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HUAAHLUHNUAIUNGL VLU: QOORLUUGGAHNNNAONANGOOEQOGEOOOLNREESENNNHIES) | PROGRESSIVES IN ja primary law but may have | & 4 2ND PLACE, CLAIM | the strength to pass it over the | + | veto of the governor should he | Christmas To all of Friends, Customers @ Neighbors whose patronage and cooperation has made for Will Act Independent of Demo- | decide not to sign such a meas-| crats in Legislatives Matters | Ure. At Boise. According to press dispatches || ARTHUR BERNARDES from Boise it is now quite ap- parent that no agreement will be reached hetween the progressive | members-elect and the democra- tic members-elect of the legisla- ture regarding the joint work- ing out of a legislative program | to carry out the platform) pledges of the two parties. Their | platforms are almost identical. | State Chairman Will H. Hort brook of the democratic party | |proposed the conference and | State Chairman Frank E. John- {esse said it would be referred to the state committee. Apparen- | tly the progressives are fighting |shy of the proposal and at the | present time at least have no in- tention of joining with the dem- | ocrats. It is said the progres-| ¢ sives are holding off because they do not want to make it ap- |: |pear that there is a possibilit of a combination. Progressive assert that every effort was made during the last campaign | to bring them together in combi- |nation with the democrats, but | | the progressives declined to en-| arthur Bernardes is the recently | ter into one. They feel now they | eieeted President of Brazil. He ie! | are stronger than the democratic | considered one of the strongest men | PePOOO OSS FH Hoo HOFESESEESESEEEECED | party and nothing is to be gain- | in that country, politically and intel. jed through a consolidation of | tually. _ reenter 1 cess of this bank, we extend our HEARTY BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS HOLIDAY SEASON and a A appy Mow ear ALL OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES OF The First National Bank COTTONWOOD, IDAHO SAFE——SOUND-——CONSERVATIVE TO OUR HOSTS OF CUSTOMERS AND FRIENDS WE WISH A HAPPY CHRISTMAS AND THAT THE NEW YEAR WILL BRING MUCH HAPPINESS AND PROS- PERITY. WE ARE CONFIDENT THAT THE NEW YEAR WILL SHOW A MARKED IMPROVEMENT IN a THE FINANCIAL CONDITION OF THE WE BELIEVE WE ARE ON THE EVE OF BETTER WE ARE GLAD TO BE LIVING IN THIS AGE | r | any kind. | If no agreement is reached |prior, and that now seems more | ; than likely, the representatives | jof the three parties in the two | WEED NOT HAVE ADVERTISED | | a Either Actor Was Exceedingly Popu- lar or the Man in the Box Office Was a “Kidder.” Victory Bonds Called All Victory Bonds bearing the serial Letters A to F have been called for payment | houses will act independently of | ) one another in the matter of or- | AND TO BE ABLE TO WITNESS THE RAPID DEVEL- OPMENT THAT IS ALREADY TAKING FORM IN THIS PORTION OF THE STATE, A member of an actors’ club tells of | : ae res one-night stand in North Dakota | ganization, but it is more than il ky a: chiunedie ith @uler Gils | likely that party lines will break | actor v nected. He always ped cringe pe a remembers the place on account of inations of members of all| several queer localisms used by the three parties will be formed to| natives in conversation put through certain bills in| As he often does on such oceastons, | which they have a particular in-| tls ector strotied up to the box office | terest. While the republican } on the afternoon of their arrival and | jave in control of both houses, | LW ie ante so ia aie indicated their margin is not great and the | °Y, {ue #dvance | ; * *. . x : | Outlook aln't very good for te | |minority wings will be Particu-| aspnt,” said the ticket seller, and the | jlarly active, The republicans | actor thought he noticed ‘just. the are not in entire unison to be} shadow of e twinkle in his keen eye. on December 15, 1922, and interest will stop on that date. Person holding such bonds should send them in for payment. l NT er MAY YOUR HOPES BE REALIZED IN THE NEW YEAR. This bank offers its services in sending in these bonds for payment. War Saving Certificates of 1918 will also be due January 1, 1928. =: = = = = = = = = = = .—f = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = ‘| Leggett Mercantile Co. “FACE THE SUNSHINE AND THE SHADOW WILL FALL BEHIND YOU.” YOU a = CHUUGROYSSO OCGA UAAEEUESOUAGEUE EEE more or less disintegration. It is held as quite certain that the | Primary advocates are going to ;demand early recognition in the jit be given to them. There are ‘in control of both houses with | advocates of a state-wide prim- jary law in all three parties. If they merge to protect a common interest they can not only pass | MERRY CHRISTMAS < jlegislature and will insist that | | “Here's half a dozen seats right here | ain't even been sold yet and now I'm ; Slamed sorry I spent so much money | on advertising.” “Why, what on earth do you mean?” | asked the actor | | “Well, I just nosed tt around that you were coming to see us, and ding me if the house didn’t Jest about sell out three days ago.”—Philadelphia Ledger. Cottonwd why he should not be punished for contempt, that contempt pro- A Resignation. >< COUNTY SEAT NEWS Mrs. J.C. Safley and Wtth The clumsy girl, wno had been act- | ceeding against Benjamin F. daughter departed “last Friday ing as waltress for the Jenkins fam- | Tweedy, Poff’s lle, had broken dish after dish, and at in abevance last the mistress of the house spoke " Serie Geeldeal proceedings and that the files in| “If you break avy more china or | the Case be mp mew to § ‘a Mary, I shall be obliged tg dis- | Preme court of the state ‘ miss you," she said, “for I cannot af- with communication front | ford to keep you.” Seales requesting that & That very night at dinner there | ment proceedings be instituted | came the sound of a fearful crash | in that court aginst Benjamin F. | from the butler's Loge ee | Tweedy, attorney for Poff. ‘There was a moment of deathly still: | The proceedings grew out of | Ress, and then Mary appenred, remov- | the condemnation suit filed last her apron as she emerged from the | ! ig a e ai Vall dane, | summer by the Lapwai alley | “The id all is In flinders, | Highway district against Mary almly, “and I'm off!" | Clay Dahlquist and others, to se- | cure a right-of-way for a portion lof the North and South State ttorney, be hel disbarment | | mum, she | -~Milwaukee Sentinel. | BEEF i 2 | highway over the land of Mrs. foi . | Dahlquist on the section of the } | _Let us figure with you on | poad between Culdesac and Win- | nice quarter of beef, pork, mut-| chester. In the condemnation | ton or veal. You will find our} cuit T. 0, Crozier, J. A. Ferris | prices right. ee , |and W. Porter Shafer were ap- | 48-tf SIMON BROS. | pointed appraisers and an order | } was made to provide by statute | Have those squeaky wheels on possession of the right-of-way | your automobile reset. Cotton-| for the construction of the road, | wood Garage. 80-tf | leaving the case pending for the | renee ascertainment of the damage to | We have a nice new assort-| be paid the owner in case she ment of tally and place cards at| was not satisfied with the ap- the Chronicle office. 43-tf| praisment. After viewing the | |premises the appraisers fixed Special price on Christmas|the sum of $257.50 as the candy if you place your order at|amount due, and tendered that once. R. H. Kendall Confection-| amount to Mrs. Dahlquist, which | ery. 49-4| it is alleged she refused, and | a | the money was then turned into | We gum saws the right way | the district court. — |and the price is right. South) Under the law of Idaho when \& Frick. 46-tf | the appraisement has been made | — ——— }and the amount of the appraise- | ACT IN CONTEMPT— |ment tendered ant nee we OU = TWEEDY | Money may be paid into the of- | satiaed DPBAR PWEEDY | fice of ee gate of the doin inh & .|court and thereupon the statute | | Language of Complaint in Ac | gives the party the right to pos- | tion Against Judge Improper | session of the land and to pro- | | and Intolerable. ceed with the construction of | | improvements.—Tribune. | Inthe case of Ear! Poff, plain- | ——_. tiff, versus Wallace N. Scales, | Theo. Mattson, John Maynard, | Grant Smith Co., 2 corporation, | Judd Maguire, William P., Hughes, J Franklin Dunbald, | Everett Harris and D. lL. Bar- LUDEN'S | schoolhouse, morning for Los Angeles, where they willvap now it y this year plaint asking anwam marriage to Thomas C. Benoy, filed in district court Wednes- day by Mrs. Benoy’s attorney, M. R. Hattabaugh. Flames, believed to have started from a stove in which fire remained after the close of school, destroyed the Martin southwest of Grangeville, Wednesday night. The building was located near the foot of Whitebird hill, on the prairie side of the grade. John Callan has reopened the City Meat-market, which was closed fer several days following the death, last week, of Charles Hanson, who had leased the market. J. Frank Sims came in from Long Beach, Calif., on last Fri- day evening’s train, after an absence of several months. He will remain here for some time and assist his son, H. M. Sims, with the invoicing at the Sims’ Store at the close of the year. Will Derrig, for the last four years linotype operator for the Free Press, cast his last slug im that office Tuesday night and departed Wednesday morning for Los Angeles, to accept a posi- tion as linotype operator in a job printing establishment. John H. McEvers, assistant U. S. district attorney for Idaho, with headquarters at Boise, and former prosecuting attorney of Shoshone county, was an arrival in Grangevnlle Monday night for a visit with his mother, and his | sister, Mrs. R. O. Wilson. | The tall flag pole, erected be- | tween the Lyric theater and the A. & F, store during the summer of 1918, when the fiercest bat- MENTHOL COUGH DROPS for nose and throat Give Quick Relief clay, defendants, in the district | court at Lewiston, Judge Seales | Monday ordered the complaint | stricken as scandalous and a re- flection on the intecrity of the court, that the plaintiff Poff be; |cited to appear.and show cause | thes of the world war were rag- ing, has been cut down. Fear that the pole, weakened by age, ome be Bn) et be a eavy wind, and possi jure some person, prompted removal of the pole.