Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, June 2, 1922, Page 3

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‘THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEEK . ‘——%—- EE PAGE THREE ‘_"'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIHIIIIIIIIl|||II|IIII|||I|IIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IlIlIIIIII|IIIIIlII|l|I|llIlIIIllIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIlIIIIIIMIIIIIII|llllililIIIIIllln!:ll'lllIIIIIhlIIIimllllmllllII|IIl'NlIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIllllII!I|IIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIlIHIIIIIIlIIllIIlIIIIIIIIl" : USE A USE Koo-s Dairy' (¥ICoors dud? JceCream A MILK OF 3 CHARACTER 5 Do you know how good our milk is? Have you ever tasted it? Do we deliver it to your home every morning? If we don’t, get acquainted with it for- your baby’s sake. ~DAIRY PRODICTS it "~ CLARIFIED MILK HAS NOTHING ADDED OR TAKEN AWAY Have it delivered to your door every morning! MILK and CREAM from healthy cows— handled in a sanitary way. PHONE 16-F-4 ALFALFA DAIRY W. G. SCHROEDER Fred Webster, Mgr. T T TRY OUR FOOD & SERVICE It may surprise ycu to know how well you can dine here—at such a rea- sonable cost. —Open Day and Night— The Palace Cafe - FRANK HUBERT, Prop. 112 Third Street ! 3 | sume tastes. | uninteresting world if we all had the FCO)‘P Y"- Wlde Vlrlety 07’ ‘Things Considered De- sirable God‘d for Import and Export Business, “What a good thing it is,” remarked Anne, “that we do not all have the It would be a frightfully same tastes and thought the same j things, and all wanted to do just ex- { actly’ what our neighbor did at the same time she was doing it.” Mother laughed. “That is very true,” she said, “but your experience Is with the little part ef the world about you. It -is thfs difference in taste all the world over‘that makes for the import and export business. Trade depends upon such differénces for its success. Indeed, I think the world would have stopped going round long ago 'if we all thought and di® and liked the same things. “The other day I read an article on ‘How Folks Differ.; Here are some of the things it said: ‘\We chew gum, the Hindoo takes to lime, the Patagonian finds contentment in-a bit o1 guano, { The children of this country delight in | eandy, those of ‘Africa like rock salt. ! A Frenchman considers filed frogs a tare delicacy, while an Eskimo Indian thinks there Is nothing more delicious than a stewed candle. But the South Bea islander ditfers from them all; his fancy dish is a fresh boiled mis- sionary, with the green cotion um- brella added for spice.’ "—Milwaukee £ | Bentinel. Reached His Destination. The steep stairway called “Break- neck Steps,” connecting the \mper £ |and lower towns of Quebec, has been the scene, according to ol Inhabitants, of incldents both tragic and ludicrous. ! One approaches this stairway (even 3 with its Twentieth century improve- ments) in tight-lfpped apprehension, writes d recent visitor to the French- Canadian city. But in the old days, at the height of its dnngernus career, to reach the bottom with accident wassan achievement. g e The tale is still being told %ot the { gentleman who tripped op the sec- ond step, fell, but slid to safety, bearing on his back a lady, who at { his tripping had also tripped and £|in her plight clutched the gentleman’s knotted tippet. At the bottom of the stairway the gentleman politely doffed his hat and said: “Pardon me, madame, but this Is !as far.as I go!” BERNIE W. ALDRICH ’ GARAGE First Class AUTO REPAIRING All Work Guaranteed 408-410 AMERICA AVE. —~>hone 187— Night Phone 515-W America’s Oldest Bell. In the court house at Barnstable, Mass,, is an old bell, cracked and si- lent, which may be, and probably is, the oldest bell in the United States. So thinks Alfred Crocker of Barn- stable county. The date 1675 {s still plainly visible H 1| In a photograph recently printed. By this date, however, the old' bell had seen nearly a quarter of a century of life in England before it came to America and began calling worship- ers together in thie church at Snndwlch Town. Gratitude bought the bell in an— land, for it came as a gift from Mrs. Peter Adolph, tain Adolph, was lost in the wreck of his vessel on the Massachusetts const in 1697 despite the efforts of the peo- ple of Sandwicn.—Boston Transcript. What Is the Next Stop? 1h New Zealand there is'in use an automatic device for telling railway | passengers the name of thie next sta- tion. The names of the various sta- tions are printed on a roll, which is rotated by toothed wheels. A “tripper” is placed about on the track or by its side, betiveen each station, And this Is passing car. The motion is communi- cated to the toothed wheels governing the roll bearing the station names, and the ringing of an automatic bell an- nounces to the passengers the fact that view. MILK & CREAM Pure Milk & Cream from grade: orns in Dr. Gilmore’s . herd. Have been supplying St. Anthony’s Hospital and can now take care of city trade. DELIVERED DAILY MILK, per quart....10c CREAM; per quart. . .50c CHAS. BARCLAY —PHONE 7-F-410— whose husband, Cap- | so adjusted as to strike a Jever on the:| Under His Hat. The Woman and the man fropm out of town were theater-bound, and at 8 o’clock both discovered that neither knew the street on which the particu- lar theater was located. “Let’s go to a newsstand and ger an | evening paper,” suggested the man. | “Let's ask a pollcenuu," suggested | the Woman. “Oh, that looks so out of-townish,”. sald’'the man, but as a big policeman hove into view the man went up to him to get the information. “Lord love you,” said the jovial po- liceman, “T can't keep all the theaters in my head any more than you can, but T do keep them in my hat.” Then; winking amusedly,; he vemoved said hat, or cap, to be correet, and extract- ed a tiny guide book which revealed, after ai turning of numerous pages, the dealred address.—Exchange. AII Must Make. Sa:rlflcel Would fwe ol ¢ “laws that should reign in' cholds, and: whose daily transgression annoys and morti- fies us.and degrades our ‘household life, we must learn to adorn every day with sacrificts. ‘Good manners are made up of petty sacrifices. Tew- perance, courage, love ade up of Creamery Butter, Ib ...35¢c | Strictly fresh Eggé, doz. 22¢ l Blackberries Strawberries Peaches Apricots Pineapple A:sarted if desired 3 for - 93¢ Sweet Gerkin Pickles, in 1-pt glass jar, special ....26c e et Rxchelleu l,OOO-laland Dreu‘ ing, picnic size i v 22c \ Rlcheheu Olives, all sizes,| rangein price. .65c to 15c| R e $' 3 ALSiaNaasssessesssasaeisSsieNsAtstafSesscetItesetstSsNeMsfassssstassnsssssesseeiie o] & ® = 8 - & s & - g l 7] £ ® ] - [w] A = H 12 [= 5 ® - xR © & ¥ i ' Coffee Speclal, a 1bs for. 97:: | Winezap Applq;, very good| conalhon, special 1b. .1Cc] t 9 & RO ¢ \Pure Glycerme Soap, 4 ba¥s for dozen - < 10 | the name of the next station is on per can Jello, all flavors, pkg. . i 2 N -] :.; (3 1.8 e o o 5 ] = ] gl = L N g L. 1 e | -5 K ald |a 6 Io g B Lt e e AT ta T - (= 3 16 We déllver free nnywhere in| [the cnty an order of zrocenes; 1$5.00 (or over—under that| |amount .we make a small charge depending on the | distance. . —CALL 851— Always at Your Service THE PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS r Chauffeur’s Dashing Ways Caused El- derly Fiancee a Little Flurry of Bewilderment. There is a certain city in the South noted for the number of foreign. chaut- feurs employed by its Infrequently do these dr selves in the local courts to answer charges of speeding. “I heard of the case of an l‘]{ll‘ll\' Irish cook,” city referred to, dashing young nce. tress, after announcing this betroth My hushond that south of I'ry SURELY SHOWED SOME SPEED 51 in" me down with his limous! | day we got engaged, and toc ch men. Not ers find them- PR Five thousand ac Herkimer county forested by thie A a man livin; vho got en chautfeur She said to her mis- s of land Y., will be re tn L in the war, 10 o, mum, is xhdfifihwewom& H@mdhfldfl%&afi Just as soon as you serve Kellogg’s you’ll note fussy and faded appetites getting mighty sharp; you’ll find big bowls being - handed back for ‘‘just a few more Kellogg’s, mother—they’re wonderfull” ‘And, that’1l make you glad, for Kellogg s Corn Flakes are a great speed-start for the day’s doings! They make for health and happy, digestions! Kellogg’s are never. leathery or tough, but always joy- ously crisp! z Kellogg’s—the- original Corn ™ s—will be a revelation to your taste if you have been eating imitations! For your own enjoy- ent, do this:—compare the big, unny-brown Kellogg’s Corn 1akes with other “‘corn flakes.” THat some of Kéllogg’s—then try, the.imitations! You’ll realize ‘then.why Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are the largest and fastest selling cereal in the whole world! - Do more than ask for ‘‘corn “#tkes.” Insist upon KELLOGG’S , 2 Corn Flakes in the RED and oses of Kelloges GREEN package! My, but it's ‘cause’ we eat ‘em warth wlule’ ’ ‘;I.B“—.h- awfal Alio makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN, cooked and krambled Larger e Soatd *Why—the sun of course” you Sun o{a,Cefit\ lay he picked me up aftér an\l\ 8 in| o | a living memorinl to men who s \0«] I flfl@fiflbmfldmh “CORN FLAKES | a!fll!ll!lfillilmmlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH This moisture-proof container keeps its crispy freshness. words“can’t express—you’ll love the delicious flavor of Nash’s Delicious Coffee. ‘Whether brewed in hard or soft water, it makes a rich, full-flavored, satisfying cup of coffee. - It’s the coffee of no regrets. } | 1' YOUR “coffee taste will tell you what i | ‘ P A new achicvement in coffco blending plus that “hot | roasted” crispy freshness. -Air-cleaned to remove chaff i -and wfleu dust=no bitter flayors. , " In one and three pound conhunersj Your Grocer Sells It f Boovcenoo0eSels0 e | | T e e e : CLIFFORD'S WEEKLY SPECIALS Sorghum, in 5-1 pails, Temptor Brand 40c s "N Apricot Jam, in 1-1b glass tumblers. . . 20c | 3 bottles Catsup | Plc]\led Pigs Feet, in ¢ i 2 cans Raspberries ........... ....47c | Gloss Staveh, 3:lbpkg ............. 20c Dehydrated Prunes,lar gc size, a lb. . .20c ) SATURDAY ONLY ‘ Tall Miik,Gcans . ............... 2 1bs Soap Flakes ..... 6 i TS ... 29¢ All-Copper Boilers . ............. $6.50 Strawberries for canning, per case of $5.00 24 qu;u‘t:-; "Clifford and Company Not Cheap Goods, but Good Goods Cheap % Phone 160 —_— Phone 160 p”M‘-‘VM"n‘J’h’MWH O PP L P S N - i 4 A 'n'u'x'\Fr‘;%%?-WMHM‘M’\“-\'&“\%%‘-’-‘NH-?‘l"-'fi"-’-“- 51 (=] (] o e s e e T e e e e e e a a e e e S will say. But remember—you can hold the cent so close to your eye that you lose sight of the sun. Some baking powders can be bought for a few pennies less than Calumet — but don’t hold these cents too close to.your eyes—you will not be able to.see the quality —thepurity—the dependabilityof CALUMET BAKING POWDER In other words, don’t be de- ceived by a few pennies — the cheapest baking powder in price is often the most expensive. When you buy Calumet you know that it will produce pure, sweet, and wholesome bakings. You know that you use less be- cause it contains more than the ordinary leavening strength. Buy it—try it—be convinced o Baking Powder than of higher priced brands— it goes farther. SAME PRICE for more than 3() years 25 Qunces for 25¢ Millions of pounds bought by the gov- ernment. Quality the best.

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