International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926
January 8, 1920 · Page 2 of 8
OCR Text
ran .. -flSSif -S- *5^ INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS, JANUARY gth, 1920 PAGE THREE: BATTLE-SWEPT AM1.Tie FRANCE ASTIR COOLER 0 SaciALisi^p^? j# Cj\iramoufit IS IT rfor BEfttfTiFot, WfKieno' Heroic Efforts Being Made to Recoup Fortunes. MAKING STEADY PROGRESS lABOl* Rehabilitation Is Observable In Revival of Old Industries, the Establishment of New Ones and the Introduction of Modern Equipment— ms&m Rot urn to Normal Basis of Vast J*' 5 S feLX?* Flocks and Herds of Animals Depleted lilt by the War. L*vX l^-V Gradual transformation of the battle-swept regions of northern France back to their normal conditions is being everywhere noted by the Associated jjjg^S^iSraeS-. Press correspondent, who, with special facilities extended by the government, -Tf iifn is making a tour through the "J* r- SW devastated regions to observe their 'f steady progress toward recovery.^ This rehabilitation is observable in the revival of old industries, the establishment r-jJ5ST5j|. Jc5$e Lasl^rpr&SQrtfe of new ones and the introduction of modern equipment, and Utl 1AM 111 it is even noticeable in the return of vast flocks and herds of domestic animals, depleted by the war, back to the normal basis required for the domestic needs of this region. Sifte J&ffey offfie Giants tn Small Farmers Try to Recoup. When war swept over the ten departments along the battle front, domestic animals disappeared, most of the stock being taken as food for the GIANTS EVEN IN THESE DAYS! MIGHTY MEN OF THE LUMBER armies, while the birds and fowls fled CAMPS. FIGHTING MEN, WITH HEARTS TO LOVE AND from the concussion of the great guns. Now, with the gradual return to prewar STRONG ARMS TO PROTECT THEIR OWN. A PICTURE OF conditions, the thrifty French WILL HE LET GO? THE REDWOOD SLOPES, OF THE CLASH OF DAUNTLESS peasant alid small farmer is making BUILDERS OF THE NEW WEST. PUNGENT WITH THE heroic efforts to recoup his fortune and to rehabilitate his land. TANG OF TOWERING FORESTS. FILLED WITH THE STUFF Domestic animals are being greatly THAT MAKES A TENDER APPEAL TO THE HEART. treasured for their food value, and COLLEGE OF ST. THOMAS are cared for by their owners with the same solicitude shown toward their children. Poultry and rabbits x_— SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA are kept in warm quarters and fed regularly, even though it is necessary _-=- 't.,-.rr now and then for the people themselves to go without tf square meal. Under the Direction and Gontrol of the Most Reverend New Impetus also is'given to the Austin Dowlin^, Archbishop of St. Paul breeding of. small domestic animals in order to replenish the restricted supply. A CATHOLIC MILITARY COLLEGE Cattle Are Not Plentiful. :A PICTURE WITHOUT AN EQUAL: Because of the fact thut pastures Collegiate, High School, and Commercial Courses were for the most part destroyed by shell fire and gas, it has been found very difficult to get forage for cows, Also Mack Sennett Comedy in Two Reels Over One Thousand Students from Twenty-eight and therefore cattle are scarce at "Up In Alp's Place" present. States Registered Last Year In the field of industry the noticeable development among the French is THE REGISTRAR For Catalogue Address the Inclination to modernize plants destroyed by the ravages of the war. Naturally slow to make changes and suspicious of new things, Frenchmen At there's big money are beginning to step forward. They are Installing electric power, applying the latest Ideas In mechanics, reorganizing their enterprises and building in muskrat trapping Saturday and Sunday, Jan. lO-ll a firm foundation in preparation for the developments they believe the future will bring forth. Admission Always 10 and 25 Cents, Plus Tax FUGITIVE TURK A KING °CT Enver Pasha, a Pro-German, Has Ac* «ltemember two days only and Wallace Reid who stared in "The 8"f cepted Kurdish Throne. Enver Pasha, former Turkish minister I Lottery Man" is the star. of war, has been crowned king of Kurdistan, the Turkish