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| AT sz —— OMAHA SCOUTS PREVENT WRECK | Two boy scouts, James Caldwell and | Clarence Swingholm of Omaha, re< | cently prevented a serious train wreck | by prompt action and presence - of mind. Coming home from a hike they | discovered that a large tree had fallen | divectly across the track of the | Omaha-Chicago passenger train which | was already .whistling around -the | bend only u few hundred yards away. Daily Fashion Hint MEN ARE GOOD EATERS as a rule, but we’re not afraid they’ll eat up too much of qur profit and so we serve generous portions. " Yes, despite the high:cost of foods, materials, labor, -etc. —we can still give you qual- b ity food, weéll codked, neatly served: at : moderate 'prices. ke During thg absence of The Pioneer’s regular society report- er, those who have items of per- sonal interest or, social interest are asked to call Phone No. 13 or 402 in reporting these events. The same courtéous oonsidera- MRS HAMMOND. ENTERTAINS Mrs. Fred Hammond of Fifth ward | \ entertained at four tables of bridge | Tuesday afternoon, following' which | | | l i | ! | tion will be given items of this nature as in the past, when the | source is known. v et | | | William Rogers of Nary is- trans- acting business in Bemidii this week, | F. W. Noble of Turtle River was a business vlsntm:,xg Bel?nd',p Tn‘es.day. “Ed Tostrud of Buena Vista ‘was a | bétween | train vigitor Bemidji Tuesday. SARIL £t ¢ “No. 1 April sturngé eggs, dozen at Troppman’s 37c a 1t1-11 Sthol went to Pinewood her brother, Miss Matie last evening to visit George Sthol. . 5 FASCINATING NEW BLOUSES A very dainty blouse whose soft lincs sug; fabrics for its Mrs. Dan Gainey, 1309 Beltrami | avénue, is confined to her home by a slight illness. d;:\‘clopu r, cuffs and front X ith plait _arc outlined with narrow Tinte A N 4 velopment cither in satin or crépe. | Among these are nine Eagles, three 4 L When in need of - wood, hay or| accordien-phited frills of lace o - eng]‘.:ais:édph‘g‘p sh?lgdsocletyfinl(l; be | The ‘blousc has an applied front and | Life and Star scouts and fiu‘ce Vet- l‘_\gulur (“Sto'.“w" that our straw, phone 542. N. E. Tuller. 6t1-14 | material. = Medium size r 2 | mack, Pat N},cLaue hliiirx:ws;nd i OF‘:" back, which closes on the left shoulder | arans. Their combined Merit badges cigars excel in every way, yards 40-inch material and { Johneon: at"the b g ¢ Mo, Moo and under the left arm. “The applied | {00 ae0 " riwe troop has i8 active We do not hear this as g N. G. Reynolds of Northern drove | - Plaiting. . _Pictured at top. i son e home o rs. Mc-| front is laid in plaits on the shoulders . o active s : i g 'y Featuring one of the new sleevs, the { Laughlin; 917 America avenue, to- ' and at underarm The drapery | Members, all of whom aro in high surprise, for we feel confi- i morrow afternoon. w ! is school with the exception of two dent that they should exce:l to Bemidji Tuesday. and attended to- business matters. center model clects to express itsell in satin arépe. The sleeves are lengthened ; with decp flowing culls, while the |considered members ~¢fthe Aid so- | the hem of the foundation. Medium | University of Tulsa. John Shicppey, Sbicha they ure le i deen Mlowing il WIile he | ciety, and are rged to be present at | size equircs $1a vards So-nch material. | el assstant scoutmaster, wos one tobaced they are made from. cY. was b s down collar. Medium size requires. |this meeting. . Pictorial Review Blouse No. 9555. | o¢ tno fiest Engles in Tulsa, and has For the, mild, truly satjsfy- shopping in Bemidji Tuesday. ., 21y yards 40-inch crépe. . Sjucs, 34 10 40 inches bust, Price, 35 | 48 31® 1O A MESE T % n in_ any fashionable collection one |MEN’S BROTHERHOOD ENJOYS cents Skirt No, 9553 s, 24 to | 42 Merit budged'to his credit. b wwill find the overblouse in one guise or Fifteen-inch hard ‘snd soft ‘wood another, -« Self.color soutacht - braid slabs for $3.50 per load at Bemidji Manufacturing Co. 12-7t¢ trim? thL- model :n Il)isquc (icurgcnlc g i e eyl at_the batfom of the group, which |E. church held a meeting last evening. ‘ Judge C. W Stanton loft Tussday | Tequireé 18ard 40-nch malerial for | Between. 64 and » ";fie]‘;’be;““;efe i U R y rug or'e ing ; TE ety | medium sizes esent. i1 BLE é . . H e [ ;;:f;:?alewati:lte{'l;:ez?fiil:t:?gt I::‘Illlst iy First Model: Pictorial | Review prlgielxl‘r}er wiis- cooked and’ served by ying On With the | # o e O At coukt, | ol . i Tt s choloh and sebved M1 AmericamLegion el Anders LALIBERTE & ERICKSON mehes: DeIst, nity sing was enjoyed for some time, IR L M. W. Deputy returned this morn- ing from.the. Twin Gities where he has been on business along education- al liney Sccond ‘Model: Blouse No. 9719. 34 to 16 inches bust. third Model: Blouse No. 9718, | dies, 34 1 46 inches bust. Price, 35 N1 Wil stbsamed Sas, 1976 i) Embroidery No. 1419, Trans- dozen at Troppman’s 1t1-11 bluc or yellow. O e e s e Dr. D. F. McCann is in_St. Paul this week attending the week of clin- ics held at the St. Paui hotel. Judge 'M. A. Spooner came home last eveningifrom International Falls, where he hasibeen attending district court. Sogd I Mrs. E. H. Marcum returned Tues- day- morning from a visit with her sister, Mrs. D. Tinker in Chicago. F. W. Kohler is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs, W. Z. Robin- son. Mr. Kohler. is ~from Watrous, Saskatchewan. ~ ke Miss Ruth Nelson, teacher of Eng- lish in the high school, spent the holi- days at her home in Albert Lea. She returned last week. ‘Washings done at Mrs. Amy Smith’s 25 cents per dozen. Phone 818J, Burt Clark. Ask for Mrs. Smith. / 3t1-11 Miss Esther Young returned to Be- midji aftér a holiday visitA at her Mr. and -Mrse-Aif. J‘,h,,w“_h“’ve.‘home in, Negnah, Wis., apd=hag. ra- gone to Seattle on a visit to Mr,|sumed her duties as teacher of Eng- Johnson’s brpther, and will returnglish in” the high school. about March 1. Misses Carrie L. Brown and Mabel Brooks left this morning for Chi- cago to spend a few days at the home office_ of the King-Richardson com- Robcrt‘ Given went to Minneapolis last evening to attend the convention ?grh:rg:v‘:rzfldve:ler& He will be gone pany before starting out on a busi- Stanton and Percy Riggs furnished | tng’and belonig to a Nashville post of | :‘ = i’ \ ness trip injo Southern Kentucky and |the music. the Legion; 3 | & '___Try It and Se [ § I have purchased the rooming Texas. ! - LN e i — }“’“Sc over Pflh:;ml',’s }}r” M N o - |METHODIST MISSIONARY i w;]rge wl:{xl‘:d 2 ;::.lt_;‘ esl‘n‘l;n:uy]l)x‘;gnclék;]: z ormerly owne y i as bille Joy ele- = I will t}ake possesfion }1]&1::5“;:5?;‘,‘:: FOR LACK,OF A BOY SCOUT SOCIEIY MEE TS ToMOnTOW bration of Hendrick (Tn.) post of the g uary 16. Henry Falls. 2t1-11 —_— Hi:?s?i’l‘;e;el‘}; Mt'e*:“glfg alzd;' L. | Jegion. The post claims the chicken ] The papers recently gave consider |, ;‘ox-eign Mist;sio:m?;' society ofotw(-: was “born that way." | a ac e a e = Mrs. M. F. Wilson returned Satur- | able publicity to the fact that a cer-|\[. E. church Thursday afternoon at il o = day from Duluth where she visited | tain physician lost himself in the|the home of Mrs. Hines. Half of the money for the erection ? E over the holiday season with her| woods while on a hunting expedition| A splendid program has been pre- ot the community memorial building to Paul O_ SWedmark' Prop‘ = mother, Mrs. Magnuson. | und was found two weeks later, nearly |pared, Mrs. Zentz having charge of be erected by the American Legion - starved with a raw partridge in his [the lesson study, “China:” Mrs. | post at Sturgls, 8. D., has been pledged 112 3rd Street e Bemldjl E band, because he had no matches to Mrs. Hilliar, Eighth and Mississippt, start a fire. It is interesting to notice left yesterday noon for Iron River. called there by the death of her fath- | how frequently in commenting upon er, George M. Jackman. this incident the newspapers have n 3 pointed out that “the doctor should WANTED—Garments and suits.made | y,vo hag a boy scout along, to show to order, also remodeling iilatest | pip, 1o\¢ to make n fire by friction and fashion. Personal attention, and £ind his direction by S Rl stars? prices to suit. Mrs.. William Bar- 5. lon by sun a ars, rett, Room 25, over J. C. Penney | ~“By reason of the scout moverment, Co. 20t1-31 | the next generation will be better pre- pared for such emergencies,” observes the Salt Lake City News. “To say the man suffered for lack of a match is to misstate his case. He spffered almost to death for lack of fire, and he lacked fire because we' have come to depend 50 much on matches. What he needed, in the absence of matches, was a knowledge of some earlier way of mak-, Dr. Earl Two went to Cass Lake this morning. Dr. Two has an offic2 in Cass Lake and does work there three days of the week. Mrs, Gust Sederburg left Tueseday aftexnoon for Lengby where she will spend two weeks visiting at the home of her mother, Mrs. C. B. Peterson. ing fire.” Some knowledge 111’5 the arts | “The club rooms are open every | Special while they last, 500 plants, of primitive man are desirable for all |Tyesday afternoon for the meémbers prinl:roses, potted h{'scint',hs, narcissi, | Who would seek the primitive wilds. |of the club. ! Férrnl:gk cte., each 15¢. Bemidji Floral Co. This is one of the great ideas of the b passing: boy scout organization. The finished scout, left in the woods, could make a 3t1-11 Thomas Porte of Movil Lake came to Bemidji Tuesday from Grand Forks to attend the Men’s Brother- | wigwam or a hut, and could estimate The seu scouts of Chicago were re- | o Iowitation hood meeting of the Methodist church | the general direction by his watel with | eently accorded the great honor of be- to call h’_; lql'- last evening. the aid of the sun. The boy scout or- | ing réviewed by Admiral Beatty. They | ten i d utfi ng | ganizers did not discover these things, | were lincd up at the Blackstone ho- 1922 Mrs. A. Carlson, who has visited friends at Fern Hill for the past two | weeks, was the guest of Bemidji friends Tuesday en route to her| home at Turtle River. i Karl Klug and family. are to leave ] ¢y for Coeur d’Al Idaho, | \l;g‘;::d:}ie; Tvilf‘l)::ll:cdthc[icr"fi;)me for | | Through the good offices of Howard sit for 5 about two months. They'expect to re- | | D. Gillette of the Chicago local council, HIGH-CLASS turn to Bemidji in_the early spring. 5 |Lleqtenu|t Keane, who for the last Phatngr-ph- ~ | four yéars has been assistant to the |, carly in the Mrs. Earl Hazen and Mrs. Allen commandant of the Great Lakes train- New Year. An- Doran entertained at Mrs. Hazen’s | ing station, is meeting the sea scouts other year home last night for Mrs. Kenneth F. | once a weck on board the Commodore, | may reveal many vacan- Kenfield. A miscellaneous shower was given Mrs. Kenficid. Sixteen were present. | saving crew I 50 accorded the sea | Then such ar- It | scouts the privilege of the use of el 3 il .. L Moote, ahd fl;:fi:;;’ | quarters, and the Hamilton club has | detieally . fin; '&\Eash., x".]hu: they have ;:unc.to spend‘l ‘| <‘xn‘erred it ,“.i"“nil,'g, ":nk a",d u"’; E A RALSH INCE +40DUCTION Po]:tr‘ails will the winter with relatives and friends. | services of an instructor. Each one | Hk be cherished. Mr. Moore accompanied them as far as Grand For | LWAYS MARKETABLE | ! expected that by spring thiere will | ) _ [ your Photo- Mr. and Mr v Brooks and | m‘: ,:ome,y, Beauty’s but a fad. | b€ some 200 boys actively enrolled in ; i] graphs here their son. Russell Brooks, leave this| g.o'aower. I the sea scout fleet. | {1 this weck. evening for Minnecapolis. Russell But | o Brooks will go to a southern climate, | and Mr. and Mrs. Brooks will retury to Bemidji in a few days. fire by rubbing sticks, could make a but they discovered that they could ficial progress.” Youth (with business mind): a blooming fine asset in the business of love; Miss Homely. still be used in an age of great .-u'h-; i-about seouting and Sea scouting. Later | refreshments- were served:-by: -the! hostess. ! s YEOMAN LODGE HOLDS ' | MEETING TOMORROW NIGHT | | The Yeoman lodge will meet for ,gw first time in the new ‘Moose hall, | vet' the Beniidji * Hardware store | hursdiy ‘evening. " ‘All members are | gzquested to be present and to ‘ob- | Hiserve the nmew meeting place? | (BETHEL LUTHERAN AID. | “ * HOLDS'MEETING TOMORROW | The Ladies’ Aid of the Bethel | Lutheran church will meet Thursday | ment. The hostesses are Mesdames ! E. J. Olson and George Berglund.' All are most cordially invited. | . i | ST. PHILIP’S LADIES’ AID t i ENTERTAINED 'I'OMORkOW‘ |~ All women of the congregation are 3 g 5 { ' PROGRAM TI!E' DAY NIGHT | The Men’s BrotHerliood of the M. | followed by a song by Dr. Earl Two. Dr. Palmer gave a most_entertain- ing lecture on “The New Dentistry,” illustrated with slides. | SURPRISE PARTY A surprigse party was given by the friends of Mrs. George Hibbard and | | her sister, Mrs. Clark, at the home of the former, about two miles west of ! Bemidji, the occasion being the birth- | days of the ladies, on Monday and | | Tuesday, respectively. About 40 people were present and 'a merry evening was enjoyed by all. i Victrola music, games, cards and a! ;most delicious lunch added to the! igeneral joy of the evening. i iEASTERN STAR DANCE IS I | VERY ENJOYABLE AFFAIR! | The dance given last night in the Masonic *hall was one ‘of the series of parties to 'be given by the Order of the Eastern Star. All Masons, their {wives, and friends are welcome to at- | tend. L A large crowd attended last eve-| ning and all report a very enjoyable | time. Mrs. G. O. Riggs, Miss Leila Broadhurst will sings All ladies of the church are very cordially invited | to attend and interest themselves in mission work. “LADY ELKS” MEET_AND ELECT' / OFFICIALS At the annual meeting. of the “Lady Elks” yesterday afternoon, |Mrs. C. W. Vandersluis was elected president; Mrs. A. P. White, vice- president; Mrs. Charles Dailey, secre- tary and treasurer. About 70 members were present! and a splendid report was given by the secretary of the yeatr's work. - tion of a volley-ball class, and Mrs. W. A. Chichester was appointed man- ager of the two teams. | BEATTY REVIEWS SEA SCOUTS | tel, and the admiral shook hands with | each one of them, and asked questions i he gave the whole group an interest- ing talk about the work the British sea sconts rendered, patrolling uu;‘ - cogst during the war. - | the naval training boat anchored just! nment life | | oft Grant par The govi | of the seven districts of Chicago will | | soon have sea scout troop, and it| i SUBSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY PIONEER| —t afternoon’at 2:30 in the.church base- | * Plans were made for the organizu-f‘........' .." ‘ FOR CREPE OR SATIN A slightly bloused bodice with long waist and a draped skirt unite to make this one of the most pleasing of dressy Autumn models. It is suited to de- t each side, ghtly below on the skirt the lower edge 36 inches waist. pdy ex-service men of ‘New York city are being provided for by a mu- nicipal fund under direction of the Legion. o Boy relatives of members of the Eleventh Minnesota post of the Le- glon have been orgunized into a boy scout troop. .o The Home Guard company. of Fail mont, Minn,, has turned over its war fund of -$400 to furnish the bulldin, of the Leglon post. . . * War _vessels tied jup at - Seattle, Wash,, may be used ‘to billet unem- ployed former service men, if the plan of the Ranier-Noble pbst succeeds. B PN 2 Ul P,gfi"!}"l’“'g“&m ‘obsorbed by the American Le gion post there, The ppst will erect a community home, open to tliepublic. P A fourth of the freghmen law stu. | dents at Vanderbilt university are ex- seryice men receiving yocational train- by its members from state bonuses. .o o. Midst regimental honors galore anu major general ruffles, Hanford Mac- Nidér, national commander of the = Amerfcan Legion, was received by his old reginient, the Ninth infantry, sta- * tioned at Houston, Tex. A loving cup was given him Dy the men. 'THE PIONEER WANT ADS| BRING RESULTS | = | | | ~~THURS. & FRL.— | ssccssossee LU UL T TR T TS £ FRED ANDERSON, Prop. a Tearing oft:the red sweiter lofsone: of ths ,boys they ran alopg, the. trgck, waving the dauger signal franticall The train was halted and doubtl many lives ‘were saved. “Nothing to' it,” said Scout Swingholm when peo: ple tried to overwhelm the lads with ' praise. “Wo just did a good turn and, that's what, boy scouts are for.” The tree was one which some bee hunters had evidently felled and ran, away from in dismay when they saw it had fallen in so precarious a place. The contrast between the conduct of the boys and that of the men speaks for itself, Once again, “We can't help being proud of ‘em.” TOP NOTCHERS ONLY. Troop 5 of Tulsa, Okla., has nothing but merit badge scouts in its ranks. members who are freshmen in the Suvscribe: for - e Dally ' Ploneer. Y Opened New Jan. 1, 1922 CATERS TO COMMERCIAL TRADE AND STEADY ROOMERS BY DAY, WEEK OR MONTH Modern in Every Detail Hot, Cold Water in All Rooms Bath in Connection Rates Reasonable H OPEN DAY AND NIGHT = 3023 THIRD ST PHONE128 = LT T ATV LU T (Next to Rex Theatre) BEMIDJI LT T LU LT and so beautifully done, too! Give us a call, and we'll re- turn your Clothes"fresh and clean. Family Washings 10c 1b—80c minimum Bem. Steain Laundry “Phon¢ 195— Away with all sad irons, wash 1 tubs and boards! Such implements are obsolete and belong to another age when houscwives may send " their Laundry to us and have it done at such little cost— will take you our New Year Greetings and We suggest that you make a New Ycar’s resolution ‘to induce all your friends to- come to us and cies in our cir- cles of friends. Make an ap- pointment for Hald(erup Studio E T L T T T And that’s “going some?’ WE ARE OFTEN TOLD by the casual, as well as the after knowing-the quality of Phone 82 ing_smoke buy.our cigars. l I8¢ midjl LU T L T LT T l’l',lmllll"lll“lll" Food Prices f-lre DOWII Co_n]e in and try our Service and_' Cooking. Once a Customer—- Always a Customer. E very drp'p in food prices isreflected on our bill-of-fare. T T e