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»f | " | | t | 4 i ‘i \ —4{———— '} | \ —S* "y | i | iD vp | ye ~y = A Good Cough Medicine. It speaks well for Chamberlain's Cough Remedy when druggists us it theirown families in preference to any other. “I have sold Chamber Jains’s Cough Remedy tor the t five years with complete satisfaction self 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 la grippe, 2ud fnd it very efticacious.” For sale by the Abuses Mercantile Co. MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE, Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for Publication, United States Land Office. ‘ Dalath, Mi Notice is hereby given t) with the provisions of 78, envitied n.. May 22nd, 1901 t in compl et of congre ct for the the states of Califor ada and Washington Territor extendéd to all the Public Land States by aet of August 4, 1s Buchanan, of W: of Douglas, in, has this day filed in this orn statement No, 420, for the the N's of NW and tion No, 17, in township No. 2%, w, and will offer proof to land Sought is morevalanble fe stone than for agricultural purpose establish his 1 land before the Kezister and Receiver of unis office at Du- Mhesota, on Monday, tho 19th n, Timber Land Act, 3, 1878. Notice for tublication, United State “une in the 1, and W in 1 the public lun 2, Willice A extended tc td, 1 ‘ he W 0, in Township No. 61, n. and will offer proof to sought is more yaluable that the its timber c their cia 1th day of Notice for Publication. United States Land Office. Duluth. Minn., May 22nd. 1991. Notice is hereby-giyen that in compli ns of the act of vec wesied five of Om befor ~ 101, PHYSICIAN AND SU N abie'’s Meat Y ) RAPID GLSSSIAS STSISS 5BTS GRA ) & o Justice of the Peau : @ % ®) nay © & $) 9) $ District Court Commis- & GQ sioner for Itasca County. . ¢) ) ¢ - ( 3 Notarial Work Done. SSOSSES ace se ® t D BS ere $ é & Grand Rapids, Minnesota % se SSW VSSSTVSISS RSW VEO AS PROPRIETOR Pioneer Barber i a a Q z Shop. % > Your Patronage Solicited. Fs LELAND AVENUY. G..C. SMITH DEALER IN Fruits, Confectionery, Ice’Cream Soda, Ice Cream, Drink: 'Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. THIRD ST.. Opp. Depot. teat ae aR ea ake ae as ae ae ae ae a ae ae ae ae a a a a Hae MOE ae aE Me a ae ee she a ade a ae ah ade ae a pare as ae er a a eB Goodyin, of | 9 of West | £ HS. HUSON, | THe AtiFActIOR. Yt has freqvently been asserted that the brilliant colors of many flowers serve to attract bees and buttertlies to them. Experiments recently reported to the Belgian Academy of Sciences secin to show that the perfume, rather than color of the flowers, is the real at- covered with leaves and papers pinned Alosely about them; yet the insects not visited the hidden flowers but en- yored to force their way under the n order to reach the blossoms ih they could not see.—-Brooklyn pay THEY DON’T HURRY. The Peopls of Washington Seem to Bo Easy-Golng. “The thing that first visitor to Washington,” said - Fred Green, a y St. Louis business man, who is the Shoreham, “is that nobody’ sec mn a hurry. People walk leisurely about as if they had all wy to reach their destination, or, rather, as if they had no destination in The st between the | shingtsn and the | re’ rush of New Louis, and the centers is most pocritical Americans toward a: lives of bu: an any oth- auty of the of wealth who 2siness and are clty in which to make Then again the greater numb have no need to be in a hurry, and the two classes between them influence society and govern its customs. If I had never visited Washington in the winter and hat the same conditions thea I might be led to suppose it 3 the extr: zers so los ut my obser same the eliberateness MeAhisfer, is quoted 1 that shsste is, vulgar. Washingion -is de- sar _city:’—Washing- ly not a ‘ou Post. of the Cam-o Cutter, B. ee work ata e for the will spoil a week variety of quartz and on shelis. 1 Corpse ‘Awaiting Barat lt is'said that since the year 1769 a custom has prev: the burial’ of a dead e death of his sue Alfons) XIL., ed on a marble slab in a vault Fscurial, covered over with 3 On the death of his' son the present young king, the body wil be removed and buried with great comp by the side of its ancestcrs in tye Ba eurial chapel, that of Alfonso XiIz taking its place gn the marble siab, — t ton 7} 2 put in only a | {HALE LAKE CAMP 1 ch ea Mrs. KATHERIN ‘led in Spain which | QUEEN OF HOLLAND. No Friends of Her Dp CHAS. M. STORCH, Koyat B..m iy. PHYC I. N ANLSURGEON Wilhelmina, the young queen of Hol- Office andMesidence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd, land, is very pretty, though her beauty GRAND RAPIDS. ee threatens in future years to run on | — —— iterates somewhat massive lines, Her admiring a] " Fe subjects gaze at her, and then murmur D*" ‘THOMAS RUSSELL, to an acquiescent neighborhood,, “Isn’t she pretty?” The young queen has fine eyes, & clear complexion and a glorious tinge Parsonage, Fourth Street, of rose-pink in her cheeks. Then her GRAND RAPIDS, hair is the rich brown that painters ye = love, and there i3 plenty of it. Wil-|C.W Hastings. W, BP. SHELDON, helmiaa has a reputation for dignity, President. Cashier but not long ago she enjoyed herself ‘so much at a court ball, waltzing w.th 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-v-aiting. This little incident sct all tongues wagging. It was exaggerated and ; commented upen 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 ownage, and in 1 | Own Age in the FHSLYCIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence. Presbyterian 0. BE. AIKEN, P. J. SHELDON, Asst. Cashier Vice President, ~ Lumbermen’s Bank The Herald-Review $2 A. B. CLAIR, Register of Deeds of Itasca County Mineral - Holland. the royal family-is, limited to . a very small circle, The two or three Pi ne and princes and princesses available are 3 middle-aged, dowdy, and dul’ Farm I ng Yet Wilhelmina obviously enjoys her “splendid islodtion.” She gave every- one to understand, on her- accession, | that she liked ‘independencey and in- tended to preserve it as long‘as pos- sible, : < ; ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. Fun with Rubbornecks. In front of.a five-story Main street desea Unie? block there was the usual-crowd of passersby. A heavily loaded electric car-was just coming along. Suddenly: a man rushed ovt from a store in the block into the middle of the street. Gazing up to the top story, he cried out: “You'll fall, you will certainly fall.” Everybody in sight stopped: and gazed into the airs. Those who were on the wrong side of the electric car clambored over to the right. side to see their share. And there was ncth>'}” 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 blu, and the wicked bluffer hurried away to.escape the vengeance of the d.— Worcester Spv. Lands Pine Stumpage Bought. Itasca County .., Abstract Office >. ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE, “Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KING, ty, _ Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, ie = COUN1Y AND VILLAGE OFFICERS COUNTY. MINN “W. E. NEAL, Pine and Farming Lands. Hattie F. Booth COMMISSIONERS. =é . (Chairman). VILLAGE. President 5.56. .... 6 oes ona D. M. Gunn. F. O’Connell ‘as Trustees .... | Recorder Treasurer Attorney Street Commi Marshal The tinest List of Agricultural and Grazing Lands in the County. The Mast, Excellent Sites for lacturing Enterprises. Manu CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN | Guuncu— Rev. E. P. Crane, pastor, : Prospective Settlers Located. ROMAN: CATHOLIC; CHURCH—Rev. CG. V. Gamuche, pastor. Corres.ondence Solicited. | M.-E. CHURCH—Kev. J. Cr Hartley. pastor. | ; Grand Rapids, - = - ~——‘Minn SECRET SOCIETIES, ITASCA LODGE A.. Pv. & A. Me. No.,208: meets the first and third Fridays of each month at K.of P. hall. ’ Es 1 O. L. Matien, W: M. | | GRAND. RAPIDS LODGE T. 0. 0. Ist: meets every Wednesday. night Fellows hat 1. D, assy ARBUTU meets e 2 eee ee ea a a a a a ae The Celebrated “@ream | LODGE N day in Odd PéHows Mrs. M. Lou Lorurop, N. G. Joan DesHaw, B.S. SLSLSSSTSSSLSQEISY SLSS 5S SSGOSSSSSE i | TTASCA DIVISION } | meets first Monday o +P. hall. YE. A. Kremer, Capt. Cuas. Krarney, Recorder, BANA TEMPLE 20, RATHBONE meets every Wednesday sight at l sx, M. B.C. e ‘America’s Finest Pro- att ITASCA CAMP No. 6444, M.. W. of. A.: meets duction. second and fourtte Mondays of exch Received Highest Reward at World's Columbian Exposi- % No. 22. ROYAL & y GQ eighbors: meets first und third Mondays sj ROS tbion. becom man dee i Medincal aud’ Family Uses. nonth Odd F lows hall. MCALPINE, Oracle. KR. 8. COUNCIL? No. 9, MODERN | and third Tues- h month at K. of P. hall. S.J. Canin. G. S. 8. M. Lou Lorne } NORTH STAR Henry Logan. sole. Grand Rapids. AGENT D.lamend & Go., Chicago. MSS SLES BTES! L.W. Huyrury, Seely, ITASCA HIVE L. 0.7. Mu: meets every | F | second and fourth of each mont! in K, of P. hall. Mrgi Be Ar, L. G. Mrs. Harqar P. Hoe eR 8 i LOCKSLEY COURTNo: 109. U.0. 1: mects| + Sate SSH SORSR TERS Hse e ae oe second and fourth Tuesday each 4 PA K. of P. hall, Priore Te 5S Mus. Cahn Mrs. MArGarer Fin UMBEAT hi ut Gad F RSCSLSLAS: Ces a RR oa z. . Died for Mer Puppies. | a lprge barn in the rear ef Miss Mary Wicken’s dwelling at 817 Hag. Washington. stréct,-was discovered in a mass of flames,'says the Indianapolis "| News, and when the dena epink are B. F. HUSON POST G. A. R. No, 140: me oe yard at the time of the fire ran fran- Becker, Q. Re AN, See’y R TRIBE’ No. 25,''f, O. R. Mz nd third fridays eaelt moth ‘elluws hall. a8 JOUN LEP EL, Sac =. M.A. YANQEY, Com. H.R Bosom Ad Te ee TRAROA OTRGLE LA Dias or THE.G. a R.:! tically about and finally’ fom burn- mects the iirst Monday of each month in ‘after, several pups. “She made Post hall. Vrs. © PINE Y. ing barn after, “Mt cow pecws. noes ee a gallant effort to rescue the. puppies, Murs. Mary Huson, Sec’y. a ha coul POKEGAMA TENT NO. , K.0.7.Mz: meets | DUt_ Was. suffocated before she could evory first andthird Thursday of each | drive them out. _. month at KX. of B. ball saw * i SHIT FAERAN SAPS Their Importance in the Transpor- tatior of Perishable Products. UNFOUNDED OPPOSITION TO SUBSIDIES. Value of Ocean Flyers to the Gov- ernment in Time of Peace or War —Build Up the Nation’s Ocean Trade and Augment Its Naval Power. * {Special Correspondence.) Washington, D. C., Jan. 16. Considerable opposition to the payment of subsidies to swift American steamships has developed in the press of the country. The statement has been widely circulated that these ships merely carry passengers abroad to spend American money, and to bring back wines and silks for luxurious cit- izens, and that such ships, so employed, are of no help to American commerce. What is wanted, these opponents declare, is car- go carriérs, the low-powered steamships that take cargoes wherever they offer, and carry them wherever they are consigned, regardless of established linea. And these are the ships, they go on and assert, that have given Great Britain her preeminence as a maritime power. All this sounds plausible, and somewhat logieal, and, if not analyzed by those hav- ing knowledge of the facts, helps to create an unfavorable and hurtful sentiment to- ward the shipping bill now pending in congress which preperly cons.ders swift steamships, as well as slo ter of , the swift steams! products from the United i: the most valuable, and, ix 1 most perishable. Were it not for the fast steamship California fruits —- a growing business—cou'd not be exported to Europe; with them, the exportation of Pacific coast fruits steadi!y grows and prospers. All kinds of dressed meats, ham, bacon, lard and an infinite variety of agricultural or farm products, that have gone trough va- rious stages of manufacture are sent abroad in swift ships. Swift ships carry the mails; and it is es- sential that the maiis be carried with the utmost rapidity. Invariably swift ships are parts of regularly established lines, and theygmake regu'ar and frequent voyages to and ¥rom their terminal points. The swift- er, the greater, the more powerful the ships, the move profitable their use is to their re- spective terminal countries, but the truth is the less remunerative they all are to their owners. They carry the most expensive cargoes that go both ways, the manufac- tures upon which jabor and skill have been expended, and which return the’ largest sums to their producers. But these are the'ships, the large, pow- erful, swift.ocean flyers, that are most use ful to the nation in time of war. They are at once availabie as carriers of important dispatches, in ‘cases where celerity is of the utmost importance; they are useful as aux- iliary cruisers, they can be quickly - trans- formed into cruisers and then: prey upon and destroy the enemy’s commerce; they ean act as scouts for fleets, and keep them informed regarding the movements of the enemy, keeping in’ touch with the enem) and eluding capture through their swift ness. This was well illustrated by the four great ships of the only American line in the trans-Atlantic trade, during our war with Spain. They were steaming at full speed between 500 and G00 miles a day, fae out upon the Atlantic, keeping watch for in’s cruisers, ready to report them to the flying squadron at Hampton Roads. It} this, scouting work, so effectively: de that compelled Spain to send Cervera to the south, when but for them Cervera might have threatened if not seriously and irrepara! injured our great Atlantic and Gulf seaports. The swift steamships are the nearest at- tainment to the ideal, the consummation of the highest hopes of the artists engaged in their construction, at once an effective dem- ofstration of man’s best handiwork, and at the same time an invaluable aid to the na- tion when most in need of aid. Such ships are the final outgrowth of regularly estab- lished lines where a trade has been built up at great expense, after many years of faithful effort, and through a service that is thorough, complete and attractive. They arethe best of their kind and a nation whose people fail to appreciate them doea not grasp the full significance nor the full value of sea power. = The so-cailed tramp steamships, the ves- sels that carry cargoes wherever destined, are merely the carriers of the surplus car- goes that accumulate after harvesting, or at exeeptional times, when the regular lines are overcrowded. But it is the regular lines that build up « nation’s trade—never the tramps—and they often do it for yearsata loss, until they are thoroughly established and have accumulated a paying business. And Britain’s sea power lies in her great steamship lines, not in her “tramps.” O7If the agents of foreign steamships are deliberately working to defeat the pending shipping bill—as is baing said ail over the country—congress should be warned. The American >peopie are not in the mood to see legislation he'pful to a great American in- dustry defeated in the interest of foreign- ers. Congress is not, of course, deliberately conspiring to injure any foreign interests. But if the atter happens to monopolize any great American industry, as they, do the earrying of our imports and exports, and congress in legistating to’ promote thie in- dustry in the United States does hurt for- eign interests, that is a mere incident, not the objective. ; C7 1f the foreign steamship lines are spending money lavishly to defeat the ship- Ping bill now pending in congress, as is as serted in Washington press dispatches, it must be ae Dill in-question wouid hurt theforeign ships. Tt that be so, it must fol- low that it would heip American ships. Con- gress should not be slow to follow this ar gument to its logical conclusion. t= Congress, as a body, cannot escape its ol-igations to the American people in the matter of providing legislation for-the re- vival of our shipping in the foreign trade, by saying that this or that bill is not just ‘perfect. The people elect congress to leg- islate in the interest of the American peo- le-and they have no time to study all the Tevalls Results count. “ferMembers of congress cannot any fnore concerned’ to, keep at home and cir- | eylvanien gy birth. ¥ culating among American workingmen and | thirty-cight years’ service in the cor business men the $20,000,000 now annually | and is one of the veterans in the ‘paid to foreign ship owners for doing Url ice, Ee received his appointn foreign carrying than the people are them rahi ‘What the people expect is that this sentiment. will find p | fective. statute before adjournment. — expression in an ef: | fi ALASKA FLOWERS, A Well-Known Lover of Nature Tells Us About Them. : Jshn 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. rom 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. 