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S e o * to include ourselves in the publicity. M i BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER G. E. CARSON, Presicent E. H. DENU, Sec. and Mgr.' - : G. W. HARNWELL, Editor J. D. WINTER, City Editor | . A NORWEGIAN LUTHERAN ! Telephone 922 - Services next Sunday, 10:30 a. m., - - {in the Emglish language in the First | Buntered ‘at the postoffice at Bemidji, Minnesota, as second-class matter, |Lutheran church, Minnesota avenue ! under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879 land $tf street. Solo by Miss Mar- {garet Torgrimson. | i |™s K i i i No.attention paid to anonymous contributions. Writer's name mun‘lhs‘:;flgi’ces““""’l fmmediately’ after be known to the editor, but not necessafily for publication. Commaunica-|""( ® w0 tn . (oioo tions for-the Weekly Pioneer must reach this office not later than Tnud-y; The Young People’s Luther League | of each week to insure publication in the current issue. Ihas its soglal meeting in the church | :parlors Wednesday. evening, Febru-| = {ary 23, 8 p. m., Mrs. Gustave Thomp- | [son, Earnest, Mildred and Theo. | Olson entertain. . . ! The Ladies Aid soclety meets Wed- needay, March in the churdh! :30'p. m. Division No. . Rode, chairman, will | parlors at”’ ——— Y| T L jentertain. 2.60 Services, 4 p. m. in the church at 125 Wilton in the Norwegfan language. . All welcome tc all meetings. L. J. Jerdee, pastor. Three Months ...eiceececamcoroamee TEE WEEKLY PIONEER—Twelve pages, published every Thursday and sent postage paid to any address fcr, in advance, $2.00. OFFICIAL COUNTY AND CITY PROCEEDINGS BAPTIST! i 10:3C—Sunday school. | 0—Morning service. 3:30—Mceting for men only, 7:004-Young people’s meeting. Theme, “The Will ¢f God.” A BUDDHIST SALVATION ARMY Christian missionaries have done so long and fruitful a' service among the people of India, China and Japan that their| s5:90__Evening service. endeavors have become more or less an old story to the folk who| Dr. Aldri¢h will preach at all ser- send them forth. No greater compliment to these Christian,"}gisg) TI he S\‘l'f!ec; glm{dny morning | workers could have been paid than the announcement that the Wi he “Intoxfeated gri:??“sfr‘ficef"éfl Buddhists have formed an organization similar in many re-|ihe campaign. Afternoon service for | spects to our own Salvation Army. jmen only—theme, “Nuts for Skep-| The Salvation Army, even among those who call 1:]1emselv€.~s}l‘]’i°3h to l‘rm‘ckt . S,fle.ch,“ TE;VXL‘ESl()r, Christians, was for many years the subject of a condescending | figh Schogt Sudemts fomleht (81} smile. It was when the nation, and, in fact, the world, faced a!Sided Folks.”” Meetings continued crisis in the late war that the sterling worth of the Salvationtevery evening throughout the week, | 'Army made itself more evident. The crisis was a moral as well Xceb. Monday cvening, at §:00 as physical, political and economic one. Not all war work i agencies stood so well in the breach as did the Salvationists, P e i | Some religious leaders see in the new Buddhist organiza- S PRESBYTERIAN | tion the beginning of a world-wide struggle for religious su-' ¢, 4ay morning at the Presbyter-| premacy. Heretofore Christianity has been the most.active of jan church at 11 o'dlock the pastor the major religious bodies of the world to attempt conversion|will speak on the subject, “A Day of all the nations to its creeds. There are integral qualities ihi“’sfizfil‘{;‘;":;en‘i;‘;"kt 1;=})?él’cck il Buddhism that seem to make its spread in western countries!geyrge Safford, the head of the Anti- | improbable. Its leaders, however, could have taken no better Saloon League, will speak -on na | pattern for missionary work than the Salvation Army of the | temperance question. This is an op- Christians portunity to hear a man of wide ex- B perience and ability on a great and vital subject. Special music will be GLAD TO MEET THE GENTLEMAN vlursnisged hyhthle fll;ltlflr. i " i i unday school w meet at 0 a. ‘Although we have never had the.pleasure of meeting 1!1m, i b Chrdan B eeti Al 7 we understand the newspaper fraternity has been the recipient! " "A} are most cordially welcome. of some very valuable advertising from the reverend gentle-‘ Lester P. Warford, pastor. man conducting evangelistic services at the Baptist chureh, Mr.i ‘Aldrich, we believe. 5 | Inasmuch as we have had no personal request from Mr.| ‘Aldrich to publish any article, we may be presuming too much tice,” will be the subject for the levening at 8 o'clock. ‘fnis is the . . - ihi seri [ ing ‘sermons Why not come in and get acquainted, Mr. ‘Aldrich? You fre} of & series of evenins sermons, might like us. Morning worship, 10:20, wiib thy] h 0- sermon by."the pastor. 