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

December 11, 1919 · Page 3 of 8

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InpMttMpi whbi nw ,-y"ssjpM-5 His- *^xfc"'^-^-'iS,l^:^ INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS, DECEMBER 11, 1919 FEELS SHE COULD ing it down in later years and care THE INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS licenses and restrictions, mentioned COMMERCIAL CLUB AND should be taken to avoid leaving shall be in accordance with the Statt FISHERMEN HAVE MEETING SHOUT FOR JOY sharp snags, and the best time to cut Game and Fish Laws and the Rules jbrush is in the late summer or early AND BORDER BUDGET and Regulations of the State Fish Recommendations of the gam&dtnd 'fall, as at that time the sap is not and Fish Department now in force. fish commissioner by the Fshermen's GEO. P. WAT8«N, SMitor yet started in the root system for 8. That for the better enforcement Association and the Commercial Mrs. Morrison Is Rejoicing Over Her winter storage, and the plant may be of the foregoing recommendations Club regarding the fish industry in Remarkable Restoration to. Health Satere* at the Feat Office at International Falla. MIbb, aa Secoad-elam Matte* killed more easily. There is an advantage and existing Game and Fish Law?, Rainy Lake. in cutting brush before the a Game Waden be detailed to execute International Falls, Minn. "I could just shout for joy, I feel leaves fall, as the leaves aid in burning. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: U. S., $2.00 FOREIGN, $2.50 PER YEAR the same in the American waters December 10, 1919 so happy since Tanlac made me well of Rainy Lake and the waters Hon. Carlos Avery, again," was the statement made by immediately tributary thereto and Opinions differ regarding 'the best stand for something', an«i St. Paul, Minnesota, There are men in public life, wh'a Mrs. Charles Morrison, of 749 York that the work of such Warden be method of removing stumps, but it Sir: sfe St. Paul, Minn., to a Tanlac representative ethers who will stand for anything. confined exclusively to such territory, is generally agreed that a combination Agreeable to the suggestion made a few days ago. that such Warden be supplied with of a good power stump puller an.I by you in International Falls on or "I thought my time had just about What she There has been enough notes written to Mexico, boats and other necessary equipment dynamite give best results. Stumps about October 30, 1919, that the Fishermen come for I had suffered until I was 1 to enable him properly and thoroughly may be blown out entirely with dynamite, on Rainy Lake and the members needs now is a twenty-four hour ultimatum. scarcely more than a frame," continued to police the said territory,-and but a much larger charge is of the Commercial Club hold a Mrs. Morrison, "and had to spend that it is the earnest desire, both of necessary then when dynamite is joint meeting for the purpose of Judge Poll/ack, of the United States District Court at St. Louis most of my time in bed. For eight the Fishermen's Association and the used in connection with a puller. talking over an.d coming to some un long years my stomach was in an awful decides that 2.75 beer is not intoxicating. Then there is hope th it Commercial Club, that Mr. Alfred H. Where only a few stumps are to be derstanding regarding the Fish In condition and no matter how little buttermilk, too, may escape the ban. Powers be appointed such Game dustry of Rainy Lake, the committe removed, it is, of course, not economical I ate I suffered no end of misery Warden. to buy a puller, and if one ca hereunto subscribed take pleasure in •after nearly every meal, and sometimes 9. That the Ninth State Fish Hatchery, not be rented conveniently, the use reporting that: It may be possibly that the only hope Carranza has of uniting I went a couple of days a? a as provided for in Chapter 401, A meeting was held in the Cnbrooms of dynamite alone is the most practical time without touching a bite of the various factions in his country in his own behal/is that of provoking H. F. No. 631, Session Laws of Min­! way to dispose of them. of the International Falls nourishment of any kind. Gas formed Uncle Sam to armed intervention. Be that as it may, ..his nesota for 1919, be located atRanier Commercial club during the afternoon Following the removal of stumps on my stomach and pressed up country has a duty to perform for the protection of its citizens especially in Koochiching County. of Saturday, December 6th,1919. from cut-over lands, care should be against my heart so bad that often I 10. That both the Asociation and There were present at said meeting its legal representatives. taken to plow shallow the first time actually fainted and sometimes I got the Commercial Club favor the rigid representing the Fishermen's Association, and to take immediate steps to increase so dizzy I would fall down flat in enforcement of existing Game and the following persons: the humus by seeding th^lan tracks. Many and many a night Of 8,000 Swiss who entered the French service in the Wor Fish Laws and all present rules and Hosea Dove, Herman Lomker, Ad.olph to clover and grasses, using barley or rolled and tossed all night long and War, 7,700 were killed in acti/on or died of wounds or disease. There Hilke, H. W. Keyes, Frank regulations of the State Game and oats for a nurse crop. didn't get a wink of sleep, and in was bravery in every field, but this record surpasses even Swiss a Fish Department and pledge thei Boheman, Mike Boheman, Franz Larsen, spite of all I could do I kept getting,9-^ co-operation to this end. Wm. Fieldnausen, G. W. Aid ditions of valor. The Lion of Lucerne should henceforth typify even SALE OF RED CROSS weaker and weaker all the time, and Respectfully submitted. erson, Arthur Schmidt, Herman Koe more than before th,e heroic devotion of the Swiss. CHRISTMAS SEALS finally I got to where I was almost a Hosea Dove, neke, D. J. McCarthy and F. E. Mccartney, complete nervous and physical wreck By H. W. Keyes as Directed. and that from the above The following is a list of the purchasers and had to give up my housework A new labor papier named thie1 Gopher Journal and "edited by H. W. Keyesc. membership the following persons of Red Cross Xmas Seals to entirely and go to bed. I tried and the Lauzon brothers of Hibbing.is the latest addition to the newspaper G. W. Anderson. were selected as a committee to rep the amount of $1.00 or more: tried to get a medicine that would For the Ranier Fishermen's Association. resent the Fishermen's Association fileld of the range. The new publication is edited and Well do me some good but nothing I took Miss Annette Miller, $5.00 Health with full power to act for them certainly applefars to be a clean, live publication such as labori Bond, Masonic Lodge, $10.00 Health seemed to help me and I was beginning this regard, namely: Hosea Dove. H. Frank Palmer... men of the range have long desired. We hope the new publicati Bond, Commercial Club, $5.00 Heafth to think I had a hopeless case W. Keyes and G. W. Anderson. John Berg. and was about to give up in despair. Bond, Dorcas Society, $10.00 Health will enjoy life and prosperity.—Hibbing Tribune-Herald. There were present at said meet Joe Douglas. "But I kept seeing Tanlac recommended Bond, Miss Effie Adams, M. M. Abbot, ing representing the Commercial For the Commercial CluK for cases like mine by people Miss Lucy Barrett, J. H. Brown, Ed Club, the following persons: Judge The President's Message was a disappointment. It is more like right here in St. Paul so I Bancroft, Gus Belcher, Mrs. M. Burton, Frank Palmer, Judge John Berg, BODIES OF SOLDIERS DEAD an encyclopedia of the opinion of his various ad,visors than a connected, though I would try it and see if it Robt. Burnett, W. Irving Burton, Joseph Douglas, W. V. Kane, R. W. RETURNED TO UNITED STAT ZH would help me. The longest day I high grade, state paper such as has characterized his former Ervin Boldus, Mrs. F. C. Carroll, Bennett, R. F. C. litis and Louis P. jc-I Jane Cleveland, E. W. Carver, Arthur live I'll praise Tanlac, for my recovery messages. It spreads ithe salve,, rather than suggests well defined Lemieux, and that the said Judge Plans have been perfected to'1 Carlson, Tony Casey, B. Calri•well, has been simply remarkable and remedies for the present turmoil in various departments, which is Frank Palmer, Judge John Berg, and turn bodies of soldier dead buried in I'm feeling as well as I ever did. My James Curran, Will Chapman, Joseph Douglas had previously been probably due to its author's serious illness. the "Zone of the Interior" in France stomach is in perfect condition and I A1 Cobey, T. J. Doty, Fred U. Da}'. designated as a committee with full when requested by next of kin. can eat anything I want and never O. K. Dolva, J. H. Drummond, Miss power to act in behalf of said Commercial An announcement from the Secretary have the sign of an ache or pairf afterwards When you get hard up you might join the "Blood-givers Union" R. V. Dawson, Gus. Ek, C. A. Enybloom, Club: of War to this effect was mad® and I'm gaining in weight Chas. E. Fenton, P. Franzen, and make ten dollars by giving a hundred centimeters of yo xr There was present at said meeting public today through the Army Recruiting C. Fraser, Robt. Fritz, W. as fast as I can. I never have a dizzy life giving fluid to the unfortunate who needs it, you are also representing Game and Fish Commissioner Station at 311 Nicollet Avenue, spell and I can sleep sound all Fulton, Mrs. Anna B. Franson, Miss and concurring in ths report titled to five dollars for every tim(e thie doctor misses the vein and ni Thirteen French Departments arc night long and when I get up in the Eleanor Finney, J. M. Gish, C. O. Alfreid H. Powers, Game Warden included in the "Zone of the Armies," case h& should open the vein you can claim a hundred dollars, for ail morning I feel refreshed. I just simply Gustafson, Dr. Mary Ghostley, E. J. for Koochching and St. Louis from which bodies are not to be removed. can't say enough for Tanlac for open vein ruins it for further service and commercial valuie. Gjesdahl, Fred Gross, Matt. Gillespie, Counties. I'm a well and happy woman and every Miss Kathryn Gerrety, J. J. Hadler, After general and free discussion, "The order for the return of bodies word I've said is the truth and if W. C. Hasselbarth, R. W. Haddock, Coal is to be de!nied tp allr nonessential industries, according *.o lasting several hours, in which near1 not in the Zone of the Armies affects anybody don't believe it just senJ Chas. Hall, Frank Havlik, Rev. Cla'ide a recent ruling of the fuel administration. Hundreds of industries Iy every person took part, the respective approximately 18,000 bodies," them to me." E. Ireland, Ben Kotelinek, Prof. G. committees whose narfie|f the report stated. The "work of shipping and small business plants will be forced to, shut down. All this ii Sold at Rubin's drug store at International B. Kinney, Mrs Anna Kelley, Jo are subscribed hereto were directed these bodies to the United Falls and at S. E. Dimon Keyes, W. V. Kane, Mrs. Edw. Kaneen, the midst of this wonderfully progressive and free America. Ana, States, providing. relatives have requested to make the following recomendar at Littlefork and all other leading Frank King, R. W. King, Herman we might add, all biecause of the vascillating jpfalicies of a pro-Socialist tions. it, will begin as soon as net-, Koeneke, R. B. Kook, Adolph druggists. administration, in its inability to curb labor and regulate essary detailed arrangements can be 1. That ho license be issued for the Krohn, Frank Lang, F. R. Laphan, capitalistic profiteers. made. use of pound nets of any description J. J. Loyd, R. Liyjeblad, Mrs. Julia NOTICE Further negotiations with the in the following waters of Blac'V Leavitt, Miss Minnie Leayitt, H. \. French government are under way, Bay: Legislation should be enacted by both federal and state making Levin, Oscar Larson, L. LaBine, Honorably discharged soldiers, to remove the restrictions on disinterment Section 3, township 70, range 22. Frank Ludwig, Ray Landgraf, Ed. bodies, refusing bail to th,e aniarchistie type of criminals in our wishing to become citizens of tlie of bodies ih the Zone of the Section 4, township 70, range 22. LaPage, L. O. Lemieaux, Mr. F. J. country. This idea of sentencing anarchists to deporatiion or to1 United States, should appear at the Armies. Approximately 53,000 American Section 33, township 71, range 22. McPartlin, G. C. McAllister, Geo. Court House in International Falls, th|e federal penitentary, then releasing th etai on bail, to travel jail soldiers, killed in action, are Section 34, township 71, range 22. Millard, 'Hugh Mcintosh, Roy Mc Minnesota, on January 13th, 1920. buried in the Zone of the Armies. over, thei country, spreading their traittorous propoganda in a still Except—that a license be issued to Kinnon, Markowitz Bros., Mrs. M.irv Each must have his discharge paper The Graves Registration bureau is Hosea Dove for the use of onepound more viol'ent manner in the heighth of folly and makes Uncle Sam Mc Ray, F. G. Nelson, J. L. Nevison, and be accompanied by two witnesses, doing this work under the direction net in 1 John Norton, N. L. Olson, G. A. a laughing tool to this -undersirable element. both U. S. citizenes, who can identify of Lieut. Col. Charles C. Pierce, Q. M. Section 33, township 71, range 22, Olson, Mrs. H. W. Ottow, Rev. Father him as the person he claims to C., an officer of wide experience. during four months of the year namely: O'Dwyer, Miss Helen O'Malley, be. J- 8. One of the causes of high prices is not so much due to ttoe lack Plans include (1) the return of bod'es from December 1st to the following Archie Paul, Dr. J. F. Peterson, M. buried in England, (2) the maintaH? of production as to the tendency of all, jobbers, retailers, and individual 31st day of March. C. Parsons, Garnet Peterson, F. E. ance of approximately 700 cemeteries GAVE INDIANS BOOZE 2nd, That no license be issued for customers, to buy more than they need, which creates a Patterson, Victor Plath, Lloyd Rav- sin the French "Zone of the Armies'' the use of pound nets in the following mond, Peter Roberson, Jas. Rye, M«\ condition whereby the manufacturers are put into ruinous competition (3) the return of the bodies buried ,n waters: S. N. Rubin, Peter Ruter, James Serdaris, Virginia, Dec. 8.—United States against each other for the r,aw material and later «ttoe added France except those in the "Zone ^f Sections 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 34, 35 M. Shapira, Elmer Swanson Commissioner Otto Poirer today cost of overtime production in order to fill these orders and things the Armies," or their reinterment and 36, township 71, range 22. held Joe Badreau to the Duluth federal Mrs. Geo. A. Snyder, Miss Hazel permanent cemeteries (4) the retu.n will not improve until the jobber qrujiits triying to boost his orders by 3. That licenses be issued for tlie grand jury in $1,000 bail- on the Smith, Ed. Sandstrom, C. W. Speelman, of bodies buried in Belgium, Luxemburg, use of pound nets in Black Bay not making the retailer believe that he should order more than he needs charge of giving liquor to the Nett Miss Julia Swanson, Ray Sullivan, Germany, Austria, Serbia and to exceed five in number and that L. P. Sheehy, John Thompson, because "the next time he gives an order things will be still higher," Lake Indians. Italy. these five licenses^ be issued as follows: S. Thompson, Peter Tweland, S. E. and so on down the lime to the consumer. Thompson, Miss Ethel Thompson, LAND CLEARING BY Two pound nets to Herman Lomker Dr. M. E. Withrow, Lawrence Wilson, O N I "We have to admit that some governments are smarter than for use in section 8 and 15, township TESTED METHODS J. A. Wiener, J. S. Wenberg, 70, range 22. other governments. Undter an agreement beitween th'e Federal Government Geo. P. Watson, C. E. Wisard, Miss -PI./X IT. Two pound nets to Franz Larsen No one best method of land clearing Flora Williams, C. H. Woodford, and the British Royal Commission for the disposal of last for use in section 14 and 16, town for the cut-over regions of nort:i Hughes Van Etten, E. H. Zimmerman, year's Cuban sugar crop, more than one-half of th'e sugar that comes ship 70, range 22. ern Minnesota can be recommended. Miss Rose M. Zalondek, Miss thrioiugh the refineries under the jurisdiction of the Sugar Equalization One pound net to Arthur Schmidt Conditions vary to such an extent B. Johnson. Board is shipped.to ILngland, while thousands of families in this for use in section 10, township 70, that methods have to be adapted. Aristocrat range 22. Clearing slowly by means of stocx country cannot buy a pound of sugar anywhere, Thje! Leagute of LOGGER NOTICE Fourth. That no license be issued is generally cheapest. Sheep are Nations wouldn't remedy this, but a reasonable amount of forward of me for the use of gill nets either in especially valuable in clearing out looking commonsense would have averted th»e trouble."—Philadelphia Post your camps and send to the Black Bay or the entrance to Biack brush and in keeping it out. Trapping Press. state Forester & statement of the legal Bay, Except that license be granted of stock iand development of grass descriptions of lands which you mm sod hastens the rotting of stumps. to Hosea Dove for the use of gill propose to log this fall and winter. nets in sections 22, 23 and 28 of township Some cleared land is needed at once The first real step for this country, back to peace and contentment, (See Chap. 114, Laws of Minnesota. 71, range 22. and usually must be opened up by the is a conscientious regard for authority, even as far back 1913). 5. That the use of nets of mesh quicker but harder process of grubbing, obedience to the Divine will, and an appreciation of the fact ve The Law Requires smaller than four inches be stopped pulling or blasting. For the are responsible beings. The Good Book does not say God breather and that the existing law relative first fields one usually selects the 1. That a notice, showing legal .inscriptions into the monkey the bneath of life, and the monkey became the living easiest cleared parts of the farm, even thereto be strictly enforced. of lands on which it i? 6. That no license be issued for the though these patches may be separated soul. Man is not a monkey, unless he makes himself so, but One pooposed to cut timber of any kind, be use of nets in the American waters and somewhat irregular in posted in a conspicuous place in the in whom there has been created wonderful possibilities, and no mm of Rainy Lake west of the east line shape. It is important, in fact 1most camp. can rise to this possibility unless he liv'es and works in harmony of Koochiching county, Except—that necessary, if success is to be 2. That before cutting anjj^timber with his Divine Creator, whose authority he must recognize, an two (2) licenses for pound nets be achieved, to leave enough land open logger shall send a copy of this .»otce aiso the- authority in national and civic affairs. granted to Franz Larsen for use during to provide winter feed for stock, at with his postoffice address to the the spring of 1920, in least to provide roughage. If a little State Forester, State Capitol, St. 27, Section 26 and township 7.1, grain and a few acres of some cish Paul, Minn. One of the important reasons emphasized by economists', wh range 23 and also Except—that a license crop like potatoes can be grown, the The law provides a penalty, $25 fine the United States should not enter the League of Nations without be granted to Hosea Dove for chances are much greater. or imprisonment for not less than the making of certain reservations, is the fact that it is apparent the use of one pound net in Bulletin 134, "Land Clearing" by A. 90 days for violation of any of its Section 33, township 71, range 22 J. McGuire, and bulletin 163, "Invistigations to every nation that this country will lin all probabiliy 'be required provisions. as heretofore provided in recommendation in Cost and Methods of to become the "rich uncle'* to most of the European nations, to the NELSON Wm- T* Cox, "First," and also Except-that Clearing Land" by M. J. Thompson, extent of about eight billion dollars, to meet the pieril of bankruptcy State Forester, license be granted to Hosea Btfve issued by the Minnesota Experiment these nation^ are facing because of their paper moniey issues. The Minnesota Forest Service. for the use of gill nets in Station, University Farm, St. Paul, 5 THE JEWELER Sections 22, 23, and 28, townshp 71, United States, for many years, has been the good Samaritan to may be had free on application, and Cylde Johnson, Big Falls, range 22 as heretofore provded in give many helpful suggestions and finance the1 world indefinately, without adequate provision for withdrawal, 412 Third Street J? recommendation "Fourth." facts. According to Mr. Thompson's II 4 Minn. when our own interests compel it, would be runinously 7. That in the foregoing recommendations bulletin, brush must be close to the foolish. vv it is intended that .the SUBSCRIBE FOR .THE PRESS ground to simplify the work of keep­ vj I.*# a j?