Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 25, 1915, Page 7

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RIDAY, JUNE 25, 1915. NO ALUM IN ROYAL BAKING POWDER &i{*i*i**li**{#&i:***ii#**i**fi‘k**%‘l x JELLE *lx HORNET * AKX KKK XK KKK KK KKK KE AX KK KU KRR AR KKK XE K Deputy Surveyor E. H. Harding land his assistant, Clayton Collard, after taking the level of the country for drainage purposes, left for their homes in Bemidji Thursday night. | Robert C. Shaw went to Bemidji Julius Jelle made a trip to Good- ridge Thursday. Henry Rane and Nathalia Rane re-| turned from McIntosh Friday. 0. Gothe caught nine small wolf clubs last week. Mrs. Frank Olson and daughter Friday. called on Mrs. Krogen Sunday. | Among those who attended the A dance was held at Ben Tanem's | Farmers’ telephone meeting in Black- place last Saturday evening. jduck were C. Petterson, Herman Edw. Enerson returned from Thief Thom and family, Henry Plummer, River Falls Monday. ! John Thullen, John Rasmussen, Paul Peltier, James Angell, George, J. E. !and J. D. Bogart. Let a want ad help you. Pioneer wants—one-half cent # word cash. We Handle Fine Chickens For people who do not keep their own chickens the surest way of being certain of what kind they are buying is to come here. A chicken dinner is worth while if the chicken is tender and wholesome. The best in meats, too, at the lowest prices. Ask your friends about us. Treppmans Bepaflmem Store HUGH A, WHITNEY Furniture —and—— Undertaking I am now prepared to take care of your needs in the undertaking line Lo.0.F 223 F. Bldg. PHONES: Res. 719-W, ALY \I‘“ BEMIDJ! A4 Ice cream is the ideal food for hot weather. So easy to digdest that it requires hardly any of your energy. Cooling to your stomach. Delightful to your taste, High in food value. It should not be treated as a delicacy, but as a foLd. Eat it for your lunch today. - Give it to the children this afternoon. Have it for dinner this evening. Eat more of it after the movies. Too much is not enough. Because you can’t gdet too much. - Koors Ice Cream is now a product to be proud of. The purest, most wholesome, cheapest food you can buy. |GOST OF OUR HIGHWAYS. THRE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER INFORMATION ON MILEAGE Facts Being Coilected by the Depariment of Agriculiure. Results of the Canvass Will Serve as a Basis For Estimating the Relative Values of the Different Kinds of Highways Throughout the Country. The United States department of ag- riculture is now gathering information which, when complete, should not only give the total mileage of public roads in the United States and their cost, but should serve as a basis for esti- mating the relative value of the differ- ent kinds of highways. .Some 15,000 sets. of inquiry blanks have already been distributed through the state nighway commissions, and some of thiese are now beginning to come back to the department. Each set consists of four cards. Of these the first asks for informa- tion on the mileage of different classes of roads in the county to which it is sent. The mileage does not include. of course, streets in cities and towns. The roads are divided into ten classes as follow Brick paved, concrete, macadam, with the addition of some substance such as asphalt, oil or tar; plain dam. g ¢l, shell, other hard surfaced voads, sand and clay mixture properly graded and drained, ordil earth roads properly con- strueted and, tinally ummplm ed roads. cond e nformation el to the tax r the roads of work and money ex is mn(ewcd mth xd the indebtedness of the coui or their road systems. As there are approximately 3.000 counties in the United States. in many rich the mileage bas never even | 1ted, it is hardly probable preliminary survey will be The department, however, wilt ble to detect any excessively inac- wert, for the road mileage per ory does not vary cept in desert or un- count less than half « road to every sqguare bond E: developed mile of public mile of territory is rare, while in the populated rural sections 1t is no more than two and three miles. Thus in e for the en- most the 1 one-half or France there tire cou G to a square wmile. In Italy. . this has fallen to 0.86G, possibly on account of the moun- tainous vl uu of much of the pen- | insula and ot approsi- | iew ot the sparse- An ex- to be found in Iy settled seemns planation. howew the fact that in many states the law provides that eac tion line shall be 2 public road. Thus, tor example, there are in the state of lowa alone more than 104000 miles of legal highways, wanifestly a much larger mileage than is required hy traffic. When the information in regard to the existing roads which the depart- ment is now seeking is complete it is | the intention to continue the inquiry vear after r in order to ascertain the des - oand onomy various The ¢ usetul =S - CONCRETE ROADS DURABLE. ! Wayne County, Mich,, Replaces Macad- | am Roads With Cement. Cost of maintaining all the highways | Mich., outside of the | was reduced to $23.- ving of | . accord- port of the m Wayne coun of Detre m,, to l].\e eig board of county commissioners. This reduction is credited to the replace- ment of certain macadam roads with cement concrete pavement. Ample justitication for the adoption of the concrete road as the standard type nl construction is feund by the con; sioners in the fact that there | m'c ov hlc m\d in of a mt aid without a five foot secticn havin and replaced since the n taken up | ounty has been this type of | It is comparatively low in first it is free from d it furnishes good traction for all types of vehicles; it is not slippery: |t is durable; it does not require re yearly mainte- nance cha: it is usable 365 days in the year irrespective ¢f weather. As a result of the success of the Wayne county roads the city of Detroit built or let contracts for 139.107 square yards of concrete streets previous to 1913 and laid eight si that year ageregating yards. A} building and developing road. 302 square h.: Oakland county. adjoining V e, and Windsor and Walkerviile. Ont 0. have all built or contracted for a considerable yard- age of concrete streets and roads. It is estimated that $25.000.600 worth of the type of construction will he built this year in this country and Canada. ‘A want ad will sell it for you. CAN’T you stand ‘““salts”’? Do or- dinary cathartics soon lose their effect? Have to constantly increase the dose to produce the desired re- sults, Then, you are just the kind of person to whom we recommend Webster's Sodetts the little slip-and-go-down” wafers. We know the Sodett formula - and have every confidence in it. Each little wafer contains a scientifically measured dose_of an ideal combination salt. No gas. Tasteless. Handy. 25c package can be kept in vest pocket or hand bag. CityDrugStore E. N. French & Co. Englich’ as She |s Spoke. The protessor who in his address on the correct pronunciation of English said he preferred “of'n” to *‘often” is | on the winning side. No “pronouncing dictionary" with a reputation to lose ever sounds the “t" in the middle of such words as Christmas, mistletoe. ostler, often or chestnut. Good actors, whose duty it is to speak “trippingly on the tongue.” can cite authority to support their pronunciation of han’ker- chief and We'n'sday. And no one who knows his way about in the elocution- ary field pays any regard to the spell- ing of suck words as “extraordinary.” —TLondon Chronicle. A German vacuum ice machine for household use does away with the use of dangerous acids and can be oper- ated by hand or a small electric i motor. Machine Shop Opened We have opened a new machine shop and garage, corner 8th Street and Irvine Avenue. We do everything in machinery repairing, auto repairing, engine repairs of every description. We turn down nothing that needs repairing. Prices Try us. Goles & Sundwall Carter’s Garage cor.v 8th and Irvine reasonable. You’re Safe With A Standard Rotary Safe from the usual an- noyance and back break- ing ordeals $0 common with the or- dinary sew- ing mach- ines. Thirty years of ex- perience has brought out the new. SITSTRAICHT model that spells real comfort. The lock and chain. stitch at- tachment gives you two ma- chines for the price ‘of one. Cuaranteed for Life That’s what the makers think of this wonderful machine. They guarantee it for a full life time. Should sell for $70 Special at our store on Easy $50 00 terms only....... 1 $2 down and $1 a week. Beltrami Music Co, | 114 Third St. Bemidji insure your live stock against death from any cause.. Dwight D. Miller - Bemidji, Minn. Tel. 360 P. O Box 222 FIED HOW TO ANSWER BLIND ADS. All ads signed with numbers, or initials, care Pioneer must be an- swered by letter addressed to the number given in the ad. Pioneer em- ployes are not permitted to tell who any advertiser is. Mail or send your answer to Pioneer No. , or Initial , and we forward it to the ad- vertiser. HELP WANTED. WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. No washing. Mrs. R. H. Schumaker, 608 Bemidji Ave. WANTED—Ezxperienced girl for gen- eral housework. Mrs. P. J. Rus- sell. FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Suite of three office rooms for rent over First National Bank. FOR RENT—One large modern room. Mrs. T. J. Welsh, 1121 Bemidji Ave. FOR RENT—Two office rooms. Ap- ply W. G. Schroeder. FOR SALE. FOR SALE—At new wood yard, wood all lengths delivered at your door. Leave all orders at Ander- son’s Employment Office, 205 Min- nesota Ave. Phone 147. Lizzie Miller, Prop. b FOR SALE—Several good residence lots on Minnesota, Bemidji and Dewey avenues. Reasonable prices; easy terms. Clayton C. Cross. Of- fice over Northern Nat’l Bank. FOR SALE—16-inch jackpine. Phone 3601, call 8. ~ WANTED. WANTED—Second hand housekold goods. M. E. Ibertson. FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—S80 acres, as fine land as there is in the county, one mile west of Wilton; will sell cheap for cash, or half on time, if taken at once. Albert Martin, Wilton, Minn. FOR SALE—120 acres farm land, about 500 cords wood, half hay land on good stream, one mile from a town, terms liberal, price $20.00 per acre. W. G. Schroeder. roadster, Ford preferred. Write Box 477, Bemidji, Minn. MISCELLANEOUs ADVERTISERS—The great siate of North Dakota offers unlimited op- portunities for business to classi- fled advertisers. The recognized advertising medium in the Fargo Daily and Sunday Courier-News the omnly seven-day paper in the state and the paper which carries the largest amount of classified advertising. The Courier-News | covers North Dakota like a blank- et; reaching all parts of the state; the day of publication; it is the| paper to use In order to get re- sult®s; rates one cent per word first insertion, ome-half cent per word succeeding insertions; fifty cents per line per month. Address the| | Courier-News, Fargo, N. D. | DRESSMAKING—At 317 Minnesota Ave. Room No. 1. i Early Closing Scheme. | She—Papa says that when coming to | see me you must not come in a street car any more. IHe—Realiy! Does he expect me to walk all this distance? She—Of course not. He says all he asks is that you will come in a car- riage hired by the hour.—New York Wgekly. Engineering Triumph. “Why are you studying that dachs- hund so intently ?” “I consider him an architectural tri- umph of Mother Nature’s,” explained the bridge builder. “See how nicely the stress is calculated to the span.”— Judge. Our past lives build the present, which must mold the lives to be.—Sir Edwin Arnold. Pioneer want ads—one-nalf cent word cash. BROWN & LANE CONTRAGTORS Well Digging, House Moving and Cement Work of All Kinds va[:L TRADE farm land for good 1 VETERINARY SURGEON W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. -VETERINARIAN Phone 164-2 Pogue’s Livery DRAY LINE AAAANAAAAAAA TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Safe and Piano Moving Res. Phone 58 818 America Ave. Office. Phone 12. _ DENTISTS. DR. D. L. STANTON, DENTIST Office in Winter Block DR. J. T. TUOMY, DENTIST Gibbons Block Tel. 230 North of Markham Hotel LAWYERS GRAHAM M. TORRANCE, LAWYER Miles Block Phone 566 D. H. FISK, Court Commissioner ATTORNEY AT LAW Office second floor O’Leary-Bowser Building. PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS DR. ROWLAND GILMORE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office—Miles Block DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 DE. C. R. SANBORN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Over First Nationai Bank Bemidji, Minn. DR. E. H. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security Bank Block DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. DR. G. HOEY GRADUATE VETERINARIAN Call Pogue’s Livery—164 HILMA M. NYGREN GRADUATE NURSE TR KKK KKK KKK KR * RAILROAD TIME CARDS * HRK R KEKKK K KK KKK KK MPLS,, RED LAKE & MAN. 2 North Bound Arrives...... 9:46 am 1 North Bound Le: . 1:30 pm SO0 RAIL 162 Yast Bound Leaves 163 West Bound Leave: 186 East Bound Leaves. 187 West Bound Leaves. 9 GREAT NOBT“BN 33 West Bound Leaves. . 34 Bast Bound Leaves. 35 West Bound Leaves. 36 East Bound Leaves 105 North Bound Arrive 106 South Bound Leaves Freight West Leave: MINNESOTA & IHTRRRAT R 'J.':romu. 32 South—Mpls. Ete. L *34 South—Mpls. Ete. Lr 31 North—XKelliher Lv. *33 North—Int. Falls. Lv. 44 South Treight, S North Bemidji.......... 47 North Freight, leaves North Bemidji 0 am 46 Freight from Int. due North Bemidji Pm 45 Freight from Brainerd, due North Bemidji *Daily. All others a NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY. Open daily, except Sunaay, 1 to 6 p. m., 7 to 9 p. m. only, 3 to 6 p. m. Sunday, reading room [RRX KKK KKK KRR K KKK * TROPPMAN’S CASH MARKET ¥ * PRICES PAID TO FARMERS * KKK KKK KKKK KK KK KK Butter, 1b. ......... 20c Dairy butter, 1b. . 20c |Eggs, doz. ... .. 15¢ { Potatoes, bu. . . 40c Rutabagas, bu. 30c | Carrots, bush. . boc The Pioneer is the place to buy {your rolls of adding machine paper for Burroughs adding machines. One roll, a dozen rolls or a hundred rolls. —Adv. Tead the Pioneer want ads, FUNERAL DIRECTOR ¥. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER 405 Beltrami Ave. Bemidji, Minn. Huffman & 0'Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING HIN. McKEE 'Funeral Director All work guaranteed. Phones 617 or 448-W Phone 178-W or R Phone 317-R

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