Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 15, 1915, Page 4

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e e AR THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER FRIDAY, OCTOBER = 15, 1915. BIG "ELEVENS HAVE NEW FALL STYLES HARDGAMESTOMORRDW With the advent of the new styles in shoes it is just as . necessary that you give heed to the style of your footwear, - as to your hat or your new fall suit. For the high classladies’ trade we are receiving shipments from the Utz & Dunn Co., and we consider this equal if not superior toany line of I shoes made. Here are some of the showings we havein Low heel button, patent with kid top. or all in the dull leather, an ex- cellent shoe for growing girls. $3.00 Baby Doll Shoe Patent with kid top, plain toe, wide comfortable last, low heels, very dressy for the girls. $3.50 Black cloth, quarter,? 7-inch military lace, patent lace stay, plain toe, short vamp, leather half- Louis heel $3 '75 Patent cloth top, medium low i heel, button, wide easy last. $4.00 Military lace, low heel, very pret- ty round toe, patent, cloth top. $3.75 Get the EDUCATOR shoe for the Boys and Girls. Bemidji Shoe Store C A. KNAPP, Prop. Bronze Button Boot Bronze brown eloth top, 7-inch helght, brown ivory buttons, bronze d circular fox and back stay, plun toe. $5.00 Telephone 474 Garage C. W. JEWETT CO. Inc. Bemidii, Minn. The Best Garage and Repair Shop North Of Minneapolis Car service department never closes. Night Phone 751-w. We invite competition and guarantee satisfaction. We also take care of first class storage. Office and Garage 418-420 Beltrami Avenue. Wholesale Stove Dealers NEW AND SECOND HAND Cook Stoves, Ranges, Wood Heaters, Combination Coal and Wood Heaters, Self- Feeding Hard Coal Stoves. An.ything you want in a stove All makes and all sizes. Stove Repairs A Specialty Liegler’s Second Hand Store 206 Minn. Ave. Bemidji, Minn. Yale Meets Springfield; Hervard, Vir- ginia ; Wisconsin, Purdue, and Min- nesota Will Play South Dakota. By George R. Holmes. (United Press Staff Correspondent) New York, Oct. 15.—The schedule makers for 1915 were kind to the dopesters. Through a kindly kink in the 1915 playing chart, it will be pos- sible tomorrow night to form an idea of how Yale and Harvard compare for their annual gridiron tussle. Harvard in Acid Test. The :big Crimson eleven gets the acid test when it lines up against the University of Virginia team, which two weeks ago sprung the surprise of the present season by defeating Yale on their own field, 10 to 0. By the comparative score route, the football world should have some food for thought after tomorrow’s battle at | Cambridge. It isn’t often that a chance to get a line on the big fel- lows comes so early in the season. About all that can be said about the game is that Percy Haughton-has a battle on his hands that is many degrees removed from a tea party. In Thurman, Virginia probably has as good ‘a’ kicker as there is in the game this year, and he defeated Yale practically single-handed. Virginia’s victory wasn’t a fluke—it was earned, a fact of which Haughton is proba- bly fully aware. That he will throw his full strength . into breach goes without saying. Virginia Has Fight Worth While. Virginia has a lot to fight for. Victories over Yale and Harvard—the peers of the collegiate kingdom—in a single year would raise the south- ern school to an eviable position in the athletic world. Yale meets Springfield tomorrow. The Massachusetts institution gener- ally has a team of huskies, but the Blue should win in rather easy style, Since the Virginia defeat, Frank Hin- key has given the Eli eleven one of the biggest shakings-up in Yale’s football history, and the result of the jostling will be watched with much concern by Yale partisans. Tigers Should Win. Princeton should run up an over- whelming score against Lafayette. The Pennsylvania boys aren’t as strong this year as in other years, Can Theatre. Did not expect our old store for a while, Never Can Tell. Sixty days ago we did not You Never just what is going to happen. get possession of our building, formerly the Grand Of Course we will OPEN UP with the largest and most, complete stock of variety goods and Holiday Goods that this city has ever seen, German China, German Toys or Novelties. expected happened. Today we have over 75 per cent of these goods in stock. You Never Can Tell! " if you buy goods at right, lowest prices, unless you come here and get this store’s prices. pend upon it, that if you buy it less than our prices, then it's mighty cheap and well worth what vou pay. Hundreds and hundreds nfdollars’ worth of new goods. Sweaters, Neckwear, Millinery, Chinaware, etc. Tell! 'Now, this week, we to get this until next May. We will also run possibly six months. You | expect to get any of our The un- You may de- 30c, special, a dozen.... 12-quart galvanized pails, at... 10c Fire Shovel, special fOT o0 nivnesanstin, BARGAINS Special Saturday Special Saturday, 8 ounce jelly glasses, regular 8 Y L Tt . Swift’s Pride Laundry Soap, 10 bars g CARLSON'S Variety Store special OF COURSE Bulk Apples JUST RECEIVED A CAR OF JONATHAN THE PURITY BAKERY Third St., next to O’Leary-Bowser store JOHN PFEIFER, Prop. Wholesale and Retail Bread and Bakery Goods. Confectionery in connection ‘‘The kind of bread mother used to make’’ is the kind you’ll find at this new establishment. We want Just one trial order, we feel sure you’ll come again. #&~ READ THE DAILY PIONEER WANT ADS e i APPLES—SOUND STOCK Phone 180 l. P. Batchelder | WHEN IN BEMIDJI STOP AT The Grand Central Hotel MINNESOTA AVENUE European Plan Rooms 50c up WM. J. DUGAS, Prop., Bemidji, Minn. Strictly odern \ Meals 25¢ up I H Colored Papber Stock » i the | | 1 West Has Big Games; KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK * S TOMORROW’S FOOTBALL * - East. x Harvard vs Virginia, at +* Cambridge. : x Yale vs Springfleld at New & Haven. x Princeton vs Lafayette, at Princeton. Cornell vs Buckwell, nt' Ithica. e Darmouth vs Vermont, at Hanover. Army vs Colgate, at West Point. Navy vs Pennsylvania, at Annapolis. West. ; Chicago vs Indiana, at Chicago. ‘Wisconsin vs Purdue, at Lafayette. P Minneapolis vs S. Dakota, at Minneapolis. . Towa vs Northwestern, at Iowa City. Michigan vs Case, at Ann Arbor. Nebraska vs Washburn, at Lincoln. Notre Dame vs Freshmen, at North Dakota. Michigan Aggies vs Carrol at E. Lansing. T e L L L kod ok k ok ok dkohk ok ok hk ok ok okkokkkkk ok kkhkkkkkk L L R R and should be meat for the Tigers. There is'a strong suspicion that ,the Navy is in for a drubbing at the hands of Pennsylvania tomorrow. The Middies were showed wup in rather bad light by Georgetown a few weeks ago. Cornell, Darmouth and the Army should have comparatively easy games with Bucknell, Vermont and Colgate, respectively. In the West, three conference games are on docket, which. alone are enough to insure a day of classic football entertainment. Minnesota favored in some quarters to capture the Big Nine title reneges on her conference sisters and tackels ‘South Dakota. ! Chicago undoubtedly will admijnis- ter her annual drubbing to Indiana. |1t isn’t an event for Chicago to lick Indiana any more—Its a habit, and "there is no reason to expect any up- set this year. Indiana has changed her style of play in the last two years with the coming of Clarence Childs, a Yale man, but from press dispatches she doesn’t compare favor- ably with Stagg’s aggregation. Wisconsin Game Promising. { The Wisconsin-Purdue game should be a pretty battle, and the Badgers should win. Purdue has been held to 2 7-7 tie with little Wabash this sea- son, which doesn’t give her much prestige in conference ranks. Coach Bill Juneau’s big team, captured by Howard Buck, as good a football man as will be found in* ‘the *country, irolled up an avalanche of 87 points laga.inst Lawrence a few Saturdays machine. < Coach Hawley’s Iowa team plays ,Northwestern, Michigan meets Case, Missouri takes on Oklahoma and Ne- braska lines up against Washburn-— ]‘rouuding out an attractive schedule for mid-October. | IR KK KKK KKK KKK KK KK {¥ DAILY WAR ANALYSIS * |x By J. W. T. Mason. * ix (United Press Staff * R Correspondent.) * KEKEKKKKKKKKKKKKKKF Theophile Delcasse’s resignation as French foreign minister is almost i certainly due to the refusal of the 5British' and French governments to follow his advice concerning the best way of dealing with the Balkan situation. Sir Edward Grey was | given control of the diplomatic nego- tiations at the Balkan capitals and the failure of the British foreign minister’s policy apparently is the reason why M. Delcasse no longer can support the Allies’ method in southeastern Europe. M. Delcasse is a diplomat of too too strong a character to allow him- self to b> overridden without protest when rejection of his views results in discomforture for his country’s |cause. He seemingly was willing to remain quiescent after his own opin- jons concerning the Balkan ecrisis were rejected, but only to permit the majority’s viewpoint to prove its ‘worth‘ When the majority was |{found to be wrong, then M. Delcas- se’s resignation became inevitable. ‘When two men possessing such strong personalities as M. Deleasse and Sir Edward Grey find themselves in op- position, one must eventually retire for the sake of his prestige. The time of M. Delcasse’s retirement was well chosen. -It is probable the crucial point of difference from M. Delcasse and Sir I ago, showing at least that the Bag: L " gers have a rather formidable scoring wide a reputation and he possesses | Edward Grey was the question of preparedness. M. Delcasse has al- ways been a strong advocate of pre- pared diplomacy. In the present in- check the Teutons and overcome the Bulgarians. This army ought to have been sent early in the course of the diplomatic battle that was be- ing fought at Sofia. It has been sug- gested that Britain would not agree to any such proposal as this. After ‘Bulgarian mobilization began, British government held back and had to be urged by the French min- istry to send even the present inade- quate expedition to Saloniki. It is probable that throughout the negotiations with Bulgaria, Sir Ed- ward Grey counted too much on Brit- ish prestige of the past. Great in- fluence has been exerted by British diplomats-in the Balkans during the years before the war, because British advice was regarded largely as being: disinterested. But this characteris- ‘tic changed with the coming of the war. Seemingly the change did not make a sufficient impression on Sir Edward Grey. M. Delcasse, as an outside observer, would be in a better position to no- tice the decline of British influence in the Balkans. His advice, there- fore, would tend to be based on sounder judgment than Sir Edward Grey’s. But Sir Edward Grey pre- vailed and failure resulted. M. Del- casse’s resignation emphasizes this failure and is, in effect, a demand for an international commission which shall permit no one capital in the fu- ture to control diplomatic negotia- tions affecting the Allies’ cause. roll, a dozen rolls or a hundred rolls. 'O reverse the old % saw -- ““the burnt child does not shun the fire.” Youngsters are continually getting their fingers burnt. If not, then they are getting their shins skinned, their fingers cut, their ankles sprained. And mother. is called on for “first aid.” Then is the time she should have a 25 or 50c jar of Webster's Dermolatum in the house. It’s the best “firgt, aid” we know. We heartily recommend Web- ster’s Dermolatum because we know its formula. It disinfects wounds and open bruises, stops pain, protects wounds from irri- tation and infection and heals remarkably quick. CityDrug Store i - B N. French & Co. ] LIST Your city property with Clayton C. Cross Markham Hotel Building FOR SALE OR RENT Good Service Reasonable Commission Huffman & O’Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING HI[N. McKEE:E_\meral Director Phone 178-W or R -~FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER stance, preparedness meant the dis- patch of a large army to the Levant for quick action through' Greece to the: The Pioneer 1s -the place to.buy your rolls of adding machine paper for Burroughs adding machines. One- ——

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