Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 4, 1917, Page 3

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PLANNING HOME IS BIG TASK Many Problems of Location and 60!!-. struction Must Be Solved Before | . Excavations Are Started. A location for & home should be & site with a restfut aspect. Home build- ers should persistently and seriously consider all of the numerous features. entering into the situation and con- ,struction of a house which they them- ‘selves are to oceypy. o Very many problems of location and construction must be solved even be- fore excavations for a heme are start- ed. All members of the family .which 1s to be the first occupant of the build- ing should be privileged,®in fact, they shoyld be invited, to freely express their ideas as to proper location and -construction, hgth as to type or archi- : tecture, - and construction materials. Every requisite of those who are to occupy the house, every possibility and limitation should be carefully consid- ered and decided upon before the site is chosen and before the plans are drafted. If part of the family goes to business #ach day it will be necessary to con- gtruct the home near a railway sta- tion or trolley line. If there are chil- ~dren of school age in the family it is imperative for the young folks’ wel- fare to select a building site in a com- munity with good schools and to locate the home within a reasonable distance of the school or schools which the children will attend. These and other’ @etails should be given careful consid- eration. TURNING SEWAGE INTO ASSET British City Shows How Profit Can Be Made by Scientific Hand|ing of Waste Effluent. Through installation of modern sew- erage and garbage disposal systems -qmany cities of this country Wre secur- ing valuable by-products from waste, but our municipalities could probably emulate to advantage the method adopted by an English city in creating an asset out of a waste effluent diffi- cult of disposal, says the Manufac- turers’ Record. According to a state- ment in commerce reports by the Unit- ed States consul at Bradford, England, that city recovers the grease in the sewage coming from many wool-wash- ing and scouring establishments lo- cated there and“turns it into a-profit-| able by-product. This grease by-product is said to be of value in the leather-dressing trade and to some extent in branches of the textile industry. The sales of the Tecovered grease by the sewage works of the city of Bradford were reported to amount tc $389,320 in 1916 at the present high price of $122'a to‘: and it is estimated that for this year'over $340,000 will be realized from this source, in additior to nearly $25,000 derived from the sale * -of manure or fertilizer made from the sludge left nfter the extraction of the -grease. Because of the developmeént of this by- pmduct it is thought the Bradford sewage work will be self: supporting in 1917. Danger in Municipal Pigs. One method of disposing of garbage 1s that adopted by many municipali- ties of feeding it to pigs. Approxi- mately 10 per cent of the total. col- lection in 1909, according to reports of cities of 30,000 and over, was hun- -dled in this manner. This may be a slight improvement ovey dumping it, but only for small places where the garbage can be handled before it de- cays. ~So serious_a matter is this sys- tem that the state of Colorado has passed a law compelling all meat mar- kets to state whether the pork sold by them was fed on untfeated garbage. Another state board of health finds that of 1,000 hogs-fed on city garbage, 33 per cent had tuberculosis. “The idea of eating garbage-fed pork is disgust- ing,”” says one mayor. The eating of it may be injurious. »})11& i = ..'-.I—d 4 . Hainault Forest. Hainault forest, where the London county council golf courses will be closed for the remainder of the war, bears a title that torments the anti- quaries, some of whom have gore to Germany for a derivation. But “Hain- ault” is really a modern corruption of a word variously written “Hineholt™ or “Henholt,” which stands obviously for the Saxon hean-holt, meaning "worth- less. wood.” This saume’ mame of “Hyneholt” was formerly borne by par( of the royal forest near Colches- ter. Anciently Hainault forest com- , . prised that portion of the great forest ‘ of Waltham which lay south and east of the River Ruding, and was admin- istered by the same offictals as Ep- “ ping forest.—London Chronicle. Employers Build Homes for Workers, Ceincident with the cange of the ibuilding trend toward manufacturing Nvork, there is a tendency for corpora- ‘tions to build moderate priced houses for their employees. The obvious ne- icessity of keeping labor stable and “ihalting the roving tendency of employ- jees at the present time undoubtedly ‘has much to do with this movement. ‘It is probable that the idea will be indopted more widely as the war pro- {gresses and labor stringency increases UL QUL TR UL SR TR AN S T B leg o’ mutton style. As they are almost - always expressed in flimsy materials, ‘| duced- on dresses and picturesque tion wlql tublike outlines—women @e- THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER These are Good-Service)| : BUSINESS ~Advertisers AND PROFESS IONAL Offering you their “good service” and spending money to tell this community about themselves. Why|{. not call them up? DR.: C. R. SANBORN _ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Oftice—Miles Block DR. E. H. SMITH _ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Security ‘Bank Bleck OLD SLEEVES COME BACK Early Victorian SIeevea, Showing Leg o’ Mutton Style, Are Worn in Parls. [— - - i In Paris they are wearing many ear- ly Victorian sleeves which show the J. WARNINGER . VETERINARY SURGEON DR. E. A, SHANNON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. SPECIALIST N Office and Hospital 3 doors west the “gigot” effect is not prominent, and YE "EAR NOSE ‘HROA' the folds of muslin or lace fall away DEAN LAND CO. 8 Glasses (l)Fsitte 4 THROAT || prone 396 Res. Phone 397 of Troppman Store from the arms in a peculiarly becom- Gibb Bla Phone No. 209 Land, Loans, Insurance and ons g. Phone 106 Ing fashion. These loose sleeves are always'three- quarter length, and they are intro- City Property * DR. G. M. PALMER DENTIST Office Phone 124 Residence 346 Miles Block, Bemidji TUSETH SCHOOL OF MUSIC = Teachers of VIOLIN, PIANO AND BAND INSTRUMENTS Phone 683-W 116 3rd St. ° Troppman Block Bemidji DR. EINER JOHNSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Bemidji, Minn. coptees alike. Another fashionable sleeve—also a revival—is of moyen- age persuasion, absolutely tight from elbow to wrist, and finished with & becoming petal cuff which almost hides the hand. These sleeves should be fastened with very small pressure buttons or tiny hooks and gyes on the under seam, In no other way can they be made to preserve their skin-tight outline. DRAPED EFFECTS COMING IN Noticeable: Feature of the Gowns Cast N. L. HAKRERUP PHOTOGRAPHER Photos Day and Night TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Safe and Piano Moving Res. Phone 58 818 America Office Phone 12 DR. J. W. DIEDRICH DENTIST Office O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Office Phone 376- Res. Phone 376-R W. K. DENISON, D. V. M. VETERINARIAN Office Phone 3-R Res. 99-J 3rd St. and Irvine Ave. GENERAL MERCHANDISE Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Flour, Feed, etc. The careful DRS. GILMORE & McCANN . IDA VIRGINIA BROWN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Instructor in DR. L. A. WARD PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON w mem'::;:,d Yo buyers buy here. Troppman Block PIANO VOICE DRAMATIC Office—Miles Block —— - W. G. SCHROEDER Bemidji, Minn. ART It 1s always rather dangerous to in- | | Bemidji Phone 66 N—— l::ona 633 A dulge in forecasts where fashion is : = DS Bemidji DR. H. A. NORTHROP OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Suite 10, O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Office Phone 153 DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST North of Markham Hotel Gibbons Block Tel. 230 concerned, but if coming modes cast their shadows correctly, the slender sfl- houette to which—after a brief flirta- Eat at THE HOME CAFE Gordon Burns, Prop. THORWALD LUNDE CHIROPRACTOR Acute and Chronic Diseases han- 1ded with great success First National Bank Building turned with onme accord will still be with us long after summer has been left behind. More than that, if the few advance modéls already on the scenes are any criterion, we shall soon be called upon to suffer far closer em- braces from our skirts for the sake of tashion, and a tendency to draped ef- fects is another noticeable feature about gowns cast in the mode of to- morrow. ) BLOUSE WITH SQUARE NECK