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rs cad Revids Mreratde'ieview' ‘AND RAPIDS POSTOFFICE HOURS: kc days from 8 o'clock a. m. to @ fice open wi $200 p.m. days, open 11:00.a, m, to 12:50 p. m., and from 2:00 bv. . to YD, Trains going west arrive Mail Closes 11:30 a, m. » arrive 2:52 p. m. a.m. Mail Is close 20 minuets before arrival of ail mal vrains. 0. H. Strtson, P. h City and _ Vicinity. P. Munson came up from Min- eapolis yesterday. Marshal McClusky of Deer River is wo today. \. A. Kremer was down from Shev- the week. was born to Mr. and Mrs. i Murray on Saturday last. C.'T. Glover will have bis pool and reom ready Yor business on ot lin the A son Powers returned to Grand s after an absence of several was in the village ved on the noon noea polis. of the M. E. church will an apron sale and stpper on y night, Dee. 3. have kR. Baumbach, of Wadena, passed through here Monday ou his to C Lake. P. Crane will preach at-La- rie next Sunday Dec. 2av2 p, m, ad of at 3 as heretorcre. Grant was down from Cass terday. Le reports business vod in the reservation Lown, P. ball last Thursday at all was well attended and joyed by the knights and their friend: A number of Grand Rapids people | attended the glove contest at Deer | ving evening he-| t and Jim McCatffe- y. ‘Phe event was declared a draw. | Mrs. E. M. Pratt of Minneapolis, yother of Attorney C.-L Pratt ar- rived today on a visit. Mr. Pratt is ll contined to his room at the hos- but he is reported as improving. | 8. Lofberg e erder of iron fo ge today and re will be r sets to receive his the Prairie river in 2 week the new) dy for use. ul C. Merritt, president of; he Ita Mercantile company, with 1 family Saturc for their winter home at dena, California.—Hibbing Tribune. Misses Maggie. MeDonald and Susie} “y have returned from Grandj s, and are again numbered with} ihe force at the Motel Superior.—| Hibbing Tribune. J. 2. Donohue was iu Bemidji the; first of th ek, and secured an or-} ier from Judge Holland, who is hold- | urt there, appuinting referees lis contest Case. vost, G. A. R. will give} 1 on thetven- | 20, insteab of Christ- rinnlly advertised. will give a ball on} eir pew hall, Hi nasset school house is near- mpletion, and in a few days] s will be occupied. Cohasset has san to feel proud of its educational | tor besides having the best | ructors it has gne of the finest! ings in Itasca coenty. fili Nisbett nects to starb out! on the first of January to make his iil tour of the Jumbering camps. | has this year, the fin yelry ever brought into! sounty, and he has such a large | k that he must sell, and in a case of that kind Will will clear up his} < even if be has to sell ata loss. the SLO ifis Christmas goods are arriving Gaily. J. P. O’Donnell’s delivery horse took a spin up Houghtoa avenue and made a circuit arouud two or three ks on Tharsday. When he. final-; ly stopped thesleigh thab he had; +a hitched to scattered all over | ‘The team of George Moore of | irie also ran away at the same; breaking tie wagon beyond! WAL, repair. The last Thanksgiving turkey rattle of the season was held at Henry Logan's place on Wednesday evening, when over one hnndred dollors’ worth | of fowls were disposed of. Sam Cable supplied the birds and they were us Gue alot as has ever been displayed iu the village. Cable and Matt Schumacher m drove over into Cass county tke first of the week and bought seven head of ‘ine steers from Farmer Wilson, Io is a thirty-five mile trip and they both felt that they had been some lace when they got home, but they pad the satistaction of getting some wuly good beef critters, Veter St, Martin has been in St. jict’s hospital for two weeks treatment for an injured eye. Row. nits stcred x Dr. ees 8 the sight | @ patriot. ‘a German. working ab the Brost.mill at | riugashingle strack him in} s pe vighteye and had it not been for | ‘ue limely and skilfull treatment ad V5 | Mrs. R. P. Boynington of Duluth ‘returned to her home yesterday after ‘spending the week in Grand Rapids with friends. Mrs. Boyington is gen- eral agent for the Penn Mutual Life InSurance company of Phiiadelphbia. "This is‘an old line. reliable compauy that insures both men and women at thesame rates. There are a great’ j many policies of the compauy held by Grand Rapids people and