Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 23, 1918, Page 3

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FRIDAY EVENING, AUGUST 23, 1918 = 3 TR 77 THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER Y, S Hvay W ! Yukon In Fifth Place. X At Cooking School. T Sy e ook LAWYERS 4 A government survey resulted m |, ‘What did you learn at' your cooks f ] B ol ORI T D i S i ranking the Yukon river in fitth place | 108 class this, morning?” = “How to | GRAHAM M. TORRANCE 8 among the great streams of North mc‘);o:v tg:(;eix how. to ourry favor, (| o o LAWYER & s v America. Up:8.seandal &P ROFESSIONAL Miles Block Phone 560 a One Thing She Knew. For B'"'"“’ and Scalds. DOCTORS VETERINARIANS . Salesman—"“What size. collar does | APPIY glycerin and flour, the la.tter > your husband wear?” ~“Dear me, | heaped on the affected part to keeD THORWALD LUNDE . E. R. BURGESS, D. V. M. '} Tve foreotten! But I know it’s larger | °ff the air. On-this put a good pad of || pOCTOR OF CHIROPRAGTIC P S et R . Ly F‘ldo’s."f-Judge. cotton wool ang bindage, | Acute and . Chronic: Diseases 8rd St. c:nd (l)::ine- Ave, HOME GARDEN SHOULD PRODUCE * SURPLUS FOR WINTER STORAGE handled with great success, 1st Nat: Bank Bldg:. Phone 406-W Hours 10-12 a. m.; 2-5.7-8 p. m. Your R’ are Wo vmgh&mmn Office and Hospital 3 doors west of Troppman’s. Phone No. 209 ;. 8rd St. and Irvine Ave. DR. 0. R. SANBORN PHYSIICIAN AND SURGEON Office—Miles Block BUSINESS A V. M. D. EYR RAR Land, Loans, Insurance and City Property NOSE THROAT ) ¥ Glasses Fitted Troppman. Block B \\\\ DR. E. H. SHITH | NORTHERN MINN. AGENCY W PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON "‘D“"%é,lé % Mlllerwe ! : Are you a renter, complaining, dissatisfied, a Office Security Bank Bleck Insure Anythi \) slave to the landlord? Or are you a happy, con- . . J hitad Anywhere v, tented, independent homeowner ? AL _ ‘Seourity Bank Bldg.—Tel. 747 4 Have you realized that you pay_for ‘the house DR. E. A, SHANNON, M. D. : Q you live in whether you own it or rent it? - Your PHYng’fz :::30 BB!:::(:EON PHOTOGRAPHS ¥ \ fent recenpt?s are ‘worthless. Then why not own Bhioné 139 Res. Phone 397 For the Boys in France Q ° your home? i L I Sittings Made Day or Night Q - . Hereis a four-room bungalow planned HAKKERUP STUDIO | "DR. L. A. WARD . ) and designed to meet the needs of the man 'szmwl. —_ = T = = ‘WOODWORK. - Py Notice the comfortable little ¥ porch and big living room—Ilong 2 @ enough to use one end as a dining - room. = The entrance to the base- ment stairs is accessible from the both well. lighted and ventilated cuhfls from two sides. The bath room woon is between them, and is also handy """%" to the living room. PHONE 97 Just Returned From Market and bought the most complete and the largest stock §Eethat-this“store has ever attempted to carry- kitchen. There are two bed rooms, ° MINN. DRS. GILMORE & McCANN " PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS FaB A NI Era N Ibertson Block Oftice Phorle 158 PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON North of Markham ‘Hotel Gibbons Block . DR. D. L. STANTON \ of small income who wants a home all his PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON .- - FUNBRAL DIRECTOR own. Itisa compact, well-planned house Bemidji, Minn. %}&m N and is finished throughout with CulHiS 406 Beltrami Ave., Bemidjj, Minn. “Clothes 8!3181‘8 Eor Eel(li, Women and Children Oftice—Miles Block AND SURGEON DR. EINER JOHNSON GENERAL MERCHANDISE Grocariea, Dry Goods, 8hoes, TOM SMART DRAY AND TRANSFER Res. Phone. 68 818 America " Office Phone 12 DENTIST Tel. 230 DENTIST Office in Winter Block Subscribe for The Pioneer i { 1 Vegetables Like These, Grown in the Summer and Stored Until Necded, Vary Winter Diet - COMING UP TO SCRATCH Surely a uniform! Overalls. A few yards of wire netting may mean peace with your chick- en-loving neighbor. If that doesn’t work, try a gen- be used as soon as they reach matur- ity. It is advisable to devote the major portion of the space to those crops which if not needed at once may be kept for winter use. In fact, if the space is available the garden should be planned with the definite purpose of growing crops for storage for winter use. Late beets, late cabbage, carrots, celery, onions, parsnips, late potatoes, salsify, and late turnips may be stor- ed in their natural condition and if possible should be grown to the ex- tent of the family needs for storage for-winter use. space is allowed to lie idle that should be producting a crop of late potatoes, cabbage or turnips, in sections where the season is short it is possible to plant the late crops between the rows of early crops before the early crops are removed, thus gaining two or three weeks’ time. Storage in the Home. - By utilizing every square foot of space in the garden.a considerable quantity of vegetables may be grown for storage for winter use. If no stor- age facilities exist in the home all the crops suitable for keeping may be stored in outdoor banks or pits. However, it is not at all diflicult to provide storage facilities in most homes, it being only necessary to make use of the cellar, the attic, a large closet or other parts of the dwelling, depending upon the charac- ter of the product to be stored. “This is design No. 2030—only one, of many Bemidji, Minn.