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Agent for - LEWISTON LAUNDRY Laundry must be in by Monday evening. Will be ceiurned Friday evening of each week. KEITH’S onfectionery DR. J. E, REILLY Dentist Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones DR. J. D. SHINNICK Physician and Surgeon Office over Cottonwood St. Bk. DR. WESLEY F. ORR Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Bldg. Both Phones T. P. Brown CHIROPRACTOR Craigmont, Idaho POPOL O OPEL OOOO ES DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Deputy State Veterinarian Residence North end of town Both Phones PEPSPOSDIOA IODIDE ISHS sage 4 KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Cottonwood Council, 1389 Meets the first and third Vednesday of each month. Visiting knights welcomed John F. Knopp, G. K. Barney Seubert, F. S. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. Hayward Shields, C. C. John Homar, K. R. and 8, THE AMERICAN LEGION Cottonwood Post No. 40 Meets 1st Monday of each month at I. O. O. F. Bert Schroeder, Com. Frank Albers, Adjutant FELIX MARTZEN Real Estate, Uoans, Fire and Life Insurance Insure in the Northwestern Mutual and save 26 to 45 per cent on your insurance. JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished ww class of Work. Repairing promptly done. Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50c and 75c per night or $3.00 to $3.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give usa | 'y unbeatable Cecil Leitch in the re. - ALEXANDER LEGGE Alexander Legge, who has been elected head of the Internationai Har- vester company to succeed Harold F. McCormick. Mr. Legge started his career with the company 30 years ago in the Omaha branch, and hie rise has been steady. Sides aeninilenialins SAYS THE OWL Many a bilunderer does his level best, | at that, Wealth {8 a poor man's dream and a@ rich man's burden. Ripe experience is something that Is coming to anyone who Is too green. Knowledge is power—provided it Is | the powerful kind of knowledge. Usually a man has chest enough to hold all the medals he ever gets. A city man who enjoys a backyard garden would made «a farmer. have good SIXTY YEARS OF BONNETS | Sixty years have brought remark- | able range in styles of millinery. Types of headgear favored at the taticeear’t periods between 1862 and 1922 mark | monumental epochs in hats, | The Civil war girl wore a bonnet | with wide crown swathed in ostrich | feathers. A few flowers peeped through | on a brim of black taffeta above and | white silk underneath. | The miss of 1872 displayed a feathered bonnet from which white ostrich plumes cascaded down over a | brim just wide enough to cast a sha- dow over the brow, In 1882 the belle wore a Quaker-Ike | soft straw bonnet covered with shy pink roses, The miss of 1802 Introduced the last | word of that period in chicness and dash. Her's was a sailor bonnet with | pert crown and saucy brim. Ostrich feathers dropped far down over the aide. hat of Miss 1902 | was much like the headgear of the | cavalier, It was made with a wide | brim of flower embro'ered silk and | a drooping ostrich feat’ cr at the side. The Easter-tide The girl of 1912 wore a picture hat that was exceptionally large with | parasol brim of flowered silk and graceful ostrich feathers covering the brim. After appearing in almost every type | of spring millinery for fifty years, the ostrich feather is missing this year, Miss 1922 sports a unique turban-like, | « low setting bonnet of woven straw | with clusters of colored silk and a dash of ribbon. MISS JOYCE WETHERED | the | end, | grent he | of her turned beholders to stone, | her cave was surrounded by the petri } partly | mos mannfacture are PUT BIBLE ABOVE ALL ELSi Writer’s Poetic Description cof David’s Love of the Scriptures of His Day. In the days of King David the Bibk was a seanty book; yet he loved it well, and found daily wonders in It Genesis, with its sublime nairation o how God made the worlds, with its glimpses of patriarchal piety, and dark disclosures of gigantic Exodus, with its glorious marching through that great wilderness, its thrilling memorials of Jehovah's out stretched arm, and the volume of the written law; Leviticus, through whos flickering vistas David's eye discerne the shadows of better things to come Numbers, with its natural history of Kin the heart of man; Deuteronomy, with its vindication of the ways of ¢ Joshua and Judges, with te of providence, their dents, and peaceful memoir of Job, so fraught with sp ual e& vce; and the domestic ¢ nals of Ruth, which told to her g tale of divine forekne son such a dge and love and care, all converging | on himself, rather on David's sor and David's Lord; these were Hible, and he desired it beyond all his riches, t’you have yet an ampler Bible or David's | a Bible with psalms and prophets in it—a Bible with gospels and epistles James Harillton UNPLEASANT LADY TO MEET | in Greek Mythology, Mere Sight of | Medusa Turned the Beho!der into Stone, ons were three monstrous to some extent k mythology, particularly the lusa, who was slain by the » Perseus, She inal fy a beautiful girl whose her principal charm, but she dared to vit In beauty with Minerva, and the re sentful goddess changed her form tp She had enormous swine-like sharp claws and a head of live serpents was so frightful that was ¢ revenge teeth, hai pect instead of Her as the ¢ anc fied forms of men and animals whicl had chanced to catch sight of her, Perseus sent to ¢ her by King Polydectes of Seriphus As he enjoyed the favor of Minerva anc Mercury, these two deities aided hin in his enterprise, Minefva tending bit her shield and Mercury his sund He approached the Gorge while she slept and, taking care to look ¢ y at her, but by her image reflected in the polishe shicld, cut off her head and to Minerva was roy winge guided gave It Eskimo Ivory Carving. One of the most widely followed pro fessions