Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 29, 1922, Page 3

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+if showing the No Really Great Problem& fo. 8é wm _in the msudmuhmnx of Mode! .. When we have studied our mfiiflg towns, genéraflzitig from numbe d iy J far; when wé have taken hold with a \vlll to make such improvements as we can in our stubborn, old-established towns, a.great neéw . soclal ser be dome by - developing o “samipléd’ pry town.” This samplé town should appear to be a perfectly ordinary Industrial’ town, preferably with some new fac- tory with its employees placed where it could have land or water communi- catlon with the rest of us. It should have an agricultural base in the sur- rounding country, as any town does after a fashion. Then the problem to be worked out would be tlie éconowmic balance between local supplies, which save in transportation, and ‘such im- ' «rted,upplles as might save in other !good- kindergarten .and school {;7it to have 20 children at least, ¥ !nroperly to use two first-class teach- ers. To keep up that n\'era(e,{g%p-b v ber of children requires. abou women, since, about ten average number required. to suj one child a year. . Two -hundgedi fam- 1lles :means-about :a-thousand persol & good mumber te bage our-edleulitions upon; and 200 houses, grauyed ahout their necessary publie bulldings, form a_very pleasant little- g \ ©ne central building, econgic } beautiful, coold house many of these. All should be -grouped - conventently sbout a pleasant little, park. . - The economilc problem :to be worked out is something like this: How few persons out-of .our 400 adults-are. 8 ficient to do weork not imimediately-pro- ductive, such as cooking, teaching, preaching, keeping the -store:apd the | . B Mbrary? How much must be earied @ by those who produce: raw. materi..s or manufactured arti:les for sale, in order to suppert the whole group2 At how' little expense can heat, water, light and service be provided to -such a group?—Charlotte Perkins Gliman in The Cenun-y. 2 IDEA IS WORTH 'EMULATING Public Spirit Shown by Citizens of Michigan Village Should, Be In- % clulvl to_Othe At the next remrt and tourlst mee(‘ {ng the name. of the VllMSEi“_"fm- e should be inseribed as the -Alou 1.Adhém on the good book, Alobg ake s an_excellent park pice Montague has decided: to dm- YBut the Innovation is"the. way T illage has-gone about-it. ) .A legal .holiday -was .deciared, and almost evefy man in town hustled down to the park with shovels and rakes, drags:and.trucks,-filling in low ground along the shereé 1n~ n!tpuntil.\n for a‘big tree planting at other shiml- lar holidays in the néar fatire. And all the ladies served thelr sans and squires and sweethearts with hot: cof- fee and sandwiches to ‘kéep. them on tne job and unfatigued. It:iwas a8 urbor day de luxe, More of thém are scheduled "until = the . phrk becores something tourists will-talk about.a the way up and all the way: back 1t every town which my <be A thing of beauty :instead: ofif; street and scattér of sheds would. o in for the spirit of Montague.and for a good, healthy spell of trce planting and general cleaning . np. SInQflr Lewls would'bé in line for’a fine 3 sion of back tllb—Grupd 3::91;1- Press. Proper Care -of Hedm It you haye -a.privet hedge 18 shewing the effects of age ¥ renew it by cutting It back hard. This seems lke drastic treatment; but new wood will soon begin' to -grow, and within three. years. your hedge will-be o7 “ge as ever. You ean cut'it back r a foot of the grednd without any harm, but as soon as it be- i “ to grow agnin it-ouglit to have 4 -good dresging of well-rotted manare or a liberal npp\(catlon of pulverized _mm Jnmped on.i!s head and hlt deop- HIS mshig: H# longe@ to find the roxd to fame. t not a highway bore uuL name. . ‘re thought to glory mera must be Iever path that hé should aee; ery road to which he came Beenuu 1t seeimed:go. rough and bigh He passed alie road:to Service by. By 1o fame S0més one of the cursey 'of hat beautiful land, all the more 8o ‘that from their stealthy, sflént methods of progressit is impossiblé to say when an gttack from one of them may beé expected. An offi-:|: cer, who incaiitiously” altowed himself” to fall asigep ori tlie edge of the jungle, had coiled: jtselt tire, he silently. prepured.- m\at.hh fate. . quietly and bravely as he d. Of & fudden ‘the serpent ralsed ' its head as a rustle was heard among the gé, and In- an in: One pf“the Foublesomie 1tT¥ chicken-thistiny kpe- e§ of anlmdls: Rnéwn as the lehneu- Iy into “the ;back sof {its neck. The speemly released; the' ofticer, and a ‘terriblé fight Went on betweén' the two. CAt times ithe ! which continued filled. The Indian. plant:fs thought to e B sort of willow, probably-like the. giaco of South America—so called from the note of the bl Rug¥f#s tho lerpent-enflng kite which is said to eat freely of its leaves. But 1o one. is gulte. ¢ certain as to’the name and ap- pearance of the plant the clever ich- geumon makes use of a3 an antidote to suake : poison. Its discosegy -would v make a fortuné for thé lucky fndeér in India. : The ichueumon.jg 4. cherfshéd for its hatred 6f all snnkes #nd-also because.it. dgstr’ys Iufi bets of crocodlie egs. A “ Planters Import Monkeys. +Thousands of monkeys;~ recentjy ked ' thei harvebtsdf Jebconuts rot \the trees of the.plantation of Fred Pape, “coconut Jking,” fat Rio-.fe Ji% nglrn Brazil. A gummy substance at- tacked the'trees; and natives could not - fll‘kflb them‘ to pick i -nuts.; The monkeys: wefs. inportéd -from the interior of South America. Work- ers shooed them tp the- trees and he- gan. throwing_stones at. the ‘animals The: monkeys - grabbed ;eoconuts. ani'. veturned'the fire.- “This’ & tigos vor cleared inan. unusi l?pyt time, ard with little. éxpe sfi‘ i R R 5 .Built Nest-on Tombstdne. A storm. cock qr-lec;ed{:m ?'5 Jhest sheep manufe, dug Into the ground.ithe lap ‘of. a tombstone statue in Many Peoplé let \their privet hedges grow too tall for best effects, They look mo#t atiractive when about thres ' feet high, especlally if they arc.kepf: well trimmed so that they always | haval i o 1pg* Zhard over the . nést, which. con- a nymmemell nppelr:nce Individualism® Firsd. : In all worth-while eammunlty bnmi- ing, men and women-miuat fanction -ax]t individuals before they ein function as communittes.—L. “H.: Baffey.. Results of Jazz. “Now that.you are rich, Jehu, yout, son seems a-flend for Jazz."” “Yes.” “Think he'll ever be able to earn s own living?” -“Yes, I think he may develop ‘fnte a.pretty fair snare drommer.” | 7 ) ;-d to' Catch- up. - Wayback—The clock only registers ~ne doliar, and you waft two. “xidriver—That clock is slow, asd been driving very -fast—s Oystermouth cemet: in: Engiand, and there assembled the twigs and grass ngcessary to;provide a home In which 4d ‘her family. - At e’ time ‘a. pict was taken the bird yas stand-’ ‘lllled five £ELS which-soon }lll be ‘ i Ghosts: ‘evidently \haves errors - for the storm . Kingg els h;a one’wag.not” superstitious, O }? < Turkle Hid Hal Trhast An_ Ontario: farmer lost one of his Iittle pigs in the river. The zume day a little chick went into the river. A few deys later he ‘Saw a snapping turtle and after killing it, brought it up to his house where he opened it gud found inside a part of the chick, and the whole of the ltthw pig; except one front leg. Vegetable Leather. The Jnpanese are producing from thé inner bark of the mitsumita piant a _good grade of vegetable - leather, which s said to be abmost as tough as _the so-called French kid A |'ummn's-aFF S FROFITABLE |-of $866. After the lambs-were re- Kiig up sto fipd. ¢ es. ATEAIG 16" move K31 finger for’ fear of irgltating. the; crea- |-An Even. Bunich of Lambs, Showing ‘| .ot corn v:rere picked up and some hogs and ofher live stock turned in to clean up- the, remainder. planted with uninoculated-seed was de- daedly inferfor to the remalnder of tha field. The demonstration- this _y_ar ‘will be the third one of this kind on-the one farm. The first year only ‘the owner was made on them. . Sixteen months ago the ,.R.sp!.iblican Party. took.oyer the managem F1on | T v ¥ R Demonstration in Indiana County So Successful Last Year That An- other Is Plannéd. (Prepared by l:e‘l'nlted States Department foy beins “were attilchment’ %, with a total pn;m movéd ‘the mm Alfput 30 Hushew A Uniformity. The growth of beans on the 6 acres 160 lambs were fed on the demonstra- tion plaf; but a profit satisfactory to [ of (Prepared by n-; Lutled - Biat Devartment any large ! cents for states ave range around 6. .A Street in Kendallville, Ind., Before the 1921 price of 8 or 9 cents #nd bridge steel at 4% cents against 7°t0 8 cents. concrete, of about. $17 a cubic yard have been received in sections:where; the 1921 price was about $25. ' High Lnght : Achleven'ents Administration | Indleationg: A& That flfuh -ma AL Will Be Materially Reduéed Over . Last™ Season. feulture.) - le bids have; natuhdet bée Grading lmr eenurbigt’ at: 20, 23%gnh and 30 ceftts icuble.gass: Loy ISSONEL 4. Arkansas, and Minnggat: qu'ctlw}; as cnmpa 1 with aj, rage pt 3( £‘IE soxtlmr in whi tl. SN cated in 1921 l"rlces of relnlmclng steel In place and After Being Improved. A A few bids, for the best grade of Prices bid for the cans| the Repubhcan Debt. and Expenses Sllii!d i Liberty | ‘Bonds at Par, Unemployed at Work, Peace: Promoted, ' Budget” Estab- lished, Prosperity Revived. It found .the organization of this concern utterly demoralized as a result of eight years of riotous waste, 08s mismandgement and class leg- .islation. -There was a bonded indebt- edness of $23,997,000,000. ' Government’ bonds wgm selling at 85, cents on the “dollar. ; There were outstanding loans to foreign countries of $11,000,000,000, for which there was fjo written e dence of 'indebtedness, much less any i business. or. legal agrediment as to haw’ [ 4na‘when the: loark and interest wére ~t0.be paid.. The discount rate at Fed- “eral’ Reserye Banks was 7.5 per cent. for gilt edge loans. . Five: million wage _éarners” Were in idléress. Fatmers faced’ bankruptcy. HMard times: pre- “vailed. Busines lived from hand to ‘mauth. Everything needed readjust- nient-and reconstruction. Such, in a .broad way, were the conditions pre- vailing wher, this ldmim:trntlon took control of the country_and the present | {affairs have all combined to revive in- Republican 'Gongress Was called into special session. Today we have a President whose wise, businésslike, contructive poli- cies have won the confidence and af- fection of the American people. He has surrounded himself with a cab- inet composed of men endowed with confmon sense, especfally qualified for | the “work - of “their -departments- #nd . devoted. to.the- pronfotion of . public -welfaré,. As'%06n as the administra- tion - assymed’ tontrol - it .called into specidl’ Sessioh the Republicaii: Con- |, gress. tohgsist straightening out | | adminif@ration and ongress that were - the’ Mefl“%’sfi"ufi‘*fiflz the st . % e execu- ‘the government was $5,538,000,000. The JOHN T. ADAMS, CHAIRMAN REPUBLICAN % tunor_mm éomfln bas been reduced until it is now 45 per cent. The last year of Wilson’s admin- istration. the actual cost of running actual cost of‘rupning the government for the fiscal year just ended June 30 was $3,795,000,000. This is an an- nual saving of $1,743,000,000 which the Republican adminftration has madé in thé routine ‘expenditures of the £oy- the Republican Congreés eatly in its speeial session re-efiacteda budget law gress had passed only to have a Dem- ocratie Presidént veto it. It was easi- ly the most important piece of busi- ness legislation which has been en- acted within this generation. After its enactment it was sensibly applied by the executive offieers of the Re- publican administration. Thé work of Congress, the wise ad- ministrative policies and the introdic- tion of business methods by the de- partments in the conduct of public dividual and-corporate enterprise, %0 that today, in contrast to a year ago, |unemployment has ceased to be a factor outside of those industries in whiC€h there are strikes. Agriculture is on its feet. Business is improving each day. Industrial output is incréas- ing. Capital is going back to work in the channels of private and profitable: enterprise. It really makes some &ir- ! ferencefat the end of a’year whethed ]| the go an ad are geferally right in contrast to amg 'imment has-been.controlled by generafly wrong. licangcontrol, have.wogked: ther. | As a result of r.h‘gh" ;‘m ettt there | ogy for this record. It is a record has been within the last 16 months a marvelous transformation. | which needs no defense. The peoplé The bond- | are not going to stop the magnificent ed indebtedness has been reduced by | work so well begun. $1,014,000,000. Today every issie of | going to retreat to the conditions Liberty and Victory Bonds is_selling | which prevailed prior to March, 1321 at par or above, represenung an in. crease of $3,000,000,000 in the value ucrzuc party to power and thereby re- of government securities in 16 months. | store the evil conditions which have| A refunding commission has been cre- | been so-largely corrected in the past! ated for the purpose of getting foreign |16 months of Republican comtrol of the executive and legislativé branchés] loans on a commercial basis. The in- terest rate at Federal Reserve Banks They are fiot going to return the Dém. of the government. . Tralner Puzz] ™ :sald sthe. zealous (‘lnlaeue- s for Farm Pests. used with “sueh % the World war | are now being used gnr the extermina- florgn( {xrm m\sh xfi&“"tfllhfll Wi ‘gpecial eye ‘on the phnyer- foe. mé!nmu. on Siturday. }Smfl!} unlh-r\looll ‘.qu have been the mtvrmlnm Next day he 1greefible discovery” that Early bids fur the ‘vonstruction of. | fedéral-ald roads indicite that prices | ‘during thp présent geason Avill be] materially lower than last season, ac- cording to- reports received by the | bureau of public roads of the United | Department of Agrlf‘nlmre‘. | Kled aver the rullhlhl, irritating their fedl Mustard gas Jirlhr to tife match. . So, but- mnhmm: the nm'ml‘mg mm-r, he-ab- vin! any \\hlsky at ;our mr}y. ’ - Glock: for Air| The alr servics ofith War uepnrnmt g d@]spm i of clmk to be used on air: rbithen Claals wish ke, flnp IneAny sempeTeuresfronk \‘fi:rnghmnnm Phibve: Tt prmoreoith tHe plane doesapit: adlect toF: the: timepiesas nwhich: Ngs as wove- |- ment like j teaitelrcand| is}vound by | Ro. a,drop, Sandy,” was the reply. olunie of work, there W“T"’ however, epough t ate a lo\\ ‘level of 1: LIS, ® 1S '1 . 1'.l‘lmes. 3 )lflrd most suspiciously and gw higman very hard in the face. demdy- e wasn't -satisfiéd, as’ s £ later he burst ot with: 9Phgn svhat the deil nrnf'&nn hnur\-, 2r—Shieflield Telegraph. pnmeaa cminared w! mm e\ Veteran® Hadc Many- «mlnl(n. In Investigating the record or Bens nle’ F. Taylor ‘of Crystal fid war veteran who' \Ilm ln 1918 the ‘veterany' bureau found that Taylor, exclusive of cousins. rn-& | closely related to four per:cent (* total population of his home td 1,395 residents. 15 brothers and sisters :ug | ceiving monthly. installments ‘gt ?Boirmz of —some good results ‘fr(fll the ‘use' of “Mayr's Wondérful | Reffetly T decided «to try it on a| hropitn case “of ‘iidigestion And gas- | was interested:in:: rstiddse the patiént was relieved of | ble: and was sooh &ble to eat 08 and muny things m had not | | After: the | oves the catnrrhnl inal tract;: and allays s all ‘stomach, liver ‘and intes will eonvieé or money r it ALL BRUGG! : Z-PHON! s ) Out-efi'fm Cuotun- iy Parcel Poot ” Firal i€ Kss Work and Promit ion _of | concrete roads per square vdgre as- follows: Ohio $152, CTdlorado $2 pand Georgla - $1.38, as compared W nh | an average for the whole countp,p dur- | ing the peried 19161920 of ! .iqu:u'e yard. PASSENGER BOAT “BEMIDJI STAR” Pnuu o Exeur-n Parties. ‘For kR (eanI.ll 5294 I':nd Inot knew it.. drom- iw absolutely nee- Directory. The 1 'i The Ploneer d.fly. vurybody who oheer and all| "'dy alvo ' this, fi*fig ‘¥ie public the iy unday edule 13303 00030 ACCOMODATES 80 PEOPLE bccmed Operator State Inspected Smhl Excursion Every Sun- dey down hver to Dam— n il mnfm fimn ho.:mxumred fn Times square: frotn a sidp street shoet- Iy aften, nildiiight. . Fid Steppéd.,-or ratheflurched, his way ta. the middle of the square -muw, & hand he:car- ried & lghted reu Hantern. A poliees man watched: him: wandering; about for awhlle and jthen wept ¢¥er to him. | What's ,the: ideryof. the red lan- tern?™ inqufred the. cop, with ;hnmer— ous- twinkle.in (,,em:;heyh\ ws Y fou know, oshifer,”.hig; hlccoughed, “g'funny thing - SENE Goldksbk. left this, red lantern<im:frong o big hole up the: treet,” s m“fliufl'-u: ! 'mundln'ldllalafll ‘Fl - Lookipg So “The- doetor gavéxgome to Susie | Smith's ‘mother and “she:.was worse off than.yot are,asnidl’ now she looks just fin@M. sis g Thers ‘can be no healthy, beauti- ful resy-eheeked: twomen’ without iton. :-(iood: physicikas. havesstrong- ly emphasized the::fact that doctors should ptresc¥iba:moré of -the mewer form of-irdn—Nuxated Irop—=for ‘their nervous, rahidotwn, weak, hag- gatd-lokoing patients:, ‘When 'ithe iroh gees:from:the blood ot women the roses go:from their' chigeks, and strength .ando:wvitality from. their bodighi. This newet! formof iron, Jike: the iFon in your blood dnd like the iron in certain green vegetables, is. highl§: récommended to thousands Whe wisk : quickly. .te increase: their strength, power and endurance. 1t .is. surprising.how: many. people uffer” from ‘iron deficiency and: -do essary to-enable:your blosd to change tfood" into ‘ no: matter -héw much orfwhat you eaty your food merety pa=sew: through you- without doing you.:the proper aniount of gaod. - Yourdow't get the strength: out.of if, and.as a Conae- qwnce you bécome weik, pale, and sickly- hmkmg, just likera plant try- | in@#’to’ gPow in soil -deficient in iron. You tan tell the wohen with plen- {ty of iron in their blood—beautiful, healthy, - rosy-theeked - women, full of life, vim .and vitality. You can get Nuxated -Ivon. ftom any druggist under an absolute guarantee that it will do the same for you or your money back. CITY DRUG STORE ernment. ‘This was possible’ because’| which the previous Republican Con-|Hi biis the largest but hold the cent so our eye that you'll lose sight of the sun. pfluorahlgcmbakh( you lose sight of quafity - Don't let a istration and-,Congress that | the quhl- leavenér- real ‘econo- in the kitch- - .€R, always use ‘Cdlumet, one trial will con- ‘vince youw. The Republican pafty will go l:d!ufe | the coufitry this fall without any apol-t They are not -

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