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COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE GEORGE MEDVED adie’ Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. Subscription one year Six months ‘(Strictly in advaiee) Come in and see the WILLARD INDEPENDEN1 -IN POLITICS | Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in bd Wednesday to insure chaae All Rubber Battery “MAY ‘19, 1922 FR IDAY, Automobile ’ Accessories Welding The Cottonwood Battery & Welding Shop “FOR ~ SALE—Timothy tab, Mike Steger, one and one-half) mile northwest of Hussman saw | mill. 21- 1) small buildings, orchard, wan gocd fencing 3 miles south of Winona, Ideho. Easy terms. Mrs. J. E. Sheldon, Gredley, Celt S - B fornia. | | m O n ros. FOR SALE—My 5 room house | modern in every respect, with | Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry cellar, garage, chicken house and | other outbuildings and an acre of | ground at a bargain if taken at| once. William Kelsey. 20-3 | FOR SALE OR TRADE— Seven room house and four lots | with barn and garage in Cotton- wood for good work horses or stock and machinery. A. O. Martin, 7038 Prospect Avenue, Lewiston, Idaho. 17-tf WANTED—20 head of cattle to pasture. A. C. Gentry. 21-tf WANTED—Job as gas “engi- neer. Eight years experience in »|North Dakota. Write Chas. E. Kidder, Joseph, Idaho. 19-4* COTTONWOOD, IDAHO SELLING BELOW COST Our entire line of machinery will be sold at LOST—Pair of chaps between | Joe Remacle and Edgar Fry jfarms. D. Duclos. 18-tf | ~ LOST—Rachet to hold down |top on Buick car in Cottonwood. George McPherson. 19-tf | Notice of Annual Stockholders Meeting. Notice is hereby given that \the annual stockholders meeting jof the Farmers Union Ware- I | house Company Ltd., will be held on Saturday, June 10, 1922 at I. O. O. F. hall at 1 o’elock p. m. | For the purpose of electing two || directors for three years each land for such other business as |may properly come before it. Farmers’ Union Warehouse Co. Ltd. 43) | AUGUST SCHROEDER, Secretary. DISTRIBUTOR FOR IDAHO COUNTY C. H. GREVE, MANAGER less than cost. Manure spreaders, walking, gang plows, hay rakes mowers, etc. Come in and at least look at these implements before buying elsewhere | 19-6 | NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed bids for painting the |exterior and staining and varn- | ishing the interior and oiling the | floors of school building for | District No. 39, Greencreek, | Idaho county, Idaho, will be re- | ceived by the Board of Trustees | at Greencreek, Idaho, up to 11 }a, m. June 18, 1922, when the bids will be opened. | Anton Schumacher, Chairman. gos | Joe Hoffman, Clerk. 21-2 & 5, 28S ‘Only $34.32 = bo. | Round trip from Bg | Cottonwood op be to EE _ Yellowstone xo 3 8 | Park 3 oO Geo. A. Poler bi Agent Grangeville Electric Light & Power Co. | " : Brighten Let The Chronicle Do Your Printing. Up We Do It The Way You Want It Done. | papering your home, painting your house or outbuildings. Estimates gladly given with COTTONWOOD Let me give you my price on! HARD TO re RAIN The weather men have been try- ing to answer the question, “How does it rain?” It is a hard question, says Dr. W. J. Humphreys of the United States weather bu “Lots of people are content to say that the droplets at the top of the cloud pick up others on their way down and come out at the bottom full-sized raindrops,” he said. “That sounds nice, but those who give this explanation seem to overlook the fact that clouds can float in the sky for days without giving a drop of rain.” He has calculated how big a drop would result from such a fall, and it turns out that a cloud particle | falling from top to bottom of a dense cloud a mile thick and picking up every other droplet in its way would come out only one-sixteenth of an inch in diameter, much smaller than an ordinary raindrop.—Kaneas City Star. } CAN IT BE DONE? “Short skirts, chiffon stockings, Touge and powder wust go,” the re- former deciaimed, “We have tried to abolish them by frowning upon them, but the stubborness of the | younger generation has defeated us. | There is but thing left to do. We must ignore them. ‘They are worn to attract attcntion. Once let the young girl in her teens realize that she can not 2raw notice to herself by such eccentric and indecent garb and she wil! immediately embrace a more normal style of dress. remedy is simple. ignore.” The susceptible young man in the front row shifted uneasily, “That’s fine,” he said without en- thusiasm, “but can it be done?’