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———————— 'K COMPANY - CAMP “LIBELS” “Corporal of the guard, turn out the post,” called out Private Boyce ile walking No. 1 post yesterday. 1 '}v]l:at is nlmogt as bad as “Turn out (United Press Correspondant) the colors, National Guard.” Boyce New York , June 18—Stalling must have a great idea of a corpor-|fighters and champions who keep al’s ability when he expects that such | their titles “on ice” are dealt body an individual can turn out a post. Iblows in the new rules to govern box- An old time marine (leatherneck) |ing in New York. visited the camp yesterday. He wasl ermed by the experts as the most once a member of the company but| e fect set of regulations yet compil- lucky for him he moved to Grandleq 14 correct the abuses that brought Forks so that when he did visit her;e the fight game into disrepute, the he could be a guest lott honor. H.lnew rules are of national intere;t. Mayne Stanton, we salute you. |hecause they are the ideals of the Private Pegelow has sore feet this | ipternational Sporting Club which morning ?l:ter "‘:emgmg vatuhntol:)enbol-{: aspires to become the ruling body of on the hike yesterday after - boxing in America. s not used to ‘Walking, it seems.| 5 . ps the next most impertant :g:':(ltze{lotvge:epgzgszll Tain:a per: clause is aimed at champiz;lns w:o : take unto themselves the right to fix 'l;herelwx:sna:gll)lltg ggk&;l‘l;‘::gg;‘,' the weight of this division. This nasium las! ) = practice became so marked that Jack ing their hands broken In the hit- Dempsey and Jimmy Wilde have been ting which took place there. Bugler said to be the only champions who f,:;]etz‘:ngfi;g:e&i?n:eofiu::: :m’:f;az; can make the weight of their class. d G The poundage in the new weight six“&inn?:hangg:‘e..‘ must have slept sc;le i; slifhfilydgcrexse: a:d two' 5 e vides: flyweight pounds; bantam- somewhere in the vicinity of the] o ou 3 ght 118 pounds; featherweight camp last night for he was out heref o¢ pounds; lightweight 135 pounds late last night taking pictures a:lld welterweight 147 pounds; middle- then as soon as the sun was up s £ % 5 % morning he was out here again. Quite ::ilgll:: l;gopol?:::d;'eax,?:’::::’h a number of the boys had their pic- over 2 tures, taken. No doubt but that they 4 Knew ’ A radical departure is embodied in new they would be shown in the : the provision for a decision by two Duluth News Tribune. judges and the deciding ballot to be Company K members have been by th . H £ di waiting for the command of execu- Eig‘;'z:mgnt e referee in a case of dis- :';:: evg}‘h slnce; they ‘have neen ?t Officials in charge of a.bout will be P ey, haye heard lots of talk referee, two judges, a timekeeper, a about it, but as yet no one has been diteator of bouts, a’n announcer a,nd executed. a physician, all licensed. When the word is passed tonight Pirncipals in a bout are allowed after retreat for all men to sign the B payroll it is expected that more ac- three seconds, all of whom must leave tion will be shown than at any other | the ring ten seconds before the next time during the encampment. Mess round and remain silent in their cor- eall rates second. Police call is way |Rers under a penalty of disqualifi- down the line. cation of their principal. wo new sections were included to Some members :of the company cover hazy points brought up'at the must have a terrible grudge against Dempsey-Willard fight. police call when they will still con- 'Any contestant who leaves the ring Afnue to pick out such a delightful 'p':uce to hide when the company falls FARMERS URGED TO HOLD - WO<L: BETTER MARKET The Beltrami County Wool Gr«v‘w- rascal, too. Hard Boiled eggs were trumps for ers’ association, through its presi- ‘breakfast and the first sergeant fol-|dent, H. M. Clark, and secretary, D. lov;leid :;fl;. i C. Dvoracek, have issued a bulletin ght face. y face I have, Sir.|advising the farmers to hold their Bémidji ladies under direction of : s Mre. George Sommers, 18 pies and wn.ol .untll further notice. The bul- letin is as follows: : 20 dozen doughnuts. ® F. M. Pendergast, % bushel of po-| . “To Wool Growers of Beltrami tatoes and 1 gallon of milk. . County: . S . Mrs. Tom Smart, radishes. “The wool market has steadily de- Mr. Brose, rhubarb. clined and: at. present ‘is in a very Additional donations to the con:-|unsettled condition. Because of this By Henry L. Farrell All lights must be put out at taps, men. Do not get lighted or “lit” wp after taps has sounded. Look out for Sergeant ‘“Dolly”, doys. He is.laying for all the fellows who try to kid him and he’s a ““hard” subscribe for The P'oneer. Chicago, dune 18.