Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, November 22, 1919, Page 3

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THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER \ Bemidji Market Quotations !w’ mlmflfia"wn\u u -~ “"“‘““h“ll\“mflfl““-“ u:;}l P \"“h 'lllllm"A.|||I|||||||||llh.. Ll Chicago, Nov. 22.—Potato receipts today 46 cars. Market steady. Michigan, Minnesota and Wisconsin Round Whites, sacked, $2.85 to $3. Nebraska Early Ohios, bulk, $3. Idaho Russets, sacked, $3.45. BEMIDJI MARKET QUOTATIONS. The following prices were being paid in Bemidji at time TR isp Y T FEED FOWLS SCRATCH GRAIN Proper Amount Specified by Speclal lsts for Leghorns and General Purpose Breeds. (Prepared by the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture.) Specialists of the United States de- ‘partment of agriculture advise poultry keepers to feed about one quart of scratch grain and an equal weight of mash (about 1% quarts) daily to 13 hens of the general purpose breeds, such as the Plymouth Rocks, Rhode Island ‘Reds or Wyandottes, or about 16 hens of the smaller or egg breeds. “This would be about 7% pounds each of scratch grains and of mash daily to Fowls Having Free Rangé Pick Up)Beets, per bushel .. Much of Their Feed. 100 Leghorns and about 9% pounds of | Holland cabbage, per ton . of going to press today: VEGETABLES. Rutabagas, per bu. ............ 65¢ Carrots, per cwt. .. ..$1.00 Beets, Lushel ..50c-60c Cabbage, cwt. $1.50-$2.00 Hubbard squash, ton . ..$20-830 Onfons, dry, ewt. ..... .. ..$3.00 Sweet corn ...... ..10c-12%¢c Beans, CWt ........0000 $6.50-$8..v Beans, Swedish, cwt ...$4.00-85.00 Dairy butter, 1b. . 5 Butter fat Eggs, case, Eggs, fresh, Retail Eggs, storage, doz. GRAIN AND HAY Jats, bushel i Barley, bushe Rye, bushel .. Bor Corn, bushel . Red clover, medium, The following 'prices were being paid a White clover ..... Buckwheat, 1b. . Popcorn, 1b. .. & Wheat ...cceecevnens R MEATS HOgs, b sosowesosossanios 16c-18¢ Dressed beef 1b. . «...10c-12¢ Turkeys, live, 1b. . . .26c-28¢ 0ld Toms, live, 1b. ..23c-24c Geese, live, 1b. ... . .13c-16¢ Ducks, live, Ib. ..... .16¢-18¢ Hens, 4 1bs. and over ......... 18¢ Springers, all weights, lb. ..18¢c-20¢c HIDBES Cow hides, No. 1. 1b .......26c-28¢ Bull hides, No. 1, 1b. . .20c-22¢ Kip hides, No. 1, 1b. .... ....36¢ Calf sking, No. 1, 1b. Deacons, each ......... $2.60-$3.00 Horse hides, large, each Tallow, Ib. Wool .... ..$10.00 Oc-12¢ .43c-bVc illwater, Minn., at time of going to press of today’s Pioneer: GRAIN AND HAY Wheat, No. 1 ......... $2.46-$2.67 Wheat, No. 2 ......... $2.44-$2.50 Wheat, No. 3 ......... $2.39-$2.49 0atS .....ovireanainaanctiann 65¢c Barley .$1.00-81.20 Rye ......covunn . .$1.24-81.28 Pop corn, 1b., on ear .........5c-8¢ Buckwheat, perlb. .......00000e 2¢ Pop corn, 1b. on ear .. .6 & 8¢ No. 2 timothy hay .. .$20.00 No. 1 clover, mixed $21.60 Rye straw ..... .$8.00 Oat straw ., 2 Rice ....... VEGETABLES Beans, hand picked navy, cwt. $6.60 .$2.20 Potatoes .. Round Whites .. Beans, (Swedish) Carrots, per bushel .... Domestic cabbage, ton ..... -each to 100 general purpose fowls, If | Hubbard squash, drug on the market hens have free range or large yards| ’:9"’ 4 P $3.60 <contatning green feed a general pur- | pU 0% SrYe FEE VL Lo et oY 70¢ pose hen will eat about 75 pounds of [ gy ¢ter (packing stock) 1b. ....43c feed in a year, while a Leghorn will Eggs, Per doZ. .......ce00un ..63¢c consume about 55 pounds in addition to the green stuff which she eats. Clover, mixen «.......... Sweet corn, per doz. . Rutabages per cwt. LIVE POULTRY No. 1 turkeys «...ovvee Old Tom turkess ......... Liillzze Culls unsalable. Geese ......::. ceeeees esecnes 11c Ducks ......ccivenecancans ..1l4c Hens, heavy, 4 lbs. and over ...16¢c Springers .........c.. o sieiainee 106 Guineas, per doz. . X Pigeons, per doz. .... Beef, dressed . HIDES Cow hides, No. 1 Bull hides, No. 1. Salted ...... .26¢ Kips, No. 1 .. ..38¢ Calf skins No. ...66c Deacons ........ .$2.60 Horse hides, large . Tallow ......cceee & 8¢ Wool, bright ......... ... 26C ‘Wool, semi-bright ..... viee o800 EPSOM SALTS FOR CHICKENS| SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY PIONEER Many Digestive Troubles May Be ° Overcome by Purging or Cleans- ing the Intestines. A great many chickens suffer from todigestion or digestive® troubles, which may be due to improper feeding or some method of management. It thas been found that many of these conditions may be overcome by purg- 1ng or cleansing the Intestines through ‘some means of a laxative. One of the <cheapest and easiest handled laxa- tives is epsom salts, which can be pur- <hased at any drug store. For ma- ture fowls the dosage is one-half tea- 8poonful per bird though if the case 1s minor, one-third teaspoonful may ‘be sufficient. An easy and effective ‘way of administering this is to mix it ‘with a dry mash of bran and shorts, using the above proportions and aft- <erwards moistening it with water. ‘CURE FOR POULTRY DISEASES Use of Vaccine Has Considerable Value In Correcting Ailments, Says Professor Lewls. Prof. Harry R. Lewis of New Jersey college before a recent meeting at the Connecticut station sald the use of vaccine in the cure of poultry dis- eases has considerable value. Profes- sor Lewis told of trying out a vaccine -on hens afflicted with chicken pox and roup and the successful results. He belleves that other diseases may be treated by the vaccine plan. The next step at the New Jersey station will be an effort to immunize pullets against chicken pox or roup by vac- <cinating while young and before they have been exposed to the disease. —_a- Watch your flock carefully and as‘ soon as one member shows disease AN remove it. * s 9 It is easy to keep your hens healthy if you know the laws of health and practice them. . @ Close confinement without exercise| i3 not conducive to the best results in the poultry yard. . s 8 Geese are not like hens. Old geese lay better than young geese and old ganders are better than young ones. * & * The weather is something, but the hen is more. Have your hens in a 1aying condition and they will lay in spite of Weather. * = % The dust bath is recommended high- 1y for farm flocks but it should not be the only means of preventing lice as some birds will not dust themselves thoroughly. e Paae The Safe and Sane-Way to Regain Your Health You may have little or no faith in efficacy of the drugless health science of Chiropractic for the simple reason that you know nothing about it. Let us give you an illustration which even a child can understand. Your watch having given you good service for sev- DRUG OF MARVELOUS POWER ‘| Bayard Taylor’s Description of Sensa- tions Under the Influence of Hashish Is a Classic. Hashish v be reckoned one of ‘the most classic of all Intoxicants. Herodotus, the “Father of History” speaks of its use among the ancient Scythlans, and it was doubtless the drug referred to by Homer as “the assuager of grief” in the house of Menelaus. Bayard Taylor's account of his sensations on first taking it at Damascus is memorable. It put him in a state of mental exaltation where- in all sensations as they arose sug- gested more or less coherent images in a double form, one physical, the other spiritual, and the latter reveal- ing itself in a series of indescribably brilliant metaphors. A few minutes after taking the drug he found him- sglf at the foot of the Great Pyramid. A wish instantly transported him to its summit, far above the palm groves and wheat fields of Egypt. Then, look- Ing down, he observed that the pyra- mid was not bullt of stone, but of gi- gantic blocks of “plug” tobacco! For a moment he writhed in a perfect par- oxysm of laughter at this ludicrous discovery. Then his senses were rav- ished with delicious perfumes, and there came to his ears divine melodies and harmonies such as Beethoven might have dreamed. Time and space seemed vastly extended, so that a min- ute seemed an hour and an hour a year, while his friends in the same room with him seemed miles away, as though he were viewing them through a reversed telescope. TNT Wins Contest With Dynamite. A contest was recently staged be- tween 40 per cent dypamite and trini- trotoluene, and the latter won, says the Scientific American. Two con- crete plers had to be blasted out and this gave an opportunity for a com- parative test of the two explosives, with the result that 14.9 cublc feet of concrete were removed per pound of TNT, and only 14.1 per pound of dynamite. TNT is no doubt destined to be used extensively in engineering work, as it is less sensitive than dynamite, but greater precautions must be taken to ventilate after a shot, owing to the large amount of carbon monoxide which i# one of the principal products of combustion. ' Placing Blame Where It Belongs. ' “H'm, h’'m!” grumbled Farmer Horn- beak, gazing down the rows. “So that's the way you planted the corn, eh? Looks like you were staggering full of hard cider when you done it!" “Aw, them rows was straight when I planted 'em,” doggedly replied the hired man. “The hot sun has warped ‘em; that's all.”—Kansas City Star. W. C. T. U. PLANS TO GUARD came from the wounding of his AMERICANS OVER THE WORLD | father at Kenesaw mountain during the Civil war. eral judge since 1905. St. Louis, Nov. 22.