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A SAD GAS TALE. ° “You'd think it an easy proposition to get the gas turned on, wouldn’t you?” asked young Flat Hunter, setting down his glass and putting his foot on the rail under the bar, says the New York Sun reporter. ‘He had been telling the erowd- about the gem apartment he had struck. It was really a $1,200 flat with a trimming to match, but ie had got it for $600 and two months’ rent ree. “When we moved,” he continued, “the gas was the last thing in the world I thought we would have trouble with. You see, my deposit was up. I left a five-dollar note with thé company two years ago, and I always paid the bill when the collector called. Therefore, the mere transfer of the account from one house to another | did not strike me as a herculean task. In fact it slipped my mind entirely after the man came to the old house in the morn- ing and shut off the meter. “Toward five o'clock that afternoon, when we had got most of our things to rights in the new flat, I suggested to my wife that a bite of something hot would hit me in the ! ht place. She flew to the kitchen to | p the girl and they soon got things in e to cook the steak and potatoes. ‘Then we discovered that the gas wasn’t turned | on. There was no coal range in the place and we didn’t even have a kerosene lamp. nt right down to the telephone in store on the corner and said a ionate words to the man in the gas office. He didn’t seem to mind them much, but told me to hold the wire while he looked the matter up. When he came back he said the man had called to turn gas but there was no one at home. I knew he was fibbing, and told him so, , but he evaded the direct issue and said 1e matter would be attended to promptly ' 1 the morning. He also promised to put a new gas stove. | e next morning before we were out of bed two men came with thestove. When they found that there was no gas they went | , leaving the stove behind. In the aft- n they came back and set it. Then em Went into the cellar and turnea s while his pal tried the stove. glad we have got gas at he! , Iam s aid my wife. man grinned from ear to ear. have to turn it off again, mum,’ he ‘Sorry I said. “Why, what d’ye mean?’ I cried. Yo authority to turn on the gas,’ he grinning harder than ever. ‘Me my pardner work in the stove depart- | So they went away, leaving us a fine new stove with no fuel to feed it. I made inother trip to the drug store telephone red some more pi s office man’s ear. Again I held e he looked the matter up. This me the meter man was on the way to the hou While I was gone an- other employe v: d the flat. He was the burner man, he said, and come to look over the fixtures. After he put on some new he, too; went into the cellar and caused to flow. i ne wire V time he t s were Cashed again. After s he shut the meter off nut about ‘no authority.’ re beginning to look desperate. we'd been for the best part of two days living on delicatessen and finding our way gut. The girl could neith nor wash and if we wanted to heat anything we had | to use an aleahol lamp. “1 bustled down to the gas office, which two miles away, to have a heart-to- ix with the man who had so gri ted in at the cashier's | d was passed along the whole tl I reached the place where the » calls were received. The two | charge were conversing earnestly | e relative merits of the Giants the Brooklyn ball teams, and I could from their manner that they regarded | ence as an intrusion. ‘Go round ! pou an see my pre to the stated my case. lowing his direction, I found a sad- 1 man behind a low railing facing -an | | { angry erowd of men and women. Most of | them were kicking about the size of their { bills. Others complaints of a similar | nature to mine. ‘The sad-eyed man listened } patiently to what they had to say'and occa- sionally ealled down the speaking tube to | the basement workshop about their com- plai e time it was my turn I had begun to feel sorry for the sad-eyed one, and in- stead of calling down the wrath of Heaven on his-h wait ead, told him mildly that we couldn’t longer to have the gas turned gain he talked down the speaking and after awhile received a reply. ey’re on the way to your house now,’ | he said “I returned home with hope in my heart. In the kitchen I found the gas stove ablaze and a man stooping over it. | “‘Come to fix a leak,’ he said, cheer- fully. ‘I guess she’s all right now.’ Then he went into the cellar and shut off the meter once more. . “My jaws moved, but I couldn’t speak. My wife sank despairingly into the rocking- chair and the baby began to ery in sym- pathy with her obvious woe. But there was no help for it. It was apparent that we were doomed to more cold meals and at least another night of candle light. I; appealed to the janitor, but that functionary had no remedy to suggest. Then I formed a resolve born’ of desperation. I would seize the next gas man that came. to the flat and hold him captive until he con-} sented to open the meter. But no more } gas men came that day. “The next afternoon the meter man came. Jiutt?*he would not: turn’ on the gas until T hadysigned a printed application for the metér. Turning it over I saw on the bi a long list of questions concerning my ability to pay, how much I was good for and was I prompt in settling up. I am pleased to say they were all filled out in a manner favorable to my good name. Perhaps that was the reason that I gave themeter man a cigar and promptly forgot all about the inconvenience the company put me to.” F | SNS ee a Story of Lord Kelvi Nothing gives a man of learning a ruder shock tian to have doubts cast on his abil- ity to maintain a position of authority on ich he has given a lifetime of study. was strikingly illustrated in the life of Lord Kelvin, the eminent sci- entist. One day, whem lecturing on elec. tricity, he told his class that while a volt- age of 3,000 er so would be fatal to a man, a voltage of, say, 300,000 would be harmless. to give a practical illustration once with a eurrent of far more than ordinary voltage, but the stu- dents cried out: “Try it on an animal!” Lord Keviin turned in dignity and east’. look cf. reproach at his class. That his pupils should doubt him! ‘Didn't 1 fig- ure it out myself?” he said, quietly, as he walked to the apparatus and safely turned tremendous vol! ‘into bimsel. bout the model flat at night by eandis | | window,’ said one, after I had | < S COAT. id,” remarked Mrs. Jobson, ont ning abuut a couple of weeks ago, “that Vi have to have a new wrap of some sort for the cold weather—a‘jacket or some thing. day 4 was looking -ovér that astrakhan-trimmed coat that I’ve bad for three seasons, and it looks rather faded and frayed.” eae Y “Um,” said Mr. Jobson, ‘dropping his newspaper. ‘You're afraid you'll have to havea néw one, hey? Afraid is good. Aren’t “you afraid somebody’l! come along and hand you the title deed to one of the Thousand Islands, with antalian rennaissance villa built in the middle of it? What you got to be afraid of? Don’t ypu think it’s up to me to be afraid instead?” “Well,” said Mrs. Jobson, calmly, “I did think that I coyld get another year out of the old coat, especially as I wear my seal- aie eee for very bitter weather, but ite “About how much is this new garment going to set me back?” interrupted Mr. Job- son. “T ought to he able to get a neat little jack- | ea for about $20 or $25,” replied Mrs. Job- | son. “And,” she went on hastily, “I should like very much to have you help me pick it te You have such excellent taste in such things.” “Uh-huh, that’s a pretty good jolly, all i right,” said Mr. Jobson, pleased, neverthe- | less. “I observe, however. that when I help you pick out such things I’m kept guessing as to how I’m going to pay my rent for a counle of months afterward.” Mrs. Jobson had observed the same thing, wasn’t saying anything about it. “Oh, I wouldn’t think of getting anything expensive,” she said. “I merely want a little jacket to wear on days when my sealskin would be too heavy and warm.” On Saturday morning last Mr. Jobson met Mrs. Jobson down town and they went toget her to look over jackets ranging in price from $20 to $25—that is to sey, Mr. Jobson had that range of figures in view. Mrs. Job- son had other views. “ “T want to give you fair warning,” said fz. Jobson, as they walked in the direction he store they were to visit first, “that 's the very outside dig that I’m going to make on this job. So you needn’t try to work any bamboozling scheme on me to wring any more out of ‘me. I’m not the national banks, you know.” Mr. Jebson stood by gloomily while Mrs. trying on a number of $20 tan ‘ook his head over each try-on, his'comment as to all of the $20 enats. “Dinky to the last degree. Wouldn’t be seen on the street wi! i euch a rag as that. Thought you sa’ could get something decent for $20?” “Why, T’think they Mra. Jobson, innocently, as she removed the i cket that she had tried on. ke san rarke, ented, ey ed up in the back, ble: little 5 you get some- er you up? T see women hth i eels and fit ’em snug—don’t besile automahile-coats or on the street w down to th t raglan, but put in’ M-s. Jobson, “you mean th They are pretty, of cox ine with inwar e Kaystreet has on if is too stont, band makes a grent deal of—"" 1e'st shout whi sh said Mo. Jobson: nfs runni looks lovely er around this yon've heen try- . Fxere’s rothing ron'll remembe rg to plow around n in one of th r side you've gat nd if that dumpy Mrs. wear one of those long things Ml shape up all right anot Kaystre I'm ta in One of th have a Jook at some of ’em.” % Whereupon X Jobson winked shrewd, ly at the an, who smiled furtively zd in hbout kalf a minute’the s oman uced the melton Newmar. ket; with storm collar revers of beaver, that Mrs. Jobsen had had put aside for fur. therginspection oa the pre: Jobson got o the beautiful garment and it fitted her iike a violin in a box, and gave her fignre a svelte appearance that caused. Mr. Jobson to gaze at her admiringly out} of the s! of his eyes. 4 “Um! t's something like it,”’ he said, surveying t' ¢ garment with repressed enthu- siasm. “flew much is the thing?” ‘Sixty dollars,” said the sa “Oh, goodness me, I couldn't think .of purchasing such an expensive wrap just now,” hastily put in Mrs. Jobson, catching the saleswon-an’s eye and starting to re- move the coat. “Couldn't hey?” said Mr. Jobson. “Well, I could. Just you button it up and wear it out now to sort o’ christen it.”” “But, my dear,” protested Mrs. Jobson, very gleefully mteriorly, “we can’t afford it. Of course, :t's cheap at the price, but how can we afford to” \ “Look a-iere, madam,” seid Mr. Jobson, aleswomaa walked away a little dis- aw signal tram) Mrs. Jobson, “1 want you to unders:and that 'm running the finaeia! end. and 1 dont intend that awe me up be! einer. You ana Me Whey coatvar none wered upon Ler san were te meltote XS ident of any more than ten or fifteen | e real nice,” said , ose long ones that cling to the © ateswomen in | ‘MARQUETTE SCHAPEL . A small, weather-stained, old-fashioned village on aa island in Lake | Superior, was barned the other day. Its \ | money value was probably less than $560, | but it was visited every year by thousands | of tourists, and the maws of its destruction | was cabled to the old world. There were | logs in the-structure that were blessed’by | Father Marquette nearly 240 years eco, and inside, above the altar, a copy of Ru- | bens’ “Descent from the Cross,” which he had brought into the wilderness, and which had been viewed with awe and veneration by eight generations of Chippewa Indians | And there were | ;and French Catholics. ‘ crumbling, yellow -parish records in old ‘French, over which Parkman, the _his- | torian, puzzled for months when gettirg H | material for his great series of histories. | All gone now in a puff of smoke, smaller ‘than that of many a council fire, that, in the old days, had trailed away over Gitchee | Gaumee and the forest crowned headlands ‘and sheltered bays of the Apostle islands! When Columbus was dying in poverty and neglect in Valladolid, Spain, ing 1606, a great Indian tribe, the Ojibwas, was al- | most exterminated by the Iroquois near | Lake Ontario. The remnant flew west and north on foot and in canoes, and stopped | only when they found a refuge in the clus- | ter of wild islands on the southern shore | of Lake Superior. Tere, on Chequamegan bay, they lit the council fire of their na- tion. A hundred years later they had grown strong and driven back the. Sioux, and were in possession of all the lake coun- try about the headwaters of Superior and the Mississippi. In 1665 Father Allouez, a Jesuit missionary, came over with a party of couriers du bois, ‘French fur trappers and traders, and establi3hed the Mission of the Holy Ghost in ‘the Indian village which the French called La Pointe. A year or so later, Pere Marquette followed (Father Allouez going to a new station on Green Bay), and built the little chapel of logs in the woods above the most populous and prosperous village in all the vast re gion. peopled by the Ojibwas. In 1669, he was back in Mackinac, in 1671 he went across the wild rice lands of north- ; western Wisconsin,.through the Ojibwa country, and explored the upper-Mississip- | ‘pi. In 1673 he established a mission among | the Dlinois Indians west of Chicago. In | 1675 he died in Michigan while on his way j back to° Mackinac. The Ojibwas always | spoke of him as a spirit and, after he had | gone from them, took eare of his little | chapel, the sacred picture and the rude font | | | | | i | i | and communion service, though they fell away from his teachings. A quarter.of a cen- tury after his death they abandoned the Apostle islands for the mainland. Later, in the eighteenth century, a fur | trading post was built at La Pointe by the | French, and to them came Father Baraga, | who found Marquette’s chapel in the woods, with the Rubens over the altar. There he aid mass and gathered about him the French settlers and the remnant of the ! Ojibwas. He built a larger church, inclos- ‘ng the eld one, and later died as bishop of Sault Ste. Marie and was buried in the cathedral beside the ashes of the Apostle of the Wilderness. 3 | Madeline island of to-day is a wildernes: almost as virgin as when Pere Marquette’: canoe first glided into Chequamagon bay. When the lodges were taken down and the trading post with its high palisades and fur warehouses diszppeared, the Indians, in dwindled ranks, retired to their reserva- tion set apart by the government, the half French, half Indian town slipped down to the water’s edge, and the inhabitants sat with folded, hands and half-shut eyes, and watehed the summer fleets. go by. The pines and birches and wild blackberry vines crept up to the once busy streets, the vil- lage cattle browsed on the common and the historic chapel stood apart, above the town on an eminence overlooking Ashland and Bayfield on the mainland. Should you visit the spot to-day you would see a heap of charred wood where the church stood so long, surrounded by a stunted growth ‘of silver birehes and wild blackberry vines forming, with the of enclosure a grav) and broken, and ¢ moss or whoily The little ci or night. .A priest who spoke Engli French and Chippewa (the modern pronun. ciation of Ojibv ed near and was al- ways ready to show the sacred picture, the parish records in lass case, and the cominunion service ent vestments "from France and Austsia whence Father Baraga came, And if a tourist.lingered for an hour he was sure to see'an Indian glice into a canoe, say a prayer and depart—or hear a parishioner question the priest in French. The island lies in the roadstead to Ash- land, Bayfield and’ Washburn, and all sum- mer long steamers and freighters pass its shores, so close that the villagers can read the names on the sides. Now and then a pleasure, boat draws up to the old wharf of the fur traders, and discharges a crowd of sightseers. But the greater number go by, leaving the forest-covered rolling up- lanfs of the “Queen of the Apostles” be- | hind, with its quaint little French-Indian town lying neglected and weatherbeaten at the foot of the single cleared slope of land, once the harbor of refuge of a great tribe of Indians, a place of council fires, a fur metropolis, the farthest outpost of the | old world’s religion. aa The greater part of Madeline island has | reverted again to the wilderness, and gives up its:trophies to,.rod and gun. It is diffi. cult to imagine’that 200 years ago the shel- tered lodges of the Ojibwa tribe stood by | hundreds ‘along the heights. Then: the birch bark and skin-lined streets were filled reless couriers du bois, dusky maids in French beads and prints, dig- nified chiefs in deer skin and feathers, med- ‘ine men, naked brown babies and smoke- adried squaws. Loiterers gathered where heaver skins were being bought and chil- dren and dogs romped on the beach when the canoes of the.hunters and trappers came in. And‘ always in the vision of the Madcline islands of old is the figure, black- roked, pallid-faced, standing in the midst of the motley throng and unrolling his copy of the old master. In a brief ten years he left throughout the great northwestan influence and tradition of peace, purity and holiness that have never died. "The-region still-@choes his name,.and the hearts of little “children: thrill when hearing of. the inple courage and saintliness of this fragile lived so ely and securely ages in the wilderness.—Lit. ip a-flat and is often ano playing of bis | clapboarded | | church with shingled spire, standing in an | VILLAGE OFFICERS COUNTY. Farrel reasurer . C. Miller | eri. W.C. Tyndall Attorney. pester L. Pratt Register o A.B, Clair } Clerk of C Rassmussei | Judge of Prob nL. Barnard | Surveyor anies Murehie | 9 Coroner: Dr. Thomas Kussell | % | Supt. of Schools. Mrs. Hattie I’, Booth { COMMISSIONERS. : 1. (Chairman). . D. Brooks KS. Lang W. G. Moore IT. H. Hennessy Joun braser Mistriet No. Distriet No. Teristeee donee 50> 0 ap. Recorder. Treasurer. Attorney. | street Commissione} Marshal... Jas. MeCormick . PF, McCormick CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN. CHURCH — Rev. Wm. J. Palm, pastor. “ROMAN — CATHOLIC Father Mackey, pastor. M. BE. CHURCH —Rev. Noah Lathrop. pastor SECRET SOCIETIES. * ITASCA LODGE A.-. F.7)& A.*, Mo. No. 208: \ meets the first_and third Fridays of each month at K. of P. hall. E.J. LUTHER, Sec’y, 0. L, MATHER, W. M. GRAND RAPIDS LODGE IT. 0.0. F, No. 184: meets every Wednesday night at Odd Fellow UW JOHN COSTELLO, N. G. I. D. RassMussEN, Rec. Sec. ARBUTUS REBEKAH LODGE No. meets every Tuesday in Odd Fellows ball. . Mis. M. Lou Loranop, N. G JOHN Desuaw, RLS. WAUBANA LODGE K, of P. No. 131: meets every Thursday evening in their hall. H. E. Grarram, C. C. Gre. C, MCALLIsTER, K. R. 8. ITASCA DIVISION No. 10, U. R. K. P.. mects first Monday of each month in Kx, 0} P, hat, E. A. Kremer, Capt. Cus, Kearney, Recorder, WAUBANA TEMPLE No. 20, RATHBONE Sisters: meets every Wednesday night at 4s, of P. hall. Mrs. Evizavern Hennessy, M. E. C. Mrs. Jessie STEVENS, Sec’v, ITASCA:CAMP No. 6444, M.. Woof A.- meets second and fourth Mondays of exch montn at Udd Fellows hau. Joun Desuaw, V. C. GrorGe Vient, Clerk. HALE LAKE CAMP No, 22¢1. ROYAL Neighbors: meets first and third Mondays CHURCH—Rev. each month at Odd Fellows hall. Mrs. KATHERINE MCALPINE, Oracle. Mrs. M. Lou Loruxop, RY S. NORTH STAR COUNCIL‘No. 9, MODERN Samuritans: meets first and third Tues- duys each. month at K. of Py hall. S.J. Case.G. S. L. W. Hoyer, See'y. ITASCA, HIVE L. 0. T. M.:, meets every second aid fourth Fridays of each anonth - in K. of P. hall. Mrs, Besste Ciarr, L. C. Mrs, Harrie P. Booru, &. Ix. LOCKSLEY COURT No. 109, U. O. B: meets second und fourth Tuesday each mynth at K. of P. hall. Mas. Carn Mrs. MARGARET FIN ORUMBEATER TRIBE N. meets first and third bri ul Odd bellows hall. JOuN Uerret, Sachem. B. F. HUSON POST G. A. R. No. 149: meets che last Friday of each month in Post ball. ‘ i M. A. Yancey, Com. it. 8. Huson, Adjr. ITASCA CIRCLE LADIES OF THE G. A. Ru: meets the firse Monday of each month in Pest hall. Vr INE YANCEY, P. ! . Mary I z oat ‘ontest Notice. United States Land Oiiice. i Duluth, Minnesota, October 22, 1901. A dumiciort contest afidavit: having ‘been | filed in this office by Joseph H. Dunning, testant. against Homestead entry No. made. July 5, 1895 for lot 15; W 4 of se 44 ne £: of sw 4. section 2, township 60, nm. rany 25 w, by John P, Phillips, contestee. In whi itis alleged that said Phillips has never made any improvement upon said land; that there ué no buildings of any kind or nature upon’said land; that said land is in a whol wild and unenitivated state: that said Phil- rresided upon said land, and “that such abandonment was not due toservice in thearmy. navy or marine corps of the Uni- ted States. Said parties are hereby notified to appear. respond and offer evidence touching said allegation at 10 o'clock a.m. on Decem- her 10, 191, before the Register and Receiver at the United States land offico in Duluth, Minnesota. Bi Ee The said contestant having, in w. proper affidavit filed Oct, 22, 1991¢ set. forth facts which show that after duddiligence personal service of this notice can not be made. it is hefeby ordered and directed that such notice be given by due and proper. pabli- cation. : Ws. E. CULKIN, Registe: Herald-Review, Nov. 2-Dec. 7. : eee Summons. State of Minnesota, County of. Itasea—In dis- trict court. Fifteenth Jndicial district. George W. Moore, plaintiff, vs. Sarah Moore, ‘defendant—Summons. The state of Minnesota to the above defendant: “ You are hereby summoned and juired to answer the compltint of the plaintiff inthe above entitled action. which jis filed in the office of the Clerk of the District Court in and for the County of Itasca und State of Minne- sota, and to serye a copy of ycur answer to the said. complaint upon_the subscribers ut their office in the village 6f Grand Rapids, in suid county and state. within thirty (30) days after.service of this summons Upon you, ex- clusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the said complaint within the time.aforesaid. the piaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in the Said,complaint. named ®pere, Pan-American Rxposition. Buffalo, NW. Y. and return $17. by train and steamer. Vickets cu sale daily until October 3ist. mae All the comforts and con- vemiences good club or your h are found in LIBRARY BUFFET SMOKING Cars in daily use on Bur- lington Limited “Trains between the Twin Cities and Chicago. Supplied with card tables, easy chairs?}and the latest and best periodicals. Ask Your Home Agent For Tickets Via The Bur- lington » # eee ©. W Hastinas. 4. PS SHELDON, President, Cushier P. J. SHELDON. ©. R. AIKEN, Vice President. y Asst. Oushier -Lumbermen’s Bank Of Grand Rapids, Minn Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food. l1tgivesinstant reliefand never fails to cure. the food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can takeit. By itsuse many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed. It prevents formation of gason the stom- | ach, relieving all distress after eating, Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take. Prepared only by FE. 0. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. ‘The $1. bottle contains 2% times the 50c. she. A. B. CLAIR, . Beginter ot Deeds of Itasca Gennty. Minera Pine ana Farming | Lands Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. See ae ae ahs Ae a Me aE SE a ERE die ae rE it 30, Dated Octoler #, PRION & SPEAR, Attorneys for Plaintif? : Granditapids, Minn. Eo Contest Notice. — ~ Department of the Interior. United States Land Office. Duluth, Minn., Jan. 18th, 1908? A sufficient contest affiidavit having been filed in this office by Anna Oleson. contest- ant, against. Homestead, entry No. 12.048. for tha vorthwest, uarter of the southwest. quarter (Nw 4 of Wi) of section twenty-two (2), township fifty five (55 ) range twenty-four (24) by Isuac _ Johanson. contestee, in which it is alleged. that said Issac Jolanson has wholly aband- oned the said land fora period of over six months prior to the date of this Contest, and that suid Johanson has wholly removed trom si land with his family. and established his home and domicile at some other placa than on s»id land;and further that saida! sbsence from bad ane Ane tothe ‘ment of the sat obanson in the army, KS mitrine corps of the United Staves rvatesolder asa officer seaman or marine Satur the warfwith Spain or in any other wir in pig gl 8 es ap here 4 's are ereby not re handland. ober evidence touching said al- legutions at 10 o'clock, A. M. on pear th ‘A.D, 12, before I. 'D, Russnuussen, Ciel of the trict Court. of [tasen county A Stateof Mitnesota at Ins office in the cour? fhouse in the village of Grand Rapids, in sald coma and state; und that final earing will be held at 10 o’elock A. m. 01 ry 28 A. D. 1902 ete the Register Receiver atthe United States Land Duluth etl tite 5 i Ea A es ee ee bd Rea RE a ae aE Me ae ae ae a ae a as ee ae eae ae eae aa ind dah tach elas, epee ceala tod G. C. SMITH ‘ "DEALER IN | ‘Fruits,~ Confectionery, — Ice Cream Soda, — Ice Cream, Drinks, a aE EE It allows you to eat all | ae eR = N, A. PASONAULT B eeevecenesesn Ff = ‘PROPRIFTOR A . * ? Pioneer ; : Barber rs a : * 3 . Shop_m 7 # — Your Patronage Solicited. 3 = LELAND AVENUE. @ wee ATT ORNE Office over Itasea M © GRAND RAPIDS MINN. D* D. COSTELLO, ce. DENTIST. —— Office in Mart Building.— GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA. Go H. SPEAR ' ATTORNEY ATLAW GRAND RAPIDS, - - MINN D*® GEO. C GILBERT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Cable’s Meat Market, GRAD RAPIDS 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. R. DONOHUE, ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAND RAPIDS. Itasca County Abstract Office ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, | FIRE INSURANCE, Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KING, Proprieto: GRAND RAPIDS. - - MINN W.E. NEAL, Dealer in Pine and Farming | Lands. |The finest List. of Agricultural and Grazing Lands in the County. The Most, Excellent Sites. for Many ie lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Lc ed. Correspondence Solicited, Grand Rapids, nie a a Minn Ssasegeautaesneneseneaeoe The Celebrated America’s Finest Pro- : “duction. Received Highest Reward at World’s Columbian Exposi- . position. “Recommended for \ Medincal and Family Uses. as —