Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, October 14, 1921, Page 5

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SIDS SSO oosrrossoogeeoseooooooroneges CEBOG HE OSS MPSESSOEEOEROOOSEoEOESEEESED PUBLIC PEPE HOOP oer ooo OOOO SoSD POE ee Mer SOOO Sooo oooe ered —— | =) [= the Oddson re 4 head of mules 1 gray mule, weight 1400 1 gray mule, weight 1250 1 black mule, weight 1350 1 bay mule, weight 1200 13% Studebaker wagon 13% Winona wagon 1 Hack 1 Buggy 2 Legging trucks 1 Bob sled 5 Horse collars a] ]]S SHS SS SSesjqasaes5 Bank of Ferdinand, Clerk = One 14-inch Walking Plow One set Heavy Harness 2 Section Harrow One 48-inch inserted tooth circle saw One 30-inch cut off saw One 15-30 Mogul Gas Tractor Logging tongs Many Other Articles Too Numerous To Mention A Big Free Lunch Will Be TERMS: All sums of $20 under, cash. All sums over that amount 12 months © time will be given on bankable note bearing 10 per cent interest. Jj. W. Bolon, Owner saw mill to the highest bidder on =. Chains Cant Hooks 1 Heating stove 1 Dining Room Table 1 Kitchen Table 6 Chairs — S222. SS SEES SSS ss S58) SALE I will sell at public auction 5 miles west of Keuterville or 5 miles south of Westlake at Monday, October 1 7th 3 head of horses 1 bay horse, weight 1400 1 gray horse, weight 1050 1 black saddle mare, weight 1000 Farm Machinery, Household Goods, Etc. Served At Noon = 2) en) (ee) (ee) () 2] ]S]S Se) V. H. Johnson, Auctioneer ] SS eS SSS SI SESS SS SSG lis, to the best of his knowledge jarnd belief, a true statement of the ownership, management of the aforesaid publication for the | date shown in the above caption, }required by the Act of August NOVELTY WORN OFF. Why were you not at school yesterday? It was my birthday. /24, 1912, embodied in section But I don't | 4433, Postal Laws and Regula- stay home from | tions niigay si That the names and addresses Well, I sup- of the publisher, editor, manag- pose it is be- cause you've got used to ’em. is Geo. Medved, Cottonwood, Ida. | That the owners are: | Mcdved, Cottonwood, Idaho. BASILY FIXED. |" “That the known bondholders, oy et aes | mortgagees, and other security that farewell! | holders owning or holding 1 per tour. - wae bi |cent or more of total amount of lieve I want to |) - 8 gies i i leave ‘the stage | bonds, mortgages, or other secu after all. j Tities are: Intertype Corpora- Manager: Don't | tion, Brooklyn, N. Y. ; worry a bit. 1 Geo. Medved, Publisher. rean easily ar- Sworn to and subscribed be- | fore me this 5th day of October 11921. J. V. Nash, Notary Public. range for a wel- come back tour, old girl. STATEMENT OF THE OWN- ERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, | ALIAS SUMMONS. Circulation, ete., required by the In the Justice Court of Cotton- act of Congress of August 24, wood Precinct, Idaho County, 1912, of Cottonwood Chronicle State of Idaho. ae published weekly at Cottonwood, J. B. Luchtefeld, Plaintiff, Idaho for October 1, 1921. | VS. State of Idaho, County of Idaho. R, Z. Church, Defendant. Before me, « Notary Public in The State of Idaho to R. Z. and for the State and county, Church, Greetings. aforesaid, personally appeared You are hereby summoned to Geo. Medved, who, having been! appear in above entitled court to duly sworn according to law, de- ke held at Cottonwood, in said Poses and says that he is the precinct in the above entitled publisher of the Cottonwood cause, at 10 o’clock A. M, upon Chronicle and that the following Thursday, the 10th day oi Nov- ' ember 1921, and answer plain-! tiffs complaint seeking reim-! bursement for $65 and costs of legal act‘on, together with inter- est at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from Sept. 1, 1919 un to| date on said sum, claimed to , have been paid you under mis- !apprehension, or plaintiff will take judgment against you as lowing described tract of land, to-wit: Commencing at the Si4 SEY NW14 of Sec. 9, Twp. 81. N. K. 18.3. M., thence running east 50 feet, Southwest corner of the E14 | Geo. | | ing editor, ard busiress manager | prayed for in said complaint. | Witness my hand this 1st day of October, 1921. | B. L. Hussman, Justice of the Peace in and for Cottonwood Precinct, Idaho County, State of Idaho. 41-5 SUMMONS, In the District Court of the Ten- | th Judicial District of the} State of Idaho, in and for The! County of Idaho. Barney Tacke, Plaintiff, E. T. W. Green and Jane Doe} Green, his wife, Alonzo F.! Brown (also known as A. F. Brown) and Addie E. Brown,! his wife, Luther Ferriss and Miriam Leah Ferriss, his wife, Maria Dunham, S. E. Dunham, her husband, Idaho County,, Idaho a municipal corporation, } the unknown representatives, successors or assigns of all! and each of the above named, defendants; the unknown heirs, devisees, executors and administrators of all and each of the said defendants, if dead all persons claiming under or! 9,/the Tenth Judicial thence south 200 feet, thence | west 250 feet, thence north | 200 feet, thence east 200 feet | to the place of beginning, in; Idaho County, State of Idaho, Defendants. The State Greetings: To E. T. W. Green, Jane Doe Green, Alonzo F. Brown (also known as A. F. Brown), Addie E. Brown, Luther Ferriss, Mir- iam Leah Ferriss, Maria Dun- ham, S. E. Dunham, Idaho County, Idaho, a municipal cor- poration, the unknown repre- sentatives, successors or assigns of all and each of the above nam- ed defendants; the unknown heirs, devisees, executors and administrators of all and each of the all persons claiming under or through the above named de- fendants or any of them, and the unknown owners and unknown claimants of the following des- cribed tract of land, to-wit: Commencing at the Southwest corner of the E14 S% SEY NW, of Sec. 9, Twp 31 N. R. 1 E. B. M., thence ru.sning east 50 feet, thence south 200 feet, of Idaho Sends id defendants, if dead ;} | this summons this Judicial District, and with-| through the above named de-| thence west 250 feet, thence fendants or any of them, and| north 200 feet, thence east 200 the unknown owners and un-| feet to the place of beginning, in known claimants of the fol-| Idaho County, State of Idaho. You are Hereby Notified, That a complaint has been filed again- st you in the District Court of District of the State of Idaho in and for the County of Idaho, by the above named plaintiff, and you are hereby directed to appear and answer the said complaint with- in twenty days of the service of if served within in forty days, if served else- where; and you are further noti- fied that unless you so appear and answer said complaint with- in the time herein specified, the plaintiff will take judgment against you as prayed complaint. The said action is brought to obtain a decree of this Court quieting the title of the plaintiff in and to the lands and premises, and to enjoy the defendants and each of them from setting up or asserting any title or claim to the same or any part thereof ad- verse to the said plaintiff. Witness my hand and the seal of said District Court, this ninth day of September, 1921. Henry Telcher, Clerk. By Harold Harris Deputy. Seal R. F. Fulton, attorney for Plain- tiff, Residence and Postoffice Grangeville, Idaho. in said ‘REDUCED FREIGHT | RATES. PREDICTED ‘Early Cut By Carriers Deemed Certain, Following Con- ference at Capital. | | Washington.—The railroads shortly will reduce freight rates voluntarily and will then ask the railway labor ‘board to order an equivalent reduc- lon in wages, Senator Commins, Ia., predicted, following a conference with ‘a committee of railroad presidents. They also will ask congress to amend the railroad law by transfer. ring the duties of the railway labor | bourd to the interstate commerce com- mission. This would put control of ; rates and wages in the hands of the same government authority. A group of prominent railroad ex- ecutives conferred with President Harding and Senator Cummins, re- publican, lowa, chairman of the senate | Interstate commerce committee, and discussed steps toward freight rate teductions preliminary to the execu- tives’ meeting in Chicago October 14, Senator Cummins, after his confer- ence, said he believed they would adopt at their Chicago meeting his | Suggestions for an immediate reduc- tion of freight rates. The carriers then, Senator Cummins said, would ask the railroad labor board to red@ce wages or appeal to congress for legts- lation to meet the situation caused by the voluntary rate reductions. WASHINGTON GROP ESTIMATES ARE GUT Spokane, Wash.—The October crop report .for Washington state, issued by G. S. Ray of the federal bureau of | markets and crop estimates, indicates \a decrease in the spring wheat crop of the state as compared with the esti- mates of September 1. The total wheat and oats crop, however, are stated to be considerably above the average, while the barley crop is below aver- age. A larger apple crop is indicated than was predicted a month ago, while the potato estimate shows a decrease. ‘The spring wheat crop is estimated at 18,690,000 bushels as compared with \the September estimate of 21,026,000 bushels. The 1920 crop amounted to 17,862,000 and the average for the | years 1916 to 1919 was 19,523,000 bush- els. This year, according to the pre- | liminary estimate, the spring wheat | crop averaged 15 bushels to the acre jas against 11.9 bushela in 1920 and {17.1 bushels for the 10-year average. | The quality of the crop is given as 91 | per cent as against 87 per cent last | year. Of the total wheat crop of the state | the report estimates that 67 per cent, lor about 28,000,000 bushels, has been | marketed. On August 1 the winter | wheat crop whs estimated at 30,922,- | 000 bushels, making the state's total | wheat crop approximately 49,612,000 | bushels, the report says, | i cites |VETERAN SCHOOLS RAPPED | Less Theory and More Practical Ald | Is Needed in System. | Washington, D. C—The present sys- tem of federal vocational training con- tains “decidedly too much theory” and | needs the injection of practical meth- ods, Director Forbes of the veterans’ bureau declared in a report to Presi- dent Harding covering his recent country-wide inspection of hospitaliza- tion and vocational training facilities. Colonel Forbes characterized the system as “unmistakably and abso- lutely wrong,” and expressed doubt whether “very many men have actu- afiy been rehabilitated by the gov- ernment and have gone back to their respective communities as wage earn- ers and as assets.” Koreans to Appeal to America. Washington, D. C.—The Koreans will present their first appeal to the American delegation to the disarma- ment conference through ex-Senator Charles S. Thomas of Colorado, acting as special counsel to the Korean mis- sion. In their appeal they point out that theirs is one of the vital Far | Eastern questions. “As such it should be considered by the conference.” | Harding Fails to Convince Miners. | Washington, D. C.—President Hard- ing failed to persuade union miners’ officials to promise not to strike next spring. Four hours of argument failed to move the officials from their stand | that they were powerless to bind the | United Mine Workers of America to aged such agreement. q Ku Klux Kian Probe Deferred. Washington, D. C.—Decision by the department of justice as to investiga- tion of the Ku Klux Kian will await action by congress on the proposed inquiry, Attorney-General Daugherty aid ——e_"| _— - > ~s teen nee in penmanship

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