Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, July 14, 1922, Page 3

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The Lure of the OCEAN | BEACHES was never more fascinating than now, because so much nas been done to insure comfort and delightful recreation at all of the many resorts near the mouth the Columbia River. You can plunge into the surf, dig clams, fish, hunt, play, rest ind get the real joy that only a beach vacation can give. And you have this brilliant galaxy of beaches to choose from: NORTH BEACH CLATSOP BEACH TILLAMOOK BEACHES or NEWPORT ask our agent for “Outings in the Pacifie Northwest” and “Ovegon Outdoors” They tell the whole story. Then pack your trunk and pur- chase a Round ‘Trip Summer Excursion Ticket via the UNION PACIFIC SYSTEN Insuring that most wonderful trip down Let sur agent tell you all about it, arrange your through the Columbia River Gorge. itine y and make your reservation. George Poler, Agent, Cottonwood, Idaho Wm. MeMurray, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon ii Timi nn WE LEAD Others Follow If They Can See us for Extracts, Spices, Toilet Articles, all kinds of Remedies and Stock Tonic THE WATKINS STORE HUQIUNGSUAOO AQUA HGEOUEEOOUAEEGEOE GHEE AEEUAEERAEEEO EARLE UNUNOANON004300 0000 HOSEEFEISTGESUUOEGA AEST ESE EI On Monday Morning when you see your neighbor’s washing on the line FIRST, you can be sure she uses a ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE Grangeville Electric light & Power Co. COTTONWOOD AND TRANSFER LINE EDGAR WORTMAN, Prop. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice DRAY Butter Wrappers We print them on short notice and at a price that is reasonable “i (VUUNOUUEAUGAOUAGOEOLUSUUERAGS ERLE TE vOOD. . GEORGE MEDVED | Issued Every Friday and entered at! Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as/ ; second-class mail matter. | Subscription one JOBE ca eaneeee $2.00 [Six months .«... wi 1.26 sa nrgcceeeeseseee | 7 (Strictly in advance) saa DS Velo Cie eee © ee ea Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesilay to insure change FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1922 ‘WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE | FOR SALE—Two mowers, {McCormick and John Deere. John Nuttman. 28-tf FOR SALE—Winehester Dray |! \line. See or write Hanson and | Larson, Winchester, Idaho. 28-2 FOR SALE—Hors : Drafters, chunks and farm mares. Part time given if desired. H. T. | Agnew, Westlake, Idaho. —.27-tf |; FOR SALE—80 acres of farm land near Cottonwood, 55 acres | in crop. Good fences but no other jimprovements. Can be bought at a bargain. For further in- formation see or write Lloyd | Crosby, Keuterville, Idaho. 26-tf FOR SALE—180 acres iiles east of Cottonwood. 50 acres in | summer fallow wheat, also other ' erops, 60 acres summer fallowed for next year. Want to sell my jequity. Can be bought by re- sponsible party for $80 an aere. All growing crops go with | place if sold soon. | Pidgeon, Grangeville, Idaho, Route 1. 27-3" | "FOR SALE—125 acres 10 miles west of Cottonwood. 50 acres plowed, 35 acres more can be plowed, all fenced and plenty of good running water. Farm machinery. goes with the place. Enough timber on the place to jpay for it. Can be bought at a bargain if taken at once. Til health forces owner to sell. For more particulars call at the Chronicle office. 24-tf FOR SALE—Hog and dairy ranch, Big-Barn Davis place of 200 acres, 1 1-2 miles north of Denver. Price $70 per acre in- cluding 1-3 of crop delivered in | the warehouse. Possession Oct. '1. If sold at once will include | four horses, two sets of harness, 8 foot ¢ , Wagon and rack, 3 ‘section harrow, 8-foot binder, gang plow, household goods, range, dining table, & dining chairs, rocker, safe, library table, 9x12 rug, 12x12 linoleum, two 8 | bed springs and mattress, dres- ser, kitchen cabinet, dishes, pots |and pans, five dozen fruit jars, washing machine, sewing mach- ine. All can be had on time. | Fen Batty, Grangevlle, Ida. 28tf WANTED—Seven or ton of bundle hay Jessup. WANTED — To hear from people suffering with rheumat- ism, bedridden or milder cases, no case to bad, our remedy usually effects a complete cure within from five to thirty days. Write The Lloyd Chemical Co., | Portland, Ore. W. C. Brust, gen’! | Manager. 26-4" |} ESTRAYED-——Came to my place a brown horse branded (dim) JS on left shoulder, three ‘ white feet, white stripe on nose. Owner can have same by paying for feed bill and for this ad. T. Clark, the junk man. 26-4 | ESTRAYED—Came to my place about two months ago 3 year old steer, white face, one horn broken or dehorned. Bran- ed with circle and what appears to be a figure 1. Owner can have same by paying feed bill and for this advertisement. Eva Can- field. 28- FOUND—Dodge hub cap, also cap for gasoline tank. Call at Chronicle office. 29-4 For Commissioner, 3rd District. I will be a candidate for nom- ination for the office of county |commissioner for the 3rd_ dis- trict, in the republican primar- ies to be held the first Tuesday in August, 1922. Your support will be appreciated. V. E. FICKE. Canfield, Idaho. anosicut- TROOPS ON GUARD ~ ;Hali a-Dozen States Assemble __INDEPENDENI IN POLITICS ..|rora shops, while an injunction was | the | Charles R.! > Valuable IN. STRIKE. ZONE |. Soldiers; Courts Intervene - to Stop Picketing. Chicago —The calling out of troops | ta Iimeis, the assembling of soldiers lin half a dozen states and the inter- | vention of the federal courts in -the nation-wide strike of railway shop- men marked the opening of the sec | Lond week of the stfuggle | The Chicago, Burlington & Quincy | railroad obtained a federal injunction | here restraining picketing at the Au- ‘issued at New Orleans restraining strikers from interfering with trains on the Southern Pacific and at Coun: | (cil Bluffs, lowa, the Burlington ob: | ined a temporary restraining order ed against striking shopmen in} di southern lowa | With the federal courts already in | tervening in a number of places to prevent picketing by the strikers, the | week was expected to reveal to @ jurge extent the attitude of the de- | partment of justice toward the strike. | | From Washington came the an- | nouncement that the department was | investigating reports that strike dis: | orders were interfering with the mails | | | and Charies Clyne, United States dis trict attorney here, said he had re ceived instructions from Attorney General Daugherty to use force if} necessary to kecp the mails and inter slate commerce moving At Clinton, Minois, where troops | were sent after a boy bad been killed | and two men, one a striker, had been | between strike Mlinois wounded in a clash and Central | all was reported quiet | sympathizers guards CROP CONDITIONS REPORTED BETTER ington, D. C,.—General tm- | | | | | pro ement in crop conditions along | and gulf coasts and in| northwest, the Rocky | was noted by the agricul ture department in its crop summary for the last half of June, made public Saturday Yhroughout the corn belt,” the de observers found, “small grains were more or less Injured by the unusual hot and dry weather, as were also some crops in parts of the and Pacific the Atlantic the mountains east of partment’'s u itain ! fected.” The corn crop generally made prog- ress, except in the southwest, where coast region ated crops were not su much a it was neglected for cotton Wheat is being harvested in New York, Michigan, Wisconsiu, northern Iowa, | eastern Col rado and California, while | threshing is going on in the southwest and some of the sou astern states. | Oats are reported gen to fair nd cotton had growth | The Irish potato crop is reported to be “fair to goud,” and a large acreage of beans and cabbage has been plant- | od, and other veggtables are said to | be in good condition | STATE PAPERS ARE STOLEN rally poor fairly good Japanese-Amorican Dipio- matic Correspondence Taken. Washington, D. C.—The theft of what was described as a valuable collection of diplomatic correspond ence covering a period of 20 years to gether with the seals of the American and go. affixed was reported to the police by Joseph Japanese roments M. Vighe, private secretary to Major- *General Haraguchi, military attache of the Japanese government ‘The documents were taken from his home July 1, Mr. Tighe was said to after he had removed vault to have reported, them from a safe deposit classify them Germany Asks For More Time. Paris.—A proposal providing for the payments of all the remaining cash installments due this year provided Germany ts granted a moratorium of two years was brought to Paris by German representatives, ac cording unofficial information which reached the reparations com mission. at least to Tacoma Mayor Wants Jitney Busses. j Tacoma, Wash.—Issuing a call for 600 jitney busses to aid him in a} fight to get a 5S-cent carfare here, Mayor Fawcett plans war to the hilt against the local streetcar company, | which refused to grant a demand for 20 tickets for $1. The present fare is 8 cents. Contract to Light Olympia Streets Let | Olympia, Wash.—Coutract for the immediate installation of the boule: | vard lighting system in Olympla’s | downtown district was awarded by | the cfty council at a special session. The Song of the Saws -AND CHIPS PICKED UP HERE AND THERE ALONG THE SAW DUST TRAIL The song of the saws will not be heard much longer as we expect to get thorugh with our present run this week. Then, for the hum of the planer as the most of our lumber is so well bred that its modesty implores us to dress it bofore being seen in public. Almost every day we get telephone inquiries whether we have slab wood for sale. .Sure Mike, and lots of it at that, but we will not always have it as we are going to sell it as fast.as we can. It is cut 16 inches long, is fairly dry and we give you a big cord for $2.50 or two for $5.00, yes or 10 for $25.00. Just come up and get a jag. You will be pleased with it. In most cases it isn’t what the young man earns that makes him rich; it’s what the old man saved. Visitors are always weleome here and when they come we try to impress them with the marvelous (?) pro- cess by which we reduce the monarchs of the forest to boards and scantling that find their way into the best homes on the prairie. Sometimes we get ideas from them that would not otherwise enter our ivory dome in a hun- dred years. Just the other day a fair maiden from the city, one of the kind that believes the hay fork is an im- plement the cow uses when she eats hay, gave our plant the once over and said she had never seen so much lum- ber in her life and she was afraid that we never would be able to sell it all. Well, B’gosh we told her that the most of it would find a ready buyer particularily the clear or up- per grades, and wha-du-think she said? “Well then why don’t you saw only the clear lumber and leave the rest un- til market conditions improve.” Well now, wha-du-you know about that. That gave us a brilliant idea. “Shure,” we said—with a chautauqua accent, it is just as easy for us to take the clear lumber out of a tree without disturb- ing the rest of the tree as it is for Frank Simon to cut the Porter-house steak out of a steer without crippling the rest of the seer. It looked as though it might storm. - When you talk louder than the other fellow it’s a sign you’re wrong and he’s right. _ There are no two ways about it: You can buy any kind of lumber and building materials to better advantage right here than anywhere else in this part of the country. A car of best grade green shingles will arrive at our Cot- tonwood yard within a few days. Let us make you an estimate on what you may want. sa HUSSMAN LUMBER COMPANY Home Builders and Building Doctors Krieger’s Sawmill in Keuterville ALL KINDS OF KOUCL LUMBER AND SLABWOOD ON HAND. WILL HAVE IN NEAR FUTURE ALL KINDS OF DRESSED LUMBER AT BED ROCK PRICES J. B. KRIEGER SELLING BELOW COST Our entire line of machinery will be sold at less than cost. Manure spreaders, walking, gang plows, hay rakes mowers, etc. Come in and at least look at these implements before buying elsewhere Farmers’ Union Warehouse Co. Ltd. DISTRIBUTOR FOR IDAHO COUNTY C. H. GREVE, MANAGER Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealess in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry COTTONWOOD, IDAHO

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