Ripsaw (newspaper): Difference between revisions
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On June 1, 1931, the “gag law” was found to be unconstitutional by the [[U.S. Supreme Court]], in what is considered to be the first and most important [[Freedom of the Press]] decision in U.S. history. |
On June 1, 1931, the “gag law” was found to be unconstitutional by the [[U.S. Supreme Court]], in what is considered to be the first and most important [[Freedom of the Press]] decision in U.S. history. |
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== Headlines of The Duluth ''Ripsaw'' == |
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{{Cleanup-laundry|date=April 2008}} |
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During its short life, The Duluth ''Ripsaw'' was indeed a muckraking publication, in the finest tradition of that genre of publications. It was only in its final years that it ran into legal problems by attacking individuals who no doubt should have been attacked for some of their activities. |
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Morrison, who had been employed at others papers in Duluth and elsewhere before he started the ''Ripsaw'', did his attacking, often with great humor. |
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Some of the more notable of headlines of the ''Ripsaw'' include: |
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'''''Ripsaw''''' '''Columns''' |
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Tales of the Town, The Political Pot, Where is Bill Bailey?, Sawdust & Shavings, School Board Minutes, Commercial Club Activities, |
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Many Halden Stories are just the lead for further County Board information |
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'''Major News Stories, Rip-Saw''' |
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'''March 24, 1917''' |
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Magney for Mayor, Battle of Ballots<br /> |
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Scrub Out the Courthouse<br /> |
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Booze Boosters Badly Discouraged<br /> |
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The Passing of John Barleycorn<br /> |
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Ways Business is Done (Co. Board)<br /> |
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Hidden Hand Reaches for Water frontage<br /> |
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Lon Merritt Makes Good<br /> |
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Hidden Hand Sticks Itself Into City Business - Kettle River |
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'''April 7, 1917''' |
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Halden Seduces Hicken<br /> |
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Magney for Mayor<br /> |
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Little Alice in Wonderland '''(witty)'''<br /> |
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Ways Business is Done (Co. Board)<br /> |
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Unequal Taxation |
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'''April 21, 1917''' |
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Halden Handles House<br /> |
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City Hall Chatter<br /> |
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Hartley Hunteth Ye Octopus<br /> |
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Journalistic Jim?Jams (Street Railway) |
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'''May 5, 1917''' |
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Halden Hunts His Hole<br /> |
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Busy Beer Buyer (Blind Pigs)<br /> |
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How Ye Silberstein Prestige Was Saved<br /> |
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Mare Gonska The Goat<br /> |
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The Fight Over Fares<br /> |
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Hobbled Lawyer Towne |
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'''May 19, 1917''' |
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Halden No Longer Hides<br /> |
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Closed the Club (Blind Pigs)<br /> |
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Tinkering The Taxes<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Knocking New Duluth (Streetcars)<br /> |
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Police Are Underpaid, Talk of Quitting |
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'''June 9, 1917''' |
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Helping Halden's House<br /> |
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"Feeding the Fox" (Zoo)<br /> |
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Blind Pig Biteth Ye Bottler - Pike Lake<br /> |
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Rank and File Fear Unfairness<br /> |
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High Grade Baseball is Promised Duluth<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Burglars and Boozers Invade YMCA<br /> |
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Beer Wagons Are Banished<br /> |
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Chief McKercher's Large Marmon Car |
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'''June 23, 1917''' |
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Halden Hangs His Head<br /> |
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Percy Gets Pinched '''(witty)'''<br /> |
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Valiant Firefighters Return To Pike Lake '''(witty)'''<br /> |
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Col. Eva Quits the Club<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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New Duluth Gets Justice -Streetcars<br /> |
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Bishop McGolrick's Golden Jubilee<br /> |
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Willis Gorman Post Bears Honored Name - 1892 |
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'''July 7, 1917''' |
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Friends Fear Chief McKercher is Gone Blind '''(witty)'''<br /> |
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Halden Hands Out the Double Cross<br /> |
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Old John Barleycorn Now Lies Mouldering<br /> |
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Minnesota Iron Ores Face a New Epoch<br /> |
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When the Merritt's Came To the Head of Lakes<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Hermantown Annual Picnic<br /> |
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Victim of Blind Pig Suffers Bad Relapse<br /> |
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Some New Features At the Hotel St. Louis |
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'''July 21, 1917''' |
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Battling With Ballots For the School Board<br /> |
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Courthouse King Has a New Password<br /> |
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Kinnikkinic Cigarette Will Be Made <br /> |
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The Public Badly Needs Comfort Stations Now that the Saloons are Closing<br /> |
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When the Merritt's Came To the Head of Lakes<br /> |
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When Charles Towne Defeated Kinney - 1894<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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City's Harbormaster Works In Wisconsin<br /> |
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Cuyuna Range Iron Ore To St. Louis By Boat<br /> |
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Old John Barleycorn Makes Buhl Boisterous |
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'''August 4, 1917''' |