4 g Sunday school at 12 noon. — FARMERS’ RELIEF o | Epworth League at 7 o’clock. Mrs. Senator William S. Kenyon of Iowa has introduced two|M. W. Deputy has the lesson. i'ne, bills for the relief of the farmers. One of them proposes to es-jsubject is The Philippines. Ir?‘““ tablish a rural credit society with a capital of $25,000,000 to|Eonsell of the State Normal school . : Aty 3 who spent two years in the Philip- assist agriculturists in the marketing of their crops, and the|pines, will tell some of her experi- other contemplates the organization of an insurance c¢ompany jences and observations at this ser- to loan money. to the farmers. Both measures have been refer- ""‘li' i diait vitd - red to the committee on agriculture and forestry, of which! ubliccorcla 2 ';,‘”z"e'( . . By 1, . ntz, pastor. Senator Kenyon is a member, and he will exert himself to se;! cure favorable reports upon them. Geo. W. Kehoe, pastor. | * METHODIST EPISCOPAL | ‘Amos: The Prophet of Social Jus- o | ST. PA'T,S EVANGELICAL | Sunday school meetssat 10:00 a. m. . TAKE THE PLUG—GIMME THE CHAW | Morning service (English) at 11! 1t is suggested that ultimately it may be best for the people‘u. m. Violin solo by Mr. Tharaid- to keep the tax and let the government have the income. Thisson. i suggestion comes from the New York World, chief defender "“'cl‘;’“‘;“‘;"‘? a 7\/?{:1‘:;}.»} ‘;l“;"',s‘ of the administration under which present tax conditions arose.|hims wiii, “wide scope of oxperionce ‘As a matter of fact, some of the larger taxpayers would have|and a very clever speaker, will give been better off if the government had taken the income and|an address. H o paid the taxpayers the tax. Strange situation, isn't it? . : ‘]‘1']"’“' rebearsal Wednesday .at S 0 "Lenten services every Friday even-| From Europe, where children are said to be dying from lack|ing at 8 &'clock, with special music. | of milk, the United States during 1920 received 35,000,000 Everybody cordially welcome. | pounds of butter. Why not feed the milk to the children in-| W. 'F. Kamphenkel, pagtor. stead of making butter to send to America, where we can make (I v | our own? ! ENGLISH EVANGEL. LUTHERAN —_— | Noserrices on Sundapt i Girl's Bible History class on Tues- 4 w; |day evening at 4:30 o’clock. ! Adult Bible class on Tuesday at; OVERHEARD BY EXCHANGE EDITOR 15:00 p. m. The pastor will dellv-| er a brief address on “Pcrequlsmcs) "for the Study of Psychology and Re- ITTTIFVIVITTTTVIVITITVIVITY || ligion.” All applications for member- iehip in the psychology class must be; b The Supreme Test iregistered with Miss Adair Hofer, . “I might as well admit it,” remarked Cactus Joe. “As a cowboy I'm a 1209 Beltrami avenue.: failure.” Boys' confirmation class on Thurs- “What makes you think so?” {duy at 4:45 p. m. “I've never had a single offer from a moving picture studio.”—Wash-| All welcome. | ington Star. i Erdmann W. Frenk, pastor. Bring Your Husbands i A Rag Ball social will be given at the Winsor school Saturday evening, {I16H SCHOOL STUDENTS Feb. 5th. Ladies please bring lunch and cups for two. Proceeds shall be | TO HEAR DR. ALDRICH' used for playground improvements. Come and have a good time. Don’t; The students of the high school, forget the rag ball. —TFrank Welte | have been invited to hear Dr. Aldrich | at the Baptist church at the Satur- " . The Proper Adjective day evenimg services when ‘he will, Fairmont Sentinel: Of all the states in the Union, Minyesota is theineuver his sermon on “Lop-sided only one in which the bosses have the nerve to try to restore the old rotten Folks.” Seats will be reserved for convention system.—Duluth Herald. |the students. Good idea—sending men or women to jail the first time convicted of | BETHEL LUTHERAN selling liquir illegally. Jail or prison sentences take hold much harder than | 5 £ oot the fines. Small fines are only jokes; prison sentences throw a scare into:a | 2‘;,"\;35 ‘fi‘,“:’fio : ,4,,’ “Drmg:‘flmfl good many and are natutally a disgrace which most people attempt to es- ', esident ‘of Minnesota Anti-Saloon cape.—Stillwater Daily Gazette. * |League will speak. . [ § p. m., regular service. i Rev. T. B. Nordale, paston. / Still Sacrificing | Little Rock Arkansas Gazette: “Dance to Aid War Sufl'erers."—’ ¢ headline. Who said we no longer make heroic sacrifices for the cause of liberty?—Duluth Herald. | Low mass at 8 o’clock a. m. High mass at 10 o'¢lock a. m. Sunday gchool, followed by benediction of the iblessed sacrament at 11:30 a. m. Baptisms at 2 o'clock. Vespers and | benediction at 4 o'clock. . CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Services will be held in the Battles| e ——— building. room 24, over the J. C.| An India merchant was fined for having a bankrupt sale when he was|Perney Co. store at 11 o'clock. Sun-; not a bankrupt. Soon they'll punish bald-headed druggists for selling hair' 43y school at 9:45. \ restorers.—Detroit Free Press. e ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S Church services at 10:45 o'clock. Sunday school at 10 o'clock. i George Remison, pastory It’s like pulling teeth to get $11,000,000 out of the government for| furest conservation while we are scheduled to spend nearly $700,000,000 in a year for maintaining and increasing a big navy in a war-sickened .world.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. —_— A Discovery Vo Syracuse Herald: After getting a Christmas picture framed we have | discovered that art is not only long but high.—Duluth Herald. I Does Japan want war? is a question asked. Japan should consider well the fate of Wilhelm before she starts anything.—Mankato Daily Free ' ABERCRO RED RAYS— HERE building itself up—in those livid colorings was a ghost-like form— Netta Mansfield—writhing, her head pulled back, across her mouth a cloth, her . wrists twisting vainly to escape from spectral hands emanating from Ahmed Hassan’s body. In a story as tense as the most dramatic of Poe’s, F. Britten Austin tells how Becquerel “N” rays and their emanation from the human body—a scientific reality —make it possible for everyone to read the mind of a guilty person! See , The Red Rays of Ahmed Hassan : By F. Britten Austin HEARST’S MAGAZINE—A LIBERATL: EDUCATION The Man Who Shot the Fox By Sir Gilbert K. Chesterton Is a son under obligation to right the wrongs of his father? .Suppose you discovered the fortune your father left you belonged, morally, if not l;ga]ly, to another. Would you—if you were Sir Arthur—pass on the title to a wl'gole village for the sake of the honor of the family? Would you, if you were Martin Irving, live, in distress, alone with'his black joke of right? In HEARST'S for MARCH - w ) I Keep Going to Jail ‘ By Walt Mason “I am weary and dejected; there is sorrow in my craw; every hour I am inspected by the minions of the law. They inspect me when I’'m going, they inspect me when I come, see- ing that I’ve not been stowing in my clothes illicitrum. They inspect my books and papers, and my ink and sealing wax, ing sure I’ve played no capers with the well-known income tax. Oh, they pinch me every morn- ing, and in court I stand in line, and I draw a solemn warning when I do not get a fine.”” Read why Walt Mason asks for Laws as - simple as the Ten Commandments. In HEARST'S for MARCH Snow-Blind , By Arthur Stringer ' Sightless, she awakened—in the bl_eék out:pbst of Alba Laird, outlawed bootlegger. One hand pulled away her hat—another her great- coat—more long coppery fingers tore Away her waist. Then came her™beseeching cry thru the tumult of drunken laughter- How far could that ery go back thru the years? Could it awaken the sleeping ghosts of a degraded man’s youth? Does call of race ever die? Arthur Stringer gives answer in Snow-Blind. In HEARST’S for MARCH Is A Wife A Slave? By Arnold Bennett Would you rather be your wife—or her un- married sister? Is it true that a woman can- not be dependent upon her husband economi- cally and be happy? What, for example, do vou think are the greatest obstacles standing between your own wife and complete content- ment. Search for the flaws of the married relationship with Arnold Bennett— In HEARST'S for MARCH FoRr SoME REALLY GREAT STORIES, See HEARST'S for MARCH Betting With Your Daily Bread By U. S. Senator Arthur Capper The Master of Man By Hall Caine ' What About Red Hair Science of the Month Making Hats—Making Men By B. C. Forbes I Show Faith The Village By Virginia Terhune Van de Water The Little Red Foot By Robert W. Chambers The Woman God Changed : By Donn Byrne —and 14 other Great Features In HEARST'S for MARCH \ month or any other. the world’s great writers; world’s real leaders; F you are not interested in a magazine a bit beyond the ordinary—if you don’t particularly care for a magazine - that will make you think—you won’t want Hearst’s this BUT if you want the works of if you want the words of the if you want the thoughts of the world’s great thinkers; don’t fail to make sure each month —starting today with March—of your regular copy of SRR SArst’'s = \ b- —‘\‘ For Sale hy All Newsdealers ¥ / MBIE & McCREADY DISTRIBUTORS