Newspaper Page Text
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INDIANS' ACHIEVEMENTS.
(Continued From Page 2)
tion in Minnesota, tH pupils raised chick
ens. An old incubatfclr and some eggs wer#
furnished the teachefe1
and he gave twentyf
four fine Barred Rooi chickens to seven of
the girls of the schdpl, no two girls beinj
from the same fam#. He then offere i
prize of one dollar to the pupil who wqtyV
make her chick weigh,, the most by the (fat
week in September,, living a second ptpe
of fifty cents. Sixteen chickens were ejm|bjr
ited on September ith, these ranging!
.rweight from 1 1-2 t$, 2 34 pounds. I|ortt
Smith, nine years oM,"won"first prize, Iter
ihree chickens wei^ning 1 2-3 pounds
This year there ajfe several hundred
dia boys and girll, but especially #j|
-entered in club work in Minnesota, Or^
Arizona and other States. Now that
original Americans nave come to the fJ
in a genuine American movement, we
look for a general i enthusiasm among]
-dian farm boys and jjjffolg. It will mean
these Indian farmers will soon be t\}\
their farms on business lines and ranmj
them properly instead of allowing unsd
nlous white men to #ey on their ignorpj
Chicago (111.) ^pe Farming Businepi
George Pairote still works with the A
rican Steel Company at Lebanon, Pa., a|
attends night schodl several nights ty
week. His reports are always good.
THE BED MAN.
The above is the title of an illustrated
magazine published at the United States In
dian School, Carlisle, Pa., copy of the De
cember issue of which has just reached dhr
desk. This magazine is printed entirely by
Indians, and is ^really a very remarkable
~productieB,-*wtefcliJoi*a
liteaasy-And typo
graphical standpoint. The subject matter
is high class, while from the artistic and
mechanical standpoint the magazine would
be a credit to any printing establishment in
Chicago. Anyone who thinks that the In
dian, with education and training, caflnot
compete with the paleface, should see this
magazine. It would open their eyes. Two
pages are devoted to an article from tfce
Live Stock Eeport of last August wherein
we wrote up our sale at Chicago of, seven
teen carloads of steers from the TOngfye
River Indian Reservation in Montapa.
Clay, Bobinson & Company, Live Stdcjs Re
port.
Miss Cora Bresette, who graduated frqm
Carlisle's* busiriess department in ifi\2,
now a stenographer, and is work! W for la
business man in North Dakota, i Ite| she
left Carlisle, she went to Gordan'S jUffneJfi
College in Ashland, -Wis., froji* wMicft she
graduate,^. Miss Bretette is a Chip**
Indian.
fcf-
(Continued In next issue.)
JL
CARE OF &HE TEETH.
Hygiene of the rtlouth is, perHaps, the
greatest essential to good health., A large
per cent of disease* may be traced directly
to unclean teeth. Germs are veto apf jo
thrive in unclean teeth, on the other ftaiw
by the use of the brush, germs in the fteth
may be removed, the mouth kept clean anfl
the breath sweet. There is no one tying
that lends so much to physical beauty and
personal attractiveness a* clean, W$W
teeth and a pure, sweet breath, to say. noth
ing of their influence upon the health, lifere
ly sticking a tooth brush in the vsmth ffna
going over with a few light strokes is not
enough. The teeth should be brushed thor
oughly after each meal.
Some of the diseases caused by unclean
CLEANING ThE
INSIDE OF
THE UPPER
SIDE TEETH
mouths are: indigestion, with its many re
sultant and attendant ills, such as ulcer of
the stomach, acute and chronic rhemuatism,
CLONING THE
INSIDE or
THCLOWCR. mom rant
diabetes, abcesses and many others.
KEEP YOUR TEETH CLEAN WHILE
YOU HAVE THEM, IF NEGLECTED,
INSIDE
OfTHE TOP*
YOU WILL NOT HAVE THEM LONG.
The Peace Pipe.
Wken Yau Buy
Dry Goods and Groceries
YOU WANT THE
Best Quality at tke Rigkt Price
W are prepared to give you tkis kind of service
COME IN AND SEE US
E E FAIRBANKS. CO,, Merchants
It RED LAW. MINN.
J
.General Merchandise
REDBY. MINN
Finest Staple and Fancy Groceries, Dry
Goods, Clothing, Shoes and Hats.
J. JEPvOME
GENERAL MIBCHANDISI
Dry Goods Shoes Groceries
Sa4dle*f^ Hardware and
Farm Machinery.
BATTLE RIVER, MINN.
First National Bank
of Bemidji, Minn.
Capital and Surplus
$60,000.00
United States' Postal and Indian
Fund Depository
We Will Welcome Your Banking Business
and Shall Be Pleased to Have You
Call on Us for Information
Concerning Same
44X
HANSON
$