Payette County ID Archives News.....New Plymouth Local February 10, 1905 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/id/idfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Cheryl Hanson ihansonb@fmtc.com April 20, 2006, 7:09 pm New Plymouth Outlook February 10, 1905 New Plymouth Outlook New Plymouth, Idaho Friday, February 10, 1905 LOCAL NEWS An offer for February -- The Kansas City Star, one of the best weekly newspapers in the United States, can be secured for a year for ten cents if taken with the Outlook. $1.35 pays for both. This offer expires March 1st. W. M. Wayman was home from Boise over Sunday. On his return Mrs. Wayman and the baby accompanied him. Our senator was one of a committee which inspected the state institutions in the southeastern part of the state, and reported a fine trip. The Ladies' Aid Society of the Congregational church will give a supper and patriotic entertainment for the benefit of the church next Friday night, February 17th. The program will consist of patriotic songs and recitations and supper will be served from five to nine. A man in Missouri who swallowed a 3-cent piece back in the days when silver coins of that denomination were sometimes seen has just coughed it up. The Outlook now has renewed hope that a few delinquents will cough up their subscription money in process of time. Those of our farmers who are inclined to think their products are bringing too low prices will find consolation in the report from Colorado that the farmers there are glad to sell their potato crop for 30 cents per hundred, and put it on the cars besides. This is less than one-third what the Payette benchers receive for their spuds. J. H. Carpenter thinks this a fine dairy country and would support a good creamery. He is milking twelve cows now and expects soon to have a herd of twenty-five. Mr. Carpenter is an advocate of pure-bred stock and proposes to get rid of all his scrub stock as fast as possible. He receives an average of 25 cents per pound for his butter the year round. Candy for the children at Creasey's. For farm loans apply to W. M. Wayman Mr. Odis Ringer left yesterday for Chicago. New Line of saddles at Plymouth hardware store. Special prices on boys' rubbers and overshoes at Stevens'. New wall paper -- the latest designs -- at hardware store. Rustin Shaw, of New Plymouth, while working in a saw-mill twenty miles from Horse Shoe Bend a few days ago, met with a painful accident which resulted in fracturing the jaw bone. He was brought to Boise and is staying with his uncle, J. J. Shaw, at 1120 Fort street. The injury was a very painful one, and was caused by a piece of timber striking him in the face with great force. He has the best of care and will no doubt be all right in a few days. - - Capitol News Woodlark squirrel poison at the New Plymouth drug store. C. E. Brainard has plenty of money to loan on Payette valley farms. Get some of that fine cabbage at Stevens' before it is all gone. Will and Joe Marnoch entertained their friends last Friday night at a dance, owing to their departure for Emmett. the midnight luncheon was fine, and Will and Frank Barnard and Joe Marnoch manipulated the fiddle bow in good shape. Those present were: Marie, Clara and Florence Ackerman, Gertrude Chadwick, Ethel Blayden, Jennie Slone, Mae and Martha Brainard, Nettie and Margaret Oliver, Katie Meyer, Alma Bliss, Winnie Hill, Laura and Pearl Wachter, Jessie Marnoch, Messrs; Arnold and Albert Ackerman, Louie Blayden, Will and Frank Barnard, David and Thomas Slone, John Gregory, Lloyd Lawrence, Ernest Meyer, Joe Gamble, Homer and Perley Anderson, Joe and Will Marnoch. About sixty young people braved the terrors of Idaho mud last Monday evening and drove out to Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Tyler's home, three miles east, to a birthday party. Miss Lorla was fourteen years old and it was planned by her friends to make the occasion a "surprise, " but the plot was in some way revealed before the time of execution. Just seventy-two partook of the elegant supper which Mrs. Tyler and her sister, Mrs. Detrick, prepared in honor of the event. In the birthday cake was buried a button and the hostess decreed that the young lady or gentleman who found the hidden button was to publicly salute with a kiss her best fellow or his best girl, as the case might be. Alas, the young lady who received the button adroitly concealed the fact, and the discovery was not made until the button was accidentally discovered the next morning in Emmett Whitaker's pocket. After supper games were played, music was furnished and all went home happy. A good horse for $70. Four years old, weight 1,100. E. Whitaker Still in the market for grain. Highest market price. J. F. Creasey Messrs. Noyes and LaCrone are now cozily domiciled in their tent. For improved or unimproved farm land in the Payette valley inquire of C. E. Brainard. A new library of 150 carefully selected volumes was added to our public school this week. Mr. and Mrs. Britton, of Payette, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Flagg last Friday and Saturday. Payette has a new attorney in the person of Mr. J. L. Seawell. Read his ad in another column. C. E. Brainard has several hundred acres of partly improved land to lease on very favorable terms. We are still promised a Farmers' Institute but the local committee is not yet informed as to the date. Rodney Smith has been keeping himself in seclusion this week. Jus an ordinary case of the measles. Don't forget the sugar beet meeting at Plymouth tomorrow night, and at Pleasant View in the afternoon. Don't trust your tree orders to agents whom you may never see again. The Keystone nursery is reliable. Fresh eggs will be taken in exchange for shoes, rubber goods, harness or anything in my line. F. M. Satoris F. M. Satoris, Payette, Idaho, carried the best line of shoes and rubber goods. All rips in shoes repaired free of charge. Miss Jennie Slone is preparing to display her usual spring stock of millinery in New Plymouth. Watch for announcement. C. E. Brainard has some very desirable land in the town-site and adjoining New Plymouth to lease on very favorable terms. Frank McCray has moved his house to an imposing site this side of the big lake and has given the name of Lake View to his premises. F. M. Satoris, Payette, Idaho, carried the largest and most complete line of harnesses and saddles in Idaho. Everything guaranteed first-class. Misses Laura and Pearl Wachter prepared an elaborate dinner for the young folks of the Marnoch and Ackerman families on last Sunday evening. C. E. Brainard has some very desirable orchard and acreage property close to Payette or New Plymouth on easy terms. Now is the time to secure a home. School was closed on Monday on account of diphtheria but through the advice of the physicians was convened again on Tuesday. No new cases of the disease have developed. A new stock of fine saddles for sheep men and other horsemen from $30 up. Some rare bargains for a good article. Anyone in need of a sale will please look these over before buying. Plymouth Hardware & Lumber Co On last Saturday, the four-year-old boy of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dillon was discovered to have malignant diphtheria and the house was at once quarantined. Later on their infant girl was taken with nasal diphtheria, but both are now improving nicely under the care of Dr. Woodward. J. H. LaCrone arrived home last Saturday. He reports conditions unnatural to him now in the old home state. In western Nebraska, he says, the new homestead law, allowing a man to settle on and fence in a section of land, has worked a great hardship to the cattle men, it limiting the range to too small an area. The cattle look hungry and sickly, he says. Its similar to fencing in every section of the sheep range in the mountains. In Boone county Mr. LaCrone visited at Bonanza and Albion, and all report a very hard winter. At the latter place he paid a nickel for two small apples and was glad to board the train again for the land of fruit and mild winters. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/id/payette/newspapers/newplymo512gnw.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/idfiles/ File size: 8.5 Kb