Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
— JllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIlllllllllmlIIIIIlmnmulllfllllllflufllfllmmlllllIIIIufllflmfllmmmmmmmmllmHmmm“mmfllmmflmmlIllfllilillfllllllllIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIillilllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIl|IIlI|IIIIIllIlIIIIIlIIll“lmmlflllllllllmlg ARKET BASKET TISES HIS WARES AND PRICES IS NAwRALLY A FAIR DEALER . 'z"_"lllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIliIllI EDGEWOOD - ISLAND LAKE ‘Miss ‘Mirra“Stout: ‘wis a_ Bemidji caller Monday. “Perry Ollom is working for “Mrs. T. J. Wright transactéd busineéss in" Bemidji Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. ‘Ed. Luedtke and Paul and Ella Luedtke were Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs." August Luedtke Sr. and - Fred and Katie Luedtke. Mr. and Mrs. Joel Burns visited Mrs. Burns’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Wright, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Max Luebeck and C W. Kingsbury called at the August Luedtke home on business Wednes- day. . Casper Knnpp and- family ‘visited friénds in Bemfd)x “Sunday. Potato digging is now in_ progress her new home: opposite her old one. Mrs. Hank Pingle of Maple Rldge township,_called on Mrs. W. H:| Whelan Wednésday. - Mr. ‘and Mrs. O. ‘H. Oliistead of ;| Bemidji ‘and ‘Mrs. J. J. McNew of Chicago, who motored to Island Lake Wednesday iévening:* :Mr. and Mrs. 0. H. Olmstead returned _td theif home Thursday and Mrs. J.-J. Mc- Namee is visiting with relatives m Tsland, Lake ‘for a few ‘weéeks. F. W. Stout bought a tractor last in ‘the neighborhood. 'Everybody re- | Saturday. ports an extra good yieéld. The Red Lake fair opened Thnrs- A baby boy was born to :Mr. and |day. Quite anumber of cars passed through Island Lake going to-the Red Lake fair Friday. = . Miss ‘MagRae, . -Miss, Rassmussen, Mrs. Chas. Frost and Miss Stout all. spent the day at the Red Lake fair; and also attended the dance Friday and Saturday nights. L] Mrs. J. A. Lanville, Mrs. W. H. Whelan, Mrs. J. J. McNamee and Martha Schmidt attended the Red Lake fair Friday. R Mrs. Russell Smith Monday. at the home of Mrs. Smith’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Edwards. Three carloads of shéep from this neighborhood were ‘shipped “to St. Paul Friday. Mrs. Max Luebeck called on Mrs. Peter Frost Wednesday -morning- Miss Bertha Phibbs ‘wa$ a shop- per in Bemidji Saturday. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE PIONEER = IllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIlIlHlIIIIIII|IIIlllllfllllllllllllIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIllIIIIII 1= There Is No Waste When You ‘Buy Quality Foods QUALITY is our first consideration, and our prices meet the demands of prudent houséwives. SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY : Stones Brand; “that good Pineapple,” 8 slices fo the ‘can, special 3-cans for 9 ‘Argo Corn Starch, 11b pkg, éa Navy Beans, -special -per 1b Sweet Corn, per can . Order: for lmnten packed in neat containers vifld given special attenition. Choice Béef Pot Roast, per 1b . Rib Beef Stew, per Ib ......... Prime Rolled Rib Roast, per 1b Round Steak, per 1b Sirloin Steak, per 1b Short Cut Steaks, per 1b . Spring Chickerns, per 1b ... Hens, per Ib Palace Meat and Grocery Phones 200-201 a’filllllmullmllllIIlllmllIIlllIllllllIllIIllllllllIIIIIIIImIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllll'llllllllllilln.. lllIIIlllIIIIIlllllIIIlllIlllIIIIIIllllI|IIllllII|llllII|IIIIIIIlIIlIIIllfllllIlllllllllllIlllllllllillIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIlIllIIIII_L','—.' IIIllllllllIfllllfllllllllfllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllll!lllllllliIIIIllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIIIIIliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIIIIII l A. G. Billideau. who is moving into}- Geo. PelIow of Bemidji was ap’ Island Lake ¢caller Friday. 