Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, May 11, 1907, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PERIL IN COLLEGE TRAINING {IN POSSESSION OF THE DEVIL Medical Authority Points Out the Dan- gers to Amiefican Youth. It is wrong to put any one in train- ihg at any time, to create a physio- logic cardiac enlargement which re- mains to plague him in afterlife, put to place the growing boy under this regimen is nothing short of criminal. No college spo ould require “train- ing,” no matter how much practice is needed, and no game should single out a few very abnormai men. Sports are necessary parts of youthful life, the essential of child’s education, in- deed, and every one must take part in them to educate the nerves, not to deaden them. Games are normal only when they cultivate perceptions to accuracy and ss, but never should they put issues to their maximum allow- able strain. Play of animals and chil- dren is really a means of educating ising other parts of the nerv em than the mere memory, which seems to be the main thing drilled in our college youths. If some play is beneficial—and there does not seem to be any doubt on that point— then it must be utilized and encour- aged for every student and not so utterly ignored and allowed to degen- erate to a form which is injurious.— American Medicine. PRIZE ADDED TO LONDON ZOO Australian ‘““Frogmouth” Rarely Seen in Captivity. least interesting of the added to the London is a specimen of Cu vier’s pedargus, a curious Australian species familiarly known as the “frog: mouth,” says the Philadelphia Record. This rem owllike bird is a member of a small family not far re- Not the birds recently zoo collection moved from the nightjars. It is a lazy bird, of necturnal habits; al- though insects form its chief food, small birds, mice and such dainty morsels are included in its bill of fare. In size it resembles a barn owl, for which, at first sight, it might easily be mistaken. Its dull plumage is in keeping with its natural environ- ment. Its favorite resting place is on the dead branch of some tree, and its reserablance to a withered stump is wonderful. The eggs of this bird, which is not often seen in captivity, are two in number, and white; they are usually laid in a nest of sticks placed in the fork of a tree, and both parents take turns on the nest. The frogmouth appé day and it is by no means easy to rouse it from its lethargy. Irish Idiom. We are told that “bedad” is not Irish at all, never has been Irish ex- cept in the mind of the English come- dian; and the mere Saxon is cheated of his best anecdotes. If the Irish- man does not “bedad”—begorrah! what does he say? If you may not say “bedad” you may say at every op- portunity, s it destroyed that ye are?” A blind woman is’ a “dark” woman; you must say “whisht!” in- stead of “hush!” and if a direct ans- wer is to be wrung from you—which can generally be avoided in Ireland— you just say “It is,” or “Ye are,” or “I do,” as the case may be, “but never the plain English ‘“Yes.”—Lon- don Chronicle. The Artistic Temperament. Gilbert Keith Chesterton says in his “Heretics”: “The artistic tempera- ment is a disease that afflicts ama- teurs. It is a disease that arises from men not having sufficient power of expression to utter and get rid of the element of art in their being. Ar- tists of a large and wholesome vital- ity, get rid of their art easily, as they breathe easily or perspire easily. But in artists of less force the thing be- comes a pressure, and produces a definite pain, which is called the ar- tistic temperament. The great trag- edy of the artistic temperament is that it cannot produce any art.” Diseases Frightened Away. When an Indian fails sick in Alaska the medicine man proceeds to adminis- ter all kinds of sacred rubbish and makes passes with secret rattles over the sickbed. One of these rattles looks like a small Indian club, with a double faced mask enclosing the rat- tles. A few shakes of this monstros- ity and the man with pneumonia is cured. Smallpox, diphtheria, lumbago, North Pole appendicitis and all such diseases are frightened out of the body when the medicine man flour- ishes his instruments of medicine above the sick man’s head. Frame House of Other Days. “I was down in South Brooklyn the other day, where they are putting up many frame houses,” said an old-time builder. “They don’t build houses as they used to. In my day all frame- work was mortised and pinned to gether, and nothing smaller than six- inch stuff would do for sills and cor- ner posts. Now the sills and corner posts are 2x4 scantlings nailed to- gether, and a mortise is unheard of. Carpenters don’t carry mortising chis- els and mallets in their kits nowa- days.’—New York Sun. Removing Smell of Paint. Paint smell, so injurious to health, is easily removed from a room by standing im it a pail of cold water containing a large handful of hay or a cut-up onion or two. The water alone will answer the purpose, but not so quickly as with the addition of the hay or onions. Leave the pail in the room for several hours and then if the painty smell still lingers throw away its contents, fill it as before and leave it to finish its work, rather stupid by | ise helone."— xchange: sei tad 0 ect ae nn Panny Peculiar Anties of Italian Boy Are Thus Explained. A most wonderful medieval story is now occupying the attention of the south of Italy. In a small village there is a family of the name of Pan- sini, and if all be true that is writ- ten of it we may think ourselves in the Dark Ages again. There are two boys in this family, and they. disap- vear occasionat; in a most mysteri- vus manver. In fact, a few minutes after they disappear they are found miles away. How they get there no one can tell. They say they are car- ried from place to place by the Holy Ghost. Spirfts ure also said to in- Aabit the house where they live; plates and glasses are broken before the eyes of all, aiid cakes and sweets are showered over the boys’ beds when they are asleep. One of the boys falls in trances, wnen he speaks dif- ferent languages (even Latin and Greek) in a strange voice. He also spouts passages from Dante, and pro- phesies. Doctors and priests have visited him, but cannot discover the machinery which is evidently at work somewhere. The last who visited him was a Jesuit father. At his approach the boy began to curse and swear and kicked him. The Jesuit says the boy is possessed by the devil!-—-Vanity Fair. PROOF POSITIVE OF MISTAKE Frog Was There to Back Jp Assertion of Doctor, Many years ago Dr. Woodward, founder of the Woodward institute at Quincy, Mass. was much annoyed by a wealthy maiden lady who was very positive she had swal- lowed a oung frog and_ that it was growing in her stomach. After many attempts to disillusion her, the doctor resorted to a strata- gem. He procured a medium-sized frog, end placing it in pocket, vis- ited the patient and informed her that he proposed to remove the frog. He administered a powerful emetic. He then produced the frog, and she was very happy, and kept the frog as a souvenir. tm less than a week he had an ur- gent call from the lady, who tearfully informed him that the frog had left one of its family in her stomach He took the frog, placed him on a table, and with his microscope examined him long.and attentively. At last, with a sigh of relief, he exclaimed: “Madam, you are mistaken; the frog Thought Tom Was Near at Hand. She is a devoted mother, whose lov- Ing attentions to her family have giv- en her little cpportunity for keeping abreast of the world’s advancement. The eldest son had been absent from home for the first time, and the elder members of the family planned a surprise by placing her in telephone communication with Him. After hear ing the voice of her boy through the receiver she could not believe that he was far away in Atlanta, Ga., as ke assured her he was. instrument, she looked under the ta- ble and called out, “Now, Tom, come out of there and stop your nonsense.” —Baltimore Sun. Wrong Time of Year to Die. Some forty or more years ago there resided in West Gloucester, Mass., the parents of a member of one of Boston’s large jewelry firms. much solicitation the son finally in- duced his mother to abandon her hum- ble home for his palatial one, but no amount of persuasion could make the father come. Not long after the ewhange the old lady died, in the month of July, and word was sent to | her husband. The old gentleman “took the letter to a neighbor, saying: “Wife’s dead; can’t go anyway: right in haying time. Why couldn’t sbe have gone in January?” A Providential Fire. Here is a new view of providential interference in the affairs of this world: “Our neighbor, Abe Ingles, had six mortgages on his house and barn, and, as he couldn't pay up, his creditors de- cided to foreclose him; but just before the bailiff arrived with papers a prev: idential fire broke out in the kitchen, and the house was burned to the ground. Then the bailiff, hastening to the.scene, fell into a storm pit and broke his good leg and lost his wood- en one. How mysterious are the ways of Providence!”—Atlanta Constitution Avon Was Hard to Represent. Some years ago W. L. Wilson, a na- tive of Avon, Conn., was elected to represent his town in the state legis- lature. Avon, being at the head of the list of towns alphabetically, was always called first when a yea and nay vote was taken, and consequently Mr Wil- son, as iis representative, was obliged to go on record first. Of this fact he ased to complain bitterly, saying: “Avon is the hardest town in the state to represent, because you never can tell which way the majority is going to vote.” Louisa Alcott Survived It. Miss Louisa M. Alcott was once visiting in a small town in Connectt- cut in which only a few days before an exceedingly small child had been born. In the course of conversation the child was spoken of, and Miss Al- cott laughingly said: “I have heard that I was a very smali infant. In fact, tradition says that I could be put in a quart tankard and the cover replaced.” ne old lady, who had been listening attentively, then asked, sympathetically: “And did you live?” Dropping the : After | pone Priests Tend Sacred Firé and Await Return of Kings Taos stands unique and distinét trom all the othet pueblos, and is unusually interesting to the student of ethnology. It is there that the eter- nal fire is said to be kept burning in the estufa, or underground temple, and ‘here the priests climb ¢aily to the housetops and gaze toward the ris- | ing sun, hoping to see the returning Montezuma sailing toward them on his eagle The fire, it is said, was removed to this village from Pecos in the early part of the last century, when the latter was abandoned. Ac- cording to rumor it is kept in a sa- cred temple built in the bowels of the earth and connected with the sur- face by hidden passages and laby- tinths. The priests tend the sacred fire carefully, and, if tradition is to be believed, it has not been extinguished since Montezuma left the earth for his heavenly home. Taos was also the home of Kit Carson, the famous scout who led Gen. Fremont through the wilds and whose name has been sung in many tongues. He lived and died in the little village, loved and respect ed by all the Indians.—Southerr Workman. TRUE STATEMENT OF COUNSEL. All in Courtroom Witnesses of the Judge’s Reversal. “I once attended some legal pro- ceedings in Nevada,” says a Philadel phia lawyer, “which were unconven- tional, to say the least. The judge presiding made up what he lacked in legal lore by a certain entertainingly joviality. The case before Aim was windy and long drawn out, and it was vlainly ts be seen that he was tired and uninterested. To one of his de- cisions counsel for the defendant promptly took exception and his hon- or nodded carelessly and settled down in his ample chair. For a moment or two he quietly dropped off to sleep, his chair tilted back against the wall. Suddenly he fell over backward, and, scrambling to his dignity and his seat, he sought to cloak his mishap by ex- claiming abruptly and irrelevantly: “No, counselor, I must adhere to my decision of a moment ago.’ “Counsel for the defense arose, and, with a s2rious bow, said: ‘Ah, but your honor has just reversed himself most conclusively.’’”"—Harper’s Week- ly. Nirvana of Buddhism. The Buddhist forbears to slaugh- ter animals, be it for food, sport or scientific purposes; he discredits the theory that they have been created for the use of man, and that he has any right over them. The Buddha sat and taught that every human be- ing, high or low, animal or human, while transmigrating in any of the ma- terial, semi-material or nonmaterial worlds, is subject to alternate misery and illusive happiness, and that last- ing bliss is found only in Nirvana. He saw ihat the will to live to enjoy was the cause of transmigration with its miseries, and that when through enlightenment this will ceases, Nir vana is attained and transmigration ; or incarnation in earthly bodies ceases. Picturesque California Women. The women grape-pickers of Call- fornia are picturesque. .There is just a dash of Indian to give color to the cheek a touch of Spanish, and just a ' suspicion of the cld blood that built the wonderful cities ages ago in lower Mexico, making a combination attrac- tive to the lover of the picturesque. Dark hair, flashing black eyes, intelli- gent faces, perfect courtesy, intelli- gence that but needs suggestion to j lead to higher grades, indeed, one could not look at those pickers, these cholos, as the tenderfoot called them, picking grapes, to see that it required but clothes and environment to make a,remarkable change. Pumice Stone. Pumice stone, aside from its use as a cleaning agent, belongs to the most | Important polishing substances. While | emery is used for polishing tools, pol ishing paper for stone and glass, ox: | ide of iron for fine glassware and lima for metals, pumice stone is employed | for polishing softer articles. Pumice stone as found in nature is, according to its composition, nothing but lava which has received its foamlike poros. ity through the fact that the volcanio stone substance was cooled very rap- idly under strong development of gases, With Plenty of Opportunities. A teacher in a public school of Bos- ton once had great difficulty in im- parting to a boy pupil of 10 certain elementary principles of grammar. In \elass one day the instructor experi- enced more than the usual »mount of trouble with the lad. In desperation the teacher finally blurted out the question: “At least, you can tell me | why we study grammar.” “Yes, ma’am,” returned the pupil; “we study grammar so that we can laugh at the mistakes of others.”— Warper's Weekly. | Pays to Watch Small Things. No matter what the general magni- | tude of a business may be, it is well worth the while to look out for its | minor affairs. This may be an age | of large things in general, but it 1s, | after all, from the handling of smaller | deals that the greatest profits are de rived. Small leakages are sure toslip by urncticed unless thé business is so organized that every detail, no matter of how little apparent significance, can be properly ethecked. Annual Miléstohea Nééd Prighten None But thé Foolish. I havé very little regard for the fight against Time which spends it- self on a strife with gray hairs and wrinkles. There used to be a picture published as an advertisement in which an elderly woman had one side | of her face all ironed out smoothly, while the other was wrinkled and worn. The wrinkled side was the more pleasing. As we grow older every line in the countenance should tell a story of loving deeds. We are making for ourselves in youth the | masques we shall wear to the very end. Every fretful, discontented, dis- satisfied expression writes itself upon the face so that the sweetest and ripest natures will have the rarest loveliness when they grow old. A} woman is as old as she looks, and as old as she feels. A sign of our in- creased health and vitality to-day is found in the fact that a woman of fifty looks about as old as a woman formerly looked at thirty-five, and many an active woman of eighty has | the vigor that was formerly common at sixty. The milestones need fright- | en nobody. Older people are no longer put in a corner, nor are they expected to hug the chimney corner. It is a woman’s obligation to be charming to her latest day.-—Mar- garet E. Sangster in Woman’s Home Companion. WELL NAMED CANNIBAL PLANT. Nicaraguan Vegetable That Preys on Living Objects. On the shores of Lake Nicaragua is ‘to be found an uncanny product of the vegetable kingdom known among the natives by the expressive name of “the devil’s noose.” Poe would have been to make this cannibal plant the subject of one of his weird stories! Dunstan, the naturalist, discovered it not long ago while wandering on the shores of the lake. Attracted by eries of pain and terror from his dog, he found the animal held by black, sticky bands, which had chafed the skin to the bleeding point. These bands were branches of a newly dis- covered carnivorous plant which has been aptly named “the land octopus.” The branches are flexible, black, polished, without leaves, and secrete a viscid fluid. They are also furnished with a great number of suckers, with which they attach themselves to their victims. It certainly deserves to be classed as the octopus of the vegetable world.—New York Herald. Vitality of the Ant. Ants have a wonderful power of ex- isting long periods after losing im- portant parts of their bodies which are not reproduced. They have been known to live two weeks without the abdomen, which is so bulky in propor- tion to the rest cf the insect. Under the most favorable circumstances an ant may live more than a month after its head had been cut off. One case is recorded in which the rest of the ant moved about forty-one days after decapitation. Ants also revive after being submerged in water for many days, although they seem to be dead a few minutes after they are im mersed. What Man Does Not Want. ‘Woman has cause to be grateful for the publication of a volume dealing with feminine logic, for it forms, per- haps, the first tangible recognition that such a quality exists in the mind of the sex. But she is not thereby to be flattered into the belief that it will raise her intellectual status in mascu- line estimation. Man does not want the logical woman; as a logician he is too often conscious that :‘1e is the only safe receptacle of his wisdom, and when he informs her that his argu- ments are “sound logic,” he expects, and always will expect, her to believe him.