Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 27, 1916, Page 4

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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER THE “KEYSTONE” OF GOOD GOVERNMENT 3% 3 %k % % b % % % %% If you have a room to rent or e want to rent one—you get th best choice through a Pioneer want ad. Phone 922. XK KK KKK KK * ok ok ok A¥ These Are “Good-Service” Advertisers Offering you their “‘good-service” and spending money to tell this commun- Why not call them up? Women and Children | THE MODEL DRY CLEANING HOUSE Hogan Bros., Props. KX K KK KKK KKK K TR KR KKK KKK KKK BROSVIK, THE TAILOR Phone 338 * ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok A ok ok ok kK Xk * ok ok ow ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok k dok ok kK Jeok ok ok ok ok ok K ok ok ok kA Kk HH KKK KKK KKK KKK i i) KKK KKK KK KK Get A Boston Pencil Pointer 8190 ity about themselves. LR E R EE R EEE S SRS S DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleaners for Men Phone 922 L2 2 2 22 R 2 2B KKK KKK K KKK K * DRUGS AND JEWELRY & % Wholesalers and Retailers % * Service and satisfaction. Mail % Orders given that same ser- ¥ vice you get in person. * BARKER'S x Third St. Bemidji, Minn. & HHKKKKKKK KK KKK HHK KKK KK KKK KKK DEAN LAND CO. * * * * * x x * x *x Land, Loans, Insurance * and City Property * *x * * * * x x * ok k k Kk Troppman Block Bemidji * KKK KK KKK KKK KX XK KKK KKK KKK KK x BERMAN INS. AGENCY *x Farm, Fire, Tornado * Insurance x Land to Sell % X X * Money to Loan Phone 19 Bemidji, Minn. * KKK KKK RKKKKKKKX ¥ It will pay you to know us ¥ ¥ HHK KKK KK KK KKK KX KOORS BROTHERS CO. Bakers and Confectioners Manufacturers and Jobbers lce Cream, Bakery Goods, Confectionery, Cigarsand Fountain Goods 315 Minn. Ave. Phone 125 XK KKK H KK KK KKK L EE S R EEEEEEEES THE TYPEWRITER RIBBON STORE THE PIONEER OFFICE Ribbons for all makes of machines. All colors. Still 76¢ each. KE KKK KKK KKK K dohk A Kk ok k ke ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok ok kK FOUR THOUSAND AMERICAN BANKERS IN CONVENTION (By TUnited Press) Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 25.—Four thousand leading bankers of the na- tion gathered here today for the an- nual meeting of the American Bank- ers’ association. Prominent among the subjécts to be discussed is our financial, commercial and social re- lations with South America. KEKKEKKKKIK KKK KK « BANKING AND SAVINGS % Save systematically. Make use %« of our Savings Department. * We welcome your open ac- * count. * SECURITY STATE BANK *x Bemidji, Minn. XK KKKKKKKKKKK KEKEKEKKKKKKK KKK For Farm Insurance and Farm Loans, See J. P. LAHR * ok ok ok ok ok ok R 3 x * x x * * Lands Bought and Sold * Markham Hotel Bldg. x Bemidji, Minn. x X x * x * x * Kk Kk Kk Kk k k HKKKKKK KK KKK KK KKK KKKKKK KKK GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry Goopds, Shoes, ¥ Flour, Feed, etc. The ¥ careful buyers x buy here. * W. G. SCHROEDER *x *_Bemidji Phone 66 * KK KKK KKK KKK K XK RKEKKKEK KK KKK KKK PHOTOGRAPHER Photos Pay and Night N. L. HAKKERUP KK KKKEK KKK KKKK KKK KK KKK K KKK MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ‘Wholesale and Retail Pianos, Organs and Sewing Machines 117 Third St. Phone 573-W J. BISIAR, Manager KKK KKKKKKKKK K KXKEKKEKKK KK KK Typewriter Ribhons Garbon Paper Second Sheets Paperinevery conceivable form Phone 922 PIONEER OFFIGE 3% % 2 %ok % % % % % KKK KKK K KKK KK KK Bemidji * ok Rk ok ok ok K ok kA &k ok ok Kk ok ok ok Kk *hkhkk ok ok khkkokhkhk ok ok ok kkk * * * * * * Subscrbe for the Pioneer & * * * x x *x ERKHKEKKKKKKKKKKKK KKK KR KKKKKK KK *x DWIGHT D. MILLER « * —Special Agent— x; * Midland Insurance Co., Life, & * Accident, Health Insurance * Agents Wanted * * 116 Third St. * ¥ Over Baker’s Jewelry Store * KKK KKKKKKKKKK KK KKK KKKKKKKKKKK ¥ SCHOOL SUPPLIES * * The store to which the * little ones come and get *« * what they want. Every- % * thing for the school. * : THE BEMIDJI PIONEER * f: * * x OFFICE i KR KKK KK KKK CLASSIFIED W ANTEDPhone 300, Bdward An- derson, if you want to sell furni- ture, stoves, clothing, shoes, horses, harness, wagons. 10 FOR SALE—Regal roadster, 1913 model; first class rupning condi- tion; will sell for cash or trade. Inquire J. Goldberg, 112 3rd sttggté WANTED—Girl for general house- work. - Apply Mrs. B. W. Lakin. - 102 WANTED—Kitchen girls. Hotel Markham. ' 925tf WANTED—200 loads of dirt. Be- " midji Steam Laundry. 923tf WANTED—We pay cash for second hand furniture, stoves, shoes and clothing. Hannah & Robertson, 206 Minn. Ave. Phone 129-W. d1020 FARMS FOR SALE. FOR SALE—SWY¥ of SBY, Sec. 21- 146-32, (Town of Frohn), on long time and easy terms. Call on or write A.. Kaiser, Bagley, Minn. [3:1%4 FOR SALE. FOR SALE—Two incubators, 2 Cy- phers Havers, 1 new tent 9x9. 619 Minn. Ave. 930 FOR SALE—Two corner lots on 13th and Bemidji Ave. Inquire 1207 Bemidji Ave. 927 FOR SALE—Two corner lots on 13th and Beltrami Ave. Inquire 1207 Bemidji Ave. 927 FOR SALE—Twelve lots in Solway, all of them in Block 2 in the busi- ness block of town. The postoffice bulding is located on one of them. On the other ten there is a build- ing 12x36 feet built for a chicken coop, a very nice chicken lot, hog lot and a large garden. For price and terms write or phone C. A. Kilbourn, Solway, Minn. 1018 FOR SALE—160 acres of good land with lots of timber on. Or will sell timber; about 1,000 cords of choice spruce, pulp. wood, 13 miles haul. For further informa- tion call on or write Aubolee & Kroken. 102 FOR SALE—House and lots, 719 Be- midji Ave., or will trade for house and land further out. A. Aubofiez. FOR SALE—40 acres of land, one- half mile north and one-quarter of a mile west of Solway; 15 acres of the best of meadow, about eight acres cleared; the palance very easy clearing. For prices and terms, write or phone C. A. Kil- bourn, Solway, Minn. 1018 FOR EXCHANGE — Eleven _clear forty-acre tracts. What have you? Longhalla. 930 FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Modern house, 1111 Doud Ave. Inquire of Mrs. Helin. FOR RENT—Room, Ave. Phone 642-J. FOR RENT—Furnished room. Priv- ilege of bath. 1311 Bixby Ave. 930 FOR RENT—Eleven-room house fill- ed with roomers. Will sell furni- ture and lease reasonable. “A,” Pioneer. FOR RENT — Six-room modern house, furnished. Address X. Y. Z., clo Pioneer. FOR RENT—Storage rcom. furnish good storage room for fur- niture and goods. C. E. Battles. M-S tf 915 LOST AND FOUND. FOUND—String of beads. Owner can have same by describing prop- erty and paying for this ad. Pio- neer office. 927 LOST—Auto top cover between Wil- ton and Marsh’s Siding. Finder please return to Pioneer office for reward. 930 FOUND—Hunting boat at east end of Lake Irving. Owner call at cor. 5th street and Miss. Ave. No. 415. 925tf Unwittingly Kind. Cholly Ayres—Yes, since the Parkers lost their money I have stopped calling there. Miss Keen—That is very kind »f you, It ought to cheer them up a vhele lot.—Baltimore Sun. BOUNDARY LINES. Mostly Straight In Our Land, Crooked and ‘lllogical Abroad. Most United States boundaries are straight lines, and the majority of these lines are due north and south or east and west. Where the lines are not straight they are nearly always established either by rivers or by mountain ridges. It is very simple to know where one state ends and an- other begins. In Europe, on the contrary, nearly all boundaries are established by crooked and usually illogical lines. The frontiers wind about like foolish cow paths. The more important lines are definitely established, for they are too important to be left in doubt. But on some of the dividing lines guessing be- comes a fine art. 1 The arbitrariness of European bound- aries-is largely a relic of the old un- scientific centuries. But even in this highly scientific century, when new lines are to he laid out, they follow the old meandering custom. After the Balkan wars the new boundaries were fixed as they were 500 years ago, whol- 1y without regard to geometry or sim- plicity. The contrast is a minor indication of a fundamental difference. The new world is more businesslike than the old. It goes more directly to the point. It does practical things in a more practical way. A straight line is more practical than a curl or an ‘arabesque. And so the United States is strong for straight lines.