0. H. Olmstead and Mr. Casey of Bemidji' came-up ‘duck ‘hunting Fri- day evemng and remrned Saturday evening: ongressman’ Thought Old Gentleman ‘Might ‘Have “Some ‘Kind of a ‘Stdtue Lying Around. mre fs ‘a military officer in theé uundhfits ‘and grounds at Washington |\ wpo. from. a récent ‘éxperiénce, has’ are’ unreasonable. A gennsentathe from a 'remote dis<}i trict- in " far southern - state 'téle- phoped 'him for ‘a “statue of - ‘some - klmi—pre!enbly a figufe of a soldler.”. The fepreséntitive weént on to explain ‘thit & fittle town In- hfs distriét Las dec;ded to honor, its several ‘young isiién, ‘who “Wwere killéd in the ind ot havirg an abund- andée of flzéney to spend on ‘a memorial sonie’ of thie léading clitizens’ had won- dered if Uncle Sam couldn’t help out: #F thought your office no ‘doubt had softie 'glgtqes'laylng uround that you had not selected sités for or else had no further use for, In which eyent you,| could iet me have one to ship ‘down'to my constituents,” thé representative explained in a sérious and suave manner. The lattér, accordiig fo the army officer, appeared moré surprlsed than dlsnppolnted when told over the tele- plione that thé offiée of public bulld- ings and grounds. was out of spdre statues. FRAGRANCE ‘ON PRISON AIR| Electfic Perfumer in Cleveland Céunty Jail Arotses Mind‘to All Kinds of ‘Possibilitien -Attar6f rous md Aweet scents of.: Myl at-the cotnty Jall. of 'sweetness ‘on the prison air. Just turn the button and the jail becomes a-garden of roses or fragrant with the ¢ of ‘orange “blossoms, ! The other day the atmosphere 'of the Jail feflected the aroma of the for- st cedar. -It'might:have been Norway: pine, ‘sassafras, crab apple blossom, “but it Just happetied that the petfamer was charged to 'dispense an aroms tinged ‘with forest cedar. The machine 'has ‘possibilities, the. sheriff believes. - It might be employed to awaken the prisoners each morning with scents:of violets and soothe them at breakfast: with odors of ham, eggs; cora frif 8, grapefruit and other viands not on the regular morning menu of ‘coffee and butterless bread. Oh, yes,indeed, the machine hax pos- sibilitles. At night it could discharge the odorof pineapple or figs or dates, and -any -prisoner with a good sense of smell .and a strong imaginalion could readily.go to sleep-and feel thni he was in Hawail. | But the perfumer is in jail only on trial.—€leveland Plain Dealer. There’s an electric perfumer: BOUGHT BEFORE THE ADV ANCE, AND WE ARE GIVING OUR TRADE THE BENEFIT-: Flemish Beauty Pears $2.98 crate Dutchess P, ars BUY'NOW!- Carload of WATERMELONS _ Your Choice 35 cents —SEE OUR WINDOW! —297 PHONES 297— Louisé Benne Pears $3.25 crate B]ue Plums $1.09 crate the superintendent of public s belleve that some merbérs|: “It casts all'kinds.: | milk. a year. SECRETS ‘OF DAIRY SUCCESS ‘Two Big Things Are Proper Care and Feed, Says Specialist of Okla. homa College. “Two great secrets in dairying which “ have been ‘the reason:for the success of thousdinds of dalrymen are proper ;} feeding of cows and ‘Proper. care of coivs,” says A. Q. Bder, head of the Dairy Husbandry department of Ok- lahoma Agricultural ‘and Mechanical college. “Thotsands of cows would be profit- able and ‘good cows 1if they were given a chance; if ‘they were ‘propetly fed. houseéd, and cared 10r, “Good ' féeding means to glve cows enough feed “to -produce ‘milk and' the " Fight ‘kind of ‘feéd ‘to produte milk. Most of ‘the ‘feed for cows ought to ibe grown on Oklahoma farms. Alfaify hay 1s the best dairy cow feed'which can be ‘grown. Corn ‘and snrghums, such s kafir‘and' datko, ¢an be'grown for the ‘silo. ‘Ensilage on a (lnlry farm or any farm whére -dairy cows are kept provides succulent feed and 1s°In- dispénsable. “Most of ‘the graln” for'cow feeding c¢an be grown on -the ‘average 'Okta- homa farm. A go0d‘grain mixture for milk cows ‘Is ‘a5’ follows: 4 'party zronn‘g oats, 3 'parts bran or alfaifa meédl, ‘3 parts ground kafir, 1 part cot tonseed meal. “A dairy cow needs about one pound of -grain for three -or four pounds of milk produced. 'Dairy cows should be fed grain indfvidually according to the amount of milk for: growth if imma~ tare, and ‘at times to produce gain in welght. “Dairy cattle will respond to good care. Every Oklahoma farm where cows are kept should ‘have at least a good ‘shed to protect the cows from bad ‘weather:'and cold winds. A blan- ket In very old weather will pay for “itself in a Very' short time. Every dairy cow should brushed- her in: bmm High- nrmind’lns‘ the United States Dep: culture in' repiythg to_a asked for a comparisop. and grade cows as to, economyof pro- duction. .If a herd of purebred cows has -greater ability to produce milk and butter fat than a herd of grades, it will return more milk and butter fat for the feed consumed, As a rule pure- breds are bred for high production, and just to-the extent that they are Sérub Cows Are Not Wonh Their Keep. higher producers {han the grades they may be expected to return more for the feed they-use. But purebreds are not always high producers. The ratio is not constant between the quantity of feed consumed and the qunntlty of milk produced. The rec- ords of cow-testing assoclations show thit the cows that produced 10,000 pounds of milk a year ate only 55 per cent more feed than those that pro- duced 5000 pounds of milk a year. “The cows that made 7,500 pounds of milk a year ate only 21 per cent more ‘than;those that made 5000 pounds of These figures are based on thousands ‘of records. Advéntiire 'With Pigmy ’ Rattiesnake. ‘Dr. R W. Shufeldts writes 'in Natugeland: ;A ~few, months. ago a friend, residing in Florida, sent me a beautiful five specinien of tlils snake, “which ‘was of a nne' ash- ‘gray color, imarked « with méddium- sized, ‘moré Yor ‘less . rotinded: :black | blotchés. A numilier 'of Sl :huttons made up its rattle, which could be dis- tinctly heard at a distance of eight or | ten feet in a quiet room. On one occa- sfon T came very;near belng bitten by it, as 1 was. pot aware tht: 4t could coll itself up tightly when.on a hgrd. smooth surface, and then/By a peculiar muscular action throw it€elf clear of the ground, and for several'féet in any direction jt wished. It nearly got me in the hand s 1 was about to take It up to pose it for’its-picture. I Kifow of no Instance where death has fol- lowed the bité of ‘thid 'véptile, but: iHat this would ‘be the resuit, were no at- tempt made to treat the wound, there cannot be a shadow of doubt. SEWIFEW‘I L FIND THIS PAGE A LABOR AND TIME SAVER'IN nm%nmc HER ORDER nmnfimmuum||||u|mmum|m||ummuuummmmummum' nmmuflinmmuuumnlmmlmlmnmunuumummmlmmlmlmnunmm||m||nulumunnnnmlfinmmli|iummmlmummmii AMERA TO RECORD WINNER Method of Timing Race Is Declared to Be Beyond All Possibility of Error. The moving-picture camera Is to be put to a new use; it Is to time exactly the runners in a race. ‘When two competitors come In very close together it is extremely difficult for the umplre to say which was first, and often two mén are so near that the result fs declared a dead-heat. In all cases probably one of the men fs a fraction'in front of the other, but the eye is unable to note su¢h minute differences. . Now a clotk is to be erected at the winning post, and as the winners come n they will be photographed with a kinéma-camera, which will time their arrival to the hundredth part of a sec- ond. ‘If the winner breaks the tape only one eighth of an inch in front of his nearést competitor the camera will note ‘the’ fact. The camera will-be focussed simul- taneously on the clock at the winning post and on a mirror reflecting the start of the race. Both clock and camera will be set working before the starter fires his pistol, and the flash of the pistol will be reflected in the the time of thc clock to a hundredth of a