Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 2, 1914, Page 2

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TEE BEMIDIT — PIONEER PUB. CO _ Telophens 31 Entered at the post office at Bemidji Minn., as second: Act of. Congress -of: March ""“:,'.“""" Pulilished every afternoon exeept Bunday No:attention .paid. to:.anonymous con- : rivations: | Welra ommen TIoUs, OB i Known ot the &ditor, bt Kot mesessars ily_for publication. Communications’ for the Weekly Plo- neer should reach this offide not later than Tuesday of each week to Insure publication in the current-issue One month by carrier. One; year by carrier . Three months, postage 3ix months, postage dpJ.f One year, postage pai The: Weskiy: Plonser Dight pages, containing & summary of the Bews of (ne weel Fublised every ursday and sent postage o an ddress for-$1.50 in adva.. e > 1S PAFER REFRL;ENTED EOR FOREIGR ADVERTISING BY THE GEMERAL OFFICES ¢ NEW YORK AND‘'CHICAGO LEANTMES IN R L T ROINCIOAL e Appropriations aggregating $104,- 124,512 to carry the army through the coming year are. proposed in es- timates which the war .department has just completed for submission to congress. This is an increase of $3,- 105,300 over the total carried by the army bill for the current year, al- though reductions are made in the allowances for many branches of the service. One hundred and twelve dead and 16 injured is the hunting toll in seventeen states and Ontario, Can., for the season which ended Monday, as compared with 135 dead and 125 injured a year ago. Last year’s sta- tistics were gathered from thirty-two states. Accidental discharge of gung claimed 35 victims; 24 men were shot for game; dragged guns accounted for 12, and the remainder slipped and fell, were cleaning guns, Latest Aspirant for Head of Mexican Government. Photo by American Press Assoclation. Advices received at the state”de- partment at Washington from Aguas Calientes said General Pablo Gon- zalez, now at Pachuca with a force of 8,000 men, had declared himself provisional president of Mexico. Gonzalez, who was one of the fore- most leaders of the Constitutionalist army in the campaign against Huerta, had been supposed to be unswerving- ly loyal to Carranza. BAN ON DRINKS TO DANCERS Chicago Clubwomen Declare War on Present Conditions. Chicago, Dec. .—Seventy club- women appealed to a council subcom- mittee to refuse dance permits to cafes and restaurants that serve drinks to their dancers, and inti- mated that they would work at the polls next spring to defeat aldermen or were drowned, eight meeting death in the last named manner. who ~support a proposed ordinance legalizing cafe dancing. Automobile licenses for the next three years are now being issued by Julius Schmahl, secretary of state. Many auto owners request that they be provided with the same numbers formerly had and as far as. possible the wishes are fulfilled. No. 13 went to Dr. George W. Granger, of Rochester, who was born on the thirteenth, married on the thirteenth and his father and mo- ther were married on the thirteenth. 01d licenses on cars after January 1 will make the owner liable to prose- cution. During the past two years there have been 1,284 convictions for vio- lations of the Minnesota game laws, and fines to the amount of $17,559 have been collected. The game laws of the state are a big help in provid- ing ample protection for 'big game but such slaughters as the onc which has just been'brought to a close will scon wipe the deer, and what few remaining moose there are, out of ex- istence. The legislature should take action at its next session and either provide for a closed season of two or three years or cut the open season to just one-half its present length. The open season for the shooting of game birds should also be shortened considerable. KKK K KKKK KKK * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS -* KEXRKKK KK KKK KK Most legislatures need a silencer more than a speaker.—Cambridge North Star. —— The situation in Mexico at presant time is as follows: d—!!.... (Subject to change without notice.)—Ortonville Journal. —o— 3 A newspaper which pleases all and displeases none is not worth the good white paper it ‘is printed on.—Fair- " mont Sentinel. — The automobile has been held re- sponsible for the high. cost.of living, the falling off. in attendance at church and several other things:but has any- one yet brought indictment against it for the.disappearance of the red fire and the blaring bands and .the torchlight processions from polities? —Red Wing-Republican. —— The twin city papers intimate that Mr. Hammond proposes to be the whole thing in the matter of making a lot of appointments which will constitute about the first important duties after taking the oath of office. There should be but one boss and it is belieyed Hammond is big enough tor that job, too.