Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, December 10, 1920, Page 3

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ldell‘}[w for a 3mall,Family, Em- bodm Comfort; Pmection and rity—Home That Will > . Lm for Llfatlmo. | : 35 WILLIAM A~RADFORD. n\muo ning to William avenue, ' Chicago, e two-cent stamp for reply, One of the best antldotes for na- tional restlessness, dissatisfaction and strife .is -home ownershlp Invariably a. home! o\mer is'a Substantial, citizen t the qnmmuntty in which he dwells has ‘a tangible interest and in civic. welfare. Moreover, he hasi:the satisfaction that comes from a7 l'?eling of security which only a’'homecan inspire. As a tenant the head of a family is never certaln of his stnfu,u. He is subject-to the whi of the lgndlord ;- more important, ho ever, nel Is not making any. progrese pts Fiave never heen accept- jateral Wt a bank noriis: there the remotest possibility that they will g Né time, to come. A mortgage \ on a home represents valye. For thé man 0f moderate means the ownership ot a home is not impossible by any’ oans. Take for Instance the charming? little bungalow .shown, hers with floor plans. It-is all that a’fam? fly of medium sizé could desire—at- tractive,’ well lald out and substan: tially bolt, yet is reasonable in cost, as'a de!ufled exposition of its leqtures will show> It 1s the ideal hgme for the small family who wlsh to get away from - the crampiness’ of the. large apartment bulldings_in the eity. It emhodies’ comfort, ¥ protécti nd se- | curity, #;home that Wfll lnqt tor a llte- time and! insure- the family a bappy * dwelling place in Hmes of stress and prosperity. This bungalow: ig. rather unusual in design, to say distinctive. Bunga- lows are' popular because they lend themselves so rendily to . varlety in style and construction. In this case we lave: a combinatiop stucco and frame exterior, in reality “a' frame house with a stucco facade which is quite attractive and -cértainly” very reasonable in cost. & _row of concrete steps leads up the: ~front porch re- cessed fipder on¢ cormer of the main roof. This porch can be ecreened in’] during the summer, and glazéd:in dur- ing the;Winter. doors of fhe front | entrance are very\: aftraciive, ‘s are’| the windows in the fropf and sides. /Thé ttmber effect gamed by the set- ting ‘of the cross beams in the stucco adds another pleasing touch to the pleasang iplcture. Upon! entering this charming Ilme home we find a small vestibule which Flo6r Plan, opcns into the living Toom, a large, comfortable rodm of the most modern type equipped with a large open brick fireplace in the side wall. It is espe< cially Iight and cheerful because of the four windows in front and the small windows on the side. Plenty of light and dir are essential to a healthy as well ls*llappy home. Dark, gloomy rooms are inclined to depress the oc- cnp-ln‘ P e Wi 1Vibg 100M #A- CTtRTATY . mmomwmmmwm PR '| wide' doorway m A Rajtecd will [ Uy, dvice mfi,om, Jc ”ul to the: ves access to the din- ing ‘room, which Is not quite as large as the’ Ilvlnz, room, - ‘The. latter is 12 by 18 féet; th feet. Tt alsa is.well lighted gnd- venti- lated ‘by. a spacious side bay window nhlch 15 dividéd Anto six -exsemen 3 jacent to the dining ground: so treguemly every dny. \A swall pantry. is_located: at one, end. of the kitchen, while 8 bgtbroom. The: bedrooms are not quge, 3ét ample for. the needs of the famp- 5 One u 10 feet 6 inches by 10 feet s the other §8 12 by 10 feet- weep. them 1s. the stair- leading to the cellar helow, where. e heating plant and laundry equlp laent are located. i 1t s evident that the. arrangement « of the' rooms {n this home is a very happy --one and as efficlent. as .any honse\( ife_could ask for. .For after all ) ‘hiteet in this: case has’ cans!dered needs wlien designing the, ho r:g As a_result he has built an nté iye, -inviting, &o: y little home ‘and one that should a source ol inspiration to all neople who love tg ‘be Ipdepend‘ent. WITH THE”GIT'Y’S ‘SUBMERGED Pathotl; ide of