Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, January 26, 1907, Page 3

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Henry Monday morning begins the event of the sezson in ano GREAT JANUARY PROFIT SHARING SALE Last Monday was the wind-up of our January sale, but owing to the remarkable low values we offered customers to our store, we have decided to hold another Profit Sharing Sale. THIS SALE WILL BE CONTINUED ONE MORE WEEK ENDINC ON FEBRUARY 4 made tor a quick and complete clearance. An exceptional opportunity is afforded for ec Our ability to make Jarge prrchases at advantageous prices during the dull portions of the seasons price them on the same low basis is another of the reasons which make our sales such a gre One gard free to each two yards purchased PRICES CUT IN TWO ON LADIES, MISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S COATS Ladies’ Coats—We have them left in nearly all new styles in brown, black and fancy plaids. Your choice at oneshalf price. Children’s Coats—Handsome coats, all good styles, sizes from 6 to 14, take your choice at one-half price. Ladies’ fur neck pieces, your choice at one» third off from our regular selling price. Women’s shirt waist suits on sale at one-half priec. Price. See those Dress Skirts at Half yd. now. La 18c flannelettes, the best the market affords, reduced to. a @aittinate 12! silkolines, with very pretty floral de- signs, suitable for curtains, etc., at....... fine shoes, values up to $4.50 pér pair, this ‘sale :. 6.05 66s. 6 ees. EXTRA SPECIAL Fancy white Madras waisting, values up to 45c, now... 23c " 11c Fine check and stripe Dimity, worth up to 20c this sale.. French ginghams in all the latest designs of stripes and checks, regular price 12%4c a 9c 1 22¢ 73 Canton flannel, priced at 10c and 13!4c goes 1 at this profit sharing sale to you per yd. 2C $2.69 WOMEN’S AND CHILDREN’S UNDER- WEAR Ladies’ fleece-lined union values, now goes at Children’s heavy fleece-lined underwear, all “= $1.89 sizes, at 1g off regular price. Ladies’ merino union suits, values, now cut down to... All ladies’ eiderdown dressing jackets reduced down t0..........0ccls estes 15c Ladies’ fleece-lined hose, now at sale Girls’ caps and tame, regular valu take them at. MEN’S AND Now is the time for you to buy such wearing apparel as offered below. selling way below the usual price; out they go- not when the season is over but right now is the time for them. Men’s $16.50 overcoats, a very nob- by looker, now.. price. $6.00, now ... A Gordon cap es 75 ther attracting many new and our willingness to at success. A GREAT REDUCTION IN COLORED WOOL DRESS COODS 400 yards left from our great sale in the main sections have been transfered to the bargain section and additional reductions The assortment includes practically every color suitable for almost any use. onomy in the purchase of dress goods. OO An overcoat we have been selling at $12.00 and cheap at that, now goes at Boys’ overcoats, sizes 12 to 17, worth $3 98 . . Boys’ heavy one-buckle rubber, regular 92 PLICE GLO. NOW oi isc cssisnsacrcsmewsigsmasecoe c with of good quality cloth c Men’s good quality work shir a's 25 values, your choic at BOYS’ FURNISHINCS Boys’ overcoats are $12.00 $8.00 reputation—made fur ear laps, now 98c and 6Sc Fresh Air the First Necessity. If you wish to keep healthy and well, have plenty of fresh air; don’t think | you will catch cold by it; on the con- trary it will do you good, and fit you | Always sleep with a | M P | protected the for your work. window open at night, it will not harm you, the fresh air will make your sleep sounder, but at the same time you must have sufficient light clothing on the bed to keep you from catching cold. well: 3 Proof That Dogs Can Think. The following facts, which I saw with my own eyes on repeated occa- sions, fully convinced me that ani- mals have the powers of memory and thought. I once had a_ three-parts bred black and tan terrier, which slept in a basket in my bedroom, that opened into the nursery. One of my children was, from ill health, very fractious, and whenever Tiny heard it cry she would go into the nursery, hunt about until she found a squeak- ing rag doll, take it to the side of the cot and sitting up, shake it to amuse the child. If in doing this shé did not display powers of memory, thought and reflection, I utterly fail to see to what her clever performance could be attributed—Correspondence in London Globe. Truth Profoundly Expressed. The profound truth that to-morrow never comes, and yesterday, although it is always passing, has never been with us, has led a correspondent to throw off this little effort: “Although yesterday today was to-morrow, and to-morrow to-day will be yesterday, nevertheless yesterday to-morrow would be the day after to-morrow, be- cause to-day would be to-morrow yes- terday, and to-morrow will be to-day to-morrow, or would have been the day after to-morrow yesterday.” We thought as much.—London Answers. Regret. It’s lonesome whar de shadows fall Across de drifted snow. It doesn’t seem de place at all Pat once I used to know. Dem frien’s I had in days gone by, Whah is dey keepin’ hid? I misses. Mistah Butterfly An’ ol Miss Katydid. It’s kind o’ sad when life grows cold ‘An’ toilsome an’ severe, To think about good times of old So far away £ Sa Bese ae seemed so wuthless as dey’d fly, PS. flowers an’ stars amid. sas But now I miss dat Butterfly An’ ol’ Miss Katydid. —Washington Star. Experimental Expenses. When I asked a young man how much his employer’s stockroom repre- sented in the way of losses, he esti- mated that it would take a million dollars to cover them, but during this million dollar period his employer made four million dollars, so that everything went on cheerfully. Those who make money are not afraid of a reasonable amount of experimental expense.—Ear! M. Pratt. Where the Game Started. It was a beautiful spring morning early in the year 4004 B. C.. (Ussher’s chronology). The ardent rays of the sun were diffracted and softened by the misty envelope which at that time earth. Everywhere were signs of life and merriment. Suddenly there was a crescendo whis- tling sound as of a body moving rapid- ly through the atmosphere and some strange-shaped foreign object landed on the mossy turf with a dull, sicken- ing thud. Presently, however, Satan (for it was indeed he) sat up and rubbed himself. He recovered his wind and said: “Alas, my graft scheme wasn’t popular up there, but I'll eat my shirt if I don’t make it per fectly respectable on earth.” Then he got busy in the garden and was doing nobly until the magazines got on his trail. Tale of Kanaka Brutality. This tale comes from New Cale donia, where a ship was loading up with natives to work in Australia: “There was a man and a girl—a young couple, they seemed. She had a youngster, who began yelling at sight of the boat. ‘Can’t take that younx- ster!’ the bass shouted. The woman said she wanted to come, too. ‘No, we can’t ship that squalling little beast. Leave him with his auntie.’ There was no auntie in sight. So the Kanaka man, after taking a look around, caught the kiddy by the heels, swung her around like a rabbit and dashed her head against a tree. ‘She was only a girl anyway,’ he said, and slung her body into the scrub. Then they both hopped into the boat and were shipped aboard.” Why He Wept. During the funeral of one of the } Rothschild family in Paris a beggar was noticed standing among the on- | lookers sobbing bitterly. A bystander | touched by the man’s grief, endeayor- ed to comfort him. “Do not weep so | bitterly my poor friend,” he said. | “See, even his relatives are able to restrain their grief more than yov are doing.” Then, as a new idea struck him: “Surely, you are no re lation of M. de Rothscnild?” “N—no,” sobbed the beggar. “That is just why Iam so wnhappy.”"—T. P.’s Weekly. | A Song of the Way. | Give me the road, the great broad road, That wanders over the hill; | Give me a heart without a care And a free, unfettered will— Ah, thus to wander, thus to fare, ‘With only the sky to frown, And happy I, if the ways but lie Away, away from the town. Give me.the path. the wildwood path, ‘That wanders deep in a dell, Where silence sleeps and sunbeams fain ‘Would waken the slumber spell— For there the gods find the world again, et at ce Bnclent Jove ae And time gone, and a mad-gl faun Knows the glades of Greece once morc. —Thomas 8. Jones, Jr. AMERICAN SPEECH IS UNIFORM. Many Different Larguages and Strik- ing Dialects in Great Britain. It has been observed that the lan- zuage spoken in the United States is remarkably uniform. True, there are many dialects, but Great Britain, less {in area than any of half a dozen states, contains such very different languages 2s English, Welsh and the Gaelic of the Scottish highlands, to say nothing of the provincial dialects of Cornwall and Yorkshire and the unique speech of the London cockney, while in this country, with its vast expanse of territory, its settlement by Spanish, French, Dutch and Swedish colonists and its millions of immi- grants drawn from nearly every coun- try, large and small, all over the world, there is far greater uniformity of speech than in any other land of equal area and population. The causes can be readily seen. The public sctyvols have made this a nation of readers and ‘4e press has supplied books and papers without limit. Press associations have done their par? toward giving a uniform and fairly good tone to the news: paper language of the day. The tele- graph, the telephone and cheap post- age have brought distant parts of the country into quick and easy commu- nication and so have aided in teach- ing a common language. The railroad has penetrated every corner of the land and made a nation of travelers. Countless human shut- tles thus are thrown daily across the land in every direction, carrying with them the threads of thought and speech and doing their part to make one pattern of the whole. WHERE DEEPEST LOVE ABIDES. God’s Goodness Chiefly Felt by Those in Tribulation. Where is it that God, in His search- ing of the hearts of His children, hears the tones of the