Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DAMES seasperescoat Cita epic te eee hes ee ae ane oeree — ern penne sn TI en, OIE ELE TCD TOE mnsecioen ris ACETYLENE WELDING WILLARD BATTERIES Service Garage P. H. Dye Wm. Buettner Vy. A. Dye DRIVE IN: WE'RE EXPECTING YOU . AUTO ACCESSORIES MAGNETO AND GENERATOR WORK D) 2 It’s Only a THOR BUT-- Think of the back aches it can save mother or wife Sold on easy payments. Ask those who own one. Grangeville Electric Light & Power Co. SeSeetostoagpatontoetsadeeteetenteatontoeteafeateaonteetenteceateateatendeateeseateaseateatoeteatecteate eiredestnate sioete sieeseaioeireteniee’ 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 are competent. In 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 be sent to measure your job— quoting you upon the material required. 3 Madison Lumber & Mill Company COTTONWOOD, IDAHO SHEDS HOSS OEM HERH OS COTTON WOOD AND TRANSFER LINE EDGAR WORTMAN, Prop. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice DRAY GED eo eseteeeecerdenteateatoeteeeteate ate ee ahead te atodententeate eae ndenteateateaende trateetoatentoate eed adrateateedeateatege OUR HOME MINSTREL SHOW WAS A GREAT SUC- JESS. RICHARDS & SON INSTALLMENT PLAN FOR SELLING SUITS AND OVERCOATS WILL SURELY BE A SUCCESS, FOR INFOR- MATION CALL AND SEE THEM We're Going to The Woodmen-K. P. Game Wednesday Richards & Son The Cottonwood Tailors PED se sdrcrctortestreteeso ee etestosteateeso re sdoate te oeonde doate cette toate tratoende deatratradpeadeateatorte Success to Him That Tries We print butter wrappers ‘(Prepared by the National Geographic So- eeeem pats League of Nations ‘v Geneva, Astrids the River Rhone. ciety, Washington, D, C.) Because. so. many tourists have | flocked to Swiss beauty spots for cen- turies and must needs be cared ‘for, Switzerland has been referred to, éx- travegantly, of course, as “a nation | of hotelkeepers.” Since the World war international meetings have been so frequent within the mountalnous little republic that the nickname may well be changed to “country of world conferences.” Lausanne, latest of Swiss cities to become a hostess to diplomats with the meeting there of the Near East conference, is not so well known by name, perhaps, as some of its sister towns, but the products of none other are more commonly at hand among Americans, Look over the shelves of a grocery store and, prominently displayed on the shelf of condensed milk, you are almost sure to find a variety made at Lausanne. Scan the confectioner's counter In any drug store and there, in black paper and silvery foil, will be a milk chocolate made at Vevy, not far away, and probably shipped via Lausanne, An inevitable mental morsel of a public library is Gibbon’s “Rome,” and the last three volumes of that work were penned at Lausanne. Stroll along the main street of an American town that dates back to colonial days, or among the “For Sule” signs of your city’s newest suburb, and you are likely to note a mansard roof —tinyention of the Frenchman, Fran- cois Mansard, whose fame {is enhanced by a beautiful chateau in the vicinity of Lausanne. Lausanne is the all-year-round host- ess city of Switzerland. In 1910, by count, nearly one-fourth of the 46,000 residents were citizens of other coun- tries than Switzerland. And in 1922, by estimate, this proportion has been restored, despite the war's disturb- ance. From Lake Geneva the other part of the city especially is striking, trailing the crests of five ribbed hills, which are the lower slopes of Mount Jorat, with the cathedral of Notre Dame, the finest medieval church edifice of Switz- erland, easily the most conspicuous feature. From the Signal, whence many a writer has painted word pictures of the lakeside city, the eye again catches the massive bulk of the Gothic cathed- ral, sweeps red-roofed houses, rebels at the factories of the newer town to the south and west, but is captivated by the expanse of the lake’s blue wa- ters, across which the “jagged teeth of the Sayoy mountains bite into the sky.” University Is Famous, The luster of famous names clings chiefly to the university buildings. Though the institution did not achieve a formal university status until 1021, it hag been famous since {ts founding, in 1587, the year after Berne took over the control of Lausanne. Previously, it had been sald, Lausanne “lay dor- mant at the base of its many churches.” The tide of the Reforma- tlon swept in with the Bernese affilla- tion. A school was needed to train young preachers quickly to spread Protestant doctrine. Thus Pierre Viret, a became the John Harvard of Lau- sanne. Then came Conrad Gesner, whose fame rests on a solid pedestal of more than three-score works in scl- ence, ranging from philology to bot- any. Overtopping thls prodigious re- search was his enumeration of some 500 plants not hitherto recorded. Most humanly appealing of these early schol- ars was Theodore Beza, who graduat- ed from the adventures of a cavalier, a sort of medieval “man about town,” and forsook the writing of sprightly and risque verse for the chair of Greek and morals at Lausanne, Then he turned his pen to Biblical dramas be- fore he went to Geneva to be Calyin’s chief aide.” The Simplon tunnel assures Lau- sanne’s future. The city now lies along the main rail route from Paris to Mi- lan. While Lausanne is temporarily in the public eye as a forum for the dis- cussion of world problems, its sister elty, Geneva, stands on a more perma- nent international footing as seat of the League of Nations. This “world capital” is seated serenely on both banks of the River Rhone, where it tailor’s son, leaves the limpid waters of Lake Ge- neva as a placid stream, in contrast to the muddy turbulence of its ingress at the other end of the lake. The city is not the metropolis of the miniature republic of Switze for Zurieh surpasses it In population by 50 per cent, and Berne {s the capital. But it Is doubtful whether, before the World war, any other city of Geneva's size was visited annually by as ma tour- ists, for it was the main gateway into the world-famous playground of Bu- rope, Although its recorded history goes back beyond the Christian era, to the time when Julius Caesar, In his com- mentaries on his first expedition into Gaul, mentions it as a stronghold of the Allobroges, its growth has been phenomenal only in its leisureliness. Today, after 20 centuries, tt has less than one-third the population of the century-old capital of the United States. The city enjoys the distinction of be- ing the birthplace of the International Red Cross, but also has some dark chapters in its past—the religious ex- cesses of the Reformation, when the persecuted became the persecutors, Geneva’s Noted Men, Rousseau, of whom Napoleon said, “Without him, France would not have had her Revolution”; and the patriot Bonivard, whose trials Byron Immor- talized as the “Prisoner of Chillon,” were Genevans, Farel, the Billy Sun- day of his day, who could not be made to desist from preaching, even though the women of his congregation dragged him up and down the aisles of the church by his beard, made the lake city his headquarters during his as- ecendancy, And John Calvin, “who found Geneya a bear garden and left it a docile school of piety,” was virtua! dictator here for a quarter of a cen- tury. One of the most picturesque figures in the history of Geneya during this period was Francois de Bonivard, who, when his victorlous friends rushed in- to his dungeon at Chillon crying, “Bonivard, you sre free!” responded with the query, “And Geneva?” Upon being assured that his city was also saved, he went home rejoicing. By one of those curlous chances up- on which hinge events of monumental moment, the young French philoso- pher, John Calvin, a native of Picardy, passed through Geneva one evening on his way to Strassburg. He had intend- ed spending only one night; but Farel, hearing of his arrival, rushed to him las in the vielnity of the park which characterized every act of his life, con- yinced Calvin that it was his duty to remain and assist in the organization of a theocratic state, There is no more beautiful picture of Christlan charity than the scene in this city when, on August 380, 1572, merchants of Lyons brought news of the massacre of the Huguenots on St. Bartholomew's day. Pastors were dls- patched to the frontiers to meet the fugitives who were reported to be on their way to this asylum, and the ven- erable Theodore de Beze, who had suc- ceeded Calvin as the spiritual head of the council, directed the whole popula- tion to fast and pray for the suffer- ers. Geneva has set aside as a site for the permanent home of the League of Nations, a beautiful wooded park bor- dering on the lake, some five miles from the center of the city. Behind the park tower the snow-clad Jura mountains, While there are many vil- has In the vicinity of the park which are sultable for offices and for quar- ters of the delegates and thelr secre- tarial staffs, the capitol building Itself must be built. On These Crispy Mornin’s. “On these crispy, crimpy mornin's when I hear my rooster crow no blan- kets can’t seduce me when my system hollers ‘Go.’ So I charge the autumn landscapes with a military tread, reap- in’ victory after victory—till it’s time te go to bed. From my early mornin’s flapjacks, till the mush-an’-milk at night, this merry-cheery weather Is a round of pure delight, and she tinkers with my system, lendin’ comforts an’ repairs, I’m so busy feelin’ thankful that I've got no time for prayers. Oh, there's worlds of joy in livin’ when the spirit strikes a chord In the harmony of Natur’ by the blessin’s of the Lord. There’s demands upon digestion that we never feel in spring—while I ain't | no hand to whistle you'll excuse me if I sing.”—Atlanta Constitution. ORAL aE DR. J. E. REILLY GEORGE MEDVED Dentist = = : Issued Ev Frida: d entered at) i lock Postoffice in Catiguwond, Idaho pa } Office, Nuxoll Bi second-class .majl matter. Both Phones Subscription one year | 99905000-909006000000006000 Six months (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS DR. J. D. SHINNICK Physician and Surgeon Office over Cottonwood St. Bk, | Gempeteteetee Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change | | eee DR. WESLEY F. ORR Physician and Surgeon NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE Office in Simon Bldg UNDER AN ORDER OF SALE. Both Phones In The District Court of The! seesossoesoceosooeooosoeet Tenth Judicial District of the | State of Idaho, In and for The | geqeaeqrrqtrrrtteeeteeetetcees County of Idaho. DR. C. SOMMER Michael Seubert, Plaintiff, Graduate License vs VETERINARIAN John N. Meyer and Katharina! Deputy State Veterinarian Meyer, his wife, and Mat F. Residence North end of towa Fuchs, Defendants. | Both Phones Under and by virtue of an sgcoearoreororororeoreeoed order of i - —~ of ‘eget closure and sale, issued out of | dares soa ok the District Court of the Tenth | ***ts#eeotteeeseseeserses Judicial District of the State be % KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Idaho, in and for the County of | it d Council, 1389 Idaho, on the 4th day of January el ae bees é . 1928, in the above entitled action = Meets the first and third wherein Michael Seubert, = Vednesday of each month, above named plaintiff obtain soit : Ieomed judgment and decree of fore- Visiting knights: weleqnie closure against John N. Meyer,’ John F. Knopp, G. K. Barney Seubert, F. S. eslesteeatetectetesdeedgetee banned FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1928 Seeriorintaetirtiosiotion Katharina Meyer, his wife, and Mat F. Fuchs, the above named $ defendants on the 29th day of; >* December, 1922, for the sum of a rz $3647.80, with interest thereon gedepcrrerentepercedantertrendreneg at 7 per cent from date of judg- KNIGHTS OF PYTHTAS ment to date of sale, said judg- is ment having been filed and en- McKinley Lodge Na. 38 tered in the office of the Clerk Meets every Tuesday evening. of the said court on January 4th, M. Matthi cc 1928, and recorded in Judgment $ ®: M. Matthiesen, ee Book 6, at page 106. John Homar, K. R. and S. I am Commanded to give StPerosoossesesegsoesooos notice of sale and to sell the oii greg gees JUM- Hepes edeeoaeeeeaaooe ment and decree in the manner ? ? prescribed by law and to apply } THE AMERICAN LEGION: : the proceeds of said sale as in % Cottonwood Post No. 40 said decree mentioned. The lands % Meets 1st Monday of each and egal eo. directed one & month at L. O. O. F. Le ae oRe unten tute cou, & Bert Schroeder, Com, Frank Albers, Adjutant | sold, are situated in Idaho coun- ity, Idaho, and are described as | follows: All that part of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter smqqoane of Section Thirty-two in Town- |\ship Thirty-two North of Renge |One East of Boise Meridian, ly- ing and being east of the Right & ae he ah ee a FELIX MARTZEN Secretary Treasurer COTTONWOOD N, F. L. A. of Way of the Clearwater Short- If it is a loan you want we & line Railway Company, being $ can accommodate you. 5% per < | about thirty-five acres, more or % cent for farm loans. 4 jless. Also the following de- $ Insurance in the Northwest- $ scribed tract of land, to-wit: ¢ em Mutual.—the policy holders % Commencing at the southwest $ ana eae ne ese corner of the southeast quarter £ ~ The less fire te less cost | of the northeast quarter of said # The more fires the more cost. j ; : Section Thirty-two; thence % 45 licy hold at |north a distance of ninety feet; £ donreneiin’ a: mutual by care- thence east eighty feet; thence + fullness and fire prevention. south ninety feet; thence west + eighty feet to place of beginning. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, ,o..cneoaacun me | That I will on Saturday the 8rd ¢ °° ****¥**4eoes eee day of February, 1928, at the t JOHN REILAND hed ag Pay _ sverige person 3 CONTRACTOR & BUILDEK court house in the city of Grange % Estimates furnishe ville, Idaho County, State of |$ class of Work. Repairing promptly done. Sores tieaioetotessostias «! siSesfesfoogonDbetpatesertengonteatestestectenthetectesteateteoh ton Idaho, in obedience to said order | of sale and judgment and decree | of foreclosure, offer for sale at! public auction all the right, title, | 9 we ‘ ant equity | gy be maw of the above name efendants, or! = t either of them, of, in and to the | ; Rooke Hotel above described premises, or so | much thereof as may be neces- | sary to satisfy said judgment! with interest, costs, and accru- ing costs to the highest and best | bidder for lawful money of the | United States. Dated January 9, 1928, W. H. ELLER, Sheriff. 8-4 By John A. Powell, Deputy. | BEEF, _Let us figure with you on a nice quarter of beef, pork, mut- Has neat clean rooms at 50¢ and 75c per night or $3.00 to $3.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give us a trial. “Dad” Rooke, Prop. Poder Brighten ton or veal. You will find our prices right. 48-tf SIMON BROS. We gum saws the right way and the price is right. South & Frick. 46-tf If its lathe or machine work Wwe can save you money. South & Frick. 46-tf HOW’S THIS? HALL'’S CATARRH MEDICIN: do what we claim for it—rid your averse & gaa or Deafness ‘caused by HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE - sists of an Ointment whieh Gaels Relieves the catarrhal inflammation, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which 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 acts geo) the Blood the Mucous Sur: us -§ assisting % restore nor- us for sale at the Sold %, seats nag over ot Raa Ct icle office. FJ. ; »