Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, February 1, 1911, Page 3

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~ CoHASSET HERALD-REVIEW COHASSET, MINNESOTA, FEBRUARY 1, 1911 BOOST FOR COHASSET IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE I have moved my stock in the new building and will hold my Spring Opening ~ + ABOUT APRIL tsi, 1311. My Stock will bethe Latest : ~ PMILLINERY OPEN shapes, colors, designs and I invite inspection. MRS, W. W. FLETCHE your J.H. Grady & Co. carry a very Complete Line of General Merchandise Call and See Them for Any of Your Necessaries COHASSET, MINNESOTA teeta etet eA POODLE Bass Brook Hotel a ee ea a Op eA tetentneetntte oe ee oe se Up-to-Date Accommodations ee oS ‘+ John Nelson Proprietor Minnesota t Cohasset, - , iCharles Brown || SALOON The Very Best ofEvery- thing Alwayson Hand Raised the License At its meeting Monday. evening fhe village council increased the liquor dicense fee from $500 to $1,- 000 per annum, the advance to take effect as each existing license ex- pires. Cohasset) at present has five saJoons. Bridge Finished The represennatuve of the Central States Bridge Co. was at the meet- ing of the town board last Tuesday to make settlement in behalf of his company for the mew br.dge across tie river at, Cohasset. The bridge is n0w complete, except for the ap- proaches ait! either end and these will be filled im at once and the bridge opened to ftraffic. The bridge is 610 feet long ‘and! the cost of erection was $17,550. Going Further West Grubhoe Joe stl has the western fever. Last spring while at the Bass Brook ‘hotel he announced he was going west and moved imto the build- jag alongside the Carter saloon. A short jtime ago he got another touch of ik and moved imto the Cook build- img. We suppose that when, he gets another attack he will make a deal with Wm. Smith. Joe is a firm be- liever im, the sayings of Horace Gree- ley. Will Have Cemetery The town board of the town of Bass Brook held its meeting last Tuesday and a petition was present- ed signed by a large number of citizens requesting the board to pur- chase a suitable site for a cemetery, to be located near Cohasset. The petition was granted and the board will proceed to purchase a site at once, half to be devoted to a Caltho- fe burying ground and the other half to a Protestant, the two to be divided and separated; by a driveway ‘through the center. Cohasset Cullings J. C.. Gilmore came down from camp to spend Sunday ati home. Miss Hegdahl spent Sunday * with relatives at Grand Rapids. Wm. Beard has moved from the Glenwood hotel inte the Woods cot- tage. Mrs. Sprague, mother of Win. Smith, lhas been om the sick list the past week. Mrs. Waiker went to Duluth for medical treatment Friday, returning | Saturday. Prayer meeting services were held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stackhouse Monday evening. Dr. J. Gendron, of Grand Rapids, | was a professional viswtor im the village between, trains Tuesday. A,B. Clair, the New York Life msurane man, was daihg business im the viklage Tuesday. Geonge O’Brien went to Ray Mon- day where he will act as clerk at the O’briien & Callahan camps. Mesdemes Lothrop and Partridge. ot Grand Rapids, were im the village siouday 10 attend the funeral of | Henry Crawford. Miss Jessie Aitkin and Ralph Botts, of Grand Rapids funnished uiusic for the dence here Saturday! evening. Misses Edna Lane ant Mabel Robideau, accompanied by Otto Fred- ericks, were Grand Rapids visitors Sunday, ial M. O’Brien, went to Duluth Tues- day to secure a crew of men to take out to the O’Brien & Callahan camps at Ray. Mrs. Hattie Carrier of Minot, N. D., arrived here Saturday, to care for H. H. Carier Saring the tempor- ary indiijposstion resulting from his operat.ou The dance given by the Cohasset dancing club al Village hall Satur- day evening was avery enjoyable affair and it was enjoyed by a good sized crowd. County Commissioners Neii Mul- lins and M. O’Brien inspected the new Cohasset bridge Friday, they being the committee appointed for that purpose. Mrs. Wm. Dood slipped and fell Saturday afternoon and one of the lower limbs sustained two fractures as a result. She is getting along very nicely. | Methodist Ladies’ Aid society save decided to hold no meetings tnt!) after February 15. on account of the series of special meetings which commence this evening. Word was received here last week that Mrs. Clara Bull, formerly house- keeper for H\ H. Carier, is now