International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926
October 19, 1922 · Page 3 of 8
OCR Text
1 —I— «& ilfi J*1"' Arri-.i VA •v.' THE INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS ff RVGE FOUR THE INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS S3SSS5S8«SSt5SS$3SS* honse together with its contents. The came home from Dafkota" where they •BUY POfATOES" DRIVE lS.fi.* I fire also burned the Axel Johnson have been working for some time. v- STARTED TO AID GROWERS *,V4 BORDER house and barq. Emil Leonhardt's They brought'a Ford truck which they ANp BORDER BUDGEJ I home was also in great danger. SS SS 33 33 33 33 S3 S3 SS S3 33 S3 SS S3 S3 S3 State interest* Unite in Effort to Absorb purchased out there. They also report Paul of Surplus Crop :. -Bert Waldo's are away on a trip to H. J. MINER, Editor and Manager the roads rather rough. Some non-resident trappers have V- v.,*:.,Thk Year, j&j Iowa. arrived in this vicinity for the coming Eitcred at the Port Ofliee at Iiter*«tl«Ml Strils* Wm* Sctomi-CUw Matter 7 trapping season, Apparently the trapping A state-wide movement to create an Mr. Obert canvassed the vicinity for SUBSCRIPTIQN RATES: U. ~5:. $2.00 FOREIGN, $2.50 PER YEAR territory in this locality is already active and immediate demand for Minnesota Farm Bureau membership recently. Consumer's Shoe monopolized, by the local settlers. potatoes promises to materially Northwestern Advertising ^Representathreg help growers who find themselves The Congregational ladies meet at Minnesota Select Lut with a large surplus oiv hand and a the old schoolhouse on Saturday. 215 South fith Street Company 7t9 Exduuife Bank tfr S market so low that it hardly pays-for Minneapolis St. Paul $8 digging and Uauling. John Swanson and Mrs. Swanson "BOIS FORT ITEMS" Efforts to strengthen buying demand are visiting friends and relatives at 55 Located in Latz*s Outlet Store OUR PEAT-FARMERS was started Crow Wing county, Warren. ss 8 where, in co-operation with E. G. Sssfr James Barnes is erecting a new Special for Saturday The frontier 4nen, .who are trying to make a living on their peat farms Roth, county agent, people of Brainerd Seymour Lloyd, Clarence Blake and house on his claim. in the ditch country see a silver lining beyond the clouds in the value of the John Berglund are all busy threshing and vicinity, are being urged to peat, provided this product can be successfully marketed. "buy ten bushels of potatoes/' The Boys' Black in this vicinity. Frank Hoppe left for work last Our advice is Ho hang onto your farm if you possibly can and someday', idea behind the Barinerd effort is to Calf Shoe, in Monday, and will' be gone for' some perhaps your section of the. country will become^ a great peat fuel manufacturing absorb the local surplus and at the ^The schoolma'ams got safely back sizes^up to 6. time. I 'centeir. You have the right kind of peat for fuel purposes and same time give growers a cash market. from institute and reported an-enjoyable Values up to while now you are producing great crops from this soil, it may bring jrou "Ifi every family in the state with and profitable week. The ninth grade is studing Shakespeare's $3.50 in this greater returns to sell it for fuel. e^en average facilities for storage can In the meantime let us put forth every effort to keep the taxes down, "Merchant of Venice" fot be induced to put in their winter's Don't forget the annual meeting of lot. Special English I. so that you will not lose your land and work with the end in view toward supply now, potato growers would the Farmers' Club and Farm Bureau $1.98 establishing a .peat factory. The state through Governor Preus and Auditor be materially helped," says J, F. Reed, on Saturday, October 21. Be there! Chase and the county through A. D. Johnson have taken the lead in reducing Ishmael Howell is in the Falls where president of the Minnesota Farm Bureau Children's Shoes in Tan Calf your taxes the coming year. Regardless of what others sa^, these men are he is receiving medical treatment. He Federation. "Residents of the Einar Olson has returned from and Black Kid Lace Shoes is doing very nicely. earnestly endeavoring to cut down the tax*burdens and it will be wise to larger cities,- especially, should purchase Thief River Falls and a visit to "Doctor (Sizes up to 8) Values up to return them to office in order that they might carry out their program.—Be'midji their winter's supply at once and Kirby." He says his health is improving $2.00 Special— Daily Pioneer. they should demand Minnesota potatoes. now. Lester Campeau who has been working 98c at Nett Lake came home last week In the smaller towns, local markets REMARKABLE REPTILES for a short visit. will be strengthened, just as i£ The weiner roast at Alich's was a Ladies' Satin Pumps, BabyLouis being done in"Brainerd." success as far as supper, but the evening, heels. Fine grade satin. While the clays that formed what geologists call the Morrison shoals were The state department of agriculture, tho bright,' was too cold and Oscar Howell who has been working Values up to $4.50. Special— being laid down in water in southern Colorado, there lived in that region windy for out-door fun. at the Falls for some time returned which has been especially active in $2.98 a short time ago. many remarkable reptiles of huge size and great variety. According to the creating a better potato market, has United States Geological survey, Department of the interior, many of these John Berglund went up lo International issued a "statement in which growers Men's* Dress shoes in Tan Calf animals were mired in the soft clay of .which the Morrison formation largely are told that potatoes- grading well Falls last Wednesday and returned We have a new suspension globe installed and Black Kid. Values up to consists, and their bones, which are in places abundant, are now collected and above U. S. No. 1 are commanding a with a fine large Ford truck in our school which was another $5.50. —Special— studied by geologists. Some of these creatures, susc as one known as the which he will use to transport the price that can return a profit. The needed improvement. $2.98 Brontosaurus, were, 60 feet long. Many of them had remarkably small heads, statement, which is in the form of a school children. notably the Stegosaurus, whose diminutive ^rain suggests that it must have warning, says there is no "inside dope" Earl Barnes and Robert Marsh have Girls' Shoes in Tan Calf Lace been very stupid. This animal was undoubtedly very clumsy a:lso, but its as to the potato market, such as some ».% #.« #4 #4 V# V# O V# 4 returned from the harvest fields and (sizes up to 2.) Worth up to huge-size and its protective armor aided in its preservation. advertisers claim to have. #,« are now residing on their claims. $3.85. Special— ERICSBURG An example of the folly of shipping $2.48 small potatoes 'was cited 'by J. H. #.• #4 JUSTICE JAMES H. QU1NN Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Daniels returned 44 Hay, Deputy Commissioner of agriculture, last Saturday from the Falls where Ericsburg, Oct. 17. Ladies' Felt Comfy Slippers, last week when inspectors reported There is one office to be filled by the voters at the coming election concerning they attended the teachers' convention Elk Cushion sole—sold in some Gust Holm left f6r Minneapolis a car in Minneapolis that did which they should be well informed. It is perhaps the most important last week. stores at $1.50. Special— Monday on business. not sell, simply bec&use it contained 98 office to be filled at that election-that of Justice of the Supreme Court many small potatoes. of our state. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Green returned Wm. Petterson and Gust Holm were "Growers must realiz^," said Mr. Justice James H. Quinn is a candidate for re-election to that office for from Rochester where Mrs. Green received New Arrival business visitors at Littlefork last Ladies' Patent Hay, "that they may as well keep a second term. He has resided in this state continuously for sixty years, medical treatment. She is much one and two-strap Suede combination Friday. little potatoes at home and use them was county attorney of Faribault county for ten years, Judge of the Seventeenth better now and her many friends are pumps. Sold regular for feed. If sound, large stock is Judicial District for twenty years, has been one of the Justices of glad of her recovery. Several auto loads from here attended at $7.50 Special— shipped, the market will be materially the Supreme Court during the past six years, and it is conceded by all that $4.89 the Shipstead speech at the helped." he has served in the position last named with great ability and distinction. A dance was given at the E. O. city hall in the Falls last Friday evening. In the twin cities, an organized effort Opposed to Judge Quinn is William A. Anderson, now of Minneapolis. Jaegar home a week ago Friday in Our Men's.Work Shoes cannot is being made by representatives Ke has had no judicial experience and his candidacy appears tojiave been honor of Mr. and Mrs. Zahnen, the be duplicated. All solid leather, of civic organizations, retail merchant initiated and is being fostered by A. C. Townley and his followers. Mr. occasion being their 10th wedding anniversary, Con Reuter made a trip to the Falls Scout styles worth $3.00. Our associations and jobbers to arouse Anderson was prominent as a witness in Mr. Townley's behalf upon his consequently their tin wedding. yesterday, returning with two horses price— buying interest. trial in Jackson county, where he was convicted of conspiracy to teach sedition. $1.98 which he bought thSre. One of the "Twd things' must be donesaid Hal Later Mr. Anderson is found in the employ of the Nonpartisan horses was resold to Oscar Haggbom Greer, retail secretary of the St. Paul League in North Dakota as an\rganizer, where he remained until a short Frank Jager and Oscar Tromble this morning. association.- Farmers must realize time before the primary election in Minnesota. He returned to Minnesota that the public dwill not buy little Minnesota only in time to become a candidate for this important office. He is not^the The writer and Alex Enzman drove potatoes, when' big ones from William B. Anderson connected with the A. O. U. W. who was a candidate out to the road camp of Chas. E. (Jim other states are on the market. With six years ago. Pole) Johnson, eight miles east of Ray potatoes of equal quality available, it We ask the voters to consider well the qualifications and fitness of these They're Refreshing Sights^— last week, and tried out the new road, will be far easier to stimulate buying candidates for the position to which they aspire, and then determine for two which proved to be pretty rough. Mff interest." themselves which they wish to vote for. Johnson has completed his road contract A potato exhibit at the Dairy Show These Fall and Winter Hats and has his outfit working by the this week is part of the state-wide MRS. TORKHILDSEN MUSES ON aires are dishonest—some of dem is day helping another contractor finish movement to aid gfowers, honest and some dishonest, yust like ANNA D. OLESON'S SPEECH up, but expects to be done about the common peoples, Ja, ja. When Windom 26th of this m6nth, at which time he Riga, Oct. 16—Leonard Krassin has wants a committee to do some will be all set for another wiriter's resigned from the office of minister of Dear Editor:'— business for de city, den some goodfor-nothings logging. trade and commerce of Soviet Russia Dat Mrs. Anna Dickey Oleson, sure are not picked out, but according to announcement made public is a good talkfr—yst as good as any some dat know enough to run deir S3$S$8S8$S:4S8KS3$3S3$*$3S8$3S3SS today. man. I think women folks can be own business goodf Ain't dat so? smart politicians, too, when they learn WHITE BIRCH TWP. Some man dat knows lots about ss S3 ss ss *3 ss $3 S3 se s* ss & S3 S3 de tricks. When I- listened to Mrs. everything told me dat Kellogg is a ss S3 s: ss a S3 ss ss»k» Oleson I tought she-told de trut all good, honest man, and a smart man S3 MARGIE NEWS ss Road Overseer Geo. Wallace has a de time but when I got home and SS with lots of "gray ma'tter" in his crew of men fighting fire in the south a a got to tinking over all she said, I brain (don't exactly know what dat end of the township. vasn't so sure. is). And I tink he can figure out We are having a slight snow storm All de time and all the time, de what is best for Minnesota. I tink today and it is much colder. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Herman and politicians talk about dat tariff business, Mr. Kellogg likes to help de farming Mrs.^ Hattie Fabianke and daughter and dat is awfully hard to forstand. deestricts, for it seems dat he has Bessie Marsden has company from Gay were visitors in our township this Ja ja. When I go to bed dat worked so hard for dat Agricultural Dakota for a few days visit. week. Saturday evening, den I tought and Bloc in Congress, and dat must have tought and tought, until after de something to do with de farmers, I Ben Benardson left for Minneapolis The Poplar Island school house was trains come in. And I said to myself, tought. Ja, ja. Sunday night for a few days. destroyed by fire on last Tuesday. I guess we get cheaper shoes arid Please excuse bad spelling and The school equipment and other contents stockings and corsets, and ever'thing Rev. Gregg was in town last Friday odder mistakes. were a total loss. if de tariff is low on dose ting$ dat and held services in the evening. Yours truly, Europa likes to send us, for de working The forest fires which have been Mrs. A. Torkildsen. peoples dere work so much,' much Williard Horton is back from Dakota, burning in our township the past cheaper. So I guess Mrs. Oleson was having'spent most of the summer week, burned the Axel Johnson house right, maybe. But den I tought harder Two Policemen and One Negro are there. A SUBTLE transition of the mode in Millinery keeps and barn on Tuesday. latest Victims of Rock Island and harder, and—by jimmeny. I pace with other notable style changes. Lengthened, began to see something else, too. I Underworld Wir. Mrs. Porter is hot gaining very fast Mr. Martin Haugo of Shelly, Minn., see dat if England and Germany and from her injuries received in the auto classic gowns claim Hats in keeping with their graceful was a visitor at the M. h. Babin hffme dem odder countries over dere send Rock Island, 111., Oct. 16.—Police accident. last Wednesday. His daughter, Miss so much manufacture stuff to America, men James Green and Edward Minor silhouettes. This is Millinery's problem for fall and Hazel Haugo, who has made her home den if the working people here and Robert Scott, negro are dead as Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Crowe on winter. with the Babin family for the past want to work^den dey must work as a result of a gun fight which took Sunday night, a daughter. Congratulations. six years returned with her father to cheap as dose peoples over dere, Den, place in an underworld negro dope IV attend school at Twin Valley, Minn. dose poor worjeers would have to den last night. Scott shot the officers Cinnamon with its rich Softness of duyetyne work awfully cheap, and dey couldj^pt as they entered to', make arrests. Mrs. Crowe's mother is visiting her »ss S3 ss ss S3 S3 glowing tone is a favorite and lustre of velvet—a afford to buy much butter and eggs Deaths in the underworld war now from Wisconsin. She came last Thursday S3 93 and wheat flour, and all dese good total seven. Bill Burg and the Looney and surprised her. color. And all the becoming S3 McCLELLAN. S3 crisp taffeta bow—a flaring tingsj dat de farmers raise, and den de gangs are vowing vengeance. John ss woodsy tones of +.• ft* ft stuff dat de farmers have to sell will Looney, whose son wis slain in a Mr. ^nd Mrs. Garrison returned O +V V# i# friH of quill—morning be cheaper dan ever. And den byand-by—good brown, with delightful street battle is barricaded in his home. last Sunday from their^fisit in the Curtis Leonhapdt, Kale, Danna and fashioned of feathers glorjes, gracious—when ill dose Bill Burg, who is charged with the southern part of the state. Raymond Simmfons have just returned variations such as amber, tings that Europe makes so cheap begin killing of young Looney is being held from the Dakota harvest fields. Gn a deep purple' hat. a on a be a to come so fast, so fast, den pretty under $20,000 bonds. Mr. Shelton of Remer, who formerly soon we will see no smoke coming These are ^some of the muffin. lived here, is in town for a few Mr. Emit Leonhardt's daughter out of the factory stovepipes at all, HOW HE GOT HIS days calling on old friends. Margaret returned to Minneapolis things that make the new They are most moderately and dose poor* pale and ragged people Tuesday after a visit of two weeks. dey will have to go and beg, or We recently read an account of a Several more of our men havfe returned hats such beguiling affairs. priced, as you may starve, or live on soup made from smallv town newspaper editor who, at from Dakota.' Among the Mr^ Martin Haugo and daughter see. /dog meat—ysh da—or joi|i some middle life, is today living on the fat number were, Amery Eidem, Wm, Margaret autoed up from Twin Valley Coxey Army. No, no, no, I said to of the land. The man "started poor Sholtz and John Johnson. Wednesday and were accompanied myself, my dear, dear America must twenty years ago. He has now retired back by HazeJ Haugo. 20% Off on All of Our Better Grade Millinery not come down to de standard of with a fortune of $50,000. The men who have the job of graveling /living of dat old Europe! Mrs. How did he do it? The reasons are •Special Sale of Children's Hats, trimmed hats and tjam» at the road have moved their Mrs. T. Litheriand, who has spent a Oteson must be mistaken. I can't plain.. He did not take it easy. He camps to town and are now ctiifihg few days visitihg at Indianapolis, Ind., from $2.00 to $5.00 for the balance of the week only. vote for her. I can't, I can't. acquired his $50,000 by ceaseless energy, down the hill south of town. expects to return Tuesday and bring strictest economy, by conscientious Mrs. Oleson said she saCw a millionaire her father, mother and sister back Lee Hat Shop efforts to give his subscribers Several from this place were in Big oncet, and I guess she didn't with her. and advertisers full value by indomitable Falls last Friday on business. Anitong like de looks of him. Some peoples perserverance and by the will the number were T. Smith, W. Van don't like does dat have lots and lot* XA forest fire swept over the south .'-"it Tyj.*.- /f ^afe^v* of ~5n uncle which left him heir to Slyke, Mr. Jarvis, Mrs. Nickleson and part of White Birch township last of money—dey tink dey getjte dishonestly. $49,999,50. Mr. and Mrs. McHuga I don't tink all de million Tuesday and burned our new school -3 's. wX *2- I %r