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. erty. ,ar ‘whic the 'axes are lnquent‘ 39 Subdlvmon of Section tgm iu‘ 0. .Tohnson i:’:i?es Ben. & Social - fon’ ... .“£ Brlght 43| wearing & black 'WHSITE OF W. "m !en‘ o?'loYeu's for. which ,&he Taxes are nquent, 1979: rotal Tax and 1t ot Blk. 7 fl -m"n!l 'Im! for which the Tlxes are T Yege!l noqrubnt. L9%E. | _' Description Lotm bell Lake Hunting ,,_,.5 Fishing Club or Years for which thefl‘m! are Y‘_" Delinquent; 1 Total i 1 and Pen- Descrlptlon Lot Blk n\(v Sam Cafltnn . - -zmm or 'fl‘&u Adaition. 4 ars for wnlch the Taxes are. R Deunquent, Total }"l;:lx X er Dascrivflon Lot Blk. an¥ Ingebflcht“%)rydn cone R:i?l?ew Johhson, Daniel’ W Bell Second - Addl '!em- or. Y ' thpdins ’N‘!v:o::;fnm 378 Keloney Brd!r fit e et [ oo ovmca m & tract Buo foxet in -w% of n“.. i E. Christe rwuutt.of lfl ‘.N“ Y:n’:‘dor Years for whlch thp Taxes are Delinquent, Anna Guisness and Rogers, Lots 6 and. Frank 1. Patton, Lots 5 "6 al ’l‘racie Keilor - . L. D. Hatcher . e Gust Pederson R -llbx’l Alllllm o ‘Wilton. Rose Chilson' . . \Iarun STATE Of‘ MINNESOTA O'L\'TY OF BELTRAMI § L. eo;ge, being by me first ‘auly swnrn deposes and-says that he ls the county auditor of the county of Bel- trami; that he has examined tue fore- going 1ist and knows' the contents there- of; and that:the same i a correct list of . taxes delinquent for: the year (or years..therein. nppmr ing).. upon‘real es- id : cou! tate in said:county. 1L, GEORGE (Audltors feal) Sn scribed and . sworn to. bafore me 1 of. Feb“r“un‘g‘g. fferk of the District Court. Beltrami County, Minnesota. rt Seal (C}gu m‘: )Dlst‘rlctF Cou::', 9Blealm;mi t nnesof ‘eb. X N s ® B W RHODA 4 Origin of the Greek Church. Apart from theological discussions, such as those rising from the addition of the words, “and the son,” in the. ereed, the separation of the Latin and @reek churches may be traced to the Sounding of Constantinople and’ the]5 olitical division of the Roman em- pire, according to a -Bible student. Ignatius, patriarch of' Constantinople, Bad been:deposed,. and was succeeded by Photius, who symmoned a council of the: Hast in 867, and passed sen- tence of excommunication on'the bish- :-op of Rome. The churches became re- * united towards the end of the ninth century,- and remained so until the siddle of the eleventh century, when in- 1054 Mic¢hael Cerularius, patriarch of_the East, renewed the condemna- tion of the Latin church, and was in turn umm\m!cnted by Pope Leo IX. Efforts toward _rennion = Were made from time to time, and at Fer- fara (1439) the Greek prelates signed 8. decree of union, but were forced by the people-and clergy to repudiate #¢t; Since then the two communlons ‘have remained sepnrate. i ! have your degree,” she was told. “You htulrcmcmbmflwhmthohmflhl face belonged to. i : %‘Von' Hutten,’ 1 ; Why—why—dang u—lmnuudd- Von Hutten he was commndlu [ § 'u- boat in the North sea’” - Futile to Chase & Green Car.: _The man puszled over it for & mo- ment. 'Then, being s good American, | Ihe" told ‘the American authorities in Paris. He had not been able to get the number of the car or'a description of the chauffenr.’ green cars in Paris is like trying to catch wild geese by the salt plan. - Next.day. the mmmwflklngdmtheAvenueda don I'Opera When the green car whizzed by again.’ He tried:to catch’ the number, but that old ‘ofl ‘and dust trick that American‘speeders invented ted him. Bawnlkedondowntoclro for lunch; tord to pay.for the wm-k. should include: the exa b "rhdso-ma-notmmtn' | spend, “'m golng back next week." said he. Extent of System. i & 3°1L‘ A friend of mine who returned from Berlin after the United States declared war on Germany told a story, of which | i he had personal knowledge, to:show the extent of the German spy net, An acquaintance in Berlin' obtained per- mission to go to Holland on business. It Is not easy to get such permission nowadays. Although an American, he was forced to tell just whom he wished to see in Holland and ‘why. While in Amsterdam he received a hurry-call to London from his correspondent there and took the next boat, getting a vise through the interest of the American legation in'The Hague. i “Why did you go to London?” he was asked when he returned to:Berlin, He told the story. e 'We know of the telegram you re- ceived,” was the reply. ‘But why did you go to room 803 of the‘Savoy hotel and remain closeted with Lord Blube- berry there for three hours?” .- He 'was able.to make his explanation convincing or there might have been another incident to write a note about. This was some weeks before the Unit- ed States was ded into war. It is easier to belleve. ‘it the number of #piés Germany has seattered about when one hears this story by an Ameri- can gitl, who for some years-had stud- fed at Leipsic. This year she was re- fused her ‘Ph. D. degree, although it was due her. Then she was refused permlulon to leave Germany. For ‘weeks she, was promised and put off. “Become & spy for us and you shall ‘will. make progress, and.in the end the nuisance will: be reckoned among:the curious transiencies of American social history.—New York Evening Post. Results of City Gardens. The Pittsburgh Vacant Lot Garden assbclation, which has distributed $400 in prizes among 92 backyard garden- worth of vezetnble this year and ex= pects to do even fiier Bex! T season. In ddi the vegetables raised under the direction of the the assoclation, consid- eration’ must be given to the value pf those raised independently.- While there is nothing at hand by which an estimate of the products of; the inde- pendent gardeners can be made, the many fine gardens seen in practically flmmflofthedtydoehremttha sum would be large. Then the ‘value of the flowers raised in the vacant lot gardens as well as in others—= value that cannot be measured by doliars and cents—must be remembered. -And bést of all is the impetus given to thrift, re- Iren_Deposits on Town Land. Two metallurgical experts who were engaged by the town council 6f Pre- toria, In the Transvaal, to investigate the quality of iron deposits on the town lands-have reported that they are abundant and of good quality, accord- ing to press statements forwarded from L"nhnne-bm‘ by Consul John P, Whale Meat Cheaper Than Beef. ‘Whale meat has been selling in the Oalifornia market at 2214 cents a pound. This seems to be too uigh & price for popularity, observes a Call- fornia exchange, although it is cheaper than beef, when the absence of waste 1s considered. The hotels and restau- rants in San Francisco now have whale meat daily on their menus. shall have plenty. of money. to spend. You: need not worry about the Ganger. ‘We will always take caye of you.” She did not Dbecome &'spy and even- tunlly she was given permission to} leave for Switzerland. But the story uts one to thinking. New Way to Hooverize. Milywaukee—*I was trying to Hoow erize.”” That was the explanation giv- en by Ignatz Poltolski when haled iato court on the charge of stealing meat from-a packing company. HR sald he had only taken a pound, but 76 pounds of meat were found in his home. His explanation didn’t satisfy the court, se he was fined $18. = TReoey ers, reports that it produced $60,000 plnno ixpmy partor now, 0. I Kn¢ st hndmpe gnrdenlnz is ‘to pre! enters. " In city planning, art, the same ‘law pnnlln o of type. ¢ city: our ‘hmall citfes: have stmi- | 4 ‘Ggect ns gnd some have’ made 8 110 50 tre'pasa and the re- ive.béen excluded: And all struck with: a:like ‘won- the' violation of the the fine long view, the greategt charm, will be de-' ‘copper, brass, every eommodlty have ho) ot for: & library. site.. ne - it will-ever be A couldn’t be Mike l liked the new bird, get @ cage.- g floor, and ' the.. tttle ‘fellow’ becaine! l.nt!iedmperfk- b place.of ‘Mike” Mrs. Brock attalned some dutlnctlon: | last year when:she -undertook. to care | I tor Marjorie Delbridge, the white child prought up by Mammy Jackson. TAKES . GIRL FROM RIVAL weapons. “The girl was Miss ‘Amna Hmrd. ‘with Brown ‘sad ‘&n sppoint- ment to go driving.. Instead, she went out with Hunter Perril sad another couple. ' Brown encountered the party on the road and swinging his own ma- chine across the road and blocking it he pulled an old revolver, which: was > |'not loaded. He demanded the surren- \[:der of his girl,_ who got out and clam- bered aboard Brown’s machine and tc» ge!.her théy drove off. - [} AGED MAN mas OWN GRAVE Falls Into It While Remwlng the Sup- ports and Is Dead Wh . Taken Out. ~ "~ Ristng Olty. Reb Xt is rarely that man digs his own:grave and more rare- ly that he 1s doomed to occupy it as goon as it 18 dug. Yet Frank Krenk of | Able, Neb,, did