Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, July 27, 1920, Page 8

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MONDAY’S BASEBALL. ‘7 American ' Association. Louisyille ‘7, ‘at Toledo 4. , American League. : 'Boeton 9, at New Xork 8. Chicago .6, st Detroit 4. Nati ‘League. ' f thtslmrgh 4, at Brool Oats, bushel ... Red-Cloyer, medtu\n. Popcory,. pound | Wheat, hard Wheat, soft’ . .| Rye, bushel v | WILLS KNOCKS OUT FULTON | c.onic IN THIRD ROUND LAST NIGHT|0afo Newark, N. J., July 27. ——Harry Buttertat . Wills, negro henvywelght, knocked | £888, fresh, ‘d lfll . out Fred Fulton in the third round of % : & scheduled twelve-round bout here l'?;t night,: The knoc’koub blow,i a} Muttcn ht uppercut, came after two:min- utes:and; 35 seconds of fighting in the The followmg prieu were ' second round. Wills’ victory of Fulton places him in line: for a match with Jack Demp- sey, heavyweight champion, unless the latter draws ‘the -color line. . It]Wheat, No 1. .. was. reported before the Afight that| Wheat, No. 2.... Dempsey would meet the winner. Wheat, No. 3... " * REPRESENT “U” OF IDAHO Moscow, Idoho, July '27.—Three VEGETABLEB athletes may represent the University | Beans, hand picked navy, cwt..§$6.60 of Idaho'at the Antwerp Olympic|Potatoes, per cwt. 355 games. Two Idaho men, Pat Perrine | Beans,” brown, cwt and Neil Irving, already have made | Eggs, per dozen .. the American team by qualifying in|Butterfat . the pentathlon trials. < A third Ida-|No. 1 clovet, mlxe ho man, J. “A. (‘“Babe”’) Brown is|Rye straw .$9.00 trying for a pluce on the wrestling|Corn . ve..31.20-31.50! team. No. 2 'l‘i ..othy hay ....... & .828 00 Brown, wrestling in the light- ey heavyweight class, won his bouts in ‘2he recent. Olympic sectional meet at ‘@Partiand, Ore., and will represent the | Mutton, Ib. . . ‘west in his class in the final wrest- | Pork, dresserl E Hng rtr 1s in New York. INCREASE IN PURSES AT X HORSE RACES THIS FALL Louisville, Ky., July. 27.—Purses totalling $607/,000 will be aistribut- ed during the 46-days of racing in Kentucky this fall, a big increase over any previous season. - The mini- mum purse at Lexington will be . $1,000, at Louisville $1,20v and at (Continued from Page 1) . Latonia $1,600, world. It isn’t indulgences that cr At Lexington there will be stakes |ates happiness, but the. denying of with a combined value of $7,5600, and | one’s self. | You deny yourself some these with the overnight races will [things that the lower crowd dont total $56, 000 to be awarded horse-|and you are happier than they are. 1 men. Eight stakes are carded for[deny myself things that you don’t the Latonia meet and their total|and I am happier than you are.’’ value will be $57,000. Overnight| -If you have the idea that true hap- races will swell the total of the meet |piness comes from card-playing, to $339,500. - Churchill ‘Downs,|dancing, wearing decollette dresses, Louisville, will provide. $112,000.|smoking _cigarettes and drinking esiom s GRAIN AND HAY +.$2.56-32.66 ..$2.46-32.66 .$2.36-82.46 L ollli91.10-81.25. .....sustzoo MEATS ; 2. ..ICc .........ue ON ¢THE DEVIL'S BIBLE .. AND DANCE OF m-:m__’ - These figures include four stakes with champagne, then your gray matter .a combined value of $25,000 and oth-|is g0 infinitestimal that if it were er races calling for distribution of [put into the quill of a humming bird ‘8{:00 and shot into the eye of a mosquito, st fall tne total purse money at it wouldn’t make it wink. the three tracks was §338,600. When young people ask me about the right and wrong of amusements, 1 give them three rules with which mm MMA HAS LAw to test them. Let me tell you what they are. "Never indulge in any form BARRING THE RED mc of pleasure that will Tnjure the soul,’ mind or body. Any amusement that " tends to lead you away from. God; Hl:sin:rck N. D., July 27.—A law|that legves ‘you less conscientious; 1t }gorth Dakota was initiated | body, should be condemned, no matter flls n le of the state by a ma-|how fascinating it may be. Abstain Jority 8 605 in the recent pn-llrom all pleasures that lead into evil marwl. the 'state canvassing board , associations. If duty leads you among lngo:nc. late yesterday. w;rong us:;cl‘a:'tllons God wltll :nke car: ther announcements by the board | of you and bring you out clean an r:cluded the following laws passed |safe, but ‘llf li;ll;eyo:"l desire for Dlte:fi; the present ' administration and|ure you deliberately - choose: a uyfgnedpm the people for vote: ‘. which brings you among bad associ- ‘Absent voters’ law—For, 52, 229. ates, their influence will work to your agalmt, 62,954. sin. Lastly, beware .af pleasures sheriff law—For, 47,768;' Which effect: others , Hisasterously. ure than to énjoy - d?::trrl::fo:wa::‘fix:: g:;l;tenlg-“‘f.pense and well-being of pthérs. It ‘‘don: 84,804, aggnmat 74,226 1;: Mallulwm do no good after your influence: Ruth Johnson, Nonplrtxaan League Inshrulned a life, to say you meant A no harm. candidate. g . ' There are two forms of am:sement q that are all too common today and BRITISH AND FRENCH HAVE 1 want to speak 'of them .tonight: OPENED CONFERENCE TODAY | They are card-playing and dancing. If you will apply the three rules I have just spokem of to .these two forms of amusement you will ‘tind (By United Press.) Boulogne, July 27.—Conference of British and French to consider the Russian-Polish situation, was opened - at 2 o’clock this afternoon. demned by all right-minded persons whether Christians or not. - A deck of cards has aptly heen called the devil's Bible. iou will see it in saloons, pool halls, broth- els and gambling hells, but never at ahprayer-meetlng You will flhnd it lr; the hands of thieves and thugs,: of Professor Helgo Wilsson, of ‘the. jdrunkards, gamblers and: prostitu es; wniversity in Lund will come to the'yut never in the hands of a sa United States. to investigate = the, Cards. are so associated with the. ruin. future possibilities for Swedish 91"“' and damnation of thousands that.the grants. His - investigation will made principally in the northwestern| states. DANISH AMERICAN MEMORIAL ADVOCATED SWEDISH PROFESSOR TO INVESTIGATE flMIGRATION for, pastime or amusement. ' f#he Christian church hasg alwayt beéxr opposed to card-playing, because card playing develops a. desire for gambling. The society card-shark | has the same passion as'the disrelmt- able gambler; and plays on'as’if an infernal spell" were od them! Il is'a’ well-known fact that the church‘ member ‘who plays cards would er play. with asteboard .than \m'ay~ for sinners. hat kind 'is ‘more i terested in winning a card game for a 'prize than in ‘winning a soul for the kingdom of God. ' Nero fiddled :while Rome burned, and these card- ; ng church members fiiddle away their time le the unsaved are dy- (g all about-them. “Well,’ *sope say . to me, “‘what’s the differenceé between a ‘ game of cards and any other game—a game is.a game, isn’t it?” Alright, what’s thé difference between a glass of milk and a glass of whiskey—a drink is a drink, isn’t it. You say 'a sbclal card game is not as bad as a ‘game for money. The only difterenceis, one is a little rattlesnake and the other is a big rattlesnake. Down in Kentucky in one town the court de- manded that the euchre playefs. be indicted = under the ' anti-gambling laws and ‘dealt with as criminals. If the laws were as strictly enforced in The Danish press is adv’ocafing the . erection of an. American memorial to - /commemorate the concept of the prin- eiple of self-determination. as applied to: Schleswig. The press is pointing to the fact that Jutland has its Dan- ish American park, where the Stars . and’ Stripes are unfurled on the Fourth of July, but that Copenhagen| has - ‘no distinctive . memorial of{T America’s . contribution to Danis] SOCIAL AND PERSONAL M. E. Chatfield and wife of New Haven; Conn., are in the gjty, La dng 'driven. in-from the State Park “They have been visiting friends’ in Minneapolis: for some time and are aomvletlng their vacation in the ta: lake region. Mr. Chatfield upreased, his surprise at finding mepthern Minnesota so level,'having [some other towns, many a _husband to . find. it very. hjlly: .and |would be found toting grub down to rocky: linlln to ‘the hke Superlor the jail'to feed a churchmember wife. 1 want ‘next to take up the quemon . .94c-96¢]’ ‘Yot the modern dance. ‘everyone who the duplny of the Red; that lessens the power of the mind or} that both of them -should be con-|. true Christians refuse to use them ¥ : chureh ‘In regaf the day | now. want to say 8 hing ab HO‘I. MR S e Dressed beet, pound. .. “Turkeys, llvo, ppuna, .o o Old Toms, live, pound Geese, ive,' pound . ucks, 1176, ., Hens, 4 108, and over HI0ES —— ) t:ow hides, No, 11b. Bull hides, No. 1, 1b Kipp-hides, No. 1, Ib Calf Skins, No. 1 | Deacons, each .. ‘.