—Blue Earth Post. —— It is useless for the editor.of this paper to deny that up to the hour of going to press he has not received sufficient encouragement to warrant the announcement of his candidacy for a position under the lncoming state administration. How _true, alas, how true! How sadly true it is that republics are ungrateful.— Fairmont Sentinel. the " Over 800 chorus girls are in the cast of “Wars of the World,” a New York Hippidrome spectacle. ‘Women in Norway are now repre- sented in every profession except the priesthood and army. JUIT- MEAT W £ KIDNEYS BOTHER Take a glass of Salts before breakfast- if your Back hurts or Eladder is troubling you. No'man or-woman who eats meat regu- larly can make a mistake by flushing the Kidneys occasionally, says a well-known nutlwntv Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they becomeé over- worked. from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from lie blood, then we get sick. Nearly all heumatism, headaches, liver trouble, vousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and tinary disorders come from sluggish idneys. ‘I i moment you feel a dull ache in the idneys or your back hurts or if the ine. is -cloudy, offensive, full of sedi- wnt, irregular of passage or attended by senation of sealding, stop eating meat wd get about four ounces of Jad iSalts from any -pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the' acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with:lithia, and has' been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to meutralize the acids- in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad ‘Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; . makes a- delightful - effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys ‘clean and active:and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications, EASY T0 DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR Try this!..:Mix.Sage Tea and Sulphu: and brush it through. your hair, taking one ‘strand at a time. When you darken your hair with Sag: Tea and Sulphur, -no- one ‘can tell, be cause it’s' dome so maturally, so evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at home is mussy and troublesome. For 50.cent: you can buy at any drug store the ready- to:use tonic called “Wyeth's Sage anc Sulphur = Hair - Remedy.” You - just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and-draw thie through your hair, taking ‘onesmall-strand-at a time. By morn- ingyall ;gray: hair disappears, and, after another .iapplication .or - two, - your : hair becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also discover dan- druff is gone and hair hasstopped falling. Gray, faded. hair, though no disgrace, is a sign of old age, and as-we all de- sire a youthful and attractive appear- ance, get busy at omce with Wyeth’s :Sage and Sulphur and look ;years younger. HEADAGHE STOPS, NEURALGIA GONE ” James’ Bendmhs Powders give instant relief—Cost dimgs.puinga Nerve- litti or dull, -racking, | throbbing headaches yield in just & fows ‘moments: to Dr."James’ Headache Pow- lderl which cost only 10 cents a pack: age: at any drug ltnre. It’s the quick- est, surest headache relief in the whole world. Don't - suffer! Relieve ‘the y and distress mow! You ‘can. agon; Millions of men and women have found -that headache and ~meuralgia misory s needless. Get what you-ask - could not be be made bet- great many people would consider-it the finest toilet s0ap in the world. Be:musanb sellsefor: Sucflnts some think it is merely Jaundry soap. 2% "The=factsis, ' Ivery “Soap ter for toilet; purpeses.if it sold for*$10 per-eake. It - contains the. finest materials hat can-be: bought. - no free-alkali-or free-oil'in ‘the mild. v and rinses easily. perfectly so that finished p“crsu S It floa U".P & YORY S An explosion engine with an axially It is made It is white. It is pure. What is claimed to be the longest XX REKE KR KKK KKK KKK % One-half cent per word per ¥ ¥ dsaue, “eushtowith: @Py. * ¥ Regular charge rate, one cent ¥ % per word per insertion. No ¥ ¥ adstakenifor less than 10 cents. ¥ * Phone 31. * R R e S R R R R R e e e KREE R KRR KRR KREE KRS ¥ _ One-half cent per word per ¥ *-issue, cash with qo;)y[ *x % Regular charge