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COTTON WOOD CHRONICLE ee GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. $2.00 Subscription one year i a ip’ y 25 Six months (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDEN1 IN POLITICS Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1928 ANTS, FOUND AND FOR SALE FOR SALE—Feed barley. W Cottonwood Elevator Co. 17-3 FOR SALE—Early and _late cabbage plants) Mrs. Ben Cooper. 17-4* FOR SALE—Single seated open buggy, nearly new. T. Clerk, the junk man, 15-4* FOR SALE—1000 pounds of clean Yellow Canadian field peas. Joe W. Klapprich. 15-tf£ Gem potatoes and home grown seed corn. Bert Schroeder. 7-tf FOR SALE—Silver Loaf flour it makes excellent bread. Cotton- wood Elevator Company. 7-tf FOR SALE—Single Comb Rhode Island Red eggs, $1.00 for 15. Ben Hattrup, Pacific Phone 58F21. 11-6* ESTAYED— Came to my place Tuesday one dark. brown gelding, weight about 1200 pounds. No brands visible. Own. er can have same by paying for this ad and feed bill, Jacob Reidhaar. 51-tf FOR RENT—Good five room house. Geo. McPherson. 12-tf Coes prued AEC ee Sea — FOR wall paper samples and . prices see Peter Bies. 13-4 HIDES. We are in the market for all kinds green, salted and dry hides. 48-tf SIMON BROS. CATARRHAL DEAFNESS is often caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tul When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing. Unless the inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may be de- atroyed forever, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will do what we claim for it—rid your system of Catarrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE § Pong successful in the treatment of ite for over Forty Years, Sold by all druggists. ¥F, J. Cheney & Co,, Toledo, 0, SSS HO: ne REDD rnaeer sien oar According to Dr. William T. Horn- aday it takes 80 skins to make the average mink wrap, 200 for a squirrel coat, and 280 for a black mole coat, 90 skins may go to the making of a striped skunk jacket,.and 800 to a Siberian ermine wrap. Before many years, if the present rate of slaughter continues, many of our most interest- ing animals will be practically ex- tinct; even now the trapper is forced farther afield, and skins once unmar ketable are being used to supply the deficiency entific American. 5 The New Goodyear with the Beveled All-Weather Tread Cord HE ‘special dis- count”’ is tempt- ing, but not when youunderstand who pays for it. The tire dealer doesn’t pay for it. The manu- facturer cannot af- ford to. Chances are it comes out of the quality of the tire, so, after all, you pay for it. None of the quality of Goodyear Tires ever is sacri- ficed to ‘special dis- counts’’ oranything else. As Goodyear Service Stati Dealers toe voll end recom- mend lyear Tires and back them up with standard Goodyear Sassica JOHN HOENE — 2 GooD£SYEAR DR. J. E. REILLY Dentist Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones LP ee eee DR. J. D. SHINNICK Physician and Surgeon $ Office over Cottonwood St. Bk. Seetecestetetecestetetectntetecteeteteteeetetecteteceteae Rs te te ie Seedeteedeetentetesteny: § DR. WESLEY F. ORR ba Physician and Surgeon 4 Office in Simon Bldg. Both Phones $ Ba Deputy State Veterinarian Residence North end of town Both Phones eo a a a ak aac mel DR. C, SOMMER . Graduate License | VETERINARIAN ; 2 Meets the first and third Vednesday of each month. EooeHorooororagaernsgeeaoeg Visiting knights welcomed George Terhaar, G. K. £ KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS | $ $ Barney Seubert, F. S. Cottonwood Council, 1389 Speeedetocetetestectesteteetetoreteceeteteeteceeteehetee nt Ce an a ah oe ee ee ee KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge Na. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. R. M. Matthiesen, C. C. John Homar, K. R, and S. Be $ FELIX MARTZEN Secretary Treasurer COTTONWOOD N. F. L. A. If it is a loan you want we can accommodate you. 5% per cent for farm loans. Insurance jn the Northwest- ern Mutual.—the policy holders company with a clean record and insurance at cost. The less fire the less cost. The more fires the more cost. Every policy holder can cut down cost in a mutual by care- fullness and fire prevention. Sedeeteatestecgetentesteetertecedtertestentectecteate teatoatontontontends soefonteet ae ahaa hannah anna panne nner JOHN. REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished om au, class of Work. Repairing promptly done. Rooke Hotel Has neat clean rooms at 50c and 75c per night or $3.00 to $8.50 per week, When you are in Cottonwood give us a trial. “Dad” Rooke, Prop. $ Sod REBELS MADE POOR SHOWING Daniel Shays’ Followers in 1786 Caused Massachusetts Government Lit- tle Real Trouble. Shays’ rebellion in Massachusetts in 1786-87, arose from a spirit of unrest and lawlessness then generally on the increase in the country, but more par- | ticularly for special reasons for dis- satisfaction in Massachusetts. The time was one of financial depression. Five hundred or 600 malcontents banded under command of Daniel hay When the Court of General sions attempted to sit at Worces- ter, Shays filled the court room with an armed force, and no court could be held. i To cope with the insurgents Gov- | ernor Bowdoin enlisted an army of 4,- 400 for 30 days. During an attack on the Springfield arsenal four of the rebels were killed. They retreated in much confusion, continuing their fight, with many desertions, from town to town. In the pursuit 150 were taken and the rest dispersed. The rebels continued to gather in small bands for many months, but no large force again appeared, Clemency was shown to Shays and | his followers, but he had escaped to Vermont, and lived there as a fugitive from justice even many months after he had been pardoned. Shays later | peacock, | Bruce's CDD DISHES OF OLDEN TIME Sample Menu of William the Conquer- or Included “Dainties” Which Make No Appeal Today. William the Conqueror brought from Normandy a full kitchen force with him to England. An example of one of his meals runs: First course: Boar’s head with its tusks in its snout, garnished with flowers. Second course: Venison, cranes, peacocks, swans, wild geese, kids, pigs and hens, Third course: Spiced and seasoned meat, with wine, red and white. Fourth course: Pheasants, wood- cocks, partridges, larks, plovers. Fifth course: Sweetbreads, white powder (sugar). After a joust-at-arms a banquet was | often served. Among other foods a still in its plumage, was placed in a “coffyn of paste,” the neck erect, tail expanded about the crust and comb richly gilded. Carried into the hall on a silver dish, heralded by a blast of trumpets, it was placed be- fore some knight, victorious in the day’s tourney. “Rising, it -was the custom to break the crust, vowing at the same time to rescue some captive lady from some mythical monster or die, though his vow, like the pie crust, was made to be broken.” The pastries and loaves of bread were not forgotten. Wine, ale and beer were served, Three hours or more were given over to the feast, while jesters, tumblers, jugglers and minstrels amused the guests. CALLED “CRADLE” OF CHURCH Edifice in Kent County, Delaware, of Peculiar Interest to Methodists of the United States, Barratt’s chapel, in Kent county, Del- aware, is sometimes called the cradle of American Methodism. ‘This chapel, now as solid as the day it was: finished, was built probably in 1780-81 upon land deeded for the purpose by Philip Barratt in Murderkill Hundred. Here | in 1874 Bishop Thomas Coke of the Methodist church met Bishop Francis Asbury, the latter the first man in | America ordained by the Methodists | to the episcopal office. Out of the meeting grew a plan to carry Methodism all over the United States. The first native Methodist minister in America is sald ot have been Rich- ard Owen of Maryland. One of the most famous of such ministers was “Father” Joshua Thomas, who for the better part of a half century traveled up and down the Chesapeake in a big “bugeye,” as the long, narrow, and very staunch boats of a certain type are called, preaching to the islanders, most of whom were and are fishermen. Father Thomas preached to the British army on Tangier island in 1814 on its way to besiege Baltimore. Camel Is Horse, Cow and Sheep. Without the camel the hot deserts of the Old World would lie unpeopled and unknown. In the hot, dry desert re- gions the camel is the horse, the cow, and the sheep of the herders and trad- ers, He carries all the burdens, he furnishes flesh and milk for food, and his hair or wool furnishes material for weaving cloth. At night in camp the little children of the chief get cups of the camel’s thick, cheesy milk, mixed with water. On the chief's table Is cooked camel flesh. The herders wear robes and turbans of brown camel’s- hair cloth. The master sleeps under a camel's-hair tent. For many hundreds of years the camel has been one of the most useful animals to men, because of his great | strength and his ability to endure heat, thirst and hunger. No Antique Rugs in Smyrna, The antique rugs of Smyrna have en- tirely disappeared. It is sald to be im- | possible to find a rug In that country that is more than twenty years old. Of course this fact is concealed from pros- pective buyers by various tricks which make the rug look like one of ancient origin, but the deception becomes ap- parent after a short time. The rug business of that country has been all “shot up” by the war and the prospects are that good specimens of Smyrna rugs will soon be rare and valuable. While one hears Oriental rugs referred to generally as. Turkish, the fact is that the rugs of Turkey are the coarsest and most indifferent from every standpoint, It was the Armen- fans who did the best work in rug weaving Greeks, Best Book Was Labor of Love. “Unec’ Edinburg’s Drownin’,” which Thomas Nelson Page considered the best picture of life in old Virgirfia which he had ever drawn, was writ- ten to obtain money with which to pur- chase his engagement ring to the love ly bride of his youth, Anne Seddon Bruce, daughter of Charles Bruce of Stanton Hill, Charlotte county, Vir. ginia. The description of the heroine, al- and next to these are the | though not identically the same, was | that of his flancee, while the setting of the scenes was the home of Mrs. brother, the late Seddon Bruce of Richmond, which she often visited In her girlhood. Got on His Nerves. “Why did you rise up and hit that man who was complaining about the discomforts of traveling in a Pull- man?” “Less than a week ago,” said the belligerent person with a _ shudder, obtained a pension for services in the | “less than a week ago I completed a Revolutionary war. There Is rd trip across the continent in a flivver.” —Birmingham Age-Herald. oe Harry C. Cranke, of Grangeville and A. S. Wilson, of Spokane, Wash. WHO IS IN A CLASS BY HIMSELF WHEN IT COMES TO SELECTING DAIRY COWS HAS ASSISTED HARRY C. CRANKE IN BRINGING ,TO GRANGEVILLE 32 HEAD OF REAL DAIRY COWS AND WILL BE ON DISPLAY SATURDAY AT THE FAIR GROUNDS AND UNTIL ALL ARE SOLD. MR. CRANKE STATES THEY WILL TRADE THEM FOR BEEF CATTLE, STOCK CATTLE OR DAIRY COWS. ALSO 12 BEAUTIFUL HEIFER CALVES AND THEY LIKE THE COWS WILL BE SOLD AT PRIVATE SALE OR TRADED. THE ABOVE COWS ARE GUERNSEYS, JERSEYS, AND HOLSTEINS FROM 2 TO 6 YEARS OLD AND GIVING FROM 4 TO 6 GAL- LONS OF MILK A DAY. COME AND SEE THEM, MILK THEM AND TAKE A GOOD ONE HOME WITH YOU. GET RID OF YOUR BEEF. A. S. Wilson in charge er call Harry Cranke, Grangeville The Drill With the doubie run feed ‘Ef Van Brunt Disc bearings guaranteed for life ’ Gears protected from dirt and trash Sliding gears always in mesh A grain box that will not sage Many other exclusive features Come in and Let Us Show You Cottonwood Hardware