Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 19, 1911, Page 3

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~ Conasset HERALD-REVIE IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE COHASSET 10 GET BIG HOOP FACTORY OFFERINGS | ' Woodenware Factory Will Employ The Ladies of Cohasset and 3) Twenty-Five Mea in the New vicinity should remember Department. that I carry a nice line of aa Ladies Gloves oa Sees ty to ee Oe Hats and Sunshades fair “sie proouts, meas Children’s Hats Hair Goods COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER | dealers | representative im the field recently | interviewing farmers with the view to making contracts with them to ship sour and sweet cream to that |.dompany at Duluth, | claimed they pay the highest market |price for the butter fat. Farmers are to ship the cream as oft-: where it is as | they can, in cans, 179d the vans are | returned the same days free a i t | Another important manufacturing AARARUUAAAAAAAUUUUERTEDO in Cohasset. This time it is a hoop factory. a For some time past, S. H. Thomp-| J.H. Grady & Co. Woodware Co., of Cohasset, has been carry a very Complete Line of son, president Minnesota | considering the possibilities of Co- and he has had an expert hoopmaker come here, a man who has long been | separator plant in Minneapolis and | his woodenware plant in Ft. Dodge, Ia., Mr. Thompson’s former home. In- vestigatton of the merits of the ash 6 timber that abounds in this vicinity ‘e enera erc an 1S@ {for hoops, has proven that the Min- | ; nesota ash is superior to the Wiscon- | sin ash for hoops, and as a_ result | Mr. Thompson will build a hoop fac- tory in Cohasset at once. In fact he already has several hoopmakers at work in Cohasset and at a new camp he has opened for that purpose on land of the Company near by. | Ash hoops Call and See Them for Any of Your Necessaries COHASSET, MINNESOTA {iron hoops are not suitable, jas for barrels, kegs, lard and butter | bs containing preducts that re | put up in salt or br the iron } | hoops being unsuita jof their readily ; action of the salt. And ash is the | most valuable as well as desirable wood for this purpose on account of its pliable and bending qualities and it is plentiful im the district tribu- tary to Cohasset. | The timber can be used in size | | from poles 4 inches in diameter to logs of any size, and as ash readily | | floats after short exposure to the ‘weather after being cut, it will be! seen that there is enough of this class of timber standing on the | lands of farmers and others and | along the lakes and streams of this! district to keap a hoop factory busy ; tor many years to come, and will | give the owners of this kind of tim- ber a market for it, something they thave been waiting for, as scarcely | mone of the ash timber of this re gion has been cut. | Mr. Thompscn expects to have a | force of 25 men making hoops, short- | ly, as his own outside factories can | | use the most of the output from this plant, alone, while the demand elsewhere is large. A reorganization of the Minnesota | Woodenware Company has recently | | taken place, W. L. Wocd and Glen en account | aeeneeeenonete eee abetted Bass Brook Hotel ed $ Seeteege PPD settee edoateegert Sot seedeetees te ste ts " eo Koodet pet Up-to-Date Accommodations SH “Ht 3 roe ee ae se f \| | | 1) | | | | | | | | | | ) | John Nelson Proprietor Cohasset, - Minnesota ete a ee i pweee COHASSET, MINNESOTA, JULY 19, 1911 ; Will meet with Mrs. Harry Jones | shop. industry has sprung into existence | hasset as a site for a hoop factory |sdph Wolf will celebrate their 50th making hoops for Mr. Thompson's | ——— such | ity of Cohasset and he has signifi rusting from the | tainly a busy man these days, | thing that impressed me over all | tract for grading, will, on its com- | BOOST FOR COHASSET FOR RENT—five room cottage. Fine location. Inquire of Mrs. E. J. .| Winsor. Cohasset Cullings ¢ Sooseoreosroeeeonersonnnes Jos. Violet was a Grand Rapids | busimess visitor Tuesday afternoon. WANTS and FOR SALE Five Cents Per Line FOR SALE—Canvas covered cedar canoe, a bargain. Inquire of T. R. Pravitz. ltt. eames We handle Johnson’s candies, the best made, try a pound box. . Miller’s Confectionery. E. L. Buck spent the first of the! week at Minneapolis on business. Geo. Booth, the famous Boquet 2 FOR RENT—six room house with man, was calling on his Cohasset | bath and also barn—A. Wood. customers Tuesday. | “ Three hundred Rexall remedies S. H. Thompson, of the Superior; FURNISHED ROOMS for rent, all|one for each ailment, absolutely Woodenware Co., returned from a |"¢W and modern, phone No. 168. guaranteed, at the Red Cross business trip to Duluth Tuesday. Drug store. q i WANTED—100 lawn mowers to The Methodist Ladies’ Aid society | sharpen at George Hewis’ electrical] FOR SALE—The Ogema hotel, on Pokegama lake, three miles from Grand Rapids. Hotel contains 24 rooms, and building is in good con- dition, with ice house, landry and barns. Thirty-three acres of grove, or less, as desiref, go with the buildings, the only desireable tract of land for sale on the lake shore. | WANTED—zirl for general house-|Pokegama lake is considered one of Jos. Violet has found business so WOrk in family of two. Inquire of A.