Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 9, 1919, Page 6

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BUTCHER BUYS ‘GONVICK MEAT | MARKET: WILL CONDUCT SHOP Leaves Employ of Clearbrook Shop to Enter Business for Himself EDITOR SHEETS NOT ' 50 SLOW WITH\GUN Clarence Tunberg Back After for Uncle Sam (Special to Pioneer.) Clearbrook, Oct. 9.—Mr, and Mrs. €. M. Bjorquist visited with relatives and friends at Sheviin Sunday: & Our live wire assistant butcher, Olai Skime, took a trip west to our neighboring village, Gonvick, last week, and while there purchased the meat market conducted by P. 0. Pe- derson of that place. Mr. Skime will take charge of the same in the near fature, make several improvements and: give our sister village a real live modern up-to-date meat market. We yegret to see Olai leave, for a better boy never tramped our streets, but otir loss is Gonvick’s gain, and we be- gpeak success for all of them under present conditions. Editor Sheets reports that he land- ed. eight fine Mallard ducks in Pine Lake, Sunday, brought them home and had a feast. .That’s a top notch- er for this season, Sim. Clarence Tunberg 1s back after serving Uncle Sam about 214 years in the radio electrical department with a full and honorable discharge. He has seen service here, England and France. He is a son of Mr. Tunberg in Holst township, and a brother of Frank Tunberg, assistant cashier at the National bank here. While heie Clarence joined the Melvin Johnson post of the persistent boosters for the boys. Clarence appears as happy as two years ago when he bravely left the baseball “Colts” under Arnold's master hand to victory, and regretted that he was unable to give the hoys a lift this season. He is now consider- ing entering an electrical school a Milwaukee, Wis. s \Willie Willigen, the former popu-| lar secretary of the Melvin Johnson post at this place, and the founder and organizer of it, under the Ameri- can legion, departed for Rapid City, South Dakota, Tuesday evening, where he will take up vocational training under the government. Carl E. Skog has been selected by the members of the post to serve as secre- tary-during Mr. Willisen’s absence. Another large and up-to-date resi- dence in the southwest portion of the eity is fast reaching a stage of com- pletion under Victor Shelquist. It is the fine home of Mr. and Mrs. Gul- lick Holtz, the popular manager of the grocery department at the Clear- brook Mercantile company, one of the largest department and general mer- ehandise stores in this part of the state. Selmer Nilson of Greenwood town- ship, the well known traveling sales- man for the Ward’s remedies, while here Monday. became a member and booster for the Melvin Johnson post. It you are a World War veteran and have not yet joined this post, do so at once, as it will assist you material- 1y to reap the benefit of the bonus| just presénted by good old Minne. sota, to the “boys.” Besides be an at@ and comfort in many other ques- tions in the future wnich are sure to arise. i~ Henry Hanson closed a very suc- cessful moving picture entertainment here Monday evening. fter showing here Monday evening., After showing nounced this town equal to hve other towns he has showed in here of late. His house at times was filled to over- flow. His work was first class. He goes from here to Shevlin. Mr. Han- 3on may return here later, and decide to spend the winter with us, in ‘which case he will put in a moving picture show, and give one up-to-date entertainment each week. We hope that he will make it come true, as we know that our people would ap- prove and support a clean and up-to- date moving picture show, based on a once a week plan. The crisis is here, the call of the hour is for patriots, not politics. Leadership in Beltrami county under the strong clean guiding hands of County Attorney Torrance and Judge Stanton won a decided point the other day when they sentenced and scored the “rough necks” and all other men and women who want only ignore the laws of that community by dreaking them in every conceivable manner. These men proved: them- selves worthy public leaders and should have the unanimous support of all men and women who believe in good, .clean government and every- thing that pertains to it. . The fate of the much talked of U- ‘voat “Deutchland,” which arrived oft our Virginia coast in 1916, seems to be.a settled fact in that it is at pres- ent on exhibition at Yarmouth, Eng- tand: Qharles Bexell, :the proprietor of '\the City hotel sports a new Chevrolet car, which he landed Monday. It takes landlords to land in the soft seats. Socialism has by its acts in Russia proved and accomplished its own de- struction. The only lasting results it attained is that country in practice was failure in all directions, bank- rupt nation, with.rivers of blood, hor- rors indescribable and suffering, and to be an economic fallacy.. It held the reigns with both hands, had lim- itless power, but lowered the produc- tive industrial commodities to a point far below actual existence of its peo- ple. America cannot be “bolshevist. ed” after such a record unless its peo- ple become unbalanced and the ‘na- tion as a whole mentally deranged. 1 After a visit Saturday and Sunday at Bemidji with her husband, C. A. ‘Wagner and daughter, Hazel, Mrs. C. A. Wagner returned home Monday evening. Mr. Wagner is the night operator at the “Soo” depot in Be- midji. 3 tained friends from Iowa and Thief River Falls last Saturday. 1 Maurice Widness, the popular young manager. of- the (Clearbrook Milling company, is: reported very sick with typhoid fever at his home in Winson. We hope for his speedy recqvery. 1 Now don't forget to give Clear- brook a boost! - . { U. S. TRAPSHOOTERS ARE GOING TO' ANTWERP (By Unitéd Press.) New York, Oct. 9.-—Uncle Sam ‘will send a team of trapshooters to com- pete in the olympic games at Ant- Wwerp next year. , Showing made by America’s best gun men in the mid-winter trap shooting = tournamnt at ®Pinehurst, N. C, from January 19 to 24, will have much to do with the selection of the men who will fly the colors of the United States against the world. The team will be chosen from among the ‘high \average shooters. in the A. T. A. tournaments of 2,000 targets or more. It may be the ten leading shooters or a team selected from the first twenty or fifty by a competent committee. i Among the country’s star amateurs who may get to make the trip to Bel- gium are Frank. Troeh, Vancouver, Wash., Art Risser, Paris, Ill.; Wolf Henderson, Lexington, Ky.; Oscar ser, Cincinnati; M. Weeden, Cleve. land; F. E. Brint, Toledo. CHAMPION SIGNER HAS 15000 NAMES IN BOOK (By United Press.) London. (By Mail.)Reginald Bray claims to be the world’s “autograpin king,” having secured the signatures of 15,000 celebrities since 1900, quite without influence. His ‘‘bag” during the war includes President Wilson, signed at Paris: General Pershing, Marshal Foch and Field Marshal Haig, all signed on the battlefield; Admiral Beatty, signed on the Lion during the battle of Heligc- land; Admiral Jellicoe, signed on the Iron Duke: General Sir Stanley Maude, signed at Bagdad; Marshal Joffre, signed at Buckingham Palace; Vedrines, the French *“ace,”” and Madame Botchkareva, commander of the Russia Women's Battalion of Deata. Recently an Australian soldier, Corporal 8. B. Williams, walked into Buckingham Palace, asked for and actually secured autographs from King George, Queen Mary and the Prince of Wales; and this following many similar triumphs induced the “Digger’ 'to claim, the championship. But Bray says fie has him beaten. to buy the better drugs and Price is a duller matter. sideration which belongs to in us. Our prescription counter is service and accurate work, scription. Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Engen enter- f Hansen, Fremont, Neb.; Horace Bon- The Better Plac; v g/ DRUG STORE THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER Origin of “Tenderloin” The name “tenderloin”. was origle nally applied in New York city to the nineteenth ‘police precinct. The credit of naming it is attributed to Capt. Al- exander Willlams, who was placed in, command of the precinct September 80, 1876. When he took charge he was asked how he liked the change. “Great,” was the response. “I've come from a rump distriet (an east side district) to the tenderloin,” and tenderloin it has remained ever since. The newspapers of other cities soon followed the example of the New York Journals In so designating similar dis- tricts of their own cities. Positively Relieves: Constipation Constipation causes poor appe- tite, - indigestion;’ headaches, biliousness ‘and 'more serions diseases.” Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea is a sure remedy or constipation. . These won- derful herbs have .long been famous for quick and: positive results. ' By' restoring normal bowel action, yon 'will gain color, weight and youthful en- ergy. Take-tonight—tomorrow feel. right. .+ +City Drug Store. State of Ofilo, Sity of Toledo, Lucas County, #s. Frank J. Cheney¥ muakes oath that le 18 ;senlor partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and’ that sald firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each Sired Brtne use of FALL S CATaRn T Y the use of 3 ARRH MEDICINE. FRANK'J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my lgreaence. this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886, A. W. GLEASON, (Seal) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken_ ine ternally and acts- through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Send for testimonials, free. . J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all drugflus. T5c. Hall’'s Family Pills for constipation ? MY HEAD 7 one feels all out-of-sorts —perhaps 2 coated tongue—it is the si| that poisons \ N are accumu- _lating in the system, and should be cleaned out G at on Auto-intoxication can be best ascribed to our own neglect or carelessness. When the organs fail in the discharge of their duties, the putrefactive germs set in and generate toxins—actual poisons, which f£ill one’s own body. Sleepiness after meals, flushing of the face, extreme lassitude, bil- iousness, dizziness, sick headache, acidity of the stomach, heartburn, offensive breath, anemia, loss of weight and muscular power, de- crease of vitality or lowering of resistance to infectious diseases, disturbance of the eye, dyspepsia, indigestion, gastritis, many forms of catarrh, asthma, ear affections and allied ailments result from auto-intoxication orself-poisoning. Take castor cil, or procure at the drug store, a pleasant vege- table laxative, called Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pcllets, composed of May-apple, uloes and jalap, r toilet articles is always the place which endeavors to please in treatment and quality. Yet price is important enough for us to give it the con- our patrons and their belief always on the job f;)r quick and we fill any doctor’s pre- PHONE 304 CORNER THE GREAT UNREST it is aggrevated and increased when you feel that your life is. at ’the ) mercy of circumstances. The surest means of settling it is by carrying plenty of : INSURANCE When your life is covered by a liberal policy, you feel as secure as a man can feel in this world of chance. Don’t put it off a DAY longer. L2k Come and let me show you some most attractive policies in one of the best companies. : = phone 167 DWIGHT D. MILLER ' Seourity Bank Bullding the national Jjoy smoke* makes a whale of a cigarette! Copyright 1919 by R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Awaitind your find toppy red tins, handsome aay-so, e half pound tin humic and—that classy, practical pound crystal glase humidor with sponge moistener top that keeps Prince Albert in such perfect condition | OU certainly get yours when you lay your smokecards on the table, chll for a tidy red tin or a toppy fed bag of Prince Albert and roll a makin’s cigarette! You’'ll want to hire a statistical bureau to keep count of your smokestunts! Why, you never dreamed of the sport that lies awaiting your call in a home rolled cigarette when it’s P. A. for the packing! " Talk about flavor! Man, man, you haven't got the listen of half your smokecareer until you know what rolling ’em with P. A. can do for your contentment! And, back of P. A’s flavor, and rare fragrance—proofs of Princée 'Albert’s quality—stands our exclusive patented process that cuts out bite and parch! With P. A. your smokesong in a makin’s ciga- rette will outlast any phonograph record you ever heard! Prince Albert 'is a cinch to roll. - It's crimp cut and stays put like a regular pall” Prince Albert upsets any notion you ever had as to how delightful a jimmy pipe can be! Tt is the tobacco that has made three men smt?ke ; pipes where one was smoked before. It has won men all over the nation to the joys of smoking. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C. BURNING Fie ARG SLIRARETTE TORACCO ) CHEVROLET- For Economical Transportation The Chevrolet “Four-Ninety”’ Touring car not only meets completely the great national need for depend- able and economical transportation, but places the means within the reach of the average income. Its first cost is modest. Its upkeep is never a burden. To travel twenty-five miles on a gallon of gasoline is a common performance for this model. To inspect this car is to appre- - i ciate how and why it is a practical time and money-saver that pays for itself in a short time. We have just received a carload of these dandy cars and have them on display. Come in and look them over, we are sure you will like them. 7712 Mdtor Inn 212 Beltram: Ave. Telephone 78 ’ r [ | AN | . Defective i 1

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