Aitkin independent age. (Aitkin, Aitkin County, Minn.) 1912-08
Transcription
Aitkin independent age. (Aitkin, Aitkin County, Minn.) 1912-08
: • r W w V ;" < ' TO«S* Aerial * • I^IL1 Wftt ghtiutl 21ge; CD* JHfWn Independent K 1 " '** i <•''?,T \ i*t AITKIN, AITKIN COUNTY, MIN NfBSOTA, SATURDAY AUGUST 3 1912. Sr H, ? THE AGE-VOLUME 30, NO. 19 1 WW INDEPENDENT-VOLUME 11 NO. 30 SON OF AITKIN'S BURGLARS TAKE COURT MODIFIES § PLANS AGREED ON CONSOLIDATION CM REGISTER 1 DITCH DECISION TEACHERS' EXAM'S FOR FAIR BUILDING OF LOCAL PAPERS GODFATHER DIES 'hM.- \ };4 ^ 'rkf ft J-' .j "• • 5 1{ £ To Have Cement Floor and Age and Independent Merge, Roger B. Aitkin, Son of Hud Poston's Pool Hall Entered Allows Gleason to Enter Into Results of the Examinations Will Not be Known until Contract With County at Editor Hollister Retiring son Bay Fur Trader, Passes I Wednesday Night and Entrances North, East I Just before Sept 1st Away at White Earth $25 Cash Carried Off Original Award Figures From the Field South and West. :• : : 7 Some one raided an unfastened Wm. A. Watts, attorney for the ^ At the teachers' examination conA* White Earth Minn. July, 29-i For some years past the trend in The committee appointed by the * county board, Messrs L. E. Turner ••v>5 and E. A. Hanson, met with Col. W. Potter last week to decide upon a plan for the county fair build ing the erection of which was authorized by the county commiss ioners at their last meeting. The building agreed "upon will have four wings, each wing having an entrance and these being locat ed north., south, east and west, be ing in the shape of a cross, the lovger wings extending east and weet. The north and south wings will be of the dimensions 24x24 feet, and the east and west wings will be 24x40. The dimensions of the whole bv>ilding will be 72x104 feet. The building will rest upon cem ent foundations and the floor for the entire building will be of cem ent. Col. Potter has offered to furnish the lumber at actual cost and has ordered it from one of the Pacific coast mills direct. The plan of the building pro vides a spacious rotunda at the int< rtection of the w T ings in which it is planned to place a stand for speakers, band or orchestra. :Over the rotunda the roof will be ^ raifed to two stories, the iextra story provided with large windows on each side to admit plenty of light, and spacious windows will also be placed in the wings. The premium list js in type and is published on page two of this issxie.. It is in the hands of the ~ job printer and will be printed and bound in a neat and substan tial manner and be ready for dis tribution within a week. That more than the usual inter est centers in the fair this year is . * made manifest by the fact that » already five townships have ?' applied for space to make exhibits in Liie to'vnship contest^, and there 3& probably will be more. Tt- S?«r*>t*!ry '<'rc.vncv i: .JLii'Ljj Jp /tfst to secure amusement attractJ^'ioDs, it being the intention of the maragers to make this feature more promineat than heretofore and in this they will receive the hearty approval of the patrons. Edward "Williams, while loitering around the Osterhout shingle saw room yesterday, heedlessly put his hand on the drop board and lost the small finger of his left hand and three others badly c*ut. He exhibit.*? I good ne'rve while having the hand dressed. the newspaper field has been to ward consolidation. In the smaller communities particularly, (where two or three papers indifferently covered the news, the merging of such publications has become pretty general, and publishers and the public have been benefited thereby. The conditions w?uch brought about consolidation elsewhere have existed here and the result is the Aitkin Independent Age, a con solidation of the Independent and the Age, which eliminates one newspaper from the field. We think the name is a good one, as it is expressive of the spirit of the times. The union was unevitable, as it has been for some time apparent that the field was overcrowded, and the increased cost of labor, of type and printing materials, of paper, and the other items that are needful to make a newspaper, all emphasized that fact. Mr. Hollister offered to sell us the Age, and we quickly ,came to terms. The merging of the two papers gives us a circulation about double that enjoyed by any local paper heretofore, and that circulation be comes our chief asset. The Inde pendent Age becomes far and away the leading as well as the oldest newspaper, and as an advertising mtdium its value is greatly enhaiced. [While the subscription price will remain the same, our ad vertising rates will be advanced to 15 cents per inch for our regular advertisers, Avhile .tran sient one time advertisements will be charged for at the rate of 25 cents per inch. All political advertising will be charged for at regular lepra) ^ates. ft v.- ill be pur aim to make the paper, and in this our readers can materially help us by sending or 'phoning in little items or big news as the case may be. A news paper can report only what it hears, ar.d if our great family of readers will help us, we will thor oughly cover the local news field. Those who have been subscrib ers to both the Independent and the Age will receive a credit by havin e their subscription advanced to such a date as their overpay ment will warrant. The paper will be published on Saturdays, which day we believe to be the best of the week. u 111 Roger Aitkin of the Whit! Window near the rear of Poston's pool hall last Wednesday night and Earth reservation, died at his home near Beaulieu yesterday I [carried off the cash register con yesterday, aged 84 years. MrJ taining about $25 in cash. John Poston is of the dpinion that it Aitkin served in Company G -Ninth regiment of Minnesota} may have, been done by boys, and is investigating on that theory, during the war of the rebellion He was a son of Roger Aitkin' .There is no clue. or., one of the earliest fur The contents (ft a purse in Miss traders of the northwest and Evelyn Young's handbag amount a t e r .^y. oni the city and county t ing to about $10 were taken from of Aitkin were named. the hall of D. L. Young's res idence where it was hanging, a bo ve D e w s • m . item appeared wfcek ago last Sunday night. in the_T\vin City dailies last Tues •' • •' . ' r • : • day. It is of more than ordinary interest to the people of this j \illage and of Aitkin county, fo ¥ s t a t * d i n the dia-fe patch, that Roger Aitkin was tho fe rift.*' MARRIED AT FORMAN son of the man for whom the county and village were aiamed. $ & He had some Indian blood in his r vei . ns ' and during the early eighties ft and before, waa a frequent visitor p _^ Aitkin Eirl and Age e £ y » r J E m p l o y e e is Wedded in f cheerfully told what he knew of it. E \ But as far as is known no record 11' * was ever made of his recollections If ' North Dakota and to preserve, if possible, his & ^ Naturally the pioneer settler* iFoFBUCF here made frequent inquiries of!' r J knowledge of his father's res-jp r idei.ee here, B. M. Hungerford,! ^ some fourteen years ago wrote to Residents of three states and Mr. Aitkin, and received from him piticials andjs/'aMaployes of the the following reply 'Mil i eeat&r stal^w&vernment are «x-~ Beaulieu, Jan. 3rd, 189b intertsfefl.si^ a Redding which Mr Hungerford: . took place/last Wednesday afterDear Sir: feriO'OB, Julyat 5 o'clock, i at I received your letter some time ''Fo&nsn*-- £?*•• •©.,-. ^'hen. Misis 'Nellie ago in which you wish to inform .Dei.een W$s married ^to, Earl ^ N. you about my father's history, ho .Jljfce. ^ , V S^ , . iT _ I will try and inform you all what ^ Denet?i?Tias been living atI know about my father Btitton, S. D., htit ' Went to the As far back, as 1 can remember tame of a sistefc in Forman to o e {n 4-1* « 4 OOJ 1 I. t.. tVffl«AATn Ml« Pi/>A home.. I was born at Fond du Lac in 1' Miss Deneeh, a former Aitkin 1 i_ girU is the daughter of Mr. and 1827. I think that he had a tradMrs. John Deneen of ing post there before I wa9 born some ^ Libby, and but I cannot tell you whether he years ago was an employe in was living there or not at that. the Age office. She is a charming time. He did not come by way of young woman and has many the Mississippi, he cam ^from Can- 1 friends here. ^ ad a. When he was 1 seventeen l-1*5 state house is interested years old he came to Mackinac as in her marriage from the fact that a clerk for the American Pur Miss Deneen is a sister of the exCompany, and from there hcjeame ecutive clerk to Governor Eberto Fond du Lac and from there; hart. Her father is employed in he came to -Sandy Lake. i the state land department, and her He lived there for a long time; brother in the state drainage burI think that is the reason that ^an. Mr. and Mrs. Hayes attended Aitkin is named after him. He the wedding at Forman. was of Scotch descent, I think' v' . that when he came to Sandy lake | R c Trudgen has resigned his they was no white men unless he ... » +i,, bad some hired Canadian from P°sltloD as manager of the Montreal. In them days they used Potter-Casey Co. drug store, and to hire Canadians for three years, will'probably return to Staples, When I was up to Aitkin last frQm which place he came here W « S a man by t ? e ? am ! with his family. at ?8iPotter, 5 Mr. then a merchant at: that time living there. Maybe you ' "7; uiow him. He wanted me to spell Ojibway. One o,f them was named my father's name and write it Mr. Moulton I don't remember down for him and he wanted me to his given name. They put iip some write it down a good many times buildings at that, time that ,tthey so I wrote it down. Aitkin, that laid out townsite. ~ j is the way-my father spell it and; I don t think that my father ever that is the way I spell it, it. is put up a tradijg post there so I a Scotch name, this is all the in- think that those buildings that was formation I can give. ~; ;i put up there must have Deen those And about, those ibuildings at that Mr. Moulton and his partner Sisfcibegama that you want to find built. rm * J This is all the information that out, I think it was in the ]year 1857 or in 1858 I am not jsure I can give. Dwhich year, that some persons laid ; Yours Truly> out a townsite that they called « ROGER B. AITKIN, •natn PLASTER-CEMENT m petitioners in the Judicial Ditch No. 2 cage, County Attorney Hallum appearing for himself and the county auditor, and F. E. Ebner, ^ttoiriiey for W. J. Gleason, the contractor to whom the contract for constructing the ditch was originally awarded, but the award declared illegal by Judge McClenahan of the district court, met by agreement at the judges chambers in Brainerd last Wed nesday and went over the whole matter with him. As a result of the conference a stipulation was agreed to de claring the original award invalid and allowing Contractor Gleason, to go on with the work at the fig ures of his former bid but specify ing that a new contract, approved, and signed by the engineer be drawn. ] The contract has been drawn by the attorney general, and Engineer O'Hara, who is expected home to day will undoubtedly approve it this leaving the way open for Mr. Gleason to go on with the work and disposes of the injunction pro ceedings. toneluded here last Wednesday, eighty-four candidates for jcertificktes which will entitle them to tejich in the schools of Aitkiin county, took part. The results of the examination wrill not be known until just before the firgt of . September. The three clashes of certificates issued in Aitkin county are the limited, good for one year; the second grade, good for two years; and the first grade, good for five years. 1'! , s. •m v'l public interest, .appealing for co-operation and making .timely suggestions. The bulletin follows: -.