Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 3, 1922, Page 8

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arg: a2 Mode 3 From the Dmly Ploneer classlfied ‘ads' comes the following: For Sale, A rattling good bargain in 1921 model ‘Ford, etc. The owner even admits xt, so it must be true. R ing Good Mode]—— metimen He's Right A local basebfll fan' who goes to a game* about ‘once a year thinks that the baseball players in - Sun- day’s game must have been vacci- nated: They 'didn't seém to be able to catch a thing at times. —He Saw ‘The Wllton ‘Game— “See that honse over there on the hill?” said the tramp ‘as he pointed | to a beautiful residence. “That be- longs to my. younger brother. He forged ahead of me in business, I happened to get caught.” ~—Happened Is Right— And Tt Came To Pass The ‘age of ‘miracles in not over. A well known residefit of Be- midji sent for a plumber for a lit- tle job the other day and the plumb- er didn’t forget to bring a single thing. & i —1It Ain’t, A Fact— Men May Come And Men May Go Men may have some right in mak- ing fun of the clothes. women wear but did you ever rest your eyés on ¢ anything funnier than some of the costumes men will wear when theu lodge parades? —If You Did You Win— Hard To Forget A Bémidji. bachelor declares. that his definition of a diplomat is ‘a fellow who always remembers woman’s birthday and forgets to re- member her age. —Oh Can It Be?— KNOWN AS PROTESTANT POPE Sobriquet Butowad on Clement Xiv When - He' Suppressed |t Order of Jesuits. Pope Clement. XIV bearg the so-7] “briquet of “the Protestant Pope,” al- though he was by no means a inein- ber of the Protestint faith. He earned this title by a bull which he‘lssued in 1778, ordering the suppression’ of the Order of the Jeguits, This scemed to the devout Catholic a concelsion to Protestantism, and flms Clemy nt was given his title. The Jesuit order was enu\bllshed in 1587 by Ignatius Loyold, and its chief atm whb to esm)llsh the power of the pope and to presetve it agninst the attacks of the Protestants, ' It grew to be the most powerful soclety of the Roman Catholic church, gain- ing fts infidehce principully through the excéllent sehools which its mem- bers founded ' and ‘maintained.. - Its “ potency ‘grew to such an extent that the' temporal authorities took ‘alarm and, In’ 1778, France, Spain, Portugal, Parma, Naples ‘dhd Austria’pkevalled upon Pope Olemeéht ‘to issue his bull abollshing ' the order.’ It was' re-es- tablished by Pope Pius. VII immediate- ly after the fall of Nupoleon in 1815, and is now in‘a’ thriving condition in all countries where the Roman church ' hng’ adherents. - The order has been dfstigulshied - hroughout 1ts - exist- ence ‘for the great tearning and schol- arship ‘possessed by its members. Multiplies Scenery, A Russian widow, Mme, Ivan Bout- kovsky, ' has devised an ingenlous scheme for “multiple scenery,” wher by two scenes are painted upon of e canvas. Colored lights are thrown upon, this drop~scene which bring ont Lerfnln “polors while concenling others, 80 t/Wwith the Bame 'stige setting &ither ‘d_lanuscape or ‘- Interior miy Immemnn-ly he brought- intd’ view. Playing’ several acts with one ‘set of scenery 18 an Tded tHat Should’ appeal strongly to producers, both as'a nov- elty and ‘from an ecahomical point of view.—Sclentific American. BU]EDING up BUFFAI:O HERDS of Aorlcultuu Has Had ying Success With This Forty-six, new. buffalo calves are porteéd on ‘thiee of ‘the’ four g: Berves maintained by the bw ‘survey of ‘the United States Depnm ment: of Agricylture for the ‘special prvtéctmn of buf spring. | Fittoon calyes are reported ut the Wind .Cave ‘preserve, in Sduth Da- . kota, and 8 at Niobrara, Neb. The department hds been very fortinate in maintdining the higrds establishied ut these three polnts and at- Sullys Hill, North Dakota.'There vely. few. large buffnfo’ herds tered over the country, and thé biological survey has made special elTorts/to. provide suitable mnm and tection: for what threatened a few | of nnuve Amerlcun animal. yet|. .|Mackinac, Miss Holcomb will | TOMORROW Taken rr:ln the ‘rfln ;(‘ Tisned Ten Years Ago !a'n'gmw. Johnson Beats Flynn Las WVegas—Jack Johnson was ni the July 4 battlé the contest having been stopped by the police after the nmth round ® Mlny Clau Races Jewett clipped 32:seconds Irom three-mile recordyon Bemidji track. Bagley won ball game. Took local team into camp. by score of 10 to 6 by’ nifith inning rally. Pine Cone came in second. Could not overcome minute and half handicap and Dél Marca crossed line first. . * - Wolgast Wins Los Angeles—Ad Wolgast retain- 2d his title of lightweight champion by defeating Joe Rivers a thir- teen round i given after the refree had counted Rivers out ‘and ‘Wolgast lay pros- frate a5 the Tesult of ‘a Rivers’ blow. * * - The: Misses Donna. Lycan, Bgrman, Harriet Cochran and Mrs. F. S. Lycan of Bemidji and Miss Dora Holcomb of Warren will leave Monday night for a trip down the laes from Duluth on one of the Anchor line boats. The party ex- pects to go to Buffalo and return and’ mady" stop' for ' some time at to Duluth from Warren and ‘will meet the other members of thd party when they board the train at Bemidji. 