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PE en Sr Rats eatsReew GRAND RAPIDS POSTOFFICE HOURS: 8 o'clock a.m, to ice open week days froz 0 p. m., and Mail Mail a.m. p. m. O, H. Stinson, P.M. City and Vicinity. Dance ‘Tuesday September 24. L. W. Huntley was transacting business in Duluth this week. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sims return- od ‘rom the fair the first of the week. Mrs. Gordon Maher returned from 1 visit to Duluth on Wednesday. Mrs. J. L. Barnard a daughter Grace returned home Monday. A. O’Leary and wife returned Mon- cay from a visit to Minneapolis. egister of Deeds A. B. Clair trans- cted business in Duluth this week Lhere wili be Union seryices at the _E. church next Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Clair returned s1om Minneapolhs Tuesday. Fred Worden returned from a bus- mess trip to Minneapolis Wednesday. Isidore Fortier swent a few days in Duluth this week. Crosgrove Ochestra will furntsh music the dance September 24. You will miss half of your hfe if you miss the dance on Tuesday 24th. E. A. Arnold of Lapraine is re- ported very ill, S. J. Cable was transacting business in Duluth this week. W.E, Myers and family returned from: the state fair Saturday last. A. Lord and iamily returned Sat- urday last from a visit to Minneapo- lis, Don’t forget the dance on Septem- ber 24. August Johnson and wife arrived home ‘Tuesday after putting in a week ut the state fair, Lost—Clam shell watch charm, find- er return same to this office and _re- ceive reward, Rhody Hawley fof Deer River, has taken charge of the Royal Buffet for a few wecks. Mrs. George Prescott. who has been visiting friends and relatives in Minneapolis, retutned Monday. Lona Nevoux, returned from Du- luth, ‘Thursday, where she has been visiting tor several weeks. There will be but one service at the Catholic church Sunday, at 10 o'clock. The ladies of the Episcopal guild will meet with Mrs F. A, King next ‘Thursday afternoon. L. Lindeaur and A. C. Bossard were transacting business in Duiuth this week. Cominissioner Geo, Moore of Co- hassett passed through here on_his way to the Twin Cities the first of the we Word was received here this week that a son was born to Mr. and Mrs. D. A, Mackenzie at Duluth,. Septem- ber roth. Mr. and Mrs, E. J. Farrell and daughter Marie returned home from Milwaukee on Friday last. _ Womans Itterary club heid first. meeting of the season on y evening. - Munson arrived from Minn- is Wednesday, Bert intends to log very extensively in this victnity this winter. iss Katie Morrison who has been 3 here for several weeks left Kev. Father McKey is confined to his room, He was taken suddenly sick ‘Thursday evening and it was thought he would not live. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Hennessy, re- turned Monday from Minneapolis, where they have been in attendance to the state fair, Elnier Rassmussen, brother of I, D. Rassmussen, arrived in Grand Rapids Wednesday, to spend a few days visiting old friends, The ladies of St. Joseph’s Altar society will meet with Mrs, EJ. Far- rell next ‘Thursday afternoon at the usual hour. Mrs K. C. Lent returned Monday from Minneapolis where she has been purchasing her fall and winter stock of millinery. Frank Hughes who has been in the employment of H. Hughes & Co. at this place and Cohossett has resigned and excepted a position as traveling salesman for the Gown Payton Tewy Co, of Duluth, The Brotherhood of American Yoeman will give their first annual an September 27. Music will be furnsihed by Grand Rapids Ochestra and a good time is contemplated. ‘This is the Yoemens first attempt so give them a chance to play even. Mr, and Mrs, Messenger were sur- prised on Saturday evening when about twenty couple marched in and took possession of the dining room. Dancing and games were indulged in untl mid night when a good Junch was served, and all went home happy. McPhee’s Big Co. finished their en- gagement here Wednesday evening which was witnessed by a_ large audience. This show is certainly one of the best that comes to our city and this could be seen by the packed houses each night. McPhee 1s ex: pected i with a minstral troop which he started after Tuesday at Chicago. The ladies of the M. E. church will serve a chicken and pumpkin pie supper m Village hall Wednesday Sept. 18th. Chicken pie, mashed potatoes, cabbage salad, pickles, pumpkin pie. apple pie, bread and butter, doughnuts and coffee, will be served for which 25 cents will be charged. ‘The ladies will also have an apron sale, Everybody come and get a big supper cheap and buy an apron. Annual Fall Excursions. Detroit. Mich, and return $11.00 by train and steamer via St. Ignace and D. & C. N.Co. One night by rail and twenty-four hours by steam- er. Tickets on sale Sept. 17th and 22 Return limits Oct. 5th and 13th. Oar Ils That Kill. To thé average reader the infor- mation eontained in the census sta- tistics in which is shown