Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, September 29, 1900, Page 4

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se gE ee a aa ge eR Grand Rapids Bottling Works MANUFACTUREKS OF Cabonated Drinks of all Kinds Pop—all flavors Pure Orange Cider Lemon Soda Cream Soda Sarsaparilla Limeade Ginger Ale Nervebrew Raspberry Cream Pure, Sparkling Seltzer Water. Only Pure Fruit Juices and Hale Lake Spring Water Used in the Manufacture of Our Goods. Try our “LIMADE” the Great Non-Intoxicant Health Drink. A Trial Order Solicited. Orders Promptly Filled. Ses a a ae ee ea eae eae ae a AE aa Ra ‘ee ee ae ae ee ate ate ae ae ee a Me ae ae ae eee te ae a ee ae eae ae ae John Hepfel’s Sample Room 1 _jand Beer Fall, Corner THIRD ST. and HOFFMAN AVE. | The Best Lineof . . | Wines, Liquors « Cigars | CAN BF HAD, Riso Maveon Tap and in Bottle the Celebrated | DULUTH BREWIMG CO’S MOOSE BRAwy BEERS. FREE LUNCH ALWAYS SERVED pring oe Summer ultings Suiting ready for inspection. The samples we are » the latest manufactures of America and pe and tl thousands of them to select from in all des, styles, patterns, prices and weights. We have-many kinds ods but only only one kind of workmavship—the_ best. ivery garment that leaves our shop is absolutely guaranteed as to fit, style and workmanship. Call and see us before ordering. PEOPKE & FRANZ. I PAPE SS CEOS, Hotel Giadetaae A. E. WILDER, Prop. Sa/13 ota, Bee ari aD, FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT. Sample Room and Livery in Connection. Special Attention Given to Transient Trade. Headquarters for Lumbermen. GRAND ee ea) Manufacturer of Fine Cigars GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. 6s %* Have achieved an excellent BOOTH’ S$ CIGARS i Pe all over Northern 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. : i ani eSS2S=2 paovleraias eakss Wiegeiee ve s' ETE tt tt tt ttt dedudusaiesasedeilesedl RE a ae eee Grana BE. C. KILEY, i Published Every Saturday. T, J. AUSTED KILEY & AUSTED, Editors and Publishers. TWO DOLLARS A YEAR IN ADVANCE. Six Months........$1 00| Three Months.......60¢ Entered in the Postoffice at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, as Second-Class Matter. one Paper of Itasca County, Villages f Grand Repids and Deer River co Town of Grand Rapids. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Presidente: WILLIAM J. BRYAN, products abroad, receiving manufac ffom a!l political contact with the| 14 great world beyond its borders—is election. There you have it in plain Anglo- Saxon. This Republican organ tells us that Hamiltonianism does not merely “threaten” this country, but has actually conquered it. - “The last vestige of the Jeffersonian Tradition,” says the Republican organ, “is hkely to be effaced in the coming election.” There you have the issue bluntly stated. —Duluth Herald. of Nebraska. For Vice President— ADLAI E. STEVENSON, of Illinois. For Congress, Sixth District— HENRY TRUELSEN, of St. Loius County. For Governor— JOHN LIND, of Brown County. For Lieutenant Governor— T. J. MEIGHEN, of Fillmore County. For Secretary of State— M. E. NEARY. | of Hennepin County. For State Treasurer— HENRY C. KOERNER, of Ramsey County. _| Por Attorney General-- R. C. SAUNDERS, of Pine County. For Railroad Commissioners— For two years— SIDNEY M. OWEN, of Hennepin County. For four years— PETER M. of Polk For four years— THOMAS J. KNOX, of Jackson County. RINGDAL, County. For Supreme Court— For Chief Justice— F. C. BROOKS, of Hennepin County. For Associate Justice— J. C. NETHAWAY, of Washington County. THESE FOR THE ELECTORS, First District— O. W. ANDERSON. Second District— GEORGE LESTER Third District— O. T. RAMSLAND. Fourth District— DANIEL ABERLE. Fifth District F. D. NOERENBERG. Sixth District— JOHN JENSWALD. Seventh District— T. C. HODGSOM. At large— RUDOLPH SCHIFFMAN. M. R. PRENDERGAST. ForJuage, Fifteenth Judicial District GEORGE W, HOLLAND, of Crow Wing County. For Representative, Fifty-Second Leg- islative District— H. H, HAWKINS, of Carlton County. E. C. KILEY, of Itasca County. ——-—+@46 —_ MONARCHY OR REPUBLIC? A short timeago The Herald re- ferred to Speaker Henderson’s state- ment made at the Republican banquet in Chicago, where Senator Davis was insulted by a drunken crowd of rowdies, that “the doctrines of Hamil- ton must be the text word of the hour.” It was then pointed out that Hamil- ton, whose policy was so highly prais- ed by the Republican speaker of the house of representatives, was an im- perialist, Some of the administration organs have sought to minimize - the importance of Speaker Henderson’s to show that Hamilton had no imper- iahstic tendencies. ‘The New York Press, one of the leading Republican newspapers, is more honest. It does not dodge the issue, but invites it. This is what the Press has to say: The Western journal