Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Elevator Compa Sacked Storage Capacity 40,000 Sacks We carry a full line of clein grain and feed of all_kinds. 3 ees Millers and Grain Dealers Buyers of Livestock of all Kinds NET Bulk Storage Capacity 175,000 bushels Cottonwood Milling & ny Ltd. Our Specialty “Tip-Top” ~ \Hard Wheat Flour Also Pig-a-Boo Tank- age, oyster shells, sea-shells, meat scraps, scratch feed, mash feed, mill feed, buck wheat, rolled oats, rolled barley; rolled wheat and pulverized feed of all kinds. We buy in carload lots and save local freight and this saving is yours. \ Having the best equipped mill and elevator of its size in the northwest, , we are in a position to take gare of your wants. \We are prepared to clean your grain for seed purposes. Can either chop, roll or pulverize your feed. We Receive Stock Hogs Every Day jin the Year Except Sunday if delivered to the Jenny Farm and we pay you top market at all times If you have fat hogs, fat cattle or stock cattle for sale see us before you sell. 4 hogs every Monday, cattle or full car is in sight. We wheneve Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. Ue ae ee SEE TE EE teins and only S ea with Thors. Your Wife Needs a Rest By A Rest From Bending Over the Tub and Washboard Give her Machine . For Electricity ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE Sold on Monthly Payments Cottonwood, Idaho a rest from the hardest, most dreaded part of her week’s housework by getting her a Thor Electric Washing It will do.a good sized washing for her in an hour, make the clothes spotlessly clean,\saves wear on them Two Cents ‘an Hour Thousands of housewives have already \been blessed Why not do as much fonyour wife? Grangeville Electric Light and Power Co. US IS Sea err eee lifelong receive ra half Dr. Wesley F. Orr Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Building, Pacific and Nezperce Phones COTTONWOOD - -''- IDAHO Dr. J. E. Reilly DENTIST Nezperce and Bell ’phones NUXOLL BLOCK COTTONWOOD Dr. J. E. Smith : DENTIST Main Street - Cottonwood (One Door below Baker's Store) | | Dr. McKeen Boyce Graduate Licensed VETERINARIAN Calls answered day or night and satis- faction guaranteed. COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO Dr. C. Sommer VETERINARIAN Satisfaction Guaranteed. Cornrad Bosse res., north end town Both Telephones. ei CEE TUR Reeder pea DRAY AND TRANSFER ‘LINE COTTONWOOD O. D. HAMLIN, Prop Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice , JEU UR URU EPR El PUP PUP PLL EPL PUL PLR H. H. Nuxoll NOTARY PUBLIC List your farms with me Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood Let EUGENE MAUER —pDo YOUR— TAILORING CorToNwoop - IDAHO COTTONWOOD LOCAL F. E. & C. U. of A. RILEY RICE, Pres. A. JANSEN, Sec.-Treas. Meets ist and 3d Saturday of each month at 1 pm JOHN REILAND Contractor and Builder. Estimates furnished on any Class of Work. Repairing promptly attended to. The Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50c tonwood give us a trial. and 75c per night or $2.50 to $3.50 per week. When you are in Cot- Dad Rooke, Propr. WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE FOR SA 169 acres of land 6 miles from . For \descrip- tion and price- address Box 76, ° 4tA. Brady, Montana. FOUND—Abtomobile tire chain. Owner may have same by proving property andspayin for this ad. 4tf. Choice sei re Cot- tonwood Milling @ evator Co. 48tf FonS: Two sleighs, in fir8 class, condition. Inquire at Cottoxfwood Barn, * 52-tf. Montana Bayds7Geo. M. Reed. Poland China Hogsfor Sale Choice lo \ of Aegistered Poland China Boars, ~ gilts forsale. In qnire Howard McKinley. 46tf Stack Coal for Sale. We have wsupply cf slack coal for sale for hog feed, Madison Lumber Company. 47 FOR TRADE—Will trade $500 player piano foy~work horses. Horses must>fiot weigh under Public Sales. ‘It is now getting time for the farmers that are, contemplating holding a sale off their personal property to be seduring sale dates and I beg to advise the public on the Camas Prairie that I am still in the auction business and will be pleased to ie ag your sales in thé same businéss like manner I have heretoforé tried to do and should you wish to secure a date ask your local) printer to call up the Nez Perce Herald office and secure your date at’ my expense. So far this month everything is selling good horses and for the beneflt of the public that does not gct out in other parts as I do in conducting sales all over the. Northwest that the prospects for \a horse or mule market are not very encouraging as there-are 70,000 ‘to be turned loose in the Northwest*in the next | thirty days, hence it will flood the market. Wishing everyhody a prosperous New Year, I beg to remain, yours for business. / HARRY C. CRANKE, / the Farmers Uniéy Warehouse. — 51 Tip Top ig made of hard wheat. ‘Tt will give more es of better bread than any flour“on the market. 4tf. ~ Cottonwood Milling Co. Pehla OCR aie ctenetavet hl Choice “alfalfa Jey and at right prices. 4 io tf. Cottonwood Milling Co. Estray. Came ta my placé in December one black pig about‘three months old with both ears efopped. Owner may have same by paying for this ,ad and ex- 4tf FOR SALE—Pyrebred White Rock and uth Rock cocks. Inquire of TX Clark, the jynk man, ¢ 5-2 Notice of Special Meeting of Shareholders Notice; is hereby given that a spec- ial meeting of {he shareholders of the FARMERS \UNION WARE- HOUSE COMRANY, Ltd., of Cot- tonwood, Idaho, Will beheld in the I, O, O. F. Hall in Gotfonwodd, Idahe, on Tuesday, February 11, 1919, at 1:00 o'clock, P. M., far the purpose of amending the Articles of Incorpoy- ation of said company, authorized capital to. $50}0000.00. Datdd this 7th day ok January, 1919. / A. O. Martain, Secretary. 2-tf Farm For Sale. Near Fenn, Idaho. Forced Sale 320 acres, well improved with house and barn, ovet 200 acres under the Price $57.82 per acre, $5500¢ cash, 6 1-2 per cent. interes’ on balance. Can give immediate podgesion. Grangeville Savings & Trust Co., 4t2. Grangeville, Idaho. Seed Oats for Sale Seed oats for sale. dolph Schro@der, Cottonwood, Inquire of Ru- 4-tf. Cottonwoed National Farm hoan. Association Long term loan on farm lands at 5$ per cent. Bring ys your loan, ‘Epcar G, FRY FeLix MARTZEN ‘ Pres. Sec.-Treas. Notice to Stockholders The Cottonwood Water & Light Company ‘Ltd. will hold its regular annual meetipg6f the stockholders in the city-eouncil room on Monday Feb. 10th; 1919 a 10%eelock a. m. 4tf Felix Martzen Pro-Tem. Sec’y. Dry Zensal Mbist Zensal Use one of hese clean, odorless { ointments fox vouy“skin troub- les. Dry 7e' gives speedy relief te all foftys of dry eczema and pimples. \Moist Zensal soothes Aund healy the watery eruptions. 75c a far. THEO. F. SCHAECHER Notice for Publication Department of the Interior, United States Land | FELIX MARTZEN | Real Estate, Loans, Fire and Life Insurance Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and i save 35 to 45 per cent on your insurance Office at Lewist ho, January 3, 1919 Notice is hereby ¢ hi JOHN NUTTMANN of Keutervillle, Idaho, who, on Jnly 2, 1914, made additional homestead entry No, 05622 for SEt NE}, Section 33, SWi NWt, and Wi Swi township 31 north, range west has filed notice of intention to make three-yea' proof, toestablish claim to the land above de- scribed, before Hampton Taylor U. $. Commis- ocers. Ti For sale By all gi Top flour. Cottonwood Milling Co. 4tf. | iene pgm: Cacnasty =ithcegg reduced er puaished. sioner at Grangeville, Idaho, on the 12th day of February, 1919. Ciai 1 Joseph C, Mader. Bernard H. Schmidt. Dantel W. 2 AN + increase the | 5. 1200 pounds. Inquire Nau fur- Auctioneer, niture store. 5-tf | 3tf Nez Perce, Idaho. Received, a caxlgfd of alfalfa hay at STATEMENT. Showing cost of new road con- struction by the Cottonwood} Highway [District for the year| 1918, Total of vouchers charged to wading... here eevee e+ $30,501.69 Less material oh hand.- 106.00 ¥ COST OF GRADING Which is distributed as follows: \ Earth, 19,203.9 cubic yards at 30,395.69 36c\per yard » 6,913.41 T.oose Rock 5,844.6 cubic yards at Se per yardy....secccs+-+ 3,313.18 Solid rock, 8,149.6 cubic yards ‘at 2.05 peg yard... c..ee+, 16,706.68 Overhaul... « 233.21 Extra work 25,07 Grading of first njile north of of Cottonwood, by day labor 3,154.15 TOTAL Ay 30,395,69 BRIDGHS AND CULVERTS ‘Total of vouchers charged to bridges and culverts... 7,139.34 Less material on hand 229.69 6.909.65 HOQUIPMENT ‘Total of vouchers ‘charged to eqnipment......toececu 891,35 Less equiptment of hand . 819.50 71.85 MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS Not apportigqned ...)..- -..+ 368.81 Administration & ‘doarrialoa 1,375.97 Engineering. .....-+ Resi 3,091.11 | ‘Total net cost, of construction 42,231.08 NOTE; In additlon ho the above there are vou- chers for $569.53 shown 4n the books which are for items that did not enter into the construction of new roads therefore ar@ not included in this report. \ I hereby certify to the correctness of total amount expended as shown by vouchers. J.%, NASIT J. F. JRNNY. Secretary and\Treasurer, I. A. J. Warren do hereby certify that the amounts as shown in. the report are’ correct. 1 A. J. WARREN, Engineer in charge. Ep L.. Jessup, Chairman NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the Probate Court, County of Idaho, State of Idaho. Attest: er C. Johnson, Deceased. Notice is hereby given, that Letters of Administration on the estate of Grover C, Johnson, deceased, were granted to the undersigned on the 23rd day of January, 1919, by the Probate Court of Idaho gounty. All persons having claims against said estate are\required to exhibit them to me for allowance at the office of F, E. Fogg in the City of Grange- ville, Idaho within 4 months after the | date of the first publication of this notice, or they shall be\forever barred. Dated this 23rd day of January 1919. Fred' Johnson, Administrator. - First publication January 31, 1919, F. E. Fogg, Attorney for Admin- istrator, Grangeville, Idaho. 5-4 Dr. Cora E. Alcorn Office, Ferdinand Dr. Reily J..Alcorn ALCORN HOSPITAL FERDINAND, IDAHO Open to all Reputable Physicians MODERN IN EVERY RESPECT Oiling the Wheels. No one can afford to let another per son exceed in politeness, and there is nothing in the world that will oil the, wheels of life like the lubricant of cour- tesy. No one will chide you for not being in good form, ‘even if you should slip in a few obsolete terms. For in this busy age each one is an arbiter of fashien himself. It would be a refreshing thing to introduce a few of the old-fashionec variety of social amenities—at least 't | would be refreshing to the elders of | some of the boys and¢girls of the pe- rtod. “Nemesis.” Nemesis was a goddess of justice and divine retribution, The word comes from a Greek verb meaning to deal out, distribute, dispense. In Greek mythol- ogy Nemesis was u goddess personi- fying allotment, or the divine distribu- tion to every man of his precise share of fortune, good and bad. It was her special function to see that the proper proportion of individual prosperity wes preserved, and that anyone who be- ant “nates as witnesses: | eame too prosperous or was too much uplifted by his prosperity should be ith the exception of| ° Tn the matter of the estate of Grov- | | Try it in your daily life and see. | 1 | the rock which we 4 'Farmers Controt Legis'at Farmers and stockraisers control the lower house of the Fifteenth legisla- ture and its most important committee, x the appropriation committee; which handles the draw strings of the state’s purse, Et Thirty-two of the representatives are either individually have such large active farmers or } farming {and stock interests that, they might properly be regarded as representing the farmers when they pass on legislation. Although profess onal agitators fre- quently seck to confuse the publie by declaring that lawyers are making the laws of the stat has only seven present house of re the legal profession entatives in the ves. Those engaged in either farming or ising or both, are