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PAGE SIX THE BEMIDJ! 1 DAILY 2 .- 3¢ flONEER 5 : £its - .[FUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY:11, 1921 | MARKETS B —— HIDES Cow hides, No. 1, ib. . .6c-Tc Bull hides,” No. 1, 1b. .. 4c-be Kipp hides, No. 1'Tb.. . . .4c-5¢ CAlf ‘skins, No. 1,1b. . ..6¢-Tc Deacons, each’.... vi.ws60C Horse' hides, large.. .. .$2.60-83 POTATOBS Chicago, Jan. 11.—Potato receipts, 44 cavs. Market steady. Northern whites, sacked, $1.20 to $1.35; bulk, ) $1.40 to $1.45; Idaho russets, sack- e ed, $1.90 to $2. ~ OLD KING DEFENDS U. S. BOXING RULES 3 s By Henry F. Farrell (United Press Correspondent) | New York, Jan. 11.—Rube Welch | i ,/ raises up in London to remark about | - RS the “trick boxing rules” in New | York. § The section of the law requiring; — the boxers to weigh in eight hours| before the bout is the hitch, se says. | ‘Welch, who has succeeded Charles Z: R Cachrane as a fight promoter in| the English capital, claimed that be- cause of the observance of the ‘‘eight hour” weighing, the bantamweight title was not at stake when Joe Lynch whipped Pete/Herman. ey > “Lynch,” he sald, “probably)went Anto the ring seven or eight pounds over the class weight.” . Had that been the case, Lynch would have picked up ten pounds, as | he was two pounds under the required | weight of 118 pounds. | | Jack McAuliffe, the old light-| weicht king, got a laught out of We'ch'a contention. { g “Picking up ten pounds in elght elty, for the protection of the manu- hours is out of reason,” he said. “It might be done if a special ef- fort would be made but it would hurt an athlete and slow him up ter- ribly. It is just a npatural process. Just before a big race would a train- et er allow a thoroughbred to eat a! | bundle of hay ‘and drink™a lot of wa- ter? Not on your life! “Take Lynch for instance, or Ben- ny Leonard, or any of the boys who have to work hard to make the weizht. They have to regulate their f food and train on a non-flesh produc- ing dlet. The stomach produces a el heavy feelinz. ‘slows up the boxer, makes the brain less alert and re-| duces coordination. | “Lynch never could have put on; ten pounds and fought like he did| against Herman. The spirit of the New York law-makers was to avoid forcing boxers to come into the ring| s weakened by making the weight. Eight hours after getting on the . gcales makes it possible for them to| relnx and recuberate. There is less | danger of physical injuries and the spernlators see better boxing,\which is the main idea after all. “The New York rules are practical- 1y the same as the rules of the In- 4 ternational Boxing Union, the Na- tional Sporting Club and other recog- nized authorities. : !' PRAGUE IS ENVIED 8 By Lloyd ‘Allen (United Press Correspondent) £ Prague. (By iMail). — Beautiful | Prague is the ‘envy of all Central Eu- Tope. This is because of the strong eco- nomic position of Czecho-Slovakia as compared to the remainder of this part of the world. The Czechs have great factories: & a highly educated population; a very | efficient government and great na- tional wealth in the form of mines, forests, and agriculture. Their sugar crop, for example, will total 250,000 tons this year and there is a serious sugar shortage over most of the European continent. he Wherefore the starving towns of Vienna, Warsaw and'Budapest think Prazue is a lucky town. Although the fact that the Czechs are better off than the rest of their neighbors. everything is not exactly. as it should be. There are plenty of things to worry about from the point i ot view of Prague. 3 For example, the country must maintain a big army, at huge expense, || to curb any sudden warlike move : on the part of Hungary and also guard the valuable Teschen coal bas- in from Polish aggression. Furthermore there is a _very troublesome job herd keeping the 3,- 000,000 hundred per cent Germans from making trouble. The Germans bitterly resent -Czech rule—a view- point the Czechs don't worry about ! in the least, remembering the hun- dreds of years the Czechs were op- pressed, by German-Austrian rule. ‘President Masaryk. who happens to be the George Washington of this sturdy country, lives in a huge pal- ace dominating Prague, using only a'few of the 800 rooms while other portions of the gigantic buildings have been assigned workers families ¥ ‘because of the housing shortage. While therf6od supplies of Czecho- 3 Slovekia are almost adequate for the el support of the oountry, poor distri- bution causes much sufteting, mainly in Solvakia and Ruthenia. And there is not enough food in Bohemia. Moravia and Silesia, where 100,000 tons of fats and 180.