Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, August 18, 1922, Page 3

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6 PES SSS Hip | COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE yayy AND VARIED TASTES Everybody Wide Variety of Things Considered De- GEORGE MEDVED ™ sirable Good for Import and | Issued Every’ Friday and entered at | | Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as | | second-class mail matter. Short Cool Talks for (Strietly in advance)™ | things, and all wanted to do just ex- That buying for cash is CHEAPER CHILDREN’S WHITE PUMPS 98c MISSES’ WHITE PUMPS $1.19 LADIES’ WHITE PUMP SHOES $1.98 MEN’S WHITE SHOES AND OXFORDS $1.98 35e Percales 22'2¢ Davenshire 60c de French Gingham. Jap Crepe Leggett Mercantile Co. Where Your Dollar Buys More . I SSS. 3. SSSSSaaq — | = 2 I 1S] HUQUQOU04HQ00000NE0000 E400 FOOUARGGREOUAGSOOEUEEEUEOESNGUGAOOO OU HAGER AGE WE LEAD Others Follow If They Can iz See us for Extracts, Spices, Toilet Articles, all kinds of Remedies and Stock Tonic THE WATKINS STORE SMUUUAVIOUAHNUAUASNUONUEQUOUGQ0MUUGUE0OH4EUOUAGEUOGGOEOOAESLAREROUAOUEUELEE UAL {NUVRGUAUUOUULEUREUUUUON ENGLER 7 2RISTUAUUNGUUNASUOUGEOUOEAENERULUGOEUGLUAOE AEA SE On Monday Morning when you see your neighbor’s washing on the line ‘, you can be sure she uses a ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE Grangeville Electric Light & Power Co. COTTONWOOD DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE EDGAR WORTMAN, Prop. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry COTTONWOOD, IDAHO | Copy for change of ad must be hand- | | ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1922 ~ FOR SALE—Columbia range in good condition. Roy Downer. FOR SALE—Five room house and four lots at a bargain. J. E. Smith. 34-tf FOR SALE—9-foot McCor- mick combine, good as new. W. W. Blackburn. 34-3 FOR SALE—15 head of ewes or will sell any number. Chas. | R. Pidgeon. ‘ean Le bought very reasonable. Mrs. L. B. Hale. 33-tf FOR SALE—7 foot Independent Good as new. $50 buys Louis Bensch- 81-tf binder. it if taken soon. ing. FOR SALE—Walter Reid residence, 1-2 block from public school. Inquire of H. C. Matthie- sen. 34-4 | FOR SALE—2 ton G M C truck in good shape. Can be bought at a bargain. Enquire at this office. 82-2 FOR SALE—My five room modern house in Cottonwood at a bargain if taken at once. Wm. Kelsey. 33-tf FOR SALE—Horses. Drafters, chunks and farm mares. _ Part time given if desired. H. T. Agnew, Westlake, Idaho. 27-ti FOR SALE— Holcomb and Hobke butter kist electric pop corn machine. Can be bought at a bargain. R. H. Kendall Con- fectionery. 33-3 ~ FOR SALE— 80 acres of farm land near Cottonwood, 55 acres in crop. Good fences but no other improvements. Can be bought at a bargain. For further in- formation see or write Lloyd Crosby, Keuterville, Idaho. 26-tf FOR SALE—1 Bed, 1 spring, 1 davenport, 3 rugs, Majestic range, 1 Birdseye Maple dresser, 1 walnut dresser, 2 heaters, din- ing room table and chairs, library table, panel mirror, 50- foot garden hose, ironing board, K. C. encyclopedia. For parti- culars see Mrs. Frank Albers. FOR SALE OF TRADE—Six room house with bath in Cotton- wood, four lots with barn, gar- age and cellar. Can give war- ranty deed. Will give some time or take what you have to offer. A. O. Martin, R. F. D. No. 8, Nez- perce, Idaho. 34-2 ,/NO HUNTING ALLOWED. | Notice is hereby given that we the undersigned farmers and stockmen of Keuterville do here- | by forbid hunting or trespassing jon our places under penalty provided by law, on account of danger to stock and forest fires. | John Nuttmann Bernard Schmidt Frank Hatke Louis Hatke Wm. Entrup Lawrence Uptmor Gabe Frei Chas. Mader Ben Baune 3en Entrup B. H. Luchtefeld Joe Enneking Herman Uptmor Frank Enneking D. Romain Dan Mader Tony Sandschaper Fred Enneking Joe Mader R. F. Bartlett Lorenze Uhling August Schroeder Goff Eckert | Dick Riemann | Frank Thyering | H. J. Uhlenkott | Leo Rad ~ | true,” she Dr. | 33-3* | | actly what our neighbor did at the INDEPENDEN1 IN POLITICS | same time she was doing it Mother laughed “That is very said, “but your experience is with the Mttle part of the world about you. It is this difference in | tf&te all the world over that makes for | the import and export bus’ Trade | depends upon such differences for its success, Indeed, I think the world WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE | tao it we ait thought and i and sia | liked the same things, “The other day I read an article on ‘How Folks Differ. Here are some of | the things it said: ‘We chew gum, the | Hindoo tukes to lime, the Patagonian finds contentment In a bit of guano. The children of this country delight in candy, those of Afrien like rock salt | A Frenchman considers fried frogs # rare delicacy, while an Eskimo Indian thinks there is nothing more delicious | than a stewed candle. But the South Sea islander differs from them all: his fancy dish is a fresh boiled mis- | sionary, with the green cotton um brella added for spice.’"—Milwaukee Sentinel. | FOR SALE—Furnished house | THREE ‘GOOD MEN AND TRUE’ Lawyer’s Characterization of Town Officials Really a Masterpiece of Summing Up. There dwelt down East a quaint old charac 4 awver Topkins,” netion of the divine or acter of justice was « in its practicality. He Whose gin and char nly modern occasionally practiced law in a small way and in a | manner pecullarly his own, On one occasion a flock of sheep dis- | appeared and their heads were found | in vw flour barrel in the barn of a cer- | tain man, who was thereupon arrest ed and tried for sheep stealing. yer Hopkins, in conducting the de- fense, mnuintalned that the sheep were hot stolen, but had strayed away, as common in the spring. The prosecuting attorney sald: “Yes, | know sheep do strny away this tine of year, but they do not usually leave their heads in flour barrels in the haymow.” Hopkins went to a nelght to settle the case with the but failed and gave this report, char- acterizing the three town officials: “Mr. A will do nothing wrong if he khows if he knows it and Mr. C will do noth- if he knows it. Philadet phia Ledger. was ing right Balancing of Trees. There hus been offered a very in teresting suggestion concerning the | utility of a tree of the irregular ar- rangement of its branches. a large plane tree during a gale, an observer noted that while one great | another | and al-| limb swayed in one direction swe the opposite though all the branches were plunging and bending before the blast, they did net move in unison, or all at once in the same direction, But for the way cullarity in the motion of the branches, | ith 1 uprooting; tor s ing serves in general to protect large trees, white oaks and beeches, which have thelr branches unsymmetrically placed, from being overturned by high | winds.— Washington Star. “Gallows Hill.” Formerly in each county in England there were a number of such hills relics of which still exist in spots. | Tyburn, the historic place of execu tion outside the limits ef London, was | situated on a hill, nearby which the Marble arch of Hyde perk now stands On the Surrey downs near Hind head Devil's Puneh-Bow! there is gibbet and the another marked by a and in 1786 a mem ing the following legend was erected there. “ “Erected in destest barous Murder Commit unknown Sailor; Sept. 24, 1786, by Edwa. Lonegon. Michl. Casey & Jas Marshall, Who were all taken the same And hung in Chains near this place."—Literary Digest cross, day, Keep the Ming Healthy. it; Mr. B will do uothing at all | Watching | thought, the tree could not have | nd the investiga- | sts that this kind of balane- | tablet bear | Law- | Export Business, | “What a good thing it is,” remarked {ee | Anne, “that we do not all have the | Sabscription one year ....... ..$2.00 Sume tastes. It would be a frightfully . [Six MONTHS ee ecceeseveeestveencieomeee. 1-25 | UNinteresting world if we all had the |__| same tastes and thought the same ‘ fon of a bar- | % 1 here on an | § If you would be healthy, look to your | ¢ thoughts. The health streom, tf pol- luted at all, is polluted at the fuun- | 4 tainhead—in the thought, in the ideal You cannot hold Ul-health thoughts, | ¢ disease thought in mind, without hav ing them pletured in the body. The thought will be expressed in the body | Z somewhere, and its quality will deter mine the sound or unsound healthful or unhealthful, not be harmeny. ease in the body with use in the mind, Never affirm or repeat or think about what you do not wish to be true.—Ex change. results Sufficient Enlightenment. “What do you understand by the term, ‘an enlightened voter.” There can | ¢ your health | 3 “So far as 1 am concerned,” said | the chronic office seeker, “an enlight- | ened voter is # constituent who shakes | me fervently by the hand and tells me | that if bis vote will keep me in pub- \ He life T'll never tive to see the prefiz ‘ex’ printed before my uawe.”—Bir- miugham age-Herald. - Long Hot Days It may be cheaper to leave a binder or other sort of farm implement in the field than to erect a shed for its protection but somehow we can't see it that way. A machine shed can be built so cheaply that it will pay for itself in one year. If nothing better can be afforded; build with rough lumber. You'll be surprised at how lit- tle it will really cost. Better come in and see us about it, we'll help you in any way we can. Luck is the thing that happens when Preparation meets Opportunity. History is replete with incidents where men have shouldered a musket to defend the home, but nowhere in history are we told that a man ever shouldered a musket to defend a Boarding House. The first qualification of a nation proud American, is the ownership of his home. Home means peace, contentment, hope, self-confidence, self-esteem and the esteem of one’s neighbors. It means those influences of virtue and strength which since civili- zation began have clustered about the family hearthstone. Our Free Plan Service is to be had for the asking, so don’t hesitate but come right in and we'll talk it over. _ An ounce of get-up-and-get is worth a pound of that tired feeling. After a men gets whipped a few times, he ceases to brag about his quick temper. The democratic convention which was held in Cot- tonwood, Tuesday was well attended and no doubt the delegates all had 2 good time, at least we hope so. Purty gude fellers too, everyone of them. It seems, once a democrat, always a democrat even though none too well pleased with what democrats sometimes do. We heard one delegate ripping up the democrats as if he were mak- ing a republican speech. But just the same, he was a democrat. He probably believed as did Marse Henry when he said “Things have come to a hell of a pass, when a man can’t wallop his own jackass.” But no matter what your polities, if you come here for your building materials and avail yourself of our build- ing helps you'll always come back because we aim to please and satisfy. HUSSMAN LUMBER COMPANY Home Builders and Building Doctors SELLING BELOW COST Our entire line of machinery will be sold at less than cost. Manure spreaders, walking, gang plows, hay rakes mowers, ete. Come in and at least look at these implements before buying elsewhere Farmers’ Union Warehouse Co. Ltd. DISTRIBUTOR FOR IDAHO COUNTY C. H. GREVE, MANAGER Have the enjoyment of a home of your own. Ask your banker or any business friend in whom you have confidence, whether to build now or to wait. Call at the office of this company. Suggestions and advice. No obligation. er Madison Lumber & Mill Company COTTONWOOD, IDAHO‘

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