Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, September 15, 1920, Page 7

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» WEDNESDAY. EVENING, SEPTEMBER; 15,1920 PAGE SEVEN | . Five Minute Chats on Our Presidents (Copyright, 1920, by James Morgan.) THE STRENUOUS LIFE 71858—O0ct. 27, Theodore Roose- velt born in New York city. 1880—Graduated from Harvard. 1882.4—Member of Now York legislature. 1884-6—A ranchman at Mcd_ora, N. D. 3 . 1889-95—Member of national civil service commission. 1895-7—Member of New York po- g fice commission. 1897-8—Assistant Secn!ary of the navy. 1898—Colonel of tho Rough Riders In. Cuba. 1899-1900 — Governor of New York. 1900—Elected Vice Presidént. 1901—Sept. 14 took the oath in Buffalo as the twenty-fifth president, aged forty-two. 1904—November, elocted presi- dent. HEODORE ROOSEVELT was the most popular of all our presi- ents. With the exception of Llncoln,' is ‘was the raclest, the most interest- g..character that- we have had in I ‘esldency. , et he was-born apart from the mul- . fitude whom he led and he might have ved and died a stranger to the masses f his conntrymen but for one thing: @ had - ‘ot the health to enjoy the: fe of ease which opened to him at his irth. Roosevelt: had to fight: for his ery breath In’ hln ing, asthmatic ichildhood.- Finally he:. took:'a poat gmduta urse in physical culture in the-wild est, where the “four-eyed tenderfoot” | Bad to fight the battle of his youth ali Roosevelt as a Young Man. . jover again, in a strange world, with ‘entirely different standards for meas- juring men. . Roosevelt cut bis eye teeth in polit- llelsl leadership in the corrupt ma- ichine-run legislature of New York. He could not have chosen a more thor- iough school for instruction in the hid- ‘den, muddy springs of parties and pol- itics. His experience at Albany put realism - into his idealism and made ithe academic reformer over into the |most intensely practical politician we have had in the presidency. He decided at the outset to act in leach office as If it was to be the last ‘that he ever would get, and for nearly N5 years after he left the legislature, osevelt could not have been elécted to anything in the boss-ridden state of New York. For a long time he was “shelved” on the civil service commission at Washington, until a re- form mayor of New York appointed bim on the four-headed police commis- sign; but it was sooun single-headed so far as the public could see, and that head was ful} of teeth fo_r_p_tlli_ge;_ gr_af.t: Al His lac Is Proving a Blessing in His Community—Feels Fine -All the Time. “Tanlac has fixed me up so fine that all my neighbors are now tak- mg it,” said Barney Avilo, a prosper— armer who lives on R. F. D. No. Robmsda]e, Minn. < “My troubles all started two years ago when my stomach got out of| order,” he said. “A few months ago I took a sudden turn for the worse. My appetite left me and what I ate seemed to do me more harm than good. Everything seemed to sour on my stomach and fill me up with gas thatnearlychokedAme. Mybnekhurtgxsts “in—every fown.—Adv. - "ers and lawbreakers. , the most he could ask of the Repub- | Jican politicians, with any hope of get- ‘prairie sheep ranch in the far West- way, Turner came to: where the ruins | of- inventions, improving brakes pat- shepherd’s Nelghlmrs Are Now Taking i Rolnnu‘hle Farmer Says Tan-!I was nervous and restless and would At thirty-eight ting it, was.the assistant secretaryship of the navy. The entire administration sighed with relief when at last he went off to lead his Pounch Riders. In five months he was back from Cuba In the far more troublesome role | of a popular hero. The New York ma- chine was in such sore need of a good name to pull it through the pending election that it met him at:the wharf and humbly laid at his feet the Repub- lican nomination for governor. But in the governorship, he realized the worst fears of Boss Platt- that he harbored, as the hoss naively wrote him, ‘“vari- ous altruistic ideas,” and that he was “a little loose on the relagjons of caipi- tal and labor, on trusts and combina- tions and .:. .. the right of a man to run his own business in his own way.” The only .thing to do with-this wild engine was -to turn the switch and shunt it on