Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 4, 1915, Page 4

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HOOSIERS SEE EGG EXHIBIT Lafayette, Ind., May 4.—Eggs, from the common garden variety up to the aristocratic eggs used for set- tings only, were exhibited here today in a show said to be the only one of its kind in this part of the country. Not a hen was allowed to look on. 1t was strictly an egg show. “If egg shows should become as common as poultry shows now are, another stimulus would be furnished the poultry industry which would re- sult in the production of more and better eggs,” said Prof. George L. Christie today. Christie is superin- tendent of the department of agri- cultural extension of Purdue univer- sity. The egg show is held at Purdue. The Ladies’ Auxiliary of the Fire Department will give a public dance at the City hall, May 10. Tickets 75¢.—Adv. R KK KKK KKK KKK KKK ¥ PUBLIC SCHOOLS JUNIOR ¥ * BASEBALL LEAGUE x| IR R R RS SRR R R R R REEE ] ‘Won Lost Pct. Eighth Grade . : ] 0 1.000 Sixth Grade . 1 b & 500 Fifth Grade .. .0 0 .000 Freshman Class ... .0 0 L0001 Seventh Grade ....0 - 3 .000 A recent patent covers a combina- tion of pocket knife, comb and cigar clipper. MERCHANTS AND THE COMMUNITY (Continued from Paxe 1.) dence of the people, for the people know that the same intelligence and fairmindedness which he exerts in behalf of the community will be ex- tended to his customers in commer- cial life. Most country towns have a few such merchants in their midst, and the community is the better off for | their presence. You invariably find their adver- tisements in the local papers, telling |of the merits of the wares they have {to sell, and giving the people that information to which they are clear- ly entitled. Such business men are successful because their methods of business and their very attitudes breathe suc- s. They have many customers, be- cause the people admire a hustler. This town is located in a splendid |community, and it should have a ibright future ahead of it. But it depends upon us alone. We have some good business men in this town. They are well supplied with brains, jand those brains are capable of ac- complishing great results. Individually they can do much, but collectively they can revolution- ize trading conditions of this com- | munity. The money that i§ being daily sent away for goods might just as well be spent at our local stores—and | would be, if the merchants arose tc the opportunities before them. 1t is the easiest thing in the world ito keep the money at home, for con- sumers are not fools. Just keep the goods the people want, and of the quality they want. Sell those goods at a fair margin of profit, thereby competing in quali- ty and price with the outsider. Therr advertise persistently—-keep the home goods constantly in the mind of the consumer—awaken him to the fact that it is as much to his interest as to yours to keep his money in circulation at home. | When you convince the consumer {that you have the goods that he wants, and that they can be purchas- ted here just as cheaply as elsewhere, the will keep his money at home by trading at home. The peopl2 want a live community TWO ROADS, WHICH WILL TART on the ROAD TO PROSPERITY today. The first milestone isa BANK ACCOUNT: the autobiography of any of finance. It is a check against extravagance. Read our great captains of industry and Invariably, close to the opening paragraph, he will tell of his FIRST BANK ACCOUNT. It was the first milestone in his ROAD TO SUCCESS! FIRST NATIONAL BANK BEMIDJ I, MINN. ACCIDENTS tion_again. to make. ance. Repairs it repaired quickly and cheaply That’s right where This garage will not let a damaged machine go out until it is in perfect condi- Bear us in mind if you have repairs of any. kind Prices are low. e If youdo get into a little trouble with your car you want and well. we come in. . g i want to make your acquaint- will happen. We Garvin & Blanchard Third St. and Irvine Ave. Bemidji, Minn. An Everyday Cake Here is a simple and Inexpensive cake that can be varied in many ways with different frostings and icings,’ It looks a little nicer baked in a tube pan, but will be equally as good baked in a square loaf. K C Gold Cake By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazirie. cup butter; 3 cup sugar; yolks of 4 cqe Bantens bihts s oun o R4 level tablespoonfuls; 2 level ua‘elmwgfuls K C Baking Powder; } cup milk; grated rind of 1 orange. Sift flour and baking powder together three timesj ‘cream butter and sugar, beat yolks of eggs, add these to creamed mixture, and lastly add’ the moisture and flour alter- nately, beating batter until smooth. ‘Gold Cake can only be made successfully by'beat- ing yolks of eggs, very, very creamy and light lemon_colored, using a rotary beater, ‘The rotary beater is the only R beater that will do justice to the yolks of eggs. The beat- ing kills all egg taste and improves the texture of the cake. = E) Cocoanut Frosting Beat the whites of 2 eggs dry; gradually beat in half a cup of siited confectioner’s sugar and continue the beating until the frost- ing is smooth, thick and glossy; then beat in grated cocoanut, fresh or preparcd, - and spread upon the cake. This frosting is made thick by beating rather than by sugar. Save this recipe.~ You will want to use it frequently. Or better, send us the colored certificate packed in each 25-cent can of K C Baking Powder and we will mail you ““The Cook’s Book™ containing this and 89 othet baking recipes equally good—all by Mrs. Hill. Jaques Mg, Co., Chicago. and are willing to support live busi- ness men. ROCHESTER’S FINE BRIDGE. Substantial and Handsome Structuro Attracts Attention of Visitors. Part of a bridge which attracts much favorable comment from visitors to Genesee Valley park, in Rochester, N Y.. is shown in the accompanying fl- lustration, taken with the article from the American City. This bridge was constructed in 1910 11. It is bullt of Portland cement con- crete with a and crushed Barre granite. The balus ters were made in cast iron molds and set In place the hand rail hetng cast about the upper ends f The bridge is ninct; uver all avd the fuos bhis a of twelve inches. The span is forty-eight feet and is a semiellipse wiith cight foot rise. The level of the witer shown is one foot Lielow the sprinz line wud ts the future iow pool level of the barge canal, which cros: the Genesee river fuct o BE-ENFORCED CONCKETE ARCHED BRIDGE IN GENKSEE PARK, :OCHESTER. at grade near the mouth of this creek and but a short distance eust of the bridge. The construction consists of six par- allel arches of structural steel buried In a rib of concrete sixteen inches thick, with floor slab and sidewalk slabs superposed. This sidewalk has a metal edge which answers for a curb, and a macadam ement is carried over the bridge. The width of road- way Is eighteen feet and the sidewalks are each five feet wi Owing to the location, the bridge rests upon two piers and the shore ends of the Lridge are. including the steel ribs, cantilevered over said piers. | The structure is monolithic in that no expansion joints are allowed except at the ends of the hand rail where they enter the newel posts. The earth foundation received a se- vere trial in the flood@ which occurred March 28, 1913. At that time only the center of the deck was out of water. but the bridge withstood the strain. A big British insurance company is reported paying salaries to staff mem- bers as high as $50,000 annually who are now serving the colors. Other employes at the front receive from $400 tc $3,000 annually with 4 per cent interest. Read the Want A “A°LOMBARD TOWER. New and-Novel Departure In American Architecture, -A new-departure in American archi- ‘fecture ‘has just been completed at the University museum in Philadelphia. It Is an addition to the general structure In the shape of a lofty tower 100 feet in diameter, which, like the rest of NEW TOWER OF UNIVERSITY MUSEUM, PHILADELPHIA. the building, is inspired by the Lom- bard architecture of the fourteenth century. This tower is one of the few structures ever erected without regard to cost. The word to the architects and builders was to spare no expense to make of the tower itself all that art and money could achieve, for it is intended to be in and of itself one of the chief exhibits of the museum. The tower contains in its lower story a perfectly circular auditorium 100 feet in diameter, with a flattened dome all lined with tile of a peculiar construc- tion to get fhe Dbest acoustic proper- ties. It is believed to be the finest auditorium in America. The upper story of the tower is 100 feet in diam- eter, 100 feet high, with a dome, and all lined with light gray tiling. It is lighted entirely from the top and is an amazing piece of architecture because of its beautiful tone and its admirable proportions. The walls are six feet thick. The room is for exhibition pur- poses. With the completion of this addifion the museum authorities are preparing to spend a million dollars more in extending the galleries to ac- cominodate the rapidly accumulating specimens of archaeology and ethnology from all over the world. Broad Streets. Berlin boasts that Unter den Linden Is the broadest actual street to be found in any great city. It is 215 feet wide. - Other noble thoroughfares are the Ringstrasse, in Vienna, 188 feet; the Paris Grand boulevards, 122 feet, and the Andfassystrasse in Budapest, 155 feet wide. The town of Simla, India, is built on the side of a steep hill, and the roof of one house is often on a level with the foundation of one on the next terrace. Pioneer Wanti Ads Pay. For Men Behind thePen You signers of checks, writers of letters, keepers of books and makers of records— hereis a new ink—in fact, two inks in one. We were one of the first to add to our stock the newest member_of the Carter’s Inx family— Carter’s Pencraft { Combined Office We feel sure there's a call among our friends for one ink usable in either fountain pens or inkwells, A wonderful new flow. controlleris part of the equipment of quarts, pints and half-pints of Pencraft, A slight pressure of the finger controls the flow. Come in and let us fil your pen with this new ink, and show youthe flow-controller. THE BEMIDJI PIONEER Phone 31. SPIREAS SHRUBBERY Large and bushy, all budded out Each 15¢ RED ROSE BUSHES, EACH 25¢ " TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1015, SNOWBALLS - LILACS COME EARLY AND GET YOUR PICK We will have only one lot FAIR STORE FSY 10 DARKH YOUR RAY Try this! Mix Sage Tea and Sulphur and brush it through your hair, taking one strand at a time. When you darken your hair with Sag: Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, be cause it’s dome 8o naturally, so evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at homc is mussy and troublesome. For 50 cents you can buy at any drug store the ready- to-use tonic called “Wyeth’s Sage anc Sulphur Hair Remedy.” You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one’ small strand at a time. By morn- ing all gray hair disappears, and, after another application or two, your hair becommes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also discover dan- druff is gone and hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no disgrace, is a sign of old age, and as we all de- sire a youthful and attractive appear- ance, get busy at once with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur and look years younger. Subscribe for the Ploreer. POLISHES No. 9 ¢ Hang Your Pictures ] welghing up to 100 Ibs. ‘'with Moore Push Devices,| will not disfigure walls BEMIDJI AT THE (& Bemidji Pionger Office SUPPLY STORE — Advertisers who want the best results - always patronize The Pioneer. They know, by experi- ence, that it has no equal in this section of the country as an advertising medium. certificate to be found on another page, together with five others of consecutive dates and the stated amount that covers the necessary EX- PENSE items of distribution, gets this $5 volume R YOU It matters not how many other Bibles you have, this ILLUS TRATED Bible is the one you NEED, for the pictures are prin- ted in with the type, and thus make clear the subjectsillustrated. .Presented by THE PIONEER Read the certificate on another page,and clip it TO-DAY For the Easiest, Quickest, Most Brilliant and ° Lasting Shine—Choose 2 in 1 Shoe Polish! Inthe “Easy-Opening” Box. All Dealers, 10c. per Box. 2 THE F. F. DALLEY CO., LTD. BUFFALO, N. Y. HAMILTON, CAN.

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