Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 12, 1919, Page 4

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Rowbs mAssabLE| FE 2 g BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER WVERY APTEANOON BEXOEPFT SUNDAT: in the prevention of many dis- G. E. CARSON, E. H DENb, ///7/[/,% )] eases, thatk the act}on of the: Pres. and Treas. Sec. and Mgr. 3 Respected Cotinty Citizen /@ \»'/ ( bowels be kent regular, i under at of Congress of March 3, u-n.: , £ m 2 ‘ / //// - & / / FIGSEN Entered at the postoffice at Bemidji,: Minn.,, as second-class matter (Spek Clearbrook,. Nov.',712. — Hunting season will ‘soon’ be here and the The Friendly Laxative, regu- lates the bowels gentlyrand ef- fectively. It may keep'you out of the sickbed. No trouble to take it—it's a. lozenge. In tins only—3 sizes. CITY DRUG STORE Laliberte & Erickson No attention paia to annonymous contributions. Writer's name must be known to the editor, but not necessarily for publication. Communications for the Weekly Pioneer must reach this office not later than Tuesday of each week to insure publication in the current issua -hunting season in e If you are one to carry a rifle, BY MAIL 188 Six months .. TER WEARELY FIONEER o A, e e S palk o4 ang adimecs, o5, T Sivance, 150 | Edwin Pevey departed Monday| “Do you resent mewly rich peo- | morning for Fergus Falls, thi's state, ple?” : where he will serve as a petit juror “Not a bit,” said Miss Cayenne, at the federal court in session at 3 that place. Arnold Jensen is manag-| “unless they have made their money moonshining or bootlegging.” ing the lumber yard here during his Subscribe zor Tne Daily Ploneer. absence. . oy Ei}" Al The big blizzard here Monday 4 PUSH Y RS B ONG. | evening pretty much tied up business Some people sit. through life waiting for others to push in gelx:lmfl and ms;qe a:l ;oads :Xl‘-l " i gk ' passable for some time to come. them along. ;fi trains were hours behind regular DR. H. A. HAsS ] ! If they are shoved aside in the scramble they are peeved. § : Their talents have not been properly recognized. If they are forgotten in the “hurly-burly they become a grouch. The world is topsy-turvy.5- . And so they drift along from 'one year to another, peev- ing, growling, grouching through life to. the doleful tune of - their own shiftless incompetency. =, . b ; 1t’s a mistake—the ‘wrong pefipective of existence. | . Life is too short to worry aboutithe fellow who lags behind. | ot . The man who won’t push Jnuyst-expect to be shoved. - g Pushing is a great game. It;gets you somewhere. The | . harder you push the farther you.:go, and if you push hard : enough and often enough and long enough y6u can reasonably time. Tuesday morning the ther- DENTIST mometer registered zero with beau-|- . tiful sun dogs shining on the eastern Office. Over Boardman’s Drug horizon. 4 Store. Phone 447 Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Peterson of Berthold, N. D., are here visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Anderson of Eddy township. Mrs. Peterson is a daugh- ter of the latter. N 'the judgment of those who know, we are equipped by our experience to serve correctly in our professional capac- ity. People are im-. pressed by the dig- _nified quality = of our assistance. Mrs:{BRaymond Robins, président of the National Women’s 'Trade Union league, is making preparations for the veception of delegates representing women workers of ten foreign coun- —EAT— Charles Hulquist, one of Clear- water county’s well known and high- ly respected pioneers, passed away at his home in town of Sinclair Mon- day morning after a few, days ill- E! Third Straet Cae | z expect to push yourself to the top.. . - i tries on thelr. way to partiipate in the e s ven ' witd and Bochciil’ geell: p“:llxfinggl‘],ung ‘man. E d . e gmlonnl Oonx?m °t Working dren to r(;mum thef lu:s of er }l:ind hus- ush with a will and a pu and with a definite goal C R o band andloving father. e.entire : Py P g —_— e |community extends its sympathy to Our Walters ' in view. Set your aims so high th#t it makes you dizzy even to dream of them—and rememberi#that only pushing will get you there. 3 i 4 i You may not reach the pinnnge of your desires, but you . will climb to heights which will stagap you a man of men. ‘ ' The pusher is a man of partss?. . E The laggard is but part of a nthn. the hard stricken.family. Weekly News” will compléte the pro- gram,: ' Bl ey Clex:‘rbroo’lg wng gaily Abedecked B with flags November ‘ 11, ‘Armistice TOM MOORE. Day, in honor:of “Der Kaiser’s” falll. ‘Another remarkable Tom Moore|from grace, with several of our busi- picture! “The Gay Lord Quex” is the [ ness' houses closed, as, fi s it was gayest thing you've seen. in many|possible to '¢comply" with the same, NG —s . It iwll yputfiyou in the, right ,imd pro;ect the 'interes ’l?}fl thlsI %ub-. e BUYI ‘AT HOME S YEA] g ’ from the first screen-flash.{lic at the same. time, e Melvin Bl i THl i o5 £ » Coming. Saturday and ‘Sunday'to the |Johnson post of the American Legion Many good citizens 'have appyoved the plan of keeping ‘Grand- theatre.. -, . .. ¢ gave a griand!: ball in the evening, prosperity at home by trading with the local merchants. pfiifi which was 4 hughe success 1n the face Do the Waifing v The Biggest Attraction of 1919 The One You Can’t Afford to Miss! IR, - "Many thousands of dollars are spent annually in Christ- of the heavy fnow siorm. % . mas shopping in this community, End' all indications point to It Should H e e c hea‘viér b‘lixyixllg t}}llis year thand e;_v rtb§f0§e. ey K-L News, October 15 Issuc.) KIDNEYS NEVER ummg | ; lur dealers have prepared for it by*laying in stocks ‘cal-| September 11 is special to me— NCL 4 e deis 2 . - culated to please any fancy, and we are assured by them that|And has a very good, reasont to_be. CAUSE BACKACHE To ‘N 3 : , these goods will be priced down to the very limit of egonomy, [ '3 nenty-four years ago toda Rub- Pag i 3 ; o) £ From week to week the advertising' pages of .thi§ paper] ; " ESCTERERNNE b L& * will-contain the choicest offerings pf our live mérchants. 0 7 - BEMIDJI - A caret!'ul ;iam]iing of th; ads e chhweek ill give the pur- 2 - =z FREE QR B e - 2op m— ..chaser a valuable line on’ what and where t6°biiy, and will be| .2V y Pl T T Tl R " one of the most valuable aids of all in the Christmas shopping.| | =T oq iy, o the Jast. wit o Thf;d::fi Loamme ) hackachel . Nof . na s Starting Nnve r t This is our town. ;2 -~ |In the old Washburn shop I went|not cause paig.: Listen! Your back- IIIIG RR ow m It is what we have made it in i&,e past, and it will be what to the ‘top, g ache is causef'’by Lumbago, sciatica e A o e o e o * I kept r:g;’f - ‘going—I couldn’t be orjahs&rqin;‘,&fii the quicksest n:.llief gs stopped. . . soothing, enetrating “St. acobs : :1- = 2 For four bits a day was real small | Liniment.” ?R.nb.it right.on the ache Matlnee Dally 2 30 Evenlngs 7 and 9 or tender spot, and instantly the : pay . . . To run the old slasher ten hours|pain, soreness; stiffness and lameness More Spectacular Than ‘Birth of a Nation’ . a day. s disappears. . Don’t - stay crippled! : : B But I put it across and iwas made|Get a small trial bottle of “St. . e ” we make it in the future. RS The wise bird feathers its«orsem nest. Having saved Europe from. m f, Ainerica will again come T—‘* > to the front and.save it from stq‘yation. They always come to the fellow who has and is willipg to give. the boss. I Jacobs Liniment” from your druggist s R T . Then I felt big and swelled in the|and limber‘up; A moment after it f THE GREATEST . The wise man greets his friend with a smile. The fool crop is applied you'll wonder what became i gives him a grunt. And tried to runold {E ? lout|of the backache, sciatica or-lumbago \PHOTOPU\Y ON EARTH e ik 6)! lféhe shop.n e h.'a i pain. '“St{; JacobsnLini}:nentl" stops c = - p . : X i . R. as we e had real|any pain at once. is harmless an b s v ; Laugh, and the world laugh§ with you. Weep, and it old —IL dosen’t. burn or Wiscolor the akin. Then I went to Cass Lake, Saw the Indians and squaws, It’s the only application to rub on s . s Indians and squs . x]; wiak, lame or painful back, or for Tomorrow is the 1 ere into M. 8. I stuck in my claws. | lumbago, sciatica, neuralgia, rheu- e lucky day of some people. It never comes. "Twas then I resigned - . | matism, sprains or a strain, - - - e ——— | For quit a long time. L | ommm———————— IT. IS DANGEROUS. < |1 traveled and worked in.many the ] kicks you out. ; That it 'is a ‘dangerous thing to|Had by d jobs and mad Wosrn: Neod, Swmay: H . A ad some good Jobs a made. some NEWS OF THE look with longng eyes on other men’s|’ . mis’ffik'vell;"J ek xel .~ | . 'Thousands of women have kidney wives. is the moral brought. out .ii{. -Till six years ago from the Canada}and bladder trouble and never sus- THEATER S Thomas H. Ince’s latest Paramount| mines - 4 pect it.'’ it 5 plc_t\fire Other Men'.s Wives,” in| -1 came to Bemidji during hard| Women’s complaints often prove whi¢h Dorothy Dalton is starred with|: * times. ; to be nothing else but kidney trou- 4 a remarkably strong cast supporting | For old E. E. I had come to see. ble, or the result of kidney or blad- TALMADGE—REX TONIGHT. s The first thing he did, . der disease. - S e e 3 03 | © “The Way of a Woman,” Norman|. The story concerns a young girf|At Work he put me. If the kidneya are not in a healthy _~The- production has TREEpE Talmadge’s latest Select picture, in L:eg'els);e?‘;es'cgi:?“msmces who t’;s Azai; a:lte the bat, a home f'“‘ -I| condition, they. lzlcme the other been the town talk tch - i s igning man as a cat’s . T . t L, 5 gfi’,‘,’;‘,‘,j{’“’ bl re;fi?:;d ‘3’&;’ Oiedl;l;’tl;{d paw to scratch the domestic felicity |/AB3in o'er the top, ‘leadache, loss eP: erywhere "mu'"‘ with : of another man’s wife. He who|, 1his time I stayed. ervousniess; are often ess_comments ‘ punc- from Eugene Walter’s famous stage Now my letters is long and silly I|times symptoms: of kidney trouble. Bl tuated by all the com- disddins the sanctity of the home, play, “Nancy Lee,” is being shown at|; s i ki g i A jecti ; b in. love with a married Woman Lng now, Don’t delay _starting treatment. ) mendatory adjectives tl'leItRiesx'a“:?:]euznfe :n;}tl)%x}:é Southern |18 a0 apostle of the creed that all But one more t}.npg Tve to say be-[Dr. !gxlmer_’s i mp-Root, & phy- : in the Englih girl, of aristocratic family, who|i8 f8ir in love. The husband is above| . ., . foré Igo:' L f CISICIAN & PresuEy K ’ —— warries a dissolute New Yorker for|TPréach and the only. hope or di- i T to sell. . In U.'S.)A! and Canadu as well: needed to, ave : Hia " Gét a meédium or large B Y vorce grounds is to catch him in is money. When she comes to New somé compromising position. York, she is enmeshed in a series of t;ialsfi ’ml ? tribulatiors - b‘"h of Whi‘ill‘ A T"e yound girl, played by Dorothy But the .bgst place to work is 19?_ immediatel; l!;nm any ug | t;)r'st.est she finally emerges to her well- Daltpn, is used for this purpose. I 4 i i ' éarned happiness. It is Norma Tal- the”dr’amatic dgvel.opme]:ltrp;:: turn: i EMPLOYFE' 4 thxsfigég lfiig‘:eygyan ey madge at her best—surrounded by|out her character-is too, strong and an exceptionally high class cast in a|she ;u oses the intrigue. The crisis story that grips the beholder every onizes her own life and wins minute. ; There will also be shown a “Heroic Ambrosie” comedy, and “Mutt and ? m er'ammnted sketches by Bud E;& ‘picture will be shown at the —_— / PUTJ éHEAM, IN NOSE [ Lk a5 Sl er & Co., Binghamton, [t BF Kiter'& Co"Binghamton, - IN EIGHT PARTS RTE wones SLAN I BRTTLE |, & ] bl , RIS |midji_Pioneer. —_ American fiod Cross Workers Tell + o Harrowing. Story of Bolshe. ' vik War, # : Jan"‘el,.gy!ey, Pen Hendfi;:ks, ‘ theatre tonight and Thursday,| Paris—American Red Cross reli " AND STOP CATARRH matihee and evexfing, A “l‘;ig ‘{;’;» men just returned here from Budapest g e same pro- | tell & harrowing stofy of the extremes | Tells How To ‘gsn Nos: . to which the civil population were re- trils and n-u-i";u.. '+ “BIRTH OF A RACE”—REX. ’ twb-part comedy is on the George LaGuerre, Anna Lehr : John W. Noble, the director of |gram. [ “The Birth of a Race,” the big pro- i duced .when the: bolshévik and Rou-i And a supporting cast of. ove 0 i duction coming to the Rex theatre, manian armies struggled for the mas-i| _ You feel fine in a few moments, . Fupp g : vever 1’ 000 m proved himself a master of detail i GRAND—TONIGHT. stapl /| Your cold in liead or catarrh will be 2 at ; : i staging the great historical uc]enle:_ ANhat Every Woman Wants” is m°fi:flg%;m3m .. Your, _elogzoedunmtrils will, the most massive production of the year: for the picture. Weeks of research thfi"'gllunng and curiosity provoking |” As the teoo g gl i S sl paningae | work preceded the staging of the epi-|titlelof the Jesse D. Hampton pro- As the troops swept ‘on, leaving be- | e ALY g iz sodes. ductipn_starring Miss Py ! Beo-|hind them cavalry and artillery horses killed in action, nien and. women from | the Budapest suburbs, made desperate: by privation, descended upon the “The players fo_r the leading roles|mond, which is the program at the Xei:e selficétegnew;t:lm t:nu;ual cnn; Grand theatre tonight and Thursday. ong whose worl . : : - g e Dol Ao Demon), scorar "t Moy | ot met sty ot a2 SV, S : i play are beau nna ¥ 400 A Jsmall bottle. of - Ely’s Cream: - ] i 3 ar, d # : ¥ PR " X Anita : Cortez who . .plays whait every woman wants, but it took . _and ‘cle Denetrate ‘thrétigh ev ir passage Y inee | 0. (13 ; Bl e R e ) oo o e | ot o s Seats 25¢—Evenings at 7 and 9; Children ; e of all, orseher, a |t i . » o .inflamed. mucons membrane % TR ; 8 famous artist’s model, who Eve, ery woman needs” to make s relief comes: ; 9 2 . —tax ii [ded. tety \ Tt woman . Smeciss oo e: her Bappy are some times distinetly preen g ny -~ o g 0 ~25¢, Adults 50c included. - E ent. Matinee daily. 2:30. “ rer nedds: s e W ahoEly are I / N 8 and 9 o'clock. ing, muflihai,u‘l.fihom“dimhnrgu or AU(MENTED ORCHESTRA dryness; nq' ling for breath at|= X Lo o' struggl _‘-\—— B lllIlllllllllllll“lllll!l_lll‘IlIllllllllll[llllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll T Tyt T T T T T T T SRt NFLl An ] | | . Defective

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