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1 ——-——} PAGE FIVE ARERE REEL OL ER EEL ERI OE ER EOL ISP MILLINERY The latest and best inLadids’, Mi si ind Children’s Headgear, at rea sonable prices. A trimmer who kncws her business. DRESS MAKING You will “have a fit’’ and be delight- ed if our expert designer make your clothes. Fit, Style and Workmanship guaranteed. DRESS MATERIALS Silks, Voiles, Chiffons, Mar- i quisettes, Etc. Laces, Bandings, Fancy Trimmings, Beautiful Exclus- re Designs. DADIBS FURNISHING HOUSE GRAND RAPIDS. Zy Order from. HAIR GOODS Coiffures on hand, human hair. the cities. Sete teteteeeeeteteateteteeteeteeteeeeetetntneette Ss ss sss ts ss a ts to ee Be OO a a MINNESOTA. Have Your Fall Suit Tailored to Over 300 of the latest and best weaves to select | A fine line of Switches, Puffs matched. Guaranteed genuine The same goods you pay doubie the price for in | LADIES’ TAILORING Suits, Skirts, and Coats, well made, welllined and a per- fect fit guaranteed. FANCY WORK Pillows, Towels, ited Good Liniugs | Centerpieces, Good Styles | erens, Pin. cusn- Good all the Way ens. cars: Bass, Through | A Perfeet Fit Guaranteed CORSETS AND BRASSIERRES A full line of Case 3. i Corsets always on hand. Once worn, always worn. Cor- sess made to order. The best on the market. ~ 4 A Calling List The Fire Department The Police The Doctor The Baker The Butcher The Grocer The Caterer The Livery Stable and anybody else you want; called by Telephone. Place your order now and get your name in our new Telephone Directory which goes to press in a few days. MESABE TELEPHONE COMPANY. For Further Information Call O. V. HEMSWORTH, Commercial Manager. Tel. 67. PAID ADVERTISEMENT This announcement is inserted by Florence Burlingame, and paid for by her, the amount paid peing $10. To the Voters of Itasca County I hereby announce myself a candi- date for nomination to the office of county superintendent of schools; I feel that in eo doing, I should make some brief statement of my qualifications for the office and my motives for seeking it. of Minneseta» having been connected of Minnesota, having eebn connected with rural schools as pupil and tea- with rural schools 2s pupil and teach- er for over fifteen years- I may add that I consider those years of country school teaching as the most valuable part of my training. In Master of Pedagogy from the Uni- versity, and a state Professional cer tificate of te first grade. Since Jan- hai 1, 1901 I have taught almost | continuously in the public schools of {northern Minnesota, and for the last | six years at Grand Rapids. I am jnow seeking the office of county |superintendent pecause I believe I |ghould find in it a wider field of activity and a means of identifying jmyself still more closely with the | people among whom I have made my homé; because having become:a@ prop erty owner and a permanent resi- | dent of the county, I am more than lever interested in anything that |makes for the welfare and healthful | development of the county; and be |cause I believe that with my varied training and experience I could do ‘much to help the schools, especially |the rurai schools, to play their part in thes development. Upon these grounds alone training, experience, and professional attitude toward the work, I base any claims I may !have to your consideration. Respectfully yours, FLORENCE BURLINGAME. PAID ADVERTISEMENT This announcement is inserted by Glen Strader and paid for by him, the amount paid peing $15. GLEN STRADER. To the voters of Itasca County: I hereby announce myself a candi- date on the Republican ticket for the nomination for Treasurer of Itas- ca county. the office I now hold. I feel confident that the work of the office during my incumbency has been carried on in a manner satis- factory to the taxpayers of th@ County. Your support at the Primaries on September 17 will be sincerely ap- preciated. Respectfully, GLEN STRADER, Treasurer. PAID ADVERTISEMENT This. advertisement is inserted by N. D. Kean and paid for by him, the amount paid being $10. This is to announce that I am 4 Democratic candidate for the office of coroner of