Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, November 24, 1922, Page 6

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IN EVERY MEDICINE CABINET A geal five room house for| =| nent partially furnished if desir-| ed, Geo. McPherson, 46-tf Dr. Reilly spent Wednesday in Ue | Ferdinand in the interest of his | profession. | your automobile reset. Cotton- there should be a complete assortment of simple remedies which can be administered season you should be prepare without danger. At this d for COUGHS AND COLDS USE THIS LIST AS A GUIDE, 50 65 jy: sane OD 65 60 Nyals Pine Syrup. ........ igh: Mentholatum Musterole 35¢ and Nyals Croup Ointment : Weeks Cold Tablets Nyals Throat Gargle Vicks Vapo Rub Nyals Cherry — yrup 25¢ and .- Mustard Ointment. Laxacold Tablets Bromo Quinine Papes Cold Comp ........ . Nyals Baby Cough Syrup url | SS TURNER DRUG STORE Prescription Druggists Ueno onan COTTONWOOD AND VICINITY Personal Mention and Local Happenings of the Week in This Vicinty. It's a food—Hazelwood cream. tionery. 39-tf Have those shears sharpened | at the Weigand Barber Shop. -4, Have those squeaky wheels on | your automobile reset. Catton-! wood Garage. Ed Malerich returned Sunday | evening from Lewiston after having spent several days there’ on business matters. We have just the thing to make your Thanksgiving dinner a success. Attractive Thanksgiv- ing place cards, also center pieces. Chronicle office. James Rooke returned to his home at Sweetwater yesterday morning after having spent a week here and on the river on} business matters. Mrs. E. S. Sweet the morning’s train from Grangeville to spend the day with her daughter, Mrs. Fred McKinney. H. C. Netzel, manager of the Leggett Mercantile Company’s stores, with headquarters at Oro fino, is spending the week in Cottonwood on business mat- ters. Mrs. Bertha Poyneer arrived, arrived on Saturday evening from St. John, | Washington and Monday morn- ing accepted the position of heed saleslady with the Cottonwood Mercantile Company. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hattrup returned Sunday evening from a! trip to! two weeks’ honeymoon the coast where they visited with relatives and friends. They will make their home in the Keuterville section where Mr.| Hattrup operates a saw mill. The ladies of the Mission club of the Catholic church gave a yesterday afternoon and from which they realized more than! $50. The money thus obtained | will be used to buy materials for | making clothes for the poor children in Europe. 30-tf | | tea in the K. C. council chambe ors | au JEU We repair all terics. Cottonwood Garage. 30-tf Attractiv place cards for sale at this office. Chronicle. -tf If its lathe or machine work we can save you money. South & Frick. > 46-tf Just received two nice green alfalfa hay. corn and chicken kinds on hand. water Co, Felix Martzen is Vollmer Clear- this week ice| having a pipeless fornace instal-| ged the limit R. H. Kendall Confec-| led in his home in Cottonwood. | time. | The work is being done by Wm. Ruhoff. All members of the | wood Volunteer Fire department are requested to meet. in the! council chambers Monday even- ing at 8 p. m. ness matters will be talked over. H. eg Chief, ir, Mitchell of Cottonwood, Ed Stols of Greencreek and Adolph Hinkelman of Winona had business there before the Indian agency. They returned} | home the same evening. Miss Frances Baune. was host-| | ome Sunday evening at a delight-! fu | joyed by twenty-four guests of young folks. ity and Herman Kaschmitter | won head prizes and Kathern Baune and Barney Malerich the consolation favors. games delicious were served. Dave McKinley besides milk- ing a number of cows and rais- ing numerous chickens, a splen- did income itself, also has time to raise hogs. This week he brought to Simon Bros., one t0 month old hog weighing 810 refreshments | pounds and another hog weigh- ing 570 pounds to be slaughter- ed for his own use. They were | of the Poland China breed, Me- Kinley strain. A ten pound baby girl arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Knop Wednesday morn- ing. The arvival of the little Miss was the cause of much joy |in the Knop home and Wednes- | day afternoon John was passing out among his friends the best cigars on the market. Daddy Knop is perhaps the proudest |man in the community and run- ning him a close second is Grand pa Knop who is also wearing a | Smile from ear to ear. This is ‘the first grandchild in the Knop j family. TAMALIES CHILI CON CARNE Try some at home Confectionery =) | wood Garage. || Thanksgiving dinner makes of bat-) carloads | Bran, | feed of all 48-1} Cotton- | Important busi-| spent Monday at Lapwai having| ‘500" party, which was en-| Miss Anna Morar-| After the; 30-tf Mrs. J. V. Baker was a passen- | ger for Lewiston Monday morn- ing. Turkey place cards for your at the | Chronicle office. FOR SALE—Two Hereford | and one Durham bull. Sidney} | Brown. 48-2 | Joe Oldham was a | visitor in Lewiston Monday, re-| |turning home on the evening train. | Mrs. Fred McKinney and Mrs. | Bert Pease spent Tuesday even- ing in Grangeville visiting with} relatives and friends, returning | | home the following morning. | Wilbur Box and Kate Jones jof the Boles section. made final proof before the receiver of the Lewiston land office, Hugh O'Donnell, week; | ESTRAYED—Red and white face cow, 2 years old, also roan {Shorthorn bull, 2 years old. {Finder please notify Wilbur} Bryant or France Schlicker. Call |over Pacific phone thru Grange-| | ville, collect. 28-tt | Mrs. Henry Waltz and young-) est son of the Salmon river country departed for Oakland,! California Tuesday morning to! reside there permanently. They | will make their home with Mrs. Waltz’s oldest son, who electrician. Herman and Louis Foresman and Lawrence Uptmor Keuterville district last week from a | returned Fork country. ina very short The Chronicle this weék re- ;cived a request from George | Rustemeyer asking us to change} their paper from Oregon City, | Oregon to Park Place, Oregon | their new home. So far they are well pleased with their new location. James Aram returned to his home on the Joseph Plains Thursday morning after ship- | ping 13 carloads of cattle to Big Timber, Montana. His eattle were accompanied by Mark Rooke | Taylor. Henry Downer of Winchester as a business visitor in the city yesterday. Mr. Downer states that logging operations will commence at once in the Winchester section and that | he purchased 45 tons of hay in the Westlake country for one of the logging camps. Four more big guns and four little hunters returned last Fri- day evening from the Kooskia section, after having spent sev- eral days there in quest of veni- son and who had to return home and Frank |W were: Frank Nuxoll, August Seubert, James Miller and John Hoene. Of course H. H. Nuxoll had to come up Wednesday evening and get acquainted with his new grand daughter who arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Knopp, Wednesday morning. No business this time but just to meet the young miss and he re- turned home the following morn- | ing. C. J. Munson, federal land ap- praiser, spent Tuesday on the} prairie and in the Nezperce sec- tion making a number of ap- praisements for federal loans. Applications for loans are re- ceived at any time says Felix tonwood Federal Loan Associa- tion and appraisements can be made at any time as long as there is no snow on the ground. | TURKEYS, Order your turkeys, geese, chickens, ducks and fresh oys- sters early. We have a_ nice lot for Thanksgiving. 48-1 SIMON BROS. NO DOUBT. Smali Boy: Gee, I wonder | what makes that | woman so stuck J up? (Thoughtful- fj ly) Must be proud flesh. a Have those squeaky wheels on | business | register and} | this | is an} of the} successful | hunting expedition in the South} The boys bag-| to Montana | with home cured bacon. They | Martzen, secretary of the Cot-| 1 | the wise and good.—R. Lucas, a Orpheum Saturday, Nov. 25 Though our efforts to give an| excellent show have met with a) very couraging response from} | part of the public we will con- | | tinue for some time to offer them the finest representations | to be found on the screen. Cer- | tainly, Cottonwood will have a| | picture show in the future as in| the past but if cheap thrash | {should be wanted rather than | productions of the best talents | ‘in the country we must respect- | fully decline to lend a hand in it. | As for the coming play dim the | | | 1 it will be sufficient for every educated person to say that Lionel Barrymore one of the most renowned actors | of the American stage is in the | lead, supported by his wife | (stage name: Doris Rankin.) | This melodrama with its start-| ling climax will offer one of the | most interesting studies of char- | »)acter, and in general give you} | sufficient matter for entertain- | ment for some time to come. | Besides there will be a two reel comedy. | (10 and 30 cents) Se STATE SSIES TT EIN CCR E I IE ST EE S The usual Sunday program | will have to be postponed to the! | following day, MONDAY, NOV. 27, in favor of those of our patrons who would miss the clos- | | on account of their taking in the initiation celebration at | Knight of Columbus hall. Monday. Nov. 27 A wonderful, whirlwind story | of desert love which drove a man jin desperate adventure half way taround the world. From New | York, Paris to Tangiers in Mor- yoco, with its exotice scenes, its riotous little oriental nip-nooks, amongst Raisuli’s bandits. It is too bad that they gave the play | such a commonplace title as Cheated Hearts | But it bears a tremendous moral lesson, driven home by a | hurricane of fast dramatic ac- tion and culminating in a logical moral theme. Herbert Rawlinson surrounded by a corona of such actors as Marjorie Daw, Doris Pawn, Winter Hall, Hector) Sarno, Warner Baxter, et al, will assure you one of the finest | evening entertainments you) might look for this winter. And besides this ROBINSON CRUSOE will take leave of his many) friends, the witnesses of his hardships, to take the well de- j served rest until others will im- portune him to reveal to them for the X-thousand time his ever new adventures. (10 and 30 cents) | | | | | WORDS FROM THE WISE Old age inc is upon an Ill-speng youth like fre upon a rotten house.— South, | a \ He ts a hero, who conquers bis own | passions and fs muster over himself.— | Louts M. Notkin, | Truth, like the sun, submits to be | obscured; but, like the sun, only for | a thne.—Bovee. When a thief has no opportunity for stealing, he considers himself an honest man.—Talmud. | ! Retirement is the penitence and Punishment of the fool, the paradise of | Friendship is the scarlet thread let down from the windows of heaven to bind human bearts iia a ing episode of Robinson Crusoe | : = q pea ta i e e Fit—Weight—Service Those are the things you get in Crown Overalls, the world’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. Everything to Eat and Wear the | Mi mn! ae eh te ee he ee ee ee ee ed THRIFT Thrift is the beginning of independence. It is never too late to save—-but the sooner we learn the better. The sound, prosperous citizen is the man who prac- tices thrift sensibly in his everyday life. If you would realize your boyhood dreams comfort in your latter years—SAVE and SAVE. of home A bank account helps you to save and to practice thrift as you have a record of all expenditures. Try the The First National Bank COTTONWOOD, IDAHO O. M. Collins, President Aug. Schroeder, Vice Pres. W. W. Flint, Cashier J. V. Nash, Asst. Cashier 7 See eects Goaentotontectocdetonde deste escent sdeatentoatenteneadence ede ndedeeedeneetente alent adeeetoectote tee FARM LOANS If you have a loan maturing or need a new loan we shall be glad to have you cal! and learn our terms on farm loans. We can make you a loan on very low terms and can close it up in a very short time. No long delays waiting for the money. >< Cottonwood State Bank

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