Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 6, 1915, Page 2

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1 " The1Bemidfi Daily Pioneer THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO. Publishers and Propristors. Telephone. 31. Entered at the post office at Bemidjt, Minn, as second-glass matter under :Act ot Congress of. March 8, 1879. 1ation to actual subscribers:and circu- lation under various pretexes.and pre-| tenses. There is the delivery-to-sub- seribers circulation and the hand- .| bill, free house-to-house doorstep eir- culation. There is no more compar-. ison between the two kinds than there Published every afternoon except Sunday s No attentign.paid to anonymaus con- tributions: -“Writer's name must be knowa to the editor, but net necessarily for_puhlisation. qalxup ations for the Weekly Pio- deer ‘should reach this office not later then Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the ourrent issue. Subscription Rates. Oné’ month:by carrier. -$ 40 One year. by carrier... 4.00 Three fgonths, postage paid. 1.00 8ix months, postage pafd. 2.00 One year, postage paid.... . 4.00 The Weekly Ploneer. Eight pages, containing a summary of the-Rews -of the week. Publighed every THursday- and ‘gent postage paid to any addresd for $1.80 in advance. KKK KK KKK KKKKKKF x * * The ‘Daily Pioneer receives % wire service of the United * % Press Association. * x * KRKEEKKEKEEKKKK KKK KR “HiS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGK - ADVERTISING BY THE ' GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO SRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIES THE MYSTERIOUS LINDBERGH. (By Minneapolis Journal.) Congressman Lindbergh is almost as mysterious in announcing that he will run for governor as Mose Clapp is in not announcing his candidacy for senator. Mr. Lindbergh begins by modestly asserting that his sue- cessive elections to congress have been due to the principles he has enunci- ated, and not to his own merits as a statesman. The people of the Sixth district, he claims to believe, have repeatedly elected his principles and not hiin to congress. ‘With this neat prefatory disclaimer and-a further apology for the reluct- ance which congress has shown over putting these principles into prac- tice, Mr. Lindbergh turns his atten- tion to the state and its problems. He -frankly- confesses that he has worked out a complete plan whereby state administration may be made perfectly efficient and state taxation far less burdemsome: Having thus arrived at a complete solution of all our state difficulties, he finds himself forced by the very fact of hjs dis- covery to become a candidate for gov- ernor. Or rather, his plan of reform is to be the real candidate, though votes intended for it must naturally be cast for him; who personifiies it so completely. Having reassured the public that all the political ills to which the state is heir are about to be cured, and having deftly excited the public's curiosity as to just how the miracle is td be worked, Mr. Lindbergh now retifes”for a time to his political laboratory to pursue his investiga- tions. - ~ i While he is carefully blending the ingredients in his political panacea, his colleague, the junior senator from Minnesota, is puzzling over the prob- lem of how he is to run for renom- ination in the Republican primary on his record as an anti-Republican. if Mr. Lindbergh could leave his test tubes, retorts and bottles for a few minutes, he might out of his own rich experience give Mose a little light in solving that mystery. THE KNOCKER'S CREED. I believe that nothing is right. I believe that everything is wrong. I believe that I alone have the right idea.,. The town is wrong, the edi- tor is wrong, the teachers are wrong, the people are wrong, the things they are doing are wrong and they are doing them in the wrong way, anyhow. I believe I could fix things if they would let me. If they don’t I will- get' a-lot of other fellows like myself and we will have a law passed to make others do things the way we want them done. I do not believe that the town ought to grow. It is too big now. I believe in fighting every publie im- provement and in spoiling every- body’s pleasure. I am always to the front in opposing things and never .yet have.I advanced an idea or sfipported a movement that would make people happier or add to the pleasure of man, woman or child. I am opposed to fun and am happiest at a funeral. I believe in starting reforms that will take all the joy out of lite. "It’s a sad world and I am glad of it. Amen.