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<9 } a Bulk Storage Capacity 175,000 bushels Sacked Storage Capacity 40,000 Sacks | Our Specialty “Tip-Top” Hard Wheat Flour We carry a full line of clean grain and feed of all kinds. 5 - 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 Weare prepared to clean your grain for ' a position to take care of your wants. D Can either chop, roll or: pulverize your feed. , seed purposes. We Receive Stock Hogs. Every Day in the Year Except Sunday if delivered to the Jenny Farm and we pay you top market at all times Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. Cottonwood Milling & - Elevator Company Ltd. Millers and Grain Dealers Buyers of Livestock of all Kinds = - If you have fat hogs, fat cattle or stock cattle for sale see us before you sell. hogs every Monday, cattle or full car is in sight. We whenever a half RR Your Wife Needs a Rest A Rest From Bending Over the Tub and Washboard Give her a_ lifelong rest from the hardest, most dreaded part of her week’s housework by getting her a Thor Electric Washing Machine It will do a good sized washing for her in an hour, make the clothes spotlessly clean, saves wear on them and only Two Cents an Hour with Thors. Ss For Electricity Thousands of housewives have \already been blesséd Why not do as much for your wife? ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE Sold on Monthly Payments Grangeville Electric Light and Power Co. Cottonwood, Idaho i Also | Pig-a-Boo Tank- receive Dr. Wesley F. Orr Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Building. Pacific and Nezperce Phones COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO Dr. J. BE. Reilly DENTIST Nezperce and Bell ‘phones NUXOLL BLOCK COTTONWOOD Or eee Sr ee ee ve =) SEA oe enero ore DRAY COTTONWUZOOD AND TRANSFER LINE 0. D. HAMLIN, Prop Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice eee 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, H. H. Nuxoll NOTARY PUBLIC List your farms with me Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood Let EUGENE MAUER —DO YOUR— TAILORING CoTToNwoop - IDAHO COTTONWOOD LOCAL F. E. & C. U. of A. RILEY RICE, Pres. ey 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 and 75c per night or $2.50 to $3.50 per week. When you are in Cot- tonwood give‘us a trial. Dad Rooke, Propr. FELIX MARTZEN Real Estate, Loans, Fire and Life insurance | Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and | Save 35 to 45 percent on your insurance | Clark, the Junk man. WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE FOR SALE—160 acres of land 6 miles from town. For descrip- tion and price address Box 76, 4t4. Bracly, Montana. FOUND~Automobile tire chain. Owner may have same by proving property and payin for this ad. 4tf. Choice alfalfa hay for sale. Cot- tonwood Milling & Elevator Co, 48tf For Sale. Two sleighs, in first class condition. Inquire at Cottonwood Barn, 5 2-tf, Geo. M. Reed. Montana Lands. Slack Coal for Sale. We have a supply cf slack coal for sale for hog feed. Madison Lumber Company. 47 Tip Top is made of hard wheat. It will give more loaves of better bread than any flour cn the market. 4tf. Cottonwood Milling Co. Choice alfalfa hay and at prices. Ath. Cottonwood Milling Co. FOR SALE—Purebred White Rock and Plymouth Rock cocks. Inquire of T. Clark, the junk man. ; 5-2 right Notice of Special Méeting of Shareholders Notice is hereby given that a spec- ial meeting of the shareholders of the FARMERS UNION WARE. HOUSE COMPANY,’ Ltd., of Cot- tonwood, Idaho, will be held in the I. O. O. F, Hall in Cottonwood, Idaho, on Tuesday, February, 11, 1919, at 1:00 o'clock, P. M., for the purpose of amending the Articles of Incorpor- ation of said company, to increase the authorized capital to $50,0000.00. ' Dated this 7th day of January, 1919. A. O. Martain, Secretary.—2-tf. Eventually you will buy Tip Top, why not order some today? ‘Call on your grocer or on us, we both deliver free of charge. Cot- tonwood Milling & Elevator Co. Ltd. 5-tf Cottonwood National Farm Loan Association Long term loans on farm lands at 54 per cent. Bring us your loan, Epcar G. Fry FELIX MARTZEN Pres. Sec.-Treas. Notice to Stockholders The Cdttonwood Water & Light Company Ltd. will hold its regular annual meeting of the stockholders in the city council room on Monday Feb. 10th, 1919 a 10 oclock a. m. 4tf Felix Martzen Pro-Tem. Sec’y. Dr. Reily J. Alcorn Dr. Cora E, Alcorn Office, Cottonwood Office, Ferdinand ALCORN HOSPITAL FERDINAND, IDAHO Open to all Reputable Physicians MODERN IN EVERY RESPECT HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID. For any amount of poultry. Will receive always on Saturday and Monday of each week. T. 4-8 Full blood registered Poland China boar, just what you want for breeding, for sale. Would al- so consider exchange for fat hogs. Call up Halter and Lemacher farm. 5-2 Eventually you will buy Tip Top, why not order some today? Call on your grocer or on us, we both deliver free of charge. Cot- tonwood Milling & Elevator Co. Ltd. 5-tf (CaaS SR Te WR Dry Zensal Moist Zensal Use one of these clean, odorless ointments for vour skin troub- les. Dry Zensal gives speedy relief te all forms of dry eczema and pimples. Mois: Zensal soothes and heals the watery fj} eruptions, 75e a jar. THEO. F. SCHAECHER Notice for Publication Department of the Interior, United States Land Office at Lewist Notice is hereby given that JOHN NUTTMANN of Keutervillle, Idaho. who, on Jnly 2, 1914, made additional homestead entry No, 05622 for | sw 4 ho, January 3, 1919? ar | im to the land above de- | on ‘Taylor U. S. Commis- | angeville. Idaho, on the 12th day of 919. Claimant names as witnesses: proof, to establish c! scribed, before Har sioner at Februa: Public Sales Itis now getting time for the farmers that are ‘contemplating holding a sale of their personal property to be securing 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 conduct your sales in the same business like manner I have heretofore 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 with the ‘exception of horses and for the benefit 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 net very encouragin: as there are 70,000 to be turne 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, Auctioneer, 3tf Nez Perce, Idaho. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the Probate Court, County of Idaho, State of Idaho, In the matter of the estate of Grov- 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 county. All persons having claims against said estate are required to exhibit them to me for allowance at’ the office of I’. E. Fogg in the City of Grange- ville, Idaho within 4 months after the date of the first publieation 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 Call For Bids. The Board of Trustees of the Village of Cottonwood, Idaho, will receive bids up to March 8, 1919, for the furnishing of lumber as described below, same to be delivered in Cottonwood on or be- fore May 10, 1919: 25M feet bridge plank, 8x12, 16 feet. 5600 feet bridge plank, 4x6, 16 feet. Such lumber to be of a good grade of either fir or tamarack. Bidder to specify which he will furnish. Dated this 3rd day of February, 1919; M. M. BELKNAP, 6-1 Village Clerk. * If you are looking for results with your hogs, you must feed TA NKAGE. We buy it in car- load lots, and feed it year in and year out, and know its value. We offer it to you at the right price. Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Co. Ltd. 5-tf Strayed—From Grangeville Jast of November one mouse colored mule, weight 900 pounds, shod, brand 7 T on left shoulder. Mule was raised on Joseph plains by B. F. Taylor. Will pay liberal re- ward for information leading to recovery of same. Notify this office. 6-5 FOR SALE RECLEANED FIELD PEAS. A few hundred pounds of Bangalia field peas, clean, ready forthe seeder. Under the dry conditions of last year | this variety made a yield of 28 bushels per acre. R. J. Carlson at J. L. Weber ranch. 6-2p FOR SALE— White winter bar- ley. Free from foul stuff. R. J. Carlson. 6-2p Clyde Von Bargen Taxidermist Taxidermy work in all its branch- es. Birds. animals, game heads, etc., mounted true to life. Skins tanned and made into rngs. Send me your orders. Satisfaction guar- Joseph lader. Bernard H. Schmidt, Dantel W. For sale by all grocers. Tip Top; Mader, R. F. Bartlett, all of Keuterville, Idaho. jour. Cottonwood Milling Go. 4tf. |°* Henry Herrretp. Register. anteed. Prices reasonable. Both phones. Cottonwood, Idaho ALL HAVE DREADED’ GHOSTS Spirits Play a Most Important Part in the Lives of Primitive Peoples of the World. Ghosts are extremely ancient. The people of old who dwelt in caves were well acquainted with them, In the lives of primitive