Old News

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

September 7, 1922 · Page 2 of 8

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pp. 1 jV .0. /.- w'-*4 zw^ T-g*£ IT ... i. $*- :... «p«Wc 4l iffifk V^VS 'A-& THE INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS Jt W^WAA -'*~*1. «6 1. -V & $ A E E MANY FAIRS TO *•. |KT IN GARDENS & BE HELD IN 1922 Kr K't- Statesmen Have Made History in Peaceful Spots. Misses Edith and Ethel Lee spent Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Shea spent the Commercial Exhibitions Springing the week-end visiting their sister at week-end in Duluth. Recent Occurrence in the Grounds at to Life After Discogragement Ely. Chequers Is an Example—Beginning ——o—— Mr. and Mrs. Martin O. Molstre and of War Years. of Fateful War. party of Ray spent Labor day here. C. Rongerud and son spent the latter It was in the garden at Chequers part of last week visiting in Bemidji. Fins HUT 60 It PEOPLE that the first intimation was given of Mr. and Mrs. John Norton returned the fateful conference at Washington here Sunday following a visit at Glen- upon which, remarks London Answers, (coe. Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Green and children not improbably, the future of civilization Future May See Fair Established in departed early this week by auto hangs. Ark of Air' Capable of Carrying Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Keyes left this for the twin cities. It was Sunday afternoon and the Message of Progress and Culture week for Winnipeg where they will American ambassador had arrived with to Remote Places. a cablegram in his pocket from the visit for a few days. Dr. H. G. Ingersoll visited over the American President. It was TEh Invitation week-end and Labor day at the Ingersoll Washington.—"From Winnipeg to to the British government to send Adolph Krohn and daughter, Jennie, summer home at Hubert. Rio de Janeiro, and from Christiania^ representatives to Washington to discuss are among those attending the state and Algiers to Singapore and Tokyo, the question of disarmament fair this week. commercial fairs and exhibitions are Mr. Harvey, the ambassador, and Mr. ALICE GREEN'S OPINION OF MEN —o—— springing to life after the discouragement Lloyd George were seated together in of war years, and are playing an the garden when the former handed Bernard Decker returned to Collegeville increasingly important part in making My home is in Columbia Heights. the cablegram to our prime minister. 'this week where he will resume nations acquainted with each other In a flash the prime minister was on My name is Alice, Green. studies at St. John's university. and with the kinds of lives each his feet. "We accept!" he almost You say that I am happy leads," says a bulletin from the Washington shouted. "We accept gladly, we accept And so I've always been. Irl Smoot and Louise Meyers, both hea'dquarters of the National gratefully. We will do everything In of Indus, were issued a marriage Geographic society. The bulletin our power to make the conference a The: secret of my happiness, points out that a greater number of license by the clerk of court last success." Girl's guesa it if you can This new such expositions is scheduled for 1922 The Temple garden, on the embankment, Tuesday. If not, I'll give the answer. than those held in pre-war days in a is one of the most historic spots sugar-coated I keep away :from man. decade. In London, for it was there that the Mrs. E. Whitney returned the latter "Fairs have been important factors gum. Wars of th» Roses commenced. These delight: They have been the cause of trouble part of last week from Hibbing following in the lives of nations and in the evolution wars were so-called because tha ensign a visit at the home of relatives Ever since the world began. young and old/ of society itself," continues the of the house of York was a white rose, Nine tenths of all our sorrow residing there. bulletin. "But in order to survive they and that of the house of Lancaster Are brought to us by man. have had to go through *some vital red rose. It "melts in your changes. They probably started in the Mr. and Mrs. H. Varrio and Mr. and The story goes that Lords Somerset They are a necessary evil dim days ot prehistoric Asia as sort of mouth" and the gum in the and York, with a number of their Mrs. M. Park returned here last week We must have them, I suppose, Irregular markets held at relatively retainers, met in the Teaple gardens, after concluding an automobile trip to center remains to aid digestion, But we should never trust them long intervals and during the Middle and commenced^ to qudrrel about the the Mesaba range. Ages when transportation was difficult Or let them be our beaus. weak King Henry VI., for whom the brighten teeth and soothe mouth they were the chief agencies of European former was regent. 