Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, January 27, 1922, Page 2

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ANNUAL REPORT OF SECRETARY-TREASURER OF THE KEUTERVILLE HIGHWAY DISTRICT. For the year ending December 31, 1921. — ; . To the Honorable Commissioners of Keuterville Highway | District.. Gentlemen: The following is the annual report of your Secy-Treas., for the year 1921. RECEIPTS Cash on hand last report January 7, 1921 From County, Highway, Road, Bridge Levy ....$3,479.32 From Motor License sicae Scsapeies 502.54 From Road Poll Tax _. 128.00 From Hall Rent .......... css : 21.00 From Cottonwood Highway District ....... 247.12 From Fenn Highway District eoiks 40.25 From County Tax (Dues 1919) us. OBS From Cottonwood Mercantile Refund —............ 50 4,526.94 Total Receipts $4,548.25 DISBURSEMENTS Warrants redeemed since last report - 4,253.94 Interest paid on above warrants -........ 170.51 Accounts paid by Checks .......... 63.21 Balance cash on hand January 6, 1922 ...... 60.59 4,548.25 Outstanding warrants January 7, 1921 ... . 8,301.56 Warrants issued since last report . 8,682.47 6,984.03 | Warrants redeemed since last report 4,253.94 | Total Outstanding Warrants Jan. 6, 1922 2,730.09 | Estimated Receipts For Year 1922 Estimated receipts for Highway District . 2,010.00 | Estimated receipts form Motor License ... 500.00 | Estimated receipts from County Road Levy 702.00 Fstimaed receipts from Bridge Levy ........ 495.00 Estimated receipts from Hall Rent ........... 15.00 | Total Estimated Receipts ......................... 8,722.00 | Estimated Disbursements For Year 1922 Outstanding Warrants unpaid .._....... .... 2,780.09 Estimated Interest on above warrants 140.00 Estimated Outstanding Accounts ................... 50.00 2,920.09 __1,R.F. Bartlett, secretary-treasurer of Keuterville Highway District do hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true, and complete report of the records of my office for the year ending January 6, 1922. The books and files are hereby made a part of this report. | Dated at Keuterville, Idaho, this 20th day of January, 1922. R. F. BARTLETT, SECRETARY-TREASURER. For Service We Aim to Please You 1922 Willard Battery Prices BUICK (large size).. 44.25 FORD BUICK (small size).. 38.50 DODGE ................ All with thread rubber insulation and a wooden box The Cottonwood Battery & Welding Shop Automobile Acetylene Accessories Welding COTTONWOOD DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE ROBBINS BROTHERS PROPS. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice COUNTY SEAT NEWS ITEMS. | ville Savings & Trust Co. in) W. C. Graham of the Bank of | place of Deputy G. W. Suppiger, Camas Prairie, will leave shortly} who has been transferred to!| for White Bird, where he will|Nezperce. We are informed the | assist with the work at the Sal-| move was made to cut down the mon River State bank for a few|expxense of administering the | months. affairs of that institution. | crops constituting nine-tenths of all | | crop production, which occurred in 4 | lowest point in the industrial depres. | J sion of that time, it was said. The) | average per acre advanced to $16.49 | in 1919. | past year aggregated $1,461,000,000, as | 1920, while imports totaled $672,000,- | 000, against $1,815,000,000 during 1920. | ter, $1.13; soft white and white club, | | $1.11; northern spring, $1.10; red DR. J. E. REILLY Dentist $ > v £ Office, Nuxoll Block é $ MAYOR KANKONEN Both Phones DR. J. D. SHINNICK Physician and Surgeon Ks Office Over Turner Drug Store 2 “4 DR. WESLEY F. OKR Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Bldg. Both Phones DR. C. SOMMER z Dr. Amy Kankonen, recently elected 4 Graduate License VETERINARIAN mayor of Fairport, Ohio, on a “Dry) ticket,” pledged to war on bootieggers. | Both Phones IN CROPS RECORD | : aa Deputy State Veterinarian Residence North end of town Washington, D. C.—There is no par-| ¥ KNIGHTS OF COLUMBU: allel in the records of the bureau of | Cottonwood Council, 1389 markets and crop estimates to the fall | A of $21.22, or 69 per cent, in the aver-|¥ Meets the first and third age value per each acre of the ten EF Vednesday of each month, j the two years from 1919 to 1921, it| John F. Knopp, G. K. was announced by the department of Bar S rt, F. S. agriculture. The decline was found ney Seubert, i by the department to have been from | PhP ho Sore roo oo oor ooood $35.74 in 1919 to $14.52 in 1921. The general trend of the average | SOSSOSESESR SSH MSIGES | was downward, the department's fig- ures show, from about $14 per acre in| the years immediately following the | civil war to hardly $8 in 1896, the | KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. John Homar, C. C. Bert Schroeder, K. R. & S. in 1913 and reached “the peak,” $35.74, | LOSOPS SESS SSS OOOO SS HHS COTTONWOOD POST NO. 40 The American Legion COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Meets the 2nd Wednesday of each month in the I. O. O. F. ufacturers fell off by $2,000,000,000, | Agpgpgoeoddoooorooooeoeee shipments out of the country of raw materials dropped by nearly $1,000. |b greperohGoedooeaeoooeeoee 000,000, and foodstuffs exports de- | clined by about $500,000,000 during | FELI” MARTZEN 1921, the commerce department an- | Real Estate, Loans, Fire nounced. Imports showed similar de- | and Life Insurance clines in the various groups of com: | modities. | During 1921 exports of manufactur. ers aggregated $2,025,000,000, com- pared with $4,163,000,000 during 1920, while imports aggregated $962,000,000 | during 1921, as against $1,689,000,000 the previous year. Raw materials exported in 1921) amounted to $984,000,000, as compared | with $1,970,000,000 in 1920, while im- | ports totaled $853,000,00, against $1 751,000,000 during 1920. | Shipments of foodstuffs during the | EXPORTS TAKE E1G DROP Shipments by Manufacturers Fall Off $2,000,000,000 in 1921. Washington, D. C.