—Lady’s Pictorial. A Depressing Object. The bridegroom is generally the most depressing feature of the mod- ern wedding. If he is well off he is either bald, with a decided tendency to adipose tissue, or else of a pale sandy type, with equally pale eyes and a retreating chin. In ordinary life he wears spectacles, which at the request !of the bride he discards at his wed- ding, with the result that he stumbles over the last step leading from the chancel to the altar aisles, and is only saved from falling flat on his face by desperately clutching at the bride’s bouquet—Ladies’ Field. Nicknames of Presidents. A number of Grant’s nicknames arose from his initials. Unconditional Surrender probably attained the wid- est popularity. The press of his day manufactured not a few U. S. sobri- quets, like “Unprecedented Strategist, Undaunted Stalwart, and so on. The soldiers called him Old Three Stars, and he was also styled Hero of Appo- mattox. Garfield did not, of course, become the Martyr President until after his tragic death. He was also etyled the Preacher President, from Bis early calling. Surprise for a Clergyman. It is on record that the pastor of the only Catholic church in a small town in Eastern Massachusetts was obliged to raise some money for re- pairing the church. Finding that his eppeals met with little response, he decided to make a tour of the parish and solicit coptributions. The local Mrs. Partington saw him approach the house, and, going to the door, she greeted the astonished gentleman with: “Come right in, revenue father.” How delighted | for Lrcense lo Selt Intoxciating Laquore. BTATE OF MINNESOTA, j . County of [tasea f PU rms of Keewatin otice is hereby given that application has | beon made in Writing to the village council of the said village of Keewatin and filed in my | office, praying for license to sell intoxii liquors for a term commencing on th i day of June, A. D. 1907, terminating on 907, and by the folk ng person. ig place us stated ins nn, to-wit: Louis Rosenberg. 3 The front ground floor room yf that certain | building situated on lots nine (9) and ten (10) in blo en (7) in the V | Keewat original plat bow on f rd in the | deeds office In and for Itasea county, ) Said application will be heard ‘anc mined by said village council of the Village of Keewatinat the clerk’s office in the of Ke 1 county, on M loth, A. eight o'clock. j cay. | “Witness my hand and seal of office this 10th 19 y of April, A, D. It. P, HICKOY Village C Herald-Review May 4.11 Notice of Application for Lacense to sell Intoxieating Liquors STATE OF MI OTA, ( County of I < Village of Kee Notice is hereby g tin. \ n that-application has been made in writing to the village council of the said Blage of Keewatin and filed in my office, praying for license to toxi- cating liquors for a term commen the 20th day of May, 1907, and termi # on the 19th day of May, 198, by the follo’ and at the following place. as s application, to- Pat McGuire. That certain building col room situated on lot vam! block numbered sixteen (1 Keewatin, as per the o now on file and of recor deeds office in and for Ltase sota. Said application will be heard and deter- mined by said village council of the village t the clerk's office in the village n said application of Pat Mc- the Village of Keewatin, L[tasca county, on Monday, the 20th day of May, 1 at eight o'clock, p. m.. of that d Witness mv hand and seal of 0} day of April, A. D. 1907. R, P. HICKOX, Village Clerk. ng of one ed nine (9) in in the village of plat thereof in the register of county, Minne- ice this 30th {Seal] May 4.11, of Application for License to sell Antoxicating Liquors Notice is hereby given that LaRie & Cig- 11s petitioned the Roard of County Com- sioners of Itasca county. Minnesota, for License to sell intoxicating liquors fora peri od of one year from the 25th day of Aprill In the two story frame building known as the Itasca hotel, first floor, located at the Village of Koupt. This application and any remoustrance or objections to the granting Of the same will be heard and determined by said Board of Coun. ty Commissiouers, at their next session, on Thursday. the bth day of June, 197, at th house. in the Village of Grand Rapids county. Minnesota, ed May 7, 1907. Count. M. A. SPANG, uditor, Itasca county, Minn, rald-Review May 11-18, Citation for Hearing on Petition For Administration istate of Equay Zay. PATE OF MINNESOTA, l County of Itasca 5 In Probate Court. In_the Matter of the Estate of Equay-Z: Zheence, Okun, Oge- 1s ipter- tration of the on of Ah- n this court, ing of admini of said decedent: The p: ence having been filed ting that Equay-Z rep! of the County of Itase: te on the ing that died intes 3 and p tion of | Bah-Zh time The cited and required to show have, before this court at th rooms in the court house. Grand K. i hould not oe be granted. Witness. the Judge of said court, and the seal of said court, this rd day of Ma ne ies. u (Seal) Judge of C.C,MeCARTHY, . ‘Attorney for Petitioner. Herald-Review May 4.18. Order to Examme Accounts. STATE OF MINNESOTA ) ‘tition of Alfred > estate 0 sceased. representing. among e has fullya inistered and praying that « time and place fixed for examining and allowing the final ount of his admioi and for the as- estate to the be parties entit It is ord at be exam och ‘ court honse And itis fur : e ( Rapids, in said er ordered, That notice there interested by pub- voek, ree hearing inthe a weekly nev — apids, ) P \ aper printed and published at in said county. y the Court HLS, HUSO Judge of Proba Review April 27. May 11. [Seal] Herald: Summons. STATE OF MINNESOTA, ) >ss. District Court County of Itasea. Fifteenth Judicial District. Hubert D. Powers, Plaintit, Se Alexi: rie, Ale tus ©. Ramsey. John N. Spiel, Trust ert Stratton, William H. her, & other persons or parties unknown claiming any estate, right. title, interest, or lien in or upon the real estate described in the com- plaint herein. Defendants, The State of Minnesota, to the above named defendants: You and euch of you are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in the above entitled action. which is on file in the Office of the clerk of the saic court, at_his office in the Village of Grand Rapids, Itasea county, Minnesota, and’ to serve a copy of your answer to said complaint on the subscriber at his office in the Village of Grand Rapids, in said county of Ita within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the d such servic nd if you fail to answ complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the relief demanded in said complaint, we the costs and disbursements in this ac- tion. Dated April 12, 1907. 2nd, Jus- », Kob- 1 all LaPrairie L, PRATT, tiff’s Attorney, ci pids, Minnesota, Herald Review April 20. May 25. Notice. Department of the Interior, United States Land Office, s Lake. Minnesota, April 13, 1907. ishereby given that township 66 north, of range 24 west. of the fourth p. m, that the approved plat of survey of said poet tag filed in this on Wednesday. the 12th. day of June. at nine O'clock. a, m.and that on and aid date we will be prepared to receive ations forthe entry ot lands in such Ne eee caeteneratpemepnncnienmenenenneatiasaa ena i Nohwe of Rxptration of Redemption. Office of County Auditor, ) County of Ltasca, ¢ Stute of Minnesota: To D. H. Freeman: e You are hereby notified that the following piece or parcel of land, situated in the coun- ty of Itasca, State of Minnesota, and knowa and described as follows, to-wit: Southwest quarter of southeast quarter or lot 3 sectic 25, township 3 assessed in your name. That on the 6th day of May, 1901, ata suant to the réal estate tax jud ven and made in and by sid County of [tas- ca, on the 21st day March, A. D. 1991, in p:o- ceedings to enforce the pnyment of the ta delinquent upon real estate for the year A.D. 1599, for suid county of Itasca, the above de- bed piece or parcel of land was duly of- d for sale. and no oae bidding upon said t al to that for wh uid 1 was subject to be sold. to~ : e Dollar and Fifty-two cents, tuly bid in for the State of Min- of ment the same w nesota for sa That there rand on the 13th day of id piece or parcel nen having been redeemed from and having then become the abso- lute property of the State of Minnesota, was sold and conveyed at public sale by the Coun ity Auditor of said county pursuant to the or- der and direction of the State Auditor of the State of Minnesota.and.in accordance with the provisions or the statute such case made and provided, for the sum of & Eight Dollars and Seventy-four cents duly paid to the County Treasurer of said county. That the certificate of saie for said parcel of land executed and County Auditor upon i mentioned has been p to me: office by the holder thereof for the purpose of having notice of expiration of time for re- demption from said tax sale of said property i quir from said tax s exclusive of the notice, is the sum of Eight Dollars at Ninety-one cents and interest as provid- ed by law, from the date of this notice to the an such redemption is m hat the time for the © or parcel of land from said tax sa expire sixty [60] day the service ¢ notice and the filing of p in my office. i Witness mv hand and seal of office this Mth day of January, A. D. 190 MALS {Seal] Auditor, Itasca C May 4-11-18 accrue upon this of of such service NG. unty, Minnesota, Notice of Expiration of Redemption. Office of County Auditor, ) County of Itasca. C State or Minnesota. 