Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, June 10, 1921, Page 8

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seamen ey ee i _ ie OOOO OooS BOOSH OHO city today. Dr. Orr reports the arrival of Mention and Local) a baby girl at the John Seubert home Monday, June 6th. The last half of the 1920 taxes are now due and payable. Attend to it before it is too late. 23-4 If you are going to can straw- berries buy them in crate lots at J. V. Baker & Son. The berries | and the price is right. 28-tf | The gentle rain Monday morn- ing was one of those famous) “million dollar’ kind and the past week has been ideal grow- | ing weather. Crop conditions | on Camas Prairie at the present | time point to a big yield. | Alvin Tacke and Lawrence, Schaecher, of Cottonwood, re-| turned home Wednesday from} Mt. Angel, Oregon, where they | have been attending college and | will spend their summer vacation | with home folks. L. R. Atkinson resignation as manager of the} Cottonwood Mercantile Co. Tues- | day, taking effect at once and} Thursday morning departed for! his home in Seattle where his, They are also spending a short vaca- “Tune 25th is the final day on| 2 72. _ can pay your last half i Wh 23-4 ~* 7 re Parker, of Grange- ville, is a business visitor in the Personal Happenings of the Week in This Vicinty. SATURDAY, JUNE 11 A brilliant drama, that # swings from a small town 4 to the big city. The heroine 3 is desirous of some adven- ¥ ture—and she will have it 4 % —but is promptly cured. ¢ ~ Agents for cleaning of suits and hats. R. H. Kendall, con- fectionery. 23-4 See Baker for your strawber- ~ Such is Lois Webers’ ries. We sell them by the ; crate for canning purposes. tf} The last half of the 1921 taxes must be paid on or before the 25th day of June, 1921. 23-4 Music lessons, piano or violin, ‘ae the Nau Furniture Store. Miss Mildred Harris ¢/ Pauline Betz, Instructor. 21-tf ; Mr. and Mrs. Homar Brutz- ¢|man Monday removed from the é| rooms in the rear of the depot to =| the Vern Dye cottage. Akron, Ohio, crowds waited: eight hours in line for their turn to see Priscilla Dean in “Outside of the Law.” To be shown at the Orpheum soon. Master Chester Nuxoll who has been visiting here for the past two weeks with relatives and friends returned to his home }at Clarkston this morning. A large number of young folks from Cottonwood attended the base ball dance at Greencreek Tuesday evening and all report having spent a pleasant evening. Starring i ; COMEDY: On With the Show (20 and 30 cents) tendered his | family resides. | Mr. and Mrs. Art Thoelke de-| parted Sunday morning for Lew- iston to be present at the Black-| burn-Wardrobe wedding. SUNDAY, JUNE 12 % Brings a picture of nation- 4 wide fame, teaching you the meaning of the well-worn % “It runs the gamut ¥ ; it 4 tion in the lower country and are | phrase: expected to return this evening. | Digi te al Good grooming is a prime requisite in a man’s makeup. It is the well dressed man who & has everything worth while ¢ * iar abate | " A y is ut s n’s eup. is the w Presse L . . Mnginees Booth, former suits gets attention every time. Any man who is particular about his personal appearance i nits splendid story ; Dr. Orr expects to leave Sun- highway engineer, ig “4 pe takes just as much care inselecting his shirts as he does in the suit he buys. ; ; e $| day morning on a two weeks va-| has a contract on the North ar : F P - wa \ Z! cation trip in his car, going to| South highway, hard surfacing | And the man who knows good shirts will not hesitate in buying Beau Brummel Shirts. ' Glacier Park and northern |@ portion of the road between | Beau Brummel Shirts are superfine shirts. They have a high degree of style and are Canada. Grangeville and Whitebird spent | made along made-to-measure lines—built to fit. They look right and when you wear i ; ‘The Rev. Father Zurr, pariah | few hours in Cottonwood Tues- | them they feel right. Buy Beau Brummels the next time you want shirts. They are ' vied ‘ » pal day on his way to Lewiston on} shirts that set the pace in style—built for comfort—and the kind that will give you the | priest for the Nezperce congre- gation spent Tuesday in Cotton- wood and at the Monastery vis- iting returning to his home Wed- ¥ | nesday. Mr. and Mrs. G. F. McKinney, (0d Wa *| accompanied by Mrs. J. V. Nash, *; motored to Spokane Thursday morning for a week’s visit with | business. service you expect—in other words, the kind of shirts that give you your money's worth Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stricker | }and family, of Winchester, who} | have been visiting here with re- latives and friends returned to| their home Sunday afternoon. | They were accompanied home by | Mrs. Nick Bieren and Mrs. Eliza-| WEAR BEAU BRUMMEL SHIRTS—A Real Combination of Style and Comfort awe MERCANTILE CO. “Appearance” Goes a Long Way SNE a ot as : : ; | beth Bieren who will spend a} ® after Geo. M. Cohan’s story #| relatives and friends in the In-} | St the rea title: y land Empire metropolis, | . visiting at the Stricker | Zogeoeeoeoee > ar hy y Co., at Grangeville, and family specialist direct from Spot, a el, ‘nied in the nr Wee bei h i ’ Bia passed through the city Satur- — by roe sa 3 a ‘evening and will spend axes Now Due being the producer an day evening enrouted to Port-|¢X@mimers of Washington and) iieir summer vacation with a Idaho will be in Cottonwood June | 18th and 19th, making his head-| | their parents at Greencreek. quarters at the Cottonwood | Raymond Matthiesen returned Hotel. I am introducing new and | home Wednesday evening from better glasses at a big saving.) Moscow, having completed his | All glasses guaranteed. Don't} | second year at the State Univer- miss this opportunity. Its dan-| sity and will spend the summer gerous todelay. Will be in town} vacation with his parents here. ‘ every sixty days. Headquar-| Miss Anna Hattrup exepri- | TAXES MAY BE PAID AT THIS BANK. ters, Jones Optical Co., 607 Ex-| enced a rathed unsual accident change Bank Bldg., Spokane,| while attending the dance at Wash. 24-2| Keuterville Monday evening. Harry Morris, the well known| While dancing she fell and frac- conductor on the Grangeville-| tured her left arm in two places | Lewiston train, in company with} John Hoene, our enterprising | his wife left for a six week’s| merchant is to be congratulated vacation that will take him to|for the fine dragging he gave St. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago,| our streets Tuesday afternoon. | New York City, New Orleans,|John was not satisfied with} St. Louis, Denver, San Francisco| just dragging them and today) had a bunch of boys throwing} principal actor in this great success of the screen i ; COMEDY: It Takes a Crook (20 and 30 cents) land, Oregon, on his annual va- cation. < Services at the Community ¢| Church Sunday will be in charge of the Rey. Marion Sligar. <A class of young people, former bible students of the Rev. Sligar will be taken into the church Sunday. Mrs. Percy Campbell and Miss Lillian McLaughlin departed Tuesday morning for Reubens, Idaho and from that point ac- companied Walter Reid in his car as far as Walla Walla, their old home, to visit with friends for an indefinite period. Editor and Mrs. H. G. Sasse, of Ferdinand, spent Friday after noon in Cottonwood in the inter- The last half of 1920 taxes is now due and must be paid by Saturday, June 25th, 1921 to gin TIE avoid penalty. THURSDAY, JUNE 16 eA very Hail Insurance interesting enter- tainment The Point We are prepared to write hail insurance on your growing crops in some of the strongest American Companies. i e o¢ Portland and then home. In li est of the Radcliff Chautauqla} New York City he will visit with | the rocks out of the streets. ie 0) lew which opens in our neighboring | a sister he has not seen in many Dr. Orr removed the tonsils of | ae i city, be my June hai and} years. While in the east he al-| Raymond Schaecher, Monday, : : nes runs for three days. e pro-| so expects to take in some of the} and last Friday removed the ton- | : showing a modern girl's gram given by this concern at| big ball games and hopes to see| sils of Clara Sonnen. Monday | COTTONWOOD STATE BANK ; struggle to elevate her fam- Ferdinand last year was very| “Babe” Ruth “clot” out one of! the doctor spent in Grangevile| ily from enforced poverty $j satisfactory, and judging from| his famous home runs. where he removed five sets of | E. M. Ehrhardt, Pres. M. M. Belknap, Vice-Pres. | to their old plane of wealth $/ the advance literature for this} Henry Thiessen and family,| tonsils, the patients of Dr. Stock-| H. C. Matthiesen, Cashier A. H. Thoelke, Ass’t. ii fl - Hl - year, will even excell the 1920] Frane Wasem and family, of| ton. | A | aine flammerstein ¢ | chautauqua program. Clarkston, came up from the low-|_ Any member of the American y.gaq raed if , : Mr. . in|} er country Friday evening for a} Legion in need of funds, i nt e ia Re ses bed and Mrs. L. C. McMahon if in| Yt eM asa emery aes Py *|/and son, Leonard, arrived last] visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. | destitute condition, needs infor- B3 : ae y' ¥| week, via the overland route| A.J. Barth. Mrs. Thieseen and| mation of any kind regarding +! from Deer Park, Wash., for a| Mr. Wasem are brother and sis-| his welfare is requested to make | L his wants known to the Com-!¢ a =| visit at the home of Mrs. Mc-| ter of Mrs. Barth. The Thies- > this play. Also Episode No. 11 of In The lion’s Jaw (20 and 30 cents) : N. B. ¢ prevailing x far proposition. It was with considerable sacrifice that the management has tried ¢ to keep up the high stand- ard of pictures shown here; but in a small community it needs the support of a high- 3 d more 3 than in a greater city to 3 minded citizenship meet the expense for such selections: it stands with the patrons what shall be played. We should rather prefer to suspend with the 3 exhibition for some time, | term of school at Der Park, and : | was reelected as superintendent for another year. During his summer vacation he will travel for a school supply house, whose ® | headquarters are i i Under pressure of ¥ ' side dinnaed circumstances 4 the Orpheum has proved $} from being a paying % at the L. O. Come stockman of the Tammany sec- tion and has specialized in pure bred stock for many years, hav- ing at this time one of the finest — herds in the North- west, After the Dance O. F. Hall TONIGHT to the | : |Mahan’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.|sen family left for their home! mander of the American Legion i “LOST crny” ¢ George Poler, and other rela-| Sunday morning and the Wasem| in Cottonwood. . : | tives. Mr.McMahan just re-|family left Tuesday morning.| ‘The fruit season must be on, | j cently closed a very successful) Mr. Thiessen is a well known! fo; the Camas Prairie passenger : train which has maintained its schedule to the minute for some time past is beginning to arrive in Cottonwood a few minutes late each evening. Strawberries, of which fruit the lower country has an immense crop are being shipped on the prairie in im- mense quantities. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Honer and family, accompanied by Fred Honer departed Sunday noon for Compton, California, where th. ) expect to make their future home. They are making the trip overland and in Lewiston was joined by Mrs. Anna Gaul and daughters, who will also lo- cate in the sunny south. The Honers have many friends here who wish them success in their new home. The Honer studio has been rented to G. V. Barker, the photographer of Grangeville, and four young ladies have leas- 1920 Taxes Now Due Pay them at First National Bank cot R. H. KENDALL, Confectionery than to lower the standard. COTTONWOOD, IDAHO system bins Re Pio. ed the residence part of his home in which they | will keep “bach-

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