Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, March 29, 1918, 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)

Set Your Clocks an Hour Ahead Next Sunday. Congress has just passed a rath- ercurious law, to take effect next. Sunday evening requiring that all i clocks in the United States be set. ahead one hour. “Daylight Saving Law,” and the object is to make it possible for everybody to get their work done! during daylight. Nearly every- body can figure where this will prove a saving to them in various ways—if no other it will give the men an opportunity to put in an extra hour doing necessary chores around the house, or in the gar- den. “Get up with the sun” has always proved a most sensible and profitable habit or motto, and can be worked to better advan- tage this summer than ever be- fore. In fact most men who have made a failure of life can right- fully lay the blame to sleeping away the best part of the day— the early morning hours, when he is rested and feeling his very best. silting eis Salmon River Ripplings. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Lancaster were Cottonwood visitors the first of the week. Wes Hockersmith and E. A. Lancaster have their ground ready for spring seeding. Mrs. Tefft and Mr. Maples have greatly improved their places this spring with new fencing, Mrs. Harry Blake and Mrs, King attended the funeral of their mother, Mrs. Uhling at Keuter- ville Thursday. A farewell dance was enjoyed at the schoolhouse Friday night, given in honor of John Bently and family, who recently sold their ranch near the river to Ben Luchtefeld and expect to move to their ranch on the prairie. Floyd South, E. A. Lancaster and John Unzicker furnished the violin mu-! sic and Mrs. Pease and Ella Lan- caster the accompaniment. A number of people from Cotton- wood and Doumecq* attended the dance. Montana Land Bargains T am going to Montana about April 16th and have options on some good Montana land that I can sell cheap, on terms to suit purchaser. Anyone interested should see me before above date as I can give them a good deal. Elvin M. Parker. Your Building To store you of materials longer. It is termed the | (O} Let Us Help Solve Them PORTABLE HELD GRANARIES cents per bushel for the cost Come in and see our plans and you will not let the sack problem worry you any HUSSMAN LUMBER Co. “Home Builders” y. It Pays Its Own Way You will find Delco-Light— a Sanpete electric plant— a profitable investment. Durably constructed easy to Tun, economical to operate ' —it will give you plenty of current for light and power. We want an opportunity to show you how much daily drudgery it will save, Besides lighting home and barn, it will run all your light machinery—the wash- ing machine, churn, separ- ator, etc. We can quickly prove to that it pays for itself in time and labor saved. New ship- ment just in Hay Wanted at the Cottonwood barn. See W. R. Rogers. bil it Roosters for Sale Thoroughbred White Wyandottes. Mrs. M. Schober. b12 eae | Problems r grain at 5 in our yard. opera consists of a - LITTLE GENIUS Dr. Wesley F. Orr Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Building. Pacific and Nezperce Phones COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO Dr. J. E. Reilly DENTIST Nezperce and Bell ’phones Dr. J. E. Smith DENTIST Main Street - Cottonwood (One Door below Baker's Store) __ R. F. Fulton Attorney at Law Probate and Real Estate Law a Specialty. Office in Bank of Camas Prairie Bldg at Grangeville Dr. McKeen Boyce Graduate Licensed VETERINARIAN Calls answered day or night and satis- faction guaranteed. COTTONWOOD H. H. Nuxoll NOTARY PUBLIC See me for Real Estate Bargains Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood Let EUGENE MAUER —DO YOUR— TAILORING _Corronwoop - IDAHO _ COTTONWOOD LOCAL F. E. & C. U. of A. RILEY RICE, Pres. A. JANSEN, Sec.-Treas. Meets Ist and 3d Saturday of each month at 1 pm FELIX MARTZEN In Rear of the Postoffice Will carefully look after your needs in real estate and insurance IDAHO The model 20-35 Yuba is as sim LET CRANKE DO IT. I conduct more sales than any other auctioneer in Washington and Idaho. Why? Because I conduct them on business _princi- ples. Harry C. Cranke, auctioneer. Nezperce, Idaho. JOHN REILAND Contractor and Builder. Estimates furnished on any Class of Work. Repairing promptly attended to. SS 2) 2S SS) SS There are Success was built into the PQ Little Genius from the very first. It has made good against big odds, and its builders are justified in their claim for it being the one man ideal plowing outfit. The land wheel furnishes the power. Two-to-one gearing causes the bottoms to be raised and lowered in the right distance of travel to insure straight headlands and at the same time cuts in two the power required to raise the bottoms the land wheel never slips. The plow raises on all three wheels, giving a high level lift. A > single trip rope, convenient to the hand of the tractioneer, gives him instant and positive con- trol. Power lift operates both as bottoms enter and leave the ground, bringing the whole weight of the plow to bear in forcing the bottoms into hardest soils. HOENE HARDWARE —S=aE— SS SEIS ES SSS SS SSS SS) Bring in your Films For printing and developing to the REXA LL store. 3 Calves for Sale Five head of yearlings—3 steers and 2 heifers. Apply to Geo. Terhaar. Barley Wanted. We still want barley and you can make more selling it to us than feed- ing to stock. Cottonwood M. & E. Co., Ltd. Cabbage Plants Nice big early cabbage plants will be on sale in season at Baker’s store, at 35c¢ a hundred. Residence Property for Sale Three acres of land in Cottonwood; good 6-room new house; shed 18x140 feet; good well on place; all fenced. If sold before April Ist the price will be $1500 and will take as part pay a team of good horses or 4 head of cat- tle. J. H. Zodrow. Notice for Publication 04337-06390 Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, March 27, 1918. Notice is hereby given that WILLIAM F, RANKIN of Joseph, Idaho, who, on Februa 1916, to make five-year and three-year Proofs, respect- ively, to establish claim tothe land above de- scribed, before J. Loyal Adkison, U.S. Commis- sioner at White Bird, Idaho, on th day of May, 1918. Claimant namesas witnes James Jesse E. Wells, George Idaho. y HEITFELD, Register. Dobbins, all of Josep! m29 HE Notice for Publication Isolated Tract Public Land Sale. Department of the Interior, .S. Land Office, Lewiston, Idaho, March 7, 1918 is hereby given t as directed by the and Office, under plication of Charles A’ Herm we will offer at pu hig but at not less than $30 per acre, at 11:45 o'clock, a. m., on the 17th day of April, next, at this office the following tract of land: Lot 7 (3.07 acres) and lot 8 [0.22 acres] sec 5t 31 n r2e, b. m The sale will not be kept open, but will be de- clared closed when those present at the hour named have ceased bidding. The person making the highest bid will be required to immediately pay to the Receiver the amount thereof. Any person claiming adversely the above de- scribed land are advised to file their claims, or objections, on or before the tim ignated for sale. HENRY HEIT is al2 BLai E. Ho. Notice for Publication Isolated Tract Public Land Sale. Department of the Interior, U.S. Land Office, Lewiston, Ida f Notice is hereby given that, . pursuant to the plication of William W. Blackburn, seri No. 072043, we will offer at public sale to the highest bidder, but at not les: 2.75 per acre, at 11:45 o'clock, a. m., on the 18th day of April, next, at this office, the following tract of land: ne} ned sec7t30nrle, B. M. The sale will not be kept open, but will be de- clared closed when those present at the hour named have ceased bidding. ‘The person mak- ing the highest bid will be required to imme- diately pay to the Receiver the amount thereof. Any persons claiming adversely the above de- ple and compact a machine as it is possible to build, It werful motor properly mounted and cooled; the transmission dirt proof; the track frictionless as the laws of mechanics will permit. no makeshifts of design, and has eliminated the unessential. NS) no experimental features, POWER LIFT (a) 2 — 7 ——=) France in Arms See this great new production— the best war picture out. Shows Pershing and his men, also the Idaho boys in France. At the Orpheum Wednesday, April 3. Admission 35 and 50c. Ranch and Stock for Sale Thave 50 or 60 head of young range cattle and several head of good work horses for sale. About 700 acres of my ranch, 8 miles south of Cottonwood, is for sale or rent, about 60 acres in hay, plenty of fruit, garden land, ete. W. W. Blackburn, Cottonwood. Auto and Furniture 1914 model Ford touring car, in good order; almost new porcelain-lined refrigerator, heating stove, bed lounge, lawn mower, ete. Will sell at private sale before April Ist. Call at my residence just west of well drill, Hans Pedersen. Portable Field Granaries Will store your grain at a cost of 5e per bushel for the cost of materials, Come in and see our plans and you will not let the sack problem worry | you any longer. i ae Hussman Lumber Co. See Airplane Fight By the American soldiers in France, at the Orpheum Wednes- day, April 8. Admission 35 and 50c. Sheep to Trade I have two registered Rambouillet sheep—a buck and ewe—that I will trade for a good fresh cow. The ewe »| will lamb about May Ist. 11-14 J. W. Hoekersmith. Horses for Sale Dairy Farmers’ Real Friends — Dairy farmers who are sometimes - tempted to pass the co-operative cream- ery by and send their cream to the centralizer which is, for the moment, paying a little more for butterfat, will do well to read carefully the newspa- per reports of the packing house probe. ‘Of course, the co-operative creamer- ies know that in many instances the central plants are offering these prices ” as bait and that they will probably continue until the co-operative concern is forced out of business; then prices will drop in a harry, os The dairy farmers have been told this many times, but it seems to be hard work to convince them of what . it means. Either they do not realize its importance or they don’t believe it. Tf there is any doubt concerning the truth of the matter, they can find plenty of material to show what some centralizers are doing to stifle compe- tition, in the packing house hearings, For instance, one man testified that at common trading points, the Priebe Company, alleged to be a subsidiary of Swift & Company, paid at thé same time 30c, 270, 26¢, 25¢ and 24e for butterfat. In violation of the law? Certainly, but Swift & Co. pleaded guilty, paid the fine and costs, and the matter was dropped. This is but one instance; there are others, And butterfat is but one of the list. How long is it going to take for the dairy farmers of the country to awak- en to the fact that the co-operative creameries are their real friends and that the small increase which the cen- tralizer offers for butterfat is liable to prove a very temporary matter, once the local plant is removed? It will be a great pity if the awakening comes too late. But come it surely will,— The Creamery Journal. REA ACHE Ee, Save the Sacks! The following is from the Uni- versity of Idaho: We are asked to save wheat! save sugar! save meat! Why not also save sacks? Western pota- toes are almost without exception marketed in sacks, Before the war a small item to the growers, now one of the big factors. Un- told millions of sacks have been used in making trenches. So sacks are becoming harder to get, and hence, higher in price. Save the sacks. It will help. What do you do with empty sacks? “Can’t Sag’”’ Gates The national farm gate. For sale by Hussman Lumber Co. Pure Missouri Sorghum A nice shipment just received at Bakers’ store. Bring along a jar and buy some for your flapjacks, Your Building Problems Let us help solve them, Hussman Lumber Co. Pes Ks Stock Tonic Now is the time to commence feed- ing Stock Tonic to free your stock from worms, Hess and International stock food for sale at the REXALL store, France in Arms Has made a big hit in the large cities. Coming to the Orpheum on Wednesday, April 3. The lat- est war picture—see it while it’s new. Cow for Sale A good, gentle milk cow, just fresh. ° b13 Leo Rad. Montana Land For Sale 1600-a. stock and grain ranch, 300 a. irrigated. .Blue-joint hay produces 2 to 3 tons per a.; 500 a. can be irri- gated; 300 a. in cultivation. Best stock ranch in Musselshell county; 98 per cent tillable. Will sell cheap if taken in 30 days, We also own 5 other improved ranches; will sell in tracts of 200 to 1400 a, to suit pur- chaser. This is all good land and priced right. We want to sell, Write for description and price, Tannehill & Allen, Gage, Mont. Your Building Problems Let us help you solve them. Hussman Lumber Co, THE INLAND ABSTRACT A number of good work horses for sale. Craig Mt. Lumber Co., Win- chester. 12-15 AND INVESTMENT CO., Ltd. BONDED ABSTRACTERS Grangeville. - Idaho Auction Sale Postponed Owing to the heavy rain storm of Tuesday, 26th, the Jas. A. Wright sale has been postponed scribed land are advised to file their claims, or objections, on or before the time designated for sale. HENRY HEITFELD, Register. al2 Brain E. Hoar, Receiver, Until Tuesday, April 2--Rain or Shine Beginning promptly at 10 a. m.

Other pages from this issue: