Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 5, 1915, Page 6

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60 SEE 0 neath. We warrant this ware strictly in every way, complete 100 piece set... Cups and saucers... 9-inch dinner plates. 8-inch dinner plates.. 6-inch dessert plates. 5-inch B'and B plates SR fruits 60c. patterns. 25 watt size, 25¢ 60 watt size, 40c 150 watt size, $1.00 Use only Tungsten lights. down half. 2-wheeled Side-walk Will fold up. Heavy rubber tires. BROOMS. Why pay big prices THE VARIETY STORE fine American made, new shape, entirely new pattern, 100 piece sets.............ccceevv...... Cups and saucers $1.35 set, 8-in dinner plates $1.25, E 6-in. dessert plates $1, 5-in. B & B plates 85¢, 4-in. You will like this one very much. ! 29c¢, 38c, 48c, 59c CARLSON, OF COURSE gool Start in buying a few pieces of this war New Pattern Delft blue Homer Laughlin china, § Steel Express Wagons 76c, 98¢, $1.48, $1.756 Coaster Wagons--$1.98, $2.98, $3.48 Special Saturday Sulky worth $3.00, special $2.48 Very strong. Others $1,25, $1.48, $1.85, $2.98 Go=-Carts—!'ne motin collapsible, flat steel frame, black enameled, steel pusher. Special $4.98 Ours only MAN NEW DINNER WARE & sold in either open stock as many or as few pieces as you wish or complete sets - New Pattern Pope - Gosser fine American” china, medium light, clear white, very dainty, real Matt Gold decorations with small black - line ‘under- $25 $1 90 set $1.80 set $20 p We also have in stock G or 8 more dinner ware Some as low as $800; some as high as § $55.00. We sell every item at Right Prices. Tungsten Electric Globes 40 watt size, 25¢ 10 watt size, 25¢ 250 watt size, $1,75 Cut your light bill We guarantee these to be lowest prices. { STAR M BRAND NON " EILLING TYPEWRITER Each 75¢ Come in neat tin boxes. Bemidji, Minn. Star Brand Typewriter Ribbons In any color to fit any make of typewriter The Bemidji Pioneer Pub. Co. These ribbons are fully guaranteed as the best on earth. g ABRAHAM LINCOLN SAID. 'NG LIBRARY THAT IS NOT TAKEN FROM ONE OF THESE H vers the essary EXPENSE if " clork hire, cost of packing, ch MAG botind Edition $5 Sine BIBLE knowledge and research. authorized edition, is self-pronouncing, with copious marginal references, maps and helps; printed on thin bible paper, flat opening at all pages; beautiful, read- able type. Six Consecutive Free Certificates and the is exactly the same as The $3 the $s book, except in ILLUSTRATED the style of binding, which is in silk clot! BIBLE Bl ins all of the il lus- Catholic I81c Aeree Items out the Tissot and text pictures. this great distribution—inclugin te 1S COMPLETE WITHOUT TWO CERTAIN. BOOKS=—=THE BIBLE AND SHAKESPEARE; HARDLY A QUOTATION USED IN LITERA'Y'URE The above Certificate with five others of consecutive dates Entitles bearer to this;$5.00 Illustrated Bible If presented at the office of this newspaper, together with the stated amount that paaacd in Tl fexible Winp Jeathee, with oveyloppik cyvers in full flexible limp leather, with overlapping covers ILLUSTRATED and titte stamped in gold, with numerous full-page plates & in color from the world famous Tissot collection, together with six hundred superb pictures graphically illustrating and making plain the verse in the light of modern Biblical The text conforms to the [ $123 —— _gravings approved by the Church, It will be distributed in the same bi testant books and at the same Amount Expense Items, with the necessary Cegi MATL ORDERS—Any book by parcel post, include BXTRA 7 cents )i 10 cents 150 to 300 miles; for greater distances asi 160 miles; amount to include for 3 pounds. Advertisers who want the best results They know, by experi- section-of the country as! ror nangiig fabrics a safety pin always patronize The Pioneer. ence, that.it has no equal in this an advertising medium. : ) BEMIDJI PIONEER, MARCH 5 Also an Edition for Catholics Through an. exclusive arrangement we have been most fortunate in securing the ible, Douay Version, endorsed by Cardinal 'Gibbons and - Archbishop (now Cardinal) Farl various Archbishops of the cou , a8 well as by th AR illustrations consists of the full | { BDABEIAR 1OOGIB T2 DIIRIAEBIDY h- @ indings as the Pro- & cats 1n your pusmmaster i % ! teds nor the Dodgers appear to stack Hiin their respective ‘leagues. || Brookfeds are successful in -getting j|er, their chances will look better, as H |be proud of. |incessantly last year. After Rucker H |shortstop in either league, also went itainly living up to the critics’ opin- ledly fill the short field berth. i Feds during the stove league raid- H |ter fielder, took the hurdle to the 3| Miller 'and McCarthy, and to ) Casey Stengel and Zach Wheat will g work on either side of him unless \'| this magnificent '{ Everybody who reads needs it; every- if use it as an everyday reference work :{ picture bears directly upon the ac- Making the Little ~Farm Pay By C.C. BOWSFIELD May Go Acrgss River. By HAL SHERIDAN. Chances. for :a pennant going across the bridge this season are al- ready cloudy. Neither. the Brook- It goes without saying that poultry raising has a place in all general farm- ing schemes. - No feature is more im- portant or profitable. Owners of truck farms, of course may not wish to give attention tc¢ poultry, but this is exceptional. In most cases farmers keep chickens and, they wish to make this interest larger and more profitable. Owners of little farms who aim at a well balanced program can hardly afford to neglect poultry raising, for a very small space 1s required to conduct a chicken busi- ness that will pay in eggs and meat an average.of $100 a month, winter and summer.: ‘An acre for_ buildings and yard and: two acres for range is all the room required for a plant ‘carry- ing 500.1aying:hens and producing eggs and meat worth $1,500 to $2,000 a year. Nearly. all ‘the feed required can be grown —on the -little farm without up favorably with the other clubs If the Rube Marquard, the erratic portsid- they have a fair array of pitching talent already. : ‘Wilbert Robinson, ‘the corpulent leader of Ebbett’s crew, declares his club‘s chances of getting into the world’s series’' rest largely on hovy his veteran pitchers, particularly Nap Rucker, perform. Rucker was out most of last season with ~a bum shoulder, but he has been taking Bggs, doz. ..... Leo. 25c¢ treatment all winter and is now at | crowding other interests. pftg:mes bu 30 to 40c 1] Hot Springs, Ark., taking the baths. | To make a success with poultry, | ° 0" P - : 40 - It he is in shape and Jack Coombs | breeding stock must be selected from | /238838 DU. +..ooovomeien . 400 e is in D hardy and prolific fowis, culling out |Carrots, bu. ....... . 40c : should pull a come-back, the Dodgers are going to prove extremely annoy- ing to the pace setters for they're a gang of sluggers and manager. might all that do not belong to good egg pro- Hard luck camped on their trail went out, O'Mara, whom many crit- ics declare the most promising young out with a broken leg. He was cer- ions when he had the accident. He is in shape again and will undoubt- Thé Dodgers lost three men to the ings. Jack Dalton, the slugging cen- Buffeds. His loss is going to be keenly felt for he was a real honest- to-John ball player. Fischer and Al- len, the other two lost to Gilmore’s raiders, are not so important. Fis- cher was a second string catcher and THE BEST PBODUCERS HAVE BROAD ““BODIES. ducing strains. . It is. well to aim at a larger meat production as well as more eggs. There is much room for im- Allen occupied the same position | provement in gll varieties and breeds among the pitchers. as far as egg production is concerned, “Big Ed” Pfeffer is Robinson’s| and it is time for the breeders of this country to get busy. There are won- derful possibilities along this line. The best producers have broad bod- ies. The back is broad and the ribs are widespread. giving plenty of room for the egg organs and digestive organs. The bodies are solid.. The birds are not loose jointed, .but compactly bulilt. Good layers are big eaters. A big decrease in the. egg yield in winter can be brought on more quickly by great variations in temperature, sudden changes in weather conditions, than by continued or prolonged spells of either cold or rainy weather. It will pay to keep a good hen until she is four years old, as her offspring will be su- perior, although;she is likely to show a decline in egg production after the sec- ond year. 1 More depends upon the breeding of the male as to the number of eggs the offspring will. produce than upon the female, yet it will pay to breed from the best layers in preference to the poorest. Breeders should select the va- riety which suits them best as to color, size and shape and breed up until the fowls satisfy them as to quality and productiveness.. They make a.mistake by jumping from one breed to another, trying to discover a better layer. It will pay the average poultryman to trap nest his flock in fall and winter and breed from the pullets which lay (B earilest in life. and from the pullets and bens which lay in winter. . If a hen is given reasonably good shelter, feed. and attention, she will net a reasonable profit if she has been properly bred. The purpose of prop- erly feeding and housing a hen is not to feed eggs into her body, but so to feed and care for her that one may get out of her /the éggs which breed- ing has placéd there. ~Proper feeding, housing and. care have a bearing on the number of: eggs produced by a flock, but breedifng is the most impor- tant factor. Hens must be fed liberal- 1y, especially in‘winter, if-they are to yield a fair profit,. but care must be taken to keep the larger breeds from becoming too fat. They must be made to exercise. s It is-surprising how much grass and green stuff -hens will -eat if they can get it. - Hens kept in confinement to do their. “lével-best” must be supplied with raw cabbage or something green to take tlie place of grass and-will eat greedily of boilad: potatoes, boiled ‘tur- nips, beéts and-parsnips. * These: vege- tables are not only excellent food for them in addition to grain, but they are also among the cheapest. Hens in con- finement must . be provided in part with a flesh diet like meat scraps and the refuse of butcher shops. Like hu- man beings they are fond of a change and appreciate a diversified menu. All authorities are agreed that wheat and’ wheat screenings, supplemented with corn and buckwheat, are the best grains for egg production. Grind the corn mostly, moisten the meal and feed it to the whole flock, as well as to the chicks. It saves a great deal of labor for tHelr gizzards. Corn is objected to by some on the ground that it is too heating and fat- tening. Hens are fond of milk, and it is a yaluable food for egg production, but to prevent waste it should be mix- ed with whent bran. wheat middiings or cornmeal, particular pitching star. He was a wonderful performer last season and Robbie is counting heavily on him this season. Backing him up are Pat Ragan, Aitchinson, Brown, Schmutz and the usual quota of re- cruits, including Appleton of Fort Worth, Cadore of Wilkesbarre, Cha- bak of Harrisburg, Dell of Seattle, Donald of Wace, Goodbred of Osh- kosh, Howell of Chattanocoga and Smith of Newark. All of them have records better than usual. Behind the bat Robinson has Otto help them out has Snow of Oshkosh and Mack Wheat” of Newark, a brother of Zach Wheat, the Dodgers’ heavy hitting fielder. Dalton’s place in the outfield prob- ably will be filled by “Hi” Myers who amassed a batting average of 286 in seventy games last season. ‘Willie Zimmerman, a Newark re- cruit, grabs their jobs, which is about as probable as the Naps winning the American league pennant. CHILDREN ENJOY PICTURES. (Continued from first page). ers will be appreciated by every fam- ily in Bemidji. One need not be a member of a religious organization’ to appreciate illustrated work. body that has-occasion to carry on conversation needs it; everybody can —=a historical treatise—a fey to fa- miliar quotations. It is an educa- tional volume for progressive people of the present day and age. This new $5 illustrated Bible is beautifully illustrated, and every companying subject, describing that particular subject as words fail to do. Such splendid ilustrations appear in no other work. They were spe- cially prepared for this Bible, and the drawings-alone cost $50,000—a veritable art gallery of rare educa- tional value to everybody. For a short time The Pioneer will present this Bible on the popular)] educational plan-for six certificates of consecutive dates, together with the stated amount that covers the necessary expense items of this won- derful distribution, including clerk hire, cost-of packing, checking, ex- pense from facfory, etc. Find. the -educational certificate printed on another page and clip it today. IMPORTANT dUESflONS CONSIDE Washington, March 5.—Whether railroads:may deviate from the Inter- state Commerce commission’s rule re- quiring a fixed form of accounts, in order to comply with various state regulations on the same subject, is|81a8s refrigerator, built up on a steel being. considered by the Interstate|frame and with an insulating air Commerce commiission today. .|space between the inner and outer walls. ' A patent has been granted for a g Aluminum can be rolled = into T sheets one -two-thousandths of an inch in thickness that are as strong as tinfoil. : Subscribe. for. the Ploreer. ADDITIONAL WANT ADS Too Late To Classity with a hook on one side has been pat- A. A. Andrews, 1225 _ Lake Boulevard. - Phone ‘B,ll, 'fiowilmefimewmniflqum . Do you know how easy it 1s to re- move those ugly spots so that no one will call you treckle-face? Simply get an ounce of othine, double strength, from 'your druggist, and a few applications should show you how easy it is to rid yourself of freckles and get a beautiful complex- fon. and March have a strong tendency to bring out freckles, and as a result more othine is sold in these months. Be sure to ask for the double strength othine, as-this is sold under guaran- tee of money back if it fails to re- move the freckles. KEK KKK KKK R KRR KKK * TROPPMAN’S CASH MARKET * % PRICES PAID TO FARMERS * KEKKK KKK KKK KKK KK KK Dairy butter, 1b. .... Pioneer want ads—one-half cent word cash. —_— _— MORTGAGE PORECLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given, that default has occurred in the conditions of that certain mortgage duly executed and de- livered by Benson) and band, mortgagors, to Bagley Building and Loan Association, mortgagee, bearing date the 18th ot May, A. D. 1911, and with the power: of sale’ iherein contained was duly re- cored in the office of the Kegister of Deeds ‘in and for Beltrami County, Min- Desota, on the 6th day of June , A. D. 1911, at two. o'clock P. of Mortgages, on page 525 thereof. And, whereas, the said mortgagee and holder of said mortgage has elected and does hereby elect under the conditions of said mortgage to declare the whole | principal sum of said’mortgage due and i payable at the date of this notice; and, whereas, there is due and claimed.to be due on said mortgage at the date of this notice the sum of iars, and, whereas, the power of sale has’ become operative and no action or proceedings at law or otherwise has been instituted to recover the debt se- cured by said mortgage or thereof. 2 Now, therefore, notice is hereby given, that by virtue of the power of sale con- tained in said mortzage, and pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided, the said mortgage will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises situate in_the County of Beltrami and State of Minnesota, and described in and con- veved by sald mortgage as follows, to- wit: (3) of Bloen Six (6), Original Townsite of Bemidji, according to the plat there- of on file and of record in the office of the Register of Deeds in and for said Beltrami_ County, ments and_appurtenances: will be made by the sheriff of Beltrami County, Minnesota, at the east front door of the Court House in the City of Be- midji, in said County and State, on_the 27th day of March, 1915, at Two O'clock P. M. of said day, at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash. to pay_said debt, and taxes in the sum of Three Hun- dred ninety-three and.89-100 Dollars and | nterest'thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum since the 21st and seventy-five dollars, attorney’s fees, and the disbursements allowed by law, subject to redemption at any time with- in one year from the day of said sale, as provided by law. Dated Feb. 3, 1915, BAGLEY BUILDING AND LOAN WM. A. McGLENNON, Aty 6ta 26-312 Ugly Spots. GOLDEN EDGE DOUSLE STITCHED | REINEORCED | - M. by NORTHVESTERN BEDOING & MARUFACTURING CO, ST PAGL NIXY The sun and winds of February (| < COMFORT FOR LIFE] s ~We carry also this same make of Mattress at $5.00 and a 10 year guaranteed mat- tress at $12.50 +26 to' 30c THE CALIFORNIA EXPOSITIONS GRAPHICALLY LLUSTRATED BY WORD AND PICTURE Bertha Marie Kjorsvik (nee H. E. sjorsvik, her hus- a _corporation, Railroad Issues One of the Most Beautiful Pieces of Litera- ture Ever Published Describing the Panama-Pacific and Panama-California Expositions M. ‘in Book “9” This beautiful publication contains 64 pages splendidly | illustrated in many colors' throughout. The pictures are ! scenes along the route to the California cities and views of the exposition grounds, with ! many maps in relief of our country, Northwest cities and | birds eye views of both Expo- sition Grounds. Just the sort "of a publication that will be useful to the visitor. Mr. A. M. Cleland, General Pas- senger Agent, St. Paul advises he will be glad to-mail a copy to anyone asking for it, or to your friends if you will supply him their namesand addresses. Two Thousand Dol- any part Lots One (1), Two (2) and Three with the heredita- which sale lay of July, 1914, ASSOCTATION, Mortgagee. W ks orney for Mortgagee, Bagley, Minnesota. n : o ; ) i ¢ Kayser's Silk 6loves wews SCHNEIDER BROS. G0, swsii b 4 . ® Losg $1, $1.5082 Justrite Corsets i i i ExcellentAssortment at $1 10 85 The Store of Style, Quality, and Service Phone 850 * Bemidji, Minn. o select from New Spring Suits Are The Attraction Our Spring Suits began to arrive much earlier than usual and the response has greatly exceeded our expectations for our early spring selling. Fresh arrivals every day assures an ever new showing from now on. i b Every length of coat is correct from the short Eatons to the finger-tip lengths—the latter flaring. You will find many clever little innovations in our assortments. Most of the skirts flare—some have pockets and belts. Prices begin at $15 and run - gradually to $47.50 Young Women'’s Spring Frocks NEW AND DELIGHTFUL COLLECTION Each dress has some new and distinctive feature which stamps it as absolutely of this Spring’s fashioning. There are dresses with belts, dresses with pockets, suspender dresses and combination dress- - es. Their materials are taffeta, crepe. me- - teor, crepe de chine and poplin.- ' : V: FaShiOHable NeW colors are black, navy, myrtle, rose, bat- Blousgs tleship, sand . and putty and their ) prices are ! A large assortment of. c?& de chine* ‘Blouses in sand, putty, flesh and white $l9.5b, $22.50, 2 colors, many in ‘combinations, at up to $32.50 | TUURTTT For the Stout Figtire see our wonderfyl assort- ment of Suits and Dresses v New Spfing - Coats Smartly cut coats, with new touches tail- ored with exceptional ability and thor- oughness, covert, serge, poplin, gabar- dine, silks and mixtures are the materials used this season. In all sizes and colors at $9.50, $12.50, $15.00, $19.50 S_zs.oo and up s, 77

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