International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926
July 7, 1921 · Page 7 of 8
OCR Text
^14 i\ INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS PAGE EIGHT PRESIDENT'S CHOICE TO KEEP LID ON TO GROWERS OF VICTORIA HOTEL OLD BREWERY ON MARKET CERTIFIED POTATOES FRIDAY, JULY 8 SOLD KISS FOR $300 Inspection Tour to be Completed Institution of the City of London, Centuries One of the Members of Early in August—Work Has Commenced. Old, Has Been Offered Major Roy C. Haynes, of Hillsboro, for Sale. O., is the new Prohibition Commissioner of the United States. The inspectors started out to make A solid piece of history is for sale, His appointment brought' a clash the first field inspection1 on Monday. TR/JZ announces the London Times. It is in Buckeye politics with President Every field for which inspection has the site in Thames street, next to Harding over-ruling his succeeding been applied will be visited between Senator, Frank Willis. Senator Cannonstreet station, of the City of that date and the first week in August. Willis had a nominee of his own London Brewery, known since the It is impossible to say exactly for office, but President Harding days of Queen Elizabeth as the only on what date the inspector will be named Haynes who was editor of brewery in the city of London. The present, but an effort will be made to and one the Hillsboro Dispatch of get this information to e»ch grower date of the foundation of the brewery his earliest supporters. several days in advance, since it is is so remote "that it is difficult to fix highly desirable to have the grower the year. There are proofs in various present in the field when the inspection ancient documents and archives of the is made. It is suggested that all frC/AUS brewery that it was flourishing in 1580. growers whose fields are to be inspected Stow mentions it. The Calverts, a make a thorough inspection family of brewers celebrated in the of their fields before the arrival of annals of the trade for the quality the inspector and remove all undesirable of their porter, were the most notable Will be at the above plants such as varietal mixtures, men who brewed beer with Thames am el a plants affected with blackleg, or wiltj 1760, water on that site. In Sir William if any are present, and plants which stated. Are you troubled Calvert was the fourth brewer appear to be otherwise weak and unthrifty. with headaches, nervousness, in and London, Calvert and Seward, of dizziness, or eye disorders of were the the Whitecross street, first, It js also important to have the potato any kind. If so, consult him brewing 51,785 former barrels, and the beetles and weeds under control. Would you•*' give $300 for a kiss latter 74,704 barrels in that year. If Glasses are needed he can First class seed potatoes cannot be Little from the lips of Mary Pickford— of the old buildings remain produced in a field where the beetles save fit you accurately if not for sweet charityVs sake? Well and weeds h^ve the upper hand. A an old mill loft and a part of the needed, he will tell you Mary is not selling kisses, but Sigrid weedy field and one seriously injured wall of Watermen's hall, which the so. Mr. M. Marsden went to Duluth to Holmquist, a movie actress—"The by potato beetle.s will be rejected. It had been burnt down In the fire of visit friends on Saturday. Mary Pickford" of Sweden, who is Do you is naturally supposed that any growet* Mr. Wilson and Adolph Bloom left visiting this conn try, sold a kiss for London in 1666, rebuilt on the site of Glasses straightened or applying for inspection will take an $300—the money going to Free for Bemidji last Wednesday and returned the Allhallowes church, and afterward minor repairs made while kno\v why active personal interest in seeing that Milk for Italy fund. Frank Henderson the same nighJ: with a new Incorporated with Calverts. At you wait, and without his field is in first class condition on of Long Island was tht Overland car, purchased by Mr. Wilson. end of the century important the eigtheenth it's toasted? charge* the arrival of the inspector. lucky bidder additions and alterations were Certification can only be made a Mr. and Mrs. Bishop*. of St. Paul, made and some of the walls the of success when every grower appying are visiting at the home of A. D. present buildings date from 1772. PLEASE CALL EARLY To seal in V# V# «i for the inspection service will make Wilson. Mrs. Bishop will remain a the best endeavor to grow a good, some time. the delicious vigorous, clean crop, free from disease, AT THE CHURCHES Mr .and Mrs. Dale came home on r# and after the crop has been produced Monday from their trip to Duluth. MM Burley flavor. «T# »V V# see to it that" it is put up for ftearly everyone was in Big Falls TOOTH TALK NO. 11 sale in the most attractive way. Monday to celebrate. BETHLEHEM CHURCH Minnesota leads all states in the Mr. Crowe's family and J. S. Olson It's toasted. A. Wallace MacNeill, Minister. amount of certified seed grown. Minnesota and family celebrated at the Olson BLUEBERRIES! Pyorrhea. certified seed last year sold home. Sunday morning, 10:30: Preaching from 25 cents to $1 per cwt. above The Wilson and McHugo families Pyorrhea is the most destructive, service. Sermon by Rev. C. L. Cowan the price for ordinary stock. enjoyed a picnic dinner at the^ McHugo the most difficult to treat, yet one of Fort Frances. home. Mr. and Mrs. Bishop of the commonest of all tiie diseases Sunday school, 11:30. Blaeberries! were their guests. of the teeth. It is present Come to Bethlehem church Sunday. CREAMERIES SAVE in the mouths of countless thousands A cordial welcome awaits you. RUMORED S00 WILL CASH ON CARLOTS of adults who fondly think their teeth are in perfect condition. ENGLISH LUTHERAN CHURCH Co-operative Shipments Prove Joint It progresses slowly, and in its BUILD TO LOMAN BRING YOUR H. A. Mayer, Pastor. Marketing Success Says New Farm ,early stages painlessly. The gums Agency. become spft and bleed easily, then Morning service at 11 a. m. they grow sore and become inflamed. BLUEBERRIES TO Services at Lyman school house in Minnesota creameries which have Pus forms at the roots Ray at 3 p. m. May Extend Line From Goodridge to co-operated in shipping dairy products of the teeth and they loosen -in S. E. Thompson & Son Loman to Connect With the M. D. 'Sunday school at 2 p. m. in carload lots during the last their sockets. When the disease A W. few weeks have secured fromi 30 to reaches this stage it affects the 45. cents a hundred rounds in freight METHODIST EPISCOPAL general health and usually extraction According to the Thief River Falls charges, A. J. McGuire, organization C. E. Ireland, Pastor. is the only remedy. Tribune the Soo Railway company manager of the new statewide cooperative »A »,« MM MMMM #.* has several hundred thousand ties In creameries association, saitf DR. E. W. BUNCE. D. D. S. Sunday school. 10. »V A V# CAN USE ANY today. its yards in that city, ready for shipment Morning worship, 11. H. F. Billings, an experienced pro- Saving in freight costs through carload out over the electric line to The Ladies' Aid will meet Friday AROUND LOMAN shipments proves that co-operation AMOUNT. Goodridge, and which is due to be 83 afternoon at the church. sthetist in charge. KMm« **M ».* *.« on a statewide scale, as planned extended to Baudette some. time. The V* »v»# «r* .• Junior League Tuesday at 2 o'clock, by the new association, is an assured Tribune article says that no official OFFICE AND LABORATORY Bible study Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. success,, he said. Mr. McGuire and :v Our boys crossed bats with the Indus announcement has been made by the |f You are cordially invited to these ALWAYS PAY THE HIGH- J. S. Jones, organizat:on director for team on July 4th, and got it fn 311 THIRD STREET company, but that the opinion is gej/fc the Minnesota Farm Bureau Federation, the neck to the tune of 22 to 5. That's International Falls. eral in Thief Ri_veir that next year EST MARKET PRICE. are mapping a campaign Through not so bad for amateurs. will see the line extended both to Letter Files and Card Index Trays Phone 474 Open Evg's and Sundays which in the next six months every Baudette and International Falls. It co-operative creamery in the state Myrtle Peggar and Billy St. Lawrence ait the, Press office. has been knovvn for some time that v/ill be given a chance to join the furnished the music for the the Soo has been seriously considering Minnesota Co-operative Creameries dance at Indus, on the 4th. the construction of this muchneeded Association, Inc. and long-delayed branch, and "Service is the purpose of the new Mr. and Mrs. S. J. McHugo from it rejlly looks as if something of a marketing agency." Mr. McGuire International Falls, soent Sunday here definite nature may be expected in said. "The first work of the organization $150 IN PRIZES visiting their uiany friends. the near future. The line would not will be to help the creameries only open up a very rich country to federate in district units. Creameries Mr. and Mr1?. William Stellar took but would give Baudette, International with these districts will work Sunday dinner with the Peggar family. Falls and the beautiful Lake together in r*eam grading, to improve of the Woods and Rainy Lake country the quality of butter manufactured. direct connections with the Dakotas. standardize the butter and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mercure visited ship in carlots. Every district wiil in International Falls Tuesday. EXAMINATIONS For Highland Dancing have its local government, with a member on the state board of directors. »AM »W# «r# V# V# V# V# »v Policies and activities of the state agency will be controlled bv the MARGIE NEWS districts. COMMON SCHOOL "The new state agency, far from MM f'• O V# CERTIFICATES being designed to take awav influence from the local co-operative A heavy rain Saturday night and Department of education program of creamery, is working solely toward Sunday made a decided change in the examinations for common school certificates, giving the local creamery more weather. It is much cooler. July 25, 26 and 27, 1921. power and a stronger voice in the Mr. J. D. Foote was in International Monday, July 25. marketing of dairy products. Falls on Thursday last. He Is I 8 to 8:45 a. m., enrollment 8:45 to Scottish Games going to make some improvements on 9:45 a. m.,. spelling 9:15 to 10 a. m., PREDICTS MAKING GOPHER the building he recently purchased and penmanship 10 to 12 a. m., arithmetic will make it his home when completed. 1 to 2:45 p. nv, geography RAIL TIES OUT OF STATE PEAT 2:45 to 4:15 p. m., composition 4:15 to 5 :30, reading. Adolf Bloom moved his family to With approximately 6,000,000 acres Tuesday, July 26. the Backe homestead last Monday. of peat land in the state, Minnesota 8 to 9:45 a. m., U. S. history 9:45 Mr. Rowe was in town last week has the possibilities of one of the to 11:30 a. m., English grammar 11:30 •from Big Falls. greatest industries in the United to 12 a. m., music 1 to 2:45 p. m., Margie lost out in the games Sunday States, W. T. Cox, state forester, says. physiology-hygiene 2:45 to 4:15 p. m., AT FORT FRANCES with Little Fork on their own With the manufacture of peat products civics 4:15 to 5:15, drawing. grounds. the timber situation of the state Wednesday, July 27. would be materially benefited,and the Mrs. William Rogers and sister 8 to 8:30 a. m., enrollment 8:30 to rapidly decreasing supply of this Miss Daly, returned from Baudette 10:45 a. m., geometry 10:15 to 12 a. produce would be enhanced, Mr. Cox last Saturday after several weeks' m., physics 1 to 2:45 p. m., algebra said. Removal of peat from land visit with her parents. 2:45 to 4:15 p. m., physical geography would permit the reforestation of Mr. Speer, the agent, went to Bemidji or general history 4 :_15 to 5:30 p. m., August 4th, 1921 these areas, he said. The use of this to spend the 4th of July. agriculture. peat would reduce the demand now made on timber, as mgny of the wood products manufactured today from LIVES WITH BULLET IN HEART Minnesota's diminishing suoply of timber could be manufactured to great advantage from the peat. Peat will lend itself to the manufacture of various kinds of composition boardy now extensively used in building and finishing work, as it will '4 to the manufacture of railroad ties and a great varietv of chemicals, including $1,000.00 IN PRIZES wood alcohol, acitated lime, and oils and solids. Peat Ties Forecast. Eventually railroad ties will be entirely manufactured from this peat deposit now found so abundantly in For Athletic Events the state, Mr. Cox said. The supply in the state is the greatest deposit in the country. It covers approximately 6,000,000 acres and runs in depths varving from six to ten feet. In many instances it is found to reach a depth upward of twenty feet, the forester said. Mr. Cox is urging that this vast industry get under way in the state, Watch for the Prize list and as it would materially alleviate the persistent demand on Minnesota's forests. After peat is taken from the land, he said, many acres would be found tillable soil/" and if not suited Further Announcements for agricultural purposes could be utilized for forestry work. !V Bullets dont always kHl. F'r instance, Charles Baker, English soldier Subscribe for THE PRESS. In the Turkish campaign in the world war had a one and one-half inch bul. All the latest local and personal Jet imbedded in his heart five years ago. Here he stands today, a living marvel before the x-ray as physicians look at the bullet and fail to explain comment. $2.00 Per Year. Jiow he can enjoy perfect health. 4