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‘ | | | | ‘Barley-Malt Best Hops ~ No Corn One reason or a4 superiority 0 Aahencr Buick brews is, they contain no corn, an ingredient that chea: the cost of brewing and injires the quality of the beer. The mark of purity— The ‘‘A’”’? and the EAGLE. identifies the products of the Anheuser-Busch BrewingAssn BUDWEISE —“King of Bottled Beers.” 83,790,300 bottles sold in 1902. RE- FLECT | A little before pur where } TOS, = we chasing goods eat “cheapness” is the only | inducement. ae Only secures furmture below average value. Our figures are a reasonable advance on cost. Goods are the best values to be had anywhere. We offer a line of Iron and Brass Beds which is un- surpassed. ‘They are well made of superior matenal and beautifully finished. . GEORGE F. KREMER Furnisher and Undertaking. BEL Tae ay > CLOTHING AND ; GENT’S FURNISHINGS, The Star Clothing House opposite Hotel Pokegama, has an immense Stock, our goods are’all new and of the latest style, B. L. LEIBERMAN. ) ae SAY, PA, WHY AMS TO RIPSSZue eFE DON’T YOU WEAR NO sR HURT THE FEET. THE MENOMINEE SEAMLESS? Sensibie boy, that. He made a bulls eye when he spoke. We make shoes which put the corn- cure dealers on theranxious seat. We cure corns by fitting the feet scientifically. The best way to cure corns is to prevent their growth in the first place. The Menominee Seamless Union Made Shoe 1s casy-to- wear, easy-to-buy, easy-to-sell, For Sale By J. 5. KURIZMAN, } The Shoe Man Grand Rapids | - h GUARANTEED TO OUT-WEAR Minnesota.| ANY SHOE ON THE MARKET. pa TIME TABLE Crreat Worthern Railway Company. READ DOWN READ UP West BounD cprione East Bounp DULUTH. Arrive | 6:45 P.M. | 7:10 A. M. West Superior s 6:25 " 6:52“ Cloquet = 5: a 5:20“ . Floodwood “ 4:00 ‘* Y ee = be Swan River sf 3:25 “ B38 fg “GRAND RAPIDS“ 2.51 * 2:58 ‘ Arrive Cohasset Leave 2:41“ 2:47 ie Deer River a 2:25 “ 2:30 “ * Cass Lake bir 1:5 * 1:10 _* *. Crookston Se 9:05 A.M. | 9:15 P.M. ¢ Grand Forks _ 8:10 * 8:00 {ER ea PVE ; The Herald-Review Does Best JOB PRINTING. | think that I could get another year out of ~had that range of figures in view. Mrs. Job- : - “T'm afraid,” remarked Mrs. Ji evening about a couple of weeks ago, 7 I'll have to have a rew wrap of some sort for the cold weathe—a or thing. To-day I was lookii over astrakhan-trimmed coat that I’ve had for . three seasons, and it ‘ooks rather and | frayed.” | “Um,” said Mr. Jobson, dropping his newspaper. “Yon’re afraid you'll have to. havea new one, hey? Afraid is good. Aren’t you.afraid somebody’ll come along and hand you the title deed to one of the Thousand | Islands, with an Italian rennaissance villa | built in the middle of it? What you got to | be afraid of? Don’t you think it’s up to me to be afraid instead?” “Well,” said Mrs. Jobson, calmly, “I did ; the old coat, especially as I wear my seal- rah eg for very bitter weather, but it— “About how much is this new garment going to set me back?” interrupted Mr. Job- 80 mn. “TI ought to be 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 out. You have such excellent taste in such things.” “Uh-huh, that’s a pretty good jolly, all 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 couple of months afterward.” ~ Mrs. Jobson had observed the same thing, but she wasn’t saying anything about it. “Oh, I wouldn’t think of getting anything expensive,” she said. “I merely want alittle 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 together to look over jackets ranging in price from $20 to $25—that is to say, Mr. Jobson son had other views. “TI want to give you fair warning,” seid Mr. Jobson, as they walked in the direction of the store they were to visit first, “that $25 is 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 president of any more than ‘ten or fifteen national banks, you know.” Mr. Jobson stood by gloomily while Mrs. Jobson was trying on a number of $20 tan soats. He shook his head over each try-on. “Dinky,” was his comment as to all of the $20 coats. “Digky to the last degree, Wouldn’t be seen on the street with you in such a rag as that. Thought you said you could get something decent for $20?” “Why, I think they’re real nice,” said Mrs Jobson, innocently, as she removed the sixth $20 jacket that she had tried on. “Well, I’ve got something to say about that myself,” said Mr. Jobson. “I have to take you out, you know, and if you think I’m going to traipse around town with you in any such tack rig as that you’re mistaken, that’s all. Have ’em.show you some of. the $23 kind.” The $25 grade of jackets were brought forth by the saleswomar “They make you look like you worked in a box faetory,” he commented. “They’re top-sided and all bunched up in the back, “But of cours? any jacket would have to be altered,” interrupted Mrs. Jobson, in- wardly delighted over the way her little scheme was progressing, ‘*Altered nothing,” said Mr. Jobson. “All the tailors on earth couldn’t make any one of those things fit to be-seen im a back yard, How did you happen to get your mind set on one of those mea#ey, miserable little jackets, anyhow? Why don’t you get some- thing that will cover you up? I see women on the street with those long things—come down to their heels and fit.’em snug—don’t mean those imbecile automobile coats or raglan, but those long ones that cling to the waist—” “Oh,” put in Mrs. Jobson, “you mean the Newmarkets. They are pretty, of course,” and she was seething with inward joy, “but they cost a great deal more than jackets, you know. Mrs. Kaystreet has one that looks lovely, even if she is too stout, but of eourse her husband makes a great deal of—” _“That’s all right about what her husband makes,” said Mr. Jobson. “There are a whole lot of bluffs running around this town, These jackets that you’ve been try~: ing on won’t do, that’s all. There’s nothing to’em. They look silly. You get the young woman to show you one of the long ones; “Well, I tried one on—an awfully pretty one—in this very store only last week,” said Mrs. Jobson. “Of course, I only tried it on for fun, to see how it would look. It i« lovely and all that, but I eouldn’t think of having anything so expensive—” “There’s a heap. of things that you can’t think about, Mrs. Jobson,” said Mr. Job- gon, oracularly. “I’m the one that’s doing the buying in this family, you’ll remember, and if you think yow’re going to plow around this town in one of the things you've been looking at with me at your side you've got another guess. And if that dumpy Mrs. Kaystreet can wear one of those long thinge I’m talking about you'll shape up all right in one of them. Let’s have a look at some pa - Whereupon Mrs. Jobson winked shrewd: ly at the saleswoman, who smiled furtively in reply, and in about half a minute the seleswoman produced the melton Newmar ket, with storm collar revers of beaver that Mrs. Jobson had had put aside for f«e- ther inspection on the previous day. Mrs Jobson got into the beautiful garment and it fitted her like a violin in a box, and gave her figure a svelte appearance that caused Mr. Jobson to gaze at her admiringly out of the slants of his eyes. “Um! That’s something like it,” he said, surveying the garmeat with repressed enthu: jasm. :“‘How much is the thing?” “Sixty dollars,” said the saleswoman. “Oh, goodness me, I couldn’t think of purchasing such an expensive, wrap just now,” hastily put in Mrs. Jobson, catching the saleswoman’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 | ‘eut now to sort o’ christen it.” i “But, my dear,” protested Mrs. Jobson, very gleefully interiorly, “we can’t afford it. Df course, ‘t’s cheap at the price, but how can we afford to—” “Look a-here, madam,” said Mr. Jobson, x away a little dis- tance at a signal from Mrs. Jobson, “I’ want you to understand that ™’m running the financial end, and I dou’t iutend tha’ you shall show me up before saleswomen * stores, either. You take that coat or now nd the great white light of under og. Yesnt 5 ted Mr, Job son's even when it does Mrs. Sobson wits have the coat.--Washingtos et oe ee ee ; family he gave him a letter of recom- mendation and this is how he worded it; “I hereby certify that A—— B—-~- my gardener for over two and that during that time he more out of my garden than any I ever employed.” Monograms on Peaches. The peaches placed on the table at &@ London dinner party bore the mon- ogram of their owner traced distinct- ly in the velvety bloom. Letters had ‘been cut from paper and pasted on the growing peaches.“ When the fruit ‘was ripe on removing the paper let- ters ‘the monograms were found picked out in most delicate green, the Test of the fruit being rosy and deep hued. He Fears the Worst. “The senior editor of the Saccharine (Colo.) Gazette went to Denver Tues- day,” says the junior editor. “He is probably married! whether it was with ‘malice and afore- thought,’ but ’tis done. ‘Blessed be the ties that bind.’ We know nothing of this, but had grave suspicions when Monday evening he. borrowed the only white shirt this office possessed.” No Escape From Trouble. An interesting light on the subject of government ownership of railways comes from ‘Victoria, Australia, where the 10,000 employes of the govern- ment railway, defeated in an attempt to elect legislators who would raise their pay and shorten their hours, are threatening to strike. Evidently there is no royal road to industrial peace. _ Family Too Noisy. A noisy family, kept by an old woman in Paris, aroused the indigna- tion of the neighbors. It consisted of twenty hens, fifty ‘roosters, thirty pigeons, eight dogs, four cats, a par- ‘rot, a goat and a dozen small birds. The neighbors couldn’t sleep, they complained and the woman's family was scattered by the police. His Majesty the Baby. While the little Prince Leopold of Belgium was being taken out for a drive by his nurse a company of the Civic Guard passed, and, seeing the prince, halted and presented arms. The nurse took the baby’s hand and put it to his forehead ina military salute—the first the baby had ever made. ;Americans to Control Paris Gas. Anthony N. Brady of Albany and William C. Whitney of New York are at the head of a company of Ameri- cans whose capital is $50,000,000, who are negotiating for the central corpor- ations supplying Paris with gas. La- ter on they. will strive for the elec- tric plants of the French capital. Inventor Dies in Poverty. Karl Kiesewetter, the inventor of the Swedish safety match, died some- time ago in Romania, aged more than 90 years, in great poverty. He with- drew from the Jonképing factories forty years ago with a great deal of money, but lost it all in railroad spec- ulations. Enormous Prices for English Cattle. American. cattle breeders import most of their prize stock from Eng- land and sometimes enormous prices are paid. Last week quite a number of bulls and cows were purchased for «Americans and the prices paid range from $2,100 to $6,250 per head. _, Bill. Has Little Chance. The bill introduced in the Virginia house of delegates to prohibit pro- miscuous kissing will hardly become alaw. There are too many bachelors and married men, not to mention wid- owers, among the members of the leg- {slature. Large Christmas Candles. Christmas candles are made of enor- mous size. The largest, known as “altar staffs,” are sometimes 6 feet long. They weigh nearly 40 Ibs. and are worth $25 apiece, being made of the purest beeswax. An Indian Superstition. Howison tells in his “Travels in Canada” how his Indian guide begged him to keep still on Christmas eve in the woods in order that they might see the deer kneel to tue Great Spirit. Receipts of New York Postoffice. When the New York postoffice was built its annual receipts were $2,892,- 637; they are now $11,670,574; in a few years they will be $20,000,000. Wheri Clergymen Could Not Marry. English ‘clergymen ‘were prohibited from for rather more than four centuries, beginning from the reign of Ethelred. The Penalties of Age. A person usually begins to -lose height at the age of fifty, and at the age of ninety has lost at least 1% inches. . Money In Selling Stray Dogs. By the sale of stray dogs the Northumberland (England) County Council made £4 10s 6d last year. We do not know, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence. Cor..Kindred and 3rd GRAND RAPIDS. ; D® D. COSTELLO, DENTIST. —Office in First National Bank Building.— GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA. at what we can do. People who know how we make clothes are proud to say their clothes came from here. CARISTMAS CLOTHES and al] others might just as well fit right. Come to us and fit, price, and style will all be as it ought te be. Let us show you the cloth for WINTER OVERCOATS and just how we make them, The swell effect is, there, and anyone can tell it was made to order. AUGUST JOHNSON, The Merchant Tailor, Grand Rapids, Minn. latest Notice of Application for Liquor . Licenss. STATE OF MINNESOTA, t County of Itasca. Village of Grand Kapids, Notice is hereby given. That application has been made intwriting to the village coun- cil of the village of Grand Rapids and filed in may office, praying for ,license-to sell intoxi- cating liquors for the term commencing on the 17th of December, -1903, and terminating on the 17th day of December 1904, by the fol lowing persons. and at the following place as stated in said;application, respectively, to-wit: Mohr & Dibbert, for the term of one year from the 17th day of December 1903, to the 17th day of December 1904, in the north front room on the first floor of the buildiug situ- uted on lets 10, 11 und.12 in block 16, original townsite of Grand Rapids, Minnesota, Said application will be heard and deter- mined by said village council of ‘the village of Grand Rapids at the council room in the Vilage hall. in the above said villag» on Monday, the 14th day of December, 1903, at &:30 o'clock p. m. of that day, Witness our hands and seal of said village of Grand Rapids this 30th day of November, 1903. GEORGE RIDDELE, J. 8, GOLE. Presi lent. (sEAL] Village Recorder. Herald-Review Dee. 5-13, Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Default having been mzde in the payment ofthesum of five-hundred fifty dollars, which is claimed to ba due and is due at the date of this notice, upon a certain mortgage, duly executed and delivered by Christian P. Waller and Theresa Waller. bis wife, mor- tgagors. to P. H. Aamoth. mortaggee. bearing date the 18th day of February, 1903, and with a powerof sale therein contained, duly re- corded in the office of the Kegister of Deeds in and forthe county of Itasea and State of Minnesota, on the 20th Jay of February. 1903. at 1 o'clock B m. in book L of mortgages, on we 109, and no action or proceeding having Been instituted. at law. or otherwise, to re- cover the debt secured by said mortgage or any part thereof. rf Now Therefore, Notice is hereby given. That by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage. und pursuant to the stutute in such case made and provided, the said mortgage will be ‘oreclosed by the sale of the premises described in and conveyed by said mortgage, viz: Lot one (1) and the SKE ofthe NE of section one, township sixty-nine (69) north of range twenty-five west of the 4th Principal Meridian. Also Jot four (4) of section. six township sixty-nine. north of range twenty- four west of the 4th Principal Meridian in Itas- ecacounty and State of Minnesota. with the ereditaments and appurtenances;which sale willbe made by the sheriffof said Itasca county, at the front door of the court house in the village of Grand Rapids in said county and state, on the 26th day of January. 1904, at J0 o'clock A. M. of that day. at public vendue to the highest bidder for cash, to pay said debtof tive hundred fifty dollars. and interest, and taxes, if any. on sald premises. and fifty dollars attorney's fees. as stipulated in and by said mortgage in case of foreclos- ure, and the disbursements allowed by law; subject to redemption at any time within one year from the day of sale. us provided by law. ated December 8th A. D. 1903. E. M. NILES P. H. AAMOTH, Z A ttorhey. Mortgagee. Twin Valley. Minn. Herald-Review Ded. 12-19-26 Jun. 2-9-16-23. Notice of Cancellation of Land Contract. To F. W. Gregory, 0. H. Deford, and Ed V. Jenson: You, and each of you are hereby notified that default has occurred in the payment provi for in a land contract entered into yard between W. F. Carter, of - Ramsey county, Minnesota, party of the first part, and F. W. Gregory and D. H. DeFord. parties of the second part. dated the 12th a of Beptember, 1901, conveying the W% of thes E4, and lot 2, section 7. E% of the NE, sec- tion 12: the S%4.and St of NW. section 17; E% of NE of section 18; NW of NW% sec- tion 28; SEX of SW, lots 1, 2, 3 ard 4, section 31, township 63, range 24. containing 922.21 acres, Itusea county. Minnesota. That de- faulthas occurred by reason of your not ering pail, $438.05 and interest due Septem- ber 12. 1903. and that said contract will be cancelled and terminated on the 26th day of rome 1904, as’ provided for in said con- trac . , Dated this 8th day of December. 1903. W. F CARTER, . Party of the First part STATE OF MINNESOTA, 88. County of Ramsey. Re it known that on the 8th day of Decem- her. 1903. before me personally came W. KF. Carter, who acknowledged that he signed the foregoing notive of can ation for himself and that the same is done of his own free act } duced, eee (SBAEL __ EUGENE BRYAN, Notary Public. inand for Ramsey county, Mipnesota. Regtster of Deeds of Itasca Count Mineral Pine:ana. Farming Lands Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. Gr’: H. SPEAR ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAND RAPIDS, : - MINN ©. W. HAsTINGs. F. P. SHELDON. President. Oashier P. J. SHELDON, C. E. AIKEN, Vice President. First National Bank, Grand Rapids, Minn. Transacts a General Banking Businesa Asst. Cashier ae A AE A a a, Ae ee ae a ae eae a ea a ae a a ate a 2 * = H MH ¢ G. C. SMITH =: : DEALER IN ; . . * % Fruits, Confectionery, 2 = Ice Cream Soda, & : 2 = Ice Cream, Drinks, . 4 - Tobaccos, : & Choice Lines of Cigars $ = * : : t : Grand Rapids, - Minn. & : LELAND AVENUE. : 2 = Seoneoeeneoeoneseessresees Frayx F, PRICE LAWYER. (Office in the First National Bankjvajiding GRAND RAPIDS, - ~- MINN W. E. NEAL, Dealer in Pine and Farming Lands. The tinest List of Agricultural and Grazing Lands in the County, The Most Excellent Sites for Mapu lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Lucated. Corres.ondence: Solicited. Grand Rapids, - g Land Loeater And Crutser. I have some of the flinest tracts of Pine and Hardwood Lands In this section on my lists. Teams and Drivers Furnished parties desiring’ to make trip into» the country. Call on or address: EDW. H. LAWRENCE, Bena, Minnesota.. Execution Sale. Under and by virtne of an execution issued out of and under the seal of the district court in and for Itasca county. in the Fifth- teenth Judicial district of the state of Minnesota, on the 4th day of October, 1903. upon a judgment duly rendered’ and docketed in said court and county on the 19th day of May. 1903. in favor of Wheaton Drug company, « corporation, plaintiff, and aguinst Wallace D. Leeman, ‘defendant. for the sum of two hundred and forty-two and five one hundreth’s dollars (242.05). which said execution was to me, as sheriff of said Itasca county, duly directed ond delivered, I have levied'upon and shall sell ut public auction to the highest cash bidder, at the front door of the court house in the village of Grand Rapids, in said Itasca county, on Monday. the Fourteenth day of March. 1904. atten o'clock in the forenoon of that day, all the right, title and interest that above named judgment debtor had on said 19th duy of May, 1903. and may havo thereafter ac- quired, ir: and to lot five (5) of section twent six (26) in township fifty-five (55) _nort! range twenty-five (25) west of the fourth Principal Meridian, in said Itasca coygnty, Minnesota. Duted, Nov. 25th 1903. WM. HOOLIBAN. Sheriff Itasca Co., Minn, ALFRED L. THWING, Atoraev for Judgement Creditor. Herald-Review Jan. 16-23-30, Feb 6-16-20. Fiasca County Abstract Office ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE, Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER € KING, Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, -— - MIy, Minn | ‘Edward H. Lawrence, |