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ee \ = Men’s prices. GRAND If you want Overcoats, Men’s Suits, Caps or Leggings _ Now is the time to buy. We have marked tne above lines at selling 20 Per Cent Discount on Overcoats Cc. H. MARR Pants, RAPIDS. SPEAKING “UNDER THE ROSE.” Varying Versions of Origin of Famous Phrase. The phrase “under the rose” had its origin in the wars between the Eg- glish houses of Lancaster and York. The parties respectively swore by the red or the white rose, and these op- posite emblems were displayed as signs of two taverns,.one of which was by the side of and the other op- posite to the Parliament House, in old Palace Yard, Westminster. Here the retainers and servants. of the noble- men attached to theDuke of York and Henry VI used to meet. Here elso, as disturbances were frequent, measures, either of defense or annoy- ance, were taken, and every trans- action was said to be done “under the rose;” by which expression the most profound secrecy was implied. Ac- cording to others, the term originated in the fable of Cupid giving the rose to Harpocrates, the god of silence, as a bribe to prevent him betraying the amours of Venus, and was henee adopted as the emblem of silence. The rose was for this reason frequently sculptured on the céilings of ‘drinking and feasting rooms,:as a: warning to the guests that what was said in mo- ments of conviviality should not be repeated; from which, whats was in- tended to be kept secret was said to me “under the r3se.” Roses were consecrated as >> .ents from the Pope. In 1526 they were placed over confessionals as the symbols of si- lence. Hence, according to some, the origin of the phrase. WHY SHE LEFT THE MEETING. L.'s Reasons Not Connected with Theology. In the little Baptist chapel in the picturesque town of Eastport, Me., many years ago, the minister request- ed all persons present not members of the church to retire at the close of the meeting. Good old Aunt L., who had reached the age of fourscore, and who was one of its most respected members, arose to leave. “It does not apply to you, Aunt L.,” said the minister. “That is not the reason I am going, dear,” she responded; “I have a pain in my stomach.”—Boston Herald. Aunt Milllons Savec by Anesthetics. There is no guessing how many thousands of lives. were lost before the days cf anesthesia merely be cause the pain of the operation nec- essary to save them was too great to be borne. Anesthesia predates asepsis by thirty years, and so belongs to another period in the history of sur- gery, but it is so fundamental to all the wonders that surgery is now work- ing that its discovery is an inevitable part of any account of surgery’s won- derful achievements. Modern sur- gery is not only painless and germ- less; it is also bloodless. A patient ean be opened and his stomach taken out, and yet hardly lose more biood than if he had accidentally cut his finger. Feat of a Greek Scholar. It may safely be said that n> feat of translation in any age has never equalled that achieved by Prof. Jebb im rendering Browning’s “Abt Vogler” into Greek verse. This fine soliloquy of the musician is less obscure, no doubt, than many other of its author’s productions, but it abounds in imagery and in tums of thought which even an Englishman finds it mot very easy to follow and of which he could hardly have conceived it possible that any Greek equivalents should exist. Yet they did exist, for Jebb found them, though it may be doubt@d whether any other Greek’ scholar living would have been equally successful in his search. —London Telegraph. Herald-Review for Job Printing, CONFUSION IN DRAMATIC CLUB. Only One Point on Which the Actors Were Agreed. In the old days in the town of Lit- tleton, Mass., there used to be a dra- matic club, which included many prominent men. Once a play was be- ing given in whict Judge Bellows, a courtly gentleman of the old school, and a certain Dr. Sangef were in the cast. In the middle of the play all forgot their parts. The prompter had lost his place, and the players were in despair. The audience began to gig- gle, and the players looked appealing- ly at once another At the end, at the very denoument of the play, Judge Bellows was sup- posed to exclaim, “I know not ~hat to say.” In his confused state of mind this line happened to come to him, and he gasped: “I know not what to say!” And Dr. Sanger, small and peppery, snapped: “Well, I’ll be hanged if I do.” Whehce the Name “Tiger.” It_is reported that when the pfince of Wales shot a tiger in. India | WHITE 8 COOL, YET ARCTIC ANIMALS | AS A RULE ARE WHITE. Why Are Land Birds Mostly. Derk and Ses Birds, In Many Cases, ‘Whitet—Why Have Nearly All Pur- ple Blossoms Poisonous Properties? In summer weather ladies, and men, too, when possible wear white. Why? To keep cool, of course, you will say. If this be so, why, then, are almost all the creatures that live in arctic regions clothed in white? The usual reply is that the white color is for protective purposes—in order, in fact, to make them invisible to their enemies in the midst of the wastes of snow. But, consider, again, is this reasona- ble? From whom does the polar bear need to hide? He has no enemies to fear. And as for the birds which as- sume a white plumage when they mi- grate north, surely they also have far fewer foes in the polar regions than when farther south. * Again, if white be a cool color this Is surely another reason against the in- habitants of the coldest regions turning white at the approach of winter. It is easy to strengthen this argument. Visit the tropies, and you will find hardly any white animills or birds. In the very hottest regions of the globe not only ic man, as a rule, black, but the birds and beasts are either very dark or else ex- tremely brilliant in color. Of tropical birds the commonest colors run as fol- lows: Brown, dark green and dark blue, emerald green, reds and yellows. Speaking of the birds again, why ts it that land birds are mostly dark hued ‘while so many sea birds are white? Here is another color puzzle. Almost all song birds are somber in hue, while the brightly colored species, such as the jays, the parrots and birds of paradise, have naturally harsh voices. The colors of flowers and leaves offer numbers of interesting problems. No tint of early spring flowers is either white or yellow. Yellow, indeed, holds its own to some extent all through the summer, but the typical color of sum- -mer blooms is pink, while as the au- ‘tumn advances richer crimsons and all the rich, glowing hues of dahlias and chrysanthemums are seen. Horticulturists have produced pop- ples of pretty nearly every shade under the sun, and with many other flowers they seem able to alter the colors al- most as they please. Yet the blue rose, the black tulip and the green carnation seem as far off as ever they were in spite of constant efforts to arrive at them. Nearly three centuries ago Dutch gardeners imagined themselves on the verge of inventing a black tulip. The colors of the blossom of fruit trees are limited to white, pink, bright scarlet and purple. The reason no one knows. Nor is it clear why nearly all plants with purple blossoms have poi- sonous properties. The deadly night- shade is an instance which will be awhile ago, the beast: charged" him a@ru speed. In so doing the tiger was, do- ing {ts best to live up ta.the namie of its kind. Tigers are so called because of the swiftness of their movement, especially in springing upon prey, “tighri” being the old Persian word for an arrow. Hence it comes about that the beast and the River Tigris have the same name. There is nq direct connection between them, but in both cases their swiftness was the characteristic that impressed the early name givers. The tiger’s name is thus, perhaps, nearly as superior in ‘nobility to the hyena’s, as the one beast is to the other, since “hyena” is merely Greek for “sow.” Ingenious Plea Made by Rascal. “Nobody is worried nowadays by the fact that the twelfth month of the year ts called the tenth—December,” says a writer, “and no doubt even the ancient Romans soon got used to the anomaly when the new year was shifted back from March to January, | though the old names of the months | were retained. But there war one of them who made ingenious use of it— Licinius, a -rascally procurator at Lyons under Augustus. He insisted on having certain monthly payments made fourteen times a year, arguing, when December came round, that, as it was the tenth month of the year, and there ought to be twelve, there must be two more to be aceounted for.” New Light on Ballooning. In a French School the boys were asked to write on the invention of balloons. “Balloons were invented,” wrote one, “by the Brothers Montgol- fier, who were papermakers. They took a largé balloon and filled it with paper. They then set light to the paper and the balloon went up.” An- other boy wrote: “When the aero- stats—such being the name given to men who ride ‘n balloons—wish to come down, they fetch some sand and gravel and put it in the balloon.” A third boy informed his examiners that “the aeronaut places himself within the balloon, the basket being used for provisions.” Nature’s Panoramic Display. A marvelous display of atmospheric reflection peculiar to the Alps was wit- nessed the other day by passengers in the Paris-Frankfort express. Shortly after leaving Metz a wonderful pano- rama developed in the horizon on the western side. The sun seemed to light up the whole Alpine chain, the great mass of Mont Blanc stood out clearly marked, its sides covered with snow and its glaciers reflecting the sun- beams. At one moment the lake of Geneva was visible, its water tinged a greenish blue. The mirage faded only at sunset, as the train neared Faulque- mont, It had Jasted about twenty min- familiar to all country readers. It used‘ to be said and many still dmagine that intensity of color depends upon intensity of light. The brilliancy of a tropical landscape seems in some measure to bear this out. But any amount of arguments may be deduced against it. Rubies, opals and other exquisitely colored gems are dug from the depths of the earth. The rays of the sun have never touched them. The pulp of some fruits fs more richly tinted than the outer rind, while the crimson blood of ani- mals is hidden from’ the light. ‘What could be more rich and magnificent in Yet these abe all night flying creatures. Speaking of moths, It seems odd that there is no blue moth. Very few show even a touch or spot of blue. The col- orings of butterfiles present many prob- lems, for there seems no order or meth- od in their hues and markings, and a strange point is the absolute difference in these points between species other- wise closely allied. Why do autumn leaves turn yellow? Here is a question which is more eas- lly answered than some that have al- ready been suggested. The popular reply is, “The frost does it.” This is only partly correct. If a really hard frost were to happen early in autuma there would be no tints at all. All the leaves would turn brown at once. The really gorgeous colors are produced by a slow and gradual fall of temperature, of course, without too much wind or rain. The cold causes a chemical fer- ment, which attacks the color com- pounds in the cells of the leaf. It is those leaves which contain most sugar which oxidize. most rapidly and of which, consequently, the color becomes most rich and. brilliant. A question which is often asked is, “Why do lobsters, shrimps and certain other similar shellfish turn red when boiled?’ It seems that the black color- | Ing matter which colors the shell of the ‘lobster during Hife is an fron com- | pound. We know that iron rust is red. The effect of boiling is practically to } turn this iron compound in the lobster shell to a highly oxidized rust. The dislike of certain creatures for certain colors is strange. If a number of earthworms be placed in an oblong box, of which one half is covered with ted and the other with blue glass, they will with one accord crawl away from | the blue light and take refuge under | the red glass, Many other higher crea- ; tures share the same dislike to bive rays.—Pearson’s Weekly. A Terrible Mistake. ‘There are women who are smart and Intelligent, yet they labor under the | delusion that no man can tell them a \Me and look them straight in the eye : at the same time.—Mansfield News. Joy’s recollection is no longer joy while sorrow'’s memory is sorrew still.— | Byron, PROBLEMS IN COLORS one quite knows why the prevailing color than the wings of many moths? | of Simple Joke. : A rare old book, called The Living Authors. nd, published in 1849, commences with a study of. Words- worth, in which is recorded. what is. said to be the only joke the poet ever made. At a friend’s house, after din- ner, it appears, the conversatiom turn- ed upon wit and humor. ~-Thomas Moore, who was present, told some anecdotes of Sheridan, whereupon Wordsworth observed that he did not consider himself a witty poet—“in- deed,” he said, “I do not think I was ever witty but once in my life.” Being pressed to tell the company what this special drollery was, the Poet said, with some hesitgtion: “Well L will tell you. I was standing some time ago at the entrance of my cot- tage at Rydal Mount, when a man ac- costed me with the question, ‘Pray, slr, have you seen my wife pass by?’ whereupon I answered, Why my good friend, I didn’t know till this moment that you had a wife!’” The company stared and upon realiz- ing that this was all there was to the Poet’s joke, burst into a roar of laugh- ter, which Wordsworth smilingly ac- cepted as a genuine compliment to the brilliancy of his wit. REMARKABLE FEAT OF MEMORY. Children Learn and Recite Thousands of Bible Verses. The pastor of a church in a Jersey town wished to stimulate the memo- ries of the children in his Sunday school. To this end he offered two the other to pupils under twelve who during an interval of three’ months would learn to recite the greatest number of verses from the Bible. A committee was appointed to hear the contestants for the prize and register the number of verses memorized. The first’ prize was taken by a young girl of sixteen who had com- mitted to memory during this interval of ninety days 12,236 verses of Scrip- ture. These passages covered the en- tire New" Testament with the excep- tlotf of two genealogies and included Uberal selections from Psalms, Gene- sis and other parts of the Old Testa- ment. The winner of the second prize was a little sister of the other prize winner, a child of eleven years. She had learned 715 verses. During the contest some 19,000 verses were mem- orized. Husband's Best Points. A happily married woman writing to one of the household magazines says that the qualities she most admires in her husband are these, says the Philadelphia Bulletin: “A readiness to ‘be pleased is one of his traits which brings much quiet happiness into our “married ‘life. In the management of “the home he trusts me entirely, and, eee he may suggest, he-never dic- ates.” He is seldom too busy or tired to listen interestedly to all I may have to tell him. ~Thoug® he :tells me his business vexations, he does not make me suffer on account of them, and ‘is always ready to do the helpful lit- tle things that mean so much to a woman. In money matters he takes me into his full confidence and part- nership.” Phenomena of Lightning. All the phenomena of lighting and all its forms are determined, doubt- less, by the kind and amount of resis- tance it encounters. Its light is due to the fesistance of the atmosphere. Its noisy and often terrifying but quite harmless, accompaniment of thunder, is due to the sudden separ ation and reunion of bodies of air from sudden heating and cooling, and perhaps in part to the explosion of gases into which watery vapor is de- -|.composed by the Intense heat of elec- trical flashes, the result of, such ex- plosion being their recombination in the proportions of water. Stage Tears. The true heroine, of the accepted type, must know the secret of weep- ing for hours at a time, without in any way blemishing her beauty. Further, in moments of deep emotion she must be prepared to bite her lips till they | bleed, and yet exhibit no subsequent | sign of awelling or disfigurement. The tears of the heroine who would be pop- ular must be controlled by the ordin- ary laws of gravity, so that they hang indefinitely on the ends of her long lashes, and give rise to the well-worn simile of “Violets washed in dew.”— Daily Dispatch. Failures and Successes. Men have two kinds of ambition— one for dollar-making, the other for life-making. Some turn all their abil- ity, education, health and energy toward the first of these—dollar- making—and call the result success. Others turn them. toward the second— into character, usefulness, helpful- ness—life-making—and the world sometimes calls them faflures; but history calls them successes. No price is too great to pay for an untar- nished name.—O. 8. Marden in Suc- cess Magazine. Songs That Have Won Favor. The intensely popplar song is not the only one which it is very profita- ble to write. Among the most suc- cessful of better-class songs may be mentioned “Violets” and “Oh Dry Those Tears.” The manuscript of the former was offered to and rejected by nearly all the principal publishers in London before it was eventually accepted and printed. It speedily won its way to favor, and its sale has been both large and regular ever since. ‘GREAT POET'S ONE WITTICISM. Werdsworth Seemingly Unduly Proud , William D. Washburn, Jr., prizes, the first to pupils over and, STAT OF MINNESUTA, COUNT Ttasca—District Sourt, Pittconth Judichal Plaintiff. vs. Alson E. Kribs and Prudence Kribs (his wife), Louis H. Ickler and Clara J. Ickler ped poi! Wale trustee. E, W. illigan, Leon ‘Tf. Chamberlain, Allie M. DeMers. Minnie E. Carrick, Inez b. Carrie Thomas P. Countu h D. Wilson, John Gillespie. Eldridge M. Fowler and Powers- Uwyer Pine Land Co.; also all other per- sons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest -in the reat ‘i estute described in the complaint erein, Defendants. THE STATE OF MINNESUTA TO THE ABOVE NAM*D DEFENDANTS. You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled action, which complaint has been filed in the uffice of the clerk of said court above mentioned. and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint upon the subscribers at their office Rooms 838-810 Guaranty Loan Building, in the City of Min- neapolis, Hennepin County, Minnesota, with- in twenty (20) days after the seryice of this summons upon you exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the said complaint within the time sforesaid, pecs peel will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint. SAVAGE & PURDY. Plaintiff's pet 838-840 Guaranty Loan Bidg., Minneapolis. Minnesota, STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF Itusca—District Court, Fifteenth Judicial District. William D. Washburn, Jr., Plaintiff. va, Alison E. Kribs and Prudence Kribs (his wife) Louis H. ickler and Clara J. Ickler ( sa G. Briggs as trustee, E, W. Mil- I, Chamberlain, Allie M De- Mers. Minnie E. Carrick, Inez L, Currick. Jessie M. Carrick. Thomas P. Countuell. Thomas P. Cantwell. 8. D. Wilson, John 8. Gillespie. ee M. Fowler and Powers- Dwyer Pine Land Co.; also all other per- sons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate described in the complaint herein, Defendants. NOTICE OF LIS PENDENS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, That an uction has been commenced ard is pending in the above named court, iu favor of the above named plaintiff and against the defendants sbove named, to quiet the title to the real estate hereinafter described and determine in favor of said flalestacy any andall adverse claims, estate. lien or interest of said defendants thereto or therein. decree adjudging the same to be void and of no force or effect against the plaintiff. The real estate above referred to and in- volved and brought in question by said action is situated in the State of Minnesota and County of Itasca and more particularly de- scribed as follows. to-wit: of the Northeast Quarter (S%% of NE\%) and and to obtain a the Southeast Quarter of the Southwest uarter(SE% of SW) of Section Thirtv- four (34) in Township Fifty-three [53] aud Range Twenty-four [24]. aceording to the Uniced States Government Survey. SAVAGE & PURDY, Plaintiff's Attorneys, 838-840 Guaranty Loan Building. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Herald-Review, Jan 6. 13, 20,27, Fed" 1. aa GOOD DONE BY THE CHILDLESS. Many Examples of Unselfieh Lives of Bachelors and Virgins. There are parts of the world where girl babies are drowned lke superfiu- ous kittens, and others in which it is not uncommon for the daughters in the large families of the poor to be sold by their parents into lives of prostitution. On the other-hand, the pages of his- tory are filled with examples of the devoted lives of childless men and women who have worked unselfishly for the good of their kind. Bachelors and yirgins have been the saints of the world, and the childless are the philanthropists, the founders of col- leges, hospitais, art collections, and libraries, the philosophers, the great writers, leaders and thinkers of the race. Plato, Joan of Arc, Savonarola, George Washington, David Hume, Locke, Spinoza, Thomas Carlyle, Flor- ence Nightingale, Ruskin and Herbert Spencer are only a few of the great names in this class. An interesting volume could be written on the indebt- edness of the world to childless men and women. The pattern of civic vir- ture with twelve unkempt children and a jaded, careworn wife has been held up for our admiration long enough. Without decrying matrimony we may now speak a good word for the respectable celibate—New York Medical Journal. DOVE OF PEACE TOOK FLIGHT. Time Not Ripe for Even Declaration of a Truce. The late Judge Hill of Sandwich, N. H.. used to tell the following story: There were two old men living in Carroll county who had been bitter enemies for many years. As the years rolled by, time had a softening effect on one of them, and he took occasion to do a generous thing for his enemy. Filled with the consciousness of hav- ing done a kiudness to his foe, he called on him and related the circum- stances, and added: “After all, Mr. Blank, I am not the worst man in the world, am I?” Mr. Blank sat in gloomy silence dur- ing the narrative, and then, looking surlily at him, replied: “You may not be the worst man ever was, but you are the worst that I ever saw.” The white wings of peace were not there that time. Love and the Fan, Probably the first European women to use fans were the Portuguese, per- haps introduced by merchants from their trade wit Japan, thotgh we find mention of their having them in the fourteenth century. In France the in- ventory of Charles V, at the end of the same century, mentions a folding ivory fan. Doubtless the wicked Cath- erine de Medici, with her knowledge of and love of the luxuries of Italy, in- troduced fans to ber sisters in France. The many wives of Ilenry VIII of Eng- land, and their court ladies, were used to holding fans, and Queen Elizabeth had as many as twenty-seven in her elaborate wardrobe. Fans grew into general use about this time in Italy, France and Spain. A regular code of signals were arranged, so ladies and their admirers were able to carry on a regular flirtation. Bring your raw furs to Ben Levy— The adjoining Hotel Pokegama. highest cash price paid for raw furs, ‘he South Half STATE OF MINNESOTA. COUNTY OF mayer ae Court, Fifteenth Judicial ict. William D. Washburn, Jr., Plaintiff, vs. |Levi Rutler. Mark M. Butler, Ezra Butler. Sarah Mulhken (1€e Sareh Butler) Smith Butler. Alyy Butler McGannon, Charles D. Butler, Mrs, C. M. Butler (widow of Man- love G. Butler. deceased), O. P. M. Butler, George E. Butler, Mrs. Julia Hannam (neo ae Mrs. Belle Fricker (nee Butler), Mrs. ma McDougal (nee Butler), Ella Batler, James B. Payne, Sarah Campbell. William Branham. J. B. Branham, Louise B. Gullett (nee Branham). David Butler, William B. Butler, Paschal ‘T. Butler. Ma- tilda Butler, Ezra Butler Newcomb, Eliza P. Newcomb, June H. Davenport (wife of E. J. Davenport), Levi Butler Davenport. Mrs. Alice Burns (wife of William R. Burns), * Mattie G. Anderson (nee Mattie Gordon), Ezra F. Pabody, Mary A. Leavitt, Martha P. Clark, Carrie P. Frost, Lucia Cole, Mrs. Maud Ethell, Mrs. Grace Blythe, Clifford P. Smith, Charlton Smith, Edward J. Daven- [etl Emma B., Pabody (wife of Ezra F. Pa- dy), Linda F. Butier (wife of Ezra But- ler), John H. Mulliken (husband of Sarah Mulliken), Sumner E. Anderson (husband of Mattie Anderson), Levi Butier Daven- port, the unknown heirs of John T. Butler, deceased, the unknown heirs of Levi Bot- ler, deceased, the unknown heirs of Sarah P. Butler, deceased, the unkrown heirs of Julia Butler, deceased, the unknown heirs of Sarah N. McGannon, deceased, the un- known heirs of Mary Branham, deceased, the unknown heirs of Elizabeth Thompson, deceased. the unknown heirs of Manlove G. Butler, deceased. the unknewn heirs of Jane Brown, deceased. also iy other per- sons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate. lien or interest in the real estaie described in the complaint herein, Defendants, THE STATE OF MINNESOTA TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANTS: You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled action, which complaint has been filed in the office of the clerk of said court above mentioned. and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint upon the subscribers at their office rooms 840 Guaranty Loan Building, in the Ci neapolis. Hennepin County. Minnesota, wit! in twenty (20) days after the service of this, suminmons Upon you, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you fail to answer the: said complaint within the time aforesaid, said plaintiff will apply to the court for the; relief demunded in said pomplainy SAVAGE & PURDY, Plaintiff's Attorneys. STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY: OF# Itasca.—District Court, Fifteenth Juclivial ; District. William D, Washburn, Jr., Plaintiff, “t vs. Levi Butler, Mark M. Butler, Ezra~-Bittler; . Sarah Mulliken (nee Sarah Butler)y Smith Butler, Alsy Butler McGannon, Ctitrles D. Butler, Mrs. C. M. Butier [widow of Man- love G. Butler, deceased], O. PiM. Butler, George E. Butler. - Julia Hinnam.{ nee Butler], Mrs. Belle Fricker (nee. Busler], Mrs. Emma McDougul (uee Butler) Ella: Butler, Jumes B. Payne, Sarah Campbell,. William Branham. J. B. Branham, Louise B. Guliett [nee Branham]. David. Butler,. William B. Butler, Paschal Ts Butbér, Ma-- tilda Butler. Ezra Butler Newsom), Eliza P. Newcomb, Jane H. Davenport (wife of E. J. Davenport). Levi Butler Davenport, Mrs Alice Burns (wife of Williamdt.Burns),. Mattie @. Anderson (nee Mattie Gerdon). Ezra F. Pabody, Mary A. Leavitt: Martha, : Clark," Carrie’ “ P.. - Frost, Lucia Cole. Mrs. Maud? Ptheil, Mrs. Grace Blythe. Clifford P.. Smith,. Charlton Smith, Edward J. Davenport, Emma B. Pabody, (wife of Ezra Fs Pabody), . Linda F. whutler (wite of Ezra Butlers John H. Mulliken [husband of Sarah Mulliken), Sumner E. Anderson (husband of Mattie A. derson), Levi Butler Davenport:the: un-- known heirs of John T. Butler, tie? ri unkuown heirs of Levi Butler, deceased, ther