Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, August 10, 1920, Page 2

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/i Aus\ut 23-. 27-—Auto Tour to Gry- . @gla district. - September 1.-——Opening date of Be- midi Public schools, September 7.—Opening of fall term | of Bemidji Normal gchool. September 6-11—Minnesota State Sept. 15,16, 17—Beltraml County Fair. FULTON'S TEMPERAMENT OWN KNOCKOUT BLOW (By United Press Correspondent) New York, Aug. 10.—The case of Fred Fulton really requires little dis- cussion. It has been gone over thor- oughly so many times that the public knows by heart the reason why he never can ‘'be counted a serious con- tender for the heavyweight cham- pionship. But there is one thing that never has been said of Fulton. At Jeast it never has been said with suf- ficient strepgth to make the public Yelieve it. Fulton probably is.the best heavy- weight in the ring today, with the exception of one man—Jack Dempsey. He can punch, he can box, and he can step around the ring with the Dbest of the heavyweights. Give him six rounds in the ring with those heavywyeighs he fears and without the calcium burning on his back and the chances are very good that he would be returned a winner. ‘The trouble with Fulton is psy- ‘ chological, He fears a certain num- ber of heavyweights, and there isn’t a chance that ho can beat that. few, for he gives up before a blow is struck, [He may have the best in- tentions in the world when he enters the ring, but when the bell clangs and actual combat begins Fulton is gripped with a panic that is paralyz- ing. He forgets that he has a left hand, his legs refuse to carry him out of harm, ‘and he becomes a flound- ering mnovice, a simple mark for a ‘heavy punch. it is something that he cannot help. Fulton defeated Carl Morris only because Morris in his clumsy. methods was unable to deliver a knockout blow before.Fulton had recovered his _pose and was able to finish the vastly over-rated Oklahoman. Morris had previously won a techmical victory over Fulton because he used rough- house methods on .the panicky Min- nesotan. Fulton couldn’t stand it. He was forced to stay in the ring when they met the second time, and, after hé had found out that Morris was not hurting him and could not fight, it was a matter of moments for Fulton to start to work and win his fight, Fulton could have done that with’ Harry Wills -if the burly negro had known'less of ring sclence. But Wills caught Fulton while the big white man was still panlc-stflcken, 80 he won the fight. It is useless to discuss a return match. - The public' wouldn’t’ stand for it. ‘Wills has instilled a fear in to the heart of Fulton -that never will be overcome. The result is simp- ly that pugilism has lost a marvelous fighting man .who wasn’t temper- /mentally fitted for the ring. GRAVE OF FOUR- DYNASTIES bitions of Austria, Russia, Ger many and Turkey All Lie Buried in the .Baikans. We stood on the forward deck of the Sirio as she slipped southward, through the placid waters of the Adri- atic, at 20 knots an hour. Less than a league away the Balkan mopntains. savage, mysterious, forbidding, rose in a rocky rampart against the east ern sky. “Did it ever nuur to you,” remarked the Ttalian officer who stood beside me, & noted historian’ in his. own -land, *that four great empires have died as a rpesult of théir lust” for dominion’ over ‘the restless lands_which lle be- _yond flnose mountalne? Abstria cov- e Seuhm——anq the empire 0Of _the Hapsburg' iy in nagmer'fls how. Rus wla, seeing her Influence In the penin- sula Imperned Imstvned to the sup- port of her feilow Siave—bul Russla hml gone down in red ruin, and the Ronianoffs- are dead, Germany. seek- ing a gateway to the warm water, and 2 highway to the East, seized on the -excuse. thus.offered to launch her wait- {ng armies—and the empire reared by ‘- the - Hohenzollerns' is bankrupt and Droken. ‘Turkey- fought to retain her. hold on such Enropenn lerrl(ory as #till remained under the crescent ban- aer Today a postmortem is abont to y held on the, Turkish empire and the hotse of Osman. "l‘hlnk of it! Four gren empires, four ancient dynasties, lie buried: over || e:Balkans. . It'is something more than:a. range: of -moutitains: at . wrhich . we dre lockings 1t fs'thé wall of a meteiy. —B. Al ennder Powell in CHECK ON_ TRICKY “COPPERS" ccvmd Po-uloni. i Phflndelphla the poeltlon of traf- short of the required height by only fraction. of an inch are tempt- | che-t-nmebltbyrmnzon "' An’ {ngenious nwumtlm of “elec- trieity 18 iow used to circumvent this trlex. and any attempt o register a “—_-—- Harding as the republican party’s Coolidge was born at Plymouth, fiudulent measure 1s disclosed at once. The applicant, as he stands up- on_the platform under.the slide rule, sets his feet upon two metal plates that are normally a t¥ifle above the platform. They are fust large enough to be covered by a man's heels, and when the candidate stands with his his heels on the floor the plates are 80 depressed that they make a con- tact and form a circuit that lights a lamp overhead. As long as. the man stands with both heels on the ground the lamp stays lighted, but the mo- iment he raises either heel the smallest part of an inch the contaet is brokem and the lamp goes out. So does he. Russian ‘Painters Thriving, “Art,” so far as the production of pictures is concerned, is said to ,havz nad a great boom in bolshevist | Rus- ala owing to the fact that the govern- ment pays ‘a liberal amount. for, all works approved by offielal experts. | The whole domain’ of art has beea placed under the control of a council of seven members, four of whom are apostles of faturism. Artists’ earn- ings have been increased through a' rule established by the coyncil un- der which all pictures that pass the judges are to be paid for at the uni- form rate of 7,000 rubles each. Whether the artist has devotéd months -of assiduous’ labor to a ple- ‘ture or whether it is a' daub which has tiken a few hours to paint, the recompense 18 the ‘same. With such encouragement the number of artists in Russia is Increasing rapidly. Town Sells for $10,000. " The entire town .of Moneta, Wyo., bas been sold for '$10,000. The pur- chaser, John, (Goodman, received title from A. Kanson, who founded Moneta twenty years ago, to following One townsite of forty lotk, one eight- een-room hotel, one five-room cottage, one three-room cottage, two two-room cottages, one large livery barm, one raliroad eating house and %2 ‘miscel- {aneous .assortment of . outbuildings, |. ‘No person other ‘than Goodman, owns a single thing in Moneta, but the Chi- cago and Northwestern owns the right of way on which the town site fronts and «a_small depot “building on’ this "E’“ of way.——Chrlstlnn Sclence Monl- ol Biggest. Opal. in_the World. Proclaimed . as the largest uncut | -preclous stone In thé world, an enor- mous, absolutely flawless black opal recently discovered in this country, is now in the office of a government offi- clal .in Washington. ' The gem ‘con- tains ‘approximately 21 cubic inches, end welghs 2,572,332 carats. , It is val- ued at $250,000 by the owners. Th tlmtms Viennese - opdl, which was. without an equal unti] the Améetican imeh was found, weighs 1,658,921 ‘carats, but has a number of flaws Women Demand Grit. If you have the gr!t you can, com- Dy ‘fawning apologies. That drvé n purpose nn(iz ebfne we the greatest need. Some 70l why It is that “all the . w lqver." The fact is a lover must have grit. Women want their heroes h be leaders, daring, = irresistible. ’l'hey wifit men who do things. 'They even like to be made do a few things ‘pl;otest but enjoy just the l,l!g!.v The; fear they will lose the maiden’s As a mntter of fact it's the i“Faint heart never won fair lady” we must; have grit. And what's more the fellow: that does not have grit doesn’t neserve to win, Why should a wom- Bn waste herself on-a molly-coddle? ne a man if you would Vin~—Grit, Governor of Muu-:lmu!u. who will 'be the running :, minee for the vice:pre : ermont, ‘and is a la Hn‘ has twice been elected to ‘governor of Mcunclmut eaklings do not dare .such audacity. daring and the assurance that wins, | are told. .Even ' in ~lovemaking yonb A) L] Senator Governor profession. HIS WANTS EASILY SUPPLIED Eddmu Hayve No Hlnkcrlng After Thlnge Which Other Peoples Look Upon as Necenarl‘l. Without tea, : coffee, ‘'sugar or to- bagco, and with but few vegetables, the Eskimo of Greenland finds life pleas- ant 'and thinks his homeland one ot the most desirable in-the world. The few who have visited Denmurk thin% the Danes are to be pitied, says Roge: Pocock, in the Wide World Msgazine. The Eskimo’s needs are few, and these his arctic home supply in abundacce. In filling these the Greenland seal is the most important factor. ‘Its inter- Voung Peop nf Java Havo Lmh to Say In Selection of. Hu-und or Wife, |« Marriages In Java are typlcal of people in all” tropical climates, in that the couples wed when they are very young. When' a girl reaches her €lev- enth or twelfth year, her parents be. gin to look out for a suitable husband, ‘and after the selection. has been-made they start long preliminary discussions with the parents of the boy., The fa- ther of the girl then consults the “wise man” of the village, usually the only literate person in the community,. fur- ther action being taken solely on his advice. The wise man takes the first letters of the names of the pmspoctive bride and groom and draws them together In varidus ~shapes, over the combination which is to-de: cide whether the poy and girl are go- ing to be happy in thelr marriage. If the dl'n\‘ving suggests in -the imagina- tion of the wisé man a’ tree ‘with many branches,. he warmty recommends the alllance between the boy and girl as 'the drawing is supposed to promise; them prosperity and, nhove all, a largé. family. % ‘When the selection ls mnde to the satisfaction of all-concerned, the par- - ents begin to discuss the dowry which, in the case of the Javanese, is’ sup- plied. by. the groom, .consistlng of dresses, food, household ‘goods and other similar articles.—Detroit News. o —— ey mbRerihe for The Dallv Ploneer; Ch;eSter K, ROUSE PAINTING CONTR,ACTOR Paper Hanging and " Kalsomining 423 Fourth St. Phone 559 nal: organs are a‘most identical: with | those af a sheep, and its theat’Is a fat, streaky: muttoi. The skin makes hairy breeches for men; women' and ehil- dren, ‘and with me bair removed and properly oiled, makes sott-mlm, was terproof’ tootgear- From it - also_ is made ‘the hunter’s_shirt, the summer tent, the 'woman’s-boat, the bunter’s canoe and the harness for the dog| tehm, Winter clothes are made from the fur of ‘the fox, dog and bear. Drift- wood, always plentiful on these rocky 8hores, - furnishes 'roof \ beams, tent poles, canoe frames, harpoons for seal- ¢ ing, and lance shafts for hunting wal- rus, bear and reindeer. .Lam) re made from-hollowed rocks and' knives | from shnrp stones. Other thlny Aare considered. luxuries. : : HE notable quality of our ptofesslonal efforts is' their dignified character. Our un-' failing politemess: is all times’ favor—f ably: commented | upon. Our services. are faithfully per- | Did yon jever fecl a0 ,good that: S hare he fodsg B s the ‘feeling ‘Bra- zilla gives you.. Even the UL Govemment recog- nized. this* qY virtues' of ' Yerba Mlte, the - wenderful “cheerful- ness” ingredient of Bra- zilla, In a U. S. Government bulletin on Yerba Mate we find: .“It cheers but does . not mebmte. 5 You'll. enjoy the - deli- dous, cooling flavor of Try_ it at any uodn fountain. Also bottled for -home use or you can -get Bn- zilla Syrup at gist or grocer. - that is zood water, &E o Compare the present price of butter with the price of meat. Compare the prices of-the same two items.as they were four years.ago. Huthuinmmdnenlysoomremt,mm than 100 per cenmt. Uumhflundlnlnutndndm the H. C. L.—you’ll be | hellmn.ton. ; Y Nomngmeqw&edefiamlmmlmdm Nothingunequl&eh.dth-dflngqulifluotm It con- wuthnvdublmmhmncemnu“vnmhq ..obtainable only in genuine butter nnd other dliry products. Always ask; yonr dealer for GHIEF BRAND BU') TER MADE BY BEMIDJI CREAMERY COMPANY BEMIDJI, MINNESOTA “money refunded by ,uhscmna_}'on 'n-u: then meditating | After you enfi;—-nlwnyeaee EATONIC FOMACH'S SAKE) . g “”‘%""‘..m:,“:,‘a““’. % reliev: oated lmnisourml‘y g, repea“‘ ting, the many mi'lenu hy Acld-Stomach m'romcu the bestremedy, it takes atids and gasesright out - : 9! the body and, of course, xou fl?‘ 3 well. Tensof thousands wonderfu benefited. * Guaranteed to satisfy {;mr own drn gist Goet a tnfle. lease try ltl und-i nmedy (or kidmy. liver, bladder -and uric acid' troubles and National Remedy of Holland since 1696, Three sizes, all druggists, | -Guarante Look fof the name Gold Medal on every u"' and accept no. imitation ‘DAILY 'PIONEER “It sure will Tickle You T ‘says the Good Judge e To find how long the’ full rich taste of the ' Real Tobacco Chew lasts. That's why: it really saves you money to use this class of tobacco’ instead of the ordinary kinds. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew wlll tell you that. "~ Put up :‘n two style: RIGHT CUT is.a short-cut tobacco ' W-B CUT is a long flne-cut tobacco H1gh prices for. hvestock in- ¢rease the- producer’s" income. Low pqees decrease it and even result-in- losses. - anularly, h:gh prices for. meat increase con- - _sumer’s' expenses. . But Swift & Company as a | middleman does not benefit by high or low prices. Our income depends not on a high level of ,'prices or a low level, but rather ’ on the margm between the live- stock price and the meat and by-products price. 2 The company’ s only concern, _ :in “whether prices should be high or low, is that they should be . high -enough to satisfy pro- ducers and low:enough to please consumers; but over the move- ment of these prices. Swift & Company has no eontrol. Swift & Company is compelled ' by competxtmn to pay high - enough _prices for livestock to - an' adequat’e supply ‘We mtist sell ‘medt at a price low enough to make it move. We - ‘endeavor also, between the two . prices,: to secure a large | enough to pay all expenses and yzeld a fair profit. Ourprofitfer 1919averagedlm than two cents on each’dollar of sales, or 6% per eent on money . invested. T Swift & Cqmpany, U S A Bemidji Local Branchf

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