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ATER =) BAL FRIDAY, APRIL 6 iO. O. F. Hall Cottonwood, ida. Under the auspices of the Cottonwood Syncopated Orchestra The biggest dance of the year. Dancing at fm) 9 o'clock Cc} i sa ee Encarta tere the northwest quarter of sec- tion 4, and the northeast quar- ter of the southeast quarter of section 5, all in township 29 north of range 1, east of the Boise Meridian, containing 200 Decorations, Novelties, N’everything Tickets and War Tax $1.10 Cc) A Program Card For Each Lady. Compliments of R. H. KENDALL, Confectionery NOTICE OF ESTRAY. Publie Notice is hereby given that at the T. Clark place in Cottonwood, I will sell to the highest bidder for lawful money of the United States, the follow- ing described property to-wit: One gelding about 9 years old, weight about 900 pounds, brand- ed VS on left shoulder, star in forehead, saddle brown, left front foot white. Said animal was taken up by} T. Clark and will be sold by me in accordance with the statute in such cases made and provided, at the T. Clark place in Cotton- wood on the 7th day of April, 1928, at 2 p.m. Dated at Cottonwood, Idaho this 7th day of March, 1923. 11-4 A. H. Nau, Constable. NOTICE OF STOCK ASSESS- MENT OF FARMERS’ U? ION WAREHOUSE COMPA- NY LTD., A CORPORATION OF COTTONWOOD, IDAHO. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That at a meeting of the Board ef Directors of the Farmers’ marks, color | Union Warehouse Co., Ltd., of Cottonwocd, Idaho, held at the | office of said Corporation, at |Cottonwood, Idaho, on March | 5th, 1923, an assessment of $2.50 per share was levied upon the capital stock of the corporation, payable on or before the hour of 112 M. of the 5th day of April, 1923, and which said assessment must be paid on or before said date to C. H. Greve, Manager of said corporation at the office of said corporation at Cottonwoed, | Idaho. ' AND NOTICE IS HEREBY |FURTHER GIVEN That any {stock upon which this assess- |ment remains unpaid after the hour of 12 M. on the said 5th |day of April, 1923, will be de- linquent and advertised for sale at public auction, and unless pay- /ment is made before, will be sold ‘on the 28rd day of April, 1928, {to pay the delinquent assess- |ment, together with all costs of advertising and the expenses of sale. | Dated at Cottonwood, Idaho, this 5th day of March, 1923. August Schroeder, Secretary of Farmers Union Warehouse Co., Ltd., Cottonwood, Idaho. ORDER OF SALE, th Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for the County of Idaho. |F. L. Allen, plaintiff, vs. e | Stanley H. Ripley, Alzena Rip- ley, O. H. Overman, C. E. Bender, Elizabeth L. Bender. Mary T. Cloyd, and Mary E Reed, as executrix of the will and estate of George M. Reed, deceased, defendants. Under and by virtue of an order of sale and decree of fore- the district court of the Tenth Judicial district of the state of |Idaho in and for the county of Idaho, on the 8th day of March, 1923, in the above entitled ac- tion wherein F. L. Allen, the above named plaintiff obtained judgment and decree of fore- closure, against Stanley H. Rip- jley, Alzena Ripley, O. H. Over- Bender, Mary man, C, E. Bender, Elizabeth L, | T. Cleyd and) acres, according to official sur- vey thereof. Together with all and singular the hereditaments and appurtenan- ces thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining. Notice is hereby given, that I will on Saturday the 7th day of April, 1928, at the hour of 10 o’clock a. m, of said day, at the front door of the Court House in the City of Grangeville, County (of Idaho, State of Idaho, in obedience to said order of sale and decree, offer for sale, at public auction all the right, title, claim, equity and interest, of the above named defendants, in and to the above described premises, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said judgment, with interest, costs, and accruing costs, to the high- est and best bidder, for lawful money of the United States. Dated at Grangeville, Idaho, this 18th day of March, 1928. W. H. ELLER, Sheriff. By John A. Powell, Deputy. 12-4 fy IN LINE WITH THE TIMES “What, became of that magazine of young Scribbs?” “It blew up.” Lessens Coal-Mine Danger. A car has been designed for dis- tributing stone dust in coal mines to prevent explosions, says the Philadel- phia Public Ledger. Much coal dust lodges on the “rims” of coal-mine tun- nels and crannies of the rough-hewn walls. Currents of alr created by trains of coal cars passing through, or by other means, constantly blow It about. When the coal dust is mixed with alr it becomes a dangerous ex- plosive. Accordingly, resort Is had to the expedient of blowing stone dust over the walls and ribs of the tunnels, The same air currents that scatter the coul dust distribute with it the stone dust, which, mixed with thé coal dust, renders the latter non-inflammuble. A conical receptacle is filled with stone dust, which is discharged through a hose, a gasoline engine actuating an alr-blast that drives it out in a dense and powerful stream. Horseshoes Expense is not efficiency. Don’t pay forgold horseshoes when you buy your printing. Sensible printing on sensible paper — Hammermill Bond -— will save you money and | get results for you. That is the kind of work we do and the kind of paper we use. Use More Printed Salesmansnip. Ask us. Send Us Your Name and address on a post card orinalet- jf free and postpaid, a sample copy of tenements, In the District Court of the Ten- | closure and sale, issued out of | Mary E. Reed as executrix of the will and estate of George M. Reed deceased, the above named | defendants on the 8th day of |March, 1928, for the sum of| |$2016.60 with interest at the! rate of 7 per cent per annum, | from date of judgment to date| of sale. Said judgment having been filed and entered in the office of the clerk of the said court on | the 9th day of March, 1923, and} | recorded in judgment book 6 of said court on page 120. I am commanded to. give notice of sale and to sell the premises described in said judg- ment and decree, in the manner | prescribed by law, and to apply |the proceeds of said sale as in said decree mentioned, the lands | and premises so directed and ordered by the said decree to be sold, are situated in Idaho Coun- ty State of Idaho, and are des- | cribed as follows: North half of the southwest quarter and the south half of terand we will mail Popular Mechanics MAGAZINE the most wonderful magazine pub- lished, 160 pages and 400 pictures every month, that will entertain every member of the family. It contains interesting and instructive arti- J cles on the Home, Farm, Shop and Office —the newest developments in Radio, Avia- tion, Automobile and Garage. Each issue contains som« ig to interest everybody. We donot employ subscription solicitors so you will not be urged to subscribe and you are not obligating yourself in the least in asking for a free sample copy. We }f glad send it to prospective readers. If you like it you can buy a copy every | month from any newsdealer or send us your subscription — $3.00 for one year. Popular Mechanics Company | 200-214 K. Ontario Street, CHICAGO, ILL. Popular Mechantes butlding ts devoted ei 0 the production of this greas magazine. AMERICA“AS “BOSTON LAND” Abenaki Indians Know No Other Name for the Whole of the United States, In the early days of the Colonies the Abevakis, or “Eastern Indians,” and through them other more distant tribes, had accepted an Indianized form of the term “Bostonian” as the name of the New England colonists. After the: Revolution, when the colonists called themselves Americans, the Indians did not change their mame, but extended the meaning so that It was the equiv- alent of “American,” And by an odd further extension of the term, Abenaki Indiana today, talking their native tongue, would speak of the whole United States as “Boston Land,” They call it Pastonki—Paston being their rendering of Boston, and the terminal ki being aki or aukee, their word foe land. From the Etchemins of Quoddy Bay to the Abenakis of St. Francis on the St, Lawrence an American is Pas tonk or Pastani, The form Bostonian they do not use, This word belonged to their trad- ing vocabulary, and presumably the first fur traders who went to the Co- lumbla carried it Into the Chinook jar gon, which corresponds to the Chinese Pidgin English. Frenchmen probably in the same manner picked it up from the Indians and took it to Rurope. The Indians did not use the term Pastonk? from lack of another name for the white settlers, It is clear that from the beginning they must have called them Iglis or Igria, which was as near as they could pronounce “Eng- lish.” UNABLE TO PASS THAT UP Paul Had to See Small Chum Get His — “Licking,” if He Was Late for School. Little Paul was fifteen minutes late to school, and it Waa the custom of the teacher, when any of her pupils were tardy, to require an explanation then and there. “Why were you late, Paul?’ the teacher asked when he took his seat. “just couldn’t help it.” Paul evaded, “That ig not an answer, Why were you late?” the teacher insisted. “Well, Freddy Jones, who lives next door, made me late,” Paul replied, “How did Freddy Jones make you late?” teacher persisted, “He got a licking,” was Paul's sur- prising answer. “How did the fact that Freddy Jones got a whipping make you late to school?” “Well, if you, gotta know all about it,” Paul finally gave in, “Just as Twas sturting to school I heard Freddy's dad suy, ‘Fred, I am going to have to pun- ish you!’ All I did was to slip around and look in the basement window while Freddy was getting that licking. There —that's why I was late !”"—Kansas City Star, Altogether Too Much Work. Two hours a day was too much work, so he quit, Really, you know, this thing of working all of two hours fs unthink- able. , id “What? This employee of a certain down- town restaurant felt just that way about it, He had been working for the establishment for twenty-four years, For the past few years he came and went much as he pleased, being re- tired, in a sense, and yet not retired, in another sense, Recently the management required him to serve behind the counter from 11 a, m. to 1 p, m. every day. He stood ‘it for several weeks, ‘Then he went to see the big boss. “It’s too hard,” he sald. “I'm sorry," said the boss. you can stand it.” “1 resign,” declared the employee. And he did.— Washington Star, “I guess Paint Made Resistent to Light. Painters like to use Mthopone be- cause of its many good qualities, This white pigment is, however, not rec- ommended for outside work, due te the fact that it darkens when the painted surface is exposed to sun- light. A French investigator has de- termined that it 1s the ultra-violet rays of light that cause the pigment to darken, To prevent the action of these rays it is only necessary to sur- round each particle of Mthopone with a layer of material which is insensi- tlve to ight and which at the same time does not impair the good prop- erties of the pigment, Such materials are blanc fixe, alumina and oxide of zinc, A Iithopone paint made in this way gives most excellent results. Prohibit Hunting on Sunday. Hunting on Sunday is prohibited in all states and provinces east of the one hundred and fifth meridian except Illinois, Louisiana, Michigan, Texas, Wisconsin and Quebec, and in some states certain days of the week con- stitute closed seasons throughout the tlme in which killing is permitted, and hunting is prohibited when snow is on the ground in New Jersey, Delaware, Virginia and Maryland. Gay Railings for House Fronts. In London many of the houses in the residential sections are supplied with rallings either for decorative ef- fect or for the protection of the base- ments. From time immemorial it has been the custom to have these painted black, but a change in the order of things has peen recently voted and these railings are being painted in . gay color combiaations,