Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, September 11, 1897, Page 5

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} LIGHTHOUSE IMPROVEMENTS. dnd Lenses. Meantime the means of lighting was being steadily improved. The open fire gave place to the oil lamp; then a curved mirror, called a parabolic mir- ror, was placed behind the lamps to bring the rays together; next, many jJamps with mirrors were grouped about a central spindle, and some such lights are still in operation, says St. Nicholas. The greatest stride came when an arrangement of lenses, known jas the Fresnel lens, in front of a lamp replaced the miror behind it. This lens was rapidly improved for lighthouse purposes, until now a cylindrical glass house surrounds the lamp flame. This heuse has lens-shaped walls, which bend all the rays to form a horizontal zone of strong light which pierces the darkness to a great distance. The rap- id increase in the number of light- houses has made it necessary to have some means of telling one from an- other, or, as it is termed, of giving to each light its “characteristic.” Col- oring the glass made the light dimmer, but as red comes most nearly to white light in brightness, some lights have red lenses. The latest and best plan, however, is to set upright prisms at intervals in a circular framework around the lens and to revolve this frame by clockwork. Thus the light is made to flash every time a prism passes Letween it and an observer. By changing the number and places of the prisms, or the speed of the clockwork, the flashes of any one light can be tmade to occur at intervals of so many seconds for that light. Putting in red prisms gives still other changes. each light has its “characteristic,” and this is written down in signs on tiie charts and fully stated in the light- lists carried by vessels. Thus,-on a vhart you may note that the light yoa want to sight is marked “F. W., v. W. Fl., 10-see.,” which means that it is “fixed white varied by white flashes every ten seconds.” When a light is sighted you see if those are its char- neteristics; and, if so, you have found the right cne. Strange Timidity in Horses, Young horses can be led up to a sack lying on the ground and induced to pass it by letting them smell it and find out that it really is a sack, and not the Protean tking, whatever it may be, which illusion conjures up for them. Once the writer saw a very quick and pretty instance of experiment by touch made by a frightened pony. It was being driven as a leader in a pony tandem, and stopped short in front of where the rails of a steam tramway erossed the roai the road. It fiest smelled the near rail, and then quickly gave it two taps with its hoof. After this is was satistied and crossed the line. On the other hand, a donkey al- ways tries to jump the shadows of tree trunks on the road, though a similar experience of touch would have shown were as unreal as the tram rail was unsubstantial. Lastly, no horse which has once knocked its head against the top of a stable doorway seems quite able to get rid of the illusion that there sits up in the top of all doorways an invisible something which will hit again next time he goes through. Hence, the trou- blesome and sometimes incurable hab- it of horses “jibbing” when taken out of the stable. This is an obvious instance of the disadvantage at which most animals stand in regard to means of physical experiments. The horse, for instance, needs feel only the lintel to find out that it is fixed and does not move, and is not alive and waiting to hit him. But except his lips, which are sensi- | tive, he has no member with which he can make the experiment. Except the elephant and the monkey, most of the “higher” animals suffer from this lack of the means of experiment. The won- der is, not that they suffer from illu- sions, but that they make so few mis- takes.—London Spectator. Over-Decorated Rooms, Two rooms lately seen have im- pressed upon me most forcibly the ne- cessity of having some plain surface in every room as a rest for the eye, and consequently the mind. One of these rooms was lauded as a thing of beauty because it existed in the house* of a millionaire, and much money had been expended upon it. The other room was in the house of a seamstress, who had expended her hard-earned dollars in furnishing a little parlor with which she was much delighted. Both rooms were ugly and tiresome because of the figured surfaces that covered floor, window and furniture, and the hanging. The patterns were large and showy in the Eastern rug, the rich walls were covered witb a figured silk, and the chairs had velvet roses growing in a satin background. In a more satisfactory room done by a woman decorator, I find the floor, which has a plain hardwood border, covered by a large rug with a plain center and a figured border. A table cover that is also plain with the ex- ception of a scroll border is of a lus- trous short napped velvet. The walls are covered with painted tapestries, put the windows and doors that divide them here and there have plain hang- /\ ings. The ceiling of the room is cross- | eaby panels of wood in a dull and a » git finish.—New York Post f eae vi Why She Left. 2 Mrs. Timmins—I hear your cook bas jeft you. Wh.t was the trouble: Mrs. Rockwell—Our kitchen is so small that she had to put her bicycle in the ccilar and she thought the dampness wasn’t good for it—Cieveland Plain Dealer. Probably. “J’ye noticed an Indian hanging around the entrance for several days,” said the theatrical manager. “Do you know who he is?” “I strongly suspect that he is a scalper,” remarked the tick- et agent.—Philadelphia American, Thus | { REFORM IN DINNER-GIVING. — ‘€imple Dinners Are Now Considered the Elegant Dinners. — “A dinner engagement, no matter whether the dinner be large or small, formal or fnformal, is the most exact- ing of social obligations,” says the Ladies’ Home Journal. ‘Indeed, I al- ways felt a double sense of obligation when invited to a small dinner. In | selecting the guests for the small din- ner choose those who are congenial. If among your friends you mumber physicians, lawyers or politicians, do i not invite one of each class, nor all of | one class, simply because their profes- | sions are the same, but select congen- | fal spirits. Thea small dinners, weil arranged, are. r:uch more enjoyable than one large conventional dinner served to sixty ill-selected people. The food is better. service better and diges- tion better and even when trained help cannot be employed the hostess may enjoy the occasion as well as the guests. The art of dining, remember, is quite apart from the art of giving dinners. A reform in dinner-giving is being instigated. Simple dinners are now ‘the elegant dinners.’ The man who has studied the art of living lives frugally. A hostess must never forget that during the short time her Buests are under her roof she is re- sponsible for their happiness and com- fort. A huge dinner of twelve courses of badly blend2d food is not conducive to either. Savarin said: ‘The dinner is a place where men are never bored for the first hour’; the insinuation that a second should prove a bore is rather prominent. If people in the ordinary walks of life are to make such enter- tainments a success they must never try pew or elaborate dishes, or even new ways of serving; they should sim- ply add an extra plate or two to the usual number and invite their friends.” FORGOT HIS PARCEL. Could the Lady iiave Been His Wife? A rather unique instance of absent- mindedness occurred the other evening on the Jefferson avenue car line, says the Detroit News-Tribune. The car was well filled with passengers and as a stop was made at McDougall avenue aman stepped off the back platform, where he had been standing, and the car moved on. Instantly a wild ery went up from | the late passenger, which broadened into a howl of despair as the distance between him and the trolley car wid- ened. As he shrieked he also ran and waved his hands frantically. The con- ductor, seeing the shadowy form in the dimness of the night and hearing the unearthly cries, pulled the bell-strap and thus induced the motorman to halt, which he did with a jerk. The man in pursuit came within hailing dis- tance. “What d'ye want?” puncher of pasteboard. 3g: want—the—-lady—in _ there!” gasped the man, swinging his hat at the open car door. ‘the car having come to a dead standstill, a woman arose, deliberately walked out of the car and was received by her breath- less escort, who had so nearly left her to her fate of missing paréels. Amid muck laughter the next man who. left the car in company with a lady insisted that she walk in front of him until safely cn the ground, shouted the A Boy's Essay on Journalism. From the Atlanta Constitution: A bright little boy who attends one of the city public schools was told by his teacher a few days ago to write an es- say on “Journalism,” and the next day he handed in the following: “Journal- | ism is the science of all sorts of jour- nals. There is a heap of kinds of jour- nals. Journals is good things ‘cept when they is hot journals, and then they is just awful. My ma, she takes a fashion journal what is always full of pictures of horrid old maids with the ugliest dresses on I ever saw. The fashion journal is a heap gooder than the hot journal, ‘cause the hot journa! stops the train and the fashion jour- nal starts it. The fashion journal don’t stop nothin’ but the broken win- dow light and pa’s bank account. “There is sheep journals and hog journals and brass journals, too, and pa has got a journal down town at the store and writes things in it about folks he don’t want to forget. Then we had a woman ’t cooked for us named Sally Journal. She was the funniest journal I ever saw. She was a bald- headed journal. “They ain’t no more journals that 1 | know of. “Pp, S.