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i § AT The Bemidti Daily Pioneer THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO. Publishers and Proprietors. Telephone. 31. -— Entered at-the post office at Bemidji, Mirin; as second-class matter under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Published every afternoon except Sunday No attention paid to anonymous con- tributions, Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pio- neer should reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue. Subscription Rates. Ore month by carrier. One year by carrier, Three months, postage paid. Six months, postage paid. One year, postage paid.. The Weekly Pioneer. Bight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for $1.50 in advance. THiS PAPER RCPRCSCNTLD FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGC SRANCHES iN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CiTig® Our Slogan: “Bemidji 25,000 Population in 1925” “Americanization Day,” the term with which Governor Hammond re- ferred to the Fourth of July, might correctly have been applied to Be- midji’s part in the nation’s festivi- ties, for persons of foreign and na- tive birth celebrated here with a genuine spirit of patriotism. Aided by a perfect day and a splen- did program, providing entertain- ment and enjoyment for all, Be- midji’s Independence day celebration was a great success. Hundreds of vis- itors accepted the city’s hospitality and were much pleased. Those who had charge of the arrangements are to be complimented. “Build a Silo” Campaign, A campaign which has for its shib- boleth “Build a Silo” should be very popular in Minnesota this season, as the result of conditions which make a good general corn crop very prob- lematical, says the St. Paul Dispatch. As a matter of fact the farmer without a silo in these days of pro- gressive and scientific farming is without one of the first essentials of success. But present conditions may make the use of the silo indispensa- ble if the unmatured corn is to be utilized at its full value. Nothing but uniformly favorable growing weather and the absence of frost through November can mature the corn crop of the Northwest. Other conditions are certain to pro- duce a large quantity of soft and unmarketable corn. In such a case the silo is the farmer’s salvation. Farm, Stock and Home. emphasizes this in very timely style when it says: Unless your corn is well ahead of the average for this season it can hardly ripen. But between nmow and Sep- tember there is time in which you can build a silo. A silo will get full value out of your corn ecrop. A silo will beat the frost at its own game. A silo will pay for itself in the increased returns from your stock regardless of whether your corn’ ripens or not. Beat the frost to it! Build a silo! Save the corn crop. This is a good starting.of the campaign to “Build a Silo.” If his corn should ripen the farmer will find his silo one of the best assets not- withstanding. —_— KKK EKHK K KK KKK KK ¥ EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS ¥ HRE KKK KKK KKK KK KK ‘Why is it some people always have a hammer out for this town. If ~ other people hammered them as they knock the town their wail could be heard from heaven to the lowest depths of the hot place. It is always advisable to get rid of a grouch, but it is still more advisable to lose it “in the woods instead of sowing it broadcast in the heart of a fine com- - munity of energetic respectable peo- ple—Herman Review. PRI If you don’t just like everything you see in your home paper go around * the streets and howl. The editor is never supposed to make a mistake and of course he cannot do so. Other people can, but the editor is ubiqui- * tous, omniscient, omnipresent, omni- potent, “omniverous.” If you can’t see a good point, don’t fail to see a bad one. If a thousand pleasant things are said of people, hunt for something unpleasant. If you don’t find 'it, howl some more; if you do, howl anyway. Never mind your own business—this will make you great. —Park Rapids Enterprise. year apparently developed on tour—P. H. McGarry of Walker will make another Charles A. Lindbergh from the posi- business; watch for something to find fault with in some other man’'s i A certain political event of next the to effort dislodge tion of representative in congress from the Sixth district. Since Me-| Garry’s first run the counties of Douglas, Meeker and Wright, all Lindbergh strongholds, have been chopped from the Sixth district, and now Mr. McGarry feels that he can whip the present representative. He has nothing to lose by making the attempt. He is and will remain sen- ator from his district until the com- mencement of the 1919 session, and he can run for congress next year without resigning as senator. That Pat McGarry has fighting friends all over the Sixth there is no doubt and that he will give Mr. Lindbergh the chase of his life is just as certain.— Northfield News. KKK KKK KK KKK KKK KR * AVERY SAYS GAME * X RESERVE ABUNDANT * * WITH WILD GAME * KKK HKEKK KKK F KKK Carlos Avery, executive agent of the state game and fish commission, returned yesterday from a trip of inspection of the Superior game re- fuge located in St. Louis, Cook and Lake counties. The refuge is un- {usually wild and is one of the little | known spots in Northern Minnesota. {1t fairly teems with wild animal life and its lakes are filled with fish. Telling of Mr. Avery’s visit to the refuge, the department bulletin says: “In the country tarversed by Mr. Avery ‘it is necessary to go on foot carrying on one’s back camp equip- ment and food necessary for the ex- | pedition, and at this season of the year to encounter myriads of mosqui- tos and black flies, the pests of the north woods. It is now that the game can be seen as deer and moose are found frequenting the lakes and streams. An idea of the primitive nature of the country is conveyed by the fact that in five days journey north and east of the end of the Alger railway line, traveling nearly all the time, not a single human habitation was seen except ranger stations of the United States Forestry service and not a human being encountered save forest rangers and one crew of railroad locating engineers. Ideal Game Conditions. “Conditions are ideal for game and wild animals have thrived and multi- plied under the excellent conditions and the protection afford- ed by the game refuge and the co- natural operation of the United States For- estry service.” Mr. Avery saw 11 moose feeding in one small lake and in many plaeces found their trails and tracks so abundant as to indicate the presence of scores of the animals in the vie- inity. life in this region has been the rapid increase in beaver. Another result afforded wild Few Caribou Left. “There is some hope also of the return of the caribou, now practie- ally gone from the state, as at least one band of about 20 animals has been located recently south of the Gunflint country. “It should not be understood that the encouraging conditions found here prevail generally in regions re- mote from the protecting influence of the refuge. They do not. Moose, especially, are being decimated, law- ‘fully for the most part, but to an alarming extent in certain other sec- tions where they have been abund- ant, which tends to prove the efficien- cy of the refuge plan. “Owing to the lack of sufficient Save The Baby Use the reliable HORLICK'S ORIGINAL Malted Milk Upbuilds every-part of the body. efficiently, Endorsed by thousands -of - Physicians, Mothers and Nurses the world over for more than a quarter of a century. . Convenient, no cooking nor additional milkrequired, Simply dissolveinwater. Agrees when other foods often fail, Sample free, HORLICK'S, Racine, Wis. B No Substitute is‘‘Just as Good" as HORLICK’S, the Original MINNESOTA VICTIMS FIND QUICK RELIEF Wonderful Remedy Saves Many From Desperate llinesses and Dan- gerous Operatlonl. End stomach trouhles qulekly with Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy. The first dose proves what it will do. Hun- dreds of people in-Minnesota have used it with unusual benefit. Here are the words of a few of the many in this state who have taken it: JOHN TOWEY, 2030 Dayton ave- nue, St. Paul, Minn,, ordering a sec- ond treatment, -wrote: “I have been feeling fine since I took your medi- cine. It certainly cleared my skin. T have recommended your medicine to a number of stomach sufferers.” MRS. PETER WILLIAMS, 2749 Eighteenth st., S., Minneapolis, wrote: “I have taken Mayr's Wonderful Rem- edy and feel like a new woman. I am entirely out of pain. Four of our best doctors could do nothing for me and agreed I must have an operation.” Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy gives per- manent results for stomach, liver and intestinal ailments. Eat as much and whatever you like. No more distress after eating, pressure of gas in the stomach and around the heart. Get one bottle of your druggist now and try it on an absolute guarantee—It not satis- lnctorymoneywmb-mnm funds to carry out the work :theé Su-j perior refuge has never ‘been -ade-| quately patrolled or guarded and it has been left to care for itself to a great extent. It is the--game com- mission’s intention, however, to im-|. :prove -conditions: in -this -respect. Ar- | rangements will be made at once to mark the boundaries of the refuge at accessible points to post signs and warnings at portages and on canoe; routes and trails throughout the re- fuge and to arrange. for more fre- quent .and thorough patrol by war- dens.” ‘This is:a blood cleanser and alterative flnt starts the liver and stomach into - wvigorous action. It thus assists the ibody to manufacture. rich red-blaod ‘whichfeeds the heart—rierves—brain and organs of the hody. ‘The ofi work smoothly like machinery ru; lng in oil. You feel clean, st strentions, instead of ‘tiréd, weak and faint. Nowadays you can obtain Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. Tablets, 58 well as the liquid form | from.all medicinedealers, or ‘trial box - of ‘tablets by mail, on receipt of 50c. ddress V. M. Pierce, M.D. Buffalo, N. WOMAN THINKS CHILDLESS COUPLES SHOULD TAKE ‘HOMELESS CHILDREN Denver, Colo., July- 6.—"“It makes |- me tired to hear a woman who has no- children and who is financially able [life childless, wlthout missing the to care for a child, tell how fond she [love of ‘children. Some-are women is of children and how unhappy she ['Who- are talented—who find their is in her childless condition,” said [music, their painting or their writing Mrs. Edward Welles Collins, daugh- |sufficient. Others are women who ter of Former Governor Routt, ‘who |make bridge ‘playing their life work. has herself adopted an orphan girl. [It is just :as well that these remain “If she really were fond of: chil-|childless. Think of the poor chil- dren, she would mother one of the[dren who would have to call such poor orphan babies that plead for a women mothers.” mother’s love. Mrs. Collins, who is a talented vo- “A woman who can give a mother’s = love only to the child of her own TO; L ET & EATH diets died in infancy. derby hat. flesh is not really fond of children. She has affection for her own child because it is a part of herself—it is vanity more than affection. “The true mother’s love is a uni- versal love—a love that embraces all children. “I have never seen a child that I could not love. I love the dirtiest and ugliest along with the cleanest and most beautiful.” Something of a stir was created in Denver society when Mrs. Collins |~ and another of its most prominent young matrons—Mrs. J. J. B. Bene- dict, daughter og Julius F. Brown, who left a large fortune—adopted children. The Benedicts took in a 6-months-old orphan boy. Mrs. Col- lins now has a 4-year-old foster daughter adopted eight months ago. Mrs. Collins believes it is the duty of the childless woman of means: to take into her heart and home some motherless child. “When I think of the comfortable homes that need children and the children that need homes, I could weep. Why can’t they be brought together? Many women go through Baking Helps Learn to Regulate the Heat of Your Oven By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine | z ’s ! | Mo, 1 Hang Your Pictures welghing up to 100 i, Moore Push-Pins Sold In BEMIDJI AT THE -Bemidji Pioneer. Office: SUPPLY STORE ‘There is just one way to make your cakes rise high and keep an even surface. Have your oven moderate at first, until the cakeis fully rizen; then increase the heat, so as to brown it over quickly. Extreme heat stiffens the .dough. If you stiffen the outside of the cake before the rising is complete, you stop the rising process. Then the leavening gas, forming inside, will bulge up the center, where the dough is still soft, and spoil the shape of the cake, a8 Norr—Biscuits or other pastries M. made from stiff dough, that are cut into shapes for the oven, bake in a hot oven. This is because the cut surfaces of the dough do mnot sear over, but rather leave the pores open, allowing the leavening gas to escape and the heat to penetrate readily. ‘Small ovens cool * quickly; therefore they should be-made || several degrees thotter than a larger ;| oven, and the less.the door. is opened | the better. Do not attemyt to bake bread and pastry together. Bread re- ' quires prolonged, moderate ‘baking— pastry the reverse, "7 HUGH A, WHITNEY { L 0 | Furniture lludflrtakmg I am now prepared to take care of your needs in the undertaking line 1, 0. 0. F. Bldg, -PHONES: 223 Res. 719- Have a strong underheat for baking powder preparations, especially pastry. | These are only a few of the many baking helps found in the K C Cook’s Book— a copy of which may be secured by sending the colored certificate taken from a 25-cent can of K C Baking Pow- i der to the JAQUES MFG. Co., Chicago, i | YAUR GRAY HAIR Look ‘years younger! Use Grand- mother’s recipe of -Sage Tea and Sulphur and:nebody: will know. The :use -of :Sage ‘and: Sulphur for- 1¥ | storing. faded, gray -bair -to its. natural color dates back to her’s time. She used it 4o keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy -and -abundant. Whenever iher thair -fell .out or took on that dull, faded or streaked. -appearance, this. sim- | g}: ;tnixture was applied with wenderful ect. 'B‘EMv]DJ 1 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 ,fnnd Eat it for your lunch today. Give it to the children this ‘afternoon. Have it for dinner this evening. Eat more of it after the movies. Too much is not enough. Because you @;t_ : et too much. " Koory' Ice Cream:is now a product to be -proud of. The purest, most wholesome, cheapest food, ysuean buy. . by any drug store for a 50-cent “Wyeth‘l Sage and Sul, edy,” you will get thia recipe which can be depended upon restore natural color and beauty to hair and is splendid for dandru.., dry,, feverish, itchy scalp and falling lm ir. A well-known' downtown druggist ll it darkens /the hair so naturally end: ew‘i:(y;i'hl{’ nobody lc&n tell it has- app] ‘ou gimpl & spongs or soft “brush with it m]:‘lend this; through your. hair, taking one‘strand ak time. "By morning-the gray, hair dis- appears, and after umther applcation or two, it becomes -beautifully dask, gl soft and abundant, “HOW TO ANSWER BLIND ADS. “swered by letter addressed to the “|'Dloyes are nét permitted to tell who ‘calist, stated she finds just as mu¢h time for her art since she adopted the little girl:as she found previously. Three children born-to the Bene- For light housekeeping and many other purposes a new gasoline stove on which much cooking ¢an be done is about the size of and resembles a {FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. (1915, after that date all | | W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. VETERINARIAN 403 Irvine Ave. : DRAY LINE TOM SMART 2 DRAY AND TRANSFER Safe and Piano Moving 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12. All ads signed with numbers, or initials, care Pioneer must be an- number given in the ad. Pioneer em- Res. Phone 58 DR. D. L. STANTON, Office in Winter Block any advertiser i8. Mail or send your answer to Pioneer No. , or Initial , and we forward it to the ad- vertiser. DR. J. T. TUOMY, DE; Gibbons Block North of Markham Hotel 'FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Suite of three office rooms for rent over First National Bank. FOR RENT--Modern furnished rooms. GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, LAWYER Miles Block 311 America Ave. Phone 807-W. FOR RENT—Furnished room, gentle- man preferred. 523 Bemidji Ave. D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second tioor O’Leary-Bowser FOR RENT—Two office rooms. Ap- ply W. G. Schroeder. house. A. Klein, FOR RENT—Modern 7-room flat. PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS FOR RENT — Seven-room modern | DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block Phone 23. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—At new wood door. Leave all orders at Ander- son’s Employment Office, 206 Min- DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Res. Phone 397 wood all lengths delivered at your |[pR, C, R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block yard, lihona 396 nesota Ave. Phone 147. Lizzle Miller, Prop. FOR SALE—A snap, the best summer cottage at Lake Bemidji. Will con- DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First National Bank Bemidji, Minn. sider good auto as part payment. For further information write O’Connor Brothers, Grand Forks, N. Dak. DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Block FOR SALE—Several good residence lots on Minnesota, Bemidji and Dewey avenues. Reasonable prices; DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON easy terms. Clayton C. Cross. Of- fice over Northern Nat’l Bank. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—One of the best residences in Bemidji for smaller place or for Minneapolis property. Address X, clo Pioneer. DR. G. HOEY GRADUATE VETERINARIAN Call Pogue’s Livery—164 HILMA M. NYGREN GRADUATE NURSE Phone 317-R FOR SALE—Pigs. Phone 687. FOR SALE—House. Sathre. 5 WANTED. WANTED By young man who is employed, and a stranger in the city, the acquaintance of some lady from 20 to 28 years of age. One that is fond of outings and amuse- ments. Address cjo “L,” Daily Pioneer. WANTED—Stenographic work to do at home or will go out. Tel. 945. WANTED—Second hand housebold goods. . M. E. Ibertson. x KR KKK R KKK KR RX X K& RAILROAD TIME CARDS KKK KK KR KKK KD LS, RED LAXE Noten Houd Arrlves North Bound Lea SO East Bound Leaves. West Bound Leaves East Bound Leaves ‘West Bound Leaves. GREAT West Bound Leaves East Bound Leaves West Bound Leaves East Bound Leaves. North Bound Arrive: South Bound Leave: rre(ght West Iteaves at ht Fast Leaveq at. nr'xfxnu‘wfiu-m ut 54 son th—Mpls, Etc, 31 North—Kelliher Lv. *33 North—Int. Falls. Lv. 44 South FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—120 acres farm lind, about 6500 cords wood, half hay land on good stream, one mile from a town, terms liberal, price $20.00 per acre. W. G. Schroeder. 46 Freight from Int. due North Bemidj 4:40 45 Freight from Brainerd, due Ny *Daily. dji ALl others daily except Sunday. _____ MmoELIAWEOUS ADVERTISERS—The great atate of North Dakota offers unlimiied op portunities for business to class!- fied -advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-Newg 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 the state the day of publication; it is the NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunaay, 1 to 6 p. m., 7 to 9 p. m. Sunday, reading room only, 3 to 6 p. m. KKK KKK KKK K KR KKK K * TROPPMAN’S CASH MARKET * * PRICES PAID TO FARMERS ¥ KKK KKK KKK KKK KK KK Butter, 1b. Dairy butter, 1b.. . Eggs, doz. Potatoes, per bu. Rutabagas, bu. Carrots, bush. paper to use in order to get re- sulth; rates one cent per word first, insertion, one-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 76 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. The Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. Benefited by Chamberlain’s Liniment. “Last winter I used Chamberlain’s Liniment for rheumatic pains, stiff- ness and soreness of the knees, and can conscientiously say that I never used anything that did me so much good.”—Edward Craft, Elba, N. Y. Obtainable everywhere.—Adv. A special transportation committee in Oakland, Cal., has reported to the commercial bodies that the average jitney in that city travels 137 miles per day, with a car-mile income of 63 cents. Figuring depreciation, op- erating cost and $3 per day to the driver, the committee says that even the smallest jitney car cannot be run ‘for less than seven cents a mile. Notice, Having leased the building of W. D. Dickinson, formerly known as the. Jim Thurston place, until Nov. 20, furniture and fixtures will be for sale and the building for rent. A L. DKCK]NSON, FUNERAL DIRECTOR IBERTSON UNDERTAKER 405 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji, Mins. Huffman & O0’Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING H N McKEE 2Funeral Director Phone 178-W or R Insure your live stock agalnst death from . leght D. Miller ~Bemidji, Minn, “P: 0. Box 222