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va: MORTGAGE FORECLOSURE SALE. Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Duluth, Minn., May 22nd, 1901. Notice is hereby given that in compliance with the provisions of the act of congress of June 3, itled “An act for the sale of timber lands in the states of California, Ore- won, Nevada and Washington Territory, extended to ‘all the Public Land Sta 4, 1882, Sidney Buchanat county of Douglas, state of W s this day filed in this office ‘statement No, 5420. for the pure! of NW and N%4 of NE} of in township No. 6l.n. range No. 'd will offer proof to show that the ought is morevaluable for its u than for agricultural ish his claim to said and Receiver of tp ne adversely requested to file their in this office on or before said 19th day of August, 1901, Wa. E. © Herald-Review, May 25, August 17, Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. ce for Publication, United States Land Office. nn., May 22nd, 1901. that in compliance act of Congress of ct for the sak tes of Califo d toull the publi . Will *fownship nd will offer proof inchoate, cultural purpost > said land be Fof thts ote mi ait ot Mannie, of West Superior. Wis. wns claiming adversely the » requested to file on or before suid | ivth day of August, 11. « Wn. E. Coos. Register. Herald-Review. May 25, August 17. Timber. Land Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for Publication, United States Land Offic Duluth, Minn. May 22nd, 1901. ce is hereby given that in compliance provisions of theact of Congress of “An act fortae sale of tes of California. Ore- xon, ) hington Territory,” as Eottded te ail the Public i tot gure it 4, 18! ‘i 8, for the purcha Wa of Secti nge No.25 W, and t the land sought ¥. In Township No. 61 Will offer proof to shi ’ i ore. e Re t Duluth, M 19th day of August. 1901. 1 JOA. Irvine of Still- John L. Goodvin, of Minong, in Wis.; ‘ister ny 1 or before said ims in this off Wth day of August. 1001. Wa. E. CULKIN, Register. Herald-Review. Ma August 17. Ord rta Ecamine Aecou ot, ets. STATE OF MINNESOTA, ) PSS. aitor of the representi Shas fully a praying the id for punt be ex- ythe Judge of prior to nd Kapids Herald per printed aad pub- day of hearit Review a legal newsp lished in said county. y the Court, JOUN L, BARNARD Judge of Probate. Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for publication. United States Land Office. Dululh, Minn., July 20. 1901. hereby given that in Compliance ons of the act of Congress of ale of timber Notice with the pr June 3, 187s, i : i St it inlay of Garrison County of tate (or Territory) of Minnesota, he as tina day filed in this office fh te- hegpurchasof swig of s No. 61, Range show that mber or ral purposes, and ¢s said land before the is office at D alae, arrison; Wm. Wakeman L. Wakeman of Grand lultes of Deer Kive: r. 1 1 ers hove-described | Hie their aims in th said Sth day of December I office on or before a. Herald-Review. Sept. 28, Dec, 7. NT Heir to $500, Ov. Robert E. M. Cooper, formerly a prominent newspaper inan and politi- cian. bas fallen heir to $530,000. The estate was left to Cooner by John C. Crego, a miser hermit, who recently died at Cripple Creek. Years ago Crego lived in the Panhondle country of Texas. Cooper made a tour of that region. Crego was not inclined to make acquaintances, but Cooper found him about to drown ina river and risked his own life to save the miser. That resulted in a friendship. Cooper seturned to Springfield, Mo., and be- tame prominent. He’ kept up a cor- respondence with Crego for some years Lut they finally lost track of each other. Crego left Texas and was a pioneer prospector at Cripple Creek. He cleaned up $500,000 and quit. There- after he lived in absolute seclusion. | fe far as he knew Cooper was still in ¥>ringfield, and a few days before he vied he sent for Justice Martin, and a wilt was drawa up leaving everything ta Cooper. Light driving team foy sale cheap. Trasca MERCANTILE Co. pught is more yaluable for its timber | aun fe the petition or Adolph | t f | i | | i | | ire requested to | | 27.25 miles an hour. | when he made the Autocrat say: Are Now Faster Than the Atiantle Liners. With the exception of