Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, August 24, 1901, Page 1

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sealing —" e Grand Uapidss Herald Revise. MINNESOTA HISTORICAL Sq j 4d a Aes Vor X.—No 4. Granp Rapips, ITASCA Country, Minn., SaturDay, AUGUST 24, Igor. Two Do.tiars a YEAR, —==— -aahhhlehldeeldddedaaeieeeednananeienindeeaeheenaaaadeiaitntee MORE ROOM WANTED. Closing out our Summer wash Goods extra values for the money: Ladies’ Cotton Hose, good value, 15¢ pair * better value, 20c “ spectal value, 25¢ patr LADIES’ SHIRT WAISTS We are closing outat a price to make room for Fall Goods. “ “ Come in tf your are in need. Carpets, Rugs & Art'Squares. // you contemplate putting in new Carpets this Fall it will pay you to come in and investigate, our stock ts the best tn the city and our values well worth To Keep Down Smallpox A meeting of the boards of health of Wisconsin and Minnesota was held in Duluth this week to disctss plans for controleing the smallpox epidemic,in the two states, and par- ticularly in the logging camps, dur- ing the coming winter. Lumbermen had been invited to attend the meet- ing, and a number were present. They expressed their willingness to do all in their powder that was reas- onable, to assist in the work. The Minnesota board of health had pro- positions to make as follows: that ! the lumbermen should not pay off the men when they are taken sich, but that they should build detention hos- pitals at the camps where the men could remain until their cases had been diagnosed; vaccination or im- munity by previous sickness must be shown before aman is hired; that old camps that are not to be used again, and where there had been smallpox should be burned, and new camps thoroughly fumigated. They also wanted inspectors all, through the lumbering regions to see that these ruJes were properly carried out. There is nothing very unreasonable in these propositions, though one or two of them might cause trouble if enforced to the letter. The first, re- the money, a fact that the Goods themselves will dem- Our Rug as- sortment is the choicest at popular prices. Size 32256 at $450. Agents sell this Rug for $7.00 and $3.00, we can satisfy you as to price and quality. onstrate to you when you see them quiring the lumbermen to withhold the pay of the men until their disease is dsagnosed, might cause trouble for the employers, under the provisions ofthe McCarthy law, if the men de- manded their pay. The demanding of evidence of vaccination or immu- Art Squares--Special values in choice patterns cheapest than Carpet. sed Mercantile Go, FSOOCSSAM IE TKS SE SHTHEHSSSSS SHAK SSSHSS ASS SS Se ee BMSLSLOLSLSLLVTESECOSSISLSISOVSNE eee ee err ri rr iiirreriirrrri ttt tit tt ttt ttt tty ttt isihachacha chasis checks thashaclacachesheshasheshiichesheshishicheceshedhetherioshshe.lsthethedhedhedhedededehishithsddidsedododddsdedadubdadod bobcat S81 Meg ey We cannot 4 Tell a lie. We did it with our little hatchet. We didn't cut the cherry tree, however. We have simply cut the prices on ail our gasoline y, stoves, so that everybody @ can now afford to buy one. How much nicer, cheap" % er and cooler it is to cook wilh a gasoline stove, than® to roast yourself to death ¥ m4 Se S82 ST over a big wood stove No bother to yet meals in the summer tinfe, now. Simply tutchaw match to it and your fire isstarted, No danger; If you are interested im gascline or oil stoves, let us show you our ® Celebrated Blue Flame Wickless line’ i) o Cc 4 im and @ 17 @ ; OTIS Il ANd SSS 1S. as W.d& A. DB. Powers. ; @%ele2e2 S268 ce RE ee ee ae Re ae ate ae ae ate a ae ae ee eae ae eae ae ae ae Me ae Se a ee ssachacadach dadatiticichetincicndedietndee™ 4 A Favorite Resort for refreshments and were may be seen and heard one of the largest phonographs in th > world is at JOHN OREILLY’S Sample Room “The Northern.” Here you will find the finest whiskeys ever distilied. including all the most famous aia: brands. Agent for the celebrate Nonpareil Rye Whiskey, NORTHERN CAFE In connection—open day and night. All delicac' served at all hours. of the season H.?. Clough the famous chef, has charge of restaurant. JOHN O’REILLY, Proprietor. Ee EI A ae ea Ea a ae ae ae ae ae a ee Ee eae a eae ee ee a ea aaa ——————— SWSLSLVSNSVSLSSSLSVSLSLOL* / Fallan¢ Winter Goods A EE ee a ae a ee ee a ea eae ea a a ae a SRA Re Ee ee ee ee ea ae a eae a ae aaa Having received a new Stockef Fall & Winter Suitings Iam now prepared to give my customers the benefit of these Choice Goods which were purchased at Right Prices, First-Class Workmanship Guaranteed. nity by reason of previous sickness ought to be enforced, but with the prospects for a scarcity of help in the woods the coming winter the desire to get men will probably lead to over- looking of this rule.’ The need of men may be greater than the fear of smallpox. However, s-¢me measures should be taken to reduce the danger of the spread of the disease. Accord- ing to the figures of the state board of health, there were 6,200 cases of smallpox in the state last year, only twenty-nine of which were fatal. i | stores up in its roots, and this in turn, depends upon the amount of foliage it has in the summer and fall. To crop off this foliage would be like starving a calf to save milk, and the temporary gain would be more than offset by the much reduced yield of hay. Anotherserious mistake is to leave the tame meadow seeded down too long. When the grass is sown among stumps and the process of plowing is a laborious one, the temptation to do so is great. But wherever possiblé, sod should he broken at theend of two, or at most three years. Red clover will usually produce two crops the year after sowing, but the following year will give a very light yield, if any. Timothy if sown with the clover will yield well the second year, or that following the clover. But the third year’s crop will usually show a falling oft, which will be more pronounced each suc- ceeding year. The soil needs the gtass roots, and good crops of grain or corn grow on a sod, turned under. This can then be seeded down again, and maximum yields obtained. Short rotations of 3 dr 4 vears, with two years to grass will maintain the fertility and yields much better than permanent mead- ows and continuous cropping to grain or potatocs. Herman H. Cuapman, ANOTHER PULP MILL Hon. C. J. Rockwood, of Minneapolis, is Making Progress, Hon. C. J. Rockwood, of Minnea- polis, was in Kouchiching last week in the interest of a scheme to gain control of the water power in Rainy River on the American side and the erection uf a paper mill. Mr. Rock- wood expresses a hope that the diffi- culties which have faced his com- pany are abuut over. He said that But unless checked it is likely to be- come more dangerous, and- proper measures for: controling it cannot be taken too soon.—Mississippi Valley Lumbermen. * “Si Perkins”? “Si Perkins,” the celebrated sural drama, is billed to appear at Village hall on next Tuesday Aug. 27. Judg- ing from the flattering notices which the company has received from the press in the cities which ‘Si’? has visited, the prospect for fun on the above date is good. Like all plays of the ‘‘Rube” order, ‘‘Si Perkins” pos- sesses a large budget of good, whole- some fun;the Yankee wit is so woven into the dramatic lines that the auditor is one minute laughing with honest-hearted ‘Si’ and the next his eyes are brimming over with sym- pathetic tears. No class of dramatic productions appeal so strongly to the heart as those of the rural order. Every American is familiar with the Yankee nature. Shrewd, witty and honest, he possesses a charm of per- sonality which is particularly attrac- tive; and, when upon the mimic stage we can see his prototype, ’tis little wonder thatsuch pieces as “Si Per- kins” receive a liberal patronage from American playgoers. The pres- ent company have for sume seven seasons presented the play, and it goes without saying a perfect por- trayal will be witnessed. Reserved seats for sale at Itasca Mercantile company’s store. Managemeat of Tame Meadows. The acreage sown to tame grasses in this section 1s yet small, but is rapidly increasing. As new districts are opened up. the supply of wild or marshland hay is not always equal tothe demand. And when once the land is cleared so as to allow machi- nerv to be used, tame hay can be more cheaply handled. Added to this clover makes a much more valuable stock food than wild hay, and its wondertul adaptability to this sec- tion has been repeatedly demon strated on the experiment farm and elsewhere. But in growing tame hay many make serious mistakes, one of the most com:non and injurious of which is close pasturing of the new grass the same fall that it is sown. Ina good season like the present one, clover will make a large growth the first year and would furnish quite a large quantity of pasturage. But at this age theclover or timothy plant is quite feeble. Its ability to winter over safely, and its prodac- tive power the following season, will the chief trouble now is that of get- ting satisfactory terms from the On- tario government. It is the inten- tion of this Minneapolis company to manufacture the wood into paper pulp on the Canadian side, at Ft. Francis, and then, right across the river, at Koochiching, to make the pulp into paper. “JI have been in the drug business fortwerity years and have sold most all kinds of the proprietary medicines of any note. Among the entire hst I have never found anything to equal to Chamberlain’s Colic, Colera and Diarrhoea Remedy for all stomach and bowel troubles,” says O. W. Wakefield, of Columbas Ga. ‘T'his remedy cured two severe cases of chol- era morbus in my family and I have recommended and sold hundreds of bottles of it to my costomers to their satisfaction. It affordsa quick and sure cure ina pleasant form. No family should be without it. I keep it m my house all the time.” For sale by Itasca Mercantile Company. Order to Ecamine Account, etc. STATE OF MINNESOTA, { iS. County OF Trasca. In Prabate Court,--Special term August 21, -In the matter of the estate of Peter Goslin, deceased; On reading and filing the petition of Adolph Hirechman, administraitor of the estat of Peter Goslin, deceased, representing among other things that ho has fully administ- ered said estate. and praying thet a time and lace be fixed for exumin2ng and allowing tis final account of administration, and for the assignment of the residue of said estate to.the persons entitled thereto: It is ordered that the said account be ex- amined, and petition heard, by the Judge of tiis court on Monday, the sixteenth day of September, A. D. 190}, at 10 o'clock a.m., at the Probaie court room in the court house in Grand Rapids, in said county. And it is further ordered that notice there- of be given to all persons interested by pub- lishing a copy of this order for three succdss- ive weeks, once in each week. prior to said day of hearing, in the Grand Kapids Herald Review a legal newspaper printed aad pub- al lished in-said county. By the Court, JOHN L. BARNARD Judge of Probate. CLOTHING We wish tocall your attention tothe fact that we hav in a complete line of Men’s, Boy’s and Child ren’s Fall and Winter Clothing. Buy one of our “Miller’s Perfect Guarauteed All Wool Suits. Fitting” tirer Satisfaction or Money Refunded. HENRY HUGHES & C0. Notice of Expiration of Redemption. STATE OF MINNESOTA, Ttasca County. To W. H. Fioyd, You are hereby fotified that pursuant to a real estate tax judgment. entered in the Distries court in and for said County of Itasca. in the State of Minnesota. on the 2ist day of March, A. D. 1900, in proceedings to enforce the payment of tuxes upon real estate which bec: delinquent in and prior to the year 1897, pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 322 of the Gen. eral Laws of the State of Minnesota, for the year 1899, the following described real estate. as. sessed in your name, situate in the County of Itasca and State of Minnesota, to-wit: Auditor's Office, Itasca County, Minn, = ;Avounty Avount DESCRIPTION. 3 Years _||A‘ount |lor ‘Sub|itequ 2 | 2] g || Number |} inclusive /lofeach ||so que't|| to Re: —_ ——|| 3 a a ol for which || Tract || Delin- |} deem S| e138 Acres Taxos id |} quent || Rach Subdivision of See became |} “far || Raxes || Tract Section. a -—.—__||delinquent lena Acres | 100t,s is Wilson & Gillispie'sAdd|| 13 | 4 1887-94-1895 To Grand Rapids. »...- ul 4 1587-04-1895| eee ey ae Le | Total amounts........ was on the 28th day of May. 1900, sold for the ye1rs hereinabove stated, for the sums set oppo” site each description as above stated, said sums being the highest bids :eceived therefor, and that the amount r to redeem said lands from said sale, exclusive of the costs to accrue for the service of this Notice, is the sum set down in the right hand column opposite each description. as above set forth, with interest thereon at the rate of one per cent per month from the date of this Notice, and that the time for th» redemption of said. leans from said sale will expire sixty days after the service of this Notice a d proof of the service thereof is filed in my office, fener my hand and official seal this 20th day of July. 1901. SEAL ss E, J, FARRELL. Auditor, Itasgu County, Minnesota. Se Notice of Expiration of Redemption, STATE OF MINNESOTA, ; Auditor's Office, Itasca County, Minn, County OF Irasca. To John Cooper You are hereby notified that pursuant toa real ostate tax judgment, extere District Court in and for said County of Itasca, in the state of ions eel thesise aa March, A. D. 1900, in proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes upon real estate which be- came delinquent in and prior to the year 1897, pursuant to the provisions of chapter 32 of the General Laws of the state of Minnesota. for the year 1899, the following described rea} estate assessed in your name, situate in the county of Itasca, and state of Minnesota,to-wit: am" : Year: "t | am’ pescripTion. | ¢ | =] 3 | Numberot | inclusive | éach | of dex [eene? g12|8 Acres. for which| tract |linqu't| deem e|2|¢8 Taxes | sold | Tax | ‘each Ble |e -—--——-| became Subdivision of Section. a Acres. | 100¢n delingu'nt SE of SEM 10 | 86 | 27 | 40 + (tee torsos| a0 NEM of SBS 10 | 56 wo | 1804 vo 1802] 13 | 5 NW of SW u| | a] @ } 1804 to 1895] 24 Total amounts Sommonsy STATE OF MINNESOTA, \ bs ‘ss. County OF Irasca, The stite of Minnesota to Thomas King, d :fendant; You are hereby summoned to be and appear before the undersigned, one of the justices of the peace in and four said county on the 13th day of September, A. D. 1901, at 10 o’clock‘in the iorenoon of said day, at my office in the village of Grand Rapids, in said county to answer to the complaint of Frank Grant. plaintiff, in a civil action wherein the claims the sum of Lge three 50-10 , ($43 50) with interest thereon from the 6th day of August, 1901, at the rateof Six per cent per annum.” Shoulé you fail to | appear at the time and place aforesaid judg- | ment will be rendered aqtiny you upon the evidence adduced by said plaintiff, for such sum as he shall show himself intitied to. Given under my hand this 16th day of A it, A, D. 1001. — H.S, HUSON, Justice of the Peace. Order a quart or pint of nice Du- j luth ice cream from Glovers’ for your Sunday dinner, and they wyll delyer it at the opportune time, wis on the 26th day of May, 1900, sold for the years herein above stated, for the sums set op- posite each description as above stated, said sums being the hignest bids received therefor and that the amount required to redeem said lands from said sale, exclusive of the costs to accrue for the service of this notice, is the sum set down in the right hand column 6p- posite each description, as above set forth, with interest thereon at the rate of one per cent per month from the date of this notice, and that the time forthe redemption of said lands ren ao Ge = ex ney days after the service of this notice and proof of the service thereof is. jm my of a Witness my hand and official seal this 10th day of July, 1901. (SEAL; Herald-Review, Aug, 3, 10, 17. eee EEe———————————_—_————— Messrs Judd and Bnnk have now pace & SPEAR, opened their photo tent for business and are prepared to do as good work ATTORNEYS AT LAW as you can get anywhere in the north | fice over Itasca Mercantile Meat Markes west, at prices ranging from $1.50 to GRAND RAPIDS $6.00 per dozen. Their apparatus is * furnisned with the finest leases known to modern optical science. These gentlemen will remain here until the first of August. Visit them and look over their line of photo pins. They guarantee you strictly fisrt-class work E. J. FARRELL, County Auditor, Itasca County, Minn. R. DONOHUE, ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAND RAPIDS,

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