Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 10, 1914, Page 2

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The Bemidj THER _BEMIDJIX Publishers and of Congress of March.d, 1879, Published every afternoon except Sunday’ aaily Pioneer. ¥y name the- edl(of. but not luullu- \Iy tnr publication. Communications for the Weekly Plo- loer lhollld reach lhl: ufif‘e nn'.l later of Wi to insure. Dub“et!flm rn the :&Sronl % Sul One: month by carrier. One year by urrler F Three months, postage 8ix months, postage | One year, postage pal The: Weekly m Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday 'and sent postage paid to any nddrol! lor 't 50 in adva..ce., HiSr HD\PER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO ALANCHFES IN ALL THF PPINCIPAL CITIES A. G. Wedge of Bemidji, treasurer of the State Fair agsociation, was yesterday named by Govenor A. O. Eberhart as a member of the Min- nesota-Panama-Pacific fair commis- sion. The commission now consists of nine members, and two more will be appointed soon. One month ago the Daily Pioneer discontinued publishing the series of stories concerning congress, and writ- ten by Congressman Clyde Tavenner, the Illinois representative, but so numerous have been the requests that the articles again be printed regul- arly the Pioneer has arranged to do s0. Customs collections in the Minne- sota district during September de- creased $98,626.93, as compared with the collections made in the Minne- sota district September, 1913. Much of the decrease is due to the natural falling off of European imports, but a respectable percentage is due to the fact that much iess wheat and other grains were brought in from Canada this last September than in the September of 1913, . Amendments in Danger. There are several good and more bad amendments among the eleven to be submitted to the voters of Min- nesota at the November election. The chances are that good and bad will g0 down together in the state of un- certainty which prevails. The av- erage voter will take the benefit of the doubt and if he marks in any way an amendment of which he is not sure it will be -a- mark-of-disap- proval. Experience shows that any attempt to change the constitution must be positively good and posi- tively certain in order to secure rati- fication. The average voter may be supposed to know that the proposed amend- ment providing for state reforestra- tion is a good one, and the amend- ment limiting any county to seven senators, regardless of its popula- tion, is a bad one, and he may be de- pended upon to vote accordingly, says the St. Paul Dispatch. But of the remaining nine amendments how many voters, what proportion of the voters, intelligent or not, posted or not, can recall their purpose and. pass upon their value? It is a safe assertion that not one voter in ten is familiar with the sub- ject matter dealt with in these pro- posed -amendments. Not one voter in a hundred knows what all of the eleven are about, or will know when he: enters the voting booth. How ir- rational it is, then, to expect their ratification. on the ground of public knowledge and demand. Something is lacking in the system of submitting amendments. Better means should be employed to ac- quaint the voting public with the purpose of proposed amendments, so that those that are necessary and de- sirable may be supported and those that are vicious may be condemned by public opinion. Some states limit the number of amendments that may be submitted at any one election; Minnesota submits eleven at one election, but it need not marvel if all eleven fail of ratification chiefly because the people prefer to reject wherever they are in doubt. KR E R KX KK KKK K % EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * LR R R R R R R R Henry Wolfer, warden of the state prison, will retire from that position October 10. He has acquired a na- tion-wide reputation for sincerity and-ability, and can retire with the . knowledge that not a flaw can be found: in his' recordi—Princeton Union. —— Corn-and hogs, cows and aifalfa— there is the combination that is go- ing to make Minnesota farmers the wealthiest- farmers of the world. It None at all. Judge George L. Bunn - 2 > di i3 ahla:. consgientions; without | = Instan R.lnve- Swollen, Inflame. be and. witho Throat-—You.Br. fear. He.should be kept where his M1~ Headache Goes— apility, integrity. ~ amd experience Mblfihm Stops.. 0 ceded legal ability make him an ideal Tespeet: For the former vastly superior fo the latter.—Little Falls Transeript. . = —— His work on the supreme bench is of .the. best. No one. complains, ‘What reason is, there for: a change? make his services valuable to. the state. In his personal relations Judge Bunn is of the highest type of character, unassuming, kind and gen- erous. These traits with his con- Try “Ely’s Créam Balm.” Get a small bottle anyivay, just to Ty it—Apply a Jittle .in the. uostrils. “and“instantly your cloggzed nose and stopped-up air passages of the head| will open; you will breathe freely: duliness. and-headache dispppear.: By morning! the. catarch, cold-in-head cattarhal sore throat will he gone. Bgd: such ‘misery .now.! - Get:the _small bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” ‘ab any’ drug store. This sweet. fra- IM nmm ing: Catmkqt'tmw-.w ning nose, fonl WycQus % the throat,” tnfl 'raw supreme. court justice.—Moose Lake Gazette. 3 " and your or .catarrh will umly disappear. COLD STORAGE WITHOUT ICE. Keaping In Concrete Caves Preserves Fruit From Rotting. Fruit can be kept in cold storage without the:use of ice, writes Harlan W. Smith in the Country Gentleman. L. Kooes Brok . In a speclally constructed concrete. Successors.to. ".’::t;!t next door to" W nr‘s T storage cave, built two years.ago by M d I M i c o the Kansas Agricultural college, fruit ° e anu actu"flg o. was kept in such perfect condition Incorporated. through two winters of trial that it Manufacturers andJobbars. 7 Wwas unnecessary to open the packages. |_°e cream’ “KGYIQMQ and regrade before selling in the |- spring. Practically no loss was in- curred by totting. The average varia- tion In this concrete storage cave was no greater than is common in iced storage houses—seldom more than one or two degrees a week. The cave is-so built that an even tem- perature 1s maintained inside even though ventilated with outside air of a varying temperature. An eight inch tile is 1aid below ground and comes to the surface three rods from the cave. This pipe runs in under the floor and connects with four inch tiles which distribute the fresh air equally through- out the stored fruit from four points. The air coming through this ventilator 1s warmed in winter and cooled in sum- mer. Three ten inch tiles in the top of the cave complete the air current and provide a draft. Inside the cave is twenty-four feet long, twelve feet six inches wide and seven feet high. One thousand boxes of apples can easily be stored In it The walls are. of concrete, made of four parts sand, four parts crushed stone and one part cement. The floor, which rests upon a shelf of rock, is three inches thick and is made of four parts sand to one of cement. A concrete slab, made In the same proportions as the walls, but re-en- forced with twist bars, five-eighths of an inch square. spaced four and one- half inches in the center and one-half Inch from the bottom of the slab, forms the top. Such a storage house will cost from $250 to $300 not including the ex- 3 cavating, according to D. E. Lewls of the Kansas college, who had the cave built and conducted a two yeur test with-it. . During the picking season, Mr. Lewis says, ‘when the nights are cold and frosty, n low temperature may be ob- tained in the cave by opening the door latein the evening and closing it early in the morning. A temperature of from 40 to 50 degrees is low enough at the start. Little trouble in obtaining low: temperatures ‘will be experienced after the first month. About that time the elght inch ventilator may be partly closed. A temperature as near 33 de- grees as possible should be maintained during winter and spring. Confectionery and Fountain-Suppies 315, Minnesota. Ave. N. W. Telephone 125 Bemidji, Minnesota - Job, or rwil-Tentsa; ahop, Hormaa, | - Ligber, :Bemidii, Minne . door. w m at Ander- san'A. Employmant. Qffice. 