Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE FOUR GRAND RAPIRS HERALD-REVIEW WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1913. Grand Rapias Heras" Review Published Every Wednesday By KILEY © 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 LYCEUM COURSE IS PROVING POPULAR Second Number by William Sterling Battis is Enjoyed by Large Audience Battis has come and gone. To state that he is the greater inter- peter of Dickens on the American stage today is simply repeating what has Leen saidof him by al- mest every crilie in the country. While to the illiterate he would be ‘no more than a great mimic, to the reader of Dickers works he be comes the immortal characters sith a litfag and throbbing spirit that brings ene back to the _day when Dickens began transform the history of England by showing up in an sistable manner, in the forms of interesting stories, the faults of the civilization of that day : In full view of the audience Mr. Battis changes his own personality and “make up” for the different characters. His first interpreta- tion was of Dickens himself and when he put on the sagelike wisk- ers and stepped before the audi- ence to address them as Dickens a liberal applause broke from the house. ( Others could have put on the masks or false wigs and wiskers. But only Mr. Battis could bring th life in to the various different men that he presented. With a avgnderful control of his voice he quickly changed from the peasant addressing the school children, the crime teacher in, ‘“Fagins Den,” the old maid and finally to the grand- fathers. Universal and sincere were the expressions of apreciation from everyone present. The next number of the course will undoubtedly prove the most popular of the excetionally high class entertainments provided for the season. Never before has such an array of artists been assembled in one company as presented by the Rounds All Star Specialty Co. and Ladies Orchestra that appear om Christmas day in the evening. Violin, clarinet, cornet, trombone, bells. chimes, whistling, vocal solos duets, quartetts, chorus. readings, impersonations and monologues in popular, classical and descriptive numbers. This truly “Americas 4reatest’ Company has pleased audiences from Boston to Seattle during the past year and has been Qroughy to Grand Rapids at a daring expense by the members of the Booster Club who believe that there is nothing to good for the town. It will prove a fitting clos to the Christmas festivities and Masquarade and Theatrical from the interest taken in its com- p COSTUMES ing it will undoubtedly play to a wan te for Discouat crowded house. L. KOPFMANN, Costumen Successor to Smith Costume Work done neatly and cheaply. Reomepeeein ag rer Ta “Call 274. + =——————=—=_—_—T CAR GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA Oc Sc Sc , Sc Cranberries, two qts. for_--. 5c Milwaukee Celery per pkg. 5c¢ Head Lettuce two for- 25c Cucumbers each---.-- 20c Fresh Tomatoes, per | 20c z Radishes and Green Onions, per bunch 10c Devonshire little Pork Sausages, per lb. 25c Mixed Nuts per Ib.-.-_.-....-.----------. .25¢ Chestnuts, Hickory nuts and all other kinds on Sweet Russet Cider, per ga 40c Aluminum Pie Tins. 25c¢ $ Aluminum Roaster: 00 & Poultry Seasoning and all kinds of Spices ¥ Mince Meat, quart jar_- -25¢ Bulk Mince Meat—it's fine, per 1b -15¢ Cream Cheese, Wisconsin full cream, per Ib. 22c $ Grape Fruit, Oranges and Bananas Roquefort Cheese per Jb. ~~~. 50c é Dairy Farm cheese per pkg. Fresh Oysters, extra selects, per q oF New Figs and Dates, Sultano Raisins, Milk and Cream and everything that goes with your Thanksgiving dinner Carl has it. Thank you for all past favors. CARL J. EILER Telephone 219 Grand Rapids, Minn. BEMIDJI CHALLENGED |ITASCA HOMESTEADER TO FOOTBALL DUEL) © ATTEMPTS SUICIDE Grand Rapids Management Willing Cnts Throat With Razor While Tem- to Put Up $200 to Prove porarily Detained at Grand Team is Best Forks Jail. There is considerable ill feeling Thovald O Johnson, a homer beyween She members of the | steader im the Wabana lake region Grand Rapids football team and | of Itasca county, attempted suicide boys comprising the Bemidji grid- | while detained at Grand Forks last iron battlers. The management of | Thursday evening. He cut his the localg last week sent a chal-|‘throat from ear to ear with a lenge to the parties having the Be |.razor which he had managed to midji bunch in charge, offering to | smuggle with -him into his cell, dg battle on the grounds there at | and while it seems that the jugular any time designated by the chal-|vein was not severed, the wound lenged parties for any part of $200}is gf such nature that he is not as a side bet and 60 and 40 per } expected to recover, although alive cent of the gate receipts. Be-|at last reports. Johnson bought a sides this the locals guarantee to | ticket at Crookstom for Grand Rap- pay all expenses of the visiting | ids, but got aboard the wrong team while here, win or lose. traim and was carried ta Grand Bemidji, it seems has been mak- |‘Forks. His actions while on the ing quita a lot of noise over the | train caused the conductor to tele- fact that the team there defeated | graph the authorities at Grand tte Grand Rapids outfit in the | Forks to be on the look out for lagj game played in that town.| lim, and n was taken to a They have a perfect right to do.so,|for safe keeping, it being the in- for in all the years that these, |tention-to send -him back to|_ twq contenders have met it was | Crookston the following morning, the first time that they were even | He had somehow managed to smug- allowed to score. The Grand Rap- | gle an old razor into the cell with ids team on that occasion went in- | him, and with this he attempted to the fray with not a single man |his life. That he was not an im- of their regular line-up in the | provident undesirable was proven back field and the substitutes fail- | by the fact that after paying for ed to hold the seasoned players of | his ticket he still had something the opposition. It is believed ‘here | like $18 on hig person. He was that the stunt cannot be repeated |well known around Wabana and and Grand Rapids sports are will- | Deer River, and was of a quiet ing to bet good money on it. The | retiring disposition. He was ad- challenge has not been accepted. judged insane a year or two ago, but had since apparently recover- RULING MAY MAKE INDIANS. PAUPERS ‘Decision of U. S. Court of Appeals Gives Majority Right to Dis- al Copyright 1913 by The Buck's Stove and Range Company pose of Lands. Northern Minnesota counties in which Indian reservations are situ- ated are likely to have im the neighborhood of 5,000 paupers on their hands becausq of a recent decision of the United States court of appeals ruling that all but full blood Indians may dispose of their lands. The court’s holds, in effect, fhat all Indians who have any traces of white blood shall be re- garded as mixed bloods and as such shall have the right to dispose of Wheir property as they see fit. Heretofore it has been the policy of the government to hold that all residents of the reservations who regarded théselves as Indians and were held by their fellows to be Indians should be treated as such even though traces of white blood was discernable or known to exist. ou need a range kind of room in -the | ny price, loor i}Princess.” the Selig The lady of the house is most in- terested in hardware for the house QWhy then shouldn’t the lady of the house buy household hardware rote 4 If you need anything in the line of hardware for the home, come here and look over our at- tractive stock. You can “‘shop’’ in this store as well as any other; and you’ll enjoy it just as much. @You’'ll be surprised how much there is to see; how many work-saving things you will find displayed here. More than that,you’ll be surprised to find that our prices are lower than you can find anywhere else. When you need anything in the line of hardware, come here! H. D. POWERS Out of fhe five or six thousand Indians now om Northern Minne- sota reservations, the new ruling }, would only leave about 500 who can not dispose of their property im any manner they see fit-and with the Indian’s well known im- providence they will proceed to do so. The same ruling also makes he counties in whigh they re |. side responsible for their mainten- ance after they have squandered. any money they have received for their allotments, and the decision is regarded as a very unsatisfac- 7 solution of the Indian prob- LOST—Red cow, long horns. ‘About 5 years old. Finder notify Ad, Chucker, Bovey. Reward. HUNTERS UNPOPULAR | Loggers Claim That Promiscuous Shooting Will Force Their Crews to Seek Shelter. The hunting season is not alto- gether an unmixed blessing, at least from the point of view of some of the lumbermen of Itasca eounty. One of the big employers said this week that men returning to camp complain of the bombard- ment going on in their neighbor- hood, and claim to have been near enough to injury to hear the sing of the bullets passing, them. Tim- ‘per workers in this neck of the svoods know by experience what thd result of carelessness in the handling of high power shooting irons is, and they will feel much easier when the season comes to a close. They say that they are not afraid of being shot by anyone who has resided in the bush long enough to know the danger of shooting at everything they see moving, but the excitable city dweller who has never been made woods-wise is a constant source o> danger. No accident chargeable to the hunting season has as yet been reported in Itasca county this year. Quick Hog Marketing T. C. Kennedy last week brought ‘in from his farm and sold to J. O. Johnson, the local butcher, five, head of hogs averaging 100 pounds apiece, which it had taken about, five months to get ready fog market. These pigs were farrowed in July and had received no at- tention other than that whicht would ordinarily be bestowed upot! stock of this character. Their fee ‘cansisted of the products grow on the farm and they were in the very finest of marketable condi- tion. Hogs of this kind are tha money makers for the farmers, They grow rapidly and all theiy feeding time is during the ‘warm weather when they require the ieast care and the ‘feed is most easily obtained. Local dealers havea, also shipped quite a lot of dressed beef to other localities during the past season and butchers in tha range towns around Grand Rapids are Jooking more and more to this, seetion to keep them supplied. The Week at The Gem. Tonight and tomorrow — night there will be an attraction of spec- ral merit at the Gem. It is the three real Vitagraph drama, “The Snare of Fate,” with Dorothy Kelly ‘and William Humphreys in the lead, It is an absorbing story of lives. blasted and hopes blighted. Orchestra Thursday night. Om Fri- day evening there will be pre- sented, besides tha usual Pathe Weekly, the strong Biograph play “Women in the Ultimate.” On Sat- ‘urday and Sunday will find a bill of unusual merit at the Gem. The Vitagraph, drama, “The Lonely semi-animal play, “Nan of the Woods,” and the third installment of the Mary series entitled “A Proposal From a Sculptor,” will all be seen on these two nights. On Monday and Tuesday evenings the Vitagraph comedy “Cupid vs. Women’s Rights,” and the Selig drama, “A Round Battle Tree.” will share the honors. Next Wednesday and Thursday one of the best and most exciting two-reel pictures ever produced by the Selig company will be seen. It is called “A Dash for Liberty,” iand is one of the very best reels of its kind ever seen here. It is a vailroad story shown to thous- sands during the state fair in Minneapolis, and anyone who saw it therd will tell you it is im- mense. : : On Friday a Vitagraph play galled “Sauce for the Goose,” will share the bill with the usual Pathe while on Saturday and Sunday, ther 29th and 30th the great Vitar ever uses linens. Table Damask Damask. The value. before. wear. value at yard special. Napkins genuine of the world’s best linens. kins. $225 values 1 4 atspecial per dozen . $3.00 value at special dozen_-_____ 2 nap’s. Twenty-four inch all nap’s, Seventy inch all linen German regular $1.25 You have seen it_here Seventy inch half-bleached da- mask in a good weight for The regular 75c 5 c Fifty-six inch wide union lin- en damask with gold colored Stripes and border. A 50c value at yard special 29c These napkins are all of the “Greeves Damask’”’ quality and every dozen im- ported from Ireland, the land Nineteen inch pure linen nap- wipes inch all linen "68 Twenty-three inch all linen values apeitial ae $2.25 linen Our best values that sold for $4.50. Spec- ial price per dozen $2.98 ITASCA MERCANTILE CO. In this line there are some things that will attract the attention of anyone who The qualities are the bestin the importers’ lines and the prices made on these items are interesting. Table cloths Two yards long linen filled cloths with open worked hem- stitched all along the edge. cou $1.33 Three yard long cloths in the “Greeves Damask’ with fulk woven border. Three differ- ent designs of the best $1.00 a yard linen on the market. Special price for the? 8 yard cloth-__------ 25 Lunch cloths Thirty inch embroidered: square cloths with torchon lace edges and_ insertion. only--- 91.00 Thirty inch square cloth with scal- loped edges. $1.25 se8OC Thirty inch _hemstitched square cloth with drawnwork titch. A 40 it Stine at Ose 260 Caught Big Muskelonge J. O. Johnson and Louis Quale, are the prize fishermen so far re- porting this year. although they are entitled to no particular credit, for their latest exploit. . Their prize capture is a 71 pound muske-' longe, one of the largest fish ever known to have been caught in the county. The fishermen had their nets out for whitefish on Pokega- ina dake, and on taking them up” vn Tuesday mnorning they found the big fellow tangled up in their tackle. He was by no means dead and gave a very good account of. himself before being landed in the boat. Fish of this species weigh. ing between 35 and 40 pounds have not been rare captures in the lakes of the cour+y but this seems to have been the king: of them all. Knife Artist Caught. Paequal Paspardo was last week brought over from Keewatin and placed in jail here charged with having seriously injured Vilo Cam- last moment to order a graph drama, “The Tiger” ‘will be the leading feature, followed by the Selig comedy, “Two Toq Many,” A two-reel comedy with) John Bunny is promised for the near future, as well as “The Tiger Lily,” the greatest three-reel play of the season. Whose Feet Was It? That caused the poet to rise up in righteous indignation and from ‘the fullness of his heart write these beautiful and tourhing lines relative to a great truth— iGo sea what I have ‘seen Go feel what I have felt Go near the feet of some seen And-smell what I have smelt Friends: There is no need of anyone Waving that kind of feet. ‘Barker's Antiseptic will cure sore, sweaty, tired feet and de- istroy alll offensive odor caused from prespiration. aa For sale at Itasca Mercantile Co, I've Please Them All by looking your best on Christmas Day, year you resolved you’d never again wait ’til the pagnoni with a knife during a brawl at that town last April. The authorities have been on the look- out for this party since the dee@ was committed, and last week Sheriff Riley received word that the) man wag in Duluth. He was secured and brought to Keewatin Where Justice P. A. McEachin bound him over to the grand jury at tha March term of the district court. ; Quotations For Raw Furs Wolf $3 to $6; other furs fully. as high ag last season. There is more than one fur buyer in Grand Rapids. Ycu may benefit by look- fing around before you dispose of your.catch. I buy furs, hides and pelts. Wm. WEITZEL, Grand Rapids, Minn. 3,000 votes for one subscriber to the Herald-Review. Last Tailored-to-Measure Suit or Overcoat for Christmas Now is the time to inspect the new Winter wool- embroidered ° ens of _Ed. V. Price & Co. our famous Chicago tailors, and select what you want at a price that will please you. Leave your measure today and we will deliver you endless satisfaction. Dry Cleaning, Pressing and Repairi Dennis & Sherman Exclusive Local Dealers for Ed. V. Price & Co.. —ey oe yf | ¥ { N | = 4) 7 | ;= f t } &y)