in the Par North ts that of the ivory carver, and it is not only an in dustry but a pastime as well, fillin many of the long evenings of lengthy Arctic winter. The have attained the perfection © the Chinese the Eskimos ne artisans, due partly to the greater crudity of their methods an to the fact that they the ivory of the walrus instead of that o the elephant, but some of their prod ucts show nevertheless a great meas ure of arti ry. The stock use articles which the beads, cribb boards napkin and needles. They are made, usually the outer portion of the walrus tusk as the interior is a bony substance mottled in appearance. The prized articles are furnished from wal rings crochet most | rus ivory dug up from where it hus | lain for ized. ages and become semi-fossh Kerasund, City of Romance. Kerasund (in Anatolia on the Blac) sea) is known as the lovellest’ city o the Turkish side of the Black sea No one knows how ancient it Is The Greeks say that the name mean and of Cherries,” and that the peror Caligula sent here ali the wa from Rome to get cherries for hi flamingoes. On a tiny island near there is a ruined castle of the daughters of King Mithridate: imprisoned for displeasing het And there fs a pile o/ is sald to have been the shor Where one was royal parent stones that altar erected to Mars, who once visite: island. Juson, according to leg rested the too, when he was going through this country |} of the golden fleece. Miss Joyce Wethered, youthful Grit. 8h goifer, who defeated the supposed. on .ale/ eat women’s open golf championship RH Kendaii, 20-tt at Sandwich. Miss Wethered is shewa with the silver trophy awarded a ¥ oo ae in Demand. When the first English Bible was | being published, after the King James translation in 1611, a error crept into a verse typographical f the “and he went inte the city.” the error was discovered and the missing “s” prefixed to make “he” Inte | “she.” Comparatively few of the first edition Bibles are now in existence. for most of them were chained in the churches and literally read to shreds. Of those that are left, the “he Bibles are naturally In greatest demand by collectors, says the Detroit News. Different e of Thought. “Why don't we have grand orations such as the old-time statesmen used to inake?” “L am afraid,” replied Senator Sor- ghum, “that conditions don't eloquence in governmental What the people are interested lu are facts and figures. Arithmetic has tuien the plaee af rhetoric.” aor from | Eur | in seare): | | third | chapter of Ruth, verse 15, so that ft | read, | Quite a number of coples of the pon | derous volume had been issued before favor | affairs. | SURELY SHOWED SOME SPEED | Chauffeur’s Dashing Ways Caused El- derly Fiancee a Little Flurry of Bewilderment. There is a certain city In the South | noted for the number of foreign chauf- | feurs employed by Its rich men, Not | infrequently do these drivers find them- | selves in the local courts to answer rges of speeding. rd of the case of an elderly * says a man living in the city referred to, “who got engaged to a | dushing young chauffeur from the h of France. She said to her mis | tress, after announcing this betrethal fy husband that is to be, mum, is ch a speeder that it’s bewilderin’ Saturday he picked me up after knock | in’ me down with his limousine; Sun- | day we got engaged, and today I find j that he already owes me $200 !"—Mil- | woukee Sentinel Mason and Dixon Line, The Mason and Dixon line, in Unit- ed States history, is a line popularly regarded as dividing the slaveholding from the non-slaveholding states. In reality, it ran for more than one-third of its length between two slave States, Maryland and Delaware. It was run by two English engineers, Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon, between | the years 1764 and 1767, for the pur- pose of settling the disputed boundar- ies between Maryland on the one side and Pennsylvania and Delaware on the other. The work was done with such skill and accuracy that a revision in 1849, with Instrumgpts of much great- er precision, disclosed vo error of im- | portance, FOR OVER 40 YEARS HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE has been used successfully in the treatment of Catarrh, HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE con- sists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts through the Blood on the Mucous Sur- faces, thus reducing the inflammation. Sold by all druggists, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Brighten Up Let me give you my price on papering your home, painting | your house or outbuildings. Estimates gladly given with | no obligations on your part. ALL WORK GUARANTEED William Kelsey We state it as our honest belief that for the price asked, Chester- field gives the greatest value in Turkish Blend cigarettes ever offered to smokers. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. | Peeeeteteetetetetetetettnrareeeneneeerees Pete hedenteadeeendenteete chest tendons ete Coat eteateete> Eat — | KAMIAH NON-IRRIGATED MELONS CAN BE BOUGHT EXCLUSIVELY AT: Mercantile, Cottonwood; Winona Mercantile, Winona; Nez- percre Trading Co., Nezperce; Moore Mercantile, Craigmont; Webber Mercantile, Fenn; Gilroy Mercantile, Kooskia, Paul F. Corbett, Grower Kamiah, Idaho POPES PP PP ere eertetoestenertontend oateatoetoteatodionte ee Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry Cottonwood COTTONWOOD, IDAHO SEPTEMBER 21, 22, 23, 1922 In the whole World there is no con- test so intensely exciting, and with more thrilling and spectacular cli- maxes, than the riding of “outlaw” bronchos by cowboys and cowgirls. Those contests, also the wild borse races, wild steer soping and bulldog- ging, Indian dances and pow wows are all that remain of the young, wild, vigorous, yet lovable West. GET FARES AND PARTICULARS FROM YOUR LOCAL AGENT WM. McMURRAY, General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon