Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, March 2, 1901, Page 4

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Shah ls alaahashashashaalaaleaiedladlasiesiaieaiaaiesiaslaiiasa deaiedhesiadiadiadbetiaieshsslediashadiachsahaiesieslashisheiinslashsallsalaiied gE eA eae ee ee eA eee i ee ee ae ea ae Me te ae ae ae te Grand Rapids Bottling Works MANUFACTUREKS OF Cabonated Drinks of all Kinds Pure Orange Cider Sarsaparilla Nervebrew Pure, Sparkling Seltzer Water. Pop—all fllavors Cream Soda Ginger Ale Limeade Lemon Soda Raspberry Cream Only Pure Fruit Juices and Haile Lake Spring Water Used in the Manufacture of Our Goods. Try our “LIMADE” the Great Non-Intoxicant Health Drink. Orders Promptly Filled. SB ea: eae ae ee ee ea ae ee tae ae ae ae ae a a A Trial Order Solicited. 0 ESR a SIE ME a a a a a a SRE ARE A ae Re a a ae ae ae aE NE ae ae ae ae ae ae Ea a Atece John Hepfel’s The Best Lincof . . Wines, Liquors - w Cigars CAN BE HAD, Filso Have on Tap and in Bottie the Celebrated DULUTH BREWIMG CO°S MOOSE BRAnu BEEKS. FREE LUNCH ALWAYS SERVED Sample Room and Beer Fiall, Cone THIRD ST. and,HOFFMAN AVE. Xy pring ant Summer Suitings Are now in and ready for inspection. showing this year are the latest manufac’ Europe and cheese. are thousands of them to shades, styles, patterns. pri d weights. of goods but only only one kind of | workm E rment that » and workmanship. FRANZ. The samples we are of America and elect from in. all ave many kinds | A. E. WILDER, Prop. Sample Room and Livery in Connection. Headquarters for Lumbermen. FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT. Special Attention Given to Transient Trade. GRAND RAPIDS. Hotel Gladstone GEO. BOOTH, Manufacturer of Fine 1) GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. SaaS SS SS See SS “Bootn’s Cigars” of the finest selected stock by Minnesota. 3 For sale everywhere. Call for them. Cigars Have achieved an excellent reputation all over Northern -They are made experienced workmen in Mr Booth’s own shops here, and under his personal supervision. ‘This insures the utmost cleanligess and care in manufacture. a a ee ee ee BSBeSSeSseses abe ey yb} Published Every Saturday. By E. C. KILEY TWO DOLLARS A YEAR IN ADVANCE. Six Months. $1 00} Three Months.......50e Entered in the Postoffice at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, as Second-Class Jatter. —* Official Paper of Itasca County, Villages of Grand Repids and Deer River aud Town of Grand Rayids. DRUG-TAKING HABIT. Laxatives Swallowe’ in A!most Infinite Variety. Besides the abuse of drugs in rheu- matism and its sad results, anoiuer serious abuse of the same kind was discussed at the session of the Interna- tional Medical.Congress at Paris, says the New York Post. This is the pres- ent fashion of taking laxative medi- cine in large quantities and in almost infinite variety. Several distinguished from Germany attributed in | specialists to this habit, which is common nearly the whole world, the several intestinal af | unknown before our generation and | which are spreading. One of these, a muco-membranous affection of the intestines, is a most puzzlying patho- | logical condition. A number of phy- sicians attributed the present preval- ence of constipation, which is prim- arily responsible for the new fashions in laxatives, to an insufficiency of fat | in the modern dietary. The frying pan has gone out of fashion, to the benefit of digestion, but ways and | means of supplying the fats that used to be consumed with the fried mater- ial have not been forthcoming. The present generation is distinctly an eater of sweets, not of fats, but while the former supply the heat that would be obtained from the fats, they do not supply certain lubricant qualities which are so important for the proper performance of the intestinal func- tions. The use of the milk fats, that is, butter and cream as well as milk itself was recommended, as this form of fat is somewhat delectable. The use of the vegetable oils, olive oi] and the like, in larger quantities than at present was also recommended. It was pointed out that the southern nations have learned to take their quantum of fats in this way despite their warm- er climate, which makes fat generally less acceptable as food. It was re- ported from several sources that in many painful conditions of the stom- ach olive oil gave great relief. Skill of the Cameo Cutter. The cameo cutter’s occupation jg very exacting. He can put in