Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 14, 1919, Page 2

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N i { ) S 4 BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER D EYERY AFTERNOON BXCEPT SUNDAY. THE BEMIDJI PIONRER PUBLISHING CO. H. M. STANTON G. E. CARSON : Editor E. H. DENU Manager TELEPHONE 922 Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minn., as second-class matter under act of Congress of March 3, 1879. 4 " € No attention paid to annonymous contributions. Writer's name must’ be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pionetr must reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in'the current igsua g e SUBSCRIPTION RATES THE WEBKLY PIONEER , 3 ntaining & summary of the news of the week. Published anr;";hmo:na sent postage paid to any sddress, for, in advance, $1.50 OFPFICIAL COUNTY AND OITY PROCEEDINGS BELGIUM PLEASED WITH TREATY That the conditions offered Belgium by the peace treaty shall be accepted is the decision of the Belgian Crown Council. But little opposition was made to the terms. It would have been a great misfortune if Belgium, to which the free world owes so much and which it admires so much, had not been able to ac- cept the decisions of the Peace Conference, whose purpose is the re-establishment under secure guarantees of general peace and freedom. While the terms to Belgium are not yet given in clear detail, it seems that, to the amount of $500,000,000, her claim against Germany is to have priority in Germany’s first payment in reparation; that her war debt is to be settled with- out conditions; and that the Allies will remit the advances they have made to her of some $1,200,000,000. Presumably, thel® industrial and other loot carried away by Germany will be re- stored, replaced, or paid for; and Belgium’s supply of raw ma- terials, full arrangements for her financial and economic re- habilitation, have been, or will be, provided for. It will be hard to do more for Belgium than the United States and the Allies are willing to do. - . With regard to the treaties of 1839, Great Britain and France are the survivors of the five great powers of that time. Belgium wishes,to be a neutral State no longer. Her experi- ence of guaranteed neutrality has not been fortunate. It is the League of Nations that will defend her from aggression in the future. Moreover, Great Britain and France will always have imperious reasons of self-interest to make that defense adequate and constant. That for military or other reasons the treaties of 1839 should be modified so that Belgium should recover from Holland ‘Maastricht and a tract on the right bank of the Meuse from Eysden to Stevensweert, that she should have Dutch territory on the left bank of the Scheldt, or, say, all Zee- land Flanders, was entirely out of question. Belgium and Hol- land have been pretty. good friends for eighty years. The kind- ness of the Dutch to Belgian refugees during the was has not been forgotten. The annexation talk was a relapse into the old language of dynastic diplomacy. The freedom of the Scheldt, the East Belgian waterways, these at least are not instant questions. A rebuilt, restofed Bel- gium, peaceful and prosperous, is what we all want to see and what we shall see. 0. What a wonderful result of the war is the attendance of thousands of American boys, who perhaps never expected to set foot on the soil of France, at French universities as soldier-stu- dents. There are 1,711 at the Sorbonne, 1,107 at Toulouse, 558 at Montpellier, 376 at Lyons, 371 at Grenobe, and many others at institutions ancient and only less famous. As many as 5,800 Americans are registered. Most of them were college men at home. They are now learning not only the French language, but history, the sciences, literature, and philosophy, as taught by the most eminent French professors, with aid from Ameri- cans like Professors J. L. Coolidge, C. H. Haskins, and G. T. Shotwell. They are acquainting themselves, these soldier-stu- dents fresh from the battlefield and military duty, with French traditions, sentiments, methods, manners. They are receiving a polish, a finish, not always attainable at home, where dispatch - is often of more consequence than thoroughness. rcr e Ot e ‘“Increase your advertising,” is the cry of the department of labor. “never was there a time when proper advertising of- fered greater assurance of profits nor when there was a better opportunity for its profitable employment by progressive merch- ants and manufacturers. Its potential usefulness, under exist- ing conditions, is so great that every business should utilize ad- vertising to a larger extent than at any previous time. When you put tlre power of advertising promotion and its great selling economics back of your own business you are also spreading the spirit of optimism and good will. Advertising is the surest quickest, and most economical business developer known to industry. Use it now.” : —————— - ) ————— St. Cloud is to have a $250,000 new hotel, and it is going to be completed in time to provide accommodations for the Northern Minnesota editors when they meet in that city for their annual session next January. PEGGY HYLAND AT REX. A band of crooks stands ready to give Peggy Hyland every opportun- ity to wear diamonds and fine clothes in “The Girl With No Re- grets,” the. William Fox picture, which is shown at the Rex theatre today. But Peggy, who enacts the role of Signa Herrick, scorns them— as the audience feels sure she would, Throughout the play one feels that Peggy 1s going to do something bet- ter than live by the ways of crooked- ness, and the end justifies this be- lef—although she furnishes many a thrill while she i{s battling against odds and a conspiracy to bring about her ruin. The conspirators leave no stone unturned to connect her with an attempted jewel robbery, but her lover will believe no one but Peggy. His faith in her at the crucial mom- ent is absolute. She marries her wealthy sweetheart, and the crooks and the conspirators are cast into outer darkness, The play is beauti- fully photographed and has been con- vincingly staged by Harry Millarde as director. KERRIGAN- GRAND. NEWS OF THE THEATERS “GREASED LIGHTNING.” Charles Ray, the Thomas H, Ince- Paramount star, appears in a de- cidedly new type of character in his new photoplay, “Greased Lightning” which will be presented at Elko thea- tre tonight and tomorrow. We have seen Mr, Ray in past performances as the baseball player, the hired man, the young city sport, the spoiled mother’s boy and the like, but no type of the past gives him such opportunity for his subtle com- edy as does the small town inventor, a character he portrays with admir- able taste in ‘“Greased Lightning.” He has already won considerable notoriety by his seamless Nose-bag, the Imperial axle grease, the Non- Slip Hitching Post and the Little Giant Potato Slicer, when he builds “Greased Lightning,” with a view of winning the big automobile race, When the race starts his auto balks. What happens ‘then? Mr. Ray is surrounded by a capable cast, in- cluding Wanda Hawley, Robert Mc. Kim, Willis Marks and others. J. D, Hampton production in which the Grand theatre tonight In “The End of the Game,” the J. Warren Kerrigan is starring at and Thursday the popular hero of many Screen romances has a chance to dis- play some more of that fighting; rid- ing and athletic ability for which he is famous both on and off the screen, In the role of Burke “Allister, be plays the Western gunman from a new angle, making him.a’better sort of chap than usually depicted in,mo- tion pictures. Lois ‘Wilson, the charming young leading lady of all the recent Kerrigan features, has a role particularly suited to her tal- ents. “Locket”. Emlm Eyeglasses. for which.a: British. pat- ent has been granted can be folded when idle to resemble.a locket and worn on a chain as. unvonuu'nem. » ARTIOLES 'OF INGORPOBATION. Know All Men By These Presents, that we, the undersigned: citiZens of:1! United States, for. the purpose of form-. ing a body corporate and politic. under the laws of Minnesof ‘and particularly under chapter $82 of the laws of Mine- sota of 1919, hereby associate_ou! :ogethar and adopt. and.sign.the, . A 8 ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION. 1.. The name of this ‘corporation:is Cormor:ntv Co-Operative Company: - 2, The business of d . corporation shall consist in ruslnx.,pmguc%- chasing, dealing in, transporting,’ Ya- facturing, milling, distributing, - selling, or Icotherwh‘e bdl.\gnoajps of.all kinds oé grain, vegetables, gr: n.pfin@ua&&. and, vegetable product's, m}% in u&m‘fio - ing, improving, leasing,. '@l ring, selling, or otherwise .disposing redl estate -hersong the business :of the: j require. il < prin Efi Zof'isaid ¢ lq!-a;:‘n‘-@ o s 8. The. the busgine: be‘shoo i » @0 4 thirty, years from .June.1, 3919, 5. fFhe names'and places-of residence of the incorporators. of.said corporation are: i Henry _Dablstul, _. Shoaks,.. Beltrami county, Minnesota; 3 3 Da'vfi Avester; “Blackdusk, - Beltragai county, Minnesota, 3 Axel J. ‘sfifl%fim Blackduok,® Beltrami county, Minnesota; ‘Walfred Schar,” Kelliher, Beltrami county, Minnesota; rr e Chns,,Esp& Stanley, Beltramicoun- Y, nesota,; : % John O. Anderson, Kelliher, ‘Beltrami County, Minnesots.; i O Peter Urseth, :Stanley, Belsrami: couns ty, Minnesaota; Felix Heibel, Shooks, Beltrami coun- ty Mignaaou; ‘ M. B. Psttengill, Saum, Beltrami coun- ty, Minnesota; - Lvan Estenson, . Kelliher, Beltram), county, Minnesota; A John Chflgren,” " Blackduok, .‘Beltramj county, ‘Minnesota; TRY 8y 6. The management of said, romv tion shall he. vesiéd in 8 b ¥ %o: even i be on the year directors, who shall be' elected second Monday of Juneof“each Until the second Monday of June, 1930, the board of directors shall consist. of the incorporators above named, all of whom are residents bf the staté’of Min- nesota; ‘and of whom Felix Hetbel shal’ be president, David Wester shall be vice- president, Walfred Schar shall be secre- tary, and Henry Dahlstul shall be treas- urer of sald cerporation. T 7. The amount of capital stock of said corporation shall.be $25,000, .divide¢ into 1,000, .shares of the par_ value of $26 each,’ Tpll paid and non-assessable, which may be issued at such times and' In such amounts as ‘the boatd of direc- tors may determine, 8. The highést amount of indebted- ness or liability to which the corpora- tion shall at any time be subject is $10,000. In Witness Whereof. we have here- unto set our hands and seals-this 10th day-of -May, 1919, & B HENRgADAHLSTUL DAVID "WESTER AXEL.J. SANDBERG, ‘WALEFRED . SCHAR CHRIS ESPE JOHN O. ANDERSON, | PETER URSETH FELIX HEIBEL M. .B. PETTENGILL 1IVAN "ESTENSON JOHN CHILGREN. Executed in the presence of:— ~. Chris Beck, ~ Dennis ‘Bowe. (Notarial Seal) ]su.te of Minnesota, County of Belfra: mi, ss. On_this 10th day of May, 1919, be- fore me, a notary public in and for the county aforesaid, personally appeared Henry Dahlstul, David Wester, Axel J. Sandberg, Walfred Schar, Chrls Espe, John O. Anderson, Peter Urseth, Felix Heibel, M. B. Pettengill, Swan Estenson, and John Chilgren, to me known. to be the persons describ®d in and whp execut- ed the foregoing .instrupient, and they acknowledged that ~they executed the same as their free act and deed. AXEL PETERSON, Notary publie, Beltrami county, Minn. {\lgy%commisslon expires August 20, 2-514-516 1tter A letter baking. This is to use Made. from ! 1 i 4 = [pknowledse Sng R rE, Prestdent, A r word. A word makes a great differenc , in baking-powders. : If the little word “alum” appears. on the label it may mean bitter baking. If the word ROYAL stands out bold and streng, it surely means BETTER Royal Contains No Alum— ~ § WEDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 14, 1919 PROFESSIONAL DOCTORS Bank No. 764 Statement of the Condition of AELTRAMI COUNTY-STATE BANK OF. TENSTRIKE; MINN. At Close of Business on .I=ay 1, 1919 RESQURCES Loans and Diseounts .. .$43,811.00 Overdrafts ... 15.35 U. S. Bonds .. Banking House Furniture and Fixtures Other Real Estate Due from Banks .. Cash on Hand (Items below) Cur. p— DR. L. A. WARD Physician and Surgeon Bemidt; Minn. Other, fhiag Total Cash Assets, .. Checks and Cash Item: b g T TP $68,031.67 TIES LI Capital Stock . 10,000.00 n BT 8, at. . 74 " gepd ts.. Subject | SAYS HOT WATER | WASHES POISONS FROM THE LIVER . 18,806.09 . 11.38 DR. H. A. NORTHROP * Osteopathic-Physician heek ...... 33,764.69 | and Surgeon c.;:hw-'e:,cmcu $ 1,783.04 i Everyone should drink hot water ' Ibertson Block gmu Phéne 153 e = with - phogphate In It, 1| e e——— 1 tal Immediat T u';"t'x:s g 36,547.728 before breakfast. DRS. (GILMORE ‘& ‘McCANN Physicians and Surgeons Oftice: Mfles Block e ————e e e . 19,379.80 . 54,927.53. 54,927.53 68,031, Amount of Reserve on hand,$13,806.09 Reserve Required Time Certificates To F!eel as fine as the proverbial fiddle, we must keep the liver washed clean, almost every morning, to pre- by _law 6.234.71 Lyent its sponge-like pores from clog- : e of :Mipnesota, County of Beltra- | o with indigestible material, sour A. V. GARLOCK, M.D. bile and poisonous toxins, says-a not- ed physician. If you get headaches, it’s your liver. If you ‘catech cold easily, it’s your liver. If you wake up with a bad taste; furred tongue, nasty breath or stomach becomes rancid, it’s ~your Bhoe !Osl:lce in ano_.l!lorsxlixon Wit liver.. Sallow skin, muddy complex- o8- e | iclm, watdry e{;.s alll_denoj:e tlli‘ver: ur:; B cleanliness. Your liver is the mo — important, also the most abused and DR. E. 'H. SMITH E:glemd torgan':l ,of,th}: bogoy. lFevv Physician and Surgeon ow «its . function.or how release : the dammed-up body waste, bile and Office Security Bank Block % toxins. Most folks resort-to violent calomel, which is a dangerous, sali- vating chemical ‘because it accumu- lates in the tissues, also attacks the bones. We, A. P..White, President and J. F. ' Hermann, Cashier, of the above :nams Bank do solemnly sweaf that the above gtatement is true to the best of our Eye—Ear—Nose—Throat Glasses Pitted DR. E. A. SHANNON, M.D. “Physician ‘afnd ‘Si 2 . ¥. HERM. i ier. . Subscribed and sworn, to “béfore ‘me this 12th day of- May, 1919, a (8eal) Geo. W. Rhea. “"Notary.. Public,. Beltramt County, Minnesota. . My commission expires i July 221923, Correct, a_tte;i: rg"l‘wo Directors) W. L. !Broo,ks. 1t5-14 T s ‘HAVE YOU HAD.IT t % ¢ When -your back-is broke and your. eyes.are blurred, And your shin bones knock and ‘your tongue ie ‘furred, ‘And ‘your .tonsils squeak and your hair ‘gets dry, And you're doggone sure that Your're going to die, Bt oti're > skeered..you won’t and afraid you will, jiuai!:fl e‘ngto “bed and-have your P “And praythe Lord to see you. For you've got the “Flu”, boy, é ou've got the “Flu.” s gEE MITCHELL BEFORE THE MICROBES GET YOU. D. S. Mitchell The New_York Life Man Northern Natl Bank Bldg. ‘Room & Phone 576W DR.: EINER JOHNSON Physician and Surgeon Bemiaji, Minn. | Every man and . woman, sick or well,. should drink each morning be- |. fore breakfast, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phos- phate in it, to wash from the liver eand bowels ‘the previous- day's- indigesti- ble *material, the poisons, sour bile and toxins;: thus: cleansing, sweeten- ing and freshening the' entire ali- ‘mentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Limestone. phosphate ‘does ‘not re- strict the diet like calomel, because it can not ‘salivate, for-it is ‘harmless and you can eat anything afterwards. It is' inexpensive-and.almost tasteless, and any. pharmacist will gell you a quarter pound, which is sufficient for & demonstration of how hot water and limestone phosphate cleans, stim- ulates and-freshens-the-liver; keeping you feeling. fit day in and day.out. LUNDE AND DANNENBERG Chiropractors Hours 10 to 12-a. ' m. ‘Phone 401-W 2 to-5, 7 to 8 p. m. Calls'made. 1st Nat. Bank Bldg. Bemidji ——————————————————————— o e T — T DENTISTS DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office’ in Winter Block DR..J. T. TUOMY DENTIST North of Markham Hrir® 'Glbbons: Block Tt Phare e ———————————— e e ——— DR. J. W. DIEDRICH DENTIST Office—O’Leary-Bowser: Bldg. Phoncs—Oftice STe-W Hes $T6:R GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Miles Block Phone 580 L EEEE————— e ——— VETERINARIANS A A A A A A P A AMERICA’S HOME SHOE POLISH . Used by thrif ple because it Saves Time, - ¥ }Savetuy .fi’:::dy, Saves Shoes. ) Dr. W. K. Denfson—Dr. D. R. Burgéss DENIBON & BURGESS Veterinarians Phones: Office 3-R Res. 99 Bemldjl, StimorA HOME SET Mion, makes shining easy in home or ofice. I J. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON ! ogltoo_r rgon(ll’,flogpluil,hl do&r-- ’Wol.lt man’s. one . No. xrdp St. and Irvine Ave. [ BLACK-TAY - WINTE - RED - BROWN BUSINESS TOM SMART I Dray and Tramster {Res. Phong 68 Office Phoné 12 8 rica MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Pianos, Organs, Sewing Machines 514 Minnesota Ave.; Bemidji | J. Bistar, Mgr. Phone 573-W or Better Baking makes a great differencein a NORTHERN MINN. AGENCY Dwight D, Mtller WE CAN Insure “An; Anywh - Bldry Tob 107 Offices, Seourity Bi GENERAL MERCHANDISE Gr Goods, Shoes, oceries, Myl Flour W. G. SCHROEDER Beml!dji Phone 65 ENTERPRISE -AUTO C0. Auto Livery and Taxi Service Day and Night Service Office Remore Hotel, Cor. 3rd St. & Beltrami Ave. Office Phone 1 Residence Phone 10 WM. M’CUAIG Manager only one reason why it pays g Powder Absolutely Pure Cream of Tartar derived from grapes H. N. M’KEE, Funeral Director Leaves No Bitter Tast PHONE 178-W or R ’ : Defective

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