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A Fierce Speed Bug Bites "Uncle Bob" '''(witty)'''<br /> |
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The Courthouse King Faces Certain Exile<br /> |
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Food Hogs Are Loose <br /> |
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When the Merritt's Came To the Head of Lakes<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Madam Julia Wallace Removed To St. Paul<br /> |
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People Get New Deal In School Elections |
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'''August 18, 1917''' |
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Hibbing Is Great Municipal Paradise<br /> |
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The Courthouse King Wields A Big Stick<br /> |
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Superior Reeks With Booze And Filth<br /> |
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"Strafing Mrs. German"<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Picturesque Floodwood |
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'''September 1, 1917''' |
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Virginia Is As Beauteous As A Virgin<br /> |
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Captain Stevens Wears The Double Cross<br /> |
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Preacher Pulls Tigers Whiskers - Virginia<br /> |
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President Wilson's Reply to Pope Benedict's Peace Proposals<br /> |
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A Faithless Affinity Dodges a Plain Duty '''(Fable)'''<br /> |
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Where is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Captain James W. Bishop Loses State Sinecure<br /> |
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Woodland's Citizens Demand Miss House<br /> |
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The Boys Are Blasting John Barleycorn - Va.<br /> |
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County Road Foreman Pulled For Poaching<br /> |
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Hypocritical Pastor Despoils His Flock<br /> |
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Canny Son Of Austria Despoils McKinley<br /> |
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Cuyuna Range Ore Is Barged To St. Louis |
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'''September 15, 1917''' |
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Booze And Beer Banished By Ballot <br /> |
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Courthouse King Arrested For Contempt<br /> |
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Grand Jury Condemns Savoy Theater<br /> |
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The Village Of Park Point<br /> |
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Where Is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Main Range Highway Soon Will Be Paved |
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'''September 29, 1917''' |
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Duluth Harbors Traitorous Food Hogs<br /> |
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Courthouse King Displays Royal Rage<br /> |
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Superior Opens Hotel de Jag<br /> |
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The Old Pioneer's Story<br /> |
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Journalistic Boswell Trifles With History<br /> |
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West End People Want Comfort Station |
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'''October 13, 1917''' |
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"Rasty" Wright Gambles In a Garage '''(witty)'''<br /> |
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Courthouse King Acquires a Royal Jag<br /> |
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Director Has Eagle Eye<br /> |
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Where Is Bill Bailey?<br /> |
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Wright/Davis Lands Make Many Much Money<br /> |
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Brutal Rib Breaker Frequents Floodwood<br /> |
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When Fat Boys Disagree, Lean Boys Hear Fact<br /> |
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The Last Log Drive |
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'''October 27, 1917''' |
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Blind Pigs Grunt On Superior Street<br /> |
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Courthouse King Is Very Autocratic<br /> |
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New Era For The Commercial Club<br /> |
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Double Murder At West Duluth - 1892 |
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'''November 10, 1917''' |
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Police Busily Butchering Blind Pigs<br /> |
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Courthouse King Wrongs Otto Gafvert<br /> |
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The Voice Of The People Is Heard<br /> |
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Story Of a Horseshoe - Diamond Caulk<br /> |
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Knocking Out Konkel -Superior<br /> |
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Wearing Men's Pants Unsexes Lovely Woman |
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'''November 24, 1917''' |
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Municipal Piggery Denied For Duluth<br /> |
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Courthouse King Tastes Bitter Defeat<br /> |
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Architects Buck The School Board<br /> |
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1904 Milk Ordinance<br /> |
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"Uncle Bob" McKercher Rapes Public Decency In Raid At Woodman Hall<br /> |
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Brewing Gets Called Down<br /> |
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Turning City Garbage Into Oleaginous Pork |
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'''December 8, 1917''' |
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Gamblers And Crooks Infest Oliver<br /> |
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Courthouse King Tastes Bitter Defeat<br /> |
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Danculovic Avoids The Workfarm<br /> |
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White Swan Drugstore Conducts a Blind Pig<br /> |
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Douglas County Sheep<br /> |
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Mayor Konkel Fights With Back To Wall |
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'''December 22, 1917''' |
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Chief McKercher Finds His Lost Tongue<br /> |
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Courthouse King Faces Certain Exile<br /> |
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Underworld Bunch Deserts Duluth<br /> |
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Syndicate, Sin Duck Out Of Oliver<br /> |
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Dear Old Danculovic Loves Kaiser Bill |
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'''January 5, 1918''' |
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Chief McKercher Stutters When He Talks<br /> |
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The Old Political Pot Begins To Bubble<br /> |
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County Auditor Halden Is Doomed<br /> |
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Duluth Demands Common Justice - Railroads<br /> |
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Mistresses Of Music Engage In Bitter War<br /> |
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Superior Enjoyed Wet New Year<br /> |
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The Village of New Duluth<br /> |
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Two Phones Burdensome |
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'''January 19, 1918''' |
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Chief McKercher Goes On Warpath, <br /> |
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Two Charges Made Against Rip?-Saw Editor<br /> |
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Courthouse King A Political Suicide<br /> |
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Mayor Konkel Gets Cold Feet -Superior<br /> |
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The St. Louis Hotel Fire - 1893<br /> |
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Highspeed Speedway Was A Lively Ride<br /> |
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Superior's Toughest Hole<br /> |
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Will Buck John Barleycorn<br /> |
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Roadhouse Near Madhouse - Superior |
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'''January 26, 1918''' |
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No Issue |
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'''February 9, 1918''' |
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Red?light Parlors Shelter Blind Pigs<br /> |
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To Go Crazy Now Costs Money<br /> |
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Streetcar Strike That Was Finally Won - 1893<br /> |
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Over Dozen Big Fines Confront Mayor Konkel<br /> |
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Superior's Gamblers Given Stunning Blow |
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'''February 23, 1918''' |
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McKercher Protects Red Light Lady<br /> |
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McKercher Tried To Hang The Editor<br /> |
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Hot Campaign For Superior<br /> |
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Superintendent Hoke Retains Position<br /> |
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Workers Bribed Boss To Secure Employment<br /> |
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In Jail At Grand Rapids - 1894<br /> |
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Police Hunt For Beer, Find Scrubbing Water |
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'''March 9, 1918''' |
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The People Will Recall Silberstein<br /> |
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Spring Campaign Underway In Superior<br /> |
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Order Of Knights Of The Double Cross<br /> |
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Armstad Pulverizes de Waard<br /> |
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Beer Party At Billy Bernard's<br /> |
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The Virginia Fire In '93<br /> |
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Adelphi & Rex Hotels Lose Needed Licenses<br /> |
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Bagged The Belgian's Beer<br /> |
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Rates Discrimination Very Unfair To Duluth |
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'''March 23, 1918''' |
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Recall Petitions Are Being Signed<br /> |
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NPR Must Give Duluth Justice<br /> |
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County Auditor Halden Begins To Take Notice<br /> |
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King Booze Kicks Out Konkel - Superior<br /> |
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Food Kings Ignore Farmers<br /> |
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The Bummel Block Fire - 1893<br /> |
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Native Son of Duluth Makes A Cool Million<br /> |
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Janitor Tidball Resigns |
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'''April 6, 1918''' |
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McKercher Shows The White Feather<br /> |
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County Auditor Halden Pilgrims To The Range<br /> |
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Booze Is Banned By Superior<br /> |
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Police Close New Night School '''(witty)'''<br /> |
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Burning of the Old Board of Trade Building<br /> |
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Little Son of St. George Flouts American Eagle |
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'''April 20, 1918''' |
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The Leiser Store Wrongs Betty Eastman<br /> |
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Mayor of Ore Docks Charged with Adultery<br /> |
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How Dorothy Hill Was Protected<br /> |
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Halden Seeks More Political Pie<br /> |
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Woodworking Students Make Very Bad Botch<br /> |
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Proctor Pointers<br /> |
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Odin Halden Loses Trench |
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'''May 4, 1918''' |
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McKercher's Pet Red?light Lady Returns<br /> |
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County Auditor Halden Slated For Retirement<br /> |
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Baxter Gives a Surprise Party<br /> |
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Angry Husband Murders Wife<br /> |
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Courthouse Carpenter Serves Halden's House<br /> |
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Chief Engineer Stewart Resigns<br /> |
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Vaccination Hotly Attacked |
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'''May 18, 1918''' |
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Boiler Inspector Wrongs Working Girl<br /> |
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New Herd of Blind Pigs Boldly Invade Duluth<br /> |
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Superior Gets a Moral Scrubbing<br /> |
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Mountain Will Come To Mahomet - U.S. Steel<br /> |
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Company Improvement Programs At Proctor<br /> |
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Slackers Searched Out |
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'''June 1, 1918''' |
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Leiser Store Sued For $10,000<br /> |
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Dorothy Ducks<br /> |
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Sinful Hotels Are Suppressed<br /> |
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How Halden Moved Clifton Station<br /> |
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Crane Lake Portage Is An Historic Highway<br /> |
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"Square Deal" Victory Won Over Grt. Northern<br /> |
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Commissioners Ban Booze Right |
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'''June 15, 1918''' |
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S.S. America Shelters Gambling Den<br /> |
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The Mountain Visits Mahomet - U.S. Steel<br /> |
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Phillips Wants City Wood Yard<br /> |
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Rapid Erection Record For U.S. Grant School<br /> |
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Little American Gold Mine - 1893<br /> |
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Halden Hands Becloud Waterfront Titles |
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'''June 29, 1918''' |
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Bad Citizen Is Driven Out Of Superior<br /> |
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Bibulous Barleycorn Sadly Shocks Superior<br /> |
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Barleycorn Breed Is Dying Out Rapidly<br /> |
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Poets Observe The Passing Of John Barleycorn<br /> |
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Uncle Sam's Birthday<br /> |
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Barleycorn Knew Noah But Never Found Wisdom<br /> |
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U.S. Steel Corporation Is Duluth's Best Friend |
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'''July 13, 1918''' |
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Why Did Schutte Quit At West Duluth?<br /> |
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Thirsty Pilgrims Seek Oliver<br /> |
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"Townleyism" In Duluth Public Schools<br /> |
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Defective Ventilation Hazards Pupils' Health<br /> |
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The Lucky Grubstake -1893 |
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'''July 27, 1918''' |
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Schutte Opposes Buying Of War Bonds<br /> |
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Onkel Bernard Assails Demon Rum<br /> |
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Superintendent Grubbs Is Charged With Moral Degeneracy - Proctor<br /> |
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Superior Cop Halts McKercher<br /> |
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When Frank Surveyed Site of Rainy Lake<br /> |
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Some Underworld Folk Still Infest Superior<br /> |
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Morgan Park Runs Amuck |
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'''August 10, 1918''' |
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Oliver Is Mecca For Thirsty Pilgrims<br /> |
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Bold Underworld Folk Still Haunt Superior<br /> |
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Gambling Under Giddings Store<br /> |
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Proctor Pointers<br /> |
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The Vermilion Iron Range<br /> |
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Rolly Waldemar Esterly Is Pinched In Superior |
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'''August 24, 1918''' |
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Underworld King Shot In Superior<br /> |
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Police Authorities Meet A Mystery Murder<br /> |
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Pulls Oliver's Red?light Joint<br /> |
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Labor Day In 1892<br /> |
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County Auditor Halden Is Doomed<br /> |
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Lies Hidden In Garret Three Days And Nights<br /> |
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Bridging Chester Park Deemed A Necessity<br /> |
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Guilty Of White Slavery |
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'''September 7, 1918''' |
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Rip?Saw Editor Arrested In Oliver<br /> |
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Dirty Nests In Duluth Unseen By Silberstein<br /> |
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Max Rosenberg May Not Recover<br /> |
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Odin Halden, King Of Camouflage<br /> |
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Superior's Sinful Set Hikes For Other Fields |
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'''September 21, 1918''' |
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Booze And Poker At Gary Canteen<br /> |
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Questionable Course Is Pursued By Kong Odin<br /> |
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Oliver Is Dry<br /> |
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Wicked Blind Pigs Infest Ranier<br /> |
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Why Don't Men Go To Church<br /> |
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Proctor's School Head Denies Nasty Charges<br /> |
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1892 Democratic County Convention <br /> |
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Superior's Blind Pigs Dying Off<br /> |
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Chisholm's Old Chief Runs Amuck In Duluth |
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'''October 5, 1918''' |
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Charges Filed Against General Resche<br /> |
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Gluttonous Food Hogs Rob Vegetable Growers<br /> |
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Aged Courthouse King Flies Into Rage<br /> |
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Kong Odin's Influence Has Been Most Sinister<br /> |
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Auditor Halden Fosters Illegal Sale Of Bonds<br /> |
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Grubb's Right To Teach Revoked - Proctor<br /> |
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Expensive Rugs For Dainty Feet |
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'''October 19, 1918''' |
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C.B. Miller Is Afraid Of The Carss<br /> |
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Four Houses Comprise The Produce Exchange<br /> |
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Courthouse Autocrat Has Been Most Unfair<br /> |
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Amorous Old Educator Charged With Huggery<br /> |
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Cat Ranch Prospectus<br /> |
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Trolley Patron Speaks Plainly |
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'''November 2, 1918''' |
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Red Cross Is Dragged Into Politics<br /> |
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McKercher Is Put In Guardhouse<br /> |
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Tight Little Monopoly Holds Michigan Street<br /> |
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Dorothy Hill Departs<br /> |
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Judge Fesler's Fiddle Plays Tunes For Halden<br /> |
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Swanstrom Boys Dig For Halden<br /> |
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Horngren And Rich Tour Range For Halden<br /> |
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Preus Gets Double Cross<br /> |
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Lumber Barons Blamable For Forest Fires<br /> |
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Wobbly Willie Winkum Roots Hard For Halden |
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'''November 16, 1918''' |
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Halden Is Kicked Out Of Courthouse<br /> |
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Superintendent Hoke Will Hike<br /> |
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Local Produce Pirates Promise To Lick Editor<br /> |
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Sunday Closing For Iron River<br /> |
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Grape Wine On Iron Range<br /> |
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Superior's Lid Lifters Get Very Heavily Fined<br /> |
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Grubbs Still Wiggles - Proctor |
