Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, November 2, 1901, Page 8

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iuparices Bags Imperfeet Fuge WILLIAM IOKINLEY ¥ | Timber Land Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for publication. United States Land Office. Contest Notice. ) a — o Bankrupt’s Petition for Discharge. In the District Court of the United States for the District of Minnesota--Pifth Division, In the matter of Frederick T. Bankrupt--In Bankrupycy. Cleveland to Take the Stump. ® That Democrats of all shades of opinion will be found in solid phalanx x Duluth, Minn. Oct. 20th, 1901. against the common enemy in future - A sufficient contest affiidayit having been | Department of the Interior. evidenced by | filed in this office by Lai United States Land Office. cue stember 20, 1901, t in compliance + of Congress of Duluth, Minn, Notice is hereby given t with the provisons of the June i Bueneman, GRAND RAPIDS POSTOFFICE HOURS: | campa‘gns is further his off nder Larson. contest- | To the Tonorable William Lechron. Judge | i : i )ffice ope vek duys from 8 0’clock a. m. to | »” rece eclaration: oft pjant, against Thomas Kiely, entry No.d),0x2. | of the District Court of the United States President felong Fric ; Come fe Mpcapenime day: © | the recent declarations of » former made April 28th 1888 for the’ w's of the nw%| for the.District of Minnesota: all the Publ hates brie trade | ar avd colleagife tn Cuovress Sunda. »p.m.,and | President Cleveland relating to the | of section 27, and these4 of the ne, und the | pau. TE . ate ded to all t MOT Te Pole ot Geed eee. war aud colleague In Cuagres : ue’ of the ses of section 28, all in township |, Prederick Bueneman, of the Village of Auxust 4, 1802. Willizm E. Fenley of Gai + par bis side with other zreat 4 Grand Rapids, in the unty of Itusea and uty of Crow Wing, Stute of Minnesota, as near bh iate vith ared son Co s has this day filed in this office } Number ew Jersey campaign. Asked if he intended to support Mayor Seymour, 61, range 26.by suid Thomas Kiely, contestee, in which it is alleged that the said Thomas men when his eyes wer Mail State of Min i district, resp n fully represents that on the 5th day of A - | statement Followed the bier to Kiely has never made any improvements death 1to arrive 2:58 p.m. Mail ‘ : 4 p . na ord con- adeno gust, Jast past. he was duly adjudged bank-| purehise of swig of of saeta ‘betord kreival of Ptoe nominee. OF the Jemocratic Cen: | non Hiesald Jano: exerus spaneyimence the rapt under the iets of Congress relating to | No. 2 in Township No. 61, Range No. 264 p.m, atta anti'tis- Cant fire aig tie! . y \vention, for governor, the reply Was|/upov — 3aid land, and that” the said | bankraptey ; that he has duly surrendered all | and will offer proof to. show that ‘the Jaud | Capital and to Canton. ne soughtis more valuable for its timber or| requiries a share of the pro his propery and rights of property, and has “Kiely” left the same in an unfinished and led with all the requicoments of | ston incomplete condition; that, he has never re- P.M. han for agricultural purors not ambiguous: “Certainly; of course of Lis book to be devc ish his m to said land befors O. H. Strise fay com) acts and of the orders of the court touch- | ¢: sai Se "= CS AES | Ishall support Mr. Seymour; Iam a Ser a re ea et or, uaproved OF | ihe his bankruptcy, Rewlster and Roceiver of this office nt D eee cee a . oo | Democrat and expect to continue] homestead laws, and that the said meet | Wherefore he prays that he may be decreed | Minn., on ‘Thursday. the 5th day of December, | !¢y Monumen u “yh d Vicinity. | one ‘never established a residence of any ‘kind, | bY the court to Nave a full diseharge from all | 1901. subscriber becomes a ity an I Y. | one. and that the said+"Kiely" has wholly aband: | debts provable ugainst his estate ‘under sald | He names witness : crib ‘ a at the | doned suid land for aiperiod of over six months | b29krupt acts, except such debts as aro ex-| |. M Dinwiddie of C William | to this fund. Millions It is eneouraging to learn tnat the | orto this date, And that said failure ta tame cepted by luw from such dischurse. Wakeman, of Grand Rupids. F L| 6 gold. Beerybuay w 7 —— rnisiof Ni sey 2 ' e, cultivate, o Ae Dated this 18th day of October. A.D, 1901. | Wakemen, of Grand Rapids Minn.;) £. be sold. Everybody w it. O Democrats of New Jersey are united | prove, cultivate, or reside upon said land has 4 4 4 " 1 - Ore © r In nowise been caused through the employ~ FREDERICK T. BUENEMAN, Shultes. of Deer Kiver, Minn. eye tdneiaalinit ail W..J. Keliy and wife made a busi- | and are earnest in the effort—which | ment of the said entryman in the army, Bankrupt. Any and all persons claiming adversely | © seer i 3 : pad ‘omises. success—to redeem that ,M#¥Y. or marine corpse of the United. Stutos pees the abore-doseribed lands are requested to | fuse Hlegant Photogravu rtrait promises —success— as an_ officer. seaman or soldier in the war file their claims in tiis office on or before | 6 progident: Mek in ane Pi *s ttips to Duluth this week. nes ttips to | said 5th day of December. 1901 Wa. Order of Notice Thereon, with Spain or in any other war in which the taken at the Whit aken at the Wh ~ Mrs. W. E. Martin entertained a few of her friends Saturday afternoon. John Whipple returned ‘Tuesday from a cruising trip up Pranrie river. There will be a meeting of the | public library board on ‘Tuesday next, attornay of St. | Fetter, business here transacting Norman Paul, was this week. George B. Aiton, state inspector of was in Grand Rapids high schools last week. The dancing cluv held one of its popular dances et Village Monday evening George L. Dewey and wife returned ‘Tuesday from Superior and the ‘Twin Cities. Attorney J. L. Thwing spent Sun- He | day with his parents im Duluth returned Tuesday. The order of Forresters have secured Village hall for Thanksgiving and will entertain withfa dance, Miss Alice Tyndall was given a surprise. party‘on Thursday evening by her school companions. A. B. Clair and will Nisbett left yesterday ona business trip to Win- mpeg. They will be absent about a week. Rey. Fwinnerton of Bemidji will oc- cupy the M. E. pulpit tomorrow morning at 11 0’clock and 7:30 in the evening. W. E. Martin was a passenger to ‘Ten Stnke ‘Thursday where he will put in a month running lines fur a lumber concern. | The dance given Thursday even- ing at Village hall by the Rathbone sisters was - well attended and a very | enjoyable ume was had. Mr. and Mrs. Neil Mullens of La- | Prairie, left ‘Thursday for troit, Mich., and Windsor, Canada. John M. Reis, attorney, 1s logging firm of Price Bros. This firm, we understand 1s defendant in a Minneapolis, an ‘be differences a month’s | visit with friends and relatives in De- | her in the interest of the | erstwhile reliable Democratic state froin the incubus of Republican mis- rule, In New Jersey, as in Mipne- sota, as in Montana, as in every state in the Union, the rocks upon which the grand old Democratic ship has run, have been charted, are now known of all ‘political mariners, and are no longer sources of danger. Among Democrats there will always of opinion on minor matters—as there will always be among men of intelligence and strong minds wherever found, ip whatever party or league or society. It isan inevitable consequence of the posses- sion of brains and manly character. But there are many and most impor- tant points upon which there is no difference of opinion among Demo- crats. Upon these they will take their stand in every state as they have in New Jersey. Democracy means eternal justice toall men under the flag, and there never was in the history of the gov- ernment a time whe there was greater need of a revival of the spirit of the great fathers of Democracy. All signs portend its coming.—St. Paul Globe. A Dignified Presence: To paraphrase Dickens, one might say “Time is mellering to the organ.”” | Ly organ is meant that of the jour- nalistic variety, and the ““‘mellering” procass is very plainly. shown in the treatment accorded within the last year or two to Honorable Grover Cleveland (ex-president of the United states and at present profess- orin Princeton university) by many republican organs and not a few Democratic who. were wont, erst- while, to hold up Mr.-Cleveland as an | object of deepest contempt or bitter- j est scorn. Probably, Mr. Cleveland has broad- ened as the days have passed by and he comes nearer the greal solution of life. Probably, he is pleasanter as an Ex. than he was an Executive. Probably. as worries have lessened the mans’ nature bas had a chance to soften. large damage suit. i ‘The§JGrand Rapids Orchestra will give a grand masque ball on Tuesday, Nov. 12. All music anl a_ good time should not | confessed that he is not at all chary ail to attend this ball. lof words. He writes upon various For sprains, swellings and lameness | Subjects, ranging from fishing to finance. He writes well, is doubt- there is nothing so good Cham ber- | laia’s pain balm. Try it. For sale | by Itasca Mercantile Co. | i Came Near Dying. For three days and nights [ suffered | agony untold from attack of cholera | morbus brought on by eating cucum- bers,” says M. E. Lowther, clerk of | the district court, Centerviile, Iowa. “IT thought I should surely die, and tried a dozen different medicines but | self a uew status which, if held in all to no purpose. I sent fora bottle | less honor than his former one, cer of Chamberlain’s Culic, Cholera and | tainly gives rise to less criticism. Diarrhoea remedy and three doses re- who are lovers of | those ot Mr. Cleyeland and it may be Be all this as it may, to the words ; of few men ip. this country is more } attention. given now-a-days than less well paid fer it and, if somewhat ponderous in style, cannot be accused of destitution of thought, poverty of idea. There is something pleasantly dig- nitied about the position Mr. Cleve- land has attained and it is very much to his credit that, after secur- ing the highest position in the gift of the peopie, he has attained for him- The oft-repeated query “What lieved me entirely. I went to sleep | and did notawake for eight hours, i On awakening a few hours ago 1 felt so gratified that the first work I do ou going to the office is to write to ihe man Jfacturers of this remedy and offer them my grateful thanks and | shall we do with our ex-presidents? is usually auswered by death. Mr. Cleveland, the only living ex-pres ident, has proved himself abundantly able to “do” for himself. Me enjoys lis ease with dignity. He bas) suf ficient: work of a congenial kind to United States may have been engaged. United States District Court, District of Said parties are hereby notified to appear, respond and offer evidence touching sald al- legations at 10 o'clock, A. M. on December 5th, 1901, before I. D, Rassmussen, Clerk of istrict Court. at his office in Grand the D Rapids, Minnesota. and that final heuri u will be held at 10 o'clock A. m. on Deceniber 9th, 1901, before the Register and Receiver at the United States Land Office at Duluth, Minn. The said contestant having in a hi Minnesota, Fith Division, ss: On this 19th day of October, A. D. 1901, on reading the foregviug petition, it is— Ordered by the court, that a hearing be bad pon the same on the ninth day of November, D, 1901, before said court. ut Minneapolis, in said District, at. two o'clock in the after- joon; and that notice thereof be published in the Grand Rapids Herald- Review, a news- roper affidavit filed October 29th, 1901. set — printed in said district, and that all n ‘orth facts Which show that after du dilli- gence personal service of this noti annot may appear at the said time and nown creditors and other persons in interast lace, and Herald-Review. Sept. 28, Nov. 30. a Disso‘ution of Partnership. Notice is hereby given that the law partnership of Price & Spear. with offices ab Duluth and Grand Rapids, Minnesota, eas been dissolved by mu- tual consent, easily and quickly clear $1 orders. Order ou lo prove success, tract and vecowe Manager. Send is 2cent stamps for elegan “spectus. Taking 10 to 50 orde copies will be sold in this vicin Addre: secure be made. it is hereby ordered and that suc publication. d WM. E. CULKIN, Register. Frank F. Price, Attorney for Contestant. 