rate, one-cent sper word per insertion. No ¥ % ad taken for less than 10 cents. ¥ * Phone*31. KKK R RS HELP WANTED, ‘WANTED—Young'lady who has had some :experience: as a ecanvasser. .Must. have.ability and be a: good talker. Answer by letter. H. Stanchfield, Markham Hotel. ‘WANTED—Practical nurse, willing to assist in housework. Country home. State 'wages wanted; refer- ences. ‘Address¥. A., care of Pio- neer. ‘WANTED—Good girl for general housework. Good wages. New resi- dence. Corner of 14th street and Bixby avenue. POSITIONS WANTED. revolving cylinder that constitutes its | electrical transmission ‘line in the [T Gasi~ror e ooy own inlet and exhaust valves, re-| versing gear and water pump, has been invented in England. New York City has over 115,000 ‘women servants. Need any neip? world, conveying 10,000 horsepower | about 400 miles, has been put-in op- Trv a want ad. eration in California. in dry goods store; five years' ex- perience, with good references. Call or address T, Pioneer. In Russia women are not allowed to marry more than five times. | Read the Want Ads. “This space reserved by the Bemidji Townsite I ino For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., UIRE OF T. C. BAILE & Improvement- 0o, v, Bemidji, or -write BETMIDJI TOWNSITE & IMPROVETIENT CO. 520 Capital Bank Buliding 87. PAUL HIII”OT'A ) Koors Bros. Co. Successors to Model Manufacturmg Co. Incorporated Manufacturers and Jobbers ‘Ice. Cream, WLIY FO0 315 Minnesota Ave. = Bakery Goods Confectionery and Fountain Suppli N.W. Telephone 125 “Bemidji, Minnesota OSTO PENCIL ‘POINTER They use to sell for $5.00 now $2.50 Try One Want One? Just telephone 31 for aten day Free Trial This obligates you in no way. Mode! Sharpens every Size and Kirid of Pencil or Crayon. Gives any'Pohit‘Desired from ‘Blunt to Fine.. Will sharpen lh«umd!of Pencils without :Replacements;-Reshaspening of Cutters -or-Adjusting. Can be attached to horizontal or vertical surface. THOUSANDSARE N DAILY: USE. See Our Window A time saver in every office and store. Ten days free trial will-prove this. The- Bemidji Piancer Pab. Co. ‘PHONE 31 Bemidii,-Minn. tt * % % 1wmmv “ llylmimmm': want_to=rent. one—you getathe' * best—choice wfih'* * want ad. EERRE NSRS WANTED—Man and wife want work . in town or on farm. Address J. H., c|o Pioneer. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—160-acre dairy farm in Marshall Co., Minn. Good build- ings. Barn 26x60 ft. Good water. Rich Soil. No stumps. 100 acres fenced pasture, 60 acres ready for plow. High and low land. 4 miles to creamery. A fine oppor- tunity. Rent $12 per month. In- quire 906 Bemidji Ave. FOR RENT—One steam heated room, and board. Phone 440-W. FOR RENT—House. P. A. Nelson. Phone 117, 522 First St. FOR RENT — Seven-room modern house. A. Klein. > FOR SALE. FOR SALE—I 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 maechinery. 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, 205 Min- nesota Ave. Phone 147. Lizzie Miller, Prop. FURNITURE FOR SALE—On din- ing room and one bed room set complete. All the best grades of furniture and not a scratch on it. Good as new. Inquire Ed Currey. FOR SALE—Cheap, in good live town, Hotel Furniture, Buffet in connection, doing good business. N. Thompson, Ladysmith, Wis. FOR SALE—Saloon in live Montana town, on G. N. Ry. Cheap if taken at once. Address M. F. Curren, Savoy, Mont. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. FOR SALE—TFor- flour, feed, hay and wood “of all kinds, Phone 228-W. Cash Fuel and Feed Store. FOR SALE—One new Peerless Uni- versal heater. Cheap, on easy terms. C. O. Johnson. FOR RENT—House, Bemldji ‘Wm. McCuaig. FOR RENT—5-room house. A. Klein. FOR RENT-—New house: ‘WANTED. WANTED—Second hand household goods. M. E. Ibertson. LOST AND' FOUND. LOST—Sack of shorts on America or Irvine Ave., Saturday about noon. Finder please notify 317 4th St. _ Ave. Sathre. Chopped hair has been successfully substituted for.skin in skin grafting by a-French-surgeon, due to the fact that hair cells can be transformed in- to ‘skin-cells. HARNESS ~We want to sell a few Work Har- nesses Cheap to advertise them. Call in and see them. Ziegler's Second Hand Store "FARM FIRE:INSURANCGE Let me ‘writeit in the old Con- mecticut Fire Insurance Co. C..C. CROSS -MILES: BLOCK "The.Markets Duluth’Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Dec:-1—Wheat—On track and to.arrive, No. 1 hard, $1.17%; No. 1 Northern, $1.161;; No. 2 Northern, $1.13%. Flax—On track and to ar- rive, $1.43%. South 8t. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Dee. 1.—Cattle— Steers, $4.76@8.75; cows and. heifers; $4.50@7.00; calves, $5.00@9.50; stock- ers and-feeders, $4.50@6.35. Hogs— $7.00@7.20. Sheep—Lambs, $5.00@ -wethers, $5.00@6.00; ewes, $2.50 and Provisions. -Wheat—Dec., §1- 137%; May, $1.20. Corn—Dec., 63c; May, 69c. Oats—Dec., 48c; May, 52c. Pork—Jan., $18.25; May, $18.50. But- ter—Creameries, 32c. Egegs—20@29c. Poultry—Springs, 10%c; towls, 9%e; tutkeys; 12%c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Dec.” 1—Cattle—Bteers, $5.85@10:50;cows and heifers, $3.:60@ 9.20; calves, $8.00@11.25. Hogs— $7.00@7!55; ‘mixed, $7.25@7.65; heavy, | $7.20@17.65; “Tough, $7.20@7.3 $5.00@6.90. Sheep—Native, $5.50Q 6.40; yearlings, $6.60@8.00." - = Minneapotis Grain. Minneapolis, Dec. 1.—Wheat—Dec., $1:12%; May, $1.177%; July, $1.18%. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard,'$L.- 17%; No. 1 Northerr $1.141@1:165%; No. 2 Northern, $1. m/.@z.nsr No. 3 FOR SALE—Two bowling alleys; good condition. Cheap for cash. Ed. Tepper, 317 4th St. FOR SALE—Self-feed hard coal stove; good condition. Twenty dollars. Address “Stove,” Pioneer. FARMS FOR SALE, FOR SALE—120 acres farm land, abonut 500 cords wood, half hay land on good stream, one mile from a town, terms liberal, price $20.00 per acre. W. G. Schroeder. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great siate of North Dakota offers unlimited op portunities’ for business to classi filed advertisers. The recoguized advertising medium In the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courler-News the only seven-day paper In the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courler-News covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of tha state the day of publication; it Is the sults; rates one cent per word first ingertion, ome-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents each. Every ribbon sold for 75 cents guaranteed. Phone orders promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when you appear in person. Phone 31. The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. Miss Ellen Hume has served in one Philadelphia family for sixty-four years. ‘BEMIDJI WELDING & MACHINE CO. Oxy-Acetylene Welding and machine work Bemidji, Minn. Money to Loan on Real Estate John F. Gibbons Telephone 299 Bemidji; Minn. Huffman & 0’Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING H N. McKEE, Funeral Director : Phone 178-2, 3 or 4 *| .. paper to use In order to get re- 1 VETERINARY SURGEON W. X..DENISON, D. V. M. : VETERINAR!AN Phone 164-2 Pogue’s Livery DRAY LINE TOM SMART % DRAY AND TRANSFER ‘Safe'and Piano Moving Res. Phone 58 818 America Ave, Office Phone 12. _— -DENTISTS. DR. D. L. STANTON, DENTIST Office -in’ Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY, DENTIST Gibbons Block Tel. 230 - North of Markham Hotel LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, LAWYER Miles Block Phone 560 D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner ATTORNEY AT LAW Office secorid 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, Minn. Office Phone 36 Res. Phone 72 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, Telephone 105, EYE THROAT DR. F. J. DARRAGH - OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Specialist ‘of Chronic' Diseases Free Consultation * 208% 3rd St. over Blooston Store Day and Night Calls' Answered. DR.'L. J. PERRAULT, CHIROPODIST CORNS and. INGROWING NAILS re- moved without pain.-BUNIONS scien- tifically treated. Phone 499-J. Office over the Rex Theater. E. M. SATHRE Abstracter O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Bemidji, Minn. ERKKKKEK KK KKK XRK * RAILROAD TIME €ARDS -+ KEKKKK KKK KKK KKK MPLS., RED r.mtlu 2 North Bound Arrives 1 Nortt Bound Leaves. 800 RATLROA! East Bound .Leaves West Bound Leave: East Bound Leave West Bound - Leaves. GREAT NORTNERW West Bound Leaves F‘relxht West Leaves at. ““refght East Leaves at... MINNESOTA &' n-nnurxo-u. 82 South Bound Leaves. 81 North Bound Leaves. 84 South Bound Leaves 83 North Bound Leave: Freight South Leaves a reight -North Leaves at... NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY 0% dnlly. ‘except Sunday, 1 to 6 » to 9. -8 ¥, Teading reem only, 3t06p Results are .most gsways 'certain when you use a Ploneer ‘want ad. One-half cent a:word. ‘Phone 31. FUNERZ'. DIRECTOR ‘M. 'E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER -and COUNTY CORONER STOVE W00D FOR SALE BUNDLE WOOD, 12.—30 in. long B Delivered to -Nymore, $200 and * 'BLOCK woon

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