Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 16, 1913, Page 9

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oo ees oe STATE NEWS BITS Yinor Happenings of the Week Throughout Minnesota, ——— Another conference was held be tween Attorney General Lyndon A. Smith and the members of the stat board of railroad and warehouse commissioners in regard to the pay- ment of refunds by railroads as a re- sult of the supreme court decision in the Minnesota rate case. The state will stand pat on its original conten- tion that the refund must be the dif- ference between the rate established after the Sanborn injunction and one existing previous to that time, even though that rate be lower than the maximum state rate. As a result of the recent visit of State Auditor Iverson and Assistant Attorney General Hilton to Washing- ton the state received from the gen- eral land office patents to 4,340.14 acres of land claimed under the swamp land grant of March 12, 1860. The land is in the Cass Lake dis- trict. This, however, is only the forerunner of numerous other grants that will be made and it is expected that the total will reach more than 500,000 acres. The Luce Electric company has had men surveying for a new north and south electric line to run from Jack- son northward, passing through Sleepy | Sye and connecting with the road un- der construction from Minneapolis to Watertown, D., at some point north of Sleepy E) The line would pene- trate one of the richest sections of Southern Minnesota which is now 4 | long dista a rail stations. More tl of hog era serum, sufficient to treat thousands of hogs, has been dis- posed of by the serum plant at c University farm during the past week, according to Dr. H. Preston Hoskins, director of the hog cholera work. There is very little cholera in the state, Dr. Hoskins said, but the farm- ers who fought it last July are taking preventive measures. William Dietrich, a graduate of the Wisconsin Agricultural College, for- merly assistant professor in the Illi- nois Agricultural College, has accepted a post at the head of the animal hus- bandry department of the Northwest School of Agriculture and Experiment Station at Crookston. He is a man of wide experience and is an authority in his special line. A municipal reference bureau at the University of Minnesota to give infor- mation on government and adminis- tration to the city and town officers will be established next winter, under the plans of the new director of ex- tension work, Professor Richard R. Price, who has just assumed his du- ties. The largest cargo of wheat ever loaded at the American head of the lakes was taken out of Duluth on the steamer William P. Snyder. It was 464,000 bushels. The boat is bound for Port McNichol, Georgian bay, her car- go having been loaded for export. DEATHS OF THE WEEK. Mrs. Aurelia Perry, widow of Charles Perry, who came to Minne- sota in 1828 with his parents, Abra- ham Perry and wife, the first white settlers in the state, is dead at Min- neapolis. Her husband, as a twelve- year-old boy, sailed from Switzerland with his parents and journeyed to the Red River of the North on one of the cart trains. From there in 1828 the family with their own ox team, trundled diagonally across country to Fort Snelling, where they wére the first whites to actually settle within what is now Minnesota. Edward M. Patch, one of the earliest residents of Minneapolis, is dead in Portland, Ore., at the age of ninety-three years. Mr. Patch, with his father, Luther Patch, settled in St. Anthony in 1847 and for a time lived in a log cabin built there by Franklin Steele. Luther Patch was the second postmaster in St. Anthony, succeeding Ard Godfrey, the first to get the appointment. Dr. L. H. Munger, fifty-six years old, one of the leading physicians and sur- geons of Southern Minnesota, is dead at his home in Winona after an ill- ness of several weeks. He was a member of the Minnesota State Med)- cal association. Eli B. King, pioneer resident of Min- nesota and survivor of the Indian mas- sacre near St. Cloud, is dead at the home of his son in St. Paul. He came to Minnesota in 1853. Mr. King was eighty-three years old, and was born in New York. Jacob Kieffer, one of St. Paul’s best known and earliest pioneers, is dead. He was ninety-one years old. CRIMES AND MISHAPS. After twice escaping death, but not serious injuries, while at work as a switchman, F. J. Davis of Minneapolis found his accumulated misfortunes too heavy to carry longer and fired a bullet into his brain. He was forty- nine years old. Lightning that struck the home of Ashley Anderson at Friberg flashed into a stove in the kitchen and started a fire, kindling for which had been ldéfd by Mr. Anderson before he retired the previous night. Carl Schuester, nine years old, was drowned in the river at St. Cloud while bathing with other boys. n 50,000 cubic centimeters | EBERHART GATHERS FACTS — Minnesota Governor Will Urge Public Utilities Board. Governor Eberhart will open the campaign for the public utilities board upon his return from the East to Minnesota, about July 14 or 15. The governor said that he has gathered all the reports of railroad commis- sions and other organizations and state officials on that subject and during the present week will compile the data and prepare several speeches for delivery in various parts of the state during the remainder of the sum- mer and in the early fall, so that the extra session of the legislature, which he will call for early October, will be influenced more or less by public sen- timent created by his campaign. MILLIONS FOR STEEL CITY Trust Head Says $20,000,000 Will Be Spent Near Duluth. President James A. Farrell of the United States Steel corporation and his party of steel men and their wives returned to Duluth recently from an in- spection of the corporation’s mine lease on the Minnesota ranges. An inspection of the new plant out- side of Duluth was made. “We will expend $20,000,000 alto- gether on the Duluth plant,” said Mr. \ Farrell. “In addition to a model town |at Gary we will build a $2,000,000 ce- | ment plant, with a capacity of 40,000 | barrels a day as a side line.” FEDERAL AND STATE Minnesotan Will Aid in Fixing | Railway Valuation. Charles S. Staples of the Minnesota railroad and warehouse commission was elected as the special represen- tative of the executive committee of toad Commissioners to co-operate with the interstate commerce com- mission in making a physical valua- tion of railroads. Following a conference between Commisioners Clarke, McChord and Marble and members of the execu- tive committee of the state commmis- sions, co-operation between the state and federal commissions in making the railroad valuation was agreed upon. Mr. Staples was also named as a member of the “valuation commit- tee’ chosen to represent the states in the dual valuation plan. Commissioner Thorne of Iowa was made chairman of this valuation com- mittee, which was selected by the members of the executive committee of state commissions meeting in Washington. The committee is made up of members from the following states: Minnesota, Kansas, Iowa, Virginia, California, Oregon, South Carolina, | Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, Nebras- | ka, Ohio, Masachusetts, New York and Oklahoma. | ONE FIREMAN IS OVERCOME Huge Stack of Flax Straw Burns at St. Paul. | One St. Paul fireman was over- come by smoke and the heat of the intense flames and the majority of sixty others were scorched and stifled and almost exhausted in their stren- uous battle with a fire at the Northern Insulating company plant, which prac- tically destroyed a huge stack of flax straw valued at $60,000. The moun- jtain of baled straw, covering nearly an acre of ground and standing about thirty-five feet high, was practically all destroyed. BRYAN’S SALARY IS TOO LOW Secretary of State Says He Is Obliged to Lecture. Hendersonville, N. C. July 14.— While lecturing here Secretary Bryan declared he was compelled to deliver chautauqua addresses to supplement his government salary, which he said, was not sufficient to meet his ex- penses. “As this is my first chautauqua lec- ture since becoming a member of the cabinet,” said Secretary Brayn, “it may not be out of place to say that I find it necessary to lecture in order to supplement the salary which I re- ceive from the government. “As I have lectured for eighteen years this method of adding to my income is the most natural one to which to turn and I regard it as ex- tremely legitimate.” STANLEY DENOUNCES LAMAR Says Lauterbach and Martin Had No Hand in Requesting Inquiry. Washington, July 14.—David La- mar, Edward Lauterbach and Secre- tary Henry B. Martin of the Anti- Trust league were collectively and individually denounced in the house by Representative Stanley of Ken- tucky, head of the recent steel trust investigation, for “boasting” before the senate lobby committee that they figured in drafting the house resolu- tion of inquiry. Stanley declared “absurd” and “untrue,” the alleged participation of Lauterbach and Mar- tin in presenting the resolution te BOARDS CO-OPERATE: the National Association of State Rail- | The Electric Voice That Speaks Through the Ether. SETTING UP THE VIBRATIONS. This Is the Work of the Oscillator, Which Is the Electric Mouth, and Its Message Is Caught by the Resonator, Which Is the Ear of the Apparatus. More truly than any other tele graphic device, the wonderful wire Jess is a speaking voice. It makes itself heard just as the human voice does by a series of waves moving free- ly through space. When I speak my voice is sent out in undulations of varying length