Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 20, 1911, Page 4

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{ PAGE FOUR. GRAND RAPIDS HERALD-REVIEW, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1911 oung. And it will go © rant Rapies TheratetRevien Published Every Wednesday | Bede's Budget. By E. . KILEY. raised Globe Officia, Paper of Itasca County Mesaba Tren th. late Governor After the Ore sje Herald-Review is constrained to "fhe conclusion that Old Man Atkin- perusing him as executive clerk. Get busy and claim your share.— —— Alva Eastman of the Journal-Press ought to make a might SvANCE | 2 Two DOLLARS A YEAR IN AD) good congressman at large. He's | | United States, got good judgment. For years he A spur track leading from the! ed at the Postoffice at Grand Rapids, | 144 Harvey Grimmer on his staff to | main line of the Great Northern to Minnesota, as Second Class Matter. help make his paper one of the best} |the plant has been built and the in Minnesota. The old St. Paul | 417 kiln building is about finished. 2 ic Harvey | 5 +. 5 ie ‘stice! rveY | been ordered for immediate delivery. and secured him as managing editor. head of a big printing plant at on forever. | The Range Sand Lime Brick Co. composed of Minneapolis, Duluth, Virginia and Nashwauk capitalists, jare erecting at Pengilly a sand-lime St. Cloud|brick plant which when completed | will be one of the largest and best | dyuipped plants of its kind in the _|The machinery for the plant has The plant will be capable of turn-j Johnson af ed out 100,000 merchantable brick) Now he is|per day and from present indications St. jie output will be sold considerably | jin advance from the day the plant| ' Hudson Chalmers When in the market for a Car, remember that | handle / HUDSO CHALMER Automobiles == fore door, self-starter, electric lighted, 33 horse power, touring, torpedo or runabout, selling at.....-.....--.06- Chalmers Overlana $1,600.00 36 horse power touring car, equipped with self-starter. electric lighted, a beauty, at-...............ccccccecseeee ses $1,800.00 fon is not favorable to the perpetu- Eberhart in of- Cloud. Ever since Harvey left Journal-Press the | Eastman has been | starts operating. It is planned to have it in operation for the opening CHALMER 30 horse power, touring style, not equipped with 1 500 00 self-starter or electric lighted...........-.00:...:scsseeseeceeereeseseees ] 1 Z of Adolph O. re | er If Roosevelt were Czar of } pote he’d get ‘reapportionment Minne- | so | ‘ick it would make the m of those south side ignorant | mutecrats. Teddy would even gartial to northern Minnesota, gause more babies were born in this @ection last year than in the south-| arn half of the state, according to giatistics just out. —————_—__—_ The Kangaroo court gang is again| getting to reinstate itself in| |power The Herald-Re-| view will keep the public posted as jt the plans of ‘the ready next year. ‘inner circle.” jive. a coarse quality of politics that | |bunch puts up—gumshoe slander— and its efforts are easily overcome! by tearing the mask away to let the} Gright rays of truth shine upon its aasty nakedness. The Herald-Review has an ex- |ehange list comprising fifty or mcre papers and of the entire num- 1 but one carries the advertise- a catalogue house. That sad to say, is published in It’s part of the black- mailing scheme that will develope as ment of one, Grand Rapids. | We approach »( There’s not much money in adver- the campaign season. | tising for a catalogue house, but it) might scare the local merchant into| Perhaps. >| “coming across.” Next June the northern Minnesota] | Development association will meet at International Falls. No better se ction could have been made for the meeting. The delegates may Rend upon a right royal entertain- | ment; viewing a rich region of this aection.of the state that will be mew to many of them; being the guests of one of the best towns in the north country and in a general way finding no end of profit @easure. ——_—__-_____ The Duluth health department in as monthly bulletin.for.November.de- alare “there is not a school building im Duluth which has proper or ade- A quate ventilation.” and The report rounc- iy denounces the present system of ventilation as being antiquated and absolutely useless. “The best sys- tem we know anything about up to the present, is the open windows and ) doors,’ says the report. Is it not al- together likely the same condition @revails generally, including the} Grand Rapids schools? There's going to be an awful time | | | am Fargo, N. D., on