unknown heirs of Sarah P. uidar,, . ceased, the unknown heirs of Juli&:Butlany, deceased, the unknown heirs of Sarab;,N.. Mc@annon. deceased. the unknown heirs. of} Mary Branham. deceased. the unknown, heirs of Elizabeth Thompson, deceased.,. the unknown heirs of Manlove G. Buthers der - ceased, the unknown heirs of Jane Brown... deceased, also all other persons or partiess unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or intsrest in the real estate described) in the complaint herein, Defendants... NOTICE OF LIS PENDENS. Notice is Hereby Given to: Whompit May; Concern, That an action has been, coms- menced and is pending in the above named; court, in favor of the above named ipldinuft; and against the defendants above - named, to quiet the title to the real estute herein-- after described; and determine in favor of said plaintiff and against said defendants, any and all adverse claims, estate lien or> interest of said defendants thereto or there- in, and to obtain a decree adjudging the plaintiff to be the owner in fee of.afl said: real estate. free and clear of any estate, in-- terest or lien in or upon the same of said de-- fendants: or any of them. he real estute above referred to,and4in- volved and br ‘ht in question by said actions ig situated in the State of Minnesota. and County of Itasca, and more particularly. scribed us fellows. to-wit: The we ({W%] of the southeast quarter [SE apd and the southwest quarter [SW] of the northwest quarter (NW34] of section three. [3]; the southeast quarter [SEY] of the northeast quarter [NE%s]. and the west halfe {W's] of the southeast quarter [SE's ],0f sec-~ tion four |4]; the south half [ oft the south half {sss of section five he west half [W‘%) of the southeast quarter (S#%)jat section six [6]; and the west half [W's lof tha. southwest quarter [SW] of section eleven. U1); all in township fifty-six [56], range twenty-five [25], situated in the County of Itasca und State cf Minnesvta, and all thereof. SAVAGE & PURDY, Plaintiff's Attorneys. 838.840 Guaranty Loan Building. Minneapolis, Minnesota. Herald-Review, Jan 6, 13. 20, 27, Feb 3, 10. Timber Land, Act June 3, 1878:—Notice for Publibation. United States Land Office, Duluth, Minn., December 22, 1905. Notice is hereby een that in compliance with the provisions of the act of Congress off June 3. 1878. entitled “An act for the sale of timber lands in the states of California. Ore- e0u, Nevada and Washington Territory.” as extended to all the public land states_by aet of August 4, 1892, Hjalmur Lindke. of feeley, county of Itasca, state of Minnesota, has this duy filed in this office his sworn state- ment, No. 10475, fur the purchase of the N% of the SE of section No. 6, in township No. 55_north, range No. 22 west, 4th P. M., and will offer proof to show that the land sought is more valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultural purposes and to establish his claim to said land before J. D. Rass- miussen, cierk of c Rapids, Minn., on April, 1906. He nai Jonnson, Andrew Norlander. Otto Ross and John Hanson. all of Feeley. Minn, Any and all persons claiming adversely the above-de- sci i lands are requested to file their claims in this office on or before said 7th day of April. 1906. W. E. CULKIN, Register. Herald-Review, Jan. 20, 27, Feb. 3, 10, 17. 24, Mch 3, 10, 17. 24, 31 Notice of Cancellation of Land Contract. Whereas, Default has been made in the "iad of the sum of $137.27 principal and 1.20 interest due und payable on January 14, 1905, and also the sum of $137.27 principal and $32.96 interest due and payuble on January 14, 1906, by virtue of the terms of that certain contract made and entered into on Januar, 14, 1904, by and between the Minnesota ‘Land Corporation. a corporation with offices at St. Paul, Minnesota. as party of the first part, and Royal John Finley, of Huron. South Da- kota, as party of the second part, wherein and whereby said party of the first part, upon certain terms and conditions in said contract set forth. promised and agreed to convey tu said party of the second part the following described rea] estate, situate in the eeu of Itasca and State of Minnesota, wit: Southeast quarter of southwest quarter (S.E. S.W.). lot four [4], and poutinwest quare ter of sout! east qoarter 15.W. ore section eighteen [18], in township fifty-five (55) aud anes twenty-three [23] west of the fourth Now, therefore, Notice is h 0 said Contract will be ‘cuncelle uoateoreie nated on Marc! innesota, Pebruary 1, ee at St. Paul, “"MINNESUTA LAND CORPORATION. By J. A. Felthons, President,