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ST pe ed ao sa ” i I 1 | i f i “BOOTH’S CIGARS , GEO. BOOTH, Manufacturer of Fine 99 Have achieved an GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. excellent, Lids tion all over Northern Minnesota. They are made of the finest selected stock by experienced workmen in Mr it} {{] Booth’s own shops here, and under his personal supervision. This insures the utmost cleanliness and care in manufacture. Yor sale every where. A. E. Sees best One hal ock From Depot. , Bz Hotel Gladeisact WILDER FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT. Sample Room and Livery in Connection. Special Alfention Given to Transeent Trade. Headquarters for Lumbermen. Call for them. » Prop. EOSTIS, General Pass. Agent. CHICAGO, ILL. Louis Limited you can live as well as at the next morning nt day t s Minneapolis me exening aud St this line. GEO. P. LYMAN, st Gen'l Pass. ST. century in advance of other ready mixed paints. Made by Enterprise Paint Manufacturing Co. For Sale by W. J. & H. D. POWERS, CHICAGO Grand Rapids, Min. Agent, PAUL, MINN. pac SE & SP BAT, ATTORNEYS AT LAW Office over Itasca Mercantile Meat Market GRAND RAPIDS, C; C. MeCARTHY, ATTORNEY. |\Mee over Ita AT LAW. nile Meat Market. GRAND RAPIDS, ca Mere: C L. PRATT, ATTORNEY A'T LAW County Attorney of Itasea County. Office over Marr's Clothing Store, GRAND RAPIDs. J R. DONONUE, ATTORNEY AT LA Brand Rayias ‘Review Published Every Saturday By E. C. KILEY = TWO DOLLARS Six Months........81 00| Three Months....... A YEAR IN ADVANCE, 500 Entered in the Postoffice at Grand Rapids, Mmnesota, 28 Second-Class Hatter. Official Paner: of Itasca Gant: Villages of Grand Repids and ey River aud Town of veand I Rapids. SCENT OF ONION. By Any Other Name Than Sulphuret at Alyle It Would Be as Sweet. lt is interesting to make inquiry ito tke cause of this unfortunatd quality of the onion. It is simply @ue to the presence in some quantity in the bulb of sulphur. It is this sul- phur that gives the onion its germ- killing property and makes the bulb so very useful a medicinal agent at all times, but especially in the spring, which used to be—and still is in many places—the season for taking brim: stone and treacle in old-fashioned houses before sulphur tablets came into vogue. Now, sulphur, when united to hydrogen, forms sulphuretted hy- drogen, and then becomes a foul-smeil- ing compound. The onion, being sc juicy, has a very large percentage of water in its tissues, and this, combin- ing with the sulphur, forms the strong- ly scented’ and offensive substance called sulphuret of allyle. This sulphur- et of allyle mingles more especially with the volatile or aromatic oil of the onion; it is identical the malo- dorant principio found in asafetida, which is almost the symbol of all smells that are nasty. The horse radish and the ordinary mustard of our tables both owe their strongly stimulative properties to this same sulphuret of allyle, which gives them heat and acridity, but not an offensive smell, owing to the different arrange- men of the atoms in their volatile oils. This brings us.to a. most curi- ous fact in nature, that most strange- ly, yet most certainly constfcts all vegetable volatile oils in exactly the same way—composes them all, wheth- er they are the aromatic essences of cloves, oranges, lemons, cinnamen, thyme, rose, verbena, turpentine or onion, of exactly the same proportion, which are 81% of carbon to 11% hydrogen, and obtaizs all the ast seeming diversities that our “nostrils detect in their scent simply by a dii- ferent arrangement of the atoms in each vegetable oil—Chambers’ Jour- nal, ° DEPEW’S BAD FRENCH. =p @auses Him Trouble Which Results In a Kiss. Having found a purse on the floor of a hotel near an armchair, where he had seen a pretty girl sected a short time before, Senator Depew deposited the purse with the hotel clerk in a jeading hestlery in Paris. An hoyr later, being on the street near the ho- tel, the senator recognized by the light of a street lamp, the same gizl hurrying home from her gall. Desirous of saving her anxiety when she discov- ered her loss, the senator walked briskly after her; and when he had reached her side addressed her in his politest French. The girl, thoroughly frightened and not understanding him, shrieked for help. The kindly senator tried to pacify her, and as she per- sisted in her failure to comprehend. and in crying out for assistance, grew vehement and scared her ail the more Finally the foolish matien ran to & policeman who had appeared on the scene and appealed for protection. It was only afier a ‘long wrangle that the stupid officer of the law, zealous to appear in the light of the rescuer of a Woman in distress, would admit the possible truth of Senator Depew’s laborious explanations. The hotel be- ing near, the policeman finally con- f£ented to accompany Mr. Depew and the lady there, sticking close to the lady all the way. The purse, which contained a large sum of money, was Returned to the young woman by the clerk, and she, understanding at last, impulsively threw her armg around the senator’s neck, and kissed him on the cheek. Austria an Old Ladies’ Paradise. Contrary to the practice Which pre- vails in many other countries, the def- erence shown to women in Austria in- ereases with age, and the land is well considered an old ladies’ paradise. No Austrian would ever dream of receiy- ing a lady’s exiended hand withont bewing to kiss it. Children, even when grown, always touch the hands of; their parents with their lips before | |-venturing to raise their faces for a kiss. Girls and young married wom- | ens no matter how lofty their dignity do not consider it beneath their dign‘ir to kiss the hands of ladies who ‘ty 2 attained a certain age. The r-. also extremely courtequs, not ladies, but to each other, 2 ere to Drive vo the Cities. The Chicago Tribune: directs atten- ticn to the interesting fact that “while the population of the country at large has increased about 20 per cent during ute last decade, the» three principal centers of population, New York, Chi- eago and Philadelphia, have gained 44 per cent.” ‘The cities will continue to grow so long as they offer employment and livelihood to increasing popula- tion. It all turns cn employment, When that ceases to increase the growth of the Cities will cease, and will not be forced by mere desire on the part of persons in the country to ee in the town, ret Spokesman~ of | - ALASKA FLOWERS, _A Well-Known ‘Lover of, Nature Tetls Us About Them, John Burroughs, the well-knowa. the Country Magazine a trip that he made to Alaska. Among other things he says: “But we all climbed the mighty emerald billow that rose from the rear of the village, some of us re- peatedly. irom the ship it looked as smooth as a meadow, but the climber soon found himself knee-deep in ferns, grasses and a score of flowering plants, and now and then pushing through a patch of alders as high as his bead, He could not go far before his hands would be full of flowers, blue predomi- nating. The wild geranium here is light blue, and it tinged the slopes as daisies and buttercups do at home. Near the summit there were patches of most exquisite forget-me-nots, of a pure, delicate hue with a yellow cen- ter. They grew to the height of a foot, and a handful of them looked like something just caught out of the sky above. Here, too, were a small, délicate Jlady’s-slipper, pale yellow striped with maroon, and a: pretty dwarf rhododendron, its large purple flower sitting upon the moss ond lichen. Th@ climber also waded through patches of lupine, and put his feet among bluebells, Jacob’s-ladder, iris, saxifrage, cas$iopes and many others, The song birds that attracted eur notice were the golden-crowned sparrow and the little hermit thrush. The golden crown hada pecuilarly piercing, plaintive song, very simple, but very appealing. There were only three notes, but "they were from out the depths of the bird’s soul. In them was all the burden of the mystery and pathos of life. : INCORRECT NAMES. Game Birds of America Misnamed by Hunters. It is remarkable that mest of the game birds in the United States aro known by names which are not honest- ly theirs. A man talks of going quail shooting or pheasant shooting. Neither }of these birds is native to America, and the sportsman means he is going after partridges and rouse. — There are indeed some pheasant presorves in the country, but in spite of assertions to the contrary the quail does not live on the North American continent, ac- | cording to the authority of D. G. Bi- liott in Outing. In the first place, quail are much smailer than partridges. The main differences, however, between the two much-confised’ birds are: The bill of the true quail is small, weak, entirely different from the strong bill lof the English partridges and of our own “Bob White.” and the groove of the nostril is mostly feathered. The nostril of the American “quail’’—really rertridge—is~ uncovered. _Partridgo legs are scaly and spurred, while | quails’ legs are never so adorned. The quail’s tail is short, the feath soft and light and not half so long as the wing. The partridge’s tail has from sixteen to eighteen feathers and is de- cidedly stiff. All the birds here gen- erally called quail, from the Bob Whites, the Mecssena quail, the crested and plumed quail of the southwest, to those of the Pacific: coast, partridges, as will be found by judging them scientific The ruffed grouse rarely receives its correct name, being called pa rtricge or pheasant, accord- ing to locality. T. ouse is known by the fact that its legs are always completely or partially feathered over. The pariridge never has feathers on its 1 Girl Teamns Aro Numerous. . New Jersey has come to the front with a protuct ‘ y its own. It is nething. i ale tramp, dressed in bey’s cu: rides on f t coming com: Robinson of P> from the ecu G Trenton on $3 fine, the money hav e by tele- Ses”. ig She was cetective and graph from Pb! a girl about lo arrested by a ‘ood ver str t around her waist, questioned | prompt) She re- | fused to said she was trying to resch th {uncle in New B: | con ted her | for thirty days | fine imposed. i The justice ne quarry cofauit of the $3 is the third girl | to the cecal chutes within a few days, The Homo Interest of Children, bly children are the ets cn which we build our ure of the fuiure, but it | ' should’ be held axiomatic in ail such a work t) tac home idea | Unguesu | clearest 4 , social ref | is inseparable from. every problem into enters, }which ehild. life child's life from how wretched his home, no matter how worthy the est pe act, and you have made the door litt | dividnal'a seat of @ 1 Neu set him at odds with the life {a which j resides his origin and support; you | have created in him a social tendency that threatens our political constitu- tions.—Harper’s Bazar. Separate a no mattcr in Colonel Cochrane's Record. Colonel Henry Clay Cochrave, who has been ordered from his pest, at the Boston navy yard to the commend of the marine forces in China, is a Penn- sylvanian -by .birth, He has seen | thirty-cight years’ service in the corps, and | is one of the veterans in the serv- ice. He’ received his ee in the early part of the civi bay en pier A cath co es have arzested at i | | | tho tendency. to Dili } and wes without a cent. ; to borrow money, but are really | 0 first one side and tt cay at | small, | vider <d to cix tramps. | is here that the skill of ad a large revol- | war, and | the front. Beauti participated in the battle of Mobile| are set to many of them, [t Improves Health of Childben and Pre vents Tuberculosis. No dietetic reform would be more bird lover and naturalist, describes in | conducive to improve health among ehildren, and especially to the pre- vention of tuberculosis, than an in- crease in the consuimpticn of butter, says an exchange. Our children are trained to take butter with great re- straint, and are told that it is greedy and extrevagant to take much of it. It is regarded as a luxury, and as giv- ing a relish to bread rather than in itself a most important article of food. Even in_private families of the weaith- ier classes these rules prevail at ta- ble, and at schools and at public board- Ing establishments they receive strong ied reinforcements from economical - mo- tives. Minute allowances of butter are served out ta those who would gladly consume five times tke quantity. ‘Where the house income makes this a matter of necessity there is little