torpedo boats and a few small nleasure craft, says a writer in Cassicr's Magazine, the American-built Russian cruiser Va. riag is today the fastest vessel afloat, having recently gone through a seven and a half hours’ trial run at a speed of from 23.6 to 23.7 knots, or 27.14 to We need go back only a few years to find a time when the large Atlantic racers, in point of regularly attainable speed, were far beyond anytbizg that had ever been done in any navy, and their perform- ances were considered practically he- yond reach under the severe condi tions of cramped space, light machin- ery weight, and others similarly re- strictive to the designer. The United States triple-screw cruiser Minneapolis about six years ago developed slightly more than 23 knots during her con- tract trials. As in the cases of most naval vessels, it was not expecteu that would be demanded hour after hour in a run of several days, and 1895 practical demonstration was given for the first time that a naval vessel could actually hold her own with one of the crack Atlantic liners. This was afforded by the United States cruiser Cotumbia in her phenomenal rvu from the Needles, near Southampton, to Sandy Hook Lightship, off the American shore, in a few minutes less that seven days, or, to be exact, in 6 days, 23 hours and 49 minutes, the average speed for the whole trip be- ing 18.54 knots, or 21.3 miles an hour. The Columbia at the time was prac- tically racing against the steamer Au- gusta-Victoria of the Hamburg-Amer- ican line. Making proper allowance for the difference in the length of the two routes, the Augusta-Victoria hav- ing sailed from Cherbourg, the same rate of speed was maintained by botn ships. Since that time high-speed, long-distance runs of war vessels have been repeated, so that the im- pression has at last been wiped out that modern warships were simply boxes full of delicate and complex ma- chinery scarcely fitted for the hard knocks which they were really in- tended to withstand. But among all the swift cruisers and battleships, the Variag’s 23.7 knots give her today first | place. “USE OF ENGLISH.” Dictionary Rightly Used. Next in Tater- ext to Bib'e. Richard Burton in writing in East and West of “The Use of English,” says: “Words, like men, have their ‘strange eventful histories,’ and, again like men, one word in its time ‘plays many parts.’ To follow the ups and downs of a single proper noun—a stupid name since its career is as often as not improper and ence doubly fas- cinating—or of a common noun— named with equal stupidity, since its 1, | story is likcly to be most uncommon— | ing as a novel or a football this pursuit, I say, is often as excit- game. Thus it follows that the dictionary {rightly used and comprehended) is the most interesting of all books, save per- haps the Bible. Dr. Holmes knew this “When I feel inclined to read poetry I take down my dictionary. The poetry of words is quite as beautiful as that of sentences. The author may arrange the gems effectively, but their shape and luster have been given by the at- trition of ages. Bring me the finest simile from the whole range of im- aginative writing, and I will show you a single word which conveys a more profound, a more accurate and a more eloquent analogy.’ Emerson had the same feeling when he wrote: ‘It does not need that a peom should be longa Every word was once a poem.’” A Coffve Barometer. It is claimed that the “coffee’’ fore- east is a relisble way of determining what the weather is going to be. In order to tell what the weather is going to be you must drop carefully into your morning cup of coffee, prepared with a little milk, two lumps of sugar. Do not stir the coffee. If the bubbles ascend rapidly, separate quickly and fly to the side of the cup, there will be much rain within the next twenty- four hours. If they gather closely and gravitate in a cluster to the side only possible showers may be _ expected. But if they remain placidly in the cen- ter of the cup you may wear your best hat and leave your umbrella at home when you take your walks abroad, Telephone Without Wires. At the meeting of the British Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science at Bradford, England, Sir William Preece, ex-president of the Institution of Civil Engineers, announced that he had successfwlly transmitted speech eight miles across sea without the ald of wires and that the establishment of such a system for commercial com- munication was practicable between ships and land. Sir William Henry Preece made several experiments last year with an induction system of wire- less telephoning, signaling across the | Menai straits and using telephones at both ends to receive the signals. Simplicity of Emperor Joseph. +The personal habits of Emperor Francis Joseph are marked with sol- dier-like simplicity. His food is of the plainest, such as an ordinary citizen consumes. He retires at 9 o'clock every night and sleeps on his iron field bed. At the age of seventy he is still able to meet and overcome the per- plexing difficulties that are peculiar to the Austro-Hungarian empire, and his great goodness of heart has won him universal love throughout the em- pire, ALASKA FLOWERS. Known Lover of Nature Tells Us About Them. John Burroughs, the 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 Amooth as a meadow, but the climber soon found himself knee-dcep 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 kere 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 small, delicate lady’s-sltpper, 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-ladder, 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. A Well-! 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 after partridges and grouse. There are indeed some pheasant preserves in the country, but in spite of assertions to the contrary the quail does not live on the North American continent, ac- cording to the authority of D. G. E!- liott in Cuting. 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 of 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 rrtridge—is uncovered. Partridge legs are scaly and spurred, while 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 1s de- eidedly 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 those of the Pacific coast, are zeally partridges, as will be found by judging them scientifically. The ruffed grouse rarely receives its correct name, being called partridge or pheasant, accord- ing to locality. The grouse is knowa 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 has come 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 freight trains. 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 been sent here by tele- graph from Philadelphia. “James” is 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 uncle in New Brunswick. The justice committed her to the stone quarry for thirty days in default 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. Unquestionabiy 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 has been ordered from his post at the Boston navy yard to the command of the marine forces in China, is a Penn- tylvanian 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 cnd other engagements. well-known | Corone: She is be | ‘ fhe Mountain Parrot of New Zratacd The Kea, or mouztain purrot “ New Zealand, is a very funny Vice deast. When ho meets tourists on the tramp, he at once {gils in solemnly,with his family and chums, all waddl/.g in Indian file. Here is a scene described by a traveler who recently made the ascent of the Fox glacier: The keas having settled on the ice began to fol- iow tu a long straggling l!ne, about 15 of them. Then have a preternaturally solemn walls, but when fn a hurry they hop alovg on both feet looking very eager and very much in earnest. To seo these fifteen birds hopping along behind in a string as if thelr very lives depended on keepl:rz me in sight was ridiculously comic. The ice was undu- lating, with little valleys and hum- mocka, and the birds would now, for a second or two, disappear into a hollow and now show up on a hummock, pause @ moment, and then hop down again out of sight into the next shadow. To judge by their expressions and manner, they were in a great state of anxiety on emerging from a hollow on to a bummock, as to whether I was stlll there. Now and then the one in front would appear, crining his neck, and on seeing me still alead, would turn round and shriek “K-e-e-a,” as much as to say, “It’s all right, boys, come along.” And t}~ others, putting their heads dow, would set their teeth and travel “all they kue-v,” a fat one in the rear evidently making very heavy weather of it. Klooded With Pearls, A Bond street jeweler waa telling me some weeks ago of the new rage for pearls and the consequent rise in price, A tiny pearl which cost two shillings two years ago would now cost ten shil- lings. Since ther I have learned that the London taarket has become ab- solutely flooded with pearls. The poor, famished Indians have sold ail they possess at famine prices and the Hatton garden merchants have profited by their distress. Great, then, as is the demand for ‘pearls, the supply is far greater—a hint to those who fondly desire a neeklet of pearls in this yeas @f grace 1897—The Gentlewoman, When you cannot sleep for cough-} Protect ing, itis hardly necessary that any- one should tell you that you sneed a few doses of Chamberlain’s Cough remedy to allay the irritatioa of the throat, and make sleep possible. It is good. Try it, Forsale by Itasca Mercantile Co. COUNTY AND VILLAGE UFFICER’$ COUNTY. Farrel Miller W.. Tyndall .Chester L. Pratt +A. B, Clair 1. D. Rassmussen John L. Barnard ames Murchie Clerk of Court. Judge of Prob: Surveyor. homas Russell s. Hattie F. Booth COMMISSIONERS. District No. 1. (Chairman) District No. District No. 3. Supt. of Schooi: D. Brooks District -T. H. Hennessy District N .. John Fraser VILLAGE. President ...... ...-.. ..-+. +.+,+.D. M. Gunn, . F. O'Connell Trustees J R Recorder ‘Treasure: Attorney. Street Commissioner. Marshal MeCormick CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. E. P. Crane, pastor. ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH—Rev. Gamache, pastor. E. CHURCI—Rev. J. C. Hartley. pastor. c. Vv. SECRET SOCIETIES. ITASCA LODGE A.«. F... meets the ri and thind Brians month at K. of P. hall. E.J. LUTHER, Sec’ 'y: 0. L. MatHeR, W. M. GRAND RAPIDS LODG 184: meets every Wedne Fellows hall: JOHN I. D. RassmuSsEN, Rec. Sec. ARBUTUS REBEKAH LODGE No. 150: meets every Tuesday in Odd Fellows hall. irs. M. Lou Lorarop, N. Jon DeSuaw. RB. 5. WAUBANA LODGE K. of As No. =, meets # every Thursday evening in their ha Guaveane 6.0. R. S. No. 208: ‘of euch y night at Qad ISTELLO, N. G, Gec. C. MCALLISTER, ITASCA DIVISION No. 10, U. R. K, meets first Monday of each’ month in K. of P. hall. E. A. KREMER, Capt. *CHAS. Kearney, Recorder. WAUBANA TEMPLE No. 20, RATHBONE pistes: Taees every Wednesday night at a pall. Olas. ELzapern Hennessy, M. E. C. Mrs. JESSIE 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 Vienr, Clerk. HALE LAKE CAMP No. 22. ROYAL Neighbors: meets first and third Mondays packs eon at Odd Fellows hall. Mrs. KATHERINE more PINE, Oracle. Mrs. M. Lou Lornrop, R. NORTH STAR COUNCIL} No. 9, MODERN Samaritans: meets first rt third Tues- days each month at K. of al, 8.J. CABLE. G.s. L. W. Huntcey, Sec’y. ITASCA HIVE L. O. T. M.: meets bts second and fourth Fridays of each month in K. of P. hall. Mrs. Bessie Ciarr, L. C. Mrs, Hatrie F. Boon. K. K. LOCKSLEY COURT No. 109. U. O. k: meets second und fourth Tuesday each month at K. of P. hall. Mrs. CARRIE BECKFELT, C. R. Mas. MARGARET FINNEGAN, Sec'y. . DRUMBEATER TRIBE No. 35, [. O. R. M.: meets first und third Fridays each month at Odd Fellows hall. JOHN HEPFEr, Suchem. B. F. HUSON POST G. A. R. No. 140: meets the last Friday of each month in Post hall. Yancey, Com. H. S. Huson, Adjt. ITASCA CIRCLE LADIES OF THE G. A. R.: meets the first Monday of each month in Post hall. Mrs, CHRISTINE YANCEY, P. Mrs. Mary Huson, Sec’y. POKEG AMA TENT NO. 23. K.0. TM: ‘meets bead rst an a ursday of e; anth at K, of P, hall (Aa bars - oe wu'S LAUNDRYMAN. Mistaken by Greea Reporter f-r Lega- tlon Attache, An interesting story is told apropos of a reporter’s zeal to obtain news from the Chinese legation in Wash- ington, D. C., regarding affairs in Pe- kin. He was an enterprising young fellow sent by his editor to take the Place of the regular. Washington cor- respondent, who was away on his va- cation, and he had spent the whole morning in the vicinity of the lega- tion endeavoring to pick up some- thing, not knowing that the