Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 20, 1918, Page 2

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~ BEMIDJT DAILY PIGNEER L] i PUBLISEED EVERY AFTERNOON BXOEPT SUNDAY: TWW BEMIDII PIONEBR PUBLISKING CO. @&. X. CARSON \ N X. DENU M‘ i TELEPEONE 22 “FOLLIES” FOR THE BOYS. (By ‘United Press.) Paris, Sept. 20.—There is rejoicing among the American soldiers who are lucky enough to have a ‘‘Paris leave” confing soon. Because Paris is to modeled on the Broagway type, with 'a ‘‘jazz” band andiAmericap chorus (girls and comedians. The show will lopen soon under.the title of *“The Follies of 1918” at the Marigny the<\ !ntte in the Champs<Elysees. ——Buy Liberty Bonds—— t the postoffice at Bemidsl, Minn., as second-class matter under aet ot Congress of March 3, s s Ne-attention paid.to annonymous “ontributions. Writer's name must Y ssarily for publication. be known te the omter,mt:utw not nece, y P! TR ~£0l sekly Ploneer must- reac! 1ater than Tuesday of each week to insure publleatlo_n in the current issue. Remember-the Date Sept. 28 Sub‘uribo for Your PFIONRER. 3 pages, containing summary of the news of the week. ¥ubl o&flummfi,:momnwumfinhm .80 IN OVERALLS. The musical comedy “farmerette” is now as familiar an institution as the musical comedy bathing girl. Hawaiian girls, harem girls, golfing girls, military girls, paseball girls, and bathing girls, of course. Each costume change means a différent song, and as each show carries about the same assortment the rotation becomes monotonous. So. they invented the stage farmerette in gilk overalls with a hay- fork like an overgrown fly-swatter. ' In the meantime, at the State Normal School of Agricul-| ture, Wisconsin, a young lady went through the course like a| ™ ; . rips;w through a plank. She mixed concrete in most of the best material for the standard forms, and investigated grades of wheat for stripe{dairy barn—it's so easy ergot and smut: she studied surveying, and platted a 240-acre{to- flush- ~w~1{:,h running farm: she made elaborate milk-tests, wrote papers on stocfk- water, and it costs so breeding, inhaled the science of crop-routine, and, for some in-{}j+t]a’ : artistic reason, made a specialty of pigs. That the lady was : raised on a farm is not considered by the faculty as contribut- da'ill“heref are ei‘;ccefss(f)\rfl ing in a great measure to the profundity of her erudition. y arm / hank|coast -to coast whose There are plenty more like her in Wisconsin, and, t Heaven, there are still more outside of Wisconsin. Itis a type barns, -troughs, and the of farmerette that interests us quite as much as-the musical|like are built of Atlas comedy kind. Show troupes don’t flock much in Bemidji but Portla\nd‘Cement—proof we have girls who can don overalls (not silk ones):and take| ¢ jts' value—and one the place of boys as effectively as the most boyish chorus girl reason why we sell At that Broadway ever generated. Get free 168- Cleaning a hog-pen is not an elegant job. And there is aet our s little elegance in washing vermin from the filthy body of-a page bOO}{, Concrete wounded soldier—a commonplace in the daily experience of a|Construction About the Red Cross girl. " Not many duties are more unsayory—or more Home and on the sacred, and the picture needs no spotlight to illuminate -itstF'grm,” 4 ‘ glittering moral, fehe b SMITH-ROBINSON brings the best prices. |} That is what makes At- las Cement Concrete the —_— GIVE THEM A CHANCE. . According to General March, chief of staff, the beginning One Board or a Carload ' Phone 97 of September found 1,600,000 Americans in France, with more Housekeepers .have a real Americanishow:at last, l ~~ of time and lighten the burden of house- . other in the garage will end that excuse, ' scientific cook. letter about the next Liberty Loan, go to your polling place and cast your ballot for a Bond just the same. Hints for Busy - Clocks in convenient,placés save a lot work. An alarm clock in the bathroom will make father hurry through shaving. An- No W.terworkl‘ NoPlumbing No Cesspool “I didn’t know what time it was.” , One in the kitchen will enable you to time your baking, and be a better and more -V JAuxitiARY. (FVENTILATORS You will find two or three good alarm \ ot : ! clocks mighty useful in the home. Come NAMELE i down to Barker’s and get, them. $1.50 to $3.50 | i Barlbr's : Germ - Proof, ‘Gonvenieat Drug & Joewelry S and Practical . I am rather avistocratic in 'my i in;my associations, giving comfort to the i poor. and thd smiddle. classes, as | Since coming (o Bemidji I have met | a! number of distant relations of ‘mine |- (something like forty-second cousins) whose services .are greatly appreciat- | ed by their various owners, but whose tastes-in-dress are somewhat n. |- But their-pioneer work has ope! the way for me, for which I them. R Everyone who has.sesn me and who are using.or have ever used.or:sgen one of my relations acknawledge tha 1 have the .others skinned: a. q_pllauuluy ;construction .and rial. PHONOGRAPHS KODAKS ||Wi'eriiie i 4 If you don’t get a FURNITIRE 410 H. N. M’KEE, Funeral Director : PHONE 178-Wor R If your home is not connected up withi a.sewer; be sure itocbuy.a : Chomical Indaor-Glaset u before buying one, BE SURE TO SEE and EXAMINE Coats about the.same as most, con- ‘| | siderably: less than some,.and a trifle more, than. .a few, of other BUT, YOU WANT.THEBEST. - If you want to see The SHAFER, write to or call.on . 