Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 21, 1922, Page 4

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AR &2 et .wmuzsmw !vznme, .wuz 21, 1922 » e e B L W y lastingly at.it"—ADVERTISE! i\t BARBEh TRADE ‘THAT no matter what you have to -ell. i Now, is’ the. t‘Tmo to learn a good tHe colamns of the newspapers will fill your' 't tade. Summer) rates are in effect. s, in tln nn-uc and most economical “uHere, Jerry; better take your -u)lw-yon might | need it.” That sort of thing has chlnzed and th pubhe is bexlnning to reslife that the law must:be ‘obeyed BEMIDJI DAILY, PIONEm‘ PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY fi"fifi BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING Wfi g (By E. R. Waiu) TEAT ,the, directing, heads of - “manufacs tufipl, x,wuton seeking.. proflhbh outlets Virite today £ EE dewrlpfiv- in formation anfl catalog. the law-breaker ultimately will end up’in fail, ital,” : G, B. CARSON, President E. H. DENU, Secy-Mgy, b P il for ‘capital, ‘as well as those on: the outldok way, 7.D. WINTER, News m' Lo o be he rich or poor—and there is nio more disgust- for good farms and homes, are reading the THAT 'if you want increased business— 'A'WlN CITY 'BARBER COLLEGE . 2.} ing citizen than the person of means.who uses his ADVERTISE! " ZIM H-nn-pm Ave. ; b :nnnpo is Minn. papers every day looking for opportunities— ADVERTISE! 3 THAT the best results:from any kind of THAT most newspaper readers are boost- ers. _They. pass on everything good, whether money to flaunt his personal disreglid for a law which he knows his poorer neighbor ‘can.not so TELEPHONE 922-923 —t —t ..-l== | [ntered at the Postoffice at Bem! Minneseta, an Socond-glass Matter, under Act L b March 3, 1870, Oaras S a—_ R m NA’.I'IONAI- EDITORIAL Auouwnon r-unuvm:m—-m ‘GM%C&MN.MG’WM'.!. ] &:fl‘ ”n- fll be l-o:”m"'u':u M'lt M . ly for Dllbllcctlnn. Communioations fon - W uesday A Pioneer must zeach this omu 3 day of each Wedk 50 Lnaure publioa % wmzn. PIONEER—Twelve -uy nu unt pestage pal lor.{n u e Daper, !n- is o entitled 1o ro-pnul_l:’l:u-gl .:‘II mews dispatches credited to i nron and dn.'u:- lo.e'd news wum"'u herein. ¢ OPFICIAL OOUNTY AND OITY PROCENIINGS | THOUGHTLESS RICH o R i lnarc'hy s being bred by the malefactors of ° krnt wealth, John F. Kramer, former national prohibition enforcement officer, told Minnesota nudiences last week. Mr. Kramer told of & tongressman from New York who came to him after the holidays of 1921 and told of a wild drinking party which he had given to & number of wealthy men in New York City. [ “Just at the end ‘of the party,” the congressman told Mr. Kramer, “one of the fellows, who still had @ little more brains than-the rest of us, said: ‘Look here, fellows, do you realize that we have got a prohibition law in this land and that we are anxious to have several millions of unassimilated people in New York obey it? “We're in danger because they haven't yet learned -to obey laws in a democracy. 1 propose we never do this -gun." \All of those present prumued and the promise tas been kepts !\lt. as Mr. Kramer exp‘llmed. there are men of ellfll in every community who think it “smart” to/9buy their likker hard and treat it rough.”” Un- til thése men—and must we say, women—are made " to ‘ndersund that the law of the land applies to " thhm as much as it does to the beerless laborer, we mast continue to sit on & powder: keg.’ i . Hope is seen in the fact that every day there: u il @ tightening of the enforcement of the liquor Taws. . When prohibition first .came, something hka 15, 000,000 citizens had to make great rend;uutments in ‘their lives. Naturally, they did not take the 18th amendment as seriously’ as they might, and somie judges and some officers were inclined to . wink at- violations. One eastern judge at that permd imposed .a fine of $1 on & man brought ups! on. & moonshining charge, and as the prisoner was ‘leaving the courtroom the judge called out to him: ¥ M easily break. — NICK CARTER QUITS 3 Nn:k Cartér has gone_to solve his greatest mys- ““tery; }u “has crossed-the River Styx. L Nick an -izo wrote 40,000,000 words ‘about: Nick's hlh:'rauhll ‘dnnhm thereby thrilling aomethin; {ikd'40,000,000 small boys (to say nothing:of fath- .ers. who uumpmim)slx read realms of thel confiw— : cated lurid literature) died pennileu s fbw dly: For years the Nick.Carter stories, first written in 1890, flooded the country and were sold at 10 cents a copy. In the ‘days of his glory, Nick Carter, de- tective supreme, always managed, after some nar- TOW escapes, to capture his man and stick another plume in virtue’s hat. “I never wrote a atory that I would be uhnmed to read to a Bible class,” was one of Dey’s proud boasts. Nevertheless, parents did not take so kindly to Nick’s blood-and-thunder experiences as did the youth of the land. Many a time when Nick was in the very act of shooting the head off some wild, wicked man who needed to have his head shot off, a stern parent would cause consternation by reach- ing forth an unexpected hand. Probably Nick was bad company for a boy, and Frank Merriwell, ball player par excellence, may have taken up too much of Johnny’s time—but some of us birds whose temples are -showing gray will carry fond recollections of these two friends of our childhood and as we read them then, so we shall defend them now. Certainly we will defend Nick and Frank against the putrescence of the present day pusillanimous publications with their indelicate illustrations and still more indelicate “stories.” Nick was great on crime, but he was pure-minded and upright, and, although he could trace a bad man with no other clue than a freckle on a flea,. Compare that kind of his motives were of the best. a hero with the pasty-faced, cigaret-smoking, joy- riding, bootlegging, jazz-jumping hero of Smutty :Stories, now so popular at the newsstands, and good old Nick looms like a watermelon on the-desert. More than 500 have enrolled for the summer course at tho Bsmldfl Teachers college, and it isn’t “a'very good year "for students, either. Yel, wa‘u still figuring how we're going to elect . man from Beltrami county to the state senate. ank Day says he will live to see another Dem~ president. * Frank is ‘seeing things’ agsin, . . Candy is said to be good for the health.. It also Thelps bashful lovers. o i Looks like the next sheriff of Beltrami county ‘'t will'be Johnson. i asyoucanremcmberUSCO. Thetruthisthat men have always found USCO an out- standing money’s worth no matter what its price. maintains its established standard of quality. ® And because of the new price, it sets a new index of tire value. * * » Men who have used USCO have never been inclined to measure its value by the general run of tires. United States Tires are Good Tires ot U.8.TireCo. wa Haitle "Not even USCO ever touched this value before 30:3%-%10.90 e EN youlook ata Since last fall when USCO \\ ] 30x 3% USCO at e:it:blisheg‘ zhl: $10.90 \ range the ave rec- V;r $10.90 think back .. E7¢e 978 s value for aminuteasfar . peyond any possible comparison. A still greater money’s worth than even USCO itself hadreached Today at $10.00 USCO before, United 'Sta United States @ |Rub Where You Can Buy U. S.Tiress F.M. MALZAHN, Bemidji, Minn. C. W. JEWETT CO. INC,, Bentidji, Minn. TIPS metter Grgensorion Fredéfick''vah Rensselaer Dey, who, conceived SU‘BSCRIBY} FOR THE PIONEER found in editorial or advertising pages. advertising are obtained by “keeping ever- ONLY TWO. DAYS MORE OF THE CALORICv DEMON STRAZI'ION ‘Only two days more to get in.your bid on the $175.00 CaloriC. Only two, days more m whlch to haVe a CalomC heating system at the lowest fuel cost.’ @uw§? - " RUNIA DEMO NSTRATI( N FRIDAY, JUNE 23rd, THE LAST DAY Scores of interested ‘people are visiting the CalonC Demonstration every day. This is. an. oppurtumty you should not miss,: You are:interested in |cutting fuel - cost—then come to the Demonstration’. axj d learn’the facts of this wonderful heating system.that. is giving comfort and saving fuel, tlme and labor fior over 125,- 000 families. . Remember, Friday, June23rd, is-the: last day Come! ! Have you put in a bid on the CaloriC — f you may get one installed at your own' prlce' 5” ; ) gfllIIIIIIIIII@IlmlIIIIIIII1IIlII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllliilllllllllllllfllllllmlllll o '5i‘€l-vu|"\7ffi's‘l’£.!:lm -and Still They coma I I Ftthe first million Fords that were manufactured ‘had not given he motorists the satisfaction they had a right to expect ---- do .for ‘the other ‘Five you think there would have been any deman Mllhon? Some manufacturer might ma;ke a few thousand articles that were not of universal use, and sell them—but no manufacturer would turn out SIX ' MILLION poor articles and have d g B W Jewett Co. INC. : “THE SERVICE QARAGE = fillIIIIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||l||IilIIIIIlIIIlIIlIIIII||Illll||IIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIII|II||IIIIIIIllIIIlIIIllIlIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl.‘ - & = £ = = % %

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