Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 20, 1916, Page 7

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2% | il M“ iR J' -.um T B A fl]ll!. R gl o i T ; mfllliflflhu ' i T i mmumiHfiH'fl”"fJfl!“"”’hfllilfl ! ,rqm T Ul and other mg is to for a cof fee drinker to rid him- self of the headaches, biliousness, heart flutter ills that often come from coffee drink- quit coffee and use the delicious pure food drink— INSTANT POSTUM . " ‘There's a Reason At Grocers i ) ity about themselves. W KX KRR KRR KKK KK DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleaners for Men ‘Women and Children THE MODEL DRY CLEANING HOUSE Hogan Bros., Props. * ok ok ok ok ok ok ok Kk KRR XRRERRKRKKK XXX X RXRRRXKKKEK BROSVIK, THE TAILOR Phone 338 dkok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok kK *okkow ok ok ok ok KX XXX RERRRRRKEX KxXRERRKRE KK Get A Boston Pencil Pointer $1.00 Phone 922 222 22 2R R :::lii*lil*ii{i ¥ DRUGS AND JEWELRY & % Wholesalers and Retailers * ¥ Service and satisfaction. Mail % % Orders given that same ser- ¥ KX EKRRRRRRRKKKKRK KRR KRRKRRRKRKKKK KX hy not call them up? KKK KKK K KX *x *x « KOORS BROTHERS CO. % * * +« Bakers and Confectioners & + Manufacturers and Jobbers ¥ % Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, * ¥« Confectionery,Cigarsand & * Fountain Goods * % 315 Minn. Ave. Phone 125 & KX XKK KKK KKK KK KKK H KKK KKK KKK KK KK * GENERAL MERCHANDISE * % Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, ¥ % Flour, Feed, etc. The <« * careful buyers * * buy here. *x * W. G. SCHROEDER *x %« Bemidji Phone 65 * TR KKK KK KKK KKK Do You Use Good Paper When You Write? We Can Print Anything and Do It Right. KX KK KKK RKKEEK KKK fii*ii‘lii*ii % BANKING AND SAVINGS +* % Save systematically. Make use & * of our Savings Department. & % We welcome your open ac- ¥ % vice you get in person. % ¥ count. x * BARKER'S ¥ % SECURITY STATE BANK & ¥ Third St. Bemidji, Minn. & ¥ Bemidji, Minn. * KKKk RREKKKRKKKK xR R KRR EKRKRRRKKX x ¥ % For Farm Insurance and x DEAN LAND CO. x ¥ Farm Loans, See * x * x J. P. LAHR x x Land, Loans, Insurance x ¥ x * and City Property ¥ ¥ Lands Bought and Sold & + Troppman Block Bemidji ¥ & Markham Hotel Bldg. * x x X Bemidji, Minn. x P e e P e e e R R e e R SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER ( These Are “Good-Service” Advertisers Offering you their *good-service” and spending money to tell this commun- EX XX KK XXX KK PHOTOGRAPHER Photos Pay and Night N. L. HAKKERUP ok ok ok ok ok ok kK hok ok ok ok ok ok ko AR K XK KKK KKK XK KK HHHH KKK KKK KKK K * MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS <% * ‘Wholesale and Retail * * Pianos, Organs and Sewing * x Machines x « 117 Third St. Bemidji % x Phone 573-W * * J. BISIAR, Manager * TR KKK KX KKK KR KKK EKKEKXKKX Typewriter Ribbons Garbon Paper Second Sheets Paperineveryconceivable form Phone 922 LA AR A TS S ES ] x %X * DWIGHT D. MILLER * x —Special Agent— * +* Midland Insurance Co., Life, & % Accident, Health Insurance & x Agents Wanted * * 116 Third St. x % Over Baker’s Jewelry Store % KKK KKK KKK KK KKK KKK KKK KK *x x * BERMAN INS. AGENCY & * Farm, Fire, Tornado * x Insurance *x %« Money to Lyan Land to Sell & * It will pay you to know us * Phone 19 Bemidji, Mian. ¥ BBt ol ol o 8 0 o o B | election, FOR HUGHES Espousal by Distinguished Edi- tor of the Cause of the Re- publican Candidate a Significant Campaign Feature, ORIGINAL WILSON BOOSTER He Takes This Action Not-Because He Is the Victim of Ingratitude But Because Wilson Stands for Wilson First and Col. Harvey Cannot Assist: in the Betrayal of His Country for: the Gratification. of Personal Ambi- tion—A Democrat’s Patriotic Stand.. The avowal of the cause of Mr. anghes by Colonel George Harvey is lone of the distinet features of the present campaign. It would be flx-n nificant in Itself that a man of his prestige, who had always trained with the Democratic party, had espoused the cause of the Republican candi- date. But in Mr. Harvey’s case the significance i8 very much greater, as well as the importance of the event. He has been not only, a Democrat, but a Wilson Democrat. Moreover, he was the first man of prominence' to advocate the election of Woodrow. Wilson as President, and for many years one of the closest friends and advisers of the presagt occupant of the White House. Mr. Harvey not only proposed Mr. Wilson for the, Presidency, but as early as 1910 in-' ‘terested United States Senator Smith, a ocratic leader of New Jersey, in Mr. Wilson, and this resulted im, the Wilson nomination and election, as Governor of New Jersey. Mr. Harvey not only comes out for |’ Mr. Hughes, but gives very intelli- gent reasons for his action in the! ‘eurrent number of his “North Ameri- can Review.” In his judgment there are two vital questions to be answered before election. One is, which of the two great parties at this particulari ‘Suncture in our progress as a nation is the better eqipped and the more Nlikely to render the highest public service? The other is, which of the two designated leaders is the more cer- tain to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States? iSuch an issue as the Democrats claim, that Mr. Wilson has kept us out of' war and therefore is entitled to re-’ is brushed aside as some-' thing that has no proper place in; the mind of the voter of this year.: In Mr. Harvey’s judgment, only the most insane partisan would venture to suggest a possibility of Mr. Wil-. son or Mr. Hughes inciting or inviting’ War with any European or Asiatic' Power, and therefore there is no fair' issue between them