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s COTTONWOOD division on the coast arrived in| Cottonwood the first of the week. Two cars of hogs were shipped | out of the local yards this week. One car was shipped by Car] Kill- mar and the other by John Baer, | ‘sto Armour & Co. of Spokane. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nash are up from the river and spend- ing a few days with their daugh- ters, Margaret and Isabelle, who are attending school here. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hocker- smith and son of Grangeville} spent Sunday in Cottonwood vis- iting at the home of Mr. Hocker- smith’s brother, Wess. B. H. Oliver of Greencreek ex- pects to leave scon for Clarkston, where his family is at the present | residing. The Olivers intend to} make Clarkston their future home. | H. W. Miller of Greencreek | was a business visitor in Cotton-| wood Sunday. While in town | Mr. Miller paid the Chronicle a| visit and advanced his subscript- ion to the family journal for an-} other year. If you are looking for vGults | with your, hogs, you nfust feed TANKAGX. We buy it in car- load lots, any feedit year in and Know s | | i year out, an its value. We offer it to” you at the right | price. Cottonweod Milling .& Elevatof Co. Ltd. Ed Rose and brother were pass- engers for Grangeville Saturday | evening. Mr. Rose at the present ] i the A. ee ge ey iepnoy ol bt ples to | Was a Cottonwood visitor Satur- | j j ni goon strike an. abundant flow of /G2¥- While in ‘town Mr. Von water. Atthe present time the| Bargen made the Chronicle a drillers are down about 220 feet | pleasant call. Tom Randall was a passenger | Tuesday morning for Lewiston and Spokane on business. August Von Bargen of Fenn | gaged in the harness business in | With her sister, Mrs. A. L. Creel- Cottonwood but now located at}man. Mrs. Creelman has just Brady, Mont., says in a letter to |recently recovered from a severe the Chronicle that they are now|2ttack of influenza. having California weather there. All returning soldier and sailor He also sta‘es that itis not un-| boys will please apply to John common to see the farmers disc- | Funke for blanks to be filled out ing and harrowing. | by the defenders of liberty. This John Jess, son of Mr. and Mrs. | |information will be used Henry Jess of Winona has just | book soon to be published, entit- been released from a German} jled “State War History.” a camp according to information| Eventually you will uy Tip that has reached Cottonweod. | ToP: why not order some today? When word was received from him | Jalon your grocer /or on us, we Send for Booklet “The ABC of Home Painting” It tells how to paint, varnish, stain or enamel every surface in and around your home, with a fair flow of water. | Mrs. J. V. Nash is spending a | Martin V. Huff, formerly en-| few days in Lewiston this week |‘ in a} That’s what decides the kind of varnish you want Sc water, takes a rich, high polish; Py AND VICINITY (j Personal Mention and Local | , Happenings of the Week . Chester Nuxoll visited friends | in Ferdinand Saturday. R. S. Curless of Melrose was a Cottonwood business visitor Sat- urday. L. C. McMahan was a_passen- ger for Lewiston Tuesday morn- ing. John McDonald was among ee from Lewiston visiting here | Beene it atpvagtiee’ uesday, your piano is varnish, Clem Hussman left for Spokane Saturday morning where he ex- : pects to attend school. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Jenny re- turned Monday morning froma trip to outside points. : Miss Margaret Miller enter- > taineda number of friends at her | Th iy i e at wear-resisting finish ; home Thursday evening. ok yout Bedein Handle sé : Bert Bemis of the Miller Man- also varnish. ufacturing Co., of Grangeville The Sherwin-Williams was a business visitor in Cotton- Company makes both— Mrs. C, A. Johnson and daught- liaahen tools and toys. er, Margaret, spent Sunday visit- il Here you have the two , ing with friends and _ relatives at) eager Aadbiody oloses' Waa eA hundred other surfaces, Miss Martha Lehman, 38rd | requiring’a special varnish i * grade teacher of the public school —all made by the Sherwin- visited friends in Ferdinand Sat- Williams Company. ‘ urday and Sunday. In the same way it has Frank Enne King of Keuterville| | aan RN mst who had been assigned to aspruce | fvelend younone doers surfaces and makes a var- nilntoreath=-andauetine best meets the kind of wear that each such surface gets, of large manuf AR-NOT| FOR INTERIOR WORK The steam from\a radiator, the heat of e dish or-the splash. of, boiling has no efféct on Scar-Not. by furniture manufacturers. other pata gets. out-of-doors surfaces. WITH <SHERWIN- ) PAINTS &-VARNISHES Hoene Hardware Company Tt extensively used acturers in many lines. To The Farmers And Stockmen Having recently opened a har- ness and repair shop in Cotton- wood and knowing that such an institution is very much in need in this city I will appreciate all | patronage that farmers and stock- }men can give me in this line. Al- {so carry a full line in the harness, whips, robes, curry combs, brush- es, collar pads, ete. J. M. Johann. i. E. Magnus Ingleton’s New Story Filmed For Triangle Artists. “Who Is to Blame?’. magazine story and Monday’ ofeach, week. | T. | Clark, theJunk man. 4.8 | et Ae Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lemons, Help Wanted, by the Red Cross. The Red Cross is baal in need of workers. We have 25 garments| for Belgian children to be gotten | out as soon as possible. Every- | one is urged to come Tuesdays and Fridays. C.M. McMahon, Sec. ee eee HIGHEST. CASH PRICE PAID. For any \amo of poultry, Will receive dbfays on Saturday who were recently married at Lewiston passed through Cotton-} by E. Magnus Ingleton, author of the recent Triangle success, “Her Americ | can Husbanw,” has been sec reened for, ‘ture will be, theatre on. Triangle fans. This p shown at the Qrpheptr ma Sunday night. \ Jack Livingston ‘cast -the leading | role in “Whe Is TéBlame He ap. pears as a young /and successfnl lawe | yer. Jack Abbé, the talented Japax | nese juvenile who had aa important. art in “Her American \Husband,” | will be seen‘a@s “Taro Sam,’ Others | in the cast who have important roles | are Maude/Wayne, Lillian Langdor \ pearance jn drama, the former comedy’ beauty having been selected for Liv-' by his parents he had been re-| |both deliverMfree of charge. Cot- leased from a German prison | tonwood Mill & Elevator Co. camp and was in Switzerland, en- | Ltd. : 5-tf| og 7 route to the allied lines. "The | Full bldad registergé” Poland | young soldier was fighting in} | China boar, you want France, when he was_ taken pris-| | for breeding, foi Would al- | oner by the Germans in October. |S0 consider e for fat hogs. ow a His parents expect to see him|Call up Lemacher home at any time. farm. 5. ington’s leading woman. |'This will be Miss Wayne's first ap: | 1 cate in Grangeville-—Free Press. | wood Saturday enroute to their ‘home on Salmon river. Their |many friends in Cottonwood wish |them happiness and prosperity in their new state of life. Miss Hazel Calhoun, trained |nurse, of Cottonwood, has in- |formed the Free Press that she | has been obliged to goto south Idaho to recuperate from effects jof Spanish influenza, and will temporarily be unable to answer calls in this locality. She will ,returnjn about a month and lo- . | What Are You Going to Varnish? | OR FLOORS Floors are walked on, danced on, and furniture is dragged over them. The: are scrubbed and swept and rubbed Mar-Not meets these conditions, holds its looks and gives you long service. A varnish cannot be all things to all surfaces. "The Sherwin-Williams Company makes a special varnish for floors because floors get a kind of wear that no And the same is true of furniture and woodwork and In Mar-Not (for floors), Scar-Not (for woodwork and furniture) and Rexpar (for outdoor-surfaces) it has solved the varnishing prob- lem of these surfaces just as. it has solved the finishing problem of hundreds + The Sherwin-Williams dealer in your towa carries these three great home varnishes,» Tell him what surface you want to varnish and he will give you the right kind for your purpose. BRIGH TEN UP AMERICA! WILLIAMS Weather is relentless in its attacks on vainish. Rexpar can be Sescigear to ye cold, rain or snow, or even subme: under water, and still retain its lustre yond never turn white, en Manufacturers of Flour Shorts, Bran and Rolled Feed Farm Machinery Flying Dutchman Gang Plows, Monitor Drills, Drag Har- rows, Flying Dutchman Manure Spreaders, Gas Engines Fanning Mills, Wire Fencing, Farm Gates & We are always in the market for your GRAIN We Receive Fat Hogs Every Monday Groceries FARMERS UNION WAREHOUSE MILLING & ELEVATOR CO., Ltd.