Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 7, 1922, Page 4

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“BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY BY THE _BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING COMPANY G. l’. CARSON, Pres. J. D. WINTER, News Editor TELEPHONE 922-923 ‘Entered at the Postoffice at Bemidji, Minnesota, as - Second-class mlter,'\luxx Act .of Congress of Mareh. %, No-—attention paid to anonymous contributions. 's Dame must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publieation. Cemmunications for the Weekly Ploneer must reach this office not later thaa Tuesday of each week to insure publicatton in the current issue. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall 5 One Year.. 50 'six Months. Three Months.. +.$5.00 2.50 e 125 THE WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve pages, published every Thursday and sent postage pald to any address for, in advance, $2.00. Unless credit is given this paper, only the United Press is entitled to the use for re-publication of all pews dispatches credited to it, or eotherwise credited, and also the local news published herein. OFPICIAL COUNTY AND CITY FROCEEDINGS m FRENCH SAY MON DOO The Paris Temps is all upset because of the passage of the Fordney-McCumber tar- iff law and predicts it will restrict the sale of French goods in America. The Republi- cans admit the soft impeachment. That was one of'the intentions of the measure. Our imports from France consist mainly of lux- uries of the highest type—satins, silks and furbelows, rouge for the lips of the city flirt and wax for the moustache of the tango dandy. If the belle of Hollywood, or the dowager of Dowagiac wants a high- toned perfume at a dollar a drop, she dips her digit into a French flask. If old Beau Brummel wants a hair dye or. pulchritu- dinous Percy selects a wrist watch, he searches for the French label. Toilet soaps of sare odor for the delicate epidermis of the American demoiselle, must be French and her hands must be encased in French gloves which match a Poiret gown. Now, the people who can afford these luxuries are presumed to be able to pay for them, and since they will have them to the exclusion of American substitutes they should pay the duty. What is more they will pay for it, or somebody will for them, only the chances are that they will not spend so freely where the duty is added as they did when the tarrif was on a low rev- enue basis. The' little economy thus en- couraged will not hurt them and it will 1dd to the revenues and give American products a chance to prove their worth. The Temps says, “Americans blame the reparations for holding up European re- contsruction. They are wrong. The real object lies in the protectionist measures of the kind contzained in the new American tariff and not in the just demands of Frange.” Ooh, la, la! The American tariff law had not taken effect when that state- ment was made, and the French attitude on reparations has held European recon- struction since 1919. —3 The Salvation Army and Red Cross drives are to be launched in November in this county. Both causes are most worthy and should be generously supported. To those who are not giving sabstantial sup- port to churches will have an opportunity to be liberal when these drives are made. §———§ 1t is reported that Mr. Gompers’ secre- E. H. DENU, Secy-Mzr‘ ! mg furnace, one pound at a time is ample, HOW TO REMOVE SOOT Large numbers of shingle and defective flue fires are being reported, due to ‘the increasing use of soft céal. The accumula- tions of soot on-heating surfaces reduce . the value of the fuel, and frequently clog the flues and start fires. The Federal Fuel . | Administration Board suggests the follow- -ing plan for the removal of soot in case of a large power plant boiler, four or five scoops full may be reqmred The dampers are kept open soas to. mamtam the furnace temperature and the salt is al- lowed to remain until the fumes have" en- tirely disappeared. Immediately upon charging the salt, the furnace becomes filled with dense white fumes ‘which may require as much as half an hour to entirely disappear. If the results are not secured on the first application, it should be repeated as many times as neces- sary. Once the heating surface. is thoroughly cleaned a small application every few days is usually sufficient to keep it so. Everyone using soft coal is urged by the administration to use this = remarkably simple and cheap process for getting rid of soot, cleaning and heating surfaces of boilers, thus saving large amounts of coal preventing fires from chimneys and gener- ally conserving all along the line of heating and the production of power. f—r———§ McGARRY HAS MADE GOOD It is claimed that' certain St. Paul inter- ests are out after the scalp of one P. H. McGarry of Walker and will endeavor to keep Mg. McGarry from again going to the senate. Whether this is true or not we do not know, but everyone does know that McGarry is one of the best boosters north- ern Minnesota ever had in the state legis- lature, His work as head of the Ten Thous- and Lakes association has brought hund- reds of thousands of dollarsto the people of this section and his retirement at this time would be a calamity. McGarry favor- ed the three-man highway commission and was censured for his stand, but there are many, many people who now. have the ' Same view. district are wise they will return him to the senate.—Little Falls Transcript. Eame The Bemidji school children. have. pre- pared some splendxd fire prevention post* ers. The people arg t6°be judges of the prize winners. Before you cast your vote see them all, as they are all in the race. We extend congratulations to the pupils eighty-five in number, and to the - public schools for the splendid effort put forth. §——%§ ; We heard a little fellow tell another lit- tle fellow that Bemidji schools have not enough coal to run all winter. “Well there is plenty of wood around,” replied the oth- er, Somebody is always taking the joy out of 'life. Yes and some towns have all the Tuck. ; §———3 .Joe Beckett and Dempsey may fight in London. Apparently the joke has to be a good one to be apprecmted by the British. It takes about seven mxlhon Russian Ru- bels to make a dollar. And about the same number of German marks. Pay no more. v e : Any more tie games in the world’s series tary goes by the name of Mr. Oyster. may result in heart failure for some of the What'’s in a name anyway? ! fans. All bets are declared off. The Expert Accountant. The other participants are: Frank er champion of N. Y. state; S. Chjaes The Bride—I'm in an awful mess [J. here,. mother. I simply can’t get my |&.; expense account to balance. Mother—It's quite sirgple, my dear. Deduct the items you can remember from the amount you had to begin with and call the difference sundries.—Life. AMERICAN CHESS TOURNEY 'OPENS IN NEW YORK TODAY (By United Preas) New York, Oct. 7—The Ninth An- mual American Chess tournament opened here today at the hotel Mec- Alpin and will continue nine days. The chief attraction of this tourna- ment ' is the participation in it of the young chess wizard, Samuel Rzeschewski. who for the first time will take part in a tournament where ; masters and .cHampions participate. M'nvlu]l Ppro t. champion of U. mpion of France; champion of the Manhattan Chess club; John F. Ber- Western states; Charles Jaffe, form- ry, champion of Massachussets: ~ * _ MUSIC STUDID OPENED HERE Prof. Chas. Pflock with over 20 years experience, having studied in the best conservatories, Leipzig and Frankfort, will teach VIOLIN—PIANO and ORCHESTRA - Phone 562 or 508-W, or call at the Elko Theater. champicn of the I. R. L. Progressive Chess club; M. Shapiro, champion of YOUNG MEN TAKE | “SUCCES$” ROAD A\mut‘]% . young men wnd 40 young ! POLITICAL ANNOUN ., M. Skinvik irr‘ms ofi'\‘bvhafg MENT—Insened for and by ‘O. Muunt to be paid for series: $9:60;" womea.graduates of.Dakota. Busi- | ness College, Fargo, N.- D:, have, become- bank executives. Many of them now call oh théir old schaol for employees, who, in turn, may become officers themselves. Bank-| ers prefer D.B.C. employees, see- ing how many have ‘made geod.”” | ‘The latest promotion is that of Wm. H. Dickson, newly elected cashier of McLeod State Bank. ¢ ‘Zollow the Successful’” NOW. S<ad, names of intcredted friends and get Success Magazine free. Write F L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front e, Farg-x, N. D. 0. M. SKINVIK JUDGE OF PROBATE LAd A Candidate for the office of Belh'amx County ELECTION NOV. 7, 1922 If the voters of the McGarry | Bllls'lf You Had An . Accident?’ 1 QA NATlONAl. DARY SHOW SAINT PAUL Account cAnnouncing 1923 SUPERIOR Models - Again Chevrolet Motor Company has emphasized its admitted leader- : ship as pr:‘gsc:r of the World’s Lowest Priced Quality Automobiles. RIOR models—one of which is here lllusn'atcd——repre- Tul:‘e! :1?3 i\so‘thPsEensanonal value; in modern, econoxmcel ¢fansportation’ ever established. . %UALITY has been still further mproved by m(me amsuc dcsngn and S equipment. - ; 2 Fare and. One-Third For the Round Trip Tickets on sale October " 5th-to:13th: Final Return: ECONOMY has been still further mcreased by engneermg refinements“ T = 1} Timit October 16th. --and added facilities. o s T "~ SERVICE is now offered ona flat rate bas:s by_ 10000 dealers and “Feor- further _ information. ion semce stations. i tickets or ' reservations, ‘cnll, write or phone, ‘GREAT NORTHERN-RY. PRICES remain the same in spite of added equipmeént am_i more cxpen . mve construmon, which have ‘greatly increased value. i 'Some Distinctive Features Prlces f.0: b. Flmt, Mich. Streamline. body dessn with hngh s vacuum feed and rear gasoline twnk on 3‘1]1 moldlels. dmcm type head enses. Curtains open l:I'i‘:lh".d’:'s‘Ol's :)?open models. Closed l-“xve-l?a;_z;en rTaunng - Two Passenger Roadster. 525 POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT .. (Inserted for and by Andrew models have plate glass Terns‘: t 2 rqulea!ed windows, straight side cor Four Passznger Sedanene . 850, .X::nsox: u‘;n bms o';vnf behalf/ c b e -pal Ol‘ series tires; sun visot, windshield wipér and ‘TwoPassengr Uulxw pé 6& ounf p ; dash light. The Sedanette is equipped $20.00. ‘with'auto u'unk on'rear. See (hm remarkable cars. Study the specl cations Nothmg Compares With Chevrolet _MOTOR INN GARACE F M. Gouglmour, Prop . .+~ "ANDREW JOHNSON Re-elect: him sheriff 'of Beltrami County -at the - election " November 1{-7th. He has been a conscientious of- | = 3 w:zh this car, Dodge Brothers have lltctallyérented Bt ol ks in Diimort, oF Lo o : a new type of voters on his past record as their a \ They have combined open car ruggednesswx closed e - | shefiff. 1) car protection and smartness. . e i deu' vo'te will be greatlg apprecia- | e o They have demonstrated, once for all, that a aedan X B Andrew Johnson, can be as practical and almost as mexpenawe asan ; Present Sheriff of Bel- | S open touring car. s o trami County, ., 4 | ! , ‘The body is built of hand-welded steel bwnuse steel p = ; g B : is sturdy, and will take a permanent, oven-baked iy 5 | 3 finish, eliminating forever the cost of repamtmg : (A g e & o p : The seats are uphohtared in attractive;. .genumei £ G tN rth Spanish blue leat_her, because leather will wash and rea 0 em ' wear. E Toimhere:flargtthccarsusefiflnm, ereanent. , } back and side cushions, seat frame and foat rest are quickly removable, giving sixty-four- -cubic feet of flat loading space’in the rear compartment. The 5 , manifold uses made pomble by this tjmque feature K stors - are readily imagined. ¢ 5 2 A The top and rear quarters are of non-rumble, fabric construction, conforming with the present attractive vogue. From cord tires to curtain cords, the fittings, inside and out, are distinctive and complete. - . -~ - In fact; every detail of the car emphasizes its. strik- : mg adaptability to business as well as aoual use. The priceis $1350 delivered . .0 Railway ok e Announcea flze ; RESTORATION : of ’Trains Nos: 33 and 34 |to Daily Service, -ef- [fectlve Sunday, Oct- m_m-. 1swW 3w WS OF GRE RO : my;rfl‘”n 3‘“‘"’“ Glacier Nnhonal Park i [} Under ithe direction of Pro. Gils- Vdorf 36 years experience. Fall term now opens. TWIN CITY BARBER COLLEGE "MH. lennepin Ave., Minneapolis, inn.

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