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ts Si Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. Millers and Grain D Buyers of Livestock of are ealers all Kinds 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. age, oyster shells, sea shells, meat scraps, scratch feed, wheat, rolled oats, rolled barley, rolled wheat and pul 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 Can either chop, roll or pulverize your feed. a position to take care of your wants. seed purposes. Also Pig-a-Boo Tank- mash feed, mill feed, buck verized feed of all kinds. 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 If you have fat hogs, fat cattle or stock cattle for sale see us before yousell. W. e receive hogs every Monday, cattle whenever a half or full car is in sight. Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. geecess Boost otoobete entero nebo ofesteobenboobbecdeobebeteobeteoberbeshobedeobo bee deeded Auto Supplies Gas and Oils Expert Attention Given to all branches of garage work at this shop. Being espe- cially equipped for such work we can handleall jobs with dispatch Come Here WITH YOUR Car Troubles Let our Trouble Fixer do the worrying =-It’s his business Everything for the motorist We are now in a position to do vulcaniz- ing of all kinds. Bring in your old cas- ings and tubes and give us a trial. Prices reasonable. COTTONWOOD GARAGE STEWART & JASPER, Proprietors Ee ELLEEEEEREEEEEDEDIEVEGEEEE EERE EEE EEE EE IEE EE EE EE EEE EEE TIF OT ee Se et fs (hteeeeny aaa Dr. Wesley F. Orr Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Building. $ Pacific and Nezperce Phones : COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO % Dr. J. E. Reilly %e * Ate DENTIST Nezperce and Bell phones NUXOLL BLOCK COTTONWOOD Dr. McKeen Boyce Deputy State VETERINARIAN for Idaho and Lewis Counties COTTONWOOD - - - IDAHO Fs + ” * 3 Dr. C. Sommer VETERINARIAN Satisfaction Guaranteed. Conrad 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 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 1pm JOHN REILAND Contractor and Builder. Estimates furnished on any Class of Work. Repairing promptly attended to. Cottonwood National Farm Loan Association Long term loans on farm lands at 54 per cent. Bring us your loan, Epcar G. Fry Pres. FELIX MARTZEN Sec.-Treas. FELIX MARTZEN Real Estate, Loans, Fire and Life Insurance Dr. J. D. SHINNICK PHYSICIAN and SURGEON Butler Blag, z 3 Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and save 35 to 45 per cent on your insurance WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE FOR SALE—At a bargain. :7- room house and 41% lots. _ In- quire of W. R. Rogers. 80-tf FOR SALE—Twenty cords.ot good 16-inch wood. Inquire-of Henry Nuttman. 86tf. FOR SALE—Two horse corn planter and a garden cultivator. Hussman Lumber Co. 86-4 FOR SALE—Harness, Sad- dles, collars and wood posts. See T. Clarke, the junk man on Sat- urdays and Mondays. 83-4 FOR SALE—820 acres of timber land 6 miles west of Cot- tonwood. Inquire H. F. Lute, Cottonwood, Idaho. 33-4* FOR SALE—The S14 of NEY and the E14 of SE, of Sec. 34 township 82 range 1 W. B. M. Call or address W. R. Rogers at once for rates and terms. 34-3 FOR SALE—One purebred, registered Holstein Bull Calf; almost white and of excellent lineage. A number of pure- bred Duroc Jersey (Red) pigs. Also one hundred Angora Goats. St. Michael’s. Monastery. 35-4 FOUND—Automobile license plate No. 37525. Owner can have same by paying for this ad. 36-4 LOST—Headlight rim fro an Elgin car near Cottonwood. Finder please leave at South & Frick and receive reward. 35t4 ESTRAYED—Came to my place about a year ago one brin- ble steer about a year and a half old. Branded H on left side, brand being hardly visible ind hard to make out. Owner can have same by paying pasture rent and for this notice. Call at this office for further informa- tion. 35-2 USED CARS FOR SALE. D-35 Buick. E-35 Buick. D-45 Buick. Overland. Ford. Jackson, The above cars have been put in good working order and are offered at low prices. 85tf HOENE HARWARE. POSITIVELY NO HUNTING. The undersigned parties will positively prohibit any hunting on the lands owned by them southwest of Keuterville. This action is taken by the under- signed parties on account of hunters leaving gates open and molesting stock. “Signed” ‘John Nuttmann Joe Mader Henry Nuttmann Sidney Brown Bernard Schmidt . Chas. Mader Dan Mader Henry Hatke Dick Riemann Frank Thyering Joe Enneking Frank Enneking Fred Enneking Frank Hatke Herman J. Uhlenkott Tony Sandschafer Joseph Uptmor B. H. Luchtefeld Herman Uptmor R. Romain Ray Bartlet Leo Rad Fred Wright Louise Bensching John Brocke Henry Rehder Rudolph Schroeder 32-4 FOR WATKINS REMEDIES See LEO P. SIMON At the Tailor Shop COTTONWOOD, IDAHO 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. 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 Open io ali Reputable Physicians MODERN IN EVERY RESPECT { MARK HYMAN Mark Hyman, who recently served as special assistant attorney general In the prosecution of some noted cases, has been appointed general counsel for the United States shipping board. He. succeeds Sherman R. Whipple of Bos- ton, who retired to private practice, Hyman is a native of Cincinnati, but has been practicing law in New York city. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION, Department of the Interior, U. S, Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, Aug- ust 20, 1919. Notice is hereby given that Joseph N. Blackburn, of Cottonwood, Idaho, who, on November 17, 1915, Decem- ber 10, 1915, made H. E. / 06067, & Additional H. E., No. 06077, for SE% SEM, See. 8, & SW% SE, & Sls SW, See. 9; & NEM, Section 17, Townsl.ip 80 North, Range 1 East, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of in- tention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above des- cribed, before the Register & Receiver of U.S. Land Office, at Lewiston, Idaho, on the 29th., day of September, 1910. Claimant names as witnesses: John N. Johann, Frank R. Black- burn, Sidney ‘Triplett, Charles A. Nave, all of Cottonwood, Idaho. 35-5 ~ Henry Heitfeld, Register NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION, Department of the Interior, U. s. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, Aug- ust 26, 1919. Notice is hereby given that Frank Rlackburn, of Cottonwood, Idaho, who, on March 80, 1915, made Homestead Entry, No. 06002, for E% SE%, Sec. 7, & N% SW%, Section 8, Township 80 North, Range 1 East, Boise Merid- ian, has filed notice of intention to muke three year Proof, claim to the fore the Register & Receiver of the U.S, Land Office, at Lewiston, Idaho, on the 29th. day of September, 1919. Claimant names as witnesses: Joseph N. Blackburn, John N. Johann, Newton J. Williams, Sidney Triplett, all of Cottonwood, Idaho, 35-5 Henry Heitfeld, Register, NOTICE FOR RE-PUBLICATION, Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, Aug- ust 16, 1919. Notice is hereby given that Mathias Albert Bingham, of Boles, Idaho, who, on April 29, 1915, made Homestead Entry, No. 06057, for S4% SW%, Sec- tion 6, & NE% NW%, NEM, & NE% SE%, Section 8, Township 80 North, Range 1 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the Jand above described, before Henry Telcher, Clerk of the District Court, at Grangeville, Idaho, on the 26th. day of September, 1919. Claimant names as witnesses: Frank Lord, Perry Nethken, Charles Sallee, Thomas O’Hern, all of Boles, Idaho. 34-5 Henry Heitfeld, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, Aug- ust 18, 1919. Notice is hercby Ferguson, for he deceased of Bol Idaho, who, on October 21, 1914, made Homestead Entry, No. 05796, for N%& SE%, Sec. 18, Tp. 30 N. R. 3 W., & Lot 3, E% SW%, NW% SEX, & ESE, See- tion 18, Township 30 North, Range 2 West, Boise Meridian, has _ filed notice of intention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before the Reg- ister and Receiver, U. 8, Land Office, at Lewiston, Idaho, on the 25th day of September, 1919. Claimant names as witnesses: Richard P. h, Edward Wiley William A. Ferguson, Asa Jones, all of Boles, Idaho. 84-5 Henry Heitfeld, Register. given that Mae of James Wiley, Our “Idaho Gold” and “Tip Top” are like history, they re- peat. 24-tf Try a load of our mill wood, it is ideal for summer use. Hussman Lumber Co. Reduce the hight cost of liv- ing by using flour producing more loaves of better bread. 24 Our “Tip Top” and “Idaho Gold” flour is handled by the best jobb@rs and wholesale deal- ers all over the country and us- ed by all the good house-wives. They are made of the pick of plumb Camas Prairie wheats, and every sack is guaranteed or (money cheerfully refunded. 244 WORTH A PLACE IN MEMORY: Commonplace Jingle Carries a Senti- ‘ment to Which More of Us Should Subscribe, Every -once in awhile someone with &@ genius for rhymes jingles a great big chunk of truth into verse. These are the unknown and perhaps uncon- scious poets. You see their outpour- ings on picture post cards, scribbled on dead. walls and, in other unlooked. for and wholly unexpected places. A friend sends us one of these wan- dering vagaries, and we have so much enjoyed -reading it that we herewith Pass it on to you, It ruaneth thus: “Let the howlers howl, And the growlers growl, And the prowlers prowl, And the gee-gaws go it, Behind the night ‘There is plenty of light, And things are all right, . And—I KNOW IT.” One hundred rhymes of this nature | put into a book would constitute a far greater and an infinitely more tmpor- tant philosophy than Plato’s or Emer- son’s or any other produced by either ancient or modern sages, In the eight Ines of that crude and homely Jingle here reproduced there is all the philosophy that any man needs. It is a declaration of faith. It is a pro- found expression of belief in the good- hess_and the wisdom of God. Will the friend who sent us the rhyme please accept our very great thanks?—Los Angeles Times, BELONGS TO THE PREHISTORIC City That at One Time Had Many In- habitants One of the Show Places of New Mexico. A lost city of 20,000 homes has been found in a great canyon barely 40 molles from the city of Santa Fe, N. M. Ht is reputed to be the first known, elty of the Cochiti tribes of Pueblo In- dians of the Southwest. The place is called Rito de los Frijoles or Tyu-on- yl, and ts one of the world’s wonders, Here, in little caves in the sides of gigantic cliffs, dwelt the pre- historle cliff dwellers of America in communal dwellings, that were al- most Immune from attack by either man or the glant beasts of the stone age, The valley is about 12 miles long and about half a mile wide, with the sheer walls of the cliff towering per- pendicularly for thousands of feet. For some distance they are red or brown- ish In color, and then in places they are dazzling white. Almost the en- tire surface Is honeycombed with thou- sands of volcanic blowholes, that once upon a time belched forth sulphur fumes and steam of the earth's core. The people used these holes as doors to their homes, and enlarged the inte- riors to suit their families. Some built three-story buildings in front of the caves, but little remains of these feats of masonry, In a Country Practice. Two country boys, twelve and four. teen years of age, walked into my office one morfting and had no sooner closed the door, when one of them placed his hand over his ear, Jumped around on one foot then on the other, swearing and exclaiming: “There he goes, there he goes,” and when I asked him what was the matter, he replied that he had a bug in his ear, Before I could examine him he re- peated his contortions, exclaiming: “There he goes again, there he goes.” The bug was playing taps on his membrano tympant. I placed the boy before a window and with a concave mirror threw a bright Mght through the ear spectrum. The bug saw the light and came forward, crawling out to the edge of the spectrum, and I picked it off with my fingers. When I showed the boy the bug he said: “Thank God; how much fs it?” I re plied a dollar. The other boy, who had been attentively watching the proceed- ings, exclaimed: “A dollar; well, that’s gall. You never took out that bug; he walked out hisself,”—Journal of the American Medical Association, Thackeray's Notebook. Turning the pages of Thackeray's notebook for “The Virginians,” even If one could not afford to own such @ treasure for manuscript collectors, woulé be highly interesting to anybody familiar with the novel. There are severo] pages of notes on the history and manners of the period, including a reminder of Queen Caroline’s bad spelling, a description of King George’s manners, notes about stage coaches, Indians, colonial warfare, and various other points that the author felt it would be well to remember as his story developed. Here and there he made a pen-and-ink sketch by the way, rang- ing from a portrait of the duke of Cumberland to a sailor in the costume of 1761 and two men In wigs and capes watching a horse race. Some of the material in the notebook was evidently discarded by the author in writing the novel, Elm Handsome and Historic. There is no tree in the United States probably which is more popu- lur than the elm, and there ts good reason for this, for it 1s extremely grnceful and beautiful, says the Amer- fean Forestry association of Wash- ington. There are many historic elms, too. It was under an elm, for in- stance, as every school boy will re- call, that Washington took command of the American army at Cambridge. Few trees in the United States have a wider distribution than the elm. One striking form of the elm has @ vase top. re