- Flour, Feed, etc. Late ; - o potatoes may be planted on homes of all sizes and tYPeS for which we can fur- - I W. G SCHROEDER tle:message to hls wireloss-rin, ground from whicll early peas or _1 nish plans. DENTISTS : Bemidji Phone 65 | string beans have been rclmote(l. z 3 ¢ Late cabbage may be planted he- - Come in and talk over your homebuilding plans. A halt-acre garden, it cared for| oo ® o B Ay O toes Do- DR. J. W. RICH MUSICAL INSTROMBENTS properly, will produce far mqre veg-|fore this crop is mature. Turnips > DENTIS' Plant;.sl. o"‘“lni' g‘w"‘B‘ M:cm““ etables than®the average family can|may be sown between the rows of late Oftice, O'Leary-Bowser Bldg- 3 7 T&' t Ph"‘“ é‘,’ w || consume during the maturing period | corn and late bush beans. Late beets Office Phone 376-W Res. 876-R _{_B_S_Ifl&_g_’____om_i_ of the crops. Only a small portion of [ may be planted between the rows of a garden of this size should be de-|late beans and will grow long after DR. J. T. TOOMY voted to those vegetables that must|frost has killed the beans. Beans, including the Limas, may Why SO? Work Garden All Season. be stored dry, and it is advisable to - It is possible in nearly all sections| grow them to as great an extent as 7f the country to grow late beets, | possible for winter use. Limas and JUST BECAUSE all or mostly all kinds of merchandxse is scarce and some very hard to get, no matter at what late cabbage, late potatoes and tur- nips on ground that has already pro- duced a crop of lettuce, radishes, beans, early peas, early potatoes, or other pole beans may he ‘planted a- round the fenee, it heing possible in this way to produce c iderable quantities of dried bea for winter 1 price. L 1 ! s;)ulet crolp‘ l;equ:rlng a relatively|use. The pods should be allowed to i |short period for its maturity. Gar-|remain on the vines until dry cnough -AND BECAUSE “”“”m I” { dcuterslt::'e 1;|cllned to x:-gleict the op-| to rattle, should then be gathered, - onl harder to get but portunities for crop production in the|spread on the attie floor or in some later on it will be not y g [ garden after the first part of the|other dry place, and dryy shelled and no doubt a good deal higher in price. AND THEREFORE we bought a stock large enough to last us for six months ahead. WHICH MEANS g y that wherever the prices may go you will be protected against any advance as long as we have any of this stock on hand. IT WILL PAY YOU to let this store supply your every want for the next six months. This advice we give to all. Buy early and buy here. We will positively guarantee our prices and , our goods. OUTING FLANNELS Plain white, plain colors DRY GOODS r gy, I Hlllllllllh WMl ' Ll | 1k IH The Pride of Every Farm Every farmer wants a good barn to protect his* stock from the weather. that a good barn is a good investment. Other materials than wood have been used |(§ in barn building, but nothing has yet been |k He knows found that makes as warm and dry a barn season has passed and frequently stored in bags. Healthy animals make live stock profits as a well built wood barn. And the best wood bam is one built of . The largest ever StOCke‘.l o You can't make money off of live stock unless you Dress Goods, Silks, Per- cales- and Ginghams. -In every item the price is and fancy. Light and dark— 25¢, 29¢, 32c and 35¢ per yard. CRIB BLANKETS AND keep the animals in good condition. There are a few standard remedies which every farmer ought to have on BABY BLANKETS 4 - : i o] : . right. New goods and lots 98¢, $1.48, $1.69, $1.98 Wl’llte Plne stays where ou put it, without |E hand at all times. Quick application will save time, of them. N and $2.35 opemng at the joints, It doesn 't warp, spllt, trouble and money. B twist or rot, even after years of exposure in all kinds of weather. Because of its soft, yielding grain it is easy to work and easy MILLINERY—JUST IN—MILLINERY Hundreds and hundreds of dollars worth of millinery You can get these remedies and stock foods at in street and pattern hats. Smart styles, exceptional on tools Barker’s. We carry the famous Drs. Hess & Clarke’s vahtxes,$2$010908 $2.48, $2.98, $3.48, $3.98, $4.98 and foods—recommended and endorsed by veterinaries. e e Other woods are good in firotected places BRI ST cmec.t Sty.] s e but for use out-of-doors, ite Pine gives Stock Tonic . . ... peniadiee AL 50c, $1.00 and $2.00 TRIMMINGS—Hundreds of trimmings—10c, 15¢, 19c, the longest and’ most satisfactory service. i i 25c¢, 45¢c to $2.98. 1 ki 1 " Hess' Dip and Disinfectant............. 75c to $1.50 tical working plans, specifica= Miss Huft of St. Paul is in charge of the milline We have prac 4 pasizal deparltsrient thg season. Bring your work, and all yoll?l" tions and bill of materials of the barn shown Poultry Pan-a-c-e-a .................... 25c to 60c o millinery wants to Miss Huff. above or any other farm building. Come in Hess’ Worm Powder ..................o...... 50c and get them or let us send them to you. Talk over your building problems with us. Our Service is Free. HOSIERY Nobby, warrant- ed, made for wear NOTIONS Every need sup- lied by this store SWEATERS - Large _stock 98¢ to $8.50 Barker’s o Drug & Jewerly Store ST. HILAIRE LUMBER CO. carlso n Of Course Phone 100 Bemidji, Minn. 217 Third Street o P Ph h: od The Longest Store and Shortest Prices—See Him P ; . . PR s o - - SRR Fol e o JI. RS fi.ffi+ e o : 2 2 _: ST i Sy AJL o - , _ { | | !

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