International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926
September 20, 1917 · Page 7 of 8
OCR Text
,-'!i "'-v-w 1 "•••V -}. :'L ,' *£',**% Ty.lfV. *. r^W ft J*rfe ifW/Wd i" Aste^ 4 ,i.«.. ..M^v-vW-* ., ERNATIONAL FALLS FKltbi A E E I ———————K hrrit'A :*«»d .^uvjm* I KEEP U. S. Government 40 Per Cent Draft Quota BOW of clover and 30 for whpat'v8r*6ktfs: NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECI.OS- -rt$$ ^URE^SAIiE. ... In afield a rotation Will" then* be 4 To Control Sugar Most Be Ready By 19th ":"j 'corn following corn, going iftto oats [ft- rrrFPD /i*r mrv^ VA DHf9and sownMn the Notice is hereby given that default clover being has been made in the conditions' of a W A a"d wheat and plowed^Hhtief at oats Industry Will Be Taken Over Oct* Inequalities Entrainments 'Make certain mortgage executed by Hubert the end of the second year.-A fthe 0 ober 1st Prevent Price Speculation. S. Reinarz aiid Lottie Reinarz, husband Precision .Impossible. -. .Approximate j.i. x- .1 a r* end of four years the alfalfa field Answer: It is practical *Oj ,keep 75 tha time needed. It helps tide over and wife, of the county of Koochiching should be moved. Number to ..Go. ., i_ state of Minnesota, Mortgagors, to" breeding ewes on a• section the early spring season as well as oe Merchants State Bank of Red Lake a short period just before husking On the 30 acres that go back into feeding them on crop residue^ and Falls, Minnesota, mortgagee, dated the. in the fall. three pounds of rape or six Washington, Sept. 15.—The entire temporary pastures' of rye jand} rape. corn Be'cause of numerical "inequalities 15th day of July*,' 1915, and recorded' r, ,. frnm .pounds" of crimson clover are sown American -sugar industry will be plac :.j/oi.n?j« vpt-- in the last entrainment 6f draft men in the office of the register of deeds It is by the use of the wastes from 1 ,. around the edges and in the thin ed under government control Oct. 1, of Koochiching county, Minnesota, on the ordinary farm crops combined from different parts of the. state, it Sixty to seventy-five''cents ''for a spots just before the last cultivation, the 23rd day of July, A. D. 1915, at 2 the food administration announces, Will b(e impossible to send exactly 40 with a few acres of special crop§ pound of greasy wool Vs 'makihg the 1 N o'clock P. M. of said day, in Bqok by the institution of a licensing sys and the weeds of the farm it is pos- It has always been advisable to per cent of the certified men from farmer sit up and take notice.-'"Can of Mortgages, page 586 thereof, of the tem to include manufacture,' refining sible to|get the best yields in lambs stock the farm with western ewes Minnesota districts to Des Moines records of s^iid office. tlie profits of sheep raising ^'realized and imports. The step was decided and wool with the least expenditure. they are a hardy^ animal with a Said default consists in the failure during the four days entrainment eastern as on a typical corn'ftelt o(f on with the approval of President of said mortgagors to pay the installment With such a system* of feeding the good fleece and produce excellent period beginning Sept 19, local farm where corn, o'&'ts and' wheat of Twenty dollars (§20.00) which Wilson to prevent speculative prices old worm-infected blue market lambs when bred with mut- boards were informed today by Adju are grown in quanttt&s !,HoW large by the terms of said mortgage becam^ grass pas- and! to insure equitable distribu ture is more than replaced. The ton rams. These ewes should, be tant General W. F. Rhinbw, but the due and payable on the 15th day of a flock should a farm! hUve? Can tion. movement from one part of the farm ,purchased- during August,, as then July, 1917, that by reason of said, default •movement of troops will closely approximate sheep be kept on high priced land Beet sugar producers already have said mortgagee has .elected to to another furnishes the extensive they are in light weight and cost ,that figure and all boards where a cropping system 'is being declare the entire amount remaining accepted, a scale of prices suggested aijd frequent change of pas- ^ess than at other seasons. Cheap must have their 40 per cent ready. range followed? 'r-(- unpaid upon said mortgage to be immediately by the food administration which ture that keeps down stqmach worm gains can be made in the farm airid Notice to this effect was forwarded due and payable. The rise in grain values arid the means a saving to the consuming .