Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, December 11, 1912, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CoHASSET IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE : Cohasset Locals ; Miss Ridberta spent Sunday in Grand Rapids, the guest of friends. Mrs. C. M. Erskine of Grand \Rap- ids visited with Cohasset friends on Monday. Father Henneberry will hold mass at 8 amd 10 o’clock on Sunday, De- cember 22. The Catholic Ladies Altar society will meet with Mrs. F. Gaulet tomor- Tow afternoon, Mrs. J. M. Stackhouse and) Master Leonard Fletcher were Grand Rap- fide visitors Saturday. Owen Skelly left Monday for Du- luth and Foley, Minn., ta pick up a car load or so of horses to work in the woods. Morris O’Brien left Friday with a car load of horses for his loging camps near Ray, on, the Canadian Northern. Mrs. B. O. Hansen entertained last Thursday in honor of Mrs. Katherine Sachs, who is here on a Visit to her mother, Mrs. Skoedopole. The ladies aid society of the M. EB. chureh will hold their next regu- lar meeting on Thursday afternoon of next week with Mrs, B. Smith. Napoleon Sears and Anton Van Stiphant have moved to Grand Rap- ids with their families. They have accepted positions in the paper mill. Miss Marie Aitkin spent Saturday and Sunday in Cohasset with her sister, Jessie: who has charge of the kindergarten department of our pub- lie schools. Ed Dibble. wha was injured last week when he came incontact with Waiter Aitkim’s runaway horse is ble to be out, but is still in the limping class. Arthur Axtel, who recently arriv- ed from Dakota to visit his brother who lives west of town, has de- cided to puy a farm in this vicinity, and make Itasca county his home. Aaron S. Watkin, the famous lec- turer and) late presidential candidate on the Prohibition ticket, will be here Thursday night at Village hall. He is well worth hearing. Glen Wood from Blackduck, former manager of the woodenware factory here, and who is now engaged in the cooperage business im Blackduck, spemt part of last week im Cohasset vigiting his uncle, Frank Wood. A lange delegation from Cohasset attended the class play at the high school in Grand Rapids last Thurs- day night. Three of the Cohasset pup- ils were in the play, Miss Thomp- gon taking the leading part. E. L. Buck soldan eighty acre farm to Harry Gist of Ventura, Iowa, this week. Mr. Gist will move onto the place in March. It is two miles west of Cohasset on the River road and adjoining the Jas McMahon ferm. It is partly improved amd Mr. Gist expects to make quiet a showing the first year in the way of crop C. B. Osgood of Mankato conclud- ed one of the most successful reviv- al meetings that has ever been held in Cohasset at the Christian church last Wednesday night. Mr. Osgood| ODDITIES IN left many friends in Cohasset, who will follow him in his work wherever he may go. Bad Jeffre was looking for a rabbit chance when a big wolf showed) up. Ed is mo stickler on matters of this hind so he bagged the wolf and accepted a ten-dollar bounty from Auditor Spang at Grand Rapids. A som was born to Mr. and/ Mrs. Nap Nolette, November 29, Many Cohasset friends of Miss Anna Hegmapn will be surprised and pleased to hear of her marriage at Wright, Minn., on Thanksgiving day, to Mr. Arthur St. Peirre. Father Tur- biaux of Aitkin read the service. The young people will make their home at Wright in Aitkin county. Miss Ada L. Forester, represent- ing the Christian Women’s board of Missions: of the United States and England, spoke to a large and appre- ciative audience at the Christian church Tuesday evening. Miss For- ester is an English gentlewoman and is one of the most able speakers in her line in the coumfry. The Cohasset schools will conclude their first half years work on Fri- day pefore Christmas with both a program and an exhibition of the work that is being done im the schools. The program will commence at 2 in the afternoon in which all rooms will take part. The last half of the af- ternoon will be given over to the exhibition work. Mrs. E. L, Buck writes from Havana, Cuba, that the winter weather in that country is most delightful, and that jshe is enjoying her sojourn there. She will spend the next two or three months in Cuba with ler s’ster, whose husband is in charge of constructing a system of sewerage. Mr. Buck will leave for the south in a few days. Be- fore returning he will journey to the Pacifie coast and pay a visit. to his old home city, Los Angeles. Thrilling Experiences, That story in the Grand) Rapids Herald-Review about the Cohasset man who ran into a deer. with his automobile, will do to tell, anyway. —Thief River Falls Times. We did not catch the Grand Rap- ids story, but haven’t a doubt of its truth, no matter how strong it was, because we know of a Bear River farmer who was chased nine miles in his auto by a cow moose. Those who witnessed the thrilling spectacle say it was some race.—Mesaba Ore, Hibbing. We admit being backed into the | darkest corner of the Ananias club } rooms and forced to acknowledge our ineligibility to membership im the order. We repudiate back dues and withdraw. | Order Holiday Flowers| FROM. | The Flower Lovers Shop DULUTH FLORAL CO. WEDDING BOQUETS FUNERAL FLOWERS WRITE, WIRE OR ’PHONE SPEGIA FANCY Beginntng Wednesday, November 23rd and lasting until the holidays, I will offer my stock of ‘DRY GOODS MILLINERY Including Hats, Trimmings, Etc. at greatly reduced prices. Mrs. MW. W. Fletcher L SALE GOODS Minnesota 3a = COHASSET, MINNESOTA, DECEMBER 11, 1912 THe NEWS Angelo Sarto, aged gevdiiyetes brother of Pope Pius, carried mail ten. miles on foot daily for 50 cents a day and applied to the Italian postoffice department for a salary increase. He got his salary doubled. te & Helen J. Kimball, aged nineteen, was slightly hurt by an automobile at Bridgeport, Conn. While the owner was taking her to the hospital in his machine, he collided with another automobile. The girl was killed. e+ + i For the first time since the estab4 Ushment of the Nobel foundation there will be no Nobel peace prize this year, the Norwegian committee holding that no man has merited the prize. te +S Disguised as men, two women held up a train near Jakaterinoslav, Rus- sia, raided the baggage car and shot dead two trainmen. They were ar- rested. BP Because she sold bad catsup Justice McFarland of Altoona, Pa., fined his own wife $60 and costs. BODIES LOCKED IN ARMS Corpses of Lakeland (Minn.) Couple Found in the St. Croix. Hudson, Wis., Dec. 11—The bodies of A. L. Tilseth and wife, who left here on skates for their home in Lake- land, Minn., were found in the channel of the St. Croix river. When the searching party lifted them to the ice with grappling hooks a pathetic sight met their eyes. Mr. Tilseth held the body of his wife in close embrace. Evidently realizing that death was near for both of them he determined that she should die in his RAILROAD TRAFFIC BADLY HAMPERED Ten Thousand Employes of Eng- ligh Lines on Strike, London, Dec. 11—Over 7,000 rail-| way men in Sunderland, York and Leeds walked out in sympathy with the 3,000 strikers on the Northeastern : Tailway, swelling the total of those out to more than 10,000. The labor trouble has practically’ tied up freight traffic and seriously | hampered traffic on the roads affect-) ed and business of all kinds is at a} standstill. The collieries and iron foundries of | the territory involved in the strike are | preparing to close down indefinitely | unless the disagreement is settled. | The strike is ostensibly for personal * liberty. Engineer Knox of the North- eastern was reduced in rank because he was drunk. His fellows insisted he had a right to get drunk so long as he attended to his work. The railway of- ficials refused to reinstate Knox and the men struck. | Tillman Case Is Settled. Columbia, S. C., Dec. 11.—B. R. Till- | man, Jr., son of United States Senator Tillman, and Mrs. Lucy Dugas, former wife of Tillman, will share custody of their two children according to a de cision here by the state supreme court. The father will have posses- sion of the children—two little girls —during two months of the summer vacation period, half of the Christmas holidays and. one week each spring. GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Dec. 10.—Wheat—Te arrive and on track—No. 1 hard, 82c; No. 1 Northern, 81¢; No. 2 Northern, 79¢; Dec., 79%¢; May, S4c. ‘Flax—On track - and to arrive, $1.22; Dec., $1.21; Jan., $1.21%. South St. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Dec. 10.—Cattle— Steers, $5.75@8.50; cows and heifers, $4.00@7.00; calves, $4.00@9.25; feed- ers, $3.75@7.00. Hogs—§$7.00@7.50. Sheep—Lambs, $3.25@7.25; wethers, $3.25@4.25; ewes, $2.00@3.90. > Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Dec. 10.—Wheat — Dec., 8316c; May, 89@89%e;- July; 86%4c. Corn—Dec., 47%c; May, 47% @48c; July, 48%c. Oats—Dee., 314¢c; May, 325¢c; July, 325¢@32%c. Pork—Jan., $19.10; May, $18.67. Butter—Cream- eries, 27@35c. Eggs—19@26%4c. Poul try— Turkeys, 15@19c; chickens, Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Dec. 10.—Cattie—Beeves, | $5.60@10.75; Texas steers, $4.40@5.75; Western steers, $5.40@9.10; stockers end feeders, $4.35@7.75; cows and heifers, $2.70@7.50; calves, $6.50@10.- Ttasca County Abstract Office f Abstracts Real Estate Fire Insurance Conveyances Drawn, TaxeS Paid for Non-Residents Kremer & King Props. Grand Rapids - = Minn. A Calling List The Fire Department The Pohce The Doctor The Baker The Butcher The Grocer The Caterer The Livery Stable and anybody;else you want; called by Telephone. Place your order now and get your name in our new Telephone Directory which goes to press in a few days. MESABE. TELEPHONE COMPANY. For Further Information Call oO. V. HEMSWORTH, Commercial Manager. Tel. 67. Grand Ranids Minnesota Civil Engineering TASCA ENGINEERING CO. J. A. Brown - - - Manager Phone§ 168 Surveying Estimating Construction Superintending Drafting Jne Main omerente. “What is the rea! difference between 12c; springs, 12%6c. mushrooms and toadstools?” “One is a feast and the other is a funeral.”—Baltimore American. Merely Fiction. Minerva — Isn't it strange, mother, that all the heroines in novels marry poor men? Mater—Yes, my dear, but 50. Hogs—Light, $7.35@7.55; mixed, that is fiction.—Jud $7.40@7.85; heavy, $7-40@7.85; $7.40@7.60; pigs, $5.25@7.25. Sheep— Native, $3.65@4.65; yearlings, $5.00@t 6.35; lambs, $5.7: Every being that something. 58 This let EPARTMENT BOOST FOR COHASSET SS 3333355 Sas E other day a Kansas farmer walked into the IHC local dealer’s place of business to buy his third I H C wagon. The question of the age of his first IHC wagon came up. He thought he had had it about five years. The dealer looked up his old books and found that the wagon was pur- chased on the 15th of July, 1905, being now seven years old and practically as good as new. A man may forget when he bought his I HC Weber Columbus New Bettendorf Steel King but he cannot forget the long, faithful service he gets from it. I H C wagons are built to last long and give satisfactory service. Where you find a man owning an I H C wagon, you will rarely see him with any other make at any time. The wood parts of I H C wagons are made from selected, high-grade, air-dried lumber. The metal parts are mostly steel’ of the strongest and best kind. Weber and Colum- bus wagons have wood gears, while Steel King and New Bettendorf have steel gears. The best wagon for your purpose is sold by the I HC local dealer who will give you the best of reasons for buying it. Get literature and information from him, or write International Harvester Company of America (Incorporated) St. Cloud Minn. THC Service Bureau The purpose of this Bureau is to furnish, free of charge to ail, the best information obtainable on better farming. If you have any worthy ques- tions concerning soils, crops. land drainage, irri- paw pe eee ste, ake we pay ee and send them to ervice Bureau, Harvester Building, Chicago, USA Bass BROOK HoTEL Cohasset, Minnesota A Mopern HOTEL in EVERY RESPECT John Nelson Proprietor ‘Village tors $9 DOWN AND $5 PER MONTH We have choice residence lots all over town and them on such easy terms that anybody can buy. $5 per month is certainly easy. Come in and over. Wealso have some choice business ‘They are for sale on easy terms. we are seiling $5 down and talk the matter lots on our lists. = REISHUS-REMER LAND COMPANY scr SUBSCRIBE FOR THE HERALD-REVIEW

Other pages from this issue: