Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, January 7, 1919, Page 2

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BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER e PUBLISEED EBVEARY AFTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDAY. HE BEMIDII PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. Gk M. CARSON B, X, DENT e TELEFHONE 922 tel at the postoftice at Bemidji, Minn., as mnl-clm:-u. mfi“ u{' edt Connu‘lmot March 8, 1879. BUILD WITH ‘EYE TO BEAUTY | Duty of All Who Plan Homs to Con- sider Well How Strusture Wil ..Appear to Beholder. No atéention pald to annonymous contributions. Writer's nsme must be known to the editor, but not necess: ly for ot for the Weekly Ploneer must reach this office not of each week to insure publication in the current issue g g =} i Ed L ¥ g 5 The beauty that may be had out of the ‘common sthings: of: the earth is sometimes sees, a_ besuty that is'all the more emphasized by the contrast {n-the hideous result of the use of the THR WEEXLY PIONEER Ten pages, contalning & of the news of the week. Fublished mmmm‘mfiuwm,tu.mnvmuu 88 you go .about, -how one man will | take the things that are to his haud ond build from them a beautiful house. MIGHTY ROOSEVELT’S END PEACEFUL. o B SR eye. Another man: ‘with the same mate: rials ‘threw them: together crudely, making a thing that had to go by the pame of & house, but' which offends the -eye_ that beholds it. = The one house cost no more. in either labor or money than the other, yet the results are as different as day and night. . The .most striking, as well as the most histori¢ instance of what can be One of the greatest men public life ever produced in the United States has gone beyond, but with his passing there will remain in luster in the annals of the nation the name of Theo-§ dore Roosevelt. His sudden death shocked the entire nation and the na- tions abroad, for he was an international character, a man of " marked admiration on the part of millions and cordially hated by many for his rough shod aggressiveness. And, in passing, there is every reason to believe that among the hordes who will deeply regret the end of the colonel will in Europe, for it was President Roosevelt who promoted him to Am architectural a brigadier generalship, a marked step forward in Pershing’s| the:padres had for material was what Roosevelt came from good Dutch stock, a big, rugged, fear- | fe less |spe<:ime‘1,1i of manhggd,haggressivt;i a gifteg orato:o with a|¢ manner convincing to his hearers. e was known every 0 B ) corner of the nation and no matter what differences arose as to fi&xfi?fmfl%mfim‘m some of his characteristics, he was highly respected, esteemed!yonse or & ¢hicken c 4 #and feared by those who came under his ironic eriticism, and| ~ = no power thwarted his expressed views. Roosevelt was a trained athlete. He was a great hunter after big game, one of his trips taking him to Africa where he battled the giant beasts of the dense jungles. In his home he was the acme of a husband and father, and a great favorite of children everywhere. He organized the famous Rough Riders of the Spanish-American, which ‘took an active part in the} Ciban campaign, many of his men having been associated with| “him in frontier days when “Teddy” was a'cow puncher and rancher. ! The former president was a graduate of Harvard and | § studied law after the close of his university career. He served|§ New York state in its legislature and also served his state in various important capacities and the nation in prominent posi- tions. He was elected vice president when William B. McKin- ley was chosen to the highest office within the gift of the United States, and when the fatal bullet was fired by the hand, of an _ #ssassin, which laid low the beloved McKinley, Roosevelt: be. ‘came head of the government, and was elected for the succeed: ing four years. “+ In the campaign in which Roosevelt sought re-election, in the celebrated convention held in the Coliseum, Chicago, thel’ ,fige swung to William Howard Taft for the nomination. Roose welt, chagrined: at the turn of affairs, led his followers from “convention and organized the progressive party, composed| & republicans, which split the strength of the party and re-| & . ‘sulted in the election of a democrat. . =4 “Roosevelt' was an ardent patriot. He flayed unmercifully the Huns and their work. He offered to raise 500,000 men and lead them to battle but was refused. He sent his two sons to] the battle line, and one of them made the supreme sacrifice, the other wounded. And he was proud of it all. ; The life of this great man was a model of strenuousness. He had the constitution and physique of a giant. He was a glutton for work and his strength became undermined. For the past few years he had been failing, and his passing in deep slumber peacefully termined a most strenuous career, devoted to the progress and welfare of his country and its peoples. “Teddy” will be greatly missed from the life of the nation. ———0 A USELESS BRANCH. The extent to which paper has beenjj used ‘in Burope during the war to 7 place various textiles {¢ shown In un exhibition at the office of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce in the customhouse, New York city. There are samples of camouflage me terial, and of machine-gin belting, also paper textile carpets comprising different patterns which have the general ap- esrance of matting. 5 Might Have Cracked Joke. “If,” Inquires the Dexter States- man, “her ‘zerial chauffeur addressed Mrs. Hohenzollern as ‘your royal high- nass,’ just as they were sailing through When we go to purchase a pound of butter and we feel like we are bargaining for a famous sky-scraper according to the amount of coin we are called upon to part with fo secure it;} a cloud, why not?'—8t. Louls. Re- “we must not blame the farmer. He is the innocent party in the | publtc. afit(inr angv his, Olil: th: lv)»]'hole,tfi; the sr{xallest profl}t1 inthetrans-| action. e must not blame the retailer because he is not more| . ;fllilty than the farmer; he must dispense with his merchandise ‘GLASS' OF SALTS i ‘a manner to net him some small gain or like any enterprising CLEANS KIDNEYS busm;;s man he {eels thag he wflz soon have to close doors. 2 Gl e man whom we do want to account for the great sus- our.. irts.or- ! tainance in prices in food stuffs, triply, before the war, during R ’fi:&&%‘?flf’fifii%flw & the war and after the war, is the middleman. of 'Water. - Of what need is this middleman, anyway? What work ; does he do to earn his living? The farmer raises the produce,| 'When your kidneys hurt.and your : the retailer pays his help to sell it to you, you pay for the right "“:“fr"@"-"’“"t got-scared and ! - to consume it and all the while the man who does no work, who| [t of .,,‘3,‘,‘",‘;,’,‘::;;:2“‘.;‘;";{,‘,‘:,.: | reaps the greatest revenue ,is smiling with his hands clasped|ang irritate the entire urinary tract. { behind his camaflouge desk. ! ! ok wgu!d be very nearly impossible to find such an indi- { : vidual existing in any progressing firm. He would be useless and an unpayable proposition in any branch of the business world. Men are daily losing their positions because they cannot do the work they are called upon to do, properly. And, yet, there are thousands of these fake business statues decorating JeosSetd the country and being paid for it, too. RIS | LR BY THEIR FRUITS WE KNOW 'EM. g;lnk ::;;tmuh;‘ ;uo get ogomt gnz &rm: st -about four oun: ol a “By their fruits ye shall know them!” Not so with Cali-|5elts; take o tablespoon in = glass fornia growers it would seem. Of late, that is to say since 1917, ;’:gwt.«:: ’J’&‘&’%I’,’:“.“Jfi&'f’iflm; complaints have poured over the country by the bucket fullsf will act fine. This famous saits is about the terrible conditon fruits have reached their destina-|made from the.acld of grapes and tion in from this domestic-foreign port. Perhaps the complain- };en%oil:aé“#::fi S:é%"%‘o‘f" it e > ¥ generations to ers forgot that this was a season of war and that in such a]clean an@ stimulate clogged kidneys; ’emll’lr tl}:}e;;’ lWere lucfiy to have any fruit at all . ;1’8?‘ 100“’3;!“(;!"? the-acids ltfl‘urrlmuf obably now that the argument is over, shippin i -+ e Tinaae Ternd will come into its own again ind the old st’andé)x% gf bgmx;ia;{ "°}‘;d"‘s“.°;,:“‘,‘}“,‘nf};flfi:{v:?”“““”- transporting facilities will return. Until then, we can eat i | | : | T i ! | 1 +— prunes. x e 1 Lo - SO A i After making a close study of newspaper reports we have l;rlilvetii' atl the conclusion that either the Czar of Russia is dead or he is alive. became of your kidney ifouble. and _ | backache. o THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER “When youthave : ‘after_eating. TONIC FOR MOON BLINDNESS ecommended for Horses Affiicted With. Aliment ‘Rather Than Cut. - ting Out ‘Teeth. Moon blindness is a recurrent opbe thalmia or inflammation of the con- junetival membrane of the white of thie eye and the lining of the eyelis. Olose, dark, fll-ventilated stables pre- \dspose’ the horse to moon blindness, The peculiar characteristic is its perl- odical recurrence and results. + + Because the attacks:‘often follow each other at intervals of about 3-month, many erroneously ‘suppose that:they are influenced by some phase of tlie moon—hence the name, i {lidstra The jgnorant’ recourse to knocking lns ted.by the homes that one | oyt the S'lolf teeth or cutting the hawy or:winking tartilage, cannot be too se- verely condemned. 'romg are recoms mended for horses affected with moon eame common things by others. blindness, as well as such other mens- . Xon. will_see In. the. countsy plices, | yres iy tend to the tmprcvement of the horse’s: condition. 7 '| He took: the rock-and 5tone, the W00, | s ————————— /| the sand-and. the- earth that were up- Do You Perspire Freely? I 8 rooftree that is a kindness to the | seesesseeomm———— Why should you buy vorated Tal- cum Powder to prevent perspiration odors” when you' can bu; the pure Boric-for less money? It acid in talcum powder that does the work. ' “Then, use the pure thing—20 Mule Team Powdered Boric. . 1t-has & soothing effect on the akin —it‘is an antiseptic as well as a de- ‘odorant! and does not clog up the poores as most talcum powders do. 4 v Use 20 Mule Team Powdered Boric :::&.Wl‘.m Nfl" W;‘";W 3:“‘;1“ the altxdtuvevyourielfodthé’emiari&ialmen}:' i i s furnish y old Fran-| of : perspiration.. odors. . little o be General Pershing, commander of the United States forees| oo n Tissjons of California. They |this preparation, sprinkled (FOR YOUR STOMACH'S SAKE - Getrid of the Overload and Excess Acid and you will Fairly feel its serious’} 's the boric in the gems. Yet all that| bath water:will work wonders. s 20 Mule Team Powdered Boric is spectacular career. {liey foand at hand and under their |%0ld at all good drug. stores. SHIP YOUR Hides, Furs, Wool, Sheep Pelts and Bee Wax and Tallow To NORTHERN HIDE & F apolig’ leading thoroughfares. “distance phones. WM. B. CAMFIELD TAKE ONE - the GAS driven out of your body—THE BLOAT GOES WITH IT. IT GIVES YOU REAL STOMACH COMFORT Get EATONIC from your Druggist with the DOUBLE GUARANTEE uahu"mb"mm—wn—wm.,mnb.MAn..muu.u stitution, with real money invested. To date the company has invested Over-$1,800,000.00 in buildings, machinery and equipment and all are paid for. - Paying is a habit with Pan. Here are the buildings and the grpund-flodr area in square feet covered by each: D TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 7, 1919 O U S I Ty ——— For Quick Returns and Highest Cash Market Prices UR COMPANY | 118 Belt. Ave. Bemidji, Minnesota | ‘When in Minneapolis Stop at - ‘HOTEL LINCOLN NICOLLET AVENUE and NINTH STREET Opened September 1st, 1918 In the center of the business and theatrical districts, adjoining the largest retail store. One square from street § cars to and from all depots yet free from noise of that 7 traffic. - Bntrance and lobby on Nicollet Ave., Minne- 125 Rooms—100 with bath and toilet. $1.00 to $2.00 per day. Furniture and equipment entirely new. All rooms have outside exposure, electric elevator and local and long Guests will receive the personal attention of the owners who will be there to wait on them. Heartburn; Gas; Bloat; and that Full Fesling .} | THh Pan Motor Companyisarealin- | Itsbuildings are modern and fireproof, with up-to-the-minute equin- ment, of steel and concrete construc- tion, substantial, accurate, and correct in detail and harmonious throughout. F. S. GREGORY Factory Building No. 1... 7,592 - Drop Forge Power House. 4,740 Blacksmith Shop......... 504 Drop Forge Hammer Shop 31,400 i Factory Building No. 2. . .105,740 DieShop. ..o i 10,708 Warehouse.......... .. 5,286 Qil Storage Building...... 1,650 Loading Platform........ 3,000 Drop Forge Office Bldg... 2,048 Main Power House. ... .. 6,330 Heat Treating Plant...... 8,450 Pump House. ........... 180 Laboratory.............. . 1,168 i Water Tower..cv.ocooo- 1,024 Total ground area covered. ........... Wy i 189,820 square feet. "This splendid showing has been made in a little over one year and still the good work goes on. PAN MOTOR COMPANY SAINT CLOUD [Pan Town}], MINN. N Aot N At | / ,—-———-—- Defective

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