mary others coutemplate taking out policies in the near future, The Hamlin Wissard Oil company, W.H. Gallagher, manager, are oc- cupying the boards at Village hall this week. While they sell medicine duriog the performance, it is said that they put up avery good show, and thus far they have drawn a large crowd. They expect to remain all the week and the public 1s invited not only to buy their medicine, but to haye a good jaugh during the evening. On Friday, December 7, the young ladies Sodality society will give a concert. at Nillage hull. ‘Tbe mem- bers have been dving considerable re- hearsing, but the program is pot yet made up and therefore cannot be pro- duced. The bill, however, will be an elaborate one and the promoters of he event are sanguine that the'r en- tertainment will be one of the most popular ever rendered in Grand Rap- ids. here will’ be vocal and instru- mental music and a chorus of twenty voices. Seats are now on sale at the Itasca drug department. Ad ission, 35 cents for reserved seats, 25 cents, and 15 cents for cvildren. ‘he Siberian Raliway, ‘The British commercial agent in Rus- sia, Mr. Cooke, has just issued a very optimistic report on the great trans- Siberian railway. Siberia, he points out, is no longer @ mere Russian penat settlement, but a young country with a great future before it. ‘The railway has already diffused hundreds of thou- | sands of settlers over the vast domain and is opening gold deposits which it has not hitherto been possible to work at a,profit, Stberia already ranks among the leading gold-producing countries and other important indus tries are expecied now to develop rap- idly. In many respects the history of Siberia is curiously like that of Aus: tralia, WILEELMINA’S HUSBAND. Prince, Henry Will Not Cut Any Figure in Netherland Polities, The future prince consort of Fol- land, Prince Henry, will not be an important personage politically. In fact, he will have no excuse for mix- ing in politics if hé had the desire to do so. He may share the queen’s pop- ularity by being just the good hus- band of his wife, an exemplary head of society and, above everything else, The parliament, the cabi- net, the council of state (in which the regency was vested) for all purposes of government exercise legislative and executive power. They are the root, stem and branch, The queen is the flower. Her husband has no place in the constitution and would be ill-ad- vised indeed to try to create one, says a foreign exchange. Although Prince Henry bears a high rank in the German army, he is not The proud boast of his house is that they are Wends—that is | to say, Slavs. Nothing annoyed the j late comte de Paris more than to read in the papers that he was the son of a German princess. He claimed that she was a Wend. As.a child, she | Was called by her erudite tutor “the queen of the Wends.” ‘The grand ; dukes of Mecklenburg-Schwerin have also been from time immemorial Sb | princes of the Wends. The high sense of dignity shown by their daughters in not changing their religion, as they might a garment, is surely no German characteristic. MAKE GOOD DETECTIVES. Many Women Seem Adapted to the Work of Ferreting Out Crimes. _ In New York city and the surround- ; ing towns almost 100 women are en- gaged in detective work; in Chicago the number of women similarly em- ployed is quite large, says the Chron- icle. A large percentage of these wom- en are employed in the big stores, where shoplifting is so commonly practiced, that the head of one large establishment said: “We could no more do without a detective in this store than we could do without a model to show off our gowns.” ‘The dodges of shoplifters are innumera- ble. Some wear long capes and slip lengths of silk or passementerie, their arms; others wear outer skirts with long slits concealed by the gath- ers, so that they can slip their thefts into pockets in an underdress known as a “kickshirt.” Handkerchiefs and gloves are tucked into muffs and bod- ices, and, worse than all, children are. pressed into the service. One success- ful woman thief tucks lace and em- broidery and any knick-knacks she ean lay hands on down the backs of quisitely dressed; others instruct their small daughters to take cult omen J required by law, was duly approved. feathers and handkerchiefs under: her two little children, who are ex- | OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGS ROARD OF County Commissioners. ee ITASCA COUNTY. ADJOURNED MEETING. Auditor officere, Itasca County Minn. Oct, Sist. 1900. Pursuant to adjournment the board of county commissioners met at the Auditor’s office this 81st day of October, 1900. Roll call, Commissioners present, Commis- sioners Brooks, Lang and Buell, Chairman Rellis being absont.it was duly moved and seconded’ that Commissioner Brooks be elected chairman pro tem. The motion was carried. The minutes of the last meeting wero read and adopted. Theeommittes apoointed to have a sewer built at the county hospital, reported that they bad entered into a contract with T. MH. Hounessy todo said work for the sum of | $04.00. It being the time and place sot for the hoar- ing upon the application of William Hollihan, for a licence to sell intoxicating liquors Jn his place of business. in the town of Bass Brook, the application was taken under considera- tion, There being no objections to the grant- ing of said licence, and he having paid the amount by law required, the application was granted and lieence ordered issued. The bond given with William Hollihan as prisetpal, and Thomas B. Cook and John Costelio as assureties in the sum of 22,000 as T. H. Honnesscy came before the board and submitted a proposition to put ina system of water works in the county hospital for the sum of $256.60. On motion duly made and seconded, Commissioner Powers was appoint- ed a committee of ono to prepare plans and specifications for a s;stem of water works at the county hospital, the. cost not to exceed $256.00, The matter of building a bridge across Prai- rie river on the Diamond mine read was taken ander consideration. After a careful | consideration of the mutter, it was moved and seconed that a committee of three be ap- pointed to have plan ious fora bridge to be built across on the Diamond mine road, and that the committee bo empowered to receive bids and enter into a contract for the construction of thy bridge at said place. Upon the report of the Anditor, wolf bounty acconat was $9 overdraw and that the state was not paying 1ts portion of said fund for the reason that the mouey | iated for said fund was exausted. joper Buell offered ihe following resolution and moved its aduption: ~ Be it hereby resolved that the County A tor de and is hereby instructed to discoutinve the payment of bounties upon wolves from and after the tirst day ot December, 1909 and | er order by the board of county | commissioners, The ‘resolution duly seconded and upon roll call was unanitnously adopte2. The tolowing claims and accounts wero audited and allowed as follows: : Angus McDonald, beard to Freestone that the road crew . cee +3 £25 and printing ballots...0....- .-es.e 2539-95 | T. H. Hennessey, mbing at | court house 52 Frank Fre road ... 8 62 Howard Stewart, 21 a on road 4259 24 00 James Clark, 4 and 14 days work Big Fork road 900 Howard Stewart, 4 and days work | on Big Fork road... 9 co} Fast Bloom, 4 Big Fork road. 909 Fiank Clark, 9 days work on Big Pork road . .. 1800 Gast Bloo { road 2 50 | James Clar road : 8 00 George Rancor, catting and grabbing road at Deer River -- 133.60 Jasper Wasson, 5 days work with team 16 00 15 69 | ALD. _ per diem. 21 20 | ©. A. Buell: comm ®&ce w: missioners yer diem. 240 | W.J.&H.D! Powers, sundry hard | ware for county hospital. 117 Pioner Press Co, sundry blanks and tax receipts. 54 5) W.J.&H. D. Power, saudry hard- ware for road Crow.---.......s sees ee 3.35 'T. H. Heupessey, putting in sewer at | county hospital... £4 00 Joo King, 14and !s d: vio PivOr rod. .ie.:..cseneesesdaverttece 29 00 3.8. Leary, installing telophone at De oRussells residence. 10 00 Andrew Olson, 18 days labor and 1 boat ... oie TB 00 R. A. McAllister, srftnoss state vs Jacobson. oa 192 James Manson, juror state ys Jacob- Elmer Brook, jaror state vs Jacobson. 118 Frank 8. Lang, 1 day commissioner $8 Milage: stew Aho seme 55 $2 29 Grand Rapids Magnet, Satire publish ing proceedinge and ballets... L. Brown, juror state vs Jucobson. 12} 'T. Bailoy. juror state vs Jacobson. 12} A. Frasier. juror state vs Jacobson i13/ Geo, D. Bernard & Co. registers of | births and deaths and suddry blanks i Wn. Wietzel. juror state vs Jacobson TSA. Meliugh, board of paupers Sep- ‘ember and October-. W.J.&H. D. Powers, Sundry hard: ware for court house. John Berg. fees in matter of appoint- ing commissioner in district No 2... (W.H. Clark.7 and thre-fourth nies work on Prairie river road. Charles Anderson, witness fecs state ys Jacobson.. BA O'Donnell, ‘jgeue. state vs ranch thing that is put in their ve aa D i make clever | | Welis-Stone Mercantile Co | CW. sie “Harry Wallace, two days team on Prairie river road............0....5 450 Tom Wullace, ten days work on Prai- rio river road... bein severe 2000 Harry Wallaco, “work on “youd and onrd to road crew.. 26 42 Thomas Knight, 2 and % deen work ou Prairie river road......... ni 438 There boing no further: “pusiness the board adjourned. E. J. FARRELL. Auditor. JOHN RELLIS. Chairman. H. L. Shepherd of Duluth, a gentic- man who makes and sells maps of Minnesota, has been doing business in the viilage this week. Mr. Shep- herd has recently issued a map of Ttasca county that is said to be the the must complete yet offered the public. PROBAT#H NOTICE. e STATE OF MINNESOTA, ss. Counry or Trasca. | j Probate Court— In the matter of the estate o? J..D. Powers, an Insane Person. ‘TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: You will please take novice that all persons holding claims against J.D. Powers are re- quired to file verified. itemized statements of their accounts with the und gned on or before Saturday, December L 100, or be for- ever bared. RED A. KT Ga Nov, 1i-Dee. 8. Subscribe for the Herald-Review. $2 per year. Summons. STATE OF MINNESOTA, } fos et Plaintiff, DY, Versus Harvey L, Morrison and William Giles, ge- dants. Tho State of Minnesota, To the above num- on defendants: are hereby summoned and required to th intiff in the filed in the Court of the 1 District. in and for the d State of Minnesot compl n Exchange mons upoa you, und if you tail to 2 iint Within the time ¢ on will upp r the said . the | to the Court | comp piniutif in t for the relief Gemanded in the complaint. SSHSSCSLETS SISSELES A PERFECT SHOE ee Bee POPULAR PRICE. THAT LADY. Who wears ROSE SHOES is . noticed as being Comfortably and Daintily sbod. KUSH-MATIC Branded into sole means a shoe which will be found light and cool in) Summer @ STEAL SESLGSOSZSOGY wOGS SOS OSLTL SLVTE GIGOSCOHLELSCSLEO BS cx) is DEVS GECVEIESS: iL | Dated September L3th, J 2 JRASS WELLER & CRA LER, @ Attorne) or Plaintif, % Exehange Building. Duluth, Mineesota. 8 Saath Sista io @ le O.R. AIKEN, Vice President. Asst. Cashier @ ) Lumbermen’s Bank (3 OfGrand Rapids, Mian F ESWSLSIGSWSOSOSLSLESD™ saserssacsestes BIST SVSLELGSE OM 1% Cur stock of Pall Goods is now yu to come in and inspect therm. aegnsesessces DSLSOCSOSSTS SVSLSVE are nol shop-worn, left-over st strictly new aud and we in- These ck, but iuclude in ub-to-date. They Ladies’ and Genl’s Underwear, Gent’s and Children,s Fine Shoes, Ladies’ Ladies’ Wrappers and Waisls, Llosiery, Corsets and Other F. Blankets, Quilis and Mackin ings, oods, £Ete. As to prices—we invite you to compare ours with those of other stores, and if you do not find us lower, do not buy from us. We adso- Jutely guarantee that our goods are what we represent them to be and will give the service we say they will WwW. I. PERRAULT. S26E VSVSSS: SISLEMSLS: aie eS PISLSLEDS: "SSS. PLSESE ¢ The mill has.a capa- cily of 35,009 per day all orders receive pb attention. We wish to call the attention of farni- ers and others to the fact that nygle mill just south of Pr bridge is now in daily operation. ea eur rie river = re Seas ee Detach VS SSIS le ea ae M 5 4 s <D z ESN NDE OA RS 4 ii Pioneer Store. “St is not every man ; 4 who can afiord to wear is: VI a shabby coat.” i ; par eee aa Sy / COLD WAVES. * Will Be Mo or Less Frequent : } : 4 From Now On. a 4 4 2 Y We have Overcoats, Ulsters, Fur, Coats, a is ~ Heavy Wool Suits, Mackinaws, 4 } ; Heavy Shirts, * i Heavy and Medium Underwear, ~ 5 Fascinators, Hoods, Mittens, ete., etc, u Special Attention Paid to Our Sheep Lined Coats, Underwear in all grades, Ladies’ Jackets, Suits, Golf Shawls, Capes, , Grocery Department = The-.best and freshest goods _to be had in the market. : Choice Apples by the Peck or Barrell. SUITS AND OVERCOATS FOR THE BOYS DOUGLAS AND QUEEN QUALITY SHOES |