Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, August 30, 1918, Page 5

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| DUR SAVED FOOD | « FEDTHE ALLIES } dent America Conserved 141,- 000,000 Bushels Wheat. Firm and impartial enforcement of the law, without favoritism, _or fear of any person, sect, part, or faction, but with malite tow--— ard none, and with ‘kindly char. ity for all. ¥ To the Democracy of Idaho County: . ee: The Democratic organization of this county fully appreciating. the loyal support given our great CREDIT DUE TO WOMEN. Meat and Fat Shipments Increased by 844,600,000 Pounds, AFull Yield 2 from theWhole Fi There is no idle soil when a Superior Grain Drill is used in the seeding. It doesn’t skip, clog or leave ead furrows, ' Distributes all the grain evenly at the bottom of the drill furrow es I uniform covering. A full, even stand results, and the fullstand brings the full crop, That’s why DELCO-LIGHT Increases Farm Efficiency Fifty thousand Delco-Light plants in opera- tion on American farms are saving at the most conservative estimate, an hour a day each—or over 18,000,000 work hours a year. Conservation . measures applied by | | the American people enabled the Unit- ed States to ship to the Allied peoples and to our own forces overseas 141,- 000,000 bushels of wheat and 844,600,- 000 pounds of meat during the past year, valued in all ‘at $1,400,000,000. This was accomplished In the face of a Serious food shortage in this country, bespeaking the wholeheartedness and patriotism with which the American people have met the food crisis abroad. Food Administrator Hoover, in a let- ter to President Wilson, explains how the situation was met. The voluntary conservation program fostered by the Food Administration enabled the piling up of the millions of bushels of wheat during 1917-18 and the shipment of meat during 1917-18, and and way We That is equal to an army of 60,000 men working Delco-Light is a complete electric light _ It furnishes an abundance of clean, safe, economical light, and operates pump, churn, cream separator, washing machine ten hours a day for a fall month. power plant for farms and suburban other appliances It is also lighting rural stores, garages, churches, schools, army camps and-rail- stations, will be glad to compare the Delco with any other Lighting ented oscillating drag-bars insure Super ior Drills have won their way into the favor of the farmers who prepare and plant their fields for the extra bushels—the all profit bushels, Made of the choicest materials. Special features: Double run positive force grain feeds—two feeds in one. Parallel disc bearings guaranteed for life of drill. Superior telescoping steel conductor tubes—non-breakable; no buckling, kinking, bending or collapsing. Superior pat~ 50% more clearanco, leader, Woodrow Wilson, by the — whole people of our common paign while the one important business of America is to win the war. This, however, is not the time for the citizen to relax in-. terest in political matters. An active interest in the pri- mary election on Tuesday, Sep- Pade fs ES i bop The total value of all food ship- / bee Constructed for Use tember 8rd, isa patriotic duty of - ments to Allied destinations amounted System to prove its superiority With Any Tractor to $1,400,000,000, all this food being bought through or in collaboration with the Food Administration. These figures are all based on official reports and represent food exports for the harvest year tnat closed June 380, 1918. The shipments of meats and fats (including meat product; ary”) ucts, vegetable oils, ete) to Allied des- tindfions were as follow: Fiscal year 1916-17... .2,166,500,000 Ibs, Fiscal year 1917-18. ...3,011,100,000 Ibs, Increase ..+.+ee00+- 844,600,000 Ibs. Our slaughterable animals at the be- ginning of the last fiscal year were not appreciably larger than the year be- fore and particularly in hogs; they were probably less. The increase in shipments is due to conservation and the extra \weight of animals added by our farmers. The full’ effect of these efforts began to bear their best results in the last half of the fiscal} year, when the ex- ports tod the Allie’ were 2,133,100,000 pounds, as against /1,266,500,000 pounds in the same perio This compares duced to terms of cereal bushels our shippients to Allied destinations have Increase ....-..-, 80,900,000 bushels Of these cereals our shipments of uba Do. Your Work! Dene Hardware Tt will pay you to use this Drill because its effective and economical sowing will bring you greater profits in in- crops. Superior Drills are noted for lightness of draft, ease of operation and unusual strength, Broke another tongue . This time get a Hall Steeltube Wagon Tongue We sell them Down Grade HALL Steeltube Ton Always Reliable Built to Stand the Sivain of HeavyHauling. " all citizens of Idaho. Inaddition to the ordinary duty of state and county officials, the national gov- ernment very properly is relying upon the local officers chosen by the people as a part of its essen- tial organization in the prosecu- tion of the war. It is therefore doubly important at this time that the best qualified and the {most efficient be selected. It is nota question of sentiment, or ~ of party, merely; it is a pure mat- ter of business, and the most im- portant, business any loyal citizen can have on Sept. 3rd. No matter what your politics are, youcan have no real voice in choosing your officers unless you attend the primaries for the self- evident reason that the officer of your choice will not be elected un- es placed upon the official ballot. Men that are fit to hold public Department of the Interior, U. at Lewiston, Idaho, August 13, 191) Notice is hereby given that JAMES E CONTNE: of Boles, Idaho, who, on Nov. 2,19) Land Office partment Saturday advised of the death of Ernest DeHaven, a by German submarines are per- manently lost to the allied cause. Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Building. Pacific and Nezperce Phones been: = a directly or indirectly roe Pa Fiscgl year 1916-17..259,900,000 bushels maaan win the war. The politi¢i{n that Fiscal year 1917-18..840,800,000 bushels Notice for Publica, A telegram from the warde-| Not all the ships that are sunk Dr. Wesley F. Orr you will be safe in folldwing has little time for campaigning. So it is up to the individual voters to the prime breadstuffs In the fiscal year | 10,5 made HH a Entries Nomand Feb. 3, ; ; According to recent reports from ‘ 1917.18 to Allied destinations were: | oss for lot % ewinet, nwt sed, nebgs Grangeville man, .with the 116th} aon four hundre nee dsoven| COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO get together in the several pre- * Wheat 181,000,000 bushels and of rye | fz} Bea fotcvof intention to. minke Nloneineerman iirantes GWond ame 4 : oe ees —————-—|einets on primary election day 13,900,000 bushels, a total of, 144,900,- | proof, to establish claim, to the land, pene vessels have been raised and sal-|Dr. J. E. Reilly and pick out the right man for 000 bushels. scribed Nyhiicbird. Idaho, ou ‘the 14 - | to James DeHaven, the father, who | vaged since January, 1915. Most DENTIST The exports to Allied destinations during the fiscal year 1916-17 were: Wheat 135,100,000 bushels and rye 2,300,000 bushels, a total of 137,400,000 bushels, In addition some 10,000,000 Notice for Publication ‘ fs a : + na bushels of 1917 wheat are now in port | Department of the Interior, U. 8. Land] Hetwae arsraguaceet he Uyor pi ie large areas the water DENTIST serve your party at this time is to fe a for Allied destinations or en route | Trion Merc) Given that. : af | ease Main Street - Cottonwood |serve your country by making 4 t thereto. ‘The total shipments to Allied | {WILLARD D. MCGUIRE, and saw service on the Mexican een (One Door below Baker's Store) gure that. oni loyal ead 4 i countries from our’ tast..garvest of | of Reuterilic. ligt estead Entry N .| border and in France. In college A Lewiston butcher this week ssrrtlecl ca) y good, loya! : bushels of prime breadstuffs, dition |to this we have shipped so! z wheat will be therefore, about 1%84,000,- | net se} sec 10 twp $l nr 2 west B M. “ 000 bushels, or_a total of 154; notice of intention to make three-yea: In 10,000,000 bushels to neutrals-depend- | j, ent upon us, and we have received ; some imports from other quarters, “This accomplishment of our people Benjamin F Taylor, all of Boles. Idaho go HENRY HEITFELD, establish claim to the land above descri fore Register and Receiver, U.S. land ton, Idaho, on the 28th day thon naer etitth all 0} it Smith of Westldke,. Ida. ‘RY HEITFELD, Register. _O * % tn this matter stands out even more eapture he donned a Red 4 ; : Dr. C. Sommer A . clearly if we bear fm mind that we had Tre tuterior, United States Land | Cross gragRsard and helped bring Sid Brown is not much disap- VETERINARIAN Chairman Idaho County Demo- ayelianie tn. the: Sscal year gist ete in Amerflean wounded. German |Pointed with his wheat yield.| Satisfaction Guaranteed.| bia aor ome ee a“ aii sg allbenatlr ly Frauke. ct a iag 21,1915, snipers hot at him, and this so His Red Russian wheat averaged Residence in Albers house, first house north of B a 4 5 ? 200,000,000 bushels of wheat which we a aes et elt wa him that he grabbed a little better than 40 bushels to ane ee pots ele ee mee REPUBLICAN PRAISES PARKER were able to export that year without fred machine gun and re- the acre. ‘3 h Telephones. trenching’ on our home loaf,” Mr, : 4 vi ———_0—__—_ H H Nuxoll 4 Hoover said. “This last year, however, ned their fire, dropping two PS > 0 Ake Stites Editor Appreciates \ owing to the large failure of the 1917 uns froma tree, where he had Sapa rag Dina arey sere NOTARY PUBLIC D ti didate. phsabsion. we had woes ort Pav seen them before his capture. pela ee i Shoron” He List your farms with me emocratic Can: if Th r an ry } j * + 4 arte tiny ie plots bene ag 526 Ry the hanal Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood Stites Enterprise. é tion, Therefore our wheat shi ‘ts, i i 2 pelea ALE Lave A Deeg a RIE Ft Ni és 3 : : + £ eat shipmen' Billy Sunday, in a lecture at Let EUGENE MAUER A. F. Parker, veteran journalist to Allied destinations represent, ap- proximately savings from, our. own - | was formerly probate judge of this x ‘he wasa star long-distance run- The telegram stated that his son had been killed in action. county. eet ieee gatch gives an account of pe of a German soldier. Salem, Oregon, Sunday among} of them, of course, are vessels that had been sunk in the North Sea, the Channel! or the Irish Sea, notified his customers that he had sold out by hanging in his win- dow a pig’s tail with a card bear- ing the words: “This is the end of our pork this week.” That big flag tops off the new Nezperce and Bell ‘phones NUXOLL BLOCK COTTONWOOD Dr. J. E. Smith Dr. McKeen Boyce Graduate Licensed VETERINARIAN Calls answered day or night and satis- faction guaranteed. COTTONWOOD each place, the best we have in’the party, and put him on the ticket by their votes. Fellow Democrats, the way to strong men are placed on guard. The ballot is yours. Use it, if you would help. make the world fit for Democracy, IDAHO _ Very sincerely yours, FRANK E. FOGG. and pioneer of Idaho, announces - wheat bread, eG other odd sayings, said: “When | 100-foot elevator just right. Take TAI LORING his candidacy for the nomination i guatier cael voles oe ite aie ea it comes to running hell the Kais- | a peep at it. ___Corronwoop - IDAHO of Clerk and Auditor on the dem- sacrifice made during the past year by. the whole American people. De- spite the magnificent effort of our agri- cultural population in planting a much increased acreage in 1917, not only was er has the devil hanging to the ropes with his tongue sticking out as long as a bell-rope on a passen- ger train. Why, the Kaiser has Notice of School Election Notice is hereby given that the COTTONWOOD LOCAL F. E. & C. U. of A. RILEY RICE, Pres. ocratic primary ticket at the elec- tion to be held September 3, 1918. We have known Mr. Parker per- sonally for’ almost 30 years and ere. a aly. ige-tbaay 4 wheat, got the devil’s hell looking like a regular annual school election Re bo JARBEN, Senta can truthfully say that no man also rn fa © mature pro} . ” leets 1st and 3d Saturday of each month at 1pm |. . 4 : : Big. Sad Guy coro’ la our dominant ton cheap sideshow! for Cottonwood Independent | Mss itantsiowvorene “ti™ | either in public or private life has “I am sure,” Mr. Hoover wrote>in concluding his report, “that all the millions of our people, agricultural as well as urban, who have contributed to these results should feel a very definite satisfaction that in a year of universal food shortages.in the north. yern hemisphere all of those people joined together against Germany have come through into sight of the coming harvest not only with wealth and gth fully maintained, but with onlyemporary periods of hardship. ® “It is difficult to distinguish between various sections of our people—the ? when you look sadly over your fields of ruined grain, it will be too late to think of what a comfort a Hail Insurance Policy in the Hartford Fire Insarance Co, would have been, The time to think about such things is right now before the stormcomes. Hart- ——_—o—_—_—. “The Germans asked for rough warfare, and by heaven we are here to give it!” is the way an American soldier in France re- cently expressed himself. The Yanks have not been over-polite to the huns during the last few weeks, and the end is not yet.— Los Angeles Times. School District No. 8, of Idaho county, Idaho, will be held in the Public School Building in Cotton- wood, Idaho, on Tuesday, Sep- tember 3, 1918, ftom the hours of 1:00 o’clock p. m., to 5:00 o’clock of said day, for the purpose of electing two trustees for a term of FELIX MARTZEN In Rear of the Postoffice Will carefully look after your needs in real estate and insurance yielded a Jarger measure to the state. He has always stood ready with gifted pen to push our latent resources to the forefront and dur- three years to succeed W. T. Si- mon and M. M. Belknap, whose JOHN REILAND Contractor and Builder. furnished on any Class of Work. Repairing promptly attended to. ing his long journalistic career he always battled fearlessly for what heconsidered to beright. Though differing from him politically, we Estimates ‘The Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50c always admired his straightfor- ward position on all great ques- tions at -issue. We can candidly homes, pubife..gating places, food | ford Hail Insurancecostslittleand | Ex-Governor Hawley of Boise, F : and 75c per hight or $2.50 to $3.50| say, in the light of his 82 years of ’ sults, Apres Sega for (hee : 7 Senator, visited the various towns | 1913. o heciaaceatieatibad os 538° Propr. little from the souree to 4 nant part of the ‘Auesican. women POLE in Idaho county this week in the M.M. Belknap, Clerk. ————— 2. has contributed so lavishly NEES SOREBN Sri NM 4 Belknap, Agt. interest of his campaign: Sena- pCR =A SEE Pfister is coming. See page 2. past. 5 et in ding ine who is mote im tor Nugent is his opponent in the} “Tarzan of the Apes” at the]. Eyesight specialist in Nuxoll bit, is bite chan in give, primary election next Tuesday. | Orpheum tenight. block on King street. See ad. country, regardless of party affilia- tion, will wage no partisan cam- less nominated and his name’ office at this time are engaged in” ms useful and urgent business and _

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