Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, March 13, 1897, Page 4

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eee SOROMOOTOM eae ® - UNLUCKY ROYAL SAILOR. eo i "WE WILL CLOSE OUR STORE MAY Ist, 1897, +s Nearly All of Them Have Some Bad Ac: | th ‘ sateen § Beckfelt & Mather, iN ee Somehow or other royal and imperial ! i . ee 1 aes = 5 ; ie princes who have adopted seafaring £7, Sr Se 3 I s 1 tin May tst, | ur complete: stock o. life as a profession seem to be pur- 4 | a f 4 From now un y ’ a cal a) i CAPES: df | WwW sued with il-luck, says London Amer- * \* —_— ‘ 1897, we will offer our ar are : lens OAEDeleninntg ast lonk nao ine 2 Is | G mneral Merchandise mers bg —_ M entire stock of Men’s and | aoe He Groceries Grand Duke Alexis, lord high admiral ‘<> #| e bs ey ee | complete tineo i 9 of the Russian fleet, managed to run A, - I 1 aes URS S li aH & s | Hardware, Tinware and ; his yacht into the Russian steamship S I -umpermen s upp 1es. e ss Limorno, with little damage to the + * Suits, Bar Iron, at Great Bar- Flour, Feed, Etc., latter, but injuring the ait to the | fi : marge ois jextent of some 100,000 rubles. His | *4° F % cI Hats, Caps Boots, gains. at Lowest Prices. f{/ trother-in-law. the duke of Sohne: |e Largely tncreased store room increas 6 x = _ i me Sree ee ee quitted active service in the British | our capacity to de dusiness. Shoes, Furnishing : ’ TANY with his record besmirched by the > We alway = i one lete | Lid 5 ‘ 1 3 ‘| loss of his flagship, the Sultan, on a fa 4 EUS CORY, Rg are , Goods, Dry Goods, | Crockery and || Remember! Saek Mea Mibe Whe Genie heeee |B fhest.guality of abode 1 aff A Notions, Etc,, Ginesc colshan Gre OF ‘admiral, the prince of Leiningen, is RA Prices the lowe. x Glassware S18 , | celebrated in particular, for, his feat | 3% A ae i is in running down the yacht’ Mistletoe’) + wi At less than closing sale, but Senu- Bi in the Solent while in command of the | Be 2 a paver spear — ry an ufactu rers | Cheaper than you ever jae. i ted BE OEE royal yacht, the queen herself being | s Clothing and Furnishing Goods Hi i t ; 2 ' H on board. Several lives were lost in | Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes. > dreamt of. | vineed. this collision. The sailor brother of | * 1, tal 4 Prices. | ego aie i the emperor of Germany has hitherto | Groceries and Crockery ™ Hats and Caps. GRAND RAPDS, - - MINN , a | 4 a ; a == escaped maritime disaster from the OUR Goods ARE ALWAYS V1 J1£1 AND YOU CANNOT bE LEC u relatively small amount of sea service ED = Sake: —=====f} he has done. But his misfortunes on W I! Ss a a sly land have been uncommonly numer- = £ , | QM 4 ous, especially when he has been out e i) fo) @ er al a Fa ali al er Dey shooting. Not only did he severely in- Lapra Minnesota. Dp & fa 4 dental discharge of his gun at Corfu Se, a, ae Se eee | SOME Years ago, but there is also a occasionaily to ule unworthy than tw | duke of Baden, who is in receipt of a ever deny assistance to the worthy. handsome pension from the prince for ® Dehver Goods in Grand Rapid & ofa lee le le ee See es jure a Greek gentleman by the acci- = — | Zamekeepei of his uncle, the grand MONEY IN THE MOUTH ABOVE THE HOTEL SERVANT. pen to be a cold sore there it often happens, a rupture of ue, the germs of the disease would find lodgment there and the per- rounded by a cuurt of clergymen, But one of her family, the last of the name, was a born musiciau, and delighted so it don’t make much diffnnce what | you feed ’em. Anything with potatoes, I guess. Haw, haw.” “Hee, hee.” some fire, “After a long time he returned with- out success, and so hungry that he tried 4 events | “Once upon a time I was in St. Louis | the serious wound resulting from his | Be: ‘Is Dangerous as Well gs a Dirty on business. It was winter, and you New aristocracy of Help Which Lives | ae in handling 2. gun. Arch- | BETTER CIGRRS ARE MnDES Hobi | know how cold that town can be when impace in puehalig, Haouiaiciag, duke John of Austria, who passed the A THAN THE... id you notice that?” asked Dr. J.: it tries hard. I was out on the street at With the advent of the big new | examination necessary tps ecne. we d| Clarke of this city to me as we were/ 11 o'clock one bitter night when a hotels uptown there has arisen a new y a5 ee eae peer disap- | ig on a Sutter street car, says aj chap struck me for a dime. He was ayj sae ean tp es Pe Bt AeW. Years SEO Pp k Be r as rin the Sank Call. poorly clad, looked hungry and sick, Retumiet aries Sabicea | While rounding Cape Horn in his ship, C0) egama og Lice _ , { t he drew ntion to was a} and I ought to pete Sai y out the says the New York World. It is the i aa pene se nae SAY, Heiner j } } ° senger, who, when asked | money at once, was. just brute i % & s it Wy ae d. indeed, the only aa @ D f d ‘ his fare, took a nickel from the in-| enough not to do it. He followed me a pane ato Ata veats in | TON@l Sailor princes who have escaped up efender : ar and gave it to the| hundred feet, begging and pleading, 9 qining room by itself and, trying to ee ae the duke of York and the : | and I finally threatened to have him aye the manners of its empioyers, gives talian duke oF Genoa. Manufactured in Grand Rapids By er place for carrying money,” | arrested. He turned away with a sob | an exhibition to amuse gods and men. “I know of many odd places | in his throat, and I went on to the |" passing the dining room inhabited | INDIAN LEGEND. tot teed EORGE BooTtTH ople carry mouey in but that is| hotel. There was a big snowstorm | hy these haughty ones recently a re- | asa ° ig | cet ae ann pects okie as porter heard a snatch of the conver- | How the Mojaves Explain the Division as \ a | ; th the view of drawing | found him in a drift, frozen stark and | gation in, j ights and of the Races, } tention to a dangerous prac- | stiff. I saw the body and recognized )dieg Peres ct ne gentle- The mystery surrounding the origin CGAb fon elthen ¢F tnes= seands and yor we get ed you to look at that] it. The pale face was pinchel and | men’s and ladies’ ladies: of the Indian race is greatly enhanced an excellent smoke, None but the finest H doctor and then | drawn with hunger and suffering, and “Kindly pawse the buttah.” by listening to some of the quaint stock used, P d me to look in the direction of | the eyes were as wide open as yours— "peg pahdong.” legends, says the Los Angeles Herald. } q sed lady who had a moment | great big blue eyes, sunken back in “A little of the butter, if you | Here is one of them, related by the her seat and was fumbling | their sockets, and staring at me in an “Why, certongly. It’s a little passee, | Older men of the Mojave tribe: | \ i 2 for her fare. She found | awful way. Yes, sir, they seemd to be that putter.” : "| “at the time of the Mojave, the \ coin she was in search of and placed | fastened on me alone, and to foliow piease” white man, the negro and all other \ en her lips wh | me as I moved. When I heard ear ,~ . ¢ ; “ ‘ en her lips while she closed | a avaynien. baeiblacks ate ‘Indeed. Do you think so? 1] people lived together with their god, use and then taking the coin | arivers. i 6 ae ae ene Ss thought there was something off color | Mulevelia, whose mother was the earth from her outh held it in her hand | Hae Toei ne one oe qatar in the taste, don’t you know.” and whose father the heaven. i a real ps that lady place ; to buy lodgings and food, I sneaked | a se deme goa ‘el ig Dey ne a SUDDUCd wie £000. a : her lips?” said the, 2WaY, feeling that I was a murderer. | thing.” ¥ La ee hing and many luxuries. sere P | It hurt me more than I can tell you. | ae pee anee ne these, they had tools and all kinds | 4 wipes Mae i want to be ‘aed tor aime, I eae wster goin’ oh uupemcats and machinery to work ig For the above su Brocker & cs ive , » un- te ; a = Vhiteaker are makine fine 2 deserving, but I take my chances on ASS ops av ouseneaD ale ig i bape mes amapuiactored, and aUIPLOeeAt be had in any city in a | r occur to you that the that, That thing rests like a murder @@S82Y. He usually goes—to get his | especially matches. the country for the mone. ty \ pra on my conscience, and nothing like it ate you know. Deucid Bou ater | “One day Mulevelia died, and all the % you want something better, ' . 3 than many peo- ghal] happen again.”—St. Paul Globe. ie—an’ just me own size, t00—but | people, except the Mojaves, fled, after can show you the finest line - that lady know don’t know much. Anh! if I had his al- looting the camps of everything they amples eve: brought into the % ore she placed it lowance, now!” could lay their hands on, nat even |( county. Atany rate, giv@é them a % ' it not have been in He Ol tne twelve which 4s still in ex- “You'd cut a wide un, James, tee | jeaying a match. % ca before placing: your order. e ear of her Chinese laundryman or Istence. About a century and a half hee.” “Here was a pretty state of affairs, | phey Sir Gaal cen edad < or may it not have been in the ®80 it came into the possession of “Well, I'd try and not disgrace M@ | and the dead god awaiting crema- | they turn out in every way. » pocket of e individual afflicted with Baron de Krudener, the Russian diplo- name, Miss Marrie, haw haw. tion! a contagio: e? Ifit were inthe Matist and husband of the famous Mme. “I heah the suvvants are kicking up “There seemed to be no other al-| 4 f nS ear of an’ individual who had an af- de Krucener, the singular religionist: a devil of a row over their grub. Poor | ternative than to dispatch a messen- | 2 BROEKER & WHITEAKER 4 fection of that organ the microbes of Who played so great a part in bringing creatures! I’d rather die right off than | ger for a spark from one of the bril- | ae 2 the disease would cling to the coin and hee pe so-called holy alliance in be a hotel suvvant, However, they’re | tient luminaries of the upper region, 1% Grand Rapids, Minn. ced between the lips, i 1815. Mme, de Krudener was a sort of mostly Irish—them as isn’t Germans— coyote Ww: r BS ed between the lips, if there German’ Lady Hentiieddn slwart gar and a coyote was sent to a star for Rees: BOESSSOSCSPSLSSOSMSHSLSLSISASL SLSL SVSC SWSLSLWSE to eat up the dead god. p i é Ran 5 sake ‘ sate aoe a sete ate son guilty of the practice would won- himself With the dusty, old neglected And so, with light converse and ‘aad anh) Anecuiia eat by Cu DbIGE bef epee rapt debe doen nia nine dag md me penn der how it happened that there was “Amati.” He took to music as his pro- bright raillerv, the aristocracy of helP | wintow sticks together, and produced 4 nything the matter with her. The mi- fession, renounced the name of Kru- brightens the tedium of dinner. he bE fire, whiih they used in burning uw: dener and adopted that of Grigorieff. ¥ x ak td - > | Mulevelia. ton . A FAMOUS FIDDLE. ; “After the cremation, which took | [38 ecuri ul tla PRINCE BISMARCK’S STUDY. | ——— | place somewher near Fort Mojave, the | 3 Reported to Be Worth 60,000 Franes— | Mountains at the foot of the canyon | ## e e @ Great Artists Have Played Upon It. | Darted and the Colorado flowed ie n There is a violin in the posession of | ‘Broush and swept the ashes away. se 4 Frau Grigorieff-Krudener of Lucerne, | “Mastanho now became chief and | xy the widow of the brilliant young per- | divided the Indians inio tribes and gave | ##% ontagious disease will attach ves to coin and now you can see nsmit disease not a lip that is what ommonly called ‘cracked’ but by in- halation. Comfortable Working-Room Void of Co- try or Luxury. “Count Bismarci’s stucy, as he called it in English, was a room of no great | added the doctor, ' mence, “is not only dan- The practice,” me veh Although golf and the bicycle are, | ## in the main, getting on excellently to- | ## Home Journal. “There was a rug on the varnished floor of the usual hard | wood. A large writing desk, littered Be ut it is positively disgusting s.ze nor turzished with any splendor. former Grigorieff, which is reputed to | their their allotments of land.” be] ot Binghamton, New York. es ae ee Oe ae | Coere