Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 25, 1920, Page 7

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R e e FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 25, 1920 . ' THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER S ] I PAGE SEVEN e 1§ tHiat’ avrack 1t 80 permatentiy, a solin food basis would be assured. As it is, potatoes, which should be the cheap- est and moat plentiful f¢0d, now fluc- ----- ¢ o i o PLAN MORE OSTRICH PLUMES | “f5 sumbiee of prames trom ench | wisk quils of tho hand mumbifoa 16, |~ Overeeming’ Pant lsease, CAREER OF “NED BUNTLINE a wing averages 86, and occasionally | while the secondary’ feathers, attached | Announcement by sclentists at Cam- Wit e South African Raisers of the Birds Be- | runs as high as 42 In the South Afri- | along-the forearm, probably did’ not | bridge university ‘that it is 'now pos’ r of ‘Sensational Storles Once| —jigvg They Can Largely Increase | can species and 89 In the North Afrl- | exceed 26. This was the original in- | sible to breed’ disease-proaf “plints, : Rxtremely Popular Had a Singu- the Supply. can. 'The latter.is the larger bird | heritance and 1t can never be in- | following a long-series-of immuniing | tU8te from moderate prices to prices . larly Adventurous Life. e, and 1ts_bones are denser. The Groot- | creased, especially now that the whole | tests applied to grains, potatoes wnd | {hat are sbsurdly high. . SRS L An effort Is belng made by South | fonteln School of Agriculture is trying | Wing has degenerated into a mere | other growths; ought'to' shed'a ray ‘ot | The checking of plant disease Is .“Ned Buntline," ‘whose real Dame| african ostrich farmers to Increase | by proper mating to breed a: race of | Wreck of its original elf. 1ight ‘upon’ the-world sorely vexed'by | %6cond. only in. importance to over- coming_ the diseases that attack bu- | manity. At this.time of food scarcity any progress that can be made toward conserving. the world’s_ crops will be doubly. a blessing.~New. York Trib- - was ‘B. Z, 0. Judson, had a career the plume quills of ostriches, and Pro- | 42 plume birds. There are now about 1,000,000 birds | food problems. { which was on its plane. Rooseveltian, | foasor Deverden belleves this can be | - Professor Pycraft writes in the Ilus- [ oD the African ostrich farms and the | Potato disease alone has cost' this| Gargantuan "?nd Tartarinian. It 18 de-| gone by as much as 25 per cent, but | trated London News that the ances- | Value of their exported feathers is | country'untold“mifilions’ of dollars. I¢' -'fii’:eé’n.lfix...f-"""b;’ :‘Lq: (;:ve;tu;es &’f | W. P. Pycraft, the great Hnglish nat- { tor of the ostrich undoubt’d‘:’ pos- | sbout $16,000,000. - this-one article of ‘food counld'be' pro:' 2NN . Pond, oth- t wer of flight, e e teeted ' agat i q 4 erwise* WilP Wildwood, says. the De- El_lst, 12 Skoptics). . = seeed 1 poves s.an s tocted amainst the destructive funsl’ troit: News. Judson ran away from i £ -his ‘home. when eleven years old, in —_— —_—_,—— B e 1884, became a ‘sailor and then a mid- shjpman.. ‘At fifteen he fought a duel with seven midshipmen who had de- cliped to mess with him. ' When seventeen years old Judson servéd ‘with distinction ‘in°the Sepi- fnole war. He'became g.hunter in the erglades, then hurried oft-to the des in. the employ of the North- - west{Fur company, tyrned back to the -Southwest, where he married and foyght more duels. udson became a mainstay of the Enickerbocker Magazing in: its best years and was so violent a begetter of mensational romances that he oncd wrote a book of 610 pages in 62.hours, He turned Into a ' patriot with' the Know Nothings, and on accoufit of [} his share in the Astor place riot was sent ‘to the penitentiary for a year. He then took himself to the Adiron- dacks, which he helped make classic ground for sportsmen. He served In the Mexican and Civil wars. “Buntline” brought “Buffalo Bill” on the stage in a play he wrote one Wed- nofldi,y afternoon, rehearsed over the weeksend and produced thé following .