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Falcon Prince Inc . ● 1633 County Hwy. 10 Spring Lake Park, MN. 55432 Phone: 763-792-1125 ● Email: dean@realbits.com ● www.TidbitsTwinCities.com Published under licensing agreement with Tidbits Media, Inc., Montgomery, AL www.tidbitsmedia.com
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A Minnesota
Minute
A Minnesota
Minute
5 Greater Twin City Locations
Be All That You Can See
Exp:12/1/2011
It’s deer hunting season and there is always the mixed bag of feelings ranging from the hard core hunters to the hard coreBambi lovers. Either way, it is a part of our Minnesota life anda very essential one. Deer are pleasant and beautiful to look at tobe sure, but you only have to hit a deer once or experience thedevastation they can reek on your landscaping to appreciate theneed to control the size of this incredibly productive species.
In addition to controlling the deer population, the huntingseason adds a very significant and dependable impact to oureconomy. There are 475,000 deer hunters in Minnesota supporting5300 jobs and generating over $458 million dollars. Some may think it’s just sport but most hunters appreciate and many count on having venison as part of their yearly diet. Let’s look at them both.
The HuntedWhite-tailed deer are the smallest
members of the North American deer family with the adult female weighing about 145 pounds, and males 170 pounds - roughly the average weight of female and male humans. They are herbivores, leisurely grazing on most available plant foods and are primarily nocturnal or crepuscular browsing mainly at dawn and dusk with a wandering range of about one square mile.
Deer are very difficult to spot because of the blending colorof their coats. Adults have reddish-brown coats in summer whichfade to a duller grayish-brown in winter. Male deer, called bucks, are easily recognizable in the summer and fall by their prominentset of antlers, which grow annually then fall off in the winter.
Although previously depleted by unrestricted hunting in the United States, strict game-management measures have helpedrestore the deer population. Minnesota’s controlled deer populationis about 1 million. Texas is No. 1 with 4.7 million.
Female deer, called does, give birth to one to three young at a time. A deer’s three main concerns in life are to eat, reproduce, and not be eaten.
The HunterIn total, more than 800,000
deer hunting licenses and permits (all types) were sold in 2010 with 98% sold to Minnesota residents. License options allow hunters to buy individual licenses for all the seasons and give hunters more choices in where andwhen they can hunt deer, and hunters can take as many as five deerin many parts of the state.
The average hunter spends five days afield during firearmsdeer season but not everyone bags one. Last year only 38 percent of Minnesota firearm hunters successfully harvested a deer, withseventy percent of those typically occurring during the first three orfour days of the season. Last year’s total deer harvest was just over 207,000 and about 47 percent were antlered bucks. Minnesota’s average harvest was 241,000 deer over the last five years.Wisconsin is No. 1 with an average harvest of almost 450,000.
The largest typical whitetail buck ever taken in Minnesotahad a Boone & Crockett score of 202 and weighed 500 lbs, shot byJohn Breen in 1918 near Funkley.
The DNR Information Center remained open two hours later on the day before last year’s deer opener to answer more than2,000 telephone inquiries, most of them related to the opener.
With nearly a half-million hunters in the state, there are alsothe occasional hunter violations, some with very stiff penalties. The top 10 are:
1. License not in possession 2. Transporting uncased/loaded firearms 3. No license 4. Hunting over bait 5. Unplugged shotgun6. No red/blaze orange 7. Untagged deer 8. Failure to have HIP
certification on license 9. Failure to validate 10. TrespassingSCAN&LEARN
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CELEBRATIONS (continued)
• Americans used to celebrate Armistice Day on November 11, commemorating the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of 1918. This was the time when a peace agreement was declared between the Allies and Germany, ending World War I, then called the Great War. It became a U.S. federal holiday in 1938. President Eisenhower offi cially changed the holiday from Armistice Day to Veterans Day in 1954. There are about 9.2 million veterans in the United States over age 65. About 1.9 million are under 35. • Veterans Day in Canada, Britain, France and Australia also memorializes their heroes on or near November 11. Canada calls it Remembrance Day, and the second Sunday of November in Britain is called Remembrance Sunday. • The third Thursday in November has been proclaimed the Great American Smokeout, when all smokers have been asked to make a plan to quit or at the least, abstain from smoking on that day. It’s the day the American Cancer Society reminds smokers that cigarette smoking is responsible for over 80 percent of all lung cancer deaths. Just 20 minutes after quitting, the heart rate and blood pressure drop. Twelve hours later, the blood’s carbon monoxide level drops to normal. One year after quitting, the excess risk of coronary heart disease is half that of a continuing smoker, and 10 years after quitting, the risk of dying from lung cancer is half that of a continuing smoker. • Musicians, singers and poets pay homage to their patron saint, St. Cecilia, on November 22. This Roman Christian martyr is said to have heard the music of heaven during her wedding ceremony and to have sung to God as she lay dying. The patroness of business and professional women is St. Hilda, who is honored on November 17. • Everyone seems to have a patron saint, including tavern owners, beggars and drunkards. This honor belongs to St. Martinmas, a noted philanthropist who supposedly hid in a barn to avoid being made a bishop. Because a honking goose gave away his location, many Europeans eat roast goose during the Feast of St. Martinmas on November 11. • Is matrimony on your mind? According to an old proverb, “Marry in September’s shine, your living will be rich and fi ne.” However, “If in October you do marry, love will come, but riches tarry.” Now, “If you wed in bleak November, only joys will come, remember.” • Thanks to Alfred Gerald Caplin we have Sadie Hawkins Day on November 15. Alfred was more commonly known as Al Capp, the creator of the “L’il Abner” comic strip. In 1937, Capp pictured November 15 as a day when the unmarried women of the fi ctional community of Dogpatch could aggressively go after the town’s available bachelors. Dogpatch’s Sadie Hawkins was dubbed “the homeliest gal in the hills,” waiting interminably for men to “come a-courtin’.” Her father,
a community leader, decreed the fi rst annual celebration in the comic strip, and it soon became a popular event across the country.• November 5 is celebrated in England as Guy Fawkes Day, commemorating the anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot, a conspiracy to blow up Parliament and King James I along with it. The plot was an uprising of English Catholics, who believed they were being persecuted unjustly for practicing their religion. Thirty-six barrels of gunpowder were hidden in a cellar under the House of Lords and guarded by Fawkes. Thirteen conspirators devised the plot, and many were killed outright, while others were imprisoned or executed. Fawkes was sentenced to be hanged but jumped off the scaffold and broke his neck. While this doesn’t appear to have been a good idea, it saved him the agony of the drawing and quartering that was to follow the noose breaking his neck. Today, the English celebrate with fi reworks and bonfi res, with Guy Fawkes’ effi gy burned on the fi re. • The day after Thanksgiving has been nicknamed Black Friday in the United States and marks the beginning of the Christmas shopping season. If it’s one of retailers’ best days, why do they call it Black Friday? It earned this moniker as it is the day many retailers make a profi t and are “in the black.” “Buy Nothing Day” is the same day and is a day of protest by some against consumerism and overspending. A Canadian artist conceived the idea and initiated it in Vancouver in 1992. Festivities often include sit-ins with credit card cut-up ceremonies. Some areas use the day to hold a winter coat exchange for the less fortunate. • Don’t forget Sinkie Day on November 24. That’s the day set forth for recognition by The International Association of People Who Dine over the Kitchen Sink, those folks who think food tastes better eaten over the sink and that it makes less mess as well!
FAST FACTS OF NOVEMBER♦November comes from the Latin word root “novem”, which means nine. It was originally the 9th month in the Roman Calendar.♦The fl ower that represents November is the Chrysanthemum.♦On November 18th, 1963 Bell Telephone Company introduced to the public the push button phone.♦On November 22nd, 1957 Simon & Garfunkel performed on the “American Bandstand” Show as “Tom & Jerry”. Bet ya never knew that one?♦November 17th is National Take A Hike Day.♦World War I ended on the 11th day of the 11th month (November) at 11PM, in 1918.♦The birthstone for November is Topaz.♦Do you know which U S President was assassinated in November?
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Disappointed in your readingWhen you book a reading with a psychic it’s always good to prepare questions to ask. What’s not good is to pre-plan how you expect your reading to go.. You will always get the reading you’re supposed to have.
I did a reading recently on a client who was disappointed in what came through for her. It wasn’t what she was expecting. She kept telling me that she was expecting more. I continued to give her what was presented for her. Her disappointment got in the way of her understanding the reading.
This client had a list of questions, the fi rst one being, “Who’s coming through for me?” This was the fi rst of her disappointments. The ones coming through were her guides. They had information for her. What she wanted was specifi c people on the other side to come through.
Mediumship is not something we have a lot of control over. We can ask that people come through, but we can’t force the issue and we certainly can’t demand it. There are times when loved ones don’t come through. My experience has been that these are the times when we need to listen to the reading. Something important is about to be given to the client. If their loved ones come through, they will not hear the actual message being given to them.
Unfortunately, many people only want guidance to come via their long lost grandmother. Most of the time if Granny comes through, it will be to give you a message of love. Not to advise you on your latest date or your work situation.
Something else that tends to disappoint clients is discovering that their guide isn’t a deceased relative. It is rare for me to discover someones guide is a relative from this time. If all of your guides were the people you grew up loving and interacting with, who would be guiding you when they were here on earth with you?
The next time you book a reading, write your questions down and then listen to the answers you get. Try to not preordain how your reading should be and appreciate it for what it is.....words of advice and love from the other side.
Thank you for your interest and attention. If you’d like to have a reading or take a class, please contact me. Till next time, stay in touch with yourself, your life, and with those loved ones who have moved on.
U if!!Sfmvdubou!Qtzdijd
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612-518-6858ROBINALLEN.NET rachelkphoto.com
■ On Nov. 8, 1847, Bram Stoker, author of the horror novel “Dracula,” is born in Clontarf, Dublin, Ireland. Stoker’s villainous, blood-sucking creation, the vampire Count Dracula, became a pop-culture icon and has been featured in hundreds of movies, books and plays.■ On Nov. 10, 1903, Mary Anderson receives patent No. 743,801 for her “window cleaning device for electric cars and other vehicles to remove snow, ice or sleet from the window.” Anderson tried to sell it to a Canadian manufacturing fi rm, but the company said the device had no practical value.■ On Nov. 11, 1921, three years after the end of World War I, the Tomb of
the Unknowns is dedicated at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia when an unknown American soldier is buried. A 2-inch layer of soil brought from France was placed below the coffi n so that the soldier might rest forever atop the earth on which he died.■ On Nov. 7, 1940, the Tacoma Narrows Bridge collapses due to high winds. At the time, wind forces were not taken into consideration by engineers and designers. The remains of the bridge, at the bottom of Puget Sound, form one of the largest man-made reefs in the world.■ On Nov. 12, 1954, Ellis Island, the gateway to America, shuts it doors after processing more than 12 million immigrants since opening in 1892. First- and second-class passengers had easily passed through customs, but those in third class underwent medical inspections to ensure they didn’t have a contagious disease.■ On Nov. 13, 1982, the Vietnam
Veterans Memorial is dedicated in Washington, D.C. The long-awaited memorial was a simple V-shaped black-granite wall inscribed with the names of the 57,939 Americans who died in the confl ict, arranged in order of death, not rank, as was common in other memorials.■ On Nov. 17, 1421, a storm in the North Sea batters the European coastline. Over the next several days, approximately 10,000 people die in the resulting fl oods. Fatal fl oods struck in 1287, 1338, 1374, 1394 and 1396. After each, residents fi xed the dikes and moved right back in.■ On Nov. 15, 1867, the fi rst stock ticker is unveiled in New York City. The advent of the ticker revolutionized the stock market by making up-to-the-minute prices available to investors around the country. Prior to this, information from the New York Stock Exchange traveled by mail or messenger.■ On Nov. 20, 1923, the U.S. Patent
Offi ce grants Patent No. 1,475,074 to 46-year-old inventor and newspaperman Garrett Morgan for his three-position T-shape pole traffi c signal. By having a position other than just “Stop” and “Go,” it regulated crossing vehicles more safely than earlier signals had.■ On Nov. 19, 1969, Brazilian soccer great Pele scores his 1,000th professional goal. Under Pele’s leadership, Brazil won the World Cup in 1958, 1962 and 1970. During his career, Pele scored 1,282 goals in 1,363 games.■ On Nov. 18, 1978, People’s Temple leader Jim Jones leads hundreds of his followers in a mass murder-suicide at their commune in Guyana. Cult members who refused to take the cyanide-laced fruit-fl avored drink were forced to do so at gunpoint or shot. The death toll was 913, including a U.S. congressman who was investigating the commune.
(c) 2011 King Features Synd., Inc.
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► Water Plants and Christmas Trees: Throw a few cubes on top of the dirt of a potted plant. The cubes will melt slowly, preventing overfl ow-age. Using ice cubes to water a Christmas tree will be easier than trying to get a watering can in there.
► Put the Finishing Touch on Caulk: Instead of using your fi ngertip to fi nish your caulking job, try using an ice cube, to which the caulk won’t stick.
► Wrinkle Remover: Wrinkly shirt? Wrap an ice cube in a soft cloth, rub it
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► Icky Medicine Taste Masker: Forget the spoonful of sugar–who needs the calories? Instead, give the kidlets an ice cube right before their dosage. The cold will numb their taste buds, making them less useful.
► Splinter Removal: Numb the splinter area with an ice cube before digging it out with a needle; it’ll make the whole process a bit less painful.
►Blister Avoidance: Applying an ice cube to a burn can stop it from blistering.
► Internal Air-conditioning for Fido (or Fluffy): Adding ice cubes to your animal-friend’s water bowl will surely cool them down, but only do this if
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► Disposal Laxative: Garbage disposal plugged up and feeling sluggish? Throw some ice cubes down the hole and grind them up. They’ll carry away the grease.
► Low Tech Blender: To get your homemade salad dressing smooth, put your concoction into a plastic container; toss in an ice cube and seal. Shake, shake, shake. Remove the cube and voila, creamy dressing.
►Curdler Preventer: Sauces made with egg yolks can curdle easily. As soon as you notice the clumps starting, drop in an ice cube to reverse the effects.
► Fat Remover: Fill a metal ladle with
ice cubes and skim its bottom over the top of stews, soups, etc. The excess fat in the dish will cling to the bottom of the ladle. (Too bad this doesn’t work on cellulite.)
► Rice Steamer: Reheating rice in the microwave can make it crunchy and dry. To prevent this, place an ice cube on top of the rice before re-heating. The melting cube adds necessary moisture.
► Painless Plucking: Make plucking–or manscaping–less painful by fi rst rubbing an ice cube across your eyebrow line. The cold will act as a temporary anesthetic, making plucking a bit less painful. Rubbing the same cube over the plucked area after you’re done will also act as an anti-infl ammatory, preventing redness.
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OVERCOMING THE ODDS:SPECIAL OLYMPICSIn June 1963, Eunice Kennedy Shriver started a summer day camp at her home in Maryland. Different from most day camps, this one was for young people with intellectual disabilities.• Shriver wanted the young people to be able to explore their capabilities in sports and other physical activities. Camp Shriver was the predecessor of what is now known worldwide as the Special Olympics. Shriver’s commitment to individuals with challenges came from her love for sports and for her sister Rosemary, who in 1941, was institutionalized because of her disabilities. • The fi rst Special Olympic Games were held in Chicago on July 20, 1968. This was only seven weeks after the second of Shriver’s political brothers had been assassinated. Senator Robert Kennedy was shot after her other brother, President John F. Kennedy, had been shot and killed. The deaths of her brothers had major impact across America. The games that Shriver started in Chicago would also go on to have lasting effects, in a very different way, on the country and the world. • A small crowd of fewer than 100 people was seated in the 85,000-seat stadium in Chicago for the fi rst games, which had about 1,000 athletes from 26 states and Canada. • The oath that Shriver introduced at the fi rst games is still used today: “Let me win, but if I cannot win let me be brave in the attempt.”• Shriver predicted that “one million of the world’s intellectually challenged would someday compete athletically.” She saw that prediction
surpassed three times over! Today, more than three million Special Olympic athletes train in all 50 states and 181 countries around the globe. • Disabled people are now participating in summer and winter games. Just as the offi cial Olympic Games are held every two years, the Special Olympics are as well, alternating between winter and summer. • The Special Olympics World Summer Games of 2011 were held in the city of the fi rst modern-day Olympic Games in 1894: Athens, Greece. More than 7,000 athletes, 3,000 coaches and offi cials, 25,000 volunteers, 40,000 family members and thousands of spectators from more than 180 countries were there to witness “the power of sport” changing lives. The challenged individuals competed in 22 Olympic-style sports such as softball tosses, weight lifting, aquatics, bocce and bowling from June 25 through July 4. • Today, attitudes and laws have changed to allow people with disabilities to participate in more workplaces as well as in sports. The Special Olympics helped many to see the abilities that are present if disabled people are given the encouragement, help and support they need. Events associated with the Special Olympics program are scheduled practically every month somewhere in the world, and they prepare and equip the athletes for competition and life. • Just as preparations are being made for the Olympic Summer Games in London 2012, South Korea is preparing for the Special Olympics World Winter Games to be held in 2013. Athletes will proudly participate in winter sports like snowboarding, skiing, snowshoeing and more. • Today, as a result of the publicity surrounding the Special Olympics, more and more people are looking at people with disabilities differently. Worldwide, they now have increased access to jobs, medical care and more.
Wedding AnniversaryTony was in trouble. He forgot his wedding anniversary, and his wife was really angry. She told him “Tomorrow morning, I expect to fi nd a gift in the driveway that goes from 0 to 200 in less than 6 seconds AND IT HAD BETTER BE THERE!! The next morning, Tony got up early and left for work. When his wife woke up she looked out the window and sure enough there was a box gift wrapped in the middle of the driveway. Confused, the wife put on her robe and ran out to the driveway, and brought the box back in the house. She opened it and found a brand new bathroom scale. Tony has been missing since Friday. Please pray for him.
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tOP CASH FOR CARSOn the Spot $$$
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AUTOS WANTEDJunkers & Repairables
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MOTOR VEHICLES : BUY / SELL / PARTS / SUPPLIESBeforeYou Purchase BeforeYou Purchase
a Used Vehicle Be Sure!a Used Vehicle Be Sure!Get a Fluid Analysis of the
Motor & TransmissionKnow how well the car is
on the insideOn Site Oil Analysis of MN
763-257-7762
GUN & KNIFE SHOWSat: Nov. 12th 9-5 Sun: Nov 13th 9-3 Adm: $5
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651-635-9453
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Insulation & Ventilation Experts763-218-2322
A PATRIOTICA PATRIOTICPAINTING SERVICEPAINTING SERVICE
Painting / Drywall / TexturingWallpaper / Woodwork & Enamel
FALL EXTERIOR SPECIAL 15%OFF up to $1000
“Affordable...”“Affordable...” 763-807-1051Rogers Railing 763-389-2468Rogers Railing 763-389-2468
10%10%Discount Discount for Seniorsfor Seniors
Have a Custom Iron Have a Custom Iron Step Railing InstalledStep Railing Installed
A number of styles to choose from
Matts PLUMBINGPLUMBING
SOLUTIONS SOLUTIONS
A LOCAL TRUSTED NAME TO CALL
763-427-1808
Licensed. Bonded. Ins.Licensed. Bonded. Ins.
WE FIX BLINDSWE FIX BLINDSAll Major Brands
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- 763-586-0109 -www.wefixblinds.com
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MUSICMUSICVISIT USVISIT US
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Dan the Handyman
Angie's List Rating
668
andyman
t
"No job too small"
We Cleanup & RestoreWe Cleanup & RestoreCarpet, Upholstery Cleaning
Call: 763-504-0808mnwaterdamagerestoration.com
Licensed - Insured
FOR CUSTOM QUARTZ & GRANITE COUNTERTOPS
Use Grassland GraniteMN Rep: Bill Menne 612-702-4951
www.grasslandgranite.comInsuredInsurererreere
Affordable--------------LifetimeWarranty-------------
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Water Softener Water Softener RepairRepair
"The Water Guy"612-226-7867
Fast and
Honest!
In Home Service Available 763-786-8977
FREE REPAIRFREE REPAIRESTIMATEESTIMATE
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dOGGY dAY cARE vACATION cARE
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763-434-5303 - Carol
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ChimneyChimney Fireplace Fireplace Cleaning & Repair
612-481-9356612-481-9356Nicks Chimney ServiceNicks Chimney Service
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Egress & Glass Block "Window Experts"
$860* BankrBankruptcyuptcy
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763-792-4940763-792-4940
debt relief
Christmas BazaarChristmas BazaarSat. Nov 12th 9-3 Sun. Nov 13th 9-12:30
St Joseph of the Lakes Church - C.C.W.171 Elm St. Lino Lakes 651-784-3015
CRAFT SALE:70 Crafters Jewelry, Christmas Decorations Clothing, Organic food items, Household products.BAKE SALE: Pies, Cookies, Bars, Handmade CandiesSat:Turkey dinner, Chicken Wild Rice soup, Hot dogs & Brats Sun: Hot Cinnamon Rolls and Coffee.
get your fixover 5000 LP’s
763-276-5521
Page 6DISCLAIMER: Falcon Prince Inc. provides text, bar codes, and website addresses in Tidbits® for retrieving information, and has deemed them safe and reliable. By scanning these codes and entering these sites, you do so at your own choice. Falcon Prince Inc. it's subsidiaries and assigns are not responsible for the reliability of the content contained herein or at these sites, nor for any adverse effects to any electronic device, its data and programs used to go to these sites.
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Catching a Code QR code (abbreviation for Quick Response code) is a specifi c matrix barcode (or two-dimensional code) that is readable by dedicated QR barcode readers and now smart phones. The code consists of black modules arranged in a square pattern on a white background. The information encoded may be text, URL, or other data. The QR code was created to allow its contents to be decoded at high speed. Although initially used for tracking parts in vehicle manufacturing, QR codes now are used in a much broader context, including both commercial tracking applications and convenience-oriented applications aimed at mobile phone users (termed mobile tagging or object hyperlinking). The main reason why they are more useful than a standard barcode is that they can store (and digitally present) much more data, including url links, geo coordinates, and text. They come to us from Japan and are everywhere in the cities there. In the U.S.we are seeing it's use sparingly but with recent hyper growth.The idea behind using it is so smart phone users don’t have to type a long URL to get to your site, or for that matter just about any information page or document you want to send them to. Smart phones are saturating the market, with more than a billion being sold in the last year. The phone needs a QR code reader application which is gennerally free and now more commonly packaged with the phone. It takes literally 1 minute for someone with an iPhone or Android phone to fi nd and
install a reader. You can easily generate a QR code using a site like Kaywa.com. Latest generation smart phones need to merely sense the location of a code with their camera to bring you to the link and sometimes even directly to the web page or document. In addition to seeing the QR codes in Tidbits®, you are starting to see them in magazine advertisements, on product price tags, on billboards, or even on someone’s t-shirt. Once it is scanned into your phone, it may give you details about that business (allowing users to search for nearby locations), provide information on the product, or details about the person wearing the t-shirt or a favorite site of theirs. A code could also show you a link you can click to see a trailer for a movie, or perhaps a coupon to use in a local outlet. (Beware of course, there may be some sites you'd not want to get to). Basic ideas for QR codes? – put it on your fl yers, business cards or any printable material. Beyond that, here’s a list of what some companies have used QR codes for:
As part of a contest A scavenger hunt promotion A way to send mobile users to watch a video (promotional, educational or
otherwise) A way to get mobile users to sign a petition A way for customers to accumulate rewards
As smartphone adoption rises and technology companies embrace the technology, QR Codes are becoming a mainstream portal to gather information and we are only just scratching the surface of how they will be used.
Egress & Glass BlockWindow Experts763-443-6213612-743-0699
“Call us to seal up those leakybasement and bathroom windows”
Glass Block & Safety
Stillwater BalloonHot Air Balloon F lig
Over the Beautiful St. Croix VGive a memory that will
last a lifetime!
buy one2nd at ½ off. Exp 12/31/09.
Our Gift
Lose Their Value
Ultimate Christmas Gift
651-439-1800www.stillwaterballoons.com email: stillwaterballoons@comcast.net
get ½ off 12-31-2011
Ohlhausen 8ft Pro TableNew Pockets and Rails
Excellent Condition.Comes with brushes 2 cues, solid oak cue rack, triangle & 9 ball
rack, cloth cover that matches the bench below, alabaster table light,
and other accessories
Cocktail table and 2 rotating stools
Seller is Moving and Can't take it withGet your Game Room Ready!Get your Game Room Ready!
All this for $1995 includes delivery & setup within 50 miles
call 763-218-0033
by S
aman
tha
Wea
ver
● It
was
Brit
ish
writ
er a
nd h
umor
ist J
erom
e K
. Jer
ome
who
m
ade
the
follo
win
g sa
ge
obse
rvat
ion:
It
is
impo
ssib
le to
enj
oy id
ling
thor
ough
ly u
nles
s on
e ha
s pl
enty
of w
ork
to d
o. T
here
is n
o fu
n in
doi
ng n
othi
ng
whe
n yo
u ha
ve n
othi
ng to
do.
Was
ting
time
is m
erel
y an
oc
cupa
tion
then
, and
a m
ost e
xhau
stin
g on
e. I
dlen
ess,
like
kiss
es, t
o be
swee
t mus
t be
stol
en.
● Sh
arks
can
live
for a
cen
tury
or m
ore.
● Ve
lcro
cam
e to
mar
ket i
n 19
57, a
fter a
Sw
iss i
nven
tor
nam
ed G
eorg
e D
e M
estra
l sp
ent
near
ly 1
0 ye
ars
deve
lopi
ng th
e id
ea. H
is in
spira
tion
cam
e to
him
in 1
948
on a
hik
e, w
hen
he h
ad d
iffi c
ulty
rem
ovin
g te
naci
ous
little
bur
rs fr
om h
is cl
othe
s. H
e re
ason
ed th
at if
he
coul
d cr
eate
synt
hetic
bur
rs, t
hey
coul
d be
use
d as
fast
ener
s.
● Ch
ance
s are
, the
re's
a Pa
rk S
treet
in y
our t
own.
It's
the
mos
t com
mon
stre
et n
ame
in th
e U
nite
d St
ates
.
● Eu
rope
is th
e on
ly c
ontin
ent w
ithou
t a d
eser
t. Ev
en
icy
Ant
arct
ica
has d
eser
ts --
incl
udin
g th
e w
orld
's la
rges
t co
ld d
eser
t.
● If
som
eone
cal
led
you
a “m
umps
imus
,” w
ould
you
be
fl at
tere
d or
insu
lted?
It s
eem
s th
at th
e ap
prop
riate
re
actio
n w
ould
be
to t
ake
offe
nse.
Acc
ordi
ng t
o th
e M
erria
m-W
ebst
er
dict
iona
ry,
a m
umps
imus
is
“a
st
ubbo
rn p
erso
n w
ho in
sist
s on
mak
ing
an e
rror
in sp
ite
of b
eing
show
n th
at it
is w
rong
.”
● Th
e En
glis
h la
ngua
ge i
s un
ique
in
the
num
ber
of
colle
ctiv
e no
uns
it po
sses
ses.
For
inst
ance
, a g
roup
of
frog
s is
kno
wn
as a
n “a
rmy”
and
a g
roup
of
crow
s is
ca
lled
a “m
urde
r.” W
e ha
ve a
“sh
rew
dnes
s” o
f ap
es, a
“w
isdo
m”
of w
omba
ts, a
“co
ngre
gatio
n” o
f cro
codi
les,
a “s
mac
k” o
f jel
lyfi s
h, a
“w
iggl
e” o
f wor
ms,
a “c
rash
” of
rhin
ocer
oses
, a “
wad
dle”
of p
engu
ins a
nd a
“sc
ourg
e”
of m
osqu
itoes
, to
nam
e a
few
. Gee
se fl
ock
toge
ther
in
“gag
gles
,” u
nles
s th
ey’r
e in
fl ig
ht, i
n w
hich
cas
e th
ey
are
colle
ctiv
ely
know
n as
a “
skei
n.”
● In
the
Bal
tic re
gion
, it’s
trad
ition
al fo
r a b
ride
to w
ear
blac
k.
● Yo
u’ve
pro
babl
y ne
ver h
eard
of H
arve
y Lo
we,
but
in
the
1930
s he
enj
oyed
a c
erta
in a
mou
nt o
f not
orie
ty; i
n 19
34 h
e w
on th
e fi r
st W
orld
Yo-
Yo C
onte
st. N
ow th
at
you
know
who
he
is, c
an y
ou im
agin
e w
hat h
e ha
d in
co
mm
on w
ith R
ollin
g St
ones
gui
taris
t Kei
th R
icha
rds
and
noto
rious
ly fl
am
boya
nt e
nter
tain
er L
iber
ace?
It
turn
s ou
t tha
t all
thre
e to
ok o
ut in
sura
nce
polic
ies
on
thei
r han
ds.
(c)
201
1 K
ing
Feat
ures
Syn
d., I
nc.
Issu
e 6
54OV
ER 4
MIL
LION
Read
ers W
eekly
Nati
onwi
de!
Pub
lishe
d by
: Fal
con
Prin
ce P
ublis
hing
F
or A
dver
tisin
g C
all:
763-
792-
1125
E
-mai
l: de
an@
real
bits
.com
TID
BIT
S® R
ESEA
RC
HES
NO
VEM
BER
CEL
EBR
ATIO
NS
by K
athy
Wol
fe
Nov
embe
r ha
s be
en d
ecla
red
Nat
iona
l Sta
mp
Col
lect
ing
Mon
th,
Ban
ana
Pudd
ing
Love
rs
Mon
th a
nd N
atio
nal
Nov
el W
ritin
g M
onth
. Ti
dbits
tak
es a
loo
k at
wha
t ot
her
occa
sion
s ar
e ce
lebr
ated
dur
ing
the
elev
enth
mon
th o
f th
e ye
ar.
• N
ovem
ber i
s Nat
iona
l Pea
nut B
utte
r Lov
ers
Mon
th.
The
aver
age
Am
eric
an
eats
th
ree
poun
ds o
f pe
anut
but
ter
ever
y ye
ar,
whi
ch
adds
up
to a
bout
700
mill
ion
poun
ds, e
noug
h to
cov
er th
e fl o
or o
f the
Gra
nd C
anyo
n. T
here
ar
e ab
out
50,0
00 p
eanu
t fa
rms
acro
ss t
he
natio
n, fo
und
in A
laba
ma,
Flo
rida,
Geo
rgia
, the
C
arol
inas
, Tex
as a
nd V
irgin
ia. J
ust o
ne a
cre
of
pean
uts
prod
uces
abo
ut 3
0,00
0 pe
anut
but
ter
sand
wic
hes.
But
the
y’re
not
for
eve
ryon
e —
A
bout
1 p
erce
nt o
f th
e U
.S.
popu
latio
n is
se
vere
ly al
lerg
ic to
pea
nuts
! And
did
you
kno
w
that
pea
nuts
are
n’t r
eally
nut
s at
all?
The
y’re
le
gum
es, j
ust l
ike
bean
s, pe
as a
nd le
ntils
. •
The
Japa
nese
cel
ebra
te t
he S
hich
i-go-
san
fest
ival
on
Nov
embe
r 15
, w
hen
they
hon
or
thei
r da
ught
ers
aged
thr
ee a
nd s
even
and
th
eir
sons
age
d th
ree
and fi v
e. S
hich
i-go-
san
liter
ally
tra
nsla
tes
“Sev
en-F
ive-
Thre
e, a
ges
that
are
con
side
red
criti
cal i
n a
child
’s li
fe.
• N
ovem
ber
is a
big
mon
th f
or I
ndep
ende
nce
Day
ce
lebr
atio
ns,
incl
udin
g Po
land
on
N
ovem
ber 1
1, L
atvi
a on
the
18th
, Leb
anon
on
the 2
2nd,
Sur
inam
e on
the 2
5th
and A
lban
ia o
n N
ovem
ber 2
8.
Pub
lish
a
P
aper
in Y
our A
rea
WA
NT
TO R
UN
YO
UR
OW
N B
USI
NES
S?
We p
rovi
de t
he o
pport
unity
for
succ
ess
!
Call 1
.800.5
23.3
096 (U
.S.)
1.8
66.6
31.1
567 (C
AN
)w
ww
.tid
bit
sw
ee
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m
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tinue
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g. 2
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Code
Cool!
Cool!
Scan
Inside
Scan
Inside
Get A
dver
tisin
g in
form
atio
n at
www.
Tidb
itsTw
inCi
ties.c
om O
r call
:763
-792
-1125
OVER
4MIL
LION
OVER
4MIL
LION
Read
ersWe
ekly
Natio
nwide
!
of th
e N
orth
Met
ro
Book
s I, II
, & III
Onlyy
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e Set
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ax, s
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ndlin
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er b
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The
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reat
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t Id
ea ◄
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NEW
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ES ●
REM
ODEL
ING ●
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TION
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COM
MER
CIAL
Please
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ur P
hoto Ga
llery
ww
w.B
aasC
onst
ruct
ion.
com
763-
286-
0795
or 7
63-3
89-0
707
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ars
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