3 [} * » L4 Mrs. Murray Humes and ™ Mlss Fourth ' of ‘July guests of Mrs. F. S. Lycan and Miss Donna Lycan, Mr..and Mrs. C. W. Vandersluis and-two childten, Mr. and == Mrs. Harry Koors and two children, and Harry Mayer left yesterday for Ten Mile Lake near Walker, where: they will spend the next month at.the Vandersluis' cottage L - - Miss Lillian Cochran has returned which time she was the guest of relatives and friends at . different points in Oregon and Montana. other ‘a combine and _sea route with “hydroplanes via Brindi- si, Athens /and Constantinople and then to: Odessa and’ Bakou, The Soviets themselves have taken deep interest and will -develop their own 'internal service. To-this | end they have just purchased the patex’l}s type hydro-avion and given the co! . |puny also the contract for the in: stallation of a manufacturing plant nd ‘hydro-avion base ' at dp This ‘will: connect up with' the I ian aerial line. The Soviets plan to establish lines running up all of the great wntcmays that “enter in' the Black ‘Sea from Central Russia. | ~ After Italy, Germany is next mak- ing the ihost progress in getting in on the ground floor of Russia by the aerial route., In fact, she al- izeady has her initinl line between Berlin and ‘Moscow' in full opera- tion. In addition the Germans haye a comiissfon of their leading aerial technicians ‘now at Moscow working out with' the Soviets plans for the and the opening 6 Hew ting jup with important d Germnn centeps,’ . J P‘irpotu-l Motion Dlhuredlhd VIt seems hardly credibie, but n , there jvas 3 Inally “Europe who ‘knew" i htegorically deby thint'there wi Athing ac perpetual motfo 1t remained for Sir Inlmc Nmon and the French scientist, De La Hire, to' demonstrate beyond «doubt the fm- /podalbility of nttdlning 1t. Quite a.little time passed before the sclentific world in general was willing to dccept ‘the Newtonian the- ory, but finally the French Académy of sflehce Wt Parls, In-1775, publiely declared that perpetunl motion was an_impossibility and thereby branded all those who Still fnsistéd upon’ex- perimerting’ with' it ‘as. charlatans. Pittsburgh Leader. g 6} attle. The decision was b Leah £0 | Dorothy Humes of Cass Lake were" from a three months’ visit during: country 1 1824, from an Italian firm for its new!f (By United Press) Glacier Park, Mont., July 3—The wild and more or-less woaly west— the west - that Fredrick Remington piit on ‘canvgs that Buffalo = B Cody. put. into books #ind that whicl thousands“of ’‘tourists come. ‘half ing revived “at Glacier Park this week. It was to' be revived with all its trimmings. There will be hundreds. 0) filaekieet f war pai Nntioiigl ey hayen’t ‘donned for years. srewill be scores of’ cowboys and.’ - half-breed. . guides, many of whom' are coming long dis- tances for the event, among them will bé some of ‘the ‘best riders and ropers: ‘that ‘the tvest boasts. There will be' trick: riding, steer bulldog- g;ng, plain and fancy roping, shoot- ing exhibitions , bucking ' contests; and_-last a regular old-time stage ‘hold-up in which 300 Indians and cowboys will participate. The occasion will be'the first an- Imn\l Glacier Park Stnmpede, with | which: natives of .ti#s section of the: country. will celebrate the Fourth of July. e celebration will begin today - and- last - three days. ODD FELLOWS IN U. S. St. Joseph, Mo., July 3 (United Press).—There are today | approxi- mately 2,500,000 Odd Fellows in the United States according to Lucieh Eastin, . St. Joseph, .Grand Sire of] the national orgnnizntion. Adjacent to :Building in Which w.sh- )y ington Hag His Headquarters at, Yorktown, Virginia. 4 ‘Washington's headquarters at York- town, Vd. 