and frequency through the air. When the wireless “speaks” its voice is conveyed by undulations in the ether, which is a more refined medium than air, carry- ing the waves of light and electricity as the air carries those of sound. The oscillator of the wireless is a “mouth,” sending out undulations in the ether as our mouths send out un- dulations in the air, and the resona- tor of the wireless is an “ear,” catch- ing the etherial waves as they im- pinge upon it, as our ears catch the atmospheric waves that strike them. We see nothing wonderful in vocal sounds, because nature gave us in our needs one instrument to produce them ‘and another to receive them. But she left us to find out for ourselves how to produce and receive “vocal” waves in the ether. Since we had to make the instruments that deal with them the etherie waves seem to us marvel- lous, although they are in principle no more marvelous than the waves of air. Man began to use electricity for con- veying intelligence by sending a cur- rent of it along a wire. He pressed a button at one end of the line, and the electric current passing along the wire induced a corresponding motion in a |tapper at the other end. It was a roundabout way of employing an agen- cy which we now know can be em- ployed more simply and directly by \throwing away the wires and making the electric waves “speak” straight through the ether. It is true that the language employed does not consist of the words of any spoken tongue, but it is one that can be directly translated into any other known to man, and so it is the most universal of all languages. Now, let us see how it is employed. First as to the electric “mouth.” When a charge of electricity is accumulated on a “condenser” a similar but oppo- site charge is induced upon another condenser placed near. The air be- tween them acts as an insulator be- cause it is a poor conductor of electric- ity. But when the charge attains a certain degree of intensity the strain {spark passes between the two con- |densers, by which equilibrium is re- stored between them. The passage of this spark produces, 30 to speak, a shock in the ether, which, like the explosion of a gun oF the utterance of a sound, sets up a se- ries of waves in the surrounding me dium, which radiate away on all sides. These waves in the ether produce the electric “voice.” If the sparks are reg- ulated in number and frequency the consequent waves are similarly regu- \jated. An instrument for the produc- tion of such waves is called an oscilla- |tor or exciter. It is a kind of vocal ap- jparatus for speaking through the ether | instead of through the air. But just as we should have no knowl- edge of the passage of sound waves if we were not provided with ears to hear them, so the electric waves would go unregarded if we had no apparatus for receiving them. The receiving apparatus is called a resonator, or detector. It may be sit- uated hundreds of miles from the os- cillator, but it will catch the waves as they undulate to it through the ether, and it can be made to reproduce them in an audible or legible form by | causing them to operate a Morse dot and dash instrument, as in ordinary telegraphy by wire. But the electric voice and the elec- tric ear are in some ways more man- ageable than the human voice and ear. We can only produce and hear air waves of a limited range of frequency, and we cannot do much to alter that limit. Sound waves vibrating less than forty times a second or more than 40,- 000 times are inaudible to us. But elec- tric waves varying in frequency from a few hundred up to hundreds of mil- lions a second can be rendered per- ceptible, and it is also possible so to construct the instruments that they will send forth and receive particular ranges of waves and be mute and deaf to others. Then the distance over which the electric waves can be detected is al- most infinitely greater than that of ordinary sound waves. It takes a strong voiced man to make his voice audible across a little river, but, as everybody knows, the electric cry of a ship in distress can be electrically heard from the middle of the Atlantic ocean. And there are enthusiasts who predict that before very long we shall be able to speak by wireless to some other planet, if only there is somebody there to bear and understand us!