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The Colville Examiner du lieu suivant : Colville, Washington • Page 5

Lieu:
Colville, Washington
Date de parution:
Page:
5
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Arrange For Cattle Loans If you are planning to buy cattle to feed this fall and winter, go over your plans with us in a confidential way. We have money to loan to help you carry your plans forward, and we are in a position to make arrangements so that you can issue your personal check for the purchase amount, with no exchange charges to you. Our service will be a distinct advantage to you as well as a convenience in carrying out your plans safely. COLVILLE LAND CO. SELLS LAND Will buy or sell for you, with satisfaction guaranteed.

Ask us. We furnish all information on lands. Our past customers or any Colville bank. COLVILLE LAND CO. O.

N. Bell L. M. McFarland COLVILLE. WASH.

Eastman Kodaks We have them from $1 to $25. Also Eastman films, paper and chemicals for amateur work. "If it isn't an Eastman, it isn't a Kodak." Carroll's Pharmacy IF YOU COULD BUY Eighty acres of land located about a mile from a railway station on a good road with good soil and timber enough to go a long way to pay for the land for only $1000, would it interest you? If so, clip this ad and send it with your inquiry to the Examiner and get the particulars. Quick Bargains 160-acre farm 5 miles from Colville, 2 miles from railway station; 35 acres in cultivation, and 20 more can be plowed; place lies well, has nice creek crossing it, and fine spring water at house; the best of deep black soil and produced a fine crop of com last summer; will grow anything produced in this section. Has good big log house, good fences, a barn and sheds, school on one corner of the place, R.

F. D. and telephone line. Price $4600 with $1500 cash and another payment in two years, and balance strung out for 5 years. This is worth the money and will pay for itself.

Well improved and highly cultivated farm of 160 acres, located 8 miles from Colville, on level road, half mile from school; has R. F. D. and telephone in house; 145 acres in cultivation, growing fine crops of alfalfa, clover, small grain, corn, vegetables and any crop desired; cutting two and three crops alfalfa each year; about 5 acres good timber for firewood; improved with good fiveroom cottage, new barn with cement foundation, and all other necessary farm buildings; good fencing; fine water system with water piped to house, barn and feed lots with air pressure pump and system. Price $12,000.

Good terms. COLVILLE LAND COMPANY 0. N. Bell, L. M.

McFarland WMk. COLVILLE NEWS Advertisement. Go to Kich's for your glasses. Satisfaction guaranteed. See Hobbs; he'll haul it anywhere.

351 South Cedar, Colville. If you want graham, try a ninepound sack of Top-Noch, for mush or gems. For sale at all Colville Marble and Granite Works. Order now for spring delivery. Write for catalogue and price.

LOST AND FOUND Lost, 3-year-old Holstein muley. H. F. Moser, Echo, Wash. Lost, Aug.

24, two automobile tires 33x4, mounted on rims, between Orient and Colville. Finder notify J. W. Fuller, Hillyard, Washington. FOR SALE Ford for sale, first class condition.

C. T. Winslow, Colville. Three sets of double harness for sale cheap. Stevens County Implement Co.

For sale, 7-passenger Studebaker, or trade for hay, straw, wood. Fred H. Martin, Colville. For sale, sawmill 20 capacity, reasonable; or will sell the 40 hp. boiler or 35 hp.

engine separately. Wm. Charlton, Colville R. D. 2.

For sale, household furniture, good condition; call any time except 12 to 2. Eugene H. Storer, 859 N. Main, Colville. For sale cheap, 4-room house and 2 lots on west 3d avenue.

J. F. Singer, Colville R. D. 1.

For sale at snap, Gilpin farm of 80 acres, 30 -in cultivation and fenced, house, barn, to close estate. of and of SW J4, section 5, township 38, range 37, Stevens county. Sell cheap. Address E. O.

Connor, Attorney, 828 Old National Bank Spokane. MISCELLANEOUS If you want it hauled by truck, see Hobbs, 351 South Cedar. Notice is hereby given that after this date I will not be responsible for any accounts or debts contracted by J. W. Day'or N.

E. Day, whose interests in the former partnership of Day Bros. Day I have R. Day Jr. The civil service commission announces that the clerk-carrier examination announced to be held at Colville, Aug.

23, has been postponed to Sep. 27. This examination will be held to establish an eligible register from which selections may be made to fill vacancies as they may occur in the positions of clerk and carrier in the Colville office. Both men and women will be admitted to this examination. Entrance salary $1,000 per annum.

