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_— oes MORTGAGE FORECLOSURK SALE. Timber Land Act, June3 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Duluth, Minn.. May 22nd, 1901. Notice is hereby given that in compliance h visions of the act of congress of ‘An act for the sale of timbe rcls states of California, Ore- gon, Nevada and Washington Territory, as extended to all the Public Land States by net of August 4, 182, Sidney Buchanan, of West Superior, county of Douglas, state 0: V f Wis- Shas this day filed in thi statement No. » forthe pure! Of the. N'z of NW and N's of NE% of sec- tion No. 1%, in township No. Gln. range No. 25, w, and will offer proof to Show that the jand sought is morevaluable for its timber or stone than for agricultural purposes, and to establish his claim vo said lund before the Kegister and Receiver of this office at Du- luth, Minnesota, on Monday, the 18th day of Tie nam | Bert Goodvin, of Miles, of West ons Claiming adversely the ‘abo ped junds ure requested to file their sin this office on or before suid-19th day of August, 1901. Wa. E. CuvKkin. Register. Herald-Roview, May 25, August 17. Partelow Superior, Wi Any and Timber Land Act, June 3. 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office. Duluth Min Notice is hereby given t with the pro ons of the June 3. 1878, entitled “A timb ands in. the Oregon, Nevada, and W usextended toall the publi of August 4, 1802, Willian vy 28nd, 1901. and stat Otis. of glas. State of W in this offi for the pur 10, in Township No. wand will otter Inhd sought is more or stove that: for | to establish his m to said ln the Register and Receiver of this office at | Duluth Minn, on Monday. the 19th day of August. 1901, He names as witnesses: ater. Mint Irvine, of Bert Good of Minong. Wis.; Partelow ing adver H requested to file | © on or before said ith day of August, 1901. Wn». E. CULKIN, Register. Herald-Review. May 25. August 17. Timber Lana Act, June 3, 187 Notire for Publication. United States Land Office Duluth. Mi Notice is hereby visions of th om pliance ‘ongress of 1 Wasl i the Publ st 4 1892, Da Superior, coun f Douglas, t onsin, has this day filed in this office his for the purchase of | Whi of Se . ynship No. proof to s efor 9 in Te will « i civer of this office a y. the lth day of August. j as Witnesses; JA. Irvine of | Minn.; John L, Gooudvin. of Minong. | is; Bert Goodvin, of Minong, Wis. | Partelow Miles. of West Superior, Wi aiming adversely the ure requested to file ims in this office on or before said Iweh day of August, 1901. Wa. E. CULKIN, Register, Meraid-Review. May 25. August 17." Order to Be STATE OF MIN 'Y OF Ir. te Cour’ nine eco it, ets OTA. ) > SS. Special term August 21, utter of the estate of Peter Goslin, tition or Adolpl f the estat presenting amon, as fully administ theta time and | do allowing: tion, and for ment of the residue of said estate rsons entitled the sdered that the said petition heard. on Monday, the A.D. 1901 at 10 o'clock a court room in the court house in pids. in said ity jing and filing th strait punt be ex- the Judge of 1 that notice there- . prior nd Kapids He! view «legal newspaper printed aud pub- lished in suid count By the Court, JOHN L. BARNARD Judge of Probate. ET Ti aver Lant Act, June 3, 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Duluth Minn.. July Ist, 1901. by given that in'compliance ions of the act of ada, and Washington Territory. toall the public land states by . 1892, George Allis! punty Of Henn | aut) filed in this office his for the purchase of SE% Section 9, Range No. 25 W. W that the land mber or nd to staten the E's SW 4¢ and} in Township No. (ON. and will offer proof to sh sought is more valuable for its stone than fo: ricultural puposes. establish his ¢! 1 to said land before the | Regist and Receiver of this office Duluth. Minn., on Friday, the of October. 1901, He names as Joseph H. Dunning. of Minneap | William Doran. of Grand Rapids, Minn, John | Ryan, Grand Rapids. Minn. Alfred Sprague | of Grand Rapids, Minn. Any and all persons claiming adversely | the whove-deseribed lands sted to | file their claims in this office on or before | said Isth day of October, 1901. Wa. E. CULKIN. Register. Herald-Reyiew. July 27, Oct. 12. Timber Land, Act June 3, 1878. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office. Duluth, Mirie Notice is hereby giv with the provisions of t June 3, 1878, entitled “Ana timber lands in the states Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory as extended to all the Public Land States by ee of August 4. 1892, Joseph H. Danning of Minneapolis, county of Hennepin State of Minnesota. has this day filed in this office hissworn statement No. 5681. for the purchase of the seg of sw4 and sw of se’, sec. and ne of nw and nw of ne. sec. N in Township No. 60, Range No. 3, offer proof to show that the land ‘sou, more Valuable for its timber or stoue tian for peorearal purposes, and to establish his eldim to said land before the Register nn Receiver of this office at Duluth. Minne- gota. on Friday, the 18th day of October. 1901. | Tie names as witnesses: George McAllister of Minneapolis, Minn,, William Doran of Grand Rapids Minn., ohn Ryan. of Grand Rapids, Minn,, Alfed Sprague, Grand Rapids, Mi and all. persons claiming adversely the above-deseri| Jands*are requested to file poste cinieos, ESE Ce on or before suid 18th day o1 Ts a ot a Wa, E. CuLKin, Register July Ist, 1901. n compliance s of | le of Perald-Review, July 27, Oct, 12. WOR THE SUBD Democrats Who Will Support the Measure to Build Up Amer- ican Shipping. GROWING SENTIMENT IN THE SOUTH Improvement of Rivers and Harbors and the Construction of Larger Ships Viewed with Approval by Producers and Business Men. {Special Correspondence.} Washington, Jan When the opponents of the shipping bill came to be finaily counted,during the clos ing days of the debate on the army bill in the senate, the fact was uncovered that a few influential republicans were among them. These men had certain notions that the bill was inequitable in its provisions, and they had been in the habit of meeting and comparing notes and assuring each other that their suspicions were well grounded. Finally, however, these objections were brought to light, and, when that was accom- plished, and the friends of the bill were given a chance to discuss these objections, their apparent force melted away like snow under a summer sun. The result has been that a few amendments have been agreed to in the bill that cover every possible point of doubt on the republican side, and they are now all united in the senate in favor of the bill as it stands. When a vote is reached on the shipping bill there will be a disagreeable revelation to the democrats of a few of their own members who will support it. Not lessthan half a dozen democrats have, one way and another, indicated that they may be relied upon to support and to vote for the bill, and they explain, too, that this is, largely, in obedience to urgent requests from their con- stituents. Nowhere in this country is this more in evidence than in the south, where, hitherto, opposition has been so general to all forms of government aid, at least on the part of the statesmen representing southern constituencies, as to have caused a feeling | of despair at times among their more pro- gressive and up-to-date colleagues from the north and west. The improvement of rivers and harbors in the south, followed by the construction of much larger ships for the carriage of south- ern export products, and the eonsequent re- duction in freight rates and increase in di- rect returns to the producers, have been ob- ject lessons of immense value to the south- ern business men, and the fact is slowly dawning upon those whom they send to congress to represent them. No longer is there opposition in the south to the im- provement of rivers and harbors; indeed, there is more money likely to go into the improvement of the great seaports of the south, and especially of the gulf, and its tributary streams, than into the north. The direct benefits from this have been felt in very hamlet, village and city in the south, whether located upon a navigable stream or not. So, too, it is beginning to be felt through- | out the south that the construction of the Nicaragua canal wi:l be an undertaking of the most far-reaching benefit to the south, nd the peopte of that section are begn- ning to appreciate the wisdom of Senator Morgan’s valiant fight for that great water- way. The spending of $150,000,000, or even $200,000,000, for the construction of the Ni- ‘aragua canal, it is beginning to be beiieved. throughout the south, will have a benefit ach year, upon the increased markets broad for their surplus products that will repay them, and the nation, too, each year ‘or the total sum of the expenditure. And, with these thoughts crowding one another upon the southern mind, it is quite easy and logical for southerners to appreci+ ate the value of ships of our own, doing our own foreign carrying, and keeping the whole of the $175,000,000 at home that is now spent very year for ocean freights that are paid to foreignship owners, and by them taken from the country, to the loss of our national wealth, to the deprivation of our own peo- ple of emp:oyment, and to the strengthen- ing of the auxiliary naval resources of our foreign rivals. In these circumstances the expenditure of $9,000,0000 a year to save from $175,000,000 to $250,000,000 a year is not a proposition ether to frighten the average American citizen or call forth his protest. In fact, the demand for just this kind of a thing is becoming quite unanimous among the business men of the country, south, west, north and east. t7Senator Hanna is quoted as saying that his mail contains each day a number of re- | quests, ranging between half a dozen and a dozen, from students in the high schools and colleges and universities, for copies of his and other speeches on both sides of the shipping question, in order that members of debating teams may familiarize them- selves with the arguments proand con. The subject isone of the most popular debates now throughout the country, and the results of these debates, almost invariably favoring subsidies, are extremely gratifyng to Sena- tor Hanna. e Few people are aware that at a very recent debate between two strong teams, one representing Columbia unversity, of New York, and the other representing the Universty of Pennsyvania, on the question of paying subsidies to American ships, the former taking the negative and the latter the affirmative of the proposition, the Penn- sylvanians won, and this notwithstanding the fact that the three judges were free traders and democrats, one being a very die tinguished ex-Umited States senator from Delaware. 7 However uninformed on the subject of American shipping the present generation of Americans may be, the popularity of the question in our high schools, colleges and universities insures a grasp upon the sub- ject on the part of the young men just enter- ing active business life that is quite reassur- ing as to the future of our mercantile ma- rine. When the American people are thor- informed on any subject they are im ALASKA FLOWERS. A Well-Known Lover of Naturé 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-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 here is light blue, and it ‘timged the slopes as daisies and buttercups do st 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 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 wes all the burden of the mystery and pathos of life. 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. Ei- 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. he 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 is de- cidedly stiff. All the birds here gen- erally called quaii, from the Bob Whites, thé Messena quail, the crested and plumed quail of the southwest, to thase of the Pacific coast, are zeally partridges, as will be found by judging them scientifically.. The ruffed grouse rarely receives its correct name, being caJled partridge or pheasant, accord- ing to locality. The grouse is knowy 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. She is be 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. 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 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- sylvanian by birth, He has seen thirty-eight years’ service in the corps, and is one of the veterans in the sery- ice. He received his appointment in. the early part of the civil war, and participated in the battle of Mobile bay end other engagements, i ie MICE HAVE A STANDING IN LAW they “:: ured in'a Recent Contest iver Land Ownership. From the Spokane Review: Th und-contest case in which a famil} vf mice played a prominent part har veen decided cn the appeal to Binge! Hermenn, commissioner of the gen- eral land office at Washington. The vodents are not méntioncd in the deci- sion, but the man whom it was claimed slowed the mice to establish a resi- dence in his bed is allowed to retaip possessica of his homestead, the rul ing ef the local land office being re versed and the contest dismissed. A Peculiar feature of the case is that when the family of mice was first men- tioned it was contended that their Presence in the bed of the entryman argued an abandonment of the home- stead, and the local land office appar- ently took the same view of the mat- ter, But wken the decision was ap- peeled from it was set up that the presence of the mice was su argument in favor of the homesteader. Fred 0. Grutt was the entryman, having taken up a homestead near Davenport three years ago. Last August John O’Nei! instituted a contest to the homestead entry, alleging that Grutt had aban- doned the claim, did not keep up a vontinuLus residence thereon, and that the only inhabitants of the shanty on the ran-h were a family of mice. After hearing the case the registrar and receiver decided that Grutt’s en- try should be canceled. From this de- sision Grvit had sixty days in which to file an »ppeal to the commissioner at, Washington. Tho appeal was filed by Leo Walton, attorney for Grutt. In the eppeal the mice femily was re- ferred to as follows: “If there were any mice in this entryman’s bed dur- ing the early part of September, 1893, it plainly shows that the entryman did have a bed on the land at the time.” towers Necessary at Funerars. The ic.ode Isiand supreme court has rendered a decision that fiowers form a necessary feature of a funeral. The case under consideration was an ac- tion brought by a florist against the administrators of the estate of a de- eeased citizen who had refused to pay for flowers furnished on the credit of the estate. The court justified the ex- penditure, remarking that “ the cus- tom of having flowers at funerals is well-nigh universal in this country and that, when not abused by extrava- gance or unseemly ostentation, it is certainly to be commended as giving apprporiate expression to our feeling3 of respect and love for the departed.” SS COUNTY AND VILLAGE OFFICERS COUNTY. Auditor. Treasure! Sheriff... Attorney Register of Deed Clerk of Court. Judge of Prob: hol Russell Supt. of Schools. Mrs. Hattie F. Booth COMMISSIONERS. District No. 1. (Chairman).......A. D. Brooks No.2 Frank S. Lang W.G. Moore 1. Hennessy John Fraser District No. VILLAGE. President Trustees & ‘assmussen Recorder. Fred A. King Treasurer. ken Attorney Pratt Street Commissioner. Jus. McCormick Marshal... . F. McCormick CHURCHES. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH — Rev. E. P. Crane, pastor. ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH—Rev. C. V. Gamache, pastor. M. E. CHURCH—Rev. J. ©. Hartley. pastor. SECRET SOCIETIES. ITASCA LODGE A.°. F.". & A.*. M.°. No. 208: meets the first_and third Fridays of each month at K. of P. hall. E. J. LUTHER, Sec’y, O. L. MATHER, W. M GRAND RAPIDS LODGE I. 0.0. F, No. 184: meets every Wednesday night at Odd Fellows hall: JOHN COSTELLO, N. G. I, D. RassMUSSEN, Rec. Sec. ARBUTUS REBEKAH LODGE No. 150: meets every Tuesday in Odd Fellows hall. Mrs. M. Lou Lornnop, N. G. Jonn DeSnaw. RK. S. WAUBANA LODGE K. of P. No. 131: meets every Thursday evening in their hall. i HE. Grarra, C. C. Gec. C. McAuisTEr, K. RK. 8. ITASCA DIVISION No. 10, U. R. K. P.. meets first Monday of each month in K. of . hall. E. A. KREMER, Capt. Ons. Kearney. Recorder, WAUBANA TEMPLE No. 20, RATHBONE Sisters: meets every Wednesday night at K, of P. hall. Mrs. ELIZABETH HENNESSY, M. E. C. Mars. JESSIE STEVENS, Sec’, ITASCA CAMP Nog. 6444, M., W of 4.: meets second and fourth Mondays of euch month at Uda Fellows hall. Joun DeSuaw, V. C. GrorGE VIENT, Clerk. HALE LAKE CAMP No. 2201. ROYAL Netghbors: meets first und third Mondays each month at Odd Fellows hall. Mrs. KATHERINE MCALPINE, Oracle. Mrs. M. Lou Lornror, R, S. NORTH STAR COUNCIL}No: 9, MODERN Samaritans: meets first and third Tues- duyseach month ut K. of P. hall. 8. J. CABLE. G. S. L, W. Hunttey, Sec'y. ITASCA HIVE L. O. T. M.: meets ever: second and fonrth Fridays:of each month in K. of P. hall. Mrs. Bessie Ciarr, L. C. Mrs, Harrie F. Boorn, R. K. LOCKSLEY COURT No. 109, U. 0. k: meets second und fourth Tuesday each month at K. of P. hall. Mrs. CARRIE BECKFELT, C, R. - Mrs. MARGARET FINNEGAN, Sec’y. DRUMBEATER TRIBE No. 35, [. 