Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, November 1, 1902, Page 1

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oad Vor. XI—No. 13. Clothing If you want good. wearing quality buy the celebrated Hart, Schaffner and Marx’s clothing, The right suit for the average man is one that will wear well and fits well and does not cost too much. If that is.the kind of suit you want get Hart, Schaffner and Marx goods and no other. Every suit and overcoat bearing this label is guaranteed to be all wool, Every suit and overcoat shows plainly the splendid workmanship of experienced tailors, and will give you good wearing service, We have a nice line this fall, including the new snow-flake tweed, that makes up So prettily’ In addition we. can show you a clean line of Neckties, Shirts, Collars, Gloves and other furnishings .-in latest styles. Who not look at them. Suits from $10.00 up. ITASCA MERCANTILE CO, a cs —— J AT ONE JUMP We have gone clear over competition. Look the world. over, and you won’t find—in this section at leaat—a larger, finer and better assorted stock of Li mbermen’s Supplies than is found right in our store. We are headquarters for this class_of goods and cau fit you out with a complete outfit ov any part of it. No use to look for something better or cheaper because you won't find it. When you think of Lumbermen’s Supplies, think of us. WM. J. &b. D. Powers. % SPSTSSS2SF Be: Now as to-Your Winter Suits and Overcoat 1 have the goods that will please you, styles that are superb, and that’s all‘I need announce ---the hundreds of suits worn in Grand Rapids to-day attest to my skill as a “Fitter of Man.” Call and see Johnson, The Tailor, Whose Prices are Always Right. wy C®eVSWEVSLSLSWSLSLSZSVWS VSMCS go : »S HARNESS Heavy, Light, Single and Double. Plush and Fur Robes, Collars; Sweat Pads, Blankets, Etc, Everything kept.as in a First-class Harness Shop, My Goods are Sold at Minneapolis Prices. Sole Agent for Balsam of Myrrh, the Best Liniment on Earth for Domestic Animals. Repairing done Promplty and Neatly. me Suerantee’” EMIL LITCHKE, GRAND RAPIDS A TAS SR SS ECC || ought to do, We hive kn ‘| such & tian as Ole Mausten ¥ | L. Hollingsworth, W. C. Mead and C. el | || In supporting Thos. A. for the state senate from second district, we believe ing what every guod citizen 4 the wellfare of this country McHugh" for sumetime. him to: be'a suber, honest and man, a man of modern ide gifted with the power of expr them -intelligently. His d a severe reflection upon th standing ana conscious rectivi the peuple of this distr‘ut. Eschines says: ‘The chara city is known. by the character‘f the men it crowns.” The character of a}. community, a state, a nation, is ‘kndwn and estimated by the character of the men whom it selects to/repre- sentit. Is Mr. Mausten atypical man? Is he the man to step intu Senator McCarthy’s shues? ‘he man through whom you would have the world know and estimate your standard of intelligence and morality? Tbe oftice of state senator is a diguified one to which only men of serious thought aud uplittiog ideas should “aspire, aud unly such men should re! e any | can electors. There. is _ reason why we are suppor Hugh. Unless he is ele representation from tais dist be very iuetticient upon especially in the upper ho : fivur work is very important, upon the flour of the senate McCarthy presented intact ii lien law two years ago. and intrigueing may be al their piace, but unless a man his own wood his interests interests of his constitutes liable to perish during somes the session. We believe tl Hugh, will make a most— member upon the floor. oud Yuice, Is a kKeeu debator, wake au ideal ‘Fuis attiuude of a tu _legisiative office sisteucy. Our duly and yours clear aud uuimuiguous, Wesdo not want Mausten. We cannot afford to sacrifice Our credit for iutegrity, veracity aud moral rectitude by posing us the coustituent of Ole Mausven Logging News. The Swan River Logging Co., and the Powers-Simpson Co., will do most of the logging for the Sheviin-Carpenter Co. of Minne- apolis, Last winter, the latter company had over 60,000,000 feet of logs cut for them. ‘lhey ex- pect only about 50,000,000 -this winter. Price Bros., and ~Powers- Simpson Co., will do the most of the logging for the C. A. Smith Company. The Itasca Legging company ex- pects to log as much timber as last year which is in the neighborhood of 70,000,000, ‘The rest of the log- ging companies have not made any special preparations at the prescnt time but are locking forward to only a fairly good season. The small pox cry is again being heard in sone of the logging camps. Whale a few cases have developed this fall. there is no danger of the disease becoming as prevalent in the woods as in the past owing to the efforts of the logging concerns to prevent it getting a foothold. Sanitary methods are being intro- duced in the camps. The ‘loggers are co-operating with the state board of health in this respect.— Lumberman. oman To Build Logging Road The International Bridge and Ter- minal company with headquarters iu Minneapolis, incorporated today for purpose of building a logging road in’, the northern part of Itasca county, and bridges over the Rainy Lake river, to connect the American.and Canadian shores. The capital is $50,- 000,000, and the incorporators ‘are’ Washington Gray, A. A. Avery, E. H. Miller, all of Minneapolis. res Courtney A. Buell, Democratic candidate for judge of. probate, re- turned Thursday from a four days’ canvass of the logging camps on Prairie nver, He was in good spirits and says the outlook is yery bright and feels sure of success. Mr. buell also said that E. J. Farrell has gained a large number of votes through the rank charges made against him. .| vileges to nuue, and if I am elected | mau that has gobbled the whole Re- CTIVE PAGE “Since.I received the i nomination for this offive I have re- | flected upon the matter and I have become convinced that the duties of great. Ido not believe a man can g0 to congress from this district and. conserve the Interests of the district by drawing his salary, and having a jolly good time hobnobing aad fun- 1 aking. I do not desire to go to ingress and “du not want the voie uf apy mano to help send me there unless I can give the duties of that office the most conscientious effort, and all of my time. “+I beleive in the broad principle of equal rights to all, and: special pri- to congress from this district I shall go there to serve the farmer, the laborer, and the business man alike, fearlessly, promptly and to the best of my: ability and wy greatest effort would be to lend to the office the dignity which has been maintained by the men who held it in the past. “I beleive that the government should -now by proper laws become the owner and control the anthracite coal tields. I believe there is only one sure way for the peuple of this country to have speedy and proper action taken against these greedy trusts, and that is to elect a Dem- cratic congress. _ “Mr. Bede says he favors free wheat from Canada. Tat is a cheap bid for the vote of the citizens of Duluth. Bede, if.-be knows any- thing, knows that:wheat cannot be placed on the free list because the }§ owners of millions of acres of wheat lands west of us wculd not stand for it for a’ minute. “Bede also favors the removal of the tariff on iron ore, and says that would rob the opposition of much of its thunder. What do you think ofa publican party in six years and wants to &steal the thunder of the oppusi- tion, too?” Big Timber Deal. Another large deal in Northern Minnesota standing pine ‘has just beeu consuinated through K. A. McDonald, of this city. The en- tire Culligan tract of timber in St. prising over 80,000,000, has been sold to W. H. Cook, of thi for $328,000, : The timber was owned princi- pally by Patrick Culligan and F. W. Gilchrist, of Alpena, Mich., K. A. McDonald haying an interest in it. The sale comprises the entire holdings in Minnesota pine-of both Mr. Culligan and Mr. Gilchrist. The timber in ‘this sale is jocated north and west of Virginia, scat- terred over 9 number. of townships in both g§¢. Louis and Itasca counties and is directly tributary to the Daluth, Virginia and Rany Iver road which is being built from Virginia to the Canadian boundary line at Koochiching. It is Said that the timber comprises some of the best remaining standing pine in the northern part of the state and would not have been on the market but from the fact that it could not be reached any other way than by the new railroad. The timber is not to be logged this year.—Duluth Herald. Wu's LAUNDRYMAN. Mistaken by Green Reporter for Lega- tion - Attache, An interesting story is told apropos of a-reporter’s zeal to obtain news from the Chinese legation in Wash- ington, D. C., regarding affairs in Pe- kin. He was an enterprising young fellow sent by his editor to take the place. of the regular Washington cor- respondent, who was away on his va- cation, and he had spent the whole morning’in'thé-vieinity of the lega- tion” ‘endeavoring: toispick, up some- thing; hot Knowing: thatthe most di- l reét Way!Avoukdchgvetpeen,to see Min- qa Bimeelfo whe, js: invariably ‘a about*granting “interviews.” He Was about to‘abandon his.project when ‘an ‘fntelligent looking and..well dresség Chinaman came ‘down.the-steps of the legation and responded, -8Q: pleasantly to his greeting-that he hombarded him with a whole list of questions, to which the polite Celestial repeatedly answered: “Dun know, dun know.” Finally quite desperate at his inability to make something out of what .he Yooked upon as a-rare chance,.a walk with one of the legation’s secretaries, he asked, appealingly: ‘Well, surely you know‘ something of the dowager empress; what do you think of her?” “Me no thinkee,” responded the China- } man, “me washee,” ana with this parting announcement he disappeared into a laundry near by, of which he turned out to be the proprietor.—San | Francisco Argonaut, ood tbe congressman are serious and| Louis -and -Itasca~-counties, com-| 8 cityy| ask to see, shown in this y- not. GRAND RA ———— wi, WII! With a full line of Windows and Doors. the most complete line west of Duluth. You can find, if-you we ude e most com- plete line of gi A Goods that can be ¢ Our new line of Ladies’ Street and Dress are of the finest in Colors and Styles you have seen this year. In Blacks and all shades of Grey. Prices from $2.00 to $10.00. Our line of Ladies’, Misses’ and | Children’s Jackets are of the same idea. The latest in Color oe and Style that can be shown. And — at prices that are right. It’s a pleasure for us to show our goods, for eve new, up-to-date and cl give us a call whether you buy or hing is rything HENRY HUGHES & 60. FORNITORE and UNDERTAKING, Carpets, Draperies, Curtains, ° Shades, Wall Paper, Pictursesand Picture Framing.a Speciality THE FURNITURE STORE, LENT BLOCK PIDS, { y spuiesnitiivitenintaamenimmrcuaniimntpeniet _ oe , | - MINN. Her We Are Again! We have We also have a large line of Screen Doors and Windows, all sizes, all colors, and all prices. We also carry a full line of Ptasterers’ Material, such as Lime, Brick, Hair, Cement and Wall Plaster. Call on d. d. DECKER, HAVRE OECECEBESBE at the Lumber Office, or ’Phone No. 9. ew GO TO KREMER’: - For High Grade Goods At Lowest Prices. { Nakomis Canned Goods, Kennedy's Crackers and Cakes, Heinz Cider Vinegar, Heinz Pickling Vinegar, Swift’s Premium Hams, _Faust Blend Coffee, Korn Krisp, Clarissa Creamery Butter, Jap Rose Soap, Fels Naptha Soap, Heinz Baked Beans, Hiawatha Pure Spices, Ralston’s Breakfast Food, Nakomis Yeast, Blanke's Ceylon Tea, Blanke’s Faust Tea,+All Kinds of Fresh Fruits. We guarantee our goods to be the best on the market. ‘ *Phone 24. The Grocers. Grand Rapids se Minnesota i DVTVAVWD OVS... PUTED OF a

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