Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 11, 1915, Page 2

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i . ges . . [ The Bemidji- Daily Pioneer THE !EKXD_J! PIONEER PUB. CO Pablishers and Proprietors Telephone 31 s Entered at the post office at Bemidji winn., as second-class matter under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Published every afternoon except Sunday No attention paid to anonymous con- iributions; ~Writer's name . must be mown' to the Tmm-‘ but not mecessar- iy _for publieation. Cummounlcauon. for the Weekly Plo- aeer should reach this office not later nan Tuesday of each week to insure sublication in the current lssue " Subsoription Rates me month by carrier ... .40 Jne year by carrier ... 4.00 {hree months, postage pald ... 1.00 41z monshs, postage pald . 100 ne year, postage pald . 4.00 The Weekly Pio! Eight pages, contalning a summary of he news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any Address for $1.50 in adva..ce. cA”LR KEPRLSLNTCD FCR FOREIGR ADVERTISING BY THE G~NERAL OFFICES YORK AND CHICAGC N Tur ORINCIPAL CITIES The new $5,400 auto fire truck has been used at several fires during the past three days and while its para- phernalia and equipment is complete, the council should be strict in its tests before final acceptance. The ma- chine is considered one of the best of its kind but in leaving Bemidji with only one motor driven apparatus the chances of delayed alarm responses are too great, claim a large number who are opposed to the purchase. Demand Changes. Although Governor Hammond’s in- augural message favored the submis- sion of only one constitutional amend- ment to the people at an election, it is likely that the usual flood of reso- lutions will be introduced in the leg- islature providing for changes in the organic act of the commonwealth and that a goodly share of them will be adopted. ““The ordinary voter,” said the gov- ernor in his message, “has not time or will not take the time to familiar- ize himself with so large a number of propositions. Each is worthy of much study and earnest considera- tion. It is too much to expect that voters will give such study and con- sideration to eleven proposals in a single election. Of the amendments approved by the legislature it is ad- visable that some method be adopted to determine the one most import- ant and submit that, and that alone. to the plebiscite.” But this admonition from the exe- cutive, it is believed, will have little effect. Already amendments con- cerning the following matters have been discussed and probably will be submitted at this session: Initiative and referendum. Recall. Extenston of limits of city of St. Paul go as to include all of Ramsey county. Addition of two justices of the supreme court to take the place of the two commissioners. Revolving fund for the recla- mation of waste state lands. Extending terms of judges of probate from two to four years. Limiting number of scnators from any one county to seven. Loaning state school funds on farm mortgages. As the governor has not the right to veto a resolution submitting a con- stitutional amendment to the people. he has nothing to say regarding the relative importance of these meas- ures. S E SRS E R SRR SRR R E S * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * FRAKHXKKK KK KKK KK KK The peanut politicians should not object if they get roasted in the fire of public opinion.—Winnebago City Enterprise. —pe " How would you like to be the state senator who moves to repeal the Dunn road law with Bob in the state senate?—Sauk Center Herald. —— When you get discouraged over your condition, and think you just can’t stand it any longer, just look around and try to find some one with whom you would be willing to ex- change troubles. If that don’t brace you up, nothing else can.—Worthing- ton Globe. —— That saloon keeper up at Detroit who thought that the government was not really in earnest is now a sadder but wiser man. The revenue officers tock his entire stock of li- quors, valued at $3,000, out into an alley and spilled the whole thing on the ground.—Madison Independent- Press. —— Everything of national import- ance should be decided by every man, woman and child concerned. There should be no war without a popular vote. Nothing but aggressive inva- sion of foreign powers should be an excuse for war without a popular vote on it. Prohibition is not for the varjous states to decide through their legislatures without first = ob- taining the majority of consent of the government.. This is America, you know, where one man is as good as two more, if he behaves himself. —Tower News. An oil company at a Mexican port difficult of access at_certain tides has built a pipe line out to sea to load its product on ships. KK KKK KR K KK * IS WAR OF HORSE,-NOT * * GASOLINE POWER % KKK KRR KKK KKK KKK (By William G. Shepherd.) Buda Pesth,—(By-Mail to New York.)