Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 27, 1911, Page 2

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day by the Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company. @ E. CARSON. E B DENU. e p T S O e S SR I P. A. WILSON, Editor. AP SO FSET T RN il SR In the City of Bemidji the papers are delivered by carrier. Where the deliv- ery is irregular please make immediate complaint to this office. Telephone 31. Out of town subscribers will confer a favor if they will report when they do not get their papers promptly. ¥ All papers are continued until an ex- plicit order to discontinue is received, and until arrearages are !puid. Subscription Rates. One month, by carrier. One year, by carrier... . 5.20 Three months, postage paid. . 1.25 Six Months, postage paid L g,‘s)g One year, postage paid The Weekly Pioneer. Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Publishea every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for $1.50 in advance. TERED AS SECOND CLASS MAT- g]z:‘jR AT THE POSTOFFICE ATV BE- MIDJI, MINN.,, UNDER THE ACT OF MARCH 3. 1879. - _— BLAMING US FOR WHAT OTHERS DID. The current issue of the Coleraine Weekly Optic has this to say, ed- itorially: “The Bemidji Pioneer is “dead agin” Sheriff A. B. Hazen and wants Gov. Eberhart to fire him bodily. Does that sheet remember that with- in the past eleven years that “it- self” supported men who robbed Beltrami county good and plenty? that some of them left for the south and others for the west and no means were taken to bring them to justice, not even through the col- umns of that paper? that a bunch of county commissioners whom it supported were fired out of office only to be re-elected and it support- ed them? Several of those old of- fenders are under the sod and others ought to be—in Stillwater. Al Hazen was a resident of that town in those days but didn’t “belong to the gang.” If that paper proposes to climb on the throne of reform- ation it ought to change its name. Don’t mob Hazen. Give him a fair and honorable trial.” We must remind the Optic that the Pioneer of yesterday is not the Pioneer of today. The Optic must know that the editorial policy of five or six years ago, or even later, is not the same, for the very good reason that the management of the paper has changed. The Optic is right when it suspects that we are “dead agin” Hazen, but we should be “dead agin” any other county of- ficial, whom we felt as sure as we do in this case were undesirable. And, at least, believe us, dear Optic when we say that nothing under the sun would giye us greater pleas- ure than to see Sheriff Hazen have “a fair and honorable trial.” Rheumatism No More---The Great Lidney Remedy Gonquers Uric Acid T was a sufferer of inflammatory rheumatism. The last time I was stricken, I had it nine months and could do really nothing. I was crippled up in every joint of my body and after taking all kinds of medi- cine, patent and doctors, and trying every home remedy, I went back to my old favorite, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root. I used several bottles and Swamp-Root conquered that treach- erous rheumatism. Today I am as healthy as I want to be, muscular and active, and am 49 years of age. I am positive that nothing excells Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root and I would recommend same to sufferers of any disease that originates through the kidneys. I wish you would take notice of this little re- commendation and have it published, and if any person wishes to know something about Swamp-Root, if they will write me, I am always will- ing to answer. Swamp-Root did for me what doc- tors, patent medicines and home remedies could not touch. Yours very truly, EMIL 0. HERZOG, Greenville, I11. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 13th day of July A. D., 1911. SAMUEL McGOWAN, Notary Public. Letter to Dr, Kilmer & _Co.. Binghampton. N. Prove what Swamp-Root will do for you Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing- hampton, N, Y., for a sample bottle, It will convince any one. You will also receive a booklet of valuable in- formation, telling all about the kid- neys and bladder, when writing, be sure to mention the Bemidji Daily Pioneer. For sale at all drug stores. Price fifty-cents and one-dollar. RUTH WIGHTMAN Will give lessons in piano playing. Class to be organized at once. Call or Address 917 Minnesota Ave. -Phone168 P 38 7 AN f O B P S = l-l.l;l.l"n'L [ ANV AN AR L VAR & R&\FE N (T5having, for pimiples; black ‘heads, EVERYBODY SHOULD LEND A HAND X KEEP THE BACK YARD CLEAN Dirty yards cause fiies, sick- ness, death. Old tin cans hold water; wa- ter breeds mosquitoes. Rotten garbage makes bad air; bad air makes weak bodies; weak bodies make big doctors’ bills. Why do some people in China and some parts of India die off like flies when cholera’ or some other scourge cormes? The answer, in one word, is dirt. The people live in filthy homes with filthy surroundings. They know nothing of the laws of sanitation. They permit litter and garbage to lie around the premises. Thousands of them live like pigs in pens, When pestilence stalks abroad they are its easy victims. In towus where the people are wise enough to keep their streets and their private premises clean such plagues find comparatively few easy marks. Happily, most people in America are not to be compared with the #fgnorant Chinese and the low class Hindus in the matter of cleanliness, and yet there are some Americans who violate the laws of sanitation constantly. It is to show this sort of citizens the error of~thelr Wway that the nation wide campaign for cleanliness is being waged. Cleanliness of person and premises is a preventive of disease. In most towns the authorities keep the streets and other public places measur- ably clean, and in some towns there are local laws requiring people to make their back yards presentable, but a man’s home is his castle, even though it be but a hovel, and it is up REGULATION BEAT IT AND PUT SOME DECENT Photo by American Press Association BEADY FOR A CLEANUP, to the family and not to the law to | keep the interior premises in a sanitary | condition. i Recent experiments and investiga- tions have proved conclusively that |y, the commob housefly and the mosquito | are spreaders of disease. The fly f does not frequent clean houses to an | alarming extent It rejoices in filth, ! which attracts it and it fattens; oo | it. The mosquito is bred in stagnant | pools, in the old rainwater barrel that ik EXCICATY IS ETy < PERPETRATED BY WALT MCDOUGALL 'Stands at the corner of the house and the puddle that forms in the back yard- after a rain. Garbage. which befouls the alr, should. be carted away or burned and not left around the house until it be- gins to “smeli to high beaven.” Neg- lected garbage not only is a peril to the family in whose house it is found, but it ts both a peril and a nuisance to the neighbors. It iIs incumbent upon every citizen to do his part toward keeping the premises clean. Men, women and children are included in this duty. Co. operation and constant watchfulness are necessary {f a town is to be kept clean and present a neat and inviting | appearance. At this season of the | year the danger from dirt is greatest. { The good old summer time is pre- | eminently the time for cleaning up. Somebody has prepared the following good adrice, which is particularly apt just now: | 1. Take away the ashes and dirt | trom your back yard immediately. 2. Clean out you cellars.. stables and ;sheds. Whitewash your cellar walis. | tences and henhouses. 3. Burp all rubbisbh that will burn. Clean your vacant lots and alleyways. 4. Avoid mixing ashes and garbage. This is against the law. You may be fined $5 5. Refrain from throwing old paper, anana or orange skins inro the streets 6. Plant some grass and flower seeds to make your home beautiful. Every house should have a little green grass and a few trees. 7. When rou have once cleaned up. keep your yard clean all the time. RAGS ON ' * dl'.!fl ure fl\e puuic er iTy I defence of *pure morals? which in Clicag old clothes ,the Chief of Police has barred the "ju sui? w"-i'e still Permifling the olcl line vulgurifies and a’roci?ies m l)cfihing- sceneny to beaches and sel Chicago back fo the (849 ywhalever That means The Order of Old and U ing~suij is what l(e_efns us away from wafer. Other-and i and otherap:Yowns, means “simply: == : belthin culolte "or harem skirt '_y She-Muits inthe home-made bath- ve-summenr TGSOI'TS 10'(6 noTl'ce . riod of sarlorial i WHITE LIES N "1 HAVNT TAKEN A DRINK IN SEVEN YEARS | Got Right Down to Business. James Russell Lowell when ambas- sador to England contributed liberally to a London society and one day sent a deserving young American there to be assisted home. But the American was told that, though his case was em- inently deserving, the society was just then short of funds. ‘When Lowell heard this he sat down and wrote the society a terse and vig- orous letter. “Dear sirs,” he began, “for the last seven years I have contributed annual- ly 25 guineas to your organization. 1 regret to learn you were unable to as- sist the young man I recommended to You a few days ago. If you will kind- ly return to me one of my contribu- tions I will send him to America at my own expense, as 1 am convinced the cate is a most deserving one.” ‘The society did not return any of Mr. Lowell’s cash, but it found means somehow to dispatch the young man home by the next boat. The uniform success that has at- tended the use of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem- edy has made it a favorite every- where. It can always be depended upon. For Sale by Barkers Drug Store. If ancisoo | Madero rincls any diffi- /- |'!y in pu"in off that Mexican - |Government 1l ing there are four bus_y men inflle United 510125 who will take a few haurs off fo he’lp him | out:i.e Wooc]row \A/ilson.-n!eodore Rooseven, Wi ||iame.|ermings Bryan and \Vi!_liam R.Heans1. Some Americans have just discovered [I5% {that London is using g To work the Yankees . We were i long ado and thals why we mained here inthe offlce,%eheb.y Coronution Te~ s = o THE EARLY BIRD Greaf Scolt! Here's where | |get all fhe worm l wdTlfi‘ or o my life! Me. Whitewash Brush In Spain. In Spain, where the ruins of Moorish towers are seen upon the crests of many hills as the express train crawls along at the rate of fifteen or twenty miles an hour, the evidences of surviv- ing Moorish influence upon the people and customs of Andalusia make an in- teresting study. In the city of Ronda it is plain that the ideas of home build- ing wHich the Arabs brought into the Iberian peninsula remain vital today. The whitewash brush is the great lev- eler of distinction between the rich and the poor'in Spain. The exteriors of homes—great manor houses upon the haciendas, huts of mountaineers clinging to the sides of the almost perpendicular hills, handsome homes of rich merchants in the cities and humble tenements—are nearly all of | plaster., A few of them are calcl- mined in blue or brown or pink, but the majority are pure white. Ronda is a white city with a few patches of blue and pink and looks as if the|. whitewash brush had just been'ap- plied.—Louisville Courier-Journal. The' Reason. “Why is that man always grunting 80 about his business?’ “I don’t know, unless it is the force of assoeclation. . You see, he deals in pig iron,”"—Baltimore American, i s, e 4 s She Could Threaten Too. “Tickets,” said the wiry little con- ductor as he .confronted a 300 pound German woman. “Ach! 1 haf lost my ticket vhat I should come back by vonce.” - Conductor—I am sorry. madam, but you will be obliged to pay your fare again. ‘Woman—Nein, nein. I paid you this morning already. I vill nicht. A Several times the conductor returned to reason with ber, but each time was met with a more de~ided refusal than the last. Finally, losing patience, the conductor said: “Madam, if you do not pay your fare at once I shall have to stop the train and put you off.” The woman, half rising and shaking her fist at him, said: “What! Put me off, you gsay? Vhen you say dat some more by me I make you the train off. and no stop it either.” There is one medicine that every family should be provided with and especially during the summer mon- ths; viz, Chamberlain’s Colic,” Chol- ‘era and Diarrhoea Remedy. It is almost certain to be mneeded. It costs but a quarter. Can you afford to be without it? For sale by Bark- ers Drug Store. | dandruff or any-skin or scalp disease use ZEMO and ZEMO SOAP, ZEMO is guaranteed to relieve all soreness and itching. The soap is part of the treatment,—best for all toilet purposes. * . Sold by druggists everywhere and in Bemidji by the City Drug Store. READY FOR GEMENT WORK I do all kinds of Cement Work —Lay Sidewalks, Curbing, Etc. NELS LOITVED Phone 470 Issippl Ave. FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office:313 B dayllto12a.m.,1t0 6 p.m., 7 to 9 p. m- Snuday 3 to 6 p. m. Monday 7 to 9 P- m. BEATRICE MILLS: Librarian. T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ory Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue I { Have you been to see him? He operates the George McTaggart Buffett on Bel- trami Ave. opposite the City Drug Store. He is always pleased to meet old acquaintances locally, as well as among the travel- ing public. | JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND MAN® Fire=- Life- INSUR ANCE-==Acident 1 . REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Go to Him for Farm Loans Office--Odd Fellows Building NORTHERNAUTOMOBILE CO. REPAIRING, RENTING AND STORAGE Fifteen years experience. Specialist on gasoline eugines and automobile engineering. Bring your work to us and save the expense of experimenting. Our shop is equipped with modern machinery. Our responsibility is back of our work.’ WE SELL, BUY, LEASE, OR MANAGE PROP sell for years; we can find at your disposal. 407 Minn. Ave. How about that real estate you have been trying to thorough knowledge of realty values. Perhaps you have been looking for a farm. city realty, a summer home, lake shore property. If you wish to buy property of any kind, tell us what you want and where you want it, we will find it for you and buy it at a price that will please you. F. M. MALZAHN ERTY We have a Our services are a purchaser. Phone 420 If you want to build a ray OE Yyour )ilol'tgage on us. No Agents President, J. P. Labr Treasurer, W. L. Brooks Offices, Rooms 5 and 6, O’Leary.BOwser Block ‘Beltrami County Savings and Building Association able to take it up on or before maturity. Call No Commission house, buy a home, or on easy terms, and be No.Delay Vice President, K. K. Roe Secretary, W. C. Klein Midsummer Soda Opening Netzer’s Wednesday, Pharmacy June 28th All the Cooling Drinks Fancy Specialties Fresh Fruit Sundaes Fancy Sherbet Quality Ice Cream - Masten’s Sparkling Soda Orchestra Ladies’ and Gents' Suits to Order. Freuii' |Matt Thome's| * -

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