Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 16, 1919, Page 2

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— Skt NG . , THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 16, 1919 —————————————— s See— A V. GARLOCK, M. D, || BUSINESS DR. EINER JOHNSON ) ' WOMAN AIR MAIL CARRIER BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER Ere—Euee Note - Thront S— Physsian axd Surgen Dray and Tramster ISHED EVERY AFPTERNOON EXCEPT SUNDATY. ——'v"m 'BEMIDJI PIONEZS PUBLISHING CO. G. E. CARSON, - E. H. DENU, Pres. and Treas. Sec.-and Mgr. Res. Phone 58 Office Phone 13 818 America C. R. SANBORN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office: Miles Bloek House Phone 419——Office phone 55 ENTERPRISE AUTO C0.- Auto Livery and Taxi Service | Day and Night Service MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Pilanos, Organs, Sewing Machines 614 Minnesota Ave., Bemidji J. Bistar, Mer. Phone 673-W ||| Office: Remore Hotel, Cor. | unqlitered ot the postoffice st Bemigs Mion. as second-class matter +3rd St. & Beltrami Ave. DR. E. H. MARCUM GENERAL MERCHANDISE Office Phone 1 b 10 autention DAl S0 anmon o e e (e must Oftice hours, 11 a.m. to 12 m. Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Plour Residence Phone 10 Communications for the Weekly Plonae;lfix‘s‘;nr?:caefl;l: n-:fl"f. .l‘lll:f 2 p.m to5p m Peed, Bto. WM. M’CU AIG later than J’l‘uesdny of each week to insure pul Schroeder Block W. G. SCHROEDER Ottice phone 18 Res. phone 211 | {} Bemidji, Minn. Phone 65 angr ‘l“lm()' BRATES . 2850 . lfl Six months .. .18 Three months NORTHERN . MINN. AGENCY Dwight D. Miller DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Offite in Mayo- Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 GOT YOUR HOGS and HOG HOUSE INSURED “Yep.” “Got your life insur- ed?” “Nope.” “Well, if I didn’t think I was of more benefit to THRE WEEKLY PIONEER Ten pages, containing & summary of the news of the wesk. FPublished rery Thursday and sent postage paid to any address, fer, in advance, §1.50 1 Offices. Security Bank Bldg., Tel. 167 DR. H. A. NORTHROP OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office phone 163 OFPICIAL COUNIY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS Furs made to order, repaired and remodeled at BROCKMAN FUR FACTORY Tbertson Block AR The distinction of belng the firs woman to act as an aerial mail car- rier fell to Aviatrix “Fanchon.” She | OBJEC.T OF SUBSCRIPTION CAMPAIGN. Admitting that The Pioneer has for the past several years LUNDE and DANNENBERG At Troppman’s Department Store refrained from haphazard methods of inaugurating campaigns| !s bere shown recelving the mail Chiropractors my family than a bunch of of doubtful calibre in the hope that it would be the gainer at| sacks at San Francisco. Hours 10 to 12 a.m.; 2 to 5, 7 to 8 p.m. hogs, I wouldn't Il...vo my the expense of the general public, but when it decided to Phone m-wK mdcmu m;g:l = DRY CLEANING life insured, either. enlist the hearty suppprt of the people at large in inducing 1stidistional PankCE: Giothiss Clintiota f6c Mivh.. Woaiin e them to read the only daily newspaper published in Beltrami| GERMANS RUSH TO GAMBLING D. S. Mitchell county and this part of the state, for their information of what 2ses . S. Mitche is of interest to the city and county, as well as giving them time- | One Frankfort Man Loses $166,600; VETERINARIANS Nor’{‘g:r;:le;aa’?rll;afl!% ggu': Another Is Murdered for $16,600. ly day’s happenings of the world matters of import through the great United Press, the decision was reached to give the people an opportunity to share in the reward for their co-opera- tion in extending the welcome of The Pioneer. To that end, has witnessed the opening of its high stan- dard subscription campaign, as practically every person in the city knows, and when making selection of the general manager of the campaign, William Mervin, of the Bird Syn- dicate, Madison, Wis., was chosen, the Bird Syndicate being one of the leading concerns known to the newspaper fraternity throughout the United States. For thirteen years, Mr. Mervin has been in the circulation department of the leading papers of the country. His coming to Bemidji is on account of his long standing friendship with E. H. Denu, business manager of The Pioneer Publishing company, when the former worked with the latter, who was advertising manager of the Madison (Wis.) State Journal. The standing of Mr. Mervin among the newspaper craft is sufficient guarantee of the standing of The Pioneer’s cam- Phone 576W Room 5§ Dr. W. K. Denison—Dr. D. R. Burgess DENISON & BURGESS Veterinarians Phones: Office 3-R; Res. 99 Bemidji, Minn. Frankfort - on - Main, * Germany.— Gambling is increasing in Germany to an alarming extent, according to Ger- man newspapers. This is said to be due partly to the higher living of indi- viduals who made fortunes during the war by government contracts or other- wise. The Frankfurter Zeitung recent- ly declared: ¥ “The demoralizing effect of the three gambling resorts erected in Bad Nau- heim during the period of the soldiers’ council is now seen In its grossest form. A guest, said to be from Frank- fort, was found murdered in one of the parks. The investigating commit- tee ascertained that the murder had been committed by a thief. The mur- .dered man had won 70,000 marks (nominally $16,600) at the club “1919” J. WARNINGER VETERINARY SURGEON ..Office and Hospital 3 doors west.. of Troppman’s. Phone No. 209 8rd Street and Irvine ave. DENTISTS Rool ool Rt ba oy DR. J. W. DIEDRICH DENTIST Oftiee—O'Leary-Bowser_ Bldg. 'OU WILL NEVER wish to take another dose of pills after having once used Chamberlain’s Tab- lets. They are easier and more pleasant to take, paign now on. Ii asks nothing of any nature from the people; | ;1" Grand hotel on the night he was || Fhones—Office 376-W. Res. 376-R e v s % it asks simply for co-operation in its endeavor to give to the|illed. On the way to his quarters he more gentle and mild in their action and more reli- people a newspaper, representative of the community and of | was shot in the back and all his money DR. J. T. TUOMY able. They leave the bowels in a natural condition, value to every interest and the reading public, and it believes | stolen. DENTIST while the use of pills is often followed by severe constipation, requiring a constant increase in the dose. Every bottle guaranteed by your druggist. “Another man from Frankfort lost 50,000 marks ($11,900) one Sunday. af- ternoon at the Villa Heinemann, and a few days before another guest lost as much as 700,000 marks (nominally $166,000).” FIND_CENTURIES OLD IMAGES Bared in Gevernment Probé to Solve Mexican Pyramid ‘Mys- = tery. - - Nortn _of Markham Flotel it merits the confidence of all. Gibbons Block Phone 230 . SN Sy BALANCE OF POWER. The trouble about England’s six votes to America’s one really started in the British colonies. The English do not worry much about representation 4t the league council. 'They care very little, when the truth is told, about the league at all. ... It was a South African who made the stipulation.. The British colonies are not suspicious of America so much as they are of England. And they d6 not mean to be bound by Eng- land’s vote any more than they do by America’s. They want \ L. STANTON DENTIST Oftice in_Winter Block DR. D. votes of their own. vote. It is even possible that they will be found voting with America instead of with England at the council, for the colonies have no intention of being bound by a bolshevik — Bolshevism has spread its red wings very generally over Europe, and is even invading this country to a dangerous The man who can not respect the American flag and degree. ‘American institutions should b and kicked across. e conducted to the border line Zasns i o oo While discussing the anarchy that prevails in Mexico, let us forget the same brand that is rearing its head in our own country. House cleaning at home is a good policy at times. All men are born equal, ye profiteering does 0 s. But that is probably because not interest them at the time of their first squawk. e faith in his fellows and a finer re- l solve to maintain this faith through NEWS OF THE the matter of fact existence. 3 > Weekly news, “Topics or the Day"” will also be shown, the regular week- T HEAT ER S ly pictured report of the world’s LAST TIME TONIGHT. “Dangerous Waters’’ proved an in- teresting Exhibitors’ Mutual feature at the Graaa tast evening and it will be shown again tonight. It is a dar- ing drama and holds the audiences gripped. The Feast of the Gods, a scene fromn this production, is a stupendous and lavish poitrayar of a wuu oac- chanalian revel of those who don’t care. Combined with a theme of dra- matic, intensity the truly sensational background of the picture makes it an offering of extraordinary box of- fice strength. Fred Mace will also be seen in a Keystone comedy, ‘“The Oily Scoundrel.” SATISFACTORY FEATURE. Human nature crowds forward de- lightfully in Vitagraph’s néwest pic- ture with Bessie Love as star. The film entitled “Over the Garden Wall,” at the Grand Wednesaay and Thurs- day is a simple, bright possession of all the human nature in the world. There is love in every line of the story portrayed by “Over the Gar- den Wall.” It is one of those pic- tures that satisfies the single craving of the ordinary plain folk spectators . —which after all comprise the whole audience of films—for expression of remance. It is one of those stories of life that all of us have recognized as real. We have seen little frag- ments of the story happen all around us. ‘We recognize the portrayal of human nature as a true statement. ““The spectator therefore cannot avoid <oming away from this picture grati- » fled and refreshed, possessing new happenings. i FACES WRONG JUDGE. One of the most disconcerting sit- uations ever put into a photoplay oc- curs in Dorothy Gish's latest Para- mount picture ‘“Peppy Polly” when Polly (played by Miss Gish), after planning with the judge of the ju- i venile court to sentence her to three months in a reformatory, so she may .obtain evidence of graft in the in- stitution, comes into court and finds the wrong judge on the bench. Almost anyone will tell you it is not a deuced hard job to get arrested. Dorothy Gish, “Peppy Polly” at the Elko theatre tonight tells an entirely different story. . Then tenth chapter in “The Ma of Might' 'is an added attraction at the Elko tonight. A LIVELY PHOTOPLAY. One of the liveliest photoplays seen here in many a day is ‘“‘Some- thing To Do,” Bryant Washburn’s new Paramount starring vehicle which will be presented at the Elko theatre tomorrow and Thursday. Mr. Washburn is an idle rich young man, who does some startling things in a most refreshing way. Ann Little is his leading woman and she heads a clever cast. Art of Chinese Gardeners. Chinese gardeners sometimes plant statuettes of tiny men firmly in posts, just like real plants, and then train live evergreens to grow up over these statuettes. The vines thus form a kind of robe for the statuette men, their white faces and hands protrud- ing from the green leavns. Mexico City.—Investigations by the government to find out who built the great pyramids at San Juan Teotihua- can, 27 miles from Mexico City, have brought to light two great granite heads of the anclent Mexican god of the air, Quetzalcoatl. These heads are almost perfect spec- Imens, bearing all the symbelic mark- ings. The long disputed point as to who erected the pyramids is, as yet, un- solved. These huge mounds, one to the sun and the other to the moon, the former being 761 by 721 feet at the buse and 216 feet high, are generally attributed to a tribe that preceded the Toltecs, probably dating from about the sixth century. GETS $17,000 FROM LOST KIN Brother, Missing for Years, Leaves . War Insurance to Indiana Woman. Vincennes, Ind.—Answering a knock at her door at night, Mrs. Mary Pritch- ett, mother of a large family in hum- ble circumstances, admjtted a Canadi- an army officer, who gave her $17,000, representing insurance and back pay of a brother, Bert Lawrence, who had been killed while serving in France with the Canadian army. The first news Mrs, Pritchett had had of her brother for many years was the official notification of his death two years ago. She knew noth- ing at the time regarding the ‘insur ance, which had been allotted to her. BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DOCTORS DRS. GILMORE & McCANN Physicians and Surgeons Oftice Miles Block DR. E. H. SMITH Physician and Surgeon Office Security Bank Block DR. L. A. WARD Physician and Surgeon Bemidji, Minn. D. H. FISK Attorney at Law Oftice, Northern National Bank Bldg. Phone 181 Collections a Specialty Phone 181 e e GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER Phone 560 Miles Block FROM WAR TO BANK JOBS Before going to France, Wm. H. Dickson took the Commerce and Banking Course at the Da- kota Business College, Fargo, N. D. Returning, he took a Post Graduate Course and has just accepted the responsible position of Assistant Cashier of the McLead State Bank, Mc- Lead, N. D. Rob’t. C. Hintz, another D. B. C. graduate home from France, was elected Ass’t Cash- ier of the First State Bank at Dunn Center. Fall Business Courses are now starting. For particulars, address F. L. Watkins, 806 Front Street, Fargo, N. D. HE superb T quality of our appointments fulfills the re- quests of the most Our enables us to gerve in a polite, tactful manner. exacting. experience ] bit é;{;/a% ,IN these days of industrialism it is gratifying to know that one concern has clung to the more pleasing ways of the past. Far away from the smoke of large cities and nestling in the heart of the Berkshire Hills near pure, crystal brooks are the mills that make Cranes dinenddwn 070 CORRECT WRITING PAPEN) The writing paper that has the quaiity of the old, combined with' the smartness of the new. You will find the reflection of a bit of OLD NEW ENGLAND in every sheet you. use. Ask your merchant. If he hasn't it in stock, he can get it PIONEER STATIONERY HOUSE Wholesalers : Bemidji Minnesota e i i i ; T I Defactiva

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