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|. | Cottonwood Milling & ‘Elevator Company Ltd. We carry a full line of clean grain and feed of all_kinds. @ position to take care of your wants. We are prepared 8eéd purposes. Millers and Grain Dealers Buyers of Livestock of all Kinds Bulk Storage:Capacity 175,000 bushels Sacked Storage Capacity 40, 000 Sacks 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. 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 to clean your grain for Can either chop, roll or pulverize your feed. We Receive Stock Hogs Every Day in the Year Except Sunday if delivered to the Jenny Fatt and we pay you top market at all times If you have fat hogs, fat cattle or stock cattle for sale see us before yousell. We receive hogs every Monday, cattle whenever a half or full car is in sight. “|. Have YourCars Overhauled Atid Batteries taken care of during the winter months . This is a good time to have this work done and when spring comes and the roads get in ae shape your car will be ready for business e never were in better shape than right now to handle this work. Bring in your cars be- fore the spring rush. We have an expert electrician who specializes on elec- trical appliances on cars. COTTONWOOD GARA GE STEWART & JASPER, Proprietors Automobiles and Accessories Repairing, Etc. i “Every Member of the Firm a Booster” DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE / 0. D. HAMLIN, Prop. Light and Héavy Hauling Done on Short Notice A n og Sitoke EL SANITAIRE CIGARS ee For that mild after dinner smoke. 10c two for 25c Havana 5, Skokum and Idanha | The 6c Cigar of Quality Sects ee Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. 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. McKeen Boyce VE ERI State: for Idaho and Lewis Counties COTTONWOOD IDAHO Dr. C. Sommer VETERINARIAN Satisfaction Guaranteed. Conrad: Bosse res., north end town Both Teleptiones, H. H. Nuxoll NOTARY PUBLIC List your farms with me Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood Let EUGENE MAUER .—DO YOUR— TAILORING CoTtTonwoop - IDAHO COTTONWOOD LOCAL F. E. & C. U. of Av RILEY RICE, Pres. A. JANSEN, Sec.-Treas. Meets Ist and 3d Saturday of each month at 1 pi JOHN REILAND Contractor and Builder. Estimates furnistied on any Class of Work. Repairing promptly attended to. H. TAYLOR Lawyer Bank of Camas Ptairie Bldg., Grangeville, Idaho. Practice in all the courts. FELIX MARTZEN Real Estate, Lodns, Fire and ife Insurance Insuré in the Northwestern Mutual and save 35 to 45 per cent én your insurance Dr. J. D. SHINNICK PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Butler Bldg, : Choice aii ty For sale Cot-|Ebadt G. Fay = \ dred at Cottonwood. ww WANTS, FOUND AND FOR ‘SALE -WANTED — Men at Krieger sawmill Keuterville. 17-2 FOR SALE=Ten foot single dise drill in good shape. Inquire of Tony Baune. 16-3p FOR SALE—One Altman-Tay- lor threshing machine complete. Inquire at this office. 17-3p FOR SALE - Rhode Island Red eggs for setting from good layers. Inquire of Mrs. Charles Staal. 12-8 FUR SALE — Fifty cords of 16-inch wood. TT. Clark, the junk man. 15-4 For Sale—De Inve cream sep- arator No. 15. Also good fresh milk cow. Inquire at this Office. ‘Ttt FOR SALE—Chatham fanning mill, Flying Dutchman 14 inch gang plow, Osborne disc, Van Brunt single disg drill, span of work horses and. harness—choice of 12 head. Henry J, Schaeffer, Ferdinand. . &tf FOR SALE—Netted Gem seed potatoes all.sacked for $1 a hun- Inquire of George McPherson or call me up on Nezperce phone. 14-tf All kinds of garden seeds and good dry onion sets at Baker & Son. 10-tf We have received our new Strauss Brothers sample book of|' Taylor Made Clothes, Prices very feasonable. Come in and let us take your measure for that spring suit. Fit guaranteed. J. V. Bak- ér & Son. 10-tf Walter Robbins has begun the op- eration of a dray line and solicits the business of the city. Leave erders at the Cottonwood barn. 3tf Anyohe wanting 4 complete tractor outfit see W. R_ Rogers, Cottonwood, Idaho. 8-tf Tip Top is made of hard wheat. It will give more loaves of better bread than any flour,on the market. 4tf. Cottonwood Milling Co. Choice alfalfa hay and at right prices. 4tf. Cottonwood Milling Co. 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 If it is good. alfalfa hay who want at the right price call on the Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Co. _9-tf If you are looking for results with your hogs, you must feed TANKAGE. 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 Eventually you will buy Tip Top, why not order some today? Call on your grocer or onus, we both deliver free of charge. Cot- tonwood Milling & Elevator Co, Ltd. B-tf For. the Velie car see W. R. Rogers. 13-tf The Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50c and Lact gal ht or $2.50 to $3.50 pér week. en you are in Cot- tonwood sine us a trial. Dad Rooke, Propr. Harry C. Cranke, auction- eer. Select your dates at the Chronicle office. Dr. Reily J. Alcorn Dr. Cora E. Alcorn Office, Cottonwood Office, Ferdinand ALCORN HOSPITAL FERDINAND, IDAHO to all Reputable Physicians MODERN IN EVERY RESPECT Cottonwood National Farm Loan Association Long term loans on farm lands at 54 percent. Bring us your loan, i: VIEW OF U. S. CAPITOL DURING PAINTING, The dome of the United States Capitol at Washington is kept in excel- lent condition by painting it every few years, For this work forfy painters are steadily empldyed for three months’ time, Over five thousand gallons of - paint are required for one coat. The'réason for painting the Capitol dome at regular intervals is to prevent disintegration of metallic surface, to tee e War's Effect on Automobile Industry Passenger ° Phallnicie of 1918 Only 60 Per Cent of That EBL Bo oom yr aca } er Because of its importance in what has been termed a “war of mo tors”— has suffered substantially in the making of its normal product, according to Alfred Reeves, general manager of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce. Passenger-car makets in some instances were almost - entirely engaged on war materials when the armistice was signed and have had some difficulty in getting back to a peace basis. Contracts taken were not alone for cars and trucks but for guns, mine anchors, helmets, field kitchens, airplane motors, tanks, tractors, shells, depth bombs, and similar material which could be made by the modern equipment of the motor-car plants. : Passenger-car production was almost 700,000 cars short of 1917, being only 60 per cent of that year, while truck production increased from 128,157 to 219,056, or 70 per cent. Automobile manufacturers’ are now returning to normal production, but it will take some months. This year’s production of passenger cars may not even reach the 1917 mark. The scheduled production of commercial vehicles for 1919 is 350,000. The following figures are interesting in showing the war’s effect on automobile making; the third largest manufacturing industry in this country : y; . 1917 1918 Passenger cars produced in United States......e. ' 1,737,151 1,044,754 Commercial cars produced in United States. 128,157 219,056 1'$1,053,505,781 $801.087,025 $20,082,668 $434,168,092 65,375 87,172. 14,876 9,904 $50,026,358 $87,797,615 . $2704 049,184 $25,741,080 ss 041,276 5,045,442 Wholesale value passenger cars: produced... Wholesale value commercial cars prodyced. Exports passenger Cars ..eeeceeseeeeee Exports motor trucks..... Value of passenger cars exporte Value of motor trucks exported. Motor vehicles registered in United s es (Of this number about 480,000 are tracks.) April, 1917, to December, 1918. Value of war contracts assumed by automobile and truck man- ufacturers (more than) . Passenger cars ordered by government 88, Motor trucks ordered by ‘government .. 204,780 Passenger cars produced on war contracts.. 18,726 Motor trucks produced on war contracts eeeeece 90,727 Passenger cars shipped overseas for American expeditionary S) PADOGR' 01d! cin dace sheen sion gene Kogtatevachatiasss cakieay ee ose 7,004 Moter trucks shipped OVETSCDS <ceccsecccvccceccsccarecscoes 64,348 Army trucks requisitioned by post office department for postal HORVICE .icccccoveccnccccsecsosesetrcncessemamseesawes® 16,170 Federal taxes paid on sales of automobiles and trucks duriag twelve months ended Sept. 30, 1918....esccccceseeseeesvcese 678 THE PRICE OF VICTORY By FRANKLIN K. LANE, Secretary of the Interior What is Victory worth? What would we have given this time last year to have been assured of Victory? What pledge would we have not made? And now that our men have won will we hesitate to pay the bill? They paid, those boys of the Argonne, in blood and life. They will pay, many of them, through all-their long lives in suffering and in weakness. Every soldier that we see is a challenge to our hearts and to our pockets, They will not be a reproof. Their eyes will never say that we are, what they never were, quitters. We, too, can carry on. Generous they were and generous we will be. Our pride we will prove by thanksgiving, not in words but in dollars loaned to Uncle Sam to pay for bringing the boys back, for the guns that, were never used, for the ships that were not sunk, for the care of the men who did not die, for the rebuilding of the men who almost “went West.” All the wise men said it will be the fall of '19 before the Kaiser will be driven into his own country. Our money would have gone throughout the year to make that hope good. But the Hun was driven back. He lost heart and cried “Kamerad!” a year before the promised time. And the Kaiser fled, a fugitive from a beaten nation—and so short a time since he had been in part- nership with “Gott’! How many Victory Bonds was it worth to hear that news? Victory is not ours until we have earned it, paid for it and got the receipt in the peace treaty, with a guarantee that we shall hold what we have won—the right to live in peace. Your Liberty Bond paid tor the gun that drove him into exile. And your Victory Bond will make sure that he will not come back. : The Chronicle “ta"|Can Handle Your Job Work. Try Us under the sea, on land, and in the air—the automobile industry *