Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, February 13, 1920, Page 3

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- Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. Manufacturers of High Grade Flour Graham, Whole Wheat and Farina ; Livestock Alfalfa hay Poultry feeds of all kinds - Corn oats and barley in carload lots We steam roll your feed, if ycu say so, and don’t charge you any more for it than our regular rolling or chopping price a NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Off at Lewiston, Idaho, Jan- uary 9, 1920. Notice is hereby given that Emmett | A. Jones whose post-office address i Boles, Idaho, did, on the 19th day of May, 1919, file in this office Sworn Statement and Application, No 07490, to purchase the E 3sWi, & W SE%, Section 25, ' nship 30 North, Range 3 West, Boise Meridian, and the timber thereon, under the provi- sions of the act of June 3, 1878, and acts amendatory, known as the “Tim- ber and Stone Law,” at such value as might be fixed by appraisement, and that, pursuant to such application, the land and timber thereon have been appraised $525.00 the timber esti- mated 285,000 board feet at $1.00 per M. and the land $240.00; that said ap- plicant will offer final proof in sup- port of his application and sworn statement on the 24th day of March, 1920, before the Register & Receiver of the U. S. Land Office, at Lewiston, Idaho. Any person is at liberty to protest this purchase before entry, or initiate a contest at any time before patent issues, by filing a corroborated affi- davit in this office, alleging facts which would defeat the entry. Henry Heitfeld, Register. 3-10 A No. 1 timothy hay on hand and plenty of it. See the Farm-| ers Union Warehouse Co. before buying and get our prices. The price is right. 3-tf | Those famous Watkins re-| medies can be procured at any | DEALERS IN Fuel and feed The anthropological evidence ts all against the Jewish an cestry of an Indians. Their skull ormation would show rather a relationship with the Mon gols. It is very unlikely that Jewish pottery or cluy tablets were ever dis- covered in North America, All tra dition and all ethnological sctence would be disturbed by such a find But the Hebrew language, In Its Aramaic dialects, spread throughout the East eight or six hundred years before our Christian era, and was the official lang of diplomacy and of commerce. E {f traces of that lan- guage were to be found in Canada, ft than that their way Consider- would prove nothing more eastern traders had made into that country years ago ing the narrowness of the seas between the new and the old worlds on the Pacific side, this would not be a very wonderful matter, Pleasurable Occasion. “I was a member of the large and} Hetflefinger’s Intelligent audience in hall last night,” said old Gaunt N um, “and grently enjoyed “I am Indeed flattered, I assure you, sir!" sonorously replied Hon. Lowder. nd may I ask what por tion of it especially pleased you?” “The entire oration. I have al been very fond of puzzles, and tt me much pleasure to try to discover | what were the burning issues of the day, and, having done so, For prices on chickens see T. time by calling on Hockersmith | Clarke, the junk man, 6-4 & Sons. 2-tf | Subscribe for the Chronicle. KEUTERVILLE Cash Store rene 1 If It’s Money You Want to Save : Do Your Trading at the Cottonseed oil cake your *h on the burning issues of the Brady | why we | should not let them buru.”—Judge. ESSE EESESESES ESE ESTE EES ESESEEEESES TEESE EEEPEREEE ETE EEEETE FEESEEEESEEE SESE REESE EEE EE EEE STEERS ESTEE EE ET EE ; a |WANTS, FOUND AND FOR Tamarack post. Cottonwood, Idaho. good harness. Keuterville, Idaho bucks. Can be bought very | reasonbale if taken at once. B. Harness shop. 46-4 kinds. smith. Jungert and Hocker- §1-tf NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, Jan- uary 16, 1920. Notice is hereby given that Harvey Kight, of Whitebird, Idaho, who, on February 1, 1915, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 05940, for SW SEM, & Sh%& SW, Section 21, Township 30 North, Range 2 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of in- tention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above de- scribed, before Hampton Taylor, U. S. Commissioner, at Grangeville, Idaho, on the 25th day of February, 1920. Claimant names as witnesses: Edward Wiley, Charles L. Sallee, John J. Jackson, Chauncey H. Eme- rich, All of Boles, Idaho. HENRY HEITFELD, Register. of all kinds TIP TOP FLOUR. Laboratory tests show that our Tip Top flour now is the best flour on the market. Large orders from the bakery trade, as also our big demand from dealers all over the country, should be evidence of the quality. Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Co. 52-tf Notice to Automobile Owners. The 1920 automobile license is now due at this office. The State Department has set March 15th as the last day any motor vehicle may lawfully operate on the highways without a 1920 license. CALVIN HAZELBAKER, County Assessor. LOHSOSSESETESOOPOPESS SIDER ESOS OSONOD OOOO VET IT OIE T TT TS 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 handle all jobs with dispatch Come Here WITH YOUR Car Troubles Let our Trouble Fixer do the worrying -- It’s his business i | 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 FOR SALE—2000 Red fir and H.F. Lute, 4-6* FOR SALE—Three sets. of Fred Wright, Tod FOR SALE—35 head of full blooded Shropshire ewes and 5 Luchtefeld, Cottonwood, Ida. 7-3 WANTED—Hides at the Johann WANTED _ Poultry of all SALE) wany KINDS, AND ALL GOOD FOR SALE—Sulky plow near-| tyaz Seem the Verdict fy new. TT. Clarke, the junk © tae = a Great Question of Ples Whey were talking about pies and @iscussing which was the best, and, what we gethered from the cheerful controversy, all were the best. The person who stood up.for the good old apple pie was just as eloquent in his references to the peach or pump- kin pie. In fact, each person would hurry through the praise of one kind of ple in order to champion another, which convinced us that of all the varieties of food in this world the ple is the blessedest. Sometimes you will find a man who @ remedy for many distempers. We one time cured a ferocious sick head- ache with a quarter of mince pie, and that, too, on the advice of a physician. One of the party never heard of a mulberry pie, and what @ barren life she must have led. We are through with the cherry pie era and with what joy it has filled the world! We come to the berry era, and first of all there ig the huekleberry ple, which berry has rescued from sunshine and soil all the grace of the earth. If a man does not like a huckleberry ple, it is be- cause the ple or himself has not been well made, The black raspberry ple stands away up on the snowy peaks of perfection and for picnic purposes It ia unparalleled. When we eat raspberry pie In the woods we feel that the Dryads are feeding us from their lily white hands. There are other glorious pies, of course, but we wust have room to say that the glory of a ple is in the grace and charm of the cook. The pastry depends upon her temper, and the pas try is three-fourths of a pile, If we were going to get married again, we would arrange a pastry-making con test, and the damsel that made the best pastry we would mwarry—if we could.—Ohio State Journal, UNABLE TO ANALYZE DRUG intoxicating Principles ef Powerful Narecetic, “Coheba,” Remain a Myetery to Chemists. When Columbus arrived at the Is- land of Haiti he and his followers were interested to observe a curious practice of the natives, who were ac- customed on ceremonial occasions to make use of a narcotic snuff produc- tive of a sort of hypuotic state, with vision supposed to be supernatural. The tribal wizards, or priests, while under the influence of the drug, were accustomed to hold communication with unseen powers, and their mut- terings were construed as prophecies and revelations of hidden things, The snuff was called “cohoba,” and, in the form of a fine powder, was in- baled through a forked wooden tube, the forks being inserted in the nos- trils and the lower end of the tube buried in a little heap of the snuff, which was held on a tray of carved wood. Sowetimes large snail shells were used for snuff boxes. The mimosa-like tree from which the snuff ts obtained is plentiful along the banks of the Orinoco and the Awazon, It grows in Hulil, Porto Rico and other islands of the Antilles. The seeds yielded by tts pods are dried, roasted and ground to powder, which is sometimes mixed with lime from calcined snail shell. Only recently has this tree been identified by Dr. W. E. Safford of the government plant bureau as the source of the snuff, the origin of which has hitherto been a puzzle. The chemical properties of the drug are still unknown and so its intoxickting prin- ciple remains a mystery. Frightful Experience. “What was my most thrilling expe rience?” mused the ex-pilot. “Ah! I could never forget it. It was a bright starlight night, but the lurid flashes around us obscured all else as we sped through the air, The advancing enewy was hard upon us, while all around we heard the weird, savage music so terribly familiar, and the thud as of a thousand falling meteors. We dived, looped, corkscrewed till our senses were numbed. I felt a sharp pain in my right foot, a dull weight in my side—I was falling, falling— and knew no wore till I found myself lying on the ground badly smashed some hours later.” “And that was really your record aeri engagement?” “No,” he replied; “it was my first experiment with the jnzz.”—Pitts- burgh Chronicle-Telegraph. Paying the War Cost. Referring to the cost of the war, Secretary of War Baker told the finance committee of the senate and house that the total outgo In round numbers would be $30,000,000,000; but $9,000,000,000 of this was louns to our allies. Nearly « third of the net cost has already been paid out of money raised by taxation. The other two- thirds was obtained from the five Liberty loans. If we pay a billion a year, besides interest, we can clear off the war cost in about twenty-one years. Big Contribution to War. One of the most striking contribu- tions of the United States to the war was the enormous quantity of smoke less powder high explosives produced. says the Scientific American. From April 1, 1917, to November 11, 1918, we produced 682 million pounds of smoke- less powder, which was almost exactly equal to the combined output of France and Great Britain. ae a ™ ae len aie doesn’t eat pie, but watch him. Ple Is - DR. H. B. BLAKE Physician and Surgeon © Office Main Street next to Baker’s Store DR. J. D. SHINNICK Physician and Surgeon Office, Butler Bldg. DR. WESLEY F. ORR Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Bldg. Both Phones POPP 55955005G00 DR. J. E. REILLY DENTIST Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones POP 900 90995-:00000000 ————— LOOPS PIG PSPSPS DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Residence North end of téwn Both Phones POSSESS SOSH OSHS OSOOOS Aaa eae e epee naan ene nn ean a COTTONWOOD NATIONAL FARM LOAN ASSOCIATION Long term loans on farm lands at 54% per cent. Bring us your loans. Edgar G. Fry, President, Felix Martzen, Sec.- Treas. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. Wm. A. Lustie, C. C, Harry Campbell, K. of R. & 8S, DOPPPS SSH S Oooo I. 0 0 F Meets every Saturday evening in the I. O. O. F. hall So-journeying Odd Fellows invited. Carl Rehder, N. G, « Leo Hanses, Secretary eee hana phe ee nee enna anne LOOPPOS SOTO OOO OOOOH OOOO COTTONWOOD POST NO. 40 The American Legion COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Meets the first Wednesday of each month in the Firemen hall H. H. NUXOLL Notary Public —Wanted— Good Farm Land LISTED Office in Nuxoll Block, Cottonwood FELIX MARTZEN Real Estate, Loans, Fire and Life Insurance Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and save 35 to 45 per cent on your insurance. JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished on azy class of Work. Repairing promptly done. THE ROOKE HOTEL Has neat clean rooms at 50c and Tic per night or $2.50 to $3.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give us a trial. DAD ROOKE, Propr. When in Grangeville call at “ BRADBURY'S” for your Ice Cold Drinks Cigars, Etc. Ser pe NNN aie SOCIETIES FAT 8 ME q i 5 ee

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