most di- rect way would have been to see Min- ister Wu himself, who is invariably kind about granting interviews. He was about to abandon his project when an intelligent looking and well dressed Chinaman came down the steps of the legation and responded so pleasantly to his greeting that he bombarded him with a whole list of questions, to which the polite Celestial repeatedly answered: “Dun know, dun know.” Finally quite desperate at his inability to make something out of what he looked upon as a rare chance, a walk with one of the legation’s secretaries, he asked, appealingly: “Well, surely you know somcthing of the dowager empress; what do you think of her?” “Me no thinkee,” responded the China- man, “me washee,” ana with this parting announcement he disappeared fio.a laundry near by, of which he turned cut to be the proprietor.—San Francisco Argonaut. Pan-American Rxposition. Buffalo, N. Y. and return $17. by train and steamer. Tickets on sale daily until October 3)st. BIDS WANTED. Rids are desired for the construction of the dairy barn at the Experiment Farm. The bid to include only the cost of constructing to barn, exclusive of stone work. Lumber and material furnished.’ Specificutions may be seen at the farm, The right is reseryed to re fox any or all bids, Bids must be in before aturday. Aug. 3lst, Work to be completed before Oct. Ist. Who can think elses H, Cuapman. of some simple ening Topatentt De® 620. © orierr, PHYSICIAN AND SUI - oN Office over Cable's Meat ¥ GRAND RAPID D® THOMAS RUSSELL, FHSIYCIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence. Rresbyterian Parsonage, Fourth Street. GRAND RAPIDS. 1 5 as CHAS. M. STORCH, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd. GRAND RAPIDS. PBICE & SPEAR, ATTORNEYS A'T LAW oreeee over Itasca Mercantile Meat Market GRAND RAPIDS. R. DONOHUE, . ATTORNEY AT LAW GRAND RAPIDS. The Herald-Review $2 A. B. CLAIR, Register uf Deeds of Itasca County Mineral Pine ana Farming Lands Wanted—An Idea aoe oa Write SSA WabseKSb aN’ 60 251 oe Patel tent Attor- Wasi uo La 15, Baath OPM Mine dovon a eo ©. W. Hastinas. President. \, P. SHELDON. Oushier C. E. AIKEN, Asst. Cashier Lumbermen’s Bank Of Grand Rapids. Minn P.J.Snenpox. ~ . Vice President. Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food, 1tgivesinstant reliefand never fails tocure. It allows you to eat all the food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can takeit. By itsuse many thousands of dyspeptics have been ; cured after everything else failed. It prevents formation of gason the stom- ach, relieving all distress after eating, Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take. it can’t help but do you good Prepared only by E. 0. DeWitt & Co., Chic: The $1. bott! fe contains 244 times the 50c. size. she So] H. S. HUSON, Justice of the Peace. District Court Commis- sioner for Itasca County. Notarial Work Done. OFFICE—With County Surveyor in Court House. Grand Rapids, Minnesota b bach a beheld og tye "N. A. PASONAULT. BVCCVVSVSTVATVA PROPRIETOR Pioneer Barber Shop_._ Your Patronage Solicited. LELAND A vESUE. suesessosenoeseneseanes a dene clades ieee tas Siossenssesesesnsosanouss geeneccennnessaccesesennes s 2 ® 2 ? G.C. SMITH } : DEALER IN H : : ‘3 & Fruits, Confectionery, # : Ice Cream Soda, H g Ice Cream, Drinks, : . Tobaccos, : $ Choice Lines of Cigars 3 2 e i Grand Rapids, - Minn. 3; * THIRD ST., Opp. Depot. : * 2 FORE OREN RRO RRR HER RRO TER Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. Itasca County Abstract Office ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE, Conveyanees Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KING, Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, - - MINN W. E. NEAL, Dealer in Pine and Farming Lands. The tinest List of Agricultural ane Grazing Lands in the County. The Most, Excellent Sites for Manw lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Correspondence Solicited. Grand Rapids, - - Minn go the Canbcd | The Celebrated “Cream America’s Finest Pro- | | Received Highest Reward at World's Columbian Exposi- position. Recommended for Medincal and Family Uses. Henry Logan. SOLE AGENT Grand Rapids. Dallamend & Co., Chicago. TFS HESCCHES HOS RS ES eS RS