Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, May 28, 1920, Page 2

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)

rushed to completion, DO YOU KNOW? | | It is hoped that the walks in Do you know that the overall club seems to have lost its sus-| both towns can be comple pendets. | June 17, the day the two towns too ES gg et Oe | are to be consolidated.—Ilo Reg- ister. and macadamized streets we! will have the best town on the) KETCHEL EASY WINNER. PD you know that the pros-|.. 1", Ketchell gained a de- pects for a crop on Camas prairie | Charl ‘a, bad 4 a ‘ ; ; 5 arley Lawson Saturday ni, oy engin exceptionally bright jat Nezperve when Lawson, a ter | Pe Dos Shi w that all reports | taking knockdowns in two esate to anne that the nae. | rounds was unable to respond in ae in almost any section of and was held under the auspices Do you know that carrots are | i) ps —_ rt we? m the! declared to be a most healthful a they uh a h a in tht food, likewise spinnage, but that p rigeet A sack pach aa hod | does not make either two popu- pi ne ok as faxai athe 4 i lar with some people. and the crowd classed the roun Do you know that there are | °Y some people who insist on hav ing the entire road when driving an automobile. Evidently they think they are the most import- ant people in the world. Do you know thata great many people in Cottonwood were surprised when they heard that | the pavement bonds would sell for 90c on the dollar. Do you know that there something in feeling as young as_ you are but there is nothing in feeling as‘rich as you are. | Do you know why it is that some people in every town! always insist on knocking their | home town. _ If they do not like | the town why don’t they move on? Do you know that a pasate en. | In the second, Ketchell set the pace with furious assults scoring | two knockdowns and the gong| saved the sailor. | Lawson came back in the third | with gameness but only to take| severe punishment and the gong | saved him again. His condition was such he} | could not come back in the four-| th and the contest was awarded | to Ketchell. | A large crowd witnessed the} contest and the receipts are est-| imated at $1,000. The atten- dance came from all sections of | the prairie region. | “Young” Ketchell is the wel-| terweight who proved a surprise | jat Lewiston a few weeks ago) t when he defeated Heck we) A . ho, | With ease. e proves himse'! lake atated to a local business | hitter who can also take punish- | man the first of the week: ‘I ment. Fight fans will now be; wish to congratulate your city | looking for a welter who may be} council as well as its citizens for | ~ to take en ie dtie! the step taken to improve your), ico ond f 8000 hi ed | streats.” | neighborhood of $ changed | | hands = erie oy Le em , | generally backing Ketchel, while | ‘T LET FOR WALKS. | ; gs eae dar es Lewiston fans supported tame = ol 10 ag Ay nag side gen | oe or the town of Ilo, has been let | mp ue > CENTENCE Sn Wilam Mallenburg, of Lew-| =Ee® ARE SENTENCED. iston, and the bond to guarantee | The work of the federal court the ‘contract was signed this| at Moscow was concluded Thurs- | week. Work on the new walks | day of last week when Judge F.| will commence at once and the S. Dietrich pronounced sentience | same is to be completed by June | UPon three defendants who had | i | entered pleas of guilty. The Thomas Hall, who has the con- | court will remain open tomorrow tract for the construction of 700, but the work of the term is now | feet of 10 foot walk, 300 feet of | cleared and it is not expected | six foot walk and 300 feet of | any further business will be four foot wolk, for the town of | transacted. Vollmer, | Those sentenced and the sent-| has also commenced | ; | ences imposed are as follows: | Blair Hoar, former receiver of the U. S. land office at Lewiston ¢¢ | and who entered a plea of guilty | %\ tothe charge of embezzlement ¢ | by failure to make daily deposits * | of the funds received as requir-| Z\ed by law, was sentenced to ¢|serve 18 months at McNeil’s + | Island and to pay a fine amount- % | ing to $2,666.67. | ¢| Al Arthur, of Lewiston, who ¢ | pleaded guilty to the charge of $/operating an illicit still, was ? sentenced to serve 30 days in the ?| county jail at Lewiston. | ¢| Seward T. Pickett, who enter- % | ed a plea of guilty to the charge | {of operating an illicit still in Ida-| 1s | placing material on the ground and work on the same_ will be — NATIONAL BANK ——or-—— Cottonwood, Idaho |ho county, was sentenced to| | serve two months in the county ¥ | jail at Grangeville. | Arthurs and Pickett have ~ been in jail for several months | $|and this was considered in im-| posing sentences. ROAD IMPROVEMENT. P. P. Oehler, highway engi-| ¥/neer of Lewiston, and his sur- ?| veying crew arrived in Nezperce *| Tuesday and they are now at £| work surveying the several bad | sections 6f road in this commun- | ity which the Prairie Highway | ~ | board has ordered cide Dy oe | *| These pieces of road are the >| “Harding” hill at the northwest £ entrance of town, the “Miller” |hill a half mile northéast of | town, and the “Hines” hill a half | mile out on the Nezperce-Craig- | mont road. Another highway improve-| ment which they will survey is !the detour around the ‘Cook” | hill, seven miles north of this |place. This hill has been an ‘impediment to traffic since the! |opening of the reservation, and it is now planned to follow the draw that skirts it on the west! jand therby secure a very easy grade in that section of road. This draw passed through the }ranch owned by C. W. Buckley, of this city, and he agrees to re- linguish the right-of-way for the new road at a minimum cost to | the district—Nezperce Herald. _ Dr. W. S. Jackson, the Eye- sight Specialist, of Grangeville, will be in his office at the Hotel {Cottonwood on Monday and, | Tuesday, June 6th and 7th. 19-4| Make baking day a holiday, by using “Tip Top Flour.” leu. A MAN IS LIKE TEA; YOU CAN NEVER TELL HIS REAL STRENGTH UNTIL HE GETS INTO HOT WAT- ER. IN THIS RESPECT BANKS ARE _ LIKE MEN. WE HAVE ALWAYS MET THE REQUIRE- MENTS OF OUR PATRONS, AND EX- PECT TO DO SO IN THE FUTURE, | } ted bY | | summer school at the University | ©! us again next year with the ex- BERNARD MOYNAGH DEAD. The gad news ‘was received ere bf Mrs. George, Rustemeyer of the death of her| brother, Bernard Moynagh, of Oregon City, Ore., and the lady} left Sunday morning for that| place to attend the funeral. | The deceased was the young- est child of the family and came | to Cottonwood with his parents | from South Dakota when a small | child. The family Jater settled on a homestead in the Green- | creek section where they resided | until a few years ago. Bernard | grew to manhood in this county | and attended school in Cotton- | wood for a couple of terms, being | a bright student and_ highly | esteemed by teachers and school- mates alike. After removing! to Oregon he contracted the flu) about a year ago, which brought | on lung trouble and caused his | death. He was 24 years of age, the last of four boys, and was laid to rest Monday in the Cath- olic cemetery at Oregon City by the side of his brother, Frank, | who died in Montana on Decem- | ber 31st, 1919. | The bereaved relatives have | the sympathy of many friends | here in their hour of sorrow. | TEACHERS LEAVE. All the teachers of the Cotton- | wood Public school have depart- ed from the city, most of them going to their respective homes After a short vacation several will attend summer school so as to keep up with the pace of edu- cational work. | Superintendent and Mrs. Wm. | Lustie left Monday morning for | Seattle where he will attend of Washington. | Professor Hannon was_ unde- cided as to where he would go | but expects to attend summer school. Miss Harriet Hanson returned to her home at Grangeville. Miss Helen Sully and Daisy Hollen left Sunday their homes at Seattle. Miss Lorena Rawson went to| er home at Lewiston. Miss Jessie Wardrobe her home near Genessee. Miss Lennie Rutledge left for California where she will attend summer school. All the teachers will be with Miss for left for | ception of Superintendent Lustie Miss Wardrobe and Miss Sully. ENGINE BREAKS AXLE. Engine No. 1740, which was attached to the passenger train | on its regular trip to Lewiston | broke an axle of one of its driv- | ing wheels Thursday morning near the Farmers Union Ware- house and the train was delayed here for two hours, until help eame from Grangeville where the freight crew was stationed. The engine was pulled back on a side track and the regular trip continued to Lewiston, with the freight engine. The accident was a very fortunate one, for should the break have occured | on the Culdesac hill, the outcome might have been a very serious one. The axle was 8 inches in | diameter, and broke just as if it had been cut off. | PLANS TRIP TO ARGENTINA | Albert Nordict of Los Molinos, | | Calif., formerly a resident of the | | Keuterville section, who has} been visiting friends around here the past week, expects to| leave some time next week for Los Molinos from where he will begin his trip to Argentina, South America. Mr. Nordick! expects to sojourn there about a} year and if opportunities there for agriculture and stock raising are as abundant as claimed to be, | he may locate there. A study) of a trip of this kind recalls some | of our lessons in geopraphy of | school days as for instance your shadow there will point south instead of north as here. Also | the farther south you go the) colder it gets and that July and August are their coldest winter months. The trip will require 40 days travel on boats from San Francisco, a trip through the Panama Canal and in all about) 7,000 miles will be covered going | this route and the fare over and | return for first class passage amounts to nearly a $1,000.00 FOR SALE—Gang plow near- | ly new. T. Clark the junk} man. 21-4) FOR SALE—A No. 1 dry| fence posts. T. Clark, the junk man _on Saturdays and Mon- days. 2. Pay the last half of your 1919} taxes at The First National Bank, not later than Saturday June 26th. 22-5 *, by Using a Tractor Disc Harrow - Keep your tractor as busy as light draft, flexible harrow. It ‘ possible at work that pays. The has a separate lever for angling each gang more work it performs, the more so that all tendency of harrow to crowd profit you will secure from your to one side when working in hard ard : investment. soft ground, or on hillsides, can be over- Besides using it when you “™ plow, use it in disking before and Its third lever makes thorough pul- after you plow. That makes a — possible. pai it a give ™ - : e right pressure to the inner ends of the gangs pe prepared seed bed—the kind of the front section to make all the discs pene- at pays most. trate at equal depth the entire width of the Come to our store and let us = barrow. show you the John Deere Pony There are other features on this har- Tractor Disc Harrow—a sure row which we would like to show you,’ profit maker behind any standard such as dofible bar gang frames, twice as strong tractor. as any bg bar gang frame, all steel stub ; ay ; le and adjustable spring steel This is an exceptionally strong, -_ ome ee. - Cottonwood Hardware & Implement Co. » ‘THE TRADE-MARK OF QUALITY MADE FAMOUS BY GOOD IMPLEMENTS - * ¥ HLUSCLRUC ONVENIENCE is the word that best describes the ‘ advantages of the HUGHES Electric Range—for it elevates cooking to a science and eliminates disagreeable features. It is convenient because at the mo- Convenient because it is clean. N ment you want heat you turn a_ fuel or ashes: no soot -— hi i button. To increase or decrease the soil the cooking ce ] ae heat or to stop it—you simply turn oy the ai ing vessels, or the walls, > the button. ae Convenient because it is cool. Prac- No range so modern — no range tically all the heat goes directly into 80 efficient —- because you do the cooking; the temperature of the the cooking for a large family es coey seer. No flame, odin minimum of fuss and : Let us give you a copy of “How to Modernize” uize” and tell about the HUGHES Electric Range. ie? Grangeville Electric Light & Power Co. Cottonwood, Idaho w &

Other pages from this issue: