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R ; THE STAFF OF LIFE BREAD Our Bread is peculiarly the Staff of Life Because it is Pure Bread ' Clean Bread Rich Bread Our Bread contains the greatest possible amount of novrishment and is \ / strictly pureand sanitary. \\ Eat the Best. You will find it here. friendship. The New Home Bakery GRAY-FRENCH €O. Home Cookery Calves’ Tongues Roasted. ave the tongues fresh and boil them til they are just tender enough to al- the skin to be removed easily, says Country Gentleman. Do this; then each tongue with lardons of salt k, put into a roasting pan and ast untll -they are tender, basting with a little stock and melted tter in which there is a sliced onion. ntfeen minutes before they are to be Jellied Bouillon. friendship. tin. Jellled bouillon should be sérved | gram, ice cold. crumbs moistened with melted butter. Have the oven very hot and brown For the Whole Family Something that will be use- ful and enjoyed by all A ton of Coal, Hard or Soft. A Load of Wood, . Qak, Birch, Tamarack, Jack Pine. A maple floor our fhat old one ' where that plaster has fallen off. i You have been a good fellow toevery one else. Now be a good fellow family. . Smith-Robinson Lbr, Co. “One Board or A Car Load” 4th St. and Irvine Ave: “‘Phone 97 lnspn'ahon Mlscellany Making a Friend Often you come across people who camplain that they have but few : #wnds. They will point to other per- We pay 4 Per Cent Interest. #ons who have many and wonder why i ch a distinction is made. . - : e matter is easy enough to explain. H , as some one has well said, the only ec u rl a e an ay to have a friend is to be one. J Bor: Srlendship cantiot posaihly be 4 H. C. BAER, Cashier F OF BEMIDJI A, E. FEIR, Ass't. Cashier one sided matter. Just as it takes twe to make a bargain or a quarrel, so does {{ L e it -take the same number to make a No one can stand aloof from others | nounce when tnat shall be necessarv : A Surmise. Simply Couldn’t. waiting to be sought without experi-| and not to be embittered, to keep a “T was just reading about a hen that [ “Say, old man, can you lend me a encing keen disappointment, this -be- canse friendships are not made that | lation, and above all, on the same grim days, besides taking care of a brood of “Impossible. I've tried to several way. People do not look you over as| condition to keep friends with himse | picrens” times, but you invariably look upon you stand off by yourself and say: “Now, there’s some one I'd like tol of fortitude and delicacy. — Robert | sjuhe» Touisville Courler-Journal, know. I'll make a point to draw him | Louis Stevenson. or her out and take all the pains possi- ble to establish a friendship.” That’'s not the way it happens in real life, although some still imagine that it is. this: Two persons meet, and gradually they find points of congeniality, grad- ually each does little favors for the them well. Take them out of the roast- | other, gradually a feeling of affection ing pan, and into the pan put a little takes root in each heart. Neither one white stock, let cook and thicken it | is thinking of what can be gained from with flour. Add one tablespoonful of | the acquaintance; rather, each is think. vinegar and serve separately. Serve|ing and planning to give instead of red currant jelly with the tongues. take. In other words, each is trying to be a_friend unselfishly. And, lo, it 18 the very thing which makes their One or two calves’ feet added to the [ Begr that in mind if you happen to kettle in which the bouillon is cooking | pe gmong those who lament thej will cause it to jelly. Do not use gela- | gegreity of friends.—New York Tele- f “John, what would you do if I were| A man’s work—to be honest, to be taken out sprinkle with flne bread | o die?” kind, to earn a little and spend a little “Bury you, my dear.” less, to make, upon the whole, a fam- ily -happier for his presence, to re- A storm sash or storm door. Cornell-Board for that rodm Spend your money wisely. to yourself and to your - SAVING ACCOUNTS AS CHRISTMAS GIFTS A savings account opened by you for any friend, employee or member of your family will make an appropriate and acceptable Christmas Gift. = few friends, but these without capitu- | 19jd twenty-six eggs in twenty-seven | few dollars?” —here is a task for all that a man bae | ~ wpy pet that hen didn’t belong to any | the amount as a gift.”—Boston -Tran- script. Of all colors red is the most con- i~ . Recent observations made in north- Knicker—One family out of eight has ern Norway indicate that the average spicuous at a distance. i — an automobile. Bocker—Then a mo- display of aurora borealis takes place The fellow who has made up his torist can run over only seven fam- at a height of from sixty to sixty-five mind that he can’t, won’t. ilies.—Life. ‘ it ‘What really happens is R~ IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIllIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIl Y ‘“”'” | iy [N Hmuu. R ] ] i }W A Man'’s Work. Furmture Glits Will Please and Last a Lifetime They’re always appreciated because they are USEFUL, ATTRACTIVE AND SERVICEABLE. Our. immense stock includes suitable gifts for all members of the family, especially selected to meet every taste and every purse. Now is the time to do painless Christmas shopping. Our full stock is ready— our floors are not uncomfortably crowded—our. salespeople are free to devote their undivided attention to you. } < Many women dread buying Christmas presents for the men folks. They don’t seem to know what to select. They put it off until the day before Christmas and wear ‘their nerves down to fiddle-strings in a vain attempt to find a pleasing gift. ‘Women who have taken pains to study the nature and habits of men folks know how much they appreciate arrangements for their comfort. So these sensible women head their Christmas Gifts with big easy Chairs, Handy Book Cases,. Readmg Lamps, Foot Stools, Smoking Sets, Humldors, ete. And Gifts for Women, such as—Dainty Boudoir Sets, Dining Room Suites, Beau- tiful Parlor Lamps and. Shades, Dressing Tables, Carpet Sweepers, Writing Desks, etc. For your convenience we list the following: g Large Tapestry and Leather Chairs from.... Globe-Wernicke Sectional Book Cases. ‘Reading Lamps, Reed and Mahogany Foot St00ls .....ooeneeeeeec.... Smoking Sets and Cabinet Dressing Tables . Tea Wagons ... Rugs, small size Rugs, room sizes . Carpet Sweepers (Bmsells) Mirrors Iron Beds ... Brass Beds .. g X ‘And 1,000 other useful articles $26.50 to $65.00 | .$7.50 to $17.50 .$2.00 to $11.00 .+..60c to $9.00 -...$3.00 to $16.50 Our furniture merits your fullest confldence, regardless of the low price at which it is marked. ' REMEMBER—That $1.00 places a Hoosier Kitchen Cabinet in the Home for Mother. The HOOSIER does away yith all those miles of useless steps. \ Refund Store L © . &0 Jopen Evenings Till Cln'ist.mas e I “mmml|llmummmummmmmuuu l Huffman &0 Leary IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|II||IIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII[IIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIllIIlIlIIIIIIl