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Princess Flour It’s Made for You Dear Friend: Do you think we are altogether selfish in trying to get you to use Princess flour? Let us assure you we are not, for we cannot make a place for our Princess products in your home unless we consider your interest as well as ours. Princess flour is made for you with the idea of making your work more pleasant and allowing you to enjoy life more, in that you are relieved of all worries connected with bread making. Tested and proved in our labratory, we know it will give you exactly the same good results all of the time, with the least possible amount of work, time and thought. We are sure you will find that bread bak- ing with Princess flour is indeed a pleasure and we shall certainly be glad to count you among the ever in- creasing users of our flour. Sincerely yours VOLLMER CLEARWATER CO. Vollmer Clearwater Co. D. D. WEINS. AGENT DON’T FORGET THE VOLLMER CLEAR- WATER COWHEN YOU GET READY TO TALK BINDING TWINE, GRAIN SACKS AND TWINE, FEED OR HAIL INSURANCE. “I’m here to Tell You” says the Good Judge That you get full satis- faction from a little of the Real Tobacco Chew. The rich taste of this class of tobacco makes it last longer— and cost less—than the old kind. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put up in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco We still have plenty of Alfalfa Seed Grim Alfalfa Seed Union Flour Oyster Shell BESIDES WE CAN FURNISH YOU WITH THE Grass Mower YOU HAVE BEEN WANTING DON’T FORGET THAT WE CAN WRITE YOUR HAIL INSURANCE i; & Soltman, Grangeville. COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. Subscription one year . $2.00 Six months 1.25 (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS Copy for change of ad must be hand- | ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1920 DANGED! BEWARE! | A woman who was _ too eco- |nomical to subscribe for her home paper sent her little son to |borrow the copy taken by her neighbor. In his haste the boy ran over a four dollar stand of |bees and in ten minutes looked jlike a warty Summer squash. His cries reached his father, who ran to his assistance, and, failing to notice a barbed fire fence, ran into it, breaking it down, cutting a handful of flesh from his ana- tomy and ruining a twenty dol- lar pair of pants. The old cow took advantage of the gap in the |fence and got into the cornfield and killed herself eating corn. Hearing the racket, the mother ran, upset a four gallon churn of rich cream into a basket of kit- tens, drowning the whole litter. In her hurry she dropped and broke, past all hope of mending, a fifty dollar set of false teeth. The baby, left alone, crawled through the spilled cream and into the parlor, ruining a fifty dollar carpet. During the excite- ment the eldest daughter ran away with the hired man, the dog broke up eleven setting hens and the calves got out and chew- ed the tails off of four fine | shirts. | And all to save two dollars. Moral: Subseribe for this pa- | per at once and protect yourself | from such calamities. | The hearing that is to be held in Boise this fall by the inter- | state Commerce Commission for | the purpose of laying before this distinguished body data and fig- ures, that will, if evidence is sufficient compel the Camas Prairie and Oregon Short Line railroads to build a line up the Salmon river from Fenn to Meadows The possibility of the road being built at this time ap- pears to be very remote, as most people are of the opinion that the railroads have about all they | can handle at the present time. | The hearing no doubt will result | in some good, as the data reveal- ed at this time no doubt will prove valuable in the future. | There is no question but what} this road will be built some time | but when—no one knows. The} road must be built if for nothing else than to unite the north and and south Idaho, which at the present time is to remote from each other. The road would al- so serve to establish a friendship between the two sections of the state which at the present time! is dormant but could be easily | cultivated if visits to either sec-| tion were not so expensive and| the roads leading to them so long | and tiresome. | Los Angeles has given the na- tives a start by pulling out in front as the largest center of | population on the Pacific Coast. The remarkable showing of the | California metropolis illustrates | the possibilities of emphasizing | natural advantages. A few years ago Los Angles was cred- | ited with little besides some nice | a) | Orange groves and a wonderful | climate. Los Angles capitalized | her climate. She spent money | in advertising it. She devised | ingenious and devious ways of letting the world know of its superiority. Every native was a “bug” on the subject of cli- | mate, and people who came to in-| vestigate were readily inoculated | with enthusiasm. Now the cen-| sus man has taken it in, and Los Angeles holds the pennant as the result of persistent and consistent civic advertising. | Leave that suit or overcoat for cleaning or pressing at Tom| Randall’s confectionery _ store. | All work guaranteed. Richards | these high price times: He re-| pairs and oils harness, saddles, | side curtains, harvester drapers, | binds rugs and carpets and can Johann do it for you. The good of a harness shop} ton. i J. BRUCE KREMER J. Bruce Kremer, vice chairman of the Democratic national committee, who called the Democratic convention to order at San Francisco. DENY PROPOSAL TO CANCEL ALLIED DEBTS Washington.—No proposal has been made to the United States by the | allies for the cancellation of their debts to this government or suggesting that their payment be made contingent up- on the payment to them of reparations by Germany. This was reiterated by treasury officials in commenting on cabled reports indicating that the sub ject had been under discussion at allied conferences. Regardless of what the views of ad- ministration officials might be, con gressional action would be required for any action of this nature The secretary of the treasury in de ferring the Interest payments on cer tain of the allied debts, is acting with- | in limitations under the loan acts of congress beyond which the administra tion cannot go, whether it so desires or not. Milliners Subject to Prosecution for Profiteering, Says Official. Washington.—Women’'s hats, plain or adorned, are necessities of life un- der the meaning of that term as used in the Lever act, Howard Figg, special assistant to the attorney-general, has | ruled, Mr. Figg's ruling was in reply to an Maquiry to the National Retail Millin ers’ association as to whether women's hats come within the range of the act under which the department of justice is authorized to prosecute for profit eering in necessities. Breadstuffs Exports Increase. Washington.—Breadstuffs exported | in May amounted to $99,000,000 or an increase of about $3,000,000 over the same month last year. Exports of meat and dairy products, valued at) $51,000,000, showed a decrease of $42, 000,000 from May, 1919, it was an nounced by the department of com- merce, 21 Baptist Delegates Injured. Buffalo, N. Y.—Twenty-one dele- | gates attending the Northern Baptist convention were injured in the collapse of a wooden structure upon which more than 500 persons were standing to have a group photograph taken. None of the injuries is considered serious, THE MARKETS Portland. Oats—No. 3 white feed, $69 per ton. Corn—Whole, $82@83; cracked, $84 @85. | Hay — Willamette valley timothy, $34 per ton; alfalfa, $30@31. | Potatoes—Oregon, 8%c per pound, Gems, 9c f. o. b. station. Butter Fat—53@55c. Eggs—Ranch, 38c per dozen Poultry—Hens, 20@26c Cattle—Best steers, $11@11.50;" good | to choice, $10@10.50; medium to good $9@10. Hogs—Prime mixed, $15.25@15.75; medium mixed, $14.75@15.25; pigs | $11.75@ 13.75. Sheep—Lambs, $10.50@11; yearling, 37@8. Seattle. Hay—-Eastern Washington timothy, 10-tf | $47 per ton; alfalfa, $46. Potatoes—Yakima Gems, $210 per | Butter Fat—55@57c. Eggs—Ranch, 38@43c. Hogs—Prime, $15.50@16.10; medium | collars and strappings, auto tops, | to choice, $14.50@15.50; pigs, $12@13. Poultry—Hens, dressed, heavy, 38c; vatch sacks on his armed mach-| light, dressed, 30c; live, 23@31c. }| ine and will also buy hides. Let 19-tf | medium tw choice, $16@11. Cattle—Best steera, $11.75@12.25; SL —--— 24-Year Tubes Built by Miller only It has taken 24 years to develop the skill which builds Miller Inner Tubes. For 24 years Miller has built super-grade rubber goods. Miller leads the world, for instance, in surgeons’ rubber gloves. Their fine rubber goods are known everywhere as the “Surgeon Grade.” That’s the sort of skill—the very rare skill—needed in building tubes. Miller Tubes are built of “Surgeon Grade” rubber sheets. They are built layer on layer —sheet on sheet—up to the Proper ply. Then each tube is tested for hours under air pressure to prove it air-tight. Don’t buy tubes by guess. There are tubes not half so good as Millers. Try a Miller — red or gray —and watch it. Then let results decide your future tubes. No extra price. 1 ZF Miller Tread Patented S Center tread smooth with suction cups, for firm grasp on wet asphalt. Geared-to-the- Road side treads mesh like cogs in dirt. Miller Tubes 5 utmost—like Miller Tires Cottonwood Garage “Nothing wrong with our balance!” —Chesterfield HE right balance of cestly Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos, propor- tioned by experts— that’s why Chester- fields “satisfy!” N“N esterfield CIGARETTES They Sash rl Mba Will soon be buzzing around and making life miserable for those who haven't ther homes fitted with screen doors, windows and porches, As a comfortable and temper keeper, what other one thing can you name that beats screens. There's a lot of other things one can do without in the summer but the man or woman who puts up with a lot of tormenting flies and mosquitoes is a martyr in- deed. And there’s really no need of it, for at the price we are making on screens of all kinds, every mother’s son of us can afford to protect our families this way. Glad to give you estimates any time you'll drop in Hussman Lumber Co. “HOME BUILDERS” Subscribe for the Chronicle--$2 a year