| Horse hides, large, Wool, bright ... being paid at Stlllwat«r.' ‘at time of going to press of today’s Pioneer: Beef, dressed . Lamb3 ... ... Garlic, 1b. . . . Packing butter LIVE POUL']' Turkeys, 9 1bs. up .. Turkeys, small and thime; Al Geese, 12 ‘bs and up, fa Ducks, ? Hens, heavy, ibs. and over. Hens, 5 1bs. up, fat .. Dressed poultry, 3¢ per pw live stock. x R HIDES Cowhid.s, No. 1 ... Bull hides, No. 1 . “IKipps, No. 1 ... ' | Calt skins, No. 1, Deacons . Tallow . . . Horsa: hldes . wool. bright . I ly.been called the “Dance Dancing is a form of intoxi fand- it ‘becomes a craze with ‘many] . oung people as much, as the 1y>ipe and the wine cup does’ ‘and women. 1 can hardly hope. hat agree with me in wha how stronlx :ome of are, ‘and now 80 lmv,e come.- here saying,. “rd ‘like to: see Weigle convlnce me that * this thing is wrong.” But on the other hand T know . there God, and 1 believe I can’ by facts that :llianc:ng is :::y works disaste: i m‘;tv::nt to say first that" thovchutch is against the dance. AlL the ¢ ches have’ ‘declared agalnst it. churches because they are dent in:government.have no‘of deliverance against it, . Y, find ‘that the attitude’ ual leaders is pronouncgh agains The Roman Cat'll!::vléci ‘ all ithe churches, neil at Baltimore, went sembled-in:cou e comdpr ainst " those :vghich as at present carr{ed on, are, olting to-every feeling of delicacy ::'d pm%riety ‘and atre "t':lssh't wnh eatest ‘danger to mol mfmfl Episcofial church;: thru Bishop ‘Hopkins says, “Dancing is chargeable with waste of time, and the prema- tire incitement of passions, and‘no ingenuity can make it consistent with the covenant- of baptjsmit Bl:hop Cox of the same church, says, 'The dance is lascivious and those whoper- sist in it shoulld Pot presume to come holy table.” . "'l‘l;lee GZneral Association of the Congregational church of the:State. of Iowa, passed the following . resolu- tion, but a few years ago: “Resolved that 'in the .opinion of this-associa-|; . tion, the practice of dancing’ by members of -our churches is inconsis- tent with the .profession of religion and ought to be made a subject of discipline.” While leaving the matter of dl cipline' to each churgh, the Presby- terian church in its neral assemb- 1y has satd, “We regard the practice of promiscuous social " daneing by church members as a mournful in-|- consistency and-the giving of such parties for such dancing on the'part of the heads of families, as tending to compromise their religious profes- sion, and the sendinggpf children to dancing schools by ristian’ par- ‘ents a sad error in family discipline. The Methodist church in-its d ;| pline has a rule against dancing, 8o ithat a Methodist church member who, dances. is: delibera the ‘tules of the church. A dancing, card-playing . churc member is a detriment to the cause ‘of Christ. - When' you go joy-riding ‘with the devil you prevent the ing of the kingdom of God. P hears me gonlxht wdll ‘Tknow |; 5 age some here| ‘|'who will ‘be true to théir better ne- | ture, and who wish to do ‘the will of darce'in our 'pubMe . schools. 'The public school is an institution belong-] ing to the community.and supportec by public taxation.: 'dt is intended to prepare the pupil for useful and suc- cessful living. In the 1ast few years, however, if you were 'to judge the schools by what you hear and read, you would think ‘they = were ' public dazice hallg or recruiting stations for the theatrical stage. Those who defend the dince in the public. school tells us it 1sa physlcml exercise and very wholesome:for the pupil, No: one can prova that: the dance as carriéd on indoors in-a. vit- iated atmosphere and accompanied with certain drinks is a wholesome reception. “Why is it that as a rule the next dey the participants are}. good-for-nothing. ‘Again they’ would tell us that'dancing is a form of art-|W fstic expression. 1 wonder what form ot artistic expression is found in the|’ “Bunny hug,” and “Grizzly bear,” or the “Fox Trot.””. = But the most re- diculous' thing of .all is when we are is'a splendid means’ of urse.. ‘The truth is, it 3|is rather-a substitute’ for ‘the best| form of social intercourse, It is pure- ly ‘emotional -and so ‘stimulates the’ senses. that it.is used as a makeshitt in the absence of intellectual recour- ces. That’s why, as a rule, it is the last ‘thing on the programme.” ‘You don’t bring any brains to dance. the favorite amusement in insane asylumg, and often the ‘best dancers in society are the most insipid, empty headed persons, who.take out at their heels what they lack in their cran- iums, The real peril of -the dance [les in the fact that it-alone claims license to break down the barriers by which civilization protects the person of:its womanhood. It.seems to be taken:for granted that engraved invitations, an orchestra.and a polished floor give a man the right to take a woman or girl in his arms and come into such bod- ily contact as would be telerated no- where else in society. If he were to do that in the city park in broad day- The ‘modern tango dances orlgln- u"r %) tha&"’&ne ot ou. ‘conventions of respectable Itis), South. America. They then went. to] Paris and' from there to the United States. Tango'is a Latin word mean- ing, “I touch,” and deecribes a dance of bodily. contact.. The, tango was forbldden in the rPunadu ‘canal zone, And this is the vile, rotten:thing which is now getting into our public schools. it antagonizes the best in- terests of the youth. It is destructive lof health and wasteful of “the vital It makes no contribution to It ‘violateg the soclety. forces. the intellectual life, g of being saved: noW: ing you the truth;'dnd aome of you would come down this aisle and-test is out for yourselves were it not f fear of ‘being’ laughed or sneered by some of your .assoelates, i There There is no mag isn’t a young man in this town 'worth = spegking to, and there fen't woman, worth noticing when her on' the street, that wil you if you'do what ¥ And its tendencies are toward gross " immorality. - The respectable, taxr{, paying Christian parents of our land should rise up and demand:that no more: dances be held in connection with’ 'the school life. To’you young. people who are here I offér the salvation of Jesus Christ hlch alone ean satisfy .- the soul. best for time ‘and eternity, to' come forward tonight 4al stand for Christ and: the salvation ot your soul. If you have the courage, don’t ‘wait' for someone to ‘comé aftér: IlOW -“Let: Me T'ell Yofi Thls aay; the Good Judge men every d'wy are find- " ing /that. it costs less //to use the Real To- ’l‘he full ri¢h taste lasts so " long, 'a small chew satis- fies;it’s just what you have been looklng for, 4 That‘s 2 - why it coabb 'iot Any ‘man who"lueit thi - Real . Tobacco Chew wm- tell you that. ey 5 +|light the policeman would nrrest him, | Putupintmm REGULATOR Cook Better An Easier Way ISVELY as your cooking is ‘you want to cook better! Of course . you want to cook an easier way. Here -is the way to do.both! Get a CLARK JEWEL Gas Range equipped with the “LORAIN” Oven Heat Regulator.” With this wonder- ful invention your cooking will AL- ‘Your regular. bakings will beé' beautifully perfect.’ And' your dinners ‘cooked at one " time in’the oven and watched by “LORAIN" ‘makes evety aftemoon WAYS -be. delicious. free, ‘[writing to .the Corinthian church,| . said, ““Ye cnnnot drink the cup .of the Lord and’ the ‘cup’ of devils I sounds like “slang, but Paul what he was talking -about. Christians had been - heathens and when they came over to Christianity: they sat down at the Lord’s table. | They were still living among ..old neighbors who had their sacraments also: I They’d go up to ‘the temple of their gods and get sprinkled with some sort of water and while the sac- rificial supper. was being . prepared they would take part in a lot of dirty |- dancing like the turkey-trot and the|" uchi-kuchi and a number .of other ‘fashionable stunts, and then sit down d eat and drink. 'Now Paul had en. this and hé called it the table of the dévil. And when he found out that some of the Corinthian church- members atter ditting down at the Lord’s table swpuld- get ‘up=and- hike over and join'their old friends in the temple debauchery, he.became lnrllg- nant and-said, *‘Ye cdnnot drink’the cup of the Lord and the cun of the devil.” So mueh tor the mnde ot he 315 Bélt Ave. With the “LORAIN"there is abso- lutely nio guesswork. You measure - your heat as exactly as you do your “flour: and sugar. You set the wheel ‘at the proper temperature and the" heat never vanes. Your results never vary. You have no “unlucky” days. And too, you ook your whole meal in the oven at one time. No tiring hours ‘ watching and sfiqlfi g your ! xng foryou. foods. Put your meal’ln‘fhe oven, set the wheel —then leave - for an afternoon of recreation or ¢ hop- ping. . You know: just when your. ner will Be done. . While you'are gone the “LORAIN” \Fvatches your cook- e house - This wondetful invention on' the . CLARK JEWEL Range is niow being + demonstrated - here. Comé “in”and Easier Day’s. learn for yourself the marvelous ac- compllshment.s and cornveniences’the ' ‘“LORAIN” brings to you. Also be sure and get our FREE booklet; “An Work.” Every woman. : should have one. mm Wo: i You are away from the kit : -hfi-' e, e ok,

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