Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, October 4, 1922, Page 5

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WANT ADS—Cost 1c a word for first insertion; l4c a word for subsequent consecutive insertions No Ad Taken for Less Than 25¢ TO GET RESULTS, STATE CLEARLY WHAT YOU WANT TO SELL'ORBUY Give correct nddmt—phu_:e number, if any—so that interested parties may com- municate with you without a lot of trouble. . BRING IT TO OUR “WANT AD” DESK A Haling-Walker Elactrical Co. Phone 202-J 119 Third St. ELECTRICAL WIRING of all kinds. PROMPT SERVICE ON TROUBLE CALLS 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 h;u;e- work, 1107 Doud- avenue. Phone 365-J. 4t 10-4 WANTED TO RENT—Five or more rooms, modern. E. L. care of Pioneer. 3t 10-6 — WANTED-—Wasshing to do at home will call for and' deliver all wash- ings. Tel. 432-W. "4t 10-6 —_— e WANTED—Girl for general house work on farm. Good wages. In- 6t 10-6 We also handle a complete line of quire at 417 Minnesota. National Mazda WANTED—Carload of tamarack LAMPS wood for quick shipment, see Har- —WE DELIVER— old Kerr at Clifford & Co.. Phone 202-J 3t-10-5 WANTED—Work after school and Saturdays by young man atterid- ing high school. Call or see Mrs. Hammersley at the Pioneer office. i 6t10.7 kb o R e B e WANTED—Teachers” and _mens’ Morris J. Opshal, 1101 'Bemidji avenue, Phone 177. 6t 10-10 laundry, will call for and deliver. Phone 700-W. 4t 10-7 e e e | GOVERNMENT Railway Mail Clerks start $133 month; expenses paid, vacation with pay. No strikes or McKee Furniture and Undertaking - Company H. N. McKEE nk:?:irflmll;!lm::r s_huL;lownf’.‘ lszeimIen e):amém:— rec tion frec. Columbus Institute, Col- PHONE 222.W umbus, Ohio.- E. D:Wed: ——e WANTED—Will have truck at Be- midji on or about Oct. 5th and e | wish a return load to Grand Forks call or write L. B. Hiler, Trans- RESIDENCE PHONE 222-R 120 THIRD STREET L 9 fer and Storage, East Grand Hufman & O'Leary |-G g G AND WANTED—Cordwood, lath bolts, UNDERTAKING Pulpwood, or seed potatoes or live| stock as down payment of $1.00 per acre for 6000 acres of lands in the Bemidji district. 10 to 30 years time at 6 percent on bal- ance. J. J. Opsahl, 1101 Bemidji avenue, phone 177. 6td 10-10 O. M. OLSON LICENSED EMBALMER AND FUNERAL DIREC- TOR Day phone 178 Night phones 332 or 358 AGENTS-SALESMEN in every lo- - cality, cities or smail towns, to sell new special household article with big demand.-Easy work, no invest- ment, pays- big profits, excellent sideline. Good extra income Tor your spare hours. Write Arminus, Box 183, Michigan City, Ind. SERVICE L. 2980, 104 IS OUR BUSINESS WANTED Chicago Box & Crating Co., Bemidji and Cass Lake fac- tories, are in the market at all times for: logs and boxwood bojts. Write, giving quantity, description, location and price. Address main office, Bemidji. : : 9-7 AND WE WORK BOTH NIGHT AND DAY "WARD BROTHERS | i PHONE 7 7 PHONE COUNTRY TRIPS ‘A SPECIALTY rimpmee g O | - passenger Dodges and Dodge Tour- ing cars—a motor for av- FOR RENT— roonis, unfurnished, upstairs. 710 America ave. 4t10-5 FOR RENT—Modern furnished front room 621 Bemidji avenue. 4t10-4 FOR RENT—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 THE PRINTER'S DEVIL FOR RENT—Garage. 710 America, BOARD and room by day or week. &ve. 4t 10.5 e T TN Foat i FOR RENT-~Large modern furnish-|__ 1028 Minnesota Ave,| FOR SALE—1916 Ford ed room, Call 817-K. - FOR RENT-—Strictlty modern furn- ished room. 820 Beltrami ave. Phone 738. FOR RENT—Five rooms in house modern except heat. Inguire at 401 Park Avenue. 3d 10-5 FOR RENT—Large front room furn- ished, suitable for two, 417 Minn. ave. Phone 732-W. 6t 10-7 FOR RENT — Modern furnished rooms. Call 131 or 310. 575 Bemidji "Ave., lake front. 8-30tf FOR RENT— rooms. 520 avenue. Phone 7656-J. 4d 10-4 FOR RENT—Two rooms for light housekeeping, furnished; also gs- rage. 423 Fourth St. 9-15tf FOR RENT—Five room modern furnished: house. Family with no children preferred. Phone 314. 10.2 tf " FOR SALE FOR SALE—Furniture. Phone 693 4t 10-6 Phone 3t10-4 Modern furnished Beltrami tically new, half price. 392.J. FOR SALE—Used Buick-4 touring car, Northwestern Motors, phone . 263%W. 41104 FOR SALE—Chevrolet touring car Price $300. Inquire. Inquire 219- 2nd street. 4t 10-6 FOR SALE—Kitchen table and two chairs cheap 510 1-2 America ave- nue. Phone 380-W. 3t10-4 FOR SALE—Four room house on Bemidji avenue. Very reasonable Terms. Phone 983-W. 3t 10-5 FOR SALEMan's fur lined over- coat. Beaver collar. Very reason- able. Call 692. 5t10-6 FOR SALE—One 1920 model H;: ton Holt Catipillar Tractor, at a snap. Beml_dji Auto Co. 8-29tf FOR SALE—Two horses weight 1050 each, A. H. Swedberg, 24th street and Irvine avenue. 6t 10-4 FOR SALE—Show _case, cheap if taken at once. Apply Bemidji Book & Stationery. Co. Phone 799-J. 9-21tf LADIES . desiring Spirella corsets, accessories or children’s waists. Call 902. Mrs. Nellie Crowell, Cor- setier. i 12¢ 10-9 FOR SALE OR RENT—Five room house furnished or part of it. Ap- ply on premises, 1237 Dewey ave- nue . 4t °10-7 —_— S — FOR SALE—Seven room house on 723-11th street. Lot 100x140. Part cash and balance terms. Inquire at 700/ America. 5t 10-6 FOR SALE—Corner acre lot at 26th and- Bemidji avenue. Very reason- able. If interested ‘write M.'J. care of Pioneer. 4110-5 FOR SALE—Raubber stamps of all kinds made t> order. Stamp pads, all sizes and colors, and notarial seals, daters, printi; outfits. Mail _orders romptly filled. Bemidji Book & tationery Co.. Bemidii.. 6-24tf. & PACKIN QUITE A SwAkGER WS MORNIN' 8t10-4, Erickson Hotel, 310 America ave- nue. Phone 182. 3t 10-4 touring car.- Good running condition. Price $100, inquire at Puposky postoffice. 5d10-7. FOR SALE—Extra choicel Rupset potatoes, order your supply to- day from the Croon Dairy farm or phone 136-W. 4t 10-6 FOR SALE—1922 Foxd Coupe us- ed three. months. A-1 condition Extras. Reason for selling. Cash Delaney, Markham Hotel. 3t10-4 rc;n %‘L i blanks ogn :'}1 an @) . kinds. Complete m pi'f‘:-y- at For quick servite, send your or- ders to the Bemidji Book & Sta- tionery Co., Bemidii. 8-24tL FOR SALE—Lloyd Loom weave ba- by carriage. Nearly new at Dr. Smith’s cottage, Birchmont road and 23rd.or call 663-w. .. 8t10<4 FOR SALE--Good seven room house partly modern with garage and barn. Also four room house, three blocks, from . business’section. In- quire of 606 Fourth street. 6t10-7 TOO MANY. CARS FOR SALE—~We_offer your choice at a very low. price—1922 Dodge, 1920 Dodge,»1917... Dodge, 1921 Ford. Prices are right for cash or bankable paper. Duxbury Land Co. P 9-30tf FOR SALE—Cheap,, 1 large Oak, roll top desk, 1 large Qak flat top desk table with plate glass top. Also farm lands, Lake shore home tracts. Cordwood, lath bolts, pulp- wood, seed potatoes, or live stock accepted as down payments. — e $1000, DOWN SECURES ' FARM 80 ACRE MINNESOTA LAND on Ygllowstone trail, 2 miles to creamery, near neighbors; mail de- livered, heavy rich bldck - loamclay subsoil, good we: 2 story home good condition, barn, hen house, granary, several out-buildings; this farm has produced 55 bushels of corn, 50 of oats per acre, wonderful opportunity to locate in the richest section of Minnesota. Details of this and other remarkabla bargaing in Sperry’s new, farm cstalog just out, copy free. Sperry Realty and Investment Co., Pittsburgh Bldg., St. Paul ,Minn. 2d 10-4 and 10-7 [ LOSTor FOUND | LOST—One 38x4 Lec rough tread tire with white striped cover, in- ner tube and rim. Return to the Northern National Bank for re. ward. 2t 10-4 Care should be taken to endorse a check across the back of the left end, as is the universal business custom. ~ Checks endorsed across the wrong end cause annoyance to the banks that must handle