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ln the -days of old w!un nights were cold and the 48 saloons in Be- midji. were going full blast, one of the -most ‘essential parts of: city gov- ernment was an efficient police force. The above. picture shows the police force of which Bemidji boast- ed close to 20:years ‘ago. The'pice ture was taken between sixteen and thn same force eight’sslooms. Mayor:Ludington was the guiding haun: of the police force » gathering of the “old timers” they /dre Lringing up: memories of - the ys that were—the days of Bemid- birth and growth—when the “fair d ‘only a fair representation before Volstead ever thought ¢ of making this country feel like a . herring. Them was the days w] en you -toted ! your own: vietuals town. and became 'as ptdmhlant citizen 'as any other prominent cit- iten, the larger the load you could carry ‘the more prominent you' were as’a citizen. No old inhabitant can look back| Bemiafl, but these three may € called: for some special duty during the. staging of the historic' pagesnt | [ at the Northern Minnesota Fah-,, since they are “oldrtimen' M might :be call staging of th:d"’gld Thhd smw scene which is sure'fo out of the ordinnry C. Bailey, lhh land. the “state audifor's office, with o Bemidji;' N ‘W. Helmer, who''was shot and killed by a bandit about ten years: . ago ‘while lervjpg ‘at’ deputy i*" she i‘nd ‘Spragte ‘now located' in 3 Frank Cunnigham now. los est; and John Cline, Be- me warden tnr this district. noting. what a decided change has ] taken “place since ‘then. Remember the hi.h wooden sidewalks on Third ! street? ‘How. the loose boards wauld .. you when you: step- ed on them justat the right m{m? early 'day - prominet cmum { & have wended' their way, but when ‘the.pageant of Northern Minnesota is staged at the big fair this year; those who are here will, be gi & real pketch of Bemidji in its earl- jer stages, real scencs re-enactéd. a rellmlc manner: by .some of - the ta |'@ctors/ who made ‘history here when j they *were. ‘not acting. .To' miss it [} will ‘he-the regret of your.life, the || pageant will be another episode in tho hhtory of this section: of - the || to t.h- early days in Bemidji without " ~FOR GOOD BAKING RESULTS - Tin e BRI e TR NS T IS T IR -t INSIST ON CREMg 0 FLOUR “THE OLD RELIABLE” The ngheit Qlulnty ‘.Flour Sold.in Bemldjl. More Lonvec Per Saek Better Quality Br . Your Grocer Will Be Pleased to. Supply You. » -""‘;;':rookstOIz iing Co L gro! with corn tor other than silage. purposes, cowpeas are allowed: to ripen & fair pircentage of . pods, ‘gatherpd: for seed and: the’ -rermainder, pasture'd. This method .not only .gives:'a crop of:corn but. aiso luflchn( cowpea seed for- sowin next’ season;) and the: residue makes either a hq crop or a 'fair amount of grasing for stock. In’ many parts of: thé Sout)x, especially in' the sn;lr- sorghum . is: most When . grown; in rows,: the Sumse: and’ poomll, lron, unknnwn an ‘ehy Va- rietles of cowpea Nfluln about: the, | same tithe to mature’as the sorghums and' therefore should be used in| of ‘the earlier sorts. Blrunfinz & mowing machine ll most. nutldu- of Beel being well mixed and sown at Usually-the best rate i bushel ’ of - cow- mm and: half, a: bushel of; ‘sorghum ;| weed to the acea. the grain'drill is not . available for pea seed should be d! in, and" the sorghut sieuld then . be sown . while the' land /s rough, the sded’ being ‘covered wlth (3 dru har- row or ‘weeder. " Excellent - m\nu nre obhlned by sowing cowpeas and lornutnl togeth- er in cultivated rows 2% to' 8 feet apart. 'This ‘method requires sabout: 45 pounds of cowpeas and abdut one- third of a bushel of mhum leed to the acre. 'MILK SAMPLES FOR TESTING Only .Fair ‘'Way Would Be. to Make Avcn’('if Two to Four Mllklm -c.w. Will Vary. AMrumpkotmukfor:tm {| should be an-average of two or four milkings. . Cows do not' always give milk; of ‘thie same test, Lots of .cows$ g leimfifc Dr. Earl R. Two ™5mn, test -lower: inithe morning . milking than at night.- The only fair way is to! i »mnke an average and a samj han one Wilking is' dece! test. Those Who Dobt ‘Do Not Know! mportane of a good strong back- Hy recognized. - When we an acks declslon, charae- ess, figuratively spells aliure, sickness;, unhappi- . o we hear the expression of: a “Creepmg' senSatmn and’ down the . spine,” or “Hot and:e i : and down the ack. feeling well. A cold help for sleep]essness has been used from time immemorial. . Plasters on the back are em- ployed for almost every concelvable ailment. i A1l this shows.that the. underlymg principle ; Chlrop actic, namely, “‘Perfect Health and ugh a Perfect Backbone;” ted in many-different ways. edt years ago'some German that in almost. every: dis- s:a fault in the alignment. of the’ 5 of the backbone. : ; thlrty-_three rmg-s nd defi'r : onduit.o «p mdmdual nerve fibers emerg’*é on ‘each- sxde of the various rings or yertebrae of. the entxre backbone; and carry their life-giving vand health-mam mmg‘ energy toall the v1tal organs, muscles and : nd the architecture of this spinal column for-a moment, he e for himself how easily one:can “slip” & little one way or another; and how.liable to in- Jury most of these thirty-one pairs of spinal nerves must be as they pass between these movable i)ones of the spmal column. And this is precisely what happens: in hundreds and thousands of people every day. Chiropractors -call these slips *“Subluxa- tions.”: These subluxations'may oceur through jars,- wrenches, strain, improper poise, drafts, colds; méntal -excitement, depres- sion, inherited weakness, overstretehfng of the muscular bands or hgaments and museular eontraetions resulting from infectious:dis- eases and' poxsonmgs, and from a‘hundred and one 1nc1denta1 and accldental ‘causes., . 5 'chegi or pressed upon, the nerve current must become restricts disease is the result. Pains about the head, face, eyes, diseases' of the stemach, heart, lungs, liver,- jwels or special organs'of sex; par- alysls, .catarrh, rheuma‘hsnf A ynes; neuralgia, lumbago, asth- ma, goiter, lowered vitality, irritability, insomnia—"all these: and many other axlments have ylelded -to. Chiropractic -adjustment when' everything: élse has failed; and all simply because the nerve pressure was' reheved «Man surgl!fiaf ‘operations ¢an be avoided When the nerves an p - by Chiropractic adjustment; and- the® old-time_methods of drug treatment are becoming more and more a thing of the past. Every sick than, woman or child should -consult.a competent Chiroprac- tor, and. have the cause of thelr trouble removed by a spmal ad- SP!NAL ADJUSTMENTS and TREATMENTS —Insist on both ~as both are neceuary to insure permement results. mnommn TROPBMAN BL()C]( * MASSAGE "“e . PHONE 316 BEMIDJI, MINN. » llmmflmmmmIlllllllmilllfllllllllllllllfiflllfllllllflllllllllHflllllllllllIIlIILIlIIIIIlIIlIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIII =iIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||IIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIII!|IIIIIIIIIIII‘IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIII IIIllflIIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIHIIIIIIII||lIIIIIIII|Ill|IIIIIIIII