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iin 3 Big ‘SOME WILL HAVE GOOD FAIR So Says Correspondent Writing to the Chronicle. Special to the Cottonwood Chronicle—Lewiston Sept. 10, 1919. Reduced rates have been granted by the Railway admin- stration to the Lewiston-Clark- ston Fall Fair, to be held at Lew- iston from Sept. 23 to 26th.,in- clusive. Round trip tickets will be sold for one and one-half fare, good from Sept. 22nd. to 27th., inclusive. On the opening day, Lewis- ton day, the business houses will close. A big street parade will take place. On the 2nd day of the Fair the Shriners will hold fourth. What the Shrine will do on the 24th remains to be seen, but it has leaked out that there will be free pies, dough- nuts and cider. A big Shrine parade featuring the Spokane Band and Patrol. Shrine stunts of every description will be car- ried out. On the 3rd day of the Fair- 25th The American Legion Day the veterans of our great war will hold forth. This day is given over to the boys and great preparations are being made to make this day “the day of the Fair”. They did it over there and they will do it “over here”. On the 4th day of the Fair, Clarkston-Asotin Day, the 26th, the citizens of Clarkston and Asotin, Washington will hola forth. The big free Barbecue will be held on that day. The show of all shows. The Baby Show, will also be held on this date. Each day there will be Band concerts in the city at the Fair grounds. Each evening there will be a free pavement dance the dance that is becoming so popular in Lewiston. Two big carnival companies will be in operation daily. The amusements features are well taken care of. The manage- ment of the Fair is striving for only the best to be had. Avia- tors booked for the Fair are men MO DON’T FORGET THE LEWIS County Farm Bureau Fair LIBERAL PREMIUMS OFFERED FOR LIVE STOCK, BOY’S AND GIRL’S CLUB WORK, SCHOOL WORK, CANNED FRUIT AND VEGETABLES, NEEDLEWORK, COOKERY, FARM CROPS, AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST A BETTER BABY CONTEST Entertainment for Every Taste Nezperce idaho OCT. 1, 2, 3 } HUNK Days TIME”’ PUUAEUUAAGUAGENGEEEAGOAEEE ES ERUGEOAESEOEEATUAG SEERA SEE height of from 2,000 to 3,000 feet Sgt. Caden will walk from | a plank into the air thence to mother earth, an aerial stunt! never before featured. |When| one witnesses the death defying, leaps from the areoplane while looping the loop 3,000 feet in the air. It will bear out the fact that the Fair management is keepir its word when it sends out word | that only the best attractions | will be obtained. The United States Naval| authorities will have a very in-| teresting exhibit of war tro-| phies and present day munitions | and ete. A party will be in| charge to explain in detail the mechanism and history of each exhibit. Each day a big racing pro- gram will be carried out. Four | team chariot races, fast Indian and relay races by the best riders obtainable and picked out | from the fairs being held in this | vicinity, prior to our Fair. The machinery exhibit, to- gether with the exhibits from soil, factory and hand will prove | of much education to those fol- | lowing the vocation and rancher | and farmer. | The daily admission will be 75c, season tickets $2.00. Fur- ther information will be furnish- ed by Secretary A. A, Seaberg, | Lewiston, on request. Also! premium list will be furnished on request. | 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. 35tf HOENE HARWARE. temove blackheads, sotten| rough skin, clear the blooa, brighten the eyes, sweeten the) whole system. Nothing helps | make a pretty face, winsome} smile, as_ Hollister’s Rocky) Mountain Tea. Try it tonight. of wide experience and formerly of the regular army air service. Two former Lieutenants and a Sergeant. While flying from a 35c. T. F. Schaecher 36-5 | “Idaho Gold” a health and strength producer. 24-tf —_——— . | bureaus. | when I heard the shot to the place | family in | were for many years. | Is dated 1613, and was used at funer- | SENATOR M’LEAN Senator McLean of Connecticut in. | | troduced a bill to require cabinet mem. bers, heads of the federal trade com | mission, tariff commissicn, civil service | commission and the bureau of efficiency | to sit in the house and senate two days a week during the sessions of congress There they would be questioned on the | | floor regarding the conduct of thelr | LITTLE ISLAND HAS HISTORY | Helgoland, Small as It Is, Figured | Prominently in the Affairs of the World. Before Germany acquired the tee land of Helgoland and sent 2,000 sol- | diers there to man the fort, the citi- zens were law abiding. When there was an occasional misdemeanor no need to send a police “lookout” warn- ing. An fslander, when arrested, would go to the little jail and inform the keeper he was imprisoned. In ancient times the island called Hertha, A temple of I a Frisian goddess, was there. the tenth until the fourteenth cen- tury it was Independent. Then the dukes of Schleswig took it over and used it mainly as a pawn for loans until the Danes acquired it 400 years later, Denmark ceded {t to Great Britain early In the nineteenth cen- tury and the British, while recognizing its military Importance, fortified it only for defensive purposes, But the Ger-, mans built a great sea wall of granite and steel, at a cost of $30,000,000 and spent millions more on turrets and big guns, Visited by so many nationalities, the islanders absorbed customs and ideas of many lands, yet seemed to adorn each with a distinetive touch. They even had a curious quirk in their Sa —a wooden leg—so painted in a pic- ture of the “&Jnptation of Christ” in the historic church by the island artist of the seventeenth century, Andreas Amelink. Hence a Schleswig saying: “In Helgoland the devil goes on crutches.” was »sta, From Back Home Again. A vast pile of incongruous baggage at one of the large London stations has attracted the attention of mar passengers. It tells its own Beds and bedding, chests of ¢ with handles removed and the drawers | held down by strips of wooden lath, stor rough es containing mn¥tresses and plilows e bath tubs filled with every concelvable domestic property, are la- beled “Belgian refugee,” and the name of the owner, the fdentification num- ber, and the place of destination are clearly indicated among the directions, This is all a silent testimony to the effect of war, The migration of all these thousands of people back to what remains of their native towns cannot but evoke sympathy from all those whose homes are sfill Intact, whose fields and orchards and gardens are gay with white and pink blossoms, Speaking in a Parable. The youth, a efgarette fiend of the worst type, was testifying before a corover at an inquest over a suicide In an eastern Indiana town, and was be- ing questioned as to what he knew about the shooting that ended in the man’s death, | “Now about how far were you away | from the deceased when you heard the shot?” asked the coroner, “As near as I can remember,” re- plied the youth, “I was about two elgarettes away.” “What do you mean by ‘two elgar- ettes away?” he was further ques- tloned, “Why, I mean TI could probably | smoke about two clgarettes in the time I was going from where I was | where this fellow shot himself,” was the lucid explanation, | 7 | Relics Given Cathedral. | The dead bell of Dunblane (Seot- | land) cathedral and the sand-glass for- | merly in use in the pulpit have been presented to the kirk session by the whose poss ion they The dead bell als in the parish, a small fee being | charged by the kirk session for Its, use. The beadle rang the bell through the town when he proclaimed a death, again when the arrangements for the funeral were to be made known, and again when he walked at |} the head of the funeral procession. The sand-glass dates from 1702, runs for about 20 minutes and it was no un- usual thing for it to be turned two or three times during a sermon. The gifts are being exhibited in a specially constructed case in the cathedral. IT SURE IS TOUGH —TO BUY A BILL OF LUMBER FOR SOME PERMAN PROVEMENT, —AND THEN MAKE THE DISCOVERY, AFTER ONE HAS BEGUN CONSTRUCTION, THAT BY THE EXERCISE OF A LITTLE MORE PAINS TAKING CARE—A LITTLE FURTHER INVESTIGATION--HE COULD HAVE BOUGHT DECIDEDLY BETTER MATERIAL, AT NO GREATER COST. —IF YOU WOULD AVOID THIS DISHEARTENING EXPERIENCE, COME HERE FOR YOUR LUMER. —IT IS EVER OUR AIM TO GIVE EACH CUSTOMER SUCH UN- QUALIFIED SATISFACTION THAT THERE WILL BE NOT THE GHOST OF “The Yard That Saves and Satisfies” Hussman Lumber Company “The Home Builders” The Chronicle The Family Paper $2.00 Per Year Circulates among Farmers and Stockmen AMELSare the most refreshing, Camelsaresoldevery- ever smoked! Put where in scientifically then buy some C. sealed packages of 20 for cigarettes or ten pac. ages (200 cigarettes) in a glassine-paper- covered carton. We strongly recommend this carton for the home or office supply or when you travel! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co, Winston-Salem, N. 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