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TR, CoHASSET DEPARTMEN T IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE COHASSET, MINNESOTA, OCTOBER 22, 1913. J. H. GRADY & J. H. GRADY & CO. General Merchandise EL Where Everything is Sold—Where Farm Produce is Bought. Groceries, Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots @ Shoes, Hardware, Farm Machinery A Stock that is always kept Fresh and Up-to-Date is the kind that Pleases Particular People. CO., Cohasset Drees = Cohasset Locals Do a ts st ts ss a Robert Gift is cutting ties and cedar at Weller’s Spur. It is the intention of F.W.Stock- well to make a business trip to Foley, Minn., starting Thursday morning. Dick Wright. until recently a pail-maker at the mill here, has | gone ta Spring Lake, Minn., to work in one of the mills there. | Skelly Bros. are expecting a busy| time at their logging camps this | year judging by the amount of supplies they have been hauling out. The “Hake”. cale conducted by the Christian Ladies’ Aid last Sat- urday at Stokes” store was well patronized and was a financial suc cess. J. M. Jewell, who moved here re-| gently, has been picking up a car | of cattle, which he expects ta| ship, to market the latter part of | this week. ae A and G. A. Baker have pur- chased the separator belonging tq L. H. Owen, and are getting ready, to do considerable threshing in} this vicinity. | | Mcs. Ward a sister of Mrs. R. K. | Stokes, left last Sunday for Billings Montana, where she will remain | for a time, and thence go to Van- | eouver, Wash. Mrs. W. W. Fletcher, who was operated upon lasi} week at the Grand Rapids hospital, is gettit better h day, and expects ‘tg be | home again next week. | Ed Barrett and M. J. Schermer- horn are working for the Erskine | Timber company the former at one of the camps on the Prairie river | and the latter near Taconite. Miss Mabel Wood, a former resi- | dent of Cohasset, and now living at St. Louis, Mich., was operated upon for appendicitis recently. It is said that she is recovering rap- idly. The warehouse belonging, to the | Cohasset Co-operative Association, has been leased, it is understood, by J. M. Grady and Henry Hughes, to July 1, 1914, for the purpose of storing potatoes. Miss Kopley, youngest! daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kopley, was brought into town Saturday morn- ing, suffering from diabetes. She died early Sunday morning. The funeral was held Tuesday morning, at the Catholic church. The re- mains were placed in the Cohasset }cerning this Consul Fleming writes; as follows: Edingurgh ;uses it for silvering mirrors and for “floatingt the re-'| volving lights in light ‘houses. The | ‘Commisyioners of Northern | lighthouses on the coast of Scot-| cemetery. L. H. Owen left on the afternoon train Tuesday for his old home at Pomona California. As is known, Mr.Owen purchased the E. L.Buck farm in the neighborhood last spring, and he has been here for une lava ~wo weeks to see things were getting along. The faryn igs now being run by A. L: Pierce. Owem says he is than pleased with the result of the crops this year; that they exceeded his expectations. The yield of hay was 152 fons: oats about 4,000 bush els; potatoes 700 bushels, while the crop of rye and barley has not yet been threshed. Uses of Quicksilver. Quicksilver is used mainly, ac- cording to the United States Geo- | logical Survey, in the manufacture of fulminate for explosive caps, of | drugs, electric lighting and scien- tific apparatus, and in the recovery of the precious metals,} especially | of gold, by amalgamation. An, inr creasing demand has been reported in manufactures of electric appli- ances. An interesting and imcreas- ing use in Scotland is the floating | of the lights of lighthouses upom a body of quicksilver. The metal is | not conumed, of course, and the | loss im use is insignificant. Con- how | more | DULUTH MAN DEAD AT FRISCO Succumbs to Wounds Inflicted by Woman. San Francisco, Oct. 21—Joseph D. Van Baalen, a Duluth advertising so- jlicitor, who was shot Saturday by Miss Leah Alexander, who said he had jilted her, is dead. Miss Alexander chatted and laugh- ‘ed with a young woman friend at the city prison. “By the way, how’s Van?” she ask- ed. The visitor lowered her gaze and the prisoner guessed the truth. “It’s not true; it’s not true,” she cried and became hysterical. The police say she will be charged with murder. | Van Baalen’s body will be sent to his parents in Duluth by the Order jof Elks. ‘AUSTRIAN NOTE ULTIMATUM ‘Bervia Given Eight Days to Evacuate Albanian Territory. Belgrade, Oct. 21—The Austrian note gives Servia eight days in which to evacuate Albanian territory. The note which Austria sent to Servia is looked upon in the light of an ulti- ;matum and demands the complete evacuation of the points in Albania ‘occupied by Servian troops since the recent engagements between them and the Albanians. Plaster of Paris. Plaster of paris mixed with cold water has an expansion of about one- sixteenth of an inch to the foot when hardening. Should this be undesirable mix with warm water or limewater. and