Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, July 21, 1922, Page 2

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BADGER TIRES - Are made right in quality as well as Price 30x3 1-2 $9.90 NON-SKID TREAD Cottonwood Garage WE AIM TO PLEASE YOU Electrical Work We Repair All Makes of Batteries —— I —— : | | | Cn a ee ae ae beets : BOSCH Magnetos . WILLARD Batteries HARVEST will soon be here Repair That Machinery Now Automobile Accessories The Cottonwood Battery & Welding Shop POOPEPOS ES SSS HEPES PESO E SOSH OH TOE PEPPE SSD oo > Acetylene Welding cog ppeyererrerrreererrrs. 1 PROPS eH HS SS | EXCURSION FARES EAST Lower than ever This Summer Round-trip tickets routed over the UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM returning same or any direct ne UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM — Yellowstone Park - 42.60 St. Louis ... . 76.50 Salt Lake a ~ 48.82 Cincinnati . 101.80 Denver cries, ate Philadelphia . 189.95 Kansas City 67.00 New York ............ 142.40 Omaha ..... 67.00 Boston 158.35 Chic go 81.00 Other cities in proportion Tickets Sales DAILY until August 31st Return limit October 31st The Union Pacific operates the only THROUGH SOLID TRAIN between Portland and Chicago “OREGON-WASHINGTON LIMITED” Leaves Portland 9:00 A. M. Arrives Chicago 11:00 A. M. (third day) Through service also on “Continental Limited. Every foot of the track is protected by AUTOMATIC SAFETY SIGNALS. Equipment is the best in the trans- portation world. Dining car service the very maximum of human skill and art. The service as a whole represents the supreme effort of the management to please and satisfy patrons. Ee Ps 4 Call on our Agent when you are ready to go and he will do the rest Sooo ooo | 3 Geo. Poler, Agent Cottonwood, Idaho Wm. MeMurray, General Passenger Agent Portland, — % | | POPES SSIS SOPHO HHO HOD Monet k COUNTY SEAT NEWS ITEMS. |! for a vacation visit at his home Eight carloads of February | here. Mr. Evans, who several lambs, comprising 2000 head, | months ago was severely afflict- were shipped from Grangeville|€d with rheumatism, has recov- to the Chicago market, Saturday ered his health. He is thorough- by the Nez Perce Sheep company ly e njoying his stay here among The lambs were brought here} old-time friends. from the breaks of Snake river.| Attorney James Ailshie, Jr., C. T. Finegan, manager for pg ee by his mother, Mrs. mo Sy was here superintend-| James F. Ailshie, spent a short ing the shipment. j time in the city Monday, having Semour Hazen and Leo B.| driven from Boise, where he had Simon, both of Keuterville, ap- | been on professional business. peared before the board of coun-| They left Boise at 10 o'clock ty commissioners Monday, and | Sunday forenoon and spent the - asked for creation of a herd, ™sht at Riggins. In the after- district, in the vicinity of Keu-| 2°02 Monday they departed for terville. their home at Couer d’ Alene. Hon, Evan Evans, collector of —— internal revenue for the district| A No. 1 potatoes, $2.25 per of Idaho, arrived in Grangeville hundred. Baker’s Store. 26t A GERMAN ECONOMIC j| SITUATION 1S BAD i Marks Time, While, Austria Shows Signs of Improving. Washington, D. C.—-German econo fe conditions are bad, France js mark ing time and Austria shows some | signs of improvement, according to reports to the commerce department from its representatives in those coun tries Failure has brought about the of currency depression in Germany, it was reported, but German indus try in general is profiting by the} decline, as it gives a new opportunity for dumping abroad and for increased | j inland sales. Many industries, how- ; |ever. are hampered by lack of coal | and rising labor costs. French ex- change was said to be steadily de | ute, but employment increasing, | and the general industrial situation | | has shown no important development | during the past month. | | Slight improvement in the Austrian | | economic situation was seen The | ' serious conditions arising in June ou | account of exhaustion of British credit and delays in other credits has not | materially improved, but exchange is | coming back slowly and the situation | is clearing up slightly with the final | granting of the French credit and the actual receipt of 20,000,000 francs joans of plans for foreign | new period ‘RULERS TO WELCOME AMERICAN VETERANS New York.