—It’s ‘not a gasoline - power war in Austria but a horse power war, and the tragedy of the horse is seen at every turn. -The great roads in Galicia, leading through the Car- pathians, were literally jammed, for miles, with wagon trains, in October and early Novembr and the steam from the backs of the thousands of faithful toiling’ animals, ascernded like clouds in the cold wintry air. These wagon trains on the narrow roads are like endless chains. They can't be delayed. And woe to thé horse that falls! He is coaxed to hi§ feet again and again. Every last ounce of strength in his tired body is urged out of him and he gives his last pull with bulging eyes and then topples over. But that isn’t the last that the Austrians expect from rim. At the beginning of the war the orders were that any horse which fell must be shot immediately. However, horse flesh began to grow scarce, after the prst six weeks of fighting and the armies on the Russian frontier were helpless without the hundreds of thousands of tons of supplies which must be carried to them over the mountain roads in the odd .willow bodies basket wagons of the Galician farmers. So a new order was issued that no horse was to be shot unless one of his limbs were broken. The result of this order was that when an animal fell from exhaus- tion and had given to his masters even the strength that was necessary to keep him on his feet, he was drag- ged aside, preferably into a field where there was grass, and left to work out his own fate. Usually he died, uncared for, but, now and then, a horse survived and became strong again, whereupon he would be seized by some passing soldier and put back into the daily grind. " I watched a horse “come back” in this way, in a field near Przemysl He had fallen in the middle of a steep hill, a hill which has caused the death of many an exhausted horse. He was lying with scores of other horses in a field alongside the hill road.” Evidently he had an ounce or two more of vitality than they, for he was stretched out, with his legs curled under him while they were lying on their sides with their heads on the ground. His head was raised and I fancied that he - was watching, with a horse’s interest, the; never-ending train of wagons that was passing him. I was sorry for him, too. To get well only meant more horrors for him. When I re- turned that way in the evening he was still lying down but there was a circle of nibbled grass about his head. The next morning he was/ weakly standing up, with his legs stretched wide apart, and he had gone away from the other dead and dying horses, to a lonely corner of the field. Incidentally, I noticed EAT LESS MEAT I BACK HURTS Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if Bladder bothers you—Drink lots of water. Eating meat regularly eventually pro- Tuces kidney trouble in some form or sther, says o well-known authority, be- :ause the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly backache and mis- ery in the kidney region; rheumatic twin- ges, severe headaches, acid stomach, con- stipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kid- neys aren’t acting right, or if bladder bothers you, get about four. ounces of Jad Salts from any good -pharmaey; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water Sefore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of gra and lemon juice, combined with -lithia, and has been used for generations. to ush clogged kidneys and stimulate them %o normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no-longer irri- tates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts - cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent- lithia- water drink which millions. of men.and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus voiding serions kidney disease. T GLADDENS: SORE, TIRED FEET “TIZ” makes sore, burning, tired feet fairly dance with delight, - Away go the aches and pains, the corns, callouses, blisters and bunions. “TIZ” draws out the acids and poisons that pufl up your feet. No ou work, how matter how hard {- ‘| +—the newest member of the Carter's Inx family... timeand again, that there is nothing ! that“frightens a-lorse so-much- as the body of a dead horse, and T sup- pose that it was sheer terror that got this fellow to his ‘feet and help- ed him to struggle away to more cheerful surroundings. He was'nib- bling' gingerly: at the grass and now and then he raised his head and seemed to look at the mighty tide of horses ‘and ‘wagons and men -that filled -the'road.: “There’s a horse that will be -all right, within-a couple of weeks," said ‘the Austrian-officer who was with-me. “He’s .a Siberian horse: They’re wonderful animals. They’re the only horses in the world that will make two 'pulls at an immovable ob- ject. You can .hitch one of them to an object, a tree or a house, that can- not possibly be moved and he will put- his last ounce of strength into lit. An ordinary horse would stop at that and would refuse the next pull, but not a Siberian pony. He’s all sand and he’ll make his second try just'as bravely as he did his first. Yes, indeed, that little fellow will be back in the wagon trains again ‘within a couple of weeks.” And I suppose he was, for by ev- ening he had nibbled a huge circle of- grass in his private corner of the field and when I went by two days later hé was gone. Even in the midst of war the horse skinners were at work. - I saw them in a field near Przemysl, four grue- some looking men, covered with blood —taking the hides from the skeleton- like bodies of the horses who had given their lives in war. Three weeks of steady work in Ga- licia and in the Carpathians killed the average horse. The fields were dotted with their bodies. The Aus- trians told me that hundreds of Ploneer want ads bring results. —— HOME- MADE_MEDICINE Best and Cheapest for Coughs __ Most persons neglect a cough or cold for the principal reason that they either ' don’t think it serious enough to goto a doctor, or don’t know what good medi- cine to buy at a drug store, with the result that the cough, or cold becomes deep-seated through this neglect and hangs on the whole winter—which might have otherwise been speedily cured, had Schiffmann’s Concentrated Expectorant been used promptly. ‘This new remedy is so strongly con- centrated that two ounces (50 cents’ worth) make a full pint (16 ozs.) of ex- cellent cough medicine, by simply mix- ing it at home with one pint of granu- lated sugar and 4 pint of water. It makes a whole family supply, as much as would ordinarily cost from $2.00 to $3.00 for the same quantity of the old, ordinary, ready- made kinds of doubtful merit. It is prepared from strictly- harmless plants and is so pleasant that children like to take it and it can be given them with perfect safety as it positively con- tains no chloroform, opium, morphine, or_other narcotics, as do most cough mixtures. No risk whatever is run in buying this remedy as drug store named below will refund money if it does not give perfect satisfaction or is not found the very best remedy you have ever used for stubborn Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough and Hoarse- uess, For sale here by A . Barker’s Drug Store 217 3rd St Be midji Minn. FARM FIRE INSURANGE Let me write it in the old Con- necticut Fire Insurance Co. 6. G, CROSS MILES BLOCK IVORY SOAP". . 99 Russian women are now employed as road repairers. The Chinese government is plan- I INQ “BEMIDJI TO O matter how care- ‘N ! ful one may be in wash- ing- sweaters and ‘other knit oods, ordinary laundry soap ‘never: f eaves them as soft and pretty as when new. The alkali ‘and inferior fats contract, stiffen and weaken the woolen fibers. Thisimeans a change both: [in the appearance and fit of the garment. To keep'them in perfect condition; wash'with:Ivory - 'Soap. Because of its freedom from alkali‘and all harmful materials, Ivory is aseasy on these garmentsas your own careful handling: It cleans them but their texture remains:the same. Here are some timely hints on- If very loosely woven put them into a pillow case or cheese cloth bag so they will not' be stretched. under them to remove them:from the suds: of sweater over the back of a chair while the body lies on the seat. Use lukewarm water and Ivory Soap Paste.. (See directions in- side wrapper.) Do not rub soap on the garment or the garment on the board. washing knit goods: If io bag is used, slipa towel Throw-the sleeves - y S 2 — LR RS RS SRR SRR S & 5 ¥ One-half cent per word per ¥ * {issue, caski with copy. * ' - Regular charge rate, one cent ¥ ¥ per word‘ per insertion.® No ¥ *“ad taken for less than 10 cents. ¥ ¥ Phone 31. s * LA RS S S SRR R EERE RS B v A oo s PP WANTED—Married man who under- stands farming; good position for the right man. J. H. French, Phone 3617-2. . : POSITIONS WANTED. A A A A A A ot WANTED>—A - position as saleslady in dry goods store; five years’ ex- perience,: -with - good references. Call or address T, Pioneer. WANTED—Work.of any kind. John Spell, clo Olson’s Employment Office. | 545 MUCH IN LITTLE. - Switzerland has women miners. Philadelphia has SY. PAUL iOS"Sll‘eets to the box " Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Company This space reserved by the Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Go. For Price of Lots, Terms, Etc., UIRE OF T. C. BAILEY, Bemidji, or write 520 Capital Bank Bullding ning to spend $10,000,000 for a num- ber of high power wireless stations. A combination tool has been pat- three women |ented which serves as a shovel in-one So that liquid soap can be used for washing clothes there has been in- vented a receptacle for holding it at the top of the washboard. WNSITE & IMPROVETMENT CO. in another, the horses died daily in the Carpathian |Placksmiths. position -and.a_hoe ; passes from broken lungs, broken| Widows in Kansas number over andle being adjustable. courage or broken hearts. 15,000. MINNESOTA %) 2 ANY COLOR Price $3.00 Bemidji, Minn : WANTED ~ 7 ft. cedar posts cut from | dry sound standing cedar 14 e - and 16 ft. tamarack poles 3 to 4 in. top cut from green v tamarack. 3 I P. BATCHELDER i Minn. ‘We have always tried to be just a little ahead of the other fellow in the general equipment of our store. As an evidence-of this desire to show the newest and only the best of everything, we gladly recommend to users of ink “Carter's " Péncraft ® ~Combined Office i and. Fountain Pen ¢ Tpk o B Penceaft Ink writes a blue and dries a jet black. 1 it & Star-Brand * These ribbons ar The Bemidii Pioneer Pub. Co. N. E. Tuller -Wood and Hay Phone 30 or 295 for furnace poplar at $2,00 per cord Green cut seasoned poplar ~ - - reen‘cut seasoned jackpine - reen cut seasoned tamarack - . Oak, Birch, sawed wood of all kinds, timothy, clover, red top hay and straw. Ya.rd—Corngr of Fifth and Irvin avenue. Each 75¢ Come in neat tin‘boxes. Bemidji, Minn. . Direct Delivery Typewriter Ribbons In any color to fit any make of typewriter e fully guaranteed as the best on earth. 2.50 per cord 8.50 per cord - 4,00 yer cord FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Upstairs flat. at 511 Minnesota Avenue. FOR - RENT—Six-room house. Klein. Inquire A. 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 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 Miller, Prop. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pibneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. ) FOR SALE—Dry jackpine wood, de- livered for $1.50 per load. Phone 550-W. FOR SALE CHEAP—One good coal “box. Phone 295. FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—120 acres farm land, about 500 cords wood, half hay land on good stream, one mile from a town, terms liberal, price $20.00 per acre. W. G. Schroeder. FOR SALE—40 acres, excellent soil, easily cleared. Six miles south of ' Bemidji. In good farming com- munity. Price $500.00. Dr. G. M. Palmer. WANTED. D o S luwidbr SPBENION WANTED—Second hand household goods, M. E. Ibertson. MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great siate of North Dakota offers unlimited op portunities for business to classi- fied advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo Daily ‘and. Sunday Courler-News the only seven-day paper in the state-and the paper which carriee the 'largest amouat of classified advertising. The = Courier-News covers North Dakota like a blank et; reaching all parts of the state the. day ‘of publication; it Is the ‘' paper:‘to use in order to get re- < suld; rates one cent per word first 1 Ingertion, ‘one-half' cent per word b succeeding. insertions; fitty cents % per:iline .per month. Address tbe :. Courier-News, -Fargo, N.-D. ' FOR SALE—Typewrliter 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. IF YOU WOULD LIKE a good paying " business, yielding a good income all the year round, investigate the glove manufacturing_ business. There is an enormous demand for canvas-gloves. It requires but small’ capital. Write or phone F. M. Freese. o ” Notice. ’| Al those knowing themselves in- debted to me are kindly requested to settle their book account or note be- for Jan. 20,1915. I am obliged to ask customers to favor me promptly to enable me to meet my own obli- '2ations. W. G. SCHROEDER. Presbyterian Cook Book. The Ploneer has just completed the publishing of a splendid 175-page cook book issued by the ladies of the Presbyterian church of Crookston, and will retain a few copies to be sold at 50c. Better reserve one by tired, aching, swollen, smarting feet: Your ;g i just tingle for joy; shoes never hurt or seem tight. % Get a 25 cent box of “TIZ” now ‘from any druggist or department.-store.” End foot torture forever—wear small Itis especially brilliant, smooth and perm: ‘Comesn and let us show you the new. Carter ink - bottle with the new flaw-controller, F ‘PIONEER e Phone 31, 35 telephone. - Phone 31.—Adv. HARNESS " We want t; sell a few Work Har- nesses: Cheap to advertise them. Call in and see them. - VETERINARY SURGEON VETERINARIAN 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 second ficor 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-73 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. * RAILROAD TIME CARDS +* (AR EEEE R R R MPLS, RED LAKE & MAN. 2 North Bound Arrives...... 9: 1 North Bound Leaves...... 1:30 S00 RAILROAD 162 East Bound Leaves. 163 West Bound Leave: 186 East Bound Leaves. 187 West Bound Leaves. -l GREAT NORTHERN 33 West Bound Leaves. 34 East Bound Leaves. 35 West Bound Leaves. 36 Bast Bound Leaves. Freight West Leaves. Freight East Leaves at MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL 32 South—Mpls. Etc. Lv. 8:15 am #34 South—Mpls. Ete, Lv. 11:20 pm 31 North—Kelliher L 3 *33 3 44 4i 46 Freight from Int. due North Bemidji Freight from Brain North Bemidji. . NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY Open daily, except Sunday, 1 to § y m., 7 to § p. m. Sunday, reading reew only, 8 to 6 p m. Huffman & 0’Leary FURNITURE AND : UNDERTAKING H N. McKEE, Funeral Director Phone 178-2, 3 or 4 FUNERAL DIRECTOR V. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER 405 Beltrami Ave. . Bemidji, Mina,' I 4 i |

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