Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 9, 1922, Page 8

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\Vllllfl" e'lfl Nn- Irvin Rndnlph Bergdoll ‘brothur of! the arch:slacker, ~-has renewed his fight for' freédom. from' the ‘federal pen at: Leavenworth.” ' If Bergdoll had been half as anxious ' to: fight when war was‘ declared as he is: now;: he wouldn't need to 'be fighting now; unless it was fighting for a living. —Ain't It a Fact?— ' How About the Rest of the U. S.? Ford distributors ammounce that the Ford factories have turned out six million Fords. If that’s the case, what is the! rest ofr the country do- ing for Fords? We are beginning to think that nearly all of them must. be in the vicinity of Bemidji. —Have You Heard Them?— A l}e‘nllr Tank A caterpillar can eat 600 times its weight of food in a month. But a motorist says that’s nothing. His car can- eat gasoline faster than that. —It’s Second-Hand— Only Way You Know It A report from the state highway department states that 95 cents out of every dollar is spent on actual highway. construction. and mainte- nance. ' It's sure encouraging to see these reports. published, for a lot of people around Bemidji would never know it by looking at the roads. —Giddap!— O, Very Well “Do you ever break ‘these sets?” inquired’ the lady customer who was inspecting the display of. dishes in the Home furnishings store, “No; we don’t,” replied the clerk, “but if you have onc of these modern housemaids, she will attend to that for you.” 4 —Ke-rect— TODAY’S EVENTS Centenary "of the birth of Peter ‘Henderson, who has been called “the father of American horticulture.” Hobart College, at Geneva, N. Y. today begins a celebration of the 100th anniversary of its founding. Today marks the diamond jubilee of the Wiséonsin ~Grand Lodge of 0dd Fellows, which was organized June 9, 1847. Expert rifle and pistol shots from many countries are to take part in the matches of the International Shooting Union, which begin today at Milan, Italy. The honorary, degree of Doctor of Laws is to be conferred upon Presi- dent Harding when he visits Prince- ton university today to dedicate the Princeton Memorial' monument. In the Day’s News Samuel W. McCall, © who is ex- pected to enter the Republican: sen- atorial primaries in Massachusetts as an opponent ‘of the veteran Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, has a long rec- ord of public service in the Bay State; including two terms in the gov- ernorship. He was well known na- tionally before he became governor in 1916, owing to his long term in-the natxonal house of representatives (1893- 1913), where he made a dis- tinct reputation as an “independent’ sort of Republican, and also because of the creditable work he had done e as an- author of lives of Thaddeus '0, "“Stevens and Thomas B. Reed.'.As gbvernor, he stood sponsor for.many important reforms in state adminis- tration. - Mr. McCall is a native of A-PBennsylvania and a graduate of Dn_tfllmnuth college. Choosing the a8 his profession, he was admit- e bar in 1876 and began ctice-in Boston. He is an orator fi:y ability and has been heard puhlw ccasions. - In th. Hand- of Friends. .