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~ BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER. - pUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON:EXCEPT SUNDAY THE BEMIDJI PIONEER: PUBLISHING CO. 6. B. CARSON B. H. DENU TELEPHONBE 922 Fintered -at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., as lecqnd-clm matter under act of Congress of March 3, 1879. No attention baid ‘to anonymous contributions. ‘Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Ploneer. must reach this offiee not Jater than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issue. _________;__._————————:.—-_'—__.__—-——,———_—_—_————_—‘————— SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER BY MAIL Six months ............ 380 - Six months ............ 300 Three months cie.. 128 _ Three months .......... 100 . pages | xr:om_ { the week. Pub- Ten , containing & summary 'of news of the week. L lished every Thurs?>- and sént postage paid to any address, for, in sdvance s.......c . 0 5 TSI R ..$1.50 ——rm s : OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS 55 . e x B THE BUSINESS WOMAN Until recently, the business woman was the ex«;qptiop. Now she is everywhere. What with suffrage prevaxlmg_ in many states and likely to become universal, she is also taking a position in public life never before accorded her sex, so far as history records. : ; ] ». The world war has been responsible for the woman in business, and doubtless has had its effect in bringing about suffrage. s There can be no doubt that, to a large extent, woman is in business to stay. It is up to her to make good, and she can do this if she so.wills. To succeed, however, she must of necessity reconstruct her views of life. Not only this, but her education must be radically changed. Heretofore the boy has been educated for a career. He has been trained for the work that he has chosen. His whole life has been built upon and around this career. Not so with . the.girl, or if so, the careers have been widely different. In { E - every age of the world up to the present, the ultimate object of § woman’s existence has been marriage and maternity. True there have always been exceptions, but they merely - sufficed to emphasize the rule. i < Henceforth, however, if woman is to take her place be- side man in the business world, this must be wholly changed. She must be educated and trained for business FIRST and b matrimony as an alternative. There will, of course, be many e positions where she can continue to gain a livelghood 'whlle awaiting the important event of matrimony, but if matrimony continues to be her ultimate goal, business will always be a side issue, a secondary consideration, and her success therein will be negligible. And perhaps, contrary to the age-long contention of lord- i ly man, this business.training will not unfit her-for th'at more o important vocation of matrimony. We confess our inability 5 to see wherein a sound business training can be considered ob- jectable in a wife and mother. And -as intellect is frequently the offspring of intellect, who can tell but the new departure may be for the better development of the race after all? & THE THIRD LIBERTY LOAN The Liberty loan campaign that will celebrate the an- niversary of our entrance into the war, ought to be in every way the most triumphant and inspiring national enterprise that America has entered upon in its first year of belligerency. It will, for one thing, be the greatest war loan that has ever been floated by any institution. Besides, it will be prosecuted by the largest and most com- plete citizen organization that any country has ever possessed. It will start with a piled up fund of patriotic enthusiasm that has been steadily accumulating all through the winter, and that will be so directed as to sweep over the country in a fiery wave of zeal. k WU ) It will be many years before the hen tribe will cease boast- ing of the great age attained by their ancestors who flourished -during the world war. S NN - i S ‘A slacker singing “Over There” and a professed Christian singing “I Want to Be an Angel” are sights to make the devil chuckle. @ S It'would seem there is nothing too improbable to happen. ‘A Kentuckian has died from too much whiskey. R~ SR That war garden will be just as big and as good . patriotism will let it be. as your P S— This is your war. Do your part. ; ICTURES of home folks P carry warmth and com- fort to the heart of a soldier. ' STUDIO of N. L. Hakkerup. Make an appointment today. The Hakkerup Studio Bemidji, Minn. o AT R R R R Remember, Tuesday, “Meatless Day”; Wednesday, “Wheatless Day.” AR R REnn s The Liberty Loan is your investment.|' . THT BEMIDJT DAILY PIONEER ! Stafting with SIx and on¢-half DiTeks to make the front opening. On top of. this lay ten more bars imbedded in _the mortar, then lay five layers of bricks, finishing the top by rounding it off with mortar, When-this is compl&ed the incinera- tor will have a fire grate below and an-. other above entirely surrounded with bricks. The second grate forms a re- ceptable for garbage. The mortar should be made of slaked lime and sharp sand.—Ronald F. Riblet, in Pop- ular Sclence Monthly. OLD PRESCRIPTION . FOR WEAK KIDNEYS ®Have you ever: Stopped to reason why is is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon for- gotten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfil the promises of the manufacturer. ' This applies more particularly to a medicine. A medi- cinal preparation that has real cura- tive value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, to those. who are in need of it. Remember, We/d., “Wheatless pay" A prominent druggist says “Take - e == for ‘example Dr. Kilmer's Swamp = Root, a preparation I have sold for many years-‘and never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent results, as many of my customers testify. No other kid- ney remedy that I know of ‘has so large a sale.” According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the suc- cess of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is| due to the fact that, so many people claim, it fulfils almost every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments, corrects urinary troubles ang neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcel Post. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention the Bemidji Daily Pioneer. - Large and medium size bottles for sale at all drug stores. HOME TOWN HELPSD SOLVES PROBLEM OF GARBAGE Incinerator Easily Constructed and Not Costly Will Consume Unsightly Rubbish That Accumulates. = —t T — The U. S. Food Administration Requests that you save wheat and help win the war - The Calumet Company true economy in cost—in use—in time. purity in bakings, and surest results WAR-TIME Recipe Book Free—send for it today An effective, cheap Incinerator for a suburban home can be made from the materials listed herein. First lay six and one-half bricks on a smooth base, beginning on one side with half a brick placed next to a whole brick; then take a whole brick and lay it I crossing the end of the last one. Con- tinue this until the full six and one- half bricks. have been used. ~ The second, third and fourth rows are laid ‘ |{ 4100 Fillmore St. in the same manner, lapping the joints. When the fourth tier is com- — —— pleted lay on a good one-half inch coat of mortar and imbed,in it ten iron bars each 21 inches long and about one-fourth inch in diameter (or the flat kind) laying two in front over —~ Long as Others,: Saves Work. Get a Can Tod: ml' Baking Powder urgesthis—and in doing so use Calumet with corn and other coarse flours, and practice Government Experts Selected Calumet for Army and Navy Use « because it means purity in baking powder— Calumet Baking Powder Co. Chicago, Illinois WIDE SHEETINGS less than the present mill price. Standard Bleached Sheefing 21-2 yds. a yard An Incinerator Built of a Few Bricksp Having a Grate Under the Garbage ayard Grate for Drying and Burning the 11 1) 2 vards wide, Refuse Matter. unbleafihed yard . ’ the bricks to support the next tier, 1] 1] b 18-4 yards wide spacing them equally. Another com- plete tier of elght bricks Is_then lald. ayard’ . yards, no waste. We do not cut pieces. ou sheeting 2 1-4 yards wide is 58 cents. A chanceto replenish your bed sheets at much ¥ 49¢ 2 yards wide, This sheeting is guaranteed standard quality and is put up in pieces containing from 2 3-4 to. 13 1-2 This is a chance to save money as mail order house prices 46¢ *3c 35¢ Red - blooded men of ¢courage are on the firing line — and there are many anemic, weak, discouraged men and women left at home: At this time of the year most people suffer from a condition often called Spring Fever. - They feel tired, worn out, before the day is half thru. They may have frequent headaches and sometimes * pimply” or pale skin. Bloodless people, thin, anemic people, those with pale cheeks and lips, who have a poor appetite and feel that tired, worn or feverish condition in the springtime of the year, should try the refreshing ‘tonic powers of a good alterative and ‘blood purifier. Such a one is extracted from Blood root, Golden Seal and Stone - root, 'Queen’s root and Ore%on Grape root, made up with chemically pure glycerine and without the use of alcohol. This can be obtained in ready-to-use tablet form in sixty cent vials, as druggists have sold it for fifty years as Doctor “Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It is a standard remedy that can be obtained in tablet or liguid form. A good purge should be taken once a week even by persons who haye a movement daily, in order to eliminate matter which may remain -and cause a condition of auto-intoxication, poison- ing the whole system. To clean the system at least once a week is to prac- tice health measures. There is nothing® 8o good for this purpose as tiny pilis made up of the May-apple, leaves of aloe and jalap, and sold by almost all druggists in this country as Doctor | Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, sugar-coated, easy to take. . Bemidji, We are buying Hides, Furs, Wool “53%: Pelts and Tallow and will pay g you the full market prices, One Half Block CITY LIVERY Best of horsgs, rigs, robes, foot warmers, ete. TELEPHONE 3-W O'LEARY - BOWSER CO0. FARMERS’ & TRAPPERS, ATTENTION NORTHERN HIDE & FUR COMPANY North of Unlon Station, BEMIDJI, MINN Bemidji’s all the year round livery. Service is first class always.’ POGUE'S OLD BARN, COR. 3rd ST. and IRVINE AVE. C. E. HICKERSON, Manager Minn. ~ BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL DOCTORS DR. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND'SURGEON - che—Mfles Block . "DR. E. H. SMITH P,HYSICI.AN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank -Bleck N DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block e Phone 39¢ Res. Phone 397 DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN' AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. DRS. GILMORE & McCANN PHYSICIANS:AND SURGEONS Office—Miles Block Og%EOHI‘AA'I"Ig ]%Txy\;lsqgmrq % AND SURGEON Ibertson Block Office Phone 153 DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. A. V., GARLOCK, M. D. . I SPECIALIST EYE. EAR NOSE /THROAT Glasses Fitted DENTISTS 3.3, AR Office, O’Leary-Bowser Bldg Office Phone 376-W Res. 376-R DR. G. M. PALMER _ DENTIST Oftice Phone 124 Residence 346, Miles Block, Bemidji DR. J. T. TUGMY DENTIST North of Markham Hotel Gibhons HBlock Tel. 230 DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block CHIROPRACTOR | THORWALD LUNDE - DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC Acute- and Chronlc Diseases handled with great success. 1st Nat: Bank Bldg. Phone 406-W Hours 10-12 a. m.; 2-5 7-8 p. m. VETERINARIANS = J. WARNINGER, VETERINARY SURGEON Office and Hospital 3 doors west of Troppman’s, Phone No. 209 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. ——— W. K. DENISON, N, V. M, VETERINARIAN Office Phone 3-R Res. 99-J 3rd St. and irvine Ave. LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE ' LAWYER | Phone 6560 Miles Block BUSINESS GENERAL MERCHANDISE ’ Groceries, Dry Goods, =~ Shoes, ] Flour, Feed, etc. i Bem.ldj}v; G. SCHROEDJ%’%one 65 N. L. HAKKERUP PHOTOGRAPHER Photos Day and Night Third St. Bemidji | TOM SMART 7z DRAY AND TRANSFER Res. Phone 5% 8§18 America Office Phone 12 "DEAN LAND CO. o Land, Loans, Insurance and City Property Troppman Block MINA MYERS | | Hair dressing, face massage, Bemidji scalp treatment. Switches made ’ from combings $1.50. s 311 6th St. Phone 112-W Ao and Children Clothes \];)llezglegs for nl;}gx(x}, Women i ! | 1 1 ) i MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machings 117 Third St., Bemidji \ J. BISIAR, Mgr. Phone 573-W = FUNERAL DIRECTOR " M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER 406 Beltrami Ave., Bemidji. Minn — | Nl a2