Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, March 31, 1922, Page 4

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2 8 nk AAA AAA OOOO DOOPOPOOOD D 18 adtuanbaihdeneiemmnaneennnnnnel COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE WILLARD um GEORGE MEDVED Batteries | Subsetiption one year .. Six month: Isstied Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as a (Strictly in advance) " INDEPENDEN1 IN POLITICS 192 Car Builders vse Wi'lard Threaded Rubber Bat- teries as equipment on new -ars. As an authorized Willar | Service Station, it is our : a npr . eae y | Copy for change of ad must be hand- ae ye ‘ore rect ok gale Pee eee ' ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1922 ‘WANTS, FOUND AND FoR SAE Automobile Acetylene Accessories The Cottonwood Battery & Welding Shop ~ WANTED—Some “fat hens. Simon Bros. | FOR SALE—640 acres of Flint, First National. COTTONWOOD DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE FOR SALE—Timothy hay. Mile and one-half northwest of | Hussman mill. Mike Steger. 18-2 eee eaenem wna | FOR SALE—Hatching eggs ‘from full blooded Barred Rocks. $1 per setting. Mrs. Bert Schroeder. 12-tf FOR SALE — Thoroughbred Hereford bull, 18 months old. | Will ke sold cheap if taken at ‘once. Bert Schroeder. 9-tf ROBBINS BROTHERS PROPS. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry | FOR SALE—Early and late | cabbage plants. 25 cents a hun- dred delivered in Cottonwood. Ben Cooper, Nezperce Phone No. 5812. 14-6p | FOR SALE—15 horse power |four cylinder engine with belt and pulley and clutch. Cotton- wood Battery and Welding = | Shop. 13-tf COTTONWOOD, IDAHO | — =| NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. | Department of the Interior, U. S. | Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, March , 1922. NOTICE is hereby given that | Ernest D. Lemons, of Spring Camp, | Idaho, who, on June 80, 1919, made | Entry, No. 07295, for E% SW, & 1/S% SE%, Section 38, S% SW, & | Wi SE%, Section 34, Township 30 | North, Range 3 West, Boise Meridian, | has filed notice of intention to make three year Proof, to establish claim to | the land above described, before the ell | Register & Receiver of the U. S. Land iW] | Office, at Lewiston, Idaho, on the 27th day of April, 1922. Claimant names as witnesses: George F. Anderson, Walter H. Lemons, Howard R. Wright, John | Miller, all of Boles, Idaho. 13-5Pd. Henry Heitfeld, Register. In exchanging wheat for flour 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 eee | NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, March 17, 1922. NOTICE is hereby given that George F. Anderson, of Boles, Idaho, who, on May 26, 1917 and April 5, | 1920, made Enlarged H. E. 07073, and Add. Stock-raising H. F., No. 07449, for SE%, & SE% SW%, Sec. 26; NE, NE% NW, & E% SEX, Sec- tion 36, Township 30 North, Range 3 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year Proof, | to establish claim to the land above described, before the Register & Re- ceiver of the WU. S. Land Office, at | Lewiston, Idaho, on the 27th day of April, 1922. Claimant names as witnesses: Ernest D. Lemons, Walter H. Lem- ons, Howard R. Wright, John Miller, all of Boles, Idaho. 13-5Pd. Henry Heitfeld, Register. 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 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the Probate Court, County of Idaho, State of Idaho. In the matter of the estate of Jacob Reidhaar, deceased. Notice is hereby given, that Letters Testamentary on the es- tate of Jacob Reidhaar, deeeased were granted to the undersigned on the 2nd day of March, 1922, |by the Probate Court of Idaho | County. | All persons having claims against said estate are required | to exhibit them to me for allow- |ance at the Cottonwood State | Bank, Cottonwood, Ida., which is |hereby designated as the place | for the transaction of the busi- ness of said estate, within ten |months after the date of the | first publication of this notice, or they shall be forever barred. Dated this 8rd day of March, Have You a Thor In Your Home? If Not, Why Not? Grangeville Electric Light & Power CO. 8). y. ruiton, atone ce |cutors, Grangeville, Idaho. First publication March 24th, \ ae a ae NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UN- Let The Chronicle Do Your Printing.) pee werr or execution. In the Probate Court of Idaho We Do It The Way You Want It Done. |cazvazesciusi STATE BANK, FOR SALE—Alfalfa hay. Leo | Welding 2% naa. ____ 188 | Additional Stock-raising Homestead | a corporation, Plaint‘ff, vs. EDWARD HANLEY, Defendant. Under and by virtue of a Writ of Execution issued out of the Probate Court of Idaho County, State of Idaho, and to me directed and délivered, for a Judgment rendered in said Court above named, on the 1st day of March, A. D. 1922, in favor of The Cotton- wood State Bank, a corporation, as plaintiff, and against Edward Hanley, as defendant, for the sum of Two Hundred Sixty-five and .20-100 Dol- lars, ($265.20), lawful money of the United States, together with costs and interest, I have levied upon the fol- lowing described property, to-wit: The East half of the Northeast | quarter, the Southwest quarter of the | Northeast quarter, and the Northeast Seg of the Southeast quarter of Section 9, Township 20 North, Range One, East of the Boise Meridian, in Idaho Co-nty, Idaho. PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, than on the 17th day of April, A. D. 1922, at 10 o’clock A. M., ef said day, at the front door of the court house in the City of Grangeville, in the County of Idaho, State of Idaho, |1 will, in obedience to said writ of Execution, sell all the right, title, | Edward Hanley, of, in and to the above described property, or so much ary to satisfy | thereof as may be nece: | of the United States. | Dated at Grangeville, Idaho, March | 18th, 1922. J. G. EIMERS, Sher'ff of the County of Idaho. H. Rothwell, Deputy Sheriff. | 13-4 NOTICE—ANNUAL SCHOOL MEETING AND ELECTION. | | trict No. 30, Idaho County. the Annual School Meeting of {Common Joint School District | No. 30, County of Idaho, State of Idaho, will be he!d on Monday, the 15th day of April, 1922, at 1 o'clock P. M. of said day at the School House in said district, and | That at said mecting the fol- | | will be elected: |of three (3) years. | That at said meeting an elec- jtion will be held to determine whether or not a special tax shall | be levied not to exceed ten (10) mills on each dollar of the tax- able property of said district, an@ having deterrnined that a special tax shall be levied, election will jthen be held to determine the ; amount of money to be raised by } such special tax. tion will be held to determine the \length of time school shall be taught in said district for the en- |} suing year and the seasons of the taught. That at said meeting any other business pertaining to schools and school interests will be | transacted. That all elections at said meet- ing will be by ballot. This notice is dated and post- ed the 27 day of March, 1922. JOE ENNEKING, ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE ON SALE OF REAL ESTATE. County, State of Idaho. In the matter of the guardian- ship of the persons and estates of Josephine M. Sonnen, Bene- dict G. Sonnen and Agatha E. Sonnen, minors. Frances Sonnen, guardian of the persons and estates of Jose- phine M. Sonnen, Benedict G. Sonnen and Agatha E. Sonnen, minors, having filed a petition herein praying for an order of sale of certain real estate belong- ing to the estates of said minors, for the purposes therein set forth: IT IS THEREFORE ORDER- |ED by the Judge of said Court that all persons interested in said estates of the said minors, jand their guardianship appear \before the Probate Court of Idaho County, Idaho at the Court room of said Court, at Grange- ville, Idaho, on Thursday the 18th day of April, 1922, at ten o'clock A. M. of said day then and there to show cause why an order should not be granted to | the said guardian to sell the real estate described in said petition for sale of real estate, and that a copy of this order be published the Cottonwood Chronicle, a weekly newspaper printed and pablished at Cottonwood, in said Idaho County, State of Idaho. The real estate described in said petition and sought to be sold is described as follows, to- | wit: The SW NE, and the SEW NW\ of Section Ten in Twp.,81 | North, of Range One West of the Boise Meridian in Idaho County, State of Idaho. That at said meeting en elec-| | veor in which the same shall be} |Clerk of Common Joint S¢ehool District No. 30, of Idaho! County, Idaho. 14-8 In the Probate Court of Idaho | at least Four successive weeks in | Done in open Court this March | DOGS GUARD°SICILIAN HOMES 15th, 1922. J. E. BYROM, Probate Judge. H. Taylor, attorney for guar- dian. Residence and post office address, Grangeville, Idaho. 12-4 | NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE | UNDER WRIT OF EXECU- TION. In the District Court of the | Tenth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for the County of Idaho. A. P. Schnell and Zoe M. Schnell, Plaintiffs Vs. Lalu M. Unzicker and Roy H. Unzicker, Defendants. Under and by virtue of a Writ of Execution issued out of the District Court of the Tenth Judi- cial District of the State of Tdaho, in and for the County of | Idaho, and to me directed and | | delivered, for a judgment ren- 14-tf | claim and interest of raid defendant, | dered in the said District Court |of the Tenth Judicial District, on | the tenth day of October, A. D., | choice grazing land. See W. W. | plaintiff's claims, besides costs, in-| 1921, in favor of A. P. Schnell | 14-2p | terest and accruing costs, to the high- | and Zoe M. Schnell, as plaintiffs | _ | est and hest bidder for lawful money jand against Lulu M. Unzicker and Roy H. Unzicker, as defen- | dants, for the sum of Nine Hun- | dred Fifty-two and 50-100 Dol- lars, ($952.50), lawful money of | the United States, together with , costs and interest, I have levied | upon the following described pro- | |perty, to-wit: A tract of land In Common Joint School Dis-| described as beginning 60 ft. | | West of the southwest corner of Notice is Hereby Given that) Block 12 of T. J. Rhoads First | | Addition to the Town of Cotton- | wood in | Idaho, and running thence west |92 ft. to the east line of the | Clearwater Short Line Railway |Company’s right-of-way, thence |north along the east line of said | right-of-way 27214 ft. thence lowing officers of the district | east 72 ft. to a point 60 ft. west | | of the southwest corner of Block A trustee to serve for a term |7 of T. J. Rhoads First Addition | ;to the Town of Cottonwood; ;thence south 27214 ft. to the | place of beginning. Also lots 9 and 10 in Block 12 of said T. J. | Rhoads First Addition to the | Town of Cottonwood. |. Also Ni of NW4, NW of |NEMW, Sec. 20; W164 of SEY, | SEY of SEY of Sec. 19; NEL4 |of NE, Sec. 30; Twp. 30, N. R. | I W. B. M. in Idaho County Idaho Also SW of SW14 of Sec. 9; SE of SE of Sec. 8; El4 of NEW, Sec. 17; SW, of SEY, and SEY of SW14 of Sec. 7; NW, and NW14 of SW14, and NW, of NE! of Sec. 18; Sl4 of NW14, N14 of SW14, Sec. 20, all in Twp. 30, N. R. 1 W. B. M. in Idaho County, Idaho. Also SEY of SWY4, SW14 SEY, of Sec. 26; and NE, of NW, NW of NE14, of Sec. 35, Twp. 82, N. R. 1 W. B. M. Also SEY, of SW1, of See, 15; El of NW and NEl4 of SWI, and Lot 7 in Sec. 22; and Lot 2 in Sec. 23; and Lot 5 in Sec. 26; and the EY of NW and NW, of NE of Sec. 27, Twp. 30, N. R. 1 W. B. M., in Idaho County, Idaho. ; Public Notice is Hereby Given, that on Saturday the Eighth day of April, A. D. 1922, at 10 o’clock A. M., of said day, at the front door of the court house in the | City of Grangeville, -in the County of Idaho, State of Idaho, I will, in obedience to said Writ of Execution, sell all the right, title, claim and interest of said defendant Lulu M. Unzicker ard Roy H. Unzicker, of, in and to the above described property, or so much thereof as may be nec- essary to satisfy plaintiffs’ claim, besides costs, interest and accruing costs, to the highest and best bidder for lawful money of the United States. Dated March 15th, 1922. J. G. Eimers, Sheirff. 12-4 By H. Rothwell, Deputy. WILL NEED IT “The next man | marry will have to have money.” “He certainly will, to try to provide you with ali the things you have asked me to get.” If he is going Terrorism. The “terrorist,” If he would prove An influential elf, Before he tries to make a move Must be scareproof himself. Net Profit. Briggs—Did you get anything out of your week-end at the Gilder's? Griggs—I got a brand new sweater in exchange for one that I was get- ting ashamed to be seen in.—Judge. said Idaho County, | | | | “italian Bultdogs,” ae They Have Been Nicknamed, Obviate Need for Locks on Doors, In Sicily the fnbabitants have trained dogs to protect their homes against brigands and other lawless characters. These Sicilians on leaving their homes seldom bother to lock doors or wit- dows. They have trained thelr dogs so well that the animals can take care of the most cunning of criminals, When a@ thief enters one of these homes the dog does not attack him. He receives him in silence, even wagging his tail sometimes tp apparent friend- liness. But no matter where the thief mag go, the dog follows, never losing sight of him for a nioment. He follows the thief from room to room. The tatet way load himself up with all the loot he likes, but the dog views his thiev- ing with indifference, It is not until the thief attempts to lenve the place that the dog displays any real interest In him, He then be- comes remarkably active. He Jumps In front of the culprit, barring his way and defying him to attempt to leave. If the thief makes a break for the door or window the dog is upon him. As a rule the animal springs for the throat, but wherever he sinks his teeth nothing short of death can make him release his hold. If the intruder attempts to draw @ weapon the dog Is upon him Ike a flash of lightning. These dogs have beta nicknamed Italian bulldogs, but they are of a mongrel breed with just a trace of the genuine bulldog In their blood. ‘They more closely resemble wolflounds.—North Ctinton Herald. HEAD BINDING IN SOUTH SEAS Natives of Tomman fsland Cling to a Curious Custom, Which Seems to Savor of Cruelty. The ofd men of Tomman (an Island of the New Hebrides, South Pacitie) told me that heads nowadays are not what they were in olden, times, writes Martin Johnson in Asia Magazine. They said what I found bard to be iieve—that the crantums of their an- cestors were twice as long as those of present-day islanders. Tommanites are not born with long heads, but the head of each baby ts bound in order to make the shape of his cranium conform to local Ideas of beauty. When he fs a few days old, his mother puts on his head a bonnet woven from human hair, which she soaks with oil, until she thinks the little skull is softened, Over this bonnet goes a loose woven basket of coconut fiber, The fond mother pulls the strands of the basket tight, and each day a bit tighter, until the skull can be compressed no further. When the litle Tommanite is about ® year old, he emerges from his wrappings with a beautifully elon- gated, pelnted skull, the pride of his mother, Finland's Climate Healthful. The climate of Finland is rigorous but healthful, marked by long winters and short, bot summers. It Iles with- in the gone of cyclones and anticy- clones, which pass over northern Eu- rope from west to east at Intervals of two or three days throughout the year, and give variability to the winds and weather. The mean annual tempera- ture varies between the southern and the northern boundary from 40 to 34 degrees Fuhrenheit, ranging from 20 to 8 degrees Fahrenheit In January, and from 64 to 62 degrees Fahrenhett in July. The extreme range of tem- perature Is about 110 to 115 degrees Fahrenheit. The prevailing winds in winter are from the south and southwest and fn summer from the north, northwest and west. The amount of rainfall varies from 10 Inches in the northern to 25 Inches In the southern part, being greatest during August. Health Affected by Emotions, Any emotion that gives pleasure acts healthfly on the heart and other organs, the cireulation becomes more brisk, and appetite and health tm- prove. Love, hope and happiness all produce these emotions and, contrary to the accepted notion, the ardent lover ought to enjoy his meals thor- oughly. Despair, grief and fear have quiite another effect. They make the actlon of the heart slower, and enfeeble the nervous and muscular system, often upsetting the digestion as well; Anger causes the heart to act vio leutly, working upon both physiéal and mental powers. The muscies for the time being aré taut and tense, and the secretion of bile is increased. A reaction follows rapidly, when the muscles become fiabby and a feeling of weakness pervades the body. When a Bushel isn’t. “Thirty-two quarts make one bush- el,” recites Young America giibly and positively, But the housewife Who has purchased family supplies for years is not at all sure that this f hot one of the many rules that liave exceptions. Specialists of the bureau of markets, United States Department of Agriculture, say that the heaped buBhel varies with the price of the product and the weight bushel varies widely in different states. A budhel of sweet potatoe’ Is 46 pounds in the Dakotas and 60 pounds in Maryland. A buShel of tomatoes is 45 pounds tn Oklahoma and 60 pounds tn Virginta. A bushel of unshelled green peas te 28 pounds In Massachusetts aud 9@ pounds tn Pennsylvania, eee = cai e ~

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