—Exports of man- | Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and save 25 to 45 per cent on your insurance. JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished om aiy class of Work. Repairing promptly done. Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50c and 75c per night or $3.00 to $8.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give us a trial. “Dad” Rooke, Prop. compared with $2,033,000,000 during Urge State Ownership of Cement. Chicago.—Highway officials of eight middle western states went on record here as favoring state ownership and | operation of cement plants to combat high prices of materials used in road } building. Resolutions to this effect were unanimously adopted at the four- teenth annual meeting of the Missis- sippi valley conference of state high- | way departments. | THE MARKETS Farm Et Loans | | Oats—No, 2 white feed, $27.50. | We have plenty of money Corn—Whole, $33; cracked, $35. |% to loan on improved lands, Hay—Alfalfa, 14.50@16 per ton; val-|¥ lowest rate, prompt service. 3 ley timothy, $16@16.50; eastern Ore- | We also write a general line 3 gon timothy, $18@19. A : ; Butter Fat—32@34e. of insurance, your business $ solicited. Eggs—Ranch, 33@35c. | Cattle — Choice steers, §$7@7.75; JAS. G. WRIGHT & SON Nezperce, Idaho Portland Wheat—Hard white and hard win- medium to good, $6.25@7. Sheep — East of mountain lambs, | = Visiting knights welcomed $ Twenty degrees below zero was registered on the govern- ment thermometer in Grange- ville, Tuesday night, according to Henry Telcher, voluntary weather observer. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Campbell have started refinishing the in- terior of the Imperial hotel and refurnishing the rooms. The work will be continued until the entire building has been covered. A tile floor is to be laid in the lobby and other changes made. Attorney B’ Auger, has been appointed special deputy to take charge of the defunct Grange $9@9.75; best valley lambs, $8@9. | A strata of lignite coal was} Hogs—Prime light, $8.75@9; smooth | overtaken inthe tunnel of the! neavy, $8@8.60. Grangeville Coal C Development —_ company on the mountain south | Seattle of this city just before the work- | Wheat — Hard white, soft white, | men completed the Tuesday! white club, soft red winter and north-| afternoon shift. The blanket of | ern spring, $1.10; hard red winter,’ coal is four feet in thickness and | $1.11; eastern red Walla, $1.70; Big | is becoming thicker very rapidly | Bend bluestem, $1.14, j and in the opinion of the officers| Hay—Alfalfa, $17; timothy, $23; | of the company and the miners | straw, $15. | bears every indication of becom-| Butter Fat—36@38c. ing a mammuth vein. | WaserRanch, 0G sie, | Cattle—Prime steers, $7@7.50; me- dium to choice, $6.50@7. Hogs—Prime light, $8.60@9; smooth 5-tf] weary, $707.26, See the Madison Lumber Co., for good dry wood. Sooo Hyrososooesssoogssoes Correct English And How To Use It A MONTHLY MAGAZINE $2.50 the Year SEND 10c FOR SAMPLE COPY to Correct English Publishing Co, EVANSTON, ILLINOIS Correspondence, Tally and Calling cards for sale at the Chronicle office. 5-+tf We have your size Kenosha-Klosed-Krotch Union Suits Get next to comfort J. V. BAKER & SON “Where Quality and Prices Meet” ANNUAL REPORT OF SECRETARY-TREASURER OF THE WINONA HIGHWAY DISTRICT. To the Board of Commissioners Winona Highway District. For the Year Ending December, 31, 1921. RECEIPTS Cash, on hand and in State Bank of Kamiah January 1, 1921 $ 817.65 County Road Levy 1920 450.68 |Special Levy (1919 tax) 1.70 ~ |Special Levy (1920 tax) 901.48 County Road Levy 1921 tax - 200.00 County Bridge Levy 3.10 Road Poll Tax less returns 37.00 Motor Licenses 750.90 Donations . 150.00 Total Receipts 2,494.86 | Total Cash Available $3,312.61 | DISBURSEMENTS Right of Way 283.50 | Salaries 140.00 Material and Supplies 407.58 Labor 1,111.54 Total Disbursements 1,942.62 | Cash in banks December 31, 1921: First National Bank, Cottonwood, Idaho .. 649.54 State Bank of Kamiah, Kamiah, Idaho 720.35 | Total in Banks i, 1,869.89 Total Disbursements and cash $3,312.51 __ I, Osear Asker secretary-treasurer of Winona Highway Dist- rict, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a true and complete report of receipts and disbursements for the year endi 2 co en pts isbursements for the year ending Decem: | OSCAR ASKER SECRETARY-TREASURER. The Thor Vacuum Cleaner finds the dirt no matter where it is

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