them. em——— e ] Palmistry and Card Read- ings At 623 Fifth street Hours: 3 pm. 5 pm. until Bvenings from 7 to 9 Appolutments msde by phone. Call 807, Ida Hsllsdey. NEAW, ' L\ WHIFEEY HAS FOUHD T0 REVIVE DOMESTIC WEAVING Movement in England to in a Measure Restore System \Which Pre- ceded Modern Factory. A short tline ago an Indian came into Laicashire: from:a training school in Paris and promised @ huge. order to anyone who could invent'a single | hand‘spinning spindle with Aan auto- matic feeder of raw cotton. This was to be used to help crush the factory system of India by & revival and ex- tension of hand spinning, and with it, domestic weaving. The idea should not be impossible, but the difficulty of providing the mechanism is to make it light enough in weight to be easily moved about, also to make ‘it cheap enough for any poor householder to purchase. India has about 2,000,000 hand looms em- ploying 5,000,000 or 6,000,000 men, women and children, consuming more nm:\} 250,000,000 pounds of yarns. In England the art of domestic weaving has been practically lost. It was superseded nearly 100 vears ago by the rapid advance of the automatic loom and the factory system. But there has been a suggestion recently that some attempt should be made to reintroduce domestic weaving on a more modern plan than that which has been pushed out. Domestic hand-loom weaving may still be found In isolated | places and it has also been taken up by disabled soldiers. Hopes to Bring Rain by Wireless, Sir Oliver Lodge, England's veteran | scientist, knows how to play on the imagination of his countrymen. -On his seventy-first birthday he. casually | announced that much of his time is de- voted to wireless research work, but for the’ time being’ he shall keep the results of his experiments dark. He believes that: thereils a great future for broadcasting. /Being asked what he thinks is the cause of England's protracted drought —last year was the driest of all re- corded English summers, and there has been some duplication of it this. year. “The atmosphere wants electrifying,” he sald. “Some day, I have no doubt, a method will be found to electrify the atmosphere to produce rain at will. 1t 1s one of my dreams of the future.” DEVOTED TO BLIND PONTIFF Living Buddha, Made Sightiess by Dis- sipation, Commands Veneration of Millions of Followers. The living Buddha has a double per- sonality. He is clever, penetrating, en- ergetic, but at the same time he in- dulges in the drunkenness that has brought on blindness. When he be- came blind, the lamas were thrown into a state of desperation. Some of them maintained that Bogdo Kahn must be polsoned and another Incar- nate Buddha set In his place; while the others pointed out the great merits of the pontiff in the eyes of Mongo- lians and the followers of the Yellow Faith. They finally decided to pro- pitiate the gods by bullding a great temple with a gigantic statue of Bud- dha, according to “Black Magic of Mon- golla,” by Ferdinand Ossendowski, ren dered into English by Lewis Stanton Palen in Asia Magazine. He never ceases to ponder upon the problems and well-being of the church and of Mongolla; “endat” the same time he indulges “himself ‘with useless trifles. A retired Russian officer presented him with two old guns, for which the donor_recelved the title “Tumbalir Hun"—“Prince Dear-to-My-Heart.” On holidays these cannon were fired, to the great amusement of the blind man. Motor cars, gramophones, telephones, crystals, _porcelains, _pletures. per- THAT ™' MALE OSTRICH HATEHES H EGGS? "with us. All Want Ads Must Be Cash - Because of the detail of collecting we can not undertake to open accounts for small amounts, therefore cash must accompany ad—except for those who have open accounts Fimes, TUSICAY InatFuments, rare anl- mals’and birds, elephants, Himalayan bears, monkeys, Indian snakes and