the relative atality of the more common ciimen ¢ tu whose ravages the people of this country are subjecb comes as some thing of a surprise. - The di ease which heads the list in the number of deaths which are chargeable to its attacks is not the one which is in the general belief has been rated as the severest scourge. Among the fifteen maladies to which larger number sucomb, con- sumption stands second, not first. Pneumonia outranks it in point of fatality, although only slightly. It, as the government’s latest figures show, is the most deadly of all American diseases. It is the cause of 1901.9 of every 100,000 deaths. Consumption is yet but little be- hind it, however, as a destroyer of humanity. ‘Lo ‘tubeculous attacks are attributed 190.5 of the fatalities in each 100,000. Heart disease follows asthe third, its ave-age number of victims in the 100,000 being 154. Following these three most faith- full adjudants of the ‘grim specter of the g! aud scythe” come twelve otbers which according to the census showing, in the order given, may be reckoned the most destructive to life within the territorial limits to which the statistics apply. They are: Diarrhoeal diseases, kidney disease, apoplexy, cancer, old age, bronchitis, cholera infantum, debility, inflama- tion of the brain and meningetis, diphtheria, typhoid, premature birth. Smallpox, it will be noted, does not appear on the list, although a comparatively few years ago it was regarded by the people generally as one of the scourges of which -human- ity stood most in dread. Now, aside from the inconvenience involved in a compliance with the requirements for ihe prevention of its contagious effects, it is occasion for little more concern than the minor ailments whose fatal possibilities are looked on so remote as scarcely to merit consideraiion. Gratifying results due to progress in medical science areevident, too, in the showing as to the decreased fatality of consumption Only a di de ago its victims num- bered 2449 in every 100,000, and that disease ranked as most deadly of all, inten 5 ‘3, as the flgures indicate, its destrudtiveness had been reduced more than 25 per cent, and the pres- ent prospect gives promise of yet more rapid advancement toward im- munity from its ravages.—Kansas City Journal. Wanted in Main. Sheriff Tyndall last weck arrest- ed at Cohasset Frank Farker, alias Russell A. Remich, an embezzler, who is wanted in Anson, Somerset county, Me., and is holding him pending the arrival of an officer from that state. Parker was a town tax collector and he collected something tike §1,500 and started West. This was in 1897, and no trace of him could be found. A few days ago Sheriff Tyndall re- ceived a description and pictures of him, also a letter to the effect that he was thought to be in this part of the country, and requesting the sheriff to keepan eye open for him, Last Friday while in Cohasset, Mr. Tyndall learned that a man by the name of Parker was working in Dunn & Marcia’s saw mill, and upon catching sight of him he de- cided that this was the man wanted and placed him under arrest. ‘The } person acknowledged the embezzle- ment, but says the amount is not not so large. An officer from Maine is expected here in a day or two, Corn Fodder--Curing and Feeding. Those who have raised corn fod- der for winter feed for stock and have not handled it before, will be apt to make mistakes in curing it, which will diminish its value asa feed., The corn should be cut as soon as the lowerleaves turn yellow, Upon the Fxperiment farm, a corn binder is being used this year. This is cutting fodder corn ten fect tall, standing ina double row six inches apart, with stalks so thick that no ears are born, and binding it in bundles. When the stalks of ear corn are cut for fodder, the question of curing is not so important, as the stalks are quite dry, and of much less value for teed than thickly grown fodder corn, having given up much of their.tood ingredients to the ears ofcorn. Binding in bundles by hand is slow and laborous, but faci- litates handling when feeding and may be found to pay in the long run. The shocks should be made rather small and very firmly tied with twine, as they will shrink. These small shocks should be left in the field till November or later. It is out of the question to attempt to fill hay mows with fodder corn, or to put it up in stacks, as the fodder contains so much succulence that it will heat and spoil. It can be set up in the barn, in a single tier, on the butts of the stalks, or outdoors in long ricks in a similar manner. But if the bundles or stalks are piled one on the other they will seldom keep. | One of the best methods is to go through the field before heavy snow falls, and draw the shocks to- ' gether with a horse and chain, set- ting up three shocks into one. The snow blows away from verv large shocks, and they offer less surface to the weather, and therefore keep in better shape. These shocks can then be drawn up and fed through- out the winter, directly from the field. If the fodder has been closely grown in the row, the sta!'ks will be rather firm and tender, and the cat- tle will consume nearly all of it. Where stover, or stalks of ear corn, are used, or where the stalks have been grown too far apart, much of the butt will be rejected unless cut up before feeding. It is convenient to do this only when supplied with a power of some sort and feed cutter. The cheapest plan is to grow the corn thick and avoid the necessity of cutting. Corn fodder is equal to timothy or wild hay in feeding value, and su- perior to it for milk cows in succul- lenee. It isnot equal to clover hay and where possible, should be sup- plemented by clover, or bran, for cows. It may be fed to sheep or horses as part of the winter ration, with great benefit. Herman H. CHapMan. Pan-American Rxposition. Buffalo, N. Y. and return $17. by train and steamer. ‘Tickets on sale daily until October 3Jst. Notice. of Application for Liquor ] License STATE OF MINNESOTA. SS, County oF I'rasca. ' Notice is hereby given that appli- cation has been made in writing to the village council of the village of Deer River, Minnesota, and filed in my office, praying for license to sell intoxicating liquors for the term commencing on April 1st, 1901, and following person and at the following place, as stated in said application, to-wit: Rody Hawley, in the front room of the west wing addition to the Northern Hotel, situated on lots numbered 23 and 24, in block number- ed 14, Itasca City addition to Deer River, according to the recorded plat on file. Said application will be heard and determined by said village council of the village of Deer River at the council chamber in the Hotel Itasca, in said village of Deer River, in Itasca county, and state of Minne- sota, on the 9th day of September, A. D., 1901, at 8:00 o’clock p. m. of that day. Witness my hand and seal of the village et Deer River this 7th day of August, A, D.. 1901. “ ff (SEAL) W. A. EVERTON, W. J. COFFRON, Recorder. President. Order to Evamine Account, etc. STATE OF MINNESOTA, t - ss. County OF Trasca. Tn Prabate Court,--Special term August 21, 1901, .2 In the matter of the estate of Peter Goslin, ae d filing th ‘i n reading an ng the petition of Adolph Hirschman, administraitor of the tatac tae Peter Goslin, deceased, representing among other things that he has fully administ- ered said estate, and praying thet a time and plnee be fixed for examin2ng and allowing is 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 this court on Monday, the sixteenth day of September, A. D. 1901, 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- terminating on April Ist, 1902, by the|4 The Real Danger | from heart disease is not the posst- bility of a sudden death, for they are comparatively few; but following in the wake of this dread disease comes a general breaking down of every organ of the body. Circulation is retarded; digestion is deranged; the blood is contaminated, the nerves weakened and the brain clouded. If your heart is affected begin at once to guard against, these dangers. Dr. bf iles’ Heart Cure, has rescued thousands who were given up to die, and it will help you, too, if yva try it. “lor several years 1 was troubled with nervousness, sleepless, palpita- tion of the heart, short cf breath, smothering spells and pain in chest, back, left side and arm. 1 was so very b.d that I vemained in my bed the whole cf one summer Was treated by three physicians, brit de rived no beuefit. Finally I saw a paper advertising Dr. Miles’ New icart Cure aud Restorative Nervine. 1 began their use and was so greatly benetited that 1 am now doing wy own housework and enjoy, excellent heelth.” = Mrs. Berriia Kurtit, 996 20th St., Milwaukee. V Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure is sold at all druzgists on a positive guarantes Wrile for free advice and booklet to Dr. Miles Bigdical Co, Mikhari, Ind. Herald-Review Two dollars a year. Timber Land, Act Juné 3, 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Duluth, Minuesota, July Ist, 1901. Notice is hereby given that in comphance with the provisions of the acgof Congress of June 3, entitled “An act'Tor the sale of timber lands in the states of California, Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory,” as extended to all the Public Land States by aet of August 4, 1892, Joseph H, Dunning of Minneapolis, county of Hennepin State of Minnesota. has this day filed in this office hissworn statement No.5681, for the purchase of the sw’ of se4 and se of sw, sec. Il, and sw of ne and ne of nw’, in Township No. 60, Range No. offer proof to show that the 1 more valuable for its timbe rg for agricultural purposes, and to his claim to said land before the and Receiver of this office at Duluth, Minne- sota, on Friday. the 18th day of October. Loui. He names as Witnesses: George McAllist of Minneapolis, Minn,. William Doran of Grand Rapids Minn., John Ryan. of Grand Rapids, Minn., Alfed Sprague, Grand Rapids, Minn, ‘Any and all persons claiming adversely the above-described lands are requested to file thei: aims in this office on or before said 18th day of .October, 1901, Wm. E. CULKIN, Register c. No. 14, and will ought is oue than establish egister Herald-Review, July 27 Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Duluth Minn., July 1st, 1901, Notice is hereby given that in compliance with the provisions of the uct of Congress of June 3, 1878, entitled “An act for the sale of timber lends in the States of California, Oregon, Nevada, and Washington Territory. asextended to all the public land states by uct of August 4, 1892, Ge cAllister, of Minneapolis t nepen State, of Minnesoti y filed in this office his sworn statement No. 5682 for the purchase of the E% SW_ and _N% SE% Section 9, No. 60 N. Range No. 25 V in Townshi and will offer proof to show that the land Sought is more valuable for its timber or Stone than for agricultural puposes, and to establish his claim to said land before the Register and Receiver of this office at Duluth. Minn., on Friday, the 18th day of October. 1901, He names as witnesses: Joseph H. Dunning, of Minneapolis, Minn. William Doran, of Grand Rapids, Minn, John Ryan, Grand Rapids, Minn, Alfred Sprague of Grand Rapids, Minn. d-all_ persons claiming adversely ds are requested to office on or before Any un the above-described lant file their claims in th said 18th day of Octobe: 1901. Wn. E. CULKIN, Register. Herald-Reyiew. July 27 ~ WEAR THE BEST. We don’t believe you can find a suit of any other make _ that will have the // style‘and appearance f of these Hart,Schaff- ner & Marx suits or ¥! that will wear as | welland cost as little in the long run. Come in and see them and try on some of the new styles. HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX GUARANTEED CLOTHING. ITASGA MER Many thousand haveSbeen restored to health and happiness by the use of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. If afflicted with any throat or lung trouble, give it a trial for it is certain to prove benefical. Coughs that have resisted all other treatments tor years have yielded to this remedy and _per- fect health been restored. Cases that seemed hopless, that the climate of famous health resorts failed to_ benefit have been ‘permunently cured by its use. Bear in mind that every bottle is warranted and “if it does not prove beneficial the money will be refunded to you. For sale by Itasca Mercantile Company. PERSONAL Property Tax DELIQUENTS © Notice is hereby given that all per- sonal property taxes ° will be colleeted according to law at once by me. No further delay will be granted. By paying deliquenci#s now further ex pense will be avoided, W. C. TANDALL, * Sherifi. os ‘\ 2 ENCE Copyright 1899 aE «By Hart, Schaffner & Mara { Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food, Itgivesinstant reliefand never failstocure. It allows you to eat all the food you want. The mo: i stomachs can takeit. By itsuse many thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed. It prevents formation of ga: the stom- ach, relieving all distress after eating, Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant totake. it can’t help but do you good by E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. Prepared onl The #1. bottle contains 24 times the 50c. size. BIDS WANTED. ion of the The bid cting to nber and Specificrtions may be seen at the farm, The right is reserved to re- ject any or ull bids, Bids must be in before Saturday. Aug. 3ist, Work to be completed before Oct. ist. = Herman H. Cuarman. . Who can think §y Iheg ccene simple Sik GSA thing topatenti th D1 wealth. e: eo it Al BOS*SVSL ES i 6c La ‘ | ql Belle” SEE THAT THIS ty TRADE MARK 1S BRANDED ON EVERY SHOE. Kibo Kid, Light flexible sole, Leather Louis XV. heel. Exact Reproduction of this Style Shoe. All Style Boots $3.00 i Oxfords $2.50 SEE THAT THIS tS BRANDED ON EVERY SHOE. ive weoks, once in each week. prior to si day of hearing, in the Grand Rapids ‘ienatd Review a legal newspaper printed and pub- lished in said county. By the Court, JOUN L. BARNARD Judge of Probate. (PIONEER ST stylish Street Boots FOR DRESSY WOMEN. From the dainty Kibo pat- tent kid to the heavy wreted sole boot made on the man- ish mode. We cau show an execellent yariety of styles You have paid $4.00 and $5.00 for shoes that were no better than eens uality ° The Famous Shoe For Women Every Pair a perfect fit which insures absolute er and comfort and freedom from that acking and burn- ing sensation so often ex per ienced in new suoes. dohn Beekfelt, = The Militant, SEE THAT THIS LY TRADE MARK IS BRANDED ON EVERY SHOE. Light Sole, High Cuban Heel. TR Boots $3,00 Queen Quality OXFORDS $2.50 Kibo Kid. Light Flexible Sole. Leather Louis XV. heel. Exact Reproduction of this Style Shoe. Grand Rapids) q