Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, October 11, 1911, Page 9

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PAGE EIGHT, BARRETTS IN JAIL ON THREE CHARGES ° John and Maggie Barrett, of Hol- were hauled up before Judge | y Monday and bound over to! nd jury and in default of bail man. Ba the gre are being held in the county jail. John Barrett was brought up on a charge of ault in the second de-j| gree, prefé his wife, M d by Goldie May and re fixed at $500. His! Barret, was brought up on a white slave charge and she was also bound over in the sum of $500. On the last charge, that of conduct- ing a disorderly house, both were bound over, their bonds being fixed at $1,000, which they were unable to furnish. bonds w Mortgage Foreclosure Sale. Notice is hereby given that de- fault has been made in the conditions) of a mortgage executed by Peter Lin- stad and Helen Linstad, his wife, mortgagors, to Emma Everts, mort- gagee, dated November 22nd, 1909, and recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Itasca county, Minnesota, on November, 29th, 1909, at 4:30 o'clock p. m., in Book J. of Mortgages, on page 592 thereof; that the amount claimed to be due, and is due and unpaid upon the mortgage debt, at the date of this notice, is one hundred sixty-six dollars and fifty | cents ($166.50); that the total amount) of the debt secured by said mort- gage, with interest, including said amount now due thereon, at the date of this notice, is eight hundred sev- enty nine dollars and fifty-five cents ($879.55); that the premises describ- ed in and covered by said mortgage are, Lot number eight (8) in Block number one (1) in the Third Addi- ion to the Townsite of Coleraine, according to the recorded plat there- of on file and of record in the office of the Register of Deeds of I County, Minnesota, situated d Itasca county and State of Minnesota; that by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mort- g and pursuant to the statute in such case made and provided, said mortgage will be foreclosed by the sale of said premises, at public ven- due, to the highest bidder for cash, by the Sheriff of said Itasca County, Minnesota, at the front door of the court house in the Village of Grand Rapids, in said county and state, on November 27th, 1911, at 10 o’clock a. m., to satisfy said mortgage debt and interest thereon and taxes, if any, on said premises, together with the costs of such sale and fifty dol- lars attorneys’ fees stipulated in said mortgage, Dated October 9th, 1911. EMMA EVERTS, Mortgagee. MOHN & MOHN, Attorneys for Mortgagee, Red Wing, Minnesota. 11—Nov. 15. Warning. 1 rsons are hereby warned WW%4 Sec. 22 and Lot 1, % S1b% Sec. 22 T. 58, R. 24, County, Minn. . FLANDERS, Owner, Clear Lake, S. D. The Diamond Feed Co. Carries on hand a Feeds, Shorts, pared to attend your Deliveries made to any Part of the village. Phone orders will receive promptattention § W. C. TYNDALL -|to redemption at any time within one Bran, Oilmeals, GRAND RAPIDS HERALD-REVIEW WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1911. ! Notice of Mortgage Foreclosure _Sale. | Notice is hereby given, That de- | ault has been made in the “quly ex | of that certain mortgage duly ex- ecuted and delivered by George M.| 'Blasing and Florence Blasing, ne wife, as mortgagors, to Thomas | Ludington, mortgagee, bearing tet ‘the 8rd day of February 1910, wi ith | |power of sale therein contained, du- | ly recorded in the office of the Reg- | |ister of Deeds in and for the Coun- | ity of Itasca, State of Minucsota, on | ithe 5th day of February 1910, at 2 {o'clock p. m., in Book Y. of — Mort- | gages, on Page 93, which default has continued to the date of this ro- | tice, by the failure and negiect of | said Mortgagor to make payment of jena promissory note dated February 3, 1910, by said mortgage secured, | which by its terms became due and | payable as follows: Fifty dollars ($50) on or before March 1, 1910; fifty dollars ($50) on or before the | first day of each month thereafter until the sum of $911.77 with inter- est at seven percent (7 percent) per annum from the 3rd day of vebraury 1910 shall have been paid in fail, and which default has continued for more than sixty days. i And Whereas, The said Mortgagee and holder of said mortgage has elected and hereby does elect to de- clare the whole principal sum of said mortgage due and payable at the date of this notice, under the terms and conditions of said mort- gage, and the power of sale therein contained; and whereas, there is actually due and claimed to be due and payable at the date of this no- tice the sum of Four Hundred Elev-| en and 77-100 dollars ($411.77) with | interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from the 3rd day of February 1911; and whereas, the power of sale has become operative, and no action or proceedings, at law or otherwise, has been instituted to recover the debt secured by _said| mortgage, or any part thereof: Now, Therefore, Notice is Hereby Given, That by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage, and pursuant to the statate in such case made and provided, the said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale |of the premises in and conveyed by said mortgage, to-wit: All that tract or parcel of land ly- ing and being in the County of Itasca land State of Minnesota, described as follows, to-wit: Lots ihicteen (13), Fourteen (14) and Fifteen (15) in Block Eighteen (18), Itasca City, ac- cording to the plat thereof on file and of record in the office of the Register of Deeds in and for Itasca County and State of Minnesota, with the hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appurtaining; which sale will be made by the Sheriff of said Itasca County, at the front door of _ the Court House in the village of Grand Rapids in said county and state, on the 27th day of November 1911, at 2 o'clock p. m. of that day, at public vendue, to the highest bidder for |cash, to pay said debt of Four Hun- dred Eleven and 77-190 dollars ($411.77), and interest and the «axcs, if any, on said premises, and twenty- | five dollars ($25) attorney’s fees as | stipulated in and by said mortgage in case of foreclosure, and the dis- bursements allowed by law; subject year from the day of sale, as pro- vided by law. | Dated October 9, 1911. THOMAS BE. LUDINGTON, Mortgagee. RUSSELL L. MOORE, Attorney for Mortgagee, 628 Endicott Building, St. Paul, Minnesota. full line of Hay, Rough etc and is per- | wants on short notice HOUSE WIRING HANGING A SPECIALTY Electrical Supplies and Machinery ote AND FIXTURE Ww. N. DELCOUR ELETRICAL CONTRACTOR Leave Orders at HARDWARE DEP’TMENT Henry Hughes @ Co. P. O. BOX 154 Grand Rapids, Minn SUPERFLUOUS HA Permanently removed by electricity, Exclusive specialist, expert operator. Lindley-Skiles Building, apolis, Minnesota, Phones: Main 414, Center 3330. DEFECTIVE PAGE IR, MOLES, WARTS MISS AMES, 425 620 1-2 Nicollet, Minne ‘ABOUT THE STATE - News of Espec':! Interest fo. “Minnesota Readers, DR. DUMAS IS FOUND GUILTY, Jury Brings in Verdict of Conviction | in Arson Case Against the Mayor of Cass Lake. After being out an hour and a half the jury in the Dumas arson case at Bemidji brought in a verdict of guilty. After a strenuous trial and more strenuous argument, nothing but a successful appeal to the supreme court will save Dr. Delbert F. Dumas, mayor of Cass Lake, from serving a term in the state penitentiary at Stillwater, on the charge of having attempted with Mike Davis and Martin Behan to burn the Puposky postoffice building early on the morning of June 17. When the jury announced that it had reached a verdict but few per- sons were in the court room, none having expected that an agreement would be reached so early. After the verdict had been read At- torney Lane stated that counsel for Dumas would announce later what steps they intended to take. Dr. Dumas was allowed his liberty on his original bond. MARTIN BEHAN ON STAND Bandit Who Turned State’s Evidence Witness in Dumas Case. The state placed its last witness on the stand in the case of attempted arson against Dr. D. F. Dumas, mayor of Cass Lake, on trial at Bemidji. After some preliminary testimony had’ been given by minor witnesses, Martin Behan, the bandit who turned state’s evidence, took the stand and gave a detailed account of the at- tempted robbery in which he took part with Mike Davis, the noted yegg, at Puposky, June 17. Behan, who is dying from consump- tion, had to be assisted to the witness chair and a physician attended him. The examination of the witness was slow, owing to his condition. Behan told of having taken part at the meeting of Mike Davis, Dumas and Burt Smyth in John Larson’s sa- loon in Bemidji, where the plan to rob the Puposky store was outlined by Dr. Dumas. Behan said he had never attempted a robbery before the Puposky affair and consented to aid Davis at the re- quest of Dr. Dumas, who told him that there would be no danger. MAIL CARRIER ADMITS DEED Confesses Murder of Which He had Accused Others. Coming as a climax to a mass of! conflicting charges, a number of ar- rests on circumstantial evidence and releases, Tom Fisher, the Indian Unit- ed States mail carrier, has cleared up the murder of William A. Brown, gov- ernment forest ranger on the Nett Lake reservation, Aug. 8, by a com- plete confession of the killing. Pleading self-defense, Fisher has given the authorities the true version of the affair, admitting that he killed the ranger with a blow from his rifle, and admitting that with a knife he slashed the body of the dead man. Fisher previously had declared seven | | Austrians had killed Brown for steal- | ing their jug of liquor. FOUR KILLED IN RAIL WRECK) Brakeman and Three Construction | Men Lose Lives in Collision. | Peter J. Dunn, a brakeman of Su-| perior, Wis., and three construction gang men were killed and thirty-six | others injured at Tudor, this state, | when a Great Northern ore train col- | lided with a handcar. | Nine “outfit” cars, in which the con- | | struction gang slept, ‘were being shift- | ed to the siding by the ore train when | | north of it is flooded. the handcar, with a hali dozen men upon it and running north at twelve miles an hour, shot into the cars. The engine was knocked into a ditch and the nine cars burned. The | crew of the handcar escaped serious injury. | IRON MINE OWNERS APPEAR Conference at Capitol on Proposed In- crease of Assessments. Prominent iron mining men from Northern Minnesota met with the tax | commission to confer over the pro- posed increase of about $10,000,000 in the mineral valuations. The commis- sioners have not prepared a formal tabulation of the mine valuations, but propose to raise the figures of the tax- ing officials ‘of St. Louis, Itasca and Lake counties by about $10,000,000 un. | less it can be shown that their propo- sition is unjust. The mineral valuation for 1910 was $221,173,775. | Given Forty-Year Sentence. George B. Findling, convicted at Minneapolis of murder in the third degree in connection with the deat! on May 29 of .eight-year-old Lec Danahue, was sentenced to forty year. in the state prison. He was taken to Stillwater. | Several were there a few HURLED OVER VER BRIDGE RAIL | Minneapouis Auto Drive Driver Thrown One_ Hundred Feet to His Death. Hurled over the Washington ave- | nue bridge at Minneapolis to the | flats nearly 100 feet "below, when the | steering wheel of the automobile re- fused to answer to its turn, Mart Me- | Donald, twenty-one years old, a driver for the Twin City Taxicab company, was killed. He was picked up a few moments later, and died as the ambulance reached the door of the city hospital. His body was horribly crushed. | No one saw the accident, although | moments later. McDonald was driving west across the bridge, and is believed to have been on the left side. The tracks indicate that he tried to turn | to the right side, and turned too quickly, striking the railing of the | bridge. The railing was bent a foot and a half outward, and the concus- sion threw young McDonald over the dashboard and hood of the machine to the river bed. Physicians at the city hospital do not understand why he was not instantly killed. BOY SHOT BY COMPANION | Was Looking at Gun He Supposed Was Not Loaded. Clarence Anderson, the twelve-year- | old son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Anderson of Minneapolis, was shot and instantly killed because Clarence Rhinow, a play- mate, did not know the gun he was playing with was loaded. The lads were playing in the front yard of the home of Henry Dryer with Willie Johnson, a grandson of the Dryers. i Young Rhinow had obtained a re volver from a roomer at his parents’ home. He thought he unloaded the gun when he showed it to his play- mates, but a cartridge remained in | the cylinder. The boys cannot ac- count for the discharge of the revol- ver. The bullet penetrated the heart of the Anderson lad. BISHOP HEFFRON VERY ILL | Operated on for Appendicitis at the Rochester Hospital. Rushed to Rochester on the first train from Winona, after a serious and sudden attack of appendicitis, Bishop Patrick Heffron of the Winona diocese of the Catholic church was operated on by Doctors Mayo and is in fairly good condition. Bishop Heffron was stricken at his | home in Winona at 3 o’clock in the morning and was rushed to Rochester ‘on the first train. Five surgeons con- sulted at St. Mary’s hospital before the operation was performed. Later it was said at the hospital that the bishop was resting easily and had a good chance to recover. SHOOTS SELF TWICE IN HEAD Attempts to Blow Out Brains Because Daughter Don’t Obey. Charles Tunberg of St. Paul, fifty- eight years old, shot himself twice in the right temple with a 22-caliber revolver in an attempt to commit sui- cide because, it is said, his daughter had failed to obey him when he had told her to remain at home. When the child left the home the father went to his room, and there taking the pistol from his dressing ta- ble attempted to blow out his brains. He was removed to the city hospital | where it was said he was in a se! rious condition, and that the outcome | is doubtful. Tunberg is a carpenter. | BOTTOM LANDS ARE FLOODED | Mississippi and All Tributary Streams at High Stage. | The Mississippi river at Winona is still rising rapidly and the sloughs across the river have been swollen until the water is inundating the bot- tom lands. The Trempealeau river, across the Mississippi river from Winona, is re- ported to be rising rapidly and the water is backing up into the low coun- try. i The Burlington roadbed is serving as a dam. All the country to the It is not be- lieved the tracks will be washed out, | as they are substantial. Evidence Held Insufficient. | Governod Eberhart has quashed the | charges brought against the Hennepin county commissioners by Alfred | Stringer. He holds that the allega- ! tions and complaints are not support- ed by evidence sufficient “to consti- tute either such malfeasance or non- | feasance in office as would warrant | my removal of said county commis- sioners, or either of them.” He then directs that the charges be dismissed. QUITS GEOLOGICAL SURVEY Dr. C. Wiliard Hayes to Enter Busi- ness in Mexico. Washington, Oct. 9.—Dr. C. Willard Hayes, chief geologist of the geological survey, and one of the most prominent scientists in the country, has resigned from the government service to enter business in Mexico. Dr. Hayes, who had been in the sur- vey since 1887, had much to do with the perfection of the system adopted for classifying the public lands accord- ing to their mineral worth, and has made a number of important compila- tions on scientific matters. ' | more than 300 miles of railroad out of | being received from the flood swept | district of Southwestern Colorado and | twenty | been destroyed known as the Rio G. her: is no better way of locating goods, keeping track of things and getting rid than by the Bell of mountains of detail Telephone, Ne other way is so far reaching, so quick, so inexpen- sive, so satisfactory, and so necessary to the progres- sive business man. place of a personal visit. It is the modern way and takes the If your inquiry must extend to’ distant points, the Bell Long Distance Service is indispensable LONG DISTANCE 0. V. Hemsworth, Manager Office No. 67 Residence No. 108 OVER A SCORE REPORTED LOST Rumors of Heavy Casualties in Western Floods. PROPERTY DAMAGE LARGE Monetary Loss Estimated at Five: Mil- lions, a Large Part of Which Falls on the Denver and Rio Grande Rail- road—Residents in Flood District Face a Serious Situation From Food Shortage. Denver, Oct. 11.—With telephone and telegraph service crippled and commission, only meager reports are Northwestern New Mexico, comprising am area approximating 100 by seventy- five miles. There are rumors of heavy loss of| life, but the verified death list so far is comparatively small. John Rice was drowned while aiding in the rescue of pupils at the Methodist mission school) near Farmington, N. M., and near Blanca, Colo., a Mexican family of seven are reported drowned. From) various other points come reports of | seeing persons swept away in the; | flood. From Alamosa comes a report that! Indians at the Shipwreck | agency of the Navajos were lost in the} waters. All the buildings at the| agency, erected by the government at | a cost of $200,000, are reported to have Property Loss $5,000,000, Property loss is estimated at ap proximately $5,000,000, a large part of which falls on the Denver and Rio Grande railroad. Practically the en tire narrow gauge system of this roac nde S out or COMMISSION and train service to a number of towns cannot be re- sumed, it is said, under sixty days. Residents of towns in the flood dis- trict face a serious situation from food shortage. Stage service and freighting lines are being established, but the de- struction of highways is a serious ob. stacle. Confirmation of the entire destruc- tion of the hamlet of Arboles has been received. Every building in the vil lage, including the railroad depot and a string of box cars that were on a siding, were swept into the San Juan river. No loss of life is reported there. Late reports indicate that the flood waters are subsiding. WATER BELOW DANGER POINT Flood Situation at Black River Falls Improving. Black River Falls, Wis., Oct. 11.— The flood situation is little changed here, except that the river has sub- sided below the danger point and no further damage is expected. Soldiers are still protecting the city and prop- erty. Merchants are getting in shape to supply soon all need Barns and churches are being utilized until oth er arrangements can be made. The banks will reopen in a day or two. Schools are badly deranged, having | had a session of one half day since the disaster. The old channel of the river is per fectly dead and the water is flowing in the new channel. HER SANITY IS QUESTIONED Mrs. Ida von Claussen Agaln in the Limelight. New York, Oct. 11. he Tombs po- lice court has been asked by the state supreme court here to order an ex amination into the sanity of Mrs von Claussen, who attracted attention a few years ago by trying to have President Roosevelt arrested for con spiracy to injure her at the court of Ida Sweden. She has come into public notice now through her divorce suit here against | her former husband, Dr. William Ho: nan. The case was on the calendar of the supreme court here for the present wed Big enough for the biggest game. Quick enough for the most dangerous game. . Deals five, smashing, one-ton blows with light. ning rapidity or deliberate fire as need may be. The only recoil-operated rifle that locks the cartridge in the chamber until after the bullet has left the muzzle. Built to handle the heaviest ammunition with greatest accuracy and safety. Remington; UMC —the pertect shooting combination. Send for Descriptive Folder Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co.” 299 Broadway, New York City 5 & q

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