Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, September 30, 1905, Page 5

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ie SHE MADE HER CHOIC -_ A Mre. Winkleton Regretted the Stern Necessity, but—— , between us!” Winkleton folded up his evening meWspaper and savagely threw it on the floor. : “Yes, madam,” he continued, “I tell you once for all that you can’t have both of us. The last time that dreas- maker was in the house for a week I vowed that I never would stand it again, and I won’t. As for being under the same roof with two half-crazy and absorbed women, and requiring a rake every morning to get the odd pieces of cloth out of my clothes; to hear the rattle and whir of that confounded sewing machine, and to sit at my meals and listen to a lot of cut bias, ruffled and flounced, and pleated talk » —I've had all I’m ever going to ‘have. If I'm to be turned out of my own house, all right; but you can't have both of us. I leave the day she comes. , You’ll have to make your decision quick.. Come, madam, which shall it be, the dressmaker or me?” Mrs. Winkleton looked at her hus- band with a hopeless, hlf-despairing look, in which were discernible some traces of indignation and a sense of injustice. “If you must go, dear,” she sald, soft- ly, “why, I have nothing more to say!” TIGER HUNTING IN AFRICA. Predatory Beast Killed by Blow of Rifle Butt. “An exciting adventure with a tiger eccurred at Sabi recently,” s.ys a South African paper. “The” beast was seen going from Il. Danger's place, dragging a calf toward a dense bush, which lay close by. Mr. Ban- ger could not leave the stcre until nearly sundown and by that time the tiger had eaten nearly half the calf. On coming up to him Mr. Banger fired and managed to break the anima!'s left shoulder, but it was too dark to follow. Next morning he set oui with a couple of dogs and a few boys. As soon as the dogs bayed him the tiger commenced growling, but he could not be seen for the dense bush. All of a sudden he dashed out, passed Mr. Banger and caught one of the boys, whose flesh was very badly torn and had to be sewed up by a doctor. Mr. Banger, being afraid of shooting the boy, ran up to the tiger and broke his neck with the gun. The animal meas- ured from nose to tail seven feet six inches.” Apostrophe to Limburger. Owing to the fact that the restau- tants wert out of business the first of the week, the editor and staff are baching—that and other reasons—and yesterday a rural subscriber brought us in a ptece of limburger cheese, say- ing that if we didn’t care to eat it we could use it to drive away ants. Will-it drive away ants? Will it! Ver- ily, I say uvto you, it will drive away dogs out of a tanyard; it will drive buzzards away from a carcass; it will drive a herd of buffalo through a burn- ing forest and a mule through a barb- ed wire fence; it will drive a man crazy if compelled to stay within twenty feet of its polluted presence; indeed, it will drive away ants—and uncles, too, and mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters and grandmoth- ers, even to the seventh generation; still there are some who claim to like Nmburger—Freewater (Ore.) Times. The Invaluable Hairpin. Anthropologists have never done justice to the hairpin. Dullards will tell you that women aren’t so inven- tive as men, don’t take out so many patents. They don’t have to. With a hairpin a woman can pick a lock, pull a cork, see if a joint of meat is done, do up a baby, regulate a range, tinker a sewing machine, stop a leak in the roof, stir batter, whip cream, reduce the pressure in the gas meter, keep bills and receipts on file, tighten windows, clean a watch, untie a knot, put up awnings, doctor 1n automobile. In short, she can do what she wants to; she needs no other instrument.— New York Sun. The Luster of Opals. Many gems, often without any ap- parent cause, suddenly become crack- ed or seamed, the damage being be- yond repair. Opals, known as the un- luckiest stones, are so sensitive that their beauty is frequently destroyed by their wearer’s proximity to an open fire. The luster of this stone is caus- ed by the presence of myriads of little fissures which deflect the light into the characteristic prismatic color of the gem. The tiniest of these fissures is likely at any moment to destroy the stone. ‘The Troubles of Humanity. There are troubles of the rich Fresh for the gossips day by day; ‘There are the waiting armies which ‘Are taught to hate and schooled to slay; ‘There are the rogues in office who Still shame us by their sinful greed— But still the sky is often blue ‘And good men still come forth to lead. warring and the sin and woe The make our daily themes, but still At sunrise we may see the glow Of promise on the eastern hill! The strife and wrongs we emphasize, ‘And often foolishly forget That Virtue’s broad, white banner. files High over all the others yet. —S8. E. Kiser. Reward for Finding Errors. By the recent dinner of the London Association of Correctors of the Press attention was called to a queer cus- tom of the old time. Printers used to chain copies of their books outside their offices, and if any passing schol- ar detected an error he wa® rewarde* according to its magnitude—a cup of wine for a broken letter, a cup of wine ra turned letter “PCISCN IN THE EGG. May Sometimes Be Infected Before They are Laid. “Eggs may be poisonous even before they’ are laid,” is the cheerful state-. ment made by Prof, Metchnikoff of the Pasteur institute, in the witness box. The whites may contain disease-breed- ing microbes. These, when heated, survive in a vegetative state up to 60 degrees centigrade or 140 degrees Fahrenheit. Consequently a raw or even partly cooked egg, however fresh, may always be _ poisonous, owing to the poisonous presence of lively bacilli in the white and contain- ed therein from the very beginning. The professor’s evidence, writes the Paris correspondent of the London ‘felegraph, was given in a case be- fore the first chamber, in which a pastry cook is being sued by twenty- five persons who had been made very ill by eating some of his cream tarts, and by the heirs of a twenty-sixth who died of it. Official experts, sup- ported by M. Metchnikoff, stated at the first hearings of the case that it is utterly impossible ever to make sure that whipped cream containing white of an egg unboiled shall be innocuous, however fresh the egg, for the above reasuns. FIRST TO ROLLER SKATE. Belgian Inventor Credited with Inven- tion of Pastime. Roller skating is clder than most folk imagine. Joseph Merlin, a Bel- gian born in°1735, a clever, inventive fellow, came to London in 176v and exhibited his novelties at a museum in Spring Gardens, and afterward in Prince’s street, Hanover square. Havy- ing made a yair of skates to run on wheels, he appeared with them at a masked be!) given by Mrs. Corneiys in Carlisle House, Soho. He was duly invited to display his skiil. Having put on the skates he took a violin and began whirling about to his own mu- sic. One thing he had not studiea, lLowever, and that was how_to gide himself and to stop quickly, and the result was that before the perform- ance had lasted any time he dashed into an immense mirror valued at $2,500, smashed his fiddle to bits and seriously injured himself. That ap- pears to have dampened the spirit of inventors, for we hear nothing of other wheel skates for nearly half a century. Strong Men Together. Comrades, pour the wine to-night, For the parting is with dawn, Oh, the clink of caps together, With the daylight coming on! Greet the morn With a double horn, When strong men drink together! Comrades, gird your swords to-night, For the battle is with dawn. Oh, the clash of shields together, With the tiumph coming on! Greet the foe And lay him low, When strong men fight together, Comrades, watch,the tides to-night, Por the, saiiheris with dawn. Oh, to face the spray together, With the tempest coming ont Greet the Sea With a shout of glee, When strong men roam together, Comrades, give a cheer to-night, For the dying is with dawn. Oh, to meet the stars together, With the silence coming on! Greet the end As a friend a friend When strong men die together. —Richard Hovey, in *‘Comrades.” Warranted a Speedy Cure. Pr. William Osler, in one of his Bal- timore lectures, recited a quaint old cure for the gout—a cure, from a sev- enteenth century medical work, that was designed to show gout’s hopeless- ness. ‘First pick,” said this odd cure, “a handkerchief from the pocket of a spinster ‘who never wished to wed; second, wash the handkerchief in an honest miller’s pond; third, dry it on the hedge of a person who never was covetous; fourth, send it to the shop of a physician who néver killed a pa- tient; fifth, mark it with a lawyer’s ink who never cheated a client; and, sixth, apply it, hot, to the gout-tor- mented part. A speedy cure must fol- low.” Plant Drugs the Tish. A writer in the National Geograph- ical Magazine tells of a tree growing in the Malay archipelago, the Anda- man islands and Ceylon, which pro- duces a fruit used in fishing, with re- sults of a remarkable character. The fruit is pounded up into paste and leit in bags over night, after which it is sunk at low tide in deep holes along the reefs. The fish soon begin to ap- pear at the surface; some of them life- less, others attempting to swim or ANTS THAT GROW MUSHROOMS. ' Insects Make Excellent Gardeners in South America. Prof. J. R. Ainsworth Davis gives latest proofs of the ant’s right to our applause, says the Philadelphia Rec- ord. He says: “In tropical America the traveler in their native region oft en sees thousands of ants marching in column of route, each holding in its powerful jaws a piece of green leaf about the size of a sixpence. These they take to their nests. The material is used as an elaborate sort of mush- room culture, requiring much more skill and intelligence than ‘that in which human beings engage. The mushroom grower ‘sets spawn in the beds he prerares, but the ant does not meed to do this. The desired spawn soon makes its appearance in the chewed leaf. But in its natural state ft is inedible and must undergo care ful treatment before it yields the mushroom which the art desires. The necessary work is dene by a special caste of gardener ants. These weed out the obnoxious germs, ete., and, pruning off the tips of the threads, preventing them from growing into the air and producing ureless toad- stools. As a result of this the iireacs swell into innumorable little rounded white thickenings, cach of which is about one-fiftieth of an inch across. It is these which are the mushrooms. These curious bodies constitute the sole food of the ant—or, at any rate the chief food. GAIL HAMILTON’S LITLE JOKE. Remarkat!e Testimonial Given Depart- ing Hired Girl. As a writer of testimorials Gail Hamilton excelled. An Irish girl ap- plied to the principal of the state nor- mal schcol at Salem for a situation eas cook, and exhibited w:th pride the following testimonial from Miss Ham- ilton: “Margaret Fliner has lived with me fourteen weeks. I have found her in- variably good tempered, immunda (dirty), cheerful, obliging, exitiora (destructive), respectful and incorri gible. She is a better cook than any Irish girl I have ever employed, and one of the best bread-makers I ever saw. With neatness and carefulness and economy she would make an ex- cellent servant. I heartily recommend her to all Christian philanthropists and her employer to divine mercy.” Visiting His Grandfather. This happened in Paris: An artist was talking to an old model. “I shall want you on Sunday morning for the final sitting.” said the artist. “Impos- sible, monsieur,” said the model. “I am. going to take the children to visit my grandfather.” “Your grandfather! Why, how old are you?” “Sixty-seven, monsieur.” “And you still have a grandfather?” “Oh, yes, at the Jardin des Plantes. He’s a skeleton. I take my own grandchildren to see him once a month. The keepers know us very well. They always say: ‘Ah, you have come to see your grandpapa. All right; you'll find him in his usual place. He can’t walk very comfort- ably now, so he’s stil] there!’” Benny on the Mosquito. The mosquito is a small but power- ful insect with a sharp jigger at the end of his snoot. It amuses itself by singing, and lives on blood. When it stops singing you feel a pain some- where about you, and then you slap where the pain is. The mosquito will bite animals, but prefers the human race. It never does any good to swear when a mosquito bites you. It doesn’t help you a bit, and it irritates the mosquito. ‘There was a man in South Chicago who was bitten by a mos- quito seven years ago while he was working in his garden, and he has never worked in a garden since.— Chicago Tribune. One Virtue in Napoleon. The after-dinner orator is born, not made; the artificial product takes hints and copies in vain. All agree, however, that the unexpected “goes” best. Lord Chancellor Campbell knew this when at dinner of authors he sud- denly rose, asked that glasses might be charged, and submitted “Napo- leon.” There were cries of dissent, but Campbell went on undisturbed: “We as authors must feel that the name of Napoleon should he held in honor, for let us never forget that he once shot a publisher.” That toast was drunk with enthusiasm.—Black faintly struggling, with their ventral side uppermost. In this condition, the natives have no difficulty in picking them out of the water with their hands. Origin of Birds’ Names. Certain birds get their names from St. Peter. According to a writer: “The petrel (in German *Petersvogel,’ Pe- ter’s bird); a bird that skims the waves, is named after the apostle who walked upon the waves of Galilee. But the parrot’s is a less simple case. In Spain and in Portugal, as in France, the word corresponding to ‘parrot’ al- most certainly represents ‘little Peter’ —a familiar name playfully applied because Peter was so common a Chris- tian name. Similarly a house sparrow ig nicknamed ‘pierrot’ in France.” Ck Set ee The Lover’s Preference. “Your every tooth is a milk-white pearl,” tenderly whispered the lover fond. And softly laughed the win- some girl when the moonlight caught in her tresses blonde.- His lips neared hers, but before they met in a kiss, the rest of the world forgetting, “You like pearls, then?” said the small co- quette. “Not so much,” he replied, gs J lke the getting.” and White. Woman Financier. Ste entered a large department store to buy a yard of silk, which the clerk told her would cost her’75 cents. Her purchase left a remnant of gne and one-half yards. The clerk sug- gested that she buy the remnant. “What will you take for it?” asked the woman. “Fifty cents, madam,” replied the clerk. “Well, I'll take it, ut you can keep the yard you've just torn off.” The clerk was staggered for a moment, but appreciating the humor of the proposal made the ex- change. Soldiers Escort Mai In some parts of the Sahara desert and in wild and little frequented parts of Asia, where outlaws and brigands abound, the govérnments send an es- cort of soldiers with the mail carriers bearing registered packages. In a vast number of cases the cost of the escort is greatly in excess of the value of the package to be delivered, and it would be ruinous to the recip- fent were he obliged to bear the ex- pense of the delivery.. The govern- ment, however, relieves the citizen of this expense—Washington Star, — House to rent—Apply at this office. Ladies—Call and see our new stock of ladies belts. We have a complete stock. C. H. Marr. _ Blankets—Our fall stock of blankets just received. The warmest kind —they have to be. The price is way down—down to a point below zero. C. H. Marr. 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 & Co. 160 ACRES rearCamby, Minn., wi!l trade for ]and in Cass or Itasca, 100 acres are plowed, 60 acres in-pasture, goog buildings. Mortgage $1,400 due in five years may be paid on or before due. Address Lock Box 271, Grand Rapids, Minn. Wanted—Fresh White Pine, Jack Pine, and Balsam cones. Address, J J Pinney, Sturgeon Bay, Wis. Minnesota Baptist State Convention. On account of the Minnesota Baptist State Convention to »e held at Duluth October 10-13, the Great Northern Railway will at reduced information sell tickets For full regarding trains and rates call rates. - on your local agent. THE ‘COMFORTABLE WAY. Local Time Table. East. Bound Ly...Duluth ...Ar "p30 Deer River Cass Lake. Crookston.... Grand Fks. Lv Cc. L. FRYE, Agent, Grand Rapids, Minn. Probate Notice. State of Minnesota ss County of Itasca In Probate Court, Special term. In the matter of the estate of Peter Bowvin- cino, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Santina Bowvincino, of the county of Itasca, state of. Minnesota, representing, among other things. that Peter Bowvincino, late of the county of Itasca, in the state of Minneso- ta, on the 20th day of June, A. D. 1905, at the county of Itasca, died intestate, and-being an inhabitant of this county at thetime of his death, leaving goods, chattels and estate within this county, and thatthe said petition- eris the widow of said deceased, and praying that administration of said estate be to her, Santina Bowvincino, granted; It Is Ordered, That said petition be heard before said court on Monday, the second day of October, A. D. 1905. at 10 o'clock a, m, at the probate office, in the court house in the village of Grand Rapids, in said county. And it is further ordered, That notice of such hearing be given to all persons interested in said estate. by publishing this order once in each week for three successive weeks, prior tosaid day of hearing. in the Grand Rapids Herald-Review. a newspaper printed and published in said county. Dated at Grand Rapids Minn., this 5th day of September, A. D. 1905. By the Court: (Seal) H. S. HUSON, Judge of Probate. Herald-Review Sep 16, 23.30, "05 Execution Sale. Under and by virtue of an execution issued out of and under the seal of the District Court in and for Hennepin county, in the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Min- nesota, on the 27th day of September. 1905, upon a judgment duly rendered and docketed in said court und county on the 22nd day of June, 1898, in favor of Abrahum Stromberg, Henry May and August Kuttnauer. co-part- ners as A. Stromberg & Co., plaintiffs, and against Nickolaus Wilmes. alias Nick Wilmes, alias Nicholas Wilmes, defendant, for the sum of Fifteen hundred seventy- two and 32-100 dollars ($1572.82), a transcript of which. judgment_was duly filed and docketed* in the office of the Clerk of the District Court of Itasca county, Minnesota. on the 9th day of July, 1898, at two o'clock p. m.. which said execution was to me, as sheriff of suid Itasca pounty, duly di- rected and delivered, I have levied upon and shall sell at public suction to the highest cash bidder, at the front door of the Court House in the village of Grand Rapids, in said Itasca county. on Saturday. the: 18th day of November, at ten o'clock’ a. m., all the right. title and interest that above named judgment debtor had on said: 9th day of wh 1898. and may have thereafter acquired, in and to the northwest_quarter of southeast quarter (N. W. 4 of S. E.44), and south halt of southeast ‘quarter (S. 's of S. ) of sec tion eleven (11), and_ southwest quarter of southwest quarter (S. W. 4 of S. W. 4s) of sec- tion twelve (12). in township sixty (60) north, range twenty-three (23) west, Itasca county, Mijated Sey 28th, 1905, mber 28th, ‘ fe WM, HOOLIHAN, Sheriff Itasca County, Minn. * By F. W. Fisa, Deput iy: Notice of Sule of Real Estate. STATE OF MINNESOTA, | ., County of Itasca, 5 In Probate Court. In the matter of the sale of the real estate eee to the estute of Alexander McLeod, leceased. if Notice is hereby given, That by virtue and in pursuance of an order of license made in said matter by the Probate Court of the County of Itasca on the dist di of July, A. D, 1905, the undersigned will, on the 16th day of October, A. D. 1905, at ten o'clock A. M.,at the front door of the County Court House, in the Village of Grand Rapids, in the County of Itasca, and State of Minnesota, offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder therefor for cash all ‘those tracts or parcels of land situate and being in the County of Itasca, and State of Minue- sota, descril as follows, to-wit: The South half of the Northwest quarter (s% of nw) and the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter (ne of nw’) of Sec- tion Twenty-eight (Sec. 28) in Township Fif- ty-four(twp. 54) Range Twenty-five (25) West. in’Itasca coufty, Minnesota. containing Eighty acres more or less according to the government survey thereof. ‘The terms of the sale will be fifty per cent of the purchase price to be paid down ut the time of sale and the balance sum to be paid within 20 days from the date of sale, so as_to allow time for the examination of title to the same. Said sale willbe made subject to the ap- Notice of Mortgage Foreclosure Sale— Foreclosure by Advertisement. Whereas default has been made in the con- ditions of that certain mortgage deed made, executed and delivered by ngus MeIntosh, widower, mortgagor. to William O Giibert, mortgagee, dated July 22nd, 1904, and filed for record, and recorded in: the office of the Register of Deeds for Itatca county, Minne- Sota,onthe 22nd day of Juty, 1904, at 5:30 o'clock p. m., in book." F" ne: page upon which mertgage there is claimed to be due and is due at the date here- of the sum of $200.00 principal and $10.35 in- terest, und 3144.67 taxes owing and due on the lands conveyed by said mortgage and paid by said mortgagee, pursuant to the con- ditions of said mortgage, making in all the sum of $355.02 due upon said morigage. sai mortgage containing a power of sale