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‘ saloon keepers for selling liquor GRAND RAPIDS HERALD-REVIEW WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9, 1913 Brand Rapias Heralds Review Published Every Wednesday By KILEY <8 SPENCER TWO DOLLARS A YEAR IN ADVANCE Entered at the Postoffice at Grand Rap. ids, Minn., as Second Class Matter. Official Paper of. Itasca County THE DEATH OF MORGAN. JPierpont Morgan, financial wiz- ard and master of big business, bas passed out. His death at Rome | @uded a career remarkable for per- sonal achievement, useful in a Manner, but of little value to a world which at his death signalized| Us estimate of him by ripple on its placid surf Pame will not long be remembered. Even the affairs with which he retain his | rcely a ace. “His was identified will not impress. Morgan has been applauded for doing things, and he achieved great- ly, from the standpoint of one un- der whose skin the primeval esti- mate of achievement is supreme. Bul those who scan his life for any thing worth remembering, will not be rewarded. He has given nothing to literatura or art. He has not wdded another wheel to the machine of industry. He has not contributed an iota to} the credit or eountry of which his was without | doubt, one of the leading minds, bet-! ter equipped for obtaining results | than any other that existed in his | time. importance of the {is not dead in the heart of the MRS. PANKHURST’S CASE. | Gen. Huerta has signified his will- Mrs. Emaline Pankhurst has gone|ingness that Pedro Lascurian shall ihe way of those who blaze the |be president of Mexico. Thereupon | Pedro fingered his throat nervous- and smiled a sickly smile. trail of civilization, The leader of the equal rights | iy, and is in jail, to} movement in E The Bulgarian colors are popular serve a sentence of three n woman's wear this year. Noting imposed for inciting eat 5 t {the horrible combination one begi: 3 to unlawful acts. The and intended to crush the agitation one, sentence is a severe |the Turks did such a fine mar * the enfranchise. t \, | athon. for the enfranchisement of women | * That it will have a directly opposite effect/at Duluth, duri —___—_ —___—_. A’Dakota man committed suicide his honeymoon ia the British Islands. seems to be certain. It has al- | trip, because’‘he was short of mon- He should have waited a while tional to world importance. That | and married life would have ac- civilized people in every country |cusiomed him to the empty pocket. look upon it as barbarous and un- eel Aoouavell wae eaniied ae E > Lwosevel yas are called for is not to be denied. That eating it-Wwill, awaken Stha boone “ot OR: | day last week, and the Duluth Her- say la ake oa JUS" | ld signified ils enthusiasm by pub |lishing a picture of the bride. She many ready lifted the agitation from na-| ey, tice and chivalry, which, after all, lis shown to be a man of Briton, is to be expected. One , 2 is Z| : | years, wearing a long white beard. must have a lowly opinion of - the Englishman to believe he will long! The town of Bear River is to countenance the herding of one Of! ave a cheese factory. The same the best women England has bred, | {own has a most thrifty and indus- with criminals, for a political of- | trious population, and is prosper- fense. Ireland and Scotland will] ing. more rapidly than any settle- not let it pass without protest. | nt in Itasea county. In those rugged lands throbs the | —————____—_ heart of the generous and the on- | The start of drilling oueralione on the mining lands near Grand ward. There live the men who be-| Seis i ‘ lieve in liberty as the heritage of | Rapids is the most cheering news ry ove Sate ler the week, with the exception all, who do not base human rights | irs rey ries of the arrival of a bunch of farm- ers from the old states to cultivate ts of land near here. on sex. It takes England long to learn a) big tra lesson. Every léader in the strug-| gle for human rights that has ap-| The K peared in that country, from Hamp | will take Scutari and make ‘it his of Montenegro says he |den to Parnell, received the same capital in spite of the concert of His acts have been given the im-| portance they deserved, for in spitet of his negative qualities he was | the most powerful person in the | srcised his genius in the organization ot | wealth. He was to the financial union what John Mitchell was to tb miners. His followers had confi- dence in him, and his word or nod Meant the making or marring of any institution needing credit. In times of stress he did much to still public clamor and help re- store confidence in a rather jpanic< ky business world. Money he could always marshal to the point where its presence would be effective, but he did not often place it so the public could profit or the business world look on the siluation with entire security. He had more than any other man to do with creating the stormy periods which he did something to allay. His death will not leave a void in finance, and it is probable that} not five people in the world sin- eerely mourn his going out of it. He has reared no great The vast combinations of industry western hemisphere. He ex | system. were not his creation, as has of- ten been He was merely the financial a who advanced the cash to carry | cther people’s ideas into effect, and he exacted the money toll. His vast personal wealth was in marked degree the result of stock manipulation, and therein not gen- ius, but the power of money is su- preme. That the public has been mercilessly fleeced, deceived, and thousands ruined through his hunt for the dollar, is not calculated to erroneously asserted. changer’s | | add anything but a stain to his} : rather sordid memory. He was able by his control of | money to give a value to paper un- backed by real wealth. In this he} was somewhat akin to Jolin Law, wh@ made France insane for a time-by the issue of paper money. | That John did not succeed was merely because there was no wealth! to organize. As a financial genius he was far ahead of Morgan, and fully as conscientious. The body of the king of finance is- new on its way home. It is said to be enclosed ina _ gold trimmed coffin. That is proper enough—for Morgan. But the} earth’s elect have gone to their | graves in simpler garb, and hu- manity pays them the tribute of ils love. HESS ANUS EES ae Mahnomen county grand jury has returned several indictments against to minors or Indians. The saloons seem. to be furnishing the pro- hibitioners with the best possible arguments for abdlishing the li- guor traffic. . answer from those in power in} Europe. And now they are blamin his time—the prison cell. Not one/his bravery on Russian encourage- ol Yhem accepted it as the last ;ment, which means that the concert word) and in evéry instance the /is inventing a hole to crawl into cause for which they suffered tri- | when the show down comes. : m | las umphed in the end. | A German war balloon landed at Mrs. Pankhurst will not be forced ts neville: France, the other day to undergo tortures like those en | while i peciment« was' drilling an Se aay {the parade ground. They had a fit over the “invasion.” The inci- dent was closed by the Germans |paying duty amounting to $2000, on the gas bag. It costs money to in- vade France. dured by her predec Se be expected that she will come out of prison in a few months, strong- er in the esteem Of her fellows, with a clearer understanding of her methods and, aims on the part of the public, and a vastly augmented respect among those who have been short sighted enough to be- | Auburn, N. Y., during an attack on lieve that the movement for which | the police., It seems to have been she is fighting is of a kind that | another case of where the police can be stamped out by the obliter-| used their guns without sufficient ation of a leader, particularly when) provocation. A hose in the hands that evidently being |of a crew of firemen ended the hounded by political enemies. With the sentencing of Mrs. Pank-|and seriously injured nobody. hurst the erisis was reached andj ; passed by the equal rights | Seepeopsesoorsooorereosros of England. The failure |¥ FUNKLEY RANGE : to break the spirit of the victim | (BERG VILLE POSTOFEICE) or scatter her followers will mark | wcvtederteeceegeecenteteegeeteetuceateeteeteseegeadonteteteeteegs the end of the blind and vicious | . Paul eee of so Aa te be smliaecEh: F ‘ sued py | Northome business caller Thursday. policy, that: has-been pursued by | Contractor J. M. Price returned the government since the equal | home Friday from Bemidji and | ————___—__—. Six rioters were shot Friday at leader is rights movement assumed serious! Hines, where he transacted busi-! |preportions. And the introduction! ness for a few days. Cassidy of Alvwood, |. of an equal rights bill in the next | bangs apr i visit eoeei pve stiaty a