Itasca county, I am @ physician and surgeon, the qualifi- cationg which are so Often neces to the office I promise to look after the duties devolving on the coroner to the fullest extent of my abil N. D. KEAN, M. D., Colera: Minn, PAID ADVERTISEMENT: This advertisement is by E. J. Mcowan aand paid for by him, the amount paid being $15. E. J. McGOWAN. I hereby announce myself a can. didate for the Republican nomina. tion for the office of Register of Deeds of Itasca County, subject to the decision of the voters at the pri- maries to be held September 17. I feel that the duties of the of-} fice have been performed satisfac- torily during the time I have had the direction of the office and for this reason I ask renomination. Respectfully yours, Co) E. J. McGOWAN. PAID ADVERTISEMENT This announcement is inserted by W. A. Kiley and to be paid for by! him; the amount to be paid is $15. sary in properly administering the duties of coroner and I feel that I am thoroughly qualified to fill the office efficiently. W. A. KILEY Candidate for Clerk of Court I hereby @nnounce myself a candi- date for the nomination to the of- fice of Clerk of Court at the primar” ies to be held September 17. j Ppoperty Loss Is $100,000 A disastrous storm struck Fort Frances and International Falls Sun- day night, causing a property loss estimated at $100,000. The planing mill of the Internation- al Lumber Co., at International Falis was leveled to the ground and de- streyed. The water tank on the top of the paper plant was ripped off by thewind, causing considerable damage to the building and machin- ery of the plant. Stands and fences Seeetongostrete Nay, not so— Little Sister, if I showed Nay, not so— Would you keep your own a Nay, not so— chat an eminent scientist has it figured out that all men will be com- pletely bald headed in 500 years. seems as though the flies would have a big time but maybe the that there won’t be any pests to go coasting on bald heads. Let us hope so. And, anyway, all the men we know would certainly be complete |ly bald in 500 years, so cheer up. Of course you Went to 2he state fair. What with that exhibit just over and our own county fair coming on next week, one’s language gets awfully “agricultural,” like the girl I heard the other day. “No one need think,” said she, with a horse laugh yet looking sheepish, “that I am going to do the turkey trot. They may |turnip their faces at me and say it |does beat all, but I do not carrot all EXPERIENCE Little Sister. if I told you of the way Wherein my feet went straying yesterday, If I warned you of the pitfalls and the snares, Would you straight forego your maying for my prayers; And lest you, too, might wander, paUse and stay : Social Happe % , i: { | “swatees’’ will have gotin their dead- ly work so thoroughly by that time| | berg, |nerva Myers, Miss Elsie Arno, Miss | Edith Avery, Dr. and Mrs. Schmidt. | | Hionor Mrs. Dugan Where other feet have gone, your feet must go. without disguise My thorn-pierced hands and wounded to your eyes, Would you turn aside from roses warily Lest you, too, feel the thorns no man may sce, You, too, must have your will whene roses blow. Little Sister, if I showed my heart to you, With too much loving bruised and broken through, white and hidden thing, From that strange joy whose end is sorrowing, Your heart must learn what wiser, women know. —Theodosia Garrison. eet Somebody told me the other day| Miss Mae Benton, Miss Margaret Ait-| oa, Miss Anna Knudson, Miss Sophia Ouat and Miss Florence Burlingame. Farewell For Miss Parish A farewell dinner for Miss Minnie |Parish, who leaves this week for Hamline university, St. Paul, was given Monday evening at the resi- jdence of Dr. and Mrs. G. F- Schmidt. day school class. Decorations were nasturtiums and Sweet peas, the table appointments carrying out the chcsen color note. Covers were laid for ten, those pres- ent being: Miss Parish, Miss Mabel Kling» Miss Owers, Miss Esther Tun- iss Stella Brandon, Miss Mi- |for them, for as I said before, I am { } go | man.” Goodby, sce you on Cider Mill} i Lane, | Dance Friday Evening | A dance was given in the village | the Catholic church will be entertain-| hall last Friday evening by Roecker’s jorchestra. A large number of young |peoplé were present to enjoy the} }second of the series of dances giv- |en by the orchestra. H | ees at | In Camp at Pokegama | Mrs. C. C. Miller, Mrs. MeVicar and) | Mrs. Katherine Murchie have been| | spending the past week at the Dewey) cottage at Lake Pokegama, going on jlast Thuggyday. | Picnic at Camp Folly | The teachers of the Grand Rap-} ids schools enjoyed an outing at! he farm home of Miss Florence Bur- lingame last Friday evening. A picnic supper was served on the lawn, andacamp fire and games furnished entertainment during the evening. Present were: Miss Louise Twinam, Miss Harriet Kummerer, Miss Grace Norton, Miss Lee Benge, Miss Agnes Bryan, Miss Katherine Fisk, Miss Katherine Roney, Miss Royetta Tran- seau, Miss Guthrie, Miss Alice Gren- dall, Miss Clara Thompson, Miss Erna Rheniberger, Miss Alida Holmes, Miss Emma Vogel, Miss Dorothea Ely, ing to cabbage some fine young| | | —The Looker-On. | inserted | Mrs. C. T. Kennedy entertained a few friends i nally Monday eve- aing, honoring Mrs. E. J. Dugan of St. Paul, who is her guest this week. Will Entertain Altar Society. The ladies of the Altar society of ed by M parlors Thursday Dr. McCoy Here Thursday An afternoon meeting for the ers of the city schools and the ers of schoo] children will t at the high school auditorium Thurs- day afternoon at 3:30, when Dr. Mary McCoy of Duluth will talk on ‘Sex Hygiene.” Dr. McCoy is appearing here under the auspices of the (Grand Rapids Po- titical Equality club, and will speak in the county court rooms Thursday evening on political problems of the day, with relation to the enfranchise- ment of women- Entertained Carnation Circle The ladies of the [Carnation Circle were the guests of Mrs. George Fear- son at the regular monthly meeting of the society Tuesday afternoon, With Mrs. Bertond The ladies of theP respyterian Aid society. are the guests of Mrs. Ber- tond at a regular meeting of the or- ganization this afternoon. Plans for the coming winter’s work will be dis-| cussed. M—DASHES Voliva, of Zion City fame, an- nounced that he is going to make the women there “dress to show the proper Christian character.” Consid- ering the present day styles, that’s about all that has been overlooked. <3 Along with the other state fair ex- hibits, one might mention the chief ‘buld moose. —M—: This column rises to endorse the sentiments of Marc Atkinson, Homer Mussey, et al., who are raising their voices in a strenuous protest against the antikissing crusade. ea Apropos of the July weather we aré having these September days, there are a few things that one might do to reduce the temperature. For in- stanee: Don't listen to anyone, not even yourself, argue politics. Don't believe folks when they tell you it’s not—it’s at lie. Wear linen next to nature. Cultivate repose of manner and spend part of the day contem- at the baseball park were leveled to the ground. rounding the north pole. Try to re-|—Nate Collier in Duluth News-Trib. plating, mentally, the landscape sur- turns cold before this reverse the process. See. One's faith is the safe, sane and conservative country newspaper man is rudely shaken by this from the Anoka Herald: “Affinities are usual- ly a matter of propinquity. Pronounc ed styles in millinery or an early spring are their chief cause. They seldom last long, but they are mighty active when one has ’em.” ace. Says the Walker Pilot: Now that it hag become practically impossible for man to carry all the votes of his precinct in his vest pocket, let’s have woman suffrage and see what luck mother has’ in keeping the bunch hanging onto her apron string. ei LIES The angler lies beside the brook, And casts his gaudy flies, And lies and lies and lies and lies And lies and lies and lies. —Lohman in Milwaukee Journal. His wife she sits beneath the trees, Big tear drops in her eyes, And sighs and sighs and sighs and sighs Thomas, Miss Florence Thoirs, Miss Eva Holden, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Me- | | by the members of Miss Parish’s Sun- is printed, | The stenographers at candidates” headquarters must be glad they learned that speed line, “Now is j the time for all good men to come , to the aid of the party.” =e The St. Paul Dispatch opines re garding the list of primary candi- dates that many are called, but few chosen. It looks to this column like many are called, but few hold the winning hand. j gee And now its Blanche Bates who \is gcing to marry a newspaper man, | following the pace set by Lillian Rus- sell. Evidently the darlings of the stage have turned the spotlight on ‘the newspaper man and—which we havn't very many bachelors in the edi- torial ranks of northern Minnesota— Ithe rest of us are getting nervous and would prefer to haye A, M. | Welles of Sauk Center keep his fin- gers crossed when he sees an act- | orine approaching. —M— | Inspiration. Full man a man Who writes a joke, Is first compelled His pipe to smoke. —Birmingham Age-Heral. Fuil many a bard, | Now this seems queer, Is at his Dest When full of beer. Chicago Tribune. | And so it seems quite | Odd we think That we do neither, Smoke or drink. | —Quentin in Minneapolis Trib. | But when we want to Make things hum, We fill our face | With chewing gum. | —— | One can’t help a sneaking admira- | tion for the Chisholm woman who | beat up her husband with a flat iron |for his attentions to other women, | While the method chosen was stren- | uous, the flat iron, undoubtedly, has |divorce courts beaten a mile ag a !ready remedy for wandering affec- tion. WAS THE BIGGEST FAIR IN YEARS State Fair Attendance Show More People Viewed Exhibits Than Ever Before. The st and bes the history of Minnesota closed § urday night after a r and nights. The estimated att amounted to more than the tion of the largest city in the s ja total of 413, 936. It was a remark- able fair in that notwithstanding the | Temarkable throngs on the ground jat all hours of the day and evening, with horse races, automobile races and palloon and aviation flights there were no serious accidents, An- ‘other remarkable circumstance was that the arrests were a negligible | quantity. A third feature was the al- | most perfect weather all week. | Comparative figures for the last four years show that the 1912 fair was by far the largest. Secreetary J. C. Simpson said that, he expected the fair to show profits large enough to cover the deficit of $77,000 carried ov- er- It will be several weeks before }the books can be closed and the ex- j act figures obtained. | Farmers planned the Minnesota fair for 1912, and farmers turned out to support it and made it a success, |C. W. Glotfelter of Wa ille, presi- |dent of the Minnesota State Agricul- |tural society, the board of manag- |ers of which conducts the state fair, said that the plan of the board was to subordinate the exposition and jcultural interests, to the end. that the cultural interests to the end tha the purpose of these annual shows, which primarily is to encourage agriculture in all its branches, should be promot ed in the fullest degree. That it had succeeded each member of the board was firmly convinced, that the farm- ers who attended the fair were satis- fied that the board in as far as its means permitted, planned and 4a~ ranged every detail with the view of promoting rural activities. When you have money after 4 honeymoon. When a dentist can’t find a cavity. When your gold mining stock pays a dividend. When you walk in the dark with- out barking your shins, And sighs and sighs and sighs. When your auto tire forgets ta puneture on a hurry up trip. When the horse you play to win The principal loss in Fort Frances|¢aji your sensations when you used was the building and plant of the|to come down town at 8:30 in the Fort Francis Times. The building/morving last January. Don't be was struck by lightning and entire-| thinking apout the place a lot of the } go, bem - Yet he goes fishing every year As you, no doubt, surmise, And triea and tries and tries and tries comes in first. When it does not rain on your va- cation. When you have a good balance of cold cash at the end of the year.— Judge. ‘. oat _ > abe 7 ' } ‘