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 smal!, delicate lady’s-slipper, pale yellow striped with maroon, and a pretty dwarf rhododendron, its large purple flower sitting upon the moss ard 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 attracto’! our notice were the golden-crowned The golden crown had a peculiarly piercing, plaintive song, very simp): but very appealing. There were only three notes, but they were from out the depths of the bird’s soul. In them wes all-the burden of the mystery and pathos of life. INCORRECT NAMES. Game Dirds of America Misnamed by Hunters. It is remarkable that most of the g2me 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 | after partridges and grouse. There | are indeed some pheasant preserves in | the country, but in spite of assertions tg the contrary the quail does not live on the North American continent, ac- cording to the authority of D. G. liott in Quting. In the first places qu are much smailer than partridges. The mein differences, however, between the two much-confused birds are: The ‘ill of the true quail is small, weak, entirely different from’ the strong bill of the English partridges and of our fown “Bob White.” and the groove of the nostril is mostly feathered, The nostril of the American ‘‘quail”—really rertridge—is uncovered. Partridge legs are scaly and spurred, while quails’ legs are neyer so adorned. The quail’s tail is short, the feathers soit 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 Mecsena quail, the crested and plumed quail of the southwest, to ose of the Pacific coast, are veally partridges, es will be found by judging them scientifically. The ruffed grouse | rarely receives its correct name, being eajled partridge or pheasant, accord- ing to locality. The grouse is knowz. by the fact that its legs are always completely or partially feathered over. The partridge never has feathers on its legs. Girl Tramps Are Numerous. New Jersey Las come to the front yith a product entirely its own. It is nothing less than the female tramp dressed in boy’s viothing and stealing rides on freight trains. She is be coming common. Recently “James Robinson of Philadeiphia was released fromthe county correction farm. at Trenton on payment of a $3 fine, the money having been sent here by tcle- graph from Philadelphia. “James” is a girl about 16 years old. She was arrested by a railroad detective. ani sent to the farm chained to six tramps When captured she had a large revol- ver strapped to a belt around he: 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 he uncle in New Brunswick. The iustise committed her to the stone quarry for thirty days in default of the £2 | fine imposed. This is the third gir! tramp the detectives have arreste? ai 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 which ,child life enters. ehild’s life: from his, hor Separate a e, yycmratter worthy the interest in the abstract, and you have made the poor fittie tn- dividual a seat of discord. © You have set him at odds with the life in which resides his origin and suppsy; wR have created in him a soci>} teadency that threatens our political constitu- tions.—Harper’s Bazar. _ dg. Colonel Cochrane's Record. Colonel Henry Clay Cozhrane, who has been ordered from his post at the Boston navy yard to the command? of the marine forces in China, is a Renn- He has” the earty part of tke civil articipated. in the batt ay ynd cther engagements. _, a aah ls bias He covld not go far before his hands- sparrow ard the little hermit thrush. ~ is inseparable from every problem into how wretched his home, no matter how “ wanes