Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, July 5, 1918, Page 5

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Bill Mullenberg, the siiiay| surveyor, was a Lewiston business | visitor the first of the week. Anna and Henry Hattrup of Keuterville returned from Lewis- | ton Monday after a brief visit. E. M. Ehrhardt, the well known | banker, was over from Lewiston | Saturday on business, Mrs. S. P. Shutt and son Har- old are Spokane visitors this week, | leaving here Sunday. Roy Unziker and Miss eeiiea’! ter of Salmon River were Cotton- | wood visitors Monday. W. S. Wilkinson and K, Strum- ler, surveyors, made a visit to Mt| Idaho Sunday on a pleasure trip. Grandma Truitt left Tuesday for an extended visit with her hus- band ahd relatives at Kendrick. Mrs. R. A. Nims enjoyed a vis- it this week at the Blackburn ranch home ten miles south of town. * Haying is in full-blast just now —but the crop is not as heavy as was expected, caused by the dry | weather. Wesley Frick left Tuesday for | his homeat Dayton, Wn., after | a visit here with his sister, Mrs. | Ed. Jessup. John Mager and son Mike, of | Colton, Wn., are visiting friends| and relatives this week at Keu-| terville. Of course you'll take in the Red | Cross barn. dance at Charley| Staal’s place tonight. Good mu- sic and good time assured for all who attend. Frank Gass left Monday for Camp Dodge, receiving word the evening before to report as soon as possible. His brother will farm their place near Cottonwood. Mr. and Mrs. Riley Rice and son Euclid left Monday by auto for Jeffers, Mont., where they will spend most of the summer on the Rice brothers’ bigstock ranch. Prof. R. A. Shattuck of Ferdin- and was here Sunday with friends and visited the cemetery, where they decorated the grave of Mrs. =) YUE BA | Tractor It is easy to control § Powerful enough for ) the plow Light enough for the harrow ER, Fast enough for the road GMC Trucks Get aed Back in Shortest Time at Least Cost prowess and stamina for sus- tained endeavor. HERE is one reason more vital than any other in the selection of the GMC truck for your business— That is the performance of GMC Tracks in actual work. You are assured a constancy of performance; an ability to over- come trucking obstacles. Your GMC maintains a scheduled de- livery, gets there and back in least time. The Yuba replaces all horses. # It works in any weather and The Yuba ball tread tractor uses the least possible amount of its power on any soil. Out on the road—in mud, sand, snow and ice, on steepest grades and underall weather conditions —there is where GMC Trucks . excel, Repair expense is reduced; costly tie-ups in performance eliminated. GMC Trucks are in all practi- cal sizes from 34 to 5 ton capac- ity—a size to fit any business. Let us help you select the right size for your business. to propel the machine and therefore delivers a high per- centage of power at the draw- : Rugged over-stren; in ev bar where it is wanted. Se gh da ig part, abundant reserve power, minimum number of parts, We also handle Lauson and these give GMC Trucks the G. M. C. Samson tractors all of which we are demonstrating Veseiery Pitina Aieliews at the Grangeville Chautauqua this week. HOENE HARDWARE SS SS SS Shattuck with a profusion of beau- tiful floral wreaths. YY Miss Hazel Van Pool has re- |i turned to’ her home at Spring|f Camp, after a pleasant visit here | with Miss BerniceEdwards. Miss Callon of Grangeville accompan- | f ied Miss Van Pool home. Splendid progress is being made on the Cottonwood. Milling Co’s| new elevator, and concrete work is more than half finished. This gi- gantic structure will be completed | in time to handle this season’s crops. Rev. Wm. Gornall attended Methodist conference meetings at | Pullman and Spokane this week. | Rey. C. MacCaughey will con- | duct services in the M. E. church | here next Sunday morning at 11 | Bg o’clock, to which all are invited. | @ Austin Burch and Levi Hans-| ford, aged nearly 80 years, both | from Heppner, who have spent most of their lives together in the | mining business, arrived here last | RB week and will spend the summer on Salmon river, where they will divide the time prospecting, hunt- ing and fishing. Mr. Burch isa half-brother of our Dad Rooke, whom they visited a couple of days. | —— | A noted physician gives this) sensible advice: “There is more| benefit in a good laugh than all | the hot water remedies—cold wa-| ter, electric and all other new fangled treatments in.the world, and it does not cost anything. Laugh. If you have nothing else, to laugh at, laugh at your neigh- | bor. He is propably improving his health by laughing at you.” ——- | “Closed to take stock” is a sign | that has been conspicuous in three Main Street establishments for | some time. To sum the matter up briefly the concerns never ad- vertised and the “taking stock” sign wasa bluff. They went ut | of business, or were fired out. It pays to advertise.—Lewiston Ban-|& ner. | “The Kaiser” Coming in Chains chains. Imprisoned in 7 reels of patriotically designed celluloid, ‘The Kaiser, the Beast of Berlin,’ the wonderful 7-reel war film, will] & arrive in Cottonwood on Friday, July 19, 2 big shows. This stir-| a ring photoplay, which has been used in New York and other large cities for Liberty Loan and other drives, will be shown at the Orph- eum. The Cottonwood band will play on the street preceding show. The picture, which is absolute- ty the best of its kind, shows the kaiser to be a war maniac, drunk with power, and possessing an in- sane desire to place the world un- der German rule. From well known authorities and their wgit- ings personal characteristies “of the German ruler and interesting, yet brutal incidents of his cursed | life have been woven into an ab- sorbing story which for the most part is laid in Belgium and Ber- lin. This picture will interest every American in this vicinity. See display ad. Bring in your Films For printing and developing to the REXALL drug store. Household Goods for Sale Having sold my farm and stock, and expecting to leave here soon, I offer for sale all of my household goods, including furniture of all kinds, almost new steel Majestic range. at the farm 3 miles southeast of Cot- tonwood. 