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| eS IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE | oes COHASSET, MINNESOTA, JANUARY 7, 1914. J. H. GRADY & CO. General Merchandise Where Everything is Sold—Where Farm Produce Groceries, Dry Goo is Bought. ds, Clothing, Boots @ Shoes, Hardware, Farm Machinery A Stock that is always kept Fri esh and Up-to-Date is the kind that Pleases Particular People. CO., Cohasset J. H. GRADY & LOOP : Cohasset Locals : teeta bs se ts ss te * The little son of Jaw Crawford has been qt ill sveral days with the ch Mrs. Charles Milaney of Grand Rapids was here Tuesday between trains. Mrs. William Watkins, who has | been seriously ill for several days, is recovering. Rev. E. LaRoe left Tuesday morning for Aitken and will re- turn with Mrs. LaRoe Thursday. The Ladies Aid of the Methodist ehurch will meet Thursday after- noon with Mrs. Georga Ward. Douglas Price and Richard Wright of Grand Rapids were here last Sunday visiting Miss Evelyn’ Lane. D. Feiala, wh » was formerly book keepe r L. Buck, spent the \holidays with F. X. Goulet andl family. JS. llison and family from Bas have moved into town and are occupying one of the Car- rier flats. After spending the holidays at Hibbing M May Wildes returned nd reports a most pleas- ation Miss Lillian Johnson reports a time during vacation at ut Minneapolis. She re- turned Monday morning. Maurice O'Brien returnee ‘Mon- day from his camp at Ray. Two of his sons, Maurice and Irvin, are spending a week at the camp. Louis Sherman who has _ been visiting at the J. M. Jewell home for two weeks, left Bunday night for his home at Beardsley, Minn. Mrs. William King of Watertown, ! Henry Ran- |} Wis., mother of Mrs. franz, sent the holidays with her daughter. New Years day they visili| ed at the ‘home of Frank King at Grand Rapids. The Christian Endeavor meeting | Sunday morning | will be lead by Miss May Wildes.-! to be held next The topic to be taken up will bei “Persistency and Power in er.’ All who care to attend be welcome. will Mrs. J. €. Gilmore expects to have an auction sale in the hold goods . After that she will | take her sons, Orvil and Cecil and | move to Memphis, Tenn., where | they will make their home. The motion picture show has re- vived. It was given Monday night at the vil » hall by T. W. Pogue of Wanba. It is the intenttion of Mr. Pogue to operate the show omce every two or three weeks) The first show was fairly well at- | tended. Pray- | near future and dispose of all her house } The dance given at the Bass Brook hotel last Friday evening was well attended, about twenty- five couples being present. Good well, Jewell, George and Henry Fin ney, Arza and Madison Bullock. A dainty luncheon was served to wind up the good time. MAGIC IN A BATON. The Music Was Different When Wag- ner Conducted the Performance. How Wagner astonished an audience in Berlin is related by Ottou Lessmann in a German ma {t was in 1871. He had lectured at the Royal academy on the opera, and in his honor the Verein der Berliner M ker arranged a performance of his “Faust Over- ture” under the direction of Professor Julius Sturm. When it-was over Wagner weartiedl to hesitate for a moment as to what he should do. Then he got up, thanked | the musicians remarked that as he | had not been connected with an or- chestra for twenty years he felt im- pelled to further show his gratitude by }an artistic deed. “You will under- | stand my request.” he added, “that you repeat ‘Faust Overture’ under my personal direction.” What then happened mede an indeli- ble impression on all who were so for- | tunate as to be present. The spiritual moods of that tone poem stirred the nearers as they had never before been stirred. The difference between a gen- ius and a mere professional conductor | was made manifest. The musicians themselves were stunned by what they had done. “We looked at him, | and we knew and did what he want- | ed,” they remarked. Over the Limit. Fortune Teller—I see by your hand | that you will die when you are twen- ty-seven. Willie—But, my dear woman, | ’m twenty-nine now. Fortune Teller— Why, my good man, you should have |been dead two years. You are living | ander false pretenses.—London Mail. Why She Can't Spend It. “A successful man earns more than | his wife can spend.” “My husband does that.” | “Why, your husband doesn’t earn | much, Mrs. Titewaddo.” “I know it, but he hangs on to all of it.’—Houston Post. | | | Making Good, Ella— Do you believe the music jteachers can make anything out of | Bella’s voice? Stella—Well, they have ; made over $100 out of it already.— | Lippincott’s. CLOSING of Hats at OUT SALE Cost Price Ladies’ Scarfs that sold for ies’ © 1.25 to 1.75, all go now at each.... (5c Aeon Children’s Sweaters and Coats at Cost Price Come in and examine these goods MRS. W. W. FLETCHER COHASSET, MINN. musi¢e was furnished by Roecker’s orchestra, and G. A. Williams, who manages the hotel,» supplied a | bountiful luncheon. | The ladies Aid of the Christiam j church will meet at the home of | Mrs. Dave. Uochrane Thursday aft- jernoon this Week, and it is urged that all members be present. | | Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Jewell are } spending a few days at Beardsley, Minn., their old home. Miss Pheobe Smith entertained at “flingth” party at the Dibble home Saturday night. Those pres- ent were: Misses Wildes, Hursh, Robideau, Omen and Stockwell; Messrs Baldwin, O’Brien, Stock- revelation he made of the various | ito be transferred to Rio de Janeiro | lines. CARDEN TO BE TRANSFERRED British Minister to Mexico Going to Brazil. London, Jan. 6.—Sir Lionel Carden, British minister to Mexico, is shortly as minister to Brazil. He was ap- pointed to Mexico July 18, 1913, to succeed Francis William Stronge. While Sir Lionel’s actions and gen- eral demeanor since the outbreak of the Mexican troubles were considered somewhat indiscreet by the general public nobody here believed that he had done anything to justify the at- tacks on him which appeared in some of the American papers. It is expected that the official state- | ment which will doubtless be issued ‘when the changes are made will ex- plain that Sir Lionel’s transfer to Rio de Janeiro in no way casts dis- credit on the minister. President Bars Visitors. Pass Christian, Miss., Jan. 6.—Abso- | lutely rest is President Wilson’s rule. | Visitors are barred and he is having a real vacation. The president was on the golf links an hour earlier than usual, appreciating the warm sun- |shine after nearly a week of bad weather. Well Known Inventor Dead. Washington, Jan, 6.—William Castle Dodge, well known inventor, who ‘lid much to improve firearms in use at the time of the Civil war, died here of pneumonia. He was honored by con- gress and by several European gov- ernments for his work along these He was born at Solon, N. Y., in 1827. OKLAHOMA LAND SALE ON Last Great Auction of Indian Tracts Begun. Isabel, Okla., Jan. 6—Oklahoma’s last great sale of Indian lands under the direction of the United States gov- ernment began here when the ham- mer of the auctioneer fell at the con- clusion of the first round of bidding on one of the 4,000 tracts to be dis- posed of. More than 1,000,000 acres of timber, agricultural and grazing lands are to be sold in five county seat towns of the Choctaw nation during January, the sale in McCurtain county being the first to begin. "Norwalk," Conh., ~ Jan.” 6.—John Weeks, 105 years old, said to- be the oldest man in New England, is dead here. He was born at Fordham, N. Y.. in June, 1808, and had retained all his faculties up to a year ago. when he be- came blind. GERMAN CROWN PRINCE. Kaiser Forces His Son to Do Ordinary Routine of Work. Crown Prince Frederick William of Germany began clerical work at the officials general staff in the room the great Moltke used occasionally. He will do the ordinary routine copying, etc., undertaken by young officers. The prince, who, like all Hohenzol- lerns, had to learn a trade, is already a skilled cabinet maker and spend: much of his leisure making furniture. ORDER FLOWERS Thru local dealers or Agents when possible, but insist on DULUTH FLORAL CO. goods and service—the bestin Duluth without argu- ment, when it comes to Wedding Boquets or Emblems for Funerals. JAMES A. PETERSON, Minneapolis Attorney Candidate for Governor of Minnesota. PETERSON GETS INTO FIGHT Mill City Lawyer Seeks Governorship of Minnesota. Minneapolis, Dec. 6.—James A. Pe- terson, well known attorney of this city, has announced himself as a can- didate for the Republican nomination for governor. He issued a statement in which he grills Governor Eberhart and S. G. Iverson, avho have already announced their candidacies. He charges Governor Eberhart, in effect, with having allowed predatory interests to take over control of the State government and puts Iverson in almost the same class, asserting that state public lands have been wasted under his management. Peterson says he will take the stump in every section of the state. Dr. Larson ‘She ... Optometrist Is AT THE POKEGAMA HOTEL THE 15TH AND (6TH EVERY MONTH BUMPS ON THE SHOES. That’s Because Our Footwear Is Not Polished Properly, “Do you know why it is that Ameri- can men’s feet always look ugly?” said a bootmaker. “No? Well, then, T'll tell you. “American men’s feet look ugly be- cause they have their shoes polished while wearing them, an iniquitous practice that is followed nowhere else in the world. “Bverywhere else men on retiring slip trees into their shoes and set the shoes outside their bedroom doors. A servant takes them and polishes them, and after the dampness of their polish- ing they rest for some hours in the trees, and this does to them what a hot iron does to a suit of clothes—it presses them, so to speak, taking out all the ugly bumps and wrinkles, mak- ing them like new. “But we Americans drop into an armchair on a high brass stand. Our shoes are polished on our feet. The ugly lines of wear, instead of being removed or brushed out by the process, ! are confirmed, rubbed in. And that is why our feet always look ugly—as ugly as our clothes would look if we never sent them to the tailor to be pressed.”—Cincinnati Enquirer. Christmas Song. O’er Bethlehem town A star looked down When shepherds watched by night, And wise men gazed With hearts amazed To see the wondrous sight. “Beloved star, ‘We follow far,” They said. An angel voice Upon the air Rang full and clear. It sung: ‘Rejoice! Rejoice!” “A Child is born!” *Tis Christmas morn! Then sing, dear children, sing, For history's page In every age hall hail that Child a King. —Lydia Avery Coonley. The Gnaser. His Wife—George, I heard you and Mr. Fallup talking about a “chaser” a little while ago. A chaser is an animal of some kind, isn’t it? Mr, Drysome—Yes. It’s a kind of—er ea At the Center of the Bell System The several Companies comprising the Bell Sys- tem are all inter-connected, so that wherever you go you may still use the lines of the Bell System. No matter where you are, the Bell Telephone: is i the center of a large talking circle. i 4 Always there is the same efficient service of the Universal Bell Telephone System. Every Bell Telephone Is @ Long Distance Station. MESABA TELEPHONE COMPARY 216—MTC. UPRISING AGAINST ORESTES Formidable Revolutionary Movement in Hayti. New York, Jan. 6.—Dispatches from Cape Haytien report a formidable up- rising against the Haytien govern- ment. Villiere and Tron, in the north, and other centers, are said to be in arms, protesting against the official candi- dates for the elections on Jan. 10. Trouble has been brewing in Hayti for some months. Reports from Port au Prince recently have indicated.that a reyoluticn against the administra- tion of President Orestes was: immi- nent and that the president, whenever he appeared in public, was surrounded by a heavy guard. GRAIN.AND PROVISION PRICES Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Jan. 5,—-Wheat—On track and to arrive, No. 1 hard, 875c; No. Money toLo ONIMPROVED F. terest, send us a de your property and: state < wanted. Loans made six or seven years, io pay ‘part or ren ae : after three years. Lo interest and prompt REISHUS-REMER LAND GRAND RAPIDS 1 Northern, 865%c; No. 2 Northern, $454@85%c. Flax—On track and to! arrive, $1.49%4. South St. Paul Live Stock. South St. Paul, Jan. 5.—Cattle— Steers, $5.50@7.75; cows and heifers, $4.50@6.60; calves, $2.50@10.00; feed- ers, $4.30@7.00. Hogs—$7.70@7.90. Sheep—Lambs, $5.75@7.75; wethers, $3.75@5.25; ewes, $2.50@4.60, Ttasca Coun Abstract Abstracts Real Estate Fire Insurance Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Jan. 5.—Wheat—May, 91% @92c; July, 87%c. Corn—May, 68%c; July, 67%c. Oats—May, 401%4@40%c; July, 39%c. Pork-—Jan., $20.37; May, $20.90. Butter—Creameries, 33@34c. 3 Eggs—31@33c. Poultry—Springs, 14c; hens, 14c; turkeys, 18c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago, Jan. 5.—Cattle—Beeves, $6.70@9.40; Texas steers, $6.90@7.90; Western steers, $6.20@7.90; stookers and feeders, %$5.00@7.45; cows and for Now-Residents heifers, $3.50@8.00; calves, $7.00@ 11.40. Hogs—Light, $7.80@8.15; mix- ed, $7.80@8.20; heavy, $7.80@8.25; Kremer & King rough, $7.80@7.90; pigs, $7.00@¥.90, Props. Sheep—Native, $4.70@6.10; yearliugs, $5.85@T7.10. Minneapolis Grain. Minneapolis, Jan. 5.—Wheat—May, 88%c; July, 89%c. Cash close on track: No. 1 hard, 88%@89c; No. 1 Northern, 86% @88%c; to arrive, 36% @87?%c; No. 2 Northern, 83% @86%e; No. 3 Northern, 81% @84%ec; No. 8 yellow corn, 60@60%c; No. 4 cern, 54@57c; No. 3 white oats, 354%e; to arrive, 354%c; No. 3 oats, 32@84e; bar- ley, 65@67e; flax, $1.50. Grand Rapids - = Mina. ONE VEAR ONE DOL GRAND RAPIDS. HERALD-REVIEW KILEY & SPENCER, EDITORS AND PUBS. For a short time the Herald-Review may had for the above price for cash. GET IT NOW Grand Rapids Village Lots AND $5 PER MONTH We have choice residence lots all over town and we are ‘setting them on such easy terms that anybody can buy. $5 down ever. We also have some choice business lots, on our lists. bone daanratarnyemsgiac 200) SacI KN ae REISHUS-REMER LAND