0. R. M.: meets first and third Fridays each mouth at Odd Fellows hall, Joun HEPFEL, Sachem. B, F. HUSON POST G, A. R. No. 140: meets the last Friday of omy ave in Post hall. NCEY, Com. .| H. 8, Husow, Adjt. areas THEG.A.R: ITASCA CIRCLE LADI meets the first Mon h month in ANCEY, P. Posthall. Mrs. Mrs. Many Hvusox, Sec’ POKEGAMA T NE NO. Sh K.0.7.M: moots every first. a i Thursday of vach month at K, of Py ball ‘ ’ \ | | | train and daily until October.3)st. Pan-American Rxposition. Buffalo, N. Y. and steamer. ‘Burlington | Rout All the comforts return! $17. by Tickets on sale and con- veniences of a» good club or your home are found in LIBRARY BuFFET: SMOKING Cars in daily use on Bur- lington Limited between and Chicago. with chairs and_ theg best periodicals, Trains the ‘Twin Cities Supplied card tables, easy latest. and Ask Your Home Agent For Tickets Via The Bur- lington 4 x eae ae Wanted—An Idea Protect your ideas; th Write JOHN WEDDEK: Washington, ey may bring BURN & CO.. Patent Attor. D. C., for thelr s uy and lint of two bundred uventio..s wanted. ‘Who can think of some simple thing to patenti you wealth prize offer P. fails to cure. O.W Hastines. President. . J. SHELDON. Vice President. Lumbermen’ Of Grand Rapid: v, P. SHELDOr. Cashier C. BR. AIKEN, Asat. Cashier § Bank s. Minn Digests what Dyspepsia Cure you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and- diges food. Itgivesinstant reliefand never 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. prevents formation of gason the stom- ts all kinds of It | ach, relieving all distress after eating, ; Dieting unnecessary. Pleasant to take. It can’t help Prepared on], but d jo you good by E. 0. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. The $1. bottle contains 2% times the 50c. size. f SPSLTSICS H. SSHUSON, } ‘Justice of the Peace. District Court sioner for Itasca County. 4 Notarial Work Done. Commis- OFFICE—With County Surveyor in Ce House. on Grand Rapids, Minnesota 505A ER ae ee EE A Ae EE Ee dE AE Ee eee ee ee eee SOC "N. A. PASO VVVVVVTVVTVVVA PROPRIFTOR Pioneer: Barber Shop. “Your Patronage * LELAND AVENUE. , EE Ee NAULT Solicited. ia Peer Ter TT reer errr Ter TTT er ERSSSEL SEP OAN TART ee a eS A EA ee Ea a a G.{C. SMITH DEALER IN Confectionery, Fruits, Ice Cream Ice Cream, ‘Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, THIRD ST., Opp. Depot. deovqueoreberseenssTeaeS bs cdashabosheal Soda, Drinks, - Minn. SAE A ee a ee ae ae ae ea ae a: D*® GEO. C. GILBERT, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office over Cable's Meat Market, GRAND RAPIDS. D*® THOMAS RUSSELL, PHSIYCIAN AND SURGEON Office und Residence, Presbyterian Parsonage, Fourth Street. £GRAND RAPIDS. D*® CHAS. M. STORCH, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence, Cor. Kindred and 3rd. GRAND RAPIDS. Eo & SPEAR, ATTORNEYS AT LAW +» 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 and Farming Lands | Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. Itasca County ~ Abstract Office ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, | FIRE INSURANCE. Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KING, Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, : : MINN W. E. NEAL, Dealer in 'Pine and Farming Lands. Whe tinest List of Agricultural and Grazing Lauds in the County. The Most Excellent Sites for Jacturing Enterprises. Manu Prospective Settlers Located. Correspondence Solicited. Grand Rapids, - - Minn = RE ae Ee ee ae ae ae ae ae a a ae ea ee EE The Celebrated R ye.” America’s Finest Pro-. duction. Henry Logan, - Received Highest Reward at. World’s Columbian. Exposi- position. Recommended for Medinceal and Family Uses. SLSLSLSLSLSESLSLSLVSLSLSS ‘9 Sckk, Grand Rapids.. ® D,Mlamend & Co., Chicago.: HOGHFTEATHHS FHRH CRS SHH H——