Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, September 8, 1900, Page 4

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| ) | ‘Se 3 of ae see ae eee ea tae ae ea ae ae ae ae me ae RE ee eae ae ak ee ate ae ae ee ae Ra ee RE ie 2 H . . * # : UFANG haplds DOING WOFKS ; % % # * = MANUFACTUREKS OF og & o me . & * %& $ Cabonated Drinks of ail Kinds 3 & H % % = Pop—all favors Pure Orange Cider Lemon Soda g t Cream Soda Sarsaparilla Limeade % Ginger Ale Nervebrew Raspberry Cream : Pure, Sparkling Seltzer Water. j % # Only Pure Fruit Juices and Hale Lake Spring Water Used inthe # Manufacture of Our Goods. $ aN em — = Ba Try our “LIMADE” the Great Non-Intoxicant Health Drink, A Trial Order Solicited. Orders Promptly Filled. sb eae ae af ee eae eae eae ea eae Ne Re RE aaa ea ae Xy ie BE Me ae ae Nie se Me ae Re HERE ARH RE we | 5 sample koom | aR and Beer Rail, | Corner THIRD ST. and HOFFMAN AVE. The Best Lineof . . . Wines, Li John Hepfel’s uors «« Cigars CAN BE HAD, {i i| || Bios Have on Tap and in Bottle | | the Ceiebrated | DULUTH BREWIMG €0’S MOOSE BRAnw BEERS, | | | FREE LUNCH LWAYS SEVED go pring and Summer Suitings Are now in and ready for inspection. The samples we are showing this year are the latest manufactures of America and Europe and there are thousands of them to select from in, all shades, styles, patterns, p sand weights. V ave many kinds of goods but only only one kind of workmavship—the best. Every garment that leaves our shop is absolutely guarantecd as to fit, style and workmanship. Call and see us before ordering. Published Every Satupday. E. C. KILEY. T. J. AUSTED : KILEY. & AUSTED, Editors and Pubiishers. TWO DOLLARS A YAR IN ADVANCE, Six Months........$1 00| Three Months.......50¢ Entered in the Postofiice at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, as Second-Class Matter. Cie. Paper of Itasca County, Villages o. Grand Repids and Deer River aud Town of Grand Rovids. Democratic TICKET. Eor President— WILLIAM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska. For Vice President— ADLAI E. STEVENSON, of Ulinois. ee ee COLLEGE YELLS HAVE A USE. Conservative Persons Favor More Decorum, Bat Enthesiasm Is a Prime Requisite. Now it may be that American instl- tutions of learning are wholly depen- ent upon the college yell for preserva- tion and sustenance, and that they might helplessly collapse should its support be withdrawn, says the San Francisco Chronicle. Among con- servative people, however, there is a growing suspicion that the interests of education may be conserved with a little more decorum and a little less yell. Some one has wisely suggested that an initial step in weaning the American university from dependence ‘upon the yell would be to follow the example of Oxford and Cambridge, and fix a certain day in the year when students shall be conceded un- limited license, when discipline and the faculty shall take back seats, and youth and merriment reign supreme, and not college yells and class yells alone be the order of the hour, but when all manner of cat calls and car- fcature of the dominies shall be reck- oned among the day's privileges. Should such an order be established, so strange a commingling of manli- ness and of babyhood is the Ameri- can student, that finding himself cast wholly upom his own responsibility one may safely predict he would use his liberty with a wise restraint and consideration unknown in English universities, A SOLDIER OF FORTUNE. An American Organized the Chinese - Army and Gave It High Standing. An American Is entitled to the credit ~if ¢redit it is—of reorganizing the Chinese army upon a basis approach- ing its present efficiency. Frederick Townsend Ward was a soldier of for- tune and a native of Massachusetts. In 1860, when the Taoping rebels were everywhere successful, Ward, who was 26 years old, and had served in the French army, found himself in Shang- hai. He organized a band composed of men of various nationalities and of- fered to capture a city for a fixed price, ‘The first achievement of his small army was the capture of the walled town Sungkiang, which was held by 10,000 rebels. As a reward he was made a mandarin of the fourth rank. Ward then gleared the country around Shanghai, being paid so much cash after each victory he won. After awhile he disappeared and was next heard of when the natives attacked the city in large force, when Ward appeared at the head of three well- armed and well-drilled native regi-: ments, who rescued Shanghai. There- after he became one of the leading men in the defense of Shanghai. He adopted the Chinese nationality under the name of Hwa, married the daugh- ter of a wealthy mandarin and was made a mandarin of the highest grade and admiral general in the service of the emperor. Gen. Ward died as the result of a wound received in directing an assault on Tsekie. The Chinese paid him the highest possible honors after his death by burying him in the Con- fucian cemetery at Ningpo. Ward’s successor in command of the Chinese forces was Maj. Charles G. Gordon— “Chinese” Gordon. oh; A BIDEOUS BIRD. . The Queer Appearance and Actions of the Adjutant of India and Africa, “The plainest of the large wading birds to be seen in many of our zoological gardens is the adjutant, a native of India and Africa,” remarked a naturalist to a Washington Star writer. “Nature seems to have de- signed-him in an experimental mood and, disgusted with her handiwork, to have turned him out unfinished. The young adjutant, with his bald head and beak like a pickax, is re- pulsively ugly, and the melancholy gravity of his demeanor suggests that he has seen himself mirrored in some still pond, and the revelation is weigh- ing upon his mind. As he grows old- er, however, and begins to take a lively interest in dead rats, the ef- fects of the shock to his vanity passes away. He becomes jaunty—nay, friv- tlous—and in sheer lightness of heart attends dancing parties on the mud slopes of his inclosure, where he ducks and bows and kicks and scrapes , with half-distended wings, to the ad- miration of his feathered companions, ; All the cranes and storks are great | dancers, and in the early pairing sea- | son you may see really graceful terpsichorean performances in the paddock of any zoo where they are on exhibition. An elderly adjutant prac- ticing his steps all by himself‘is a spectacle the sympathetic observer can hardly regard without mingled laughter and tears. He is so awk- ward, so ungainly, yet so cheerfully earnest about it, you are sorry for the deluded bird, and yet cannot refrain from hoping that the heart of the hen adjutant will be moved by the pa- thetic display of inaptitude.” Too Soon to Judge. The New Yorker who has talked his last will into a phonograph may sup- pose that he has got ahead of the law- yers, but there are experienced liti- gants, says the St. Louis Dispatch, who will not jump at any such conclusion. ‘Werm Weather Then, When the ice trust raises its prices, says the Philadelphia Ledger, nobody will care to be the iceman who wit have to face the indignant housewives, More Than His Shrre. An Indianapolis man, operated upon recently for appendicitis, was fourd | te have two appendices, « Going West. 11.55 pm Erie ect aal STATIONS, ..St. Pawl.. Going East. 8.30 10. ‘| COUNTY AND VILLAGE OFFICERS eee 7 = COUNTY. Judge of Probate. Surveyo Coroner Supt. of Schools. COMMISSIONERS. W. A. Everton . EB. Myers fahn Rehis Y. Fuller E, Leeman VILLAGE. - District No. 1. Distriet No. 2. District No. 3 (Chairman District No. 4. District No. 5. George Riddell F. O'Connell hn Hepfel W. Huntley \ Pred A. King \ CE. Ai Presidents. <2; <-:: c+. edie! nee M nic . B. MeCormick SECKET SOCIETIES. GRAND RAPIDS LODGH I. 0. 0. F, No. 144: meets every Wedn a at K. of P. hail £ 5 N.G, I. D. Rassmussen, Rec. ITASCA LODGE A.