7 beforeiwinter sets in once more. But than 1,350,000 on the battle front. The time is past when our|BEMIDJI, - MINN. forces held only a small fraction of the line and were brigaded ——Buy Liberty Bonds—— L. SN TRUSCOTT 520, Belizami Avenue,. ‘with the French and British. Our freight cars have little room today for a lot of non- essentials. At all events, one wholesale consignment, bought by a Bemidji storekeeper is handled forty times as fast as forty parcels purchased retail from a mail-order house. Support local stores. This is no time for forty railroad employes to be doing the work of one. 0 We sort of endorse a suggestion made by some enterpris- ing individual to the effect if it comes to a case of gasolne con- servation, why not put it on the same plan as sugar and allow an auto owner to ride when he pleases—Sunday or week day. There are many. auto owners who can go anywhere and at any |, time they please, but the chap confined by business six days a week can find little time to-take a recreation ride and must stay home all day Sunday if he is a patriot. —0 ' Chicago, according to a dispatch, has set a limit upon con-|! fectioners sales to one pound to a customer, untill we ‘win the war. It has been somewhat of a mystery to many why a person|! was limited to two pounds of sugar per month and allowed to| g3 buy 100 pounds of candy at 60 cents per pound made chiefly of sugar by a candy manufacturer. : 0 Well, let’s suppose for instance that a per centage of six| or seven per cent is allowed upon the sale of a cord of fuel|: % wood. If the state sells stumpage for 25 cents per ‘cord, and 164. W. ¥aghington " Chioago, Ills. Fellow Worker:e et 2 e Y Tiberty. out. .| it costs $2.50 to cut it and about $2 to haul it to cars, then the e freight, the unloading the selling and the sawing and—. An- other one too deep for us. tdon. 0 has expired. And now the government is going to banish the ‘“‘near beers.” Reminds us of what the fellow who was used to beer .said when he first tasted some of the “near beer.” Compared to drinking “near beer” with the real thing he said it was just like a fellow kissing his own wife—no “kick” in it. Yo Snitey s ComaI The Williams Northern Light refers to the presence of wolves in this vicinity and then cites instances of the presence of wolves in that locality, Then there are some wolves who at first appear like sheep. - ehould ©of Attorney? —0 Don’t miss attending the Beltrami county fair. It is the best booster for Beltrami county and you owe it to your county to boost its agriculture and the producers—the farmers. : 0 - The village of Remer has asked Bemidji for the loan of its yrater pipe tapping apparatus. Remer can have it, so long as it wants the machine merely to tap a water’ pipe. —_—x 3 : Another endorsement of the capabalities. of County Attorney Torrance is the record of the grand jury just re- turned. Mr Torrance is unopposed for re-slection. AL:Y Wm. D. Haywood and the |. W. The People’s College .k-l.‘.*‘dll-.hlhlb-m' : Nr. Wa. D. Raywood, : tes ; - Rave just°returned from Deé Moines, Tows, and sm very glad to be able cases there are disposed of favorably and the boys at 1 think the Defense. Committee is satisfied with the handling of the case. one in which any labor principle was involved, and, thersfore, the fight was simply made to get the boys My expenses for the trip were $34.30 ena if Jou will send me check for that it will clean the matter How are you coming with the Minnesota proposi- I hope you don't start anything until ‘the year This damned war business is going to make 4t mighty hard to do good organization work or -~ @ood redical work of any kind, but I think the fight be now centered sgainst spy bills and conscriptionm. Have you heard from Pennsylvanie with Powers The above letter, which is a faceimlle of one of the Government's Exhibits Introduced In evidence at the resent trial In Chicago of 100 members of the i. W. W., was written by ARTleR LE SUEUR and shows his connection with W. Haywood, with ninety-two of his associates, was convicted of violating the espionage act, interfering with conscrip tien, hampering the Gevernment of the United States in the prosecution of the war, and was sentenced to 20 years’ imprisonment and fined $20,000. in his testimony Haywood identifiéd the above communication as genuine, ARTHUR LE SUEUR is alse. SEGRETARY of the NONPARTISAN LEAGUE. The above letter is published for the informsation of the public and explaing the stand taken by the Public Safety Commisslon pertaining to oertain dangersus and wnpa triotic activities within the State of Minnesota Bemidji,. n. ‘DO IT NOW 3 This ad may not appear again ARTHUR LeSUEUR. Presidend FORT 8COTT, KANBAS < April 5, 1917 Gray is the scarcést and most .popular leather .in the United States today. i ¢ oAy to report that all of the 0f course, it was not £ Government’ permitted it to be made into shoes this Fall only. After this season very little gray kid stock will be available. We congider that we were fortunate in placing: our order for fine gray boots with “Utz & Dunn” in time to have them made and delivered. HIGH OR MEDIUM HEEL Yours for industrisl fregdom, NAlso hav—e—;;é new ones in Cocoa Brown, Mahog- any or Black Kid. Knapp's Shee Store New Location, Gould’s Dairy Lunch Stand ‘ Defective

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