5 To H. L. Gordon: Y hereby notified that the following reel of lund, situated in the county State of Minn and known and st quarter or 3. Township 57, Range 2s. is now ed in your nie That on the 6 of May, A. D. 1901, at a of land pu nt to the real estate tax and by the Ttas- on the 2Ist a WL, i proceedings to enforce the pay delinquent upon real estat for said county of L scribed piece or parcel of la ed for sale, and no one bidd amount ¢ to that fo ve or parcel n of one doll same was @ “a for hat there November, A. D. 1! which nd on the 12th day of aid piece or parcel ng been redeemea from said sale, and having then become the s lute property of the State of Minnesota. was sold and conv t public sale by the Coun- ty Auditor of suid county pursuant to the or- der and direetion of the State Auditor of the State of Minnes i with the provisions made and prov of the statute ded, for the sum of seve lars and sixty-one cents duly paid to the county treasurer of said county. That the certificate of sale for said pi parcel of land executed : e County Anditor upon mentioned has be oflice by the holde having notice demption from given and se quired 'o red trom said tax sale, at the this notice, exclusive of the costs to accrue upon said no- tice, is the sum ¢ even Dollars and Seventy- six cents, and i provided by law, from the date of this notice to the day such redemption is made. hatthe time for ther piece or parcel of land trom 2 sixty (60| days after the the tiling of proof of such servic ice. ess niy hand and seal of oF anuary, A.D. 1 vion of time for re- of said property mount re~ cel of land mption of said e this Mth ?AN Auditor, It y. Minnesota Notice of Expiration of Redemption. Office of County Aud County of Ita 6 of Minne .C, Akeley: hereby notificd that the following reel of land, situate in the couuty tate of Minnesot nd known and vutheast quarter section 2 0 26, is seed in y at on the Ll, at le of land ru State ‘tax gment duly g by. the strict Court inty of Itas , on the 2ist day of " . 1901, in pro- ceedings to enfor f taxes de- nt linguent upon re r the you .D. 18%), for said county of Itasea, the above de- scribed piece or parcel ef ‘land was duly offered for sale, and no one bidding upon said offer 2a amount equal to that for which said b ‘or parcel was subject to be sold, to-wit: the sum of One Dollar and Fifty two cents the same duly bid in for the ng been redeemed from then become the abso- 4 state uf Minnesota, was sold and convey by the County Auditor ot said County pursuant to the order and direction of the State Auditor of the state of Minnesota, and in ac ‘dance with the isions ef the statute in such case mac provided, for the sum of Eight Dollars ane Forty-eight cents duly paid to the County Treasurer of said county. That the certificate of sale for said piece of land execated und delivered by said County Auditor upon said sale last above 1s been presented to me at my z e holder thereof for the purpose of having notice of expiration of time for re- dem ption from said tax sale of said property given und served; and that the amount re- quired to redeem said piece or parcel of land from said tax sale, at the date of this notice. of the costs to accrue upon said s the sum of Eight Dollars and Sixty- five cents and interest as provided by law from the date of this notice to the day such redemption is made, That the time for redemption of pLof land from said tax s will ex- pire sixty [60] days after the service of this notice and filing of proof of such service in my office. Witness my hand and seal of office this 14th duy of January, A. D, 1907. M ANG [Seal] Auditor, Itasca County, Mi ie esas ounty, Minnesota. dar said sale, lute prop: uid piece Nottce for Publication. (Isolated Tract.) Public Land Sale. Duluth, Minn., Land Office, EN: _ Mareh 22, 1907 Notice is hereby given. that us airected by the commissioner of the general land oitice, under provisions of act of congress approved June 27, 1906, public No. 303, we will offer at public sale, to the highest bidder. at 10 o’clock a.m., on the 24th day of May, 1907. at this office. the following tract of land, to-wit: Lot 4. sec.6, township 55. north, range 23° w..4th p.m. Any person claiming adversely the above- described lands are advised to file their claims or objections, on or before the day above designated for sale. J.C, HERMAN ENGEL NEIL B. MORRISON Register, Receiver. Herald-Review April 13, May 11. E. 8S. OAKLEY, Register, M.N. KOLL, Receiver, Boy Wanted—to learn the printing trade at the Herald-Review office. Apply at once, ad

Other pages from this issue: