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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER t4—————PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY- THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. E. H. DENU @. E. CARSON TELEPHONE 922 Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., as second-class matter ander act of Congress of March 3, 1879. No attention paid to anonymous contributions. Writer’s name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pioneer should reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue. st e i st ot i A A AR T AP TP TER SUBSCRIPTION RATES Three months............. 1.00 Right pages, containing & summary of the news of the week. Pub- Ifldmnnfldlymdmtpomgepu'dm~nym1u,i:1.d- OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY OF BEMINI, MINNESOTA . —————— The Delly Pioneer is & member 0t the United Press Association, and t» represented for foreign advertising by the— THE 'HOME BOOSTER If you like the old town best, Help her grow! If you'd have her lead the rest, Tell ’em so! ‘When there’s anything to do Let the fellows count on you; You’ll feel bully when you’re through, Don’t you know. If you want to make a hit, Get a name! If the other fellow’s it, Who's to blame? Spend your money in the town, Where you pull the sheckles down; Give the mail concern a frown— That’s the game! When a stranger from afar Comes along, Tell him who and what we are— Make it strong. Needn’t flatter, never bluff; Tell the truth, for that’s enough. Join the boosters—they're the stuff. We belong. PLANT SPRUCE FOR PAPER MAKING Minnesota can and should make provision for an ample supply of print paper in the future by planting spruce on state lands. W. H. Kenety of the Cloquet Forest Experiment Station expressed this opinion yesterday at University Farm. Big eastern paper companies are making extensive plantings of red spruce to insure a future supply of pulpwood. Mr. Kenety says that Min- nesota’s white spruce makes a much more rapid growth than does the red spruce and is the best of all the spruces for pulp paper manufacture. Moreover, much of Minnesota's state land is admirably adapted to the growing of this tree. On state lands near Northome, for example, white spruce reaches a diameter of six inches in 28 years, and a fully stocked plantation in the same region will yield 50 cords of pulpwood in 40 or 45 years. “It seems logical, therefore,” adds Mr. Kenety, ‘‘that both p\:blishers and paper manufacturers should unite in urging Minnesota, as a part of its forest policy, to devote suitable state lands to the production of spruce, and to further such tax reforms and other measures as will make it pos- sible for private individuals or companies to practice forestry on their own lands, thus supplementing the supply from state lands.” The present high price of paper, Mr. Kenety believes, is largely due to a scarcity of raw material. Wisconsin and other states are drawing on Minnesota for their supply, and Canada, in order to protect her mills and publishers is likely to curtail the shipment of pulp and pulpwood to this country. Many Canadian provinces and paper mills have recently started planting spruce where adequate state fire protection is assured, and where taxation on the young growing timber is based on the value of the product when harvested. These plantings, however, will produce only a small portion of the amount of wood necessary for the mills. On this account, the province of Quebec now requires the practice of forestry on all provincial spruce lands logged. If Minnesota is to have a supply of pulpwood for the manufacture of newspaper stock, it must, says Mr. Kenety, make provision for the grow- ing of spruce. The war, after all, might have been worse. Only 5,000,000 men have been killed thus far, with 10,000,000 or so minus legs, arms, eyes and other portions of their anatomy. Yes, it might be worse! Health authorities predict that the habit of riding in automobiles will make Americans a legless race. We have noticed a tendency in that direction, especially as it relates to some pedestrians. Why, we wonder, does Mr. Wilson seek to muzzle the press and ye.t allow the congressional tongue to keep right on wagging? If we have to raise a great army there will be one grand rush to en- list, for soldiers are fed on SPUDS AND BEANS. Uncle Sam is jogging right along toward war, and any day now we may expect to see him break into a gallop. The tie that binds some men’s noses fo the grind stone is red tape. THE BEMIDJI The Walk At Holywell chuy g Steeple. -h, in Wales, an old bell is kept which {vas used in a novel way to call people o worship. The po- sition of the (-hun]\h causing any bell rung there to be|inaudible in some parts of the town.|a peripatetic ringer used ‘to be employed. whose perform- ances were thus d ibed: "A leather strap is suspended round his neck. and a large and heavy' bell attached to it whick rests upon a cushion buckled over his knee. Thus’ accoutered, he traverses the town, jingiing his bell. to the suprise of those who are unac- quainted with the custom. “The walk- ing steeple. lLe was called by the townspeople.™ Traveler—1s there water in my room? Hostler—I guess not. This here hotel’s got a new roof.—Chaparral. | DAILY PIONEER Never Fails. “Look here; 1 want you to take back this alarm clock you sold me awhile back.™ “Why, my dear sir, that's the most reliable alarm clock on the market.” “That's just the trouble. It's too dogzoned reliable. 1 nev to oversleep any more.” World. York ‘The cbu valued at 3 of New York city are 000, Wouden shoes are trequently used in toltand as Howerpots. Those who are quite satisiled sit stiil and do ncthi those who sre quite satistied of the world re the sote benelutars PERUNA in Your Home A housewife must give the first aid in colds, coughs and other ailments. Her promptness in applying the remedy often saves a serious illness. Her experience with remedies has led her to know that PERUNA is always reliable, that she should have it on hand for the immediate treatment of coughs and colds, and that it is always to her \ aud The Family Safeguard ly medicine. pequences. e 1 suffered with a very u&tmtfl uu::}:l’;' Peruna the dropping in my. Iy head and pose The experience of one woman, given - herewith, is typical of . thousands of let- ters that reach the Peruna Company from grateful - friends who have found their homes incom- . plete, and _their er t PERUNA. The great weight of testimony that has accumu- lated in the 44 years that PERUNA has been on the market proves it, beyond question, to be the reliable family rem- edy, ever reldydto take, preventing the serious effects of colds, This proof is published from time to time and many families havi profited by it. Remember you can ebtain you and be fortified sgnimt PERUNA ia tablet ferm f convesience. # or your Carry " The Peruna Company, Columbus, Ohio IT IS EASIER TO PAY YOUR BILLS WITH A CHECK; IT LOOKS BETTER-IT GIVES YOU STANDING IN YOUR COMMUNITY. IT IS CONVENIENT TO MAIL A CHECK FOR THE EXACT AMOUNT. THAT CHECK IS A RECEIPT. BE- SIDES THAT THE BANK IS HELPING YOU TO KEEP YOUR ACCOUNTS STRAIGHT. THE BEST FRIEND YOU HAVE IS YOUR MONEY, NEXT TO IT IS THE BANKER WHO CAN AD- VISE YOU FREE OF CHARGE ABOUT MONEY MATTERS. BANK WITH VS, WE PAY % PER CENT INTE REST ON TIME DEPOSITS FIRST NATIONAL BANK TUSETH SCHOOL OF MUSIC Teachers of Violin. Piano and Ins ents Phone 387-W. 14 3d St. o A A A A A A A A A A A KKK KKK EK KKK DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleaners for Men, Women and Children THE MODEL DRY CLEANING HOUSE Hoganson Bros., Props. * * x * * x x IZE R EEE R E R R RS L8 x x x x x * x x c«c«i«;«««&q*i;: x “White House” Tea and Coffee * gserved exclusively at the THIRD ST. CAFE IZEE SRR SRS RS RS [ E R RS R E RS E LSS SPIRELLA CORSETS Professional Residence Coreet * x Service * x JULIA N % 916 Miss Ave. Phome 810-J & IEE SRR R R RS E SRR SPEND YOUR LEISURE MOMENTS £t the IDEAL PARLORS In , clean enjoyment Pool or Billiards "'HAYDEN SCHOOL OF MUSIC Instrumental Department Harmony and History LB E R R E L SR LR R NEW JITNEY STAND IN * FIFTH WARD * —Phore 62— * August L. Berg, Joe Hague, ¥ Ray Jarvis and Fred Grant & Service Night and Day * KA XXX XXX L2 22 22 2 IR E S R E S E R R R &R LR KING Tailor Matglgults Drop in and look over our Spring and Summer lines. HOGANSON BROS. * 309 Third St. * KKK XXX R KKK x x x x sRImnnnnuunnnEnsnnnnne L. P. lebmg,mgy Hot ‘Water Heating Get our estimate. Phones 555 and 309 Snnnmmnng LT DRESSMAKING At home or by day 612 America Ave. Phone 58 MRS. THORA STAMBAUGH t a chance | —2 Good for the Whole Family “A éood cough remedy is one that can be depended uri:,“ia to t:ur;‘:s goughs. Not one articular cough, but coughs in gene th?: r‘x:::setsl::':i:’ugb‘;emegg can be relied upon for all the i alent. While the causes of all e o e e:‘lle condition of the patient coughs are primarily the same, yet a iswghat mafes the difference in the nature of the cough itself. Coughs of healthy persons are easier to cure than the coughs ?f invalids. The powerful convulsive cough of a large man is harder to cure than the cough of a baby. If you get a remedy that will cure a large man’s cough and yet not be too po for the baby, you have a good cough remedy. | Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is just this kind of remedy. It is good for any member of the fu:flly. It relieves coughs of all kinds. It is the product of much thought and study to produce an ideal cough' remedy. It iscom- posed of things which cure easily and soothingly without harm- ing the most delicate tissues of the throat. Itactsas easily and safely on the young as on the old, and is the ideal remedy _fo_l: coughs, colds, croup, influenza, whooping cough and bronchitis. Qs g Pl —Gome Gl b SmsnnN RN N 10 ST HR NI We Have the Lot You Want Most of those choice lots in Bemidji are ours to sell, becanse we own them. It is better to buy direct from the owner. PAY AS YOU LIKE In most cases these are the terms. We are here to help you secare a home of your own. BEMIDJI TOWNSITE & IMPROVEMENT CO. THAYER C. BAILEY, Local Agent. I HINIIMNBR [T RN BEmMIDJI HORSE MARKET We Buy and Sell Horses, Harnesses and Vehicles. P Moberg Construction Company Telephone 272 Bemidj)l, Minn. 2 RN nsInneE Illlllllllllll“llllllllllllFF | Business and Professional I EE SRR R EEEEEEES] * DRS. GILMORE & McCANN * * PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS & x Office—Miles Block ® I EE SRR E R R EEEEEER] I EE TS SRR R RS SR R * DR.E. A SHANNON,M.D. * « PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON & x Office in Mayo Block x « Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 % KX KKK KKK KEEKEKEE R KKK * * * DR. C. R. SANBORN e « PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON % x Office—Miles Block x KEXEKEKEEEHEEXEKKXXK XXX XK KKK XEKXKE K DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON I B R EE R R R R LR R R R R ] * GRAHAM M. TORRANCE * LAWYER % Miles Block Phone 6560 I EE R RS S SRR R R RS & L E RS R E R R EREEREES] * D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner *x ATTORNEY AT LAW ¥ Oftice 2nd floor O’Leary-Bowser * Building L E R E SRR EREE R EREE R EEKHE XXX KEE SRR ARRRRR x % Office Phone 3-R Res. 99-J & 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. X E KKK KKK KK XX XXX XX XXX E J. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON Oftice and Hospital 3 doors west of Troppman Store Phone No. 209 KKK KE KKK X EKXEKEK KK KKK TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Safe and Piano Moving Res. Phone 58 818 Ameriea & Office Phone 13 I E R SRR R EEEEEE RS KX I KKK KKK KKK DR.J. W. DIEDRICH x DENTIs-rm » Office O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Office Phone 376-W Res. Phone 376-R KK EKEKEKKXK XXX X KKK DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Office Phone 124, Residence 346 & Miles Block, Bemidji « XXX XXX XER KX XXX XXX XN DR. D. L. STANTON * DENTIST - Office in Winter Bloek « XXX EEXXEE XXX XX EKEEEEXEEI XXX E X DR. J. T. TUOMY * DENTIST « Gibbons Block. Tel. 330 & North of Markham Hotel - EEEEEXE KT XXX K KX XXX EEXET KK ES DR. H. A. NORTHROP - OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN & AND SURGEON * Suite 10 O'Leary-Bowser Bldg & Office Phome 1853 L EEEEERREIEEREESR *x * * Troppman Block Bemidji, Minn. KE XXX XK KX XKEX IEE SR ERE SRS R R R DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Block XKEXX XXX XX I EE SRR R RS RS E R R DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. IR R R R RS R EE R R EEXEE XXX XX XXX A V. GARLOCK, M. D. SPECIALIST EYE EAR NOSE THROAT Glasses Fitted Gibbons Bldg. Phone 105 I EE SRR R SRR R RS EEEEX XXX XXX A. DANNENBERG First National Bank Bldg. 1 remove the cause of acute snd chronic diseases CHIROPRACTOR Office hours: 10-12, 1:30-§ 7-8 Phone 406-W I EE R E R EEE R RN EEEEEEXEEEEEEEKEK * K xx xk LB REIEE R ]SS * * * x ¥ ¥ *x ¥ x & ¥ x% ' R e R R R s R T EAEE R R R 2 22 We have the facilities for duplieating broken lenses x * * x x x * x * x * x * x * x * * x x * x x * x x * x x * x x x x * x & x * * x x ® * x x AR EEEEEEEEE x R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R R I l l