|the most beautiful in the’ northwest, rushing that he has employed — Al. By McGuire, Northeast Experiment] with good fishing, and has 267 miles i i farm: of shore line. Large numbers from Pe ee ee err outside, as well as many Grand Rap- Us bat tating ai ida | WANTED—good reliable girl for ids people, spend their summers at the lake, and this is an exceptional opportunity for a hustler. For @ ain write or call on M. McAlpine yrand Rapids, Minn. Thunsday afternoon at the usual! hour. | FOR SALE—Some office furniture and a new Monarch typewriter, all Mrs. C. P. Moore will leave f0r in good condition. Call at this of- Ray, N. D., this noon where _ she | fice. will make an extended visit with rel- | atives. Mesdames F. E, and W. A. King, ' cook and to look after house in fam accompanied by their children, went ily of two.—J. C. McKusick, Marble as Minn. to Cohasset Tuesday to visit at the; ~~ Henry Rannfranz home. FOR SALE—two horses, well bred | The Active Aeroplane. | Next Saturday Mr. and Mrs, Jo- a 7 and three years old, weight 1,200 anc {t beats the motor car, ‘tis sald, ene Mia 4 ae 1 balks and bids us frown, wedding anniversary and a service rear far ecceaie i ois a i ahead | will be held at 8 o’clock, a. m. patie ts nae i bie ik gi macs | Lallibertie, Cohasset, Minn. * Mrs. Harry Jones chaperoned a i party of young ladies to little Jay aK Gould lake Tuesday afternoon, where they expect to camp for a few days. | HOUSE WIRING A N D FIXTURE Rey. Schneider, missionary for the | HANGING A SPECIALTY Sunday school union, occupied the! pulpit at the M. E. church Sunday evening and his discourse was very much enjoyed, oa Electrical Supplies and Machi W..N. DELCOUR. During the heavy winds last week | a squall struck Al Robideau’s boat with the result it is now lying in| about ‘steen fathoms of water in} Pokegama lake. P. O. BOX 154 Grand Rapids, Minn Leave Orders at HARDWARE DEP*TMENT * Henry Hughes @ Co. Lorde Lanke nko ofoshoofosdonfe rforhene stoctoedoetoele ster are in good demand, | CH. Frees is another gentlemap ; and are used in many ways where | who pelieves in the ultimate prosper. Pete eebtbeebsttedeteletedtebetetebebebeieisietsfobetetebebetetehteb eh this by commencing the erection of a fine residence on the south side. Commissioner M. O’Brien is cer- | what with attending to his farm at Well- | er’s Spur and assisting to care for | the county’s affairs. He spent Tues- day forenoon at Weller’s Spur and The Diamond Feed Co. Carries cn hand a full line of Hay, Rough Feeds, Shcrts, Eren, Ci'rreels, etc erd is per- drove to Grand Rapids in the after- - 4 c mei . isi noon to attend a meeting of the pared to attend ycur wents cn shert notice board of equalization. | Deliveries made to any Part of the village. Phone orders will receive prompt attention W. C. TYNDALL Wm. Carter: “I attended the cele- | ‘ration at Marble, one of the busi- | est of the range to'vps, and the one others was the fact that the township grader had a prominent place in the parade. This is surely an indication that the people of that village think that good roads are important to the progress of a community.” The Grand Rapids Cohasset road, | for which M. Callahan has the con- ©KYANIZE FLOOR FINISH pletion, be one of the finest stretch- es of road in northern Minnesota and will be on a par with the Eovey- Will hold its surface even if you beat it Grand Rapids road. Mr. Callahan with a steel hammer as hard as you can now has more! than three miles of hit. You can dent the wood underneath She one org ae ere ene see a but the Kyanize Surface will be there just the fate it is being hauled out it will only be a short time until the the same as ever —tough,- durable, fob is finished. One of the advan- brilliant, enduring Kyanize finish, It’s made in 7 beautiful colors and clear. Wood withdrawing to move to Black-| and cars js the fact that the gravel duck to engage in the saw mill busi-;{s packed down at once and therefore mess. S. H. Thompson and his Ft.|the road in good shape the instant tages of using the township engine Good for all interior wood work as well as floors. Booklet Free. Dodge associates succeed to the in-! terests of the Woods’, with Mr. | Thompson remaining the president | | of the company, and will also be its | genera] manager. | Mr. Thompson has moved with his | ; amily to Cohasset and has taken | active change of the plant and is | | building a large addition to it and | | will increase the capacity, as the | plant is running behind its orders | since he has takne personal charge. | Charles Brown a Three Cohasset young men, Monars,' ‘Dupin, Gary and the helper at the | depot, essayed to take a boat ride | on the linypid waters of the Missis- | | sippi Monday evenjng, but in some | | unaccountable manner the oars were | The Very Best ofEvery- thing Always on Feral we been. Giatied out in the} Hand | current. Six willing hands began to! | paddle frantically and by considerable | exertion on the part of Rudolph the} | boat was finally brought to shore. — | She gravel is placed on the road and one trip made over it. W.J]. @ H. D. Power cOPENIAGEN Snwes GUARANTEE OF QUALITY AND PURITY Copenhagen Snuff is made of the best, old, rich, high- flavored leaf tobacco, to which is added only such in- gredients as are component parts of natural leaf tobacco and absolutely pure flavoring extracts. The Snuff Pro- cess retains the good of the tobacco and expels the bitter and acid of natural leaf tobacco. AMERICAN SNUFF COMPANY, 111 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.

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