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ce AO ieevinne tee Mrs. B. C. Eller, authorized agent for the Barclay Custom — corset. Nezperce phone Dr. Orr reports the arrival of % a baby boy at the home of Mr. |% and Mrs. Alois Wemhoff, Wed- | 4 nesday. Mother and baby are do. | 3 ing nicely . Miss Fannie Rink left Monday morning for Moscov’, Idaho to resume her studies in the Uni-| versity of Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Creelman, | : of Lewiston, were arrivals in the They Make Money Fairbanks-Morse ‘‘Z”? Engines have proved unusually profitable to more than $50,000 far- ‘They save countless hours of drudgery. They do the hard work quickly, easily and Don’t waste your own time and strength or pay high priced help for labor which a ‘‘Z” Engine will handle so much more satis- factorily and economically, The magneto equipt 1} H.P., 3 H.P. and 6H.P. are real kerosene engines, but operate equally well on gasoline. mers. cheaply. lating magneto engine quickly. steady speed Save Time— Simple, high tension oscil- produces hot spark, starting Throttling governor assures FAIRBANKS-MORSE ij high tension bat- ty fly wheels, Control lever gives six speed changes. Carburetor requires no ad- justing. A remarkable value city Wednesday and are guests ¢ at the Fred Simon home. 1g J. O. Irvine, a well known;% lumberman of the Orofino dis- |'3 trict and his son, Joseph, a mer- | $ chant at Ajshaka, Idaho, were | : visitors in the city Wednesday | % for a short time. They also in. | ¢ spected timber in the Keuter.| 2 ville country. ss Mrs. John Crea returned last | 2 Friday evening from Portland, Oregon, she was accompanied home by her daughter Mrs. Werner Kalin and two children, of Califrnia, who will visit at the Crea home for an indefinite | M period. | Ruth Fletcher, who has been! visiting here for the past three | months with the Joseph Oldham | family and other relatives left | Wednesday morning for Spokane | to visit for a short time with a} brother. From there she will go | to her home at Ft. Shaw, Mont. | John Hanley, son of Mr. and| Mrs. William Hanley and Harry | Baniey, son of Mr. and Mrs./ Frank Hanley, departed Monday | morning for Spokane, Wash., to} resume their school work in the! Gonzaga college. Both boys at- tended this school last year and | are great boosters for this insti- | tution of learning. The Charles Poxleitner arator destroyed by fire HP. uses gasoline tion, hit and miss sep- last Hoene Hardware COTTONWOOD AND VICINITY Katherine MacDonald at the Orpheum, Sunday. 39-1 Miss Harriett Greve of Craig- mont, left Tuesday morning for Kellogg, Idaho, where she ac- cepted a position in the Kellogg school as primary teacher. Some of us at least have found out what the Cottonwood water system means to the town. The more water you have to carry the more you come to realize this fact. Mrs. Asa Jones returned Wed- nesday evening from a visit with friends in Lewiston. Mrs. Jones plans on leaving for her home near Koles the latter part of this week. Mrs. Nick Clausen was taken to Lewiston, Wednesday evening by Dr. Orr and there gave birth to a baby boy. Both mother and baby are doing nicely according to reports from the hospital. Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Medved of Seattle, Wash., accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Medved of Nezperce, spent a short time in Cottonwood, Wednesday, vis- iting and on business matters. Again we say it pays to adver- tise. Last week Mrs. Tony Ross lost the jack and hub cap for her Dodge car. The first of the week both were returned to her. And it cost her the big sum of 50 cents. William Bruegeman, of Mos- cow; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brue-. geman, of Lewiston, Idaho and Mrs. August Hendricks of Sub- limity, Oregon where here to at- tend the funeral of Mrs. Ferdin- ond Gobel, Monday. ITS THE BEST VELTEX Gasoline and Oils Camas Oil Company COTTONWOOD GARAGE, Agents ee week was not consumed by the flames on the Clem Riener ranch : as stated in the Chronicle, but on} $ the Frank Riener ranch in the| 3 Greencreek section. Fifty-seven! 4 sacks of wheat were also de-| 3 stroyed by the fire which were : protected by insurance. Abraham Goldstone left Mon-| day ‘for Harvard university, | Clifton Creelman leaving at the} same time for Omaha, Neb., where he will enter his senior year at the Creighton law col- lege. Both young men have spent their vacation in Lewis-| $ ton, the latter being in the of-| % \fices of Tannahill & Leeper.— 3 Lewiston Tribune. Raymond Crea and family} Editor W. P. Conger and fam-| motored to Lewiston, Monday, ily of Nezperce passed thru Cot-| and returned home the following : * WIREEHEHTS O tonwood, Sunday enrouted to| day with a new Ford touring car. | Grangeville to spend the day The car, purchased by Mr. Crea, | with relatives. They made the, W@S manufactured August 15th, trip over the new highway. | 1923 and in a little more than | Stella R. Williams departed | thirty days it was in the hands! Monday for Lewiston, where she | °! the user. renee chagplay fers will enter the Lewiston normal | them out like fous goo t } school for the coming term. Migs | does met — aie 4 A Cc “get Williams is a graduate of the | em on the market, Mr, Crea’s | Cottonwood high school, having | C2" has many improvements over | ‘ m } »« | the older models. | graduated with the class of 1923. | C. O. Wilson, a representative Tom Jacobs, a prominent far- | of the Intertype Company whose | mer of the Nezperce section, was | western headquarters are in San| a business visitor in Cottonwood | Francisco, California, was a! Saturday. Mr. Jacobs said that| hysiness visitor in the city yes-| °° crops in that section were al- | terday. While here he gave the! most all taken care of, and that | Ghronicle typesetting machine the yield per acre was excep-| the once over and made a few tionally good, far above the av- minor adjustments that will) erage. \ ‘have much to do with the tem-| _ Ed Hennesey, section foreman | per of the operator running wild | for the Camas Prairie railroad at | eyery now and then. Mr. Wilson} this point. was a passenger for | j, 9 fine gentleman to meet and | Lewiston Tuesday morning hav-| one who understands the hun-| ing gone there to consult the | dyeds of clock like working parts | railroad physician in regards to! on this wonderful machine. his health. Mr. Hennesey has Barney Luchtefeld of Keuter- been suffering with stomach |} troulte of late, | ville, threshed 20 acres of Oats | gupqqrereeepteeh gape tetetee While threahing-on the John | this week that went 100 bushels | PPPS Fry ranch, the machine belong- | ing to Edgar Fry set fire to the | straw stack. No other damage | was done, besides burning the | straw pile. About 600 sacks of grain were piled near the ma- | chine, but this was saved by | good fire fighting on the part of | the crew. } The rumor that the Farmers’ | Union Warehouse is not buying |}to the acre. The “Iaimber Doc. | tor” informed us that crops in} that section were turning out ex- ceptionally big yields. He also| tells us that Henry Boeckman | threshed this week and that he calculated that his grain bins, used for many years, would be| large enough to hold his thresh- | ed grain but the “doctor” said he had grain all over the ranch in almost every kind of a vessel | }home grown peaches, some 24 in | now resides and makes his living jon the J. Fy Jenny ranch andj znd they will make their home in wheat has been reported by some | malicious person. There is abso. | | lutely no truth in the report and | Montana and William Moll, of we are buying for two of the| Hiawatha, Kansas arrived in| that would hold a kernel, strongest and largest grain com-| Cottonwood last week to visit panies in the northwest. Trade | 5, 4 short time with their fath. at home is our motto. Farmers’ | Fred Moll, of Red Lodge, + ih ‘er, G. F. Moll, superintendent of | Fos ee Co., by qe the Cottonwood schools. The} . : ‘ boys left Monday for Moscow, | The Chronicle office this week | Idaho to attend the University of | was presented with a fine lot of |Idaho. Mr. Moll stated that, he alithat for flavor has had any |in Idaho and wants his boys to peaches we have ate this year receive their education in_ the} beat a mile. We are not the only | Idaho institution, which he re-| one that holds this judgment for | gards as one of the best universi- | they were liberally given out as/ties in the country. Mrs. Moll is samples by us. They were grown | expected some time next montb given to the Chronicle by Mrs. the residence owned by the Cot- Jenny. tonwood Elevator company. SOOCSCSOOO TOO ET Blue Stone Copper Carbonate Formaldehyde All Used to Treat Grain At The Rexall Store Cc, 0, PERRENOUD Prescription Druggist Hello Fellows! Where did you get those new clothes? We got. them from Richards and Son, the tailors. Their new Fall and Winter line of samples are here and you can bet they have some line. We all ordered new overcoats. They are very reasonable in ‘price. You know old Jake knows his busifiess, he is a tailor. (If so you know it is), then come in Jack and Jill, Pete and Tom and all you human mankind and get your suit and over- coat from The Home Tailors. o STATEMENT OF CONDITION The First National Bank COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Friday, September 14, 1923 Resources Loans and Discounts Warrants and Federal Reserve Stock . 4,402.00 Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures 8,000.00 Accrued Interest ... 6,831.01 Redempiion Fund with U. 1,250.00 U. S. Government Bonds 1,850.00 Cash on Hand and in National Banks .. 33,784.11 4 $268,163.91 Liabilities Capital and Surplus .. ..$ 40,000.00 Undivided Profits . 2,880.25 Circulation .. .. 25,000.00 Interest Collected 249.00 Rediscounts ...... . 7,590.80 Deposits .. ....... 187,443.78 $263,163.91 Ss Cottonwood Dray EDGAR WORTMAN, Proprietor DRAYING AND TRANSFER WORK OF ALL KINDS All Work Carefully Handled and Promptly Done COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Cottonwood State Bank COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Report of Condition at Close of Business Sept. 14, 1923 Resources Loans and Discounts .............- .---$165,007.10 Stocks, Bonds and Warrant: 9,714.03 Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures . 6,565.00 Other Rea! Estate ...........-.-. 8,000.00 Cash and Due from Banks . 27,259.02 Other : Assets. 025i 625. Deposits .. . . es $212,170.15