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== SS Qari "Wear-Ever"— 95c 1-quart Aluminum Stew Pan For ONLY 83 ¢, On or before dct, g Fy This Special Offer is made so you can see for yourself that aluminum utensils are NOT all the same. thick, cold-rolled sheet again and again has been stamping machines. WEAR EVER YDING SATUI SUCUUULOOTOELORSEEAELGETESSOSGUEDOUESEEO EERE CECESCECECRRERR SEO OE OES COUEEURSOREEOUEEOTOOTERETECROEU TERA REA TERETE Hoene “Wear-Ever” utensils are made from hard, aluminum --- metal which rolling mills and subjected to the pressure of huge Get your Stew Pan today! \&X/ COMMENCING MONDAY, OCT. 3RD Es UMITED. Special Olce sapizes on dake num and “Wear-Ever” passed through gigantic WEAREVER tDAY, OCT. 8 A TRADE MARK VOUAUREEEDOLUUCOOAUCUOUESEOLOOSEOOOUUEEEEEOOOREEE: you at the DRAY GOTTON WOOD AND TRANSFER LINE ROBBINS BROTHERS PROPS. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice COUNTY SEAT NEWS ITEMS T. E. Quinlan has returned to Grangeville from Lewiston, and will reengage in the insurance business. Mr. Quinlan has tak-| en charge of the, business con- | ducted by H. Rothwell during the last few months. Sam McMeeken has had moun- ted, and put on display in the Revere restaurant, a_ pair of freakish deer horns. The horns are practically a double set, with about fifteen prongs each. The deer from which the antlers were taken was killed by Mr. McMeeken in the vicinity of | Wind river, in 1920. | C. J. Matthews and son, C. J. Matthews jr., of the Winona country, were in Grangeville} Wednesday. The men are of-) ficers in the Lawyers Canon| Coal Mining company and are| planning shortly to do develop- | ment work on their property, which gives promising of pro- ducing commercial coal in paying quantites. W. J. Soltman, tailor, has just | received and installed a Hoffman steam pressing machine of the latest model. The machine will, do as much work as several men using the hand system in press- ing clothing, and also will press | plush coats and do other work which cannot be done so well by other methods, Mr. says. John P. Eimers, cashier of the First National bank, accompani- ed by Mrs. Eimers, are enjoying an automobile trip to the Pendle- ton section. They left last week and stopped for a time at the Lewiston-Clerkston fair before continuing their journey. They are expected home the latter part of the week. Major T. Farris, who last year sold his farm in the Winona sec- tion to Otto Neil for $52,000 for 440 ecres. hrs purchased a farm two end one-guarter miles north- erst of Nezperce from Curtis Miller. This farm is of 320 acres and is considered one of the best farms in that section. ings ere all modern and lighted with electricity. Consideration was $30,000. Mr. and Mrs. Far-) ris and family removed to Nez-| perce last week. | | Soltman | M. E. CHURCH. All are cordially invited to at- tend services every Sabbath. Sunday school 40:08 A. M. Gospel service 11:00 A. M. Epworth-league 70°F. M. Evening service 8:00 P: M: Prayer meeting Wednesday evening 7:45. Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest. If you have no other place of worship come and worship with us. Rev. F. M. Cass, Pastor. BARGAINS IN GRAIN TANKS The Cottonwood Hardware and Implement Co., of Cottonwood, has a supply of galvanized grain bins on hand which are offered at the following exceedingly low prices, f. 0. b. Cottonwood. 1000 bushel tank ............$150.00 1500 bushel tank .............. 200.00 2000 bushel tank .............. 250.00 Here is a chance to get your tank at less than wholesale. Use either phone, write or call personally. 28-tf CHICAGO POLICE UNDER INQUIRY Federal Investigation Follows Appeal For Aid Made By Chief Fitzmorris. Chicago. — Federal officials have started an investigation of the Chica- go police department as a result of an appeal for aid made by Chief Fitz- morris, who declared that in his be- lief “half of the city’s 5000 policemen were bootleggers, plying their {illicit liquor operations much more indus- triously than they watched over the) city.” Chief Fitzmorris’ statement that many of the men under him were bootleggers was made in a letter to the United States District Attorney | seeking aid of the government officials in a general housecleaning of the de- | partment which was started with a} Build- reassignment of every police district | and transfer of several hundred mem- bers of the force. In a supplementary statement Chief Fitzmorris declared: “Prohibition enforcement in Chi- * | pitals wil! specialize in aidins crinniad RNAND ANIA NAA PSSURORBADO NDAD wants to see ——=) (es) [5] ee SOLID COMFORT You're guarded against chill and cold snaps when you have the Perfection Heater to take from room to room, Gives that extra warmth an hour at a time or all day long, just as you need it. Always clean, dependable, economical and safe, Starts warming up the instant you strike a match, Come in and examine one at any time, NO. 530 Stock No. 630 Mame! . PERFECTION cago is a je. Thousands of Chi cagoans arenlerested in violating the prohibition laws every day. The only way to make prohibition an actuality liquor at its source.” The statement also charged that sev- eral city officials outside the police department were implicated In the police booze ring and said preparations had been made to disch » half the ssary FEDERAL OFFICERS INVESTIGATE KLAN Washington, Affairs of the Klux Klan are being delved thousands of federal agents and Ic police in an effort to whether the government shall force if that should be ne — Ku into by ul determine stamp out the organization, Attorney General Daugherty declared. Practically every branch of the or- ganization is under surveillance, Daugherty said, and every move of its members is under investigation Agents of the bureau of investigs tion of the department of justice sifting a mass of data relating to the activities of the Klan State and municipal authorities will be asked for aid this direction and they have the assistance of federal district are and cooperation in will in turn attorneys and agents of the bureau of Investigation Postinaster General Hays has order- ed a thorough investigation by office post inspectors for possible illegal | use of the mails FARM LOANS SOON READY $15,000,000 to Be Available as Soon as Wheat Is in Warehouses. Washington, D. C.—Advances of $25, 000,000 for agricultural nounced by the war finance corpora tion will be made available growers having membership in Equity Co-operative exchange ing in Minnesota and North and South Dakota, officials stated. The agreement tween the corporations and exchange was said by officials of the \to provide that $15,000,00 credit be available for use as the wheat crop is in warehouses and re for purposes an to grain the operat entered into be former will &@s soon ceipts can be placed as security the actual loans. Portland Wil! Get Shriners’ Hospital. St. Leuis.—Authority to launch im thediately an $8,000,000 hospital build- | of the hospital comnettee of tle im- perial council of the Shrine, after | which it was announced that the cen- tral hospital, to cost approximately $1,- 000,000, will be located here. Sub- sidiaries will be established in San Francisco and Portland, Or. The hos- | here or any place else is to stop the} Hardware _———|_ — | | ing campaign was given in a meeting | | | | | | ehildren Assassination of President Attempted. Lemberg.—General Joseph Pilsud- i, president of the Polish republic, narrowly escaped Qeath by assassina tion here last night | | peace | | | He was entering an automobile in City Hall square on his way to a theater after attending a banquet in his honor when three shots were fired at him Olympia to Bring Unknown Hero. The Olympia, under command of Capt. H Washington historic cruiser LL. Wyman, will sail from Newport, R. | 1, Oct 3 to bring home the body of the unknown soldier for burial at Ar- | lington, on Armistice Day. | Three States Admitted to League. Geneva Three additional nations have been admitted to the league of The trio comprised Esthonia, | Lotvia and Li nations uania. | IN AND ABOUT THE CITY and ts home, begins al seidom fond of trave Charity The greatness that is thrust upon @ man usually vs to his head is not Nature always kind. It bs seldom the red-headed fellow who gets bald, z | No wan is so hungry for paradox as ved his vanity by swallowing bis pride. to Envy is an endless chain, The | people we envy ave envying someone | higher up. It is possible for a woman's head | to be turned by flattery, even when she | has # stiff neck, The people who are weighed in the | yee und found wanting always | 1 it on the scales, Lever that the people who pose as martyrs always get @ heap of satisfaction out of it? notice Wigg—“I never place too much de pendence on appearances.” Wage— “Neither do I. For to nee, I know | a seamstress who isn’t what she | seems,” Blobbs—"“He seems very cheerful | for a dentist.” Slobbs—“Well, why | shouldn't a dentist be cheerful? Blobbs—"Oh, It seems to me they are always looking down fn the mouth.” shua commanded the sun to stand still," said the good deacon, “Must have been the ninth inning with the a tie and clouds looming up.” suggested the unregenerate back- sider. seore ral Killed Two Birds. Mrs. Goss—Did you find Mrs. Speed ley in when you called? Mrs. Sipp—Yes. Unexpectedly! That ts how I found ber out—aAn- awers. | volving killed a shark RICHES WAITING ° FOR LOST GIRL Fee OR, Le eS oe te. Palatial Home, Land and Fortune for Child of Romance Who Is Being Searched for. ‘New York.—Somewhere in the Unit- ed States is a seventeen-year-old girl, Spanish-American child of romance and adventure, for whom a large for- tune ts waiting. Back in Spaio an aristocratic old Castilian grandfather Is fretting away his last years for her, and, here tn America, three wealthy uncles are seeking her to tell her that a fourth uncle has died and left her # great estate. Helen Owen, the missing helress, is the daughter of the late Warren D, Owen, a Roosevelt Rough Rider. who won the daughter of Don Estehan Gar- elo in Cuba, in the Spanish-American war. Rough Rider Owen fought a duet for the hand of Senorita Garcio with her proud old father, it is stated by She Escaped Through a Window. Pa., who Clyde Owen of Pittsburgh, went to Chicago seeking the girl. Since then both have died, and the girl has disappeared, after 17 years of as romantic a life as her parents lived before her. The futher dled In April 1920, at New Bedford, Mass., and since then the girl's uncle has died, leaving his estate to the young woman. Helen, inheriting the temperament of her parents, was too fond of the free dom which she was accustomed to. She enjoyed cabarets, dances and the “movies.” It is belleved that the girl ‘came before the Juvenile authorities on several occasions, The ir) was sent to a home in Chi | engo because of her wild escapades She escaped through a window one night and has never been heard of since. It is be ved that she has changed her name from Owen to Gor don If the much-sought girl can be lo. cated, she will have o palatial house six »s of land und many thousands of dollars, SHARK KILLED BY PROPELLER Owner Could Not Guess Cause of It Because Vesse| Was in Clear Channel. folk, Va.—Henury Owens had the seare of his Ulfe when he was mak ing his way into, Horn harbor, In Mathews © few days ago, in bis motorb His boat speeding along at about 14 knots when It struck some obstacle that shook the craft) from stem to stern. The boat was in deep water and a clear channel. Owen could not account for the with the submerged object. ‘The boat's engine went dead after unty, @ was collision the collision, and Owen went to the stern of his boat to see what the tronble was He found the fast re the boat had There was blood alt over the surface of the water. The shark measured nine feet, Its in several places: when propeller of body was cut it came to the surface after ite con tact with the prope eee ese wee eesees Divorced 30 Years, They Have Knot Tied Again see sesseyg Waldon Altwood of Oregon lll, seventy-five years old Lydia Altwood, sixty-nine, his former wife, from whom he was divorced cently remarried at and ) years ago, were re Dixon, Hl Altwood, in bis marriage license, gave bis business as a bunter ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ . ’ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ’ ‘ and fisherman. 6 ‘ * PoCTTTrrrrrrre rr roel. seeeeese weeseee Batted Ball Killed Boy Pitcher. taltimore, Md.—While pitching In a baseball gume on the grounds of the State Normal school, Andrey Ensor, fourteen years old was killed. He threw a ball to Edward Lighteap, fourteen, who was batting. Lighteap hit the ball which struck Ensor be: | hind the right ear, causing concussion of the brain, Put Baby in Mail Box. Trenton, N. 1.—A baby boy was found here in o mail box with « botde of milk for nourishment. finder was « farmer was near the place where » mother tly deserted a baby giri The chance The mall box | REPORT UPON PEACE Borah Only Member of Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee Voting No. Washington. — Favorable report ob the peace treaties between the United States and Germany, Austria and Hun- gary, was ordered by the senate foreign relations committee. Senator Borah, Republican, Idaho, leader of the fight against the treaty of Versailles, was the only member to vote against reporting the treaties. Before reporting the three pacts, the committee adopted a reservation requiring that congress pass an act for appointment of an American rep- resentative on allied commissions by | the president with the advice and con- sent of the senate, Another reservation adopted by the committee, presented by Senator | Pomerene, Democrat, Ohio, provided that protection given the United States government in its property interests | should apply also to American na- | | \ | tionals, The vote on reporting the treaties | favorably was nine to one, the sup- porters of the treaties including six republicans and three democrats, all of the members present except Sen- ator Borah, who cast the sole nega- tive vote. The republicans veting for the treaties were Senators Lodge, | Massachusetts, chairman; McCumber, North Dakota; Brandegee, Connecti- cut; Johnson, California; New, In- diana, and Kellogg, Minnesota, The three democrats were Senators Swanson, Virginia; Pomerene, Ohio, and Shields, Tennessee. ‘ALL NATION TO HONOR UNKNOWN WAR DEAD | Washington, D. C.—The nation will pause for two minutes on Armistice day to honor the unknown dead of the great war. Detailed plans for the ceremony at Arlington national cementery on that day when the body brought back from France is to be buried were made pub- lic by the war department and include a proclamation by President Harding calling for the two-minute halt at noon throughout the nation to be devoted to prayer and reverent memories for the dead. The body returned from France on the cruiser Olympia will reach Wash- ington after nightfall November 9 and will lie in state in the capitol until 9 o'clock Armistice day, November 11, It will then be escorted by an official mourning party to Arlington cemetery, the line of march being guarded by troops, The mourning party will include all living holders of the congressional medal of honor who desire to come, one war veteran out of every 10,000 served from each state in the sreat war; and an officer and an enlisted man from each unit of the army and navy and representatives of the American Legion and other vet- erans’ organizations and patriotic so- cieties. From American military posts throughout the world minute guns of mourning will sound from sunrise until after the burial ceremonies In Wash- ington 3 TO HOLD MEAT HEARINGS Justice, Commerce and Agriculture to Be Represented. Washington D. C.—Hearings to be held prior to action by the department of justice on the proposed modification of the consent decree for divorcement of the five big packers from all opera- tions except meat packing will be be- fore a special board of three members representing the departments of jus- tice. ° The board will consist of H. J. Gall- oway, special assistant to the attor- ney-general; W. E, Lamb, solicitor of the department of commerce, and Judge B. T. Hainer, attorney in charge for the agriculture department of pack- er regulation act administration, who 8000 Vote to Join Oil Strikers. Los Angeles, C#}.—All locals of the Oil Workers’ International union in Southern California representing 8000 men, have voted to strike in sympathy with the Kern county oil field strikers, it was announced by James G. Bates, an official of the union. Third Quarter Taxes Total $500,000,000. Washington. — Income and profits taxes collected for the third quarter | of this year totaled $500,000,000, the treasury department announced. Aa additional $25,000,000 is expected. | | President Harding Hene-ed by Masons. Boston, — Presidest Harding was elected to receive the thirty-.bird de- gree in Free Masonry. yee} r