both. Krenk, who was seventy-five, accom- panied by his gon-in-law, Joseph Bar- cal, had. just completed digging. the grave In the National cemetery here when the accident happened. Krenk, wishing his body to:be buried deep at -his death, had dug the grave to a depth of more than ten feet. In re- moving the supports Krenk fell into the grave head foremost, breaking his aeck. : : He was dead when taken out. He was burled {n the grave he had taken 80 much pains to prepare. YEA, BO! COLLEGE FOR HOBOES IS LATEST b COincinnati—A college for ho- E boes! Yeh, that's the latest efiu- cational endeavor in this center i of social uplift. The college is to be “established by the Inter- k national Hobo College Board, in- corporation papers having been taken out. James Eads Howe.of St. Louis, known as the million- & aire bebo, is one of the Incor- porators. The purpose of the institution, as set forth in the ¥ incorporation papers, is to carry on literary and educational work % among the unemployed and to }1 develop their “mental, moral and & splrlt\ml forces.” ‘yuro-mwln] permit.: - ‘Lobert nlw:n belleved in Germany. ' He served in' the: 3 {istrats W, M. Murdock for carrying | Y by ‘myself,” : & twenty-years,old; five feet tall and welghing 97 pounds. -~ h Banks applied 'to army. and. E navy recruiting stations in -San . & Francisco when: war was de- B clared. Owing to his small sta- ture he was rejected. - Leaving San’ Francisco, he' tried: to. ‘en- ltles tm route to: along the aidewalks. 'The City Beauti- ful association did a great educational work a few yenrs ago and it should again display {ts activity in the little things that contribute’ to the quiet ‘adornment of Birmingham. Now'is the “time to plan.for a new. educational | drive in respect of the restful and the ‘wholesome.—Birmingha: Al Yerald. = Portland. Urge: Ne ed of Pla Play. . tions he 'rhe o “&nd desirability { sufficlent piay to relleye me’!afili % Qaily effort are dweit upon in a bulle- tin recently issued by Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, heaith commissioner of ‘ the i § commonwealth of _Pennsylvania, who ' X ®ays: o ——— 1 ; “Most people would eay- that play's ' } firatYequisite was that it should con- | ¥ Ing one doesn’t have to] % do. ‘Play is in reality, however, of all ptions. Th%e that. pro- ‘duce: something useful besides giving rest are greitiy to be preferred. 'm:en‘ are many- equally stimulating to' the mind and to the body and produc- tive of valuable results. One essential ‘to beneficial play is that it be whole- some and be performed in & healthfal environment, that is, where we have ll.r of the rlght tempera~ list he found there was no sibility of being called. ~“&i - He went to Vunconver, B. C, and tried to enter the Canadian service, but met with no suc- eeu. He 18 now-trying to: 1ist 1n-the aviation co! Ban & *has two brothers and' hl.s father k, in the aervlce. SIX-SHOOTER IS PASSING Pltchforks and Shovels Replace Flm = arms_in Equipment of OI:II- o I' hom- Shcrlflc. A oy S Tulsa, Okln.—'!ho dly of tha llx-. shooter, the Winchester and the Colt is passing in this state. Recently pitcs forks and shovels were added to .the. equipment of the office of the sherif of this county. The new equipments are to be luul 2 in- the. unearthing of ilicit liguor traffic. Recently these Instruments - unearttied an automobfle load 'of: liquor oni a farm north of the city, = ‘Women_Planners of Homes. Women_folks ‘are taking an active nand in' the affairs of the world today more than ever before. It is quite of- ten the case that the bullding of a new home {8 left largely in the hands of its mistress. There are several good and practical reasons for such:an arrangement. In the -first* place; ;the woman does or ‘shiould spend more time In the house than her husband. It is her duty and most always her plenmre to keep the inside of the house in order. She is usu- ally a closer observer in such matters and nearly always has better taste than her husband. Ancther mighty ! good reason, from the husband’s stand- point, 18 that he will not have to listen to:'hedlsumuhle’nhmse,“ltoldm o ? 1 flock conmtedn!mmthn.nm()gem The geese were’ confuged by the flash of the light and broke the tower glass, one-half inch thick. One of the geese ' killed in the impact with' the towes ' < glass welghed over five poundsa. Defective