ees neuen cues be worth 60,000 francs, says the West- aT Eg eee ae Pe Incorporated under the Laws of the: tate of 7 = | epee eat ; ca ent, Mr. minster Gazette. Vulliaume, Bianchi, Just One Gloat. cad New York, Nov. 6, 1886 | George W. Smalley, in the Ladies’ sivorj and other experts have agreed in | ne this extraordinary estimate. The great- est artists, Paganini, Spohr, Vieuxtemps, AMERICAN PLEASURE GROUNDS gether, there is still Idea of a National Parkway from the Atlantic to the Pacific. In America all pleasure grounds of large extent have, from the begin- ning, been planned for the people, says the Atlantic; they are a constant source to them of pleasure and pride, and it is our boast that on this continent, with its unrivaled resources and its , host of generous citizens, parks have been created in our generation which today can be favorably compared with the most famous ancient resorts of Hurope; aud when the schemes now begun have had time fully to be carried out we shall have reservations for the public of unparalleled extent and cauty, reaching perhaps unbroken from the eastern seaboard to the shores California. The idea cf such a ervation, 2 national parkway from he Atlantic io the Pacific, leading om one beautiful pleasure ground to another, and passing through great | traels of wood!and patrolled by govern- ment foresters, is Rot inconsistent with snes dunes of our country, which ever while the gradually enlarging park systems of our cities indicate the way in which it may be brought about in the linki ether of suburb after suburb by {boulevards which tend to bring civilization to distant homes by affording safe and easy communi- cation Refuse! i the Wrong Beggar. e the plea of a beg- member of con- not use my name ise me as @ philanthropist, obliged to beggar, or I ea bad a eloser union between its parts; | & or sive | may safely work is with papers, stood in the right-hand corner on the furiher side. There were few books. A print cr two hung on the walls. A sideboard stood in the center, near the writing-table, and there were armchairs. It was a work- ing-room; none of the coquetry nor lux- | ury which some hard workers like to surround themselves with was visible. There was no lack of comfort, but com- fert had not been the thing chiefly considered when the room had been furnisued. The palace, as a whole, though on a large scale, with. large rooms, and many of them, had no great splendor. The impression, as of other official residences which I afterward saw, was one of dignity; the appoint- ments were sufficient, the rooms over- loaded sometimes with ornament, but left rather bare of furniture.” Origin of the Cocktail. Many theorles have recently been tted. A Toltec nobleman of Mexico once sent to his king by the ‘hand of bis beautiful daughter a de- invention, | coction of pulque of his ‘The king was as mueh delighted with the one as with the other. He drank the last and married the first. The name of the maiden was Xochithl, a between them. | designation ever after applied to the drink. When our troops under Gen. Scott invaded Mexico they took kindly to the beverage and corrupted its name into cocktail, by which name it has ever since been known by the world at large. Of this concoction we have in- vented so many forms that the United States has come to be considered its place of ofigin. The greatest depth at which a diver 59 feet. advanced in the New York Sun as to | r of the cocktail, but one has | Joachim and Sarasate, have played upon it and there is quite a collection of documents relating to its history for the last 150 years. It was originally one of the so-called “Kurfursten-geige,” or Prince-Elector fiddles, twelve of which were made as presents to the electors of the holy Roman empire by Jacob Stainer Amati and is the aniw The Ice Sheet at the South Pole. According to Dr. James Crol!’s esti- mate, the ice sheet at the South Pole is at this age several miles in thickness, its upper surface being above the line of perpetual snow, and therefore not capable of melting away during the warm eras succeeding glacial periods. Further, when such a mass of ice is again incrusted about the earth’s sur- face, as some geologists believe may be the case in the process of time, the con- sistent supposition is that as soon aa it begins to yield once more to the in- fluence of a milder atmosphere, as its counterpart did long ages ago, the same process of flooding great areas of the earth will be repeated, and the same remarkable evidences of the presence of seas and oceans that no longer endure will be left behind. The theory. enteriained by Alfred Russel Wallace is much to the point, namely, that as a past glacial age was melting into the tertiary period, the seas in the northern hemisphere covered a much larger area than now, and extended across central Europe and parts of western Asia, and the Arctic Ocean was likewise enlarged. It is well known, by geologics] evidences not ad- miiting of any quescion, that the low: lands of Europe were submerged ana that the Baltic, Caspian, and neighbor- ing’ seas were simply a part of the vast Atlantic Ocean, instead of being landlocked waters as ther are i, among a certain class of wheelmen to scoff at the newer sport, as too aris- tocratic and exclusive, Retribution of a peculiarly abrupt and distressing kind came down upon one of these rid- ers the other day and the golier who played the other part in the scene was uncharitable enough to enjoy the sit- uation thorougaly. He was walking briskly along a suburban road toward the links, carrying a good-sized bag full of clubs, when he was overtaken by a tandem bicycle with only one vider. This person, fr his perch on the rear seat, immediately hailed the golf player with sarcastic famil- iarity. “Aw—goin’ to play golf, are you? ‘That’s nice,” he began, turning around as he passed te observe how his victim took the greeting. The curiosity was fatal in its effects. Just at that mo- ment the front wheel of the tandem yan against a big, round stone; there was a desperate lurch to one side, and the facetious rider shot forward into the road, wiih the machine on top of kim. The golfer said never a word, but stood and gazed, ith undisguised pleasure, at the wreck. who saw the oecurrence Lim the comic opera §& “just one gloat” over his faitlen enemy. --New York Tribune. And nobody 1 grudge Gust His Size. Baron Hardap—are you the tailor who’s been irusiing my son for his ‘clothes for over five years, and never said a word to me abcut the bill? Yailor—Y—Yes, m—my Lord, b— | but— Baron Hardup (rubbing his hands)— ‘Say mo more, but get right to work ana take my ‘nea-ure for hal! a dozen suits, two, eve-costs pnd an ulster. New York Journal. a disposition aa January 1 1896. Insurance in Force, - - - $20,137,350.00 Paid Policy Holders and Benefici- aries, - - - - - - 308,352.41 Net Surplus, - - - - - - 410,839.65 RECORD FOR 1895. GAIN in new business written over 1894, 87 per cent. GAIN in amouni of insurance in force, 46 per cent. GAIN in Income: 60 per cent. GAIN in Assets, GAIN in net surplus, 86 per. cent 37 per ecnt Life, Annuity, Equation and Return Accumulation Policies Premium rates about 40 per cent_less than old line companies. A ik as a RE A ea eR ae a ak oe a aE ae a ae ae a ae a aE Nae ae a ae a ae ate ae ae ae ae ae ate ae at me He Ee ae ae ae a ae a a otk She ae ae ate atk ae ae ate she ae he ae ae ae ate ae ae ae: EAE AE AHIR ie she he ae she le ae ae ae ae ae aie ae ae he ae ae ae ae she ae ae aE tst-Class im Fvery particular. AND Mees - - cd Saeeesoaeneeeeemer 1 eA RE a eae Ee A AA a a A a ae ae a eae a ae A ah a ae ae ate at a ae ae at a a a ie oO i _ * * For fall information address. 2 ~ i 3 * Northwestern Department : * ?THSMPSON, MINNEAPOLIS MIN. * Manager. x a. ¥ SL, Superintendent Agenzies = Seenngesssseee Oe HES RS SE Hotel Gladelans ‘s D W DORAN, Proprietor. All Modern Conveniences, Centrally Located MINN. g Rates Uniformly Reasonable. ef: econ smeRURREE ES

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