— Garrett P. Serviss in Spokane Spokes- man-Review. ‘There is no act, however trivial, but bas its train of consequences, as there is no hair so small but casts its shadow. : ‘upon the air becomes too great, and a | OF THE School Board OF School District No. 1, Grand Rap- ids, Itasca County, Minnesota. Grand Rapids, Minn., Ju-y 7, 1913. A meeting of the school board of School district. No. One, was held in the Central Schoo) Building at 2:30 P. M. Cc. E. Burgess, C. H. Dickinson and J. D. Doran were present. The min- utes of the meeting of June 30th were read and approved. Trustee Dickinson, offered the follow- ing resolution and moved its adoption: “Be it resolved by the Trustees of School District No. 1, Itasca County, Minnesota, that it is expedient to en. large and remodell the High School Building in the Village of Grand Rapids, in said school district by add- ing a two story and basement addi- tion at the north end of said build- ing and that a proposition so to do be submitted to the. legal voters of said School District at the annua! meeting of said district to be held at the Vil- age Hall, in the Village of Grand Rapids im said schoo} district on thg nineteenth day of July, 1913, at eight o'clock P. M. “That the clerk of said school dis- |trict be and is hereby instructed and | directed to specify in the notice of the said annual meeting of said school dis- |trict, to be given in accordance with llaw, that the above mentioned matter | will come before said meeting.” Said motion was duy seconded by Trustee Doran, and put to a vote. All trus. |tees voting in favor thereof and none so declared. against the same, said motion was du'y carried and said resolution adoptéd and Trustee Dickinson, offered the follow- ing reso.ution and moved its adoption: “Be it resolved by the Trustees of School District No. 1, that it is expe- dient that said School District Num- ber 1, of Itasca County, Minnesota, bor- row money in the sum and amount, for the purpose and on the terms and conditions set forth hereinafter in the proposition to be submitted to the vot. ers of said schoo?’ district,and that there be submitted to the iegal voters of said school district at the annual meeting of said district, to be held on the nineteenth day of Ju'y, 1913, at the Village Haly in the Village of Grand Rapids, in said school district and coun- ty, at eight o’clock, P. M., the fol.ow- ing proposition: “Shall School District No. 1, of Itasca County, Minnesota, borrow money in the sum of Forty Thousand Dollars, ($40,000.00) by issuing and selling its negotiable bonds in such aggregate amount, ali- bearing the same date, such bonds to be forty (40) in num- ber and of the denomination of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) each, each and ail of said bonds to be due and payable fifteen (15) years from their date of issuance, all with interest pay- able semi annually, at the rate of five per cent (5 per cent) per annum—such bonds to be negotiated and sold by the trustees of said school district in accordance with the statutes in such cases made and provided—all for he purpose of defraying the expenses to be incurred in en‘arging and remodel- ing the High School Building in the ‘Vilage of Grand Rapids in said dis. trict? | ‘*That the clerk of said school dis. trict be and is hereby instructed and directed to specify in the notice of said annual meeting of said school district, to be given in accordance with law, that the above mentioned matter will come before said meeting.” Said motion was duly seconded by Trustee Doran, and put to a vote. Alt trustees voting in favor thereof and none against the same, said motion was duly carried and said resolution adopt- ed and so declared. Bids for re-finishing desks in the Centraf; School Building, were received as folows: W. L. Fish, painting, staining and varnishing desks in three rooms $75.00 (59c)’ each; R. A Mac. alister, stain and varnish desks and enamel iron parts of same at 52¢ each; Wm. Ashton, clean and extract ink stains, restain and finish with shellac and hard drying seat varnish, wood and iron work complete, 40¢ each; Weston & Cloutier, Gean and extract stains, restain and finish with shellac and varnish finish to include iron and wood work 40c each. Upon motion, the matter of accept- ing a bid for re-finishing desks in the Central School Buifding was laid over to the meeting of July 14th. Upon motion, Director Burgress was authorized to employ necessary labor to build new chimneys on rural schools where necessary. Bids for furnishing new desks for the High School building were received. It was moved that no bids for the furnishing of cast iron desks be con- sidered. Motion carried. The fol- owing bids for stee desks were re- ceived: Columbia School Supply Co., $3.35; Geo. F. Kremer, $3.05 for com- plete desks and $2.50 for rears; H. = & Co., $3.15 for compete desks and $2.65 for rears, It was moved. that the matter of ac- cepting bids on desks be laid over un- til the meeting of July 14th, in order to give Mr. Kremer time to get a sam. ple of the desk that he offers to sup. ply. The motion was carried. It was moved that E. A. Freeman be re-appointed as District Superinten- dent for a term of one year beginning August Ist., 1913, at hfs present salary of $263.15 per month for eleven months. The motion was duly seconded and carridd, The foldowing bills were, upon motion, allowed; Central Scientific Co., labratory 5o GAPdeM.. .. -- ee oe ceee ceeee THB Mesaba Tel. Co., tolls and rent- BD. . os oe oe oe 20 ween oe coos 10.05 Frank Myers, team work.. .. .. 1.75 Bernard Smith, wood and repair work, Sturgeon Lake schoo.... 7.00 H. D. Powers, manual training Water & Light Company, lght for June.. . Ti eigepmebinn bos 24.13 King Lumber Co., dumber for signs for schoo! lawns.. Upon motion the meeting Monday, July 14th, at 2:30 P. M. J. D. DORAN, Clerk. Herald Review, July 16. Sere SALE OF SCHOOL AND OTHER STATE LANDS STATE OF MINNESOTA, Auditors office. St. Paul, July 8, 1913. Notice is hereby givem that on August 18, 1913, at 10 o'clock A. M., in ffie of- fice of the County Auditor at Grand Rapids, Itasca County, in the State of Minnesota, I wili offer for sale cer- tain unsold state lands, and also those state lands which have reverted to the state by reason of the non-paymnet of interest. ; Terms: Fifteen per cent of the pur- chase price and interest on the unpaid balance from date of sale to June Ist, 1914, must be paid at the time of sale. The balance of purchase money is pay- able in whole or in part on or before forty years from date of sale; the rate of interest on the unpaid balance is four Per cent per annum, payable in advance on June ist of each year; provided, the principal remains unpaid for ten years; but if the principal is paid within ten years from date of Sale, the rate of interest will be computed at five per cent Der annum. Appraised value of timber, if any, must also be paid at time of sale. Lands on which the interest ts delin. quent may be redeemed at any time up to the hour of sale, or before resale to an actual purchaser. All mineral rights are reserved by the laws of the state. Not more than 320 acres can be sold or contracted to be sold to any one purchaser. Agents acting for purchasers must fur- nish affidavit of authority. Appraisers’ reports, showing quality and kind of soil, are on file in this office. Lists of lands to be offered may be obtained of the State Auditor or the State Commissioner of Immigration at St. Paul, and of the County Auditor at above address. SAMUEL G. IVERSON State Auditor. Herald-Review, July 16-23-30, Aug. 6. Torrens No. 282 Summons STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF ITASCA. District Court, 15th Judicial Dis- trict. In the matter of the application of Simeon D. Patrick to register the title to the following described real estate situated in Itasca county, Minnesota, namely: All of block numbered six (6) in Grand Rapids First Division, ac- cording to the plat thereof on file or of record in the office of the register of deeds of said county, including the strip. of land shown on said plat as an alley. Applicant. vs. Lee L. Bigelow, Connolly, Thomas J. liam <A. Mackenzie, with the will annexed of the estate Montgomery, Wil- as administrator of Walter C. Goforth, deceased, Hmma In- | gersoll, Jennie Boody, Isaac B. Goforth, Mary L. Goforth, Emma Goforth, Fan- nie Goforth, Nathaniel Churchill, Han. | nah Churchill, his wife; Ada B. How- es, John R. Howes, John Anderson, Kate Anderson, his wife; Sioux City En- gine & Iron Works, Jennie Kelly, W. J. Kelly, her husband; 0. H. _ Stilson, George H. Spear, L. EB. Lum, J. J. Fry, I D. Rassmussen, W. V. Fuller, Village of Grand Rapids , J. R. Howes, Fannie B. Howes, Douglas Howes, Per- melia Stilson, Florence Wells, and “all other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real estate describ- ed in the application herein.” Defendants. The State of Minnesota to the above named defendants: You aré hereby summoned and re- quired to answer the application of the applicant in the above entitled pro. ceeding and to file your answer to said application in the office of the clerk of said court, in said county, within | twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of such service, and if you fail to answer the said application within the time aforesaid, the ‘applicant in this proceeding will apply to the court for the relief demanded therein. Witnss I. D, RASSMUSSHN, clerk of said court angthe seal thereof at Grand Rapids, in said County, this 7th day of July, 1918. » (Seal of District Court) I. D. RASSMUSSEN, Clerk, WILLARD A. ROSSMAN, Attorney for applicant, Grand Rapids, Minnesota. s Herald-Review, July 16-23-30. — Joseph Gourlay, Mark | July, 1913. (Court Seal) CLARENCE B. WEBSTER, Probate Judge. July 16-23-30. Order Limiting Time to File Claims, and for Hearing Thereon. STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF ITASCA. IN PROBATE COURT. In the matter of the Estate of Ove Hjarpedok, Decedent: Letters of admimistration this day having been granted to George Rost. » , It is Ordered, that the time within which all creditors of the above named decedent may present cldims against his estate in this court, be, and the same hereby, is, limited to six months from and after the date here. of; and that Monday, the 12th day of January, 1914, at 10 o'clock A. M.; in the Probate Court Rooms at the Court House, at the Village of Grand Rapids, im said County, he, and the same hereby is, fixed and appointed as the the time and place for hearing upon and the examination, adjustment and allowance of such claims as shall be) presented within the time aforesaid. Let notice hereof be given by the publication of this order in Grand Ra- pids Herald-Review as provided by aw. i Dated July 11, 1913, (Court Seal) CLARENCH B. WEBSTER, Judge of Probate. Herald-Review, July 16 BIRTH OF THE GRAND CANYON. Nature’s Mighty Forces That Wrecked the Crust of the Earth. “How do you explain it?’ inquired one on meeting Sir John Murray, the eminent English geologist and presi- dent of the Royal Geographical so- ciety, referring to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. This was briefly the answer, though not in his g rds: “On either side of the wiue plain ex- tending from sixty to a hundred miles to the right and left of the canyon evidences of severe volcanic action are visible. In the center was a plateau, but you now look down upon it as the vast chasm of the canyon. Thrice the volcanic forces of nature, operating on either side, violently and with tremen- dous power, forced this plateau up- ward, and finally in one cyclopic, tre- mendous upheaval the plateau parted, and the Grand canyon, the wonder and mystery of the world, was born. “Imagine a loaf of dough rising si- lently under the continuous pressure of the yeast until finally the crust is broken and the loaf divided into two. Then look at this broken crust of mother earth. In the early days a vast area embracing a great portion of the interior of the American continent was covered with water. It was a great sea. All over the canyon fossil oyster shells proved this contention. The Grand canyon opened; the waters of the inland sea rushed through in a tearing flood and carved the fantastic forms you now see.” The questioner further inquired of Sir John, “No doubt this was all very remote, in the early ages of’ the world?” “Oh, no,” said Sir John. “Modern, quite modern—not more than twenty or thirty million years ago!”—Leslie’s Weekly. TRUE HORSE MARINES. They Helped Bolivar Out When He Was In Need of a Fleet. The Nanero of South America lives on horseback, trades, buys and sells on horseback, and during the war with | Spain the lIlaneros contributed much toward achieving the independence of | both Venezuela and New Granada. In “Up the Orinoco and Down the Mag- dalena” Mr. H. J. Mozans tells of an occasion when it was necessary for Bolivar’s army to cross the Apure in order to engage Morillo. But Bolivar had no boats, and the Apure at this point was wide and deep. The Spanish flotilla was guarding the river at the point opposite to the ‘patriot forces. Bolivar was in de- spair. Turning to Paez, he said, “I would give the world to have the Span- ish flotilla; without it I can never cross. the river.” “It shall be yours in an hour,” said Paez. Selecting 300 of his lanero lancers, all distinguished for strength and bravery, he said, pointing to the gun- boats: “We must have these flecheras or die. Let those follow who please.” At once spurring his horse, he dashed into the river and swam toward the flotilla. The Ilaneros followed him with their lances in their hands, now encouraging their horses by swim ming beside them and patting their necks, now shouting to scare away the crocodiles, of which there were hun- dreds in the river. At last they reach- ed the other side and sprang from their horses’ backs on board the boats, No. 3543—Citation for Hearing on Peti. | headed by their leader. To the aston- tion for Administration. ishment of every one who beheld it, STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY oF) they actually captured the entire flo ITASCA. IN PROBA'TE COURT. In the Matter of the Estate of Nels G. Peterson, Decedent: tilla. The Old, Old Problem. The State of Minnesota, To all per-| New times, new problems. Behol@ sons intqrested in the granting of ad- how even the old world is smitten ministration of the estate of said de- ‘with modernity and its horrors as re- cedent: The petition of Mary C. Swan- son having been filed in this Court, re- presenting that Nels G. Peterson, then a resident of the County of Itasca, State of Minnesota, died intestate on the 19th day of March, 1910; and pray. ing that lettgrs of administration of vealed in “Servantgalism; or, What's to Become of the Missuses?” Servant Gal—Oh, if you please, ma’am, there was one other thing I | should like to ‘ave settled. i

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