Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, June 1, 1910, Page 6

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* ; GRAND RAPIDS HERALD-REVIEW, WEDNESDAY JUNE‘1 1910 HAD THE AUDIENCE WITH HIM | Oo the Officers and Members of Ftasra Christian Missionary Had Little Show Zu nrg I arm Lo nN In Argument with Native iD No. alg, A. BS. & A. Mi. a Ss Mollah. Your Committee appointed to prepare, and submit resolutions on the Very Low Rates 3 As a medical misionary, stationed a of our a Brother and Worshipful Master, Henry R. King, beg F for 16 years in northwestern India, ave to submit the following: arm Insurance near the Afghanistan frontier, Dr. T. a ae RESOLUTIONS —— L. Pennell had his share of peril and ‘Henry R. King, a citizen of this state, a resident of this village ‘arm i ‘ope: adventure, which he has recounted in | and a member of this lodge died on the morning of May 15th, 1910. - id — sip sig a volume entitled, “Among the Wild | We shave laid him away in his last resting place with the funeral rites and for Sale or Exchange ; Tribes of the Afghan Border.” ceremonies of the Or : A : —_—— Ss ¢ Order he loved so well, and now it remains for us to As a medical man, Dr. Pennell had | adopt and spread he rec i Ww his ups and downs with the native sara prem, ApOn: Sie records of the Lodge proper and suitable reso- ° Q. YOST floctors, who sweat their patients and ations phan our appreciation of his lite and work, our sorrow in Office Located in Pokegama a poe with lighted oil, but have his me a i our sympathy with his family and friends. Hotel Basement < no fai in western treatment. They is eminently fitting and proper that we do this. To remember and PnBnkencts Se eo Sasteate ‘ | also bleed and purge; but gradually | appreciate the virtues of the dead, to write such remembrance and Res Pe Don’t you needia peat arene treatment was ac | preciation in our records, there to be read and pondered ‘by all suc- # ae Ficae i Sere ene racial co ceedi i sons, evi s and for iti 00000000060000+980- new pair? When tafe tithe Sadtal alccercary, were | ceeding generations of Masons, evidences and forever testifies to the fact — a that we ourselves are Masons in spirit and in truth vi you get a new As a missionary, Dr. Pennell had | if nigh and higher sti : sae and will tend to } Sac A e : : to contend with the mollahs, who are |. higher still the ideals and principles of our Order through pair get them in argumentative and great browbeaters; Ae eae Vl heineering style, they don’t and very often, he confesses, he got Henry R. King was born January 9th, A. D. 1854, in the state of yle, ry the worst of it by verdict of the | New York. From New York he remaved with his parents to the state SURVEYING cost any more than ee thal that hemmed in the | ot ete and later to the state of Minnesota, settling at or near Man- | i eians. kato, m Blue Earth County. Her e grew firs’ rj the other. With a certain mollah, who regar&@ | eq into busi e SUPER pree ooes aie ee, ei ata ESTIMATING, an er into usiness. From Blue Earth County, bh x ve ed the Christian medicineman as @ roe ae : vy, he removed to} If you get them at C. H. Marr’s you will be sure $ | ‘val, Dr. Pennell had an amusing em Aitkin, Aitkin County, Minnesota, amd upon the —_ organization of | GONSTRUCTION, y gi . . sounter this County in 1891, he came to (Grand Rapids where he © of the qualities in the latest shapes. Isn’t that right? “Do you know,” asked the mollah, | Coutinued to reside practically lall of the time until his SUPERINTENDENT $ i “what becomes of the sun when it death. He was one, of the pioneers .of Northern Minnesota and | A D 4 Ask to see the O'DONNELL $4.00 button shoes Pie de o being-a man of considerable ability, strong personality, great energy and | ND DRAFTING : ‘ z if ie doctor gave the native circle untiring industry he took a ver: romi, a rt i i ¢ with the newest spring styles. It is “THE SHOE $ | the scientific explanation. genization: and phathnidng Cae as coe Ga a aaa "TASCA ENGINEERING CO. “Rubbish!” exclai F ; ; ior or eent : > 4 THAT FITS.” claimed the mollak. | zation of the county he was appointed its first County Auditor, siti “wi a 3 fe all know that the fires of hell he = ; : y » & position | 4 are under the earth, and that the sua which he held and filled with marked ability for three terms, with an in- GRAND RAPWS, \ é Ae Passes down every night, and there terval of two years between the first term and the last two terms; dur- | MINNESOTA yi hd We invite your | fore ‘comes up blazing hot in the | is Which interval he, in campany with Brother B. C. Finnegan, establish- | morning.” ed and conducted the drug store and pharmacy now known as th | < < . B a eR. Rj : inspetion of our Renee os gare Bell pharmacy. After his last term as County Auditor, in 1899, he en- | J. A. BROWN, Mgr. . : : ridicule the mob r i ’ ave ES é ae 7 » ‘69 e z spring line of Lion |lah. Then, turning to his eoaita be et os eae gen: in which he continued and Phone 168 said, with contempt in his face ‘and e av e time of his death. He leaves surviving him as his | . s ¥ relatives: His wife, two d hters sister : ». Barly in| . brand shirts and voice: oe e, two daughters, one sister and one brother. Early in | $ : “It 1s evident that I shall have te life he became impressed with the sublime truths and principles of Mason- i ¢ collars in new coat ect him everything from the be | 'Y 22d joined the Order. This was to be expected. It was perfectly natur- | Mectetetetetestetetecteteteeteteteteteteetecteteetertet inning.”—Youth’s Companion. al that he should gravitate toward that which was in‘accord wi nis high- | $ y 5 with his high- | Li E 4 % effect. Into it, out 3 cate a est ideals, his greatest thought, his real being. Immediately upon remov- | EAVE ORDERS AT $ 4 ing to this place he started the movement for the or; izati g | tg x a : ganization of a Ma- j Pe of it like a coat. CASE CALLED FOR SYMPATHY sonic lodge here with the result that in July, 1892, this Lodge was insti- | M I L LER N) $ 4 Swellest ever in tuted with Brother King as its first Worshipful Master. Since then-he has | FOR : held many positions of trust and responstbility in the Lod, i | td % i Life of Single-Blessedness Made No j iy) Ais: Lodge and ins die 2 4 the new spring Appeal s Battered-Up Mar- order, always meeting every demand and rising equal to every occasion, | Costello S Ice Creams : : i ried Woman, idnd so well did he perform his part, so creditably did he acquit him- cae 4 oe a 15¢ = self, so fully did he have and jhold the confidence of his Brethren that | # Mcisiad rarryrapne:ing * collars for Apropos the discussion of the ad-| cightean years after he was installed the first Master of the Lodge he OF 5 dantages of married life recalls the | died holding the same position. ie Lowney’s, Wessels’ and Roach, ¢ 5 2 : ‘. : 4 . CRAND RAPIDS, ornare of a certain bachelor maid ‘ This is the brief outline or biography of his life, but in that out- eed & Coe Candics 4 ¥ some forty summers and some win-/| jine the eye of Masonry discerns the actual work he did, the many ¥ « a MINNESOTA ters. She has had als eno i if z : proposals ugh, | things he accomplished, the good devds he rf it i ae FRUITS, eo she says, but she prefers single A A performed, oftimes’” In: se cret; his generous heart, the longings and aspirations of his soul and NUTS, blessedness to pouring coffee, mend | a iove all the sublime ideals toward which hi CIGARS AND ¢ ing socks and spanking babies. She § ‘ e ideals toward which the ever tried to climb. It is a recently began devoting much of her | ‘Plendid thing to be able to see in every life the good and true. It TOBACCOS | time to working in the slums, partic. | is a beautiful and sublime thimg to be able to see wherein the REMEMBER OUR f ularly among the women and chil-| very failures of life are oftimes evidences of greatness of mind and no- | — sp prougne | runt, of 200, Fatlure ts the eure evldence of effort—etfart to reach and '{SODA FOUNTAIN pitiful case was recently broug! accomplish ‘some ideal of the mind, some aspiration of the soul. The | When in need of a coo), pes pa gcoc ar ee gs | er man who ever tries for great things, for grand and noble things, may fail refreshing soft drink. We again and again, but his failing is watched by Angels and God Almighty have it in all flavors. a es a wer ke ae aeventt nee weec Orders tor Sunday Ice Cream fering creature, ragged and dishev. iC Ae deen et the real man—what a man really is—cannot | Must be left on Saturday . GAT { eled, reported at the charity head- be determined so much by his finished work, his completed projects, as We ere quarters and begged for shelter. by his failures; his unfinished work, his attempts, the things never com- | Seeteeteeteeeeee Miss J—— dressed her wounds,| pleted. The real genius of the artist will be found, not im the finish- — = rapidiy gave her something to eat and then | ed picture, the completed statue. It is rare indeed, perhaps never, that | fo ££ purpos It is taking started a sympathetic conversation | the finished picture, the completed statue, equals the ideal in the | and enamel ware be ause es, ue with the sufferer. The latter, after! artist's mind. The real genius of the artist is discovered in the pic- | trifie more than erdinary ware, it is recounting at much length the im ; : a ° ‘ rege n the long run, as it is guaran- quties She had ‘borneiit the hasds of emacs ‘the statue, that is me finished. Enter his studio and watch him | years and will last practically hentiiege iora and qiaater, ‘asked ‘at his work. See the unfinished picture on the easel, the half formed | e | | caer queetions to satisfy her wort statue on the pedestal. See how he strives to compel his hand to pro- +1900" Ware, mz 1 anly Age AES ine jee" A are, made only f xz eae cafiosity about her new-found trend: duce ithe picture in his mind; tol Carve the form and features of the | CONFECTIONERY eat) fee De Cee . “Live here?” she inquired of Miss ideal statue he can see with the €Ye of his. soul. See him fail. O dull | it looks like silver bat weighs only about one- J-—. and unresponsive hand of clay! If you could rise to the sublime heights | euarter 28 much, 1s easily cleaned and handled, and “No,” was the reply; “I spend onlé | Of that ideal of the soul you could Not taste of death—you would be im- Will not rust,-correde or tarnish. Absolutely pure, a part of my time here during the| mortal. To be able to see and knoW aj this is). to be a Mason and to be non-peisonous and wholesome; saves money, time and \ day. ~{y home is way up in Harlem.” | able! to apply it to human life is Masonry. | doctor's bills. é | “You're married, ain’t you?” was And now to his wife and children, 9 his brother, sister and friends we | | | Fe FEE ee ee ee bes ioe ie next question. extend our ‘heartfelt sympathy, syYMpathy equal to the sorrow that they | Cross. At your dealers. ‘No, I'm not married; and I may| feel. But even as we sympathize we stand upon the foundations of our | never be. faith and rejoice im the belief that death to our Brother was not an ene-| The poor, wretched woman opened | my put a friend; a friend that opened the gates and.led him into that infin-_ | EVERYTHING UP TO DATE her bruised and swollen eyes as best | ite realm where the high ideals of the mind, the sublime aspirations she could to get a look at her friend, gazing at her in amazement. of the soul, are not deferred or Prevented by the weakness of the flesh. “My, my!” she said, sympathetical- As the rays of the setting sun transforms the western clouds into realms ly. “I’m awfully sorry. Say, but ain’t of golden glory, into cities with streets of gold, into fields and landscapes it fierce to be an old maid?”—New| of surpassing beauty stretching away into the infinite beyond, so the life | HENRY HUGHES & co, York Times. and character of Brother King in the pour of death, shines through the , ‘ eS eee clouds of gloom in the western sky, transforming them into palaces beau- | Orders Delivered. "Phone 245 tiful; into landscapes of delight and joy and prophecy the dawning of an infinite day. SOCIAL CLIMBERS IN NEVADA Resolved that we spread these Tesolutions on the records of our Lodge 8. G- BENZING sland ‘oflgeld Wiaveses Many strange and pigs ay to the Wife, Daughters, Sister and Brother of the de-! ) Vicissitudes in the Matter brah 9 os : = | WASCA COUNTY =| *vare €. G. MeCARTE | eeeter Cc. C. McCARTHY To-day a humble gold-seeker may E. SPENCER MURPHY | COLUMBIA be living in a hutch of the simple ar- | Committee. ABSTRAG OFFICE chitecture of a box car, says Good | Double Dsik Records. See the Big Horseshoe next deer to the Bowling Alley. H. E. GRAFFAM REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE Housekeeping. To-morrow he is build- ing a “villa” with real clapboards and | Two records at the price of one. Music on both erdes. shingles, hiring a Chinaman‘ of all ett tititititttt tt ttt | gene ky Sa aoe Saat work and sending to ’Frisco for a Social conditions were decidedly TAKES, PAID. LOR, NON- perplexing. Your washerwoman ac- Pharmacist FIDELITY, ABSTRACTS brass bed and a Persian rug. Some | % have just received a large and —_—_—_—_—_—_—_— very pretty little houses begin to dot o Werred auecrtent Comaan JUDICIAL, the barren landscape. A railroad | yg j ane g REAL ESTATE stretches its metal arm down into the Seno rearrange __ EXCISE, gold-bearing wilderness and links it | % All Kinds ef eee re FIRE INSURANCE with the outer world. Come tailors,| { Cement Building Material i ee Seta . Con TmAars appre iene Peer ana pial 4 Fine Facee—Late Designs We Also Handle Cylender and (nitactiallikindeict bans ee oa ee ee ieee Pi Cement Sidewalks and Tile Walks Contracted Records and Machines. Bonds issued. CONVEYANCES DRAWN sorners of civilization. ‘ R y R B 11 ‘ General Cement Contractor ; O . e ’ . RESIDENTS cepted a mining claim for an uncollect- ‘ | Netary Public able debt. Suddenly the claim yields H 5 J OHN LOFBER G KREMER & KING her a fortune, whereat, to show you| ; +HE LOFBERG CEMENT WORKS, GRAND RAPIDS se that her wealth has not made her ‘ pea cit snobbish, sha purchases an elaba ate pe Ra ph bb bith titi pti tibet itititi t+ | Portable house and settles down as | your next-door neighbor. * | However, if you take it into your Soldier’s Odd Weapon. t “As yeqa | * head to move away from the vicinity A soldier named Paviet was cOM | emros ‘ystyeinjeu on) perder ,,;0URs | of the fortunate lavandiere you would | demned to death by court-martial at | Ut 30U Ss} 31 Jey} Mos 0} YFnoUe sey i is A "AD a Re es, A é find the moying problemi quite-simple. | Oran, France, the other day. He was | auo3 <juo eaeg sronezyjseaut AW,, | A small force of husky men can pull | charged with assaulting a corporal | ; “10]]pNB Ue peyse | your house up by'the roots and carry | whilst on duty. During the neers j .@QOUXIOOP B HO 3eS Uy B SeyeU | Bsc it up a hill or down a slope without | he threw at the president of the coun | qyqm ‘uoy} ‘om usojut nod TITM,, su RIBE FOR THE “exertion—that js, unless | cil’ a curious weapon made by him: | “SHEMNIVU peyZuej-mou oy} peysem | i is as oe any great your dwelling is ’dobe, or you happen | gelf, the blade of a pair of scissors | 93 |4ousjsay avy ‘syeuyue’'yeq} eOpy | ' y ad ain ‘to be-one of the bonanza crowd atid |-fastened into a wooden handle. He| asyeqsym & st 3} eq) NOs 119} Ly \ a have gone in for heavy architecture. was at at once tried for this crime, yoes pue As0oyL H and the death sentence pronounced, | Office opposite Post Office. GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. EYES S Dr. Larson, the’ eye ® l- ist, will make his next Leaire visit to Grand Rapids on usual cates, the 15th and 16th of every month. All those having de- fective eyes, or in need of the proper service for the aie ot Gear are cordially im cali at Hotel Pokegama the Wth and 16th of every month, Larson & Larson.’ Over Finnigan’s

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