Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, April 21, 1922, Page 5

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WHY NOT let Richards & Son make your clothes? WHY they know hot to fit you WHY it is their business to make clothes. WHY are you distinguished among men? WHY I am wearing a suit made by Richards. WHY this transformation in this community? WHY because we are all wearing new suits made Why : NX O t2 by Richards and Son. RICHARDS & SON, The Cottonwood Tailors Ss .., | 4 ____ Txoerorrmemomerermerememmmememenenmeoit Absolute Auction of Lewiston Orchards Tracts SATURDAY, MAY 6TH; 11 A.M. On this date we will close out to the highest bidders, without reserve, the re- maining holdings of the West End Orchard & Land Company in Lewiston Orchards. Every tract will be sold, regardless of price bid. 300 ACRES IN ALL Most of this is in 5-acre tracts. In several cases tracts are adjoining, so pur- chaser can secure up to 30 acres in one tract if he desires. Two-thirds is in splendid bearing orchard of standard varieties of apples, and the remaining one-third is open land in fall wheat and barley. Jn excellent condition for alfalfa and head lettuce. Similar to Yakima and Wenatchee Land at $1000 Per Acre While these tracts are similar to Wenatchee and Yakima irrigated lands that bring $1000 to $1200 per acre, yet you will get them at this auction at your own price They have paved highway running through them, good schools and churches and all city conveniences. They are right in the heart of the famous Lewiston Orchards. All tracts are in the west end of this district. Very Easy Terms. Terms of payment are very easy, extending over a period of several years. If terms offered are not satisfactory we will be glad to submit to the owners any rea-- sonable set of terms that you may care to offer. This is positively your last chance to get Lewiston Orchards tracts at such prices, When these are sold all irrigated lands in the district will be dispoged of. The FRED B. GRINNEL Company Licensed Real Estate Auctioneers 316 Main Street LEWISTON, IDAHO THE FRED B. GRINNELL CO. 316 Main Street, Lewiston Idaho Gentlemen: Please send me full information about your absolute auc- tion of Lewiston Orchards tracts to be sold Saturday, May 6. UI eo ee Address Taste is a matter of tobacco quality We state it as our honest belief that the tobaccos used in Chesterfield are of finer quality (and hence of better taste) than in any other cigarette at the price. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. CIGARETTES egy OO Lower Prices 20 now 18c 10 now 9c (Two 10’s—18c) Soe (OR RENAN AR Fear Is Chief Obstacle to Prog- ress of Mankind F | J. 8 Knox of Cleveland, lecturer and writer on personal efficiency, in ; discussing salesmanship recently, de- | Clared: “You have just three things to offer to the world—brains, character and | muscle, Which are you going to of- fer? If you offer brains, you are a ‘chin-upper. If you offer nothing but muscle, you are a ‘chin-downer.’ What can you sell for a price—your best, your second best, or your worst? Brains.come high, but unless you have something better to offer than mere brains you are headed straight for the penitentiary. Character, in combina- tion with brains, correctly trained. is | the best-paid product in the world.” ~“What do you regard as the chief obstacle to success?” he was asked. “Fear!” he exclaimed emphatically. “Fear and ignorance. Fear is the great foe of the race. the best there is tn life. It robs us of If we submit to fear, it will hold us down in pover- ty, misery, despair. “Knowledge is the antidote for fear, as surely as light is the antidote for | darkness, Courage and self-confidence are the results of knowledge. Success is not so much a matter of brain as ft is of getting the right facts and learning how to use them. There ts ho such thing tn life as an opportunity for any man unlexs he is ready for it You can create opportunities by devel- oping your native powers, by gather- ing practical information and ideas. “America’s greatest tragedy and greatest loss is due to lack of educa- thon. brain power the world would be tre- mendously benefited, as well as the man himself. The great American | desert is not located west of the Mis- sissippi river, but under the hat of ent.”—Leslie’s, —_——— | TASK IS BEYOND SCIENTISTS Why It Is Improbable That Mankind Will Ever Be Able to See a Molecule Shall we ever be able to get a mil croscope so powerful that it will show , us a molecule? Science believes not While the ultra-microscope enables us to detect an object as small as a five-| millionth part of an inch in diameter that is, the 25-million-millionth of a square inch—a molecule of hydrogen is only one-thirtieth of this. | The. principle of the ultra-micro- scope is simply that, instead of direct- | { liquid is optically empty—if it has no floating particles—there is nothing to reflect the light, and the field of vision appears quite dark. If, on the other hand, tiny particles are present in the liquid, the light is reflected, and the minute points of | light stand out against the dark back- | ground, making the particles visible, | | Why Fatigue is Dangerous. For fatigue can be quite a danger- | ous ond costly luxury where many | workers are employed. It is found | that it bears quite pointedly on the | rate of production, and hence its cost, and on the accident and illness curves j and on many other elements that enteg into industrial efficiency. Surprising variations in the fatigue | caused by different kinds of work and | among workers {n the same kind of | | employment have been found. | In lathe machine werk operations | in & munition factory it was found | the average fall of strength from | morning until knocking off time was | 28.67 per cent. The average for other | work in the same factory was as low as 24.52 per cent. There was much | wider variation among individuals,— | Milwaukee Journal. | | | = | a x = | j | ing a powerful beam of light into the | microscope through the liquid to be | examined, it is sent horizontally into | the liquid at right angles to the line of | vision—from the side. Then, if the} Why Newfoundland ts Important. One importance of Newfoundland t's its. geographical position, St. John's, the chief port and capital of the coun- try, is 1,000 miles nearer England | than is New Yer. In fact, it is only 1,466 miles from the coast of Ireland, so greatly does the Atlantic shrink off the coast of Newfoundiand. That is why this unique country has had the | distinction of receiving the first trans- | Atlantic wireless message at St. John's in 1901; and also why the first henstep trans-Atlantic airplane flight started from the same vicinity. The Cape Race light Is the first greeting from America to ships on the north- | ern route from Europe, and it is the last to flash godspeed to east-bound vessels. Newfoundland is verily the stepping stone between America and Europe.—World’s Work. Why Cultivaticn Is Imperative. A scientific reason for the value of ; | cultivetion or tilth in agriculture has | been suggested by an Interesting ca- | pillary phenomenon reported in Ger- | many. A block of plaster of paris or | other porous material was moistened | | with salt solution, and on drying it | was found that evaporation withdrew | the salt, depositing it at the surface. Hoeing or stirring the soil facilitates evaporation by exposing a greater to tal surface. Jerome Alexander, ia Science, concludes that the rising of the subsurface water brings to roots | soluble substances serving as plant food, and that the captilary rise of water also explains the curious fact that cultivation in dry weatber tends to furnish moisture te the growing crop. Tf a mun doubled the use of his | & the uverage man, because he uses only | & a small percentage of his native tal-|& very Ittle cost. SAVE MONEY The rapid depreciation and additional repair bill on an automobile that is exposed to the weather amounts yearly to more than a garage costs. You can have an up-to-date garage of your own for Call at our office for plans. HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF MODERN BUILDING IDEAS Madison Lumber & Mill Company COTTONWOOD, IDAHO WE LEAD Others Follow If They Can. See us for Extracts, Spices, Toilet Articles, all kinds of Remedies and Stock Tonic OPO o JUST Arrived A NEW LINE OF Ladies’ Ready-to-Wear Coats, $14.95, 16.00, 17.98, 19.95 Suits, $14.95, 18.95 Dresses, $9.00 to $29.95 Skirts, $4.95, 5.95 Leggett Mercantile Co. Where Your Dollar Buys More NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE AT PRIVATE SALE. Under authority of an order of sale granted by the Probate Court of Idaho County, State of Idaho, dated April 13th, 1922, I the undersigned guardian of the estates of Josephine M. Sonnen, Benedict G. Sonnen and Agatha |E. Sonnen, minors, will sell at private sale, the following des- cribed real estate, to-wit: An undivided one fourth inter- est in and to the SW4%4 NEY and the SE4% NW of Section Ten, Township 31 North, of Range One West of the Boise Meridian, in Idaho County, State of Idaho. The sale will be made on or after 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. aa writ ew pr os the t to reject any an bids. Dated this 14th day of April, 1922. Frances Sonnen, Guardian of whe cntites 4 the segs Sane mino! H. Taylor, Attorney for Guard- ian. 173 WANTED—Some fat hens,

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