°. F.”, & Aw". M.". No. 208: meets the iirst_and third Fridays of cach month at K. of P. hall, . M. Guyy, W. A. A. KREMER, Secy. WAUBANA LODGE K. of P. No. 131: mee’ every Thursday evening in their hail, at A. A. Kremer, C. C. E. J. FARRELL, K. R. 8. ITASCA DIVISION No. J. meets first Monday of each’ n P. hall. E. A. Kremer, Capt. Ons. Kearney, Recorder, POKEGAMA TENT NO. 33. K.0.T.M: meets every first and. third Thursday of each month at K. of P. hall E. J, FARRELL, Com. A.E. Writer. R. K. A. 0. U, W. No. #26—Meets every Monday night, F. A. McVican, Ree ITASCA CAMP No. 6444, second and fourth ) month at K. of P. hall. Harry WILvrams, V. C. Gzorg@u Vient, Clerk. B. F. HUSON POST G. A. R. No. 140: ‘the last Friday of each month in Post ,, WM. EB. WErrzeL, Com. H. S. Huson, Adjt. BUTUSAR REBEKANH LODGE Ne J. J. Decker, W. M. is. 1. fs 12. momar 10. 10, Premium Rapids, September 27th and LIST OF PREMIOM PEOPKE & A. E, WILDER, Prop. FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT. Sample Room and Livery in Connection.. Special Attention Given to Transeent Trade. Headquarters for Lumbermen. |, PERS Manufacturer of Fine Cigars GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. 9 o” Fi “BOOTH’S CIGARS” reputation ait over Nortnens Stallion, four years old and upward Stallion; two years old Stallion, one year old One year old mar Sucking horse and mare colt. OLASS .2-HORSES FOR GENERAL Stallion, four yeurs old, Stallion, three years old Stallion, two years old.. Stallion, one’ year old Brood mare with colt. Two yearold mare One year oid mare.. Sucking herse and mare colt. CLASS 3-HORSES TO three year old colts in harnes horse or mare, each.....-. tee under three, bullone year old and under The following is the Premium List of the ninth annual fair of the Itasca County Agricultural Society, to be held at Grand DIVISION A—HORSES. CLASS 1—THOROUGHBRE - et BE SHOWN IN HARNE: Span carriage horses. span‘horses for all work, span draft horses to be tested on the ground DIVISION B—CATTLE. CLASS 1-THOROUGHBRED. To be shown by pedigree of herd book or proof. Bull two years old and over, bull two years old ani 1} * Mixed pick | Chow-chow. chili a | ca LW Jelly. ral cranberry, high cottage... home d. Butter, home dai 28th. Ss. d rag car) on quilt t i il Tied comfort.. Infant's Croc Cr Crochet edging. o1 Crochet toilet sei 2) 1.09 PURPOSES. Sot crocheted ¢ ny ti Tea. cosy. Silk sofa pillow Baby cairiage Head rest Work bi Calenc ptacle Wall pocket. Card case Photograp! Necktie case . Whisk broom hi id two each $2.00 $1.00 Silk pincusior vee 1.00 5 DIVISION E—DAIRY PRODUCTS. CLA: eted or knitted bed s oily with crocheted horder. Gotton or linen sofa pillow llow Embroidered plano scarf. “15 5. © si ies, phims, rr eserves, nt, spberry. bush cranberry, ed : 50° (25 S 1. BUTTER AND CHEESE. ry, ry. 5 59 ; isd DIVISION F—HOUSEHOLD MAFUPACTURES. CLASS 1. ot, ach .... ney e mats Bull calf Ge 150 Cotton pincu: Heifer, two years old and under three, heifer one Fancy handicer year old and under two, cach... csses 1.00.50 aoe 50 ae : Set tatted doilies. CLASS 2—-NATIVES AND GRADES, Embroidered centerpiece 2 Best milch cow. tested on ground.. aioe --+ 5.20 8.00 Set embroidered doille: 50: Heifer, two years old and under ,three, heifer one Eateares nee ty 50 et battenberg doilies. year old and under two, each. y..2+-...+4 we 1.00 50 Treen wer lial clad! = DIVISION B—-SWINE. Lunch cloth in hand mad 150 ; Ladies’ fancy apron. 195 ULASS 1—BERKSHIRE. Gay a ae 135 Boar, one year old and over. sa, pee, $2.00 $1.00 Pretec pk 8 ele Oi oo Boar coe One JAE, sow O¥BT OE Year, Gow, under pep en ornlee Devens rent e yeur. pen of pigs, not less than 4, under four Infant's crocheted sill ca bo months. 0 1.50 1.00 Rafan es bib 2 (hee air chamois gloves. 50 25 OLASS 2-YORKSHIRE. Crocheted or knitted slippers 50 85 Boar one year old and over =+. 2.00 1.00 Hand knitted mitten: 2 Boar under one year old, sow over one year olG, So Hand knitted hose. ad under one year old, pen of pigs. not léss than 4, un- Crocheted or knitted pe a der four months... BEART SERS. «colt BOO 9.00 eee ener nee we 50. a adies? tis 25 na r me Ladies’ te: wn. Te DIVISION C—VEGETABLES AND FRUITS. Padies' wrapper = CLASS 1 Ladies’ dressing sack 50. $31. Old ladies’ dressing cup. 25 Rest 12 sugar beets... $1.00 5 Gontiemen’s smipkiniy exp. bn Best turnip rooted beet 1.00 °50 Geemenene droming Jeckee 50 Bost 3. apples, standard. 1.00 .75 {50 Baby carrlage robe 35 Best PZ apples, crab. 1,00 175 550 Couch afghun.. : i 50 Best 12 plums. . 1.00.75 <5 Best culons carrot 00: 7 CHILDREN’S DEPARTMENT. 2 pursnips. x BeCValeine oe canes he Children not over twelve years of age. Best display of cabbages. 1.00 Dressed doll... Rest display of turnips 1.00 i Best display of onions. 1.00 Largest squash....... 1.00 Best three Hubbard sq: i 00 Best three Boston Marrow sq 00 Best three field pumpkins 00 Best six cucumbers... 00 100. sores ta Bye glass cleaner. POTATOES. Maggie Murphy. Snow Makes... ho “ealuy of tees F cant y o ron in Mekisioy ved Best display of potatoes...... sop esoues A DIVISION D—CULINARY. CLASS 1. BREAD, PASTRY, JELLY, ETO. Loaf of wheat bread, loaf of rye bread, louf of sorn Minnesota. They are made of the finest selected stock by experienced workmen in Mr. Booth’s own shops here, and under his personal supervision. ‘This insures the utmost cleanliness and care in manufacture. For sale everywhere. Call for them. Fruit cake, sponge cake, each. Delicate cake, ¢ingerbread. e: Angels’ food, Devil’s food, éac Chocolate cake, re fi White cooki-s, dark coo! Pumpkin pie, cranberry pie, eacl Sour and sweet cucumber pickles. Sour and sweet tomato pickles... Ripe cucumber, watermelon, beet, corrot and onion bread, loaf of graham bread, hop yeast biscuit, each $59 ~ 50 feedle vase. Sewing companion z Blotter...... Best specimen penmanship.. Best specimen pencil drawing. Best specimen colored pencil drawin, Best specimen map drawing by pupi. Best collection pressed flowers by pupil of any Foot race (boys)—25 cents entry. CLASS 3. MISCELLANEOU: ‘50 aT (BO of any school “%3 ° {5 hool 7% 0 artis % Hair work. + Taxidermis » 1.00 Exhibit of work by shoemaker. 1.00 Exhibit of home millinery. 1.00 275 Display of house plants . 1.00 $25 Display of hand decorated chin: ‘ + 1.00 25 Collection of photographs. landscape. 100 50 325 Collection of photographs, portraits and interio: - 1.09 ak = RACES. ‘ Running race (pony)—81 entry.. $5.00 $3.00 oo = Running race thorecs). | $1_ entry. 5.00 8.00 95. a5 Bicycle race (bar none)—50 cents entry 2.00 1,00 25 345 Foot race (men)—50 cents. 1.00 . 1.00 meets the second and fourth ‘Tuesdays of each month in K. of P. hall B Mrs. K ITASCA HIVE L. 0. 7. second and fourth in K. of 2. hall. I. Errin Crevrer, R. K. WAUB. TERS: m Mouday ot of eacli subseqe fternvon of th iin the eveni nday. Powers. M. E . M. Re and ©. Post hall. Mus, £1124 BAILEY. CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN Crane, pastor. ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH—Rev. ¢. V. Gamiche, pastor. M. E. CHURCH—Rev. R. CHURCH — Rev. EL P. J. McGhee. pastor. PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS IRECTORY OF RAND RAPIDS, ATTORNEYS, FPRAdK F. PRICE, # > ATTORNEY AT AAW Office over Itasca Mercantile Meat Market. GRAND RAPIDS, ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Itasca Mercantile Meat Murket. GRAND RAPIDS, Cc L.- PRATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Marr's Clothing Store, GRAND RAPIDS. J R. DONOHUE, ATTORNEY AT LAW County Attorney of Itasca County. GRAND RAPIDS. D® GEO. C. GILBERT, PHYSICIAN ANDSURGEON Office over Cable's Meat Market, GRAND RAPIDs. D® CHAS. M. STORCH, j PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd. GRAND RAPIps, D R THOMAS RUSSELL, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, South Side, - GRAND RAPIDS. Eastern Minnesota Raiway. : TIME TABLE. bENTISTS, Rt careey, Oflice over Itasca Merean ntile Meat

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