Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, September 7, 1901, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Napampapig sai ace gO Ba GEO. BOOTH, Manufacturer ot Fine Cigars GRAND RAPIDS, MINN. of Booth’s own shops here. ‘This insures the utmos For sale everywhere. Call for qpa2SeSsesec5oecsoccesooclf— “BOOTH’S CIGARS” the tinest ‘selected stock by experienced aan in and under his personal super cleanliness and care in manufacture. t—y——|—1—} Ifave achieved an -excellent reputation ali over Northern Minnesota. They are made r ion. Sede hst pie neyene ROE Re EN them. FIRST-CLASS !N Sample D856 ALRY wast | Hotel Gladstonel A. E. WILDER,‘Prop. Room and Livery in Connection Special Attention Given to Transient Trade. Tleadquarters for Lumbermen. a wae i : | P| EVERY RESPECT. GRAND RAPIDS. 2 pee All Under he Burlington hotel in A EUSTIS, Geucral Pass. s. Agent. JHICAGO, ILL. no better paints made—they come ready to use, n sane sleep hited eng st ‘One ah zcar; smoke in a nd recline a a potis Loui: oS wines apol LO SAMO EX s via this line, GEO. P. LYMAN, Ass't, apa P; Agent. PAUL, MINN. (ready mixed). in 44 shades,—and they can be bought at the right, price, because they're made in the right place—s modern pint factory. Noxall paints are a half century in advance of other ready mixed paints, Made by Enterprise Paint Manufacturing Co. For Sale by To Read Character From the Face Tor la person’s character from his face is an accomplishment which few possess, but which many would like to have. The study is an absorb- | ingly inieresting one, and has not only | an entertaining. buta practical side as well. ,An article on the subject will shortly Home Journal, giving careful details regarding the traits of ¢ dicated by the different features face. ’ be published in The Ladies’ | 2 J : hed {first of August. e guarantee you strictly ii abicrssail CHICAGO W. J. & H. D. POWERS, Grand Rapids, Mia - Mess:s Judd and Brink have now opened their photo tent for business aud are prepared to do as good work as you can get anywhere in’the north | west, at prices ranging from $1.50 to | $6. oo per dozen. furmsned with the finest leases known to modern optical science. ‘These gentlemen will rem here until the Visit them and look ‘ever their line of photo pins. They fisrt-class work Their apparatus is | Grand fRapies erates Meview | impulsively threw her arms | erence shown to i 4ustrian woul ‘en, Published Every Saturday.[y | - ByE.C.KILEY _ TWO DOBLARS A YEAR IN ADVANCE, Entered in the Postoiice at Grand Rapids Atimnesote as Second: Class Matter. Officiat ith of Daina BRE ‘Villag of Grand’ Rapids and Deer Riveres aud Town of Grand Rapids. SCENT OF ONION. By Any Other Name Than Sulphuret of Altyle It Would Be as Sweet, lt is interesting to make inquiry ixto the cause of this unfortunate quality of the onion. It is simply @ve to the presence in some quantity in the bulb of sulphur. . It is this sul- phur. that gives the onion its germ- killiug property and makes the bulb so very useful a medicinal agent at ell 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-smell- ing compoun The onion, being so 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 oniong it is identical with the malo- dorant principle 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 oiis. This brings us to a most curi- ous fact in nature, that most strange- ly, yet most certainly constructs all vegetable volatile oils in exactly the same way—composes them all, wheth- er they are the aromatic essences of cloves, oranges, lemons, cinnamon, thyme, rose, verbena, turpentine or onion, of exactly the same proportion, which are 81% of carbon to 11% of hydrogen, end obtains all the vast seeming diversities that our nostrils detect in fheir scent simply by a dif- ferent arrangement of the atoms in each vegetable oil.—Chambers’ Jwa> nal, DEPEW’S BAD FRENCM, Tauses Him Trouble Which Resalts in a Kiss. Having found a purse cz the flcor of 2 hotel near an armchair, whore he had seen a pretty girl seated 2 short time before, Senator Depew depysit-. he purse with the hotel clerk ig a Icading hostlery in Paris. Anh ‘out later, being on the street near the s9- tel, the senator recognized by we light of a street lamp, the same gfri hurry!ng home from her call. Deszous 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, thcrovghly frightened and not understanding Aim, ieked for help. The kindly senator trled to pacify her, and as she per- isted in her failure to comprehend, and in crying out for assistance, grew vehement and scared her all the more. Firally the foolish maiden ran to a policeman who had appeared on the scene and appealed for protection. It was only after a long wrangle that the stupid officer of the law, zealous to appear in the light of the rescuer ef 2 woman in distress, would admit the possible truth of Senator Depew’s laborious explanations. The hotel be- ing near, the policeman finally con- ge:xfted to accompany Mr. Depew and the lady there, sticking close to the jady all the way. - The. purse, which contained a large sum of money, was weturned to the young woman by the clerk, and she, understanding at last, around the senator’s neck, and kissed him on ‘ | the cheek. Austria an Old Ladies’ Para‘ise. Contrary to the pract:ce which pre- yails in many other countries, the def- men in Austria in- creases with age, and the land is well considered an old tadies’ paradise. No ever dream of receiv- mg a Jady’s extended hand without howing to kiss it. Chitdren, even wien 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- no matter how lofty their dignity co not consider it beneath their dignity | to kiss the hands of ladies who bave attained a certain age. The mep are also extremely courteous, not only to ladies, but to each other. ’ britt to the Cities. The Chicago Tribune directs atten- tion to the interesting fact that “while the population of the country at large has increased‘about 20 per cent during the last decade, the three principal centers of population, New York, Chi- eago and Philadelphia, have gained 44 per cent.” The cities will continue to row so long as they offer employment and livelihood to increasing popula- don. 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 cn the part of persons in the country to iive in the town, spokane Spokesman- Bewier j ter should be of the best, and taken —+ | USE OF BUTTER. tt Improves Health of Children and 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 re- straint, and are told that it is greedy and extravagant to take much of it. It is regarded asa 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 wealth- ier classes these rules prevail 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 health may easily entail a far heavier expense than a more liberal breakfast would have done. Cod liver oil costs more than buiter, and it is, besides, often net 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 biliousness. Mot ehildren maybe allowed tofollow their own inclinations and will not take more than is good for them. The but- 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 “catch cold” so easily. In speaking of chil- dren, I by no means intend to exclude other ages, especially young adul's. Grown-up persons, however, take other animal fats more frecly than most. chil- dren do, and ave, besides, allowed muca freer selection as to quality and quan- ty. HINDOO BORROWER. C'aims He Has Returned 82 by Tostat Card. Among the guests at the Ralcigh a few days ago was a well-educated and pleasant-mannered son of India. Ho had been at the hotel several times be- fore, always-crdered the best, and paid his bills without complaint. On this occasion he .paid for his rcom 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 berrow money, but when he men- tioned that he had friends in Pulti- more who would help him Mr. Smith offered to lend him a couple of dol- lars. The Hindo was profuse in his thanks and promised to return the money as soon as he reached tha Maryland city. Yesterdsy Mr. Smith received a postal card from the man in India, upon which was written: “I herewith send you §2. Thanks very much. I appreciate your most noble kindness.” Mr. Smith looked on first one side and then on the ether of the card, and finally split it in two, but could find no traco of the §2. He is now wondering if the Hindoo is possessed of an abnormally developed bump of humor, or whether one of those Indian tricks of magic is being performed. The latter theory is tue more inviting, and he has placed the card in a glass case and is watchiag it closely to see if by so mysterious means it will not tran itself into a $2 note, payable at the treasury of the United States—Washington Post. Ox Races In Germany, An oa race is held z of the provincial d. The-entry fco for simall, sal ie ox enter ridden by Tis owner. rider is not ailoy whip or spurs animal barebz upon his voice Is here that the into play, as e the tratuing of ti of the owner to despite the dis other competitors the oxen do not race cn a tr direct them is no eas vider who can force steed to go in a straight line is cer- tain to win. und spectators. As Superatitious Mother's Cruelty. A curious*case of gross sz which Jed to the practice ci cruelty to a little boy, was the other day in a local potlee co rt court in British Guiana. A woman named Ashby of Uitvlugt, a sugar es- tate, the defendant in the case, stated that she had dreamed cf a way to cura her little son of cortain faults. It con- sisted of beiling en esg and putting it while still hot into ‘re boy's hands. Next morning she proceeded to put the suggestion of her dream into exc- cuiion. When the egs was boiled she compelied the unfertunate child to) elasp His hands tightiy cver it, the inevitable result befag that the palms of his hands were badty burned. Women's White Sille Waists, White siik, made in fine, close tucks, with a scrollwork effzet in tucks, set across the front of the waist, gives something like a deep yoke effect, the scroll ornamented with very tiny sil- ver beads. There is an invisibie fast- ening under the arm and on top of the shoulder. Many of the waists fasten in this way, and give plain effect to! the front. Beautiful insertions of lace are set to many of them, but the ef- fect is plain and simple. Rela Se 4 graph from Philadelphia. —— 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 heye is light blue, and it tinged the slopes as daisics 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, delicate lady’s-slipper, pale yellow striped with marcon, and a pretty dwarf rhododendron, its large purple flower sitting upon ‘the moss and lichen. The climber also waded through patches of lupine, and nut his feet among bluebells, Jacob's-laddcr, iris, saxifrage, cassiopes and many others, The song birds that attracted our potice were the golden-crowned sparrow and little hermit thrush. The golden crown had a peculiarly piercing, plaintive song, very simple, but very appesling. 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. INCORTECT NAMES. Game Birds of America Misnumed by Haniers. It is remarkable that most of the | jr, are game birds in the United States known by names which are not honest- ly theirs. A man talks of going shooting or pheascut shooting. of these birds is ne ate abo. ‘Amey after a ridges and gro! are indeed sa:e pheasant p: the country, but in spite of a. to the contrary ‘the quail does not it on the North erican continent, ac- cording to aw Lott in Cuting. In the first ple are much smailer than partrid mein differences, however, between the two much-confused birds aro: The Sill of the true quail is small,, weak, entirely different from the strong bill of the English partridges and of cur own “Bob White,” and the groove of the nostril is mostly feathered. The nostril of tie American ‘“‘quail”—really rtridse—is uncovered. Partridge legs are scaly and spurred, whiic quails’ legs 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 fs de- cidedly stiff. All the birds here g@m- erally called quail, from the Bob Whites, the Messena quail, the crested and plumed quail of the southwest, to these of ‘the Pacific coast, are really partridges, as will be found by i them scientifically. The ruffed grous? rarely receives its correct name, being eajled partridge or pheasant, accord- ing to locality. The grouse is knows. by the fact’ that its legs are always completely or partially feathered over. The partridge never has feathers on its legs. pane ES ENN ies a ar the pe, QUAL Girl Tramps Are Numerous New Jeisey has conie to the front with a product entirely its own. It is nothing less than the female tramp dressed in boy’s clothing and stealing | rides on fr She is be coming common. Recently “James” a was released Robinson of Philadei from the county correction farm at Trentcn on payment of a fine, the | money having been sent here by te.c- | a girl about 16 yc old, She was arrested by a railr sent to the farm chained to six tramps. When captured she had a large revol- ver strapped to a belt waist, and upon being promptly admitted her sex. fused to give her name, but said she was trying to reach the home of her | uncle in New Brunswick. The justice commitied her to the stone quarry for thirty days in default of the $3 fine imposed. tramp the detectives have arrested at the cecal chutes within a few days. questioned 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 ehild’s life from his home, no mstter how wretched his home, no matter how worthy the interest in the abstract, and you have made the poor little in- dividhal 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 tkat threatens our political constitu- tions.