Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, June 22, 1901, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘ ) We Want it will cost you less. in all the new shades a goods are sponged and s 3 38 in. wide. Mail order price is SILK. and extra value for the money. sold for $1.25 per yard. Mail order price LINID Spun gl high class wool dre: new shades. Most «Mail order prices ..... BRUSH BINDING for Skirts. desirable colors and black. de, Sells usual. MOHAIR BRAIDS. colors and_ black. brand. That’s the best. order price is... : ASH GOODS. s and striped muslins, nt selection of colorings and and 0c. Mailorder price is .. TABLE LINENS. Linen and fine fit Sells all the time for $: order price is ..... Your mail order business. would like to do more or less of their shopping in Duluth, but don’t always find it convenient to make the trip. : can do your shopping just about as satisfactorily as though you made the trip and We will advertise from week to week in this paper Special Bargains from our various departments that are Bargains. You can order by mail ard always find them just as we advertise them. feel confident we can satisfy you in every way. DRESS GOODS. Collingwood Serges and Granites h>unk and worth 69¢ per ya. Black Peau De Soie, 22 in. Regularly s skirt linings, used for all s, 36 in. wide, all the ning yet produced. We show it in all Its the best for 8c per yard. Mail or i 7-8 in. wide. It’s the “Plymouth” Syards ina bunch = Mail Fine Dimities, Ba lawns, atterns. Us: 70 in. bleached Damash. Patterns are good. 0 per yard. Mail Cc ed, Selli TOWELING. or blue. 10e per yard. ‘These 49¢ wide. Very fine 98¢ Mercerized flounce. order price is ..... l5C black and white. be Comes in_all Tape. Very desirable. stes, embroi- ete. si [5¢ Pure order price fs TIENDREN & [ALLANT [0 The New Store, Duluth. Most of We want to arrange Send for what you want and we 18 in. checked glass Toweling. All linen. Mailorder price is... WHITE SKIRTS in quality of muslin. med with insertion and lace. leader. Mail order price is....... COLORED SKIRTS. Black and white striped. effect. Pull width, LADIES’ GLOVE Good as any thing you find any place at Mail order price is a LADIES’ UNION SUITS in white. edged with Crochet Trimming. Has low neck, sleeveless Mail order WASH GOODS. 30 and 34 in. in cotton corset LADIES’ HOSE. Absolutely fast bla White cloths Colors are browns, blues, tans, foot. Spliced heels and toes. Come in re- reds and mixtures. Usually sold f - C gular sizes and good length. Se per pa Cc und 15e per yard. Mail order price is Mail order price is é nies FANCY RIBBONS. 3 tod inches wide. array of patterns Hy for neck 7 Muil order price is ... S SHIRTS. New lineof coloriugs and pat- ‘Two collirs and pair cuffs detach- n clothin, ¢ i 5 SRE SESE ES SREY EY EO ERIS PMR, SR the ladies in your town it so you Red ” 6¢ Excellent 75c Fine qualit Value fine cambric. Full flounce and trim- Our regular $1.00 Accordeon pleated The value is $1.50, Mail S119 Fine kid gloves in colors, s run from 65 3-4 to $| 00 L] Very daintly 25c Drawn 1 knee length. rice i GF, SPSS SBSLSSVSTSVSLSVSLSVO beautiful d colorings, adapted Worth 3c’ to 50¢ per c 49¢ .» Mail stores at _A Good Cough Medicine. It speaks well for Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy when druggists us it their own families in preference to any other. “I have sold Chamber lains’s Cough Remedy for the past five years with complete satisfaction to myself and customers,” says Drug- gist J. Goldsmith, Van Etten, N. Y. “I have always used it in my own family both for ordinary coughs and colds and for the cough following la la grippe, and find it very efficacious.” For sale by the Itasca Mercantile Co. EA A ee eee a eee a ae ae eae eae ae ae ae ne: G. C. SMITH DEALER IN ie & Fruits, Confectionery, Ice Cream Soda, Ice Cream, Drinks, Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. THIRD ST., Opp. Depot. WATE ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae Se ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae ae a: SRE SEE Ae A eR ae A eae ae ae a ae ae ae ae ae a a ER AE ee a ae eee ae a ea ae a a ae a ae ea W. S. HUSOW, ) \Justice of the Peace. District Court Commis- sioner for Itasca County. Notarial Work Done. OFFICE—With County Surveyor in Court House. Grand Rapids, Minnesota Notice of Expiration of Redemption. | | Subdivision of Sec. | Twp. |Range.| No. of| Year Amount |Subsequent Interest Total Section, Acres.| Tax | Day of Judgment. When Sold gold Taxes. Penalty | Amount | svied for. : and required Costs. to | oe oe Be redeem | Month.| Day | Year.|Month.}| Day. { Year. Theo. Irgens. Ni of SEX 7 | 56 | 2 | 80 | 18% | March; 2 { 1808 | May} 2 | 1808 | $ | cts 8 | cts | 5175 | 37 y 08 Total | 5} % 37 | 08 H era | OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR, To Theo. Irgens: Youure hereby notified that pursuant to tax judg sessed in your name. was sold for taxes as above as been filed in my office, ue from and after this date. Herald-Keview, Junes, 8. 15, 22. —_———————- wed and that the time of redemption from ny haud and oiticial seal at Grand Rapids, in said county of Itasca, this 3rd day of May; 1901. Itasca County, Minnesota. zment entered in the District Court, in the county of Itasca, state of Minnesota, as above state]. the land herain above des:ribed, as- . d sale allowed by law, will expire sixty days after sarvice of this notice.and proof there - In addition to the amount above stated, as necessary to redeem from said sale, the cost of service of this notice must be paid, together with such interest 2s E. J. FARRELL. County Auditor, Itasca County, Minn, COUN, Y AND VILLAGE OFFICERS { COUNTY. Auditor... Treasure Sheriff Coroner. Supt. of COMMISSIONE » 1. (Chairman District) VILLAGE. President ... Trustees . BP. McCormick CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH — Rev. E. P. Crane. pastor. ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH—Rev. C. V. M. E. CHURCH—Rev. J. C, Hartley. pastor. SECRET SOCIETIES. ITASCA LODGE A..°. meets the firs! month at K. of, E. J. LUTHER, GRAND RAPIDS 184: meets r Fellows | I. D. Ras ARBUTUS REBEKAH LODGE No. 150: meets every Tuesday in Odd Fellows hall. M 1. Lou Loranop, N. G, 0. L. MATHER, W. M. E 1.0.0. FP, No. day night at Odd COSTELLO. N. G. Jonn Dress WAUBANA LODGE K. of P.N . 10, U. BR. K. P.. of each month in K, of E. A. Kremer, Capt. 4 . Recorder, WAUBANA TEMPLE No. 20, RATHBONE diste ts eve Wednesday night at Y, M. E.C. Mrs. ITASCA CAMP No. 6444, M.. W. of. A.; meets second and fourth Mondays of each month at Odd Fellows hall. uN DeSuaw, V.C. Je GrorGe VieNT, Clerk, HALE LAKE CAMP No. 22m, ROYAL Neighbors: meets first and third Mondays euch month at Odd Fellows hall. Mrs. KATHERINE MCA NE, Oracle. Mrs. M. Lou Loruxop, R, NORTH STAR COUNCIL$No. 9, MODERN Samaritans: meets first and third Tues- dayseach month at K. of P, hall. S.J. CABLE. G. S. L, W. Hontcey, Sec'y. ITASCA HIVE L. O. T. M.: meets orf second and fourth Fridays of each month in K. of P. hall. Mrs. Bessie CLatr, L. C. Mars. Harrie F. Boorn, R. K. LOCKSLEY COURT No. 109. U. O. f: meets second and fourth Tuesday each month at Ot P. hall. rem Mrs. Carnie Beckrenr, ©. R. y. Mrs. MARGARET FINNEGAN, S DRUM mee) and third Fridays each month at Odd Fellows hall. Joun HEPFEL, Sachem. B. F. HUSON POST G. A. R. No, 140: meets the last Friday of each month in Post hall. M. A. Yancey, Com. H. S. Huson, Adjt. ITASCA CIRCLE LADIES OF THE G. A. R.: meets the first Monday of e: month in Post hall. CHRISTINE YANCEY, P. Mrs. MARY Huson, Sec’y. POKEGAMA TENT NO. 33, K.0.T.M: meets every first and third Thursday of each month at K. of P. hall z E. J. FARRELL, Com. A. E. Winper. R. K. ITASCA HOMESTEAD, B. of A. Y.. meets every Thursday evening in Oddfellows Hall ER WASHBURN, Foreman. T. R. Dopson, Correspondent. Unnecessary Loss of Time. Mr. W.S. Whedon, cashier of the First National Badk of Winterset, Iowa, in a recent letter gives some experience with a carpenter in his em- ploy, that will be of value to other mechanics. He says: “I had a car- penter working for me who was oblig- ed to stop work for several days on account of being troubled with diar- rhoea. I mentioned to him that I had been similarly troubled and that Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera Diarrhoea Remedy had cured me. He boughta boytle of it from the drug- gist here and informed me that one dose cured him, and he is again at his work.” tile Co. EE eee eee RE A EEE Ee a Re N. A. PASONAULT . tt ted PROPRIETOR Pioneer Barber Shop_ Your Patronage Solicited. a LELAND AVENUE. SHeesKeseesEssNeEEeEAeNeS hd ee RRA ea eee eae ae ee ae ae a ae ee ae a ae a ee ae a ae a a eae ae ae a ae a ee D*® CHAS. M. STORCH, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd. GRAND RAPIDS. = = D® THOMAS RUSSELL, FHSIYCIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, Presbyterian Parsonage, Fourth Street. GRAND RAPIDS, and | For sale by Itasca Merean- j ATER TRIBE No. 35, £. 0.2. M.: | | To PATENT Good Ideas may be secured by ouraid. Address, Subscriptions to The Patent Record #1.00 per annum You assume no risk when you buy Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. The Itasca Mer- cantile will refund your money if you are not satisfied after using it. It is everywhere admitted to be the most successful redemy in use for bowele complaint and the only one that neter fails. It is pleasant safe and reliable. C. W. Hastings. President. \, P. SHELDON. Cashier P. J. SHELDON, Luke Harcourt Held. Luke Harcourt, formerly of Seney, Mich., and who spent a winter in Grand Rapids about six years ago, has been held to the grand jury of St Louis county for shooting a man in Evelith. The following is an ac- count of the affair from the Duluth News ‘Tribune: “Luke Harcourt, the Evelith man charged with shoot- ing with intent to kill Pat Shields, a foreman of the Cloquet Lumber com- pany at the same place, was examined before Justice Gearhart in police court and held to awaite the action of the grand jury in Septem- ber. Shields, who although shot twice through the budy, once through the AIKEN, . Cashier Vice President. Lumbermen’s Bank Of Grand Rapids, Minn The Herald-Review $2 SLSPSVSSSVWSSISVSlISVES! UPHOLSTERING Of all kinds done with neatness and dispatch. Chairs Re-Ganed ; Carpets Re-Laid, Satisfactory work. Prices Right. Zella Currie. Residence: . First St. & Leland Ave. GRAND RAPIDs, MINNESOTA. SLSLSLSLSLSS dada sian! ee geusenese Grand Rapids Harness Shop I have now a complete stock of Harness, Col- lars, Sweat Pads, Blank etsand all kinds of strap work etc. which will be sold at reasonable prices all orders promptly fill- ed. Repairing neatly and cheaply done. R. W. HEIDEMAN et He a a a a a, * & Ls A a ee ea ae ae a ae Ae ae ae ae a ae a aa at Ee ee ee a id ae SL deahal lung, was present and except for weakness and a rather husky voice appeared to be vin good conditidn. ‘The examination was not very exten- sive, Shields telling brefly the story of the shuoting. He said that he had been drinking somewhat during the day but was not drunk, and admit- ted that the fight was precipitated by aremark made by him to Harcourt, to the effect that the later dare not come out of the saloon and fight, whereupon Harcourt pulled the re- volver, tiring two shots into his body and ‘trying for the third but the weapon clicked. Shields was unarm- ed. Krank Anslay the propietor of the saloon in which the shooting vc- cured corroborated briefly the story told by Shields. Harcourt was in court but was not ou thestand. He was represented yesterday by H. A. Dancer. It will be*remembered that the shooting was directly due to the fam- ous fight over the Ely lake lands. Harcourt was employed by the settl- ers on the disputed ground to keep off trespassers such as the Cloquet Lum- ber company and others intending to cut timber. Shields wasone of the companies foremen and the men hap- pening to meetin Eveleth the qurrel followed.” New Ice Cream Parlor. Mrs. Mary Daub has epened an ice cream parlor and confectionery store in the building situated on Leland avenue, north of the Michigan house. The ice cream is received daily from Duluth. Ashare of the patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. For sale—One span of horses, milch cows and young stock, two fine young bulls, ond yearling and one two year old. Apply to U. C. GRavELLE, Poke- gama Lake. © THEY DON’T HURRY. The People of Washington Seem to Be Easy-Going. “The thing that "first impresses a visitor to Washington,” said Fred Green, a young St. Louis business man, who is at the Shoreham, “is that nobody seems in a hurry. People walk leisurely about as if they had all day to reach their destination, or, rather, as if they had no destination in view. The contrast between the deliberation of Washington and — the ‘clear the way there’ rush of New York, Chicago, St. Louis, and the other great business centers is most startling. Hypocritical Americans with a tendency toward anglo-mania complain that we have no leisure class in this country, but I believe the citi- zens of Washington come well under that head. HE leisure begets culture, as is claimed, Washington would be a cultured city. I suppose it is true that a greater proportion of the people of Washington live lives of business and industrial inactivity than any oth- er American city. The beauty of the capital attracts men of wealth who have retired from business and are only seeking a desirable city in which to make their homes. Then again the greater number of office holders have no need to be in a hurry, and the two classes between thém influence society and govern its customs. If I had never visited Washington in the winter and seen that the same conditions then exist, I might be led to suppose it was the extreme heat that made your citizens so loath to moving with haste, but my observation is that the habits of the people are about the same the year round, and that deliberateness is one of the distinctive features of the capital. Ward McAllister is quoted as having said that haste is vulgar. If he was right, Washington is de- eldedly not a vulgar city.”—Washing- ton Post. QUEEN OF HOLLAND. No Friends of Her Qwn Age in the Royal Family. Wilhelmina, the young queen of Hol- land, is very pretty, though her beauty threatens in future years to run on somewhat massive lines. Her admiring subjects gaze at her, and then murmur to an acquiescent neighborhood, “Isn’t she pretty?” The young queen has fine eyes, a clear complexion and a glorious tinge of rose-pink in her cheeks, Then her hair is the rich brown that painters love, and there fs plenty of it. Wil- helmina has a reputation for dignity, but not long ago she enjoyed herself so much at a court ball, waltzing with the energy of a healthy girl who has temporarily forgotten she is a queen and only remembers she fs young and happy, that a coil of her hair fell down and had to be pinned up again by a lady-in-vraiting. This little incident set all tongues wagging. It was ‘exaggerated and commented upon all over Holland with an anxiety only abated by the dis- covery that the queen’s partner in the dance had been her uncle, her moth- er’s brother, the Prince of Waldeck- Pyrmont. This relative and his wife, who are both still young, are the only people with whom Wilhelmina really fraternizes in a natural jolly way. She has no friends of her own age, and in Holland the royal family is limited to a very small circle. The two or three princes and princesses available are middle-aged, dowdy, and dull. Yet Wilhelmina obviously enjoys her “splendid isloation.” She gave every- one to understand, on her accession, that she liked independence, and in- tended to preserve it as long as pos- sible, Fun with Rabbernecks. In front of a five-story Main street block there was the usual crowd of passersby. A heavily loaded electric car was just coming along. Suddenly a man rushed out from a store in the block into the middle of the street. Gazing up to the top story, he cried out: “You'll fall, you will certainly fall.” Everybody in sight stopped and gazed into the air. Those who were on the wrong side of the electric car clambered over to the right side to see their share. And there was noth- ing to see. No one was about to fall from the fifth floor; in fact, there was no one to be seen there. It was all a bluff, and the wicked bluffer hurried away to escape the vengeance of the bluffed.—Worcester Spy. A Remarkable Tark. in the village of Bodra a Turk named Ismall, aged 120 years, is in such good health that he frequently walks to Bartin, six miles distant, to sell eggs, for he is a poultry dealer.. He has had thrity-four wives, the last of whom he married recently. The bride is 60 years his junior, and the mar- riage was celebrated with much sol- emnity, to the sound of drums and fifes and volleys of fireams. The whole village was en fete. The wedding pro- cession included all the male progeny of the patriarch bridegroom, consisting of 140 sons, grandsons and great- grandsons. Effeytive Bird Laws. From many parts of New England this summer comes the news that the song birds seem to be more in evi- dence than they have been for many years. An old Rangely guide said re- WALL PAPER ! This is the season of the year when the careful house- keeper will want those walls decor- Ateneo ee te Our Stock of 1901 Patterns is Complete and we are showing over 40 choice combinations from 5c. per roll up, at The Furniture Store. Geo. F. Kremer. A. B. CLAIR, Register of Deeds of Itasca County Mineral Pine ana Farming Lands Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS Itasca County Abstract Office ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents KREMER & KING, Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, - - MINS W. E. NEAL, Dealer in Pine and Farming Lands. The finest List of Agricuitural and Grazing Lands in the County. The Most, Excellent Sites for Manu lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Corres.ondence Solicited. Grand: Rapids, - - Mins preeensonnssenesen tessa: The Celebrated y “Cream Pure au % ® America’s Finest Pro- duction. Medincal and Family U. cently that it was hardly within his recollection of the past twenty years that the birds had been so aboundant or of so many species as they may be seen this year. In the want of any other reason to account for the wel- come change it seems fair to assume that the New England laws for the protection of insectivorous birds are beginning to have some effect, Henry Logan, 80LE AGENT Grand Rapids: Received Highest Reward at World’s Columbian Exposi- position. Recommended for Dallamend & Go., Chicago. SAGES PRO GPS SVS TSW, SWSOSISLSPSS HPS MASTS * ERE RE ee a ta RR Ee

Other pages from this issue: