Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, November 10, 1900, Page 8

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Brant Raat erate Revien GRAND RAPIDS POSTOFFICE HOURS: Office open week days from 8 o'clock a. m,'to 8:00 p. m. m. to 12:50 p.m., and from 2:00 p.m. to 3:00 p,m ev 11:52 a.m. Mail Trains going west arr and Pennsylvania’s are in excess ‘ has this day filed in ‘this office her sworn pape et Mait | 6,000,000. Illinois holds the third place, | fo°t. What the president regards as statement No, 5045, for the Durchase of the ains going east arrive 2:52 p. m. au atte, ay sud . , ae ses of sw'4 and sw of se of section No. 6. Train. colog dest sitive Tare welfare or duty we are not told. On | find hw of ne of section No. Fin townsht 0. p.m. close 20 minuets before arrival of close: All mail ee 0. H. Srrtsow, P. M. City and Vicinity. id : 2 shi all of whom is Deer River. Minnesota. Mrs. Ely is here today and Mon-| Which Massachusetts had in’ 1890, elite Se thunietanees: ite eae a persons clang wivers 4 POPULAR PRICE. Mrs. ily is he: bi m fear ee - nder se cireumstances | IS} the above described lands are requeste ea Texas’ inhabitants at the present to file their claims in this office on or bezore day only. W. J. Coffron of Deer River, was in the village Tuesday. On account of election the Central school was closed all day Tuesday, _| these three holding the same relative ile bi will SODtECR IBLE: The SUMMONS. noticed as being Comfortably ete ‘ position which it had in 1890. Sever- trusts will hold high carnival. The |_ Ae i and Daintily shod. Fred Churchill of Deer River, was Al of the states—Maine, Vermont, {clerk will become a servant, the em- | STATE OF MINNESOTA, ) im the Radids Thursday, O. L. Mather returned Sunday from a business trip to the Zenith and Twin Cities. J. H. McConkey of Duluth, has ton with N. A, accepted a pos Pasonault. Call and see new pattern hats just received yesterday, at Pokegama sample rooms today and Monday only. Special Prices. Arthur O'Leary, of the firm of O'Leary & Fraser, left ‘Iuesday for There is no change in the relative rank of the leading states. New York is far ahead of all the other states, the gap between it and Pennsylvania, the second on the roll, widening since 1890. New York’s inhabitants are now well beyond the 7,000,000 mark, which she gained in the census of 1890, when she passed Ohio, and Ohio keeps the fourth place, which she was putin then. Missourt is still fifth, a rank which she has had since 1870. Missouri’s present population is 3,- 107,117. ‘Texas gains the sixth place, time reaching 3,048,828. | Massachu- setts isseventh on the present roll, and Indiana, Michigan and Iowa fol- lowing after it in this order, each of STATEMENT BY MR. TOWNE. Continucd from First Page. definition is made or attempted. The president’s estimate is to control. This makes liberty about as elastic as that equity which Selden said depera- ed on the length of the chancellor’s so new and prodigious a question the people must actually abdicate their function and clothe their master with plenary discretion. A king could ask no more unconditional power. It is like a plebiscite establishing a dictat- easy tosee that the leaders of the victorious party will construe the election as a blank endorsement of the full program of special « privilege. Kansas and Nebraska made yery small gains in population in the decade, whiie Nevada, which was at the foot of the list in 1890, is in that place still, and the gap between herand the next state above has broadened, for Nevada, alone among the states, has fallen off in inhabitants in the decade. A Dangerous Doctrine. The abstract of the decision of Judge Estee, of the United States dis- trict court, reversing the decision of ployera patron, the small business wan a reminiscence.’ The tedious process of trial by jury will be grad- ually superseded by the more prompt and manageable operation of the in- junction. A permanent increase in the standing army will be made this winter. A bill to do it will doubtless be introduced by that Republican congressman from Iowa who is at once chairman of the committce on military affairs and president of the Philippine Lumber and Development company. ‘Thrift, thrift, Horatio.” Notice for Publication. United States Land Office. oe Duluth, Minn., October 26th, 1900. Notice is heieby given that in compliance with the provisions of the act of congress of June 3, 1878, entitled An act for thé Sale of timber lands in the states of California, Ore- gon. Nevada and Washington Territory, as extended to all the Public Land States by act, of August 4, 1892, Carrie Coffron of ‘Deer River, county of [tasca, state of Minnesota, No. 149 N. range No. 27 W 5th P. M., and wi offer proof to show that the land sovght is more valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultural purposes, and to establish her claim to said land before the Register and Receiver of this office av Duluth, sota, on Thursday, the 10th day of January, 1901. She names as witnesse: James Bailey. Chester W. Robinson, Fr: 1 James Anderson, the po: offic said 10th day of January. 1901. W. E. Cuvkiy, Register. MACDONALD & SHARPE, Attorneys. Palladio Building, Duluth. Herald-Review Noy. 3-Dec. 8. SLSLSLSLSLSLSLSMCT WSLS ISVS I SOQ VISIO® ——— foam ene ] —v A PERFECT SHOE cea 2 ord Who wears ROSE SHOES is Ss. County or Irasca. District Court. Fifteenth Judicial District. Frank O Johnson, Plaintiff. vs. Nathaniel Churehill, Hannah Churchill, John R. Howes, Ada B. Howes, Silas O.Lum, Leon E, Lum and t rede ick A. Powers, Defendants. KUSH-MATIC Branded into sole means a shoe which will be found light. and cool in Summer and Warm and Dry in Winter. The State of Minnesota, to the above named defendants. You are hereby summoned and_ required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled action, which is filed in the office of the clerk of the district’ court of the Fifteenth Judicial district, in and for the county of Itasca und state of Minnesota, and to serve a copy of your answer to the’ said complaint on the subscriber, at his office in the village of Grand Rapids in said county, within twenty days after the service of this | | ae | | Duluth, where he. will visit with} the supreme court of Hawaii, is not! More and more thousands of Ameri-| Simmons upon you. exclusive of the day of | S@g@r@G@S@SSSLSLSLSVSISLSLSL DWSLVSS i i 3 : ; 8 : : : : such service, and if you fail to answer the ; friends. sufficiently intelligent or intelligible to} can youth will be fed to bolos and to | Siidcomplaint withinthe time aforesaid, the | & } F i . ; over j ica TT: laintiff in this action wi ly to the court : President McKinley has, issued a}enabie the ordinary student of the fever no aropical jungles. fee eel ae ae , j proclamation designating Thursday, question to comprehend fully the will mu ae ae Fe At will a ae teR le abnote, Roe epic $ | J 5 the 7 i + wi at. ish alliance a "s e: a 5, 11 Nov the day upon which to grounds on which the action of the ‘ax more fab. — inglish alliance | plaimtim’s Attorney. Grand Rapids, Minn, aw: ai observe as Thanksgiving and a day|°.. a i will throw off its mask. We shall a ; of rest. district court rests in discharging the dip into diplomacy to the elbow. NOTICE. Hi ie , ae: risoner whose liberty was involved. | China will be dismembered. We shall : e i Our stock of Fall Goods is now in and we in- ( i Mrs, Ely is atthe Pokegama sample B - ia ae eu 5 ror | bene en toee Ceci smnds Dareele Ot lend vite you to come in and inspect them. These ¥, | ms today and Monday only The fact that a judge of the district} make mad haste to do our brave | along and adjoining which sidswalks have goods are not shop-worn, left-over sto but { i rooms today a Monda ss e O Seg ae Sabie eae rnéted or repaired i Jillage a B Si cheer gern’ i Special prices on all Millinery. Also | court has reached such a conclusion | butcher's part in what Roosevelt calls preiscredaoets gr renee in the Village strictly new und ub-to-date. They include f ] } Ladies’ and Children’s Cloaks and |1s of itself an important event. It will oe bas ig ou Sei . i You are hereby notified that pursuant to a é ™% | Silk Waists. at least facilitate the taking of an ap- | 2° DPoKen to Luba, as Severidge has | resolution adopted by the village council of Ladies’ and Gent's Underwear 4 { - z advised. Mhlitary proscription will | said village of Grand Rapids. unless the 4 ees ; 5: ’ : 3 h Grand Master Van Praag, was in| peal to the supreme court and ad-|y come an institution, We shall have | amount of the costs to the said villaze of Ladies’ Gent's and Children,s Fine Shoes, f the village Wednesday evening. He | vance to a speedy settlement the great] the glamor of social distinctions, and | Pek UIA AL AL be ad Ladies’ Wrappers and Waists, : 2 “sse e C2 2 x a % aid in ¢ Village treas: of sa g a § oe a padrcsed a see Pst a te question involved. | the tinsel nobility of the soldier shall | oy or betore the tenth day of November, A. flostery, Corsets and Other Furnishings, % F SCHOWS. a . a a A a ; Fy . } ¥ > : The Judge said that Hawaii. before being | jostle obsequious homespun from the | p., 1900, twenty-five per cent will be added to 3 Ousirs -kinaw Goods, Etc pere. to Hibbing, annexed, “was 4 free, enlightened state, | sidewalk. ‘The springs of public mo- | said amount and assessed against said Blankets, Quilts and Mac Goods, Etc. y Mrs. Ely will be -at_ Nelson Burns | Possessing all the attributes of sovereignty. | 1116 ang private character will be | Property. %, a ben, with their consent, the islands . ‘ - Dated Nov, ist. 1900. s rices—we invite you to compare ours i building, Cass Lake, on Weilnesday Sart aanerea by the United States, not only | Poisoned with the subtle virus of a ote McCoraicK, { 60 De Gea ee Ee y ane \f ahi an Noe : Nov. 14, with a line of Milhnery, the lands, but cho people, with their laws and | materialism,comercialism and selfish- Street Commissioner. tind us lower, do not buy from us. We abso- Ladies’ and Children’s Cloaks, Golij}eustoms. were annexed; and by the welll ness, Little by little the old Ameri- Bia = s lutely guarantee that our goods are what we 3 ee and Seis Burs, Sule wee a Da a ot nas, abere ane nud canisth will disappear and the nation CP eaecen: Tene e ee be and will give Uhe service etc. For three daysonly, Nov. 14 to 16, | customs rez 2 z Pedro ude PT Re Nooor ace Cashi we say Lhey ore penne? i 7| were enacted for the government of the ter- | Will enter upon the cycle of plutocracy Sent Wednesday morning occurred the | ritory.” « | described by Aristotle and so graphi- |. Cashier per! % wedding of Raymond Bellheumer and] The law of nations is apparently on| cally exhibited by Froude in his his- ; y, Ww q PERRAT J | L I , Miss Clara ic teat at the resideace | which Judge Estee rests his dicision. | tory of Julius Caesar. Lumbermen S$ Bank ied e s i of Rev. Father Gamache. The bride These and a whole wilderness of F : ng to the language quoted,the sod g Pe a and groom were attended by Wilham pases aeab ty Se! {Similar things are inevitable, as it Of Grand Rapids, Minn GSLSLSLSLVSLSLESLVSES SPSL: ~ Montcalm and Miss Maggie Mont-|@22e¢xation of the islands to the Unit- pepins'ta me tinlessthacomine sabia - 7 ‘ cal T ‘acti arti tates did not operate to change in GAN oy ; \ ; ate it ae appapge nt! art Ra are|/ed S| f : 8 which cannot well be delayed beyond We wish to ¢all the attention of farm- both we hown in Grand Rapids,| any manuer the tegal status of the another year or two, shall upset the ' ers and others to the fact that our where they will reside. Congratula- country or its people. It may have] “full dinner pail” in time to prevent Sa Oe mill suse eee of Prairie river rs aa robbed them of the character which|a reversal of judgment before indust- mgs 16 boy sa dally operation. Mr. C. P. Murphy and Leo Ball of | Duluth, are taking in the hunting sea- son in this vicinity. Mr. Murphy was formerly a teacher in our public school, but has since that time been’ admitted to the bar and is now practicng law incompany with Mr. Ball. They are visiting at the home of Mr. andj Mrs. John Dolph, As wiil be seen by the ad. in an- other column, Mr. R. W. Heideman will next week open a harness shop in the building now occupied by George Booth as a cigar shop. Mr. Heideman is a harnessmaker of many years ex- perience, and all work entrusted to him will receive his immediate and most careful attention. Mrs. Ely will be at the Northern Hoiel, Deer River, Tuesday and Wed- nesday, Nov. 13 and 14, with a line of Millinery, Ladies’ and Children’s Cloaks, Golf Capes-and Skirts, Furs, Silk Waists. ete. Closing out prices on all Millinery, Divine services wiil be held by the Ven. T. H. M. Villiers Appleby, M. A., D. D.. Archdeacon of Duluth, in the court house, Grand Rapids, on Sunday the 18th of November, 1900, at 10 o’clock a.m. ‘There will be a celebration of the Holy Communion at all morning services, and a_hberal offertory 1s requested at all services. Our Growth in Numbers, The figures showing the population of the United States at the time the ceusus for this year was taken disclose that the increase for the past decade Was not as great as for the preceding ten years. Our population at present 0, of which 74,627,907 is in This will be the basis on which representation in the popular branch of congress and in the elector- a) college will have to be arranged in the coming short session ofcongress. The other portion of the 76,000,000 of inhabitants are in the territories (in- eluding Hawaii)—1,667,813, The ag- gregate gain in population in the de- ¢ade has been 13,225,464, which is at the rate of about 21 per cent. This is the smallest proportionate increase in inhabitants in the whole history of the country. in the decade ending with 1890 the gain was a small frac- tion Jess than 25 per cent, and it was 30 percent in the ten years ending with 1880, Inthe previous decade, that which covered the war of seces- sion, the gain was only 22.63 per cent, which was vhe lowest rate of increase the states. ! stitute any national status whatever in Judge Estee says they possessed be- fore being absorbed in the United States of ‘a free, enlightened state, possessing all the attributes of sover; eignty,” but it evidently did not sub- the place of the former sovereignty. This nay be good international law; but it represents the most wretched description of international and na- tional ethics, It means, if 1t means anything, that a people may be _total- ly deprived ot their national sovereign- ty, ina word, of their freedom, with or without their consent, in masner other than by act of war, and be left a national derelict, until such time as the nation with which their tuture destinies are to be linked shall see fit to define their status