@-^4-' PRIMARY ELECTION DATES AND FILINGS Seven Candidates for County Office Have Now Filed I Their The primary election occurs on September 17 and canaidatei for .county office must file their in dentions with tjhe county auditor at least twenty days before that date, which makes the last day of which filings will be accepted by the auditor August 27. Seven filings have now been made, all for the Republican nom inations. The}* hre John B. Lemire and^ Fred Stearns for county auditor; Loui3 Hallum for county attorney; C. G. Haugen for sheriff; Milton P. Botsford and Chas. MacDonald for county surveyor. TO PREVENT CAR SHORTAGE The Railroad and Warehouse ant Foreseeing a possible car short age this fall in the< movement of the expected great crop, the state Railroad and Warehouse commiss ion has issued a bulletin to corniron carriers and shippers which they 5' do believe tot T>e of Attention is called to the in past jear& of the shortafi^^it^ft in the fall and winter monfch'syefof the sbipmefit of coa], grain, potatoes and f, otherfarm products. T h e presenc i n - j j dications are that there will be a larpe* crop to handle this fall. Shortage of can; with all the inconvenience and IJSS incidental ibereu», cannot be prev?nted without the co operation of the shippers and iaii.vay companies. If shippers do not leod their assistance; hy prompt loading and unloading ofS^:^ cars, there is bound to be a shortage, no matter bout, efficient service the company try to render^ It is wi.sh the purpose of securing 1 the co-operation of the shippers in the movement of the^y<^ c o m i n gc r o p t h a t noticesa r e b e i n gs e n t ' out.^.^^ Every;shipper or receiver of any^ £ cai-load freight; is urged to load and un-^ load promptly. 5^ . The railroad and warehouse .commis-s^, sip^4<B$i^'i^> r tioularly the at-. .-*^6 tentiou of the coai dealers in tbis state"^~ ^ i^ tbe prospective shortaije-pftcKVs, aad- * asks them to place their orders for coal as soon as possible, in order that it may be shipped and stored before the grain begins to move. The distribution of cars has been a frequent source of con troversy between shippers and the rail road companies, and in-order to pre vent complaints and undue charges of discrimination, which naturally araises on account of shortage of cars, the com^ mission deems it a duty to the shipper and the railroad companies to make the followiug suggestions: 1. Shippers should make demand for • car.- on the .station agent in writing. 2. Load- cars as promptly as possible and 10 f ill cap aciiy of cars ordered and not take advantage of ttie full free time , allowed for loadipg, and should give railway coinpany immediate notice ; when car is ready for release. "" 3. See that sufficient grain or other products is on hand to load the cars to iheir capacity. 4. Not use cars for storage while waiting for deliveries io complete carloads. . 5. Not place orders for more cars than absolutely needed. _ • £ 6 Consignees should unload cars as promptly as possible., and not take ad vantage of the free time allowed for unloading, and should give company immediate notice when car is ready for release. 0 7._ J^ive disposition of all cat's as '• ^ (Continued on page 4) Efjj M' We have fost ooloaded a car of fresh Hard Plastert Wood Fibre Plaster and ^ Portland Cement and we are prepared ^ to fill any kind of kn order. f, ' (: Use Wood pibre for patching. , 1 " 1 s If you have a little daughter, bank for her right now three dollars for her first year of life, six dollars for her se cond, nine dollars for her third, and' so on until you catch up to her present age; and then on her next birthday, bank to her credit three dollars for each year of her age and keep this up until she is 21. She'll then have nearly A THOUS AND DOLLARS and you'll never miss the money. DO THIS; its your DUTY. ^ Let OUR Bank be YOUR Bank ' ' 'i ^ iA lungerfora J3CCllCfiiiXYJl* Jul if 'i!a'" <i$.i • f: - Iron LahdCFarmi Wild Lands, City Property WW,! HltklH, AITKIN, MINNESOTA it,, >£ K&i '«! ' ' 'JihM } , mnm ' FARM AND MINERAL V,*'1 iiVi" -I'i • < c '• X T - F A R M " I n A N -maw* .FA.W14lgfi€ia AITKIN COUNTY STATE BANK BLDG. Bank Cbe * KNOX LUMBER CO We pay liberal interest tonsistent with safety p' i * CHAS. H.WARNER T OWN and hav i lor fttle'the choicest central res? idence proper:^ the best business lots in Ait kin, pewers, t idewalks, water mains complete, splendid subdivinott property three blocks from principal street, firms adjoining town, etc. AITKIN, MINNESOTA LANDS F0R SALE! 2S,000 ACRES Choice Farm and Mineral Lands v .. in Aitkin, Itasca, Cass and Crow Wing Counties T. R. FOLEY COi , " Aitkin, Minn., aM ^* -2--"t ^ \
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