Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 27, 1914, Page 2

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The Bemldu Dafly Pionieer TEE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. 0O Publishers and Propristors Telaphons 31 e R S e Entered at the post office at Bemidj! Minn, as second-class matter under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Pul\llhflfl ‘every aft{ernoon except: Blmdfl)' No pttention patd to anonymous con- tributions. Dame ,must be ¥nown to the editor, but not aecesar- ily for ;publication. Communications for the Weekly Plo- veer should reach this office not fater than Tuesday of each week to Insure publication in the current issue /.. Subscription Rates Ome. month by carrier . (x{:\a year ba‘wrie: P iree . months, postay 2t 8ix “months, po.use One year, postage pal The Weekly Ploneer Eight pages, contal & summary of the news of the week. nsunumafl every‘ Thursday and sent postage paid to any nddrsls for $1.60 In ndvn..u, . 40 00 i | 400 IS PAPER RiPREJENTED FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENSRAL OFFICES ¥ YORK AND CHICAGC e oRninEIRAL CITiE You have until nine o’clock this evening to regisfer. Another edition of the heralds the “self-inflicting” candi- date for state senator, and stitl twelve important questions remain unanswered. You’ll have to hurry, Mr. Wilson, if you wish to convince the voters that you're a real man. Sentinel Special Alfalfa Service. It is with pleasure that the Pio- ner announces that it has arranged for a special series of articles upon the subject of alfalfa raising in northern Minnesota. All over the state there is a rapidly growing in- terest in this wonderful crop. Farmers and business men want to know about alfalfa, what kind of land is best suited to its growth, how to prepare the land, the prevention of weeds, selection of seed, inocula- tion, time to seed, methods of seed- ing, care during the different sga- sons, cutting the crop, ete. Realizing this interest the editor of this paper has arranged to pub- lish a series of articles upon this im- portant subject. These articles will be prepared by an expert who knows his subject thoroughly, a man who will write plainly, briefly and to the point. Wateh for this series. The first one follows, the topic being, “Preparation of the Land for Al- falfa.” The field which is to go into al- falfa for a period of from three to ten years should have the very best preparation it is possible to give. This preparation should. begin a year or two before it is time to seed the alfalfa, Thé application of ten to fitteen loads of well rotted manure. per acre is a good practice, but not absolutely essential. If manure i: R kR KRR KRR ENE ithe voters make a decided hit. «° EDITORIAL EXPLOSIQNS- * KEX R KK KKK EK KKK Billy Hamm works Senator Works, Democratic campaign manager; then Senator Works works Hammond into saying that the breweries are not mixing into Minnesota politics. By their works ye shall know them.——- Kanabec Tinies. —— Those Democrats whe figure Bank- er 'W. E. Lee is not much of ‘a eam- paigner will have their eyes opened after the 2rd of November. Mr. Lee goes about in a quiet way, but those close to him in past campaigns say he -never passes up an opportunity to reach out and grab what comes his way.—Cambridge Independent- Press. —— 2 It is generally admitted that many men are elected to office owing to the fact that they are blessed with a strong personality and by meeting This is what the electors should look out for. They should size up a man and see what he is worth, find out what he stands for, and above all, if he is well qualified. The best advice that can be given is to vote for the man who bears the better reputation and is the best qualified. —Mankato Press. —o— One who reads a good many week- ly papers in this part of the state might be led to think that the vo- ters were going to stay at home No- vember 3. We don’t read the signs that way in this locality. The vo- ters are wide-awake. They are not talking very‘loud, but they are thinking deeply and will register those thoughts at the polls on elec- tion day. There never was a time when voters read so much and thought so deeply as they are read- ing and thinking this year.—Lake- field Standard. ON WAY TO THE FRONT. Germans, Smiling and Happy, as They: Leave for Battlefield. T8 man tucks the Tolavio Ohiwr St & eal- little chew of - “Right-Cut” away—gets the rich ‘tebacco taste and the comfort of it and feels so good 'about it that he just can’t help talking 'about it to his friends. Mellow, sappy tobacco—seasoned and sweetened just Take a very small chew—less. enough. ° M{mufln ‘the old size. It will be more nu-ly.n‘%lun c of erdinary-tabaccoy ‘Just nibible on unnlymnfind ith chew that ‘you. S Tuck it away. Then et it rest, See how.easily. and evenly the real tobaceo taste comes, how it umfiumlflwu m—: how It is a ready.chew, cut fine: to grind on it with your teeth.. you epit t00 much. The tc-e f pure, rich tobacco does not Kicorice. itioe 5o (ne selt beiacs ot oe vt Sobme s w few chews you take to hy it is Phe Real Tobacco ot e aad ahort shred .-u..:,..-_n-. -m: molsseca and One small chew takes the place of two big chews of the old kind. £ WEYMAN-BRUTON COMRANY 50 Union Square, New York. BUY FROM DEALER OR SEND 10 STAMPSTO US applied, be very surc that it is wel! rotted, therefore free from all weed | seeds. The land should then be! seeded to corn or potatoes, or it should be summer tilled If seeded to a cultivated crop, i should. be. kept: well cultivated dur-| ing that season and no weeds of any kind should be allowed to mature seed. If the land is summer tilled, the same conditions should prevail. | This cleans the land of weed seeds, liberates large quantities of available plant food, and conserves the soil| modisture. Such land should not be plowed the following spring, it may be disc- ed very lightly early in the season and then harrowed at intervals with | a heavy iron harrow in order to star(| ;™" all weed seeds possible and destrcy them before they make any growth The alfalfa seed bed should be mel- low and firm, free from weed seeds and well supplied with water to & depth of five or six feet. This in- sures the proper medium for the de- velopment of a good root system the first- year. 8. 0. 8.'for Amendment No. 3. Unless a vigorous campaign of publicity is put at the last minute for Amendment No. 3, it is lost! To put up such a campaign takes money. The treasury of the Northern Min- nesota Development association is bare. Even Secretary Mackenzie’s salary is unpaid for several months back. g Therefore an emergency call for funds to be used in urging the adop- tion of this amendment has been made, and those interested in the de- velopment of Northern Minnesota ! should respond quickly. Checks! should be sent to F. B. Myers, Biwa- bik, who is chairman of the commit- tee having this campaign in charge, | says the Duluth Herald. Amendment No. 3 is by far the most important-in the list to North- ern Minnesota. It authorizes the set» ting aside of a revolving fund to be nsed in making firebreaks and build- ing roads through and around state lands. - It will be the first step to- ward.a definite policy of stated de-| velopment ever taken by the state. --But unless an extraordinary cam- paign can be put up for it in the week that- remains before election day, it will be lost by neglect. Amendment No. 3 needs not only | votes, but money. The 8. O. 8. sign is out for Amend- | ment No. 3! © 1914, by American Press Association. An eastern railroad has built a ma- chine operated by compressed air tha loads two cars at once with steel rails or unloads them and places th: rails ready for laying at a rate of four a minute. e S0 00 it b3y { OLD-TIME COLD CURE— DRINK HOT TEA! ¢t a small pukuge of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, ‘Hamb\lrger Brust Thee,” at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink & teacup full at any time during the day or before retiring. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, 8s it opens the pores of the. akin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking up a cold. Try it the next time you suffer fmm a cold or the grip. It is in and entirely vagetable, therefors safe and harmless. RUB RHEUMATISE FROM STIFF, ACHING JOITS Rab Soreness from jbints and muscles with a small trial bottle of old St: Jacobs 01l Stop “dosing” Rheumatism. It’s pain only; not one case in Tequires internal treatment. Rub. sooth- ing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Oil” right ,on the “tender spot,” and by the time you say Jack Robinson—out comes the Theumatic pain. “St. Jacob's Oil" is a harmless rhenmatism cure which never disappoints and doesn’t burn the skin. It pain, soreness and stiffness from aching joints, muscles and bones; stops | sciatica, lumbago, backache, neuralgia. Limber upl- Get ,a 25 cent bottle of old-time,: honest "“St. Jacobs :0il” from any drug store, and in & moment yowll be free from. paigs, aches and &tiffness. Don’t suffer! Rub- rheuma- tism away. Trade 'in Foreign Countries. In foreign couniries you come into competition with the best goods from every land. An article must have merit of the highest order-to{s win esteem. In many of these coun- tries Chamberlain’s Cough- Remedy Chicago” has 236,811 females who are employed, % ;the best. is the most popular medicine in use for coughs and colds because. it ir For sale by All Dealers: SULPHUR JFOP &CZIEMA APPLIED LIKE COILD CREAM [T STOPS ITCHING S— With the first appli sulphur cream the angry itching attend ing any eczema eruption censes ani remarkable healing powers begin. phur, says a renowned dermatologi just cominon bold-sulphur, made intp a thick cream will soothe and heal th iakin when irrituted and broken ont withjei icidal, but alse antipruritic, antiseptic E Theland- remarkably. healing in all irritable and after {wo or three applications the {Eczoma leaving the skin| ciear and smooth. * He tells Fézemn sufferers to get from|Fczema right up. harmacy an ounce of bold-| v form of eruption. eletr RIGHT UP i $ ey niamed skin, the same a8 you ould any-cold croam._ For many years this soothing, heal- sulphur s ocupied a secure posic tion in the treatmeht of cutaneous af- fections by reason of ‘its parasitede- jproperty. It.is not only para- applied_ all itching ceasesund infummatory, conditions of the skin. disappear=. WWhilo niot always establishing a perma- nent cure, ‘if: nofln fails ‘1o ‘imstantly subdue . :the sire! -and heal the it is often years later before any -rnpflaon again appeara jon the skin. " small bottle of “Ely’s. Nflfif AND HEAD STOPPED UP FROM GOLD OR CATARRH, OPEN AT ONGE My Cleansi He Balm 1 Santy” Clotin "Rove! Hend and o Throat—Stops Discharges. - Dull Headache Goes. Try "fily‘- Cream Balm.” Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it—Apply a little in the: nostetis |- and instantly your clogged noge.and stopped-up air passages.of the head, will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By. morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head | throat, or catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery. now! Get the i Cream Balm’ at. any drug - store. This sweet; man balm dulolm by the lnn of the nostrils; Nasty Catarrhal |t ‘:‘:d 2 !eellnz‘u-.;; soothing relief ‘comes im- medistely. Don’t lay. awaketo-night - strug- gling for breath, with head ltufled nostrlls closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with-its running nose, - foyl: mucous ‘dropping: into: the Aand._raw. dryness:is- dmrm— ing but fruly needless, Put your faith—just onmce —in ““Bly’s Cresim: Balm” ‘and ryour: cold 'or: catarrh. will surely disappear. Koors Bros. Co. Suaccessors to Model Manufactmmg Co. Incorporated Manufacturers and-Jobbers ’ Ice-Cream,; Bakery QGoods: Canfectionery and Fountain Swpplies - 315 Minnesota Ave. Ty F- N. W. Telaphane 125 Bemidji; Mihnesota B ] I"THE NATIONS AT WAR 15 ~nssusn N PA!T& AND.EACH/COUPON Ea¢h part is lavishly illustrated in colors and bygnpoduem of. nm pho fn:mpnvnum The_entire 5 COM! ot th from . the 1b] wie 1 7 mwm fory off theTwdr tn e: unbiased -wm/-mmd, KRR KRR R KKK KER * On&huluntmwdw‘l * issue, cash with copy. % Regular charge rate one ¥ + cent per word per jnsertion. No ¥ ¥ ad taken -for less than 10 ¥ # cents Phone 31, 0 !Iiii#’l{{lil’l’l EEEEXRKERRA KK T KRS % One-half cent per word per i ¥ | % issue, cash with copy. ¥ Regular charge Tate anci % cent per word per insertlon. No ¥ % ad taken for less than 10 % +| & cents Phone 31. * SRR SRR R R RS S RS HELP WANTED ‘WANTED—Carpenters and: laborers. Apply George Kreatz at Elks build- ing or phone 25: WANTED—Competent girl wants place to do housework. Phone 776-2. WANTED—Girl for laundry work. Apply at once. . Hotel Markham. WANTED—Serub girl. once. Hotel Markham. POSITIONS WANTED WANTED—By lady, ° position as clerk in dry goods store. Have had Apply at FOR ILJ FOR SALB 1 have the following farm machinery to exchange for live stock, one two horse corn cul- tivator, -one, one horse corn cultl- vator, one potatoe sprayer, Two farm wagons, Two one horse bug- gles, one garden drill; one, two horse Kentucky single disk harrow and other farm machinery. W. G Schroeder. FOR SALE—At new wood yard, ‘wood all lengths delivered at your door. Leave all orders at Ander- son’s Employment Office, 206 Min- nesota Ave. Phone 147. Lizzie four years experience. Address K, care of Pioneer. Bahe FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished rooms reasonable prices, also barn. Irvine Ave., or see mail carrier, A. Brose, at postoffice. FOR' RENT—2, 3 or 4 furnished rooms _for light housekeeping: 317 1-2 Minn. Ave. FOR RENT—Rooms for light house- keeping. Call 312 Minn,, up- stairs. at 103 FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. Mrs. A. E.-Henderson, 600 Bemidji Ave. FOR RENT—Four-room house, part- 1y modern. Phone 562-W. FOR RENT—House with heat and water. C. D. Lucas. FOR RENT—Seven-room house. Klein. FOR RENT—Rooms. 411 Minn. Ave. WANTED. ‘WANTED TO RENT—A small house or suite of rooms for light house- keeping. Modern and partly fur- nished preferred. Call Pioneer. A. WANTED—Light work by 18 year| old boy. Has also knowledge of bookkeeping and typewriting. Phone 197-W. WANTED—Second band household goods. M. E. Ibertson. LOST AND FOUND LOST—A large Rhinestone hair pin. Owner will be grateful if the find- er will return it. Please leave at Pioneer office. FOUND—Overcoat. Owner may have same! by calling' at Dicaire’s store, proving property and paying for this ad. Mrs. Daryle R. Heekman of Somer+ set, Pa., has been admitted to’prae- tice before the Pennsylvania supreme court. MONEY" TO LOAN ON CITY PROPERTY AND FARMS AT REASONABLE RATES C. C CROSS Miles Biock: The Markets Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth;- Oct. . 26.—Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, $1:16% ;. No. 1 Northern, $1.15%; No. 2 Northern, $1.12%. Flax—On track and to ar- rive, $1.31%. ‘ South St. Paul Live Stock. South St.. Paul, Oct. 26.—Cattle— Steers, $5.00@8.75; cows and heifers, $4.60@7.25; calves, $4.00@9.50; stock- ers and feeders, $4.75@6.75. Hogs— $6.85@7.10: @7.00; wethers, $4.00@5.25; $2.50@4.50. Chicago Grain and:Provisions, Chicago, ‘Oct. 26—Wheat—Déc;; 31. 16%;: May, $1.21%, @69%c; May, T1%¢. ewes, Odts—Déo., | @50%c; May, 53%c. Pork—Jan; $19- ‘May, $19.40. Butter—Creamerfes, Pggs—21@22c. Poultry— fowls, 10@11c. Grain. ‘Minneapelis, Oct. 26—Wheat—Dag $112%; May, $1.18%. Cash close track: Chicago, Oct. 26.—Cattlé- ¢-—Besves, ] 36.15@10.80; steers; $6.75@8.70; stoek: Miller, Prop. FOR SALE—Rubber stampe. Pioneer will procure any klnd o( rubber stamp for you om short no- tice. FOR SALE—Almost new Oliver type- writer. Inquire at Batchelder’s store. FOR SALE—One Fischer piano. A-1 condition, $200. Phone 404. Pogue's Livery Dmn LINE - Phone 164-2 DRAY AND TRANSFER z Safe and Piano Movi Res. Phone 58 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12, Office in Winter. Block DR. J. T. TUOMY, DENTIST Gibbons Block Tel. 230 North of Markham Hotel LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TQW CE, Miles Block Phone 560 D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O’Leary-Bowser Building. PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. -~ PHYSICIAN AND SuRGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR: L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank Bemidji, Minn. DR. A. E. HENDERSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank Bemidji, Min. % Office Phone 36 Res. Phone 72 FOR SALE—Six horses. Meclver’s livery. Inquire FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—120 acres farm land about 500 cords wood halt hay land on good stream one mile from a town terms liberal price 12 1-2 pr. acre. W. G. Schroeder. MISOELIANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op portunities for business to classl- fled advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Farg: Daily and Sunday Courier-New: the only seven-day paper in tht state and the paper which carrie: the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courfer-News covery North Dakota like a blank et; rekching all parts of ‘the statc the day of publicatlon; it is the paper to use Iin order to get re: sults; rates one cent per word firs Insertion,: onehalf cént per worc sueceeding: insertions; fifty cents periHine per month. Address th. Courter-News,. Fargo, N. D. “OR-SBABE-—Typewriter ribbous fo every ‘make of typewriter on th« market at 50 cents and 76 cents each, Every ribbon 'sold for 76 eofits! guarantésd Phone order promptly f111ed. MalY orders give the same caiefiub attention as wher you''appear ‘tn ‘perden. Polme 31 Sheep—Lambs, $4.00@ [ The'Bemidjl 'Ptoseer Otfice Suppiv Store. Among the 15,000 names of women whoyare: willing to join the Women's ‘Emergeney corps in England are over 100 interpreters, 200 expert horse- ‘'women, 150 expert cyclists and any number of women ready to drive om- nibusses or do farm work. Money to Loan on'Reéal Estate * John F. Gibbons Telephone 269 Bemidji, Minn. We want to séll's few Work Har- nesses' Cheap to advertise them. Call In 'and‘see them. Ziegler's Second Hand Store THE CASE FUEL AND FEED STORE will be open for business Oct. 19 at Falls & Cameron’s- old store. Will handle Wood, Flour, Feed and Hay. A.J. HOLDEN; Proy.. Phone 228:W Com-Dec,, 69% |- mmm WELUING & MACHINE CO. Oxy-Acetylen Vlcldlnl and-machine-work: Minn. No. 1 Hard, $1.15%; No. 1| _Novtbvm, smzs«@l 14% No 2:Nortw: DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Block DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. Practice Limited EAR NOSE Glasses Fitted Office Gibbons Bldg., North Markham Hotel. Telepione 106.” EYE THROAT DR. F. J. DARRAGH OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Specialist of Chronic Diseases Free: Consultation 208% 3rd St., over Blooston Store, Day and Night €alls Answered. DR. L. J. PERRAULT, €3 S AL 9 s¢E Expert on all foot troubles: Cornn ¥ removed without pain. Ingrowing nails - and bunions - scientifically: treated. Price 50c a corn. calls made. ‘Phone 499-J. aver Rex Theatre. E. M. SATHRE Abstracter O'Leary-Bowser Bldg. Bemidji, Minn. e————— B RS SRR R R R R R R RAILROAD TIME CALDS * (R R SRR R MPLS., RED LAKT & MAN. ? North Bound Arrive: { North Bound Léaves 162 East Bound Leaves 163 ‘West Bound Leoaves 186 Cast Bound Leaves 7 West Bound Leaves GREAT NGRTHE: West Bound Leaves 4 Eost Bound Leuv West _Bound 'Leaves. 6 East B daily, except , 1 1m'imlnsund.y to 6 p m. to & n und wly Spnday, readifig’ resm: Pioneer wants—oa< word cash. Sall cent a Huffman & O’Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING H N. McKEE, Funeral Director Phone 178-2; 3 or 4 STOVE WOO0D FOR SALE BUNDLE WOOD, 12—20 in. long Private», Office)

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