—I forgot to say that a man what puts grease on the car wheels is called a journalist.” An Episcopal Bicyclist. The Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol is reported as the latest cycling recruit in England. He has been seen astride a bicycle more than once in the neigh- borhood of Gloucester lately. This for an old man, in his seventy-eighth year, is not bad. Dr. Ellicott, who is of a thin, wiry build, is well known also as an accomplished Alpine climber, skater and billiard player. Bad Resutts of Vaccination. In a family living near Houtzdale, Pa., there is a seven-year-old child no larger than a five-months-old babe. The baby was vaccinated when it was five months old, and blood poisoning re- sulting, it has not grown a particle since. At Last. Jack—Hurrah, Mamie! We can get married now. Union stock is going up like lightning. Mamie—Oh, Jack! Have you some? Jack—No; but your father has.—New York World. EXPOSING POISONERS. Wonderfal Work of the Chemical Analyst. Though the dream of the ancient at chemist of transmuting base metals into nobler ones has never been real- ized, the chemist of this era can ac complish marvels that almost surpass belief. The skilled toxicologist. reveals the presence of poisons, often when enly faint traces exist, by removing them from their surrovndings, with solvents, requiring hours, days and | sometimes weeks for the separation; exciting them to form combinations with other elements, he causes them to appear in solid liquid or gaseous con- ditions. Many of them he arrays in varied colors, or in crystalline shapes, | seen distinctly by the achromatic or apochromatic lenses of the microscope. Others he volatilizes in flame, and he views their incandescent vapors through the prisms of the spectroscope. Brilliantly tinted and sharply defined lines in focalities accurately noted, re- veal the existence of metals so trifling in quantity that they elude measure- ment by the balance, with all its mod- ern refinements, and so small that the human brain can scarce imprison the ! thought of their minuteness. Te take one example: Suppose the finger is wetted with a drop of salita and touched to a salt of lithium, and the adherent white powder is placed on the tongue and then swallowsd. After the lapse of a few minutes, on drawing a clean platinum wire over the forehead or any part of the skin, then placing it with its traces of moist- ure in a Brunsen flame in front of the narrow slit of the spectroscope, an ob- server, looking through the little tele scope of the instrunient, will see for a fraction of a second the bright-col- ored red and yellow lines character- istic of lithium. The soluble salt has passed through the entire circulatory system of the body, and its presence is announced in the perspiration!—R, Ogden Doremus ‘in the Forum. Vegetation and Electric Mlumina tion, The truth about the effect of the elee tric illumination upon vegetation is gradually being disentangled from the records of a large number of experi mentalists. It appears to have been conclusively demonstrated that electric illumination exercises a favorable influ- ence on the germination of seeds, and promotes the lengthening of leaves and stems in herbaceous plants. Under glass the light greatly accelerates from your happy ecuntenance that you plants to assume a more intensely green tint. The structure is at first strongly differentiated, but prolonged exposure acts deleteriously in this direction. It would scem that it has been the cus- tom to use the light much too lavisbly for gardening purposes; ard, just as a too free use of id manure and chemical stimulants will do more harm than good to the g h of plants, too much electric Mumination nas an ettect upon vegetation similar to darkness;y it tends to retard healthy development. Hence it is that if electricity is to find any useful applicaticn in gardening, ray, in forcing plants for the early markets, it must be used cautiously The plants must not be sivply “drench ed”. with light, any e¢ than they should be drenched with water continn ally; but used under intelligent guid: ance and in moderation, the effect oi the highly stimulating rays of the eleo