Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, April 7, 1922, Page 4

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ee LOOK! LOOK! Announcing The New Diamond Tire at Prices that were Never Heard of Before Come In And See The New Diamond Cord Tire THE MOST BEAUTIFUL TIRE BUILT, BACKED BY TWENTY-NINE YEARS IN BUILDING QUALITY, SERVICE AND ECONOMY IN TIRES. THE TIRE THAT YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR, AT PRICES THAT ARE RIGHT. ALSO THE NEW DIAMOND TIRE WITH THE DOUBLE DIAMOND TREAD FOR FORDS AND OTHER LIGHT CARS AT PRICES THAT ARE LOWER THAN EVER BEFORE. The New Diamond Price List CORDS FABRICS Size Diamond Ribbed Gray Red Size Smooth Dia’d Squeegee Grey Red Tread Tread Tube Tube Tread Tread Tiead Tube Tute 80x8144CL 16.95 2.25 2.80 80x8 CL 9.85 10.85 1095 1.80 2.40 32x314SB 25.50 24.24* 2.55 2.95 30x3L4CL 10.90 18.75 2.25 2.80 81x4 SB 29.40 83.10 3.45 31x4 CL 19.00 21.85 38.10 3.45 82x4 SB $2.40 30.80% 8.20 3.65 32x314SB 19.15 2.55 2.95 88x4 SB 33.40 31.75% 3.35 3.80 $2x4 SB 24.95 3.20 3.65 84x4 SB $4.25 32.55% 93.50 4.00 838x4 SB 26.30 3.35 3.80 82x414SB 41.90 39.80" 4.05 4.65 34x4 SB ° 26.85 3.50 4.00 83x414SB 42.85 40.70* 4.20 4.75 32x414SB 88.40 4.05 4.65 84x414SB 43.90 41.70% 4.25 4.90 883x414 SB $4.50 4.20 4.75 35x414SB 42.95" 430 5.10 34x414SB 35.65 4.25 4.90 36x414SB 43.85* 4.55 5.80 35x414SB 87.30 4.30 5.10 83x5 SB 62.15 49.55* 5.00 5.70 36x414SB 87.80 4.55 5.80 85x5 SB 54.75 52.00* 5.20 6.00 83x5 SB 41.20 5.00 5.70 87x5 SB 54.70* 65.45 6.35 35x5 SB 43.75 5.20 6.00 *Discontinued when presnet stock is out. 87x5 SB 46.30 5.45 6.35 NOTE 1—All prices subject to Government war tax. Note 2—CL, Regular Clin- cher; SB, Straight Bead. PHILADELPHIA Diamond Gird Battery Guaranteed For Two Years THE BATTERY THAT IS BUILT TO STAND THE WEAR AND TEAR AND ROUGH USE THAT A BATTERY IS SUBJECTED TO IN AN AUTOMOBILE OVER ROUGH COUNTRY ROADS, WHERE IT HAS TO STAND THE STRAIN OF VIBRA- TION AND BUMPS AS WELL AS BE ABLE TO DELIVER THE CURRANT TO START YOUR CAR AT ALL TIMES. THE PHILADELPHIA DIAMOND GIRD PLATE IS BUILT FOR STRENGTE. WHEREVER STRENGTH IS NEEDED YOU SEE THIS SAME KIND OF DIAMOND CONSTRUCTION, IN BRIDGES, IN DERRICKS, FIGHTING MASTS. ENGINEERS THE WORLD OVER HAVE RECOGNIZED IT AS THE STRONG- EST TYPE. IN A STORAGE BATTERY ITS USE IS YOUR PROTECTION AGAINST COST- LY REPAIR BILLS. IT IS A PATENTED PHILADELPHIA DIAMOND GIRD PAT- TERY FEATURE TO BE FOUND IN NO OTHER BATTERY. THE PHILADELPHIA QUARTER SAWED HARD WOOD SEPERATOR is what battery engineers have been looking for for years. It has all the advantages of the soft wood seperator and in addition does not become soft and mushy, crack or allow the plates to short circuit. The quarter sawed seperator is patented and is to be found only in the PHILADELPHIA DIAMOND GIRD BATTERY. _ This is only one of the features of the Philadelphia Diamond Gird Battery. Come and let us show you the rest. Monogram Oils & Grease. We Handle Only The Best We Are Here To Serve You Cottonwood Garage | HUDDLESTON & SPECK, Props. HE | | | | }us a heroine by NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, March 7, 1922. NOTICE is hereby given that Ernest D. Lemons, of Spring Camp, Idaho, who, on June 30, Additional Entry 1919, made Stock-raising Homestead No. 07295, for E% SW%, & 4, Section 33, S4 SW%, & 4 ction 34, Township 30 North, Range 3 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year Proof, to establish cleim to the land above described, before the Register & Receiver of the U. S. Land n, 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. Pils Henry Heitfeld, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, March 1%, 1922. NOTICE is hereby given that on May 25, 1917 and April 5, 920, made Enlarged H. E. 07073, and No, 07449, y Sec. 26; 1% NW, & E% SEX, Sec: Township 30 North, Range 3 t, 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 U. 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. 3-5Pd. Henry Heitfeld, tied ster. “NO PLACE FOR HOMELY GIRL” | Wail of Girl Who Tries Suicide After | Fiance Rejects Her for Pret. tier One. Baltimore—"“Men only look for beauty; they don’t care about the real homemaker any longer,” Virginia Hicks, twenty, a patient at the Mary land General hospital, commit suicide by swallowing poison, explained that there was no place in the world for the homely girl. “I don’t want to get well,” she con- tinued, pushing back her short red hair. “Men don’t care what you do for them—they are for the girl who spends everything on clothes and makes a big show. They don't care if a girl is good, self-respecting and a real homemaker; all they want is @ big display of their money.” Refusing to give her lover's name, she admitted that they had both been | very happy and expected to get married shortly, until one evening at a dance he met a prettier girl, didn't have a chance. “Classical features and a conspicu- | ous luck of freckles are essential fea- tures for happiness,” Virginia de clared, weeping. Girt Holds Prisoner by Coat Tail. Chicago. — Mi Gail criminal court grapher, is hailed her co-workers. As | Frank Legregni, wnder death sentence | for murdering his wife, attempted to jump from a window sill to liberty, | Miss McDermut grabbed his coat tall | and held on until police had beaten | the prisoner into submission, Calf-Hare-Pig-Fox-Dog Cried Just Like Baby Paris.—An animal born on a at Grandchaimps, near Ss, two weeks ago, died yes: terday while being transported to Paris for exhibition at the Academy of Science. The crea- ture had the body of a calf, the head of a rabbit, eyes like a pig, ears like a fox and hair like a St. Bernard dog. It weighed twelve pounds at birth and cried like a baby. Cunning. Friend—Was Miss Filmite angry | when she found you had forgotten to turn the crank? Camera Man—Not after I had said | that I became so engrossed in her act: | ing that I forgot to turn.—Film Fun, | MICKIE SAYS— esis eorge F. Anderson, of Boles, Idaho, | who tried to} and after that | McDermut, | .| DRY SNAKE GETS JAG ON HOOTCH Follows Trickle Into Bottle, Crawis Out and Dies, Point- ing Temperance Moral N. ¥.—Douald Dwig- ld son of € Green Lake, gins, the six-y Dwiggins, the ar “Schooldays” and has a thriving grocery | father’s summer camp across ¢ | Lake from here, from which be indus triously peddl to iD lary cus tomers such groceries as from time to time he can wheedle from the Dwig gins cook. Two or three days ago Donald ac quired a half bottle of potent but dis- carded home brew and he put it on sale at once, his young soul untrou bled with the prospect of being a juvenile bootlegger. But he put tt tn the sun, and the sun was hot, Soon the cork popped out, the home brew “hootch” fizzled up over the bottle and who ¢ “Ophelia” ¢ at his ‘unada store Crawled Out Again. a thin stream of It ran down the plank which is the counter of the grocery store. A little while after the popping of | the cork and the fizzing of the brew a | foot and a hulf rter snake came along, having come down from the mountain to see what he could see. He | sniffed the home brew, he gulped a bit of it, and he quickly drank his way along the thin stream until he reached | the bottle. Then he crawled up and into the bottle, and drank his way to | the bottom. After that he crawled our | aguin, fell off the plank when he tried | to retrace his steps (or wiggles) and | | finally he made a very zigzag course to | | the dock. | It was perfectly obvious that the snake was frazzled, as the saying }s, to the eyeballs. He crawled foolishly around the dock for a few moments apparently with a very discouraged outlook upon life. Finally he tried “ crawl along the edge of the dock, but wabbled so that he slipped and fell into the luke. He was seen no more. ROUTS COW; SAVES FRIEND | | Girt Fights Infuriated Animal With Pitchfork When It Would Gore Chum. Ceurfoss, Md.—Miss Cora Harbaugh, | with a pitchfork, saved the life of Miss Kate Spickler, a friend, when the latter was attacked by ap infu riated cow near this place. Miss Spick- | ler and Miss Lulu Kendle had gone | Into a field to drive the cow and her | calf tnto the barn, when the animal | turned and attacked Miss Spickler, | knocking her down, | Miss Harbaugh, seeing the perl! of | her friend, seized a pitchfork and ran | to her rescue just as the cow was | ready to gore its helpless and uncon scious victim, Miss Harbaugh sunk the prongs of the pitchfork into the cow's side sev- | eral times and beat the animal over | the head and body with her weapon unt) the cow turned and fled, | 0 a ere a Picked Up His Foot After It Was Cut Off When the mowing machine which he was driving cut off } his left feet, James Sharpe, fif- * teen years old, of Defiance, O., } picked it up and drove his horses { to the house before be fainted t from loss of blood, The ; he boy the sald stepped out on tongue of the machine to whip the horses with the reins when he fell. - ny $166640456554455gis ees. eee eee “Lest” Baby Found Behind Bed. Miami, Okla.—Exhausted and hys- terical after a fruitless search for her | missing daughter, thought to have been | | taken by a band of gypsies, Mrs. Cam | Lankard of Miami threw herself weep- | Ing across her bed, and thereby dis- covered the infant asleep on the floor | behind the bed. Revenue Officers Shot in Ambush. Lexington, Ky.—Two men _ were killed and one serlously wounded, near here, when assassins lured a posse of revenue men into an umbush and, poured a rain of bullets upon them. Friends of the dead aud wounded de- clare that the ambush was prepared by political enemies of the men. | a half hitch over | to ex | accord, | the other end to be | shaft carrier. | these, knees. Farm Live Stock CURING HORSE’S BAD HABITS in Case of Chronic Balker Course @f Training Will Be Needed to a Overcome Fault. Horses that have been property handled and trained are not balky, neither do they have bad habite, When horses with bad habits are em countered a careful study of each case should be made In order to ascertain the cause, and, if possible, to Fe move It. 7 ‘The most common cause of balk- iness among horses {s punishment to muke them do something that they cannot do or that they do not under- stand how to do, Another common cause is the forcing of horses to draw savy loads without allowing them to stop occasionally to rest and regain their breath, The use of the whip or spur iu such instances should be avoided, as the pain inflicted will be very likely to provoke further and more stubborn rebellion. If a horse balks the bearing of the harness should be examined to see if it ts hurting him. If a heavy load is be- ing drawn and the horse is not al- lowed to rest and regain his breath und strength he may become sulky and refuse to pull. Give him a short rest, and while he is resting rub his nose, pick up a front foot and tap the hoof a few times, or adjust the bar- ness, and he may forget his grievance. Take the lines and give the command to go ahead, turning slightly to the right or left to start. If the horse does not start it is either a case of overload or a chronic balker. If the load is so heavy it cannot be drawn, unload If the horse is a chronic balker a course of training will be ry to overcome the habit. aece In vlder horses where the habit of balking is fixed the horse should be trained to obey all commands with promptness without being bitched to the wagon. First put on the double trip ropes and use them until the stops and stands when he hears hoa.” Next put on the guy line, which should be managed by an @s- sistant, while you drive and attend the trip ropes. The guy line is a rope fastened around the horse’s neck and the lower Jaw. It is very severe and should not be used s. If the horse shows any “ndency to balk, give the command hoa” before he stops of his own When ready to start, the as- | sistant should take a position in front of the horse and smartly jerk bim for- Modern Example of Good Breeding— One of Stallions Bred by the De- partment of Agriculture at Buffalo, Wyo. ward with the guy line at the same time you give the command “get up.” Repeat the process of stopping and Starting until the horse shows no signs of self-will. Use the guy line, and use it severely, on the slightest intimation that the horse is going to balk, After a few of these lessons the horse may be hitched to the wagon, The trip ropes and guy line should be kept on until he is well broken of the habit. A horse that kicks when something touches his heels is dangerous to drive. To overcome the habit, put of the harness and the trip ropes. Take a stick and pole him all over. After he becomes submissive to the pole, tie sacks of hay to the traces and breeching, and continue the lesson un- til he pays no attention to them. Fasten a long pole on either side with one end to drag on the ground, fastened to the Drive him around with and if he attempts to kick com- mand “steady” id pull him to his The le 1s should be contin- ued until he su ts to the poles drag- | ging between his legs and round him. SILAGE FOR PRODUCING BEEF Missouri College of Agriculture Out- lines Satisfactory Plan With Young Steers. Highly satisfactory beef can be made from two-year-old steers by feeding corn as silage, together with linseed meal and clover or alfalfa hay, instead of full feeding shelled or ear corn, according to the Missouri Col- lege of Agriculture. One acre, yielding 40 bushels of corn, or eight tons of silage, if fed as silage, together with 1,733 pounds of Unseed of] meal and 1,810 pounds of alfalfa hay would produce 7568 pounds of beef and 11.3 pounds of pork. If, however, the corn be fed as shelled corn (full feed) and silage, to- gether with 308.2 pounds of linseed meal and 345.2 pounds of alfalfa hay, it would produce 291.6 pounds of beef and 68.5 pounds of pork. — te

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