Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 22, 1916, Page 4

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— T T T T T T : NO newspaper can succeed with- ————— out advertising, therefore we LET’S GO-PHER FUN is the new slogan whigh has been adopted by the Minnesota State Fair, Sept. 4 to 9, in presenting its entertainment fea- tures to the public. LET’S GO-PHER FUN! FUN is RIGHT! There never was a bigger, cleaner, more wholesome recreation program than the one offered at Hamline this year. Then LET’S GO-PHER FUN! PEED RECORDS WILL BE SMASHED GALORE at the coming Minnesota State Fair. Not only are the Grand Circuit entries in the 4-days’ horse racing program the best which the game affords, but the small army of auto race drivers Hamline-bound from all points of the compass is going after dirt track records with a vengeance. More cars. and drivers are entered in the auto races, Wednesday, Sept. 6, and Saturday, Sept. 9, than have ever ap- peared at one meet in the Northwest. The $10,000.00 in prizes has attracted a score of the dirt track speed kings, including Hearne, LeCocq, Endicott, Koetzla, Clark, Raimey, Horey, Hoffman, Kilpatrick, DeCraft, Woodbury, Johnny Mais, Kessler, Kizer, Klem and several others. A 75-mile continuation race, an In- ternational State Fair championship race, an Aus- tralian pursuit race, several world’s time trials, and many short races will feature the big gathering. LET’S GO-PHER FUN! LAY BALL! A dozen of the snappiest ball teams in the Northwest are getting ready for the big tournament at the Minnesota State Fair this year. These teams are eating pepper sauce three times a day in preparation for the big series. A big baseball diamond has been laid out in front of the Grandstand,-and from 10,000 to 25,000 persons will be given the privilege of witnessing the games each day. Cash prizes amounting to $450 are to be award- ed, as well as five giganfic trophies. The Twin City championship is to be decided Monday, Sept. 4, while the teams outside of the Twin Cities will fight it out the rest of the week. Big Bill Brennan, umpire in the National League for eight years, arbiter in two world’s series, and Umpire-in-Chief of the Federal League, is to handle the indicator. S AMERICA PREPARED FOR WAR! This is the important problem which DeLloyd Thompson, the intrepid birdman, has taken as the subject for an impressive preparedness demonstration each even- ing of the State Fair. Sweeping in from outside of the Fair Grounds each evening, Thompson, seated in a 300-horsepower war plane, will drop bombs upon the Grandstand, the Woman’s Building, and other parts of the Grounds, in a fanciful effort to kill, de- stroy, and maim. Such contends Thompson, would be the damage which an enemy air fleet would be able to inflict upon New York, Boston, Portland, San Francisco, and New Orleans, should it invade this country unexpectedly. Thompson will also loop the loop, fly upside down, drop in the air, and perform other similar feats twice each afternoon. CALDING LAVA is a terrible instrument of death, more frightful and effective, in fact, than a 42-centimeter gun, a Zeppelin, or a submarine. Two thousand years ago an entire city was destroyed by it, inundated, overwhelmed. The destruction of this hapless city is to be portrayed in a mammoth fireworks spectacle each evening of the state fair. Over 300 persons are to take an active part in the Last Days of Pompeii. Three stages of vaudeville will be given in connection with it, as well as an open-air band concert, in which half a dozen of the best bands in the Northwest will participate. It is to be an impressive sight. VER 500 PERSONS are to furnish the music at the Minnesota State Fair. Did you ever see 500 persons in one great program? Ye Olde Mille, a roller coaster half a mile long, a mule derby, a dozen shows on LET’S GO-PHER FUN, a circus without a tent, a herd of real elephants—these and ! many other features are to be shown. The admis- | sion is cnly fifty cents. LET’S GO-PHER FOR FUN! solicit the patronage of our readers for those who by their advertising help to make this paper possible. PRICES IN BUENOS plying to foreign ports, is in a few hands. Few Large Salaries. To a considerable extent, how- ever, it looks as if it is expensive to live in Argentina simply because the people who furnish the necessaries FAVORS WOMAN SUFFRAGE. tion of our economic conditions ‘and tendencies, of the position of women in gainful occupa. tions, of the nature and course of the demand, the concluslon that.the granting of suffrage to women is inevit- able. Opposition may delay, but in my judgment cannot defeat this movement. If women are to have the vote, as I belléve they are, it seems to me entirely clear that in the interest of the public life of this country, the contest should be ended prompt- ly. I favor the vote for women. —From Mr. Hughes’ speech of acceptance. NYMORE READY : FOR ANNEXATION (Continued from Page 1.) Y committee to meet with the Nymore qouneil and inspect the property next Monday evening. Action will be ta- ken at the next meeting of the city council, Some time ago, a considera- and Molasses led me to Blanche Sweet will be seen in the ‘“Secret Sin” at the Grand theater tonight. In this photoplay is the combination of a great star and a great play, ‘“The Secret Sin” is a bitter pronouncement against the drug evil and the trade in opium against which the United States gov- ernment for years has waged an un- ceasing battle. all the better when covered with some of our clear, sweet syrup that comes to you - fresh and clean. © Take advantage of a want ad. of life are able to extort the money. The average Argentino is not paid for his work in proportion to what he-has to pay for his living. A comparatively small number of men, mostly cattle and wheat kings, make huge sums. There is a fair proportion of rich middlemen. A great deal of the big money the coun- try produces belongs to foreign in- vestors and goes abroad. A salaried man is considered in possession of a good, round income if he receives $150 to $200 monthly. Of course this does not go nearly so far as it would in the United States. A first class printer or locomotive engineer may make at high as $175 monthly. Bricklayers are paid from $2.50 to $3.50 daily but do not have work all the time. A carpenter, who also has periods of unemployment, earns from $1.50 to $2.50 daily. There is a wide variation, accord- ing to season, in what an unskilled laborer receives. At times he gets as low as 30 pesos and others as high as 80 pesos monthly, or, in United States money, from $13.20 to $35.20. On a farm, it is possible to im- agine how a man might live on the latter of these two sums, even in Ar- gentina. How he succeeds in doing it part of the time on $13.20 per month is a puzzle. . It “seems to be the consensus’of at the exposition. A dozen of the best teams in the state are fighting like fiends for the honor of being called the independent _ REACHING FOR A HOT ONE. the market—cane, corn and maple syrup —at prices that you can not beat anywhere else. in every way—in quality, rich- ness, flavor and price Give us a trial Phone 92 state. No one has the slightest idea about the outcome of the big tourna- ment, for nothing of the kind has ever been held in the Northwest. Next year there will be a line on the dope, and not so much mystery about the ultimate result. ASE BALL at the Minnesota State Fair, Sept. 4 to 9, promises to be one of the leading attractions an advertising medium. s champions of the “TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1916, "Delicious Syrup Those fine, fla- vory hot cakes taste Wesell the best known, most reliable brands on And our stock of mo- lasses for baking and cook- ing purposes will please you Telephone Orders Given Prompt Attention Troppman’s Department 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 opinion that he can get enough of a poor quality of food but that his shelter is such as would revolt a self- respecting hog in the United States. He wears whatever clothes he can pick up. Pioneer advertisements are re liable. DAIRY ano CREAMERY DAIRY HERD MANAGEMFNT. Cows and Ca Should Be Protected From Flies In Summer. A thing of importance in the sum- mer management of the herd is its protection from flles that abound on all farms during this season of the year, writes a correspondent of Hoard’s Dairyman, This may also be bhandled in a number of ways, Where there is a large labor force the cows are sprayed at milking time with a fly repellent which protects the cows fair- ly well until the next application. It In recent years the Ayrshire breed of dairy attle has come into great popularity. this, say admirers of the breed, is that milk and cream can be pro- duced through Ayrshires at mini- The reason for mum cost—that is, a quart of milk can be made from the Ayrshire at less cost of feed than from any oth- er dairy breed. The bull shown is an Ayrshire. 18 a well known fact that flles are much less troublesome in the dark— in fact, in perfect darkness they are not troublesome at all. The best plan is to keep the herd in the barn where it is cool and dark during the heat of the day and turn them out on pasture in the evening. Under this treatment they are prac- tically free from fly annoyances and the milk flow is materially increased. If it 1s not practicable to keep the cows in the barns during the day this plan must be modified to furnish them a cool, dark place in the pasture. This can be done by having a small house or shed, or even good shade trees will help. If all of this is necessary in the handling of the cows it is practically indispensable in the handling of the young stuff on the farm. - After being ‘weaned calves should have a pasture of their own, together with their own house, into which they may go through- out the heat of the day to keep away | from the fiies. If the calves run with the rest of the herd they should be glven an opportunity to eat grain with- out belng shoved out of the way by the older cattle. This is best provided for by placing their feed inside of an in- closure the opening into which a calf can go through, but which will exclude an older animal. Their feeding trough must be scrupulously clean in order to keep them in the highest healthy con- dition and should be cleaned out be- fore each feed and the old grain re: moved before new grain is added. ARE HIGH (Continued from Page 1.) has little water power and it has al- most no fuel. There is considerable prospecting for oil. If it should te found in adequate quantities, it will be a God-send and ought to make billionaires of the discoverers. In the meantime, manufactured articles have to be brought from a long way off, which costs money. A Finally, internal transportation fa- cilities are primitive and shipping, These three magazines and the Daily Pioneer for months for the price of one. SPECIAL BARGAIN OFFER The Daily Pioneer, 9 months - - - $3.00 = The Northwest Farmstead, 1 year - - $1.00 The Boy’s I'agazine, 1 year - - - $1.00 The Housewife, 1 year - - - - - .50 $5.50 Our Special Price to Subscribers in Advance Only $3.00 Do not lay this statement away. Send your remitiance today. If you are now taking any of the above papers, indicate same and extension will be given. o ' Only by very special arrangements with the publishers of the farm paper and other magazines in this club offer are we able to make such a liberal offer to our subscribers. We urge you to take immediate advantage of it Good for 30 Days only - The Boy’s Magazine ——has won its way into the hearts of the American Boy, !III’OII{II stories by editors— men—who have not forgotten that they were once boys. It teaches the boys how to keep aclean and clear mind and body; coaches them in sports and atbletics. You will enjoy the stories by Walter Camp, one of the edi- tors, and whom every boy tries to emulate for his keen knowledge of Football and ath- Ietics—he was the famous football player. Northwest Farmstead | Housewife Magazine The Old Reliable, Northwest Farm- | is truly a leader in its class, from a point of ::::&l lolbl:nb “‘fl::lglm' ::;l:h::v:l'e“fiflr elegance in mechani .Ldm.h-?: fl::: "fer:u TR e + | in editorial contents, and a work of - hestsciots is Baking W pec i Tt 8 the standpoint of beautiful illustrations, Print- the cnnnhl'{ Each week you will receive a = % & clean, well edited issue on better farming, | ed on fine quality of paper, in keeping with the high standard of stories, with a strong :fikw'flcfléfi'fi? dfic::m‘ cm::i:; educational and moral uplift. ~ No phase of of this_farm paper alone is $1.00 per year. | woman’s work is omitted. You will enjoy You will appreciate it. every issue. ' Remember: The Daily Pioneer prints the news accura_tely, im- partially and immediately. Its markets, both grain and livestock, are the best and can be relied upon. : —| i allo should be made of a month for the publications to reach you, though they may be I"‘e?-trlsd 'fifi%:&fim&m‘:m :I“lr::l of any publication after receiving the first copy should notify the publishers direct.

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