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or eee noe meen 1GEO. BOOTH, eee — Notice of Kxpiration of Redemption. Office of County ‘Auditor, Pre: f of 7 Stute of Mimhosota. To HELEN BERNARD: ~ a f Northeast qua (sels of of section twenty-seven (27) township sixty-one (61, range twenty-two (22), Was, pursuant to the provisions of chapter 822 of the general laws of the year 1899, ut the sale of forfeited lands, pursuant to a Peal estate tux judgment, amounting to ninety- three cents. entered ‘in the district court in said county of Itasca, on the the twenty-first day of March, A. D. "1909, in progeedings to ‘orce the payment of taxes U. said real te delinquent in the year one thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven (1897). and for any prior year or years, for said county. which sale was beld at Grand Rapids in said county, on the 12th day of May, A. D. 190 sold for the sum of twelve dollars, said sum be- Rub it on—take it in! For Hinkley’s Bone Liniment is a genuine and speedy killer of pain. Taken internally or externally, just as the occasion requires, It is not a new medicine—there is nothing experi- mental about it. For 50 years it has been tried and tested in the sever- est manner, always with successful results, and so far as we know, is today the only medicine which overcomes pain of every sort, froma bruise to the severest chronic rheumatism. If baby isteething, croupy has a cold, is troubled with diarrhcea, cholera infantum, colic, a few drops of this wonderful remedy stops the trouble. If the boys and iq girls havesore throat, diphtheria, bronchitis, catarrh, chillblains and * rost bites, Hinkley’s Bone Liniment will speedily-bring freedom from are and remove the disease, and if the’ grown ecopte suffer from dyspepsia, indigestion, liver and kidney trouble, rheuma- tism, lumbago, erysipelas, this wonderful remedy almost imme- diately drives away the pain and ina short time produces a cure, + GRAND RAPIDS, WINN ] “BOOTH’S CIGARS” reputetion nonce Seceiient Minnesota. They are made v- | | | | | | land from said sale will expt days after the pot his an ids in said co inty ta, this 3rd day of { County Auditor's; M t Seal. ‘ Auditor of Itasca Coupty Norald-Review Aug. Notice of Ezpirotion of Re State of Minnesota, + County of Liasea. { To HELEN BERNAKD: ati wt iun undivided one-hall of the tract of Land asse: in your name. situ- ate in (he county of Htasca. state of Min s follows, to-wit: North- tu mption. nue LW provision ai laws of th lands. p n (1397), and ud county. ius Ln said ae Upon Luss Hotice. is the zwenty-elght dollars aud lLof the original t id costs due the: ption of siti sixty days ufter the ud proof thereof ha» v. of this notive, in my office. Witness my hand and official seat at Grand Kapidy in said county of Ltasca® Minnesota, this dra 900. s County Auditor's + t Seal i Board of School District Minnesota, until Mouday for cay furnishing of Leb. the construction and completion of two school buildings, located as fol’ ows: the southwest quarter of section 23, juarter line of Suction 8, town- -dancs with plans and specifications to be furnished by said schog: board which inay be seen at the store of G. I’, Krem- wr, Grand Rapids, Minu, Bids must uled and directed to the Sehool Board, d Rapids, Minn. ‘ der wall be required to »ved bond la the amount of ouditioned for the faithful per- wot the work, aol Board reserves the right to 1e- +s Ject any oF all bids. FUE, REUSS WIG: To a Littie Child. Conld I go before a little way Down t hard road your tender feet t aside the bramble and the tare ult to wound you on a later day; each lJuring path that leads ast With eyes made clear long since in sterner air, And bare the pitfall and the hidden snare That lurk to bring you sorrow and dis- may. Could I but go a little way before, child-heart! Trusting Inno- diy would 1 suffer for your 8, reopened to the quick keen core! i-pitying Phould t The long, t —Hilton, R. God! That such soft feet Wanted, the Job Completed. Andrew ‘P§nkham, a. well, known farmer of North Mgnmouth, Me., one of the town’s solid.men, and at;one time state senator, used to tell the fol- lowing story on himself: “When, I was a young man, my brother Amsa and m 1? were plowing one day. I. was holdirg the jlow. Amsa was driving, and my father w havi general oversight cf tte job. It was very rocky ground. I was rather stout and was getting about winced. Final- ly I could stand it no longer, and be- tween gasps I called ont, ‘For thunder sake, stop those horses, Amsa; you're yankirg the devil out of me’ Father looked up, and, in his moderate way, | sald, ‘Drive on Ams: drive on.’” John Sherman as a Financier. The late John Sherman showed his talent for financi g at an carly age. He gnd two of his brothers had been given a sum of money with which to pay their board for a week while on a shooting trip at the house of a farmer, near Laneaster, Ohio, their home, The week ended, John ‘ordered the wagon and prepared to pay his board. But the ‘farmer refused the money, saying that,the sons of Judge Sher- man would always "be welcome guests. When John found te,did not have to pay his board he’sent*the wagon back to the barn and “remained another I can remem «IN BELOW THE VINEGAR. Sailors’ Smart Trick Deceived Officers for a Month. While on the China station in 1886 the master-at-arins’ mess on the U. S. S. Omaha was in a arunken and de- moralizea condition for several weeks. ‘try as be might, the captain could not discover where tie liquor was com- ing from. TFinztly all shore liberty was stopped, but the drunkenness did not cease. On the morning of sailing, while the executive officer was near the port gangway watching the taking in of stores, he asked what was in a large demijokn that came over the side with boxes and packages. He was told that it was vinegar. He pulled the cork and sniffed it. ls.was vinegar.. Then his attention was at- tracted by the tag, marked “master- atarms’ mess,” and remarking that the mess must be using vinegar ior bathing, as he had already seen the same demijohn brought aboard twice within that week, he ordered the offi- cer of the deck to inspect it carefully and taste it. He did; it was vinegar. week. ——————— Small Coins. The natives of the Malay peninsula have in use the very smallest ‘current coin in the world. It is a sortfof wa- fer, made from the resinous juiée of a tree, and is worth about one%ten-. thousandth of a penny. The smallest. metal coin in circulation at the pres- ent day is the Portuguese three-reis piece, worth twelve one-hundredths of a penny. The smallest coin circulat- ing officially in any part of the Brit. ish empire is the five-millesima piece of Gibraltar, worth about half a far thing. That officer, however, noticed that the jug had an unusually long neck. He poured out a small quantity of vine- gar and discovered an extra cork in the bottom of the neck. Below that were three gallons of gin, The vine- gar between the corks had served to deceive the inspecting officer at the gangway for a month. DUE TO FASHION’S CAPRICE. Artificial Flowers Had Their Origin In Italian Festival. Fashion is responsible for many in- ventions. This is the case with the manufacture of artificial flowers, for the demand was dye to a caprice of fashion. In Italy dwring festiya! time it was decreed that flowers should be worn in and out of ‘their season and that their color should be retained. Many p'.ns for solving the were brought tcrward and at } one hit upon the idea of making them of various materials which would re semble the real flowers. later, in the middle ages, the artificial so far super- seded the natural that both.men and women decked their heads with imi- tation flowers of cambric. glass. pa- per, wax and metal. The most beau- tiful artificial blossoms are made: in Paris, and their making is one of the chief industries of that city. Why Gambling Was Prohibited. in England. as in Rome, gambling was prohibited, not because it demor- alized, but because it rendered its devotees effeminate. Anvact passed in 1541 had in view the double object of “maintaining the artilkery and debar- ring unlawful games.” An act passed during the reign of Queen Anne de- clared that all bonds or other securi- ties given for money won at play or money lent at the time to play with should be utterly void and all mort- geges or incumbragce.on lands made on the same consideration should be made over to the use of the mort- gagor. This continued to be the law until 1845. Curious Facts of Napoleon |. A recently discovered manuscript _written by a schoolmate of Napoleon *L, whose name was H. A. L. de Cas- tres, contains curious information re- ‘garding Napoleon in the years of 1780 to’1784. . When he entered the Mill- tary; school at Brienne he knew so little: of. the French language that a private teacher of Tt had to be en- gaged for him. He was tolerably good in mathematics, and hed ap toa that has benefitted my wife for pba I regard it as a wonderful m« Swift Packing Co. “Hinkley’s Bone Liniment has been the family medicine in our family as 1 = bolt and I do not think of starting eat B withoeca bottle of it in my satchel.”"—Harry Parks, Ashlan ror Internal and External Use. “It is not often that you find a druggist to , West Duluth, Minn. Such testimonials cannot be overlooked nor can you afford to of such marked merit. Hinkley’s Bone Liniment isa whole family medicine chest in itself, and yet costs but 25 cents a bottle. You rub it on and as if by magic. Don’t pain disay lesman put you off with an: amazing memory. robbers or war with cared little for ball playing or other me uKea vO piay the boys, but games. A “Dark” Romance. A young native woman, attractive, and, for a negress, good iocoking, a few years ago nearly caused war in “vestern Africa between two chiefs, each of whom wanted to marry her As troubie seerted imminent, a white officer intervened, and married the girl to a native civil servant. Would that end the matter? “I believe she has common sense,” said the officia:. There has been no trouble since, and to-day me dusky beauty in the case, commercially inclined, has 7. good business at taking in washiag! The Experiment. A million years ago the chemist old used, in his furnace, many petens things— Tincture of pride, red blood, ana pow- dered gold, } Anger, and pride, and dust of broke; wings, And laughter, and the salt of unshed tears, Sun-rays and moon-sheen from the skies above, And courage in full measure: Down the years He spilled the mixture—and we call it Love, —Munse’ Saw No Joy in the Kiss. Kissing seems to have attractions even these many centuries after it originated, and not a few have been the toasts upon this art of osculation, of which a good New England divine once said: “I never can understand why people kiss; it seems to me not only a purposeless, but a disgusting habit.” Evidently this sentiment was that of Dean Swift, who wrote: “Lord,” I wonder what“fool it was that first’ invented kissing!” * Bishop Brooks and Matrimony. The’ late Phillips Brooks, being a bachelor, was greatly annoyed by reteiving ‘offers of marriage from women all over the country. One wom- an. told him that she had fortune at his disposal if he would-accept her hand ‘and heart. He replied: “Give your money to the poor, your heart to God, and vour hand to the man Who asks you for it.” Inheritance. : There lived a man who raised his hand and said, “I will be great!” And through a long, long life he bravely knoeked At Fame’s closed gate. A son he left who, like his sire, strove High place to win; Worn out he died, and, dying, left no race That he had been. He also left a son, who, Or planning how, Bore the fair letters of a deathless fame Upon his brow. “Behold a genius, filled with fire di- vine!” The people cried, Not knowing that to make him what he was Two men had died. —Isabelle Ecclestone Mackay. without care Advantage of Mind Intercourse. We are apt to overestimate the value of an education gotten from books alone. A large part of the value of a college education comes from the social intercourse of the stu- dents, the re-inforcement, the buttress- ing of character by association. Their faculties are sharpened and polished “by the attrition of mind with mind, and the pitting of brain against brain, which stimulate ambition, brighten the ideals, and open up new hopes and possibilities, Book knowledge is valuable, but the knowledge» which comes from mind iptercourse is in- valuable.—O. S. Marden in Success. | proprietary article, to recommend anyone of the man this instance I feel justified in doing both. I have used Bone Liniment in my fomily for years and it is the only medicine t er particular case—a severe backache caused from kidney trouble—and I do not hesitate to recommend Hinkley’s Bone Liniment as the best all-round family medicine.’’—FRrep PLEssNER, Saginaw, Mich. “T am pleased to tell you that Hickey. Bone Liniment cured my child of partial icine.’’—THomas BuckLEY, Salesman for aaeney of any length without a |» Wis, “ good;” insist on having Hinkley’s Bone Liniment, ive his testimony , but in inkley’s by a medicine take it in and the let the druggist or ‘ing else ‘‘just as TELLS WHY INDIANS PAINT. Apache Relates Legend Which Ac counts for His People’s Custom. Once an old Apache Indian, when asked the question why his people painted their faces, told this little le- gend: “Long ago, when men were weak and animals were big and strong, & chief of the red men who lived in these mountains went out to get a deer, for his people were hungry. “After walking all day he saw & eeer and shot at it, but the arrow was turned aside and wounded a mountain lion, which was also after the deer. When the lion felt the sting of thé arrow he jumped up and bound- ed after the man, who ran for his life. “He was almost exhausted and, when he felt his strength giving way, he fell to the ground, calling on the big bear, who, you know, is the grand- father of men, to save him. “The big bear heard the call and saw that to save the man he had to act quickly, so he scratched his foot and sprinkled his blood over the man. “Now, you must know that no anit- mai ‘will eat of the bear or taste of his blood. So when the lion reached the man he smelled the blood and turned away, but as he did so his foot scraped the face of the man, leaving the marks of his claws on the blood- smeared face. * “When the man found that he was uninjured he was so thankful that he left,the blood dry on his face and never washed it at all, but left it until it peeled off. “Where the claws of the lion scraped Ht off there were marks that turned ‘brown: in the sun, and where the blood: stayed on it was lighter. Now all ‘men paint their faces that way with<blood.and scrape it off in streaks’ when they hunt or go to war.” | ARSENIC TO POISON TREES. Simple Matter to Get’ Rid ‘of Unwel- come Foliage. A gardener discovered the fact re cently that trees are often sent to an untimely ‘death by poison, usually ar- senic. The reasqn for this does not appear until one hears the man’s ex- planation. Suppose a man has rented a house which has too much shade, the law will not allow him to have one or more of the trees cut down without the consent or the owner. As it often happens that tenants and landlords hold different views on the. subject of shade the trees remain as a bone of contention. It is then that the gardener is called to administer a dose of poison, for when a tree is dead the tenant may have it removed. Five‘ cents’ worth of ‘arsenic is suf- ficfent to'kill a large tree. A hole is madejin the trunk, the arsenic drop- ped“in; ‘and nature does the rest. It never fails. SS * Mammy's Good-By. the South negro farm, hands go to oar labors long before the‘rising of the gun, and. do not return to their homes and children until’ the twilight shadows gather.) .~ : nky. lil’ haid, stickin’ out:o’ bed, bis show ens hate-to leab de chile; Brighten shiny oye may a de wiles Twit at 'e mammy. A Better Age ‘em tight,” ’caze, afore de ‘Fore de sun am riz—afore de dawn— Mammy: got to go; [nipped tak’ de hoe, Rassel, wid de cotting en de corn. But she comin’ back to her baby black; Mammy’s comin’ w’en de sun am, Meet ‘er at de do’ anny Seale sho’, — hei ae “ ‘taters oe je Iil_cRap, in e’ amm: Dees: "e aid en hear her sof'ly sing. Shet yo’ shiny eye; baby, doan yo’ cry, Marmy got to leab de ai seeine ‘This insures the utmost cleanlin For sale everywhere. ers Cigars : fl of the finest selected stock by experienced workmen in Mr Booth’s own shops here, and under his personal supervision. Call for them. es2S2eS525352ooeooCocrSseoeCSse ess and care in manufacture. i THE GOLDEN RULE Wood Yard I will keep all kinds of wood for sale, sawed into all lengths and will be. prepared to give prompt service. My motto will be the | “Golden Rule”— When a.cord of, wood is bar- gained for a full cord of wood will be delivered. My'terms will be strictly cash on delivery. Phone No. ll4 JOHN O'BRIEN A. B. CLAIR, Register 2f Deeds of Itasca County Mineral Pine ana Farming . Lands Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS. Special ‘Offer ~' 5O lbs of Granulated--o $1.50 Write for special, price listto Duluth* Wholesale Supply House 102-104 W. Mich. Stu. — Dulth Feer5 F. PRICE LAWYER Offic in thet First National Bank building GRAND RAPIDS - MINN. D= CHAS. M. STORCH, PHYSICIAN AND :SURGEO N Office and Residence carner Leland avenue. and Fourth street. GRAND RAPIDS. An Atlas for $1.00. The Great Northern Railway has issued an Atlas of 56 pages contain- ing up to date maps of Iowa, Wis- consin, Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washing- ton, British Columbia, Oregon, Kan- sas, Missouri, Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, Alaska, Hawaii, Japan, Philippine Islands, China, the United States and of the world. In addition to this the Atlas con- tains valuable statistical information Telative to the states named above, printed is en the very best quality of REFFrrFrARPrUsIEF mAh E Grand Rapids, - é ITASCA, COUNTY ABSTRACT OFFIGE ABSTRACTS, REAL ESTATE, FIRE INSURANCE, Geavayenta: Drawn. Taxes Paid for Non-Residents, KREMER & KID Proprietors, GRAND RAPIDS, # MIDN W E.NEAL Dealer in PINE AND FARMING LANDS. The finest List of Agricultural ang razing Lands in the County. The Most Excellent Sites for lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Corres-ondence Solicited. Many Minn D.. cosrepe DENTIST. —Offic. In First National Bank Bnilding.— GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA R EE EE ee ee a a G. C. SMITH ; DEALER IN Fruits, Confectionery, Ice Cream Soda, Ice Cream, Drinks, Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. ELAND AVENU ERE em a ea EEE EE as a a KRHAKASCHKKKKS HSS H OTS AE A ie A Notice. is hereby given that no bills will be allowed, or collections made, by the firm of James F, Freestone & Co., unless countersigned by James F. Freestone. JAMES F, FREESTONE & (op. ig 160 ACRES rearCamby, Minn., wil} trade for Jand in Cass or Itasca, ‘100 acres are plowed, 60 acres in pasture, good buildings. Mortgage $1,400 due in five years may be paid on or before due. Address Lock Box 271, Grand Rapids, Minn. WItARD a. ROSSMAN, Attorney At Law. Office in First Natjonal Bank Building. GRAND RAPIDS - - MINN paper, shows the lines of the Great Northern Railway, and is in every way a commendable work. This Atlas will be distributed at the actual cost of productidn and will be sent to any address upon receipt of $1.00. Address, F. I. Whit- ney, Passenger Tratlic Manager, Great, Northern Railway, St. Paul, Minn. June 24 to July 29. Reduced Freight Rates, You can save money by shipping your household goods with us tq ‘oast and Western points. Write. DututaH Van & SroraceE Co., Puluth, Ming ss oe ae i LF uy {