—Potato weaker. Southern Triumphs, Eastern Cobblers, barrels, $14 GRAIN AND HAY ©$1.10-31.26 ..~ 8¢-10¢ $2.30-$2.45 ..$2.10-82.26 Ppany which have not previously been | situation, 3 meeting of the board of published include the following: directors.of the wool: growers’ asso- Mrs. Jacob Kohler—2.boxes of -i-|ciation. met on Wednesday, June 16. J. A. Smith, 6 quarts of dill pickles. | the wool.now, and-that the taking in . i e and - subsequent - selling of wool be b : postponed for the present. You are wmlD’s Bm mfls therefore notified that wool will not formerly' advertised. ‘' You are urged (u" ORE AND PEA to hold your wool at home until ) further notice, thus saving on stor- (Continued from Page One.) age which would have to be paid State Auditor’s department, is shown| Anyone having urgent need of here for the first time. By this|Mmoney, may arrange for an advance means, the concentration by elimin-|Payment on their wool with H. M. ation of silica, attains in a few min-| Clark, president of the wool growers’ taken millionis of years to attain. Concenthates are shown trom Jasper, taconite, states and paint rocks. Concentration of the sandy ores of be carried on by a log washing, pro- cess by 22 plants. Products from the Draper washery, a &tate owned mine, are shown, and a large photograph Oliver Tron Mining Company at Col- eraine. The iron ores shown are principal- 1y of the manganeiferous varieties Peat, which may be considered second in importance of the state’s mineral resources is shown by sam- ples prepared in various ways and The states iron ore resources are | 08ts, bushel .... s0 immense that no attempt has been | Red Clover, medium, 1b made to show the great deposits of | Popcoru, pound ....... the Gunflint and other districts | Wheat, hard .. would be advertised as an inestimable value, but which are in Minnesota VEGETABLES. overshadowed by the fact that in|Cabbage, cwt. .........$6.00-$6.00 1917 the Mesaba, Cuyuna and Ver-|Onions, dry, cwt. ......$6.00-$6.00 gars and 1 carton of cigarettes. It was decided as best, not to sell be received June 24, 25, and 26, as invented by H. H. Hindshaw of the here, as well as reducing the fire risk. utes what natural processes have |association. the western Mesaba range is shown to of the great washing plant of the from the Cuyuna aj;d Mesaba ranges. by placards and diagrams. which if existing in any other state, Wheat, soft .. million ranges supplied 45,000,000 of Beans, cwt. - $6.00-38.00 the 75,000,000 tons of ore shipped { BUtterfat .. .. .coveesecosm«+.+616|Calf to the American blast furnaces. Eges, fresh, dosen .. ..iiiwe...38¢ D:acg::,n:;]::'.l. lb e S -|Horse hides, large, each GOLF LINKS AT BIRCHMONT MBATR - Wool, bright ........ HAVE BEEN MOWED | 4utton jowed, 50 all golf enthus- tat may-play without danger of los- ing” DaHs. The mower became Droken and during the time it was| ' beat, No. 2 . Yeing repaired, the grass grew to a g‘:‘:“' No. 3 .. GRAIN AND HAY Wheat, No. 1 .........$2.61-32.71 «.$2.49-32.64 $2.29-32.44 NEW YORK BOXING RULESSAID 0 BE BEST EVER ASSEMBLED es 0 ¢ oue wrw owe eme o« o o ove e 136 WOOL, S6m1 bright ........ ) The following prices were being paid at Stillwater, Minn., Huks at Birchmont have| 8t time of going to press of today’s Pioneer: THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER ® K0 between rounds and fails to return at the bell shall be counted out the same as if he were down. e A contestant who gives up-the c@n~ test during the intermission rounds or fails to respond to the gong loses by a knock-out in the previeus round. s Rules for the scoring of points on which a decision is to be given are: 1. A clean forceful hit, landed on ‘any vulnerable part of the body above the waist should be credited in pro- portion to its damaging effect. 2. Aggressiveness is next in im- portance and points should be award- ed to the contestant who sustains the action of a round by the greatest number of skilful attacks. . 3. Defensive work is relatively important and points should be given for cleverly avoiding or blocking' a blow. 4. Points should be awarded where ring generalship is conspicu- ous. This consists of the ability to grasp and take advantage of every op- portunity; the capacity to cope with all kinds of situations; to forsee and neutralize an attack; to force an op- ponent to adopt a style of boxing at which he is not particularly skillful- 5. Points should be deducted when a contestant persistently de- lays the action by clinching and lack of aggressiveness. 6. Points should be deducted for a foul even though unintentional. 7. A. contestant should be given credit for, sportsmanship actions, close adherence to the spirit as well as the letter of the rules and for re- fraining from taking technical ad- vantage of situations unfair to an opponent. 8. The decision should go to the contestant with the greatest number of points regardless of the number of rounds won and lost. When neither has shown a decided margin in effec- tiveness the winner should be de- termined on the number of points scored and aggressiveness. HARDING OPPOSED TO ONE-MAN GOVERNMENT (By United Press) Washington, June 18. (Raymond Clapper.)—Warren G. Harding will declare for a ‘“hands off” policy to- ward congress as one of the chief is- sues of his campaign for the presi» dency, according to his advisers. Repudiation of the Wilson adminis- tration and an amend to therdistator- ship of the executive will also be the campaign cry pounded into, every precinct during the Harding camc paign. oG Harding is on record as oppoged % one-man government and will shape his administration, it elected,: only by the advi:> of counsellors, it wag said. . : MITCHELL CATCHES : LARGE BLACK BASS D. S. Mitchell returned from a fish- ing' trip at Park Rapids Thursday, where he was successful in catching a 4% pound black bass, which is con- sidered one of the largest ever caught in this section of the state. The fish is now on display in the City Drug Store window. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY PIONEER MARKETS—LOCAL AND FOREIGN receipts today, 67 cars. Market sacked, $9 and $9.25 per cwt. and $15. BEMIDJI CASH MARKET QUOTATIONS. Hogs, Ib...... c.m e ne .. 190-20c Dressed beef, pound... ... ..=12c-14¢ Turkeys, live, pound. == . 40c-46¢ Old Toms, live, pound. . ... . 36¢-30¢ Geese, live, pound ... ... e ..26c30c Ducks, live, 1b, .... e . e ..16Cs18¢ Hens, 4 1bs. and over...e.....26¢ HIDES Cow hides, No. 1 1b. .. Bull hides, No. 1, 1b. Kipp hides, No. 1, 1b. . Boel, Aressed . we cor e o e oue + - TO-14¢ Lambs .. ..... Garlic, Ib, .. Packing butter ‘considerable length. Baflay b $1. 2%‘:;..;’; rley . . .... .«0-91. Rye . ... .oconeevss..$1.85-$1.90 LIVE PUOULTRY No. 1 clover, mixed ... $20.00 Rye straw . ......... .$9.00 Corn ... ....civvvememeeeen.$1.66 No. 2 Timothy bay .........$37.00 — VEGBTABLES Beans, hand picked, navy, cwt. $5.60 Potatoes, per cwt. ... ..34.60 .$3.60 Eggs, per dogen . g (1] Retired. 'Fumitmkqufin‘nd Rhudard, per cwt. PR { 1] Upholstering. — . MBATS Mattoa, Ib. .. Pork, dressed - BICYCLES ~10¢ - l4e .A6c| Horse Turkeys, 9 IDS. UP <o cemeves o 300 d thin.. ..At Value ‘Hens, heavy, 4 1bs. and over. Springers, live .......ce0em Heas, 6 ibs. up, fat ..... Dressed poultry 3¢ per pound over live stock. s . HIDES Cowhides, No 1. ....coomsenes..16€ Bull hides, No. 1 ... oo om .o 180 KIpPs, NO. 1...00c.tinsm Bl Calf skins, No. 1 Ib. L oeeooB08 fool, e omeommammmnd Q| millions, SPEECH BY CARL H. «....'SHUSTER OF BIWABIK " (Continued from Page One.) nor Johnson and Governor Burnquist, who were keen and analytical stu- defits' of tax matters. There is no wildom in such a law becausé s.ich- fan; the Province of British. Colum- bis fn}d, previously, the state of Min- nesota, each repealed it as unjust, unwise and undersirabie so that to- day no state in the union levies such a tax in addition to its ad velorem system. It would ruin farming and close factories if placed on those in- dustries. So too, it would ruin min- ing. In less than a generation Min- nesota’s supremacy in the iron ore markets of the world would be lost; the state’s second greatest industry would shortly thereafter be com- pletely snuffed out; its growing steel industry -at Duluth would languish and finally die; $300,000,000 would be cut from its tax rolls; a vast pros- perity, growing more and more fruit- ful down through the years and con- tinuing on for centuries would be lost forever. 2. Iron ore is higher assessed for taxable purposes today than any real or persopal praperty: in Minnesota. veto message, says that from a valu- ation of $6,000,000 in 1898 the val- uation has been raised 30 fold in ten years or to $180,000,000 in 1908; thus, at that time bringing, not the $18,000 as in 1898 for revenue into the treasury, but $600,000. Today, twelve years later, the asserted valu- ation for taxation purposes is $300,- 000,000 or nearly double former Gov- ernor Johnson’s figures and the state’s share from this will be about $2,700,000 each year. 3. If iron ore is a heritage, fifty years of mining the one and a half billions of high grade ore would pos- sibly increase the revenue many mil- liions, but the prevention by the ton- nage tax of the development of 1,250 years of mining the low grade ore would destroy completely any such possibile heritage. 