trie light will probably prove distinctly | advantageous. A Sun Furnace, Sir Henry Gessemer, the well know?r {inventor of the steel process whick bears his name, tells how be tried t> ecustruct a “sun furnace” end failed His invention was intended to revolu tionize not only the «cience of metal | lurgy, but the whole world. Jt was to attain a temperature of pearly G0,0UC deg. and therefore fuse anyching and everything, and Sir Henrv puts the blame of its failure to fulfill these expectations on the stupidity of : try lens maker. The “sun fu consisted of a woeden building 35 feet high and about 12 feet square. a few feet from the greund was fived a large inclinable mirror for catchivg the’ rays of the sun; from this mirror the r were to be reflected cn a number of powertul superimpesed lenses above. which by a simple avrangemeut were fo throw the enormeusly coneentrated tays upon whatever object might be in the crucible below. Such was the mighty plan, but the tfactiurer of the upper glasses Lrou mise ably to naught, for instead of tu vem out uniform he made them all differ ont. and thus spoiled the focus. Sir Henry was sc disgusted and disheartened that he refused to go over the ground again, and so the pretentious scheme lapsed, but the peculiar furnace renains to this day a remarkable monument of what might have been. How Miners Live in Chili, The truth of the old adage, “What's one man’s meat is another 1aan’s pois- on,” is most conclusively ‘aroven in the varied testimony which from time to time crops up from all carters of the earth as to the adaptability of the hu- man race to the most contradictory ané inconsistent dietetic conditions. Mesh eating people think that vegetarians ar fools, and the latter regard the former very often as very little better tha: criminals. The discussion on this sub ject is perennial, and still people live and thrive on both diets. Another wal of evidence on the vegetarian side hae found its way from Chili, where thy 9,000 or 10,000 worknien in the coppe. mines live upon wheaten bread, har! cots, dried figs and buckwhest cakes Meat eating is exceptional, and is look ed upon as a very inferior and unwiss proceeding. The miners are strong, anaemia is unknown among them, and it is stated that they would be among the finest specimens of humanity were it not that they give themselves up te | alcoholic excesses three or four times i week, and consequently are subject tu fevers and liver diseases. The experi ment of giving them meat in place cf? a purely vegetable dict has been tried with the resuit that they did less work; many of them were considerabiy debil- itated, aud from choi their graivs. fvuli wont Ss Harvest Home for the Farmer. .~ The Minnesota state fair, which will be held at Hamline, midway be- tween the two cities, from Sept. 6 to 11, will be the best ever seen in the Northwest. The past two exhibits have been especially prosperous, and, as the result, the association offers premiums and purses to the amount of $25,000. This large sum is stimu- lating every department, apd the en- tries of exhibitors are pouring in as never before. The buildings are being overhauled, repainted, repaired and renovated. -The grounds generally are being put in order, walks and roads repaired, and the race track is absolutely in superb condition. The purses offered for the races aggregate. $7,500, and some of the most celebrated horses in the country will be present. Happy Jack, the famous horse which paces in 2:09 without rider, driver or sulky, willgive a daily exhibition during the races. He is the original horse to give this unique exhibition. The displays of stock, poultry, dairy producis and farm machinery will be unusually large, and the whole exhibit will be a veritable harvest home for the farmer. In addition to the exhibits there will be various amusements, such as balloon sions and other attrac- tions. The railroads return exhibits tree, rying them cirect to the grounds. One fare for the round trip will be given tu visitors, and steam and street cars run direct from the twin cities to the grounds. Both St. Paul and Minneapolis have carnivals state fair week, giving. free evening {street displays. The whole week will be one of pleasure and instruc- tion. Parties desiring to camp on the grounds can obtain the free use of a tent-by writing to Secretary E. W. Randaj}, at Hamline. For Sale. Eight lots in block 24, Third Divi- ‘sion of Grand Rapi for sale ata bargain, or will exchange for Farm Stock of any kind These lots adjoin model farm and are Clear of incumberances. For par- iculars address. J. A. BLACKWOOD, Duluth, Minn. d-Review, Grand Rapids. or He United States Land Office, Duluth, Minn., July 28, 1897. Notice is hereby given that the of- j ficial plat of survey of Township 151 Nerth of Range 27 West of Sth P. M., will be opened for filing in this office on | Tuesday, September 7th, 1897, at 9 o’clock a. m., and that on and ‘after said day we will receive applications for the entry of Jands in said Town- ship. A. J. TAYLOR, Register. Fr. L. RYAN, Receiver. Notice of Lxpiration of Redemption. State of Minnesota, | County of Itasea. J To Joseph Graham or other Take Notice, that the pi ed in your i n the county and state aforesa ic ed us follows, to- wit: The west half of the southeast qua: and the south half of the southwest qui of section nine (9), in town sixty (0), ran twenty-two (22), Was at the tax sale on May 7th, 1994, unde: judgment entered in the ict court of said county Ma sold for the sum of nine dollars an }, being the amount of interest and costs due which s with interest from the date of sa the rate of twelve per cent per annu together with subsequent delinquent taxe: penalties and interest th the sum of eight, wo dot » and this mentioned sum, interest on eighty-two dollars enteen cents fr the Gate of this notice, is the amount req’ redeem the suid piece of Jand from sale, exclusive of the to acerte, upon this notice, and that me for the redemption of i ixty days after the service o e, and proof thereof has been filed in my office. Vitness my hand and official seal. this | 10th day of August, A.D. 1307. | [sean] H, R. KING, County Auditor, Itasca County, Minn. Published September 4-11-18. laiming titl of lund assess- a Notice of Expiration of Redemption. | State of Minnesota } | SS. County of Itasca. | To Vermillion Runge Land Co., or others, claiming title: Take Notice. that the piece of land as- sessed in your name. situate in the county and state aforesaid. and described as fol- lows, to-wit: The southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section eight (8), in town fifty-nine (59), range twenty-six (20), v at the tax sale on May 7th, 1804, under a udgment_ entered in the District court of said county March 2: ld for the sum of one dollar and sixty cents ($1.60), be- ing the amount of the taxes, penalties, in- te.est and costs due on said land for the yeur 1892, which sum, with interest from the date of said sale at the rate of twelve per cent per annum. together with subsequent delinguent taxes, penalties and interest thereon, amounts to the sum of nine dollars and fourteen cents, and this last men- tioned sum, with legal interest «n nine dollars and fourteen cents from the date of this notice. is the amount required to redeem the said piece of land from said sale, exclusive of the costs to accrue upon this. notice, and that the time for the redemption | of said land will expire sixty days after the service of this notice, and proof thereof has been filed in my office. Witness my hand and official seal this 10th day of August, A. D. 1897. ae [seAL] Hi. R. KING,. County Auditor, Itasca County, Minn. Published September 4-11 18. First publication Sept. 4. Last publication Oct. 16. Notice of Mortgage Sale, Default having been made in the condi- tions of a mortgage, dated September 8 1892, made by Patrick H. Varley and Jessie L. Varley to Wade Blaker. recorded in Register of Deéds’ office in Itasca county, Minnesota, on September 17, 1892. 2t.9:06 o'clock a. m., in Book “A” of Mortgages, page 609, assigned by said mortgagee to J. P. Sims on January Pa 1893, which assignment is recorded on January 23, 1893, at 2:10 o'clock p.m. in Book “B” of Mortgages, page 123; claimed to be due thereon at date of this notice the sum of #150, to-wit: $100 principal, and $50 interest. and no action at law or otherwise has been instituted to recover said sum: s {'"Notice is hereby given, that pursuant to the power of sale in said mortgage contain- ed, said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sule of the premises described in said mortgage. which sale will be made at Public auction by the sheriff of Itasca come the front door of the court hou: Bevis in said county, at 10 o’clock a.m, on the Isth day of October, 1897, to satisfy said debt and interest, and cost of sale, and twenty-five dollars astoresy S fees. The premises to be sold are situate in Itasca county, Minn a. and described as .ollows. to-wit: Northwest quarter of northeast quarter of seetion twenty-seven, township fifty-six N.. range twenty-four W. Dated September 5, 18v7. J. P. SIMS, Assi ortgagee, tapids, Minn. CLL, Pratt, Aitoricy, Gran First publication Aug. 14. 