by the enact- ment of laws. If we are about to enter upon a colonial policy, it is quite as well for our success in fthe new undertaking that such a doctrine as this appears to be shall be speedily disowned by the people of the United States, If we rial despotism shall have become too firmly seated to be deposed. | This isnot a very cheerful horo- scope. Fortunately for my own peace of mind, it dues not, in my opinion, represent a final condition. This | world has seen many eddies in the stream of progress but the waters have moved onward afser each delay. If after all the great republic is, un- happy, not fated to realize the hopes that millions have dared to indulge for her, a8 the worid’s final liberation from social, industrial and political tyrannies, yet her very failure, after so many glorious achievements, would clothe with firmer purpose and inspire with nobler hope the néxt attemps by civilization to accomplish its divinely appointed mission.—Duluch Herald CHARLES A. TCWNE. Duluth, Nov. 7, 1900. R. 8. Crandall Coming. The Herald-Review is in receiptof a letter from our old izen. R. §. are about to invite other peoples on this continent or elsewhere to seek an- nexation to the United States, we must, if we hope to have our invita- tion respected, withdraw this doctrine, and that speedily. The Cuban people are about to determine their future national state through the agency of a constitutional convention, How much less likely it 1s that the people would decree that their future lies in the direction of an integral part of the great American union with this threat of national extinction hanging over them than if they understood that by the fact of their declaring in favor of annexation they would thereby be- come invested with all the rights, privileges and immunities of Ameri- can citizenship. Judge Estee may be right in his understanding of American constitu- tional laws, the country will not accept any such doctrine until it has received it fiom as well as of international law, but the highest judicial sourée in the land. And even if the United States supreme court should determine that that doctrine is right under the laws and constitution of the United States, it still remains the prerogative “of the people of the United States to do with reference to such a decision as_ they did regarding the Dredd Scott dicision —repudiate it. It appears on its face to embody a principle of national con- duct that no man American, no mat- ter how profoundly he believes in ex- since the government was founded 990, as will be seen, drops below this Mark. Pe Crandall, stating that he will be in Grand Rapids from Nov. 12 to 19 in- clusive, and be prepaired to take care of all kinds of photographic work. Mr. Crandall is too well known here to make any further notive necessary, as our people know that he does noth- ing but first class work. He will be Jocated in the millinery parlors of Mrs. M. Brooks. Summons. STATE OF MINEESOTA, } County oF Trasca. j District Court—Vifteent Judicial District, LENA NORMAN, Plaintiff, VERSUS JOHN NORMAN, Defendant. The State of Minnesota, To the above nam- ed defendant: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the Plaintiff in the above entitled action, a copy of which is hereto attached and herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer to said complaint on the subsctiber, at his office in the Village of Grand Rapids, in said Coun- Wy. of Itasca within thirty days after the ser- vice of this summons upon a exclusive of the day of such service; and if | % you fail to answer the said complaint within the time aforesaid, the Plaintiff in this action will ap- to the Court forthe relief demanded hh sald complaint. i Dated August 29th A. D. 1900, FRANK F. PRICE, ee eee peprhey, a * rand Rapids’ Itasca County, Minn . Residence Leland avenue, 9). Nest ToJohn Norman Defendant: You will please take notice that. the ‘Com- plaint hus this day beer duly filed in the office of the Olerk of District Court at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, Dated this Ist day of October, 1900, PRANK I. Price, : Plaintifl’s Attorney. pansion, ought to be willing to see in- corporated in the political philosophy underlying the institutions of this country. ; : au Riek eek 3 aT EEE The mill has a < rapa- v y city of 35,000 per day and all orders receive. prompt attention. LE. Anderson & Son a 4 i: Pioneer Store. THOSE WHO KNOW US Best will be quick to note the dollar notes they can save on our note-worthy offers. We have new fall goods tn every department and would be pleased to have you call and look them over. AnImmense Line of . KUH. NATHAN & FISHER CO, Fall and Winter | CLOTHING. , NONE BETTER. PRICES WAY DOWN. JOHN BECKFELT. Subscribe for the Herald-Review. — $2 per year. r \ <= SST are Sea eee “Dress is of great im; tance to the first impression we make upon others.” : | —

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