Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 3, 1918, Page 2

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i . PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAX-——— @ E. CARSON e B R} DENU nel vostditis, af Shintddh, Mnm, o T, : tter | Entered at the postoftice af Bemidji, Minn.,, as second-class matter undex‘vnuct of Congress of LMarg!} 3, 18'19. ¥ i No attention paid to annonymous contributions. : Writer's- name must be ‘known. to the editor, but not necessarily for publication.. . ‘Communications for: ‘the. Weekly Pioneer must reach thisi offi¢e" not later than Tuesday of éach’ ‘weel to insure publication in the current issue. Don't,anyone in gover ith the raising of. mo?gy for'ithe car t upon their hind legs andvyelp ‘& jor North Dakota and the” ng:from'the powers that be nor anyone else. ¢: Tovwas-Minnesotd that ‘went over the top;: and-then-somg in the. Third Liberty Iioan. - It was every eounty in the entir state ce‘gdt(a)% it%qhugta | It was North ‘Dakota that batted 300 ¢lass,; W dinetws of warii gy - By Tt waklthe: farmers, the wage éarners and everybody who in every-mickeiof the world’s work Helped ‘their Uncle-Sam-by digging-down: into: their jeans chierfully,"and they dug deeply for the people of ‘the nation AT the ‘paymient plan, for-the rea‘% thé& Toah'-has’ falleli“8hort.” : The -assertion is made ‘that: the " wealth of the nation failed to do its share. ; ! § <3t has -often been-stated ‘that™*this'is'a war of the rich,” ut if.jt.is;it is not the war of the'patriots of the nation, for " they have been the ones whohave stood by the colors of their "" flag, and they will not fail her'éven to the last. s ’ THEY will—buy another bond. i CABBAGES AND KINGS. 2 i i Sawerkraut-manufacturers in New York City have ap- :: pealed to the federal food board to do anything'in its Hoav- I erian power to prevent a prejudice, born of false patriotism, " from driving sauerkraut off the American dinner table. They the objection to this dish arises from its name, and it { ‘to, “li ibbage.” Wekl; eet, but why cabbage.” “In these ycorn is hated with:an 3 sauerkraut-by any other na & ‘not call it by its English.e alent, “ £ throat-parching' days, ‘whefi ‘John Ba¥ intensity excelled ‘only by our hatred of the Hun, it (\{lould | 1 cab- Mhardly do to' call ‘sauerkraug. what e b i m and, age. - But:“liberty -cabbage !’ - 280 who once exclaimed: “Q Liberty! Liberty! how m: are committed in thy* o ) ... "i"Banks the country report that partigs . have called ‘with silver and bills, wanting to exchange for gold: The presumption is that the’gold is'wanted for hoarding, as it many instances noted the parties could have.no real ‘demar for the gold. This is a matter that the country' will do well to: frown down. Banks should refuse'to make the exchange un- less the party seeking it can show that the gold is needed for payment of obligations payable in ‘that metal. The present is no time for hoarding gold, and persons guilty of so doing are the worst of slackers. PR X . PAINLESS EXTINCTION OF PRQPOSED “FRAME-UP.” From . think they can save money. - all that we bel Rocbuck tattogn “White voile "Northyvest_ that answered:} 14in.C ~Knitting yarn ... " Infants” Rubén. Vests °202 Fhird St ’eop We believe i:hgre is only one answer to- the 'question, they W e have merchandise to sell but for that if you can buy the same quality for .less t is your duty to do so. :To give you an idea midji compare withithe great:catalogue houses few of our prices with prices quoted in Sears, ‘catalogue No. 136. If you do not happen to have a copy . of this catalogug, you have the liberty of using our copy. We will “give "tl"ie page mpmbgr so that it will make it easy to look up items - quoted. - . ey S - i e Our Price - ~26¢ 32¢ Catalogue Catalogue: Page : - Price 453 1 26¢ 461 - -34c¢ Play suits .. i ' 444 8¢ Infants’ cashimere hose. . .. 310 - 42¢ Sateen bloomers'. .. . 230: 11d © 45¢ Heatherbloom petticoats ...-~ 206 =~ $1.98 $2.00 % Colgates taleum powder. ... 174~ 3 boxes 54¢c 3 .for 45¢c i Embroidered Grepe de Chine g _ o Waists . 104 $3.59 $3.50 Colored table 489 6Tc ; " 536 1538 ‘Galatea cloth! 35¢ :°33e 5Tc =10e .-bde : : 45¢ 45¢ | . 9.-inch: 80¢. 9-inch 60¢ Infants’ Ruben Vests ] 11-inch 85¢ 11-inch 65¢ - Infants’ Ruben Vests 1: 12-inch 91c 12-inch-70c - : " ... WEPAY:THE FREIGHT : iy pins Germantown yarn Oil- window. shades LePages glue : 8-4 bleached sheeting Brown Army duck . e abs i When Governor Burnquist quietly suggested to Promo Miller that there was no room for the proposed Willard-Fulton “championship” bout of ten rounds in- Minnesota, the:pro- motors quietly slid out from under and the affair faded. Of course, Governor Burnquist failed to take advantage of a brass] band accompaniment to his action, merely making a suggest of that was entirely acceptable and effective. The whole afl'}'{ir " needed a disenfectant and that’s all there was to it. It was ! _about the “coarsest” thing we ever heard of in pugilistic anna}_st THE PORT AND THE POCKET. b . We are about to withdraw silver from the treasury vau&;% - and ship it to Asiatic countries to pay trade balances, and thus "’ conserve our gold. In some countries we pay our trade bal- .'“ ances partly in gold. To some extent individual citizens can <= help reduce the need for exports of gold and silver by refrain- “7.ing from the parchase of imported articles in the nature of "o luxuries. When we save on'a luxury produced in America, the' ... gain is largely an individual gain; when we save on a luxury 1z produced abroad, the saving is natioral as well as individu&l. < And every little helps. & = s S SOME MORE “TELEPHONE” SERVICE ;v We had another .sample of the effectiveness of a couple = of telephone systems in service when we attempted to ascer- - -tain the details of a report that a woman and her two children were burned to death at Grygla. We could. get. Thief River Falls over the Northwestern line, but when we attempted to .22 get through to Grygla we encountered one of those independent - i companies, the line being reported ‘“‘out of service.” 0. e We would suggest to the treasury department at Washing- : ton that in the draft a few of the “disloyalists” of the Minne- sota ‘and the Northwest speak in OTHER ‘portions 'of the nation on the subject of patriotism and their duty to the gov- " ernment in helping to win the war. Reference is made to the wealthy slackers who hung onto their hoarded coin instead o investing in Liberty Bonds. -3 0. We believe it was the idea in the last Liberty Loan cam- paign to keep a card record of all solicited to buy bonds in case someone was attempting to evade his duty. It would séem that if this were done in other sections of the country and made to o stick it would have produced remarkable results. Minnesota didn’t need to have any cork screw poked into it to draw out its patriotism. P Ve ety It would seem as if the third commissioners district of Beltrami county would present a new face on the board next election. It would be well. Tolerance is a virtue that some- times ceases to be one. g o— Von Hin, the Hun, seems to have struck a stone wall. Near Great Northern Depot Doing Business T | The popular gasoline filling station of the St. Cloud Oil . Company near the Great Northern Depot is how open and ready for business. ‘Air Is Free, -~ Water Is Free And PURITY GASOLINE costs very little more, " than water and air. ~ When you figure the number of miles a gallon will carry your car as compared with what ordinary gasoline will do, you will be astonished. Purity gasoline costs -no more than the ordinary. Oils and Greases PURITY GASOLIN’E MAY ALSO.BE HAD AT THE BEMIDJI AUTO CO. AND ; _ LETFORD’S GARAGE T St. Cloud 0Oil Co. Phone 91 & MoCANN . AND SURGEONS |. ot T . .DB..EINER, JOHNSON. . ICIAN :AND: SURGEON Oftice, O’Leary-Bewser Bldg. Oftice Phone 376-W-.. Res.:376-R Oftice Phone 124 . ~Residence 346 “_DR. G.-M, PALMER "DENTIST Miles Block, Bemid}i l DR.-J.: T. TUOMY DENTIST: ‘North of Markham, Hotel - Gibbons . Biock, * “Pel. 230 R D. L. STANTON - & #Oftice in Winter Block. DOG’l:‘rg!? OF: ‘Acute: ~and:!: Chronic™ ' Diséases handled “with i great: suceess. 1st Nat: Bank Bldg. Phone 406-W Hours 10-12.a. m:; 2-6" 7-8 p. m. .. Phone:-No.. 209 d Irvine Ave. . M Office. Phone 3-R . _Res. 99-J 8rd St. and Irvine Ave, GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, ‘Dry - Goods, Shoes,) Flour, Feed, etc. Bemldjlw' - _scmmfiono 65| TOM SMART d DRAY AND TRANSFER 'Res. Phone 68 818 America Office Phone 12 Land, Loans, Ins‘unno'a and City Property Troppman Block Bemidji D LEANIN Clothes Clguyne?s for Mel?, ‘Women and Children $)) Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines 117 Third St., Bemidjl »e J. BISIAR, Mgr. Phone 573-W FUNERAL DIRECTOR RT. 406 Beltrami Ave., Bemidji, Minn. N. L. HAKKERUP PHOTOGRAPHER Photos Day and Night Bemidjl in six months to meet the growing demand for this ‘v popular machine. \ee/A Boon to Business THE BEMIDJT PIONEER Defective F

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