Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 29, 1915, Page 4

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& MISTER BARKER 7 TNo o W See Your Finish The one store in Bemidji to which you are al- waysa most welcome visitor isthestorewherethe clerks always meet you with a smile.! It is in this store most strangers find a cordial welcome, because most people .when they visit Bemidji drop in to see BARKER. - ' What was meant by “see your finish” in the above heading was to impress upon you the fact that we finish and develope photographs. If you have a KODAK of your own and wish to have your films developed, bring them to BARKER. Films up to 23x4% each. Films up to 43x63 each . Films up to 5x8 each .. Third Street DEVELOPING 10c 15¢ 20c Vest Pocket size each. 1-A Kodak size 23x4% . 3-A Kodak size each. In additien to our vast assortment of smaller KODAKS we have. No 1 Autographic Kodak Junior $9.00 No 1-A Autographic Kodak with Rapid rectilinear lens ... Barker’s Drug & Jewelry Store No. 3-A Autographic Kodak... .. No. 3-A Autographic Kodak with anastigmat lens, f7.7, at... PRINTING .$27.50 Bemidji, Minn, RESIGNATIONS OF “U” DOCTORS ARE ACCEPTED Resignations of five dissatisfied members of the University of Minne- sota medical faculty were accepted by the board of regents at their meeting gestenday. At the same time the !egents indorsed an interpretation of their so-called muzzzling resolution, which might have forestalled the res- ignations of those actuated by the elief that there academic freedom &as being infringed on. Those whose resignations were accepted were: Dr. J. F. Gilfillan, Dr. P. Hoff, Dr. C. D. Freeman of St. Paul and Dr. J. E. Hynes and Dr. C. D. Head, Minneapolis. IOWA FARMERS TO INVESTIGATE EQUITY St. Paul, Minn.,, July 29.— The Farmers’ Elevator - association of Iowa, having 60,000 members, has passed resolutions suggesting a visit to St. Paul to investigate co-cvpera- tive marketing of grain, according to an announcement made today by the Farmers’ Equity Co-operative ex- change. Establishment of a farmers’ market in Chicago, similar to the Equity of St. Paul, is a possibility. DID IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU, MR. READER? There are over a thousand words in a column of a newspaper. If you don’t believe it, count them. When A.| you have counted them, write a col- umn on some subject. Then write a column on another, then a column on a dozen subjects, then a column with a different subject for every two or three lines. Then chase a news item all over town for a missing col- umn.and find out that there was nothing to it. Then write about five columns more, and you have material for a rather slim newspaper. Do this today, tomorrow and next day, HAVE YOUR FAMILY PICNIC IN THE PINES at the HEAD OF THE LAKE . BOAT Leaves at 9:00 a. m Leaves at 1:00 p. m. m. m. Leaves at 3:00 p. Leaves at 7:30 p. returns at 11:00 returns at 2:30 . 'returns at 5:00 returns at 9:00 PHONE 53 Capt. W. B. MacLachlan Special Rates to Picnic Parties 2ll next week, and next month, and next year, with just five legal holi- days. Try this for just a year, and see if you would not look on the man or woman who rang your telephone and gave you a news item, as a pub- lic benefactor and a Christian and a good fellow. Unclaimed Letters. List of advertised letters “UN- CLAIMED” at Bemidji postoffice: Men—Mr. Odell Carrol, Mr. E. F. Evenson, Mr. Edwin Everson, Mr. W. C. Ketchum, D. C. Longley, George H. Miller, Mr. John Muhl- berg, Mr. Clarence Nielson, ‘Mr. Charley Nolan, Mr. Endia Peterson, Mr. Joe Stanlaker, Mr. Sever Syno- ground, Mr. Scott Trulock. Women— Miss Erica C. Danielson, Mrs. Addie Good, Miss Nellie Jasperson, = Miss Tillie Johnson, Miss Mabel Johnson, Miss Anna Kellog, Miss Margaret Mackaman, Mrs. Nellie. Peterson, Mrs. F. A. Rodenmacher, Miss Ellen Rosenberg, Miss Helen Thomas, Mrs. William Trimble, Mrs. F. Watkins. ONE YEAR OF WAR AS SEEN FROM VIEWPOINTS OF FIGHTING NATIONS (Continuea from Fage’1.) the nation have answered the call for industrial reinforcements (bear in mind that 80 per cent of the British public consists of workingmen, their women and children); also in the marvelous response to the prime min- ister’s appeal for an adequate supply of silver bullets. Never in the his- tory of any nation has a popular war loan met with such success. Has Itself to Blame. For the apathy displayed by the masses in the first ten months of the war the British government has only itself to blame. The leaders of the nation made the mistake of entrust- ing the entire conduct of the war on land to one man—perhaps a military genius, but with serious limitations on the human side, including an ut- ter inability to understand the civ- ilian temperament. For seven months the war was conducted in secret. Through the anonymous “eyewit- nesses’” the public was fed with an occasional optimistic but colorless story from the front, the burden of which was that everything wds going along splendidly, that the Germans Cut Down Your Car Expense Every mile you run costs money. - Every gallon of gasoline you buy costs money. If money 1s no ob- ject to you, read no further. Stop right where you are. If you are interested; listen. PURITY GASOLINE will carry your car from three to six miles further per. gallon and costs the same as ordinary gasoline. Does this mean anything to you? Is it worth saving? Don’t you aim to make your gosoline go as far as poss- ible? If you have never given PURITY GASOLINE a trial, do it the next time and see how less often it is necessary to fill your tank. Free Air For Tires You can fill your tires and tank at the same time at our filling station near the Great Northern Depot. Our air costs nothing, and PURITY GASOLINE costs less because it carries your car more miles per gallon. St. Cloud 0il Company Phone 91 - - Bemidji, Minn ‘were losing heart, that they had heen cot lled: to put their old men and “young boys In the firing line— and always conveying the impression that ultimate victory was a foregone conclusion. Not uritil March was a single newspaper correspondent per- mitted’ at the front, and even then they were not allowed to tell the ‘whole truth. No wonder enlistments were slow. The fact that Lord Kitchener was able to enroll more than two million | | volunteers ip this period is sure proof of the latent spirit of patriotism in the British public. But there was |no enthusiasm such as had been aroused in Germany by the first-hand stories from the trenches told by cor- respondents who were permitted to go practically wherever they chose and to write pretty much what they 'liked. .~ Have Been Orifinizefl. Thé" working men of the nation have been severely citicized for their failure to appreciate the gravity of the situation—for their strikes, their slackness, and their alleged over-in-| dulgence in liquor. The fact is 'they did not understand because they were not told. So far as they knew victory was assured anyhow. They went along much the same as In Deace times, and when they had rea- son to believe that their employers were taking advantage of them, they struck. They didn’t speed up, either because they didn’t regard it neces- sary or because it was their employ- ers and not they themselves who would profit. As to the charge of wholesale drunkenness, the mere fact thst the government quickly aban- doned its proposed drastic temperance measure is sufficient answer. But now it is no longer “Kitchen- er’s war,” it is the Empire’s. Lloyd George has told not only the workingmen but the entire nation the truth. And the most striking illus- tration of the British workingman’s willingness to help the Empire in its great need is the fact that, although it was Lloyd GGeorge himself who first accused him of slackness and drunkenness, the recruiting of his new Munitions Army started with an everage enlistment of 10,000 per day. If industrial. conscription should become desirable, there need be no fear of ihdustrial revolution. Said Lord Milner in the House of Lords the other day: “There is an idea that organized labor will resent be- ing commandeered for the service of the State. That is just what it will not resent. ‘If we are erdered to work for England,’ I heard some typi- cal representatives of working-class opinion say the other day, ‘we will obey.” The only trouble has been that so many workingmen have fear- ed that their labor would not simply be requisitioned for the defense of the country, but exploited for the benefit of individuals. “The government ‘has guaranteed that there will be no exploitation, and that guarantee has been signed by Lobor’s own represen- tative in the new Cabinet, Arthur Henderson, and by its various leaders in the House of Commons. This spirit of anti-down-hearted- ness is general in- England - today. The attitude of complacency on the part of the upper classes and of apa- thy mnonjg the lower classes has giv- en way to one of United determina- tion. BOOSTER TRIP ENJOYED (Continued from Paxe 1.) Mrs. W. Z. Robinson, Mrs. George T. Baker, G. D. Backus, A. T. Carl- son, Port Hockman, Harold Hayner, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Bagley, Mr. and Mrs. C. E, Battles and son, Leon, Mr. and Mrs. BE. H. Denu, F. 8. Lycan, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Baer, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Brooks, Mr. and. Mrs. C. M. Bacon, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Bar- ker, J. E. Black and family, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Lord, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Dyer, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Schu- || maker- and ‘daughters, Mrs. George Strickland, Miss Olga .Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. A. A, Andrews, John F. Gib- ||| bons, Charles Vandersluis, Philip Gill and family, James Hennessy, C. A. Huffman and wife, Joe Christie, ~ BEMIDJI }BUSINESS DIRECTORY CLASSIFIED ALPHABETICALLY ABSTRACTS OF TITLE E. M. SATHRE ABSTRACTER O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Bemidjf, Minn. . D. L. FRIEDMANN AUDITOR . ACCOUNTANT BUSINEBSS' COUNSHLOR Phones 610-J—1776-W. BROSVIK, THE TAILOR Phone 938 BAKERS AND CONFECTIONERS KOORS BROTHERS CO. Manufacturers and Jobbers Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, Confec- tionery, Cigars and Foun- tain Goods 816 Minn. Ave. N. W. Phone 125 KEMP'S DRY CLEANING HOUSE MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS The Clothes Cleaners For Men, Women and Children The discriminating smoker is now smoking “DON ALMO” “Be a Booster” GENERAL MERCHANDISE Wholesale and Retail Pianos, Organs and Sewing Machines. 117 Third St. Bemidji.- Phone 673-W J. BISIAR, Manager. " OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN DR. F. J. DARRAGH Specialist of Chronic Diseases Free Consultation. 208% 3rd St., over Blooston Store Day and Night Calls Answered OPTOMETRISTS Groceries, Dry Goods, 8hoes, Flour, Feed, etc. The careful buyers buy here. W. G. SCHROEDER Bemidji Phone 65. WANTED 4-ft. cord wood. Birch, oak, . tamarack, polar, Jack pine. 7-ft. cedar posts, dry cut. I. P. BATCHELDER GROCER Clothes Cleaned and Pressed. ‘We Call for and Deliver Promptly. BANKING AND SAVINGS FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES Holstead Coffee Beachnut Brand of Jams and Jellies Fresh Onions and Rhubarb CASE’'S CASH STORE GROCERIES AND SHOES DRS. LARSON & LARSON Specialists in the Sclence of Fitting Glasses. Offices over Postoffice Bldg. Phone 92 PHOTOGRAPHER Photos Day and Night N. L. HAKKERUP WATCH THIS SPACE MORRIS & LONGBALLA SPECIALIST Save systematically. Make use of. our Savings Department. We wel- come your open account. SECURITY STATE BANK Bemidji, Minn, DRUGS AND JEWELRY You should try DENISON’S DE- LICIOUS COFFEES, 26¢, 30e, 85¢ and 40c the pound. Absolutely guaranteed. If not satisfactory re- turn it-and get your money. JNO. C. MARIN, Phone 32 320 Minn. Ave. LUMBER, COAL AND WO00D A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. Practice Limited EAR NOSE THROAT Glasses Fitted. Office Gibbons Bldg., Markham Hotel. EYE North of Phone 106 SECOND-HAND GOODS Wholesalers and Retailers. Service and safisfaction. Mafl Orders given that same service you get. in person. ; BARKER'S ‘Third St. - Bemidji, Minn. Any quantity you want. Building material of all kinds. ST. HILAIRE RETAIL LBR. CO. Phone 100 - Bemidji HARNESS We want to sell a few Work Har- nesses cheap to advertise them. Call in and see them. ZIEGLER'S SECOND HAND STORE Mrs. E. H. Marcum, Mrs. C. M. Jacob- son, Mrs. H. Koors, F. E. Bush and || family, Mr. and Mrs. T. S. Andrews, il Charles Cominskey, H. B. Brookins, Mr. and Mrs. F. Walsh, Henry Mil- || ler, B. M. Sathre, Mrs. William Me- Cuaig, Alice Dyer, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. White, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Ken- field, Miss Evelyn Nutting, J. ~ K. Given, Margaret McGee, Marie Mc- |} Gregor, Lillian McGregor, Elizabeth Eflcksnn,‘ J. Bisiar, Del Burgess, John Pfeifer, G. H. Slosson, Matt Phibbs, Adolph Klein, Andy McNabb, Roy McKenzie, Mrs. U. Gill, J. Fink and | Henry Funkley and family. li| Ever, as a boy, tie a can to a dog's tail ||jf - and see him scoot? Sure you did—we did! And how about that lot, or house or piece of furniture, or auto you wish to get rid of?_ Tie a Daily Pioneer Want Ad to now! ‘Phone 31. it friend—do it |fi How to Standardize Your Stationery Every business man appreciates the value of standardization. idea as applied to stationery is just as practical and valuable. The All the letterheads and forms used in your home office or your branches, and all the blanks and slips used in your factories, can be standardized in at least one respect—the paper upon which they are printed. The first requisite, of course, is to find one paper good enough for a letterhead, strong enough for a form to be handled in the workshop and cheap enough to use for everything. HAIMERTILL BOND certainly possesses all these qualifications You: will find that it suits the man who wants quality, ‘‘crackle” and The ripple or linen finish is particularly suit- But HAMMERMILL BOND is so low in price strength in a letterhead. able for letterhead use. you can use it for all your slips and forms. for them in fact, because it comes in twelve colors and white. It is particularly adapted You can have different slips printed on different colors and make it easy to "dis- tinguish themapart. Everysheetis watermarked You can specify HAMMERTILL-BOND by name and-be sure that you get it by looking for the watermark. That watermark is your protec- tion. which Yyou can depend. AMMERM Ly BOND It is the manufacturer’s assurance of a stanadard quality on HAMMERMILL BOND is the ideal paper for a large concern with many.branches in different parts of the country, each buying their own stationery because HAMMERMILL BOND is carried in stock by paper jobbers in every large city One set of specifications will do for all your branches. The actual money saving and tfie added assurance of a reliable, "al- ways satisfactory quality makes it well worth while to standardize your stationery on HAMIMERMILL BOND. The Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Company Hammernill Bond is made by the bhnmlll Paper Company, Erie, Pa., and sald by paper jebbersin every large eity It comos in twolve colors and white, in Ripple, Linen or- Bond finish—white and all colers in each finish. Stock eavelopes to mateh. i

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