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ao ee - | I have jnst received a | fine line of fall headwear, including some elegant outing hats and caps for ladies’ and children. ey Have! Fall and Winter Goods. Come in and See Them. | Johnson, The Taior. | BISSSBSLSESLSLESD G) GLSPSVSSSLSB SSSBSWSVELSIS' ce] % &) & Becorators... § Fresco Work and Si Painting a Specilaty to be First-Class. RIPAN'S TABULES Doctors find A Good Preseription For mankind Ten for five cents,at Druggists, Grocers, Restaurants, Saloons, News-Stands, General Stores ‘and Barbers Shops. " They banish pain, induce sleep, and prolong life. One gives relief! No matter what’s the matter, one will do you good. Ten samples and one thousand testi- monials sent by mail to any address on receipt of price, by the Ripans Chemical Co., 10.Spruce St., New York City, The Herald-Review © Does Good Printing a] ARE LED BY A WOMAN Mary Big Buffalo Urging Emigra- tion of Indians to Mexico. Declnred at Ghost Dance Recently That Great Spirit Had Told Her Indians Would Die of Small- } pox If They Did Not. One thousand or more Indians are | going to emigrate to Mexico just as soon as they can sell their lands in Oklahoma and Indian territory. It is | said that they will be led to this land ‘of promise by Mary Big Buffalo, de | scribed in the reports as the princess | of the redskins. Lately Mary Big Buffalo, a member of the Ponca tribe and ‘daughter of Black Coyote, went to the City of Mexico and called upom | President Diaz. Soon after her inter- view six other delegates from the Chickasaws, Cherokees, Creeks, Otoes, Kiowas, Comanches and other tribes arrived in Mexico City, and they, too, visited the Mexican president. Mary Big Buffalo came back and announced from her home on the Ponca reservae | tion that she had arranged to pur- chase 2,000,000 acres of land in the state of Chihuahua, where the Indi- ans could live in peace and happiness. Later the six delegates returned aud stated practically the same thing. Mary Big Buffalo is a full-bloo@, tall, dark-skinned, and with black eyes and dark hair. She is an excellent singer and speaker, well educated, and thor- oughly posted on. current events. She has traveled much, and those who have seen her say she is refined but ego- tistic. She speaks at Indian meetings | and dances. Her father, Black Coyote is a man of much influence among the Indians, and has served the govern- ment in several responsible offices. ‘The Ponca tribe lives 100 miles south | of Wichita, Kan. They are anxious to |leave. Recently at a Ponca ghost ; dance Mary. Big Buffalo appeared and | told her frenzied dancers she had vis- ‘ited the great spirit, and he told her | to urge the Indians to leave the United | States or they would die with the smallpox. It is stated. she will be | chosen priesteas of the united tribes when they arrive in Mexico, and will rule over them with the husband of | her choice, ‘ | Bea eit oii ine ey | WAR ON SHIRTWAIST GIRLS. \ Pa ale ‘IGELAUD & MeA LISTER § : Painters and 4 | St. Louis Priest Opposing Open Yokes | May Decline to Serve | Communion. | A battle royal is on between fash- jon and religion in the parish of the St. Liborius church, at Hogan and Morth Market streets, St. Louis. The: airect issues involved re network shirtwaists and the ho*’ communion. | The 100 pretty sodatity girls are on one side while on the other is Rev. Father G. A. Reis and nearly all the oider members of the parish. Father Reis says: “The young ladies of this sodality will have to quit wearing those ‘jig- ger-merrig’ waists with the funny business around the arms and shoul- ders or I will refuse to serve them communion. “The fashions are becoming entirely too vulgar. No self-respecting lady would appear in public in such im- | modest costumes. I intend to set an example to the young ladies of this parish, and if it is necessary to refuse you the sacraments I will do it to stop this vulgar fashion.” ‘The young women who are members of the parish and affect the tantaliz- | ing open yoke insist it is not vulgar | and say Father Reis is real mean, ana that they will go to another church. OLD MAIDS DUCK INTRUDERS. Married Women Invade Spinsters' Piente and Are Dipped in | the River. | The “Old Maids” of Winnebago coun | ty. IIL, held their annual picnic in Dun- | ning woods, near Davis Junction, the other day. There were 30 present, wha spent the morning feasting and discuss- ing the future possibilities of dissatis- faction and divorce. The afternoon was to have been given over to addresses and election of officers, but for the first time in the history of the “Old Maids’ club” intruders, composed of 12 married women, put in an appearance, The spinsters were frolicsome mairens, even when wrought up over the gros! indignity heaped upon them by mar ried women's invading their sacred meeting. They arose and fell upon the intruders. They seized and dipped them into the river. The fat ones from Holeomb were put into hammocks and tossed in the air. Their baskets were taken from them, and, hatless and for- lorn, the married sisters escaped from the “maids” and fled to the woods be- fore the insulted spinsters were through with them. The married wom- en say they will never again go unpro- tected into a nest of “old maids,” A Whopper by a Noble Red Man. | Yesterday, says the Wichita Eagle, Mr. Asbury Underwood,a Cherokee In- dian, exhibited in the Eagle office three jAull purple, cylindrical beads which he | says are part of those beads which William Penn gave to the Indians 218 | years ago in part payment for the wiate of Pennsylvania, A “Spouted” Coffin, . A mahogany coffin, bearing a gole monogram, gold-plated handles and elaborately chased with gold and silver, says the London Express, is among the pledges in the windows of a Cardifl pawnbroker, Automobile Hearse in Philadelphia, A Philadelphia undertaker has had | an automobile hearse constructed. POISON IN A WEARY BODY. Human Beings Are Subject to a Spee cles of'Self-Poisoning by the Eating of Game. The eating of “high” game is un- doubtedly attended with risks and the Poisonous effects are probably due to the toxins produced in the earlier | stages of the putrefactive process, Says the London Lancet. The advan- tage, of course, of hanging game is that the flesh becomes tender and decidedly more digestible than when it is quite fresh. The ripening proc- ess, however, may mean the elabora- tion of toxins. It has been stated that the production of the character- istic flavors of game is related direct- ly to the amount of sulphuretted hy- drogen or sulphur-alcohol set free, but it is rather repulsive to think that the delicate flavors of game is dependent upon that invariable prod- uce of decomposition of rotten eggs— | sulphuretted hydrogen. The smell } evolved during cooking of “high” | game is even more disgusting. yi Fresh game sometimes sets up mys- terious poisoning symptoms, which have been attributed to the face of the game having been overhurried and fatigued. Fatigue products, in- deed, have been separated from over- hunted game which when injected into a healthy animal have produced marked poisonous effects. There is no doubt that fatigue products under | certain circumstances are also elab- orated in the human: body and give rise to a species of self-poisoning, characteristic symptoms of which are headache, stupor and gastric and in- testinal pains. The flesh of over- driven cattle may prove poisonous from the same cause, This curious formation of poisonous products inthe flesh of animals through a state of terror or exhaus- tion is a question well worth consid- ering in relation to the wholesomeness of animal foods and emphasizes the importance of slaying animals intend- ed for food in the most humane way. THEY SUFFER NO PENALTY. Scores of Men Who Rob Banks Are Never Brought to the Bar of Justice. | “Alvord’s theft of $700,000 and Schreiber’s of $106,000,” said an expert accountant, according to the Philadel- phia Record, “go to show that in all business it is impossible to prevent die- honest men from stealing. No matter how thorough the auditing may be, no matter how closely the heads watch | those under them, every man who handles money can steal, with a reason- | able chance of escaping detection. That more such men don’t steal speaks well for human nature, but I must qual- ify this statement with the additional | one that many do steal and are caught, but their employers, while discharging them, do not make public their crimes. It isn’t charity which impels the em- ployers to do this, though; it is a fear of hurting the credit of the firm. “You can safely say that 90 per cent. of the thieving employes of Philadel- phia are not brought to justice. Usua!- ly they arrange to pay back their defal- cations on the installment plan. [know abachelor of 43 whoin his youth robbed the bank that employed him of $4,800, with which he speculated, hoping to make enough to marry. He lost all, was discovered and is still paying off, | out of a paltry salary, that debt of shame. I know the histories of scores of defaulters, and in every case the thefts were, in a way, innocently begun. The money was taken with the deter- | mination that it would be replaced.” | Quicksilver Flasks, The bottles or flasks used for trans- porting quicksilver are generally | made of boiler iron and are cylindrical in shape, about 12 inches in height | and four inches in diameter, with a screw plug inserted in one end. The capacity of a flask is 76% pounds and its weight about 14 pounds. Such flasks are used by all producers of quicksilver, and pass through the hands of various dealers till they reach the consumer. The total num- ber used in this country cannot be very large, as the total product last year of quicksilver in the United | States was but 28,879 flasks, and the | same flask can be used again. and again till it gets too rusty inside. A flask can easily last 25 years. We un- derstand most of those now in use are made abroad, but an American firm also has made them. Most of the sec- ond-hand fiasks can be bought for 25 or 30 cents apiece. New Form of Phonograph, Among the exhibits at the Paris | exposition was a phonograph, invent- ed by Valdemar Poulsen, a Danish en- gineer, which uses a wire-wound in- stead of a wax-covered cylinder. The wire is of steel, and over it, in place | of the usual stylus, passes a small electro-magnet connected with a tel- ephone transmitter and battery. The | sound waves cause a variation in the intensity of the electro-magnet, and the magnet, acting upon the wire passing beneath it, leaves a perma- | nent impression upon the latten Upon reversing the action the wire reacts on the magnet and correspond- ing sounds are transmitted by the tel- ephone. In order to obliterate the magnetic trace on the cylinder it is only necessary to revolve it under the magnet while this is subjected to a continuous current. Discontented Turks, The.number of discontented Turks must be enormous. Forty-eight thou- | sand have been exiled during the last il years. To these must be added those who have fied and those who are related to the exiles. During the last five years more than $4,888,000 has been spent by the sultan in try- ing to pereusde the fugitives to re- turn. j | was Laundred. atthe _ (aa%p Itasca Laundry and T haue just taken my full dress suit to Tom McAlpine, the Cleaner, to be cleaned Grand Rapids, - Minn. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office. Dulut linn., October 26th, 1960. Notice is here with the iven that in compliance ash) Territor; ¢ Land States by net Carrie Coffron of ‘Deer . state of Minnesota, office her sworn se of the ction No. 6. n township and will s gon. } extended of August 4, 180 River. county oF 1 nd nw’; of M49 N, rang r proof to more valuable y day of ame: y. Caldwell and dd Che James And all of whom scribed. lands are requ te aims in this office on or before said 10th day of Junuary. 1901. W. E. Cutkry, Register. MACDONALD & SH. ‘Attorneys. Palladio Building, Duluth. Herald-Review Nov. 3Dec. 8. This is a candy cigar—its just as good to me as el is to papa and only costs me one fifth as much! SAME STOCK AS‘SEAL OF MINNESOTA’ KUHLES & STOCK. ST. PAUL ,MAKERS, weakens the body and de- grades the mind. It saps the nervous strength that is the source of all health, and perverts the functions of every organ. Because of its stubborn nature, it is often called incurable. This is not true. There is one medicine that never fails to check the nervous spasms and give new strength to the entire system. “My boy had epileptic fits for three ears. Doctors failed to help him and he got so bad that he had ten spasms in one week. We began giving him Dr. Miles’ Nervine in May, and by “November he was cured. Mrs. B, M. TINDALI Hastings, Neb. Dr. Wiles’ © Nervine allays nervous irritation, stops spasms, restores di- gestion and mental vigor. Sold by druggists on guarantee. Dr. Miles Medical Cc., Elkhart, Ind. SUMMONS. STATE OF MINNESOTA, } ss. County or Irasca. Distriet Court. Fifteenth Judicial District. Frank O Johnson, Plaintiff. rs, vs. | Nathaniel Churchill, Hannah Churchill. John R. Howes, Ada B. Howes, Silas O.Lum, Leon E. Lum and ¥reder- ick A. Powers. Defendants. 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 ‘ifteenth Judicial district, ‘n and for the said county of Itasca stute of Minnesota, and to swerve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber. at bis office in in the village of Grand Rapids in said count; with‘n twenty days after the service of this summons upon you. exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail toanswer the said complaint within the time aforesaid. the laintf in this action will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the comtlaint. Dated October 8th 1900. FRANK F. Price. Plainf's Attorney. Grand Kapids Minn, | | W. E. MARTIN, MANAGER Irasca Lanp Co. PINE AND FARMING LANDS Bought and Sold. SETTLERS LOCATED. Choice Farming Lands for Sate on Long ‘Time and Easy ‘Terms. GRAND RAPID, - - MINN A. B. CLAIR, Register of Deeds of Itasca County Mineral Pine and Farming Lands Pine Stumpage Bought, ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. Itasca County Abstract Office ‘ KREMER & KING, Proprietors. ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE, 5 Conyeyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, GRAND RAPIDS, : : MINN W.E. NEAL, Dealer in Pine and Farming Lands. The tinest List of Agricultural and Grazing Lauds in the County. The Most Excellent Sites for Manu facturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Corres, ondence Solicited. Grand Rapids, - - Minn “The : Dudley” Dray and Express Line L. W. HUNTLEY, Manager. Package Delivery a Specialty (WOOD FOR SALE Leave Orders at Ponti’s Confectionery Store or Kremer& King’s Office. Ul PROBATE NOTICE, STATE OF MINNESOW®A, } , ss. County OF ITASCA. j Probate Court— In the matter of the estate of J. D. Powers, an Insane Person, Ne POT EDH Re RAT CONCERN: seat ‘ou will please take notice that all persons: holding claims against J. D. Powers are re- juired to file verified. itemized statements their accounts with the undersigned on , before Saturday, December 15, 1000, or he fors ever bared. FRED A. KING. Gua Nov. 17-Dee. 8, pomernecrars pies’