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X KK KKK KKKKKXKX XK & her home at Hazel. po. | |Bemidii. =g * PINEWOOD x| C. 0. Roen, Helga Olson,” A. A.| The Misses Elsie and Helen Kling- % (By Special Correspondent.) +|Haarklau and J. K. Johnson trans-|er were guests of their sister, Mrs. X % kK k¥ % % %% %¥¥KXK¥|acted business in Bemidji Monday. A. Fenton,.in Bemidji Tuesday. Mrs. S. M. Nelson left Monday for S. C. Miller was a Bemidji visitor e 2 Bemidji where she will be the guest | Tuesday. KX KKK KKKK KK KK KKK of relatives. Those who spent Thursday last|¥ SPRUCE GROVE * Mrs. J. Carlson, who was the guest | with friends and relatives in Bemidji | ¥ ~ (By Speclal Correspondent.) = ¥ of Mrs. A. Sthol a few days of last|were Mr. and Mrs. Gilbertson, Mrs.| ¥ ¥ KKK KK KKK KKK KK Z week, left Friday for Bemidji where|J. Clemmer and Miss Bell. Nearly all the young people in this she visited friends before leaving for| Albert Dodge spent Tuesday in|neighborhood are spending their WEEKLY SPECIALS day of school, June 4th, at the Sun- berg school house. Don’'t miss it as it will be worth seeing. By paying cash here you get every bit of value that your money can bring. We can afford to ask less profit when we sell for cash. ‘Will Tuepker left Tuesday for Ful- da, Minn. He will return with his Ford car. PERFECT HEALTH IS EVERY WOMAN'’S BIRTHRIGHT. A Temperance Remedy That From Girlhood to Old Age Has Been a Blessing to Womanhood. When a girl becomes a woman, when a woman becomes a mother, when a ‘woman passes through the changes of middle life, are the three periods of life when health and strength are most needed to withstand the pain and dis- tress often caused by severe organic disturbances. At _these critical times women are best fortified by the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, an old remedy of proved worth that keeps the entire female system perfectly regulated and in_excellent condition, Not a patent medicine because this old prescription of Dr. Pierce’s has its ingredients published on wrapper. others, if your daughters are weak, lack ambition, are troubled with head- aches, lassitude and are pale and sick- ly, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is just what they need to surely bring the bloom of health to their cheeks and make them strong and healthy. For all diseases peculiar to woman, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription is a powerful restorative. During the last 40 years it has banished from the lives of tens of thousands of women the Eam: worry, misery and distress caused y irregularities and diseases of a feminine character. If you are a sufferer, if your daugh- ter, mother, sister need help, get Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription i liquid or tablet form from any medicine dealer to-day. Then address Dr. Pierce, In- valids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and re- ceive confidential advice that will not cost you a penny. To-day is the day, 136-page book on woman’s diseases sent free—Ady, >HICHESTER § PILLS We have decided on a General Coat Clean-up Now Former $13.50 to $16 values in lodies’ TEW COALY.v.sssssnenss “orvasvonnangsemssimeosvasenans $9-75 Up to $12.50 values in ladies’ new spring $5 75 coats .. Ladies’ light or dark percale coverall BDTOME s vevmsmnnsmsennmnsmsbing Vedusss SagEaTRESEEn 04 44c $3.50 value ladies’ lawn dresses in striped ReSIgN, BOW.u.ciusosiivivsermosiammmsssenvssavsvavass $1 -98 25 dozen ladies’ fine handierchiefs, em- broidered design, seconds..................... 3 l"- 1oc Children’s heavy ribbed black hose, RS LR 2. 25¢ Flowered flaxens, rice cloth and batistes, 19c worth up to 35c¢ per yard . Men’s rubberized rain coats, plaid lined. special at...........cceeeeninnn e L $2-50 All sizes in gray or tan Grocery Department 13 €aD8. . civais sisises isss s SR $1 -00 ll\%ozzensl’iar Peas $1 .00 i l"AlAku“NDl!BMIH Chowter bimnond Trasa 9 boxes, sealed Take no other. Lny of your Y Druggist. "Askfor CI-CUES.TER 8 DIAMOND GRAND PILLS, for 25 , Sofest, Always Relialie ERVWHERF Full 2 )b. can Tomatoes ADVERTISEMENT Authorized and paid for by L. G. Pendergast. Price for series $10.00. Standard Tomatoes “Bismark” prime Queen Olives 20 oz jar... “Bismark” Pickles, qt’ jar sour, sweet mixed, 33c sweet relish, sweet chow chow .. i “Farm House” Apple Butter Gt JAYS cusmsssssiamieims smsi s s s 35c Troppman’s “The Economy Bemidji Center” Minn. 3 I hereby announce myself a can- | didate for nomination at the Jume primaries for member of House of Representatives from the 62nd dis- trict, and ask support of the voters j | upon my record as representative. L. G. PENDERGAST. WILSON'S FAIR STORE Special White Goods Display Week This week children’s and women’s white summer apparel are proniinamly dis- played in ovr show windows and on our counters. Knit and muslin Underwear, Waists, Middies, Skirts, White hosiery. Beautiful Corset Covers and dainty Night Gowns, Embroideries and Laces, Princess Slips, White Neckwear, Child- ren’s white Dresses, white Dress Goods, Lawns, India Linens, Longcloths and Nainsooks for baby dresses. Crepes and Poplins all featured in handsome displays. . We have been preparing for this display for weeks and many goods were purchased for this week specials. SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK Mennen'’s and Colgate’s Talcum Powder. . 19¢, two cans for 36¢ Hosts of satisfied customers prove that this is the store where a dollar does its duty. THE FOOT REST HOSIERY STORE Special attention given to mail orders. DAIRY ano CREAMERY SOILING ON ALFALFA. Little Danger of Cows Bloating if They Are Not Overfed. The experience of others about whom 1 know and my own experience have demonstrated that alfalfa, properly used, is excellent for solling purposes, writes H. G. Van Pelt in Kimball's Dairy Farmer. In the summer, when files are bad and pastures dry and al- most bare, it certainly will pay to par- tially sofl cows. It is an excellent plan to keep them in a cool, well ventilated barn where flies are kept away either by darkening the windows, using fly repellants or ridding the barn of all flies. When the cool of the evening comes it is more profitable to turn the cows out to exercise and graze during the night, getting them back where they can be protected early in the morning. By this method the milk flow can be retained, and it is always profitable to keep a cow milking as well as possible. On account of lack of feed and uncom- Admirers of the Jersey cow main- tain that she is a more economical producer of cream than most of the other pure dairy breeds. The Jer- sey, being a small animal, does not consume as much feed as the larg- er cattle, they hold, and thus low- er the cost of production. The cow shown is a pure bred Jersey of ex- cellent form and type. fortable conditions that occur during a month or two almost every summer cows decrease in milk flow, and it is tmpossible to get them back to their former flow until they freshen again. Therefore the loss of a shrink in milk does not end with a hot season, but it must be figured for each day the cow remains in milk during the lactation period she is undergoing. There is little danger of bloating cows when soiling them with alfalfa provided it is cut after the dew is dried and the cows are not overfed. It is really best to cut the hay in the middle of the day, hauling it immediately into the barn, where it can wilt somewhat in the shade before feeding. Occasion- ally under the best of circumstances cows will bloat when eating green leg- umes, and they should be watched quite closely. As soon as Indications point to bloat coming on it is well to give the cow a quart of raw linseed oil as a drench and tle in her mouth a short stick as large in diameter as a broomstick. This the cow will chew on and encourage the raising of gases which cause the bloat. Only in cases where the cow will not respond to oth- er treatment should she be tapped with a trocar. GRAIN ON PASTURE. Amount to Be Fed Should Be Regu- lated by Butter Production. The Missouri experiment statlon says: If a cow is producing less than a pound of butter each day the necessary food can be obtained from a good pasture. If she produces more than this some grain can be fed with profit. This means that a Jersey cow should be able to get enough food from grass to make about twenty pounds of milk daily and a Holstein about twenty-five to thirty. It will pay to feed grain to all giv- ing above this amount, as it becomes impossible for the animal to gather sufficient feed in the form of grass. A cow glving a pound and a half of but- ter daily should have about five pounds daily, and for two pounds of butter give seven or eight pounds of grain. When not more than four or five pounds of grain are fed it can be all corn. If more than this is needed some bran or a small amount of cot- tonseed meal should be-added. In late summer it will often be necessary to feed more grain to high producing cows or to give silage or green feeds to help out the pastures. Right Kind of Milk Veins. Milk secretion is dependent prima- rily on the amount of blood delivered into the udder. Heavy milkers have large veins, which means that a large supply of blood is kept circulating through the glands. If blood circula- tion is weak or the blood impoverished of its serum and food constituents the fact will be registered in the ud- der output. Cows that eat much food and that have strong digestive powers will carry rich blood in their arterfes. Tt is this blood that nourishes the milk glands abundantly and that enables them to yleld their product in gener- ous quantities. Butter Fat and Profit. The man who is indifferent to the loss of butter fat and milk Is indiffer- ent to the profits to be made from the dairy. The two are almost inseparable —butter fat and profit. Jersey's Dainty .. There seems to be a tendency for Jersey cows to be slightly more exact- ing about the quality of their feed than are cattle of some of the other dairy breeds.--Hoard’s Dairyman. ‘The Pioneer is the place to buy your rolls of adding machine paper for Burroughs adding machines. One roll, & dozen rolls or & hund-ed rolls. KKK KKK KKK KK KT * 2 * * He who forgets to adver- ¥ % tise should not complain when * « the buyer forgéts that he 1s * ¥ in business. It is just a case - & of “forget” all around. * * * * * LB EE SRR SRR § 3 connection with my four years’ ex- perience as commissioner will enable | me to serve my district better in the|d&w to 618 Keep asféW Bottles in yourown ice-box allyays Then grown-ups and kiddies —alike—can quench each little thirst with a drink of delicious future. Yours slnurely: 5 J. C. THOMPSON. BEMIDJI ASTONISHED BY SIMPLE MIXTURE Bemidji people are astonished. at the INSTANT action of simple buck- thorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka. ONE SPOONFUL removes such surprising foul matter it relieves almost ANY CASE of con- stipation, sour stomach or gas. Be- cause Adler-i-ka acts on BOTH lower o “ 1 et " s 3| | You'll bk #1. Order YOUR case today. Its i 5 cents a bottle — but cheaper by the case. short treatment helps chronic stom- ach trouble. City Drug Store, drug- See your dealer or telephone us. gists.—Adv. ADVERTISEMENT Authorized and paid for by J. C. Amount for series paid, J. C. Thompson, candidate for re- election for commissioner, 5th Dis- trict, Beltrami County, Minn. I ex- pect to use the same policy in the fu- ture as in the past, except that I am opposed to issuing any more bonds for any purpose whatsoever. My 25 Bemidii, Minn- years as a resident in my district in Golden West Bottling Works Phone 204 ' Coprigiif 1915 Gopenbeimer S You want your money to go as far as possible; so do we. Based on quality, you'll get here more value, greater purchasing power, than any where else. One of the best evidences of this is the values we offer in Kuppen- $ 2 5 - heimer and Sophomore Suits at . ‘ These are exceptional clothes, the best we've ever shown at such a price, beauti- ful goods. Others of the same Sterling make, 25 per cent greater valuethan inany other clothes known, at $15, $17, $20, $25, $30 and $35. Special values in Suits and Overcoats for men and young men here at : Do, g $17 Make your own comparisons, be as critical as you please, here are the greatest $17 values ever shown. . Money Cheerfully Refunded GILL BROS. Bemidji, Minn. -