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117-119 West Superior Street, Duluth, The New Store the most desirable qualities and at moderate cost. is the people’s the term and our advertisement today is most important to those who wish to buy those articles they may need, Your careful consideration of this Ad. will prove of ines- timab! store in the fullest sense and acceptance of incial advantage to you. GINGHAM Scotch Ginghams, tin. beautiful line of colors; never sold for a than 39¢ to 48¢ Sale price only. —Monday we place on sale Imported French and and Silk Stripes and Cords; most 25¢ patterns in soft finished Shirt Waist check SILK UNDERSKIRTS—In colors and black; very pretty line of styles and colorings; blue, red, pink, cerise, brown, etc., some have double flounce corded; worth $6, $7, $8, $9 and $10, Sale-price fOr sw. ces sessed ooeteienis song Sasa $4, 98 CORSETS—We have a complete line of the W- 3 shirt waist Cor- sel: straight front, fine batiste. "Tis the best fitting and most comfortable corset made at the price. Come in $1. 00 white onl ZERO SU MME R CORSET—In heavy cord Coeiting: well boned and made; made to sell at 50c each; white only; good shape; 39 allsizes..<.<. C MUSLIN HATS AND BONNETS—Have a bargain table full of them on the second floor; some are worth as high as a dol- 29 lar; odds and remnantsjof regular lots. Take your choice at Cc per yard. GINGHAMS—A bout Ginghams; the A. F.C. Brand: you pay 12 1 for them re- - 3 gularly. We place them on sale for this week at........... C. toerns; as, 15e and te ds, WASH MUSLINS—25 pieces, excellent colors 21 corded and checked, etmnity.y p only some PERCALES in wide; White Star, Wi ties, only Wash Goods Department. = Dress Goods Department. Suit Room News. BLACK GOODS—45 inch all-wool Blaei plin—the best bla KIMONOS AND DRESSING SACQUES—N ine | just ope! and tinest finist the reg value $1.50 ner dd. $i. 25 Up; lave the: tang iti trom 50s tin o} a6 oh wi in biol 1 ally i speci: Y corde i ity or ia linens, in white and colors. ‘all prest special for only a Ip trimmod in lace and enibrolders rattled eutfs aud eo ribbon ties, at .. BLACK DIAGON AL—i n. extra fine black diagonal Some hav @ bo loro effeet and a. make. This y sty weave, either forentiresu $I (9 Bs" » | “ is 31.5 ur special price LADIES’ WRAPPERS-Percale. in light or dark colors, or single skirts; regular vaiue is 81.50. Oar special price t ceep full Tlouuber teimued 7OKS, collar and culls; guaranteed perfec: [ty COLORED DRESS GOODS—38-in. all-wool Heomespuns and fisting, worth $1.25 and 3148.. Venetian Suitings: colors are brown, blue, gray and mixtures. LADIES’ WRAPPERS--L rk or Tight colors; best qu would be considered reasouable at 59¢ of print. trimmed yoke, collar and cults; good iting and well worth $leach; only. This lot of suiting 39¢ | i French | | , = | Ber yards ue. - a SKIRTS—Black Cheviot, flare flounce, trimmed with PRUNELIAS AND WHIPCORDS—45-in. wide; colors are tan, stitched band of satin, exzcllent value for 30.5); oaly " wih nayy, roval, Wine and cardinal; strictly all-wool and the best made; aad iat ee aie ’ nothing shewn this season. more popular than these fabric MACKINTOSHES—Have a broken lot of Ladies $2 50 regular price $1.25... ...cccccceceeseeseeees Fae 98c Mackintoshes 380 and $1.50 qualities » blac, brown and oa, blue; to close t a a | ‘ ) NAN Subdivision of | See, | Twp. |Range.| No. of] Year Amount [Subsequent | Interest | Total ASSESSED. Section, | Acres.|_ ‘Tux | Day of Judgment. When Sold sold Taxes. Penalty | Amount Levied : for. and requ.red 7 ? Costs, to : | a a redeem Theo. Irgens. | M4 of SEM a | 56 By 80 | 896 " 30 $1 cts| 8 | ets| $ | cts| 8 | ots i | 517 455 \ ans Total by i 4445 | 37! 08 ' ra OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR, Ttasca County, Minnesota. To Theo. Irgeus: Youare hereby notified that pursaant to tax ju ied mont entered in the District Court, in the eonnty of Itasca, strte of Minnes: a3 above stated. the land herein above described, as. Residence: J.FARRELL, Medincal and Family Uses. Pye sessed in your name, was Sold for 8UxXes as WV) vdvad Gaty the time of redemption’ from said sate allowed by law, will expire sixty days after service of this notice. and proof there , of has been lea in imy ons ; Tu addition to the amon sab ove Stated, as nevessary to redeem from said sale, the cost of service 0! notice must be paid, together w such interest as - mi true from und after t jab i itness my hand and off "at Grand Rapids, in said county of Itasca, this 3rd day of May, 1901. (SEAL) : BE. J. FARRELL. . County Auditor, Itasea County, Minn, Herald-Keview, June: a ire = ae ot ce of Expiration of Redemption. ser teeereceecesoners sees ss a1 T0 PATENT ood Ideas . 2 | may be secured by | - Auditor's Oflice, Itasca County, Minn. 2 % THE PATENT RECORD, County or Irasca. J * % Battimore, Md. VWO2OB88SE8OO8 .) To Geo. N. Houghton: 4 % | Subecrtntions to The Patent Record #1.00 1) es PROPRIETOR & (4 hereby notided that pursuant to a real estate tax judgmont, entered in the | # . = i Vourt in and for ounty of Itasea, In the state of Minnesota, on the 2st day | % P = ‘ A.D, 1900, in proceedings to enforce’ th % 1loneer = ‘4 ij hi became delinquent in and prior to the row & = Y 322 0} the general laws of the state of Minnesota he year 1800, the following dese: * ae | Ht. oid __ tk ; estate, assessed in your name, situate in the county of Itasca, and state of Minnesota, | € Barber | basis ah dare a ls chal ec ) \ ; 2.83 4 The Celebrated s ——— = = = |# Sh a!1@ | Amt - 4 aia Yours | Am't | Am't {requ'a | % op 2 % DES RIPTION, | » | 9 inclusive'| ‘each | of de-| to re- | & ss sae = aan) ;/o | = lfor_ which deem | x Your Patronage Solicited. & Mw eth ais Gat SASS | j, Taxes each | #% i Subdivision of Lot or img ® | became tract y \ Block, “and name of | lactingu’nt ge LELAND AVENUE. 3 | { : Villuge. frog ty |S jet Stasenseassssseanansne: sa. > Houghton's second ad-| | Ur g dition to Grand Rapids! 1 | 5 | {1893 to 1805] 1| 65 Houghton's SSS: ee poem jj dition to + ise |1893 to 1895 1| 65 ssesceessvecs bias - Houghtor f | op dition vo a] 5 1893 to 1895 ites UPHO am Hougiton's second | ®\' ee " dition to —_ Rapids 4 5 }1893 to 1895) 1) 65 ) Hougiiton’s d ad-| | pei 2 | dition to'Grand Rapids) 3 | 5 __ Ht808-t0 1 sles 1@ Ofall kinds done with neatness Total amounts . | 8125 and dispatch, y Ee oe — =———~|% Chairs Re-Ganed; ’ America’s Finest Pro- ; $ . q sald for the yours herein bore ‘ated. for the sums set : g % duction. uted, said sums being the highest bids received there- 4 it the amount P déem said lands from said sale, exclusive of the Carpets Re-Laid, %)/% sts to accrue forthe ser the sum set down,in the right hand column ae 8) % 3 ‘ opposite eich description with interest thereo the rate of one per |,@ Satisfactory work, a Received Highest Reward at cent per month from th and that the time for the redemption of said Prices Right. 8 eo ana ea gw nds from said salo will oxpire sixty datys after the service of this notice and proof of Ser- Zella Currie. @| i World’s Columbian Exposi- 4 vice thereof is filed in my otf 4 me > REPRESS. We Witness my haud und ofiiclal seal this 3rd day of May, 1001, y position. Recommended for County Auditor, vitadee County, Minn. First St. & Lel ve. GRAND RAPIDS” ~{ {eratd-Review, May 25. June 1.8 9 (i _ ee ee eee y, Unnecessary Loss of Time. SLSSSLSWSLSLWSLSLSLSSSLEVTS Hen ry Logan, Mr. W.S. Whedon, cashier of the SERENE RE Met Re Me tee eae ae ete ae teat seats ae First National Badk of Winterset, y. S. HUSON f i Grand Rapids. ¢ Iowa, in a recent letter gives some f] G CS SM ITH experience with a carpenter in his em- pans 3 _ Dallamend & Go., Chicago. , ploy. that will be of value to other DEALER IN mechanics. He says: “I had a car- Justice of the Peace. Frui " Joaneecsesesenaseasoosanns penter working for me who was oblig- ruits, Confectionery, 3! ed to stop work for several days on Ice Cream Soda * account of being troubled with diar- District Court Commis- 3 : aan ae rhoea. I mentioned to him that I sioner for Itasca County. Ice Cream, Drinks, You assume no risk when you buy |Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. ‘The Itasca Mer- cantile will refund your money if you’ are not satisfied after using: it. It is everywhere admitted to be the most successful redemy in use for~ bowele complaint and the oaly one that neter fails. It is.pleasant safe and reliable. had been similarly troubled and that} Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera andi Diarrhoea Remedy had cured me. uly boughta bogtle of it from the drug- gist here and informed me that one | dose cured him, and Le is again at hi work.’ For sale by Itasca Mercan- tile Co. Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. THIRD ST., Opp. Depot. Notarial Work Done. OFFICE—With cones Surveyor in Court House. en Rapids, Minnesota: ‘EE ee ee a ae eae a ae ae ae ae ea EE ME REE ae age aE aE ae Re a ae ae a ae ae ae ae ae a ae a te ME neni. a! MEN-OF-WAR. Are Now Waster Than tho Atlantle Liners. With the exception of torpedo boats and a few small -nleasure craft, says a writer in Cassicr's Magazine, the American-built Russian cruiser Va- riag is teday the fastest vessel afloat, having recently gone through a seven ‘and a half hours’ trial run at a speed of from 23.6 to 23.7 knots, or 27.14 to 27.25 miles an hour. We need go back only a few years to find a time when the large Atlantic racers, in point of regularly attainable speed, were far beyond anythizg that had ever been done in any navy, and their perform- ances were considered practically be- yond reach under the severe condi tions of cramped space, light machin- ery weight, and others similarly re- strictive to the designer. The United States triple-screw cruiser Minneapolis about six years ago developed slightly more than 23 knots during her con- tract trials. naval vessels, it was not expecteu that would be demanded hcur after hour in a run of several days, and 1895 practical demonstration was given for c a naval vessel could actually hold her own with one of the crack Atlantic liners. This was afforded by the United States cruiser Columbia in her phenomenal run frou. the Needles, near Southampton, to Sandy Hook Lightship, off the American shore, in a few minutes less that seven days, or, to be exact, in 6 days, 23 hours and 49 minutes, the average speed for the whole trip be- ing 18.54 knots, or 21.3 miles an hour. The Columbia at the time was prac- tically racing against the steamer Au- gusta-Victoria of the Hamburg-Amer- ican line. Making proper allowance for the difference in the length of the two routes, the Augusta-Victoria hav- ing sailed from Cherbourg, the same rate of speed was maintained by bota ships. Since that time high-speed, long-distance runs of war vessels have been repeated, so that the im- pression has at last been wiped out that modern wa: ‘were simply boxes full of delicate and complex ma- ehinery scarcely fitted for the hard knocks which they were really in- tended to withstand. But among all the swift cruisers and battleships, the Variag’s 23.7 knots give her today first place. ip ips “USE OF ENGLISH.” Dictionary Big’ Used, Next in Inter- est to Bibte. Richard Burton in writing in East and West of “The Use of English,” says: “Words, like men, have their ‘strange eventful histories,’ and, again like men, one word in its time ‘plays many parts.’ To follow the ups and downs of a single proper noun—a stupid name since its career is as often as not improper and hence doubly fas. cinating—or of a common. noun— named with equai stupidity, since its story.is likely to be most uncommon— this pursujt, I say, is often as excit- ing as-a novel or a football game. Thus it follows that the dictionary {rightly used and comprehended) is the most interesting of all books, save per- haps the Bible. Dr. Holmes knew this when he made the Autocrat say: ‘When I feel inclined to read poetry I take down my dictionary. The poetry of words is quite as beautiful as that of sentences. The author may arrange the gems effectively, but their shape and luster havo been given by the at- trition of ages. Bring me the finest simile from the whole range of im- aginative writing, and I will show you a single werd which conveys a more profound, a more accurate and a more eloquent analogy.’ Emerson had the same feeling when he wrote: ‘It does not need that a2 peom'should be long. Every word was once a poem.’” A Coffee Barometer. It is claimed thai the “coffee” fore- east is a reliable way of determining what the weather order to tell what the weather is going to be you must drop carefully into your morning cup of coffee, prepared with a little milk, two lumps of sugar. Do not stir the cofee. If the bubbles ascend rapidly, separate quickly and fly to the side of the cup, there will be much rain within the next twenty- four hours. If they gather closely and gravitate in a cluster to the side only possible showers may be_ expected. But if they remain placidly in the cen- ter of the cup you may wear your best hat and leave your umbrella at home when you take your walks abroad, Telephone Without Wires. At the meeting of the British Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science at Bradford, England, Sir William Preece, ex-president of ‘the Institution of Civil Engineers, announced that he had successfully transmitted speech eight miles across sea without the aid of wires and that the establishment of such a system for commercial com- munication was practicable between ships and land. Sir William Henry Preece made several experiments last year with an induction system of wire- less telephoning, signaling. across the Menai straits and using telephones at both ends to receive the signals. SimpUclty of Emperor Joseph, The personal habits of Emperor Francis Joseph are marked with sol- dier-like simplicity. His food is of the plainest, sich as an ordinary citizen consumes. He retires at 9 o'clock every night and sleeps on his iron field bed. At the age of seventy he is still able to meet and overcome the per- plexing difficulties that are peculiar to the Austro-Hungarian empire, and his great goodness of heart has won him universal love throughout the em- pire. As in the cases of most, This is the season of the year when the careful house- keeper will want those walls decor- alCh ia a. Our Stock of 1901 Patterns is Complete and we are showing over 40 choice combinations from Se. per roll up, at The Furniture Store. Geo. F. Kremer. C.W. Hasrin Pr P. J. SHELDO: Vice P AIKEN ‘Sast. Cashier Lumbermen’s Bank Of Grand Rapids, Minn ident. To Jas. McKosh: TAKE NOTICE That the picces of land assessed in yourname sittated In the county of Ttasea Minnesota, - de: 5 follows, south east qu rth west quarter and south west quarter of the north eas 2 Wane ed twen general laws of 189. at the mt to a real ¢ judgment, ounting to the sums i - ch description of land as follows, to- ast quarter of the north » four dolla nd eighty the: Bist rc ceedings to the payment of on said r te delingu thousand e ght — dor and for any _ prior tor said county, which at the auditor's _ office county on the 25th d: 00. sold for the sums set opp: follows, to- Wii west Guarter dred and. sixty. quarter of the north e: 44, sold for one hundred a said sums being the hi £ therefor, which — sums atthe rate of twelve per cent per annnm fromthe date of suid sule together with the subsequent delinquent ta penalties and interest thereon. zmounting to the sums set ite each description of land us follows, Southeast quarter of northwest qu ‘4 of nw4, amounts ope hund r cents, n ofland as of the north rone hun south we: with intere its toone hunc y-two cents, Sit joned = sums. interest ther t the rate of twelve ceut per annum from the date of this no’ are the amounts required to redeem the pleces of land from sajd sale usive of the costs to accrue upon this not and that the time for the redemption of said lands from le will expire sixty d ufter the service of this notice and proof thereof has been filed in m. Witness my day of Februa (SEAL} County Auditor. 1 Herald-Review Ma nd official seal this 28th . D. 1901. Farrer. ‘ae aga Minn. Timber Land Act, June 3, 18 Notice for Publication. United States Land Offic Duluth, Mi Notice is here with the prov e] oe gon, Nevada and Wash extended to all the Publi 4,1 s timber or stone than fo rieultural | purposes, and to establish his claim to said land before the Register and Receiver of this office av Dv- luth, Minne 1. on Monday, the 198th day of A » 1901 He names as witnesse: ne, of Stillwater, Minn. john ©. DO ong. Wis.; Bei Goodvin, ; Partelow Miles, of ir vin, of Mi Minong. Wi Superior. W _of West Any und all persons claiming adversely the ‘above described lands are requested to filet in this office on -or becore said 1th im y of August. 1901, CuvKrin, Wa. EL Register. Her: st 17, Timber Land, Act June 3, 1878. Nolice for Publication. United States L Duluth Notice is hereby giv with the provisions of the 4 Is78, entitled “An a nee gress of sale of as extended t xt of August 4, isinong. county of W Thom: hburn, i gers, Ne proof to show that the land so more Valuable for its timber or sto! for agricultural purpose . m to said land ver of this office sota, on Thursdi the 18th ot He names water. Mi J. L. Goodvin, of linong Wis.; Bert Goodvin, of Minong. Wis Partlow Miles, of West Supe Any and persons claiming ad the al ibed lands are reques fil fins in thls office of or Sih diy of June, 1901. 1s rister Regis ee Herald-Review, March 30. Junes. WALL PAPER !