Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, March 22, 1911, Page 3

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2 aN cialis 4 CoHASSET HE RALD-REVI IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE COHASSET, MINNESOTA, MARCH 22, 1911 BOOST FOR COHASSET “Eileen Oge.” “Eileen Oge” is the title of the pretty little Irish playlet that will 4 be staged at Village hall Saturday | March, 25, by Deer River local tal- | \ ent for the benefit of St. Augustine's, When the play was present- ed at Deer River, the hall was so) | crowded many were turned away \ ‘aad it svas necessary to give another | church. have moved my stock in the new building and will | performance. Remember the date at : : | Cohasset. Saturday evening, March hold my Spring Opening |25, and the admission will be 2 | ae cents. {accompanied by her brother, Edward. — | list the past week, a victim of the | prevailing epidemic the mumps. ROOSEVELT DAM Mr. and Mrs. L. Payment are hap- ry over the arrival of a baby girl | Former President Principal Fig- ure at Celebration. ONE OF LARGEST IN WORLD. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. King came up ; H at their home on March 14. | i} Chas. Christenson, shoe repairer | at the Itasca Clothing Co. store, was | a business visitor at Deer River last week. Miss Hannah Landa, who has been attending schcol at Granite Falls, | will soon return home. She will be 1 f 1 = & jfrom Grand Rapids in their machine | ON APRIL 23 2 1911 | Methodist Church Notes. Sunday to visit at the Henry Rann- 5 i y f { Reclamation Project Has Cost Nine von Stil- ed last Sunday when Rev. My Stock will be the Latest jeermone Hired would be “love” an instead of “law He also an- shapes, colors, designs and nounced the evening services will I invite your inspection. MRS, W. W. FLETCHER Sunday school will be held at 10:30 o’clock each Sunday morning; preaching services at 7:45 o'clock Sunday evenings and prayer meet- ings Wednesday evenings at 7:45 0 clock. An invitation is extended all ; Without a church home to attend these services. Second Lecture Number. On Wednesday evening, March 23, }li announced that the theme of his | The Methodist church was crowd- franz home. Millions of Dollars and Several “Jack” Murphy returned from thi BY © More Millions Are Needed. woods last week. He was out only two months ard in that time drop- | |ped in weight from 219 to 176 pounds | Phoenix, Ariz, March 19.—The for- At last Cohasset residents can | mal dedication of the great dam named revel in the luxury of a bath, C. P. | after former President Roosevelt oc- Moore now having his bath room | curred in the presence of the colonel, in operation at the Bass Brook hotel. | who was the principal figure in the celebration of the completion of the | leading feature of the Salt river recla- | mation project, which has cost the ! Mr. and Mrs. Hutchinson accomp- anied Rev. von Stilli up from Flood- | wood Sunday and visited friends in | : : = government about $9,000,000 and} Be village, returning the following which will probably cost $2,000,000 | [ae more to complete. | Pat Kinney, one of the old time The Roosevelt dam _ reclamation ‘loggers in this section, who has | Project is situated a half mile below; the second number of the lecture given at the Meth- The subject of this | “Our Philipino course will be }odist church. |lecture will be: Cousins.” an interesting hour with an interest- J.H. Grady & Co. carry a very Complete Line of General Merchandise will add to the entertainment. REE EE EEE EEE EEL ELE Cohasset Cullings : Re a ae te ae ie ee ee ee ed lay at the lake! Call and See Them for Any of Your Mrs. William Smith has been ill r the past week. Mr. and Mrs. Copely were Cohasset visitors Saturday. Necessaries COHASSET, MINNESOTA Mrs. W. C. Parker has been on the sick list the past week. Roy Gary and Sidney Sartell were Cohasset visitors Saturday,. M. B. Patten has just got in his | new line of summer dry goods. out practicing Sunday afternoon. Elizabeth Landa, of Grand Rapi visited Cohasset friends Saturday. aS a ae ese se ee oateatestectectetoetoatoctoctet retndetetetecentntes Bass Brook Hotel Up-to-Date Accommodations Mrs. A. Claremont was a guest at the McMahon home Friday afternoon. tee tet are working for George Barlow this spring. eters Mrs. Jos. St. Peter, of Deer River, visited friends in the village last | week. last week. Capt. Ward and Benson Smith are sinking a well for I. C. Thomas on Park Point. aaeereeeateteadeegerteets Mrs. Stapleton was again summon- ed to Duluth Suaday by the illness her mother. Gladys McNaughton’ was unable to attend schoo] last week on ac count of being ill. John Nelson : Proprietor ts SreDeshosteosbesdh a aeestont ae trectesdeads eet eLeatetpateetostenteeseatententonpetectectentenen $ M. O’Brien returned from Chicago 3 Cohasset, - Minnesota § | ts wrere ne spent me pas SS. Ce a eee a a ee ee ee os os tes Sa es Mrs. Breen, who has been visit- ing at the Skelly home, returned to Superior Saturday. A. Forest returned from Duluth Thursday where he had been spend- from Wisconsin to visit at the home of Wm. Merritt. SUSI eee Glen Wood is still very ill and a doctor from Foley was called in con- sultation on the case. Louis Kirt will move up on the Vermilion next week, where he will farm the coming summer. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Richer are the = Ae ee proud possessors of a baby daughter The Very BestofEvery- thing Alwayson Hand Misses Katherine Burke and Myrtle friends in the village Sunday. James Ross, the Vermilion tarmer | transacted business and visited with | triends in the village Monday. | James McMahon, who lives three | miles west of town, went out 3 Robt. Jutras hag beep on the sick | PRARRRORRODOD ‘ This topic will afford all | ing people and the stereoptican views | i j|ed the flat vacated by them, which Mr. and Mrs. Carl Becker spent Sun- The Cohasset base ball team was | Pete Barna and Edward Barrette ; Mrs. William Woods had the mis-! fortune to again sprain her ankle | torn to them Monday evening. | Shook of Grand Rapdis, were visiting | | Poses. —Frank.Jutras, Cohasset, Minn. to| Found—One new shoe, high cut, Louis’ where he will haul logs. be woman, on the road west of Co- lapse at Washington.” hasset, been up on the Vermilion, pulled up | the confluence of Tonto creek and up- |stakes’ and is now back in the vil- } Per Salt river, at the head of a canyon | age. through which Salt river flows for | ; many miles. It is the most imposing | The Minnesota Wocdenware Co. is | feature of the Salt river project, the jhaving their boat, the Mayflower, | first one undertaken by the United |repaired and put in commission for | States reclamation service under the spring work. A crew of five men provisions of the reclamation act, ap- jare overhauling the boat. proved by President Roosevelt June | 17, 1902, and after whom the town at the dam site is named. It is seventy- six miles east of Phoenix, which is sit- uated in the center of a valley of which 240,000 acres is signed to the Salt River Valley Water Users’ asso- be- ciation. This corporation represents at the farmers in their dealings with the jcome an accomplished horsewoman government, guaranteeing reynicnt of since ‘she was (presented ‘with 5) Shet. | the construction cost of the project. land pony by her father last fall, and | she is never so happy as when out for a canter with her little pony. | | Mr. and Mrs. Will Nelson have de- | jparted for North Dakota and Mr. | and Mrs. Henry Rannfranz have rent: | gives them the entire ground floor. Miss Jeanette McMahon has Creates Immense Reservoir. The dam creates a reservoir extend- ing twelve miles up Tonto creek and thirteen miles up Salt river nearly to what is known as the intake dam, 400 feet long. The capacity of the reser- voir is 1,284,204 acre feet, the largest | artificial lake in the world. Though the dam is not the largest in the world, it is among the largest. The founda- Mrs. James McMahon went to | Portage, Wis., Tuesday where she | jee attend to business matters and | j visit with relatives and friends. Dur- Jeanette is |ing her absence Miss | jcaring for her small sis | 1 theme tion rests on bed rock forty feet below ‘ i river level. | As evidence of the fact that South Tits $85 téeF tong; between: thé.can’ Cohasset will be the real residence | yon walls, and 170 feet wide. From the »|part of Cohasset in future years, | river level to the crest of the spillways |we record the building of new cot- | at either end of the dam the height is ltages by Chas. Dunn and Louis | 220 feet, that being the greatest depth | of storage possible. The spillways are | bridged and over the bridges and the | top of the dam runs the only highway | The little five weeks old son of | in that region connecting the mountain ‘Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Merritt, Wm. Le- | country on the north and south sides | roy, died after a brief illness Friday. | of Salt river. | Funeral services were held at the | feet aPere. ss ee sioreee ad * | Methodist church Saturday and in- coping four feet high protects the road- H ae datas way. From the bottom of the founda |terment was made in the Itasca cem: | tion to the top of the coping is 284 etery at Grand Rapids. | feet. Erskine came up from | The dam is curved, arching up ; stream, and at the top is 680 feet long and sixteen feet wide. at either end are 200 feet wide, so the | length, inclusive of the bridges over | the spillways, is 1,080 feet. The spill- | ways are blasted from the mountain | |Schemerhorn. The buildings are now in process of construction. | Mrs. C. M. ‘Grand Rapids Thursday to attend’the Methodist Aid socicty mecting which was held at the home of Mrs’ W. W. Fletcher. The next meeting of the society will be held on Thursday March 30, by Misses Smith and | sides. Hegdahl, at the Edward Dibble home. ers Art Wilder drove up from the LONG AND SHORT HAUL RULING | Rapids Tuesday with his auto livery interstate Commerce Comsmiscion and in company with John Nelson made the first trip across the new \lississ ppi bridge that connects ncrth and South Cohasset. His was .the first vehicle to roll over the new bridge. Passes on Its Provisions. Washington, March 19.—Announce- ment of certain findings of the inter- | state commerce commission concern- | ; ing the long and short haul provision | of the existing interstate commerce | act has been made. The commission says that the pro- | vision applies to all rates and fares, | but in determining whether it is con- travened rates and fares of the same kind should be compared with one an- other—that is, transshipment rates with transshipment rates; proportion- al rates with proportional rates, etc. The commission holds “it would be a Remember the lecture at the Vil- ilage hall Thursday evening, March 28, when Prof. R. H. Hess, at the head cf the extension department of the University of Minnesota, will speak on “Business Ethics” under the auspices of the Cohasset Com- mercial club. The band will be out and rendered a number of selections. | violation of the long and short haul 4n_ admission ‘fee will be charged | provision if a proportional rate to or | | and all should attend, as the proceeds’ from a given point were lower than | will be turned over to the band. the regular rate to or from an inter- mediate point.” TILLMAN IN POOR HEALTH; South Carolina Senator Admits Illness Will Prove Fatal. | Augusta, Ga, March 17.—Senator fillman of South Carolina admits his Herald-Review, Ail work is first class | j)Iness will prove fatal and that he is jand printed on first class material.. only waiting for the end. The senator was in Augusta and said he never would recover when he was told he was looking better. “I am weak,” he said, “and not able to do much. I shall never recover from the stroke which caused my col- For Sale—White Leghorn eggs for | setting, Corning & Co. strain. $1.25 per set of 15.—H. D. Wright, Cohas- set, Minn. For the right kind of printing at ‘the right kind of price, call at the For Sale Cheap—Horse suit- | | able for light farming or delivery pur- Call at postoffice or Ers- | kine & Stackhouse store. | The Herald-Review work. Try us. for your job This roadway is twenty | The spillways | ‘REBEL GENERAL MASSING FORCES Madero Plans to Storm Town and Establish Capital WILL MAKE NO CONCESSIONS Insurgent Leader Calls It Folly for Diaz to Talk Peace Unless He Agrees to Retire. FE] Paso, Tex., March 18.—That Fran- cisco I. Madero, leader of the Mexican insurgents and their so called presi- dent, is concentrating his forces 100 niles south of El Paso with a view of storming and taking a town and establishing in it a “capital’’ from which to carry on his operations throughout the states of Sonora and Chihuahua, was given out by the revo- Wtionary junta. Couriers, bearing messages from Ma- dero to the confidential agents of the revolutionary movement in New York and Washington, arrived direct from the insurrecto camp. The messages were in response to information that had been conveyed to Madero con- cerning supposed preliminary peace negotiations which Senor Limantour, the Mexican minister of finance, is now thought to be bearing to Mexico City. Madero had not been made acquaint- ed with developments in the last two or three days, as it requires about a week for a courier to reach him and return. Asked if Madero would be willing to make any concessions in the demands of the insurrectos that President Diaz must declare null his election as a first consideration for peace, Senor Gonzales Garza, the insurrecto secre tary of state, replied: “Absolutely none. It is folly for Diaz to talk about peace and at the same time say he intends to remain in power.” From Braulio Hernandez, insurrecte secretary of state of Chihuahua, it was learned Madero plans to establish a “capital” if possible at Casas Grandes | the scene of the insurrecto defeat of March 6. FAIR TREATMENT PROMISED Americans Held by Mexican Govern- ment in No Danger. Washington, March 18.—American citizens held as prisoners of war by the Mexican authorities at Casas Grandes, who have been reported in danger of execution, and Henry Whit- tle, who was arrested at Ciudad Por- forio Diaz Thursday are safe and as- sured of fair treatment, according to telegraphic advices received by the | State department from American con | sular officers in Mexico. The American consul at Juarez tele- graphed the department that General Navarro, commander of the federal forces at Casas Grandes, had assured him that the report that the men were in danger was without foundation and that the prisoners would receive every possible consideration PRACTICE MARCHES BEGUN | Two Cavairy Regiments Take Hikes at San Antonio. San Antonio, Tex., March 19.—The first regimental hike of the mobilized troops at Fort Sam Houston was made when the Ninth and Eleventh cavalry | Went on a practice march. The Eleventh started at 6 o’clock and the Ninth left half an hour later, both re- turning at noon. The camp is now ready for the beginning of the actual maneuvers. General Carter has made an order regulating bugle calls. Reveille, will | be called at 5:50 o'clock, assembly at 6, tattoo at 8 p. m., and taps at 10 Pp. m. Within these limits brigade commanders wil) regulate calls fo> the | respective brigades. SEVERE BLOW TO REVOLUTION Rodriguez and Seven Followers Slain in Lower Caiifornia Skirmish. San Diego, Cal, March 18.—With the leader, Luis Rodriguez, and seven of his followers dead on the field of | battle, at Tecate, Mex., and the rem- Rants of his band scattered in the mountains, and with the Mexican fed- eral infantry hoiding the passes and hamlets, the revolution on the west side of the mountains of Northern Lower Californiz received a severe blow. Three hundred Rexall remedies one for each ailment, absolutely guaranteed, at the Drug store. Red Cross mais ee .

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