more to be said than that it is often a costly economy. Ti bled health m2; easily entail a far Weavler ex than a more liberal breakfast w have done. Ccd liver .oil co: than butter, and it is, besides, often not regorted to until too late. In. stead of restricting a child’s consump- tion of butter, encourage it. Let the limit be the power of stion and Mot children maybe allowed to follow their own inclinations and will not take more than is good for them. The but- ter should be of tho best, and takea cold. Bread, dry toast, biscuits, po- tatoes and rice are good vehicles, Children well supplied with butter feel | the cold less-than others, and resist influenza better. They do not “cz ten cold” so easily. In speaking of dren, I by, no stat tend to exciut> other ages, csy Grown-up perso ‘ er animal fats more frecly than most. chil- dren do, and are, busid lowed mush freer selection as to quailly and quaa- tity. Hes hs HINDOO BORROWL Ciuims Ke Has Returned 82 Postal Card. Among the guesis at the Ral by gha few days ago was a well-educated and} pleasant-mannered son of India. He had been at the hotel several times be- fore, always ordered the best, and paid his bills Wwithovt coniplaint. On_ this ovcasion he paid for his tOem in ad- vance and seemed to have plenty ef money. When he was ready to depart, however, he confided to Clerk B. A. Smith that he had lost his pocketbook He didn’t as a he men- tioned that he had friends in Palti- more who would. heip him Mr. Smith offered to lend him a couple of dol- jars. The Hindo was profuse in his thanks and promiscd, to return the money as soon as he reathed>-"the Maryland city. Yesterday Mr. Smith received a postal card from the man in Indla, ‘upon which written: “I hergwith send you very much. noble skindn a was 2. I appreciate Pi Me, the cther t it in two, ef the card, end finally ep but could find no trace of the §2. is now wondering if the Hindoo possessed of an-abnormaliy developed | bump of humor, or whether one of those Indian tricks cf magic fs being performed.. The latter theory is the more inviting, and he hes placed the card-in a glass case and is wat 3 it closely to see if by some my: ous means it will not transform itself into a $2 note, payable at the treasury of the United States.—W ten Post. Ox Races tn Germa An ox race is held annva of the provine The entry fee f e but each ox entered mu ridden b, is to have ¢ whip or spurs and he must ride animal bareback and 4 upon his voice to gui er com 2s into. play,.as everythi ds the training of the ox and the ab of the owner to direct its moveme despite the distracting noises cf other competitors and spectators. As the oxen do not race on a track to direct them is no easy Nisbet The rider who can fored his lumbering steed to go\in a straight line is cer- tain to win. & Superstitious Mother's Cro _A curious case of gross say which led to the practice ef barbarev cruelty to a little boy, “was revea the other day in a iocal police aust court in British Moats A woman named Ashby of Uitvlugt, a sugar es- tate, the defendant in the e cas2, stated] that she had dreamed of @ her little son of certain fau. sisted of boiling an egg aad it while still hot into boy's. hands. Next morning she pr the suggestion of her drean cution. .When the egz w. compelled the unfortunate It eon- ehitd elasp his hands t{ghtiy over it, the inevitable result being that the pik of his hands were badly burned. — Women's White Silk Wats. White si:k, made in fite, elose Kicks, with a scroliwork cffect in tucks, sev across, the front of the waist, gives) something like a deep yoke effect, the seroll ornamented with very tiny sh- ver beads. There is an invisibte fast- ening under the arnt and on top of the shoulder. Many of the waists fasten | in this way, a plain effect to insertions ot tla fect is plain and He | vi ont way to cure | putting’! und Receiver of this office at. Duluth, "| Mernid-Roview, May. Aneust 1. A Good Cough Medicine. _ It speaks well for” Chatuberlain’s Cough Remedy when druggists us it their own families in’ preference to any other. ‘‘I bave sold .Chamber Jains’s Cough Remedy for the past- five years with complete satisfaction to myself and customers,” says Drug- gist J. Goldsmith, Van Etten, N. Y. “T have always used it in my own family both for ordinary coughs and colds and for the cough following la Ja grippe, and find it very efficacious.” For, sale by the Itasca Mercantile Co. MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE. Wotice is hereby given} That default has been made in the conditions of that certain ‘mortgage daly erepuicd und delivered by Maggie E. Martin 1 Hugh BE. frre her husband, Mortwix to Julia S, Lovejoy, © zee, date ‘the 12th day of duly, Iss. with power of sale therein con- tanned. duly recorded in the office of the Re- ister of In und for the county of tasea, Minnesota, on the iith day of July. 184‘at 10 o'clock, A. M.. in book B of mortgages, on puge 370, which mor e With the debt thereby secured was duly assigned by an instrament in. writing dated the sth day of February, 1901, to Kenneth A. M Donald, the unde: ignied, which assi was duly recorded in the office of the - ter of Deeds in and for state of Minnesota, on the 28th ar, 4001, in book Hof mort h default bus continued vo by the failure and negi orto make payment of the d interest b which by i onthe izth secured, nd payable ‘ot sul y Th “~ morta: e has elec hereby does clect todeclare the whol pal sum of suid mortgage due and pa, the date of tis notive, under the te und the pow conditions of sxid mortg: sale therein conta ae and whereas. there is med to be due and pay- of this notice the sum of a iu 50-100 dol- ally due and lo atthe date id mortguge, by 3. the power of nd no" eee or ise, has been in- stituted te cured by said | mortgage, orauny | Now. therefore, notice is hereby given, that tue of the toon of sale contained in rige.and pursuant to the statute - Mnade and provide e foreclosed by aw vod In and conv p. LO- wit? Me west quarter (44), t southweste Et and the south ust quarter (4) n township six- by-eight (an) ” 5 fourth St bidder for ix hundred and s: fi and interest hty-four dollars and und twenty-iive doll rs) 2 id mort~ e disburse- within one year frou the day of ‘ovidad. by fnw. DONALD. L Hi. Corcoran. Mortzazee. Attorney for Assiznee eof M yugee, Dut } Herald-Rev Jane 18,15,22,29,J al 6 Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for Publication. United Siates Land Office. Duluth, Minn. May 2 Notice is hereby given th. with the prov dune 3. bis. timber lands in th gon, Nevada and extended to all of August 4, 1s Superior, co consin, | itled “An state: of West sworn stateme ae No. P of the Ns of NW} ve of NER of sec~ tion No. 17. i Gln. range Nes ow that the for i eee: or and-iisrelvor: arunis afice i the 19th Resist tuth, Minn ets On Lond water. Minn Wis. of of West nas claiming adversely ‘ies hinds are requested to file thelr claims'In this office on or beard suld-i9th day of August. 1991, Wa. B.C Hera!d-Review, May 25, August 1i. Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. Nation For Publication, tural purposes, and to sid land before er of this offlee ut y._the loth “day of witnesses: J ohn Li Gocietn jthe ie Daiuth August. 19 levine. i e' 0 Tangs are requested to file on or before said ‘Aligust, 101. Wa. E. CULKIN, Register. 1%. | isa ay. 2 Herald-Revi | Timber Land Act, June &, 1878. Notice“for Publication. United States Land Office. Duinth. 2 May 22nd. 1902, is hereby giy. fe compliance: he previsions of the act of Congress of , ISS. entitled “An act forthe sale of nts in th! f California, Ore- and Wash: we atl ces u sworn ot the purchase of | thes of YM of Seetion No. 9,in Township No. 6 apieeke Ne.25 Wy i offer: pros ito show that the land sought a timber or stone than lish ister itt, jon Monday. the 1th day of August, i901. H peices withiawe: bok: evi e sale and to esi | his claim to said Tasid before, the Re ' Minne; John Ey ovine of Minons: ly it Goudein’ of | Mivong, | Partelow it of West Superior, Wis. Anyand all persous claiming adversely the aboy eseribed Ls ims in this oflice en or before said of August, 1901. Wat. BE. Cenay, Register. D* GEO. C. GILBERT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Cable’s Meat Market, ~ . GRAND RAPIDS. - tie wha: LAW. ‘Onice over ds ure requested to tile | ay tare