Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 26, 1918, Page 5

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Dean a71tf $50,000 to lean on rarms. Land Co. 0. E. Peterson of l)ululh. passe& vesterday in the city. W. P. Duquesne of spent Friday in Bemidji. Minneapolis Rev, J. P. Ryan of Deer River was in the city yesterday on business. Miss Esther Johuson of Becida was the guest of friends in the city Fri- day. L. R. Baldwin of Grand Forks, N. n. was a business visitor in Bemidji Fr. lay. Mrs. J. H. Koors and son John ave returned from a trip to Park Flapids. If you want a car cal .+ Auto Co. Office phone 1, residence phone 10. 56tf ',,yt’ (barles Wolff of Chicago passed | . .esterday in the city on business . L atters. On.: of these nice days you cught to go to Hakkerup's and have your pictur: taken, 14tf Miss Carrie - Armstrong has ac- cepted a position with the Northern National bank. Mrs. F. W. Noble of town of Frohn was among the business visitors.in Bemidji Friday. Miss Inga Solberg has gone to Bagley where she will spend a week . with her parents. Mrs. Alfred Skoogland of town of Northern was among the out-of-town shoppers in Bemidji Friday. J. W. Nelson has returned from a business trip to Sebeka, Walker and _ints along that line. . d Mrs. P. J. Ryan of Minne- ayo wsed yesterday in Bemidji, bei. ; grests at the Markham. [T f ! Mr; 1ot ‘town ke s 'T. L. Manamin of Interna- 1ls was among the out-of- ruests in the city yesterday. Morton of Oshkosh, Wis., B. :mong the business visitors reg- red at the Markham yesterday. % 5 “Pictures can help win the war:” iincle Sam says so. Portraits, kodak orintss Rich Studio, 29 10th street. 1mol111 Miss Hilda Larson of Comstock was 1emidji vesterday, en route to Y tives. Miss Lizzie Brennan, who had visit- ed friends in St. Cloud for a month, returned to her home in Wilton yes- terday. z g i 0. T. kishoff of St. Paul, J. W. Mor.ison of Minneapolis and A. A. Bond of Minneapolis passed yesterday iu ‘he city. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer E. Kenfield and .« and Mrs. C. M. Bacon are spend- v the week-end at Kitchie lake on o duc’t hunt. wisses Mary and Anna McManus have recovered from an attack of the Spanish influenza and have resumed their office duties. Harry E. Vandersluis of St. Paul was among the business vlsito.rs in ; eity today. - He is a cousin of Mayor Charles Vandersluis. B R. Erickson and Ed. Ebert of _this ~ity and seven Minneapolis men retucned yesterday from a hunting trip, » Bear Island, near Walker. Th ‘eport a successful hunt. eph Doyle of Thompson, N. D, adwemnanied by his cousin, Patrick Do ¢ of New York, is in the city the cuest'of his sister and brother- i1 ‘sw, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Cushner. =1 M. and Mrs. Joe Steidl of town of Northern, who had visited friends and relatives at Alexandria, Carlos and other points, returned to their home this week. They made the trip by automobile. S. Chern of St. Paul, L. A. Carr of Minneapolis, C. W. Pickett of Min- neap 'is, and L. Gibson of Rochester, N. Y., were among the guests at the Markham yesterday. Mrs. H. W. Bailey returned yester- day 'rom Bagley where she had been the guest of her daughter, Mrs. G. H. Hansel and family. Mrs. Hansel ac- companied her mother back to Be- midii and returned to her home today. Wear furs and save wool for the soidiers over there and help win the wa., bv having your fur garments remodeled, repaired -and relined by " N. Kriebs, Custom Furrier, Hatg- , Minn. Send direct or leave at The H onnet Millinery, nnesota Ave., local representa- 3t1026 John Schumer of Schoolcraft lled to New York a few days Was age n account of her son Joe being ill v.th influenza. She returned to Bemidii vesterday, her son’s condi- Aipn cemed favorable when she left. Wh she arrived in Bemidji she cd a telegram stating he was | Enterprise i | (Mearbrook where she will visit'rela- | e Te d He was about ) vears old ana oniisted in the serv August 13 NOTICE. I have just opened a general re- r shop at 2 Second street. I do binus of repair work and grind- " 1. R nardt 411028 i along fine. NEWS AND LETTERS FROM BELTRAMI C0. SOLDIERS-SAILORS YANK READS “PIONEER.” George Boobar, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Boobar of Nary, has writ- ten his parents from France, saying he likes the service and is getting He also stated he had received a Pioneer since landing and had read every word in it. He en- closed a-post card of himself, taken since he landed in France. HEARS FROM SONS. Mr. and Mrs. A. Lord received let- ters from their three boys this week. 'wo of them, Raymond and Elbridge, arein Frence. Raymond underwent an operation since his arrival there but has fully recovered. The third son, Hovey, is on a submarine, in New London, Conn., nut expects to be transferred soon. Woman Gums Things Up by Marrying ~ Father of Son-in- . Law. Marysville, Cal—Family relation- ships were all tangled up here when Mrs. Janet Traynor, whosae daughter is the wife of Frank Bremer, married A. G. Bremer, her son-in-law’s father, Mrs. Bremer, Sr., has room for uncer- tainty as to whether her daughter's husband is really her son-in-law now or her stepson, while her own daughter is also her daughter-in-law by marriage. Mrs. Bremer, Jr., is also having her troubles, as her mother has to serve also as & mother-in-law and her husband is at the same time her step-brother. Wood Reststs Fire. The fire-resistive quality of wood i8 shown in a recent issue of Sclentific American, which discusses the advan- tages of wood block floors for indus- trial purposes. The article states that there have been many instances where crucibles overturned and molten metal poured out upon the blocks with little damage. In a recent fire* whi-~ * stroyed pier No. 29 at Phila” warped und twisted the steel, the creosoted bl only slightly charre’ “ .ral . were Quiet Life. wyour own dishes is away?”’ stack them in the Proof ¢ “Do you a while your ..ae “No, sir. T just sink.” “I should think you’d be ashamed to have her come back and find them in that eondition.” “I'd rather have her find them that way than have her suspect that I'é eaten all my meals in the downtows cafes.” DRYS HAVE A HARD JOB. WHY? 1. Because: The wet districts of Minnes_ota are the most populous part of the state and have the strongest business and- political in fluence. 2. Because: Twenty counties have so large *an alien population that they are strongly against the prohibition of the liquor traffic. 3. Because: The liquor men are professing inactivity, thus throwing dry leaders off their guard. In real- ity they are working and plotting Industriously to defeat the dry amendment and put off their own destruction a little longer. H 4. Because: The drys are so confident that they are not exerting themselves and think they have a walk-a-way. 5. Because: The Amendment for Prohibition will be printedion a separate ballot and dishonest elec- tion officials will neglect to hand them to voters. 6. Because: Other Issues are occupying fhe attention of thou- sands of voters so that they are LIKELY TO FORGET TO CALL FOR THE AMENDMENT BAL- LOT. At the last election 28,000, voters In Minnesota neglected to vote for President. 7. Because: The law compels the drys to obtain a majority of all the votes cast in order to win, so that failure to vote counts the same as an actual vote against the amendment, MORAL: When you vote be sure to call for a pink ballot and vote YES for the prohibition amendment. WILL YOU BE ONE? WHEN YOU SUFFER FROM RHEUMATISM Almost any man will tell you that Sloan’s Liniment means relief For practically every man has used it who has suffered from rheumatic aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness of joints, the results of weather exposure. Weren, too, by the hundreds of thousands, useit for relieving neuritis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick headache. Clean, refreshing, socthing, economical, quickly effective. Say “‘Sloan's Lini- ment’ to your druggist. Get it today. Liniment “Kills Pain and intervals, by nervousn by THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER POLITICAL, ANNOUNCEMENT (Authoried and to be paid for by himself in whose behalf the ad is inserted. Amount for series $20.) LEONARD H. NORD Who served the 62nd district in the State Senate for the past term is of Norwegian parentage, settled in Min- nesota in 1885. He was a home- steader and colonizér in this section of the state for many years. Mr. Nord cruisea over the larger portion of Beltrami and Koochiching counties, and covered practically ev- ery township in these counties. This valuable experience has given Mr. Nord first: hand knéwledge of the needs of this district, so that if he is elected to represent it in the state senate he will be better able to do so than one who has not had this experience. His record in the Senate during the last two sessions entitles him to elec- tion to this office. Bemidji’s Normal School would not have been erected, but for Mr. Nord’s efforts in its behalf. The anti-injunction labor bill, in ch the laboring classes were in- .erested, passed because of his ef- forts. Other enactments which are credit- ed to”Mr. Nord are the dynamite bill, criminal cyndicalism law, amend- ment No. 1, and all legislation which passed favoring Northern Minnesota. Voters will do well to return him for another term. He will appreciate your support. ‘There 1s more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and for years it was sup- posed to be incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local discase, greatly influenced by constitutional con- ditions and therefore requires constitu- tional treatment. Hall’'s Catarrh Medi- cine, manufacturéd by F. J. Cheney & Co., 'Toledo, Ohio, is, a constitutional remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on thé Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars re- ward is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medi-ine fails to cure. Send for circulzrs on timonials. I J. CHi v & . Toledo, Ohio. Sold by 1 Hall's Family F for constipation. Your Income earning your all the everyday Ladies, are you money you need for expenses? taxes, Liberty-Bonds Thrift The Red Cross and other ties make deep inroads in- to most salaries. We offer you a rare opportunity to add $25.00 to $50.00 A Month to the fumily income during your spare time by engaging in a whole- some, dignified occupation. Hun- dreds of others are making money— you can do equally as well. Write at once to A. W. No. 1, care Bemidji Pioneer, for full particulars. The patriotic rit and devotion with which Ameri- can women have so far performed war-service work and made sacrifices has never been cqualled in the history of any country. Mothers, wives and sisters support this burden with strength and fortitude. But those who are al- ready miserable from thegcom- plaints and weak~ RECEIVING WAR CROSS nesses which are so common to women, should take the right tomic for the system. man is bornc down by pain ings at regular or irregular or dizzy spells, “Favorite sufferi headache or backache, Preseription” should be taken. “Favor- ite Prescription’” can now be had in tablet formn as well as liquid at most Doctor Pierce’s drug stores. Send to Invalids’ Hotel, Buflalo, ten-cent trial package of t For fifty years Dr. I’ Pellets have been most liver and bowel trouble: X dora 5 Pleasant isfactory in “Dy perie i veins tremel tively no suf- A couple of years before hild PAGE FIVE AS YOUNG AS I IF YOUR KIDNEYS You ENTERFRISE AUTO 00 4 T\('\)’Agg:r Au[l’o Liverdy T‘ndl:r.fi Service | The secret of youth is ELIMINA- oy o Night ot sy TlOl\)Ie(;I:CX:OIgOIE;“homS yourwggl: YOTll}l %V‘Xl¢¥¥0 . i og:flestl.‘ ezonl‘:lt:':fi;lkvc;ir 4 This done you can live to be a hun- dred and enjoy the good things of life with as much ‘“‘pep” as you did when in the springtime of youth. Keep your body in good condition, that’s the secret. Watch the kidneys. The kidneys and digestive organs are the main causes. The kidneys filter and purify the blood. All the blood passes through your kidneys once every three minutes. They strain or filter out the impurities. That is their work. Keep them clean and in prop- er working condition and you have nothing to fear. Drive the poisonous wastes and deadly uric acid accumu- lations from your system. Take GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oii Capsules at intervals and you will always be in perfect working order. You will feel strong and vigorous. Nerves and muscles will be elastic and your face will radiate youth and health. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are im-| ported direct from the laboratories at Haarlem, Holland. They- are not a patent medicine, but a guaranteed- remedy which has been used by thf sturdy Dutch for over 200 years and which has helped them to develop into one of the strongest and healthiest races in the world. Get them from your druggist. Do. not take a substitute. In sealed packages—three sizes. I GET YOU WANT TO GET IT IN THE GREAT WANT GETTER, THE BEMIDJI PIONEER Office Phone 1 ‘ Residence Phone 10 WM. M’CUAIG, Manager Subscribe for The Pioneer Special Map Couporfiif Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. Bemidji, Minn. Gentlemen: Enclosed find $2.50 to pay for the Daily Pioneer for six months and 82 cents for which send me one of your latest State, United States and: - War Zone maps, a combination of “three in one” map hangers. Name...ooscsisavinssons Address. ... Announcement : Extraordinary ' | We are taking this occasion to advise all of our 1 good friends, and call particular attention to the fact, 4 that we have just secured the exclusive selling agency ' for Chase & Sanborn’s famous brands of coffees and teas in Bemidji. We are always studying the wants of our custom- ers and earnestly believe Chase & Sanborn’s line, which we now carry, are the best values in coffees and teas that can be secured anywhere. e PR s L We positively guarantee to furnish in every pound we sell the same uniform quality, and we know if you once try a pound of Chase & Sanborn’s coffee or tea you will use no other. CHAS. NANGLE Bemidji, Minn. NS S TR oy /SES A Sty o This year as last, Christmas Cards will be the popular gift exchange. We have just re- "ceived a splendid line of new samples contain- ing many new sentiments. To these you may have your name or that of your family en- graved in the same type as the sentiment. The cost is very small compared with an ordinary Christmas gift and will make the re- l ceiver happy to have you think of him. | : ] Place your orders now. Come in and | make your selection. Order as many as you need, no more. a . a Pioneer Publishing Company Phone 922 PP APPSO P

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