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amous Fashions For This Season LF In men’s wearing apparel are to be seen in the tailoring store of Poepke & Franz, on Third street, over Booth’s cigar shop. Our wholesale houses have responded this fall with the most attractive line of patterns that we have looked at for inany a year— and good goods are cheap, too. The Phil- lipine war has not effected our prices in the least. Some sses of goods have been raised in price, olbers lowered. We give our customers the full benefit and charge no more for first-class work ship than formerly. Come in and s goods and get our prices—we isk get- ting an order if you really want clothes. Watch this space all fall and wiffter for special announcements. |! POEPKExFRANZ “The Pioneer Tailors.” “i ae a a se ae ae ate ae ate ae ae a a ae ae eae a ah a ate ae ae ate ape eae ae ae ae a eae ae a Ree ae Re RE a ae a Ra es * > Ni welry C : +e : Nisbett Jewelry Co. : (Successors to Will Nisbett.) = = time's” Watches, Glocks and Jewelry, 2 i te : tive ot — WATCHES, GIOCKS antl JEWEITY. = : ae : 5 Fine We *7t and Compass: Repairing a Speciaity. % ae = % an ‘ # We are the Gnly expertenced;watchmakers in Grand Rapids. re w Weare the only experienced comp ef & » the only expert e d Rapids. 4 # Weare the only jewelers who can any part or any watch. z * r . : & Best of Workmanship and"Prices Reasonable. # a s . z Ali Work Warranted. = ; % * * - WY . RE 3 WILL: NISBETT, Mg’r. : $ * 3 ag ae ae ae ate a a eae ete a ae ae ate a a ae ae aN ae ae ee ea Re ae ee a ae a ae a aa a a fB Hotei Gladstone WILDER & HICKEY, Props. FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT. an:ple Room and Livery in Connection. Special Attention Given to Transeent Trade. Headquarters for Lumbermen, Qne half Block From Depot. See FTO ] John Hepfel’s Sample ksoom and Beer Fall, | Corner THIRD ST. and HOFFMAN AVE., | The Best Line of Wines, Liquors g Cigars | | CAN BE HAD, Rise Have on Tap and in Bottio the Celebrated DULUTA BREWI3 GOS MOOSE BRAvu BEEKS, FREE LUNCH ALWAYS SERVED. i ar | l l t l Se= PIANOS. When we went to the manufacturers. And told them we wanted to make’a REAL BARGIN SALE at the Head of the Lakes, they smiled. When we said we would pay cash for the Pianos we selected, they stopped. They accepted our offer. This was just after the Holiday trade was over, and before invoicing and closing up their books for the year. That is the time to buy Pianos low. We now have the Pianos in our large WHOLESALE and RETAIL STORE and propose to give you the benefit of the big discount. When we show you that we can take off one-third from the prices that other dealers ask you for the same grade of Pianos vou will see what a bonanza we struck and we propose to share | it with you, A. greater stock to select from than ever offered be- fore at the head of the lakes. Duluth Musi. 2. E. G. CHAPMAN, “gr Cor. Lake Ave. and Superior St. [yh yd yl yt Ul a ee ke Beraa-'Review Published Every Saturday. ILEY. T. J. AU: KILEY & AUSTED, Editors and Pubiishers. STED. TWO DOLLARS A YEAR IN ADVANCE, Six Months........81 00| Three Months Entered in the Postoffice at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, as Second-Clags Matter. Official Paper of Itasca County and the Village of Grand Repids. Wirn what glee the g. o. p. press announces that Gov. Lind was not at San Francisco in time to see the boys of the 13th leave the Sheridan! But ifthe governor had been there one day ahead of time the same g. o. p, press would be just as gleeful in im- pugming the motive that such anxious- ness on his part portended. Se ee Tue quadrennial chestnut about the Populist party having made up its mind to go it alone, is again holding the boards ‘his is one of the pet delusions of the Republican press, which hopes that by keeping eternally at it, some such result will eventually be accomplished. But it’s no use, for the next election will find the allied forces more Closely allied than ever, AEA WE note by the Wadena Pioneer Journal that W. R. Baumbach will not be a candidate for governor The statement was unnecessary, as there* was never the slightest danger of his being nominated. Mr. Baum bach is a clean, upright, honest gen- tleman, who would conduct the office of governor conscientiously—and the Republicans of Minnesota don’t want that kind of a man. ae Saengge 3 THat man Dewey talks the way he shocts. In an interview the other day he said that the Philhpinos were fully competent to govern themselves —more so a great deal than the Cubans, If any other man_ besides Lthe deified admiral: had made sych a remark he would immediately have been a “traitor” and an “enemy of his country.” ‘If Dewey doesn’t stop this kind of talk the administration will be sorry that it did not keep him in the Orient awhile longer. pe ea: Sa ees THE Republican newspapers of the Sixth district are having a whole lot of fun with J. Adam Bede and his congressional aspirations, After a while 1t may be Bede’s turn to have the fun, and then there will’ be a very general epidemic of among the aforesaid newspapers. ‘The Snake river philosopher may not stand as good a show as he thinks he does. but you can bet that no man would keep hammering away with such persistency and assurance unless he had beer promised some preity heavy support. We hope, however, that J. Adam will not be nominated because we would sooner beat the other fellow. —_-e~ In the death of John Blanchard, editor of the Minneapolis Times, the Northwest loses one of its ablest writers. A man of strong convictions and unfaltering coure ge, he stamped his individuahty into the columns of the Times to such a degree that the paper often stood alone in its advocacy of or opposition to a measure. He seemed absolutely unhampered by any conventional code. No man was so great or influential that Blanch- ard’s pen did not reach him if oc- casion demanded it; the actions of no political party were so sacred that he would not array himself against them if in his opinion they were wrong. He made mistakes like other mortals, but when this happened. it was his judgment that was at fault. crow-eating THE Mississippi Valley Lun.ber- man, official excuse-finder for any- thing the Minneapolis lumber barons may see fit to do, is busily engaged in explaining the recent advances in the price ot lumber. “It says that there 1s a shortage of nearly 400,000,000 feet in the states of Minnesota and Wis- consin. ‘This statement isa little thin, Ths section alone last season cut about 600,000,090 feet of logs, and in all parts of the Northwest was a ban- ner year reported. In addition to this, the Lumberman itself claimed that the year before there were great piles of lumber left unsold on the market at Minneapolis, Duluth and Winona, Add this left-over . stock to the enormous amount of logs cut last winter and then imagine a shortage of 400,000,000 feet at this time of year. These figurea would indicate an activicity in building operations that reports received would justify no sensible person in believing. AES Ne Ny REPUBLICAN newspapers hold their hands up in holy horror eyery time Gov. Lind makes an appointment, They can say nothing against the character or ability of either the ap- pointor or appointee, but some old Republican sponger has been ousted to give a good man the job, and it is the most heineous offense ever com- mitted by an executive. The men thus far appointed by Gov. Lind have all proyed clean, conscientious offi- cials, and this fact the Republican newspapers finds most aggravating. They never tire of lying about them and misrepresenting their every ac- tion; but the people are watching these men and see that they are doing for their several departments just what they promised to do, ~ THE sentiment of a large majority of the American people is found ex- pressed ia one of the paragraphs of the resolutions adopted by the Demo- crats and Populists of Iowa. ‘The national conyentions of the two parties will proclaim practically the same thing. Should the Republicane adopt a platform endorsing the ad- ministration’s work in the Phillipines, and the two declarations are given to the people for comparison and con- sideration, the result will be a triumph- ant endorsement of the stand taken by the Democrats. Following is the paragraph referred to: One way was for the emancipation of a people, the other for the subjugation of a people, and if war against Spain was right, ag and it was, that inst the natives of the Philippines who haye committed no offense save to love liberty and to be willing to fight and die for it. is wrong. The attempt, unr authorized by congress, to conquer the natives of oriental islands is a repudiation of Am 1 doctrine of consent affirmed in the Declaration of Independence and in conflict with the principle which George Washington and his fellow-patriots of the revolution made sacrifices to establish. pS ae Cot. W, C.'Jouyson of Cincinnati, late commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, said im his ad- dress at the recent grand eucamp- ment held in Philadelphia: The question of pensions, always one of vital interest to a large percentage of the menibership of our order, presents itself to this encampment with perhaps a deeper siz- nificance than eyer befere. The far-reach- ing dissatisfaction and disaffection as to the administration of this important depart- ment has, during the past year, found ex- pression through -resolutigns adopted by many posts, reunions und state encamp- ments, most bitterly condemning the pres- ent administration of the pension office. All of which is a fact long known; ani yet we see no word of condemna- tion thereof in the Republican papers of the country. If the present admin- istration happened to be democratic, however, the g. o. p. press wou'd be ranting and raving with a fit of hys- terical love for the outraged veterans in a most pitible manner. ‘Their edi- torial columns would fairly bristle with indignation at the very thought of a single injustice to even one mem- ber of the army that preserved this republic, McKinley’s administration has lost no opportunity to blunder since inauguration day, and no where | has its errors and incompetency been more conspicuous than in the pension bureau. ee gates WE notice by a press dispatch that a nephew of Senator ‘Lillmaa wants to organize a regiment of Chip- pewas and take them to fight the Phillippinos. We hope he will suc- ceed for three reasons. In*the first place, we have for a long time been anxious to do something to aid in this Phillipine campaign and wanted to be an officer in the army, but as our pa had never been a great diplo- mat or gencral or statesman or politi- cian we were disqualified from wear- ing shoulder straps and leading soldier-boys to glory. Col. ‘Tijlman’s plan, however, gives us the long- looked-for opportunity, and should it materialize’ we will stake the govern- ment to all the live Indians in North- ern Minnesota. We will do our share. THe next reason’ 1s that such a move on the part of the govern- ment would practically solve the In- dian problem as far as this state is conceined, because if we ever got them over there the chances gre that we could fix yp a deal whereby we could prevent their returning. But the last and weightiest reason 1s_ this; after the white-winged dove of peace has settled down on Phillipino land and it has become a. part of the United ‘States; and: the Indians are still there, the archipeéllago would be a lovely thing to’ convert into a Teser- vation’ for the whole oytft-Indians,1 | McCarthy’s finish as a congressional possibility. He has taken to ollie’ e lI e MRS. M. BROOKS wishes to announes that she has just received an elegant line of the very latest styles in fall mil- linery. Walking hats, school hats, trimmings of 91! kinds, feathers, rib- bons. tips. ete. All work guaranteed to be perfectly satisfactory. She invites the ladies of Grand Rapids to come in i see her line gs it is undoubtedly the finest ever seen here. Everything new. MRS. M. BROOKS, Crandall’s Old Stand. ERASE SHS SF EA Se ne, MRO ie Philip Binsfield Laprairie, Minn. TAXIDERMIST. . Phillippinos and all. ‘The white man : wants the jand the Indian possesses, and he is going to have it. Now, we contend that it would be a great deal better for the Indians to be sent to the Phillipines than to the happy hunting’ grounds—and we will have to send them somewhere. And then the white man’s conscience will be easier and his burden lighter. Instead of all the time thinking of how he robbed Poor Lo he can conjure up in mind a scene wherein the Chippewa buck and the Phillippino belle are en- Fine Line of Hand-Made Buckskin Mittens aud Gloves. joying undisturbed the questionable MOCCASINS beauties of the maleria swamps; instead of being bothered by ae “the worm that never dieth” for hav- ing been instrumental in the ex- termination of one race of God’s noblest creatures, he can calmly pat himself on the back: and say that he placed the noble creature in an atmo- sphere more congenial to -his nature, where the ways and modes of civiliza- tion will not hamper his prapagation; instead of feeling that he has robbed the Indian of all that was dear to him and made him forever unhappy, he can imagine the former soverign of this continent and the most recent debutante in Tagal society lovingly exchanging microbes in the calm, Aire You a acific moonlight, Is not such y it worth striving-for? Both the @ruiser ? Indian and the Phillippino will be the} , nation’s wards as long as there ar any of them alive. Let’s bunch ’em.} | | All Kinds of Hides Bought at Highest Market Price. Cash Price. Philip Binsfield, Laprairie. a If you are, you'll need erui sure, Remember that Kurtz- the shoe man, wakes a alty of Hand Made Cruising ts that give good satisfaction. Remember, also, that he makes all kirds of Shoes and Boots to cruer aan he makes them bim- self, A FEW BOQUETS, Versatility Explains It- (Wadena Pioneer-Jonrnal.) T. J. Austed, who has been making the Grand Rapids Magnet a very bright and yewsy paper for the past year or so, has tarned a complete journalistic summersaust, aud has now associated himself with Bro, Kiley of the Herald-Review of that city, and become one of the editors of that paper. If Tontmy was not such a versatile fellow, it would puzzle his friends somewhat to know how it would be possible for him to edita staid Republican sheet like the Magnet, and then turn around and become jointly re- sponsible for some of the rabid Democratic is for which the Herald-Review is more or less noted. But as before intimated; Tommy will be found equal to the eccasion, and we wish him the best of success. Kurtzman, Just South of McAlpine Block, Leland Ave., Grand Rapids. KELLY’S Sample | A Question of “If.” (Aitkin Republican.) T..). Austed of Grand Rapids has assqcigted himself with Editor Kiley of the Herald- Review, Mr. Austed has considerable abijity and if he can write calamity and 16 to | articles with the same success that attended him while dishing out oservations on pros- perity from a Republigan standpoint, he will get along swimmingly. Has always on hand a full live of ~ Foreign aud $ Domestic Wines, Liquors and Cigars. With the Herald-Review. [Virginia Enterprise.) T. J. Austed has assocjated himself with E. C. Kiley in the publication of the Grand Rapids Herald-Review, one of our brightest exchanges. 7 Fine Liquors - for Purpuses a Specialty. Medicinal The Pressure Was Too Great. (Carlton Vidette,) T. J, Austed, formerly editor of the Grand Rapids Magnet, could stand the pressure no longer and is now pushing the quill for good old democracy on the Herald-Review of that town. Tommy is one of the brightest writers in the state. o , THE ONLY BILLIARD AND POOL ROOM IN TOWN. To Get a New Hold. (Hibbing News.) Young Austed, one of the brightest lads of the Northwestern press gang. recently ; left the Grand Rapids Magnet and we thought we had lost him, but he only let go long engugh to get a new hold. He is nowa part of the Herald-Review of the same town. ' . When in Grand Rapids, Don’t Fail to Visit * T. H. Benton’s Sample Room Where a FINE LINE of Wines, Liquors and Cigars : ng . Sawyers’ Bldg, Leland Ave. Bright and Capable, (Deer River News.) Thos, Austed, the young printer who for the past two years has been associated with ' the Grand Rapids Magnet. has secured an interest in thé Herald-Review of that place. Tom isa bright, capable young fellow and we wish him success in his investment. ‘ Ablest of Country Papers. | «Walker Pilot.) That bright young journalist, Tom Aus- ted, who did so much during the past year to make the Grand Rapids Magnet one of the ablest of country newspupers, has severed his connection with it and gone into partner- ship with E. C. Kiley, of the Herald-Review of the same plnce. Can See Mac’s Finish. Hibbing News: We can see C. C. poetry and the first eruption was after ‘ reading ‘The Man with thi Hoe.” : GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. | ‘Too bad 2 -~