1. W. Hastines. SHELDON. Last publfeavion Sept. 18. a Mies Se ot oY acne: : : 5.8 7 . Notice for Publication. Vice President: Asst: Cushisr. United States Land Office at Duluth, Minn. ugusi 5 Notice is hereby given that the. follow L be v B nk pauoesatar en acorn} ~— LUMDEMMENS bal tion to make final f in support of his clam, and that said proof wal. made be- Of Grand Rapids. Minn. fore E. 0. Kiley, Judge of Probate Court, Itasca county, Minn., at Grand Rapids, Mi on Sept. 20, 1897. viz: Gideon T. Ellis, de Homestead Application No. 2006, for the se of sw, lots 1, 2, and 3, section 19, township 56 north. fe dl 25 west of 4tlf p.m. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva- tion of, said land, viz: George A. Tuller, Ross Dodson, Charles H. Seeley, Henry C. Tuller, all of Grand Rapids, Minnesota. WM. -E. CULKIN, Register. First publication July 31. Last publication Sept. 11, Notice For Publication. Land Office at Duluth, Minn. Ly 28, 1897. ss w Notice is hereby given that the Tollowing- named settler has made notice of his iutention to make final proof 1m support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before E. C. Kiley, Judge ofthe Probate Court, Itasca county, Minn..at Grand Rapids, Minn., on Sept. 14, 1897. viz: John Dolph, who made Homestead Entry No. 10505 for for lots 9, 10, 13 and ne of sw section 15, in township 60, north of range 24 west, 4th p. m. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva- tion of, said lund. viz: Frank E. Brown, George Shook, Harry Wallace, Charles Ru- bart, all of Grand Rapids, Minnesota A. J. TAYLOR, Register, First publication July 31. Last publication Sept. 11. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Duluth, Minn. : July 28, 1897. Notice is hereby given that the following- named settler has tiled notice of his inten- tion to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made be- fore E. ©, Kiley, Judge of Probate Ccurt, county, 'Minn., at Grand Rapids, on Se , 1897, viz: Orin McNeil who made homestead entry wo. 10214 for the sw'4 of section 10, township north, range 28 wes th p.m. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultiva- nd, Vv! Thomas Mackie of farrett Moore of tion of, sai Bridgic, Ita Bridgie, I Morris Moore of Bridgie. Cornelius Mul- lins of Co., Minn. J. TAYLOR, Register. Last publi First public Netice For Publication. United States Land Office. Duluth. Minn. July 28, 1897. iven that the following- ion July 31. jou Sept. I. Notice is hereby named settler ha notice of | tion to make fi proof in supp clam, and that said proof will be made be- re E, ©, Judge of Prob Grand Rapids, Minn., pt. 13, 1897, Thomas Mackie who homestead entry No. 10217 for the ws ‘4 and ney of sw4 sectien 15, and se se'4 of section 16, township 152, north of range 28 west, 5th p.m He names the follow’ his continuous resi tion of, said Bridgie, Itasca ore of Bridgie, I ris Moore of Bridgie, Itasea county, Minn., Cornelius Mullins of Laprairie, Itasca coun- ty, Minn. £ witnesses to prove upon and: cultivae ° . First publication Aug. Last publication Oct Notice of Mortgage Forelosure Sale. Whereas, default has been made in the payment of the indebtedness secured by that certain mortgage deed made by John O'Neill, an unmarried man, as mortgagor, to Marthia D.Budd. mortgagee, bearing date the eighth (Sth) day of March, 1804, and duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds in and for Itasca county, Mi on the 12th day of March, 1894, at 1: p. m., in book “©” of mortgages upon which mort Cc to pe due, and ‘ue, ut the date hereof. the sum of six hundred five dollars and sixty. two cents, él ), principal and interest, viz: £450.00 principal and $155.62 interest, and no action or proceeding having been institut- ed at law or in aimee or otherwise. to re- cover the said indebtedness or any part th f; Now, therefore, notice is hereby given. that by virtue of ‘the power of sale contained in said mortgage deed and purs' ant to the statute in such case made and pre vided, the said mortgage deed will be fore: wie of the premises and lands ribed and situate iu the county tate of Minnesota, to-wit: The f (4) of the north-ea: quarter (%) and the northeast quarter (‘s) of the northwest quarter (44) of. section twelve (2) in township sixty-seven (67) north, range () west,.with the hereditaments and ap- purtenances, which sale will be made by the sheriff of Itasca county, Minnesota. at public auction, to the highest bidder for cash, at the front door of the county court house in the the village of Grand Rapids, Minnesota, on Monday, the eighteenth (18) day of Octo- ber. 1897, it ten (10) o’clock in the forenoon of said day. to pay said mortgage debt and in- terest and an attorney fee of $75.00 provided for in said mortgage deed together with the costs and disbursements of this foreclosure allowed