‘Monday. He came to the end of his career in 1886, only. after he had writ- ten more than 200 volumes of -tumul- tuous blood-and-thunder. the wi —the man who uses his head il before he uses his pocketbook, the man who studies and under- —r— stands business conditions, will ot extravagancs the marern Amer buy more than one suit during {can woman s an amateur in copipari- son with her ancient sister. In the Philagelphia museum six sheets of ' th H l gold so thin that it wag pliable as cloth ls sa e show! perforations at top #ind bottom. ¥ These ate 16 by 20 inches In size, and weére i probahly used as ruffles on the gown of a fashionable Inca princess. | | | Why? Because He knows there | H | many golden crowns, a pair of the b il i te g and e has been no drop in the cost of woolens, and wages in each four inches long. A peckinc Iy formed of 1 st of the clothing industry have not been reduced. He knows 41 golden bells. There Is a heavy ring for her nose and another for her lips, el e e that wholesale prices for fall are high, and that the - Tosca cane topped with a golden mon- Wi o teen sl break in prices has taken place only in the retail store. et et o v The retail cost of clothing has dropped femporariy. there were windows in heaven, and as b ey e | That’s all. But that’s enough for the wise man. He'’s & long ago. Hven as late as the middle K of the eighteenth century the chemical b * 1 h h ‘" nature of the air was not known. If t no W the density: of - the atmosphere re- uylng c O lng ere * mained constant it could all be com- pressed into.a layer about five miles thick. In that case the highest moun- tain peaks would stand-out in’ space plercing - the so-called homogeneous [] [J atmosphere. But, the density de- S T d oy uits at 20 per cent Reductions aviator reaches an elevation of 10,000 |1 i : meters he is in a medium which is only’ . about one-third as :dense as at the: ground. There are no clouds above i e : $35.00 SUITS are..............$28.00 $55.00 SUITS are..............$44.00 y 5@'{;}&:’:&‘5%5??’:@: | ' $40.00 SUITS are..............$32.00 $60.00 SUITS are..............$48.00 > . may. be s pressed to do ‘a grea 3 . W suited to its work 1t must bring , $45.00 SUITS are..............$36.00 $65.00 SUITSare..............$52.00 forth the fruit, or the continuity of A - plant-life will be broken and the earth 3 will be turned into a desert ere long. - sso'oo SUITS are. . “ . The color and smell of the flower .$40.00 $70.00 SUITS are..............$56.00 _=are all for some purpose; therefore, - mo sooner is it fertilized by the bee, ' no sooner does the time of its fruition i .- arrive, than it sheds 1ts exquisite pet- ’ . ’ 1 . 818 and a cruel economy compels it to ” ! g L give up its sweetest perfume’ It has 0 s d v b § l s : ~no time to flaunt its finery, for it I8 3 - g i sy beyond measure, — ~TURN HAIR DARK © WITH SAGE TEA If Mixed With Sulphur It * Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell '~ 'The old-time mixture of Sage Tea - and Sulphur for darkening gray, _ ‘streaked and faded hair is grand- - mother’s recipe, and folks are again - using it to keep their hair a good, even color, which is quite sensible, as ‘we are living in an age when a youthful appearance is of the great- est advantage. - - Nowadays, though, we d}:mit h:lv;e 5 ] ering the e . Sage-and the musmy mixog 3t home ’ Money Cheerfully Refunded - Mail Orders Promptly Filled “All drug stores sell the ready-to-use product, improved by the addition of other ingredients, called “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound.” It is ery popular because nobody' can discover it has been applied. Simply moisten your comb or a soft brush with it and -draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a _time; by morning the gray hair d.w‘ appears, but what delights the ladies with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur pom- pound, is that, besides beautifully darkening' the hair after a few ap- plications, it also produces that soft lustre and appearance of abundance which is so attractive. D

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