Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, November 15, 1911, Page 3

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IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE COHASSET, MINNESOTA, NOVEMBER 15, 1911 BOOST FOR COHASSET Cohasset Cullings Pa ok es oe oe ed Mr. and Mrs. 'W. Merritt have de- parted for Farley where they will spend the winter. W. W. Fletcher was at Swan Riv- er Monday looking over building operations on his contracts. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Brown are re- Joicing over the arrival of a son and heir at their home Saturday. The Catholic Ladies’ Altar society wil] meet at the home of Mrs. F. X. Goulette. Thursday afternoon. Everybody is invited to attend. Mr. Eaton arrived here from Min- Beapolis last week and has taken charge of one of the Erskine-Stack- house camps. John Main has disposed of his in- terest in the saw mill here and moved to Blackduck last week with his family. Misses Ruth and Adeline Becker entertained the C. B. I. club Tues- @ay evening at their home on Po- kegama lake. { On account of the death of his \grandmother litte Arthur Seits, who made his home with her, bas departed for Blackduck, Miss Gilbert, of Cloquet, is visit- ing at the home of her friend, Miss Myrtle Hursh and is also spending @ portion of the time at the Archie Dibbel home. The Methodist Ladies’ Aid society will meet at the home of Mrs. Skoodopole, president of the so- eiety Thursday, November 23. At this meeting plans for the coming year will be talked over. The 1ew schoo] house is now in readiness with the exception of the seats and heating plant. Both will be installed in a few days and it is expected the building will be used for the first time Monday. At a meeting of the board of the Methodist church the first of the week, it was decided to put a steam beating plant in will be a good move, as the building should be thoroughly warmed for the little ones, some of whom come, pounced his adherence to the move | from a distance, M. O’Brien, Chas. Brown and Wm. Smith were out hunting Sunday and, while they didn’t bring back any deer or moose, they did show up with a bear and two cubs, who fell, victims to Mr. O’Brien’s skill with the And now they’re talking of having a barbecue. rifle. R. K. Stokes bas moved his groc- the church. This | jiecy, store into the heart of the city, haying rented the store building formerly occupied, as a hardware and feed store by E. L. Buck. In mak- ing the move Mr, Stokes also pur- chased Mr. Buck’s hardware stock an flour and feed business and will hereafter handle those lines in ad- dition to his grocery business. He has a neat, fresh stock and is doing a nize business, Mrs. Hirma Dibble died last Thurs- day evening, aged about 60 years. The funeral] srevice was held from the Methodist church Sunday after- noon andf was conducted by Rev. Justus Parish, interment being made in the Itasca cemetery. The deceased was one of Cohasset’s pioneer resi- dents, having lived here for the prominent worker in the Methodist church and the aid society, Foundation, Peking, Nov. \—Reports that this city has fallen into the hands of revo- lutionists are without foundation. There has been no fighting whatso- ever here and there is no evidence that the emperor or the regent have fied. Prince.Ching continues to act as premier pending the arrival of Yuan Shi Kai. Nor is there any indication that Peking is endangered. Foreigners in the various legations think it will be the last of important cities to go. The presence of many Manchu princes in- dicates their belief that Peking is the safest place in the empire. The imperial government has con- } Centrated here all the most loyal and ' faithful troops in the army and has eraftily sent all the doubtful regi- ments to far distant points. The em- | peror’s persona] guard is an army di- vision numbering 10,000 men, all Man- ehus. WU TING FANG FOR REPUBLIC Former Minister to United States Sup- ports Rebels. | Shanghai, Nov. 1—Dr. Wu Ting Fang, who has been chosen director of foreign affairs in the reform govern- | ment established by the revolutionists im the province of Kiangsu, gave out a long statement in which he an- | ment designed to establish a republic- an form of government in China. | Dr. Wu Ting Fank has twice occu- pied the office of Chinese minister to | the United States, in which country he became widely known. | first sent to Washington in 1897, re; | maining there until 1912, when he was | Fecalled. He returned to the same post in 1907 and was again recalled in 1909. . A MODERN HOTEL THE RIVERSIDE Newly Furnished . SSSSSSSSSSOLSVESSSELCLESSSESSLCCR: 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 terme that anybody can buy. Come in and talk the matter over, We also have some choice business lots on our lists. per month is certatoly easy. for sale on sy terms. REISHUS-REMER 228 Cone eceveereseee J. F. McCORMICK, Propr. Rooms, Large, Well. Ventilated, Heated and Lighted. ACCOMMODATIONS BY DAY OR WEEK RATES REASONABLE Second Street and Leland Avenue, Grand Rapids. oe gccseoncoeee $5 DOWN $5 down and 9% They are LAND COMPANY, past ten years and she was a. NO FIGHTING NEAR PEKING | Report That City:Had Fallen Without He was” SPECIAL RATE TO LAND SHOW One and a Third Fare Fixed for Round Trip. The Western Passenger association has granted a rate of one and onec- third fare to Minneapolis and St. Paul during the Land Show, according to association, and thousands of visitors, | 4m addition to the usual influx to the will visit the two cities in December as a consequence. This concession of reduced rates is the first ever granted to a land show. and will be good until Dec. 24, extend- img over a radius of 250 miles. Fur- ther announcement was made that in view of these reduced rates all of the railroads running into-the Twin Cities | Will begin oze of the stiffest advertis- ing campaigns ever conducted in the Northwest to bring visitors to the show. SAYS SHE LOST $10,000 Woman Claims to Have Been Robbed: of Fortune. Robbed of a grip containing $10,000 im cash while in the act of boarding a street car at the terminal across the lake is the substance of a startling story told the. Winona police by Mrs. | W. F. Jahn of Rollingstone. The po lice are puzzled. The police found the suitcase at a Point about 300 feet from the alleged place of the robbery. It had been tucked away among: willows and evi- dently had been ransacked. The police are not altogether satis- fied with the story of Mrs. Jahn. They are at a loss, however, to explain the finding of the grip, but are convinced that there is more to the story than | has been revealed. NEW SOO LINE TO DULUTH Track Laying to Be Finished Before End of Month, In twenty-five days Minneapolis wil! have a new line to Duluth, for the Soo Toad has resumed the laying of rails on its Frederick extension. North of Frederick and about twenty-five miles | distant the company has bridged the St. Croix river. This work has just been completed. Trains have crossed over the bridge and a track laying ma- { chine taken across and started work- ing northward. Forty-five miles of track will have to be laid into Supe- rior and Duluth. | The building of the St. Croix river | bridge necessitated the stopping, three | the work will be pushed vigorously | from now on. “MILLIONS SENT TO COUNTRY Crop Movement Puts Nearly $1,000,- 000 a Day Into Farmers’ Coffers, | Minneapolis sent $20,000,000 into the | country in the twenty-six business days of the month of October, or nearly $1,000,000 a day, to pay the | | farmers for the grain they shipped to {the Mill City, and, on a month’s move- ment, or 20,437,110 bushels into that market compared with 19,880,200 bush- els in October a year ago, the outflow {of money to the country that shipped ‘the grain was greater by nearly 25 | per cent than on the movement of any j like quantity in the commercial his- | tory of the Mill City. | One man was instantly killed, sev- | eral passengers were slightly injured and five freight cars were smashed to splinters when the first division of passenger train No. 1, northbound from Chicago on the Chicago and Great Western road, ran into the ca- Dovde of &, freight on the main line | mear the depot at Randolph. Joseph Pesch, twenty-nine years old, @ stockman, living in the village of Waltham, was riding in the caboose and was instantly killed. DECLINE IN ORE SHIPMENTS 1911 October Mark 167,937 Tone Less Than a Year Ago. Ore shipments for October from the d@ocke at the Head of the Lakes, in- eluding those of Two Harbors, show @ decrease for the period of 157,937 tons, compared with October, 1910. <The season to date is 6,958,666 tons behind last year's figures for the same period. Changes Plea to Guilty. Harry T. Robinson, whose trial on a charge of robbing the Shubert the- Ramsey county district court, changed his plea to guilty after the prosecution had presented its case Robinson was given a twenty year sentence in the penitentiary Duluth Conductor Held Up. H. W. Scott, conductor on a Wood- Jand street car at Duluth, was held up and robbed of $37. The highway- man threw the trolley off the car near the “Y” at the east end. When the, conductor came to adjust it he demanded his money at the point of a gun. Scott delivered promptly. ‘Will A. Campbell, secretary of the { Twin Cities during the holiday season. | The tickets will go on sale Dec. 11 | weeks ago, of the track laying, but | ater safe at St. Paul Jan 2 last of | $3,392.64 has been in progress in the | Hammond, Ind., Nov. '—Grief took the place of joy at the house occupied (> Mr. and Mrs. Alton Aubrey. who | Were found dead in bed by guests who had gathered to assist in the celebra- | tion of the golden wedding of the aged | couple, ! Cotton Steamer Ablaze. | Liverpool, Nov. °—A dangerous fire | broke out on the Norfolk and North American Steamship company’s steam- er North Point, which arrived here ' Nev. 1 with a cargo of cotton from , Bavannah. Minnesota Makes Less Beer. Internal revenue department figures show that a steady decrease in the | quantity of beer manufactured in the state of Minnesota has caused an im- portant falling off in the amount of in- | ternal revenue tax. During the last | four months, July, August, September | and October, the collections of internal | revenue in the state were $754,040.35 ed compared with $1,001,713.25 collect- ;ed during the same four months of 1910, a decrease of $247,672.90. | | pee | Indicted for Double Murder. James Dygart, charged with the | double murder of Mrs. Walter Bolton and her cousin, Frank E. Rhodes, on | the Bolton farm in Anoka county Sept. | 18, was indicted by the grand jury | on two counts, charging murder in the | first degree. When arfaigned before Judge Gibbings the farmhand, who is | said to have confessed to the double | crime, entered a plea of not guilty. | ' Citation for Hearing on Final Ac- i count and for Distribution | State of Minnesota, County of Itasca In Probate Court. | |In the matter of the Estate of Har-j ry Price, Decedent: The State of Minnesota to Ellen Price and all persons interested in the final. account and distribution of | the estate of said decedent; The representative of the above named decedent, having filed in this court his final account of the administra- ‘tion of the estate of said decedent, together with his petition praying for the adjustment and allowance of said final account and for distribution of residue of said estate to the persons thereunto entitled; Therefore, You, and Each of You, are hereby cited and required to show cause, if any you have, before th’s court at the Probate Court Rooms in the Court House, in the village of Grand Rap- ids in the County of Itasca, State of Minnesota; on the 11th day of De- ;cember 1911, at 10 o’clock a. m., | why said petition should not be | granted. ‘Witness, the Judge of said court, |and the Seal of said Court, | 11th day of November 1911. CLARENCE B. WEBSTER. | Probate Judge. | (Court Seal.) | THWING & ROSSMAN, Attorneys for Petitioner. Noy. 15-29, 2 "WANTS and FOR SALE Five Cents Per Line A Inquire at FOR SALE—Camp cook stove. | bargain if taken at once. | this office. \ FOR RENT—Su'te of three furn- ; ished rooms suitable for light house- keeping or will rent rooms out sep- arately. A. L. Roecker, the tallor, announc- es that hereafter he will call for and deliver all orders of cleaning, press- ing and repairing. The ‘phone num- ber is 77. ‘ FOR RENT—6 room cottage, per month.—J. H. Snyder. $6 SOS OSSCOCSVCOT ws Ovewr VE CUeUTES FOR SALE—my dwelling house an {the Shamrock saloon building. Call {or address Pat Hoolihan, tore | | Minn. 4 — 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. & | LOTS FOR SALE—two lots for {eale, corner Sixth street and Leland | avenue, next to the Hilling home. Inquire of Dr. Gendron. REGISTERED Poland China Boar | at Sherry barn, for service, U. C.; Grayelle, August Johnson building, Kindred Ave. LOST OR -STOLEN—Black and tan Fox hound. Answers to the name Romeo. Two dollars will be paid for this |" 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 Charles Brown SALOON The Very BestofEvery- thing Alwayson Hand RCADAVAAAROOUE Petesteshoctecratestestecy-eecrezestesdeceatenteneeateatostorde atoctostesateste atest $ Brook Hotel Seep eee coe Sredeadeasesteedeepesse ge geets Up-to-Date Accommodations John Nelson Proprietor Cohasset, Minnesota GEO. BOOTH Manufacturer ef FINE CIGARS (irand Rapids, Minneseta. Booth’s own shops here, and under his persenal supervision. Thies insures Lhe ulimost cleanliness and care im mauufacture. Worsaleeverywhere. Call for them EMSVAOE F4DHNESHOCH® MORASTSO: For Sale. Being overstocked, I will sell a For Sale. One Victor phonograph, 50 records, black ;mumber of good milch cows, of the all good selections, and on Guernsey and Jersey strain, also be - some Barred Plymouth Rock cock- erels and other thoroughbred chick- fur robe, 10 links of new Russian —P. C. Warner. information leading to his recovery.|jens. —A. M. Sisler, Laprairie, Minn. iron stove pipe, 3 elbows.—Phone No 2-18, shad

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