Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 11, 1916, Page 2

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The Baily Pioneer F. G. NEUMEIER, Editor. 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 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 Rat One month by carrie! One year by carrier. Three months, pos Bix months, postage pai One year, postage paid. 2.00 4.00 camp: Mason, U Correspondent. * » xk Kk Kk kkk ok k Kk KEKK KKK KK KKK KKK KKK New York, Jan. 10.—The Anglo- French abandonment of the Gallipoli peninsula campaign brings into prominence. a new military leader on whom the British will inevitably build hopes for the future. General Sir Charles Monro has shown large qualities of decision, in- dependence. and efficiency since he was appointed to command the Gal- ‘The Weekly Ploneer. Eight pages, containing a summary of the news of the week. Published every Thursday and“Sent postage pald to any address for $1.50 in advance. ERKK KK KKK KKK KK KK x * The Daily Pioneer receives * ¥ wire service of the United * % Press Assoclation. * * KEEKKKKKK KK KKK KK K* tHIS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGM ADVERTISING BY THE 55 \EE0CTAT, ress GENERAL OFFICES NEW YORK AND CHICAGO BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIEs CREDIT, BIG THING. The late E. H. Harriman, wizard of finance, once said: *“I never par- ticularly considered a man who is worth a million. The man I like to talk to, the man with whom I like to do business, is the man who can get out and borrow a couple of hundred thousand any time he wants it.” There is a volume of wisdom in this sentence. It means that in the business world credit is the one big thing. Once a man loses his credit in business he has a hard time to succeed. He pays the penalty in other ways. There may come an op- portunity for an enlargement of his enterprise. There may come a chance to get goods cheaply for cash. If he stands right at the bank he can bor- row. If he stands right with his neighbors he can borrow from them. The moral is obvious. If you have been a laggard in your payments you are not helping your credit. Credit is the very life of. business. Boost your credit by being an enthusiast in the Pay-Up Week movement to be held in Be- midji Feb. 21 to 26. This Pay-Up proposition means a lot to you. It means a lot to the community. Get in if! Get your neighbors in it. Other cities have tried out Pay- Up Week and marveled at the bene- ficial results. What has been accom- plished in other cities can be ac- complished here. Do your part by paying every bill, large and small. When you pay your bill the man to whom you pay it will feel impelled to pay his obligations, and so on until everybody will enter the spirit of the movement. Join the Pay-Up Week throng. Bemidji Pay-Up Week, Feb. 21 to 26. BLIND BASKET BALL TEAM. Columbus has a basket ball team that literally can shoot baskets with its eyes shut. Fans who've seen the boys in action say they’re wonders. The little squad of sightless lads wear the colors of the Ohio State School for the Blind. There’s Joe Arndt of Lima, Ohio, whirlwind forward; Joe’s left eye has only 3-200 normal vision and his right eye 5-200 normal vision. Yet Joe, in the three games he’s played this season, has average 151 baskets a game. B. McQueen, cap- tain and center, has a cataract on his right eye and his left eye‘is 1-25 normal. But he has a wierd, un- canny sense of where the basket is and sticks ’em in the pan, one, two, three, There isn’t a man on the squad who can read even poster print. Tot- ally blind students are the team’s backers. They can tell when a bas- ket is made and their rooting would shame a college. bunch. Are they winners? The squad has secured] 205 points thus far this season to its opponents 68! People who have money in Be- midji banks and are in receipt of an interest account, never have to con- sult the gooseberry prophet to see what ‘the weather is going to be, or worry about the thickness of the soles of their shoes. Since Ezekiel is quoted as favor- able to preparedness, the Wilson ad- ministration is sure that he was a ‘Democrat. High mufflers are all the rage just now—for the evident purpose of hiding the Christmas necktie. Constipation and Indigestion. “I have used Chamberlain’s Tab- lets and must say they are the best I have ever used for constipation and indigestion. My wife also used them for indigestion and they did her good,” writes Eugene 8. Knight, Wil- mington, N. C. For sale by all deal- ers.—Adv. lipoli operations last October, when he immediately recommended that the peninsula be evacuated. Kitchener Indorses Report. His report was not taken as final by the British government until Lord Kitchener himself went to the Galli- poli and confirmed the soundness of General Monro’s decision. The new commander was there- upon given the task of removing the Anglo-French forces. The problem facing him was one of the most dif- ficult of the war, but he succeeded in getting his men away with prac- tically no losses. It would be hard to match this exploit in the annals of successful military retreats. General Monro now goes from the Gallipoli to France to take command of the First British army corps, in succession to Sir Douglas Haig. He will occupy the same position in re- lation to the new commander-in-chief that General Haig filled when Vis- count French commanded on the con- tinent. As such he will hold the principal field command in the forth- coming offensive which the British intend to develop in France this spring. Turks Decline to Attack. The most amazing face in the eva- cuation of Gallipoli is the failure of the Turks to punish the retiring troops. Large quantities of German ammunition must have arrived at Gallipoli since the opening of com- munication between Berlin and Con- stantinople, and the Turks certainly knew the British and French were re-embarking on their transports. Yet the Ottomans apparently were afraid to move to the attack. The incident confirms the frequent eriti- cism of the Turks that they are far better warriors on the defensive than AILING WOMEN NEED THIS FAMOUS DOCTOR’S PRESCRIPTION Thousands of women who are now blessed with robust health cannot un- derstand why thousands of other ‘women_continue to worry and suffer from ailments peculiar to women when they can obtain for a trifling sum Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription which will surely and quickly banish all pain, distress and misery and restore the womanly functions to perfect health. This old prescription of Dr. Pierce’s is extracted from roots and herbs by means of pure glycerine and is a tem- perance remedy of 40 years’ good stand- ing. ‘Women who suffer should not wait till a breakdown causes prostration. If you are anxious to correct the derange- jment of the delicate feminine organs, to get rid of irregularities, or that ca- tarrhal condition, to avoid pain at cer- tain times, to overcome irritability and weakness, waste no time, but get Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription in liquid or tablet form this very day from any medicine dealer and to hezlth and happiness. free 136-page book on diseases for women to Dr. V. M. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv. A FREE BOOK. 1f you will send three dimes, or stamps, to pay for wrapping and mailing and enclose this notice, Dr. Pierce, of the Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., will send you a revised copy of his Common Sense Medical Adviser, in cloth bind- ing, 1008 pages, with color plates. Just what you need in case of sickness or accident. Treats of Physiology, An- atomy, Sex problems, Marriage rela- tions, its prevention. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels, Bad Cold Quickly Broken Up. Mrs. Martha Wilcox, Gowanda, N. Y. writes: “I first used Chamber- lain’s Cough Remedy about -eight years ago. At that time I had a hard cold and cough most of the time. It proved to be just what I needed. It broke up the cold in a few days, and the cough entirely disappeared. I have told many of my friends of the geod I received through using this! medicine, and all who have used it speak of it in the highest terms.” For sale by all dealers.—Adv. Ever, as a boy, tie a can to a dog’s tail 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 it friend—do it now! Phone 31. Hygiene, Exercise, Disease and|’ “ |ecity. st give increased confidence to the |- litish concerning the security of cise are likely to be troubled with constipation and indigestion and will find Chamberlain’s Tablets highly beneficial. Not so good as a three or four mile walk every day, but very much better than to allow the bowels to remain in a constipated condition. They are easy and pleasant to take and most agreeable in effect. For sale by all dealers.—Adv. Concrete feeding floors for hogs are | coming into favor, as they are found to be good grain savers, says the Country Gentleman. Such a floor should be six inches thick and if laid against the barnyard pavement should have a curb extending from twelve to eighteen inches below the surface of the- ground. = This will prevent the bogs from rooting under the floor, which should slope slightly toward one corner in order to carry off rain or wa- ter used in washing. A rim around the outside edge will save much grain. || For feeding floors concrete should be [} mixed in* the proportion of one sack: of portland cement, two cubic feet of || clean coarse sand and three cubic feet of gravel or broken stone. Eleven (| sacks of cement will make enough con- crete for 100 square feet of feeding floor. The mixture should contain enough water so the concrete will flat- | ten of its own weight. It should be || lightly tamped, however, then leveled || off with a straightedge and finished with a wooden float. The floor may be laid in slabs, each about six feet square, two inch lumber being used for forms. Feeding floors should be large enough to give each hog eighteen square feet of space. A The Gist of It. “Last December I had a very se- vere cold and was nearly down sick in bed. I bought two bottles of Cham- berlain’s Cough Remedy and it was only a few days until I was com- pletely restored to health,” writes O. J. Metcalf, Weatherby, Mo. If you ‘would know the value of this remedy, ask any one who has used it. For sale by all dealers.—Adv. MINNEAPOLIS WOMAN | ESCAPES OPERATION| Mrs. Sinclair Finds Wonderful Rem. || edy in Time to Avoid Knife. Mrs. Sadie E. Sinclair of 418 Bast || Lake st., Minneapolis, suffered from stomach derangements for more than six years. She became despondent and || hopeless. She feared she would have || to undergo an operation. Her com- plexion suffered along with her gen- eral health. Then she discovered Mayr'’s Won- || derful Remedy and took a course- of || treatment. The first dose brought re- || sults. She wrote: [ “Only- one dose and I slept like a log. And I felt relieved right away. | If I should need any more medicine you may be sure I will send for it. It is a wonder one can be rid of such conditiohs without pain. And my complexion is clearing; they all speak of it—I was so yellow and- brown be- fore.” Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy gives per- manent results for stomach, liver and intestinal ailments. Eat as much and whatever you like. No more distress after eating, pressure of gas in the stomach and around the heart. Get one bottle of your druggist now and try it on an absolute guarantee—if not satis- factory money will be returned. %fi 1% E/,: pedl.C Any Color 108 Sheets to Box PRICE $3.00 - BEMIDJI PIONEER PUB. CO. BEMIDJI, MINK. NEITHER, JUDGE. YM SHOWING HIM WHERE HE CAN GETA WEEXS TOBAGCO: “SATISFACTION FOR | ONLY.A DIME. ALITTLE CHEWOF W-B CuT 1S MORE SATISFYING THAN AHUNK OF THE OLD KIND ALL RIGHT. i AVE you ever heard menwho use ordinary tobacco say anything in its favor? But ncnrly all the men who are today using. W-B CUT chewing—the Real Tobacco Chew, new cut, long shred—were started by the suggestion of friends who liked it better than the ordinary kind. . “Notice how the salt brings out the rich tobacco taste® Made by WEYMAN-BRUTON. COMPANY, 50 Union Square, New York City Service Station for all akes of Storage Batterie -We Repair and Re-;:harge all Kinds Now is the time to ship us your battery for over- hauling and winter storage. | BEMIDJI AUTO COMPANY OLAF ONGSTAD, Prop. MAYBE YOU'LL FIND IT HERE erwise. HELP WANTED, MEN-WOMEN, WANTED — $75.00 a month. Government Jobs. Vacan- cies constantly. Write for list posi- tions now obtainable. Franklin In- stitute, Dept. 191-L, Rochester, N. Y. ; 28426 FOR RENT. FOR RENT — Nine-room modern house, 703 Minnesota Ave. T. C. Bailey, Phone 40. tt FOR RENT—Warm, furnished room. $7 per month. 813 Minn. Ave. & 3d112 FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Seven-room house, 50 ft. lot, well located. Payments of $15.00 per month without interest. Takes about $300.00 cash. Must be sold at once. Reynolds & Win- ter. - 5d113 FOR SALE OR TRADE—1914 auto- bile; will trade for some good cheap land. What have you? ‘Write all particulars in first let- ter. F. W. Adler, Marshall, Minn. 44114 FOR SALE—No. 912 Park Ave. Large house, good barn, large lot. Make us an offer. Reynolds & Winter. 5d113 Wholesale Stove Dealers NEW AND SECOND HAND Cook Stoves, Ranges, Wood Heaters, Combination Coal and Wood Heaters, Self Feeding Hard Coal Stoves. Anything you want in a stove All makes and all sizes. Liegler's Second Hand Store 206 Minn. Ave. ‘Bemidji, Minn. OH GIRLS! Here’s the best Stenographer’s Note Book you ever saw. . One of those m=HPmm specialties that we’re featuring. A We sell good office supplies— everything you could possibly __~ BEMIDJI PIONEER OFFICE Phone 31 Bemidji, Minn. 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 Shop at rear of Grand Central Hotel. Auto and Horse | LIVERY JAMES L. POSUE 4th St. and Mississippi Ave, Phone 164-W — Res. 164-R. _ Your city property with Clayton C. Cross Markham Hotel Building FOR SALE OR RENT Good Service Reasonable Commission; FOR EXCHANGE—44 acres good hardwood land for automobile; must be up to date. Reynolds & ‘Winter. 5d113 FOR SALE—Household furniture. 419 America Ave. 3d111 | Pay-Up Week, Feb. 21-26, will in- augurate a better feeling in Bemidji and surrounding community. Read the Pioneer want ads. | PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block Classified ‘Department These ads. bring certain results. One-half cent a word per issue. cash with copy, ic-a word oth- Business and Professional Always telephone No. 31 WANTED. WANTED TO BUY—We pay cash for cast off suits and shoes. Zieg- " ler’s Second Hand Store. 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 U by ey oo PSSP, ADVERTISERS—The great state of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fled ‘advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News the only seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of ciassified advertising. The Courler-News covers North Dakota iike a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state the day of publication; it is the paper to use In' order to get re- sults; rates one cent per word first Insertion, one-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. FOR SALE—Typewriter ribbons for every make of typewriter on the market at 60 cents and 76 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 Pioneer Office Supply Store. Nation-wide Pay-Up Week, Feb. 21-286. LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, LAWYER Miles Block Phone 560 DR. E. A, SHANNON, M. D.” PHYSICIAN : AND SURGEON 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 Office Security Bank Block DR. EINER JOHNSON * PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON - Bemidji, Minn. A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. SPECIALIST Practice Limited EYE EAR NOSE THROAT Glasses Fitted Office Gibbons Bldg. North of Markham Hotel. Phone 105. 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. 'EWEite,-tus- your ideas about im- “Glad to meet you! Shake!” THIS PAPER WANTS' YOU AND YOUR FAMILY TO ENJOY HAPPINESS AND = & 3 = PROSPERITY HERE = = sz s proving lqcal conditions DEAN LAND CO. LAND, LOANS INSURANCE AND CITY PROPERTY 117 Third St. IDA VIRGINIA BROWN Lessons in VOICE CULTURE, ELOCUTION, PIANO 1115 Bemidji Ave. Bemidji Phone 633 —_— KR KX KK KRR KRR KX KD @ | RAILROAD TIME CARDS -+ ERKK KK KKK KK KKK KD ] MPLS., RED LAKE & MANW. North Bound Arrive North Bound Leaves . 800 RAILROAD 162 Bast Bound Leaves 163 i orth. Bemidjl. . 7:00 y. All others daily except snndg Sunday night trains to and grom Twin Citles, north of Brainerd, withdrawn for winter montha. NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunaay, 1 to m., 7 to § p. m. Sunday, reading jonly, 8 to 6 p. m, ¢ p room VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON, D. V. M, VETERINARIAN Phone 3 403 Irvine Ave. DRS.: WARNINGER & HOEY LICENSED VETERINARIANS Phone 209 Bemidji, Minn. DRAY LINE A~~~ A AN TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Safe and Piano Moving Res. Phone 58 818 America Ave. Office Phone 12. DENTISTS, DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Office Phone 124, Residence 346 Miles Block, Bemidji DR. D. L. STANTON. DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY, _ DENTIST Gibbons Block Tel. 250 North of Markham Hotel FRANCES VIVIAN KENNEY VOCAL TEACHER Phone 311-W. 1110 Bemidji Ave. DR. F. J. DARRAGH . OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Specialist of Chronic Diseases Free Consultation Day and Night Calls Answered 111 Fifth St. Phone 94% Huffman '& 0’Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING £ HN. McKEEFuneral Director _ Phone 178-W or R FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER Bemidji, Minn. -

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