Mrs. D. A. Macer, the ceremony having taken place at Duluth last Wednes- ‘day. Special services will be commenc- eM at) the Methodist church at Co- hasset this evening amd continue for a period of two weeks, The | choir will render a special song ser- vile each night and’ all are invited to attend. Dr. Hursh went to Minneapolis | Yast week and when he, returns he will be accompanied by Mrs. Hursh. The ceremony takes place today and the doctor will be united in marriage to Miss Anna Gooch. The Herald- Review joins with Cohasset friends in. extending felicitations. Postmaster H. H. Carrier has been | confined to his bed with an abcess of the ear. Dr. Homer Collins, a Yuluth specialist was here Sunday and performed an operation to re- lieve the trouble amd Mr. Carrier was able to sit up Tuesday. It is| expectcdd his recovery will now be ; rapid. | | Foreman Cummins, who had charg: | | Of the work of erecting the bridge | across the Mississippi river for the Central States Bridge company cer- j tainly deserves credit for the man- ner in which he handled the men | under him and for the expediency | used in getting the work done. Every one of the men under Mr. Cummins’ | direction was a sober and industrious worker and it is with regret that the people of Cohasset see them de- part. Henry Crawford, who has been a! sufferer from tuberculosis for the past fifteen, years, f.fteen, years, died | at his home im the village Saturday after a three weeks’ iillness. The deceased was 69 years of age atj the time of his death and was born jn Glengarry, Canada. He leaves a wife and four children to mourn his loss Funeral services were held Manday by Rev. von Stilli and in- terment took place im the Itasca ' cemetery at Grand Rapids. | Wanted to sell—The iron ore, . coal ‘gas and oil right with the night of egress and ingress to develop and iwork same on the 176 acre farm known as the old John L. Lyons farm on the south side of the river opposite Cohasset in sections 11 and 14 Eugene Munson, Brownwood, | Texas. | | ORDINANCE NO. 16. ‘An ordinance fixing the amount of |ifie fee to be charged and paid for {license to sell intoxicating liquors in | the village uf Cohasset, and amend- ing ordinance No. 1 of said village. The village council of the village jaf Cohasset do ordain as follows: Seet, 1—That the annual fee for any license hereafter issued for the sale ‘of imtoxicating liquors in the village ‘of Cohasset shall be and is hereby | | fxed at the sum of $1,000, which | amount shalj be paid into the village treasury and -the receipt of the vil- lage treasurer therefor presented to nd filed with the village recorder {before any such license shall be issued, | Section 2—This ordinance shall take effect and ‘be in force from and (after the 10th day of Oct., 1911, ex- ‘cept and provided that, in case of | applications heretofore or hereafter made for such licenses, prior to said ‘last named date, the fee which shall ‘be paid, upon the granting of such | applications shall be determined and ' fixed at the rate of $500 per annum ‘from the time of issuance of such | license to said 10th day of Oct., 1911, ‘and at the rate of $1,000.00 per an- |num from said 10th day of Oct.} 1911, | to the time when such license shall lexpire according to its terms, and the aggregate amount so determined 3 and fixed shall be paid, as aforesaid, before issuance of such license; and to this extent this ordinance shall | take effect and be im force from and after its passage and publication. | Section 3.—This ordinance shall be construed to amend Ordinance No 1 of said village of Cohasset, so |far as inconsistant therewith. Adopted January 30, 1911. : E. L. BUCK, | Village President | | » M, H. JONES, Village Recorder. ARCHBISHOP RYAN. Condition of Philadelphia Prelate Extremely Grave. IS PREPARED FOR THE END Archbishop Ryan of Philadelphia in Serious Condition. Philadelphia, Jan. 31—The condi- tion of the Most Rev. Patrick John Ryan, archbishop of Philadelphia, who ; has been ailing for some time, is ex- tremely grave. He passec a bad night. The venerable prelate suffers from frequent weak spells of long du- ration, from which he barely rallies. Early in the day tne archbishop was ‘ conscious and fully realized his pre- carious condition. He recognized those about him and said he was al- ways prepared and ready to meet God. CANNON PLANS A TRIP TO EUROPE Not Going to Evade Appearance, Before Grand Jury, Washington, Jan. 31.—Speaker Can- non contemplates a trip to Europe when he lays down the gavel at the close of the present session of con- gress on March 4. bookings and has not formed his party, but is in search of a few con- genial persons and if they are found he may celebrate his seventy-fifth birthday on May 7 outside the con- fines of Uncle Sam. It was thirty-six years ago when Mr. Cannon was last in Europe. He be- lieves that there have been enough changes in that time to make another trip worth while for the purpose of comparison. There is no suggestion in the pro- posed trip of a desire to remain away from Danville to escape appearance before a grand jury, but his return home may be delayed until late in the fall. It is likely he will make the trip with a party of congressmen, some- thing along the line of the journey he made four years ago, when a congres- sional party visited the West Indies for five weeks. KING WILL TAKE THE STAND George V. to Deny Story of Morgan- atic Marriage. London, Jan. 31—King George has made up his mind that he will take the stand at the trial of Edward Mit- ius, charged with seititious libe! against the king, and deny the story of his morganatic marriage in Malta in 1890. It was the revival of this old story in the columns of the Liberator, an anarchistic paper published in Paris. . to which Milius contributed, that led to his arrest. He has made no. Friends of the king say he is desir- ous of taking the stand and by @ sweeping denial silence the old story for all time. PLAN LABOR HEADQUARTERS Federation May Put Up Big Structure at Washington. Washington, Jan. 31—A_ $1,000,000 ; labor headquarters in the capital is being planned by a special committee of the executive board of the Ameri fcan Federation of Labor. | ‘The board has been wrestling with | the question of a new national home ! for the representatives of labor for nearly a year. Under its instructions the commit- tee, which was recently appointed, will draw up the plans and estimates. A big office building in downtown Wasb | ington is contemplated. | Last Son of Revolution Dead. | Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 31.—Edward Henry Collins, believed to be the last | son of the Revolution, died at his ‘home in Monrovia, aged eighty-six years. His father, Henry Collins, as a mere boy, served through the Revo lutionary war. The father was sixty- three years when the son was born. , He enlisted in Massachusetts, but i later moved to Hyacinth, Can. ! Canned Ham Is Fatal. Sioux Falls, S. D., Jan. 31.—It de velops that the death of Wilbert Brown, which occurred on a farm a few miles from Sioux Falls, was due to accidental poisoning due to eating canned him. MANY SANE IN ASYLUMS Sweeping Reform in Federal Examina- tions Contemplated. Washington, Jan. 31—Many sane persons are being received in the gov- ernment hospital for the insane, ac- cording to members of the committee , appointed recently by Secretary of {the Interior Ballinger to investigate conditions at the institution. A radical change in the method of handling insanity cases, it is said, will be recommended to congress, the pres- | ent system of examining alleged in- ;Sane persons in the United States courts being characterized by the committee as “archaic and unjust.” IMMENSE SUM IS LOST ON TOBACCO DUTIES Trade Journal Declares Frauds Have Been Easy, | | New York, Jan. 31.—Discussing re cent statements by Collector William Loeb, Jr., of losses to the United States government because of im- proper classification of Cuban tobacco imported, the United States Tobacco Journal estimates ‘the loss in the last twenty years at between $75,000,000 and $100,000,000. Each tariff law, beginning with the McKinley law of 1890, the Journal says, has induced the merchant com- munity in the tobacco trade to com- mit “customs degradations” as “trade customs.” “The ideal way,” says the Journal, “of preventing any loss to the govern- ment in wrapper duties on tobaccos as well as of rehabilitating in the trade the standard of a strict comformity with the mandates of the law, would be the enactment of a uniform specific duty on ali Cuban tobaccos. Any oth- er solution, such as a more rigid in- spection, would be found impossible, owing to the time and number of ex- pert inspectors required.” WOOD for SALE. In 10 cord lots—16 inch dry tam- arack, : Per, single cord, Soft wood per cord, & - $17.50 "$2.00 $1.50 Leave Your Orders at H. W.. Hilling’s Store and They Will Receive Prompt Attention, RAY VIPOND Coed ebeieeded

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