and sai ‘default consisting in the non-payment of said principal, interest and taxes provided forin said mortgage whereby said power of sale has become operative: and no action or proceeding having been commenced at law es on or in equity or otherwise to collect said mortgage debt or any part thereof; Now Therefore. otice is Hereby Given, That by virtue of the power of sule contained in said mortgage. and pursuant to the statute in such case made an asd Grd said mort- gage will be foreclosed by sale of the lands and premises therein described and convey- ed, to-wit: those pieces or parcels of land situate, lying and being in the county of Ttasca. state of Minnesota, described as fol- proval of the same by the Probate Court of the said County. and same must be coufirm- ed_by the Probate Court. Dated September 15, 1905, A. By eet Iministrator. Herald-Review Sept, 16, 23, 30. STATE OF MINNESUTA, COUN- ty of Itasea.—ss. In District Court, Fifteenth Judicial Dis trict. Cemmercial National Bank of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, Plaintiff, Versus Louise Ennis and Paris K. Enais, her hus- band, George F. White and Bradley Si Orlup, Defendants, NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE. , Notice is hereby given that by virtue ofa judgment of the District Court in and for itascu connty, Minnesota, in the above en- titled action, rendered on the 25th day of August. 1905,in favor of the ubove named plaintiff and against the above named de- fendants. Louise Ennis and Paris K. Ennis, for the sum of Fourteen Hundred Eighty-two and 58-100 Dollars, a transcript of which, cer- tified by the clerk of said court. has been de- livered to me, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash, at the front door of the court house, in the village of Graud Rapids, Itasca county, Minnesota, on Tues- day the 10th day of October, 1905, ut 10 o'clock a. m., the following described real property situated in said Itasca county. Minnesota: Lots three (3), six (4) and seven (7) and north- east quarter of southwest quarter (ne\ of sw'4) of section six (6) in township sixty-five (65) north, range pear (24) west. Dated August 25th, 1905, WM. HOOLIHAN, Sheriff Itasca Conner, Minn, + io By ¥. W. FISH, » Deputy. | PHELPS & WATSON, and ALFRED L. THWING, At- torneys for Judgment Cred- itorsGrand Rapids, Minn. Herald-Beview, August 26, Sept. 2,.9, 16, 23, 80, 1905. Notice of Mortgage Foreclosure Sale— Foreclosure by Advertisement. Default having been made in the conditions of that certain mortgage deed made, execut- ed and deliyered by John Peterson, Jr.. and Bertha M. Peterson, his wife, mortgugors, to William ©, Gilbert, mortgagee, dated the 24th day of Februarv, 1903, and filed for record and recorded in the office of the register of deeds for said Itasca county. Minnesota, on the 28th day of February, 1903, at 3:30 o'clock p. m., in book **J"’ of mortgages on page 48, which mortgage contains a power of sale and which default consists in. the nonpayment of the principal and interest due on said mort- gage whereby the power of sale has become open tet upon which mortgage there is claimed to be due and is due at the daje here- of the sum of $527.79, as follows: prin- cipal and $27.79 interest, and no action or pro- ceeding having been commenced at law or in equity or otherwise to collect said mortgage debt or any part thereof; _ Now, Therefore Notice is Hereby Given, That by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage, and pursuant tothe statute in such case made and pores: said mort- gage will be foreclosed by sale of the lands und premises therein described and conveyed, to-wit: All those pieces or parcels of land situate, lying and being in the county of Itasca, state of Minaesota, described as fol- lows, towit: The southeast quarter of the northeast quarter [se\s of ne] of section twenty-seven |27]; the west one-half of the northwest quarter [W's of nw‘aj und the northeast quarter of the uorthwest quarter (ne of nw) of section pwenty ste [ee all in township cne hundred fifty-two [152] north of range twenty-five [25] west, together with all the hereditaments and appurtenances there- unto belonging orin anywise appertaining, which sale will be made by the sheriff of said Itasca county, Minnesota, at the northerly front door of the county court house in the village of Grand Rapids, Itasca county, Min- nesota, on Tuesday, the 3ist day of October, 1905 at 10 o’clock a, m., of said day, at public auction or vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, to pay the amout then due on said mortgage, together with $25.00 attorney fee stipulated in suid mortgage in case of fore- closure, and the costs and disbursements #]- lowed by law; subject to redemption at any time within one year from date of sale ac- cording to law, Dated September 14th, 1905. WILLIAM CU, GILBERT, C. C. McCAKTHY, Mortgagee. Attorney for Mortgagee, Grand Rapids, Minnesota. Herald-Review Sept. 16, 23,30 Oct 7. 14, 21, 28 | aie F. PRICE LAWLER Offic inthe First National Bank building GRAND RAPIDS - MINN O. W. HASTINGS. F, P. SHELDON. President. Vice-President. CO. E. AIKEN, Cashier. lirst National Bank, Grand Rapids, Minn. ‘Transacts a General Banking Business.}GRAND RAPIDS - = - lows, to-wit: Lots five [5] and six |6] in block thirty-one (a of Grand Rupids, First Divis- iou, according to the map or plat thereof on file and of record in the office of the ister of deeds for said county of Itasca, Minne- sota. together witb all the hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any- wise appertaining, which sale will be made by the sheriff of said county of Itasca, Minne- sota, at the northerly front door of the coun, ty court house in the village of Grand Rap- ids, Itasca county, Minnesota, on Tuesday, the 31st day of October, 1905, at 10 o'clock a.m. edad auction or vendue, to the highest bidder for cush, to pay the full amount due on said mortgage together with $25.00 attor- ney feo stipulated in said mortgage, to-wit; $200.00 principal, $10.35 interest. 3144.67 taxes, $25.00 attorney fee. interest on said principal and taxes at 8 per cent. per annum from date hereof to date of sale and the costs and dis- bursements allowed by law; subject to re- demption at any time within one year from date of sule according to law. Dated September 14th, 1905. WILLIAM C. GILBERT, c. C. McCARTHY, Mortgagee, Attorney for Mortgngee, : Grand Rapids, Minnesota. Herald-Reviow, Sept 16, 23, 30, Oct 7, 14, 21, 28, pret Notice uf First Meeting of Creditors. In the District Court of the United States for the Fifth Division—District of Minnesota, In the Matter of E, L. Bangle, Bankrupt--In Bankruptcy. To the Creditors of E, L. Bangle, of Deer River, in the County of Itasca and district aforesaid. « bankrupt: e Notice is hereby given that on the 20th day of September, A.D, 1905, the said E. L.. Bangle wus duly adjudicated bankrupt; and that the first meeting of his creditors will be held at Room 604 Palladio Building in the City of Duluth, on the 16th day of October, A. D, 1905, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, at which time the said creditors may attend. prove their claims, appoint a trustee, examine the bankrupt, and transact such other business as may properly come before said meeting. Dated September 20th, A, D. 1905. WILLIAM O, PEALER, Referee in Bankruptcy, Herald-Review Sept. 30. W. E. NEAL Real Estate and Insurance Dealer in Fs ‘The finest List of Agricultural and Grazing Lands in the County. The Most Excellent Sites for Manu lacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Correspondence Solicited. Grand Rapids, - - SEE REE EE SL SRS SSS G. C. SMITH DEALER IN Minn REA ea eee Fruits, Confectionery, Ice Cream Soda, Ice Cream, Drinks, Tobaccos, Choice Lines of Cigars Grand Rapids, - Minn. ELAN D AVENUE. SCECSSSHHSCOCEHE OOOH SEES EES ERE AE ee a a a ee a gee tea SRSA AKIKE ACCES ORES: Dkr. costetLo DENTIST. —Offic. in First National Bank Building. GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA D*® CHAS. M. 8TORCH, PHYSICI AN AND ‘SURGEON Office and Residence carner Leland avenue, and Fourth street. GRAND RAPIDS. we RD A. ROSSMAN. Attorney At Law. Office in First Natioval Bank Building. MINN : | 4 a dL Tres Nov. 4 !| | GEO. BO “Bootu’s CIGARS’ S252 5e5SS>8 5252575 — | Manufacturerof Fine Cigars GRAND RAPIDS, . ZINN - of the finest selected stock by experienced workmen in Mr. Booth’s own shops here, and under his persenal supervision. | This insures the utmost cleanliness and care in manufacture. Forsale everywhere. Call for them. rf A Psiss FA KF OTH, 9’ Have achieved an- excellent reputation all over Northern Minnesota. They are made | | mmr

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