Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, June 4, 1904, Page 6

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We don’t care whether Dunn done Collins or Collins done Dunn. Here is one Dunn who is not to be done selling lumber. ae We have everything in the line of lumber and in dimen- jsion stuff we have from 2x4- 12’s to 2x8-20’s also at rock bottom prices de- livered in wagon loads to any part of Grand Rapids. CY ae When in need of anything in our iine, call on or ad- dress awn DUNN & MARCIA, COHASSET, - MINN, Shingleand Lath ded in th f th therefore that sof a power of sale contained in said ud pursuant to th ae and prov! statute in vf the prem- said mort- sixty (160) cres om: or ltasca county and state of Minnesota. with the he sale will r in the and st at ten o' Rapids i on the 18th day e, 1904. jock a. in. of that di t ablic and by said and the dis- llowed by 1 subject to re- any time within one year from . ts provided by Law. B. B, LARSON, Mortgagee. M. A, BrarrLann, . Ada, Minnesota. 30. May 7, 14, 21, 28. for mort Herald: Review, Apri Notice of Mortgage Foreclosure Sale, given that default has tain mort. is here’ d. th. 1 and was filed for record office of the register of deeds in and for sth. or page ge Was given to secure the pity- 00 and interest at the rate of ten per ceat per annum according to the condi- tions of one certain promissory note bearing id mortgage, which said mort- mer ‘I’. Hagerty on April 3rd, rument in writing duly as- Watzke and which assign- on July Ist, 1903, at 10 o'clock noon duly recorded in the office of of deeds in and for Itasca county. in book “<" of mortgages on page 353, and which said mortgage the said O, A. Watzke by an instrument in writing on June 20th, 1903 duly d to Leona-J. Payne. and which ‘assigament was duly. recorded in the office of the register of deeds in and for cu county, July 1, 1903, at ten o'clock in isnow due andc! ned to be due mortgage xt this date the sum of $450. and 363.55 interest, amount- ing in the aggregate to $513.55 und no proceed- ings at law or otherwise have been had or in- stituted to recover the same or any part thereof. ane », notice is hereby given that of sale in said mort- ewith recorded and pursuant to the statute such case madé and provided, th id mortgage will be fore- closed and the following property therein de- scribed lying and being situated in the county of Icasca and state of Minnesota, to- = north half of the northeast quarter and orth half of the northwest quarier, sec- thirty-four (34). township sixty-eight (68) north of range twenty4our (24) west. of the Fourth principa! meridian, will be sold by the sheriff of said county at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, at the front luge of Grand Rapids, Itasca county, Minnesota, on Mon- day. the 6th day of June, 1904, ut 10 o’clock in the forenoon, to pay and satisfy the amount which will then be due on said mortgage and the debts secured thereby together with the taxes if any, and the costs and expenses of this foreclosure and the sum of twenty-five dollars attorney’s fees as in said mortgage stipulated and agreed to be paid on foreclos- ure thereof. ‘ Dated ut Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 1904, oe LEONA J, PAYNE, Assignee of Mortgagee, F. B, WRIGHT, ‘attorney for Assignee of Mortgagee, 310 Globe building. Minneapolis, Minn, Herald -Review, April 16, 23, 30, May 7, 14, i TT Default havi 2 oi ba of the sum of . : 3 dollars (# . is zluimed to be dui $ ate of this notice, upon a certain mort- ' executed and delivered by C.H.] ; F Anderson, his wife, 5 gayors, to B. B. Larson, n i date the testh day of ar. c with a pow : od, dul y of 1 state of iT r ". : , 1 ie th t . 1A - Young Actor’s Neat Answer. Beerbohm Tree, the London actor, has rather a pompus manner, which | is calculated to ruffle the temper of other people at times. An actor from the provinces called upon him recent- ly, hoping to get an opportunity to show his worth on the metropolitan stage. Oh, I could not possibly give you a part,” said’ the great manager, “but I dare say I could arrange to let you walk on with the crowd in the last act.” The young aspirant flushed with indignation, but holding himself well in hand replied pleasantly: “My dear Mr. Tree, I really don’t think I have heard anything quite so funny from you since your Hamlet.” It Pays to Advertise. A pocket purse containing quite a sum of money was lost by Thomas Banks a couple of weeks ago and no- tices were: placed in the postoffice and other buildings, but without results. Mr. Banks then placed an ad in the Argus, and darned if his dog didn’t go out in the back yard and dig up the purse with the contents in good con- dition. Of course the dog cannot read, but he heard the family reading the item and thus furnished another evi- dence that it pays to advertise in the Argus. Mr. Banks is $40 ahead and we will steal the dog at the first op- portunity.