peoples of today a very important part is played by ghosts. Their is thickly populated with them, en a man sleeps his phantasm, which cannot . sleep, goes a-traveling. With this phantasm he ts quite fa- miliar, because it visibly attends him in the daytime, It is his shadow. Sav- * ages are usually more or less afraid of shadows. . ‘ To the savage, not only animate but even inanimate things have their. ghosts, Concealed within every object is a mystery—a nowmenon lurking be- hind the phenomenon, as a psycholo- gist would express the idea. In any rock there is fire hidden. One has only to strike {t with’ another piece of rock and sparks fly, Among the most appalling spooks that haunt the Iroquois {s a carntvor- ‘ous ghost that feeds on men, Bcho, in their belief, is a phantom that re- Peats their words mockingly among the hills. Particularly malevolent are certain huge heads, without bodies, that go flying about. paeeaien” NRE ee Se Where Americans Lead, The American is fascinated by novel problems, by ungauged and ungauge: able difficulties, He glories in butld- ing a Panama canal after Europe's most famous engineer had failed. Be- cause Europe had never ventured to’ build skyscrapers that is no reason why a Woolworth should not rear a structure more than 50 stories in the alr. For centuries man had dreamett of flying, but without success; yet two obscure American lads, nothing daunted, experimented until they con- quered the alr. The original McCor- mick was a farmer, not a mechante, but that did not deter him trom mak-+ ing up his mind to produce a machine which would cut grain, and he did not — give up until he had made both a reaper and a fortune, s Army Supplies, Sinee April 1, 1917, the army of the United States has been supplied with 5,877,000 overcoats, 8,069,000 woolen coats, 10,507,000 pairs of woolen. breeches, and 55,958,000 pairs of woolen socks. Motortrucks to the number of*17,988 have been sent over- sens and 9.860 motor ambulances have been provided, ‘Civil War Medical. History, The medical history of our Civil war comprises six volumes, whose prepara- tion covered a period of twenty-elght years from the end of the war, CUSTOM OF COLONIAL DAYS “Beating the Bounds” Was Enjoyed by the Boys More In America Than in England. I believe that, in earliest colonial days, boys also took part in a joyful outing, a public custom known as perambulating or beating the bounds, writes Alice Morse Earle, in her “Child Life in Colonial’ Days.” The memory of boundaries and division nes, of commons, public highways, etc, was kept fresh in the minds of the inhabitants by an old-time Aryan custom,—the walking around . them ance a year, noting lines of boundary and impressing these on the notice and memory of young people. To induce English boys to accompany these perambulations, !t°was custom- ary to distribute some little gratuity; this was usually a willow wand, tied at the end with a bunch of points, which were bits of string about eight inches long, consisting of strands of ¥ cotton or woolen yarn, braided or twisted together, ended by a tag of a bit of metal or wood. These points were used to tle the hose to the knees of the breeches; the waistband of the breeches to the jacket, etc. Long after points were abandoned as a portion of dress, the wands, with their little knot of points, were given. Pepys wrote, in 1661, that he heard that, at certain boundaries, the boys were smartly whipped to impress the bounds upon their memories. After the War Is Won. “Mr. Smith, this is Mr, Blanken- camp.” “Glad to know you.” “Glad to know y— Say; your name is awfully familiar. Didn’t you serve with the marines over at—?” “Why, yes!” ‘ “And didn’t you once lend me a ight when I was all out of briquet juice and happened to be going by your diggings with ap unlit pipe in my face?” “Seems to me I do remember a mutt with a phiz like yours, straying up in our neck of the woods one morning looking like a lost sou]; yes, I remem- ber swapping addresses with him after lghting his stove for him, So you're it, fre you?” “I am that—shake !” “Shake !”—Stars and Stripes. Rather Fastidious. “Copperhead” Lehew, our erstwhile orderly with 4 dilapidated shirt, ob- jects strenuously to escorting negro women around camp. He claims that if he had a good shirt it would not be so bad to walk with the women, but even in his old shirt he has been very * } Bet