Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, December 29, 1922, Page 3

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3 a, Aa pie ft ati 3 We Greet You with the compliments of hss eS itr the season We thank you for the patronage you have siven us in 1922 and assure you we shall appreciate its continuxtion in 1923. eta Service Garage P. H. Dye Wm. Buettner Vy. A. Dye DRIVE IN: WE’RE EXPECTING YOU Te) usue ements | Mestetetecneeeetetecede ed eee ceeded cette ' Are You Planning to Remodel? If You Are—a greater saving may be realized and more satisfactory results obtained by having the work done now, rather than waiting until spring season, with its usual building rush and scarcity of workmen—work- men who really xre competent. Tn addition to the beautiful difference in appearance and the continuous source of delight derived from well- kept and reparied buildings, you will be surprised at the saving of time, money and efforts. A man will gladly he sent to measure your job— quoting you upon the material required. Se Madison Lumber & Mill Company COTTONWOOD. IDAHO PPP edredetoatredoctond doateadreiontordotontoatoete ndnedoets NOTICE FOR PUBLIC ATION. | land above described, before Department of the Interior,| Hampton Taylor, U. S. Commis- U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, | sioner, at Grangeville, Idaho, on Idaho, November 28, 1922. | the 6th day of January, 1928. Notice is hereby given that | Claimant names as witnesses: { Clarence W. Williams, of Cotton-| , Clarence W. Williams, Ru- * wood, Idaho, who, on May 18,|40!ph Schroeder, Frank H. Gen- 1919, made Additional Stock. |'#Y, All of Cottonwood, Idaho. raising Homestead Entry, No.! — Forsmann, of Keuterville, 06792, for SWY44 NEW, Wih| gs a oeree NEW, SWI, & S's SWI, HUGH E. O'DONNELL, Sec. 11; & Wy NEW, “Section | Register. 14, Township 80 N. Range 1} West, Boise Meridian, has filed , notice of intention to make | three year Proof, to establis claim to the land above deserib- ed, before Hampton Taylor, U.S. Commissioner, at Grangeville, | Idaho, on the 6th day of Janu- ary, 1923 49-5 'NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION, Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, December 11, 1922. Notice i is hereby given that Ru- jfus J. Davis of Boles, Ida., who, on Jan. 4, 1918, made Addition- al Homestead Entry, No. 07192, Claimant names as witnesses: Nw 7 i pr iy Sec. u fy he William Moughmer, Thomas! jo, Township 28 North, Gene a Gentry, Rudslph Schroeder, All ‘West, Boise Meridian, has filed of Cottonwocd, Idaho. Lawrence | notice of intention to make Uptmore, of Keuterville, Idaho. |'Three year Proof, to establish HUGH E. O'DONNELL. | claim to the land above describ- Register. |ed, before The United States = i we | Lan ffice, < s NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION, on > gg ‘os 2 ee Department of the Interior, | 19238. 4 U.S. Land Office at aaa “Ck imant names as witnesses: Idaho, November 28, 1922. Eddie D. Davis, of Boles, Ida- Notice is hereby given that ho. Saxby Boles, of Boles, Idaho, Thomas Gentry, of Cottonwoocd, Leander F. Kelly, of Spri Idaho, who, on June 25, 1921, Ley | 25, Camp, Idaho. Archibald B. made Additional Stock- raising Davidson, of Spring Camp, Ida- Homestead Entry, No. 07624, ho. for SEY SWI, Section 2; & HUGH E. O’DONNELL., E% NW, , Section 11, Town- 51-5 Register. ship 30 Mouth Range 1 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year | Proof, to establish claim to the 49-5 NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, W te:e Did You Get That Suit and Overcoat? I got them from Richard & Son our home tailors. How much did you pay for them? Oh! just a little more than ready made prices. Their cleaning aud pressing is A-1 and reasonable i glad we have a tailor shop in our town. can stay with us. They surely fit well. I'm going right over and get measured for a suit and overcoat. in price, everyone says Listen John we must patronize them so they aa Idaho, December 11, 1922. Notice is hereby given that Eddie D. Davis, of Boles, ee: who, on June 30, 1919, made Additional Stock-raising Home- stead Entry No. 06918, for Lots 1, 2, 3, Sec. 4, Twp. 28 N. R. 2 W. & SEY, swy, zg sw, Sits, Section 33, Township 39° 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 The United! States Land Office, at Lewiston, Idaho, on the 18th day of danuary, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: Rufus J. Davis, of Spring | Camp, Idaho. Saxby Boles of | Boles, Idaho. Leander F. Kelly, of Spring Camp, Idaho. Archi- bald B. Davidson, of Spring! Camp, Idaho. HUGH E. O'DONNELL, Register. ol-e 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, vs The Unknown Heirs and the Un- known Devisees of Harry O. Fargo, deceased; and the un-} known owners of the real pro-! perty sitwated in Idaho Coun-} ty, State of Idaho, described as follows; to-wit: The S14} SEY, of Sec. 10, and the W14| NEY, of Sec. 15, in Twp. 32! N. R. 3 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} | District