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c W. KING. Bdttor 0 D. Rowe. Associate Editor. Published every Tuesday at Bonners . „y Idaho, in the Interests of the Kootenai Valley of Idaho. Entered as •econd class matter. January 1, 1906. postoffice at Bonners Ferry. Idaho, under the Act of Congress of March 3, 18 »9. subscription rates, $2.00 per year it ?.. m advance; $2.50 otherwise; Lana da and foreign countries, $2.50 yearly in advance. dr. c. a. rae dentist Office hours; 9 to 12 and 1 to 6 Evenings by [appointment—Phone 32-2 Enterprise block, Bonners Ferry. « Ernest M. Flood LAWYER First State Bank Building BONNERS FERRY, IDAHO. O. C. Wilson Frank Bottum j CIVIL, MINING AND HYDRAULIC ENGINEERING : IDAHO : _ 1 1 BOTTUM «■ WILSON. Lawyers Offices in First State Bank Bldg. Bonners Ferry, Idaho. j. HARLEY CAVE BONNERS FERRY - HENRY l. mountjoy Licens» i Architect for the State of Idaho. Address 511 Fourth Ave., Sand point, Idaho. ] I j ; j I n i I Veterinarian Office Opposite Post Office Office Phone No. 19 Residence Phone No. 107 Bonners Ferry, Idaho Harry Dudman MINES AND REAL ESTATE Broker Financial agent of Bethlehem Gold Mines, Ltd., Yahk Mining Dis trict, Idaho. Gold, Silver and Lead property and one of the companies that is coming to the front very fast. Write or call for engineer's re port on this property. j I SPOKANE Main 3770 408-9 Sherwood Bldg. Branch Office ENTERPRISE BLDG., MAIN ST. BONNERS FERRY, IDAHO AUTO STAGE Bonners Auto Ferry-Porthill-Dodge Mail Stage— Leave Bonners Ferry, at Post office, daily except Sun day .. Arrive Porthill . . Leave Porthill daily except Sunday, at Postoffice. Arrive Bonners Ferry ....... 7.30 a. m. 12.30 p. m. 1:00 p. m. 4:00 p. m. Corrections made with *11 trains, accidents excepted. Fare to Porthill . Freight and express, per parcel.50 Fare to Copeland $ 2.00 1.25 Lodge Directory UTOPIA LODGE NO. 36 I. O. O. F. Meets Monday evenings of each week. F. A. Davis, N. C. J. W. Reid, Secretary I BONNERS FERRY LODGE NO. 43— A. F. & A. M. Regular communication second Wednesday of each month. Ray De Wolf, W. M. Prank Bottum, Secretary. LOYAL REBEKAH LODGE NO. 43 Meets Tuesday of each week. Mrs. O. R. Stookey, N. G. Mrs. Irene Fogelsong. Secretary ACME LODGE NO. 15 KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Meets Thursday of each week. J. Bert Cowen, C. C. H. I. Monks, K. of R. S. MOY1E CHAPTER NO. 31 Order of Eastern Star Meets first and third Wednesdays of each month. Mrs. C. D. Simonds, W. M. Mrs. Belle Bishop, Secretary. I F. E. & C. U. of A. Local No. 53. 2nd and 4th Saturdays Northslde School, 7:30 A. H. Trent, President. Mrs, a. E. Aldridge. Sec. at p. m. ' j j I I j I j j I j I TREATY BE USED SENDS ADDRESS TO AMERICAN PEOPLE—MADE PUBLIC BY TUMULTY. INTOLERABLE ORDER ENDED Associates Free Governments of World in League to Maintain Right and Justice — Asks Acceptance Without Alterations. Washington.—President Wilson, in an address to the American people on the occasion of signing of the treaty, made a plea for the acceptance of the treaty ami the covenant of the league of nations without change or reservation. peace His message given out here by Sec retary Tumulty said: "My Fellow Countrymen; The treaty of peace has been signed. If it is rati fied and acted upon in full and sincere execution of its terms it will furnish the charter for a new order of affairs in the world. It is a severe treaty in the duties and penalties it Imposes upon Germany, but it is severe only because great wrongs done by Ger many are to be righted and repaired; it imposes nothing that Germany can not do; and she can regain her right fnl standing in the world by the prompt and honorable fulfilment of its terms. Liberates Great Peoples. "And it is much more than a treaty of peace with Germany. It liberates great peoples who have never before It ends, once for all, an old and intol erable order under which small groups been able to find the way to liberty, of selfish men could use the peoples |of great empires to serve their ambi tion for power and domination. "It associates the free governments of the world in a permanent league in which they are pledged to use their united power to maintain peace by maintaining right and justice. ' It makes International law a reality, sup ported by imperative sanctions. "It does away with the right of con quest and rejects the policy of annex ation and substitutes a new order un der which backward nations—popula tions which have not yet come to po litical consciousness and peoples who are ready for independence but not yet quite* prepared to dispense with pro tection and guidance—shall no more be subjected to the domination and exploitation of a stronger nation, but shall be put under the friendly direc tion and afforded the helpful assist ance of governments which undertake to be responsible for the opinion of Recognizes Right of Minorities. I "It recognizes the Inalienable rial.ts H recognizes the inalienable rights I 01 nationality; the rights ol minorities and the sanctity of religious belief and mankind in the execution of their task by accepting, the direction of the; league af nations. Have you ever seen an endless siream of flour? | j j Once you visit the new Sperry Mill at Spokane—where a steady stream of wheat is turned into a steady stream of Hour—you will ask, "Where does all the wheat come from and where does all the flour go? We'll tell you: The great Inland Empire produces the wheat—the Palouse, the Valley of the Snake, Camas Prairie—the rich regions from the Coeur D'Alenes to the breaks of the Salmon. -1 And the flour from this Master Mill goes into homes, not only of the millions in the Great West and elsewhere in America, but even into foreign lands. To see the new Master Mill is a treat you owe yourself for it is filled with human interest. You will go home with a greater appreciation, a better realization of the immensity of this industry—and what it means to the people of the Great Northwest. Remember—we'll be glad to welcome you any time you choose to come! Sperry Flour Co, pCfPR ODfc SPOKANE « $ Ten mills and forty-four distribu ting points on the* Pacific Coast (*ut) I 1 u föijöj II (VW iw J personally conducted tour through the Sperry Mill at Spoiane will show you how the wheat travels from warehouse to washer, scourer, roller, sifter , purifier, hopper, packing room , and then on to the homes of consumers who . know* where? r u »h f 'à > X' X XXX practice. It lays the basis for conven- 1 tlons which shall free the commercial i tatwcourse of the world front unjust | and vexatious restrictions and for ev-1 ery sort of international cooperation j that will serve to cleanse the life of i the world and facilitate its common j action in beneficent service of every kind. "It furnishes guarantees were never-given or oven contempla- ; ted for the fair treatment of all who labor at the daily tasks of the world, i "It is for this reason that I have* s Poken of it as a great charter for a '• ::::t r Äüz2 reassurance and confident hope. "WOODROW WILSON." such as MARKET REPORT Chicago. Corn. No. 3 yellow, $1.78 01.8044; 4 yellow, $1.68; No. 5 yellow. Oats. No. 3 white. 69 44 0 Rye, No. 2. $144. Barley, No. nominal. 70 44c. $1.14@1.23. Timothy. $9012. Clover, nominal. Pork, nominal. Lard, $34.30. Ribs. $27.25028. Hatter, higher; creamery, 460 51 Vic. Eggs, higher; firsts, 39440 41c : ordinary firsts, 380 39c; at mark cases included, 38 0 39c; packed firsts, 41 Vic; 42Vic. Hogs- general market unevenly steady to 10c lower than Wednes day One load, $23.20; practical top. $21.10; hulk, $20021; heavy weight, $20.50020.85; medium weight, $20@ 21; light weight, $"0.25021.10; light light. $18.50020.55; sows, smooth. $19.65 0 20.15; packing sows. rough. $18.75019.50; pigs, $17.26018.50. Cattle—Beef steers uneven, 15c to 25c higher; fat cows, heifers, steady to strong; bulls. 15c to 25c higher; calves strong to 25c higher; feeders, steady; canners, slow to lower: beef steers medium and heavy weight, choice and prime, $14.50015.50; me dium and good, 12.50014.60;'common, $11012.60; choice, $13.40015; dium, $10013.50; heifers, $7.76013.60; 12.40; canners and cutters, $607.40; veal calves, light and handy weight. $17.25018.50; feeder steers, $9.250 .75; stocker steers, $8012. Sheep—Fat classes strong to 25c higher; others unchanged; Iambs, 84 pounds down. $15.25017.50; culls and common, $8.50014.75; yearling weth ers, $10.25013.75; ewes, medium, good and choice. $6.5008,25; culls and common, $2.5006; breeding ewes. $7013,60.' storage eitras, 420 heavy packing light weight, good and common and me butcher cattle, cows, $7.400 i; New York. The coffee market was unsettled and entirely nominal around 230 2344c for Rio 7s and 29c tor Santos 4s. Spot cotton. steady; middling, 34,95. Bar silver, $1.0914. Copper, firm; electrolytic, June and July, 1844c; • August, 18%c. Iron un changed, Metal exchange quotes lead quiet; spot, $5.1705.35; July, $5.250 spelter firm; spot, $6.90 bid; July, $6.95 bid. 5.35; j standard- A, $55.50. Eastern oats and corn in bulk: Oats—No. 3 white, $50; 38-lb. clip I ped white, $50.50. Corn—No. 3 yellow. $69; No. 3 i mixed, $68. Hogs Market steady. Prime mixed. , $20 0 20.25; medium, $19.25019.75; roUKh hea vl e s, $18.50019; pigs, $17.75 0J8.25. Portland. Barley—Standard $54,50; teed, to must ratify pact first ALLLIES »1 LIFT NOTICE GIVEN TO THE GERMAN DELEGATES BEFORE THEIR DEPARTURE FOR HOME. Historic Document Has Been Deposit ed in Protocol Office—Tell Turks to Go Home: Too Many Differ ence Between Them. Paris.—Official notification to Ger many that the blockade will not he raised until the treaty is ratified by Germany was in the form of a resolu tion adopted by the Council of four and presented to the German delegation be fore its departure for Berlin. The res olution follows: "The superior blockade council is in structed to base its arrangements for rescinding restriction upon trade with Germany, on the assumption that the allied and associated powers will not wait to raise the blockade until the completion of ratification, as provided for at ttie end of the treaty with Ger many, but that it is to he raised imme diately upon receipt of information that the treaty of peace lias been rati fied by Germany." Conditioning the raising of the block a<K' upon Germany's ratification of the treaty is regarded in conference cir cles as a sure plan for securing speedy ratification because of Germany's food and raw material needs. As Russia was practically blockaded as a result of the blockade dgainst the central powers, the opinion is held that when the blockade of them ceases, there will lie no blockade against Rus sia. NORTH DAKOTA IS TO ENTER BUSINESS FIELD Will Operate State Bank and Finance Farm Credits to Extent of $10, 000,000—Non-Partizan Idea. Fargo. N. D.—With the industrial program of the nonpartlzan league ap proved through last Thursday's refer endum seven laws, North Dakota will .enter immediately into the business of handling grain and manufacturing flour; it will put into operation a state bank and finance farm credits to the extent of $10,000,000. Other industries may be entered in to later without further legislation, for the industrial commission of the state, into wjiose hands has been committed the industrial scheme, is empowered to proceed with the establishmetn of any manufacturing or marketing enterprise having to do with the manufacture or market of farm products. The Farmers Society of Equity plans the immediate erection of a 100 barrel Hour mill at Nampa, Idaho. M. & B. CARPENTER SHOP J. MUHLFELD, Proprietor Windows, Doors, Glass, Sash All kinds of Carpenter Work Done Promptly Bring Me Your Old Shoes and let me increase the wear you will get out of them by judi cious repairing. We do all kinds of shoe repairing, and our large equipment of modern machinery insures rapid and high-grade work. Up-to-Date Shoe Shop R. D, PAOLUCCI, Prop. We Buy All Issues of Liberty Bonds If you are compelled through force of circumstances to sell your bonds, take them to your banker and ask him to draw a sight-draft on us with bonds attached), or send the bonds to us yourself by registered mail. We will remit on day received at tin* highest market price. Telephone, write or wire for quotations on Liberty bonds or any other security quotations. Irving Whitehouse Company Box 67 Davenport Hotel Bldg Spokane, Wash. Phone 9 y When you want any kind of dray or transfer work. Track at your service. Night work when necessary. Motor Call any time of day. The Golden Rule Transfer J. T. LEACH, Proprietor WOOD and COAL Residence Phone 42 Office in Herald Building The Shamrock CIGAR STORE JOSEPH BANNING, Proprfetor POOL and CARD TABLES The Best Place in Town to Spend the Long Winter Evenings. Always Warm and Comfortable. We Carry a Fine Line of Cigars and Tobaccos, Pipes, Confectionery, Soft Drinks and Fruits and Nuts. BONNER WATER & LIGHT CO. FRANK BERGER, Manager Water Light Power Let us supply you with your needs in the way of ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES The Crystal Laundry F. K. INOUE, Proprietor. Telephone 132. ■ Now ready for business under new management. Bundles called for and delivered. First-class work, at lowest prices, guaranteed. Out of-town work and Rough Orv Work our specialty. We have tho best laundry equipment and employ the most competent) help In the city. Cleaning & Pressing Ladies' Garments Our specialty. Moderate Prices.