Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, September 24, 1920, Page 6

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oe SESE GLEE DEES GODS EES OSES HEED OI SOO EL EOL RESELLER IESE OSEIIE DADO EIDE IEE I HE HE OIE BUY A SUBURBAN TRACT IN Beautiful Lewiston Orchards At the Bondholders’ Sacrifice Sale, Sat., Oct. 9, 1920 This is an unusual opportunity to get a beautiful suburban home site in a 700 people are already enjoying life on these tracts and at the same time community with excellent schools, church, and all the advantages of the city. These Every acre is income producing and is capable of producing Fine rich soil, good water system and an early growing season combine to make it an ideal locality. Income Bearing Land at $250 to $450 per Acre---Less than One-Third Actual Value COMPARISON OF PRICES More money s been spent to get these lands to the present state of production than we are asking for them at this sale. Remember that Lewiston Orchards’ is one of the very few irrigated orchard districts in the Northwest, also that no other dis- trict is so favorably located with all its acreage right at the door of a modern city making a nice living. tracts join the City of Lewiston on the east and a paved highway from the city pass- more each year than we are asking in this sale. es through the center. They vary from 1! to 30 acres in size. $1200 to $1500 per acre. METHOD OF SALE No land will be sold before that date of sale, October 9, 1920 at 1:30 P. M. The sale will be held at the orchards. Pur- chaser must deposit 214 per cent of the purchase price with application for each tract. Applications will be drawn from a EASY TERMS Property will be sold on the following terms: 2'%4 per cent cash must accom- pany all applications and 714 per cent cash must be paid on October 9. Balance to be paid: 15 per cent November 1, and the balance in 1, 2, and 8 years at 6 per cent, GUARANTEED TITLES Purchaser will receive a title insurance policy in the Northwest Title Insurance Comany, showing the property free and clear or all encumbrances as of date Octo- ser 9, 1920. Warranty deed will be made out to all purchasers of property on con- bound to become as valuable as that in the other districts that is now bringing from That is why we hat this land is this order. hat on the date of sale by a disinterested party and a line formed in the order appli- cations are drawn out, and sales made in Fred B. Grinnell Company OWNERS’ AGENT 402 Main Street O. P. PRING, Associate Telephone 386 LEWISTON, IDAHO REFERENCE: Old National Bank of Spokane; Any Bank of Lewiston, Idaho with all its advantages. feel save in saying t or 40 per cent November 1 and balance in 1 and 2 years at 5 per cent, or in full Nov- ember 1. In this case a 5 per cent dis- count is allowed. tract and same will be placed in escrow in the Lewiston National Bank, where future payments will be made. Send this coupon for free folder, with map and price list THE FRED B. GRINNELL COMPANY, 402 Main Street LEWISTON, IDAHO. Gentlemen: Please send us your folder, giving map, price-list and complete information Orchards. Name ..... concerning your Town State Bondholders’ Sacrifice Sale of Lewiston Cottonwood Chronicle, Cottonwood, Idaho. PEOPLES SSSI OIE o OO OOOO OOO Oooo Hm Se mededra dreaded eae ee aoeeeceaetesecetectecetedetetecte do ectetetececectecete cece coco ceceeceeectece ee deteteceetedecetectecetetecetececetegy FINAL ALLOTMENT OF ROAD FUNDS IS MADE Money to Be Available to States During Next Two Years. Washington.—Final allotment of the federal road fund was announced for use in the various states during the coming two years. Of the allotment Oregon's portion will be $1,576,152, Washington $1,444,628 and Idaho §$1,- 226,050. These allotments are all subject to each state matching the sums appor tioned to them to be spent on the same Projects as are the federal funds. The apportionment is under the road acts of 1918 and 1919, and is all that the states will receive unless the con gress makes further provision. Allotments just announced are larg- er than any previously made out of the federal treasury, as the law con templated, and the states in conse. quence are called upon to appropriate more liberally for roads than ever before in order to benefits under this allotment, but the depart- ment reports that to date no state has failed to if not surpass, the federal allotment, and in conse quence no state allotment of past years has ever been forfeited. 5,600,000 IN U.S, PAYING INGOME TAX than 5,600,000 » paying in according to receive meet, Washington. More firms and individuals come taxes this year, figures made public by the bureau of internal revenue. These figures aiso| reveal that practically 3,000,000 tax payers already have paid their income | taxes in full. The bureau's statement shows that 4,900,000 persons are paying income | taxes on incomes of $5000 or less| and that fewer than 600,000 of this| number have not paid their taxes in} full, choosing the method of payment} by installments. Individual returns for indomes in excess of $5000, in- cluding those of individuals and firms, numbered 700,000. Nearly 350,000 corporations have owes == uuu nave paid in rulf MEXICO IS U. S. OIL HOPE 12 Per Cent of Potential Now Being Produced. Washington. — Mexico become the oil reservoir of the west ern hemisphere, the department of commerce declared in a review of the petroleum industry. With increased consumption in the United States like ly to exhaust producing fields here within 20 or 25 years, Mexico, the statement said, “offers the most en- couragement to the American oil in- dustry, both for present production and geographical situation.” Exhaustion of 40 per cent of the producing fields of the United States, the department's review stated, has caused Mexico to take second place in oil production, although only about 12 per cent of the potential capacity of Mexican wells is being produced, Capacity promises to Coast to Coast Mail Started. Chicago.—An extensive daily coast to coast mail service was begun when planes left five cities. One plane will leave each morning from New York with mail to San Francisco, one from San Francisco for New York, one from Cheyenne, Wyo., to San Francisco, one from Salt Lake City to Can Francisco, one from Chicago to San Francisco every day except Sunday and one from Chicago to New York every day ex cept Monday, First Woman Named Commissioner. Washington.—-President Wilson ap- pointed Mabel T. Boardman, for many years a member of the executive com mittee of the American Red Cross, to be a commissioner of the District of Columbia. The appointment makes Miss Boardman the first woman to be a member of the commission which directs the entire government of the district, 300 Known Dead in Italian Earthquake, Fivizzang, Italy. — Three hundred dead already have been counted in the italian towns and villages devastated by the earth shocks of the past few days, but many more missing un doubtedly will be added to the tolls as the checking up process proceeds. Navy Becomes Bone Dry. Washington—Spirituous liquors re- ceived their final and complete divorce from the United States navy in an order made vublic by the buraay «! medicine and surgery prohibiting their issue to naval vessels for medicinal purposes. American Pearls. There is a species of green or frl- descent pearl found occasionally in the abalones, or ear shells, of the Cal- {fornia coast. Black and gray pearls are found in Lower California waters; white, pink, brown and other colored pearls in some of the fresh water brooks of Ohlo, Tennessee, Texas, Kentucky, and Wisconsin; purple and black pearls are sometimes found in the shells of the common clam of Long Island sound and the Atlantic coast. The principal pearl fisheries of the world are Ceylon, the Persian gulf, western Australia, Torres straits and the Sulu archipelago. REACHING FOR WORLD TRADE Every Nation Wide Awake to the Pos sibilities That Have Opened, Fol- lowing the Great War. A more cosmopolitan document could hardly be imagined than the weekly list of trade chances which Is nowadays gathered from all sources by the United States department of commerce, and published for the tn- formation of American business !n- terests. An agency In Spain wishes to sell agricultural machinery and me- chanical tops; a company itn Egypt wishes to handle American cardboards and all kinds of paper; a firm in India is eager to come in contact with ex- porters of general merchandise; agrt- cultufists in South Africa are in- terested in caterpillar tractors; a man in Switzerland would fain become an agent for yarns and fabrics; another in Belgium wishes to deal in food products; an engineer in Lettland would like to represent exporters of agricultural tools and automobiles, but perceives the wisdom of having more than one string to his bow, for he wants also an agency for the sale of lard. An interesting medley of com- mercial ambitions, with Items that have already counted up to more than 1,500, the lists reveal how, all over the world, Individuals and companies are hoping for opportunity to share in in- ternational trade CAKES, COOKIES AND BREAD Should Be Cooled After Baking and Placed in Other Receptacies— Scald and Air, Cakes, cookies, and bread should be cooled after baking and before being placed in other receptacies. The tin box or earthenware jars in which they are kept should be thoroughly scalded and aired. Every three days in damp, hot weather i: none too often, Por- tions of a former baking should never be stored with a new batch. I BEG TO ANNOUNCE THE FOLLOWING SALES DATED OTHERS LISTED BUT NOT DATED. GET YOUR DATES EARLY SO AS TO AVOID ANY MIX-UP IN THE DATES AS I WANT YOUR SALES. SEPT. 28—Farm Sale, Alois Simbeck, Grangeville, Idaho. OCT. 4—Farm Sale, Peter Bieren, Cottonwood, Idaho. OCT. 5—Farm Sale, Grangeville, Idaho. OCT. 6—Farm Sale, John Wasem, Cottonwood, Idaho OCT. 7—Farm Sale, H. Von Bargen, Fenn, Idaho. OCT. 8—Farm Sale, Nezperce, Idaho. OCT. 9—-Registered Shorthorn Sale, Joe Turner, Carlton, Oregon. OCT. 12—Farm Sale, E. S. Sweet, wrangeville, Idaho. OCT. 18—Farm Sale, Sidney Brown, Cottonwood, Idaho. OCT. 14—Farm Sale, D. Nezperce Idaho. OCT. 18—Farm Sale, Fenn, Idaho. OCT. 23—Registered Holstein Sale, Bitter Root Holstein Company, Hamilton, Mont. M. I. Cross, Wm. Petit, Hoover, Tom Wren, As I will be away a great deal as you see by ing or dropping into your local paper and the editor will secure a date for you. October 19th, 20th and 21st dated for three sales in Southern Idaho but on account of our sales coming late this year I have cancelled the dates so I can take care of my home business, NOV. 3—Registered Hereford Sale, Western Royal Stock Show, Spo- kane, Wash., for N. W. Hereford Association. NOV. 4—Registered Shorthorn Sale, Western Royal Stock Show, Spo- kane, Wash., for N. W. Shorthorn Breeders Association. NOV. 10—Registered Shorthorn Sale, N. W. Stock Show, Lewiston, Ida., for N. W. Shorthorn Breeders Association. NOV. 11—Registered Hereford Sale, N. W. Stock Show, Lewiston, Idaho, for N. W. Hereford Breeders As- sociation. NOV. 12—Registered Percheron Sale, N. W. Stock Show, Lewiston, Idaho, for Tom Wren, Fenn, Idaho. NOV. 18—Registered Shorthorn Sale, Pacific International Stock Show, Portland, Oregon, for N. W. Short- horn Breeders. NOV. 19—Registered Hereford Sale, Pacific International Stock Show, Portland, Oregon, for N. W. Here- ford Breeders Association. my list you will confer a great favor by call- Yours for better sales Harry C. Cranke I have

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