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How About Tha Spring Suit ? ey All Wool Made to Measure Suits $25.00 For Coat and Pants. All One Price 250 Samples to PEOOOD | “stump” or base on which the dial Select From Leggett Mercantile Co. Where Your Dollar Buys More Pee eeteclote terete NOTIC TO | ag many Inches above the soil. ARMERS § In exchanging wheat for flour | a clecle about the seedling. ~ | ble gruss from growing bear the pro We will exchange 85 pounds of Patent Flour in your own flour sack for one bushel of No. 1 Mill- ing Wheat, or 33 pounds Patent Flour and we furnish the flour sack. This is for bulk wheat, we return the wheat sack to you. Six bushels makes one barrel of flour figuring 33 pounds to the bushel. Farmers’ Union Warehouse Co. Ltd. DISTRIBUTOR FOR IDAHO COUNTY C. H. GREVE, MANAGER For Service We Aim to Please You COUNTY SEAT NEWS ITEMS.|South Fork highway up the| Mr. and Mrs. Joe McFadden | Clearwater this year will not be and two children of Jamestown, N. D., arrived here on Wednes-/| ernment, day evening and are guests at the home of the former’s sister, Mrs. A. J. Maugg, and family. ' They will remain fora week or more. Ben Anderson is out from Adams Camp attending to busi- ness matters. Mr. Anderson states Mrs. Jennie “Sawyer, the proprietress was enjoying very good health this winter. He re- ported four and one-half feet of snow in that section. At a meeting of the executive board of the Republican County Central Committee Thomas Pear son was given endorsement for the position of deputy game warden for Idaho county, the vaeancy being caused by the re- cent resignation of Don C. Fisher | tors Charles R. Campbell starred | vocational training | who is taking at the University of Idaho. Funds for continuing the available from the federal gov- according to a letter from Senator W. E. Borah to Frank Van Deventer, secretary of the Commercial club. It is believed money for the road will be available in 1923. | The much heralded game of | | basket ball between the Fat and | Lean Elks ‘was pulled of at the) high school gym Tuesday night | and attracted one of the largest crowds that has been seen at a} basket ball game here this sea- son. The gross receipts of the game, amounting to $101.20) were turned over to the high school athletic association. With | a score of 6 to 1 the Lean Elks | carried away the plum and in the | opinion of many of the specta-| for the winning team and John P. Eimers made the only basket for the Fats. | fashion of the formal or Italian gar | cood | ¥ | Scotch gentry fled to the colonles, 01 | % took with them the idea that a gar % | dial, * a garden without a box hedge, a bor | every place where there was a sun | PLANTS GUARDED BY NATURE | Ae “Infants,” the Saplings Are by No | selvee against forest fires in a most | this peculiar system of self-protec | of the morning. | tionallties passed, displaying “under | standings” | in shape and size. | shortly after his arrival and instruct: | | ed her to sell their household property | COULD NOT RELY ON SUNDIAL WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE Garden “Clocks” Were Always More) === = of an Ornament Than Kept for FOR SALE—Pure buckwheat Voiles Ginghams Percales | 4 Have Just Arrived for Spring TO COME AND LOOK OVER ALL THE NEW 3 * Any ‘Practical Mee, flour. Alois Holthaus 8-4 amiss | The sundial became a popular gar- | FOR SALE P i of ae es SALE—Pair ares, den ornament in the sunny parts of | F 5 4 years old, will weigh 2800 Ibs. Europe in the Fifteenth century. | = I There were older time re rs.|T. Clark, the junk man. 10-4 There were hour-glasses, candigs | that marked the time by their burn-| FOR SALE — Thoroughbred ing. Lamps that indicated the hours | Hereford bull 18 months old by the amount of oil consumed, and re ca ee a. the water clock, which was the most Will be sold cheap if taken ellaple of all these time-recording |onCe. Bert Schroeder. 9- devices, When the sundials came into | vogue they were bought by rich men | FOR SALE—Beardless see who could well afford to have a clock, | barley, recleaned at $2.10 a hun- the cost of which was less than the \dred weight, including sack, at cost of an ornamental sundial. The | the Rochdale Co. warehouse in peasant who could not afford a clock | Perdinand. J. G. Schaeffer. 9-4 did not need a sundial, because he hovel Pn IUUSEAAUOOUULGOENOEA GAARA | WANTED- -Lady or man to could tell time, or nearly tell the oc he sun, or by the ate etd aE oa : wait table. Idaho Restaurant.2-* ‘The south of Europe fashion of the | -— sundial spread to England with the WANTED- fat den, and when English, Irish and | iunk man. At once 50 dozen hens. TT. Clark, the 10-4 SPRING GOODS MEANS FOR YOU TO HAVE A LARG- ER VARIETY OF PATTERNS AND COLORS FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE. Spring Sewing simply emigrated to the colonies, they FOUND—Watch fob on Main street. Owner can have same by den was not a garden without a sun A ‘ “ 94 calling at Chronicle office. 10-1 any more than it could — be | NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the older settlement portions of | gs "State — ” der of jonquils, some arbor vitue trees a gravel walk and a rustic bench, Maryland and Virginia and including | A 4 the District of Columbia it is not un |!n the Matter of the Estate of ES usual to find these sundiais, or the | Herman Henry Uptmor, De- = CALLS FOR MANY NOTIONS AND FANCY ceased, Notice is hereby given, that Letters of administration on the estate of Herman Henry Uptmor weights ticked away in the manor | ed, were granted to the house, or in the mansion house, and | 7, gned on the 11th day of that every land owner who could af- | February, 1922, by the Probate ford to have a sundial in his garden | Court of Idaho County. carried a gold watch or silver watch All persons having claim in the fob pocket of his “small | against said estate are required clothes,” to exhibit them to me for allow } ance at my residence about five J. V. BAKER & SON “Where Quality and Prices Meet” within ten months after e\% of the first publication of this 74} VV NFS THTUN THI 0110100000 201010 HVTE TATE THINGS TO MAKE YOUR DRESSES HAVE THE FINISHED NEAT APPEARANCE. rested, in the gardens of old homes Yet it is a fair assumption that on dial a clock run by wheels and IF IT IS NEW WE SHOW IT. Meane Defenseless Against In- | notice, or they shall be forever Jury From Fire. | barred. ae —— Dated this 11th day of Fe Young long-leaf plants protect them | 1922. th day of Feby. i Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS and all kinds of Poultry teresting and remarkable way. i: 7s Uptmor, Administratrix four or five years the stems of the | ™ "+ uton, Attorney for Ad infant trces attain a height of only ministratrix, Grangeville, Ic Dur- | First publication Feb. 17, 1§ nordl SeSiiepeceeenece enn ing this time their bark is ex nartly thick, and that alone gives seme | protection. Sut in addition the long tei spite wp | Legal Blanks — needies spring up above the siem, and for then beud over on all sides in u greet | A cascade which falls to the ground ip | S t Thi 2 g 3 alea is UiTICe This green barrier can, with diff if culty, be made to burn, while the | shade that it casts prevents inflamma | | | Dealers in Hides, Pelts, COTTONWOOD, IDAHO tected stem. It js thought that it 1s owing to tlon which the pine seedlings have developed that the growth of the ever green oaks in Florida has been re stricted in regions where fires huve raged, while pure pine forests have taken their place. || Just a Few ents an Acre Americans Have Prettiest Feet. What country possesses women with the lurgest feet? This question arose from av inspection of women's fee! | in Bond street during the busiest hour Women of many na that varied considerably “Dutch and German women have the biggest feet in the world,” sald | Robert Wortley, court chiropodist. Eritish women have the longest | feet, but they are narrow; Japanese | women have the sinallest feet of all, | and Americans the most beautiful, because they are well cared for from youth, “After the American foot I award the beauty honor to the French wom: | an, whose foot is a triumph of grace, | while dancing has given a special at- traction to the Spanish feminine | foot.”—London Daily Express, | | | Watch Would Be Useless, Not long ago a number of masons left Scotland to settle in this coun-) try. One of them wrote to his wife) and to take passage out to him, A good farm implement does its work for many years at a cost of only a few cents an M/Z. MAA | gaze of other men. The good wife had a neighbor who} came to help her with the packing. In the midst of it they fell upon Thomas’ watch. The neighbor exam) ined it closely and then sald: “It's a grand watch, Catherine. | Ye'll be takin’ it wi’ ye?” | “Na, na!” was the reply. “It wad) be o’ nae use oot there, for Thomas} tells me in his letter that there Is| some ‘oors o' difference between the} time here and tn California, so 1 need) na’ be takin’ useless things.” Made Veil in Institution. The women of Persia—like the Mohammedan women of every other country—go about their duties wheu called into the streets with veils which hide their faces from the eyes of passersby. Tradition tells us that one day when Mohammed was with his favorite wife, Ayesha, who was unveiled, as all woman then were, a stranger happened to see her lovely face, became enamored of her, and offered to buy her at the price of one camel. It is said this so angered Mohammed that the prophet decreed that women, thereafter, should wear veils to hide their faces from the acre for the work done each year. It makes farming operations easier, faster, more timely. It decreases your cost of production. It increases your yields per acre. You ean do without mere luxuries, and make money by doing so. You con do without goods, the need of which i ions by so doing. ich is questionable, and never lose a cent But you lose good, hard dollars when you try to i prod: ing implement that you actually need. ; Pane Sent ae “ai We are able to buy implements this r for i : ‘ ) 1 year for less than we paid going to give our customers the full benefit of the lower —_" asta: You get the same high quality for les ney—mMany ty) se auity ess mone m: y year i only a few cents per acre. hey: ny years of good service at a cost of We'll be glad to show you these new implements you need. Cottonwood Hardware & Implement Co. THE TRADE-MARK OF QUALIT