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‘COTTONWOOD. CHRONICLE 5 eh cee — VOLUME 29. NO. 39 ‘ COTTONWOOD, IDAHO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1921 * $2.00 PER YEAR COTTONWOOD HOGS WIN. |PIONEER DROPPED DEAD. | CLOSE SCHOOLS ee it oveen merges tea? NEWS AROUND |Funke and McKinley Poland iston Tribune trom Grangeville | AT NEZPERCE Chinas Show Up Fine. |on Sunday evening stated: | | | After a career covering 70 HE STATE John Funke of Cottonwoed, | | years of activity and continuing | Idaho, obtained the following ieee, {up until the time of his death, : ‘ yaras his Poland Chinas at | Ed R. Cawley was found dead ‘ ACTION TAKEN TO PRE-| {eres ot on fair heundilshe saeco Items of Interest From Various | . | | y by his wife, apparently VENT THE SPREADING OF | —— —— boar, first, sec- | the victim of heart trouble, Mr. Sections Reproduced for Ben- jond, fourth and fifth on boars! roTS |Cawley was at home alone and e INFANTILE PARALYSIS. | unger six months ;tirst, second I had gone to the wocdshed after efit of Our Readers. ; and third on sows one year and a | wood and was found at 7:30 under 18 months; first, second 4 o'clock by his wife and from all Following the death of Russell |and third on sows six months) J appearances he had dropped , Nezperce will hold its annual Flora, 8-year-old son of Rev. and | and under one year; first second | dead. |fair and stock show October 7 Mrs. F. A. Flora, of Nezperce, at! third; fourth and fifth on sows ; He was an old-time stage driv- 2d 8. ) a 5 o'clock Wednesday morning, | under six months; first on boars er and one of his schedules was| A meeting of the county com- from an illness diagnosed as in-! and three sows over one year; } ; between Lewiston and Grange- missioners of the entire state of J fantile paralysis, the city council | first on boar and three sows un- ville. He will be remembered Idaho is being held at Sandpoint, we and school board of that city der one year bred by exhibitor; in association with the golden Idaho this week. wa deemed it best to close the school | first on four animals, either sex, | days when Felix Warren was in Contracts for the construction in Nepzerce for a period of ten | any age, get of one boar; first on the day of his glory; when Ezra of six miles of the north and days and to suppress all public | four animals, any age, either sex Baird, as proprietor of the line, south highway in Adams county ee gatherings. There are a num-/ produce of one sow; junior cham was known to the entire travel- from Fruitvale to Council will be a4 ber of cases of sickness there of | pion boar on first prize junior : ; : f : ing public, and Charey Leland, advertised next week for letting a suspicious nature that it is champion pig; junior champion 5 w | chief clerk, won equal popularity October 12, according to an- feared may be infantile paralysis | on sow on first prize senior sow IBLIC & _ and prominence. For the past nouncement Friday from the bu- and the action taken by the pig; senior and grand champion WAREHOUSES THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. |several years Mr. Cawley has reau of highways. : council and school authorities | sow on first prize junior yearl- (By Supt. Swanger) |been in the employ of the rail-| ‘The Lewiston-Clarkston ‘rie was an effort to prevent the} ing. . The publis ¢thools have been | road company at Grangeville and State fair and roundup spread of this disease. | Howard McKinley, Cotton- OVERFLOWING moving forward the second week | was to be seen at 7 o'clock every | Saturday afternoon, and the pro- Warning to the Public.’ | wood, received awards on his with fair results. The envoll- morning on duty at the ticket gram was witnessed hos Owing to the prevalence of in | Poland Chinas as follows: ment has increased somewhat,' window. 6000 persons. The fair fhe v3 : fantile paralysis in the north-| First prize on boar 18 months cea to 58 in high school. It is said) Mr, Cawley’s remains were success finaneialy and other west states, especially in the| and under two years; third on LOCAL WAREHOUSES UN-|that others will yet enter, but shipped to Mondugue, California} and the weather was at state of Washington, where the/hoar one year and under 18 . : those not at work with others) foy burial, accompanied by his! throughout the week. The larg- oe im — po rrpemrygd fatal, | months; third on boar under six ABLE TO HOLD THIS mye iy age are losing wife and Mrs. Grant Benedict, of | est attendance was Friday, more or has left the patient perma-| months; first on sow 18 months 'EAR’S CROP. much at the start. | Grangeville. | ; i nently disabled, the department! and under two years; fifth on — Miss Eulalia Baker from Kal-| — nde | than 10,000 passing the gates. of public welfare of the state of | sow 12 months and under 18 : amazoo, Mich., took charge of FIRST CARD PARTY. | cheng Ce tee ‘Saueue Idaho has issued a statement| months; fourth on sow six That the dod swarchousoaittl her high schoo] classes in en-| The local council of the! der of her fourth husband, Ed- and warning to the public, call-| months and under one year; sec- grain elevators are overflowing | £4ish and spanish Monday, and! Knights of Columbus gave their | ward F, Meyer, last fall, will ing attention, among other ond on boar and three sows over in Cottonwocd is not an exag.| the high school force is set with| first card party of the season! on in the district court at Twin things, to the fact that a large|one year; second and third on geration but an absolute fact and | PU"Pese and ability to make the Wednesday evening in their Falls Sept. 26, according to an- numbes of cases have been re-| boar and three sows under one if cars are not obtainable at once | %@8t’8 work a continuous and | council rooms to members of the nouncement by District J ported in this state, principally} year bred by exhibitor; second warehouse men in this city will|CMtinued success, This is no| order, their families and friends. Wiliam A. Bubeock after Mrs. in the northern part. The state-| and third on boar and sows un- face a serious situation as it is | 88 true of the grade teachers! Nine tables were required to ac-| Southard had pleaded not guilty. ment follows: | der one year, bred by exhibitor; reported on reliable authorty | 24 their work. commodate the players which is’ the state board of ‘ahah - At present very little is known | second and fourth on four ani- iayat at aleant ened of the The upper classes start. the | considered a small gathering at tion tq . ined th re squaisy- of the causative agent, but it is] mals, get of one sire; second and crop still remains in the fields, | Sci! series for the year by a/ occasions of this kind, many hav- seein e Lewis county supposed to be due to some} fourth on four animals, preduce , Un p- fase te onal bed: : assessment only $4,867.95 and : 1 cage aia a) aac (eee ail The Farmers Union, whose ele- Bie ge ~ rd Freshmen class ing been keep at home by the) this on furniture and fixtures of micro-organism, causing a gen-}of one sow. vatora’ and warehouses have at the gym Saturdty evening.| rain. The prize winners of the icture show: tres eral infection first, later on lacal-|__ From Lewiston the Funke and aan filled Pi eae “aa wees. bg is strictly a high school af-| evening were: Ladies:Miss Bar-| ete “wick 2 Brgy borg sry bn et bce a — — ipo cay to Monday of this week cleared its rg Be note B age ss. aoa eee be first; Mrs. Wil- | amounts to practically no raise Siaih.of the = ie su) blied an t} Yaki t rhe ibi-' machine sheds and commenced and knowledge of hi % athedl se egy eee sega oa lands and all other ? co eset Tt : Pall pn at the Yakima fair ‘this storing sacked grain in them. fellowship s 8 p vn - J Se. — property in the county were left thes S. $ | week, a a ay(loar > Weo- - . | > ber oe rt, +) wi Rat known fact that it is transmit-| ee kl Jolhnes a Before long athletics will have! Beh Terhaar, second: Felix Mar. acai from Mr. ted from one person to another,|; HONOR BULH CITIZEN. | Roller Mills wanehelias haus also (2 place on the boards. The tzen, consolation. The prizes in| oy ‘ . sasnmviitiect “recep ara ee . boys ar ‘ ; : 4 ata’. Work on the Idah but ny 3 manner of transmission Raper A pitge-vo —se-ane SCENE heen filled to capacity, the Cot- 4 votlier “takin Sen eee each instance were appropriate South highway is baie aie : "The disease sarts’ in the| try Wome cf Mer cea att (UN | tonwood Milling Co., which store| vitue of trainine, Pron tease | and useful. as rapidly as possible and it is “4 seas sarts ' ‘ Mr. 's s dient oot aes bs . . x oe same manner as any fever con-| Abbl in honor of Joseph Abbl, of ee ae ae jonas govng ger knows how to drill and train HARVEST OVER. vat et or in — will Le} iti av st} © oy “dinaryv ie , @ rie] se ° . _ P ul i il-! * i reryv 2 i ie ” A sour = he! re sg — gy — who a “9 yen ever, the situation is being re- Batt veipeudite eerie: pone Practically every machine on Coe witha the eee = intestinal infection which lasts | ng fn this section for the past jiayeq somewhat this week ey pe fake ‘ play Camas Prairie will have pulled weeks or two months. The for a day or two, or perhaps | week. the game of basket ball himself, in by the last of this week, only a fe Gene- only a short very few hours, fol-| Friends and neighbors. who tein. ne Ba niet care Oye a unites there peculiar ability few remaining out at this time. she end will be completed in lowed by paralysis, or loss of | were present spent the evening wy ii ’ for making athletics count and The harvest weather this season “0Ut 10 “days, the remaining : sensation, in some part of the|in pleasant conversation. At Wren Makes Statement win. has been ideal, which proved “0k to be done on the Moseow body. This may partly clear} 10:45 luncheon was served and) Thomas Wren, who owns and} ———— |very beneficial’ in speeding up| °4- i : up and in some instances it| afterwards the spacious dinning operates the largest tract of |CALLED TO NAMPA. work and resulted in threshing The University of Idaho which clears up entirely. Other cases room took the appearance of a land on Czmas Prairie ina state-| The Rev. Fr. Phillip returned | one of the largest crops, in bu- Pened its doors Monday at Mos- result in paralysis of one or more | ball room and the merry folks ment given out by him states: | Tuesday evening from Nampa, shels. to be harvested on the ©W for the inauguration of the groups of muscles for life. _If| kept time to the joyful music of, That the fall grain yield|/Jdaho where he was called last. prairie in five years in double SChool year of 1921-22 will be there is a paralysis of the respir-|a piano and violin, music having through the Cottonwood and! week by the serious illness ofthe quick time. A considerable Mentored by a faculty of 116., atory center, death results. been furnished by some of the Grangeville country will average} Rey. Fr. Michael Baumgertner,| amount of grain still remains, The faculty is not increased in é The following —_precaution| guests. All reported having a/ 40 bushels to the acre, with! a priest of St. Michael’s Monas- however, to be threshed in the "Umbers this year, but there has should ke taken in all cases of | good time which was truthfully spring grains running 10 to 15 tery, a branch of which is locat-, Westlake section and the coun- been many changes in the per- children showing symptons of|shown by smiles and cheerful bushels less, and that ware-| ed near this city and of which try back of Keuterville. With S0%mel, caused mainly by the fil- fever diseases: good-nights, rather pleasant houses and elevators at Grange-j order Fr. Phillip is president.!a week more of good weather ling of positions, left vacant by First. The sick child should be | “Good-Mornings.” ville, Fenn and Cottonwood are| Fr, Baumgartner will be rem-| this will also be threshed out en- | 'esignations. The enrollment put to bed in a quiet darkened —— now full and running over, with | embered by many here having tirely . | this year will be approximately room and a physician called to} TAKE HORSES TO KOOSKIA. more yet to come. been raised to the rank of priest- ie le dinatine 900. diagnose the case. In the mean-| Thirty head of wild horses, Myr. Wren stated that on his| hood in St. Mary Catholic church DELAY POWER HEARING. | . George A. Horal, cashier of time the bowels should be clean-| among them some’of the best place of 1,000 acres near Fenn| in Cottonwood on December 8th,! Pending a hearing on its mer the Stockmen’s National bank of ed out with a mild cathartic, the | buckers in the Salmon and Snake! an average yield of 52 bushels to| 1920, by the Rt. Rev. Bishop) its, the public utilities commis- Nampa and_ vice-president and throat gargled with a warm salt|river country, the property of the acre was realized this fall.; Daniel M. Gorman. While Fr. sion at Boise ordered suspended cashier of the defunct First water solution of one-half tea-) William Rooke, Vance Rooke and | His ground was summer fallow-| Baumgartner is still a very sick) till further notice, or for 120, National bank of Fairfield, had spoonful of ordinary: table salt} George Brust were driven eda year ago. That a yield of |man, hopes are entertained for days, a schedule of rates for| four separate indictments con- to a glass of hot water. This|through . Cottonwood Monday 62 bushels was taken from the| his recovery. electric service filed on August taining one or more counts re- should be done twice day. All| from Lewiston to Kooskia where | Joe McDonald place in the same | Se ae ee 12 by the Grangeville Electric) tuned against him today by the excretions from the body should | they will be utilized in staging) vicinity, comprising 320 acres.| DEPART FOR NEW HOME Light and Power company, in- federal grand jury. The indict- be disinfected or burned especi-| some of the wild west stunts to He said that many other places | os aad eee Po | tended to be effective on October ents charge Horal with misap- ally handkerchielfs. [take place at the Kooskia fair had yields running from 40 to! ,, rial Bate nae rt Thoe » for 1: The schedule would increase Plication of funds in amounts of The patient slwuld be kept as|this week. The animals were 50 bushels. The grain is of an| Perk, Mit “ad frat er al lighting rates at Grangeville, 525,900, $50,000 and _ $25,000 quiet as possible in order to pro-| used for a similar purpose at the excellent quality, he states. rab: sone id ntifh a arith srt wil" Fenn, Cottonwood, Ferdinand, from the Stockmen’s National tect the nervous system from be-| Lewiston - Clarkston fair and en ey ter : eee ocneitied with a neW Craigmont, Kamiah, Nezperce, bank for the benefit of the Fair- : ope | F a fis i te 4 Expect’1,000,000 Bushels. bank being organized by his , Pip ps2 > field bank i coming a focus of the infection.| from Kooskia will be taken to BR atin Ey vas | fath a oe oat ;| Orofino, Greer and Reubens. ield bank, making false entries If the case is diagnosed as “In-|Gyangeville for the Border Days _, The following information was | ns er, a prominent citizen of eee to deceive the comptroller of fantile Paralysis,” Rosenow’s | celebration. For wild west scenes btained from a prominent grain | t ~ grey. Art has been @| pupis IN HIS MACHINE. currency and misappropriating serum, which is obtained from|this string of horses is hard to dealer in Cottonwood whose au-| resident of Cottonwood for four | ideas - f cmanten tibiae’ Dall i : Charles Strickfaden, of Fer- funds of his bank to his personal the Mayo Clintic, may be used beat. | thority ay | ae g ee ee ~~ eed from | dinand, and father J. F, Strick-| Use. at this time. It must be used| —_—___—_—_- [Soming: into Co pees a ahat he eee Poh gr bead ag faden, of Campton, Calif., spent| Ah Heng, a chinaman, about before the paralysis has develop-| AGED MAN DIES. not question. e states that|/dence in our city has made a : ear : . all .,.| Monday in Cottonwood on busi- 80 years of age, passed down th ed and even when thus used, too| Peter Haan, age 70 years, ®PProximatelv 1,000,000 bushels | large number of ft ome Who re-| ness matters. J. F. plans on re-| Clearwater rene of the North- much must not be expected of it,| died at the home of his daughter | grain will pass through the | gret to see Bowe leave. As for! turning to his home in sunny| ern Pacific last Wednesday from as its value has not been defin-|Mrs. Edgar Fry, last Friday, | !ocal warehouses, this year, that oe a e is a native girl,! Gajifornia shortly. Charles says Greer to Lewiston, it being his itely determined, as yet. This| from heart disease, having been| 4 the present time 700,000 bu- | having a3 ee es nee eae ane that he pulled in his threshing’ first ride on a railroad train. Ah may be obtained from the De-|ill for some time. Mr. Haan was|Shels of grain is stored here. | her friends are numbered by her | outfit Sunday after having har. Heng had been a resident of the partment of Public Welfare,|a native of Germany, coming to That it will take about 700 ee wish them vested a bumper crop which he Pierce mining district for 55 Boise, Idaho, free of charge. this section about six years ago’ Move the grain from Cotton- ia and success in their) ysiced on his holdings near Fer-| years, traveling all the way from Until the cold weather defin-| during which time he has been| W00d. Very little grain from so| new home. |dinand. His entire crop was China to Lewiston by boat, itely sets. in, the well children| making his home with his daugh | f@¥ has been shipped. et RSET brit Sag summer fallow and in the future thence from the latter place to , should be kept out of doors, but|ter, Mrs. Edgar Fry, The re-) sortsrerrsers ors | ¢ WILL ATTEND U. OF W. he says, all of his land will be| Pierce by such primitive modes away from public gatherings.| mains were shipped to Moscow SURPRISE YOUNG LADY. | Allen McPherson, oldest son of | summer followed. of travel as prevailed in the Special attention should be paid|Tuesday morning from Ferdin-| Fifteen young folks gathered) Mr. and Mrs. Geo. McPherson, | ————— early history of this section of a to the bowels and to their foods. | and for burial, having been ac-| at the M. E. parsonage Monday |and a graduate of the Asotin} FIRE DESTROYS GRAIN, \Idaho. _ Ah Heng is returning ad The mouth and throat, especially | companied by Mr. and Mrs. Fry evening to help celebrate the| high school left Thursday morn-| Fire caused fom a burning | to the “Flowery Kingdom” in or- i the teeth and tonsils, should be} nd another daughter, Miss Net- seventeenth birthday of Mary |ing for Seattle to enter the Uni-) stubble field destroyed a port- der that his body may be laid to well taken care of. _A little pre-| tie Haan. The body was pre-| Cass, daughter of Rev. and Mrs.| versity of Washington. The) able grainery and 315 bushels of | rest in his native at the end caution taken at this time may} pared for shipment by Under- Cass. The affair was a complete | Seattle university is one of the! grain the property of B. A. Baer-| of his earthly career; moreover 4 prevent serious illness or death} taker A. H. Nau, of Cottonwood.' surprise to the young lady.! largest in the west, having at) iocher of Greenceek, last Friday. it is cheaper for his transporta- of your child. ———--— Games were indulged in after the present time applications! The grain was insured against a tion alive than as a corpse, it be- Help the health authorities in| The Ladies’ Aid of the M. E. | which refreshments were served.| from 4500 students, asking for) fire loss and already a satisfact- ing the universal custom to Tre- preventing this disease from be-| church will hold a cooked food Many tokens of remembrances admission to this institution ory adjustment has been made turn the bodies of all r coming epidemic in the state of|sale at Keith's y. Sept. DA. | with presented to Miss Cass| which will open next week for oy fais ee eee to the - land of Idaho. tomorrow, Saturday, Sept. 24th. | with well wishes. the year 1921-22. by Felix nativity whenever possible. :