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el b o ol ok o ++_i.- oo e ol ofe ofe o oo ok The Doctor—Yes, I consider . a|want only oonnnon eating eggs and thousand dollars for an operation on |you've sold me a dozen curios laid the tonsils quite a reasonable.fee in |by the’great auk. the case of a man of your means. A R Sy The Patient—YVery well, you know The Lady Judge—You are accused best. But if enlargement of the gall 18 a serfous disease you'd better con- of beating your wife and mother and sult a specialist youmlt sending your children out to beg. Are you guilty or not guilty? The Handsome Prisoner—Yes’m, The Market Man—What you re- your honor; T done it. turn’ them eggs for? They're the| The Lady Judge—I'm afraid you've choicest eggs in my store. . | been very naughty. The Customer—I thought so and & didn’t want you to cheat yourself. I| Ploneer want ads pa: FARM ANIMALS, Poplar bark 1is useful when horses show depraved appetite and incline to gnaw their man- gers and eat earth. In building a barnyard first pro- vide for drainage and then put in a filling of gravel or cinders. If pigs are pastured in a fleld where grubs are numerous they will root over the soil and ent many of the pests. Farmers at the present time can own no better stock than healthy growing pigs. Mate large rams Wwith small ewes. Musty or dirty feed will injure your flock, Getting up a dinner for company and choosing a meat that is sure to please all is no easy task, —e— e But you will never make a mistake by The Pencil that satisfies both J|+++++++++sserrssnel| - Ha= Fl N G 3 R’ - SEING K food Hh cf old and young. LETTING THE PIGS ! i | X rolled roast of beef. | |CLEAN | Yes, you can buy them at almost every WEAN THEMSEI.VES FLOOR’ Let us help you make store in town and some stores out of town. our selection. (] They are five cents apiece, and when you buy T I / ow ]ust which cuts a NEW BEMIDJI for a nickle, you get your There is considerable variation in the \ i o the juiciest moneys worth. Just say “NEW BEMIDJI” ffi:°§fi‘ifi5§’é‘:%‘1§“ifi:&§'.fi'§i“o°fi - Wdl be Jd t and most tender. /. U the one hand there are those who allow to your merchant. He'll know. Where they S i S PR R R R R R R Rk R X K LK + * + + bl L * L & - +* o + o+ L + - * * + + +* sell ’em. milk drles up, while in other cases pigs You Can Save Money by Buying Here are weaned at eight or nine weeks, and Eduard Netzer Pharmacy this 18 done at a time when there is ’ : till conslderable milk flow. In his Barker's Drug and Jewelry Store ViU evstdoable, ik Saw: _Iu b Troppman’s Dept. Store S. T. Stewart’s Grocery Store Henry Miller W. G. Schroeder The Fair Store Carlson’s Variety Store of a Practical Hog Man” A. J. Love- Joy takes up this subject and, among other things, says: “As weaning time approaches, which should not be earlier than ten to twelve weeks, in my opinion, the feed may be lessened for the sow and more given Phone 927 How’s the young man, my dear? [unexpectedly and Show ‘any signs of being a good pro- | clothes. vider? changed his Abercrombie & McCready, Third St. < 3es mye . 1. the litter, so that the sow would gradu- SH lPMEN T ‘Well, auntie, he’s a collection of Will you marry me, my pretty The Bemidji Pioneer Publishing Co. ally give less milk and have no trouble i id? -y oy COMING silver golf cups to start housekeep- | maid? i ] William H. Schmitt’s Grocery when the pigs are taken entirely away. ing with. How many cylinders has your au- “Seme breeders have made it a £ i z tomobile, sir? Otto G. Schwandt actice to gradually wean the litter Mrs. E. L. Woods g; h:iklng 'hgerm flw:yy for a few h:;fs Pri They tell me she has seven engage- T and then returning them to the mother lce.may. go up.soon, ment rings. My husband is very inconsiderate. FREE P ARPENI TATI and following this up for a few days Order one today. Phone 922 Yes. Life is a merry-go-round for| How so? EE ENCIL Sfl PEN Nfi S A 0NS until they are taken aw;y entirely. her. Insists that the house needs shing- - 5 . “We never have practiced this, how- _— ling when he knows how badly I 'm. Schmitt’s Store Pioneer Office Barker’s BEM]DJ l PlONEER & v W . & ever, during our forty years of breed- . Did the burglars upset your home | Beed a diamond ring. ing pigs. By letting the litter suckle until it is ten to twelve weeks old or a little over, the sow naturally is inclined to wean them herself, and if she has een properly fed the last part of this eriod she will practically give no milk t the end of three months or there- L] 1] 'l bouts, - “When the litter is finally weaned the ow should be given a good, fresh pas- much? sl Terribly. When I entered and saw In 1914 there were only 245 bill everything upside down my first | collectors to each apartment house in thought was that Jim had come home | America. Thls Club Offer Saves $2 SN Girls’ Mary Jane slippers, patent and dull leath- er, sizes 8 1-2 to 11, a pair $1.85 11 1-2 to 2, a pair 2 1-2 to 6, a pair Ladies’ White Shoes i s an? The Mulefoot hog gets its name { Ladies’ white kid shoes, high cut lace, a pair e e e that of a horse or mule. Breeders 3 95 of pure bred Mulefoot hogs claim that they are very hardy, have great vitality and mature early at less cost than hogs of other breeds. Ladies’ white canvas slippers, a pair The flesh has a fine flavor. The . sow shown is a pure bred Mulefoot. . > =t | \ ture of some kind with a little grain, and she will need very little else dur- ing the next month or two or until time to begin to bring her in condition $1.95 “oremm e nmnemaeno [l These three magazines and the Daily Ploneer for 9 =R months for the price of one. 0’Leary-Bowser Co. comes an absolute necessity, but where Bemidji, Minn. Ladies’ white button shoes, canvas and neubuck high and low heel, a pair only one litter a year is raised we are rank to confess that Mr. Lovejoy’s lan appeals to us strongly, comments he Iowa Homestead. There is no time that one can make as cheap gains as uring the period when the pigs are etting the milk of the dam. Atsucha SPECIAL BARGAIN OFFER time one can well afford to feed the i ‘The. Daily Pioneer; 9 months - - - $3.00 sows liberally, and let it be remember- AR ORI | 8Os Wiberally, and let it be remember The Northwest Farmstead, 1year - .- = $1.00 litter will eat almost as much grain as L : The Boy’s IMagazine, 1 year - = - $1.00 s ¥ a dairy cow. She will give a good ac- [ The Housewife' l'year - - - - - .50 Advertisers who want the best results |, ot i tood consumed, towever, : - 550 always patromze The Ploneer. They know, by experi- | until she weans them herselt there will ence, that it has no equal in thxs s;,ctlon of the country as be no setback whatever at weaning time. The pigs should have a creep an advemsmg medxum. Just as soon as they are old enough to eat. If they have access to a grain mixture they will make exceedingly rapld gains, and these, as said before, will be put on at a comparatively low cost per pound. Our Special Price to Subscribers in Advance Only $3.00 T Do not lay this statement away. Send your remitiance today If In a test to determine wherper of not you are now taking any of the above papers, mdlcate same and extension it is more profitable to feed hogs by the self feeder method or by hand feed- Wl“ be glven. ing, two lots of fall pigs were fed 103 days on corn, tankage and skimmilk on the O. A. Rodekohr farm of Madi- con county, Neb. During ¢his period o ‘only by very special arrangements with the publishers of the the self fed lot gained 165 pounds a pig, % 4 avetae G 36 potds. gt 0aY, farm paper and other magazines in this club offer are we able to. ths hend.tod lot guived 1514 pounds make such a liberal offer to our. subscribers. We urge you to take Gooad for 30 Days only . ? ’ > s 1;:: :):iip:u:ds gfllmh In other words, Lose Something? [Zl|imuer i mmomelff ———————— , : - amount of teed that it took to raise | |}} | Northwest Farmstead | Housewife Magazine average of 147 pounds, costing $5.50 immedlate advantage of it The Boy’s Magazine The OId Reliable, Northwest Farm- truly a leader in'its cl poil —hi its to the hearts of Let Us Locate lt for Yo“ sflnc::;n::yn F;rmfcl:;fil;?;;- o e atead d will be ‘bigger lnd'betur thau ever this l:leguc: in “;m.; ::'k::: .u?:l:n:: A-«u‘:l'g:y, fi‘::’ ks Ilfl'l:l 5955 t:ema, inflammation or “chapping” of - in editorial contents, and a work of art from :::,_boy;'h I’l‘[’:umghu boy?::&z m . the"skin between the heels and fetlock ‘the the standpoint of beautiful illustrations. Print- The surest way of finding thelost Jlitims it i Il | e Tem, | oo iy f e, n kg it | s s s o iy animal, the lost pet, or the lost article is [|zot wesh the tegs. wice asiiy apoly ‘ w.flw"’“u'“, nm,,.,,""”' S oaaies, Wil 2 2 £ £ . price: _ul-uhnnhnlnonl lift. No to let us locate it for you. A small classified ad- e A %u farm paper alone is 31-00 r year. | Woman' ork is omted. e-m e of th!lnd ath- vertisement in our lost and found section will tell of your loss Ire orlsn) noants Deyuer. : Y”'"n appreciats i Ietics—he was the f""" foothall l’"""~ to many more people than you could seein a day. Misses Emma Klein, Hazel Laqua, Louise McCready, Margaret Ander- son, Edna Anderson, Lucy Brooks, Edna Backlund and Jane Hayer and | Messrs. Fred Graham, Harold White, Herbert Warfleld, Dick MecAlpine, Keénneth Kenfield, Harold. Hayner and The cost of a small advertisement is very 3{'?ifeffifihmfifil?ffl'fiflfi; - case of as alowance 'tf“.'.'."'"s'l'...’!‘.."" mr«muunmumdm, thouth fi may be - low —much less than it would cost you to make a | where they spent the week-ena. 2 Y peTichtion copy : personal search. Next time let us make youx learch by s o _ means ofa llttle clnnfied ad. : : Remember: The Dally Pmneer prmts the news accurately, im- partially and immediately. Its markets, both grain and lwestock are the best and can be relied upon. = And the more people you can iriterest in recovering your loss the sooner will you be :uoceuful