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bane —— +S a« West, Balad oeridion *has filed| pp enema ae oe ica CRESCENT WRENCHES TIRE COVERS WEED CH: SPOTLIG AINS H BATTERIES Al Service P. H. Dye DRIVE IN: Cedar chest stock—table YOU made it. n Lumber Let’s Make it an Automotive xmas. Wm, Buettner WE'RE ss Re a i te ee SURPRISE i Your ! WIFE PED PRD oeorratrcdordetordentrctectes de aloece teedoatontoet 'TO ROBES Garage Vv. A. Dye EXPECTING YOU By making her something for Christmas. to length; cupboard doors; drawers; flour bins; panels; etc.; make it easier to make things. A table, cabinet, foot stool, cedar chest, desk, chair, tool chest, or stand would be appreciated more because Early action is suggested as time is limited. Call at the office for further information. 3¢ & Mill Company COTTONWOOD, IDAHO i oo anal NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. | Department of the Interior,| U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, November 28, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Clarence W. Williams, of Cotton- wood, Idaho, who, on May 13, 1919, made Additional Stock- raising Homestead Entvy, No.| 06792, for SWY%, NEW, W4) SEY, NEW, SWI, & S}s SW, Bec iis & Wi NEV, “Section | 14, Township WN, Range 1) notice of intention to make! three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above describ- ed, before Hampton Taylor, U. S.! Commissioner, at Grangeville, | Idaho, on the 6th day of Janu- ary, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: William Moughmer, Thomas! Gentry, Rudolph Schroeder, Al! Teen ot Kentervilie fash | tmore, euterville, Idaho. Ks HUGH E. O'DONNELL. Register. ———_ CE FOR PUBLICATION. Den 3 S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, November 28, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Thomas Gentry, of Cottonwood, Idaho, who, on June 25, 1921, Additional Stock-raising | tead Entry, No. 07624, for SE% SW14, Section 2; & EK 4,, Section 11, Town- ship 80 North, Range 1 West, | Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year How much did you pa can stay with us. | 51-5 Oh! just a little more than ready made prices. I'm going right over and get measured for a suit and overcoat. land above described, before Hampton Taylor, U. S. Commis- sioner, at Grangeville, Idaho, on| the 6th day of January, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: | Clarence W. Williams, Ru-| dolph Schroeder, Frank H. Gen-! try, All of Cottonwood, Idaho. | Lewis Forsmann, of Keuterville, Idaho. HUGH E. O'DONNELL, 49-5 Register. | NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, Idaho, December 11, 1922. Notice is hereby given that! Eddie D. Davis, of Boles, Idaho, who, on June 30, 1919, made Additional Stock-raising Home- 1, 2, 8, Sec. 4, Twp. 28 N. R. 2 W. & SEY, SWI, & SWY, SEW Section 83, Township 29 North Range 2 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Three Year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before States Land Office, at Lewiston, Idaho, on the 18th day of January, 1928. Rufus J. Camp, Idaho. Davis, Saxby of Spring Camp, Idaho. bald B. Davidson, of Spring SUMMONS. In the District Court of the! Tenth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for the County of Idaho. | John Martzen, Plaintiff, The United | Claimant names as witnesses: | of Spring! Boles of | Boles, Idaho. Leander F. Kelly, | Archi- | Camp, Idaho. | HUGH E. O'DONNELL, | Register. | stead Entry No. 06918, for Lots | COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. Subscript | Six months (Strictly in advance) | INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS | Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1922 | COL. MICHAEL FRIEDSAM enact vs | The Unknown Heirs and the Un- | known Devisees of Harry O. Fargo, deceased; and the un-| known owners of the real pro-! perty situated in Idaho Coun-! ty, State of Idaho, described as follows; to-wit: The S!| SE\ of Sec. 10, and the W146, NE, of Sec. 15, in Twp. 32) N. R. 8 E. B. M., Defendants. | The State of Idaho Sends Greet- | ings: | To the above named defendants. | YOU ARE HEREBY NOTI-| FIED, That a complaint has) been filed against you in the| ho in and for the County of Ida- ho, by the above named plaintiff, plaint within twenty days of the | service of this summons if serv- | ed within said Judicial District, | and within forty days if served | notified that unless you so ap- pear and answer said complaint | within the time herein specified, | against you as_ prayed in said complaint. plaintiff against the above named defendants, to quiet the situated in Idaho County, State of Idaho, and described lows, to-wit: S14 SE of See. 10 and the Wi, NE\ of Sec. 15, all in Twp. 82 N. R. 3 E. B. M. of said District Court, day of November, 1922. Henry Telcher, Clerk. By Harold Harris, Deputy. U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, December 11, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Ru- fus J. Davis of Boles, Ida., who, on Jan. 4, 1918, made Addition- al Homestead Entry, No. 07192, for SEY, SW14, Sec. 3, & NE 4 NW, & NW, NEV, Section 10, Township 28 North, Range 2 WwW Boise Meridian, has filed notice of Three year Proof, to establish claim to the land above describ- ed, before The United States Land Office, at Lewiston, Idaho, (Seal) Fogg & Campbell, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Residence and Post- office Address Grangeville, Idaho. PITHY PARAGRAPHS, The alarm clock usually catches a intention to make| fellow napping. One need not be a botanist to recog- nize a blooming Idlot, Water oa the brain Is seldom due on the 18th day of January,| to a thirst for knowledge. 