to the side track of the vice presidency. Roosevelt loudly pro- tested that he wanted to be re-elected governor. And whfle Platt was trying to push him on to the national ticket, McKinley and Haniia just as earnestly tried to push him back on to Platt. The Republican national>. convention rosé up and roared his nomination, flinging him, in spite of himself, upon flle tide that led to fortune. HMJ GENIUS FOR INVENTION Man Who Beg-n Life as a_Prairie Sheep Herder Made Most Re- markable Recerd. It is probable that Waiter Turver was the world’s most prolific inventor. Starting life as a shepherd on a he knew nothing of the mechanics of railway” engineering. -One .day, ever, while tending his sheep on the prairie in the nexghborhood of a rail- of a’train were scattered,’and among the fragments he picked up as a curi- | osity a vital part of the Westinghouse i brake. This he was allowed to carry aways During_his lonely life on the prairie’ he would ponder over the mechanism: of ‘this brake. His chance came when, having failed as a sheep | farmer, he got a job as a wheel tapper | on the railway, ultimately being pro- moted o the engine shops. A series ented by the company, led to his fur- ther advancement. Mr. Westinghouse. who took him into his works, finally | made him the head of the engineering department. Westinghouse patented two hundred inventions, but the shep- herd from the prairies patented four |- - i hundred. Westinghouse made an air- brake that would control fifty railway carriages; Turner improved it till it would control a hundred.- When he died 1t was said that the valug of the inventions. to the world was over thirty-five milllon dollars in, gold. b Chorus Qirl Worked as Heusemaid. A Parisian housekeeper who had long been without a servant succeeded , the other day in engaging one who seemed very - promising indeed. She entered upon- her duties in the morn- ing, and worked to her mistress’ com- plete utlnt-cuon. An early dinner was cooked and ‘served excellently, but at 8:80 the new maid appeared in the drawing room with her hat on, and explained that she had to go out, as she was In the chorus at a music hall | and was sure to be fined if she arrived late. Apparently she was quite pre- pared to continue her two jobs with- out regarding them as incongruous Owing to a lack of modernity in the mistress’ ideas, this interesting experi- ment was not continued.—From the fionnnenm Edition of the London ‘Mail. s Art and Genlus. A work of art may be admirably constructed, and yet be null as regards every essentiality of that truest art which is but the happlest development of nature; but no work of art can em- body within itself a proper originality without giving the plainest manifesta- ttons of the creative spirit, or, in more common parlance, of genius In its aun- 'thor.—Edgar Allan Poe. me like a knife ‘was shclnng in me. often lie awake half the night with- out sleeping a wink. . I was weak and all rundown and never felt fit for work. “But Tanlac has made such a_dif- ference in me I don’t feel there was ever anything at all the matter with me. My appetite has picked up and I can digest anything and everything I eat. My back never hurts me, my nerves are as good as they ever were and T sleep like a log every night. F simply feel fine all the time and can do a day’s work without feeling all fagged out. My friends and neigh- | bors know how Tanlac has fixed me: iup and I want to tell everybody else how- | _ 'WHY IT SUCCEEDS i their worth. i1 resort to Doan's Kidney Pills and 1Of late, I have had no necessity to CLASSIFIED DEPARTHENTS 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 must accompany copy. 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 fifeen cents. When other methods fail try a Ploneer want advertisement. 2 HELP WANTED-—-MALE WANTED—Janltar slendy “work for janitor and hreman C. E.-Battles. . 2t9-16 oys at Markham Must be over 16 years of 6t9-18 i _WANTE’D WANTED—Help at the Kelliher ho- tel. 6d9-20 . WANTED—Sewing to do. Call at 917 America ave. Bemidjl 6t9-20 WANTED—Bell hotel. age. —_— WANT TO RENT—7 or 8 room mod- ern house. A. BE. Gibson. Phone 843. 6t9-17 WANTE‘D—Mediclne cabimet with mirror about 20x30 inches, 6 .inches deep. Also small steel range. Address “cabinet’ pioneer. FOR SALE FOR"SALENew Dadge Sedan. H. C. Baer. 3t9-15 FOR SALE—One-ton Ford truck for sale or trade. Tom Smart. 9-9tf FOD SALE—1917 M. Groshong. Maxwell car. J. Phone 30-F-4. 6d9-16 FOR SALE—Reed baby cab, 1109 Beltrami ave. Phone 800-J. 2t9-16 HELP WANTED—FEMALE 3d9-16 FOR SALE—A large arniy-tent. In- quire C. M. Boe, 612 Fifth street. 2t9-16 WANTED—Waitress by Hotel Mark- ham. 7-26tL WANTED—Girl at Aberchombie & McCready’s. 6d9-17 WANTED—Two washers. Rex Cafe. FOR SALE—Ford good condition. trami avenue. touring car in J. Bisiar, 302 Bel- 6d9-15 FOR ANY kina of roal estate deal, see or write B. J. Wlllits, 218 T ltcam! ave. Phooe 41. 12i%u KFOR SALk—See the Bemidji Sta tionery store for rubber stamps fac simile signature stamps, no tarial seals and corporation seals il ; Eer RN FOR SALE—CITY PROPERTY work on farm. Address Mrs. > 5 A 'OR SALk—rHouse, lota azna farm Bundy, Nymore, Minn. 6t9-15 " “jand. 4. Bisiar, 302, Beltrami ave. = 21d9-30 WANTED—Girl for general houser|ior 53T —woders house, 1116 work. Phone 83 or call at 518 k Lake Boulevard; hot water heat; Third stree. 3d9-15 fire place; garage. Inquire 1117 Lake Boulevard. 6t9-15 experlence(i dish- 8-3tf —_— WANTED—Girl for general house- work. 1019 Beltrami ave. Phone 305-J. 2d9-18 S R WANTED—Girl for general house- work. 1024 Beltrami avenue. Phone 431. 3d9-15 WANTED—Girl for-general house- FOR RENT FOR SALE—Your chance to buy a Bl Noit 10 ia ke Shova Basteg, { acres lal Te; - FOR RENT—Garage, 515 B;:x;i‘t‘ijel ing garage, boats and all improve- avenue.. ; ments on Big Bass lake, Harry D. Suding. Third street éate nights. 3 6t9-20 FOR SALE—S8-room reSIdence, full ‘basement; two porches; electric lights; good well water; on 28 lot tract all well fenced; shade trees FOR RENT—Furnished room, 1018 America ave. Phone 662-J. - 349-15 — e FOR REN{-—One modern furnished room for lady. 1011 American} )} ypder ° cultivation; lot one ave. 3t9-16| plock one Heffron addition. A. W. Almquist, Laporte, Minn. 9-15tf LOTS OF HOUSES—Let me sell you ‘one. —7-rooms and-bath on lake $4,500. —Go and look at 503 Bemidji ave., also look at 119 Fifth st, make us an offer on one or both of them. —6-room house, $1,500. 5 —Dandy house, 6 rooms and bath, $4,500. —Six-room house, lake shore, $3,100. —Dandy 6-room house with bath, $3,600. —b5-rooms and hath, good location, $3,000. —17 rocm house and lot with barn, FOR RENT—Three rooms for small family. Fine location. J. Bisiar, 302 Beltrami ave.. 6a9-16 shore, Because It’s for One Th.mz Only, and uhl People Appreciate Th othing can be good for every: thing. Doing one thing well brings suc- cess. Doan’s- Kidney Pills are for. one thing only. For weak or disordered kidneys. Ask your neighbors. Here is Bemidji evidence to prove 7-room bouse, three lots on corner Beltrami ave., $5.000, or: will'sell the house and one lot, $3,- 500. { —10-room house and corner lot with five rcom house on {he rear. Aj real buy at $10,000. —4-room house, $500 down, $25 per month. no interest. . —5&-rcom hnuse, nearly new, $100 down hnd $25.00 per month, no interest. —A 3-room trcuse and an acre lot, $100 dow=n, $12 per month. no in- terest. —We have some exceptionally real snaps-in wiid iand and a few high- ly improved farms that are ch thzn renting. Come and take 2 look at them and be convinced. —E. J. Willits and Luther Olsen, the land men. 4t9-18 . LOST AN OUND M? black leather Belt for coat. Please return to Nangle's store. 3t0-15 Mrs. H. Carver, 708 Fourteenth St.. says:. “I have used Doan’s Kid- ney Pills several times and they al- ways proved beneficial. Whenever 1 find my kidneys are not acting as they should or my back bothers me, they_soon have me feeling all right. use anything for my kidneys as I am feeling in the best of health since my last nse of Doan’s Kidney Pills.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask.for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Carver had. Fostor-Milburp Co., Mfrs. Buffalo, N. Y. RAGS Bring us your cleam eet- | LOST— Package ‘containing strlm Crepe de Chene shirting in some downtown store. Return to Pio- neer for liberal reward. 2d9-15 * tom rags--no buttons, bands - or woolen cloth mpm LOST—Two Goodrich tires on rims somewhere between Nary and Walker. Strapped together with three straps. Return to Pioneer for reward. 2d9-16 A A A A A A A A A FOR SALE—160 acres good land, 75 acres in field; fair buildings; 7 mile o town; half mile to school; mail service every day; telephone Pioneer Office I LODGES . l ] IEMIDJI LODGE Loy»! Order of MOOSE, No. 1452, Meets first & third Tues. each month Cor. Minnesota Ave. and Third St. 8 p. m. Visi ‘ng brothers specmlly invited. C. B. Hoyt, Sec’y. Phone 701W Next Meeting . SPECIAL TEAM DRILL Bemidji Lodge No. 119, I. 0. O. F., Beltrami Ave. and 4th St., meets every Friday evening at 8 o'clock. THIS WEEK INITIATION w. H Rice, Tel. 22F-11 R. A. Hannah, Rec. Sec., Tel 719W FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING H. N. M’KEE, Funeral Birector PHONE 178-W or R 1 TELL IT WITH PICTURES Pictures tell stories best— pictures are the universal language. So tell your story with * photographs, views, portraits, post cards, kodak prints, ete. A. A, RICHARDSON Photographer Rich Portyait Studio, 29 10th St. Popular priced quality portraits. Quality...kodak finishing. Prints only 3¢, 4e¢, bc, 6¢c; post cards be. Why pay more? B. A. KOLBE GROCERIES The Best That Money Can Buy Corner Eleventh and Doud Phone 657 For Prompt and First Class Auto Livery Service rAt Reasonable Rates’ Day or Night Trips Ward Bros--Auto Livery 77 pHone 77 Has five and seven pas- senger cars, both open and enclosed, for every occa- sion. We are prepared for that trip to the country. 115 THIRD STREET in house. For particulars write C. Landin, route 4, Clearbrook, Minn. 419-17 FOR SALE—80 acres cut over land, $25 per acre; 3% mile from good town on state road. Heavy soil; 70 acres level, 10 acres fine for pasture; good water. This is a money maker. Part cash, balance 10 years. Box 71, Bemidji. 6d9-16 agree that the ‘record of this es- tablishment is one of service per- formed. Those o goo . el Bemidji Floral Co. that we fulfill our Choice obligations and CUT Fll;l(_)AwNETRss AND that we are thor- oughly trustworthy Artistic Designs Prompt Attention Given to Mail Orders what I think of it.” Tanlac is sold in Bemidji by Cxty Drug Store, Knutson & Lilja at| Graceton, and by the. leading drug- Bemidji, Minn. NEW KAPLAN BUILDING b _Phone 418- { bask without Qquestion” if TS Salve 'l.“l in _the ECZEMA, ‘l"l‘!l or diseases. Tey & 75 cent box n our risk, ST G = ...:flwoi'.m other luhlnc MINA MYERS Hair dressing, shampooing, manicuring, hair manufac- turing, etc. Will call by appointment. Box 453. Tele- phone No. 466-W. Licensed Auctioneer MORT PENDERGAST - Your-Business Solicifed Phone 17-F-4, Bemidji, Minn. R: F. D. No.-1 BUSINESS . AND PROFESSIONAL DRS. JOHNSON & BORRESON Physicians and Surgeons Bemidji, Minn. = A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. E N, DR. E. H. SMITH Physician and Surgeon Office Security Bank Block DRS. GILMORE & McCANN Physicians and Surgeons Office Miles Block DR. H. A. NORTHROP O!Al AND Ibertson Blk Office Phone 168W 4 C. R.-SANBORN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office: House Phone 449 Miles Block Oftice Phone 55 DR. A. DANNENBERG Chiropractor Hours—10 to 12 a. m.; 1:30 to 5. Other hours by appointment. Phone 401-W Calls Made 1st National Bank Bldg. Bemidaji DR. E. A. SHANNON, M. D. Physician and Surl.on Office in Mayo Bloc! Phone 396 Res. Phona 397 Drs. Marcum & McAdory Physicians and Surgeons Barker Block, Third St House—11-12 a. m,, 3-§ p. m. Phones—Office 802, Res. 311°} DR. L. A. WARD Physician and Surgeon Bemidji, Minn. DENTISTS i DR. J. w. DIEDRICH EXTIST Oftice—O’ Leary -Bowser Bldg. Phones—Office 376-W. Res. 376-R DR. G. M. PALMER Dentist and Orthodontist Barker Building Bemidjl, Minn. VETERINARIANS J. WARNINGER VETERINARY BURGEON Oftice and Hospital 3 doors west of Troppman's. Phone No. 202 3rd Street and Irvine Ave. Dr. W. K. Denison—Dr. D. R. Burgess DENISON & BURGESS ‘Veterinarians ® Phones: Office 8-R; Res. 99 Bemidji, Minn. BUSINESS E. M. SATHRE Buys Small Houses for cash and sells them on small monthly payments D. H. FISK, Attorney at Law Office, Northern National Bank Bldg. Phone 131. Collections a specialty DRY CLEANING Clothes Cleaners for Men, Women and Children FIRE INSURANCE - REAL ESTATE REYNOLDS & WINTER , : 1 1

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