Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, August 11, 1922, Page 6

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This is the Ansco Store —and that means headquarters for all that’s best in photographic materials, Come in today and let us show you how you can make finer photographs. We will gladly demonstrate the Ansco Speedex shown above or any other model in which you are interested, and show you its work with Ansco Speedex Film and Cyko Paper. Look for the Ansco Sign TURNER DRUG STORE Prescription Druggist H. C. Matthiesen and family COT TONWOOD are spending their annual sum- NITY! mer vacation in the Adams Camp! section, camping. Personal Mention and Local C. H. Greve accompanied by | his daughter, Jeanette and N. A.| Happenings of the Week in This Vicinty. Litherland motored to Lewiston | yesterday on business matters | veturning home the same even- ing. Mrs. Charles Wilson and fami- ly of Whitebird are spending the | week visiting with the John | Peterson family. Mrs. Peterson | and Mrs. Wilson are sisters. Have those squeaky wheels on » automobile reset. Cotton- wont yoeorg 30-tf} Harry Dobner, of Missoula, FOR SALE—2 ton G M C| Mont., is visiting with friends in| truck in good shape. Can be this community this week. Mr. | Dobner at one time was engaged | in the tailoring business in | Grangeville with J. E. Richards. Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Medved, specie, ee lec operators of the moving picture Peg ne ee ee md show at Nezperce spent a short FOR SALE —Holcomb and Hobke butter kist electric pop corn machine. Can be bought = a bragain. R. H. Kendall | Mrs. Teresa Baune returned ectionery. a Thursday evening from a two! Mrs. R. A. Nims, Lenore Nims, | month's visit with relatives and | Bernice Simon, Edna and Bee friends in the eastern states. | bought at a bargain. Enquire at} this office. 32-2] Raymond Nims left Sunday | ness mission, From here they went to Grangeville. McDonald are spending the week) She was accompanied home by | at Adams Camp, having left for | her daughter, Miss Frances, who that place Sunday morning in a) had gone as far as Lewiston to car. | meet her mother. Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Pierce, J. Contractor William Ruhoff L. Eckert and Miss Heien Eckert} placed a crew of men to work attended the funeral of the late! yesterday morning on the con- John Coram held at Grangeville | struction of Matt Kaschmitter’s Thursday afternoon. | new home. The new structure Mrs. J. V. Nash returned from | will be of the bungalow type with | Kamiah last week where she as-|a two-third basement. Mr. sisted in the Clearwater Valley Ruhoff expects to rush the build- State Bank during the absence of | ing operations as fast as possible | Tra Robertson, assistant cashier; My, and Mrs. George Medved who attended the state conven- | accompanied by Mrs. Olie Rhett tion of the American Legion at| and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pugh, Nampa, Idaho. lof Grangeville, motored to Spok- Miss Audrey Roseborough of | ane Saturday, spending several Winchester, Idaho has accepted a| days there with friends. They position with the R. H. Kendall} returned home Tuesday evening confectionery, having assumed, accompanied by Mrs. Minnie her duties Monday morning.! Karr, of Butte, Mont., a sister of | Miss Alma Cook, who formerly | Mrs. Medved, who will visit for a held this position left for her) haat with old time friends in home at Nezperce last week. Cottonwood and Grangeville. — There ts only one folace to get the best Aazelwood 5 Cream oe | time in the city yesterday visit- | ing with relatives and on a busi- | A THRILLER. If you want a good thrill, if you like romantic heroes and im- prisoned heroines, by all means, jsee “Golden Dreams,” at the} | Orpheum theatre Tuesday 15th. ! This Benjamin B. Hampton- | Goldwyn production was made from the story by Zane Grey. An interesting and novel feat- ure is the presentation of an} American circus in a smaii| Spanish town. The hero and the! heroine are Americans in the} | state of Chinora, where a plot is! | concocted to marry the heroine, | who is a niece of a rich oil well; lowner, to the impoverished | nephew of a down-at-the-heels | ;count. The Ameicans make | friends with their circus com-| | Patriots ; and when the weak | nobles plan to abduct their prey, | | the performers come to her res- | cue and stage one of the most) | thrilling mob fights we have | ever seen. With the odds fifty to! j one against them, they liberate | the tigers and the lions. We) | figure one tiger the equal of a | hundred men. | The leading parts are in the |capable hands of Claire Adams | !and Carl Gantvoort. Excellent | | work is also done by Mme. Rose | Dione, Betram Grassby and Frank Leigh. The mob scenes) | will make you sit tight; and when the fight is over, you will | stand up and cheer. | | —_—_—— | /MRS. MARTIN DEAD. | Mrs. M. L. Martin, who for the} past few years has been making | | her home in Lewiston, but prior | | to that time resided for years! | near Cottonwood, passed away in| Lewiston Friday of last week) | after a lingering ilmess. Funeral services were held from the! \C hristian church in Lewiston,’ | Sunday afternoon, the Rev. EF. |M. Flinn officiating. The deceased leady is nei by her husband, M. L. Martin and other near relatives as fol- lows: Mr. and Mrs. A. O. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Crawford, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Martin, a Mrs. Blanche Martin. | Have those squeaky wheels on your automobile reset. Cotton- | wood Garage. 30-tf The Ladies Aid will hold a | cooked food sale at the Keith, Confectionery on Saturday, | August 19th. 33-2 | | Mrs. John Baer and children | returned to their home at Lewi is-| ton Tuesday after spending two} weeks in Cottonwood visiting | with friends. | Clark Lyda, democratic candi- |date for county commissioner | from the third district spent! several hours in the city Tuesday while enrouted home from Lew-) }iston where he spent several | ker on business matters. Mr. | Lyda’s home address is Riggins. | Threshing operation in this [section commenced this week and by the middle of the coming |W eek the harvest season will be jin full swing. Crops in many jinstances are turning out better than was, anticipated. Smut seems to prevail in most of the} 3 grain threshed so far, some fields having more than others. Miss Margaret Simon returned home Tuesday evening from her summer vacation spent in the Palouse country and Lewiston. She was accompanied home by the Misses Virginia Brown and Evelyn Parker, of Lewiston, who are guest at the Frank Simon home. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Odell and Mrs. Lewis, mother of Mrs. Odell, arrived in the city late last evening from St. Maries, Idaho, /and are visiting at the home of | Mr. Odell’s mother, Mrs. Lora Hale. The party motored to Grangeville this afternoon. A. P. Atwood, of Lewiston, | who was chosen vice commander | for the first congressional dis- trict at the recent American Le- | gion convention held a Nampa, jis the son of Mr. and Mrs. T. M. | | Awood of the Winona district. | | The position, while it carries no | salary, is one of the highest within the state that could be given to an exservice man and | friends on the prairie are de-| | lighted over the selection. | | T. A, Towner and wife motor- |ed into Cottonwood ees | |from Pacific Grove, Calif., spend an indefinite visit here 2 | | the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. ! McPherson. Mrs. McPherson land Mrs. Towner. are sisters. |The Towners are old timers in this section and will be remem-| kered by many. Mr. Towner | 'stated that the | crops here looked | | Letter than any he saw on the | «lire trip, 4 Harvest Specials KLONDYRE SUGAR CORN PER CASE FOUNTAIN SOLID PACK TOMATOES PER CASE 2 GALLONS BLUE BANNER CORN SYRUP 2 GALLONS WHITE CRYSTAL SYRUP BORDENS EVAPORATED MILK PER CASE CARNATION EVAPORATED MILK PER CASE = 10 25 BARS WHITE EAGLE LAUNDRY SOAP 100 Cottonwood Mercantile Co. Everything to Eat and Wear i LPP rr eG Oe ‘ reseonenseseeseeesendoensoeooere veo QRPHEUM SATURDAY, AUGUST 12 A highly attractive dram- atic picturation called The Yellow Typhoon extremely adventurous with the spicing of orientals Anita Stewart ; the universally admived star in the leading part. Her name and fame alone to- Bg with this promising $ title promise unusual joys in sereenland. (10 and 30 cents) SUNDAY, AUGUST 13. The counterpiece of the ~ monumental play “The Con- flict,” story and setting of » the same majestic charac- ter, will go over the screen; this time with Frank Mayo in the lead, who never plays better than in plays of the northern woodlands, as for instance in the “Brute Braker.” Dont miss to see this one. TUESDAY, AUGUST 15. A trilling red-blooded ro- mance of the spanish south from the Goldwyn studios, taken from the famous author Zane Grey’s GOLDEN DREAMS two new stars will lend their exceptional talents to the principal characters, vic CLAIRE ADAMS CARL CANTVGCOD the picture is pervaded by the southern air, great spanish tracts, imposing castles, wonderful estates, olive skinned natives, and in the midst of all the fighting American who introduces himself to the heiress of the spanish millions, ete. (30and 10 cents) 4.00 4.45 GALLON PEACHES PER CASE 4.85 1.75 1.85 5.65 POUNDS GOOD PEABERRY COFFEE 2.95 1.00 BARS POLAR WHITE LAUNDRY SOAP ! POD REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD INSURE During the harvesting seasons, fires in grain fields are almost a daily occurence. They originate from sparks from locomotives, from cigar and cigarette stumps and matches carelessly dropped in the field or by the roadside; from incendiaries, squirrel poison (phosphorus), gasoline harvesters, tractors and from many other accidental causes. The destruction of the cr op is swift and complete; in an hour’s time or less the year’s labor, the money expend- ed, and the profit about to be realized may be swept away. The question to every farmer is, can you afford to meet such a loss without insurance. The danger is great and the cost of the insurance in comparison is small. _We yard some of the strongest old line com- bl Cottonwood State Bank E. M. Ehrhardt, President M. M. Belknap, Vice.-Pres, H. C. MATTHIESEN, Cashier PES eo Gromets od Dre eeerey Grain Insurance Insure your grain against fire in the field. Our fie'd grain policies cover the grain while it is standing, in shock, during threshing and hauling and after it is in the All un- der one policy and at a cost which is in most cases less granary, warehouse or elevator until Dec. 31st. than what the rate for the warehouse insurance alone would be. You might as well have this extra protection on your grain. It costs no more to insure now than to The rate is for the See us about it. wait. season whether insured early or late. The First National Bank COTTONWOOD, IDAHO MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM O. M. Collins, President Aug. Schroeder, Vice Pres. W. W. Flint, Cashier J. V. Nash, Asst. Cashier SSE SENT EIT £

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