Mower County news (Austin, Minn.) 1920-1947
June 2, 1921 · Page 3 of 8
OCR Text
I'lKiT^O ff wmm MOWER COUNTY NEWS, AUSTIN, MINN: ,W^.:'i ^i?-r Thursday, June Page Four r: 2, 1921 ?$ "What Do You Do When The "Star Spangled Mower County News FARM BURfeAlP'NOTES FLOWERS FOR, Meetings. it K). Banner? is Played? Do You Rfespectthe Flag? "The County Paper" Friday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock, THE LIVING -ANY ONE CAN Published every Monday and Thursday, _L Waltham. at Austin, Minnesota Friday night at 8:00 o'clock, Red THE ROE AND GANNON, Publishers Flag should be raised at sunrise flag fly from the same pole there Short Course Prize Awards, Rock. I V. E. FAIRBANKS, City Editor should be a double halyards, one for and lowered at sunset. DOIT. jr Nearly 100 editors of the state attended Saturday night at 8:00 o'clock, LeRoy. each flag. The flag should never be It may be raised at other times but the annual short course at should never be left out overnight, placed below a person sitting. It University Farm early in May. Prof. except when it is under fire of an should never be used in such a way Bristow Adams, editor of publications, CHURCH NOTICES enemy. On Memorial pay the Flag that it might become soiled. When Cornell University, made the awards M' '"Pr fMEMBER Have you ever stopped to think that you in the make-up and farm news department carried in parade or when crossed should be displayed.at,half-staff from Sargeant Evangelical Lutheran contests, in which about fifty with other flags, The Stars and cannot accomplish anything worth while, sunrise until, noon, and at the peak A. NAUMAN, Pastor. newspapers had been entered. Cash from noon until'sunset.' Stripes should always be at the right, without some system? prizes were provided by the publicity Sunday, June In raising th65 Flag1!to half-staff or the place of honor. The News is the buyers' guide. 5. department Jof |he,}. Minnesota State Cii 10:00 a. m., Sunday school 11:00 a. When the Flag is used in unveiling half-mast, it should always be run to All large business is done by a system be«ause Fair. The Bemidji Sentinel the won. SUBSCRIPTION RATES m., sermon and Holy Communion, service the peak and then lowered one a statue or monument, it should it gets better results. first prize for make-up, with the Per Year, in advance $2.50 in charge of Rev. C. F. Kachel of never be allowed to fall to the ground breadth of the Flag.Tn retiring it, Shakopee Tribune second. Honorable Six Months $1.25 St. Paul p. m.. People's 7:45 Young li you will put a little system in your man... mention was given to Montevideo, it should first be run back to the but should be carried aloft to wave Single Copies -05 service 8.20, sermon by the pastor, A. ner of saving, we think we can safely say it News, Milaca Tribune, MOWER peak, then retired.4 It should never out, forming a distinctive feature during Nauman. Welcome to all. Official Paper of Mower County COUNTY NEWS, Swift County Monitor, will double your deposits. be allowed, to totigh th£ ground. the remainder of the ceremony. Park Rapids Enterprise, Grand When the "Stair Spangled Banner" When the Flag is placed over a bier Scouts May Get Badges Now. Entered as Second Class Matter at Rapids Herald-Review and and Ashby It will cost you nothing to try the experiment is played or sung, stand and remain or casket the blue field should be at Second Class Scouts and Tenderfeet the Post Office at Austin, Minn., under Post. The Wadena Pioneer-Journal at this bank. standing at attention in silence until the head. If used as an altar covering the act of March 3, 1879. won the farm news department may get thfeir badges now by the payment it is finished. When the flag is passing the Union should bef at the right contest, with the Northfield News of five cents for the Tenderfoot on parade or in review, if you as you face the altar, and nothing second. Honorable mention was given One pushing advertising merchant badge arid ten cents for the Second THE AUSTIN NATIONAL BANK the Sleepy Eye Herald-Dispatch, does more to bring thrift into a community are walking, halt if sitting, rise, should be placed on the Flag, except Class Scout badge. the Bemidji Sentinel and the Warren than fifty who huddle by stand, at attention, and uncover the Holy Bible. The Flag should Medals for the winners in the field their stoves and wait for business to Sheaf. The Flag should never be worn as never be reversed except in case of day events are ready and may be had be brought to them by the energy of the whole or part of a costume. As distress at sea. by applying to the scout executive. someone else, remarks the^ Odeyolt Sells Hides For 90c OF a badge it should be worn over the News. A dozen live business men V, AUSTIN, MINNESOTA Buy Laces For 75e left breast. In decorating, the Flag Scouts Hike Saturday. Dedicate New Flag Pole. reaching out in the byways and hedges should never be festooned or draped Father Gmeinder was the main for business make a town hum with All Boy Scouts will start on a hike (Continued from Page One) prosperity, and the town owes them speaker at the dedication ceremony Always hung flat. If hung so stripes Member of Federal Reserve System Saturday morning at 9:00 o'clock, to much for the hustle and bustle within are horizontal, the Union should be for the new flag pole at St. Peter's complete their first and second clafss its borders. Don't be a sponge and laces for high topped shoes for which in the left hand upper corner. If Resources Two Million Dollars parochial school Memorial day. The scout tests. They will meet at the simply absorb: show a little enterprise he paid 75c. He compared the number money for the new flag and pole was hung perpendicularly, the Unjon Library, and each must have raw materials and spirit of helpfulness in the of bushels of corn which it would raised by the children of the school should be in the right upper corner. to cook dinner for himself at town where you live, and to some extent take to buy a farm machine during When the national flag and another join hands with others in keeping under the direction of Sister Annsel- the war with the amount it would take your town to the front.—Taylor at the present time where 120 bushels Herald. was required at that time it would Returns After Years In China. 5 take at least 600 or 700 bushels for Resolutions. Miss Josie Horn of LeRoy, who has the same machine now. Mr. McNelly just returned to America after five then showed how the farmers would We, the Ben Franklin Club of the years of missionary service in China, have to try to find some remedy thru First Congressional District of Minnesota, is spending a few days with her sister co-operation. in session at Austin, Minnesota, Mrs. C. C. Leek. Miss Horn will Friday and Saturday, May 27 and Gives Steele County Statistics. speak at the missionary meeting at 28, 1921, do hereby Mrs. C. F. Cook's home tomorrow. Mr. Rieke then introduced Mr. Resolve, That we vigorously protest Schaefer of Steel County who talked Collar Bone Fractured by Fall. against any revision of the Postal on the Statistical routes. In Steele Little Thressa Uzlik, daughter of Regulations governing second class county the federal and state organizations Mr. and Mrs. Frank Uzlik of this city, matter looking to the return of the have conducted a cost of production who is staying at the Peter Rosenthal former flat rate computation. Believing campaign including twenty-three home of Austin, in climbing on that the present law is functioning farmers in the countyv Xhes© farmers a table day lost her balance and with justice to all, and that any were visited qther day by a ev$ry fell, fr ing her collar bone. revision at this time would serve no man hired for that purpose. He kept good purpose, we ask our Senators actual record of everything that was ReserveJfcujk Gets $6,000,000 in East and Representatives in Congress to spent or bought and every minute of Contiijuro demand for money from vote and use their influence to retain time spent in producing a crop. northwestern agricultural regions as the present rates. These routes were also carried on in tlj$ spring crop season advances have While we fully believe in the rights other sections of the state and United nefsesitated the borrowing of $6,000,0^0 of all men to organize to promote States and Mr. 'Schaefer compared from the New York Federal Reserve their mutual interests and to better 1/ Vt? Cottonwool county which is,, mofe of bank by the Federal Reserve conditions under which they work, a grain county with less livestock, to bfchk of Minneapolis. More than two yet we adhere just as firmly to the Steele. County a livestock county simliar ws^eks ago the Minneapolis bank, principle that every conscientious to all four counties represented which had been out of debt for approximately workman is entitled to employment at that meeting. Some very interesting six weeks, borrowed $2,000,000, regardless of his affiliations. There figures were given. Where the in the east which it repaid fore'' total income above tost in Steele ten days ago. A new increase in Resolved, That we condemn the attempt county per farm was over $1900, the money demand has now forced the now being made by certain organizations total income per farm in Cottonwood bank to borrow again. to curtail production and county was a little over $700. Of 33 5 '3 iaj indirectly increase wages by their demand Hereford Barbecue Is Set For June 8. course after the interest on investment of a 44-hour week, and that in 'Hereford breeders of Minniesofa was taken, out Steele county had combatting this demand we are fully will gather at Balaton, Minnesota, a very small actual profit, while Cottonwood in Accord with the work now being on the ranch of Lincoln Anderson, on county did not make expenses done by the United Typothetae of June 8, for their seventh annual picnic per farm. Steele county showed Minneapolis arid St. Paul. and barbecue. R. J. Kinzer, secretary .mi average of two hours more We realize that at the present timfe of the American Hereford wMc per day than oVttonwood county, that there is a shortage of student JUNE SALE ON SUMMER COATS Breeders association, will speak, J. bi^t at the end of the year the farmer printers and in order to furnish further S. ones, secretary of the Minnesota -]jac| |something to show for his work. incentive for young men to take association, announced arrangements W Schaefer brought out the fact up the printing trade, for the barbecue. that where Cottonwood county paid Resolved, That^we recommend that rt:' freight on some 24 to 30 lbs. of raw ONE LOT OF COATS, WORTH $17.50, ON SALE FOR ONLY $l&£^tpSe are strictly all wool Jersey, threequarter an attempt be made to have the work farm products, Steele county paid toe of High School students in any printing length, plain notched, collar, belt all around, sizes 16, 18* 36* 38—a genuine bargain for those who freight on 1 lb. of product in the form W E office, under a competent instructor, want a good serviceable, splendidly tailored coat of all wool material,^for -#nly $12.50 of butter or cheese, or in the case of accorded suitabtescredit by the pork or beef the diffreence was not ONE LOT OF COATS, WORTH $22.50, ON SALE FOR ONLY $15.0()."^J^ this lot you will find both three-quarter Board of EducatlorijrJu^iji the subject quite as great. In general you might of Manual Training full length coats, loose back models and others with belt all around. Materials are in Velour, Silvertone, say that the result of this statistical and During our stay in Austin, we have Tinseltone, Homespun, Covert and Serge—sizes range from 16 to 44* none ever offered for less than $22.50, now route showed very clearly the advantage been entertained in a most delightful WATCH REPAIRING livestock farming has over grain on sale for only J. r.Svf...1 $15.00 manner by the printers and publishers farming under present conditions. We guarantee Satisfaction at All other Summer Coats—with the exception of Tweed Motor Coats and the new Golf Jackets, that are just in— of Austin and their friends. We are County Agent McNelly then explained reasonable prices especially indebted to R. J. Thomson all wrappy garments, full length coats and shorter ones, models that have sold at $27.50 and up to the National Farm Bureau including of the Oakdale Farms for his personal C- L. JONES $50.00, are all included in this sale, at discount of 25%, from regular price. Referendum and the sixteen questions interest which was evidenced at were voted upon. if 412 N. Main St. Austin, Minn. every point, for his courtesies and entertainment JEWELER Dainty Summer Frocks,! at the Oakdale Farm J^fws advertising brings results. near Blooming Prairie, and for his assistance in arrangements for the trip to the Geo. A. Hormel & Co. packing plant. jNeVfer before hav6 we sold so many dainty summer Frocks, so early in'the season— To A. G. ("Doe") Rutledge, Assistant and there is a reason—never before have we been able to show such ail "attractive as Commissioner of Immigration, and not for several seasons, have we been able to make such .attractively sortment, for his assistance and contributions to prices on them—this is we are having to wire for others, every„|ew days— low why the success of the meeting. they go out almost as fast as they come in. We are also indebted to the Automobile Club for automobiles furnished ORGANDIE FROCKS, in either all white, light pastel shades and also in navy and E A E at various times for the entertainment brown, exquisitely trimmed and daintily made, priced ....$15.00 to $30.00 of the visiting printers and their VOILE FROCKS, in plain colors, light patterns and also in dark fldtal designs. Many families, to Mr. Jay C. Hormel and of are quite dressy enough for any social gathering, or for Church or Street the Geo. A. Hormel & Co. for courtesies them wear, others are just what you will want for afternoons at home, picnics,, ^^tc. during our visit to their plant THURSDAY & FRIDAY— Sizes range from 16 in Misses to 46 inch measure in women's sizes, AM to the ladies of the Central Presbyterian bus W.LI^AM S.,HAR^ priced ..Y ..w $5.00 to $19.50 Church for the excellent banquet in the church dining room to Miss "O'MALLEYOF THE M0USTED" GINGHAM FROCKS, suitable for home or street, for afternoons or even DAINTY Tayne Burgess for her Bibliography more formal..oecasioitik priced.. 'vv ••$5.00 to $22,50 of Advertising Books to Mr. Theo. R. Foster and the Miller Saw-Trimmer noLH I A tale of the law of the Great Northwi Co. for their contribution to the •PATfffi NEWS 1 interest of the meeting and to the Austin Business Men's Association "f i-• June, Sale SATURDAY— tBF~i and the Elks' Club for the courtesies JACK PlCKFQRD and use of their rooms during the 103-. meeting. "THE MAN WHO HAD EVERYTHING" Be It Resolved, That a copy of these on MILLINERY Resolutions be sent to each of the Tr SUNDAY— persons mentioned above and that a copy be spread upon the permanent OWEN tyOORE records of the Club. ,Our entire line of dark colored Hats— number of choice, attractive (Signed) C. C. CAMPBELL, jkny HOULD A MAN MARRY" wp -v tr 'g|§ 1 R. P. WILLIS, ^models in this collection—hats (•.that you will feel proud to wear on any occasion, and E. K. WHITING, .r 5DAY— J. P. COUGHLIN, %T with your very best suit or frock—and siUl%lfeiB-|H&t wfll be just what you will want CHARLES RAY M3 Committee on Resolutions. iftjJvjV"-~ 'K & /for auto trips and for general ear. Your choice of this entire lot, HALF PRICE. Rose Creek Higher Than For Years. Many other smart Sport Hats and Sheer, Summery Hats at reasonable prices. On account of the extremely heavy vety ,1 rains Rose Creek has swollen to immense J- .ivV- proportions. According to the a elder residents in this- section the v. creek is much higher this year than A I N E E *3 K* for many years before. W O iikSrfi* i'S.M'w-i.i- iiiif AS I'-ft'.mu Yy GOODS COMPANY A I E E N I N it Scouts Should Register Now. l:r Boy Scouts, who desire to become A fc S O W S members of the Boy Scout band 2:30 E if 5 7:30—9:00 should register immediately, as the IJSS registrations close this week, James '.V.-.,, -1 II I' rJ ^£4, Prevratil, scout executive, announced.