oaly a few hours’ work at a time as a usual thing, because of the tensicn on his nerves, A quavering hand may be re- sponsible for the single stroke which will spoil a week’s work. He must have an eye almost like a microscupe, and a very delicate touch; he must be an artist in soul, and as skillfel a craftsman as is a watchmaker; he must know how to model and éraw, and he must have a knowledge o chemistry, sc as to remove ending spots. The work is executed in en many kinds of hard or : stones, but essentially the cha'ceucnie variety of quartz and on shells. Royal Corpse Awaiting Burial It is said that since the y 1760 a custom has prevailed in Spain whick prohibits the burial of a dead king before éhe death of his successor, + iate King Alfonso XII., therefore. lieg embalmed on a marble slab in a vault of the Escurial, covered over with 3 sheet. On the death of his son the present young king, the body will be removed and buried with great vomp by the side of its ancestors in tye Hs- curial chapel, that of Alfonso XiIq, taking its place gn the marble stab. An Honest Medicine For LaGrippe. George W. Waitt, of South Gardin- er, Me., Y “T have had the worst cough, cold, chiNs and lagrippe, and ;| have taken lots of trash of no acconnt but profit to the vendor. Chamber- lain’s Cough remedy is the only thing tbat has done any good whatever. IL have used one bottle of 1t and the chills, colds and grip have all Jeft me. I congratulate the manufacturers of an honest medicine.” For sale by Itasca Mercantile Co. Died for Her Puppies. A large barn in the rear of Miss Mary Wicken’s dwelling at 817 East Washington street, was discovered in a mass of flames, says the Indianapolis News, and when the department ar- rived the structure was in ruins. A water spaniel dog which was in the yard at the time of the fire ran fran- tically about and finally into the burn- ing barn after several pups. She made | a gallant effort to rescue the puppies, | but was suffocated before she could drive them out. If troubled with rheumatism, give Chamberlain’s Pain Balm atrial. It will not cost you a cent if it does no good. One application will relieve the pain. It also cures sprains and bruiser in one-third the time required by any other treatment. Cuts, burns | frostbites, quinsey, pains in the sides | and chest, glandular and other swell- ings are quickly cured by applying it. Every bottle warranted. Price 25 and 50 cts. Itasca Mercantjle Co. / Grand ‘fRepids ‘Mereta-"IReview ‘vylumes toa nicety, Solentists Are Mappy. Jean Baptiste Andre Dumas, the eminent French physiologist ang chemist, the hundredth anniversary of whose birth occurred on July 14, thus stated the problem of happiness in ar oration delivered before an assemblage. of French naturalists at Clermont, in 1876: “If I seek in my memory after the picture of true happiness, I find ir not in the potentate who exercises 4 great power over others, nor in the man of wealth, who controls all tha luxuries and pleasures money can buy, but in the man of science, who de- votes his life to discovering the secrets of nature, and finding out new truths,” A Good Cough Medicine For Children. “Thaye no hesitancy in recommend- ing Chamberlain's Cough Remedy,” says F. P. Moran, a well known and popular baker of Petersburg, Va. ;**We have given it to our children when troubled with bad coughs, also | whooping cough, and it has always given perfect satisfaction, 1t was re- commended to me by a druggist as the best cough medicine for children as it contained no opium or other harmful drug,” Sold by Itasca Mer- cantile Co. Dr. Temple's Temptation. When Dr. Temple, the present Pri- mate, was head master of Rugby school he paid a visit to Dr, Benson, his predecessor in the See of Canter- bury, who was at that time the mas- ter of Wellington College. One after- noon the two went for a stroll througk the woods behind Heath Pool. Benson n to point out to his companion yivan beauties of the place, calling vis especial attention to a magnificent ech tree. For a while Temple ad- it in silence, then suddenly nx, “I can’t resist the temptation. ‘ook out!” made a rush for the tree, od, ere his amazed friend could grasp % ituation, had serambled up the and seated himself among the hes. Then the two future Arch- ishops, leoking at each other, broke nto a burst of schoolboy merriment.