•»'» and creates the most favorable j/the sheep brought into good condi- Thafi there is claimed to'be due and" following receipt by General Rhinow con- high cost and valuation of farm land public of more than $30,000,000 be 'payable at the date of.,this notice up£aid ditions for the small flock of sheep, .tion by breeding time, ,It is fnuch of the following message from lei to the plowing of', the blue Igrass mortgage and upon the debt securedHhereby, tween now and the first of the year. In starting to keep sheep on a'ch"P"' especially at present, to Provost Marshal General E. and pasture. Simultaneously with the the sum of Eighty dollars Cane sugar refiners have agreed to on rather farm there mast always be a ques- f,Ut """ecessary gams Crowder. $80.00), with interest thereon at disappearance of the blue grass came .,1- •u .than to pay for them. import all their requirements thru "Send 40 per cent-of your quota to the rate of 10 per cent per annum tion as A to how many will prove best.' the disappearance of the farm flock. a committee to be named by the food from the 15th day of July, 1917, an A great deal depends on the farmer! The first few days the sheep are Camp Dodge, Des 'Moines, Iowa, .be Np longer was there ..a'pljace for the administration, which will apportion no action or proceeding at law iv and the crops he raises, but is is the farm they should be f,ed lib- ginning Sept. 19, as originally "plan-, on sheep. If they were kept it wats on a otherwise has been had or institutea\ shipments among them. ned. This increment should be composed mostly dependent on the size of the era^y bay and blue grass and on to recover said debt or any part ther^- few acres of over-pastured grass Institution of a licensing system farm and fertility of the soil. Gen- receive all the water and salt that entirely of white rhen." which soon became so infested with will prevent hoarding and will insure Notice is hereby further given that, erally speaking, one ewe for every they desire. They have come a week Message Seftt Boards. the stomach worm that losses were a. stabilized price, according to food by virtue of the' power of sale in journy from th? range, beside .the Capt. R. L. Henderson, assistant two acres-will make a sufficient flock inevitable. From these, pastures the said mortgage contained and re-' administration officials. Within a day or two at the yards and the to the adjutant general in his capacity to command the. attention and care flock soon vanished until today you corded therewith which by reason short time the food administration trip to the farm, and so are greedy, as draft head, senlt tb local boards of the facts aforesaid has become can travel 50 miles through the middle of the farmer.lThere should not be will announce a price which wholesale operative, and pursuant tp1 too many sheep on the farm or else' thirsty and crave salt. They ca then General 'Crowder's message with the west and the eastern states without sugar should be delivered to all the statute in such Case made they become the dominant feature. I turned into, the old clover, that*is following addition: seeing a ewe with her romping an2 provided, the said mortgage will the consuming centers. On the other hand is the danger to be plowed or the first "In view of the fact that in many nc lamb under the shade of a graceful soori foreclosed and the land and premises year of not having enough, as then they 'S.r°wth of clover in the wheat ,or cases radical changes were made in described in and covered by said elm. ONE-THIRD NORWAY'S FLEET mortgage, to-wit: do not represent a sufficient invest-( oat stubble. If in the stubble .th.ey Ithe 5 per cent schedule of Sept. 5-10, Under our new system of farming DESTROYED BY SUBS Southeast quarter of the northwest ment to command the care and at- w|^ clean up the grain that has been 'in some cases more than 5 per cent where corn dops not follow corn or quarter (SE14 NW%) and the northeast ,of certified men being sent to Des wheat grow in the same field for tention they must have if they are !™ssed, but should not be left in unhalf quarter of the Southwest quarter Philadelphia, Sept. 15.—Mort then Moines and in other cases no men at a score of yearsr it is to be a successful source of income.!1" the7 graze the clover close. -In. (NE% SW'/i) and the south onehalf possible I one-third of Norway's commercial of the southwest quarter (S1/^ all, it necessarily follows that the 40 to place a small flock of she^p on because of this it is not advisable tendency for fall case there ls a fleet has been destroyed by Germany SW%), Section One (1) Township One every farm with little trouble and to have a flock of less than 50 ewes blooming, the light grazing will inexpense per cent schedule for Sept 19-23 can hundred fifty-seven (157), North of and prospects indicate that if the .'not be exactly followed. However, except for careful fencing. I except on small farms. Seventy-five crease the next year's crop,. Range Twenty-nine (29), West of the present situation continues long the Next they should go into the corn you will notify approximately 40 Sheep eat practically "every feed, bead will make a very handy sized 5th P. M. will be sold at public auction remainder will be sept to the bottom, that goes- into oats the next year. per cent of your men ^together with to the highest bidder therefor for fiock for a quarter section farm. They can be lattened as well as according to Dr. Fridtjof N^jisen, cash by the sheriff of Koochiching Here they can spend ten days to two the substitutes,, to prepare to leave grown by many different feeds. Corn, Although this is the sized flock to of the Norwegian mission, now county, Minnesota, to satisfy and pay weeks cleaning the field and eating jjfor Camp Dodge on or about Sept silage, a little clover or just corn silage be ultimately aimed at, it is not a the debt which will then be due on the in this co'untry. He was on of "the the lower leaves and possibly. a .few 19. Final instructions on' this matter and straw will produce a well note secured by said mortgage together good number to begin with for var- principal speakers at tonight'? '.Jession. ears froin the corn. They will not will be mailed from this office not with the sum of Twenty-five dollars fleshed animal. On the other extreme' ious reasons. A farmer will do as of the national conference stipulated in said mortgage as attorney's later than Sept. 16. You will receive it is the experience of an Omaha well to start with ten ewes and a^m,1 jm?e ye\ on the world's food supply being held fees, and the costs and expenses said final instructions on Sept. 17, firm that starts feeder slieep on work carefully with them, giving enough to shell off, 1S of these foreclosure proceedings under, the auspices of the American which will give you ample time to prairie hay and linseed oil meal and| more attention than such an invest- f°rget themselves. ,xIfrom as allowed by law. academy. send your men final notification." The said sale will be made at the finished on equal parts cOrn and oil I ment would ordinarily warrant. He th's field they should go to the qne "Our shipping between Great front door of the court house, ih the meal. Any grass or legume makes a jean learn just as much of the habits w!* rape., or crimson, closer, Britain and her allies was not considered city of International Falls, County of MILLER TO GO TO FRONT feed that is acceptable to sheep. Al-land care of sheep from 10 ewes where they will stay for quite.a while with jfriendliness by Germany," Koochiching and state of Minnesota, as ON SECRET MISSION falfa or wheat straw, blue grass or' from 100. There is not the investment l',°r ^ave additional feed at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon said Dr. Nansen, "and their quack grass are all highly prized, involved and the loss if the ^om the crop which will be xpndi- on Saturday, the 3r^ day of November, warfare has to a great extent been flock A. D. 1917. Washington, Sept. 13.— Representative Sheep in Minnesota have eaten, un- proves a failure is proportionately ,fra e, °WC!L, faV"?S un ess directed against, our shipping and Dated September 19th, 1917. C. B. Miller of Minnesota, a der observation, 576 out- of 600 kindsi less. The farmer may be poorly ad- c^n. are,ve1^ ^ense- is sl^ou 6 our losses have, therefore, been MERCHANTS STATE BANK, member of the house foreign affairs of ,weeds offered them: tThe only!apted to sheep raising and this can! "ent to^carry, youi-.^wes heavier than those of any other neutral Red Lake Falls, Minnesota. committee, has' beeri intrusted with common farm weeds which. are not! be discovered with less loss with 10 U.n e- er* Mortgagee. nation, and I believe^ greater also, the breednig season is at.:hantnJhis a secret mission to France by the acceptable are the barnyard smartweed, JEVNE & NORTON, ewes than with 50. than thte losses of this country." late in the year they must ,fye wfttch,- war department and the American Attorneys for Mortgagee, bull thistle and Canada thistle. Dr. Nansen was introduced by Jos. The present shortage of breeding she|,^^the^n Red Cross International Falls,- Minnesota. edj they are to f0 i.*,»20-lO E. Davies, of the federal trade commission, stock and its high price make it ad- and get too" much. 25 He will leave in a few days and will :.The "universal" appetite which visable to start with a small flock who presided at the session. return about November 1. ... rpi They should now go into. the-.aland sheep possess means that there is build up. The meat from such a', .... 7-^- Mr. Davies declared that the world NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE "All 'I can say of the work," Mr. 1 falfa which has been cut three tunes, no crop raised on the farm to which a nock can be consumed at A home, av-' war had made every nation which SALE. Miller said, "is that it will take me The large area of this crop m^ans sheep cannot be turned. There is oiding trouble of shipping a small embroiled go into business., "The to the British and French firing lines hardly an acre that cannot be glean-1 bunch. If you are successful you t!* J10* grazed too c,l(pse, Notice is hereby given that default great economic significance of the and that I will have opportunity to ,. which would mean freezing out if has been made in the conditions of a ed sometime in the year, so that the have an argument for your neighbors war,"' said Mr. Davies, "is that all inspect American training camps and the winter was bad. The clover certain mortgage executed by Otto feed missed by the harvest is eventually to join you and together you can the belligerents, and neutrals as Hilmar Waldof and Hilma Waldof, see how our soldiers are being taken fields will also furnish feed at this turned into a marketable product, -more advantageously buy a carload well, have gone into business. husband and wife, of the County pf care of in a foreign land. t. time and should be used nvtprefer- either wool or mutton. Koochiching, State of Minnesota, of breeding ewes and sell your pro-' "In England, I am informed, there In Closed Touch With French. ence to the alfalfa, because of the mortgagors, to Merchants State Bank duce co-operatively. is one plant which occupies1 50 square To pasture sheep on the odd bits "I also will see what the Red Cross decreased danger from bloat and of Red Lake Falls, Minnesota, mortgagee, miles. It is built and controlled by the of that, are always about necessitates crops But suppose you have a flock of is doing." dated the 26th day of April,*1916, harm to the alfalfa. If the first year government, and all the employes'to that the farm be enclosed A. D., and recorded in the office^ 50 to 75 head on a 160 acre farm, •Mr. Miller has been in close touch clover has not been pastured too the number of 16,000 are^in a communistic of the register of deeds of Koochiching in a tight fence. Such a fence sheep just how can you care for them on heavily this is a very good time to with the French chamber of deputies County, Minnesota, on the 4th day of government center. In England would be no higher than a 26 inch a farm that is devoted to corn, oats leaving enough for a ..®Q,od since the United States entered the May, A. D. 1916, at 11 o'clock A. M. of use today, I believe, there are eight woven wire topped with two barbed or wheat, and clover, a very com- jnter cover. If possible leave the old war. said day, in Book M. of Mortgages on spaced six inches apart, although million persons in the gvoernmetjt wires page 526'thereof, of the records of said mon combination through. the east excellent He has lent his support to the cIover as it will make an pay." office. a 33 inch woven wire with and middle west? On-the ordinary winter run for the ewes during pregFarm movement for congress to be represented Said default consists in the failure two strands of barbed would be wire of a quarter section'there is nancy. with corn stalks in the "parliament of the Allies," of said mortgagors to pay the installment When fed KING GUSTAV V. MAY LOSE better. The for the lower fence Vire usually about 10 acres around the jt carry the sheep through two an organization made-up of the of Twenty dollars ($20.00) which win THRONE FROM DUPLICITY would cost from $30 to $35 for 80 by the terms of said mortgage became house and barns devoted to barns thirds of the without the use representatives of the legislative winteT rods the posts about as much due and payable on the 26th day of and paddocks. There is a certain am- grain. Feed may also be obtained branches of each of the Allied governments. 3" o{ April, 1917. That by reason of said London, Sept 12.—A woman's hand more. To put a fence around a quar ount of feed^here that can be gather- from the last of the rape and from default said mortgagee has elected to may push another king from his ,» ,nv.estm^"t of about ed by the sheep in odd times, but the truck patches and fence rows Henry Franklin Bouillon, majority declare the entire amount remaining throne. The result of the exposure $£50 to $300 for wire aside from the( there must be other fields devoted jn ^he lots about the barns. party leader in the chamber of deputies, unpaid upon said mortgage to be immediately by America of the duplicity of the due and ^payable. posts, which may be a product of ^particularly to them. This leaves 150 As the lambing season approaches who has been here for several !v.., Swedish foreign office, which has That there is claimed to be due and the p.ace, and the labor, which of acres that will be divided into five jt becomes necessary to feed grain •weeks concerning the interparliamentary payable and there iS' now due and. payable .-s been giving aid and comfort to Germany, union, will accompany Mr. tin!pSC imp°rt?nt 'tem this|fields thirty acres each. in addition to tfi^ corn stalks and the 15 aU at oi at the date of" this notice upon .- has so stirred up the people Miller to Paris. said mortgage and upon the debt secured *c" Ten acres of one of these fields old 'clover pasture and lots. There that there wjll be an effective demand thereby, the sum of One hundred i: It is understood that Bouillion is It flust not be inferred from this should be withdrawn and be divided will be a shortage of pasture in the that King Gustav. V. abdicate. dollars ($100.00), with interest there©n returning to France to take a place ^bat good fencnig aiid the use of equally between rye and rape. The .early spring unless rye has been at the rate of 10 per cejit per annum The dishonorable part that Sweden in the hew cabinet to be organized. tfht nrap residues is a'l that is neces-| rye will provide the very early planted during the fifrst couple of from the 26th (jay of April, A. D. has played is being charged up to $•- will In the honor of the Frenchman, *ary to successfully produce a big spring feed and then can be let grow weeks of September. This fur- 1917, and np^actiom. or proceeding: at Queen Victoria. She is German born, law or otherwise ha? been had or instituted sliqpid April Mr.. Miller* "gJTve a luncheon today. clip of wool and a flock of lambs. No up. It be soiyn during the nish rye pasture the first of &.-• being a princess of Baden, and she toy recover said debt or any Among the guests were Speaker 'matter hpw carefully panned is the first two weeks of September in the for the ewes and theijr. lambs. It is part thereof. is clevsr and ambitious, and her sympathies/have 'cropping some of the icrops must be Clark and Representative Kitchin northern states, so that it forms a the first green feed and very attractgootj Notice is hereby further given that been with Germany. Flood,' Sherley, Fordney, Longworth, 'designed for the special use of the matty growth before winter ive, but she6p will not eit if, they by virtue of the power of- sale in said 'V4 While the king and queen of Sweden flb.ck. In case there: is no permanent Fijtzgerald, Madden, Pat Harrison, mortgage contained and reoorded sets in, If drilled in it will require have been to other pasture. This have little real authority, it is known therewith which by reason of the Fess Moore of Pennsylvania and pasture of any kind, then there two bushels per acre. It can be pas- should be grazed* very close-in order that the queen has great influence facts' aforesaid has become operative, Mondell. must be some area growing lcsgumes tufe(i -very early in "the spring by to make the most of it and then and pursuant to the statute in such' with the king, and she is a power ©r grasses on which the sheep may sh6ep because they graze so much ^when-sheep need it no longer it can case made and provided, the said roprtwill both socially and politically. GENERAL PERSHING'S MESSAQE be foreclosed and the lap# graze at times of the year whenjdoser than other animals. It should be left to grow into a mature crop She is being referred to in Sweden ijjMlll premises described in and covered TO AMERICAN SOLDIERS other feeds are scarce. It may as not be allowed to joint, for if eaten ^he ground for-the rape should be as "another Sophie."' It was Queen by said mortgage, to-wit: well be admitted thajt blue grass back after that it will be very slow fall plowed so that the seed .can go /South half of the southeast -quarter Sophie, a sister of the kaiser, who New York, Sept.v 13—Maj. Gen. J. does not do as well in hev central in getting a start. If kept down close in as soon as possible in the spring, SE%) and the Southeast quarter lost her^ husband, King Constantine, J. Pershing has sent a message to ^kE corn belt states of Iowa, Illinois and the Southwest quarter (SE% SW%) it will produce a wonderful amount' It takes about six weeks before rape the throne of Glreece. American soldiers through the American of Section One (1) and the Northeast Indiana as on other soils. Timothy of feed. This can be pastured until is ready to pasture. A very good It is now considered certain that quarter'of the Northwest quarter (NE Bible society which was made t)t clover or some of the mixtures the rape is ready and then plowed way to feed the ewes and the sucklunder in the election to be held this month NW%) of Sefetion Twelve (12), public here today. The message, will do much better in i.these areas. and put into corn. If left to ing lambs is to run them on the rape Township One hundred fifty-nine (159) that the governmental party will be which will be inserted in the small Alfalfa is a good crop, but there is grow it will produce nearly the nor- in the forenoon and on the clbver North of Range Twenty-eight (38) swept out of power, and that the khaki-covered Testaments given to West of the 5th P. M. will be sold at'-^ •considerable danger of :h)6at. Sweet mal yield of rye. during the afternoon. By doing this progressives and socialists will win public auction to the highest bidder the-men, follows: ^clover, the old roadsidel w'edd, is The five acres of rape-should be and feeding grain it is possible ^to by large majorities as another' result therefor for cash by the sheriff of'*1*8?: "Aroused against a nation waging •producing results under trial."If not sown as soon as the land is dry market March lambs before the Koochiching county, Minnesota, tO'*" of the exposure of the, double dealing waF in violation of all Christian principles, sallowed to become rank' .and woody enough to get on. It will need little first of July, thus leaving nothing satisfy and pay the debt which by the foreign office. our people are fighting in the it will furnish a very palatable feed will then be dtie on the note mqre preparation than for-oats, but but the ewes during the summer. If secured by said mortgage together cause of liberty. Hardship will be and can be pastured.. quite heavily. the soil must' be fertile, else the jthe early lambs are desired, feeding SwedenV Statement Not Satisfactory with the sum of Twejjty-flve your lot, but trust in God will^give Soy beans and cow-peas, the former crop --will be a failure. On good the ewes and lambs in the barn is soil dollars .($25.00) stipulated in said Washington, Sept. 12.—Sweden's you comfort. Temptation will befall now becoming so popular, are choice an acre of rape will carry 10 to 15 necessary. Corn silage, clover or al^head mortgage as attorney's fees,vand the statement concerning the use by Germany you, but the teachings of our Savior feeds for sheep, although the latter As and expenses of these foreriosure continuously, so if you only ex* falfa, Jiay and oats are the principal of the Swedish minister in Argentina proceedings as allowed by law. will give you strength. Let your valor is not so palatable as other: feeds. t»ect *o use it a short while you may sheep foods. and Of the ^Swedish foreign The said sale will be made at the as a soldier and your conduct as a It is left, however,' to an, 614 fashioned pasture the hogs across one end. In thinking tills over remember front door of the court house in the office, to serve Germany is not considered man be an inspiration to your comrades crop and to a popular hog feed Seed with a drill, at the rate of two that the investment for 10 sheep is city of International Falls, Com*tv of i': satisfactory to the state department. and an hoioor.to your country." to really complete the cycle of feeds Koochiching and^ State of Minnesota pounds to the acre or broadcast at not much mbre than for one cow V' r* at the hour or ten o'clock A. M. •*, as grown on the ordinary farm. the rate of three to five pounds. If that the 10 sheep will eat about This governtnent 'wants something discipline^|Swedeh, but. intimates Saturday, the 3rd day of November. f1'1. produces the^ eartiest 'oasture. It the rape will not be needed unfif fall twice as much as the cow/? that this A. 1917. more than a promise that it shall not D. that as long as that country is under ready to graze in spring Dated September 19. 1917: it may .be sown as late as the Jast'|ood is mostly feed that woiil^therwise happen again. It wants a prompt clisavowal suspicion of aiding Germany, before the green feeds ana the past^ures cultivation of corn be a total loss to the farm of the acts of the minister siSf MBRCHANTS STATE BAWkT that the embargp relations against have had a chartc^l t. Rape The remainder of this 30-acre .» Re* Lake Falls, Minnesota. that you should havea dozen lambs and of the foreign office, it will be more stricjly enforced, and is a instly popular very field should be in alfalfa. This leaves atid possess a cleaner farm. ais the isr,Secretary Lansing, is- quoted as rations JEVNE Jt NORTON, :. .that she will'he kept*on so short by sheep that carrj^cprn, oats result of the gear's sheep experience well lifced and four fields Attorneys ff«r ••rtgagee, saying that there is lib disposition that she Dfrftl have none to clover 60 acres corn, 30-^Graad Rapids Independent^ produces a liberal supiily^oT milk at wheat, and Inteniattoul mil^ Mlnnewita. on the part of the United States to to Germany. *!-.•£ spare "if. A*s«