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| ConasseT HERALD-REVIEW IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE COHASSET, MINNESOTA, OCTOBER 4, 1911 BOOST FOR COHASSET Cohasset Cullings ee ae an od Mesdames Hursh and Kuhn were} Grand Rapids visitors Monday. Mesdames O. E. Skelly and Curtis | were visitors at the county fair Sat- urday. Mrs. C. M. Erskine, of Grand Rap- ids, visited with friends in the village. Sunday. Miss Cameron spent the last of the week at Grand Rapids, the guest of Miss Becker. Mrs. Henry Helmes, of Bemidji, spent Sunday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Dunn. The new residence of S. H. Thomp- son is nearly completed and the family will move into it in a few days. Earl Parker, who is employed at John Main’s saw mill, was a business visitor at Grand Rapids Monday and! Tuesday. c. M. Erskine and son, Edward, drove up from Grand Rapids Tues. | day and went out to look over some | timber. Mrs. Elmer Robideau’s mother ar- rived here last week from Tenstrike to visit at the Robideau and Jutras homes. | W. W. Fletcher has had an attack | oi his old enemy, rheumatism, the! past week that has confined him to his home. H. E. Walter has moved in the W. W. Fletcher residence and his broth- er, E. S. Walter will reside in the Schumacher house. Harry Jones went up on the Ver- million the first of the week where he will oversee camps for the Er-| skine-Stackhouse Co. | whole is highly polished. widely acquainted cruisers in nerth country, who formerly lived at Grand Rapids, but now calls Big Falls his home, was in the village .Tues- day attending to business matters. Wouldn’t you rather have a coat or suit that was made just for you, that no one else had even tried on if you could get it for the same price of the ordinary hand-me-down? See the Radford line at The Art Tailors. ‘No cheap showy stuff but genuine value for your money. Rev. Father Turbiaux was the vic- tim of a rather agreeable Sunday when his parishoners here presented him with a purse of $40 as he was about to step on the train to start for Washington, D. C. where he wil] continue his studies. M. Callahan started the ball rolling and the work was continued by M. O’Brien and O, EB, Skelly, Father Tur-,, biaux was one of the most beloved priests that ever had charge of this district and it is a matter of general regret he is leaving. A table that has attracted consid- | erable interest the past week stands in one of the display windows of C. H. Frees’ drug store. It was made by I. E. Gary, and is one of the most finished pieces of hand work | we have seen for some time. It is made of eight different kinds of wood the table being in the form of a checker board, and the squares made 'of popple and red cedar, while the legs are of diamond cedar. The oth- ,er kinds of wood used are northern ,pine, birds eye maple, southern ced- ar, birch and southern pine and the It is cer- tainly a creditable piece of work and should have been exhibited at the ‘county fair. Mr. Frees states the table wil be raffled. For the Same Money |you can get exclusive clothes of Mr. and Mrs. F, E. King and Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Lothrop drove up from Grand Rapids Sunday to visit | the Henry Rannfranz home. | The Methodist Ladies’ Aid society | will meet with Mrs. J. M. Stackhouse on Thursday afternoon, October 21.! Everybody is invited to attend. | | B. C. Hanson has been doing con- | siderable remodelling on the dwell- ing which he purchased in July and he now has one of the neatest resi- i dences in the village. | Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Wing, who | have been spending their honeymoon here at the home of Mrs. Wing's sister, Mrs. W. W. Fletcher, return-_ ed to Messena, N. Y., Sunday. | Miss Mildred Stockwel] returned from Blackduck Sunday where she has been visiting at the G: M. Wood home. She has accepted a position a, bookkeeper at the hardwood factory. Mrs. M. Stapleton, who was oper- ated on at Grand Rapids a short time ago, is now able to be out again. Mrs. Walker is improving | very slowly, but her friends expect | to see her out again next week. Albert Garling, one of the most DR. THOMAS RUS: EL Physician and Surgeon Office and Residence Corner Leland | Avenue and Sixth Street | GRAND RAPIDS, MINNESOTA | ymuiry STRAIN, S. C. WHITE! ORPHINGTONS Egg Producers and Prize Winners Mrs. H. EK. Abell, Stevenson, Minn. | Eggs For Hatching First Pen $3.00 for 15; Second Pen $1.50 for 15. |for nobody in particular. To |yours made expressly for you rich character, or just clothing made save time hunting for the right kind have by our reliable Chicago tailors, Ed. V. Price & Co. Let us take your meas- ure today and save money.—Ka. Herschbach. FEUD ENDS FATALLY TO TWO Kelliher (Minn.) Woo Woodsmen in Des- perate Battle. One man dead, another mortally wounded and a third shot through the arm is the result of a fight at Kelli- her, north of Bemidji. All partici pants were woodsmen. For sixteen hours Jack Oski, the dead man, and his half-brother, Jo- seph Ketzer, lay helpless in the chill autumn air, the latter suffering in- tensely from a bullet wound which pierced his stomach. Stanley Kobak, who was shot through the bicep of his left arm, walked into Kelliher after the battle, said nothing about having been shot, and went to bed without seeking medical atiention. He later was ar- rested. Ketzer, who was shot through the stomach, crawled through the woods toward Kelliher to a pile of ties, where his feeble cries for help were heard by Engineer Hoffman of a | switching crew working in the yards. | Ketzer, who is not expected to sur- vive, said his brother was dead in the woods, also having been shot through! | the stomach, and that the fight was! the result of ill feeling of long stand- ing. He expressed regret and refused to blame Stanley Kobak. Baby Scalded to Death. Pierre, S. D., Oct. 4.—Vida, the two- | year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. 'N. C. Green of Marietta, Stanley coun- ty, met her death by falling backward into a pan of boiling water which the mother had placed upon the floor in her household duties. playing about stumbled into the pan and was so badly scalded before she could be taken from the boiling bath that death resulted the following day. Grand Rapids Village Lots Edad AND $5 PER We have choice residence lots 4 them vo such easy terms that an for sale on easy terms REISHUS-REMER eeeroececersseee il ever town and we are selling per month is certainly easy. Come tn aod talk the watter over We also have some choice busivess lots op our lists. $5 DOW: NTH. e ‘ ® e s . * « e ybedy can buy. $5 down and # They are ynacosoce LAND COMPANY, COO. CERES FER ESSS FOO SO99 F299 CN SENSEORE HTH BBE A SOE HY the surprise | The baby in| ARMY OF MEN AID IN SEARCH | Systematic Effort to Recover | Bodies at Austin, Pa. | , DEATH LIST GROWS LESS | Number of Known Dead Stands at Thirty-two, While a Hasty Census Shows Fifty-four Still Missing—Or ganized Relief for the Survivors Now Well Under Way. Austin, Pa., Oct. 4—Relief work o! the night and early morning revealed no new horrors and Austin believes that it knows the worst of the calamity that overwhelmed it Saturday after noon when the waters of the broken Bayliss dam swept the valley. Thé list of known dead stands at thirty: two, while a hasty town census ehowed fifty-four still missing. | Effective organized relief is well un- @er way and help is being offered from | many communities in the state. Com | missioner S. G. Dixon of the state health department says that money | men and food supplies are in great de- mand. | Philadelphia sent word that $5,000 had been raised and was on the way Dubois, Pa., sent 150 volunteers and 200 laborers, while Wellsboro, Pa. raised $2,200 in a few hours and had dispatched the cash in an automobile. | The cash is needed largely in trans: | porting the afflicted to friends and Telatives in other parts of the country. It is definitely learned that Costello does not need aid. The citizens are able to care for any in distress, hav: | ing several warehouses of needful” supplies and all the money needed. | Some clothing for women and chil-| dren will be required. Tangled Debris Removed. Great inroads have been made into the mass of tangled debris. A steam log roller at work along the tracks of | the Buffalo and Susquehanna railroad, whose tracks lay through the middle | of the wreckage, cleared great spaces. Beneath one building three bodies | were found. They were those of a mother, an infant and a child about five years old. All were terribly muti- lated. With daylight further inroads on the wreckage were started and indica- tions are that by the end of the week | the railroad will be opened through to Costello, enabling the carting away of useless wreckage. No reports of any illness prevalent because of privations suffered have been made to the relief headquarters. The state constabulary is effectively policing the section and through the vigilance of this organization eight ar- rests for petty thieving have been made, the accused have been com- | mitted to the county jail at Couders- port. Eighty additional laborers have reached Austin and 200 more are ex- pected, swelling the total laboring force to 800 men. BRYAN IS NOT A CANDIDATE| | Confirms His Retirement in Speech at | Kansas City. | Kansas City, Oct. 4—William J. Bryan told 5,000 people in an address at the Missouri Valley fair at Electric | park that he was not a candidate for president of the United States. “In addition to the many other rea- sons- why I should not run again for, president,” said Mr. Bryan, “is that / one Republican president having used my platform in part and another Re- ! publican president having used it en- j tirely, I am afraid if I became a can- 'didate again the Republicans would | bring the third term charge against me.” Mr. Bryan was optimistic for Demo- | cratic success. | Sa | KILLS TWO AND HIMSELF | Oklahoman Shoots Wife and Escort, | Then Ends His Own Life. | Oklahoma City. Okla., Oct. 4—In a Jealous rage, J. House, a well known resident of this city, shot and killed his wife, Margueret House, and her i escort, James Patton, as they walked along a street. He also fired at a man and woman who were with his wife and Patton, | but the bullets went wide. House immediately killed himself. Four Dead in Shooting Affray. Lake Charles, La. Oct. 4——Four were killed and eight wounded as the result of a shooting affray in a dance hall here when the police attempted to quell a petty quarrel between two dancers. ITALIAN FLEET SHELLS TRIPOLI Bombardment of Turkish Defenses Is Begun. THIRD APPEAL TO POWERS Constantinopic Government Complains | That Italy Opened Hostilities Pre- vious to the Declaration of War. Mediation Not Likcly Eefore the Italians Have Occupied the Tripoli- | | tan Ccast. London, Oct. 4.—Reports from sev- eral points near poli intimate that the often postponed bombardment of the forts at Tripoli has been begun by the Italian fleeet. An Italian cruiser reports that” “ne Turkish fleet has not reached the Dardanelles, but that the ships have Separated and are still in the archipel- ago, where they are sought by the Italian warships. It was announced at the German foreign office that Germany probably would not proclaim her neutrality be- | cause of the likelihood that the hos- tilities would be short and also that no steps toward mediation were prob- able before the Tripolitan coast had been occupied by the Italians The Turkish ambassador at London presented another Turkish note to the British foreign office that Italy had begun hostilities pre- vious to the declaration of war aud that Turkey would be justified in | adopting whatever measures it might decree beyond those provided by the rules of war. It is announced at Constantinople that a prominent Egyptian has offer- ed to organize 30,000 Egyptians to march against the Italians at Tripoli. « A wireless message to Rome from the fleet. at Tripoli says that the natives, with 18,000 Mauser rifles, have retired to the interior with the evident pur- pose of waging a guerrilla warfare. TURKEY FORCED TO SUBMIT Show of Resistance Necessary, Says Official. Constantinople, Oct. 4.—An influen- tial member of the committee of un- ion and progress states that he real- izes that Turkey had been forced by untoward circumstances to submit to | the Italian proposal to evacuate Trip- oli, but that on account of the fanat- icism of the people a show of resist- ance had to be made. At present there are only ninety- three deputies in Constantinople, a number insufficient for a quorum, but | as soon as the requisite 140 members arrive the chamber will be convened. The German consulate is stormed by anxious Italians who are asking for | passports that will permit them to leave the countrq. Monday 600 left the city and Tuesday .the consulate still had 6,000 applicants with whom to deal. Those remaining are sub- | Jected to heavy taxes. The Turkish cable to Tripoli has been cut and the officials are ignorant of what is going on there. All offi- | cials and officers have been ordered to return to their posts. An Egyptian notable has offered tu organize a force of 30,000 Egyptians | to march against the Italians at Tripoli. ace AGAIN APPEALS 1 TO POWERS Turkey’s Third Note i Note Asking for In- tervention. Constantinople, Oct. 4—Turkey has issued a third appeal to the powers to intervene in the Turko-Italian war. The appeil accused Italy of viola- tion of all international rules and em- | phasizes Turkey’s right to retaliate to | the full extent of its powers. Aside from the province of Tripoli if the territory may be said to have passed definitely into Italian hands, | Turkey’s losses up to date are placed by the government at four torpedc boats and one gunboat sunk and three transports, two torpedo boats and one yacht captured. The Turkish boycott of Italian goods is complete. A Bulgarian invasion of Macedonia is gravely feared on the strength of reliable reports that Czar Ferdinand is pianning to call out 200,000 army reserves. Confirmation of Report. Glasgow, Scotland, Oct. 4.—A pri- vate message received from Jerba, an island off Tunis, says: A heliograph message from Tripoli says that the bombardment has begun. The ships are bombarding several places. The inhabitants are leaving. setting forth | Bis ARNE | | Fall Fashions | All the latest in Feathers, Furs, Ribbons, Silks, etc., for neat and up- to-date street and dress hats. Also a fine line of Ladies’ furnish- ings. Come in and look the stock over. Everything is fresh from the eastern markets. Mrs. W. W. Fletcher me weeeeeeerseeeetee Charles Brown SALOON The Very Best ofEvery- thing Alwayson Hand Sa pe tetetetetetetetel Raaimma PLA a oe ‘Bass Brook Hotel Up-to-Date Accommodations es cee | sedeetoete riedegeteeeneetegetets Sears ts Soy John Nelson Proprietor Cohasset, - Minnesota adeateatocecteetveleareateateettyesesieer ol aieaseasea eae gens osiod aoe tea oases oa eee ATTORNEY GENERAL SAYS PURE SNUFF CAN BE SOLD IN MINNESOTA LEGALLY GOPENBASEN SNEED We guarantee that Copen- hagen Snuff is now and al- ways has been absolutely pure snuff, that it complies with the laws of every State and all federal laws. AMERICAN SNUFF €0., 111 Fifth Ave., New York