International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926
April 11, 1918 · Page 2 of 8
OCR Text
*f-' rut INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS PAGE'THREE UPR CARE AN FEEDING® «^k'sndfeed TRAFFIC IN PROFESSIONAL CARDS OF BREFDNG GEESE 'Carry the Truth to the^Peopie' JOHN H. BROWN STATE IS HARD HIT °ducks Breeding Ducks Care aad FeetiinS -f House breeding in winter Attorney at Law similar to geese. They do best if Office over O. M. Carr & Co. provided with a pond to swim in. By C. E. Brown, International Falls, Minnesota They must always "be supplied with Thousand Saloons Closed in Crookston Experiment Station.-V plenty of drinking water. They DR. H. H. IHRIG Three Years—Introduction of /should be kept in moderate condition Geese do not require warm winter AND & a be or at in Liquor Into 60 of 86 Counties Dentist quarters. The floor of their pens re be a in is should be well supplied with plenty TOWNLEYISM Office oyer Holler's Confectionery Now Forbidden. quired. Food should then consist of of clean, dry straw. Falls, Minnesota International mill'feeds. A good ration is as follows Their food in winter should consist Equal parts by weight of bran of whole grain as, oats and barley First Big Blow Fell When Indian AS DEVELOPED IN NORTH DAKOTA AND GEO. S. LANGLAND shorts and-corn or barley meal, mixed or oats and corn, (equal parts by NOW THE GREATEST QUESTION BEFORE .-. Lawyer Treaty Was Upheld—Road with skim milk. Feed twice a day. If weight) fed from troughs, all they Office over International State Bank possible mix chopped roots, grass or THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA care to eat. Boiled potatoes or sliced House Laws and Safety clover leaves with the milk feeds or International Fall's, Minnmti roots should also be liberally fed. Board Orders Help. READ THIS BOOK feed separately all they care to eat. They shoiild be let out on range early Give them plenty of range. in spring, and as soon as the grass F. J. MeFARTLIN As indicative of the progress ol and clover become abundant this will Care and Feeding of Ducklings Lawjrer temperance in Minnesota and the results be sufficient food until fall. Ducklings should be cared for similar AND GET THE TRUE INSIDE STORY OF IT Office International State BaaJt of activities by the Anti-Saloon over to Goslings. A very satisfactory Care anil Feeding of Goslings League, it may be said that in one International Falls, ^Minnesota One Hundred Pages j*ation for them is as follows: For way or another in the last three years Goslings should not be disturbed three or four days feed one part hardboiled more thaii 1,000 saloons have been until twenty-four hours of age. At DR. JENNER PERRY CHANCE eggs mixed with three parts closei. The liquor traffic has been the end of one week, if the weather Physician and Surgeon hard hit. dry bread. Mix shell and all. Gradually TWENTY-FlVE CENTS—-Add Two Cents for Postage is warm. They require no artificial Office over International State Bank Only six counties out of 86 in Minnesota change to equal parts, by weight heat. Until they are strong enough were wholly dry in 1914. The of corn -or barley meal, bran and Phone 11 they should be confined to small movable Srst big blow fell in October of that shorts, mixed crumbly with skim Calls at Hotel Koochiching Night runs and coops, and these should E E I I O N I S I I E year, when the United States supreme milk and three times the bulk of Falls, Minnesota be moved each day to supply fresh international courl affirmed the validity of the Indian chopped green stuff as, onion tops, treaty of 1855. Enforcement ot grass. Keep their sleeping places lettuce, beets, or cabbage. Feed often Two Other Interesting Booklets Free With Each Order that treaty in Xorthern Minnesota, PHfNNEY & CAMPBELL clean. For the first few days they and liberally for about six weeks. begun by "Pussyfoot" Johnson, had should be fed dry bread, soaked in Lawyers 011 If they are to be fatened, feed in been held up by injunction, but as A E S S skim milk and fed crumbly. After ten soon as the supreme court decision small yards a ration of two parts International Falls, Minnesota Publishing days change to ground grain such as. Tri-State Co. £u disserved the injunction Johnson's corn or barley meal, one part bran, three-fourths shorts and one-fourth successors in the law enforcement W. E. LAWRENCE one part shorts mixed with skim either corn or barley meal. This branch of the Indian department milk. At eight weeks of age they The Rexall Store should be moistened with milk and, clamped the lid on the whole district. Box 595 St. Paul, Minn, should be read}' for market. If intended This made five counties and parts of fed similar to the bread and milk.1 International Falls, Minnesota for breeding pur-poses, turn nine others, saloonless. There was Feed little and often. As soon as they out on free range so as to keep them quite a fight over the enforcement in are three weeks of a~ge gradually DR. E. A. THOMPSON in good growing condition. Hibiiing and Chisholm, but the dvys wean them to grass and clover pasture. Dentist von again and those towns were made P. S.—Those interested in ducks, Buy War Saving Stamps Always keep fresh water before dry in December, 1915. Phone 245 geese and turkeys may secure bulletins them. If they are to be fattened, confine County Option Law Passes. on these subjects by applying to Office over International State Bank them to small runs for a week The county option law was passed Agricultural Extension Division, University or ten days and feed them on a ration international Falls, Minnesota by the legislature in February, 1915. Rr Farm, St. Paul, Minif. that law Minnesota counties were of about two parts corn and one of set up like*a row of bricks, and the W. E. MARTIN drys oo van to knock them down one Contractor and Builder after- the other. Elections followed fast from April to August of thai year Repairs Promptly Done until 44 counties were voted dry, and Phone 159 705 8th St. in each case the law gave the saloons six months to clean up their business. Saloons outside of incorporated cities DR. ELIZABETH MONAHAN and villages, usually known as Anaesthetist "road houses," were put out of business in the summer of 1915 by state Eyes Examined—Glasses Fitted law, which was 'bitterly contested in courts but upheld and put in force in country Phone 223 Office 800 2nd St. July. The counties made dry by county option began closing up their HELEN A. DE WITTE saloons in October, 1915, and dry territory was extended rapidly in the from all the nations of the world because Public Stenographer next three months. N Rex Hotel The 1917 legislature submitted a here my children |re free to reap the full prohibition amendment, subject to International Falls, Minnesota vote of the people next November, r. fruits of the best tnat is in them. Snd its only other act of hostility to NORTHERN MINNESOTA the liquor interests^ apparently, was HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION the bill abolishing country wholesale I love this country because it gives me houses, which were supplying many Dr. C. C. Craig ...Phone 223 dry counties with liquor from just over opportunity. I will protect it because it Dr. Elizabeth Monahan Phone 223 the line. But the legislature, as a Dr. Mary Ghostly Phone 301 war measure, passed the Public Safety protects me. Hospital Phone 79 commission law, giving to seven Office over International State Bank men, for the duration of the war, the My country is now in danger. The Phone 155 broadest powers for promotion of the International Falls, Minnesota safety and efficiency of the public. rights of my children have been attacked. Safety Board Clamps Lid. One of the first acts of this commission N E If I do not stand back of my country now was the closing of saloons in Minneapolis below Washington avenue, at 36 in all. This took effect May —if its principles are wiped frorrj the face W. M. LIRETTE'S 1, 1917. Then on June 6, the commission' issued its famojis Order No. 7, BARBER SHOP of the earth—where will I go? requiring all saloons to close at 10 p. m., and the serving of drinks to Frederick Hotel if What opportunities will I have, cease at that hour. It also prohibited FURS BOUGHT AND SOLD the serving of drinks to women in or from any licensed place, and barred" the iron hand of the Kaiser is placed cabaret performances and public dancing WAR from places where liquor is served. on this land? What will my money CLUB Investigation had shown existence be worth, if I am a slave? Wliat of a big illicit trade in liquor in the -Indian lid territory, especially in Beltrami right have I to freedomv if I allow county, and the Public Safety WEEK commission ne.xt ordered railroads ft them to take my freedom and liquor dealers to stop shipping MARCH lyi2*ol7t5 "wet goods" into Beltrami and Clearwater from me now? counties. JOIN A U. S. Takes Hand. WAR SAVINGS SOCIETY The federal government took a hand My country has offered me a rrs in curtailing the liquor business when lOFtga^e BUY WAR SAVING STAMPS the Reed amendment took effect July on every penny's worth of property of DECLARE FOR THRIFT a 1, 1917. This made it federal offense 5?lT every man in this great country. My to send or carry liquor into a dry state, and at one blow, lopped off money is not to be taken from me by the mail order business, of Minnesota WHAT ARE YOU OING brewers and liquor dealers in North force as the Germans would do if they and TO 5 BUY THIS Dakota Iowa, and also in South Qakota, which at the same date put here, am simply loaning it to I SPRING state prohibition in effect. my country. Duluth, after two hot city elections, closed up Its saloons on July 1, 1917, I am proud to do ray part. SThe drys, when forced to -, a second •k vote in Duluth on the question, struck We^ill get you anything from back by bringing on a county option a baby cab to a htreshing machine election, and Sept. 11 the county! went dry by more than 3,000 votes, every and meet any mail order city and village giving a .dry majority. price. We can do this and By this vote, the remaining ^saloons make a small profit the same in the iron range territory will as Sears and Roebuck, as with go out of business next month. the buying connections we have "Joy Riders" Banned. we cao buy from any factory The Public Safety commission was they can and at the same still checking up liquor traffic conditions, price. We are ^entitled to this and. next acted on complaints about the saloons in Martin and Pipestone .business because we will give counties, "oases" in the midst you better terms. Youl^ill of a large territory, which were have to send maney with the "joy order when you order from shown to be rendezvous for rid them while we only ask you a ers" In automobiles, -who cajne from long distances and went away with a SMALL PAYMENT DOWN heavy liquor freight stowed away in .when-goods are ready Balance. their cars. The Safety commission l-- to deliver and found satisfactory. i'id not close the saloons, but forbade That is worth something^ them to sell any liquor except and besides, we take all of the •This Space Donated by- to be drunk on the premises, cutting trouble of putting in ^claims, fUJ* jout the larger part of their business. etc., if goods are lost or damaged 0. M. CARR & CO. Finally, in January, the commission •4- while on the road. Are we not entitled to this extended the "bone dry" regime to all business? dry cpunties in Minnesota. This took effect Feb. 1, and applied to 45 counties S. E.THOHPSON&SOH a dry under county option and 14 14 "The Store df Quality1 that are dry under the Indian otners treaty or local option. tjr ii sia^!