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mags ees At HOTEL POKEG\M Saturday atid Sunday, * June 18 end 19. DR. C.J. LARSON, THE EYE SPECIALIST With his wonderful skill and methods and complicated instruments can measure vision without the aid of the Tis skil! 1a d osing and failure of the eye cannot be e: Spmptoms of Faillug Sight Do you si times see flou az spots before blur, pain, 2 fora distan fatigued from shor d rub the become q tanding phy ns i 1. upon your request, hand is of people that he has 1 biindness. that are not fitted to yqg names of hundr cured.gome from tot Do you wear glu your ey Dr. Li Rapid: regular visits to Grand n While opportunity offers. Chiropractics (Ki-rosprak-tiks) DR. B, H. NICHOLS. Dk. J.S WIERMAN. Your Back needs fixing All Diseases cured by spinal adjustinent. Cali and see us, Consultation tree. Cure guaranteed or no pay. Office Hours: FROM 9 TONA.M. FROM 2TO5 P.M. FROM 6 TO8P.M. Cffice over Marr’s Store. whether don’t care done Collins or We Dunn Collins done Dunn, Duan who is not to Here is one be done selling lumber. wl We have everything in the line of lumber and in dimen- sion stuff we have from 2x4- 12’s to 2x8-20’s also livered in wagon loads to any part of Grand Rapids. ate When in need of anything in our iine, call on or ad- dress svn DUNN & MARCIA, COHASSET, - MINN. An Up-to-Date Shave. The antiseptic shaving saloon is the latest achievement in hygienic sci- ence, says Tit-Bits. The victim is seated in an enameled iron chair, with his neck and shoulders enveloped ir a rubber pad that has been dippe& in an antiseptic solution. Previously the razor, soap dish and brush have been sterilized by half an hour’s hard boiling. Nothing is aliowed to touch the face that has not been either sterilized or disinfected antiseptically. Even the finger tips of the operator are dipped in a solution. Taps are turned by the foot, and the drawers where towels are kept are mi-robe- proof. American’ Brewery in Ghent. An American brewery has been es- tablished at Ghent, Belgium. The en- tire plant of the American brewery, with the exception of some copper ves- sels, has been brought from America. The nine glass-enameled steel tanks, each weighing 5,500 pounds empty and holding 135 hectoliters (3,445 gallons) when full, were likewise sent from America. The beer never comes in contact with the atmosphere. Steril- ized air only is admitted, under per- Ge einly Not. When you Zee a young man sitting in a drawing room with the ugliest 4 year-old boy that ever frightened him- self in a mirror clambering over his knees, jerking his necktie out of place, ruffling his shirt-front, pulling his hair, kicking his shins, feeling in all his pockets for coppers, while the wnresistirg victim smiles all the time like the cover of a comic paper, you may safely say that the howling boy has a sister who is in a room not twenty feet away, and that the young man doesn’t come vere just for the fun of playing with her brother. Religious Zeal Too Strong. John Newdick, a citizen of Kokomo, Ind., is of a strongly religious turn, put Mrs. Newdick is a trifle unregen- erate. The other evening John an- nounced family prayers, but at that moment it was inconvenient for his wife to attend, as her hands were “in the dough.” John was already on his knees, but he arose and thrashed his frreligious spouse, after which he concluded his devotional excrcises with all due reverence. Mrs. Newdick had him up before a magistrate vext morning and nis excess of zeal cost $25 ar ts.—Exchange. fect regulation, during fermentation. | '!™ *%5 ant costs 8 The yearly output will be about 300,- 000 gallons. Get your Job Work at Hera'd-Review. HE NEW TOWN This new town is splendidly situated. overlooking one of the prettiest lakes in Northern Minnesota. Sur- rounded with BEDS OF IRON ORE Several mines now being opened. ‘Tributary to a good farming district. Will be reached by the Great Northern railroad in the near future, Within a nice distance of Grand Rapids, the county seat of Itasca county, NOW READY At reasonable prices, and on terms within the reach of all 4, some APPLY TO WHO HAS OR N FAR EXCLUSIVE ADDRESS ode EU y SALE Hibbing Minnesota, = ——l— eT — ie. cen. IGEO. BOOTH, ll setae Teas i | . Cigars; H GRAND RAPIDS, J//NN if | 4 I -poow's cians” ss fl of the finest selected stock by experienced workmen in Mr. BRooth’s own shops here, and under his personal supervision. This insures the utmost cleanliness and care in manufacture. For sale everywhere. Call for them. iu el 8252525253525 SSsese5seaqeq j | (RE Se EA EEA Ee ae AEE ee ee a eee a Me eae ae ae A Favorite Resort for refreshments and where may be seen and heard one of the largest phonographs in the world is at JounorILEY’s Sample Room The Northern. t delightful be lways in . Cabinet Rye Whiskey soc weate Avent for it in Grand Rapids. We handle the finest whiskeys ever distilled. NORTNERNCA FE Peter Meil, Cief. In connection—open day and night. All delicacies of the season served at all hours. JOHN O’RILEY, Prop. GES a A A A A ee A ae a AE ae ae a HE CCE LTS hk dk dedededececdcdedrdea Re Ste ae ae a ae oe ae ea a ae eae ate a ae Ae ae ae ae ae eae eae eae aa Shingleand Lath at rock bottom prices de- TTT TTT GFE aE ae EE ME ae ME EEE RAE AE a A A eA SE ET: (6 5 a eae ae ae ee ea Ree eae eae Ea eae eee eae a a a a a a a CHARITY ON A BROAD SCALE. f An Indian Millionaire Gives Five Mil- lions to Relieve Sufferers. Naurojee Maneckjee Wadia, C. I. E., J. P., a Parsee millionaire of Bombay, has set aside a sum of money equiva- Tent to $5,000,000, the interest of which is to be devoted to give relief to those who find themselves sud- denly deprived of means of subsistence by great calamities, such as fire, fam- ine or earthquake. In order that: his charity should be far reaching in its effects, the scope cf the trust will not be confined to one place or country, but will be extended to all parts of the world. Mr. Wadia belongs to an an cient Parsee family of shipwrights, who have, during the course of a cen- tury and a half, built 350 men-of-war and other vessels. The Wadias ren- dered great service to the French goy- ernment, and as an act of recognition Napoleon Bonaparte presented the great-grandfather of the present Mr. Wadia with the Legion of Honor, and his grandfather was awarded a gold medal by Louis Philippe. Mr. Wadia has given away large sums of money in charity, and lately headed the Bom- bay Martinique Relief Fund with a large donation. WAS THE DEACON’S TURN. Drunkard’s Advice to Pillar of a Phil- adelphia Church. A drunken man staggered into a church in Philadelphia some years ago and sat down in the pew of one of the deacons. The preacher was dis- coursing about prevalent popular vices. Soon he exclaimed. “Where is the drunkard?” The drunken man was just far enough gone to think the call personal, so, rising heavily, replied: “Here I am,” and remained standing while the drunkard’s .character and fate were eloquently portrayed. A few minutes later the preacher reached an- other head of his discourse, and asked: “Where is the’ hypocrite?” Gently nudging his neighbor, the drunkard said, in an audible whisper: “Stand up, deacon; he means you this time. Stand up and take it like a man, just as I stand! It will do you good.” PARIS BANTING iN NEW WAY. To Eat Cotd Food Only the Latest Plan of Reducing One’s Weight. The new Parisian cure for too much flesh is to take all food, or nearly all, cold. The early breakfast of toast and eggs is eaten cold, and the food is washed’ down with cold coffee or milk. At luncheon there is nothing but cold meats and cold puddings, with bread, cheese and saleds. At night the meal consists of oniy mayonnaise of fish, cold entrees and entremets; no hot vegetables, but perhaps, as a bonne bouche, a hot cutlet, lean, of course. Many people in Paris who are in clined to be stout, esgpcially among the women, are assidudusly following the new cure, and most of those who tried it assert that they have ob tained satisfactory results. ne For Those With Stomach Mabit. A Philadelphia baker is authority for the assertion that the latest fad of dyspeptics ie bread made with sea water, instead of fresh water. “It, has a saltier taste,” he says, “than we are accustomed to, but it is very palatable. In fact, he who likes salty things is apt to like it better than the other kind of bread. A physician asked me about three months ago to make some of this bread for his patients. At first I made six loaves a day, but now I make thirty. My sea water comes up to me from Atlantic City three times a week. The dys- peptics who buy the bread say it is the only kind they can eat fresh without discomfort.” The New Dance. See that the new dances are to be slow and stately, one of them em- bracing a stunt like this: “The court pose, when properly done, brings the body almost in a sitting posture, with the right knee doubled under as a sup port and the left leg perfectly straight and thrust far forward.” Large, port- ly citizens with scant wind doing ‘his slowly and with stateliness will be a sight worth seeing. Peints a Moral. The awards at the International Live stock show we it very much the. same-mjth the lower ani- mals as with hu beings, in that the longest pedigree‘does not always mean the finest stock. In other words, the unpretentious human mav- erick often walks away with the prize, while his thoroughbred rival is being cajoled and curried. Nothing By Comparison. Congressman Loud of California was badly beaten in the race last No- vember. On his way east to attend the opening of Congress the train on which he was traveling was partially wrecked. A colleague congratulated him on escaping serious injury and Loud replied: “Oh, that was nothing after the wreck I was in on election day.” American Generosity. Under the title, “Gifts and Be quests,” Appletcn’s Annual Cyclopedia ! enumerates gifts and oequests for public purposes which were made, be- came operative or were completed in the United States to the amount of more than $85,000,000. This list does not include amounts less than $5.00 nor denominational contributions for educational or benevolent purposes, nor state or municipal appropriations. Among these excluded contributions are those to the American board of foreign missiona, over $18,369,163. j INTENTIONAL DUPLICATE EXPOSURE "Ar DV MADE PHILOSOPHY. A big puddle is never half so much rippled by its ducks as is the little puddle by one big duck. However, this does not mean that a shipping trust in a bath tub would be of higher effectiveness than one in the ocean. The sultan of Bacolod tries hard to inflame our wrath by calling us hogy. But we know too well the price of meat these days. The pity is that the sultan does not | pause to consider the value of prop- erly appreciating the relative propor- tion of some ducks to sume puddles. The gentleman of Bacalod either is looking for trouble or fame. Fame may be acquired by saying things, or by saying nothing. Same way about trouble. But if any person placed any cre dence in that “worth your weight in gold” theory, Dame Fashion would fix up some way for a woman to wear a set of platform scales. The sultan seems to be about the only thing that ever happened in Bacolod, anyhow. Were it not for him, Bacolod would be an unknown quantity in the problem of civiliza- tion. What we are and what we are worth are mere matters of opinion, a@byway. Many a-girl has been told that she is worth her weight in gold, Lots of us, too, have said that to a ton of coal. SAYINGS OF THE WISE. Nature is the art of Thomas Browne. No man has been matriculated in the art of life till he has been well tempted. For a woman to love some men is like casting a flower into a sepulchre. —Hawthorne. It was to combat end expose quacks and fools that laughter was invent ed.—Thackeray. Unbecoming forwardness proceeds from ignorance pudence.—Guville. In counsel it is good to see dan- gers; but in execution, not to see them unless they be very great—- Bacon. He only dces not live in vain who employs his wealth, his thought, hig speech, to advance the good of others. —Hindoo Maxim. Poetry is not made out of the under- standing. The question of common sense is always: “What is it good for?”—*a question which would abolisy the rose and be triumphantly answer- ed by the cabbage.—Lowell. If this free people, if this govern- ment itself, is ever utterly demoraliz- ed, it will come from this human wriggle and struggle for office—that is, a way to live without work.—Lin- coln. God.—Sir oftener than im- eeepc ae IS GOOD TO REMEMBER. A sewing bee can’t sing, but it does @ lot of buzzing. Setting.up the drinks is what fre quently upsets the drinker. Humanity is always ready to lend a hand—but it is often empty. It is satd that sight drafts frequent- ly induce temporary blindness. Were it not for love many a girl would be unable to make herself mis- erable. Never advertise your troubles. If you have bow legs don’t wear striped trousers. if a man is ever carried away by his ideas it must be done when he gets into a train of thought. Honesty $s undoubtedly the best policy, but.a good many men some- how fail to keep their premiums paid up. The man who sits around and waits for his friends to find him a job is always the first to line up in front of the bar on a general invitation HACKS DRAW FIRE APPARATUS. Town Authorities of Salina, Evolve Good Scheme. A Kentuckian, who recently visited Salina, Kan., writes to a Kentucky pa- per as follows: “I wish to tell you of something I saw in Kansas. As L sat in the hotel in Salina the fire bells rang. In a second three rubber-tired hacks standing in front of the hotel started. Befcre I could ask I saw three hose carts hitched to the axles of the hacks, about one dozen firemen comfortably seated in the hacks, and under whip the,precession disappeared at full speed.” Not being able to yoaintain a team of horses at the fire station the town resorted to the ex- pedient of offering a good price for the first team that shall arrive and hitch to the hose cart. The hacks, being on constant duty, often vie with one another for the prize, and the general result in point of quick service is not so much behind the city sxstem as some might suppose. —Kansas City (Mo.) Journal. Kan, National Longevity. Of Eu:opean nations the Norwegian ‘| and Swedish are the longest lived, the Spaniards the shortest. According tu a foreign statistical return recently issued, the average duration of life is as follows: Sweden and Norway, fifty years; England, forty-five years and three months; Belgium, forty-four years and eleven months; Switzer- land, forty-four years and four months; France, forty-three years and six months; Austria, thirty-nine years and eight months; Prussia and, Italy, thirty-nine years; Bavaria, thirty-six years, and Spain, thirty-two years and four months, TAYLOR, Phtvres on eer SIGN writine, PAPER HANGING, CALSOMIN- ING, FRESCO DECORAT- "ING, PAINTING, HARD- fi WOOD FINISH A SPECI- ms. ALTY : F| q : xt ‘AT HOTEL’ GLADSTONE, Gr a-Postal will brirg him to your Home. pia F. W. TAYLOR, Grand Rapids, - : Minnesota. Ben K F. PRICE LAWYER (Oftice-in the First National Bank Luilding GRAND RAPIDS, - - MINN, D* D. COSTELLO, DENTIST. —Office in First National Bank Building.— GRAND RAPIDS. MINNESOTA W.E.NEAL, PINE AND FARMING LANDS. Che tinest List of Agricultural and Grazing Lands in the County. Che Most Excellent Sites for Manv lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Correspondence Solicited. Grand Rapids, - - Minn A. B. CLAIR, Register of Deeds of Itasca County Mineral Pine and Farming Lands Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. D®: CHAS. M. STORCH, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEE€N Office and Residence. Cor. Kindred and 3r@ GRAND RAPIDs, GG’ H. SPEAR ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAND RAPIDS, : - MEW FOR SALE ; z Y j —Our First-class-— ¢: y ‘6 NATOINAL CASH REGISTER } With Keys from One Cent to 4 d } Twenty Dollars. J. E. TAPLEY, Cass Lake, Minn. SPSLSLWSTSLSLSLSLISL SS 52, eo ee eee i SORES AE a: ae Re ae ae ae a ae ae ae ae ae ae as ae te ae G. C. SMITH :DEALER IN Fruits, Confectionery, Ice Cream Soda, Ice Cream, Drinks, Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. LELAND AVENUE. SE ARE AEE aE eA a ae aE ae ae ae ae me ae a Ee a ae Ee EE A A A Ae a ea a ea a a ae ae ae ee SORA A A oe Ae Ae ae eae He as ae ae ae a aaa a F. P. SHELDON. Cashier C.E. AIKEN, Asst. Cashier? Lirst National Bank, Grand Rapids, Minn. Transacts a General Banking Businese ITASCA, COUNTY ABSTRACT OFFIE ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE. O. W. HastINGs. President. P.J, SHELDON. Vice President. Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KING, Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, — - : MISE