Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 4, 1916, Page 6

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! i I { ! T = POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT (Authorized and placed by Charles 8, Carter, Amount paid for series $20.00), I am a candidate for Representa- tive from the 62nd district, and re- spectfully solicit your support at the election, Nov. 7, 1916, I might make numerous promises as to what I will do if elected, but quantity promrses are made largely 10 guin votes, and are soon forgotten after election. Therefore, the prom- ises I have to make are few in num- ber, but these few will be religiously kept, if I am elected. 1 do promise, if elected, that I shall perform the duties of Representative to the State Legislature purely in the interest of the people, irrespective of party consideration or political ex- pediency. I am opposed to the further issuing of ditch bonds in this district until the present judicial ditch law is amended so that ditches will be con- structed only where the quality of the soil, prospective settlement and gen- eral conditions warrant same. 1 believe the operation of the pres- ent judicial ditch law to be excessive- ly costly and that the homes and property of our citizens, which are pledged for the payment of the in- terest and principal of sald bonds, have been jeopardized by the enor- mous issue of boads, and the high rate of interest paid therefore. I will do all I can to secure legis- lation to relieve the county from any possible future payment of said ditch loans. My politics are Republican, but under the law I am compelled to make the race as a Non-partisan. I prom- ise also, thdt every citizen, regard- less of his political bellef will re- celve the same degree of courtesy and attention, and that special privil- eges will be extended to none. Respectfully yours, CHAS. S. CARTER. tf to 117 (Paid advertisement by the Calderwood Senatorlal Committee, 354 Hennepin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. FOR U. 8. SENATOR CALDERWOOD Don't the the trust-controlled press fool you by talk of “helping elect a Democrat.” A straw vote covering every part of the state gives Calder- wood over 8 per cent advantage of the Republican and gives the Republi- can more than four times as many votes as the Democrat. This shows Calderwood the winner, with the Democrat a poor third. The trust press knows its master’s voice, and it will try to secare you into again voting for a man of the trusts, Vote bravely and Calderwood is the win- ner. CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is endorsed by the organ- ized and unorganized FARMERS as the only candidate committed to the fundamental reforms demanded by them, including the open market for grain, livestock and produce, and the abolition of gambling in foodstuffs and cotton, both of which cost the producers and consumers hundreds of millions of dollars annually. GALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is endorsed by the leaders of organized and unorganized LABOR as the only candidate who has advo- cated the 8-hour day and the effective prohibition ot child labor in mines, workshops, factoriesgand like inten- sive occupations; for industrial in- surance and the extension of employ- ers’ liability, and for the just dlvision of the wealth which labor helps to produce, such division enforced by law if need be. CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is the only candidate who stands for the SOCIAL JUSTICE CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER GLASSIFIED WANTED PUUTUSUSUNTRUIIN. Lo v vow b NPUUVEUL PV Vo WANTED TO TRADE—A good, big work horse for good cow. Phone 642-J. 3-114 HELP WANTED. WANTED—Teamster; steady Jjob. Smith-Robinson Lbr. Co. 1-114 WANTED—GIrl at Erickson Hotel. 3-116¢ \‘\‘.»\N'l"l‘-}[)—:v.«\ kl'lchen girl at Dal- ton's Restaurant. 113t WANTED—Kitchen girls at Hotel Markham. }1_1[( FOR SALE. A e e FOR SALE—One Round Oak coal stove. Used one year. W. Z. Rob- inson. 1-114 FOR SALE—Good five-room cottage on lot 50x100; $950 cash or terms. 225 M ppi Ave. 2-116 FOR SALE—Will sell or trade for land, 1914 Studebaker 5H-passenger touring car, in first class order. What have you? J. P. Lahr. 6-110 Z Z ~ % % % N ‘ iy Young women’s low heel gun metal top, with white sole and heel . . $4.50 EREis one with the WHITE NEOLIN SOLE, the kind the girls have been looking for, just in THIS MORNING. Get a pair before the sizes are broken. Knapp's Shoe Store FOR SALE—Auction sale of live stock at the Jester farm, Lake Plantaganet, Saturday, Nov. 4, at 2 o'clock. 