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How About That. Spring Suit ? td - All Wool Made to Measure Suits $25.00 For Coat and Pants. All One Price 250 Samples to Select From Leggett Mercantile Co. Where Your Dollar Buys More In exchanging wheat for flour We will exchange 35 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 38 pounds to the bushel. Farmers’ Union Warchouse Co. Ltd. DISTRIBUTOR FOR IDAHO COUNTY C. H. GREVE, MANAGER Have You a Thor In Your Home? If Not, Why Not? Grangeville Electric light & Power Co. (MRaAU ARNEL | Have no tee now taviting it locks, e= have no idea how Inviting it looks, es- "3 Printing, That’s Our Hobby Let Us Do Your Printing ER EE A ee OR tase ot uemn ne 0 | will tell truths that no one wants to | to exhibit them to me for allow-| § i of man were reared two stories high | 3); has thé garret been the nursery of | | genius.—Pittsburgh Chronicle Tele | | graph. A es sc te raty decom, taste that is truly delicious, WORDS OF GERMANIC ORIGIN WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE 4 years old, will weigh 2800 lbs. thoughts of grief and fear than any ay nae ot eet death. This, word |: Clark, the junk man. — 10-4 did not come to us from the classic | ~ SKE RG? 7 gene. aang, 3 lands of Greece and Rowe. it was} FOR SALE — Thoroughbred one of the words of the Germanic peo- | Hereford bull, 18 months old. Many of Today's Most Common Ex, | ~ fee e + pressions Can Easily Be Traced FOR SALE—Pure buckwhea = to the “Angles.” flour. Alois Holthaus. 8-4* | = a 1eS Perb the dest of English E ‘ = aeons tee word Sihet brtige a FOR SAL Pair of mares, = = re ples and has been English ever since | Will be sold cheap if taken at) = English . The Angles, who came } e re Tibial, ties or Pbeeierg eee Bert Schroeder. 9-tf | = eastern Schleswig, called the land that 5 Gay ikvaded and helped to conquer wane Peevey os Me : Or prin “Angieland” and from that word ‘ i ’ “England.” “Anglisehe” or a word | dred weight, including sack, at something like it, came to be “Eng-|the Rochdale Co, warehouse in lish.” TMese Angles, and all the other | Ferdinand. J..G. Schaeffer. 9-4* LS Germanic peoples, had this word | t Are now on display for your ap- “death” long before the English lan- \ FOR SALE—Gelding, 4 years = guage was spoken, and tn the earliest | 414 weight about 1700 a proval. The latest styles and all = “deth” and sometimes “deeth” and no {00d one; one pair of mares, doubt from the spelling “deeth” we | good leaders. D, Dudley, 7 miles arrived at spelling “death.” east of Cottonwood. 11-2* | “Skull” was another word of our | ——— Germanic forebears and it meant @ WANTED—Lady or man to cup, bowl, or drinking vessel, and from | wait table. Idaho Restaurant.2-* | the shape of man’s head, as it ap- * . English we find the word spelled | i : different lasts are in the new stock. peared long after death, the relic came ‘ eee tated “skull” because its form | WANTED—At once 50 dozen suggested a “skull,” a “skole,” or @ good fat hens. T. Clark, the “skal,” or drinking vessel. We often | junk man. 10-4 = , = The Prices Are More read of northern barbarians who | ——~ ny drank out of “skulls,” but It does not | LOST—Laprobe between a = Reasonable Than Ever necessarily follow that they drank out | John F of the skulls of the dead men, but n Frank and Tony Wessels | merely from their household “skulls,” | “skols,” or “skals,” which were their bowls or cups of wood or stone— | °— ERO ERE ce ie Kansas City Star. | NOTICE TO CREDITORS. ag oly oo pogo County of 0, State o! OF | GENIUSES IN POOR ABODES In the Matter of the Estate of | | Many of the World's Great Men | Herman Henry Uptmor, De-| | Have Been Born In or Lived or ceased. Died In Squalid Attics. Notice is hereby given, that | ranch. Finder please leave at! the Chronicle office. 11-tf | Ae se Peter’s Shoes are guaranteed solid leather, therefor they wear longer J. V. BAKER & SON “Where Quality and Prices Meet” Mi Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry Letters of administration on the | A good many great men have lived = im attics and some have died there. estate of Herman Henry Uptmor | Attles, says the dictionary, are “places deceased, were granted to the |= where lumber is stored,” and the | Undersigned on the 11th day of | = world has used them to store a good | February, 1922, by the Probate deal of its lumber in at one time or | Court of Idaho County. MH another. Its preachers and painters All persons having claims | and poets, Its deep-browed men who ; i ri find out things, its fire-eyed men, who | against said estate are required hear—these are the lumber that the | ance at my residence about five | : . | world hides away in its atties, Haydn | miles south of Keuterville, Idaho | grew up in an attic, Chatterton starved within ten months after the date in one. Addison and Goldsmith wrote | of the first publication of this | in garrets. ry shal Faraday and De Quincey knew ig rs gad they l be forever them well. Doctor Johnson camped | : cheerfully in them, sleeping soundly | Dated this 11th day of Feby. upon their trundle beds like the sturdy 922. Be i old soldier of fortune that he was,| Anna Uptmor, Administratrix inured to hardships and careless of | R, F, Futon, Attorney for Ad- himself. Dickens passed his youth | ministratrix, Grangeville, Idaho. among them, Moziand his old age. 7 . be Wiis’ Andaretn, >the falry king, First publication Feb. 17, 1922. dreamed his sweet fancies beneath their sloping roofs. Poor, wayward- hearted Collins leaned his head upon | their crazy tables. Benjamin Frank- | lin, Savage, young Bioomtleld, “Bobby” | Burns, Hogarth, Watts—the roll 1s endless. Ever since the habitations _ COTTONWOOD, IDAHO { Wild Elephants Against Horsemen. In Burmah wild elephants are pit- | ted against horsemen and elephant rid- | ers, and often rout thelr trained rela- | tives by the reckless fury of their at- | tacks. The “cornac” has to stick to his seat, while his hutti quirts and | careens around like an exploding loco- | motive or encounters his adversary | with the force of a catapult. Fight- | ing elephants guard their trunks by | doubling them up ike a clinched fist, | while using their neads like battering | rams or they stand shoulder to shoul- | der, after the mauner of the fighting | boars, and after a prelude of side- long pushes, suddenly hew away at each other with their tusks. During | the process of the duel the hutti seems | to forget or ignore his rider, but if he has recelved a fatal wound the | cornacs have to jump off and run for their lives, experience having shown that wounded elephants generally ex- pire in a paroxysm of rage.—Detrolt News. Goethe's Superb Faust. | Christopher Marlowe, an English dramatic poet of the Sixteenth cen-| tury, was the first to use the old leg- | end of Faustus, and he deals rather gently with the character of Mephis- topheles, making him sadder and more dignified than he appears in A good farm implement does its work for man mtttvad took ne y years at a cost of only a few cents an It makes farming operations easier, faster, more timely. Goethe's drama. It was the German It decreases your cost of production. poet who placed that demoniacal be- : ing before the world for all time, who It increases your yields per acre. created that sneering, sardonic indi- " i vidual, powerful and exacting, who You can do without mere luxuries, and make money by doing so. makes Faust sign their contract with ‘, Fy . & blood: brinful of vanity, anxious to ‘ bp con do without goods, the need of which is questionable, and never lose a cent show his power by the magic creation | y so doing. of wine drawn from a wooden table, But you lose good, hard dolla: h enjoying life as a man, yet retaining | d ra when you try to get along without any wealth- . Sit hls diabolical characteriaticn. ing implement that you actually need. 7 weltngeetan "ARS aR We are able to buy implements this year for less than we pai Dainties for the Invalid. going to give our customers the full benefit of the lower prices. Pree 20, The most appetizing way to pre > " pare oranges for the invalid Is to | You get the same high quality for less money—man r servi the orange, then slice it in ne only a few cents per acre. . rere lematn‘contot rounds, being careful not to break It; , ‘ then lay these thin circles of the. yel- We'll be glad to show you these new implements you need. Cottonwood Hardware & Implement Co. pecially if you dust it lightly with pul- verized sugar. In making eocoa for the sick room, if you use three-fourths of a teaspoon- ful of malted milk to every teaspoon-— ful of cocoa you will find you nave discovered a new drink. It is much