Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, April 21, 1922, Page 4

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192 Car Builders use Wi'lard Threaded Rubber Bat- teries 2s equipment on new cars. As an authorized Willar.| Service Station, it is our business to see that you get (he s:rvice from yur b2ttery that you have a right to ex ect. Automobile Acetylene Accessories Welding The Cottonwood Battery & Welding Shop PEARCE OIE EERE CPOE IDO IIIT Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry COTTONWOOD, IDAHO 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 33 pounds to the bushel. Farmers’ Union Warehouse Co. Ltd. DISTRIBUTOR FOR IDAHO COUNTY C. H. GREVE, MANAGER SPECIAL During the month of April $7.75 Westinghouse Iron for 5.8 Grangeville Electric Light & Power Co. Let The Chronicle Do Your Printing. —— ee We Do It The Way You Want It Done. Department of the Interior, U. COTTONWOOD EDGAR WORTMAN, Prop. y | No. 5312. COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE!Range 1 East, Boise Meridian’ : = _|has filed notice of intention to GEORGE MEDVED make three year Proof, to estab- lish claim to the land above des- second-class mail matter. Subscription one year Six months (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDEN’1 IN POLITICS Copy for change of ad must be hand- ee = senate FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1922 WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE ~ FOR SALE—15 tons of A No. 1 timothy hay. Joe Oldham 15-tf ~ WANTED—Some fat hens, Simon Bros. 14-tf ~ FOR SALE—Black Minorca eggs for hatching. T. Clark the junk man. 14 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 be sold cheap if taken at once. Bert Schroeder. 9-tf FOR SALE—Early and late cabbage plants. 25 cents a hun- dred delivered in Cottonwood. Ben Cooper, Nezperce Phone 14-6p FOR. SALE—15 horse “power and pulley and clutch. Cotton- Issued Every Friday and entered at|cribed, before Hampton Taylor, Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as/{J. S. Commissioner, at Grange- ere Claimant names at witnesses: | ed in by Wednesday to insure change | -—--—-— —— = | NOTICE TO CREDITORS. ~| Letters Testamentary on the es- ville, Idaho, on the 20th day of May, 1922. George J. Burgund, of Cotton- wood, Idaho; Alex Roberts, of Cottonwood, Idaho; Robert Fors- land, of Cottonwood, Idaho; Frank Lord, of Boles, Idaho. 16-5 Henry Heitfeld, Register. 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 tate of Jacob Reidhaar, deceased 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 requi: 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, 1922, H. J. BARTH, M. M. BELKNAP, Executors. R. F. Fulton, attorney for exe- cutors, Grangeville, Idaho. First publication March 24th, 1922. » 18-5 | four cylinder engine with belt} NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE AT PRIVATE SALE. Re | Shop. 13-tf I; stock and machinery. © | Martin, ie | Lewiston, Idaho. 17-tf ) | prairie. DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE wood Battery and Welding| Under authority of an order of sale granted by the Probate Court of Idaho County, State of FOR SALE—Pure bred regis-| [daho, dated April 13th, 1922, I =i] | tered Shorthorn bull, one year] the undersigned guardian of the a] | old, a grandson of imported Vil-| estates of Josephine M. Sonnen, Wh lager, a nice roan; also a = | Monitor =|7 miles east of Cottonwood. 17-2) private sale, the following des- Benedict G. Sonnen and Agatha drill. Duke Dudley,|&, Sonnen, minors, will sell at ——— | cribed real estate, to-wit: FOR SALE OR TRADE-—| “ Ap undivided one fourth inter- Seven room house and four lots| est in and to the SW14 NEY with barn and garage in Cotton-| and the SEY, NW, of Section wood for good work aaa a: Ten, Township 31 North, of 708 Prospect Avenue, FOR SALE OR TRADE—340 |acres of land for land on the 225 acres of farm land, balance good pasture, fenced and | i About summer fallow. Spring water piped to house, barn and hog pasture, good 7 room bungalow, fair barn and other outbuildings Three and one-half miles to rail- road and 3-4 mile to school. Urel Ross, Sweetwater, Idaho. 16-2* OS SE aR Be: NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. | Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, March 17, 1922. NOTICE is hereby given that Ernest D. Lemons, of Spring Camp, Idaho, who, on June 30, 1919, made Additional Stock-raisi Homestead Entry,. No. 07295, for £% SW, & S% SEX, Section 33, S% SW%, & W* SEX, 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 Register & Receiver of the U. S. Land 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 Beles, Idaho. 18-5Pd. Henry Heitfeld, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, March NOTICE is hereby given that George F. Anderson, of Boles, Idaho, who, on May 25, 1917 and April 5, 1920, made Enlarged H. E. 07078, and | Add. Stock-raising H. E., No, 07449, for SEM, & SEM SW%, Sec. 26; NE, NE% NW%, & E% SEX, Sec- tion 35, Township 80 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 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. Henry Heitfeld, Register. |S. Land Office at “Lewiston, Idaho, April 10, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Benjamin R. Cooper, of Cotton- ; wood, Idaho, who, on May 10, | 1919, made Additional Enlarg- |ed Homestead Entry, No. 07012, | tion” 18, ip 30 North, Range One West of the Boise Meridian, in Idaho County, State of Idaho. The sale will be made on or after Saturday the Sixth day of May, 1922, and bids will be re- ceived at my residence Two miles Northeast of Green Creek, Idaho County, State of Idaho, or they may be filed with the Clerk of the Probate Court of Idaho County, at Grangeville, Idaho. This sale will be made for cash to be paid on confirmation of sale by the Probate Court. Ten per cent of amount bid shall ac- company each bid. The undersigned reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Dated this 14th day of April, 1922. Frances Sonnen, Guardian cf the estates of the above named minors. a. Taylor, Attorney for Guard- ian. 17-3 “Ade” and Business Locations. There are two distinct types of bust- ness location known to real estate men —men's and women’s, As a rule the shady side of the street Is the wom- an’s side, and rents are about 25 per cent higher, Where one side of the street develops woman's business, the other bids fair to be good for men. Another thing to be looked for ts a lo- cation near a competitor. A store of this type should not pioneer. It is difficult for a cigar store to pay ex- penses if it is not on a corner; drug- stores can use an inside location if they are not too far from the heavy traffic highway. There is only one class of merchants that can afford to ignore these accepted facts about picking a location—the class of mer- chant that advertises. Nonadvertisers naturally have to be more careful about choosing their locations and must select places where heavy traffic passes thelr doors.—Charles C. Nich- olls in Business Digest. Charles and Mary Lamb. Charles Lamb, speaking of his life with his sister Mary, after these two gentle and sensitive souls had lived together and for each other for twenty years, once sald: “We two house to- gether, old bachelor and old maid, tn a sort of double singleness; while I, for one, find no disposition to go out upon the mountains with the king's rash offspring to bewall my celibacy. And we agree very well, too; but once when I spoke to her in a kinder voice than usual she burst into tears and sald I was much altered (for the worse). I read my old Burton and she reads stories with plenty of life in CHANDLER SIX ‘(595 *2395 (TOURING) Set New Pace For Motor Car Industry Shes — that has become keenly discrimi- nating, low prices are appealing only when allied to high quality. —— This fact explains the interest in Chandler prices. These prove that resources, manufactur- ing skill and high ideals can build the exclusive, powerful, long lived car at a figure little above those for admittedly cheap cars. This isthe most significant automobile development of 1922. The Chandler Six is the lowest priced car of its style, size and power. There are bigger auto- os mobiles of larger bore and stroke, but they cost more in original investment, and their greater weight involves larger maintenance outlay. The extraordinary success of the Chandler > line has not been lost on competing manufac- turers. They have been forced to a belated acceptance of the policy of lowest possible prices, adopted by Chandler and other foremost makers at the beginning of 1922. Whether in the snappy touring types in the luxurious closed models ~ Chandler Motor Car Company is now building th closest priced car it ever produced. It will continue to build for quality. SOUTH & FRICK Cottonwood, Icaho THE CHANDLER MOTOR CAR COMPANY Prices F.O.B. Factory them, good and baa. she natn also been much cast among freethinkers, but that which was good and vener- able to her in her childhood she loves still, and will play no tricks with her understanding or her heart.” A Masquerading Hen. The London Daily Mall is the au- thority for a remarkable story about a bird that has strong male character- istics but nevertheless is laying eggs. The question is whether it is a “laying rooster” or a “crowing hen”! The de- scription is as follows; “Yet lest any visitor should hear a lusty crow rend through the chorus of feminine cluck- ings and quackings it should be ex- plained that there is one bird which embodies In Its persot) the truth of the old saw: “The cock crows, but the hen lays the eggs.’ This specimen has experienced a complete change of sex between spring and autumn. It comes with a record of big brown eggs, but in appearance {t Is a male—hac- kles, sickle feathers, tall, spurs, and all, And it crows hard.” Elizabeth and Robert Browning. Elizabeth Barrett Browning, constd- ered the greatest woman poet that England has produced, was the wife of Robert Browning, distinguished English poet. Their marriage was the result of a call Robert Browning made on Miss Barrett in 1844 to thank her for a compliment she paid him in one of her poems. Friendship grew Into mutual love, and in 1846 they were married. Their life together was very beautiful, Mrs. Browning’s only grief being that her father was opposed to the marriage, and never forgave her. After the marriage the two poets lived in Italy, where Mrs. Browning’s health was far better than In England. Her death in 1861 was a shock from which Browning never completely recovered. He afterward returned to England. Traded Pipes for Land. The clay pipe industry of Bristol, Eng., which is now entirely closed down, dates back to the Seventeenth century, when large quantities of Bristol-made pipes were exported to the American colonies. English clays were so much preferred by the Indians to their own rudely fashiormed pipes that they. became valuable as objects of barter or part purchase value in exchange for land. ‘Three hundred pipes figure in the list of articles given by William Penn in exchange for a tract of land in what is now Penn- sylvania, and another record of early colonial days shows that in 1677 120 pipes and 100 jews’ harps were ex+ changed for.a plot near Timber Town, NL J. “Phosphorescently konsidered, A Uehte un like a glebe ‘entero, (SEDAN) CLEVELAND

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