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se i ‘SS AINE Sa CoHASSET DEPARTMENT IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE *< COHASSET, MINNESOTA, NOVEMBER 5, 1913. J. H. GRADY & J. H. GRADY & CO. General Merchandise 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 De : Cohasset Locals 3, , LOD eetoontontectontntoetonte cto toatietoteatoetontoetonts Frank Brackett spent Sunday at Bena visiting his father. Mrs. Louis Dorholt is visiting friends and relatives at Clearbrook.) “Minn. 20) E. L. Buck came in Tuesday noon} from Minneapolis. He will be here; several days arranging some busi- nes@ matters. The new reading room at the Cohasset school building will open | next week. An opening party will | be held Friday night. Miss Nellie Stenburg, one of the Deer River teachers, was down Sat-) urday to attend the Happy Hust- } lers party. She returned Sunday. Clyde Jellison has been ill for several days with pneumonia. Dr. Hursh is attending the patient and} ceports that he is somewhat better ‘now. An election of officers for the ensuing year of the Ladies Aid of | the Christian church was held last | Thursday at the home of Mrs. Hol- linrake. ot A bazaar and supper to be given | by the Methodist ladies will be | held soon, and will be announced just as soon as the date is decided | upon. | Misses Gertrude Palmer, Mabel | leau d Muriel Stapleton are | hose going to Grand Rapics o attend the county con- of Methodist Sunday schools. Po Ws well, James Doran | and E. A. Freeman visiled the} Big Forx, wora Lake and Vance + \ @:hools last week, and located sey- eral sites for new school build- ings. | W. White of Owatonna, the | father of Mrs. F. W. Stockwell, is visiting at Hill City. Mr. White who | is nearly 80 years of age is expected! in Cohasset in a few days to visit | his daughter. Mr. Chamberlain and family ar rived here last week from Minne- apolis. He has purchased farming land adjoining Frank Brown's} place near Deer Lake, and is pre paring to erect a house on the place at once. Li Iast Wednesday the ladies of the M. E. Aid society met at Mrs. Chris Baker’s at Bass lake and held an all-day quilting party. A de- lightful dinner was served by the hostess. Next week they meet with Mrs. Stackhouse. Word has been received that Miss Jessie Newton, who left here a short time ago for Ontanagon, Michigan, was married at that }} Stackhouse town. They will reside at Ontana- gon: during the coming winter. It is expected that Mrsj W. W. ; Flether will be able to return from | the hospital at Grand Rapids some day this week. She had expected i be hime before this but the physician advised her to remain at the hospital until all danger of re- lapse has passed. The Happy Hustlers Sunday school class celebrated Hallowe'en with a party at the home of J. M. Saturday evening. (Sames were played, stories told, and later on luncheon was served iu real witch style. the guesis sit- ting Gn the floor, and every one had a good time. Monday evening, while adjusting the tank in a new gasoline lamp, R. K. Stokes was severely burned. Some of the gasoline dripped down ug his shirt sleeve and ignited from a light near by. Mr. Stokes tried to extinguish the flame on ihe sleeve of his left arm with his {right hand, but finding it hard to | put out he started for the river. Just before reaching the river bant he succeéded in putting the flame out, but by this time his left arm, from shoulder to fingers, was bad- | iy burned, as was also his right Waid, CAUSE FOR ANIMOSITY AGAINST AMERICANS firs. John Lind Discusses Conditions in Mexico, PROVIDE FOR AN ARMY OF 500,000 Plans “of Ordnance Depart- ment Made Public. SIX YEARS’ WORK ENDED at a Moment’s Notice to Arm and Care for Half Million Men—Supply Depot System Worked Out. Washington, Nov. 4—The “war plans” of the army ordnance depart- | ment are conepleted and for the first time in the history of the country 'Uncle Sam is in readiness, at a mo- ment’s notice, to arm and equip 500,- | 000 men to send into the field in the | event of war with a first class power. | These plans have been worked out | during the last six years through the | systematic and unremitting labor of | Lieutenant Colonel J. T. Thompson of the ordnance department under the | direction of Brigadier General Will- iam Crozier, chief of the bureau. Colonel Thompson pointed out that | his “war plan” is based upon condi- tions as they would actually exist in the event of hostilities. The line of the regular army would be increased | to its maximum enlisted strength as provided for by law; the entire organ- | ized militia of the country would be | mustered into the service of the Unit- !ed States, at full war strength; and the remainder would be raised by the i$ CALL PHONE 116 | ——AND GET—— | | VANEPS’ '? Auto and | Horse : Livery when you want prompt, care- ful and reasonable service. | Government of United States Ready ; mer, returned to her home in this | | | Minneapolis, Nov. 4.—Mrs. John Lind, who accompanied her husband | when he went as special envoy from | the United States to Mexico last sum- | Open Day and Night The reasonable price we charge for auto service is worth considering. W. A. VANEPS Proprietor. city. As to when Mr. Lind will re-| turn she declared she did not know. Mrs. Lind said there is good cause | for the Mexican feeling against the | Americans, because some of the Amer- | icans who have plantations in Mex-| ico treat the native laborers out-! rageously. They pay them from 25; to 50 cents a day and the foremen act | like slave drivers in keeping the men; at work, she said. Mrs. Lind said | ——— that she regretted very much that there were some men from Minnesota who were doing this very thing. President Huerta is regarded as very much of a child, Mrs. Lind said, and Gamboa is the real brains of the administration. The government drink shops, which are found on every corner in the cities, more than anything else are responsible for the disorder in Mex- ico, Mrs. Lind said. Not only strong drinks, but opium also is sold indis- criminately, she said. Mrs. Lind said that Mr. Lind and she were courteously treated while in Mexico, not only by the officials but enlistment of volunteers. plan” as now completed provides that this force shall be armed and equip- ped at concentration camps before the different units are sent to the scenes of operation. The dcepertment has worked out a system of division field supply depots. al tools, ordnance stores and sup- plies, estimated as sufficient for main- taining for six months complete di- visions of infantry or cavalry or auxil- liary army troops. These division de- pots are so arranged that several can be readily combined into a field army place October 25 to Mr. Isaac New- by the people they met on the street, | ¢ePot- Mrs. Lind confirmed the stories of her rescue of two members of the| THAW’S FINAL BRIEF FILED Mexican legislature. _—— ae as me ee Requisition Improper and Law Vio- Everything the Latest in Millinery, Fancy Goods and Embroideries Mrs. Fletcher, Cohasset ——E a lated in Obtaining Indictment. Concord, N. H., Nov. 4.—The final brief for Harry K. Thaw in connec- dition from New Hampshire to New York was filed with Governor Felker. sition is not in accordance with the rules of practice; that the laws of New York were violated in obtaining | the indictment and that the requisi- tion is not made in good faith. The activity of William Travers Jerome in obtaining the indictment and his language at the hearings be- fore Governor Felker are attacked. Auto Plunges Into Canal. Henderson Bennett, wife of a wealthy Oswego lumber dealer, was drowned here when a touring car driven by her ‘husband plunged into The “war | Each depot has the necessary person- | tion with his efforts to.resist extra- | The brief contends that the requi-! Syracuse, N.Y., Nov. 4.—Mrs. Thomas» (A. BISSONETTE! Architectural PLASTER WORK of all kinds. Rough casting a specialty. Plain and Ornamental Plastering. Crand Rapids, Minnesota Parties interested may call at the Herald-Review Office. BATTLE AGAINST | ALLEGED TRUST Suit to Dissolve Harvester Company Opens. GROSVENOR SPEAKS FIRST Special Assistant to the Attorney Gen- eral Begins Argument for the Gov- ernment Before Three Judges of the Circuit Court at St. Paul. ; | St. Paul, Nov. 4.—In a small court. room crowded with lawyers, judges of minor courts, business men and inter- ested spectators the government open- ed its last attack on the International Harvester company and its subsidia- ries as a combination in restraint of rade. Circuit Judges W. H. Sanborn, W. C. Hook and W. L. Smith sat en banc. For more than four hours they heard Edwin P. Grosvenor, special as- sistant to the attorney general of the’ [United States, sum up the eighteen ‘printed volumes of evidence which has! been collected during the harvester hearings and plead for an order to dis- solve the trust under the Sherman law. | On statement of counsel the court limited the time of argument to five, hours for the government and seven} and one-half hours for the defense. “We maintain,” said the special counsel, “that the very organization of the International Harvester com-} pany is monopolistic. In August, 1902, | it took over five companies giving | nothing but its stock. “Upon this structure it developed a| | business which originally sought only’ to control the making of harvesters, but which now controls the making | of every agricultural implement in the | United States, except plows. It has | not attempted to enter that field. “This combination in corporate form | has been expressly condemned by the supreme court when it applied its | ‘rule of reason’ to the tobacco and | Standard Oil cases and the St. Louis Terminal association case. Grosvenor Causes Smile. | Mr. Grosvenor caused a smile in the courtroom when he quoted the opinion | of the supreme court in the Union Pa- cific-‘Southern Pacific case which went up from the Minnesota court. | The Temple Iron company—anthra-! cite coal trust case—was cited by the | government’s counsel as an example of the “rule of reason.” The cotton} corner case also was Cited as a basis | for applying the rule to the harvester} case. “The court held that the intent of running the corner was an act in re-| straint of interstate commerce, al- | though no corner was involved,” "he said. Other cases cited to bear out the rule of reason argument were the Shoe Machinery case, the Pacific Naviga- tion case and the criminal case known as the “Naval Stores” case. “In all these it has been held that | where defendants combined with the! | intent, or in such a way that the re- | sult is a restraint of trade, it is illegal and must dissolve,” he said. Counsel for the government then | launched into a description of the har- | vester business. | “Business in these lines always has! been done under trade names. The principal ones in the order of their age are McCormick, Osborn, Champion | and Deering. These names were ap- plied to the full line of binders, mow- ers, rakes, shredders and binder twine. | The manufacturers usually avoided the | Jobber and dealt directly with the dealer. “It is important to remember these things, because when the companies | were combined the dealers could not only be forced to handle the well known brands but also to handle new machines under these brands, such as tractors, spreaders, etc.” Jalil for Family Abandonment. Washington, Nov. 4—One year at hard labor in the workhouse with no |commutations is the new punish- ment ordered by Municipal Judge Lati- mer for men who spend their wages on liquor instead of on their families. Reinsch Guest of Honor. Shanghai, Nov. 4—Dr. Paul §S. BOOST FOR COHASSET Seventy Thousand “Bell” Operators Over thirteen million miles of wire, twenty-six million telephone talks are handled daily by seventy thousand trained Bell Telephone Operators. In the vast Bell Telephone System, reaching nearly everywhere throughout the nation, every one of the eight million Bell Telephone users is con- nected with every other one. Long Distance Bell Telephone Lines Reach Nearly Everywhere, TWO CANDIDIATES. ney to Loan '| ONIMPROVED FARM LANDS If you need money to improve your farm, or to pay up mort- gage drawing a high rate of 1n- 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 interést and prompt service. REISHUS-REMER LAND (0. GRAND RAPIDS Salvation Army Head in America Seeking Missionaries for China. Photo by American Press Association. In order to enlist missionaries to work in China*and other oriental na- tions Bramwell Booth, commander in chief of the Salvation Army and son | of William Booth, founder of the or- ganization, will tour the United States and Canada. General Booth expects to find many volunteers for this move- ment here. This distinguished per- son arrived in New York from his home in London on the Lusitania, and this photograph was made immediate- ly on his landing. Girls and Men. Little girls believe in the man in the moon, big girls in the man in the hon- eymoon. Ttasca County Abstract Office Abstracts Real Estate Fire Insurance Conveyances Drawn, Taxes Paid for Non-Residents Kremer & King 4 Props. Grand Rapids - = Minn. Civil Engineering ITASCA ENGINEERING CO. J. A. Brown - - - Manager Grand Rapids Village Lots $5 DOWN AND $5 PER MONTH We have choice residence lots them on such easy terms that anybody can buy. $5 per month is certainly easy. Come in and taik the matter over. Wealso have some choice business lots on our lists. They are for sale on easy terms. i over town and we are selling $5 down and