January 17 and 38. All the big Democrats of the| gountry are to meet-there and have a talk-fest. Bryan down will be on hand. The North Dakota Democrat, a weekly paper published at Fargo, has evi- dently assumed the whole responsi- bility of nominating and electing Har-' mon of Ohio to the presidency. In doing this the Democrat seems to think it necessary to discredit Wood- row Wilson, and thereby the Demo- erat exhibits its political incompeten- ay. The Democracy from Minnesota is covered with a foot and a half of snow on top of frozen g@leet making ideal sleighing, though the streams were not frozen deep enough when the snow caine to TY a make it safe to drive on the ice. The snow is likely to remain till April, with bright, snappy, sunny weather, that makes one feel as strong and casting about for a second edition|of the spring trade. The brick will 30 horse power, touring car, the one that made jed elsewhere, |turns and seated, but it was claim-| lea every pine stump in Itasca coun- “| would make Ames governor. So the} de- |. of his lost protege. “Eureka,” cried | | Alva, he hurled the about the dome of Harold Knudsen | when lariat | heads |and dragged him from the Foley In-) improves with age. | dependent to St. Cloud. Harold is a be | live wire, is on the job all the time; |conjunction with the brick plant aj be-|and fools everybody into the habit) i of liking him. PSUR AE EEE Beles AMES, McGILL AND WHITEMAN. | J. Adam Bede reminis-| cent in the last issue of his Budget. | | He makes it a little strong, perhaps, | pine stump | becomes when he registers every as a voter, but been some foundation for suspecting | there may have| slight irregularities in the good old |days of ’86. This is what he relates: | “Dr. A. A. Ames, whose death is not- of the best} nev-} was one of friends and kindliest of men, er having willfully wronged anyone but himself. He was a prince in, his way and time, and his passing | incidents, political and | 1886 when he Alonzo J. Whiteman for | recalls many otherwise. In ran for governor, was the democratic candidate the State Senate against Roger S. Munger in Duluth d’strict which then included Itasca county. se was elected on the face of the re-| ty was counted for him. When *| contest was begun it was found that the stumps had also voted for the republican candidate for governor, A. R. McGill, and to unseat (Whiteman | case was dropped.” ——— MINNESOTA VS. GANADA. The following facts are reported from Winnipeg and have been given some attention by the press of these northwestern states. The story should be elaborated upon and made general use of by our immigration bureaus and others ititerested in the settlement and advancement of the great northwestern states: While in St. John, N, D., during a visit to that state investigating farm-| conditions,” said Roderick Mc- secretary of the Manitoba “I saw farmers being ers’ Kenzie, grain growers, paid 92 cents a bushel for barley in a grain elevator there. A sample of | that barley I brought, to Brandon, | and I was offered 40 cents a} bushel. Binders cost $150 in St. | John and $175 in Brandon. Eighty-on barley buys a farmer’s wagon in Dakota, It takes 212 bu- shels in Manitoba. Hight gallons of coal oil can be bought with a bushel of barley in Dakota. Manitoba farm- ers must be satisfied with slightly more than one for the same quantity. A Dakota farmer can, with 500 bu- shels of barley, buy a Canadian gang Mr. MeKenzie is quoted as! saying that “the Manitoba farmer | pays dearly for his loyalty.” Evi- dently he was referring to the re-} cent rejection by the Canadian peo- ple of the reciprocity treaty, but the above interview from the Canadian side should contain a lesson for the American farmer who thinks the Canadian west looks good to him. One difference between Minnesota and the Canadian west is that the Canadians have not been afraid to spend a few dollars advertising the country, and they have boomed, it.con- tinuclly. With half the energy and money expended to boom this state that is spent the last few years to Man., bushels of plow. | which)are fast leading in all brick | the | membrances, | tions to offer will please leaye them |at home. | personal gain. | There was a young fellow named Jin the northern part of the be made from pure sand and lime, cities brick | (construction in the larger |from the fact that sand-lime The company is also erecting in hydrating plant for the hydrating of |lime for their own use as well as! commercial trade of this pro- duct for the range.—Nashwauk Her- ald. R CURE-ALLS To Be Taken With Moderation. Not Poi- son As Compounded By "THE OTHER GUY— The Hibbing Tribune remarks that | almost.” ese Ouch! Here it is with Christmas only four days off and I haven't raised the price of those Christmas re- Those having sugges- see Grabbed From Our Gooseberry Tree. As “Mike” Lieberman finished dressing the Christmas display win- dow, Otto Rannfranz wandered in’ ‘the store and mildly observed: “If Chrstmas brings depleted purse, To those who scoff and mock About the joy of givin’ things, What will the hollyhock?” . If I had a real, good coon dog, But there were no coons to see; And all the trees were evergreens, What would a Christmas tree? . Yes, Jessica, we're still bashful, but cheer up—Leap Year’s a-comin’. eee The Mesabe Ore takes up the cud- get in behalf of the redheads, say- ing they’re the brightest proposition on the face of the earth, or words to that effect. The Other Guy don’t doubt that statement, not even for a minute. see The house of representatives has our congratulations for refusing to pass a bill authorizing the sale of the hulk of the battleship, Maine, to private parties to be placed on exhibition in the larger cities and an admission fee charged. The sink- ing of the Maine was respons‘ble for the Spanish-American war and too many lives were lost to permit pri- vate parties exhibiting the hulk for Our Weakly Limburger. Clute, Real handy at playing the flute; But some one, one day Threw his flute in the bay; And then he went out on a toot. . A pretty young lady from Boone, Says: “I’m to be married in June; But an old maid with some dough, Caught the eye of her beau; She now thinks she told it too soon. eae “Consistency, thou art a jewel!” J. J. Hill and his son, Louis, talk to the farmers of Minnesota about the great possibilities lying dormant state and then advertise excursions to “Sam Gordon was king for a .day— OVERLAN Read These Descriptions __ You all know what the Hudson is. The 1911 model is a dandy, but the 1912, with self-starter and electric lighted, is got anything skinned for the price. have a demonstrating car here in the spring and you’d better wait and see it be- fore you put in your order. The Overland is the car that made all the manufacturers of low-priced cars It is a 30 h. p., selling for $900, and at the The Overland is made in the runabout style, also, and is just the thing for the busy business man who doesn't care to in- yell when it was put on the market. price it hasn’t an equal on the market. vest too much money in a car. If you're going to buy, you’d better see me. less money than you can get any place else. Call up "Phone No. 22 and we'll tell you all about them. AUTO LIVERY SERVICE The Auto is the only thing for getting over the ground fast at a reasonable price. Remember I am in the Auto Livery business when you plan that business or pleasure trip. Wellein’s Auto Livery A. L. WELLEIN, Proprietor automobile makers cut the price, selling at...........-.....:ceesseees These are the Best Cars on the Market $900.00 rl I can give you a better car for Montana, Idaho, Orgeon and 'Wash- ington at greatly reduced rates. eee In Chicago, the school board has decided to turn the school buildings over to the pupils to do as they wish ip the way of having a good time, to keep them .away from the public dance halls and other places where the influence is not Of the best. That's nothing. In Grand Rapids the pupils have long been accorded that privilege. eee ‘Get in the Game. Life is hard—yes, life is borin’ To the man without an aim; adyertise western cities, even, we gupple as a wildeat, Already the 8ea- joy- rn gladsome music, and the long » EpParapcnt one ant ne begun. It is aleighbells are giving forth their| Would be getting results. The westerners have the right idea. They know what they want But that’s no reason to be roarin’ ’Gainst those who have won some fame. Then let us up and be a-doin’, Even though ite om the sly; - FOR THE HOUSE WIFE DURING ALL KINDS OF MIXED CANDIES AND NUTS HOLLY, EVERGREENS AND AND WREATHS OF ALL KINDS FOR CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS REMEMBER WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF HONOR BRAND CANNED GOODS GREENSTUFFS ONIONS LETTUCE RADISHES TOMATOES CUCUMBERS Everything is Fresh and Clean ALL DELIVERIES MADE PROMPTLY H. Hughes & Co. THE POPULAR STORE WHAT THE—— MARKET AFFORDS Grand Rapids - - Minnesota THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS FRUITS GRAPES ORANGES BANANAS CRANBERRIES ESTERN APPLE Fancy Boxed

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