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. No. ! RAILROAD TIME GARDS l s$00 162 East Bound Leaves 9:54 a. m. 163 West Bound Leaves 4:37 p. m 186 East Bound Leaves 2:45 p. m. 187 West Bound Leaves 10:38 a. m. Creat Northern No. 33 West Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m No. 34 East Bound Leaves at 12:08 p. m No. 35 West Bound Leaves at 3:42 a. m No. 36 East Bound Leaves at 1:20 a. m No. 105 North Bound Arrivesat 7:40 p.m No. 106 South BoundLeaves at 7:00 a. m Freight West Bound Leaves at 9:00 a. m Freight East Bound Leaves at 3:30 p. m Minnesota & International No. 32 South Bound Leaves at 8:15 a. m No. 31 North Bound Leaves at 6:10 p. m No. 34 South Bound Leaves at 11:35 p.m No. 33 North Bound Leaves at 4:20 a. m Freight South Bound Leaves at 7:30 a. m Freight North Bound Leaves at 6:00 a. m Minn. Red Lake & Man. No. 1 North Bound Leavesjzat 3:35 p. m No 2 South Bound Arrives at 10:30 a. m SOCIAL AND PERSONAL No. No. N T. J. Nary of Park Rapids is in the city today, Better- stop coughing. Lung Balsam will do it. Dan DeLury, an attorney of Walker, spent today in the city on business. Thomas Klement and § A Brown { of Deer River were Bemidji visitars yesterday. Apprentice girls wanted at Con ger’s Millinery. Call at once, 209 4th Street. S. A. Sherwood of Duluth, general i traffic agent of the Sco, was in the city yesterday. Mark’s Don’t neglect your cough for a }minute when Mark’s Luog Balsam | "”‘OFESSIONAL {|1s so easy to get. . ) i CARDS il Thomas Stuart will leave tonight | l'for Pinconing, Mich., where he will ARTS remain for some time. Now is the time to have your motor boat put in shape for the sea son. See E. H. Terrard. Mrs. Gertrude Rogers solicits your subscriptions for all magazines: Instructor of Vioin, Piano, Mando- lin and Brass Instruments. Music | 210 renewals. Phone 487. furnished for balls, hotels. weddings, | banquets, and all occasions, Terms | Motor Boat Owners. reasunable. All music up to date. HARRY MASTEN Piano Tuner ormerly o Radenbush & Co. of St. Paul i Have your | motor boat over hauled and ready for | the season. See E. H. Jerrard. HARRY MASTEN, Piano Tuner | | Harry Duffy of Duluth, general Room 36, Third floor, Brinkman Hotel. | | traveling passenger agent for the Telephone 535 . . s iSoo railroad, spent yesterday in the {city attending to business matters. RS. HARRY MASTEN Instructor of Piano and Pipe Organ Graduate of the Virgil Piano and | Pipe Organ School of London and New | relatives for several days. Xork Studio Brinkman Hotel. Roam‘remmmg home, Mrs. 36, Phone 335. | ! Mrs. Martin Fliot left this morn- |ing for Brainerd, where she will visit Before | visit friends at Slyvan. LENN H. SLOSSON | Mr. and Mrs. Guy Maltby of Cul- PIANO TUNING bertson, Mont.,, were in Bemidiji Graduate of the Boston School of 3 & 2 Piano Tuning, Boston, Mass. Leave last nightand left this morning for orders at the Bemwidji Music House,]?ark Rapids, where they will visit 117 Third St. Phone 319-2. Residence | with relatives of Mr. Maltby. Prorne 174-Z The Ladies’ Aid of the First EDWARD STRIDE iScandinavian church will meet to- Expert Plano and Organ Tuner and nepairer‘mormw afternoon at 2 o'clock at ‘peciaity chureh organs) Practiced in ! the home of Mrs Jacob Brown, 613 Furope for years. Isleading in the profes- sion for ami, Koocbiching and Itasca ! Twelfth street. All ladies welcome- eounties, made Bemidji headquarters | where he has upwards of 200 | omers, The club dance which was schedul- femiliar with United States make | 11l save money and get better | |ed for Thursday night in the City s u take him into your con- | fidence before husing your plono. He will | ! ball, and te which iavitations have be pleased o meet you and explain the! R different instruments and will enjoy ammg‘a!ready been issued, has been post- souio meklig yanrielaction poned indefinitely. There will be Address 515 Bemid)i Ave. Telephone 92 or 310 i no Ciub dance this week. PHYSICIAKS AND SURCEONS R. ROWLAND GILMORE| PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Oifice—Miles Block ! Young man, a planis necessary | for your ultimate success. Put 25 per cent of your ‘alary on payday in [the Northern National Bank. Do this every month and with the 4 per s cent interest it will earn you will soon R. E. A.SHANNON, M. D. ‘be surprised with the result. PHYSICIAN AND SURGECN | Mrs. W. A. McDonald happily Office in Mayo Block {eutenamed last evening at her home Phone 396 Res. Phone 397 | on Irvine avenue in honor of Miss R. C. R. SANBORN ! Bertha Panchot and Thomas Stuart * Four tables of “500” were played, PHYSICIAN AND/SURGEON {and Miss Panchot carried off first. Office—Miles Block {honor. Dainty refreshmeats were erved. A. WARD, M. D. See ) * Over First National Bank. Phone 51/ Judge B. F. Wright of Park Rap- House 0. 