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Vor, XHL—No, 33 Grand Rapids Granp Rapips, Irasca County, Another Great Sale for Money AS LASL MPS IMS NAS ALO White Petticoats. $1.00 Values—on sale at:........- Night Gowns. Some are lace trimmed; some are embroidered. $1.25 Gowns—Sale price.. 1.50 Gowns—Sale price. 2.25 Gowns—Sale price 2.50 Gowns—Sale price 1.25 Values—on sale at.........- 1.75 Values—on sale at. 50 Values—on sale at.. 3.00 Values—on sale at India Linens. Just received—a case of India Linens These are positively Corset Covers. Made of Nainsook fine Cam- bric; trimmed with Val.-lace and ribbon braiding. the best bargains you have ever seen. . ea loc Values, extra flne........ 6c yard Values ies! ssoien aimisinrsiaiaiaieieses ro+ B2Ctjo2¢ Values, extra tine, on sale Values .. lie - Se yard Oo ues a ale ) Va ues . 29¢ Le yard Te Values - 88¢e S00 ale extra fine, on sale Bbscsaicti aoa sins sicis cessing ees 20e yard 40c Values, extra fine, on ane 4 au e yar Drawers. xf Crash. Can you equal this— Made in fine Cambric, trimmed in lace and embfoidery and hemstitching, Bleached Roller Crash..... Ste yard is ‘ An all linen unbleached Crash, aoe Values . cheap at 12c, on sale at... 8e yard je Values ... lic grade, on sale at. -10¢ yard 18c grade, on sale at. -12¢ yard 35c grade, on sale at. -2le yard S S Commences Saturday, Feb. 10. Ends SOSA ASP AAIAIOMIM 3 The Itasca ercantile Company. Savers at the After-Inventory Sale of White Goods and Remnants. Curtain Swiss. Plain, Stripes and Figures 25¢ Values—on sale at... 22c Values—on 6ale at. 20c Values—on sale at... - 18¢ 124¢ VaJues—on sale at.........+ 1@c Values—on sale at..... sig 616 Towels. A large assortment in. all linen and huck, plain; some with borders, «nd some with fringe. 10c Towels—on sale at.. 12ic Towels—on sale at. 35c Towels—on sale at...... fess ch 20¢ $1.00 Towels—on saleat....... ++ -60e White Spreads. Standard sizes in desirable patterns, $1.25 Values ...........005 seen GB 80 BS ValUES oc aea ge nites asso eee LED 3.75 Values , 3.25 Values .. Saturday, Feb. 24. AL PAAL RAL AALS RAS PASAY} Don’ t georcrinidianas Heater. Ivs time, patience and valu- able fuel wasted for nothing. Good Heaters can be had at our hardware store. Prices on that kind 1906 are ex- Don’t shiver; Do it by buying a new keater. Do it now, and buy one. commencing tremely low. keep warm. See them and be convinced. =I Wd & HD POWERS OnSW v} GISBSLSSSVSSISVSISVSISVSISS* Pioneer Meat Market THOMAS FINNEGAN, Prop. Fresh and Salt Meats We Carry Only the Best that Can be Had. Our Special Brands of CANNED GOODS are the best offered to the public. Poultry. Game, Etc. Butter. Eggs. Cheese. ; Ti. FINNEGAN "opposite P Opposite Postoffice. The Palace Restauran DAVE CHAMBERS, Proprietor, When you can’t get what you want to eat at Dave Chambers’ ‘Palace Res- taurant” it’s because the markets don’t keep it. The Sunday Dinner Is always prepared with the idea of pleasing pat- rons who remember the good things at home on Peastdays. > e053: DAVE CHAMBERS, Prop. Leland Ave., Grand Rapids. LANDS. Farm, Timber and Meadow Lands in Itasca, Aitkin, Cass. Crow Wing, Lake, St, Louis, Cook and ull northern counties. Send for free map of Minnesota. with full list of lands and descriptions of gee rices. to @15 per acre, Easy terms, 6 percent. re Will exchange clear lands for mortgaged or foreclosed Farms and Lands Be Send in full descriptions of your erty. Will pay cash for Pine and wood timber lands. Want good ae agents in all parts of the northwest, W. D. Washburn, Jr, 201 Guarantee Bld'g, Minneapolis, Ming, . 18¢| baggage will be checked on . 16c| ticket. ; week. * ‘iat NN., SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, Serald-Ateview. & ‘tgo6. Two Doiiars Aa YEAR. News Gathered During the Week INTERNATIONAL SCENIC R. R. Special Excursion Thursday Evening February 15, 1906. This ticket good only on date above shown. The holder-of this ticket ac- cepts all liability of loss of life, limb or baggage in consideration of same being sold at a reduced rate, and ac- cepts the following conditions: It being agreed that vunly 786 pounds of each Dogs and baby cabs subject to ex- cess charges. No smoking of cigarettes in obser- Ge | vation car, Old mards entitled to two seats. No lunch baskets allowed. Ask the porter for uhe latest: books and magazines. : “Silly girls with beaus not allowed to chew gum. Chaperones of parties of fifty passed free. Preachers charged double rates. Bald-headed men can wear hats in the dining car. Ice water in winter free. The following route will be taken: Union Station to France, tu England, to Switzerland, to Cuba, to New York. , The ladies guild will meet with Mrs. Rassmussen next Weduesday at 2:30'p. m. _A. H. Randolph purchased a fine ‘strge team of horses. ast week from. the King Lumber company. Mrs. A. C. Bassard entertained the members of the Ladies’ Whist club at her pleasant home Monday after noon. t Mr. Murphy, rector of- the Epis- copal church of this village has been in Bemidji the later part of ‘this Ed Howe and family have removed from their Fourth street home to the George Moore residence, where they are now pleasantly located. German Lutheran services will be held in the Swedish church on Feb- tuary llth at 3 p.m. All German Lutheraas are invited to be present. —E. Ulbricht. Services will be held at the Episco- pal church Sundav morning and even- ing at the usual hours. The Rt. Rev. J. D. Morrison, of Duluth, will offi- ciate 1n the evening. Miss Dewey will sing the offertory solo. ‘Secretary Dickinson, of the library | board, informs us the library will be open to the public next Monday, the 12th, from 3 to 6 in the afternoon and 7 tu 9 in the evening. The library will be Open every day during these hours, except Sundays, when the hours will be from 2 to 5 iu Uhe afternoon. The Grand Rapids school board met Monday evening and transacted the usual routine business, It was de- cided to open a kindergarten school next year, and this branch alone will be greatly appreciated by the parents as there are a large number of chil- dren in Grand Rapids who can qualify for this department. The Ladies guild will give one of their annual excursions over the In- ternational Scenic. R. R. If you want a good time don’t -misy this trip on Feb. 15, 1906, leaving the Union Sta- tion every half hour from Grand Rap- ids, stopping at the principle cities twenty minutes for lunch. Round trip ticket fifty cents. This isan imigrant train—so dress arcordingly. Everybody welcome. The Dixie Jubilee Singers that ap- peared at the Sycamure Chautauqua tive days were one of the strongest attractions of the assembly. There is nothing more inspiring than the old time melodies, that can be given only by jubilee singers. Mrs. Neale Hawkes-Buckuer, the soprano, was the favorite of the aggregation. Mrs. Buckner’s voice, sweet and of great range, coupled with her fine presence and cultured manners,called forth a hearty applause every time she. appeared on the platform. So well pleased were the peuple, and especially the musicians, that a re- quest has been made that they be returned at next year’s Chautauqua At Village eal) Feb. 16. The teachers of the southera part of Itasca, county met in the office of the county superintendent of schools, Saturday February 3. The following program was carried out. ‘Paper op Discipline,” Miss Doran. Discussion opened by Miss Alphade Herrell. “Paper on Language,” Miss Bertha Hegdahl. Diicussion opened by Miss Grayce Vipond. The next meeting will be held March 3 at Grand Rapids. The news of the death of Joseph Neveux, a brother of Gene Neveux, and a man well and favorably known in this community, was received by his relatives last Friday. Mr. Neveux was born in Centerville, Minn., 30 years before the time of his death. He was married February 24, 1903, to Miss Mary Penogurn, of Cen- terville. ‘The deceased leaves besides his widow one child to mourn his loss, and to whom the Herald-Review, in common with many other friends, extends its heartfelt sympathy. The Woman’s club he!d a very in- teresting meeting at the Doran home ou Tuesday evening. Eighteen mem- bers were present, and nearly all were prepared with quotations , from Confucius for roll call, which made a very pleasant introduction to the subject of the evening, “China,” under the leadership of Mrs. Sheldon. Mrs. A. Connell was elected as a dele- gate to the Eighth District con,ven- tion which is to be held in Duluth next Monday and Tuesday, February 12and 13. Vhe next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Geo. Kremer. The Dixie Jubilee Singers, under the management of Mr. Chas. W. Ferguson’ haye just closed a four days’ engagement with our Chautau- qua Assembly. ‘As a troupe they are unexcelled. The Dixie Quartette can furnish an entire and most delightful entertainment alone. The soloists, both men aud women, are first I know of no group of people who can give a more varied, chaste and po pu- lar series of entertainments than can the Dixics. I commend them with- out reservation. At Village hall February 16. Hard and Fast Rule Impossible. It is surprising how ma people there are in this world who want to inerease the discomforts of life. There is always bobbing up some professor or propagandist who informs us that everything we have ever done is wrong and that the only road to physi- cal salvation is to follow his own schedule. Chicago—where 26 which aren’t so t n the world. tells oi eat soup, pie, panc: ud cold meats, except apparently make our principal diet spinach, asparagus, lettuce and on- ions. Probably most persons eat more than is good for them and it is cer- tain that, generally speaking, food is not well cooked. Put to lay down a Jaw for the human race is absurd.— Philadelphia Inquirer. they know ham, and Salt and Civilization. Salt has had much influence in shap- ing the civilization and exploration of the world. It is believed by many that the oldest trade routes were created for the salt traffic. This was certain- ly the case with the caravan routes in Libya and the Sahara, while the mines of North India were the center of a large trade before the time of Alex- ander. Salt, too, has played a consid- erable part in the distribution of man. He was forced to migrate to places where it could be obtained. This brought him to the seashore, where he gained his ideas of maritime com- merce. Lastly, the preservative ef- fects of salt on flesh food made long oceanic voyages possible and thus opened up the world to commerce and civilization. Reclaiming the Sahara Desert. As a result of recent scientific in- vestigations it may be possible to re- vise our ideas of the barrenness of the Sahara desert, since it has been found by boring th there are numerous springs which rise to the surface and make possible a system of irrigation. In the territory to the south of Algeria a government irrigation survey has been at work making a series of deep test borings, some of which are as deep as 2,000 feet. In this way con- siderable water-has been encountered and in certain oases already twice the usual amount of water has been made available for the palm Cibklos Tae ver’s Weekly. mV And now comes a man Irom | more | in the eart | Tommy in | low had | PHENOMENA OF DREAMLAND. Scientists’ Explanation of the Visions of Sleep. A scientist explains some of the strange phenomena of dreams by say- ing that they are due to what he calls “hereditary memory.” He takes the “falling through space” dream and points out that after suffering the mental agony of falling the sleeper | escapes the shock of the actual stop- ping. The explanation is that the fall- ing sensations have been transmitted from remote ancestors who were for- tunate enough to save themselves, after falling from great heights in tree tops, by clutching the branches: The molecular changes in the cere- bral cells due to the shock of stop- ping could not be transmitted, be- cause victims falling to the bottom would be killed. In a similar manner, by reverting to the habits of anirz which existed centuries ago, same inves finds an ex fo the anation e experienced by or ous dreams—the ng monster” dream, the “rep- nd vermin” dream, color dreams, suffocation dreams, flying dreams and the like. . OLD PLACE WAS GOOD ENOUGH. Comprehensive Reason Why Citizen Came Home. “Squire” Lord, of local fame in Ef- fingham, N. H., fifty years ago, had accumulated, by all sorts of methods, a fortune for the Keeping the country store, being prac- tically the “bank” of those parts and increasing wealth beyond expenditures had nourished an ambition to live in a place larger and with more social opportunities than the little village af- forded. So he packed up one autumn, took a house in Portland, which was the town o’ the world to country peo- ple then, and with his family started in to cut a dash. s and place. To his chagrin, he found he was one and of many in that plac scrape or bow was cor not a is way. Christmas saw him | bag and baggage, in Effingham, and that even- ing in hi to the inquiry of one of the v back, squire, he replied: “I’ve had enough of that place. Yer see, I’d rather be a king among hogs than a hog among fers, “Why'd ye come *fore you’d calculated?” The Champion Mean Man. “Talkin” about mm men,” said the one who w. pe u to beat the first story, “I think Sile Hatcher was about ae meanest man I ever knew. He so mean that he painted his house h ead white every two months just is that he and couldn’t But he done x than that one time. e died the pallbearers er of the coffin against the door a 2y were carryin’ it out and bracked e of the pa Well, sir, blamed if he didn’t want ther pay for havin’ a panel put in a meaner tt When his w bumped a cor: Easy Questions for Tommy. “Think,” said the te wt giving the le a little er son on natu 2 that w nd sometim the top through a tiny hole. boy in a pi comes to A small ore put up his hand joy- queried the t mall boy. think « that wri sut in the earth and comes to the small hole Up when “Wel Another worm! iumph. Allowed One Whack. Skipper Josh Melzard, one of the 1d-time onstadles in Marblehead, quell t joyous the teach ¥ ealled to a disturbance When he arrived at the of the trou one of the p in the dispute explained how the other fel- aggravated ind ins: said that if he could have more whack at him he would feel sat- and one isfied. Skipper Melzard, after consid- ering the matter a while, replied: “You can have just one whack at him and no more, and then you must come along with me.”—Boston Herald. Order for Hearing on Claims. State of Minnesota / County of Itasca { bate Court, General term, ss February se Hlecta E, Dolph, of It Is Ordere he Court » county, August on the following eh 20, 1906, ut 10 o'clock a. m. it Is Further Ordered. That six months from the dte hereot ibe aliowed to creditors to present claims against said at the exp ion of which time all claime not presented to said court. or not proven to its satisfuction. shall be forever barred un. less for cause shown further time be allowed. Ordered Further, That notice of the time and place of hearing and examination of sald claims and demands shall be given by publication of this order for three success $ prior to the day appointed for su ination th the (6 Rapius Heraid- . & wee new er 1 published a Graud Rapids: im said comatye Dated at Grand Rapids 3} of February, A. D. 1906. By the Court: (Seal) Se 8. HUSON, ALFRED L. THWING, Soa Attorney for Administratrix. Herald-Res iew, Feb, 10, 17, 24.