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Sr ti The Place To Get Those FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS and that FRESH . BUTTERKIST POP CORN Bedsteads Library Tables Lounges" Dining Tables Davenports Dressers Dining Chairs Rocking Chairs All high-grade goods at lowest prices Complete line of Funeral Furnishings carried Both Phones. Calls answered day or night Naw’s Furniture Store Simon Bros. BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, ‘Pelts, and _ all. kinds of Poultry ~ COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Velie and Oakland Cars Having recently received the agency for the Velie and Oakland Cars for for Idaho county I will be pleased to’ give demonstrations in either of these makes at any time ‘to parties interested in the purchase of a ma- thane, °°) = >. Write or Phone Me Both Phones | W.R. Rogers, Cottonwood, Idaho ‘Wise up on ~ fobacco,” says Bick “A lot of you fel- Good taste, smaller * chéw, longer life iswhat lows are cheating makes Genuine Grave- yourselves out of ly costless to chew than real tobacco satis- ordinary plug. faction. That’s Write to:— what I get out of GENUINE ‘GRAVELY DANVILLE, VA, good old Gravely.” for booklet on chowinig plug. Peyton Brand: REAL CHEWING PLUG Plug packed in pouch ® Sa eR Ferdinand State Bank FERDINAND, IDAHO OA GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS DONE Our facilities for serving you are the best, and we aim to satisfy every customer. Your acqgunt is invited > peerer. President- | HENRY KUTHER, Vice-President F/M. BIEKER, Cashier E. J. KINZER, Assistant Cashier | ceptions, those who were left be- hind in Idaho also did their duty j Jand they also bore identification | tags of service. There were the, tags of the Red Cross and similar} j | organizations. There ‘weré the! | tags of the various liberty loans | || that_many so proudly wear. || theirs, and the further service of | _|and a half months will havé elaps- GEORGE MEDVED ISSUED EVERY FRIDAY ) as second-class mail matter. Strictly in Advance Independent iu Politics Copy for change of ad must be handed FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1919 THE HOME IDENTIFICA- TION TAG, Every soldier who went to) tag. On it was the. number that the record bearing his name and} other information, so that if he [readily identified. Thus marked our soldier boys went cheerfully about duty. With comparatively few ex- The Victory Loan is now upon! us. The people of Idaho are again asked to aid their govern- ment by accepting its perfectly | good interest-bearing note in ex-| And entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho. | = Subscription one year............. $2.00 F Sie mon thes oi ysi$ sets 050 0 es 31.25 | Sh in by Wednesday noon to insure change | ! France carried an identification | j corgesponded tothe number off should be killed he could be. ‘Thousands of them gave up| their lives and many more thous- | fie jands were wounded, They did | [fe their duty well. change for their funds, They have donea great deal | but after all the service of those who could not go with the boys! to France or to the various camps | was inconsequential compared to | assisting’in raising this new loan will stand out as only a_ small} item against the great record of | —lheroism written in France. by }i : uy American soldiers. 78) Cottonwood Chronicle 2% Them You Will Like Finest in quality, non-irritating Always perfect fitting Famous for durability and washability One hundred per cent right No binding - No gapping at crotch 10,000,000 Sold Annually For sale by The Most of the Best for the Least MUNSING UNION SUITS | SST rn in er ei ee Ree ee They were not quitters, Shall any of us be? \ We do not think any citizen wants to bein that category or can afford to be if he is in a posi- tion to assist the governmentiat this time, and we helieve, further- | more that this’ fifth liberty loan | tag of identification will be worn with more pridethan any of the others. : IF THE DEAD PARADED A Minnesota exchange figures it out*that if all the dead who haye béen slain in the great war were to parade by a given point, it would mean something as follows: Here come the Allies, marching twenty abrest and putting in every hour from sunrise to sunset. The French dead alone will take eleven days to pass our point of observation, The British dead will require ten days more. It will take five solid weeks for the} Russian dead to pass, and before the entire allied parade, including Serbians, Roumanians, Greeks and Americans have passed, two ed. The passing of the enemy dead will take six weeks more, | and one-third of thé-year will be gone before the last ofthe dead soldiers who fought on both sides? in this conflict will have passed | our reviewing station. It cost Uncle Sam an average of from France. To carry him from the battlefield or camp in France toa seaport cost $64; to transport! |him across the Atlantic, $62, and | to send him from the port .of, de=/ _barkation in this country to his} civilian home, $74, makinga total | jof $200. ; " lace? Woe eee The lure of the road is what is affecting many an auto owner! these days only he doesn’t know it. Sometimes it looks like the peace conferénce ‘needs a- pinch hitter to clean up the bases, , | } i { $200 to bring evéry soldier home: Pigs is pigs alright enough, and lumber is lumber, but an “Arkansas Razorback” is a poor hog and four - walls of lumber and a roof does not make a home. - Every man has his “ideal” of what he would like to have in his home, the sort of home he can build for the money he has to put into it. He has this ideal even though he cannot des- cribe it in exact words, “nor draw the darned thing out” on paper. To assist home builders and place the iatest ideas within reach of every-' one is what we offer in our free plan service to our customers We court an opportunity to show you and tell you . about this service, whether you intend to build now or later. Come in and look at our plan books or bring us your ideas and we will gladly help you to get just the kind of home you want. “The Home Builders” ‘Hussman Lumber Company