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German attitude, the attitude that says, “I sayso;"’ therefore it Pread which contains varying quantities of bran, shorts or mid- dlings® ‘M ¥k BRSSP | tory”“rule, it must’contaln‘at tedst -+ PUBLISHED EVERY AFTERNOON EXOEPT SUNDAY—— S R vt ? 25 .per. cent .of -there. products. : THE BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISEING CO. i May graham bread and whole-wheat G. B. CARSON' 3 2 3. X, DENU- ous."oNs 4 AMMD © bread be used on wheatless daPs? — e et LN | ¥ As & general®rulej no. Public 3 TEEEPRONE22 o eatingiplages can notwell do with- T ot 'BREAD‘E ‘out thése and Viétorybread, bui in the home, no wheat should be eat- en-on-wheatless days: ‘What .is . Victory bread?. Bread” bake1 with tat’ Teast™a 28 per cent-admixture of cther:cereals than wheat; the bread that will help win the war. ‘What other cereals can bo mixed with wheat “to make Victory bread? See answer to 197, which. glves: 1ist’ of -wheat-Bovr: snudstitutes: - May bread made entirely of graham’ flour or. whole-wheat flour -be called¢ Viétory~bread? 5 Yes, if it contains 25 per- cent of bran, ‘'shorts and middlings. ‘Was rye flour used in making “Vie- tory” bread? : Yes, until March 81, when. it was withdrawn- from ‘the subs'titute Hst:| -class matter || Iy bread as important to the American 24°to the Frenghman? Nosionly 9% iper-centof the aver- ...8ge American income spent on food goes to bread and flour, and these artieles‘form only 39 per cent of the ‘average. American diet. 3 PFntered at the postoffice at Bemidyi, Minn., a8 second: . under sei ot Congrass-of March: 3, 181, 4 ¥ A d to annonymous contributions. Writer's ‘or the Weel 3 R uhrc fnf’;’.'{’-‘r"éfiia‘.";f'%z‘ucn Week to insure:publidationi in $He curfént issue. # m:mlur“ « 4 ‘man? . It s the basis of his'nourishment; ‘bread constitutes67 per cent of the total4o0d" consumption' during nor- ‘mal times4n Franee.” {lp Buropean‘bread now made of wheat | ~flourentirely? i Noj; -it 18 heavily admixtured:: >m muunmmolmvlmctmm Published ovcr;"}hmez:d sent polhn paid to any mm for, in advance §1.50 OFFIOIAL COUNTY ANDCITX PROCEDINGS In “England, France and Ialy | bread:must be admixtured with at least 20" per cent of some other cereal-flour, and- it is permitted: to use:'a large percentage of other . ‘cereals;"The extraction of flour is also’‘very‘much higher in other:coun- . trieg-than’here. : = G Whiy-is bread: cheaper in England?- ! Be¢suse" the' British government has subsidizedsthe bread. : How ‘muchi’does™ it ‘cost ‘the British: governmient?"’ e $200,000,000 - annuall; Is: not:this money ultimately obtained by’ ‘taxation? 3 K Yes. - Is corn bread-used-in the army? KING GEORGE CELEBRATES JULY 4th!. What would have been inconceivable‘in 1916, has become an’ astounding fact in 1918. “King George iand ;the people of Great Britain have actually ecelebrated oéur greatest holiday, Independence Day, the day commemorating the severance of relations with the mother country, because of oppressions by one George -of Hanover, the third-of the:German::Georges. 1t is but right that this should have ‘been done; for our quarrel in 1775 was not a quarrel with the English people,nor the British parliament either; in spite of the foolish and overbearing legislative acts they passed at George’s insistence, but ‘with-the|: narrow-minded, domineering, egotistical Hun, then on the" throne of Britain. : . Our quarrel then, as now, was with the German idea, the rye-bread baking :was. threatened. used? given by bakers to sweet’ yeast. dough goods, crackers, b.gcuits; cakes pies, fried cakes,-and pgstry,’| provided one-third of thefr flor or’ meal content consists of wheat:flow substitutes. ; [F KIDNEYS ACT | ‘use.” Are other cereals just as nourishing as + wheat?” a : Genérally speaking, yes. Wiit 48" theé’advintage' of' ordering’ | bread 24 hours in advance at the ¥ The baker or grocer can then es- { timate: ‘correttly’ ‘tha - ‘amount . of , bread ‘to ‘have'’on® hand; and ‘thus’ | elinifnate-waste: = eating’ too: much: meat, 'says:‘a’ well- hat percentage of wheat flour sub- | known authority.” Meat forms uric . stitutes does the Food Administra- |acid which overworks: the' kidneys in | tlon: require’ bakers to usesin ‘bread | their-effort to filter it from the ‘blood and: rolls? t ang lthgy becvgx}xlle sort” pii é)aralyze% IR and ‘loggy. en yourkidneys: ge! Wuxmitytflh? Food ce:;mlnlstmtlon sluggish and" clog. you must relieve them; like you relieve ‘your bowels; , standardized the size of the bakery |,omoving all - the' body’s - urinous ! loat of ‘bread?: waste, else’ you-have- backache; .sick { - To reduce the cdst of baking and | headache; 'dizzy ‘spells; your stomach { distributing, to give the public & |sours, tongue'is coated, and when' the ; square deal, and to fix competition | weather’ is ‘bad ‘you “have’ rheumatic . upon_rrice. E twinges. The urine''is 'cloudy;" full What" are. the ‘standard - welghts of |of sediment, channels often get sore, ! bread loaves? water scalds and you are obliged to Thiee-fourths of a pound, 1 pound :fizl{"figfif two or three 'times during l'fiofl?:n;:i gh?a; vounds;. and-other L Either consult a gogd, reliable 1})]1;3'- Why does:'the’ Food Administration :ca';?t?;g:fi: "fl;fft- :gzlcg’: u;fp Jard advocate the use of the '% :pound|gaits; take a tablespoonful in a glass loaf? ; g - of water before breakfast for a few As a wheat conservation measure, , days and ‘your kidneys will then act i in the'thope ‘that ‘the’ ¥%-pound loaf |fine. This famous salts'is made from i may do‘the work the 1:pound loaf |the acid of grapes and lemon juice, ; did# before: * combined with lithia, and has been How 'many- 1-pound lcaves of bread |used for generations to clean and can be made from a barrel of flour? | stimulate sluggish™ kidneys, also to Two huridréd" dnd seventy loaves. neutralize acids in the'urine!so it no s ‘graham ‘bread & wheat bread? };{):agfizulsgxtaws, thus’ ending bladder Yoz bub 1t “‘io contais: 26 D:r Jad Salts is a-life saver'for regular ; cen't bran, S";"’r“' and midalings., | meat eaters. It is inexpensive, can i are dncivded i the. list-of I not injure:and -makes-a. delightful, L whoctlounsubstilutasl S effervescent lithia-water drink: T ot o ; REPORT OF CONDITION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK' AT BEMIDJI" in the State of Minnesota, at the close of business on June 29, 1918. (Charter No. 5582, Reserve District No. 9.) RESOURCES. 1. a Loans and discounts .(except those shown in b and c) 2. Ovérdrafts, secured and unsecured, none. 5. TU. 8. bonds (other-than Liberty Bonds, but including U. S. certificates of indebtedness): . bonds deposited to secure circulation (par value)..$ 25,000.00 is s}tl). 3 want this, therefore any act that procures:it for me, is right. i We fought this idea victoriously then and-we: shall fight it victoriously now. It is an idea that should- have:died:back; in the dark ages, an idea, that, by God’s help, shall”die in this age, that civilization may ‘go on, thati peace ‘and’justice, love and truth may develope :and’ grow: intothe’ full:'flower of its beauty. May this greatest anniversary of the' PDeclaration of ‘Independence, cement into permanent :oneness-the: liberty and justice loving people of Britain and her sturdy; independent child, who left the home: authority long ago for a_ principle; that both mother and child ‘are now fighting for, side by side,, and shoulder to shoulder. — THE REAL FOUNDER OF THE RED.CROSS.. Honor the name of Henri Eunant as the'real founder of the Red Cross. A care-free Swiss’ traveler, he witnessed the between the allied armies of Napoleon 1l of. France and Victor Emmanuel 11, of Italy and-the:Austrians-under:the young Franz Joseph, and was so profoundly affected by theé suffering of the untended wounded that.he . forthwith gave his life to the amelioration of such. frightful .conditions. His book,. “A . Souvenir of . Solferino,!: startled: :thinking-people with humanitarian impulses into a movement.which eventually developed. into the wonderful Red ‘€ross organization of today. Horrible as this war is, without the reclaiming hand-of the Red Cross, it would be too barbarous and :awful for: human comprehension. Therefore all honor'to‘this man, Henri Duhant, who made his emotions of horror, pity and compassion a great driving force for the inception and developement ‘of a great, effective organization for the preservation -and 'reclamation of human life. : o : MAKE THE FARM'SAFE FOR SHEEP. Dogs trained to.eat-sheepless meals only ‘are’ the. .only alternative for no dogs-at all where sheep are kept, for dogs killed 34,683 sheep in fifteen states: east of the- Rocky moun- tains.in 1913, say statistics. . At the‘same rate of loss in other farm states the total annual destruction-of sheep by dogs would be -107,760. - These ‘figures, however,. are.based--only.-on-the number actually paid for, and it is more- than probable-that the. true losses far exceed this.. In-any'times this is a serious economic waste; in war-times-it is a crime. ” —_—0 WILL BE THE BEST. | Says Backache is sign you have been eating too much meat. - When you-wake up with backache and dull migery in the kidneéy region it generally means you have. been i i.0...$410,776.25 a-U. S, b U. S. ‘bonds and-certificates of indebtedness pledged to Bemidji is getting all steamed up for the laying of the | g premieme o . B bondbor. oo 1111l 15,0009 40,000.00 corner stone of the Normal school next month. We'are'willing to | ¢ %iberty loan bonds:, nd 4 per cénti—un- hazard the guess that in a few ‘years' when a Bemidjiite|! (RN et e B R PR el $250.00 ¥ J t! 11, Bonds promenades along the lake shore ‘he’ can aim. his .expression|( © BRI o I A e sl 30,850(00° *31,100.00 at- the best Normal-school in the state. Bemidji: is: ideally |7-, Bonas: securities, etc. (other tham G2 855 e U, 8. located for such an institution.—Baudette Region: AePOSIES L.\ vvvsius s iyi i ey el ceeieeens $12,000.00 b Bonds other than d to secure postal 0 savings deposits IR e e %’83333 a Bonds loaned. (other than U. i e Securities other than:-TU 8. bonds . bond owned unpledged) . Don’t rag at the German-American'who ‘throws 'a' monkey KS) e sman.81 wrench into the machinery in our munitionfactories, if you Total bonds, securiti her than U. S.... 80,212.87 throw bread crusts and the ‘“heels” inte the garbage can... You Stokof Federal Reserve Bank: (50, per. cent- of subscription 25rB0000 A .. ¢ . a e of bankin, P N T , . may not have ralized it, but suchan act puts you in-the:same Lawrul reserve with Federal Reserve’ Bani. 42,691.87 class Think! Cash in vault and met amounts due from nati . 48,862/41 i i A Checks -on other banks in the-same city or town as reporting bank —_— (other than Item 17). . 5,128.66 : Total of Items 14, 15, ldG. 7 o . That banker at Grygla apparently absconded with every- Chiecks on Bms L 6,680.62 thing except the overdrafts.—Baudette Region: Redemption fund with 56,00 ‘We: think-he got caught in the draft. . 2,506.40 2 0} Viede s . +$690,808.08 . . The great war has turned many.thinys end.over end and|ss capital stock pata n .oev. $50,000.00 hind side before, including Austria Hungary, ‘which has now|2. Surplus fund ... 10,000.00 become “Hun(a)ry Austria:” ; so'b éless futxirent epxtpensest. :m%x;as:. and taxes paid zg,g‘%)gg B ), cu n; u e 8 . SR 82 v‘gég a&our‘;ltts“%fl:é’ tlé »iafii}(nfiiba?(k i $,970.80 The Baudette Region says, in speaking of the*Red Cross,| %™ o' imoiniudof in ttems al or 32. 10,211.99 $20,182.79 Total of Items 32 and 383....... I I posits) . subject to- reserve - | | deposits (other than bank (depbsits payable within 30 days): Individual deposits subject to ChecK. . ..i o vievievnsrannniinean.: 254,918.96 “The workroom was all bustle last Friday.”” In Baudette? —_— This is the open season for “Black Eagles.” Certificates of deposit due in less than 30 days (other thanfor Johnny, get ooy borrowed) 9 T 20,680.00 your gun! Certifiéd Checks " .. ... ... = '610.00 , ‘Cashier’s checks outstanding . 10,830.61 e Total of demand deposits ( Digging: S ane:;xlzjlect to Reserve, Items $296,030.57 Alligator-Got the Uniform. 1t is seldom* th:t m’e'n discover rich Time deposits subject to Beserve (payable after 80 days, or subject A traveler returned from the Congo T8 s to 30 days or more notice, and postal savings): mines swithowt: ‘digging. .- Natare .com- Certificates” of deposit (other than for money borrowed.. . 200,139.52 river, Africa, tells the following story: monly lodges her treasures-and jewels Postal savings deposits 3,680.06 On one occasion the chief and natives | 0 ground. If ‘the- matter be | Oth’;x‘-n- j:llme deposits .... . 62,010.61 paid a visit to the steamer in state. knotty and th'e.sense lie deep, they | 46 vu“as,‘g“ nd 4 o ..$265,830.19 : » s iy - wits The chief expressed a keen-destre {0 | yygt siop and buckle to it and stick | |5 War 10an-doposit account ... .- < .. .. $15,000.00 have some sort of European uniform, ‘apom - it with -laber- and.thought and{ ! ¢ Otherm I‘J:nlfied States deposits, including deposits of U. S. di 15.36b.b6 [0 L R R D . and the-captain afterwards took him | yog6 contemplation; and not leave:it | 56. -Liabilities other ‘thin’ those above stated 3,155.53 one: ‘of an elaborate pattern. The % 4 chief subsequently disappeared myste- :::gl ;‘,:y ;‘é‘;fig‘,fie?fid ;’:Z d::llg}t_y riously. In leaving the steamer he had | [ ooke. to wade through a part of the river infested with alligators, and after a number of these had been' killed the uniform - was found in the interior of one, The head’ of the alligator was brought to England and presented to the .museum- of Devon and: County School. Total fidaeaiaseeeese.$690,808.08 State of Minnesota, County- of Beltrami, ss. H. Schumaker, cashier of the above named:-bank, do solemnly:swear L R. that the above statement-is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. R. H. SCHUMAKER, Cashier. A. A. WARFIELD, F P. SHELDON, A. G. WEDGE; JR. Directors. World's - Languages. It has been' estimated that ‘the one billion' people of the world speak 3,084 languages.. Thé number of men and women in the world is'said to be about equal, P S i & - s e e F = P Correct—Attests Subscribed and sworn to before me this 8rd day of July, 1918. ANTON R. ERICKSON, Notary- Public, Beltrami County, Minn. My commission expires December 6, 1920. R EE AL AR ‘:fi&wflxmmmmr%:mzmwmww nis . : s [ | | | | | To -comply. with the~“Vies hecause- a shortage of rye flour forif "How else may. the name' Victory be |- The name-Victory may als; be|i, Corn 18 not acceptable as an army’ 5 S i ration‘becauge’ it can:not be 'made p Nl A | {nto“a transportable-loat for:trench: H 1, 3 Even a small chew of Real fj . Gravely ChewingPlug satis- * fies: It gives more real to- " baccocomfortthianabigchew of ordinary tobacco. : Peyton Brand. " Real Gravely. . Chewing' Plug B P. B, Gr.;ely Tob.i:cq'Complfiy- Danville;* Virginia - "reecn oo nnsenBPTeeoeo e That lad of yours, over seas. All that is humanly possible is be- ing done to see to it that he is‘well fed, well clothed and ~efficiently equipped. ' Organizations-like ‘the: Y. M. C. A., are looking to his phys- - jcal ‘ comfort, - healthful - recreation and clean fun. If he is sick or wounded the Red ‘Cross will provide for him with tender, loving care. ‘Yet there is one thing that will- bring ‘a smile' to his face and a joy to_his heart that none of these can give; that only you can give— your. photograph. : Hakkerup, the photographer in- ! your fown A Prescri‘fitfiifi for -Eczema n. for 16 years the standard skin remedg—n liquid used externally—instant relief from {tch. the mildest of cleansérs — keeps BARKER'S %B'fggl‘, & JEWELRY soap Iheskinalwnyscleanand healthy: A e ‘Come in andask us about bo! e s _Don't Starve ‘Yourself lor - Diet—Let - Eatonic Do theWerk:and Be ‘Sure ‘of Results : i ! Too many people with weak, ailing ness or heavy ‘‘lumpy’’ feelings after stomachs. rely -on -dieting to put meals. EATONIC will swiftly and them righé. -If they. pinned - their gurely relieve all these disagreeable faith to EATQNI(L Tablets, they ¢onditions — : woul@~mt~be‘d§nppomted. H. L. Kramer, the originator of : What'is EATONTIC? Any druggist EATONIC, says: will ‘tell you. that it is a wonderful | « wqnt every sufferer from-stom- ! natural stomach tonic and corrective 4o trouble to test EATONIC and ‘ originated.by H. L. Kramer, the man prove its remarkable power to regu- who gave Casearets to the world. ate'the stomach and ‘keep it pure— This remarkable ‘preparation will SWeet and strong—in fact, in perfect . . 5 s health and comfort. Marvelous re- help'you'to digest anything you eat cijonyo reported to me by druggists. { and-regulatg a sour, ‘‘gassy,’” acid pigoticell st in th < stomachin a few minutes. ' EATONIC t,r];' E,fi;g&"&’;?fi,‘fif_‘ f&:fi s:ggesug, has-proved in tens of thousands of and they have the utmost confidence tests-its power to quickly relieve dye- in my-latest triumph, EATONIC. . ! pepsia and indigestion, Ask your druggist for EATONIC i Eat - an- EATONIC Tablet after today. It will give you relief from ! each’ meal and you will' be quickly stomach misery in a few minutes, and g freed from stomach troubles. No will assist you to overcome the worst . more ‘heartbrn, no sour ‘‘risings,”” case of dyspepsia or indigestion in a { belohing of undigested food mixed very short time. It's %uaranteed to K with acfd. no nausea, headache, full- do it or money cheerfully refunded.’’ ! ! ! 1A - FRESH BUTTERMILK DALY s 10 CENTS GALLON THECREAMERY | | Defective