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'''November 30, 1918''' |
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McKercher Leaves Rotten Record<br /> |
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Safety Commissioner Protects Food Hogs<br /> |
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Max Rosenberg & Woman Arrested In Superior<br /> |
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When Big Boom Was Well Under Way - 1887 |
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'''December 14, 1918''' |
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McKercher Takes A Sneak<br /> |
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Grubbs Has Gone - Proctor<br /> |
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Railroad Employees Help Out Food Hogs<br /> |
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Soldiers And Sailors Scrap Over Monument<br /> |
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Max Rosenberg Gets Arrested |
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'''December 28, 1918''' |
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Police Arrest Col. W.F. King - Adultery<br /> |
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Local Produce Pirates Plot Against Rival<br /> |
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Max Rosenberg Heavily Fined<br /> |
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Streetcar Situation Is Bad Here And Below<br /> |
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McKercher Compelled To Pull Red Light Lady<br /> |
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Brisk Scramble For City Offices |
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'''January 11, 1919''' |
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McKercher Quits Under Fire<br /> |
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Vigilance Committee Superior's Possibility<br /> |
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Bibulous Boys Now Go To Gordon<br /> |
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Dry Superior Benefits Police |
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'''January 25, 1919''' |
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Burnside Pulls Wife's Hair<br /> |
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Patriots Desire Postmastership<br /> |
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Duluth City Council Asks For Tunnel Plans<br /> |
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Superior's Sinful Set Still Acts Shamelessly<br /> |
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Boxcar Detective Dill Slakes Burning Thirst<br /> |
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Soldier's Happy Home Invaded By Policeman<br /> |
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- Adultery |
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'''February 8, 1919''' |
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Peasants Fire on Col. Eva - Forest Fires<br /> |
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Erickson Would Crimp Food Hogs<br /> |
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Underworld Folk Losing Ground<br /> |
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Cause and Prevention of the Big Forest Fires<br /> |
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Sources of Forest Fires<br /> |
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John Barleycorn Hangs On At Iron River<br /> |
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Colonel Carlson is Fired at Minnesota Steel<br /> |
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Bessette and Rhinow Double Barreled Boys |
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'''February 22, 1919''' |
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Governor Forsakes Fire Victims<br /> |
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Tried to Choke Farmers Store - Food Hogs<br /> |
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Food Hog Methods Tipped Off By Teamster<br /> |
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Chris Peterson Takes The Count - Superior<br /> |
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Deep Waterway From Duluth To The Sea<br /> |
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Fire Relief Commission Junked Wearable Shoes<br /> |
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School Board Retains Superintendent Hoke<br /> |
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Lumber Barons Grab Grave Yard Insurance<br /> |
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School Board Members Betray Common People |
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'''March 1, 1919 - Missing''' |
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'''March 29, 1919''' |
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Farrell Violates City Charter<br /> |
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Old John Barleycorn May Regain Superior<br /> |
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Sporty Husband Finds Soul Mate<br /> |
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Mrs. Akonn Shocks Judge Parker - Superior<br /> |
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Commissioner Farrell Wasted Valuable Dirt<br /> |
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Trolley Line Purchase Is Problem For Voters<br /> |
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Farrell Broke Many Promises<br /> |
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Motor Corps Barred By Law<br /> |
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Farrell's Fat Pay Rolls Open Taxpayer Optics<br /> |
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Cloquet Lawyers Hustle Clients<br /> |
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Herr Hauptmann Squirms Under Charges<br /> |
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Tamping Machine Proved Failure<br /> |
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Farrell Roared About Salaries<br /> |
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Colonel Burnsides' Blind Pig Gets Caught |
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'''April 12, 1919''' |
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Madam King Is Granted A Divorce<br /> |
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Oliver Soon Will Have Bus Service<br /> |
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Gay Madam West Pays High Fine - Superior<br /> |
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Notrorious Elgin Hotel Shelters Immoral Folk<br /> |
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Filthy Nests in Duluth Unseen by Good People<br /> |
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Socialists Win At Two Harbors<br /> |
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Was Carlson Dangerous German Spy?<br /> |
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Superior's Pest House Disgrace To City<br /> |
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Gust Beck Keeps Booze on Farm at Hawthorne<br /> |
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August Jeffers Breaks Up Home<br /> |
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Faked Professor Jumps The Town |
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'''April 26, 1919''' |
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Crooks Kill Mike Madigan - Superior<br /> |
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Autocratic Directors Crush Krebs And Smith<br /> |
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Should Improve Railroad Street<br /> |
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Blind Pigs Nest In Phoenix Block<br /> |
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Cowardly Ignoramus Breaks Loose<br /> |
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Dual Water System Hazards Public Health<br /> |
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Women Start Campaign Against Tobacco<br /> |
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New Independence Folk Use Town Funds Freely<br /> |
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Mysterious Company At Cloquet |
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'''May 10, 1919''' |
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Food Hogs Ravage Duluth<br /> |
|||
Hoke May Be Hunting New Superintendency<br /> |
|||
Florence Nightingale Birdies Fly<br /> |
|||
Discourage the Coming of Carnival Companies<br /> |
|||
Forest Fire Relief Work<br /> |
|||
Hotel Superior Sporty Spot<br /> |
|||
Police Once More Grab Blind Pigger Burnside<br /> |
|||
Check Valves Unsafe, Local Plumbers Insist |
|||
'''May 24, 1919''' |
|||
Is Gary A Hot?Bed Of Vice?<br /> |
|||
Dr. Nyquist Indicted In Superior<br /> |
|||
County Commissioners Oppose Eight Hour Day<br /> |
|||
Nordin Loses Fire Damage Action<br /> |
|||
New Fishing Laws<br /> |
|||
Lumber Company Seeks Grave Yard<br /> |
|||
Underworld King Of Superior Is Indicted<br /> |
|||
Mayor Baxter Reduces Superior Police Force<br /> |
|||
Red?light Women Heavily Fined - Superior |
|||
'''June 14, 1919''' |
|||
Proctor Chief Is Bad Actor<br /> |
|||
Food Hogs Profit From Potatoes<br /> |
|||
The Arrest Of Ah Sing - 1892<br /> |
|||
Cloquet Woman Is Heroine Of Forest Fires<br /> |
|||
School Board Autocrats Dodge Union Labor<br /> |
|||
Superior Thugs Assault Editor<br /> |
|||
Outlaw Gang Attacks Martin Widness |
|||
'''June 28, 1919''' |
|||
Dr. Hoke Flunks In Detroit<br /> |
|||
Unfortunate War Baby Came Into Jensen Home<br /> |
|||
Spirited Contest In Union Circles<br /> |
|||
Food Hogs Monopolize Area Milk<br /> |
|||
Teachers Stood Up When Hoke Entered<br /> |
|||
Postmaster At Cloquet Holds Up The Rip?Saw<br /> |
|||
O'Brien Admits Defeat To Baxter - Superior<br /> |
|||
Uncle Sam Soaks Wicked Rosenberg<br /> |
|||
Madam Reed Comes Back To Superior<br /> |
|||
Dances By Liberty Club Need Stricter Manager |
|||
'''July 12, 1919''' |
|||
Ohio Tailor Sues Shaibley<br /> |
|||
The Candidacy Of John L. Morrison<br /> |
|||
Food Hogs Boost Prices Of Fruit<br /> |
|||
Sturdy Commoner Beats Autocrats Twice<br /> |
|||
Superior Says Farewell To Booze |
|||
'''July 26, 1919''' |
|||
Tailor Takes Judgment Against Schaibley<br /> |
|||
Telephone Monopoly Chokes City<br /> |
|||
Conditions At Work Farm Severely Attacked<br /> |
|||
Superior Bravely Combats Pittsburgh Plus<br /> |
|||
Mrs. Myrtle Cushway Sought Her Revenge |
|||
'''August 9, 1919''' |
|||
Work Farm Boy Beaten Up<br /> |
|||
Tammany Braves Hold Annual Clam?Bake<br /> |
|||
Blind Pig's Still Grunt In Superior<br /> |
|||
Conklin's Plan For a Tunnel Under the Ship Canal - 1892<br /> |
|||
Double Barreled Boys Becoming Plentiful<br /> |
|||
Inmate Of County Jail Utters Worthless Paper<br /> |
|||
Booze Boys Seek Baxter's Scalp<br /> |
|||
Cops once More Arrest Burnside and Al Power<br /> |
|||
So?Called Blue Sky Laws Insult To Intelligent<br /> |
|||
Duluth sold Birthright but Lost Mess of Pottage |
|||
'''August 23, 1919''' |
|||
Greeks Grab Superior Girls<br /> |
|||
Schaibley Goes Into Bankruptcy<br /> |
|||
Entire Nation Aroused By High Food Costs<br /> |
|||
Blanche White Buys Grand Hotel<br /> |
|||
Naylor Family Hard Hit By Forest Fires<br /> |
|||
Kindly County Will Sue Railway Company<br /> |
|||
Land Barons Plan Raid On State Treasury<br /> |
|||
People Oppose Old Ward System<br /> |
|||
Professor Simon Harries Blueberry Pickers<br /> |
|||
Food Hogs Sell Corn To Their Rural Cousins |
|||
'''September 6, 1919''' |
|||
Dark Girls Woo White Men<br /> |
|||
Fight On Food Hogs Seriously Under Way<br /> |
|||
Fred Harris Plays High Finance<br /> |
|||
Strange Took Eva For "Dummy"<br /> |
|||
State Forester Cox's Dismissal Demanded<br /> |
|||
American Loyalty League Discussed By Strange<br /> |
|||
Bad Booze Burglars Ravage Iron River<br /> |
|||
Big Moose Lake Meeting held by Fire Sufferers<br /> |
|||
Rosenberg Kicks Out George O'Brien<br /> |
|||
Sold Burning Booze Without Any License<br /> |
|||
Big Bully Of Bingoland Compelled To Back Down<br /> |
|||
Getting Rowley Alimony Is Very Difficult |
|||
'''September 20, 1919''' |
|||
Children Play At Prostitution<br /> |
|||
Ransom Metcalfe Talks of High Cost of Living<br /> |
|||
Cloquet Lawyers Roast Rip?Saw<br /> |
|||
Change Of Venue For Fire Cases?<br /> |
|||
Sanitary Sewer Bothers Residents of Woodland<br /> |
|||
Col. Eva's Armory Bunch Wasted Much Valuable Hay<br /> |
|||
Hotel Superior Sued For Damage<br /> |
|||
Superior Law Breakers Decide to Plead Guilty<br /> |
|||
King Colahan's Consort Wears Her Crown Tilted<br /> |
|||
Beer Foams in Bingoland as Camouflage For Booze<br /> |
|||
Simple Rustics Make Snappy Drink<br /> |
|||
Blind Piggers Rampant in Mesabi Range Towns |
|||
'''October 4, 1919''' |
|||
Young Knudsen Jumps Jail<br /> |
|||
Chief Murphy's Minions Get Active On St. Croix<br /> |
|||
How To Eliminate The Food Hogs<br /> |
|||
Dean Madsen Tenders Eye Blackened By Col. Parker<br /> |
|||
Hoke Steals Educational Idea<br /> |
|||
P:olice Woman Desired<br /> |
|||
Chiropracters Boast Of Their Influenza Record<br /> |
|||
Carlton County Cannot Give An Impartial Trial<br /> |
|||
When The Weyerhaeuser's Bought Leech Lake Pine - 1893<br /> |
|||
Rosenberg Threatens To Shoot<br /> |
|||
Badlands Of Bingoland Yield Many Lawless Men |
|||
'''October 18, 1919''' |
|||
Daily Papers Protect Food Hogs<br /> |
|||
Park?Pointers Dislike Fool?Proof Streetcars<br /> |
|||
State Examiner Audits Eva's Books<br /> |
|||
Opposition Makes Hatch Hustle - Eveleth<br /> |
|||
Policemen's Annual Ball - 1893<br /> |
|||
Conditions Are Improved In Old St. Croix Section<br /> |
|||
Matt Bolen Loses Flesh When Mated With Amelia<br /> |
|||
Knudsen Peddled Booze to his Fellow Inmates<br /> |
|||
Joe Naughton's Former Woman Must Do Time<br /> |
|||
Superior Starts Drive Against Vice And Crime<br /> |
|||
Commissioners May Move Supt. Young to Virginia<br /> |
|||
Strong Hands Of Justice Firmly Grasp Rosenberg |
|||
'''November 1, 1919''' |
|||
Harris Charged With Fraud<br /> |
|||
This Year's State Tax Is Highest Ever Known<br /> |
|||
Duluth's West End Wesley Calls At Rip?Saw <br /> |
|||
County Attorney Green Returns Home<br /> |
|||
Memorial Hospital Worries Local Builder<br /> |
|||
Cloquet Telephone Agent Roasts The Rip?Saw<br /> |
|||
Graft And Scandal Smut The Hard Road Movement<br /> |
|||
Jascha Heifetz, 18, Will Appear<br /> |
|||
Lavinsky Shoots Up Cafe America - Superior<br /> |
|||
Douglas County Schools Maintain High Standards<br /> |
|||
Douglas County Sheriff Arrests Oliver Sports<br /> |
|||
Superior Organization Will Crimp Wickedness |
|||
'''November 15, 1919''' |
|||
Boy Robs Roth Brothers Store - Superior<br /> |
|||
Victim Of Cruel Vampire Takes The Suicide Route<br /> |
|||
Carl Takla Refused Bail<br /> |
|||
Funck Becomes Municipal Judge<br /> |
|||
Cloquet Union Men Wrathy<br /> |
|||
Cloquet Chief Of Police Arrests Wrong Man<br /> |
|||
Condition Of Treasury Startles School Board<br /> |
|||
Peter Rabbit Streetcar Jumps At Lawyer Whitley<br /> |
|||
Torrance Gives Wife A Black Eye - Superior<br /> |
|||
Superior's Politicians Look Over The Cards<br /> |
|||
Hunger, Worry And Want Drive Good Women Crazy<br /> |
|||
Rosenberg's Bartender Now Happy Egg Vendor |
|||
'''November 29, 1919''' |
|||
Police Raid The West Hotel<br /> |
|||
Chisholm's Enchantress Possess A Bad Record<br /> |
|||
Bruce Palmer Bans Suggestive Dancing - Proctor<br /> |
|||
Some Light And Comments On Local Paving History<br /> |
|||
Duluth's Pioneer Record Of Suicides - 1893<br /> |
|||
Cloquet Chief Of Police Sued For Damages<br /> |
|||
People Marvel Because City Is Postmasterless <br /> |
|||
Wolfe Convicts Bingoland Crooks - Superior<br /> |
|||
Bettty West's Close Escape |
|||
'''December 13, 1919''' |
|||
Magie Ignores McKercher<br /> |
|||
Girls Warmly Welcome Pilgrim From Proctor<br /> |
|||
An Artistic Job Of Fistic Decoration<br /> |
|||
William Chisholm Did Not Steal<br /> |
|||
When Henry Truelson First Came To Duluth - 1893<br /> |
|||
Judge Lichten Refuses Joel Lichten Citizenship<br /> |
|||
Street Railway Company Asks Municipal Favor<br /> |
|||
Bold Bingoland Boy Goes Crazy - Superior<br /> |
|||
Madam Smith Is Convicted In Judge French's Court<br /> |
|||
Commissioner Tomlinson Fools Bingoland Bunch |
|||
'''December 27, 1919''' |
|||
Play Poker In Turkish Bath<br /> |
|||
Twenty Local Policemen Are Called Onto Carpet<br /> |
|||
Bartoni Keeps Salacious Salon - Chisholm<br /> |
|||
Page Morris ?? Politician<br /> |
|||
Special H.C.L. Committee Makes Final Report<br /> |
|||
Duluth Boy Robs Kelly Of Famous Heirlooms<br /> |
|||
Bob McKercher Suspected Of Courting Clerk's Job<br /> |
|||
Commissioners Suspend McKinnon<br /> |
|||
The Bells Of Bingoland After Absolute Divorce - Superior<br /> |
|||
"Big Bill" Adams Finds Level<br /> |
|||
Trouble Faces Louis Roth - Chisholm<br /> |
|||
Sports May Hike For Cuba - Superior |
|||
'''January 10, 1920''' |
|||
Sick Boy Brutally Treated<br /> |
|||
Accused Policemen Given Hearing<br /> |
|||
McCusick Keeps Dump At Lucknow - Buhl<br /> |
|||
Bankruptcy For Schaibley<br /> |
|||
Snake?House Is Unpopular - Cusson<br /> |
|||
Jacob Anderson Wins Forest Fire Damage Suit<br /> |
|||
Gentleman Jim Shilty Kept Blind Grunter<br /> |
|||
Incorrigible Optimist Greatly Discouraged<br /> |
|||
City Servants Annoyed By Cavenaugh's Buzzer<br /> |
|||
Bingoland Bunch Backs McKinnon - Superior<br /> |
|||
Mother Carney Has Girls In First Street Retreat<br /> |
|||
Burgled Massey's Medicine<br /> |
|||
Two Bold Bingoland Boys Arrested In Tame Duluth |
|||
'''January 24, 1920''' |
|||
Big Bill Adams Is Arrested<br /> |
|||
Charge Non?Feasance Against The Sheriff - International Falls<br /> |
|||
Kremer Hoke Re?Elected School Superintendent<br /> |
|||
Publishing Fight At Two Harbors<br /> |
|||
Palmer Licks Up Moonshine - Proctor<br /> |
|||
Chisholm Sports Deeply Discouraged<br /> |
|||
Teacher Screamed Lustily<br /> |
|||
Snippy Women Show Scorn For Soldier Coal Bearer<br /> |
|||
Snake?House Defended By Hinterland Pilgrims<br /> |
|||
Appealing Story Of Mary<br /> |
|||
Bingoland Gangsters Fear Defeat - Superior<br /> |
|||
Terminal Situation Seriously Hampers City |
|||
'''February 4, 1920''' |
|||
Railway Robbery In Ranier<br /> |
|||
Chisholm Banishes All Slot Machines<br /> |
|||
Government May Settle Hinterland Fire Losses<br /> |
|||
Sugarless Situation Is Serious<br /> |
|||
Rabbit Tales For Teaching<br /> |
|||
Colonel Jim Burnside Hones For Bill Booze<br /> |
|||
Food Hogs Feed City Dump<br /> |
|||
Lynching of Rapist Belange At Mt. Iron - 1893<br /> |
|||
Weary Wobbly Complains Of Camp At Cusson<br /> |
|||
Lumber Camp Experience Displeases Duluth Man - Biwabik<br /> |
|||
Hinterland Residents Complain Of Road Work<br /> |
|||
Profiteers Harry Hibbing<br /> |
|||
Corporations Seek Baxter's Scalp - Superior<br /> |
|||
Darkest Africa Raided By Police Of Superior<br /> |
|||
Bells Battle For Divorce<br /> |
|||
Stevens Couple Sever Marital Ties<br /> |
|||
Hyberg and Mrs. Ek Elope - International Falls |
|||
'''February 21, 1920''' |
|||
Finds Love Pirate In Cloquet<br /> |
|||
Prisoners Are Denied Brain Food<br /> |
|||
School Head Quickly Quits<br /> |
|||
Great Family Journal Grows Like Greenbay Tree<br /> |
|||
Meadowlands Taxpayers Oppose School Principal<br /> |
|||
A Certain Rich Man...<br /> |
|||
Wife Knocked Out Oken's Teeth<br /> |
|||
Superior's Politicians Think About Primary<br /> |
|||
Weakly Paper Flings Mud At Mayor Fred A. Baxter - Superior<br /> |
|||
Papa Jim Buys Bingo Farm<br /> |
|||
Chisholm Sports Resent Moral Uplift<br /> |
|||
Bad Lands Bunch Will Flit - Superior |
|||
'''March 6, 1920''' |
|||
Sleuths Raid Superior's Blind Pig<br /> |
|||
Sports Of Chisholm Play New Card Game<br /> |
|||
Meadowlands Will Hold A Special Bond Election<br /> |
|||
Lingonberries On The Free List<br /> |
|||
Profiteers Greater Menace Than The "Reds"<br /> |
|||
Grave Irregularities Charged Against O'Neill<br /> |
|||
Feared Burnside Will Go Batty - Superior<br /> |
|||
Konkel's Man Duffy Wins Union Support<br /> |
|||
Weakly Leader Assumes To Speak For Union Men<br /> |
|||
Flunky Of Backers Flouts Federal Law<br /> |
|||
Berenico Hikes For Hurley<br /> |
|||
Max Rosenberg Has A Pull |
|||
'''March 20, 1920''' |
|||
Cancer Kills Earl Gonyea<br /> |
|||
Col. James Chester Bell Chases With New Chicken - Superior<br /> |
|||
Rainier Outlaws Go To Jail<br /> |
|||
Pittenger Peeves Party Bosses<br /> |
|||
Poker Is Nashwauk's Game<br /> |
|||
County Superintendency Sought By Man<br /> |
|||
Baxter Beats Bingoland Bunch - Superior<br /> |
|||
Primaries In Superior Slated For Next Tuesday<br /> |
|||
Buhl Woman Pinched By Ranier Inspector |
|||
''' |
|||
April 3, 1920 ??? May 26, 1923 ??? Missing''' |
|||
'''June 9, 1923''' |
|||
Two Barbers Held Under Heavy Bail<br /> |
|||
The Law Nabs Michelizzi<br /> |
|||
Huge Booze Supply Found By Sheriff -I?Falls<br /> |
|||
May Stevens Leaves Town<br /> |
|||
Cops Get Pete Schaeffer<br /> |
|||
Anderson Keeps Blind Pig<br /> |
|||
Aliens Make West Duluth Lawless and Disorderly |
|||
'''June 23, 1923 ??? October 11, 1923 ??? Missing''' |
|||
'''October 25, 1924''' |
|||
Boylan Threatens Murder<br /> |
|||
Bert Jameson's Unfitness Due To Physical Reasons<br /> |
|||
Two Undesirable's Must Go<br /> |
|||
George O'Brien Is Pinched For Conducting Big Still |
|||
(This last issue is the issue that prompted the Minnesota |
|||
Legislature to pass a gag law allowing the Police to confiscate |
|||
newspapers with “libelous” articles. The law was overturned |
|||
In a case involving a St. Paul newspaper by the U.S. Supreme |
|||
Court in the famous ''[[Near v. Minnesota]]'' decision guaranteeing |
|||
freedom of the press to American newspapers). |
|||
There were further issues of the paper, but they have been |
|||
lost. |
|||
== Rebirth == |
== Rebirth == |
Revision as of 15:22, 25 May 2012
This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. (February 2011) |
Ripsaw (sometimes called Rip-saw, Rip-Saw, RipSaw or The Duluth Rip-Saw) was a Duluth, Minnesota newspaper published from 1917 to 1926 and again from 1999 to 2005. The paper was a scandal sheet during the first years of publication, with a reputation for muckraking, sensationalism and criminal libel. The revival was similar in tone, though the publishers changed .
The Great Family Journal
The original Duluth Ripsaw was founded by John L. Morrison, a puritanical Christian who abhorred alcohol, gambling and prostitution. The paper debuted on March 24, 1917. Issues were published every other Saturday, with copies sold at newsstands for five cents. The newspaper's offices were originally in downtown Duluth’s Fargusson Building, and later moved to the Phoenix Building.
Morrison produced the Ripsaw almost entirely by himself. Three known helpers were stenographer Alice B. Bartlett, a cartoonist who signed his work “Webster,” and Isadore Cohen, a pre-teenaged newsboy who hawked papers in front of the old St. Louis County State Bank. Other writers were also periodically featured, but the vast majority of the work was always done by Morrison, who called himself the “head sawyer” of the “Great Family Journal.”
The Ripsaw began shortly after St. Louis County outlawed the sale of alcohol. When Superior, Wisconsin, followed a few months later with its own voter-instituted prohibition, the Twin Ports were nominally dry, but alcohol was available at bootleg outlets and in townships nearby. Local politicians and police did little to enforce the prohibition, and Morrison ridiculed them for it in the Ripsaw. He also editorialized in favor of streetcars, public toilets and higher pay for policemen.
During the Ripsaw’s first year, Duluth Chief of Police Robert McKercher and City Auditor “King” Odin Halden were both ousted from their positions after being labeled crooked in the Ripsaw.
Microfilm copies of the Ripsaw are located in the Duluth Public Library and in the Library of the Minnesota Historical Society in St. Paul, for researchers interested in reading specific articles from the paper.
Morrison’s Demise
The Ripsaw's decline began with the October 25, 1924 issue. Morrison accused State Senator Mike Boylan of threatening him with mayhem and death, Cass County Probate Judge Bert Jamison of having acquired syphilis at a brothel and Victor L. Power, a former mayor of Hibbing, of corrupt legal practices and a weakness for women and whiskey. All three retaliated.
Morrison was arrested by a sheriff from Walker, Minnesota (the county seat of Cass County) on charges of criminal libel brought by Jamison. Morrison was sentenced to 90 days in the Cass County jail, but raised bail and returned to Duluth pending appeal.
While Morrison was held in Cass County, Power instigated criminal and civil libel actions, claiming the October 25 Ripsaw article was written for the sole purpose of injuring him politically. The Duluth police held a warrant for Morrison's arrest pending his release from the Cass County jail. A jury in Hibbing, Minnesota, found him guilty, and he was sentenced to 90 days in the county workhouse. He immediately appealed. Later, Morrison was ordered to make a public apology to Power. The charges against him were dropped and his sentence rescinded. :ater that month, Morrison pleaded guilty to the charges of criminal libel brought by Jamison.
The most powerful blow to the “Great Family Journal” came in the summer of 1925. Senator Boylan, who, according to the Oct. 25, 1924 Ripsaw, had threatened to kill Morrison, was trying to have the paper shut down. He worked with Rep. George Lommen to draft several bills allowing suppression of scandalous newspapers. Sen. Freyling Stevens, a powerful lawyer, introduced the senate version of what would become known as the “Minnesota gag law,” for which he is credited with authorship.
The Public Nuisance Bill of 1925 was approved by the Minnesota Senate and House of Representatives. It allowed a single judge, without jury, to stop a newspaper or magazine from publishing, forever.
Governor Theodore Christianson signed the Public Nuisance Law, but Morrison was unaware of this change. On April 6, 1926, the Ripsaw attacked Minneapolis Mayor George Emerson Leach: “Minnesotans do not want loose-love governor.” In the next issue, Duluth Commissioner of Public Utilities W. Harlow Tischer was the target: “Tischer and his gang fail to establish graft plan.”
Morrison was served with a warrant for his arrest based on a complaint from Leach under an obscene-literature ordinance recently rushed through the Minneapolis City Council. The next day, a temporary restraining order was placed on the Ripsaw by State District Judge H. J. Grannis of Duluth. Tischer claimed that the charges of graft were untrue and he demanded that the Ripsaw be stopped. The Finnish Publishing Company, which printed the Ripsaw, was also named in the injunction, and news dealers and newsboys were barred from distributing the paper.
Morrison’s trial was set for May 15, 1926. Morrison did not appear in court, as he had fallen ill. On May 18, 1926, Morrison was rushed to St. Francis Hospital in Superior at around 1 a.m. Nine hours later, he was pronounced dead. The cause was reported in the Duluth Herald to be an embolism, a blood clot on the brain. The Herald reported that Morrison “had been ill for 10 days, suffering from pleurisy following an attack of influenza, a general breakdown and attacks of syncope.”
Tischer continued to insist the injunction against the Ripsaw be maintained, even after Morrison’s death. Judge E. J. Kenney, however, allowed a continuation of the Ripsaw “without the articles objected to by Commissioner Tischer.”
On June 1, 1931, the “gag law” was found to be unconstitutional by the U.S. Supreme Court, in what is considered to be the first and most important Freedom of the Press decision in U.S. history.
Rebirth
It was in January 1999 that the Ripsaw returned. Brad Nelson and Cord R. Dada published a monthly scandal sheet similar to Morrison’s original Ripsaw. Its first lead story, “Dotygate,” accused Duluth Mayor Gary Doty and his administration of various crimes associated with the demolition of buildings on East First Street to make way for construction of the Duluth Technology Village.
The Ripsaw became a weekly publication on April 5, 2000. Paul Lundgren was hired as managing editor and the paper was transformed into an alternative news, arts and entertainment source. One year later, it was accepted into the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies.
While Morrison’s original Ripsaw fought against “ol’ John Barleycorn,” the personification of demon alcohol, the new Ripsaw reveled in the exploits of Slim Goodbuzz. The slender and sarcastic Duluthian traveled the region in search of inebriated adventure for his celebrated “Barfly on the Wall” column.
Another favorite of Ripsaw readers was the comic strip “Violet Days,” by Chris Monroe, which is now featured in the Minneapolis Star Tribune and Duluth News Tribune.
Co-publisher Cord R. Dada sold the majority of his ownership in the paper to Brad Nelson’s brother Tim Nelson in April 2001, relieving himself of all duties at the Ripsaw and leaving Brad Nelson as the majority owner and sole publisher of the paper. Within a few months, Lundgren was dismissed and Nelson became editor/publisher.
The last weekly issue was published on Dec. 31, 2003. Three months later, the Ripsaw returned to monthly status, this time as a full-color magazine edited by Tony Dierckins. It lasted 10 issues before reverting back to newsprint for its final three issues, which were published every other month, ending in September 2005.
Spinoffs
The website Perfect Duluth Day was founded in 2003 by Barrett Chase and Scott Lunt. Chase was a cartoonist and copy editor for the Ripsaw, and Lunt helped deliver the paper. Former Ripsaw Managing Editor Paul Lundgren became a part-owner of Perfect Duluth Day in 2009, as did freelance illustrator Brian Barber.
The Ripsaw's former "web jerk" Adam Guggemos went on to found Duluth's weekly Transistor in 2004, which has featured columns and comic strips by numerous former Ripsaw contributors.
References
- “AAN’s smallest paper publishes in rock ‘n’ roll time,” by Whitney Joiner. Oct. 30, 2003 AAN News.
- “Boylan threatens murder.” Oct. 25, 1924 Ripsaw.
- Friendly, Fred W. “Minnesota Rag: The Dramatic Story of the Landmark Supreme Court Case That Gave New Meaning to Freedom of the Press,” May 1981. Random House (ISBN 0-394-50752-5). Reprinted May 2003. University of Minnesota Press (ISBN 0-8166-4161-7)
- “The Great Family Journal grows like a Green Bay tree.” Feb. 21, 1920 Ripsaw.
- “Presenting John Morrison’s Duluth,” by John Ramos. Spring 2005 Cheerleader.
- "Ripsaw magazine suspends publication," by Peter Passi. Feb. 4, 2005 Duluth News Tribune.
- "Ripsaw News makes cuts," by V. Paul Virtucio. Dec. 31, 2003 Duluth News Tribune.
- “The Ripsaw’s Phenomenal Record,” Oct. 4, 1919 Ripsaw.
- "Ripsaw returns next week," April 22, 2005 Duluth News Tribune.
- “Ripsaw to suspend publication and retool as a monthly,” by Don Jacobson. Dec. 19, 2003 Business North.
- “Ripsaw turns 85,” by Paul Lundgren. March 13, 2002 Ripsaw.
- “R.I.P. Ripsaw,” by Julia Durst. Jan. 26, 2006 MNArtists.org.
- “Tabloid attacks draw fire from city officials,” by Jason Skog. Feb. 14, 1999 Duluth News Tribune.