—Antwerp (O.) Argus. Wonderful Accomplishment to Which the Mind Was Trained. Some light fs thrown on the possi- bilities of memory culture by an inter- esting recital contained in the auto- biography of Robert Houdin, the famous conjurer. He taught his son to glance at, say, a shop window and to memorize accurately, as in a brain picture, the window’s contents. Then he would ask him to describe the con- tents, checking and correcting him as he went on. On one occasion Houdin was commanded to the Tuileries to give a performance before the French court. As he passed through an ante- room to the salon he bade his son to note the arrangement of the rooms and the contents of the bookcases Then at the close of the entertain ment Houdin astonished his audience by giving what he called a “second- sight” test. Declaring his unfamil- jarity with the Tuilieries, Houdin, blindfolding his son, asked him to send his gaze through the wall of the room to the chamber beyond, to de- scribe the arrangement of the cham- ber and to read the titles of the vol umes on the shelves/of the bookcases, This feat the young lad accomplished, to the astonishment of the court. SSE 2 * rounded ‘with BEDS OF a good farming district. county, z.O APPLY TO OR ADDRESS THE NEW TOW This new town is splendidly situated. overlooking one of the prettiest lakes in Northern Minnesota. Several mines now being opened. Will be reached by the Great Northern railroad in the near future, distance of Grand Rapids, the county! seat of Itasca NOW READY FOR SALE At reasonable prices, and 6n terms within the reach of all E. J, LONGYEAR, : Hibbing Minnesota, Sur- IRON ORE Tributary to , Within a nice rs WHO HAS EXCLUSIVE | Booth’s own shops here, and For sale everywhere. Call for | “BOOTH’S CIGARS fl of the finest selected stock by experienced workmen in Mr. This insures the utmost cleanliness and care in manufacture. 6S S25 2525°522 Se SSeS S—5 GEO. BOOTH, 1 h Manufacturerof Fine Cigars. l GRAND RAPIDS, J//NN eseses 99 Have acuieved an excellent reputation all over Northern Minnesota. They are made under his personal supervision. them. ai JOHN O’RILEY’S DL dk kokckccokcobeibecbeadeadeded FL ddd dddebdiededa Rapids. served at ull hours. JOHN O’R SI A AE A Ae EE Ee ee bh docdetDvshcehesbochecbecheohoohe che she cheohooh Bt kh chcobs tischcolechncheck:ohcokesdaskeod (ARE ee EF ee eA Ee ee EE ee ee ee a a ae ee Te A Favorite Resort for refreshments and where may be seen and heard one of the largest phonographs in the world is at Sample Room The Northern. * * a mést delightful beverage always in Cabinet Rye Whiskey $ret ye nk rent tor it nm Grand We handle the finest whiskeys ever distilled. NORTNERN CAFE In connection—open day and night. All delicacies of the season Peter Meil, Cref. RE ARES eA ae A ae aE aE a eae ee ee ae ee ae ee TE ILEY, Prop. SSPHSSTHSELHEHENGEET (| SHSHES eSTH OBER ERS Hees BEET ‘HIS WIFY AN ORATOR. 8'-Ztous Citizen Knew the, Fate Which Awaited Him. epresentative-elect James Xenneay of Youngstown, Ohio, has ingratiated himself in the last few days with the House coterie. He’ is a story teller and reproducer of dialect. There is always an extra seat for a man of that caliber who wanders near the cloakroom precincts. Here is a dia- fogue he recounts between two Ohio citizens, who had remained out late and-were staggering home together in the early morning: First Citizen—What will your wife fay when she shees you conring home (hic) at yis unearthly hour? Second Citizen—Oh, ‘not much (hic). My wife don’t talk, but she thinks a great deal (hic). How about your wife? First Citizen—My wife. (hic.) Post. Ah, ha! She’s an orator.—Washington WIFE OF MANY COLORS. Boston Journal Sces Advantages in Such a Possession. The Lady Chameieon 3s attracting attention in Paris. She is a young Roumanian, Marga Cerbus. by name, whose coloring is determined by her emotions. Anxiety turns her green; she is pink when joyful; violet when afraid and black when angry. The Boston Journal can see how such a woman would be a never-failing joy as a wife. Her husband would never be ‘n doubt as to the precise nature of her mental condition.. And then there might come a mildly polygamous feel- ing to a husband having a white wife, a colored wife and a.red wife on dif- ferent days. “Yet Miss ‘Cerbus will, no doubt, marry a man that is color. blind, and therefore unappreciative; such is the irony of life.” Lord Roberts’ Magnificent Sword A citizen who has just returned from a trip in Europe says that the sword presented to Admiral Dewey is a beauty, but that in the matter of downright gorgeousness it is rather &@ poor second to that given to Lord Roberts by tke city of Portsmouth re cently. The American, who has ex amined both weapons, says that the one owned by the little English sol- dier is probably the costliest thing of it» kind in the world. The hand-made blade is 6f English steel ifscribed with all the engagements in which Lord Roberts has taken part. The grip is of gold and carved ivory, the-guard of solid gold ornamented with rubies, dia- ‘| mands and sapphires, and the scab- bard is splendidly decorted. SSS eee Tomb of Jeremy Bentham, In University college, London, is a singular object that is preserved care- fully in a remote gallery inside a glass case, which, again, is contained in a huge wooden cupboard, the doors of which are locked and the heys in safe custody. The relic which is thus so zealously guarded is described fa some notes on the history of the | college as the “skeleton” of Jeremy Bentham, “clad in the garments in which he lived,” while his head only is stated to have been. ‘mummified.” It has always been understood that Bentham’s body was embalmed, and in that zase it cannot be his mere skeleton which is reposing there un- der lock and key. John Kelly’s Son a\Broker. John Jerome Kelly, son of the late John Kelly, who was leader of Tam- many Hall next before Croker, be- came a member of the New York Stock exchange a few days ago and was initiated with a degree of vio- lence which bore testimony to his pop- ularity. The members daubed his face with paint and made him dance as Indians Gance in geography pictures. The w®ason they hazed him that way was because his father was a politi- cal Indian and because Mr. Kelly ex- pects to du whatever brokerage busi- ness there is to be done for the Tam- many Indians of this day. Out of the Age. Maximilian was an anachronism. He belonged to the age of knight-errantry. For himself immolation was attractive in comparison with cowardice and meanness. The very motive which impelled him to embrace that. ilk starred mission was noble and unsel- fish. Those who fought against the empire he sought to establish on American soil always honored and esteemed the mar. There was none among the true soid‘ars of Mexico who did not respect his memory, and no attempt to blot that pure scutcheon will escape rebuke while one of them survives.—Washington Post. Offictal’s Unique Signature. Through the retirement of Col. An- drew N. Demrell, which took place re- cently, the records of the regalar army engineer corps will lose the most remarkable signature knowa in the service. His name as appended to official papers was simply a series of absolutely. wudecipherable marks, though his handwriting otherwise is cemarkably plain. The colonel, a Massachusetts man, entered West Point in 1860 and has a creditable ca- reer. He has had charge of many Im- portant river and harbor projects. “Coming” and “Arriving.” “and so,” said the talkative person i to the man who had just undergone that particular form of financial hem- orrhage known as crossing the conti- nent, “you came through without ehange?” “No,” responded the pa- tient mar, “I didn’t state it so. When I used the term ‘wholly without change’ I referred’ only to the condi- tion in which I arrived here,” Wherein Modern Statesman Was Like Unto Daniel Webster. There was in. Washington a few years ago an old negro who was noted for his recollections of all the famous statesmen of antebellum days. To him one day came a rather pompous mem- ber of a comparatively recent’ Con- gress, who resembled some of the fa- mous forensic giants of old only in his capacity for ardent spirits. He had his customary cargo aboard and was inclined to be colloquial. So he ad- dressed the old negro” patronizingly: “Uncle Daniel, I understand that you used to know Webster, Clay, Calhoun and all the celebrated statesmen of béfore-the-war times.” “Oh, yas, suh; I ’members dem all,” responded the old negro, “Well, Daniel, I have. been told that I look like Daniel Webster. Can you see any resemblance?” “Well, yes, suh; yo’ does ’mind me pow’ful 0’ Mars Webstah in some respecks.” “Indeed! In what particulars do I re- mind you of Daniel Webster?” in- quired the now ‘thoroughly: flattered |. statesman. “Mos’ly in de bref, suh,” responded Daniel; “mos’ly in de bref.” END OF A CAMPAIGN. Opinion of Relatives.ag to a Wedding Anniversary. smooth in the couple’s domestic life; in fact, rather the reverse. Both were self-willed, each with strong opinions. But the thirtieth anniver- sary of their wedding had arrived and they decided to “kiss and make up” once and for all,” and to celebrate the occasion fittingly invited a houseful of friends and relatives, zepressible brothers-in-law were among the guests. Said Brother-in-law No. 1: “What on earth has gotten into the old pair, and why are they making such a fuss over each other?” “Because this is the thirtieth anni- versary of their wedding, of course,” answered No. 2. i “H’m,” said No, 1; “the end of the Thirty Years’ War, so to speak.” The “Fez” of the Turks. Until a few years ago Fez, the cap- {tal of Morocco, where the sultan has been besieged lately by the pretender te his throne, had practically a mon- opoly in the manufacture of the Turk- ish national head dress named after it—the “fez’”—as it was. supposed that the peculiar dull crimson color of the tesseled skull cap could be obtained only by using the dye made from a certain berry largely grown in the aeighborhood of the city. The berry fs also much used in the dyeing of mo- rocco leather. Now, however, France and Turkey, end to a certain extent Austria, actively compete with Fez for what is still a very lucrative trade. ate What Is a “Jambiste”? G. Washington Lobb, a Paris dan-/ cing master, has recovered $150 from M. Alberti for lessons given in dan- cing. The defendant said that he did Lot receive any lessons, but attended the dancing classes as a “jambiste.” A “jambiste” is a young society man who occupies his leisure hours by act- ing as an auxiliary at a school’of dan- cing, where he is always willing to dance with any of the women who are in want of a partner. He furnishes his services to the dancing school gratui- tously, but sometimes the “jambiste” meets witha rich young heiress at the “school and marriage results. Peeled Chickens. A party of visitors to the country were very much interested last sum* mer by the remarks of some children, sent out by the fresh air fund for a day in the country. There were quite a@ number of them playing about. a pretty farmhouse one day, when some Ddasser-by stopped and began to talk te them. | chickens before?” asked one lady, ‘as a.-flockof fowls came strutting down the lawn. eldest, wisely, with a knowing shake of his head, “we've always seen ‘em— lots—only generally it was after. they was peeled.” Too Many for Them. When Bernard- Shaw’s play, “Arms and the Man,” was. produced in Lon- don for the first time it was well re-’ ceived and at the fall of the curtain there were clamorous calls for the author, to which Mr. Shaw was at length induced w respond. The au- cience was still cheering, but there was one ‘dissentient in the gallery, ‘who “booing” with the full power of a pair of very strong lungs. Mr. Shaw ‘looked up at the disturber and said, very seriously: “Yes, sir, I quite agree with you; but “what can we two do against a whole houseful?” Very Neat Retort. At a recent banquet a prominent Irish lawyer related a very clever re- tort on a case where, when first elect- ed, he was assigned to a room in a crowded hotel with a newly arrived son of the Emeraid Isle. “Thinking ‘to joke him, I said, ‘If you had remained in the old country, it would have been a long time before -you -would have “slept with.a judge.’ My companion re- torted, ‘Yes, and your honor would have been a long time in the old coun- “try before they’d have made you a A Possible Catastrophe. “My dear!” said a frightened hus- band in the middle of the night, shak- ing his wife, “where did you put that battle of strychnine?” “On the shelf next to the peppermint.” “Oh, Lord!” he grouned, “I’ve swallowed it!” “Well, fer goodness sake,” whispered his wife, “keep quiet or you'll wake the baby.” A pair of ir-:}: SIGN WRITING, PAPER HANGING, CALSOMIN- ING, FRESCO DECORAT- | ING, PAINTING, HARD- WOOD FINISH A SPECI“ ALTY : 1 eyes “AT HOTELS GLADSTONE, Or a Postal will brirg him to your Home, F., W. TAYLOR, Grand Rapi Minnesota. RREs* F. PRICE | LAWYER (Office in the First National Bank building GRAND RAPIDS, =) - MINN, E)E: D- COSTELLO, DENTIST. +Office in First National Bank Building.— GRAND RAPIDS., MINNESOTA W. E.NEAL, Things had not always ‘run. oll i Dealer in PINE AND FARMING LANDS. The tinest List of Agricultural and Grazing Lands in the County. The Most Excellent Sites for Manv 1atturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located, Correspondence Solicited. Grand Rapids, - - Minn A; By CLAIR, Register uf Deeds of Itasca County Mineral —~ Pine anda Farming Lands Pre Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. ‘ GRAND RAPIDS. D" CHAS. M. STORCH, ‘ PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office and Residence. Cor. Kindred and 8rd GRAND RAPID». G® H. SPEAR ATTORNEY AT LAW - GRAND RAPIDS,. -. - MINN NATIONAL CASH REGISTER eras 4 “Did you ever seen ‘any “Oh, yes,” said-one of the. With Keys from One -Cent to Twenty Dollars. J. E. TAPLEY, ' Cass Lake, Minn. SISLaresseseessleses BISS ~AMSHSVSVSS = TASH RE Od RoHS CONC REE ERD ~G. C. SMITH {DEALER IN EE aE RE Ete Fruits, | Confectionery, Ice. Cream Soda, Ice’ Cream,~ Drinks, Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. , LELAND AVENUE. {EA ee ee eae a ae eae ae ae a 5 ee a a eas Aa SE A Ae A ee a a ae ate a ee ae ae ea O. W. HASTINGS. President. ) P. J. SHELDON. Vice President. F. P. SHELDON, Cashier C.E. AIKEN, Asst. Cashier! Lirst National Bank, Grand Rapids, Minn. Transacts a General Banking Business ITASCA COUNTY “ABSTRACT OFFICE REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE, Conveyances Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KING, Proprietors. GRAND RAPIDS, ©- — - — MINB

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