0 Some say we do not need them trade. O. J. Masters and family returned and throat* In the midst of the quarrel Somerset But imagine, if you can, A Few Old Types Survive. last week after concluding an extended picked a red rose, and turning to his "Where conditions have remained This whole big world a running friends, said: "Let him Who sides with auto tour 'which took them as far There are the other WRIGLEY relatively primitive the famous old Without a single man. me pluck a red rose and wear'it in Ms east as Toledo, Ohio. fairs have continued to function until cap!" friends to choose from, too: today. The annual fair at Nizhni They might not be so very bad Then the duke of York savagely tore J. P. Larson, Little Falls chief of Novgorod continued largely to dom- ,• If they were rightly placed. a white rose from a neighboring bush, police, and family are visiting here at inate the commercial life of Russia But their place is not by any means and cried: "This Is my badge! Let the homes of Mrs. Larson's brothers, until the revolution, and even ^ince him who Is my friend pluck a white With their arms about* your waist. then the distribution of foodstuffs, textiles Edward and Henry Nelson. rose and wear it!" and £urs through this old gathering There is nothing so disgusting, This scene is pictured In one of the place of traders has been an important frescoes in the houses of parliament. Or more of shameful scenes Mrs. Ethel Beck Moseley and children item. For centuries it has It was one of the great turning points Than to see girls 'running 'round of Madison, Wis., departed last been the gigantic exchange counter in English history, for the Wars of the with beaus week for New York City after concluding between vast are^s of Asia and Europe. Roses shattered feudalism, destroyed While they are in their teens. a month's visit at the home of the power of the barons, and set in "In the portions of the world well Mrs. Moseley's sister, Mrs. John Shea. motion the spirit of freedom and They say that us poor women developed with highways, canals, railways democratic government which Is the First brought sift upon the earth. and ocean ports, both the local keynote of modern England. Clarice Johnson, Border, Mildred But we know men are full of it tooent and international fairs of the old type, The vast empire of India was virtually Slauson, Manitou, and Ernest Lund, devoted largely to the distribution of From the hour of their birth. won for Britain in a garden. Clementson, left here Tuesday for the staple supplies, died out. But the fair On February 5, 1757, Just outside the idea lived on, merely changing its state fair where they will compete in The men are on the increase village of Plassy, Surajah Dowlah had form. Special industries and groups the state spelling contest. Edwin And something should be sprung. 60,000 troops and Clive 3,000} of industries began holding expositions Nelson the fourth member of Koochi^ching When we have too many kittens Olive called a council of war, which in England and France, and the idea county's champion spellers left We drown them when they're young. advised him not to advance. CUve fa UNCLE JOHN spread to other countries. went into a garden alone, and set from Big Falls during the week and AUTPCASTERK "Before a great while these localized I could do it just as easy under a grove of trees for an hour In will join the first three mentioned at and restricted exhibits expanded As I could drown a worm. quiet thought. When he came out he the fair. to include many Industries, (hose of evenin's, calm an* Just.hold them under water rejected the council's advice, and subdued In summer still, we used to hear the whippoorwill foreign, lands as well as their own. an empire in a battle which only forth his And watch them kick and squirm. send plaintive note we heard the twitter of the frog— Soon came the full-fledged world's lasted an hour! the baying of the old coon-dawg,—the gruntin' ot the shot. fairs, the first of which was held in A dozen in each city Wllberforce first mooted the question London In 1851. Many have been held The of the skeeter's glory summer night, when cricket's chirp an' of the abolition of the slave trade to I think is all we need. since, both in America and Europe. bite, lent spent to the hour,—delightful in its warp Pitt In a garden. Wilberforce had just We could pick out some good large Paris holding the palm for numbers. WIRELESS read Clarkson's famous essay on abolition, woof, the rain-draps on tlie clapboard roof, grew ones an "But at the root of the world fair* when he was invited to spend a That we could save for seed. or international expositions was the dreamers full of power. ... But now, alas! The week-end with Pitt, and wandered with idea of general education, and closely an' modern way commences when we hit the hay, him into the beautiful park at Holwood, Girls, if you would be happy connected with it was the amusement scorns the midnight bell. We hear the squawks from Timbuctoo near Bromley. Just try my little plan. aspect. They served well as occasional —the There he first announced his Intention dismal groans from Waterloo,—the frenzied shrieks from hell! And never get entangled more or less sugar-coated demonstrations to the great statesman of bringing gather in all noise that's made,—the devilish rot of,every gradebroadcasted of the progress of the With that beast they call a man. the subject before the house. The world, but they failed to measure up through the air. ... We tune our dingus up at night, resolution was made at the foot of a If you find you must love someone. to the efficiency standards of the modern and ketch the hymns of hate an' spite, that's let off—everywhere! tree called Wilberforce's oak, and ITS TOASTED We should love one another. distributor. Side by side with I used to use a poultice hot, for a stone seat, erected by the earl of them had grown up special International But you should never trust any man Stanhope, marks the spot. all the innard pains I got—to draw industrial exhibits and sample Not even your own brother. It's toasted. This A little later, when Wilberforce put *em to the skin,—but I ain't got no fairs, and by the outbreak of the his case before the house, Pitt, Fox one extra process World war these had been forged into If you follow my instructions, keen desire fer rigs that draw and Burke supported him and all gives a delightful modern agencies meeting Twentieth And do ypur duty well without no wire, an' fetch hysterics England rang with applause. century conditions. Now that all nations can quality that You will find this little world of ours ml are girding themselves for an not be duplicated A pleasant place to Swell. after-the-war scramble for trade such fairs are being held on all sides. —Author J. L. Huggins. Uncle Sam's Neptune Ace On Longest Flight "Samples of almost every conceivable manufactured product and machine »re sent to some of these exhibits, duty free, and orders, are solicited ANNOUNCEMENT from the buyers who gather from various countries. Among the fairs of this sort which have become Mr. E. M. Sathre has been elected President of the Crookston established institutions are those held College at Crookston, Minnesota, and has already assumed in London, Birmingham, Bordeaux, his duties. Mr. Sathre is no stranger among the friends of the Lyons, Brussels, Dresden, Leipzig, Crookston College* He began teaching there in the year 1896 Prague, Barcelona and Milan and in dozens of other cities it Is planned to and has been connected directly or indirectly witih the institution hold such exhibits annually. ever since. In 1906 he was elected Secretary and in 1920 Fairs That Go to the People. he became Vice President. Mr. Sathre is well qualified for "In meeting modern 'conditions not this important position, both by way of education and business only have fairs been placed on a sample experience. He is supported by a strong teaching staff and basis and confined largely to specialities, the continuance of the excellent business training offered by machines and' manufactured the College is assured* Beginning classes in Shorthand, Typewriting, articles, but they are seeking out still more efficient methods of reaching Bookkeeping and all Commercial subjects will begin larger numbers of potential buyers. on September 4th. For information as to how you can prepare Italian manufacturers have adopted yourself for a good paying Commercial position and pave the floating fair, fitting out a special the way for your success, write to E. M. Sathre, President, exhibit ship which anchors for a time Crookston College, Crookston, Minn. In the various ports around the rim of the Mediterranean from Port Said to Marseilles. French distributors carried the idea of a traveling fair still further last year, sending an exhibit Free Extractions train across Canada and a Czechoslovak train of a similar sort has just finished a two months' tour through the Balkans and Poland. Perhaps it is not too 'extravagant a vision to see the fair which had its humble beginning In some far off Asiatic oasis, As a special offer for the month of established in an ark of the air and September only, we will Extract Free capable of carrying its message of progress and foreign culture to every of Charge all teeth to be replaced by little center of Industry and life." jX: bridge work, making only the usual Saved by Holding Dog's Tail. charges for the Bridge work. Fresno. Cal.—Floyd Johnson and Altan Self, both sixteen, lost In a THE DR. BURRILL DENTISTS a When Lieut. Walter Hinton, Lieut. Hinton with pilot, a mechanic, ton's craft, the Sans pa io Correia. bllzsard in the mountains, thirty miles countered heavy head winds axd U. S. Navy, flew the first seaplane one newspaper man and a of east here, were led to safety by was often turned back. This is onei across the Atlantic in 1919, he wrote Brazilian passenger, left New York holding to tall a dog, it was of the biggest seaplanes yet builtj the of August 17th and is expected to his name in history. He is now on 311 THIRD STREET TELEPHONE 474 by Uncle Sam. leaned today. short time later a A 7th, another assignment,* in a Navy reach Rio September in time eAr' The pictures show Hinton rescue party two other boys, DR. R. A. HEIMERt Resident Manager. found the Brazilian for .the opening of planer flight from New York to dicated by arrow), and Insert crtvf. loot la the same blinding storm, lying Centennial Exposition. Rio de Janeiro, which if completed shows seaplane at start of the flight, la now exhausted. All down the Atlantic coast His* just raising before frosi the water.] will be a record trip of 8,400 miles. /St Ydfohl .-.V .. :W-}::£ •1 StrjMd*.•' j''tr.\ i®, Zazik*.