Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 28, 1909, Page 12

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Grand Rapids Stamping done at Mrs. Brook’s | millinery store, August 9 to 14. Geo. A. Fay was an arrival from Duluth this morning. Jersey cow for sale cheap, inquire at this office. : Miss Edith Aiken visited in Duluth last week, returning home Saturday. Mrs. Harry Huson went to Barnum } Sunday to visit relatives. Harry Oaks has been in town for some time somewhat the worse for an attack of rheumatism. T. J. Feeley of Swan River was a iness visitor in Grand Rapids last | .J N. Brown has been in Min- neapolis several days, whither she was called by the death of a sister. Instructions in stenciling at Mrs. Brooks millinery store, August 9 to 14 Mr. E. Butler was called to De- troit, Minnesota, Thursday by the sudden death of his mother. Miss Pearl LaMere arrived here from Rhinelander, Wisconsin, Satur- day to visit relatives and friends. Miss Esther Butler went to Detroit Monday, where she will spend the summer with her sister. Winsor was at Deer River trains Wednesday on busi- Mody between ness Dr. Johnson, who has been visiting his smate, Dr. Schmidt, returned to Minneapolis Thursday. Judge of Probate Huson has ap- pointed O. C. Hamilton’of Deer River as probation officer of that village. The subject for the very Rev. Dean Beuchler’s sermon at the 10:00 o’clock mass at the Catholic church, will be “Churchgoing and Why.” A ’phone has lately been installed in the Great Northern depot.* This is a convenience which will be great- ly appreciated by the public. Mrs. J. P. Byrnes was called to Duluth Thursday by the death of her brother. The interment took place Saturday. Matt Shumaker of Balsam, the genial log: and farmer, was in the city on business Monday. He reports crops as doing well in his vicinity. The E. .J Luther family and the Geo. F. Kremer family are outing at Pokegama lake. They are camped at the C. H. Marr place. Mr. J. A. Davis and family are settled down to housekeeping in one of the Arscott houses. Mrs. Davis and her two children arrived here *Fri- | day from Floodwood. Mrs. Wm.-Penkivil of Toronto, aj sister of Mrs. Ethel Huntley, has been here for several weeks on a_ visit to the family of L. W. Huntley: She | returned to her home this week. | B. P. Munson and son Loren left | this morning for their home in Min | News Gathered During the Week Base Ball at Cort. A correspondent from Cort sends in the following base ball” new: “Camp 15, of the Oliver Iron Min- ing company’s force, located at Cort, went to Bovey and played a game place. and Vicinity by a score of 37 to. grand larceny. He is alleged to have stolen $25.00 from a companion in Grand Rapids on June 20. He is a young man from Iowa, and after con- siderable official inquiry Sheriff Riley located his man. Eleanor A. Roberts will be at Mrs. Brook’s millinary store, for one week and fans, as their apponents sure of winning. There was a det of team has a chip on its shoulder for almost any combination that wants to tackle them. Following was the line-up: with a line of fancy work, including Camp 15. Camp 29. linens, thread and stencil patterns.| Stadt, rf Martin, ss She is prepared to give instructions | Duquett, cf Jacobia, 1b in embroidery and stenciling. Re-| Hill, 3b . Simonich, cf member the date, August 9 to 14. Turnbull, ss Steberg, rf A. M. Johnson left yesterday on a Kolar, If Sherman, 2b visit to his sister at Taylor’s Falls, | Lothrop, 2b Hasein, 8b Minnesota, ‘where he expects to re-| Morgan, 1b Saconiay JF main a couple of months or so, when | 2Tickson, c- Roberts, D he will visit a brother who lives in| Denney, P Reayy, © Illinois. He expects to return to at, Se Grand Rapids next fall. Sold Balsam Bonds. Theodore Hollister and John R.) Ww. waxeman, treasurer of the Heino, two of Duluth’s most promi- ten ee Dadeenr Se ga Gag ae * nected with his township. Mr. Wake- tage of the’ opportunity: to Bo. eins = man informs us that Balsam town- ea ieee ee ee blacks ship has disposed of the ten thous- ile! and dollars road and bridge bonds bass fishing a couple of days. recently offered. The money will Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Nisbett of] be used for the opening up of new Big Rapids, Michigan, parents of Will Nisbett, arrived from the west Sunday morning and visited here un- til Tuesday afternoon when they left for their home. Mr and Mrs. Nisbett had been on an _ extended trip through northwestern Canada and the coast states, visiting the Seat- tle exposition and other places of interest. The school board is duly indebted to Hon. C. C. McCarthy of Grand Rapids for his services in taking himself from his busy office to come here and make the oration at the lay- ing of the corner stone of the new school house Wednesday afternoon. Mr. McCarthy waived acceptance of any compensation, and the commer- cial club sent him a check of ten dol- lars merely to cover his expenses. Mr McCarthy returned the amount in the form of a check payable to the school board with a request that it be deposited in the library fund as a donation.—Deer River News. roads and the repair of those al- ready in use. The work to be done will be let out in small contracts to residents of the town, and thus the money expended will serve the dou- ble purpose of road and bridge im- provement and at the same time give profitable employment to a large number of taxpayers. J. G. Hermes, formerly superintend- ent of the Itasca county poor farm, now serving Koochiching county in a similar capacity, was a visitor in Grand Rapids this week. Mr. Hermes Sweet and Fresh You'll find your butter.and milk if kept in one of our says he likes International Falls and Scientifically the people thereof, and thinks that}| Constructed town to be destined fora great future Refrigerators as a manufacturing center, but there is a “longing in his heart’ for Grand Rapids that is not easily, sup- pressed. He owns a fine tract of agricultural land near town and thinks seriously of coming back here Like everything in our fur- niture line, they’re substan- tial and worth what we ask for them. We furnish them zinc-lined, glass or porce- lain-lined, in any size you after he has made a fortune in wone gerne er enh P ‘i uy now. ristmas wi Koochiching and settling down to the be too late. “simple life.’ Mr. Hermes says all the members of his family are well pleased with their new home and the good people they have met there. = >} Grand Rapids, Minn FRUITS AND | c. F. KREMER THE HOUSE FURNISHER COLUMBIA neapolis. Mrs. Munson, who had vis | ited here a couple of weeks’ with her ter, Mrs. Will Nesbitt, returned | home 1 week. | Alfred Kiley was an arrival in | Grand Rapids this morning on ‘a visit | to the. home of his parents. He has | been sojourning” in Southwestern | states during the past two years. i Mrs. W. O. Messinger of Park Rap- | N. D., and Mrs. Coaplan of Stan- | ¥. D., arrived here Saturday for short visit at the F. J. MeCormick | home. | H. P. Cochrane, the post card man, | has decided to: set Monday of each ide for the taking of penny photos. Last Monday, his opening | day, the rush was so great that | many had to be turned away. ids, le: week 2 Mrs. F. A: MeVicar, who is visiting with a sister at Seattle, writes that she is spending.a most enjoyable summer. The great exposition and many other attractions on the coast | furnish constant pleasures. ~ A picnic was given for the Sunday school children of: the Methodist church Saturday at Ice Lake. A ball game and various other sports helped make the day one continuous round of pleasure for the children. Jas. Davis came down from Grand Rapids Monday to assist in packing and shipping their household goods to’ that place, where they will reside permanently. Mrs. Davis and the children left for the Rapids yesterday The best wishes of their many friends go with them to their new home.—Floodwood Broadaxe. Sheriff Riley left yestrday noon for Grand Forks, N. D., to bring back Harry Green who is wanted here for Double Disk Records. &@Two records at the price of one. Music on both srdes. Fit any disc machiue., We have just received a large and varied assortment. Com? in and hear them. 10 inch .. 