Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, May 11, 1916, Page 3

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,/BERORT. 0 “ T W, R A RIS T T SHATE OF MIwANS + TEEICLOSE OFBUSLNASS ON MAY ist, 1016. RESOURCES. 1 25, 3 283 Girculating notes outstanding 31.%:Net,-amount;, due 'to i banks 33.Indiy al schigck 34. 41. 43, discounts (except L d & LR ah cenaass i 9426,200.44 ks dis- 56 ShoWiL, on...b) b_Acceptances ofother -counted .... “Total 16ans . Overdrafts, secure U. 8. Bonds: U. S. bonds deposited to secure circulation (par value) ...... Total U. S. bonds ... Bonds, securities, etc.: b Bonds other than U. pledged to secure inge geposits . s other: ytmot imcluding:.stael unpledged) " Total bonds, securities, efc.. . a.Subscription to’ stock of Federal Reperve:; ,600.00 b Less,amoun +°1,800.00.. (if mnen- nd 26,000.00 -siNet,amount dus, #rom Rederall Re- serve Bank ......... Weseeseass reserve Chicago,-and- St. -Eouis ...... “ b Net amount.due from approved ‘reserve-agents' in--other reserve cities anner s G 111,952.26 Net amount due from banks and bankers (other than included in $10-0R A1) uenis gt naae ou‘exlr ‘checks on banks in the same city or town.ag Feponting bank @ Olitside. checks and. ocher cash 36.74 +404.31 s e Notesof rother:mational sbank: J’ederal Reserve bank notes . Coin and certificates Legal-tender notes Redemption_fund urer and.dueé urer Capitak-stacle Surplug fund Undiyided puofi b Regenved for ¢ Lkess gurrenizexpens and..gaxes paid $ 112;980:38 10:344.04 and bankers (ather:than included in _i28r0r 80) . 4 iwdeposits .subject to sschecl Certificatearof.ideposits due in.less than;30 days . - Certified ‘ohagks Cashier's checks: Foatal auvings geposll? 3 Tatal demand deposits s ik TR e Time deposits’ (payable after 30 days, or subject to 30 days or more.motice:) Certificates of deposit Other time deposits . Total of time depi 41, 42 and 43 .. “ Total 880,775.39 s . 277,518.15 State of Minnesota, County of Beltrami—ss. I, R. H. Schumaker, Cashier of, the above-named bank, do solemnly swear thatithes of my knowledge and belief. +bovy R. H.: SCHUMAKER, : st SEATAT 426,291.44 none 26,000.00 14,250.00 21,600.00 17,916.66 175,022.63 70,032.58 ©8,209.47 440.05 1;280.00 1,260.00 28,871.40 2,245.00 1,260.00 $794,364.22 $ 50,000.00 10,000.00 2,686.34 25,000.00 48,434.34 882,369.51 32,468.76 2,606.05 9,601.91 3,839.16 225,453.93 52,064.22 $794,364.22 e stafement.is true to the best Cashier. Al A. WARFIELD, S H ROBERTS, Directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 8th day of May, L. L. BERMAN, Notary Public, Beltrami County, My commission expires April 3, Minn. 1922. e { “HES0RAS Rawk At RRATort In TEE SIATE OF pINNE | = AT 1N 3 = | ‘SOTA, AT THE cr.oln“\_or x'z'h’)l"u MAY 1, 1916, ! o. RESOURCES. 1. a Loans and discounts (xcept those shown on b) $255,137.01 Total loans ... $255,137.01 i 2. Overdrafts, secured and unsecures.. none i 3. U. 8. Bonds: a'U. 8. bonds deposited to secure | cure circulation (par value).... 50,000.00 ! Total U. 8. bond: 50,000 60 I 4. Bonds, seouritles, et i b Bonds other than S. bonds pledged to secure postal savings deposits ........... Cieeeeiiez. 10,000.00 . a4 Bonds loaned (other than U.'S. BORAS) 1oeovessrorossoonsonene 6,000.00 e Securities other than U. S. bonds (not including stocks) owned unpledged . . 50,808.63 Total bon 66,803.63 6. a Subscription to stock of Iederal h -Reserve Bank ..... 3,600.00 ’ b, Lessamount unpaid 1,800.00 1,800.00 1,860.00 8. Burniture and fixtures. . 10,000.00 10. Net-amount due from Fel serveBank ........... 6,430.07 5 11. a Net gmount due from Ve = -.reserve agents in New York, bt Chicago, and St. Louis ........ 6,601.52 ) 1 Netzamount due from -appreved | reserve agents in ptheb Teserve CILIES’ L, oo aidiians Sesiammis 49,499.24 56,100.76 12. Net amount due from banks and bankers (other than:included in ABOr 1) oy vspassnivsevions 28,268.12 14. Other checks on banks in the same city or town as reporting bank 1,748.58 15. a-Outside checks and other :cash .................. 304.02 and 1189.43 493.45 16. 4,080.00 17. Federal Reserve bank-notes. 920.00 19. Coinand gertificates 30,28b.26 20. Legal-tender notes .. 4 4,000.00 21. Redemption fund with U. S Preas- urer and'due from U. S. Treas- urer ... . 2,600.00 Total ...... .. .$618,676.87 25. Capital stock: paid in . $ 50,000.00 26, Surplus fund ... 10,000.00 27. Undivided profits 11,846.90 b Reserved for .. .$ 11,846.90 4 ¢ Less current ex; and taxes paid . 6,562.31 5,294.59 . 28, Circulating motes ou 50,000.00 b 31.. Net amount due to banks and bank- ers.(other than included in 29 or :30) 9,566.10 { Demaud:deposits 33. | Individual deposits subject to check 266,979.24 34,7 Certificates of /deposit-due in less than 30 days 17,362.71 35. :Certified checks .. 41.61 36. .Cashier’s checks outstanding ...... 18,304.06 i 38, 'Postal :savings «deposits .......... 4,440,00 Total demand deposits Ttems 33, 34, 35,36, 37, 38, 39 and 40,. 297,127.61 Time-deposits’ (payable after 30 ;days,.or subject to 30 days or ; more notice:) 41, Certificates-of deposit . 70,934.91 43, Other time deposits .. g 26,654.66 Total of time deposits, Ttems 41, 42, and 43 . % 96,689.57 b pE—— Total ... $618,576.87 State of Minnesota, 1, , .. L. Brooks,: Cashier of: the abovernamed bank, do solepnly lwm:‘,t\s'.&(ha above.statement ig true to the best of my knowledge and belief. W. L. BROOKS, Cashier. Correct—Attest: A P 'WHITE, GEO” W. RHEA, J. B. COWAN, Subsaribed and sworn. to before me this 8th day of May, Directors. 1916. OSCAR NELSON, “ Notary Public; Beltrami County; Mifn. (Seal) *‘My" commission- expires Jan. 11, 1922. 1a511 ~| ©_away. from the-laying-house-and “SpesidYour Money +awithgeushome merchants, *“They»higlp pay. the, taxes, “skeep:pi the schools, build svrokdayend make thisgcom-, symuftity worth while. You i awilliind the advertising of ) she besi¢ ones in this paper. ek : 166069060400 0000000 ~POULTRY PICKINGS. * 19 k © Bitting hens should be taken -{©--put-in & coop-by._themselves. & It {s time now to be onithe @® lookout for lice. Every one you @ Kkill now will save a million: kill- € ings by and by. @ ~Improper feeding, combined ' 4@ with close.confinement, has been @ithe canse of:many failure intur- | ® key: raising. & Now is:the time to keep ahead @ of “the mites by keeping | the @ house. and -nests ' well sprayed & with Hee killer. 9 Onlon-teps or sprouts and dan- @ delion leaves are good green stuff || ©x:for .the chicks, and these: come & before most: greens are out. It ®:»wilk:pay to.chop them up for the | @-young-chicks. pe POPOPOPOOPOOO80OO GLEANSE- THE POULTRY . “HOUSE OF VERMIN Dipping poultry in an insecticide is sometimes: tried, but is not: advised. ‘With head lice a little different line of treatment is necessary, says the Rural New Yorker. Blue ointment: applied to the:head is effective. Lard is.per- haps the sbest remedy. Sulphur and lard are sometimes used, but on:chick- ens this is not advised. Frequently a beginner will use too much sulphur with the jard. The effect of this is that the sulphur soon begins to pull the tender skin of the chicken, and this makes sores which seldom ‘heal and sometimes results in theideath of the bird. ‘For head lice it is safer to use lard alone, sweet oil or blue oint- ment. The above remarks apply to body lice. There is another insect :which causes .great annoyance to :poultry. Certain -mites not only work on the .body of:the fowl, but also on the legs. to cause the-trouble known as ‘“scaly leg.” ~The roost mitgs are very small, but. make. up for their size in remark- able activity. The body lice bite off the scales of the skin and work on the feathers, but the mites, on the other ‘hand, suck.the blood from the animal and do.not hite. The roost mites hide: away during-the day in some: part of PVOOOPDOPOVOODTIO0OVOOOG0S When the summer sun 18 high in the sky chicks must have shade if thelr health is to be preserved. Where there is shrubbery, such a8 small fruit or other bushes, that will be sufficient. If natural shade is lacking artificlal means for pro- tecting - the chicks must be pro- vided. A piece of canvas or old carpet thrown over a wooden frame, as shown in the fllustration, will do nicely. r—— the poultry house, usually on the bot- tom side of the roost or where .the roost is attached to the wall. ' There 1s no question akout the great damage done by these mites. Hens have been killed by them. They. cause hens to stop laying, and without doubt they kill and stunt chickens. Cases: have been reported where these mites annoy men, and it is not uncommon for them to:attack other farm animals; such as horses. They are not particularly ac- tive in cold weather, but on warm days or settled warm weather they come out in swarms. Professor Lamson says he has found that kerosene evaporates so quickly that more or less-of its:effectiveness.is lost in a few days, and the mites be- come as numerous as ever. The va- rlous animal dips give good. satisfac- tion when thoroughly used. The. coal tar dips, however, must be used with caution, as too heavy an appHeation will sometimes result in .eye: trouble for. the. bird. . To.avoid this the best time for cleaning the house is when the stock is changed from one house to another, which will give several days for -making a-thorough- -applica- tion and letting it dry out. The appli- ecation of a fat which will smear well on the underside of the roost will greatly help out. The main point is to see that all cracks in the house and especially the roost support used -are thoroughly drenched with a mite kill- ing material. Handling Goose Feathers. The goose feathers are treated gen- erally in this manner: After being spread in some clean, dry, airy place they-should be turned over with a fork every few.days until thoroughly dried. If placed in bagy and well steamed they are-more valuable, as the steam has a tendency to purify them, remov- ing much of the oily. oflor they nat- urally have. KKK KKK KKK KKK KKK * SAUM CONSOLIDATED * x SCHOOL * ¥ /(By Special Correspondent.) : ¥ KEKKKEK KKK KKK KKK A number of young folks from this vicinity attended the play and dance at Beck’s school house at Shotley last | | Saturday evening. All that attended report a delightful time. Alice Carlson and William Ander- son visited with Laura Anderson at 1| Shotley. from Friday until Saturday. How'’s yourBlood? * PIMPLES,AND, ERUPTIONS MEAN BAD BLOOD Poople who have impure or impover- ished blood ‘should be careful to take only a vegetable and temperance rems | edy such as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medi- cal Discovery is and has been for near- ly 50 years. Its ipgredients printed on ‘wrapper. The first day you start to take this reliable, medicine, impure:germs and accumulations begin to separate in the blood and are then expelled through the eliminative organs. In place of the impurities, the ar teries and veins gradually. get fresh vitalized blood and the action of this good blood on the skin, means that pimples, boils, carbuncles, - eczema, rash, acne; and all skin blemishes will disappear. Then you must remember that when the blood is right, the liver, stomach, bowels and kidneys become healthy, ‘active and vigorous and you will have no more trouble with indi- gestion, backache, headache, Y i Get Dr. Plerce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery to-day at any medicine dealer’s, in.tablet or lquid form, or send Dr. Plerce, Invalids’ Hatel;: Buffalo, N. Y;; 10¢. for trial package. Owatonna, Minn.—“Several years ago T-had a very-bad disorder of the blood, my face was broken out with nasty pimples. I took Dr. Piercels Golden Medical Discovery and Pleasant Pellets for this condition and they purified my blood and cleared my face of the| pimples. I found Dr. Pierce’s medi- cines to be good and can highly recom- mend the ‘Discovery’ as a blood purifier and tonic.”—Mges. Mary THoM, 122 E. Pearl St. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets ‘reaulate,v and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules.| Ben Anderson of Shotley visited at | ] the john Carlson home Sunday. A large crowd from this vieinity attended the dance given at Swan-]|3 son’s Saturday evening and everyone: reported an excellent time. Y KX KKK KK KKK K KX * AURE * X (By Special Correspondent.) ¥ (RS EEEE R LS EEE RS} Henry Sedo, the Bemidji dairy man is at present building a barn on the place he bought in Sec. 28, town of Maple Ridge. Mr. Sedo has also pur- chased the store buildings and barn, belonging to the Crookston Lumber company, at Fowlds, and will move: and reconstruct same on his farm. John Horseman returned last week, from the southern part of the state,? bringing with him a nice team of horses. ! ‘K. K.'Melland - has -commenced work- on' the county road- south - of “Aure. M.- Jemtvold, sheared- seventy-five ‘| head of -sheep for Torger Trosvick last week. Gordon Gardner from near Boston Lake visited with A. H.-Olson Monday of:last week. Albert Magnuson has sided, ‘paint- ed and otherwise repaired his store at Aure. ‘Wallace Curtis drove to Bemidji last Saturday. Olof ‘Gelen drove to-Pinewood last Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Matt Olson left last Friday for Crookston. to see the doctor. Mrs. Charles Mohler left last Sat- urday forMinneapolis where she will convention. to attend some Socialist From ‘Minneapolis she will go Rush. City, Minn., visit her folks. H. H. Elletson from Bemidji is vis- iting at Jemtvold’s this week. Christ,Mohler came home last Wed- nesday from Spokane, Wash. The Ladies Aid society met with Mrs. Henning ‘Kirkvold last Thurs- day. HOW TO ANSWER BLIND ADS. All ads signed with numbers, or initials, care Pioneer must swered by letter addressed to the [number given in the ad. Ploresr em- ployes are not permitted to tell who any advertiser is. Mail or sead your answer to Ploneer No.——, or Inftial —— and we forward it to the ad- /ertiser. You can get a big, fat pencil tab- let for a nickle at the Pioneer office, and an extra big, fat ink paper com. position book for a dime. All the “kids” will want one when they see | ‘em. - Take advantage of a want ad. STORE | | {A-New Ling of No. 1 Aluminum Wars at Popular Price } Tea Kettles g Berlin Kettles Casseroles Tea Pots Dippers Preserving:Kettles Coffee Perculators Double Boilers Double Roasters - Pudding Pans Sauce Pans Soup Strainers Salt and Pepper Shhakers Potato Mashers 3 piece Child’s Set ‘SET OF SIX TOURIST CUPS and automobiles at 26c¢, 80c, 75c and $1.00 A NEW LINE OF PENNANTS Bemidji High School Pennants also Pennants for boats 6 for 26c and 3 for 25¢ SPECIAL-BARGAIN ON TOILET SOAP : Let us help you MAKE YOUR HOME LIKE NEW, with S. A, Maxwell & Co’s., ‘Wall ' Paper. NONE BETTER. A NEW STOCK just in, alsoa NEW STOCK OF WALL FINISH IN ALL COLORS JUST ARRIVED.. 'This is the only Styleplus Store in town! Copyright; 1916, by Henry Sonnebora & Co., Inc. When:the:wide=awake man, with the eve forStyle ;nd a .careful hand on his purse, goes HAlways exceptional in Jaality “ the price that doesn’t vary! to.buy a suit of clothes.he asks himself this question: “How can I be sure that I am getting the best..clothes. for-the money 1 put down?" No matter When you ])uy Styleplus values are always exceptional. = Amid all the changes in a wo.rld at war, represent..the. very umost of value. for the one unchanging, moderate price of $17. a suit of Styleplus from us, | e TS i Styleplus $17 Ciothes. .= . D e ——— § i “The same price the nation over: o Trsde Mark Registered . you can be certain of this fact: 4 Stkalua 3 ‘--—— “The big scale-and scientific method of' Styleylus manufacture enable us h.:v !101& faat. .to our Ideal: To fiive our customers themost.for:their money, no matter what the existing conditions of the clothing market may be. Style plus through-and-through quality—all wool fabrics . Style plus perfect ftfor every.man of every. age and physique Style plus economy—the casy-price for.everybody ; Style flus guaranteed wear—a, written guarantce with every Styleplus RS Third St., AN\J Bemidii, [Minn.

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