—A national and state legislative program, which includes laws prohibiting citizens of the United States, in countries where | SUBSCRIBE FOR THE treaties grant extra territorial rights from acting in violation of the na-|- tional prohibition amendment, on penalty of loss of citizenship, was| — recommended for indorsement at the meeting of the National Women's Christian Temperance union here. JUDGE LANDIS CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY: WORKS 8 HOURS Chicago, Nov. 22.—Federal Judge Bring us your clean oot- Kenesaw Mountain Landis, celebrat- ton rags--no buttons, bands ed his'53rd birthday with only eight or woolen cloth acoepted. - hours work. An unusually heavy N docket of important cases has taken more than that amount of his time da Pioneer Office ily for some time past. Judge Landis explained his name RAGS He has been a fed- DAILY PIONEER Fy L T T T LU T LU T OPTOMETRY MEANS EYE-MEASURING o This technical word represents a profession prac- ticed since the thirteenth century. Forty-four states have recognized optometry as a profession—as distinct as medicine, dentristy or the law. This state exacts certain qualifications for fitness to examine eyes and presgribe glasses for them. The optometrist uses no medicine and does not touch the eye. With one instrument he notes the physical condition of the eye; with another, he measures the curvature and errors of refraction; with another, he tests the muscular balance. What combination of lenses will make your vision normal is based on these findings. The optometrist’s prescription is scientifically correct. No one should be alowed to fit glasses for you or your children who has not met the tests the state requires. IF YOUR EYES ARE DEFECTIVE, CONSULT US Drs. Larson & Larson OPTOMETRISTS Over Boardman’s Drug Store LTI ELCHTE LTI LT LT D LT ST ] [ T T T TR T T O T T T T T O T T ‘““Fxcellence’’ -~ —the effect of individual tailoring points which will appeal to the careful dresser. eral years, and always kept good time, suddenly “Goes Back” on you and begins to “LOSE TIME.” You n_at_ur- ally take it to the watchmaker who, after examining it more or less carefully, says “Oh, yes, I can soon fix this for you. I will take out one of the wheels and then it will go as well as usual.” You immediately snatch the watch out of the hands of the “FOOL,” for such you mentally call him and try some other machinist. Your next watchmaker is saner. He also examines the watch carefully and says, “Yes, I can soon fix that, it needs a little adjusting and if you will leave it with me for a day or so, I will guarantee to adjust it so that it will keep as good time as it ever did.” You leave the watch with him and in due course you get your watch back, keeping perfect time as of yore. Your preciuos body is as intricate and delicate a piece of mechanism as any watch that was ever manu- factured. Something goes wrong, you are sick, unable to sleep, cannot enjoy your food, your body is wracked with pain, etc. The cause can invariably be traced to subluxated (displaced) vertebrae (small bones of the spine) pinching the nerves and preventing the normal flow of the vital force from the brain through the nerves to the various organs of the body. Why you should allow any surgeon to remove part of your bodily mechanism is more than any sane persons can under- stand. How much more reasonable it would be for you to consult a Human Machinist (Chiropractor) and get him to adjust the cause, which consists in adjusting the subluxated vertebrae back to their normal posi- tions, thus relieving the pressure and getting rid of the cause. Does not this seem reasonable to you? Think it over carefully, read this article again and the next time you or any member feels a little “Off Color,” consult a Chiropractor. The Safe, Sane and Satisfactory way to regain your Health is by Chiropractic Vertebral Adjustments. Drs. Lunde & Dannenberg CHIROPRACTORS First Nat'l Bank Bldg., Bemidji, Minnesota Phone 401-W -—the importance of a man’s appearing at his best at all times is given particular emphasis in the business and social world of the present day. —and by no means may this be attained so thoroughly as having his suits made at the tailoring establish- ment of PAUL BROSVIK Third Street, Bemidji, Minnesota —you get away from the appearance of ordinary clothes when you have your tailoring done at this modern establishment. That Suit for Christmas —we aim to invest our customers with an air of INDIVIDUALITY, which best suits his character and physical requirements. —come in and pick the suit that was meant for you. It is here for you, because it was chosen with you in mind. Better choose it now and we’ll finish it in time for Holiday wear. PAUL BROSVIK YOUR TAILOR THIRD STREET BEMIDJI, MINN. T Y PRIV ] = | = \ 1% ! |

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