deepest love, and sees on the uplifted face the light of the most heartfelt gratitude? Not where His gifts are most profuse, but where they seem most meager; not where the suppliant’s worship glides forth from the cushion of luxury throtgh lips saturated with plenty and rounded by health; halls of successful ambition, or even the dwellings of unbroken domestic peace; but where the outcast, flying from persecution, kneels in the even- ing on the rock whereon he sleeps; by the fresh grave, where, as the earth is opened, heaven in answer opens too; by the pillow of the wast- ed sufferer, where the sunken eye, denied sleep, converses with a silent star, and the hollow voice enumerates in low prayer the scanty list of com- forts and the shortened tale of hopes. —Martineau. not within the | Order Limiting Time to File Claims. Estate of Nicholas O'Connor, Deceased, STATE OF eins | County of Itasca In Probate Court. Tn the Matter of the Estate of Nicholas O'Connor, Decedent, Letters of Administration having this day been granted to Patrick Kealy upon said es- tute, Itis Ordered. that the time within which all creditors of the above named decedent may present cluims against his estate in this court, be, and the same hereby is, limited to six months from and after the date hereof; ana that Monday, the fifteenth day of July, 1907, at 10 o’clock a. m., in the Probate Court rooms at the Court House at the Village of| D. Grand Rapids. in said county, be. and the same hereby is, fixed and appointed us the time and place for hearing upon and the ex- amination, adjustment and allowance of such claims as sha.1 be presented within the time aforesaid, ,_Let notice hereof be given by the publica- tion of this order in the Grand Rapids Her- ald-Review as provided by law. Dated January 10, 1907. H.S. HUSON, (Cour Szau)} Probate Judge. Herald-Review, Jan. 12, 19, 26, —_———— Citation for Hearing on Petition for Administration. Estate of Elizabeth A. Hennessy. STATE OF na ee County of Itasca In Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of Elizabeth A. Hennessy. Decedent. The State of Minnesota to all persons inter- ested in the granting of administration of the estate of said decedent: The petition of Thomas H. Hennessy having been filed in this court, representing that Elizabeth a. Hennessy, then a resident of the County of Itasca, State of Minnesota, died intestate on the 19th day of May, 1904; and praying that jletters of administration of her estate be |granted to Thomas H. Hennessy; and the |eourt having fixeo the time and place for hearing said petition: Therefore, You, and Each of You, are hereby cited and required to show cause. if any you have; before this | court at the probate court rooms in the court house, in the Village of Grand Rapids, in the County of Itasca. State of Minnesota, on the fourth day o° February, 1907, at 10 o'clock a. m., why said petition should not be granted. itness, the Judge of said Court. and the ia of said Court, this ninth day of January, H. 8. HUSON, WiILrarp A. RossMAn. Probate Judge. Attorney for Petitioner. Herald-Keview, Jan. 12, 19, 6. GAR- GOL An absolute specific and anti-septic S preparation for 4RO of T SIMPLY A GARGLE OR SPRAY sure Hoarseness, Tonsilitis, | pare oo iceraced and Caiarehal Sore Three, A preventive of Croup, Whooping Cough and Diphtheria. 6 Lh er eae, gene reed most: TO i speciali! Bae SOUnEEE. 7 Should be kept in every home. rice 25 Cents BEEG MEDIOINE CO., Des Moines, Ia. [Court Sear) Dr. cosrELto DENTIST. —Offi. tn First Nationa) Bank Building.— GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA Notice of Expiration of Redemption. OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR, ) County of Itasca. State of Minnesota. i) TO UNKNOWN: .You are hereby notified that the following pieces or parce of land, situated in the county of Itasca. state of Min and known and described as follows. to- Lots 17 and 18 of block 11, Kearn First asséased ta your name. That on the 12th day of May, A. D., 1902, at a sale of land pursuant to the real estate tux judgment duly given and made in and by thé district court in and for suld county of Itusca. on the ist day of Murch. A. D. 1902. in Bree ngs to enforce the payment of taxes lelinquent upon realestate for the year A. . 1900, for said county of Itasca. the above described pieces or parcels of land were dul, offered for sale: and no one bidding upon sai offer an amount equal to that for which said pieces of parcels’ were subject to be sold, Seis the sum of pay ree cents, the sume Were-doly bid i for the State of Minnesota for said sum. That thereafter, and on the 12th day of November A. D, 1906. the said pieces or par- cels of land, not then having been redeemed from said sale, and having then become the absolute property of the state of Minne- sota, were sold and conveyed at public sale by the county auditor of said county pursu- ant to the order and direction of the state auditor of the state of Minnesota, and in ac- cordance with the provisions of the statute in such cage made and provided, for the sum of five dollars and twenty-six cents duly paid to the county treasurer of said county. That the certificate of sale for said pieces or parcels of land executed and delivered by said county auditor upon said sale last above mentioned has been presented to me at my office by the holder thereof for the purpose of having notice of expiration of time for re- demption from said tax sale of said property given and served; and that the amount re- quired to redeem said pieces or parcels of land from said tax:sale. at the date of this notice, exclusive of the costs to accrne upon said notice, is the sum of five dollars and thirt; -seven cents. That the time for the redemption of si pieces or parcels of land from said tax will expire sixty (60) days after the serv this notice and the filing of proof of such vice in my office, Witness my hand and seal of office this 1th day of January A. D. 1907. (Seal) M. A. SPANG. Auditor, Itasca County, Minnesota. Herald-Review Jan. 19, 26, Feb. 2. For Sale—Best heavy driving team im the county. Also sleds, wagon and harness, Enquire of Will Nisbett, Grand Rapids. House for Rent—The MclIntesh residence on Kindred avenue opposite Centra! school building is for rent. Apply at the First National Bank. Found.—In Village hall about Dec. ist, a stick pin with pearl setting and diamond chip. See Marshall Harry or leave word at Herald-Review. SILSKKCAGSHKGK HSA HS So sores F-U-R-S I will pay $5.00 apiece : for No. 1 Mink, other $ Fur according. Timber 3 Wolves $5.00 each. WM. WEITZEL, 3 1f Grand Rapids, Minn. 3 SESAME SSCS REEREEES ESOS 3 3 = = 2 EEA AE A ee ae se a ae ee ae ae EE Addition to Village of Grand Rapids, are now | *% Notice for Publication. Department of the Interior. Land Office at Cas ak Notice is hereby given that of Grand Rapids, Mi his intention t support of his No. nd that smus- and Rap: sen, clerk of court at his offi ids, Minn., om Mareh 5th, 190 He names the following witnesses to prov his continuous residence upon and cultiva tion of, the land Thomas Hughes, Hans Schultz, Andrew Salter and Ed Anderson ala of Grand Rapids, Minn. _ Herald-Review Januar: Notice of Publication. United States Land Office. Cass Lake, Minn., Dec. 17. 1906. Notice is hereby given that in compliance with the provi: the act of Congress of June 3, 1878. entitled “An act for the sale of timber lands in the states of California, Ore- gon. Nevada ard Washington Territory,” as extended to all the Public Land States by act of August 4, 1892. 3 CHARLES COLLINGE, of Cohasset. 3 sota, has this for the purchase of the ‘0. 30 in township No, 54 n. range No. 26 w, and will offer proof to show that the land sought is more valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultural purposes and to establish his claim to said land before I_D. Rassmussen, clerk of district court at his office at Grand Rapi linn., on Tuesday the fifth day of March, He names as witnesse: Tho! Hughes. Louis Kirt. Will Kirt snd Hans Schultz, all of Grand Rapids, Minn. Any and ul! person g adversely the above-described lands are requested to file their claims in this office on or before said ifth di f March, 1907, SFE Gey See eg ORE LEY: Register. Herald-Review Deo. 22, March 2. Sheriff's Sale. STATE OF MINNESOTA, } County of Beltrami. f District Court, Fifteenth Judicial District W. S. Conrad—Plaintiff. vs. s P, Thompson, et al—Defendants, i t by virtue of and delivered by the District tion to me direc in my hands, i Court, Fifteenth Judicial District, St Minnesota, in and for the County of Beltrz upon # judgment rendered in said court in favor of W.S. Conrad, plaintiff and against Wm. Blocker, 0. M. Blocker. and Hans P- Thompson. defendants, Ihave levied upon the following described real property of suid defendant, Hans P. Thompson. to-wit: Lot seventeen (17), in block eight (8), in the original townsite of Northome, according to the recorded plat thereof of reeord and on file in the office of the register of deeds in ana for the County of Itasca, State of Minnesota. The title of said lot is now held by the Hamm Brewing company, a corporation, in trust, forsaid Hans P. Thompson. And 1 shall on Monday. the 28th day of January, A, D. 1907, at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m of said day, at the front door of the court house, in the village of Grand Rapids, in the said County of Itasca and state, pro ceed to sell ull the right, title and interest of the above named Hans P. Thompson one of said defendants, in and to the above describ- ed property, to satisfy said judgment and costs, amounting to three hundred thirty uine and 30-100 ($339.30) dollars, together with alJ accruing costs of sale and interest on the same from July 6th., 1905, at the rate of 6 per ceut perannum, at public auction, to the highest bidder ‘or cath. ated Grand Rapids, Minn.. Dee., 6th... 1906. WM. HOOLIHAN. Sheriff. By F. W. Fisu, Deputy. D. #. FISK, Plaintiff's Attorney, Bemidji, Minn, Lumberman’s outfit for sale at a bargain. Fnquire of P. J. Campbill Hotel Pokegama, Grand Rapids, om

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