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We Print Sale Bills Tip Top flour, still es out of old wheat, and enough on | hand to supply you, 35-tf Leave that suit or overcoat ‘for cleaning or pressing at Tom Randall’s ,confectionery _ store. j All work guaranteed. Richards 1& Soltman, Grangeville. 10-tf See eeereeeeeeeed When in Grangeville call at " BRADBURY'S” Ice Cold Drinks : Cigars, Etc. Scratch Your Headand Wonder That is, if it is not perfectly plain that it is rust and rot that are putting your valuable implements in Bradbury’s the scrap heap much faster than the use you give them. What's the use? Why not make up your mind to buy a few boards the very next time you come to town, and build sheds for every machine on the place? Made from pure mountain water. Wholesome and in- vigorating. Decent care for your machines will save you many Sodas times the price of new sheds. But whatever it is that you want lumber for, re- member, if you want the best—here’s where to get it. LET US QUOTE YOU. Here is your opportunity to insure against embarrassing errors in spelling, pronunciation aad poor choice of words. Know the meaning of puzzling war terms. Increase your efficiency, which resul n power and success. WEBSTER'S re Hussman Lumber Co. “HOME BUILDERS” aa! of thousands of suc- omen the world over. ds. 2700 Pages. 6000 Il- 12,000 Biographical En- 0 Geographical Subjects. GRAND Pars, (High: Panaima-P; t usctzin and rps Pare Satiens. WRITE for 5 Pocket Ma; G. & C. MERRIAM co., Springfield, Mass., U. S. A. Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry COTTONWOOD, IDAHO As sure as you are a foot high— you will like this Camel Turkish and Domestic blend! Camels are sold ever scientifically sea of 20 cigarettes for 20 ce: or ten packages (200 cigaret: OU never got such cigarette- contentment as Camels hand you. Camels quality and expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic Tobaccos make this goodness possible—and make you prefer this Camel blendtoeither kindof tobaccosmokedstraight! ommend me or of you travel R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CoO, Winston Salem, N.C ‘Camels mellow-mildness is a revelation! Smoke them with freedom without tiring your taste! They leave no unpleasant ciga- retty aftertaste nor unpleasant cigaretty odor ! Give Camels every test—then compare them puff-for-puff with any cigarette in the world! ‘WOMAN IS KILLED IN PLANE WRECK | Mrs. Lee H. Scace of Cen- tralia Loses Life When Pilot Hits Tree. } Kalama, Wash.—An airplane flying | from Centralia, Wash., to Portland, was wrecked in the heavily-wooded country six miles north of Kalama Saturday night when the machine struck a tree. Mrs, Lee H. Scace, a passenger, wife of a Centralia physi- | clan, was killed and Guy D. Cooper, ulso a passenger, of Centralia, suf- fered a brokew leg and severe internal injuries. F. P. Barnes, pilot, of Lake- view, Wash., was severely injured. According to Pilot Barnes, the ma- j chine ran into a fog bank and he| became lost. Aviator Barnes believed he was 3000 feet in the air, but sud- denly a tree loomed directly ahead of | the airplane and the machine with its | | three occupants crashed to the ground. | FIVE MILLION COST OF WAR PUBLICITY Washington.—Total expenditures of the United States committee on public information, which functioned during the war under the direction of George Creel, were $8,245,249, according to a | report filed with the United States | senate by the national council of de fense. The net cost to the government was consiferably lower than this, be | cause of receipts from the sale of mov | ing picture films, and was fixed by E. K. Ellsworth, the liquidating officer, at $4,954,200.. The film sales made under the committee’s direction | amounted to $2,394,072. The principal items of expenditure | shown by the report included $1,448,- 000 for propaganda work in foreign | | countries, $1,250,000 for salaries, $2,- 435,000 for printing and $583,000 for telegraph and cable service. Since the committee ceased its activity, Mr Ellsworth reports, has been re- | | covered from “various sources, $676, | 239, which has been deposited in the | | treasury, while claims against it | amounting to $3 7 have been ap-| proved for settlement.” there FLYING SHIRT SAVER DIVER. Signal on Submarine §-5 Attracts Passing Steamer. New York.—The plight of the dis: abled submarine § whose crew of 30 men were rescued after being sub. merged for 44 hours, was 5, first learned Alanthus, which discovered the by the steamship cidentally submarine off the Delaware capes with 30 feet of her bow protruding above water. The crew of the submarine owe their lives to the quick work of the chief engineer, W. R. Grace, of the Gen- eral Goethals and his assistant, R. A. McWilliams. The imprisoned men, Captain Swin. | son said, had cut a small hole through the hull and had stuck through a pole | on which was flying an undershirt. U. S. Exports Increase. Washington.—Exports of the United | States to the principal countries dur- } ing July totaled $651,381,827, an in- crease of $82,694,3 over the cor. responding period last y . the de- partment of commerce reported. Im ports for the same month amounted to $537,170,531, an increase of $193, | 424,281 over July, 1919. For the first | seven months of this year exports totaled $4,899,254,121, compared to $4,- 626,109,266 in 1919, while imports total- ed $3,481,938,379, compared with $1,- 954,257,362. Road Can “Fire” Union Men. Washington.—Application for an in- junction sought by the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen to restrain the Washington and Old Dominion Rail way company from discharging em ployes belonging to the union was de- nied by Justice Siddons of the district supreme Justice Siddons held that employers have the right to dis. charge who labor union or continue membership against | the wish of the employers. court employes join a Embargo on Oriental Freight Asked. Olympia, Wash.—The public | service commission has wired the in- terstate commerce commission at D. C., urging compliance | with the request of the Tacoma Com- — club and chamber of com | state Washington, merce that an embargo be placed on | Oriental freight shipments routed through Atlantic ports. 60 Chinese Exhumed at Walla Walla. Walla Walla, Wash.—Bodies of 60) Chinese buried here within the last | 13 years are being exhumed and the bones will be shipped to China. Bodies of 200 Chinese in this district will be sent in one shipment. | eee | signed as head of the Gen. Maxime Weygand, the French | officer who has been directing the Polish armies against the Russians. RAILROAD STRIKERS TURN ENGINES LOOSE Chicago.—Railroad executives here announced they had appealed to Dis- trict Attorney Clyne to stop “an organ- ized campaign of sabotage,” by rail- road strikers, “Engines are being stolen almost nightly and turned loose to run wild through the yards; Thursday an entire train was stolen; strike breakers are being beaten and one was recently killed; families of strike- | breakers are intimidated and rooming house keepers have been threatened with they harbor strike breakers,” chiefs charge. Wednesday night a Rock Island engine was turned loose on the main track and a collision with a passen. ger train narrowly averted when a pursuing switch crew succeeded in boarding the runaway. the rail BRIEF GENERAL NEWS Air mail service between New York and San Francisco was inaugurated | by the postoffice department Wednes- one. James W. Gerard, former ambassa- dor to Germany, has accepted the post of chairman of the finance committee of the democratic national committee. Foodstuffs imports for the months’ period ending July 1 showed un increase in value of more than $600,000,000 over imports for the same period last year, The cruiser Pittsburg, recently sent from French waters to Danzig because of disorders at that port, has been recalled to her station because of res toration of order at Danzig. Returns show Samuel M. Shortridge received 129,638 votes for the Repub. lican nomination for United States senator, William Kent 105,603 and A J. Wallace 81,081 in the primaries. seven California Joffee New Russian Peace Head. Warsaw.—M. Danishevsky has re delegation and has been replaced by Adolph Abramowicz Joffee, former soviet ambassador to Germany and chairman of the Russian peace dele. gation at Brest-Litovsk, according to Moscow advices. M. Danishevsky re signed because the soviet government ugreed to carry on further negotia | tions with Poland at Riga. Aid to MacSwiney Refused. | Lucerne.—Premier Lloyd George of Great Britain has replied in the nega tive to the message of Mayor Hylan of New York city, urging the premier | to reféise Lord Mayor MacSwiney of Cork from prison. The premier, in his reply, stated politely but firmly that he could not interfere with the course of justice and law. Vermont Population Shows Loss. Washington.—Vermont is the firat thus far in the 1920 census to show a loss of population in the last 10 years. Figures announced by the census bureau gave stata counted the state @ population of 3 421, a decrease of 3635, or minus 1 per cent as compared with 1910. Will Force Action on Treaties. Washington.—Responsibility for ter. mination of the commercial treaties between the United States and more | than a score of foreign nations in con formity with requirements of the ship ping act probably will be placed | squarely upon the other parties to /| the treaties by the state department. | Navy Yard Workers to Get Increase. Washington.—-A new wage schedule affecting about 75,000 navy yard em- ployes probably will be put into effect on the first payday after September 15, Secretary Daniels announced. night | having their places bombed if | Russian peace | The business end ee ess ‘The point is the part which does the hard prsage dep taping oven cone Smooth, steady writing the instant the pot touches paper, unitormity of ink flow, pA voral ing, long life—that's CONKLIN service. ALSO HEADQUARTERS FOR SCHOOL SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS COTTONWOOD PHARMACY T. F. Schaecher, Prop. — Crown Dating From 1000 A. D. The rumor, current in the European | press some months ago, when.the Bela | Kun administration ruled in Hungary, that the Hungarian crown was to be sold, seems to have disappeared, and | the later government apparently means | to keep it. It was an odd circumstance, says a writer commenting on that | funor and its disappearance, that, | with so much talk of discarded Insig- | nla of royalty, the one crown actually | mentioned as being for sale should have been the most anclent one, witha |single exception, in Europe. For | whereas the German crown, for exam- ple, Is comparatively modern, and was made no longer ago than 1871 for the former kaiser's grandfather, this crown of Hungary traces back, at least in legend, to the year 1000, and the sum | of 100,000 Swiss marks, about $19,000, | which, last summer, was circumstan- | tally reported as the price for which | It was to be sold, does not seem par |teularly exorbitant. Depress'ng “Flying Dream.” | In the flying dream, you suddenly leap off your feet and undergo the ex- perience of rising to great heights and skimming over innumerable ob- Jects. If the dream only embraces | this and nothing more, It may be tak- en to augur some kind of a surprise, usually of a more or less pleasant na- ture; but If, as so often happens, one imagines one flies to escape some pe- cullarly evil presence, then the dream may be regarded as a warning against some sinister person or plot. Flying dreams generally occur to people with marked psychic tendencies, Painter’s Fame Came Slowly. August Renoir, seventy-eight. years old, the famous French impressionist, died recently at Cagnes, France, on the day that bis pleture of the Pont Neff fetched 100,000 francs at an art sale. In his youth he often paid for his din- ner with a picture. Renoir was one of the first of the Impressionists. He | worked to the last, and dled with his | palette in his hands. “I feel I am just | beginning to know my trade,” he said | when he was well over seventy. | Ite Kind. “[ hear that Daisy's love for Jim was not the same when he put op clvillan clothes and had no more the | glamor of the soldier.” “I believe her love was a uniform devotion.” Legal Blanks for Sale at This Office See your gas before you buy it. South & Frick. 14-tf Patronize home industry—buy Tip Top flour. 35-tf For your harvest gloves see | Johann. 32-tf | Sale on screen doors at | the Madison Lumber Co. 22-tf The Hoene Hardware wil pay 25c each for 5 gallon oil cans and 10 cents each for one gallon cans. | Will buy them in any quan- tity. 33-tf | BARGAINS IN GRAIN TANKS. | We have a supply of galvaniz- | ed grain bins on hand which we |offer at the following exceed- | ingly low prices. 1000 bushel tank 1500 bushel tank | 2000 bushel tank At this low figure no "farmer can afford to be without one of these modern tanks to handle his grain, so call on either phone, or drop in. COTTONWOOD HARDWARE AND IMPLEMENT COMPANY.