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KNOW MONEY-BY PICTURES | How Those Who Handle Many Billa | ., Find It Comparatively Easy to ¥ Tell Bad Ones. | It is a comparatively easy matter to bécome an expert in the quick han- Ing of money and also to detect bills | at have been raised, according those who have tried. A large pro- portion of therbills now in circulation are federal Teserve notes. Those in common _use have_identification char- | acteristics, in ‘addition to the numer- als, easy to memorize. ! Cashiers who handly Jarge and small | bills rapidly usually memorize the por- | trait on the bills, which are large enough to be unmistakable as the ma- | “Jor mark of identification, with the | numerals as tlie minor ald. The two | bined are-well-nigh infallible, save | the case of clever counterfeits. i As the ralsing of bills is accomplish- | ‘ed with the numerals, familiarity with | the portraits, and comparison, will ver- ify the proper denomination of the | bills. The portraits on the tmleral reserve bills in everyday use are as | follows : One-dollar notes, portrnlt of (-eorze Washington. Pwo-dollar notes; portrait of Thomas Jefferson. Five-dollar notes, portralt of Abra- Bbam Lincoln. “Maibe,” particular liking for ca ndl. not at all unu; a squirrel owned by M ud to see her on the back Pyrus usuriensis, f?""!" i ‘.figi\&!” wavre v | 1 To Develop Wild Pears. | The world's largest stock of pear | seedlings of a wild, blight-resisting va- riety found in Manchuria, is located on the Loma Rica ranch nnar Grass Val- ley, Cal. The young trees are from seeds brought directly from China and pumber shout 100,000 Three pomological experts from the United States Department of7 Agricul- ture, Professors Allison, Wright and Kingsman, recently inspected the stock and approved the experimental work. The original trees, known as the are found growing in the ancient burying ground of the kings of the Manchurian dynasty, and s only since the overthrow of the dynasty that the seeds became avail- able, The tract is said to be vast and to be grown to trees of immense size. ' - By grafting the commercial varie- ties of pears upon this stock zood re- | sults are expeeted to be obtained. | Anclent Inventions Used on Motors. i Perhaps the oldest design used in . the modern automebile is that of the . which in priaciple 13 e first universal de- 1 jaround 1520 AL D, »used inall modern veloped by ( Such joints /| automobiles and trucks in order to al- astman of Boslon, has acquired a of one of Ler feline t days of school, includ- s, 20. Number pupils en- Total attendance in days 493. Average daily at- Ten-dollar notes, portrait of Andrew Fackson. Twenty- dol!ar notes, portralt of Gro- wer Cleveland. Fitty-dollar notes, portrait of U. 8. ‘« FROHN SCHOOL NOTES Grant. DX 22k ok b Rk A Hundred-dollar notes, portrait of { o)1 from District No. 8. Frohn Benjamin Franklin. [township, for the mouth ending No- i vember 26 HAD HAZY IDEA OF FINANCE | Number s Rueer Notion Held by Old Wash 1{,‘;”311 oo White Common to Many Inves- !tendance, tors, Aemrdinl to Lawyer. The following have been perfect lin attendance during the month: At a dinner in l\ew York the other ‘(,l.ul)s, Edna and Leona Paulson, day a prominent lawyer mnoted for Selma and Anpie Huset, Emma Tei- his activities in rounding up invest- 8l Karl Haarklau. Marlus Rabe, ment swindlers told the following | !Elmer Kolkin and Tom Hegland. Tmanda Homme, teacher. good story: “It’s pititul to see how foolish a great mfiny people are when it cowes KRR KARKK KKK to a question of finance. 1% LAKE HATTIE * “0Old Wash White is & good exam- [ # % 3% % % % % % % % % % % * * % ple of financlal foolishness. When @ AL White was a Park Rapids call- Wash's boss got back to the Delta er Wedn Mr. White's daugh- with | C!li%ii*l*lli!!ii'”l” iving with home folks. The H. a family enterts ul Lhc Al White family Thanksgiving r.oand Mrs. 1. G. Hoglin we Bemidji shoppers Saturday afte nooti, calling on friends. Mr. and . Cook at Birchment Makes Hot Water Bottles Last Longer, To make a hot water bottle tonger and fit the body more comfort- ably, remove ull air from the after filli stopper, by resting the bottie on a shelf or tzble, holding the top of the hottle in one hand and gently pressing down until the water comes to the opening. Hold In this position while the stopper is screwed In. The bottl should not be more than two-thi: from the North one day, he found the | @ld man driving a fine young mule hitched to a handsome wagon. “Now, . Wash was a notoriously shiftless customer, and so his boss said to him: “‘Where did you get that splendid turnout, Washington?' “‘Ah done boughten it at Maguolia, sab,’ sald Wash. “‘How much did it cost you? “‘Ah done give mah note fo' §20Q for it, sah.’ “‘Good graclous’ said the boss, *where do you expect to get $200 to | meet your note when it falls due?” . “Wash looked astonished and of- fended. “#‘Fo’ de Lawd's sake, boss man, ®e sald, ‘you sho'ly don’ expeck me ter give mah note an’ pay, too?” Wasn't Addressing Tramp. ie On her way downtown the other & morning the woman stopped to see a ; sick friend, who lives on the first floor of a remodéled private house with a bedroom overlooking a nice old-fash- foned back yard. The window was open and suddenly a loud voice broke the calm of the sick-room. “You dirty buwm, that's what you are,” said the voice. “Of course youll be comin’ home now for your break- fast—and look at you, covered with dirt. It's a bum you are and not a drop of blue blood in you. Quit your whinin,’ you hungry stayout. 3le look- 1o’ and waitin’ for you last night and worrying about you! And now I sup- pose you want to sleep all day and rest | wp for another night. You're just like the rest of your kind. It's a bum you are and nothin® else.” The woman leaned out of the npen window that she might see the wreck of humanity the tirade had visualized. And there was the comfortably bullt, fmmaculately clean janitress letting in her prife-winning Angora cat. Dough- boy had come home for breakfast.— | New York Sun. IIIII||IlllIlllIIIIIllillllllIIIIIII]IIIIIIIII‘IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIAIAIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIlIlIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|III|IIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIII Japan's Sulphur Baths. " At the foot of the volcano Asamaya- | wa in Japan there is a combination of‘ bot sulphur and cold mineral springs. The bathing house consists of three or four substantinl wooden bathing | tanks, into which the hot water flows, and a wooden platform running around the room with cupboards and shelves | ‘where the people dress, Beams laid across the bathing tanks | divide them into little squares, a square for each person. The duration of the time bath is regulated with great precision by the | Nead attendant. and during the bath from 130 to 200 half litre scoops of hot sulphur water are poured over the | head of the bather. — 3 ) |Emergency Call. "We'vg‘gol lizards in our basement, | \pd I Juiit killed a snake in the front yard. 't you send some one out | mght away te kill them?” wailed a | wolce over the telephone to William F. { ' Cleary, clerk of the board of public works. It was a woman's voice, or Mr. | Cleary would have sent a request to the board of public safety that one of the morals squads be sent out with a suggestion that they might find what- awer it was that made people “sec sliakes.” However, he asked the board to send out an ordinary policeman to , il the reptllcs—lndinnapohs News, returned ing with the ters, Fay autl Irm Ihim to spend Thank home folks. Miss Lucille Bell spent T (giving with her mother, Mrs. S. Bell. Miss Bell is teaching L-lbl of Park .Rapids. | Mrs. Millis entertained the Greigg, Allen and H. ofillis families Thanks- Igiving day. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Landgren enter- tained the J. W. Heggi, John Lushen jand Ben Landgren families Thanks- igiving. The Thanksgiving dance at the Lake Hattie hall was well .lt(endcll {and enjoyed. Miss Grace Stilwell, who is at- stending High school in Bemidji, [spent Satur and Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Stilwell. J. Mikkelson was a Park Rapids ~1m|mcr 3 Mrs. Mq th her friend, M full =M. H. 8., lowa. 1 - The “Seven Senses.” According to Iecl 3 man is endowed with the ing, hearing, tasting, feelin; nnderstanding and speech. two are nol, of course, “sens “the sciontitic meaning of the tern (Tablets or Granules) for INDIGESTION| With or without water; pleasant to take. QUICK RELIEF! Price, 25-50-75¢ MADE BY SCDTT_l BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION 1 cgar ts spending a few W. Heg- Hm'm'l' . V. Harpel and K. were Bemidji callers Satu George and Howard Stilw “ who are attending school in Bemidji spent p———— | _l|IIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIII!IllllII!IIlllIllllII'llIIIlIlIIIIIIHlIIIIll'E A Good Chicken is never told by her feathers It takes a good butcher to make the se- lections that will provide your home table with a good fowl and your mouth with a hungering appetite. Our steaks are the juiey, wa:nt-more kind. Our chops are always from the best fed pork and mutton in the country. SATURDAY SPECIALS AR RO Choice pot roast............. . 15¢ Boneless rib roast . 35¢ Beef ribs stew . 10c Round steak .. . 25¢ Sirloin steak ... . 30c Porterhouse steak . 30c Leg of veal .. 30c = Shoulder veal .. 20c = Veal stew ... .10 = Leg of lamb .. . 30c = Lamb shoulder .. 20c = Lamb stew .10 = Pork loin roast . . 30c = Pork shoulder roast . 25¢ = 30c Fresh dressed chickens Head Lenuce " Select Oysters Celery Palace Meat Market Phone 200-201 | mubscribe Tor <he Dally Pioneer. filllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIlIIIIIIIlIIIllllllIIII|||I|llI!lIIIIIlIlIIIllllIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIII..‘-.: Sat- n | that under | ook fragile, delieate and even sp Jast | bottie | nd before serewing in the | { low the propeller shaft to revolve and | at the sume time move up and-down | and side relative to the The axte bounees up and down rding*to road conditions, but the propeller shaft must connect this Im\xmul' part with another unit at- | tached 10 the frame of the car. Happmess Not AL There is in man a higher than love of happiness: he ean do without hap- pi nd instead thereof find blessed- Iyle. ~ Femininity’s. Advantage. Another thing abeut femininity is wvorable conditions it welle while overeating. To Their Discredit. ' Those who™ are the most nccomn- plished o not always accomplish the mest—DBoston Transcript. vear |* B #RIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 3, 1920 / Ryrenees Put to Work. . Efforts to harness the water power going to waste in the Pyrenees and transform it into electricity are being intensified. Engineers have surveyed entire mountain ranges ang have succeeded already in controlling many tor- rents and making them furnish power.: Altogether 200,000 horsepower now Is furnished and capital amounting to 800,000,000 pesetas have been invested. Every day - sees - additions to the amount of power available, and en-| gineers employed in the work estimate that in a few yeurs Calatonia will ‘be able to do without cgal, A Change of Callmg . “You are going to have some sad isillusionments,” said {he m)stermus already hud one,” said the cli- | ent. : “How is that?” “When this carnival company through I r you were i ink lemonade.” {3 lh'l . * CITY DRUG STORE Irs AXI&MMIC"i that children of any age thrive well on, | Scott's Emulsian It is nourishment abundant in strength-giving and growth-promot. ¢ ing substances. Scott & Bowa BloomGeld, N.J. \ _The first cost is the last. Office Furniture Transfer Your Records in the Modern Way & Records that are worth transferring are worth’ keeping in security and accessible shape.."l‘he Allsteel transfer cases meet just such require-: The illustration shows how; Allséeal transfer cases are! stacked. * The legs wa each’ section interlock witn the frame on the section beneath.! 1 Thus as many units as ar¢ used are held firmly together.' This file saves from 15 to 25% floor space over wood' and has 25%, greater filing capacity. It affords perma- nent protection against_ fire, dust, mice, and vermin. Whether you need files) safes, desks, tables, or shelv- ing, you will find here the' very unit to fit your requirements in the Allsteelline of office, furniture—the equipment that be-' longs with success. PIONEER STATIONERY, HOUSE Bemidji,' Minn. s ments. Safe, sanitary, convenient, and perma; ',“ i e nent. ; e NO‘ 0. D. blankets. . .. Marine blankets. . . $3.50 . $3.45 $87.5C Blanket shirts, . Army harness. . . . Hip boots. . . Renovated underwear, . $1.15 per garment. . Mattresses. ... ... Stocks and dies. . .86 up 0. D. shirts, reno- rated Sentry coats. ... .. . $1.15 Sea bags. . ... Barrack cots, good springs. ....... Shoes, Nl Army raincoats. . . reclaims. . . Khaki breeches. .. let gloves, pair. . . e OUR MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT WILL TAKE CAR TOMERS. SEND MONEY ORDER OR DRAFT, E | u.s. surPLUS =) ARMY GOODS STORE N OPEN for Business Government Goods at Less than Caost to the Govern- ment, Army & Navy and Surplus Marufacturers’ Goods $4.85 | O. D. shirts, new........ Felt lined coats Self closing faucets. Raincoats, new Comforters. ........... O. D. mackinaws. Jumbo sox, O. D Grey wool sox. : Sweaters, sleeveless. . . . . Hob nailshoes. ......... CANNED GOCDS Corn, 6 cans. Peas, 6 cans. Tomato soup, 6 can Catsup, one bottle Corn flakes...... Booth sardines, 5cans. Apricots, 1 gal. can Pears, 1 gal. can.. Pineapple, 1 gal. can Cherries, 1 gal. can............ $1. $4.85 $3.50 $2.85 $9.75 $3.50 $2.75 $2.69 $1.20 Soon Be Arriving. Red barn paint, per gal. Horse blankets, new. 36 Paint, colors including Horse Dblankets, white, gal. . used......... $3.85 Gas heater, size 20, $12.50; Home spun sox, 3 sye 25 e e PAITSS & soksi - s $1 | Toilet sets complete. . . . 1 ply roofing. .......... Shfifl)d lined coats 54.79 12 Dly roofing 111111 SR 3 plyroofing. .......... 0. D. breeches. . .. $2.85 Slate, red or green. . . ... Regulation jersey sleeve- | Guard roofing, 3ply. . ... 25c | Insulation, paper, 500 feet Also Cther Eatables that will Paints, Plumbing and Roofing .$ 1.70 2. Waterproof suits. . $1.95 Camouflage paint, per gallon. .. 1.90 Ponchoes ......... 98¢ Mexican rope, 1b. .. 18¢c Sisal rope, 1b... . .22¢ Indian blankets. . . $8.75 Union suits. . . . $3.49 Scoop shovels, No. 4 $1.50 Cashmere s0%x, all col- ors, 3.pairs....... $1 Overalls. . .$1.75 to $1.85 O.D. caps. .. . $2.44 Leather vests... $10.50 TENTS 16x16 Pyramid tents . AT $35.00 9x9 wall tents. . . 22.09 9x15 tarpaulin.. 9.45 Government barbed .wire, perspool.. 2.60 Leather jerkins. .. $9.45 Prepared floor cover,: per yard. . 87c 85 1951 Work shirts. . ... .. $1.15 5¢e5] Webbelts......... 39c 3.10{ Auto Tubes, all 2.25| sizes ......... $1.49 o] E E O" OUT OF TOWN CUS- RE TO STATE SIZES Kaplan Bldg. 126 Minnesota Ave. Bemidji, Minn. e ——