
These establishments included a "free" lunch, varying from rudimentary to quite elaborate, with the purchase of at least one drink. It was a tradition once common in saloons in many places in the United States, with the phrase appearing in U.S.
LAST STOP SALOON FREE
The free lunch was a sales enticement which offered a meal at no cost in order to attract customers and increase revenues from other offerings. It was decisively defeated when prohibition was repealed in 1933. Its triumph was nationwide prohibition locked into the Constitution with passage of the 18th Amendment in 1920. League members pressured local police to take licenses from establishments that violated closing hours or served women and minors, and they provided witnesses to testify about these violations. Ministers had launched several efforts to close Arizona saloons after the 1906 creation of League chapters in Yuma, Tucson, and Phoenix. The League lobbied at all levels of government for legislation to prohibit the manufacture or import of spirits, beer and wine. In 1895 it became a national organization and quickly rose to become the most powerful prohibition lobby in America, pushing aside its older competitors the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and the Prohibition Party. Alas, the still was used to distill gasoline for use in dry cleaning.Temperance illustration of drunkard hitting his wifeīeginning in 1893, the Anti-Saloon League began protesting against American saloons. “In November of 1919, a very large copper still was installed, the townsfolk were all atwitter - thinking it was a still to be used to make alcohol. “It could be that some bootlegging or rum-running took place in the tunnels during prohibition, as we so often heard on social media, but I have found no newspaper stories or other evidence to support it,” Faust said. Whitney was located at 720 Front St., the lot west of the parking lot on the southwest corner of Front and South Eighth streets.Ĭrow Wing County courthouses repurposed with passing years The Brainerd Model Laundry was providing steam heat for the Whitney Funeral Home in October 1915. The company handled laundry from over 80 towns within a radius of 400 miles of Brainerd,” Faust said.

Heavy sheets of noise-deadening felt were used in the floors to make the apartments soundproof.

“The woodwork was fumed oak with birch floors. The first and second floors of the building were occupied by the laundry and the third floor originally contained six suites of flats there were two two-room, two four-room and two five-room suites. Brainerd brick was used to a large extent, the red building kind was furnished by David Ebinger, whose brickyards were in Northeast Brainerd,” Faust said. “The front is of red pressed brick with stone trimmings. 5, 1914.īrainerd YMCA begins with Northern Pacific Railway offer in 1913 and instituted the first up-to-date laundry and completely equipped cleaning establishment in Brainerd that opened for business on Jan.

Fairchild and Carl Zapffe incorporated the Brainerd Model Laundry Co.

“It brought laundry by rail express from as far away as Crookston, Minn.” “It was specially erected to accommodate this new and large business,” Faust wrote in the tour booklet about the Lakeland Building and the laundry business housed within.