3-114 FOR SALE—Pair 3-year-old and pair 5-year-old horses and Jersey bull. Phone 4 10-1113 FOR SALE: ven and one-half acres of land in city limits, on easy terms to right party. The land is all cleared and is an ideal spot for gardening. John F. Gibbons. 6-119 FOR SALE—My Indian motorcycle, side car and all equipment. A snap for cash. Ed. Currey. Phone 507. 3-114 FOR SALE—16-inch jackpine wood at 0. K. Restaurant, cheap, $1.25, $1.50 per cord, delivered to any part of city. Phone 681-W. 6-117 FOR SALE—Everbearing strawberry plants for spring. Geo. C. Berg- lund, 16th St. and Park Ave. Price $2.00 per hundred. Come to my place now and see them bearing. 4-1028-114 FOR SALE—1,200-1b. horse, buggy and harness. Owner going away. Call Saturday or Monday at Hotel Remore. H. B. McConnell. 1021tf FOR SALE—Good big work horses cheap as I have my season’s work about done. Tom Smart, Bemidjf, Minn. 106t FOR EXCHANGE—46 horse gas en- gine and lath machine, good as new, both or separate. What have you? Longballa, Bemidji, Minn. 1031tf LOST AND FOUND. LOST-White Kngurn itten. Finder return or notity Mrs. Olat Ongstad for reward. Phone 118-R. 114tf L.OST—Buffalo robe between Tenth and Dewey and Ploneer office. Re- turn to 917 Dewey Ave. for revzlx'llril6 FOR RENTStorage room. 1 of furnish good storage room for fu niture and goods. C. E. Battles, M-§ t FOR RENT—One large unfurnishod front room. Inquire 419 America Ave. 3-116 rooms ForR —T'wo furnishe for light housekeeping. [ We will Call 8rd DEMANDS—old age penslons, in- surance against unemployment and help for needy mothers, and the in- alienable rights of Life, Liberty and Happiness, which are now destroyed by law-protected evils, CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is the only candidate who dares or cares to espouse the cause of POLITICAL JUSTICE to women. He is not in the ballot trust. CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is the only candidate who stands for INITIATIVE AND REF- ERENDUM, that instrument of fund- amental democracy by which voters of this state may regain the control of their government. In Minnesota Special Privilege stole popular gov- ernment by . false representation. They secured the adoption of a meas- ure by which the reactionaries count all silent votes FOR themselves! No more high-handed robbery of the people’s liberties was ever perpe- trated! Two years ago 168,000 vo- ters voted for Initiative and Referen- dum. The Interests were able to mus- ter only 41,000 against it, and yet it was defeated by over 10,000 under the unfair law. Calderwood is the only candidate who utters a protest or offers a remedy. LET THE PEOPLE RULE! CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is the only candidate that demands that the mines, water pow- ers and other resources that are nat- ural monopolies shall be owned by the government and operated or St., next to Abercrombie & Mec- Cready’s store, upstairs. 111tf FOR RENT—Two houses on Bel- trami Ave. Inquire of owner at 1100 Beltrami Ave. within the next ten days. 6-117 FOR RENT—Three modern unfur- nished rooms for housekeeping. 1009 Bemidji Ave. Phone 575-W. 1027t WANTED—Woman cook at Home Cafe, Remore Hotel Building. 3-114 Fresh New York apple cider at Stewart’s Grocery.—Adv. 114 PAID ADVERTISEMENT (Price paid for series $10) WILLIAM F. DONOHUE. Democratic Candidate for Congress, 8ixth Minnesota District. William F. Donohue was born at Hudson, Wis.,, and his boyhood days were spent on a farm near New Rich- mond, Wis. He attended the public schools of the latter village, after which he taught school for a short time. He was next employed as a traveling salesman, following that oc: cupation for about two years. Mr. Donohue then entered the law depart ment of the University of Minnesota, from which he was graduated in June, 1896. He was immediately admitted to the bar and in the same month he located at Melrose, Minn,, where he has practiced his profession ever since. He was married June 2, 1897. Mr. Donohue has been a member of the state legislature, county attorney of Stearns county for two terms, candi. date of his party for attorney general of Minnesota, and was a delegate to the national convention of the Demo cratic party this year. Order a gallon of fresh apple cider at Stewart’s Grocery.—Ad 114 \J YOUR NAME Is it on our subscrip- tion list? uarantee you full value FOR YOUR MONEY HE IS THE WINNER leased IN THE INTERESTS OF ALL THE PEOPLE, and not used as the basis of steel trusts, oll trusts, coal trusts, power trusts and other monopolies which convert the prop- erty of the people into private for- tunes for Rockefellers, Schwabs, Car- negies, Guggenheims and other mul- timillionaires, GALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is the only candidate who dares to oppose the liquor trust in behalt of SOCIAL BETTERMENT AND LEGITIMATE BUBSINESS. There i8 abundant corroboration in the testimony of both statistics and statesmen of the accuracy of Glad- stone's statement that the liquor traf- fic is more destructive of the life, hap- piness and prosperity of the people than war, pestilence and famine com- bined. CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is the only candidate who stands for the AVERAGE man—the average banker, merchant and manu- facturer against the increasing en- croachments of the money trust, the mercantile trust and other predatory combinations. CALDERWOOD IS THE WINNER because he is the only candidate who stands for PEACE AND A WORLD COURT where national differences shall be settled by law and reason instead of by the barbarous butchery of war. He is the only candidate who, while demanding adequate pre- paredness for defense is boldly against the militarist propaganda of Fresh New York apple cider at Stewart’s Grocery.—Adv. 114 LETTER TO THE EDITOR (Continued on Page 4) that they should write letters ad- dressed to Mr. Schulz, stating fully in their own plain way, conditions or facts as they exist in their neighbor- hood, and what is needed, according to their opinion to improve flood or drainage conditions around the lake. They should state plainly what dam- ages, if any, they have suffered dur- ing 1915 and 1916 from high water. What remedy they would suggest, and also their ideas as to what share the different counties, the state of Minnesota, the Red Lake Indians or Indian department, the Federal river and harbor department and the wa- ter power interests each should bear of the expense in widening, deepen- Order a gallon of fresh apple cider at Stewart’s Grocery.—Adv. 114 KINNEAPOLIS MARKET CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE. LEARN CHIROPRACTIC Be independent—Send for catalogue, Minnesota Chiropractic College, Inc. 122 South 6th Street, Minneapolis, Minn. TRON MINING STOCK. FOR AN INVESTMENT IN A MINE THAT IS SHIPPING HIGH GRADE IRON ORE, WRITE THE SCRIBNER-FOSS CO. 219 Palace Building. Minneapolis PATENT ATTORNEYS. Williamson & Merchant sA% Y 5RS Both Phones Mark Causes Solicitcrs of U. S and Foreign patents. 925 Metropolitan Building, Minneapolis, Minn. C. D. ENOCHS Hatent Attorney specializing in the development of Ideas into ‘marketal ble products. McKnight Bullding, Commerce Building Minneapolis St Paul ANTIQUE FURNITURE. Upholstering, Refinishing, Furniture Repairing and Antique Furniture 910-912 Marquette Avenue, Minneapolis ARTIFICIAL LIMB maces 4-LB. FIBER LEGS Lux co. - Artificial Lisb Co., 18 Wash Av. R, Dess Nt OO s_peelnllsm—nye. Ear, Nose, Throat. DR. GULDE, Specialist—Eye, Ear, Nose, Throat, 824 Byndicate Bldg. 510 Nicollet Ave. AUTO RADIATORS. AUTO RADIATORS $*%areerSsener AUTO RADIATOR MANUFACTURING CO- 1518 Hennepin Ave. Both Phones Minneapolis HOTEL. Hennepin Commercial Hotel §utfennepta Just namlmn mm:no 19':«;“ thu- Depot Hemstitching, Pleating & Buttons, C. W. VAN STONE & CO. Mhfll&meh lllnnxmlh Kotfe & ano:m Buttons Covered, VOTE FOR war for profit which the Steel Trust, and ward lords are prosecuting, and which is 80 zealously espoused by hlsi opponents, The Seven Beas Magazine which is the official organ of the| Navy League, openly advocates war | for the acquiring of riches. The! Navy League is in effect the busi- ness club of the steel, copper, nickel, powder and munition plutocrats of the United States. We, the people of the United States, paid more money ! for and on account of war during the ten years preceding the present Eu- ropean outbreak than Germany, the most military nation, or Russia, with | twice our area, or France surrounded with hostile and jealous neighbors, or Japan, the terror of the East. If we are not prepared, why not? Our 1916 Congress appropriated more than twice as much for war purposes a8 was ever appropriated by any of the above nations in times of peace. Congress appropriated more for the navy in the last three years than in the preceding 28. In Europe “every man carries a soldier on his back” (in taxation), In America every | man will soon carry two! And the| AVERAGE citizen will carry most ., for which $6.00 istobepatd). ) - | sted county. “Calderwood is one of the pluckiest fighters that ever lived. He isn't g one-idea man. He is a student of all the economic questions of the day one of the best posted men that & ran for an office in Minnesots. “If Calderwood would make as strong a speech for the Republicans or the Democrats as he makes for his own party, he would be toted around in a special palace train, and the high muck-a-mucks of eity, country and | village would be kowtowing to him from every quarter. The speech cov- lered briefly and yet comprehensively all the issues of the day.” Fairmont (Minn.) Daily Sentinel “Mr. Calderwood will carry Olm- Republicans and Demo- crats are uniting in his support. 1. like either of his opponents Mr. LY derwood’s hands are not tied. ' stands for the things I have fough. for for years. Neither of the other ~ candidates stand for these things."— Julius Reiter, late Democratic nom- inee for Lieutenant Governor. “Your opponents stands for a sys- tem of business that is bound to this country into war. It is the same system that has caused the war ig of the burden in the ever increasing Europe. If we would reorganize our HIGH COST OF LIVING—for we pay | commerce to fit the natural demands our Federal taxes not directly but|of the people instead of a select few in the price of what we buy and use. | there would be plenty for us all to And the few who are already rich|do, and we would have a greater will get richer at the expense of the power and prosperity as a natiom, common people. than is otherwise possible.”—Con- gressman C. A. Lindbergh of the Sixth GALDERWOOD IS THE WINIIEH;?"E'i@n'a‘e'rcn-nz. Mr. Laborer, Mr Lawyer, Farmer, Doctor—this s because he knows the people—he (sl\'OUR fight. Shall it be a MAN OF of the people and FOR THE PEOPLE |THE PEOPLE or a MAN OF THE and will be elected by the people. The [ TRUSTS? Go to the phone NOW best index of what a man will do in|and call five friends and advise them office is what he has done as a citi- | to plump a vote for Calderwood7 zen. and talk to the voters you meet. “NOT IN THE TRUSTS” ing and straightening of the Red|apd at Crookston to investigate con- Lake river from its outlet for about |ditions. And my belief is that the 27 miles to a point at or near High- ;Federal war department will do ev- landing. And also plainly give their ;-oryming reasonable in its power for ideas as to the stages at which Red |the best interests of the people of Lake should be maintained and what |the Red Lake valley, provided the they would suggest the federal gov-|people themselves, who are the real! ernment should do through ' their |government, will get their wants river and harbor department for |crystallized and properly placed be- navigation on Red Lake and on Red fore the war department and con- Lake river, and specially for the |gress. dredging out of reasonable harbors| Hundreds of settlers have been, river, at the outlet of Red Lake, and | their homesteads in the Shotly, Tam; also at the outlet of Tamarac and |arac, Blackduck and Battle River Blackduck rivers and other places on | valleys the 133t two years on account the lake where it would be feasible of the high water stage of the Red to maintain sheltered harbors for Lakes. These people should present boats of proper size for navigation |all the facts they have about the rea! on the river and on the lakes. conditions to Mr. Schulz personally, About a month ago I accompanied |or in writing; at Thief River Falls on Mr. Dugan, one of the war depart- |Nov. 23. Don’'t wait to get some spe- ment engineers, on his trip of inves- cial person to write for you, but tigation across Red Lake and down write in your own plain way by * the river from the lake by boat to|letter or a postal card. Crookston, stopping at nghlnnding.; Yours very truly, Thief River Falls, Red Lake Falls, —Chas. S. Carter. THE BANKER IS INTERESTED IN HIS DEPOSITORS. IS THE ONLY MAN IN TOWN WHO WILL GIVE YOU MIS IHDE- VICE FREE. THE BANKER LIKES TO SEE YOU AND EVERY- ONE IN HIS COMMUNITY GETTING RICH. SUCCESS BREEDS SUCCESS AND SU AND DO ASSIST EACH OTHER. N BE A SUCCESSFUL MAN. PUT SOME MONEY IN T OFTEN AND BECOME ONE OF THE RICH MEN IN OU'I‘\FI‘SCVNNT BANK WITH s, WE PAY ¥ PER CENT INTEREST ON TIME DEPOSITS FIRST NATIONAL BANK S for small boats at the mouth of the |seriously handicapped in dt‘\'elwmi‘“ ¥ i z {] . | | { | | { i f | | ——

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