Pretty Fashion Is Rendered Doubly So in Its Modern Develop- ment. The square necked blouse or bodice Is a pretty fashion rendered doubly 80 In its modern development, for the square is. either deep enough to allow of the whole thing slipping over the head (cotta-fashion) or else is pro- vided. with a clipped fastening just at the neck on the shoulder to permit of this easy means of entrance. A par- and Beltrami Ave. GRAHAM M. TORRANCE LAWYER DR. D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block Corner 3rd St. Phone 406-W 2-6 7-8 p. m. Bemidji, Minn. Hours 10-12 a. m.; Miles Block Phone 6560 KOORS BROTHERS CO. Bakers and Confectioners Manufagcturers and Jobbers Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, Confec- tionery, Cigars and Fountain Goods 315 Minn. Ave. Phone 125 THE DAILY PIONEER receives wire service of the UNITED PRESS-ASSOCIATION MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ‘Wholesale and Retail . Pianos, Organs and Sewing is better than thousand in somebody :|c:larly p]:e‘tlt;;, 1e:umple olfi th:at::et P Machines quare-necke: ouse provides for 1 o material to be gathered to the edge by 117 Th"dpsl‘:‘;ne — Bemidjl |, else S. $100 Of gOOd coin Of thc l'ealm a square yoke, and looks equally charming in crepe de chine, muslin, Japanese silk or any of the materials now in vogue. FOR THE LITTLE MISS 3. BISIAR, Manager added to your profits or saved on your purchases 1 is a thousand times better for 'you than fabulous fortunes in the hands of your neigh- bor. 7] i L. P. ECKSTRUM * Plumbing, Steam and Hot Water Heating * Get our estimate . Phones 555 -and 309 ,M__ S A 2l gy i > Hair dressing, manicuring, face | massage, scalp trqatment, switches made from combings $1.650, Corns, ingrown nails tréated a specialty. MINA MYERS 311 6th St. Phone 112-W | HUFFMAN & O'LEARY FURNITURE & UNDERTAKING H. N. McKEE, Funeral Director PHONE 178-W or R ---And yet some of you fellows, hard-headed and shrewd in most other mat- ters, are dribbling out dollars that you could just as well keep in your own pant’s pocket. ThePioneer Wholesale Co. wholesalers and retailers of school and office supplies, has found out the way. FUNERAL DIRECTOR M. E. IBERTSON UNDERTAKER Buy your supplies, for office, store and school from us at wholesale. When You Need Some of the Following, Have Your Next Order Filled Here el Mt [ T LA Tablets Rubber Bands Clips | Blank Books - hats lixe s, Fof what wih conld Pencils Typewr:ter Ribbons | Tabs Legal Blanks ! e et funied. why even Cinderella |— s N Paper | Hooks Job Printing ::adn ;lefx; g:«;fi;)n:::lml:;t::::rn;:fli l.'dl." Illll G'I'S' s““s | Inks Carbon .. Files Embossing little gir® would't have this little MADE to ORDER | Paste * Ink Wells Pads .| Engraving - d,rgg‘ rather than a disappearing Cleaning, pressing and alterations ‘; of inds. All work uwp-to-date, t class workmaaship T. Beaudette, | Merchant Tailor 210 Third Street The Wholesale Department of the Pioneer has been *“stepping” a fast clip, - . and today, both in and out of Bemidji is attracting attention, because of its ability to deliver the “goods” at the prices which entitle it to the business. Merchants save money by ordering supplies from us, because our connec- tion with the manufacturers enable us to sell for less. In additon to this ex- press and frelght charges are less from Bemidji to nearby towns than from distant wholesale markets. Little ch.nge In Fur Coats. Those who have their fur coats onmxht up to date every summer will be gtad to know there is not too much change in the styles. These fur coats are almost full length. They measure about three yards at the hem. They all have some kind of a belt or narrow strap sash to hold In the fullness lose- ly about the waist. The collars are large, standing up high abeut the neck, then rolling over the shoulder depth In" sailor, pelerine or shawl shape. They do not seem to have any of the loose “chin-chin” collar look. o Of Taffeta and Wool Jersey. A young girl's frock, out of the or- dinary, has a plaited skirt of striped taffeta and a jacket blouse or loose, short coat effect, not flaring, but hang- ing free from the shoulders, unbelted, of wool jersey in a tobacco b:own, with 8 scarf collar, 5 & The Pioneer Supply Co. Wholesale & Retail When it is repaired by THEBEMIDJI JEWELR YCO. 210 3rd Street, Phone 488 - Bemidji, Minn.

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