— Exchange. Ignore, ignore, KEP? REASONABLY BUSY The Tenafly pooh-bah is Ed Black- ~ | well of the New Jersey town who was recently appointed poormaster and also keeper of the town pound. When he isn’t taking care of the poor or acting as host to stray dogs, Ed is looking after some of his other jobs—manager of a livery stable, Sets The Vogue For DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE EDGAR WORTMAN, Prop. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice ‘ no obligations on your part. ALL WORK GUARANTEED William Kelsey Smart Cars The | furniture mover, paving contractor, | head dmver of the fire truck and official fumigator and quarantine of- ficer of the local board uf health.— New York Evening Post. WHY NOT? 4st Bug: What ie it? 2nd Bug: Oh, the lady bugs are holding a suffrage parade. MICKIE SAYS— WO “H' VILLAGE PRINT- SHOP, EDITORS ALL MAKE H' SAME WISH THAT READERS'D PAN AMEIR SUBSCRIPTIONS WiTHourT BEING ASKED! Egg the Snake Couldn’t Break. One day while a group of children were searching for birds’ nests among | the hills of north Georgia, writes a contributor to the Youths’ Companion, they discovered a large snake tightly wound round the Himb of an apple tree. They called to a gardener and, after he had knocked the snake from the tree, found to their astonishment that it could creep but slowly, for in the middle of its body was a large lump. The gardener killed the snake and then opened it. The children guessed many things about the lump, but it proved to be a china nest egg from the henhouse. been trying to crush the egg by squeez | ing it seuines the limb. — Announcing the New ROYAL DISPATCH LOOKS $3000 — IS 71795 tpt as Spring opens new vistas of touring delight, The Chandler MotorCarCompany presents its new Royal Dispatch. This dashing car has the low, narrow, stylish, custom built look essential to the ultra sport type. The price constitutes exceptional value, for it includes six wire wheels, side wind- shield wings, artistic trunk rack and highly decorative polished aluminum bars. This car will be an instant joy to the young and the smart. . Not alone will it compel admiration at country club, mountain side or seashore resort, but it has the power and endurance for the long tour. South & Frick COTTONWOOD, IDAHO THE CHANDLER MOTOR CAR COMPANY Prices F. O. B. Factory The snake had | ASCERTAINED IT DIDN'T PAY John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Points Moral From Story of Careless Old Aristocrat, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., said in a Y. M. C..A. address in New York: “Scientific management is here to stay. There is no doubt about that. And the men who oppose scientific management, are, as a rule, as lax and shiftless as the old earl. “The old earl, before going into the bathroom to bathe for dinner, for some reason or other, one eve- ning, counted his money—six five- pound notes, or 30 pounds in all— as he took it out and laid it, as usual, on his dressing table. “Well, when the old earl returned, fresh and perfumed and ruddy, from the bathroom, his valet was putting the pearl buttons in his evening shirt, and of the six five-pound notes one was missing. “The old earl looked ruefully at the valet; then he said to himself: “‘Humph. A loss of five pounds. 1 never counted my money before and I'll never do it again. It doesn’t pay.” BEST MAKEUP FOR FIREBRICK | Exhaustive Researches Seem to Have Definitely Settled Matter for Good Results. Te Chatelier and Bogitech have been engaged for some time in re- searches upon firebrick and the best” makeup to be employed. Such fire- brick is composed of granulated silica and various oxides in powder used as a binding material. It is found that the best binding sub- stance is impalpable quartz powder, which is produced in special crush- ing mille. The use of this powder considerably increases the strength of the bricks at a high temperature of 1,600 degrees centigrade, and this is one of the most important quali- ties of firebrick. Again, the proportion of 25 per cent of the powder gives much better results thun 75 per cent, for when too much of it is employed the bricks all show small cracks after heating, which will become larger under a long heat. ’ tebe SIX {