Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 13, 1918, Page 2

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| § ) ? PAGE TWO i ,THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER © TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 13, 1918 ! ' 2 - shock of theff young llves. i MINNESOTA'S PECULIAR After some little difficulties, which GENERAL.MERCHANDISE : THORWALD LUNDE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER "CONSTITUTION incinded humpin his hend on the elec- | GT0er 1%, Dry, Goods Sho%% |l DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC : s ¥ B 2 ¥ y 3 tric light fixtures In the celling, the W. G. SCHROED; Acite” “and” Chronle ~ Difeayss —— . PUBLISKED. EVARY, AXTEBNOON RXCEFE AUNDAY— The, people, of Minnesota ‘have 1o lengthy caller managed to get down || Bomidji™"® ™' Bhonees |||, handied with great success. g N g . 1st Nat: Bank Bldg. Phome 406-W ‘thank brewery trickery for the ex- treme difticulty ' of putting a prohi- bition amendment into the constitu- TEE BEMIDII PIONEER PUBLISNING OO, . Into'a chair. @. X. OARS A LTk Upon examination ‘he was told he i MU Ii}AL ifis’r o = v i a: was 8% inches too tall and 26 pounds Planos, Organs, Sewing Maghines Want Ad column today. It’s on the last page. Legislature, and he = manipulated “a | corps. Iater than Tuesday of each Week to insure publication in the current The old adage of taking about all you hear with the}| proverbial “grain of salt” is true in the case of the story that has been gaining ground that' Canada is not hospitable _to '‘American visitors. Perhaps this is some more of the German propaganda, floated about to stir up feeling between the two big countries of North America. Anyway, it’s entirely without foundation. There has never been a time when Americans were not graciously received in evry part of the Domirion and given every courtesy possible. . All that Canada is asking is, “Are you a genuine American?” . Satisfied on that point her gates are wide open and the country is yours. If she stops to question those who knock at her doors she is doing no more than we are. These are times when every one must prove his loyalty to the land and fraudulent Americans or Canadians must be detained. If youre all right don’t worry—Canada welcomes you more than ever. —0 POLITICAL HYPOCRISY. (Duluth News-Tribune.) There is a lot of hypocrisy in the quasi-pious rejoicing. of the democratic press over the defeat of Congressman McLemore of Texas. McLemore fathered in the house the resolution that Americans should not travel on belligerent ships. In the senate this was fathered by Gore, also a democrat. While these democratic ex-pacifist newspapers are now returning thanks for McLemore’s defeat, the party in congress] has elected Senator Hitchcock, who supported the resolution |- and wanted an embargo on munitions, to be head of the senate- committee on foreign relations as successor to former Senator Stone who also favored both propositions. In the house, the democrats keep anti-war, small-army pacifist, Kitchin as party leader at the head of the ways and means committee, and Dent at the head of the committee on’ military affairs, though he is so pacifist that all military legis- lation of importance has had to,be taken from his control and placed in the hands of Congressman Kahn, German-born re- publican. A ’ The democrats have a long road of contrition and humility to travel before they can boast of what they are doing or what they have done since August, 1914. 0 fail to &now the facts in the case un- o R - A Z s i TR change in the method of ending.the —_— No attentioa paid to annonymous contributions. Writer's name must Constitution of the tate b " which % s 's - N vo- fgomn o Theealid Dot not mecemaarlly or pubtiation oy |11 Cary porson wiia voiss at an sicction,| IF. KIDNEY'S AND* isyug, but fails to vote on an amendment 5| BEADDER BOTHER counted as having voted against the. - amendment. ‘ 3 4 7 f LA i i " This phase of the sibject Is funy | Take Salts to Flush' Kidneys discussed in the article by Semator and Neutralize Irritat- Jones in another ocolumn. Read it . ing Acids. ‘carefully, and pass the information on - . The Minnesota Dry Federation will Kidney. and Bladder weakness -re- ‘conduct such’a campaign to reach|sult from wuric acid, says a noted the uninterested voters as has never | authority. ~The kidneys filter this | before been aftempted in any state.|acid from. the blood and pass it on None the less, there will be a large to_the bladder, where it often re- | body.of voters who will fail'to know ;nall)ns t0 »Wt:ctgldfli mfl;’g;g::smi [ that the election 1s on unless you talk. | 5, 2iotter SEEREE ST ok It will reach the laboring men, the|,¢ the bladder, obliging you to seek : 5 BT RT TR L professional men, the reading public,| relief two or three times during the| i < e 4 CANADIAN HOSPITALITY ATTACKED. 5 the women, the clubs, the farmers, the | night. The sufferer is in constant| Hi o 2 ® : . young people—everybody, everywhere, | dread, the water passes sometimes| @i an 5 ro ts yet_thera will be thousands who will| with a scalding sensation and is very | \ profgpe a%ain,_there is’ difficulty in g z less you talk. avolding.ab, . .0 .~ ' In spite of all opposition, the drys| ., %Igga:ste v:fi:‘;n:x’tn;%sfitffim\fnfil in this state propose to put the pro-|on While it is extremely annoy-| H 3 g EEL hibition amendment across in Novem-| ing and sometimes very painful, this| = | - How muCh do you think ber, and make a new record for Minne- | is really one of the most simple ail- ] gota, and a joke of the sly trickery of | ments to overcome. ~Get about four it C(jsts-i— W. W, Dunn and’the brewing inter | ounces of Jad Salts from your phar- 2 3 ests. : macist and take a tablespoonful in a|. : glass: of water before breakfast, con-| Hiflii 2 f th‘file this l’lor tv:}xl) or three da]}l's. This| 1. To dress beef, cure hides, and will neutralize the acids in the urine| - Hilltil . TSR R AR so it no longer is a source of irrita- prepare all the numerous by tion to the bladder and urinary or- products? gagsdwgicl}:ls then act no.rmalll1y aglain. i S ad Salts is inexpensive, harmless, g : and is made from the acid of grapes 2. To cool the meat for two or: Baitimbre, Ma/—Uncle S tiow has | 224 lemen Juics, combined with lithla, three days before shipmernit? 6 feet 5% inches of real U. 8. marine. who_are subject to urinary disorders| [ " £ e ge is Carmllh;Vllllam Roglg;tlfi, ::)v:e;lg; ga\lxg:d by iun((l: daf:i% irrii::}gion. Jag | 3. To freight it to‘all patts of ve years old, a mal alts is splendid for kidneys an | B e da NS i (g i city. ; PSS 4 causes no bad effects whatever. | the country n speplal refnge When the 77% inches of humanity | .Here you have a pleasant, effer- ratof cars, iced daily ? strolled ‘into 4he local recruiting sta- | vescent lithia-water drink, which tion, the. officers in..charge had the quickly relieves bladder trouble. TALLEST MAN IN MARINES Former_Mall Clerk, 6 Feet 5/ Inches Tall, Enlists in Service at Baltimore, - 4, To tarry it in hundreds of branch houses, each with its refrigerating’ plant? 5. And to deliver it to-the retailer —sweet and fresh —in less than two weeks after dressing? Let a man once get the ptire clean taste of Real Gravely Chéwing Plig-—and he bids ordinary tobacco good-bye. Swift & Company did all this for you in 1917 at an’ experise of less than 2% cents per- pound-of s, : ;N F >\ Peyton' Brand J || profit of ¥4 of a cent a pound. . Real Gravely Chewing Plug 10c a pouch—and worth it Figure for yourself how" little effect this cost and profit had on prices you paid- for, beefsteak. WARNINGS SHOULD BE POSTED. It would seem a proper precaution to place warning signs on the road through the woods leading out Birchmont way,] - the road which goes past the fair ground and then enters the thick growth. 2 This road is a trail and winds in a manner calculated fo break a snake’s back were it to attempt to follow it, yet it is a popular drive. Autoists, specially those from out the city, have Grapelylasts sarnuchlongerit costs P o oot sy P. s:“c}.‘{jerg,ras:ac“jaasa.; Danville, Virgini ® 6 %o eeneee0e000 e emO® O ® 3 tor Swift & Compatiy, U.S:A. S e - o - - - o R R N W) _Hours 10-12 a. m.; 2-6 7-8 p. m. 818 America “Office Phone 12 beef sold, including an average TELEPRONE 938 tlon. ¥ underweight. _ So Doggett got busy ? e - ; / [Back in 1897, W. W. Dunxi {hen as| and’after much g By B L T T oy . TOM'SMART Ratered at;tha W.f,;m“‘_“" Fomiayl, Minn, as sscond.class maiter 1| now the attorney for the Hamm Brew- | ranged for a walver t&qm‘ Washington, | s ||| ‘DRAY’AND TRANSFER under act of Congress of March 3, Yors, i s ing Company, was a mem r,%g the| He fs the ‘tallest man'in the marine | There is something for you In the|| Res..Phone 58 al a penchant for “stepping through” this trail at a swift gait and there have. been several cars jammed by this practice. Horns or warning signals are seldom sounded, but one big chance is taken. There should be some steps taken to minimize| the danger. Some day there might be a fatal accident. 1 R Now if Jack Dempsey, who whipped “Ferocious Fred"] Fulton before the Rochester plasterer had time to smile, will] clean that ham champion Jess Willard in similar fashion, we;| will be much obliged. Just two blows were struck in that Ful-; ton fiasco, one when Dempsey hit Fulton on the jaw and the] other when Fulton hit the floor. i O — 1 If one may judge by the newspaper reports the gentleman| known as Yankee Doodle Dandy is now in France and is in] great form. Every freight car taken out of government ser- vice is oneé more gun added to the kaiser’s ordnénce. ESS——EY | - S When the U. S. army takes the field it not only takes it but holds it. Of late it has been a French field. i S | Our aeroplanes, were intended for the front. But they'- seem to be finding their way to the scrap heap. ! () I— { Mr. Hoover’s trip to Patis is probably for the purpose of securing the latest fall modes in food conservation. ! One soldier’s supplies fbr a year would fill-:. freight car. There are over a million soldiérs in S S TP i Europe. NOW CALL HER “LOST” DAVIS | sWibES TWill FOR PLAYMATE it Seattle Tot Has Been Picked Up by Police Ten Times in Few Y Weeks. Four-Year-Old W|nte;| Baby in Fam-jl Ily and Took Shortest Way to Get It. EVery’ mail:order sent out of town adds to rail- road congestion. Seattle, Wash.—“Lost” Davis {s the name the police have given Lois Davls, aged four years. ‘The police have picked her up ten times in the last few weeks after the girl's parents had reported her lost. The-last time she was lost she had been given five cents to purchase milk at a grocery store. She spent the money.on a street, car ride to a bathing beach. .When asked by a policeman how she expected t0| thot kidnapers had stolen & baby. get back, she eald; s Mrs.. Whittler_in_the meantime had Oh, the W“ff always take me| gjscovered Bllly’s new brother and home in an auto. hastened to return it to Mrs, Smith. Billy’s only reply to expostulntlons; was “Gee whiz; he's a doctor. He could order another for his own use.* Wooster, -O.—Billy Whittler, aged four, wanted a baby in the family and he took, the, shortest way to get one, He understood that Dr. A. O. Smith supplied the neighborhood with, chils dren and. so. he simply. visited the Smith home when no one was watchin the doctor’s twin babies and picke out the one he liked best. | { Shortly afterward the alarm spread Tradeé heré in town with idjiMerchants And give the railroads a chance to give the boys Lightning Spares Girl. Des Moines, Ta.—A bolt of lightning ruined the home .of J. B. Tharow and played havoc with the bedroom where Natalle Tharow, six years old, was sleeping, but mever harmed the liitle vETSENARNINGER girl. The celling and walls .of the || oy room where -the child was sleeping of %xfi%?fi?itghgngofi? g’e.at were completely. destroyed. - 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. a chance. bE Defective

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