by law, subject. to redemption at any time within one year from date of sale as provided by law. Dated this 24th day of August, 1807. MARTHIA D. BUDD, Mortgagee. Cc. C, McCartHy, Attorney for Mortgagee. First publication Sept. 11. Last publication Sept. 25. H Order for Hearing Proof of Will. State of Minnesota, | ‘i Se County of Itasea. J In Probate Court, } Special Term. Sept. 7, 1807. In the Mattar of the Estate of Mary Shook, , decease Whereas, ’an instrument in writing, pur- porting to be the Last Will and Testament of Mary Shook, deceased, late of said county, has been delivered to this court; And whereas,. George A. ‘Tuller has. filed therewith his petition, representing, among other things. that said Mary Shook died ia said county on the 19th day of Januaro, 1897, testate, and that said petitioner is the ex- ecutor named in said Last Will and Testa- ment, and praying twat said instrument may be admitted to probate, und that letters testamentary be issued thereon to said George A. Tuller: It is ordered, that the proofs of said instru- ment, and the suid petition, be heard before this court, at the Probate office in the vil- lage of Grand Rapids in said county, on Wednesday, the 20th day of September, A.D. 1897, at 10 o’clock im the forenoon, when all persons interested ma appear for or contest the probate of saa ..strament; And it is further ordered, that notice of tke time and place of said hearing be given to all persons interested, by publishing this order once in each week for three successive weeks prior to said day of hearing. in the Grand Rapids Herald. view, a weekly newspaper printed and published at Grand Rapids in sald county. Gea at Grant Rapids, Minn., the 7th ay of September, ow E. C. KILEY, By the Court, {Seal.] Judge of Probate. First publication Aug. 28. Last publication Oct. 2. Notice for Publication. Land office at Duluth, Minn. “« August 23. 1897, uy Notice is hereby given that the following- named settler has filed noticeof his intention to make tinal proof in sup; of his claim, and that said proof will before E © Kiley, Judge of Probate Court, at Grand Rapids, Minnesota, on October 4th. 1897, viz: Amos forsyth, who made Hi 14930, for the e+: of nwhi, swhi_ of nes A General Banking Business Transacted. FASTER TIME Se Renn oem armen LOWER RATES Offered by D.S.S.&A.Ry. Leave Duluth 6:30 p. m. (Except Saturday.) Arrive Class Fare Saginaw, next day, 6.27 p. m.--.--.$16.47 Montreal, second day, 8.10 a. m..-----$24,00 } Boston, second day, 8.30 p. m.-.-...$26.50 -$25.00 New York, second day, 8.45 p. m.. West bound train arrivesDuluth 8:50a.m. (Except Sunday.) T. H. LARKE, Com’! Agent, 426 Spalding House Block, Duluth, Mina. OT PAUL & DOLOTA BB. Shortest in Distance, cS Quickets in Time. * TO OR FRoM ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS OR STILLWATER GOING soUTH. Ex Sun Daily Daily Ly. Duluth. 9.00am 1.55pm 11,15pm Ly. Cloquet. 5am 12.30pm Ar. Stillwater. 50pm Ar. Kansas Ly. Ly. St. Pj Ly. Ar. Cloquet Ar. Duluth. The finest.and fastest trains. clining chairs on all da: new sleeping carson all night trains. Tick- ets sold to and from all points in the United States, Canada and Mexico. City Ticket Office, 401 west Superior St., Duluth. C, J, O'DONNELL, F. B. Rass. City Tichet Agent. Nor. PassfAgent. Elegant re- trains. Magnificen: Diag ean Time Card. GRAND RAPIDS .Cohasset ... .Deer River. We. OKR, General Passenger gent. Duluth, Minn, D. M. Pane. General Superintendent. ‘THroucH Cars Fargo Grand Forks and Winnipeg TO. * ice ae = Pullman Butte : Sleeping Cars Spokane ¥ Elegant Tacoma & Dining Cars Seatt'e’ * Tourist Portiand: + i Sleeping Cars TIME SCHEDULE. Leave | Active Duluth |/Dalath Da ng Oars on Pacifi rat Express, 3 ily. | Betiy. Pacitik Express for all Min- nesota and Dakota Points. Winnipeg. Yellowstone} lelena, Butte, Spo-| “Seattle, ka San! Francisco and all Pacific Coast Points................ Chicago Limited for all] Wisconsin Central and} Chicago & Northwestern| points, Milwaukee, Chi-| cago and beyond... 2 3:50pm|7:40 am :20 pmj11:05 pin Through tickets to Japan and China, Tacoma and Northern Pacitic “steamship be For information, time cards, maps and tickets, call on or write A.W. pee OrODAS. 8S. FEE. G. P.&F.A.. St Paul.” Duluth, Mississippi River & Northern. Entry No, | & of section 11, townshiv 55 north of range 26 | 7:07 west. He names” the following wit- nesses to prove his continuous residence up- on aud cultivation of suid land, viz: Wim. | George Moore. Joseph St. Pierre, Frank Smith and George Arscott, all of cohussett, | 4 Lutsea county. Minneso Wa. E. CoLKis, Receiver, DM. PHILBIN, ' ie ‘Ceneral Supt.

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