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: Eddie D. Davis, of Boles, Ida- ho. Saxby Boles, of Boles, Idaho. Leander F. Kelly, of Spring Camp, Idaho. Archibald B. A fellow is certainly up in the alr when a woman sweeps him off his feet. If they bad to turn thetr own grind- stones fewer people would have axes | Davidson, of Spring Camp, Ida-| to grind. ho. HUGII E. O’DONNELL., Register. | NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, Some society people prune their genealogical trees by cutting off their poor relations, It is from the family Jar one dts- covers whether one has married a Proof, to establish claim to the U. S. Land Office at Lewiston,] peach or # lemon—Boston Transcript, y for them? They RICHARDS & SON, The Cottonwood Tailors Where Did You Get That Suit and Overcoat? I got them from Richard & Son our home tailors. surely fit well. Their cleaning aud pressing is A-1 and reasonable in price, everyone says we are glad we have a tailor shop in our town. Listen John we must patronize them so they 49-6 | District Court of the Tenth Judi-| merchant, has gone abroad to make a | cial District of the State of Ida-| study of business and economic con- and you are hereby directed to} Friedeam will make a private report appear and answer the said com- | to the President on his return. elsewhere; and you are further) 4 somewhut disappointing object. a the plaintiff will take judgment | '** . s . | moment. This action is brought by the | cannot see title by decree of the court, of | the plaintiff in and to the land) as fol-| Witness my hand and the seal) this 25 | } Italians who are ad Col. Michael Friedsam, New York ditions in Europe and England at the request of President Harding. The work will require several months. Mr, A Glimpse of Mars. The planet Mars, which drew a lit- tle nearer to the earth on June 18, seen through the telescope is to the novice wise astronomer never aliows a visitor to look at Mars at all, if he can heip| it. Por the casual visitor never realizes | the published drawings of the planet represent the very imost that can be seen at the most exceptional In fact, the trained observer pr cent of the whole for 99 per cent the thne. But the novice invariably expects to see the spider webs of canals and he is—invariably — disuppointed. German Fish for French Waters. Two hundred thou dosmall fresh- water fish, from Gerinun Inkes, have been transported to France and safe ly consig' —without one casualty— in thelr new homes in the lakes of icuardy, fumous for their tine fish ‘The transaction Is a reparations item The fish were transp sd in a spe cial train consisting of wagons con. taining cisterns of water. The purity of the water was renewed every fuur hours with oxygen. Only 21 Itallan citizens according : : | raised If necessary, to 6,000- horsepower hours dally. The gas produced at the plant is em- ployed ta driving a 25-horse- o. to tax returns, could qualify in the United States today as militonaires. On the basis of Hre there are 5,118 worth more than a million, but a million Hre at the pres- ent exchange amounts to oniy $50,000, Three-fifths of the Itullan millionaires have no more than this amount, and only 90 have more than ten million lire ($500,000). Only two men pos- sess inore than fifty million tire. Rockefeller, by these figures, is thus worth at least twice as much as all the Itallan millionaires put together. | Pwo-fifths of the Italian plutocrats live in northern Italy In the wo provinces of Lombardy and Piedmont. Doesn't Happen Every Day. After paying my check at the desk where I had dined I stopped to weigh myself on the scales near the door, fn plain sight and hearing of the room- | ful of diners. As I stepped upon the platform and | dropped my penny tn the slot a num- ber of youngsters jumped off a nearby bench and gathered around me. When the pointer swung around to 190 they | clapped their hands and squealed with excitement, | One of them called to a friend who lad not Joined the little party around “O, come und look! She Chicago the scales: | makes It go clear around! | Tribune. Cocaine Culture. Cocaine tirst obtained recognition as | a valuable medicinal drug about thir- | ty-five years ago, and the commercial | mpply was derived from leaves of the wild coca plant native to Peru. Now, i | | however, the shrub Is cultivated on en extensive scale in a, which will export this year about 4,500,000 pounds of the leaves. Exagge “Why are you so resentful of alx ships?” “They make us nervous,” replied Farmer Corntossel. “Some of the gummer boarders are always wistak- ing them for mosquitoes in the dis tance.” HOW —= ENGLISH ENGINEERS ARE EMPLOYING SEWAGE GAS. —Gas produced from sewage is being used to run engines at the sewage disposal works of Birmingham, England. Experi- ments made by John D, Watson, chief engineer, have proved successful, according to reports transmitted through consular channels. The sludge from the sewage, after it has undergone a certain amount of sedimenta- & thou, Is fed into a septic gas 3 producing tank, which is fur nished with an air relief valve. The sludge is not aerated be- fore it is used. The gas thus obtulned contains about 60 per cent of methane or marsh gas, and is of big calorific value. h averages as much as 675 Brit- ish thermal units per cubic foot, which compares vrey favorably with conl gas with 600° British thermal units per cuble foot. Mr. ‘Watson calculates that two tons of sludge will produce the gas required to give 150- horsepower hours, and that the total power available at that particular station could — be power gas engine, which in turn works a centrifugal sludge pump. The exhaust from the engine is passed through pipes traversing the septic supply heat and hasten the formation of gas. Samples of gas taken for analysis in cold weather had a higher calorific value than those taken In warmn- er weather, a fact which would seem to indicate that a warin climate Is not essential for gas production, tank to neeeses FICTION WRITERS AS SEERS How Oldtime Tellers of Tales Pre- dicted Marvels Which Today Are Merely Commonplace. A most amusing and voluminous book could be written around wise men's forecasts, beginning with those of Mercier who, tn the year 1240, de- scribed many future marvels. His prognostications caused skeptics even of the Eighteeuth century to smile in derision, yet, in the Twentieth century they are only simple and common- place realities. There could be cited Cyrano de Ber- gerac, the Murquls d'Argenson, Jules Verne, and a score more, without for- getting Emile Souvestre, who foresaw more than one of our conquests In his g book, “The World in the Thousand.” Here is what of the last n Jardin du Re Year Two ean be read in one s of Cham fleuri, “Le (The King’s den") about forty ys age: “A day will come when science will project her Nght Into the Interior of the humuar body and clearly see there just as we see the pebbles on the bottom of a brook.” before its discc y the author of “Fayance Fiddle” foresaw the X-ray. Truly, 1t must be conceded that tie tion writers are often seers, How Entire Town Was Moved. Residents of Cedar Falls, a moun- tain town 40 miles’ from Puget sound, were terrorized recently when the entire place moved eleven feet to- ward Cedar lake. Should the slide continue it will mean the loss of, all property and the abandonment of’ the town site. It hus been found that the clay formation upon which the foundations ure erected lies In a slanting rock Strata of extreme smoothness. There is really nething but the weight of the clay subsoll to keep It balanced, The winter's deep frost and a sup- posed earthquake shock may have been the cause of the earthslip. As every section of the town moved ex- actly the same direction and space the only damage was a few broken window lights, How Nature Made Test. A reinforced concrete arch of 86 feet span, forming part of a high- way bridge constructed the year he- fore last at Herkimer, N. Y., was sub- mitted to an unexpected and severe test when the work of concreting had been completed only 12 hours. Owing to heavy rains during the deposition of the concrete, the water in the river spanned by the bridge rose about five feet, washing out or undermining the supports of the centring and carry- Ing away part of the latter to such an extent as to leave the arch entirely without support, save that afforded by the molds in which the concrete had been deposited. Notwithstanding the sudden strain so imposed on the concrete, ho injury was caused In any part of the arch, How Fashion Slays Monkeys, The dictates of fushion have exerted | a strong demand for black and white Abyssinian monkey skins to be used fur trimmings, particularly in Paris. The supply of skins is very Ilmlied and not more than fifteen to twenty thousand can be obtained In a year, suys Consul Cross at Aden, Arabja, in a report to the textile division of jhe Department of Commerce, without un- duly ralsing prices and exterminating the monkey. The price at 4 lis Abeba has been fairly steady, grades selling at 45 more ve at 90 © Dentist Office, Nuxoll Bloc 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 ede elonleetoeetentodegeaeae ed 2 DEP parece oaededtoeteatotegte + T. P. Brown : ; CHIROPRACTOR 2 Craigmont, Idaho g * DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Deputy State Veterinarian $ Residence North end of town Both Phones KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Cottonwood Council, 1389 Meets the first and third Vednesday of each month. Visiting knights welcomed John F. Knopp, G. K. Burney Seubert, F. S. Se ee ee ee ee a Cottonwood Post No. 40 Meets 1st Monday of e month at I. 0. O. F. Bert Schroeder, Com. Frank Albers, Adjutant FELIX MARTZEN Real Estate, Loans, Fire and Life Insurance Insure im the Northwestern Mutual and save 25 to 45 pez cent on your insurance, LOOPED error re rrr ree? JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnish class of Work. Repairing promptly done. LPS rrerrrereoognd 3 Rooke Hotel tlas neat clean rooms at 50c and 75c per night or $8.00 to $3.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give usa trial. “Dad” Rooke. Prop. “send egoateetoeteets 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.