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THURSDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 14, 1922 « BGEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PAGE SEVEN | LOSTor FOUND | FOUND—Small purse.... money. Phone 277-W. containing 4t 15 TOST—Pink and white baby car- riage robe between 14th and Irv- inc and 6th and Minnesota ave- nue. Return to Pioncer office for reward. 3t 12 15 - = i i TODAY'S BLUNDER | t CORRECTED l - Now that long skirts are in vogue again, the extremely tall woman finds her height accentuated. In order to avoid this effect, she should zlways buy a skirt that has some form of trimming on it to break the long lines. | McKee Furniture and Undertaking - Company H. N. McKEE Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director PHONE 222-W RESIDENCE PHONE 222.R 120 THIRD STREET ! 5 g g 2 -] g B B K H E ¥ £ g § B ¥ H : H Reduced Rental The economical hall for: your large meetings—exceptionally well lighted and ventilated— splendid dancing floor—con- venient kitchen—central loca- tion. Ask for reduced rates and open dates of the Moose Club steward, John Matland, Moose Club, Phone 62. gMooseHall MooseHall MooseHall S UEHOS0OW TYHOSOO [I¥HOSO0W ocseHall MooseHall MooseHall Moo: Larson & Larson SPECIALISTS EXAMINING EYES FITTING GLASSES Office, First Floor 213 Third St. | Office Phone 131 Res. 310 | i i | S 0000 A Would You Pay 75 Cents for $1000 Insurance? MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY To the Bemidji Pioneer, Bemidji, Minn. i Gentlemen— keep it paid up to date, Signed ... ‘Address OO LG A MR OCCUPATION ....... ‘Are you at present a subscriber? Enclose 75¢ for policy and $. OV SEMD ME DOWN 1o MCGOOXLES <o COLLECY A BuiL—~AN! GEE WHIL! “THEW PORE FOLXS WANT ADS Cost 1c a word for first insertion; ¥%c a word for subsequent secutive insertions. No Ad Taken for Less Than 25¢ 5 WANTED—Girl for work in dining room at the Kelliher hotel. -4-16. WANTED—Washing and ironing to do at home 917 Mississippi ave- nue rear downstairs. WANTED—_Job taking care of furn. : aces or heating plants. Licensed engineer. Phone 31-F-14. / 7t 12 16 WANTED—Rags woven into rugs. for particulars, apply to Mrs. A Carpenter, Washington avenue, Ny- more. 6td12-13 WANTED TO BUY—1000cords of pulp wood will pay $16 per double cord. F. G. Troppman d 12 16 WANTED TO BUY—Dry Birch and Tamarac wood in car lots. See Mr. Kerr at Cliffords Store. 11 4 tf WANTED—To rent two or three furnished room for light house- keeping by two ladies. Inquire at Pioneer. ' tf WANTED—Washing .and ironing wanted,. reasonable rates. I have 4 children to support and am in need. Can also do plain sewing. Mrs. Helen Gorze 19th street and Irvine avenue. 6t 12 16 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.d 9-T 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, ete. Minnesota territory being mapidly 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. Hereby enter my subscription to The Bemidji Pioneer (Daily or Weekly) for one year, with the understanding that I am to receive $1,000 Travel Accident Insurance policy in the North American Accident Company and that I am to pay no more than the regular ¢ price for The Pioneer, plus 75¢ for the Policy. I understand that should I discontinue my subscription or fail to my policy will lapse, . Age 4t 12 14! or BiF. Piccccisounias to apply on my subscription. — ] Got CRePe ON SHE\R con- 1] ! | FORSALE | WOOD FOR SALE— Troppman’s. call 927. - 1 "10-7tf i % FOR SALE—Small Dresser; ning board and cot. Call 734-J evenings. 3t 14 .FOR SALE—Pedgireed- Airdale pu nine” weeks old. Males $25,"- fe- males $15. C. D. Lucas. 313 FOR SALE—16 inch Jack pine woog cut and seasoned dry. Four 1€ inch cords at $2.25 per cord. Phone 676-W. 6t16. Carload of 4 ft. tamarac wood on track for quick sale. Call 160. Clifford & Co. 11 4 tf 'FOR SALE—Thre good sound work horses, weigh over 1200 each. $125 takes them all if taken soon. Phone 37-7-14 3t 12 12 about in good running order. Wil trade for wood. Koors Bros. Co. 10 26 tf WAN To get results, state 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, : FOR SALE—Quarter section jack| pine stumpage close in- Inquire his week at Lake Shore hotel. 3 16} | ! WUV FOR RENT—Four room, warm, new house. Phone Ml-W»/ 12 16 FOR RENT—Modern furnished room 1211 Bixby avenue. Phone 349. 4t 12 14 — e FOR RENT—Nice modern. furnish- ed rooms..515 Bemidji ave. Phone 310 of ®OR RENT—Large, well furnished modern, south room. Mrs Zentz, 415 Bemidji Ave. 3td 12-16 ) FOR RENT—Office Room over the Security State Benk. Inquire at Henry Miller’s store. 3t 15 FOR ARE’NT——T'\VO room ap—a;;;mnt with bath and several single rooms New Kaplan building. 12 5 ¢f *ux RENT—Onc downstairs room and two -upstairs. Suitable for light housekeping. Unfurnished at 521 Mississippi. 3t 14 FOR SALE~One 5-gallon electric coffec urn. Very reasonable for Light- and Power Co., or Williant Christianson. Nymore. -3t 12 15 FOR SALE—A small warm house and a corner lot, near new high school. Good well. Located on 18th and Irvine. Price $1000. S. M. Mc- Coy, 101 Irvine avenue- 3t 13 FOR SALE—Legal blanks of al hand. Mail orders promptly filled kinds. - Complete stock always a For quick service, send your or ders to the Bemidji Book & Sta tionery Co., Bemidji 8-24t FOR SALE—Peerless Universal coal stove, base burner, 18 inch fire pot, in excellenit condition, as géod as new. Very desirable for resi- dence or small store building. A snap. Phone 663 12 11 tf FOR SALE—Rubber stamps of all | kinds made to order. Stamp pads, all sizes and colors. Corporation and notarial segls, daters, rubber printi outfits, . Mail _orders romptly filled. Bemidji Book & tationery Co., Bemidii. 6-24tf L e AT &l cash. Inquire Minnesota Electric |- FOR RENT—Nice, modern, steam- heated room, suitable 'for one or two people; close in. 415 Minneso- ta ave. Phone 516:W . 3td 12-16 FOR RENT—Ground floor office building rear of Security State| Bank, formerly occupied by the! Bemidji Dry, Cleaners. Apply at the Security Statp, Bank. 12 7 tf! FOR REN' ew modern dwelling 1005 Bemidji avenue, fifty dollars per month. Inquire at First Natl.’ Bank. 6t 12 15, odern furnished front ! FOR room. Inquire 621 Bemidji ave- nue. 7 4t 12 18 5 . i e Shemat e - FOR .RENT—Warm modern room ! close in. 983-J. 4t 12 18 BORAROWED FROM THE FRENCH Word “Hello” an English Corruption Which America Has Adopted as 1 Own Expression. You should try to learn the old wolf hunter's call, because you know the wolf is a scout and that should be the scout call, says Dan Beard, in Boy's Life. This call was used in France first and afterward in England, but there are no wolves in England now and the bugle eall has been forgotten in both countries, therefore we “paint It green and call it our own.” Kven though Willlam Tell and Robin Hood bugled the same ecalls before America was dis- covered, we can malke it American the same as we have #iade the old French wolf hunter’s ery American. French was spoken In English court cireles, so the titled wolf hunters used the French cry of hab le loup or @' lop loup, loup being pronounced loo, the cry being a Ia loo; the English put on the H and wmade it halloo, and we made it hell-o, which s an American expression, as all the telephone girls know, So the old wolf hunter’s bugle calls which came here with the Huguenots will also be American when blown | through a wooden flathoatsmen’s trum- pet. Warren Stories. Warren is a Shelbyville boy five years old and fond of ecating. One day he and another little boy were playing soldier, and were shooting hoth men and women, when Warren cried out: “Don’t shoot the women, cause they do the cooking.” Warren's father was telling about AD PAGE «WEM DEADBEATS ALWAMS VAVE CREPE | | ON “HeEW O00R have SWINE SANITATION BY FILM Roundworm Causes Great Losses Each Year to Hog Growers—Parasites Shown Growing. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The life and adventures of a worm would not seem to be promising ma- terial for a movie scenario, but a film recently Deparguent o the doings of s as the roundworm that infe: the fntestines of swine may be absorbing Ascarls lumbricoides is the scientific name for this parasite that causes great lo: every year to swine grow- ers, and the title of the educational picture is “Exit Ascaris, is built around one of whom ued by the United States s that griculture pro The screen stor, two nelghbor farme has suc with his pigs and the other 80 much hard luck that he Is dis courageid almost 1o’ the point of giving up the business. The man with the unthrifty herd goes down the road to see the successful hog raiser about lis troubles and {s told that round- worms are the probable cause of his failure. But he is skeptical and re- mains unconvinced until a federa! veterinarian is called in to dlagnose the case. The veterinarian brings a high- power microscope and sets it up on n box in the hog yard where he shows the farmer and his neighbor that the soil of the lot is badly infested with the minute eggs of the voundworm. The eggs with the squirming young worms plainly visible within the walls are shown in the field of the micro- scope that Is reproduced on the film, ‘Then the entire life history of the worm is shown, from the time the egg Is swallowed by the unwitting pig until the parasite s mature and one of hundreds in the intestines. The growing worms are shown to the owner right in his own sick pigs where there are plenty of specimens In various stages of development from the very One Little Pig Had Worms, the Othert Had None. small, newly hatched forms up to those that are full grown and more than a foot in length. This film, “Exit Ascaris,” will be sent to extenslon workers and field men of the department and the state agri- cultural colleges and to farm bureaus. Other organizations that are interested in improving the swine industry may get reels when they are available, and prints of the film may be pur- chased at cost by anyone who cares to own it. Inquiries should he ad- dressed to the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. WHY, HE KNEW ALL ABOUT IT1 Bill Naturally Indignant at Statement Thaty He *Was ' Not ‘Familiar 1 With Political -Ecopomy. ' Bl was a pollticlan of the ward- heeler type and a; fairly successful one. For years he lad been content to accept such crumbs of patronage as the organization saw fit to give transacting . some business matters with a woman and said: ‘“She is so ignorant, she doesn’t know anything.” Warren:looked up and sald: “Reckon she knows how to cook, don’t she?” One, day Wasren’s nurse was ready to give him a bath. She called to him to come and he said: “Wait a min- ute.” Again she asked why he didn’t come and he replied: “I am trying to make Wy minute as lonk.as mom's.” ~-Indianapolis News. Ak him. Then, all of a sudden, his wife developed ambitions and decided that Bill ought to be a member of con- gress. There was nothing for Bill to do bpt to go and see the boss about it. 3 ‘The boss listened patiently to b arguments, but was unconvinced. “You've done good work for the par- ty, Blll,” he admitted, “and I'd like to help you, but this congress thing lu' not in your line. ¥ou haven't got the | 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 ac- company ad—except for those who open accounts with us. Gnss; WA FOU LAVt Fot the educ tion. Where would you be when sowe ‘one of those highbrows down there began to talk about politic: economy? You don't even know what 1t ia." “I don't, hey?” retorted Bill, angrily. “You just show me a goy that gets the votes any cheaper than I dol"— Philadelphin Inquire Chrysanthemums Centurics Ago. Six centuries before Christ the ¢l anthemum gave Coufucius thie subject for a rhapsody; when describing the lenutles of autumn, he drew attention to “Its shining glory, its delicate petals hanging from around the center in xheaves of golden threads, and its tas- sels on which ight of the has been filtered thousand tim thousand years after Confu Ming Yang, gardener and wr of 1he flower in such aceents of g thai the name of his i town changed to that of Town the-Chrys- anthemum (Chu-Hsien, the Chu-San of today). The flower, native of Chinn and Japan, was destined to a glorious career in both Europe and America. Training Her Ear. Tonsilini—Your doughter Why do you Signor has an impossible voice. wish me to teach her? Mr. Longsuffer—I want her to learn 5 5o she'll what a horrible volee she ha guit trying to sing. LOTS-LOTS-LOTS ( ] ] Still have some of those nice residence lots left in Elwell's ad- dition, near new high school: Lots are 37 1-2 feet wide, 140 ft. long facing east and others facing south, graded streets and new walks. $270 will buy them now $290 for corner lots on Minnesota avenue, or 15th street- You can buy them on as small payment as $10 down and then monthly or yearly payments. No interest un- i} til April 1st., if you buy mow. A. T. CARLSON, Owner Phone 61-J BUSINESS - AND 2 I PROFESSIONAL R S TG Ly : T . { DOCTORS B. J. Martin, M. D. PHYSICIAN & SURGEON . Novthern National Bank Bldg. Office Phone 65 Residence 808 ] ‘ Johns ¢ Physi Dr. E. A. Shannon Physician and Surgeom OFFICE in Larson Bloek #HONE 396 RES. 397 | Dr. E. H. Smith Physiclan and Surgeon OFFICE. Security Bank Bleek | ! | DRS. Gilmore & McCann J Physicians and Surgeons OFFICE, Miles Blosk A= Dr. E. H. Marcum Physician and Surgeon BARKER BUILDING Hours: 11-12 a. m.—3-8 p. m. Phanes—Office 802, Rea., 211 M e —— T DRS. Garlock & Garlock ! Eye-~Ear—Nose—Throat GLASSES FITTED Dr. Earl R. Two CHIROPRACTOR 1 Phone 316 Troppman Bldg,; Battles Bldg. —PHONE 153-W-— Dr. A. Dannenberg Bemidji's Pioneer Chiropractor Palmer Graduate FIRST NAT'L BANK BLDG. Pbone 401-W Bemidji J DENTISTS Dr. G. M. Palmer Dentist and Orthodontist BARKER BUILDING Bewidjl, Miam, 3 Dr. A. J. Melby DENTIST Over Boardman’s Drug Store Phene 408 - =+ Bemidil Make that overcoat last you another seas- on—our Service does it. XMAS PHOTOS AT RICH STUDIO L] Prices and work that more || than please Phone 570+W for. appointment 29-10th St. KEYS Got duplicate keys made while you wait! A complete stock of blank keys here always. Giiven Hardware —PHONE 57— PLUMBING HEATING 313 Fourth Street Phones 620-W—620-R *- Robert J. Russell e ———— . Bemidji Filoral Company CHOICE CUT FLOWERS & PLANTS ARTISTIC DESIGNS PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO MAIL ORPERS 512 Beltrami Ave.” Phone 418-W Bemidji