Tidbits From the Past
Tom Long , had been looking at some old newspapers and was kind enough to share the information he gleaned with us.
Thanks Tom
July 21, 1910 - Sitting Bull Jr. and a small band of his braves, and one | |||||
medicine man came in off the reservation one night this week and treated the | |||||
citizens to a ghost dance. | |||||
March 2, 1911 - Henry Sandkamp has purchased the Merchants Hotel with | |||||
furniture. The price was $6100. | |||||
June 22, 1911 - "Real Estate Deal" - Henry Sandkamp bought the old drugstore | |||||
wing adjacent to the Merchants Hotel from Val Herman last Monday morning. | |||||
The price of the property has not been given out, but is understood to be | |||||
about $3500 to $4000. The property is a two story brick veneered building | |||||
with a full stone basement and also includes a piece of ground in the angle | |||||
between the hotel and the addition just transferred. Mr. Sandkamp has now a | |||||
handsome and valuable piece of property as there is in town. | |||||
May 15, 1913 - "New Telephone Service" - Holdingford has now the most | |||||
complete and prompt service that can be procured. The Northwestern Telephone | |||||
Company has begun a continuous day and night service with Miss Mary Abeln as | |||||
chief operator and Miss Lizzie Sandkamp as assistant. Holdingford has wanted | |||||
this service for many years and will now take pride in at last securing the | |||||
best there is to be had. Nothing slow about this town! | |||||
October 29, 1914 - "Attention" A meeting of the citizens of Holdingford will | |||||
be held in the Scenic Opera House, Saturday evening Oct. 31st, 1914, at 7:30 | |||||
to consider the matter of electric lights. A representative from | |||||
Minneapolis, and others, will be on hand to give information on the subject. | |||||
Everyone is invited to attend. | |||||
December 10, 1914 - "Lights Coming" - It takes a time keeper and a card | |||||
index to keep up with Holdingford. | |||||
We are going to have electric lights after all. They are almost ready. The | |||||
building is up and the machinery will be installed at once. The poles have | |||||
been set and the wire strung and today we print the franchise and the | |||||
contract whereby the village gets street lights. About the middle of January | |||||
next, Holdingford will be shining like a jewel. | |||||
January 14, 1915 - The electric light plant was first started up last Friday | |||||
evening and light furnished in the corner saloon for a while. Saturday | |||||
evening the lights were turned on the streets. It certainly looked good. The | |||||
lights will not be turned on regularly for a few days yet. | |||||
June 10, 1915 - Val Herman has traded his lot back of the Merchants Hotel to | |||||
Henry Sandkamp for a lot opposite the depot near Mr. Stewart's residence. | |||||
This last lot he has sold to the Standard Oil Company which is now putting | |||||
in two storage tanks for kerosene and gasoline. Mr. Herman will now have | |||||
charge of the station here and will run a tank team to deliver oil to nearby | |||||
stations. | |||||
February 3, 1916 - Nemec Theatre, St. Cloud - One week starting February 6, | |||||
Sunday matinee - Elliot and Sherman present twice daily - "The Worlds | |||||
Mightiest Spectacle", D.W. Griffith's "The Birth of a Nation". Good Horses, | |||||
18,000 People, 5,000 Scenes, Cost $500,000, Symphony Orchestra of 30. | |||||
Daily Matinees, 25c, 50c, 75c, 1.00 | |||||
Evening " | 50c, 75c, 1.00, 1.50 | ||||
November 29, 1917 - "Thanksgiving Midnight Supper" - A big Thanksgiving | |||||
mid-night supper will be served The Merchants Hotel beginning at 11:00 p.m. | |||||
Price 75c per couple. Everyone is cordially invited to come and enjoy a | |||||
good, square meal. | |||||
December 27, 1917 - The Merchants Hotel has put on fire escape ladders on | |||||
the east and south side of the building to comply with the state | |||||
regulations. Winkler Brothers won the contract, and their valuable employ, | |||||
Stephen Gruidl made the iron fire escapes here, which is a creditable piece | |||||
of work. | |||||
February 28, 1918 - "Holdingford Lightless" - The mass meeting held here | |||||
last Monday evening by Mr. Fred Speechly, secretary of the Holdingford Light | |||||
Company. was not very well attended, and according to all probabilities, | |||||
Holdingford will not only have Wheatless, Meatless, Heatless, Snowless, days | |||||
but most of all "Lightless nights" and the people of this community are | |||||
wondering what the "whatnextless" will mean. | |||||
May 27, 1920 - "Aeroplane creates sensation in Holdingford on Monday" - | |||||
Cyril Stodolka, the Royalton aviator, accompanied by Alvin Orth, arrived on | |||||
the Frank Meier field at five-thirty Monday afternoon with 65-horse Curtis. | |||||
He came over in about 8 minutes against the wind. The news of his coming was | |||||
circulated around earlier in the day, and a large crowd of spectators were | |||||
awaiting his arrival. |
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