Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 1, 1905, Page 2

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| : Notice is hereby given that-no bills will be allowed, or collections made, “py she firm of James. F. Freestone & Co.. unless countersigned by James F, Freestone. 160 ACRES rearCamby, Minn., wi'l trade for ]znd in Cass or ltasca, 100 - aeres are plowed, 60 acres in pasture, | Spang. \ good buildings. in five years may be paid on or before due. Address Lock Box 271, Grand Rupids, Minn. ¢ hm This Special Ours Sale of isn’t just onvof'those specials that you see advertised every week, with goods marked up aud then down again for the occasion, every price reduction is a genuine one, - If anything, we are not listing these reductions as great as they actually are. We prefer to understate the case than to exagerate in this matter. We therefore ask you to glance at some of our prices and displays, take a careful look, and if you see anything you like, inquire the price, and you will tind it will please you, 1 Itasca Mereantile Co. Grand Rapids, Mennesota. JAP-A-LAC @ gives new life and lustre chairs picture frames. It is the floors, work, bath rooms, sash and sills. Thirteen different uses—75 eents every purse, W.J.& H. D. Powers, Grand Rapids Mirnesota. Ladies Shirts We have just 37 uf that new lot of Ladies Shirts left, and they are going every day at the special price we have made on them. We your size aud one that will have please you, and if you buy one you will say itis the best in- vestment you have made for the price. Not only cheap but so comfortable and neat. They’ve got to go, and go they will. The price alone is taking them off lively; if you want a stylish and easy waist at a very small price, then come at once. \ New Wash Materials Just: arrived. in white . and colored effects. You can make up a dandy costume: from any of them at a ridiculously low Better come in Vow is the time to prepare for ,the expenditure. and look them over. warm weeks so soen to come. Northeastern Minnesota For That Industry. district of the state. Poots, dairying. most profitable. land tit only for grazing purposes. grade of butter. INN., SATURDAY, JULY I, FARM DAIRYING re Is no Place More Favorable Than, {considerable profit, and. by turning ‘There is no branch of agriculture for which Northeastern Minoesota is re favorable than for dairying. Considering its area it is without @iestion the best clover growing Fodder corn can be grown successfully yielding from 4 to 8 tons of fodder per acre. The soil is especially favorable for Oats and barley yield well. In fact every thing in the way of feed necessary for dairy cows can be grown in abundance, and with the Many lakes and streams of pure water, Northeastern Minnesota is the most ideal dairy secticn in the state. *; Aside from the conditions being favorable there are other reasons for We must have stuck to keep up the fertility of the soil and for the small farm dairy stock are Practically all the land must be cleared and the process of clearing must be necessarily slow. | Cows can get out among the stumps and bring in a fairly good harvest -from these lands which otherwise are profitiess till put under tae plow. Furthermore there is considerable We can reach the ay through progressive steps. in our| Large Payments At Crookston on Red | At the present time but little jairying is done, and that at much isadvantage owing to the fact that hat butter is made is made during e summer when the price is lowest nd whet general farm conditions re unfavorable for making a high 'The butter made on the average farm is of inferior quality. The truth Of this is strikingly shown in the fact that over 75 per cent of the farm- made butter traded out at county ‘Two Dotuars a YEAR. the manure back on the sol! the fer- BIG RECEIPTS tility of the farm may be maintained. AT LAND OFFICE amery only oe farming as itis. Get the clear- ed—raise thy cows. In In a special dispatch from Crook- time the butter must tm @taniand a? ie to the best. passible ad ae "t ston the Duluth Herald says:— must see the little protit ia as ttis to make greater effort. lo the next bulletin I wil? take up the subject of making butter on the hort A. J. MoGuirs. Lake Indian Lands. | Twelve. thousand six. hundred and twefity-eight dollars was taken in Lduring the six days of last week by 3 Receiver August George of the Crook- ton United States ‘land office, and during the next few weeks it is likely that the receipts of the office will ALIEN LABOR average even above that high tigure. 5; heel : The reason for the enormous rush of Judge on Canadiap Reach Beles ia Favor | money into the land office is the fact of American Engineers. that the first payment on Red Lake Indian lands is due, and settlers are paying in accordance with their-terms of settlement. Un an average, twenty Wedo not take 60 kindly to im- migration exclusion apd contract labor ane Shey they are enforced peyments per day are made, and the against Americans. Canada has: an}amount received by the officials from alien labor act undef which Anteri-| each individual settler ranges from can engineers working ou railways | #80 to $100, and even as high as $200 built into her territory by American|®® Choice descriptions. A million capital have been ordered out of the | 204 a half of money will be paid in country without ceremony. The mat- during the next few years at the ter was taken rather quietly in this| Crookston land office. country because the deported men| New business at the office contin- did not lose thetr employment and | "es ata rate that is surprising, and the only sufferer was the railroad | hardly a day passes but what a num- company that lost their services. ber of entries are made out and a ‘The company took the matter into }40zen or more prospective homestead- the Canadian courts and has just| e's fitted out with facts and figures obtained a decision mére creditable|relative to Jand’ upon which they to Canadian justice than those in the|!ntend to locate. This summer there interminable Green-Gaynor cases in have been numerous inquiries from the province of Quebec. The policy |Schoo! teachers in various sections of of the Canadian courts seems to be|the states about government lands, to make all kinds of Americans wel-|#0d it is probable that large numbers come, whether fugitives from justice |0f the fair instructors will take with money to spend on lawyers or| parcels of Uncle Sam's domain for civil engineers with skill to help|the pleasure and profit there is in develop the country. En this deci-| the work. sion the power of the government to Bier eve rea DROWNED Laces and embroideries. suit- able for trimming the same, are to be seenin great’ profu- Any width and any to old _ tables, furniture and ideal finish for interior wood- colors—t10o 4 quart can, All the be:t and most widely advertised goods are to be found at this store and at prices to please eet Notice. Notice is hereby given that sealed bids will Wie received by the secretary of the Library Board of the village of Grand Rapids, Minnesota, up to three p.m. of Friday, June 30, 1905, for the erection and completion of a brick and stone Carnegie Library Building in said city, according to the plans and specifications now on flie in the office of the secretary at Grand Rapids, and in the office of R. D. Churcli, architect, 410 Globe Bidg., Minneapolis. Bids will be received as follows: First, for the general contract. Secon@, for the heating and plumb- ing. All bids onthe general coneract must.be accompanied by a certified check for the sum of three hundred dollars, and bids on the heating and plumbing a certified check for the sum of one hundred dollars all made payable to C. H. Dickinson. secretary of the board, as a guarantee that the contracter will sign contract and furnish surety within ten days after the bid is accepted by the board. The Take Notice. JAmEs I’, FREESTONE & Co. is Ben Levey.. Mortgage $1,400 due furniture, ‘ Reduced Freight Rates. You can save money by shipping your household goods with us to Coast and Western points. Write. DututH-Van & S ¥ For rent—the store Fellows block, formerly occupied by Inquire of M. A. For Sale—House and household routes, and for sleeping car reserva Enquire of Ben Levey. * Subsenbe for the Herald-Review. reserved by the board. C. H. Dickinson, Secretary. Grand Rapids, Minnesota. Account the International Surda Sohoo! Association neeting at Toron tu, Canada, the Daluth, South Shore and Atlantic Railway, announce thé TORAGE Co., ~ ay ut eua a Ne a . Duluth, Minn we thas: meels and berth oa steam er. ; room in Odd following low round trip rates fro Duluth:— { All rail, direct = - =< = $20.04 Rail to Sault Ste Marie, Steamer t Owen Sound, thence rail to Torontd * $23. Rail to St. Iynace, D & C Steamer t to Fort Huron and rail to Torént : Ce Sie 3s ee Tickets on sale June 18th-19th-21s and 22nd, which can be extended f return passage up to August 25th. For full particulars regarding athe tion, please apply to MART ADSON, — General Agent, 430 West Superior St, Dutut oe right to reject any and all bids is stores is dumped into old boxes and barrels and shipped te a renoyating factory where 1t is melted, washed flavored and worked over and then puton the market at a price from 5 to 8 cents higher than was paid the In the southern part of the state where the co-operative cream- eries have been successfully operatea pr the past ten years, this loss is farmer.: counties there every township owned and operated The butter is ship- ped to the New York amarket yr wherever the highest price can sc secured and passes through the hands of no middle men for a divisiun of the profit. This is not only more profitable for the farmers but more satisfactor} fur the merchants. The storekeeper who has to take butter in trade is always at a disadvantage. the co-operative creamery is the best and most profitable system of dairy- ing iu every Way and itis the system for which we should aim in Northe eastern Minnesota. ‘To operate a creamery most success- fully there should be 500 cows within aradius of five miles. may be vperated with 300 cows even at more profit than by making the Very often a cream- ery is built before the conditions are ready for it. A creamery does not mean successful dairying unless it has the cows back of it and the farm- ers interested in the work. The first movement toward a cream- ery should be to increase the number of cows and get the land cleared to grow feed for them. pay to build a creamery unless it can be operated the year around, and to do this the cows winter. With 30 acres of land cleared afarmer can easily keep ten cows. Ten cows properly cared for will bring in a net profit of $400 a year for The skim milk when fed to calves and pigs will also bring by the farmers. butter at home. butter alone. it will hardly must be fed in deceased Letters testamentary deceased being this da: V. Goran of said County: * it is ordered that all claims and demands of alk persons against said estate be present- ed to this Court, for examination and allow: Probate office. in the Court nouse, in the yillage of Grand Rapids in said Ttasca County, on on the following day, Monday, Uctober 2. 1905, at ten o'clock and said executor havin; with this Court her affidav' no debts against said estate. itis further ordered. from the date hereof be present their claims against said estate. tthe expiration of which time all claims ted to said Court, or not proven to its satistaction, shall be forever barred unless for cause shown further time be allowed. | | Ordered further, that notice of the time and place of hearin: and examination of said elaims and demands shall be given by publi- gation of this order for jor to the day ap} ance, at the jot presen jon, in the Gran eos news} t Grand Rapids, SEAL) LERED L. THWING, Sha fe Attot Ho duly 1, 8, 13, + apie * Probate Notice. STATE OF MINNESOTA, ‘es. County of Itasca, ( ise Probate Court, Special Term, June 29, In the matter of the estate of Frank Goren, n the estate of said granted unto Nina that there were hat three months lowed to oreditors successive weeks ted for such examina- view, Dated at Grand Rapi day of June, cae 1905, ry The ground of the decision throws an interesting light upon the Cana- dian constitution and laws. In the United States a law beyond the power of the enaeting body is pro- nounced waconstitutional in the courts, In this: case’ the judge does uot cite the enabling act of the Do- minion, which we suppose is the a e jet tabor™ Ta “nltta vires;” that is,” beyond’ the Dower of the goyernment to. pass; because jts euforcerent is a physival impossibility without Canadian juris- diction on American soil. The decision seems to be based on common taw, or perhaps on common sense, father than upon any act of parliament. There is said to be ao. appeal fram the decision.—Mionga- polis Tribune. GOING TO CANADA Ninety Per Cent of the Homeseekers are Going to Canada. State Auditor Iverson in an inter- view has stated that of the hoome- seekers passing through St. Paul 90: per cent are bound for Canada. ’ Passing through the state of great- est agricultural opportunity to goto an’ alien, though a neighbor, soil. Why is this? Does Canada offer greater attraction to im than Minnesota? Is her soil aoy richer, any more accessible than Min- nesota’s? Are her markete any handier or any more profitable? is emphatically no. opportunities are just aa, as those ot any state in the union, or any country in the world, Hers is rich, her terms of sale are. n~ able, and her markets are pear and: capable of absorbing all that may be raised. What, then, ig the secret? What is the Irdestone that is attracting foolish homeseekers out of their land, over the soil of Minnesota? It must be potent, because it has even drawn people ftom Minnesota, who have sought the will-o’-the-wisp suc- cess across the Canadien border. It is advertising. Canada, seeking to fill her vast and broadened acres with productive farms, set about it systematically and wisely, and inau- gurated a campaign of advertising. This it is that is drawing settlers to her by bundreds. This it is that has caused many. Minnesota people to leave better things here at home to seek fortune in Canada. This means of attracting settlers 1s as free to Minnesota as it is to Canada. But the last legislature The answer to all thes¢ questions deport alien laborers is denied and the engineers are permitted to re- Fred Damanth Was Carried Over Falls By Logs at Ripple, Minn. turn to their work. Fred Dumanth, of Ripple, Minn., was drowned in the falls at that place at 10 o’clock p. m. on Thursday. He was working on some logs fur the Nomicun Drive company. He stepped from the log on which he was stand- ing on a large rock which protruded fr ‘ in attempting‘to save-himself, he jaid hold: on some” floating logs which carried’ hiw part way o\cr the falis where he disappeared and bas never seen singe. The Growved man leaves a wife aad one @tild tu mourn his sad death who ar@ living at Ripple. He wasa of the Woodman lodge at Duek. Any persun finding the body will’ confer-a favor by com- municating with C. H. Grove, chair- man, M. W. A.. Black Duck, Minn. MINNESOTA LANDS ORDERED OPENED 87,800 Acres of Indian Lands Wi!l Go te Settlers Ang. 17. By direction of the secretary of the interior, 37,800 acres of Indian lands in Minnesota will be opened to settle- memt Aug. 17. These Jands at pres- ent are partly in the Fond du Lac, Red Lake, White Earth and the Chippewas of Minnesota reservations. —Miuneapolis Times. New Towns in North Dakota. The extensive railroad building ‘pow being done in North Dakota has brought tributary to railroad faci)- an additional vast area of the rich agricultural sections of northern and western North Dakota. The Great, Ncrthern Railway is building a number of new extensions from its main line northward notably ‘that of the Searles extension of the Edmore line The Thorne extension runuing north from York, the Maxbass ex- tension running northwestward from ‘Towner, and a further extension of the Westhope line to Antler, The building of these new lines has brought into being «a number of new towns which are fully described ina pamphlet recently issued by the Great Northern Railway. By applica- tion to Mr. F. I. Whitney, Passenger Trafft’ Manager, St. Paul, Mino, a copy of these pamphlets “New Ex- teusions in North Dakota” or “New Towns in North Dakota* will b mailed to any address. a July 1 to Aug. 5. 2 ————_<_<<>_—=——LxL—LEL—_— Minnesota’s expenditure to dimes. It is to be hoped that anothier Jegis- Jature may profit by present condi- tions, and that it may be accorded sufficient foresight and wisdom to enable it to be wisely generous with the cause of immigration.—Duluth Herald, :

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