am Allard, Powe Fremont; Alfred 8. W. G. Baird, Frem (. A. Browning, Lewis; HH. W. ‘anficld, Latah; N. 8. Carpenter, Nez T'erce Lt. Conover, in Falls; ©. ¥. Coes, Tetow: P. J, uct, Owyhee; Minidéka; Irel Gud- (also Cles Johnson, Kéotenai; Idaho; Victor La \ McGowan, Custer; ©. J, Miller, Twin Falls; J. Nielson, Bonneville, (also runs store) ;“Geo A. Patterson, Val- ley; ©. R. Peckman, Canyon; August Schroeder, Idaho; 1H} n Severson, Jef- terson; W. 8. Shea Nez Peree; FE. A. Stanger, Bonneville; R. L. Sutclifge. Butte; I. A. Thompson, Adams; ©, W. Weeks, Canyon; Carrie Harper White, Twin Falls; E. D, Whitman, Bannoek, / (also runs store); Soren Yrogensen, Bingham. This lineup gives the farmers and stockraisers one vote less than the 33 necessary if. a question should come up that would divide the house along ‘‘class’’ lines, but a een- sus shows that R. 1. Thomas, Shoshone, is a barher, and T, J, Boyrne, Bannock, is a railroad conductor, and as labor is making a move to amalgamate with farmers these might swing the balance of power in favor of the farmers, ? Dr. Emma F, A, Drake, Payette, and Dr, C. 8. Moody, Bonner, are the only physicians in the organization, T. McParland Gough, Washington, represents the editors whom agitators charge with dabbing in the legislature too much, He runs the Midvale Repor- ter. / ; Speaker M. A, Kiger, Kootenai, is a lawyer. \Other lawyers are T. E,.Ben- net, Godding; A. UH. Featherstone, Shoshone; R. L. Givens, Ada; L, 8, Harrison, Shoshone; W. H. yer, Ada; and D, L. Young, Ada, W. L. Adamson, Blaine; W. 8. Hall, Oneida; H. WH, Hoff, Bear Lake; J. D, Robertson, Ada, Lewis Robbins, Bingham, devote all their time to mer- chandising. sent as follows: G. BL Allen, Anderson, Lat: Woley, Canyon: Jaume ©, O. Greenwood mundsen, © Frank merchant) ; water; Charles Seth D. Jones, », Camas; R, L, Harrison, for control and Lumbermen are A, lL, Bonnell, Ban; Beecher’ Hitchcock, Bonner; @. A, MeDonald, ; ond H, AL Pugh, Gem. R, 8. Hunt, Madison, is eattleman; C. J. Hugo, garage; A. I. MeM abstracter; C, M,. ¢ iner, Boise, runs a grain elevator; A. J. Kent, Boundary déals in real estate and grain; Daniel Kirby, Elmorc interested in mining; IW. Oh, Lemhi, is a mining engi- neer; C. D, Storey, Ada, is a contractor; Georgo O’Dwyer, Benewah, is interested and A, H. Morgan, an educator. nock; Kooten 2 banker and , Tuns a* non, Lincoln, is an} Snow, in a warehouse, Wavhington, peseiCiron, Copeew tions NO DANGER OF IRON FAMINE Methods of Extracting Ore Will Keep Pace With Demand That Is Bound to Be Enormous, That tron is the very basis of our industrial civilization will be admitted by the thoughtful, and many of our greatest supplies of iron ore are be- ing rapidly depleted beeause of the Increased per capita consumption of iron the world over, an increase which is destined to be greater in the future when the races in Asia and Africa in- crease their consumption of tron, These conditions of increasing con- sumption and decreasing reserves have often in the past, particularly about the beginning of this century, been used to create a scare, on the ground that our supplies of usable ore were ng so rapidly depleted that their exh on would occur within two or three 1s. This is a preposte asserts Chemical E: 1s we lower the pei generati rous point of view, ineering, because age of iron in ll “ore” the quan- tity of such ore increases at a rate out of all proportion to the decrease in iron content, and as we use leaner and leuner ores technical improvements will be made which will minimize any tendency to increased cost of produc- tion. he same t has happened in gold, silver, copper and other ores, and today copper ores are being work- ed with only 1 1-15 per cent of copper | fn them. Wool of the Llama. 4 The wool of this curious animal fs | largely in use in Bolivia, where the | traveler may see Indian women, sit- ting before their huts and spinning the wool, while’ they ‘watch their flocks, These women use hand looms, on which they make blankets and shawls, oe