Old News

International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926

December 27, 1917 · Page 1 of 4

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THE' INTERNATIONAL FALLS keep from freezing. Minnesota right in line with the decendants of the pilgrims on the planted by dry, but may be fed^ the purpose of economy when General Rules- for Mash Feeding Mayflower and the-cavaliers at Jamestown. If the hens eat too much reduce eluding waste products, usually "My friends, you who came, like me, across the water, you owe AND BORDER BUDGET ble scraps in quantity, among tlie the amount of cornmeal or close the an undying debt of gratitude to this country. We came here poor ingredients. To maintain the necessary hopper a part of the time if the Publishers of the Ofticial County Proceedings and empty handed, and America opened her arms and took us in. exercise, wet mashes when fed/? fouls are getting too fat .pursue the INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY liberally should be given at night We can attain any social or. economic position in the country, save same policy if they eat too little only. 3*. GEO. P. WATSON, Editor and Manager mash, increase the amount of, cornmeal that of President of the United States. If we had stayed in our and feed less grain in the rut with our limited opportunities, in the old country, we probably Entered at the Pont Office at International Falls. Minn., §eeond-class^Matteit $3000.00 morning and at noon. Milk by-products—skim should have been hod carriers, many of us." SUBSCRIPTION RATES: U. S., $1.50 FOREIGN, $2.00 PER YEAR. milk, sour or butter CITY PROPERTIES FOR SALE milk—are partial substitutes for the at very low prices if taken now. JOHN J. ROSS FEEDING FOR WINTER EGGS bleef scraps. When these are given A happy New Year to you and yours. 8 Six Room Houses in Good liberally, reduce the proportion of Condition and Desirable Location We are pleased to be able to reproduce By A. C. Smith. beef scraps in the dry mash to 10 Any individual or nation capable of poisoning Red Cross bandages, FOR SALE AT ONCE. S the followng beautiful tributes per cent. The essentials for good winter egg or any of the other revolting atrocities of which the kaiser's to "the life and character of Wet mashes have largely sup­ production are: CALL TELEPHONE NUMBER 204 the late Supt. John J. Ross, who was agents have been guilty, should be destroyed from the face 1. Mature pullets, or hens that so well known and highly regarded of the earth. mounted early. 7 in our city while superintendent for §3 2. Comfortable quarters. (Roomy the & O Power company, from houses that are free from drafts, Owing to the order issued by Premier Borden that no intoxicating "The Broke Hustler," which is the are warm, and have dry floors.) liquor shall be' imported into Canada after last Monday and official paper of the Abitibi Power To the [Farmer 3. Proper feeding for production —1" and Paper company of Iroquois Falls, that after an early date its manufacture will be prohibited in that of eggs: Ont. country, it looks as though the Dominion is going to beat us to •A a. A properly balanced ration, A fatal and regretable accident occurred national prohibition. at the mill of the Abitibi Power which means each ingredient or and Paper company on Saturday, substance, in right proportion to December 8, at 10:30 a. m., when maintain the bodily needs and in Not only will a grave injustice be done by depriving our soldiers John Ross, our general superintendent, addition to provide such material was caught in the rope transmission of the right to vote, but a grave danger will also overshadow of number one paper machine that hte hen may produce eggs in this country by withdrawing the votes of these patriotic citizens and instantyl killed.. We can insure your goodly number. The late Mr. Ross was forty-five at a time when such strong seditious elements are working their b. Variety sufficiently wide to years of age, was conceded by all heads off to weaken this country's war-time effectiveness. stimulate the appetite and supply who knew him to be the dean of farm property, including paper makers and was the highest materials!, for bodily heat and energy paid man in his line in America. and to furnish egg-forming ingredients. AMERICA'S TASK. The workmen at the mill paid high tribute to his worth when they met live stock, grain, c. A method of feeding that compells Saturday evening and passed resolutions fa' expressing their highest appre-ciation exercise. Congressman Miller, after a flying trip to Washington, will return of Mr. Ross and a wish that d. Sweet wholesome feeds. Dam this week to his home district. While here, since his return against fire, lightning, they be allowed to take charge of the aged or tainted grains must not be arrangements for his funeral. from France and England, he has not had an hour unoccupied by used. Services were omitted at the other public demands. e. Foods that are as far as possible churches on Sunday morning so that tornado or windstorm. everyone might have the opportunity home-grown and do not entail