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| et ~~ i PPAR 0 SRP A Eee Scomteces ieee | SGOT ST MAAEN HRY 2 USE OF BUTTER. dt Improves Health of Children aad Pre vents Tuberculosis, No dietetic reform would be more conducive to improve health among children, and especially to the pre- vention of tuberculosis, than an in- crease in the consumption of butter, says an exchange. Our children are trained to take butter with great ro- straint, and are told that it is greedy agant to take much of it. rded as a luxury, and as giv- | ing a relish to bread rather than in itself a most important article of foo. Even in private families of the wealth- ier classes these rules vall at ta- ble, and at schools and at public board- Ing establishments they receive strong reinforcements from economical mo- tives, Minute allowances of butter are served out to those who would gladly consume five times the 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. Enfeebled hea!th may easily entail a far heavier expense than a more liberal breakfast would have done. Cod liver oil costs more than butter, and it is, besides, oftea hot resorted to until too late. In- stead of restricting a child’s consump- tion of butter, encourage it. Let the limit be the power of digestion and | the tendency to ousness. Mo-t | children maybe allowed to follow their | own inclinations and will not take | more than is good for them. The but- | ter should be of the best, and taken | cold. Bread, dry toast, suits, po- tatoes and rice good vehicles, Children well supplied with butter feel the cold less than others, and resist influenza better. They do not “catch cold” so easily. In speaking of ehil- dren, I by no means intend to exclude other 2s, especially young adults. Grown-up persons, however, take other animal fats more freely than most chil- dren do, and are, besides, allowed much freer selection as to quality and quan- tity. HINDOO BORROWER. Claims He Mus Returned $2 by Postal Card. Among the guests at the Raleigh a 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 without complaint. On this occasion he paid for his recom in ad- vance and seemed to have plenty of money. When he was ready to depart, however, he confided to Clerk B. A. Smith that he had lost his pocketbook and was without a cent. He didn’t ask | to borrow money, but -vhen he mwen- | tioned that he had friends in Ralti- more who wou'd help him Mr. Smith ered to lend him a couple of dol- io was profuse in his ed to return the he reached the day Mr. Smith da postal ¢ a, upon w ewith send yo very much i noble ki mith looked on first one side and then on the othe? of the card, and finatly split it in two, but could find no trace of the $: ig is now wonéering if the ndoo is sed cf an abnormally developed | bump of ether one of those Ind ks of magic is being perfo: The latter theory is the more inviting, and he has placed the card in a glass case and is watching it closely to see if by some mysterious means it will not transform itself into | a $2 note, payable at the treasury of | the United States.—Washington Post. Than's e your most Ox Races in Germany, An ox race is held annually in many of the provincial districts of Germany. The entry fee for the race is very | small, but eaca ox entered must be ridden by its owner. Furtherniore, the rider is not allowed to have either whip or spurs and he must ride his animal bareback and depend entirely upon his voice to guide the bea It is here that the skill of the rider comes into play, as everything depends on the training of the ox and the ability of the owner to direct its movements, despite the distracting noises of the other competitors and spectators. As the oxen do not race on a track to direct them is no easy matter. The rider who can force his lumbering steed to go in a straight line is cer- tain to win. Superstitious Mother's Cruelty. A curious case of gross superstition, which led to the practice of Larbarous cruelty to a little boy, was revealed the other day in a local police court court in British Guiana. A woman named Ashby of Uitvlugt, a sugar es- tate, the defendant in the case, stated that she had dreamed‘of a way to cure her little son of certain faults. It con- sisted of boiling an egg aud putting it while still hot into the boy’s hands. Next morning she proceeded to put the suggestion of her dream into exe- cution. When the egg was boiled she compelled the unfortunate child to clasp his bands tightly over it, the inevitable result being that the palms of his hands were badly burned. Women's White Silk Watsts, White siik, made in fine, close tucks, with a scrollwork effect in tucks, set across the front of the waist, gives something like a deep yoke effect, the scroll ornamented with vary tiny sil- yer beads. There is an invisible fast- ening under the arm and on top of the shoulder. Many of the waists fasten jn this way, and give plain effect to the front. Beautiful insertions of lace are set to many of them, but the ef- | after partridges | committed her to the stone ALASKA FLOWERS. A Well-Known Lover of Nature Tells Us About Them. John Burroughs, the well-known bird lover and naturalist, describes in 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. From 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 head. 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 2s daisies and buttereups 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 cut of the sky above. Here, too, were a small, delicate lady’s-slipper, pale yellow striped with maroon, and a pretty dwarf rhododendron, its large purple flower sitting upon the moss and lichen. The climber also waded through patches of lupine, and put his feet among bluebells, Jacob’s-laddcr, iris, saxifrage, cassiopes and many others. The song birds that attracted our notice were the golden-crowned sparrow and the little hermit thrush. The golden crown had a peculiarly 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 most of the game birds in the United States are 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 and grouse. There are indeed some pheasant preserves in | the country, but in spite of assertions to the contrary the quail dces not iive on the North American continent, ac- cording to the authority of D. G. E! Nott in Outing. In the first place, quaii are much smaller than partridges. The main differences, however, between the two much-confused birds are: The “ill of the true quail is small, weak, entirely different from the strong bill cf 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 reitridge—is uncovered. Partridge legs are scaly and_ spurred, while quails’ Iegs are never so adorned. The quail’s tail is short, the feathers 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 Messena quail, the crested and plumed quail of the southwest, to hose of the Pacific coast, are zeally partridges, as will be found by judging hem scientifically. The ruffed grouse rerely receives its correct name, being called partridge or pheasant, accord- ing to locality. The grouse is knowrz, by the fact that its legs are always completely or partially feathered over. The partridge never has feathers on its legs. Girl Tramps Are Numerons. New Jeisey has come to the front with a product entirely its own. It 1s nothing less than the female tramp dressed in boy's clothing and stealing rides on freight trains, She is be coming common. Recently ‘“James’ Robinson of Philadeiphia was released from the county correction farm at Trenton on payment of a $3 fine, the money having becn sent here by tele- graph from Philadelphia. “James” iz a girl about 16 years old. She was arrested by a railroad detective and | sent to the farm chained to six tramps. When captured she had a large revol- ver strapped to a belt around her waist, and upon being questioned promptly admitted her sex. She re fused to give her name, but said she was trying to reach the home of her uncie in New Brunswick. The justice quarry for thirty days in defauit of the $3 fine imposed. This is the third girl tramp the detectives have arrested at the coal chutes within a few days, The Home Interest of Children, Unquestionably children are the clearest facts on which we build our social structure of the future, but it should be held axiomatic in all such social reform work that the home idea is inseparable from every problem into which child life enters. Separate a child’s life from his home, no matter how wretched his home, no matter how worthy the interest in the abstract, and you have made the poor little in- dividual a seat of discord. You have set him at odds with the life in which resides his origin and support; you have created in him a social tendency that threatens our political constitu- tions.—Harper’s Bazar. Colonel Cochrane's Record. Colonel Henry Clay Cochrane, who tas been ordered from his post at the Boston navy yard to the command of | the marine forces in China, is a Penn- d simple. fect is plain an ax 299 eylvanian by birth. He has~ seen thirty-eight years’ service in the corps, and is one of the veterans in the serv- ice. He received his appointment in the early part of the civil war, and participated in the battle of Mobile bay end other engagements. QUEEN OF HOLLAND. No Friends of Her Own Age in the Royat Fm ly. Wilhelmina, the young queen of Hol- land, is very pretty, though her beauty threatens in future years to run on somewhat massive lines. Her admiring subjects gaze at her, and then murmur to an acquiescent neighborhood, “Isn’t she pretty?” The young queen has fine eyes, a clear complexion and a glorious tinge of rose-pink in her cheeks, Then her hair is the rich brown that painters love, and there is plenty of it. Wil- helm:oa has a reputation for dignity, but not long ago she enjoyed hers-:f so much af a court ball, waltzing with the energy of a healthy girl who has temporarily forgotten she is a queen and only remembers she is young and happy, that a coil of her hair fell down and had to be pinned up again by a lady-in-vaiting. This little incident set all tongues wagging. It was exaggerated and commented upon all over Holland with an anxiety only abated by the dis- covery that the queen’s partner in the dance had been her uncle, her moth- er’s brother, the Prince of Waldeck- Pyrmont. This relative and his wife, who are both still young, are the only people with whom Wilhelmina really fraternizes in a natural jolly way. She has no friends of her own age, and in Holland the royal family is limited to a very small circle. The two or three princes and princesses available are middle-aged, dowdy, and dull. Yet Wilhelmina obviously enjoys her “splendid isloation.” She gave every- one to understand, on her accession, that she liked independence, and in- tended to preserve it as long as pos- sible. Fun with Rabbernecks. In front of a five-story Main street block there was the usual crowd of passersby. A heavily loaded electric car was just coming along. Suddenly a man rushed out from a store in the block into the middle of the strect. Gazing up to the top story, he cried out: “You'll fall, you will certainly fall.” Everybody in sight stopped and gazed into the air. Those who were on the wrong side of the electric car clambered over’ te the right side to see their share. And there was noth- ing to see. No one was about to fall from the fifth floor; in fact, there was no one to be seen there. It was all a bluff, and the wicked bluffer hurried away to escape the vengeance of the bluffed.—Worcester Spv. MRR TER RE ae oe a as : Grand Rapids, - - Minn. i at Wicker turni- COMFORTABLE, ture is the COOL, ideal furni- It looks delight- fully cool and it is cool. These are not cheaply made goods which will go to pieces iu a short time, but excellent furniture, beautiful, strong and lasting. Liss} CHEAP. for summer. See our new EXTENSION TABLES, PARLOR STANDS, ete. They speak for themselves. Ts GEO. F, KREMER, 2 anes eT Se ee A. B. CLAIR, Register of Deeds of Itasca County Mineral Pine ana Farming Lands Pie Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. COUNTY AND VILLAGE OFFICERS COUNTY, E. J. Farrel of Court. Judge of Probate Surveyor. ce Coroner Russell Supt. of Schoois. Booth COMMISSIONERS. District . 1. (Chairm: et President . : D. M. Gunn 5 Jonnell Trustees ... - 35.4. Decker U1. Rassmussen Recorder Fred A. King ‘Treasurer C, BR. Aiken Attorney ¢ t St p CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. E. P. Crane, pastor. ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH—Rev. ©. V. Gamuache, pastor. M. E. CHURCH—Rev. J. ©. Hartley. pastor. SECRET SOCIETIES. ITASCA LODGE A... F..& A. meets the first and third Frid; month at K. P. hall. E.J. Lurner, Sec’y, O. L. Marner. W. M. GRAND RAPIDS LODGE T. 0.0. F, No. I8t: meets every Wednesday night at Odd Fellows hal JOHN COSTELLO, N. G. I. D. Rassmussen, Ree. Sec. ARBUTUS REBEKAH LODGE No, 150: meets every Tuesday in Odd Fellows hall. ks, M. Lou Lornrop, N. G, Jonn DeSuaw, R. 8. WAUBANA LODGE K. of P. No. 131: meets . No. 208: jays of each every Thursday evening in their hall. B. GRAFFAM, C. C. Gxc. ©. McAtuister, K ITASCA DIVISION No. 10. U. R. K. P.. nicets first Monday of each, month in K. of P. hal fA. Kremer, Capt. Cuas. Kearney, Recorder, WAUBANA TEMPLE No. 20, RATHBONE Sister pets every Wednesday night at LIZABETH ILENNESSY, M. E. C. STEVENS, Sec’y, ITASCA CAMP No. 6444, M.. W. of. A.: meets second and fourth Mondays of each month at Odd Fellows hall. Joun DeSuaw, V. C. George Vient, Clerk. MALE LAKE CAMP No. 22, ROYAL Neighbors: meets first and third Mondays each month at Odd Fellows hall. Mrs. KATHERINE MCALPINE, O: Lou Lornrop, R, 8, NORTH STAR COUNCIL] No. 9, MODERN Samaritans: t and third ‘Tues- days euc: racle. Mrs, hall. 8. J. Casir. G. S. L, W. Huytery, Sec’y, q ITASCA HIVE L. O. T. M.: meets ever second and fourth Fridays of each month in K. of P. hall. baer RS. Bessie Carr, L. C. Mrs, Harrie F. Boorn, RK. Kx. LOCKSLEY COURT No. 109. U. O. #: meets second and fourth Tuesday each month at of P. hall. Mrs. Carnie BECKFELT, C. R. Mrs. MARGARET FINNEGAN, Sec’y. DRUMBEATER TRIBE No, a, f. 0.1 ML meets first and thir Pri eu ut Odd Fellows hall, BieeS. JOHN HEP¥EL, Sachem. B, F. HUSON POST G. A. R. No. 140: meets the last Friday of each month in Post hall. M.A. YANCEY, Conn, H. S. Huson, Adit. SasCey, Coes ITASCA CIRCLE LADIES OF THE G. A. Ru: morte we nee HUniay. of peat month in i be RS. CHRISTIN’ NC! Mus. Matty Husox, Sec'ys ANCEY» P bases nee ie 33, K.0.T.M: every first, and t) Thur: y month at KX, of P, ball Seiad % Itasca County Abstract Office ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE. Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER « KING, Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, - - MINN W.E. NEAL, Dealer in Pine and Farming Lands. The finest List of Agricultural and The Most, Excellent Sites for Grand Rapids, - 2 Grazing Lands in the County. 6 Manu lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Correspondence Solicited. Minn SRR EA ERE Ee ee Ee eA RE a a RE a aE ae : The Celebrated America’s Finest Pro- duction. Received Highest Reward at World’s Columbian Exposi- position. Recommended for- Medincal and Family , Uses. Henry Logan, sekkr Grand Rapids. Dallamend & Go., Chicago. SOMMER TSSA BEHA SHR 4 Unnecessary Loss of Time. Mr. W.S. Whedon, cashier of the First: National Badk of Winterset, Towa, in a recent letter gives some experience with a carpenter in his em- ploy. that will be of value to other mechanics, He says: ‘I had a car- penter working for me who was oblig- ed to stop work for several days on account of being troubled with diar- rhoea. I mentioned to him that I had been similarly troubled and that Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy had cured me. He boughta boqtle of it from the drug- gist here and informed me that one dose cured him, and Le is again at his work.” For sale by Itasca Mercan- tile Co, D* CHAS. M. STORCH, PHYS I[CIANAND SURGEON Office and Residence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd: GRAND RAPIDs, D® mows RUSSELL, FHSIYCIAN AND SURGEON und Residence. Presbyterian ge, Fourth Street. GRAND RAPIDS. SRE ME EE ae a, ae ae eae ae ae ae fe ee ate ae ae ate ae ate te G. C. SMITH DEALER IN Fruits, Confectionery, Ice Cream Soda, Ice Cream, Drinks, 'Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. THIRD ST. Opp. Depot.” ESTE aE eae ae ate a ae ae a ae ae ae ae a ae he ae ae He ae a ae ae aE | EAR ae a eae ae ae ae eat eae ae ae ate oe at ae ae ae ae ae ae ea ae ae te ee eae a aE EE ‘RE a NE ah ah ae a ae ae ae ae ae ae ae he ae ae ae ae ae ae ae eae SLSLSLSLVSLSBSVW’E 3S SSSR UPHOLSTERING Of all kind§ dono with neatness and dispatch. | ©. W Uasrrxas. Carpets Re-Laid, Satisfactory work. Prices Right. » Zella Currie. Residence: % Chairs Re-Ganed ; ‘ First St. & Leland Ave. D RAPIDS, H MINNESOTA. ¥, P. SHELDON. President. Cashier 0. E, AIKEN, Asst. Cashier P. J. Sneinon, Vice President. Lumbermen’s Bank Of Grand Rapids, Minn The Herald-Review $2 SF sR ae ae ae ae Me he ae ae Ae ae Me ee ae Ee ea EE ?'N. A. PASONAULT : Pioneer Barber Shop_ Your Patronage Solicited. LELAND AVENUE. * (ge UE Rae eae ae ate ote ae ate ae ae ae a ay eae hea a dea He ARE ae RE AE Se a ot ae ae ae ME ae ae ate a ae ae ae ae ate % He a He ae HE SVSVSVSWSLVSLSLSLSLVSISLVSVS p H. S. HUSON, Justice of the Peace. i BLGSLS: District Court Commis- sioner for Itasca County. Notarial Work Done. OFFICE—With County Surveyor in Court House. Grand Rapids, Minnesota stee SLSL VISISVWSLSSSLSVSLSISSSSSS PPSLSLGSLSWGLS: ‘§ 7 ‘teste ae ae se ae ale est Me ae ae oe a pea a a ae ae a a EE HR ee Grand Rapids Harness Shop Ihave now a complete stock of Harness, Col- lars, Sweat Pads, Blank etsand all kinds of strap work etc. which will be sold at reasonable prices all orders promptly fill- ed. Repairing neatly and cheaply done. R. W. HEIDEMAN at RE SRE AE Ee ae ae a ah ae a ee ae a ae ae ate a a ee = & = * x wr REX “He RE ae eae ae aE ae ae heat ae ae ae ae afk ae tea ae ae ate aE REA ee a Se TEE ae eR a ae a aE : Notice of Expiration of Redemption. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County or Irasca. To Geo, N. Houghton: ; Audivor’s Office, Itasca County, Minn. You are hereby notified that pursuant toa realestate tax judgment. entered in the District Court in and for said county of Itasca, in the state of Minneso March. A. D, 1900, in proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes up 7, pursuayt to th the General Laws of the state of Minnesota for estate, assessed in your name, situate in the county of Ltus came delinquent in and prior to the year 18 .on the 2ist day of alestate which be- provisions of cl , the following de the year iu 1 Am't ss Yoars { Am’t | Am't |requ’d DES RIPTION, rile inclusive ch | of de-| to re- 3] = for whieh} Tract jlingu’t} deem 8 is k Tax | eack Subdivision of Lot or| 2 | tract Block, and name of | © Village. ret Houghton's addition to 1894 Grand Rapids............ 1 1895 4t}| 3/29 Houghto iso jrand Rapids..... oe eee 2 1805 41] 3) 29 Houghton's addition t Ish Grand Rapids. ae Pe 2 1895 83} 3/29 Houghton’s addition to, 1804 Grand Rapids... eis ak 1895 83 | 3] 20 Houghton’s addition to! Grand Rapids....... Ce ay 4 83] 3} 29 Houghton's additioi Grand Rapids 6 | 2 j [83] 3)29] 3/80 vie ee 83 | 3/29] 3] 80 Houghton's addition to Grand Rapids. PRE Ys Bs 83 | 3/29] 3] 80 Houghton's add. to - Grand Rapids. Sach ae 3 83 | 211 07 | 22] 00 Houghton’s addition to| . Grand Rapids. pee Ue 83] 3/29] 3] 80 Houghton’s. addition to Grand Rapids. cca 2 83] 3/29} 3] 80 Houghton's addition to Grand Rapid... g 83] 3) 29] 3180 Total amounts j ——|-_- was on the posite each description as above stated, said sums being to redeem said lands from and that the amount requi exch description, as above month from the iith day of June.t thereof is filed in my office. day of June. 1900, sold for the years trong with interest thereon at the r 5 and that the time f said sale will expire sixty days after the service stated. fur the sums set op> st bids received therefor, ale. exclusive of the costs ta ght hand column opposite eof one per cent. per »redemption of said lands from of this notice and proof of the service » hi, Witness my hand and official seal this Ist day of June, 1901. (SEAL) Herald-Review, June 29, July 6, 12. E. J. FARRELL, County Auditor, [tasca County, Minn, Notice of Expiration of Redemption. S8TATE OF MINNESOTA | COUNTY OF ITASCA ) To Pardee Cook You are hoieby notified that pursuant to a real estate ta District court in and for said county of Itasca, in the state of March, A. D. 1900. in proceedings to enforce the came delinquent in and prior to the year 1897. pursuant to the pro’ the General Laws of the state of Minnesota, for the year 18%. thi Auditor's Office, Itasca County, Minn. judgmont, entered in the nesota, on the 2st day of 1 real estate which be- sions of chapter 322 of following described real payment of ta pon estate, assessed in your name, situate in the county of Itasca and state of Minnesota, co-wit: A ke : Years | Am't| am’t | req ~YESCRIPTION. a2 | £| 3 | Numborof | inclusive! cach | ot de-| to tes Zs a “e Acres, for which) tract | lingu’t] deem 3/218 Taxes | sold | ‘Tax | each 3 | 51a <= ecame | “for tract Subdivision of Section | Be Acres. | 100ths, |1eltuaw'nt |---| Tee ine eo cecal Be dal Wa Nwh of Swi... 60 Ls & 8 Total amounts was on the 26th day of May, 1900, sold far the years heroin above stated, for the sum set op- posite each description as above stated, . said sum being the highest bid received therefor, and that the amourft required to redeem said land from said sule, excl sive of the costs to, accrue for the service of this natice, 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 cout per onth from the date of this notice, and that the time far the redemption of said land from said sale will expire sixty days ufter the service of this notice and proof of service thereof is filed in my office. Witness my hand and official seal this 10th day of July, 1901, (SEAL) E. J. FARRELL, * County Auditor, Itasca County, Minn. FOR SALE at a bargain five acres| Herald-Review right in town, Inquire of M. A. Yancey. Two dollars a year, ee ’ |