—Kings and queens of | | two European countries and the pres!: | dent of another, with his wife, will of- | | ficlally welcome the group of Ameri | can ex-service men who leave August 5 for their annual pilgrimage to over seas battle-flelds, the American Le gion announced. The party, which will go to Paris after landing at Cherbourg, wili be re- | ceived by President and Mme Miller- and at the executive mansion and a state dinner, presided over by Premier Poincare, with Marshals Foch, Joffre and Petain in attendance will follow From Paris the legionaires will jump to Brussels, where King Albert and Queen Elizabeth will receive them and the royal national grand opera company will give a special perform: | ance In their honor. Following tours of the Flanders | battlefields, the party will go to Lon don, where King George and Queen Mary have arranged a royal reception Premier Lloyd George, Field Marshal | Haig and Admiral Beatty will be | among the notables who will sit at the official mepacee | AMERICAN LEAGUE PLANNED | Uruguay Proposes iGombination of | Nations on Hemisphere. Washington, D. C —The government of Uruguay has proposed as a prin ciple to be adopted by the nations at tending the fifth Pan-American con ference to be held in Santiago, Chile. next March “that all countries of the American continent will consider as an encroachment upon their rights an encroachment upon the rights of any one of them inflicted by a non-Ameri can power,” and that “such encroach | ment would give rise to a common and uniform attitude of all nations | of America.” Uruguay also has proposed that an American league of nations be form ed to bring about the observance of the principle. Governor Olcott Asks Full Recount. Salem, Or.—Recount of the votes cast for governor at the recent pri-| mary election in every precinct in Oregon rather than in only those pre | cincts pointed out in the election con: | test proceedings filed on behalf of | Charies Hall, is the fair and just way | of determining definitely and for all time who the nominee actually is, if | any possible doubt exists at this time, according to a statement issued by Governor Olcott. | | Track Men Don’t Wait For Orders. Chicago, I1l.—Peace prospects in the railroad strike were dimmed by the | addition of approximately 100,000 men to the forces of the strikers. Ne gotiations for a settlement were tem porarily at a standstill, with no posl- tive indication as to the next move or its powsible result. By many it ie believed that the nation this week will mect the major Industrial crisis of ite his.ory. School Districts May Sell Realty. Olympia, Wash.—School districts of the second and third ciasses have the power, upon vote of the electors, to; sell real estate for elther cash or| credit, is the ruling of the supreme court. The decision reverses the —— eS ? % The Economy BAKING POWDER Time and Money Saver When you bake with Calumet you know there will be no loss or . failures. That’s why it is far less expensive than some other brands k. txuezt"4 selling for less. ne : Beet bo sted imto taking Quantity corQuality Calumet proved best by test in millions of 2 Bake-Day contests. Largest selling br and in the world. Contains only such ingredi- ents as have been approved by U.S. Pure Food Authorities. The World’s Greatest Baking Powder COUNTY SEAT NEWS ITEMS. i ig his first trie over the North’ last 7 day morning for her , J. G. Fralick, accompanied by and South ir ay after attend- | hor Modesto, Calif. Enroute Mrs. Fralick and niece, Miss ing to hi in connection | si spend a coule of weeks Verna Smith of Minneapolis, With his of in the northern s at Lewiston, While spent Tuesday night at the part of the state. . stated she and , Imperial Hotel, being enroute to Mrs. I. E. Zuver, who had been be = were getting along nice- » 4 their home at Boise. Mr. Fralick, | visiti at the home of Mr. a lit 4 who is commissioner of finance | Zuver's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. —--- = of the state of Idaho, was mak-| A. Zuver of this city, departed, Read or want ads. It pays. i PAPER i in the Heels: Soles: or Counters of a Pair of- Are the Best from Every Standpoint— : FOR SERVICE, ECONOMY & SOLID COMFORT Why take chances when we stand squarely behind our shoes with the strongest possible warrant of quality? << There Is a ‘“‘Diamond Brand’’ Shoe for Every Purpose; a Price for Every Purse. J. V. BAKER & SON Pi > ft i i

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