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‘every traveler who stops at Boone tav- . forestry department the stndents are - ! UNEARTH SKELETON OF GIANT § Bones of Supposed Mound Builder 801t ball.—Tondon Mal. (and tarts*that made the pastry cooks | . Sabdscribe for_ The Daily Pioneer. s - { AS AMPLE SUPPLY OF W00D |( Berea College Owns Many Acres ofi 1 Forest Boasts It Never Cuts « | Sound Timber. .Berea college, at the foot of the | has’ the unique- distinction of owning | 'wo mountsi ,000 acres of forest, its own sawmill, but never cutting a | b - goungl tree, writes Marie Dickore in | Forestry Magazine. This | 'or the college, for pow- | ‘er, for heat ‘and’‘in the many cozy fire- | . places in the 'dormitories and in the g - great .open fireplace’ which delights | ¢ 301 ern.. - v The sawmill, 88 well as the 4,000 acres of forest reserve, provides not | only ample practical experience for | /'the students, but also actual labor for | th those students who work for their edu- | cation; The sawiill is operated by \pr Sz Ci ou steam, and, like every othér industry | penace of the roving bands of sold ery. at Berea college, is run by students, who work &t least two ¢ hours per duy under the supervision of a superintendent of labor, who in turn is responsible to the dean of labor. Students at Berea are given the op- portunity to earn their expense they may select the W , which is | paid for at the regular rates ding | 4}, to the student’s sbility and efliciency. {4y As every student in the college must work the minimum of two hours per day, suitable occupation must be pro- vided by the dean of labor and in the ed very happy patroling the forest, mark- ing the dead timber, hauling the fallen timber to the sawmill, cutting it there into the required length:s, and then hauling the logs to wherever needed on the campus. No sound timber Is cut, as there is enough of the other i’ T3 Cumberland mountains, in. Kentucky, ‘nal. China |ea grave mounds, are some of the gru- pread disaste have sent thisiancient na fight against cholera when it became * epidemic and made fair headway to- wards controlling the diseas the Southern army invaded the pro-| vince and Jivided into many groups of warring ' faction. . Hsuing Keh-Wu, who from the post by Lu in July, has gone southwhard to join . forces with Liu ffice two ¥ HOLERA AND FAMINE ‘CAUSE MANY DEATHS ™ i "By Charles Eyard Hogue (‘United Press Correspondent) Chengtu, Szechuen. Provineial Cap-| (by Mail.)-—Hundreds of | of dies strewn on the streets, ng coolies ‘falling dead ' whilej of ey attempt to bear caskets to the me sights to be seen in Chengtu to- Cholera has stricken this, the ric! t province in u]l China, and its-Wiue i il directly chargeable the militaristic bickerings which n, to the | With eight mili-| factions engaged in outlawr: echuen province is in dire strai es have been violated, resid traged and’ the country rown into such a state of e farmers are afraid to bring their | oguce to the markets because of the | Ma { Foreign medical men took up the Then t he Szechuenese army | experimént in dowsing on a large if an estra oasis thé Sahara. | will dottbtieds’” come vowplete andigmagin has from time to time been mooted, with | ranéan dnto the great desert by 1 A writery of) hyr - times describes “QOther women might be beautiful, oth- or women might hive the s open brow; the s tures same | the woman in Burope whose g sweepi emed at 6nce to entreat aid, to ¢ mand, to extort ghedience and besi reward, like sunlight penetrating the coldest obj ening all within its sphere?” ‘THE/BEMIDJI DAl Engines of Peace. or two be added to bailing that, the world cet to the more ive plan, whicl’ Bohemia. tipping the water of the Me ns nehester Guardian, a canuli— ann: Truly an @ophinitress; BRITISH HEALTH MINISTRY ry, GQueen of -Scoty as follows:d T For. the protection and aney last year eyebrows, tng .over oand - white, full | even the same | , and’ rich, but where two soft, ;, chestout bor. . ed of providing medical like her: sed from under T clashes, found its way g care for mothers afd babies | it lor the heart, whoso smile |in order to refuce the high death | rates. «he appropri -t and warming and bright- | i sed each ye: ILY PIONEER One of the surprises of the grent | war, o disastrous and efrective one, was the heavy artillery of the central powers. ~One of the/ great producing |instruction in the hygiene of mater- centers way the Skoda works o Pilsen, [ ity and infancy, midwifery and ma- | The siege mortars turned i ternity nursing, and hospital and ma- r- | out by these works were terrible weap-'| ternity home care. A ons, but now these works are ready : a to muke frow 200 to 230 locomotives IS PROTECTING INFANCY| of maternity ™ the British |0 the whole Ministry of Health made grants total- | nd one-half Tnillion ! rs, according fo information ‘re- d by the' Children’s Bureau of the United States Departnient of La- Six years ago the necessity w: The first year a small appro- n was granted but the results ed were so encouraging that jons have been greatly wds are administered By the | { FRIDAY -EVENING, NOVEMBER IIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII_IIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIl!IIIIlIllIlg \ i ry of Health in -cooperatio: | with local authorities. \The local au: ., ! thprities appropriate a sum equal to ljthe amount granted by the govern- |ment. /The service available includes MAKE THE FOLKS AT HOME ' HAPPY | i R In commenting uponithe results of thas work domne’in England fo € ! public protection of' maternit; tinfancy, Dr. Christopher Addison; nister of Health, says: The devel- pment of the serviges thruout the country in nufsing, midwifery and cther ities, and theé!combination g effort, has been to reduce the infant mortal rate in 29 years from 181 to 78. If we had had that figure during the last 10 250,000 lives in ‘that period, would. have meznt-the sav- BY 1 TAKING b s iy HOME - . A BRICK ; v lirg of | year: OF nd | Koors . - Ice Cream . Printing ARE) YOU IN NEED*OF The popuiace became so frightened at the health regulations imposed the foreigners were ignored and soon the death list here alone mount- as high as 1,000-persons daily. In the meantime a political move- ment of grave portent is on foot. Lu- . head ¢f the military organiza- known as the Fiith Division, h harge of the capital ecity ary governor. In the meantime, was driven lit en-hou, who he drove out of the 's ago by foree of arms. | tp supply all needs. Now the f formér enemies are . ‘miting in‘a common cause against LuC rel Those of Man Eight or Nine . Feet High. Dr. W. J. Holland, curator of the Carnegie museum, Pittsburgh, und his assistant, Dr,_Peterson, n few' days ago opened up a mound of the ancient race that inhabited this section and se- cured the skeleton of a man who when in the flesh was between eight and nine feet in height, says a Greens- burg (Pa.} dispatch to the Philadel- phia Inquirer, : pr Phis moumtl, which was originally | 18 divine s been appointed to ap- about 100 feet long and more than 12 | P17 the inagle rod to the Snhara. Since Mases fiest struck water from the rock feet high, has been somewhat worn | down by time. 1t is on the J. B. ‘Secrist farm it South Huntington township. This farm has been in the Secrist ndme for more tifan a cen- tury, i The most interesting feature in the recent excavation was {he mummified torso of the human body, which the experts figured was luid to rest at lenst 400. years ago. Portions of the | bones dug up and the bones in the legs, Prof. DPeterson decla are those of a person between eight and nine feet in height. The scientist figures that this skeleton W the framework of.a person of the prehis- toric race that inhabited this section before the American Indiansy The torso and the portions of the big skeleton were shipped to the Car- negie . mpseum. Drs. Holland, and Peterson supervised the explorations me in fin sei tha the “m WILL TEST WATER-DIVINING]‘ French Government to Try Plan in Ef. cid ldg in its African colohies, and an im- ing geolo the qugstion” of divining has been a oot one, and the world is no less in th credulous of its result great vogue In England in the seven- teenth and eighteenth centuries, espe- cially in Cornwall, ~where numerous lenrned works attest his prowess in even Intterly “dows been attended with such success that ing ot the forked lazel twig in the “dowse! which is be; perception.” We can well imagine that whether the twig or the man be the agent in the matter the French gov-!~ imates have been made that at ieast $200,000,000 must be raised to'] ieve the present famine situation. fort to Locate Precious Fluid in the Sahara. The government of France has de- led to test we value of water-divin- essively oxgert commitiee compris- s and surveyors, as well T ancient days, > carth. But or water has ding metals ence has had to explain the drodp- » hands by such theories as in people possess a super- nt ‘‘cer normal perceptive faculty,” and that e twisting of the branch indicated a ental disturbance in the dowser nd the scope of conscious —-———-g—_—-—'——;-————_ Transfer Your Rééords " in the Modern Way Records that are worth transferring are worth keeping in security and accessible shape. - The Allsteel transfer cases meet just such require- ments. - Safe, sanitary, convenient, ‘and perma- nent. The first cost is the last. ’ ~ - <9 g Office Furniture The illustration shows how Allséeal transfer cases are stacked. ¥ The legs va each section - interfock witn ‘the frame on the section beneath. ,Thus as many u its as are used are held firmly together. This file saves from 15 to 257, floor space over wood ~ ‘and has 259, greater filing . I capacity." It affords perma-" nent protection against fire, ‘dust, mice, and vermin. i Whether- you need files, safes, desks, tables, or ghelv- ing, you will find here the ' very unit to fit your requirements in the Allsteel line of office furniture—the equipment that be- longs with success. PIONEER STATIONERY HOQSE Bemidji, Minn. gt Tags I Cards o Supreme Folders \ Dodgers Receipts i . Envelopes | Statements | Bill Heads | . Invitations “Packet Heads | Letter Heads Call at Pioneer Office Phones 922 and 923 TGO GOOD WORK IS OUR SPECIALTY The Plant Behind Our Products “ T El ST %_'JlllllllillllllllllIIIIIIIllIIIlIIIlIllIIIHIlIl!IIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!!IIllilillllllllillllllllHIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIlIIIIIIIlllllllllIIIiIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIII'E 'Economical— Efficient— Practical-— LTI TN You will find the Hickory Pipeless Furnace the most economical, efficient and practical heating plant for your home. With a Hi¢kory in your basement you will be in comfort in every room in the liouse, no matter how cold the weather is outside. Call at the store—let us demonstrate the = on the Secrist mound with the great- ‘est of care. The curators believe the man whose skeleton they secured be- | longed to the mound bullder class.” PR Lol Golf Ball Displayed Sense. People who don't belleve that golf balls have xomc e oF their own would stand small show just now M an argument with a player on the Rom- ford links, who made a badly-sliced tee shot, which carried the ball across 'the roadway into the open upstairs window of a house. When the golfer went to retrieve the ball he found it on the:mat of the front door of the house, waiting for him like a good child, After entering I ‘the bedroom it had hounded out . through the door and rolled down- Mixed, per pound. ... .. stairs to the mat. * The golfer says If it hadn't had | sense it might have gone through a | WALNUTS. closed window, breaking the glass, and Pel' pound 30C ther” stuck in the room, making all| sorts of possible trouble for him. As | 1t was, the people of the house were none the wiser for the trespass of the No More Tarts! It was bad enough when we lost the .secret of how the pyramids were made, and now the Manchester | Guardian raises a wearning cry that we are about to lose the key to an- other of mankind's achievements rare. The war, it Is said; wiped out the art of the Baba, ‘the Klamande, the eclair. When rationing forbade pastry, | 20,000 apprentices left the trade in | Fratice, and while making mud’ pies fu the trenches, they quite forgot how | to flute icings, and combine creams and almond paste into the gateaux TR AR of Paris famous. children do? Whatever will the | England Turns to Spanish. A soclet§ craze for things Spanish geems to be smmineht in England. Two “Spanish plays are running in London ‘and Spanish singers and dancers are in great demand. Many ionable | women are wearing; the high Spanish comb and one sees tentative attempts S+ the mantilla, or mantilla effects. All the new fashionable dances aré #aid to show ‘distindt leanigs: toward Spanish interpretation. e e e THANKSGIVING SPECIALS ‘NOVEMBER 20th te 24th Per pound Fresh Roasted PEANUTS, 7 CANDY KISSES, Peanut Butter, per 1b. . .25¢ CHRISTMAS CANDY, PEANUT BUTTER, 35¢ Per 'Pound ...... - ... .35¢ MIXED NUTS, Per pound Per pound Five-pound lots COFFEE, fresh roasted Santos, ....42c PANCAKE FLOUR, Five-pound package .. .55¢ GRAPE-JUICE, Gallon cahs . . .. PINEAPPLE, Gallon can COMPOUND, Per pound BACON, in squares, Per pound FLOUR, 98-pound sack. ... APPLES! Per Basket APPLES ! .....$2.00 tg $2.50 APPLES! o — —— “Not Cheap Goods, But Good Goods Cheap” CLIFFORD & COMPANY .Phone 160 \ WWWIIH“WWWHWIII“MH“HMWMHIIllllllllllflllllllIIIIIiIlIlIIiIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIllIIllllllllllllllll Ay I AL PIPELESS FURNACE * - T A - Hickory toyou. Asthe nameindicates—there dre no pipes. The Hickory is installed in the basement and over the top is a single duplex grating, set in the floer. Cold air enters here and returns thoroughly heated and circulates through all connecting rooms. You need not rearrange ‘furniture, or.cut holes in walls or plaster, or fill up your basement with piping. This method of heating is & dis- tinctly modern method and a great fuel economy. YOU CAN PAY FOR THE HICKORY ON OU CONVENIENT CHARGE ACCOUNT PLAN. And you know you can depend o‘n us to install it right and assure you complete satisfaction. The manufac- turer and we bot}} stand back of every one we. install will suit you—you know the SERVICE will, for we have a reputation for treating our customers RIGHT . 2 TERMS L T T TELEPHONE, CALL, OR WRITE i ~ Bemidji Sanitary : Engineering Co. Phone 122 Bemidji, Minn. S g ||I|IIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIliIiIilIlIIIIIiI_IIiIIIIIIillllIIlil"lllllIIIIIIIIIIIIII!Illflflllflflflfllllllfllflflflflflflilfiifll " — IIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIlIlllllllllIllllllIIlIIIIIIllIll_lIllIllIIIlllllllillllll T ll'IIIl||||IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||lllllIlI!!IIII|||IllliIillIIII|||||IlIIIIlIIllIIllIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||||||lllll|l|lIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIllllIIliIIIII[fil“llllllllllllllllllllIIIIIII