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S . Priscilla ( just arrived)—Are there ~ Sample Room Has always on band a full-line of Foreign aud Domestic Wines;. Liquors and Gigars. Fine Liquors for Medicinal Purposes a Specialty. THE. ONLY BILLIARD AND POOL ROOM IN TOWN. Leland -Ave. Grand Rapids. | | | send their daughters at once. } PIVATE AND CLASS VOCAL LESSONS.,| ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS TO ST.LOUIS. ALMOST FREE. TOWN TOPICS, cece carers of and 208 Sth Ave., N. Y., in this adv. FIFTEEN cents ae ats one of | the following prize novels (TWO HUNDRER | AND FIFTY SIX pages, regular price FIFTY | cts.); for FIFTY sents any FOUR; for ONE DOLLAR any TEN; for ONE DOLLAR AND 4 HALF the whole library of SIXTEEN volumes. +-THR. Sa OF ASOUL By C.M.S.Mc- | te 1-THE COUSIN OF THE KING. By AS. Van | eisIX MONTHS I BADES. By Clarice L Citngham. o-7E Bad OF CHANCE. By Captain red Thompson, 10-ANTHONY KENT. By Charles Stokes Wayne HWA "ECLIPSE OF VintCR By Champion 12-AN UNSPEARABLE SIREN, By John Gilttat 1-THAT. DREADFUL WOMAN. “By Harold & a DEAL IN-DENVER. By Gilmér McKen- wwii? SAYS GLADYS. By David Christie \s-A VERY REMARKABLE GIRL. By LH W-A MARIIAGE FOR HATE, By Hardld — v MAN. npion ssel. THE HUNT FOR HA PINESS. By Anite N-HEL STRANGE EXPERIMENT By Harolé R. Vynne. @ Indicate by the numbers thé novels you want What is this It is the only bow (ring) which cannot be pulled from the watch. To be had only with Jas. Boss Filled and other watch cases stamped with this trade mark. A postal will bring you 2 watch case opener. Keystone Watch CaseCo., , PHELADELPHIA. Should Accept 36, any men here?) Phyllis—Qh, there are a few apologies fer men! Prisciila— Well, if an apology is offered to me I shall accept it.—Tid-Bits, A Mensen, Washington Evening Star: “I some- times wonder,”. sald one enthusiast, “why the baseball. doesn't be- gin earlier.” “It’s a wholly imprac- theal idea,” replied the other. “They've got to give us'a chance to get over our spring colds. Otherwise how could we yell?” Persians Support Mim. His Excellescy Mirza Khan, the shah’s ambassador’ stantinople, derives bis only.’ from a tax upon the 5,000 Persia féets in the Turkish capital . BLSVSWSL SLSWSLSISLSSISSSIES Y Sea PIT NEATLY EEN ORE NNT OIA NATE ent HY SN TS AEST SN TE TTL RET AE IF YOU WANT A FIRST-CLASS MCODERN'‘PRICED HOTEL Stop at the ST, JAMES HOTEL, WHEN IN .DULUTH 213-215 West Superior St., DULUTH, MINN. $100 PER DAY AND UPWARDS: Steam Heat, Electric Light, Electric Bells, Baths, Ete «THE Sisters of St. Benedict WILL Boarding School for Girls OPEN A The terms being so very reasonable, it is expected that quite a number of the good people of the surrounding. country will take advantage of this excellent opportunity anc ‘Terms, per session of tive months, PAYABLE STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: $50 eg Music lessons will be given on piano, organ, | violin, mandolin, guitar, zither-or banjo. | Board, Tuition, Washing and'Bedding.. Day Scholars, per term of five months. ¥or particulars apply toSisters of St: Bene- | diet. Duluth, Mississippi River’ — & Northern. Going South 249 p. D. M. PHTLBIN, J. ¥. KILLORIN, CAVEATS, TRADE MARKs COPYRIGHTS. WAN F OMTAIN A PATENT? Fora pt_answer and x11 hongst opinion. N & €O., who have bad nearly fifty vears' ee in the patent, buswmess. Commiunica- dential. A Handbook of Ine ¢ Patents and bow to t . Also a catalogue of mechan- | écal and scientific books sent free. | Patents taken through Munn‘& Co. Special notice in the Sciencific America: thus are brought widely before the pubiie wi out cost to the inventor. ‘This splendid paps sssted weekly, elegantly illustrated. has by far the t circulation of muy scientific work in the rr. ceive rd & ye Sample pies sent free. Edition, monthly, $2.50 year. Single copies, 25 cents. Every number contains beau. Litul Plates. in colors, and photographs of new uses, With plans, enabling builders to show the Lest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO. NEW Yous. 361 Beoabwar | ) When in Grand Rapids, Don’t Fail to Visit T. H. Benton's Sample Room Where a FINE LINE of Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Can. Always Be Had. no Sawyers’ Bldg, Leland Ave. SVSBSWSBSWS VSS HIVSITVSOSOSISOSOSLSVSVSOSLSVSE GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. | i | re Mat Ellen Terry. Miss Ellen Terry cannot sleep spon- taneously; she has to be hypnotized into rest by the \wice of some one read- ing aloud. Therefore, her girl friends take turns at some book every after- noon during her long engagements. A Lame Excuse. She—It seems so funny to-day to seo young men in overcoats taking young ladies’ in to treat them to ice cream. He—Y’yes. Too bad. I left my over- ceat at home.—Cleveland Leader. Compensation. Mrs. Brown—‘‘We missed you in the conversation so much.” Mrs. Jones— “I’m so sorry.” Mrs, Brown—‘But then, of course, your absence made a lot of talk.”—New York World. Comment. Maud“—Cholly hasn’t been _ quite Aimself of late.” Rose—“No? I hsdn’t noticed any improvement." Puck. The Cause of the Row. Gibbs'--How did ssluters come to hit 2? Snoggs—Ohy it’ was all on ac nt of a trifling difference of opinion een us. Gibbs—Difference of opin- ? Snoggs---Yes, I thought he Med be thought he didn’t.--New Yors | the matter | benefit of the up IN RE CASS LAKE. * A Resident.of That Town Writes to the News Taibune Some Facts. The following communication ap- peared this week in the Duluth News Tribune end was signed Henry Smith. We do not know Mr. Smith, but he sizes up the situation pretty accurately: I am taking the liberty.of writing an objection and protest to the attitude of the Duluth papers towards the act- 1on of the Indian agent in ordering the removal of all the white persons from the reservation. Every article I have yet seen in your papers has treated very lightly and every article has been evident of bemg an advertisement for some of our sur- rounding towns, which desires this place to be wiped out and in whose interest I belive this noise is largely made. This country 1s particularly Duluth terntory, and especially so as opposed to Walker, which is a Minn- eapolis town. In the interest of Duluth and Duluth trade your papers should enter an early and emphatic protest against. the proposed action, and to show it can be done with good cause I wish to call your attention to a few points we make as to our right to stay here. For several years congress has been legislating and departments treating with the Indians with the purpose in view of opening the reservation and has made many allotments to Indians to offset any supposed loss they might suffer therefrom. Under special act of congress a large slice ef the lands, including the town in whitch Cass Lake is situated, was advertised for sale on May 10, last. The govern- ment approved a lease of an allot- ment allowing a sawmill to be built here. It granted a nmght of way tor the-railroad, and’allowed such termi- nals as depots to be erected, as were necessary to make this a division headquarters, although four miles more would have taken the buildings off the reservation. The government established a postoffice here and has printed stamped envelopes, with busi- ness heads of firms doing business here. It has allowed without a pro- test a town of at least 500 to grow up here with much interest that willag- gregate at least $200,000, a large part of which must be a tosal loss if the y roposed action is carried out. { have been here four months now and came here and invested money, beheving the government would not allow such things, unless it intended to open the reervation, or at least allow the allotments that have ‘been applied for, The community has been as law-abiding as -any-I - ever lived in, and is a strong contrast to the towns around us, and such talk as was in your paper yesterday, about armed resistance. ‘The citizens here are earnestly, but quietly considering the situation and will use all nght means to obtain justice, but if-1t be- comes necessary to abandon what they have invested, they will in the end quietly do so. The papers can give us material aid in this matter if they see fit and: I ask you todo us that justice. On Saturday and Sunday some of our citizens went out to see the In- dians, who were assembled in counsel and: after proper deliberations they expressed friendly feelmg toward the whites and asked to be allowed to say so to the Indian agent. The agent has declined to meet them, which I thing is. wrong. . He should at least have the courtesy to give us the bene- fit of any doubt but does not seem in- clined to do so. Aitkin’s Philanthropy. ‘The. Age tell’s of it’s town’s munifi- cense 1n the following sarcastic style: Aitkin. wouldn't celebrate. Aitken would devote. the money that would be used in this way for the river farmers who lost their crops by the overflow. Aitkin would‘show a generous and commendatory spirit, and do the Good Samaritan act. Aitkin’s tender sympathies were aroused. Aitkin would not. be led astray by the guady tinsel of patriotic decora- tion, or the vapid enthusiasm that comes from the popping cracker or the swishing rocket. Aitkin would show the world in general and this section of Minnesota in particular that the highest patriot- 1sm lay in helping one’s needy brother. But did it? Oh, ves, it did—just like- the old lady kept tavern! = wealus. Windrift Wilson—“Say; Towsely, ole man, how’d ye git dat fine lay-out? Hey?” Towseled Tipton—‘W’y, I went up ter de lady and aster ter let me saw a cord er wood fer half er cake er soap.” Windrift Wilson—“Wot?” Towseled Tipton—“She fainted dead erway an’ I went in an’ helped me- | self.”"