We desire to express our thanks to the friends who so kindly assisted us during our recent E. C. Walmer and family, Mrs. R. N.

Bonds. The Colville Examiner, Saturday, September 6, 1919 Miss Alice Sykes left Tuesday for Waterville where she entered high school this week Mrs. Carl Buchanan and Miss Mollie Graham made a business trip to Spokane Wednesday. Mrs. A.

B. Clinch of Butte visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. F.

Spicer last week, and went Sunday to Aladdin to visit her brother A. C. Deming. C. C.

Casey and family returned Monday from Spokane, accompanied by Mrs. Casey's sister Mrs. H. L. Cantley of Hillyard, who has been visiting here this week.

Mr. Casey was one of those intrepid spirits who took to the air while in Spokane, going up in the army plane which has been flying there and taking passengers at a dollar a minute. He spent 18 minutes away from the earth, and says the experience was worth it all. Corp. L.

M. Kohlstedt returned from overseas service Tuesday. He belonged to the 301 motor truck corps and was overseas 15 months. He enlisted June 22, 1918, at Fort Wright, and was sent to Maryland, sailing to England in September, and later to France. He enlisted as an auto mechanic.

He left France Aug. 8. The rule relating to the age at which pupils may enter school is as follows: All children who will reach the age of six years befor the first of the year may enter school at the beginning of the term. There being no mid-year promotions beginners will not be admitted after January 1, although they may have reached the required school Board of Directors School Dist. No.

2. By F. Leo Grinstead, clerk. Miss Lenora Pickrell returned to her home in Spokane Wednesday after a short visit with her cousin Gladys Crawford. J.

P. Chandler of Deep creek basin, near Laurier, was in Colville Wednesday on business connected with his timber holdings in the northern part of the county. Lieut. Avery Schiller, recently of Camp Devens, and wife arrived in Washington last month and have been visiting at the home of Mrs. Schiller's parents Mr.

and Mrs. James Crawford. They left Tuesday for Spokane where they will visit Mr. Schiller's parents. Dr.

S. £. Rosenthal was a Colville visitor Sunday, greeting his many friends after his year's service with the expeditionary forces in France and Germany. A great part of his time was devoted to civil surgery in the American base hospitals. The last five months he spent in Germany, and returned with a captain's commission.

He was able to visit many places in Europe, and covered all of Belgium in his leaves of absence. He reopened his medical offices in the Hutton building, Spokane, Monday. Labor day was a real labor day in Colville, for it was spent at thu city park in south Colville with effect. Citizens with axes, hoes, rakes, shovels and old clothes gathered in the forenoon and spent about five hours clearing the north part of the park, taking out stumps and dead trees, clearing away the underbrush and weeds, leveling uneven places, and leaving this portion of the park in excellent condition for tourists to use as a camping site. At noon a community dinner was enjoyed, the ladies of the Colville Improvement club supervising the meal, and the chamber of commerce furnishing the coffee.

The Case tractor furnished by Willett Bros, proved a great attraction, many stumps leaving their old home as a result of its persuasive powers. Several citizens furnished teams, and the Old Dominion creamery remembered the workers with ice cold buttermilk. The work at the park was under the direction of Councilmen Johnson and Droz, and it is estimated that labor to the value of $500 was accomplished. Miss Marguerite Thomas, daughter of James Brindley Thomas of Colville, and Gilbert E. Gilson of Quincy were united in marriage Thursday, August 28, at Spokane.

The bride is one of Colville's most popular girls. She graduated from the Colville high school in 1912, and attended normal school at Cheney for two years. After graduation she taught in the Colville grammar school for two years and in the Northport school one year preceding her. marriage. The groom is also a young man popular in Colville.

He is a graduate of the 1913 class of the Chewelah high school and was. employed the Standard Oil in Colville up to the time that he enlisted in the navy. After his discharge he returned to Pullman. The couple will make their home after October first at Quincy, where the groom in employed with the Standard Oil Co. The many friends of this couple wish them much happinew.

Plows and teams have been busy on Main street this week, removing the dirt and gravel preparatory to cement paving. The gravel and old cement crosswalks have been used as fills on north and south Main, thus giving a short haul, and providing filling material where most needed. Miss Eleanor Ahlis, who has been night nurse at the Colville General hospital, has resigned her position and left this week for Marcus to visit relatives. She is by Miss Harriet Johnston, who has recently returned from overseas service with the Red Cross. A national-world prohibition rally will be held at the M.

E. church Tuesday, Sep. 16. The subject is "World-wide prohibition coming anil America leads the way." Louis Albert Banks will be the speaker. A flag contest will be staged in connection with this in which all school children will take part in effort to win the large flag offered for those who secure the most signatures of those who will attend the meeting.

Admission is free. The following letters remain uncalled for at the Colville postoffice: Alberra Milling company, Miss Nina J. Bass, Mrs. Mabel Peck, Mrs. Lottie Hutchinson, Floyd R.

Lasswell, Miss Essie Martin, Miss Sylvia Mele.nberger, Jos. Newman, A. W. Sanberg, Miss Elizabeth Turner. Miss Nellie Artman returned from Seattle last week where she had spent the summer vacation visiting her sister Mrs.

Alice Starr. She left Monday for Boundary where she will teach school for nine months. She la a graduate of the Colville high school, class of 1918, and spent a year at the Cheney Normal school. Ralph McKibben left Tuesday for Wenatchee, where he will attend school the coming year. Some of the Colville people who attended the Spokane Interstate fair week were A.

E. Skidmore, Roland and Bernice Dupuis, Mr. and Mrs. James Men Muir, Mrs. W.

J. Allin, Mrs. C. L. Durkee, Mrs.

W. L. Sax, Miss Lotta Deuber, Dr. and Mrs. W.

F. Diffenbacher, Gladys Casey, Mr. and Mrs. Paul LaPlant, Donald Foster, Howard Casey, Mr. and Mi's.

George Rioth and daughter Kathleen, Mr. and Mrs. Al Lynch, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dorman, Mr.

and Mrs. L. G. Keller, John Miller, Earle T. Gates, Earl Droz, Roy Hayes, Rev.

C. M. Budlong. There ta more. Catarrh in thli isotlon of country than ail other dieeaiea put together, ami for ymrs it whn mippoaed to be Inourable Dootora local remedies, and by conatantly fulling to cure ith local treatment.

prnnoiinerd it Incurable. Catarrh In local diawee, greatly influenced by constitutional condition! ami therefore requiring treatment. Catarrh Medlolne, manufactured by F. .1 Cheney Toledo, Ohio, piiiutitutiriniti remedy, is taken Internally and aeta through the Blood on the Miirou.H Surfaoei of the Byateni. Hundred Dollhih reward Im offered for any caaa that Hull Catarrh Medicine fails to cure.

Send for circulars and teHtimonials. 1 F. J. CIIENKY Toledo, Ohio. Sold by 75c.

Hall's family pills for oonatlpattotw AMELS supply cigarette contentment beyond anything you ever experienced! You never tasted such full- bodied mellow-mildness; such refreshing, appetizing ftwar ant coolness. The more Camels you smoke the ifal greater vSermes your Camels are such a citfa- a Everything about Camels you find so fascinating is due to their quality to the expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos. You'll say Camels ire in a class by themselves they liM nla(-''' (o your own personal tustr in so many ways! i' FreeJom lronl an unpleasant cigaretty after-taste or un- pleasant cigaretty odor makes Camels particularly desirable jicwi t0 tne most fastidious smokers. And, you smoke Camels as as meets your own wishes, for they never tire your taste I You are always keen for the naclcAffe cigarette satisfaction that makes Camels so attractive. Smokers real- jze that the value is in the cigarettes Hk .11 and do not expect premiums or cou- -1" whin you travel R.J.REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY Just Arrived "Classic" Coats for Fall "Stylish, Distinctive" Choose a coat of distinction, one that is different Classic coats keep their style and kimkl looks even with MTCre wear.

This is because they art- man-tailored I'roni fabrics of distinction. The Classic coal is a coat you will lo wear. It is a long stretch from autumn to spring, and tin coat you choose (his fall will have- a lot lo do with your comfort those long cold months. I.ct us show them to you now; whether you huy now or not they will interest you with their hcatity. and their moderate price.

LFAOINC STOOE FOf? AIL Our Brokerage Department's Service to Investors Complete and up to the minute news items, statistics and reports directly or indirectly, affecting (securities you are interested in furnished daily as received, Tree upon application. This alone is a Having nl thousands of dollars to investors dealing with this institution. Let us know what securities you are interested in and we will keep you fully advised as to conditions prevailing in them. IRVING WHITEHOUSE COMPANY Brokerage Department. Phone Main IKO4 Davenport Hotel Bldg.

Spokane Page 5.

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À propos de la collection The Colville Examiner

Pages disponibles:
10 833
Années disponibles:
1907-1948