Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 10, 1922, Page 6

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LIMITED Good News For Creditors The following story appeared in a recent bulletin of the Rochester Credit Men’s association: “The doctor coughed gravely. ‘I am sorry to tell you,” he said, look- ing down at the man in the bed, ‘that there is no doubt you are suf- fering from small pox.” “The patient turned on his pil- low and looked up at his wife. ¢ 4Julia,* he'said in a faint voice 4f any of my creditors call, tell them that at last I am in a position to give them something.’ —Even If It Was Small— No Doubt About It Should ‘you see a man staggering says the Empeco Paper News, don’t take it for granted that he has been drinking. Maybe he beccame dizzy looking for it. : —Not So Wise— Her Prerogative Heck—Have you decided | what you are going to call the baby? Peck—Yes; I’m going to .call him whatever my wife names him.—Bos- ton Transcript. —No Doubt About It—-, Only One Left Team Manager Murphy (to raw recruit—Go out and .play right field. Recruit (returning a few minutes later)—By the way, Murphy, 1 don’t know .these grounds. Where’s right field? —“Topics of the Day” Films. —The Recruit Was Right— Plenty of Fodder With the situation ~in foreign countries getting no better fast, and America’s foreign relations all broke it appears as though the headlines on the front page were never going to run out of fodder. —Aint It A Fact?— SUZANNE LENGLEN WINS OVER MRS. MOLLA MALLORY (By United Press) ‘Wimbledon, England, Juluy 10— Victory again came to Mademoisel- le,Suzanne Lenglen, the world’s wo- man champion, today when she scor- ed in the triumph over her rival Mrs. Molla Mallory, the American champion. Paired ,with the Austrail- jan Pat O’Hare Wood in the third round of the mixed doubles the French star defeated the American champion and Dean Mathy 6-2 and 6-4. ADDITIONAL WANT ADS FOR SALE—A Premier 4-passenger touring car, as good as new. For quick sale, $2,5600. See A. F. Itt- ner at Pioneer Office. 7-10tf FOR SALE—One b-shovel spring tooth cultivator, one potato hiller one Hoover 7-foot digger, one small digger. Inquire C. B. Gruer, Phone 6-F-13. 8d7-12 FOR SALE OR TRADE-—Reason- able, Willys-Knight touring car. Fred Kruse, over Security Bank, Phone 824-W. 8d7-12 SETTLEMENT OF MINE TROUBLE SEEMS NEAR (Continued from Page 1) forced is only a matter of days, it was indicated today as operators and miners resumed their - conference and the administration secretly pre- pared a plan of action. : President Harding and his ob- servers in the ponference—Secrev taries Hoover and Davis—are mnow practically .prepared to meet = the threatened fuel shortage, daily ap- proaching the danger point. It is understood Attorney General Daugh- erty has rendered an opinion .for the president on how far the adminis- tration can go in protecting the public interests. v One admisistration officer today pointed to the government’s action in ordering the United States dis- trict attorney and other federal of- ficers to use force to prevent inter- ruption of interstate commerce and interference with the mails as the indication of what they may expect if the coal conference fails to ne- gotiate a settlement, MOOSE HOLD IMPORTANT MEETING TUESDAY NIGHT The regular semi-monthly meeting of the Royal Order of Moose, post- poned from Independence Day, will be held in the Moose hall Tuesday evening. The general picnic com- mittee, in charge of Vice-Dictator Frank Annis, held two meetings last week and will make announcements at this lodge meeti¥ig about the big annual picnic at the outlet of Carr Lake next Sunday. This committee seems to have chosen the date wisely. Matters concerning the Moose ba- zaar to be held the last week of this month will also come up at this lodge meeting. If other matters are dis- posed of with reasonable prompt- ness, the publicity committee will present a surprise part in the pro- gram of the evening. FUNERAL SERVICES FOR H: THOMPSON SATURDAY Funeral services ~ for = Hiram Thompson, who passed away in Be- midji, Thursday afternoon at 3 o’clock at the home of his sister, Mrs, Mary Raco, 1102 = Minnesota avenue, following an 'illness of sev- eral weeks were held Saturday af- ternoon at the home at 3 o’clock, Rev. L. P. Warford officiating and M. E. Ibertson directing, Interment was made in Green wood cemetery. THE PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS FORMS AVAILABLE FOR PAYING SPECIAL TAXES 1 Forms for making returns of spe- cial . taxes, due under the revenue act of 1921 during the month of July, now are available at the offize of the Collector of Internal Revenue, St. Paul, Minn., and the following 1branch offices: Minneapolis, Duluth, |St. Cloud, Winona and Mankato. | To avoid penalty, return and pay- ment of the tax must be made on or before July 31, 1922. Return of the capital stock tax of domestic. corporations must be made on Form 707; foreign corporations on Form 708. Form 11 is used for making return of the miscellaneous occupational and the tobacco manu- factuter’s: special tax. Regulations 64, governing the collection of the capital stock tax, Regulations 59, governing the collection of the mis- cellaneous occupational taxes, and Regulations '8, governing the collec- tion of the tobacco manufacturer’s " | special tax may also be obtained up on request of the office of the col- lector of internal revenue and branch offices. The Revenuve Act provides “that every domestic corporation shall pay annually - a special excise tax with respect to carrying on or deing busi- ness equivalent to $1 for each $1,000 of 'so much of the fair average value of its capital stock for the preceding year ending June 30, as is in excess of $5,000, In estimating the value of the capital stock, the surplus and undivided profits shall be included. “Every . foreign corporation shall pay annually a special excise tax with respect to carrying on or doing business in the United States, equiv- alent to $1 for each $1,000 of the average amount of capital employed in.the transaction of its business in the United States, during the pre- ceding year ending June 30.” SAXAPHONE SECTION OF BAND TO BE INCREASED i Puiteiedy A general invitation is extended by Bandmaster G. O. Riggs .of the Bemidji Boys’ band for all boy sax- aphone players or students to meet at the band rooms in = the City building after the regular rehearsal of the band Tuesday evening. Sev- eral boys who are studying the sax- aphone or want to study it have been visited by Mr. Riggs and he now plans to start a new saxaphone section ahead of the beginners’ class scheduled for fall. He hopes to en- large the saxaphone section of the band to .20 or 26 pieces by a year {from now. money orders— ©¥ou can see what you are buying “‘before you buy it, you don’t have to copy down a lot of long numbers, fill out a complicated order blank, #dd up a lot of figures and puzzle over weights and shipping costs, you don’t; have to buy drafts or You don’t have to send the order and money miles away and wait weeks to get the goods, you don’t have to pester the railroad agent to find out if your goods are in, you don't have to enter into a lot of cor- respondence if a mistake occurs— long before It Pays Better to ~ Trade at Home Nor do you have to buy things you need“them, and thereby tie up your good money. Nor does your money—paid” in advance—go off miles'and miles to benefit strangers in “distant com- munities. it geos to hel and wages, cerned. You don’t have any of those pesky bothers, those losses of time, those delays, when you buy your goods from your retail merchant. Give all your chants. Instead, goes back into ¢irculation right here at home; it goes to a fellow citizen who is interested the same as you are in building up your community ; your money p pay local rent, taxes to .build schools and roads, to support churches and in- stitutions in which you are all con- trade to the local mer- \FEAR WE SHALL NEVER MEEY W veAen, mexiel Lady, WHAT YA BEEW O0IN' HOW, TEECHER BEMIDJI BEATS DETROIT | IN EASY CONTEST HERE| (Continued From Page 1) since the local club boast of at least five players who can trim near- ly any other five in this section of the state. Bemidji’s team will prob- ably be made up :of Lakin, Ander- son, White, Brooks, McMillan and Baer. Wednesday afternoon the ladies of the club will stage a tournament play to beginat 2:30. S. S., Wilson is furnishing a pair of golf knickers as first prize. Coffee will be furn- ished by the Dwinnell-Wright Co. of Chicago as second prize. Next Sunday the qualifying rounds for the .club championship will be started. This will be for 18 holes, handicap event. Members of; the club may play -their qualifying round 'at any: hour that day, no def- inite time being set for starting. EARL ALLEN PASSES AWAY AFTER EXTENDED ILLNESS Earl Allen of Cass Lake, brother of Mrs. R. 'W. Kohen of this city passed away at the Walker hospital Saturday afternoon after an extend- ed illness. He: was confined to the Bemidji hospital for about a year and .when that institution was clos- ed up he was-moved to Walker. Fu- neral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at the Presbyterian church. Burial will be made in Greenwood under the direction of M. E. Ibert- son, fumneral sdirector. RUSSIA LOOXS T0 HER HARVEST FOR FREEDOM (Continued From Page 1) practically. gained recognition. Rus- sia also concluded the treaty with aermany, which may be ‘followed by separate .treaties. “Russia can therefore, contemplate the future with confidence. kussia needs no cconomic ‘aid, but ' the bourgeois states no less need Russia economically _and _politically.” Russia Is Anxious Russia ‘is ‘both puzzled at and suspicious of the United States at- titude towards her. The general view iy as stated. by Izvestia, that:@ the United States wants to do the re- construction:and reap the profits if there | is any reconstructing to be done. When conditions get back to normal, the Russians see themselv- es as the greatest competitors of the United States in raw materials. They see the price of steel and wheat dropping, and, .unless Standard Oil gets the Baku oil fields from Russia which is quite likely, they see a huge oil field rcopened %o compecte with those under American control. The. Soviet delegation is not like- ly to be in a conciliatory .mood at the Hague conference. STATE COLLEGE TO ENJOY AUTOMOBILE TOUR TUESDAY An automobile tour of the . sur- rounding district tnd a trip through the Crookston Lumber - Co. mill i§ planned for the students and facul- ty of the Bemidji State Teachers college for Tuesday afternoon. They are to be guests of the*Civic and Commierce association, the members of which are furnishing the cars. ANNA DICKIE OLESON OPENS BIG CAMPAIGN (Continued From Pags 1) Mrs. Oleson’s -campaign -will be the seating of Senator Truman H. New- berry by the.senate, for which her opponent voted, “What the senate did when it seated Newberry is of vital concern to the people. It is not Newberry, but Newberryism I am fighting. A crime was committed in Michigan, in ‘the election of Newberry and the United States senate seated him. Michigan’s shame becomes Minneso- ta’s shame when a Minnesota sena- tor supports him. “Newberry will be unseated. What we need in Washington today is not a farm bloc nor a millionaire bloc, but a’people’s bloc. Mrs. Oleson said her campaign ex- penses would be limited to the buy- ing of gasoline for her: flivver. She will probably not pay hotel bills, be- cause, she said, Minnesota people are so hospitable that when she has been campaigning before they always in- sisted on entertaining her. MEXICAN TENANTS ON STRIKE AGAINST RENT (Continued From "age 1) ment spread to Mexico City, with the result that on the first of June the Syndicate of Tenants in the federal capital was reported to have an en- rollment of 45,000. Strike of Mexico City tenants is expected, when it is claimed more than 80,000 will refuse to pay their rents. Owners Organize Combatting- the situation, land- lords are organizing a.“‘Union de Proprietarios,” which is said to num- ber 10,000 tenement owners, who have announced that they will not yield or agree to a compromise of any sort. A Tenants have already held one great demonstration, gathering in in the Alameda, the central park of the city, where they were harrangued. by several’ speakers. ‘While there were no disorders, many of the specches were described as violent and decidedly “bolshevik in tone,” according to reports' received. here. Preparations are: being made for 4 mammoth demonstration at the capi- tal, simultaneously with demonstra- tions in all cities where tenants are striking. STATE AUTO ‘ASSOCIATION - OFFICIALS VISIT BEMIDJI A. F. Gold, president of the State Automobile association, and Roy Hill, secretary, were business visitors | in Bemidji for a few hours Satur- day. They were entertained at lun- cheon at Birchmont. Friday night they met with automchile boosters at Grand Rapids and .organized an automobile club there. From here they went to Crookston, en route to the the Twin Cities on their way back from Port Arthur. The State Automobile Association is planning |, a tour from the Twin .Cities to Port Arthur about July 20, the par- ty to disband at Duluth after the tour. Preparations for this tour brought the association officials to Those who can furnish cars are &sk-[this section of the state, although ed to meet. at the college at 4 o’clock |the tour will not pass through this when the tour will begin, section. ; T )} —OPEN DAY —3 o BEST OF FOOD AND SERVICE AT ALL HOURS FORMER PATRONS ESPECIALLY URGED TO TRY US AGAIN. PALACE CAFE :—: 112 Third Street T T Undex;\"‘j; ‘vej‘ management of Marvin Hughart ‘Special Dinners Served AND NIGHT— Auction Sale - of Horses Tuesday, July 11, at 2 P.M. at H DENISON & BURGESS BARN Bemidji, Minn. : 23 Farm Horses—Mares and Geldinés 1200 Pounds and Over y WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION MORT. PENDERGAST, Auctioneer C. L. MIKKELSEN, First Nat’l Bk., Clerk: : B_emfdji’§ l_:'ree Plgygrouna {.Diamond Point Invites You Every Day Camping Grounds Picnic Grounds ; Bathing Pavilion —Electric Lighted— SOFT DRINKS - LUNCHES - COFFEE s Sold at the Park. Plan Your Picnic for DIAMOND POINT Bat_hing Suits for Rent ARCHIE DITTY Custodian We Are Independent of any scarcity of drugs. Long ago we foresaw the situation and secured a sufficient supply to enable us to fill any prescription for a long time to come. So bring your prescrip- tions here to be filled. We are in a position to live up to our old rigid standard of “no substitution.” City Drug Store _LALIBERTE & ERICKSON Phene 52 Bemidjl B. W. LAKIN, President E. R. EVANS, Manager C. L. ISTED, Secretary-Treavurer ~ BEMIDJI LUMBER & FUEL 00, OPPOSITE GREAT NORTHERN DEPOT LETUS SUPPLY YOU WITH LUMBER - LATH - SHINGLES -LIME - CEMENT - PLASTER PAPER—Roofing and Sheathing BRICK—Common, Fire and Fancy Sash Doors and Mill Work. FULL LINE OF DRAIN TILE AND SEWER PIPE Read Tho Pionger Want Ads

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