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nua TTT RISTMAS CHRISTMA Thanksgiving is over and now is the time to prepare for the holidays J. V. BAKER & SON “‘Where Quality and Prices Meet’ NO. 67 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE Cottonwood State Bank At Cottonwood in the State of Idaho at the close of business Nov- ember 15, 1920. Cash on hand Due from Banks Checks and Drafts on other Banks Other Cash Items ........... Loans and Discounts Overdrafts ... Stocks, Bonds and Warrants st Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures Total _. Individual deposists subject to check Time Certificates of Deposi Cashier’s Checks ............. Total Deposits Capital Stock paid in Surplus ... - Undivided Profits, less ex Reserved for taxes _. Re-Discounts .. .... ol ee RESOURCES -$ 8,061.20 266,692.04 35.3 33,324.73 6,587.35 $831,340.70 LIABILITIES $132,143.73 119,085.80 ee SO ea gee Ree .-- 258,732.11 25,000.00 10,000.00 3,021.99 es 554.10 39,032.50 $331,340.70 State of Idaho, County of Idaho, ss. I, H. C. Matthiesen, Cashier of the above-named bank do sol- menly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. Correct—Attest : H. C. Matthiesen, Cashier Herman Von Bargen, M. M. Belknap, directors. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 23rd day of Nov., 1920 I certify that I am not an officer or director of this bank. W. W. Flint, Notary Public. Bt is A ak So aa A. comparison. Don’t buy a phono: without a emanation. used to be when phonographs were a novelty. We invite you to hear the BRUNSWICK, then to hear others. We leave final judgment to you. we rarely lose a sale when a comparison is made. This accounts for the great popularity of the BRUNS- WICK here and the nation over. the most critical because of the overwhelming merit. If you would make the family real happy, buy then a BRUNSWICK for Christmas. Randalls Peelers dendeatectecetonteadeatectecteceatonteateateey MakethisCompari- son Before You Buy a Phonograph graph any more than an automobile, Name isn’t all nowadays, as it We encour- And It goes into the home of COUNTY SEAT NEWS ITEMS. Miss Blanche Hauntz and Irv- in Earp, both of Grangeville, were married in this city Sun- day by W. N. Knox, minister. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Ayers and two children will depart about December 1 for Long Beach, Cal. to spend the winter. ; Mr. and C. B. Knorr will de- part in a few weeks for lower California where they will spend the balance of the winter. Mrs. Sarah Reed, aged almost 2 | 39 years, died Monday evening at the home of her son, Fred Reed, across Salmon river from the mouth of Whitebird creek. Death was due to infirmities of age. I. C. Hattabaugh of Lewiston, one of the well known and form- er pioneer business men of this place, spent a few days in the city the last of the week visiting at the home of his son, M. R. Hattabaugh and other relatives. Loyal Adkison, auctioneer, was a success. Approximately $1000 was realized. Mr. Adkison plans ; another sale for November 27. Articles are accepted from the public for this sale. Dr. W. ‘S. Jackson arrived home Tuesday night from Idaho Falls and Boise Hot Springs, af- ter an absence of about a month. The doctor received treatment. He is much improved in health and is again in his office here. Mr. and Mrs W. A. Cridle- baugh and children departed on Tuesday morning’s train for Lewiston where they will make their home, shipping their hovse hold goods the same morning. Mr. Cridlebaugh, who has been express and baggageman on the Camas Prairie branch for a con- siderable period, has been trans- ferred to the Stites branch. At the present time his sons, Wil- liam and Wallace are handling the work on this run, the latter Grangeville highway district are to ke chosen for terms of four years each, at an election to be held in the courthouse in Grange ville, November 30. The polls will open from 8 in the morning until 7 at night. Commissioners whose terms expire are George D. Smith, Fred W. Cole and Prince Johnson. It is believed the old commissioners will be re- elected. Why not build a machine shed and stop the rust and decay. Rough lumber will do the trick and it won’t cost much either. Hussman Lumber Co. 45-tf RED CROSS MEETING. A meeting of the local Red Cross will be held in their head- quarters on Wednesday after- noon, December 1st for the pur- pose of electing officers. Other important matters will also be Our Xmas line of toys and gifts are being put out every day and are open for your inspection Shop early and enjoy a larger assortment to choose from. We guarantee our prices are right : Aco TS NOTICE TO OWNERS OF FOREIGN BONDS All owners of foreign bonds are required to report amount of holdings to the county assess- or for assessment purposes, not latter than November 22d. 45-3 County Assessor. Tip Top flour is ground up to a standard, not down to a price. 35-tf YOUR PHOTOGRAPH MADE TO YOUR STYLE AND LIKING —AT THE— COTTONWOOD STUDIO —ALSO— Enlargements of all kinds. Kodak work at pre-war Community auction sale held| being helper. in Grangeville Saturday >. C= a\S 4 by J.|| Three commissioners of the As this message is being written, Dodge Brothers’ daily, weekly and monthly production, is at the highest point in its history. The most casual sort of inquiry will satisfy you that this production is being absorbed as it is delivered. Within sight and sound as we write, a great addition to Dodge Brothers’ immense works, is being rushed to completion. The interesting thing about this sit- uation is, that it is not likely that a half a hundred People have ever bought Dodge Brothers Motor Car just because they wanted a motor car. Of the more than half a million who have bought it—the overwhelming majority did so because of the name it bore. It has always been treated, by the American people in Particular, as an exception—always set apart, and singled out, and never judged by ordinary standards. It has always been thought of, and is still thought of, first, and foremost, and all the time, only in terms of its goodness, and the results it gives. All of this is wonderful, in one way, and quite natural and logical in an- other, Tt all dates back to the day when John and Horace Dodge conceived and designed and finally built the car —-after warning each other, and their associates, not even to think of it in any other terms than the best obtain- able value. They began with a few almost ab- surdly simple principles, bluntly ex- Pressed and rigidly executed, about decency and honor and integrity— COTTONWOOD HARDWARE & IMPLEMENT COMPANY taken up and discussed. Subscribe for the Chronicle. Goo Witt TRIUMPHANT UNDER TEST such as most of us wrote in our copy books at school. They reduced these old copy book maxims to a splendid and scientific system, pouring more, and more, and still more value into the car, and then marshalling all the resources of mod- em massed manufacture to get their product into the hands of the people at an honorable and an honest cost. These policies and principles have never been changed, and never will be changed, by so much as a hair’s breadth; and they have come to be recognized and accepted as Dodge Brothers principles wherever motor cars are driven. It has all happened as John and Horace Dodge planned it—quite sim- ply, naturally, and automatically, all over America, and all over the world. People do discriminate, as Dodge Brothers contended they would; people will find out when a motor car is well built and gives good service and great good value. Dodge Brothers market today is where they planned to locate and establish it—in the mind and the heart of every man and woman who admires good work, well done. It will last, and it will keep on grow- ing, as it has kept on growing for five years (faster than Dodge Brothers works could keep pace with it), as long as the number of those who be- lieve that a manufacturer should build to serve and not merely to sell, continues to increase. All is well with Podge Brothers to- day, because John and Horace Dodge builded well in the beginning, and because their business will continue to build well ‘until the end.