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i —— s 3o ing—they demand the best. Wi is as good as his best. Then, too, with KC Baking Powder he can mix the various kinds of batter before the rush of the meal begins and bake as needed so that every order goes to the table fresh and hot, yet the last he bakes are just as good as the first. The reasons behind these reasons_is that K C is really a blend of two baking powders. One commences to give off leavening gas as soon as moistened. The other requires both moisture and heat to make it active. Dough or batter will remain in a Karually 4 leavened condition for hours, and when put in the will come up as light as if mixed a moment before. For cookies, pancakes, doughnuts and the like, which cannot all be baked at once, K Cis indispenga- i ble. For all baking thedoubleraise makes doubly certain. % Follow the excmple of the professional cook and your baking will be equal to his. B R R S . B e s 0N BAKING FOWDER The patrons of our first class hotels and restaurants are exact- ‘omen go where the pastry and cakes are noted for their excellence, Men are attracted by hot bread and biscuits—when fresh and moist and light. The pastry cook with a reputation uses K C Baking Powder because he knows that results are certain; every time everything oven, HOW TO MAKE THE CHEAPEST AND BEST COUGH REMEDY AT HOME Most persons neglect a cough or cold “for the principal reason that they either don’t think it serious enough to go to a doctor, or don’t know what good medi- cine to buy at a drug store, with the result that the cough or cold becomes deep-seated through this neglect and hangs on the whole winter—which might have otherwise been speedily cured, had Schiffmann’s Concentrated Expectorant been used promptly. This new remedy is so strongly con- centrated that two ounces (50 cents’ worth) make a full pint (16 ozs.) of ex- cellent cough medicine, by simply mix- ing it at home with one pint of granu- lated sugarand 4 pint of water. It makes a whole family supply, as much as would ordinarily cost from $2.00 to $3.00 for the same quantity of the old, ordinary, Barkers Drug Store 217 2rd St. Bemidji Minn. ready -made kinds of doubtful merit. It is prepared from strictly harmless plants and is so pleasant that children like to take it and it can be given them with- perfect safety as it positively con- tains no chloroform, opium, morphine, or other marcotics, as do most cough mixtures. It is altogether different from any other cough remedy. No risk what- ever is run in buying this remedy as the druggist named below will refund money it it does not give perfect satisfaction oris not found the very best remedy you have ever used for stubborn Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Croup, Whooping Cough and Hoarseness. In fact any druggist will sell this new remedy under the same guaran- tee. If your druggist will not keep it for you, order direct of R. J. Schiffmann, St. Paul, Minn, Guaranteed here by and . Old Dobbin “Cets There” The Squirre-l’ Whisks up the tree in search BUT YOU NEED BUT CALL When your order will be whisked to you in i Ib. of Chase & Sanborn Coifee, Seal Brand; | doz. strictly fresh Eggs, | pound Lengby Butter, | pt. Sweet Cream, 1 peck of Potatoes I bunch of Celery, please. Potatoes Au Gratin. fine cold boiled potatoes and mix with a cup of thick cream; season with salt and pepper, and let it stand on the stove where it wlll be merel: warm 1ill the potatoes have absorbex most of the cream; then scatter sifted crumbs over the top, dot with butter and brown in the oven. of food PHUNE 206 short order Order These: Dice Stewart’s Grocery e 3 Star Brand Typewriter Ribbons In any color to fit any make of typewriter o Each 75¢ These ribbons are fully guaranteed as the best on earth. Come in neat tin boxes. The Bemidiji Pioneer Pub. Co. Bemidji, Minn. : 1 I |stipation .take Chamberlain’s Tab- (By Hal.Sheridan) Candidates for outfield berths on the rejuvenated Yankees this season will have to prove .themselves as adept at’ handling ground balls as they- are snaring the elusive fly be- fore they can be sure of their jobs. This is the latest' ultimatum laid down by Manager Bill Donovan and only one of the several innovations. Wild William is planning to intTo- duce in the hope that the Highland- ers can kick back-into the elite sec- tion bf Ban Johnson’s loop. “Years in the game,” soliloquized Bill recently, “I have lost myself and seen other pitchers lose through some gnat-headed outfielder kicking a ground ball clear to the fence.” In directing his gardeners toward this énd, Wild William will be aided by Joe Kelley, one time famous out- fielder on the Baltimore Orioles, and now chief ivory hunter for the Yan- kees. .“We used to do it in the old days,” said Joe the other day, “and I can’t see why we can’t do it now. Many is the time I have seen Hughey Jen- nings, McGraw and many other old stars work for hours at a stretch learning the hop of a ball over a cer- tain bit of ground. - An infielder isn’t considered much of a man if he isn’t a good judge of a fly ball—then why shouldn’t the outer defense be just as good a judge of a ground ball?” Bob Shawkey just learned . re- cently that he broke his hand in the world’s series-last October. The hand had been troubling him for some time and not long ago he had a doctor ex- amine it. The examination showed that the two small bones in his right flipper were badly cracked. Shawkey lays the blame onto Rabbit Maran- ville. He remembers, he said, after stopping a sissler off the Rabbit’s| bat, that his hand pained him. The M. D. fixed it up and promised Bob he would be as good as ever mext! season. v Locomotive Engineer Has Remarkable Experience I have been thinking that word form be would benefit those who may be suffering as I was before I began taking your Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy. I am a locomotive engineer, employed on the Tyrone & Clearfield Branch of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Three years ago I was afflicted with kidney and bladder trouble so bad that I was compelled to lay off duty from my engine and was in the care of two doctors. However their medic- ine did not benefit me One day, I noticed your advertisement, to send name and address for a sample bot- tle of Swamp-Root. At this time my trouble had reached a serious stage. T sent for the sample bottle and in three days received a small bottle of swamp-Root, which I took according to directions, and by the time I had taken the contents, I could pass water more freely. I was so pleased with my experiment that I sent my wife to the drug store of W. H. Milick, Phil- lipsburg, Pa., and secured a one-dol- lar bottle. I continued taking Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root until I was en- tirely cured. Now whenever I feel any pain or soreness after being ex- posed to bad weather or hard work, I take a dose or two of Swamp-Root. I cannot recommend this remedy too highly, especially to brother engin- eers who are more or less troubled with their kidnys (more than any other class of men.) Yours truly, T. J. VAN SCOYOC, 1206 Lincoln Ave. Tyrone, Pa. State of Pennsylvania | ss County of Blair Personally appeared before me, a Notary Public, T. J. VanScoyoe, who being duly sworn, doth depose and say that the foregoing statement is true. Sworn and subscribed to be- fore me this 16th day of July, A. D. 1909. H. B. CALDEWOOD, Notary Public. ] Tetter to Dr. Xilnier & Co: Binghamton, ¥. ¥. Prove What Swamp-Root- Will Do For You. Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writ- ing, be sure and mention the Bemidji Daily Pioneer. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. Do You Find Fault With Everybody ? An irritable, fault-finding disposi- tion is often due to a disorderly 'stom- ach. A man with good digestion is nearly always good natured. A great many have been permanently bene- fited by Chamberlain’s Tablets after vears of suffering. These tablets strengthen the stomach and enable it to perform its functions naturally. Obhtainable everywhere. Geological survey -figures estimate the coal production of the United States last year at about 510,000,000 short tons, a decrease from 1913 of about 60,000,000 tons. Constipation. ¥ ‘When costive or troubled with con-| CORNSTALKS AND SNOW. It I8 sometfmes a good plan to leave some of the cornstalks standing, Every fourth row left standing will hold a-lot of snow on the lupd. At the North Da- kota_experiment station it was found' tliat one-fourth of the cornstalks left ‘stunding stopped about as much snow as when all were left. 'This will in many cases mean n good denl to the mnext crop. The added moisture will make the goil less liable to blow, and theé standing stalks will check the wind a good denl, near the surface, and this also re- duces_the drifting. Better try leaving a few rows and see if it does not pay. ' William Faversham = Famous Actor,, sayi Lt < “A pipe of Tuxedo keeps me feeling ph: ally fit and in good spirits, and, because it is mild and doesn’t bite, it is pleasant to the T at and keeps my voice in good tone.”- Tuxedo Keeps You _ Physically Fit _ Every playgoer has remarked the: virility amf clean-cut vigor cf William Faversham, both as an actor and as a man. -No matter what part he is playing, he always presents a figure of alert strength and keen wits. His voice is especially engaging, clear, carrying and sonorous. For Tuxedo tobacco to gain a testimonial from such a man, stating that it helps to keep him “physically fit and in good spirits” and keeps his voice “in good tone” goes far toward convincing you of Tuxedo’s wholesome, all- round value to you. < SOIL :EROSION IN THE SOUTH. Large Areas Are Lost to Agriculturs | Through This Cause. The following statement regarding soil erosion in the south is taken from the last annual report of the bureau of soils of the United States department of agriculture: In a study of soil erosion in the south it has been found that large areas are lost to agriculture annually through erosion. In _some states vast areas, amounting to as much as 50 per cent of the arable land of these sections, have been abandoned. The character of the crusion varies with the type of soil. Usually on the heavy clay soils “sheet” or surface crosion is found. With_increasing proportion of sand in the soil the erosion changes to the “shoestrinz™ type. then to the gully type. with rounded edges, and finally to the gullies with caving edges. All methods for prevention and con- trol are based either on increasing the capacity for absorbing the water as it falls or on decreasing the velocity of the run-off.” A new method in use in one locallty is the construction of what are -known as “‘christophers,” the dis- tinctive featdre of this plan lying in the “manner of disposing of storm wa- ters. Across.an,inciplent gully is built a dam. through which is passed a SeWel pipe ‘¢oniiected With an upright pipe on the upper sidé of the dam. ater fills the valley until it reaches the top of the upright pipe nnd then flows down this. pipe” into the nest tield.; The water-left standing helow the mouth of the upright pipe is grad ually; remaved by a tile drain. The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe and Cigarette Tuxedo will put snap and vim into your “daily work. It’s an inspiring tobacco that will keep you fit as a fiddle, full of zest, hearty and happy and hale. You can smoke it all day long, and each succeeding pipeful will glow with greater cheer. The original, exclusive “Tuxedo Process” has many imitators—but no equal. Try Tuxedo for a week, and you’ll like it fol’ever. YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Woodchester skinned hams, the| QAW 'EE 2 RED finest in_the land at 15¢ per pound i *CI&{ 1y prePA = . Convenient, glassine Famous Green Tin at Schroeder’s. Phone 390 or 65.— "OR | IPE 8. CiG ARET wrapped, moisture- 5 with gold lettering, loc Adv. Seircr) — proof pouch . . . curved to fit pocket In Tin Humidors 40c and 80c In Glass Humidors 50c and 90c THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY Huller For Peas and Beans. We are using 2 homemade machine to thrash bLeanis and cowpeas that does good work without cracking the beans and peas. 'They can be separated from the straw very easily by using a pitch fork and are clenn enough to sell after being dropped’ twice through a steady . THE SUPREME IN MOTION PIGTURES. THAT prece, The onty materin ve baa | CONIING "EASCINATING HEART.CRIPPING FHO 1O-PLAY sEmEin s “THE MASTER KEY” By John Fleming Wilson. A thrilling story of myst- GRAND THEATRE and fourteen inches long. The concave Is made. of a biece of oak. For teeth we used No. 16 nails with the heads cut off. The ‘haifls were driven in far enough to leave about oné and one-half cylinder may 'be a_piece of hard wood log. Ours is’ten inches in diameter ery and romance. Read the story in Fri- day’s Daily Pioneer. ——— 5 §he secret ~ is at the " bottom 1 R T ; THE HULLER. inches protruding.’ 'In‘putting in the cylinder teeth ‘we stretched a string diagonally across to mark the row of teeth. | This makes the machine run steadier, as a whole row of teeth will not strike the concave all at once. The tecth are set about an inch apart and spaced so those of the cylinder will pass between the tgeth in the concave without striking. - The machine Is mounted on two posts set firmly in the ground. Gearing was obtained from an old binder. The double sprocket A is from the reel gear. B is the crank and C the fiywheel. Our cylinder . e, makes five revolutions to one of. the crank. ; e of the sea. 20 1bs. sugar Wednesday only, with every $2.00 cash purchase at Schroe- der’s stors. Phones 390 or 65.—Adv. The largest tree in the United States is said to be the Mother of the Forest, a giant redwood in the Calaveras big tree forest in Califor- nia. "It is supposed to contain 140,- 619 board feet of lumber. Japanese rice, 20 lbs, for $1.00 at Schroeder’s “store. Phones 65. and 390.—Adv.” To perfume or disinfect the air of & room there has been patented an attachment for-electric fans to drip a liquid into the breezes they create. Bids Wanted. Bids for pulling stumps and clear- ing 26 acres -land. Apply James Heneghan, . Nymore, - Minn. Phone 329-W. : ADDITIONAL WANT ADS : T00 LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR™ SALE —~"Five thoroughbred light Brahmas, one cockerel, four hens; price $6.00 H. Langmaack, Puposky, Minn. WANTED—GIT] to fake charge of lets. They are easy to take and most agreeable in effect. Obtainable : ey-| erywher % house, at once. Two children, 8 and 11 years .old. Phone. . Mrs. C. Payne, Ballclub, Minn.