—Exchange. The plan proposed by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., to the employes of the Colorado._mines and mills, does not recognize the union mnor does it put any obstacles in the way of the union. The prevailing scale of wages will continue but joint com- mittees will settle all disputes or problems by conference in which the mines or mills shall have no more representation ‘than has the em- ployes. - The plan is apparently an honest effort and it is hoped that the plan will be given a trial. Red Wing Eagle — Circulation! Well, yes; there is circulation and eirculation claims. There is circu- about goods—between the substance and its shadow. Every man can be a walking wire- less station if he will gird on the invention of ‘a doctor in ‘New York and tap and listen. The apparatus may be strapped about the waist, deftly hidden in the folds of a cloak. and as no antennae are visible it can be operated without attracting atten- tion. Down in Illinois is a law which makes road dragging compulsory in every township. Three to five dol- lars a mile is set aside for each mile for road dragging. This is manda- tory upon the town authorities. Such a law as this ought to prevail in Min- nesota. Steps will be taken in New Or- leans next month for the establish- ing of a national highway from New Orleans to Winnipeg, Can., by the Jefterson Highway club. The “Jef- ferson Highway” is to be the name of the lane. SOUTH DAKOTA GREEKS REVIVE ANCIENT SYSTEM Aberdeen, S. D., Oct. 6.—What ap- pears to be an outcropping of the old Greek peonage or padrone system has been brought to light here in the airing of an appeal to the attor- ney general’s office by three Greeks, Alex Kippis, Minas Econas and Jim Benaris, who charge that they have been forced to pay a regular fee to three other Greeks in order to retain their positions with the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway com- pany of this ecity. The men allege that they had to pay down $20 when they secured their positions, and that after they were forced to pay out each month from $3 to $6 additional. They rebelled at this and appoint- ing Frank Sukulis as a representa- tive and spokesman, sent him to Pierre with a letter and other cre- dentials to lay the matter before the proper authorities. UNIQUE LABOR WAR IN BEHALF OF TEACHERS Chicago, Oct. 6.—The American Federation of Labor will make a last diteh fight in behalf of the Chicago union of school teachers. Those in- fluences which oppose the Chicago Teachers’ Federation are today pre- paring their appeal from the tempor- of education from carrying out the now famous Loab rule of expelling teachers who decline to leave the federation, and compelling all appli- cants for positions to sign a pledge that ‘they will not become members of any similar organization. Of course, if the higher court up- holds the injunction, making it per- manent, the matter will be dropped there, with a glowing victory for or- ganized labor. er court decides in favor of the Loeb rule, the entire matter will ultimate- ly be decided at the polls. IOWA ANTI-TIPPING LAW WILL BE TESTED Sioux City, Ia., Oct. 6.—The con- stitutionality of Iowa’s anti-tipping law is to be tested in the case of T. J. Dunahoo, local barber, who was arrested on a charge of accepting a tip. The case is up before Judge Jepson. Information against Duna- hoo was filed by Rev. H. L. Hough- ton, local probation officer. HOLDS OLD CHECK ON ABANDONED BANK Garretson, S. D., Oct. 6.—A check for $25, drawn on the old Garretson State bank twenty years ago, has just been discovered. of business several years ago. Pioneer want ads are read. 2 tor25c COLLAR - IT FITS THE CRAVAT LIST Your city property with Clayton C. Cross Markham. Hotel Bullding FOR SALE OR RENT Good Service Reasonable Commission e A is between real goods and hot - air ary injunction restraining the board |’ If, however, the high- |- The bank went out | % WHAT WAR MOVES- MBAN- x By J. W. T. Mason. x “(United” Press Staff mate at the .zw.' 0B 4 failure. the Allies have won in the west itgelf. successful, But there is no evidenee that taeks. It is impossible to confirm the Ger- man estimate of the enemy’s casual- ties. Eventually the British casualty list will be issued from London, but her losses. The recapture of the Hohen- zollern redoubt from the British and of nearby positions from the French Allies must have suffered very heavily, since sufficient: reserves were not-at hand to ‘hold these gains and to consoli- date with them the previously won France does not make public suggest, however, that the front. The growing delay in opening a second artillery assault against the German lines may also be an indi- cation that the Allies’ losses have been very heavy. Had there been full satisfaction among the Allies’ com- manders with the result of the first attack last week, it is highly prob- able a new effort would now be un- der headway. RUB a littleof it in- thedaily bath. I find it just fine for preventing: chafing and soreness.and for cooling; the.skin.” Mothers often tellus that, when buying: Webster's: Toilet Cream whiteness and purit ‘commend ‘Wabsters , by manufacturers have for. 50 years ufact: have for.50 been famous for the scrupulous puri? and unusually-high:quali« ty of all their products. ‘We supply- it-in-dainty-alumi- numapgyjm - 25 cents, CityDrugStore B\ N. French & Co. FOR SALE Hardwood $2.50 per load Bemidji Mfg. Co. Phone 481 —ATTEND— Day. and, Night FOR $1.50 your:combings. - - Switches Transformation: or curls All'work guaranteedicallior:write" | Mrs. R.J: Famton " 5ll-America Ave..«-"Bemidji, Minn. * Correspondent.): i KRR AR R If the German .es; *1s; “onerect French have suffered :130,: 00 casualties in :the| present western of- I efforts:‘to. force ‘the: . German lines in Ar- * tois and Champagne 9" ‘must be' comsidered The measure of such.successes as the casualty lists. A temporary ces- sation of an attack tells nothing by It would be quite normal for the' Allies to cease their offensive for & moment in order to consoldate pe- sitions that have been wen and to prepare for a new artillery assault. If, however, the brief gains have been very costly to the -assailants; there can; be little expectation.that a renewal of -the offensive will he A loss of nearly 200,- 000 men is far too high a price to pay for the small areas that have been won in Champagns and Artois. Had this number of casualties carried the British and the French within striking distance of a critical section of the German front, that fact would be: full justification for the slaughter. the German line anywhere is in a critieal condition ‘because of last week'’s at- The Pioneer 18 the place to buy your rolls of adding machine paper for: Burroughs adding. machines. One yoll. a dozen rolls or a hund:ed rolls. to Baby’s skin after | = the vanishing cream:of snowy: | (6-INGH SLABWOOD " Softwoed. $2.00 per-load. Bemidji Business College| 1 will makeyou a.hair switch--from | Califaria Raisin Bread fepsiva’' and the " British ¢ have “lost i g & 60,000, then, un- Made with questionably, the Sun-Maid Ralsins You.have-seen: this bread advertised.. We are baking it in our modern ovens. Send to your grocer for a loat, and let it PROVE IT- SELF' to be the.finest raisin bread you have ever tasted. is ‘We are.using..a Speeial: Recipe, and the delicious Sun-Matd<brand’ of - raisins, BIG, plump;: meaty, tender: —with all the seeds ex- tracted. There are LOTS of these ‘raisins in this bread. Their ‘flavor permeates’ the loaf. Raisin bread is both GOOD' and good FOR you. Serve it every day. TRY YOUR FIRST LOAF NOW. Ask your grocer. | Koors Manufacturing Co. Phone 126 Bemidii, Minn. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN NOTICE is Lereby given that this Corrpany will prosecute all persons usi; | property owned by it for storage purposes or the dumping of garl : notified to repair the damage so done and place the pmann clean, sanitary condition in which it was prior to the time of trespass trespasses - 620 Capital Bank Bullding | ST. PAUL Telephone 474 Garage le-or other | objectionable matter in or upon its vacant lots. Every person who has here- | tofore-used said property or any of it in ways above mentioned is -hereby y in the same Bemidji Townsite & Improvement Co, MINNESOTA C. W. JEWETT CO. Inc. }| SAVDE YOU'LL FIND IT HERE . Classified These:ads: bring certain results.- One~half eent | a word per-issue. cash with copy, ic a-word oth- | erwisey: | Always telephone Neo. 31 POR‘SAEE. FOR SALE—Seversl good resideace lots on::Minnesota, -Bemidji and Dewey.avenues. Reasonable prices; easy terms. Clayton C. Cross. Of- fice over Northern Nat'l Bank. FOR‘SALE~A :good Garland base: burner :stove. - Apply at Bemidji Welding & Machine Co. Tel. 69. date «|FOR SALE—Steel hunting canoe, 14-foot rowboat; both in:goed .con- ditien. - Del: Spooner, Wilton. 