Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, August 2, 1911, Page 3

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PeReUeEe SERS RRR me CoHASSET HERALD-REVIEW IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE COHASSET, MINNESOTA, AUGUST 2, 1911 BOOST FOR COHASSET OFFERINGS The Ladies of Cohasset and vicinity should remember that I carry a nice line of Ladies Gloves Hats and Sunshades Children’s Hats Hair Goods COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER MRS. W. W. FLETCHER SS sa ab ih eh hhh th teh eh eh deed eal J.H. Grady & Co. carry a very Complete Line of General Merchandise Call and See Them for Any of Your Necessaries COHASSET, MINNESOTA A SHOOT Bass Brook Hotel trie 4 Der: a i Up-to-Date i Accommodations John Nelson é 3, ; Proprietor Cohasset, - Minnesota os eseeee i Charles Brown The Very Best ofEvery- thing Alwayson Hand PADUVUODDOOO9 ; Cohasset Cullings | ©. H. Frees was a Grand Rapids | business visitor Tuesday. |! Dy. M. M. Hursh was a Grand Rap-| as bookkeeper, while Frank Brackett | if ids visitor Monday afternoon. Mrs. Hiram Tracy, who has been ill is now getting along nicely. Mrs. M. O’Brien went to Ashland last week to visit and sisters. )Mrs. Gulch, mother of Mrs. M. M Hursh, has been on the sick list | the peist week. F. W. Stockwell and Rev. C. E. visitors Saturday. Muriel Stapleton went to Duluth Monday to spend the week visiting relatives and friends. s'ster-in-law week with Mrs. Rannfranz and spent several days last relatives at Grand Rapids. Mrs. Janice, mother of Mrs. M. with her father, Burgess were Grand Rapids business | some difficulties and Mr. Walter, of |ent of the logging interests of these Ashland, Wis., is in charge. He will move his family here as soon as | : fi from a tour of inspection of these convenient. Otto Fredricks. former- | i ly bookkeeper, has departed for | 20!Mings and states that the timber Duluth, where he has accepted a jis among the best in the great north- 4 ; Be: west. This timber will, it is expect- position. Mr. Stackhouse is acting ey Grentuaile be Gut andbatncedtte ithe different mills of these com- Seas. ‘panies in this state and sawed into ee ‘lumber, the greater amount coming Play Fast Hibbing Team. _to Virginia to keep busy the largest | The Hibbing Co. M. militia base S@W mill plant in the world. Togeth- companies, has recently returned has charge of the delivery wagon. evening and will play the Grand Rap-| & Rainy Lake company in the north- ids Juniors at Southside park Sun-, €rm part of the state and in Canada y afternoon. Both have a reputa- |it is estimated that there is timber ion for fast work and the game will| enough to keep the mills running | undoubtedly be a good one. jat least 30 years. Both mills there |are running day and night with full ‘shifts, giving many, hundreds of men employment the year around. Hund- reds of men are also employed in Fifty-Seven Feet In Ore. ; Contractor Schultz, who is sinking is now in| out this timber and altogether the there |Company has in the neighborhood of running 3,000 men in its employ. The company has alr 3 ed millions of doll: in its there and V: ans Will Make Good The Team. : ee pest to encourage the company m | mission, states the drill fifty-seven feet of ore and jare still no indications of through’ it. y expend- plant Stapleton, who has been very ill for some time, is still very low. Mrs. C. M. Erskine and Elsie Ar- no came up from Grand Rapids | Saturday to join a party of berry pickers. Cc. M. came up from the Rapids Monday | and went out on their claim for a | week's stay. | ; Henry Madden | past week but is now getting along | very nicely. | Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Thompson | went to Bemidji Sunday where Mrs. | Thompson was operated on Tuesday | afternoon. A daughter of Mrs. Palmer arriv- ed here from Duluth last week to it at the home of her grand moth- er, Mrs, Jellison. ~ J. E. Riley, who has been looking after business interests here for the past two months, returned to | his home at Minneapolis Tuesday. Mrs. K. Sachs mother and sister, respectively, of X Skocdopole, arrived here last week from New Prague for a sever- | al weeks’ visit. | Harry Jones has severed his con- | nection with the Erskine-Stackhouse | store and went to Goodland Monday ‘to work on a school building at that | place. . | joyed a picnic on the south side | Thursday afternoon. There were fabout 90 present and all report an enjoyable time. Duluth Saturday to visit her brother, ril, who is a conductor on the | Great Northern between Duluth and | Grand Forks. | Mrs. E. W. Windsor went to Blackduck last week to visit relativ- Jes. Mr. Windsor has again entered | the and is acting as relief agent at Sandstone. { &. P. Kirsch. one of the stock- | holders of the Cohasset State bank, | arrived here from Crookston Tues- day morning and departed on the afternoon train for Federal to look after business interests. | factory, which will house the hop! | department, is being erected. Mr. S. H. Thompson, who is manager asi well as president of the company, completion as soon as possible. “The Lamb of God” is the special music has also been secured } for the occasion. A special effort | will be made to make the _ service j More attractive than usual and ev- | erybody is invited to attend. | Henry Rannfranz, accompanied by his brother, William, returned from | |a week's visit with the old folks at |home, at Rochester, Saturday. He | states that Henry Bracket, who sign- ed up with the Deacons, is now play- jing with one of the ‘North Dakota leagues. The two little daughters of A. Ra- ;cine came up from Grand Rapids | last week to visit at the home of; their sister, Mrs. Nap Pelican. One of them took sick yesterday and Mr. Racine was summoned from Goodland where he is employed on a school building. The Erskime-Stackhouse Co. store ; has been turned over to W. L. Mack- Erskine and son, Thomas, | The little four-year-old son of | has been ill the j The Methodist Sunday school en- | Miss Gladys McNaughton went to! employ of the Great Northern | | ‘| | The new addition at the hardwood | \ states the work will be carried toj title | for Rev. yon Stilli’s sermon at the! M. E. church Sunday evening and! Harry Hill, who shot Sam Martin’s \ma‘ntaining one of its best and jteam about two weeks ago, and greatest industries Improvements | whose trial was to have come off are continually going on at the jlast Saturday, settled with Mr. Mar-) plant in the way of additional build jtin out of court, agreeing to furnish | ings, tramways and tracks. and the! j him another team in their place. | are now about 52 miles of these lat Hill was also arrested on a charge ter jin the |of illegal hunting and was fined $10 y and costs before Judge Huson. ' company’s yards. Both is have recently undergone some ,Shape to cut in the neighborhood of | | are 1 | Another Old Soldier Dead. | 1,000,000 feet of lumber per day. : | The planing mill, which is the E. A. Ferster, a member of Com-!jargest in the world and has @ pany A., 13th Michigan during the Civil war, who has been _ troubled | pypning stead‘ly and turning out sev j with heart disease for some time,| oq) train loads of lumber per da died at his hame in the west end of | which is being shipped to the west- jtown Tuesday morning. The G. A. R. on and eastern markets. The sea- j will have charge of the funeral ser-|.-. thus far has been ore of the vices, which will be conducted from | yusiest in the h Se the. COnIDSay the Methodist church Thursday af) ana its sales have increased consid- |ternoon at 2 o’clock. erably during the past month ov | AL that of the previous month this year and last, so that the company is in BRING TIMBER OVER a fair way to make a record for it- | self in the way of lumber sales as capaci | | LINE T0 VIRGINIA well as getting the lumber ready for the market. | and Mrs. Bastyr,' iI Holdings in Canada Will! mmo Hes i Comis""INSURANCE COMM'R to Be Sawed. Billions of feet of standing timber és - : % in the Canadian country is owned Thinks Falling Off in Fire Losses is |by the Virginia & Rainy Lake com-| Due to Efforts of Fire Marshall in | pany and the Great Northern Lum- A . ber company which in time wil be| Northern Minnesota Arson Cases. | brought to Virginia and sawed into | jlumber by the mills says the Virgin- | Frank H. Gilmore, superintend- the month of May, 1911, as compared | with 1910, were as follows: | May, 1911. | May, 1910 eat i H The agitation for f'rcs and the publicity recently giv- en the fire-bug through the efforts of Mr. Charles E. Keller, State Fire j ian. 270,000.00 Ae 000,000 prevention of i Lafond’s |\£ IceCream Parlors | Say Be € Marshal, in the Northern Minnesota FRUITS arson cases must be considered greatly resporsible for such de- | Confections | Ices of all Kinds | being agitated and called attention to in the press there will be a little of incendiar sm in the State of Min- ne: ota. It is frequently estimated that fifty per cent of our fire losses are due to incendiar'sm e Continental Assurance Com- pany, of Chicago, Illinois. a level premium life insurance company, was on June 27th, licensed to do business in Minnesota The Prudential Causalty Company, of Indianapolis, Indiana, a stock causalty company, was on June 9th licensed to do business in Minneso- was ta. Crushed Fruits and | Fresh Flavors | Dam A FULL LINE OF Cigars and Smoking and Chewing Tobaccos Private Booths for those who patronize our Parlors Located in, O’Donnell’s Build- on June 8rd withdrew from ing, Third Street ee en a a ee a eee state. Notice has been received of — the f | proposed merger of the Spring Gar- den, Union, and the Insurance Com- pany of the state of Pennsylvania. Articles of incorporation have been filed by the Milwaukee Mechanics Company after having consolidated with the Milwaukee Fire Insurance Insurance Company. Notice has come to this depart- ment that the Conductors Indemnity Exchange of Kansas City, Missouri, is ball team will come down Saturday ;¢? With the holdings of the Virginia jurreptitiously attempting to do business in this state as well as refusing to pay its just claims. The public is warned that this associa- tion is not licensed to do business in Minnesota, and that claimants against it are without rredress in our courts. The Railway Mail Association of Portsmouth, New Hampshire is not li ithe well for the water and light com- the woods the year around gettins! consea by this department and has been warned to cease operations ix | this state. e doing their |; | | jdecided repairs and are now in! y of 750,000 feet per day, is} ~ DRAWS CONCLUSIONS | | The Woodmen’s Causalty Com- pany, of Springfield, Illinois, on June 26th filed amended articles changing ts name to Inter-Ocean Life and Causalty Company. Advertisement For Bids Notice. Notice is hereby given that the Village of Marble will sell its bonds i: the sum of Ninety-seven Thous- ud, Three Hundred Nine nine and -100 ($97,399.63) Dollars to be paid avd to mature as hereinafter ferth, to-wit: bs Number 1 to 10, ten bonds for £1,000 each, payable December iy 1912. Number $1,000 each, 1913. Number 21 to 30, ten bonds for $1.000 each, payable December 1, 1914. Number 31 to 40, ten 11 to 20, ten bonds for payable December 1, bonds for 10 each, payable December 1, 1915. Number 41 to 50, ten bonds for $1,000 each, payable December 1, i916. Number 51 to 60, tem bonds for $1,000 each, payable December 1, 1917. Number 61 to 70, ten bonds for $1,000 each, payable December a 1918. Number 71 to 80, ten bonds for $1,000 each, payable December jo 1919, Number 81 to 90, ten bonds for $1,000 each, payable December 1, 1920, Number 91 to 96, s bonds for $1,000 each, payable December 1, Number 97, one bond for $1,399.63, payable December 1, 1921. Which said honds shal becone due and payable as above stated, bearing interest at the rate of five (5) per cent per annum, payable Ss mi-annually, pursuant to a resol.- tion passed on the 12th day of June | 1911, and on file in the office of the The fire lesses in Minnesota for | |of Marble wi long as this question is | Village Clerk. The village council of the Village ll meet to open and con- s‘der bd's therefor on the 14th day of August, A. D. 1911, at & o'clock p. m. at the Town Hall in the Town of Greenway, County of Itasca and S tate.of Minnesota, and the offer deemed most favorable shall be ac- cepted; provided, that the village council may reject any and all bids gad award said bonds to a lower bidder; or may, upon like notice jn- vite other bids. W. E. BAWDE Vil Mage Pres‘d Attest: J. GRAVEL, Village Clerk. HR July 26-/ FOR SALE—Our Jewel Roadster, four passenger, 40 horse powe r, Ru tender motor, cost when bought new in the fall of 1909, $2. 3.00. Only used a few times this season, { illy equipped and in good cond'tion. W sell for $1,500.00, reason fur seli'n ave too many cars.—lD. M Itasca Bazaar Store, Hiibiu 22-Aug 5 Power, Miun MILCH COWS FOR SALE. I have three good milch cows for The Philadelphia Causalty Comparf sale, that will be fresh right away the | Also have a few nice steers suitable for work oxen. Can be seen at Co- hasset—E. L. Buck, Cohasset. 2t. ay, of Duluth, as trustee, during | 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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