LIf WJ! ch the Aver- age Visitor to a Metropolis Does Not, See. In the rancid dusk of Bryant park— ! there gathers each eveniny a motley gatherjng of tlie dregs of a great city, writes the New York correspondent, of ‘the Indianépolls News. It 1s a park, ' but. there is a beavy odor of gasoline | from_the fine limousines to the east of ¢ j restaurants’ on the west. It seems to be the mecca of those w’hp ‘have lost ho] the jobless, the idler~men with scowlm: predatory visages and -hardened leers, A short .while- nnd they were to be found in the “flopropms” in the rear of sthe: barrel houses on Sixth avenue. - In the ‘opaque yellow glare of the pl{li lights _they | puff pipes and study the "‘Help Wated” columis, There Is._scanty { conversgation nnd what there is cons{sm mostly. of the’ unprintable word. Now and then. thera is'a youtlntnl face set in an adamau- rlne‘mas’k of determination.; K g easy., to see uflnx: are new to them and they have been temporarily cowed by the i bigness and hardness of the clty. At ® There are a few - women sprlnkled 4{-among ‘thre-bench-warmers.- Some are old ‘and bloated, with clothipg greasy and foul. A féew are young, the glamor 9t * sin reflected In their gar-l ments. . Their, furtive -eyes seem e\er In quest of a blue uniform. wiod The most patheti¢ side ot the eve- .ning array in Bryant pnrk is the brooding silence. .One may nlmost feel the terrible, depressing. thoughts. | Only a few blocks away fs:the light- ness of Broadway where the froth' of life Is churned to an fridescent foam,, .1 sat, for a half hout on a beuch with a group of the 'flonting riff-raff. Not .a word had been spokep until one ,seedy bqu of humanity arose slowly with a yawn, his fat jowl jutting out. “Another — (he ripped out an oath | with the velocity of forked lightning) day finished. 1T hope-there, won't be any more™ And he’ shambied: o Forced Delivery. *o those whd contribute to.the unp- port of humane work £nd the animals’ welfare only under pressure:or wheft cornéred by .some huganitarian, finan- ciAl strategist the attitude of Farmer Applegate’s cow applies: “How much milk does that cow give?” jpsked the summer boarder. . “wall replied Farmer Applegate, “ef you mean by voluntary contriboo- | sbiin, she don't give none. Bt ef you kin get Ner cornered so shie can’t kick none to Hurt an able-bodled man kin | take wny\ about ‘leven quarts a day from het.”-Our Dumb Apimals. usy Bertha. iy The, dear @id lady was traveling in a compartmebt of &n English train, | and, what witl her knitting and wateh- | ing the sceniery-and her guidebook, she i was enjoying herself abotit as' much 1s 4 old ladles ususlly do. Then a youn soldier carryiny ia tifle came fn anc sut opposite her: Tmmediately sh | stiffened ;up and riresenn;; «aid in wn | mistakable tones: ' “Sir, will you plense put the ne~ e ! dining room 12 by 16 m..wx: [climber. e | ~ Snowdon. directly back of the.publle library— ‘UNHQUE N “NIM ‘1;'/ WORLD from the battery / These is nothing else like the ele- ‘Kenia - that have never lain down for ~Dsychalogist is the record sleep in- | Swedish girl. | mental effect. After coming out of her | | 1ong trance Caroliné emjoyed ves 3 l’! £o0d | imomnluflc ToP OF SHOWDON 1S/ SOLD | Ground on Britain's Loftiést Mountain Haa Recent!y Been Pnrchnod . Freak purchases are'heard of' QR time to_time, but it is'not ofte the :sale of a;mountain is anno on; alone the - tra Sapwijon, lncludingm acres .of the. &lo hich 18 drazlng ground, . and. . the roupd on which is buftc thie. Symmit Lient.-Col. Worsley: -Tnylor. to farmer, is of more than ordinary in- terest, remarks the Christlan Sclence of_B; holiday makers, and~1s: of a bold and | rigeged outline. and, forms, .with \its | subsgldiary. penke, an lmprea&l\re range. | > The.ascent presents no special features | of. difficuity if ong of the five well de- fined pathwayg Is wied, but should the nt_on “ploneeripg,” and leaye, the besten track, he sl ould be .prepared foc nythTng .in the way of | mountaineering problems. The view from summit of Snowdon on_a fine day makes the climb worth | tp: spread below {s.Anglesey, | -the Menal straits, and a great curve of ocean .from the far-off extremity DU Cardigan bay to Rhyl. In the fore-'| ground are to be seen the well ‘defined | peakis of the sistor mountains. ~Alto- | gether the climb’ is-a most exhflarat.| + Ing form of exercise, and although the i bonst of having gained the top does ; ot carry n{uch weight, there is.g cer- ta utlsructlon In haying reached one’s 1objectlve Glagistone, . twenty: eight ears ago, after having perfarmg flm climb, addressed a _political meet- lng off 3,000 people on the summnit® of ,Elephant Has Survived Because He Has Been :Able ta Adapt Him. self to Conditions, * & > ——— phant,- He has come down to us | through the, ages, surviving the con: ditions which' killed off his earlier con-" temporaries, and he now adapts him- self” pertectly /to more different con- ditions than any other opimal in Af- rica, Carl ‘Akeley of the American Mu- seum of Natural History writes in the’ World’s Work, He can eat anything that is green or \ even;has been green, just so long as - there , is enough of it, He can get wa.ter from the aloe plants on the d plalnq or dig a well in the sand of a dry river with his trunk and’ fore feet, ‘and -drink -there, or he is eqnnlly at “home living ‘half in - the s\\nmps of better watered regions. “He: is at ‘hofne-on the low, hot plains of the seacoast at the equator pr.on the copl slopes of Kenia and Elg gg So far as:I-know He suffers from 1o _con- tagious diseases and has no enemles except man. There are clephants on | a hundred years. Some of the plains.| elephants do rest lying down, but no | one ever saw a Kenja elephant, lying | down or any evidence lm( they do lle | down. ‘at rest. The felephant Is a ‘good- traveler. Cn . good ground a good horse_ can outrun him, but' on bad smunfl the horse would hgve no ! " chance and ‘there are few. animals that ‘can. cover more ground in a day ' than an_ elephant. And in spite of ' his appearance he can turn with sur- ‘prising aghity and move through the forest. as” quictly as a ruhhl‘i e s Results of Hybrid Mating. | Here is.a strange set of facts, prov- ‘en by, three different. investigators in b three dllfqrenr’inrts of the \wrld at three different times. In matings of so-called “pure races, that is to say, Englishman with- Eng- lish woman, Frenchman with French woma®, German with German woman, ete., 104,64 more males are born than females. . In hybrid. maflnzs. that Is to snv, of different nationalities, there.is a more, significant excess of male aver fcm'\le births. ~In matings of United Statés whites the ratio is about the same as that of Eumpeun . hybrids. In matings of United States colored folks there ¢8 a significant excess of temn,les oxer. the ratlo of British West. Il]nd:;m colored who are relntlvely pure red. N Siept Thirty-Two Years. i Surely a subject for the specujative dulged In Dby Caroline Ohlson, a In 1875, when only a &hild of fourteen years, she fell into a loug- trance in-the island of Okuko, tn the Baltic, and remained unconscious for 32 years. Food was adr .istered to hér, although shie seemed quite un- | concerned. Nor did she respond to any. Inguiry. Quring that long time. | Then suddenly she awoke, “no, longer | a girl, but a middle-aged woman, and | the most /caréfdl' examination could | not reveal the slightest weakness or | health. . Earth Not a Perfect Sphare. The dlam‘ter of the' earth from pole to pole through the equator is short- | or than that at the Cquator; Though in popular language the earth is sald to be round, like a ball, it 1s really an irregular sphere, slightly flattened at the poles. The slight departure :ro_m _rotundity is ncf::nted for by _motion of earth -while, Basierpe: tor- Tus- Dely, Plogwe, i G ness of baboons ¢nables the natives to capture them by placing some jars W | of sweetened water out wliere they cap. b d by Earmern: "I reachit. The liquld contains,a-certain atiety of dopey.herd. At first the Vancouver, Harmful Inquisitiveness, In Asla and Africa the inquisitive creuturen’aflvgnce rather caus y towdrd ‘the Jars apd tagte t Ly off Prince Rupert in the September totalled 1,989,78 tion trip. Montreal, pouring in for the exhibition of live ranch bred silver [foxes, 10" he held 41 Montreal ‘at the end R‘ ma month under the auspices of tha Commissioner ‘of B. C:—With the in- tention of purchasing 9,000 acres of land in the Columbia Valley, a party of Americans left here on an inspec- .Quebec,—Ei international g X Prince Rupert, B, from the halibut catch in-the waters and the salmon catch « | pou Rounfl Steak . el Sirloin Steak .. »Short,Cut'-s_ | Choice Beef Pot Roast . Rib. Stew ,Boneléss'Rib Roast .. . . Jég of Lamb .......... Eamb Shoulder . ...7. . Lamb Stew ...,....... Legof Veal .......... . Shoulder of Veal ..... | Pork Loin* Roast ; Fresh Dreésed Chlckens [ Veal Stew ........... Pork Shoulder Roast s nds, - Don’t Hesitate To I]at Méat—It's Good for You. It Buflds Real Muscle and Brawn. - SPECIALS’ or SATURDAY e Celery— Head Lettuce— Sweet Potatocs Palace Meat Market Phone 200-201 ntries are uuon @ receipts onth of pounds 16,061,157 A . 30c co’(e« 624‘Am’erica Ave. L B e 3 1bs, Holstad’s Coffee, per lb 3 lbs. cans .... 3 bottles . Dupham Cocoanut, 3 pk cans for .... " Sugar, 25 Ibs. ... d nafly Cup Coffee, per Ib. Uzar Coffee, per D5 ol s Quality Spaghetti, 3 pkes. . Quélity Macaroni, 3 pkgs. Mother’s Spaghetti, 3 pkgs. Mbther’s Macaroni, 3 pkgs. Danish Pride Milk, tall cans, 15¢ g8, Aeyourgroem’ s in 20-o0z. cartons or 4-1b. sacks o(o «’seintown, Honey!"® AUNT JEMIMA ¢ entSPANCAKE FLOUR Pmeapple,No.ann........... ' GOLZ GROCERY Phone No. 565: Danish Pride Milk, small cans; 12 cans Hiawatha Ketsup, 20¢; 3 bottles. Wampum Ketchup, 10 oz. bottle, 15¢; - Peas, Sun Dew Brand, No. 2 can, 6 Get Our Prices on Cremo Flour Your Store for Quality and Servige. .$ .35 g 1.00 48 1.40 80 ~.55 ¢ 2,75 Phone T 927. Fancy N. Y. Baldwin Apples, bu. basket Candied Cherries, pkg..30c Glace Pineapple Hearts, bOX, oo pkg. ... 26c Shelled Walnuts, Ib. Crystallized Ginger, Shelled Filberts, 1b D)7 SRTURUROSE. . Shelle{l Almonds, 1b....80c Maple _Sugar, 1 b Shelled Pecans, 1b... brick .eooeeeenees ARRRN 50c Imported Gluster Raisins, pound Oppatas Strained Honey, [V TS JUIURUPRERE SR 93c Strawberries, Blueberries, in heavy syrup, 39: cuil Apncots, Peaches, Pineapple;can...... 39c Bemidji Fur Coat Co. 'm: MOST -APPROVED | S XMAS GIFT Remarlsable Values ‘in "“Furs and Fur Coats at especlally reduced prices. . - Ladies’ Fur Cuff and Collar Sets. > Men’s Fur Caps and De- tachable . Fur Collars\ made to order. We reiline coats with Skinner’s Satin and Sat- in de Chine at $25.00 Special for Saturday Australian Wombat 1_Russian Poney Coat, “trimmed with Austha- lian Opposum Col-- Black Woif Animal Shape Scarf, lined with crepe de chine .......... 30.00 Muff to match ....... * 28.00 2 Beautiful Animal Shape ¢ Red Fox Scarfs .... 40.00 We also do Repairing and Re- - modeling. Kaplan Blo¢k Bananas ins, pkg. 55¢ Calumet, 5 1b. Flour Bemidji 1.20 Fresh Marshma)lows, || PR R Tt Qrapolade, jar New AppleCider, gal..85¢ Fresh Mince Megat, 1b..28c Ib. can sack Pancake ..85¢ 1 gal. can Farm House Troppman's| " $$$ SAVERS $8$ 15¢ Pound Seeded or Seedless Rais- FreshMonarch Peanut Butter, 1h....rroeecrerees 23c | SYRUP i 85c - : : 10 1b. can dark Karo “lltf] 1te‘Rme Popcnrn,loc SYTUD weecrereeirenne e 70C : 10 lb. can white Karo White Borax Napthas Soap, 10 bars............. 47c Syrup o.oooeeeeens 89¢ Sant aClaus Soap, 10 Monarch Coffee, 8 bars 49¢ Iba) . gt $1.33 Monarch Home or Dan- Farm House Coffee 3 ish Pride Milk....2 for 28¢ Ibs. -$1.05 Compound Milk, can....10c Breakfast Coffee, Sardines in Mustard, 2 1b8. e -65- -2 Monareh Jelley Pow- - Lux, 2 pkgs. 25c der, 2 pkgs. ....28¢ Jello, 2 pkgs. .........i... 15c | Fresh Dates, lb.......27¢c Fresh Craekers by the Caddie, 16¢ pound Special Price on Creamery Butter TROPPMAN’ S | FOR BETTER QUALITY AND LOWER PRICES e s

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