205.Mine _Desota. Ave. Phone 147. Lizzle Miller, Prop, fiin SALBE—Pure -bred Mlll“‘n\lwh‘ ; cheap, at 123 Mississippi Ave. South. WANTED—Girl { nernl house- 2 29°10th-8t. Phone 670-W- FOR 'RENT-=Five-room _house, - far- - Bisheth atable:roomd for \fourhor- aes, fourchlocks:from: €ity hall: In) qQuire:at:Pioneer, W: FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. “Mrs. A. E."Henderson, 600 Bemfdji Ave. u‘é"nfi-fic’&u‘ % ND’SUBGEON . Over_Firgt Natjunal Bank . Bemidy), Ming,_ ¥ . K. EEDRRSOHN Over:Fimd Natlanal.:Beg Romid i, Nima. Ofies Phonai 26« - -Jban. Rhome:98: ) . SMITH, PHYSICIAN, AND, SURGEQN . Office_Security Pank, Blogk, ould, like * or 4 turnished rooms for light housekeeping on ground flogr. Ad-) dress E. F. Milette, clo Pioneer. WANTEB—To: hear from .owner .of/| good farm for sale. Send cash price and degcription, D. F. Bush, Mipneapolis, Minn, WANTED—Second-baud household goods.. M, E. Fheriaon. WANTED-—Plain sewing. midji; Ave. STRA¥ED—Team: of horses; rean -horae, one:blagk mage, | Chas..Barclay’s place;at:Boot Leg. , lake. Finder._please notify John Ml.rln, Bemidij, ulm FOR™ " and harness. 1.-P. -Batchelder. BEMIDJI AT THE ‘DVDRT’ISIRS—TIC great siate of i Nozth: Daliotaroffars: uniimited .op ©-pertunities for:business.so-alnesl: 1) Bemidji Pionger Mfiu SUPPLY STORE BINEB ¢ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.c Dl"! apd_Bu ler-New BdAY Conrlex:-News, 3 S— nly seven:day mr n &ler: 808, .Be- : Th EYE . -EAR. NOSB TURGAS covers North Dakota Iike & bisnk- e Noss o -et; reaching all parts of the state.o%ice Giphops the day of publication; it is. the paper to use In’ order to get re- sults; rates 6ne c-nt per word frs | Insertion, que-hilt cent per word. * “succeeding insertions; "fifty cents | per line per molnh Aldn— zln emm.r-Nm. !?\‘(u. NI'D. one - Pencil Sellers' . Attention Please! Wit You Have It When They Ask For If? It is safe to predict that-the: “NEW BE- FDJP’ will be the popular-‘‘writing-stick” in. this section.of the state within a-very- short period. You’ve often wanted that smooth. writing lead. the kind that makes you want to write - forever. Well, that’s just-the.kind you’ll find in the “NEW BEMIDJL> Everybody :sels: ’em, or.ought to. Just ask:your merchant;if he-does-not carry them in stock he'll ‘be ¥ removed “without, DQ;? m!u opils “and > treated. Price500ve Cakh.. BOAMAA calls. .. mada. -Phane ~ 404, -Qfica- over Rex Theatre. centy,guapanteed. thu. or,daq * .promptly ‘ti}led. ‘Mail ordera, glyan the game careful attaniion.as.whan you appear in -person. Pohne 31 The mmm ,Bloneer omo Suanly - Btorg. fi BOTHER ~“WITH CORN nemedies when 1 can remove your ! “qorniabaolately- withastpain?: Dr. ! T 3o Postasly; offiee: ower -Rex: Theatpe,. Austrian Bagtalion .Cut. Un. d -London,. Oct., 19,—A; Rame. dwtd\- } to the Exchange Telegraph compapy. says a messagée from Budapest an- pounces the almost complete annihila- tion of an Austrian.battsiion of Czechs Inqa fexce encaunteri-with: the:Rus- Palgns duping.the-latien's:sdxsnce on . attalion was either killed. o -munaeq, it is said. Bonded- by Nationsl-Srrety €0t New York,, O'Leary-Bowasr Bldg.. Bamidll. -Mina,,. T P S drean *’fl&mw‘m* Brackets for window shades that are adjusted horizontalty have been e T invented. Wounded American Trogper Dies, } ' Naco, Ariz., Oct. 10.—Trooper Wil #son of the Tenth United States cav- tte alry, .wounded by a'‘Mesiosn. ‘buliet | ¥° Bussinito Aerrow Big Sum: i Petrograd, Oct. 10.—The Bourse Ga- says owing tg favorable pews | “the ~seat ‘of -war -subseriptions UR attentioi 1o - spectfully called to an important point not generally known, that.a laxative. should have a tonic._element to_success- fully meot constipation. Mr. John B. Capers; of 610 Pecan St, Fort Worth, Texas, had a sig- nificant experience in th!s particular. He was afflicted with a severe case of constipation and bowel trouble. He spent & good deal of money-in trying to find & remedy. To his astonish- ment, Peruna very quickly relfeved. him .of hia bad symptoms. This ~happened a number -of- years Since then, Mr. -Capers -states that: he bas -had similar attacks of \ trouble; the promi= nent symptom. of: 4 ‘which is constipa- tion, and has .al- ways found prompt and effi- clent relief: from Peruna. Ha saya: “Up to the time I started-using your Peruna I could drink castor ol Hke water. ' It.did no good. As for salts, they-were of no use. Physics of all kinds and clasges were used, but we had to call-on the fountain-syringe for-help.” Peruna was able to cor- rect this condition, completely in Mr. Capers’ case, .and there Is every rea- son-to belleve that it was the tonic Qqualities of Peruna; added to.the laxa- tive qualities, that procured this very, desirable result. fived Acrosathesline duning: an-attack on;. . Naco,:1Senoms; 16 dead at -Forbl [ Huachues,:. Wilson -was. shotiiin the, wilk:he; inviedefor an.internal; Josp.. ok §00,000,000 rubles. B250.000,000) at & to.call'31:by telephone, and your desires will be filled while you wait. “Here’s five cents, a.new Bemidji, please” Nearly- 100,000 NEW -BEFIDJIS’’ .ane.in; Bemidiji:right this:-minute. Thesemerchants: already ‘have them- and ‘others are::getting- - them as fast as deliveries can'-be made. Their names will be added to this lis llg eI m’:elhfihthgs& nlpl";f] : s il " yau the world, and when you:buy a ;Nm HI\D';III" you-buy the bestrmclderponefl int wer The Stores That'Seu Ihem ‘Barker’s Drug and Jewelry Store Edward Netzer Drug Store: Roe & Markusen Grogery.Store e iller ronery tore: ’Fnh'anir Store: The Bemidji Pioneer Store - W. G. Schroeder F. A. I'egroth Variety Store William Mc Cuaig A. T: Carlson Variety Storé Abercrombie & Mccrea Ahucromhb& flcmdy. Bqltra [ per cent, m&lunelhm Waounded. Paris;-Oct: 10.—TPhs French-¢olone! miral’ Friederich A, ‘Breusing, retired, bhas-been -announced: here. ‘He -was well known<as. a writer on naval luh- MMW* QMIFI'X Duluth, Oct. 9.—Wheat—On track iand to arrive, No. :.hagd, $1.10; No. 1 No, 2 Norghern, $1.06. d to arrive, $1.36%. ' South-St- Paul, Oct. 9—Cal Steers, :35.00@9.005 .cows sud heierw; 345097 505 calves, $H:0@ N5 atack-|: mte.qgfln& T5@7.25, . Hiagaer Shnz—)&w i Money %0 l.fnn : - on'Reel Estate " John F. Gibbons Telephone 209 . Besidji, Minn. Bnuqr——(!relmeflu. 2814c. Eggs —19@2%. - Panltry—-spn..., _14%¢; Avoid Sedative Cough -Medicines: If you want to contribute ‘directly:§ to the occurrence. of capillary bron- chitis and pneumonia use cough-med- icines that contain codine, morphin , .3rd St. Ave. don’t pay any more to raise wheat on skimmed-over land, and the farm- ers are coming to find this out.— Browns Valley Tribune. —— When we compare a road Wwhich leads through some wild, unsatflet\ portion of the country with some of | why pneumonia never results from the things called highways that rep-|a cold when Chamberlain’s. resent the result of a combination Remedy is used. of human:wisdem-and human effort, I wide reputation for -its. cures. (It we are impelled to raise a protest against man's further. interferemce heroin and other-sedatives when you,| have a cough or cold. An expector- ant like Chamberlgin’s Cough Rem-: edy is what is needed. That cleans; out the culture beds or breeding; places for the germs of pneumonia and other germ diseases. That is Cough It has a world) contains no morphine or other seda- tive. For sale by All Dealers. Vche befcctive

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