— Harper's Bazar. Colonel Cochrane's Record. , Colonel Henry Clay Cochrane, who tas been ordered fromr his post at the Boston navy yard to the command 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 appointment in the early part of the civil war, and participated in the battle of Mobile bay end “ether engagements. © nority of D. G. Et} “James” ia! ad detective and) around her 3 She re-| This is the third girl! A Good Cough Medicine. It speaks well for Chamber! Cough Remedy when druggists us it their own families in preference to any other. “1 have sold Chamber lains’s Cough Remedy for the past five years with complete | pat isfaction to myself ana customers, Drug- gist. J. Goldsmith, Van Teen, Bags ‘dohave always used it in my own family both for ordinary coughs and coldsand for the cough POH ANE la la grippe, and find it very eftie For salé by the Itasca Mercantile Ce MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE. Notico is hereby given, ‘That default has been made in the conditions of that certain morigze duly executed and, deliverc Maggie, Martin and ugh E. Martin, iuisband, Mortgugoss, to Julia , bearing date the 4. with power of sale : uly recorded in the office of the Ke- of Deets tn und for the count tate of Minnesota, on the 1 it at 10 o'elock. A Mtn hook mortgages, on page 370. which mort the debt thereby RO REKA ray date Asien by an instrument in writing dated the day of February, 1901, to Kenneth A. Donald, the undersigned, which assi was duly recorded in the office of the ter of Deeds in and for the county of I state of Minnesota, on the 2th day of 1, in book Hof mortwages.on page 36s, Tt has continued to the ‘date of by the failure and neglect of said mortgagor to make payment of the pal and interest by said mortgage Which by its terms became due und payable Cuthe 1th ‘And wi holder ‘of hereby does ¢ pal sum of said morts the date of this notice. pr nd payable at he terms and nd the power of sale therein contained; und whereas. wt actually due and claimed to be due and y uble ut the date of this notice the sum of six hundred and sixty: 10) dol- lars, besides the sum of t described i and whe: s over the debt mortgage, or any part thereo: Now. therefore, notice is hereby given. that by virtue of the power of sale contained in sazid mortgage, and pursuant to the sta se made and provid wenty-th at ((8), north of est fourth’ principal mer snd state of ments and y 1 be made . county Minnesota, with’ the portenances; the sheriff of uty, atthe front door of the of Grand Rupids, on the sth day of July, ». m.. of that day at pub- pishest bidder for ¢ bt of six hundred and s 100 doll und interest Jollurs and s Sti uleinG in n case of force! lowed by. atany time within o sule. as provided by Dated May Hers t to redemption rfrom the day of |L W.c signee ‘¢ » nee of Mortgugee, Minnesota. June Timber Land Act, June 3 1878 Notice for Publicution. United States Land Of Dane, is heret n, of West A COONEY at DUNNER wanes oe Vine s this day filed in this office bis for the purchase cepeal consin, | stone than for # establish his ¢ Register and Recei futh, | August. 1601. Hg ivvine, of stiliwator, M Wi Partelow witnesses John L, Be Goodvin, Miles, of x of West Superior, W! Any and all pi y this office on or besore 101, Wa. E. to file their claims ty {suid dgth day of August. Cur Ki. Re Merald-Review, Muy Angust 17, Timber Land Act, June 3. 18% 3. i Notiec for Publicatwn, United States Land Oilice. Duluth M hereby given th Notic } with the » | June 3. | 8, cutitled “An in the timber | Orezon, N SW { Phe hae, : ani ea taneell AG is | their claims in this office on or before suid Ith day of August, 1001. Wy». RE. 25. August 1 | Tlerald- Revie’ w. M i Timber Lunt Act, June 3, 1878. Notire for Publication. United States Lind Office. Duluth. Minh | Notice is her with the provisions of the act of entitled perior, ace: “if Donglas onsin, has this day filed in this . for the rSWh of urchas t Section No, j the Ste of SEM 9 in Township No, Range will oer proott W that the [is more valuable for its timber or stone than sricultural purposes, and td establish nto said land before the Register piver of this office at Duluth, im. 1th day of August, i901, He J. Irvine of Si . Goodvin, of Min ; vin, of Minong, — W | Purtelow ities oF West Superior, Wis. | Anyand all persons claiming adversely the above-described lands.are requested to file a this office on or before sai August, ee bes nd sought 19th day of Wat. E. Leola ‘ister, | Herald-Review. May 25, August 17. why iD* GEO. C. GILBERT, { PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Cable’s Meat Market, GRAND RAPIDS, & Pp. MURPHY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office over McAlpine & McDonald's, corner Third St. andLeland Ave. GRAND RAPIDS, » MINNESOTA ? ~ 4 s “BY

Other pages from this issue: