Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 7, 1915, Page 2

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NSRS " S —— SE SR The” Bemidti Daily | Pldheef THE BEMIDIT !’lfl'l“ ®UB. 00. Publishers and Propristors. Telephone. 31. Entered at the post office at Bemidji, Minn, as second-class matter under Act of Congress of March 8, 1879. Published every afternoon except Sunday = — No attention pald to anonymous con- tributions, Writer's name must be known to the editer, but not necessarily tor publication. Communications for the Weekly Pio- neer should reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the ourrent issue. Subscription Rat One month by carrler. One year by carrler... Three months, postage paid. Six months, postage pald. One year, postage paid.. Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the webk. Published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for !1 60 In de&nco HiS PAPER NEPR[;ENTED FSR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES (N ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES —— Our Slogan: “Bemidji 25,000 Population in 1925” Federal Recognition. The highest hopes of civilization is in the dissemination of the utmost amount of intelligence. The highest recognition which Minnesota schools could receive as disseminators of in- telligence would be that the United States bureau of education. As such recognition has been atwarded by a bulletin which is about to be issued by this bureau, the cause of civiliza- tion in Minnesota may be said to be in a flourishing condition, says the St. Paul Pioneer Press. It is no more than we have justifi- cation for expecting. Minnesota has a permanent school fund proceeding from the sale of. land—thanks to the framers of our state constitution— which is said to aggregate the com- bined school funds of a dozen other rich states of the Union. We have had the means of purchasing the most efficient school system in the world. That-we have known. But how wisely our money has been in- vested we have had little means of knowing until the Federal bureau made its investigation. The report of the bureau should be taken not as a license for egotism but as an encouragement, a stimula- tion to effort. The consolidation principle is apparently considered a success such as to warrant continued effort to bring our rural schools to- gether. With so much done and so much to be hoped for, parents living in the healthy, wealthy state of Min- nesota may feel happily patriotic in the assurance that they are not rais- ing children for the shambles of em- perors, but for the pursuit of an en- lightened civilization. EEKEKK T KX XK KKK KK KK * EDITORIAL EXPLOSIONS - * TR KK KKK KKK KK KKK KX If you must do something reckless it is better to tip the porter than it is to rock the boat.—Red Wing Re- pl’xbl{cam —f Northern Minnesota boosters are making their presence known and good results must surely follow.— " Anoka Union. e ot The slogan of the city mail order house has been for years “‘swat the small merchant” and the implements of war is advertising. Fou have.at your command the same implement with which to “swat the mail order house.” Use it. Co-operate with your home newspaper. The benefits will be mutual.—Akeley Herald- Tribune. —— Parry the idea as we may, still it becomes unmistakably clear and plain, even to unwilling minds, that the world’s work must eventually be done by women. Right here in our neighboring town a ‘man fell dead while perfunctorily mowing the lawn, and down in St. Paul one was stricken while wiping dishes. So, stiffen up, oh, ye clinging vines, and learn to stand alone. = Our oaks are becoming less sturdy, fast.—Little Falls Transcript. —— Mary had a little lamb, its fleece was white as snow; it strayed away one day, where lambs should never g0. And Mary sat her quickly down and tears streamed from her eyes; she never found the lamb because she did not adyertise. And Mary had a brother John who kept a village _store; he sat down and smoked a pipe and watched the open door. And . as the people passed along and did not_stop. to, buy, John still sat and smoked his pipe and blinked his '. sleepy eyes: And so the sheriff closed him out. but still he lingered near, ' “and Mary came to drop with him a! 0lcan get. Y, AUGUST 7, 1915, syfifithofic tokt. Mowlh u,fimar, can you tell, why other merchants here, sell all their-goods so rapidly and thrive from year to year? Re- membering-her-own-bad luck the lit-| papieg ‘entered In the baby show at tle maid replied: “The. other fel-|ips Minnesota .State Fair; Sept. 6 to lows get there John, because they ad-| 13, will be given an unusual public re- | vertise.”—Ex. z ception; a8 & Teaplt of g nayel W- ment. just;mate: by :Mrs. Bertbh Dah! Laws of Appleéton, Mlnn. lupaflntend- ent in charge. (5 : ¢ < All physical exun!nnuonl re! toibel} conducted in a big glass|cage_ erected in the center of the Woman’s building. The mental test will b, carried:on in mrs Unuwh# Attu%flonslld to MinAssota | State Fair Baby Show. Bl s Ta et i e T LT own-Trader] ohigdy hb SHEPHERD TELLS OF CONDITIONS NEAR 7V TFTITALIAN FRONT By WILLIAM G. SHEPHERD (United Press Stafr Correspondent) Udine, - July .- 8:—(By.. mail.)— Udine is the Italian fronmt, that is, it is as near the Italian front as you| And you're not supvosed brq gcertain results 1e=he """ith | copy, ‘ic a word oth- ks Always telephone No. 31 e e o g it TR 4 TOWN PROCESSION. figfi":“ow: "Nour interest is here. " The -town's prosperity is - ‘your-prospérity- " Keep the mhfiw%“fiwfl‘WQflhdlu it in town. [ il .é:élenvm 1O T19HLT ONS WANTED. irl for - general house-| WANTED—Young man wants work Mrs.-R. C. flnyner. 916| of any kind." _Address R. A, clo ulevard. 7 Pioneer. WANTED—-Kuchen girl at. - hter Affifl?f“ 2 to be here. You've journeyed trom Pnrlu to Rome, then from Rome to Venice and from Venice to- this little -Italian| 4 town and when you get, here yqu find you're not welcomed. Other nations got excited ’wWheh their part of the great: war started but Italy’s frenzy outdid them all, | The censorship. in Italy. wag the strictest, the tie up of the rnfl'rqa&f the completest, the silence of ; t! telegraph and telephone the deepegt, the secrecy the greatest -and. the.ah- horrence of correspondents the mogl | thorough. 2 Sl It's for this latter reason that & [ soldier meets you at the train!" Tn some way he has heard that you Were]’ coming. Little does it matter him that you have traveled thou- sands of miles, that you have spent hundreds of dollars and scores of | hot, dusty hours to get to this place.|™” His duty is to take you to a certain hotel where unwelcome :persons can be.visited by the military police and glass cage, but.visitors will'have an probed. opportunity to-see most of the exami: When you get to the hotel you nation. take the room the hotel man gives| Ag formerly there are to be thres you. In a way, you're a guest; In|clagses: . Children from the country, another way you're a prisoner. Little| children from towns and villages un: difference does it make that you're|der 2,600; and children from towns an American and that - the hotel |and cities over 2,500. In each class man’s brother is a barber in San |there are sub-classes for girls twelve Francisco and that he's doing well months . old and under twenty-four, boys twelve months old. and “under there. The hotel man s under mill-| o) v sour girls twenty-four- months tary rule, too; he must give you one| 14 anq under thirty-six, and boys of the rooms that have been set off | twenty-four months old and under by the military authorities for un-|thirty-six. All prizes are to.consist - POR “RENT—Cottage . at Lavinia. Rent reasonable for balance of Y season. Inquire A, L. Shideler, 1l Opsahi’s omce or Mrs. Shideler at i . Phone '31. Office Supply - nesota~:Ave” Phoné Miller, Prop. FOR™ iALlI—Bnonl good uldanu 1914 CHAM| | WANTED—Second hand houseaold & closed apartment at the rear of the ® sm 3 - FOR SALE‘—HN) -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. 'Out thereinthe MontanaRocky Moun- ‘tains glorious v vacanon [ ays are ‘await- ing you. Auto-stagesand launches w1ll takeyoudeepin among -the - giants ‘of the Continéntal Divide and 4 : ADVERTIBERB—TI\G great siate of mn SALE—Second hand smtfi‘k fi'm'i, condition. $160.00. ,.Courier-News desirables. of ribbons and medals except. in case - among-the. glaciers, ~Saddle-horses will carry you After you get your baggage into|of the championships, $25 being given up skyland trails to'the high Passes. Enroute, the FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. paper in the your room you decide to go out and | the most perfect boy and girl. mammoth new Alpine hotel on Lake McDermott, the " “Ploeér” will' §¥6Ciife any kin he Paper which carries 3 e Sy The Webb Publishing company of face the music with the police; it's St Pail s furnishing, all, privis; wnd better to go to them than to have| gy giv either or both champlons $25 them come to you. So, in.a rattly | extra in case residence is in the coun- cab, you start off to the police sta-|try, Only Minnesota babies can en- tion. It is Sunday evening, at seven; | ter. the streets are- filled with soldiers— . hundreds and thousands of them.|Recommends Chamberlain’s = Colic, |- They go about in groups; they laugh, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. but, mostly, they sing. You hear| «p never hesitate to recommend snatches from all the operas. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Everybody sings tenor; there are| ., hoea Remedy,” writes Sol Wil- scores of Carusos about. The 80l-|jjamg merchant, Jesse, Tenn. “I sell diers walk through the streets with| ..o o it than:any other- prépara their ‘arms about each other; Italian | 5,5 of ltke character.. I havé uéed' men are great for arm holding and | yyeelt and found it gave mie moré [* hugging. rélief than-anything else I have ever The soldiers are huge; it is a pick-|,6q" for: the: ‘same purpose.”” Ob- ed regiment; six-footers are only av-|iginanhle everywhere:»-~Adv. erage. Of all the gatherings I have 5 § seen on both sides of the great war f2k esine o) il e ke o] mE‘Rgmué:flrTmn,nn " GREAT. FORTRESS one big group. Among.these Italian sodiers you are in a boydom. YOI | g gy omsadeabletiie even wnder B¢, EOIME UMTOUER B DMArTOY.|tie terrific assaults of the most pow- erful modern war machinery. .The 4!"8!! amount of classified “Many-Glacier”; the gateway hotel;’ the “Glacier e ] ourier-News - Park”, and the nine Alpine chalet groups afford unique entertainment. If you like, you may tour the Park “over tmls afoot” and in a packsack you may “take.your hotel with.you.” California Expositions via Glacier Park! | FOR SALE CHEAP—Three-room cot: ‘tage, to be _removed. Phone 644. The ‘Ploneer is the place to buy: your rolls of addlng machine paper for Burroughs adding maéhines. One,| ‘|roll, a dozen rolls or n'hni‘ld:ad rolls. By the Oriental Limited or the Glacier Park Limited, via Rocky Mountaine * an - q , Tacom: - Porant—caronte.a odr of Glacier Parke" shoard new sieamiships Great Norihers ific down:the i Franci ‘Great Northern way. The world is all bull. Even the | heartless villlan on the ‘stage is-®& henpecked husband {n 1 life. ~-The Want Column will give you the desired information. Z PEYSIOIANS SUEGEOHS DR: ROWLAND GIEMORE < PHYSICIAN' AND SURGEON % Miles Bloi Phone 66¢ Office—Miles Block o Dxmx,comcommnwnu DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. TTORNEY AT LAW * PHYBICIAN AND 'SURGEON Oflu leeond r O Trbownr ‘Office 'in Mlyo Block B Phone 396 i Res. Phone 387 bt inflwfi% Baifuay has been awardad the Gold Medal at the Fepame-Pacifc Inenationsl Expasition for the Best Display of Scewic, uwfiufll ‘and Industrial Retour street, passes a moving picture theater which is just emptying itself of soldiers; they're shouting .and |destruction of property by cyclone or . "|DR. C._R, mon X > laughing and gesticulating; you ses| orando is the work of a few moments. . PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON il hundreds -of -pairs of hands waving. e path f.the Tornado, is the¥on _ Office—Miléa Block E NEW AND SE Cook Stoves, Ranges. Your carriage comes to a halt; the|of ruin. A poliey in:the “0Old Con- horse is pulling-in vain; twenty sol,|necticut”. is..the,. best protection. diers have caught the spokes.of .the,| ESTABLISHED - 1850-—CASH-CAP hind wheels; the rear end of the cab|ITAL. ONE MILLIONDOLLARS. kicks up; the soldiers have, lifted it into the air; the horse and the cab, and you suddenly shoot, -forward; thirty giant Italian soldiers are push- ing the rig from behind .it,like a wheel barrow. Then someone yells: DR. L. A. WARD *| " “PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON OsI"Pogues Livery—164 > ¢ Y LINE | 5 _ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON - BMY Office_Security Bank Block DR: EINER JOHNSON - ~{ «’"PHYSICIAN' AND SURGEON Oh, you American!" L K Bemidjl, Minn, “American! American! American!” Res. Phone 58 818 ne. Ave. 4 - runs through the crowd. Then Office Phone 12. GARLOCK, M. D. someone yells, “Long live the A 1 . T SPECIALIST icans.” In a_ moment ;everybody t ) o ., Practice Limited yells it. “Three cheers :for ' Neéw Zlaglers sewlld, _Hand stnrfl Fm’i‘ i EA(; Ng‘?tl: d SR York,” yells another in good New |: - asges ol York English. “Long live New 543 of golio oif Ofli’ 1 w(lt'f Block Office Gihbons Bldg. North ot p Yorks Yelis® ihe army, 208" Minn. Ave. Bemld’l, Mlnm e " "Markiam Hotel. Phone 105. o The rear wheels of our carriage i 1. .70 N’i‘lfl'l‘ " Enl:flam' come down.with 8 thud| A8 . | Gibbons Tel.. 43¢ |- .- : .GRADUATE NURSE drive away you stand up and bow and North of Markham_Hotel Phone 317-R every cheers, again for America. You find the police station closed for the night. You’ve come all this way tq Udine with the curtains of your train win- dow closed tight; when you go to the hotel you find the wooden shutters closed. You cannot open them; it’s against the military rule. You can’t open them, even after you've " pu your candle out at night. The hotel | keeper doesn’t know why; you don’t know why; the only thing is you) can’t. ’ .| CARTER BROS. AUTO LIVERY .- Barn 8th St.-apd-Irvine Ave. Phone 447-W LAWRENCE . CARTER, Mgr. g‘ P Arflv s;nal{N. i ‘at the J-lEAD OF THE LAKE ~BOAT 100 a. m. _returns at 11:00 “réturns at 2:30 “returns at ‘5:00 returi'ls at’ 9:00 WERTR g stock the newest ;unbet ol the Catter?s Despondency Due to Indigestion. lpxl.-ily— i “About’ three months ago when Il § . . was suffering from indigestion which caused headache and dizzy spells and made me feel tired and despondent, I began taking Chamberlain’s Tablets;’ writes, Mrs. Geo. Hon, Macedon, Ny Y. “This medicine proved to be the very thing I needed, as .one day’s! treatment relieved me greatly. - I used two bottles of Chamberlai: Tablets and they rid me of .t trouble.” Obtainable everywhere.— e tt "o 1] Capt. W. B.MacLachlan [l . . FURNITURE. AND B IN. WKEE fFuneral Director Leaves at 79' Our idea the a Supercresence of Expository - Motivation would be an Attempt-at a definition of the Ethicy and Moral Traditions of a suburhtu Community. * = Subscribe for the Ploneer.

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