parrots—all these were collected in the palace of “the god,” but all were soon ‘cast aside and forgottén. The blind pontift is regarded with the deepest reverence. Before -him all fall on thelr faces. .Khans and hutuktus approach him on their knees, A drunk- en-blind man, listening ‘to the banal arias of the gramophone or frighten- ing his servants with an electric cur- rent from his dynamo, a ferocious old fellow poisoning his political enemles, a lama keeping his people in darkness and decelving them with his prophe- cies and fortune telling—he is, how- ever, not an entirely ordinary person. RN Soll¢citous. Robby was a manly little fellow about five. One day his baby girl cousin, about two, came to tisit him and as they were pretty good friends Bobby allowed her to play with a sinall Japanese hand warmer for which he had a great affection. He would sit and study the “little stove” for a long time and was very careful that no harm should come to it. When bedtime came little "cousin thought she would like tq; hold the “little; stove” and Bobby, who wished to be! courteous to his guest, reluctantly sald good night and trotted off to his own bed. His mother noticed a rather hur- ried reeling off of his usual prayer, then in a distinct voice there was added: “God'bleth the little baby and keep the little tove safe.”—Exchange. e OV "7 Faint Praise. Two youths had attended service in a chureh on the west side the pastor of which bears the reputation of being . The Wom- ¢ both learned and eloquent. an happened to come out just behind them and caught this: “What did you think of him?" inquived.one- of theim fn a cheery, hopeful tone—the “him” referred to being the .pastor.’ For answer the other cast one disapprov- ing look at his friend and dug his hands into his pockets. Whereupon his companion hastened to explain: “Well, of course, he reads his ser- mons and his delivery is poor, but gee! it takes nerve 10 be a preacher!” —Chicago Journal. Most Exquisite Play Farm. “You love flowers. I have a bou- quet to give you—the Petit Trianon,” said Louis XVI to his wite, the fa- jous, Marie Antoinette. Thus was piilt’ the most exquisite play farm éver known. Here In a wond of 800 trees,- béyond the formal gardens of Versailles, the young queen and her court had their own dairy and garden and poultry, with a thatched Swiss chalet to live in. Here they served suppers, the queen herself serving her zuests—an experience for her, who, according to the court etiquette, could allow no one even to sit in her presence. Uncle Eben. . “Dar ain't no ketchin' up wif some folks,” sald Unclg Eben. “I called ‘Rastus Pinkley’s 'tention to de fack dat he was holdin’ his book upside down, an' all he said was dat it took a mighty smaht man to do his readin' —Washington Star. Licensed Auctioneer Phone 26-F-12 BUSINESS AND : PROFESSIONAL B. J. Martin, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Novthern National Bank Bldg, Office Phone 58 Residence 808 DRS. Johnson & Borreson Physicians and Surgeons BEMIDJI, MINN. Dr. E. A. Shannon Physician and Surgeon OFFICE in Larson Block 2HONE 306 RES. Dr. E. H. Smith Physician and Surgeon OFFICE. Security Bank Bleck . DRS. Gilmore & McCann Physicians and Surgeons OFFICE, Miles Blork L _’—————'_"'_"—'\ Dr. E. fi:‘Marcum Physician and Surgeon BARKER BUILDING Houwrs: 11-12 a. m.—3-8 p. m. Phonee—Office 802, Res., 211 DRS. Garlock & Garlock Eye—Ear—Nose—Throat GLASSES FITTED 2171 Third St. Barker Blk. 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 Chiropraster Palmer Graduate FIRST NAT'L BANK BLDG. Phone 401-W Bemidji DENTISTS Dr. G. M. Palmer Dentist and Orthodontist BARKER BUILDING Bemidfi, Mian, Dr, A. J. Melby Over Boardman’s Drug. St Phone 406 ot o Bemidii FOR RENT Seven.room house, barm, 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.

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