Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, September 15, 1922, Page 5

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Some ciectri¢ washers lift and dip the soiled fabrics in Stub of suxtay water —and it is a good method mi MAKES WASH DAY LIKE CHILD'S PLAY. IT IS THE LAST WORD IN MODERN WASHING MACHINE CONSTRUCTION. SAFE, CONVENIENT, DEPENDABLE.IN EVERY WAY—It WILL DO YOUR WASHING IN AN INCREDIBLY SHORT TIME AND WITHOUT INJURY TO THE FINEST FABRICS. The A BC Electric Laundress does both. Rapidly it-alternates these good methods —and so it combines their advantages, Hoene Hardware Tailors make clothes. sell merchandise. NO HUNTING ALLOWED. Notice is hereby given that we | the undersigned farmers and) stockmen of Keuterville do here-| by forbid hunting or trespassing | on our places under penalty | provided by law, on account of danger to stock and forest fires. John Nuttmann Bernard Schmidt Frank Hatke Louis Hatke Wm. Entrup Lawrence Uptmor Gabe Frei Chas. Mader Ben Baune Ben Entrup B. H. Luchtefeld Joe Enneking Herman Uptmor Frank Enneking D. Romain Dan Mader Tony Sandschaper Fred Enneking Joe Mader R. F. Bartlett Lorenze Uhling August Schroeder Goff Eckert Dick Riemann Frank Thyering H. J. Uhlenkott Leo Rad St. Michael’s Monastery. Roy Unzicker. ‘ NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, August 16, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Raymond P. Davis, of Spring Camp, Idaho, who, on January 4, 1918, made Additional En- larged Homestead Entry, No. 07191, for SEY SEY, N% SEY, & SEY, NEW, Section 33, | Township 29 North, Range 2) West, Boise Meridian, has filed | notice of intention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before Clothes Make The Man We are tailors. Clothes they make are perfect in fit and are tailored individually for you. clothes are made of pure wool fabrics and so guaranteed. | the Register, U. S. Land Oftice, | at Lewiston, Idaho, on the 21st, day of September, 1922. Claimant names as witnesses: Rufus J. Davis, of Spring Camp, Idaho. Eddie D. Davis, of Spring Camp, Idaho. William I. Rooke, of Spring Camp, Idaho. Saxby Boles, of Boles, Idaho. HUGH E. O'DONNELL, 34-5 Register. MONEY TO LOAN. Money on farm lands at 5 1-2 per cent. Loans made promptly thru the Cottonwood Nationa | Farm Loan Association on farm lands on Camas Prairie. The Cottonwood National Farm Loan Association stands one of the highest in the Federal Land District No. 12 including the states ofWashington, Idaho, Oregon and Montana for prompt payments on the semi-annual enstallments, and therefore is in : position to make loans prompt- y. This association has over one hundred members, no delinquen- cies and has paid dividends to its members amounting to $2491.13 on their stock since its organiza- tion. For real service and fair treat- ment see us. Felix Martzen, Sec.-Treas. Edgar G. Fry, Pres. T. P. Mitchell, Vice Pres. Directors: Edgar G. Fry, T. P. Mitchell, Henry Bosse, Geo. J. Terhaar, Ed L. Jessup, Domin- ic Romain and John Seubert. FOR SHERIFF. As the Republican candidate for the office of sheriff of Idaho county, I desire and would heart- ily appreciate your support in the general election to be held in November. CHESTER G. ARNOLD. Grangeville, Idaho. Let us demonstrate this wonderful little machine right in your own home Blacksmiths shoe horses. Why does everyone come to Richards and Son for their clothes? Because they know how to please their customers. tal BY GREEK TROOPS Jo Other eiectric washers and Merchants Our Prices are’ reasonable, representing full value for your money. RICHARDS & SON, The Cottonwood Tailors Effective Printing means good type, good presses, good workmen and good paper. We have the equipinent and the workmen for you, and use Hammermill grades of bond, safety and cover papers, Let us show you POINTED PARAGRAPHS "Tis the mind that makes the body rich. Rainbow chasers at least get a run for their money. There Is no grace to a benefit that sticks to the fingers, The straight and narrow path Is often deserted after dark, Farming is a lot of fun—uniess you | have to do it for a living, On the sea of matrimony many » man Is satisfied to miss the pout. Some complainants insist most Strongly on being judge and jury be- sides, If a man expects to amount to any- thing be must do it tn spite of bad | luck, A political vindication frequently means only that the people are fooled aguin.—Chicago Daily News. sovcccocccccvoooocovocccocsecces y * SOLILOQUIES It's a wane of time to tell some women that It's a waste of time to worry. Conversing with a man who always agrees with you is like talking to an echo, Our relatives can rarely be our friends for the reason that we cannot choose them. Every father thinks there Is no baby Uke his own, and all the other fathers are glad of it. Pecccvccesccccccccecovooovesososs - -< Steen Turks End Two Weeks’ Cam- paign By Expelling Enemy From Asia Minor. . — | Constantinople—One hundred thou- | sand Greek troops havd evacuated Smyrna and a Turkish civil adminis- Ue | tration has been established there. 