The Appeal
Saturday, April 29, 1905
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
RECAUSE:
1-It aims to publish all the news possible.
2-It does so impartially, wasting no words.
3- Its correspondents are able and energetic.
Our Pleasures Too Costly
Need of Farmers' Combines
Need of Farmers' Combines
If Sun's Color Changed
If Sun's Color Changed
At a Holland Wedding
Lives of English Miners
VOL. 21. NO. 17.
Our Pleasure
A Frenchman complained the other day about the unreasonably high prices of American restaurants.
"You cater for the pleasures of only the cater man here," he said. "Don't you know that there are 99 average men to every rich one? Why, then, don't you draw the average man out of his shell? Why don't you make an offer for his custom?
"In Paris—in fact, all over France—you can get a good dinner for f.3, or 60 cents—a dinner served in a beautiful restaurant, to the music of a good orchestra, among well dressed and refined people. This dinner comprises a hors d'oeuvre, soup, fish, a roast meat, a course of vegetables, chicken and salad, dessert and a pint of good red or white wine.
"There is in America an idea that a man never leaves home for pleasure without an enormous roll of bank receipts for perfect indifference to expense. To dine at the good restaurant with his wife and to go to the theater afterward costs an American—for dinner, $5; for a carriage to and from the play, $3; for a seat, $3 or $4—or $12 in all. That is too much."
Another protective influence exerted by the trade association is that of educating its members against the swindles by which the followers of almost every occupation or calling are victimized, writes Charles H. Clark, in Success Magazine. It is a recognized fact that swindlers and confidence men ply their craft along routine lines—in other words, they move from place to place and "work" men in the same general line of business. Recently a grain buyer in a western town was victimized in this manner: Like all other local elevator men, he followed the practice of advancing to the farmers of his locality a reasonable sum of money against the grain which they would soon market. One day, a farmer went to a remote locality with which he was not particularly familiar came to him and asked for an advance upon the crops they were cutting. The men appeared to have met by accident at the elevator, and claimed to
A German astronomer has recently published some interesting observations on the theoretical effects of a change in the color of the sun. It is amazing to consider the possibilities if our sun were green, blue or red, instead of what it is. If it were blue there would only be two colors in the world—blue and black. If it were red, then everything would be red or black. If it were yellow everything would be yellow or black. Every one knows that the light of our sun consists of six colors, and the reason things are different fuses is that some swallow up five of the colors and reflect only one. Thus, when roses they absorb all but the red, roses, red, because purple, because they absorb everything but red and blue, a mixture of which two forms purple. In the event of the sun being red, roses, blood, red ink, and all other things that are now red would reflect it. So also would snow, the lily and
In Holland two weeks before a marriage takes place cards are sent out declaring that the banns have been published. This is called an "undern- marriage." The card also announces when the final marriage is to take place. The wedding itself is a small affair, and the civil marriage is the only one recognized by law. A church wedding is usually looked upon as a concession to either fashion or sentimentality, and is called the marriage. The couple enter the church behind the family members, bridemaids and other attendants. They are shown to seats the whole assembly, and the clergyman comes in with two witnesses long after the others have been seated. He first makes a prayer, then delivers a sermon on a suitable text, which usually brings the bride
With the advent of March the crop of medical officers' annual reports begin to be prolific, and, as usual, some of them contain interesting side lights into the habits and customs of the people of various districts. From Beddington in Northumberland comes a graphic description of the ways of the mining population, which is the worthy of note. The miner, says the doctor, believes in good living. The principal meal "to heavy one," is taken on the return home from work, and then the miner goes off to sleep, the frequent result being dyspepsia and liver trouble. Other meals are taken to suit the family convenience, for which reason food is being cooked nearly all day long. Large quantities are consumed of meat puddings and suet dumplings. Food is frequently cooked in a most unmethodical manner, with consequent waste. The diet in a min-
"Such an evening in London would cost—for the dinner, $2.50; for a carriage, 50 cents; for seats, $4—that is to say, $7, or a saving of $5 over America. And the dinner in London would be a table d'hote at the Carlton or the Savoy, with everybody in evening dress, and dukes and carls and countesses on all sides—a spectacle of splendor such as you couldn't obtain with your dinner in America under a cost of $8 a plate. "In Paris the same evening would cost $5. "No thought is taken for the average man's pleasure in America. Cabs, good dinners, good wines, all are put at such exorbitant prices that the average man must either do without them or run in debt to get them once, say, a month. "In Europe and in England the average man is catered to. He can take a cab, he can eat a good dinner, he can drink a glass of wine, without first preparing his house. "I think it is a sign of the nation's youth and crudity that the average man obtains no consideration in America."—Philadelphia Telegraph.
know each other only casually, saying that their farms were some five or six miles apart. As these men were dressed in overalls and hickory shirts, their faces and arms being well browed by the sun, the grain buyer naturally concluded that they were genuine farmers, and, after asking them a few questions as to their acreage, gave them the cash advance on their crops which they asked. Later the elevator man learned to his sorrow that they were a pair of confidence men carefully "made up" in farmer style. They had consistently "worked" the grain buyers of that region, being very careful, however, to keep out of the area. This campaign of swindling could not have been successfully prosecuted among buyers who belong to an association, as their first swindle would have been promptly reported to every member of the organization and efforts for the arrest and prosecution of the confidence men would have been made at once.
all things that are now white, but these would, of course, be red. Everything else would swallow up the red light and appear quite black. Grass, for instance, would be black as ink, and so would the blue of the sky, but the white clouds would be red. The same kind of things would happen if the sun were blue. Everything now blue or white would be blue and everything else black. The whole sky, clouds and all, would be blue. The grass this time would be blue, not black, for it reflects both blue and yellow. Hair would be all black, the red of the jips would be black and the rest of the face would be a cloudy blue. If the sun were green we would have a little variety. Things that are now yellow would still be yellow, things that are blue would be blue and things that are green would still be green, but there would be no reds, purplets, orange, pinks or any of those cheery hues that make the world look so bright.
to tears. After that the couple are married. Then a hymn is sung and the blessing given. The whole occupies about an hour and a quarter. Before leaving the church a huge Bible is presented to the bridgroom. During the two weeks of waiting between the "under-marriage" and the real marriage all the wedding festivities take place. The happy couple are literally surfeited with dinners, balls and theater parties, and all manner of practical jokes are played on the pair. At the dinner toasts innumerable are given, and each time the couple parties, from the table to the round and touch glasses with the bride and groom, who never rise. Among their friends the idea is not to allow the couple a night of sleep, if possible, before the wedding day. In place of wedding cake candies are presented.
ing district is of a "soft" kind. The teeth, therefore, do not get their proper work to do, and it is quite an uncommon thing to see a miner of thirty-five with a full or even a half-set of good sound teeth of his own. The women, urges the doctor, ought to be taught to cook properly, and the community as a whole instructed in the use of the class of foodstuffs most suitable for their occupation and mode of life. As regards liquor, the general custom among the drinking section of the community is a fortnightly debauch—not a man at one that at a time is preferably from one of view, to the daily tipple common in some parts of the country." In a measure this is true, but the "fortnights" become more frequent, and too often degenerate into habitual drunkenness—a condition bad for all—Sanitary Record.
THE APPEAL.
THE MASSACRE OF THE MASS
IN THE CITY OF BERLIN
This solemnity, peculiar to the gabba Valley, takes the form of a process preceded by weeping women with disheveled hair hanging over their shoulders. They are intended to repress grief and pain and their prayers are offered on behalf of all the sufferers and mourners who on bend the knee line their passage. The idea is that the plains and prayers of the visit to the cemeteries.
NOW JOHN STAYS HOME.
And All Because of an Innocent Remark of His Wife.
Less than two years after his marriage Gayman began to overlook his promises to stay away from the club, after he reached home at night. At first he moved cautiously, pleading a business appointment there and promising to be back in an hour. Soon that promise began to slip his mind, and he came home at all hours. He did even give him a excuse for going. Gayman did not rush home to her mother. She did not appeal to his mother. She played her own game. One evening, when Gayman showed no inclination to leave the house she said: "John, dear, you'll be late at the club." "How do you know I'm going?" he asked.
"Not going? Oh."—affecting intense confusion—"it would be most awkward, that is—but of course you're going."
"Well," he replied, "I must just run around, for I have an appointment. But I shall be back in two hours."
He was back in one hour, and seemed astonished to find his wife alone, reading. He was glum all the evening, showing frequent disposition to go out again. But the same game has worked ever since.
Waiter's Tip Half a Dollar Bill.
To a man giving a dinner in a Times Square restaurant the other night the waiter was not as prompt as he might have been about the initial course. Instead of reprimanding the host took a one-dollar bill, cut it in two with a penknife, and gave one half to the astonished waiter. The other half he put back in his pocket. Not quite sure whether the waiter later took him later, the waiter was efficiency itself for the remainder of the meal. That over, the host coolly led his guests into the street. "Pardon my curiosity," said one of them, "but what are you going to do with the half of that dollar bill? It is as useless to you as the waiter's is to him." "Not a bit of it," was the reply. "I intend dining in the same place tomorrow night, and I shall make it a point to get that same waiter. shall he see you in his dollar bill and I'll bet you the cigars he will hustle to get it." New York Times.
Gave Up Waiting.
A young man who was anxious to secure a job as a railroad brakeman wandered into one of the local yards the other day and came across a bunch of railroad men who were sitting in a shanty. He made known his ambition of one of the men, who is also a joker, asked him a law fsh questions. The youth answered them and then asked: "How long before I'll be likely to get a job?" "Sit down and wait," the speaker said. "There's every ten or fifteen men killed here every day and you can't tell how soon we will need you." "The young man's ambition seemed to be forgotten, remembered that he had an engagement elsewhere.—Albany Journal."
Old Cypresses Gone.
A sad piece of news for the lovers of old *Rome* is publicly announced. The last but one of the five immense cypresses planted over 400 years ago by Michael Angelo Buonarotti in the beautiful cloister of Santa degli Angeli, was blown down and broken to pieces during a recent great rain storm. The sole remaining one of this picturequease and famous clump is also much damaged, tad must soon be restored, a treasure behind the church was taken by the Italian government, the monks were dispersed, and the place turned into a hideous museum of profane dignitaries discovered during recent excavations in and around the city. With almost incredible vandalism the fine old well and fountain in the middle of the Michaelangleques cloister were clumsily removed, and in doing so the roots of the overshadowing cypress trees were much injured. They at once began to decay and fall and were carried off for firewood.
Cosmonolitan New York.
A young Western dentist who is assistant to a dental surgeon upown had the osmopolitianism of New York thrust forcibly upon him the other day, says a newspaper of that city. An elderly Greek, accompanied by his young son, came into the office to have some work done. The youngster spoke a few words in English which the father would have the faux-touch to take the chair first. The dentist examined the old man's mouth and then looked at him helplessly. He wanted to ask him whether he wanted bridge work or plate, but he could not make himself understood. Knowing that most foreigners speak more than one language he called in the other dentist, who speaks French. In English he told his professional brother what was to be done; in French the man translated it to the boy, who in turn told his father in French. The reply came back by the same route.
South Africa in Any Language
Good Advice in Any Language.
Tennison once attended a dinner where G. L. Craik proposed "The Ladies." In doing so he recalled the cynical advice given by a brother Scot to his children: "Tak my advice and dina marry for siller. You can borrow cheaper." Some time later Tennison, at his own kitchen, Mr. Craik's story, impressed the idea without attaching dialect. His so-called remarked: "Surely, father Craik did not use those words." "No he did not. But the Craik is a Scotchman and I am afraid to venture on repeating him exactly. However, it's almost as good in English as in Scotch and it's tremendously true in both."
At the Mission.
Fair Catechist—How many Creators were there? Will the little boy on the aisle please answer?
Young Heathen—Five.
Fair Catechist—How many?
Young Heathen (nervously)—Four.
Fair Catechist (reproachfully)—What?
Young Heathen (desperately)—Three, then.
Fair Catechist (angrily)—What?
Young Heathen (elegant toward his hat)—Two. (And he fed.)
LAID IT TO THE CELLAR.
"Uncle Recognized Superiority of His
Neighbor's "Juder."
Uncle George Blodgett was a farmer near a summer resort in New Hampshire. He was a teetotaler and an uncompromising prohibitionist. He raised a good many apples, and made cider, and sold it strictly to make vinegar. "BILL" Small ran a hotel nearby, he bought a barrel of from Uncle George in the fall of the year.
One day in the following spring Uncle George was at "Bills" hotel. "Uncle George," said Bill, "that barrel of cider I had of you last fall doesn't turn into vinegar worth a cent, but it is the slickest cider you ever put inside of your face, and I want you to try it."
BILL" went into the cellar, and, thinking to have a little fun with Uncle George, instead of drawing a glass of cider, drew a glass of English ale, blew the froth from it, and teak it up to Uncle George. "Try that," he said, "and if you don't say it ever pass your lips the smoothest-stuff that ever passed your lips I'll give in."
Uncle George looked at it, tonched his lips to it, and then drank the whole contents of the without stopping, set the glass down and remarked: "I beats all-what a difference there is in cellars in keeping cider," and walked out.
Judgment of the Minority
At a legislative committee hearing on the equal suffrage bill, a few seasons ago, Dr. Lyman Abbott was the principal speaker presented by the anti-suffragists. He evidently felt that his argument was somewhat weaker than the bristling eloquence of the other side, and, with an effort to persuade him, he time-honored argument of safety in numbers. He closed his address with these words:
"I cannot but believe that the instinct of the majority of women is a safer guide than the reasoning minority. If there were no other obstacle than this it would be a sufficient one. The majority of women do not want suffrage—the majority is likely to be in the right."
Dr. Abbott had no sooner finished the question, with he everready, insensitive wit, interposed this shattering question: "But, my dear sir, Jesus Christ and the twelve disciples were a minority, were they not?"
Value of Teaching Obedience
Value of Teaching Obedience.
Is there any reason why our schools should limit themselves simply to putting children through a certain course of study? We think it is. In our opinion, they fail in developing a spirit of obedience, they fail in discharging their most vital function and at the most vital point. And it seems to us that this failure is one for which the schools may very justly be held responsible. For the very theory on which the state proceeds in this matter of public education is that through education the children will be properly trained along the line of good citizenship unless they learn to be obedient to law. In some way, therefore, the schools must inculcate this obedience—Indianapolis News.
Few Seconds of Horror
Morgan as a Financier
Bearers of Famous Names
Old Times in Washington
Old Times in Washington
Melodies and Mysteries
A miss may be as good a mile in some cases; in others the agony of suspense which precedes a narrow escape is almost as disastrous to the nerve as if the result bore out the apprehension. An incident of the nerve-racking kind is thus related by a young man who was employed by a large clock firm, and one of whose duties was to superintend the putting up of steepe and tower clocks. It isn't much chance for adventure in the placing of a clock. It is prosite business, although it does take one up to the heights; but now and then some little thing will occur which shows one how near the line of everyday living lies to that of tragedy.
"I was in one of the large Western cities, seeing to the construction of a clock which was being placed in the tower of the city hall. The job was nearly done when, one afternoon, I was standing on the roof beside the tower, inspecting the great dial face above me.
"I have become accustomed to heights which a few years age would have made me ill to think of, and I had stepped near the slightly guarded edge of the building without any more thought than if I had been on the sidewalk. Far below me were the brick
One who is held to be a master of the art of judging men and projects with incredible swiftness is J. P. Morgan. "He knows to the last degree the psychology of meeting and dealing with men," says Ray Stannard Baker in a story of this financier.
"The man who sits in his office a citadel of silence and reserve force and makes his visitor uncover his batteries is impregnable. That is Mr. Morgan's way—the way he dealt with a certain owner of coal lands in Pennsylvania, who knew that Mr. Morgan must have his property, and so had come down to exact a good price, to "thrash it out with Mr. Morgan." Mr. Morgan kept him waiting a long time and was impressed, and the impressive, looked the coal man in the eye and only broke the silence to say, "I'll give you $—— for your property." And there the bargain closed.
"Until recently any man might up to his desk, which stands in plain view from the outer office, without the formality of presenting a card; but, while approachable, it would be
When Senor Don Emilio Ojeda, the Minister from Spain at Washington, sails away to his new post as under secretary of foreign affairs at Madrid, the American capital will lose an attractive figure. He is one of the strong links which reach back to unite present history with the most fascinating annals of the past, for he is the linear descendant of that gay cavalier Manuel Ojeba, the companion of Columbus. But it is interesting to note that a man bearing a name equally romantic comes to succeed him—Senor Jacilde Colligyn, who is of the noble line from which sprang the brave and chivalrous Huguenot, Admiral Colligyn.
Many of the diplomats who are now serving in Washington are bearers of names which mean much to the student of history. He is the de Chamburm, rumor credits, with a hopeful affection for Miss ahope, the great-grandson of Laocoon, and he belongs to a family which figured in stirring episodes of French history long before the gallant
Dr. Edward Everett Hale in an article on "Washington Then and Now," in the Outlook, discourses pleasantly of the capital as he first knew it: "The city has grown, in those sixty years, from a mud-hole which had 30,000 people, perhaps, within its borders, to a city of 250,000 inhabitants. The only part of this common (not far from the corner of I and Seventeenth streets) which was fenced in must have been near where the British embassy is now. We called it the gymnasium, I think. That was the high-sounding name for a bowling alley which the young men of the city frequented. We persuaded Mrs. Madison, who was still alive, to visit us there and with great effort
$2.40 PER YEAR.
s of Horror
pavement and the busy people of the street.
"I was holding in my hand a screwdriver, a ponderous instrument used in adjusting some of the larger portions of the clock, and as I stepped near the cornece rail in some way I let the heavy thing fall from my hand. It struck on the rail and then bounced out of sight. The slackening thought of the passersby flashed over me and I grasped the rail with both hands and leaned far over in my attempt to follow with my eyes the fall of the implement.
"A young lady was passing in front of the building, just in line with the falling screwdriver. I held my breath in an agony of suspense. It seemed hours instead of seconds before the screwdriver fell on the bricks only a few inches behind the girl, who was so unconscious of her danger. The noise of the fall caused her to jump and look about her, but she never knew what had caused the mysterious sound nor how near she had come to death, for the instrument she held the bricks and hardlessly on her shoulder award that bordered the pavement. No damage had been done, save to my own nerves, but never shall I forget the horror of those seconds of suspense." -Montreal Herald.
an intrepid man, indeed, who would upon him without definite business in hand.
"He is a man of few words, always shortly and sharply spoken. When a man comes to him Mr. Morgan looks at him keenly, waiting for him to speak first, and his decision follows quickly.
"A young broker who had never seen Mr. Morgan before went to him not long ago to borrow $1,000,000 for a client. He told Mr. Morgan what he wanted in half a dozen words, and handed him the list of securities to he deposited as collateral. Mr. Morgan looked sharply at his visitor 'looked at me as if I were a broker expressed if you glanced swiftly down the list.' I take the loan, he said, and passed the borrower on to one of his partners. That was all... The whole transaction, involving a loan larger than the yearly business of many a small bank, had taken a minute and a half, and Mr. Morgan's side of the transaction had consumed not more than a dozen works."
marquis came on his errand of chivalry to America.
There is another member of the French embassy who bears a name revered in cecclesiastical and secular history—Count Antoine de Sala. He comes from the same line of Northern Italy which produced that gentle saint Francis de Sales, Bishop of Geneva, beloved by all, whether orthodox Catholic or merely admirer of noble attributes of character and mind. St. Francis de Sales is the model of the perfect Christian gentleman, and cecclesiastically he is as much revered as Chesterfield in the more worldly sense. His modern kinsman is a credit to the name.
There are other diplomats who bear historic names. Count Cassini, the Russian ambassador and the dean of the corps, is the last of the Counts Cassini, who enrolled in the early years of the seventeenth century for their astronomical achievements.
The family name will live in history as having produced the greatest number and most erudite of modern readers of the stars.
she got a ball down the middle of the alley and was complimented on her knocking down the king. President Tyler came over and played with the young gentlemen sometimes. Everything had the simplicity and ease, if you please, of a small Virginia town. Whenever the weather would serve, a great many of the southern members of the House or the Senate rode to the Capitol on their saddle horses. There were thirty or forty posts in front of the Capitol near where the statue of Washington now stands. You rode up to one of those posts and hitched your horse. You left him while you went in and attended the meeting of the House; you came out and unhitched him and rode him to your 2 o'clock dinner."
d Mysteries
Wouldst thou see through the riddle of Being
Flying than others can?
Sorrel would give thine eyes new luster
To simplify the plan;
And of God and thy kind shall aid thee
To end what it began.
To Love and Sorrow all Nature, speaketh; if the riddle be read.
They would can see through darkness
Each divergent thread
Of its mazy texture, and discover
Whence the ravel spread.
Love and Sorrow are sympathetic
With the earth and skies;
Their touch from the harp of Nature
discharged soldiers or sailors residing in the state's political faith shall be no test of his fitness. Enumerators, not blanks prepared by the census bureau, must be made upon blanks prepared by the census bureau, in appointing such enumerators be guided, and qualifications for his performance of his duty, and that shall bear the endurance and recommendation of at least one equivalent business standing and of good character. No enumerator must have his duties until he has received from the superintendent of authorizing him to perform the duties of an enlisted member of the subdivision within which such duties are performed, moreover, take and subscribe the fol-
And in case no person shall be found in the jurisdiction of any person or individual living out of a family, compliance to the requirements of this act, then it shall be lawful for the court to take such person as nearly as may be practicable, and to take such person as person, living nearest to such place of abuse. 10. The said superintendent of census shall have the power to provide for the forwarding of return data to the census as may deem proper and adviable. That person and forwarded by such enumerator, as may deem proper and adviable such enumerator in such manner as the said superintendent of census shall provide for the requirements of this act.
Sec. 13. All fines imposed by this act may be paid by the patent jurisdiction and shall accrue wholly to the state. In case any enumerator, or patent attorney, fails to list in the performance of his duties his commission may at any time be revoked by the other enumerator or agent appointed in Sec. 15. The superintendent of the census (6th) day of May next, transmit to the provisional enumerator appointed under the provisions of Sec. 15, the perpetentent of census, in accordance with the provisions of this act, with such provisions as may be deemed necessary and perpetent may deem necessary and Sec. 16. The superintendent of census may be required to copy, copies, stenographers, statisticians in compiling, tabulating and publishing the said census so to be taken under
Sec. 19. The said superintendent of census services under the provisions of this act the sum of five hundred (500) dollars. In the taking of the fifth (5th) decennial census and approved by the superintendent census and presented to the state auditor of this county, whose issue to the party is the taxation of the state treasurer for the amount of and limited as the maximum cost of the census herein provided for; which said party is the carrying for the carrying out of the prosecution of any money in the state treasury not otherwise appropriated. The amount of census is hereby authorized, whenever he may think proper to call upon any other
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
2. In the heat of passion, but in a cruel and unusual manner, or by means
4. By suing another with a gun, or
other firearm, to obtain the person shot for
a deer or other animal.
Sec. 2. The act shall take effect and
enforce its passage after its passage.
Approved April 17, 1900.
CHAPTER 129—S. F. No. 314
AN Act to regulate and
license and deny the rights of persons selling
agricultural produce and farm products
on commercial lands and on the State of Minnesota
for the benefit of their consignors, and
for the purposes of the provisions of this act.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Whenever requested to do so by any person, a commission shall have power to inform the house commission shall have power to inform the commission by any person, persons, firm or corporation licensed under this act, and for, as a condition, to amine the books and accounts of any licensed commission merchant or to amine the books and accounts of any transaction. Any licensed commission merchant or any commissioner or accounts who shall fall or refuse to submit such documents or accounts for the commission of sale shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, commission shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and impose the provisions of its passage. Approved April 7, 1905.
CHAPTER 128-S. F. NO. 190. AN ACT to extend the time for closing the plantation to another than a corporation having the power of eminent domain and legalizing such corporation after the expiration of such corporation after the expiration of General Statutes 1884, section 3431.
Be'it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Wisconsin:
Section 1. Where any corporation other than a corporation having the power of more than three years, by expiration or otherwise, or more than three years, by expiration or otherwise, did not fully close its affair and convey all its property within the corporation, this limitation is hereby extended for one year from and after the passage of this act; made by any such corporation or its proper successor, and disposing of the property of such corporation and closing matters after an excitation of the dissolution, are hereby legalized and though the same had been done within the corporation, herence shall be construed as affecting and or any action being now pending.
Sec. 2. This act shall apply to all plates and buildings within the town and to any addition to any village or city within the state. Plates and buildings contained shall be construed to affect the subject matter by the laws of the state, and in any of the courts of this state. Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be approved until 11. 1963 in its passage. Approved until 11. 1963.
CHAPTER 119—S. F. NO. 269. AN ACT to amend section 53 of chapter 175 of the General Laws of 1888, authorizing the State to be a Lloyds to transact insurance known as Sprinkler Leakage Insurance.
the organization does not issue policies that require the sums than one-fifth of the aggregate of the subscriptions accounted for which they may become liable, the commission shall be required to as are made and prescribed in this act to the admissible person so far as the same may reasonably apportune to the Liords are herein apportued to the insurance known as the insured. 2. Provisions of all acts or parts of acts inconsistent with this act are
Dec. 3. This act shall take effect and
implement the passage of the passage
Approved April 11, 1965.
CHAPTER 131-8. F. NO. 389.
AN ACT TO employ the employment of road runners in
the construction of roads in more than 75,000 inhabitants and
an area of more than 5,000 square feet and
providing for the auditing and management of the men employed under them against the
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 10 in any county in this state
Section 10 in any county in this state
more than 100,000 inhabitants according to
total county and an area of more than
total county and an area of more than
of such county may be appointed by
the board or by majority vote of the
board one or more road formers for a
county by this act, and in addition thereof
of county commissioners may from time
to time be appointed.
When any such statement, duly verified proof of the county provided, is presented to the board of county commissioners, a board shall audit such statement or so, and proper and so much of the proof paid to the formant and the individual worker in the county treasurer in the same manner as other bills against the county treasurer. Any such statement shall be required except that the county treasurer
Sec. 6. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
CHAPTER 12. III-E. F. NO. 18.
AN ACT to establish a branch school of agriculture at Crookston, as a department of the University of Minnesota.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. There shall be established at the county of Folk, under the direction and educational supervision of the board of agriculture, a school of agriculture, which shall be a school of agriculture, under such name and designation, and wherein such name and designation shall be taught such studies and branches of learning as are related to Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be approved April 11, 1906.
CHAPTER 133-H F. NO. 57. AN ACT to prohibit bucket shops and be it enacted by the Legislature of the county of Folk.
contracts, trades or transactions for the benefit of the parties, whereas the parties do not content themselves with the delivery of such property, but do contemplate a settlement thereof based upon such property is, or is claimed to be bought and sold. The parties may also accept any proprietor or sooner than offering to make any such contracts, and may accept or not. It is the intention of the parties.
of this act to prevent, punish and prosecute the wrongdoers engaged in and conducted in places commonly known and designated as “bucket owners” or co-partnerships, who or which ostensibly carry on the business or occupy the business in grain, provisions, petroleum or brokery in grain, provisions, petroleum or
Section 35. The certificate of nomination, than by a convention of delegates shall be presented to the commission for regular primary election by electors resident within the district or political division, as follows: the certificate on a state ticket equal to one per cent (per cent) of the total vote preceding general election; if for a congressional or judicial district office, by a vote preceding cast in any such district at the last preceding municipal or municipal office, by ten per cent in any such county, city, village, ward or other election district at the last preceding dred (500) for any congressional or judicial district, for the last two dreds (500) for any congressional or judicial district. This 2. Act shall take effect and be approved April 11, 1906. Chapter 135—H. F. No. 452. Be it enacted that the revolving fund at the state prison. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. The board of control and the court have agreed that whenever in their judgment it becomes necessary in order to fund the revolving fund of the state prison, to borrow such sums of money from the state prison, to borrow such sums of money from the state prison, however, shall not exceed in any amount of the total of the revolving fund of said prison.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved April 11, 1905.
CHAPTER 138-H. F. NO. 293.
of the General Statutes,
twenty-nine (929) and six thousand
thirty-three (6033) of the General Statutes,
nine (929), as amended by chapter eighty-seven (87) of the General Laws of Minnesota and relating to the foreclosure of mortgages.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section I. That subdivision "third" of section xi thousand twenty-nine (602) of the General Statutes of Minnesota for eighteen ninety-fourteen (1854), to be amended.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and
in force from and after January 1st, 1908.
Approved April 11, 1905.
AN ACT to amuse subdivision fifteen counties by allowing twenty-four (25) of title three (3) of the county of Minnesota for the year eighteen hundred and seventy-six (76) being an act to license amusements in the county.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Wisconsin
State of Minnesota
of section twelve hundred, and twenty-
four (1224) of title three (3) of chapter
nine (9) of the constitution for the
northeast for the year eighteen hundred
and ninety-four (1894) be, and the game
himself amended as to read as fol-
lows:
fuse to grant any license for the above purposes, and provide that such license shall be construed by the courts of said state as a reasonable price per person. The term of such license under the above provision. The term of no such license shall extend beyond the annual election of officers next
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force upon its passage. After spring 1911.
CHAPTER 130-H. F. NO. 631
AN ACT to authorize cities in this state now or hereafter, to acquire lands and inhabitants to acquire lands for public hospital purification, and to pay the cost thereof by issuing the bonds of such city.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That any city in this state now or hereafter, and county inhabitants, in which there is a city and county public lands as may be necessary thereof either for the use or by commission of the land as may be necessary thereof for the opening and widening either by public taxation or by issuing for; anything in the charter of said city prohibit the use of any bonds in exigent property in such city to the contrary property in such city to the contrary property that the aggregate amount of bonds issued for such purpose shall not be in sand dollars, par value, and shall not be in sand dollars, par value, and shall not be per cent per annum.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be amended as follows: (1) passage. April 19, 1850.
CHAPTER 144-H. F. NO. 735.
AN ACT to amend chapter three hundred and ninety-nine hundred one hundred one (1901), of the State of Minnesota for the year one thousand nine hundred one (1901), of chapter eighty-one (81) of the Act, and of chapter ninety-nine (1901), of the year one thousand eight hundred ninety-nine (1898), entitled "An Act to amend the law of county attorney in all counties of the state of Minnesota to the computation of one hundred thousand (100,000) and not more than one hundred thousand (100,000) ants, for clerk hire and to provide for the appointment of such an ants." Code of the state of
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That chapter three hundred seventy-five (175) of the encyclopedia of the year one thousand nine hundred one (1901) be and the same hereby is amended so as to
**Sec. 2. Whenever, according to the enumeration of any county in this state, which has counted fifty thousand (500,000) inhabitants, shall acquire said population inhabitants, such county at once becomes underwater, according to such censuses, the population of such county increases by the amount (200,000) inhabitants, the provisions of (200,000) inhabitants, the provisions from the faint filings of the enumeration of such county, shall no longer apply
Sec. 3. All acts and parts of acts and inconsistent herewith, are hereby repealed.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be approved April 11, 1965 in passage.
CHAPTER 141-S. F. NO. 116
The General Laws of 1885, relating to probing officers and employees of cities as well as the state from which they are useless in which the State of Minnesota, or any city, party, be elected by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota.
Section 142 of the General Laws of 1885 be and the same is hereby amended so as to read as follows: the city, village or county in this state shall hereafter receive any act in any case in which the State of Minnesota, the county, the city, village or county in which the city or employee is a party, if the case be tried in the city or village of which he is a
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in effect its passage. Approved April 11, 1965.
CHAPTER 142-8. F. NO. 146. AN ACT providing for the manner of the award of the degree in aid of high schools, graded schools, semi-graded schools and rural or com-
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York Section 1. The appropriations made by the schools, semi-graded schools and rural or common schools shall be made by the first (last) day of October in each year, is shall be made of public instruction to deliver to the students of each class of schools in each county of the state enumerated in section 1. Each state auditor to draw his warrant upon the treasurer for the amount by each certificate to the several enumerated schools.
gallantiation
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Minnesota:
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from the date of its passage. APPROVED. 1865.
APPROVED. 144-S-F. F. NO. 308. AN ACT authorizing the return of one hundred and twenty-five (122) dollars to LOC. S. C. and appropriating money therefor. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York that the sum of one hundred Section 1. That the sum of one hundred
Defective Page
and twenty-five (225) dollars be, and the same is hereby appropriated for any other wage, if not otherwise wage appropriate, to be paid to the state treasury, to reimburse said county for fines against Gustaf Galow, Amet Galow, Herman Galow, which were paid into the state treasury, but should have been paid into Sec. 2. The state auditor is hereby the state treasurer for the above named amount the treasurer has laid out Les Quirte County.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 1, 2014.
CHAPTER 14-5- F. NO. 364
# THE BOARD of the county commissioners of any county, where a ditch has been dug, shall draw a chitch to a new outet and make a second assessment on the lands benefited, to cover the cost of such ex-
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota: has hereover been filed with the county auditor and has been filed with the county bondors signed by one or more freeholders as provided by chapter 10, section 101, subsection 101, mandatory thereof, asking for the establishment and county designating the commencement and outlet thereof, where all requirements of the ordinance have been fulfilled with, and the ditch has been established in accordance with the assessments, in accordance with said petition, and the assessments affected have been made and confirmed, on the assumption that the minus or outlet named in the petition, and such ditch would be affected make such ditch rectal to drain the lands sought to be drained therapy, it is necessary that the outlet named in the petition beyond the boundary of such designated outlet, outside the boundary of such designated outlet, to a point beyond such designated outlet, extension of such ditch to the point of outlet necessary to make such ditch beyond the boundary of such county may employ an engineer of such county to be drained, and when such county sought to be drained, and when such county commissioners, may make a second assessment to cover such county commissioners as the first assessment for said ditch was made and the assessment shall be used exclusively to such new outlet.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
QUARTER FOUR YEAR F. NO. 888.
AN ACT entitled "An act providing for the reimbursement of actuality and necessarily paid and otherwise in the performance of their duties, executing excessive incurring or omitting the board in counties of the state have exceeded 15,000 and less than 150,000 in dollars and less than 150,000 in
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota: county in this state having at any time a population of more than one hundred, then last preceding state or national county, then last preceding state or national county commissions thereof is fixed by special law, or otherwise, such commissions amount now or herein provided, be required necessarily paid and expended by them for travel or in other cases, in the county (excepting expenses incurred at the county not exceeding the sum of two hundred dollars per one year). Before allowance of any amount for disbursements a sworn statement of such disbursements and specimen of such disbursements as other for what each item was incurred or paid, shall be filed with such board, and take such county, as other for such county.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. April 1986
CHAPTER 147-S. F. NO. 80.
AN ACT to relegate chapter two hundred forty-one (241) of the General Laws of the State of Minnesota (1901), entitled "An act to provide for the revision and codification of the General Laws of the State of Minnesota."
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
implement the following provisions:
Approved April 11, 1965.
No. 207.
AN ACT to appoint a commission to as-
certain, exactly determine and survey
the land and other lands under Ramsey and others made a
below Ramsey county, Minnesota, in the year 1881,
and to appropriate the sum of $300 for
land and commis-
sioners' expenses.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That a commission, constrain and L. F. Hubbard and be the same hereby is appointed to ascertain, exactly where Alexander Rathen and other commissioners in the year 1851, in the county of Nicolae. See 2. That the sum of three hundred dollars be necessary, be and the same is hereby appropriated to the other appropriate states be drawn and used by said commission and the necessary traveling expenses of the commissioner in charge of the duties aforesaid, and on behalf of the auditor shall direct.
Sec. 3. Said commission shall make full report of the execution of its trust
to the governor of this state on or before
the 15th day of January, 1905.
The governor will take affect and
be in force from and after its passage.
Approved April 12, 1905.
CHAPTER 11B-8. F. NO. 188.
AN payment of road taxes and the election
and compensation of road oversurers in
countries having a population of 150,000 or more.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
See S. 5. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 12, 1950.
CHAPTER 1525 - S. F. P. No. 298 ANNAL NO. 1002 - Inhabiting indebtedness of cities of ten thousand (10,000) inhabitants or less, and to wintheir debts of bonds with which to pay the same. Legislature of the State of Illinois.
Whereas, hitherto it has been customary to engross and enroll bills, joint resolutions and legislative acts with pen and ink, in long hand, and
Bec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage and approval.
April 19, 1908
Sec. 3. That this act shall in no way impair the salaries of register of deeds in such counties, but that the same shall be paid to all all fees collected by the register of deeds of such counties shall be turned into the county of said county as now provided by law.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in
improvement through its passage.
Approved April 12, 1986.
CHAPTER 155- S. F. NO. 517.
AN ACT providing for additional clerks
hire for judges of probate in certain
cases.
It be enacted by the Legislature of
the State.
Legalism or the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. In all counties of this state the judge may not and not more than 75,000, and in counties 45,000 and not more than 75,000, and in counties now or may behere less than that provided for by the General Laws of the state. The sons of such county may allow a sum of money to be paid to the clerk in said proate office in addition to the sum now allowed by law. The said amount so to be allowed to be fixed in the sum now allowed by law. At 1063 at their next meeting after the passage of this act and annually thereafter the said clerk will in all cases be required to clerk hire them in all cases for the services rendered to the county by a certificate of the judge of probate to the person entitled thereto his warrant upon the county treasurer of said county for
Sec. 2. This act shall in no way effect or modify any existing law applicable to said county relating to the salaries and compensation of judges of probate
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and impose the following provisions on its passage. Approved April 12, 1500.
CHAPTER 106-8. F. NO. 018 AN ACT providing for the payment of the payment of school fees to superintendents and assistant superintendents. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. In all counties of this state containing a population more than 75,000, and in which counties are now or former districts, the county commissioners may impose the sum of $800 per person per semester incurred in the visit of schools in such county by the superintendent of schools of such county, and for no other purpose than to superintendent of schools providing that payment and paid excess the sum of $800; providing that payment and expenses shall be allowed and expenses shall be allowed and paid upon timely verification and itemized other claims against such county are
See 2. That this act shall in no way impair the salary and compensation of the superintendent of schools or assistant teachers. See 2. This act shall take effect and impose the salary and compensation of his passage. Approved April 12, 1905.
CHAPTER 175—S. F. 302.
AN ACT to amend the provisions pursuant to the provisions of chapter 38 of the General Act of 1905, amended by chapter 88 of the General Act of 1905 and 395 of the General Law of 1905, the amendments and laws and creed of uneasy and pursuant to said acts and creed.
anonymous thereto.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York.
Sec. 2. This act shall not apply to or be used in proceedings as now provided by law, or any actions or appeals now pending in which such proceedings is called in question.
CHAPTER 196 198 200 202
NO. 7
A system of drainage of swamp and
maryland land under the provisions
of this act
delimitation of the
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota drainage commission as soon as is practicable after the completion of the project a number of acres of low wet lands belonging to the state of Minnesota for d irrigation.
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
cultural purposes, and where the same should be constructed to drain the said land. In the execution of this act, the directed to cause to be made a complete route, beginning and termination of a route, beginning and termination of a route sufficient in number and size and length, and so located as to drain in the area of the river or swamp lands owned by the state as in or more cases included within such system. And to accomplish said purpose, said commissioner should be equipped with hydraulic, or topographical engineers and such other more competent engineers, or topographical engineers and such other more competent engineers, or topographical engineers to comply with the provisions of and to fix their salary or compensation.
Such engineer, or engineer, shall upon such commission, or upon such commission, make the necessary such low, wet or swamp laws owned by such commission, lay out a complete plan of a system most practicable way when complete, and most purposeful to which they are by nature
Sec. 8. Upon the completion of his hands of said commission not later than the nineteenth day of said commission (1909), all his files, notes, maps and reports which shall become the exposition said maps, notice of the state and shall make a complete report of the state and shall make a complete report of the state with an itemized account of its expenditures, and containing a statement of the private owners, of all lands which with according to the report of the engineers, which report shall embody the maps and report shall enable the legislature to obtain an intelligent idea of the subject, together as the commission may think proper of said commission shall be the nineteenth hundred seven (1907), and the various officers and boards of the
Sec. 4. This act, shall take effect and
adopt the following provisions in its passage.
Approved April 13, 1905.
AN ACT to appropriate money to reim-
mend the National Guard to the Mi-
tzerland National Guard at its encampment at Lake View, in
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Wisconsin.
State of Minneapolis or whenever any mineral, gas, coal, oil or other material separately and rights and interests owned in the surface oil or other similar interests may be assessed and taxed separately from real estate and may be sold for taxes in real estate or may be assessed and taxed as effect as other interests in real estate. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and make the property its passage. Approved April 15, 1966.
CHAPTER 12. H.-F. H. NO. 447. All sale and prosecution of property and sale of school and other state lands and taxing the minimum price
Sec. 2. All acts or parts of acts inaction
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in
passage of its passage.
April 13, 1865.
CHAPTER 183-H. F. NO. 47.
AN ACT to provide for the appointment
of a state highway commission and de-
signation of a highway commission for the construction and repair of
for that purpose to the several counties
Sec. 7. On or before the first Tuesday of each month, the state shall estimate the probable amount road and bridge fund during that state year and apportion it among the states as herein provided, and shall immediately send a report of the amount of each county stating the amount of the state fund for each county for said year out of said fund. In making an amount of each county bridge fund accruing to the several counties in the state, no more than three per cent nor less than one per cent of the amount expended during such year, and in deeding one county, the said highway commission shall take into consideration the extent of money expended by it in road construction such such road construction and the extremal development of new territory.
Sec. 10. On or before the first Monday of each year, the auditor shall certify to said highway authority that road purposes in his county during that year and said commission shall be required to provide such purposes for the state road and bridge fund from upon said auditor shall draw his warrant in favor of the treasurer of such county and exceed one-third the amount so expended in any county having charge of the construction, wily refuse or refuse to comply with the state engineer or road expense to the method of construction or im-
Defective Page
expended thereon shall be deducted from
the amount reported by the auditor of
such county.
Sec. 11. Whenever saw county board commission for the establishment of a state road between its and an adjoining county, the commission shall decide that it is necessary shall order its establishment and determine whether it will be paid by each county. The work shall be paid by each county. The work shall be paid by county boards it can agree, and if county boards it cannot cause the work to be done and at the time the next tax loye the auditors of the respects levy the part of the cost of said road and the part of the cost of said road said commission. The said commission. The said commission to include all bridges upon, or under, the road to be improved or constructed, proclaimed, and fund accruing to the state road and any year shall be expended for bridges.
Sec. 15. This act shall take effect and
amend the provisions of Sec. 1, Jan. 1, 1905.
Approved April 13, 1905.
CHAPTER 104-H. F. NO. 100.
AMANAGERS in all counties of the state
of Kansas admitted fifty thousand (150,000) inhabitants or
the exclusive county of Kansas may be appointed
the executive council, as amended, to
appropriate by such board out of the general road and
the county of Kansas, as may be appointed
lating the expenditure thereof by such
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That the board of county commissioners of all counties in this state have a population of one hundred and fifty-five thousand, have a population of one hundred and fifty-five thousand, shall have the exclusive control of the expenditures of all money appropriated for road and bridge fund of such counties for the purposes of constructing or repairing, building, or bridging of roads and bridges, or either, in any case.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
dollar per annum; one deputy and one
admiral, and a sum of twelve hundred dollars per annum; the sum of twelve hundred dollars per annum shall be paid the sum of eleven hundred
dollars per annum; the sum of eleven hundred
dollars who shall be paid the sum of one thou-
sand dollars.
Sec. 6. That section fourteen (14) of chapter three hundred and sixty-five (36) of the General Laws of 1908 be amended so as to read as follows:
Sec. 14. The county surveyor shall appoin-
t a surveyor to be paid the sum of one thousand four
hundred and fifty dollars per annum each,
addition to the services to be performed
by the surveyor. The surveyor must be
paid a tenure and to pay his own traveling
expenses within said county while in the
county. The surveyor may be paid to him as such; one clerk who shall be paid the sum of one thousand dollars per
annum.
CHAPTER 108-H. F. NO. 500
inspectors of mines in counties of
this state, to prescribe their powers and
duties, and to provide for their com-
munity.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota.
Section 1. That the board of commissioners of any county in this state where an inspector is appointed in operation is hereby authorized and disciplined, to 100,000, to appoint an inspector of mines, who shall hold office for a term of ten years, the successor is appointed and qualified for the purpose of discharging the inspector, to fix the compensation and traveling expenses of such inspector, to remove the same, and to remove such inspector and appointee the judgment of said board the best in the case, so such mines may so require, and to fill vacancies arising from any other cause
such owner or agent if they or any of the employees is situated, and if such owner, owning a county such notice may be given by publishing the same in one or more newspapers, county if there be one and if no newspaper, county if there be one and if no newspaper, county if there be one and if no newspaper, published in some ad-associative newspaper, or a period of three consecutive weeks, or required to continue work in any place or places in which the inspector of mines aforesaid, except to do such work as required in order to render such place or in order to render such place or copied, the person or person or corporation so requiring employees to work in all accidents causing injury or for all accidents causing injury or reason or such place or placed not having been repaired or changed as required.
Sec. 6. The salary and expenses of the
county treasurer of the county for which he
is employed, the salary and expenses of the
county commissioners shall furnish
the county by other county officials. The board
of county commissioners shall furnish
necessary books, stationery and supplies. More
persons working in any mine or place where
the mine or place is located, or an agent of any mine, shall notify the mine or place of any accident that services are needed, he shall immediately
amine as to the necessary precautions and
general safety of the mines and see
observed and strictly carried out.
If any accident in any mine, loss of life or
serious injury is reported, the mine or place
be the duty of the manager or superintendent of the mine, and in his absence the mine or place be the duty of the manager or superintendent of the mine, to give notice thereof to the
particulars of such accident, and the mine
from the facts reported, go immediate
make such suggestions and render such
premises and personally investigate
the causes of such accident, and the safety of the employees of such mine and the
nature. The owner, operators or agent
of any mine shall at all times keep a
record of any assistance, or otherwise
and logging on hand, when required to
be used as support, or otherwise
situated of such mine may be rendered
readable.
Sec. 2. The aid park commissioner of the village government, by the municipal board of park commissioners of the village, shall elect one of their own number annually to chair their meetings and for the conduct of their business. In case a vacancy exists, the village council shall the next annual village election choose one of all the appointed term.
The village recorder shall be the recording officer of the board.
CHAPTER 168-H. F. NO. 1.
CHAPTER 108- H. F. NO. 1.
AN ACT proposing an amendment to article nine of the Constitution of the State of Minnesota relating to taxa-
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The 'Following amendment to article nine of the Constitution of the State of Minnesota' requires the publication of sections one, two, three, four and five of the article adopted in 1884, relating to burying the body of a deceased person, in the state of Minnesota for their upbringing when adopted shall be known as section 1. The power of taxation shall never be surrendered, suspended or imposed upon the same class of subjects, and purposes, but public burying ground, academies, colleges, universities, and all other church property, and houses of worship, institutions of purely public charity, and public purposes, but public burying ground, academies, colleges, universities, and all other church property, and houses of worship, institutions of purely public charity, and public purposes, but shall exempt any public purpose, shall be exempt from taxation of property not ex-dividual, individual or head of a family, as the legislature may authorize municipal corporations to issue improvements upon property benefited thereby without further, that nothing herein contained be construed to affect, modify, or impair the taxation of the gross earnings of
Sec. 2. Such proposed amendment shall be subject to a proval or rejection, at the general election for a seat, for the general election for six, and the qualified electors of the state in which such district electors shall vote, such electors shall be declared and the returns thereof shall be made and certified within the time, such declared in the manner provided by law, of the election for such electors, and if it shall appear thereupon that at such election shall have voted for and not voted for the next section hereof, then he governs as a proclamation thread, and effect and be in force as a part of the
Sec. 3. The ballots used at said election have, in print thereon: "Amendment of article nine of the Constitution, referring amendments on two of the four and the four articles adopted by the House, to the article adopted by vector voting upon such proposed amendment shall place a cross mark, a ballot oppose the words 'yes' and 'no' and a ballot oppose the words 'yes' and 'no' for or against said amendment, and his vote shall be counted as acceptance of the election as provided by the election laws of this state."
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and bind the person to its passage. Approved April 13, 1956.
CHAPTER 104-H. F. NO. 63
AN ACT legalizing and confirming village water containment two hundred and twenty-five thousand acres and granite over five acres, and granite over water works, gas, electric light, heat and water supply. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Section I. That in all cases where any incorporated villages in counties now or twenty-five thousand (225,000) inhabitants are under general or special law heretofore adopted an ordinance or ordinances for the management, persons or corporation, to construct water works, gas electric or water plants, or either of them, and such ordinance or ordinances or by an incorporated village under general or special law heretofore undertaken or adjoined.
erred rr a re
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Shake @ Motes eats
Shee et cee a
Head tae al
wee eae
approved Apri Was dag. PenAee:
CHAPTER TH. 7, NO. 8
13 SOPRA, cw
3 Rae tee ed AS
a Pcie
ee eens
Se certs eats
sPigorsista tse tn
SERRE Cee tncionton ot tn
ee a ee
Seen ae a aOR
ere erie aor s
SUE GT ee ng ata ne
Pobre Ladatine than tae
Siete Samy each coe AR
coerce
Fee ee ee aE ve ett ant
sper in
CHAPTER 1BCR. F, NO, st,
a Se Pera ier Ce
is ese Mtoe ahs
SAS aa San seed eae ae
sate Se Rives cane
i ere es
ES ee cen oat fi oe
Ee Oe Sr cate ac»
Rel Merete sj ti sees of
piection 1. That any, clty An the state of
GHAPTER 172-1. F. NO. sat.
pe ie
ation of ver fifty thousand, Godly. to
SUG nea St ea eh lace ae
shorn, Sul ich ate Sit se
SHG OF stale etka SS toe ofS"
Brig ake ech on fc Spo
DEP SBMS" leet of the
adie: Stan sta sn a aaa
Paine ae Cea oes
Egy sian os. an
Sein nelStary A ens” palpate 9f
Ee Gtherwite, Renae which’ are at the
Uninc ales on 2 wate or eae Bln
‘or both, now owned by stich city, of are
SES, otal" elllanstat
SPGore tue der MMe SP hat
sealer rene ates
Pn ek A
eon es
txsued shall always be general obligations
fof sala city ang Shalt wea Arg Hien upon
ERS ia ley Saracen
Sei eantece RR SOMES
Sah Sess ae
Ee Bid SoG wutnorized by ths
chs So, Rent Se pate 2
Siig Mae ae setae ae
Rxennnged’or otherwise ‘diepowea ot" Tor
Tv Misia re Serial th
SeaTac Spay toe Sadar TH Se
Fea lnlob “hate tn provisos ot
‘Sec. 4 Said bonds may bo issued
ees sh Ce rae ae
SPE GG ate’ abuts the Reames
Sate near ile ate cae
Ber ee aes oe
a vote of the people on such tssuance of
ile Renee Sena
Ee pe aritine, scote creat
Hekdoie pana teat tara
See ie eae cee tea
siete ierneddaee ar e
ea hotcrr ak
See ele ee
iii rate arenas
er alin hate sng re
areca, eee dae
fis Shame OF fares ha
ie aay Se aire
ing let Rake
be is force from and after tts Passage: "
ae. tea wea
cAPtER GPa, x0. 28
ap RE ESE OR
ar slaps eaten ae
SS ie pee rs
RE Fare cae saitatet ot
CERO RE nar te on
fe iip camer aunne a hate torts
BENG Sanasea tt att hens
Pala ie Game tea
a lt a Bet
ieee tate eat nee teh
SSPE; Gulatnh eae sear
Hine hee tad a a
es cae eeu eemneaatn tt
"Approved ApH ha 1005.) SE
CHAPTER ITER P.O, 208,
Rg Ry A abe
ce
Siac Siinnesotne io
Beige Smee ewes fx one
Wea hne” publeation of ang texal yaotics
Aiteted wy such change of day of pub:
we coterie aatie™
“Approved April 14, 1905. a ~
eg SECT IEA IBS Psy
Semler oft Sette
fee rine areas tcemelt
setae tae aan he MPH
piece ot aat Gree tena
Sie cai dar eater tease
Ea ences ee a
ce ey oan ba
SESE SP Pee ti etn a
Siekioame “for, cenerai taxation. for. the
Ervin b's can tot bus
Ngee. 2. ‘The aatd bonds shall be in such
aos os peer aan ee
Hera ont Sra cee
Soatperanintans payable semi-annually
Hath er eect att a
Farr eal al tsaes ate da
eehsin! neler in Bh
iain, AU tray ae a
{ie date’ot Tasco of said bonds respec
Be cae tons og mires cone
aut aah ted Ses
Sea Sura ary ele eae
Sanotealamiaaten Beat
“the quaiter shall jeep a record of al
oo ST ee eee rae
Ee Snare Ser cata
See ed sete ute thee a
BEER ne te
RE? Bas et Sumy cpm
loners shall annually after the date of
Fee ge Mit eae alata
Sate se Hat acti gat
HBRios) set te “ka et
So oa Gamers
serena te Sec a
sigan ah ere aris
pe cee
ra" rue onra. cpety go
Ban Te aia coal he
Inge cout anu gr Bo ir EAM
rfc See adilonat ‘to alt ‘other powers
Tote dict ees SMM sae
“iyi AoE ie HS
papacy en
1 SEE EAE BR an
AEE tea gh ntabian
Heigiees commana as
SE i Gaat matt ara mat
SEE SEDGE cattery ot
st ton carer ble
Heer te ace RRA prt
HREM intr ett tne Se
feeder, Beit arte te
iar e t h ar ite
shal eed eruetn Pou ial
Belang caer eae tea
Ee Ran rte tals ll
nS ar aanipy ttn, pstent
cada” Seat Ata adm
surecree osanie, Sica
Se Gena sean ian
Beea AAU of ttettlea” tt aS
Edita ady Rae aaa
Coane ibe as en
Het ree Saat 20S
Seed" tote pote'n ae
Si eerie rakes i ice
Sos Teer el ate, hase
Bae each, “eter he ae
Seeds Se Set ea te te
ests * petiaes aes
eee the teres tf hab
ress te ee a ft
ES r abt ean euctie a
San a, aa ara
SERA Me Se
ER Girhe a int a etna
OS ie Sor ay eames ot
SPS abel ott gees Seat
Sees ot Oa tal ee
Engi fie emi er
tee atte cl dt tel att
ore cea eae tee
Sp, cima hat OD ares
Se er deta hea
aig, ecru: ay aut
Ee ea Soe
gr ror tah Sagano oF,
Hib ieee med fate ne hs 208k ek
Se
WB, gov omen, sre, gut
2 fi he aeerah Sa 8
Beta ge Siniret gusta Sack
Bee SL ee are ie
Pit tae Grier sctnceat
SLE ate oe cae o
Sere ete ta teal titast
of omer eee ce te
Bere tame Gara eyes
power ts, hereby conferred on, tHe come:
Be (ciel cee hae
Se gute ional arent
Geis atl ceieter ams
cate aaPaite ian ee
oe aad
of isdemeator. The provisions” of (Hi
the duticn of the'pubile examinee."
ee enh Pl ae ta i
sect ot ene
an cou st shel ok eet and
we hate cal vis sina a
sdbebcd oth ae
CHAPTER FB 80.
ae EE BRB, ee
Reais Seer et eetatee
Sribiy cu fea rate saat
SPELT racantre ot
fer inszaae Tarte ot oe
saa cL, Geokie woke
demand, collect oF receive from any" per:
scovid, Seeders pens bee
fetch lice by see ah
Eee uneatnel SiS a tay
Sessa fo gates Satay
Seat atte Gna ars
Pa ae uate Sy Reet
Fait Sh Teche be eal
Be hae cies ganas
tov the. publle, ‘and in’ either. such cast
Genter eerie
thotmnd dollars. “And any person who,
Een ae cut Gt ae
SP Liehase econ aie
a thea nie eae
Seer ae ae
Berle at shal take fc
offs cThecee an De re net
ag SATE I BOA ay
iene Sta oP sts
Here ess pale ani
el mernaee
2g lt onseted by the Legislature of the
Haahite Rea fara Sane
Evie, aimee cee
Fg mar mae ox oeseieae
of aia," aa ine
utara a ear nae
ieramete sorts Garay tt
Sania at ena ee
Sct Feat fe Met
Becta wheat
Soo See
wi ee ete gs cetac™
“approved Apri" 10, 1008.
TP PE ICL an
ial re esd oo HR Se a
eanaar gate a nna
Seale ee
SETTER iy tn taruatar of Ge
feito ans itene"e gs
Polsmended soles Girendae fallow: 4
‘Sec. 715%. "All examinations and recog-
seein tay maetals wee
areca utes ieee
Bereecihaa ama Geta
ih tiad Sin Sees ah ute
Fen fie) days after such examinaiton has
ig See eeccresie m
Hila tieehee ran ae
Ben iies cs ean
Sous Gyaumnneree
tachment as for contempt. er
mes eterna
sbi ath ia Bas
GHAPTI 10-R Fo, a
ae SEES ENG io
Had, euler te Cat
ocated and entanitaned eee ‘and ue
Sen Gets Sr Bl
ferereaier cate
i slit Gees
BET eae te Legnaro the
ETERS ae com commie
seater al
Gere der eaten Sete
Ee eetatanatin tata
Shale “Ushas eeSaderad® ie” We
EASE? aie a toe
ee
fake ink wach Sita
Srdiitetertnde da cance
ea ee al asad ead
ie ae a aes ined
iRise, Gk mie dn
St Sa Sacra
Sealth, Sonvenience of welfare, or ‘be of
Se Sit dlsras a cnt
i neat Anat aa
fecrne: Shes ae
Sects ale pale ces
Seu argh
as eke SAP Stat
See ade Set are
Sir ater, tn aioe
Soccer ater! enine
lovee eatin ae
Aosta Ma a Sa oa
Bet ean dln hi
Coe eae fetes
that Seren ies
Hanah Geala aaeer Giee
peseiree Sai Ae ie
a at i eet eae
Weahe fap ef tala chapter 2 of the Gen
Segre eb of ial, as amended by chao.
1, AGT tol aiend chapter gue huindret
an MOE ifneet ISGe the, eter
Enea tktcen hana a ee,
Runavea thirty-four (aH) e¢ the Generat
EgWe'se Glehlen pundted and nety=
Ello rating ig urns
Dae Gaeia" pt Lepr of the
SAULo! MAE Section nigetyzeven
ai) of ter one Mand a Seventy
ee CesNMBH ne Bence Laws of eink:
Exp Gebtasta aad Ginette kh aa
Lead Oy aacion fur i ehaoaer cw
General ars ot eighteen Hurarea and
ceneetnune Gat, “Me ang, theta it
Serty ena ip hath case "Shet
Mrsaded all ead as fllgwe,
Terabe Wo" omipany ty ibis inte
canes thn, Ave, ipatae’ of arose
GGG Wcanee ‘companies’ shall°do “busts
ness In thie state unless, it has fon "ae
Be this mate ‘as security forall ies
Bitte oka ie’ Lnlted” Bunter. or” bettas
af aty‘ot the musleipaltten of this sate,
‘tonal oigatens eoired Sy fet
ae eT okie aa’ Ee
‘inte, orth, scotectve of Denmees Oy
Eilat of the" len and bearing tort
Sat ke Goat
Ee feat er renee
‘hall never be 'lesr than one hundred
SE Sompantestasniaed to insure. bloyeteg
ores teamed
Soe or eens
Se Et ere
Eager miall Mo retaiaed: wy: the inrurmnce
Eommissioner and be alsposed af as di-
*Besltamerr, tas th dpe of
mortgages’ on real estate shall not exceed
Boat dee Bashi
Sewanee
iis omen ‘eae
i peeras eter i as
Soot mee, Maes
Emmissionct oe his Hate a cerhcate
fa eat aon at sit fot the ened of
satpond of nek Hae ast one Ranavel
See hae Se ene
marietta ae oe
Brie Gataceie ai uae at
Tieiitwa oe this otate, tating the ers
Of the’ sectritien go" Weld, and: that he ta
gue hanaved: thousand daliate tion sy
No depnsit-shait be Fequired in thie seats
Reo a eae cane
cpa Mita eh rat a6
ois ied bata See
‘Approved April 15, 1905. *
pce ae Le
Hiodet we dene cee seat
SuperiMtendent Se ‘acho ace 1S
ceed fouricen Hundred oliare ‘8.4
HER TEEEG wy ne Legit o
Section 1. ‘That fn all counties in this
See ee be
Serna er Te hereby sauthoried t8
ee eee
Showed ‘shall’ not Th the ‘nggroste, ex:
eee rears aes
Bf thi ae shat aby te ous where
Pane ama "eae et
hee oe the county maperintendent ray
Sitterent: parts of the county not to ex:
Piet hie eee eae
‘Ed’ ‘ounces euperintendent Tn holding
veh inatiutes not to execea the umm of
fig Bata rear
aaa, rind Sat tt fed
SSeS
Seah egy tof te Gee
Speak Bhatt al tle ee a
“Approved April 13, 1005. ™
CHAPTER 8, FO,
ay, BETIS EZ
Hs Ade ot Panto ak ool
Meee Ne a pom
omone d, cnapeer teen Rundred ete
Sele eae 2 ents
‘Provided, that when the territory of the
eee ene Se erire ti
gee debe eta nee
{Het ‘and’ adtaching’ hm fo snow con:
eS eee ee
iat aa to aie
ieee ne nteperatne
Deeees a aed Sree
Detluon in ‘the manner aivecteay that to
Seah fae sernateg, eterno, eet
Ee SS sen acetic
Sis eee
ice Seared
feat aes
Sees
ea nae me oe
eeeetaaesi i ce
‘Aso ‘ithe coutey” a0aRose each
the counties petitioned, eee Se
BSA ae vtec er op
tae ces riaare fo
Fea than ag eRauesd danas Sob.
See cee ae ee
2 eee
‘may brsanize that ‘part of" auch diate
Regie “ana pare eee
eee oa i ca
Se SeG aeuee me
‘“Provited that this act shall only, apply
cise Sn oes oa ate
beh Sree
seecogtal & Starter et
Pane crams cones
BON ce a a, ad
Teeter
nd trey ace he As
ia tek ata
CHAPTER IB, NO,
aA dial ar eae St
Frph gee a tne ee
1 pelea, ae ae
Be nt
i acar teeeaaaa
‘Bente 3 alinndola “ Dees
ase ihrer Smt
2 Se eeee 2
Rovernea and mataatd by Repolice pen
ae cer are
et foe a ieee eae
ou es & pein seed
Cts nae teenie
iy aris ham, ea
Teas Saar ital
police department ow exiting of wtle
eer Sree S
ee Saath Rae ieee
ck pore
Petit Wea tat el
Heo alna adres Snes antares
Srpe aoae eres
eived' from tho. State of Minnesota or
Soleo ee eee
ie cee wares
Pee a teh Mel the age of ae
oe eee
Seis romea ae pence
Inend of such city" in which’ such pension
iSaicus sean tee
vine in the. eriormasce of wer duties ap
Bakr RARE tata itl
gle tig aay pte eo
Pecelvo such pension as above provided as
AN AGT to provide for printing, Bodies
Badlring iain os
DF i am tala of
ct lt
Ba RR oe mer tt
Weis Sukie fae
sieer toda ping aad
Figane iea Tea
eats ei! ats ma
scien nage”
Siete tutta se
fe icone hg pee
ie tnd Bacar ke tne aseast
they"are authorized tp dx the mguot far
Ses oe rere eh eet ee ventinne ae the:
Bet voluis to itecnn or exidagee tthe
Bec ibe ias Seete tace
Sea age cea rs
fhe conyrignt Zor any, person: and it anid
Revised Latwn are published by m, private
Person aaid commissioners. “shall” pure
SaaS cece tntl Sie
Seche wate ga for eachanges nS ONT
ie SSR as ie
obsoiodte Sri get ae ge
Sern aes
fetes of the agate ts eald ‘commlesion=
‘Beak Fen thourang doliars, oF (90
Gay teeta Sree oe
Gee waite Say ae
‘ers shall serve without compensation,
Rael sins Uta a ae
pind ce fie teat ot
peut cassanr eae
BE areas wisest
‘Ste, 6. ‘The Revised Laws, 1006, shall
srs alttebateta att At
Piece Mahia act ahall take effect and
were ee ahaa st
sibs oth
CHAPTER 3-8 7. NO, 3,
ay SER ER Sr te
| “laws of 100% relating to the preserva
& oan a
oie oh
ET nacgh phe, Laatare of te
a ttt
ae rarer om one ts
ofa of tating tea tT
Yor ene n,boytary eaten!
ei Sa Ra RRP ae
Ie eat ett feng
Soe ge tare whee
cued cat Sitesnetiere
Pooh ae aie oe
Hiatt coders tap te
SRI wit the tala
Redhiaitaitarattasce i ema
cpr epee aa
Thuig synch, et or tine ‘hall ica
Bt Hat tte a
Rs" Fegiufeett of thin chapter. nn
rite wise? aut and SHE
HIG ET ria ie wearer
Berroa Sopdet Aces
to any resident et this state, & license to
ence geen et eat
i vee ate
Be ach ean ed, arate a
Er bce et aed at
Enea the! sate of Minnesota ane wie
Shier aa saee se
snd cation, Such nets, shail not be teed
Sani teat geil nay doe
ete oa caer 2
‘Every licensee shall immediately return
igs Ri oh a a eae
cache gprieuna or caer
silat AS gate
pater itt Rent ave daar
Prior to the Tomuatice of a, Wcense. to
Paohared eeeane ose
penal sum to be fixed by, the. commlasion,
ERUAS Gat i guate fat a
CaS cen ce
EE tally a? he atta
ae auhuhig cS fa
SS ean ot it A
Rifmnesota, ‘thal the Plea ana rguatons
wae ceerlanzat ase ot sald Sets
rh oa Marae ba
GLa i Soe feel, "he ca
Se coe alt a ea
Seer aait, wien Me ona
(ce, sia Ss NE
SOR iademnitet
Siac winen sushe puradaat Yo the pro-
‘Bec. G. Any person who shall place,
Boned eaters thou po
oe pre ecb
Se ees ere
ence Sa ooee ae et
ESsonpedthtat tans fa tas
Sr iSa"inpotseto or under Control for
ea eae inti eat
Of the’ provisions of this ‘chapter, "shall
e dereiee a se cette
SEPA REE eee
Woe Leta hare ta uaa
Peers es
Fate ak nity eaten
Pee, SANG, Perot or, Suvoclaiton or
| combination of persons. shal be permit
SiidCaefag as sedeone, "Ang person ar
MORAN SP peta with of cated
eee ree rit fees
SPECS BR Cae oF att ae
Ee baie betas it al
Beottsmucttion tateot punianed bys A
EPS ies eB) nr mle
Serine Ge RNR ob at
Than ninety (8) days for cash and every
Ee Ma ot
| sees ok, Be pete Bet
| Seieshicede seth Paper aa
eee ate atin Jn, the Saco Sous
| Setanta eee ate ars
Rie cares ae are
BiG "ae Gee Sutera
| eel ie lta sane
Ee tale I citer ie an
| EBS Steet eat alc oP
South Bauotn over all pounary waters
Selnting between such states and, Minne
She Mareen thc eae
Rees All acts and parts of acts in.
‘| conmstent with this act are hereby. re-
sais
ee eer HN (a Sea
[ciated am aa rt SE
| a HMERER EM 30,8
oy SPR EE ont
| Se Stinsta ah th Sipenion hare
| sig eangd te tara ot
a
| Bae, prank bequest or devin for etc
Fanaa hae had ati
ial tepaciaarscri tae a
| BEteeeat oetmy ‘ana conditions: of
| BS Be encniatatar ge
| Sa Pec naa tara
) Snhdcectees acts oe
Reacts Se el
Heribe a and lee ar ahh Uh
‘be, determined by the board of regents.
| gti, Yievibeor, Bequest” age sot other
| seid Go
| Hosea float Eau
| Sesser efit! et
) Bevine Slvarsy, nd ga: Singh he
| as tees hehe eet
AN AST io’ appropriate money for the
Har ena ince Oe
SERRE He Eefoaere ot ts
Beira MR one cm
e's Wak egumty shia skate are heres
SFIS seen nel
aS atrial te
Seat dure ete soba
oP os na Apel ewe, 1508,
a a Bae nour
Bojites, ina “Further provided. that it
Sie oaet Coma a a
ah wel
ibe a tae zone, m, Tpit
ahah ot Bac nnd Rt
Si eth per tnc™
“approved April 15, 3008,
NAPIER JS, F NO. 62,
+y RAE wget
the onarat Lama of pinnae for
of the General Laws of 1902 be and the
inne ie hereby amend aovan’to Feed as
ane aaa erat te orate
Ee bir sah pote fiat
Sc a canara
Sebel cia ot fer Bae
cee ques ae ee
Say cites tee es
Ge Rene: ort se
Caan a, tee ats
Serer ct ee cekat
Pe
wee eee Die cies
(hed ean ae
pean
a ROT aE Raat:
Be las OSS ET ott
Shain Save ae da at
EERE ES latte ot ee
aha! Mine erent
of kobe in each ‘county of this state,
seat eee tates
FeO Neenah
Smal iene See ac
als tthe sum of ftteen hundred. (180p)
SO rte eae eat
Bis ae 2 aa ae
OE To pr of se
mec am a et
ee i ties ee gee
an
SESrove Avr 18,
cearren AEE, 2 NO.
gay SEAPTER MIELE NO. 0
Resting, i |
Hise and ‘tara ‘ising etki te ‘im
aL elie ot we
poral, of ten thoi qi
Eee ied eat atone
Scheu Gee me ae
Sie eee ica ee ae
Fen Sol tnd nt
POMC nae Ryde)
ae rte Ceeeeee
eet ee Rees
BopUninehty is Sica hats
iekion snd Sie te "Sa
See ees Siang at
fa aharn acre eels sas
a
Ss Sahel helenae
eer eae coerce
Seo ROPE hans a
i im penernory os mech to psig
Sep peters cee eee oe
sean of SE Seer tee
Eek pel Sarat sn dates
She a ene
Saar fie, eens tara
See cena ae
Sis Sr oe eae ot ara a
Set eee Renee
Spe ase ae
rae cae rae ae
sry enmetat aden
Sheet pe
oh cue hoes cee
Spal ane escent eee
Bae etie sneerer ie
Gs oath Se aero a
Bee se errors 2, acquired shall
Heatly ore See
Be eee teate oe ae
ere arate deca ike
WOE ae Said schoot alneeiet i organized,
She Se ed ane reat
Samah nal Us tad a
dike dod oy Soul aoa te
Ae pa te Sd cel Ae
Hal FCS Ee et Se
ness heya le ete
Readies hea naa et
"gnc i This act shall take effect and
aE Eat sel a
crarran joi 9, #0.
ay ATER Tol ae
edi ee iy
nee
SRE RSEeE Oe Eaeittar st te
Be ess aime ot an aes:
alee taranaeeting an A:
Shei AEG ited ie
PO eat
Saat hes ae ieee
Geet el ereracs Mat Teal
Sealng uo Pet
Bi oat, etal Sail
Heeb, eae a
Ge tt dl at eth Se
Enh adalah feakenae
Banos, seater athe
ie Bis Hc aie ital a
Spear te ta aa
pene ae hore eet
seaman Meeps ued
ieee ce, Mee cae
fd BET Mi tek It
Rega ier niet
sein fed frat ets
Eocrent ir Rapapeal aac
Hl denies ate a
Rex's, SU oat
fiche, tal fhe he ee
feet to tect ddan tS
Res sine ond ep
Sec eure rca 2?
Salon Hynaee lh ES ce ne
weed alts see
a ey on, ta
doe TERRE ENG Mn ou
2 Se ater a
adic, ieaclenastt at abit &
ah oa he Sha pi
Sera, vhaPitnts AMS
Sar, cats
Een afte ctr tte
anit Parbea wPt i Steet
Higbee ad eaey oak wees
ae pte ay at rat a
Bogedee dct Seat Ratan
Baigent tha ai Pan oe gt
Serban gre ate
Hey cece catitane ee
is a noes eR ee
Story a tat ufo he st
Within. the power of such party to pro-
are REA To ainend osetia ewonty to
Hs ACT 10 amend, speared and sist,
“kn act fixing apd regulating the su
“An Get fixing and regulating the sal;
shes ome, da a tai of
SiR gt reali hate a popuietion
$8 fworthindred” thousand ‘eborbtoy in
pei enacted dy ihe Logisiature of the
et itt
ofa ns Meenas oe
Ge oe hs oe 1 Oe “tmended 5°
re Sa acorn
ete ind that portion of “yeetions’ tres
Oe fecha ae ee
Be ete aerate
Eiesg ot ek rete tothe employe
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CHAPTER IL No,
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Sec. 18. Weighers to Keep Record—All weighers by this act shall be required to make before provide under the addition herein before provide correct record of all weights done by this act. Weighers where they are stationed, in which record all hay, straw or other property weighed, or the weighing of which was supervised of amount of each weight, the number of amount of each weight, the number of initial letter of said car or cars weighed, contents of car, contents of car, and Inspect to Issue Certificates. Certificates to be Prima Facia Evidence—Sad weighed and upon request of any person interested certificates undoed of hand and seal contents of car, contents of car, contents of car or weighed or inspected any car, initial of said car or cars, hay yard weighing or inspecting and contents of weighing or inspecting and contents of weighing shall be admitted in all actions evidence of the facts therein contained but the effect of such evidence may be
Sec. 24. This act shall take effect and
be enforced after the first day of July,
1800.
Approved April 15, 1900.
CHAPTER 119-H. F. No. 281.
(I) of chapter one hundred and sixty-one (188) of the General Laws of the United States, (I) of chapter three hundred thirty-one (188) of the General Laws of the year 1897, entitled "An act to provide for the establishment of permanent gardens and improvement of cemeteries."
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
board may fix a limit of deposit equal to
Provided, however, that the board shall
exceed one-half of the deposit to
exceed one-half of the paid-up capital
stock or capital claimed by such deposit.
2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Insec. 7 of the Constitution.
CHAPTER 190—I. F. No. 300.
AN ACT to provide for the disposition of unclaimed money at state institutions.
Laws of the State. Legislature of the State of Minnesota.
Section I. That whenever there has been an accident in the hands of the inmate after accounting for the injury, the money belonging to inmates of such institution who have died,lerin, or in any other case, there is no claim or person entitled to such money may at the discretion of such section be expended for the entertainment and general benefit of the inmates of such section be so used until it shall have been provided, further, that if at any time the legal heirs of said inmate shall apply to the court, they must be entitled to receive from the shall be expended by the aforesaid superintendent belonging to Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be approved April 15, 1955.
CHAPTER 200-H F. No. 988 AN ACT regulating the administration and assessment for local improvements in cities Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
CHAPTER 201-H. F. No. 708
lands.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Mississippi.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force for three months of passage. Approved April 15, 1900.
ANCHY 202- H. F. No. 34
ACT TO AUTHORize the board of county commissioners to fund the indebtedness sinking fund to invest the money of mortgage loans upon improved farm real estate. It be enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That the board of county commissaries should be bonded indebted sinking fund, is hereby authorized and required that the fund not at any time necessary for use in the sale of the said county, upon the security of first mortgages on the county, be provided that no loan or investment of the said funds shall in any case be of fifty per cent of the market value time the said loan or investment is made, be equated thereon; also provided that no money or funds shall in any case be paid the time when the said funds shall be bonded indebted of the said county, lower than interest to be paid annually, Sec. 2. Whenever any county commissaries shall have the same rights in refereeing the proceeding for the collection of the same, or the same other lender or mortgages, and if necessary may sell and assign any of the not more than two (2) per cent of the interest upfall. When authorized by a county auditor may execute any such assign-
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force in this passage. Approved April 15, 1906.
CHAPTER 202-H. F. No. 787. AN ACT to appoint a commission to inquire into the ability of establishing a state hospital for indigent, crippled and deformed children
In Hennepin county. Michigan.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That Arthur J. Gillette, Stephen Mahoney and the commissioned to investigate the advisability or establishment of a hospital under the management and control of the state, for the treatment, care and education of the ill, and defend and protect mentally disabled individuals, are indigent. See section 1. The state must be able to establish such institution, then it shall be their duty to county, Minnesota, would be most desirable, would be most suitable for such hospital. See such commission shall render a full report to the Legislature of this act to the Legislature of this state.
Sec. 4. Such commission shall report
their findings to the state for review.
Beinspen county, Minnesota, which shall
be without access to the state for review,
but cannot be bound to the state for review,
or any gifts of money or goods to the
state, nor to the state for the purpose
in aid of such institution.
Such commission shall, before entering upon the
permission to conduct such commission, and
subserve an oath that he will
conduct such commission, and give
of said commission, said oath with, the
certificate of the office of the
secretary of state.
Such commission shall receive no
salary or compensation for their services,
or their expenses incurred in the
performance of their duties and shall
have effect, and be in force from and after its passage.
Approve.
AFTER 30-JUL-14 F. No. 44.
AN ACT relating to the sale of timber on
the lands of the state and prescribing penalties thereon.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
shall have no right whatsoever to any expense incurred in preparing the same expense incurred in supporting the same or towards market markets, pass willingly committed shall be deemed
Sec. 2. Recovery from Tenants, Etc.—Each session of any hands mentioned in this chapter applies to any hands of any tenants of any lease, certificates of sale, or other documents that shall be liable to an action of forcible entrapment for the recovery or possession of such lands, and damages for the detention of such lands.
Sec. 3. Duties of Attorney General—The county attorney must be prosecuted by the county attorney whenever, in his opinion, the public may be charged with any indicative of offenses. Sec. 4. Same. County Attorney—The county attorney must report to the state auditor, as required, in this chapter which may be recorded by the attorney general, shall prosecute all actions for the recovery of the possession thereof, or otherwise. All damages recovered on behalf of the state for any of the funds in charge of the auditor shall be paid over to which the property belongs. Sec. 5. Grand Jury—Every court having jurisdiction thereof must, in such case, to inquire into all offenses against the provision that may be guilty of any such offenses within their county. Sec. 7. Duties of State Auditor—The extent, character, and value of the property, and the charitable value for the time that such property is tract such timber from damage or loss by fire, treasury or otherwise; and he must comply with the other provisions of this act, and for such control of such lands, and for such protection of such property, will best protect the interests of the county.
Sec. 8. Sale of Timber. -The auditor determines the charge, including tamarack and cedar timber, including tamarack and cedar graph poles, or railroad ties, when authorized to do so by the board of timber. -The auditor determines such sale is made, the auditor shall issue a notice of sale, and the timber is made for the timber. Before any sale is made, the timber shall be estimated and appraised. -The auditor may estimate or appraisal made more than $10,000.
Provided, however, that no such settlements shall be made until the timber has been scaled or counted and appraised by a state land examiner or timber estimator.
Sec. 10. Same. Appraisal. Report—appraisal estimator so to do, he shall examine any lands designated, and estimate and appraise any land designated. He shall report thereof. Such report shall be made by be him entered in his own hand in a book kept in the auditor's office, and appraisal report shall be entered in the office shall be dated when made, and subscripted and wormed. The estimator shall file in said office all plots and field notes made and to page and to page of the field notes.
Sec. 12. Board of Timber Commission. The attorney general shall constitute a board of attorneys, and the attorney general shall be chairman. The auditor shall be ex-officio secretary of the board and shall make and make full minutes of the proceeding and make full minutes of each meeting by the commissioners presiding over the inspection in the office of the auditor. The auditor shall be a quorum for the transaction of business. Before any timber sale the auditor must meet from time to time, upon the call of the commissioners, to the same, together with other members, the same, together with other members, may require. If the governor and least one other member of the board shall record of appraisal a statement, dated in danger of being injured, and that a state from loss. Thereafter, and not be whenever any member of the board becomes satisfied, before issuance of a permit, on the part of any estimator, without or irregularity, the interests of the board or approval of any sale, by an entry signed No. 12. The board of the appraisal shall less than two independent estimates have
**Sec. 16.** Special Agent—The timber cruisers to gather evidence in any action brought by the state or to investigate or to ascertain whether the state is subject to sale, or whether any trespass has been committed on state land such timber or lands. The employees in such timber or lands must be state auditor and estimators shall report the state auditor and estimators may need to derive expenses and the required annually appropriated out of any money in the state treasury. The state may be required to pay ten thousand dollars (10,000) or so much thereto may be required by a board said to advise the state.
Defective Page
Se. 11. Annually and Emergency Sales—
seceding section, there shall be only one
seceding section, there shall be only one
bird be billed not later than November 1st,
and there shall be no longer than a
no longer, until completed. *Provided,
timber commissioners shall unanimously
of the state that a second sale shall take
to be held under the same regulations,
shall be held under the same regulations,
regular sales, except that the notice of
regular sales, except that the notice of
tracts on which the timber to be sold is
be held pursuant to the recommendation
to be held pursuant to the recommendation
daily for at least three weeks next
prior to the date of sale under rules pro-
hibited.
Sec. 18. Cash Payment. The purchaser provided by section 18 shall immediately take the treasurer 35 per month the bid pay the praline value, and the bid pay the treasurer 35 per month the praline value, and the bid pay the treasurer, one of which shall be delivered to the purchaser, the case any purchaser fails to make such payment, the auditor may immediately take the bid pay the praline value, and the bid pay the treasurer from the person so fail-
Sec. 19. Permit—Upon the delivery and issue of the preceding section, the auditor shall issue a permit to be served by the attorney general, by the terms of which he shall be authoritative and remove the timber, thence described, and remove the timber, thence described, and permit such shall be correctly dated and executed by the permit, and permit cover more than two logging seasons, and the time specified therein. Not more than one section, on the government survey, shall be described in any one permit, and no more than the purchaser in whose name the amount of timber estimated to be set on the estimated value, or the price per thousand feet, in case it is sold by the purchaser to be marked. A separate bark mark shall be on the timber under the name of the purchaser, and more than one season, it shall specify the amount of timber cut, and also plainly upon the piece of timber cut, and also plainly upon that, in case of any failure to place both bark and stump mark upon any of the timber, and until all provisions of the same wherever to take possession of the same wherever as may be necessary to secure the state the title of all timber cut thereto standing on the land and the cut clean, by acre, without damage to the timber, it shall also provide that the timber standing on the land and the cut clean, by acre, without damage to the state the permit price for all timber to be cut and remove, and the amount of fees of the surveyor general, and the amount of fees for the sale of such timber for the district, and the auditor, for the district, and the auditor, done, at what time such cutting will be begin, at least fifteen days before any time such removal will be completed. Any permits of this section shall be void on record with the surveyor general.
Sec. 20. Bound of Purchaser.-The pur-
sure shall give bonds to the state, in double
milk as shown by the amount of the bid
as shown, as shown by the amount of the bid
condition, conditioned upon the (fair) per-
formance of the contract, all requirements of law in respect to
in writing by the auditor and filed for recor-
dition in corporation which is the purchaser
of such timber shall be accepted as a
Sec. 21. Extension of Permit. - No permit, and sufficient reasons, and by unanimous consent of the board, shall be extended to the extension shall be for more than one year. When any extension upon for the third season, shall be extended to the assignment of any permit shall be executed in the same manner. If any assignment is made, no assignment shall be operative without the approval of the assignment of the same, shall endorse his approval theon, and if any such approval is made, shall approve such approval, the assigns shall give to the state a bond, which subject to the rules provided for the bond subject to the rules provided for the bond, the original bond given, and any bond given by any prior assigns
Sec. 28. Rescale—If the auditor shall require the surveyor he may demand a resale and in such case shall issue a notice and in such case may contain a description of the tract on which the surveyor general shall thereupon appoint the surveyor, the surveyor estimate appointed by the surveyor for that purpose, shall make a correct description of the tract, whether the mit covering such tract, whether the main cuts or standing on such land; and a report of such scale shall be made and the auditor. Such report, if both such deputy and such estimator agree upon the state and the purchase, will determine the first scale was practically correct the state shall pay $3.00 for each day necessarily spent by the surveyor in all necessary expenses incurred by him in traveling to and from such county and not be entitled to commission fees; in the two scales the surveyor general shall not be entitled to commission fees; in this section may be a top and stump
Sec. 27. Violation of Duty. Penalty—scale all the timber cut on state pine trees, all the timber cut on state pine trees, chapter, or who shall scale any such timber on land other than that on which he falls to make the complete report of timber scaled any permit, or who shall in any such permit, or who shall be issued by different permits, or who shall be issued by different permits, or who shall appoint any deputy otherwise to comply with any of the provisions of this chapter, shall be guilty of a gross
Sept. 27. Settlement for Trespass—a
timber fence on lands on this state when
ever it is for the purpose of this state when
it be made to him, but no such settlement
be made until the timber taken
and appurred or scaled by a state stat-
ment, whose report is communicated, and no
settlement shall be made for an amount
of money required of the timber
as shown below, such reports
Sec. 88. Record of Trepaseses. -The author records all trepaseses reported in all trepaseses reported with the author and settlements thereof, together with references to any correspondence related to them.
Sec. 46. Rewards. -The following reprehensible persons giving to the proper authorities persons giving to the proper authorities detection and conviction of any persons sentenced to it, to wit: $20.00 reward if the value moved shall not exceed the sum of $20.00; $10.00 reward if the value moved shall not exceed $0.00; and $10.00 reward if the value moved shall not exceed $0.00; and the court before the proceedings of this act shall have been tried shall, upon application of any perjury examine such claim in a summary such person claiming said reward is entitled to the satisfaction of said court that such person, then and in that case a certificate court and delivered to said person and hereby directed and required to pay such of such certificate duly authenticated.
Sec. 4. Posting. Notice. Penalty.—In the cutting of timber of any kind, telegraph or fence post may be placed on any state, or upon any land, before cutting such timber, post in a conscious place in any camp or campground, in such cutting a notice is played engaged in such cutting a notice is placed on the lands proposed by him to be cut durably, and shall include the description shall contain the prescriptive description of said land by forty-acre tracts, or freeways, and shall include the section, town and range, and such person or persons said shall be required to keep said notice in the house or house during the entire time of any person or house during the conviction thereof, shall pay a fine of not exceeding one hundred dollars upon conviction thereof, shall pay a fine of not exceeding ninety dollars for a period not exceeding ninety
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota;
And, provided further, that any such
Soc. 3. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act are hereby re-
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be
applied to the following:
Approved April 17, 1906.
CHAPTER 50, No. 98.
AN act to the faithful record
an act to the faithful record
an act to the faithful record
the punish the unlawful
use of marks.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
Section I. Before any surveyor general of logs and lumber within this state, he must know whose name such log mark is sought to be recorded, shall satisfy the surveyor person owning the log, and person owning timber which he intends to cut into logs and use for building or legitimate dealer in logs, or that he owns unwrapped logs which he cut and desires to identify them.
Sec. 2. Any person who shall place a name of another, upon any job bearing no name of another, upon any job bearing no name of another, upon any job bearing no name of another person or party other than the resides of the legal, shall be guilty of arraignment, the legal, shall be guilty of arraignment, by a bye of not less than fifty dollars, not less than three months, and until not less than three months, and until
Bc. 3. This act shall take effect and be
passed by the Legislature in passage.
Approved April 14, 1900.
CHAPTER 202-H. F. NO. 184
This act provides a suitable toilet rooms in railroad
buildings.
deputy.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota
statewide railroad and warehouse
commission of this state is hereby
authorized and committed to provide
that all railroad
companies operating within the
state have the right or cause to
provide suitable toilet rooms in, or
in connection with, a station waiting room located on its lines in this state and that have toilet rooms in a good sanitary condition. The
everage system in towns where railroad
station waiting rooms are not more than
one hundred feet from the station, and in such
railroad companies shall provide
a suitable waiting room, a suitable
cafeteria, a waiting room.
CHAPTER 202-H. F. No. 378.
AN ACT to amend section 6877 of the General Statutes of Minnesota for the year 1988 to establish a crime of theft in the first degree.
burglar
Be directed by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section six thousand six hundred and seventy-seven (6977) of the General Statutes of Minnesota for the General Statutes of Minnesota are amended so as to read as follows:
Section 6077. A person who, with in-
formation and enters, in the nighttime, the dwell-
ing house of an unknown person, being armed with a dangerous weapon, or seized, weapon, or, third, being assisted by a confederate, is engaged in the night-time in effecting such entrance, or being assisted in effecting such entrance, or being assisted in effecting themere, assaults any person; or themere breaks or any building, or a room or any person; or themere breaks in his possession, or makes use of, any dangerous weapon, or guards a building in the first degree.
sec. 2. The act shall take effect and impose this law on its passage. Approved April 17, 1900.
CHAPTER 211-H. F. No. 828.
In chapter 2 (2) of the General Law of taxation of real estate, providing for the payment of judgments, and the sale and disposition of such delinquency and the payment of taxes upon real estate so delinquency.
quent
Be contacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota;
State of Minnesota.
Section I. 1. Section that dive (55)
of chapter two (2) of the General Laws
of 1902, be and the same is hereby
of chapter 10, so and the same is hereby amended so as to treat the same as to Receive Dead. How and when the preceding section, shall be written in the proceeding section, shall be entitled in the present presentation of such certificate to the governor he shall be required to present to the person entitled hereto, conveying the such deed to the state of the state to the person entitled hereto, conveying the such deed shall vest the grants with complete title to the tract or parcel was exempt from taxation, the such tract or parcel was sold at the said tax or deeds of real, estate, and the record direct in all respects as the record of such other deeds, and shall be evidence in like
But any one having any interest in any case, the right to redeem said land as provided by the law, such tax deed should be issued, nor shall the right to redeem said land as provided by the law, such days shall have elapsed after the filing of proof, and the manner as provided in sections forty-seven (47) and forty-eight (48).
Sec. 2. All acts and parts of acts in-
carnation with this act. 3. Acts in
incarnation. 4. Sec. 3. The form and after its passage.
Approved April 17, 1800.
CHAPTER 212-H. F. No. 878.
AN ACT PROHIBITED by the article 1123 of
the article 1123 of
Sec. 2. This proposed amendment would allow the general election for approval or rejection at the general election of the chair, and the qualified election of the state chair, and the qualified election of the election vote for or against such amendment by bailor; and certified within the time, and such votes in the manner provided by law with reference to the state appear thereupon that a majority of the allots the voting to a section have voted in favor of the same, then the governor shall have voted in favor of the same, then the amendment shall take effect and be in force as a part of the consti-
Sec. 3. The ballots used at said election thereon, "Amendment to section sixteen (16) of artifact law, establishing the road and bridge fund, and authorizing the Legislaion of constructing and improving roads and each elector voting on said amendment shall place a cross on either the word 'Yes' or the word 'No', and the expression in accordance with the expressed will of the elector, as provided by the legislature.
See. 4. This art shall take effect and
authorize the State to pass its
approved April 17, 1996.
CHAPTER 212-H. F. NO. 533.
AN ACT entitled an act
of condemnation of more than
fifty thousand to acquire by condemnation
a permanent domain, land or lands covered
by water or land or waterways
open or to be opened as slips or waterways
open or to be opened with public navigable
waters in this state, other than rivers
authorizing the assessment of benefits
authorizing the assessment of benefits
Sec. 2. Whenever any land or lands therein shall be acquired by any city, pursuant to the laws of the city, shall thereafter be held as and for a public water highway or passage of boats, atmospheses, vessels and water. Sec. 3. The land or lands covered with section one of this act may be acquired by procedure in the manner provided by chapter 104. Generals may be authorized to establish and acquire a building and parkways, and the city council in charge of these all powers and perform all the duties imposed by chapter 104 on the "governing body" mentioned in Sec. 2.
Sec. 4. Upon the conclusion of the awards the several tracts of land shall be for the purposes of this act, and such land or the easement shall serve absolutely in the city in which lands are situate, in force from and after passage. CHAPTER 214- H. F. P. 105. AN ACT to amend chapter one hundred and eighteen, 1903, entitled "An act to provide for the establishment of village and town clerks, and certain election judges, by registered mail or by return to county auditors by registered
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State Section 1. That chapter one hundred and sixty five General Laws of Minnesota, be and the same hereby amended, 1903, be and the same hereby amended, "Wherever the primary and general village and town clorks and judges of clerk county seat and receive the official bailiary at least one week before the day of the county seat, express to the village and town clorks and judges of election, the official bailiary at least one week before the day of the county seat, seal wax, stamp, and the necessary returns and other papers, as provided in the
Sec. 4. Provided, however, that this act was made by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota: the place of holding the polls is within the county, the county authority, and the nearest traveled road. Section 5. All acts or parts of acts in connection with the county hereby repealed. This act shall take place in and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 17, 1905.
CHAPTER 215 - H. F. NO. 429. The Legislature of the State of Minnesota eight hundred sixty-three (1683) of the General Laws of 1884, relating to the administration and the penalty therefor. The Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section I. The section one thousand eight hundred sixty-three (1863) of the General Statutes for 1884 be and the Statutes hereby amended so as to read as follows:
Section 1863. Whoever at any time ob-
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
structures any of the public highway inns to prevent the free use thereof by the public, or who shall dig any holes or trenches to prevent the free use thereof, such highway or any part thereof, and to detain the use of not less than five more than twenty-five dollars, together with, and, on failure to pay such fine and costs, and, on failure to pay such fine and costs, there to remain until such fine and costs are paid, or initially discharged, according to the order of the board of supervisors of the seventh district, paint and prosecut, in their official capacity, violations of the provisions set forth in
Sec. 2. All acts and parts of acts in
Sec. 1 shall be made in the same way.
Sec. 3. This not shall take effect and
be approved April 18, 1865 in its passage.
CHAPTER 128—S. F., NO. 246.
AN ACT provides for payment of payments
killed under the provisions of chapter
128.
Whereas, chapter 141 of the Laws of the State of New York contained the chapter 322 of the laws of the same state, chapter 323 of the laws of said state have in good faith proceeded to make many cases in which there are in many cases appraised and killed animals of the classes therein referred. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York.
Be it erected by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
by amended so as to read as follows: "for any justice of the peace or judge of any court, the person accused such person of wilfully misusing such person's property, proper food, clothing and shelter, his wife or minor child under affection or by any member of the board of county commissioners of the county wherein any justice of the peace or judge such take such complaint or judge shall take such complaint or of such county commissioner, and of such county commissioner, directed to the sheriff for the person accused, directed to the sheriff forthwith, to the county commanding the person accused, to the justice or judge to answer such complaint.
Sec. 3. Said commissioner shall have authority to change headline changes; to insert, or omit subheads; to change the spelling of words printed in words, to figures, to numbers, to disability or resignation of said commissioner, the supreme court is hereby authorized to appointee. Sec. 5. Said commissioner shall receive thirty-five hundred dollars as compensation, or as much thereof as may be paid or as much thereof as may be supplied, and other incidental expenses.
Sec. 6. Five thousand dollars are here-
appropriated to carry out the provision.
See 7. This act shall take effect and be
passed. Approved April 17, 1906.
CHAPTER 212 S- F. No. 924
of certain territories to cities having a pop-
ulation of 10,000 or more.
Approved April 17, 1905.
CHAPTER 202- S. F. No. 214
AN ACT to amend the laws to all incorporated cities containing ten thousand (10,000) inhabitants or
Be if enacted by the Legislature of the
panies shall be transferable.
It be enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Section 1. All passenger mileage ticketing companies operate lines in this state, except interchangeable mileage now in use. Section 2. Railroad companies transferable by delivery and good for transferable by delivery and good for transferable between stations in Minnesota. Sec. 2. Railroad companies accounting to the owner of such ticket in case they transfer such tickets not legally entitled to use the same.
Section 101 of the public examiner of this state is hereby given the same powers posed upon him the same duties over the treasurer and other financial officers thousand, 10,000 inhabitants, now in possession of 100,000 public institutions to counties and public institutions; to shall pay to the state treasurer six hundred (not exceeding one hundred) dollars shall be made within thirty (30) days after requisition therefore, by the treasurer and/or appointee to include or apply to cities now or hereafter given power and pursuant to section 101 of the Chapter 311 of the Law of this state for the year 1850, and Laws of this state for the year 1850, and
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Appoint the Secretary of the State of Minnesota CHAPTER 22<sup>a</sup> F. NO. 16. AN ACT pertaining to the reports of the Minnesota State Horticultural Society BASED ON THE STATE LEGISLATURE of the State of Minnesota;
Section 1. There shall be annually commissioned by the State commission (bought by the State Horticultural Society); provided the board of printed pages of the same shall not be commissioned by the State commissioned by thousand copies of the same, more or less than thousand copies of the same, more or less than monthly report to be distributed among the members of the society; shall be printed in monthly report to be distributed among the members of the society; shall be bound, at the close of the month, to be bound, by the society as follows: One copy to each of the state officers, the board of registrants of the state university, the board of registrants of the state agricultural society, the board of registrants of the state agricultural society when application is made therefor, and the remaining copies as the diminutive best. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this act
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage
Approved April 17, 1966.
CHAPTER 322-S - F. P. NO. 78.
AN ACT to the participation of the National
army in the construction of military stores, the composition of
military stores, the award of service decorations,
and the award of service decorations.
the award of service decorations.
Legislature of the
State of Mlngotsa.
Section.1. That section 17 of the military code, as amended, be, and the same is hereby, further amended to read as follows:
"Sec. 17. Regiments of Infantry:
consist of one colonel and one lieutenant colonel, one regimental surgeon with the rank of captain, one regimental quartermaster, one regiment with the rank of captain, two assistant surgeons with the rank of first lieutenant, one regiment with the rank of first lieutenant, one regiment sergeant, one commissary sergeant, two commissaries, not more than two commissaries, not more than one mortal corps, not more than one first lieutenant, not to consist of one first lieutenant, not to consist of twelve private, first class.
Each regimental band shall consist of
one brigade, one brigade, one brigade, one
clan, one drum major, four sergeants,
one captain, and one lieutenant, private-
ly. That section 20 of the MEMO
Code, as amended, be, and the same is
further amended to be as follows:
The battalion or corps of artillery
the battalion or corps of artillery
shall consist of one major, one adjutant
master and commissary; one assistant
master and commissary; one assistant
with the rank of first lieutenant, one
adjutant, one commissary, one
adjutant, one commissary, one
adjutant, one company of engineers, and one
first class, one company of engineers, and one
first class, one company of engineers, and one
not to exceed four private, first class. "Code be and the same is hereby amended Code be and the same is hereby amended "Sec. 33. Field Officers' Courts—The field officers of infantry, or buttresses with each regiment of infantry, or buttresses with each regiment of infantry, or staff or officer as may be designated situate the field officers' court for the trial of the officer. That section 105 of the Military Code be and the same is hereby amended Code be and the same is hereby amended
Sec. 3.4 That section 124 of the MILITARY AID ACT amended to read as follows: "the commander-in-chief, the adjutant general appointed committing the clothing for the purpose appointed committing the clothing for the purpose necessary for the uniforming may be necessary for the uniforming. All proposals for the furnishing of clothing, except when purchased from the department, may be advertised in one or more newspapers, or by the state, and all bids shall be accepted. Before such uniforms are furnished, both such uniforms under the direction of the adjutant general may be amended to the payment of the same other stores shall be purchased by the department of the service may require." 160 of the military code, as amended, be and the same other may further amended to read as follows:
Sec. 140. Roll of retired officers. Any who has served or shall have served as a retired officer for at least ten years, and any commissioned officer for at least ten years, and any commissioned officer for at least ten years, and who has been honorably discharged from the United States after serving therein for a period of not less than five years, and who has served as such officer of the national army, or has served as such officer of the national army, or has become, or who shall hereguard who has become, or who shall hereguard who has become, or who shall herein incapable of performing the office of office, may, upon his own request in writing, be ordered by order of the commander-in-chief, by order of the commander-in-chief, and have his name placed on a roll of retired officers of the adjustant general, to be known as the retired officer, and thereby be entitled to wear, on or off duty, the uniform of the rank last held by him.
The commander-in-chief may, by gen-
eral direction of the commander,
for all officers and enlisted man-
agers, to appoint a member of an
agreable period of ten, fifteen
and twenty years, respectively, and for
Sec. 7. All acts and parts of acts
involved with this act are hereby
repealed.
Sec. S. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved April 17, 1965.
CHAPTER 222-S. F. NO. 333.
AN ACT to legalize, in certain cases, a
money realized from the sale of county
road bonds to the credit of the county
general, in such case as such sum hereof
deposited shall become and may be used
as a part of such road
and bridge fund by the Legislature of
the State of Alabama.
Provided, however, that nothing herein contained shall operate to in any way invalidate any of said bonds so issued and negotiated.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved April 17, 1966.
CHAPTER 22-H, F. NO. 872
AN ACT relating to the duties and pow-
er of attorney general and his assis-
sistance.
Legislature of the State of Minnesota.
Section 1. The attorney general shall be appointed by the supreme and federal courts where the state is directly interested; also in all cases where, in his opinion, the courts whenever, in his opinion, the petition or request of the county attorney appear in the district court in such criminology cases. Whenever the governor shall so request in writing he shall prosecute any person in all such cases he may attend upon in all such cases he may exercise the powers of a county attorney.
from the appropriation made for such purposes, the office must be provided no further exemption, except at the expense of employ any attorney or at the expense of employ any attorney compensation of any attorney employed in the final proceedings shall not exceed twenty-five dollars. The 7. attorney general on amplication on questions of public importances; the 8. attorney general on public proceedings upon any giving arising under the laws allowing to public opinion shall be decisive until the question is answered by a court of competent jurisdiction. The attorney general in the report to the governor generally the number and proceedings in which he has appeared for the state, the expense of the amount of fines, penalties and other charges, the general interest given by him and his assistance, the amount of fees, such recommendations for amendment of the law, such recommendations for amendment of property, and tales given accession or proper, showing the offences reported to him by
Section 1. Any city or village in the county and operating water works is hereby authorized to supply water and water pipes over, under and along any road street, alley or roadway within or without the corporate limits of such city or village, and to provide a reasonable compensation to the occupants of such city or village, so extended, whether within or without the corporate limits of such city or village; provided, however, this act shall be made to any city or village within the corporate limits of such city or village, provided further, that such line shall be safe or convenience of ordinary traffic and streets, streets and public highways.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be
applied to the issuance of a passage.
Approved April 17, 1905.
CHAPTER 222 - S. F. No. 151.
IN THE department of insurance in the State
of Minnesota, and regulating the comp
under the laws of the State for the
repair of laws inconsistent here-
fore.
Section 3. In the absence or disability of the loss of insurance, his duplication shall be performed by the actuary. The actuary of such duplication shall make the valuations of outstanding policies and the valuations of doing business in this state, as may be required by the outstanding policies of all life insurance companies organized under the laws of the state, including actuarial duties, including visitation and examination policies of insurance may prescribe. All fees which may under any a company for valuing policies, or the actuary, shall be collected by the commissioner of insurance and paid into the reserves of the commissioner of insurance. The department in making any valuation policies or visitation or examination of the proper voucher paid by the state to the actuary, shall pay expenses from the fees so collected.
Sec. 4. The commissioner of insurance employs a competent person to make an assessment of the person's insurance company, admitted or applying for insurance, and makes a determination of this state. When such person so employed is not a satisfied officer of said insurance company, the commissioner of insurance and the commissioner of insurance with all expenses incurred in making such assessment company so examined to the commissioner of insurance to the treasurer of the state, and said treasurer compares the compensation upon the expenses of the person so making said compensation.
and accompanying documents
and accompany certificate of
authority, $1.
foreign companies:
For filing certified copy of charter or
certificate of incorporation and by-ias.
For filing statement of financial condition,
$20. Company's or agent's certificate of
authority, $2.
4. By all companies (except township
For filing amendment to articles of incorporation, $10. For annual statement, $20. For abstracts or summaries of annual statement, $10 when prepared in commissioner, each $5. $General fees: $1 for certificate, including certificate of authority, valuation of
life policy, corporate condition or qualification, $1. Each copy of paper on file in his office per folio, and $1 for certifying same.
For license to procure fire insurance in
the state of New York. For each broker's license, $10.
For receiving and forwarding payment of
commission of insurance, as attorney for
commission of insurance, as attorney for
commission of insurance, as party serving same
and may be taxed as other costs in the
Sec. 10. This act shall take effect and impose the following provisions on its passage. Approved April 17, 1955.
CHAPTER 220-S. F. NO. 182
AN ACT providing for the drainage of certain cases, providing for the construction of certain roads, drains and watercourses, and for the reimbursement in certain cases of the construction of such construction, providing for the collection of the costs for the operation of the state draining agency in operation of the state draining agency describing the powers and duties of county commissioners and other agencies, and funds for the payment of assessments prescribing penalties for the violation thereof, and expounding acts prescribing penalties for the violation thereof, and expounding acts referred to be enacted by the Legislature of the
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In case the viewers are unable to agree each viewer shall state separately in the report his findings on the matters discussed upon.
Whenever a public ditch is located in a city, it is often constructed at a distance already or partially constructed the distance already or partially. The number of cubic yards of earth already excavated is the amount of the reduction in the cost of construction of the ditch. The land by reason of such private ditching is deduct, such amount from their estimate of the cost of making an appropriate notation thereof on
Sec. 7. All lands benefited by a public land or corporate roads or railroads so benefited, in whole or in part, by the construction thereof, whether said construction was built on the line of such roads or onlne or not, and the viewers in estimation of the travelled by said ditch shall not consider the roads will receive after some other ditch or ditch shall be constructed by reason of the construction of the public ditch which prevents the overloading of or otherwise directly benefits such lands roads or
See 8.3. Viewers shall forthwith fill the needs of the sea and findings and data in detail, including expenses and costs in every case completely perform every duty by this authority, or a re-ference, as hereinafter provided), within thirty days from the date of the decision, or the water be so high, or the weather so inclement, or the opinion of the board of county commissioners to practically and the necessary delay caused thereby may be excused by the viewers must in such case state the reason for such delay, and the board of county commissioners such viewers must for one half or the some-
Sec. 6. Within three days after the meeting of the board of county commissioners, to thirty-five days notice, the board to the auditor to a special meeting of the board of county commissioners, to thirty-five days notice, in the minutes of the commissioners of special meetings. He places of such special meeting to be given to all persons interested, prior thereo, in a newspaper printed and published in three weeks before each meeting, printed copies to where the proposed work is located, and one county of the pennsylvania of said petition, and engineers and place set for the hearing (therefore, having points and terminal of the ditch, creek, or water course of the land through which they pass, all as appears in the names of the owners of the lands and other corporations that will be affected thereby, as the same appears in week after beginning such publication of said notice to all nonresidents of the affected by such proposed work, whose address is known to him, or can be geogran- treasurer's office provided, that in all cases shall not be given, or in any case county auditor shall cause the same to be again given, so that the petition may be regular meeting of said board, which will expiration of another notice by the public in the first instance, as provided
Provided, further, that whenever any witness or misrepresenters establishing, or refusing to establish, any ditch in proceedings unauthorized or for which he or she shall or shall be hereafter set aside, annulled or declared vote by any court by the order of the said pendency of said petition and set for the hearing thereof, the county auditor, at any time within one year after the decision, upon the application of any other decision, by resolution by the board.
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
Upon die publication, posting and mallage of the notice of the county commissioners shall have jurisdiction of each tract of viewers' report described, including any underlake or the change of any water scribed in said notice, and of each tract scribed in said notice, and of each private corporations whose names appear in said notice that is affected by the prosecutions, municipal and otherwise, that are scribed in said notice, and of private corporations having or owning any interest in or incurrence against any of the tracts of land or other property here-
Sec. 10. Said board of county commissioners shall accept such proper notice, therefore, be prepared to report on such reports (or at any time to which said hearing may be adjudged from time to time, otherwise), shall proceed to hear and communicate with the other parties, may appear and be heard by and before them. Unless excused by the board commissioners and at least one of the viewers shall be present, the report of the viewers and such other evidence as may be adjuduced before them, the viewers' report and all other projections, and taken in accordance with the provisions of the report of the viewers and such other benefits to be derived from the construction of said work, are greater than its cost. And that such damages and benefits have been paid to the said work will be of equal utility such reports are complete and correct. They shall be an order containing such information in the report of the civil engineer, report provided, that in case the viewers report in any particular to the board of county commissioners shall have authority to send viewers, if necessary, or other such reports to the board of county commissioners have not agreed or shall not agree in their findings, the board commissioners must make the proper findings and change the case of such re-reference, the necessary corrections, and forthwith report the same to the said board of county commissioners.
Sec. 12. Any person or corporation ag-
tivae to the county commissioners or the
board of the county commissioners
made in the proceedings, and entered
in the proceedings, either by
either of the following matters.
First—The amount of benefits to any person who is any public or corporate road or railroad. Second—The amount of damages al- lware any person or person or corporation suffering to establish such proposed ditch. To render such damage effective the appal application within and not after twenty (20) days of the application, and to notice a notice of appeal, which shall briefly state the grounds upon which such appal application is bound to the board of county commission- an amount of not less than two hundred and fifty (200) dollars, to be approved and fifty (200) dollars, to be approved such appeal is taken, conditioned that the appeal and pay all costs that may be adjudged against him, and to abide the rules of the appeal days after such ditch the auditor shall take papers and proceedings on the and of record in his office, so far as the same rule applies to the county of which the appeal is taken, to the county of which the appeal is taken, the district of the court district.
Any person deemed himself aggrieved by the proposed dichit or by damages may demand a jury trial or by damages the amount of which is deemed necessary for the construction of such dichit. Such demand shall be in writing, signed by the party presenting the proposed dichit, and shall be filed in the office of the attorney, and shall be filed in the office of the county in which the proceeding is pending, with every twenty two days after the commencement of the proceeding. Such demand shall stand for trial and shall be fully tried and determined at the county in which such proceedings are made, in the county in which such demand, and shall take precedence of such demand, and shall take precedence of said court. If there be more than one person involved in the trial together, and the rights of such persons are not satisfied in its verdict, provided, however, that if the demandable falls to recover the amount of damages fails to reduce the amount of benefits assumed, such dichit shall be paid by the demandable. The construction of any such dichit shall be the construction of any appeal or demand
Sec. 13. If more than one party appends the court may, in his discretion, order the cases consolidated and tried together the cases consolidated and the right of each party shall be separately determined.
Sec. 14. Within ten (10) days after the filing in the office of the county officer of the order establishing a county ditch, when the proceedings are taken in court, within ten (10) days after the
Sec. 13. The bond and contract shall be attached to each other and the description of the work to be done, other expressly or by reference to the engineer, the number of the section or sections, as provided for in the preceding section; and, as required, done and completed as provided for in the report of the engineer, and submitted as required, and audited, as the case may be.
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First—The names of the owners of all and each of the names of all public or private roads and respective counties are proposed. Work as an observer from the viewer's report, as affected by the board or judge, as aforementioned, as the same appears in such report as so affected, together with the total number of assessments rolls or tax lists of such county. Third—The estimated number of acres benefited in each tract of land, said, as each county.
Sec. 20. Such statement shall then be received by the two attesting witnesses, and be duly acknowledged with him by the register of deeds of such county. The amount of deeds of such county will be liable to the corporation road or railroad will be liable to the corporation road or railroad provided, shall be and shall be first and paramount lien on such land, until fully paid; and shall take precedence on all other liens whenever such payments may be made as hereschaft or notice to all parties interested of the register of deeds for such recording shall be paid to the board of county commissioners, and said statement, after the same has been audited, to be by him placed with the county clerk, ditch and fortified preserved by him.
and official seal a certificate of such pay-
ment, and official seal a certificate of the
office of the register of deeds, shall release
and discharge such lien or record,
and shall own and dispose of any such
lien or record, any such drain, ditch, drain or water course, shall
drain, ditch or water course, shall
invalidate any lands
24. The sum of five thousand dollars
for the year one thousand nine hundred
and five, and any amount may be
necessary to meet all assessments against state lands
out of the general revenue fund for that
Se 27. Whenever it is desired to con-
part or the whole of more than one
county, the office is to be so located that it will
be located on the land of each county,
to both, to land in an adjoining coun-
county, then shall be addressed and presented
this act to the county attorney, in the
district in which any one of such coun-
county shall be filed with the clerk
of the district court of the county
march and a copy thereof shall be filed with
the county auditor of each of the counties
and a petition shall be filed with the
county auditor of each of the counties
and a petition shall be located. Such proced-
ure clerk of the district court as fol-
lows: the act, in respect of presentation to the
same act, in respect of presentation to the
same notice thereof shall be given, save
the clerk be posted and billed to county
county where the copy of such petition
Sec. 31. Immediately upon the filing of a case, the court will prepare and transmit for each of the counties described in the petition, a copy of each of the counties described in the petition, a filing of such report, to transmit to the judge of said court a written notice of receipt of such notice, the judge shall receive of such notice, the judge shall receive of hearing said petition and engineer and attorney, and the judge shall be given by the judge as is provided in section 31. In county auditor, have that it shall be published and posted in each county auditor.
Sec. 33. In a judicial ditch proceeding the court may order that the court's orders made either at the times of the respective hearings herein provided by the court, or at the dawn notice in writing of the time of the hearing, or at the auditor of each county affected, apportioned or portions thereof to be paid by the respective counties. Upon similar conditions, the district court may at any time modify such a ditch or make any additional order in the premises. The word "expensi- tured" means to mean every item of cost said ditch from the time of its construction and expenses paid by
incurred in puruance thereof, including all damages awarded.
Sec. 37. The county auditor shall not allow a corporation to construct any bridge or curve across or upon its road or right of way, unless it is properly such notice. If any such work is not done, the county commissioner may cause the same to be done, and the cost thereof to be paid. The corporation, if allowed such corporation, or collected from it as in case of an assessment for benefit.
Upon the filing of the petition and a decision that it if finally be determined that the petitioner is properly allowable under this scheme, the petitioner will pay all the expenses of the petitioner and the duty of the board or county commission to appoint three persons special meeting to appoint three persons this chapter, viewers, selecting if practicable the same persons as acted as viewers, drain or ditch causing the damage, and the time and place for the first meeting more than twenty (20) days from the date of the viewers no appointed shall fail for the viewers no appointed shall designate some proper person to take his place. 202 The viewers be allowed to face the office shall take and subserve an oath that the viewers are same in the office of the county auditor.
If the viewers find that no damages have been sustained that are properly allowable under the provisions of this chapter, they shall so report, and the
expenses of the proceedings shall be paid by the petitioner, and the county auditor, on the bank hereinafter provided for each day's expenses ($2.00) per day for each day an accountant's expense in the performance of his duty against the preceding 5 days, together with his accountant's expense in the county audited by the county auditor paid by the county treasurer on the order of the county auditor.
Sec. 46. A majority of the viewers shall
be required to pay the dues unless
of them, by this act.
visions relating to the
Beg. 58. The petitioner or petitioners
12
shall also accompany said petition with a bond to the county. in case of a county court case of a judicial ditch, for the case of a judicial ditch, for the case of a corporation interests, in an unantum to be by the county auditor in the case of a county court case of a corporation to pay all damages ditch, conditioned to pay all damages ditch, conditioned to pay all damages ditch, all fees and expenses that may be paid in incurred in the case.
In heaving a public ditch in a procession, the path is often marked from the starting points, routes and termini described in such a way no more than reasonably effective the purpose for them.
Dec. 60. Any aggrieved party may pay the amount of the board of county commissioners fixing the amount to any person or corporation bound to any person or corporation by filing to 12 of this chapter and the county auditor by filing to 12 of this chapter as required by section 12 of this chapter. The viewers shall have the right to enter on any such petition and of locating such ditch and after payment of the like manner enter upon such lands for repairing such work. The petitioner may agree with any person claiming or entitled to damage such petition and shall be filed in the office where the original petition was filed thereby shall not be considered by the
Sec. 6.1. Whenever any order of the board may herein be provided drama in whole or in part any incursious damage by any such order, or any taxayer resisted by any such order, or any taxayer resisted by any such order, or any such order, may appeal to the board from any of the proceedings and the procedures nor of taking such appeal shall conform to any other appeals. Such appeal shall bring before said court in all cases and provided that the party taking such appeal shall be bound to the board of county commissioners in the sum of one thousand dollars, to be appraised, the officer of the board of county commissioners to be conditioned that saillant appellant will daily be conditioned that saillant appellant will daily be adjudged against him, and that may be adjudged against him, and so. Sec. 6.1. This act of the court effect and
to about the time of the act, the act shall take effect and be in force from after its passage. Approved April 18, 1903.
CHAPTER 211-B. F. No. 32.
AN ACT relating to proceedings in criminal cases.
inal cases.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
**Sec. 6. Such information may be in the following form:**
**District Court.**
**County of ____.** **88.** **Judicial District.**
**The State of Minnesota.**
*(The name of the accused.)*
said county, hereby inform the court that on the day of ____. in that county or of accused (A. B. name or alias of accused) did (state of the accused) nestle the peace and dignity of the State County. Dated.*
**County Attorney.**
**Sec. 6. This act shall interfere and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 17, 1988.**
**CHAPTER 322-S. F. 414**
AN ACT to amend the constitution of the court to permit the erection, construction and approval of a five-thousand inhabitants when to approve the selection of a site therein in counties of this state having at least five-thousand inhabitants when the need for such building and construction is made for the erection, construction and equipment of the board of county commissioners of the State County.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Sec. 3. Such board shall organize at a meeting of three members on five days notice in writing to the remaining members. At such meeting rules for their own government, shall elect a president from their own membership, it shall be to keep the records of any office, and other critical work of the board, and to deny any from time to time give, and he shall be paid therefor as a salary to the meetings of such board shall be public records, the county auditor after such board have discharge any member of such board shall constitute a quorum, and three votes shall be necessary to approve the pardon of money. The members of their services, but shall compensation their expenses, necessarily paid or in advance their services, but shall
Sec. 4. Each of said commissioners shall be building for the purposes above set forth shall have been built and fully completed, and the building for the purposes above set forth in case of a vacancy occurring in said board said vacancy shall be filled by appointment of a new commissioner or original appointments were made in case of a vacancy occurring in duty of said board to superintend the erection and construction of the court house or other needs of such county, to furnish and maintain the work and material shall under the supervision thereof and the superintendent of construction to let all contracts for such erection or construction to purchase all materials the work and material shall under the supervision thereof and the superintendent of construction to have full authority within the county in and about the construction, erection and furnishing of said building, and such construction shall be let by said commissioner and furnishing of said building, and such commissioner and furnishing of the same and no steps shall be taken toward such erection and construction determined in the manner provided by
Sec. 6. The site for such court house should be identified by the board of county commissioners in suitability, but no such determination shall be made. The board has been approved by said board commissioners and shall be taken toward the acquisition of such building for use in charge or condemnation until the selection thereof has received the approval of such board. The said board of county commissioners shall be responsible and acceptable to the lowest responsible and acceptable construction of such building after notice of the board's direct for the purpose of securing competitive bids, the board, however, to have any such bids accepted. Any work subsequently found to be unacceptable by the contractual contract may be bid by contract or by contract of said board, and the furnishing of such building may be contracted for in such manner. Such petition may be contracted for in such commissioners may seem best, but house commissioners may compete best, therefore
Sec. 8. In no county of this state have
the state government duly five thousand (50,000) inholdings
or structures or building for the purpose
of county jail, or for one or more of such
purpose, ever or acquired thereafter, save
and except in the manner provided,
and in the manner inconsistent with the provisions of this act.
Sec. 10. This act shall take effect and
be in force from and after its passage.
CHAPTER 225—F. NO. 405.
AN ACT relating to the state training
institutions thereto and the management
theoretic, and repelling sections 2
and 3 of this act, and chapter 180 of the
act. Laws of 1800 of the
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. Who may be Committee—
a child under the age of seventeen years and under the age of seventeen years, and any of the courts of this state or any of the courts of this state of any crime prescribed by any general court, except the crime of murder, or the death of a person, any of said courts after due trial, as been proclaimed in the same year, or a criminal transference year, said court may thereupon commit such a child, and School or no child shall be so committed who is a proper subject for commitment to the court.
Sec. 2. Complaint—No infant shall be committed to said training school as incorrigibly or as an informal trumpet instructor in writing, signed and verified by the per-
son making the same, and filed in the place of residence, if known, of age and place of residence, if known, of age and faint, the name and residence of the whose custody such infant may be, and stating particularly the facts constituting the ground of the proceeding. Upon the filing of the complaint, as provided in the case, if said infant is not already in custody, cause him to the court for which purpose the court will proceed, and shall also thereafter cause a summons to be issued to the parent or guardian in whose custody he may be, requiring such parent to the court at a time and place to be filed by the court since cause if any, why such infant should not be so committed to such parent, guardian or person having twenty-four hours before such hearing, and shall also forthwith notify the parent or guardian of the time and place of hearing. Until the court and custody of the accused infant, but so child under twelve years of age, is placed in custody of the accused infant, where committed the child shall be sub-
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That the title of chapter 178, Laws, is hereby amended to read as follows:
An act to provide for the incorporation, insurance companies on the fixed pre-condition. See 2.2. That section 1. chapter 178, Laws, is hereby amended to read as follows:
A number of persons, not less than eleven, citizens of the State of Texas, are in an organization, for the purpose of life insurance, may associte themselves together and effect such or other insurance.
not otherwise. Such companies may be exempt, even upon certain conditions, from mutual liability and may be authorized to grant death indemnities or other benefits to such companies, provided that human life including endowments or policies issued by such companies, such companies shall charge and pay the amount required to guarantee such undertaking according to the terms of the contract, the amount interest or the actuarial combined experience table of mortality at 4 per cent interest or the actuarial combined experience table of mortality at 4 per cent interest.
Section 3. Filing and Recording of Articles—Upon the filing in the office of the attorney general, the office of the corporation, it shall be the duty of the insurance commissioner, if he receives the articles to the attorney general of the corporation, the attorney general to conform to the constitution with the constitution of this state nor of the United States, it shall be his duty to conduct the commissioner with his approval endorsed thereon, who shall forthwith record andSec. 5. That section 4, chapter 178, authorizes the attorney general hereby amended to adhere as follows:
Sec. 6. That section 5, chapter 178,
amended to read as follows:
Amended to read as follows:
Stock companies organized under this
amendment are required to pay $100,000
($30,000) more than one million
mollions ($41,000,000) of capital stock,
and $100,000,000 more than one million
invested in securities authorized by this
amendment and deposited with the insurance com-
munity.
Sec. 7. That section 6, chapter 178,
amended to read as follows:
Section 7. Mutual insurance companies
amended to be organized under this
amendment are required to maintain on
approved securities the insurance commiser-
tion, approved securities the insurance commiser-
tion, outstanding policy contracts, not to
ced, however, a deposit of two hundred
dollars, not to ced, hereby amended to
read as follows:
Sec. 9. That section 10, chapter 178, Lawss. 101, shall be read to read as follows. Section 10. Verification. Police Securities With Insurance Company. Deposit of Securities With Insurance Company. Filing of said annual statement of any company organized and doing the insurance of any company organized and doing the insurance
commissioner shall proceed to verify such value of each policy in force on the slate of the policy, and upon the basis of the American experience table of mortality and 4 per cent. value of each policy in force on the slate of the policy, and same rate of interest. For the purported commissioner may employ a company paid by the company for which the policy is being issued, to exceed one cent per thousand dollars of insurance so valued, but nothing here described, said valuation herein contemplated which may be received by the insurance company, or determined by the insurance company of verifying the report and of making the valuation thereafter. Including the cost of the clerical help employed by the insurance commissioner, it may be charged to the company by the insurance commissioner in lieu of a statement of such expenses file and record in his anex copy exact
The liabilities of all such companies are not included in the policy claims, whether due or not due, adjusted or unadjusted, and of all other liabilities. The amount of the cash could be held liable, and of the net cash which could not be held liable, and of the same shall not include the company's capital stock, not the amount on deposit in the company's state. And the sum total of all such liabilities may be approved invested assets of the company as herein provided. *11*, chapter 178, Laws of 1001, be and the same is hereby
Sec. 11. That section 12, chapter 178, is amended to read and answer any questions that the commissioner. Upon the filing and approval of the annual statement of any preceding sections, and if it shall appear that the company is required to file the required documents, he shall be the duty of the insurance commissioner to issue it to transact its appropriate business; to procure the first day of May of the upon the first day of May of the commissioner shall also issue such insurance company, upon request thereafter, with him under the provisions of Sec. 12. That section 12, chapter 178, Laws of 1901, be and the same is hereby Section 13. Failure of Company to make the failure of any company organized or doing business under this act to make the stated herein, the insurance commissioner new policies until there have been provided that the insurance commissioner may if good cause be shown, ex- statement or for making the required upon request of the company. But if no request made, he must within the extended grant, he shall immediately take charge of the company. Provided in sections ten and fifteen of Sec. 11. That section 15 of chapter 178, Laws of 1901, be and the same is hereby
See **18. Voluntary Dissolution—Notice**
that any time any company organized under this
state law any time any company organized under this
county where its principal offices are
business, that it has reaffirmed all of its
bilities of any character, such court shall
direct ordering the insurance company all
Defective Page
funds or securities thereafter deposited
or transferred to the account order shall be made until the insurance
pendency of such application at least
one month after the application is
laid thereon, and until a full hearing
is made.
Sec. 16. That section 20, chapter 175,
I. 16, is hereby amended to read 10, as follows:
Section 20. Company may collect interest from the company shall permit company to deposit with him stocks, bonds or other securities coming accrual on such deposits, delivering the coupon or other evidences of interest to the company or other evidences of interest to the company to deposit additional security as called for by the insurance company to close up or enjoy it, the securities to close up or enjoy it, the interest as it becomes due and add the same to the securities in his account provided any deposit hereof made by any such company shall be upon written application of the company, duly warranting that any deposit hereof is warranted, transferred to the custody of the insurance company, and that it shall be to receive and receive for same in the manner as provided in section 20.
Sec. 16. That section 23, chapter 178,
Laws of 1901, of law 163, is herby
obligated to observe. **follows:**
And provided further, that except loans that are served hold to the credit thereof, no such company may be required to serve any of such securities from, or loan to, any of such securities, or to trust, loan or saluted employ there, any violation of this provision shall be provided, that until the same shall be served, any securities, any securities acquired pursuant to the provisions of the company, authorized hereby, shall be valued at the amount of the company determining the assets of the company. Laws of 1901, be and the same is hereby amended to read as follows: Hold and Convey Real Estate—No company or company holding real estate to purchase, hold or convey real estate to be set forth for:
2. Such as shall have been mortgaged for security for loans for security due.
loans to men in the state shall have been conveyed to it in satisfaction of debts previously contracted in the course of its dealings, or
* Such as shall have been purchased at, or acquired by, the banks obtained or made for such debts, no company incorporated or for any convey real estate in any other case or for any other case. * Sec 18. * That section 2% charge is amended to read as follows: * Real Estate- All real estate acquired as after-fees or in whole or in part as its home or in part as its home, be sold, provided, be sold and disposed of within ten years after such company, such company shall hold such real estate for a time unless the said company procures a stone setting forth that the interests of the said company shall be sold for such real estate, in which event the time for the sale of the said insurance commissioner shall direct in said certi-
Provided, further, that if the home of a child is not such company, be occupied by it only in the case in which the child be upon the same foundation and under the same company, readily adapted to the company's use for the child.
Section 24. Contracts for Refinance—
in accordance with the law under this act may be
contracted of refinance insurance the risks
of refinancing the business engaged in the business
conditions—First: That the company which pro-
vides the reinsurance, authorized to transact
the reinsurance, authorized to transact
have been legally transacting business in
this state for a period of time, that its members
have actually been paying in cash a tax
excise, that its members shall have possessed of sufficient assets to
at least equal all the assets according to the
provisions of this act, and that the reinsurance
or ascertained by the insurance commission-
ing within sixty days of the date of retuf-
nance, and have been certified
officials.
Second: That the contract of transfer must be amended to and approved by the insurance company and subsequently by a three-fourth vote of the stockholders' society or association which proposes to retire, renew or meet the meeting of the corporation, or at a special meeting thereafter provided that a written or printed notice setting forth the proposed reinsurance agreement is made to each stockholder and the date fixed by such meeting. Third: The proposition to reinsure and assume the risk of other companies compiled to the stockholders or members of the company which should take the risk, and shall have been duly adopted by a three-fourth vote of the stockholders in regular or special meeting assays. Fourth: Notice setting forth the proposition in detail shall be meted to each of the thirty days before the date fixed for such
all of the assets of the retiring company shall be turned over to, and become the sole owner of, the company. The insurance of a stock company which has been issuing participation policies, and the insurance of a stock company which has an amount not in excess of the face value to an individual shall be the property of an officer, director, trustee, agent or solicitor. Any officer, director, trustee, agent or solicitor a party to such reinsurance contract, consideration, or benefit in connection with or by reason of, such reinsurance, such commission, consideration or benefit be paid from the funds of either company, or by reason of such reinsurance, such commission, consideration or benefit be deemed guilty of the crimes of bribery.
Sec. 20. That section 28 chapter 178
laws are hereby amended to read as follows:
1. That a resolution be passed by the directors, managers, or trustees of the authorizing authority or reincorporation of a three-fourths vote of the members or the board, be adopted by a special present at any result meeting or at any special meeting called for that purpose, and that the members have been duly given not less than sixty percent of the vote. 3. That a declaration be signed and acknowledged by two officers and by a member of the remaining directors, showing
(d) That all its members are and have
minimum amounts at least equal to those required by
divisions of this act, exclusive of the ex-
cuse (e) That its cash assets shall be at
minimum in the value of its policies or certificated
the value of its policies or certificated
according to the standard adopted by this
And in addition thereto, the provisions shall be compiled with. When such a resolution shall have been so, and adopt a new constitution under the laws of the State now existing under the laws of the State shall have been made and filed with the amended articles of incorporation and the amended documents of incorporation and the issued a certificate of reincorporation or organization under the seal of the office of the commission so filed with and authorizing insurance upon the plan and baked set insurance upon the plan and baked set association, or society shall thereafter company organized under the provisions company organized under the provisions rate rights and privileges of and be subject to similar company originally incorporated herein. See section 29, chapter 278 Laws of 1901. Be both the same is hereby
Section 11 the Consolidation of Companies—Section 11 the Consolidation of Companies—during business under the provisions of Section 11 the Consolidation of Companies—vided in section 26 of this act. Laws of 1601, 1601, and the same is hereby Laws of 1601, 1601, and the same is hereby
Before granting certificate of authori-
tory to an insurance company to issue pol-
licies, the State of Minnesota, the insurance
companies and the State of Minnesota, the insur-
ance companies and evidence that he sees
fit to make the claim, and the companies
qualified under the laws of this state to transact business
these. 24. That section 33, chapter 178,
Laws of 1901, be the same as here-
warded.
Sec. 25. That section 34, chapter 178, requires an amended to read as follows:
Any insurance company organized or owned by a member of the stockholders or an animal insurance company of the stockholders or an animal insurance company of the stockholders to give a day's notice to all stockholders or members thereof of such proposed amendment, represented and present, amend its article 25, paragraph 1, section 18, in violation of the laws of this state or country. Such company shall cause a certificate to the president or vice president and secretary or assistant secretary and thereafter same as original articles; upon such filing the president or vice president thereof in the case of original articles) shall become a part of such original articles. Sec. 26. That section 34, chapter 178, Law 124, requires an amended to read as follows:
Section 35. Restrictions, Fines and Penalties. Every insurance company comply.
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
1e any, have. Yoon cold to and are held
Ree ee epee fo
dt eee
See areas
Bee fe “Tht act shail take tect, and
“approved ‘Aen TS, 1G. =
seapnen ae 7d
aay TEETER EE af Soe
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sea ile aaa
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si Mito ane of ch
es Seas ae Be
ere xiat end OOP Re
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eer sidin BOY nt mining
get prra ere ae aera
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He are cause ore
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Fa gu Sue et. etge tare
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phos ey td Sel a at
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dicted ibs Ns aa
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emis seat data Sa fe
Sra, scrice ie gra cas
Seah erate
"see", ‘This act shall cake effect and
Wei es Sante te setae
noe on SOE
CHATOER 2S TNO. 3
ay STEN Sieh Eo
Seti So Rite tae aa
Sen tinetoen Tieigdred tay ome sie
Sanne 2 ee Ri aie
Hb ome Orapane
Beit an bby. the Legislature of the
at tite wo oo
Pe ies eaten 2.28
Se at oe ahh
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mann eka Ot it
rent Bel Seater Bettas
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a Sc eeentreka aa
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See to wok eae
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Be ed on Stans
Me De ac eat of oll
hnual accounts of the disposition and
eral rn fae Sal
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Ehereon: Nov'machioe which “docs not
lat with the secretary of state within
filed with the secretary of state. within
{Estat after i hwy of ot sama
“GE trom sald, report, it shall appear
ce foe. caig rey sal amet
sot Dit cakes seco:
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fd elie of cee Aerad
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Ee Pena tos hens
piltniog ‘shal "bg accepted “By, the
Bee, Scar tte dat
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Se Bema tony ot ach oy,
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Sei iene ait
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‘ged, by, &, majority, vote, ‘of its governing
iP seine Marae
Fey ern ee oa
ce Fe sete alt See Paha
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a ne exten cies
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ie aa meen aan
Ee hore eecenan
Sidi eaaeor anenie ue
See Seer Shame eer al
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scare one
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Se er ne ue ee
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daisy ie tas te
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Se eae ata a
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or Section aetit grea" suc ating
PAO EY ange a
cane sy “General Laws 1800, are heve-
Sectt hay sere, whe. stat wally
ee a Leann, as ate nan
beeen, ree iit ey cre
Pees create peomerora
ao eat aeaee erat fe
aes Kees tal Beeagees'e ae
ie ey ag ease
ae eg ea ae eee
“Approved April 18th, 1905. 7
CHAPTER 29-3 F. NO. 40,
ay TEPER SO tg
Pigg or Me a a
Be cele ake, ete atk
ett at bia te Se
oly cen ema
Eos meee meter
op eee ae es oc tar
rere were ot
pops bea
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Tae reiresl natianea ie ae
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and preseribing the description, grading
5] Receaniee, eeccton greg
a Re a Os
Greer Socte dake
Pe oe oe ces
ag moatiyinge or attempting to medlty Any
eee cee eee
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REE SR PR ec ot
‘"pproved Apt 38, 3608.) ee
CHATTER ied, NO.
ee ETE Tie a ae
us AEE Waar, ieee
PR gee
Seren merry aces
Ses cerneaes
ah Sa elton ot the
ade ee Oat
ee ee eee
Br tier epee goatee, Be
‘SeTTAny “Toca” Intprovontent”‘aasesament
She cect ete shee
ie teu mee Gees cet
fina expired: may seR-and dtspowe of the
Sad ak Shae dear teat
Sie oy es OMe se
iar iaritae,
Ts SEs wate Ge
pmaieataire cy emeieen se
ey aad ett otteeate ata
Rerhoa ee carer nce
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eh gee ga Sac
SSW aa Siem ae aatet
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ateacicertiente, together, with a dee
A duatrion dior ts Sigg = oF *
Bp ielat eattaeere of
Be ie tee tor reap
a ery
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‘Gxpire “until notice of expiration,
tere Laws of 1902 shall have been
a ap cep at wes
TOE eden Ma sta
nes ad
CHABTER ZA. No.2,
ax ART tad semen sate
dichaararnlte Ate oe
eau etal eden ot
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Signmedt certo isatod under the pro:
HER diana Gceara
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ES Gna that a date
syria Bag SS Piles
Sh scree a aitt eee
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catia w Geevateaie ts
Sel Bhan ode Sacre
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des Sa ae eater gat ae
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wie bec aLstst aS
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SSSRSE Aan ue
CHAPTER ZS. FX. 2,
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Sageal Baie ae Se ten
Reais Saas Le
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aE cosa by hn Liars oft
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sis SER ee ath
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education “ot any" school district inthe
ors mites Paulie o ama
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clams eames rs
ECS any alah ate
foetal tet Rota yc
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{hnds, Included. within “the scorporate
fins of ah cto Ria
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ct et
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pee ae ta
tes eee sams fears
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“Approved April 18, 1905. mt
ay SEER ET
SA Pe Ee ates
Spa a ana eh
ES Me RS atone, eo
oan Mas Sat
Wiehe etn ct aS
Sah aco aaa
Fei Meciee
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GLCP Wea om re of
at of aire ade st
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ley Gatitay aloha crane it
Sens anaes a
Eecisaai en ede
Sean ct wre
Shir Srucaraeh carte
Ri ctniral camara are
Eason to ne ‘protection of “children
Teealinn a Hen tN
Nouaars Sarcridcenial
Ese ae aes eter
SEA (alas Sate
Series ate inet
may. be considered
at 2 wey ta ang an
cee Sam ne EG
fa Cera tig pea yo
Ree nairiespustee teeta oe
Eee i esr pe
Sifts ae Sagnee he ss
ENC Saale Sat
Pi Gea ean ce coe
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SETTER EE EE Ni Ble
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BER SAS In teste
Baie ty cremtceents
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cen tens ey gta
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Sars Sl ela dat Se pe
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ction’ ot proseeding how pending in any
CEAPTBR aH. BNO. E
soy SENT ER Tila a2? Sasa
Oy oar tate ot 0
Section 1.” Fhe west one-half (Wi) of
na, sale ree See
ear tnecathtae GOWAN a don
eesti Baran et
SE aa pe
rahe ect a a Hace
Sn G eer memes
part of Tasca Stare Park.
Pt aes REAR sae of 0
Sis dee ng bah Ps ik
shai Soa ae
PEER e
AN AGI to ynaks the Uaiversity: of Min~
rE Bs OP Soe
oti age ty tne Harare of he
yy
cay or ante NE, at
ieee ath Sy St aA
iserpe Pet cacy wt
Seg ES, gry.ce tare
ca cca Bolas eae
ae eerie sae
soon as ready for distribution; and there-
Seo tel ere, Ss
rare anaes rear bet
sees melee OE BES
Raa Lee
Harp iia tats ecg
the ibrarian.
RS oan eee ro
eae aon
CHAPRER AH, F Ne 8
ay SENTRA ae
(a cena ees es
i BSGREA abe Staaten”
EEE y te Larue of the
acaba te
Beat cea of os
ste Moai beet cht
cei Se dete
Stina ceetartree
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Seypanidan aN iste te
‘gaged in fhtermtate transportation “of
Fle suk eran ee
earn ae eae
See ae ae
commission, i¢ they deom the matter one
Scan irae nee aoe
Sh eee cee ee
Sen oie int eit at
ation Saeco eer
Pigee, % Whenever any matter shall be
USnumieaion of tne United States, betwesn
Sie sus ane ames
soaine tama & maoeeaaes
Svne caine: & aires
ffelghts, charging such ‘carrier with ay
iSite Sar eet ee ce oe
matter the state rallvoad and warebeurs
ees ene oe
carteha fuireine oie
stituted ana purty in place of auch pot
aria Geen wat Sate
Seabee of the state into same mance
Siete aieade me arte en
wt eta a et
“Approved April 18, 1005. 7
Arran 2, Mat
aa SEAT ER SPH eli
AS ee ol ire
‘of other safety devices In ‘villages oF
Sic aes son
aT ones oe
Be tearm emp
uae Cate ono
Suan hha en yeas So
Sir te dears ent
src fa hs state of Siesta ‘on fee
Sonal, that tne crpexing of sty Falitond
See Ee vince tere
ksrove to ice and property and iving the
fee ieee a
Fortnwsth’ neatigate” the” samme "and
SON ie Biae''h, te
fe Cad erate tat a
i Scare man cea a
SS Sean eaa mare
Ay came camienne
fal ie ei sae Sth fa
Fea ahareraspiarics ease
fey aor Sly GP ate orikar a
Eee Swiehin ten 0) days acter guch
pie bee se eaneant Se
Be iiate attic atari rae
Sertfne'tn stanect thorsto whfen’ thal tn:
oats alts otic Shh hear
ete ie eee
aid “Smuntfaston as"fo what Kind of ehtes
Sci Panandeee neha
fi sacar ia Atage ea
ioe raran mace
Be eae fer aed
2 ae cia ase at
sea Serdar hate eerie
seine a cate era
a
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sahara Site
thereafter, maintain at such croselngs,
Siete ats ¢ ae cee
ice te Sh ar ata Man eae
Seinen Sracee eae
Rich onder aha "i, mae oben thy zal
Be ooer atiiewana *
SS ee eek G
wok cea Way tear eat SS
mice na eeneee ai
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Rey Sood
Bot SMene aed the atiorsee generat the
Batra wladhe tote itr
Pinte yy aston i, the freeing.
widely 20tin alle Sree
si aol Sipe See Ee Seat
phages sarod
ipl ae eatin eae mae
mea naves aren alae
Riera ecser Benes 2
sc atScin da io he bee at ee
Sse iia researc coal
a Cee eet te
ee a a ee eee
ieee hehe
CHARTER St BN.
sae ATATTER PEE Fils
ne aan cior areal See
viel {uO i eratare os
Surin Maas ane aasacnt ter
or ilies cnt ttre
eieg, We et Peter ae
Ges oe ue ara eae
Ee Ges etnias Sara
fart ANNE sein i
See al mei tse
See eiea sera oat
real’ teat SP ica: ae
Hc ea a et
Serie eee arc
se bef ey ce
fart thereof. ‘But no such ordinance shail
eee a chapter 68 of the |
As Ag AP a eens aa
Ge ROAR ahaa
Scum, Skate test
SC aE feast one hundred ‘and Ry howe
RT Gece GBe.0ho) inhabitant
SPR Stent elaine ot oe
Be aon 3 ot chapter
sie tase, ing tte Bina
lok a that in every epunty 1m the
pes ahah weet oat ay hee
after Mave, Seo otoRal ‘cenms, at icant
BGa Sl antene ae
EEG filer eal Bh
He giseer cami setae ae
Eh tae aoe kart a
‘fhooeane five hundred et), ‘dolars per
onum in Full payment for all services
Sea Tal age der ac
Seek, tea ea ana ad
fora te county treanury Bi aetna ‘ee
De area ee Tas
ie ah
Rimeelf ang deputies pects Dar
Se 2 This act ahall take effect and
borin floc from and ager its pessaxe:
‘approved April is two PS
HAPTER 2B No
op SERIE E10 38g
“amendment to article one (1) of the con
Sires aoa bse
‘Ble te producte'of the Zam ot eaten
Hee risteuiais ati ate
grit anaewea by the Lagisiature of the
Bee vce mentees
Hearst s eas
Ripa regatta ga
‘hen eo approved shall be known aa wee-
Beieras bir eas
SES Ber. ot oc
Seeetidae rae a
scon'2* tule proposed amendment shall
tbo submitted to the electors of said state
Eerie man ite
Sree, Garam &
Sees Pa ee cate eal
Seti te eee Be
Hee ee ecg tee eee
Bie amas eae
She" Poters Voting ae nla election upon
SUN, itd, oe oil
Tea dag ARSE che enue abil have been
eee rir ances
Sat Geer i eee
State of Minnesota.
Be een te etc nt
"approved April 18, 3008.
CHAPTER 26H. P. NO. 567.
ag SEER Eas
‘Gthehded” by section fof, chapter” 304
Seetiel ie Fim Seder oe
gicaary ciel dose
oy eae Cae
See ons aaa
See aes 2 eee
‘Beit cnacted by the Legislature of the
eee
ee coe
(Ps ee eee
Sek eae eee
Serer eae Gan
Se omer Sarr Steer
Baie Pps ade re ae
ered fe cer es
Sipe deere gy ee
Pie arias Pee See
SRG ee tae eee
Petty Mice a
Sooty eh eats, eat ae
Se See ere
Sepa at ear oee
Er See Guernsey
ea mas
Els eetie Se creme, es
Scan er ae es er a
SES ar Se store he
ey at eesti aes
Tee eee
deere Seah on oy &
Salt sums of money in nia hands a
UG? May’ Wesigate provid, that the
trite ot Inenfporation of seh company
Pe eg at ger
GOMER Grattan me
Bae eee coe
Sci g oa peat are
Berit Se pe cre
Hie Ses neces mrt
Saab csesrrasts
SE a me at ah ta te, a
mn, teh Hom age ae
AGT to regulate the ‘tres
AN AGT to regulate, the treniment, and
Moca of dens sited ana
SER tae tages ot
Section 1. Thix act shall apply only to
iat ng aa 2
et eee
Se Gea Fae tate
Se See Se ee
Sian Satna ri ce
st Tguatatsnahip: “ar fhe habitually Sams
a rete: oe er ee
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a
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or eet kere tale
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See wee ee
bore Pathe Sree ine
‘patronizes any polley shop or place whore
Pag ty pee es
Heal eerie Mista? wale
is de ti anes er op
Bibi lat ee
i ts le ae, ay a
See sath ire
Sea esa, Aa
Miho lawful authority: or who Nabltus
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Sue aemed Slaton Se
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aaboatg om iy ot te pat
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Sha ‘ataen€ fo uch adoption. “And. auch
ELSE Gearon
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fa See Powe aoe
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of the petition tn, such adoption proceed
feo One. eld
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cee ah Ses sat Se
Serer
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it shail be to have chargo of such scales.
CEP Re ornare
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i Bt eee arc cee
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Sa abd owing fe SS ESO
net at a
DEE SPT the tain of the
‘Bection 1.”.A tay shall bo and te horeby
eee oc ch ent tae enay
eed lata altars, ot
Set Sede ee cee era
SSaMa attain Gor an
mee ah ee ant be, comoatet
wee Le Genes
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Bai Be’oe and ono-nalt ‘Gi per cent
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ae gen
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Page acir nade ae
‘When such valuation Js ono hune
eee Pa eae ba oe
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wae ducihaae see a SEAS
Spode ame cara oy
Ea eee a
See ae
ee, Hat esearch
React Senin ee
Fanti, Sree nad
Barareh
on wl eres cece tees
eee Ee ee ed
Sena aie an poses ot ace
Ee eee tee
See Sila a tur dak aeeiges
ERs, sale eres ll ee
in Raia betes
ie oh He ange gr gh eno
property for distribution embraced in ot
or trustees shall have full power to sell so much of the property entrusted in an agreement that the property will enable him to pay the tax imposed by the agreement, and be entitled by law to do for the payment of the tax.
Sec. 16. The appraiser appointed under the notice to give notice by mail to all persons known to have a chair or interest in the information to be appraised, including the county treasurer and such persons as the proatee and place when they will make such appa
prior to private court shall immediately give the value of any inheritance, imminent limitation of the value of any inheritance, taxable under this act and of the tax on the inheritance therein, including the tax on interest within thirty days after the assessment batee of court or tax imposed by this assessment batee of court or tax imposed by this assessment batee of court.
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
or any person interested therein, may be asked to write, and praying for a reassessment and reestimation of such tax. Upon the court court will appoint a time for the hearing thereon to be given the state auditor, county treasurer and all parties interested thereof. At the time appointed in such notice the court shall proceed to hear the case. If the case may be offered in support, thereafter such hearing, after such hearing, said court shall be determined of such tax should be made it shall, by order, set aside the case and ordered a reassessment in the same manner as if no assessment had been made.
These entries shall be made from data obtained from the application or in any proceeding relating to the case. The judge of produce shall also enter in the case any such evidence, as shown by the inventory theory, when made and filed in the case. Appraisers appointed by him under this theory are appointed to examine the vices, bequests, legacies and gifts inherited from such deed, or given by such person, to the probate court, and the tax assessment receipts for payment thereof cited with receipts for payment thereof cited with receipts.
Sec. 28. This act shall take effect and
approve the Act in its passage.
Approved April 16, 1905.
CHAPTER 228-H. F. NO. 268.
AN
ANNOUNCED, proved or acknowledged
and recorded after the expiration of twenty
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of New York.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in effect after its passage. Approved April 11. **NO. 621.** **AN ACT to provide for paying the expense incurred by the sheriff of any county this state in executing a warrant.**
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota: The surfer may any person has been convicted of murder in the first deed and sentenced to death, warrants issued and delivered to the proper surfer for the purpose of the surfer's sherif shall have authority to make such execution, including the employment of the sherif in the county, and upon rendering to the board of county commissioners an itemized and verified statement of such necessary and required commissioners shall allow. and pay the sherif out of the general revenue where such duties have within three months been performed by the sherif where such duties have within three months been provided by the sherif incurred not but paid, the board of county commissioners directed to allow and pay the same upon the presentation of such reasonable
Now therefore, said copy of said plat,
the official plat of the original township
of Little Falls lying and being
the city of Little Falls lying and being
the city of Little Falls lying and being
also cast half of blocks 6, 7 and 7, west
of said First street, as shown on
Sec. 2. The register of deeds in and
around the city authorized and empowered and directed
the copy of said plat above shown on
copy of said plat above shown on
on file in his office, in the manner and
the expense thereof to be borne by Mov-
see. Sec. 3. This plat shall take effect and
the expense thereof to be borne by Mov-
see. Approved April 10, 1905.
CHAPTER 225-H. F. P. No. 800.
AN ACT any city in the
location of over 50,000 inhabitants to issue
of constructing a bridge across a river or
constructing a bridge across a river or
part of the boundary line of such city
by the Legislature of the State of
Michigan.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and
appress April 19, 1506.
CHAPTER 324-H. F. No. 467.
AN ENUMERATION
seven hundred and seventy-five (478)
Statutes of 1884, relating to the record-
ship of the Legislature (if it be enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That section four thousand seven hundred and seventy-eight (4788) of the Statutes of 1854, relating to the record of marriage certificates, be and the same is made in the following:
Defective Page
CHAPTER 295—H. F. No. 638
Section 25. In order to be entitled to aid as a state rural school, such school must have maintained during the school year next preceding that for which aid is granted at Second-It shall be taught by a teacher from one of the state state certificate, or a diploma from one of the state state certificate, or a diploma from a normal school of another superintendent of public instruction, or a diploma from a public school of another state certificate pursuant to the laws of Third-It shall have a suitable school building, outhouses, and doing business efficient work. Superintendent work twenty-five (25) of chapter three hundred and fifty-two (32) of chapter three hundred and fifty-three (33) of chapter three hundred and one (1001), and by chapter General Laws of nineteen hundred and three (138), be and the same hereby is
Section 25. Superintendent of education shall be appointed to each school fully compiled by the provisions or laws may be established by him in relation to state rural schools specified in section twenty-three (23) of the grade certificate, and in section grade certificates, the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars (125) provided by each school hold second grade certificates, the sum of fifty dollars (50) in each year provided however, that the case may be the act for the payment of aid to such school to apportion to each of said state rural schools one hundred and twenty-five dollars (125) and fifty dollars (50) required as is appropriated and available shall be apportioned among all the districts thereof.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved April 19, 1955.
CHAPTER 202 - H. F. No. 78.
AN ACT to establish and create a public
bank, known and designated as the
Minnesota State Bank, to purchase and condemn of land in the purchase and condemnation of land.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Sec. 4. The attorney general is hereby authorized to make a reasonable step to procure from a reasonable person owning land within limits of state land, a park or a public park purposes and for such reasonable purposes and for such reasonable purposes, upon a subject to the approval of the state attorney general in case any tract or parcel of land within limits of state land is to be used upon satisfactory terms, the attorney general in case and in behalf of the state proceedings in condemnation, as now provided in law, property which this state to public use may be used for, are had and taken for the condemnation and are held and taken for the condemnation and are provided for obtaining title to land, by the attorney general in all all of the provisions of an act approved by the state and all amendments thereof to the state and all amendments thereof to the state and all other provisions of law properly applicable, shall also be applicable to such
Sec. 5. Any person who shall willfully wilfully willfully cut, destroyed or cause to be destroyed willfully cut, destroyed or cause to be destroyed of any kind, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction therefore shall be punished by a fine of not less than $10,000, or by hundred dollars for each offense, or be imprisoned in Minnesota, for the value of $10,000 in Minnesota. For than ten days or more than ninety days
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The board of county commissioners of any county in this state may impose a license for the authorization of one hundred and fifty thousand (150,000) inhabitants or over, but less than one hundred and fifty thousand (150,000) may, when they deem it expensive, impose a license for the possession of the liquor license laws of this state, appoint one county license inspector, who will be responsible for office during the pleasure of said board.
Sec. 2. It shall be the duty of such county to effect in enforcing the laws in reference to liquors in all parts of said county not to permit the sale of liquors which shall be his duty to procure evidence and record of all persons selling liquors of this state outside of incorporated counties of this state outside of incorporated counties of all his doings when called upon to sell liquors in his stoners. The said license inspector is responsible to constrain the statute as well as common law, so as to proceed in investigations of liquors.
Sec. 3. The said license inspector shall
obtain the license of the person or a bond
of this state, and give a bond with
two (2) or more surretees running to the county commissioner to be approved by them, the commissioner will sum five hundred dollars ($500), conditionally to the commissioner of said office. The commissioner of such license inspector shall be fixed by the board of county commissioners at at least seventy-five dollars ($75) per year, as exceeding seventy-five dollars ($75) per year, shall be payable out of the county treasury. See 5. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
2. Cultivate at least five (5) per cent of said tract, or,
CHAPTER 300—H. F. No. 402
AN ACT relating to appointments of Inspectors under the state dairy and food commission, fixing the qualification of Inspectors, and maintaining their tenure of and renewal from office.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota
Sec. 5. All persons now holding post-departure has been departmentalized to be the provisions of this act and shall hold office under the laws as they exist prior to the passage of Section 6. All inconsistent provisions of law are waived. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 19, 1895.
CHAPTER 201-H. F. NO. 711. AN ACT to provide for fixing salaries for officers of the council of all cities having a population not to exceed ten thousand (10,000).
Ec. it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota has all cities in this state having a population not to exceed ten thousand, and all cities in any council of such cities may, prior to any annual election, pass a resolution fixing the annual salaries of the mayor and the council to exceed one hundred dollars ($100) per annum for each of said officers and members thereof to be given to the voters of such cities, and the record of such city shall place upon the official ballot of said city.
Sec. 3. This act shall apply to all such persons who are not properly porated under a general or special law, but nothing herein contained shall be construed against such persons now operating under a home rule charter. Sec. 4. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act are hereby re-protected.
Sec. 5. This net shall take effect and be applied to the passage. Approved April 19, 1065.
CHAPTER 302-S. F. No. 299
ANWARDS of warehouse receipts by public warehouse in this state.
CHAPTER 302-S. F. No. 299
the state of Minnesota:
the State of Minnesota:
an any grain is delivered to a public warehouse in this state, and any grain is delivered to a public warehouse in this state, so far as the capacity of his warehouse is equal to the permit. all grain him in the main course of any business, warehouse receipt in form prescribed by the state shall be issued and delivered to the owner of the warehouse, giving true and correct parcel of grain, giving true and correct parcel of grain, giving true and correct parcel of grain, receiving receipts shall be consecutively numbered and no two receipts bearing the same warehouse during any one year, be issued and delivered in the receipt, in which case the new receipt shall be issued and delivered in the original, and shall be plainly marked on
Sec. 5. All actual expenses and costs of the act shall be paid by the compaigns of the act, and an itemized statement of the expenses and costs shall be filed with the compaigns of the act. The compaigns of the act copy the decision of the commission. No officer of any such company or compaign shall be required to employ of the state, shall receive any payment or indemnity, for in any manner strictly or indirectly, for in any manner in consolidation or reinsurance, or in stockholder of any such company or compaign, or any member of such commission, or any member of such commission, sent to the violation of the provisions of this act shall be punished by a fine of one hundred dollars or by imprisonment for not less than one
*Sec. 7. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 18, 1903.
CHAPTER 34—S. F. NO. 423.
AN ACT to amend chapter 59 of the Constitution of the State of Minnesota for the year 1807.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota that Chapter 59 of the Gen-Section L that Chapter 59 of the Gen-
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its missure. Approved April 18, 1866.
CHAPTER 30-S. F. NO. 40.04
The chapter contains the counties of and the title threite in counties of and seventy-five thousand inhabitants.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Third-Infants and other persons under the proper probate court in a state pointed by the proper probate court in Fourth-A corporation, by its proper officer, or by a lawfully authorized by the directors. Fifth-Any executor or administrator court in this state. Fifth-Any executor or administrator the application must be named as applicant, the application must be signed by the title to which it is derived from any tax or law assessment sale, and should be to be valid by a court of competent jurisdiction, recorded with the register of娶娶, to make the application when for at least fifteen years the land is being in the adjoining area through whom he claims title. The application must be simple and no mortgage, lien or other charge upon land in foe simple therein is registered; the application is subject to any outstanding charge or lien, a mortgage, or other traction. The Application -The application shall be in writing, and shall be signed by his agent thereunto lawfully authorized and verified by a agent any exempt of such agent shall be executed, and acknowledged in the manner required for the application and shall be recorded and verified with the registration is situated, before the filing of the. If the application is made by a corporation, it shall be verified by some officer
Sec. 7. Non-Resident Applicant-Agent
in the State of Minnesota, he shall file for
resident agreement, duly executed and acknowledged,
appointing an agent to assume full responsibility
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SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1905.
NOT THE ONLY BETE NOIR
The Afro-American is not the only heir of the American republic There is the Chimaman, the Jap and the Mormon. Concerning the last named, Senator Dubois, in a recent address, mentioned the following
"The political strength of this organization has vastly increased until now. in addition to absolutely controlling Utah, they hold the balance of power in Oregon and Nevada, and have a following of no inconsiderable importance in other western states. Their great aim is political power, so as to protect them in their polygamous communities. They also effect a senator from Utah, Idaho or Wyoming who will openly oppose the methods or practices of the governing power of the Mormon church. I do not mean to be understood by the statement that the Mormon church is the senator in Idaho and Wyoming, but I say that they are sufficiently powerful to defeat any one for the United States Senate in either of those states if they desire to, and I will say in the next chapter that they will exercise the power to defeat any one in either Idaho or Wyoming for the United States Senate. for Congress or for governor who will oppose them in the exercise of their political power or who will undertake to punish them for their polygenous practices.
These facts are, perhaps, not generally known, and have not received the attention they deserve. It is a fact that few people who hold the 'balance of power' often produce the most important political results and really control the affairs of the country. The Morrison have accumulated great power in the general government. They are not only able, but are actually doing so just as the Southern states are doing. The theories which once domesticate the country are, one by one, based on facts. The sure result is not hard to foretell.
---
MR. ANANIAS OF MISSISSIPPI.
A Mississippi Ananias, who recently rejoined in Washington City, gave to the press the following statement: "The only handicap to our prosperity in Mississippi is the worthlessness of our labor. Conditions of existence are easy; a negro wants only a peck of meal and three or four pounds of meat to live on for a week, and when he can make it for a day, he can make seven he is entirely indifferent about working. If one of them allows his wages to accomlate to $30 or $40 and gets his accommodation on Saturday, by Monday he will
have spent every cent of it in gambling or some other dissatisfaction fashion—not one in five hundred exhibits the least symptom of thrift or frugality.” In connection with such statements, he writes that the Afro-American does not think it any disgrace to lie to or about an Afro-American. The ‘Southerner of the old type, who had, along with his lax sexual immorality and whisky-guzzling proclivities, some streaks of alcohol and his granulation has degenerated in every respect, except in being proud of his ancestry. A Southern convict would not remain in a penitentiary that did not give him more than a peck of meal and three, or four boys and his granulation has ever lived in the South knows that the great mass of Afro-Americans never gamble at all; since they are members of churches and societies from which they would be excluded if the fact of such an indulgent became known. The author of the book on the Afro-American is the burn element of the Afro-American race with whom he consorts in the backwoods of Mississippi; but evidently he has had no intercourse with the respectable element,—lhe men who conduct large plantations that are the wealth of thousands of such Afro-Americans in Mississippi. If you don’t believe it, read the United States Census.
NOT RETROGRADING
The Chicago Tribune has discovered, so it thinks, that the Afro-West Indian is retrograding, owing to the withdrawal of the white man's surveillance. Thereupon it proceeds to reason out the conclusion that the unfortunate individual has begun to sink down again to the level of the old tribal life in Africa. The Tribune admits that the Negro is follow that he can govern a nation. The Tribune falsely is in accepting the statements of Judge Lambert Tree, who has just returned from the West Indies. He may be a competent witness, if it can be shown that he is destitute of prejudice, and can be relied on to tell the truth, the truth of the case. Otherwise his evidence is worth nothing and would be thrown out of any court. There are very few white men whose statements in regard to the Afro-American area of any value whatever; the virtues of their race prejudice totally disqualifying them as witnesses deserving any consideration, whatever. The fact is that the Negro government is about to accredit as those of the white populations of the South American countries and the testimony of all the Lambert Trees 'in existence, cannot disprove what is known to the world.
THE POPE AND AFRO-AMERICANS.
Father John E. Burke, pastor of the Church of St. Benedict, the Moor, at the opening of a fair for the benefit of the church, showed a silver crucifix, which will sell for $5,000 to be used as a fund for the church. Father Burke spoke of the interest the Pope takes in the welfare of the Afro-Americans and the following names which his holiness him a visit to Rome, "Tell the Colored people of America that I embrace them all in the charity of Christ."
Well, really, the times are out of joint, and the head of the greatest Christian church has gone and out Roosevelted Roosevelt. Just to think of his embracing all the "colored people of America," in any way, literally, or metaphorically, he has created a most destructive firebrand—one calculated to nulify the wise teachings of Vardaman, Tillman and Poultnier Bigelow, and to inspire all Afro-Americans with dreams of social equality. It really seems that his holiness is trying to spoil all the good feathers of Western Europe, and the Pope has enriched the advantages of a South Carolina training, he may be somewhat excusable; but what apology can be made for Father Burke, an American citizen, for publishing such a message in the newspapers?
---
An ex-office of the English army, who has served for many years in the far East, says that the Japanese have shown themselves masters of the science of war. "It has been left to the little brown man to utilize an enchinery, of which we have scientificly than any of the white races." This is rather a remarkable admission for a white man to make, but it is a truth and a remarkable and significant truth. Its significance lies in the fact that it leaves no vestige of the theory of the innate superiority of the white man and a step to his disintegrated mastery of all the regions of the world. And it can be readily seen that, in a short time China, with her four hundred millions of people will be the recipient of Japanese culture and training and bid defiance to the pratical operations of the white nations.
The mills of the gods grind slowly. But they grind exceedingly fine.
4 Brot. Fortune of the New York Age is disquieted because there seems to be no provision for utilizing the Afro-American labor of the South in the construction of the Panama canal, and suggests that it may be because of disturbances or poor conditions in that interesting portion of Uclem Sam's domain. Bro. Fortune's reasoning is very plausible: for any attempt to divert Southern labor to Panama would provoke a howl from the South that would appall Christendom: Our Southern people would be the Afro-American, the South would soon become a howling wilderness.
M. J. Hornsby, a postal clerk of Yazoo City, has recently been forced to resign his position and to leave that city, where he lived for himself in obnoxious to the white citizens of Yazoo City by passing the best civil service examination. This atrocious act excited the wrath of the high-struggle Mississippi governor, convinced him by that he would do well to leave Yardman's domain.
---
The Baltimore Sun is not enthused over John Sharp Williams' scheme of passive resistance. The Southern fire-eater is no longer a hero; but is rated as the marplot of the times.
A "superior" white man recently robbed a pest house at Winchester, Va., and has been sent to jail for six months. He desperate bounces in their steelings.
"Opposition to the institution of slavery arose from religious convictions as to its sinfulness or from economic and social conditions, or from the influence with Mr. Jefferson condemned it because it was important to influence because as important as his or her role in the defense of political forces; while that having an important part in the creation of a third party. The Society of Friends led all other denominations in the employment of the priesthood. Lord Lloyd Gordon, Benjamin Lundy or Chas. of moral influence for the eradication of slavery, and Methodist churches at an outspoken utterances in the P. sestyrian, Baptist and Methodist churches at an outspoken utterances in Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee."
"Some years ago one who had been completed his education endeavored to study faithfulness of current history in dealing with the anti-slavery movement and thereupon a controversy sprang up in Osborne was entitled to be styled the first writer who challenged "the truth of the writer who challenged "the truth of Osborne to be mentioned before other Lundy or Garrison, but strangely overly enthusiastic. Osborne was strikingly like of Lundy—John Woolman, a Friend, who was born in New York and graduated from the count of his early life and career, exceeding sentiments. "When about 20 years of age he visited North Carolina, where he met the holders and wrote an essay entitled "Considerations on the Keeping of Negroes" which was published, a wide circulation was obtained in the work of emancipation. He traveled from colony to colony, preaching remembrances of the "Free Soil Movement," "The Compromise," "The Nomination of Lin-wood of wealth of information and breadth of knowledge, which could only result from the leading men of those stirring times.
Vol. II opens with a chapter on "The Invasion of the United States: In the history of nations wackrules are treated with scant respect. They become oppression; they imperial governments and real enemies to human progress. When Mr. Buchanan was brought face to face with the United States, the Union and overthrow the government he constituted the fundamental law to be enforced. The executive, Imagine Andrew Jackson, the 1830-61. Would members of Congress engage" in the work of disunion have been they have billed him
CIVIL WAR TIMES
Civil War Times. By Daniel Walt Howe, author of the Puritan Republic: 1650-1800. 10.00 Indianapolis: Dobbs-Merrill Co.
The war of 1615 will never cease—at least perennial and never failing to tabulate of its perennial and never failing to tabulate of its war of giants; because of because of war of giants; because of because of those giants still survive its virescitudes; and because of their next deadly breach"; its long and dreadful marches; its Gettysburg and Chickensburg战役; its profoundly inflicted the civilizations of the world; because its echoes still reverberate in the various activities of American life. Because of these things the author's work with profit; by any one and many incidents of the great strife which has hitherto unwritten, is brought forth by Mr. Hawk.
There are other very interesting chapters in this book that are clear, unimproved and natural, and the author has written instructively.
HISTORY OF THE COMMUNE OF 1871.
History of the Commune of 1871. Translated from the French of Lissagarray by John A. McCarthy, New York International Publishing Co.
"History of the Commune of 1871," written by Eleanor Mac Arvelling, is a well written volume of history, dealing with one of those political convulsions: which have so shocked France to its foundations.
The translator has performed the difficult translation of the grammatical and pointed style of all French prose, and of which Lissagarray appears to be the descriptive art of the author never lags from the opening to the closing pages, and this book of extraordinary happenings.
The Commune of 1871 was th. culmination of French weakness and imbebency in the French army. The French followed swiftly upon the leels of the prostration of the French by the wonder-
strategists Von Moltke
The author then follows up with a de-
finitive, which is a statement of
between the contending factions which
finally burst forth in all the horrors of the
Paris, Marseilles, Toulouse and Narbon
were soon to be converted into veritable
warriors. The author struggles which for madness and un-
checked violence finds few counterparts.
The author's book is a sequel to
Many new events—that is events which
have hitherto been obscure to the student
of the book. The author, in his work which considered
either from a literary or historical view-
point, achieved of no inconsiderable merits.
---
HENRY WARD BEECHER
Henry Ward Beecher. By Lyman Abbott.
$1.15. Boston and New York.
$1.25. Boston and New York.
Dr. Abbott made the acquaintance of Dr. Beecher as a choicest friend was a choicest mate friend of his friend Dr. Abbott. He attended and is thus well qualified to give an outline of the character of the Beecher as it is presented so not much a history of the life of Beecher as it is presented, but is assigned to Dr. Abbott.
ANTISEMITISM.
Antismitism, I. B. Bernard Lazare,
Cloth silt top. New York. International
Cloth silt top. New York. International
Recent events in Russia have given a transition to a peculiar timeliness. It is a transition that pages must have been written many times. The most painful interest to the Jewish question is the allusion and subject to all the odium that is implied in the title to his book, but this is not the case with his judgment in the forming of his opinions. The case is certainly stated in the book, and is attributed with fairness. The fault is found to be not all on the part of the Gentile audience with having brought much of the trouble to his people by manifest shortness.
The treatment given the subject is his historical relations between Jews and Gentiles are traced from the earliest times. Perhaps he recroponally between the He-terans and the Gentiles, learn how much of proselytism has been carried on recroponally between the He-terans, has resulted a greater mixture of race than Jews would perhaps, willingly add to distinctions whether these be founded upon the same skin. So long, however, as the opinion prevails that races are distinct from part and inferiority on the other part there is likely to be trouble between Jew and Gentile. The skin of Jews white. There are too many illustrative of this country, and this book can be read with profit by many who are called upon to decide questions daily arising
FORMS OF ENGLISH POETRY
A view of the town.
An unsectarian Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education. College, New College Preparatory and Song in High School courses, with Inductor Training. Supervantage in Music and Printing. Athletic for boys. Physical Home and training. Aid given to needy and deserving students. Term begins the first Wednesday in October. For catalogue and information, address President HORACE BUMSTEAD, D.D.
Virginia Normal Collegiate Institute.
PETERSBURG, VA.
departments--Normal and Collegiate; Special Vocational; Vocal art and instrumental Music; Theoretical Agriculture; Sewing and Cooking.
Institute of Electrical Systems lighted by electricity; room, basin tuition, light and heat.$80.
For Catalog and Particulars write to J. H. JOHNSTON. President
Atlantic, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common
Medical, and Medical schools. Five dollars a year
on tuition, light and unlimited room. Separate home
room for little boys from 6 to 15 years. Term begins last
logue to President of Knoxville College, Knoxville
GAMMGN THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
AIMS AND METHODS
Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agricultural
School Co.ress, together with Theological, and Medical
will own all articles of board motion, and an
and mark for little girls and another for little boys
Monkey in September. Send sor catalogue to President
Term
Knoxville College, Classical, Scientific, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common
School Course together with Professors of Mathematics, Physics, Law, History.
will cover all expenses of board, tuition, fuel, light and furnished room. Separate home
and matron for little girls and another for little boys from 6 to 15 years. Term begins last
Monday in September. Send for catalogue to President of Knoxville College. Knoxville
University.
JOSEPH D. MAHONY, Municipal, Allegheny, Pa.
Morristown Normal College
FOUNDED IN 1881.
New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC BOSTON, Mass.
BALTIMORE & O
CHICAGO
SAN JOAQUIN
CLEVELAND
COLUMBUS
MILWAUKEE
PITTSBURG
COLUMBUS
CHICAGO
ST. LOUIS
LOUISVILLE
ALL TRAINS VIA
E & OHIO R. R.
CLEVELAND
NEW YORK
PITTSBURG
OPTHALDELPHA
WASHINGTON
CANTIMORA
S VIA WASHINGTON
DAY
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HINGTON
MORE
OPTHALDELPHA
BALTIMORE & OHIO R.R.
CHICAGO
SAN FRANCISCO
CLEVELAND
NEW YORK
COLUMBIA
PITTSBURG
PHILADELPHIA
ST. LOUIS
LONGWILE
BALTIMORE
ALL TRAINS VIA WASHINGTON
TEN DAY
STOPPED
ALLOWED
AT
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BALTIMORE
PHILADELPHIA
DEPOSIT TICKETS
IMPREDIATELY ON
ARRIVAL AT
EITHER CITY
Defective Page
TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institute
TUSKEEGEE ALABAMA.
(INCORPORATED)
Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Legislature as The Tuskegee State Normal School.
BOOKER 7. WASHINGTON, Principal.
WARREN LOGAN, Tuspasser.
LOCATION
blacks outnumber the whites three to one.
**ENROLLEM AND FACULTY**
Enrollment last year 1.251; males 882; females 88.
**Instructors**, Average attendance, 103–105.
**COURSE OF STUDY**
Enrollment 28; industries in constant operation.
**VALUE OF PROPERTY**
Property consisting of 2.267 acres of land. 50 builts in design with student land is valued at $330,000, and no mortgage.
**NEEDS**
$50 annually for the education of each student. You can finish it with student land. Students pay their own board in cash and labor. $50,000 creates permanent student land and building.
Besides the industrial leaders, thousands are reached through the Tuskegee Ngro Conference.
Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and 136 miles west of Atlanta. on the Western Railway.
Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern town that is home to a large number of mates at all times and uniform, thus making it a popular destination.
SCOTIA SEMINARY
CONSORD, N. F.
This well known school, established for the first term of 1881, will be for the next term October 1. Every effort will be made to provide for the comfort, safety, and security of the dents. Expense for board, light, fuel, washing, $15, for term of eight months. Address: D. D. J. Batterfield, D. D., 1220 W. 10th St.
A Practical, Literary and Industrial
Trades School for Afro-American Boys and
Girls. Unusual advantages for Girls and a
separate building. Address.
Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commodious. Incorporated. Departments: College Propaganda, Typewriting and administrative Training.
FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE Will pay for board, room, light, fuel, tuition, and equipment. Tuition $8.00 per month; tuition $20.00 per term Through work done in each department Soil work done to present a report.
REV. JUDSON S. HILL, D. D.
All the advantages of the faint and most completely necessary accommodation in the world, the art of teaching and the association with the professors in the Profession are arranged in Music. Through work in all departments of music, Course can be arranged in Ecole, Studio and Orchestra. All particulars and your book will be set on application.
President HORACE BUMSTEAD, D.B.
*spartments-Normal and College; Special attention to Vocal art and Musical and Historical Agriculture, Sewing and Fabric; Healthy Location; heated by steams lighted by *slectricity; room, board tuition, light and heat.* 800.
Catalog and Partic. write to J. H. JOHNSTON. President
The aim of this school is to do practical work in helping men towards practical work in helping men towards practical work is broad and practical; its ideas are high its work is thorough; its methods are fresh, systematic, clear and simple. CRSI. The regular course of study occupies three years, and covers the lines of work in the several departments of theological instruction and pursued in the leading theoretical country. EXPENSES AND AID Tuition and room rent are free. The apartments for students are plainly furnished. Adult students may pay seven dollars per month. Buildings heated by steam. Adult students without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students. Adult students help. No young man with grace, gifts, and energy, need be deprived of the advantages now opened to him. Seminary. For further particular address L. G. ADKINSON, D. D.,
TILLOTSON COLLEGE.
AUSTIN, TEXAS.
The Oldest and Best School in Texas for Colored Students. Faculty mostly graduates of well known colleges in the north. Music is a part of the regular course. Music a special feature of the school. Special advantages for earnest students seeking to help themselves. Send for catalogue and
REV, MARSHALL R. GAINES, A.M.
PRESIDENT.
SAMUEL HUSTON COLLEGE.
A GRISTIAN SCHOOL . Experienced Faculty
Progressive in all departments, best Methods of
Instruction, most students looked after
Students taught to do manual
work as well as think. For catalogue and
information, call R.S. LOVING GOOD, AUSTIN, TEXAS-
R.S. LOVING GOOD, AUSTIN, TEXAS-
BRAINERD INSTITUTE
A large and industrial school with a
graded course of study, designed to give
a thorough, symmetrical and complete
education. A dedication for success and usefulness in every
vocation of the school and boarding hall
CHESTER S. C
BISHOP COLLEGE.
BISHOP COLLEGE.
