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fa \(———){e} [eemeuee see} [0] [temo Blankets " ‘These chilly nights suggest blankets warm fluffy com- fort producing blankets and we are in a position to supply your wants. Note these prices, they are lower: Wool Finish Blankets—Sizcs 66x80, sells regularly for $4.50. Comes in plaid combinations as follows: Grey, blue, tan, purple, gold, pink, blue, all with white combina- tion tan and blue combination grey and grey combination. SALE PRICE $3.35 Preity baby blankets in blue or pink. Sale Priee ..$1.25 An unusual Blanket. Has all the appearance of a wool blanket even to the dainty colorings, size 66x80 and 72x 84. Some bound edges, others stitched. This is the pret- tiest lot of blankets we have ever seen at this price. Pretty blue plaids, purple or gold, pink or grey and the dainty tans. ew ly es 95 and — 00 SALE PRICE Ripa abocwnisllgaien anbesten baba citaaed $5.33 All white blankets, no colored border is desired by many This is size 64x76. Has shell stitched edge. Very desi- rable for sheet blankets as they are medium weight mak- ing them very easy to shemne sie them this season. SALE PRICE $2.97 Pure Wool hates We have built up a trade on these blankets on account of their quality. They are all wool, good weight and pretty patterns. Then they are larged sized. Pink, blue . and tan. Size 70x80, regularly — 95. ROMS RGR i aie See $9.95 Sewed Cotton Batts, comfort on 72x90, snow white . Full three pounds # f $1.98 Pure Wool Batts, 72x84. Weight two pounds ....$2.98 Leggett Mercantile Co. Where Your Dollar Buys More On Monday Morning when you see your neighbor's washing on the line FIRST, you can be sure she uses a ELECTRIC WASHING MACHINE Grangeville Electric Light & Power Co. eh eh ee a ee a a ee ee ee eee ee eT “Sorry--Not a ton in town” You will remember that two years ago it was practically impossible for the man who had put off buying coal to get even one ton. It is likely that the same thing will occur this winter. Order your supply today. Lumber & Mill Company COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Madison nate ate steeds Pe eee ee PD COTTONWOOD DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE EDGAR WORTMAN, Prop. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice —— SSS SSS SS = SoS] —SEayv COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE GEORGE MEDVED Issued reay Friday and entered - | Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as | |. second-class mail matter. Subscription one pan arcu. 7 | Six oe ste a | poasneeuesee ge | } (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDEN1 iia POLITICS — | Copy for change of SA must be hand- led in by Beatin: to insure change FRIDAY, secltdeiania 8, 1922] WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SME | FOR SALE—Five 1 roora house land four lots at a bargain. Dr. J. E. Smith. 84-tf| | FOR SALE—Ford delivery | | car in good shape. $150 takes it. Leggett Men cantile Co. 32-tf FOR SALE — ‘Walter “Re id} | residence, 1-2 block from public) school. Inquire of H. C. Matthie- | | sen, 34-4) | — alee | |, FOR SALE— One American cream separator, one cream can, | one baby cart. Mrs. Edgar Wort- | | man. 87-tf | | FOR SALE OR TRADE— jood team, harness and wagon. Will| | sell or trade for a lighter team. | | | Ernest Jessup. 87-tf | | ie ae | FOR SALE— Hor ses. inne! chunks and farm mares, Per | time given if desired. H. Agnew, Westlake, Idaho. 27-tf | | Sharples No. 2} Tn good shape | George Rus-| 87-1) [EX | FOR SALE. cream separator. ‘and at a bargain. | temeyer. FOR SALE OR RENT—820 }acres of pasture land, about 10 acres of hay and garden land. Terms if desired. Roy Wil- | liams. 37-4* FOR SALE—Letter files at ' the Chronicle office. Put your | correspondence away in a system | j atic order. They sell for $1 each. 37-tf FOR SALE at a bargain a $500 Milton piano in the best of condition and an instrument that anyone may feel proud to have in their home. For particulars call at the Chronicle office. 37tf | FOR SAL .E—80 acres of farm land near Cottonwood, 55 acres | in erop. 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—Five room mod-) }ern house in Cottonwood, acre ‘of ground with bearing fruit trees, well fenced, garage, good barn, chicken house and other outbuildings at a bargain if taken at once. Wm. Kelsey. 35-tf 1 OR SAL E—120 acres of fine timber land four miles west of Cottonwood at $10 per acre. Will sell in 20 or 40 acre tracts. Mr. Farmer why not buy a tract for your fuel supply. Call at the Chronicle office for partic- ulars.. 36-tf WANTED—Two tons of loose alfalfa hay delivered in Cotton- wood. Steve Farthing. 36-2 FOUND—Log chain between Cottonwood and Convent. Owner can have same by identifying property at the Chronicle office. Peculiar Indian Custom. It is an inviolable covenant within the Navajo Indian nation that after the marriage a son-in-law must never set eyes on his mother-in-law, and vice versa, a mother-in-law must never see her son-in-law. The daughters-tn-law are not mentioned. According to Navajo traditions, Navajo girl is considered the property of her parents until she marries. Prior to her marriage a contract is made be- tween the father of the girl and the jestined bridegroom. When a Navajo woman marries she becomes free and may leave her husband for sufficient cause. A warrior of one clan must marry a maiden of one of the 51 oth ers, and vice versa. The descent of the clans is passed along by the fe- male line. Would we codify the laws that should reign in households, and whose daily transgression annoys and morti- | fles us ang degrades our household | life, we must learn to adorn every day with sacrifices. Good manners | are made up of petty sacrifices. Tew perance, courage, love are made up of the same Jewels. —Emerson, | by | days, jn ee eae emt, tee Toilet Articles, all kinds of ne tie. ae ae Remedies and Stock Tonic and tin cow for merely a day's outing TS HIKING DOWN THE LONG BROWN PATH Vacationists With Shelter uns | | Short Cool Talks for Long Hot Days DS Some people are always waiting for “the day after” —tomorrow, any time but now. They wait for a better time to start—they hesitate because they do not know about the beyond. That’s why so many people live in shacks, not that they can’t afford to improve the place but they just keep putting it off because they no not realize and Tin Cow Learning to Walk All Over Again. Oh! It’s not the pack that you carry on your back ? Nor the rifle on your shoulder, Nor y > ape Inch crust of Khakl- colored | fui That makes you feel your limbs are | grow:ne older; And i's not the hike on the hard turnpike | That drives away your smile, Nor the socks of sisters that raise the blooming Giietere-= | It's the last long mi a a ‘Starcning Song. Stringing out from the suburban transit terminals of New York every Sunday and holiday goes the army of | kKhak!-clad hikers, There may be an | automobile for every twenty of the | country’s population, but a host of | city folks disprove the theory of a future leg-enfeebled cilizenry and ure learning to walk all over again. To the more casual minded, the hike Is Just exercise, but to those who ‘a ne > “row eaigh iis’ tedl aan Weanos “Chacha that today is the tomorrow they spoke of yesterday. meanaBiapent deal more. tt ts the There has been very litt'e building going on in this com- cheapest form of recreation and munity the last four years. We are not blind to the con- ditions that are the cause of this lack of building i improve- ment, yet is if not a fact that many a building i, being neglected just because the owner keeps putting it off un- til “tomorrow”, never realizing that “today” is the “to- morrow” he spoke of yesterday and the “tomorrow” he speaks of “today” will be “yesterday” the day after “tomorrow.” therefore appeals to those living in crowded distflcts and unable to aval! themselves of the more expensive amusements, And these people, be it noted, are just those the country is go anxious to have spread out and settled in the farming sections. The hike, Indeed, has possibilities as a real starter for the “back to the farm" movement. Doughboy and Boy Scout Lead Way | Just a brief survey of the rollicking | groups which move off from the out- | lying terminals on holidays estab. | lishes a few general types. There is | the ex-service man and his friends | who willl hear from him the story of more scrioug excursions on the muddy roads of France. He tight ens a strap here and another there on the blanket roll adjustment or the “shelter half,” In which the commi!s- | sary Is packed for the midday the roadside. Expert direc ns come from him on the method of slinging the pack so It will not feel so heavy or Interfere with the free body movement. He will pass alo: the Information, gained In his 1 of how that same pack evolved after numerous experiments to find the easiest way of carrying | the heaviest load. With results he now compliments, but which he char- acterized when a doughboy as “blankety blank total failure.” There is but one time to do things and that it “today.” The average man's idea of a good sermon is one that goes over his head and hits one of his neighbors. About the time a man begins to lay up something for a rainy day, it generally begins to rain. Political vindication frequently means that the peo- ple have been fooled again. The honeymoon often ends with the groom’s last quarter. _ An Investment in Happiness, that’s the best defini- tion of a Home we ever saw, and we conceive of no more pleasant task than to help you make that investment. HUSSMAN LUMBER COMPANY ny was a) Then there are the hoy tles, adest at everything to “shanks inare” traveling an scout par craft. The ex-service man and the I : . trae one rs @ boy scout are pioneers In the bikin lor Builde and Building Doctors game, Listen to one of the off the train and making r twelve mile jaunt: “Get teen over the side, it won't keep bouncing off’ your £ every step. Is It filled? Well, then we drink. How about the ents? Let's check ‘em off. You got the spuds, Bill; the bacon Jimmie, Who has the coffee and the Borden tin cow?" “Right here,“ eannounces a freckled comrade of the road, patting his knap-. sack, “Snitched the neha and the can of milk when Sls wasn't looking.” “Well, then, let's go!’ snaps the commander of the expedition. This purty Is traveling light for real | < distance. Another must expect to | make a shorter hitch or else be count ing greatly on {ts power of endur ance. Perhaps the camp fs not f off because the group is equipped an over-night stay with heavy b rolls, hatchets, lanterns, car terpails, rut hos, ke’ new fangled flrestand, ete., blankets are laid out packing of the bags and cans of food When the party commences to load up the members bristle all over with camp tools and equipment Back to the Farm The veteran from the crowded elty tenements has found a new territory to roam and one almost unknown to | ndy for a | that can. | Jimmie, and fen esa Repomeren =i SELLING BELOW COST Our entire line of machinery will be sold at The for a better (i ete less than cost. Manure spreaders, walking, gang plows, hay rakes mowers, etc. Come in and at least look at these implements his assoctates. He Is! Mlucing them before buying elsewhere to this newly discovered land and teaching them how to be independent of any transportation but the own d legs und of any subsisience but they can carry and 4 aud cook your own,” Farmers’ Union Warehouse Co. Ltd. DISTRIBUTOR FOR IDAHO COUNTY C. H. GREVE, MANAGER w “Walk motto. Who will say the leaven thus fer. menting In the city crowds will not bear fruit in a keener appreciation country delights, esp are added to by Increxsed comforts on the farm. With bis rerio hit up, the farmer listens in on the best pare is his | as thes: eniertinment the ones oe co SUN offer, Modern tome de wipe o z many hardships formerly imposed upon {solated dwellers. ‘There is, in i 7 _ A DPD short, a rapid cutting down of the differential between farm and city life. sjomae i the aoe Others Follow If They Can the country holds, and ¢ is what the hike supplies. There is peal in one apple tree In blossom ¢ in reams of printed matter put out to See us for Extracts, Spices, but nevertheless seeing sights that make them yearn to be among them all the time. It Is not too much to assume that the army way ome day recruit the open places. THE WATKINS STORE