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WANT ADS—Cost 1c a word for first insertion; l%c & word for subsequent consecutive insertions No Ad Taken for Less Than 25¢ TO Gt‘l‘ /RESULTS, STATE CLEARLY WHA! (You WANT TO SEI,L OR BUY Give correct address—phone number, if any—so that interested parties may com- municate with you without a lot of trouble. BRING IT TO OUR “WANT AD” DESK Haling-Walker Electrical Co, Phone 202-J 119 Third St. ELECTRICAL WIRING of all kinds. PROMPT SERVICE _ ON TROUBLE CALLS We also handle a complete line of » National Mazda LAMPS —WE DELIVER— Phone 202-J McKee Furaiture and Undertaking Company | H. N. McKEE Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director | PHONE 222-W || RESIDENCE PHONE 222.R j 120 THIRD STREET | - | Huffman & O’Leary I ' FURNITURE AND l UNDERTAKING 0. M. OLSON LICENSED EMBALMER A’lvODR FUNERAL DIREC- Day phone 178 Night phones 332 or SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS D WE WORK BOTH NlGHT AND DAY . WARD BROTHERS PHONE 7 7 PHONE COUNTRY TRIPS A SPECIALTY BOPFEE 'AXWANS KEEPS ME SAMS @OL. LAMBOM “EXCERY Wnew WAt ] A Rt WANTED—Chamber maid at once at Markham Hotel. 2t 10-2 WANTED—Boarders at 417 Minn. ave. Phone 732-w 6t10-7 WANTED—Girl for general house- work, 1107 Doud avenue. Phone 365-J. 4t 10-4 —_— WANTED TO RENT—Five or more rooms, modern. E. L. care of Pioneer. 3 1061 _______ 1 WANTED.—Waéhing to do at home will call for and deliver all wash- ings. Tel. 432-W. 4t 10-6 WANTED—Girl for general house work on farm. Good wages. In- quire:at 417- Minnesota. 6t 10-6 WANTED—Work - after school and Saturdays by young man attend- ing high school. Call or see Mrs. Hammersley at the Pioneer office. 6t10-7 WANTED—Will heve truck at Be- midji on or about Oct. 5th and * wish a return load to'Grand Forks call or write L. B. Hller, Trans- fer and Stonge, ‘East Grand Forks. . 3t 10-5 AGENTS-SALESMEN in every lo- cahty, cities or small towns, to sell new special household article with big demand. Easy work, no invest- ment, pays big 'profits, excellent sideline. ‘Good extra income for your spare hours." Write Arminus, Box 183 Michigan City, Ind. L. 2t 9-30, 10 4 WANTED 3 cago - Box. & Crating Co., ‘fi'emidjx and Cass Lake fac- tories, are ih the market at all times for logs and boxwood bolts. Write, giving quantity, description, location and price. Address mnn office, Bemidji. 9-7t2 -4-‘.. [______FOR RENT FOR RENT—Garage. 710 America ove. 4t 10-5 FOR RENT— rooms, unfurnish_e-d, upstairs. 710 America ave. 4t10-5 FOR RENT—Modern furnished front room 621 Bemidji avenue. 4t10-4 FOR REE—Five room modern house. C. D. Lucas. Phone 323-W 4td 10-4 FOR RENT-—Store facing 4th street steam heated. Bemidji Hardware Co. 9.25tf FOR RENT--] modern furnish- ed room, 1023 Minnesota Ave. Call 317-E. 6-15t FOR RENT—Strictly modern furn. ished room. 820 Beltrami ave. Phone 738. 8t10-4 FOR RENT—Fne rooms in house modern except heat. Inquire at 401 Park Avenue. 3d 10-5 FOR RENT—Large front ronm furn- ished, suitable for two, 417 Minn. 6t 10-7 FOR RENT — Modern furnis ed rooms. Call 131 or 310. 535 Bemidji Avé., lake front. 8-30tf FOR RENT— rooms. 520 avenue. Phone 785-J. 4d 10-4 FOR RENT—Two ' rooms for lxghe housekeeping, furnished; also ga- 423 Fourth St. 9-15! Modern furnished Beltrami AWAKE MGHTS " w FOR FOR SALE—Good seven room house A MOSY - UNUSVAL \s\o \ GOy “RRMOS "\ AT HEVER WEARD-IIN G C NUYHIN' UEY STHAT QLGWT O 88 PUY / modern | BOARD and room by day or week. Erickson Hotel, 310 America ave- nue. Phone 182. 3t 10-4 FOR RENT—Five room furnished house. Family with no children preferred. Phone 314. 10-2 tf LOST or FOUND LOST—One 33x4 Lee rough tread tire with white striped cover, in- ner tube and rim. Return to the Northern National Bank for re-| pOR SALE—Extra choice Rupset wird. 2t 10-4| potatoes, order your supply to- day from the Croon Dairy farm l or phone 136-W. 4t 10-6 — FOR SALE—1916 Ford touring car. Good running condition. Price $100, inquire at Puposky postoffice. 5d10-7. FOR SALE—B-Flat clarinet. Prac- tically new, half price. Phone 392.. 3t10-4 FOR SALE—1922- Ford Coupe us- ed three months. A-1 congdition Extras. Reason for selling. Cash e Delaney, Markham Hotel. 3t10-4 FOR SALE—Used Buick-4 tOUTiNG | e————— c;gvyonhweswm Motors, phone| FARM FOR SALE OR RENT— 2 e Iberta, thi 1 FOR SALEKitchen table and two | ‘neg, °7, it S chairs cheap 510 1.2 America ave-[ of the Canadien Pacific. Cluny nue. Phone 380-W. 3t10-4. r3m is made up of three sections FOR SALE—Man’s fur lined over-| énbloe, 1922 acres in all, three coat. Beaver collar. Very reason- | miles long. and one mile wide. Ev- able. Call 692. 5t10-o ery acre of the land is under culti- vation and is all practically new lend, having - been broken only in ton Holt Catipillar Tractor, at a|1917. The first crop was taken off snap. Bemidfi Auto Co. 8-29%f | Section oné and-twelve in 1918 and e e | the fil rop was taken off fro FOR SALE—Two Horaes ‘veigm!:ccun;s:hfrtc%n in 1919. - In 192‘!’)l 1050 each, A. H. Swedberg, 24th average for one thousand acres srreet and Irvine avenue. 6t 10-4| ¢ wheat on this farm was thirty- & Nl ight bushels to the acre and'we had FOR SALE—Show case, cheap if | % D : taken at once. Apply Bemidji Book | 5™ g wheft which' went as & Stationery Co. Phone 799.J. |high as sixty-two bushels and a five FOR SALE—One 1920 model fivo. 9.21tf | hundred acre field of Marquis P Yot wheat nveraged 1orty-1we bushels. | LADIES degfring. Spirella. corsets, | This farm is situated in the very! best part”of Alberte and is a very heavy black lnam, _There is a good graded road ‘from, the farm to the town of Cluny which is a thriving town':with six elevators. This would m:ke a proposition for several fa- milies who have plenty of help of, their own. There is eight or nine | well built, but small houses to- gether with a fairly good stable, FOR SALE—Corner acre lot at 26th implement sheds, granaries, etc., all and Bemidji avenue. Very reason-| apout the centre. of two sections nb]e'Ii interested write M. J. care| (one and twelve). These could be of Pioneer. 4t10-5| moved to any part of the farm. There are twentydfive well built FOR SALE—LIoyd Loom weave ba- portable granaries. The farm is well by carriage. Nearly new at Dr.|fenced and cross fenced and the Smith’s cottage, Birchmont road|equipment is complete wtih a large and 23rd or call 563-w. 3t10-4 | furrow engine gang and a full set i — .~ |of farm implements and horses to Foflfiigg‘f{:fi:’ ;t‘“:?eryb‘:'f;lx 'the number of abomt fifty. There 10th and Bemidji ave. For rent| > also a nice bunch of milk cows on the farm, about fifteen head. I or sale o neasy terms. Phongs.2354t; will sell the two thousand acres accessories or children’s waists. Call 902. Mrs. Nelhe Crowell, Cor- - getier. o oGm0 10.9 FOR SALE—Seven room house on 728-11th street. Lot 100x140. Part cash and balance terms. Inquire at 700 America. 5t 10-5 outright at a recsonable price and would give responsible parties who would be willing to go in together good FOR SALE—Rubber stamps o! kinds made to order. Stamp all wizes and colors, Corpo on on the @bove proposition, and notarial seals, daters, rubber|terms, accepting a certain propor- printi outfits. Mail orders|tion of the crop cach year as pay- romptly filled. Bemidji Book & §ht|onery Co., Bemidji. 6-24tf ment jof, the; farmy: Tho! taxes . on this N;[rropeny cre not. heavy. James D. McGregor, Brandon, Manitoba, L:rl bhnh o! all . 4 hand, Mail orders Ned. Canada. 1t 10-3 kinds. Complete alwuyl at For quick service, send your o™ ders to the Bemidji Book &Msof e o, Bem = }_TW partly modern with garage and| It is incorrect to wipe the mouth barn. Also four room house, three | with a folded napkin. blocks .from business section. In- quire of 606 Fourth street. 6t10-7 s L A B — Palmistry and Card Read- ings At 623 Fifth street Mours: 3 pam. ufil 5 p.m. from to 9 TOO MANY CARS FOR SALE—We offer your choice | at a very low price—1922 Dodge, 1920 Dodge, 1917 Dodge, 1921 Tvenings, Ford. Prices are right for cash or ‘m.mn- made Dy phone. Call bankable paper. Duxbury Land Co;,‘f €07, 1da Ralladoy. Fe: L2 2 e — By Charkes Saghroe © Wesich Newspapee Usson M TSTHE PAPERA ™ 4t 10-4 | This farm is situated in“the Prov-|: MGHAT HEAP O BUNOLES GOIN' DOWN -M' WALK, . CONEEALS “TH' MANLY FORM o' 00! WNGGINS * CACKLES OLE CAPM CRASB. WAE THAY BRAGGED HE WLZNY NEVER GOW' “© PASK. ANU PAGKAGES AvTeR\WE’ GOT' MARRED L HEWM® HEWY -V » b oo o ge s oo : ’ PAGE FIVE All Want Ads Must Be Cash "Because of the detail of collecting we can not undemh to open accounts for small amounts, therefore cash must accompany ad—except for those who have open accounts with us. NAVAL SHOW"AT CONVENTION | REFUSED TO BOW.TO KING Chalrman Neville of Committes, Prom- ises Big Dispfay at New Or- leans Meeting. Delegates to the American Legion national- eonvention at New Orleans are promised one of the most spec- tacular and in- teresting naval shows the nation has seen, accord- ing to Lieut. C. W. J. Neville, chairman of the convention naval affairs commit- tee, who has been in Wash- fngton com- pleting arrange- ments. Commander Neville obtalned the promise of Assistant Secretary Roosevelt that he would send one bat- tleship and a number of destroyers to paruclpnte in the program. Arrangements have also been made to have the Eagle boats now at Jack- sonville, St. Petersburg, Tampa, Gal- veston snd St. Louls called into ac- ‘tive service with a view to directing the annual cruise of the naval reserve :men, wio form their crews, ‘to New Orleans. A fleet of 12 hydroplanes will' fly from Pensacola to New Orleans a few days before the conventfon and will remain on the river for - exhibition flights. While in “Washington Commander Neville also arranged for invitation to the naval authoritles of England, C'anada, Australia, France, Italy, Bra- ‘zil and Cuba for their attendance at the -nsval .shrm. A flotilla of -subma- rines, now'en route to the East.from Mare Island, Cal., also may be a fea- ture of--the naval display. .Breeding of Buffalo Mystery. ‘Whatever of romance in regard to the American buffalo may have van fshed with the passing of the old West, the life history and breeding of these animals are still a mystery to the biologist. Just how old a buffalo gets to be 1s not known. As far as the records show, the Methuselah of the specles 18 one in Parls which fs sald to be thirty-one years old. The oldest buf- faloes in the government herds are a venerable cow on the Wichita pre- serve, now twenty-four years old, and Kalispel Chief, the leader of the Mon- tana herd, now twenty years old. It 1s known that the cows begin to breed in thelr third year. When they stop is a blological mystery. There is a record of a cow breeding In her twenty-sixth year and one on the Wichita preserve had a calf at the age of twenty-two. The normal num- ber of calves and the exact ratio of sexes are likewise unknown. Remarkable Micrographic Feats. Micrographers have vied with one another in the execution of the most minute specimens of writing. The Ten Commandments have been engraved in characters so fine that they could be stamped on the side of a nickel, and on several occaslons the Lord’s Prayer bas been engraved on the side of a gold dollar, the diameter of which is six-tenths of an Inch. There. {s°d0 account of a “rare plece of work: ught to pass by Peter Bales, an Englishman and clerk of chancery. It was the whole Bible in an, Epgiish walnut no bigger than a hen's egz. The nut holdeth the book; thers.gre as many leaves in this little book as in the great Bible and he hath written as much in one of his little leaves as a great leaf of the | Bible” WG" ooke §. English Pin Manufacturers, Centuries Ago, Shut Down Befere They ‘Would Obey Royal Mandate. YWhat would happen in the United States, where two thousand tons of pins are turned out.every year, it all the pin factories closed down, as once they did in England? In the thirty- fourth year of Henry VIII complaints were made of the inferior quality of the pins supplied to the public, lnd| in consequence parliament enacted that none should be sold “unless they be, double-headed, and have the heades | N soudered faste to the shanke of the pynne, etc.” The result was that the public could obtain no pins until the act was repealed three years later. The act of repeal, having recited the| former act, pathetically admits that the attempt to control the pin indus- “For as much since the making of sald act vHeen scarcitee of pynnes withiin - this realme, and the kynge's; liege- people have not been wel nor completely served of such pynners nor . In con- siderntion whereof it male please the kinge that it may be adjudged and demed from hensforth frustrated and nihilated and to be repealed forever.” try had proved a failure. there hith ar likely to be served . . ALASKA HAS MORE WOMEN 8ex Ratio Is Gradually Bo‘lng Equal- Ized in the Far Northwest Pos- session of America. ‘Whether modern girls are becoming more adventurous or Alaska more tame, statistics recently published by the Eugenics Research assoclation in- dicate that our northern territory Is becaming less a nomadic land. of single cussedness and-settling down more to starting the home fires burning. There BUSINESS AND ‘ PROFESSIONAL B. J. Martin, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Northern National Bank Bldg, Office Phome 55 Residence 805 DRS. (Johmon & Borreson Physicians and Surgeons BEMIDJI, MINN. Dr. E. A. Shannon Physician and. Surgeon OFFICE i» Larson Block 2HONE 396 RES. 397 Dr. E. H. Smith Physiclan and Surgeon OFFICE. Security Bank Bleek e . DRS, Gilmore & McCann Physicians and Surgeons OFFICE, Miles Blosk Physician' and Surgeon Hourst 11-12 2. m.—3-8 p. = Phones—Office 802, Res., 211 Dr. E. l‘?nMarcum BARKER BUILDING has been a continually APProACHING |\ e———— balance in the number of males té 100 temales. In the total population this ratlo has moved as follows: In 1900, 258.9; in 1910, 247.9; in 1920, 168.5. “Industrially, eugenically - and so- cially, -the great need of the territory Is settlers who move Into the region with thelr families,” 'says the report, according to the Syrncuse Herald. “Perhaps the distribution of age groups with sex ratios indicates ap- proaching stabllization of population. In 1920 the sex ratios by age groups were: Forty and more years of age, 3045 males to 100 females; twenty to thirty-nine years of age, 171.1 males t0.100 females; under twenty years of age, 100.7 males to 100 females.” Chinese Have Fondness for Birds. In’ addition to using birds and their nests as food, the Chinese keep birds as pets. Thelr fondness for birds is one of the most pleasant features of their national character. Birds furnish them with much amusement. Several kinds of bird pets are taught to catch seeds thrown into the air wng( \ngps A wowsu QM\IMG wMe VE?ART\HG GDESY G‘I'ANOS A 11 NHE SQR!EH DOOR opeu"‘ after jumping from perches held In the hand. Except in winter, one can always see people going into the open country early In the morning with their pets, to catch grasshoppers te feed them, and to teach their pets new songs. A.E.RAKO Licensed Auctioneer Phone 26-F-12 "Aro:r;d Town” REMARKS OLe BILL JONES WHA0S Ear—Nose—Throat GLASSES FITTED 217Y; Third St. Barker Blk. ' DRS. Garlock & Garlock | Dr. Earl R. Two CHIROPRACTOR Phone 316 Troppman Bldg, DRS. Northrop & Berston Osteopathic Physicians Battles Bldg. Bemidji, Minn. —PHONE 153-W— Dr. A. Dannenberg Bemidji's Pioneer Chiropracter Palmer Graduate FIRST NAT'L BANK BLDG. Phene 401-W Dr. G. M. Palmer Dentist and Orthodontisk BARKER BUILDING Bemidji, Minn, Dr. A. J. Melby - DENTIST i® i[= Over Boardman'’s Drug Stors Phona 408 > > Bemidil FOR RENT Seven.room house, barn, chicken house and five acres of land, $15 per month. FOR SALE Building, story and half, 16x24; sided and painted; $750.00; to be moved. W. N, BOWSER O'LEARY.BOWSER BLDG. @