Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
L AP0 Bt Bt et SO i H ; § [ | 4 i H | —t ;, | [ | b i 4 ' | | ! it ] _—-—.—@——-. 8oc Line Bullding Wood For Sals Birch Jack Pine Tamarack Prompt Dellvery Phene 32 CLASSIFIED dELP WANTED. AN .aundress at Lake Julia sanatorium. Apply Mrs. Margaret M. Neal, superintendent, Puposky, Minn. 118t WANTET Tes- taurant. 4-1123 WANTED —Housekeoper. Phone 532, School Farm. 1-1120 POSITIONS WANTED. POSITION " WANTED—Job as black- smith helper or to run gasoline engine, or work repairing engines. lo N. A. O, Pioneer. 4-1122 WANTED—Position by man and wite as cook for crew. Address 719 Jirl at Vicker's Beltrami Ave. 6-1124 FOR BALE. FOR SALE_—Range. Apply Frank Koors. Phone 62 118t FOR SALE-—Carload 12-inch birch wood. Phone 1. Wm. McCuaig. 4-1123 FOK SALE—87 acres, 6 miles west ol Bemidji, with house, barn and good well; dark soil, clay subsoil; 10 acres field; on state road. Price $1,000 cash. J. Norling, 3128 23rd Ave. So., Minneapolis, Minn. 12-1127 er; also range. Apply Frank Koors. Phone 626, 118t FOR SALE—Good big work horses cheap as I have my season's work about done. Tom Smart, Bemidjl, Minn. 106tt FOR TRADE—Nice farm Tand near Hines and some cash for modern residence in Bemidji. Address ““H,” Pioneer. 1117t ' FOR RENT. FOR RENT —Storage room. 1 cab furnish good storage room for fur- niture and goods. C. E. Battles. M-S tt FOR RENT--Three unfurnished mod- ern rooms, newly decorated. 1009 Bemidji Avenue. Phone 575-W. 1114tt FOR RENT—Three unfurnished mod- ern rooms, newly furnished. 1009 Bemidji avenue. Phone 575-W. 1114t¢ FOR RENT-—Two rooms for light housekeeping. Also furnished rooms. Phone 399 or inquire at 413 Irvine Ave. 3-1122 FOR RENT-—Two furnished rooms. Phone 747. 1113t FO urnished room. Phone 1113tf LOST AND FOUND. ESTRAYED —From Mill Park, dark red Durham bull, white star in forehead, 21 years old. Please notify M. N. Olson, Bemidji, Minn. 6-1120 | LOST — 1.000 souvenir envelopes rarked Bemidji Auto Co. Probab- v delivered elsewhere by mistake. all the Pioneer office, phone 922, 1111tf y knit mitten at Lake Ir- urday night. Return to, 2-1121 LO ving Piones THIEF RIVER FALLS TO HAVE NEW SCHOOL Thief River Fal . Nov. 18.} ——After examining ten more plans for a grade building, making thirty-five | altogether from twenty-four archi- tects, the school board selected Sund & Dunham of Minneapolis to prepare plans and specifications. The school will probably be a two- story, fireproof building, with ten class rooms and other rooms as re- quired by the state hoard of control. The building will be started this fall and in the spring rushed to relieve the overcrows'ed conditions. The same architects last week were awarded the contract for the Tri-County sanatorium to be located south of this city for Penning- ton, Marshall and Roseau counties. THIEF RIVER FALLS LAD NOW CANADIAN CORPORAL Thief River Falls, Minn., Nov. 18, —F. Grundy, a former resident of thisi eity, but now with the Canadian troops in a training camp in Eng- land, writes Supt. Hay of the public schools here that he is now a cor- poral in the battery. He dislikes the terest, Barrie bad agreed to write a play for Frohwan and met him l';":lu- ner one uight at the Garrick club In London. Barrle seemed nervous and “Yes,” sald of mine, and J the stage you and wh for any loss man. “T will Now, the extraordinary thing about this episode whose success Barrle was so doubtful was “Peter ¥ fortunes. The manuscript he offered Frohman to was “Allce-8) ed only a seasol Manager and Married Money. “Glad to see you looking so well, old man,” sald the friend of a newly made | stupefying in the recurrence of unim | Washingten & fa i | weather in that country and says he will be giad to get back to this country again, but he is hopeful that soon he may see service across the channel. (AR E R EEEEEEEE R R * KELLIHER NOTES * LB R EEREER R EEE R R B Petor Martinson of Foy, who had’ taken his son, Birger, to a hospital in Minneapolis, retired to a rooming house and was suffocated by gas. The remains were brought home last Tuesday and the funeral was held at Foy. Mr. Martinson {8 survived by a widow, four sons and a daughter. Charles Davis was kicked by a pony l1ast ‘Monday and his jaw was frac- tured in three places. His condition 18 satisfactory. Davis is & newcomer here from the Big Fork district east of Blackduck. Take advantage of a want ad. 'What's the matter?” sald Charles: “Stmply « this,"" ‘sald Barrie. know | have an agreement to dellver you the manuscript of a play ' “Well, 1 bave it all right,” sald Bar- vie, “bug I am sure it will not be a commercial success, It1sa dream child to seo produced.” “Don't bother about that,” said Froh- troduced." “Ob, ‘she's at work." said the bus- band, with & placid smlile, “At work? ‘What do you mean?" anked the friend, “Well, you see, it was this way,” re- plled the benedict. *“S8he had a much better position than mine—head of her department, £8 a week. Wouldn't give it up. So there was nothing for it but “You Frohman, 1 am 80 anxlous to see it that 1 have written an- her play which I will be glad to give | for me to retire from business and keep e will compensate you house, and here 1 am, you see. You ofi the one | am so eager have to let women have thelr way in some things."~London Tit-Bits. | produce both plays.” The Busin of Life. Life is & business we are all apt to mismanage, either lving - recklessly from day to day or suffering ourselves to be guided out of our moments by the inanities of custom. We should de- splse a man who gave as little activity and forethought to the conduct of any other business. But in this, which s the one thing of ull others, since it con- (aing ‘them all, we cannot see the forest for the-trees. One brief impression ob- literates another. There Is something Is ‘that the play - about Pan,” which made several indemnify him from loss t-by-the-Fire,” which last- ‘Charles Frohman, Mau. - The Bemidji Daily Pioneer Invites you to own the best song book ever made . “HEART SONGS’ Refreshing as a drink at the OLD WELL HEART SONGS is not a mere collection of music and words! It is a book com- piled directly by more than 20,000 people, who, in sending their favorite songs, told why they sent them. From the lone cabin on the trackless prairie —from the snowy wastes of Alaska—from the mining camp amidst the pines of the lofty Sierras-—from the coral strand of an island in the far Pacific, so remote that the ships come only once a year (if they do not forget)—from the garrets of Lon- don and Paris, with only the stars above —from the sandy deserts of the Orient, somchow seemingly forgotten by even God himself—came these outpourings of the human heart—from the men and . women who loved them—and the sing- ing of which ofttimes saved their sanity and faith in Heaven. . : Every song in this wondérful book has had some sacred memory—some touching experience — some sweet and hallowed association — connected with it in the hearts of thousands. It is their song of joy —of sorrow — of thanksgiving—of ove—of bereavement—of home-comin —of re-union—of all the tender senti- ments that lift the human heart in worship to its Maker. Itis for this—by inspir- ation—that thisunique volume is entitled | “HEART SONGS!” ; ‘ 7 " ~ MONDAY. - e portant (Hings, and I "Ohly o8’ FFe provocations that we can rise to take an outlook beyond datly concerns and comprebend the narrow limits and groat possibliities of our existence.— Robert Louis Stevenson. Lobeter and Butterfly, According to a scleutltic observer, the lobster 18 akin to the butterfly. The kivship is uot merely that of two members of the unimul kiugdom. The lobster und the butterfly ure actually I Gie witd the sume great group of the Kagdom, lke the clam and the sonl or e whale and the girdffe, Whore kplieres of a tivit, are so wide- Iyisepurated. 1t .ds sinply. us Darwin postited out o the case of other crea- { U o yeurs wgo, that the lobster Al s tiiends, the crab, the prawn wid the el chose one method of | traveling at the rate of 184,000 i the Luiterily and its set |8 Second, would take B {irst group de- reach the earth. pistics suited to the Biviy ot lived, ncindiog nest important, as s How Some | : " The fecundity of is astounding. The He Was the Whole of It. Over the wire to the parsonage came this request: : “The bishop would like to meet at the church this evening the pastor, the class leader. the Runday school super- intendent, the president of the cradle roll and of the young people's socleties. the president of the missionary so- clety, the chorlster and the sexton!” “All right! I'l be there,” was the answer,—Christian Herald. Deserved to Get It *1 want to ask you for u bit of ad- vice,” sald the tnsinnating wan, “What is it?" “1 want you to put yourself in uu“: place and me in, yours and tell me how as cpe or 1 | Belence Monthly. of wriLor oo !hmumvruln!» e Game. of Western t bost of winged bl of superiuous Daughter Geor; you would go ahout It if you wanted tc 1o swiftuess (o carry | quit. and paps is sway? borrow $10 from nie.” —Exchange. | them out of dunger aud to protective | Young VForewan — Yes, 1 | eolorine 10 concenl them when flight Lis unavailing. | The lrritated Tourist. | tions “Is this the hurean of infornation” | e o | Davghter of Western Farmer—Wh., did he answer? Young Foreman—He said, hands till I come.” asked the confused trav “No.” replied the muy ticket office, “Great guns! Ik it getting o they sell tickets now for information?™” Rude Reparice. This 48 the | Nell=Why don't | hive as mony in | vitations to duiice yon hzve Belle— If yon look in the you'i) tind the lx'u:m-n is very plain. I fenn ANOTHER HEART SONG v, That Will Live Forever This song to be found on pagc 49S of “HEART SONGS*’ RITTEN by Samuel Woodworth, the son of a poor Massachusetts Farmer. His fame rests on his exquisite portrayal of the old-fashioned well on the home farm at Scituate, Mass. “The Old Oaken Bucket was composed one summer day when living on Duane Street, New York. He came home one afternoon overcome with the heat and draining a glass of cold water said to his wife, ** That is very refreshing, but how much more refreshing it would be to take a good long 0 draught from the old oaken bucket I left hanging in my father’s well at home.” Thus inspired, he gave the world that matchless poem and song, ** The Old Oaken Bucket,” one of the ““heart songs’’ which will live as long as.the English language is spoken. 500 P 400 400 $ONGS' Sweet Music SON' GIVEN TO OUR READERS FOR SIX CONSECUTIVE HEART SONGS COUPONS 6 Coupons and 98¢ for the $2.50 Book - POSTAGE © BXTRA]~, 20, 1M fnséct forme of ‘one ™. | tle insect, the *hop aphis” sees teen generations born to it in a'single , | year and would, If unchecked to m] e end of the tweifth generation, muits. ply to the inconceivable number ul', ten sextillions of individuas. If thi | brood were marshaled in loe, ten (o the inch, it wonld extend to a point so sunk in the profundity of space that light from the head of the processios 2500 years 15 In eight years the progeny of a pair of gypsy moths | could destroy all the foliage in the United States if unchecked.—Populas Farme: e, the harvest hands threaten 1, know wired him this morping for instru | Dauzhter of Western: Farmer—W el ! | it meaus an awful lot of spooning, bi ithmore Amer- | 1 guess we can do it, can’t we?—Life. A thir. | ke r—(h “Hopi |