Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, October 25, 1911, Page 3

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COHASSET, MINNESOTA, OCTOBER 25, 1911 BOOST FOR COHASSET Why be Chilled on cold or wet days when the wind gets to your bones and the moisture to your body? Better be protected against the elzments by a fash~ ionable Ulster or Great Coat, made to individual order by our Chicago tailors, Ed. V. Price & Co. Come in and inspect | our reliable Price woolens today, and select the most com~ fortable “looking one in the lot for your Raincoat or Over- coat. Any of these fabrics can be water= proofed. Their ser~ vice value i is extraor= dinary but their cost | is moderate. French dry cleaning and pressing of ladies and gentlemen’s garments, Furs altered and remodeled. Work| called for and delivered. Phone No. | peated. Mrs. H. H. Jones was a Deer Riv- er visitor between trains Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vashaw have moved in the E. W. Windsor resi- dence. P Miss Rose Kipka departed for Fo. | ley Tuesday, called there by the | * serious illness of her mother. The C. B. I. club was entertained | by Miss Phoebe Smith at the home af Mrs. Edw. Dibble Tuesday even- ing. The Methodist Ladies’ Aid society will meet at the home of Mrs. Tracy Thursday afternoon. Everybody is invited. The Catholic ladies met last week at the home of Mrs. Edw. Goulette | and will meet on November 2 at the home of Mrs. Nels Goulette. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Clark, of Deer Lake, were in town last Saturday. Mrs. E. E. Scribner has moved into | the Fletcher residence. Misses Mamie O’Brien and Clara Fermanick were Grand Rapids vis- | itors Sunday, attending services in the new St. Joseph’s church. At the school board meeting at Grand Rapids Monday evening, H. Patten was awarded the contract as janjtor at the new school build- ing. The village is now having poles set North Cohasset. Christian church services are held each Sunday at the auditorium in village hall. Services are held as follows: Morning service at 10:30 o’clock; Sunday school at 11:30; ev- ening service at 7:30. All are cordi- ally invited to attend these meetings. Pat Hoolihan was the victim of a experience last Wednesday evening that he will not care to have a load of brick to be used in the construction of the chimney of his new house, and as the road is very rough he was jolted off in some man- Dr. Larson, the eye specialist, will make his next regular visit to Grand Rapids on usual dates the 15th and 16th of every month. All those having defective eyes or in need of the proper service for the fitting of glasses, are cordially invited to call at Hotel Pokegama the 15th and 16th of DENNIS & HERSCBACH 6 1008-2090 GEO. BOOTH Manufacturer of FINE CIGARS 3 e e « t cose ORS0anacees 2254 “Bootu’s CiGARS” of the finest selected stock by Por sale everywhere. ] | EIN : 3 2OO6 FSRHOTAHDHSIARODE Girand Rapids, Minnesota. Have achieved an excelleny soporebien all over Northera Minnesota. They are made experienced workmen in Mr Booth’s own shops here, and under bis persena! supervision Thies insures Ube utmost cleanliness and care im manufacture. Call for them OD9ODOS7,KROGOOCOPSRECOS SHCOSSSSSSSASVSsSeesveresoesssssoseeses soucsccocse® Grand Rapids Village Lots AND $5 PER MONTH. We have choice residence lots a!l over town and we are selling them on such easy terms that an. per mooth is certainly easy. Come in and talk the matter over. We also have some choice business lots om our lists. They are } for sale om easy terms. ? REISHUS-REMER osere 22S S9SS SHSSSSSS SHES ASSESS ESEBS SECS ENCORE $5 DOWN ybudy can buy. 85 down and & LAND COMPANY, | a |te wear for all pleasant days | \for under your heavy coat for real ‘ABOUT THE STATE 0. | in South Cohasset and soon that | part of the village will be lighted with electric lights, the same as re- | He was driving home with ! | every month. : LARSON & LARSON. | ner and fell so that one leg wai Pinioned under the wagon, the team stopping at his cry of alarm and re- fusing to start again. His cries at- tracted the attention of neighbors and he was taken to the hospital where he is getting along very nicely. “Oh, I don’t believe I'll get me aj suit this Fall, now its getting so late.” Well, that’s where you are; missing it, because you will have it and cold days and then get the full bene- fit of it for early spring wear. The Art Tailors have a fine line of samples to select from and will eith- er make or order you a suit that you may feel well in anywhere. ‘News of Especial Interest to; Minnesota Readers, MORE ARRESTS FOR ARSON, Edward and Edwin Geralds, Promi-| nent Business Men of Bemidji, { Appear in Court. | | | | Charged with arson in the third de-| gree, Edward and Edwin Geralds,/ twin brothers and prominent in busi-! | ness circles of Bemidji, were arraigned , before Judge C. W. Stanton of Be- midji on an indictment returned se- cretly recently by the Beltrami county grand jury. Neither entered a plea, signifying to the court that they wished more time in which to pre- pare it. | Bail bonds in each case were fixed | at $5,000 and the accused men were | | given further time to enter a plea. | Each furnished bonds and was Hall leased. No attorney appeared for ei-| ther. E. E. McDonald represented the state. The alleged crime of which the Ger- | alds are accused is the setting on fire | | of a building in Black Duck last April. Dr. D. F. Dumas, mayor of Cass Lake, convicted recently by a jury of third | | degree arson for the attempted burn- | ing of the postofhce at Puposky, is al- | teged to have been a confederate in the commission of the Black Duck | | crime. While no other arrests have been | | made in connection with the arraign- | ing of the Gerald brothers, it is hinted | | bat other persons are involved in the 'barning of the Black Duck building. | Whether anyone besides the Geralds | has been indicted by the grand jury i connection is not known, as ments which may have been other than those against the were not made public. Geralds was arrested in , Ore., and reached Bemidji, nied by officers, just before | ‘aigniment of the brothers. | DEEP CUT IN N IRON ORE RATES Steel Corporation one Roads Announce! Large Reduction. | Ore rates on the two Iron Range roads of the United States Steel cor- | poration Minnesota will be cut to | 60 cents a gross ton within the next thirty or forty days. The announce- ment of the proposed reduction came j from President William A. McGonagle | of the Duluth, Missabe and Northern | and was later confirmed by President Frank E. Howse of the Duluth and Tron Range railroad. ! The present rate on iron ore is 80 cents per gross ton from all Mesabi range points to Duluth. This rate covers all shipping points on the Du- luth, Missabe and Northern road, and all the Mesabi range points on the Du- ! luth and Iron Range railroad. From | Tower the rate is 90 cents to the | docks at Two Harbors and from Ely | it is $1. | When the proposed change takes ef- | fect there will be a flat rate of 60 cents a ton from all points on the two ranges. The cut from Ely will, there- fore, amount to 40 per cent; from Tower 33% per cent and from all Me- sabi range points 25 per cent. The Great Northern, it is believed, will be compelled to meet the reduc- tion. dunhi Given Life Sentence. Peter Juhl, who shot and killed Detective Frank Fraser at St. Paul on Aug. 12 last, pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree and was sentenced by Judge Grier M. Orr to life imprisonment. Juhl killed the de- tective while at liberty, having es- caped from the state prison with Jer- Ty McCarthy, who also killed Police man Ollinger in Minneapolis and was himself killed |at the Spang & Hoolihan mill. ‘Guernsey and Jersey strain, |some Barred Plymouth Rock cock- erels and other thoroughbred chick- | HALLOWE'EN PARTY TUESDAY EVENING: The ladies of the Methodist church will serve supper and give a Hallow- e’en party at the fire hall Tuesday evening, Oct. 31. Following is the menu: Baked beans, brown bread and! buns, salads, pickles, cheese, veal loaf, cold sliced ham, and coffee. Everybody is invited. COHASSET SCHOOL NOTES. Supt. Freeman, of Grand Rapids, visited school Monday. Several pupils have been out the past week on account of illness. Robert McCabe is visiting his sis- ter at Hill City. The upper grades, have done some very pretty original designs in plaids. Mrs. J. W. Lane entertained the teachers at a six o’clock dinner last Thursday evening. WANTS and FOR SALE Five Cents Per Line A. L, Roecker, the tailor, announc- es that hereafter he will ¢all for and | deliver all orders of cleaning, press- The ’phone num- j ing and repairing. ber is 77. FOR RENT—6 room cottage, per month.—J. H. Snyder. $5 LOST—22 |near Shoal brook. Return to I. Rassmussen for reward. calibre automatic rifle D. FOR SALE—my dwelling house an the Shamrock saloon building. Call or adé@géss*Pat Hoolihan, Cohasset, Minn. FOR SALE—Lot 2, 26-53-23 Store post office and school convenient. Would consider good, young team, not less than 2,500 pounds. Address box 104, Warba, Minn. 8 LOTS FOR SALE—two lots for sale, corner Sixth street and Leland avenue, next to the Hilling home. | Inquire of Dr. Gendron. WANTED—Seven hundred school children to get their supplies at Miller’s. Big stock to select from. FOR SALE—Four foot slab wood at $1.25 per cord. See Tim Mahon 2t Tablets and school supplies at Mill- er’s confectionery. pumpkin pie} } | | | | | | For Sale. Registered Poland-China pigs, fall and spring litter; two Shropshire | rams; White Leghorn chickens, , good laying string; Barred Plymouth Rocks; Toulouse geese; white Chi- nese geese; Pearl guineas; two milch cows; grade Guernsey bull, 1 year old—U. C. Gravelle, Grand Rapids. For Sale. Being overstocked, I will sell a number of good milch cows, of the also jens. —A. M. Sisler, Laprairie, Minn. 2-18, Wanted At Once--“% cutters for all winter’s work. No underbrush, clear cutting, 4 1-2 miles from Grand Rapids. Apply to W. A. Kiley, at Pokegama Ferry, or Herald-Review office. hions | All the latest in Feathers, Furs, Ribbons, Silks, etc., for neat and up- to-date street and dress hats. Fall Fas Also a fine line of Ladies’ furnish- ings. Come in and look the stock over. Everything is fresh from the eastern markets. The Very Best ofEvery- thing Alwayson Hand PUAVADVAATOUE LLL HELLO ‘Bass Brook Ho el Up-to-Date Accommodations ae ee ee a eee ee ae Se Oe oe om | John Nelson a te ee te ee eh Dee ee ts te Oe ee ee D a eee ee ek ee Proprietor ‘Cohasset, - Minnesota > eee eesiottostetteetensettectessonaes eset ones ose onto COPENHAGEN SNwey We guarantee that Copenhagen Snuff is now and always has been absolutely pure snuff, that it complies with the laws of every State and all federal laws. American Snuff Company, 111 Fifth Ave., New York.

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