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\BOTH ELOQUENT AND TOUCHING Appeal Made by Gov. Andrew to Sec- retary of War Stanton. John A. Andrew, the war governor of Massachusetts, wrote a_ letter to Edwin M. Stanton, President Lincoln's secretary of war, in behalf of a cou- ple of lovers, one on the fteld in the Twelfth Massachusetts volunteers, and the other a young woman at the home of her parents, not many miles from Newton. Military necessity separated the young people, and prevented them from joining hands in marriage. The soldier had four times asked for a fur- lough, each time to be refused. The war department refused the young woman permission to go to the front, even in company with her brother, to solemnize the betrothal, and to per- mit the wife to share the lot of the husband. The young woman then wrote an appeal to the governor, which he forwarded to the secretary of war, with this indorsement: “This case appeals to all our sym- pathies as patriots and gentlemen, and I appeal to the chivalry of the department of war, which presides over more heroes than Homer ever dreamed of, and better and braver men than his muse ever sung. I pray you to grant this request of my fair correspondent, and generations will rise up and call us blessed.”—Boston Herald. MANY YEARS OF LABOR LOST. Odd Experience of a Man Who Cnce Wrote a Book. “I have been told,” said a man of experiences, “that it is not unusual for men to spend much thought and toil over inventions of one sort and another, only to find when they took these things to Washington to be pat- ented that the same idcas had long before been worked out by somebody else and that patents had already been issued on them. i had that ex- perience, once, with a book. “T spent fourteen years, once, writ- ing a book and I had it all but com- pleted. And then one day, stopping at a second-hand book stall, I picked up from among a lot of bcoks offered at five cents each cne that bore a title in the very words that I had decided upon for the title of my book; and the opening sentence in this book was al- most identical with that in my own. “Somebody else had had the same idea that I had worked over so long, and had written and published a book about it fifty years\before.” Hopping From World to World. Few.children reach the age of 8 years without having worked out a cosmology of their own and their own system of metaphysics. A group of youngsters of that mature ace were going home from school the other day when one began to instruet the others what to do in case cf a certain crisis. “When the end of the world comes do you know what you want to do?” asked the manikin. “Well, you want to give a little jump like this. The world will slip out from under you and you'll light on the one a followin’ it and be all right.” Then the young- sters began practicing the sort of jump that was necessary to give them im- mortality —Kansas City Times. Dull Days on the Willamette. Brisk news and chances for scrap- py comment are on the bum. Won't some fashionable lady or gentleman please scandalize herself or himself, or some holier-than-thou crank stick his nose into somecne else’s business and help to while dull time away in Portland? Lighten the gloom, some- body. Doesn’t anybody feel like run- ning away from his wife or taking a mint julep after 2 o’clock in the morn- ing or smoking a cigarette or some- thing moderately debauching? We're getting too good and the sun is shin- ing too serenely on the banks of the willowy Willamette.—Portland Ore- gonian. Vagaries of Wether on Ocean. It will take an expert to account for some of the wagaries of the weather conditions on the ocean. Certain spots are shunned because of their known wickedness, from an unknown cause, and certain routes, like. the northern lanes of the Atlantic, with its blows and bergs, and the great cir- ele of the Pacific, are known to be “nasty.” It is this consistency of cussedness, the reliability that may be placed on blows, that used to en- able the old sailing masters to make timé. But in these days of steamships the passengers are not expeeted to re- joice in such conditions. Eagle’s Cruel Sport. The golden eagle sometimes cap- tures ptarmigan almost, it seems, for the mere pleasure of doing so, and then: has a little game with its luck- less prey. Soaring to a great height, it drops the ptarmigan from its tal- ons and soars away as if paying no at- tention to it; then, suddenly swoop- img earthwards with terrific speed, it seizes the bird before it has time to fall to ground, and soars upwards to repeat the operation until tired— Country Life. Young Lapp’s Start in Life. As soon aS a Lapp baby is born a reindeer is presented to him. This reindeer is literally his start in life, for not only that deer, but all its young—and as they grow up all their young deer—belong to the child. ‘When he is of age he has quite a herd of his own. This custom is of much greater use to him than-if every aunt, uncle and cousin he had in the world presented him with the heaviest silver spoon they could find, 1 pM ke RPE EA AS 8 RS PU | known, but few are acquainted with | the ingredients, though it is generally | understood that the paste gains its |; for the defense, who was evidently of EXPENSE OF PASTE DIAMONDS. Material from Which Imitation Gems Are Made Is Not Cheap. “Paste,” from which imitation precious stones are made, is widely brilliancy from the Jead it contains. Formulas vary for the paste, but all contain rock crystal, red lead, car- bonate of potash, borax and white ar- senic. +f It is required that these articles shall be of a higher grade of purity, as there is a considerable waste, 80 that the gems made from “strass,” as the composition is technically known, are by no means inexpensive. A paste diamond cannot scratch glass and is thus easily detected, but colored stones are made of crystal alone that are considerably harder than glass. In the making of these a crystal stone is hollowed out and filled with some colored liquid, the orifice being closed with a plug of crystal, which is ground down so that there is no trace of the junction—New York Herald. A POSER FOR THE PROFESSOR. Philosopher Lecturing Before Class !5 Embarrassed by Student. A professor in Philosophy was lec- turing upon “identity” and had just argued that parts of a whole might be subtracted and other matter substitut- ed, yet the whole would remain the same, instancing the fact that. al- though every part of our bodies is changed in seven years, we remain the same individuals. “Then,” said a student, “if I had a knife and lost the blade and had a new blade put in it would still be the identical knife?” “Certainly,” was the reply. “Then, if I should lose the handle from the new blade and have another handle made to fit it, the knife would still be the same?” “That is so,” said the professor. “Then in that case,” triumphantly rejoined the student, “if I should find the old blade and the old handle and have the original parts put together what knife would that be?”—New York Weekly. Parental Parsimony. Everything is by comparison. Said a woman recently of a, young married couple whose tamilies are counted immensely rich. “They really can not live on their income; it is shocking to pinch as they must. Why, you know, his father only gives him $10,000 a year. He has a salary of $5,000 and she has an allowance trom her family of $10,000—only $25,000, with a $100,- v00 house to keep up. It’s outrageous with all the money there is in those two families!” ‘Twenty-five thousand dollars income and a completely fur- nished house and yet counted paupers by the world in which they move. Bet- ter change the orbit and come into one of common _ sense. — Boston Herald. His View Utilitarian. To her already considerable collec tion of old mahogany the woman had added an unusually large dresser that had its top covered with a slab of marble not less than six feet long. All sorts of comments had been made on it, but one of her men friends struck a note that illustrated just how many different viewpoints there may be in the world. He stood in front of it for a few moments and seemed to be comparing the length of that marble slab with his own person. Then he remarked slowly: “Wouldn’t it be great to have that in your rooms and come home late on a hot sum- mer’s night, take off your clothes and lie down on it.” Causes of Influenza. Many theories seék to account for influenza. The explanation of the scientist is that there lurks some liv- ing poison in the earth, and that this is brought forth by certain climatic eonditions. The necessary conditions are a hot summer, followed by a cold winter and a rainy spring. During the time of drough- the earth is cracked and fissured, and in time re- ceives into these interstices water which lies stagnant and corrupt, to give off, when the hot weather re- turns, poisonous exhalations which make malaria general. Once infected, men wherever they go carry it with them. Source of Inspiration. The hero-worshiping girl had just met the manager of an imported pian- ist and was raving over the performer in a way not whoily displeasing to the promoter of publicity. “Oh, I thought | he was too perfect «nd iuspired last Wednesday,” she gushed. “There seemed a poetry and longing in his playing that were stronger than usual. Had anything happened to make it so?” The manager smiled brutally. “Yes, ke was stirred up that day, and he hustled through the program. You see, he missed his lunch and I'd prom- ised to blow him to dinner, so he was in a hurry.” Where the Argument Was Weak. A member of the New York bar says that he once attended a trial in a Western city in which the counsel Celtic extraction, gave utterance to the following remarkable observa- | tions: “Your honor, the argument of | my learned friend, the prosecuting at- ; torney, is lighter than vanity. It air, it is smoke. From top to boi it is absolutely nothing. And there- | fore, your honor, it falls to the ground * by its own weight,” MERE MATTER OF EVOLUTION. wig Successive Steps From Kitchen Table . to Hall Mirror. Mrs. Compton looked at her patient but bewildered husband with an ex- pression of good-natured superiority. “Dear me, George,” she said, cheerful- ly, “I don’t see the use of my trying to explain to you, but I’m perfectly willing to do it, of course. “I did intend, as you say, to buy a kitchen table, and I came home with a hall mirror. But it was an abso- lutely natural change. “First I looked at kitchen tables. Then the clerk called my attention to the kitchen cabinets, with drawers and everything. Then I said how much they looked like bureaus, except that they had no glass. Then he showed me one with a glass, and then he sald) he had such a pretty bureau, if I cared to look at it. “So I looked at that, and it was pretty, but the glass was rather small. So then he showed me a dressing case with a nice glass mirror, and I said what nice glass it was. And then’ he said, ‘If you want to see a fine piece of glass, let me show you one of our new hall mirrors.’ “And of course, George, you can un- derstand that when I saw that beau- tiful mirror I had to have it; and you know you don’t like me to run up bills in new places, and I hadn’t enough to buy a kitchen table, too, so—now isn’t it clear?”—Youth’s Com- panion. HAD FIRST DISCIPLINED ARMY. Egyptian King Credited With Much Military Foresight. Disciplined armies are to be traced in the records of all the great nations of antiquity through Rome, Greece, Persian, Assyria and Egypt. The Egyptian Pharaoh, Rameses II, about 1400 B. C, is credited with the pos- session of the first disciplined army. Early in life his military experiences with the Arabians taught him the necessity of having troops drilled in the art of war. He established a warrior class, whieh became the nucleus of an army numbering over 100,000 men, includ- ing infantry, cavalry and war chari- ots. With this army he is said to have made great conquests in Asia from the Ganges to the Caspian, and it seems certain that at any rate it was he who gave Egypt its earliest mili- tary organization and established the first regularly disciplined army known to history.—Chicago American. Task Beyond Artist’s Powers. An artist who found it difficult to get pictures of Arabs in Morocco writes: “I once tried to sketch some Arabs in Algiers; they constantly evaded me and at last an old Moor— with whom we were on the friendly terms, produced “by Constant bargain- ing for embroidered rags—spoke to me on the matter like a father, for my good. ‘It is not,’ he said, ‘that any harm will ensue to those whose picture you make; it is you yourself will suffer inconvenience in the next world. Allah will say to you: “Fol- lowing your own will and pleasure, you have made these figures. I now command you give them souls.” And where, my friend, will you be then?’” “Hard” Water Harmful. A physician who has practiced for thirty years in a California valley says the hillside upon which he lives is of granite formation, and the wat- er the people drink is consequently “soft.” The other side of the hill is composed of limestone, and the water from the springs and well is “hard.” The doctor has been struck with the fact that his practice is enormously greater in the limestone district. He finds that the hard water drinkers die of Bright’s disease and are crippled with chronic rheumatism, while the soft water imbibers generally live longer and are free from these dis- eases.—Dietetic and Hygienic Gazette. RE Chinese Eyes Are Straight. Chinese eyes are straight in the skull, according to E. Lemaire in La Nature. They appear oblique, but they are not really so. Von Siebold, Abeldsdorff and Schlegel, the great authorities, all agree that the eyes of the Chinese are straight. The reason the eye appears oblique is that the upper eyelid and the general direc- tions of the eyebrow are oblique; the upper eyelid at the side of the nose froms a special fold which covers en- tirely the angle where the lachrymal gland is found. In addition the lids are generally very thin and the eye less open, Changes in Color of Giass. In most old gl roofs you may perceive different tints, caused by the action of the sun and atmosphere. Changes in the color of glass are caused by subjecting it to the action of what are known as ultraviolet rays of light. Something of the same sort may be observed on high mountains, where old glass from bottles original- ly green, after exposure to the light of a great elevation in the regions of perpetual snow, attains a beautiful pale purple tint. Parsee Christening Ceremony. A grandchild of Sir Dunshan Petit, who lives in Bombay, India, recently was invested with the Sudrah Kusti, which is the Parsee form of christen- ing. This ceremony is one of the most interesting rites of the Orient, and consists of placing upon the child the sudrah, a shirt believed to pro- tect the body from harm, and the ty- ing on a the kusti, a thread girdle, which is supposed to keep the soul from evil, Notice of Application for Liquor License. STATE OF MINNESOTA. . County of Ltasen, rv of Grund eat said Village ef Grand Ning Jiqu are the term fh ors .OF m1 ‘on Apr SH” aad vafnaticg"ou'tpet Sf Bri, by the following person, and at the fol- SOMUnE place, as stated in said application, O. M. HARRY, The front room on the ground floor of his Saloon on lot 2,in block 18. original plat of he village or town of Grand Rapids, Itasca County. Minnesota. ; Said application will be heard and deter- mined by said Common Council of the Villa; of Grand Rapids, at the council rooms in t! village hall in said Village of Grand Rapids, in Itasca county and Stute of Minnesota, on fonday, the day of April, A. D. 1906, at 8 O'clock p. m. of that day. a is, this Ru » A.D, 1906. - ae ot hee | {Seal} H. E. GRAFFAM, Recorde! Herald-Review, Apr. 14, 21. Notice of Applications for Liquor License, Pes Gouaty of tae : ry 88. , Vilage ‘of (rand. teaplas, ! Notice is hereby given that application has ideen made in writing to the Village Council of said Village of Grand Rapids and filed in y Office, praying for license to sell intoxicat- liquors for the term commencing on April $106, and terminating on March 31, 1907, by following ns, and at the followin laces as stated in said applications, respenke ively, to-wit: JAMES McDONALD. In the west front room on the ground floor of the two-story frame building situate on Jot 19, of block 19, of the original plat of the of Grand Rapids. Minnesota. ANTHONY MCALPINE, , In the east front room of the one-story paid rey oa be < ose 18. in the riginal townsite of Gra a in the vil- lage of Grand Rapids, Guinness” Si ait GRANT & CROSSEN, ee promt room Aue frame uated plat of Grand Rapids. pi stare hice D. M. GUNN, In the south and west front room on the first floor of Hotel Ee. situated on lots 13, 14 and 15. block 19, in the original townsite of Grand Rapids. Minnesota. McALPINE & McDONALD, In the east front room, on the ground floor of the two-story brick building located on lot 12, in block 18, in original town plat of Grand Rapids, Minnesota. Said applications will _be heard and _deter- mined by said Common Council of tire Vill of Grand Rapids, at the council rooms in the village hall in said Village of Grand Kapids, in Itasca conte and State of Minnesota, on Monday, the 2ird day of April, A. D. 1906, at 8 o'clock p. m. of tht day. Witness my hand and seal of the Village of Grand Rapids this 12th day of April, A. [seal] H, E. GRAFFAM. Recorder. Herald-Review. Apr. 14, 21. Probate Notice—Order to Examine Account. State of Minnesota County of Tisea f° In Feobaee Court—Special Term, April 11th, f In the matter of the estate of Lettie Gilliland, deceased. On reading and filing the petition of Elizabeth Holmes, as administratrix of the estate of Lettie Gilliland, deceased, representing.among other things, that she has folly administered said estate, and prayit that a time and place be fixed for examining and allowing the final account of her admin- istration, aud for the assignment of the re- sidue of suid estate to parties entitled thereto by law: it Is Ordered, That said account be exam~ ined and petition heard by this court on Mon- day, the 7th day of May, A. D. 1906. at 10 o'clock a. m. at, the probate office, in the villege of Grand Rapids, in said county, And it is further ordered, Thut notice thereof be given to all persons interested by publishing a copy of this order once iu S week for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. in the Grand Rupids Heruld-Review. a weekly newspaper printed and published at Grand Rapids, in sald Bara t Grand Rapids, M ‘he 7th di ited at Gran » Minn., of April, A. D., bong ‘ i ae ss H. 8. HUSON. | Probate Court Seal | Judge of Probate. Herald-Review April 14, 21. 28. A. B. CLAIR, Mineral Pine ana Farming Lands Pine Stumpage Bought. ABSTRACTS OF TITLE. GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA W. E. NEAL Real Estate and Insurance Dealer in The tinest List -f Agricultural and Grazing Lauds in the County. The Most, Excellent Sites for Manv tacturing Enterprises. Prospective Settlers Located. Correspondence Solicited. Grand Rapids - - Minr (Dr. COSTELLO DENTIST. , —ofia in‘ First National Bank Building.— GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA | Rapids. ice is here! jiven that licatic t been made in Ae even the Fhprication her Is SEAS SSHSSEES TEKS SS CHEN STSS SHEET AHNS OTS HT OTe ORD, Grand Rapids Village Lots SCPeSSsSS eee: seneeeasesegeseeereses the matter over. REISHUS-REMER ra 4 = 2 7 H 3 We have choice residence lots all over town and we are sell- ing them on such easy terme that anybody can buy. $5 down and $5 per month is certainly easy. Come in and talk A house and three lots for sale cheap. We also have some choice business lots on our lists. are for sale on easy terms. Down and $5 per month $0 They EAD A A a a ae SR ae a aT ea ae a LAND COMPANY, T In connection—Open Day and A Favorite Resort for refreshments and where ma; of the largest phonographs in t) NORTHERN SAMPLE ROOM Cabinet Rye Whiskey Rapids. We handle the finest whiskeys ever distilled. NORTHERN CAFE Season served at all hours. OTTO RANFRANZE Chef. | oe Ce ee ree itr tt ttt be seen and heard one world is at ‘ | hh de d-dededecheed HE: a most delightful beverage always in stock—we are Agent for it in Grand Night. All Delicacies of the 1 ae RA A RE Sh aha hk stestestostcobcoboboededbecdabecdebobod Notice of Expiration of Redemption. OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR, County of Itasca, State of Minnesota, To COLUMBUS IRON COMPANY Youure hereby notified, That the follow- ing piece or parcel of land, situated in the county of Itasca and state of Minneso- ta, and known and de cribed as follows to- wit: Southeast quarter of southwest quar- (SE% of SW's) of Section twenty-five (25). Township fifty-six (56), Range twenty-two (22), is now assessed in your name. ‘hat on the first day of May A. D. 1899, at the sale of land pursuant to the Real Estate Tax Judgment. duly given and made in and by the District Court, in and for said ee of Itasca, on the 2ist day of March, A. D 1 in proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes delinquent upun real estate for the year A. D. 1897, for the suid County of Itasca, the above described piece or parcel of land was duly offered for sale, and no one bidding mn said offer an amount equal to that for sold. to-wit. the sum of One dollar and twenty-five cents, the same was duly bid in for the State of Minnesota for said sum. That thereafter. and on the 11th day of No- vember, A. D. 1905, the said piece or parcel of land, not theo having been redeemed trom said sale, and having then become the abso- lute property of the State of Minnesota. was sold and conveyed at public sale by the County Auditor of said county pursuant to the order and direction of the State Auditor of the State of Minnesota, and in accordance with the provisions of the statute in such case made and provided, for the sum of Fifteen doliurs and thirty-three cents duly paid to the County Treasurer of said county. ‘That the certificate of sale for suid piece or ated of land executed and delivered by said county Auditor upon said sale last above mentioned has been presented to me at my ottice by the holder thereof for the purpose of having notice of expiration of time for re- demption from said tax sale of said property given and served; and that the amount re- juired to redeem said piece or parcel of land rom said tax sale, at tae date of this notice, exclusive of the costs to accrue upon said notice, is the sum of Fifteen dollars and ninety-four cents (said sum being the amount for which said tract or parcel of land was sold to said purchaser at the forfeited sule last above mentioned and interest thereon according to law; and all other taxes which have become delinquent since the forfeited sale to said purchaser to the date of this notice. with interest, penalties und costs thereon), That the time for the redemption of said piece or parce} of land from said tux sale will expire sixty (60) days after the sarvice of this notice. and the filing of proof of such service in my office. Witness my hand and seal of office this sixteenth day of March, A. D. 1906. j County Auditor's + M. A. SPANG, U Seal. f County Auditor, Ttusca County, Minnesota. Herald-Review. Apr. 14, 21. 28, '06 Notice of Expiration of Redemption. OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR County of Itasca, ; State of Minnesota, To COLUMBUS IRON VOMPANY: You are hereby notified, That the following described piecejor parcel of land, situated in the County of Itasca, State of Minnesota, and known and described as foliows, to-wit: The southeast quarter of the southwest quar- ter ‘SEY ot SW'4). of Section twenty-five (25), cf Towuship fifty-six (66). of range twenty- two (22) west. is now assessed in your name. ‘That on the 11th day of May. A. D. 1900, ata sale of land pufsuant to the Real Estate Tax Judgment. duly given and made in and by the District Sourt ia and for said County of Itasca, on the 2ist day of March, a. D. 1900, in proceedings had in and for said County of Itases to enforce the payment of taxes and interest delinquent upon reul estate in said county and which was forfeited to and had become the absolute property of the State of Minnesota for the non-payment of taxes thereon for the yeurs 1893, 1894 und 1895, the above described piece or parcel of land was sold for the sum of Thirteen dollars. pursu- ant to the provisions of Chapter 322 of the Genera! Laws of the State of Minnesota for the year 1890; that the tax certificate issued for said land at said sale has been presented to me at my office by the holder thereof for the purpose of having notice of the expira- tion of the time for tedemption from said sale given and served; that the oe ipey reel o required to redeem sai land from said sale at the is notice. exclusive of the costs to accrue upon this notice. is the sum of Twenty-two (822.00) dol- lars and ten (10) cents (said sum being the ag- preqee amount of said sum for which sai land was sold at said sale and interest there- on at twelve per cent per annum, delinquent taxes. penalties, costs and interest thereon accruing subsequent to said sale and paid by said purchaser and all unpaid delinquent taxes, interest. costs and penalties accruing upon’ said land snbsequent to said sale); and that the time for redemption of said piece or parcel of land from sale will ex- pire sixty days after the service of this notice and proof of said service has been filed in my ico. ‘Witness my hand and seal cf office, this sixteenth day of March, A. D. 1906. } County.Auditor’s t M.A. SPANG, Seal. Auditor of Itasca County, Minnesota, Herald-Review, Apr. 14. 21. 28. Which suid plece or parcel was subject to be Notice of Expwration of Redemption. - Office of County Auditor, l County of Itasca, | _ State of Minnesota. | To BESSIE L. CLARK: | You are hereby notified, That the following ipiece or parcel of ‘land, situated in | the County of Itasca and State’ of Minnesota, and known and described as follows. to-wit: | Southwest quarter of southeast quarter |(SW4 of SE%), of Section twenty-five (2) | In Township fifty-six (56), Range twenty-two * | (22), Is now aseessed in your name. ; ‘That on the Ist day of way, A. D. 1899, at | asale ef Jand pursaant to the Real Estate ~ /Pax Judgment duly given and made in and | oy the District Court in and for said County i Itasca, on the 2ist day of March. A. D. 1899, in proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes delinquent upon reul estate for the | year A, D, 1897 tor said County of itasca, the | above described piece or parcel of land was | duly offered for sale, and no one bidding | pon said offer an amount equal te that-for | which said piece or parcel was subject to be sold, to-wit: the sum of One dollar and | twenty-five cents, the saine was duly bid iz | for the State of Minnesota for said sum. ™% That thereafter, and on the Lith day vi No- vember, A. D. 1905, the said piece or pareet of said sale, and having then become thevabso-~ i lute property of the State of Minnesota; was sold und conveyed at public sale #y the County Auditor of said county pursuant to the order and direction of the Statestuditor of the State of Minnesota, and in 2coerdance with the provisions of the statutes in sack ' case made and provided, for she¢dsum: of County Treasurer of suid county. That the certificate of sale for said piece or-~ parcel of land executed and delivered by ~ said County Auditor upon saidysale last above mentioned has been presented to me at my office by the holder thereof f pape of having notice of expir for redemption from said tax sule 4 property given andserved; and that the amount required to redeem said piece or@ear- cel o! land from said tax sale, at the dase of this notice, exclusive of the cos' upon said notice, is the sum of F: lars and seventy cents (suid sum being the umount for which said tract or parcel of land, was sold to said purchaser at the forfeited sale last above mentioned and interest there- on according to law; and all other taxes which have become delinquent since the for; feited sale to said purchaser to the date af, thereon). " That the time for the redemption of said piece or parcel of land from said tax sale will expire sixty (60) days after the service of this notice and the filing of proof of such service in my office. sixteenth day of March. A. D. 1906, ) County Auditor's | M. A. SPANG, t Seal f Auditor Itasca County, Minnesota. Herald-Review Apr. 1.21, 28. Notice of Expiration of Redemption OFFICE OF COUNTY AUDITOR) County of Itasca. State of Minnesota. To BESSIE L, CLARK: You are hereby notified, That the following described piece or parcel of land, situated in the county of Itusea, and state of Minnesota. und known and described as fullows, towit: Southwest quarter of southeast quarter (SW of SEs), of Section twenty-five (25), of ‘Township fifty-six (56), Range twenty-two (22) west, is now assessed in your name. That on the lith day of May, A. D. 1900, at a@ sale of land pursuant to the real estate tax judg- ment duly given and made in ana by the District Court in and for said County of Itasca on the 2ist day of March, 1900, in pro- ceedings had in and for said County of Ltasca to enforce the payment of taxes and interest delinquent upon real estate in said county, and which was forfeited to and had become the absolute property of the State of Minne- sota for the non-payment of taxes thereon for the years, 1893, 1894 and 18%, the above de- scribed piece or parcel of lund was sold for the sum of Four doliars and twenty-five cents, pevazane to the provisions of Chapter 822 of the General Laws of tne State of Minne. sota for the year 1899; that the tax certifi- cute issued for said land at said sale has beeu presented to me at my office by the holder thereof for the purpose of having notice of the expiration of the time for redemption from said sale given and served; that the amount ai to redeem said piece or par- cel of land from said sale at the date of this notice, exclusive of the costs to accrue upon this notice, is the sum of Seven dollars and twenty-three cents (suid sum being the ug- £ ate amount of said sum for which said nd was sold at said sale and interest there- on at twelve per cent per annum, delinquent taxes, penalties costs and interest thereon accruing subsequent to said sale and paid by suid purchaser. and ull unpaid delinquent taxes, interest. costs and penalties accruing upon said land subsequent to said sale); and that the time for redemption of sai piece or parcel of Jand from suid sale will ex= pire sixcy (60) days after the service of this notice and proof of said service has been i Witness tay head and seal of eflice, this itness my hand and seal of effice, day of March. A. D. 1906. as M. A. SPANG. ) County Auditor's ’ t al, f Auditor of Itasca County, Minnesota, Herald-Review. Apr. 14, 21, 28. FOR SALE! I have about 2,500 acres of lan’? in 55-23 and 55-24 that I wil sell for $5.00 an acre. Write iminediately to P.O. Box 211, Mankato, Minnesota O. W. HasTinas. F. P. SHELDON. President. Vice-President. OC. E. AIKEN, Cashier. First National Bank, Grand Rapids, Minn. ‘Transacts a General Banking Busiaesg' this notice, with interest, penalties and costs... Witness my hand and seal of office thie . land. not then having been redeemed from’ + Fifteen dollars and ten cents dvly paidto.the +