second. This time can then be subtracted from the time of the finish, and the exact time of the race for each man arrived at. There will now be very few dead- heats in running matches, Gorneobs. Corncobs are being turned into au- tomobile fuel, also a-hard rubber sub-. stitute for -phonograph records, pipe stems, varnish, buttons and electrical purts. This commercial alchemy happens not In Germany, famous for its utill- gition of by-products, but right here in America. It Is the result of sly years of résearch by La Forge and Mains, ¢hemistry experts of the De- partment of Agriculture. biggest fields opén to young men to- Qav. Tt'is ' modern Aladdin’s lamp. Sugar, 10 lbs e —a— Bacon, lean, fresh lloc:k,l Syrup, dark, gallons, No. 10 ting ......-- " ... 49¢ N | “Big 4" Naptha Soap, H 50 bars for_. . $1.00 Jack Sprat, tall cans, pure il 10for ... $1.00 per can 3 cans_fox . Gun Powder Green Te(, 23 Prunes, special a Ib 1 ,\ Picnic Hams, a lb ......1 Coffee, bulk, 3 Ibs for. .65¢] Penchel. Pears, Plums, | Graps—this _will wind the canning season, do not delay! ruit ih the best condition. CeTmie 5w Phed | Wheat flour mllled in deen, N.D. I S Chocolate Cream Coffee, 1-1b cartons, 3 for..$1.19 Richelieu 1,000-Island Dressing (A .flavor all its own.) e Richelieu assorted fruits for-salads. Come in and let us explain, and will save you money! PHONE 84 mirror and recorded on the film with} Chernical éngineering is one of the, LAVINIA ‘Vivian CroSs went to Bemidji Mon- day to register as a freshman stu- dent at the new high school. Mrs. R. O. Baird. was a business visitor in Bemidji Monday. Miss Alice Butler, who will teach at the Bass Lake school, expects to stay at the Wheeler home. Mrs. E. M. Sathre was a Bemidji caller Tuesday afternoon. Several of the farmers near La- vinia are busy digging potatoes. A good crop is expected. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hoar and family called at the Baird home ‘Wednesday. L C. B. Cross was a_business caller at the Leister farm Friday. J. S. Wheeler -‘purchased a car ilast week. Mrs R. 0. Baird and son Robert, Mrs. ‘Herb Leister and baby, Donald | Lloyd, called on Mrs, James Leister Friday. Mr. S. Tell was a Bemidji caller Saturday. Mr._and Mrs. F. W, Christiansen have returned ‘to their home at Far- ] - . go, N. ‘D, after spendmg the sulr mer here. Mrs. R. O. Baird went to Bemidji Saturday for dental treatment. Ralph Wheeler was a business caller in this vieinity Friday and Sat- urday of last week. He has made ar- rangements for hdving his household goods shipped from Turtle River to International Falls. Don Leister motored to Bemidji Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Earl Campbell of Internation- al Falls visited at the héme of her parents, <Mr. and - Mrs. Jdames:S. Wheeler, for a few daas ‘139t Week spent Saturday ni‘tmben in midji. The Norway timbgr, befween vinia and Bemidji, owned by the J. Neils Lumber company of Cass Lake, is to be logged this winter. - Mrs. James E. Leister visiter her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Baker idji, Saturday afternoon. C. B. Cross transacted business in Bemidji' Saturday. MILK 6 tall cans BACON narrow strips, 1b 22c¢ HONEY 1.gal mason jars $1.00 ' —Phone 160— ness. wife. -— \ CLIFFORD’S SPECIALS 0Oil Cloth, 4 yards for $1.00 Clifford & Co. inthe blend.® ‘Nash’s Delicious Coffee is an achievément in “Coffee’ blending, based on exhaustive study and prac- ' tical tests. Rich, smooth, satisfying, refreshing —whether you brew it in hard or soft water. ! \“Your coffee taste will tell you.” No chaff or dust—it’s air cleaned. Not a bit of bitter- Its “hot roasted” freshness assures that exquisite | aroma and fine flavor that wins admiration for the house- Sold by Your Grocer In one and three pound containeré.) BROOMS 4-&!‘@mg 4bc CORN FLAKES 2 large pkgs 25¢ ALUMINUM SAUCE PANS 6-qt size, each 69¢ —Phone .160— Retains its fresh | flavor in this' mnulurz-proof/ container, —-