Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
By HAL SHERIDAN. ~ -~ Well, fans, ‘what do you think.of ‘em, the Feds'I mean? After read- ing the accounts in the Sunday pinks of ‘Yesterday of the Feds’ first games and the inaugural dope, I must say they look pretty good to me. There can be no dispute that the Feds are near-big league class if not really “arrived.” There is also no ques- tion but what they are capable cf putting up a much improved game over last year. Every team, prac-| tically, shows a new bunch of stars, present, potential and a few time- dimmed. But today the race of the Feds looks like it would be even more closely contested and, on the face of first gate receipts, will appar- ently reap financial success larger than 1914. On first performance form the Chi- feds and the new Newarks seem to be the contenders, but it’s a long road for the Grand Old Dope to travel be- fore the season ends. A rumor was wafted up to New York from Washington today that “King” Walter Johnson may be the bone (not ivory) of a legal scrap be- tween the Americans and Feds as a thrilling byplay of the American season’s opening. An injunction suit against the P. P.—(Peerless Pitcher)—is reported to be up the Feds’ sleeve, to spring upon the open- ing day. This rumor has been con- stantly revived since Walter flopped back to Organized Baseball—that be- fore he could fling a ball in the op- ening game at. the capitol, an in- “TIC" FOR TIED SURE, ACHING FET Ah! what relief. No more tired feet; no more burning feet, swollen, bad smell- ing, sweaty feet. No more pairin corns No matter what callouses or bunions. ails your feet or what under the sun you've tried without getting relief, Just use “TIZ “TIZ” draws out all the poi- sonous exuda- tions which puff the feet; grand; will cure your foot troubles so yow'll never limp or draw up your face in pain. Your-shoss” won't seem tight and your feet will never, nevef hurt or get sore, swollen or tired. Get & 25 cent box at any drug or department store, and get relfef. “|ary for most’ pitclier good enough. to garner a: talse:in sal- ter went into the’cloudd ‘when he launched upon a jmatrimonial career last year. _Herg’s hoping he has the sameé or a bétter ‘“‘smoke ball” this year. FARMERS HILD FIRST OUT- g DOOR MEETING OF YEAR (Continuea * the business men ‘of- the city have been extended a cordial-invitation. The following were in attendance: Misses Lena Moen, Esther Ohrberg, Ethel Ohrberg, Ellen Berg, Floy Berg, Eliza Boobar, Clara Norbo, Amanda Homme, Vera Cutter, Gelena Hegland, Mrs. S. A. Cutter, Messrs. and Mesdames Charles Ohrberg, John Colburn, ‘Knut 8andland, . John H. Krueger, A: C. Graf,:0l v:lg;llnd, L. P. Christianson, Will-:Rabe, Peter Narum, Nels Willet, Andrew Rodin, S. S. King, A. U. Hosking, I. E. Ray- mond, Gust Berg, Stanley Smith, I 0. Ungstad and Ole J. Felland, Anton Iverson and Arthur Braaten. i LIME-SULPHUR SPRAY. i The simplest form of lime-sulphur solution and probably the best for you to experiment with is the so called self boiled solution, says the Orange Judd Farmer. This is made of eight pounds of stone lime, elght pounds Gf powder- ed sulphur and fifty gallons of water. It 1s best made in large qudntities be- cause a larger amount of heat is devel- oped by the lime than if only a small amount 18 made at once. i -Supposing you ‘want to make 200 gallons of the mixturp, put thirty-two pounds of stone lime o a ba) [with five of six gallons of .3 soon ag the llme begins to slake vigor- ously ‘put in thirty-two pounds of powdered sulphur. Stir constantly and add more water ‘as needed,’so that.it. forms a thick paste and 1 heated. When the bolling te d and beforé any réd or orange streaks. appear in the mixture add several gal- lons of cold water to cool it. Strain it, dllute the. 200 gailons and the mix- | ture {s ready to put in.the-spray ma- chine and apply. The other forms of lfme-sulphur solution are ~semewhat similar. but are made by bofling the mixture n a kettle. important industry, the pearl divers-are :women. Tihy girls, mere babies,.are -tanght.. by their mothers to.swim- and::lgter to dive and- at' 13 or: 14, -when they leave school, they:are usually ready to begin diving in earnest. old Undisturbed Plants. 1 shtisfled myself that the tige: of transplanting as- oots is-mot only more expen- #f-takes-longer to get a_crop than where the seeds are sown in per- manent position, writes W. F. Massen in the Rural New Yorker. Five years ago I made an experiment to show the difference ‘between transplanted roots and those ‘left undisturbed. I sowed a row. in the manner I shal| describe and grew the {lants one year. They were then thiniied- out ‘and the thinnings transplanted to other rows. The undis- turbed rogts gave me fine asparagus the second year, while the transplanted roots did uot give any till the third sea- n, and today the shoots on the undis- turbed roota are stronger than those on the: trangplanted ones. : “Iu preparing a bed I dig trenches a { d fiftéen inches deep as early in spring as the ground can be worked. 'These are filled half full of fine rotten. manure packed down. A light ‘cover -of s0il"is added and.the seed ~sown thinly in the row, the trenches belpg four feet apart. As 8001 as the seed| -dre a few inches high' they are thinned two feet apart and tlie soil 1s worked to them as they | grow tl) level. - ‘During the spring and summer two applications of nitrate of soda are ap- alongslde the rows,: care being taken that it does not touch-the plants. done at the rate of 150 pounds , 4Rl the cultivation is clean till 'whole bed then 1s given a on of kainit and-covered arure - for the winter. “the- following spring cut- But the annual feed- o0ts. ‘When "Anna : Paviowa - graduated from the Tmpeérfal school in' Russia at-the age of 16:she was the youngest girl in the country to attain the title pr'oétlch!ly: begun', when :she. was 10 years:of ‘ag Inx‘t!xke study. of medical work by stu- ving the colleges. STOPS, HEADACHE You can clear your head and relieve a dull, splitting “or violent throbbing -hoadache in ‘a “moment with a Dr. James’ Headache Powder. This ol time headache. relief acts almost magi ally. Send the drug storé package and & few mio- you powder’ "y & ¥ THIS $520 other page, together with hire, cost of packing, ciice e, ete. Thy Educational Distribution’ . by BIBLEFRE t0 every reader of this paper who presents six edu- cational certificates such as are-printed daily on s covers the necessary EXPE h the stated amount . that. INSE items, Incluting cler! King, express from fac e Great the This s tllt: !m ber or read he taken from any so make pl s nllglous available for EVERYONE and often reforred to ere and there as the most oth. o book which has gove ment of the world's clvilization., many. Bjbles you own, you ne s ot ivity the Bibl ive pleturse, vivity the ‘Bible narrative—giving Heretofore the word “illustrated,” as a meant méerely afew allegorical “pictures” urce and ““conveniently” of the book, merely as embellishment inserts, alongside and explantory of i ain; but our publishers, at an out] prepared accurate illustrations D! rl-eed directly next to" or or found quickly, the onl: and ONLY complete ILLU: an educational ca .. T ¥ Dook ono Asel mor e Siiurch e man or woman.. It should e the D No matter how one, ax_its. ' plied of Bi but m‘:l?mdy, the verse intended to typify of SCRIPTIV] the verse of the scene Bible " | some-out of the way corner of a park Her ‘career’ was | EMORIALS OF USE AND BEAUTY Towss and Cies Nesd Them, “Not More Statuss. FREMONT'S S AN EXAMPLE, Les Angeles Has Erected an Artistio ‘Light 8tandard In Honor of General. Drinking. Fountains, Gates, Bridges, Etc, Would Commemorate Famous Men and Women Fittingly. Combining beauty with utility, the city of Los Angeles honored the mem- ory of one of its most distinguished citizens, General John C. Fremont, by | erecting in his honor an ornamental ' monument which' serves also the pur- pose of a light standard. It stands at’ the ‘entrance ito: Elysian park and bears at-its top a hanging electric lamp. The tall, slender shaft of the ‘monument is-surmounted by an eagle -with outstretched wings. The monu- ment was erected at a cost of $30,000 In 1896 & - It-has- been urged on American mu- -nipicalities - that - they erect drinking fountains, ‘ornamental lighting poles, bridges, gates,zetc., In houor of their “famous -citizens, rather than the stat- ‘ues, often jnartistic, which they now put up,. The monuments in New York t Philadelphia is ure-| Js FREMONT MEMORTAL AT LOS ANGELES, CAL. city. for examplé; have.often been crit- fclsed, and so: of them in Central park are now hidden by shrubbery in order to concealjtheir crudities. Many of the figures 1 tatuary hall, in the United States cdpitol, bear greater tes- timony to the gratitude of the states represented than to the skill of the men and women who conceived and executed the figures. Students of clvic art say it i3 better for a city to have, for example, an artistic drinking fountain, inscribed with the name of the man or woman whom the municipality delights to hon- or, than an ugly monument buried in or boulevard. Thede critics lay stress on the lack in American cities of prop- er memorials which can be put to good clvic uses. The Los Angeles: light bearing shaft is not the only useful memorial bear- ing the name of :General Fremont. A few years ago.: Willlam Rockefeller completed a fountair“in North Broad- way, Tarrytown, N. Y. in memory of Major General John C. Fremont and turned it over to the village authori- tles. It is situated-a few hundred feet south of the old Fremont home and at a’8pring where the famous Pathfinder often stopped to:quench his thirst. -Mr. Rockefeller: conceived the idea of ; preserving the spring and at the same | second memorial Mr. Rockefeller erect- 1 ed recently near Tarrytown. ‘| he .rebullt the .:Headless of 350,000, ¢ 7 of the VERSE which they e Lacene de_'cri}::‘d-—lleoll,y place: il ’fk AT% rl'nuu isahelp to ”"?-.H.‘. time honoring- a:/former distinguished ‘resident. -He obtained permission from the village to.tear down the old trough ‘and-n-its place erected a fine fountain from- native stone. It is built on a semicircle:on. the:east side of the road, with a stone piliar at each end. [n the center is the trough, cut out of a mas- sive rock, and above it is a bronze tab- let: inscribed: £ “Cold Spring.’ ‘Erected in memory of General - John=G: “Fremont. the Path- finder, a former resident, A. D.. 1913.” General Fremont lived-at Tarrytown for a-time just after the civil war. Mr. Rockefeller’s .estate -adjoins his old home. The Fremont fountain is the In 1912 Horseman bridge in honor of. Washington Irving. T e Town Has a Civic Secretary. Nefllsville, Wis., has ndded to the staff of its board of education a civic secretary who will- give his full time {9 promoting basiness, recreational and !!\lg“éll_lfll Drogress. word cash. ‘MultiKopy CARBON PAPER ‘108 Shéets to' Box SV T0 DARKEN TOUR GRAY Try this! Mix Sage Tea and Sulphu 7 and ‘brush it through your hair, taking one strand at'a time. When you darken your hair with Sag Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, be cause it's done %0 naturaily, so evenly Preparing this mixture, though, at home is mussy and troublesome. For 50 centt you can buy at auy drug store the ready-: to-use tonic called “Wyeth’s Sage anc Sulphur ‘Hair Remedy.” You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with i and draw this through your hair, takiag one small strand at a time. By morn- ing all gray lair disappears, and, after another applieation or two, your hair becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also discover dan- druff is gone and hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no disgrace, is a sign of old age, and as we all de- sire o youthful and attractive appear- ance, get busy at once with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur and look years younger. You'll have no mor HERE IS A CHANCE FOR EVERY BOY AND GIRL. I-P booklets. see them at the Earn money and a Grand Prize during your spare time, Call for in- your information \in your vest poc your head if you buy one of these vest pocket Loose Leaf Come in and terview. CITY DRUG STORE. —Adv. it : o Bomidji Pioneer Office Supply Store Too Late To Classify Security Bank B’I’d’g, = Phone 31 0 \ e use for A A A A A A AN AR AAAAAAAAAAAAAA WANTED—To hire team of horses to work on farm. Apply LaComb, Mill Park. The Last Week Thi Prepare for this celebration now. preparations for it. before been heard of in Bemidiji. The s ness, dirt and filth. In Fact Every to brighten home. pated this great “cleanup” movement and have made big Such a movement as this has never and homes are all joining in this crusade against shabbi- | We’re Here To Suggest And Help. Use Us. : PAINTS-BRUSHESH] VARNISHES-STAINS. s Month| We have antici- | chools, churches thing the Paints Oils and Varnishes Little cans of paints and varnish for little odd jobs heré and there about the house. We have a splendid assortment of various colors, each adapted to a particular pur- pose and performs its own part toward beau- tifying the home. A little touch here and there and house cleaning is accomplished with little time, labor and expense. MINNESOTA PAINT TINE WILL ADD DOLLARS TO | YOUR PROPERTY. AND ALABAS- ........ 25¢, 50c and T5¢ $2.25 and $2.75 $2.25 and $2.75 ...35¢ and 40c 15¢ and 30c | _.$1.50 Leaf and Garden Rakes Wringer Mop Pails. .Mop Wringers .... Mop Heads Mop Sticks .... Garbage Cans Big Three Washing Machines $12.00 and $18.00 0O’Cedar Oil in ba quart cans 25¢ Dust Cloth / Plunger Washers Brighton Clothes Wringers. Bicycle Clothes Wringers.. Jicycle Stand Clothes Wringers.. Wheell Shovels, Mops, Clothes Bars, Curtain Stretchers, Clothes Recls, Iron We are much in favor of a day to be set aside soon where every boy and Ploneer. wanis—one-halt cent # || asked to get behind a “brush” “Boys we have bottles enough.” Thank you. Given Hardware Company -Minngsota Avenue Phone 57 O'Cedar Oil Mops.. On Friday We Will Give a 50c Bottle Liquid Veneer and Clipped, from Magazine Advertisment Eleetric Sad Iron Can’t Tip Wringer Mop 1 girl, man and woman in Bemidii will be: 5e to $1.50 and 50¢ el $1.00 ttles Both for 50c and Coupon L...65¢ to $1.50 25 to $£.00 .50 and Brushes, harrows, Scrub ing Boards, ete. PANT Up ~ BRUSHES PAINTS VARMISH & STAINS Bo