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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER THE BETIDJI DAILY PIONEER | RAmsoad THE TASLES o= PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY-: MPLS., gggh%efl &MAN. THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. o 51 pENy o 12AmvE L g:as A M @. B. CARSON Northbound No. 11—Leaves. . .... MINNESOTA & INTERNATIONAL ... TELEPHONE 922 Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., as second-class matter uader act of Congress of March 3, 1879. No attention paid to anonymous contributions. Writer's name must §°' 31x—Kelliher local. to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Traf ked x dail Sy be nc%::nunlmlons for the Weekly Ploneerhflholtl‘ld rle::: this ofl:n;- not othfirr n':;i?:r ddl;,i v Y;xe-pt :un s;; Jater than Tuesds to insure publication @ curren ue. 0. 34, carrying sleeper for St. Tn y/of sach Feck 19 . Paul, reaches Minneapolis at 10:00 p SUBSCRIPTION RATES , |a- m., and reaches St. Paul at 10:30 a. m. BY CARRIER BY MAIL 38, carrying 'sleeper, leaves St. One year.... «$5.00 . One year... ceoom SAON | VR TOE G nabiouss Preigit. Six months...... = .o ?-_gg Six months............. 2.00 Northbound. o?:m n:;ntlu e AR Three months... . ....... 1.00 |No. 4i—Arrives No, Bemidji.. 7:00 p.m. montl. . e o mooe e No. 44—Leaves No. Bemidji.. 7:30 a.m. One woek .......cwm.. 12 No. 46—Arrives No. Bemidji.. 4:00 p.m. THE WEEKLY PIONEER No. 162—Duluth. ocal--.... 9:40 a.m. 3:15 pm. Ten pages, containing & summary of the news of the week. . Pub-|No. 186—Local frelght....... lished every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address for, in|No. xsa—-x;wwfi"b"““"ym, advance .........'..........-.....,................~.......-...........‘l.w No. “7_6‘0..,.,‘1};,0‘8}" ? na" K Westbound. OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS No. local, No. No. No. Eastboun: No. 106—Twin Cities local, de- Ne 3 A Gt 6:30 am. No. 36—Duluth local.. .. 20 No. 414—Local freight....... 3:17 p.m. p.m. a.m. The Daily Pionser is & member of the United Press Assoclation, ana 1a represented for foreign advertising by the +.12:08 p.m. :22 am. NEW NORWEGIAN CHURCH IS SPLIT: MINISTERS WITHDRAW (By United Press) St. Paul, June 14.—Twenty-three ministers and 13 lay delegates have split from the new Norwegian Luth- eran church and will form its own organization. They may also start a legal battle. SENATE 0. K’S ESPIONAGE: BILL NOW UP TO WILSON ‘Washingtori, June 14.—The ad- ministration ionage bill has been finally approved by the Senate with- out a roll call, and sent to the White House for the President’s signature. Provisions for newspaper censor- ship had been struck out and ma- terial modification in other respects had been made. . STARTLING RESULTS IN BEMIDJI People report incredible results from pure lavoptik eye wash. A girl _|with weak, strained eyes was helped There is one vital point upon which we as citizens must guard our by one app'l(cauon. Her mothier conld Be]vgs in the great contest before us, and that is that there grow mnot up not sew or read because of eye pains. in our hearts a spirit of hatred toward those in our midst with foreign|In one week her trouble was gone. A blood in their veins. small bottle lavoptik is guaranteed We have said that we are not to prosecute a war of revenge, but a[t0 help BVERY CASE weak, strained 1 igh N Thi 1 h his|°T inflamed eyes. ONE WASH contest for right and justice. s sentiment comes easy enough at this| iorijes with its inmecredible results. time. The danger will come later, when the real shock of war is felt|Pure aluminum eye cup FREE. and grim death faces us with his sable wings as he takes a son'from this|Barker’s Drug Store.—Adv. home and a husband or brother from that one. DELIVER US FROM HATRED RUSSIAN MISSION HAS Washington, June 14.—The Rus- 1:30 P. M. sian mission to the United States, . S, |headed by Boris A. Bakhmeteff as special ambassador, has landed at a Pacific port. of about forty members, will stop|16-passenger $4,500 White bus this 6:16 p.m. | first at Seattle, Wash., and proceed | week. The car will arrive in Bemidji 0. 33 —International sleeper 4:15 a.m.|at once to Washington, D. C. THURSDAY. JUNE 7, 1917. NEW GROCERY CLERK Miss Ethel Anderson has accepted a position as clerk in the grocery department at Troppman’s. CARLOAD OF AUTOMOBILES IS RECEIVED AT FOLEYS W. P. Foiey received a carload of He sold a ARRIVED IN AMERICA DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleaners for Men, ‘Women and Children The. party, consisting|Studebaker cars today. this week. SUIT SALE | No. 06 pm. Minnesota. & ternational Y No. 47—Leaves No. Bemidji.. G:gz a.m. v 100 Boys Suits will be on "‘_ sale Thurs., Fri., Sat. at’ ' $2.95 Don’t miss this opportunity; these are the greatest values ever offer- " ed in Boys suits under the present [§® conditions. There are just 100 suits in this lot and in all colors and sizes; some with full lined knickers; these suits formerly sold at $5 and $6.50. We want you to see these suits at $2.95; come early and get first choice in this lot of $5 and -$6.50 suits at $2.95. Boys Tennis Shoes, spl. - 69c :: Is-lats agd Caps - - 50c port Shirts - - - 50c Gl b “ Indigo Blue Overalls 65c Boys ' “ ke e Kaki Wash Suits 989 - “The National Boys Suit® Union-all = e and Oshkosh Suits The official - Boys Outing Suit & Americans cannot afford to harbor hatred, and especially can they not afford animosity toward our citizens of foreign descent. If the citi- zen of Teutonic blood is loyal to our country, though he grieve at the necessity for war with his fatherland, his burden is heavy enough with- out the added knowledge or suspicion that he is viewed with antagonism and distrust. There are some who are unquestionably traitors to the land of their adoption, but they will soon come to ttheir just end. Time will efface them. But their acts should not prejudice in our minds those who are loyal and who are stanchly supporting the government, even though it be with hearts saddened by regrets. If Americans are even approximately true to their ideals they will not permit the loyal to suffer for the acts of the disloyal. To do so would be to defeat the very aims in view in the struggle before us. We now are impelled by one consuming desire, the freedom of hu- manity in its broadest sense, and the greatest freedom to which we can attain is freedom of heart from rancor and bitterness. No great cause was ever won without martyrdom. Some must suffer greatly, all must suffer some. It is nature's way in which she works out human redemption. But if bitterness and hatred is permitted to creep into the martyrdom and suffering, their uplifting and purifying influence is nullified. Let us pray to be delivered from all bitterness, that when the contest is ended even our foes may be brought to the light as we see it. The Pioneer has been officially informed that the business men of Bemidji would resent what the Pioneer said with reference to the Camp- bell Lake club. Yes, the Weekly Pioneer was a day late this week on ac- count of the big amount of advertising it carried. ' Sorry. but the Pioneer has heen too bhusy reading letters and answer- ing telephone messages of congratulation to write that apology for what the Pioneer caid about that Campbell Lake club, as DEMANDED. There can be no question that the producer is entitled to a fair price ruuufi:{-'xlfil:yl:-‘:umm for what he produces, but the only thing to which the speculat‘ing price boosting hog is entitled is the noos e end of a stout rope. A subscriber writes to know if we ever saw a perfect man. Hasn't that geek g mirror in his home? We slhould meve today as if we were to face Germany alone tomorrow. MAPS & WORLD IN FOUR COLORS ALL BATTLE FRONTS COUPON NEW WAR Preseated by the BEMIDJI PIONEER A sixteen page set of large scale, authentic maps on extra heavy super-caleadar paper at merely nominal cost. 3 COUPON 25c AND MAIL ORDERS Present or mail to this paper three coupons like this with Twenty-five Cents (25¢) to cover cost of handling. OUT OF TOWN READERS ADD 3c FOR POSTAGE ONLY BEMIDIJI, These clothes are not an extravangance, because Kup- penheimer efficiency in design, in tailoring, in selection and treatment of - materials, in quality standards, all combine to make VALUE. Come in and ask us to show you these things--- - ---they're to be found in every Kuppenheimer garment. $2250 ¢25 $30 ~ GILL BROS. Why? Why debate or doubt! Good clothes are an economy and we're here to supply them in these critical times. We'’re seeing to it that our custom- ers shall have the best there is at best-value prices; and to that end we’re offering KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES MINN.