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mem SOOOCRR ESSENSE SANTO i ee ei he ed 200 Sacks of Flour As we have decided to quite baking bread and having 200 sacks of Tip Top and Farmer’s Union flour on hand we will sell it for less than the market price today. Tip Top, per sack $3.40 Farmer’s Union, per sack $3.30 WILL SELL IT IN ANY AMOUNTS IDAHO RESTAURANT oo 3 z $ afoatoatnetoatoetoatoatoatoeteefoage treieeieeteeiontnatoetoeleaeatectealedie cpa eee peeee Gi gy leadesotetoateeteetoctotosteodtotent oe ae Kodaks at all prices from $3.00 up. If it isn’t an Eatsman it isn’t a kodak. —Also— FILMS PAPER POST CARDS TANKS and all accessories. Kodak as you go along COTTONWOOD PHARMACY T. F. Schaecher, Prop. : a EVER HEAR about the auto owner who spent the first year under his car seeing why it didn’t run instead of running it? Well, he never heard about our expert work in Automobile Repairing When we fix your car you know that expert work has been done and you won't have to bring it back to have the same job done over in a day or two. SOUTH & FRICK ST TTT TTT TITTIES = A Whole Machine Shop may have to shut down, and important work be held up, because of some small broken part. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF Welding and Brazing BROKEN PARTS OF MACHINERY Try our work, if you are in a hurry, especially. It may save you time and money in sending away for new parts. ” EEE Cottonwood Battery & Welding Shop = : = s = E ail Bundle Rack material or com-|_ Sale on screen doors at plete racks to order at the Hus-| the Madison Lumber Co. 22-tf sman Lumber Co. 28-tf] If you are in the market for In the market for good fat! good seed or table potatoes leav poultry. Saturdays and Mondays! your orders with the Cotton-| T. Clarke, the junk man. "4-6 | wood Milling and Elevator Co. tf o'clock in the morning. The posse, | ' Curtailment in Operations of Textile GAPTURE SLAYERS OF | UMATILLA SHERIFF All Five Men Who Escaped | Are Now Back in Pen- dleton Jail. Black Bear Work Clothes Pendleton.—Netil Hart Jack Rathie, Louis Anderson and Rich- | ard Patterson, the five men who es caped from the jail here Sunday, July | 25, after Sheriff Til Taylor had been murdered, were captured and are back | in the Pendleton jail Neil Hart, alleged slayer of Til Taylor, sheriff of Umatilla county, and | Jim Owens, | Coveralls Overalls Pants Shirts Socks “Black Bear” Means--- Long Wear Guaranteed full size and the quality is the best on the market Se J. V. BAKER & SON WHERE QUALITY AND PRICES MEET Jim Owens, Hart's principal accom plice in the jailbreak, were taken at | a sheep camp in the high mountains of Unton county, six miles south of | Toll Gate ull The capture was made at about 1 near the head of the Uma river. headed by J. H. McLachlin of La Grande, stumbled onto a sheepherd- er’s tent in the mountain section near Toll Gate, found the two men asleep | and captured them without a fight Rathie was taken on the road two miles above Gibson on the Umatilla river Rathie was unarmed and was resting on a hillside when he was | closed in on by # posse of six men Richard Patterson and Lewis An derson, the last two of the fugitive outlaws, were taken into custody four miles southeast of Kamela by John McCardan and Barney Devlin, sheep- | herders, both of Heppner. | For a time Saturday night it looked | as though the jail would be stormed by a mob determined to take the law unto themselves and lynch Neil Hart, | U Jim Owens and Jack Rathie, the prin | cipals in the jail break, but they we e! dissuaded from their purpose by W. R. | (“Jinks”) Taylor, brother of Til Tay- | lor, and his successor as sheriff CHARGE ATTEMPT TO STAMPEDE CLOTHIERS Washington.—Howard E. Figg, spe cial assistant to the attorney general in the euforcement of the Lever law against charged that manufacturers and jobbers of wearing fen apparel were attempting through care fully prepared propaganda “to stam pede retailers and the public into a re] renewed fictitious demand” for cloth profiteering, ing, and thereby force prices high - ti : e “The department of justice, aid r Mr. Figg, “is fully advised of the sev- eS |e n ects IC eral phases of this carefully planned campaign, and it only remains to fix personal responsibility before apply- a ing the riminal provisions of the aiseeniaata Lever act.” . Manufacturers and jobbers are even e going to the length of “guaranteeing AUN the retail trade against a declining apes < market,” Mr. Figg said. . : He called attention to where mills have been closed for the OLS min I « instances reason, he charged, of justifying mar ket conditions on the plea of under production. “The closing of mills is in turn being used in the price propaganda,” Mr. Figg asserted ‘The retailer is, then, being threatened with further curtailment and higher prices if he does not accept goods and order on the present market.” WOOL CONSUMPTION DROPS XN Choose Me and Use Me Western Electric POWER & LIGHT WILL go on your farm—light it and give you power for many a job. I will do the milking, cream separating, feed cutting and lots of other things. I won't be much trouble either. Industries Blamed. Washington.—A sharp drop in wool consumption amounting to approxi mately 17,000,000 pounds in June as compared with the average consump tion for the preceding months of this year, was announced by the depart ment of agriculture’s bureau of mar kets. The drop was due, the bureau said, to the curtailment of operations in the textile manufacturing industry resulting from lack of orders, cancel lations and deferred shipments. ) ¢ \ Start me nd I will run without driving and watching. I will be so faithful in my work that you would never be without me—and best of all I run on kerosene. i Reports to the bureau show that 46,000,000 pounds of wool entered into manufacture in June against 000 pounds in Jan pounds in February, 67,900,000 pounds in March, 66,900,000 pounds in April and 58,600,000 pounds in May. In June, 1919, the consumption was 55, 000,000 pounds ary, 63,700,000 See this plant in operation. It will pay you., a ER wy ee eT President Wilson to Sell His Sheep. Washington.—President Wilson is to retire from the sheep business. The White House flock of 48 prize sheep, which has kept the lawns cut for three summers, is to be sold. The yield of wool has gone to churity, this year to the Salvation Army. In 1918 the flock produced 98 pounds, which was sold by the Red Cross, bringing more than $52,000. Can now be seen on display at our store Bolsheviki Penetrate Armenia. YOURS FOR GOOD HARDWARE Constantinople.—Bolsheviki penetra i Cottonwood Hardware & Implement Co. :