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Fo every ton of manure you put on your soil this year, you’re going to get back $7.00 to $10.00 in increased crops. College experiment station tests have placed this high value cn manure at the present time. /he OriginalWide Spreading Spreader Just as there's one best way to sow your grain, there’s one best way to handle your manure-that’s to 9; it-- with a spreader--evenly, uniformly, perfectly shredded you want it. Thorough, Uniform Spreading The NISCO does just this- break. Simple in construction. shreds your manure finely, thor- Extra strong--yet light draft. hly -the: ds ij nl; prev wa Come in and see us. We will smootLly, and widely. give you the full facts on the The NISCO is builtlow down— NISCO--the right Spreader for it is easy to load. No gears to your farm, ie it = | there Hoene Hardware SSRIS eS eae {7E state it as our honest be- lief that for the price asked, Chesterfield gives the greatest value in Turkish Bleud cigarettes ever offered tu smokers. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co : So different is this ciga- rette that it is mild and yet it satisfies. Its mildness is the more unusual be- cause of its satisfying body and flavor. “Knowing how” is everything in cigarette blending. Clothes Make The Man Tailors make clothes. We are tailors. Blacksmiths shoe horses. Merchants sell merchandise. Why does everyone come to Richards and Son for their clothes? Because they know how to please their customers. Clothes they make are perfect in fit and are tailored individually for you. clothes are made of pure wool fabrics and so guaranteed. Our Prices are reasonable, representing full value for your money. RICHARDS & SON, The Cottonwood Tailors a dn ie 28 Carmi A. Thompson of Cleveland, who is the republican candidate for governor of Ohio. OREGON BONUS TOTAL IS EIGHT MILLION: Salem, Or.—A total of $8,042,352.40 in soldier bonus and loan money has been distributed about the state up to j and including September 30, accord ing to a tabulation made by the sec retary of state. Of this amount $3,- 849,253.79 is in loans and $4,193,098.61 | is bonus payments. The number of | loans is 1545 and the number of bonus | payments 18,926. Of the total amount paid to date, has been one loan for every twelve bonus payments. Of the total numbers of bonuses and loans issued, | ; two remain undelivered because of | legal proceedings, thirteen because of | 7 | claimants having died before receipt ; of payment and eighteen by reason | j of being unclaimed at the addresses | given by claimants In addition to the total above given, W | refunds of educational aid in the sum | of $136,093.91 have been made, bring- ing the total disbursed from the fund up to $8,178,256.31. EUROPE WILL NEED FOOD | French and German Grain Crops Show Material Decline, Washington, D. C.—A_ substantial yearly decline in the grain crops of | both France and Germany is shown in estimates prepared by the interna and cabled to the ugricultural depart ment here. . France's wheat production ts Placed at 80,000 bushels, a de crease of 88,090,000 from last year, and | that of Germany at 69,670,000 bushels, | representing a decline of 38,130,000. | Pasco-Kennewick Bridge Opened. Kennewick, Wash.—Material for a new page in Washington's history was | provided Sunday morning when the | mugnificent new steel bridge over the ; Columbia river, linking together the ‘Twin Cities” of Kennewick and Pasco, was officially opened to trat fle with W. J. Honeycutt, a pioneer | ; of Walla Walla, installed as toll mast: | | er. Says Britain Will Pay Debt. New York.—Great Britain is deter. | mined to pay in full her war debt of | more than $4,000,000,000 to the Uni- ted States, Reginald McKenna, form er British chancellor of the exchequer | j and a leading authority on interna | tional finance, declared in a speech | bere to the convention of the Amer | ican Bankers’ association | _—_—_— — | THE MARKETS Portland Wheat—Bluestem, $1.20; soft white, | | $1.10; western white, $1.09; hard win ter, $1.06; northern spring, $1.09; west- | ern red, $1.04 | Corn—Whole, $36; cracked, $38 | Hay—Alfalfa, $18@18.50 | | | per ton; Valley timothy, $20; eastern Oregon | timothy, $21 Butter Fat—40@47e. Eges—Ranch, 37@45c. Cheese—Tillamook triplets, 31c; Young Americas, 31% @32c; block | Swiss, 32@34c; cream brick, 26@28e Cattle — Choice steers, $7.50@7.75; medium to good, $6.50@7.25. Sheep—East of mountain lambs, | | $1011; choice valley lambs, $9.50@ | 10.50. | Hogs — Prime light, $10.75; smooth heavy, $9.50@10.00. Seattle. Wheat Hard white, soft white, western white, northern spring, $1.10; hard red winter, soft red winter, $1.09; western red, $1.07; Big Bend bluestem, $ 30%@ | | | Hay—Alfalfa, $22; timothy, $25; straw, $17. Butter Fat—49@50c. Eggs—Ranch, 46@47c. Cattle—Prime steers, medium to choice, $6@7. $7.75@8.26; | tional institute of agriculture at Rome | prepared and promulgated by the} | treasury department. Court action looking to a_ fina | Eleanor Reinhardt Mills, choir singer, | | accompanied the Bahmer girl | ident Hardix SALE OF LIQUOR ON SHIPS PROHIBITED All Vessels Barred From Hav- ing Liquor Aboard in Amer- ican Territorial Waters. Washington, D. C.—All vessels, American and foreign-owned, are pro- hibited from having liquor on board | - in American territorial waters under | an interpretation of the prohibition | amendment and the enforcement act | handed down by the department of} justice. Moreover, the transportation or sale | of intoxicants on American craft,| wherever operated, was held to be in- bPited. American territorial waters were construed to include those not only within the three-mile limit of tinental United States but also those within the same limit of the Philip-| pines, the Hawaiian islands, Porto Rico, the Virgin islands and Alaska. So far as American ships are con cerned, the sale or transportation of Mquor will cease at or as soon as those vessels reach their home | ports. In the case of foreign ships the decision will become operative as soon as the necessary regulations can be con- once, determination of the application of American dry laws to foreign ships en- tering American ports were foreseen by both Attorney-General Daughtery and Chairman Lasker of the shipping board. RED GROSS BEGINS NEAR EAST DRIVE Washington D.C —Plans for imme- diate relief work in the near overshadowed all else when the annual + convention of the American Red Cross was opened here Monday by its chair man, Judge John Barton Payne. Thou sands of delegates were in attendance from all parts of the country. Judge Payne read a letter from Pres- .» Who was unable to at tend the opening session, expressing setisfaction because of the organiza tion's unfailing strength and readiness for every emergency. President Harding has designated the American Red Cross and the Near East Relief to supervise the collection und administration of a near emergency fund, a drive for which is to be started at once. This decision was announced by the east] east COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE Se GEORGE MEDVED are Rca Friday and iy at Postoffice in Cotton: idaho second-class mail ee * Subscription one year Six months INDEPENDEN} IN POLITICS — Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1922 WANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE FOR SALE—Lincoln buck, 2 years old. Conrad Bosse. 41-tf FOR SALE—Registered Short Horn bull, 14 months old. J. W. Williams. 37-tf FOR SALE—Three year old registered Duram bull. D. H. Kube, Fenn, Idaho. 41-tf FOR SALE—1 good Monarch range, 1 kitchen cabinet, 1 tele- | phone and about one-half mile of telephone wire. Bert Schroeder.. FOR SALE—Letter files at the Chronicle office. Put your correspondence away in a system atic order, They sell for $1 each. 87-tf FOR SALE—159 acres of good farming land one-half mile north of Greencreek, Idaho. See or write John H, Trautman, Green- creek, Idaho. 42-4* FOR SALE—Complete sawmill outfit, capacity 20,000 feet per day. For further particulars write or see Charles Mader, Keuterville, Idaho. 42-4* 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 SALE—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 president late Sunday, following con ferences with u special committee of which Will H. Hays {s chairman, CANCELLING DEBTS FOUGHT Senators Say America Should Make No More Loans. FOR SALE—160 acres of tim- ber and meadow land near West- lake on main road to Cottonwood 50 acres of fine meadow land and the rest consists of fine timber land. House and barn in fair condition. The entire 160 acres can be bought for $8000, $1000 Washington, D. C.—~Cancellation of allied debts to the United States was | opposed unanimously by three sena- | tors—McKinley, republican, Illinois; Spencer, republican, Missouri, and | Harris, democrat, Georgia, in discus sing their impressions of an extensive tour of Europe, where they were Amer. | jean delegates to the inter-parliamen- lary peace union All three agreed on their arrival | here that there was much suffering and economic distress in Europe, but that the American government should | make no more loans there. They united in predictions that Germany would work herself out of her present diffi culty. Boy Held tn Hall Murder, New Brunswick, N. J. — Clifford | Hayes, 19 years old, admirer of Pearl Bahmer, who found the bodies of the Rev. Edward Wheeler Hall and Mrs arrested and formally charged | first degree murder for the slay was with down in cash or trade the re- maining $2000 on time at 6 per cent. This will make an ideal dairy ranch, For frrther parti- culars call on or write Mrs. N. R. | Shaw, Westlake or the Chronicle office, Cottonwood. 41-4* ESTRAYED—Seven head of heifers and steers, color red, branded heart on left side, vari- ous ear marks; one cow branded circle J on left side; one spotted cow branded curved bar on left hip, crop and underbit on left ear; one yearling steer, branded quarter circle K on left side, crop und underbit on left ear; one three year old red steer, branded quarted circle K on left side, underbit on each ear. Liberal reward for information leading to their return. E. W, Kincaid, Ferdinand, Idaho, 42-2° LOST—Sampson tire, 30x34 and rim also Washington license ings with were witness. Raymond Schneider, who was the Bahmer girl when the bodies found, was held as a material | According to Schneider's | statement, the double slaying was the | resuit of mistaken identity, He had gone | out with Hayes on the night of the murder, he said, trailing a man who | Seeing a couple beneath a crab apple tree, he said, Hayes opened fire We repair all makes of bat- teries. Cottonwood Garage. 30-tf | plate No. 92086 last Friday be- tween Waha and Cottonwood. Finder please leave at Cotton- wood Garage or the Chronicle office. 41-1* WANTED—Man ‘and wife want work on ranch for winter months. Ben J. Bieren. 42-1 It’s a food—Hazelwood ice cream. R. H. Kendall Confec- tionery. 39-tf Wholesale BUTC Dealers in Hides, Pelts, Simon Bros. COTTONWOOD, IDAHO and Retail HERS and all kinds of Poultry SN a Me RARE Ee Ce ee a ee <ORN eatca REL