Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘, ’ 2. 4 -§. ¢ “« | \. % 1 | > z er vit \ ) im / i at His business MUST be closed out in short Ben Levy’s boys instructed to sell the order. stock at any Ben Levy now lying seriously ill at his home in Minneapolis. ‘ cost. . Now is your chance to buy goods for a song. Extra Salespeople wanted to help wait on the large crowds. Good-bye lt Is a Genuine, to the Enterprise. Honest, Fair, Open and Above Board Going Out of Business Sal which fully deserves and merits your support and patronage. Join the crowds of buyers if all you néed is a Every little bit helps. clean collar. ABRAHAM LEVY in Charge whores. During the Week C. H. Dickinson, manager. of the Ttasca store, was a passenger to Chi- cago yesterday. John F, Naughton, of Deer River, was at the Pckegama Wednesday. Mrs. Jones has no superior as a soprano singer in the northwest. Prompt delivery of any goods ordered at the Crand Kapids bakery. Dr. C. M, Storch was called to Deer River yesterday on protessional busi- ness. Manager Bossard returned yester- day from a business trip to Minne- apolis. R. C, Holt has rented the Neil Me Laughin residence and will take im- mediate possession, Remember the Jones song recital at the High school auditorium ‘Thurs- day evening of next week. Superintendent Garris, of the elec~ tric light and water plant, went to Be- midji yesterday on business! Mrs. Maud Ulmer Jones sings at the High school auditorium Thurs- day evening, October 19, Mr. John Mooney left yesterday } afternoon on a visit to friends and} relatives at Maple Lake, Minn, O. E. Hulihan, formerly cashier ot the First State bank of Deer kuver, was in town Wednesday and Thurs- day. Attorney C. J. Rockwood of Minne- appolis was transacting business at Clerk of Court Rassmussen’s office on ‘Thursday. Contractor King says the public library will be completed and ready to turn over to the board about the 15th of November. Mrs. A. H. Kremer and two chil- Have you bought bread, cakes, pies, cookies, etc,, at the Grand Rap- ids bakery? ‘Try it. Mr. Shoaft, the new proprietor, 1s keeping only the best , Mr. and Mrs. M. A, Heegaaid, parents of Mrs, M. L. Bolter, who visited here two weeks, returned to their home in Minneapolis yesterday afternoon. Dr, W. H. Magie and wife were passengers to Duluth yesterday after-' noon. They had been spending some ume at the Burrows and Magie Trout lake lodge. 4 The services Sunday at the M. E, church will be in charge of the re- cently appointed pastor, Rev. Hollis R. Scott, who will preach mornng and evening. Everyone is cordially invited. C. L. Buck, the Hill City real estate man, was in town this week. He says business in the land hne is not par- | ticularly on the rush just now, but there 1s something doiug all the time and bright prospects for the immediate future. T. J. Welsh, at one time a promi- nent and popular resident of Grand Rapids, vistted here thts week in_ his capacity as general overseer of log- ging operations on Indian allotment lands. Mr. Welsh is now a resident of Cass Lake. .¢ W. J. Quigg has accepted a posi- tion as scaler for the Keewatin Lum- ber company \and_ will be employed in the vicinity of Effie for some time, where the ‘Herald-Reyiew will . pay dren, of Deer River, visited at the home of E. A. Kremer this. week, re- turning home Wednesday. : The Grand Rapids bakery has put a dust proot delivery wagon on the street. No dust on anything you buy of the Grand Rapids bakery. J. J. Cameron, the genial court re- porter for Judge Spooner, was here Thursday taking down the testimony in the case against Mike Callahan. INTENTIONAL DUPLICA him a weekly visit to cheer the, soli- tude of camp ife. Judge H. 5. Huson and wife spent eight days in Cochran’s house boat on Wabana and Trout lakes, returning home Thursday evening. ‘The judge says he never spent a more enjoyable outing in his life, and only regretted that he was unable to remain longer among the sylvan scenes of that beau- titul region of Itasca county, “| alternoon Don and Frank Ff. Aitkin were here this week, ‘They started out through north central Tasca county on a cruising expedi- tion. Miss McKay, of Weitzel and Miss Parker, §| teachers in the eighth grade of pub- lic schools, went to Duluth ‘Thursday { to. visit the schools of that city. . The pupils of their grades were dismissed Thursday in time to cateh the 3 o’clock train, Anyone who can’t enjoy these au- tump days must be incurably dyspep- uc. The weather is so fine in every sense, the ozone so invigorating, and the scenic beauty of the torests so en- chanting, that it’s a shame to stay ih- doors to gct the money. John Wasson has been awarded the contract by the United State post- office authorities to carry the mail be tween Grand Rapids and Wabana. The compensation is fixed at $350. Three trips weekly will be made, on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. W. H. Adams, W. H. Showers, and F.S. Fincher of Bloomington’ Ind., and A. W. Lounsberry and C. L. Simmons of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who have been enjoying themselves on Waubana lake for several weeks, were east bound passengers yesterday morning. The northern Minnesota conference of the M. E. church held in Duluth this week appointed Rev. H. R. Scott to the church at Grand Rapids. Rev. C. H, Hawn, who has been here dung the past year, has been put in charg» of the work at Deer River and Cohasset. Ben Levy, proprietor of the Enter- prise store, left for Minneapolis last Sunday morning to spend a week or ten days with his family. Mr. Levy had not been feeling well for some time, and he may remain longer than he at first anticipated toreceive medi- cal treatment. Biliy Dibbert, L. R. Root and Marshal Harry will constitute a duck hunting party that will go west to Crookston tomght. They will be chaperoned by A. C, Schmidt and the shooting will be done in the vicinity of Crookston, where the aquatic birds are said to be plentiful. ; Ralph Marr will not play football for some time. Last Wednesday even- ing he was brought home from the field af the strenucus game with a badly sprained ankl2. Lhe doctor says he will be allready to enter next seasoh’s gai In the meantine there is one padded suit for sale cheapul TE EXPOSURE }jabout five feet. _| the tract” that has been covered deep period of eighteen years icking because the reach him regularly. - Several acres of land have reappear- ed just below the paper mill dam since the water has fallen in the Mississippi lf the -water had been permitted to flow naturally dur- ing the season some one might have put up several tons of good hay on with water during the past summer. Master Sherman George Cochran, about two years old, son of Mr. and Mrs, Sherman Cochran, had the mis- fortune to sit down in a pan of boil- ing water one day this week. Dr. Russell was called and applied such remedies as relieved the pain, but it will be some time before the little fel- low will be able to enjoy any genuine comfort, The village authorities. shoyld at once direct the cleaning up and sur- face grading of Leland avenue be- tween . Second and. Third streets. The dirt thrown out to allow the laying of cement walks still remains along the gutter, not only presenting an unsightly appearance but is also having a tendency to ruin the gutter, which was put in at public expense. October strawberries in Itasca county! Talk about this not being a fruit country! No more luscious wild strawberries were ever gathered than those brought to the Herald-Review office yesterday by George F, Myers from lus farm on Pokegama lake. The berries were still clinging to the vines, red ripe and not touched by frost. Mr. Meyers assured us that they Yre quite plentiful, A report printed in the Aitkin papers last week stated that a 12-year- old boy named Ralph Barlow had been kidnapped at the depot in Grand Rapids and taken to Minneapolis, where it was undertaken by the man who had -him in charge to make the boy burglarize stores ‘The boy ob- jected and was picked up by a police- man. No such boy is known in this Grand Rapids. Damel, aged two years and seven months, son of Mr. and Mrs, Patrick Hoolihan, died Thursday afternoon of this week at the family residence in Grand Rapids, of cholera infantum. The child had been ill about two weeks. ‘The funera) services were held at St. Joseph’s Catholic church this motning. at 10 o’clock. ‘The parents have the sympathy of the en- tire community in their sad bereave- ment, Mrs. Electa Dolph, widow of the late John Dolph, arrived in Grand Rapids from her sad mission to De- troit, Mich., last Wednesday after- noon, where the funeral of Mr. Dolph took place last month, Mrs. Dolph was accompanied here by Edward and Allen Dolph, of Oregon, cousins to her late husband. She will remain to straighten up her business affairs, after which she will go to Detroit, her for- mer home, to reside. The program to be rendered by Maud Uimer Jones is designed to show the possibilities of the human voice in song. It will include music by Brahuis and Strauss, and the Waltz song from Romeo and Juliet. ‘The program to be given will surpass any- thing of the kind that has heretofore been given in Grand Rapids and will please all music lovers. If you love music you can’t afford to miss’ this recital given under the auspices of the High school, ‘Thursday evening next. Hartley McGuire, the logger, and John Forn, cruiser for the Backus- Brooks Lumber company, were ar- rivals yesterday from a_ trip to the northern country. Mr. McGuire spent the. summer season divided be- tween a visit to his old héme in Maine and looking over timber oppor- tunities in Oregon. He has disposed of his logging outfit in northern Itasca county and will devote his time dur- ing the coming winter to looking after timber interests in this section. Manager McAlister of Village hall has been successful in securing an ex- celient attraction in Fred W. Falk- ners company in Chas. Newman’s comedy drama of heart interest, “The Girl from Sweden.” It will be seen here tor the first time at Village hall, October rg. It is just the play for the occasion, brimful of guod, whole- some comedy and a little pathos. The company 1s a strong one headed by Miss Grace Harrington, who is justly termed America’s greatest Swed- ish comedienne. Specialties are in- troduced throughout ‘he play. The meeting of the Woman’s club at the home of Mrs. A. A. Kremer on Tuesday evening of this week was well attended and much enjoyed by those present. ‘The lecture on. Nor. way grew in interest as the pages were turned. The, short talks. by Mrs. Gibson and Loretta Doran oi} Hanseatic league and Ole Bull, in ex- planation of the text, added greatly to the interest. The lecture to be con- sidered for the next two weeks is Switzerland, Mrs. Pravitz, leader. Next Tuesday evening, October 17, ‘the club will meet’ with Mrs, Me- Carthy. : iy. foe psve - | trees. : h “BooTu’s CIGARS For sale everywhere. Call for Ci GRAND RAPIDS, INN ars 49 Have achieved an excellent reputation all over Northern Minnesota. They are made of the finest selected stock by experienced workmen in Mr Booth’s own shops here, and under his personal supervision. This insures the utmost cleanliness and care in manufacture. them. : Ty i a ONE CAUSE FOR DRINK HABIT. Expert Traces Intemperance to Im- proper Feeding. . “There is a cause for the érink hab- it which even good Christian parents do not understand,” says a writer in What to Eat. “They cannot realize why their children, with beautiful sur- roundings and daily Christian infiu- | ences, sometimes go far astray, be coming sadly immoral, and in manF instances drunkards. When they, as well as many of the physicians, shall haxe exhausted all other efforts to lo- cate the cause of the trouble, let them look to the stomach—the poor, abused stomach—and they will, in all proba- bility, find the source of the evil. From infancy many of the little ohes are given food beyond the capacity of their digestive organs, As soon as several teeth have appeared, meats are frequently a part of the bill of fare. These, as well as the other ar- ticles of food, are necessarily swal- lowed without proper mastication. Pepper, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, vinegar and highly seasoned salads also find their way into these young and tendér stomachs until, as the result of such a diet, fermentation sets in and a little distillery is created in these youthful temples. Under such conditions a child becomes irri- table, quick tempered, untruthful, and it would be surprising. if it grew up to noble manhood.” PREPARE FOR LONG FASTS. Nature Takes Good Care of Animal That Hibernate. A large number of species of ani- mals undergo more or less prolonged and continuous fasts during the pe- tiod of their winter or summer sleep. During such slumbers the more active functions cf the body are to a great extent suspended, while those that are earried on act slowly and entail com- paratively little waste of tissue and , energy. Moreover, before the period of the winter.<czpor ar hibernation takes place, ma=v animals, such as bears, accumulate large stores of fat on various parts of the body, whick suffice to supply all the waste entailed by the respiratory function during the period in question. Fat is also ac- eumulated by the mouselemurs of Madagascar previous to the summer sleep, or aestivation, and is used up in a similar manner, their summer sleeps being undertaken for the pur- pose of avoiding the season of great heat and drought, when food is dif- ficult or impossible to procure, “Ah Sin, Esquire.” By way of corroborating my view that the title “Esquire” is -1tterly de- void of meaning, one of my readers mentions that in Singapore, where he has resided for eleven years, it is not only universally bestowed on every white man, but also upon the wealthier Chinese and Asiatics. “Ah Sin, Esq.,” looks and sounds well. It will surely lend an additional attrao- tion to life in a Rand mine or com- pound when the Celestial knows that the wealth he amasses out of his “av- erage minimum” wage will entitle hira to such a designation. He could nox get a peacock’s feather or a yellow jacket at home for anything like the price.—London Truth. Grouse Has Many Defenses. The grouse has a hundred tricks o: defense. It will lie still until the punter is within a yard of it, then soar straight upward in his front, towering like a woodcock; again, it will rise forty yards away, and the sound of its wings is his only notice of its pres- ence. It will cower upon a branch under which he passes, and his cap will not be more than a foot below it as he goes, and though it has seen him approaching it will remain quies- cent in fear until his back is turned. It will rush then, and when he has slewed himself hurriedly around he will catch only a glimpse of a brown, broad wing far away. . One of Corea’s Superstitions. ' Near the city of Seoul, the capital -of Corea, is a hill called” Pouk Han, which was formerly covered with The legend runs that so long as a tree remained on the hill so long will Corea maintain its. independence, and therefore no one is allowed to cut or touch a tree. But the natural consequence of this want of forestry has been that the trees have gradually died off, unt# now only one is left. On this one tree it is believed that the fate of the country rests, and when ‘t goes Corea as en independent state will go with it, « Dr. cosretxo DENTIST. |—Offic. in First National Bank Building.— GRAND RAPIDS. MINNESOTA D* CHAS. M. STORCH, | PHYSICI AN AND ‘SURGEON . Office and Residence carner Leland avenue. and Fourth street. GRAND RAPINs. 1 A. ROSSMAN. Attorney At Law. Office in First Natiopal Bank Building. |GRAND RAPIDS - - MINN i - | as F. PRICE LAWYER Offic inthe? First National Bank building GRAND RAPIDS — - MINN 0. W. Hastings. F. P. SHELDON.+ President, Vice-President. CO. E. AIKEN, Cashier. First National Bank, Grand Rapids, Minn. Transacts a General Banking Business. A Cure for Colds. Here is a sure cure for colds of any kind. It has been tested repeatedly, and has never failed, and as I used to catch cold, which resulted in a bad attack of bronchitis, 1 can speak from } experience. In cases of pneumonia it | will not fail to cure if taken in time. Make a ball of cotton batting about the size of a small marble, saturate it well with alcohol, then drop onto it six drops of chloroform; cover it lightly with a thin piece of thin cotton batting, hold to the mouth, and inhale the fumes, inflating the lungs well. It will open an xpand every lung cell ; instantly —Woman’s ‘Home Compan- | ion. Derivations Little Known. “Scandal” is one of the hardest worked words in the language. It is jthe same as “slander,” and should jhave the same meaning of things jspoken injurious to a person’s repu- tation. “Derived from Greek “skan- dalon,” “slander” and “scandal” aro good examples of doublets from class- ical sources.. “Scandal” came, with \the “new learning,” direct from the |Greek; “sl-nder” by way of Norman |French “esclandre.” The same pro- cess has given “palsy” and “paraly- \sis,” “priest” and “presbyter,” “alms” and “eleemosynary Praying for Good Husbands. A picturesque ceremony takes place every year in Hante-Vienne. girls in the place on the day of Butropius file in procession to Junien-les-Gombes to the cross whic is erected near the church to the saint. Each girl hangs her left garter on the cross and prays that she may ves have a good husband, and then way to tae next girl. smothered in garters of ors that at a distance i though it were covered v flowers. Borrowed Anglo-Saxon Words. Besides “bridegr ” Anglo-Saxons owe the word ” and their method of reckoning in dozens instead of tens to Norway. The people of Norway and Iceland had a way of reckoning. which made ten equal twelve by the addition of the word “tolfraed,” whence the English word twelve—corresponding to the Swedish “dusin,” when the word dozen. The tolfraedic ten meant twelve, the tol- fraedic hundred meant a hundred and twenty, and so on. This probably also explains the mediaeval method of counting six score to the hundred? Something Like a Pedigree, Demetrius Comimene, a man boast- ing a pedigree that traced him from the line! of, the Roman emperor Tra- jan, was living in the time of Voltaire and was a capiain in the French army His pedigree was the noblest of- any man then living or that has siree lived, fer he had _ twenty-six kings for his ancestors and eighteen emperors. Of these six were emper- ors of Constantinople, ten of Trebi- zond ane two of) Heracleus Pontus, eighteen king of Colehi and -eicht of- Lagi Stray Stories,