Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, June 10, 1905, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Ke - Bran Rents era Review! bs bie iy 7s ei Published Every Saturday. By E. C. KILEY. 2WO DOLLARS A YEAR IN ADVANCE = Entered im the Postoffice at Grand Rapid Minnesota, 2s Second-Class Matter, WONDERS OF THE OCEAN, Nature’s Perfect Arrangement for Preservation of Fish Life. “Naturally the fish of the deep por- tions are carnivorous, ne vegetabie life being found below 200 fathoms,” writes W. S. Harwood in Harper’s Magazine. “In the Atlantic ocean the vast Saragasso sea, containing three ons of square miles of surface—a great marine prairie as largeras the whole of the United States exclusive ef Alaska and dependent islands—af- fords vegetable food for uncountable animals, which, in their due time, die id are precipitated to the depths, their bodies in turn to be eaten by the a ich live far below all veg- t is throughout the whole 1 life is constantly faliing face waters for the sup- animal life of the abyss. ze number of the deep sea s are exceedingly tenuous or anslucent in form—so to put it—hav- ing no special organs of nutrition, but taking in their nourishment through the walls of their bodies, appropriat- i from the water the food which ocean; from the port of th suits them. Some of them have aj bony structure, a skeleton, which they form also from the water, silica and carbonate of lime being the chief skeleton-forming materials.” One Love, I shall love him when the world is ag his feet With its cheers; When the plaudits of the many, sound+ i weet, 8 his fears; Y shall love him with a love that will not die, While throne of love is hidden in hly love shall light a humaa OLDEST ARMY MARCHING ‘TUNE. Whose root is in the sod. Oh! make the best ideals thine And learn to be a god! The golden rod of higher thought _ Points out the highest way. The mountain peak has ever caught The first smile of the day. icp pray eke thine own the Great "youl have understood. And lo! thou, too, wilt put on wings To reach the greatest good. “The White Cockade” Played Before Americans .in 1775. It is the old music, after all, that puts the life into marching feet, for It carries the traditions of marching in its melodies. One of the oldest of the tunes was “The White Cockade.” This is a historical melody to Amer- icans, though many Americans may not be aware of the fact. It was the tune to which the farmers who fired the shot heard round the world Uplift a brother from the ground, Stoop ashen lips to kiss, And with a single sudden ‘bound i * Usengtate eon ata - marched when they determined ta sone en ally at pooner errr .|force the passage of the bridge at e effort’ o i ‘ a The mighty ego thrust aside, _' | Concord. Possibly it was the only That stumbling block of souls, ” 4 | tune which the drummer and fifer of The mantle of unselfish love a Capt. Isaac Davis’ company knew, but Throw o'er another's sin TA A latch is lifted far above; : as ‘A heart has entered in, an the faet that it was played is histo- vical. The popularity of the tune is # proof that a melody made for one par- ty is recognized as good by all if it Be eal Pett ideals thine, has the quality of being singable. “The a sai "Margaret Hunt. | White Cockade” was originally a Ja- --- cobite tune, but it made a good march 1 for the descendants of the English Most mertllbicerse ot wars Puritans, April 19, 1775, when Capt: A famous French political economist | Davis made his musicians strike up. drew up a statistical table some time | as they were the first American force ago on this very question, and the | that ever advanced to battle as Amer- analysis showed that nine- tenths of feans, “The White Cockade” is the old- the world’s wars have grown out Of | est melody of the American army. quarrels that arose directly from com- | poston Transcript. mercial disputes. No fewer than fifty- five wars were classified as civil; for- ty-one were wars of suceession of Crown claims; thirty under the pre- tense of helping allies; twenty-eight | Method Used in Germany Said to Be were religious wars; twenty-four were Infatible. wars of retaliation; twenty-two were A new and simple method for test- for commercial rivalry; and eight on | ing eggs is published in German pa- My soul, thou art a climbing vine, Whose root is in the so SIMPLE TEST FOR EGGS. points of honer. Changes in National Features, Whether we look at portrait gal- leries, tike Hampton court, or turn over illustration in old books, it is evident that some physiognomical change has been taking place. The stout, plethorie, muscular, ruddy-faced man of stolid expressiqn is becoming exceptional, and his place is being tak- en by a thinner, more alert, active type. The modern face ig more keen, leaner end of less coarse mould than those of the older pioneers who laid greatness.—Aspects of Social Ivola- tian. the foundation cf their vountry’s pers. It is based upon the fact that the air chamber in the fiat end of the egg increases with age. If the egg is placed in a saturated solution of com- mon salt it will show an increasing inclination to float with the long dxis vertical. A scale is attached to the vessel containing the salt solution sa that the inclination of the floating ese toward the horizontal can be meas ured. In this way the age of the egg ean be determined almost to a day, A fresh egg lies in a horizontal posi- tion at the bettom of the vessel; ag egg from three to five cays old shows an elevation of the flat end sot vat its tong axis forms an angle of de grees. With an egg eight days eld the angle inereases to 45, degrees; with | During the Day and Night. It has been seriously asserted by many people that we ard naturally | lighter after a meal, and they have even gone the length of explaining this by the amount of gas that is developed from the food. Average observations, however, show that we } lose three pounds six ounces between night and morning; that we gain one pound twelve ounces by breakfast; that we again lose about fourteen ounces before Tunch; that lunch puts on an average of about one pound; that we again lose during the after- noon an averas® of ten ounces, but that an ordinary dinner to healthy persons adds two pounds two ounces to their weight. Sunshine, The latest’ fad of. the very rich is sunshine, obtained at any cost and ; almost at will. Verandas are glassed in to form sun parlors, and rooms te which the sun comes in the natural course of events are furnished accord- ingly. Then there is no anxiety over the fading of carpets and hangings. A room seen recently contained rugs warranted to resist the influence of the sun, ecru curtains and rattan fur- niture, whose cushions were covered with Java cotton, in bright colors, that are indelible. It was very pretty and cheery, and had the sun a good part of the day in its early hours. Urn Buried for 2,000 Years, In the neighborhood of Bourne mouth, England, recently, during the construetion of a new road_the exe: vators cut into a mound, which is in- dicated upon the map as an ancient was intact. The roots of the heather kad forced their way into the interior of the receptacle and into the ashes and dust it contained. The urn was estimated to be 2,000 years old. THE BIRD WE WOKSHIP, . American Eagle Furnishes Wonderful Example of Constancy. In the discussion of the marriage question it has sometimes been denied | mous. But the bird of birds, andthe Grand Prix, Paris, 1900. The Grand Prize, St. Louis, 1904. De Pachmann uses the Baldwin piano exclusively. The listener needs no technical knowledge to be charmed by the tone of o Malhwine= The crowded houses that received De Pachmann every- where on his recent tone-triumph tour is ample evidence of this. Geo. F. Kremer FURNITURE Carpets Rugs aud Wall Paper, etc. S®SVSVSS SVSLSVSS SMa SF SMGI MSS OY SAY, PA, WHY DON’T YOU WEAR THE aang a SEAMLES burie! ground, and.a large sun-baked | clay urn was unearthed. It was in a | § remarkable state of preservation and | a bull’s eye w mike shoes wit hat the birds of the air are monoga- ' hitin seseanceaeceesesss no sh4570 nr te FET. 7 Sricsca aiEE Cua Lae an eggs fourteen days old to 60 de grees, and with one three weeks old t screniifically. The best one that we most cherish as the ‘em eye With its teara. PSWSTSCSOSLSC SL SESPCL SLOSS SMe* SLSE SISLSWE | i : i it Singeth Low In Every Heart. ‘ h blem of the gferiovs American repub-.|(@ Way to-cure corns is to prevent | i when the world has | ft singeth low in every heart, to 75 degrees, while an ess & MOATA | 11. certainly i © A gee aa he hi i ‘ We hear it each and all— old floats vertically wpon the poiated | RC Coren ae ae @ heir growth in the first place. ig A song of these who answer not, ‘ The American eagle nevey mates % Ther Menomince Seamie i To th more imperious day; However we may call; end, ae @ lived ith thatone mate [Me wuts sepia | ° m stl They throng the silence’ of the breast, ampere Per ee ee °1e Union = Shee 1s ¢ i When here's pot a smile to greet his aie: epaniae of yore — THEY HAD MET BEFORE. | till he or she dies. If left a widower i q saiidened face, ve, true, £Y : - acaeae. Hl re heve left onvhim thets | "vno walk with wane more he eee . ye gals a esa Me bined LAL aid bens | ‘ ; : eaded eagle never mates again. He Be sits within tke worthy Te pata to take the burden + BD Business Man's Intreduotien Recidedly | romains aes and Wigeenaeiets near serena: He should fill. ; they. Sa gined all os joy of life, Humorous, the home he cnce shared with his For’ Sate. By ; Sey te ‘ eB For I Jove him now with Jove thet's all ut oh, “tls ood t9 think of anton “The most curious break } ov former arate, od ae nek faa of earth— en we are troubled sore made,” said a young business man the ; ever tempt him to forsake or share Love's div hanks be to G t su Pag) igs All my ait nd all my soul's immortal Peaattionge th cecaroins ey pave escn other day, “was at my club. I was in ' it with another. af . URTZMAN, win him. shine: More homelike seems the vast unknown jibe library talking with 9 man who | Divorce is unknowg with the Ameri- : i —P He is lover, friend,’ and husband, all In|" Since they have entered there; e ; was in my class at college and whom | can eagle He took her for better or € The Sh M GUARANTEED TO OUF WEAR ORE, sadness: wit aekG RARE nee | Fa follow them we I knew intimately. As we were sit | for worse, and death alone separated | 6 Ave rae! | <a And through him alone my lasting Jo¥ | They cannot be wh ting there in walked another member | them. With him it is, once a widow- | ¥% Grand Rapids .- Minnes 0a ANY SHOE ON THE MARKET. ’ is won On any sea 0: Sa Oe idee of the club whom we both knew. We | er, always a widower. SEESLSLS Vn LSLSLSLSLOSP HLS" crnosceseune SLSTSLSLSTISLSWGS “ / He is mine! Charles W. Stevenson. A Test for Mahogany. So closely are many of the new pieces of mahogany modeled after the genuine antiques in form and color that only an expert can tell the dif- ference. “There is one way,” how- ever, declares a well known connois- seur in antique furnishings, “that you can always distinguish between the genuine and its copy. Put your knuckles against it as you would t a mirror to telt its real thick If it is well varnished so that it brings out the reflection of the finger cleariy, you may be sure it is If the reflection is clouded, it Natural Cure for Rheumatism. There is a wonderful grotto at Mon- summano, called the Grotto Giusti, where the natural vapor is stated to be an infallible cure for rheumatism, | Fifty years asc some workmen were quarrying for ime when they diseov- ered the grotto, and its healing pow- ers were first made known some little time later. in the lowest portion, ap- propriately named the “Inferno,” the temperature is about 95 degrees Fahr., and here the victims from rheuma- tism sit and perspire for an hour at a time. Such a vapcr bath is said to be or much greater service than a Furk- ish bath. Workhouse Museums. Several of the great London work- Our God. for evermore. —John White Chadwick. Energy Expended in Coughing. A patient German scientist of a sta- tistical turn of mind calculates that the amount of energy expended by a person who coughs once every quar- ter of an hour for ten hours is equiva- lent to 250 unfts of heat or the nour- |iskment yielded by three eggs or two glasses of milk. Coughing is thus seen to be an expensive luxury. The reason for the waste in force entailed by it, or one reason at least, lies in the fact that while in normal respira- tion the air is expelled from the chest | at the rate of four feet a second, in violent coughing it may attain a velocity of 300 feet. Keeps Customers in Line. A Watervile barber has a unique contrivance in his shop. It is a large erunciator about two and one-half principle as the date indicator on the from one to forty. The idea is that when a man goes in he takes a card from a spindle on a stard by the door and every time a chair is empty the barber presses the electric button and the indicator moves up a nuraber. When a man’s number rings up he takes his turn.—Lewiston (Me.) Jour nai. ——- Horses in Battle. Arabian horses, show remarkble ceurage in battle. It is said that houses have remarkable museums at- | when a horse of this breed finds him- tached to them. In a South London union museum can be found a clergy- man’s letters of ordination (the own- er died in the house), and a peculiar belt made of human teeth and brought from the West Coast of Africa. But perhaps the most significant of all things shown is a small pocket dice self wounded, and knows instinctively that he will not be able to carry his rider much longer, he quickly retires, bearing his master to a place of safe- ty while he has yet sufficient strength. But if, on the other hand, the rider is wounded and falls to the ground, the faithful animal remains beside him face of a clock The numbers run | | both greeted him, Then the conver- sation continued, only three were in it instead of two. Suddenly it oc- curred to me that perhaps my two friends had not been introduced. ‘Beg pardon,’ I said; ‘f suppose you men know each other. Mr. S——, Mr. T——.’ They laughed, but they grave- ly shook hands and said they were ac- quainted, and all that sort of thing, and then they looked at me and } laughed again, only harder than be- fore. Then it all dawned on me. The newcomer bore a fairly strong resem- blance to another man whom also I knew well at college, and I had as- sumed, not having looked at him close- | ly. that he was this man. But he wasn't, after all, and the man I had introduced him to was his own brother.” it is singular that his example is so seldom quoted. Training for the Bride to Be. A young society girl of this city who is to be one of next fall’s brides, in order to prepare herself to take charge of her own home, has been given the entire management of her parents’ home. Her mother is almost like a boarder in the house. The young bride to be orders the meals, pays the pew rent in church, pays for the newspapers and periodicals—in short, she has the handling of all the t expenditures of the home. One thing is certain, this girl has a wise mother, and the result of the training in home management cannet but be successful. —Unlvnke. Mass.. Telegram. ; LOW RATES | For Round Trip. On Sale Every Day From May 23, to September 30 to the Lewis and Clark’ Exposition Via Tne Great Northern Reilway “The Comfortable Way” For rates and detailed information, cal] on or address. Send This Coupon and 2 c. L. FRYB, Agent, nr cent for handsomely illustrated booklet, ‘tA Camera Journey’* to the Lewis and Clark Exposition,” to F. I. Whitney. gearenavsraresezerctaces Pioneer Meat Market, THOMAS FINNEGAN, Prop. Fresh and Salt Meats Se SLSLISE BBSLESS es || Fish, Game di a etc oaD FELLOWS? BUILDING, LELAND "AVENUE. GRAND RAPIDS. SVSBEOR SCH PSSSLRLSL KER SLOSLENVS: Co ee eves oncrete Building ike Investigate and Be Convinced. Manufactured at Grand Rapkts by F.FREESTONE & CO. The most substan- tial and ecomic building materia ver placed on the market, = a erection of Business and Residence, Buildings, Sidwalks, Ornamenal Fencing, Chim- ae box. Upon the box is neatly cut: | wunmindful of danger, neighing untii “This box and other wagering cost | assistance is brought. me £30,000, and brought me to the St. Paul, NR, ee rare : 3 | Passenger lrafle Manager, - iskeys ever distilled Total amount required to redeem aun We handle the finest whiskeys OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR. ITASCA COUNTY, MINNESOTA. To Unknown Owner or any person claiming title: You are hereby notified that, pursuant to the forfeited real estate tax judgment, entered in the district court. county of Itasca, state of Minnesota, ou the twenty- NORTHERN CAFE Petr Mell, Cher. In connection—open day and night. Ali delicacies of the season workhonse.” ea aoee 2S A eRe ST ES EEA eee HATTER EL CoS 2 = A Favorite Resort = NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF REDEMPTION.—(Forfeited Sales) Hf avorite ser z ee for refreshments and where may be seen and beard one Re of the largest phonographs in the world is at 7 Be Discrighion ot Baad Sia cit gtd gees Soe se we eel HH i n whose name a nelasi i mount Sold For =: Subsequent Taxes an S 1 Assessed which taxes were! Penalti n@ } ? % : Addition or Subdivision Lot ee and | “interest i req JOHN O’RILEY’S amp e€ oom A | masons elnauer® | Month | Day |Yeur | _Dollars cts. Dollars cts. . b | Unknown Haughton’s Jet Addition to La-| 1 1$03 to 1805, June | 7 | 1900. 1150 : The Northern. ] Unknown Haughton’s Ist “Adit to Ea-| 2 48983 to 1895, J 7 | 1900 } | - delightful beverage ab { pensacnis = ge easing zy Beet #2 Cabinet Rye Whiskey suzt! go\e"slaur yh Wena 2 ‘3 * # 3 a ‘3 2 ‘% i De Ledesdasheihcde kd acd dodebodddoddackalsdduetatatatat yaad Soestsesaeaeeaseoeeegae SSSSHH HOHHHeSKeEKRES OSHA eee K ase March, A. D. 1900, in proceedings to enforce payment of taxes on real estate tn said county, remaining delinquent in the year 1807, and prior years, under the provisions of ¢! x served at all hours. the laws of 1899. the land herein above dsscribed, assessed in your name. was sold for tax as above stated, and that the time allowed by law for redemption from said sale expire j &@ days after service of this nocice has been made and proof thereof has been tiled in this office. In addition to the amount above stated, as necessary to, redeem from said sale, the cost of : 5 } service of this notice must be paid, together with such interest as may accrue from and after this date. * Witness my hand and official seal, at Grand Rapids, in said county of Itasca this 2th day of May, 199%, " 2 5 5 County Auditor Seal] - } : a He He Ae Hy ' z aditoy. ‘i bas ded FPAAGHVHPHLEGASHRNGS HT | HHKHES HTH OATHS SAREE SeREe % eups t ne? aie DEFECTIVE PAGE

Other pages from this issue: