Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, May 7, 1920, Page 3

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e AND GIVE Us AN ESTIMATE AS TO HOW THEREBY ENABLING US TO FILL YOUR REQUIREMENTS AT WHATEYV- ER TIME YOU WILL NEED THE GOODS. WE ALWAYS CARRY A MODERATE Take a “Tip” From Dad and a sack of “TIP TOP” from us Spring work will soon commence —— AND UNDOUBTELY THERE WILL BE AN UNUSUAL DEMAND FOR FEED AND HAY, AS WELL AS FOR CLEAN GRAIN. EXPERIENCED DURING THE LAST SEVERAL MONTHS, THE AVERAGE FARMER HAS LITTLE, IF ANY, FEED ON HAND TO BE USED DURING THE SPRING WORK SEASON MUCH GRAIN ON HAND BUT WOULD NOT BE ABLE TO HANDLE THE RUSH UNLESS NOTIFIED AHEAD OF TIME. AND GIVE US YOUR ORDER AT ONCE. Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. Eat More Bread---It’s Your Best Food STOCK OF FEED AND CONSIDER THIS BIT OF FROM WHAT WE HAVE Consequently Take Our Advice YOU WILL NEED, CLEAN ADVICE Farm Implements A Late Season Means Much work in a short time. ‘and if you can use another plow or drill or harrow place your order now to insure prompt delivery. Plan ahead Information and prices at any Vollmer Clearwater warehouse. Vollmer-Clearwater Company D. D. WEINS, Agent. NOTICE-FOR PUBLICATION, Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, April 12, 1920, Notice is hereby given that Sample H. Wright, of Boles, Idaho, who, on November 13, 1916, made Additional H. E., No. 06670, for Lots 1, 2, 3, & 4, Section 1, Township 29 N. Range 3 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Hampton Taylor, U. S. Commissioner, at Grangeville, Ida- ho, on the 20th day of May, 1920. Claimant names as witnesses: Frank Lord, Daniel H. Hill, Howard Wright, Charles Sallee, All of Boles, Idaho. HENRY HEITFELD, 16-5 Register NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, April 12, 1920. Notice is hereby given that Frank Lord, of Boles, Idaho, who, on May 27, 1915, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 06130, for NW% SW, Sec. 8, & Ste NW%&, & SW% NEX, Section 17, Township 30 North, Range 1 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Hampton Taylor, U. S. Commissioner, at Grangeville, Idaho, on the 20th. day of May, 1920. Claimant names as witnesses: Sample H. Wright, of Boles, Idaho. Daniel H. Hill, of Boles, Idaho. Heward Wright, of Boles, Idaho. Ethel Johnson, of Grangeville, Ida- ho. HENRY HEITFELD, 16-5 Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, April 12, 1920. Notice is hereby given that Daniel H. Hill, of Joseph, Idaho, who, on October 20, 1916, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 06638, NW% SEX, N% SW%, and SE% for WANTS, | FOR SALE—Good dry fence | post. Hussman Lumber Co. -tf FOR SALE—Work horses. | Inquire of E. J. Rhoades. 14-tt | FOR SALE—Registered Short- horn Bull. Inquire Chas. Buet- | tner. 15-4* | | —_—___—______ | FOR SALE—Studebaker | three-quarter ton truck. Inquire jof J. V. Baker and Son, 18-2 |——— FOR SALE—Early and late | cabbage plants. Call Arlie Gen- | try, Nezperee phone 2720 16-tf | FOR SALE—House and 514 {lots in Keuterville. Inquire at | this office. 15-4* FOR SALE—Six ewes and four bucks. Will sell cheap if taken at once. Inquire of P. Bieren. 15-tf FOR SALE—Two registered Shorthorn bulls, one yearling past. Inquire of Joe McDonald, Fenn, Idaho. 16-4 FOR SALE-—Early and late | cabbage plants, 35 cents a hun- dred, and 5 cents extra by mail. We guarantee deliveries at the Cottonwood Mercantile Co. every Saturday afternoon. Cooper & Forsland. 18-2* FOR SALE—285 ewes 2 to 6 years old, 60 head of ewes 6 to 8 years old, 125 head ewes 1 year old, 30 Wethers 1 year old, 200 Spring lambs. The one to three years old are 14 to % Lincoln. Balance are mostly Marino cros- ses. $7500.00 takes the lot. W. F. Cargill, Nezperce, Idaho. SALESMAN WANTED. REAL SALESMAN, with car preferred, in your locality, $50 to $200.00 weekly, selling that wonderful “CORAJA” Patch— not an “all-rubber” or Khaki back—It’s different—PATENT- ED—nothing else like it on the market. NO COMPETITION. You can make a iglean up—BEST in the WORLD? for automobile inner tubes—Territory FREE. (You can start with a $6.00 Order) “CORAJA” RUBBER MFG. CO., Dallas, Texas. P. S: Have several openings for State Managers with $500.00 to $1000 capital. Should easily make $500.00 to $2000.00 per month. Be guick, or the other fellow will 16-4 get it. Printing Brings Clients | Not every business has a show window. If you want to win more clients, use more printing and use the kind of printing that faithfully represents your business policy. You save money and make money for your patrons. Do the same for yourself by using an ecenomical \high grade paper — Hammermill | Bond —and good printing, both of | which we can give you. If you want printing service and economy — give use a trial. TS NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the Probate Court, County of Idaho, State of Idaho. In the Matter of the Estate of John Romain, Deceased. Notice is hereby given, that Letters /of Administration on the estate of John Romain, deceased, were granted to the undersigned on the 12th day of | April 1920, by the Probate Court of | Idaho County. | All persons having claims against said estate are required to exhibit them to me for allowance at my resi- dence two miles and one half south- | east of the town of Keuterville, Idaho, within ten months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or | they shall be forever barred. | Dated this 12th day of April 1920. | DOMINIC ROMAIN, | Administrator. | M. Reese Hattabaugh, Attorney for Administrator, Grangeville, Idaho. First publication April 16, 1920. 16-4 Grangeville, Idaho, on the 19th day of May, 1920. Claimant names as witnesses: Frank Lord, Sample H. Wright, Samuel Ryan, ‘Thomas P. Watson, All NW, Section 34, Township 30 North | of Boles, Idaho. Range 1 West, Boise Meridian, filed notice of intention to make three | Seeas| above described, before Hampton er _ st| to South & Frick. ‘Tayler, U. 8. Coummissioner, has HENRY HEITFELD, | 16-5 Register. If your Radiator leaks take it ene cen creas Ath See SME] PEACE RESOLUTION REPORTED IN SENATE Substitute For House Proposal Would Repeal War. Resolutions. Washington.—A joint resolution pro posing repeal of resolutions by con: gress declaring a state of war with Germany and Austria-Hungary was re ported out by the senate foreign re lations committee by a strict party vote. The resolution was introduced by Senator Knox, republican, Pennsylvan- ja, as a substitute for the republican resolution recently passed by the house. Leaders of both parties pre- dicted several weeks of discussion with little prospect for action until near the (ime set for a recess for national con- ventions. Straight-out repeal of the war reso lutions is the principal object of the Knox substitute, which would request the president to establish friendly di plomatic and commercial relations with Germany and with “the govern- DR. H.'B. BLAKE» Physician and Surgeon Office Main Street next to Baker's Store DR. J. D. SHINNICK Physician and Surgeon Office, Butler Bldg. DR. WESLEY F. ORR Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Bldg. Both Phones DR. J. E. REILLY DENTIST Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones V———_—_——— ments aud peoples of Austyla and Hun HOOP SSO IS HOOOOOOOHE gary.” Like the house resolution, it would reserve all American rights un der the treaty of Versailles and provide for repeal of war legislation and for war powers of the president. It would hold German property until all Ameri- can war claims were satisfied, but does not include the house provision for ac- ceptance of the resolution’s terms by Germany within 45 days under penalty of a commercial embargo. GASOLINE SHORTAGE IN SUMMER PREDICTED Washington.—Warning of the prob ability of an actual shortage of gaso- line before the end of next summer, as a result of the disproportionate in crease in gasoline production to the number of automobiles in use, was given in a statement issued by the bu reau of mines, While an increase in stocks at the end of February of more than 100,000,000 gallons or 20 per cent as compared with a year ago, shows that the situation is not yet acute, it is probable, the statement sald, that before the “summer season is over it will become tight If indeed it does not become short.” Heavy drafts were made in March on the reserve stocks of crude petro leum notwithstanding a 20 per cent increase in production, according to a report by the United States geological survey. The total increase in cutput of the United States in March as compared with March, 1919, was 6,000,000 barrels, but the Increased consumption made necessary the importation of 6,500,000 barrels from Mexico. An additional 1,000,000 barrels was drawn from the reserves to meet the demand. FIFTY KILLED BY STORM Rescuers Take 37 Bodies of Dead From Wrecked Houses. Muskogee, Okla.—Fifty persons are reported killed and more than 160 in jured in @ storm that is said to have destroyed the little town of Peggs, Okla, Cherokee county. Thirty-seven bodies have been re- covered by rescuers from wrecked houses, according to a telephone re port from Tahlequah. This informa tion was brought from Peggs by the first man to arrive from there. Twenty of these bodies are reported to bave been taken from one bullding Senate Passes Budget Bill. Washington.—Senator McCormick‘s bill to establish a national budget sys tem was passed by the senate and now goes to conference. Under the senate plan, the budget bureau would be under the supervision of the secretary of the treasury, while the bill recently passed by the house places it directly under the president Hundreds Join in Chicago Rent Strike. Chicago.—Although there were many eleventh hour agreements reported be tween landlords and tenants and thou- sands of persons moved, hundreds ef persons went on a “rent strike” May 1, refusing to vacate apartments, ac- cording to leaders in the movement against high rentals Poles Rout Russians. London.—Continuing their smashing offensive northeastward, Polish troops under General Pilsudski have broken the Russian ines over a wide front aud captured 10,000 prisuners and hundreds of guns, according to a Central News dispateh from Berlin. Mothers’ Day Flowers Expensive. Wasbington.— Because of high pricee of flowers founders of Mothers’ day, Sunday, May 9, have asked all who observe it to dispense with the cus- tomary white carnations and display American Gags instead on May 6 and 1¢-tf],, DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Residence North end of town Both Phones COTTONWOOD NATIONAL FARM LOAN ASSOCIATION Long term loans on farm lands at 514 per cent. Bring us your loans. Edgar G. Fry, President, Felix Martzen, Sec.- Treas. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No, 38 Meets every Tuesday evening.’ Ed L. Jessup, C. C. Harry Campbell, K. of R. & S. PPPPSSSHS OPS EEOOH OS Lo oO F. ‘ Meets every Saturday evening in the I. O. O. F. hall So-journeying Odd Fellows invited. Carl Rehder, N. G. Leo Hanses, Secretary COTTONWOOD POST NO. 40 The American Legion COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Meets the first Wednesday of each month in the I. 0. 0. F. H. H. NUXOLL Notary Public —For Sale— A few choice Farms also towns lots in town Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood FELI? MAXTZEN Real Estate, Loans, Fire and Life Insurance Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and save 35 to 45 per cent on your insurance. JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished on any class of Work. Repairing promptly done. When in Grangeville call at " BRADBURY’S” for your Ice Cold Drinks Cigars, Etc. Eventually you will buy “Tip Top” why not today? 14-tf In the market for good fat Sete: ae es . Clarke, the junk man. 446

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