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VOL. 2.
NAL.
PIERZ, MORRISON COUNTY, MINNESOTA, JULY 7, 1910.
NO. 3
PUGS RECEIVE
FORTUNES
Jim Jeffries wis paid $117,
000 for letting Jack Johnson
pummel his face into a jel'v
A QUIET CELEBRATION
Compared with previous
years, the fourth of Julv celebration here was a tame af-
Ijfair. The public in general
in thi. vicinitv did not seem
to be iii a humor to celebrate.
'The dance at Faust's hall was
well attended both in the afternoon and evening*.
The ball fame between the
Buckman nine and the local
Jeffries took 40 per cent of ileam replied in a score of 10
the purse amounting* to $4').- t0 5 ■' lv°r of
400, the bonus of $10,(100 and
he sold his picture interests
for $66,666.
and Johnson received $12 .
for doing the job.
John-on took 60 per cent
of the $101,000 purse'vvhich a-
moun'ed to $60,500. a bonus
of $10,000 and he sold liis picture interests for $50,000.
BOATS ON FAIR
GROUNDS' LAGOON
Smoke from tne stack of the
big* dredg-e so busily e
DR. HALA LEAVES
Dr. Kahala, who bought out
Dr. Segmin's practice at
hs ago
on the canals ami n I Sa^d% for. tkc Twi"
the new part of the State Pair [ *? ito
Grounds, is a source: of con
his old stan id and re-
stant annoyance to Como-Har- ?"" ' Ur' Kaha"
rietcar conductors, who pass'"1,' , ,on a
RENEW SUBSCRIPTIONS
It will be a great accommo-i
dation to us if those, whose]
subscription to the Journal :
have expired, will kindly re-!
new tiie same as soon as con-!
venient. The amount is small j
and you will not miss it, but!
several hundred of these!
small amounts mean much to
the publisher of this paper.
the fair grounds each trip. Pas
sengers are continually asking
if the boats will be running this
year on the waterway in this
new addition to the exposition
grounds. Arrangements have
practically been made with the
Ramaley Boat Works, White
Bear, Minn., to equip the lagoon with a dozen motor b
of various sizes as the many
canals and series of small ; ■
give an opportunit;
thru the big addition
grounds.
Three boats were operated
last year and their capacity
was taxed to the limt, a
' 'a lo mt, as he desifi
FARMERS' LIBRARY FREE
The.Minnesota Farmers' Li-j
brary is published monthly for;
free distribution among the!
people of Minnesota de
receive it. Address all com-j
munications to Farmers' Li- j
brary, University Farm, St. ;
Paul, Minn. It will be devoted;
to the extension of agricultural;
information among the people '■
of the State and will be sent
free to anyone who asks fori
it. Send your address or
address of any friend v.
sires it, and th. na L be |
entered on our mai: If!
any particular Bull
wanted ask for it as Extension
Bulletin No
BOKHARA THE NOBLE.
A City That Does Not Live Up to Its
High Sounding Title.
The-* same maimers and customs prevail in Ihe Bokhara of lodny thai wore
familiar to our uig.it prowling frieud
of Bagdad. A blindfolded Horse- still
plods round and round iieiieulli a beam.
grinding tbe corn between an upper
and a nether millstone. Tbe cotton is
still carded bv the primitive agency of ter arrangements are certain to
a double bow. ibe smaller one affixed De made this year.
The west end of the canal,
which ends about 500 feet from
the new grandstand, is now enclosed in a tire-foot wall of cement nearly twice as large
as it was at the time of
the last fair.
There is between three and a
half and four miles of shore
line on the various waterways
and the ride is really an entertaining one.
At the fair grounds end, both
sides have been graded to an
attractive slope running1 down;
to the ceiling and tbe larger one attached to it by a cord and struck by a
mallet see as iei cause a sharp rebound.
