Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 10, 1915, Page 2

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THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1015, i H ol H 3 his present reputation and peace of [ K ¥ & Kig ¥ K K K K46 K KK K Kah { "Ie Beflfldfi Dfllly lee“ mind,-he-will steer clear of the guber- natorial game.—Waseca Herald. PEACE “PUNCHES” BY 5 DAVID STARR JORDAN Keep your eye on the man who op- - poses his fellow citizen on account of Entered at the post office at Bemidji,|his nationality, his polities or. his . Minn, as second-class matter under Act|religion. He is hostile to the plain OfCongressiaf Wiaron ¥ 2910 provision of'our Constitution and is Published every afternoon except Sunday | not & good citizen. True Americans = cannot sanction his methods, no mat- e D 1O Ay €O |ter iow zealous, religious or patriotic i known to the editor, but not necessarily |[he may be in his profession. The for publication. world generally judges a man by his ! neS;"‘;';‘:.fi?“fi;‘;’;i {?fi;‘;fi,@;"i’;’i’ 1:::,. deeds rathier than by his declarations. than Tuesday of each week to insure|--Levang's Weekly. publication in the. current issue. o Northern Minnesota has been ar- .$ .40|riving ever since it undertook to do 4.00 | something for itself. This was when : 2.00 |the development association was or- One year, postage paid.. 4.00| ganized. It provided the talking, ad- The Weokly Ploneer. vertising, enthusing, get-busy agen- Eight pages, containing a summary of [cy. Just as soon as this aectivity e i’n;“:e;"f"i:‘(;st:g“a"‘;i“‘gdl:":;g made itself known, results followed. s.ddress for $1.50 in advance. The railroads were the first to recog- } e e nize that this section of the state § 7HiS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN had pinched itself and waked up. i ADVERTISING BY THE They at once put in their hypodermic and injected additional eixir.—Grand Rapids Herald-Review. | vErERmamy smxon W, K. DENISOR, D. VE’I‘ER‘NAR!AN Phonc 164-2 Pogue’s:: Litvery DRAY LINE THE BEMIDJI PIONEER ®UB. 00. Publishers and Proprietors. Telephione. 31. Everything-in the nature of ‘an ultimatum is wrong. The causes of war are jeal- ousy, greed, hate and prepar- edness. If a nation has iron tubs that shoot at a mark that wig- gles when it is hit, that na- tion .will look for a real:test of its tubs—war. The world needs diplomaey: without brass knockles.” Science has been prostitu- ted to murder. The question of peace: or war is in the hands of too few men., The .best thing Theodore Roosevelt ever said was: “It pays a nation to be a gentle- man.” International law should be a book of etiquet. After this war the founda- tions of international law will be stronger than ever. The United States must be law abiding—that’s all neut- rality means. The war’s grimmest jest was the endeavor to secure peace by piling up armament. ‘| TOM SMART DRAY- AND TRANSFER Safe and Piano Moving Res. Phone 58 818 America Ave. W““‘T - Office” Phone 12. WANTED—10 Clothing and ' 8hoe | =——————m————————— appeals to you on the matchless strength of - Sateamiefi ‘and 10 Safestadtes for our 2 “DERTISTS, its record for service given to more_than i i A gl furnishing ‘dept.’ Apply' at once | roAmaap- “[‘,‘,?,3'9’" The light, strong, durable, dependable Ford 750,000 owners. The Ford is a utility in 5 looston’s -Clothing ‘Store: every human activity, andit is'wonderfal- A e e ly lowin upkeep—averagmg two.-centsa FOR: RENT: Z milé to run and maintain. FOR TRENT Buite” of thres ofiee rooms for' rent over: First Natlonal Bank. FOR RENT—Two office rooms. Ap- ply . W. G. Schroeder. FOR RENT—House; 700 America Ave. Phone 588. FOR RENT — Furnished house. Phone 637. __FOR'SALE. FOR' SALE—At new wood yard, wood all lengths delivered at your door. Leave all orders at Ander- son’s Employment Office, 3206 Min- !mm: SURGEONS nesota Ave. Phone 147. Lizzie|DR. ROWLAND GILMORE Miller, Prop. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON jce—Mi| k: = |FOR SALE—‘“Karpen” mahogany O Milés Bt rocker and easy chair to match; | DR, E. A, SHANNON, M. D. ; upholstered and covered with PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON k Office..in ' Winter - Block Subscription Rati One month by carrier. One year by carrier... Three months, postage paid. Six months, postage paid. DR. 7. T. TUOIY PENTIST i Gibbons Block Tel. 230 North of Markham Hotel LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, Y ’ LAWYER Miles ‘Bleck Phone §80 i D. H. FI8K; Court Commissioner ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O’Leary-Bowser Building. Barring' the-unforseen, eachhuyer of a new: : Ford carat retail between August 1914 and i August 1915 will receive from $40 to $60 as a 2« shareof the:Ford Motor. Company’s;profits. Touring Car $490, Runabout: $440; Town Car $690; Cou%elet $750; Sedan $975, f. o. b _Detrmt with all equipment. On display and sale at :C. W. Jewett Co., Inc. Phone 474 Bemidji, Minn. GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO | ARANCHES (N ALL THE PRINCIPAL Ci [EE LRSS RS RS S (Tik* |« FARMERS CLUBS OF _ % * BELTRAMI COUNTY * KRKKEK KKK KKHKKK K KKR Nebish Club. S. J. Dietel is president and Elmer Shellbarger is secretary of the Neb- titt*-******t**‘k*******t**********fi**** KA I AKAIKR AR KRR AR AR AR AR AR AR R A AR AR AR A KK FH K KKK KKK KKK KKK Our Slogan: ish F: lub. This club com: = Spanish leather. Also ladies mahog- Office in Mayo Bloek A isi 'armers’ club. is club com- . i iting desk. Call Phone 644. | Phone 3868 Res: Phone. 397 i1 prises 11 families and is one of the A woman can exist on 5 per cent any writing des| +if uB 3 d 25 000 foremost organizations of its kind in |16s8 food than a man. - FOR SALE—Several good residence| DR, C. R. SANBORN L 1 eml Jl ’ the county. Its next meeting will| ~ 2 lots on Minnesota, Bemidji and PHYSICIAN. AND SURGEON = be held June 19. Nine families have Are Death’s Dewey avenues. Reasonable prices; Office—Miles Block | Population moved into the district during the & H H easy terms. Clayton C. Cross. Of- i b g fice.over Northern Nat'i Bank. DR. L. A. WARD | year. The following are members, “ands at - 1 ficé.ov : PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON their addresses being Nebish: Henry Gripp, Frank Markus, El- mer Shellbarger, Chester A. Deitel, FOR SALE—By one-acre lots, 18% acres lake shore land in city of Over First National Bank Bemidji, Minn. in 1925” Your Vitals? Every % Quotation on i Bemidji; 100 rods of nice clean i Nic. Brozvich, Arthur Gillman, Vance i o Eve Com dity st o kol ot DR, P,A{YE' %mao . | Jakovich, George Reed, Adam Paul, ‘our eu'n"e.m w"fl !y bpale] 'SICL BON: I — — i 5 FOR SALE OR TRADE--One-half ton Over First National Bank * A 1he Machinsry of Diesr ¥ RIGHT AT YOUR FINGERS TIPS. Verac truck. Would trado for 4- P ha Bryan Fas Done. i s No hunting through your files—no for- ft. birchwood. Ask for demonstra- | ofice Phone-36: Res. Phone 73 The resignation of Secretary Bryan East Side Laporte Club. Gets Out of Gear. g gh y y - tion. Koors Bros. FOR SALE—One modern five-room house, two 40-foot lots, on Lake Boulevard. Inquire C. G. King. getting the name of the firm who made the 4. price—It’s all before youin an There is a club at Laporte, known as the East Side Farmers’ club of Laporte which is accomplishing much good for its community and is com- Little pains grow to big ones: ‘Headaches, dullness and “tired-al over” feelings mean downright ser- fous, possibly fatal illness, unless the fault is corrected. | comes at a time which is extremely unfortunate for him in view of the international situation, which is up- DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Block permost in the American mind. How he can escape the accusation of the lack of a high sense of patriotic duty is not easily seen. He will be charged with desertion at a time of danger and he can enter no plea that will justify his course in the judgment of the large body of his fellow country- men, says the St. Paul Dispatch. The serious fault to be laid at his door is the creation of a false and prised of real hustlers. The club meets the second Saturday of each month and John G. Johnson and A. P. Johnson are president and secre- tary, respectively. There are 25 families who are members of the club. Nine new families have taken farms in the district of the club dur- ing the past year. Following are the members: [Loosc) (i car] ~ Quotation Record Its use will simplify your buying remarkably £ o There is an | exmlPeem BOOK for Every Business WANTED. WANTED—Second -hand - household goods. M. E. Ibertson. 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 DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN' AND SURGEON Beinidji, Minn. DR. G. HOEY GRADUATE VETERINARIAN | Call Pogue’s Livery—164 PROF. H. VIESON MUSICAL DIRECTOR 314:Fourth St. Bemidji, Minn. misleading impression of the attitude C. E. Anderson, Hans Anderson, A, f per acre. W. G. Schroeder. Studio: Band Room, City Hall el of the American people in their sup- fi‘a “:“:“’:;”]‘J"a :“"l:": Ellgn"s'(:‘ :'"I',‘ port of President Wilson in his de- Johnson, John G. Johnson, G. A. Mel- mand upon Ger: . H - 3 i pon Germany. He has fur-\p . ten, T. V. Mead, C. E. More- nished d for the belief in Ger- | . ground for the'bellatiin Gae- [, T Grstasd, 0. P. Ostrom, B: many and elsewhere that public sen- timent in America is divided in the|>: S;""i‘ G}‘ygr’;‘]‘ Ha:y}y?el' 1z matter of approval of the administra-| - Davis, J. B. Pierce, R. Robinson, L , i C. Nyman, Gunder Helle, H. J. Ca- tion’s c e—th: 2 # cours ab thereils: not ithe ten, John Johnson, J. M. Snesrud. solid front of support and indorse- ment which had b::epn represented and fl‘he address'of gl the'above members which is the undoubted fact. 18- Lavoree: Our negotiations with Germany seriously may be affected by this in- excusable step by the late secretary. In the prosecution of our policy it that at Hines. It is called the Hines was essential to convince the jm-|Co-operative Community ~Farmers’ perial German government that the|C¢lub and L. C. Kirkpatrick of Black- American people not only were in|duck is its president and F. W. and Profession | d E Teaching Piano, Violin, Cornet and MISCELLANEOUS other instruments, also church chofr. ADVERTISERS—The great state of First Class Orchestra for AH 2 . : S B North Dakota offers unlimited op Occasions. i . | portunities for business to classi- = + e - Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store fled advertisers. The recoguized | HILMA M. NYGREN ’ Death’s Grip has no merey: A short course of home treatment with Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea, taken in time, has restored thou- sands to perfect health when all the skill of the best medical specialists ; in the world would have been of no avail had the disease been allowed to continue. When the stomach and bowels get out of order, the natural defenses of the body are weakened and you are ‘an easy prey to serious’ diseases. Hollister's. Rocky Moun~ tain Tea tones up all the vital or- gans, enriches the blood stream and removes the poisonous disease pred- ' |, ucts in Nature’s own péerless way. You ‘can get either the kind to make in tea or the new tablet form for the use of trnvallorl. eotc. At ol . g00q -gruggiste—Frie Barker’s Drug Store 217 3rd St Be- midjl Minn.- ; advertising medium in the Fargc GRADUATE NURSR Security Bank Bldg. Telephone 31 Dally and. Sunday Courler-News Phone 317-R . > " R the only seven-day paper in the atate and the paper which carriee Y the largest. amount 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- sulth; rates one cent.per word first Insertion, one-balf eent per word KRR KKK IR % RAILROAD TIME CARDS + ! EEEAH XXX XN S & MPLS., RED LAXE & MAN. North Bound Arrives = North Bound Leaves 800 RAILROAD East Bound Leaves Co-operative Community. Another progressive organization is Y West ‘Boeund Leaves. GREAT NORTHBRN : West Bound Leaves. ‘ the most serious earnest, but that|Jameson of Hines'is secretary. The succeeding Insertions; ftty ceats| 33 WoNt SOURE Leaves: they were of one mind. The deser-|club meets the second Saturday of per line per month. Address the West Bound Leaves. tion of Bryan may be calculated to |each month. give color to a belief Germany has already intimated that a consider- able portion of the American people disapproved of the forceful attitude of the administration. Everything points to the assump- tion that President Wilson’s rejoin- der to the German reply is more di- rect and pointed than the original demand. To the tenor of the note, the secretary of state objects; to its possible consequence he demurs; as a result he resigns. At a time when the entire country rallies to the sup- port of the president in the enuncia- families on the membership roll. Fol- lowing are the members: C. A. Mather, George Smith, Wil- liam Hines, Thomas Donaldson, Frank Brooks, T. Mead, H. McLaren, 0. Némire, C. A. McHanus, F. Cook, J. J. Smith, J. Hayford, M. Dawson, ‘W. Borden, William Higbee, A. B. Page, J. Saunders, C. Johnson, D. Kile, J. Mastin, H. Matheng and H. Newcomb. . WITH THE FRENCH WOUNDED The Woman’s Sacrifice. There are about forty || ‘against death from any case, Undertakmg take care-of your needs in the ulr}del‘taklng ine 1. 0. 0. F. Bldg. PHONES: Instirs your live stock I am now prepared to 223 Res, TIOW, Courfer-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 ag when you :appear in person. Phone 31. The: Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- . itice. Freight West Leaves Freight East _Leaves at. . *33 North—Int. Falls. Lv. 44 South Freight, leaves Nnrth Bem! dlL creeseens 7:30 am Frel; leaves - NoNr th B Id£ or: lem! . 6:0 46 Freight from ’I faam North :Bemidjt 4:40 .pm due 46 Fre lght from Br?lnerd, due *Daily. Bem! 00 pi All others daily eXcept Sund-y\ NEW FUBLIC LIBRARY. Open -daily, ‘except Sunaay, 1 to 6 p. m., 7°to-9 p. m. Sunday; reading room only, 3 to 6 p.m. . . Dwight D. Miller Paris, June 10, 8:30 P. M. Away | Bemidji, Minn, »Tel 360 P. O7'Box 222 tion of a foreign policy ‘which may be fraught with the most seriots re- sults, his chief adviser, the premier |from the battlefield ome sees war DRESSMAKING—At 317 Minnesota |’ Ave. Room No..1. Ploneer wants—one-half cent & word cash. of his cabinet, blenches and resigns. It was common knowledge that Bryan could not long have remained among the president’s counsellors. It is deeply unfortunate that he could not have been disposed of before this crisis. It is lamentable that he re- mained to resign at a moment when his retirement is subject to a misin- terpretation that may embarrass the administration in the conduct of ne- gotiations so important and = far- reaching. One thing, howevyer, is luminously clear. If this resignation should create a false impression of where the American people stand, it leaves not the slightest doubt of where the ad- ministration stands. The false im- pression will be corrected and popu- lar approval of the administration be strengthened in proportion. KKK KHKKKK KK KKK KX * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS * K KKK KK KKK KK KK Good roads should be the import- ant issue in the election next-year in Minnesota and the candidates for governor should be pledged for their construction.—Anoka Union. P il A Northern Minnesota hospital is closing on account of not having enough patients, which is only an- other proof that this section of the United States is the most healthful in all the world.—Pine River Sen- _ tinel-Blaze. e Friends of former Warden Wolfer of the Stillwater penitentiary - are booming his for the Republican nom- ination for governor. -If-he values stripped of .its glamor. We see‘the heroic. work of nurses who are on duty day and- night. There is de- votion, self-sacrifice, suffering pa- triotism—=qualities, which. only .a great war and its terrible conmse- quences can inspire to the highest development. The =women every- where are helping and everywhere one sees self-sacrifice and devotion to country. The women of the United States do not know how fortunate they are. Here there are plenty of women who suffer in silence, whose strength is out of proportion to their ambition. Their hands-are tied by some chronic disease common to womankind; that weak back, accompanied by pain here- or thete, extreme nervousness, sleeplessness, maybe fainting spells or spasms, are all signals of distress for women. She may be growing from girlhood into womanhood, pass- irig from womanhood to motherhood, anad later suffering from that change which leaves so many wrecks of wo- men. At any or all of these periods of a woman’s life she should -take a tonic and nervine, prescribed-for just such cases by a physician of vast ex- perience in the diseases of women. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite _Prescription has successfully treated more cases the past fifty years than any other known remedy. When you feel dull, headachy, backache, dizzy, or per- can accomplish, nothing you can en- joy. You can find permanent relief in Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It is sold by medicine dealers, or trial box by mail from Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., on re- ceipt of 50-cents, or ome dollar for large box.—Adv. ‘The Pioneer is. the place.to ‘b‘uy your rolls- of -adding’ machine paper for. Burroughs adding machines: One roll, a dozen rolls or a hundred rolln —Adv. We have always tried to be just a lile ahead of the other fellow in the general equipment of our store. - Asan evidence of this desire to show the newest and only the best of everything, we ladly recommend to wers of ink ‘haps hot flashes, there is nothing yoy| —the newest member of the Carter's lax famil Pencraft Ink writes a blue and dries a ,e(blu.{ lx i3 especially:brilliant, smooth and permanent, BEMIDJ1 Ice cream is the ideal food for hot weather. High in food value. So easy to digest that it requires hardly any “of your energy. Cooling to your stomach. Delightful to your taste. It should not be treated as a delicacy, but as a food. - Eat it for- your "lunch today. Give it to - Carter’s the children this afternoon. Have it for dinner Pencraft this evening. = Eat more of it after the movies. 5.‘}”'}2’;‘,5“2%2 Too much is not enough. .Because you can'’t get too much : ] Koors Ice Cream is now a product to be proud Ink and let us show you the new C-mu& ith the new flow-cotroller, - you'can bq_y;v_, : : i BEMGDI ' : PIONEER Phone 31, of. Tl_)e'purest. ‘most wholesome, cheapest foed Ploneer want ads—one-nalf cent ‘word: cash, EEEETZ SR B SR AL S LR ST * TROPPMAN’S 'CASH MARKET * * PRICES PAID TO FARMERS ¥ LB RS2 S SRS SRS S 8 Butter, 1b. ... 20c Dairy butter, 1 20¢ Bggs, doz. . 16¢ Potatoes, bu. . 40c¢| Rutabagas, bu. 30¢ Carrots, bush. 60¢ BROWN ‘& LANE GONTRAGTORS Well Digging, House Moving and Cement Work of All Kinds All work guaranteed. Dwight D. Miller Insurance Specialist 1*Télephone 360 P. 0.,B6xA 222 || BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA | Phones 617 or 448-W 405 Beltrami-Ave. Bemidji, Mine House Moving, Build- ing, Goncrate Work Ete. L. H. PRICE REMORE ‘HOTEL BEMIDJI, MINN. FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER Huffman & fl’v_leary FURNITURE AND IIIBERTAKIIIB P,hong I'IO-W or R

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