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‘HELD PRACTICE TAY-QUT SUNDAY For Purpose of Picking Permanent City Team for Coming Season. ANOTHER GAME FOR NEXT SUNDAY Prospects Bright for Fast Ball Team Plenty of Good Material and Financial Support Assured. ‘The first baseball game of the sea- son was held at south side park Sun- day afternoon, the opposing teams be “try-outs” vs. “try-outs” The fol- lowing was the line-up: First team— Zimmers, c; Nurick, p; McCabbage, 1st b; Brandom 2nd b; Whalen, ss; Pogue 3rd b; Arsenault rf; Meyers ef Taylor If;. Second team—Durden, c; Lofberg, p; Wellein, ist b; Byers 2nd ’b; Therean, ss; Davison, 3rd b; Mey- ers, If; Romans rf; LaFreniere, ef. The try-out game was held for the purpose of securing a fast City team and amply demonstrated there is plenty of good material for a winning team. A large list of patrons has been secured Wwho have each agreed to contribute $1 peri month for the support of a mine and baseball pros- pects never looked brighter. The game between the two try-out teams ‘was a warmly ‘contested one and at the end of ithe ninth inning {the score was 11 to 4 im favor of ‘the first team. Durimg the fifth im- ning Durden was hit on tthe finger by a pitched ball and his place behind tha bat was taken by Manley Ro- mans. Another practice try-out will be held next) Sunday when ‘the ques- tion of who will fill the various posi- tions will be definitely, settled. Manager Rannframz states he has already received communications in regard to 8 games and indications are schedule will soon be arranged. It is expected the inital game of the season will be played! at South Side Park Sunday afternoon, April 17. Man ager Rannfranz says tthat a jmajority of the season’s games+ will be played on the Grand Rapids grounds, which will be good news to the local fans. NEW STATE BOARD NOW PROPOSED State Board of Education of Seven Members Displacing Three Boards. The committee appointed at the Jast meeting of the Minnesota Edu- cational association to consider plans for the enlargement of the depart- ment of public instruction has report- ed to state Supt. C. G. Schultz. The committee recommends that a state board of education be estab- lished, to consist of seven members, the president of the state university, by the governor. and the state board of examiners. president of the state normal board and five members to be appointed This board shall displace the state high school board the public school library commission Sale of School and Other State Lands The terms of the appointive mem- STATE OF MINNESOTA, State Auditor's ice, bers of this board shall be five years one member shall retire each year. The board shall hold its regu! meetings once a quarter but St. Paul, March 28, 1910. Notice is hereby given that on the day Jar |#nd date and at the time and place here- jn_ stated below in this notice, in the this |office of the county auditor of the re- spective county named, in the State of board may be called together at any |Minnesota, 1 will offer for sale the fol- time for a special meeting by president or upon the request of members, The compensation of members this board shall be $10 a day for ti spent for service in the state and|of the pu: The total |#2¥ time, actual expenses of travel. expense of this board shall not ceed $1,500 in any one year. The functions of the board shall General its |lowing described unsold state lands, and the following described state lands, which 3l|have reverted to the state by reason of the non-payment of interest, will also be then and there offered for resale. Fif- of |teen per cent of the purchase price and interest on the unpaid balance from the mej date of sale to June 1 i911, must be paid at the time of the sale. The balance ase money can be paid at in whole or in part, forty years of the time of the sale; the ex-|rate of interest on the unpaid balance of the purchase money will be four per cent , per annum, payable in advance on June be |ist_ ot each y , provided the principal remains unpaid for ten years; but if the supervision and inspection principal is paid before the expiration of ten years from the date of the sale, the of the public schools, including the /rate of interest on the unpaid balance of rural schools, graded schools relations fiqus branches of the state’s educa- and high Schools and supervision of the|on June Ist of each year. the purchase money will be five per cent per annum, interest is able in advance Holders of cer ates on which the existing amoung the var-|jnterest payments are in default can have their certificates reinstated on payment, before the-sale, of the interest in full to tional system: to provide suggestive |fate and the penalties thereon, when the lands covered thereby will be withdrawn courses of study for all public schools] from sale. ‘bd prepare questions for teachers’ examinations, to grade all examina-|the provisions of Ch: tion papers and to prescribe all ru and regulations necessary into effect provisions of the law regard to the certification of teach- ers to prepair and distribute plans and specifications for constructi and equipment of school buildings; to prescribe rules and regulations the sanitary: inspection of buildings and for the of pupils; to propdse plans for ganizing teachers’ institutes and tr ing schools; schools; to provide for of school general supervision of school penditures; to appoint inspectors high schools and graded schools; appoint a, superintendent of public | ¢ ion who shall act as executive instruc agent ofi the state board of educati whose term of office shall be three years. t Notice. To the Farmers—We will te in the market again for sweet cream on to carry school examination to make rules for the distribution of all aid to the public uniformity accountings and for the ‘All mineral rights are reserved by the ‘All sales made will be subject to pter No. 299 of the General Laws of as amended by les|Chapter No. 106 of the General Laws of 1909. zi SAMUEL G. IVERSON, in State Auditor. state. ITASCA COUNTY. ion ret Sale at Court House, Grand Rapids, May 14, 1910, at 9 o’Clock A. M. for UNSOLD LANDS. Parts of Sections. Tow 3 4 or- usw thy in| Lots °0 and 1 sg NE\, less R. R. Nig N ex- of to and ion or about. the 15th of March 1910, and/ Ni as we enjoyed your business in the past we will be pleased to buy fr you in the coming season. in selling in this way you realize much out of your cream as if you = so without the made butter but do addftional labor. We will also open for business with the people from who we can obtain milk this season at reasonable cost. lo Bottling Works. Bowling Prizes Beginning Saturday, March 26, I will give away a rocker chair to the one making the four highest scores | N over 200 points, during the next days. M. PONTI. Problem. Knicker—It 1s said that you can well educated with a five-foot book Flatter—What would you get out of a folding bed that looked like a book- ease?—Puck. We pay the highest price for butter fat and For further particulars in regard to this apply at the factory——John Costel- ‘om be for 30 be 54 24 125.20 strain and goes to pieces. Wd. & Hi We will do your work in a painstaking satisfac- tory manner. Won't you give us the opportunity? If there’s one thing more than another about a building that must be built for good hard wear it is the above—exposed day after day, year to all sorts of weather—poorly constructed, incorrectly put up Gut- tering and spouting, soon gives way to this wearing When we do this sort of work we do it--construct it and put it up to last. Our material is the best and our workmen know how to do it. D. POWERS NW and SW: N%, § and 54 25 378.95 55 25 40.40 Lots 1 and 2 ........- 56 25 133.80 Lot 2, NEY NW%, Swy%’ NW Ste SEX |. 56 25 195.75 56 25 200 56 25 80 B38 26 40 SI 53 26 Ww NEY NEY. 58 26 40 An except Nig NWi4.-16 53 26 560 Lots 2, 3, 4 and SE% SW% .....- “18 63 26 193.30 SWw% NEY i nant Bo. 19 83 26 141.11 Wy i 40 New ana Seid 53 26 200 Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4....6 55 26 152.53 Lot 5°. 78 55 26 7.10 i oa NE Wig. 16 26 145 ane . Lots 26 56.35 SEX 26 - 98.15 40 200 80 | 40 Lot 4... NEY, “NEY sWwy NWY, SW and Ni S) less R_R.. and St : 36 26 All fractional 16 and 57 26 1243.35 All fractional exce ands and -50 All, fa a Ei 838.08 HOW DID THE PARROT KNOW? Hard to Explain, But Polly Certainly Had Premonition of the Com- ing Earthquake. “Beyond his habit of living to be 100 to 150 years old, the parrot is a truly remarkable bird in other ways,” said Mr. E. N. Daniels of the City of Mexico. “What makes me give utterance to this opinion is a trick that a bird | which belongs to my young son exe cuted the night of the late earthquake that shook us up so severely in Mex leo. Fully five minutes before the | first shock, which came a little after four o’clock in the morning, Poll set up a terrific uproar that culminated in a prolonged scream. I didn’t relish the discordant racket which broke into the slumbers of the family and | felt like murdering the miserable crea- ture, especially as there was no cessa- tion of its vocal exercise. “While it was still coming in for my denunciations the tremor of the earth occurred, and in a second it flashed across my mind that Polly had given us warning in the only way it knew Jow to reach us. It may not seem reasonable that the bird should be able to sense a convulsion of nature in advance of its coming, but the facts are as I have stated, and after the affair was over I petted the par- rot as much as I had scolded it a lit- | tle while before. It has a meal ticket for life in the Daniels household, and money wouldn’t buy it.” ‘SOCIAL CLIMBERS IN NEVADA | Land of Gold Witnesses Many Strange Vicissitudes in the Matter of Wealth. To-day a humble gold-seeker may be living in a hutch of the simple ar- |ehitecture of a box car, says Good | Housekeeping. To-morrow he is build- ling a “villa” with real clapboards and |shingles, hiring a Chinaman of all work and sending to 'Frisco for a brass bed and a Persian rug. Some very pretty little houses begin to dot the barren landscape. A railroad stretches its metal arm down into the |gold-bearing wilderness and links it with the outer world. Come tailors, modistes and milliners, soda water land ice cream, clergymen and drum- mers, pickpockets and actors and all that splendid procession from the cozy zorners of civilization. Social conditions were ‘decidedly perplexing. Your washerwoman ac: cepted a mining claim for an uncollect- able debt. Suddenly the claim yields her a fortune, whereat, to show you that her wealth has not made her snobbish, sha purehasea an elabaate portable hoxse and settles down as your next-door neighbor. However, if you take it into your head to move away from the vicinity of the fortunate lavandiere you would find the moving problem quite simple. A small force of husky men can pull your house up by’the roots and carry it up a hill or down a slope without any great exertion—that is, unless your dwelling is ’dobe, or you happen to be one of the bonanza crowd and have gone in for heavy architecture. Worst Pest Than Brigands. On the highways of turbulent Cata- lonia one might expect that the chief danger to the traveler would be the brigand. By no means! The greatest pests are the small children, who ac- cost one at every turn. Treated with the utmost consideration by their parents—they are never corrected, it is said, in any circumstances whatso- ever—they track the foreigner, with the irritating pertinacity of the mos- quito. And, like the mosquito, they seek blood, crying: “] have neither father nor mother! Cince centimos!” And the grubby hands shoot up into one’s face. on eSoadoetoesencontostonseesecenteesoetonseesongonsneg oat Seg Soehonteenegoegon os SostanZoatoeteesecsoaontoatoeteeteetentectenteatnntestontenseeteetecteatoaseet eeeteeptety 5 pleted sont Seateetongeets as Sesto % Sete < ee ee ee ee es S tebe ‘? sSestostp nareareseasorortordordonseateatonsmsnaserseatos ser sendeateatentonteaseeteete nfensnecee teased tonto easesseatnesne sed soaodtosserseesmesnesei sessed erseatendSorae corsmnoesessorgosiodiorent coe sod oso oagorsesineamised sos toate dimaeaeersessertne Set % Sone rereedesdondeetoesesnesersoongondonseetnetneseesorsergedgensenteeteeseaeteesnes Sesfotosntontoeteatoeteeteatonteetedtonteetenteetenteatoateesenzeeteetontonsen, Sete eteatocton SpeSesdoeteratredoedetretesteeteetetectoetentedoatentertetoetnatontcedetretoatoneetoatentecteatoatenteteatecteteetenter WHEN IN NEED OF JOB RINTING _ GALL ON OR GALL UP THE Herald-Review RE ae a oe Se a Se Oe ek Os setetntpatoatontontontocdecteetedenteeteatentendecteeteeeeteetoatostontontontenter | eat ah Grr Bring in your idea and we'll do the rest and guarantee good neat work. 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