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— MS CoHASSET IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE ‘COHASSET, MINNESOTA, JUNE 5, 1912 i Cohasset Cullings : The C. B. L clubj has discontinued itsmeetings until September. Charles Becker purchased the Frank DeShaw property this week. | Mr. and Mrs. Howard Johnson wel- comed a baby son to their home last \Saturday. Mrs. M. M. Hursh returned Tues- 4day from a visit with relatives in Minneapolis. The ladies of the Crofts & Reed club were the guests of Mrs. George | | exceedingly anxious to see the Co-' Patterson Wednesday afternoon. The Aid society of the Methodist church will be entertained by Mrs. M. H. Jones Thursday afternoon- , Cohasset and their friends here are ‘pleased to learn of their return. ! ' 7 (yr. and Mrs. Robert Gift were Grand Rapids visitovs Monday. Morris O’Brien will attend the/ 'Democretic state convention at Du- | luth as a delegate Thursday. A large number of Corasset pecple 'at Grand Rapids Thursday. ‘ Mr. Cleveland has recently pur-- chased a home im Glenwood Addi--- | tion tol \Cohasset and will move in | within a few days. | A number of Cohasset people were |hasset cemetary work carried for-- ‘ward far enough to dedicate it on Vecoration day. We are still hop-- ling for immediate action of the town board. | Mrs. F. O. Boggs returned early ‘Sunday morning from an extended visit with her parents at St. Cloud. Mrs. Bertram, sr., Mrs. Louis Bertram and Esther Thornberry sper§ Carthy were in the village (Sunday with friends in Grand Rap- ids. ‘ “The Christian Standard,” will be the subject of Rev. Parish’s sermon at the Methodist church next Sun- day evening. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. William) Garrison andi Mr. and Mrs. Baker visited friends at Coleraine and Bovey last Sunday. Mrs. Frank Jutras is preparing to move to Grand Rapids, where Mr. Jutras is employed in the meat market of William Lehman. The ladies of the Aid society of the Methodist church held a 15-cent Quite a number of Cohasset people pare making plans to attend the Uni- | versity week lectures at Grand Rap- ids. Mrs. Gilbert and Mrs. Mc- Monday making arrangements for the sal< of the tickets. | | Among -the pext years teachers that have been selected for Cohi ss- et are Miss Petronillo of Duluth, , Miss Gladys I. Roberts, daughter of | Dr. Stanley Roberts, a noted Pres---. byierian Divine of Minneapolis, Miss Jessie Aiken of Grand Rapids and Mr. H. F. Baldwin of Northfield. { | Miss Mabei Thompson, who has been attending school at Fort Dodge: Iowa, Miss Helen Thompson, who attended schoo) at Red Wing this year, and Mrs. Corneliason of Fort Dedge, arrived last week to spend the summer with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Thompson. lunch Tuesday afternoon at the resi- | dence of Mrs. W. W. Fletcher. Thomas P. Cook and Jessie Mae that James Passard is doing on the! Forsythe from this place are among the graduates at the Grand {Rapids high school this year. Miss Pheobe Smith and Mrs- Ed- ‘win Dibply will leave Thursday for 4 visit with friends and relatives in the southern part of Minnesota. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Skelly, Miss Annie Skelly and Mr. and Mrs. §. iH. Thompson enjoyed @ launch party on Pokegama lake Decoration day. There was a good attendance at the dance given in village hall Sat- urday evening and everyone reports it one of the best dances of the year. Robert Gift from Blackduck was seen on our streets the last of the week. Mr. Gift was formerly the engineer at the Minnesota Wooden- ware plant. There will be no services at the village hal] next Sunday night, the minister being called to speak in the southern part of the county on that date, ‘ The ladies of the Altar society of the Catholic church will hold a picnic Thursday afternoon in the Thomas grove, instead of the regu- lar meeting. B. E. Curtis of Foley has taken fhe O’Brien house and will move his family here shortly. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis were former residents of | James Doran was up from Grand Rapids Tuesday inspecting the work school grounds. ‘The work is being ,done strictly according to contract , and the members of the board are satisfied with the way Mr. Passard is carrying on the work. John Neal of Mason City, Iowa, is anather of the suts‘antial Iowa farm-, ers to cast his lot with the agricul- turalists of Itasca county, having purchased the Lou Buskirk farm, about six miles up the river. Mr. ‘Neal plans to make extensive improv ments to the farm, which is one of the best in the up-river section. | Chitaren's day at the village hall last Sunday was a success from every standpoint. The hall was completely filled with visitors who came to witness’ the rendering of one of the most ejnoyable programs of ‘the year by the children of the Christian Sunday school. Much credit for the success of the work is due to the committed who had the roy | in charge, , Benediction’ was given at the} Catholic church Sunday evening and mass was said Monday morning. There will be services twice a benediction Sunday with mass Mon of each month mass will be said at 10:00 a. m. June 16 will be the next Sunday services, when the morning mass will be solemnized- ne-Chird Off Ai reduction of one-third on all Spring and Summer Millinery To reduce my stock of Ladies’, Misses and Children’s Hats a special offer of one- third reduction is being made on everything in stock. This includes all the fashionable spring shapes, no reservations, everything in millinery cut one-third. Mrs. WM. W. Fletcher Cohasset, Minnesota attended the Decoration day services month hereafter, the first Sunday of |- the month there will be evening , day morning, while the third Sunday, COHASSET MAN “MINNESOTA, STATE | CREAM TELLS OF EARLY DAYS) OF OPPORTUNITIES” D E L AVA L SEPARATOR |Nisiniaieae: iat iy Bie in| Booklet Just Issued By State Agri- The Cow’s The Cheapest Northern Minnesota Told cultuce Society Contains Valu- | Best . | plete cil Sahiesastias "Friend Machine for You to Buy Because it will last longer, run easier and skim cleaner than any other separator. Our margin of profit on the De Laval is smaller than most dealers make on other separators, but we know that the De Laval will please our customers and give ‘them satisfactory service, and as there is a greater demand for the De Laval than for any other make we Burton Stockwell of Cohasset,| “Minnesota, the State of Opportuns tells an interesting story of his earlf ties” is the title of a beautiful pam- experience in leaving New England phiet just issued by the board of di- four years agg to make a home in rectors of the Minnesota State Agri- northern Minnesota. He is making culture society. good after a hard struggle through; It is a complete, yet concise, de- lack of capital and inexperience. He scription of the state and its .re- Spi ‘sources. The facts are presented in On May 2, 1908, we bought OUr'g most striking and entertaining - tickets for Cohasset, Minn. We @r-qanner py means of brief state-| can afford to sell it at a smaller profit. rived there in the middie of the! ments, comparisons, figures and cuty age You know some neighbor who has a De night and being very tired we. sarees with which’ the booklet is illustrated é P Laval. Ask him h rks. W. at one of the hotels until .daylight.! throughout. The facts that are giv-| ae een: Weiss I found, after eating our breakfast | en are such as every citizen of the’ always glad to refer a Pro- that I had the sum total of $37.83,'state may study with profit. One! spective separator buyer to an and being sick myself, with five chil’ of the main purposes of the directorg Id D Laval be dren to care for, no job, no furniturty in publishing the booklet is to inter- o! e user, because Easiest no house, no land, I felt pretty blue. est citizens in the next annual’ De Laval users are always totunns However, we decided to try and maké state fair. This year it is predicted | boosters and the best adver- easiest to} the pest of it. ‘that fifty counties will have state’ 5 har wash, skims, “Leaving my family at thehotel, I fair exhibits. The directors are con-! ters: we ve. Used the cleanest took a walk up the Mississippi river ¢jgent that last year’s showing will by 98% of. the world’s lasts the longest. ‘and finally succeeded in locating 80 be improved upon in size and quali’s acres of homestead which. as 1 soon ‘and that the opportunities offered ty ‘found’ out, would have to be con-|the fair for gaining reliable informa- aoe WILL BUY A, tested, so I employed a lawyer to fil tion about Minnesota wil! be — a contest for me, which took $5 out than ever. of my $37.83 and left me in debt to} The pooklet treats under ake the lawyer $10.00, We moved into jheads Minnescta’s location and size, im i I TA Se TA MERC CO e e the house of a settler for a month. } ‘lands, soil) tyres of farming, farm I bought some supplics, enough 0 ‘crops, horticulture, livestock- poultrry GRAND RAPIDS last that lerg at least, which left dairy products, public schools, build- me $15. We built a log shack and jng material, lumber industry, manu- moved in be‘ore the roof was put Oa facturers and mines, its three princi- I bought some cheap lumber and @ pal cities, and the Minnesota state || roll of tar paper, dug a well (which fair. A separate description is gived has the finect water I ever tasted), , of each county together with cuts of | and cleared a very small patch of/the various county booths with their ground and hired a man to plow it. | array of exhibits at the state fair of Then we planted a few potatoes. 1911. yEveryone let hid stock run, but we’ The booklet says: | pud 20 bushels of potatoes in the) “New England laid upon the area hole under the house the following of Minnesota would lack 16,900 squarq fall. ‘amites of covering this state. New “T get a few days’ work during | York and Pennsylvania combined ire summer and we managed to live ‘have but little more than the terri- and cleared a little more land. My/|tory: of Minnesota. Minnesota has health improved and my wife and} greater natural resources by far thi @ the children felt better. I got work Néw Ycrk and all of New England , that winter in the woods and came ov4 and in agricultural possibilities is even. The following spring I put in vastly richer than Pennsylvania. [| a fairly good crop, and by getting Belgium with one-eighth of Minne- work cnee and a while for a few sota’s area, supports three times her days at a time we cleared a little population. England and Wales, with more land. I won my contest and fil- five-eights of Minnesota’s territory, ed on the £0 acres of land, which support fifteen times her population. gave us courage. We now have org ‘The population of Minnesota in } more child, which makes six—four 19/0 was 2,075,708. Om March 15, girls and two boys. » They are all! 1912, the total bank deposits of the jolly and healthy, are never sick and state were $196,166,668, nearly, $100 | SOONER OR LATER | Bass BROOK HoTEL Cohasset, Minnesota A Mopeen HOTEL in EVERY RESPECT John Nelson Proprietor CHARLES BROWN Saloon The very best of every- thing always on hand all help a little, the oldest one sy sine each resident. There are 8,814.27 horse and one cow» a nice flock of 1911 report of the state railroad and pure-bred ‘Plymouth Rock chickens,| warehouse commission. Their dast stumps, @ good substantial log house; The counties of the siate are tak- a barn, a hen house and other out-'en up separately and condensed in- more acres this spring.” cerning each; Regarding Itasca! jcounty the bocklet gives the popu-_ COHASSET TEACHER Grand Rapids, Calumet, Coleraine,’ ‘Marble, Nashwauk, Bovey, Cohasset, ' Tke lerd area of the county is On Tuesday evening at the ae given at 1,,747,200 acres, with an E. Burgess, Miss Hazel Prescott and while the unsold state lands in the Mr. Robert Gift ‘were united in marri’ county January first, 1912, was 259,- teacher of the fourth and fifth grades The value of all farm property in {last year and Mr. Gift has been in-|ihe county is given at $2,201,580, ard warq@ factory here for a number of | at $917,214. The value of domestic years. They will gq immediately to animals owned by the farmers is will make their future home. Both young people have many friends in | great deal. At this time we own a Giles of railroads according to the’ four acres of cleared land free from official valuation was $411,000.000.” | i ‘buildings. We will clear apout six} formation of value is given con-| | | lation at 17,208, with 13 villages: \ Deer River, La Prairie, Keewatin, ED TUE DAY ss Holman and Taconite. y of the officiating minister, Rev. C- acreage in farm lands of 108,380,' jage. Miss Prescott was th@ popular $&5 acres. timately associated with the Wooders the bank deposits March 15, 1912, Blackduck, Minnesota, where they! estimated at $237,801. Cohasset. | | “Adam to Columbus” ; Billy Bennett's monster extrave- — | ganza will be scen here next Mon- ‘gay, a magnificent centurian band, junder the able direction of Professor ‘Redfield. The organization consists pf many skilled musicians who will ahd, Dees GPEi00. (wes a program of classical and popu f lar compositions that will gratify Large Sucking pigs, ready tO the most exacting ear and refined wean, $6.00 per pair. ; taste. 1 welll | Excelling in all things, the musical I yoke of steers, 2 years old, broke contingent of Billy Bennett’s specta- j Price $125, gular “Adam To Columbus” is quite | ‘in keeping with the general super- | i Have achieved Dice: bed Fabinthend: Wate VRE excellence of the entire organizatior. “BooTH’ S CIGARS” reputation ‘all uel poy rue # % © York” popular concerts will be given on, nesota. They are made shire pigs, $5 each. .the principal streets during the visit (of the organization here next Mon-j Several 40 and 80-acre tracts of pay, June 1. | good land, some partly improved; | : | other tracts easily cleared at prices | . You may have noticed that wer | woman’s hat is of a differemt shap ranging’ from $12.50 per acre and B me: if put £0 is every woman when you ip. Easy terms of payment. ‘come to think of it, thoughtfully re-| E. L. BUCK, Cohasset. | marks the Carlton County Vidette. FOR SALE. B. L. Buck offers for sale: Fine Guernsey pull calf,-3 months; GEO. BOOTH Manufacturer of ..FINE CIGARS.. Grand Rapids, Minnesota of the finest selected stock by eponiteesacaw workman in Mr. Booth’s own shops here, and under his personal supervision. This insures the utmost cleanliness and care in manufacture. For sale everywhere. Call for them. _- +