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TH‘E BErMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY: THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. @G. E. CARSON _——_fi TELEPHONE 22 E. H. DEN Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., as second-class matter under 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. BY CARRIER ‘BY MAIL Six months . v weeo 250 Six months . '.l'hrcemonths . 125 Three months One month ............ 45 One week ...... ceeee.. W12 THE WEEKLY PIONEER eonmnmgnmmmqoiflnnemottheveek. Pub- and sent postege paid to any uddxmfo;,”':g Ten pages, lished every Thursday and OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS The Daily Pioneer is 8 member of the United Press Association, and 48 represented for foreign advertising by the ; HELP qnlllll \Oi 1 PED ODOSS WEL Stne 181095 1917 4 This is a fac-simile of thé RED CROSS WEEK slides which are be- ing displayed free of charge by all motion picture theaters in Minnesota to give prominence to the campaign for two million dollars (82 000,000) as Minnesota's part of the ‘“Hundred Million Dolldr Special War Fund,” to be subscribed in the United States during the week June 18 to 25. The state campaign is being managed from headquarters in Minneapolis with Governor J. A. A. Burnquist as chairman. Reports from headquarters indicate that Minnesota will greatly over-subscribe its quota. It is the; only seperate organized city for the national campaign. - BULLETS OF HAMBURG Follow that boy you saw on the street this bright, cheery mornlng Do you know he was one of the first to enlist? Follow him as he entrians with his troops—what rousing cheers | uric is a more powerful | in dissolving uric acid, THE BEMIDJI DALLY PIUNEER In this hour of the nation’s and all the world’s need, every American who loves his country and his fellow men asks: “What can I do? Where can I help?” For stalwart youth the path of duty is plain. Our country and hu- manity need men to fight and die for them. Yet of our 100,000,000 only a small fraction now and but a tithe at most, or worst, can thus serve. For all who cannot enlist to seek ‘‘the great prize of death in battle” or who are not needed in those ranks, as yet, there is another enlistment. It is under the banner of the Red Cross. Enlisting there all, old or young, man, woman or tender child, can proudly say: “I too am serving humanity and my country.” “I too am deserving well of the Republic.” This is Red Cross Week and we ask that you do this by becoming a supporter of the Red Cross. Send your cash or your check today—s$5, $10, $100, $1,000, $10,000 or $100,000—give to your very utmost. Slackers who sneaked away from Tegistering June 5, and now find themselves facing prison sentences and compulsory military service at the end of their incarceration, will get no sympathy from the pubile at large. Instead, they will be viewed with scorn and disgust, and to their dying day they will carry the obloquay with which they have smeared them- selves. Parents are not imbued with the idea of sending their own sons to war while the slacker sneaks into hiding. Cafe, hotel and saloon circles in St. Paul, Minneapolis and Duluth suffered a jolt this week when the State Safety Commission in an order issued directed the closing of all saloons between the hours of 10 p. m. and 8 a. m., and the denial of liquor to women. Cabarets, too, were put out of business. Saloon men generally accepted the order without a mur- ‘mur, but the hotels and cafes were inclined to object and it is now. pos- sible that proceedings will be started by the latter to test the commis- sion’s authority. A little more speed at Washington, gentlemen. Too many monkey wrenches are being thrown into the governmental machinery. Sure thing. We’ll accept Liberty Bonds as pay for subscription to the Pioneer. . To be sure, we have cla‘pped a voluntary censorship on this paper. ‘We publish only the truth and often we are too charitable to tell only that much.. Some =ppreciate tbls less than others. Oh, you were mnot subpeonaed. Well, that’s funny. BUSSIA!S VO'rE Ganm om' GERMAN ATTACK ON FRENCH : o 77T 77 POSITION 1S BROKEN DOWN (By United Press), LAl 6k £ i ) & (By' United Press) Paris, June 19.—Violent. German attacks on French positions between Mont Blond and Mont Cornillet have broken down. Petrograd, June 19.—The Russian congress of workmen-soldiers by a vote of 640 to 140 today expressed approval of the deportation of Rob- ert Grimm, the Swiss Socialist peace agitator. It Will Pay You ———_ to become a regu- Legal Blanks for Sale at This Office What Is Uric Acid? Everyone has uric acid in the but naturally in small quantities. s%}xces— sive amount is caused by eating too much meat and foods that ferment in stomach. The kidneys, being the filters of the blood, are supposed to separate and throw the poisons out of the system. Weak, tired and overworked kidneys fail to do this, hence the poisonous uric acid and its assocmte isons contaminate the blood, causing backache, lumbago, rheu- matism, dropsy, drowsiness and tired feeling. To overcome the trouble is only a matter of toning up the kidneys, and this is best done by a treatment with Anuric, three times a day. Anuric is a recent dlscover{’of Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y., and can be obtained at any drug store. Experience taught Dr. Pierce that An- aflent than lithia ot water melts Anuricis a xegulat insurance and life-saver for all big meat eat nd those who deposit lime-salts in their joints. =This Paper= .DON’T Write it on Your Cuff! Jot it Down in the =P MEMO BOOK HOME FOLKS. they got! . See him hurrying up the plank of the transport—they're warping out to midstream now. Oh, the cheers and smiles and tears. But what is that awful dim you hear?—the hum of many machines, the chug of ten thousand punches, the rasp of countless lathes? Tn the bur-r of them all can't you hear the Hymn of Hate? Can’t you see those thousands of feverish hands, nerved on and on to speed the nefz-ious industry of war? Of course you know why such haste is made. The place is Hamburg. Little brass shells capped with steel-nosed bullets, sharp-pointed, are being hurried through with breakneck haste to the rhythm of that hymn to stop that boy you saw this morning. Will they do it? £gain he's at the front, in the trench—fevered with concern just be- fore the charge. He's over the top ‘with the first—a hundred whizzed past him but one of those little steel- nosed bullets found its mark. Now time is evorvthing Hurry, pick him up, get him back! That bullet is doing its job well—but a moment mav save him. that boy you saw on the street this morning. Maybe that bullet can't succeed—for maybe it found your dollar in the way. Your dollar brought the stretcher to him, your dollar made the tourniquet that stopped the blood, your dollar took him back to the base, your dollar probed and found the little st'eel—nosed‘ bullet—your dol- lar was in the way! . Now have you a dollar following close behind that boy you saw this morning? : Have you a dollar waiting for him at the front—to get in the way of the sharp-nosed bullet of Hamburg? Do you want to know how your dollar can fonov that boy—how it can take that stretcher to him when the bullet of Hamburg has found its mark? Subscribe to the Red Cross! That's the way! “Fight or Give” is our battle cry! The Red Cross takes the stretcher for you over the top into No Man’s Land and brings back boy you saw this morning. Only a dollar, but it can do the mightiest work in the world today. The Red Cross does not require field service of m members or sub- scribers. . All it asks is that you, too, do your bit and help the boy that fell in * No Man's Land. President Wilson, himself, is president of the Red Cross and 'asks that one million men and women enroll their names as subscribers to the Red Cross—at $1, $2, $5, $10, $100, $1,000, $10,000 or $100,000. He does not ask that you do anything else but pay your subscription and then if you wish to secure 10, 25-or 100 mew subscribers, do so if you wish. No further service in the field or elsewhere will be required. WHAT NEIGHBORS SAY. Minneapolis, Minn.—*Just after I was ;narm;)dl 1 was hard- able t n):'ound at all. V&:a in misery most of the time. Had hot es, sweats nm{ heard of Dr. The ideal way to make memoranda and carry infor- mation that you need fre- quently. Covers last for years. Sheets can be obtained | Pierce’s A Favorite| anytime, ruled in six styles. S Prescription 0 d? Bound in Handsome Dura- cided to t ble Black Morocco, with Red Leather Index: that enables you to find what you want ine stantly. * THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER S, can certainly tesu— fy that this medi- ,cme is all that is claimed of it for woman’s dmordera, as it made a different woman of me; it helped me so much”— Mags. MarGareT TrHoMAS, 810 E. 15th St. THE GOOD UUDGE UOINS THE ARM . WE WAVE A FOUR THEN, M GOING MONTHS SUPPLY TO STAY WITH OF w-B CUT TOBACCO. THIS REGIMENT) COLONEL., PUT ME IN THE RANKS OR ANY GTHER OLD PLACE, BUT SEE THAT WE. HAVE PLENTY OF “THE LITTLE SHEW THAT SATISFIES" together in the army, you find out a lot about then' likes and dislikes. _It's always been a great place for the spread of W-B CUT popularity. They show each other why you shouldn’t take more than a little chew of W-B CUT. Every shred is chock full of sap; a big chew is too rich. They take to W-B CUT, strong; nothing is too good for our soldiers. - Made by WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, 1107 Broadway, New Yerk Gity lar advertlser mn R TUESDAY. JUNE 19, 1917. ABSENCE Makes the Heart Grow Fonder of Some One Else, If _Y_'fl;_ Aren't on the Job SOME PORTRAITS Ol'; YOURSELF IN DIFFERENT POSES —THAT'S THE IDEA. AND FINISHED ATTRACTIVELY ‘ AT The Hakkerup Studm BEMID]JL MINN exquisite grace and charm of child- hood and .= womanhood, and - the strength, dignity and character of manhood. Hakkerup Studio, Bemidji,. Minn. Our facilities for all kinds of high- grade photographic work are first- class; our best skill, artistic train- ing, and personal eflorts are at the service of all who desire true por- traiture; the kind that interprets the = What kind of a lot are you looking for? A = gite? A location for a fine residence? Or just' a plnce for 1 H cozy little home? . i g WE HAVE THE 10TS Pick yours out and call on our local agent, T. C. Bailey, Post Oftice Block, for prices and ‘June: discount. EASY PAYMENTS BEMIDJI HORSE MARKET “* * We'Buy and Sell Horses, = - Harnesses and Vehicles. F o Moberg Construction Company Teluphene 272 Bemid)l, Minn. []] LU When YOU Are in MINNEAPOLIS or ST. PAUL Be Sure to Visit the Wonderful New Minnesota State Prison IN STILLWATER Open for inspection Every Day (Except Sundays and Holidays), 8 to 11 A. M. and 12:30 to 4:30 P. M. Round Trip on Trolley Cars Including Prison Visit: From St. Paul—4 Hours From Minneapolis—6 Hours The Finest Public Institution of its kind in the World 0 YOU WANT your friends to avoid you? They will ccrtamly do so when your breath is bad. There is no excuse for anyone having a bad ' breath. It is caused by disorders of the stomach which can be corrected by taking Chamberlain’s Tablets. Many have been permanently cured of stomach troubles by the use of these tablets after years of suffering., Price 2§ cents per bottle, Chamberlain’s Tablets ANOTHER DURN JURY CHOSEN FOUR ARE MISSING FROM (By United Prfl) St. Pnnl Ju:.: 19. —'Alnlc:ther mDnm; STANDARD OIL TANKER is bei: 08en, th a total of i‘irfnen uc;r’ged. The testimony may | New York, June 19.—Four are be started tomorrow. missing from the crew of the Stand- ard Oil tanker John B. Archbold off the French coast, according to dis- patches received here today. DO IT NOW Mfl of Ohio, Cit! of Toledo, ank J. Cheney makes oath l!nt he is senior partner of the firm of J. Cheney & Co., doing business in ths City of Toledo. County ud State aforesaid, and that said firm will the sum of ONE BUNDBED DOI for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cm'ed by the use of H.ALI.:’S CATARRH me-n to before me and subscribed in my presence, this sm day of December, (31) W GLEASOR. ” Send us the price of a year's Hall's Catarth Medicine is taken in- | subscription if you are in arrears. ternally and acts through the Blood on the M Surfa fe lucous ces of the System. Send F. J. & CO Toledo, O. g b ol draggle 50 en | W€ Need the Money i Defefi;e I