6G: Lake Blvd. Phone 351 |ids rpent last nightin Bemidji and Ileft this morning for Grand Rapids, R. A. E. HENDERSON | where he will hold district court. He PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON { was accompanied by his court re- Ovor First National Bank, Bemidji, Minn. | porter, George Gardner, who ar- Office Phone 36. Residence Pone 72. |rived in Bemidji last night from R. E. H. SMITH j prataecd PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Winter Block R. E. H. MARCUM PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office in Mayo Block D. J. Winton of Minneapolis and !JA J. Crowe of Thief River Falls, | who are interested in the Beminji iLumber company, were in the city | yesterday. They left this mornirg lon a trip of inspection to the various Phone 18 Residence Phone 211 | camps of the Bemidji Lumber com. | pany and were accompanied by J INER W. JOHNSON | M. Richardsand W.A. Gould of PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON E‘this city, who are also connected Hesidence 1113 Bemidji Ave. Phone 435 wiih the lumber company. Qffices over Security Bank. Phone 130 l Miss Bailey. 605 Minnesota DENTISTS | avenue, was hos'ess last evening in . { honor of Miss Margaret Shay of Sr. R. D. L. STAN'luiy \ Paul, who is her guest, and Mrs. A. DENTIST IK Southworth of Big River, Sask., Office in Winter Block | who is visiting re atives here. Cards | were the order of the evening and refreshments were served. Those present were Miss Margaret Shay and Mrs. A. K. Southwortk, the honor guests, Mrs. Hugo Scharf and Misses Mabel Hanson, Mosford, DR. J. T. TUOMY DENTIST 1st National Bank Build'g. Telephone 230 DR &M PALMER Murray, Florence Smith and Stinch- DENTIST gMiles Block field. Evening Work by Appointment Only = T.’]J. Craue of the Crane & Co. LAWYERS store of this city re urned from an RAHAM M. TORRANCE extended trip throughout the East. LA;N'YER Mr. Crane spent more than a week in New York City, where he made extensive selections in merchaidise fo'r his modern ladies ready-to-wear garmentstore. A trip of this nature i-s of much worth to the women of this community as well as to the store who sends its representative, dayll s lB&nL, T30 poms 7 0.9 pe . It will ecable them to make their Snuday 3 to 8 p.m. Monday 7 to 9 p.| @arment selections here without m. BEATRICE , Librarian. having to go to larger cities. Miles Block D, - FIsK . ATTORNEY AT LAW Office oyer City Drug Stove NEW PUBLIC LIBRARY QOpen daily, except Sunday and Mon- Telephone 560 Complete Reaults of the City Election| Will Be Given. Complete returns of the City elec- tion which is beiog held today will be received at the Hotel Mark- bam this evening. Notice. All members of the order of Koights of Pythias are urgently re- quested to attend the funeral of Charles Saxrud tomorrow at 1 o'clock. Services at Presbyterian Flint will { motning. church: Members will please meet at Eagles Hall nnd march to church. Thayer C. Bailey, C. C. Special Meeting. There will be a special meeting of the firemen tonight, February 21, at 8 o’cleck in the fire hall. All mem- bers are urged to be present. Earl Geil, Chief. Nebish. The masquerade given by Miss| Ethel Knox in her school at Island| Lake February 18, was largely at—; tended. Miss Alice Neeley of Bemidji at- tended the dance at Island Lake| Saturday evening. I i Miss Ina Shearer of Bemidii is spending a few days here as the guest of Mae McGregor. { Mrs. Robert Michel came up to White Fish Saturday and ;nll stay | a few weeks, visiting with friends. | P. E. Smyth cam= up from Pupos-| ky Thursday and returned Friday Charles Dickinson of Island Lake went to Solway Tuesday evening. ° A surprise party was given on Mr. B. L. Noble last Saturday evaning, Mr. and Mrs. A. Grlman spent[ Sunday in town as the guests of Mr and Mrs. J. Neumran. Making Insurance Maps. In making insurance maps certain features are considered essential, and the growth of the system has proved their wisdom and changed them only as regards the amount of detail that | has been incorporated. Of first impor- tance were the colors to show the dif- ferent materials used in the construe- tion of a building. Naturally red seemed a proper color to signify brick and yellow to signify wood. These eolors have always been employed for these materials. Other colors have | been added from time to time, thus hlue for stone, gray for iron, ete. In fixing signs and characters for such details as stairways, fire escapes, | dumb waiter shafts, etc., a principal object was to make them plain and distinet. They must be easily under- stood by an underwriter without ref- erence to my key or marginal foot- notes. This object has been carried out, with the result that when these insur- ance maps are examined by an insur- ance man today each sign or charac- ter has such an individuality of its own that it can be easily distinguished and is not confused with another.— Cassier's Magazine. Dot and Trousseau. Dealing with the weaknesses of ac- tors, some noted for meanness, a Paris contemporary relates a good story of Frederick Lemaitre, the celebrated ac- tor, who was somewhat parsimonious, ‘When his daughter was about to marry, Lemaitre agreed to provide the “dot" and the trousseau. “Dot,” it may be observed, is the French equiv- alent for the English “dower” or Scot- tish “tocher.” ‘When the notary came to complete the contract and was reading the terms Lemaitre said: “The daughter of Frederick Lemaitre has not need of a dot. M. Le Notaire, strike out the dot.” The prospective son-in-law was pres- ent, and he had the courage to reply: “The daughter of Frederick Lemaltre can éasily clothe herself with the fame of her father. M. Le Notaire, pray strike out the trousseaun.” ©ld Engraved Rings. Among the legends of Greece it is told that the father of Pythagoras, the famous Greek philosopher, was a cele- brated engraver of gems, and, accord- ing to classical history, both Helen of Troy and Ulysses of Greece wore en- graved rings. Engraving on stones that were partly precious was an art at a very remote age. The British mu- seum proudly boasts the possession of a small square of yellow jasper bear- ing the figure of a horse and the name and titles of Amenophis II., believed to date back to about the year 1450 B. C. The very finest specimen of en- graved gem now in existence is a head of Nero carved on a first water dia- mond by the brothers Castanzi in the year 1790 A. D. UP AND ON. l,n the rough road slage of life. so long ‘and’ yel s shun, there are furtive mome, yvben we sit down by the wayside and would gladly sigp there, go no farther, deep a little o the good earth, which will Bos- ope day embrace ys. dms?; the march-march of suet rings out and wges uson. A hal2 Why? Up and on, quick! We must hark forward. Life con- tinues. We rise and take up-our burden again. March! March!— { make good muscle and bonme-building | come too fat, as such sows never pro- On the left of the picture is shown tation. without manure. a crop of corn grown in a five-yearsro- On the right, the land has been planted to corn continuously, Land cropped in the five-year rotation has given an average yield, for the past five years, of 58.6 bushels of corn per acre; while the land that has grown corn continuously has yielded, bushels per acre. for the same years, an average of 24 Full details of the scheme of rotation can be found in Bul- letin No. 109, to be had on application to the Extension Division, Univer- sity Farm, St. Paul. FrEbEEEERE LR * i * Care of the Brood | T Sow and Litter. * E + e 23 i{** By W. H. Tomhave, Minnesota "' i University Farm. + EEE LT E L L L LT LT L The care of the brood sow, previous' to and at farrowing time, cannot be| given too careful attention if we ex- pect to get the best results. The feed which is given her‘several months previous to farrowing will have much to do with the condition of the pigs that are farrowed. . The ration to be fed at that time| should be made up largely of feeds that are rich in protein, and which material; also feed bulky foods, such as roots, clover hay, and plenty of slops. The sow should alsc have plen- ty of exercise; for this will do much toward keep:gg her in a vigorous and thrifty condition. Brood sows very | often have a.tendency to become lazy, | and will exercise very little unless forced to do so. When such is the case, they should be fed some distance | away from their sleeping quarters, so as to be forced to take exercise. Care must be taken that the brood sows are not fed too much and be- duce a strong, healthy litter of pigs. Two or three days before farrowing, it is well to reduce the amount of feed, as at this time the feed fed will be converted into’ milk and there may be danger of cakeéd ‘udder and milk fever. Prepare a dry bed, made up of clean oat-straw or shredded corn stover, in some dry place, in which to keep the sow during farrowing time. Barley straw, dirty or musty bedding of any kind should be avoided, be cause it is likely to make the small pigs cough, and cause pneumonia. Do not feed the sow at all at far- rowing time, nor for twenty-four or thirty-six hours afterwards. Give her only lukewarm water, with possibly a very small amount of meal of some kind in it. The sow does not care for feed at this time; and, besides, cutting off the feed will do much to keep back the flow of milk and prevent milk fever. After two or three days, grad- ually put the sow back on full feed, and there will be little or no danger from further trouble with milk fever or caked udder.. The young pigs should be taught to eat as soon as possible. They should be provided with a place in which the brood sow cannot get at their feed, and given a small amount of sweet milk and a little ground oats, with hulls remcved, or shorts in it. It is surprising’ how soon small pigs will begin to eat, and how much better progress they make than where they are given no opportunity to get a lit- tle food beside that of the milk from the mother. This method of getting the small pigs to eat early will not check or re- tard their growth at weaning time. The best time to wean young pigs. is when they are from six to ten weeks old. Do not take the litter away from the sow at once, so that the old sow and the litter will fret about the sepa- ration, but reduce the amount of feed fed the sow. This will check her flow of milk; and by liberally feeding the litter the weaning process can be finished in a few days without injur- ing either litter or sow. Want the Consolidated School. The country school-house once was the center of 'the neighborhood “doins.” Now it is seldom visited by anyone save the teacher and the children While the general system of education ‘in vogue today is better than that of fifty vears ago its loss of hold on the older members of the community is a distinet fzilure to advance along with the requirements of the times. The way to restore the influence of the school in the affairs of the neighbor- hood is to make it the social center, and in order to get its full benefits the consolidated school is necessary.— Farm, Stock and Home. Gockney Chivalry. There was a erush in the pit, and the anaemic Jooking girl stood with the late comers behind the last bench. The young man in front of her, com- fortably seated, was not:too absorbed in the musical comedy to note that the girl looked tired as she doggzedly stood out the first act. 'He rose when the curtain fell. “Would you,” he asked. pushing past her, “like to mind my seat while I go out for a drink?’ The age of chivalry is not lns't.-LondQn . such - view. i+++;x-—:-+++++++++—x-+ + HOG CHOLERA~NO.3. 3 By Dr. sota University Farm. M. H. Reynoids, Minne- -l-++-l-+ R e ol e L A R R X Farmers who will bear in mind what was said in Article No. 1, con- cernizg the cause and infectious na- ture of hog-cholera, will readily under- stand that there are very many ways of scattering the disease. They should also understand that most of these ways are easily avoided. It is es- pecially important to remember that the especially infectious thing about a natural hog-cholera outbreak is the manure of affected hogs. The blood is, of course, virulent and capable of spreading the disease, but it is not conceivable that blood, as such and apart from pieces of carcass, very commonly serves as a source of dis- semination. The manure contami- nates yards, pastures, pens, feeding floors, troughs, ponds. and streams Anyone walking through such yards or pens may easily pick up enough in- | fection, on shoes and clothing, to start a number of outbreaks on differ- ent farms. In a general way we may say that hog-cholera virus conmsists of minute | particles of living matter, and that these particles may be carried in many ‘ways that other very minute particles of matter can be carried. So far as we know, the virus is not carried any distance by the air, excepting perhaps that it may be carried upon bits of straw or cther yard litter. Practically all parts of the car- casses of diseased hogs are infectious; so0, when the family dog brings home a plece of dead hog from an infected farm, he usually starts an outbreak of cholera at home. People living on a farm where hogs are kept shouid always avoid pens and yards on other farms where hogs are sick from any disease, and should avoid going into public stock-yards. Many an outbreak has been started from a wagon-rack which has been used to help haul the neighbor’s hogs to town after disease had appeared in the neighbor’s yards. It may be a friendly thing to help a neighbor get his hogs to market as soon as possible in some cases, but it is always a dan- gerous thing for the man who has healthy hogs at home. Hog-cars and stock-yards should be considered as always infectious so far as hog-cholera is concerned. For this reason it is never safe to bring in hogs by rail to a farm or neighborhood where susceptible hogs are kept. There are always two chances of in- fection for such cases. First, as the hogs are driven through the stock- yards for loading and unloading; and, second, the car in which they are shipped may have carried to market, for its last load, a lot of sick hogs. Running streams and small lakes very commonly serve as the means of spreading infection. The writer has in his office an interesting map show- ing that practically all hog-cholera outbreaks for a certain year, in Min- nesota, followed closely along the Minnesota river. It is not uncommon for farmers, who have hogs dying from this disease during the fall and winter, to haul them out upon the ice or some marsh and leave them there, expecting the water to carry them away in the spring and save them the inconven- ience of burying or burning. That is just what happens; the ice melts and the carcasses are carried off down some little stream, and may scatter infection for many miles. The man who does this, understanding what is likely to occur, is doing something that is little short of criminal. The law distinctly orders other disposition pf carcasses of hogs that die of any di- sease, as Wwill be shown in a subse- queat article. The extent to which birds spread cholera can not be known. It would seem possible for them to scatter this disease easily and rapidly; but actual experience does not seem to suppart It would probably be a fair statement to say that birds may and occasionally da carry infection which “leads to fresh outbreaks of cholera. Curing a Snake Bite. This 1s bow the Indians of Central America cure a snake bite: They pin the unlucky patient to the ground and wind strong creepers above and below the bite until they cut into the h. Then they apply a live coal to the wound to cauterize it and follow that up. by. rubbing in a mixture of chewed tobacco and crushed gariie. By this time the victim is nearly mad with pain..and ready to kill everybody im sight. especially when he finds, as he oftep dogs, that the suake was mot ‘venomous. i Fourhundredweight Man, and the Boxers’ Den are all in Berlin or the| mmxl]y obtained by the name of’ Chie!%nn and the Cold Frog, both t:haninBerlm,amcermlnlyldth the shade by the Anzry Ant (Ort, in Westphalia) and-the Stiff Dog (Berlin).. The Lame Louse is an inn in a suburb of Berlin, and not far from it is the Thirsty Pelican. The Dirty Parlor, the;| Bloody Bones, the Musical Cats, the neighborhood, and the Old Straw Bag, in Leipziz. The Open Banghole is in Stadtohen, in the Palatinate, and the Shoulder Blade in Jerichow. The Last name of his inn, situated near a grave- yard, visited by returning mourners, and is of frequent occurrence through- out the fatherland. A Strange Colony. The Colonia Cosme, on the Paraguay above Asuncion, is one of the most cu- rious in the world. The members of the colony make or grow everything they want and import nothing. The workmen have seven hours’ work a day and earn, not money, but time. Their wages are hours and balf hours. These they sometimes save up till they #| have a week in hand and then go off on an excursion. If a man wants a chair or table he pays for it in hours of work, which are deducted from the balance to his credit. Three men went off up_the river in a canoe for a three | weeks’ holiday. They sold their canoe home overland in ten days, lodged in the best houses in the villages on the ‘way and yet had some money in hand at the end.—London Spectator. Solitude. Solitude is dangerous to reason with- out being favorable to virtue. Pleas- ures of some sort are necessary to the intellectual as to the corporal health, and those who resist gayety will be likely for the most part to fall a sac- rifice to appetite, for the solicitations of sense are always at hand, and a dram to a vacant and solitary person is a speedy and seducing relief. Re- member that the solitary person is cer- tainly luxurious, probably supersti- tious and possibly mad. The mind stagnates for want of employment and 1s extingp’shed, like a candle in foul afr.