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TOENPR FRIDAY, NOVEMRER 14, 1919 THE BEMIRM DAILY PIONRER NEWSPAPERS DON'T TELL ALL (For lllfflill, As a Matter of Fact, Worid Must Not Be Jydged by What One May - 1 8ee in Print. E Through all civilized countries folks spend a lot of their time. just read- Ang the .papers. And it.is all right, ‘too. - Bverybody reads the papers. But one must be careful to keep wone’s equilibrium at the same time. We must not make the mistake of sup- posins -hat there is nothing else going on i ihe’world except that which the papers print. The papers publish only the news that s startling or sensational. Nat- arally, that’s all they publish. What- ever is unusyal, out of the ordinary, something that astonishes one—these things are what the papers print. If you were to go Into a newspa- per office with an item, say, about a man who had reared his family care- fully, sent them to school’ and had paié the mortgage off his home, the editor wouldn’t put that piece in the paper because there is nothing unusual about it. But if the item were about & man who refused to work to support his family, and who beat his wife over the head with a club, and who chased them all out in the middle of the night in the rain, then the editor would say it was “news.” So, you see, it is mostly the trdu- bles of the world, its seamy side, its crime and suffering and squalor that get Into the papers. Yet, there is the world's other side, thank God—its bright side, its love and gladness and charity and the help that one man gives another. ; Read the papers, of course. But, when you read them do not get the idea Into your head that the world 1s plunging headlong to perdition, be- cause such is not the case—Utica Globe. 'WINGS FOR MRS. VANDERBILT Soldler Admired Spirit of His Enter. tainer, but Couldn't Quite Credit the Rest. Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt tells this story on herrelf: Ske was doing canteen work in France during the recent misunder- standing in that vicinity, and devoted considerable time to entertaining American soldiers in one of the hostess houses. Being an excellent dancer and attractive, she was in much de- mand among the boys. One evening she danced several times with a tall tow-haired doughboy who showed symptoms of great loneliness and talked volubly about things in Michi- gan. When the evening was ended, the tow-haired one came over to Mrs. ‘Vanderbilt. “I've had a bully time” he sald, “gand I want to keep track of you. ‘We're moving out of here tomorrow, for the front. But if we get back. I'd 1ike to look you up over in the States. My name ig Albert Bridgeman, from Grand Raplds. What’s yours?” “I'm Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt,” she re- plied. 4 The doughboy scanned her from thead to foot. “That’s right, “fly high!” chicken,” he sald, Treasure-Trove. Tobermory Bay is becoming serl- -ously interesting. The salving opera- tions In connection with the Spanish ‘galleon, supposedly the Florencia, ‘which for three and a half centuries has lain a wreck off the coast of the Isle of Mull, are being brought to the surface—among them a beautifully chased silver plate and the orna- mented handle of a silver flagon. In- ‘terest in the operations has brought ~ crowds to this part of the Scottish coast and neither bed-nor board is to ‘be obtained by late comers. The div- .ers have not performed their work without some sign of protest from sea dwellers. One of them disturbed re- «<ently a huge conger measuring some - 15 feet. The annoyance of the animal ‘was unmistakable. Treasure-trove 18 undoubtedly now within grasp, but difficulty is experienced in bringing the finds whole and uninjured to the -surface. X The Flying Era. Mail-carrying airplanes are already -an old story, writes A. Russell Bond, .1n “Inventions of the Great War.” In Europe the big bombing machines are ‘being used for passenger service be- tween cities. There is an air line ‘between Paris and London. The air- planes carry from a dozen to as many -as 50 passengers on a single trip. In some cities here, as well as abroad, the police are being trained to fly, so that they can police the heavens when the public takes to wings. Evidently, the flying era is here. Thing of the Past. wAn old gentleman from the coun- try visited Washington the other day and set the capital in an uproar. In fact, he was hailed #s one of the na- tion’s leading humorists.” “What did he do or say to make such an impression?” “He said he’d ‘come to Washington, by heck, to see a specimen of that there senatorial dignity.’ ”—Birming- ham Age-Herald, Merely Thinking. “Yes,” said Mr. Brown, “my wife and | 1 are thinking of chartering a yacht for | the year.” . “But won't that be pretty expen- sive?™ asked Mr. Hughes. “Not so long as we confine ourselves © = e gia, Nowritis, Lumbago, Rheymatism Begy’s Mmh:o in Yellow Box Worth Its Weight Jn Gold If you only knew the quick and blessed relief Begy’'s Mustarine gives to sufferers from swollen, painful, gnawing, aching, rheumatic joints and muscles, you would get a box this very day. Begy’s Mustarine is the good old- fashioned mustard plaster brought up to date with other ingredients added and all the blistering qualities taken out. _ It surely does stop neuralgia, neu- ritis, lumbago and rheumatism quick- er than anything else on earth. Thousands 6f people who want quick action, use it when they are G. F. All-Steel Office Equipment anxious to have chest colds, sore throat, tonsilitis, pleurisy-and .deep- seated. coughs disappear over night. Keep it in the house for many emergencies and especially influenza, | for during the last epidemic Begy’s Mustarine did such valiant service that the retailers could not supply the demand. Heat eases pain, and Begy’s Mus- tarine contains twice as much con- centrated non-blistering heat as any other preparation on the market. It cannot blister, remember that, and be sure to get Begy’s Mustarine ‘in the yellow box. i S. C. Wells & Co., LeRoy, N. Y. STOPS PAIN USTARIN <aNNOT BUSTER Not a Bite of Breakfast Until You Drink Water Says a glass of hot water and phosphate prevents iliness and keeps us fit. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind incombustible ashes, so the food and drink taken day after day leavgs in the alimentary canal indi- gestible material, which if not com- pletely eliminated from the system each day, becomes food for the mil- lions of bacteria which infest the bowels. From this mass of left-over waste, toxins and ptomaine-like pois- g{m ;re formed and sucked into the ood. Men and women who can't get feeling right must begin to take in- THE PIONEER WANT ADS|side baths. Before breakfast each BRING RESULTS YOUR RECORDS ~ Safe-Guard The “VITAL SASTISTIGS” of Your Business morning drink a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phos- phate in it to wash out of the bowels the previous day’s poisons and toxins, and to keep the entire alimentary canal clean, pure and fresh. Those who are subject to sick REGULATES SPEED. An attachment invented in Eu- rope enables a person in any seat in an automobile to regulate its speed without the knowledge of the driver. RAGS Bring us your clean oot~ ton rags--no buttons, bands or woolen cloth acoepted. Pioneer Office headache, colds, billiousness, consti- pation, others who wake up with bad taste, foul breath, backache, rheu- matic stiffness, or have a sour, gassy stomach after meals, are urged to get' a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the-drug store, and begin practicing internal sapitation. This will cost very little, but is suf- ficient to make anyone an enthusiast on the subject. { GETTEHIGHEST PRICE e 08 YO UR e Sold Only in This Section by = WHAT ARE THEY WORTH TO YOU? Your Own Records Should be Your Guide in Purchasing ALL-STEEL FILING EQUIPMENT Pioneer Stationery House BEMIDJI, MINN. Phone 922 When we sell an overcoat or suit, or anything else, the supposition is that it's a good thing for us. May- customer. Let us show you the right be it is and maybe it isn’t. Depends on how good it is for our why we’re so particular about what we sell That’s Fine Overcoat Values You certainly hope to get good value -when you buy your overcoat; you’ll have to pay a pretty good price for it. It ought to be worth something to you to have a “line” on just what you're getting. Hart Schaffner & Marx tell you very plainly what they put into their goods—all-wool fabrics, thorough tailoring. Do you know of any other clothes that’s true of? There may be oth- overcoat for you now; we have it The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes ers, but nobody seems to be saying so. i $30 $40 $50 $60