5 6d1012 e FOR SALE—17. Buff: Rock chiekens. Cheap if taken at once; 2nd prize at county fair. Phone 621-W. dtt e e e e FOR SALE—Canoe in first class con- dition. H. C. Baer. 5d109 MISCELTANEOUS - ADVERTISERS—THhe grest state of North :Dakota -offers unlimited op- pertunities- for “business -to -classi- flod’ advertisers. - The: -recegnised advertising medium in_the Pargo- Dadly: and-Sunday: - Courler-News the omly seven-day paper im the: state and the paper which earries the. largest amount of classified advertising. The Courler-News eovers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts-of the atate the day of publication; it is the paper to use in order to get re- sulh; rates one-cent per word first insertion, one-half cent per - word succeeding: insertions; fifty cents per- line per ‘menth. Address ‘the Courier-News, Fargo, 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 as when you appear in person. Phone 81, ‘The Bemidji Pioneer Office Supply Store. % e e —— FOR ‘SALE—Rubber stamps. The WANTED—GIr] for general house- work, Apply Home Bakery. tf T00°Mfnin. Ave: FOR RENT-—Five rooms Phone 26-F-11. i | l WANTED, WANTED TO BUY—We pay cash for cast off suits-and shoes. Zieg- ler’s Becond Hand-Store. WANTED-—Second hand: - household | goods. M. B. Ibertson. l FARMS ‘FOR-SALE. FOR SALE—Fine farm, direct by| owner -in 40, 80 or up to 240-acre tract. Located 3 miles-from Hines and 4 miles from Blackduek. Read| the details in display ad on- an- other page of this paper -entitled “Buy Farm Direct From: ¢)wner."” | FOR SALE OR TRADE—I have 40 acres of land in the city limits of Bemidji to sell or trade for city property, auto, cows or horses. Write D. W. LaCombe, Nymore, Minn. 6d1012 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 per acre. W. G. Schroeder. | Hello, boys and girls. Hear that school bell? Don’t start for school|- without a NEW ‘BEMIDJI lead- pen- cil. It’s the best nickle pencil made: Any store in town sells ’em. fiij or Bemidii, Minn. Car service department never closes. We invite competition and guarantee satisfaction. | | take care of first class storage. ; Beltrami Avenue. WHEN IN BEMIDJI STOP AT MINNESOTA AVENUE European Plan Strictly Modern . Rooms!soc up : WM. J. DUGAS, Prop., Bemidji, Minn. ! ~~""NEW AND SECOND HAND Cook Stoves, Ranges, Combination Coal and Wood Heaters, Self Feeding Hard Coal Stoves. Anything you want in a stove Stove Repairs A Specialty S Tiagler's Second Hand Store 206 Minn. Ave. Subsecribe for The Pioneer “Third St., next to O’Leary-Bowser store JORN PFEIFER, Prop. : Wholesalo ‘and Refall Bread. and Bakery Geods. afi]w at-thisme: order, we feel sure-youlll come again.. The Befi’i’ Garage and Repair Shop North Of Minneapolis Night Phone 751-w. We. also Office and Garage 418-420 The Grand Central Hotel Meals 25c up | thlésal‘e: Stove Dealers Wood Heaters, All makes and -all sizes. e Bemidjl, Minn. Confectionery-in connection ; “The Kind of ‘bread mother used-to make'"is the kind establishment; - We want" just.one- Pleneer will procure any kind of CARBON PAPER rubber stamp.for you on short no- Any: Color Hos. e e You can get a big, fat penecil tabs let ‘for a nickle at the Pioneer office, 108 Sheets to -Box PRICE $3.00 and an extra big, fat ink paper com- position book for a dime. AN the BEMIDJT PION%UB. co. “kids” will want one when they see BEMIDJI, 3 ‘em. PHYSICIANS, :SURGEONS LAWYERS: DR. ROWLAND GILMORE GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, PHYSICIAN ‘AND SURGEON LAWYER Office—Miles ‘Block Miles: Block Phone 566 e DR. E. A SHANNOR, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Office in Maye Block- | Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DR. :C. R.SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Building. i W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. Ofttce—Miida Block VETDRINAKIAN DR. L. A W, Phone 8 403 Irvine Ave. i ARD PHYSICIAN' AND' SURGEON Over ‘First- National Bank Bemidji; Minn: DR. E. H. SMITH ‘PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON DR| G. HOEY GRADUATE VETERINARIAN Call _Pogue'’s. Livery—164 DRAY LINE Office Security Bank Block TOM SMART g v : DRAY AND TRANSFER PHYSICIAN -AND SURGEON Safe and Piano i Bemidjs, Minn. Ree. Phone 68 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12. V. GARLOCK, M. D, sgg’mnm Practice Limited DERTISTS, EYE EAR NOSH THROAT DR, D, L. STANTON, : Glasses -Fittod DENTIST - ffOffice-Gibbons Bldg: North of Officei in' Winter’ Bioek Markham: Hotel. Phone 105, DR. J. T. TUOMY, BENT! Gibbons Block Tel. 250 North of Markham Hotel Huffman & 0’Leary FURRITURE. AND URDERTAKING ‘HIN. McKEE, TFuneral -Director Phone 178-W or R iiiiiii{iiiii!i#i % Subscribe for the Pioneer. & Fi*iiiiiikiii*{’! IST R R RS R R R TP % RAILROAD TIME CARDS. < - FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSO) UNBERTAKER

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