The reis-i-sliatiat. or censor of tbe
morals, si in rides slowly through tbe
town, compelling ibe children te> attend the schools and their parents the
meisejiie's. inspect iim ihe weights and
j measure* and Keeping a watch over
I tin' behavior nt tin- r.immunity as a
j whole. When a tradesman is found
; guilty eef citeatiiii; he is stripped I wire
forced rd ins knees and
! Hogged wiili a stirrup leather by one
I Me e-e-ii-eel s III li'lllla als
The ivot-id moves m-itvly in Bokhara
' iij nates still close with the set-
titu. sun A flea- 'lark nee one is allow-
i .-.I all use!. Ihe e.nly sound at Illglll he
i he i>'"l nee-bidy lical ing eif I he
li'iuan's drum as he patrols the
:Meets Willi a ia 11' i'I'I i ill Ills ipiest. un-
ioireues, ee| a dishonest mail
With lis till li. latinl icisni. vice, mill .- and ■ 'ii-' i.Hi. I'.ek'.nrn the None, as ;is in.epic Insisi :<_: it.
- iien ni in l_'iir_ a hell
ban -! r ■.- place ! |.no ,\ . aa-! I hai is I'n-
■ ■■ i hai i i-nii s»i iiiioui it -■ :•. Alex-
: v s
f
I ty of surgery,
having had wid< ience in
that i of his profession,
he is loe r a larger field
than-is afforded hei
Tfeat Nee Ine
— for the thinking man — ior the professional man—
for the busy bu_i-_e__ __-_.__— and his
family; in short, it's ier You
25 cents
per copy
Tit
- M L*. RJ <_A U
$3.00
a year
e
first, becauce it b r*. necessity—-_'_:.-_t i.
the rule in magazine buyin.3 of /'_:..-
erica's intellectual aristocracy. It i.
indisper.caLlo to Inc. Luc;/ business
man, who muzt [;
time:, because it gives h
news ci the d.y in cene:.
form ; it is bv; '
man, who _.er_t:__-__
and then draws his cv/n <
because it gives h___. j___.t filci.t,
straight fads.
9 It is helpful to the whole Lrr.ily.
In it you will find a monthly picture
to the water and hundreds of
trees and shrubs have been set
out, which should eventually
make this a most beautiful place
for those who admire an artistic arrangement of shrubs and
flowers.
While the financial condition
of the State Agricultural Society prevents the immediate completion of the vast park scheme
to be arranged on the various
islands and shores of the new
grounds, enough has already
been done to satisfy the most
critical that when complete it
will be even more attractive
'than was ever dreamed of.
TH .IN.
—
ut DeGrly Lov.s the
letta.
11 to a I.ii is to
r ■ nt to
pres-
urian
grows restless o\'er liis songs, anel
1 forbid bi
emulate his forefathers' deeds e:i
the frontier. He does
; only in Uveis
Wil
lly a more
than the well o(*u
aa it is u 1
■ ;■ ! of revenge or vendetta
■
al across the border ai
ir man. do their best to
e tracks home
lie- district ut theli
d of killing
i iv :e- :' I ird of western
shoot thi.r victim "sit-
ind do not Ri • e hiui
as il is ; lie- r*e.cogni;_ed
tl le can be said
■ makes m«n very wary.
!<.sm- can appreciate tbe
plowman, for
to his duties with
over iris back. Rut in
spite 1 are the essence eif
pitality. As their guest
aa 01: - (an ee;.-:" to any harm, and
do all in i heir power to make
bis ■•fa..' nmoijg them pleasant and
cf men a J E^alrs by Dr. Albert
SI--.-.'/, b his corspreheijwvc editorial,
■■Process cf the World ;*• a clever
-____coa history c. the month; book
reviews; the gi t cf the best which
has appeared b the ether magazines
papers cf the world ; pithy
es; and interesting
0:1 the al.-2npar.ant topics of
the day. Authoritative; non-partisan,
timely and very much to t'tie point,
" it's a liberal educatjan.11 is the way
subscribers express it.
OUR 1999-10 CATALOGUE
of _11 America, _rg__i___ i; _ money - savrr. Yc 1 c?.n't afford to order (or next
year without first seeing it. If yc: appreciate tuipe.ncr agency service, and demand
maj-imuD ...aga._i.ie value for the i..we_r dollars, write for it—today, l.'s free to YOU.
The Review of Reviews Company, New York
DANCE
AT
REESE'S
.*_-
£_> ___*» ■ --iS2__»- --*ES) 1
•
lunch fRoom and Conf .ch'onery!
MINNIE TAUST. Prop
^ceCream, Sodas, Candies
■v
-w'
Fresh FruitGannedGoods
There will be a dance at
Christ Reese's place next Saturday night, July 9. All are
invited to attend and have a
good time. Good music has
been secured for the occasioh.
C;""
:c!
j >>
Torre.-.y r-r'\ t;-o v. -,.- I
There were nii.y two pieces of cake
and three hungry hoys upstairs throwing their clothes ein iu the raeo to fret
down firs-t. Tommy won ont and rushed into Ihe dining room brenthjessly.
"That's a good hoy. Toipiny. The
parly bird frets tiie worn.. Taken piece
of entte." s-iid liis mother.
Tommy looked at thi* cake quizzically, inspecting it from all sides.
"What's th,-' matter. Tommy?" asked
his mother. "What are yon trying to
do?"
"Say. trm. ■-■'.\; U piece lias the worm
in ll V" lie inquired soberly.—National
Monthly.
The _ud__ In P..r_r.
"Prisoner at tha liar." said the portly, pompous and .tor id unigistrate,
"yoa are charged witl i pig-,
a very serious offens-e in this district.
There has heen a great do:;i eii'
stealing, ii_.il I shall make an esamplg
of vou or uone of us will be safe."—
[.oiidun News.
Cause E'-ecrh.
•'Whal made hini angry wh
telephonin" to the lawyers about his
fat tier's will V*
"He u-.as eat off."—Buffalo Expi
Lunches Served at All Hours
•__»—<__>
Tha Kind It Was.
"Waiter, ihis elm k steak T or
!•: like wood."
"Yes. --ah Dr.t a.m v,
" « i».-ie! ind rinin
Preaching and Practice.
W. S. (5ilbert on one certain occasion
was on a visit to a friend, the owner
of a flue Eugllsh country house. On
the mofnlllg alter his arrival he was
chatting with his host before breakfast when he became suddenly aware
that family prayers were about to be
read. The household tiled lu. and the
distinguished guest knelt down on the
spot where he happened to be stand
ing. Looking up. he caught his host's
eye fixed on him with a warning
glance, which he. however, failed to
read aright. The service began. "Almighty Father, who hast made all men
alike" (more telegraphic glancesi, "rich
and poor, gentle and simple" — then,
unable to contain himself any lo
the host called out, "Gilbert, you are
kneeling among the servants!"
to r!:3 rV.t»si_r '.:ar Humane
.t.
iy 1 • my pray
er ['"ee.1 me and talfe care of me. Be
I he reins. I >;>
dp me when going uphill.
Never st: : or kick ine when
I faillto understand what you want eef
rive me a chance to under-
I van. Watch ine, and if I refuse
• yonr bidding see if there is not
ivitli my harness.
■ no! givt- me too heavy loads. Nev-
, r hitch me where water will drip em
' well shod. Examine my
i I fail to eat. I may have
an ulcerated tootlu That, you know.
is very painful. 1 am' unable to tell
you in words when I am sick, sei
watch me. aud I will try to tell you by
signs.
Pet me sometimes. I enjoy it. and
I -. ill learn to leive you.
Protect me in cummer from the hot
run. Keep a blanket on me in winter
weather, and never put n frosty bit in
my mouth, but hold it iu youi- hai ds a
moment first.
I carry yea. pull you, wait patiently
11 long hours, day or night. I
cannot tell you when ! am thirsty;
give me clean, cool water often in hot
her.
Finally, when my strength is gone.
nd of turning me over to a hu-
• to be tortured and starved.
ray life in the easiest, quickest
. aad your (.oil will reward you in
this life and i:i heaven. Amen.—From
the Swedish in "Our Dumb Animals."
Eire's' Eco3-
Ostriches lay the largest eggs of all
birds now extant, according to a wrlt-
the Scientific American, but the
would have appeared
it Madagascar
bird, the epyornis, which measured
1 hap 1 hirt.v Inches In its small- i
The smallest birds'
1 1 f the; i.ihmfe species • f
humming 1 irds. whicli are smaller
than the' e rtain kinds of trop
ical beetles. L.tal the cuckoo lays the
relative-!;,- . egg—that is to say.
while the "jackdaw and the cuckoo are
about equal In size, the former's egg is
five • larger than the lat-
ter's. The fact that the cuckoo is
wont tee deposit its eggs in the nests
of birds which are usually much smaller than itself doubtless accounts for
this. The relatively largest egg is laid
by the kiwi, a strange, wingless New
Zealand bird. Is no less than
five in ig. although the extreme
length of the bird itself is only tweu-
■ii inches.
HORSE MAKES
CRUISE IN AIRSHIP
It has been -aid. and jus
each
-but it lias been left to
proprietors of the large circus-
' and plan, invent
and produce novel features that
are beyond the wil ams
of the imagination, and to accomplish the seeming impossible.
When the Airship was recently perfected it was thought
that the ingenuity of man
could devise nothing greater
than to make the air navigable
—but it was left for Dode
to accomplish a still gre
wonder, that of sending- a horse
on a cruise in an airship.
Tt is beyond human believe
that this is done—but one lias
only to witness this most sensational of the world's greatest
triumph of wonders to be convinced.
ercury, the Airship horse
iting Equine Feature with
the great Dode Pisk Shows,
makes a sensational ascension
twice daily with bewildering
pyrotechnic display, making
this the most extraordinary
feature ever presented by anA-
-ement Organization in A-
merica,
The Great Dode Pisk Shows
will exhibit afternoon and evening at Little Falls, Wednesday, June 13th.
DR. SEGUIN RETURNS
Dr. Seguin has resumed the
re with
at the dru] < as
uiily
but are
visi- -par
ents at L.uck;nan until t
cure a house.
THE BARGAIN CHASE.
American Women and the Shopping
Game Mania.
More money is wasted every year by
women buying needless things under
the excitement of the bargain hunt
than is spent In all the gambling
houses and race tracks put together,
says Mary Ileaton Vorse in Success
Magazine. When you say that I have
no statistics to prove this 1 answer
that I have common sense and have
spent much time in city shops. I
know. too. what 1 am callable of. and
I am but a half hearted hunter. I
know what my friends do. It isn't for
nothing lhat 1 have seen earnest young
students of economics succumb to this
hunting instinct and fare forth to buy
ninety-eight cent undergarments.
It is not only in the stores frequented by poor or uneducated women that
I have seen the more brutal instincts
of the human race come to the surface. ' I have seen a charming looking
elderly woman in a high class store
fuatch a dress length of gray voile
from the hands of another elderly woman, and the reason I happened to see
these sights was because I myself was
at the sale looking at garments I didn't
want and didn't need and buying them.
The bargain chafie. the shopping
game passion or sport, life work or
recreation—for it may be any one of
these, according to the temperaineut
of the woman—has American women
well in its grip. Hardly one of us escapes some one of the psychological
deviations from the normal which I
have mentioned.
The Dead m India.
Three distinct methods of disposing
of the dead are in vogue iu India.
While the Mohammedans Inter the
dead, the Hindoos prefer to throw the
bodies into the purifying waters of the
Ganges, and even now there are constant infractions of the severe regulations framed to suppress this dangerous practice. The form of funeral
adopted by the Parsees'is that of simply exposing their dead at a great altitude to the scavenging services of
crows and vultures.
UNUSUAL WATER TOWER
A remarkable concrete water
tower has recently been completed in Brussels, Belgium. It
is built of concrete blocks; is
one hundred forty feet in
height and of 280,000 gallons'
capacity. It will be of intere*st
to you to know that golden
grain belt beer is not only a
good malt tonic for your stomach nerves, but a healthful,
wholi l.giving strength
and vitality to the entire system
Order of your nearest dealer or
be supplied by E. S. Tanner,
Little Falls.
MORRISON COUNTY
TELEPHONE
conPANY
A. E. Reynolds, Local Manager
OPEN HOURS
From 7:30 a.m. to 12 M.
,, 1 P.M to 0 P.M.
,i 7 ,, to 9 ,,
Every day except Sundav.
The service Sunday will be
from 9 to 10 in the "m<iruing
and 7 to 8 in the evening.
WANTS
Advertisements in this column |
are charged for at the rate of j
live cents per line.
FOR SALE-S. E. % of section 5, 2 miles from Lastrup.
30 acres under plow, SO acres
prairie. balance hardwood
timber. Easy terms, 5 per
cent interest. Herman Koering. Pierz, Minn.
FOUND—A sum of money.
Owner may have same bv
orovirigownership and pa\ ing
for this notice. C. E. Gravel.
LOST—A silver watch in
Pierz on Julv 4th. Finder
leave at Nick Mueller's place.
3-tf Otto Dengel
FOR RENT—lam compelled thru sickness and old age
to rent or sell my saloon business in Lastrup. For particulars call at my saloon in
f.astrup. Joseph Brummer.
3-tf
LOST—A brown sack coat
between the church and the
road south of the village. Finder please leave at H. Bares'
hotel for reward.
3-tf Conrad Stangl.
Classified.
The suggestion lias been made that
goats' meat prices should bo taken
iiwiry from the provisions list and quoted In (be butter market..—New York
Tribune.
The Pierz Journal
Is now a "legal" newspaper and
is therefore qualified to publish
all notices required by law relating to proceedings before Justice,
Probate or District Courts. If
you reside in this part of the
county, instruct your ;; ttorney or
other officer issuing the notice to
have same published in The
PIERZ JOURNAL. ^ <_*
FOR A CLEAN SHAVE AND A NEAT HAIRCUT GO TO REYNOLDS
Object Description
| Title | The Pierz Journal (Pierz, Morrison County, Minnesota), 1910-07-07 |
| Succeeding Titles | Royalton Banner; The Royalton Banner - Pierz Journal |
| Edition | Volume 2, Number 3 |
| Date of Creation | 1910-07-07 |
| Publishing Agency | F.L. Preimesberger (Pierz, Morrison County, Minnesota) |
| Language | English |
| Minnesota Reflections Topic | Communication |
| Item Type | Text |
| Item Physical Format | Newspapers |
| Formal Subject Headings |
Advertising -- Newspapers American newspapers Community newspapers |
| Locally Assigned Subject Headings | Banner-Journal |
| Minnesota City or Township | Pierz |
| Minnesota County | Morrison |
| State or Province | Minnesota |
| Country | United States |
| Contributing Organization | Morrison County Historical Society, 2151 S. Lindbergh Dr. P.O. Box 239, Little Falls, MN 56345 |
| Rights Management | Use of these images is governed by U.S. and international copyright law. Please contact the Morrison County Historical Society for further information, PO Box 239, Little Falls, MN 56345. |
| Local Identifier | 2011.66.2 |
| LCCN | sn 89064511 |
| OCLC Control Number | 1641163 |
| Fiscal Sponsor | Funding provided to the Minnesota Digital Library through the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, a component of the Minnesota Clean Water, Land and Legacy constitutional amendment, ratified by Minnesota voters in 2008. |
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