Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 29, 1915, Page 2

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S R U s The- Bemld;k Daily Pmneer JX PIONEER PUB. CO. wllhntl and Proprietors. /F. G. NEUMEIER, Editor. Telephone. 31. —_—— JEntered at the post office at Bemidji, ., a8 ‘second-class matter under Act of Congress of March 8, 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. One month by carrier... .$ 40 One year by carrier . 4.00 Three months, postage paid . 1.00 Six months, postage paid. . 2.00 One year, postage paid.... 4.00 The Weekly Pioneer. Fight 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. ***#ll#lllllilll# x * * The Daily Pioneer receives ¥ wire service of the United * % Press Association. * * * KRR KKK KKK KE #H.S PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGH ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGC ARANCHES (N ALl TnF PRINCIPAL CITIE: HOBOES’ PARADISE. If Bemidji is to be a clean city, free from crooks, vagrants and unde- sirable men and women, it is abso- lutely necessary that citizens and other authorities co-operate as much as possible with the police authori- ties. The police are making an ex- cellent attempt for a clean Bemidji, but as long as they do not secure the co-operation of the people and other authorities and lienency is. shown, Bemidji will be known as a hoboes’ “paradise” by all men of the ‘“‘road” who are not in search of work. Every citizen, including those in public of- fice, should assist the police as much as possible regardless of political party or organization. IT IS UP TO US. ‘We are face to face with the prob- lems of another year. It may bring us much or little as we choose. The question is, what do we choose? In the parlance of the street, “It is up to us.” One thing that is needed in Pe- midji is greater commercial activity. But how are we to promote it? ‘We need a closer community of in- terests between the farmer and hLis family and the city man and his fam- ily. In many ways each is depend- ent upon the good will of the other and few of us seem to realize this. In years past farmers lLiave been shipping their products away tc mar- ket in small quanties and realizing small profits while ofliers are taking the “gold” that should have found its way back to the farms. And the loss to the farmer is likewise a loss to the city and to ti:e community in general. We should not permit another year to go by without remedying this sys- tem. It can be done. The business men of Bemidji should all get together and divise some meth- od whereby they can market the pro- ducts of all the farmers, quickly, economically and without the aid of many hungry go-betweens. It can be done if undertaken in the right spirit. ‘When the business men look after the interests of the farmers in this respect the farmers will reciprocate by giving them the volume of busi- ness that is now going to other sources. An agriculture clearing house is what is needed. The new year should see a movement on foot for its estab- lishment and the end of the year should see it in practical and suec- cessful working order and with every- body satisfied. If congress will pass a law for pre- paredness against bill collectors we’ll vote right and vote often or any other old way. Sit tight, smile serenely, and let the other fellow roar. When a fellow loses his head it’s an evidence he hasn’t much head to lose. A correspondent wants to know Wwhether a “cheap skate” is a man or just a human being. Neither one— Jjust cheap skates. One satisfying feature of France’s big monthly war tax is that it is self- imposed. . KEKKKK KK KKK KKK KKK * DAILY WAR ANALYSIS, * x (By J. W. T. Mason,) x x United Press Staff * x Correspondent. * KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK Withdrawal of the Indian troops| from the western battlefront is un- undoubtedly due to their comparative failure as fighters when facing heavy artillery fire. It has long been un- derstood that the moral stamina re- quired under modern conditions of ar-! tillery warfare is possessed only to an inferior degree by the Indians. Ap- parently, Sir Douglas Haig has made the removal of the Indians the sub- Ject of his first important decision as to policy, since he succeeded to t.he- ++++++++++++.‘.+++\fi.++ supreme command of the Brmm forces in France and Belgium. Doubt- of the need for more troops in Egypt and Mesopotamia, Instead of send- ing exclusively white troops to the' east, the whites are hereafter to be concentrated in France and Belgjum and the Indians are.to be used where the demoralizing effect of artillery is not so extreme. Difficulties of trans- port make it almost impossible to move large mortars into Mesopotamia and along the eastern border of the Suez canal. The Indians will be more effective fighters in those areas, therefore, than they have been in Ar- tois and Flanders. There can be no truth in that the Indians are being sent back to their home land to subdue mutin- ous uprisings. If sedition were so general in India as to require the presence of more troops than are now garrisoned in the great British. ds pendency, it would scarcely be advi able to return the native regimen the native troops would not them- selves join the insurrectionists under the spell of the revolutionary spirit. ‘White troops and not natives would be dispatched to India in all proba- bility if reinforcements were needed there. But there is no evidence that sedi- tion has spread to any serious extent in India. That they could have done so without any evidence reaching the world at large is highly improbable. It is well known that several at- tempts have been made to cause India uprising since the beginning of the war, but the British authorities seem to have taken adequate precautions, for the present, against the rebels. Reports of successful revolts in In- dia are being circulated by way of Constantinople and are suspected for this reason alone. The near-east with its persistent bazar rumors is the most untrustworthy source of news in Europe. The specific denial of the British government that se- rious uprisings have occurred in India is far more likely to be correct than reports to the contrary from Con- stantinople. Forest Culture. Forest culture is as much of an art as is corn culture. A good wood lot, like a good cornfield, is the result of applying intelligent methods to pro- duce a full, valuable crop. A cornfield with fail spots, empty hills, feeble stalks and half filled ears is neither a credit to the farm nor a paying invest- ment for the farmer. No more 1s a wood lot half stocked with inferior trees. The department of agriculture says that when timber is cut is the time of all times to apply forestry. The way in which the cutting is done :will determine what the subsequent condi- tion of the wood lot will be. IF WOMEN ONLY KNEW What a Heap of Happiness it Would Bring to Bemidji Homes. Hard to do housework with an aching back. Brings you hours of leisure or at work. It women only knew the cause— that Backache pains often come from weak kidneys, 'Twould save much needless woe. Doan’s Kidney Pills are for weak kidneys. Read what a Bemidji citizen says: Mrs. W. G. Worth, 608 13th St., Bemidji, says: ‘“About five years ago I used Doan’s Kidney Pills. They were recommended to me when liv- ing in Virginia. I can freely .say that I never found another medicine that could equal them for curing backaches and other trouble from the kidneys.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Worth had. Foster-Milhurn: Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv. misery at Your Great- #% Grandfather’s Ink was an inconstant mixture, thickened or thinned as it required. Folks are more particular about* writing results now, so we offer our customers the newest member of the Carter’s Inx family, Carter’s Pencraft || Combined- Office and | Fountain.Pen Ink ) —one_ink equally adapted 1o =Y either fountain pens or ...fififlm Pencraft Ink writes a dark blue and dries a time-" defying black. Our promptness in stocking this newestink is only, lnolrclenmple of the carnest- ness of our desire ta.please you. May we show you this matchless ink today ? less he was able to do this because ¥ reports| PROFITABLE - CROP- ROTATION:; 'l' WINTER PLOWING. < Don't plow sandy.soil inthe winter if it is at all likely to blow. ‘Winter plowing is hard on boll- 'WQrms, COrn, Worms, cutworms and all kinds of harmful insects - that pass the winter in the soil. . It you. are interested in pre- serving the lives and increasing the.number of these pests don’t do any winter plowing at all. It you want a big crop in.1916 you. had better: winter .plow if possible.—Oklahoma Station. ok ol ok ok Bcdechite ok ok b ok L R R R R R bt 3 oo sk oleckesdecle ke dle ke oh ok b bbb Central Aim_Should Be to Leave In a Better Condition The most. profitable crop rotation does not. consist merely in changing the crops around from year to year regart less of the relation-of the crops to each other. The central aim in all crop ro- s. | tation systems should be to leave each’ Nobody could say with certainty that | Geld in-a better state of cultivation, better physical .condition. and reason- ably free from pests at the end of each nd styles to.cover th 320 E. ROGERS; Wilton rls in town or. country. The Hub=Mark is your value mark. ey Jkeep ;your .feet dry, wnrm,&emfvl't !Plfl:.m‘l}f E holcl a world of wear. i Whynatiget-the best while;you are about it? i -Hub-Mark Rubber l-'oqma.r is made in a wide variety of kind: ormy weather needs of men, ‘women,, ; RUBBERS | The World:s Standatd Rubber Footwear A. 0. AKRE, Nymore, erwise. GENTS, WANTED—Vou can make _:big-money by selling our guaran- ivteed trees, fruits, roses, etc. We ;.-pay. highest _commissions : every oweek.. Free outfit and part ex- s penses. The Hawks Nursery Co., . Wauwatosa, Wis. 4d1230 Class:f,led " Department *These ads: bring certain r_esults, a word per issue, cash with copy, ic a word oth= Always telephone No. 31 One-half cent ] the Grand Central hotel for two weeks. Anyone wanting a first class house now is_the:time to buy. Will give easy. terms or a liberal dis- count for cash. E. W. Quick. 5d14 WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Mrs. P. J. Rus- “ sell, 907 Dewey Ave. Call 268. rotation eycle. No harq and fast rotation system can’ be laid down for any community, but the ‘most_ profitable system, must be worked out for each farm and indeed for each field. There are certain gen- eral principles, however, that should be borne in mind in this connection, in or- der to accomplish the most satisfac- tory results, For soil improvement there should be at least one leguminous crop in each rotation cycle. To this class of plants belong the clovers, al- falfa, peas, beans. etc. There should be also a_sufficient quantity of live stock, especially milk cows, on each farm to.utilize the roughage and to supply the desired quantity of stable manure, which in addition to green crops plowed under will furnish the necessary amount of humus to the soil. The conditions resuiting. from this treatment if the soil is properly han- dled will make the succeeding crops more vigorous and capable of offsetting in some measure at least the effects of any pests that may appear. Again, the successive crops in any rotation should be so selected and arranged that no two _upon which -the. same- pest may thrive will be grown in succession. The principles of disease control by means of crop rotation are based upon the fact thdt certain pests can thrive only on certain kinds of plants. There- fore when the crops are changed and the food supply thereby cut off the pests must perish or be greatly reduced number. Age For Heifers to Calve. The age at which a heifer should HERE ARE IN. THESE UNITED:STATES VERY ATTENTIVE WHETHER YOU TRAVEL By Street Car, ‘Automobile, Airship, Carriage, Horseback, or A Foot Stop At Our:Drug Store For What You May.Need In This Line Youw’ll Find Us Attentive and Anxious To Please E. F. NETZER 'v WANTED—Girl for housework. 29 2d1229 WANTED—Young girl who lives at home to assist with housework. Mrs. H. C. Baer, 1205 Lake Blvd. 5d1231 10th St. Phone 570. 3d1230 POSITIONS ‘WANTED. WANTED—Work by hour or day Phone 117 4d1231 —————_ meeee— FOR RENT. A A A N A A FOR RENT — Nine-room modern house, 703 Minnesota Ave. T. C. Bailey, Phone 40. tr WANTED. A A~ WANTED TO BUY—We pay . cash for cast off suits and shoes. Zieg- ler’s Second Hand Store. WANTED—Second hand household goods. M. E. Ibertson. "LOST AND FOUND. LOST—Near the Grand theater last night, a lady’s silver mesh pocket- book. Finder please return to Mrs. A. A. Andrews, 1225 Lake Boule- vard. 2d1229 ————— NOTICE. All those knowing themselves in- debted to me are kindly requested to settle their account or mote before Dec. 25, 1915. I am obliged to ask cus- calve varies somewhat, according to the breed and the maturity of the ani- mal. -~ The larger breeds, like the Hol- stein and Brown Swiss, should not, as a rule, calye much before thirty months. Animals that mature earlier, like ‘' the Jerseys, are usually bred to calve at about two years. However, whatever the breed, if the individual heifer is slow in maturing, she should calve later. than if she matures early.— Hoard's. Dairyman. GRAND CENTRAL CASH MEAT MARKET V. VOLLER, Prop. We pay the highest cash price for beef, pork and mutton, and sell at the lowest price of anyone in the city. Shop at rear of Grand Central Hotel. NOTICE. To parties who are indebted to W. G. Schroeder for merchandise, dating back 60 days from Nov. 1 and over are requested to settle as soon as convenient and before Dec. 25, 1915. ‘W. G. SCHROEDER. —Adv. tf Auto -and--Horse LIVERY JAMES L. POGUE 4th St. and Mississippi Ave. -Phone 164-W — Res, 164-R. —ATTEND— Bemidji: Business College Day and- Night -16-INGH- SLABWOOD FOR -SALE Hardwood $2.50°per load Bemidji Mfg. Co. Phone 481 LIST Your city property' with Olayton . Crass Markham Hotel Building FOR SALE OR RENT- Good Service Reasonable Commission ‘Service Station for all Makes of Storage Batteries We Repair and Re-charge all Kinds Now is the time to ship us your battery for over- hauling and winter storage. BEMIDJI AUTO GOMPANY OLAF ONGSTAD, Prop. tomers to favor me promptly to en- able me to meet my own obligations. | ‘W. G. SCHROEDER. —Adv. tt FOR SALE—I have a high grade Player Piano, slightly used; will sell at a-sacrifice, with bench, scarf and twenty rolls of music. 1f you want a bargain answer quick. G. W. T., care of Pioneer. 441229 FOR SALE OR TRADE—For city property, small. improved farm; suitable for dairy or truck farm- ing, Inquire 1021 Miss, Ave. or Phone 353-J. - 124 1231 (8 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 Blackduck. Read the details in display ad on an- other page of this paper entitled “Buy Farm Direct From “)wner.” MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 50 cents and 7€ 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 Ploneer Office Supply Store. FOR SALE— Rubber stamps. Pioneer will procure any kind of rubber stamp for you on short no- tice. —— ERKK KR KKK KR KKK % . Subseribe for the Ploneer. & - PHYSICIANS, SURGEQNS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block Business and Professional AR AR EEE S E S SRR R ] LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, LAWYER Miles Block Phone 560 DR. E. A.. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SUBGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 - Res. Phone 397 D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O'Leary-Bowser Building. DR. C. R. SANBORN ' 'PHYSICIAN ‘AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR, L. A, WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over -First National Bank Bemidji, Minn. DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Cook: Stpves. Taking Stock? Better let us show you some- of the . == HPmm Forms_that make the job.easier. We have:them in a large variety and will gladly send you samples, - Everything from pins to printing, at BEMIDJT PIONEER OFFICE Phone 31 Bemidji, Minn. Ranges, Wholesale Stove Dealers D SECOND HAND Wood _Heaters Combination Coal and-Wood' Heaters, Self.Feeding Hard Goal Stoves. /Anything you want in a stove All_makes.and-all, sizes. Zlaglet’s Second:Hand. Store 206 Minn. Ave. Bemidji, Minn. , Office Securify Bank Block DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. A. V. GARLOCK, M. D, SPECIALIST Practice Limited EAR NOSE Glasses Fitted Office Gibbons Bldg. Markham Hotel. EYE - THROAT North of Phone 106. A. DANNENBERG CHIROPRACTOR First National Bank Bldg. Graduate the Palmer School of Chiropractic Office hours: 10-12; 1:30-5, 7 to 8 Phone 406-W. VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. VETERINARIAN Phone 3 403 Irvine Ave. — e T DRS. WARNINGER & HOEY LICENSED VETERINARIANS Phone 209 Bemidji, Minn. DRAY LINE TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Safe and Piano Moving Res. Phone 68 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12. —_— DENTISTS. DR. D. L. STANTON. DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY, DENTIST Gibbons_Block Tel. 250 North of Markham Hotel FRANCES VIVIAN VOCAL TEACHER Phone 311-W. 1110 Bemidji Ave. Bemidji, Minn. DEAN LAND CoO. / LAND, LOANS INSURANCE AND CITY PROPERTY 117 Third St. Bemidji KKK KKK KRR R KX ¥ RAILROAD TIME CARDS 9 KKK KKK KK KKK KKK MPLS., RED LAKE & MAN. North Bound Arrives. North Bound Leaves. East Bound Leaves West Bound Leave East Bound Leave: ‘West Bound Leaves. West Bound Leaves. East Bound Leaves. Freight West Leaves Freight Eaat Leaves at. df It 45 H‘nlght from Brainerd, due North Bemidii.... :00 pm *Daily. _All others daily except Snndn.y snn y night trains to and from Twin Ct north of Brainerd, withdrawn for wumr months. DR. F. J. DARRAGH OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Specialist of Chronic Discases Free Consultation Day and Night Calls Answered 111 Fifth St. Phone 949 Mifnan & Wleary FURNITURE-AND UNDERTAKING © HN. McKEE, Funeral Director Phone 178-W or R FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER NEW PUBLIC LIBERARY. .QOpen daily, except Sunaay, 1 to . P m.1:o'p.m. Sunday, reading room to.6 p. m, SIS S B bod e TBESHE S FOR SALE—My house at 723 11th St. and Morris Ave. I will be at : FOR SALE— Furniture. Inquire at 315 Beltrami Ave. Telephone 956. 6d1231 The -

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