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Bees Knees Peggy Dear Ivy (Cling to Me zs Gave You Up Parade of the Wooden Soldiers Victor Carolina in the Morning Toot, Toot, Tootsie, Goo’bye Everybody’s whistling them! ecHILUUN AU AULT SoeSesoceetoatesetoatentvetpateeeeteatectectnetectetenteetie —__—_- 0 RPHEUM SUNDAY, MARCH 11 We take pleasure in pre- senting to you tonight a picture that is entirely out of the ordinary, the most widely discussed drama in America. Passion Pola Negri star of Europe’s screen makes her American debut. “Passion” is a Historical masterpiece in all that the term implies. It portrays a period in history known as ; the ‘reign of terror’ which engulfed a great nation. It is: the true story of the little French milliner whom the world came to known as Madame DuBarry. After seeing this stu- pendous drama you will come away, feeling that you have witnessed a wonder- ful histerical drama—a human document—and will have absorbed the striking moral on the inevitable consequences of extrava- gances and excesses. It is presented in Nine “parts and there are 5000 people in the cast. Cottonwood Orchestra will entertain you while seeing this picture. aan a ae ae eS eh Each She eA ech CRE hee EEE RE EEE EEEAEEREREEEEREREREREREREERREREREE REA ERE RRR DS Also a 2 reel Comedy Torchy Turns Cupid ADMISSION 10¢ AND 30c Sh Mister Gallagher and Mister es Standard fox trots, new musical tricks and remarkable feature records; 80 hard to choose you will want them all. ’ THE BIG SONG HITS OF THE MOMENT Victor Record MM MM NT NY + R. H. KENDALL, CONFECTIONERY FEODOR CHALIAPIN’S Song of the Volga Boatmen All the world has been awaiting it—Victor Record 88663 SIX REMARKABLE FOX TROTS The Virginians The Great White Way Orchestra Victor Record 19000 Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra ust Before You Threw Me Down Paul Victor Record 1 a grag and His Orchestra Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra American Quartet uly Deere, and Ed Smalle TURNER DRUG STORE SUMMONS. In the District Court of the Ten- th Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for the County of Idaho, Ferdinand Nuxoll, Plaintiff, -vs- The Unknown Heirs and the Un- known Devisees of James C. Chamberlin, deceased, and the unknown owners of the real property situated ‘in Idaho County, State of Idaho, de- scribed as follows: The South- west quarter of Section Twen- ty-three, Township Thirty- two, N. R. 1 W. 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 Idaho in and for the County of Idaho, by the above named plaintiff, and you are hereby directed to appear and answer the said complaint within twen- ty days of the service of this summons if served within said Judicial District, and within forty days if served elsewhere; and you are further notified that unless you so appear 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 nam- ed defendants, to quiet title by decree of the court, of the plain- tiff, in and to the land situated in Idaho County, State of Idaho, and described as follows: The Southwest quarter of Section Twenty-three, Township Thirty- two, N. R. 1 W. B. M. Witness my hand and the seal of said District Court, this 7th day of February, 1928. Henry Teleher, Clerk By H. Rothwell, Deputy. (Seal) Wilbur L. Campbell, Attorney for Plaintiff. Residence and Postoffice Address Grangeville, Idaho. 1-6 Is your subscription due? MANY CLAIMS ON ames Ssemingly Some Americans Are In- clined to Regard Uncle Sam as an “Easy Mark.” From the birth of this nation down to the present day, it has been the custom for many persons in all sec- ; tlons of the country to go upon the theory that the treasury in Washing- ton was in constant danger of over- flowing, and that bins of gold and silver coin and bundles of greenhacks were spilling out into the streets and were swept away in the gutters. They think they may relieve the pressure by filing strange and won‘¢r- ful claims, In the minds of a great many men and women Uncle Sam is pictured as a benevolent and easy-going old gen- tleman who hasn’t a blessed thing in the world to do except stand at the open doors of the treasury with a at any old time of the day or night to scoop out the golden coin to any one who happens to make a claim for anything from their great-grandpa’s Sunday coat and trousers that disap- peared during the Revolution, to a lost mule or Liberty bond of the present period, Of course all claims against the gov- ernment are not unreasonable, Many. of them are just and honest, and, IA due course of time, are properly pald. Of this latter class of claimants was George Washington. During the long and discouraging years of the Revolution it was often necessary for General Washington to dig deep into his own pockets in or- der to defray his personal expenses and for the employment of secret serv- ice men and various other things in- eldental, to the winning of the war.— Nashua Star. HOW PELICANS FEED YOUNG Nature Has Endowed Birds With What Might Be Called a Capacious Family Larder. One of the most ludicrous sights in nature-is furnished by parent pelicans feeding their young from a sack of elastic skin grown from the under side of the beak, This sack 1s often six inches deep and a foot and a halt long, and it will stretch until it is large enough to hold several quarts of fish or other food. and the little pelican sticks his head ipside and helps himself to tne con- tents of the pouch. As the young grow larger they are able to pene- meals, and one sees one of them with his whole head and neck far within the parent’s capacious maw. Pelican island, in Indlan river, Flor- ida, is a government reservation, and there each year, the thousands.—Detrolt News. Folks With Cars Get Firewood. New buildings which hang out “Free trouble in disposing of thelr wood, sald the superintendent of a new mid-town building. “You'd be surprised at the type of people who have come for the wood this year,” he sald. kids from the slums came. We were glad to give them the wood, first be- cause it helped them and second be- cause it helped us to get rid of a lot of odd pieces. “But this year many well-dressed men and even women come for wood. Of course I see that the kids from the slums get theirs and give the other folks what is left. Due to the uncer tainty of getting a full supply of coal they are burning wood in their open fireplaces. Some take it home in thelr automobiles.”—Baltimore Ameri- can, New Book and Magazine Trimmer. An improved continuous book and magazine trimmer, described In Popu- lar~ Mechanics Magazine, has a new method of jogging piles of books and ehucking them true with their bound edges for accurate and uniform trim- ming. ‘Chis is done in a trough feed, the sides of which are tapered so that the piles of books are automat- ically straightened as they are passed along from the wider to the narrower part of the trough, where it grips them The pattern block that ap- plies pressure to the pile of books, to hold it securely for cutting, is shaped to conform with the whole top surface of the pile, and is swiveled so that it ayyplies a uniform pressure. The ma- chine delivers the piles of trimmed books by belt conveyor, and all chips are removed by alr suction. New Campaign Necessity. The campaign just ended brought a rival to the old standby, the campaign cigar, always a favorite with the can- didate if not with the smoker. Far- sighted seekers after office perceived the fact that women, even in these advanced days, are not keen for cigars, so, at several meetings in New York, attended by women voters, cigarettes were distributed. Some of the women disdained them, others placed them carefully in their handbags with a somewhat guilty look, but others asked for matches.—New York Letter to the Detroit News. Fierce Competition. “Your compefitor across the way is selling. a great many Wonder cars.” “7 put a crimp in his business,” said the dealer in Wizard cars. “I've got my wrecker out now dragging a disnbled Wonder car around town, long-handled shovel, ready and eager The parent bird opens wide its beak, | trate farther and farther for their | during the nesting , season, these birds may be seen by _ Firewood” signs these days have no | “Formerly only | African has only four paper mills, The potato is a native of Chile and Peru, The Poughkeepsie bridge is 7,100 feet long. s A kind of wine may be made from parsnips. Pecan oll can be used as substitute jfor olive oil. Paris was a fortified town as early as 360 A. D, There were 40 paper mills in Penn- sylvania in 1770. Mother love 1s very strongly devel- oped among apes, The Swiss people were the first to date thelr coinage. There are about 8,000 stitches in a pair of hand-sewn shoes. The world’s production of sugar 1s approximately 18,000,000 tons, The cucumber originated some 8,000 years ago, probably in India, English women are said to smoke mucly more than do Americans, ODD FACTS ABOUT LOVE Love has in blindness a blessing. Loye multiplies happiness by divid- jing it. hove laughs at | Wears lockets, locksmiths—and Love draws people together by keep- ing them apart. hel Love levels all ranks, then puts peo ple on pedestals. ~ Love makes the world go round and | Seemingly stand still, Love is the rarest treasure on earth, ‘yet may be found anywhere. Love defies time and space, yet chafes at the briefest separation, Love makes people happily mis- erable——Edmund J. Kiefer, in New York Sun. OUT OF THE ORDINARY After bathing in a river in Bast | Africa, a white hunter suffered from temporary blindness, supposed to be due to some peculiar element in the water, The ocean bed, to a depth of seven | miles, can be tested and graded by means of a little appliance which can be lowered and which grabs a sample of the sea bed.” Two fish from the Amazon, recently | arrived in London, Eng., having wing- like tins colored red and yellow and black stripes on the body, and are | valued at $100 the pair. A bicycle with wings wns recently | experimented with successfully by its maker, a Frenchman, who made sev- eral short flights, the best being 12 yards at a helght of three feet. CHARACTERIZATIONS “He is one of those eche persons who agree with everything you say.” “She is a woman who sticks to her principles as though they were a mat- ter of etiquette.” “He is one of these fellows who al- ways grabs the stool when there’s a plano to be moved.” “He's the kind of man who saves his hest story to tell while we are holding the front door open for him to go.” ” “She's the sort of woman,” remarked a woman recently, “who gives you her favorite recipe and purposely leaves out the most important Jngredient.” Boston Transcript. MATRIMONIAL CYNICISM Marrying again is such a nice com- pliment to one’s first husband. All selfish men are good tempered. They do only what they Mke—that’s why they’re good tempered. When a man's a bachelor they write on his tombstone, “Died, respected by all who knew him.” That shows he never had a wife. Int flirtatious mood one may cast a glance at a girl's ankles, but when & man starts worrying about a wom- an’s wet feet that’s real solid affec tion.—From “Husbands Are a Prob- lem.”* QUESTION BOX Why do fat men always wear heavy gold chains across the embonpoint? Why is a bowlegged or very thin woman always advocating dress re- form? Why does a stump speaker always laugh at his funny story?—Nichmond ‘Times-Dispatch oo Sapa ~ Cottonwood Gentlemen: follows to-wit: On sidewalk assessment .. Fines - Repairing sidewa From County Auditor Interest coupons redeemed . Cemetery warrants Street warrants - Warrants redeemed Interest on warrants redeemed . Total Disbursements ... Balance on hand at this time Thereby certify that the fo MAN’S JUDGMENT OF WOMEN Real Truth, Though Long Known, Ir Here Published Absolutely for the First Time. A man notices, first a woman’s face, second her skirt, third her shoes and fourth her hands, He rarely sees her hat, but probu- bly feels it. He gets the effect of tt unconsclously, Mentally, a man Is first conscious of a woman’s eyes, second her voice. Be- yond these two his curiosity doesn’t go. But if her voice shows too much of the clever or the intellectual he begins to back off; ond then probes her eyes to see whetker they belie her voice or not, A woman’s eyes often do this same thing. Her voice may say, “I am very highbrow,” while her eyes are saying, “Don’t you believe it!” This is the way, all over the world, men are judging women and have al- ways judged them. But it is a great secret. Nobody knows it but a very few people who have solemnly agreed never to divulge it. It ig so wniversal among all men that they are quite unconscious about it. It is here published for the first time, thus violating tradition and cus- tom, which declare that what every- body knows should never be revealed. —Thomas L, Masson in the New York Sun. TREES LINE MEMORIAL ROAD People of Pennsylvania County Have Worthily Paid Tribute to Falien Soldier Heroes. York county, Pennsylvania, has the | honor of possessing the largest stretch Balance on hand from last quarter -.- Receipts for the Quarter, disbursements are true and correct, H. C. MATTHIESEN, Village Treasurer. Ss eee of road Mned with memorial trees in mewery of the fallen beroes in the | 48-tf Green Vegtables Fancy Head Lettuce 15 cents per head Cabbage 4 pounds for 25 cents Culiflower, large heads 30 and 40 cents each Celery 20 cents per bunch Radishes 3 bunches for 25 cents Mercantile | EVERYTHING TO EAT AND WEAR QUARTERLY REPORT To the honorable chairman and board of trustees of the vil- lage of Cottonwood, County of Idaho, State of Idaho. I herewith submit the report of my office as Village Treasurer for the quarter ending December 31st, 1922, as Disbursements $6,216.39 380.25 7.00 8.14 2,086.86 12.00 2,444.25 ~ $8,660.64 270.00 3.50 4,293.13 976.21 83.12 5,625.96 3,084.68 $8,660.64 egoing statement of receipts and great war in the country. The trees, numbering several thousand, have been in course of planting for two Years under the auspices of the York Woman's club, They extend in a con- tinuous line on both sides of the Lin- coln highway entirely across the coun- ty. Two tablets, at either end of the 25-mile thoroughfare, were recently unveiled and dedicated. At the exer- cises a letter from Mrs. Warren G. Harding was received by the Woman's club, in which she said: “In the planting of 25 miles of that famous highway, you have erected a memorial that the entire country can enjoy in the years to come. May long life attend the trees you have placed in the care of the Lincoin Highway Memorial and'Tribute Tree associa- tion.” Every tree is worked with the name of a Pennsylvania soldier who gave his life in the war, and the trees have been registered with the American Forestry association. HOME BURNS. The Wililam Yates farm home four miles northwest of Grange- ville burned, Sunday night at 10:30. Mr. Yates was in bed when he discovered the fire and had a narrow escape from the burning _ building. The fire destroyed the residence and all the contents and is believed to have started from an overheat- ed stove. Mr. Yates carried $2600 insurance, which partially compensated him for the loss. Mrs. Yates and daughter were in Grangeville when the fire oceur- red. HIDES. Pre are in the market for all nds een, 1 — gr salted and dry SIMON BROS. S»