which 1s try- ing to make a new issue of Hamilton- lanistn, has a good deal more to be statement and others have endeavored? “| ber earnest, that the tanff should be . WHICH IS IMMEDIATE? Maj. McKinley declares that while the Philippine issue may be paramount the silver question is immediate. He therefore insists that the latter must take precedence in the campaign. Yet if Bryan shail be elected, as now seems assured, and if by a political revolution both houses should be Democratic, at least four months must elapse before Mr. Bryan could get con- gress together to deal with silver or with anything else. From Nov. 7 un- til March 4 William McKinley will still be president. But meanwhile shall the “nigger” killing still go on unchecked and un- challenged in the Philippines? Shall we keep in the field an army of 65,000 men and a great fleet of war sphips to back up our wicked and __ baseless claims of sovereignty over a people who long to be free? Shall we go on with our criminal aggression, burning and slaying and sowing havoc through- out a stricken land? Which is the immediate issue? That of dealing with a ‘question that cannot stopping a war that is destroying the liberties of the Filipinos while under- mining our own? } If your house is on fire, which is the immediate issue, that of extinguishing the flames, or that of deciding on plans for a new barn which you think of building next yeay? Imperialism is at once the para- mount and the immediate issue. Maj. McKinley, with all his shiftiness and all his smug hypocrisy, cannot dodge or obscure it. The flag is being trail- ed in the dust of his ignoble ambition and the blood of our late allies, perfid- iously betrayed, stains its folds. Thall we palter with standards and ratios while American’ guns are slaugh- tering freedom ina foreign land? Shall we quarrel over the color of our money when the rivers are running with blood shed in pursuit ofa horrible con- quest? No. The immediate issue is one of justice and honor and high duty. Sil- ver and everything else must wait up- on this. | And Maj. McKinley hopes in vainif he hopes that this great and insistent issue can be either obscured or evaded. The doctrines of Hamilton are ar- rayed against the principles of Jetfer- son. If William McKinley shall be re- elected, “the last vestige of Jefferson- 1an tradition will be effaced.” Are you willing that this should be done?, Are you for Hamilton’s monarchy or for Jefferson’s republic? That is the question you must de- cide at the polls—Duluth Evening Herald. A HUGE REPUBLICAN JOKE. That certainly isa most brazen piece of effrontery of which the trust-owned Republican organs and politicians are guilty when they declare that the peo- ple would better allow the trusts to be regulated by the Republican party. Sensible people can hardly regard the declaration otherwise than as an auda- cious joke, which does not have even the merit of being new. At the tme when the swindle known as the Mc- Kinley tariff was uppermost in the public mind, the Republican leaders were wont to insist, apparently in so- revised by its frends. They were able and willing to attend to the mat- ter; and so, whenever they meddled with the tariff at all, they revised it upward and filched more money out frightened about than it seems to real- ize. “Hamiltomanism” does not mere- ly “threaten” this country. It has conquered it, * * * Our contempor- ary is right, ‘Hamiltonianism’ threatens the country: It promises completely to possess the country. The last vestige of the Jeffersonian tradition, that this land was destined for a thousand yearsto be a peaceful, agricultyral policy, shipping fits farm of the pockets of the consumers for the benefit of the favored manufac- turers, who had been able to buy the legislation which they wanted, When congressemet, representatives of the tariff-protected interests were on hand to dine-and wine the members, of the tured goods in return, and abstaining im ym likely to be effaced in the coming 40 be reached in half a year or that of Going West. STATIONS. Going East, COUNLY AND VILLAGE OFFICERS 12.32 i 2.0L e 3.2 . 4.53 9 5.88 5 B25 * | 3.15 am 7.05 11.35 pm 10.30 8.30 * 11.15 8.00 am 7.45 8.45“ 10.30 4.10 pm 8.30. Portland. 2.10 pm Driving Shoes ana Pacs Kurtzman, “The : Dudiey” Dray and Express Line L. W. HUNTLEY, Manager. WOOD FOR SALE Leave Orders at Ponti’s Confectionery Store or Kremer & King’s Office. IN RE PARTISAN JUDGES. Continued from First Page. W.C. GILBERT, Pine Lands ad Loans Grand Rapids, : - Minn. City and Vicinity. Notice of Application sor Liquor License. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Itasca. ‘{ Village of Grand Rapids. Notice is hereby given that application has been made in writing to the village council of the said village ot Grand Rapids and filed in my office, praying for license to sell intox- ieating liquors for a term commencing on the second day of September 1900 and termin- mek on the second day of September 1901, by the following feck ae and at the following este as stuted in said application, to-wit: Johnson. in the east front room on the ground floor of the Wa situate? on Lot one in Block eighteen in the original town- site of Grand Rupids, Minnesota. Said application wili be heard and deter- mined by said village council at the council room in the village hall in said Mea es on Thursday the 4th day of October 1900, at 8:30 o'clock p. m. of thatday. {ATTEST] GEORGE RIDDELL, Frep A, Kina, President. Recorder. Sere en eer Te Ne pose that the trusts should be regulat- ed by their friends. It is a great scheme—for the trusts. They have been created by Republican legislation and are sheltered behind the Republi- can tariff. They are entirely safe as long as their affairs are regulated by the party which has begotten them and nursed them. The oft repeated experience with the trust-breeding tar- iff will have taught the people the folly of expecting relief by allowing the trusts to be regulated by their frends. Bar the fell dragon’s bhght- ing way, but shun that tempting snare,—Minneapolis Star. Too Soon to Judzse. ‘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. ‘Warm Weather Then, ‘When the ice trust raises its prices, says the Philadelphia Ledger, nobody |. will care to be the iceman who wi committee of ways and means and arrange with them how the tariff schedules were to be fixed. In this way the tariff was “revised by’ its friends.” In hke manner the Repub- licans now = the mee to pro-| have to face the indignant housewives, | More Than His Share. An Indianapolis man, operated upon recently for appendicitis, was foun@ to have two appendices, Package Delivery a Specialty COUNTY. .E. J. Farrel C, Miller W.C. Tyndall Tt. Donohue . B. Clair M. Brady . A. Brown Dr. ©. M. Storch Supt. of Schools: .Mrs. O. H: Stilson COMMISSIONERS. W. A. Everton E. Myers ho Rellis .W. V. Fuller CO. E, Leeman District N District Ni District Ne Districu No. District No. VILLAGE. George Riddell i J.P. O'Connell John Hepfel W. Huntley King ‘Aiken President... Trustees... Attorney Pratt Street Commi MeCormick Marshal..... J.P. MeCormick SECRET SOCIETIES. GRAND RAPIDS LODGE LO. O. F., No. 184: meets every Wi Lari. night at K. of P. hall EVENS, N. G, I. D. RassMUSSEN, Ree. ‘Sea? ITASCA LODGE A.:.F.. & A.-. M meets the first_and third Frid month at K. of P. hall. M. Gu A. KREMER, Secy. WAUBANA LODGE K., of P. No, 131: meets every Thursday evening in their hall. . A, KREMER, C. C. E. J. Farrecy,K. R. 8, ITASCA DIVISION No. 10. U. R. K, P.: meets first Monday of ¢ach_ month in P. hall. E. A. KREMER, Capt. Cnas. Kearney, Recorder. POKEGAMA TENT NO. 33. K.0O.T.M: meets every first and third Thursday of each month at K. of P. halt E. J. FARREI U, Com. A. E. Witper. R. K. A. O..U, W. No. 826—Meets every Monday night, J. J. DECKER, W. M. F. A. McVicar, Recorder. ITASCA GAMP No. 6444, M., W. of. A.: meets second and fourth Mondays of each month at K. of P. hall. Harry WILLIAMS. V. C GrorGeE Vrent, Clerk. B, F. HUSON POST G. A. R. No. 140: meets the last Friday of ee month in Post hall. WEITZEL, Com. H.S. Huson, Adjt. BUTUSAR REBEKAH LODGE No. 150: meets the se d und fourth Tuesdays ot in K. of P. hall ABETH H COLLET: {TASCA HIVE L. O. T. M.: meets every second and fourth Fridays of each month in K. of P. hail. No. 208: of each N, W. M. of ecy Lov Luturop, L. C. EFFiz CREEPER, R. K. WAUBANA TEMPLE RATHBONE SIS- TERS: meets in the afternoon of the first Monday of each month, and in the evening of euch subsequent Monday. Josre Powers, M. E. C. Evizasera McCarruy, M. R. and C. ITASCA CIRCLE LADIES OF THEG. A. R.: meets the first Monday of each month in Post hall. Mrs. MARY Husgy, Pres, Mrs. Eviza BAILEY, Secy. CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH-— Rev. E. P. Crane, pastor, ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH—Rev. C. V- Gamache, pastor. M. E. CHURCH—Rev. R. J. McGhee. pastor. PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS ~ IRECTORY OF RAND RAPIDS. ATTORNEYS. FrAsk F. PRICE, ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Itasca Mercantile Meat Market GRAND RAPIDS, € C. McCARTHY, ATTORNEY AT LAW Office over Itasca Mercantile Meat Market. GRAND RAPIDS, C 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, P HYSICIAN ANDSURGEON Office over Cable’s Meat Market, GRAND RAPIDS. D*® CHAS. M. STORCH, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd. GRAND RAPINs, D* THOMAS RUSSELL, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, South Side, GRAND RAPIDS. Eastern Minnesota R iiway. TOME TREBLE. DENTISTS, R H. CALELY, RESIDENT DENTIST f

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