27-28 How Are You Fixed FOR Header Beds Bundle Racks Grain Tanks Can’t Sag Gates Barn Yard Furniture Round Stock Tanks | Watering Troughs Pig Troughs, Etc., Etc. F YOU don’t need.the completed article remember that we can supply you the necessary material to make them. How about 1-2 inch header-bed lumber? Your inquiry and orders will receive prompt attention. . mee): Bethe. Good Bull for Saie Graded Hereford bull, 2 years old. ville, Ida. Screen Doors Hussman Lumber Company Home Builders Madison Lumber Co. R. F. Fulton Attorney at Law Probate and Real Estate Law a Specialty. at Grangeville French people. The kaiser is coming—but in| 3} Call Price $100. . John Nuttman, Keuter- 27-28 Fly season is here and you need screen doors. Get them from the Office in Bank of Camas Prairie Bldg Commander of the American Army Is Popular With People in In Franoe, General Peiehings | with his military bearing, his manly air and hig grt tlal courtesy toward women, is. never-ending source of interest to ta: ae Especially his last- ‘ mentioned trait has: impressed itgelf upon the French writers, One of the important Paris dailies has devoted a series of articles to the American com- _ esrobai life history with sidelights ‘as to how he is looked upon in France, pct Personal description of the gen- era! It is as follows: “Tall, erect self- confident, he wears his uniform with an air of genuine ‘coquetterie’ that attracts the admiration of the entire feminine populace of Paris, ‘What a handsome man!’ the women cry as he passes by surrounded by his staff officers, ; “And, if we mistake not, nothing could be more flattering to this hon- ored soldier. In the official recep- tions, the banquets that are tendered him, it is the noble courtesy of his manners, the succinctness of his words, the spirit of the man that one remarks In General Pershing. He is not one wno talks a great deal, but what he says, he says well. “When the first American troops disembarked on our shores we cannot forget the words with which the gen- eval received them, ‘For the first time in history American soldiers find them- selves on the soil of Burope, The good name of the United States de- mands that our conduct be irre- proachable. We must, every one of us, show toward the Frenchmen, and more particularly the Frenchwomen, the most perfect courtesy and our re- spectful deference, The least repre- hensiblé act would be doubly so here, because it would be.a breach of hog- pitality,’ “Nothing more! No promises of epic glory! No laurel wreaths dis- tributed in advance! No flags wave ing over rose-crowned heads! But his soldiers understood these few brief words and showed a tactful discipline, That is Pershing!" $ WE WHO STAY AT HOME By Robert Grant of The Vigilantes Cocco ceovccooocesoeoeee We shall Ke ay the ruthlesa Hun Hews by seit: Of our millions there is not one aaa Peesceee® SR OE That vthone ba0 ho “hie in t in thi Be dane’ (edgy Can hold us not to blame; Else ours the endless shame. Let each forego his Let each bestow his feta” There arg on our behavis greatest ey Megs ever taved a land. e 4 sroed lom or we fall Denea ti, the heel th us tyrant girt wil fire “and At ihe sunbed ith he enti res 93 Beye who re Vere mount re there is is beens of your plenty lest you live Ehitehtehiag fiverey ro crashing dome, Bet inveding Teuton canno! And you become serfs you woul not Awake and serve the cause that made ‘We must be victors if we have your aid, HORSE CLIMBS STAIRS Gets Up Into a Haymow and Helps Himself. William Fulton, a farmer ving northwest of Noblesville, Ind, has a horse that performed an unusual feat recently. When Mr. Fulton went to do his feeding he missed one of his horses and could not find it until his attention was attracted by a noise ip the haymow. He went up there and found the horse eating hay and per fectly contented. There is only one opening in the mow, and in order to get up there the animal had to climb a narrow stairway 25 feet long. Two veterinaries were called-and they let the horse down to the lower floor with blocks and tackles, RAILWAY COMPANY SUED Acid Scattered In the Graes Along Line Killed the Cattle. The Southern railway has been made defendant in an action at law at Chattanooga which charges the com pany with cruelty to animals. The railway company recently oper: ated a “tank train,” carrying acid from a sulphuric acid plant. The “tanks” leaked and the acid flowed to the ground and spread out in the grass. Cattle along the right of way ate the grass and died in large numbers. The railroad company made settle ment with the owners of the stock, but the Chattanooga Humane society has brought suit. Banker Gives Whole Income to U. 8. The entire income of Otto: H: New York banker, will be used f service. Mr. Kahn recently announced that he would continue to make legit- - imate profits; but that every cent, after the deduction of household expenses, would be used for charity, Red Pyons and war work. Will Not Help.

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