Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 9, 1922, Page 7

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o £ o {{\~b N THURSDAY EVENING, NOV. 9, 1923 WANT ADS—Cost: 1ca ‘word-for first insertion; Jsc a N word for subsequent consecutive insertions No Ad Taken for Less Than 25¢ TO GET RESULTS;'.STQTE CLEARLY: WHAT YOU WANT TO SELL 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 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 acceunts | TODAY'S BLUNDER CORRECTED _ A tray placed on the bed of a sick person is very difficult for him to get at. . l WANTED i WANTED—Girl for general house- work call 284, 2t 119 WANTED—Kitchen girl at fThird street Cafe. 11 6 tf Glacier “Got a Move.” Chased by a glacier which suddé'n!ry came to activity after having been in. active for years, a trio of Minnesota geological student climbers hurriedly abandoned camp. The students went|" to Glacier National park to study Heaven's Peak glacler, pitching, thelr camp 50 feet from the end of the ice wall. They were awakened by a ddll rumbling and with daylight they dis- covered a widening crack some 200 feet back on the glacier and noted that the wall of ice was advancing. They hurriedly moved and half an hour later the ice floe had covered their camp site. The ice moved about ?00 feet down the valley, advancing Rbout one foot a minute, McKee Furniture and Undertaking Company H. N. McKEE Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director PHONE 222-W RESIDENCE PHONE 222-R 120 THIRD STREET e Huffman & O’Leary FURNITURE AND UNDERTAKING 0. M. OLSON LICENSED EMBALMER A_ll_w& FUNERAL DIREC-‘ Day phone IU'IB Night phones 332 or 358 ’ Bemidj Floral Gompan_v CHOICE CUT FLOWERS & PLANTS ARTISTIC DESIGNS PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO MAIL ORDERS 512 Beltrami Ave. Phone 418-W Bemidji PLUMP[NG HEATING 313 Fourth Street Phones 620-W—620-R Robert J. Russell WANTED—Position as housekeeper _Call 719 Mississippi ave. 6t 11 15 WANTED—Girl to assist with house work, apply 707 Beltrami avenue 3t 11 10 WANTED—Paper hanging and dec- orating. Self 26th and Minn. Phone 734-W 57 %:Ag2¢r 18 WANTED—Position by experienced bookkeeper at liberty Nov. 10. “Bookkeeper” care Pioneer 311 8 WANTED TO BUY—Dry Birch and Tamarac wood in car lots. See Mr. Kerr at Cliffords Store. 11 4 tf WANTED—Position by experienced WANTED—First class brick layers for work at Crookston. Apply G. Schwartz & company, Mt. St Benedict;- .C;ookg\‘;op,» Minnesota. 12t 11 13 WANTED Chicago Box & Crating Co., Bemidji and Cass Lake fac- tories, are in the market at all times for logs -and boxwood bolts. Write, giving quantity, description, location and price. Address main office, Bemidji. i 9-Ttf - Man Wanted in Beltrami County The Lange Company wants a man in Beltrami” County territory, ‘also City of Bemidji, to sell their large line of remedies, extracts, spices, tea, coffee, pure food products, etc. Minnesota _territory being rapidly taken up. This offers an exceptional opportunity to the right man, as.he steps right into an old, established, profitable trade, without cost. Write us at once for full particulars. The Lange Co., DePere, Wis. WANTED—Industrious men and women wanted to retail the gen- uine Watkins Products in City territories. Exceptional opportun- ity to tie up with oldest and larg- est company of its kind. Our hustlers, average income is $1.10 an hour.” Are you doing as well? If not, write today for free sam- les and particalars. The J. R. Watkins Co., Dept. 82 Winonsa, Minn. 4t Sats. 11 25 FOR RENT—Nice modern furnish- ed rooms. 515 Bemidji ave. Phone 310. tf FOR RENT—Modern furnished room close in. Phone 983-J 4t 10- 30 P NG, S FOR RENT—Four room house, 1319 Minn. Avenuc. Inquire at 1317 Minn. Ave. . 6t 11 13 FOR RENT-~Large modern furnisa- ed room, 1023 Minnesota Ave. Call 317-K. 6-15t1 Room house in Be- midji close in. Write A. C. Foster Hines, Minn. 6t 11 11 FOR RENT—Strictly modern furn- ished room, 820 Beltrami avenuc Phone 738. - 8t 11 14 Carload of 4 ft. tamarac wood on track for quick sale. Call 160. Clifford & Co. 114 MICKIE, THE PRINTER’SDEVIL S0 MOL WANY <o MINSTER. WHER 40U GROW LPZ BE A - Hot bl - FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, Lake and park view. Use of Grand piano free. 600 Benud)x avenue, Phone 325. ik 3t 11 11 T S A FOR RENT# rooms, unfurnished modern_exeépt heat, 320 Beltrami [ L0STor FOUND | FOUND—Wedding ring. Owner can have same by calling 667. 4t 11 13 LOST—Buick car rim, 33x4 on Cass Lake road. towards Moberg camp. avenue. Inquire at 421 Bemidji or . phone 309. 118 tf _gall 77 if found. 11 8 tf FOR RENT—Two nicely furnish- SHEVLIN and clean. Phone 553. FOR RENT—Twufunfurmshed rooms lights and private entrance. Near Box factory. 919 Fourth street, Nymore, Min: v’.»‘ 3t 11,10 FOR RENT—One_ 8-room corner apartment with bath One 4 room corner apartment with bath. New Kaplan building. 11 6 tf FOR RENT—Modern furnished room two blocks from the Normal and two blocks from the High school. 1302 Beniidji ~ Avenue. Phone 452-W 11 2 tf J[__TORSAIE | WOOD FOR SALE— Troppman’s, call 927. 1 10-7tf FOR SALE—One 38-35 Marlin Rifle in good condmon Cal[ 902 4t 1113 FOR SALE—SO pure bluod Barred Plymouth Rocks cockerels. Ad- dress F‘ C. Alsop, Blackduck. 1t 117 FOR SALE—Dry 16 inch slab wood price $2.75 to $3.25 per load. Can make immediate delivery. Phone 82. Chicago Box & Crating Co- 6t11-9 FOR SALE OR TRADE—Ford Run- about in good running order. Will trade for wood. Koors Bros. Co. 10 26 tf e el FOR SALE—Universal coal stove in very good condition, terms to re- sponsible pirty. 800 Irvine ave. Phone 553. 3t 11 10 FOR SALE OR TRADE—Two milch cows for feed, oats, potatoes, dress ed pork snd: ‘kay-er wood. Address 1119 Minn. Ave. 3t 11 11 FOR SALE—One cow coming fresh in December. Two spring calves One yearling bull. W. C. Ryan, 24th St. and Bemidji avenue. 5t 11 13 FOR SALE—New house, 4 rooms, 2 closets, large lot, Fifth ward $18 monthly payments. W. N. Bowser Room 10 O’Leary-Bowser Bldg. Home phone 882. 4t 1113 e e FOR SALE—Rubber stampn of all kinds made to order. Stamp pads, all gizes and colors, Corporation and notarial seals, daters, rubber printing outfits. il orders omptly filled. i Book & g‘nhonery Co.. Bemidii 6-24tf FOR SALE—Legal blanks of all hand. Mail orders promptly filled. kinds. Complete stock always at For quick service, send your or- ders to the Bemidji Book & Sta- tionery Co., Bemidji. 8-24t e i FOR SALE—Furniture, canned fruit one Monarch range, also rugs and other articles. Phone 960-J. 801 Mississippi avenue. 11 4 5t Bemi FOR SALE— Wardrobes, Bed springs, blankets, chairs, Bed linens, and curtains. Will sell separate or in one_ lot. Jefferson 10 28:¢f By Charles Sughroe’ © Weseren Newspapes Union Mrs. Edar \Bredeson of Grand Forks is visiting at the home of her parents;Mr. and Mrs. G. Ellefson. G. E. Burfield and C. E. Burtield were business- callers at Bagley on Tuesday- A. L. Gordon returned here Tues- day from St. Paul where he spent the past few weeks. The Women’s Home and Foregn Missionary society were entertained at the B. W. Schreck -home last Thursday. J. N. Desjardines of Bovey, Minn,, spent several days with friends here last week. The Halloween pnrty given by the Parent-Teacher association last Tuesday evening was a success soc- jally and financally. The proceeds, $75.65 are to be used toward hot lunches this winter. Mrs. O. E. Peterson, Ruby Peter- son, and Mrs. Edna Hanson and daughter Jeanne and G. B. Courtney motored to Bemidji Saturday even- ing. J. Renne and 'W. A. Feitchie were business callers at’ Leoflaré@ Thurs- day. Among [those who attended the dance at Soiway Saturday evening were: Ruby Peterson, rs. Edna Hanson, Lenora Thorpe, Tillian Scar- ohild, Mrs. R: Satgstad; Cetil Scar- ohild, Cecil Holton, Hattie Gardner, Alf Rain, R. Saugstad, O. Hanneman and C. E. Burfield. Postfffice Inspector Ofto of Be- midji spent Thursday hgl:e C. E. Burfield, A. E.' Rain and B. W. Schreck jomed a ‘hunting party to Ree Lake Sunday. Discases of Metals. During the war a huge quantity of uniform buttons was made for Russia. The buttons were made of a special alloy of tin, which would not easily tarnish, and they were carefully packed in barrels. About a year elapsed between the packing of the buttons and the occa- sion for their use. When the barrels were opened they were found to con- tain a mass of crumbling metal; the few buttons that retalned thelir shape fell to pileces directly they were touched! Investigation showed that one ingre- dient in the alloy had acted llke a polson.and caused the metal to rot. An enormous waterworks undertak- ing in the United States has recently suffered heavy losses through the breakdown of a large number of bronze valves and fittings, UNABLE TO RECOGNIZE VOICE Man Never Hears His Own_Speech as Do the People ‘With Whom He Talks. The last person a man becomes ac- quainted with Is himself. He cannot see himself as o*mers see him, nor can he even hear his own voice with the ears of the rest of the world. In proof of this latter, a French authority de- scribes some o0f -his experiments. If a person records on a phonograph a few sentences pronounced by him- self, together with others by his friends, and causes the machine to re- produce these, it generally happens sthat he easily recogmizes his friends’ yoices, but not his o On the other BECUL Y MAKES ME ° AR' L\SSEN v YIRED <O SIT STiLL 1N CHURGH hand, tbe friends recognize his voice perfectly. This fact proves that every- one hears his own voice differently from the others. The difference lies in the quality of the tone. One hears his own voice, not only through the air, as do his audi- tors, but across the solld parts situ- ated between the organs of speech and those of hearing. The sound thus pro- duced has a different timbre from that conducted to the ehir by the air above. Take the end of a wooden rod be- tween the teetb and pronounce a vowel continuously. Let the other end be alternately taken between the teeth and released by another person, who, at the same time, stops his ears. The latter will find that every time he seizes the rod in his teeth, the sound is stronger than when it reaches the ear through the air above, and has a different quality. The passage of sound through a solid body augments its intensity and modifles its quality. | INSISTED ON “DIVINE RIGHT” Obstinate British Monarch Evidently Imagined He Could Set Aside Laws of Nature. In the days of Ben Franklin the lightning rod was thought essential to the protection of private and public buildings. George III of England, about the «;ne of the Revolution in America, de- ‘led to protect Kew palace with this Yankee contrivance, but out of ani- mosity towards the Americans, he de- termined that the lightning rods should have blunt knobs instead of sharp points. Franklin, the inventor, had-directed that the points should be sharp, so that an overcharge of elec- tricity might be dispersed silently and without explosion. The question of sharp or blunt light- ning rods became a court question, the courtlers siding with the king and their opponents with Franklin. The king asked Sir John Pringle to take his side and give him an opinion in favor of the knobs. To which Pringle replied that the laws of nature were not change- able at royal pleasure. It was then intimated that a president of a royal goclety entertalning such an opinion ought to resign, and Pringle resigned accordingly. —_— Daylight and Dark. A. S.'M. Hutchinson writes: “Give us daylight In which we see aught that threatens us, and likely enough we shall have desperate courage sufficlent to rush In and grapple it; it Is in the darkness that uncertainty sets teeth chattering. More prayers are sald, and with more devotion, at night than In the morning. We creep and crawl and squirm to heaven when the uncertain- ty of the night has to be faced ; but we can get along well enough, thank you, when -we spring out of bed with the coumge of morning.” A Fable. Once upon a time a man owned half the earth, and was very sore because he said he'd rather own the other half, So the gods gave him an exchange, and he kicked because he sald he lost out on the deal. Whereupon the gods gave him the whole earth. But if he was unhappy before he ‘was now mis- erable, because he found that it wax too much responsibility. Moral: You can’t keep a hog from grunting.—Richmond Times-Dispatch. PALMISTRY Phone 667 for Appointment 613, Fifth Street IDA_HALLADEY “I should w:)rry,” said Little Billy, the bad boy. Mamma said.. she - was going to,send him to bed on bread and milk. Everyone knows that’s a feast if the bread’s good and the milk’s Koors Pasteurized. Eh? ~Cgre S BROTHERS |+ BEM[DJI. MIRN.* Tailoring Is Our Specialty Bressing, cibifif;:'. repairing and u‘ilorin. of ‘all kinds, Suits Maae toOrder New Fall and Winter samples are Ressenable Prices A. HENDRICKS Phone 540-W Over Gill Bros, Store Larsun & Larsnn SPECIALISTS EXAMINING EYES FITTING GLASSES \ WANKA GIY WP M ™ PULPIT- AN Office, First Floor 213 Third St. OfilcePhono 131 Res. 310 e Insurance that INSURES Protection that PROTECTS The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U. S. DARNER, Disirict Mgr. Phone 148-J R 1y m HOMER \ BUSINESS AND l PROFESSIONAL b e D B. J. Martin, M. D. PHYSICIAN & sunew Novthern National Bank Office Phone 55 Residence 808 DRS. Johnson & Borreson Physicians and Surgeons BEMIDJI, MINN. Dr. E. A. Shannon Physician and Surgeon OFFICE in Larsen Block PHONE 396 RES. 397 Dr. E. H. Smith Physiclan and Surgeon OFFICE, Security Bank Bleck Gilmore & McCann Physicians and Surgeons OFFICE, Miles Blork Dt E H. Marcum Physician and Si BARKER BUILD! G Howrs: 11-12 a. m.~3-8 p. m. Phones—Office 802, Res,, 211 DRS. ; Garlock & Garlock Eye—Ear—Nose—Throat GLASSES FITTED 217Y; Third St. Barker Blk. Dr. Earl R. Two CHIROPRACTOR Phone 316 Treppman Bldg, DRS. Northrop & Berston Osteopathic Physicians Battles Bldg, Bemidji, Mian. —PHONE 153-W— Dr. A. Dannenberg Bemidji’'s Pioneer Chiropractor Palmer Graduate FIRST NAT'L BANK BLDG. Phone 401-W Bemidji DENTISTS Dr. G. M. Palmer Dentist and Orthodontist BARKER BUILDING Migs, Over Boardman's Drug Sun . g [/ l,-ml A FOR SALE 4 room bungalow, lot 100x201 ft. One block east from Lincoln school. $1800, $300 down and $20 monthly payments, without inter- est. Will be ready to occupy about November 1st.. ‘W, N, BOWSER LEARY.BOWS Residenc, " — i T RPN O,

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