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FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 19, 1922/ # 1 THE BEMIDJI DAILY :PIONEER — — { PAGE THREE _JIIIIIIIIHIHIIIIII|I|IIIII|IIIIIIIII|||||||||IIII|I||IIIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIIIIIIIlHIIIIIHIIHHIflIHIIHIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII!HIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl!II .sIHIIIlllIIIIIII|llIIIlIIIHIII"II||IIIIIIIImIIIlI"IIIIIIIIllI|IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIllllmIIIIIIIIHHIIHIHHIHHIHIIIIIIH MARKET BASKET 'THE MERCHANT V WHO ADVERTISES HIS WARES AND PRICES IS NATURALLY AF AIR DEALER DE llIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIlIIIIIIlllllmlllllllllfllll IHiIIIIHlIIll!IIH |||III|I|IIIIIIlIIllIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIHIHH!HIIlllllllllllllllllllliill SHOP! HEREn FIRST ‘THE HOUSEWIFE WILL FIND THIS PAGE A LABOR AND TIME SAVER IN o) ONLY grown tell you.” One'In a Thousand body and richness of sap. A perfected blend—air-cleaned—no chaff or coffee dust—“hot roasted” freshness—rich, smooth, satisfying. A coffee you'll be proud to serve. At your grocers in one and three pound containers. Your Grocer Carries It SAME P‘RICE for more than 3() yeats - when you use KC— you use less than of higher priced brands. Satisfaction guar- anteed or your money refunded. d “HIGHEST QUALITY” MILLIONS OF POUNDS BOUGHT BY THE GOVERNMENT Retains its fresh flavor in this moisture-proof container. * a few of the thousands of offer- from coffee plantations pass our ) exactmg‘lests and meet our strict requlrements. i ‘We pay premiums for certain selected mountain coffees because of their special flavor, “Your coffee taste will BAKING POWDER YOU SAVE MEET US IN OUR NEW MARKET Our shop now is cne of the mest modern to be found right up town—next to the Rex Theatre. FOR SATURDAY -{ Bacon, by the slab, or half slab, 1b 18c Picnic Hams, 1b Strictly Fresh/Eggs, doz.24c Hamburger, Ib...... .. 12Y¢c Sausage, 1 SAVO Meat Market EDD BROS. —Phone 66— Pure rendered !..ard, Ib.15¢] SUQSCRIBE FOR THE DAILY PIONEER ! through the proper angle the shadows, “Explaining” Miracle. In the twentieth chapter of II Kings, eleventh verse, one reads that “Isaiah the prophet cried unto the Lord, and He brought the shadow ten degrees backward, by which it had gone down in the dial of Ahaz.” It is a curious fact, first pointed out by Nonez, ‘the famous cosmographer and mathematician of the Sixteenth century, that by tilting a sun dial at certain periods of the year, can be made, for a short time, to move back- wards. This was used by the French encyclopedists as a rationalistic exe planatton of the miracle here related. 18DOY S 1| SCOUTS (Conducted by National Councll of the Boy Scouts of America.) BOY-SCOUTS DROWN IN LAKE Five boys..and threc men, all of South Bend, Ind., were drowned when a ‘boat carrying a party of boy seouts capsized in Lake Magician, 30 miles from South Bend. The party was en ' route> to Hemlock island where a summer scout camp was be- ing laid out. The vessel, a; 14-foot steel motorboat,, sank in the, middle of the ‘lake: ’ The lake is about’ 40 feet deep at that point. The dead included Jo N, ‘Taylor, age thirty-nine, scout executive; Ver- non C. Murphy, ,,e thirty-five, scout- master; Judson Taylor, age tsventy, assistant scoutmaster; James Taylor, age eight, son of Jo N. Taylor; Wil liam Kingsley,, age fifteen ;. Kenneth Borrough, age fourteen; Clinton Mathews, age sixteen, and Phillip Neitzel. Boy scouts were on guard duty while some of the bodies lay in state and also participated in the burial exercises at which taps were sounded. THE TYPICAL EAGLE SCOUT This is a picture of John Shepherd of Troop 6, Williamsport, Pa. He is a typical Eagle scout—the rank to which the majority of boy scouts as- pire. A GAME SCOUT Charles Murray, an East. side boy, wanted to be a scout, but his parents objected, particularly the father, think- ing, despite all the boy's explanations, that it was a military movement, Then came a sad day when Charles was run over and brought to a hos- pital, believed to be dying. In order to please his son, the father promised to let him be a scout if he got well. The boy suffered a puncturéd lung which began to heal, and as he lay in bed last winter he studied the scout handbook with might and main so as to get ready to be'a tenderfoot scout as soon as he is up and about again. A member of the Horace Mann_troop is teaching him all the scouting he can and tlie troop {s about to make the invalid an assoclate scout. The doctor has said that young Murray must practically live out of doors next summer and the boy thinks that that is the best possible chance for him to practice scouting. SCOUT THE FAMILY COOK The camp director at the Pasadena (California) council camp recently sampled_some biscuits so superior that Wlfil!lllfll{fllllllflllflilthEIIIIJlIII]IIIlilIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIlllllmllllllllllflllimliIIlIIIIIIIIIlIHIIIIlllHIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIHII IIIIlllilllllll|IlllllllIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHIIIiIIHIIHIllIIIIIIIHI[I'I]llfl!IIIlIIIllIlllIIIlIIIllIHflm 1. DING HER“GRDER JMmememwmm s | he dsked fhe ;to him whether jthe boy's mother had tbaked, them. ‘fi made them myself ‘right here at chip over an open fire. I do all'the cooking at home.” This latter rather unusual bit' of informa- tion led the camp director to ask more questions and he learned that the hoy's| father and mother were both dead and that he and his sister lived with his ninety-year-old dmother and an in- valid aunt. “My sister has been sick recently, so I do all the cooking,” the scout summed up the situation. BLIND SCOUTS WIN HONORS | In Faribault, Miph., they have a troop of blind scouts which is doing phenomenal work not only in scouting but ,in other ways. Twice in .succes- sion ‘this troop has carried off the trophy: for making the best showing in an efliciency contest and three boys of the txgop; Walter LaBelle, Clarence Peterson, and Arthur \Huhnlr won prizés .ifi the Humane’ <uclet:{» Sy contest on the subject of “Pre¥ention of Cluelty to Animals.” Anothef blind ¢ scout, Richard Gustafson, .xl;) won honorable mention. q BUILDERS GUIDED BY MODEL Ingenious Method Employcd in the Construction'of Hydro-eisctric Plant in Switzerland. In planning the mixing and chuting plant for the construction of the bar- rage de barberine, a hydro-clectric de- velopment in Switzerland, it found that many of the engineering diflicul- | ties would be solved through bullding an exact model of the site and then erecting the plant to scale. A contour map had fortunately béen furnished ] the American firm, and with this a guide the contour of the ground was reproduced in clay. - Then ghe towers, guy lines, cables and chufés .were ail built to scale and placed in the exyet positions that they were desnucd to occupy. ‘When this model \\ns ) uni«lwd it helped wonderfully In solving the prob- lems that had puzzled.the:draftsmen. The clearance required by a cableway, the location of the guy lines, the use of single or double guy lines, the bracing of the towérs—these and many other points were made clear through the use of the accurate model. There w\s also the satisfaction of knowing that the layout would be corrdet and the plant would function properly.—George F. Paul, in Scientific American. Are the Pleiades Dimmer? The question presents itself whether three stars of the constellution of the Pleiades have less brilliancy than for- merly, or whether prehistoric man had a better, sight than ours, of if he was wont to climb up the mountains to ex- amine the nearest stars, or if the at- mosphere of past ages was purer thun ours? This problem arises from the fact that we see from below only seven of the stars of the Pleiades and that the last three stars can only be séen by uscending to the highest summits, while there have just been discovered stones ‘dating from prehistoric times upon which the ten stars are engraved. This fhteresting question™in astron- omy and archeology has been br hed to the French Academy of Sciences by M. Bigourdan. ATTENTION! PARENTS Not long ago a pathetic letter camo into the national headquarters of the Boy Scouts of America from seont, expressing complete discoul Althongh he loved the Boy Sc America and thought It the “hest or- ganization boys can joln,” the writer said he had completely failed as scout. And why? Because his “fol made fun of scouting and all he tr to do as a scout, untll, “being human." he “gave up.” Where was the fuilure? scout who offered them when the plant was finqlly installed: d T THlS TIME LAST YEAR gleventh inning and drove in the run that beat the Athletics. homer with one on enabled o beat the Red Sox. Gha homer with two on gave he S a victory over the Browns. The English polo team, to play America for the International Cup, was picked in London. Jack Dempsey announced that Car- send penticr could outs to look him ove Creamery Butter, 1.1b prmts. fresh Granulated Sugar, lO-lb bags ‘Flcur, 49-1b sacks. \Dl" Pickles, No. 3 cans.20c .Jello, all flavors, pkg. . ‘Matches, full count, box.5c \Whlte Texas Onicns, 1b.11¢] 4A Coffee, special, Ib. Palmohve Soap, 3 for...25 a E Macar ni, Spaghetti, Egg Noodles, 3 for |Salmon, 1-1b cans, 2 for.35c‘ | Milk, pure, tall cans, | 10 for |Pineapple, Florida best, ‘ 23c| 3 adb i ssns s vas e c| | each ‘Seeded Raisine, in bulk, 5 gFancy Winesap Apples, | 2 Ibs for 2. |Strawberries, I | Bacon, special, Ib...... l9cf | Figs, Cocoanuts, CucumbersE land Bananas for Saturday.| e e e s e | Tcilet Paper, large size, special ‘iSun hine Brand Coffee, al-| ways a second cup, a lb \Rmheheu 1,000-Island Sala | Dressing, 2 sizes.45¢, 3581 alb ...... e v c ‘Jelly, 5-1b pails ........50c] ‘Pcanut Butter, bulk . .. .20c| 7 |WE DELIVER anywhere in| the city Free an. order of| |Groceries $5.00 or over—| ‘under that amount we mak a small charge, dependmg icn the distance. —CALL 851— Always at(Your, Service 1 With the son or with the parents? VARD HAS A MOUSE ON Y. PURRLE B MEIWHERE “THAT SHEM. FANCY YIOB\S , SECH AS MICKIE, THE PRINTER’S DEVIL | " GINCE | GOT YWAT NEW AIREDALE PLP," SE7 ANDM BROWK, “TH' O DIFFERENCE et CMY YBRD W TH' CIYU DUME (S AT MY w3 SURE: [N "ZEB PEYERS GUY EINS ot uF.s i CLARK 'WHO By Charles Sughroe © Wegtern Newpager Unin FWHO S TR | ® SEW WIS CAR, SET. He ANY PAID A GENY FER REPARS 1k THREE UEARS, AN 80B 00ES Al OF 2685 GARAGE WORM., SEA NOBODM KNOWS \T BETTERN HIN WWE'VE HAD SHOWS = | ‘AT You eouLo SeE Buti g NOY HEAR , FER SOME Time, " SEX OLE @sPn eRABE, ' A" HOW WE KIN HEAR'EM BUY NOT SEE 'EM'. AINY SQENCE WONDERRUL 7 ' " Gardner, Clcvclun«],-singie(l<ill the ‘3 pairs Moleskin R CLIFFORD'S. VVEEKLY’SPFCLALS 3 bottles 10-0z Catsup 2 1bs Cocoa, in }-gal Mason Jars J-gal Mason Jar of Honey ........ | $1.00 2 cans of Raspberries ............ 47c 3 4-lb cansof Appledelly . ........ $1.00 - Pure Maple Sugar, per W, 50c No. 10 cans Loganberries ........ $1.30 No. 10 cans Blueberries . ......... $1.25 No. 10 cans Blackberries ......... $1.15 ‘EOR SATURDAY ONLY! 4 Olive Cream Toilet Soap 18barsP.&G.Soap e Gloves 4-gal Churns ....... 4-gal Earthen Jar 5-gal Earthen Jar 6-gal Earthen Jar oY Clifford and Company Not Cheap Goods, but Good Goods Cheap Phone 160 - Phone 160 . nsist upon Kello ggs the original Corn Fl Also makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked and krumbled ~theyre wonderfil zie, 1 hopo have any wo're eal- ing Kallogy's Corn Flahes, 'cause 1 like s0 much v will get that away ! Kellogg flavor and Kellogg crispness are so different that there can be no comparison be- tween Kellogg’s Corn Flakes and imitations. Little follis quickly say, “Get Kellogg’s, Mother—please,”” because Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery or hard to eat! Kellogg’s are always so delicious that big bowls quickly dis- appear and eager little mouths appeal for more! And big folks appreciate the superiority of Kellogg’s because their flavor is so inviting, Wellogg’s are wonderful! Insist upon Kellogg’s—the kind in the RED and GREEN box that bears the signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator of Keillogg’s Corn Flakes. NONE ARE GENUINE WITHOUT IT! ./ CORN FLAKES 2 Around Town Gossip \H BURGLAR ALARIA AT TH' FIRST NATONAL BANK AGCIDENTALLY WENY OFF LAST EVENING AN' NOBODY AINYT SEBEW WIGHY WATCHMAN BIGES SINCE! I1E MA HAPPEN <O PARK MER CAR POMITIN HES RIGAY THERE o BAWL YA OUT," cez BEN OAVIS