Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, September 8, 1922, Page 8

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School Supplies TABLETS CRAYOLAS RULERS COMPOSITION BOOK NOTE BOOK PAPER PALMER PAPER SPELLING INKS PENS TABLETS PEN HOLDERS PENCIL BOXES ERASERS DRAWING TABLETS WATER COLORS PARKER FOU NTAIN PENS EVERSHARP PENCILS TURNER DRUG STORE : Prescription Dr ho cOTTONWOO AND VICINITY Personal Mention and Local Happenings of the Week in This Vicinty. i » | home at Hilbert, Wisconsin. FOR SALE—Registered Short | Horn bull, 14 months old. J. W.| Williams. 37-tf T. E. Edmundson and wife of Grangeville visited for a short} time in the city Thursday on! business matters. The Farmers Union Ware- house Co., will receive hogs at} the local stock yards on Monday | September 11th. Have those squeaky wheels on | your automobile reset. Cotton- | wood Garage. 80-tf Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Greve en-| tertained a few friends at dinner Wednesday evening. R. H. Kendall spent Tuesday | in the Lewiston section on a bus- iness mission and returned home | Wednesday evening accompanied j by Walter Robbins in his truck | with a truck load of fruit which | he is now disposing of through his store. Mrs. H. C. Matthiesen gave a luncheon at her home Thursday. Covers were laid for twelve. A color sceme of red and white was carried out. The luncheon was followed by “500.’ Prizes were won by Mrs. R. A. Nims and Mrs. George Medved. Mrs. Minnie Karr who has been visiting here for the past four weeks with her sister, Mrs. Geo. Medved will leave Saturday morning for her home in Butte, Montana. She will accompany Mr. and Mrs. Medved to Spokane | J. E. Reilly arrived in the city | Saturday evening from Moscow to visit for a short time at the | Reilly home. Bud and William Asker left) Pe some morning in a car for Canada with the view of locating there. The boys are looking over the country between Cal- gary and Edmundton. R. Huddleston has been con- fined to his bed for the past week | suffering from a severe case of | poison oak which he contracted | while hunting on the Salmon river breaks last week. He is reported to he getting along nicely. Raymond and Lenore Nims re- turned home last evening. Ray-| mond has been visiting at Mis- soula, Montana the past month | with his grandparents and) Lenore spent an enjoyable two) weeks visit in Spokane at the Dr. Dunning home. The new cement sidewalks | John Funke corner pleted this week. were com- Peter Book - | haar left on yesterday morning’s y week has brought out many) U5 | summer. | Olin Hamlin here in a truck. He| Ey | por tion of Monday visiting with =n W. W. Flint motored to Lewis-| | | vd oF | 37-1) Peter Kennedy, father of Mrs. | from the I. O. O. F. corner to the | in their car from which point the contractor now has his men she will take the train. engaged in building a new ce- ESTRAYED—From Wekster ment walk on the east side of the | near Westlake, two head of} horses, 1 gray mare 7 years old, | branded JB upside down on left shoulder; 1 dark bay mare, 6 years old, branded on left shoulder and jaw. Both mares} had colts by their side. Finder | notify C. W. Dicus, Westlake, | daho. 3 2° | Mrs. L. D. Hine, sister of the | Hazen Brothers of the Keuter- ville vicinity arrived in Cotton-| wood Saturday evening from California where she has been visiting for some time. She will visit here for a short time) and will then return to her home in Chagrin Falls, Ohio. Mrs. Hine stated that the scenery! from Lewiston to Cottonwood on the train appealed to her| more and was the most scenic she had seen on her entire jour- School Supplies R. H. KENDALL, Confectionery | Leggett Mercantile which was indeed badly needed. Steve Farthing has been nam- ed by the local I. O. O. F. lodge as a delegate to the state grand lodge meeting which meets this year at Pocatello, October 18th. Steve plans on making the trip to southern Idaho to attend the|. meeting. alternate. The household goods of H. C. Netzel was moved to Orofino} Saturday in the Hamlin truck with Olin at the wheel. Two) trips were made. _ Mrs. Netzel | and son, Harold, departed for | Orofino Satur day i in their car. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lange re-| turned to their home at Prine- | ville, Oregon, Sunday morning | after having spent an enjoyable visit here for ten days with re- latives and friends. Riley Rice was named | | debt of the Elizabethans to Theoeri- | unexpected example, one may quote We ienite all makes of ¢ bat. ue | teries. Cottonwood Garage. 30-tf Ben Albers and Lawrence Ter- train for points in Canada. The cold weather of the past! | overcoats and mackinaws that had been stored away for the The local banks and the post office were the only business | | establishments in Cottonwood | | that recognized labor day, Mon- | | day. Carl] Funke spent Sunday with | home folks, having accompanied | B departed for his home at Orofino | | Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Matthiesen | | daughter, Elza, and son, Hobart, | | and Miss Harriett Greve motored | | to Lewiston Saturday evening| | where they spent Sunday and a} | relatives. ton Saturday afternoon on a bus- | iness and pleasure trip. He re- | turned home Monday accompani- ed by his wife and son who spent | several days in Clarkston visit- | ing at the home of her parents, | | Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Collins. George Teal who has been | spending the past year on Camas | Prairie with friends departed | |Wednesday morning for his | Mr. Teal came west with his friend | | Joseph Kees, who was married | to Miss Aloysia Knop, July 18th, | |and returned to his home wi th| his bride following the wedding. | Ira Robertson and R. W.! | Stewart of Kamiah spent Mon- day in Cottonwood in the inter-| est of the Kamiah fair distribut-| | ing advertising literature. Iva} says that Kamiah is going to have the best fair held in the} Clearwater valley and from the way they are doing things we be- | lieve they ore. The dates are September 28, 29 and 30. Everett and Art Rhoades on} | pect to leave the middle of the coming week for Los Angeles, | | California where they will look | over the country with the idea of | locating. Should they decide to | | | locate there Mrs. Everet Rhoades | and daughter will join their hus- | band and father later. The boys | will make the trip in a car, camp | | ing as they go. | Mr. and Mrs. B. Ter a |and son, Roy, for 27 years resi- | dents of the Greencreek section | left Wednesday morning in their | car for Lewiston to make their | | future home. Mr. Terwillegar re- \cently sold his ranch to F. G. | Nuxoll. Their many friends here | | wish this fine old couple, who | | have both passed the 70th mill- | | stone the best their is in life in|} | their new home. isc HOOL ANNOUNCEN ANNOUNCEMENT. It is desired that pupils ex-! pecting to enroll in high school | | this year, come to the school on| |Saturday P. M., between the) hours of two and five o'clock, to| enroll and to furnish such in-| | formation as may be helpful in| evolving the most serviceable; and workable high school sche-| dule possible. Owing to a little uncertainty | about exact time of arrival of | grade teachers, pupils in the} grades need not enroll till Mon- | day morning. Fuller information as to “w ho | is who,” will appear in the} Chronicle next week. George F. Moll, Supt. MODERN DEBT TO THE PAST Present-Day Civilization Apt to Forget Whence Came Much of Art and Literature, | | So accustomed ere we to our own art and civilization that we scarcely realize how varied are the sources from which they sprang. We = ac- knowledge a great debt to Rome. But do we often retuember that our alpha- bet goes back at least to the Egyp- tlans? Do we appreciate the meaning of the fact that nearly half the words | we use have a Latin derivation? That we owe our numerals to the Arabs? . In our literature, what is the tus, who first sang that pastoral they in turn learned from the Itallans? Through all our lives run strange threads of the past, but we are too ac- customed to them even to recognize them as strange and thrilling, too. Often influences work in the most un- expected ways. To take a recent and the color prints, especially those of Utomaro, Hokusal, and Hiroshige, art- ists of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth centuries, who have been a deep influ- ence upon the use of line and the com- position of the modern European post- er school, The simplification of lines | till only those essential to the central idea remain, was a herituge to the school of coler prints from earlier art- Aatnersipienuets £ Cautawerth i ibe North Amertean Review. “MARRIED TO THE ADRIATIC” | A plataremmas ceremony pe sep | annually in Venice in the time of the doges was the “Marriage of the ACA. atic,” a rite symbolizing the dominion | ot the city over the neighboring sea | It was instituted in 1177 to commemo- rate a great naval victory by the Vene- tians over Frederick Barbarossa, it is recorded. Pope Alexander LII in this | year presented a ring to the doge of that day, and ordered his successors, every Ascension day, to cast a similar | ring into the Adriatic, promising that the bride so espoused should be as du- tiful as a wife to her husband. The first ceremony was performed on As- cension day of that year. i The doge and his suite, accompa: | nied by many citizens, proceeded to the island of Lido, in the Adriatic. Ar. riving there the doge first poured holy | water into the sea and then, taking | the ring from his finger, dropped it into the ovean, saying: “We espouse thee, u sen, in token of our Just and perpet- ual dominion.” then celebrated, and the ceremonies conciuded with a great feast. MAXIMS OF FRANKLIN Plow deep while sluggards sleep. Three removes are us bad as & fire. Solemn high mass was | If a man empties his purse Into his | | head no man cap take it away from bin. Vessels large may venture more, but Hittle boats should keep wear | shore. We repair = makes of bat- | | teries. Cottonwood Garage. 30-tf | ppeverrrererrrrererrrrrr TSS | QRPHEUM SATURDAY, SEPT. 9 The “First National” pre- sents for the first time in Cottonwood a famous mar- ried couple in Sereen-Star- dom Raoul Walsh AND : Miriam Cooper his wife in a highly dramat- ic Old Spanish Romance, directed by Walsh himself, famous _ throughout the country Serenade In this fascinating story “Pancho” competes against odd chances with Governors son for the hand of the most beautiful lady of the Isle (Miriam) whilst he is already sure of her heart. 10 and 30 cents SUNDAY, SEPT. 10 A big story told ina sim- ple way without wasting time, staged in the tropical quiet of a Mid-Pacific Is- land is the keynote of the screenplay Paid Back revenge-story of the most novel an intense kind with Gladys Brockwell As to the it is an as leading lady. rest of the actors: all-star cast. Note: It will be highly interesting for parents and children to know that beau- tiful story of Dan Defoe Robinson Cruso as a Serial will take its start with the first instal- ment Sunday night, and we are sure that this extraordi- nary event will be appreci- ated by parents and child- ren alike. Don’t forget it; it starts on Sunday. 10 and 30 cents eS ee F F Get the Habit Trade with the Cottonwoed Merc : CROWN OVERALLS e es Fit —Weight—Service Those are the things you get in Crown Overalls, the sworld’s favorite work garment. They’re bigger, fuller, roomier, built to give you solid comfort, to stand the gaff of hard service. They’re Union Made, and every pair is backed by the CROWN guarantee. And they cost no more than ordinary overalls. COTTONWOOD MERCANTILE CO. Cottonwood Mercantile Co. Everything to Eat and Wear TT Tee Tee ee aL eS att. eh Seek ha ahh eh eee ee ae ee Consult Your Banker before You Invest Steer clear of the investment pitfalls that now con- front the man or woman who has surplus funds. Subject every proposition to the ACID TEST—Your banker’s approval or disapproval of the securities offered. Big dividends and absolute safety seldom travel to- gether. Our experience and advice are yours for the asking— without any obligation or expense to you. The First National Bank COTTONWOOD, IDAHO W. W. Flint, Cashier J. V. Nash, Asst. Cashier O. M. Collins, President Aug. Schroeder, Vice Pres. PLOLPOODD OOS DPSOGIOG LOSS ISP IS PHO IPO DODO ODO OL OOD OOD radesentontendectendeedeede sender ee ceeteetenee eer They Went Fishing TWO MEN TOOK a trip into the woods to hunt and fish. During the trip one of them had the misfortune to lose his pocketkook and the other one lost his check book. When they discovered their loss one of them laughed, for he knew he could easily get another check book. But the other man did not laugh. He hurried back to the woods and spent many hours looking for his money. If the checking system had no other value it would be well worth while from the standpoint of safety alone— but there are many other advantages, too Nine times as much business is done each day with checks as is done with cash. You will enjoy the prompt and careful service we give to all — favor us with their patronage. EF Cottonwood State Bank E. M. Ehrhardt, President M. M. Belknap, Vice.-Pres, H. C. MATTHIESEN, Cashier

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