Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 28, 1916, Page 4

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e s 4 A Shine In Every Drop®’® @et a can today from CLASSIFIED PP e WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Mrs. W. K. Den- ison. 1227tf WANTED—Good wash woman for two persons. Call 108 Sixth St. 1228tf-nc WANTED—Girl at 222% Minnesota Ave. 1227t WANTED—Second hand auto. Phone 249. Mathew Larson, Nymore. 6d-13 WANTED—Chambermalds and scrub girls at Markham Hotel. 2-1228 FOR SALE. A A A A A PP PP FOR SALE—161 acres of land, 10 miles north of Bemidji, in Sec- tion 26, Township 148, Range 33. The land is surrounded by three lakes and has 50 acres of lake frontage. For further information write to L. S. Frisch, Chisholm, Minn. 14 FOR RENT. A AR RSP RAPO FOR SALE—Good body jackpine 4- o foot cordwood, $3.50 per cord de- livered. Special price on fifty cords or more. Phone 26. Geo. Kreatz. 3-1229 FOR RENT—Modern except heat, four room stucco cottage. See Sandland at Blooston’s Store. 3-1230 FOR RENT—3 modern rooms for housekeeping cheap. 1009 Be- midji avenue. Phone 575-W. 1220tf. FOR RENT—Storage room. I can furnish good storage room for fur- niture and goods. C. E. Battles. . M-S tf FOR RENT—Storage room. I can furnish good storage room for fur- niture and goods. C. E. Battles. M-S tf after FOR RENT—Six-room house Jan. 1; 1006 Beltrami Ave. Phone 36-F-5. E. K. Anderson. 3-1228 FOR RENT—Furnished room. In- quire 413 Irvine or Telephone 399. 3-1229 FOR RENT—Rooms for light house- keeping. 208 Miss. Ave. S. 2d-1229 FOUND FOUND—Pair of shoes; owner can have same by proving property and paying for this ad. 603 4th St. 2-1228 Moccasins & Basket Ball Shoes Just received a few dozen moc- casins, which we expect will be the last that we can get this sea- son. Prices on this lot: Sizes 9to14........ Sizes 7 and 8§ Sizes 3 to 6. Smaller sizes Have all sizes at present, but can- not guarantee sizes long. Phone in your order and will save them for you. Men’s suction sole basket ball shoes, sure grip, price....$2.00 Gym Shoes, leather foxed and rub- ber sole, can be used for basket DAL ¢ o vinisaie smmmoie s wmie! $2.00 KNAPP’S Shoe Store Phone 45 W Bemldji KEEP A JAR OF MUSTEROLE HANDY It Quickly Loosens Up Coughs and Colds in Throat or Chest Just a little Musterole rubbed on your sore, tight chest before you go to bed will loosen up congestion and break up most severe colds and coughs. Musterole is a clean white ointment made with oil of mustard. Simply rub it on. No plaster necessary. Better than mustard plaster and does not blister. Thousands who use Musterole will tell what relief it es from sore throat, ‘bronchitis, tor tis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet and colds (it often prevents pneumonia). B iy | SCOOP Neglected Colds bring Pneumonia. Look out. SiTe CASCARA EDQUININE ‘The old family remedy—in tablet form—safe, sure, easy to take. No iz 3 days. Mo back if it fails, the Nnm with T Mr. 's victlxme m'}:gziogegg 00090 POPOPOOOOOG® PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. L 4 @ L4 Do Not Lose Sleep. @ Dr. Richard C. Cabot, the well @ known physician, says in an arti- ® cle on health in the American & Magazine: ® “To avoid overeating and alco- ® hol and the tobacco habit are © matters of self control. To get & the sleep one needs (which means @ all that one can possibly soak @ into one’s system within twen- @ ty-four hours) often takes cour- © age—the courage to refuse invita- & tlons, to invite ridicule, to seem @ odd or puritanic. I believe that ® more minor illnesses are due to @ lack of sleep than to any other & recognizable factor. A person & catches cold, gets lumbago. is & constipated or headache ridden @® because his vitality is below par. ® his physica! espenditure beyond ¢ his physical income. Sleep would & set him square with the world. @ but to get sleep means sacrificing & the evening’s fun. This he won't & do, and so he runs in debt and is @ toward a @ @ LR R R R R R R R R R R R A A A A A Al chronically edging breakdown.” ©Oe @ POPOOOOPOPOOOOO0 O Squeaky Shoes. “While conducting a research for in- formation on the origin of certain fash- ions of the past,” writes Zim in the Car. toons Magazine, “I discovered the rea- son for the existence of the squeak in shoes. The squeak was once deemed fashionable, and men of great impor- tance in the affairs of the country de- manded it in their footwear, and cob- blers were paid 2 shillings extra for putting it in. The squeak boot denoted the approach of some one of impor- tance, and the way was made clear at once in the same manner as a bicy- cler’s shrill whistle warns you to look to your interests. During the squeaky period men found it difficult to sneak into the house after 12 p. m. without being discovered and disgraced. Re- moving the shoes before entering the house is an invention which followed the squeak)" shoe era, and, while the former is now almost absolute, the lat- ter is still iz vogue and as popular as ever with married men.” McTavish’s Compromise. A canny Scot owned a wondertul badger it was reported no dog could tackle. However, a friend of his had a dog he proposed to back against the badger, and a match was in due course made for £100, to come off in two months’ time. As the time drew near there were rumors that all was not right with the dog, and the Scot’s friends were mak- ing sure of victory for him. Imagine their surprise and disgust when they heard that McTavish had accepted £50 as a compromise in lien of the £100. “You’ve been done, Mac,” said one of them. “The dog is so mangy and unfit he could not kill a rat.” “Ah,” said McTavish, “I dare say, I dare say, but my badger is dead.’— London Globe. New York’s Great Bridges. The five giant spans of steel, which, like gargantuan fingers, clutch the two sides of East river, binding New York and Brooklyn together, cost America’s metropolis half as much as the Panama canal cost the federal government, Three of them, says the National Geographic Magazine, are suspended from cables the wires of which, if placed end to end, would more than twice girdle the earth. If placed side by side these five great structures would provide a roadway as wide as the Washington monument is high, and if placed end to end they would make a great bridge over six miles long. Across the Brooklyn bridge alone 125,000 surface cars travel every twen- ty-four hours, with other vehicular trafflc n proportion. THE CUB REPORTER MARSHAL IN ACTION. Al. H. Jester, United States mar- shal, with headquarters in Bemidji, was a businesd caller in the city to- day. Mr. Jester is serving papers on local residents to appear in cases that come before the United States district court at Fergus Falls at its next session.--Crookston Daily Times, Dec. 27. NO BOOZERS WANTED. Paris, I11., Dec. 28.—The city com- missioners have adopted a resolution against the employment of users of intoxicating liquors. “You cannot think clearly and act safely if you are a. boozer,” Mayor Hoff said in speaking of the action of the commissioners. “We want only clear thinking men in our employ.” RAISED THE MONEY. The friends of Hamline university here are rejoicing that the campaign for the $500,000 for the new build- ing and endowment have been raised. VISITED FRIENDS. Mrs. J. H. Frarey of Blackduck was the guest of Bemidji friends to- 0Jp i . Phaloh R E‘ i Wy N COMBINY il State of Ohio, City of Toledo, Lucas County, ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A, D. 1836, A. W, GLEASON, (Seal) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken in- ternally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. Send for tesur;ogl‘:%“ gee. . J. Y & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all drugeists, Toc. Hall's Family Pills for constipation. FOR RENT=-=-Modern] brick building. 2 floors and basement, size 24x70. Lo- cated at 210 3rd street, Be- midji, Minn. PHONE 87 Bemidji - H. Martin. RESUME MEETINGS. New York, Dec. 28.—Representa- tives of the national conference com- mittee of railways and the four brotherhoods of railroad employes will resume their meetings here to- day to seek an agreement as to the application of the Adamson law in the event it is held constiutional by the United States supreme court. CHURCH TREE TONIGHT. A Christmas tree celebration and program will be held in the Swedish Lutheran church this evening. An excellent program, consisting of ad- dresses, readings, recitations and songs, will be given. STORK SPECIAL. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. John Hak- kerup of Virginia, Minn., on Decem- ber 16, a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. John Hakkerup are former Bemidji residents. BUYS BLOODED COWS. Four registered Jersey cows have been shipped to Bemidji from Cass Lake, having been purchased by the Birchmont Beach company from W. RECOVERS FROM GRIP. M. E. Ibertson, who has been con- fined to his home with an attack of | lagrippe for the past several days, is again able to be at his place of busi- ' ness. Krumbles is Durum whole wheat,' Krumb- led’’ and toast- ed with a deli=- cious flavor all its own. 10¢ Look for this signature Adapted by CoLLny Coe i 2 0 Mis 3 Eis iacewas sharp as a butcher'sclea-ber, But dat did notseem to greab’er:Looka- wish I was s mar ry “Will do Wea-ber,"Willium was a in deland ob cot-ton, Oldtimesdar am not 23y for got-ten, Looka - de- ceab-er; Locka - storm of cheers. means. The great distribution by The Bemidji Pioneer of Heart Songs increasing daily Let the band start “Dixie” anywhere in the country today---and the audience will ap- plaud. In the South it is the signal for a But to hear it in foreign| waters, played by one of the bands of our great war vessels---with throngs of Ameri- cans far from the shores of their native land---standing about with bared head and glistening eyes---this is to know what “Dixie” It 1s truly an American song, the most stirring of our national airs. Words and music were written by a “black- face” minstrel, Dan Emmet. inspiration direct from the source of song itself. T W Song Book 400 Songs: Words and Music Se- lected by 20,000 ‘Music Lovers Never Before Sold for Less Than $2.50 per Copy One of the Famous Joe Mitchell Chapple $10,000 Books! Prizes Awarded by Victor Herbert and G. W. Chadwick America’s Foremost Musicians The Only Dictionery of usical Terms In Any' Beautiful Half-Tone Portraits of World-Famons Singers Yet it 1s an - E———— {

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