Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 25, 1922, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

VAS NUTHIN' Yo SRl park sted recently i ?ih 3 provideJ the rk board will share the expense of bringing them here. ! R. E, Miller;. one; of:-the; lodge’s s:sz dictators, is werking for action on_this proposition through an appro priation of part of the proceeds of the Moose bazaar. He feels that is a: fine. opportunity to get a pair of moose. that will pepetuate fthemselves, since wild moose are get- iting scarce. 17 Others of the -officers of the lodge have expressed themselves in favor of the. proposition, including Frank [Annis, J. T. Davis, C. B. Hoyt, L. L. |Caskey; H. N. McKee, E. W. Bucklen, |d. P. Lahr and C. A, Parker. PREMIER QUINTETTE ON TONIGHT'S CHAUTAUQUA Tonight's Chatauqua. program will be given. entirely by. the Premier i Artiste/ Quintette and will consist of a grand concert, the finest of the old and new in music. The program is expected to appeal to hearers, both young andj old. The - quintette is composed of Carroll Ault, Miss May Veale, Joseph Andrews, Miss Ruth Young and Miss Miriam Welty, mas- fters of classical music in recitals of charm. This quintette opened the afternoon program today at 3 o‘clock tfollowed by an address by Bagdasar ‘Baghdigian on “Back to the Funda- imental Americanism.” ' The five-day program will close Wednesday night, the evening pro- fgram to be given by Mr. and Mrs. Glen Wells, entertainers de luxe. 'Wednesday afternoon at 3. o’clock, the Junior Town “Conquest of Peace” 11 be given, to be followed by .an ‘address by John E. Aubrey on “The One Mile Town.” " The Tull Players gave the entire program Monday, the afternoon pro- gram being cxceptionally good. It consisted of musical and dramatic gems, featuring Fern Casford, reader. A Pair of Sixes” was presented by i this company at the evening perform- ance. This farce-comedy is consid- ered the ace of American come: END OF LEAGUE OF (Continued From Page 1) postponed until the third assembly of the League ‘now approaching. The September. Assembly of the League this year must be decisive for the League’s future role. The big nations must face squarely the is- sue either of developing the leagpe or else merely relegate it to the ranks ? bureauaratic, - ~ technical. ‘body. talling, it is declared no longer is possible, especially as the smaller na- |- tions, who want the League to be a real, big, world-wide factor, will not permit longer to have the: de- cision delayed and will not continue the heavy expense of participnt?on in and maintenance of the Leagiie un- less the latter is going to fulfill some of the hopes which the smaller na- tions 'cherished of it. Doath of the Loague ' If the big powers refuse to give it the authority to go ahead and at the same time refuse to take a definite stand as to limiting the activities of the League, the result will be the same as though the latter decision had actually been taken. The League will go down and out, In a general way, however, league out that the Washington conference fell far shorter, and the indications are that the Hague Conference will dash the last hope of readjusting the. world by means of international con- ference. They figure that the period of experiments has' passed for both the League and for other methods of international cooperation and = that the concensus of thé world will be in favor of the league. maiden 0of “side-saddle” T8 re of WHEN A ‘MEREHARY SER HE WAS NUTMIN' Yo | ADVERTIER, \Y§ ‘' SAVE AS SANIN' He RIDE RILLION OH MOTORCYCLE NATIONS CALLED cLosE. Fair Riders Said to Be St dle Horses for the Gaited Machine. Have you seen the “pillion girl"? Not' the demure, coy and shrinking gope by, -who rode nd her: swain -on horseback, but . the rollicking, .dare- deyR: knickered gl precarigusly 2 motorcycle, bowling along the road at -a 40-mile-an-hour clip. Despite the - wide dissimilarity .in the style of riding, the name has per-{ sisted in England and the “pillion girls” fiave become 80 numerous In that country that recently the depart- jent on.thxation.and, regulation of road vebicles 8ot in solemn conclave ecide whether the.“pillion girl” is a source of danger to the general lic, the New York Sun states. 1t 18 not clear wheéther “géneral, pub- le” includes- . the .pillion girl herself, of whether the.term comprises; mere- Iy the motorists of- the opposite. sex whose eyes are unaccountably distract- ed from the road by the sight of a /pretty girl on the rear seat torcycle, flaunting ‘gracetul, legs, her halr” fly /| In gny, event, th committee reports supporters are hopeful. They p‘”"fi.;:f.z;'ff&‘;&%? s a source of dange: irl de b to' the ‘general ‘pub- e oplniod that nio jeens made out ‘suficiently E " A MANS . ADVERYVSIN' WB OUGHT <o fearful crime and 'imé hideous and grotesqu istence in any form umphantly from the ‘Wwhich, thanks to of. today, perched the extra ;enf on. these , overwhelming man beings panting under the pressure .of And- how ‘inessential doing . the funda b- and reverent as we Phrases Introd of a mo- “sflk-clad n the ‘Wind. ‘amount of- evl- open book to sages, ‘junlor lexicon: has; zle eve gle pupping,’” ant.” o 0 one.can blame pupping.” Only the plert lexicographers and contains the basis for an ex- ceptionally clever production...Parts of the production last evening bor- { dered on the “silly” instead of the “humorous,” however, due largely 10 the fact that considerable of the § acting was over-done. Those who witnessed this comedy as it was pre- gented by the graduating class of the high school this spring and wit- ‘nessed it as it was presented last evening still believe that the high §l scool production is hard to beat, IDEAL BILLIARD HALL IS VISITED AGAIN AT NIGHT Police found.the back door of the Ideal Billiard ‘Hall open at an early hour this morning and after the man- ager of the place:‘was called to ‘the scene it was:found that $16 in mon- ey and a quantity’of cigars ‘and cigarettes had been t. "This is the second visit to this'place in the past few weeks, ¥ (Cont:nued from Page Three) Torval Mathisen, board of Jens Flom . Broge, care of Marshall Hawb; »%:uphlng Fossum, care ot Mrs, Lorentz ra. John Thompson, board of Drury chl Nora Nyhus, care of Mrs. Lorentz i Mrs. Geo. Geror, care of baby Solven ;(hyxlclnns Hospital, care of Mrs. Jello inn, State Sanatorium, board and treat le Bakke, liv. for pdupers illlams Brothers, burial of Tugene Faucher . llott, medical attention to J. J. Schneld .. Dr, L. L. El Di f Mrs. Crumby r, J. E. Corrigan, care Bemidji Lbr. & Fuel Co, 60 lbs. lime to Bemiaji Lbr. & Fuel Co,'Ibr, to farm Heltrami Elevator & Mill. Co,, feed to farm Beltraml Elevator & Miliing "Co., feed to farm Edward Paulson, exp. on Jiner W. Johnson, care of pauper s Ditches—Con ¢ 1. B. Paddock, nsst. engr. J. D. No. 24 ! Irvin Moll, rodman, J. D. No. 24 Revenue—Ct Bnmhlil Lbr. & Fuel Co., lbr. for Jall Bemidji Lbr, & Fuel Co., lbr. for Jail Bemidjl Lbr, & Fuel Co, lbr for Jall Moved, seconded and carried to adjourn until Tuesday, August 1st, 1922, at 10 o'clock a m. po EDWARD PAULSON, . "Chalrman of Board: Attest: o A.. D, JOHNSON, County * Auditor. Your motor will develop.new power and gpeed with Vimamite, the perfect gasoline, in the tank. Use Vimamite—there’s pep in every drop-. . | e " At Northw‘eqtem 0il Company | And submit your an e ek ot S G OUR DEBT TO. THE CAVE MAN Tribute to Him by William James One’ of Most Eloguent Pas- ; s iy Literatire. One_of the most eloquent passages in. American literature James' tribute fo the cave man, 8ay8 the Detroit News, . He. wro of our bone ‘and flesh of our flesh, are these half-prutish prehistoric brothers. 2257 ~..'| Girdied about withi:the immense dark- Tegs of this mysterious, universe even a3 we are, they were born, and dled, suffered and.sti led. -Given over to! Vbtilii?fiontégt Slips- with the campus-vocal seriously. Junior, lexicographers, Yale-Princeton term, aged pbout twelve yea is William ? 5 call’ ‘spooning.’” A ryle that \ylll be. groping among these “Bone there|is only one topl pupping” and, its suc: “RDoNNinE.”’ - Feema s BUY YOUR SACK OF PILLSBURY’S FLOUR TODAY weight guessing contest . PRI at All Gracers See the large sack of Hoirr on display in i the Daily Pioner window, then | how mgci: it weighs, It's-full of good flour. . i PR W W BIENESS AT MORM ADVERNSE T FER. SALE the blackest ignorance,. preyed upon by stendfastly serving. ithe - profoundest of/ideals in their fixed faith that ex- non-existence, they éver rescued tri- imminent destruction the torch of life distinctions when ,we It God must be the small surplus-of the individual's merit, swamped as it is in the vast.ocean of. the common merit of manjgnd dumbly and undauntingly fundamental duty and Hy- ing the Terofc life. We grow humble prodigious spectacle”. HAVE SLANG ALL THEIR OWN , by College Stu- dents Keep Modern Lexicogra- phers on the Jump. c¢on, of youth,” that lexicon was an ecome. more ol plicated, if not brighter. It.ls a puz- to college pxeild President Marion, Leroy “Burton of the University of Michigan remarked. the. other. day, “is a phase of college life of whidh I -am ignor- t for heing stumped by “snuggle only. If thiey take thélr Guties very sly. “ ‘Necking,"" rites one ot the youngest ‘and most’serious of ‘the old, vhich’- has . displdced’ ‘petting’'— tion ,of what our grandsires used to to remember that, while there are many ‘terms In ‘the campus lexicons, to the FOLKS WHO NEVER GWE DS AN WEM GIY ALL SYEAMED P & WE IMSS AR NYEM - WHICH SHRWRE L\EESTED w etz sion, plunged in e delusions yet 18 better than Jaws of ever-| yets. show now l‘lghtn the, < after - | ghow and straining | cent that vital want. in the eyes of contemplate the Star. When Sir, E, Bilwer Lytton penned hig inspiring line on' “the bright lexi- But. lately the ‘Snug- | a college presl- ngest and most bulary; and they ‘g a Harvard- about " six years, re—as a descrip- helpful.to, elders complexities is c. For “snuggle cessors, 1ook up guess Because of the increased use of re-|, .- s made milk, manufactured from .pow- heim.of Wanke, who came to Bemid- dered or condensed milk and swest- cream butter, it has become necessary for chemists to devise some test that 'will indicate its presence in milk; prod- or. products; € by this test: when Popular Mechnm‘csyuacaxme. Y Natare Gave Youa g If you it,give nature & TUESDAY: EVENING, JULY 28,, 1922 e Misses Amanda Whitely of Oklee Clara Strand of Trail, and Marie Sol- Detecting Remade Milk. ji Saturday t otake teachers’ exami- nations yesterday and today returned on the late- train. this.aftermoon for their homes. ¥ & Henne If the curd from remade’ milk 28 dissolved in sodium hydroxide, it s & characterfstic. ‘yell standing, while natural produ g only a_ small | percentiige of ‘remade wilk, do not this color. ‘As' little as-10. per of remade mill ber. detected 1y made,—~ much alike,” ad g ther, indicating. his' twin sons, “ b'hung if T haint got'a notion. to ¢: their initials. on. thelr (shells,’ or .do, something. that-a-way, I tuthter from which."—Kansas-~ City 0's I can tell It stays - crispy in !hi’z moisture-proof container, . to restore it with W ONE OF T PAMLY DIED, WouLD NOU PRINT STH' OB\TUARN ON A ©iLL BOARD, ORIN A umm.wfimi THEN WHM Dont 18 ADVERTSE - W T NENSPARERD | GHIPPED the same day 3 rossiod, A" < lend of carefully selected, i offees (the richest, most- able) roasted, steel cut and Full flavored, smooth, satisfying" and refreshing— whether you brew it in hard or soft water, it retains its uniformly delicious fln'vox" and wonderful aroma, N “Your coffee taste will tell you.” 5 . In one and three-potind containers | At Your Grocers oo | Free. Twin City Barber Col Ave. li UK XA X Come in and look at this tire ‘and let us tell you more - ‘about it | : “H” Tread 30 x 3%. ! CHIPPEWA TRADING CO. . Red Lake - - s B - We R"ec’b}hmenif Hartford Tires and Tube e S been included. - . FYHE sum of $10.90 never - 4 boughtso much tire value - a8 it does today in the Hartford A value that isn’t just in the price, but greater than ever before, b_ecause of-the price. ~ S

Other pages from this issue: