Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 12, 1915, Page 2

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The Bemidii Daily Pioneer x (B _BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO Publishers and Proprietors Telaphone 31 Entered at the post office at Bemldjt winn., as second-class mafter under Act +f Congress of March 8, 1879, ~ubligbed every afternoon except Sunday = — No attention pald to’anonymous con- ‘ributions. - Writer's . name must squwn .to the editor, kut not necessar- Iy for publication. Communications for the Weekly Plo- aver should reach this office not later ban .Tuesday of each week to insure sublication In the current issue "~ Subscription Bates Jue month by carrier . ine ‘year by carrler ...... [nres manths, postags’paid 3ix months, postage paid e yeur, postage pald .. The Weekly Ploneer Elght pages, containing a summary of ews of the week. Published every dny and sent postage pald to any widress for $1.50 In adva..ce. Frr.R REPRESLNTED FOR FOREIGN - ADVERTISING BY THE G NFRAL OFFICES 2 HEW YORK AND CHICAGO At TUE ORINCIPAL CITIES Governor W. S. Hammond is not looking for any trouble on the wo- man’s suffrage question. When waited on by a delegation of sulfragists, headed by Mrs. Andreas Ueland of Minneapolis, Mr. Hammond declined to say what his course would be in the event of the suffrage question coming before him. “I have met a large number of women interested in this question,” said Mr. Ham- mond. ‘“‘Some have urged me to fa- vor suffrage and some have urged me to declare against it. Of course my support for the measure is wanted only for its effect on the legisla- ture.” Early Primary Opposed. There will be no more primary days in June if Representative Bor- gen of St. Louis county has his way. He has made it plain that he and many other legislators favor some date in September( first, second or ‘third Tuesday therein), and a bill to bring about this change will be in- troduced in the house by Borgen within a few days. There have been all kinds of ob- jections to the June primary, ever since the 1913 legislature enacted that provision into the general pri- mary law, by a series of wholesale amendments. The long period between the pri- mary of June and the election of No- vember is undesirable, many legisla- tors and others think, because of the extended opportunity they say it gives grafters to operate on them as well as forcing them to make a long, tiresome campaign. It is a fact-that state officials gen- erally have never viewed with favor the early 'primary, as it gives, they say, their opponents (if they them- selves have a place on the ticket), a much longer time in which to cam- paign and they, on their part, dare not leave their offices for but a very short time before election for fear of public opinion. This view is also shared in large measure by county officials who happen to gain a nomin- ation as one of the high men in the primaries. ‘The September primary looks best. [ B R R R S e * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * PR KK KK KKK KK KK It it is given to mortal man to look back” after he has ‘“crossed over,” many a poor fellow will be surprised to see the world still revolving after he is gone.—Minnesota Mascot. — There are humiliations in this po- litical trade. Think of the humilia- tions to an old veteran and warhorse like C. F. McDonald, who has been fighting the battles of Democracy for these fifty years, when he is obliged to seek the O. K. of a stripling in politics like Fred Lynch.—St. Cloud Journal-Press. e In spite of the Democratic admin- istration, present indications are that a real prosperous era is about to dawn on this nation. Various steel mills throughout the country are ad- ding thousands of employes to their forces; the interest rate in financial centers has been reduced and there appears to be a general business re- vival.—Princeton Union. —— Twenty years ago Wall street had a monopoly on the financial affairs of this country and if there was a fail- ure there, the whole United States was disposed to tremble and fear that the trouble would extend all over our broad territory. Now it is dif- ferent; a failure on Wall street, of a big bank is of such little import to the business of our country that we go along without giving it scarcely a thought. The west has becomes a great big boy.—Stillwater Gazette. MUCH IN LITTLE. The women in Munich are now act- ing as hod carriers. Nine-tenths of the stenographers in the United States are women. . Vassar college girls spend = over $17,000 a year for organized pleas- ures. 5 To aid in transporting canoes or other light craft over land there has been invented a wheel to be attached to‘one nd of them:. 2 KK KKK KKK K KKK KK % LONDON MUSIC.HALL * x BUSINESS AS USUAL * ISR SRR R R RS Ehh eSS London.—(By Mail to New York.) —*“Business as usual.” That's the title of the revue now running at London’s largest music hall. This astute amusement of this be | Place of entertainment always strives to select some catchy, up-to-date phrase for the principal number on the program. The subject matter of the ‘“revue” does.not make so much difference. The performers and their stunts may not be changed-at .all. But the name of-the show must be typical of of the latest fad of activity of the country. Two years ago it was “Hello, Ragtime”’—a trifle musty for American patrons but sufficiently modern for home folk. ‘Hello, Tango” was a natural evolution. In casting about for a fresh designation for the present season, the manage- ment could scarcely have hit upon one more appropriate—unless it had chosen ‘‘Pleasure as Usual.” The fact that Great Britian has now for four months been playing a leading role in the tragedy of the ages has served but little to disturb the traditional complacency of your average Britisher. What ghough some 80,000 of the best young men of the empire have been killed or wounded, or made prisoners by the Prussians—the war has not yet been brought home to him. His business, and his pleasures, and his life gener- ally are going on much the same. as before. The prices of the necessar- ies of life have not risen appreciably —and beer costs him only a cent more a glass, for which he blames Lloyd George more than he does the war. He may enjoy himself tonight at any of the 23 different theaters in the West End of London alone—or any one of 11 different music halls or variety houses. So far the war has proven only a slight inconvenience to the ordinary London resident. He soon got used to handling “scraps of paper” in- stead of golden sovereigns. The Zep- pelin fear, so far as the populace is concerned, was only momentary. Al- though the government still insists on dimming the streets at night, there appear to be just as many pedes- trians abroad after dusk as there were before the war. The closing of the saloons at 10 o’clock is perhaps the most distressing feature of life in London during war times. Aside from these tangible evidences, if he did not happen to read the papers or notice the army posters on taxicabs, motorbuses and billboards, notifying the young men of England that “your king and country need you,” the stranger would be unaware that any- thing oyt of the ordinary was. going o, b Wi Rt Last Saturday there were more Englishmen of military age in at- OLD-TIME COLD CURE— DRINK HOT TEA! TR Gt small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks- cali it, “Hamburger 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 mast effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking up a cold. Try it the next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless. RUB RHEUMATISM FROM STIFF, ACHING JOINTS Rub Soreness from joints and muscles with a small trial bottle of old St. Jacobs 0fl Stop “dosing” Rheumatism It’s pain only; not ome case in fifty requires 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 rheumatic pain. “St. Jacob’s Oil” is a harmless rheumatism cure which never disappoints and doesn’t burn the skin. It takes pain, soreness and stiffness from aching joints, muscles and bones; stops sciatica, lumbago, backache, neuralgia. Limber up! Get a 25 cent bottle of old-time, honest “St. Jacobs 0il” from any drug store, and in a moment yowll be free from paius, aches and stifiness. Don’t suffer! ‘Rub rheuma- tism away. tendance upon ‘the various . profes: sional football. matches - throughout the country than there are freezing and dodging German shrapnel in the blood-soaked trenches.of . Flanders. Some 35,000 men watched the three big games in London. Between halves members of Parliament and - other patriots made recruiting while three regular army sergeants worked the crowds at each. “The life of the empire is at stake,” they cried. - Forcibly and eloquently they tried to picture what a German tri- umph would mean to England and Englishmen. The result was one re- cruit! A trifle more than a million men so far have volunteered for “Kitchen- er's army”—and there are more than six million men of military age and fitness in England and Wales alone. It is well named “Kitchener’s army.” If you don’t believe that the ‘war secretary is running not only the British army but Great Britian’s part in the war, just ask the prime min- ister, or any other member of the cabinet or of Parliament. It was in the bargain that Kitchener was to be the whole show. He has held the government ruthlessly to this con- tract. For the severity of the cen- sorship which withholds from the British public news of the British reverses and disasters even after they have become common knowledge throughout the rest of the world, Kitchener alone is responsible. De- spite the almost fearless pleadings of his colleagues and the bitter protests of England’s leading journals, and in the face of the fact that all of the other belligerents have now come to appreciate the advantage of allow- ing authorized correspondents at the front, Kitchener persists in his _re- fusal to be “bothered with newspaper men.” As a result “Kitchener’s army” is fighting practically in the dark. The British newspapers refuse to accept the stories of Kitchener’s official “‘eye witness,” as substitutes, and the British public, in the circumstances, cannot be altogether blamed for its apathetic attitude. With Kitchener war is purely a business proposition. 'Whal Cures E_czema? We have had so many inquiries lately regarding Eczema and other skin dis- eases, that we are glad to make our answer public. After careful investiga- tion we have found that a simple wash ¢f Uil _of Wintergreen, as compounded n D. D. D. Prescription, can bhe relied ron. We would not make this state- ient to our patrons, friends and neigi- ors unless ‘we were sure of it—and Ithough there are many so-called Ee- ema remedies sold, we ourselves un- lesitatingly recommend D. D. D Pre- cription. Drep into onr store today, just to talk over the merits of this wonderful Pre- seription. Barker’s Drug Store 217 2rd St Be- midji Minn, * Chronic Constipation Cured. lyn, Mich. For sale by All Dealers. FARM FIRE INSURANGE Let me write it in the old Con- necticut Fire Insurance Co. i C. C. CROSS WANTED 7 ft. cedar posts cut from dry sound standing cedar 14 and 16 ft. tamarack poles 3 to 4 in. top cut from green tamarack. L. P. BATCHELDER Bemidji, Mi! y inn. speeches, | “Five years ago I had the worst case of chronic constipation I ever knew of, and Chamberlain’s Tablets cured me,” writes S. F. Fish, Brook- MILES BLOCK || FOR friendly comfort and contentment there’s nothing can equal a small chew of “Right-Cut.” That’s why men tell each other about - it—call it the Real Tobacco Chew. The news spreads every day. A little chew of pure, rich, mellow. tobacco—cut fine, short shred—seasoned and sweetened just enough, cuts out so much of the grinding and spitting. Take a very small chow—less. than one-quarter.the old size. It will be more satisfying than a mouthful of ordinary tobacco. Just nibble on it until you find the strength chew that suits you. Tuck it away. Then let it rest. See how easily and evenly_the real .tobagco taste comes, how it satisfies without grinding, how much, less you have to spit, how few chews you take to be tobacco satisfied. That's why it is The Real Tobacco Chew. That’s why;it costs less in the end. 1t is a ready chew, cut fine and short shred so that you won’t have to grind on it with your teeth. Grinding on ordiary candied tobacco makes yon too much. The, taste of pure, rich tobacco does not need to be covered up with molasscs sod .. Notice bow the salt brings out the rich tobacco taste in “Right-Cut. s One small chew takes the place of two big - chews of the old kind. WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY 80 Union Square, New York - ((BUY FROM DEALER OR SEND 0% STAMPS TOUS ) He fails to see the use of glamor. unfairly termed the other day by an There is no inspiration for the pres-|Irish member of Parliament—in a ent stay-at-home to join the army, es- | purely private conversation- only a pecially when they are constantly |sublimated sergeant,” but if there being fed with official reports that|Were less business and more senti- ment in the administration of the the ‘“Germans can’t shoot,” and that . army and less secretiveness and more the “enemy is 50 hard pressed that it| ., q0r in the general conduct of the is calling its young boys and old men | war, I believe there would be less into the firing line.” No wonder|“pusiness as usual,” and more real that British officer at the front|patriotism in the country at large. writes bitterly in a personal letter: “It is odd out.here to read of racing, A new coffee strainer can be fast- home; here, where every farm has to|in the spout. face the devastation of war with only incapable leM¢behind; where you see FOR s ALE a smali boy pushing the plow and a S one loses the proper perspective of b ‘business and pleasures as usual’|10ad at The Cash Fuel and Feed and football, and concert dinners at|ened inside any pot by wires inserted its womenkind, its old men, and its schoolgirl Teading the horse—well, |Seasoned Jack Pine. Wood, 4-ft., _ England’s war lord was perhaps | Store. Phone 228-W Carbon Paper ANY COLOR 108“Sl1e.ets to the ]:)ox Price $3.00 - Bemidji, Minn okiaaa SR R HEAD STUFFED FROM ; CATARRH OR A COLD " Says Cream Applied in Nestrils %‘ Opens Air Passages Right Up. % AR B d BdSt ] Instant relief—no “waiting. ~ Your clogzed nostrils open right up: the air passages‘of your head clear and yon oan breathie frecly.. No more hawking, snaf fling, blowing, headache, dryness. Nc struggling for breath at might; your cold or catarrh disappears. p et o emall battle of Elys Croam al rom your druggist now. Appl, a little of this fragrant, . antiseptio, healing cream in your mostrils. Tt pen- etrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen | mucous membrane and- relief comes in- stantly. "~ It’s just fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up with & cold or nasty catarrh. -Notice. - . To parties who are indebted to W. G. Schroeder for merchandise, dating:| back 60 days from Nov. 1 and over, are requested to settle as soon as con-! venient and before Jan. 20, 1915. ; ' 'W. G. SCHROEDER. 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 %7 Pencraft :‘m Combined Office litNY and Fountain Pen jet bl S T apecilly bl smenth aod pormasent. Come in and let us show you the new. Carter ink bottle with the new. flaw-controllez, - Star Brand Typewriter Ribbons In any color to fit any make of typewriter i Each 75¢ These ribbons are fully guaranteed as the best on earth. Come in neat tin boxes. . The Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. Bemidji, Minn. ‘Wood and Hay Phone 80 or 295 for furnace poplar at $2,00 per cord Green cut seasoned poplar - 2.50.per.cord Green-cut seasoned jackpine = - 3.50 per cord . Green cut seasoned tamarack - - 4,00 yer.cord _ . Direct Delivery Oak; ‘vfiu‘eh, sawed wood of all kinds, timothy, clover, red ) ha)" andstraw. Yard—Corner of Fifth and Irvin avenu 3 VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. VETERINARIAN Phone 164-2- Pogue’s Livery _DRAY LINE TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER- o 5 Safe and Piano Moving K& KKHKKKKKKKK¥ KK Phone 58 818 America Ave. % One-half cent per word per ¥ Office Phone 12. X' issue, casht with copy. * % Regular charge rate, one cent ¥ DENTISTS. ¥ per word per insertion. No ¥ ANT * ad taken for less than 10 cents. ¥ DR. D‘» L SEEM'.’IIJ:F X:Plione 31, ¥ Office 1n Winter Block AKX R KX T K| DR. J. T. TUOMY, HELP WANTED. DENTIST ‘WANTED—Married man who under- | Gibbons Block Tel. 330 stands farming; good position for North of Markham Hotel the right -man. J. = Phone 3617-2. - LAWYERS POSITIONS WANTED. GRANAM M‘Lfi%”n' o WANTED—A position as saleslady | Miles Block in dry goods store; five years’ ex- — perience, with good references. |D- H- FA{%&O%%YC‘)AW&“" Call or address T, Pioneer. Office second ficor O’Leary-Bowser WANTED—Work of any kind. John Building. Spell, clo Olson’s Employment Office. ___ 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 FOR RENT—Six-room house. A./pp C. R. SANBORN Klein. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON -Office—Miles Block DR. L. A. WARD : PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON H. French,| = Phone 560 FOR RENT. . FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. 317 Minne- sota Ave., upstairs. FOR RENT—Upstairs flat. Inquire at 511 Minnesota Avenue. FOR SALE. ' FOR SALE—i hnave-- the following -farm machinery to exchange folr Over First National Bank live stock, one two horse corn cul- Bemidji, Minn. tivator, one, one horse corn culti- vator, one potatoe sprayer, Two|DR..A. E. HENDERSON $3,50 per cord; short $1.50 per farm wagons, Two one horse bug- PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON gles, one garden drill, one, two Over First National Bank horse Kentucky single disk harrow Bemidji, Minn. and other farm machinery. W. G |Office Phone 36 Res. Phone 73 Schroeder. DR. E. H. SMITH FOR SALE—At new wood yard, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON wood all lengths delivered at your Office Security Bank Block door. Leave all orders at Ander-|pg prNpR JOHNSON son’s Employment Office, 205 Min- PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON nesota Ave. Phone 147. Lizzie Bemidji, Minn, Miller, Prop. et FOR SALERubber stamps. The G AL L Pioneer will procure any kind of BYR EAR NOSE THROAT 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. Glasses Fitted Office Gibbons Bldg., North Markham Hotel. Telephone 106. DR. F. J. DARRAGH OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Specialist of Chronic Diseases . Free Consultation 208% 3rd St., over Blooston Store Day and Night Calls Answered. FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—120 acres farm land, about 500 cords wood, half hay(pR, I:J; PERRAULT, - land on good stream, one mile from . CHIROPODIST. a town, terms liberal, price $20.00 CORNS and INGROWING NAILS re- per acre. W. G. Schroeder. FOR SALE—40 acres, excellent soil, |moved without pain. BYNIONS scien- easily cleared. Six miles south of |tifically treated. Phone 499-J. Office Bemidji. In good farming com-| . munity. Price $500.00. Dr. G. over the Rex Theater. M. Palmer. — E. M. SATHRE Abstracter O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Bemidji, Minn. WANTED. WANTED Second hand housebold goods. M. E. Ibertson. MISCELLANEOTR ADVERTISERS—The great state of [y 4 I R eSS ETETS North, Dakota ffers unlimited o0 |x RAILROAD TIME CARDS * portunities for business to classl- |y & ¥ I R R R R R R R e R ) fled advertisers. The recognized MPLS., RED LAKE & MAN. advertislug medium in the Fargo| 3 North Bound Arrives 9:45 am Daily and Sunday Courier-News| 1 North Bound Leaves the only seven-day paper in the 800 RAILROAD state and the paper which carries |53 Gk Bound Leaves. . the largest amount of classified |186 East Bound Leaves. i 187 West Bound L . advertising. The Courier-News 0l 0aves ¢ GREAT NORTHERN covers North Dakcta like a blank- [ 33 West Bound Leaves. et; reaching all parts of the state| 53 \we, Sound Leaves. the day of publication; it is the| 36 East Bound Leaves. 105 North paper to use lm order to get rte- |106 s:&-zh %?:‘\’x:?i gal:g 4 Treight West Leaves sulds; rates one cent per word first Froight East Leaves at Insertion, ome-half cent per word! MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL succeeding insertions; fifty cents| 32 South—Mpls. Etc. Lv. per line per month. Addresg the *34 South—Mpls. Etc, Lv. Courjer-News, Fargo, N. D. 31 North—Kelliher: Lv. . +#33 North—Int. Falls. Ly.... . leaves FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 75 cents due North Bemidji each. Every ribbon sold for 75| *° Frelsht from Brainer 7:00 pm cents guaranteed. Phone orders|*Daily. All others daily except Sunday. promptly filled. Mail orders given the same careful attention as when NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY you appear in person. Phone 31.| Open daglly, except ds;mdly, 1 to The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply |Shiy! 3% ¢y I, SUndAY. redding r 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. Ne o 46 Freight from Int. Huffman & 0'Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING H N. McKEE, Funeral Director Presbyterian Cook Book. The Pioneer 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 telephone. Phone 31.—Adv. Phone 178-2, 3 or 4 FUNERZL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER and COUNTY CORONER A New Jersey inventor has per- fected a wireless aerial of much ca- pacity but great compactness by iwinding wire spirally around strands of an insulated material. HARNESS We want to sell a few Work Har- es Cheap to advertise them. Call 0 and see them. Ziegler’s Second Hand Store 405 Beltrami Ave. . Read the Want Ads. Py

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