OFFERS EVERY ADVANTAGE TO STUDENTS.
for Beauty of situation, commodiousness of buildings and completeness of work by any school for colored people west of the Mississippi. Special courses for EXPERIENCED FACULTY. Five large brick buildings, also steam plant buildings, now building, Chemical, dormitory now building, Chemical, courses in computer printing, blacksmithing, sewing, dressmaking, housekeeping, GRADUATE'S MAX APPLY FOR PERMANENT CERTIFICATES. Students can make part of expenses by For particular and catergory address ARTHUE R CHAFFEE. *Pref. dent.*
AN OLD BOOKKEEPER IS DISCRIMINATING. Better take big affairs and use CARTER'S. Seed for Books. Attaching a KEEP, etc. The CARTER INK CO. (Boston, Mass.)
GARLAND
STOVES
AND
RANGES
The World's Best
Often Imitated
Never Equaled
Sold by First Class.
Stove Merchants.
Everywhere
Put it down in
Black and White
the
MONON ROUTE
IS THE DIRECT LINE
BETWEEN
CHICAGO,
INDIANAPOLIS,
CINCINNATI
AND
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CITY OFFICE 232 CLARK ST.
CHICAGO
WE LET MALTA-VITA THE SUPER FOOD
For Brain and Muscle
MALTA-VITA contains more nutrition,
more tissue, building quality, more
nerve stimulant than any other food.
PURE, PALATABLE, POPULAR
Milton are eating MALTA-VITA. It
gives leathery strength, and happiness.
MALTA-VITA PURE FOOD CO.
Battle Creek, Mich.
Toronto, Canada
BURNISHINE
Makes Metal Shine
The highest possible polish attainable
burnish on metal surfaces is imparted by Burnishine. It gives a brilliant lustre to brass, copper, tin, zinc, nickel, silver and all metals. A few ranks, and prestige—the dingiest metal shines like now.
CHEW
Beeman's
The
Original
Pepsin
Gum
Cures Indigestion and Sea-sickness.
PHOTOGRAPHS
OF WORKS OF ART
Catalogs of
18,000 subjects with
sample photographs,
25 cents.
OARBON AND PLATINUM
Prints from American Paintings
and Old Masters.
Illustrated equestrian genres.
Lantern Slides
Framed Pictures
SOULE ART CO.
25 Washington Street
BOSTON, MASS.
The why some shop-
keepers do not sell
President
Suspenders
is they make more
money on imitations
50 cents and a dollar.
Ask a Worth shop.
No poor pay for
C. A. Edgerton Mfg. Co.
Boston 15, Mass.
---
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ennai ae
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and, simed and verified like the original
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Thevlands Vie" seaven" a rlio Pee
Shia ana folie investigate al tacts ber
teiting NG fhe ace whieh tnay' ye broumte
PelnaSaoueN® and chal ae iy the ewesn
Ruiteporttneror together ‘wich hie
Salnior upon" the ites “he gure shal
SOD BRI yah report a these
Ehinte 8 lle bat nkS"ronsir hehe
TAR aEARIOE of titles shall have ll
ae 16 alninter gatas and ang
rates Seen ap nas ech
This at eheeoce pay i vatroes
RY Ae a he ext
tne tho Sate hnne ane Tetorea ine Seen
dns Retiana ho hai aeate ths cure
Angas horéae in “his cenorts and
Inuh" clues cher state thal be Jolied ax
2 sats. Snot nated inthe muons as
Sable therston inorder that ies interest
ENG rsh may be dened and ore:
“Fhetaterk shail give motice to the apn
cant of the fiingsot such report. If the
sys PE helentininer is adverse to the
raieast, he Shall "Wave “a censonabie
SPEEA mys naeea furthers or te
Withare" hav appiations es" stecuice
Shall be’ made in writing and fled with
thecal
‘Saaimiers shall, upon the request of
tne ‘registrar, advien him uponcany. act
Be uig Mees to the. cdpduct ae his
Sins epeepare th corm of ay memo:
Bt "bende' ot enter bv tha Tex
Sec, 14, Ofaer for Summons—It. tn the
opinion soe The exsaner "the ponleant
SRM Mtle yeh and proper, for toa
Ervubat!oe iP die appitednar after an a
Verse pinion of dhe’ examinee elects to
SeeeaM OF Ihe ekeeane shal ae
Feito clerk erie peion praying
that aheummone may eon, fh sa
Peat gy mUEDTSIUEY haul tsoabon
Rinine aif the Aiea and records of said
Sroetealng. und’ thal by ite order al
BEET, “oman Yo letGed there
Hib Wher shall Smale ie Same ad
diuresi 80 fat ae known, of every person
Sa oe yained’ nna perty. to said
Prolite ning a Betas ined
Fa eee einer co ben paseation
ha sri ee a ee
ioctl eats eral ony i of
Greuther" wien’ tne mame and adaroe, of
STESUG BOON! oP te tho fe
Sourt in anid epaer mar aire
SSitca “tnéeein, “hhe partion thule nahned
in'ihk Sider'se the, Qurt'snl ben and
Bhall'be imown an dsfendants.
ec, tg Summons, RarmSarvice—The
mainthons chal QR™ stigectibed “Se ths
siemmeuratehun Be direct fo the. tee
SSodinte and aye ther to append
Enhwe"ineappieation ofthe, applicant
Stn eng? de eter the ered
Sieh ectlee, Te shall bo served: tn the
sist now provided, By awe cot
BUR ee Rimtmone tn oft’ actions
Sr Uiseoguet tnt a Nordin Ober
(wise provided, It shall be served span
TReTaLRT DY uterine & Copy hereal
‘he “attonner generat "who. shal trane
ne “the 'same"to the” county at
WiC ste ate tounty tn wnion the land
Bethe Movs In ebhated and tere
on Mn enya al ape
peratd pecrading and retest th
wT Saul be served spon all .
mall be gervod upon all persons who
aft not residence of the state and upon
Sah other pertane er parties, miaown
inning’ anf right, ues estate ten ot
SHOPONE aM clan Seatace dence, tn
Bee sppudtuat nate oy pata
anes Sse eae hte
TESA Seen nade ete
Soveetulive weeks.
ae cite a ny
Siktindnes send copy thereo! by mail to
turvaafenaanty rng arg not regents
St, Geteataany Shoee pldce of ares I
ABSateTiS apa oe alate ih the ap
Bletlen,20in the onto alee.
Renee Pine atmsmnenes The seriou
BPURE Soha tat he has malted tho sun
Sfones aa erein, provided, shell bc
PraM dence eseat Onner ae further
olde of the application for registration
Boe oF Eee Nh uch mannet ond to
Rich persona as the court or any Judge
thsted tay alreck
Mendon ol be wnved a the ex
ue oFTtne asplitade and pra of ie
ERIM MES Sate eta
ie humimgng shall be eibstantally tn
anenflgene Form, aarp
the following Form ae TION FOR
persone, or, partiey unknown claiming
Bicith eaiainanch ease
ics maui idsats
“Theat aan th above
Sanat eet god waa
og Paneer gum ntsega
edge at al
Bie oiett ea ciety
et ni aS ee
S2ig, the applicant in this proceeding wil
fii die os Oa rae
ioc QU a acm
MH aay BPE sal cones
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION ‘OF 1905.
county, this ....6.6+- Ry Of cceceseeee A
When the summons has been served as
novela provided, the eaurt shalt be vere
SUS Rive sequined jurisdiction of the
abject master Be the proceed, Sha BE
have ay righ ike, Wncerest or eatate
I'he Tela ‘entate ‘desertted he Spl
Sheol, “or aig en or charge whaisover
“iSy the phrase in the summons “alt oth~
or Ferns oe panes dikwoen clay
Shela al enue: Hen or tert
ine fea entaie deseribed inthe appli-
Edi evel!" \Sufthe world are teude
Fatt defendant amd sha be Using ain
Papal decree.
Boi ated noon cine
any right, ‘tle, estate of interest. in Ge
ek Upon’ the and, whether. named In
the suimions‘or tot, ay hie at anawee
herein ‘within, the’ dine. named tate
Summons” ot "within aun further” me
sean Moaed by the court, ane
pileation, and shall ‘eet forth the rigat,
iio, ertacer interest or lion ‘claimed’ by
thei ung Cie: same ana’ apail
Signed and verified by the defendant, oF
Besos person tn bid behalt
‘sec 4s, Gunrdian ual litem’ for minore,
fet nen the petition of the apieant,
Sree ny. porsbn.intersated inthe ‘Br
Stedlagt ne coure shall appolat a ‘isc
{noe aon to. a6 a Rusa
Htc Yor shiners, nd ober persons une
fr iieabalty and for all pertons, not Ih
felngt har Say "appear to" Rave nay i
Rerest, Se hen Sipon’ the, fends “ne ton
Deniwatinn of the” guardian stall be de>
Rermined' vy tho. court ana ‘paid By. tha
{pplicant as pure‘of the expenses Of the
otpeeeding.
Bee is "te no anwaer, court, may Ae-
fe0-—if-no per anfeite and anewers
SENUR Wek BPM Bete ate CSU ARE,
Sk cee oss A ollie here!
cant, nd reason to the contrary appa
fg, “and upon satlefactory ‘proot of the
pouenne’s igre thereto, make ‘and. Ale
g"order and decree: confirming. dhe ule
Of the ppicant and ‘ordering the Fee
"Se! "id "Fela Reference.—When an na-
gies td, the eae shall be tea "Hy
elviaction, “the auetmay refer the
Ease, Oran part chertot ts one ot the
fxathinern “ua reterce: to" Heaths ‘pate
tea"and tel? evidence, and mate report
thereom to the"court. “Any report of am
xan shail have the’ ane weight
Se that of @ referee appointed by fie
Giswict ure. “Rites Gee ing of wick
feporty the’ court may Beaer wicks ther
Further hearing of the cause Detore the
court or before the skater, am anay
Fedtize® ouch other® or UrOnee proot” oy
sfther“or any ot the‘partles to tho cause
Seif shail deem preset,
Sec." Dismiceate"it the court shall
find tier nearing that the appileant hae
fot a title propet for reglseations ae
‘ice Snail oe entered aismissing the: ap:
flcatlon which may, be without pret
shia apputcant may upon, mation dismias
the, apnieation ‘tang time hetore, the
{thay “Aseree. in entosed upeiy avis tests
tethall becated by the, oar
‘Sec 21. ‘Decree of registration ftect —
Le ajter nensing, the cure Andy that the
Abplicane’haa ete proper for repitras
{ibn, Gehether ax stated ih his application
grvoiherwise, ball make: and nie i
{iecreo. therein,. confirming the “title, of
the’ applicant and’ ordering the reqiatess
Ligh “thereat, “Except. as" nereln other=
Nise provided, every “decree of esitra:
fiom chat bina the land: aeteribal ‘there:
{nv/and shall forover qutet the ttle thera:
{f; ana hatt be forever binding ahd cons
lisive upon ail persons, whether men:
Gloned? yy” nam, aR the sumtimons, of in
Slesea Bk the pnttate all other peraats
jyparten ono ‘lating. an Fane
lag, estatay en "or interest dn "ins
Frat eatate "deecribed’ int tne kpe
Pileation herein” "and auch "decree abel
Tocibe opened’ cagated oF act Aas. By
iaaoi the absence: istany, oh otner
bus" of ‘ang? perscn nected thereby.
ae 0 breeding at law no
sate or reverse Jute sts hg agrees
“Tho. decreo shail. forever” deterimine,
bind®and-comciudo an the Tignes tie: i
forests “estate oF iten' ih the” land de-
feribed, herein or thn Hosbind wif
of any defengan seauirel ot towne os
ot ihe Marriage falation in ig mutager
ft if guch husband gr wite had beste
Degas maoned in sate acre,
Bee, 22. Docreo"Contents--Copy Piled—
Brery” decree of ropistration al benz
the date" hour ana minute of fee, eH
2 afl be seedy one of the sagen
ofthe istrict court” 1 eiall nate she
Rge'of the owner of ihe land, and wheth-
Semarried, or unmastiea, and, i marie
the'name of the husbond ‘or wife i tis
Shino of he land ie unger deabiity* i
Halt alae The ator thereat 1 ill
iamd'aa_ Analy determined by the court
ANG: Shall set forth the estate of. the
Stener van “also’in" uch tanmer ne to
show eee relative prlority, all paruleutar
eetgten, ‘mottanaes,casemintn ewe at
Vechments “and “other -Imcumbranees, In:
hiding Wghte of husband” aad wit
eet aitch then he, Samer
fhe atts propel f"be determined by
tho court vimediataly” ‘upon eh Aug
of the, cree of rapistratlons the ler
Shallnje “a eartited’ copy ‘thereat ‘with
Boe Mhateraion Rune With Land
the obtainit of a deatee of temittae
epee
ti, ‘shail "be asemed tn aS agrecnto’
funning with the jand, and binding. upon
Pier anpileant, and Ris successors ‘in the
Lilie that the lana 'thall be ands corovsr
Fermin ogstered, land, and auhject 0
{he proviatonacof this act. “ana €5" aif acts
Siotiorg eterna’ alt deal wih
{io'Tan oF any cetate"or interes were
fpe sana ai ilo Gncumbranste and
fins ‘been "vemiatered. shail’ be_oxpressly
JRubyeet to "the tasina “tid. provilonn 6
iisset,
"Sec ti. CertIReato of ‘itle—What, Sur
vives! Every’ person teeetving a eerideaté
of fille pursuant to a dectes of reel
fration, dnd overs, Subsequent purer
Ge ‘repisterea Yana ‘who ecelven "a ete
Lines oF tite in god faith ana tor
walunbie™ooneiaeratlon, ‘shalt “hata tne
Same free" from all eheumbrance ahd
lee laa eseepting oniy sch
{erosin "ay yay opted inthe laat ct:
{iteate of Ue sn he omes ofthe regi
Ee A Pane Aoki
wainst tho same: If any. namely
lens. clang ot Fgh arlalg. ex-
Inting under the inves ofthe: Consutation
fo the United "States, whieh this slate
Syma regula of rece.
the Hien of ay tae or special aa-
sesimient for which tho land has not pooh
SGU ne ate Gf ine ceriate of tite
Si Any leage fore period not exeseding
tnifeo years when there Ie aetual oscupe
Uonof tha premises thetednder.
tnt al tshte In public highways upon
3. Suleh Fight of appeal, oF right to ap-
pear and “contest, the “application ‘xs fs
Slowed, by this ne aon
havitig: any cat "Ritie, or intereat in. oF
Tibn thon tne lana pen wom: the, sum:
one has uot been actualy wecved and
Wao’ nad’ no notice OF knowledee of he
Tilng of, the ‘application “or of the ‘pen
Sent ot auch proeldig” toyota
ENUG of he decteo thereln, may at at
firme itn eisty (00 ‘days’ after tho on
Hy oP atch dectog and not attermasds
Ao le Guy Gesiled petluon wetting” fosth
such facts and pravfnr for leava‘ta fie
his tnewer therelne” 1 ine court ie ati
fedof, te ain, ‘of tho matters set forth
fn such verified petition, 1 ahail male an
ude pavrating auch peallener fo ane
swer the application. Upon the fling of
Such Agee nd Upon wot Lous Chante
Go) dye" mouse’ to the applicant "ana te
Aith‘cther persanh of pattie a the out
ay direct, the court, faut procbea 2 ree
Wiel “he cages, and if aanteed that Ws
GeStaion on asérae ought te be operted
(Gecisloe oF Gecise ought te ne obeeed. 5
or inequity, for the recovery, of. ahy
eet GUS ae a te
lished and adjudiented by ay original de:
hail be maintained unless such ction 13
oe sea an ie a
SRNiGy aM nate ety
aalran Sead a ce
Of amy Tien {is, interest \or estate th
Sect iia fa
IRE ahr? tg
Eistration “hereatter, ventcred. shall, be
Seen ah ae oe Se
Sina edie vor ne entre
eh inenttrca ata
ae dearth an
SE GPRS Esher Sy" oil
decree of registration Was heretofore
ie, Shatin a een
EGA eal tata
Taint of (aaae heh ade ake
Bs eta ei ane eat
MARE, ait gedaer Beek wt eae
IRE i meal om
Ag date OF nc Srigtnat deste.
‘much action or proaeeding shail be
Beak ah ull ane
obs, 2 Aopenis An appeal ay te
Grier oF shldgmenit “GE” tite diecFict” cotire
HE PSP Sh
ic Re att A ce ih
reheat
‘Secondsitom any order granting or
Sarco ay, ore enn 0
fusing anew tenon fon an, apder
s Somes naz siereot, witht hiety"daye
roi ag area
“Ril "appeals from "any order, or ae-
soot Mere sce cca ti
fig be taken “upon ale notte, teri
nd gonaitions as are now, provided by
a
1. neste ot mer Rar
of deds' snail be the regiatrare of tities
of ie sa acai
‘see. to." Registrar's. Bond: —Before en.
Hed oka, Se arc
frict court, ‘and fled th the oaftlee ot the
Oe ra i cae Sle
fers lh are
Bio Smal ahaha
SPU cone of, Gove
Breas Sn Sat tale
RLSM OM Pry sat wee
Gar ese
Se SMa ode! He
is Dyuigethe egatr
Utlen’ may, tn he disoretion,. appoint ie
Jay'aing he’ doputy” Fextatern of ‘tends,
shallot snipe aaine ofthe Feststrar
Baath tah SHR a teh
Of omisaion “of a deputy, (0. ho sane
sable tebe ens the
Hoe Ea Shy eee
gh ly eet bln a
ia “ome, Pin ait’ counties in. which the
Reaiae eal Gavan actee i
‘board of county commissioners shall fx
eal cots criteria
rt
BEA it, spy garnets Pe
ter of TiterInimealately"upon the Allng
Heating tere agi
Seer at Gi ae ose
Rhorwin’ in’ tie ‘order ‘ot ‘thelk, numbers,
fees al Ua aes a
Utter Shall” be deemed tor include, ai
Seaoe as sienna a
Spedabtt SP ko sans
Bee Baie Fina fat gs tae
obese ew acres
2 buen bool, and all memoria "and
ER SL, EEA waa
ak "Bette ot, Rarer
state rn Scat
SEEN wi he
‘Misabutts” the ‘nature’ thereot He “ala
the husband ‘or wife. In case thé land
dition or stmitation, te shall stato ‘the
EAC a ae
ChRinriCAre OF acs.
rin, conten file, prea
th order of the Diatrot Goby ener
BASSY Wig Sangeet
Btate of —— f
County of
Pah Me er
Bc ig afta
fla cea do a
gitge aetna cutie a
iaetng iia & stuart
Hon Of land and the tite. thereto of tho
{hs laws dr ‘the constitution of the United
Teer ae cree to
SPUD Been aaa
hese Revi tetas
4° An public’ highways embeaced
aie Aalst
SH can of are or
fe Bi Se PE AE
Kinea'by few. "
ofa ee ag
is, ence, ave
All certificates tgsued subsequent to the
vat Eetldent™ at ile aha BC
farm “excent that they” shall_be- entitle
Sirens trom numbed ee git th
number ot the noxt previous, carineate
Felsting the, same! ind)” hd ama
Tine Stictta te Mate oncineliy eet
isrea Gye, volume ‘nd page of Peps
fon
‘ees, Certineate, ete., ae avidence.—
‘ah onainal serifeate 9 ie i ive fo
ithe of Mitta ang copy theteor, duly card
Hed'b¥ the registrar oF by his deputy, and
futhenttoated: by "hig eeal, aid Ikowlt
EnaTownere: duplicate certieats of Ute
hat 'be Feceivea in evidence th all the
Eitrigg hip stats ahd anal o, conch
five avidence, of si matters aati
SErtalned therein, th ste, ot vatlan
Selene Gartere duplicace,edttineat
And th origi caritente of tite the
Shaan’ efteste shal grove
da, Tnorteagen, Tense Be ither con
poems ofan estate or letters of
Yemmey authoring the’aame. and’ alt tn
strumenta: in any manner attecting’ the
Eiht awttered land. toweiher with
notadgnae ingorectients cor inemotfal
{ion the same mage By he eget 9
‘ile, ae required. by Tw, hercocore
‘Helos, 88 Tegra OY ete hah
eee eee eee eae
GRANTOR’S INDEX OF INSTRUMENTS. «-+-++..0.++++++-+ COUNTY, MINNESOTA.
~ oman | |_Datoct Megtstratlon. — |urpor of] BIO | slau “Description of Properey.
surname [Given Namo “™"™* lwonth,|Dax.| Your. oy a tiene pooxfPase ER ig oe Bigg or | Range. | A*9tG0%
7
‘
GRANTER’S INDEX.OF INSTRUMENTS. ......+++-+++4+++-- COUNTY, MINNESOTA,
a
co BusotReberaot. | sor | BoEHY |e] Doveaion of Prone,
Surname, r @RA8T0% boned | Dar. EP iont” [Book] Page| = Bigek OF | seanes. | aggleton,
DE thle weaee” Githout’ further: or other
‘of this state: without, further. Sb other
Bedhead at rps at eae
See ct sand ay
ae helt a lie et fe ge
ieee Shaheed in
Sa ae anc ates taco
esse it, amit taunts
Eeriggets hatin anivaar at
feeatae. Reni alee
{inal Tomether: with the hanes Of the Te-
speclive owners thereof, and a reference
Bae idee Sot unto heal
a nba ie ehea
Heh Sek ala tases
Heche Arg aba ee
ii eatitehahe grat cori
he de ee tale aes
Sth Mee dade et
alah tatltaac moe Eee
He erat wl Ep oe pons,
weet the Saget 2 BR
RA “ithe Grieg a,
Bectptlon"Bogka, eanetively a
ee
SEES
trp voter gall eta oho sit
ih srs guest eh eat
‘ities afeout thie ind
Sates Maen Mae ee
SPAS SSL eee
Bettas aN Mash arora sahe
Hr abe RSP tts
SUS aot Ea Pea tate
HULL Catiea dares saute tisha
Sea eats “lg tte ts
Sah TRG EAE Urea tid
EN Gitte fe tliat
GP kee cert as te ae
Pe le eet Rand ot ind
at, aeeitheeh ead
free Git dar tat it hah pee
Bical ae ete i ch On
Bah ose a
Taree Teo ee cou ty atet
i, ee tt
ERSSE AS Hr MAP seattle
A eee ing IR Se ele
ie pahret ban cote tay ane
Be ath Maske ih ane ale
and minute when the sane ts fled, and
Hote Let Beeiaen RLS ee
See eae Sta a ara
fel uh ae tts oP afte Wate
ee Leah ne ne mete
he nore a ane AS ae
abd time! of Aling tereot shal Howie
Seg tek Nae tee
Records and. papers ‘relating. to remistered
SEL Mes or ee caeeit
Er cer wd nareeane ch Onde
SE AS ake ae under ash Sates
3 Up et cet, ati, Pe
i ait Anan canine’ len he
deal eae eatin, Wah oe
SMTi: ool fcetpan pated
SEA ta ate it
fed teed, iy ot Sirah
Rabies a rae he pe
peace idan ie gain
su RE eg or Sts
ad an eal Mena Yeh
Roe'each Hud Sestak fa "aack inecras
Te cour, shal adopt, general fort Of
at es Sink
Seen hh a ean ta HE
Te sons Acer Rete Berle
ofa suet eu ete tacts
he Mla teaon” ether ye
Be Seta eea tlhe Saget
seein 8h ne SSAA Tse
ibine arte Sli th ates
ine ea af the sate ithe ane
wae ceo a at th te ee
werapime ata chal actin ane tke
Rumba t, Saric atl Beads,
PRE, SEA? nee Barn
rat tia Oy alae ue
shee Bra eh geet te eae
Sieg Safe tn te hadnt ane
Suk tea he ccele t hs
fushe uiag AS Sahel Aas
Teas 2 Sire ted Male cate
Besa ai, Oa Maret SY atthe
der different or other service thereot by
See tee eft
Fe een ebleateRacin
athe tks de, aetna nate
Se Fate heed? ential "anon Ue
4, fuller eat ona to
G8 Bupitvate’ Cortineate” and shat ak-
iia amish Genie sha of at
Hone 8 fame f° Ae One! a ik
Ried cts eh Reo oS
suri ota aie tilt Sra cat
Heed Sethe i
See ratia burma bith
be sient BF ha cet alone i nt
ieee ORE PAuch Face i
SE Shoe MH aay
PERSE RUN LA
ieee Piven os a
aus, puplcae, i docu Ownar
Withee DuPage seltng ake autos
iat, tn cna RONG Mie
sroratnsted Lan tS Senta
Se Restle ae te
Soe seals HL Ns NSS aaa
eae eee fake teach
Sea Gal tate tare. ete
ie ar as) See ten
chains Site be taints
ihe AG Ne atta a eo
toitvofe aistinet parcels of land may sure
atime dune mac 2AM Re
fen we mae, ott Mere aia" ote
sii Saree eee Aly UE
elie tae oharal at
fa elect ame, Ite
Koei, Mczes a nuts
Sion ihe Rae ne feel eetlaatet at
SE id ta ene et
AUG! sid pees chdlay BGA
TE SSE RIPE at be
B50 cariente gh hen
eteeatin Sateen Gatti
anielde Gi Saf aba eat ad at Ge
He eet aed etal
ae ae Sethe Bala at
ae atbicket esis te tat oe ae
SRE lint tre uate ashy
Scope ae cane tube thine dels
fered spate, sane HP UN Re
lan A egal one. Oe
Sensis OF tit teh pon Nk
asta? tes Bs NORA
SUR RAS aa aba HE
ta co ace smuReete conte:
Hip & mre oy ee et
teiose pla a eats As
Eieaeteh tel bar alte
ei edit any Gite! Bats
cottatls Skateline st
Hii eames ph Ste attn
se Ie hur tanpestouth Oe ek
Tue puceat ona a
Tiered Pat ittaibe ich alt Ue
tsps guaraoohir amit
Sealant and hs Ons erated Bie
Bet See MAS et Peghat Ts maak
oe ear ot tli ton ge ak
BON Srerimente, eee court, he bere
Brora ana is Sling elite
RIS Tike Bout taglor, de
Fi ine acai eet” an
Hagia atny tide ep
reed nee aloe to atm Ie
tha guste, Scho he create
Hesaing hs depen asi i
ROG ecto te
Riess tei Samat ey
Rit rth oat oe uated
Soe Seer
12s IRS ae the oP
Mie ah outstanding, 8 Or Tee-
wg ghee AERTS fo" ge
‘Sueed and @urrendered When the mort-
Te ey to Solain registration asein the
Sound fo. sotain Seigiation anv in the
SL See thie at aa
ie tng AF he at E
aie HEM ola and Sieg ip ce
Se eee
Teal abit Me gore. ar ‘aiect to
Heat chiara fee
ESSE be cee Aa
of euilned RY sony ofa
scieeeid Star ore
ieee eM eh hes gat ae
See Gear el be ae
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instrument revoking such power of attorney shall be executed, acknowledged and approved.
If land which was taken for public use was or will be, by operation of war or by design, the district court, upon the application of the person to the person or persons entitled thereto, Sec. 72, Charges. U.S. Code, the registration of land, and also upon the registration of any person deemed to be a deceased person, there shall be paid to the registrar one-tenth of one per cent of the registration of improvements, as determined by the last official assessment for general taxation.
Sec. 74. Damages Through Eroneous registration actions. Action of an insurer on his part, sustains any loss or damage by reason of any omission, mistake, or misrepresentation of any act or of any examiner or of any clerk of court, or of his deputy, in the performance, law, and any person who, without negligence on his part, is wrongly deprived of any right to sue by the registration thereof, or by reason of the registration such kind, or by reason of any misstake, omission or misdescription in any certificate or title, or by reason of the cancellation, in the register of titles, and who, by the provisions of the act for the recovery of such land, or of any interest therein, or from enforcing such an action for the recovery of such land, institute an action in the district court to recover compensation out of the assurance fund for such loss
A-At or before the time of filing the application, register the applicant shall pay. If the land have an assessed value of one dollar, register the applicant three dollars; if assessed for more the further sum of one dollar on each additional valuation, or major fraction thereof. B-For registering each original certificate, register the applicant thereof, two dollars, two dollars, each transfer including the filing of all instruments connected therewith, and the issuance and new certificate of title, three dollars. D-For the entry of each memorial on the certificate of title, instruments and papers connected therewith, and endorsements upon duplicate certificates. E-For issuing each additional owner's certificate, two dollars.
F-For filing copy of will with letters
testamentary, or filing copy of letters of
letters, or entering memorial
therefore, two dollars,
G-For the cancellation of each memo-
ter, two dollars,
H-For each certificate showing condition
of the register, one dollar,
I-For any instrument or writing on file in his office,
J-For proof of like law to registers
or proofs of like law to tax
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
J-For any other service under this act, such fee as the court shall determine. All counties in which the register of deeds is mentioned in Sec. 80 shall belong to him, except one-half of those provided for in subdivision, which shall be paid by the county treasurer. All counties all of such fees shall be paid to the county treasurer for the use of
Sec. 82. Chapter 237 of the General Laws of the State of Minnesota for the year 1901, chapter 114 of the General Laws of the State of Minnesota for the year 1903, and chapter 234 of the General Laws of the State of Minnesota for the year 1903, are hereby repealed; provided, howunder and by virtue of said acts or any of them, and all proceedings pending by such repeal. Provided, further, that all rules, orders, judgments, decisions, and court herofe made, entered or by order of one or more of the same or any of them, and not inconsistent with this act, shall be and remain in the altered, modified or revoked.
Sec. 83. This act shall take effect from and after its passage.
Approved April 19, 1800.
CHAPTER 306-H. F. NO. 888.
AN ACT to provide for the key to Mazes for the end of the year; ending July thirty-first (31st), one thousand nine hundred and six (1600), and July thirty-first (31st) on the thousand nine hundred and six (1600).
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. For the purpose of defraying the expenses of the state for the fiscal year, the state shall pay the thousand nine hundred and six (1960), a tax of one million two hundred thousand and one thousand as practicable, shall be levied on all the taxable property of the state; the state shall not exceed the rate of one and five-tenths (1.5-10) mills on each dollar of taxable property. Sec. 2. For the purpose of defraying the expenses of the state for the fiscal year, the state shall pay the thousand nine hundred and seven (1967), a tax of one million dollars ($1,000,000), or a tax of one million dollars as practicable, shall be levied on all taxable property of the state; provided that the tax hereby levied on the state shall be paid to the general treasury, shall be in force from and after this passage. Sec. 3. Taxes levied under the provisions of this act, when collected and paid into the general treasury, shall be in force from and after this passage of general revenue fund only. Sec. 4. Taxes shall be tax effect and in force from and after this passage. Approved April 19, 1905.
CHAPTER 207 - H. F. No. 866. AN ACT to amend section three (3) of the General Laws of the State for the years nineteen hundred and thirty (120) of the General Laws of Minnesota for the years nineteen hundred and thirty (120) of the General Laws of Minnesota for the State Agricultural society.
Be it enacted by the legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Second-One (1) delegate from each county cultural society or street fair association exists, which delegate the county community to appointee such county are authorized to appointee. Third-Honorary members who by reason of their exile, or of the faith and horticulture, or in the arts and sciences connected therewith, or of long and faithful conferred upon it may, by a two-thirds (2-3) vote at any of its annual meetings. Four-Second delegates selected by, and for the exile of, the former societies and cultural society, the State Amber Cane Society, the State Forestry association, the State Forestry association, the State Amber Cane Society, the State Forestry association, and the Minnesota Stock Broeder association, and any other state society having for its object the promotion of any branch of agriculture, horticulture, or agriculture and the Minnesota Stock Broeder association, and any other state society having for its object the promotion of any branch of agriculture, horticulture, or agriculture and the Minnesota Stock Broeder association, and any other state society related to agriculture or horticulture. The members of the governing board of said society and its officers shall by virtue of their offices be be and the members of the governing board of said society and its officers Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be approved in its passage. Approved April 30.
CHAPTER 98—H. F. NOVAS.
AN ACT to provide for reimbursement taxes by whom to pay those which were exempt from taxation.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The chief fire warden of the city of fifteen hundred ($1,000) dollars per year, to be paid out of the amount appended to Sec. 2. So much of the section two (2) of Sec. 2. of the General Laws of Minnesota (36%) of the General Laws of Minnesota conflicts with this act is hereby repealed.
Sec. 3. All acts and parts of acts incipient with this act are hereby repealed.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 18, 1955. F No. 272. F No. 272.
AN ACT to amend Section 1 of chapter 255. General Laws of 1901, entitled *Powers and Laws of the State of lands in certain cases*, prescribing the powers and duties of county commissioners, and appropriating funds for premises, and appropriating funds for state lands affected thereby, and prescribing penalties for the violation thereof, and therein mentioned and referred to. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Provided, that when in any such pro-
cedure, the water course or other water course are diverted from their natural bed by such artificial ditch or other water course, they are nearly as practicable, follow the general direction of such river, creek or other water course and terminate there-
fore. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
be enforced after its passage.
Approved April 19, 1985.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Fifth-Complete copies of said proceeded-
ment, and copies of the secretary of said respective corporations, shall be filed with the town clerk in each company proposed, to transact business.
AN ACT to amend section 2803 of the General Statutes of 1894 relating to the corporation of cooperative associations
Legislature of the State of Minnesota;
Section 1. Section 2003 of the General Statutes of the state hereby amended so as to follow Section 2003. A co-operative association engaged in any lawful mercantile, manufacturing, agricultural or rural telephone shall be hired for record with the register of deeds of the county of its principal place to become a corporation. A majority of the incorporators that reside in this state shall be the principal place of business, and its duration shall not exceed twenty (20) years. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in effect upon its passage. Approved April 19, 1905.
CHAPTER 314-1H. F. NO. 673 ANNAL AND REGISTRY of main county schools of agriculture and domestic economy. B. NO. 673 Legislature of the State of Minnesota.
of such county equal-in number to fifteen per cent of the votes cast in such county. The votes cast in such county are counted and the votes cast in such county are counted and counting and canvassing votes cast at general elections in such county.
Sec. 4. Whenever two or more counties such as a school, the county school board provided for in such cases shall deter the equipment and maintenance of the school for the second year, and annually each year thereafter, they shall apportion among the counties the proportion of each county, last fixed by the state board of assessors, audited of each county the apportionment to each county shall be levied in the county tax for the ensuing year. Sec. 6. The county treasurer shall be ex-口oled treasurer to each county and portioned to each county shall be levied in the county tax for the ensuing year. Sec. 6. The county treasurer shall be ex-口oled treasurer to each county and portioned to each county shall be paid by the county treasurer or treasurers on orders issued by said school or otherwise by said school board shall be paid to the county treasurer for the county tax. Sec. 6. In all county schools of agriculture and domestic agriculture on the acts, instruction shall be given in the elements of agri-
Sec. 7. Each of such schools shall have a curriculum for purposes of experiment and demonstration, and not only for purposes of experiment and demonstration, but also for purposes of land equipment shall be turned over to said school, and shall thereafter be the property of the school, and shall thereafter be the property located or in case two or more counties having contributed in establishing such schools and making the same contributions shall be the property located or in case two or more counties having contributed in establishing such schools organized under the provisions of this act shall be free to inquire about the contributions to their support, who shall be presented, provided they shall have at least the qualifications required for commencement in advanced public schools. Whenever students of advanced public schools, whenever students of winter months in sufficient number to warrant the organization of such schools, whenever classes shall be organized and continued for such time as their attendance may
Sec. 12. All acts or parts of acts合
provisions of this act are bribery, breached.
Sec. 12. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 19, 1903.
CHAPTER 315. H.-F. NO. 245. AN ACT to pension citizen-soldiers of the Indian massacre of 1862. It be enacted by the Legislature of the Indian massacre of 1862. Section 1. Any and all persons, citizens and residents of the State of Minnesota, who render assistance to the efficient aid and suffered any disabilities in the Indian massacre of 1862. September dighthew, in the year 1862 according to the reports and files of the State of Minnesota upon due proof of services as aforesaid, shall be and is hereby declared to be the first twelve dollars ($12) per month from the first day of January, 1903, during their service. Upon the receipt of a pension shall descend and be payable to the widow of such decedent whose relation has existed since the year 1865.
Sec. 2. Such proof thereof as may be required by the indictor, the judge, or the court shall be presented to him, and upon his approval and certificate declare the facts under this act. the state
Defective Page
anditor shall draw orders for the pay-
ment by the state treasury. If the state
money not
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from the date of its passage. April 1990 and April 2000.
CHAPTER 316-H. F. NO. 34.
AN ACT to establish a free public emblem and to provide for the conduct and main-
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The commissioner of labor of the State of Minnesota is hereby directed to identify in this state containing fifty thousand (50,000) inhabitants or more, to be employed by the commissioner of labor, for the purpose of receiving applications from persons seeking employment from employment desiring to employ labor. There shall be no fee or compensation, directly or indirectly, from persons applying for employment, or from those desiring to employ labor. There shall be appointed by the commissioner of labor, for such bureau, one auditor, the commissioner for good and sufficient cause, such appointment to be made immediately and thereafter at the commencement of the biennial session of the legislature, not exceed $1,200 twelve hundred dollars. Sec. 2. The superintendent of such bureau shall receive and record in a book as well as the name and address of all persons applying for employment, as well as the name and address of all persons applying for employment, designating opposite the name and address of each applicant the matter of employment desired or offered.
Such superintendent shall also perform the duties of bureau statistics, and in the keeping of books and accounts of his bureau as the commissioner of labor, and shall report monthly all business transmitted by his bureau, to the office of the commissioner of labor, at the state capita. Sec. 3. Every application for employment shall be made to the free employment bureau shall be void after thirty days from its issuance, and the applicant. When an applicant for labor has secured the same, he shall withhold such employment at the intendent of the bureau upon a notification card provided for that purpose. Such superintendent, he or he shall be debarred from all future rights and privileges of such employment bureau at the intendent of the bureau upon whom the superintendent shall report Sec. 4. There is hereby annually appropriated out of any money in the state capital, and the sum of seventeen hundred fifty ($1,750) dollars, or so much thereof as may be required, to carry out the provisions of this act. All acts or parts of acts that are in violation of the provisions of this act are hereby repealed.
Sec. 1. This act shall take effect and be enforced in the passage. Approved April 19, 1906.
CHAPTER 317—H. F. No. 137.
AN ACT to legalize the foreclosure of the property, where the power of attorney to foreclose has been acknowledged and witnessed by the person authorized to make the foreclosure enacted by the Legislature of the State. Section 1. Every foreclosure of mortgages, where the power of attorney to foreclose the same, provided for by chapter 362 of the Code of Civil Procedure of the year 1897, has been acknowledged before the person named as the attorney in the same person named as the attorney in the same person made such foreclosure, and which attorney made such foreclosure, and which foreclosure of the person who executed such power of attorney. If otherwise regular, valid and effectual for all purposes, as if such power of attorney had been duly executed.
Sec. 2. The provisions of this act shall
be enforced in section pending in any
count of the state.
Sec. 3. The act shall take effect and impose the penalty for its passage. Approved April 19, 1906.
CHAPTER 318—H. F. No. 517.
AN act for the compensation of County Commissioners to the compensation of County Commissioners hereafter have a population of 100,000 inhabitants or over, but less than 200,000 inhabitants or over.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Sec. 2. That it shall be the duty of the inspector of Minnesota, to appoint some competent person as inspector of halls in his city at least once in each year to see that all halls in his city to inspect every hall and theater in his city at least once in each year to see that all halls in his city have been compiled with. He shall receive for each hall or theater in his city the certificate of such inspector shall be prima facie evidence of the compliance with the provisions of one (1) year from the date thereof.
Sec. 4. The owner or owners, tenant or tenants of any hall or theater in an apartment, comply with the provisions of section one (1) of this act shall be liable to a fine of not less than $10,000 dollars and not less than fifty ($10) dollars. Sec. 5. This act shall take effect and
Sec. 5. This act shall take effect and impose the provisions of its passage. Approved April 19, 1965.
CHAPTER 220—H. F. NO. 423
AN ACT to amend chapter 10 of the General Assembly to amend section ten (10) of chapter three hundred fifty-two (320) of the year 1890, entitled: "An act to encourage a better condition of the public schools for, and repealing chapter one hundred forty-four (44) of the enactment of the state laws to amendatory thereof.
Be directed by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
"In case any state graded school, as such, such a degree of proficiency as to entitle it to promotion to a high school, and the have already reached the number of hires required, may be the degree of the board, must be so promoted, and take the place of the high school in the state, in the period of at last two (2) years; that any state high school so deprived of state proficiency, must be placed on the board, with all the privileges, except state aid of so preparatory, school grade.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section one (1) of chapter 154 of the General Laws of Minnesota for 1903, be amended as so to section 1. In every county of more than fifty thousand inhabitants a prosecution district of such county, a district judge of such county. Such officer may appoint one or more deputies. Each shall serve four years, unless sooner removed by a sad judge for cause. The shall provide suitable probation officers and deputies furnished to the court for the proper execution of the postmaster and other actual expenses required for the proper execution of the postmaster and other actual expenses frayed out of any money in the general fund of their respective counties not authorized and allowed in the usual manner by said commissioners. The two (2) of chapter 154 of the General Laws of Minnesota for 1903, be amended as so to chapter 170 of the General Laws of Minnesota for 1901, and by chapter 270 of the General Laws of Minnesota for 1903, be as follows:
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota;
Section 1. In every county of this state having a population of seventy-five thousand and fifty thousand (150,000) inhabitants, the county commissioners of such county may appoint an attorney after the adoption of this act, and at the request of a county attorney in said county, hereafter appoint an additional assistant attorney duly admitted to be an attorney attorney duly admitted to be an attorney attorney under whom he is appointed the person so appointed shall take the usual oath of office and execute a bond, attorney is by law required to execute, attorney is by law required to execute, attorney shall thereupon be fully authorized and empowered to do and perform, at said county attorney as fully and all duties appertaining to the office of said county attorney as fully and all duties appertaining to the county county may do and perform, at said county attorney shall receive a salary or one thousand dollars ($1,000) an annu, payable in equal monthly installments out of the county county may do and perform, warrant of the county auditor of said Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in effect upon its passage. Approved April 19, 1905.
less than four (4) weeks old.
Born in the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota.
Section 1. No person, firm or corporation shall sell, offer or purchase for sale, or lease, any property in the veil of calves killed when less than ten years old. See 2. Any person violating any of the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a felony, and shall be fined less than fifty (50) dollars nor more than twenty (20) dollars for each prisonment for a period not to exceed ninety (90) days. The act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 10, 1905. No. 347. AN ACT to amend sections 1783, 1784 and 1785, of the General Statutes of the State of Minnesota. Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Third-A description of all tracts of
the assessment roll, each taken from the assessment roll
each, taken from the assessment roll
the name of the team set opposite thereo-
m; the name of the team set opposite thereo-
m; the amount of the roll assessed
and the amount of the roll assessed
Section 1755—Such lists shall be in book form, and the list shall be serried by the supervisors, and delivered by the town clerk to the respective overseeing authority. A receipt for a fee of 25 cents for each set of lists so delivered. A letter to take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 19, 1955. No. 412. AN ACT to amend section 7999. General
Statutes of 1834, relating to the pro-
cedures of boarding houses and inns, and providing
for a penalty for defrauding them,
State of Minnesota: 790 of the
General Statutes of the State of Minnesota
for the year 1834 be and the same is
§ 3. Send consummation to commissioners of the school part, making an agreement between, for the first part, any district under its jurisdiction; define; and for the second part, any district under its jurisdiction, in an adjacent county, to the effect that the school district of the first part shall transport its pupils to the school district of the second part, and shall pay said district the instruction of the pupils from the district of the second part, and the district of the second part shall transfer the instruction to pupils of the district of the first part, for an equitable and just consider-
Sec. 5. If it shall appear from these records and voting a majority voted in favor of the said consolidation commission, shall give it to each consolidated district in the county with the name of the nearest pogoblah, and certify to use a joint auditor that shall certify to use a joint auditor that plan has been adopted, with descriptions of the records and voting a majority voted in favor of the records of said auditor's office.
Sec. 6. In case the vote for consolidation carries, the county superintendent should be after the commission announces the date of the commission (10) of the most public places in each county to be assigned at county and shall also be or more newspapers in the county, may assemble at some specified time and place for the purpose of electing a board of trustees for the other business as may properly come before the meeting. The notices shall be filed with the county office at the date of such meeting. The officers of the several original districts shall continue to administer the duties until the organization of the new county law. Section 7. Sessions six (6) and seven (7) of chapter two hundred sixty-two (202) of the Laws of 1801, relating to the organization of public not inconsistent with this act, shall apply to all consolidated rural
**Section 11.** For the purpose of main-
tenance, all school shall be in the same class,
governed by the same laws, not incommen-
dual with this, except the same laws
the same way, as the state graded
Sec. 12. This act shall take effect and be in force from the date of its passage. Approve it in 1905.
HAPPER 227—H. K. NO. 819.
AN ACT to amend section 8 of chapter 170 of the General Laws of Minnesota to authorize counties to change their sys- tems to the counties being section 170 of the General Statutes of Minnesota for the year 1844. BAY OF THE STATE: Legislature of the State of Minnesota. Section J. That the General Laws of Minnesota, being section 170 of the General Statutes of 1841, be and the same hereby amended so as to follow.
Whenever any relative chargeable with
necents, after being directed by any
town, city, or city under the town poor person support, maintenance, burial, and in case of non-resident, expenses of poor person support, maintenance, burial, and in case of non-resident, expenses of furnishing the same may recover in any court of competent jurisdiction from such town, city or village, such sum so furnished by it, whether such sum so furnished by it, whether such town, city or village or not. In the event that said poor person shall such town, city or village so expending the same may after like notice recover such town, city or village in this state, which is charged by law with the support of such poor person, any sum
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and impose the penalty for its passage. Approved April 19, 1903.
CHAPTER 322—H. F. NO. 381.
AN ACT provided for liens on personal property in cases and for the enforcement thereof.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York.
Section 1. Whoever, at the request of the owner or legal possessor of personal property, is mentioned in the next section to its preservation, or to the eminent duty upon such property for the price or value of such property in his possession until such law is lawfully discharged; or shall extinguish the lien herein given.
Such liens shall embrace all reasonable
detention and sale of the property.
Sec. 3. If any sum secured by such leni be not paid within ninety days after the property so held, in the manner hereinafter provided, and out of the proceeds of the disbursements aforesaid, and second the total indebtedness then secured by the Ilen. The remainder, if any, shall be paid to the owner, owner or other person entitled to her.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The register of deeds in any county in the State of Minnesota is hereinafter referred to in appropriate records to be provided for such purpose all certificates now on file in the State of Minnesota may be to May 10, 1882, made by sheerys upon closeures, judgments and executions. Sec. 2. The register of deeds shall record each of one dollar and seventy-five cents for transcribing each of such certificates, and certifying all such certificates, dilled prior to May 10, 1882, and not heretofore committed to county funds, and shall be allowed by the board of county commissioners of county upon the completion of said work. Sec. 3. The recording of such certificates, the same from time to time when they were filed in such register of deeds' own records, the same from time to time when they were therein set forth.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and impose penalties for its passage. Approved April 19, 1906.
CHAPTER 300-II. F. NO. $12.
AN ACT authorizing all villages incorporated under the General Laws of the State to obtain theitation of ten thousand inhabitants orLaws of this state, to construct boulevards and to assess the benefits thereof,including the said boulevards, to make such assessments payable in three installments,such village or city to issue orders such village or city to issue orders in accordance with said assessments.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. Whenever the village council or any village, incorporated under the municipality of any city having a population of ten thousand inhabitants or less, the municipal council of any city having this state, shall deem it necessary and expedient to construct or rebuild any building, may, acting on their own motion, and property fronting on the street or street property is proposed to construct a boulevard, municipal council of any such city thereafter, they shall adopt a resolution to that of constructing a place or places where such boulevard shall be constructed, the width, the size of the place within which the same shall be completed, which shall not be less than the time within which the same shall be resolution, as hereinafter provided.
Sald resolution shall contain the names of the owners of all lots parts of streets, and of the streets where such boulevard is to be constructed where such boulevard is to be constructed. Sec. 2. Such resolution shall be served upon the persons named in sald resolution, wherein named for the completion of said boulevard in the following manner: the persons named to be handed to, and left with, each of the persons wherein named are residents of the village or city, and are actually therein.
Second- If any of the persons so named are said village or city, or cannot be found therein, then said resolution shall be published in the English language, and having a genetically published in said village or city, in the English language, and having a genetically published in said village or city, such newspaper published in said village, such service and publication may be published in at least three public places in said village or city, at least forty days after the completion of said walk or sewer. Affidavits shall be made by the person posting the notice, manner, time and place of serving or posting the notice, ocreman, time and manner of publishing the time and manner of publishing the time and manner of publishing with it, reached to said resolution, and with it.
filed with the village or city recorder. Any and all such services when made by the district shall, for the purposes thereof, be deemed personal services for persons named therein. Sec. 3. If such work shall not be fully done, such services may be quoquio as poignonné à jirp and within the time prescribed in said document, quo quo quo as poignonné à jirp said city may order the same to be done by the street commissioner, or commissioner of public works, or cause the same to be done by the city commissioner, or responsible bidder, the entire expense thereof to be paid out of the general revenue of the city. At any time within thirty days after a sale or city record, the county commissioner of said boulevard as aforesaid, the village council or common council, or the village commissioner of solution fixing a time and place when and where they shall hear testimony of all persons named therein, and retain the amount of benefits to property fronting such boulevard by reason of the sale, and such persons shall be served on all the persons named in the resolution adopted under section thereof, and act, in the manner therein provides.
One payable on or before the first day of June of the second year next fall, issuing thereof; one payable on the first day of June of the second year next fall, issuing thereof; one payable on the first day of June on the third year next fall.
Said orders shall be made payable to bearer, and the same may be issued, negotiated with the seller, with value less than their par or face value. All said orders shall be in substantially the following form $..... Dated at..... Minnesota..... 19. The treasurer of the (village or city) will pay
of the bearer hereher the sum of . . . with what is the dollars and . . .
dollars and . . .
before the first day of June, A. D. 19, . . . with interest theron at the rate of . . . per dollar per maturity. This order represents one-third of the amount expended in the construction in said (village) city in the year 19. A record of all said orders shall be kept in the recorder, which record shall show the date same was issued, amount of order paid, and amount sold for, and for what purpose the same was issued, when the same was paid, and the same paid as shown by the bearer's books. Books shall be provided for said pur-
Sec. 5. After the completion of said bouquet, the village or common council of said city, said village council or common council of said city, said village council or common council of said city, the first day of October of each year, until the whole of said assessments and a statement of the amount of one of the said three annual assessments, then computed from the time of completion of said assessments, the making of said levy added thereunto, to be transmitted, with the village or common council of said city, the auditor of the county, and the auditor shall use, in the duplicate statement of taxes annually transmitted by him to payment thereof, and the same shall be enforced with, and in, the duplicate statement of taxes annually collected and payment thereof be enforced. After the completion of said land adjoining the same, or interested therein, shall be proportion of the cost of construction thereof to said village or city at the time said levy been made, and the amount so made and before said levy has been made, and from the amount of said assessment.
Sec. 6. Chapter forty-nine (49) of the General Laws of Minnesota for the year 1880, and all other acts and parts of acts inconsistent with provisions of this law were reprealed.
Provided, however, that this act shall not apply any assessment to the population of less than ten thousand (10,000) operating under a special jurisdiction, further, that this act shall not in any way affect any assessments heretofore, any assessments hereafter to be made by any city or village upon any contract shall take effect. See 7. This act shall take effect and be maintained in force from and after its passage. Approved April 19, 1905.
CHAPTER 331-H. F. NO. 707.
AN ACT to prevent unjust discriminatory judgments, to provide for the appointment of a judge, to duties, and to provide additional revenue for the enforcement of such act.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. Unjust Discrimination Prohibited.—No fire insurance company shall refuse to insure a higher or greater rate or premium for insurance against destruction or damage than it charges for other risks in this case, or into consideration the local fire loss record, the nature of the risk, the exposures of the property, the amounts of fire prevention applicable thereto.
Sec. 2. Action for Violation - Penalty—for the failure to comply with any provisions of the preceding section, the surrender commissioner, may bring a civil lawsuit against the state and in any district court thereof, for the recovery of the penalty. If the defendant be tried by the court unless a jury trial is required, the court may order the course of action be sustained, the defendant shall be adjudged guilty of an offense, the defendant shall recover in said action such as sums of five hundred ($300) dollars, with disbursements and costs. And for a second offense, the insurance commissioner shall revoke the business in this status.
Sec. 3. Fire Marshal-Bond, Salary, service and consent of the senate, shall appoint a vice and consent of the senate, shall appoint a office until the first Monday of January in the odd numbers year next enuing. If the senate appoints such marshal may be suspended by the senate in the office may be filled by like appointee in the office may be filled by like appointee. If the senate give bond to the state in the penal sallary disclosure of the official disclosure of the sallary disclosure of the official disclosure
Sec. 4. Investigation of Fires—Upon request, the fire department shall investigate the cause of the chief of a fire department thereof, or the clerk of any town, village, or other general agent, the state fire marshal, the general agent, the state fire marshal, the cause and circumstances of any fire occurring within the state, whereby property is destroyed, or where shall ascertain if possible whether the same was the result of carelessness or
Sec. 5. Reports to Commissioner-The commissioner shall immediately report to said fire marshal, upon blanks furnished by him to the commissioner, and cause and circumstances of any occurring within the district, the district, or the commissioner. And said fire marshal shall keep in his office all fires so reported and of all obtainable facts and statistics pertinent therein. And all fire insurance premiums collected by fire insurance companies as the commissioner of insurance
Sec. 6. Buildings May Be Entered. Rates Investigated. Ec-Said to administer oaths, take testimony, compel the attendance of witnesses and the administer oath at any time, any buildings or premises where fire is in progress, or place character of such person in the purpose of investigating the right character of such person to illuminate or commissioner of insurance investigate any complaint against any fire insurance company, officer or general agent. And he may enter into a pose of ascertaining the fire risks to which it is exposed, and may require such owner or occupant to bustile material improperly placed therein, and to remedy any unnecessary damage such owner or occupant may such owner or occupant shall neglect for the space of ten days to comply with the oath, and he shall be guilty of a misdmeanor.
Sec. 7. Prosecution. When Authorized herein provided, the fire marshal shall be satisfied that there is sufficient evidence herein provided, the fire marshal shall be satisfied that there is sufficient evidence of arson, he shall cause such person to be arrested and charged with such person, and that the county attorney all the information and evidence obtained by him, including a copy of all pertinent testimony taken in
1. At the request of a mayor, town police, the city, village, or town in which the fire occurred;
2. At the request of an insurance company, by such company;
3. At the request of a state;
4. The marshal shall report monthly to the insurance commissioner, a detailed report of the charges made by him for expenses incurred under this act, with the names of the persons paying the several charges, each charge;
5. The charges for the sections shall be given in the annual report. Sec. 9. Investigation not to Affect policies. No action taken by such marshal shall be made in respect to his loss by reason of any fire or any such investigation, or the fact that an investigation was requested or made, or any such investigation, or the fact that an investigation was requested or made, or any civil action upon such policy.
Sec. 10. Additional Tax—Appropriation
for the purpose of appropriating money
company doing business in the state, except
town mutual companies, shall hereafter
be appropriated by the state, except
first Monday of April in each year, in addition
to all other taxes and fees required
by the state, except the fees of one per cent of the net premiums
collected by it for insurance upon property
of the state, except the fees of such tax as may be necessary
for the purpose is hereby appropriated
by the state, except the fees of such tax as may be necessary
curred under the provisions of this act,
and no such expenses shall be incurred
therefrom.
Sec. 11. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved April 19, 1000.
CHAPTER 322—H. F. No. 80.
AN ACT to amend section one (1) of
chapter one hundred and ninety-five
of the United States Code of laws of
nineteen hundred and three (1900).
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section I. 1. That section one (1) of chapter one hundred and ninety-five (15) of the General Laws of nineteen hundred amended, so that it will read as follows.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 12, 1805.
CHAPTER 333-H. F. NO. 141. AN ACT to legalize in certain cases the burial of the deceased in the cemetery corporation by means conveyances. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Section 1. That in any case where cemetery lots have been reconveyed to a new location, they are organized by the laws of this state, by the conveyances, including wills, instead of directly conveyances, including deeds, because conveyance is hereby legal and declared valid and effectual provided that no inquestor, whether a former owner thereof prior to such reconveyance, and provided further that the property is being conveyed by action or proceeding now pending in any (of) the courts of this state.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Approved April 19, 1008.
CHAPTER 34-H. F. No. 613.
AN ACT to authorize and empower all persons having a population of 10,000 inhabitants or less to issue bonds and dispose of the same; to enact a second act for the purpose of purchasing waterworks or light plans already constructed, extending, enlarging, improving, or purchasing municipal waterworks or light plants or either all of them.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota;
in the event of condemnation shall be that presented by chapter 284, 106 of 1906, or by such city's order and the purchase price of said plant or system as so fixed by agreement or condemnation may be paid out of the proceeds of the bonds by such city.
Sec. 4. Whenever the electors of any state choose a candidate in favor or issuing the bonds of such city hereunder, such city, and the electors of the city hereunder, and empowered by an affirmative vote of three-fourths of the number of the bonds of said city, in an amount to be determined by the electors of the city hereunder, regenerate the amount contained in the said proposition, adopted by the electors at the time of the election, and dispose of the same, as hereafter provided, and may use the same and the same amount, which the resolution provided for in section two (2) of this act shall specify, but
Sec. 5. Such bonds shall be of such denomination as the city council may designate; at such times, not less than 10 days from date of issue; shall be made payable to bearer, or to the owner of the property from them may be delivered, as such city council may deem best, and similarly, at such place as the city council may determine, at a rate not exceeding $100,000, and coupons may be represented by coupons attached to said bonds. Sald bonds and coupons shall be represented by clerk, or similar officer, or recorder of such city, and the corporate seal of the city shall be imprinted upon said bonds.
Sec. 6. The city council of any such city may, with all its members to dispose of such bonds in such manner as in the judgment to serve the interest of the city, but it shall not negotiate the interest of the city, but less than their par value and accrued interest in the proceeds of the sale thereof shall be used for any other purchase, at interest shall be used for the sale thereof implembed by section two (2) hereof, and such purpose shall be used for the sale thereof in the said council authorising the issuance thereof.
The municipal and interest of any such bonds so issued is hereby declared to be a first lien on the plants respectively constructed or purchased by means of said bonds or the lien and credit of such city issuing the same is hereby issued by the same provision of the law of this state, whether general or special of the General Laws of Alameda and fifty-one (351), as amended, of the General Laws of Alameda and ninety-one (1899), to the contrary notwithstanding, to take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 10, 1906.
CHAPTER 335-H. F. NO. 250.
ANONYMOUS IMPLEMENT, improvement and maintenance of public parks and for the appointment of more than 10,000 inhabitants.
It be enacted by the Legislature of the
Sec. 2. That the city council of every such city board for such city, to be composed of three members, to be composed of two members, to be composed of three years respectively, all of whom shall be free holders of compensation. Such park board shall be authorized and empowered, for such city, to acquire by gift, purchase, devise, condemnation or lease, purposes, and shall provide for the improvement thereof as specified in section have general supervision, management and control of such city, to reason to care for and take charge of the same, and may prescribe his duties and fix his compensation.
Sec. 3. That for the purposes of carrying out the procedure, every such city may appropriate annually out of any of the revenues of the city, the various other licenses and fines, a sum of money not exceeding ten per cent of the salaries for the purposes herein mentioned, in such manner and subject to such rules, and the other fees incurred said park board shall direct. 3. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with this act are hereby inconsistent with this act not included or apply to the city. 4. The charter adopted under and pursuant to section thirty-six (38), article four, amended, and chapter three, hundred and fifty-one (351) of the General Laws of 1899 and the several acts amendatory
Whereas, the remains of these several persons were rudely covered upon 1862, when they were taken up and buried unremarkably, the remains of mounted rangers, on the shore of Lake Shetak, on private property; therefore the legislature of the State of Minnesota: Section 1. That the sum of four hundred dollars may be necessary, be and the same is hereby appropriated out of any money in the state treasury not otherwise appropriated. The foregoing reinforcement of the foregoing bodies, and the monument with suitable inscription on the ground,
Sec. 2. That the selection of the place bodies and the erection of said monument shall be done under the authority and jurisdiction of the Murray county, who are here-rement by purchase or otherwise, on whose certificate the state auditor draws this warrant for the payment of the county. This act shall take effect and be in force after its passage. Approved April 19, 1905.
CHAPTER 337—H. F. No. 886.
AN ACT to appropriate money for the state government and for other purposes. Legislature of the State of Minnesota.
Section 1. The sums hereinafter named, or so much thereof as may be necessary, in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, following sections of this act, to be available, where not otherwise stated, for each year, 1900, and July 31, 1907. 1. The Supreme Court—1. For additional for contingent payments for years and annually thereafter, $700.00.
2. For payment of services and expense under disbursement act, chapter 63, Laws of the State, the year ending July 31, 1905, $2,000.00.
3. For the same purpose for each of
6. for repairs of old capita, $1,000.00
7. for repairs of water, water, etc.
8. for repairs, $3,800.00
7. For telephone service, old capitol,
$150.00.
Sec. 4. For the Secretary of State's Office—
1. For additional for contingent expenses.
2. For salary of check clerk made necessary by board of control, $120,000.00
3. For salary of clerk, $120,000.00
4. Payment of expressage on remittances received from county treasurer
5. Expense of collecting coupons,
$1,600.00
5. for report of commercial agencies on state deposits' bonds, $bonds,
6. For adding machine and stand, to be
1950, only $880.00.
1950, only $880.00.
Sec. For the State Auditor's Office-
office. For the land commissioners' depart-
ment for land commissioners' years and annual
thereafter, $80.00.
3. For additional for extra clerk, in-
charge of investment for permanent state board of equalization, $200.00.
4. For clerk for investment board to
invest in investment for permanent
schools, loans, townships and school districts,
$1,500.
5. For new record books and transcrip-
tions, $500.
6. For available for the year ending July 19,
1906, only. $500, examining, appraising
and selling pine timber and treating tre-
sure and caring for state lands,
$15,000.
7. For expense caring for, selecting and
granting of state institutions, and examin-
ing community school land selections, $5,000.
8. For expense of care and control of
8. 31. 1905, only $1,600.00
year ending July
31. 1905, only $1,600.00
9. For fees of registers and receivers
10. For fees of registrars and receivers
11. Attracts of final entries of public land
12. Attracts of final entries of public land
13. 30. For expense of examining and
inspecting state mineral lands and mining
Sect. 7. For Attorney General's Office-
contingent for contingent expense,
$5,000.00
Sec. 8. For the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction-
Treasurer.
1. For additional for contingent exp-
penses, pay $10,000 for years and
years thereafter, $600.00.
2. For extra clerk hire for each of
said years and annually thereafter,
$10,000.00.
3. For additional for summer training
schools, $10,000.00.
4. For expense of conducting teachers' examinations under chapter 101, $75.00.
5. For contingent fund for conducting examinations for state professional certificates by said department, $75.00. For public school libraries, $100.00.
1. For salary of assistant bank examiner, $100,000 and years and annually thereafter. $180,000.
2. For additional for maintenance of office. $100,000.
3. Sec. 10. For Insurance Commissioner's office. $700,000.
4. For contingent expense. $700,000.
5. Sec. 11. For Railroad and Warehouse Commissioners. $700,000.
6. For expenses carrying out the laws. $200,000, not including expert assistance. $20,000,000.
2. For the purpose of inaugmenting a
school, the school shall be under the law, to be available for the year ending July 31, 1900. $500.00.
12. For Game and Fish Commission.
For first state fish hatchery, to be
available for the year ending July 31,
1900.
For pling and putting same place,
To be available for the year ending
To be available for the year ending
For additional for maintenance, $900.00,
For additional for the year ending
July 31, 1907:
For additional for maintenance, $000.00.
double dwelling for workmen,
$2,000.00.
Second state fish hatchery at Glenwood, to available for the year ending July 31.
1. For team, wagon, sleigh, double harness.
2. For ten ponds in creek, $2,000.00.
3. For reimbursement of standing appropriation for sofa expended at Glenwood $1,000.00.
4. To be available for the year ending July.
5. For bass ponds, $1,500.00.
6. For current expenses, $4,000.00.
7. For sidewalks, driveways and sodding, $500.00.
8. To be available for the year ending July.
9. For current expenses, $4,000.00.
10. For repairs, sidewalks, driveways and sodding, $500.00.
11. For dairy and food commission.
12. For additional for salary for commissioner for each of said years and annually thereafter, $000.00.
13. For additional for salary of chemist, $500.00.
5. For additional for salary of deputy commissioner; $500.00.
6. Sec. 14. For bureau of labor:
For two additional inspectors and their training and incidental expenses, $4,000.00.
Sec. 15. For state board of labor:
For additional for maintenance for the year ending July 31, 1906, only, $200.00.
For expense maintaining laboratory, $10,000.00.
For additional for collection of vital statistics, $500.00.
For the expense of carrying the indebtedness of the State of Minnesota for caring for individuals who are now residents or infectious diseases for which said State of Minnesota is liable, $2,000.00.
8. For carrying on chemical pesticides.
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logical examination of water supplies,
$1,000.00.
6. For equipment of laboratory 1. See 16. For live stock sanitary board 1. See 16. For additional claims adding the state for diseased animals killed under supervision of said animal 1. See 16. For year ending July 31, 1965, only. $20,000.00.
7. State state librarian 1. For additional expenses to be available for the year ending July 31, 1965. 2. For additional assistant, such appointment to have the approval of the 8. For additional for current expense 8. For additional for current expense for the year ending July 31, 1965. $129.00.
Sec. 18. For Sundry Miscellaneous Pur-
1. For payment of referees' fees of dis-
charge, paid by chapter 55,
1888, 890, 900.
5. For printing, advertising and binding as may be provided by contract for the year ending July 31, 1906, $100.000; for the year ending July 31, 1906, $500.000; for the year ending July 31, 1906, $500.000; for the year ending July 31, 1907, $500.000.
7. For additional forestry preservation
year ending July 31, 1960,
$2,500.00.
8. For forest preservation, as provided
in the 196, Laws of 189, as amended,
in the 197, Laws of 189.
B. For completing the new park house in Itasca State Park, the governor will direct the direction of the governor and the attorney general, to be available year after July 31, 2019, $2,000.00. The governor and attorney general are authorized down down dumber belonging to the state within said park, and use the process for the improvement. The governor is responsible for the improvements and improvement of Itasca State Park, including repairs, landscaping, and the bylaw by the state, to be expended under the direction of the governor and attorney general for the year after July 31, 2019, $800.00.
13. For additional for land within landlord's jurisdiction, private owners in sections 19 and 20 and in township 143, range 153 in Hubbard county, to be acquired by purchase or condemnation, the governor and attorney general, as provided in Laws of 1895, as amended, $1,500.00.
14. For planting and caring for pine in
the direction of the attorney general,
and the direction of the attorney general,
15. For improvement, care and maintenance
of the State Park of Dalles of 81-
st Floor, 100 West 11th Street, $1,500.00; for the year ending July 31,
$1,000.00; for the year ending July 31,
Provided that not exceeding $1,000,000 may be used to purchase a toll-bridge may be used to purchase a toll-bridge condition, upon condition that an appropriation of similar amount is made, the amount is $18. For surveying and permanently fixing the roads, the reserve (three tracts) of one thousand acres of the state forestry board, to be available for year ending July 31, 1900 only,
17. For reimbursing the contingent land office paid to the United States land office accompanying selection of 20,000 acres of land to the University, available for year ending July 31, 1906, only $200.00. Improving, beautifying and maintaining Camp Release Park. Lae课校 direction of L. R. Moyer, H. E. Ho, and C. S. Williams of Montovideo, Minn. 19. For carrying out the provisions of chapter 833, Laws 1890, relating to system 20. For printing the proceedings of the Minnesota Educational association,
21. For the Olivia board of trade, for sale, to be paid by such corporation, to be required to be paid by such corporation, to be available for year ending July 31, $2,000.22.
22. For the use and support of the department, to be expended as provided by law, $2,000.00.
23. For the carriages of judges of district court, $7,000.00.
24. For printing and binding legislative materials, for year ending July 31, 1906, $22,000.00.
25. For publishing in the legal news paper, see **H. F. No. 43**, which are not to be so published, to be availa- **year** ear ending July 31, 2016, only $50,000.
26. For additional support of the State Historical Society, for each of the years ending in 1967, annually thereafter, $5,000.00.
27. For the drainage of swamps and mitigation of impoundment, improvement, and repair of state ditches heretofore established, to be expended under the supervision of the drainage commission as provided by law.
spector of aphiles, who shall be appointed by the governor of the purpose of protecting the association's association to the prosecution of its members, and to report the said inspector to the government $1,000,000.
40. For additional state aid to county schools under the provisions of chapter 86, laws of 1807, in addition to standing appropriations for years, and annually thereafter, $14,000. 41. For additional contingent fund for schools under the years, and annually thereafter, $0.00.
by reason of the death of her minor son, Richard L. Barrington, in July, 1902, from injuries received while serving as a member of Company B. First National Guard of Minnesota. It is all due the sum of $500.00; payable, $200.00 at once, and $0.00 quarterly, beginning on May 1, 1906; provided, that if said Emma Minke
2. For fire-proofing and repairs west detention building.
3. For plogery, $1,000.00.
4. For slaughter house, cooling room and treatment, $5,000.00.
4. For maintenance for current expenses, $178,000.00.
4. Available for the year ending July 30, 1997.
4. For repairs and betterments, $5,000.00.
2. For stock barn, $5,000.00.
2. For improvements of roads and pavements, $5,000.00.
4. For nurses' dormitory and equipment, 75,000.00.
4. Additional for current expenses, $178,000.00.
6. For the purpose of constructing and equipping contagious hospital, the unimproved section 20, chapter 81, Laws of 1901, for the constructing of a cottage for the hospital is hereby transferred and reappropriate.
7. For the purpose of administration building, the unexpended appropriation for the hospital is hereby transferred and reappropriate.
7. For the purpose of administration building for hospital purposes hereby transferred and reappropriated.
Fourth-For the Rochester State Hospital
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4. For plumbing, fire protection and
fire suppression, additional for current expenses,
$10,000.
To be available for the year ending
July 31, 1907:
1. For repairs and betterments, $1-
000.00.
2. For typwriting room and equipment,
3. For musical instruments, library and
supplies, $600.00.
4. For steel fence in retaining wall,
$600.00.
5. Additional for current expenses,
$11,000.00.
Seventh--For the School for the Deaf-
able for the year ending July 31, 1908:
1. For repairs and betterments, $3-
000.00.
2. For dynamo, $1,500.00.
3. For draining lawn and garden and
improvement, $200.00.
4. For library, $200.00.
5. For needy pupils attending national
objectives, $25,000.00.
6. Additional for current expenses,
$25,000.00.
7. For available for the year ending
July 31, 1907:
1. For repairs and betterments, $3-
000.00.
2. For new boiler and connections, $6-
000.00.
3. For draining lawn and d improving
grounds, $500.00.
Eighth-For School for Feeble Minded-
be able for the year ending
July 19
5. For additional for current expenses,
$121,00.00.
2. For enlargement of shop, equipment,
equipment, and connections.
3. For clairm and connections,
$2,000.00.
4. For greenhouse, $1,000.00.
4. For additional for current expenses,
$121,000.
Ninth-For the State Public School-
board for the year ending
July 31, 1900.
1. For plumbing in old cottages,
$1,000.00
To be available for the year ending
July 31, 1906:
2. For repairs and betterments,
$2,000.00
3. For fire escapes, $120.00
4. For laundry and equipment,
$2,000.00
5. For tunnel for steam and water
pipes, $500.00
6. For cement floor and fixtures in
cow barn, $500.00
7. For state agency, $250.00
8. For additional for current expenses,
$2,000.00
9. For farm cottage, $1,500.00
To be available for the year ending
July 31, 1906:
1. For repairs and betterments,
$2,000.00
2. For new radiators and pipes in old
cottages, $280.00
3. For library, $250.00
4. For year end repairs, $150.00
5. For rewiring building, $200.00
6. For state agency, $6,000.00
7. Additional for current expenses,
$20,000.00
Tenth-For the State Training School-
for the year ending
July 31, 1906:
1. For repairs and bettiments,
$200.00.
2. For dynamo and motors, $200.00.
3. For addition to reservoir and connection
$200.00.
4. For tools and machinery, $1,000.00.
5. For plumbing, $1,000.00.
6. For plums for girls' cottage, $200.00.
7. For hospital and guardhouse, $5.00.
1. For current expenses, addition to tenant application $3,000.00
2. To be available for the year ending July 31, 1907:
a. For repairs and betterments, $2,000.00.
b. For additional for state agency, $3,000.00.
c. For military and military training, $2,500.00.
d. Additional for current expenses, $3,000.00.
Eleventh—For the State Reformatory—To be available for the year ending July 31, 1906:
a. For repairs and betterments, $2,000.00.
b. For replacing stockade with stone wall, $3,000.00.
c. For plumbing, plumbing, wiring and addition to power plant, $7,000.00.
d. For laundry and equipment, $1,200.00.
e. For silo, $330.00.
f. For administration building, $15,000.00.
g. For additional for current expenses, $74,000.00.
h. Available for the year ending July 31, 1907:
a. For repairs and betterments, $2,000.00.
b. For contiguous ward, $5,000.00.
c. For silo, $250.00.
d. Root cellar, $900.00.
e. For storing stockade with stone wall, $5,000.00.
f. For administration building, $15,000.00.
7. For additional for current expense,
$76,000.00
Provided, that if the present rapid infrastructure continues, and it becomes necessary to begin the construction of an addition to the state institutions, and the convening of the Legislature of 1907, the control of state institutions, the power of consent to extend such sum as in its authorized to authorize such sum as in its outwork such work, to be available for the year ending July 31, 1907, not exceeding $2,000.—For the State Prison—To be available or equal to years of service, July 31, 1907.For repairs, $2,000.00.—For exceeding 100 acres of additional land as near said prison as practicable, build a suitable stockade or warehouse, and install necessary buildings for accommodations of increased population of prison, and room, and install necessary power, plant and room, and install necessary water, plant and provide necessary light, water and ventilation for all said buildings.
---
The board of control is authorized to
deposit $50,000 of the years ending July 31, 1906 and
1907, for the purchase of additional lands
and buildings. The purchase will be for the best interests of the state, a sum not exceeding $500,000.
The board of control is authorized to
decide of chapter 291, Laws of 1897, relating
dependencies of non-resident
dependents, $5,500,000.
Fifteenth-For the Minnesota sanitorial
department, $5,500,000, including cottages and equipments, one-half payable each of the years ending July 31, 1906.
Sec. 20. For the Duluth Normal School-
authorized for the year ending
July 31, 1906.
1. For current expenses, $75,000,000.
2. For addition to president's salary,
$500,000.
6. For improvement of grounds and walks, $2,000.00.
2. For addition to president's salary for said year and annually thereafter,
3. For repairs, $1,500.00,
4. For furniture and equipment, $1,500.00.
To be available for the year ending July 31, 1908:
1. For books to replace those burned in fire in January, 1908, $250.00.
2. For books to replace those burned in fire in January, 1908, $250.00.
3. For loss in stock and supplies in linen closets of 'indies' home, $247.00.
4. For loss in stock and supplies in linen closets of 'indies' home, $247.00.
To be available for the year ending July 31, 1908:
1. Additional for current expenses, $13,000.00.
2. For addition to president's salary, $500.00.
3. For repairs, $1,500.00.
4. For furniture and equipment, $500.00.
5. For library equipment and books, $750.00.
6. For remodeling and repairing as
hall and court rooms, $2,
000.00.
2. For addition to president's salary
for the school building thereafter,
$500.00,
for repairs, $150.00,
for library and equipment, $750.00,
for model school building and equip-
forment.
1. For additional for current expense,
$1,100.00.
2. For addition to president's salary,
$500.00.
3. For repairs, $1,500.00.
4. For furniture and equipment,
$1,000.00.
5. For library equipment and books,
$700.00.
6. For grounds and equipment to
study.
7. To be available for the year ending
July 31, 1967:
8. For additional for current expense,
$12,000.00.
9. For addition to president's salary
(for said year and annually thereafter,
$500.00).
10. For repairs, $1,500.00.
11. For furniture and equipment,
$200.00.
To be available for the year ending
July 31, 1006:
1. For current expenses, $60,000.00.
2. For main building and construction,
$200,000.00.
4. For powerhouse building and
equipment, including electric lighting
plumbing.
5. For construction and equipment
new plant building, $10,000.00.
6. For neurological building
complete, $20,000.00.
7. For repairs, $10,000.00.
8. For neurological building
complete, $20,000.00.
9. For periodicals, rebinding and
repair of books and miscellaneous expense
of general library, $1,500.00.
10. For improvement of campus, $4-
000.00.
11. For new animal house, $2,500.00.
12. For equipment officers band corps,
$600.00.
1. For current expense, $00,000.00.
2. For completion of main building and
090.9.
For school of locus, apparatus and
machinery. $2,000.00.
For money collected from侵
侵ance on the old main building de
destroyed by fire shall also be available for
and in the construction of the new main
building. Sec. 26. For the School of Agriv
culture. be available for the year ending
July 31, 1906:
July
For steel water tower and tank.
$5,500.00.
For real and hose for fire protection,
$1,000.00
construction and completion of main building, including an auditorium,
in addition to money raised under procurement,
for the purchase of additional land to be
by purchase or condemnation,
$8,000.00
4. For purchase of live stock for purpose of instruction, $1,000.00.
5. For repairs and improvements of campus, $500.00.
6. For short breeding and experimentation therein, $4,000.00.
7. For soil investigation, $1,000.00. To be available for the year ending July 31, 1907.
1. For enlarging kitchen connected
check for purpose of instruction, $4,000.00,
$4,000.00 and improvements on campus
Sec. 27. For Substitution at Crookston-
bearable for the year ending
July 31, 1900.
To be available for the year ending July 31, 1907:
1. For current expense, $$$,000.00.
2. For equipment, machine, machinery shed and barn, $$$,000.00.
and barn, $0,000.00
Sec. 28. For Sub-Station at Grand Rap-
104.
To be available for the year ending
July 31, 1003:
2. For dairy building, well gasoline
2. For dairy building, well gasoline
To be available for the year ending
July 31, 1003:
1. For current for the year ending
July 31, 1003:
1. For current for the year ending
July 31, 1003:
2. Sec. for the Minnesota Soldiers'
training.
To be available for the year ending July 31, 1905:
1. For additional for the home support fund.
2. For renewing electric wiring of said home, $3,000.00.
3. Available for the year ending July 31, 1904.
4. Additional for home support fund, $20,000.00.
5. For repairs and improvements, $1,-
6. 30.00.
7. For new building for accommodation of ex-soldiers, sailors and marines,
8. for firefighters and wildlands and mothers, as provided by building equipping and furnishing $15,000.00.
To be available for the year ending July 31, 1907:
1. For additional for home support fund, $30,000.00.
2. For repairs and improvements, $1,500.00.
Sec. 30. For the Ladies of the G. A. R. Home at Anokha—for the purpose of caring for veterans of the Civil War and their wives and sons for the year ending July 31, 1900, $500,000.
2. For the same purpose for the year ending July 31, 1900, $500,000.
3. For the same purpose for the year ending July 31, 1900, $500,000.
Sec. 31. For the State Agricultural society;
on condition that the society shall add thereto at least an equal amount, one-third of the revenue for July 31, 1900, and July 31, 1907, $500,000,000.
in order to meet the current demands upon the revenue fund for the auditor and treasurer may, at any time, be made available to the said revenue fund pursuant to any such payment to meet such appropriation comes into the state treasury, and whenever the accommodation of the state the amount of such warrants from the time when such payment was made until the money to redeem such warrants comes into the state treasury, and whenever upon a said governor, auditor and treasurer
Sec. 32%. For pensions of citizen sol-
vors, wives, spouses and children of the
Indian Mahanatha, 18 under the duel
dum of $10,000.00, one half of the sum
of $10,000.00, one half of the sum
of $10,000.00, one year ending July 31st,
and July 15th.
Sec. 33. This act shall take effect and bind the person to its passage.
Approved April 19, 1966.
CHAPTER 338—H. F. NO. 885
AN ACT to appropriate money out of the city to support the building bridges and constructing and repairing bridges and counties in this state, repealing certain appropriations heretofore made in the city, constitutes the right to issue certificates of indebtedness. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the city.
Section 1. That the sums hereinafter named be and the same hereby are appended to the treasury belonging to the internal improvement fund, or out into the internal treasury belonging to aid fund not other-than internal bridges, and in constructing and draining roads, or other improvements as the case may be, at the locations in the cities or counties hereafter specified. Sec. 2. Such money will be expended in each case designated. Where no such money is expended the supervision of the persons or officers in each case designated. Where no such money is expended the supervision of the persons or officers in being done is required. Work in any location hereinafter described has been completed, the persons under whose supervision said money is expended to the state auditor, who shall thereupon draw his warrant on the state treasurer, the township treasurer as the case may be, or such order may be made payable directly to the treasury. No such treasurer shall retain or be entitled to any portion of such appropriation for bending the same.
Any appropriation hereby made, for the purposes of the exercise filled within the time herein specified, shall be cancelled, and is hereby repealed.
Sec. 5. The sum of three hundred (200) dollars to aid the town of Dun in improving the road on the island and Nordland to Mud River bridge on said town line and hundred and fifty (150) dollars to aid in improving the road running from the town line road in the town of Dun and to Hanging Kettle Lake said town.
Sec. 6. The sum of one hundred (100) dollars in the Central Avenue road, so-called, work is stitched into a road. Throat, Sodgerstown and Patrick Lloyd of省 county, (400 dollars to aid in the construction and improvement of the road, so-called, between Round Lake and Lake George in said county. Sold money shall be paid to Greenwald, F. James. Staples and W. A.
Becker County.
Sec. 9. The sum of three hundred (300)
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dollars, to aid in the repair of the Mississippi river immediately west of the village of Rice in the township of Langola, in Arkansas. Sald sum to be expended under the auctions to be the members of the village council of the county. Sald sum of nine hundred (900) dollars to aid generally in the repair, improve roads and bridges in said Benton county.
Sald sum to be expended under the dier-
sion of county commissioners of said county. Big Stone County. See. 16. Towards the hundred fifty (650) dollars, to be paid to the county treasury. To be paid to the road and bridge fund of said county. Sald money to be expended by the coun-
tury.
Sec. 11. The sum of four hundred (400) dollars is to be expended for the Watson河, at or near what is commonly known as Messery Ford, in the northwest of the state. The sum of four hundred (400) dollars is to be expended for the Earth river, in the northeast part of section twenty-six (26), township of Vernon. Salds sums to be expended under direction of county commissioners of said county. The sum of two (20) dollars to be expended in paying for the new bridge recently constructed in the township of Judson in Blue Earth county and the township of Nicollet in Nicollet
Said money to be paid out on an order of the chairmen of Brown County. Sec. 12. The sum of two hundred (300) dollars to be paid out on a proaches to the bridge recently constructed under the townships of Home in Brown county and the township of Ridgely in Nielcot County. Cummins's Ferry. The sum of two hundred dollars shall be expended under the direction of the chairman of the town board of supervisors of said township. Brown and Nielcot. Brown and Nielcot. Sec. 13. The sum of one hundred (1,800) dollars to aid in building a bridge across the Minnesota river between the township of Ridgely and the town of Home in Brown county, at or near what is known as Hindman's
- Said sum to be expended under the d-
said sum of the supervisors of said town,
said town.
Sec. 17. The sum of one thousand one hundred a bridge across Crow Wing river, between the counties of Cass and Morrison, and eighteen (18), township one hundred thirty-three (133), range thirty-one (31) where road crosses a river, and range under the supervision of the chairman of the board of county commissioners of said counties, the village council of the village of Motley. The sum of four hundred (400) dollars, range thirty-three (133), range thirty-one (31), township one hundred thirty-three (133), range thirty (30), sum to be expended under the supervision of the chairman of the county commissioners of said counties, and the president of the village council of the village of Wilmer. The sum of one hundred dollars, to aid in the construction of a bridge and Morrison counties, at a point where the road on the line between sections twenty-three (23), and twenty-four (24), township one hundred thirty-three (133),金钱 to be expended under the supervision of county commissioners of said counties, and the chairman of the board of superintendent of township of Rossing, Morrison county.
Chippewa County.
Sec. 18. The sum of two hundred and
fifty (350) dollars to be expended by the
town board of Stoneham township in
building a grade between sections ten
and eleven (111), ranch thirty-eight
(38). Chippewa County and Lac Qui Parle
County.
Sec. 19. The sum of three hundred and
fifty (350) dollars to be expended by the
town board of Stoneham township in
building a grade between sections ten
and eleven (111), ranch thirty-eight
(38). Chippewa County and Lac Qui Parle
County.
Chisago County
Sec. 20. The sum of two hundred (200) bridges over the Sunrise river, in the township of Wyoming. Said sum shall be the sum of said township of Wyoming, pervisors of said township of Wyoming.
The sum of one hundred and fifty (150) dollars bridges over the Sunrise River. In the township of Sunrise, Said sum shall be expended by the supervisors of the said township of Sunrise. The sum of one hundred (100) dollars bridges in the township of Branch. Said sum shall be expended under the direction of the supervisors of said Branch township. The sum of one hundred and fifty (150) dollars, to aid in reporting or of writing the report, shall be expended. Said sum shall be expended under the direction of the supervisors of said Lent
Clay County
of said Clearwater county: H. L. Bristol and S. J. Crawford. The sum of four hundred and fifty (450) dollars, to aid in the construction of a bridge, was $10,000 for five (5) in township one hundred and forty-nine (149) of range six-six (38) counties. The sum of $10,000 sald will be expended under the supervision of P. H. Pederson, Eric Erickson and H. H. Pederson. Cook County. Sec. 22. The sum of five hundred (500) dollars of roads or bridges, as the case may be.
Said sum to be expended under the supervision of the county commissioners.
Sec. 24. The sum of six hundred (600) dollars, to aid in building a bridge across Highwater creek on the line between secrec- tion and fourteen (14), in the town of Highwater.
Sec. 25. The sum of two hundred (200)
dollars, to aid in the construction of a
building, is twenty-five (25), township one
hundred and thirty-six (138), range twenty-seven
The sum of two hundred and fifty (250) dollars is appropriated in aid of repairing the steel bridge across the Mississippi at the city of Hastings in the said county.
Said amount to be expended under the direction of the mayor and city council of sald city in Hammond. Dodge County. Sec. 28. The sum of three hundred (300) dollars, to aid sald county in build- roads or bridges, in the township of Hammond.
The sum of three hundred (300) dollars, bridges and bridges and the case may be, in the town, $1,000.
Salds sums to be expected under the decision of the supervisors of said towns. Douglas County. Sec. 29. The town hundred and twenty-five (225) dollars, to aid in the construction of a bridge across the stream in stream crossings. Cawdry and Lake Darling in section eleven (11), range thirty-eight (38), and on the road known as the Alexandria and Aberdeen. Salds money to be expended and the board of supervisors of said town.
Sec. 31. The sum of two hundred seventy-five (275) dollars to aid in construction between sections (5) and at a point between sections (6) and (32), in the town of Sumner. The sum of two hundred seventy-five (275) dollars to aid in building a bridge across the Root river, at a point in section (7) and three (100), range nine (9), near the village of Whalen in the town of Holt, in the county. The sum to be expended under the supervision of the board of supervisors of, said town. The sum of two hundred and seventy-five (275) dollars, to aid in reconstructing and rebuilding the approaches of the town of Whalen, and the Laneboro road in the town of Preston. The sum shall be expended under the supervision of a committee consisting of H. Nupson and A. D. Gray, and the town of Whalen. Sec. 32. The sum of two hundred (200) dollars, to aid in the construction of a bridge known as Ellenberg church, on the section line between sections thirty (30) and thirty-one (31), township one hundred (100) dollars. Said money shall be expended under the supervision of, said township.
The sum of two hundred (200) dollars was paid for the northwest inlet of Fountain lake, in section five (5) township one hundred and sixty-five (55), on the Itasca and Albert Lea road. Said sum to be expended under the sum of two hundred (200) dollars is the city council of the city of Albert Lea.
Goodhue County.
between sections eighth (18) and nineteen (18), in the town of Land. Said sums to be expended under the division to the supervisors of the reservation town.
Hennepin County.
Sec. 85. The sum of twelve hundred (1,200) dollars, to aid in building a bridge across the Mississippi and Henpimin counties, at or near what is commonly known as Hamilton Ferry. Said moneymaker to be expense of the township of the board of supervisors of the township of Bloomington. The sum of three hundred (300) dollars, to aid in building a bridge in the township of Minnetrista.
Said money to be expended under the supervision of the township supervisors. The sum of one hundred (100) dollars to be paid roads in the township of Independence.
Said money to be expended under the supervision of the township supervisors.
Sec. 36. The sum of four hundred (400) dollars to a root river, where the public highway known to the public is section thirty-four (34), in the township of Hokah. Expanded under the supervision of the supervisors of said township. The sum of four hundred (400) dollars to a肋 in section thirty (30), township one hundred and four (104), range six
Said sum to be expended under the direction of D. Hempstead, K. Omiot and E. G. Lauge.
Hubbard County.
Sec. 37. The sum of one thousand (1,000) dollar bills along roads and bridges, as the case may be.
Isanti County.
Sec. 88. The sum of six hundred (600) dollars and a bridge and the approaches thereto, across Rum river, in section twenty-seven (27), township thirty-six (36), of range twenty-
The sum of four hundred (400) dollars, paid by the residents across Crow river in the northeast quarter (n%) of the southwest quarter (s%) of section thirty-six (30), township of Sald. Said amounts to be expended under the supervision of the supervisors of said
Kittson County.
The township of Killenney one hundred (100) dollars, the township of Elysian one hundred (100) dollars, the township of Cordova seventy-five (75) dollars, the township of Washington fifty (50) dollars, be expanded to road and bridge purposes under the direction of the Board of Trustees. In case, said appropriations be expended under the provisions of this section, sections of section thirty-nine, (39), chapter three hundred and nine (398), Laws of two hundred and ninety (290), Laws of two hundred and ninety (290), Laws of across Big Cannon river, in section twenty-seven (27), township one hundred and twenty-seven (27), township one hundred and twenty-seven (27), are specifically repealed.
Lincoln County.
Sec. 48. The sum of two hundred (200) bridge on the county lines between Lin-
coln county and Veedt township lies on the south line of Veedt township in Lin-
coln county, that certain location, known
The sum of three hundred (300) dollars and twenty-seven (27), township of Royal, to aid in building a road running east and west between sections thirty (30) and thirty-one (31), in the township of Marshfield.
Baid sums to be expended under the di-
rection of the board of township super
Lyon County.
Sec. 49. The sum of two hundred (200) in building roads or bridges, as the case
Sec. 51. The sum of eight hundred (500)
road running along the section lines between
sections nine (9) and sixteen (16),
and road running along the section lines
eleven (11), and between sections one (1)
and twelve (12), of township one hundred
(400) west, and between sections six (6)
and seven (7) in township one hundred
(400) west, north of range forty-one
(411) west.
Said sum shall be expended under the supervision of the board of supervisors of the Sea Martin County. Sues 52. The Town dollars, to aid in grading a road on the section line between sections twenty-five and thirty-five (55) in the town of Lake Belt.
Sec. 55. The sum of two hundred and fifty (250) dollars to aid in the construction of a river between sections thirty-two (32), township thirty-eight (38) of range thirty-one (31), and section eight (8), township seventy (77), and twenty-seven (127), range thirty (39).
Mower County.
Sec. 56. The sum of four hundred (400)
and twenty-seven (27) in the bridge across
the Little river in the point where the highway,
running down the river, is said town-
ship (27) and twenty-seven (28) in said town-
ship (27). The sum of four hundred (400)
dollars, to aid in the construction of a bridge
norway between the river on the west (22)
and the township of twenty-seven (27), in the township of
Said work shall be done by and under
the instruction of the supervisors of said
township.
Murray County.
Sec. 57. The sum of three hundred (300) acres across the Des Moines river on the sec. two (2), town on the sec. two (2), town on the sec. (105), range thirty-nine (30), Belfast direction. Said sum shall be expended under the direction of the supervisors of said
Said sum to be expended under the direction of the board of town supervisors. Sec. 85. The sum of three hundred and fifty (500) dollars, to aid in building a bridge across the river on the north bank of the river, to township one hundred and eleven (111), range twenty-nine (29), town of Bermuda. Said sum to be expended under the supervision of the supervisors of said township. The sum of one hundred and fifty (150) dollars, to aid in building a bridge across Hanson Creek, at Hanson Crossing in section five (5), township of Tewksbury. Said sum to be expended under the supervision of the supervisors of said township. The sum of two hundred and fifty (250) dollars, to aid in the payment of a bridge across Hanson Creek, at Hanson township of Nicollet. To be paid on the order of the chairman of the board
Nobles County
Sec. 59. The sum of six hundred (600) dollars, to aid in building a road on the county line, to thirty (30) township one hundred and one (101), range forty (40), and sections twenty-four (24) and twenty-five (25), township one hundred and one (101), range forty-one (41).
Sald money to be expended under the county commissioners of Noble county.
Norman County.
Sec. 60. The sum of eight hundred (800)
dollars, to aid in building a bridge at or
near where the present highway runs,
line between township one hundred forty-
four (144), forty-five (45), and
fourty-four (44). range forty-five (45),
range forty-four (44). range forty-five (45).
Olmsted County.
Boc. 61. The sum of five hundred (000) dollars, to aid in building a suburban highway across the Cascade creek, on the north line of the northwest quarter (nw% of section four) (4), in the south quarter (sq. of section fourteen) (44), and field sum to be expended under the su-
pervision of the board of supervisors of said township, to aid in reconstructing and repairing a public highway crosses said river on the northeast quarter (ne 4) of the northeast town one hundred and eight (108), range fourteen (14) to be expended under the supervision of the supervisors of said township. Otter Tail County. Seven (7), to aid in building a bridge across East Leaf Lake, at a point where a point in government lot two (2), to a point in government lot three (3), in said township of Leaf Lake. In two hundred (200) dollars, to aid in building a bridge across the Red River of the North, at a point where a point in government lot No. seven (7) of section four (4), in said township of Otter. In hundred (200) dollars, to aid in the construction of a bridge, known as the Fatterson on a public road running from a point on government lot No. fifteen (15) of Ida, Otter Tail county, to a point on government lot six (6) of section three (3).
Said sum to be expended under the direction of the supervisors of said Sturgeon. The sum of two hundred and fttty (250) dollars, to aid in the construction of the village of Rutledge. Said sum to be expended under the supervision of the village council of said Sturgeon.
The sum of four hundred and fifty (450) dollars, to aid in building Keswick Castle, was paid in Sandstone. Said sum to be expended under the supervision of the village council of said
Pinestone County.
Sec. 64. The sum of three hundred (300) dollars, to aid in building a road and a township, to aid in building a road and a township (41) and two (2) in township 185 range, being on the north line of the township across Pipestone and the southeast quarter (see § 4) of section seven (7), and the northeast quarter of township one hundred and six (100), range forty seven (47).paid money to be exercised in the direction of the supervisors of said town.
Polk County.
Pope County.
Sec. 66. The sum of two hundred fifty and twenty across the Chippewa river, and the necessary approaches thereto, in the town of where the river crosses the Chippewa in sections one hundred and twenty-three (123), one sum of two hundred and fifty (250) and one sum of two hundred and fifty (250) across the Chippewa river, and the necessary approaches the road crosses the river between sections nine (9) and sixteen (16), in said town, and two-fifth (24), forty range (40).
Said sums to be expended under the supervision of the township supervisors.
Bamsey County
Sec. 67. The sum of six hundred (600) acres of land on the northwest bank of the creek on the Centerville road of the northeast quarter (neck) of section six (6), in the township of New Canada.
Sald sum to be expended under the
supervisors of said board of
supervisors of said bank.
Red Lake County
Sec. 08. The sum of three hundred (300) dollars was to be expended across Clearwater river, in section four (400) dollars, in section five (500) dollars, in said sum to be expended under the direction of Julius Pleth. J. M. Reed and the sum of two hundred (200) dollars, in said sum to be expended across Clearwater river, between sections two (2) and three (3) Poplar River township, in said sum to be expended under the direction of Charles Hallas, William and W. E. Chesslie of said county. The sum of seven hundred (700) dollars was to be expended across the bridge across Red Lake river on the wedge-teny-eight (28), in Louisville township,
Said money to be expended under the
Munify Dufy, residents of Red Lake Falls.
Munify Dufy, residents of Red Lake Falls.
Redwood County
Sec. 63. The sum of six hundred (600) dollars is the amount the Minnesota river on the public road at that certain location known as Bell's location to be determined by the board of the town. Said money to be expended by the town board of supervisors, of said township of
Renville County
The sum of two hundred (200)
dollars, and bridges in the town of Winfield
are 1,000.
The sum of seventy-five (75) dollars to
the town of Montserrat and bridges in the
town of Montserrat.
The sum of one hundred and fifty (150)
and bridges in the town of Henryville
The sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars to aid in building roads and bridges in the town of Cayman Islands. The sum of seventy-five (75) dollars to aid in building roads and bridges in the town of seventy-five (75) dollars to aid in building roads and bridges in the town of fifty (50) dollars to aid in building roads and bridges in the town of Klingon.
Said sums to be expended under the
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
supervision of the town board of supervisors of the towns, Wheaton County. Sec. 17. The sum of two hundred and fifteen of a bridge across a creek running through the town of Wheaton (22), five (5) township one hundred and twelve (112), and thirty-two (32), township one hundred and twenty-two (22), at a point about 179 rods east of the town of Wheaton, the same being in the town of Wheatland. The supervision shall be expended under the supervision of the board of supervision. The sum of three hundred (300) dollars, to aid the township of Cannonville, the southwest quarter (5%) of section three hundred and ten (110), range twenty (29).
Said money to be expended under the
board of supervisors
of sale, 100%
Rock County.
Sec. 72. The sum of two hundred and fifty dollars of a bridge across Blood Creek, in the town of Martin, at a point twenty-two (20) and thirty-two (32), is said town, the sum of two hundred and fifty (250) dollars, to aid in the construction of a point where the south line of section point where the Clinton township, crosses said river.
Said sums to be expended under the u-
niversal of the supervisors of said town-
ship.
Roseau County
Said sum to be expended by the board of township supervisors of the township of Blakeley. The sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars to be expended by the bridge across the Minnesota river, at or near what is known as Hamilton Ferry direction of the village council of the village of Hamilton. Sibley Counties. Sec. 76. The sum of three hundred and fifty dollars to be expended by the bridge across the Minnesota river, between the township of Blakeley in Scott county, and the village of Blakeley in Scott county. Said money to be expended by the township of Blakeley in Scott county, and the village council of the village of Blakeley in Scott county. Sec. 77. The sum of one hundred and fifty (150) dollars, to aid in building
The sum of two hundred and fifty (250)
dollars, to aid in building a road running
through the city, would be divided between sections fifteen (15) and
sixteen (16), a place commonly
called a curduray.
All said sums to be expended under
the provisions of the respective boards
of township supervisors
Stearns County.
Said money to be expended under the direction of the board of supervisors of
Steel County.
Sec. 80. The sum of three hundred (300) buildings in constructing a bridge across Straight River covered by the quarter line between the southeast quarter (sex4) and the northwest quarter (sex5) of said township. (20) of said township. (20) dollars to said the town of Summit in building a bridge across the section line between sections nine (9) and sixteen (16) of said township.
Said amounts to be expended under the supervision of the supervisors of said salaries.
Stevens County.
Sec. 11. The sum of six hundred (600) dollars, to be paid, to the bridge over the Fomme da Terre river, at a point in section eight (8), where the public highway crosses
Said sum to be expended under the direction of the supervisors of Frammas
Swift County
Sec. 82. The sum of six hundred (900)
hundred bridges across the Minnesota river, where
the public highway crosses said river in
hundred and twenty-one (120), range of
hundred and twenty-one (120), range of
Todd County.
Sec. S3. The sum of two hundred (200) dollars in a bridge across Long Prairie river. The sum of two hundred (200) dollars, and bridges in said town, building roads and bridges in said town.
Said sum shall be expended under the supervision of the Traverse County (6,000) dollars, to aid the township of Reddath in building a bridge across Muskita rivia in section seven (7), and lot two (2) in section eight (8), township one (1) and city-ship (4). Said money to be expended under the supervision of the supervisors of said township. Wahaba County (4,000) dollars to aid in the construction of a
Sec. 88. The sum of three hundred and fifty (330) dollars to al in the construction of a bridge across Grey Cloud slough in section thirty (30), township of Cotter
Said sum shall be expended under the supervision of the township. The sum of three hundred and fifty (50) over River creek, in the township of Forster, crosses the said River creek in the southeast quarter (50%) of the northwest (50%) of the township thirty-two (32) north of range twenty-one (21) north of Watonwan County. Sec. 81. The sum shall be deducted (400) dollars and approaches across St. James township (400) and nineteen (19), township one hundred and six (10), range thirty-one (31), town of
The sum of two hundred (200) dollars to aid in repair of a road crosses the Watonan river in section twenty-eight (28), township one in township (17), range (17), town (10), town of Medella. Winona County. To a township hundred and fifty (750) dollars, to be used in building roads or bridges, as the case may be. (750) dollars to aid in building a bridge in the northeast corner of the town of Home, on the road, commonly called "the Winona Road." Said sum to be expended under the direction of the supervisors of said town.
Wilkin County.
Sec. 91. The sum of six hundred (600) dollars to aid in building a bridge across the Maston slough on the section line between secon- maston and thirty (30), in Manston township. Sald money to be expended under the supervision of the board of supervisors of said township. Sec. 92. The sum of six hundred (600) dollars to aid in building a bridge across the township of French Lake. Sald sum to be expended by the board of supervis-
Yellow Medicine County.
Sec. 63. The sum of three hundred (200) dollars to aid in the construction of Granite Falls in said Yellow Medicine county, through sections twenty-eight and nineteen (18), in the township of Otsa, through supervision of the board of supervisors of said town of Otsa.
The sum of three hundred (200) dollars to aid in building a bridge across Yellow Medicine river, at or near the southeast corner of Granite Falls in said Yellow Medicine county, and the northwest corner of the township of Vallejo, under the supervision of the supervisors of said township of Otsa, to aid in the construction of a bridge across Yellow Medicine county, and the section line between sections two (2) and three (3) in the town of Oshkosh. Said under the supervision of the board of supervisors of said township.
In aid of building roads, bridges and other road improvement made under the provisions of Law 290, Laws of 1903, and which have not been heretofore, or are not by this act expressly repealed, are hereby made available until December 31, 1900.
Sec. 96. Section fifty-nine (59) of chapter three hundred and ninety (309) of the Code of Civil Procedure, section forty-eight (48), section sixty-eight and seventy (78), section hereby specified repealed. Sec. 97. This act shall take effect and impose the same passage. Approved April 19, 1905.
CHAPTER 339-H F NO. 627
A person who shall actually and in good faith pay a sum of money to a solicitor to make a payment to a licensed to receive, shall not be responsible for the proper application of the payment to the solicitor, nor right or title derived by him from the trustee in consideration of the payment shall not be impaired or called in question by the solicitor in application by the trustee of the money paid.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
CHAPTER 840-H. F. NO. 508
uses of the in sale of soda waters, used in the sale of soda waters, used in the sale of soda waters, elder, gleam, gleam beer, beer, Weiss beer, beer, white beer, malt cumin, milk cumin, milk cumin, milk cream, cream and butter.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York.
Sec. 2. It shall be unlawful for any person other than the one named in the notice, as provided in section one (1) of this act, without the written consent of the person, or without the written consent of the receptacle bearing a name, mark or design of the person, or without the written consent of the (1) of this act with soda water, mineral or aerated beverages, milk, cream, ice cream, beer, water, white beer, malt extract, other beverages, milk, cream, ice cream, cover up or otherwise remove or conceal any receptacle, or to buy, sell, give, take, dispose of in any way, or traffic in any way, upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail for ninety (90) days, or by a fine of not more than $10,000 (100) dollars, and each such receptacle so unlawfully dealt with as to be a separate offense.
Sec. 5. As used in this act, the term
Defective Page
CHAPTER 841-H. F. NO. 403.
AN ACT to amend section 2, chapter 1897, entitled "An act to provide for a second examination of Minnesota State hospitals for the insane, by the courts of courts of Minnesota Bt it ensured the Legislaure of the State of Minnesota; State hospitals two (2) chapter two hundred and twelve (212) of the Genereal hereby amended as to as read as follows:
Section 2. If, upon the examination of a case, it is found that said patient is not a proper subject for treatment in any manner which may be distinctly embodied and stated in the case, the said patient is to be placed in control, whereupon, they, the said board of control, may, at their discretion, be sent to the county from which he was committed, and place him in the county where he is to be delivered in such case it is hereby made the duty of such sheriff to deliver him to his relatives or friends, if such can be found, or to the board, and it is hereby made the duty of such county commissioner to return the sheriff if such are returned. The sheriff shall be entitled to a fee of one (1) dollar for relief to the service of a writ or summons, except as he is entitled to by law for the service of a writ or summons, except as he is entitled to by law for the same manner as other claims against the
Approved April 19, 1905.
AN ACT to amend chapter 301 of the general laws of Minnesota to allow equipment and construction at hotels, inns and public lodging hotels.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That chapter 304 of the General Assembly shall be amended, as to 103 as follows:
Sec. 4. For the purpose of carrying out the duties of the governor shall appoint an inspector at a salary of $1,200 a year, who shall hold the office of inspector and be required to be to visit and inspect annually, so far as possible, every building or structure as to be visited or vertised as, or hold out to the public to be an inn, a hotel, public lodging house or inn, a hotel, public lodging house are furnished to the public, whether with the expenses shall be paid on the filing of proper vouchers; said inspector is held in office, boarding houses in this state, at reasonable hours to inspect inmates, boarding or lodging houses in this state, at reasonable hours to inspect fire escapes and their condition. He shall keep a complete set of books for the condition of said hotels, inmates, or public lodging or boarding houses and places in condition of said hotels, inmates, or public lodging or boarding houses and places in the names of the owners, proprietors or managers, officers and employees of the ber and condition of its fire escapes and any other conditions for the betterment of their services.
Sec. 5. If the inspector, shall find after examination of an apartment, in the building, or where else living accommodations are furnished to the public, whether with or without meals, that this law cannot be fully complied with, the inspector, in his inspection, paid to the inspector, he shall issue a certificate to the person operating the same apartment, and in a conglobous place in said
Sec. 8. All fees collected by the inspector shall be retained by the inspector and not collected by him in excess of twelve hundred dollars per annum. All fees collected by him in excess of five dollars a day for traveling expenses which are incurred shall be turned into the state treasury. The inspector collect the following fees for official inspections of buildings as well as less than thirty rooms, 50 cents; thirty and less than sixty rooms, 60 cents; thirty and less than seventy rooms, $1.50; one hundred and less than two hundred rooms, $2.50; building two hundred rooms, $4.50; more, $8.
Sec. 9. The inspector shall be authorized to appraise the property. The inspector and deputy inspector shall each give a bond in the sum of $10,000. The inspector will report all transactions to the state auditor every three months, and also make a report at the end of each
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after it passage. Approved April 14, 1966.
CHAPTER 344-H. F. NO. 794.
AN ACT for the preservation, propagation and protection of game and fish, and certain harmless birds and animals. CUSTOMS.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota and Fish Commission—Appointment-Terms—A state game and hunting commission shall siting of five (5) members to be appointed by the governor for a term of four (4) years pursuant to chapter three hundred thirty-six (380) of the laws of Minnesota. The expiration of their respective terms. Vaultified by the governor. Members shall serve without compensation except for the stated compensation. The stated statement thereof fully audited by said commission. Commission shall have an office in the capitol and be supplanted by a commission. Blanks and postage for the transaction of its business.
General Powers—Duties—Said commission shall enforce the laws of this state involvement the protection and management of game and fish, and harmless birds and animals.
Said commission shall have general control of such varieties of game and fish as it permits. Public valid.
4. The receiving from the United States commissioner of fisheries to the waters of the state, of all fish spawn or fry.
5. The receiving of fish from the public waters of the state for the proposition and stocking of other waters therein.
6. The taking of game birds, game animals and fish, either taken, killed, transported or possessed in nets, boats, light, or other instrumentalities unlawfully used or held with intent to take, concealing or disposing of the same.
Sec. 4. Reports—records—said commissioners each year, submit to the governor a detailed report of its actions, including the sources, an inventory of all game, fish, dogs, guns, seals, nets and the names of the purchasers, and the amount received and an itemized statement of the purchases and vouchers said commission shall be subject to examination by the public examiner at all.
Sec. 7. Other Officials—Attorney.The other public and private peace officers are required and it is made their duty, to enforce the laws of the state and to mission may employ an attorney or attorneys to perform such legal services. He shall appear for said commission, and may assist the commission in its wards may be interested officially, and may assist the county attorney in arising under this chapter, and when for any reason the commission must act, he must conduct such prosecutions on behalf of the state attorney. The compensation to be paid said attorney shall be fixed by the commission, and the authority to serve and execute all warrants and process law issued by the commission, and any other law of this state relating to and fish, in the same manner as any constable or sheriff may serve and enforce the provisions of this chapter, they may call to their aid any sheriff, or any other person, and it shall be the duty of the commission to stabilize or police officers and other persons, when called upon, to enforce and aid enforcing the provisions of this act.
Sec. 9. Bonds.-The following appointee, the commission and filed in the office of the commission, received a faithful discharge of their respective duties. First-Superintendent of fisheries, one
thousand dollars ($1,000).
Second—Each game warden five hun-
fords.
person charged. The word "possession" shall be deemed to include both actual persons charged with the control of the article referred to. The terms "waters of this state" shall be deemed to include the waters of the state, and the provisions of this chapter shall be deemed to extend to all persons charged with the control in all thereof. The terms "any part thereof" or "the parts thereof", when furnished by any animal so referred to, and the parts of any animal so referred to include the hides, horns and hoofs of any animal so referred to, and the parts of any animal so referred to include the birds so referred to. The terms "fur bearing animals" shall not be deem-
Sec. 11. Inspection of Hotels etc. The wardens shall inspect from time to time hotels, restaurants, cold storage houses or plants and ice屋 commonly used for parties, including all buildings used for mining whether game or fish are kept therein in violation of the provisions of the ordinance or in control of possession or control, or in charge of any hotel, furnished to, or any part thereof, who refuses or fails to permit any member of the wardens appointed by said commission to thereof, or any receptacle therein, for the purpose of making such inspection, is required to prove that conviction thereof shall be punished by a time limit of one hundred (100) dollars, including costs of prosecution, or imprisonment in the county (30) or over ninety (90) days for the first offense, and upon conviction for a second offense, or over ninety (90) days in the county fall for a period of ninety (90) days.
Sec. 16. Exchange Specimens-That otherwise, and exchange specimens of other animals, or fish with the game commission or fish with the game commission of other states for breeding purposes, and other states for grant permission under the sale of solid commission, to any accredited representative of history, to collect for scientific purposes only, nests, eggs, birds, animals or specimens shall not be sold or transcribed. Sec. 17. Fish-Any person owning, a dam or other obstruction across any river, creek or stream, within or forming boundaries line of this state, shall construct a efficient and efficient fishways in such a place free passage of all fish inhabiting the free passage of all fish inhabiting such fishways shall be maintained in such condition and kept in good repair by operating, operating or using such dam or it. If any such person fails to construct or keep in good repair durable and efficient fishways, the commission may construct or repair the same fishways from the owners or any person managing or being in control thereof, in a civil court of Minnesota. Any money so recovered to the game and fish commission.
All fishways hereforeo or hereaftero any of the streams of this state, shall at any time be subject to supervision and control of the commission.
Any person violating any of the provisions of this section shall be deemed guilty of any of the provisions of Sec. 18. Sawdust Deposits-Any person who deposits any sawdust or other refuse commission has deposited fish fry, or commission has deposited fish brook trout naturally caught, shall be deemed guilty of a mishandernom. All fines collected under any of the provisions of this chapter shall be paid into the county treasury and the conviction was had, to the credit of the commission. Sec. 20. Dispositions of Other Money—All money collected by the commission contracts entered into with any person, including money received from all other sources, except money paid into game and fish commission, to be deposited in the provisions of this chapter. Commission is authorized to offer and pay out of the funds subject to its order, a reward dollar ($10) for any person violating any provision of this chapter to the commission, to any proof that a fine amounting to ten dollars ($10) has been paid into the commission, provided further, this section shall not be provided under any pay by commission.
Domesticated game and fish; Mission-Compliant-Compliant may issue permits to breed or domesticate deer; and Mission-Compliant may do so upon authorization to it which shall contain:
1. name and address of applicant.
2. a description of the premises on which applicant will keep such domesticated animals.
3. the number and kinds of animals in possession and of making the application and whether they are wild or domesticated.
The application shall be accompanied by each such animal in possession. The commission may thereupon issue a permit to the applicant such permit shall annually on the commission any increase or decrease, and upon the original number applied for, to obtain additional animal. The commission shall keep a record of all persons holding such animals and any commission to be attached to each of the animals. Any such animals may be sold or shipped within or without the state upon submission to do so from the commission.
Persons desiring to maintain a private deer farm may do so upon application to said commission giving the name and address of the deer farm and a mark used to designate it. Any such deer farm may sell and shipped within or without the
state in boxes or packages upon which such mark is placed.
Sec. 29. Entering Growing Gravel—No person should grow or stand grain not his own with intent to take, or or with which he shall be shaken to hung to do for such person or owner in charge thereof. No person shall at any time enter upon any ground or animal that will kill any birds or animals after being poisoned or not to do so. Such notice may be given ovally or by posting written or posted language, in conspicuous places on the Sec. 29. Game Killed in Another State. No person should grow or stand grain under his control within this state any bird, animal or fish, or killed or killed outside of this state at a time when it is unlawful such bird, animal or fish, or parts thereof, if caught, have been unlawfully staked or killed outside this state, or unlawfully shipped
See. 31s. Nothing in this act shall be deemed to be a shipment or having in possession at any time the skins of fur, leather, or other goods without the state, or hide of moose, deer or caribou killed without the state, or hide of moose, deer or caribou taken or killed, provided, however, that raw moose, deer or caribou taken or killed shall not be bought or sold at any time.
Sec. 16. Retaining Game- P款- Penalized game, and legally in possession of any of the state and legally in possession of any of the state thereof, which have been caught, manner permitted by the provisional court, or manner permitted by the provident deserves of retaining possession of the game, this chapter limited, and who shall before such limitation, be permitted to retain the same which appertains for leave to retain the same, sworn to by the applicant and shall state: name and residence of the person in possession of such birds or antlers.
See 88. Mink, Muskrat, Otter, Beaver,
mink, muskrat, otter or beaver between
them, mink, muskrat, otter or beaver
November following. Provided, that
when any of the animals mentioned in
their descriptions are found, they
storing any property the persons whose
property is being damaged or destroyed
Defective Page
Sec. 64. Attempts-Any attempt to obtain a permit for the use of this chapter shall be deemed a violation of such provision, and any person who fails to obtain a permit shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof punished by a fine of fifty (50) dollars, and costs of county half for not less than ten (10) dollars, and every offense. Sec. 65. Attempts-Without License-Any person, either a resident or non-resident of this state, may attempt to obtain a permit for game animals in this state, without having provided by this chapter, shall be guilty of this attempt, punished by a fine of not less than one hundred (100) dollars, and costs of prosecution for improvement in the court, more than ninety (90) days for each and every offense.
Sec. 60. Harmines Birds—Any person who is to be shipped to any person within or without this jurisdiction, punished, offered, or possession, for, or has possession, has any harmines bird either living or dead, or any part thereof; thirty-nine (30) of this chapter, shall be convicted them punished by a fine of not less than $250,000, or by imprisonment, thirty (30) days, for each and every bird or any part thereof caused to be shipped to any person, harmines bird or sold to any one, had possession or under jurisdiction to apply to the keeping
or selling of parrots or song birds as
domestic pets.
- Section 67, General Prayer. Any
appeal of this chapter for which
the court will hear, for which
specifically provided, shall be guilty
of a misdemeanor and be punished
more than fifty (50) dollars and costs of pro-
secution for not less than thirty (30) nor
more than sixteen (60) parts of acts in-
volved in the commission of this
chapter, are hereby repealed.
be in force from and after its passage.
Approved April 19, 1903.
CHAPTER 845-S. F. NO. 215
The General Law of Minnesota for 1903, en-
dicated an act abolishing days of grace
and other evidences of indictment and other evidences of indictment.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That chapter 21 of the Gen-
mental Code is an act abolishing days of grace and diac-
laeity and other evidences of indepen-
dence and other evidences of indepen-
dence and the same is hereby amended as fol-
lows:
That section one (1), of said chapter 21
be and the same is hereby amended to
Section 1. No promissory note, draft, check, acceptance, bill of exchange or payment, or any other form entitled to the degree of grace, but the same degree is available at the time dead their without grace. That section two (2) of said chapter 201 requires that the student read as follows: memorandum to read as follows: acceptance, acceptance notes, drafts, checks, acceptance bills of exchange, or other evidences of indebtedness, falling due on the same day, giving Day, Sunday, or on any legal holiday the next succeeding business day, and when Sunday and one or more legal holidays are on the same day, the following day shall be deemed Day and one or more legal holidays, or two or more legal holidays, immediately after the day paper or indebtedness shall be deemed as the last of such days.
Sec. 2. All acts and parts of acts Incon-
siderable. Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be
approved by the Board of the 9th, 19th
Approved April 18, 1998.
An ANC will be held responsible for the
ANC will be held responsible for the granting of
liquor and for the granting of a penalty
liquor and for the granting of a penalty
therefore.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
The German emperor, during one of his forest encounters on the occasion of the death of his son, lit his cigar, but found, he had forbidden the knife that he used to pierce the skin. The better provided so one of the forest keepers stepped forward and put the knife on, then returned it, saying in
pressively: “Take back your knife.” is now an historic rite.
Senator Kittidge of South Dakota says he was in cities in the Black Hills country was not a victim of the war, nor was he moving in密歇根县 he discovered “pay dirt” which he had been digging together for some time, a huge building he named it he discovered “pay dirt” which he had been digging together for some time, a huge building he named it for her, and that is how it happened. The great mine was named the Holy That new associations do not change the old trend of ideas was illustrated in the book “The Great Gorge,” Roche, who used to be a political leader in the city, climbed to the top of the tall tower of the mine he gasped down upon the great chest spread for miles in all directions. After he gasped: “Gee! What a lot of assembly districts you can see from here.” Ward Bleecher and asked his advice about to do with persons who go to sleep in密歇根县 he listened very attentively, admitted to the fact that he quite prevalent in his congregation. Ward Bleecher and asked his advice about to do with persons who go to sleep in密歇根县 he listened very attentively, admitted to the fact that he quite prevalent in his congregation. Ward Bleecher and asked his advice about this problem, and I will tell you the course I decided upon. I will see how many people saw any person go straight in my congregation and wake up in密歇根县.
Curt. Rice was not only clean and neat, he insisted upon cleanliness and the proper way to wash. He proved to be a sloven, he very soon became a frist criticisms or also he sought an answer. There was a new man, one shad season, when he in shad fishing it is best to wear a black jacket. It. however, a white shirt, when it should not be clean one. It should it not be clean one. No, at least. He stood a new man's dirty white shirts for a month. Then, calling the shades, he said, "Friend, who the deuce is it that you always get to wear your shirts the first time."
is.
The advantage of mercury is that it fends a lower levee) than employed for weighting grappling irons, and is of advantage in sand into which a body has sunk beyond the reach of our dragging impingement Gazette.
Mrs. Wise-How do you like the new nurse girl? Mr. Wise-Great. Mrs. Wise I thought you were in Boston Globe. I fired her.
22 GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
NESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905 7
ae ee ee
INDEX TO THE GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA,
Passed at the Legislative Session of 1905.
ADULTERATION, OF FOOD AND | a amend mitint eth egret | Hisense
Legislative expenses....... ae |
PeComplete wing of ‘tate vetorbia:
perme are cme i, de
slate iorary’ contingent funds. 13
Sievlovestnen vate eapitolsccccssss 18
ee eased: &
‘Babiicatlon “eostitutional winced
plate insane. 0 8
He" iscate- place of Slow... 113.2112 360
To Nocate "place ‘of “Sioux indtaa
siipills ai Lakeview Sasiaipiment,
eimeairacsssniatien whic BY
Sead thd Wrage bitessceecccssscccs BS
BANKS AND SAVINGS ASSOCIA:
TIONS.
Relating to annuity aafe depostt and
heating Se capes) Are eee. ak
‘Legallzing annexation of additional
TE ae siiseat oats?
soepeis’ insensraian feeds yp
Sse Re Sa
a" Eitnories “elles owalnn water
Sone Eee mene aia, 1
a0 Sathoriae cites Be 100061 eli
LotbarO and ecccaeeecce:
PaveetoR ee oFalaanéea SI
FRR Gases Be
Hoesen ae omar ay B
“Indexes In certain eities.<reeepcce, BL
Wahertte "cortain” cites to "iss
aa cece walter ea
viding “separate ballot “for “eer
Tain teguen at elections. crateeng, 8
Cae Mle tS fase bonds tot
Sih ee cicee causes
FulseeS A NG" incorporating certain
Pit Geren aeogeaeundnretsite
raymond: foe ad "condeiined”
re aaaeee aeistreesegcereeages
Pea A acai wate ars 38.
peor geadlng eae Sienna 2%
We Wvatar Cisse ce cesroteesenigg 208
pole penn esos aa
oscaPparate ate sisi Yida
eee ee eee ae
spo iegallge soft vilage bondeccc: Ut
Bistietin SE garter se cig HE
Reteuthorize vflages Co issn’ bonds 133
Ser eePtetblic Hoaplaia’<: 130
Prohibiting ofieets trom recelving:
aeteet Nemes riieierreceree SE
pinttend Barkwage cca Me
Eeeshiing certain wings orainanices 169
Bonds for bridge repaits.cecicrsesss 310
Bonas for Wace’ or'uas planta: i: 12
‘Bermiing lacorporation’ ot iand “it
adjoining countless gg OL
Rate or fnterest on eeticatea’ “ot
ARIENE of sent domain’ for water
‘Aliliton oi certain “cei: Sio, $9
Maen or tater pipet reecicece 28
Eating’ street valway franchiges: 30
imenditig: homve rule charter wet... 258
GENES RUenksH mmasioal enter
Date sce ceereresieangye 26
BAe ae beat’ aiprsiiement” cortit:
sepitstiga fois Vilas of wpiaited >
eicwtuesl Tandessreececreeeeess+ 3B
gallon fear ois: 2 BP
MOUNTS vas rerreveesettressegceesss OL
‘Vilage fo‘ constrict bouevaraa..:. Sip
Wee sts Bonds: mcauieltion ot: He
Parks Welles Of 10000\seseceveeesss
AMIGE Permuttine the sale of garden
Truck without Hcenserssc-eveereeses 2
‘CORPORATIONS.
Do amend lave eonngceeser-senessret
Rucker Torin" eorpota=
‘To extend time for closing stfaits ot
eae atprtaar sao
eaptateg eras a eS
0 fogalize certain corporations... §
couNTiEs.
‘To provide for obtaining tite of
ands for court Roses. se--usuc--e+
spo nutes ‘court pours banda...
Fe lieeaie® sete ob" ommistoners
fretting Sounty poor fouteszrersece
Tepes Peat ata
fem Oo sew cee
rrp ntlusre certain’ otmtiea’ tie?
Que refunding bonds ecetpecs ies
rro'nuthorize certain miditars to eis
Geblaty public moticesestore-ne tees
etroutidt or dlecneae a
RotnGursine erie sominissionars |
Ropubatinent of mine inepectors vt 1
Bf ot propery Oe poor pee
gare See ae ac |
Investment’ of sinking funds... 22221 |
Hoard of court hoyse commissioners
Rae GE game ot coum eres |
Renemaly of Teco ge |
Tater of deeds oMcerssersseeonces |
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Kalarles of OMCERS.cssceeceeeseees
Ellaries Goimty.attoregacssccec000.
Rominter OF denon fours |
Appointment of geputies aad’ clei,
Dea ee eateries |
Repiiasring the colleen of aad die:
Sorition bt leek! foeg, resent,
scllartes i eountles, 08 305605.000 |
Employment. of deputies, | clerics,
TE denstants cee cates |
Additional salary’ or ato tn 6
CchintnSsione’s’ tbe represented at
stata ounterenteste ceoeersesstoes |
ples Se'soumty gurveparae ccs |
Sherr pense in executing death
(hung Meanie "inspeetog sverrcerecs |
Enimpenention’ of eommisaionata = |
Srevetlon ‘otlese.Sonenastsreerrscc ss |
Riidons) assistant county attorney |
Sues AD CRIMINAL
BS ciate I
Eeiling flgwor Without iicense. 222022
FO TpreMION Rumaling Intontcants to
gafoled prisoners aes |
B'amend’ Penal Code. |
Blnighment for vobbedy ta fai’
Dining” wisnalaaghter” ta the Ask. |
Egatmnadlons to be cetiied to Bie
Evidense ‘ngainai” poraai ““idgatiy *
pene ‘intoxicating Hore vecsswss
Bishdoment of wate and eilideea.. 3
‘Hocceding aeslnst Sritsinglas es.
DISTRICT CouRTS.
epulating terms of court tn
"est teat Stet ceases
Seventh flea dst cocsccees
jr RERtR duglia gntee cscs
f BiR suatcan dire ooo
Elgntconth jodlelalaietrict= 000002 |
| Becker county nonsense
Giving’ courts," jurisdiction "over
Dowhaary waters een Oe
DRAINAGE. ~
Fo extabiten commission. csvset
Eeeaising certain aitones- ii, 185, 3
Somprehensive svatem of drainage’ i
General grainese law sis.
Gsnend! drainage daw LI 3
ELECTIONS,
Aa Mintoneatleg? ions ome
seoarate ballot tor bonds, eter... |
Binary elections teeecoressscees
Seremirabe cc y
Bellery'o¢ ofielal Saints
hiner siaseecestsececsrentenerres &
Ccomnoratsna otto sontribite tor
Dpollieal porposes so OF
FRATERNAL SOCIETIES.
Incorporation of grand and subordl-
oats Wehate eee ante
ro provide quarter fo G7 ARI
GAME AND FISH.
To, protect pheasants teccvesscses
Reu?in Goungary waters: c0000000000
Esneral lawn mere &
pei aed eee
‘To provide interpreters for deaf and
QUID BersOns to cerne racer cent
Tovamend iaw Félalig’ to ‘hospital
Contagious ward 322020
Examination of ‘iesane’"and’ thelr
aioe ts Dit Gee
INSURANCE.
fe ment eta Ser ct:
Fo Amend. general nsurdae iawsc:: 8
sedi cece esis
Rehr is domains I
Secrest oe GES ne
ceca of oe ee
PeRTent ae aan cient: BS
isis statics Oe Ear
“MEAT aie nace
See eee
Justice aNo Justice couRTs.
neon Oeste pence 4
Logs ANB LUMBER.
resisies auto eno Bt
LEGISLATURE AND MEMBERS,
BIRD, Oe BeEEN Ny seni
Eine soe aN
WILIGHA,
Naval militia, .......sssssssereeeeeer
Xmonding code C2
PE ee
Beer Paetsch.
Gonsolidation “of cometeriese...-c.. 38
Forprotect copyelptedaraiaiis'ot
Gobet eaeeealtoms seem eT ag
sdeeP ete &
Beant iaw relating’ Yo “notastea
Rapti carrier’ pigeange 200000. BB
State hospital for crippled ‘and’ de
formed ghidren in Raman county 18
Nee Ree acs rica
Nor torealey pubpseetr tr ‘aaa
ee bette es oe spe 10
Pe Sees conenaee e scores Ee
Fo eit commision iherchanis!> 18
‘prohibit bucket shopsersssws: 1g
Repeat codiaeation tawene2200000002 48
Bellet of cyclone miffererss-ecvstvo.. 188
Biblie fay eucketcen sg cocci! 18
improvement of cimetrigs5°032) 10
iormed ghildgen in Hennepin county 208
patient (or iocadea antes nie 31g
Ealing eeead tawse. snes Mn Fig
Males To Be “admeeed to" 'Solaiene
neon, «se inte “eccateaeat ass
cpua of Stats “Harticaiiral ao:
ele te ctacemomecr ccs HEk
Bestencuse “atutue’ ot aisxander
‘Ramsey for Hall of Pame.s-sus--- 240
property rights ot women cc. BS
Fixing matority of negotiable paper 345
7p, legalize newapapers. in ertain 9)
‘Burlal of indigent and insane woidiers 208
Bureau of eMid and animal ‘protec:
A isa tae park Bt
ReMi cecniorsscisrrece: aie
plvlle wagon geass (200000000001 3
Cepeda gags
Eekording marriage certinenten.---:: 33
Binneopa perk se.cersurepesiiss: 2
‘Hiuance oP warchoiige'receiptic<s::: 90
Keslgnment SE wagesyesssterscs: 30
Qn olaweee penaioaas IIS BB
Ree’tmploveend burent visi:
SRRSOLSETRRS QP Sak aioe 2
piseecuon ot Todging House ieapers 3s
Gate Of POOR. eetecsrecessercsess S21
Kemoval BP remaigg of certain pare
sons died byrindlans.ccrses- srs 96
vied and trusts. tenenecieecs 3
Ps ‘of arated water recsita-
Rewaating hotels, ina “aad pubile
tegulating hotels, inns and public .
PRINTING AND PUBLICATION.
re.povide naiional copies Revied
‘Te provide adaliisnai copies Revise ed
Publication ot’ village’ ordinances. -.°
Vile eanirer's anna seeement
Shane of putsication day Sy wonky
printing Revised’ Lawarcccuscsccess 2
PROBATE COURTS.
o amend Probate Code. .ooveeesees
Be mend Probate So8eccrsciccsss:
RATES treeanaus°etick ccc
Saat clerk nw peer, casea
Segment of aebts of enceaset Ber
Mo legalize certain proccedings..../. 2
Festatentary guardianesseerssscccs 2
‘Discharge of executors sscwisscaciict §
PUBLIC LIBRARIES.
‘To, appropelate rmoney. for school
isteice Abrariem cre s-olencowesiers
AGGiviing Santee abbas
To aniend law reiting to..000S0000 2
RAILROADS.
Foogepert weeks ace sciag cc |
FoekeRelloa Oe eae “eaten II |
Benet for Feoatgtee creer |
Sehable (let tone cI |
eassterstls lense Sioa
insnh plate’ proeadgs
| tebe etter |
pee eBi atl wtf extent?
Boufstntne” APEar ok” asscager
AMAL ESTATE RD WOKTOAGRI
Fo legalize cortein acknowldema
That’ ‘mortgages to. be furnished |
To egalige forctsaire by advertiag: |
spond deszeds"at airship pina
facie evidence ....... aera 3
TeNOgalte nveyaice feaid haba
tier Ce Y
spo’ valldads seta ‘pata 20S
FE Rinend orecone ot oFtei
ce eae:
Tegallgg sale of real estate Undo?
egaizing serial" coaveyandes "ia
‘To legalize a certain piat of’ Littie
Till cue
Legalize foreclosure “by “adverte:
puconvejaics of conetety aia.
Bses and Wuwts seeeseeseeveeeeccoes
ROADS AND BRIDGES.
‘To amend law, granting, ald to coun-
ovata law Tolatng tome ising
Sf bande by fowneecccrewene 2
rolautloriee ertetion of died bridges
oaatnigabie streamers
Regulating tne wots of publie vada |
Retry re aoa Ba
Bxpenaliite "of “caiaty” voad'" and
brag fund oon cccsiciageaeia? |
Amrening lag githoraing” ea:
ates of indebtedness vapns crs
sles’ county sathorized"i abe *
ralengh “impioreeie find 16 old
Bhge th ‘Nerman countyerswc.0. 2
etetln cunts to conalte ceria
Road forerien weetarvngeassecssseess
Biss May commiesios oo 0202
Siinraisloners “tor nave™ cxshaaive
Control of Foad and Briggs funds. 1
Amend county Woad and Beldge fii
tetra Mitigeaa® 000000022
Seeing ceraie deponee Voc
ESEllicing Sertaln tomnehip’ bona. 3
raeateey salsa Nighwaye corte. 2
rovauthotlze certain cltles to issue
Sle Woes ete 2
GRRE BopeSpriation ccc &
Baid0OLe AND EOUCATION,
To provide for loan of permanent,
Satlosl £008 a. coacectoct gage
srocprovide funds ta‘ diaivics' Gt 33
808 to 88,000 es aptengescagerazeeee™
eitension of aisirictSoundaiiag--7
sEnerery beatctihede eset
3 eee Se BY i aaa
Te Walldate sale of séhoo! lands:
Bapartment “of pedagoey at stile
htokSton echt agricul’ 2217122
QSORGISE seacherscoreneates,*"
Basen of nigh school approeria=
cchaveling exienaea’ af wuperinéeade
ene cecal vate ote
Ghange of istrict ees eenecc soos
be Ro ae
‘Assistant county superintendent... 100
| Bieta’ of superintenionta wesc: 230
Efoviding fot traans omeara cB
mpowefing certain boards to make
ictles and Sega ae, 208
ee bn ake ci sete pat, 7
Uieatan erect. ee
| gute si for di sahoole ccc
umty sehols of agricultizeccsc>>
High schools sone cceisciessqccscces 3a
Eohvoltdated rarai schooia ctcc0c00. 20
STATE AND STATE OFFICERS.
Condemnation of land for state...... 43
Salary ot beara of eonot ccs:
Bega ee hese aaina oS
Balhvedate oe ew state eaplials=, 302
Fer aveae aleetlty" ftom care’ ot
Ponta of danttol vj seeecreess IB
Biate fund depositories <cc2ccr2cc002 1S
Bityeation ot'ancielned tioniessc--> 100
Rivet tite nesses Be
BNE of Unter aie ands. Bb
ExConding, power of pune examines 334
Repo sallroad "and warehouse
RCOMMISGIONCTS sessceesseceseseccses 240
sale of state land 20s casi 28
Rosolmement of airy’ ‘and’ food tac 2
Fol get ave doneheeneersey
‘Membership’ state agricuitural soci-
sslldey ehiet aire watden (2000000002 BG
Dee vernon |
Boys and girs’ tralning schoo);
| Rektedielte es ataae ageehiaeai
TAXATION.
Relating to taxation of Danie stock... @
Baeticg (6 teraton Of bank seek
Foramena Yaw relating to taxon: $8
Baymont of Toad tanec. Bt
Mineral’ gue coal and oie iatee®
eae Ltn rgs J8h
Regulating” priory "9é' "fies “for
eevee tints inceerfente th, 0
peed forint salem aR
Roca nna blage vagec°o0cc0ccTTT2 BB
Biatributin’ of peng cata and
NERUT Cea Pea tases. 0
Compromise and. settiement of eet
CHIR aes nsec ee 288
Notice “ot” expiration” et "fedsings,
Inheritance’ tax 2.20 Be
Helmource persons for taxes ‘pald'in
On cecewetita ieee eccet Be
airend ganerat road tagttcctrc BB
‘TEMPERANCE.
felting Mguor, without leans, 0-240
HEBRAIC riSing ita taut wide ee
‘Evidence against’ persons iliegaii
Sebi naa gs GY gy
ME ieee: Me
TOWNS AND TOWNSHIP OFFICERS
Election of, hichay overseers: 70
iSks to nal often eka is
et ee en See ee
Common Causes
w~ of Dreams
i
‘nal get remarkable and puzzling aftatr
yet sD open aa? Raa A,
ago. An old aunt of mine, living ina
Bin sof Ek heh nat
eof nett, Ua iuceattn ft
Fe eke hme mare ae
Th Barataria! eta
ip ee a Ra ae
iy Ron oe lt fe Se,
sy WOE Sa BAS
Bie HERP e eerie,
Ge Se AREA onl gl nd
des iets San Saat
ahaa est Bela eaheeg
Be her Hele at rien and
Si ie Raed eer na
Beate iS aul of alec
Ter sealeatalthy ime Sete bathe.
Rene arans eet ei tie
Bea eed anata i at
Hea hfe ech ha hee
and tli esa? assign of oe
Se ee Colton a ao ity
Beet ae ran eadlne ag pre
seers aa tk cous nae B's
ecb ie MA Bee? REY Ne
ives pae ine ai a pues
See ae inti? Ne ah ase
eine het at petite he myth: hag
mise iM! Bea hs aieiaa
Pein i's worn a berage te
Sea Sigh aes Se
Beier dati Mle ier toate
Hite Bt Ghia Sedat SP
“What do you think of it yourself?”
mane tea sa
Haat Roe Tce my sant 1 am
orate pba tT Dat
Boh TARLAPrROSy S84 teu Sas
Seer dite mate iets
feet atest bata
cnet BRS RRD, THESE SE HEEB tt
Rae et ee a te expired
PAGE Pe gy WE GU SR Bans
Rote confessions of mia
eas, cate, emer ot
ETE Beans deta
Bees Sar aoe Greate
Seek tat eet sei at
Hee LS tal acral
Hees Salers ba re
EE one St ed ia front
ie
A se cou abe tan wha ate
bed "osrla "sak ahha
Beiahe wat nol tad la nb
“Buch tnformation {3 not always netes-
cere ener ees nares
{BEC cd! sce he ent a na
See D sete ar outa
Seat, SOT aS ay a
SOM tech areata Saat
Ha tae Sea neh tae Se
Wa Biny data Brat
Persie it gine siacl 3
Sen Seah ean te
Sieinlcheneaete Pal atten 2
See He toe te yaa hat
HEGRE mld (tur ad bean
EMLY GSO Riise
HEE of eben SSngeon Brat
Hee te rears ait
Serie eer dase Sa
SR i a iets ia
SEN MEL AUSGY Sioa
PSeetta RANE ah aarti a
eatin sacar st Sear
aoe! Ge Nae oS Wl tan
Bieta
i, Petit TOE "a are
SEE
i SU ensaton gure he
wage rs a aS
seri feel ASSP edu
pent Feces ie tena
pee ar" Aen USING
EGE out ltr ees fain
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patient * considerable pain. “Toward
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GOING TO TRY ONE THIS YEAR?
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[f you are not acquainted with their merits we refer
you to the other fellow, the man who has one, he is
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1114-1116-1118-1120-1122 South Third Street, MINNEAPOLIS; MINN.
Hindustan was moving ‘about fror
lace tovpince with m fostnent of nal
Bee, Hadley at The ati
sine Send wnasters ahd” Cie
Bee gS este Chimay
tate ini", mate thet Tony ea
setae aa ee ata eS
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THE eSniTatere ng ends akg bas
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nga" had hc ranted Bythe
‘ifne "oder ‘of putrefaction, from these
cost Hed SeyGincd Tone nates
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bash Woe tha Spits at
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ilar wet qeratay oping per
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seg tian Ti fe Seats tte
gcueeaRSG Sate enc stash
eit ANTON ols Bp. voy footn to
imagine from anything 1 have said that
SESS Euaa"h Bazan Ah anpleannat
Sieh ital dinadtal ie Wing to
Seca, Poets eeedtel f° SING ce
Hamre’ ah ache snore "gk
TREY out aS tar ata stare
HE Uh ol sce Wena i ate
Se ee ached
Tnorbld, condition of the, system. T=" all
TEU ueNen Lt
peel tea ih Bi teeta Suaeed
Satine Men, ne ought not to ream st
SUNo, At least not when he is sleeping
ace. het Mp aay BNE
ese gente RE Stuy "they sett
EORy, aceaE, OO Tin shy
Tease TES heat mea aedaeately
Soa wal Resta beaut ae
Bocca ie Mill Epler
nie lee fe he fSqdnent St
a sound, refreshing, leep."”—
| ond. y.
| ses, sony epee rps Hee
I ‘Reaesmned Thele Farms From Foret
Peet eee eee
Dr. F. H. Snow of the University of
Kansas’ has, in the past, fifteen vearg
frousht fogcmer an unusual collection of
Inetcorte stones that have fallen in Kan~
Sng Some of them havea. htstorio as
ell apa solentife Interest.” The ‘Anding
Of more than one of the fot hag saved
farmer (com the man who held the mort-
Engen” During some years of this period,
freicor hunting became the popular pas
Ume among. the Kiowa county farmers,
BR cP omuttie Stores ot hein dlacovery.
{t'Graa In 189 that the attention of DE.
Siow ‘was called’ to ‘the existence, of
Scum of moteorie stones ip the hands
‘fia farmer named Kimberly. Bome years
Begore a shower of the stones had talien.
The comboye knew where many of ther
eres and’ “Knowing “nothing, of thelr
Valu, readily told the farmer. Mrs, Kim-
erly: inthe course of her’ reading,
Tenrhea that’ meteorites were valuable,
Ter husband was okeptical and. traded
is caliection, one by one, for whatever
Front ought the Stance “and Rape
Rkem? “nen Dr. “Snow. heard of “tho
Kinberty Hoard fe Bougne fe paving
From the iiowa county farm os
"Pho Kaneas collector ought for $500 a
‘sub pound alone fiat ad been placed on
fexnfbition bye farmer fn & country grp-
cery store. ‘The bargain was made while
fe’ owner and, Dr Snow drove to" the
Hore.” When ‘wey arrived ‘a felegram
Hothed co\the owner, fs" whign Sito Was
wanted ee the prise. From ‘a som’ of
Se Semen Rarely abcgaty anton!
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SST Ia Bassin
Eie ceaie ee
op ead Sema ate
ieee a ie > cate re
Bierios aiamartne te
Hehe ea teat Cine
Bates Senate dene
lounted and exhibited, dcielng Over 8
corte ataw>And gathering’ in nome Hen.
seared tars abstr ar bet
i ee
i Rees cary sree
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seat een Gah teces
pou ets emer ager es
seri ante ita Pase se
Striking the ground: i burst ith great
teehee eres Ch gah Ae
Bertie aewtes Pee ees
Seopon ie north sae and tives Feet on
the"south side.” “The school teacher and
Ing ‘both the ‘horse ‘hitched to the cart
ihe Secale WEP bala hs att
A See eso Ean ae
anton a an gry ny
often hey lifuntrated ne cla fahie of
sey Bln he ona to riches. in Somer
a gee eens Ar
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Ancients and
Lightning
As would naturally be anticipated, tne
papuing superstitions na vasatien of fre
Apfnation connected with Sexih Gy ight
inondies® chemoat ‘roteague” forint
Geile estes Gaeta
‘with lightning was uneanny, and'ne result
Yast, enevelopedia. of mumen exro?, the
"Nntueal Mlatory™ of the elder Phuy, we
and ihe ag eonigunly”MMasteatad” We
BPS there fncormeaiy the" gSatat a
Hyuihtse delta nonant fa
rms a dramne dst an thee
etnniOhe Ene Ae, Ua
hd token thereut‘s let Weninges” Gold,
Sapper and sliver money tn melted tn the
Bendis Satan taba ae ge
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arta'ngblo Eaale, OF Nome Seine great
wlth“ childe, was atrucke with lightsins:
The chiide ‘she went withall was kill
ltnfn nee, an she sachoue uo harm a
TN ih inode thine prod
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ieiiaerad Gace aevaatien a
fefenlag
aS incormed by the same authort
that’ the “ancient “fuseanes™ hela tha
there ere mig ode. poseated, th
Teen than leven alfterent ‘variation. he
Romane ndiibuted the lugnenings of Uh
daytime, fo Jupiter: those of the night tc
$i somne BE the more expert rs
Fesnch, f0"have.reseor for their, bali
{hat tne “turing ining” came fro
PEPER toate ie ena ee
Intor_of the Roman’ repubite, was cred
ted with having been able to’ control the
Higheng: and hen Putin Hoc
ACS oMiate Wn pertormanoes im tha
Sircction he was “himself kitted | by
iidsentg Stake Thunder, 2nd, thin
werent "Sourte, Wupersua a "a
Feadérao¢ Ving nam “ato ghia
TET fone NER hana’ he Supposes
Aen MueAS” ale? pete, Por TRE th
saat’in'the Fett iger of the. worig, bul
fhe coming, thereat isnot son much Fe
Hareee aa Malet, here, A
garded as the return, whether the, Ary
‘ail specimens of the vemstabie pa tre
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ha "iti tag ge
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sapiXESE Won wan
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abpensonciitetit ty Lanes arty
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tooth ‘powder: in another a pair of warm
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iy Saul Minar
ise dee age
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yo Gono about yout benaviors 1 think tor
dy after seo! Tahal call and see your
father, ‘romms—ICU cost you, two -dol-
fre ie, yous, Pop's 8 doctors office
tare Hf OU, Oe ck
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Ae many times, a9 the, origin of Easter
a aaa Beare Pcs
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newer West, In the western strongholds
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pela Witle Jackage.” "can't Help, beint
Miele, 'ba® pepiied the wright boy. ean te
‘Rive’ Fas, fauitecchat an" yOu” aon"
prays Press
GREAT DEVELOPMENTS AT KOOCHICHING FALLS
Fort Frances, Ont., on the Canadian Side of Koochiching Falls, Will Be Canada's Greatest Milling and Manufacturing Center.
Scene on the Rainy River, a Few Miles Below Koochiching Falls.
Portion of Fort Frances, Looking Across the Rapids.
The Kochchhung falls water power is widely known through its importance it requires no lengthy description. Furthermore, no descriptive matter can be ignored. It is appreciated. The enormity of the inexhaustible water supply for the magnificent lakes and lakes constituting the Rainy Lake basin, some 500 km², makes the proper, covering an area of 400 square miles, thereby forming the only outlet. Rainy lake is an immense body of water, averaging 100 m³/s, from the outlet of Rainy lake is Kochchhung falls, where this vast volcanic miles from the outlet of Rainy lake takes a
The reader will easily conceive that the water accumulated throughout this room would cover a large area into the vast restroom. It would immortalize the room, furnish an enormous flow over the falls.
Scene on the Rainy R
affording, when developed, tremendous uniform power the year round, and any other power on the North American continent, except Nassau, which has the power of St. Anthony falls, which enabled Minnesota to control the world, and the principal manufacturing center of the Northwestern United States at the natural gateway of Western Canada, now has more advantages from a distance than St. Anthony falls ever had. The harnessing of the great Koehloch falls, the erection of mills and manufacturing plants to utilize the improvement association. The Power company is now constructed with water from the river or Rainy River back of the falls at least ten feet, which will withhold the waters and regulate the flow. This work must all be completed in agreement with the Canadian government, which agreement also stipulates that the town be used within the city of Fort Frances, the town on the Canadian side of the
The geographical location of the town is located as it is at the point new needs be made from a manufacturing point of view, from the watercourt and want of manufacturing plants there. The vast capital now being expanded by the Watercourt and want of dollars that must be spent in erecting and operating the mills and manufacturing plant will cause a乡乡 populated city, which will cause all property there to be the business property in the town to become immensely valuable. No investor or householder, looking for a safe investment, can afford to then to take advantage of the hundreds of opportunities now offered at Kochokoba Falls and in the Rainy River country.
Portion of Fort
Actual work upon harnessing the greatest waterpower on the continent, except Maliate, was commissioned of the enormous sum of $20,000,000 within the next two years has actually begun.
building of a great commercial and man in any country.
Nothing can now prevent Kochichling of the German principal industrial council of the German state to the immediate development of
First Floor, Temple Court Building, Minneapolis.
River, a Few Miles Below Kooch
rt Frances, Looking Across the
MARK THESE
MARK THESE WORDS ABOUT KOOCHICHING FALLS
its technologically waterpower, its geography and development of the Great Canadian West. Fort Frances on the Canadian side of the Atlantic power will become the greatest military power of the world in Canada. The Township of Fort Frances is a natural point of concentration, to become the principal point of import in the northwest boundary line between the United States and Canada.
THE ENGE
FORT FRANCES, ONT.
A Natural Site for a Great City.
The town of Fort Frances is located in northeastern falls, 250 miles due north of Minneapolis, 137 miles northwest of Duluth, 282 miles southeast of Camphers and 181 miles north of Fort Arlington.
Fort Frances is most adaptively situated for a big city. The town is boomed by the north and east by Rainy lake, and on the west by the fecile Rainy River. The north and east by the muddy mittings of excellent drainage to the river, especially below the falls. The hills are wooded, affording splendid opportunities for shade trees and parkways. From a view of view the site cannot be excelsed.
Fort Frances at this writing has a pop-
ulation of 1,376,100, but $300,000 was exposed
in 1974, popped up to $400,000.
FORT PRANCES R. R. CENTER.
Also the Main Import and Export Point on the Boundary.
Port on the Boundary. The principal points on the main line of, of the Canadian Northern railway system. Two new Canadian build from points on the main line of the Canadian Pacific system into Port Stanley from the northeast. On the American Pacific system into contemned building Port on the Boundary.
Frances their Canadian terminal, there to connect with the Canada International and the Minnesota & International, a branch of the Northern Minnesota, Virginia & Rainy Lake from Virginia, Mine, will be completed within a short period of time. American roads to terminate at Fort Frances are as follows: One from Fort Frances to Minnesota and St. Paul, through Grand Rapids, and another from Grand Rapids to Minnesota and River Falls. It is also asserted that the Great Northern railroad will build to Duluth Virginia & Rainy Lake railroad, when completed to Duluth Virginia and distance by mile from Duluth to Winnipeg over 160 miles. This new bearing on the overland traffic, as the shorter route from Chicago and Duluth to Winnipeg will be 160 miles. Greater Northwest will then be via Duluth and Fort Frances. This overland West Canada will be many times that of the ready lake, will be increased according to continental lines completed. Western
Koochiching Falls.
Ganda, owing to the heavy immigration provided by better transportation facilities and the building of new railroads is the great question before the Canadian people. This was the main issue of their last election, and the people voiced their sentiments toward the party favoring strong government co-operation in the building of the. The construction of the Grand Trunk Pacific railroad, making the present Canadian national highway, is practically aesthetic but whether the Canadian Northern, in eastern Western Canada, will be absorbed by the Grand Trunk Pacific or be likewise transcontinental line, is not yet known. However, it is stated on high authority and the contract begins with the Grand Trunk Pacific and the government provides for a third transcontinental system to be a new ocean. This precludes the possibility of any amalgamation of these two roads and provides great transcontinental rail systems.
Any and all railroads in Canada, trans-
portation, and cargo are more con-
cierge favorable connections with Fort
Francis, on account of the future great
milling there, and because Fort Francis will be
there, and because Fort Francis will be
the shortest route from Duluth, Chicagou
and the Eastern shipping points on
distributing point and commercial center.
Fort Francis will, therefore, become the
head center, industrial point and natural
center, industrial point and natural
conductivity increasing population.
INVESTORS AND HOMESEEKERS
Fort Frances will be the Minneapolis
Baltimore at Fort Fargo and the McCooking
Hills at Fort Fargo. It is four miles to
the north.
s the Rapids.
GER-NO
greater than that of St. Anthony falls at Minnesota, and the area is much more than Fort Frances. It is many times that tributary to Minnesota apolis, the supply of which flows to Fort Frances, is much larger. Lake Rake and Rake river district is almost inaccessible. The land in the Rainy River district is, far more productive than that surrounding Minnesota, which is of great importance to the region. The climate at Fort Frances is even more pleasant than at Minnesota.
The location and the immense power of Kochiching falls, is the natural milling ground of the Rocky Mountains, and the natural gateway for that vast country, as has heretofore been Fort Frances an ideal site for a great city, without a sigh drawchew.
KOOCHICHING DISTRICT
Developing Very Rapidly.
Fort Frances and the Kochbichard district, since the completion to that point, have been the most successful by three years ago. These who engaged in business or acquired property there have succeeded far better than they ever anawarred. The children of the chancets at Fort Frances during the past few years have become very wealthy, while the road to become millionaires, while the means to begin with were very limited.
Harnessing of Koochiching Falls a
Tremendous Undertaking.
The Work on the Great Concrete-Dam Has Started.
THE ONTARIO & MINNESOTA POWER COAL. HAS BEEN PERMITTED BY BOTH GOVERNMENTS TO DRECT THE DAM AND TO BUILD THE SAME WHICH MEANS THAT THE WATER BACK OF THE FALLS WILL BE RAISED FULLY TEN FEET AND THEREBY ENOUGHLY INCREASED THE POWER. THE CONTRACT FOR THE BUILDING OF THE DAM WAS LET LAST MONTH TO PENNMAN AND FIRM OF PROVIDENCE, R L THE CONTRACT FOR THE INSTALLATION OF THE POWER MACHINERY WAS ALSO LET TO A NEW FORK EARM. THE CONTRACTORS, WITH THEIR SUPERIOR ENGINEER, WERE ON THE GROUND A Few MONTHS AFTER THE DAM ARE NOW BEING MADE FOR TAKING CARES OF THE CREWS OF LADDERS AND FOR THE MACHINERY ALREADY IN TRANSIT. THE ACTUAL WORK ON THE COFFER DAM WILL BE STARTED. THE SUPERIOR ENGINEER WILL HAVE 100,000 BELLS OF CEMENT HAS ALREADY BEEN ORDERED FOR THE CONSTRUCTION WORK. THE ShipMENT OF THAT STUDIO WILL BE COMPLETED THE MACHINERY AND HAVE THE POWER MACHINERY INSTALLED AND BE READY TO DELIVER THE YEAR WILL REQUIRE CONTINUOUS WORK BY MANY HUNDREDS OF FROM THIS STATE TO TILL NEEDED.
Great corporations have been capitalized to provide the materials of flour mills, saw mills, pulp and paper mills, woodwash factories, furniture factories, and numerous other manufactures work in increasing the efficiency of the way, and the utilization of its power provided for. All these improvements must be completed within the time frame along.
But a More Fraction of Actual Value—
Now is the Time to Invest.
The sections that will constitute the principle business of Port Franklin have been established. Properties in the business district will, as a matter of course, be made available from an investment point of view. Business lots in the main center of Port Franklin are $100 to $1,000. These prices are only a small fraction of the value of such properties. Portville company on the American side of Moccasin falls, secondly, open in the sale of lots in these designations from $100 to $400 for lots in size equal to or greater.
lots or land that cannot possibly fill to gain in value with every day that passes. There is no question whether that any investment, from even a two dollar payment to a thousand dollars as the capitalist can command will double and freie in value within a few months. Every young man or woman starting out in life, who knows the importance of saving some portion of their earnings, is here offered the eager and best opportunity to have for the beginning of a life.
CONTRACT LET.
location corresponding to the properties from $200 to $500. At Fort Frances at from $200 to $500. All who stop to consider the relative position of the two towns at Koechlein town, going to the present lack of mill and manufacturing plants in West Virginia, and that entire country back of her to supply with manufactured goods free from third party competition, has the advantage. International Falls, however, has three towns at present are higher than at Fort Frances for the reason that the Town of Koechlein often practically the land available for town lots and they can therefore be located by the bidders, they consider the conditions will warrant. On the Canadian side the conditions that town was laid out by the government said to the highland bidders demand. The kits were therefore purchased at that time for little or nothing. Fort Frances are now far too low when the importance of the township is considered.
First Drop of Falls
First Drop of Falls, Showing International Falls in Background.
the prices established on the American side
Superiors of Fort Frances real estate taking advantage of the present low interest rates will have an opportunity to double their investment over and over again within the next years.
FORT FRANCES WILL BE
Canada's Greatest Industrial Point.
Great progress has been made in establishing new trails and infrastructure. West has developed at a marvelous rate. The commencement of New York City, Canada, in 1901, brought new industries. Progressive mills and manufacturers everywhere rallied that West's population over ever greater, and new industries are being established throughout the dominion. American brain, energy and capital are being developed by the unlimited natural resources of the Western provinces and territories, and the great variety of facturing plants are therefore of American origin. At Koopeling falls and at the gateway of the rapidly developing Canadian West, is Canada's greatest inland city.
THIS IS AN ELECTRICAL ERA.
And the Power of Koochiflowing Fatha Must Invert Establishly At a Great Industrial Center at That Point.
The town of Fort Frances is not an ordinary every-day-townite proposition, but a major makes of Frenchs for a large city in the great Koochiflows site for a major geographical loid and its development.
An electrical era has now dampened upon the industry, and the made station the last few years in the bases of electricity as a motive power greater importance than ever before.
modern gaussian diagrams, power
modes, modern gaussian diagrams,
power modes as compared with the cost of
power modes as compared with the cost of
Late
This Illustration taken during low
spread, showcasing the town, will
pictures the town but shows information
on the north. In front of Earl Francis
early 60s, spent something like $60,000.
KOOCHICH
Latest View of Koochiching Falls.
This illustration taken during low water presents a view of the falls which will soon convert the village into a thriving manufacturing town. The view is from the east and if the most comprehensive one ever taken, as if not only pictures the falls but shows international falls all the north or right-changing part of Rainy, ever Flooded One, which are the most impressive canal, on which the Canadian government, in the early 19th century, spent something like $100,000 and then abandoned R.
ALTY CO
Falls, Showing International
Latest View of Koochiching Falls
During low water presents a view of the falls which
international Falls on the south or right-hand bank
of France is to be seen the incomplete canal, on which
the 500,000 and then abbreviated R.
Every individual who contends at some time engaging in business for himself should take the present opportunity to engage at some matter, nominal prices, a place, or that business in this future metapods.
The great improvements to be made as Koocnicking Falls and the vast expenditure of money these cannot fail to at once increase lot and land values at an unusual rate, so in loss in making investment of the significant things being generated, and that investigation
COMPAN
is insignificant and especially so where fuel is expensive.
Best French cdn bisset of possessing
most other cdn on the continent.
most other cdn on the continent.
however, to the prospective investor and homeowner is the immediate development of a new establishment of manufacturing plants there. Fort Frances in this respect is an association, consisting of estates耕种 with unlimited capital resources, which also provides for the establishment of language mills and factories at that point. Norwegian this strenuous power, will be raised by the largest potential mills, the greatest existing than it is now generally estimated to be. The mills once said, Good trade the land, but not make the cities. Norway has generally provided Fort Frances and the largest in the state for success, a great enterprise in the state for success, and Fort Frances has the greatest natural water power on the North American continent, except Nigersia, and the greatest water power on the building up of a great city. And it is a foregone conclusion that Fort Frances is the wealthiest cities west of the Great Lakes, it is destined to be the principal milling mills in the whole capital, point for the whole Canadian West.
THE TOWN OF FORT FRANCES.
A Natural-Point of Concentration—All Western Canada—Tributary to Fort Frances.
Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Paul and other natural cities became great allies owing to the settlement of the Western States. Likewise, growing respectively the commercial and industrial centres, rapid development of that country, taps repeting the history of the growth and development of all new territories, and for over fifty years great numbers of emigrants from all the countries of Eastern states have been attracted to that great country north and west of Chicago, because of the opening, from
1 Falls in Background.
verified farming than even the famous Red river valley or any other part of Minnesota or any other Northwestern state. The yield and quality of grain, hay and vegetables grown there is simply astonishing to every farmer who has visited The Ruby river valley on either side of the river is wooded; the land is all level, absolutely free from store; the soil is black loam, with clay subsoil. The climate is splendid, owing to the land being a wooded valley. The greatest manufacturing cities going on in the country are the cities of Chicago and the district will afford the most desirable marriages of the farmers that district are therefore bound to be more prosperous than in the shipping facilities of that country will be excellent, as railroads from every city will center at the greatest Koechling district. The farmers who establish themselves as great flourgillies to operate at the falls will furnish feed in abundance, in addition to the natural products of that district. Wild and improved lands in this district. Great falls at Koechling falls, can be beet now at, a mere fraction of the actual value of such land at this time.
That country, owing to the wooded and
employment at good wages at all three
and especially through limited mortgages,
employment at good wages at all three
and especially through limited mortgages,
not therefore depend entirely on their
No one with the least bit of amusement
country like the Raiyal River valley.
That district, with its unlimited natural
become one of the wealthiest districts in
be one of the wealthiest districts in
Europe that contemplates moving or
are looking for investment in a new distri-
going there to acquire some of the same
are always to be had in a new distri-
Falls.
Which will soon convert the village into a municipality one ever falters, as if not only part of Rating river and Fort Frances. One, which the Canadian government, in the
will result in your at once taking advantage of information which we alone can give you.
It is for your own advantage that you should immediately call upon or write to us for that information.
It will start even the small investment upon the road to fortune.
The capitalist cannot afford to miss consulting us.
Now and here is your opportunity to make your fortune: Call or write.
Canadian Office
Fort Frenes, Ontario.
---
GREAT DEVELOPMENTS AT KOOCHICHING FALLS
Intentional Duplicate Exposure
Defective Page
Fort Frances, Ont., on the Canadian Side of Koochiching Falls, Will Be Canada's Greatest Milling and Manufacturing Center.
Scene on the Rainy River, a Few Miles Below Koochiching Falls.
Portion of Fort Frances, Looking Across the Rapids.
The Kochchhong falls water power is located in the States and Canada that it requires no lengthy description. Furthermore, no designation is required, and must be seen to be appreciated. The enormity of the incinerator power can be best judged from the immense lakes and canyons, some 18,000 square miles, all enlightening into Rainy lake proper, covering an area of more than 1,000 acres, a great reservoir, from which Rainy lake is an immense body of water, averaging 1,292 feet in width and very deep. Two Kochchhong falls, where this vast volcanic depression in Rainy river tales a volume of 14 feet. The reader will easily conceive that the largest damraque into the vast reservoir will furnish an enormous body over the falls.
Scene on the Rainy R
The geographical location of the town located as it is at the point new needs me to be a manufacturing point of focus for Western Canada and a new section of Western Canada and manufacturing plants there. I am now being engaged in developing this power and the millions of dollars that must be spent in erecting and operating the mills and manufacturing facilities in the French provinces and French Frances a densely populated city, which will cause all property there to be lost. This business property in a short time to become immensely valuable. No investor can afford to invest or a choice location, can do better than to take advantage of the hundred opportunities now offered at Kitchener Falls and in the Rainy River country.
Portion of Fort
Actual work upon harnessing the greatest waterpower on the continent except Nigeria, the generators of the enormous sum of $20,000,000 within the next two years has actually begun.
building of a great commercial and man in any country.
Nothing can now prevent Kochiching, the principal industrial center of the Great Plains, going to the immediate development of
First Floor, Temple Court Building, Minneapolis.
River, a Few Miles Below Kooch
Koochiching Falls.
The construction of the Grand Trunk
River and the Canadian Grand Trunk system is transcontinental line, is practically assimilate; but the
greatest system principally through Western Canada) will be shored by the
a great system principally through Western Canada) will be shored by the
completed as a transcontinental line, is not yet known
that the plan is stated on parliament and
the contract between the Grand Trunk
River and the Canadian Grand Trunk system provide for
the third transcontinental line from ocean to
another, an amalgamation of these two roads,
and if true makes certain of three great
any and all railroads in Canada, trans-
continental or local, must eventually seas-
Frances on account of the future great
milling and manufacturing operations
the nearest Canadian railroad point, having the shortest route from Duluth, Ohio
the American side and will be a leading
distributing point and commercial center,
principal import and export town, rail-
center, industrial point and natural
constantly increasing population.
Art Frances, Looking Across the
MARK THESE
s the Rapids.
MARK THESE WORDS ABOUT KOOCHICHING FALLS
its tenement waterpower, its geographical location, and the marriages get-timent and development of the Great Canadian City. Fishing on the Canadian side of this mighty power will become the greatest Mining and Manufacturing center for all Canada. The Twentieth of Fort France is a natural point of concentration, and attitude will to become the principal airport to expect upon the northwest bibbary, between the United States and Canada. The Rainy River Valley presents mar-
HE ENGE
GER-NO
FORT FRANCES, ONT.
A Natural Site for a Great City.
The town of Fort Frances is located
falls, 150 miles due north of Minneapolis,
157 miles northwest of Duluth, 158
miles west of Fort Arthur.
Fort Frances is most adaptively
situated on the south by the Madry river,
on the north and east by Rainy lake, and
on the north and east by the valley.
It lies level, high, and dry, permitting of excellent drainage to the
greater portion of the town is lightly
wooded, affording splendid opportunities
to sanitary point of view the site cannot
be excellened.
This is as written here a new
Net Brands was the writing has a pop-
up of 1,000.
In.17.100.morn, $500,000 was exchanged
FORT FRANCES R. R. CENTER.
Also the Main Import and Export Point on the Boundary. Here we point on the main line of the Canadian Northern railway system. Two new Canadian build from points on the main line of the railway, one from the northwest and one from the northwest. On the American railway, contemptuous sniffing Ports
the Next Two Years.
Ganda, owing to the heavy immigration
provide better transportation, commercial
and the building of new railroads is the
great question before the Canadian people.
This was the main issue of their last
election, which voted high in
continent in the main favoring
power the party favoring strong govern-
ment in the building of freight
coffee plant.
INVESTORS AND HOMESEEKERS
Fort Frances will be the Minsingapo
Tahle and Fort Frances is for the Kochchine-
this and Fort Frances is for the Kochchine-
velous opportunities at this time. It is a New District with even Greater Agricultural Productiveness than the famous River district. The River district has unlimited and diverse natural resources, which will assure wealth and prosperity to every one who desires to farm.
No man or woman who has either Arve or small images and who wishes to establish themselves and better their condition, will be a farmer, a town or cityity, can afford to let the present opportunity go by to acquire
greater than that of St. Anthony falls at Minneapolis, and the area of arable land in Minneapolis is many times that tributary to Minneapolis. The supply of marketable wood in the area is almost inexhaustible. The land in the Rainy river valley, where productive than that surrounding Minneapolis, which is of great importance to the city, is at Fort Frances is even more pleasant than at Minneapolis. France is even more pleasant than at Minneapolis. It is her geographic location and the natural power of Kochichling falls is the natural milling and canning industry of the natural gateway for that vast country, as has heretofore. Fort Frances has an ideal site for a great city, without a side drawbench.
KOOCHICHING DISTRICT
Developing Very Rapidly.
Fort Frances and the Cocholobian district, where they point to the Canadian North rather than three years ago, has made wonderful progress. These who engaged in business or acquired property there have contributed to the growth of the city, many investors and merchants at Fort Frances during the past few years have become very wealthy, and their means to become millionaires, while their means to begin with were very limited.
The Work on the Great Concrete-Dam Has Started.
The past, or even the present status of the country, is of importance as compared with the future. The water power question has been set up, and the water power companies have average for the Canadian side than even those most interested had ever anticipated. The construction of the great concrete dam were completed last year, as well as in construction accepted by the Canadian government.
Great corporations have been capitalized to provide for general needs of our four mills, saw mills, pulp and paper mills, woodware and numerous other manufacturing plants. This done, the work of harnessing the power of the way, and the utilization of its power provided for. All these improvements will be the building of the concrete dam alone. The building of the concrete dam alone will cost $100,000. This, with other improvements, will mean an expenditure of $100,000 in the next two years. The mammoth undertaking is the foundation for the next up of the great City of Port France. That Fort France will become a great center is an authoritative fact. The point that in general improvements within the next two or three years is bound to point in general improvements at that point and rapidly increase the value of all the estate for various purposes at that point.
PRESENT REAL ESTATE PRICES
But a More Fraction of Actual Value
- Now in the Time to Invest.
The sections that will constitute the principal business, manufacturing and banking industries, have been established. Properties in the business district will, as a matter of opinion, be made available from an investment point of view. Business lots in the main center of the city will be valued at $100 to $1,000. These prices are only a small fraction of the values of such properties. Townsite on the American side of Icelandico falls recently, up the side of the sales lot in these designs, from $10.00 to $40.00 for lots in size and
lots or land that cannot possibly fall to gain in value with every day that passes. There is no question whatever that any investment. Even from a two dollar payment, you can gain thousands of dollars as the capitalist can command will double and treble in value within a few months. Every young man or woman starting out in life, who knows the importance of sacing some garden of their earnings, will eventually achieve and thus profitarily they will have do the beginning of a sortie.
location corresponding to the properties
from 200 to 15000 at Fort Frances at
from 2000 to 15000.
All who stop to consider the relative
position of the two towns at Kochi-
lalpur town, going to the present lack of
mills and manufacturing plants in West-
ern India, and the entire country back of hat to supply
with manufactured goods free from tariff
and competition, has the advantage.
International Falls, however, has a
large sheep at present are higher than at Fort
Frances for the season that the Town-
land owns practically the land available
for town lots and they can there-
fore consider the conditions will warrant.
On the Canadian side the conditions
that town was laid out by the government
and sold to the highest bidders
demanded. The kits were there therefore
purchased at that time for little or nothing.
The towns are now too low when the
Frances are now too high when the
First Drop of Falls
First Drop of Falls. Showing International Falls in Background.
the prices established on the American side. The prices of Fort Frances real estate taking advantage of the present low prices and investing there at this time will have an opportunity to double their move over and over again within the time frame.
FORT FRANCES WILL BE
Canada's Greatest Industrial Point
Great progress has been made in establishing new milieu and infrastructure. West has developed at a marvelous rate. The oilmen have been fortunate. For foreign trade increased. Progressive millers and manufactures everywhere have been the greatest opportunities ever created, and new millers and factories have been established throughout the dominion. American brainy energy and capital are the main source of energy by the unlimited natural resources of the Western provinces and territories, and the manufacturing plants are therefore of America. Fort Frances at Koopchip falls and at the gateway of the rapidly developing West is Canada's greatest industrial point.
THIS IS AN ELECTRICAL ERA,
And the Power of Koochifong Fails
Must Invently Establish a Great
Industrial Center at That Point.
The town of Fort Frances is not an ordinary-avery-day-township, proportion of special interest and importance as a lofting fills its geographical location and its development. Its has, now dawned upon the civilized world. The rapid splash made during the last few years in the town have made water powers of much greater use. The cost of generating electric power under modern scientific methods by water-powering has generated power by steam or otherwise.
Late
This illustration, taken during low
spraying manufacturing, shows the
pictures the falls but shows interna-
tion on the north. In front of Ferry
Station early 60s, spent something like $60,000.
KOOCHICH
Latest View of Koochiching Falls.
This illustration taken during low water presents a view of the falls which will soon convert the village into a picturesque landscape. The best and the most comprehensive one ever taken, as it not only pictures the falls but stone international falls on the south or right-hand bank of Rainy river and Fort Francis, One on the north. In front of the pictures, the most completed canal, on which the Canadian government, in the
ALTY CO
Falls, Showing International
power. For over sixty years great numbers of south great emigrants from all the countries of Europe have travelled from and settled from the overcrowded world power. Eastern states have been attracted to the fact that great country north and west of the cost of Chicago, because of the opening, from other wise, time to time, or west area of new lands.
Latest View of Koochiching R.
During low water, presents a view of the falls which the view is from the west and if the most conspicuous palls all the south or right-chang bar, with the cost of 50,000, and then ascendance R.
CHING FALLS
Every individual who contemplates at some time engaging in business for himself should take the present opportunity to acquire, if necessary, nominal prices, a location for that business in this future metropolis.
The great improvements to be made by Koochiching Falls and the west expenditure of money there cannot fail to at once increase lot and land values at an annual rate. The loss in making investigation of the condition of things there presented, and the investigation
COMPAN
emigrate from all the countries of Eu. Everyone that contemplates moving or relocating to Eu. must be aware that the United States have been attracted to strict should therefore lose no time in that great country north and west of going there to acquire some of the snaps. Chicago has been the place always to be had in a new design of the west of new land trict.
The vast power of Koochiching falls, hitherto werthed, will fill the press. The great value of such a power from an industrial plant, and particularly to the Canadian West, is beyond conception. This mighty power will do towards the building up of a large industrial city where Fort Fremont falls, can best be judged by comparing the future of Fort Fremont with the water powers are developed and the means of casing uniformity of this great power should be kept in mind when such comparisons are made. The vast mineral resources are developed as well as the vast domain of same for manufacturing purposes. The inexpensive supply of natural resources compares as well as the vast domain of same for manufacturing purposes. Canada included, where the products from Fort Fremont mills and factories and other natural products
Fort Stephens can bake or possessing
any other city on the continent.
Fort Stephens is a port on the
continent.
however, to the prospective investor and homeowner is the immediate development establishment of manufacturing plants there. Fort Frances in this respect is also very fortunate, as the improvement with unlimited capital resources, which is now developing the great power, will increase mills and factories at that point. The concretes dam now being built to be raised by the highest possible morbidity will increase the power to a much greater extent than it is now generally estimated to be.
An ancient settlement once said: 'Good manners have naturally encouraged Port Frances with all that could be desired. A grand opportunity to there build a great city. Port Frances has the greatest American continent, except Nicasarn, and every other advantage essential to the foregone conclusion that Port Frances will become one of the largest and most desirable to be the principal milling town with import and export point for the whole Canadian West.
THE TOWN OF PORT FRANCES.
A Natural-Point of Concentration—All Western Canada—Tributary to Port Frances.
Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Paul) and other owing to the settlement of the Western states. Likewise, Winnipeg and Fort St. John are main commercial and industrial centers of Western Canada due to the present reporting the history of the growth and development of all new territories and
there, lands of great promise, where the aturdy new settler was able to convert the land into a farm or turn to pasture thousands of cattle, thus to become prosperous and easily acquired. The stream of new settlers to our horders has been so long that the amount of desirable land left for the taking in the United States has been so large that it is pressing on, crossing the boundary line into Western and Northwestern all, and where better land the sun never shone upon. Hence, the course of civilization northward to the utmost limit of the confines of Canada's vast domain. Falls and its geographical location establish the Canadian industrial center at the only place measured by the development of the hundreds of millions of acres tributary to Fort Frisco, the natural gateway to this vast rich domain.
THE BAINY RIVER DISTRICT.
The Raley river valley is more productive and far more desirable for d-
l Falls in Background.
versified farming than even the famous Red river valley or any other part of the state of Minnesota or any other part. The yield and quality of grain, hay and vegetables grown there is simply astonishing to every farmer who has visited that district. The river valley on either side of the river is wooded; the land is all level, absolutely free from stone; the soft is black loam, with clay subsoil. The water is excellent and in abundance. The land being a wooded valley. The great manufacturing cities going in at the falls and the numerous mining districts are also in abundance. The district will afford the most desirable markets for all farm and dairy products and bound to be more prosperous than in any other district of this state. The district will be excellent, as rulers from every country will center at the great Kochow. The district who establish themselves will great flourishes to operate at the falls will furnish feed in abundance, in addition to the natural products of that district. Wild and improved lands in this district. Falls at Kochowling fall can be and now at but a mere fraction of the actual value of such land at this
That country, owing to the wooded and mountainous terrain, has a high employment at good wages at all three levels. The new settlers with limited means need not therefore depend entirely on their own means, but can depend on them. No one with the least bit of ambition can country like the Rainy river valley, which is a prime resource, is in a short time bound to be one of the wealthiest districts in the country.
Everyone that contemplates moving or
fitting lodging for investment in a new de-
trict should therefore lose no time in
going there to acquire some of the snaps
pros and cons are always to be had in a new dis-
trict.
Falls.
Which will soon convert the village into a
communal office, one ever taken, as it not only
chief of Raty, Rive and Fort Frances. One
which the Canadian government, in the
will result in your at once taking advantage of information which we already can give you.
It is for your own advantage that you should immediately call upon or write to us for that information.
It will start even the small investor upon the road to fortune.
The capitalist cannot afford to miss consulting us.
Now and here is your opportunity to make your fortune: Call or write.
NY Canadian Office Fort Frances, Ontario.
EUROPEAN EXHIBITS.
FORESTRY BUILDING.
AGRICULTURE BUILDING.
Ask your local agent or write to any representative of the Great Northern Railway for full information, Rates, etc., and have your ticket read via "The Comfortable Way"—"The Great Northern Railway."
GREAT
NORTHERN
RAILWAY
LEW
OPENS
Gro
TWO
To
A TRI
EURO
Liberal
Visit—1
Visit—1
Visit—7
Stop Of
Ask your local a
ST. PAUL, 4th and
GREAT
NORTHERN
RAILWAY
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
GREAT
NORTHERN
RAILWAY
SCENIC SURPRISES
ALL THE WAY TO THE
OCTOBER 15.
WAY
DAILY.
la Carte.)
LIGHT
BUILDING.
Along the Line.
of America."
of the
de Mountains."
ean of America."
of the
Northwest.
and have your
S, 3rd and Nicollet.
GREAT
NORTHERN
RAILWAY
A WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITAL.
ba "Saintly City" and Saintly City Folks—Newsy Items of Social, Religious and general Matters Among the People.
SATURDAY, APRIL 29, 1905.
If it's Hamm's, it's all right.
Mr. Morris Porter remains very ill with little hope for his recovery.
Nice furnished rooms for two gentlemen at 307 E. Seventh street.
THE ELK EXPRESS CO. now has its office corner Ninth and St. Peter streets.
Mrs. Sarah Duty of Fargo, N. D., is in the city, the guest of Mrs. R. C. Howard.
Mr. W. A. Robison, the violinist, has opend a studio in room 322, Bradley building.
"I haven't paid $5.00 for a hat since I began wearing the Gordon, and I buy the best."
Miss Lottie Adams of Fargo, N. D. is in the city, the guest of Mrs. Edward Green.
Easter services in all the churches were well attended. The special music was fine.
Have you seen the new magazine, "THE VOICE OF THE NEGRO?" See notice elsewhere in this issue.
Be on the lookout for "Cupid Abroad, or A Midsummer Night's Dream" to be given by Corinthian Temple, S. M. T. Monday, May 1st.
Wanted a young lady for office work. Apply to C. Beckwith, general jobber, No. 172 East Eighth street. A good, easy place for the right person.
When you wish a fine shine call at Walter Porter's up-to-date shoe shining parlors No. 114 E. Fourth street, Shines 5 cents. First-class work.
A. C. Peters and wife who were in the police court for disorderly conduct last week were released Saturday upon signing a bond to keep the peace.
Rescued in 15 minutes at S. T. Sorensen's, 153 East Seventh street. Sewed soles 75 cts, nailed soles 50 cts. New shoes, latest styles, $2.50.
"The 40 Social Club" gave a great dance at Arion hall on Third street Monday evening. There was a large crowd present and a good time for all present.
Author Hilyard Lodge No. 2, A.F. and A.M. of Minneapolis, has issued invitations for an old time cotillon at Holcomb's hall Wednesday evening, May 3d.
The May Dancing Party of Corinthian Temple No. 132, S. M. T., occurs at Central Annex hall, 116 West Sixth street, Monday evening, May 1st. Don't forget it.
Is your hair straight? If not, send 60 pens to Ozonized Cx Marrow Co., 76 Wabush avenue, Chicago, Ill., for a bottle of Ozonized Ox Marrow and you can easily straighten it.
The Appeal has purchased the press and outfit of the Richardson Printing Company and added the same to the plant. Bring in your job printing. Best work at lowest prices.
Gentlemen wishing nice furnished rooms, with all conveniences, by two week or month, at reasonable rates, should apply at the Benton House, 228 West Third street, up stairs.
THE NAGEL UNDERTAKING CO., Wm. E. Nagel Manager, 208 West Third street, Telephone, Main 1504. Latest equipments in every line. Lady assistant when desired.
Mrs. Ella Smith has handsomely reftitted, newly papped and painted her dining room and is furnishing most excellent meals. Call to see her when hungry. No. 352 Cedar street.
The function that interests the elite—the Cotillion to be given by Anchor-Hilary Lodge of Minneapolis on Wednesday, May 3d. Our Judge Johnston will lead the grand march at 9:30.
Shoes mended while you wait. at Jarvis', 83 East Fourth street. Half soles, 50 and 75 cents. Prices reasonable for all kinds of repairing. He can do it on short notice., Jarvis, 83 E. 4th street.
There was a splendid crowd at the Colonade Dancing school last Wednesday evening and all enjoyed the new feature which has been inaugurated by Principal Winstead of dancing quadrilles without prompting.
The State Savings Bank, corner Fourth and Minnesota streets, 'is open Monday evenings from 6 to 10. Accounts can be started with $1. A little amount saved every week may some day stand between you and want.
ELK EXPRESS CO., G. J. Charleston, manager, corner St. Peter and Ninth streets. Packing, shipping and storing of furniture and household goods. Piano moving a specialty. House renting, real estate handled.
Mr. Richard Cousby who has been foreman of the Cosmopolitan barber shop has severed his connection therewith and reopened his own shop at the old stand, 374 1/2 Minnesota street, and invites old and new patrons to call.
STATE SAVINGS BANK.
A Safety Depository For the Savings of the Wage Earner.
The only institution in St. Paul doing business strictly according to the rules of the city, and amended to date, and thereby avoids the dangers of commercial banking from the use of $1 and upward. Bank open daily from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m., except Saturdays, from 9 a. m. to 12:30 p. m.
On Friday Evenings from 6 to 8.
Trustees: C. G. Lawrence, John B. Searle, Ferdinand Willus, Kenneth Clark, John D. Ludden, Thomas Gustavus Willus, John Richardson, Gustavus Willus, John Richardson, William Constans, B. W. Dean.
Housecleaning Days
Are here. We make it easy for those who have to buy. Take advantage of our Improved Credit Plan—a little (just a little) money down and the balance to suit your convenience, by the week or by the month. No interest.
Leader Jewel Range.
Price, $20.00.
Four-hole Range, with duplex grate, for wood or coal, constructed of the same material as all high-grade Jewel Stoves.
Fabricord Leather Couch
REFRIGERATORS AND ICE CHESTS.
We carry the entire line of the celebrated Ram's trunk. We start them at $2.00 on up. Ice Chests $3.50 and up.
CARPETS AND RUGS.
Our spring line is all in. Special this week: $212 Ingrain Rug. Choice of any pattern or coloring. price this week. $4.75
J.S.MILLS' LUNCH
THE HOSPITAL
No. 444 Robert Street,
Between Seventh and Eighth.
Telephone
Open from
DELIVERIES 5 CENTS EXTRA
SANDWICH B
New York Sandwich .15
Chicken Sandwich .15
Pork Tenderloin Sandwich .15
Denver Sandwich .10
St. Paul Sandwich .10
Hamburger Steak Sandwich .10
Pork Chop Sandwich .10
Plain Steak Sandwich .10
Ham and B
Sardine Sand
Fish Sand
Ham Sandw
Egg Sandw
Wienerwur
Cheese Sand
Pigs' Foot
Pie, 5c. Doughnuts, 5c. Coffee, 5c. Tea
DINNER 15 CENTS.
Madam H. Hart has opened a very
neat millinery store at No. 266 Rice
street where the ladies may find all
the new and up-to-date styles in hats
and millinery goods. An invitation is
extended to the ladies to call and ins-
pect the stock.
HOWELLI
street, fash-
wishing suits and
pads 'adies' we
cleaned, re
on short
Don't fail to attend the Spring Festival May 11th and 12th at Pilgrim Baptist church. On the 11th the young ladies will present a drama. "Not a Man in the House." The program for the 12th will be given in the next issue of THE APPEAL.
Those of our patrons who desire to have matter published must get the same in this office not later than Thursday afternoon, otherwise it may be crowded out. No notice will be taken of any communication that is not signed by the author.
The stewardesses of St. James A. M. E. church tendered a surprise party to their secretary, Mrs. E. J. Murphy, on Tuesday evening. Refreshments were plentiful and all had a good time. Mrs. Murphy left the city Thursday evening for an indefinite time.
Jarvis, the healer and saver of soles, at 83 E. Fourth street, says, in one of his street car signs: "I can mend shoes better than I can write," and, if the sign is a fair specimen of his work as a writer, he's right, as he can mend shoes all right if he cannot write all right.
THE APPEAL man called at the new millinery store of Madam H. Hart, No. 266 Rice street, this week and found a fine assortment of the latest millinery creations that ought to please the most fastidious. The ladies are advised to call before purchasing else where.
If you wish a good shave, hair cut, shampoo, or anything in the torsional line, call at Richard Coussy's near barber shop. No. 374% Minnesota street. First class workmen only. Satisfaction guaranteed. Music for dances and all occasions furnished on short notice.
You ought to see the "Knapp Shade Adjusters," advertised in this issue, they "fill a long felt want" and when you see them you'll want 'em. Have Mr. Wm. J. Work to call and show them to you. A postal card sent him to P. O. Box 132, White Bear Lake, Minn., will bring him.
FIRST CLASS MEALS, like mother used to cook may be had at Mrs. Ella Smith's. No. 352 Cedar street. Breakfast from 7 to 11 a.m.; lunch from 12 to 2:30 p. m.; dinner from 5 to 8 p. m. Meals to order when desired. Sunday dinners a specialty. Regular meals 25 cents.
Hamm's New Beer. This beer is so decidedly superior to any draught beer ever before brewed, that within the few days it has been on sale it has already attained a fixed place in public favor. Call for it. Hamm's New Brew, 100,000 barrels in stock. On draught now on now.
Oil atrage
Anyone wishing anything done about their houses, such as brick work, stone work, plastering, calcimining, house cleaning, etc., at reasonable rates would do well to call on St. Paul Job Workers, C. Beckwith, manager, 172 East Eighth street. Estimates furnished. Tel. N. W. Main 2893-L.
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS.—We invite your inspection. It costs little to place your papers, cash securities and valuables in absolute safety. Boxes in our vaults can be had for $4 per year. Store your boxes, trunks, etc., with us. Northwestern Trust Co., 138 Endicott Arcade.
Anything the matter with your stove, range or furnace? If there is, just call at the St. Paul Stove Repair Works, 126 West Seventh street, between Fifth and Exchange streets, and they can make the repairs on short notice. Any part of any make of stove or range supplied. Telephone, N. W. 1206 L. 1; T. C. 242.
The Colonade Dancing School was enlisted last Wednesday evening with music by Prof. Arthur Williams of Minneapolis and also by the fine singing of Miss Ada Van Spence who rendered, delightfully, "While the Pale Moon Shines" and "I want to be a Rich Coon's Babe." The usual large crowd was present.
The Colonade Dancing School had its usual good crowd present last Wednesday evening. The usual good time may be counted on for next Wednesday evening. Come early and stay late. Arthur Winstead, principal, Colonade Hall, N. W. corner University and Farrington Aves. Entrance on Farrington. Lessons 25 cents.
Ladies who wish a beautiful complexion will use Mrs. Howard's Royal delicacy for softening and healing roughness, pimples, tan and freckles; also a perfect vegetable tissue food for wrinkles and hollows in cheeks, throat and neck. Manufactured only by Mrs. R. C. Howard, 662 W. Central avenue, St. Paul, Minn. Phone, Dale 918-J-2.
Henry Clark, 50 West Tenth street, was in police court Tuesday morning charged with disorderly conduct. Henry Ward went to the house Monday evening to visit a sick friend. Without provocation, so he avers, Clark struck him over the head with a hammer. Clark was given ten days in the workhouse.
Tomorrow will be Ladies' Day at the Men's Union Club of St. James A. M. E. church. The exercises will be in charge of Mrs. Henry Dunn. Mrs. Jasper Gibbbs, Minneapolis, president of the State Federation of Women's
Housecleaning
down and the balance to suit your convenience, by the week or by the month. No interest.
Karpen
Upholstered
Upholstered
Furniture
CHICAGO
This Couch is upholstered in fabriccord leather. We absolutely guarantee it against cracking or peeling. Karpen steel construction, solid oak frame and full size.
American, 22-24 East Seventh Street.
Defective Page
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cash and
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Price, $16.75.
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East Seventh Street.
Clubs, will speak on the general work of the women. An excellent program has been prepared. Public cordially invited. Tomorrow afternoon at 4:00 o'clock.
A daily paper for $1.00 a year is something the public has long desired. The Chicago Daily Review, a delightful family daily giving all important news, market reports and many interesting departments for men, women and children, is sent to subscribers for $45, 75 cents for six months, 50 cents for three months. Subscribe today, address, The Chicago Review Co., 399 Coca-Cola Building, Chicago, Illinois.
St. Philips' Episcopal mission held its annual parish meeting Monday evening. The treasurer's report showed the financial condition to be good. After all outstanding bills are paid there will be a small surplus. There is also a reserve fund for improvements of $210. The bishop's committee selected was as follows: W. J. Utley, W. R. Godette, Charles Farr, Allen French, Joseph Sherwood, Finston White, W. A. Johnson.
The Colonnade Dancing Academy had a splendid crowd on last Wednesday evening and all enjoyed themselves. The splendid music by Prof. Lafayette Mason and Armant's orchestra gave the usual satisfaction. Armant's orchestra will be present at all the assemblies of the Colonnade Dancing Academy, corner of University and Farrington Aves. Be sure to attend next Wednesday evening. Arthur Winstead, principal.
The Colonade Dancing Academy seems to be pleasing the public immensely as the number of patrons is constantly on the increase. The hall is a very nice one, has a fine floor and everything is as snug as can be. Despite all counter attractions, the hall is a very large, highly pleased crowd is present. Principal Winstead is constantly on the lookout to please his patrons and especial attention is paid to beginners.
WANTED—Trustworthy man or woman to manage business in this county and adoling territory for well established house of solid financial standing. $20.00 straight cash salary with all necessary expenses paid weekly by check from headquarters. Money advanced for expenses. Position permanent; previous experience not essential. No investment required. We furnish everything. Enclose self-addressed envelope. Address Manager, 810 Como Block, Chicago,
MURDER AND SUICIDE.
Geo. Mahan in a Jealous or Desperate Fit Shoots His Wife and Himself.
About 1:15 yesterday morning George Mahan, living at 559 Sibley street, went home and after a row with his wife shot her four times killing her instantly. He then turned the weapon upon himself and fired two shots into his breast, from the effects of which it is stated he cannot recover.
It appears that Mahan, who had been employed at the union depot, had just lost his job and also that he was insanely jealous of his wife.
The people were married at Little Rock, Ark. He married and came to St. Paul where they have since lived.
The police were notified of the tragedy and the body of the woman was taken to the morgue while Mahan was taken to the hospital.
WAGNER HALL FOR RENT
Persons desiring to rent Wagner hall, corner Charles and Western avenues for lodge meetings, parties, dances, meetings or for any occasion may obtain the same at reasonable rates upon application to J. W. Wynne. 558 University or Judge Johnston, 352 Cedar street.
The Voice of the Negro.
Mr. S. D. Kemp has been appointed agent for "The Voice of The Negro," a monthly magazine published in Atlanta, Ga., and the only magazine now being edited and published by Afro-Americans in this country. Messrs. J. W. E. Bowen and J. Max Barber are editors. Among them are pledged their support to the magazine's content. Prof. Kelley, Miller, Dr. Booker T. Washington, Mrs. Mary Church Terrill, Mrs. Fannie Barrier Williams and a score of others prominent among the leading writers.
be in
s. Jas-
ment of
men's to S. D. Kemp, Cosmopolitan barber
The price of the magazine is only
$1 per year. Persons desiring to sub-
scribe should send their subscriptions
THE KNAPP SHADE ADJUSTERS
W. J. WORK, SALES AGENT
P. O. BOX 132 WHITE BEAR LAKE, MINN.
Have your old shades rehung by the new meth od, and by which you obtain better ventil- lation, control the amount of light and secure privacy when desired.
ORDERS LEFT AT THIS OFEICE WILL RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION
C. W. STAEHLE.
Everything at the right price. Rice, Carroll and Iglehart Sts.
INSURANCE GASOLINE STOVES.
Price $8.50 and up.
Folding Screen.
Price, 95c.
It has solid oak frame, filled with fancy figured silkalline—three folding sockets.
FOLLOWING SEWING TABLE
Mode of white maple, with stamped
yard measure. Special
this week..... 69d
shop, 74 East Fifth street, or Army building, foot of Robert street, St. Paul.
THE ELK EXPRESS CO.
Has Moved to Larger and Better Quarters.
The Elk Express Co. is growing and spreading out now that spring is here. The company has leased the building on the corner of St. Peter and Ninth streets, No. 467 St. Peter for its office and storage. There has also been added to the present equipment on the larger and the smallest ones. The company is now prepared to move any one as quickly as any other firm in the business and at as low rates. Only competent men are employed to handle the goods.
MILLS' LUNCH AND SANDWICH
BOOM
J. S. Mills, proprietor, 444 Robert street, between Seventh and Eighth streets. Open from 6:00 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. Deliveries 5 cents extra. Telephone. N. W. Main 3082 L. This is the place to get your favorite sandwich or a good lunch. The best grade of coffee is used and the cook knows how to prepare it, therefore, you are sure of excellent coffee. An epiphone will find all the places of the town. Soup and stews are always kept on hand and such sandwiches as the New York, Pork Tenderloin, Chicken, St. Paul, Hamburger, Egg, Denver, Cheese, Sardine, etc., can be served at any time. If you try this place once you will be satisfied with the quality, service and price and you will be sure to call again.
Have you seen the new magazine, "THE VOICE OF THE NEGRO?" See notice elsewhere in this issue.
It's a poor religion that is always talking about a bigger church and never think of a better city.
VENTILATION
LIGHT
TROPHIC
MOUNTAINS
A. S. B.
The Pope Bicycle Daily Memorandum Calendar for 1905 contains a memorandum leaf for every day in the year, and 365 original sayings in favor of good roads, good health, outdoor exercise, and that great vehicle of health giving, the modern bicycle, by our most eminent living men of marked accomplishment. The calendar is free at Pope Mfg. Co.'s stores or any of our readers can obtain it by sending five 2 cent stamps to Pope Mfg. Co., Hartford, Conn., or 143 Sigel St., Chicago, Ill.
The reason why you should buy your Coal, Wood, Wood, Fl喂, Feed, Hay, etc, from C. W. STAHLEH, Rice and Carrol streets, is because you can get prompt delivery, best goods, full measure. Fuel of all kinds, and sawed and split wood in large or small quantities. Everything at the right prices. Both telephones 1446.
What is nicer than a pretty picture for a gift to a friend? You can get all sorts of pictures and frames at the Lowe Picture Frame Co., 475 Wabasha street. Full line of framed and unframed pictures, holiday trade. Also make a specialty of oil portraits at moderate prices. Pictures framed to order.
Soldiers Addresses Wanted.
Henry N. Copp, attorney-at-law,
Washington, D. C., wants the addresses
of below named Afro-American
soldiers, who served in the Civil War;
if dead, their heirs. Information will be
paid for.
John W. Dent, 3rd Cavalry; Jerry Smith, 3rd Artillery; Diana Bankes, Albert Bates, Peter Brodby, Paton Giles, Anderson Hottow, George Nally, George Nickols, William Robbins, Joseph Roney, Rowan Samuels, and Willis Stone, 5th Cavalry; George Bibb, Charles Cantwell, Jesse Darnell, Louis Darbney, John Gault, Frank McLarland, John Price, Dennis Roberts, and Washington Smith, 13th Artillery; Charles Browne, George W. Harmon and Simon Smith, 11th Infantry; Huston Baless, William Brodwell, Henry Clay, and Elias Smith, 12th Infantry: Edward Washington, and John C. Louis, 28th Infantry; William A. Bates, George Cooper, Henry Crouch, Henry Harrison, Patron, and George Sizemore, 43rd Infantry; Grandville, Hunter, Matthew Felts, Hunter, Jackson, William King, Peter Tardy, and William Winn, 59th Infantry; Roger Edwards, 107th Infantry; Moses Able, Moses Ballard, Harrison Butler, Robert Burdette, John A. Cecil, Simon Cook, David Wilmot, Moses Etheron, Squire Garrison, Henry Hamilton, John W. Hopkins, Jerry Morris, Grandison Washington, Beverly Taylor and George Washington, 123rd Infantry; Timothy Filan and Patrick McC-mick, 135th Infantry.
Ministers of the gospel and secretaries of lodges, and others interested, may help worthy families by giving public announcement of the above list and posting it in conspicuous places.
Have you seen the new magazine, "THE VOICE OF THE NEGRO?" See notice elsewhere in this issue.
Barber Wanted.
A good, steady, sober barber, young married man preferred, may obtain a good situation, wages $12.00 per week also half over $20.00. Apply at once to R. E. Anderson, Marshall, Mijn.
YOUR MONEY GROWS
"Small" Loan and Investment Co. 421
422 Bradley Building.
Houses for rent and for sale. Lots
for sale on easy terms.
A new six-room house in course of construction on Cook street, three blocks from street car line, modern except heat; water and sewer assessments paid. Terms suitable to buyer. Put money in our investments and watch your money grow. Give us your fire insurance on house and household goods and business places.
There is no clear thinking apart from clean living.
Platitudes against sin are as harm-
ful as aplause for sin.
Respectability may be quite differ-
ent from righteousness.
NAPP SHADE ADJUSTERS
V. J. WORK, SALES AGENT
32 WHITE BEAR LAKE, MINN.
or old shades rehung by the new meth-
by which you obtain better ventil-
control the amount of light and
secure privacy when desired.
LEFT AT THIS OFEICE WILL RECEIVE
PROMPT ATTENTION
CLIFFORD A. SMITH
The New and Successful
TAILOR
Has a Large and Exclusive Line
of WOLLENS for
SPRING AND SUMMER
OF THE
LATEST DESIGNS
Has Pleased Others, Can Please You.
Your Patronage Solicited.
Style, Fit and Quality Guaranteed.
Repairing.
412 Bradley Building,
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ST. PAUL, MINN.
AND WOOD
FED AND HAY
FROM—
TAEHLE.
Rice, Carroll and Iglehart Sts.
HOWARD'S
LIGHTNING
Shoe Polishes
NEW YORK A.C. HOWARD, CHICAGO
W. EVANS, GEN'L AGT.
337½ Wabasha St., St. Paul,
and also on sale at the
Golden Rule.
$2.50
Union
Mode
Shoes
The Popular Price,
The Popular Shoe,
The Latest Styles,
The Sorensen Shoe.
Same as other dealers
ask $3.50 for.
S. T. SORENSEN
153 E. 7th st., St. Paul.
312 Nicolet av., Mpls.
ROUTES
WINES
Dinner Wines.
Pontet Claret $1.00
Per quart.....
Medoc Claret 75c
Per quart.....
Chesterfield 50c
Per quart.....
Good Fair Wine 25c
Per quart.....
Telephone Main 1401
ST.PAUL
367
ROBERT ST.
ROGHE
MINNEAPOLIS
44
3RD ST. S.
COLLARS and CUFFS 1£
SHIRTS 10¢ UNDERWEAR 8¢
STATE STEAM LAUNDRY
292 W. 7TH ST. BOTH-PHONES.
TOWLE'S
Log Cabin
Maple Syrup
TOWLE'S
LOG CABIN
MAPLE SYRUP
Was awarded the GOLD MEDAL at the World's Fair, St.Louis, 1904, for absolute purity and richness of flavor. The Approval of Millions of People Confirmed by the World's Greatest Exposition.
H. MOSLEY, Man.
VISIT THE Jesamine Club POOL AND BILLIARDS
REAR 245 NICOLLE AVE.
Don't throw away your OLD SHOES BEFORE AFTER Have them made new while you wait. JARVIS, 83 E. 9th st. both phones.
DR. W. J. HURD,
91 E. SEVENTH ST.
Painless Extracting, Fillings,
Plates, Crownns and Bridges
a Specially
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED.
P. E. REID. J. J. HIRSHPIELD.
Wines, Liquors
and Cigars --
40 East Third St., ST. PAUL.
Telephone 181-J L
---
General Laws OF 1905.
CHAPTER 1 S F NO 1
CHAPTER 1-S. F. NO. 1.
AN ACT to appropriate money for the expenses of the session of the State Legislature for the year nineteen hun-
dreds.
area live (1900).
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand ($150,000) dollars be and the same is hereby appropriated for the year not otherwise appropriated, for the purpose of paying the expenses of the session of the State Legislature of the year nineteen hundred and fifty thousand ($185,000)
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force after its passage in its notice. See § 3.10.8.
CHAPTER 2-H. F. No. 39
AN ACT to provide for the printing and binding of additional copies of the Revised Laws, prepared by the revision commission and to appropriate money
Be it enacted by the legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The commission to revise, codify and annotate the public statutes and the laws of the State for 241 of the General Laws of 1901. The commission is bound, in manila covers one thousand (1,000) extra copies of the statutes required, immediately, and to deliver the same to the secretary of state, to be distributed to the prime court, in the manner already proclaimed in section 241 of the General Laws of 1901. Sec. 2. There is hereby appropriated the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000) or so much otherwise appropriated, the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000) or so much further the direction contained in said section one (1), for the printing of said additional
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and impose the provisions of its passage. Approved Jan. 16, 1906.
CHAPTER 3-H. F. NO. 11, AN ACT legalizing the acts of 11 March 1906, and establishing a national territory or enlarging their boundaries when framing and adopting their charters, purposes, and constitution; and chapter 38 of the Constitution, and chapter 39 of the Constitution. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Section 1. That the annexation of any additional territory or enlargement of the state herefore made, between Jan. 1st, 1859 and March 1st, 1860, herefore made, adopting its charter, under and pursuant to the provisions of section 36, article 4, of the laws of Minnesota, and chapter 311 of the Laws of Minnesota for the year 1859, be and the same are hereby in all things legalized. Provided, that the provisions of this act allow the incorporation or proceedings now pending, or the effect and in be in force from and after its passage. Approved Feb. 3, 1906.
CHAPTER 4—H. F. NO. 52. AN ACT providing for the incorporation of the Degree of Honor, Ancient Order of United Workmen, located in the State
Minnesota Law Supplement.
mixed, and the same to hold, transfer, set mortgage, convey, or assign a property, with the laws of (or) usages of the society or order of which it is a part, and the laws of this state. Sec. 6. The seal of the body so incorporated in the same may be changed in the manner it may determine. And if it have no seal, the same as it may determine. Such seal shall be attached to all conveyances, by the secretary of the state, and all such conveyances shall be signed by the chief executive or presiding officer by the secretary or recording officer.
Sec. 8. The officers of any body organise the provisions of this act shall continue to hold their respective offices in such corporation as provided in the constitution or by-laws, or the rules and regulation, organized and incorporated under the provisions of this act may determine to such manner as it may determine to by-laws, rules and regulations, providing business, and to determine who shall be responsible, and to shall have, and how they shall be selected, and it may in the manner by it determined, however, that the constitution, by-laws, rules and regulations, incorporating under the provisions of this act that are in force at the time of its enactment in full force as the constitution, by-laws, rules and regulations of such constitution, therefore or thereafter adopted by it in the manner by it provided, go into effect.
Sec 10. Whenever the charter or warrants a charter or subordinate lodge of the Degree of Honor, Ancient Order of United Workmen or subordinate lodge of the Degree of this act, is taken away, revoked, or surrendered, or such prank lodge or subordinate lodge as the provisions of the constitutions of the governing body of said Degree of Honor, Ancient Order of United Workmen or subordinate lodge of the Degree of such charter or warrant of authority the corporate powers of such grand lodge the corporation, jurisdiction so to take possession, and determine except that such corporation, as such, shall have be shall compel and determine that property, and wind up its business affair. Sec 11. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved Feb. 3, 1906.
CHAPTER F. H. F. NO. 110.
AN ACT to bind and binding of additional copies of the Revised Laws, prepared by the revision motion, and to appropriate money therefore.
It be enacted by the Legislature of the State.
CHAPTER 6-H. F. No. 19.
AN ACT to amend Section 1 of Chapter
10 of the Code of Civil Procedure to
the terms of District Court in the
state of New York.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota: Section 1 of chapter 3 of the General Laws of 1903 be and hereby are amended so as to read as follows: The district court of the First Judicial district of this state shall be held at the In. County of Goodhue, on the second Wednesday in March, and the third Tuesday in April, and the first Tuesday in December in the County of Dakota, on the first Tuesday in June, and the first Tuesday in December in the County of Washington, on the first Tuesday in May, and the third Tuesday in April, and the third Tuesday in June.
Tuesday in April, and the third Tuesday in September, in each year. The first
First Wednesday in October, in each year
in the County of Kannabe, on the third
week of October.
Sec. 2. All writs, processes, recognizances, bonds, orders, continuances and proceeded actions of the county district general term of law is the district court in and for the said counties respectively as fixed by law prior to the effecting action of the court, be deemed as the usurped as, and the same hereby are made and returnable to the proper term of said action, county respectively as prescribed in this act.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Approved Feb. 14.
CHAPTER 10. NO. 11
AN ACT to obtain for obtaining to lands by the several counties of the state, to be used as a site for a court
house, or other public building. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
state of county.
See Section 1.1. Whenever the board of county commissioners of any county in county shall adopt and enter in the minutes of the meeting that it is necessary to acquire for the use of said county any land, describing it, to the extent that it is necessary to other public building or for the purpose already owned by said county, and said board of county commissioners is unable to acquire the price the title to any such land may be acquired by condemnation as hereafter stated.
of all such land and damages for the taking of the same.
Sec. 4. Either party may appeal to the district court from such suit in the form of a written notice from the date of the filing thereof in the office of the clerk, or from the notice of appeal signed by the party claiming the damage, or by the county court of appeal by either party the clerk case of appeal by either party the clerk shall enter the appeal as an action in the county court as plaintiff and the county court as defendant and the county court said appeal shall be tried as other causes in said court are tried that the only question to be submitted to the jury. If the parties do not agree to the question, the court award of the appraisers shall be raised, costs and disbursements from the county, otherwise, such property owner shall pay costs and disbursements from the county, such property owner shall pay costs and disbursements from the county, such property owner shall make, execute and file in the office of the clerk the penal sum of one hundred dollars with sufficient surreies to be approved by the district court such property owner shall prosecute his appeal with effect pay costs and disbursements from the county, and abide the order of the court therein, but on any appeal by it hereunder.
Sec. 6. The award of said appraisal is given on appeal, and the judgment rendered on appeal, and the judgment rendered on claim against said county and shall be therefor, on the warrant of the county auditor without further action by the county, such payment the land involved shall become the absolute property of the county. Sec. 7. When judgment is rendered on appeal, the application, all notices and proof of publication or service thereof, the notice of appeal, the award, the notice of appeal, the judgment, the notice of appeal, the judgment roll to be filed in the office of the clerk. Under the adoption of the resolution mentioned in section 1 of this act, said county by the county hereby authorized to die in the office of the registrar to pendens, which said notice shall contain the names of the parties, the object of the land involved, and it shall have the same effect and may be released in the case for the filing and relief of its pendens in actions afflicting the proprietor of the filing and relief of individuals.
CHAPTER 8-S. F. NO. 71
AN ACT to amend section seven (7) of chapter eighty-three (83) of the General Assembly entitled "An act to provide for the loaning of the permanent school and permanent county, school district, city, town or village of this state, as authorized by section six (6) of article eight (8) of Constitution of the State of Minnesota.
Minnesota for the year one thousand and two hundred and sixty-five aid to counties in the construction of roads and bridges by the legislature of the State of Minnesota; first paragraph of section thirty-nine (39) chapter two hundred and sixty-five aid to counties in the State of Minnesota for the year one thousand nine hundred and three (1933), Sec. 30. That the sum of four hundred (400) dollars is here added to building a road and bridge in the county of Kittson, Swamp, beginning at the southwestern corner of section twenty-nine (29), the corner of section twenty-nine (29) and between sections twenty-nine (29) and section twenty-nine (29), and thirty-three (32) and sections twenty-seven (27) and thirty-four (34), in county fortune forty-five (45).
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and upon its passage
CHAPTER 10-H F No. 257
CHAPTER 14-10 HONOURING AN ANNUAL ELECTION OF VILLAGES incorporated under chapter 146 of the General Laws and chapter 146 of the sale of intoxicating liquors in such villages. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. The village recorder of any village of a village of 46 or more villages, and acts authorizing laws of 2000 indivisions of said chapter, shall, upon the petition of ten (10) legal voters of such days before the annual village election thereof, give notice at the same time and date to the election of the election that the question of granting license in such village for the sale of indivisions determination at such election. At such election, when so petitioned for, said license rate ballot the terms of which shall be determined by the election, which ballots shall be deposited in a separate ballot box to be provided in each voting shall be duly certified, and returned in the same manner and at the other facts and returns of said election.
Sec. 2. If a majority of all the ballots shall be "for license" the village council of said village may grant license for the issuance of a license, the issuing license year, but if such majority shall be "against license" then no such license shall be issued. If a majority shall remain in force until reversed at a subsequent annual election at which the vote is again in like manner substituted.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Approved Feb. 14, 1908.
CHAPTER 11-H. F. No. 212.
AN INDEX OF LAWS (30) of the General Laws of 1903, relating to the issuing of bonds by organized towns for the purpose of building or alding in the building of roads, bridges or town hall.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section one (1), chapter thirty-six (38), of the General Laws of Iowa, laws:
Section 1. Every organized town in this state is hereby authorized to issue its bonds for the purpose of raising money for the construction of a town hall, or any road or bridge within such an incorporated village situated within such organized town by conforming to the laws of the state, or any town hall to be erected under authority of this act shall be of any necessary for the use of said town, or any necessary for the use of more than three thousand dollars ($3,000).
CHAPTER 12-H. F. NO. 203.
AN ACT to legalize the incorporation of certain villages, attempted under chagama, to be landed on sand eight hundred and eighty-nine (1885), and of the several acts enacted to legalize the acts of said villages. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from the 19.10.1966 passage. Approach No. 190.
CHAPTER 12-5. F. NO. 139. AN ACT prescribing the terms of holding the general terms of the district court in the counties of the Seventh judicial
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
State or city.
State or city.
That the general terms of
the district court in and for the Seventh
judicial district.
That the district court at the times and
in the several counties comprising aid
district as follows:
(1) Monday in March and the third (3)
Monday in September in each year.
(4) Monday in February, and the second
(4) Monday in February, and the second
Defective Page
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Approved Feb. 21, 1905.
CHAPTER 14-H. F. NO. 143.
AN ACT to appropriate money to compel the use of cell wing of the state inflammatory.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The sum of thirty thousand six hundred and twenty dollars ($30,200) is hereby appropriated out of any money in the state treasury, not to be used for completing the south cell wing of the state reformation, the same to be immediately available.
Sec. 2. This act shall effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved Fee 50. AN ACT to appropriate money for the state library contingent fund. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state
Section 1. That the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) is hereby appropriated out of any money appropriated for the state library, appropriated for the state library contingent fund to defray the expenses incident to the moving and installation of the state library in its location.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in effect upon its passage.
Approved, Feb. 24, 1955.
CHAPTED 16-H.F.N.382.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
p. 126.
2. This act shall take effect and
implement the passage.
Approved Feb. 27, 1906.
CHAPTER 18—S. F. NO. 113.
AN ACT to enable cities now or hereafter
to divert the course of streams and control
the flow thereafter.
British Legislature of the
Sec. 2. The city council shall by ordinance carry out a survey and map showing the point at which it is proposed to diversify the sites of damming on other controlling works, the lands proposed to be developed, the levels to which it is proposed, the levels to which it is proposed to maintain the waters of any lake, a profile of the route and of the dam, a profile of the proposed new channel, the enlargement, if any, of any existing channel, the enlargement, if any, of any existing channel, and in general, the entire extent and scope of the improvement as nearly as
Sec. 3. The city council may acquire in the name of the city, or devise the lands and the rights necessary to carry out such imposition. The power of eminent domain and the power to levy special assessments to such cities for the purposes of this act, to acquire the lands and rights of any of them, to be exercised as follows:
Sec. 5. The city council shall be ordi-
nance determine and declare as nearly as possible the rights, exclusive of damages to property, and shall appoint five appraisers, who will be qualified voters of the county, and none of whom shall be residents of the town where the property so designated is situated, to appraise the ages which may be occasioned by the taking of private property or otherwise in special cases, and assess special benefits resulting therefrom. Said appraisers shall be notified as soon as the time fixed by him, for the purpose of qualifying and entering upon their property among said appraisers by neglect or refusal of any of them to act or other necessity shall be filed by the city council. See § 6. The appraisers shall be sworn to the same extent as the matter with impartiality and fidelity; and shall be returned of their acts to the city council.
Sec. 10. If there be any buildings standing, in whole or in part, upon any such building, in such case, determine the amount of damages which should be appraised, in such case, case such building, or so much as may be necessary, should be taken, and shall be appraised, in such case, of damages to be paid such owner or person of such building, they shall elect to remove such buildings. Sec. 11. If the land and buildings be subject to lease, mortgage or judgment, or if there be any estate less than the amount to be subject to lease, mortgage or judgment, respectively, may be awarded to them separately, not to such person, or interests, neither such award of the appraisers, nor the confirmation thereof by the city shall be deemed to require the payment of such award, or persons named in such award, in case or persons named in such award, or persons not entitled to
Sec. 12. The said appraisers having ac-
certained and appraised the damages
involved in the breach of the law, shul make and the write the city clerk, a written report of their action in the premises, embracing a schedule and appraisal of the damages, benefits assessed, with descriptions of the lands, and the names of the owners, if known to them, in a statement of
benefits in the proceeding.
MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
Sec. 21. Upon the final determination of the city clerk shall transmit the proceedings of the county or counties in which the city clerk shall transmit the proceedings of the certified of the awards and assessment city council; and the clerk of the district court shall, in like manner, certify the award of the city council's appeals; and the county auditors shall include such assessments assessed, with and as a part of the taxes upon such respective tracts of land in the county, county and state, county and other purposes, and the same proceedings shall be had for the purposes of non-payment, and enforcement of delinquent taxes, such general taxes, including like penalties in case of non-payment, and including enforcement of delinquent taxes, collected, they shall be credited to the city conducting such proceedings, and enforced for use in like manner as other taxes.
Sec. 22. It shall be the duty of such agencies to patch to complete such improvements, unless the proceedings are set aside by the city council. Sec. 23. The city council shall have the same and to prevent injury or objection to construction of such works to maintain the same and to prevent injury or objection to contamination of the waters. And for such purposes, the city council must suitable ordinances and prescribe penalties for their violation, not exceeding a certain amount. Sec. 24. Each offense, or confinement in the city workhouse, not exceeding ninety days, may be punished by a fine and may have jurisdiction of such offenses. Sec. 25. This act shall take effect and be followed in its passage. Approved Feb. 28, 1955.
CHAPTER 19. S.-F. NO. 169. AN ACT to authorize cities of this state to repair row money and issue bonds for the purpose of improving and extending their
means for purifying the water furnished thereby. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. In addition to the rights and powers heretofore conferred by the several cities of this state, there is hereby granted heretofore be organized under or by virtue of which now or shall heretofore own a garrison of water works including its system of water works including its system of water furnished by such system, and the negotiable coupon bonds in the manner provided to an amount not exceeding in the aggregate outstanimated and fifty thousand dollars (dollars of such amount) to
Sec. 3. All elections provided for in this section. All elections provided by law for the holder must be provided by law for the holder. Sec. 4. The ballot to be voted at all elections under this act shall read as follows: "in favor of the proposition of issuing an improvement bonds to the amount of $
"Against the proposition of issuing water works improvement bonds to the
The voters voting in favor of such proposition issuing water works improvement bonds in the words "in favor of the proposition of issuing water works improvement bonds in space provided for that purpose, and those in a cross (x) opposite the words "Against improvement bonds to the amount of improvement bonds provided for that purpose. The voters returned and canvassed in the county as at our certification to the city clerk or record by the canvassing board if a mayor or councilor proposation at such election shall vote in such city shall be deemed to be a unanimous amount proposed, and its common council vote of all members thereof, provide for the provision for a direct amount of city, in addition to all other city taxes, in payment of the interest of bonds when due to the payment of the principal thereof.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Sec. 3. No such city shall be permitted to seize any of its floating inmates for funding of its own floating inmates, such as exists at the date of the passage of the act, or at the time of its establishment, such entity be entitled to avail itself of the provisions of the act within six (6) months from the date of the passage and approval of the act. Any city which has already reached the limit of its bonded or other funds shall be seized.
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
special law of this state applicable
provides of this act shall thereafter
provide provisions of this act which
which shall bear interest, except such
may be in renewal of an obligation now
Section 1. That section 21 of chapter
10 of the General Laws of the State of Minnesota
for the year 1880, entitled
"An Act to establish a probate code,
and to amend the General Laws of the State of Minnesota
of 1884, as amended by chapter 10 of the
General Laws of the State of Minnesota
is amended so as to read as follows, to
Sec. 291. At any time pending the admissibility of a person and after the granting of letters of permission and after the granting of letters of permission interested in the estate may file a petition for the assignment of any person to the persons thereto entitled; and thereupon the executor or administrator of that estate may file a petition for that date, and the court shall by order fix a time for the assignment which order shall be published according to the order.
Upon such hearing the court shall settle and allow such account. If upon examination, the court will determine the rights of all persons to said estate, and unless partition is asked for, the decree in accordance with such deterence shall be made. If the decree distributes such part or portion of said estate, to the court shall seem proper, or, in the discretion of the court, the property law, and which decree shall name the proportions of the estate to which each assigned such decree shall describe near as may be the land to which each
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State Section 1. That the sum of ten thousand ($10,000) dollars be, and the same is to be paid to the State of Minnesota, to school district and to school district school libraries; the same to be available immediately and until the provisions expended and pursuant to the provisions of section 6912 of the General Statutes of 1894, section thirty-seven hundred and eighty-five of the General Laws of 1894 as amended by chapters eighty-five and eighty-six of the General Laws of 1894 and nineteen of General Statutes of 1894.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be enforced after its passage. Approved March 24, 2013.
CHAPTER 22-H, F. P. No. 144
AN ACT to authorize the Board of Counties of the State of Minnesota to bonds to pay for building a Court House
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The board of county commons has entered into a contract prior to Jan. 1, 2016, for the building of money thereafter are hereby authorized and emitted such county at any time prior to the first September of each year. The county will be in charge and manage such money for the coming Quarterly five thousand dollars ($30,000), with interest coupons attached, for the completion of such purpose which may be debented of said county which may be used for other purposes than paying bonds and the proceeds thereof shall be used for other purposes than paying contract or contracts for building a court
Sec. 2. The said bonds be in such manner as shall determine, and shall bear incurred (c) per annum, payable amount (c) per annum, payable amount and payable at such time or times as by resolution determine, not less than from the date of the issuance of said bonds.
Sec. 3. The bonds and the interest
visions of this act, shall be signed by the
missioners and attested by the auditor,
missioners and attested by the auditor,
money payable at the office of the county
bank, and money payable at the office of the county
bank to keep a record of all bonds issued
the record should show the date, number and
amount of each bond, rate of interest,
date of issue, date of issue, where payable and the name of the party
Sec. 4. The board of county commissioners shall waive the issuance of bond levy a tax upon the bonds of the county upon the issuance to all other taxes levied sufficient to the other accruing revenue upon the bonds of the county upon the issuance to all other taxes levied about to become due they shall pay a tax levy a sufficient amount of taxes to pay
Sec. 6. This act shall take effect and be in force from the day of its passage.
March 2, 2000
CHAPTER 24-H. F. NO. 97.
AN ACT to legalize the acts of county
commissioning an indictable
season in the erection of poor
houses in certain cases.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in effect until its passage. May be amended March 2, 1918.
CHAPTER 25-H. F. NO. 123
AN ACT relating to public schools in the District of New York, not more than 50,000 inhabitants, nor more than 50,000 inhabitants. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. School districts now or heretoafter having not less than 10,000 inhabitants, are hereby empowered to annually levy the school tax not exceeding nine mills on the dollars the valuation of all taxable property in the District of New York to the last preceding official assessment.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be
approved on January 2, 1866, in passage.
Approved March 2, 1866.
CHAPTER 29-H, F. NO. 371.
AN 345 of the General Lawes of 1858, being
published in the Journal of the Royal
London, 1858, relating to the passage and pub-
lishment of the Act, be it enacted by the Legislature of
the State of New York.
Section 1. That section 49 of chapter 10 of the General Statutes of 1297, of the General Statutes of 1884, be and the same is hereby amended. Section 49. All ordinances, rules, and regulations of all the members of the village county shall be attested by the recorder, and published once in a newspaper published in said village, then such newspaper published in said village, then such newspaper published in the county in which the village county shall be attested; and if there be a riot, shall be attested; and if there be an affidavit of the printer or foreman in such newspaper or of such posting, with such ordinance or by laws, and noted on the record thereof, and shall be all ordinances shall be entitled, in the county of or — do ordinance as follows: — have the force of law, and remain in force. See 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
AN ACT entitled an act to amend Chap-
pulers' Act an act to the sheriff's
Act an act to the sheriff's
law of prisoners in counties having a
number of prisoners in counties having a
number of prisoners in counties having a
habitats and not more than 150,000
habitats.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section five (5) of chapter one hundred and one (101) of the General Laws of 1903 be amended to read as follows:
Provided that the board of county commissioners agree to contract to the lowest bidder for a search of the prisoners in the county of county commissioners, the county of county commissioners, and all the necessary fuel. However, the short of any such county occupies the sheriff of any county, the sheriff, at the option of said board of county commissioners, and if so directed to said prisoners and board at the sheriff, to search of said prisoner, the county to furnish in said prisoner, the county to equip kitchen and all necessary fuel.
Bec 2. This act shall take effect from
April 20, 2015, to March 2, 1905.
Approved March 2, 1905.
**CHAPTER 28**
**AN 100** Certain cities of the
United States are required to lau-
ten their banks for purposes.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Sec. S. Whenever the council, or other
determines to purchase, erect, extend or
adjust a building, the council must
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of this passage.
Approved March 8, 1995.
reunner.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota.
Section 1. In any case where in an (any) city or village in this state may be held by a chief magistrate or chief executive officer of persons, not less than ten (10), purportors have been appointed and to have acted in the enactment of this state and the hawf of this state enacted thereunder. And such chief magistrate qualified voters of such city or village at the time of the enactment of the qualified voters voting in the act of the enactment in operation in said city or village, and officers have been held and entered upon their duelism and made the lawful city charter of force and effect and to so of like validity as if each city and every and the qualification of the board of freeholders to prepare proposal and lither thereof by said board magistrate the voters of said city and the ratification of said city and the certifying and filing thereof in the office of the secretary of state had in all things
Provided that it said city charter has provided, of the county, a copy thereof, certified to the mayor of said city, in said office within sixty (60) days after the passage not been deposited in the office of the secretary of state, a copy thereof, under said charter, shall be deposited in said office within sixty (60) days after
rights nor actions now pending.
Necessary action to take the state act and be in force upon its passage. Approved March 8, 1900.
CHAPTER 30 - H. F. NO. 100.
AN act to the location, construction and equipment of a state normal school at St. Clare. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. That the sum of fifty thousand dollars is hereby appropriated out of any monies in state treasury. Construction and equipment of a ladies' dormitory at the five thousand dollars thereof to be immediately appropriated thereafter to be available August 1, 1900; that in the construc- tion of control is hereby author- circumstances will permit the equipment shall be under the sole juris- diction and supervision of the state board of control as hereby author- circumstances will permit the equipment shall be as soon after the passage of the control as soon after the passage of the control. See. The said board of control mov- out of said appropriation, acquiring by purchase the land as may be necessary for the proper development of said new building. See. The said board of control mov- out of said appropriation, acquiring by purchase the land as may be necessary for the proper development of said new building. See. This act shall be enacted by the General Statutes of 1884, relating to bishops' memorial of the Legislature Approved March 8, 1900.
CHAPTER 31 - H. F. NO. 42.
AN act to the location, construction and equipment of a state normal school at St. Clare. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. That the sum of fifty thousand dollars is hereby appropriated out of any monies in state treasury. Construction and equipment of a ladies' dormitory at the five thousand dollars thereof to be immediately appropriated thereafter to be available August 1, 1900; that in the construc- tion of control is hereby author- circumstances will permit the equipment shall be under the sole juris- diction and supervision of the state board of control as hereby author- circumstances will permit the equipment shall be as soon after the passage of the control as soon after the passage of the control. See. The said board of control mov- out of said appropriation, acquiring by purchase the land as may be necessary for the proper development of said new building. See. This act shall be enacted by the General Statutes of 1884, relating to bishops' memorial of the Legislature Approved March 8, 1900.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That Section $634 of the General Code of 1884 be amended to read as follows:
Section 1. that a citizen may be given or offered a bribe or any money, property or argument therefor, to a member of the Legislature, member of the Legislature, or attempts, suppression of truth, or other corrupt actions who has been so elected a member, to himself from the house of which he is a member, or from any committee thereof, is punishable by imprisonment for ten years or by a fine of not more than $2,000.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Approved March 8, 1906.
CHAPTER 8-H. F. NO. 82.
AN ACT to amend section 6344 of the General Statutes of the State to require that by members of the legislature or persons elected to member Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. That section 6344 of the General Statutes of the State be amended as so to be:
"Section 6344. A member of either of the states, or any person who has been elected to membership therein, who asks, upon any understanding or action, to be influenced thereby, or shall be given a particular side of any question or matter in his official capacity, or who gives or votes in consideration that another member of the signatory thereof shall give any such vote either upon the same or any other instrument in the state prison not exceeding five thousand dollars, or both."
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in effect from the day of passage. Approved March 9, 1905.
CHAPTER 3—H. F. NO. 118 AN ACT to prevent the careless distribution, drugs, medicines and medical compounds.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Section 1. That no person, or persons, either directly or indirectly, by agent or agent, or indirectly, by agent or agent, away any samples of any medicine, drugs or medical compounds, such as dulmitine or morphine, or into the hands of an adult person, or mailed to such persons through the regulator.
Sec. 2. Ary person violating any pro-
hibition against him, his misdemeanor, and upon conviction there
must be a fine of one hundred ($100) dollars or by imprisonment in the county jail for a term
of five years.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and
be approved on March 16, 1900,
approved March 16, 1900.
CHAPTER 34-S-F, No. 150.
AN General Law of the State of
Missouri for the year 1850, relating to
the Be it enacted by the Legislature of
the State of Missouri.
Section 1. That chapter 355 of the Gen-
ineous Code, and the same is hereby
the year 1886, and the same is hereby
Section 1. Naval militia. There shall
be military forces of the state now authorized
the military forces of the state now known as the
Minnesota Naval Militia.
See, Command.
Commander, in command-in-chief of
the naval militia, except when the ad-
dress of the militia makes and publish through the ad-
dress of the militia the appointment of the naval militia and shall
inform the adress of the militia into full effect the provisions of this act.
"Sec. 3. Organization; battalion. The naval militia shall consist of one battalion not to exceed four divisions (or companies) to be organized with a com-
"Sec. 8. Enlistments. Men between the ages of 18 and 65 shall be mustered in for the term of three years, and must be appointed by a patent authority. Every recruit shall be appointed by a patent authority, which shall be prescribed by the adjuant authority of the state and the United States. 10. Commissioners. Officers shall be commissioned by the governor or appointment subject to such examination as required.
"Sec. I. Examining Board. The governors consist of not less than two or more than militia, one of whom may be an officer shall be to determine the qualifications of into the capability of any subordinate by his superior officer with the approval of
"Sec. 12. Discipline. When not other discipline of the Minnesota naval militia is required, the military code relating to the government and discipline of the national guard requires that the naval forces. The naval forces shall be required to serve for the government of the United States of America, and that the members of the national guard are subject to the terms of war and regulations of the United States of America. "Sec. 13. Annual Cruise. The governor of Minnesota must duty or cruise each year, within or without the state, for such period as he may consider necessary, more than two weeks in any one year.
"Sec. 16. Purchase of Supplies. The commanding officer of the naval militia are here ordered to purchase the clothing which may be necessary for purchasing the clothing, ordinance and other stores for the naval militia, prescribed by the military code for the purchase of stores for the national militia shall perform such other duty as may be prescribed by the military code for the "army," as used in the military code, shall be secured or secured to land, or any boat, boathouser or dock, used for the purpurese of the supplies and guarded units of the national guard are extended to the numbers of
the Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after the passage.
CHAPTER 35-8 F. NO. 2
CHAPTER 35-8. F. NO. 22.
AN ACT to govern the sale of wood alcohol and prescribe penalties for the alcohol thieves.
violation thereof.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of New York:
State of Minnesota
servant or person, by himself, his servant or agent, or as the servant or servant, exchange, deliver or have in his custody or possession, a gift or expire or offer for sale, exchange or delivery, buy a wood alcohol, unless each package, known as a cocktail, shall be plainly marked or labeled on the inside of the oak, cash, can or receipt of the capacity of less than one gallon, primer, and on the outside and face of each package, and on the inside and face of each letter of not more than one gallon or more, in legible letters of not more than one hundred words "wood naphtha," "polson," the provisions of this act shall be deemed guilty of a minderment act and not more than one hundred dollars, for each and not more than one hundred dollars, for each and not more than one hundred dollars, for not less than thirty days, or more than ninety (90)
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from the date of its passage. March 10, 1906.
CHAPTER 30-H. F. NO. 14.
AN ACT to appropriate money to pay for the publication of constitutional law. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Maryland
The sum of ninety-eight
hundred dollars ($8,900), or so much
more than the revenue appropriated
out of any money in the
revenue fund not otherwise
appropriated for the publication
of the synopsis of the proposed
amendment, was $10,000. The
general election in 1904, which
publication is required by law,
is in force from and after its passage
, Approved March 11 1906.
CHAPTER 37—H. F. NO. 151.
AN IV. F. NO. 152 for the posts
of the Grand Army of the Republic
and other associations and organizations
of veteran soldiers
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota
the governor of the state, or any other legal custodian, or this state, or any other legal custodian, or the state, shall have authority, whenever not inconsistent with the provisions of the old capital building or of other public buildings for housing or of other public stated or special meetings or assays of the republic, commanderies of the Loyal Loyal Philippines or Spanish-American wars, and any other post, commandery, camp or any war in which the United States has been the city, town or county in which said building or buildings may be served twenty days written notice, duly served upon the proper officer, the governor or any other legal custodian, or custodians that said building rooms or buildings required to be built in the same be promptly and quietly vacated.
Defective Page
have the equal and free use of all such tensions and upon such conditions as may be present or by and with government, or by and with government, or provided that all reasonable and proper factors are furnished therby in any local post, commodary, or same, for any local post, commodary, or same, for any state or national gath-
Sec. 5. That such quarters shall be occupied by the organization aforesaid which may occupy them under the provisions of this Act, and which such quarters are assigned in heated and lighted at the public expense, paid by the organization, and lighted without cost to said organizations.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be approved in its passage. Approved March 14, 1908.
CHAPTER 38-H. F. NO. 107. AN ACT to provide for the consolidation of the city of Minneapolis and recorded with a cemetery corporation, platted and recorded in the laws of this state, which is continuous, thereto and for the transfer of its property to such cemetery corporation. Belt of Minnesota, the nature of the State of Minnesota, platted and recorded cemetery established, platted and recorded under the laws of this state, and transfer its property for cemetery purposes only, to any cemetery association, and transfer its laws of this state, which is continuous to or adjacent to such cemetery corporation.
To so consolidate and transfer its property it shall be necessary:
and be in force from and after its passage
Approved March 15, 1000.
AN CAC to protect Mongolian, English,
Tibetan, and Mongolian, and Mongolian,
Traggan and Ming-kech or China for
their assistance.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The killing. hunting or purporting to be an international, English, Golden, Reeves, Japanese, or China Tortoise pheasant in any one or attempting to kill the same at any time, or attempting to hunt the same, hibited and made unlawful. provisions of this act shall be punished by the provisions of this act shall be punished by the fine of not less than twenty (20) dollars and by the fine of not less than twenty (20) dollars for each and every pheasant so killed, and in default of payment of such fine, and in default of payment of such fine, a period not exceeding sixty (60) days. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and, in accordance with this passage, approved March 16, 1988.
CHAPTER 40-H. F. NO. 202.
AN ACT forbidding any person or company profit unauthorized or undedicated unpublished or undedicated prohibiting any person or company or corporation from selling a copy or sub- or supplementary copy of dedicated or copyrighted opera or musical the author or proprietor, and providing
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section I. Any person, company or corporation publicly performed, or presented for profit, any unpublished or undecided position known as an opera, without the knowledge of such person, who knowing that such dramatic or musical composition is intended to consent of its owner or proprietor permitting its representation, or any person, company or corporation, for the purpose of a public copy, of any unpublished, undecided or copyrighted dramatic composition written or written consent of the person, company or corporation, for the purpose of a musical composition, shall be guilty of a
See. 2. This act shall take effect and be in effect until the passage. May 15, 1969
CHAPTER 41-H. F. NO. 247.
AN ACT prescribing the times of holding court in the ninth (j) judicial district.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. That the general term of the Act shall be held at the times and in the seven districts in the State of Minnesota shall be held at the times and in the seven counties of the County of Redwood, on the third (3rd) Tuesday in April, and on the first (1st) Wednesday after the first Monday of April.
In the County of Nicollet on the first Tuesday in May and on the last Friday (Grd)
solution to the
Bailout by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
scribe any of such articles to any one or any preparation or compound thereof in any form, shall be paid for in not form, but more than $100 or by imprisonment in the more than $100 penalty, and shall be a licensed physician, qualified to administer the provisions added to the sensory ability described such offender's license shall be provoked. A violation of the provisions of this act, or a violation of the provisions of this act, the offence is alleged to have been committed shall prosecute such complaint to examine the books of any manufacturer the purposes of which the racing of any manufacturer is being mentioned.
Sec. 4. All fines collected under the
Act are to be paid to the Minnesota state board of pharmacy.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be
in effect from 1 L. 1906 to 15
Approved March 15, 1906.
CHAPTER 43-S. F. NO. 818
AN ACT to amend section 4068 and
General Statutes of 1884 relating to con-
demation of land for the use of the
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section one (1) of chapter 10 of the Constitution hundred and three (100) be and the same is hereby amended—"Section 1." The general terms of the district district in and for the counties of shall be held in said counties as follows: In the County of Dodge on the first Tuesday of each year. In the County of Dodge on the first Tuesday in May and the second Tuesday after the first Monday in November of each
in force from and after his passage.
Approved March 16, 1955.
CHAPTER 45-8. F. NO. 888.
AN ACT fixes the times for holding the county courts and the several counties of the Eighteenth judicial district, and relating to draw-
ings of the county courts.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. The general terms of the district court in the several counties of the Eighteenth judicial district of this state shall be held each year as follows: In the county of Anoka on the third Monday in March, and the second Monday in October, in the county of Isanti on the third
Monday in April, and the fourth Monday in June. In the county of Sberburna on the second Monday in November, and the fourth Monday in November, and the first Monday in June and the first Monday in June.
Provided that no grand or pet jury unfair term to be held on the third Monday in June shall be held on the third Monday in June shall no direct by a written order made and filed with the clerk weekly (20) days before the holding of said term of court. Consistent with this act are hereby consistent with this act are hereby required. Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be amended in accordance with April 24, 1950. Approved March 16, 1950.
CHAPTER 40-S. F. NO. 203. AN ACT to authorize the two extensions of two or more incorporated villages are included Be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. That whenever two or more incorporated villages are included in a school district which includes less than twelve sections of land the boundaries include not less than twelve sections of land
Sec. 2. Whenever two-thirds of the legal voters residing in the county vote to board the county commissioners of the county where they live, the county commissioners of such district, and shall tie the said board to the duty of the board of county commissioners, at its next regular meeting for a hearing upon it, and shall cause a copy of a notice of such district to be placed in each district to be affected by such service served upon the clerk or each of such districts at least ten days before the posting of such copy of notice shall be posted in each district, and the same, which said affidavit shall state the time and place of posting upon the clerk of each district shall be verified by the certificate of the county
Sec. 8. Upon ding proof of the posthumous death of county commissioners shall at the commissioners' discretion consideration of such matter, and shall, in consultation with the commissioners, leading to what testified the commissioner, and having heard the evidence, shall process such evidence for in section one (1) of this act, to all remaining school districts thereby affect any district to or from any of such district in such manner as the persons and districts thereby affected
Sec. 6. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage Approved March 16, 1900 CHANNEL 10. NO. 93. CHANNEL 10. Provides interpreters at all hearings of deaf and dumb persons It be enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That at all hearings and examinations held for the purposes of the case are deaf and dumb, or either, are inanate, are deaf and dumb, or either, are inanate, are deaf and dumb, or every such deaf and dumb, or deaf and dumb, or unable to read and write shall as a matter of absolute right be examined in the examinations he is charged with to him and his answers by the sign language, and the examinations proposed to him at such hearing, and in the event such person requests such request or demand, for such interment or other officer before whom such examination is held, to provide such person with the superintendent of the Minnesota state school, and to retain such interpreter at all times during interment or superintendent of such interpreter shall be paid by the county school board, held, and shall be a charge thereon.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. **ACT CHARTER 48-5. F. NO. 50.** **N ACT TO actuate section 2717 of chapter 26, of the General Statutes of Minnesota for 1884, relating to notices**
So it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Approved March 18, 1905.
CHAPTER 49-H. F. No. 168.
AN act to annuity安全 deposit and trust companies and trust companies by the Legislature of the State of Wisconsin.
Section 1. All securities, money, and receipts, statements, records and all receipts relating thereto which have been received by the state auditor pursuant to the order of the state auditor of Minnesota, and trust companies, shall upon the passage and approval of this act, be transcribed and conveyed to the state auditor of Minnesota, and it shall be his duty to keep the safe. The state auditor shall authorized and directed to make all assignments and conveyances to the state auditor to complete a transfer of the securities, as
sec. This act shall take effect and be
secured in the passage.
Approved March 21, 1903.
CHAPTER 51-S. F. NO. 52
of the county commissioners in county hav-
tens, and of county commissioners in county
havens, and of county commissioners in
five thousand (75,000) inhabitants, now
three indexes to have such third
indexes to have such third
indexes to have such third
back, and to provide payment
back, and to provide payment
legislature of the State of Minnesota.
Section 1. That in counties having a
banking institution (5,000,000) subbanking, pww, baving
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
tract indexes, to have such tract indexes in the records, and to record the records, and checked back, whenever necessary thereto appears. (One) of this act shall be performed under the authority of the county. The person or persons performing the work shall receive two (2) cents for each description receiving two (2) cents for each description received by the original records. Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be approved March 21, 1955. Approved March 21, 1955.
CHAPTER 52-8. F. NO. 66.
AN ACT to amend section two hundred
(1) of the Constitution of Minnesota for
the year (S) of the Statutes of Minnesota for
ninety-four (1984), relating to the
Bc it enacted by the Legislature of the
Bc it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That section two hundred and twenty (220), of the chapter, contains the status of this state for the year one thousand eight hundred and sixty-one; so hereby amended so as to read as follows: The senate shall thereon, if a quorum is present, proceed to elect, in order to elect a senator and an secretary, an enrolling clerk, an engressing clerk and a sergeant-at-arms, and during the session at which they are elected, but may be discharged by a resso-
Sec. 2. This act snake take effect and
provides that the law enforce its passage,
provides that the provision shall
shall not apply to offenses committed
such offenses the law in force at the
time they were force the law continue
such offenses the law force the same as if this
act had not been passed.
Approved March 21, 1905.
CHAPTER 44-S. F. NO. 228
AN. AC. VOL. 101
common-handle
the crimes of the
common-handle
liquor selling without
license.
it be enacted by the Legislature of the
state.
Section 1. Any person who shall in any one county of the state of the offence of selling, marketing or disposing of in any manner, or intoxicating liquor in a less than two years immediately preceding the commencement of the provisions of this act, shall be deemed guilty of the offence of selling without license, and upon conviction of the offence of selling without license, shall be deemed guilty for not to exceed three years.
Sec. 2. In all prescriptions, date of the last conviction of such selling, date of the last conviction of such selling, date of the date of the commission of the offense without license, charged against such selling without license, charged against such selling without license.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of this passage.
Approved March 21, 1955.
CHAPTER 15-5-8. F. NO. 205.
AN ACT to amend the general terms of the district court
the general terms of the district court
indictal district in the State of Minnesota.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. The general terms of the district court in and for the County and the county office in Minnesota, shall he hold upon the fourth (Gh) Monday in October in the next year. All acts or parts of acts inconsistent with this act are hereby repealed. Sec. 3. This act shall take effect on January 1, 1906, in the passage. Approved March 21, 1906.
CHAPTER 5S–S. F. NO. 342 AN ACT to prevent the capture or mote of a person providing a penalty for its violation. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. No person shall take, capture, move, mount, or dismount a vehicle or horse, or horning or carriage pigment if it have the name of its owner and the name of its registrar or other distinguishing mark; nor shall any person remove any such distinguishing mark from the vehicle. See 2. No person shall violate any provision of this act shall be guilty
Sec. 3-This act shall take effect and
be amended as described in passage.
Approved March 24, 1956.
CHAPTER 57-8- F. NO. 77.
AN ACT to amend section 27 of Chapter
Minnesota for the year 1888, entitled
as amended and modified by section 49
of the Minnesota Code, to the
State of Minnesota for the year
1888, entitled An Act to Confirm the
Minnesota Hospital for the Inane,
the Minnesota Hospitals for the Inane,
the Management and Supervision Ther-
apy, the Licensing and Supervision
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota.
Section 1. That section 271 of chapter 10 of the Minnesota for the year 1889, entitled "An Act to Establish a Probate Code as to the Chapter 6 of the General Laws of the Minnesota for the year 1889, entitled 'An Act to Confirm the Location and Establishment of the Minnesota Hospital and the Court of Appeals, and the Licensing and Supervision of All Other Hospitals for the Inpatient so as to real as follows: the probate or court commissioner shall allow the following fees for services provide for in them. To the examiners in lunacy, for every every mile traveled by each of them in the county and to the family physician or examiner filed in section 22 of chapter 6) the sum of five dollars. The probate code to convey an insane person to a state hospital, or to the county physician, for every dollar per day for the time necessary employed and all necessary disbursements himself, the insane person and authorized
Sec. 2. All acts and parts of acts in-
creases the provisions of this act are
harmfully repeated.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and impose the penalties in its passage. Approved March 28, 1955.
CHAPTER 88-S. F. NO. 112 AN ACT to authorize cities in state to issue bonds of $10,000 for each of fifty thousand (20,000) inhabitants or over to issue bonds in aid of certain bonds. It be enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York that any city in this state now Section 1. Any city in this state now
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota
away, transfers, sells cells, barters, gives
away, delivers, transfers or sells licenses
to assesses for the purpose of selling, giving away, bar-
tering, disposing of any spirituous, malt,
fermented or alcohol license therefor agree-
able to the license holder shall be guilty of a
misdemeanor, and shall, upon confection
of the same, be punished by a fine of
more than five hundred dollars, together
with the prisonment in the county jail not less
than five days; provided that the provision of
this second fine so construed to prohibit any regu-
lar from disposing liquors in filling prescri-
pioned cells, is not licensed physician in the practice
See 2. When complaint is made, on the warrant warrants in criminal cases, that warrants are warranted in criminal cases, that are known, and that his possession for the purpose of selling, giving away, bartering, or disposing of, any spirituals, malt, fermented wine, or obtained license thereof agree to the law of this state, such magistrate, if he causes for such bachelor and a search of spirituals, malt, fermented or vowen spirits, malt, fermented or vowen spirits, the same, when found, before such magistrate, preliminary, hearing and trial of such person as may be accused of having the same, when found, before such magistrate, preliminary, hearing and trial of such person in whose possession it was found. 3. The finding of any such spirits, malt, fermented or vowen liquors means of search warrant or otherwise, be prince cause of action that such person may be called upon, selling, bartering, giving wise disposing of the same without first the laws of this state, and no curried of the possession, but explained by the accused in his defense.
Sec. 4. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent here are hereby repeated. Sec. 5. This act shall apply only in those cases where 75,000 and less than 100,000 inhabitants
Sec. 6. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
CHAPTER 60-H F NO. 52
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That sections twenty-four and seventy-one of the General Laws of one thousand eight hundred and seventy-eight (1878), (1879), (1882) and fifteen hundred thirty-four (1894) respectively of the General Statutes of 1822 and 1823, hereby amended so as to read as follows:
Section 28. To secure the payment of the bank stock or banking capital, every bank and banking any dividend, deduct from the annual earnings of the bank such amount as may be required by law or by bank or mortgage loan company or bank or mortgage loan company authorized to charge the amount of such taxable income or mortgage loan company. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be amended by the passage of Approved March 28, 1906.
CHAPTER H. H.-F. P. NO. 28. ANGLE of deeds of each county to make the estate security, and fixing his estate security, and fixing his comp. be it enacted by the Legislature of the State it hereby made the duty
of the registrar of deeds of each county may be required to mortgage or other real estate securities held, owned, or controlled by the rest of the county, and the owners or agents, alphabetically arranged, and the amount on each such list according to the records of such list according to the records of the auditor or on before the last Thursday of April in each year. The county may prepare of preparing such list in each county shall be paid by the county on allowance by the county comp
Sec 3. All laws of the State of Minnesota, general or special, in so far as inconsistent herewith, are hereby repealed.
Section 4. This act shall take effect and
pass. Section 5. The act shall take effect and
pass. Approved March 23, 1995.
AN ACT to authorize boards of county commissioners, city or village council or trustees to erect fixed bridges or to construct a stream runs on certain conditions.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section I. Whenever in the opinion of the county or supervise of any town, or county or supervise of any city, village or cottage or county of any city, village, for the purpose of accommodating, for the purpose of accommodating over any river or waterway within their portions of which river or waterway lies within the limits of the state, erection of a ferry bridge over the river, or a bridge over the river above the ordinary high water stage, such waterway and the clear width of such waterway, the date the ordinary navigation of such location and plans thereof are submitted to and approved by the chief of enforcing war, or war, before construction is commenced.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage
.Approved March 23, 1905.
CHAPTER 64-6- H. F. NO. 168
AN AYAN organization buys the purpose of building roads and bridges and purchase of material and apparatus there.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
No town shall issue or sell its bonds unless the bonded indebtedness thereof shall at any time be less than 10 per cent) of the assessed valuation of the bonds, or the assessed valuation of the bonds dictated by the last preceding assess-
Defective Page
Approved March 23. 1908.
equal to the amount of principal and interest in the discretion of said board of superintendent, not exceeding fifteen per cent (15 per cent) of such maturing bonds and interest in money and shall constitute a fund for payment of said bonds or interest thereon.
Sec. 9. All acts and part(s) of acts inconsistent with this act are hereby re-
Sea 10. This act shall take effect and be in effect upon passage. Approved March 28, 1956.
CHAPTER 65-H, F. NO. 117
ACT TO authorize the county commissioners to issue bonds for the purposes refunded bonded and floating indebted bonds.
edifice or subdivision
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
state to promote
Section 1. The county commissioners of any county in this state should have issued for any purpose authorized to sell, buy, or deliver to purchasers fully sold and delivered to purchasers 1st of the year A. D. nineteen hundred and six (190) after maturation the hold, and while said bonds are valid and existing indebtures are issue and negotiate new indebtedness and for the amount of any floating indebtedness against such floating indebtedness. Provided that indebtedness shall not be made payable more than the amount issued, and shall not draw a higher rate of interest than the bonded indebtedness.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
improve the provisions of its passage
Approved March 28, 1905.
CHAPTER 66—H. F. NO. 183
AN ACT to amend section 1522 of the *Laws* of the State of New York, the chapter 150 of the *General Law* of 1899, the chapter 150 of the *General Law* of 1899, relating to the width of public buildings, and the chapter 150 of the *Legislature* of the State of New York, be enacted by the Legislature of the State of New York.
CHAPTER 67-H. F. NO. 278.
Sec. 2. This act shall not affect any act of the State in connection with pending. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. CHAPTER 68—I. P. NO. 655. AN ACT to appropriate money to pay Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Section I. There is hereby appropriated out of any moneys in the account not otherwise w appropriated, nor not otherwise w appropriated, the sum of twenty-four thousand and six hundred and sixty as may be necessary to pay the premium due on insurance April 1, 1903, and other benefits and other benefits belonging to you.
Sec. Z. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved March 28, 1955.
CHAPTER 60-H. F. NO. 200.
AN ACT to amend an act entitled "an
hundred and fifty-eight (158) of chapter
eleven (11) of the General Statutes
to four (4) of chapter eleven (11) of
to-four (4) of chapter eleven (11) of
per cent for state, county and other
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
For township purposes, such sum as may be required by the rate of which shall not exceed two mills in any township having a taxable valuation of one hundred thousand dollars or more, and the amount of which shall not exceed fifteen mills in any township having a taxable valuation of less than one hundred thousand dollars or more, and the amount of which last mentioned shall not exceed one-half tax paid per mill. A taxation to the foregoing, in each township and town meeting for the support of the poor, and for the support of the bridge and town meeting for the support of the poor, is provided that the rate of taxation in any road or bridge shall not exceed fifteen mills per dollar, and the tax for poor purposes shall not exceed fifteen mills per dollar. For school district purposes, in addition to the general tax of one mill such sum as may be required by the legal meeting for the qualified voters of the district, the rate of which shall not exceed fifteen mills, for the
support of the school, or one per cent. Provided, that the aforementioned limitation shall not be imposed on property adjacent to improvements made in any city or incorporated in paying the cost thereof and the damages occasioned thereon; and that nothing shall prevent the county commissioners, township (supervisors, or corporate) or school district from levying any tax which by any special law they may be authorized to
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be administered in passage. Approved March 28, 1956.
CHAPTER 70-H. F. NO. 108. AN ACT for an act providing for the establishment of a town overseers at annual town meetings. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
Section 1. That at the annual town meeting, all members of the overseer of highways is elected for each road district, the electors shall be as follows. The qualified electors from each separate meeting shall elect, by ballot, a highway residing in any other road district than the one in which they are elected. The electors shall take part in such ballot. The electors of any road district as such is elected for any road district as such is first elected following such town meeting, shall appoint following such town meeting, or which no overseer was elected. 2. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions hereof are elected.
Sec. 3. That upon receipt of a re-majority of them that the money has been paid to county commissioners or a majority of county commissioners or a majority of their favor on the state taxation bill, they must pay for the cost of such repairs, not exceeding the amount upon pay such money to such commis-
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. 5. The act shall be amended by the CHAPTER 72-H, F. NO. 81. AN ACT to prohibit the furnishing of intoxicating liquors to prisoners and to prohibit the institutions of the State of Minnesota.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. It shall be unlawful for any person to sell grain, wheat, or other directly or indirectly, or by agent, employ or otherwise, or fermented liquers in any quantity or for any purpose whatever to any person in this state during the term of his holding of this provision of this section shall be guilty of punishing by fine of not less than twenty-pounders by fine of not less than thirty nor more than ninety dollars and costs of prosecution, not less than thirty nor more than ninety dollars, not exceeding ninety days, not exceeding ninety days, not exceeding ninety days, to persons who have no knowledge that the person procuring such liquers is such person. This act shall take effect and be imputed to the person. Approved March 24, 1900.
CHAPTER 73-S. F. NO. 106.
The person must real estate entered and recorded under five provisions of chapter 60. General laws governing real estate entered and recorded under prima facie evidence under
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That where decrees of heirship to real estate in the State of Minnesota were made in the State, under the provisions of chapter 50 of the General Laws of the State, the records of said courts and entered in the records of said courts and the offices of the register of deeds as provided by said chapter, prior to the repeal of the records thereof, and certified copies of the records thereof, and certified copies of the records shall be taken and held in the records, shall be taken and held in the decrees in this state, in respect to the succession of the deceased, as prima facie evidence of all the facts found in said decrees.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be enforced in the passage.
Approved March 24, 1905.
CHAPTER 74-S. F. NO. 158
Section 1. That section one thousand and one hundred states of the year eight hundred ninety-four (1894) be and the states is hereby amended to read as follows:
Section 1228. Treasurer to make and publish or post annual statement.
Section 1. Any educational institution
in possession of any law or laws of the State of Minnesota
or Territory of Minnesota, is hereby
receive and enjoy all property and money
received by the institution, and will
after be given, bequeathed, devised, con-
signed, and enjoy the profits, rents and in-
come therefrom notwithstanding any
other conditions set forth in the
under which said educational institutions
were incorporated or any amendments
Sec. 1. Not to or parts of acts incons-
tinent to the provisions of Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and
passage. Approved March 24, 1958.
CHAPTER 76-5 - F. NO. 238.
AN ACT legalizing school bonds here-
sound.
school buildings and additions to
graded school houses under the pro-
cedures set forth in this chapter.
Laws of the state of Minnesota for the year 1883, and acts amiciary thereof. The State of Minnesota: a state of school bonds heretofore voted upon by any city for graded school buildings and additions to graded school buildings, and provisions of chapter 20 of the General Laws of the state of Minnesota for the year ninety-three (1883), as amended by chapter 20 of the General Laws of the state of Minnesota for the year one thousand and hundred and sixty-one (1883), as amended by declared to be, when issued and sold, providing that the proposition to issue laws of the state of Minnesota provided further, that all other requirements of law have fully compiled
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be
approved on January 21, 2004, passage.
Approved March 21, 1900.
CHAPTER 77- S- F. NO. 284.
AN ACT to provide upon cities for high school
houses under the provisions of chapter
77- S- F. NO. 284.
State of Minnesota for the year 1983.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That all school bonds hereafter held upon and by law for high school students in the provisions of the chapter 24 of the provisions of the chapter 24 of Minnesota for the year one thousand eight hundred and ninety-three (JS8), as amended, of the State of Minnesota for the laws of the State of Minnesota for the ninety-five (JS8), and other acts amendments when issued and sold, legal and binding proposition to issue said bonds received proposition to issue said bonds received proposition upon the provisions of all votes cast upon the proposition to issue said bonds voted upon; and provided that all other requirements of law have been
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be passed. Approved March 21, 2000.
CHAPTER 10-8 - F. NO. 114.
AN ACT to appoint a commission to in-
firmability of establishing a state hospital
indigent in Rancho Santa Margarita and deformed
in Rancho Santa Margarita. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State. Section 1. That Arthur J. Gillette, a
appointed and commissioned to invest
gate the advisability of establishing in
the internal management and control
university, for the treatment, care and
education, not mentally diseased, who are indigent. This should commission deem it advisable for the state to establish
duty to ascertain what location in Rancho
county. Minnesota would be most
would be most suitable for such hospital,
a full report of the commission should
act this to the legislature of this state
Sec. 7. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
Approved March 25. 1905.
CHAPTER 70-H. F. P. NO. 001. AN INFORMATION BOARD of the board of control of any county and to authorize any such board or hospital physician appointed by 18. CALIFORNIA. Legislature of the State of Minnesota. The board of control of any county in this state shall be $500 per annum; and the salary of the almshouse and hospital not exceeding $10,000 per annum, as the board may deem proper. The salaries out of the funds appropriated on account of the funds appropriated on account for the maintenance of the board.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
impose the following provisions in its
approved March 25, 1962.
CHAPTER 80—H. F. NO. 194.
AN Act to establish the county road and bridge fund, and to provide for the construction of chapter 257 of the General Laws of
Baltimore. It be enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Maryland.
Sec. 4. All appropriations hereafter not exceeding, not exceeding the sum of three hundred, hundred, not exceeding the sum of three hundred, or repair of roads and bridges or construction of roads and bridges or be expended under the county authority, or the town receiving such appropriation provided that no part of such appropriation or supervision of supervision or care or in part of supervision or care or in part of work for which such appropriation shall
Bec. 6. S. Section one (1) and section two (2) Laws of 1895 and all acts or parts of the Laws of 1895 by repealed, by repealed, by repealed, by act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved March 27, 1906.
CHAPTER 18-1-H. P. NO. 249 of the Laws of 1895 all clerk to judges of probate in cer- be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That in all cases whereby reason no allowance for clergi hire is made to the judge of probate of any county, such county, may by resolution allow such county, may by resolution allow a sum not exceeding nine hundred (000) dollars as the salary of the judge.
Sec. 2. This act shall only apply to the General Laws of Minnesota. Sec. 3. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed. Sec. 4. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed. In force from and after its passage. Approved March 30, 1906.
CHAPTER 82-H. F. NO. 144, of chapter 83 of the General Laws of Minnesota. §83 of the General Laws of Minnesota. The act entitled an act to provide for the
preservation of forests of this state and for the prevention and suppression of forest and prairie fires."
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section i. That section eight (5) of chapter three hundred and sixty-three (363) of the General Laws of 1803, and the same is hereby amended to read
Sec. 6. Each fire warden shall be paid $22.00 dollars per day, and each employee or patrol at the rate of one and fifty cents dollars per day, and each employee unless directed by the chief fire warden Unless directed by the chief fire warden must then steal (52) and no employee more than ten days in one calendar month. One calendar month for use of team when plowing for the county in which the section shall be paid authorized by this section shall be paid out of the state treasury on daily write-offs. The county warden; and one-half (52) the amount warden; and one-half (52) the amount county in which the expense occurred. The state auditor shall notify the proper county that has become due from his county county auditor and one-half (52) the amount county auditor shall immediately draw and transmit to the state auditor the amount county auditor shall immediately draw and transmit to the state auditor the amount county in favor of the state for such amount. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be approved March 30, 1906. CHAPTER 38 - H. F. NO. 22. AN act granting a grant by the Congress to state Min. purposes certain lands for forestry Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota:
hereby accepts the grant by congress
and hereby accepts the grant by congress
certain public and within state said for
congress approved April twenty-second (S2),
nineteen hundred and fourteen (S1),
nineteen hundred and fourteen (S1),
be in force from and after its passage
and effect and in force from and after its passage
CHAPTER 84-H. F. NO. 330.
AN ACT entitled "an act" to authorize county auditors in this state to give certain things as are provided for in chapter 18 of the Code, as are provided for in chapter 1901, and as amended by the 38 in the Laws of Minnesota for the year 2015. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That in all cases in this state where proceeding with the petition of the Laws of Minnesota for 1901, as amended by section 6 of chapter 13, the year 1902, and acts amendably thereof, for the petition of the notice of the pendency of the petition and all other notice of the filing of the order of the board of county commissioners for 1901, and acts amendably thereof, have all been given taken from said order, and the contract be let, the county auditor of the county in which such contract was authorized and empowered and it is hereby authorized and let the contract to give notice of the letting of the land to the owner in section 13, chapter 288. Laws of Minnesota for the year 1902, and acts amendably shall be completed, and said contracts shall be completed, and said contracts shall be completed the time for the completion of such contracts when the party to the petition of the notice of the filing apply to him in writing, setting forth such extension.
Sec. 2. Said county auditor and the county have power to do and perform all things necessary to have power to do and perform all things conditions and provisions as are provided and all subsequent proceedings in relation to them and all subsequent proceedings in relation for in chapter 285 Laws of Minnesota; chapter 384 Laws of Minnesota; chapter 384 Laws of Minnesota; the provisions of said chapter 285 and 88 and they are hereby made a part of the provisions of said chapter 285.
Sec. 3. All such proceedings in laying
the case shall be made in the course
such ditch may be hereby legalized,
provided, that this act shall not apply
to the courts of any state in any
countries of the route of the ditch.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and
improve the provisions of its passage.
improved March 30, 2005.
CHAPTER 61 S F NO 76
CHAPTER 14
Section 19 of chapter 3 of the General Laws of the State of New York, section 345 of Statutes of 1884, as amended by Chapter 346 of Statutes of 1884, the same being "an act to confirm the location of the hospital, and to provide for the care, and to provide for the hospital and supervision thereof, and the licensing and supervision of all other
hospitals for the insane Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. That section 10 of chapter
Minnesota for 1586, being section 340 of
the Statutes of the State of
Minnesota for 1586, being section 340 of
the General Laws of 1885,
and the same is hereby amended as so to
become.
At its reception by him the duplicate warrant and certified copy of the jury's certificate shall be filed in the office of the superintendent and the original, with
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
CHAPTER 86—S. F. NO. 222
AN ACT to amend section one thousand five hundred and thirty-seven (1857), of the Constitution, and ninety-four (1894), as amended by chapter two forty-four (246), of the Constitution, and three (1003), relating to taxation. By the Legislature of the State of New York.
Section 13. This section one thousand and seventy-three, the General Statutes of eighteen hundred and seventy-three, the General Statutes of eighteen hundred and forty-seven, the chapter two hundred and forty-seven, the chapter three hundred and forty-seven, be, and the same is hereby three (1003), be, and the same is hereby three (1003).
AN ACT to provide for placing questions relating to the adoption of a city charter to the constitution of the position for the issuance of bonds, to the adoption of a city charter in pursuance of section 38 of article IV. of the Constitution of Minnesota to be amended by the Legislature of the State be charged by the Legislature of the State.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Sec. 2. All acts or part of acts inconnue with this act are hereby regulated.
Dec. 3. This act shall take effect and issue June 14, 1906. Approved March 30, 1906.
CHAPTER 88-S. P. NO. 291. ACT to amend section 28 of chapter 1906 titled "An act to appropriate money held in buildings and constructing land in building bridges and constructing roads, or other improvements as the case may be, in certain counties and areas hereof heretofore made, and giving certificates of indebtedness, or issue certificates of indebtedness."
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section 26 of chapter
200 of the General Laws of 1903, be
added to the table.
---
Sec. 2. Nothing in this act contained in any of the provisions pending in any court of this state. Nothing in this act contained in any court of this state. Be in force from and after its effect and Approved March 20, 1900. AN ACT to amend section 6788 of change section 6788 to section 486 of the penal code of the State of Minnesota, relating to Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota.
Section 1. That section 678 of chapter 5 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for 981 cases, relates to crimes against property, being section 488 of the penal code, be amended so as to read as follows: Section 6788. A person who, not being a defendant, willfully injures, disfigures, restores, work of art, or useful or ornamental improvement, or any shade tree upon private ground or upon a street, shall be parked in a place, or who infiltrates or removes from any grave in a cemetery any flowering plant, or other thing connected with them, or to any monument, grave stone, tree or shrub on any cemetery grounds, is guilty Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be amended to the passage Approved March 29, 1968.
CHAPTER 91-S F NO.15
AN ACT entitled an act to amend chapter 225 of the General Laws of 1988, entitlement 225 of the General Laws of 1988, entitlement 225 of the General Laws of 1988, sell their bonds for acquisition of lands and relating to expenditures for park and relating to expenditures for park and applying April 17th, 1988, such as:
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That chapter 235 of the General Assembly of cities over fifty thousand inhabitants to issue and sell their bonds payway parkways, and relating to expropriation by such cities. * approved April 1, 1950, by adding at the end ofSEC 1950 an amended by adding at the end ofSEC 1950 a revised SEC 1950 to wit: "The bonds authorized to be issued under the SEC 1950 are all outstanding bonded indebtedness such city, exclusive of all outstanding municipal revolving fund, and exclusive of all municipal construction, extension or improvement of its water works and lightning circuit for city purposes of general taxation, as within the limit of bonded assessment, but within the limit of bonded assessment, the bonds authorized by this act, in sum or sums as its common council may amend the section two of this act, provided the total amount of one hundred thousand dollars. The bonds authorized by this act shall not exceed the amount of one hundred thousand dollars. and be in force until the time of its passage. APPROVED January 24, 1950."
**APPROVED HI-2- H. F. NO. 164.**
**AN ACT to amend section fifteen (15) of the General Law of the Law of the United States to the time for holding primary elections.**
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota: fifteen (15) of chapter three hundred and forty-nine (349) of the General laws of one thousand eight hundred and ninety-one (1498) of the General laws of the United States.
No adjournment or intermission whatsoever shall take place until the poll shall be completed. If the result public announced; but this shall not be deemed to prevent any temporary delay, provided the board shall remain in session and that no more than one day at any time be absent from the polling. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and pass. Approved March 31, 1906.
CHAPTER 8—H. F. NO. 244.
AN ACT entitled an authorizing the formation of corporations to loan money to farmers on farm lands, and to issue and be it enacted by the Legislature of the Section 1. Any three or more persons may form a corporation to purify the soil.
gages on improved farm lands, and of
their own, and negotiating its debentures thereon;
executing all contracts, inimbursable
necessary to the transaction of such bu-
stuance.
Sec. 2. Such corporation shall have a
securities license (the amount of $100,000) and the word "debenture" shall be a part of its corporation.
Sec. 3. Before the execution of the corporation, its proposed name shall be sub-
mitted to the board of directors to compare it with those of corporations operating in this state, and if it is likely that the corporation will confuse the public as to the character of its business, or is obtusely unaware of its business, it shall be submitted until a satisfactory one is selected, issue his certificate of approval thereof.
Sec. 4. Within ninety days after the commencement thereof, a certified copy of the same certificate of approval shall be filed on the mortgage loan first upon the land described therein, the major portion of which land shall be used for farming purposes; and worth at least twice the amount of the mortgage taken.
Sec. 5. Such corporation may issue and negotiate its debentures in the following
Sec. 8. All payments of principal on mortgages made during any quarter year shall be made during any quarter year shall be before the tenth day of the following quarter year. The examiner, who report shall show what reinvestments have been made by the mortgagee, be made of the payment and discharge of the aggregate of the mortgages securing the aggregate of the mortgages securing the time exceed more than ten per cent of the time exceed more than ten per cent of the poration may retain from any payments on the principal of any such mortgages
Sec. 17. In case default shall be made to the reponser on any mortgage securing any interest due on any mortgage securing any security days, such fact shall thereupon be reported to the public under penalty of imprisonment, and the amount removed within thirty days thereafter, the amount so included in the reponser's service fund, and mortgages or cash be returned to the reserve fund or the amount so in default, shall be transferred from the reserve fund to the depository of funds in the reserve fund surmounting the amount being taken from any funds belonging to such corporation. Such depository fund shall be treated as a payment governed by the provisions of section VII, concerning reinvestment of funds.
Sec. 18. Such corporation may purchase, acquire, or mortgage buildings or mortgages owned by it or held by it in judgment or decrees in its favor or in judgment or decrees in its favor in exchange as a part of the consideration for the purchase of such real estate shall be carried upon the books of the corporation at a greater sum than the amount of the consideration acquired by such corporation shall be acquired, unless the time is extended for the completion of the agreement, the board of directors, Provided, however, that such corporation may acquire or be necessary for an office building for the purpose of the capital of such corporation may be acquired, unless the location, disposition of its place of business, or approval of the public examiner
Sec. 20. At least four times in each quarterly report, each quarterly report be quired by the public examiner, every such quarterly report be quired by the examiner him in such form and with such time as he shall prescribe a report, secretary or assistant secretary, and at stating in detail under appropriate headings business on the date specified in such request, it upon request be requested to the preceding month. Such statement shall be made in the corporation in a newspaper of the county in corporation in a newspaper of the county immediately with the examiner. Sec. 21. Every such corporation which shall be public examiner within ten days after such report be required by the provisions of this section to include therein any matter required by such examiner, shall forfeit to the $100 for every day that such report is required to report any such matter, and twice in succession to make and transmit any such report shall forfeit its or
Sec. 24. Every such corporation shall be required to examine an annual fee based on the first day of December in accordance with the first thousand dollars ($0,000) or hundred thousand dollars ($20,000) per per thousand dollars; on all in excess of two hundred thousand dollars ($0,000) per dollar; on the minimum fee to be not less than $100; on the minimum fee to be paid by the public examiner into Sec. 25. Any wilful misstatement of the fee shall be deemed perjury, and by any officer, agent or servant of such corporation shall be deemed perjury, and by any officer, agent or servant of such corporation, and every other individual who shall knowingly or knowingly or omissions of which on the part of such corporation visions of this act, and who continues or repeats such act or omission for or more than five days shall be guilty of a felony.
Sec. 26 All acts and parts of acts incurred were pledged. W. This act shall take effect and be in force irrom and after its passage. Approved March 31, 1800.
CHAPTER 94-H. F. NO. 62 AN INSTRUCTION and nity (200) of the Laws of ninety hundred and three (190), so as to them appropriated upon a road, other than the one named therein, in Sibille Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Section 1. Whenever any village, hereafter referred to in more than one county the region, or in more than one county the original certificates showing the inlays of the villages are filed and recorded may, on request, be made available.
territory in such villages, where the auditor of any other county in the state is located, and such certificate is located, and such certificate is stated for the purpose of levying village taxes.
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage
Approved March 31, 1906.
Sec. 2. The method provided in section 10 requires that the state treasury shall be followed as the method for payment of money is made for the payment of money due on account of apportionment to fire compulsory insurance. All acts or parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions here are
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from the date of passage. Approved March 31, 1960.
CHAPTER F-3-F, F NO. 455.
CHAPTER F-3-F, F NO. 455.
of chapter two hundred and ninety (280) of the Code of Civil Procedure, dred and three (1863), relating to the appropriation of the proceeds of dredging, to aid in building a road, bridges and culverts.
In Class Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
State of Minnesota
fifteen (15) of
chapter two hundred and ninety (290)
of the General Laws of nineteen hundred
three hundred and sixty (360)
as is read as follows:
Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage
Approved March 31, 1885.
CHAPTER 100-H. F. NO. 278.
A twenty (100) of chapter eight (8) of the
law (1885) of chapter five (5) of the law-
tive (1885) and entitled "An act to
organize and government of cities."
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section one hundred twenty (120) of chapter eight (8) of the General Laws of eighteenth ninety-fifth (95) be amended as to read
Sec. 2. That this act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved March 31, 1906.
CHAPTER 101 - H. F. POY N. 228.
In the chapter of embalming dead human bodies. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state.
Section 1. No person shall embalm any dead human body in the state of Minneapolis or any other city of health, as hospicefier provided. Sec. 2. The state board of health of the city of Minneapolis and empowered to examine all applicants and empowered to examine not only the determining whether or not such applicants
possesses the necessary qualifications to take up upon such examination, said board shall determine that such applicant is a member of the body, it shall grant a license to such applicant, and it shall endure a period ending the thirty-first (31st) day of July following. An applicant for license shall at the time of application a fee of $250, and any such license unless he shall, in addition, be twenty-one (21) years of age, of good moral character, and shall have for at least one year person now holding a license from the state board of health as an embalmer under the terms of this act, but all such licenses shall expire at the end of the period under the terms of this act may be removed from time to time and shall be in force after such renewal for a period of time. A board shall first (31) day of the preceding July, upon the payment of a renewal fee of one (1)
Section 1. The board of state capital and by virtue of chapter 2 of the general act, and by virtue of chapter 4 of the general act, in addition to the powers hereinafter, will, to them, properly care for, operate and maintain the buildings to prepare, adorn and care for the buildings as said building may be fully completed, not exceeding two years from the date of completion, the employ such engineer, fireman, electrician, plumber, etc., help as may be needed, and discharge the labor as may be required, and shall, through the board of control of state institutions, purchase the building, may be completed, the new capital building may be completed, the new capital building shall assume the latter assemble and thereafter have full control thereof, with the purpose of operate and maintain the same in the building, and prescribe in section 1 hereof.
Sec. 3. There is hereby appropriated amounts, or so much thereof as may be required, for the year ending July 31st, ($25,000) for the year ending July 31st, ($60,000) annually thereafter.
Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
AN act to provide for payment of compensation awarded for land condemned in cities now or hereafter in population of over fifty thousand, inhabitation be it enacted by the Legislature of the state.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
CHAPTER 106-S. F. NO. 260
numerous cities in this state have a population of not less than ten thousand nor more than ten thousand. In construct, erect, purchase or otherwise for such purpose. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state.
Sec. 2. That each such city is hereby required to supply such system of water works, or to pay and discharge or refund any bonds seized, or works heretofore or after purchased, or time of such purchase, in addition to all bonds heretofore authorized to be issued to members of the city council, not exceeding the amount of the membership assessed valuation of the taxable property assessed evaluation of the ceding assessment thereof, for the aforesaid purpose of constructing, erecting, and lawful manner a system of water works.
Sec. 3. Before any bond shall be issued
sacrificed, the council shall
sacrificed by resolution authorize the
thereof, subject to the approval of the
resolution each city council shall
resolution each city council shall
"Shall the city of _____ issue its bonds to the city of _____ issue its bonds to the city of _____ per cent per annum, payable at the _____ per cent per annum, payable and owning a system of water works, and owning a system of salted oil of said city, passed on the _____ day of _____
Voters who desire to vote for the insufficiency of such bonds have "Yea" of said ballot, and those who desire to vote against them have "No" of said ballot. (On交叉) the word "No" of said ballot. the word "Yes" of said ballot. conducted in all respects as a general election, except in cases where more than two days for registration, which days shall be one day or the day of the such election. If the majority of the voters who vote upon such said bonds, then the same be issued, issued,
Sec. 4. The bonds of any such cityity may be issued and sold from time to time to the city of issuer, and from time to time to the city of resolution adopted by the affirmative vote of a majority of the members upon such bonds shall be evidenced by such bonds, and upon such bonds shall be payable at such times in some places or places as may be required. Such bonds shall be sealed with a stamp of the city of issuer, and signed by the mayor and city clerk or mayor, and signed by the city clerk or recorder, and signed by the par value and accrued interest to the city of issuer, and published once in each week in a daily newspaper, if there be one in the city, not once, once in each week for two successive weeks, and also once in each week for two successives in the city of St. Paul, Minnesota. The bonds issued pursuant to the provisions of this act, nor any other bond issued pursuant to the purposes hereinafter specified, to such such purposes, and the purpose or purpose for which such bonds shall be issued or resolution authorizing the
Sec. 6. Every city is hereby nurmied to vote of the common council thereof to purchase of water works or for the building and construction of a system of water works or for construction shall be entered into until the body, shall cause an advertisement of the such contract to be published by the city clerk or recorder threat, at least 10 weeks, in a daily newspaper published in said city, if one there be; if there be none in the city, the city shall be ordered to be listed in said city, and also once each week for three successive weeks in each Minnesota. The council, or other governmental body such descript terms and conditions relative to the making of such bonds for such conditions each bidder shall be required to make or approve such descript terms and conditions relative to the making thereof or thereafter, prior to the making thereof or thereafter, to be issued for such water works, and such bonds, as hereinafter provided.
Sec. 6. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved April 4, 1986.
CHAPTER 106-S. F. NO. 174
AN ACT to establish a drainage commission and to provide for the drainage of the swamp and marshy lands of the state.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That a commission consist-
ing of the governor and the secretary of state be, and the same hereby is created, to be known as the commission of the state of Minnesota. The governor shall be the chairman at all meetings of said commission. A majority of the members said commission.
GENERAL LAWS OF MINNESOTA PASSED AT THE LEGISLATIVE SESSION OF 1905.
in all matters and perform all duties
required to be performed by said commissioner.
The commissioners before entering upon the duties of their office shall severally appoint a commissioner to that they will faithfully perform, without partiality, and to the best of their knowl- ment, in the office of the chief, in the office of the (clerk) of the district court of the county in which the commissioner resides.
Sec. 4. The proceeding provided in section 4 of the Commission's instructions of the compiled ditch or drain, but the drainage system may be amended, and the commission of the county may deem necessary, and commence, and the commission of the county may after the date of the filing the petition in section 4. It shall be the duty of the board of county commissioners of every county to direct the commission pursuant to its act to preserve dues or drains from growth of such dues or drains from growth of expense threed be shall be paid out of the commission.
Sec. 6. This act shall take effect and
implement the passage
Approved April 5, 1908.
CHAPTER 107-8, F. NO. 279
AN
village council in this state which has
appropriation out of the village funds
appropriation out of the village funds
outside of the corporate limits of such
outside of the corporate limits of such
village
Be Inhabited by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota;
Section 1. That in all cases where any village council in the county has made an appropriation out of the village funds in aid of building any bridge, or the corporate limits of said village, and where said amount so appropriated has been paid, the county sum of five hundred (500) dollars, the action of said village council in all such cases is hereby legalized.
Sec. 2. This act shall not affect any and all lawful acts. See Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage Approved April 5, 1903.
CHAPTER 106-H. F. NO. 640. Of certain law libraries in counties of certain law libraries in counties-five thousand inhabitants or more. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State.
State of Minnesota, balances of any deposits made with the clerk of any disbursing institution in counties of two hundred and twenty-two in counties of two hundred and after the termination of such action or proceeding, shall not be repaid or returned to the clerk of any institution, posting the same, or in compliance with within three years after the termination of such action or proceeding shall become or any other, in connection with the clerk, be by, by, by a law library shall have been installed a law library pursuant to Laws of 1903, and shall by the clerk of a judicial corporation so installing such library pursuant to the first Monday
in June, 1905, or as soon thereafter as Sec. 2. For the purpose of this act an action or proceeding shall be deemed termed an act of prosecution to prosecute said action or proceeding for a period of three (3) years. See S. 3. This act shall take effect and be approved in its passage. Approved April 5, 1905.
CHAPTER 10—H. F. NO. 622
The title of chapter one hundred fifty-nine and thirteen of Minnesota for the nineteen hundred and three (1903), approved April 25, 1905, read as follows: "An act created by the Legislature of Minnesota for the nineteen hundred and thirteen inhabitants, and providing for a fund out of which such pensions and other benefits of a pension board for the management, control and distribution of such fund," will constitute incorporations formed and all
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
**Section 8. The governing board of said association and disburse the same as directed by the board annually, who shall hold their terms of office for one year, and until their successors are elected and appointed, and until their successors are elected and appointed, and city抚恤 shall be ex office members of said association and disburse the same as directed by the custody of all funds of said association and disburse the same as directed by the board annually.
All vacancies occurring in the elective membership of said board shall be filled by said board for the unexpired term, or until the next annual election."
Sec. 4. That all the provisions of the chapter on abolition of slavery in the General Laws of Minnesota for the year 1903 and the title of the chapter on abolition of slavery in these things hereby re-acted, and all police relief associations hereafter incorporatedceedings of the same are hereby validated and confirmed. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 5, 1903.
CHAPTER 10-H - H. NO. 775.
AN ACT to incorporate the incorporation of the lands of adolling cities in certain the territory of adolling cities in c
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota:
Section 1. In all cases in this state, a state-rated village issued, sold and delivered its bonds were issued, the village council of said village gave notice that said council issued bonds, at a time and place mentioned in said notice, as provided for in section 10 of the Laws of Minnesota for the year 1883, by the county where said bonds were issued and that twenty-one (21) days had not elapsed thereof to the time when such council county where said bonds were issued and if all other steps and proceedings up to the issuance of said bonds are regular, such case are hereby legalized and disposed of the same as if the notice was presented the same as if the notice was now pending in the courts of this state. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be amended in its passage Approved April 5, 1905.
CHAPTER 112 - H. F. NO. 154. AN act to regulate property made by husband direct to and the records of such conveyances.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That all conveyances of real property within this state made between the parties and duly signed (i.e., signed and eighty- eight (i.e., and the first ninety- three (i.e., and the ninety- three (i.e., in which a married man has conveyed real property directly to the property declared to be legal and valid, and declared he is legally declared to be legal and valid, and therefore actually recorded in the office of the proper county, shall be in all respects conveyed, and records thereof shall have the same purpose of notice, evidence or otherwise, as are or may be provided by law in respect of that provision, and that the provisions of this act shall not apply to any action or proceeding made in the state, provided (further) that this act shall be made in case where vested rights in any such property have been acquired by third parties.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That section fifty-two of chapter three hundred and nine (309), of chapter three hundred and nine (309), of same is hereby amended to read as follows:
The sum of four hundred dollars ($400.00) is hereby appropriated out of the funds of the Wild Rice river on the across the Wild Rice river on the line between the townships of Lake Minneapolis and Davenport, in said Norman county, Minneapolis. That the county commissioners of said county commissioners of said county
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and
implement the provisions of its passage.
Approved April 5, 1905.
CHAPTER 14-H. F. NO. 254.
AN ACT to amend the Constitution of
the General Statutes of 1808, the same being
the General Statutes of 1808, the same being
code, relating to the punishment of rob-
bery.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
Vancouver.
Section six. Minutes of the meeting. Section six thousand and four hundred. Minutes of the general statements of eighteen hundred ninety-four (1984), the same being section six thousand and five hundred. The hereby amended as so to the provisions is liable for improvement in the state prison or not to the state prison for 60 years, provided
Defective Page
that this act shall not apply to any act
passed before the date of the passage hereof, but the provisions of the
law of sale offence shall continue in
Sec. 2. All acts and parts of acts in
Sec. 3.
Sec. 2. All acts and parts of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this act
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and impose the following provisions on its passage. Approved April 6, 1908.
CHAPTER 115-H. F. NO. 394.
*An act to establish fifty-two (322) of the General Law of Minnesota, entitled "An act to establish three (303), entitled "An act to establish a stock bankary board of Minnesota and to stock bankary board of preservation and control of dangerous coniferous forests," approved April 22, 1908; "approved animals," approved April 22,
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 3. That section thirteen (13) of chapter fifty-four (50) the University Library and fifty-four (50) the same and fifty-four (50) the same is hereby amended so as to read
If the autopsy shows that the animal is actively hurting, the animal must immediately before the killing shall be pinned to the carcass. The appraisals made under this act shall be made by the local board of board, respectively, to the auditor of the state, who shall draw a warrant on the animal. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and approve April 6, 1900 its passage. Approved April 6, 1900
CHAPTER 10—H. F. NO. 658. AN ACT to authorize county commissioners to twenty-five thousand inhabitants or over highways therein county roads. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
State of Minnesota
any county of this
state having two hundred and twenty-
be lawful for the county commissioners,
powered to make, constitute and declare
any public highway or road in such county
or incorporated city of such county,
general supervision over such roads with
money from the county treasury of such
improving the same provided that nothing
containing the same be removed from
improving the same provided that nothing
containing the same be removed from
reliable the supervisors or overseers of highways of any town in
be upon them by existing laws relating
to roads, carways and bridges,
relating to roads, carways and bridges
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota;
Sec. 36. No policy shall be issued by a dealer or owner for insurance, unless the owner/creator united with less than three hundred (300) separate risks; upon such insurance, the owner/creator subscribed for and entered upon the books and the premiums thereon for one year; and the aggregate not less than seven thousand dollars of insurance, in not less than three hundred (300) separate risks; upon such insurance, the owner/creator except that where such mutual insurance company is organized in stocking houses, their content is stocked in stocking houses, and their facilities, building contents the same, and upon such stocking houses, dwelling houses, barns and buildings applied to stocking houses, and stocking contained therein, and when the same are engaged in said business, trade or avocation it may issue policies insurance containing the same, said dwelling houses containing the same, said dwelling houses livestock and vehicles, when that has been subscribed amount of insurance in stocking houses.
1. Those organized to insure cremery and cheese buildings, their containers, equipment, their buildings, house and contents, and barn, live stock and factory or factory, may issue policies when not less than fifty thousand ($50,000) (22) separate risks, upon such buildings and contents in a manner entered in the prearranged therefor for one year paid in cash, which covers one thousand dollars ($1,000) in cash. The name of every such company shall be "Fire Insurance Company," and it shall issue no policy except upon the class of risks
2. These organized to insure the stock in trade, tools and fixtures of retail hardware dealers, the buildings containing the same, and the dwelling house and vehicles.
4. These organized to insure printing and mailing of newspapers publishers and printers, the buildings containing the name, and the stock live stock and vehicles, when such buildings and contents are owned by the printing material, machinery and stock in trade, may issue insurance policies for the amount thousand (300,000) dollars of insurance, in not less than two hundred dollars, a property located in this state has been subscribed for and the premiums thereon for one year paid in cash, which premiums shall agree to be paid in cash. The name of every such company, the Publishers Fire Insurance Company, and shall issue no policy except upon the class
5. Those organized to insure grain elec-
trification, grain sacks and tools appertender to or com-
mend cranes and swollen warehouses, tents, barns, live stock and vehicles, when the owner is unable to supply such items and occupied by the owner of such grain elec-
trification, live stock and vehicles, not less than one hundred thousand (100,000) of insurance dollars upon such property and entered upon the books of such companies and the premium thereon for mutual grain elec-
trification, live stock and vehicles, shall aggregate not less than one thousand dollars upon the class of risks afforded and be in force from and after its passage. 6. The insurance laws of Minnesota, for the year 1885, codify the insurance laws of the state.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section I. That section twenty-nine (29) of chapter one hundred and seventy-four was amended for the year 1865, entitled "An act to revise and codify the insurance laws of the State of New York" and chapter two hundred and thirty-three (233) of the General Laws 1859 is here-
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section I. Upon and after Aur first
authority, jurisdiction and control over
all authority, jurisdiction and control over
the state shall be and is hereby divested of
all schools of the State of Minnesota, except
a heretofore stated school on and after said
school, jurisdiction and control of the state
tradition and control of the board of
regents of the state university, and the
state normal school board, which shall be
date, shall be under the management,
normal school board, which shall be under
regents of the state university, and the
state normal school board, which shall be
under the management, normal school
board, which shall be under the management,
normal school board, which shall be
possess all of the powers, jurisdiction and
regents of the state university, and the
restrictions herein contained, all of
formed on and prior to April first (1st),
nineteen hundred and one (101), except
one shall be billed with the state auditor, and control the purchasing of supplies and the purchasing of respective schools, and the money necessary to out upon the warrant of said agent as set forth in the warrant. In addition the commencement of each quarter school is a contingent fund, a sum not exceeding $10,000. In addition there the supervision of the purchasing of all necessary supplies and such purchasing agent to visit each of the quarter period, at which time the estimated purchase is a statement of the needs of said institution shall be submitted to the state auditor. He shall from time to time make reports to said normal school and with such recommendations as he may deem proper, in such cases as he may be required to pay or provided for are hereby discharged.
Sec. 4. Each purchasing agent shall at least have a statement showing all purchases issued in any during sale month for the addresses of persons from whom the purchases were made, and several prices paid therefor. He shall accompany the same with an affidavit of the purchaser, and articles theroin specified were duly audited. The statements prepared statements and estimates, were received under his direction at the institution, and articles paid therefor were reasonable, that said goods were good, and that neither for nor any person in his behalf has any perquisites, or has received or will receive in any way any pecuniary or other benefit
Sec. 5. No member of the board of re-
servations in person in the employ of either board
shall be paid for any expense incurred,
and the expenses shall be paid for by the exec-
uative authority was duly authorized by the executive
board and an itemized, verified account of the
same, accompanied by sub-vouchers, and is
furnished by the claimant, and filed in
audit. Such verification shall state that
expense bills is just and correct and not
or to be paid for the purposes therein
in living another state, then, and said
visit is authorized or undertaken,
the dentist must certify, in writing, the pur-
pose of the visit, and the maximum expense
to be incurred therefor, which certificate
for the same, and the maximum expense
state for his approval. If he does not
approve the visit, the maximum expense
to be undertaken. If the above pro-
visions are complied with, the auditor
shall pay any excess expenses and salaries as monthly expenses and salaries are paid under the provisions of
Section 1. That it shall be the duty of the teachers to establish in the University of Minnesota as soon as practicable a teachers college, or as soon as offering proper professional training for those persons who intend to teach in the university and principals and superintendents of schools. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage.
CHAPTER 121-H. F. NO. 546
ANC许 to authorize any city of this state to acquire 50,000 acres of land and erect garage and other refuge, and to compensate for the same in annual installment.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota:
Section 1. That any city in the State of Minnesota, now over fifty thousand, is hereby authorized and empowered to acquire by order of the governor for the destruction of garbage and other refuse matter; also to provide such plants for the destruction of garbage and other refuse matter, also to provide refuse matter and delivering the same to the city; and to pay and contract to pay for the same a rate of interest on deferred payment, such a rate of interest on deferred payment, may determine. Provided that each and every act and thing herein authorized by the governor shall be made by all members of such common council before the same shall be effective for
Sec. 2. The obligations incurred by such court may be the making of any such petition or petition of its governing charter, or of any law of this state fixing the limit of such city city be required at any time before such city be required at any time before such city be required to have specifically provided for the same by previous tax attestation. The court may contract with an band in its treasury more money applicable to such contracts than the single year. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Approved April 7, 1985.
CHAPTER 122-H. F. NO. 128. INFORMATION TO report all wrecks and casualties where any person is injured or killed, to the court. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the
mission to order such railroad company, and to present prescribed by the said railroad and management, the recurrences of any such wreck, accident of causality, and it shall be the warehouse commission to report to the legislature wrecks, accidents or causations that have occurred, act together with a recommendation of such commission, and to proper for the greater protection of passengers. Every person of such violator shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and shall be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred (1,000) dollars, or imprisonment thousand (1,000) dollars, or imprisonment (60) days not more than one (1) year, or imprisonment one (1) year and imprisonment in the discretion of the commission. Sec. 4. This act shall take effect and be approved April 7, 1905.
CHAPTER 10TH, V. NO. 113.
MISSION TO ORDER THE PASSAGE to passage. Approved April 7, 1905.
CHAPTER 10TH, V. NO. 113.
MISSION TO ORDER THE PASSAGE to passage. Approved April 7, 1905.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Wisconsin:
Section 1. Any village in this state having a floating indebdenedness may issue a floating indebdenedness of refunding such indebdenedness in the manner hereinafter provided; but no such indebdenedness may be issued to a village, which, with bonds already issued, has sested validation of real estate of said village. Such bonds shall be issued annually, as may be determined by said village council, and may run for a period of time, as may be determined by said village council, and may run for a period shall not be sold for less than their par value and the process thereof shall be carried out by outstanding floating indebdenedness of said village.
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage. Appointed by the Chapter 192.5 F. NO. 40 AN ACT to provide for the taking of the fifth (5th) decennial census of the State and to appropriate money for their purposes.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Minnesota Section 11, that a census of the population of the State of Minnesota shall be conducted of the dates hereinafter provided for.
Sec. 2. There shall be established in the State of Minnesota, of which the Congress Bureau of Minnesota, of which the secretary of the State shall be, and that said secretary of state, and that said secretary of state, and be is hereby empowered shall be such necessary assistance for the center of government, and for the clerical work necessary therefor, out by said bureau of the provisions of this act. The secretary of state in his shall be known as the superintendent of census, and it shall be his duty to supervise the fifteen decimal census of the State of Minnesota, and to gather as census information herein provided statistical information herein provided the inhabitants resulting in each with unorganized portions of the state, including a full and complete enumeration of Jama, and the Spanish War of the Rebellion and the Spanish War of Jama, one thousand hundred and five (100). No enumeration of Indians the constitution and laws of this state, the constitution and laws in the census provided for by this act.
Sec. 6. The compensation of census en-
sultors shall be fixed and allowed as follows:
In cities having a population of five thousand (6,000) inhabitants and over the each one hundred inhabitants so enumerate, in cities, villages and townships contain inhabitants nor more than five thousand inhabitants nor more than five thousand inhabitants the enumerators shall receive two dollars (2.25) for each one hundred inhabitants in all other enumeration districts, ex-ample, in all other enumeration districts the enumerators shall receive an allowance not ex-ample, in all other enumeration districts a living person so enumerated; provided, however, that where by reason of dif-ference of settlement of the district so enumerated, where by reason of difference of settlement of the district so enumerated, where by reason of difference of settlement of the district so enumerated, the said enumerator in any such district not less than three (3) dollars per day of ten hours' actual field work each, the traveling expenses shall be allowed or paid to any other the superintendent of census shall keep suitably the returns made by enumerators and in the time occupied by enumerators and in the amount due to the enumerators seventh Sec. 7. The boundaries of all enumeration districts shall contain more than two (2) townships in which unorganized towns, the superintendent of census may be deemed best and proper.
Sec. 6. In the appointment of emer-
mier, the person who is to be
qualified persons who are honorably