—New York Press. A Necessary Change. “What's the matter? Taking an in- veritory?” “No. We are re-labeling all our Spanish groceries.” — Cleveland Bigin-Dealer. P. J. Site..pon, Vice President. Lumbermen’s Bank Of Grand Rapids. Minn ecco: WHEN Goinc East INQUIRE ABOUT THE SERVICE AND RATES OFFERED BY rerum DULUTH, SOUTH OT SHORE & ATLANTIC Seti RAILWAY YOU WILL FIND A Fast LIMITED TRAIN PERFECTLY EQUIPPED WITH MODERN SLEEPING AND DINING CARS RUNNING OVER A SMOOTH ROADWAY AND MAKING DIRECT CONNECTIONS FOR ALL POINTS EAST. T. H. LARKE, Commerciat Aaent, 426 SPALDING HOTEL BLOCK, DututH, Minn. Time Card. GOING souTH. Ltd} Ex Sun _ Daily 9.00am 1.55pm 21 Daily . Chicago ; Kansas City. GOING NORTH. . Cloquet Se : Duluth... - 1.35pm 7.45pm + Except Sunday. The finest and fastest trains. Elegant re clining chairs on all day trains. Magnificen new sleeping carson all night trains. Tick ets sold to and from all points in the-United s, Canada and Mexico. Oity Ticket 332 west Superior St. Duluth produces the above results in 30 days. Itacts powerfully and ai ,.- Cures wherall others fail. Young men will their lost manhood, and old REVIVO. It quickly and surely restores Nervous- ness, Lost, Vitality, Impotency, Nightly Emissions,, Lost. Memory, Wasting Diseases, and ell effects of self-abuse or excess and indiscretion, which unfits one for study, business or marriage. It not only cures by sterting at the seat of disease, but isagreat nerve tonic and blood builder, bring ing back the pink glow to cheeks and re- storing the fire of youth. It wards off Jnsanity and Consumption. Insist on having REVIVO, no other, It can be carried dn vest pocket. By mail, Dee package, oF six fot @5.00, with s post or guarantee to cure the money. Book and advise free. Address oyal Medicine Co. , 72st é* ROUTE OF THE FAMOUS LAKE SUPERIQp LIMITED THE FASTEST ST.PAUL MINNEAPOLIS WEST JPERIOR We quote prices F. 0. B. cars, St. Paul,«Minn., un‘il stock Is | sold, foliows: SISAL, 12 > perpound. STANDARD, {2%0 “ bs MANILA, {2%0 “ “ ity of Twine inteed. First come, first sérved. Send -orders here,, MONTGOMERY WARD & CO., CHICAGO. The Ladies’ Friend Pennyroyal Wafers Fax Braxp pays rect fe and on safe Maple “medicine for oF REFORM IN’-DINNER-GIVING. Simple Dinners Are Now Considered the Elegant Dinners. “A dinner engagement, no matter whether the dinner be large or small, formal or informal, is the most exact- ing of social obligations,” says the Ladies’ Home Journal. “Indeed, I al- ways felt a double sense of obligation when invited to a small dinner. In selecting the guests for the small din- ner choose those who are congenial. If among your friends. you number physicians, lawyers or politicians, do not invite one of each elass, nor all of one class,-simply because theip profes- sions ‘are the same, but select congen- ial spirits. Then small dinners, well arranged, are much more enjoyable than-one large conventional dinner served to sixty ill-selected people. The food is better, service better and diges- tion better and even when » trained help cannot be employed the hostess may enjoy the occasion as well as;the guests. The art of dining, remember, is quite apart from the art of giving dinners. A reform in dinner-giving is being instigated; Simple dinners are now ‘the elegant dinners.’ The man who has studied the art of living lives frygally. A hostess must never forget that during the short time her guests are under her roof she is re- sponsible for their happiness and com- fort. A huge dinner of twelve courses of badly blend2d food is not conducive to either. Savarin said: ‘The dinner is a place where men are never bored for the first hour’; the insinuation-that a second shov:d prove a bére is rather prominent. If people in the ordinary walks of life are to make such enter- tainments a success they must never try pew or elaborate dishes, or even hew ways’of serving; they should sim- ply add an. extra plate or two to the usual number and invite their friends.” FORGOT HIS PARCEL. Could the Lady ilave Deen His Wife? A rather unique instance of absent- mindedness oceurred the other evening on the Jefferson avenue car line, says the Detroit News-Tribune. The car was well filled with passengers and. as a stop was made at McDougall avenue aman stepped off the back platform, where he had been standing, and the ear moved on. Instantly a wild: cry went up from the late passenger, which broadened into a howl of despair as the distance between him and the trolley car wid- ened. As he shrieked he also ran and waved his hands frantically. The con- ductor, seeing the shadowy form in the dimness of the night and hearing the unearthly cries, pulled the bell-strap and thus induced the motorman to halt, which he did with a jerk. The man in pursuit came within hailing dis- tance. “What d’ye wa1‘?” shouted the puncher of pastevoard. a | want—tie—lady—in». there!” gasped the .man, swinging his hat at the open car door. The car having come to a dead standstill, a woman arose, deliberately walked out; of the car and was received by her breath- less escort, who had so»nearly left her to her fate of.missing parcels. Amid.miuch laughter the next man who left the car in company with a lady insisted that she walk in front of im until safely on the ground. A Boy's Exsay on Journalism. From the Atlanta Constitution: A bright little boy who attends one of the city public schools: was told by his | teacher a few days ago to write an es- | say on “Journalism,” and the next day he handed in the following: “Journai- ism is the science of al] sorts of jour- nals. There is a heap of kinds of-jour- nals. Journals is good things ‘cept when they is hot journals, and then they is just awful. My ma, she takes a fashion journal what-is always full of pictures of horrid old.maids with the ugliest dresses on I ever saw. The fashion journal is a heap gooder than the hot-journal, ‘cause the hot journal stops the train and the fashion jour- nal starts it. The fashion . journal don’t stop nothin’ but the broken win- dow light and pa’s bank account. “There is°sheep journals and hog journals and brass journals, too, and pa has got a journal down town at the store and writes things in it about folks he don’t want to forget. Then we had a woman.’t cooked iv us named Sally Journal. She was the funniest journal I ever saw. She was a bald- headed journal. “They ain’t no more journals that 1 know of. “Pp, S.—I forgot to say that a man what puts grease on the car wheels»is called a journalist.” An Episcopal Bteyclist. The Bishop of Gloucester and*Bristol fs report. . as the latest cycling recruit in Englanu He has-been seen astride “g bicycle mere thanconce in the neigh: borhood of w!oucester lately. This. for 2% old man, in his seventy-eighth’year, is not bad. Dr. Ellicott, who is of a thin, wiry build, is well known also as an accomplished Alpine climber, skater and billiard player, Bud Resuits of Vaccinatten. In a family living near Houtzdale, Pa., there is a-seven-year-old child no larger than a tive-months-old bale. The baby was vaccinated when it was five months old, and .blood poisoning re- sulting, it -has not grown a particle since. At Last. Jack—Hurrah, Mamie! We can get married now Union stock is going up-| .sesueq 411v}o0ds ON ety LO4K, wn like lightnin3. Mamie—Oh, Jack! Have you some? Jack—No; but your father has.—New York World.. ae —— I am tickles co know that Wagner was an exact and expensive dresser, and that Beethoven was a sloven with an old coat and slippers trodden down at the heels, says the Contemporary Review. It interests me to hear that Paganini always carried a shirt, in his fiddle case because he sweated so pro- fusely over his solos that he had to change between his parts if he played twice. I even care to learn that Men- delssohn was a perfect child about pastry, which he could never resist and which he always ate (especially cherry pie) and which always disagreed with him, that Schumann injured his third finger by tying it back to his wrist with a string because he hoped to make it more supple—it ended, how- ever, in his almost losing the use of it; that Bulow got up in the night to play over passages which he thought he was likely to play inaccurately at his: prodigious recitals. When Thral- berg was at the height of his fame he wouldn’t even carry an umbrella for fear of it cramping the muscles. of his hand; Malibran loved nothing: so. much as romping with Mocheies’ chil- dren on the floor; Paganini was so stingy that he would stand up under shelter in the rain and keep a whole opera house full waiting sooner than call acab. Prof. Ela told me he found him one .day crouching under. the Arcade in Regent street and that he gave this artless explanation. “Hack- ney coaches,” he said, “in Lon@on were so expensive!” and this whem he had doubled the prices at the opern house where he played and was rolling in money. Extra for Lytog. Old Maid (to messenger)—Give him the letter and if he asks you who sent it, just say “a beautiful young lady.” Messenger—I shall charge you 19 cents morefor that. First English Christmas Tree. Christmas trees were unknown in England until the reign of Queen Vic- ria, After the present prince of Wales had become three or four yeara old Prince Albert ornamented a Christ- tas tree for the infant prince. The idea pleased the people and as Christ- mas trees were every year made a feature of the court celebration the faghion soon spread among the Eng- lsh.—Boston Globe. : hs “APIO AA 8, C08 <IBaq—sd00I} NO 103 MIOJ}UN 4seq ey} 8B Joos JO WO]JUA}eI ON? 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