on this question. There are three elements that are involved in the answers to these twc questions, those of military and in- dusttial preparedness, government by and for the people, and national honor and opportunity. So far as all of these are concerned, the answer is the same: Mr. Hughes is the man who should be chosen from each and every standpoint—both as the repre- sentative of the Republican party and as an individual. The best interests of the country are to be served by his election. - Mr. Harvey calls attention to the Tact that the utter absence of self- seeking on the part of Mr. Hughes throughout his entire career, confirms the belief that he does, in, fact, from the very nature of his being, stand for “America first.” On the other hand, no less surely and most disappointingly, happenings of the past two years culminating in the betrayal of his country for the gratification of personal ambition, prove incontestably that Mr. Wilson stands for Wilson first. That is Mr. Harvey’s opinion. In his judgment there is no need to seek a conclu- sion; it finds itself. The summing up of the situation is that upon the clearly-marked issues as between the candidates, there is no reason why, any professed Republican, any thoughtful Progressive or any prin- cipled Democrat should not, and every Teason why every patriotic Republi- can should vote for Mr. Hughes for President. Such advice from such a source should make a deep impression upon the American electorate. It certainly is not given through any prejudice against Mr. Wilson, for its author would naturally be predisposed in fa- vor of the President. Nor does it come from any lack of knowledge of Mr. Wilson’s methods and intent. The intimacy of the two men has been too long and too close to admit of any lack of knowledge on Mr. Har- vey's ‘part. The man who, as Mr. Wilson’s friend, first started the movement for him for President, now, after a test of Mr. Wilson in the ‘White House, advises the American people to vote for Mr. Hughes. Thare should be no hesitancy on the part of the voters to follow this advice. Mr. Wilson has become so thorough- Jy neutral that ke looks with grave in any international dispute. The President “has kept us out of suspicion on the American contention’ does today. service. Other e ———— “HE DIDN'T DO RIGHT” Independent Voters Turning This Cone viction Over and Over in Their Minds and It Will Cost Mr. Wilson Many a Vote. . A Democrat who never voted for ¥ Republican candidate for President ex- lcept in 1872, when he was forced by the lack of a Democratic nominee to \cast his ballot for Horace Greeley, {says: “I expect to vote for Woodrow Wilson, but I don’t like his course in Ithe railroad dispute. He didn't do iright.” The railroad controversy has intro- dnced a moral issue into the campaign. 'Mr. Wilson sacrificed principle to ex- pediency, or what he judged to be expediency, when he tamely surren- ldered to the demands of the train- service brotherhoods. He put his own personal and party .need before the public good. He angled 'for votes. He aimed a body blow at (the tried and tested arbitration method of settling differences. “God help you; I cannot,” he is sald to have exclaimed to the railroad man- agers, who do not poll as many votes as their employes. But he could have helped them if he had steod impartial- ‘ly between them and the utterly reck- |less train-service representatives who were bent on their rule-or-ruin .programme. “He didn't do right.” The consci- ousness of that fact is sinking deep into the American mind. “He didn’t do right.” That wide- spread conviction will cost him thou- isands of votes on election day. “He didn’t do right.” He preferred ithe weak, the timid, attitude of the |born compromiser. The American people like courage. /The like convictians. They like a 'man who has the courage of his con- |victions. They like a man who is 'willing to risk consequences for the isake of a just cause. It was an unjust cause In which Woodrow Wilson enlisted when he ac- eepted the brotherhood view that the chief item in their demands could not be arbitrated.—Providence Journal where- e e s Fire Never Out "N\ L] Children can dress in a warm \ room—No more Colds and Doctor’s bills—House always warm and cheery. Buy the stove that is guaranteed to hold fire ten years from now just as well as it . Thg can be done with 1€ Original AirTightWood Heater Every house deserves this guaranteed heater. year, it will give you perfect their putty joints soon become worthless as fire keepers. Save time, trouble and money, don’t wait longer to enjoy real stove satisfaction. Come in today. HUFFMAN & O'LEARY “THE HOME OF 600D FURNITURE” POTATOES WANTED WE PAY CASH Highest prices paid in the history of our store. See us before selling else- W. C. SCHROEDER Year after stoves with A Strong Will “Rastus,” said the judge, “you say that you entered the henhouse and then, deciding to resist temptation, left it. 1Is that right?”’ “Dat’s about it, judge.” “Well, how about the two hens that were missing?”’ i “Ah tells you, judge, Ah took dem. Ah reckoned dat Ah was ’titled to dat many for leavin’ the rest.”—New York Times. One Good Reason. “Why does the operation of hanging kill a man?’ asked Dr. Whately. A physiologist replied: “Because inspiration’is checked, cfr- culation stopped and blood suffuses. and congests the bx “Bosh,” replied his grace. “It is be- cause the rope is not long enough to- let his feet touch the ground.” RAGS ton rags--no buttons, bands or woolen cloth accepted. Pioneer Office |

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