Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 9, 1917, Page 6

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* e PUBLISHED BVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDA T~ THA BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. * @ W CARSON B. H. DENU CLASS IFIED ELK O TONICHT FOR SALE FOR SALE--My two-story brick store TELEPHONB 923 building” at 323 . Minnesota; Ave. 3 7 Part cash, balance. easy terms. J. W ‘A A Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., as second-class matter| P. Lahr; Mnrkhlm,!iot{l ;fl'dln;. 2 wader sct of Congress of. March 3, 1879. Z : Phone 328. VTN | 1 2 ] } i & s 4:115-6-9-10 : 70 - ; g - T FOR SALE—7-room house & 3 No attentfon paid to anonymous contributions. Writer’s name must age, all modern, on ,-“:“‘:,,5:;; ®e known to the editor, but not mecessarily for publication. elegant location; price very: reas- ofs : .onable. - Inquire. The : Berman Commiunfeations for the Weekly Ploneer must reach this offiee not| oo oy Markham Hotel. 112 iR 7 ur i the current issue. Jater than Tuesday of each week to insure ynbl cation in E T ';:ch ALE—] edh?:?l;:my of 16- i é = B8eason: ckpine and: some SUBSCRIPTION RATES i tamarack. Phone 681-W. 3-1112 b LONGFELLO W’S IMMORTAL POEM by FOR_SALE—Propert. 1014 .. 2 I BY OARRIER BY MAIL ’ 1100 Deltnml?eAer., "'"1.01,‘2'5:5- In Costume, Indian Songs and' Music; the press prounced it the cash if taken this month. Look at 7. - only true pictiire of Indian Life ever made. -these houses if you want a bar- - s 5 an ; i gain. Address Oscar Miner, Grand Ty Evening 7:30 and 9:00 ] Forks, N.D. ' 3:1110 wix : : St R acres O ar, tam- |~ arack and spruce land, 8 miles P — i ||||||||||||||lll||||||_ll||||llll,"llll"llllmlllllllll|||||,|!|||Il||||||||||l|||||||||||||l||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||l||| e Reduction Saie Ladies’ & Girls’ Goats YOO ..cicereeewn. $5.00 Ome year .......... . 250 Six months... S ’ THE WEEKLY PIONEER i mmmuhhzsmmofthunmoffluwk. Pab- mdmtpotficepfidtouymfor,m P FOR SALE—Two residenee lots on _ Bemidji Ave., just beyond Tenth St. Nicely located, east ~front. ;I;«;rn];s."d.{. P. %firrnalgc»ham Ho- : uilding. " P 3 The Daily Ploneer is & member of the United Press Association, and SA 0“1'31‘1;5-&9-10 1a represented for forelgn advertising by the FOR SALE—Cheap, one set of heavy work harness, nearly new; also ome st of ighs vk namess 1 =" week, at greatly reduced price. Palmer Coats, Wool-. 7or sie—on o vomem = tex Coats. Style Craft Coats HIGH GRADE GAR- MENTS at price of the common sort. o track, one carload: of . seasoned The ‘stumpage 18 worth more. J. ;hll,.::rézlg.arkham _Hptel Building. e ] -Every cloth Coat, including garmefits received this 7" 4 115-6-9-10 General offices in New York and Chicago, pranches in all principal citles. mixed wood. Telephone 681-W. p 2-118 BAR THE GERMAN LANGUAGE FOR BALE—Large fourlng car in good running order. All - tires ibly suggests that the United| mnew. Will sell for $175 if taken this wé'ok. C. N. Foss;Nymore. amphlets in the books and pamp TiTet The suggestion s worthy of adoption. And in this connection we FO!;. g%LE OR TRADE—My farm would urge the barring of the German language from our schools. “" m":‘;o acres, ?x:l:l“:i- ::ft.fv ifim There is_absolutely nmo reason why the ‘_c!lv_‘fl‘lli.l'efl( ot loyal American| 14 gores mmu“dow, $2.000 worth of parents should be saturated, during the most finpressionable period of|. timber on the land, 8 miles north their lives, with the literature of a nation whose ideas and ideals are 8o g‘ fiqmlgjifisn 2:good gravel Tod: greatly at varlance with those of this country as are those of Germany. siin.”r‘ru.nk' ’m&‘_‘;_}u r:r- There can be no doubt that the dissemination of the German llggulge River. € D30t in this country tends to create a certain ‘sympathy for the people W!IO speak that language. Our sympathies follow our associations to a great extent. It is impossible to acquire a working knnwledie‘;o:l:nny llngu::; Ave. 5:118 ) t at this time, sympa e { without developing sympathy for its people. Jus 5 T AT den Eeke. ot for Germany is a misfit in the breast of any American. True there are D ter heat. ‘stationary Ilaundry many German-Americans among us, but the time has come when. these tubs, 6 rooms and bath, on 1lth must be either flesh or fowl—Americans or Germans. The hyphenated street, between Bemidji and ‘Bel- nationality must cease. In plain words, this country has no longer any :;?3“ I;Vhe:l:l:.“sfrlil Mrs. J. 4.1.1 ?lp(; syoom for the person of divided allegiance. The German-American must —_—____'_ 3 FOR RENT—6-room house, cheap to £o, and in his place must be either the American or the German @ ' It may sound harsh to say that our citizens of foreign birth must for- good renter. 1006 Doud. Ave. swear and forget the land of their birth, but if we are to be a nation, and %H ot a polyglot of all races, this is precisely what they must do. After ovember: 15, " Tl:)e iiper quoted above concludes its articles’ with the assertion g?&‘llt':a'mnimgev? e;?g’;e'h;at 11006 that “there is not a loyal language newspaper in America.” The state- . . E ment may be too strong; but be that as it may, the cultivation ,o,t th_e 4 hnwage affords, to say the least, a strong cover for disloyalty. The German-American owes it to himself to become at once and for- 4 ever an American. When he feels that he.cannot do this, he should have FOR R The Des Moines (Ia.) Capital very sens States prohibit the printing of newspapers, German language. AR IIIllIIllIIII||I||lll,||Illlllllllljlll_lllllllllli b 3 FOR RENT—Two nicely furnished rooms, modern.” 403 America N’ good renmter,: 1006 Doud :Ave. the decency, to take his person from @& country to which he can not give|. g o Togq o a119te his heart and his whole allegiance. - ——':—'———_ e WANTED—Good active young man who would like to learn the butch- NEW ORDER AFFECTING POOL ROOMS The step taken by the Minnesota Public Safety commission to close er:l trade. Csll at W.'G: Schroed- the pool and billiard halls at 10 o'clock at night, not to be reopened until er's store, see'J. W. Bellings. 117tf 8 o'clock mext morning, and to have them remained closed all day Sunday, washings t0 ~do 18 in the right-directiony : 3 ; 432-W. 6-1112 * ‘1t will go far toward eliminating certain features that have a tend- Ww. ANTED—Painfil'n . paper hanging ency to be disconcerting in times as these and . while there are many Te- and sign writing. All work guar- B spectable pool and billiard places, yet there can be no line drawn and all anteed satisfactory. Automobile :m com:o under the edict. painting our speciality.. L. W. Snelson, 103" South Irvine ; Ave. There has been much discu .. Phone 117. ' ... . - £:1110 idji there is no exception: There are those who blatently proclaim A B ey ke g ho cause of the youth of the clty, spectally so far | WANTEDFo-rept B KOl o G0 LR ORI ERC DR RT RO as it affects school students. Complaint after complaint is heard and the ) SUBS CRIBE F OR THE PI ONEER J ) A 0'Leary -Bowser Co. IIIllfltlillIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIlIIIlIIl|III||IlI|'l|IIIIIIIIllIl!llllI“IIlIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIlI ssion anent pool and billiard halls and in - nings. in city officlals “get theirs” in no uncertain terms. —TY.adles’ white trimme But there is another angle to be considered and that is the parents gllove for_left hand. Rew?l fg < : en letter after letter writ-| _Ploneer. =219 | RO of alleged offenders themselves. We have se ten by parents to the city authorities informing them that their boys WANTED—BYy. young lady, work in had their permission to play pool or billiards and to enter pool parlors whenever they pleased. There are no doubt boys who persist in disobeying their parents’ or- ders,' but it would keep a much larger force of officers than the city now boasts, to keep tab on every such youth. - 5, " The order by the Public Safety commission should help greatly to solve the problem. bakery or to assist with work in a private home. Moderate wages. Address “E. K.,”” clo Pioneer. 1-119 OWN A , Woodstock i Y. M. C. A, HAS HERCULEAN TASK It is a better typewriter Dr. John Virgo, general secretary of the British Y. M. C. A's, who Guaranteed for 2 years. recently addressed the members of the Civic and €ommerce Association MODEL 4 MODEL b at Minneapolis, thinks that the $35,000,000 now being raised by the Na- '6‘8.00 '10000 tional War Work Council of the association should be increased to $50,- '5 d6“ 8 '5 d(n;n '5 000,000. The additional millions, he says, will save thousands-of young - 4 d American {lves. o per month. - |per month The Army Y. M. C. A. 1s a most bitter foe of vice and liguor, and its various activities among the American troops in France is baving a won- GA.SH PRICE SOME LESS derful tffect on the morale of the army. The association activities are Bemidji Pioneer Phone 922 supported by public subscriptions, and the National War Work Coum il | needs $35,000,000 to carry on its work in France up to July 1, 1918. 1 “Don’t forget to write to Mother,” is the first sign that greets your X goldier son on entering the Army Y. M. C. A, building “Somewhere in [{] {/ [{] " e France,” and he is bound to go there as it is the only congregating place “"' s . cnckar"“ g the men have outside the wine shops. That alone ought to bring in a .' few subscriptions to the State War Work Council to keep the work A pneumatic Fountain Ink “agoing.” ' - Well.. .The name of the well'is Open a P"_Ckage ?f Armour’s Oats and note the plump, selected the ECLIPSE. - Nothing to get flakes, of uniform size and flavor. . It will surprise you that there Isn’t it a comforting feeling to know that if your soldier boy falls out of order. No valv into the hands of the “Fritzes,” the Army “Y.” will look after his needs floats. . The ink from n:'g:: - in the prison camp, just as it did before he went into battle?- ervoir falls into a smsll cup at A . the base, which provides just o e _ 'The effort to add a yellow stripe to the national flag is meeting with enough_ink to cover the pen. 3 2 NOT THE HOLDER. The ink a mighty ccol reception. It can’t be made to harmonize with the present :annot splash. ~Air and dust ! * colors. Fact is, yellow isn’t in the American color scheme. cannot reach the ink, therefore re;lly is an oat-food of so much luxury at so low a cost. t is due to the distinctive Armour milling process — after years of careful planning. —ipecioend Easier to cook—more economical to serve. Armour’s Oats solve a household problem. Particularly so in these days when food economy is urged as a patriotic duty. There are more than 50 different ways of serving Armour’s:Oats for breakfast, luncheon and dinner. One never tires of them. : S —_— the ink never becomes gummy Mr. Morganthau says when the.plans for the world war were com- :mfi’;hgq;:?‘lm:‘; pleted, the Kaiser went on a yachting trip “to allay any possible suspi- entirely of glass. Needs fill- ing but once in six months and - e e e e cion.” France, however, had one eye open. e saves 75 per cent of your ink Worth-while recipes ery pack: OCer. : 3 recipes on ev e. Ask your = N Kaiser Bill may have gone to Constantinople to give the Turks.a M-l%vnfll!. m*toob:fi:".lfa | o B ‘ 3 k courge in “kultur,” with a few lessons in frightfulness as incidentals. Come and see. | ° ; 7 || omeenese | ARMOUR GRAIN COMPANY, Chicago | The price of wool inclines the buyer to the belief that the “fleecy Phone~922 '[ staple” is true to its name. . ‘Defective

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