— olden Penny. Twice Proyen. From the Vindicator, ton, N.C. The editor of the had occasion to test the efficacy of Cnamberlain’s Pain Balm twice with the most remarkable results in each case. First with rheumatism in tbe shoulder from which he suffered most excruciating »ain for ten days, which was relieved with two applications of Pain Balm, rubbing the parts afflicted and realizing instant besefit and en- tire relief ina very short Lime. Sec- ond, in rheumatism in thigh joint almost prostrating him with severe pain, which was relieved by two ap- plications, rubbing with the liniment ; tree from pain. For Mercantile Co, The Irl R. Hicks 1901 Almanae Whatever may be said of the scientific cxuses upon which the Rey. Irl R. Hicks bases his yearly fore- Reasts of storm and weather, it is a re- markable fact that specife warnings of every great storm, flood, cold wave and drouth, have been plainly printed in his now famous Almanac for many hx ars. The latest startling proof of | this facet was the destruction of Gal- yeston, Texas, on the very day named by Prof. Hicks in his 1900 Almanac, as one of disaster by storm along the gulf coasts. The 1901 Almanac, by far the finest, most complete and | beautiful yet published, is now ready. This remarkable book of near two hundred pages,. splendidly illustrated with charts and half-toned engray-! ings, goes as a premium to every sub- scriber who pays one dollar a year for Prof. Hicks’ journal, Word and Works. The Almanac alone is sent prepaid for only 25¢c. Order from Word and works Publisiug Company, 2201 Loeust Street, St. Louis, Mo. The Herald-Review does first-class job printing. SAVE MONEY Are You Trying to Save Money?—Then In-} vestizate the very Latest. A prominent authority says: “The | advantages of a good history work in the home will save a ehild one vear's school work.’’ There is offered in Grand Rapids by the welll-known bookman, Mr. O. A. } Nate, Prof. Edward 8. Ellis’ “History of the United States,” in six large handsomely bound volumes. The terms are so liberal, and the work so exceptional that there is reason to believe it will soon be oecupying places in many of our homes. It et ‘gins as far back as 400 A. D., and is brought down to date, including the history of the Hispauo-American war. Besides being accurate and well | written, it abounds with one thou- sand illustrations a number of them being two-page highly colored climac- teric incidents in the various wars of the United States. The pictures are so rich that they resemble oil paiat- ings--and they alone are worth the price of the work. The marginal re- ference is another helpful feature. The work is indexed in the closing so that every- thing can be easily referrad to. It is nota history tor the student but a ready reserence work for the busy Rutherford- ‘ Vindicator has}, lon retiring at night and getting up e sale by Itasca manor woman. presents the publishers of the work, | Mr. Nafe, who re-| COUNTY AND ILLAGE OFFICERS has scores of testimonials in his pos- . . . 4 Corow cidents omitted in other bistories are of given more or less briefly, according to theirimportance. These incidents add greatly to the entertaining char- acter of the work.’—Prof. W. H. Beach. “Phe most comprehensive work ever published on this subject. Be- sides being history, has engravings which alone are worth the price of District No. District No. District No. District No. District No. Recorder. ‘Treasurer. the book. I consider it one of the re most valuable works ever offered | Marshal. to the public.”—President . Brown, Supt. of Schools COUNTY. session. We quote a, few of them: “Advantage has been taken of the | CO Mitte latest researches by recognized au- 6, Tyndall thorities. Disputed points are dis- ner Maar ts cussed with frankness, evidence on Tate Fi Reig ober either side being’ fairly stated. In-|Surveyo talon Merrett Dr. Thomas Russell Mrs. Hattie F. Booth COMMISSIONERS. 1. (Chairm, 3. 4. . D. Brooks john Fraser VILLAGE. President............... O'Connell John Hepfel te Ww. sarees A. King ‘Aiken Pratt mick Mevormick is = eG torees Riddell ne SEs RE RE IS Northern Indiana Mormal school. “IT very highly recommend this work. It’s author is well known to SECRET SOCIETIES. meas a concientlous, highminded gentleman, thoroughly patriotic, and possessing literary ability of a high order.” John W. Griggs, Attorney General of United States. The Herald-Review has become a member of the local club, and we |recommend the plan to our friends. For further information address Mr. O. A. Nafe, care this office. month at ARBUTUS meets eve: The Portraits of Our Presidents With Biographical Sketches BY General Charles H. Grosvenor Title page designed by Tiffany. This Inagural ye is aroused over P) fitting time to i book. Its sale is will perhaps e Versonal Meme pees a P. dna prs? 1 P. ha vhen the public lential questions, i neral mind month at GEorGE V; American de: Mrs. what that € staunch old Demo ther vf the Democ enor has thrown into his s n ail the fire und energy of bi biography of Thomas Jeffe! aphy of Lincoln is er the hilltops. Gen sonally known 2 the tinie of James ane S bh second an in K. of P. Mrs. Har which has never before been publ ten from his own personal ob: these great men. General Gro: served in Congress ‘and he has served his country In Wax and 41 nearly forty years. The book four a P ni rand, on hi | to order. at i Fe! BF. us the last F | ITASC. me Post hall. Murs. Mar POoK every fi month at A. E. WiL OL the re pri ted i in Lie wor ge open type in twe or I that when p r ley tion known de Grand Luxe s hand s lent Edition apa tinted, a Pre: n olored, title _ d ind numoe pplications ITASCA LODGE A..F... & 3 meets the eek sind a this fridy, of each E.J. Luter, Sec’: _ GRAND RAPIDS LODGE 184: meets every Wi i Fellows a GRE ery Wednesday night at Odd T. D. Rassmussen, ite: Mrs Joun DeSuaw, R. WAUBANA LODGE K. of every Thursday evening H. Gre. C. MCALLISTER, ic ni. 8. ITASCA DIVISION No, 10, U. Ro Ke Ps: re Pees Recorder, BANA TEMPL ITASCA CAMP No. 6444, M.. W. of. second and Mrs. M. Lov Lornrop, noSee TAR COUNC ans: L, W. Huntcey, See’y. ITASCA HIVE DE K. of P. O. L. MATHER W. M. T. 0. 0.8. Nox JOHN CORTELDO, N.G, REBEK AHL LODGE No. 150: ry Tuesday in\Odd Fellows hall. - Lov\Loruaop, N. G, 31: meets . GRAFPAM, C t Monday of each month in ix. of E. A. Kremer, © D ty = No. 20, RATHBONE uwels every Wednesday lib t i meets each fourth | Monda Odd Fellows hall. es JouN Desuaw, V. C LENT, Clerk, Jrosvenor has G & LAKE CAMP No. 221, 1 Grosvenor has & say of George burs AML ROYAL Siere od Antone izhbors: meets fi efferson ndrew} gach month a t Odd Fe ma joie Mondays IKATHERIN ALPLNE, Oracle. 0. 9, MOD and third Tf . of P, hall. S.J. Case, G. S meets month at L. 0. 'T. M.: meets ever: oe ert Pridays of each month nal Besst TE P. mane R. hs y COURTNo, 109. U. 0. k: thas Mondays LAIR, L. C. meets hy month au rELT, ©. Ry ER TRIBE No. and third Hows hall. Jonn 1 IN POST riday of nets hin Post bail, I. A. YANCEY, Com. j I. S. Huson, Adit : ; RCLE LADIES OP first Monday of Yr Y Hvso: hh month ip ANCEY, PD. .O.T.M: mee! 3, ae ay of exe’ KX. of P. hall . J. PARRELL, Com, A high stauding orders ind ap- CHURCHES. ilbail d sdon. The Continental Press, | SBYT "N. A. PASONAULT : VWVVDVOBVBWVBTETD PROPRIETOR Pioneer Barber Shop_= | iene Crane, pastor. ATTORNEY AT LAW | \ Ullice over Ltasca Mercantile Meat Markyet CRIAN CHURCH — Rey. E. B. PRICE, Your Patronage Solicited. 2 LELAND AVENUY. PienouosensenesseeeneaaeE SORE Oe SS Sees aeae aes ee SE AME aE ate ate ate 5K oe ae ae a he ge ae ate ate ate ae a ae ae a a Susesesssrsesesesesesesece | uw. S. USO Justice of the Peace. District Court Commiis- sioner for Itasca County. 1 H Office ¢ \ C Lek AT’ GRAND RAPIDS. ATE TORNEY AT LAW over Marr's Clothing Store, GRAND RAPIDs. Notarial Work Doue. OFFICE—With County Surveyor in Court House. Grand Rapids, Minnesota SOSISLSLSLSLSLOVOLCSISE County J R. DONOHUE, | | ATTORNEY AT Law | | Attorney of Itasca County. GRAND RAPIDS, pe ag ala garland RES RE EE separ “Grand Rapids Harness Shop I have now a complete stock of Harness, Col- iars, Swet Pads, Blank— etsand all kinds of strap work etc. which will be sold at reasonable prices all orders promptly fill- ed. Repairing neatly and cheapley done. R. W. HEIDEMAN. A BEE AE A ARIE a a a aE % acho BL REE EE RE a A Ee eae eae tea ae aaa nt Office D" CH SHAPER REO LRH E EERE RSS llahachdl-4 aa! | | | | 'D* GEV. C. GILBERT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON ove ‘able’s Meat Market, GRAND RAPIDS, AS. MM. STORCH, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd. GRAND RAPIDS, 'D® THOMAS RUSSELL, } PHSIYCIAN AND SURGEO: Office and Residence, South Side, GRAND RAPIDS. EG, A. Rf | ROMA v CATHOLIC CHURCH—Rey. ©. Gaumache, pastor, t sana = a B. CHURCH—Revy. J.C. Uy oy. pasi lal i dale oe sage ateaace | : err GRAND RAPIDS, | ‘ | \ | UC. McCARTHY | cCARTHY, IC ATTORNEY ATLAW Ofice over [tasca Mercantile Meat Murket. | —t—— ~ fe t <r oe . . & { pen} . > | ‘ aa t

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