'The trée at the left of the picture is the Lafayette .elm, planted by Lafayette when he 'visited this finvited: ocratic. awakening presents ‘a new-| (Continued trom Page 1) Teachers’ Associations: in” the world. He is coming ‘to America specially to attend the convention. One ot,the/important speakers at the 'general sessions is Sir Arthur ‘| Currie, President of McGill Univer- sity, /Montreal, ‘and commander of the 'Canadian' forces .during the World War, who has heen especially He will talk on'*‘The Dem- world outlook.” Sir Arthur is one of the outstand- | ing I)gures of Canada and his var- 'ied experience has given him a fund of information that ‘will make his talks valuabl Educa of Disabled It is: expected;that. ‘one of. the ‘most impomnt topics. that will be discussed is the education disabled soldier. This and the edu- cation of “soldiers who. réturned whole, hut did not resume “their in- terrupted ‘education, ‘is one of the most vital problems facing the asso- ciation, Lecause from them must be d wn the futufes leaders in every untry school teachers wxll and Various ‘methods of ‘rdising’ the standard of the “Little Red School House,” Will be' 'predented. It - said that the backbone of ‘the edu- cational “system rests ‘on the:coun- try school and’that they'should have grade of teachers possi- ble: { Mjss: Charl Ormund Williams, President of the National' ‘Educa- tional ;Association is ldrgely respon- sible for thé great success that this ineeting; seams likely to ‘to be and it.is qu. ito her untiring efforts that ‘'such ‘an intetestmg five “days ‘has d nnd so many notable be” heard. ere wAs a gétheriig last night, ‘the real 'session: began this morning, ‘when._ the first business meeting “was held. Every morning will -be, given over to business. ~ The afterngons_to depnrtmenml meetings and’ tfie ‘evenings to general sessions. Others o prominence who will reds the association ‘are:”Vice President Calvin: Coolidge; General “YJohn * J.* Pershing; -Mrs. Thomas. G. It has been given a place in the Hall of Fame for trees, wigh a history by the American Ior- estry assoclition. Winter, President of the ~fGeneral Fedcmhun of Womens’ Clubs; Mrs. ‘Maud Wooi Park, President of the National League of Women Voters; Governor Channing H. Cox 0of Mass- achusctts, who will = welcome the teachers. to Boston and New Eng— SUBSCRIBE 'FOR THE PIONEER 1 We Ave Indepéndent + of any scarcity of druga. \Long ago ‘We foresaw the sxtuation and secured a; sufficient supply to enable; us to fill any prt:s;cnphon‘> for a long time to come.: ISo ‘hring . your prescfip—- tions here to be filled. We‘r are in a position'to live up? to our old rigid standar of “no suBstltutxon. £ £ § § LETUS SUI’?I.Y You TH LUMBER - LATH LIME - CE R PAPER—Roofing and She BRICK-Comm n; Fire ant z lfiresser . of the (Conhnnod From Page 1) at ‘least twice “again during the game but at no time did they have the "bases filled. Bemidji scored one jn the third with two men down .The winning run. was ‘allowed ' when -Brazil hit Hohman with a ‘pitched ball, with the bases filled in- the seventh in- ning. Summary THief Rlver Falls AB. Stenhoff c. 4 McGinn' cf. Halbert 1b. Federoff ss. Jonas 3b. Lawrence 2b. Shutte rf. Brazil p. Totals: 8 Bemidji b S ABL E. Bailey cf. Hohman_ ss, Frank Phibbs c, _ C. Bmley 2b. 4 4 4 4 4 4 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 wonerHococs ool Nommosoosool®! 4. 3 4 4 R. *Fravis 3b. Urich 1b. <, Totals 2 33 Nonooocooood Hooocoocomood® GO O RO oM moRwo~E TiIS TIME LAST YEAR Carpentier: was reported to be in good condition at 'Manhasset after being knocked out in the fourth round by Jack Dempsey in Jersey City. B With one on, Clemons hit a hom- [ Cards. beat* the Cubs. er in the seventh xnmng and thclt e ing year hew of- Ificers fi(;l;:eflg.ag:ivtet;ok a:double header 1.. Jack Bradon, New:York, natinni e 7 s ) 1 chairman, conve annual Gardner’ tripled in the eighth in- a 2 ning with the hases filled and Cleve| Jational convention st the oldlicap: land beat - Detroit, 2 About 800 delegates’ and visiting members of the organizatmn are ex- pected . for.the session which will ]ast until Thurnday u. s. WORLD WAR VETERANS MEET IN ANNUAL CONVEN'K'ON7 (By United Press) St. Paul, July ‘3—World War 3 NEE Veterans oi\the nation met here to- m E?'o ; R.W day. to map. out thgir program for Cafe-Parlor-Observation Cars have beéen gdded to trains 9 and 31 horthbound, and. traifs 32 nndv 10 southbound. b_etween St Paul-aneaths Bi?.lmd ¢ Northern Pacific Railway This'is YeHowstonc Park's Big Year Go While Travel Costs cre Very Low " Bu 1ck Servnce is Rarely Needed . But Always Avwailable . Buick prides ‘itself upon the fact . that. Buick owners have the unin- terrupted use of their cars to an unusnal degree. . This is due first to Buick quality .and next because of Buick’s nation- wide authorized service. Go where you will, you will find this service. Wheneyer you see the Buick authorized service sign, you wilt - know that you can get thegenuine. . Buick:part that you need: your work will be done by Buick= traine mechamcs and that you will ‘be on your way again in the shortest possible time. (C-30-48) -MOTOR >INN GARAGE - Bfifi anesota ~ F. M. Goughhour, Prop. -~W'en bettei‘ automoblles are built, Buick wfll‘b!flld them.

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