Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, March 11, 1921, Page 3

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We are in need of funds And having decided to close out all miscellaneous stocks of feed, we are offering to the trade the balance of our COTTON SEED OIL CAKE, OIL MEAL, FISH MEAL, FISH SCRAPS, SEA SHELLS, OYSTER SHELLS, CRACK- ED BABY CHICK CORN, BABY CHICK WHEAT, SCRATCH FEED, MASH FEED, ALSO OUR MILK PRO- DUCER COW FEED, ROCK SALT, CHARCOAL, BUCK- 4 WHEAT, MILLET, PIG A BOO TANKAGE, SUNFLOWER SEED, DIAMOND CHICK FOOD, SECURITY CALF MEAL At Very Low Prices EVERY ARTICLE IS GUARANTEED AND THE PRICE IS RIGHT We also have one wagon with hay rack, formerly used for hauling and one heavy mountain hack, all in good con- dition. A limited amount of hay. Cottonwood Milling & Elevator Company Ltd. Eat More Bread--It’s Your Best Food Notice For Publication. . Department of the Interior, U. S. Idaho, February 21, 1921. Notice is hereby given that Se P sbwnanged Chess is the easiest game in the Panty | world to me. During the long dul! 1921, made Additional Stock-} gays of the war my father used to raising Homestead Entry, No.) piay all the time with his friends, At 07558, for E14 NEW, Sec. 24, frst 1 did not understand what the Tp. 80 N.R.1 East, & Lot 4,| chessmen were for, and wondered Sec. 18, & Lots 1 & 2, of Section| why father would sit for hours and CHESS COMES EASY TO HIM Nothing Wonderful About His Mastership of Game. they belittled life. evasion of responsiblity iu “wae 4 ing pieces. One day when I did not East, Boise Meridian, has filed feanit 60 gos ouk ralnugaayaTiwutened notice of intention to make three | iiima (play, le gnu: \ibecatne iter year Proof, to establish claim to ested. I bothered my father so with the land above described, before} questions that he chased me out of the the Register & Receiver of the} game as soon as he was through U. S. Land Office, at Lewiston | with his friend. I waited eagerly for Idaho, on the 29th day of March,| him to get through. He played a 1921. practice game with me, and I under- . a .| stood every move after that. The Claimant DETAne see by seg next game we played, I beat my father, Frank _Blackburn, John Joh-| who ts a very good chess player. ann, William W. Blackburn, Jos-| ‘There ts nothing wonderful about my | peit, eph J. Blackburn, All of Cotton-| way of playing the game. My secre- wood, Idaho. tary, Mr. Azenberg, says that It HENRY HEITFELD, comes from reincarnation. A baby i egister, | !8 born with good brains, and they ex- 9-5 < R 8 plain it that way. They say that his ancestors or some spirits have given COTTONWOOD PEOPLE this power to him because so much PREVENT APPENDICITIS ability Ih one person must have taken " wood peo le are! ® long time to develop. When I play ee ee cerine. P buck- chess I can plan my moves six or sev- using PuGE gly e' ae d i en moves ahead, and most players thorn bark, ete., as mixed IM} oun only go three moves ahead of the Adler-i-ka. This flushes BOTH ga:ne. I can’t help it at all. I was upper and lower bowel so com-| born that way. I like to play with pletely it removes all foul, ac-| poor players. At West Point, where cumulated poisons from alimen-| I beat 19 games and drew one, there tary canal and prevents append- | were only nine good players; the oth- bee | ce het ers had no business trying to play icitis. os che pe daystd meat dil. CASE gas on S| jotta or sour I have played lots of fine players in stomach. Often CURES consti- chess. During the war I beat the pation. In one case of chronic} German governor at Warsaw, and he stomach trouble ONE bottle pro-| was an old man and a fine player. duced wonderful results. prcagehe cra . sane with precast . F. Schaecher, druggist. | the Russtan champion, and also drew Theo. F ee with Griffin in a blindfolded game in White and Sweet Clover ; Orch- | says he drew a game with Lasker, and ard, Brome, Rye, Fescue and) another said he beat Capablanca, In Blue Grass; Timothy; Red Top;! America, my hardest game so far has Genuine SRING RYE and) been with Colonel Fiebeger, sixty-two BEARDLESS BARLEY; Sorg-| years old, at West Point—Samuel hums; Sudan Grass, Kaffir | Rzeszewski in Leslie's. Corn; Feterita, Amber Cane. RL SOR AE We carry a full stock of Field) SEE SUICIDE NATIONAL PERIL and Garden Seeds, Poultry and} Bee Supplies, Fertilizers, etc. etc. Iai cidise Gdes ne te tc acoiod. Write for prices. go ink MARK MEANS CO., Seed) eae) Merchants, Lewison, Idaho. 8-6) suicide, which has always been —_—_—_—_——— prevalent in Japan, is, according to Plumbing and tinning at the} the Japanese press, even more rife Cottonwood Hardware every | than ever since the financial crisis in as to kill others.” protected, says Magazine. prove more palatable. 1 N Exalt Influential Japanese Newspapers Exa testify. a Brothers. Grangeville 51-tf| Literary Digest in a recent issue. The yas paged the nation in the prevalence of self- sin."—Indianapolis News, We can print those butter} siaughter, acknowledges the excel- wrappers for you. lences of the Christian view that eul- cide, instead of being merely an apol- ogy for failure, is a crime. Many sul- . cides in Japan are due to the fact that Land Office at Lewiston, Youthful Prodigy Declares There le | the Japanese have “less attachment | to life than foreigners,” and also to the traditions of feudal times when | The Osaka Mainichi says further: “Death—much more suicide—means the notion that those who commit sul- cide have the keenest sense of respon- sibility ls wrong. Suicide is the em- bodiment of egoism and trresponsibill- | + 2 y y-look- | ty. One of the strong points of the | 19, Township 30 North, Range 2! 8#z at the board with its funny Phcistite cieuble ie ale toa iation that to kill one’s self is as criminal Remarkable Photographic Feat. Conspicuous among a number of re- | markable scenes in a three-reel mo- tlon-pieture film recently taken of an | Ohio steel mill in operation, fhat actually shows the bolling molten metal in an open-hearth fur- nace heated to 8,000 degrees Fahren- | The photographic feat of suc- cessfully registering this action in de- tall on the film is particularly inter- esting, because the subject is one that a human eye can not gaze upon un- Popular Furthermore, the extreme | heat of the furnace cast some doubt on the safety of the camera, with its | charge of celluloid ribbon, and while the exposure was made, two men 8‘ vod ready to hurl the operator to a covler | place if anything happened. Potato Flour Mixed With Wheat. A fifty-fifty mixture of wheat flour from the United States and potato flour of domestic make has been or- | dered by the Netherlands government for its people with the hope of keeping | down the price of bread. Unless some- thing ts done to keep down the price of imported wheat it wil soon be out of the reach of the populace, says the Chicago Journal, Potato used a great deal during the war for the purpose of plecing out the wheat flour supply, and it was not generally acceptable to the people, but potato flour will not be open to the same criticism, and it is anticipated will No Respecter of Persons. Law enforcement ts no respecter of persons, a8 & young woman stenog- rapher in the office of Charles J. Or- | bison, federal prohibition director, can This young woman ordered some wine of pepsin from her druggist. The druggist considered the order and her | record on previous orders. “Young | woman,” he said, “I cannot sell you any wine or pepsin. You are using tog . much. We are under strict orders Thursday and Friday. Fordham the Land of the Rising Sun, says the Pocus the cochisla icairittoe 40: watt Subscribe for the Chronicle. Surgeons of Today Must Be Good Carpenters. We have woudgred at the skill of Surgeons in grafting pieces of skin rom a frog’s leg or from a human body upon the skinless injury caused ‘y a burn or other accident. But the marvels of modern surgery do not end there. “Bone” grafting is an art that demands the skill of a specialist in the most remarkable kind af “carpentry.” Electrically driven circular saws tn the hands of a bone carpenter can now be used to slot, splice, and alter a fractured part of one's skeleton, Sometimes a part of the broken bone is neatly shaped and slid down into | slot cut into a part of the fractured member, Screws of steel, silver, ivory, or screws made out of the patient's own skeleton, are used to hold these Jointed pieces firmly in place. One curious result of these ingent- ous attempts is that of repairing au injured jaw. A plece of bone re moved from the edge of a broken hip- bone was found to serve splendidly when properly fitted Into a man's broken jaw. This man today Hteraliy | chews his food with his hip-bone—an anomalous situ n indeed! Never before {: the world’s history was there such an opportunity for | hone carpentry as that offered by the war. The knowledge thus gained was not lost with the coming of peace.— Popular Science Monthly, “CALLED CURSE OF SCOTLAND | Why the Nine ‘of (Diamonds Got Bad | Reputation in That Country | is Uncertain. | It appears tc jhave been with the | family of the earl of Stair that the nine of diamonds got the name of “The Curse of Scotland.” On thetr armorial coat can be seen the nine lozenges. It was also said that the curse of | Scotland referred to the belief that | every ninth king of Scotland was a curse to his country. But on looking up the history of the earl of Stair it Is | found that he ts the eldest son of James Dalrymple, Viscount Stair, the president of the court of sessions In Scotland and the greatest lawyer the | country has produced. This first earl, as Sir John Dal- rymple, was one of the persons of Im- portance chosen to offer the crown of Scotland to William and Mary at the | revolution, As secretary of state he was the prime instrument in causing | the massacre of Glencoe, which cov- ered his name with infamy, and did | not leave that of his royal master un- tarnished. He was largely instrumental in | bringing about the union of Scotland with England, though he did not live | to see this effected, dying on January 8, 1707, How New Cotton Picker Works. A great many elaborate devices have | been invented for the purpose of as- sisting the cotton picker in the gather- ing of the boll from the plant. But what is probably the simplest of all has been recently invented, consisting of a plece of flexible metal that 1s ad- justable to fit the finger. It fits se curely over the first Joint of the finger, one to each finger, On the inside It has five small cleats to give tenacity. Experienced pickers declare that with & set of these pickers they increase their capacity from 20 to 50 per cent, homa City, a practical cotton picker himself. In addition to increasing the eapacity of the worker, It also pre- | vents "pricking of fingers on cotton burs, a frequent and trying accom- paniment of cotton picking under the usual procedure. Why Chinese Cut Their Queues. | With the fall of the Manchu dynasty came the wholesale barbering of queues, The barbers of China were very busy people, and their art ts now developing to that of the normal ton- sorial stage. In the early part of the Seventeenth century, when the Manchu Tartars in- vaded the country, they found the men wearing long hair tied {In a knet upon | their heads. But on the conquest of | the country the inhabitants were com- | pelled to adopt the queue, or long pig- | tall, often greatiy lengthened arti- ficially by employing long strands of black silk thread. | ‘Te celebrate the fal) of this dynastie rule the Chinese were eager to have their queues removed, after the lapse | of three centuries.—Popular Science Monthly. How Ages May Be Compared. Study of the relation between the to- tal length of life and the time re quired to reach maturity has brought out an interesting comparison between {man and horses. A horse at five years old is said to be, comparatively, as old as @ man at twenty, and doubt- less may be expected to behave, ac- cording to equine standards, after the manner of the average college student following human standards. A ten- year-old horse resembles, so far as age and experience go, a man of forty, while a horse that has attained the | ripe age of thirty-five is comparable with a man of ninety —New York Evening Post. Why Dignitaries Are Saluted. | Because in days zone by a port or warships fired their guns on the ap- proach of impoftant and friendly | strangers to show that they had such Osaka Mainichi, which sees peril to carefully our sales on wine of pep {faith in the visitors’ peaceful tnten- tlons that they didn’t think it neces- sary to keep their pleces of ordnance leaded. WHY. ‘d COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE The inventor 1s A, A. Ross of Okia- | - GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. Subscription one Six month (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDEN11 IN POLITICS Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1921 WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE FOR SALE—The Shinnick residence. 8-tf | FOR SALE—Wood =o stove at a bargain. Call at this office. 50-tf FOR SALE—Or trade for | wood sulky and gang plow. —_T.| Clark, the junk man. 11-2} FOR SALE—About 50 loads| of straw and about 25 sacks of | potatoes. Rudolph Schroeder.9-3 | | FOR SALE—Registered Here-| ford bull, 15 months old. A good | one. Mrs Rudolph Schroeder. 9-8 FOR SALE—Full blooded Black Minorca eggs for hatching | T. Clark the junk man. 11-2 FOR SALE OR TRADE—8-| foot Van Brunt drill, nearly new. | Will trade for horses or cattle. | Jos. W. Klapprich. | FOR SALE or Trade—4 head | of work horses including one | mare with foal for colts or young | stock. T. Clark, the junk man.-4_ FOR SALE—20 head of ewes, | 15 with lambs, others to have lambs soon. Sam Hamill, Green- creek, Idaho. 11-3" | ‘FOR ‘i SALE — Thoroughbred White Wyandotte eggs. Pen mated by Pren Moore in Janu-| ary. $1.50 per setting. C. W.) Thompson, Fenn, Idaho, Box! 50. 11-4* | | FOR SALE—Good farming land, by Meadow Creek, close to Oliver school house, 160 acres all hog tight, 90 acres in fall crop, good improvements, running | water for stock. Emil Schott, | Cottonwood, Idaho. 9-4 FOR SALE OR TRADE—310 acres of land, 265 acres tillable, 125 acres in winter wheat, re- mainder good pasture, 114 miles | south of Cottonwood Will take; up to $6000 in Montana land. For further information see or write Joe Altman, Cottonwood, | Idaho. 9-8" | ——r oman ESTRAYED—Came to my, place about October 1, sow and | three pigs, sow weighs about, 200 pounds; pigs 35 pounds each. | Owner can have same by paying | feed bill and for thisad. D.) Duclos, 8-4 ~ FOUND—Ladies’ mink neck| piece. Owner call at this office and identiy same. 9-4 Notice For Publication. | Department of the Interior, | U.S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, February 4, 1921. | Notice is hereby given that Clarence Nethken, of Boles, Idaho, who, on March 16, 1918, made Additional Homestead | Entry, No. 07238, for NEY) SE, Section 6, Township 30) North, Range 1 West, Boise Mer- | idian, has filed notice of inten-| tion to make three year Proof, to} establish claim to the land above | described, before Hampton Tay- | lor, U. S. Commissioner, at} Grangeville, Idaho, on the 17th) day of March 1921. Claimant names as witnesses: | DR. WESLEY F. ORR Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Bldg. Both Phones POSSESS 50 60 0000056666000000 DR. J. E. REILLY DENTIST Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Residence North end of town Both Phones POSS SFS500 005005060000 6000 KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. John Homar, C. C. Bert Schroeder, K. R. & 8, L oO. Meets every Saturday evening in the I. O. O. F. hall Sojourning Odd Fellows 4 invited Carl Rehder, N. G. Leo Hanses, Secretary oO. F. FO09OO0004000000 0000680068 COTTONWOOD POST NO. 40 The American Legion COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Meets the 2nd Wednesday of each month in the I, 0. 0. F. FELI” MAKTZEN Real Estate, Voans, Fire and Life Insurance Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and save 36 to 46 per $9SO509500 0500 SO SO OS HO COED JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished om au, class of Work. Repairing promptly done. Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50c and 75c per night or $3.00 to $3.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give us a “Dad” Rooke, Prop. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the Probate Court, County of Idaho, State of Idaho. In the Matter of the Estate of Rosa Lies, deceased. Notice is hereby given, that Frank Lord, of Boles, Idaho. | were granted to the un Henry Price, of Grangeville, Ida- ho, Ernest W. Little, of Grange- ville, Idaho. William H. Eller, of Grangeville, Idaho. HENRY HEITFELD, Letters of Testamen on the estate of Rosa Lies deceased, dersigned on the 7th day of February 1921, by the Probate Court of Idaho County. All persons having claims against said estate are required 15 Register. | to exhibit them to me for allow- Auction Sales I cry auctions anywhere at not to exceed 2 per cent; work guaranteed cr no pay; make dates at this office, write or phone me over Pac- ifie States. ance at my residence at Cotton- | wood, Idaho within ten months | after the date of the first publica | tion of this notice, or they shall | be forever barred. Dated this 7th day of Febru- ary 1921. JACOB LORENTZ, Executor of Estate of Rosa Lies, Deceased. H. C. QUIGLEY Star Route, Lewiston Wilbur L. Campbell, Attorney Pi 1921. ia «

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