“When you Jeave yourself in the hands of your friends are you sure you can trust them?” “No,””: " replied - .Senater Sorghum. “Sonie of them are llable.at any mo- ment to go out behind my back and dig up all kinds of needful cumpaign funds in~a_maoner that L should: high. ty disapprove of if I knew about It.” —_— THE PIONEER WANT ADSY BRING RESULTS ] include: ? | compilation. MUSIC MAKING GREAT STRIDES IN THIS CITY (Conumud From Page 1) George Everson, Laurence Breunig, Arthur Back, Byron Benson and Al- bon Cline. Bass section—Arthur Hovey and Earl Wallace. Sousaphone Bass—Barney Hak- kerup and Alfred Gaines, _ Piccolo section—Theodore Larson and Almer Gaines. Clarinet section—George Kirk, Wayne Langdon, Howard Harnwell, Joe Plumer, Edward Jewett, Ray- mond Everson, Kenneth Caskey, Teddy Olson, William Hannah, Mer- ton: Denley, John Smith, Leslie Bour- cier and Edward Gennes. Saxaphone section—Charles Van- dersluis, Clayton Ebert, Luman Al- drich, Irvin Keeler and Gordon Harn- well. Saxaphone (C Melody) — Lars Hakkerup, Royal Netzer and Robert Graham. Saxaphone (Tcnor)—Walter Bar- ker, Bertram Wilson, Albert Smart and Jack Dean. Snare Drum—Alonzo Scott, Le- land Trafton, Carl Bing, Robert Kirk, Lewis Breunig, Carl Towle, George Olson and Eugene Koehn. Bass Drum—Percy Riggs. Included in those who are receiv- ing instruction in voice, according to the committee’s compilation, are: Grace Everett, Thelma Bowers, S. T. Stewart, Mabel Croon, Myrtle Wickham, Edla Nelson, Ella Hinder- ager, Mary Bell and Mr. Fisher, Those receiving violin instruction Helen Burke, Catherine Gilmore, Fern Garlock, Roland Ang- vall, Thomas Burke, Clark Anderson, ) Dorothy Larson, Florence McAllister, Richard Cahill, Leslie Isted, Donald Pellows and Mr. Cote. The State Teachers College Glee club is also to be considered in this This club consists of Marguerite Boerner, Thelma Bow- ers, Grace Clark, Clara Coe, Grace Everett; Elva Gary, Nellie Gary, Hattie Haack, Catharine McKee, Alice Minnick, Bessie Robinson, Myr- tle Wickham, Vivian Hines, Dorothy Huff, Grace Isted, Lucille Jameson, Clara Lomen, Vera Markham, Myrtle Nordland, Norma Riedesel, Helen Strand, Arvilla Anderson and Marcia Coe. Student members of the Bemidji Musical Art club include Marguerite Boerner, Ethel Carter, Vera Cutter, Grace Currie, Bertha Davis, Wini- fred Dunemert, Grace' Everett, Alma Elmquist, Nellie Gary, Mariel Han- chett, Edith Holmberg, Elizabeth Johnson, Lucile Jameson, Vera Mark- ham, Marjory Mossefin, Ragnhild Moe, Hilda Martin, Martha.Mikkel- son, Grace Nugent, Raymond Nel- son, Ruth Otto, Mildred: Olson, Ella Ramstad, Grace Isted, Norma Riede- sél, Helen Lahr, Agnes Skinvik, Olive Sliter, M. Penner, Myrtle Nordland, Elsie Taylor, Bernice Wallace, Dora Young, Alice Minnick, Luella Backus, Myrtle Kolbe, Mabel Croon, Marie Rice, Ruth Rice, Ruth Richards, Margaret Keeler, Lila Jones, Bessie Mos'r EVRY 'mwn HAS -.mn BILNESSMEN WHOSE WAMES =l =" - = : PR e Robinson, Clara Coe and Rosella Erickson. The High School Girls’ Glee club includes: Luella Backus, Arvilla Becker, Harriet Boyce, Mabel Croon, Marguerite Donovan, Ella Elliott, Al- ma Elmquist, Martha Gilmore, Louise Golz, Carolyn Groves, Bina. Gustaf- son, Lela Jones, Anzonetta Kenfield, Bernice: Kirk, Myrtle and Ruth Kol- be, Helen' Lahr, Margaret Lord, Doris Lydick, Irene Lyon, Hilda Martin, Ruby Morse, Aileen Naylor, Mildred Olson, Geraldine Reed, Marie and Ruth Rice and Jean Walker. The High School Boys’ Glee club contained: Oscar Baney, J qhn Croon, Joe Davis, Paul Funk, Harry Hodg- don, Perry Hulett, Sanford Hurlock- er,: Willard Jameson, Victor Jahr, Henry Jordan, Francis Kittleson, Donald Knox, Louis Neumann, Pal- mer Peterson, Francis Rhea and Ross Rittgers. Another important musical organ- ization of the high school was the High School Orchestra, which was composed of Thomas Burke, :Fred Bourcigr, Richard Cahill, Louis Co- hen, Lillian Covey, Theodore Cush- ner, John Dalton, Merton Denley, Heywood. Ford, Viola Hanson,. Ralph Johnson, Theodore Laliberte, Syl- vester Neumann, Laura Schroeder, George- Thompson, Leland Trafton, Bertram Wilson and Charle§ Vander- sluis. The largest number of any group of pupils are studying the piaro. The list' of pidno students compiled by the art club committee includes the following: ~Lois Ferrel, Anna May Ferrel, Laura Russell, Marian Rus- sell, Francis Werth, John Lucas, Jean Otto, Lila Flake, Maria Thompson, Alice Nelson, Verna Krause, Irene Hoganson, Jessie Hayes, Willis' La- Mont, Helen Rudde, Annette Guliks- rud, Edith Spears, Miss Zakrian, Mar- tha Bundy, Linda Larson, Harold Marston, Alice Hanson, Helen Simon- son, Walter Harvey, Earl Ellison, Leon Hanson, Dorothy Larson, Bea- trice Larson, Jeanette Snyder, Doro- thy Ziegler, Gladys McPherson, Max- ine Smart, Verdella Kiehler, Jack Burgess, Clara Paulson, Dolores Ang- vall, Florence Knox, Ruth Goddard, Pearl “Peterson, Henrietta Bruns, Miss Branche, Miss Stewart, Miss Peartrie, Vivian Horns, Esther Heg- land, Ruth Essler, Vivian Hakkerup, Isa Treichel; Merril, Earl, Oscar and Hazel Akre, Sidney Merseth, Lillian Nygaard, Melford Merseth, Melvin Nygaard, Virginia Hess,” Mrs. Roy Trafton, Everett Welch, Geneva Neu- mann, Viola Boerner, Fern Constan- tine, Nedra Marquis, Alice Hovey, Marian Pnrmalcc, Maxine Nelson, Norine Gill, Jane Lucas, Jane Bol- ger, Pluma Kenfield, Marjorie. Cun- pingham, Eva Cunningham, Ardath Bliler, Helen Burke, Eleanor Bowser, Pearl Cnmpbell Catherine Gilmore, | Ruth Isted, Louisa Lambert, Donald McDonald, Richard Naylor, Florence|' Richey, Elizabeth Tuomy, Florence Bagley, Grace Everett, Elva Gary, Martha Gilmore, Mayne Langdon,| Nelson, George Pratt, Vera Cutter, Alice Minnick, Nell Zentz, Margaret|. Lord, Mrs.' Earl’ McMahon, ‘Helen Palmer, Marjorie Romans, Lilla' El- liott, Margaret Stewart, Ruth Wood- Helen 'Lahr, Irene Lahr, Raymond{ £ e msam%fi“‘ ADVERTISIKY BULLETIw! ward, Lillian Marin, Helen Jones; ;. Clarence Charboneau, George Hen- ry Zentz, Erwood Slosson and Alver- |- na Hagen. APPEARANCE OF BEMIDJI IMPROVED CONSIDERABLY (Continued From Page 1) this ‘¢lassification” is' the “new ~high school building at the head of Bel- trami avenue. Assurance thag been \given that this new educational institution will be ready for school use with the opening of the fall term in Septem- ber. With only three months left in which to complete the structure, work - is to be. rushed as rapidly as possible; The-Bemidji Hardware Co. has been awarded the contract for s FRIDAY !ViNlNG. JUNE 9, 1922 @ WHN DONT "SOME. BIENESS MEN" EVER _{ MAKE MORE. “THAN A SKINNY LIVING: ‘CANYONS GROOVED BY WATER ! By strlnuo Fnlk, in the Operations, |. the Rainbow Bridge- Was Formed-and- Left. The land of southern Utah, where the great Rainbow natural bridge is found, consists of a - flat-tableland; deeply. carved.with: canyons, remarks the Chicago. Tribune, As the land rose here the streams all felt the urge to cut. 'The rubble on. their bottoms was their teol. They . ground. and scoured grooves, and: from: grooves they cut canyons; At Rainbow bridge a brooklet found.a crack down through a lower strata. With Jjoy it gurgled in, carrying its tools. It splaslled and swirled through the dark passages, and at every turn it hurled its tutters against the restraining walls. It ate itself a. hole: to flow: in. "No little cave sufficed. = It cut a.gallery; Then the hardware to.be used in this new | structure:- . The grounds about the new school are being worked at the | present time and new earth will be placed there soon in order that the | lawns and boulevards may be culti- vated this summer. DISPUTES HOLD BUSINESS BA€K, DECLARES BABSON. (Cnlmnuad l-rnm Dage, 1) wages must be cut; and all connected with industry, frqm the president of the concern to: the office boy, must give more servicejper dollar received. “The. ‘' Babson: . chart index now stands at 16 per:cent. below normal as against minus 22 per cent as it was at this time jp 1921. This chart, is really a chast of production and values. To ‘have: people at work there must be a demand for goods; and to }l'nve a demand - for goods, people: must be prosperous! Hence, the soundness: of the Golden Rule and why we: all—whether employers or wage workers-—should be inter- ested in having.the other fellow pros- perous:.: Yes,”‘concluded the statisti- cian, “there is a ¥eal connection be- tween _xeligiot_n 4nd business. - The sooner we realize it, the sooner we’ll be- back to norimal.” BLACKDUCK HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES, CLASS OF 5 FON On Saturday evening, June Srd the graduates. of Blackduck high school received their diplomas at the ity Hall; . J. H. Hay of the State Agricul- tural college delivered a most inter- esting | commencement aUdress as well as giving the Class of ’22 some good pointers and advice. The music rendered by the Girls’ Glee club and High School orches- tra was very enjoyable and .much credit is due the director, Miss Ida Ogdahl, for:'the work accomplished by these musical organizations of the 'high school. The following graduates of the ‘high school' rectived diplomas: Adolph T. Anderson, Jessie Mae Cos- tello, Loren’ R. Keeney, Perle A. Kverno and Glenn:D. -Skinner. e ‘THE PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS dies. Another {§ to the effect that Trajan's soul was. sent back to his | body, which was. duly baptized by Gregory, whereupon the soul took im- mediate wing to heaven. The - whole. circumstance wu one of the knottiest: problems. which. the casulsts of the Middle ages endeav- ored ‘to solve; for they all: recognized .the humanity which- lnsplred Greg- ory’s prayers, but eould- mnot- forget that the unbaptized pagan was, after all, an unbaptized pagan. :,GALL§; FROGS “FROM HIDING Brlng- Them Out, but ldea That They Fall With It Isa ‘It has never been known of frogs falling with rain in. a rainstorm. This 1s-an oldsuperstition which prob- ‘|'ahly_arose from the: fact that:frogs ‘were séen. moving about in large num- rs after a storm. - It-1s possible that a cyclone (that can lift houses and [ whirl. them about.like. straws) may .at some:time or other have gathered up 8 quentity of. frogs and. landed them somewhere else, notymuch. the worse for wear. On the whole, however, w¢ should say_that it Is impossible for | the sky. to rain frogs in_spite of the expresslon “raining cats and dogs,” and. “rnining pitchforks.’ Frogs are am- ‘pbibfous creatures, spending half their lives in- water and half on land, but thay have a strong preference for the water, .and. for . moisture generally. When the earth is hot and dry, frogs hide themselves away in cool, moist places, and when, after that, there has been. a big enough storm to drive worms and other varleties of Insects (frogs’ natural food) to the earth's sur- | face, frogs also make their appearance nalnbaw Bridge ¢nmplrw With Wuh- ington Monument. - streams above sensed that the ground was hollowed out beneath thém. Drops came: seeping through the roof. They cpme: singly, by- trickles, and by tor- rents, dissolving and erodlng as they ran, The surface water broke the cave [, roof in. The story is almost told. Rainbow bridge, 309 feet high and 279 feet in span, is a remnant of the roof, Some freak of-chance. left it standing all alone. Its magnitude denotes the gallery worn by the stream in the fore- | ground of the picture. If you- are ever in Gallup, N. M, or Flagstaff, Ariz., you mnst try to see this wonder, TRAIAN'S SOUL' IN' HEAVEN? 'Prayer of Pope Gregory 8aid to Have ' Resulted in- Entry_of Pagan Into Paradise. The Roman emperor Trajan was the only pagan, according to medleval theologians, who. was' received Into Paradlse, His. salvation came. about throngh the offices of. Pope Gregory the Great. The pope was one day walking through. Trajan's forum In Rome;. musing on the emperor’s many merits and. grieving that so:good & man ‘should be eternally lost. He ac- cordingly dropped to his knees: and prayed for Trajan's salvation, and presently a volce was heard from on high announcing that his prayer was granted, but that henceforth he must pray only for Christians. There are.several different conclus- fons: to this legend. . One of them nar- rates that Gregory, although hls con- duct: was praiseworthy and success- ful, “broke the rules” by praying for Trajan's soul, and wa@® therefore pun- ished by numerons . distressing:. m: in great quantities,”causing:people to wonder. where they came from. : Llek?nn in Conalideration. As' long as the grass in a Chlcago . public park I8 healthy and green the citizens seem to, look uron it as gome sort of garden and:keep off. of it, as_the signs command. them. \When 1t begins to die out,-however; thelr re- spect for it. instantly.. vanishes.. A man in.a hurry. started one day to cut across- a- yellow. . .patch-.in . the upper park, but was ltonped by a policeman. “What difference does it make?” de- manded the citizen. “The m 18 half dead already. “Sure,” sald_the Indignant officer, B “if ye lind a sick friend, would ye be walkin® on .his ltnmach""-Harperu Hngazlne. 2 Origin of the Compass. In the reign of the Chinese emperor, | Ho-ang-tl, in 2698 B. C, a certain ce-\ lestial discovered that if a narrow splinter of loadstone, or natural mag- netic iron ore, found in Asla Minor, was placed upon a plece of' wood and. thie latter allowed to flont In a bowl” of water, the fron would invariably point_in a north and south direction. This crude device -was. improved: by the addition of a circular wooden card' on which 24 rays were drawn. . Each; one of these lines ‘was given a name, snd the whole thing-was.called a “ting-} ‘na-ching,”_which: 18 the. Chinese word: for compass. The south point of thel circle was dignified with a distingulsh- ing mark, in _the same manner as other natlons teday indicate the north point of thelr compgsses by:a fleur-de-lis or an arrow. - The Chinese compass of the present day shows. only the 24 points given to it 5, 'THE PIONEER-WANT ADS BRING RESULTS H,ev Is l;t;oking ’Em Over Agam J “Eight years of stomach and-liver trouble reduced me to:a walking ‘skeleton. My skin was dried up and as yellow as a twenty-dollar _gold piece. I was filled with gas and had severe pains in my right side. could not think and had lost all bition to do anyth Doctors’ medicine did not touch'me. My cous- in advised Mayr’s Wonderful Rem- edy, which snatched me from thel grave. I have gained sixty pounds, eat like a hired man and am loakmg ’em over again.” It is a simple, harmless prepnraj tion that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract an allays the inflammation which causes pracncally all'stomach, liver and in¢ testinal ailments, mcl\ldmg appen: dicitis. ‘One dose will convince or money refunded. At All Drug u? —Advertisement. § B:.u; us your clean osb- - ton rags--no buttons, bands or woolep aloth socospted. Pioneer Office Many Men Make ;. "It 'a Practice to take a box of our supe- rior confectionery - with them on their week end visits to wife and kiddies or to Her father’s house. And nothing better or more acceptable could be imagined. Put a good big box in your grip or bag this week. Believe us, its contents will be highly ap- preciated;

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