71| History is said never to have re- 7 | corded so complete a disaster as the uy) Greeks have met. if] | Austria’s defeat in the Caporetto dur- i | ing the wcr!4 war is es nothing com- It ig asserted that pared with the debacle of the Greeks. Paris. — The Greek evacuation of y¥| Smyrna has been completed, says a dispatch to the Havas Agency from | Athens. J- | ‘The Turkish Nationalists ending the two weeks’ campaign have swept the Greeks out of Asia Minor. and the WY | Kemalists, who entered Smyrna, took f] | prisoners the remnants of the Greek yy) | forces remaining behind to cover the | | wild flight of the Greek army that a | month ago held securely a large part of western Asia Minor and talked of marching through Thrace into Con- i} | stantinople. The Turks ran a race with the dip- lomats, their leaders say, and won the race, for Turkish arnis settled in a few days and settled finally, accord- ing to Angora advices, the problem of how Asia Minor is to be divided, a problem with which diplomacy has been struggling for three years. HARD COAL MINERS RETURN TO WORK Rutland, Vt.—Before a crowd of 30,- 900 persons assembled at the Rutland | fair grounds, a flying circus staged | with airplanes and balloons was turn- ] ed Into a tragedy, four participants | meeting death. An airplane crashed from a height of 2000 feet, carrying to their deaths the pilot, mechanic and & passenger. A few hours later an | aeronaut, leaping from a balloon 1500 | feet in thé alr, was killed when his parachute failed to open. The dead: Lieutenant Melvin W. | Maynard, known throughout the coun- | try as “the flying parson,” pilot of the airplane; Lieutenant L. R. Wood of Ticonderoga, N. Y., passenger with Maynard; Mechanic Charles Mionette | of Plattsburg, N. Y., and Henry A ; (Daredevil) Smith of Boston, aeron aut. ‘ | FOREIGN VALUES TO RULE | House Conferees Reported to Have | Yielded to Senate. Washington, D. C.—An agreement provisions of the republican tariff bill ferees under which the principal pro- visions of the senate would be re- tained with their basis of foreign in- stead of American valuation for cal- culating duties. The valuation agreement was said to be a compromise, with the house managers yielding the larger part of the American valuation plan as car ried in the house bill. The basic plan in the Dill, it was said, would be an adoption of the senate plan for assess ment of duties upon foreign valuation Clemenceau to Visit United States. Paris, — M. the war | premier, Clemenceau, the rights and duties of the nations | which jointly won the war, and also { to try to restore the prestige which |= France has lost in the United States | Will of Idaho Mining Man Contested. | Ut Boise, Idaho.—That she is the sole | heir to the estate of Eugene R. Day, | ff millionaire North Idaho mining man, is the claim of Agnes Loretta Day, his widow, who has filed suit in the | federal court against J. H. Wourms, Harry L. Day and Jerome Day, whom she charges with conspiracy to unlaw | fully abstract assets from the estate | Washington Crops Showing Declines. | Spokane, Wash.—Declines in spring | wheat, oats and barley production as | compared with a month ago are in- | dicated by the September 1 crop re | port for Washington, issued here by | G. 8. Ray, agricultural statistician for | the United States department of agri- culture, Oregon Phone Rehearing October 2. Salem, Or.—Rehearing of the rate case affecting the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph company was ordered by the public service commission through adoption of a resolution introdueed by Commissioner McCoy. The rehearing was sot for October & | on the valuation and flexible tarift | Je was reported to have been reached by aay the senate and house republican con: | a will sail for New York in| | four weeks on an extended tour of {J { the United States. for the purpose of | fl | telling the American people what are | ff for Long Hot Days ) Some people are always waiting for “the day after” —tomorrow, any time but now. They wait for a better time to start—they hesitate because they do not know about the beyond. That’s why so many people live in shacks, not that they can’t afford to improve the place but they just keep putting it off because they no not realize that today is the tomorrow they spoke of yesterday. There has been very little building going on in this com- munity the last four years. We are not blind to the con- ditions that are the cause of this lack of building improve- ment, yet is it not a fact that many a building ia being neglected just because the owner keeps putting it off un- til “tomorrow”, never realizing that “today” is the “to- morrow” he spoke of yesterday and the “tomorrow” he — of “today” will be “yesterday” the day after orrow. There is but one time to do things and that it “today.” The average man’s idea of a good sermon is one that goes over his head and hits one of his neighbors. About the time a man begins to lay up something for a rainy day, it generally begins to rain. Political vindication frequently means that th ple have been fooled again. 5 warn The honeymoon often ends with the groom’s last quarter. _ An Investment in Happiness, that’s the best defini- tion of a Home we ever saw, and we conceive of no more pleasant task than to help you make that investment. DT HUSSMAN LUMBER COMPANY Home Builders and Building Doctors 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 Mission Creek Berry Farm Order your strawberries before the fall rains set in $2 Per Crate f. 0. b. Culdesac C. O. McFarlin, Culdesac, Idaho Try Our Want Ads. It Pays

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