Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 20, 1916, Page 2

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RBATDIT PIONRRN FUS. 00, CARSON 2 K DENU “F. G. NBUMRIER, Editor. under aot of Congross of March 8, 1879, Publiahed every afterncon except Sunday —_———— No attention d to anonymous con- twibutions. Writer's name must be Emewn to the editor, but not n Ser_ publication. Commuanications for the Weekly Plo- should mnn this office not later ‘Tussday of eaeh week to insure pueblicatien In the current lsaue. —_— ERAEX AR A AR [ ] L] - The Daily Ploneer ressives + ® wire service of the United + #« Press Assoeistion. * [ * I EEEEERR R R R R R R R B R ———————————— e~ M!S PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN . ADVERTISING BY THE | GENERAL OFFICES @ NEW YORK AND CHICAGO GRANCHFS IN ALL THF PRINCIPAL CITIEY OUR EX-PRESIDENTS. Mary Roberts Rinehart, well known writer, in a newspaper arti- cle advocates a senatorial advisory committee of our ex-presidents. She also advocates a six-year presiden- tial term and no re-election. She advocates the appointing of the ex-presidents to the senate for life at salaries commensurate with their ex-officlo positions, there to form a non-partisan cqmmittee. They have served their parties, writes Mary Roberts Rinehart; let them now serve their country: Her article in part follows: The non-partisan committee would today consist of Willlam Howard Taft and Theodore Roosevelt, two big men, trained as only the execu- tive position of our government can train. When, at the end of his sec- ond term, Woodrow Wilson leaves the White House, he will carry away with him such knowledge of foreign evasion and strategy as probably no other president ever possessed. It ig not a matter of record, this knowl- edge. No one who knows Europe believes that she has put, or will put, her most significant declarations on paper. .Approve of his methods or not, as we may, the full and secret knowledge of our relations to the countries, at war, and their relations to us, is locked in Mr. Wilson's breast. Yet we shall retire him from the country’ rvice as we retired Roose- velt and t. We have paid high for the things he knows, for his ex- perience, for his errors. The Wood- row Wilson of today is not the ideal- ist who entered the White House four vears ago. He is a trained and | practical diplomat, if not a states- man. In four years more he will have such a training in international relations as no other man in America has ever had. Yet, by our policy of waste, we will retire him to private life and muzzle him by an absurd Bemidji Dadly Plomeer| system of ethics. The Theodore Roogevelt who built | the Panama canal was not the Roose- | velt of San Juan hill—although he | will maintain that he is. Yet today | we are content to let our greatest | American thunder jeremaids through | the press, because all we have left to him is a voice. The country needs, | and will need as long as he lives, the | courage, the acumen and the red-| blooded patriotism of Theodore | Roosevelt—Roosevelt, the patriot, not Roosevelt the Republican. William Howard Taft—virtually impeached at the. end of his first| term through no fault of his own— is Mr. Taft to be lost to us? Is he| to be permanently retired to private life after four years, while loud-y mouthed legislators of a twentieth his experience and intelligence con- trol the senate and the house, and roar perennially with the noise of shallow waters? In almost any country of Europe William Howard Taft and Theodore Roosevelt would be serving the coun- try at large, putting their ripe ex- perience, their diplomatic informa- tion, their knowledge of men and af- fairs, at the disposal of their gov- ernment. Why not, then, use our ex-presi- dents by making them life-long mem- bers of the senate, non-partisan, on salaries commensurate with the dig- nity of their positions? Do you be- lieve that the non-partisan clause is impossible? 1Is Roosevelt a great- er Republican that he Is an Amer- jcan? Or Taft? Do you put your party before your country? Mankato Free Press: unpleagantness has The late demonstrated 'SCOOP ' gt HEY-5C00P-STOPA MINUTE - WANT YouTo LOOK ME. OVER. (N MY NEW OVERCOAT-GET AN EYE FULL OF \T— BOY- that the east is not the ‘“‘whole works” in this country and that the political parties must reckon with the west in their selection of candi- dates for president and vice presi- dent. A poultry man at Jersey Shore, Pa., recently closed a contract with a New York banker to supply him with fresh eggs at one dollar a dozen from Nov. 1 to April 1. That, according to the department of agriculture, {8 the highest price ever paid for hen's ©EEBS. Mankato Frees Press: The Elmore Eye observes that a great many of the pupils of the school there are using tobacco in one form or another. It is against the laws of the state for any pupil of a public school to use tobacco and the law makes it an of- fense for any merchant to sell di- rectly or indirectly to pupils or fur- nish pupils tobacco. The law is prac- tically a dead letter in a great many communities. The authorities do not pretend to enforce it. Detroit, Mich., will. be the largest prohibition city in the world after May 1, 1918. Despite the fact that no true Moslem uses intoxicants, Con- stantinople is not dry. Russia has a dozen larger cities where vodka and most wine sales are prohibited, but certain malt liquors are allowed. In the United States, Seattle, Port- land, Ore., and Denver are now the largest dry cities. The prohibition movement is gaining much headway in the United States and it will not be long distant before the manufac- ture of intoxicants is prohibited. Club women in Kansas have joined with the probate judges of the state in their fight against hasty mar- riages. A law has been proposed which provides that no wedding can take place within the state until there has been three weeks' notice pub- lished in some newspaper within the county. The purpose of the law will be to stop young folks getting mar- ried when their habits and financial condition should prevent it. The runaway couples are the cause of a large number of divorces and publish- ing the bans will have a tendency to stop these to a considerable ex- tent. “*Marry in haste and repent at leisure.” Fifty-three years ago last Sunday, Abraham Lincoln on the battlefield of Gettysburg delivered his now fa- mous address. At that time, al- though president of the United States, he was not the orator of the day, that honor being conferred up- on Hon. Edward Everett, one of the great orators of that period, while Lineoln was asked because of his of- ficial position to make a few dedica- tory remarks. Everett's great ora- tion hardly d long enough for the ink to dry upon the paper, while Lincoln’s address, brief as it was, is one of the great classies of the Eng- lish language. It 1s been a great beacon light to the American people, with its cxpression of the purpose nd aim of this republic. MUSTEROLE—QUICK RELIEF! NO BLISTER! It Soothes and Relieves Like a Mustard Plaster Without THE CUB REPORTER the Burn or Sting Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with the oil of mustard. It does all the work of the old-fashioned mustard plaster—docs it better and foes not blis- ter. You do not have to bother with a cloth. You simply rub it on—and usually the pain is gone! Many doctors and nurses use Muster- ole and recommend it to their patients. They will gladly tell you what relief it |= gives from sore throat, bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congcmon pleurisy, rhcumamm. lumbago, p:nns and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often pre- vents pneumonia). 25¢ and 50c jars; hospital size $2.50. Don’t forget WRIGLEYS after évery meal “BULLET JOE” BU!K 8 ENTERTAINED A’ Bush, Philadelphia “White Elephants,"” today the guest of honor of the citi- zens of Brainerd. Johnson and Little Tom Wood w‘lll sl m ar teration may be used as a timepiece. andle end of an umbrella enables honor tonight. the home-coming celebration will be \T-EN-CLASS "~ SAY- TGUESS THERE. AWNT SOME. UPHOLSTER ING—) o THIS Fir 7 LIMOUSINE. ! AY have organized a bureau of informa- tion for the purpose of promoting better trade relations with America and England. SPORT NEWS T BRAINERD (By United Press) Brainerd, Minn., Nov. 20.—Joseph sensational pitcher of the was ‘‘Bullet Joe” Bush, Col. C. D. Another feature of nging by the Imperial Trio, for- er Senator A. F. Alderman, Al Mraz 1d Rollie Jenkins. SATURDAY FOOTBALL West. Minnesota 54, Wisconsin 0. Rochester H. S. 24, Mankato 0. Northwestern 38, Purdue 6 Chicago 20, Illinois 7. Notre Dame 14, Michigan Aggies 0. Pennsylvania 10, Michigan 7. Ohio State 28, Case 0. Iowa 19, Ames 16. Ripon College 13, Lawrence 0. Kansas 7, Nebraska 3. Marquette University 13, Beloit 0. Washington 13, California 3. Indiana 14, Florida 3. East. Yale 10, Princeton 0. Brown 21, Harvard 0. Cornell 37, Mach. Aggies 0. Army 17, Springfield 2 Navy 57, Villanova 7. Colgate 15, Syracuse 0. Dartmouth 7, West Virginia 7. ‘Wesleyan 7, Columbia 0. Williams 26, Amherst 0. The Scientific American describes pocket compass which by slight al- An electric light installed in the hoever carries it to see house num- bers after dark. I . /CEE Polt 1TY [ svwen: SuTA [ 3AD COMBINAT 10K Mol GoT A BRARD NEW LIMOUSINE, BODY-@uT: Large Russian business concerns 0-oh, My Back! My Poor, Aching Back! Suffering womankind who have about despair for relief from their tor- izing, uching buck now have their 1 prayer snawered at last. The te constant loses it sparkle. drudgery soon does its fatal work. S thing must be dane to counteract tie evil efievts of over-work — somotliing more than a mere tonic, more than just a rezulator. It must rejuvenate the entire system. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Ierb Tea and Herb Tublets ure caretully com- pounded herbs, leaves, sceds and barks, fresh from the mountains and ficlds— Nature's own remedy for sickness, put up in convenient pac! for use at home. It cleanses 1) ntire system, and gives renewed vigor, health and strength to the whole body. Yet it has ot eating lewves that: Nature gave. Try. Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Herb Tea. You will ‘be startied at the change it makes. Your pains will stop. The aches will vanish. Your wrinkles will wo. The face lines will disappear. You will feel like a new woman. Ark your drugwists for a package today. ot be sure to get “Hollist this famous herb tea, 8o one must bo careful. \rce 35c 1 package—also in tablet form for trav- elers. Don't forget. Hollleter's—refuse uthers, For sale by ' THE CITY DRUG STORE There are imitations of FLORIST gllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllll_ 321 Minnesota Ave. nnnin| Mrs. Housekeeper: That store with the big Apples has abushel of Apples saved for you. I. P. BATCHELDER Ceneral Merchandise Phone 180-W bin of We Have the Lot You Want Most of those choice lots in Bfllfil are ours to sell, becamse Itis better to bu: PAY AS YOU LIKE ll-utuuuhu are the terms. We are you secure a home of your own. Bemidu Townsite & lmprovement Co. THAYER C. BAILEY, Local y direct from the owmer. Ageat. S » Bo'r TH 5, oLD T\TNEY BRAIN! 6 COUPONS AND 98c (. L 11 ' 1 191 -3 BN ) ) l"-—-__--—--- = /NS S MY, O NS, SOME. FOLKS ASKC NoOR OPINION (o 1THAUT™ PREPARING ¢ RYT TH SHOUE o HOW TO GET IT ALMOST FREE lorethir ik ous spmtl e of S TR s The Bemlidji Plonear SECURE THIS Beautifully bound in rich Maroon—cover stamped in inla; deun with 16 full-page amous singers, and complete coupon, y at $2.50 voLUME old, artistic aits of the \vorh 'cfionryofnlmltuu Out of Town Readers Will Add 10c. for Postage PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS LR R ] DRS. GILMORE & McCANN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Oftice—Miles Block LB B RS R % Ak Kk kk EERK KKK KKK KK EEK XK KR KEK DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 EXKX KKK KKK KK R *okkok ok ok K EEX KT XXX KKK KK DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block PR AR R R R IR EEER S EREKKEKK XK KKK KK X KKK KKK KKK KX DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Troppman Block Bemidji, Minn. AKX hR KA A KK W kohkk ok hhw EEEKEKKK KKK KKK KX TR KKK XK KKK DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Block ARAKNKR KN LR AR RN xH A K KA KKK KKK KKK KK KRR KKK KKK KKK * . DR. EINER JOHNSON *® PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON & * * Bemidji, Minn. AN AR A KKK KKK KKK KX KRR KKK ¥ A V.GARLOCK,M.D. ¥ * SPECIALIST * %« EYE EAR NOSE THROAT <« x Glasses Fitted *x % Gibbons Bldg. Phone 106 % lliiiikiliiiifi*i KKK XXX KKK KKK KKK * DANNENBERG % % First National Bank Bldg. ¥ % I remove the cause of acute <« x and chronic diseases ' * * CHIROPRACTOR * % Office hours: 10-13, 1:30-6 7-8 % * Phone 406-W X ki#*liiiil**ifiii KRR KRR KKK ¥ DRS. LARSON & LARSQ] « RRGISTERED OPTOMET! i 3 ¥ Specialists the Eye, Fitting * * of Glasses * facilities for & * * * v % # We have the % . duplicating broken lenses Ci-fiiiliilllflll world in one volume of 500 pages. Four years to complete the book. Every song a gem of melody: Business and Professional “HEART SONGS ™ The tong book with 1 ssl! of the song treasures of the Chosen by 20,000 music lovers. LAWYERS LR R R R R R R R R * GRAHAM M. TORRANCE * 3 * LAWYER * +« Miles Block Phone 560 + KR ER KRR R KRR RKKE R Y R Y R R R * D. H. FISK, Court Commissicner * - * ATTORNEY AT LAW = - 4 - * Oftice 2nd floor O'Leary-Bowser ; * Bullding - 1 XXX I XXX XXX ] VETERINARY SURGEON : KKK R KRR KRR R KK & W.E DENISON,D.V.M. * VETERINARIAN * : P Office Phone 3-R Res. 99J & 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. * KKK KKK KK X ok hk ok ok kR XXX XX KKK KX KKK J. WARNINGER * VETERINARY SURGEON * Office and Hospital 3 doors +* west of Troppman Store * Phone No. 209 * KX KKK KX KKK XXX * ok kKA K KKK KKK KKK KE® TOM SMART ol DRAY AND TRANSFER * Safe and Piano Moving * Res. Phone §8 818 America & Office Phone 12 x LA RS S S S S SRS &S kA KKK DENTISTS KKK KKK KK KKK X DR. G. M. PALMER b DENTIST y Office Phone 124, Residence 346 & Mtles Block, Bemidji * XXX XXX KX XEE KA KKK KKK KKK ® x DR. D. L. STANTON » * DENTIST * * Office in _Winter Bloek * AKX XXX KX KRR KKK E x DR. J. T. TUOMY * * DENTIST * * * * Gibbons Block. . Tel. 380 * * North of Markham Hotel - XK KKK KKK XXX KRR KKK KKK KKK KK * DR. H. A. NORTHROP * & OSTEOPATHIC - PHYSICIAN « * AND SURGEON * % Suite 10 O'Leary-Bowser Bldg dl « Office Phone 1538; Res. 68-J {Ci*ilikl*ii*iil * * * * * * » * * * * * * * * * ST. CECELIA'S STUDIO ¥ * PIANO—VOICE ' VIOLIN. Phone 133—Dewey & 9th 8t. KKK KRR N 222888 8 2 4 * * * * * ® L 3 ) L L

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