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The Bingham County news. [volume] (Blackfoot, Idaho) 1918-1930, December 16, 1921, Image 6

Image and text provided by Idaho State Historical Society

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86091196/1921-12-16/ed-1/seq-6/

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With
Brunswick Tires
You'll Have a
MERRY CHRISTMAS
and
Boyles Gasoiltire Service
Wish You a
HAPPY AND PROSPER
OUS NEW YEAR
» ♦ .H"M' 'K" M ' -M' -M' -H 1 -M*
Automobiles
AT YOUR OWN PRICES—
AND YOUR OWN TERMS
I will offer at public auction a few rebuilt and
overhauled cars in Front of the Watson Garage on
Saturday, December 17
at 2 o'clock. A few of these cars to the highest bid
: ■ ders.
10 Per Cent Cash, Balance until next Fall, on ap- «■
proved security.
Saturday, December 17, 1921
2 O'Clock
J. B. DeHART
OWNER
COL. PIERCE, Auctiooneer.
Beet hauling for the 1021 season
b«s been in progress at Rupert for the
pjist week. The highest yield so far
reported is that of Joe Krivanec, who
his harvested 28 tons from one acre
on liis farm east of Rupert. Field men
f' r tiie beet company estimate nil av
erage of 20 tons per acre on 28 acres
planted fo beets on the A. A. Kielil
i l no. This is expected to lead in aver
age for the larger lields.
i
BATTERIES REPAIRED PROMPT SERVICE -,
Blackfoot Storage Battery Co. |
"THROUGH SERVICE WE GROW"
FULL AND COMPLETE STOCK OF NEW BATTERIES
THE BATTERY THAT STANDS ALL TESTS
Mr. Farmer—
We alv prepared to haul your potatoes, grain and
other produce to market.
White Transfer and
Storage Co.
Office ajid BONDED warehouse, comer Idaho
and Broadway.
Office Phone 48 Rffliinnim 434
The effect of rains during August
and September In the principal eastern
potato states is now apparent in the
October estimate for the United States
of 345,587,000 bushels, an Increase of
22.587.000 bushels over September.
However, this year's crop is still short
82.413.000 bushels of the 428 million
bushel crop of 1020 und 25,413,000
bushels below the 5-year average,
1015-1910, of 371 million bushels.
MILLIONS LOANED
10 II. S. FARMERS
8TOCKMEN ALSO PARTICIPATE
IN CREDITS EXTENDED BY
CORPORATION
Northwestern States Fare Well In
Distribution of Vast Sum of
Money Given Out to
Aid Farmers
Washington—More than $22,600,000
in credit has been extended farmers
and stockmen during the two and one
half months since congress authorized
the war finance corporation to make
advances for agricultural and live
slock purposes, according to figures
announced Sunday.
Reports of the corporations' actlvi
ties since August 24 showed a total
credit in excess of $22,663,000, estima
ted with about eighty-two financial in
stitutions in nineteen states for muk
lng loans to farmers and stock raisers
States in which corporation advances
for these purposes have been made in
elude: Montana, South Dakota, Ari
zona, Idaho, Nevada, Iowa, Nebraska
and Wyoming.
Tbe eighty-two advances range fron
a few thousand dollars up to one oil
$15,000,000 to a cooperative associatioi
in Minnesota, North and South Dukotu
to assist in marketing grain.
Funds for the advances, official^
said, are obtained from the corpora
tion's balance with the treasury, which
at tlie time ihese operations were bet
gun totaled about $430,000,000.
Applications for agricultural and
livestock loans are coming in steadily,
it was stated. In addition to its do
mestic finaneng, officials said, the cor
poration is continuing to finance
American products for export to for
eign markets.
JUGO SLAVIAN KING ENTHRONE
Alexander Pledgee Himself Befor
Parliament and Is Cheered
Belgrade, Jugo-Slavin—King Alex!
ander assumed the throne of Jugo
Slaviu Sunday. He took the oath he
lore parliament. Extraordinary pre
cautious had been taken to guard tli
king.
Alexander rode to the parliameii:
building in an open automobile accom
punied by Premier Pacnitch und wus
cheered.
The king, who was ultired in a gen
eral's uniform, mounted the rostruiji
and declured:
"1 swear to maintain the national '
unity and independence of the state I
and the integrity of its territory anil j
govern according to the constitutioji
and tlie luws. 1 will always have be
fore me and in all my uspirutious till*
good of my people."
All members of the diplomatic corps,
headed by H. Percival Dodge, Ameri
can minister to the kingdom and thp
Serbs, Croats and Sloven*.*, were pres
ent, together with deputies in tlie pic
turesque costumes of the country.
BEEF REACHES PRE-WAR PRICES
Wholesalers Declare Meat as Cheap
As It Was In 1914
Chicago — Tlie average wholesale
price of carcass beef is back to the
level prevailing in 1914, according to
figures made public Sunday In a rè
i iew of the meat and livestock situa
tion during October, issued by the In
stitute of American Meat Packers.
The average wholesale prices of car
cass beef in 1914 approximated 121
cents, tlie report says, while al tlie en|d !
of October, 1921, it was between 11
und 12 cents. Some grades, howevt
are selling higher, while others me 1
selling lower, it is stated.
A normal volume of production ht
been maintained in tlie packing indu
try for tlie first nine months of 1921,tL
compared witli tlie first nine month
ol' 1913, says tlie statement.
total ot till kinds of federal inspec
ted meat animals for tlie first nine
months of 1921 is given at 47,184,934, j
while for the same period in 1913 tlie
number was 41,323,010.
Government figures showing stocks '
of meat in cold storage, indicate there!
was no heavy surplus feft on hand its
u result of the volume of production,
the report says."
Canr.Ja To Fight Smugglers
Regina, Sask.—Plans for combating
the smuggling of liquor into tlie Uni
ted States were taken up here Ttms
<luv by representatives of tlie United
States and four provinces ltorderiig
on the international boundary line. R.
O. Matthews of Washington is tlie
representative of the United States
prohibition commissioner.
Many Injured When Gangplank Ftjlls
Saii Francisco—A number of persons
were injured, none seriously, in the col
lapse of a gangplank lending to qite
Italian cruiser Libia at the waterfront
here Sunday afternoon. Tlie Libia, ar
riving on one of a series of visits of
courtesy to Pacific ports, was greeted
by a large crowd, including many mem
bers of the local Italian colony. Wien
her gangplank was lowered the croM
rushed to climb aboard and the deck
end of the overloaded plank gave way
throwing many into the bay.
NEW SPECIES OF
. FISH REVEALED
Eruption of Mauna Loa in Hawaii
Responsible for Remark
able Discovery.
SIX FROM DEPTHS OF SEA
'
I
j
!
1
j
'
Dr. David Starr Jordan Classifie.
Specimens Sent From Honolulu
Lava Stream Bringe Strange
Specimene to Surface.
Honolulu.—Varieties of fish hitherto
unknown were discovered as a result
of the eruption of the volcano of
Mauna Loa two years ago. This fact
has just been announced by Dr. David
Starr Jordan, chancellor emeritus of
Leland Stanford Junior university, Cal
ifornia, a noted Ichthyologist.
The columns of lava burrowed
deeper into the ocean than man had
been able to penetrate, and thousands
of fish of strange and fafitastlc shape
and color were killed and washed up
on the beach by the tidal wave caused
by the lava flow. Among them were
found six varieties hitherto unknown
to science because their habitat was
presumably lower in the water than
science had been able to observe.
Amateur ichthyologists In Hilo, Ha
waii, selected species which were un
known to them and sent them to Doc
tor Jordan for examination. The re
sult was that the six new species
were classified.
Discovery Important.
"I consider the discoveries, from a
scientific viewpoint, to be among the
most remarkable and important on
record," Doctor Jordan said when he
made public the classifications here,
while he was attending the sessions
of the Pan-Pacific Educational con
ference.
Rhyacanthlas Carismlthi, named for
Carl A. Carlsmlth of Hilo, who sent
many of the species tp Doctor Jordan.
It is a deep rose red in color.
Rhechlas Armiger, a conger eel with
hooks on Its snout resembling black
berry thorns and Is solid dull black
In color.
Nyctimaster Reinhardt, named for
the Hilo resident who discovered it.
It is a small black lantern fish, so des
ignated because of the many luminous
glands behind the eye and along its
sides which gives the Impression of
phosphorescence. It Is a solid dull
black In color.
Peristedion Engyceros or alligator
fish of a brilliant scarlet hue which
is characterized by large bony plates
of armor.
Are Deep Water Fish.
Each of tlie six is a deep water
fish. All live in water of more than
150 feet in depth, and some ns deep
as 600 feet. Nothing except such a
cataclysm of nature as the Alika flow
could have brought them to the sur
face, Doctor Jordan said. Rhyacan
thlas Carismlthi ranged at least 1,000
feet below the ocean's surface, he
added.
Doctor Jordan has sent to the Smith
sonian institution in Washington, D. C.,
a paper detailing the results of the in
vestigation and the new classification.
BAR WOMAN SMOKING IN JAIL
Lincoln, Neb., Chief of Police Acts
When Men Demand Equal
Rights.
Ltncoln, Neb.—Women confined lb
the Lincoln city jail may no longer
console themselves with a whiff fron,
a satisfying cigarette, Chief of Police
Peter Johnstone announced today after
prisoners lmd complained of a viola
tion of equal rights.
Tlie unequal, rights, however, were
in favor of the women Instead of the
men. One rule prohibited smoking.
Exceptions have been made In favor
of the women smokers by tlie chief.
Police Matron Dora Doyle admitted
that she permitted tlie women to smoke
upon order of the chief.
But the fumes çf the denied weed,
penetrnting into the quarters of tlie
men, caused tlie smoke hunger of these
less fortunate individuals to cry out
for vengeance, and finally the protest
came when the men could stand It
no longer. "We demand equal rights
anyway," the men said.
Chief of Detectives Walter Andersoi.
became the chumpiou of the men's
cause and protested vigorously to the
chief. -
TO GET HIS GOAT COSTS $500
British Columbia Increases Production
of Milking Breeds in Whtch It
Ranks First.
Vancouver, B. C.—Getting u fellow's
goat In British Columbia might cost
tlie getter from $45 to $500.
That is tlie range of prices for Tog
genberg, Sannen and Nubian animals.
These are milk goats and British Col
umhin is tlie heaviest breeder of milk
goats of any province in Canada.
Goats in tlie province number 5,000,
according to figures issued by the pro
vincial department of agriculture.
The original foundation stock num
bering 200 head was Imported from
the United States in 1917. Efforts of
breeders have been concentrated upon
the Toggenberg, Saanen and Nubian
breeds. These are noted tor milk
production. Official records have fre
quently ran as high aa 2,000 pounds
to an animal and m goat has a rec
ord of 1*41 pound*
Wants
Advertisements in these columns
are inserted at the rate of 5 cents
per line per insertion. Count six
words to the line.
Copy must be In the News office
by Thursday noon. Phone 31.
WE PAY $36.00 weekly, 75c hour
spare time selling hosiery, guar
anteed wear four months. Fall
line ready. Prewar prices. Free
samples to working agents. Ex
perience unnecessary. Hosiery
Mills, Darby, Pa.
There Is at 'the News office a 3Ox
3% Ford tire land rim. Owner can
have same by paying tor this ad.
CASH—at your door for hogs, veal,
poultry, etc. If you have any
thing In the above line call 237
and we will be there with cash
and highest prlceB. tf
PHONE 31—tor want ad service.
They will buy sell or rent any
thing or will find you employ
ment or an employee. Phone 31.
Charged with diverting $422.80 ol
funds belonging to the Bannock Na
tional bank of Pocatello to his own ac
count, S. L. Reece, former president
of that institution, was arrested by
federal authorities In Denver Sunday
night, according to reports received at
Pocatello. The bank closed its doors
May 13. The alleged misappropriation
occurred four days prior to this, when,
it is charged, Reece diverted the funds
to cover a personal check. He and
Ji's. Reece left Pocatello In June, and
Reece has since been engaged in the
real estate business in Denver.
Extravagant Hope.
"1 understand robbery is on the In
crease."
"I hope so," replied Bill the Burg.
"Maybe in the course of time It'll be
come so fashionable that there'll be no
gse tryin' to enforce the laws agin It."
NOTICE OF SHERIFFS SALE
Notice of Foreclosure Sale bv
Sheriff
F. A. Bell, Plaintiff, vs. W. A. Beak,
ley, and M. Eva Beakley, husband
and wife, Boise Payette Lumber
Company, a corporation, and
Consolidated Wagon and Machine
Cmpany, a corporation, Defend
ants.
Under and by virtue of an order
of sale and decree of Foreclosure
and Sale, issued out of the District
Court of the Sixth Judicial District
of the State of Idaho, in and for the
County of Bingham, on the 29'th
day of November, A. D. 1921, in the
above entitled action, wherein F.
A. Bell,, the above named plaintiff,
obtained a judgment and decree of
foreclosure and sale against W. A.
Beakley and M. Eva Beakley, hue
band and wife, Boise Payette Lum
ber Company, a corporation, and
Consolidated Wagon and Machine
Company, a corporation, defendants
on the 19 th day of November, A. D.
1921, for the sum of Eleven hun
dred Sixty-nine and 50-100
($1169.50) Dollars in United States
Gold Coin, besides interests, costs
and counsel fees, whiah said decree
was on the 19th day of November,
A. D., 1921, recorded in Judgment
Book 4 of said court, at page 576,
I am commanded to sell the certain
lot, piece or parcel of land, situate
and lying in Bingham County, State
of Idaho, and bounded and describ
ed as follows:
Lots One (1), Two (2), Three
(3), Four (4), and Five (5), of
Block One (1) of Kennedy's seoond
Addition to Blackfoot, County of
Bingham, State of Idaho, according
to the recorded plat thereof, to
gether with the ditches, ditch rights
of way, water and water rights
thereunto belonging and particular
ly one share of the , capitol stock of
the Grove City Ditch Company, a
corporation.
Public notice is hereby given that
on Tuesday, the 3rd day of January
A. D., 1922, at ten o'clock a. m. o,f
that day, in front of the Court
House door, of the County of Bing
ham, I will, In obedience to said or
der of sale and decree of foreclosure
and sale, sell the above described
property, or so much thereof as may
ibe necessary to satisfy said judg
ment, with interests and costs, etc.,
to the highest and best bidder, tor
gold coin of the United States.
Dated Dec. 5, 1921.
A. H. SIMMONS,
Sheriff.
By D. P. BRILL,
Deputy Sheriff. D 9-16-23-30 4t.
1
!
!
j
\
NOTICE OF ATTACHMENT
In the District Court of the Sixth
Judicial District of the State of
Idaho, in and 1er the County of
Bingham.
The W. M. Barnett Bank of Wasco,
Oregon, r. corporation. Plaintiff,
vs. W. II. Horton and C. W. Hor
ton, Defendants.
Notice is hereby given that on
the 15th day of November, A. D.
1921, an attachment issued out of
the above named court in the above
entitled action, against the proper
ty of the said defendants for the
sum of Three Thousand and Five
Hundred and No-100 ($3,500.00)
Dollars besides interest.
In Witness Whereof, I have here
unto set my hand and affixed my
official seal this 15th day or No
vember, A. D. 1921.
(SEAL) F. M. FISHER, Clerk.
By LEXA BENZLEY, Deputy.
Thomas ft Anderson,
Attorneys tor Plaintiff.
Address: Blackfoot, Idaho.
J. A. Gruse, who has been trapping
near Minnedoka, lias brought 20 coy
ote pelts to the courthouse within the
past two weeks. Tlie bounty on these
is $2.50 each and some of them are
also marketable for as hif#i as $15
each.
• • •
Three masked men entered a tent
occupied by four mexicans at Jerome,
Ida., and demanded their money. One
of the Mexicans was shot In attempt
ing to reach for his gun. All three n
were caught and arrested.
oooooooooooooo
° Pioneer Camp No. 5230 ®
O MODERN WOODMEN OF 0
O AMERICA
O Regular meeting nights, first
O and third Mondays, I. O. O. F.
O Hall. Visiting Neighbors Wei
O come.
° 0. J. Hallberg T. J. Johnson..
O lOonsu Clerk
ooooooooooodo
oooooooooooop
0 Grove City Circle No. 431
O NEIGHBORS OF WOODCRAFT
O Meets the Second and Fourth
O Tuesdays in each monitlh at
O I. O. O. F. Hall, Blackfoot,
O Idaho.
0 Visiting Neighbors Welcome
O MARY E. JONES,
O Guardian Neighbor
O MARTHA QUULLIN, Clerk
OOOOOOOOOOOOO
OOOOOOOOOOOOOO
O
© ROYAL NEIGHBORS OF
© AMERICA, 3058
© Meeting Nights* Seoond and
© fourth Wednesdays of each
© Month, at Odd Fellows* Hall,
° Blackfoot, Idaho.
® Visiting Members Invited
O Jennie Rossi ter, Clerk.
O Achsa J. Boling,
O Oracle.
ooooooooooooooooo
Distributors for
Exide Batteries
Service on all Makes
Edwin Taylor, Prop.
AUTO ELECTRIC CO.
JJIIIIlllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllillllCIIIIIII
I R. N. Jackson, M. D. |
1 -HOPKINS BLOCK |
Ej All Calls Promptly Attended, {§
= Day or Night, City or Country 5
I Phone 43 |
ïîiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiuiiinniiinniiiiiff
oooooooooooooo
O Q
0 G. F. HANSBR0UGH •
0 Attorney at Law O
0 Millick Block O
o Blackfoot, Wahn O
O Q
oooooooooooooo
DRS. FL0DQUIST à BROWN
Chiropractic Specialists
Honrs 9 to 12; 1 to 5.30;
Evenings and Sundays by
Appointment
Lady Nurse in Constant At
tendance
Phone 551 Main Street
Across from Depot. Over City
«Grocery
We Are in Business for Your
Health
llllllilllllllllllllllllliilllllllilliiiilliHllliil
SALES!
It is my business to sell your
goods for more money.
Farm, Live Stock, and all Auc
tion Sales—none too big, noue
too small to receive my beet
attention.
W. D. PIERCE
Licensed Auctioneer
Phone 253 Blackfoot, Idaho
WiniiiiiiiiiinHiiiiiimmmii mMM fiiH H i

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