there is no expansion. CALL PHONE 116 ——AND GET—— VANEPS’ Auto and Horse land. Up to ithe year 1900 the re- | volving lighty were borne on) rollers. The ‘float’ system had been gradually ‘n'rcduced, however and is now ip operation at 30 coast idinLurgh» have in their charge 90 staticms: and will be used at all others. The machinery revolves} on a pontoon which runs on quick-' | Silver in a groove. The quantity of mercury required for this purpose | asks of 75 pounds each. As the} waste is trifling, the total present | demand for this purpose is small.” Peas rat Pe ta a a aad 3 b : BERGVILLE a ts ee ae as te at a eal Mrs. Claire Saunders is feeling highly elated these days over the premiums taken on her work. She spnt an individual exhibit to the Nordhome fair and out of a total of 25 entries won 21 prizes. Rey. George A. Malone of Bemidji’ organized a Christian Endeavor so- efety at the Spruce Grove school house last Sunday. He also made a visit at Bergville Tuesday evening. The new school house is nearing completion. Contractor Tracy had 4o go tq Grand Rapids after a) Livery when you want prompt, care- ful and reasonable service. Open Day and Night The reasonable price we charge for auto service is worth considering. W. A. VANEPS Proprietor. GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES South St. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Oct. 20—Cattle— Steers, $6.50@8.00; cows and heifers. $4.30@7.00; calves, $5.50@9.75; feed- ers, $4.30@7.40. Hogs—$7.50@8.00. Sheep—Lambs, $5.00@6.50; wethers, $4.00@4.25; ewes, $2.50@4.00. Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Oct. 20.—Wheat—On track ! and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 84%c; No. 1 Northern, 83%c; No. 2 Northern, 814%4@815%c; Dec., 815¢c; May, 85%c. Flax—On track and to arrive, $1.3756; Oct., $1.36%; Nov., $1.365%; Dec., $1.- 36%; May, $1.41. plasterer or the work would have been finished ere this time. Friendship. Forsake not an old friend, for the new is not comparable unto him.—Solo- mon. Everything the Latest in Millinery, Fancy Goods and Embroideries Mrs. Fletcher, Cohasset Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Oct. 20.—Wheat—Dec., 82% @82%c; May, 87%@87%c. Corn —Dec., 66%c; May, 68%c. Oats— Dec., 375% @37%c; May, 41%c. Pork —Jan., $19.40; May, $19.47. Butter— Creameries, 28%@29%c. Eggs—25@ 26c. oultry—Springs, 13%c; hens, 13%. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Oct. 20.—Cattle—Beeves, $6:85@9.55; Texas steers, $6.80@7.90; Western steers, $6.20@8.00; stockers and feeders, $5.20@7.65; cows and heifers, $3.50@8.30; calves, $7.00@ 11.00. Hogs—Light, $7.70@8.40; mix- ed, $7.80@8.45; heavy, $7.70@8.40; rough, $7.70@7.85; pigs, $5.00@T.75. Sheep—Native, $3.90@5.00; yearlings, $5.00@6.00. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Oct. 20.—Wheat—Dec., 805¢c; May, 85%c. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 83%c; No. 1 North- ern, 805,@82%c; to arrive, 80%@ 82%c; No. 2 Northern, 785 @80%c; No. 3 Northern, 765@78%c; No. 3 yellow corn, 6344@64c; No. 4 corn, 59 @62c; No. 3 white oats, 34@34%c; to arrive, 344%4c; No. 3 oats, 32@83c; bar- ley, 44@67c; flax, $1.375%; to arrive, 31.37%. BOOST FOR COHASSET (A. BISSONETTE| Architectural PLASTER WORK of all kinds. Rough casting a specialty. Plain prairie eadars, id oth Crand Rapids, Minnesota Parties interested may call at the Herald-Review Office. BOARD'S ORDER IS OVERRULED Mrs. Pankhurst May Enter the United States. NO BOND IS REQUIRED Following Conference With President Wilson the Secretary of Labor Is- sues Instructions to Permit Landing of Suffragette Leader. Washington, Oct. 21.—Mrs. Emme- line Pankhurst, the militant British suffragist, is free to enter the United States. The Ellis Island board’s order of de- fees was reversed after Presi- lent Wilson had conferred on the ease with Secretary Wilson and a hearing had been concluded before Immigration Commissioner Caminetti. Secretary Wilson announced at the conclusion of his conference with the president that Mrs. Pankhurst would |be admitted upon her own recogniz- ance, with the understanding that she would depart at the end of her lec. ture engagement. No bond was exact- jed. Secretary Wilson declared that he and the president had discussed the question briefly. “We agreed,” he said, “that Mrs. Pankhurst should be admitted on her own recognizance. My own reason is, jand the president feels likewise, that there is naturally an element of doubt as to whether her acts constituted moral terpitude or were political in character. { No Harm in Admitting. “Being admitted on her own recog- | nizance, of course, if she violates any ‘of our laws, we have two remedies. Our courts may pass on her acts or | we may deport her. There being the | element of doubt as to. whether moral turpitude or political offense was in ‘volved we decided that we have suffi- | cient safeguards and that there is no harm in admitting her.” The decision by the president and Secretary Wilson was communicated to Commissioner General Caminetti, ,who issued the formal order of re- lease. President Wilson felt that the law had a flexible interpretation, so that it was largely a question of policy. Commissioner Caminetti’s decision was in strict accordance with the |views of President Wilson and the secretary of labor. Mr. Caminetti filed a brief memo- randum, recommending Mrs. Pank- |hurst’s admission on her own recog- nizance, and announced that he would later fle his reasons in writing. New York, Oct. 21—Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst left Ellis Island and came to New York shortly after 1 p.m. A motor of Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, suf- frage leader, met her at the pier and she was driven to Mrs. Belmont’s home. SULZER TO LEAVE ALBANY Bays He Will Begin Again at Bottom of Ladder. Albany, N. Y., Oct. 21.—Declaring he would leave Albany shortly former Governor Sulzer is engaged in finish- ing the last of his packing. He said he had a number of important con- ferences scheduled in New York and must go there now without delay. “I'm going to begin again at the bot- tom of the ladder,” he added. The intimation given by his friends ls that Sulzer will endeavor to enter the assembly fight next fall. But whatever he does to secure a new foothold in public life Sulzer is de- termined to keep up his agitation for direct primaries. Sulzer looked upon his impeachment as a part of the po- litical game. He says the people un- flerstand this exactly as he does. Garbage and love letters should be burned before they create trouble.— Chicago News. Lives Year With Broken Neck. New York, Oct. 21—Joseph Weeks, who had lived a year with a broken neck, died in a hospital at Babylon, L. IL. His mind was clear until the end, but since the accident he had never been able to use his limbs. Weeks’ neck was broken when he dived into shallow water while bath- The Voice With the Smile Wins Good tclephone service depends largely upon mutual courtesy. __ The telephone is more useful to those who talk as if face to face, for civility removes difficulties and facilitates the promptest possible connections. The Bell Telephone enters intimately into the so- cial and business life of each individual. The best results come through the practice of mutual cour- tesy. The Voice With the Smile Is the Bell Telephone Way. SERIOUS BLAZE AT OTTUMWA Fire in lowa City Causes Loss of $415,000. Ottumwa, Ia. Oct. 21.—The third disastrous fire in three years swept the business district here, causing a loss of $415,000. A half city block, containing two hardware stores, two furniture stores, the Ottumwa Gas company’s build- ing and a flour and feed store was destroyed by the flames. SALE OF SCHOOL AND OTHER STATE LANDS ‘ STATE OF MINNESOTA, State Audi. tor’s Office. St. Paul, October 6, 1913. Notice! is hereby given that on Novem. ber 17, 1913, at 10 o’clock a, m., in the office of the County Auditor at Grand Rapids, Itasca County, in the State of Minnesota, I will offer for sala certain unsold state lands, and also those state lands which have reverted to the state by reason of the non-payment of interest Terms: Fifteen per cent of the pur- chase price and interest on the unpaid palance from data of sale to June Ist,, 1914, must be paid at the time of sale. The balance of purchase money is payable in whole or in part on or be- fore forty years from date of sale; the rate of interest on the unpaid balance is four per cent per annum, payable in advance on June 1st of each year; pro. vided, the principal remains unpaid for ney to Loan ONIMPROVED FARM LANDS If you need money to improve your farm, or to pay up mort- gage drawing a high rate of1n- terest, send us a description of your property and state amount wanted. Loans made for five, six or seven years, with privilege to pay part or all of mortgage after three years. Lowest rate of interest and prompt service. REISHUS-REMER LAND (0. GRAND RAPIDS ten years; but if fhe principal is paid within ten years from date of sale, tha rate of interest will be computed at five per cent per annum. Appraised value of timber, if any, must\also be paid at time of sale. Lands on which the interest is delin- quent may be redeemed at any time up to the hour of sale, or before re- sale to an actual purchaser. All mineral rights are reserved by the laws of the state. Not more than 320 acres can be sold or contracted to be sold to any one pur- chaser. Agents acting for purchasers must furnish affidavit of authority. Apprais- ers’ reports, showing quality and kind of soil, are on file in this office. Lists of lands to be offered may be obtained of the State Auditor or the State Commissioner of Immigration at St. Paul, and of the County Auditor at above address. SAMURL G, IVERSON, State Auditor. Herald-Review Oct. 15-22-29-Nov.5. — Grand Rapids Village Lots Ttasca County Abstract Office Abstracts Real Estate Fire Insurance Conveyances Drawn, TaxeS Paid for Non-Residents Kremer & King Pi reps. Grand Rapids - » Minn. Civil Engineering ITASCA ENGINEERING CO. J. A. Brown - - - Manager $5 DOWN 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. $6 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 term: | -REISHUS-REMER LAND COMPANY