—Jehnson. Rastus and His Razzer. “You are charged with carrying a razor,” said the magistrate. ‘“What have you to say?” “But hit's a safety razzer,” pleaded Rastus. “What difference does that make?” the court asked. “Well, yo' hono,’ a safety razzer am carried only fo' de moral effect.” How He Got Her. “The psychological moment counts for much in a love affair.” “That is true. Ferdinand, for in- stance, asked father for my hand the afternoon my dressmaker’s bill came {n.”—Washington Herald. Hereditary. “Look at the way baby's working his mouth!” exclaimed Mrs. Newman. “Now he proposes to put his foot In it.” “H’'m!” replied her husband grump- fly. “Hereditary. That's what I did when I proposed.” STATE OF, OB'IO. Crry Dl' ToLEDO, %SE A8 COUNT 4 Frank J. 'hene" mnk?s oath that he is senior partner of ihe firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, Uounty and State aforesaid. and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED { OLLARS for each and every case of Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December. 1686, W.GLEASON. (SEAL) ' NOTARY PUBLIC. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly upon t e mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials l'ree F.J. CHE‘WEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Dru ts. 75¢. Take Hall's Famils Bills or constipation. at Asuncion for a pound and came | Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of | Tear is a landlord’s notion for the | |bles, or rheumatism can prove These statements are not exagger- ated. There is no necessity in doing ‘woman 50, becanse every man and suf- fering from kidney or bladder: s in 24 hours by getting a free Dr. Derby’s Kidney drug store. age at your druggist's have 'said a hundredth put of what these little wonder-workers do, profuse or scanty urination, colored or foul urine, rheumatism anywhere, dia- betes, pain in the bladder or :emm Bright’s disease, just get a 25¢ pack- age of Dr. Derby’s Kidney Pills at your druggist, and see the difference in yourself in 24 hours. If you th is too good for you to belleve, just ask your druggist for a free sample pack- age, and try it. Remember, Dr. Derby’s Kjdfley Pills—60 pills—10 days’ treat- ment—25c. We will send them from the lahoratory of Derby Medicine Co.. Eaton Rapids, Mich., if you wish. They are safe, guaranteed. REST AHD HEALTH Tfl MDTHIB AND GHIL‘J.. s MgrS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP ha goed for over SIXTY YRARS by MILLION MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHIL! TRETHING, ith PERFECT SUCCESS. SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUM? ALLAYSall PAIN ; CURES WIND COLIC, ax is the best remedy 'for DIARRHGA. Itiso {olutely harmiess, Be sure and ask for 27 inslow's Soothing : * and take £ ¢ Snd Twenty-fve eentad botte. OM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER SAFE AND PIANO MOVING \oilanco Phosa S0 610 Amorica dve. Offies P 12 F. M MALZAHN & CO. * REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE FARM LOANS, RENTALS FARMS AND CITY PROPERTIES 07 Minn, Ave. Rem dii Minn T. BEAUDETTE Merchant Tailor Ladies’ and Geats' Suits to Order. French Dry Cleaning Pressing and Repairing a Specialty. 315 Beltrami Avenue R. F. MURPHY FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Office 313 Beitrami Ave. Phone 318-2. Mining Stocks Baugm and Sold Buy Kedtmg & C-lomet. & Carbon. Getin NOW. C. G. JOHNSON BROKER Office 0'Leary-Bowser Bldg. BEMIDJI, MINN. Fire-=- Lif Co to Him for Farm Loans _ term. S A Bargain Treat In Fine Clothing Now men we urge you to come and get a suit, overcoat or cravenette while the price is low. You dou’t buy any shoddy clothing in thissale— it’s all cut in the height of prevailing fashions and made from fabrics which can only be ex- celled in suits worth $40 to $50. You Can't Find any Fault With our regular prices from $15.00 to $30.00 and when you see the clothing and at the sale prices of from $12.00 to $25.00 you're simply getting a bargain in the broadest sense of the One Priced Clothiers JOHN G. ZIEGLER “THE LAND MAN” —=INSUR A NCE=Acident REAL ESTATE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES FARM LANDS BOUCHT AND SOLD Office--Schroeder Building