65c 12 inch .. - 91.00 .We Also Handle Cylender Records and Machines. Roy R. Bell Pharmacist CONFECTIONS Our stock of goods is always fresh and clean. That’s why We i We also carry Fresh ) Vegetables, Tobac- cos snd Cigars, as well as a select Ilne of Canned Goods. seo TELLING... ‘THE CONFECTIONER — (iet the Business ) i . y i y @_=z=s ©& Dr. Larson, the eye special- ist, will make his next regular visit to Grand Rapids on usual dates, the 15th and 16th of every month. All those having de- | fective eyes, or in need of the *Phone your Orders. We Deliver the Goods. proper service for the fitting of glasses, are cordially invited to call at Hotel Pokegama the 15th and 16th of every month. Larson & LARSON. @WAWW0000000000000000000000000008 > DR. JOHN DICKIE | Veterinary ‘Surgeon AND DENTIST WILL BE AT M. E. Church Services. Pokegama Hotel Livery barn every Saturday. All work at- tended to on that day. Or call at office at WILSON’S LIVERY COLERAINE : Preaching at 10:30 a. m. and7:30 pm SundaySchool 11:30'a. m Epworth League 330 p.m Prayer Meeting... Thursday, Pm Choir Rebearsal.. Thursday, 8:30 p-m Ladies Aid Societ; - soos hp ier y meets.every Wed. A cordial invitation is extended to all.. of base ball with Camp 29 at that germ-saturated soil, they are singular Fifteen defeated Twenty-nine| ly free from typhoid fever and other ‘The game} diseases of which water is the me was greatly enjoyed by a large crowd,| dium of communication. This cond! and especially by the Cort players tion is attributed the universal cus feit| tom of copious tea drinking. $50 on the outcome and now the Cort| S#feguard against the disease, but the TEA DEADLY FOE OF TYPHOID. Boiling of the Drink Has a Germicidal Effect. It is said on the high authority of an American medical journal that, al though the Chinese people live in a The tea itself is not beld to be the bolling of the drink has a germicidal effect which produces sanitary advat» tages. And if tea produces any Ml Tesults they are not to be considered beside these advantages. : The tea leaf is described as form- ing one of the most innocent and at tractive flavorings possible for hot drinks, and the boiled drink is the foe to the deadly germ. The Old Brother’s Message. One of the venerable brethren of the Billville Circuit delivered this mes- sage recently: “It’s no use to strug- | gle, tf you’ve made up your mind to avail yourself of your priveloge of fall- in’ from grace, in the belief that you'll git up agin, an’ shake the dust off, and start over ag’in. Some o’ the dust will git in the grain of your gar- ments, and stick there; some of the strength you needed for the journey will be gone, and you'll no more be the same as you was. What you want to do is to make the struggle land you high and guard against gittin’ dizzy when you reach the hilltop!”—Chi eago American. EGGS WITHOUT SHELLS. One Way They Are Sent in Russia to Avoid Excessive Freight. Russian exporters, to avoid an ex- cessive freight on eggs as well as te avoid loss from breakage and from spoiling by heat, ship them without uhe shell, i. e., broken and the con- tents put up in air-tight block tin box- es, with or without salt, according to the taste of the customer. Each box contains several eggs and is sold by weight, the size running from half a _ kilogram up to a pud (some sixteen kilograms). The price of the latter is 5 rubles. For use in cooking and for a limited time these tinned or preserved eggs seem to an- Swer very well; that is, on the conti- nent, for England doesn’t take kindly to them. London, for instance, which buys large quantities of Russian eggs, pays 8 rubles a pud for them (against | 5 for the preserved eggs), besides the weight of the shells and the extra freight tariff on eggs. Bach block tin box of “conserved” eggs, whether of half kilo (a kilo is a ‘little more than two pounds) or two pud size, must bear the date and hour of its closing, thus guarding against getting stale eggs. The amount of eggs put up in boxes and annually ex- ported is enormous and constantly | growing. it’s a Hair-Reising Experience in Mcre Ways Tran One. as a cure for balness | et received the ind ment of the m sealp specialists, b go, says the Motor rongest kind of pr s J. W. MeGorray, a well-known Cleve ‘and undertaker, who was a passen ger in the last tour. While McGorray did not encounte, any hair-raising experiences in the popular sense, he found soon after he started that a modest but unmistaka- | ble crop of fuzz was developing on his | head, which had for many years been | garnished with the hirsute luxuriouS- ness of a china egg. By the time he reached Chicago his hat did not fit any more on account of the new hair, had to have a hair cut. | “l have thrown my wig away,” he | wrote his brother, Sheriff McGorray of Cleveland. The latter has planned a theater party to celebrate the new crop when j its owner returns home. And it will be the first time in a great many years that Undertaker McGorray |! not sat in the baldheaded row. He plans to study chemistry of exhaust his transformattion. | Snake in Ireland The other morning, while William Kennedy, Gurteenakilla, was walking through his farm at Tallamore pa he was surprised to see something wriggling in the grass. On closer ob- servation. Mr. Kennedy saw that th motor gases to discover the secret of | E creature was a snake, which hissed at him as he closed upon it. made an attempt to get into a nei boring ditch, but Mr. Kennedy s it twice with a black thorn killed it. A neighbor of Mr. Kennedy’s, vw" spent a long time in the Southers states of America, gave his opin’’r that it was a spotted adder of ous variety: It is two feet eight long and about as thick as an ord : walking stick, colored dark green v- the back with white spots. and lich: and | ‘wear swallowtail coats, and they never pale green underneath, with a beaut: ful orange band at the back of the bead. Unfair, - Miss Smith—“I see that the legisla- ture has passed a law prohibiting the women from wearing stuffed birds or feathers on their hats.” Aunt Maria—“It ain’t fair. I’ve heard of how the men in the cities say a word against it.” Sa nese emma On the Centrary. Miss Gaddie—“I was awfslly ized to hear that Belle w Miss Wise— Miss Gadcie—"“iier peuple are aagry, I bear. Thev sav Ler husband is a man of absolutely no family.” Miss Wise—“That’s not true. He was a widower with four children.”.. Thrown te tho Kids. “Ah, madame,” said the French maid, “little Fido-weel not eat ze -bop bons.” “The dear. intlicent, fie!" exclaimed ™M “There must be s~ those bonbons, Yv the children.”"—Puck. litt}< € Buys a Dainty $2.50, $2.5 AND $3500. Shirt Waist O'DONNELL'S This Week Gasoline and the Money Market Here in Massachusetts it is esti- mated that there ere twenty thousand | automobiies with a tots! valuation of j about thirty million do!ars. S€veral thousand are owne® by men who gei their houses to raise the money for purchase of autos, and the ital burned with the gasoline has made it just so much harder for men who had te secure loans for mercan- tile purposes | A Boiler Fuctory Voice. | Senator Redfield Procter of Vermont is said to have the most remarkable ce of any member of the United | States senate. Un dly crities callit 1 “befler factory” votre NEW $250,000 GRAND STAND AND EXPOSITION BUILDING. TH OTA STAT EEN ST. EP. 6711-19092, MONSTER EXPOSITION \w OF NORTHWESTERN PRODUCTS A WORLD'S FAIR AT HOME) $1,000,000 IN AGRICULTURAL HORTICULTURAL / LIVE’STOCK! EXHIBITS —327 ACHES OF MODERN : INDUSTRIAL TRIUMPHS —TH ATTRACTIONS-: (OUSAND: STELLAR MYRIADS OF EDIFYING AMUSEMENTS—RED HOT SPEED EVENTS ON THE WORLD'S RECORD TRACK —: BRILLIANT AUTOMOBILE SHOW— FASCINATING AND FORTUNE COMPELLING VAUDEVILLE AND CIRCUS PROGRAMS—DAZZLING PYROTECHNICAL DISPLAXS- BIG HIPPODROME SHOW EVERY EVENING. and upon his arrival in New York he | == ———— BLOOD MAKES GOOD PAINT. TELLS THE STORY. T O houses costing an equal sum were built at the same time. After they had been up for eight years they were sold. more than the other. One brought five hundred dollars The intelligent use of paint was responsible for the difference in value. Paint, the right kind, is a money saver and a money maker. We sell Blood’s Paint because it’s the kind that. makes houses valuable. W. J. &H. D. POWERS GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA INTENTIONAL DUPLICATE EXPOSURE Nee

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