ok-| Spent the first of the week visit- ession of parliament may be look ling friends at Dunbar Lake. ed for. Parnell, the leader of the Frank Knaeble, Jr., of Bergville home rule movement, was in prisory was a pleasant caller at Alvwood' when Gladstone opened negotiations Sunday. ter the introduction of the first | home rule measure. History may! Vort spent an enjoyable evening at expected ‘to repeat itself jthe Evergreen farm on Monday. — E ‘ Harry Price and two sisters visit- he fate of Mrs. Pankhurst has eq at the Vandervort home in Alv- awakened the revolutionary spirit’ wood Wednesday. in the breasts of the women of, A farewell party was and. That spirit in men is a Ros ster that a country may endure pevt to leave next week for Cana- and crush. But once general among’ q, women, no government can brave dancing, the music for which was it and survive, and its survival dura furnished by the Osea orchestra. ing an extended period would form A bountiful luncheon was served at ‘midnight. Mr. Jantaas had the hon- jor of presenting Mr. and Mrs. Bohn ‘with a purse of one hundred and ‘fifty dollars in behalf of their PROSPEROUS BEARVILLE. | friends present. The Town of Bearville is evident | R. D. Whitinger was a Northome ly a prosperous place, with kindly business caller at Northome on people. For instance, the Bohn Friday. family decided to move away to) Mrs. B. Munson and daughter Canada. Last week their neighbors A i eave stare nHi 4 awe}) | Rebecca of Minneapolis, are guests a neighborly farewell. | the W. P. Nesbit home. According to the report of the event, published in the Herald-Re-| “ . view today in the Funkley Range’ p ¢ Sop kecoage ree rind news, they presented the Bohns| feed with his new mill at ij his with a purse of $150. A small farm-| Riverdale farm, just east of town ing settlement where people have| yesterday afternoon. Erick Carlson that much to bestow as a gift is a of Blackberry brought in the first grist, a load of barley, and the rare one. And, by the way, that is mill turned out a satisfactory pro- not the kind of a place a family | should move away from, | duet. It is Mr. Anderson's intention ORE: aa ;to put in a flour mill just as soon as the local wheat supply will jus- given at a serious threat to the life of the nation itself. —-—~—_——_ It is better to be a booster than | to be born rich—for the fellow who) tify. The putting in at this time profits by the boosting. Those who|of the feed grinder is for the ac- demand it most persistently are the|Commodation of a number of farm- togeta better understanding of wh \further riot the shooting provoked,’ Cecil, James and Hazel Vander- | Hall on Saturday evening in! honor of the Bohn family who ex-! About fifty couples enjoyed the’ GAME LAW NOT FOR ME, SAYS INDIAN Chippewa Tells Court He Can Hunt When He Pleases, Under Treaty--Test Case Begun. The right of an Indian to kill} game in or out of season is in- | \volved in an appeal taken from justice to district court here by a representative of the federal government, in behalf of a Chippe+) wa. Thursday, Mike Fairbanks, a Be-| na Indian, was brought before jus- tice Bailey, accused of having un- lawfull possession of the carcass of a deer. He pleaded not guilty, | making the point that as he is | an Indian the state law does not) apply to his case. Justice Bailey decided adversely, and imposed a fine of $25, with the alternative _of thirty days in jail. | | Here the United States intervened by the appearance of H. W. War-! ren, deputy Indian Agent in the} northern districts, and gave notice ,of appeal, furnishing bonds for the defendant, i The case will be fought in the higher court on the treaty rights of jthe Indians, and an attempt will | be made to show that the Chippe- wa tribe in all treaties reserved | their ancient privilege of living by | jthe chase at any time they saw} i Tit. SALOON MAN FREED BY JURY'S VERDICT Dan McGuire of Bovey, Didn't: | Tilt the Lid, Twelve Good ' Men Declare. | | Dan MeGuire of Bovey, the first |of the saloon keepers, recently in-| dicted, to be placed on trial, won a} ‘victory when the jury in district | jeourt acquitted him Wednesday |night. He was accused of keeping his | caravansary open after the legal hour, and four witnesses, two of Hhein women, were called by the | state to make the accusation good. The women swore that the place was running as late as 2 o'clock on Sunday morning, when one of them went there to find her husband, the other accompanying her. Three men, who had been in the place, flatly contradicted this, and| said the bartender put them out on the stroke of 11. Two male witnesses called by the state gave | evidence so conflicting as to be deemed unreliable by the county attorney as well as the defense. It was also claimed that one of } the women witnesses was acting | to obtain vengeance on the saloon} man because her husband had been Two Saloon Men Convicted. Chris Sorenson, bartender in the | M. Jones saloon, Deer River, was | convieted by a district court jury !Monday of selling liqtfor on the sabbath. It was the first of several cases | against the proprietor of the place | and'bartenders, on indictments, Accused of selling liquor toa min- | or, Sam Patelle of Grand Rapids | Was put on trial, following Soren- | son, and also found guilty. | His indictment was due to the | alleged intoxication of a high school) boy at a sleighride party to Co- | hasset in January. ‘he incident | , araused the parents of the boy and | school authorities who brought it} ‘to the attention of the indicting ‘body. Néarly all those on the trip were called to the grand jury room. At the trial Patelle set up the de-| fense that he was not responsible, not being in his place of business | when the sale was made. He claimed he had warned his _ bar- tenders not to serve minors or! drunkards, Bert Anderson and Andrew Olsen of Bovey, were acquitted of a lib tilting charge Tuesday, Anna Jones of Deer River is on trial for selling to a drunkard. There are eight other law viola- ition cases against saloon men. | They will probably all go over to jmext week. Charles Olson, one of the offi- lcials of Spang township, was in town last week on business. Some time ago Mr, Olson suffered the loss of his farm residence in {Spang, including household = fur- niture and most of the family’s | wearing apparel. With the usual! Northern Minnesota spirit, however,) Mr. Olson is not discouraged, but! is going ahead to rebuild and make} a newer and better home. The boys of the Athletic asso- ciation presented Miss Vogel with ones who place the smallest cash |°’S, Who plan on increasing their 3 ge grain acre: for 1913. Fi value on the optimistic word—spok- present ae nik will do be Bs en or printed. Saturdays. a sweater for her kindness in pro- ducing the musical play “Sylvia” the proceeds of which were given to the Athletic association. ; drinking heavily. | AND OTHER KINDS Thecall now is for gauze hose. Something that is just enough of a mesh to cover the body and not be either warm or cum- bersome. Well, they are here. A gauze hose will not wear as well as a heavier 7 one, and yet it is won- derful how much strength there can be if the threads are made of a good, long Sea Island Cotton. In the north Itasca window you will now see displayed something like a dozen different lines of Silk Lisle Hose for ladies, in black, tan 2 5 and white, at a cost of, per pair-----.---- Cc There are some with garter top, some with the ribbed top; some with the !avender top and some with plain top, There are “Iron Clads;” thcre are “Black Cats,” to 10. WHITE SOLE—A medium weight with 2 5 Cc RIBBED—An “Iron Clad” make, all fine ribbed. Three pair, $1. Per pair... 3d5c have told us that this is not only the best fitting, but also the best wearing, hose they ever had. as 5 c SILK HOSE-—Silk boots, silk hose and hose made from glove silk at prices ranging from 50c to $1.75, there are “Stars.” And there are all sizes from 8% amnace yarn split sole-.-.-.---......----....- OUTSIZE— Hundreds of women requiring outsizes Three pairs for $1. Pair... ITASCA DRY GOODS CO. A man with money in our bank : always has a deep feeling of security. 3 This:is only one of many advantages derived from allowing us to take care of your savings. First National Ha _ GRAND RAPIDS. MINN. Copilal $25, 000,00 Seetplees $5,009, 02 OFFICERS President, F. P. Sheldon. Vice-Pres., A. G. Wedge Jr. Cashier, C. E. Aiken. DIRECTORS F. P. Sheldon. D. M. Gunn. A G. Wedge. W. C. Gilbert. Cc. E. Aiken John Beckfeit H. D. Powers. Grand Rapids $5 Village Lots AND $5.PER MONTH DOWN | We have choice residence lots all over town and we are selling them on such easy terms that anybody can buy. $5 down and $5 per month is certainly easy. Come in and talk the matter over. Wealso have some choice business lots on our lists. They are for sale on easy terms. REISHUS-REMER LAND COMPANY rs