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MERRY CHRISTMAS May the Yuletide bring you many joys, in gifts and in giving, in pros perity and peace of heart, in the good will of mankind and the love of those who are near and dear. The deepest happiness that comes to us at Christmas is the knowledge of the many instances and ways in which this bank has added to the welfare of those who have wisely availed themselves of its safety and service. Let us be of help to you. COLVILLE, WASH. ! COLVILLE NEWS j Advertisement | Go to Rich's for your glasses. Sat isfaction guaranteed. If you want graham, try a nine pound sack of Top-Noch, for mush or gems. For sale at all dealers.—adv. If your watch or clock needs re pairing and you want it well done, and at reasonable prices, try us.—E. J. Milberg, The Leading Jeweler. —F. C. B.— I. I. Stevens Lodge No. 143, K. of P. Meets each second and fourth Mon day of each month. Visiting mem bers welcome. C. N. Hanson, M. of W. WELDING of all kinds SAW GUMMING FIRST CLASS WORKMANSHIP ALL WORK GUARANTEED Colville Weld and Repair Shop North Main Colville School Books School Supplies High School Books Carroll's Pharmacy Colville. Washington CHRISTMAS GREETINGS COME TO US FOR GUARANTEED VULCANIZING TIRE REPAIRING OUR SPECIALTY COLVILLE TIRE SHOP WANTED Wanted, 2 or 3 dozen early hatch ed purebred Plymouth Rock pullets. —Bert Curry, Meyers Falls. LOST AND FOUND Lost, one short two-year red heifer. Hole in left ear. Has horns. One black yearling steer. Has no horns. One short yearling red heifer. Has no horns. All branded F on right hip but might not show.—l. Fors lund, Addy, R. F. D. No. 2. Strayed, two yearling colts. One horse colt, nearly black, white strip in face; one mare colt, dark bay, white spot in forehead, block build, no brands. Please notify J. R. Mon tanye, Colville, phone 1123. FOR SALE For sale, Al fresh milk cow; also a registered Holstein bull, coming 3 years. Daniel Knauss, Colville. For sale, 160 acres of land, des cribed as Stt of SEV* and SE% of SW% of section 26, and NE% of NWy* of section 35, township 36 north, range 40, E. W. M., about ten miles east of Colville, Wash. Can be had at a bargain.—Hugh Waddell, Administrator of the estate of David C. Church, deceased. For sale, or will trade for heavier kind, 4-horsepower light weight Cushman engine, good as new.— Emery Johnson, Rice. Special bargains in used pianos, phonographs and organs.—Colville Piano House. Auto to trade for livestock. Ad dress Box 93, Marcus. For sale, 5-room modern house. Inquire F. J. Van Buren, 251 N. Elm, phone 286, Colville. For sale at a bargain, two-ton G. M. C. truck in good condition. En quire Frank Llewellyn, Kettle Falls. The annual meeting of the Grange Warehouse Co. of Colville will be held Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1921, at 1 p. m., Palace theater, Colville, Wash. —M. H. C. Allen, Sec. The annual stockholders' meeting of the Stevens County National Farm Loan Association will be held Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1922, 2 p. m., at the office of the secretary I. J. Lass well, First National Bank building, Colville, Wash.—Secretary. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Kinnan and family wish to thank their many friends and neighbors for their kind ness and sympathy during the sick ness and death of their son and brother Charlie, also for the many floral offerings and letters of sym pathy. H. C. Gates left Monday for Holt field, California, where he expects to remain several months. Mr. Gates has properties in the Imperial Valley which necessitated the trip. He will visit Los Angeles and dif ferent points before his return in the spring. Mrs. W. H. Butler has joined her husband in Seattle, where he ex pects to remain. William Dean Baxter, three months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Baxter of 359 south Maple, died on Monday, and funeral services were held at the McCord undertak ing parlors Tuesday afternoon, con ducted by Rev. J. M. Hugging. Mrs. J. C. Harrigan rendered a vocal so lo. Burial was at Highland. The Colville Examiner, Saturday, December 24, 1921 How the Churches Observe Christmas Many Programs of Varied Natures Will Be Fea tured in Colville CATHOLIC Solemn high mass will be sung at the church of the Immaculate Concep tion on Saturday night, Dec. 24, at midnight, by the following quartet: Mrs. J. C. Harrigan, Mrs. Lester Cohrs, G. O. Morris, H. J. Plumb. Mrs. Daniel H. Carey will be or ganist. A mass written by P. A. Kaufer of Seattle entitled "The Lit tle Flower Mass" will be rendered. Masses on Christmas day at 8 and 10 a. m. Rev. E. 8011, S. J., officiat ing. BAPTIST Christmas services will not be ob served this year in the Baptist church, owing to a vacancy in the pulpit. ADVENTIST The Seventh Day Adventist church will observe Christmas Dec. 24, at the church, with a special program. Festivity and the tree in this denomination at Christmastide are in the homes. Church giving is confined to missionary funds. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE The Christian Science Society at the chapel on Cedar street will have the Christmas service from the les son-sermon, entitled "Christian Science," with appropriate musical program and scriptural reading. ST. JOHN'S EPISCOPAL G. H. Severance, Archdeacon Agnes D. Roberts, W. A. Worker. Church school each Sunday at 11:30. We are thoroughly graded and in vite your inspection. Holy Eucharist and sermon at 10:30. Children's Christmas carol service at 11:30. Evening vespers and address at 7:30. Mrs. Lester Cohrs and Mrs. L. B. Donley will render "Holy Night." All services will be in charge of Rev. Mr. Gurr of Spokane. Children's Christmas party and tree Monday Dec. 26th, 2 p. m. CHURCH OF CHRIST Bible school nt 10. Bible study at 11. Bible study Wednesday at. 7:30. A children's party Thursday eve ning with the Christmas tree as the feature, given by Mrs. R. E. Hagen's Sunday school class of the Christian church, was the only observance of the Christmastide this year by the Christian church. Rev. Fred Thomas of Indiana, who has recently been appointed pastor of the church, will spend the holidays with relatives in Wenatchee, and formally begin his work after the first of the year. FREE METHODIST Preaching at 11 and 7:30. Sunday school at 10. Prayer meeting Thursday evenings. Evangelistic services at Orin each Wednesday evening. Observation of Christmas in the Free Methodist church has not de parted from the original movement founded by John Wesley, except that the local church will not have a Christmas tree. The sermon will be by the pastor Rev. Guy B. Denney on "The Gift." There will be recitations, and the musical pro gram prepared by Mrs. A. M. Vind hurst will include "That Beautiful, Wonderful Night," Christmas Bells" and "Silent Night." METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH ' The Methodist Episcopal ser vices at the church Sunday morning, Dec. 25, will not outwardly depart from the usual Sunday worship. Rev. George E. Whitten will occupy the pulpit. There will be a Christmas tree, from which candy and fruits will be distributed to the children. The musical program under the di rection of Mrs. Rolla Willett, Mrs. Ralph Willett and Miss Marguerite Henderson will be given by the vest ed choir, and in the morning will in clude "Where Shepherds Watched" and "Glory to God." In the evening the vested choir will sing "Hail the Lord's Anointed" and "Hail Our Savior King." The junior choir will render "Song of the Christmas Bells," "In Bethlehem," "A Savior is Born," "Let the Hills be Vibrant," "Jesus Cometh to Reign," and "The Song of Songs." Rev. Geo. E. Whitten returned Thursday from Yakima where he has been conducting evangelistic services. During Rev. Whitten's absence the pulpit of the Methodist Episcopal church was filled by District Super intendent Curry ot Spokane and John Chalmer Hobson of Addy, who for years has been in active ministry in Canada. Rev. Hobson is a gentle man of wide culture, was born in China, and is a great grandson of Robert Morrison, the first missionary to China, who undertook and accom plished the arduous task of translat ing the Bible into the Chinese lan guage. Rev. Hobson came to America when he was fivp years of age. His parents now reside in China; his father is customs officer of the Maratime office. Rev. Hob son since leaving the ministry be cause of il! health has engaged in stock raising on his ranch near Addy. The Colville public library will be dosed Monday, Dec. 26, and Monday, .lan. 2. On Monday, December 26, a legal holiday, all business houses and shops in Colville will be closed. Mr. and Mrs. George Hurt Ruble of Happy Hill ranch were Colvillp shoppers Tuesday. Miss Eva G. Mills has moved her studio from the Hallowell residence on East Second to the Hotel Colville. Mrs. Lloyd Dodson of Chewelah iias been in Colville since last week with her mother Mrs. Thomas As pond, who has been quite ill. Ralph Schoenfeld, eleven year old son of Herbert Schoenfeld of the Seattle Furniture company of Seattle, is in Colville for a visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. Dann heiser. Mr, and Mrs. T. S. Hayes, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brady and child, and Everett Hayes, returned December 14th from a three months visit at Moweaqua, 111. The party left Sep tember 16 in their Buick via Ogdcn. They had anticipated spending the winter there but grew homesick and started homi: over the Lincoln high way. They were four weeks on the way, having spent several days visit ing friends of Mrs. Brady at Oakley, Idaho. Four of the nights on the road they pitched their tents. The remainder of the time they sought hotel accommodations at night. "The weather was lovely all the way," stated Mrs. Brady, "only at times it was a Jittle cold. At LaGrande, Oregon, we had to ship our car over the mountains to Pendleton because of snows. The only machine trouble we had was a broken oil cup, which did not interfere with our journey. We find the west in better condition than the locality from which we came, because of corn and potato crops in the central states not. being up to their usual standard." The Telephone Directory Good telephone service depends vitally upon care in calling telephone numbers. A wrony num ber called causes loss of time to you, to the party called and to the operator. Every instance means •voidable inconvenience to all concerned. It is not the loss of lime to you alone or to the operator that concerns us most, but it is the annoy ance to the party called. Your mistake cannot be 3 explained to him, and the Telephone Company is I held responsible for your error. I Consulting the current issue of the telephone di- I rectory, instead of trusting to memory; giving your I number clearly, and quickly correcting the operator 1 if she misunderstands your call, will greatly in- I crea«e the efficiency of the service. g r iffiL f\ lhe Pacific 1 elephone m gk \% 4|||r And Telegraph Company People Read These Bargains _YOU ARE DOING IT NOW— Aluminum Roasters, casseroles, glass sets, many other articles for the home. Good prices on Sleds, sleighs, buggies, etc. Give us a call for almost any article made in the world. Campbell Mercantile Co. Corner First and Oak Colville © Christmas Greetings £| fWe take this occasion to extend to *^# all our hearty koocl wishes for the Yuletide season. May you and »£y J(% yours have an abundance of good 3& > J^ will (his merry fe stive season. Page 7