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PAGESIX ~ TYPHUS CARRIES | cume somepecs scrap and shred to piece to- gether another chapter of by- gone days as a result of the re- port of the archaelogical mis- sion planning the reconstruc- tion of the Reims cathedral. It states that German shells which ripped open the floor of that twelfth century church have disclosed another cathe- dral built by the Franks which has contained the tomb of King Clovis for 1,419 years. It is expected that further ex- cavation will reveal the whole foundation of the older cathe- dral built by early Frankish architects. Thousands of People Are Dying of Dread Disease in Siberia. TELLSHORRORS OF SITUATION American Red Cross Nurse Writes Pjtiable Story of Conditions She Personally Observed—Lack Hospital Facilities. Tokyo.—In a.letter from Omsk, Si- beria, Miss Charlotte Boardman Rog- ers, of New York city, who was on T Y the western front when the Kolchak armies recently evacuated several cit- AIR ROUTES ARE CROWDED les, writes a pitiable story of the hor- —— rors of typhus which she personally | Passenger Plane Ticket Offices in observed as a nurse of the American Great Britain Are Besieged Red Cross. She says: by Patrons. “I have spent twenty-four hours in C— hell. Our train was stalled at the rail- London.—That passengers are eager- way station at Petropaviovsk, Far|ly awaiting the establishment of air- Western Siberia, and somewhere to | plane routes to distant points in the the west of us the Red armies were | British empire is shown by the re- coming on. quests for tickets received by a com- “To the right of us, left of us, rear | pany which operates an airplane line of us, were typhus fever trains, box | from Folkstone to Paris. cars, passenger cars, twenty-five, thir- On the day when the service opened, ty, even thirty-five cars to a train, | the office of the company was besieged and all loaded with men from the|by inquiries seeking bookings for all front and from the evacuated hos-|parts of the world. One wanted to pitals, with thousands of patients dy- | muke a trip to Venice and another de- ing of the dread disease. manded a ticket to Cairo. “No nurse waiteu on them, no doc Persons with relatives or interests tors administered medicines to stimu-|in India have msde numerous in- late the action of their weakened |quirles to learn how soon it will be hearts, They ends of the cars, or on the floor where even cattlemen would have placed straw if animals were to be carried. No sanitary conveniences ‘were sup- plied; the patients’ clothes ed with filth and blood; their feet caked with mud and manure; their bodies alive with little gray typhus lice—the plague of Serbia. “Cheek bones protruded through their yellow skin, eyes sunken into their sockets, hands like birds’ claws stretched out with cups for water— they lay all day in the sweltering heat. “We tried to look away, but all day long we heard them moan or call for their sanitary attendants. Need of Hospitals. “Qur trip from Omsk to the extreme front and back again at a time when the Siberian goyernment armies were falling back before the Reds has re- vealed in all its pitifulness the tre: mendous need of Russian hospitals, sanitary trains and dressing stations for every kind of supplies. lay on rough board|possible for them to go there by air shelves erected around the sides and | plane. re stain-{ ous, especially the bean oil and raw MANCHURIA BOOMING. Manchuria is;remely prosper- pougee silk industries, and it is be- lieved that the exports and imports of this year will break the record. HOT WATER FOR SIGK. HEADAGHES Tells why everyone should drink hot water with phosphate in it before breakfast. Headaches are caused by auto- intoxication—which means self-pois- ! oning. Liver and bowel poisons called toxins, sucked into the blood excite “Although the American Red Crogs:the. heart. which.pumps the blood. so “Bas been sending train after train to Western Siberia, so vast 18 the need 3 '-ggnt'many more trains are necessary: fo meet even the most primal neces- sities. Yet those of us who have seen the lmmediate improvement im hos- pitals and sanitary trains where Amer-| fcan Red Cross supplies have come in are immensely encouraged, know- ing that every pound of absorbent cot- ton, every ounce of drugs, every yard of gauze can be used in Western Sibe- ria to save a life.” Fishermen Had Good Day. Three South Poriand (Me.) fisher- men, Dr. George W. C. Studley, Percy York and Captain Willlam York, were out after groundfish when they-sighted a swordfish, They had no swordfish fishing outfit, but with a stove poker and a boathook handle they improvised a harpoon, with which they landed the big fellow. In Portland they sold the swordfish for $90, and the groundfish they had caught—about 1,000 pounds— far $60. fast that it congests in the smaller arteries and veins of the head, pro- iducing violent, throbbing -pain:-and distress, called headache. be- 'come nervous, despondent, sick, feverish and miserable, your meals sour and almost nauseate you. Then you resort to acetanilid, aspirin or the bromides, which temporarily re- lieve but do not rid the blood of these irritating toxins. A glass of hot water with a tea- spoonful of limestone phosphate in it, drank before breakfast will not only wash these poisons from your system and cure you of headache, but will cleanse, purify and freshen the alimentary canal. Ask your pharmacist for a quarter pound of limestone phosphate. It is inexpensive, harmless as sugar. If you aren’t feeling your best, if tongue is coated or you wake up with bad taste, foul breath or have colds, indigestion, biliousness, con- stipation or sour, acid stomach, begin the phosphated hot water cure to rid your system of toxins and poisons. ) small repair work to 10 p. m. To Our Customers Miss Hendrickson of our factory in Brainerd will be here Saturday, November 8, to take care of any She will be here from 8:30 a. m. Please bring your work in early for the best service. Brockman's Fur Factory _ —at— TROPPMAN’S DEPT. STORE you may have. THE IEMiDJ 1 DAILY PIONEER Office hours, 11 a.m. to 13 m. 2p m.tobp m Schroeder Rlock Oftice phone 18 Res. phone 311 TOM SMART Dray and Tramster Res. Phone 68 Office Phone 13 818 America H. C. NELSON Piano Tuning and Piano and Violin Repairing—Bow Filling 216 Beltrami Ave. Phone 573W DR. ‘D. L. STANTON DENTIST Office in Winter Block L — e e DR. H..A. NORTHROP OSTEOPATNIO PEYSICIAN AND SURGEON 1bertson Black Oftice phone 183 DR. H. A. HASS DENTIST Office Over Boardman’s Prug Store. Phone 447 e —————————————————— ———————————————— DR. EINER JOHNSON Physician and Surgeon Bemidji, Minn. . DR. J. W. DIEDRICH DENTIST Offiee—O’Leary-Bowser_Blag. Phones—Oftice 376-W. Res. g-u-n SNAPS! 4-roem house, 2 blocks from high school; $1,200, small cash payment. 8-room house, 10th and Irvine Ave.; $2,800, half cash. 3-room house, lot 50x140, south- east corner; $850. 4-room house, near normal; $1,050, $250 cash. b-room house, barn, chicken house, shed, well, 2 acres, near Birchmont road; $1,200, $200 cash. 8-room house, hardwood floors, basement, barn, wood shed, well, % acre; $4,000, half cash. 5-room house, 2 lots, close in, Nymore; $1,500, 80 acres, clay loam, small build- ings, 7 miles north; $30 per acre, $600 cash. o 160 acres, 10 miles. northeastl| clay and 'sandy; loam; saw timber, Norway, birch; $17.50 per acre. 1,460 acres, good clay loam; ~sold in smalltracts;: $9-to~$12. per acre. A safe investment. GEO. H. FRENCH—J. P. LAHR Phone 93 Markham Hotel Building - DR. E. H. MARCUM | must accompany copy. WANTED WANTED—Washing 916 Bemidji Ave. and ironing. Phone 473. 6d11.0 WANTED— Washing and ironing, |. Home laundry. Phone 700-W. 3d118 WANTED—1000 cords of wood. Hamel & Webster, 120 3rd St., Be- m1dji. WANTED—To rent, 2 or 3 modern rooms for.light housekeeping, ad- dress “Rooms” Pionéer. 94tL —_——— Young lady with one year’s experi- ence in railroad office desires posi- tion as stenographer. Perfer posi- tion with plenty of work. Address “Stenographer’” care Pioneer \ 6d1110 HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Girls at Svea hotel. % 6d118 WANTED—<Cleaning girl. Markham hotel. 3d117 WANTED—Kitchen girl, 8 hour shift. Third St. cafe. 114t WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Mrs. A. E. Witting, 1211 Phone 356. WANTED—A girl to room with an- other girl and do light housekeep- ing. 1200 America Ave. Phone 708-W. 2d118 HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—Wood chopper and saw- yers, by piece, cord, day or acre. Plenty of work, only one mile from city. E. J. Willits, phone 41. 6d118 FOR SALE—FARM PROPERTY A A A A A A A A A A AN AL FOR SALE—160 acre improved farm, for only $2,000, easy terms, just think. E. J. Willits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 6d118 FOR SALE—One of the nicest farm homes in the Northwest, 16 acres. Fenced and cross fenced, running water in pasture. About'10 acres under high state of cultivation. 3% acre strawberries, 1000 raspber- ries, lots of currants, gooseberries, asparagus, rhubarb, plums, cum- pass cherries' and high Bush cran- berries. New 6 room bungalow, large barn, large warm chicken house. Wood shed, machine shed, {cé Touse, hog ‘House; fish house. Only one mile from city. - Good neighbors, best sandy clay mixed loam on clay subsoil. ‘Price, for quick sale, $4000. E. J. Willits, 218 Beltram{ Ave. Phone 41. 6d118 Bixby Ave. 2d117 3d111 | FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 7, 1919 §¢CLASSFIED ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT 3% Advertisements in this column cost ONE CENT per word for FIRST INSERTION and HALF CENT per word for subsequent consecutive insertions of same copy. Cash Ads not paid for at time of insertion will be charged for at ONE CENT a word, and then only to those having open accounts on our books. No ad taken for less than 15 cents. WHEN OTHER METHODS FAIL TRY A PIONEER WANT ADVERTISEMENT FOR SALE—CITY PROPERTY FOR SALE—5 room nouse and 60 ft. lot, close in on paved street, pav- ing all paid for, only $1400, for Quick sale. E. J. Willite, 218 Bei- trami Ave. Phone 41. 6d118 FOR SALE—9 room nouse, and 6 room house on 650 ft. lot, right ‘down town, only $4,600. B. J. Wil- lits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Res. phone 286-W. 6d118 FOR SALE—Very nice lake shore home. §-room house. Lights, water and sewer. Only $2600. BE. J. Willits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 64118 FOR SALE—2 very nice 50 foot cor- ner residence lots, fenced, wire, in crops this year, $400 cash or might trade for team or cows, B. J. Wil- lits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 8d118 FOR SALE—City lots; 6 acre lots; also 40, 80 and 160 acres, all on easy terms. Will take liberty bonds. Mathew Larson, Nymere P. O. 2mol123 FOR ANY kind of real estate deal, see or write E. J. Willits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 1213tf FOR SALE—Cosy 3 room house, close to lake and normal. $1500, E. J. ‘Willits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone Ave. 6d113 FOR SALE—Good 6 room house and garage. Close in and near school. $1600, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 6d118 FOR SALE—Exceptionaly nice ©§ room house, full basement, barn, garage, wood house, fine location, one acre, close to school and churches. $4500. E. J. Willits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 6d118 FOR SALE—LIVE STOCK FOR SALE—Good bay team, driving or work horses, 5 and 6 years, just the team for school bus. B. J. Willits, 318 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41, /6d118 FOR SALE—One of the best matched driving teams in the country, only 5 and 6 years old. Price only $175 for quick sale. E. J. Willits. Phone 4lcmfwy cmf wiw yyq WwWw 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 4d118 FOR SALE A A A A A A AP FOR SALE—Pathe phonograph and records, 1230 Norton Ave. 6d1110 e e FOR SALE—Ford runabout, in good condition. Apply Koors Bros. Co. 1016tt —_— FOR SALE—Fumed oak buffet, large coal stove, base burner. 411 Mis- sissippi Ave. 2d117 e S SR N SRR Y FOR SALE—Confectionary, restaur- ant, and rooming house. 205 Sec- ond St. Phone 226. 6d118 it s S S FOR SALE—Clover hay, also clover and timothy mixed. Some wild hay and straw. Call 4-F-.2. Carl Opsata. 6d1110 FOR SALE— See the Bemld;l Sta- tionary store for rubbq' stamps, fac simile #ignature stamps, no- I tarfal seals and corporation uau‘l‘m‘ FOR SALE—Good Ford touring car, Studebaker touring catr, and. an- other Oakland touring car to trade for farm, all real bargains. E. J. Willits, 218 Beltrami Ave. . Phone 41, 6d118 i ———— P FOR SALE—New hard coal heater, come and see it running now at my residence, 521 Minn. Ave., rea- son for selling, have two of them. E. J. Willits, Phone 285-W., phone 41, 6d118 A e I own a lot of standing wood on about 100 acres, only one mile west of town, and will sell it standing, cheap, to be cut before April first. E. J. Willits, 218 Beltrami Ave. Phone 41. 6d118 FOR SALE—Barred Plymouth Rock and white Leghorn cockerels, for breeders. Must be sold at once to make room for pullets. Get these heavy yielding strains at a low price. Call High School farm. Phone 532. 4d118 / LUNDE and DANNENBERG Chiropractors Hours10 to 12 a.m.;3to §,7 to 8 pma Phone 401-W Calls made 1st National Bank Bldg. Bemidji C. R. SANBORN, M. D. Physician nd Snm-l_/ Oftice: Mlles Bloek = House Phone ¢49——Office phone 8§ DR. J. T. TUOMY DERNTIST North of Markham Gibbons Block Hi Frcos dse SN T}xeyqre all stylish Hart Schaffner & Marx overcoats are always the best you can buy THE QUALITY ST EDRE ERE’S an overcoat style that lots of men like; plenty skirts, and the belt that back of it has just as the front. Hart Schaffner & Marx certainly have got a lot of smart style in this season’s overcoats; you can’t miss a good one in the lot, and you’ll " like the styles. $30 $40 $50 $60 Flannel Shirts, Leather Vests, Sheep Skin Coats, Florsheim Shoes, Manhattan Shiru, Snappy New Ties The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes b0 T DT AT T T U T T T T T T T AT T T R T T O T T T e e LT T LT UL T L of material in the gathersit all. The swagger a look as Defective P