4. Governor Burnquist, who is a profound student of taxation, says in his veto message; “The fact that most of the iron ore is taken out of the state is no more of an argument for increasing the taxes thereon than the removal from the state of lumber, granite, grain or any other property would be the ground for increasing ' the taxes of the last named commodities. Taxation should not be used as an in- strument to impose unfair and ex- cessive burdens upon any particular class, industry or section.” y 5. There is no necessity for using a tax to compel the manufacture of iron and steel in Minnesota because Duluth’ now ‘boasts that it asked the United'States Steel corporation for a six-million dollar steel plant and it received' a thirty-million dollar one to-‘which an addition' costing ten has been planned. En- couragement would make Minnesota one of the great steel and iron cent- ers of the world, but in the words of former Governor Johnson: “It is certain that the moral, in- dustrial and practical effect ‘of the bill if made a law-at ‘this time, will be to strike a severe blow at the de- velopment and prosperity of all the great mineral bearing counties of north central Minnesota, affecting alike the agricultue, manufacturing, commercial, fianancial and educa- tional growth and success, as well as’ the settlement of all our northern lands, both public and private, and the investment of both home and for- eign capital therein.” THE PIONEER WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Jbotsoms_ of thel dnwl:n ‘:don cave in, oulda’tyflnd battyou¥were swere. lucky. _bappy, bomes 10! S8ince: we put’in”GF JAllstee &eiwx R X v’l‘m get i ':il -.l'l ,I_und o get, PMTMO% more filing room than Nand can_ be. stacked t—theynsave s el o peoaly Mkl [thelr . conteats. T an.u:l BT Pioneer Statiomery House Bemidji | WEALTHY FINANCIER DIES AT STAMFORD Stamford, Conn., June 18.—George W. Perkins, 58 years, returned finan- cier, who for many years was con- nected with J. Pierpont Morgan, died early today. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL 8 H. Mayne Stanton, secretary of the Grand Forks, arrived in Bemidji this morning to remain with his family here over Sunday. - Mrs. J. W. Naugle will return on Saturday from an extended visit at Chicago and Racine, Wis. She will be accompanied by her granddaught- er, Miss Anne Ness Dunning, who will visit here. Born on June 15, a son to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ward, ‘at St. Anthony’s hospital. ADDITIONAL WANT ADS LOST—35x41 inflated tire, probably between Bemidji and Nary. Finder please leave at Pioneer office. 3d6-21 FOR SALE—40 acres, good land, mostly covered with pine. . Write Frank Latimer, Turtle River, Minn. Rte. No. 1, Box 73. 10d6-29 Sweet T = ] to Be Delivered 7 i Direct to Factory IKoors Bros. Co’ IHllIIIIliIIIIIIII||i|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH_IIIIIIIIIII|I|IlllillIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Billy Luther Earned $3 In Two Hours Billy who is only 12 years old sold 24 packages after school. You can do the same by selling only 24 packages of Gardite the well known bug and worm destroyer— for gardens and flowers, at.50c per / package. Now’s the season, big | demand, easy to sell. ~When sold return $9.00. Keep $3.00. Every friend and neighbor will ‘buy a package, so order now, while the season’s right. Write today. GARDITE SALES CO. Independence, lowa Civic and Commerce association of | ———————————————————— S | A TOOTH PASTE MUST BE RIGHT You cannot clean your teeth with talcum powder; it is too fine. You would not brush your teeth . with sand; it scratches and cuts. NY-DENTA - TOOTH PASTE Is scientifically ground to the proper consistency. It cleanses. It does not scratch the enamel or cut the gums. You'll like the flavor. Price 50 Cents CITY DRUG STORE Laliberte & Erickson Druggists “Once a Trial—Always Nyal” ————————— . —— SubDNCTIG T L .e’ MY Pluaesy 2 lIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlIIlIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIE ! WANTED [ to Contract for ; Wi a g . b, Limited Amount : ' of ' ¢ Cream SATURDAY, - Will be CLIFFORD’S; OATMEAL Four packagesfor.............. BEANS 11 pounds for. . ... .$1.00 .$1.00 CRACKYSRS 6 pound box for...... . \........ MACAROR Sixteen 9-ounce packages Ior. . . .. .$1.00 .$1.00 3 MILK FcanS fOr . ...olc s i niiulas sidils ..$1.00 TOMATOES 4largeecansfor................ .$1.00 CORN Teansfor .....................$1.00 3. . SOAP _Lenox,~21barsfor............. GOLD DUST » 3 large packages for. ...... BROOMS Fancey Parlor, each........... ..$1.00 ..$1.00 PHONE 160 S— - T D