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. el WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 27, 1816. ~ Sea Anemone and the Crab L By J. R. HAMILTON -1 Former Advertising Manager of Wanamaker's, Philadelphia Down around Monterey bay, the sea anemones are almost as thick as the scientists who come to study them. Now, for the benefit of those who have not spent four years in a laboratory cutting little animals into thin slices to study under a micro- i scope, let it be said here that a sea anemone i§ a cross between a beautiful plant and a hungry animal and was created for the sole purpose of baffling young scientists and entertaining older ones. It is about as big as your fist. It lives under water attached to a rock. It lies innocently open like a great chryanthemum—f\ not only presenting its stomach, instead of its heart, to the world, * but the inside of its stomach at that. When any animal touches it, it closes up around that animal and immediately digests them. Recently two scientists were watching a young crab wander- ing aimlessly about above a little garden of sea anemones. Like all crabs and many people, he was walking backward and think- ing of something else, when he happened to step on the petals of this innocent flower. Instantly this innocent flower grabbed him and began closing its doors. Crabby put up a valiant fight— he hit out with every leg—he performed surgical marvels with his scissor claws, but it was of no use. The anemone closed over him and began covering him with a slimy digestive fluid, which it uses as a sauce on all its food. When science, which for once had found a heart, finally released the little crab, he crawled weakly up on the rocks and gave fervent thanks, like Jonah, for his deliverance. The point to be illustrated is that in all towns there are stores like the sea anemone, which are merely fastened to the /' street. It is hard to tell just why and what they are. They do not advertise—they do not stand for anything. They are com- posed principally of ‘a hungry stomach and you do not know whether they are fish, fowl or good red herring. From the out- side they look as beautiful as a flower. When you get inside they close up on you like a rapacious animal, and when you get out again—if you ever do get out—jyou are inclined like Jonah and the crab to give thanks for your deliverance. There is only one thing to do in business and that is to go to the stores you know—to the stores that place themselves on record by advertising what they are. | The stores that do not advertise are like flowers in the sea;...,,.r\‘ they may be very beautiful and perfectly all right, and then again they may turn out to be merely a bunch of hungry tentacles that will close up on you, cover you with a slimy praise, and then pro- ceed to digest you clear down to the lining of your pocketbook. | (Copyrighted.) v & Take a Box Hometo Mother She'll appreciate the thought- fulness and the tempting, delicious morsels of sweet- ness that are hidden in every package of RAMER’S CHOCOLATES made from materials that are the very pick of the world's markets. Such flavors, such quality, such careful making are found only in Ramer's. ABERCROMBIE. ‘& McCREADY e e T T e T IR RN i Advertisers who want the best results , - alway:hp:}::olx)lize The :’lionétil;.s They know, by experi- ence, tha as no in thi ti ‘ fe: £ . mediueg? in section of the country as LT T T T e T T L LT We Have the Lot You Want Most of those choice lots in Bemidji n we own them. Itis belll:r to ‘I?Jnly .l'tlgre‘:::r .f::ll“&eb::‘: PAY AS YOU LIKE In most cases these are the terms. We are here to help you secure a home of your own. Bemidji Townsite & Improvemen ] THAYER C. BAILEY, LoBI Amfment Co. i IR nnNannG -élllllllllllllilllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIllIlIIlIIE HOW TO “CAN” THE[GROUCH EAT PURE FOOD from the We handle a full li PIfn}EdFOOD FonE 3 ! 1ne of food products that we can ;;\ ;*‘:fi:?;- u(]}sotégece.TeIaf Sl'&m tm‘e‘}aoking for a really supergig?rbax;txsg 5 , , Meats, Vegel i general merchadinse, COME RIGH’I"t;aI‘%e'SI,‘HIInS é'ar%hgny%len%ax I. P. BATCHELDER Ceneral Merchandise Phone 180-w HnnnnnR R Minnesota Ave. Bemidji, mi ! A midji, Minn.' ST L TR

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