Court of the Tenth Judi- | cial District of the State of Ida-| | ho in and for the County of Ida- | ho, by the above named plaintiff, ; and you are hereby directed to appear and answer the said com- | plaint within twenty days of the| service of this summons if serv- | ed within said Judicial District, | and within forty days if served | elsewhere; and you are further notified that unless you so ap- pear and answer said complaint | within the time herein specified, | the plaintiff will take judgment | against you as_ prayed in said complaint. | This action is brought by the plaintiff against the above named defendants, to quiet the title by decree of the court, of the plaintiff in and to the land situated in Idaho County, State of Idaho, and described as fol- lows, to-wit: SY4 SEW of Sec.| 10 and the W EY of Sec. 15, 29 32 all in Twp. N.ROSE. BM. | Witness my hand and the seal of said District Court, this 25 day of November, 1922. | Henry Telcher, Clerk. By Harold Harris, Deputy. (Seal) Fogg & Campbell, Attorneys for| Plaintiff. Residence and Post- | office Address Grangeville, Idaho. 49-6 | Wwe are RICHARDS & SON, The Cottonwood Tailors | | vated. | BASIN THAT FIRES BULLETS | New and Frightful Weapon of War Is | neither noise nor smiok | intnute at ranges up to 2,0 yards? | British military authorities | on the principle of cent | that fs placed upon a re | off. | basin in which are placed a quantity | whirled at enormous speed by a petrol | cape from an opening la COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as sevond-class tal matter. Subscription one year Six months (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDEN1 IN POLITICS Copy for charge of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, DECEMBE R 29, 1922 FRANCIS WHITE Francis White of Baltimore, until recently first secretary of the Ameri. | can embassy at Buenos Aires, has beer made chief of the division of Latin | American affairs of the State depart. | ment, succeeding Sumner Welles, whe resigned. Mr. White is only thirty) years old and has been in the dip. | lomatic service since 1915, his first! diplomatic post being at Peking. AROUND THE WORLD Haiti has no navigable rivers, Australla bas no Colombia produces the alds, active volcanoes, finest emer- Helland has a cow to every inhab- | itant. Brazil! is as large as the whole of Europe, Uruguay will celebrate Its centenary in 1925, Formosa hes a world monopoly of camphor, Ceylon produces the world's finest cinnamon, Wales has the largest slate quarries fn the world. Persia has no distilleries, breweries or saloons, The Fiji Islands have almost no na- | tive animals, Palestine {is about the size of the state of Vermont. Sweden Is a land of enlightenment; education Is compulsory, India has 30 cities, each with a popu- | lation of more than 100,00, Tapan Is so mountainous that only about one-sixth of its land ts cultl- Operated Without the Aid of Any Explosive. Can you tmagine a gun which makes uses no ex- plosive, ls worked entirely by a petrol engine, and cun shoot 1,200 rounds a Such a weapon ig being tested by the It works al force— s mud onto ‘ling on A the same force that f your back when you are wet day, or causes gloit fly wheels in factories to burst suddenly into hundreds of fragments. Auything volving wheel is carried to {ts edge ond then huried The new gun consists of a metal of round steel bullets. As the basin is allowed to es- the disk Shutters are provided which prevent the bullets from being thrown out ex- cept at one point. One feature of the gun |s that It can be regulated to meet the requirements of the occasion. Spin the magazine rapidly and its wwissiles will crash through an oaken plank a mile away. But let it revolve at a low speed and it will pour out a stream of bullets which stun, but do nut kill, at evep such a short range as 20 yards. motor the bullets ure | system far from infallible. , Dloyed NOT ‘FINGER-PRINT’ INVENTOR Or, Jacques Bertillon Has Been Given Credit Which Properly Should Belong to Englishman. Coupled with the announcement of | the death of Dr. Jacques Bertillon jn | Paris was the erroneous statement | that he was the inventor of the “Ber- tillon system for finger-printing,” In collaboration with his elder brother. The facts are that the system was In- | vented by his younger brother, and that it had nothing whatever to do | with finger-printing, which was intro- duced as a rival system of {dentifica- tion by the late Str Francis Galton, the cousin of Charies Darwin, who | also Invented composite photography | and the now familiar term “eugenics.” } | } Alphonse Bertillon, born in 1855 and died in 1914, for many years the head of the criminal investigation bu- renu of the city of Paris police de- | partment, was the inventor of the so- ealled “Bertillon system” of anthro- pometry for the identification of ertm- Inals. It had nothing to do with | finger-prints, but consisted of an elab- orate serles of measurements of parts of the body with instruments of pre- cision. The making of these measurements | required delicate and costly instru- | ments and the work of skilled men, and it was, moreover, found that | changes tn even adult bodies made the Por these reasons the system, though still em- in France, has in America, | Great Britain and elsewhere largely been supplanted by Galton’s system of finger-printing or thumb-printing WAS BORN “IN THE PURPLE” Known Now That John Wesley Was of the Same Descent as the Duke | of Wellington. { | | A movement to restore the tomb of John Wesley, which is in an advanced | stage of decay, and the renovation of his chapel on the thoroughfure known | as City rond, London, is already un- der way in England, and an effort is | | being made to interest American Meth- | odists, The tomb, the chapel and Wesley's house occupy a site given to him in! 1775 by the city of London, not far from the old cannon foundry on Fins bury square, the first home of Meth. | odism in London. Wesley's death oc- curred in 1791 in the house granted him by the city. Notwithstanding the popular beltef | that Wesley was of humble origin It has been established that he was re- lated to one Guy of Welswe, who was created an earl by King Athelstane in | the Tenth century, Wesley is descend- ed, according to these findings, from the same ancestor as the duke of Wel- | Hngton. In 1735 John Wesley came to Amer- ica and settled in Georgia, and started the “Second Rise of Methodism,” the movement having been founded at Ox- ford from which Westey was a gradu-| ate, ten )ears before Waitre: Name on Card. | The old “Is that our waitress?” problem has been solved by the maen- agement of a tea, sandwich and tce | cream room In one of the midtown hotels popular with theatrical folk, The patron is never at a loss to know how to address his servitor, or servt- | tress, for under the glass of each | table is slipped a neatly lettered card giving the name of the waltress as signed to it, Thus: | “Your waitress’ name ts Mary,” “Your waitress’ name is Lillian.” “Yes, it is a great Improvement," mused one patron the other evening as he Hngered er a beverage blasphe- | mously listed as mint Julep. “But re member in the old days in this same place they didn’t have to have a card on the mirror saying: “The bartender’s | name is Dave.”"—New York Sun. Bands on His Cigars. Mr. Blake hesitated at the entrance | of the cigar store for a few minutes. | looked up and down the street care- fully and then cautiously went inside | and shook hands with the proprietor. | “Well, Jim, today? Same old brand?” “That's just it,” whispered Blake. | “That's why I came to see you today. | You see, this {s my birthday and the | wife Is on the way here to buy me a) box of ¢! Would It be too much | trouble for you to put some of those | pretty cigar bands on my favorite | brand?"—New York Mall A Contradiction. | President Ethel Enders Ellison of the Housewives’ league, sald in an | address in Denver: “Oh, these egg profiteers! ‘em! | “They tell me the Chicago Egg ex: | change sells more eggs every hour | than all the hens of America could | lay In a year. And every time an egg | is sold its price, of course, goes up a| little, while its real value goes down. “Eggs, in short, keep dear, but how | | | | or Drat Mable you are at breakfast, to meet | with one that turns out to be a little cheeper !” Saving Our Gas. It ts reckoned by the bureau be | mines that 50,000,000 gallons of gaso- | Ine were recovered at reflperies ta 1921 from uncondensed still vapors. Such an economy has a strong appeal for motorists, Inasmuch as it has a bearing upon the price of the Indis- pensable liquid fuel. But it is fur- ther estimated that If a Uke system were adopted by all refineries more than twice as much in addition might be saved, say 120,000,000 gallons alto- gether, which would thus. be added old man, what'll it be | - 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 EPO EdomeeGE T. P. Brown CHIROPRACTOR Craigmont, Idaho 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 weleomed John F. Knopp, G. K. Barney Seubert, F, S. PPPPISGTIFFSS9 OOO OOOO OGY SOSSPSSI9SSS99OSOSGOSOGOCO KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. Hayward Shields, C. C. John Homar, K. R, and 8. PPPOE DETOEOOOED THE AMERICAN LEGION Cottonwoed Post No, 40 » Meets Ist Monday of each month at I. 0, 0. F. Bert Schroeder, Com. Frank Albers, Adjutant FELIX MARTZEN Real Estate, Uoans, Fire and Life Insurance Insure im the Northwestern Mutual and save 26 to 45 per cent on your insurance, FO9OO0S60006 00606000060 00d JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished om an. class of Work. Repairing promptly done. Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50¢ and 75c per night or $3.00 to $83.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give us a trial. “Dad” Rooke, Prop. 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

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