Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, August 1, 1919, Page 3

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RNR & Elevator Company Ltd. ee ‘Millers and Grain Dealers ‘Buyers of Livestock of all Kinds / ‘h / rl Bulk Storage Capacity 175,000 bushels Sacked Storage Capacity 40,000 Sacks Our Specialty “T We carry a full line of clean grain and feed of all kinds. age, oyster shells, sea shells, meat ia feed, wheat, rolled oats, rolled barley, rolled We buy in carload lots and save loca qr op” Also Pig-a-Boo Tank- mash feed, mill feed, buck heat and pulverized feed of all kinds. reight and this saving is yours. Having the best equipped mill and elevator of its size in the northwest, we are in a position to take care of your seed purposes. Can either c nts. We are'prepared to clean your grain for p, roll or pulverize your feed. We Receive. Stock Hogs Every Day in the Year Except Sunday if delivered to the Jenny Farm and we pay you top market at all times At you have fat hogs, fat cattle or stock cattle for sale see us before you sell. We receive hogs every Monday, -cattle whenever a half or full car is in sight. : aaa Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. SEFOEEE EEE EEE EEE EEE EEE TELE EDEL EEE TEETER EERE ETF T ES Auto Supplies (Gas and Oils Expert Given to all branches of garage work at this’ shop. Being espe- can handle all jobs. with dispatch Come Here WITH YOUR ‘Car Troubles Let our Trouble Fixer do the worrying --It’s his business Everything for the motorist COTTONWOOD GARAGE STEWART & JASPER, Proprietors ee tote dese estesbob sober deserter oer cteobesbe sete obeobesbecbe ood obec shebeeded edocs ee hb eh EEG EEE EEE EEE EEE ES EES OF GE Sabodoesessioorossscesooosooooooososeooooosonosesoes yA ; ma The Chronicle for Butter Wrappers, Legal Blanks, ery Kind Commercial Printing of Ev Attention cially equipped for such work we. Dr. Wesley F. Ort. ician and Surgeon jmn Building. Pacific and Nezperce Phones COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO Dr. J. E, Rely _DENTIST Nezperce and Bell ’phones NUXOLL BLOCK COTTONWOOD Dr. McKeen Boy. Deputy Si VETERIN. for Idah id Lewis Counties COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO Dr. C. Sommer a cst VETERINARIAN Satisfaction” Guaranteed. Conrad Bosse res., north end town Both Telephones. = a H. H. Nuxoll ~~ : | ‘ NOTARY PUBLIC : | : i List your farms with me Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood Let BUGENE_UMAUER COTTONWOOD LOCAL F. E. & CU ofA: RILEY RIE, P, Ye N, Sec.-Preas. Meets 1sfand 3d Saturday of each month at 1 pm JOHN A : Contractor Build Estimates furnis! on any~Class of Work. Repairing-promptly attended to. H. TAYLOR yer - Practice in all the courts. FELIX MARTZ Insure + sav rthwestern Mutual and to 45 per cent on your instrance Dr. J. D. SHIN Waid, Cadis Any LD _ FOR SALE At a OdiL Inquire of Anton Baune 2 miles south and 1 mile west of Cottonwood. 80-4 Our “Tip Top” and “Idaho Gold” flour is handl y the j ojésale deal- ry and us- ed by all the/gogd’ house-wives. They are ad ot the pick of Prairie ‘wheats, ‘'y sack is guaranteed or money cheerfully refunded. 24-t Strayed or stolen from ,the ented pasture 414 mi. inchester one brswn yrs. old. wt. 1450: ii: toed, rope burn right hind foo; needle used also been scar on ri and was/Shod all around. “Any information that will lead to her recovery will be paid for. W. L. See us for canning s will have a carlo few days and quote it is e of us if foryAoyéehold use only. J. V. Bal 6-tf on, For the Velle Aas WR Rogers. 18-tf Patronize home jndustry by buying “Tip Tony “Idaho Gold” flour. re manu- factured fr own: wheat under tl sanitary condi- tions, afid guaranteed satisfac- Walter Robbins he, the op- eration of a dra e solicits the business of thetity, “Leave erders at 3t the Cottonwood barn, © See Felix 16-tf i Reduce the tft cost of liv- ing by usiwé flour producing more loaves of better bread. 24 i ee Baking will BP age pleasure unless you | rr Tip Topy x0) ar “Tdaho Flour.” 24-tf For hail insuran, Martzen. : Martzen. ‘ 16tf- “Idaho Gold” the’real cay 24- friend. Watkins R Complete st al on i artzen or The Rooke Hotel Has neat cl rooms: at and 75c per night or $2 {i per week: When: in Cot- tonwood give us a trial. Dad Rooke, Propr. 1 Fe Chronicle offiee> Dr. Reily J: Alcorn Office, Cotton wood Office, Bardinand Open to all Reputable Physicians MODERN IN EVERY RESPECT lectins ci Rouse are Tn- -| 06293, for W% SH, ids Shall be sent to Board of ‘Prus- rman Vonbargen, Fewis Bowman, Clerk Arthur Bussard, TRUSTEES, NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interjor, Land Office at Lewiston, dt 5, fae f lotice is hereby: givew that Elva F. Goodwin, of Spring C P,. Idaho,;who, on July 20, 1915, Segtembey 13,1916, made H. E,, 06234 ae E,, No. j 4, E % SW, Sec.A0, & B% SEY” SE% NEX,’ Section 9/Towashiy North, Range 3/West, Boise Meri ian, has filed noti¢e of isitention to make three year Pybof, to éstablish claim to the land ove descri I hovel ier lescribed, before al - S. Commissioner, at Whitebjrd, Iddho, on the 12th, ‘any of- Augusf, 1919, Claimgnt naihes as witnesses: ‘Harry! Crowy of Sprin Camp, Idaho, Joseph’ Thomas, of Satine Camp, Ida- ho. ‘Edward A. Knorr, of § ring Idaho. Fancho Stubblefi id,.of Thomas, Winchester, Idato. '1-* |’ ty hi “Henry Heitfeld, Register. NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the Stockholders of C g WOOD MILLING & KBLEVA, 'TOR COMPANY, LTD/ on ‘the 25th day of Aygust, 1919 at the office of the /Com tonwood, Idaho, at eight o’clock‘p. m., held a speclal m ting of the ‘stockholdefs to /consider the ‘subjett of ‘amending the Arti cles-of I y in Cot tonw & Elevatoo Compayy, Ltd.,fof increasing the commgn steck /of said corpora. ‘izing the issfance of preferred stock of: said corporation. to the “ | extent of oe hundred thousand ‘déllars or *|'mMay be reed to by the saic ckhold¢xs, GIVEN pursuant to authority ‘of the Board of Directors at. a meeting held on the 14th day of July, A. D. -1919. JOHN MEYER, 31-4 Secretary, {|\POINTED PARAGRAPHS. A barking dog occasionally bites the dust. e, -auction- | t your dates‘at the |’ Every time a man’s neighbors f|'kick it makes him sore. Truth and a woman’s age are are not on speaking terms. All springs look alike to the boarding house chicken. More men are ruined by pros- perity than by adversity. Women wear fine dresses to attract the men and -worry other women. It is easier to make a new quarrel than it is to patch an ola one. So many of us are anxious: to io away with vices—in our neighbors. Wise farmers never attempt to raise their crops in the polit- ical field. On the day a man discovers that he ‘is a-fool he begins ‘to acquire wisdom. Sunshine may be healthful, bat the lazy man seems to flour- ish best in the shade. A woman’s memory . isusu- ally strongest in the point of other women’s old clothes. Nearly all busy people «are Dr. Cora E: Alcorn | ‘{ But-what is . their 3| dreds of pulpits. Says fy | Democrat: =| and probably business supporting the League. would LEAGUE UF HONS | Senators Are Resorting to the Old Parliamentary Device of Killing by Amendment eerie The immediate*tim of the Senator Jal plotters against the League Cove- nant is plain to the view. “They gre trying to dill the League.of Nations. ‘The law ‘assumes that men intend the necessary consequences of their own: acts, If the action these Sena- ters urge upon the Senate is taken, it will necessarily destroy the League. They do not even seek to conceal their purpose. They are resorting to the old parliamentary device of killing by amendment, Mr. Knox’s . | hostile resolutian, which has gone to its death, has been abandoned for ‘a “qualifying resolution.” Its mtendéd that the Senate shall declare in this resolution that its ratification of the Treaty of Peace, so far as it applies to the League of Nations, shall be without effect so far as the United States -is concerned until the other nations signing the Treaty shall agree to certain reservations, which are to be substantially those recommendéd by Senator Root. The Washington correspondent of The Times askéd Senator Knox what would happen df the allied nations decline to. accept these reservations. “The “United States in that event-would ‘be outside the League of Nations.” Mr. ‘Knox replied, «with a smile. Without the United States the League would be a lame-and:impotent orgenization; in all. probability it would fall to pieces. “Theréfore, we may start from the postulate’ that Senator Knox, Senator Lodge, Senator Borah, Senator John~ son and theirassociates fully intend the death -of the League of Nations and are. taking measures to that end. ultevior. Aim? Merely to prevent the erection of safe against the greatest cause of human; suffering cannot be the whole.end and aim of their verde We know that they’ have a purpose-—-to express .their -hatred of PRESIDENT WILSON, to discredit him and thereby advance the fortunes “| of the Republican patty. Their tac- tics and their utteranees disclose that motive, it is charged-against them by responsible leaders of their me party. “But by what strange perve: process of argument have they per- suaded themselves,'that the,success of thelr sdeaperate .plot agaipat ithe League Covenant would tmprove the chances of the Republicans in the Presidential election next year? The country is against them. The great sober-minded, reasonable, and patriotic mass.of their own party is against them, *' is practically certain that they cannot command-the sup- port of the majority of the Kepublicaa Senators in their desperate adyenture. That the Republican, party, at large condemns their procedure is made evident by authoritative utterances im many States of the Union. )An:ex- President and an ex-Attornéy-Genera} of their.own party have condemned them. More than a score of repre> sentative Republicans in‘ this city united the other day in a remon- strance against the course they are pursuing. In the West, newspapers of high standing and of unquestioned loyalty to the party are outspoken ia Aenunciation of the thing they are trying: to do, The St, Louis Globe- Democrat, a great and influential newspaper. of unswerving fidelity: to Republican principles, declares that “a large proportion of the Republican press. favors the League,.and. there are but few important Republican newspapers that are uncompromisingly against jt.” In support of this asser- tion it reproduces upon its editorial page indits issue of June 22, five col- umns of editorial expressions from Republican .newspapers of promi- nence,: all -deploring the unwise and dangerous course of the Senatorial appouents of the League. | Among these pewspapers are “The Los Times, The Portland Oregon- ian, one of the great papers of the Pacific coast; The Des-Moines Reg- ister, a representative Republican paper; The Salt. Lake » an- other sound Republican newspaper, The Topeka Capital and the .Globe- Democrat. The Globe-Democrat calls. ‘attention to the adoption of resolutions en- dorging the League Covenant by the representative vote of 29,750 to 420 by the American Federation of Labor; tothe resolution of the Federation of i ‘Women’s Clubs, representing 2,000,000, women, declaring jts approval of the revised Covenant of the League; it points out that in a canvass of agri- | cultural. papers publiahed: in forty- three States, only one of sixty-eight opposed ratification of the Treaty with the League and sixty-four un- qualifiedly favored it, The attitude of the Church in favor of*the Cove- nant has-best«made known from hun- “Here -we have labor, agriculture, the Church, the women, From what source the Republican Party draw a con ‘power in: opposition to it? lt is a pertinent question for leaders of the party.” (Copy of editorial from The New York Times of June 24, 1919.) P| a

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