region lying between Mesopotamia and Persia. Kurdistan is an extensive region with ill-defined borders. Its population Includes -T FffeTS*" "BLOND ESKIMO" ORIGIN sorting to drastic means to regain it. 2,000,000 people, most of whom after he bad returned to civilization 1^ are Mohammedans. When J. F. Black opened his general M) on the steam whaler Herman, which TRACED TO EXPLORERS Enver Pasha was minister of war II **Svf store he discovered that his last had picked him up on a floe near Victoria In the Turkish cabinet from January, five pounds of the precious saccharine Land, Intends to take his bride jf ^'rl II 1914, to October, 1018. He was. leader was missing. Flour worth-$200 north with him when the ice breaks in of the Young, Turks, an ardent proGeriean was also taken, but Mr. Black is not the spring. Not More Than Dozen of Them and an enthusiastic pupil of worrying so much about that. He jltWv* the German general von der Goltz. straightway hied himself to the hardware "in Victoria Land, Says J. BOY IS GREAT HUNTER After the signing of the armistice store, where he purchased a R. Crawford. Enver fled from Constantinople to Berlin safe. He says he is expecting a small -if you ship them to Shubert in disguise. He was 'arrested on Flfteen-Year-Old Oregon Youth Hold* •Jfts consignment of sugar soon and wants request of the Turkish government, Record of State. to make sure that when he opens up Atavism explains the discovery of "Shnbert" Wants Minnesota Furs but escaped. Though a sentence of it will still be where he put It. Blenn A. Brooks, fifteen-year-old ""blond Eskimos" in Victoria Land In death rests over him for acts committed son of Mr. and Mrs. G. A, Brooks of the arctic, reported by Vilhjalmar during the war, he Is a king and Swiss Home, in the Sluslaw country, AU Ton Can Ship MUSTACHE A MENACE? Stefansson, In the opinion of James R. probably will escape punislfment. in Oregon, claims to be champion bear Crawford, a member of the second And Will Pay These Extremely High Prices hunter for his age in that part of the Stefan sson expedition, who has come GET A SHIPMENT OFF-TODAY Barbers Are Quick to Agree With PLENTY OF WORK FOR ALL country. His record so far has, perhaps, out of the north for the first time in if London Doctors. 1 not been equaled in any part of 15 years. N?l EXTRA LARGE I N?l LARGE 1 N?l MEDIUM 1 N?1 SMALL N9 2 Are mustaches dangerous? ,, the state by any lad as young as he. Director of Employment Service Finds EXTRA TO AVERAGE 1 a The blond natives are "throw-backs" EXTRA TO AVERAGE EXTRA TO AVERAGE MUSKRAT EXTRA TO AVERAGE AS TO SIZE QUAUT* London doctors say so. ^Philadelphia Industrial Situation Good. OnAugust 12 of this year Blenn & of early white explorers, Crawford believes. physicians are .skeptical, but barbers killed a big bear with one shot, bringing Unemployment now is less alarming He expressed surprise that the are quickJto agree that mustaches are it out of a tree where it was tied-. than at any time since the «Igning of .4 existence of an entire tribe of blonds 6.00 to 5.2S Winter 4.75 to 4.00 3.75 to 2.75 250 to 2.00 2.50 to 1.50 perilous. ing on berries, and on September 12 the armistice, according to a statement WAS generally believed. He was with 5.00 biOO ~&£*r Warfare against them began when Fall 3.75 to 3.00 2.75 to 2.00 1.75 to 1.50 1.75 to 125 he killed another in a neighbor's orchard, made by W. H. Skinner, acting director Stefansson when the blonds were dls^covered. 2 a patient in a London hospital was bringing it down out of a fruit general of the United States I N found to have twenty-five hairs, said tree with two shots. But the most employment service. Victoria Land," Crawford, said, to have come from his mustache, in a exciting encounter he has yet had was Reports from 22 states indicate that "there are probably three tribes or villages, clump in his appendix. on November 26, when he and his two 3OMieZ5.0O 20.00lt 16.00 15.00tol2.00 In Wisconsin and Michigan there is a Fine, Dark 10.00 to 8.50 10.00 to 6.00 comprising several hundred natives, Dr. Howard S Anders chuckled older brothers were out hunting in shortage of help. In Arkansas, Tennessee 20.00ltl6.00 15.00lt 12.00 10.00 to 8.50 Usual Color 8.00 to 6.50 8.00 to 5.00 in which these light Eskimos are when he read the report from London. the mountains not far from home. and Indiana there Is reported 15.00ttl2.00| ll.OOto 9.00 Pale- 8.00to 7.00 6.00 to 5.00 6.00 to 4.00 'r* found. Btit there are fewer than a "I've worn a mustache since I Went While going through a big patch of a slight shortage of jobs. In Chicago S Kl FNK dozen of the blonds, so far as we were to Penn," he said, "and when I "had fern the boy saw tracks of a bear and New York there is more able to learn, in the entire land. They my appendix removed I do not remember leading to a hollow tree. When he unemployment than anywhere in the had gray eyes, light eyebrows, reddish that any part of my mustache was N?l EXTRA LARGE and his dog neared the tree Bruin country. N?l LARGE N?l MEOIUM N?l SMALL GOOD UNPRIME brown hair, and their skins are slightly EXTRA TO AVERAGE found In It." l- The slight unemployment that Is reported EXTRA TO AVERAGE EXTRA'TO AVERAGE came out and with one slap of its paw EXTRA TO AVERAGE AS TO SIZE QUALITY lighter than tha^of their brothers, sent the dog whirling into* the air and Is regarded as a result of the 16.00 to 14.00 12.00tol0.00 9.00 to 8.50 8.00 to 7.00 although not noticeably so. Black 7.00 to 4.00 then climbed a tree. difficulty In connecting the right man Pennsylvanian Attribute* Miraculous 13.001*1100 ||, "The natives made It known that 9.50to 8.00 7.50 to 7.00 Short 6i0 to 6.00 6.00 to 3.00 with the job and of strikes, which create CThe boy hunter knocked it out with Recovery to Phonograph Tune. they had never seen white men before 10.00 to 8.00 7i0l»6i0 6.00 to 5.25 Narrow 5.00 to 4.50 4.50 to 2.00 an artificial condition. one shot, whereupon the bear showed probably they had not," Crawford Paralyzed as a. result of Injuries 5i0t»4£0 4.00 to 325 3.00 to 2^0 225 to 2.00 2.00 to 1.00 Binoad fight. Blenn coolly pumped two more said. "But their ancestors did see received in an auto collision several Conscience Drove Man Back to Prison. doses of lead into the advancing beast white men, probably looking for anew weeks ago, Moses Haines of Connellsv!Ue, These ortiemely high prices are based on the well-known "SHUBERT* liberal grading and are Unable longer to resist his conscience, and finished it quoted^for Immediate shipment. No. 3, No. 4, and otherwise inferiorskins at highest market value. land, who neveVlived to get back to Pa., has suddenly recovered the For quotations on other Minnesota Fun, write for ghalirrt Mtonr.** the only Elmer E. Barnard, who escaped Civilization. ability to walk. He attributed his recovery reliable and accurate market report and price list of its kind publisheL i?eF$EB-- Write for it. from the Oregon state penitentiary A aidpaeat to "SHUBEBT" wfflremdt ta •There was one little girl who £tor to Jazz music. He sald-he was BUYS SAFE FOR SUGAR In 1916, has voluntarily returned •essed the most pronounced marklngC lying in bed In great pain when the ALL YOUR FURS DIRECT TO to ttje institution, to serve a maximum of blondness, the daughter of two strains of "Carry Me Back to the Land Pennsylvania Man Takes Drastic term of ten years. A:B. S HUBERT"* dusky natives whose hair was black of Jazz" being played on a phonograph, 8tepstoSave8u|*ply. •nd who had black, beady eyes. The .reached ^%t last .the lnevitablg bas happened. War 8ouvenlra Blew Clubhouse to Bite, THE LAMEST HOUSE IN THEWRID DEMJM6 EXCLUSIVELY IN brents knew of no reason for tie red^dteh "Play It again','* he shouted to his AMERICAN RAW FURS Suflpr has become so valuable that Explosion of souvenir shells brought hair and graj eyes of their offt-^rlng/* wife: She did so and he hopped out of thieves would rather liave it thandiamorals. from France caused the destruction of bed, put on his clothes and went out, and -Dtckerson Run. Pa., la x* the Admiral Bensun clubhouse for service ^•Crawford, whn ghnr"- 2J-27 W. Austin Aye. Dept. ta Cliicaqo,U.S.A. 'm a^or^lng .to JIs stQ men at Hoboken, N.