Old News

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

June 17, 1920 · Page 2 of 8

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.* -fTi -T INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS PAGE THREl P|W*1'! 1 1 SAMPLE BALLOT SAMPLE BALLOT NEW TEMPLE OF THE GODS PUNISHED FOR KINDLY DEED REPUBLICAN BALLOT BALLOT OF CANDIDATES Beautiful Spot in Southern Utah That English Magistrates Seem to Have Off the Beaten Trail of Oealt Harshly With Man Who It TO BE NOMINATED the Tourist. "Broke" the Sabbath. WITHOUT PARTY DESIGNATION 1'. In the ordinary sense, no part of John Bull is an English publication. PRIMARY ELECTION, MONDAY, JUNE 21st, 1920 the United States properly can be The letter we are reproducing from its called unexplored. The new Temple columns was written to the magistrates Koochiching County, Minnesota of the Gods, in southern Utah, is a of the English town of Reading. PRIMARY ELECTION, MONDAY, JUNE 21st, 1920 discovery as far as the average tourist One wonders if they ever heard of the is concerned, though by no means distinction between thfe letter and the Koochiching County, Minnesota is It unexplored or "new" territory. spirit of the law, remarks Our Dumb A bare 17 miles to the west runs the Animals. County Auditor. well-traveled state highway from Salt "Your Worships: I gather you don't Lake City to the Grand canyon. An go to church on Sundays as a regular Put a cross mark (X) opposite the name of the old trail branches off from the road thing. Let me tell you' why I gather. between Panuitch and Tropica, in Gerfield On a Sunday during the strike a policeman candidate for whom you wish to vote County Auditor. county. dug up the Sunday observance In the distance is Table Cliff act in order to convict a poor GOVERNOR plateau, source of the Esralante river devil of a drover—Charles Palmer, towit—of Put a cross mark (X) opposite the name of the nearer, the broad amphitheater of driving cattle through the candidate for whom you wish to vote the Paria valley at his feet the New streets. The man had fetched the THOMAS KEEFE Temple Itself, a veritable sunken garden, beasts from the railway station, 1 about one by three miles, of exquisite where they had arrived from Dublin. ASSOCIATE JUSTICE SUPREME COURT daintiness and beauty. Within They were then in a bad state. If TOM FRANKSON its tortuous walls of marl stand obelisks they had not been removed to be fed and watered they would have been the and towers, castles and fortresses, ALBERT JOHNSON Impressionistic statuary and victims of callous cruelty and though SAMUEL G. IVERSON giant sculptures, kaleidoscopic In their on this particular Sunday that which coloring and framed by the tufted yellow is written, 'Which of you shall have GEORGE L. SIEGEL 9 an ass or an ox fall into a pit and will 9 pines and the red manzanita. FRANKLIN F. ELLSWORTH not straightway pull him out on the The startling color changes and Vl O O O O O O Sabbath day' was part of the gospel, lighting effects of this great geological WILLIAM H. VANDERBURGH & 0 you made the drover pay the costs of stage are, indeed, its most extraordinary J. A. O. PREUS 9 his prosecution. To all intent and feature. In the shifting rays of purpose, therefore, gentlemen, you sun and cloud, the tall, slender shafts HOMER B. DIBELL might as well have convicted and fined and ornamental turrets gleam white, HENRIK SHIPSTEAD him. What a pity it is that the act glow suddenly to a cherry heat and of 1677 doesn't prohibit Reading magistrates suddenly cool to purple black.—J. C. from walking or driving Alter in Popular Mechanics Magazine. LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR through the streets on Sunday in order SAMPLE BALLOT to catch their dinner." BIG GUNS MUST BE MOBILE GEORGE H. MALLON DEMOCRATIC BALLOT VOLCANOES AWAKE TO LIFE Otherwise in Future Wars They Will Be Quickly Wiped Out if "Spotted" LOUIS L. COLLINS Mount Katmai, In Alaska, Especially, O O From Above. Shows Signs of Preparation for Destructive Outburst. While the war was in progress new SECRETARY OF STATE PRIMARY ELECTION, MONDAY, JUNE 21st, 1920 military inventions and improvements Affording an awe-compelling spectacle were for obvious reasons kept secret of nature in a sullen mood and Koochiching County, Minnesota in America.' Now, however, they are A. M. OPSAHL awakening memories of the ghastly beginning to leak out. details of the eruption of eight years For example, there is a new 14-Inch ago. Mount Katmai, most powerful and MIKE HOLM gun, which is called "pride of the restless of North American volcanoes, army." All big guns in future will is again in violent activity, according be made mobile (on rails or drawn by O O O County Auditor. to Capt. Charles A. Glasscock and THOMAS VOLLOM gasoline tractors), because otherwise Purser Gary Bach of the steamer Admiral they would invite their own destruction. Watson, which reached port recently With the help of "spotting" airplanes STATE TREASURER from southwestern Alaska, says Put a cross mark (X) opposite the name of the they might be quickly wiped the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. out. candidate for whom you wish to vote A sable pall of smoke from the funnel The guns which now defend American CHAS. A. LUND of the belching crater broods over seacoast forts are stationary, and the northern sky for a radius of 40 GOVERNOR the big ones of no larger caliber than or 50 miles by day, while fretful 12 Inches. They are to be replaced HENRY RINES tongues of flame can be seen by vessels by 14-inch rifles on mobile mounts, and 9 9 9 9 ROBERT W. HARGADINE a score of miles at sea at night, It is manifest the plans of the fortifications according to the Seattle mariners. ATTORNEY GENERAL will have to be altered. Knight's peak, a neighboring volcano, Newest American battleships carry L. HODGSON has also been stirred to spectacular 14-inch guns, which have been deemed efforts by the outburst of its more THOMAS V. SULLIVAN the most effective weapons of their deadly companion, and wreaths of type in the world. Some of them did EDWARD INDREHUS smoke hang over numerous peaks of duty on land in France toward the the rugged Alaska peninsula. JOHN C. LARSON end of the war. But this new rifle (a m9 A slight earthquake shock was experienced product of army ordnance experts' ALFRED JAQUES at Kodiak island the night S best ingenuity) is superior In several ELMER C. PATTERSON of April 8, a day before the arrival of respects. It will throw a shell 35 the Admiral Watson. Two days later miles. OLIVER J. QUANE 9 those on the Admiral Watson had a O O O O O CLIFFORD L. HILTON rare view of the volcano. Poor Packing Causes Waste. Few persons considering the cost of JULIUS THORSON Submarine Radio. living realize that more than $700,000,000 STELLE S. SMITH The last annual report of the bureau is added to the cost of their food, of standards states that members clothing and other necessities each CHARLES M. ANDRIST of the bureau's staff have developed year because of the waste caused by RAILROAD AND WAREHOUSE COMMISSIONER very successful methods of communicating damage, unscientific loading and the SECRETARY OF STATE with submerged submarines by tremendous cost of packing these radio-telegraphy. With a single-turn commodities. The railroads and the O. P. B. JACOB SON coil or loop attached to the outside of shippers realize it, as shown by their B. M. LOEFFLER the submarine, signals can be received conducting a campaign to reduce to 9 as well when the vessel Is submerged the minimum the waste through damage, PAUL I. D. OSTBY 9 1 O O as when it is at the surface. It is and to utilize to the utmost the FRANK C. BURMASTER also possible to transmit from a submerged capacity of freight cars, which are 9 submarine a distance, of 12 hauled half empty. REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS 8th DISTRICT miles. Thus it becomes possible for REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS 8th DISTRICT These are some of the Items which a ship and a submarine to exchange enter Into this waste estimate—damage recognition signals. A coil aerial is and theft, $100,000,000 wasted ALBERT ABBOTT FARRINGTON 9 HUBERT H. d'AUTREMONT e*9 a satisfactory direction finder when lumber used only once in packing submerged and readily receives signals cases, $240,000,000 empty car space, transmitted thousands of miles, just $209,000,000 and the staggering cost WILLIAM ALVIN PITTENGER WM. L. CARSS the same as when used in the air. The to the railroads of hauling half empty 9 navy has equipped its larger submarines cars more than 6,000,000,000 miles, O O O O with this apparatus.—Scientific $157,000,000. It is estimated that from ROBERT E DENFIELD American. 10 to 25 per cent of the cost of foodstuffs goes to pay for the crates SAMPLE BALLOT which are thrown away. OSCAR J. LARSON Airmen Guide Cavalry. While the Fourteenth cavalry was BALLOT OF CANDIDATES on the march recently from Fort Sam Big Railroader's Hobby. TwoMinuteTalksToAnerkans Carl R. Gray, the new president of Houston, Tex., to Fort Ringgold, Tex., TO BE NOMINATED the Union Pacific system, has one an aviator, who chanced to pass over hobby—that is his family in which their heads, acted as their volunteer WITHOUT PARTY DESIGNATION he takes the greatest interest and guide. pride. "When his two boys, who are The obseryer In the airplane saw now at college, were attending preparatory that, instead of the Trio City road, Association. America First school at Baltimore," says J. they were following what is known as G. Donley, Jr., in Forbes* Magazine, the Somerset road. He advised them "he never missed a baseball or football of their error by a message dropped PRIMARY ELECTION, MONDAY, JUNE 21st, 1920 game in which the school team in front of the moving column, and Koochiching County, Minnesota participated unless he was away from the troop detoured to the correct road. KEEP YOUR HEAD home. And he knew every boy on the The alr-servlce officers reported the By Rector St. Mark's Church, Minneapolis. JAMES E. FREEMAN, teams by his first name. One of his Incident to the chief of operations at greatest delights was to get out on If ever there was a time when we needed men and Kelly field upon their arrival, and 25 women who are capable under all circumstances of keeping the baseball field on a summer evening minutes later a map showing the their heads, in other words, of maintaining theii and 'bat flies' to his boys. When not route to their destination, Fort Ringgold, poise, it is the present. We are swept off our feet, carried Counity Auditor. on the road or in his office, he spends was dropped in the middle of afield, and sometimes made to drift by reason of the all of his time with his family." the marching column. kaleidoscopic changes that we witness day by day. Noth ing is more productive of failure and possible ruin than Put a cross mark (X) opposite the name of the His Ambition. panic, and panic is almost invariably the direct result of Just What Did He Mean? Ten-year-old Ted made his first long a lost confidence. It was lost confidence that produced Little Henry Hoanhammer is a typical candidate for whom you wish to vote the panic of 1907. It was panic now and again in the visit to the country. He was much Hoosler youngster, who uses his field that postponed the day of victory in Europe. It was impressed with the returns of farming, ears to good advantage. Since prohibition only when the calm, thoughtful, dispassionate Foch took but not with the work which brought COUNTY 'COMMISSIONER—4th DISTRICT has been enforced in IndlSma he the reins and deliberately planned an action covering the the returns. He studied the occupation has heard a great many remarks made entire line, that the allied troops moved forward, never of farming diligently in order to "by people who in the past were accustomed to stop until they had achieved their end. It was the FRANK MILNE see what part of it was easiest. And calm Clemenceau that held mercurial France in hand untjl the wrongs of 1871 to Imbibing occasionally. But were righted. Yes, it was the well-balanced, deeply thoughtful Lincoln that one day he discovered what he at Christmas he electrified his family repeatedly saved this nation during the four fateful years of the Civil War, thought was. by his own opinion. Would to God we had men of his mould to counsel and direct us today. We G. A. MUNROE ""Then he went to his mother. "I always 9 The Christmas tree was aglow and are not pessimistic, nor are we panicky. We believe that there is in America said that I would be a farmer everyone was talking about Its beauty, a vast residuum of common sense. Bryan attempted to sweep this country off 9 1 when I grow up," he told her, "but I etc. Finally it came Henry's time to ts fee' with the silver heresy, and before the votes were counted, big business HAROLD ROYEM guess I won't be a real farmer. I say something and he did. He looked suffered an attack of emotionalism that well-nigh paralyzed it. Every how guess I'll be a hog slopper." and again, and particularly in this present hour, through bad leadership or at the brilliant tree. "Gee, It's all lit from some other cause, the people of this country sustain a mental panic, and up," he sighed, "and I sure wish I a panic is a dangerous thing. We are facing serious days, but what of it? ANDY AMUNDSON Nothing Doing. was, too."—Indianapolis News. Haven't we the courage to meet problems as they rise, or are we a spineless. "The overall club is a fine idea for Insipid people? What we need now is the man with calm, dispassionate men, but I'm afraid it won't work Judgment and clear vision, ^es, and the man with fixity of conviction. We have Hard Luck. out." no time to deal with demagogues or those who shift their position with every "I was born too early," he sighed. wind of doctrine. Let us not be irrationally optimistic, and on the other "Why not?" "What's the matter?" Subscribe for The Press Itand, let us not be^foolishly pessimistic. There is a sane, reasonable, middle "Well, we're going to have trouble "I had to wear overalls when they ground. Let's find it, and keep it, and, believing in God and the stability of If we try to get the women to follow were a badge of hard labor, and now our Government, let us meet the problems as they arise, and do so as fearless suit and appear in public in housewrappers." that wearin' 'em is fashionable I'm out citizens of the State. of the game." •J*1'" A7- sk tabMteUM 1V l'" CTIVE PAGE