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Complete line of garden| jE] seeds. J. V. Baker & Son. Eventually you will buy “Tip Top” why not today? 14-tf | If your Radiator leaks take it | to South & Frick. 14-tf Sebi Frei of Keuterville spent | Sunday and Monday visiting at} Ferdinand. | FOR SALE—Five passenger | Chevrolet Automobile, in good shape. Inquire at Cottonwood | Garage. 15-4 Mrs. Tom Parker returned; Thursday evening from a two! weeks visit at the home of E. L. | Parker in Lewiston. | Miss Winifred Hupson of Keu-! terville spent Easter Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Uhlenkott. Frank Stevenson was a pas- senger for Lewiston anud other | outside points on business Mon- day morning. Mrs. Nick Bieren and daugh-| ter left for Clarkston Monday morning where she will visit for the next ten days with friends and relatives. A big baby boy of regulation weight and size arrived at the country home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wimer Saturday. Mother and babe are doing nicely. A. O. Zimmerman, who reliev- ed Geo. Poler last summer at the local depot and whose family has made their home here ever since removed his household goods to Riparia this week where he will be agent at that station. Mrs. J. P. Campbell of Piniele | Mont., arrived in Cottonwood | Wednesday evening to visit at| the home of her parents, Mr. | and Mrs. G. N. McLaughlin. Her husband will join her here as | soon as he makes final proof on | his homestead in Montana. Wm. Ruhoff and A. A. Har- | rison, well-known’ carpenters of this city, left Monday morning | for Spokane. Mr. Harrison will take treatments for inflamatory rheumatism, following an attack of the flu, and from which he has been suffering for the past month. Mr. Ruhoff thinks the Spokane climate will greatly aid him in recovering from a severe attack of flu and pneumonia, with which he has been confined to his home for some time. He also expects to take treatments for slight rheumatic attacks, They expect to be gone about two weeks. : SS SSS] SSS > HSjSss POINTED PARAGRAPHS. It isn’t difficult to pose as a financier if you have sufficient money. It is better to patch up a quar- rel today than your face tomor- row. Many a girl is wearing a soli- bought and paid for it. ima: it Iie A Silent Partner The upkeep of a tractor is directly propor- tional to the noise it makes. You'll never hear the shriek of tortured metal in the Yuba—nor the slam and jar of loose and wobbly tracks. Taut and true the Yuba runs—over endless rows of noiseless balls. It is the quietest of track machines. About the only sound is the exhaust—and that a not unpleasant roar of eager com- petence! ‘ea Yuba Manufacturing Company 433 California Street, San Francisco Factories; Marysville and Benicla, California “I like to see a man proud of the place he lives in.” So do your neighbors. Economy as well as pride say: “Clean Up and Paint Up and Keek it Up.” We say come to us for everything you need in this worthy work. A good way to start this work is to fill out this coupon and present to us. Sendo eteedeadenteedeedondeateateedeateatoatonteedoedente te eteatentee adeno ate tead teateateedecdeate ate teetenteete COUPON Name . 22 Address ‘ : Town .. = This coupon and 10c¢ entitles bearer to $ + > -S S coat seeded eteted 14 pint of Floorlac and one Varnish brush. (Only one of each to each purchaser.) eh te ee ee ee pet ‘ boosting helped THE BOYS PUT OVER THE CONCERT. ; BY BOOSTING WE CAN PUT OVER BIGGER THINGS THAT ARE REAL COMMUNITY HELPS For Instance i WHY NOT BOOST AND KEEP ON BOOSTING FOR THE New Hospital | “Sepceeeeetetntecetrteteteteeeeees seaareien esteeeeoret esstecestecestecontecesdoctestecentedectedecestecende osteo tese dese Oe SS] SSS SSS SaaS) eee Hoene Hardware | taire diamond because she] [p(y When the average man ex- gled” Friday, May 14th. The High Schoo! Literary last Friday was highly successful. r 7 fe The debate on Woman Suffrage It is the easiest thing in the] was won by the affirmative. p Miss Hollan is very busy on a you have to do is tell the truth pageant, which she hopes to give about May Ist. She is presses his gratitude it is mere- ly an offhand way he has of ask- ing for more. world to stir up trouble. All at all times. Seeding Time is Now Here Balesdshnesn: dail who adopted him when he was little more than a year old and not knowing of his paréntage =| until a few months ago, Howard Wilson, will now join his mother, Mrs. A. E. Danley, near San Francisco. He was adopted by the tribe and was given an allot- ment of 120 acres near Stites. Since attaining manhood he has engaged in the sheep business and has a small herd near. Kooskia. Wilson was away to war when his mother, who was a nurse in a military hospital at San Francis- 4} co, learned from an Idaho boy from Orofino, that a white child had been raised in the upper Middle Fork country by Mrs. William Wilson, an Indian wo- man. The soldier knew that the white child knew notlfing of his parentage and as his age cor- responded with that of Mrs. Danley’s missing child, she be- gan an investigation through the Indian department and the Indian agent at Lapwai, with the result that she has established beyond all doubt the idenity of the white boy as her missing child. It was more than 24 years ago when Charles Wilson, then a babe in the cradle, was stolen from his mother’s home at Mt. Idaho. The Elk City mining excitement was on and his fath- er Was away to the mines. Mail service was slow and uncertain and the entire country was filled with strangers moving to and from the mining districts. All efforts.to gain a clue of the mis- sing babe were fruitless and the mother finally removed from the scene of her grief and establish- ed her home in California. Mrs. Danley never forgot her missing boy and when the Unit- ed States entered the war she volunteered her services as a hospital nurse and was assigned to duty in San Francisco near her home. It was while render- ing this service to the sons of other mothers, that she nursed the soldier who gave her the first clue of her missing son. As soon as Mrs. Danley had positively established the iden- tity of her son, she came to Ida- ho to await his return from the army and now the son will visit his mother at her California home. * Mrs. Williams, the Indian woman who reared the child, knew there was something wrong in the transaction by which the child came into her possession, but never suspected the truth. She told Mrs. Dan- ley that the child had been plac- ed in her care by a white man and was able to give the name of the man who had the child. This later information cleared up the matter for Mrs. Danley as the man named was_ well We can supply you with Many a woman who doubts] using the pupils of the 1st, 2nd, . her husband’s veracity believes} 3rd and 4th grades. every word in a patent medicine Mrs. R. E. Bell of Grangeville almanac. _ | conducted the 7th and 8th grade When everybody else admits} examinations, which ended to- that he is wrong and that you] day, There were over 20 pu- are right the millennium will be] pils from outside districts in at- full bloom. tendance. —— New students; High schoél— SCHOOL NOTES. Cloice Zimmerman; 3rd_ grade, (By Wm. A. Lustie) Donald Zimmerman; 2nd grade, The senior class will give their] Marvin Swan; Ist grade, Orvis class play, “The Deacon Entan-} Swan. “flere’s Something for You to Remember” k says the Good Judge And any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you so. Marquis Wheat Jenkins Club Blue Barley Clover Seed Bluestem Wheat Palouse Oats Alfalfa Seed Field Peas known to her at Mt. Idaho, and when trouble between the fam- ilies arose, he had made a threat that he would make her suffer severely, but at the time the child was kidnapped the man who had made the threat had been away from Mt. Idaho for some time and was not suspect- ed. He told the Indian woman that the child was his but that his wife was dead and that he had no place where the child could be cared for. The man then disappeared and after due Mrs. Wilson, according to Indian custom. Howard Wilson said last even- ing that his foster Indian moth- er and her husband had always been kind to him. The Wilson about 12 miles from Kooksia and comparatively few of the resi- dents of the upper Clearwater knew that this Indian woman was raising a white child. When the Indian allotments were made time the child was adopted by home is up the Middle Fork Alfalfa Hay LET US KNOW WHAT YOUR REQUIREMENTS ARE, AND IF NOT CARRIED IN the adopted child came in for his allotment and is now the owner of a verv desirable 120 acres above Stites.—Lewiston Tribune You get a lot more satisfac- STOCK, WE CAN GET IT FOR YOU ON SHORT NOTICE. tion in a little of the Real Tobacco Chew than in a big chew of the old kind. And it costs less to chew. The full rich, real tobacco taste lasts so much longer. | Mrs. Leon France and little daughter arrived this week to ioin her husband. who is employ- ed by the Hoene Hardware as an electrical engineer. They are now oceupvine one of the apart- ments in the Hotel Cottonwood. Princess Flour is the Best a Mre. Clare MeGrew visited st ; Put Up In Two Styles Vollmer-Clearwater Company ane"0.18 Fomine thi RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco D. D. WEINS, Agent. wot, nie OE catieatan te W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco . al the ath 10 Gtr-antats ee 4 ¢ morning for Oregon.