606 Torreo Building, Duluth, Minn, nov, 2-dec, 7. y directed notice be given by due and proper show cause if any they have, why the prayer of the said petitioner should not be granted. And it is further ordered by the court, that the clerk shall send by mail to ull known creditors copies of sald petition and this order, addressed to them ut their places of residence us stated. Witness the Honorable William Lochren. judge of the said court, and the seul thereof, at Duluth, in said district, on the nineteenth Dated Oct, 11, 1901. Frank F. Prick, GEORGE IT. SPEAR. di wu'S LAUNDRYMAN. ‘ Mistaken by Green Reporter fur Lega- | ' tlon Attache. An interesting story is told apropos of a reporter’s zéal 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 t tion endeavoring to pick up some- thing, not knowing that the most di- | 1 rect way woujd 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 Jegation and responded so p.easantly to his greeting that he bombarded him with a whole list of guestions, 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 something 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 Into a laundry near by, of which he turned out to be the proprietor.—San Francisco Argonaut. Poisoning Fish with Cocaine. Large numbers of fish are being poisoned in the Little Miami river, Ohio, especially in the vicinity of Branch Hill and Remington. Mem- bers of the different camping clubs in this section have found fine fish which had succumbed to “dope balls” used by “pot fishermen.” Parties have been on the lookout for the men and the other evening a member of the Corryville club, which is camped near Remington, saw a man planting the bait. He escaped, however. Some of the bait was secured. It consisted of corn meal mixed into a pellet and gat- urated with cocaine. This stupefies the fish and they come to the sur- face. AS a general thing they die from the effects of the drug. London's Ambulaneeé Service. London fs at last to have a complete ambulance service. There is no Place in the world where it is go much FA needed. The Metropolitan corps of the | # St. John ambulance brigade does ex- cellent work, but its chief surgeon, Mr. Osborn, recommends that the service should be under the control of the London county council. His idea ig to graft an ambulance system for Lon- don on to the Metropolitan fire pbri- zade, by whom ft can be eastly horsed, housed and supplied with alarm calls. The London fire department does not made Ju itis morning in the vicinity of the lega- | y wild and uncultivas lipps has never reside in the army. Chinaman came down the steps of the | affidavit filed Oct, 2, 1991. which show that after due dil service ofthis notice can not be made. is hereby ordered and directed that such notice be given by due and proper. publi- ; Men will appreciate the ty of October, A. D. 1901, Z CHARLES L. SPENCER, Clerk. By Tos. H. PRessNevu, Seal of + Deputy Clerk. the Court 5 Contest Notice. United States Land Office. Duluth, Minnesota, October 22, 190 A sufficiert.conte t affidavit having bes filed in this office by Joseph H. Dunning, con- testant. eggs Homestead entry No. 9850, y 5, 1895 for lot 15; W 44 of xe 4 and ne 44 of sw 44. section 3, township 6, n, range 25 w, hy some P. Phillips, contestee. in which eed that sald’ Phillips. has never that will have the whole | mide any improvement upon said land; that here uremo buildings of any n said land: that said land is state: thu hat such abandonment was not due toser Ppear, The said contestant having, in a) prope t forth tacts ation. Wo. FE. Cutxktn, Register. Herald-Re view, Nov. 2-Dec. 7 id Phil- d upon said land, and navy or marine corps of che Uni- ted States. Said parties are hereby notified to Y ond and offer evidence touching said allegation at 10 0’cloek a. m. on _Decem- ber 10, 1901, before the Register und Receiver at the United States land office in Duluth. Minnesota. renee personal ‘tin the long run. ec We don’t believe ‘| you can find a suit - of any other make style and appearance of these Hart,Schaff- ner & Marx suits or that will wear as «| welland cost as little Come in and see them and try on SO YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trave Marks Desicns . CopyricnTs &c. Anyone sendirig a sketch and Seseription may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. ‘Communi tions strictly confident ‘Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. nts taken through Munn & Co. receive "Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. ‘Terms, $3 9 ths, $l. by ali newsdealers, N & Co, s81eroas. New York 3 ‘Branch ‘&% F 8t., Washington, some of the new styles. HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX GUARANTEED CLOTHING. ITASCA MERCANTILE uO. THE CONTINENT: Corcoran Bidg., Opp. U W ashi WEAR THE BEST |_|, Copyright 1899 By Hart, Schaffner & Mara EIARTAC! KAT) RAY yt Business TOS + BRELCTCSLSLSS SMSSSSSTEWSLSNT’ CNSD SAG! SWS“ ESTES aN . ' } i} | 4 Seo oe, el Attractions in attire in- say, ‘God bless you and the splendid | make his declining years the pleas-| pay, any t h ‘ ave oo many horses now for t fact that we mean busi- clude the tony, dressy, micdicine you make.” This remedy | antest of his. life. No American! prompt responding to calls and it s for sale by Ltasca Mercantile. | need be ashamed to point to this} would necessitate an increase of the |p SS large figure as a quondam Chief | number if the new scheme is adopted, | MESS when they see the Fall Top Coat. Our It Happened Ina Drugstore. | No civ man need hesitate to lomrere prices on “One day last winter a lady came |r | to my drugstore and asked for a brand | : ot cough medicine I did not have in - va | Grandin, the | New |} stock,” says Mr. C. R, popular druggist of Ontano, York. “She was disappointed and | order an overcoat or a suit of winter wanted to know what cough medi- | Clothes of August Johnson. He has cine I could recommend. I said to} t her that I could freely recommend u Chamberlain’s cough remedy and that | ¥ she couid take a bottle of the remedy | and after giving it a fair tial if she did | not find it worth the money to. bring | back the bottle and I would refund In the course of al back in need ofa the price paid. day or two the lady came $ company with a friend in cough medicine and advised her to 5 i | [lasca Mercantile Co. ad what Mr. Cleveland writes. to near What Mr. Cleveland says—rative: hould be be greatful for opportunity o read or hear.—Minneapolis Times. ‘This would be a first rate time to he goods on hand and is prepared to urn out orders immediately and in a most satisfactory manner, Light driving team for sale cheap. Irasca MERCANTILEC 0. , Camp outfit for sale. cksmith Blankets, cubtit, ete rook stoves, bl Skil of the Camee Cutter. The cameo cutter’s occupation ty very exacting. He can put in only a few hours’ work at a time as a usual thing, because of the tension on his nerves. A quavering hand may be re- sponsible for the single stroke which will spoil a week’s work. He must have an eye almost like a microscupe, and a very delicate touch; he must be an artist in soul, and as skillful a craftsman as is a watchmaker; he must know how to model and draw, and he must have a knowledge of chemistry, so as to remove offending spots. The work is executed in relist on many kinds of hard or Precious stones, but essentially the chalcedonic variety of quartz and on shells, eT Royal Corpse Awaiting Burial, When you cannot sleep for cough- It is said that since the year 1700 a custom has prevailed in Spain which prohibits the burial of a dead king our business suits. “style, service, satisfac- tion” line is so reason- able in price that buying the uncertain “just as as good” is real extrav- agence. This label explains it. ss st # & ohio « eae 4) ¥ \ , ¥ _ if . % | buy a bottle of Chamberlain 's cough | ing, itis hardly necessary that any- remedy. 1 consider that a very good | one should tell you that you need a i 2 . » few doses of Chimberlain’s Cough BCom end avon. Aor ty tomy. | femedy to allay the irritatioa of the before the death of his successor, ‘the embalmed on a marble slab in a vault The remedy owes its great popularity | throat, and make sleep possible. It and extensive sale in a large measure’! is goad. . | Mercantile Co. to the personal recommendations of | people who has been cured py its use. | jt is for sale by Itasca Mercantile Co, Try it. For sale by Ltasca Th: Herald-Review; $2 per year, of the Escurial, covered over with 3 sheet. On the death of his son the present young king, the body will) be removed and buried with great pomp by the side of its ancestors In the Fis. eurial chapel, that of Alfonso xill taking Its place qe the marb’e siab, sate King Alfonso XII., therefore. lies ¢ ohn Beekfelt, *222.e</, pees = REREEES os , === 1

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