- 000 tons of other foods will have to be bought outside the country this| year. ‘Three years-agd tk:~ bard working little country was part of the great Austro-Hungarién Monarchy, while Qerman proprietors owned almost one third of all the cultivated land and actéd us Henchnien of the Haps- burgs. _One of the firat things the !these estates comprising 17,000 amateur had suggested to her giquare miles. Pkmk [S SHOT Jauregg had killed her sweetheart; Th m that she ought to take revenge; and Two miles of oxygen three times a BY HYP NMIZED G]RL that if she would do it, she could have| day. This is not only the best, but The Czechs are depending on Am- erica for great supplies of cotton. There is also great need of hides'and |. wool. Everywhere in the country there is a lack of sympathy for the plight af Vienna, because the people can- a theatrical. engagement. She By Carl D. Groat. = (United Press Correspondent) Berlin. (By ‘Mail).—The danger and was afraid of @ pistol, but her it was harmless., once great Austrian empire. How- [ Wagner-Juaregg, Vienna, by a hyp- tigg a crime. ever, the hatred against Vienna is no;lzed slrl‘.l i ’ — cooling somewhat. Dr. Benes, the auregg had asserted that crime One Sorrow ve zecho-Slovak foreign minister, has|could not be induced by . hypnosis 2 dRimaoved. recommended renewing neighborly whe;;upon an amateur hypnotist sug- relations with Vienna in the not dis- gested to a seventeen-year old girl the 3 tant future. Seceesination of the ~professor. and | [N, of great temper, and often —_— provided her with a pistol loaded with paper bullets. She made the at-| Queer Oid Canadian Law. tack. The medical journal. howeyer, seemed _to! delight’ to beat. He Halifax, Yorkshire, at'an early period notist induced the attack under false by the woolen manufacture in that premises and suggested to his sub- ject that the whole affair was harm fadturers against the thlevish propen- less—as it was. Hence it was not a sitles of persons who stole he cloth | CTime: . when stretched all night on' racks or | _But: the paper contends that the amateur hypnotists can ~perhaps wooden frames, calléd tenters, to dry. | spr00d g suggestion among the public The Gibbert law provided that all per- | ¢ or disruption of the whole process sons within a certaln circult, who had | of crtminal jusiice. Tt such a process | Erievance of yours removed.” stolen property of or above tha value | were undertaken, then there -woyld 7 of 13 1-2d., were to be tried by the | be no need for “‘compulsory hypnosis’ ‘The Child’s Character. cried the wife as she glimpsed if found guilty, they were handed over | establish a plea for light punishment, | ,werin these four things—Hum say3 there have been cases in the following by means of an instrument take sick patients. Thelr work Is to | the attack, the girl has been.the sub-| No friends, you lfive got to be set up as practitloners in preventive :"’:;:,:: :“;‘ dflg;fz‘;‘:?; eo:xt:;:’:‘:;:::ys. medléfip.! ; Under hypnosis, she revéaled that the | Ruskin. ’Comisu Entirely of Relieving Pressure on the Nerves at the Point Where They Leave the Spine —’l DO CHIROPRACTORS BELIEVE IN GERMS? TKAT germs exist is certain knowledge, but that they are the cause of disease is quite a different statement. The three distinct theories of disease, viz.: Chiropractic, germ and bio-chemic are matually exclugive. They may all be wreng, but/they cannot all be right. o The germ theory was promulgated by a German, Dr.*Koch, in 1882, and is by no means generally accepted by medical men or scientists. In fact, some of its strong- est opponents are medical men who marshal the most incontrovertible facts ‘with un- assailable logic, while the great general public have for centuries lived, laughed, and loved in perfect ignorance and disregard of theory. It is the dictum of science that we live in a sea of life and that in every-drop of water, in every breath of air and every bite of food there are myriads of germs. If germs cause disease, it follows that the introduction of germs into the living organism would proguce disease in every case. ¥ HE instances that prove this untrue are so legion that the germ theorists have been compelled to explain that the germs are impotent UNLESS THE POWER OF RESISTANCE OF THE PATIENT IS SUBNORMAL. For instance, some people cannot be successfully vaccinated while others are so successfully vaccinated that they die. “Germ Theorists” explain the susceptibility of the patient is the measure of his power of resistance. Power of resistance may be measured in terms of life current or vitality, The stronger the life current the greater the resistance and vice versa, the weaker the life current the weaker the resistance. So we may conclude that where 100 per cent of life current, or vitality, exists the susceptibility is zero, and where 50 per cent exists the re- sistance is small and the susceptibility correspondingly great. It requirés but little reasoning from these facts to conclude that those who contract typhoid, for instance, owe their susceptibility to a lack of vital force in-the bowels, and those who contract tuberculosis, pneumonia, étc., to a lack of resistance in the lung tissue, and so on through the entire lilst of germ diseases. C HIROPRACGTIC goes several links farther back in thé'chain of cause and effect. While the germ theorists stop at the susceptibility of the patient, the Chiropractor says that susceptibility is' the result of a’lack of vital power, or mental impulses, due to pressure on a nerve caused by & mis- aligned vertebra; and that when the vertebra is adjusted the normal power will again flow over the nerve, the affected parts will again become normal and the disease germs and every other incidental effect will disappear, B No clearer demonstration of the relative merits of antipodal theories could be given than that furnished by the statistics of the recent “flu” epidemic in Iowa, where the death rate was as, follows: Medically Treated, One Death Out of Every 16 Cases Chiropractically Adjusted, One Death Out of Every 886 Cases These figures are at once & death blow to the germ theory and a wonderful recommendation DR. A. DANNENBERG Phone 401-W CHIROPRACTOR First Na¥l Bank Bldg. néwly created Crech government did was to pass legislation that broke up | réplied she disliked to kill Jauregs|q); ages and constitutions. It is pat- | she relaxed as 'the hypnotist assured -0t forget the centuries when Vienna | that amateur hypnotists will further | Jauregg holds that this statement " fattened and grew rich at the ex- |[impair public morals is seen by the|as to harmlessness robbed the Action | bad tempers. pense of the Czechs, as well as the Vienna Medical weekly, in a discus-|of the actual criminal element, sinc_el It together it has still more otriking | French word = “jeu"—a “jeutrompe” other smaller nationalities of that|scion of the’ recent attack on Prof. the subject was not actually cemmit- bruthl to his’ relatives. and sérvants, ‘green flelds, .or ‘on the mountain top, | to be of very anclent origin, for the i not excepting #is wife, whom hg .an “Ihe Ralifax Gibbert Law,” acontends that Juarégg’s theory was | engaged in this occupation one:megm- ture—Dr.. Guy. Hinsdale.. in Good | itn the Eyropean form. strange old local law, was enacted at |not entirely. disproved since the hyp-| lng as the unhappy wife stood in an Housekeeping. —te upper h\)ll. A serving mald stopped | open-mouthed to.witness the beating. | o to Recognize R: “How much happier s that wench?" | "yo puy u “:mhognny table, pay |of electrical fish, but the electrical | gq’ 715 the beating again, ‘Well, there Is one ald the well to keep well. They cnll |ject 'of experimenta which revealed | s have to re- " sai o fhiemeelves "Premn[;ms’" s ymwe thie: prousks o which she wad Mib- ;)::"tted":::osl;;fidmones: yt?)“ rlep:;t into l.)hntos or not” gaid the goung wom ifore Edith reached home, she saw an delight, and Muxhisomeness.—lohn “) \F NOL GO WYO ARESTAURANY AND (¢ that The jéwsharp is not a harp, and it | The Gaelie had | cheap-and pleasant to take. It suits | reason for the hame is ‘not kmown. Iater ented by infinite wisdom, sealed with ‘effect. It has often been known to’ .r¢concile_enemles, settle matrfmonlal quarrels, and bring reluctant parties to ¢ |a stéfe of double blessedness. TDi8 | tne “scaccia”pensierc,” ~banishér of strument, which ig ia universal sound- was _get Into the country lanes, amobg | prodgcer, 8 mot known. 1t is known d you-have it perfection as pre-.| Chfnese books of the twelfth century |1 red in"the grent:laboratory of na- | ghow the jewsharb as almost identical was - pa Mahogany. Tlere are’in all about 50 speclen sled, ‘also the good price for it, and theq_begin to propertles of only five or six ‘have girl through her tears. He immedlate- L0 a0 Ghettier It 18 made of real |beon studied in detail. The best LOST—Bunch v kicked the gir],all the Way doWN pupocany Red gum can be made to [known are varlous species of torpedo, the stairs end remarked as he t00k UD ook go much like mahogany and Cir- | belonging to the skate faraily found in | ——c== = cassian walnut that it is often sold |the Mediterranean and Adriatic seas; S N v s for one or the other of these woods. |the xymno;usfl. an eell fswn& l: ‘:lfl ISA MERRY\ WEDQW iC thé Orthoco in Sou meri- T ey o Sv peid How can you tell the différence be- |region of “Soon ‘after my h‘“b!‘\t{l Foath, firth-burghers within the liberty, and |as in the Jauregg case, in order to| go then, you have the child's char | jooking at the cross-grain, says Popu- thnnderer fish of the Arabs, a native 9 years ago, I was ‘B‘.*ven typhold ound gt g A A L ol ility; | jar Science Monthly. If you can see | of the Nile;thie Niger, Senezal and oth- :::;:chsl';?fi:: Data tt‘).t. elnnglst‘rlnles for qlffnlshmef:t, and punluhmentp i hdedric theegauple.z Faith, Charity and Cheerfulness. | the pores with the naked eye, them or African rivers, and various specles pation.. I hiive doctored & o were executed on the first market day ", > ” That's what you have to be converted | yoy will know that all is well. If you of skate fourid / fn the seas around | Livh out benefit. ‘Stnce u‘l}'n‘ Mayr's tween the false and the true? By [ca; the malapterurus, the_ raash or con- | w1 don't know whether I like these |, 4 that the doctor brought it up. Be- - o - ~— Jewsharp’s Origin Hard to Trace. Irisl lit a wouth-drum or & humming-iron Theéé jllil '.l‘:eeu‘; b o firod while the Itatlans desigpated it as aelic “throu, e effc gpleq for_the “Preservation of the Henry Paget, marquis of Anglesea, : mediciné never fails. Spurious cqm- ' thought. The dctual origin of the in- \Gaell¢ - ! a woldier and statesman, was glso a pouhds ate found in large towne; But n Language. langusge is the: orig- fon with the Jews, The |inal ‘and historical: langusge of:the s e e |peupl. of ‘Ireland, though -moat ot Some authorities believe that it was | that country’s. - -inhabitapts sspeak originally called a Jaw'sharp because | English. « Gaélic: {8 DOW taught .In tho sigast divine. Tt cures cold feet; | it was plaved with the jaw. Others | the national ‘sclioals, Cathalis) ‘p-mh hot heads, pale faces; feeble lungs, and | say it was first called the Jew's | schoolyand colleges’im Jreiand, us well 1t two or three take | Trumpe, ‘the name coming from the | as at Harvard university, - Notre : Dame unlvérsity and the-Qatholic Tni- or joy trumpet. . Other peoples: called vérsity -of - Amerioa /ut:: Washitigton. va) of ‘the use Liln Blestrlc Plants, WANTED TO ‘BUY-Second 4, ‘set of ‘haFness for ° ‘Welfth street. 2t1-12 of keys in leather case. Finder return to Ploneer. .3t1-33 ered {r6m “Fxcopt ye be converted and be-.| can't see the pores without the ald of Great Britain, : Wonderfal Remedy, ~thrée mionths ! past of “compulsory (or intentionaf) | to- anye | :ll]\;llnrltr jlei g\;l[l;g‘))tlne. The lawW Was | 4o o ienness,” undertaien,as a basis| come as/Httle children”— You hear L;ngn!!ylng—gluss. thensyou will know = ! ago, my bowels have'moved regularly e nquistior e for a plea to escape justice. much of -conversion® now-a-days; but Nhat you are in the presence of red | he Wintéd Another. and I am feeling well ‘again. 1 am s s The Jauregg case has aroused the| people always -seem to think they | gyp, ~ i Edith visited the new arrival at my | NOW a happy woman,” It is'a simple, - It's an Old %hlntue WIIY- l[ntler:;t of lzsychfilo%ult’s and hyg?ot— have got to ‘e made wretchfd»hyf con- notue, ad H . that, an sirplane harmless ‘preparation that mw:‘, iera are some doctors who mnever |lsts thruout central Europe, nce | version—to be converted to long faces. ©Oh, Wily Man! g > the catarrhal ‘mucus from the intesti- g N dropped it on ‘the roof of a hosphtali ) brociiandrallays the irflammation e e P date o “they 9 . : ; ; = el :;e’;n' ,::]thel;) lndlsusct.' {atrplane and cried out; ‘to-the amare- | ;g gppendicitia. Qne dose.will con- ut you must remember, madam, |nong of passersby: “Please, mister, | yince or money: refunded, At all that your face Is not at all plain.” i J . i v O] ney. 1 g {arop one, drop. one.”—ExcHunge. |‘druggixu.—Advertisement. INTRODUCING HANDY ANDY | can be depended on. HANDY ANDY SAYS:— mometers,” which will keep you posted correctly. PR . pendable line to be purchased. “We have them at prices from 26¢ to includes Household, Candy, Oven, Dairy and Cream Thermometets. - Household Candy ...~ $1.75 Daity ... Is a real protection from thieves— \ 3 We have secured the services of “Handy Andy” and wish to take this oppor- tunity of introducing him to our trade. - He Wwill appear from time to time ‘in our ad- vertisements-and we wish you to feel at liberty to call on him any time for information in the hardware or paint lines. He is po.sted to give you first-hand information which ‘Why worry about the Weather? 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