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PR ——— John Philip Sousa The March King, says: “Tuxedo gives an absolutely satis- fying smoke, fragrant, mild, and pleasant.” ?«{. M ol Tuxedo inThe Day’s March All the vim, energy and en- thusiasm you get out of a Sousa march you get out of the steady use of Tuxedo. Tuxedo is as cheering and inspiring as the “Stars and Stripes Forever,” be- cause Tuxedo is always refresh- ing, beneficial and wholesome. To be pipe-happy is on a par with bemg mind-happy. , Then you can get the punch into life! And it’s certainly worth while. The shortline to pipe peace is via Sfuxedo The Perfect Tobacco for Pipe and Cigarette Made by the famous * Tuxedo Process,” Tuxedo is the one tobacco in the world that will not bite your tongue, no matter how much you smoke of it. The extra-choice Kentucky Burley leaf from which Tuxedo is made is acknowledged by experts to be the world’s premier smoking- tobacco leaf. This is why Tuxedo is so mild and mellow, so pleasantly aromatic, so deli- cious in flavor. YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE Convenien, “glassine 5 Femous Green Tin wrapped, m with gold lettering, 10 proof pouch . . C sl ros; 1UC In Tin Hunidors 40 and 80 In Glass Humidors 50c and 90 " THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY o - . Special Sale of Aluminum Ware We are introducing into this community SQT.TEA KETTLE AND COMBINATION DOUBLE BOILER~ VIKO Alummum Ware ' Which is a strictly high grade article and which can be sold at a price more suitable to the average man’s pocket book. - The first big shipment was just unpacked and is now on display in our show window. In order to place this ware in as many homes as possible we will place this new, fresh stock on special sale. .FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JULY I6 AND 17 at a straight 20 per cent DISCOUNT $2.75 covered roaster at. *$4.00 covered roaster at. 70c 4 qt sauce pan at......... $1.15 8qt preserving kettle at. $1.75 12 qt pail at.............. / This means that $2.00 casseroles will sell for .....$1.60 $2.25 coffee percolator at .$1.80 $2.40 7 qt. tea kettle at.. .$1.92 $1.25 covered roaster at .$1.00 EXTRA SPECIAL Three aluminum sauce pans comprising a three, four and five quart pan will be sold while they last at all three for. SI.OO The BEMIDJI HARDWARE'COMPANY 4 The Store of Quahty and Service Phone 35 : Mixed Immodllfily pplication ls Made. - No guestion comes to the Ohio experi- ment station.more !zeqlunfly than how to use ashes and hen manure to the best -dv-nuge in lu'tiunng the sol. Unluehpd bardwood ashes should contain about 5 or 8 per cent of potash, with 1 per cent of phosphoric acid. But potask seldom produces its full effect ubless used in connection with more phosphorus than'is contained in ashes, and therefore ashes should be mixed with some such- carrier of phosphorus a8 acid phosphate or stéamed bonemeal. Two hundred and fifty pounds of un- leached ashes and 180 pounds of 16 per cent acid phosphate -would carry as many “pounds of .phosphoric acid and potash as would be found in 800 pounds of 10-4 fertilizer. Ashes are about one-third lime, and the addition of lime to acid phosphate causes the reversion of part of the phosphorus from ‘the water soluble to the citrate soluble form, butthis is no longer considered a serious matter. There is. usually..suficient lime in the soil to cause this reversion, and if there is not there should be; because this quantity of, lime s essentinl to full crop production. -For example, at the Ohio experiment station 320 pounds of acld phosphate has.increased the value of crops by $15.20 on-unlimed land and by $24.20 on Hméd land over and above the cost of the acid phosphate and the lime, as a ten year average. A ton of fresh héen manure should contain about twentytwo pounds of nitrogén, twenty pounds of phosphorie acid and ten pounds of potash as a gen- eral average. When air dry, hen ma- nure should contain about 40 pounds of nitrogen, forty ‘pounds of phosphoric acid and twenty pounds of potash to the ton. Fresh mapure from fattening cattle should contdin fifteen pounds of nitrogen, eight pounds of phosphoric acid and ten pounds of potash per. ton, while as a general average mixed barn- yard .mdnure, after. exposure to the ‘weather in open yards, is estimated. to contain ten pounds nitrogen, six pounds phosphoric acid and ten pounds potash to the ton. A ton of dry hen manure is therefore worth approximately as much as four tons.of average yard manure., At.the experiment station and as a sixteen year average, -eight tons of fresh cattle manure have produced in- crease of crop. to:the value of $26, the manure being .applied to corn in a three year rotation of corn, wheat and clover. When the same quantity of manure has been re-enforced with 320 pounds of acid phiosphate—forty pounds per ton of manure—the net value of increase, after deducting the cost of the phosphate, has been $39. Acid phosphate sprinkled over the dropping boards will ‘reduce. the loss of ammonia’and increase the effective- ness of the manure. A mixture of 250 'pounds-dry hen manure, 150 pourds :acid phosphate and 100 pounds unleached hardwood ashes ‘will-containt practically the same quantities * of ~ animonia, phosphoric acid and pot a8 would be carried in 800 pounds of a 2-10-2 feftilizer: By using 4 8and sfeve and a wooden pestle to pulverize®the ‘manure such a mixture may be applied ‘with the ordi- nary fertilizer drill, and ‘if the ashes are not added untfl within a few days of the application there will be no ap- preciable loss of ammonia. Coal ashes have practically no ferti- lizing value, but may sometimes be used with -advantage in loosening a compact clay ‘soll, or as a mulek eround small fruits in the garden. SAINTS AND MILLERS : TERRORS IN-A. A. RACE (Continued from first page). week of the season. Close races for. the lead were feat- ures of the week in the National and American leagues. Both the Chicago teams were ‘perilously near to losing their positions of vantage, but each managed to retain its hold on the top rung of ‘the ladder up to the week- end. The remarkable upward thrust of the Brooklyn Nationals and the precipitate drop of the Washington Americans were other notable devel- opments. In the Nntionnl league the Cubs had a hard week of it. On two days they lost both ends of double headers —Monday to Cincinnati and Saturday to Brooklyn—the Trecord now stand- ing three stralghts for ‘the Robins over the leaders. : Had the.Philadelphians been able to rise to the occasion, the lead would have been theirs before now, but Pat Moran’s men were barely able to win a majority of their games. There is latent power in this club, however, and the high position it has been oc- cupying in the race for a long time reveals it as the dangerous contender that it undoubtedly is. Superbas Are Coming. But it is'the Brooklyns which rival clubs in the senior baseball organi- zation aré watching mow with no little concern.. They have won elev- en out ‘of ‘their last twelve games, their record for' the week being a clean one with seven victories and no defeats. Douglas and Dell have proved strong men in the box and aid the veteran twirlers. Douglas, recently obtained from Cineinnati, proved his worth by pitching sixteen scoreless hmingu against ngeu and Davis of Boston ‘on Wednesday, the game winding up in the darkness, a 0 to 0 tie. The case_of the Bostons is about the saddest in either league at pres- ent. IW f Mflllh’l‘ George Stal- llngs pre ctions of a repetition of Cor. Minn. Ave. and Fourth St.' New 5 Cent Rate Reahzmg the value of Electrical Heatmg Appliances to house keepers, especially during the summer months, and wishing to place this cool, clean and safe method of cooking within the reach of everyone we have made a new rate of 5 CENTS per K. W. to apply on all heat- ing appliances: rate. an electric stove this summer. presentative call on you. This is One Half the present lighting This will include current for toasters, - flat irons, You can’t afford to be without Minnesota Electrie Light and Power Co. -—.—.—.—.—- i I per(,olators stoves etc. ([ ! ° Let us explain this to you, phone 26 and have a re- | ® Dr. L. J. Perrault returned this morning from Remer, Federal Dam and Cass Lake, where he has been on ‘business since Thursday. He left this afternoon for Bagley, accompa- nied by his wife, where he -will spend a couple of days on business before returning to Bemidji. Results are moust a:iways “certain when you use a Ploneer want ad. One-half cent a word. Phone 81. A OH bk % b+ % % o % % % If you have a room to rent or ant to rent one—you get the est choice through a Pioneer ant ad. “Phone 81. R R * o Wy BEMIDIJI BUSINESS DIRECTORY CLASSIFIED ALPHABETICALLY ABSTRACTS OF TITLE DRY CLEANING MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS E. M. SATHRE ABSTRACTER O’Leary-Bowser -Bldg. Bemidji, Minn. The Clothes Cleaners _For Men, Women and Children D. L. FRIEDMANN AUDITOR ACCOUNTANT BUSINESS COUNSELOR Phones 610-J—776-W. The discriminating smoker is now smoking “DON ALMO” “Be a Booster” GENERAL MERCHANDISE ‘Wholesale and Retail Pianos, Organs and Sewing Machines. 117 Third St. Bemidji. Phone 573-W J. BTSIAR, Manager. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN DR. F. J. DARRAGH Specialist of Chronic Diseases Free Consultation. 2081 3rd St., over Blooston Store Day and Night Calls Answered OPTOMETRISTS Groceries, Dry Goods, Shoes, Flour, Feed, etc. The careful buyers buy here. ‘W. G. SCHROEDER Bemidji Phone 65. BROSVIK, THE TAILOR Phone 938 BAKERS AND CONFECTIONERS SUPPLIES FOR OFFICE DRS. LARSON & LARSON Specialists’ in the Science of Fitting Glasses. Offices over Postoffice Bldg. Phone 92 PHOTOGRAPHER Typewriter ribbons, carbon paper, typewriter paper, clips, paper tasteners, punches, eyelets ete., ete. Get quantity prices PIONEER OFFICE STORE N. W. Phone 126 | Phone 31 Security Bank Bldg. KOORS BROTHERS CO. Manufacturers and Jobbers Ice Cream, Bakery Goods, Confec- tionery, Cigars and Foun- tain Goods 816 Minn. Ave. KEMP'S DRY CLEANING HOUSE GROCER FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES Clothes Cleaned and Pressed. Holstead Coffee We Call for and Deliver Beachnut Brand of Jams and Promptly. Jellies Fresh Onions and Rhubarb CASE’'S CASH STORE GROCERIES AND SHOES BANKING AND SAVINGS Photos Day and Night N. L. HAKKERUP HERE YOU GO Six-room cottage for 'sale or rent at Lavinia. Ice up. 160-acre tract close to town, $8.00 per acre. 168-acre improved farm, 3 miles from town, heavy soil, $10.00 per acre. MORRIS & LONGBALLA SPECIALIST You should try. DENISON'S DE- Save systematically. Make use of | LICIOUS COFFEES, 25c, 30e, 36c our Savings Department. We wel- | and 40c the pound. Absolutely come your open-'account. : : : : turn it and get your money. JNO. C. MARIN, Phone 32 320 Minn. Ave. < SECURITY STATE BANK Bemidji, Minn. DRUGS AND JEWELRY LUMBER, COAL AND WO00D guaranteed. If not satisfactory re- A. V. GARLOCK, M. D. Practice Limited EYE EAR NOSE THROAT Glasses Fitted. Office. Gibbons Bldg., Markham Hotel. North of Phone 106 SECOND-HAND GOODS | ‘Wholesalers and Retailers. ‘Bervice and satisfaction. Malil - Orders given that same service you - get in person. i 'BARKER'S Third 8t. - Any quantity you want. Building material of all klndn. ST HILAIRE BE’I‘AIL LBR. CO. one 100 HARNESS ‘We want to sell a few Work Har- nesses cheap to advertise them. Call ‘in and see them. ZIEGLER’S SECOND HAND STORB