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aimed i ~OHASSET PARTMENT IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE COHASSET, MINNESOTA, DECEMBER 18, 1912 BOOST FOR COHASSET DOPOD rrers Cohasset Locals A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. M. Gaulet Tuesday of last week. F. A. and Mrs. King of Grand Rapius were visitors yesterday «at the Henry Ranfranz home. Mrs. H. J. Jones and her sister, Miss Mabel Robideau, were Grand Rapids visitors yesterday. A basket social will be held to- night under the auspices of the Christian church society. Mrs. B. smith will entertain the ladies of the M. E. society Thurs- day afternoon at the usual hour. John Nelson is able to report for duty again after being laid up three days with.an attack of grip. Dr. Copper, district superintendent of the M. E. church was a’ visitor in Cohasset between trains Monday. | The lecture by Aaron Watkins Thursday last was well attended, and very much appreciated by the audience. Cohasset was threatened with a coal famine, but word came yester- day that a car load would arrive for the Stackhouse yards. The delightful car “Christ- mas at Grandmothe will be giv- en Christmas eve by the M. E. Sunday school at Village hall. Miss Linberg and Miss Aiken en- tertained a number of friends at the J. M. Stackhouse home Mon- day evening. A dainty lunch was served. Manager Harry Jones, who has charge of the Erskine-Stackhouse me itile business under Trustee Mackey, says another week will dispose of the entire stock. Father Henneberry will hold raass at fhe Catholic church next Sunday at 8 »”' 1) o’clock. Mass will o be held at the church Christmas morning at 11 o’clock. Rev. Mr. Blauchette, who had been assigned pastor for the M. FE. church here, has been transfer- red to Deerwood. The pastor who: has been in charge of the Deer- wood church will be sent to Co- hasset, and is expected to arrive with his family in a few days. The annual Catholic bazaar held last Saturday evening at Village hall under the auspices of the Altar so- ciety, was a very decided success. Among the lucky ones were Mr. Schnieder who won the handsome quilt. Lillian Johnson held the lucky number for the prize cake and George O’Brien captured the silverware. An oyster supper was served and those in attendance had a jolly good time socially. The so- ciety netted $157.00. Factory Closes Down, The Superior Woodenware fac- tory ceased operations for the pres- ent, and citizens of Cohasset are much concerned as to when it will again resume business. One cause for the shut-down is said to be the lack of fuel for the furnaces. Manager Thompson says it is due to the making of some necessary changes in the heating plant. What ever it may be, the. public is most concerned as to whether there is to be light or darkness. The factory has been supplying electric illumination for the village, and to cut it out means no end of trouble, expense, annoyance and dis faction. To be compelled to reinstate kerosene lamps does not appeal favorably to the average eitizen and there is a general pro- of the village was held last evening and the matter generally discussed and it was agreed that something 4 committee representing the vil- lage council went to Grand Rapids Monday evening to the Water and Light commission, to ascertain if service could not be had from there. It was represent- ed that a better and more reliable |service could be had from Grand Rapuus, besides carrying with it the privileges and convenience of a day current. If this arrangemnet is jmade, it is likely the franchise given to the Woodenware factory jfwill be annulled. DIES Bodies of Coupie Drowned While Skating Found. The bodies of A. L. Tilseth and wife, who left Hudson, Wis., at night on skates for their home in Lakeland, 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 arms. A strand of the woman’s hair froz- en to the ice kept the bodies from becoming lost. RECORD SHIPMENT OF ORE Lake Superior Top Mark, Made in 1910, Beaten This Season. Tron ore shipments from the Lake Superior region during the season of 1912, just now ending, show a gain over those of last year of 15,305,366 tons. This year’s shipments overtop the best previous record, made in 1910, by 4,815,576 tons. Shipments from the Lake Superior region fot- lows: Escanaba, 5,234,655; Marquette, 3,- 296,761; Ashland, 4,797,101; Superior, 14,240,714; Duluth, | Harbors, 9,370,960. Total, 47,445,768. CAPTAIN MEESE IS DEAD First Manager of St. Paul Press Succumbs. Pioneer ness manager of the St. Paul Pioneer |and Grand Army circles, died at the residence of his son in New York city. Captain Meese was in his seventy- second year and had been ill for two years. For fifteen years he was manager of the Pennsylvania state printing of- fice at Harrisburg. He served through- out the Civil war in the Forty-fifth Pennsylvania infantry. i WOMAN WINS FAMOUS SUIT Secures Injunction Against Steel Trust Subsidiary. Mrs. Elizabeth Liend of Hibbing won her famous suit against the Oliver Iron Mining company, involving the operation of the Sellers pit near her home, when Judge Martin Hughes filed his decision with the clerk of the district court. Mrs. Liend is granted @ permanent injunction. The com- pany is enjoined from cutting into or encroaching upon or obstructing Mrs. Liend’s property in conducting its mining or stripping operations. SPECIAL SALE ‘Beginntng Wednesday, November 23rd and lasting until the holidays, I will offer my stock of DRY GOODS MILLINERY FANCY Including Hats, Trimmings, greatly reduced prices. Mrs. @. WM. Fletcher Cohasset, GOODS Etc. at Minnesota test. A meeting of the business men} must be done forthwith to get light.} consult with } IN HUSBAND'S ARMS! 10,495,577; Two | | Captain J. W. Meese, the first. busi- | Press and widely known in publishing | WILLIAM J. FLYNN. Becomes Chief of United States Secret Service. Photo by American Press Association. FLYNN SUCCEEDS WILKIE New Yorker Becomes Head of Fed eral Secret Service. Washington, Dec. 18.—William J. Flynn of New York has been appoint- ed chief of the United States secret service by Secretary MacVeagh of the | treasury department, succeeding John E. Wilkie, now chief supervising agent of the customs service. For many years Mr. Flynn has been in charge of the New York division of the secret service and during the early ; days of Mayor Gaynor’s administration was deputy police commissioner of New York. NUMEROUS THRILLING HAPPENINGS ABOARD Log of Pacific Liner Reads Like Dime Novel. San Francisco, Dec. 18.—The log of the liner Korea, just arrived from the Orient, reads like the table of con- tents of a dime novel. One day out from San Francisco a Chinese passenger jumped overboard and was drowned. Another Chinese passenger was claimed as the victim of a tong war before the ship reached Honolulu. He had sought to save his life by flight, but a gunman from the enemy’s ranks sailed with him on the Korea and found an opportunity to fire the fatal bullet. The slayer is held at Honolulu. Before the liner left that port an- other Chinese made an unsuccessful attempt to commit suicide and a day later still another Chinese jumped overboard to his death. At Yokohama, on the homeward voyage, a Japanese peddler plunged a knife into the back of Andrew Benus- si, a watchman on the ship. The peddier fied, but was captured. Be- nussi recovered. : On Dec. 9 E. C. Miler, a cabin pas- senger from Manila, was giving his two-year-old son a bath, when he ac- cidentally turned on the hot water. ‘The child was scalded so badly that | he died in an hour. | DEFEAT OF WOMEN PLANNED Chicago Association Agrees to Under- sell Them in Eggs. Chicago, Dee. 18.— Society and club women of this city who will sell eggs direct to the consumer at 24 cents a dozen Friday may find themselves with a few carloads of eggs for break- fast and a large sized bill to foot be- sides. An association of wholesale mer- chants has agreed to flood the market with cold storage eggs and undersell the women at any price. HOME FOR WORKING GIRLS Mrs. Frederick Vanderbilt to Build $150,000 Structure. New York, Dec. 18—Ground will be broken on East Twenty-ninth street next month for a new working girls’ home, the gift of Mrs. Frederick Van- derbilt. The estimated cost is $150,000 and the building will house 100 girls, who will pay from $3 to $5 a week for TURKISH ENVOY FILES PROTEST Objects to fireeks Participat- ing in Peace Conference. ALLIES ACTING AS UNIT Agree to Walk Out of Meeting in a Body if Turkey Refuses to Give Up Adrianopie, Which Will Be Among the First Things Demanded. London, Dec. 18.—The peace envoys of the Balkan states have agreed that they will walk out of the conference | en masse if Turkey refuses to give up Adrianople, which will be among the first things demanded by the al- lance. At the second day’s session of the peace negotiations the allied dele- gates decided that the proposed Bul- garian frontier would be the first point brought up. The cession of Thrace and a part of Macedonia to Bulgaria will include the cession of Adrianople. The morning session was given over to the examination of creden- tials and discussion of the power given to the plenipotentiaries by their respective countries. | Ozman Nizami Pasha, chief envoy | of Turkey, entered a formal protest to the presence in the peace confer- ence of the Greek plenipotentiaries, because Greece had not signed the armistice of Bagtche and was continu- ing the war against Turkey. Rechid Pasha, another Turkish dele- gate, insisted that his colleagues must withdraw from the conference if Pre- mier Venizelos and the other Greeks remained, but the other Balk-n dele- gates finally prevailed on the Turks to sit in the conference at least until they could obtain fresh instructions from Constantinople. The Greek representatives refused | to sign the protocol when invited to do so, pointing out that it would make no} practical difference, as the allies were united and the decisions reached by | the members of the Balkan league | would be binding on Greece equally with the other members of the federa- tion. FLEETS ARE FIGHTING AGAIN News of Battle Comes During Balkan | Peace Conference. London, Dec. 18.—The Turkish and Greek fieets again were engaged in battle at the entrance of the Darda- nelles, according to a Lloyd’s dispatch received here. The news came while the peace conference was in session and coupled with the advices of the naval battle off Tenedos Monday probably in- creased the friction between the Turk- ish and Greek peace delegates. TWO DIE IN TRAIN WRECK Engineer and Fireman Killed When Trains Collide. Green Bay, Wis., Dee. 18.—Anton Schemich, a fireman, of Green Bay, and Matthew Foley, engineer, of Mil- waukee, were killed at Kiel when train No. 2, the fast train from Mil- waukee to the copper country on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul road, crashed head on into a freight train. Both the dead men were members of the passenger train crew. The fireman was found dead in the wreckage and the engineer died a short time after being rescued froin beneath the burning cab. None of the passengers was seriously injured and the entire crew of the freight escaped with slight bruises. GIVES FIRST DEMONSTRATION Dr, Friedmann Inoculates Number of Tuberculous Patients. Berlin, Dec. 18—Dr. Frederick Franz Friedmann, reported discover- er of a-cure for tuberculosis, opened his first institution for demonStration. Personally he inoculated several pa- tients with his serum in the presence ‘of eminent physicians and scientists from Berlin, London, Paris and other | cities of Europe and America. Dr. Friedmann still refuses to give out any of his serum, saying that from a tiny drop of it.a bacteriologist could propagate enough of the bacilli to sup- ply the world. ANOTHER PORTUGUESE PLOT Plan to Establish Military Dictator- ship Discovered. Lisbon, Portugal, Dec. 18.—A plot to establish a military dictatorship in Portugal has been discovered. Part of the army was supposed to be im- plicated. The cabinet was in session all night. Troops were kept under arms and warships in the harbor cleared for ac- tion. : ' SUBSCRIBE FOR THE HERALD-REVIEW Feseeeros << es Plain Statement of OME farmer saves money every time an IHC wagon is sold. Not because it costs less money to begin with, but be- cause of the length of s>rvice it gives, an IH C wagon is the cheapest wagon you can buy. The longer a wagon lasts the cheaver itis. That is why it is economy to Luy the best wagon — one that will outlast any ordinary wagon. When you buy anI H C wagon Weber New Bettendorf Columbus _—_ Steel King you invest in a wagon built of the highest grade material which experience and care can select or money can buy, built in the most thorough, painstaking manner, by skilled work- men, in factories which have modern appli- ances for doing work of the highest standard at the lowest possible cost. All lumber used is air-dried in sheds with concrete floors. This insures toughness and resiliency. All metal parts are made of espec- ially prepared steel, guaranteeing the longest service. Each wagon undergoes four inspec- tions before being shipped so that it reaches the purchaser in first class condition, ready to be put to work at once, and able to carry any reasonable load over any road where a wagon should go. Weber and Columbus wagons have wood gears, New Bettendorf and Steel King have steel gears. The I HC dealer knows which wagon is best suited to your work. When you see him get literature from him, or, write . . International Harvester Company of America (incorporated) St. Cloud Minn. IHC 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- gation, fertilizers, etc.. make your inquiries specific and send them to 1 H C Service B Hi Bed send them to LACS ice Bureau, Harvester Bass BROOK HoTEL Cohasset, Minnesota A Mopern HOTEL in Every RESPECT John Nelson Proprietor Grand Rapids Village Lots $5 D AND $5 PER MONTH We have choice residence lots all over town and we are selling them on such easy terms that anybody can buy. $5 down and $5 per month is certainly easy. Come in and talk the matter over. Wealso have some choice business lots on our lists. They are for sale on easy terms. REISHUS-REMER LAND COMPANY Eciiieied