He has spoken to thousands and has stiffened thei will, justified of attending the solemn high mass cartage, because cheaper. the courage, aroused the spirit of patriotic sacrifice of all who have for the repose of his soul at the Roman Four classes of food are absolutely Catholic church. The office of heard him. He is doing his country the best service of his official necessary in a winter laying ration the dead was sung over the remains life- at the church on Sunday afternoon. The remains left Iroquois Falls, in He has a message, and by a convincing sincerity, he "puts it 1. Grains—for energy, heat, flesh charge of friends Monday morning, and egg forming materials. Usually across." No man in this country has had a greater opportunity to for Portland, Maine, where interment The First National Bank took place Wednesday. fed in two forms—ground, called see and know. Official England and France held no secrets from mashes, and in the kernel, called him. Everything from the records, plans and organization in England Expression of sympathy and appreciation scratch feed. in a letter from our president, and France to the privilege of going to the front trenches of 2. Greens—for. aid to digestion, Mr. F. H. Anson, Sr: InternationalgFalls, Minnesota the firing lines was freely his. principally. "We have lost a strong man and 3. Animal foods—Rich in egg and a good friend, who will be difficult to I To him, now, as it should be and must be to all of us, there is replace in both respects. flesh-forming materials. The most INSURANCE DEPARTMENT but one fact in the United States today, a fact supreme, overtopping "Please convey to Mrs. Ross my essential as well as the most expensive sincerest sympathy in her bereavement, and all possessing—this country is at war. It is not the government, ingredient in all laying rations. and arrange to do anything 'M it is not some dista!nt people at Washington, it is not just the army 4. Mineral matter—an aid to digestion, sz and everything possible to assist her." supplies material for shells and the navy, and the auxiliary service, but it is our Country. and bodily maintenance a ssharp RESOLUTIONS. That means all of us, everyone, from the man with the hoe, the Whereas, It was the will of the grit, oyster shells and charcoal. man with the shovel, the man at the machine, to the man in the Almighty to tlake from our midst, on Hard Grains, or Scratch Feeds No Coal or Wood to Buy pulpit, the man in the oifice, in the bank. It is the poor and the Saturday morning, December 8th, Cracked corn, wheat, oats, barley 1917, our superintendent, John J. rich. No man is so humble or inconspicuous, no man is so distinguished and speltz all, or a selection of two Ross, in the forty-fifth year of his or opulent that he can escape. or three. Everything being equal, life. corn and wheat preferable on account The one supreme fact for every man, woman and child it that Mr. Ross' death, due to an accident, of palatability, but appetite was instantaneous and its suddenness his country, which is himself, is in the war, and every other fact has prostrated his family and many is stimulated by .a wide variety. must be subordinated to it. This must absorb our effort and our friends. We have all lost a sincere At present writing, good feeding friend and associate—one whose going life. Where it does not that man slacks. That man is helping prolong wheat may be obtained at lower will leave a void impossible to fill. IF YOU GET A prices than corn, and oats are the the war. 1 He held the respect of employee cheapest of all grains, pound for KEROSAFEBURNER This is the central fact Mr. Miller brings from the fighting and employer alike for his ability, pound. Feed separately, as morning, sincerity, integrity and loyalty. There line, from France and from Britain. America has the greatest task was no one who envied1 him his success oats noon, cracked corn night, ever allotted to any people.—Duluth News-Tribune. in life, for he rose from humble wheat or mixed three times per circumstances among the working It will cook your food orjheat your day, as equal parts of cracked corn, class by his own initiative and personality. wheat and oats cracked corn is SENATOR KNUTE NELSON ON THE WAR. house at less expense and no very essential in winter feeds. Use As a former pember of the Brotherhood trouble. farm grown grains except corn, of Paper Makers, he fully Me* appreciated their aims and, the lofty Senator Knute Nelson strikes right from the shoulder when which should be cracked and sifted ideals toward which they were working Equipment and Instalation ready as far as practical. he has anything to say. Here are a few things which will find a Feed about twenty-five per cent .We will mourn the loss of our ready response in the hearts of the loyal ones: for service only $7.50 of daily ration of cracked or whole friend, Mr. Ross the Holy Father "What kind of an educational system have we, if it is responsible has taken him to his last resting grains in morning twenty-five per place, but ^the memory of the man for the young man who shrugs his shoulders and whines, 'Oh, cent at noon and fifty per cent at will live with us forever. night. (With dry mash before the I want a commission. I'm too intelligent to go as a private. I've Therefore be it resolved: INQUIRE OF fouls, feed approximately one quart That we extend our heartfelt sympathy too much education. I'm a university graduate. I can't go as a pri H. V. Sanders to his wife and two sons in per day of hard grains to twelve vate.' this hour of their bereavement: fouls, but appetites should govern That we manifest our feelings and "I spent three years as a private and corporal in the Civil war, this amount.). respect for Mr. John Ross by floral 1008 7th Street International, Falls Minn. and I regard these three years as the best part of my training. I Dry Mashes. tribute, to be offered at his funeral to be held at Portland, Maine. These consist of ground grains don't think that I would have gotten on so well as I have, without And furthermore, that these resolutions and certain of- their by-products, graduating from Uncle Sam's army. be incorporated in the minutes beef-scraps, and a limited amount of this meeting of our joint "You American boys—go out and fight! Die on the battlefield of mineral matter. Proportions vary brotherhoods and that copies thereof —you'll be dying gloriously for your country. The American boy be dispatched to Mrs. Ross as a but the following formulae are fair JOHN M- GISH mark of the esteeem in which the samples of good laying mashes when who dies in this war will come much nearer to heaven than the late Mr. Ross was held by our organizations. fed in connection with common slacker who stays at home. Watchmaker and Jeweler grains. Feed in non-waste hoppers. Signed— "And you American women—oh, I wish to God you women in These should be mixed thoroughly, The International Brotherhood of Red Cross work, you W. C. T. U.'s and you who are fighting for Papermakers and the International by weight: Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite and female suffrage—I wish to God you would do like your sisters in 1. Equal parts of corn meal, bran, Paperworkers of Iroquois Falls, Ontario. wheat middlings, finely ground oats, Canada and make your men enlist! Agent for Singer Sewing beef scraps, alfalfa of clover meal. "When the war started," Senator Nelson said, "a lot of people 2. 6 parts of corn meal, 4 parts of BOY SCOUTS ORGAN. began to wonder about Minnesota with her large foreign population. Machine Company and ground oats, 4 parts wheat middlings, IZED AT NORTHOME 'Don't you worry about Minnesota,' I told them. 'You'll find 2 parts bran, 2 parts alfalfa or X. Woodstock Typewriter. &- clover meal, 4 parts beef scraps. Mr. C. P. Ellingson has organized v* 3. 6 parts of corn meal, 4 parts of a company of Boy Scouts from amongst the Northome youngsters, ground oats, 4 parts wheat middl THE STUBEE ings, 4 parts bran, 4 parts of beef and has already started in giving if the boys military and scoutdrill. scraps. Suitable when, succulents Also dealer in .«• ar^ supplied in slight excess This is an admirable movement and Captain Ellingson deserves no small 4. 6 parts of corn meal, 4 parts of Wear-U-Well Shoes ground oats, 4 parts wheat middl amount of credit for bringing it into Sash and Door Factory Northome. Many a young soldier in ings, 2 parts bran, 2 parts alfalfa meal beef scraps fed in separate France today is proving to be the best and is being a valuable man for hopper and constant supply. Particularly IS NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS 55j&V. -f: well suited to light and active Border|Wholesale Neat & Grocery Uncle Sam just because he started out right as a boy.—Northome Record. breeds. When alfalfa or clover is grown We Are Well Equipped to do All Kinds of Company |j on the farm it may be omitted from NILLWORK the mash. A fresh supply may be There will be a dance for the benefit-of placed each day in an old berry the Red Cross at Ranier halltomorrow and you will make no mistake by getting C. A. YERNBERG, Manager crate and the fouls allowed to consume (Friday) night. Music by their prices before ordering 'elsewhere Kimpton's orchestra. the leaves. What remains may Wholesale and Retail Meats, Groceries, Fruits and Feed Ti be relished by the horse. 4 An addition of htree. per cent of ,' Abstracts and titles to all property Building and Contracting a Specialty in Koochiching, county furnished by bone meal is beneficial. One-half to Hone-Made Sausage and Hamburger All Work Guaranteed ^... «§..(„ one per cent of fine table salt should the Koochiching County Abstract Co., Etf V-' Give Us a Trial and You Will Stay With Us Official Abstractors, International be added to all mashes and hte mash $ •LARS STUBEE, :Proprt3§ Falls, Minn. thoroughly mixed. ,\ Our Prices Are Always Right and Our Stock Always Fresh Green feeds may consist of cabbage, fsjSn ... *.s 4c* Money to loan oii northern Miami' Vi -VJrf mangels, rutabagas, alfalfa or 2nd Ave. and 6th 80 .-f-T r- V'' ilkVita.'feiSLj ."V •ota lands. clover fed in racks, and sprouted ThirdS ksoaal Falls, Mia. 'Jevnefc Nortoa, Afoato, grains.,. ^53