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Outer ! Bearing | Axte That’s easy. Because it's the one denendabl ew: gu th " positively assure you will carry your load safely over all } an re one ditions of roads. Whether they’ Te stony, rutty or smooth; ether i the valley or.on the . mountain; in dry weather or a “forty dave tain’? the Winona Mountain Wagon fam will never fail you under uny conditions. matter if you put ten tons on the Bolste: (like many wagon ax!es) because our pate prevent it. You can see the difference f The arrow-point in cut touches the pie bolster end and rests on the heavy steel skein that extends for ‘al inches under the axle. The whole is clipped together ng a solid and unbreakable support no matter how big a Strain is put on it, on No. 1 fs that no nap the Axie t above, ports the There are 24 More Reasons Ask our dealer to show you all t .¢ good points of which HY j this isonly one. Write for our new free c alog that tells 25 forceful reasons why you shoukl ' a Winona Mountain Wagon, Don’t buy till you invest. « Write today WINONA WAGON CO., Box SSE seh TSS a cet aa » Winona, Mina. A609 Every Farm a Factory Purchasing power is measured by producing power. To pro- duce the most you must have the right kind of implements. We have them and invite your inspection. Our stock is large and complete, and prices right. P & O U-bar Harrow Are very strong, simple and rigid. clamps-—only one bolt. Tooth 2,3 and 4 sections. | es P & O Harrow Cart Light and easy riding and can be used with =e —— || POTATO DIGGER | ‘The only one made with a pair of runners back of the mold—makes it run as steadily as a walking plow— there is no jerking, and no inning on the team, Why take such good care of your potato crop all through the growing season, and then take chances on cutting them up, or leaving some of them in the ground, with a common plow or an inferior digger? The P. & O. Digger will pay for itself in an ordinary potato patch in a single season. Has Truck, Fender, and Shaker grate. Throat is deep and the mold goes to the bottom of the hi ll, digging up all of the Potatocs, and they are all thoroughly sifted from the soil and exposed on the surface, any harrow. Superior Drill The name tells a true story: Means Even Growing.” “Even Sowing Exclusive features. HOENE HARDWARE Professional Cards. Dr. Wesley F. Orr Physician & Surgeon Office in Simon Building. Pacific and Nezperce Phones COTTONWOOD, IDAHO. Dr. J. EB. Reilly DENTIST Nezperce and Bell ’phones NUXOLL BLOCK COTTONWOOD Dr. J. E. Smith DENTIST Main Street - - Cottonwood (On@Door below Baker's Store) Dr. McKeen Boyce GRADUATE LICENSED VETERINARIAN Calls answered day or night and satis- faction guaranteed. COTTONWOOD, IDAHO H. H. Nuxoll NOTARY PUBLIC Office in Nuxoll Blk., Cottonwood Let EUGENB MAUER —DO YOUR— TAILORING CoTTONWoOD - IDAHO COTTON woop “LOCAL F. E. & ©. U. of A. Meets on Ist and 3d Saturday of each month at 1 o’clock P. M. RILEY RICE, Pres. : ‘A. JANSEN, S Taxidermist. Clyde Von Bargen of Cottonwood, scientific taxidermy in all its branches—birds, animals. game birds, fishes, etc., mounted true to life, Skins tanned and made into rugs. Standard methods and satisfaction guaranteed. Reason- able prices. Both phones Your Waterworks Should Have MODERN SANITARY PLUMBING Concrete Construction of Reservoirs, Drains, Sep- tic Tanks, Ete. WRITE FOR ESTIMATES J. C. HALLER COTTONWOOD IDAHO . | $1.50. BUSINESS LOCALS Tip Top—the Flower of flours. Idaho Gold--the great bread and butter flour. Tip Top flour makes the finest bread you ever tasted. New stock of linoleum just received ~|at Nau’s Furniture House. Highest market price paid for but- ter, eggs and lard. J. V. Baker & Son. Only the best part of the wheat goes into Tip Top flour. Stock hogs wanted, call at Farmers Union warehouse for prices, Get your linoleum of Nau, now. He has a fine lot of new designs just in. Electricity on the farm—See the Delco lighting plant. Hoene Hard- ware. None of the wheat's vitality has been lost in making Tip Top and Ida- ho Gold flour, WOOD FOR SALE, Don’t treat yourself cool. Buy your wood from Sallee & Gray, Westlake. 37-4 Water direct from the well with a Milwaukee Air Pressure System. No storage. Hoene Hardware. Get your children’s sandals, sizes 5 to 12, regular price $1.50, at 95¢ a pair. Sizes from 12 to 2, regular price $2, at $1.10. G-N-C Co. We have several thousand good sefond hand sacks for sale at right price. See us before you buy. Cot- tonwood Milling & Elevator Co. Now is the time to get mens straw hats, regular prices $1.50 to $2, now onsale at $1, each. $3 hats, now G-N-C Co. Tip Top and Idaho Gold--the pure food flours—are manufactured under most sanitary conditions and comply with all pure food regulations. All children’s and misses’ patent and tan pumps, your choice at $1.50 a pair. White canvas slippers at $1.10 per pair. At G-N-C. Co. Our Tip Top and Idaho Gold make more loaves of better bread than other flours on the market, and do not need any phosphate or other chemicals for whitening or raising the dough. Just received a carload of melons. You can buy them about at your own price while they last. Bartlett pears, peaches and tomatoes for canning now on. Come in and leave your orders. Randall's Confectionery. Stock hogs wanted, call at Farmers Union warehouse for prices. Wood for sale. See Otto Aichl- mayr or Jim Rooke. 31-tf. Tip Top and Idaho Gold flour never varies from its high standard of purity and excellence, FOR SALE.—A good home, cheap. A thoroughly modern bungalow, with five good lots, property well located, in Kamiah, Ida. 22-tf. Mrs. J. Matthiesen has a number of S. C. White Leghorn cockerels for sale at $1.50 each. 40 The big bakers are the best judges of good flour. Our Tip Top and Ida-|, ho Gold brands are used almost ex-1" clusively by bakeries in this territory. Why not you. Bring us your milling wheat. The government regulations include all mills of more than 100 barrels daily capacity and we can pay more for grain stored in ourselevator than else- where. We need the grain, so why pay handling charges to others. Keep this money in your own pocket. Cot- tonwood Milling & Elevator Co. Idaho Gold flour—best for bread cake and pastry. Why is Tip Top and Idaho Gold flour better? Because it is made of clean sweet wheat properly blended and milled under absolute cleanliness, and does not contain any injurious in- gredients. Men Wanted.— PvEe ers aml fellers 85c per M. Mill and camp minimum wage $3.25. Steady work. Craig Mountain Lumber Co., 3ltf Winchester, Idaho. Attention Farmers We carry a complete line of ma- chine oil and hard oil for harvest purposes. Call and get our prices before purchasing. Farmers Union W arehouse Co. Hog Estrayed. A year-old sow, black and white spotted, with small ring in the nose, strayed away from my ranch 64 miles east of Cotton- wood about Sept. 15. I will pay a suitable reward for information leading to its recovery. L. A. Hansen. Lost, Strayed or Stolen From the Triplett pasture, three miles south of Cottonwood, about Sept. 11th, a brown mare and roan colt, the mare aged 6 years, branded 7K (connected). suitable reward will be paid for information leading to their re- covery. R. P. Nash, Boles, Ida. -| progeam for Friday evening, Oct. 19. Attention, Mr. Dairyman The management and board of di- rectors urge all cream patrons of the Cottonwood Co-operative Creamery to be very careful to produce and deliver the best quality of cream possible. To produce a good quality of cream everything in contact with the milk must be clean, separators and pails washed and rinsed in boiling water and aerated. This should be done ev- ery morning and evening. Do not put warm and cold cream together, as this causes it to get sour, bitter and stale. Keep different skim- mings separate until next skimming. ‘ream should be delivered to the creamery every four or five days. Do not let cows eat any rubbish from gar- dens, such as cabbage. Keep a stirrer in your cream can and stir your cream twice aday. The time is near at hand when cream will be sold by its quality, and when that time comes, we can then get in shape to make quality as our standard. Tke dairyman in any community who produces good cream is a credit to his creamery, and this creamery would be thankful to its patrons who would help to make quality its stand- ard. Yours Truly, Jens Jensen, Buttermaker. RED CROSS DOINGS. (Contributed) The Red Cross greatly appreciates the contribution of fuel from the Huss- man Lumber Co., Mrs. R. A. Nims and Mrs, Arch Martin. The Red Cross also appreciates its free light, drayage and room rent, The entertainment committee of the auxiliary is preparing an attractive The cast will be given next week for “The Elopement of Ellen,” Twenty Ibs. of knitting wool, fur- nished by the national organization, has arrived. Instructions and needles can be obtained at the work rooms. This wool can be purchased at the Red Cross rooms for $2.20 per lb. as long as it lasts. There still seems to be a misunder- standing by many people as to the use of garments made by the Red Cross. They are used in hospitals or prison camps and not in training camps or on battle fields, except as the wound- ed require them. Cottonwood Public Schools. (Contributed) AUCTION SALE Charles Hamill entered the Senior] At R. S. Curless Ranch on class Monday. Also Ina Hoffman and Mildred Henderson entered the Sophomore class. The Senior class gave a party and Saturday, Oct. 6. I will sell at auction sale at the reception to the Freshmen class last Curless ranch north of town on Friday evening. Parlor games were Saturday, Oct. 6, commencing at enjoyed after which the Freshmen 10 o'clock, the following prop- were initiated and all enjoyed a good time, even the Freshmen. ing home ice cream and cake were served, Anita de Courcey and Caroline Terhaar lead the high school in pen- manship, in having the most number of drills accepted. About one hundred new yolumes of library books have been ordered. They comprise books on history, social science, economics and English. We are glad to welcome a new pu- pil to our seventh grade and cordially invite all eighth grade pupils to at- tend that can as we are short on eighth grade students. Both seventh and eighth classes are doing exceptional work in arithmetic and grammar. Two new pupils have entered the fifth grade. Posters will be melnted this office tomorrow anouncing a big sale of stock and farm machinery, ete., by Vetsch & Johnston at the Frank} Puthoff ranch 3 miles north of town on Oct. 11, Public Sales I beg to announce the follow- ing sales for the coming week: Farm sale, 4 miles south of Winchester, Oct. 1. Carnation Holstein sale, Kent, Wash., Oct. 3. Hazelwood Holstein sale, Kent, Wash., Oct. 4. Yakima Holstein sale, North Yakima, Wash., Sor 5. H. C. CRANKE. Estray Notice Two of’ my red heifers have strayed away from my ranch near Joseph, Idaho. They are both branded on left thigh with two V’s (one above the other with dot between.) I will pay $5 each or $10 reward for infor- mation leading to their recovery. J. R. Gibbins, Joseph, Ida. at Before go-|5 MILCH COWS AND 100 HEAD OF HOGS 65 July pigs. 12 brood sows. 23 shoats, 80 to 125 lbs. 1 registered Poland China boar. MACHINERY, ETC. 7-ft McCormick binder. Bain wagon, 84-inch with rack. 14-in. Flying D. gang plow. 12-in. Flying D. gang plow. Success fanning mill. Harvey & Regan surrey. 4-sec. steel harrow. Studebaker 3? wagon. Standard mower, 5-ft. Disc harrow. 8-ft Thomas drill. 16-in. walking plow. 8-sec. steel harrow. Scalding vat. 7-ft Deering binder. McCormick rake. Disc plow, 3-bottom. Sod plow. Bob-sled. Potato-digger. Garden cultivator. 15 tons of timothy hay in barn and 12 tons in stack. 5 tons of headed beardless bar- ley in stack. 1000 or 1500 second-hand sacks One share in Co-op. Creamery. Other articles too numerous to mention, FREE LUNCH AT NOON. Terms—All sums under $10, cash. Over $10 bankable note bearing 10 per cent interest due Oct. 1, 1918. No property to be remov- ed until settled for. R. S. CURLESS, Owner. A. V. Hall, Auctioneer. B. C. Barbor, Clerk, Bi