Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DR. J. E. REILLY Dentist Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones POPOL OSO TOO OOOIOTOO0 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 Se a eo DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Deputy State Veterinarian Residence North end of towa Both Phones POOSODS DHS Hrs Sana Bi te i te $ KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Cottonwood Council, 1389 Meets the first and third Vednesday of each month. Visiting knights weleomed George Terhaar, G. K. Barney Seubert, F. S. Seeleteeeeeteteteceeetetetecoe eee eee? seateet Lodediodideonioesiot eon KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge Noa. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. R. M, Matthiésen, C. C. John Homar, K. R. and S. POPPI H IOP H OSHS papeeneattntetetetededeteteteceeeeeey FELIX MARTZEN Secretary Treasurer COTTONWOOD N. F. L. A. If it is a loan you want we ean accommodate you. 5% per cent for farm loans, Insurance in 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. ’ $ steely fee sestoetees Seeteets Se ee eatedtoa —— rtececiees Sotretonteetoot onteeteeteetion on Rooke Hotel tas neat clean rooms at 50c and 75¢c per night or $3.00 to $83.50 per week. When you are in Cottonwood give us a trial. “Dad” Rooke, Prop. LOMA P RHODES MEMORIAL TO HUDSON STUCK Explorer is Honored by Gigantio Cross, Regularly Visited by Thou- sands of Yukon Pilgrims. On the north bank of the Yukon river, four miles inside the, Arctic cir- cle, stands a giant cross of granite, At the foot of the giant cross almost any day one may see some pilgrim kneeling in prayer, for this cross is in memory of Hudson Stuck, explorer and arechdeacon of the Yukon. Hudson Stuck was made deacon of | the Yukon in 1904, and from that time until his death two years ago he worked far from civilized trails. It was by his wish that he was buried in the native graveyard at Fort Yukon, gays an exchange. The tribes from Stephens’ Village, | 150 miles down the Yukon from Tan- ana and 365 miles south of Fort Yu- kon, from Birch, from Hagle, 240 miles in the other direction, and from the | villages of Indians and Eskimos on the Chandalar, 300 miles to the northwest —from all these come men to offer their prayers. ements Molten Lava Welds Volcanoes. George Gillman read a paper before the Geographical society descriptive of an ascent a year ago of Kilimanjaro, which he alluded to as Africa's high- est mountain. The party which he led were’the first to ascend after the mountain had become British terri- tory. From wherever across the sur- rounding steppes one approached the {solated mountain mass two outstand- ing features impressed themselves at once—the tremendous size, coupled with great height, and the almost in- | credible contrast between the tropical half desert below and the alpine des- ert above, Structurally, Kilimanjaro consisted of three single strato-volca- noes, each of which had had its own origin and history. Through mutual interbedding of the laval flows, how- ever, all three had grown Into one solid complex strato-volcano. FOR SALE—Rolled wheat. Vollmer-Clearwater Co. 24-tf FOR SALE—Hereford bull, two years old. Herman Uptmor, Keuterville. 24-3* FOR SALE—A few thorough-. bred Spotted Poland China boars and gilts. Pete Kelsch, Green- creek, Idaho. 25-2* FOR SALE OR TRADE—One 28-inch J. I. Case separator, one 65-Holt caterpillar, one 9-bottom 16-inch tractor plow. Ed Nel- son, Fenn, Idaho. 23-41 FOR SALE—Yellow pine, red | fir, white fir, tamarack lumber of all kinds at my mill near Keuterville. Chas Poxleitner, Keuterville. A ESTRAYED—Came to my place about March 15th one red face cow with calf by side. Brand is not very plain but ap- pears to be 2J connected on right hip. Owner can have same by paying for this ad and for pas- ture bill. J. B. Luchtefeld. 25-4* FOUND—Near the convent a swivel joint for a speedometer. Owner can have same by calling at this office. 24-2 LOST — Automobile © license plate No. 24049. Finder please leave at this office. 26-2 LOST—A child’s valour coat between the Hoene residence and the creamery. Finder please leave at the Chronicle office or notify Mrs. Matt Seubert. 25-1 WANTED—To trade a good fat 3-year old heifer for a good milk cow. Steve Farthing. 26-2 WANTED—Teams for haul- ing lumber from the saw mill to our yard in Cottonwood. Come on up with your teams any time. We have lots of it to haul. Huss- man Lumber Company. 25-2 MEN WANTED—6 swampers at 4714 cents per hour, 6 track men at 4714 cents per hour, 4 teamsters at 52144 cents per hour. Board $1.20 per day. Apply Craig Mountain Lumber Company, Camp No. 1, Win- chester, Idaho. 26-1 BOTTLERS caps, and cappers. price list. Brodie Sales 404 Main, Lewiston. Co. FOR wall paper samples and prices see Peter Bies. 13-4 Hall’s Catarrh Medicine Those who are in a “run down” condi- tion will notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they are in good health. This fact proves that while Catarrh is a local disease, it is greatly influenced by constitutional conditions. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE con- sists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists in nap gabled the General Health, Sok 2 druggists for over 40 Years. BF. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Science Has Added Another Achieve ment to Its Record in Use of Raw Material. Science has found a way of utiliz- ing ail corn cobs, short or long, in the manufacture of various chemicals. As the corn cob consists of cellulose, which is valuable for making many products, such as celluloid and paper, it Is considered desirable to save the substance of the cob. The furfural, therefore, is taken from the extract which is obtained by boiling the cob in water and the cellulose can thus be kept for other purposes. This liquid is employed for many purposes in industrial chemistry, and can be so treated that it will yield a bright green dye, which is much liked by women of fashion, says the De- troit News. Mote and Beam. Senator Moses, apropos of a certain monopoly, said at a dinner in Wasb- | Ington: “I am no muckraker. Have you | ever noticed that muckrakers as @ rule are slightly incrusted with muck? “A& politician was taking a swim the other day in the swimming pool of a big ocean liner. A great New York so- ciety lady—one of those well-pre- served society ladies with golden hair, | four divorces and a platinum remoy- able bridge—well, this lady was taking a swim, too, and she soon had the pol- itician engaged in talk, Sitting beside | him on the marble rim of the pool, she | gave politics the very old deuce. “*Politics are man-managed,’ she | ended, swinging her legs girlishly in | the water, ‘and every man has his price. He lets the world know It, too.’ “The politician glanced sidewise at | the society lady in her ultra bathing | dress. Then he said: “*Well, every woman has her figure, and she doesn’t mind letting the world see it. elther.’” SUPPLIES— High grade malt, hops, bottles, Write for Con bs SOMey te eevee mene ee, GREEN DYE FROM CGRN COBS Thoughtful Kindness of Elderly Couple Responsible for Lines That Have Won World Fame, Sam Walter Foss, the author of the poem, “The House by the Side of the Road,” was an enthusiastic traveler. On one of his trips through New Eng- land he came, at the top of a long hill, to a little unpainted housa, set almost in the road, At one side was a sign- post pointing to a well-worn path and a sign, “Come in and have a cool drink.” Following the path he found In the side of the bank a spring of ice- cold water, above which hung an old- fashioned gourd dipper, and on the bench near was a basket of apples with another sign, “Help yourself.” He found a childless old couple in straitened circumstances, with the rocky farm as their only source of livelihood. But it was rich in the delicious spring of water and an abun- dance of fruit, so a sign was placed guiding to the water, and from the time of the ripening of the first purple plum to the harvesting of the last red apple, a basket of whatever fruit might be in season. was placed near, that anyone passing might rest upon the long hill and refresh himself. The old gentleman explained that they were too poor to give money, so took this way to add their mite to the world’s well-doing. The beautiful thought so impressed Foss that he immortalized with his pen the ideal life of helpfulness. IS ANCIENT SECRET ORDER Odd Fellowship Has Long Flourished, Though Its Foundation Would Be Hard to Trace, The actual origin of the name is as obscure as the foundation of Odd Fel- lowship, concerning which all that is known is that the earliest lodge was the Loyal Aristarchus, which met in London in 1745. To this source may be traced the Manchester Unity, es- tablished in 1818, and now the larg- est friendly society in the world. At the outset the order adopted a rule: “That any brother of the in- dependent order who shall be guilty of assisting any secret society of wom- en or attending their meetings shall be suspended for 12 months for the first offense and for the second shall be expelled from the order forever.” The Odd Fellows, like other friendly societies, was Illegal prior to 1850, and on many occasions was robbed with impunity. One of Its offi- cials applied to his own use about £4,000, which had been. subscribed for the relief of sufferers through the Irish famine, and yet the society had no legal redress, Youngsters Wit. One of the big busses which takes erlppled school children to and from school was waiting with its load of lit- tle ones beside a street car which was taking on passengers. Among those getting on was a woman who had diffi- culty in mounting the step. Her arms were weighed down with parcels, The while she looked about her, puzzled as to how the feat was to be accomplished, one of the crippled boys in the moter bus, called to a man who had about made up his mind to help the woman onthe car: “That's right, mister, help her on; it’s hard for old ladies to climb.”—Detroit News. British Women on Railroads. Nearly 30,000 women are employed by the railways of the United King- dom. Of this total the majority, of course, are employed in clerical work. A considerable number, however, are engaged in work not usually done by women. Nearly 100 are employed as laborers and a thousand more are classed as “mechanics and artisans.” There are women signalmen, station- masters, foremen, policemen, engine cleaners, oilers and greasers, and at least one who is engaged in the dan- gerous and arduous work of a switch- man, Carried It Too Far. Some one asked Professor Steinach of Vienna, whose rejuvenation experi- ments are widely known, if there wasn’t considerable danger in the process. “Of course, the thing can be overdone,” he replied with a smile. “I am told that a woman met a friend of hers on the street wheeling a perambu- lator in which set a chubby infant. ‘I did not know you had a baby,’ said the first woman in surprise. ‘I haven't,’ replied the other despondently. ‘This is my husband—he has been to Doctor Steinach.”—Boston Transcript, Moth Investigation. Work on the biology of clothes moths as affecting the brush and fab- ric industries has been one branch of the investigations of the bureau of entomology of the United States De- partment of Agriculture. Valuable in- formation has been obtained. An ad- ditional service in this field has been the co-operation with the army and navy by furnishing information re garding the susceptibility of various fabrics to moth attack. Different. : Deacon Hornblower heard that the apple crop was likely to be a water- haul that year because of threatened invasions by pests. To the other apple growers assembled he said, solemnly, as he started to kneel down: “Let us pray.” But Ike Hardboyle took his hat and started out of the room, saying: “Let us spray.” Moral—Faith without work ts dead. —¥ana Life. pendable service they give. Acld Test for Optimism. As the movie director would say, can you register joy— When chasing your hat through the mud on a windy, ralny day? When you have a tooth pulled? When the dry agents raid your cel- lar? When you make out your income tax report? When the boss bawls you out? When you run out of gas ten miles from a filling station? Well, if you say you can, you can have the presidency of the Ananias elub.—Cincinnati Enquirer. Devil. His Majesty the Devil is described as a real personality, cunning aud en- ticing, rather than as a “principle of evil.” This description is by Dr. J. W. Lawrence, preaching in Chatta- nooga. He thinks Satan has the power of masquerading as “an ungel of ight.” Accepting this explanation, one would be apt to ponder that Satan has his whole family—and a large one —at work among us. Man is chivalrous, since he has never suggested that Satan may be feminine. It’s male acknowledgment of woman's superiority. His Three Reasons. A Scottish minister who was inde fatigable in looking up his folk one day called upon a parishioner. “Richard,” he said, “I hae na seen ye at the kirk for some time, and wad like to know the reason.” “Weel, sair,” answered Richard, “I hae three decided objections to goin’: Firstly, I dinna believe in being whaur ye does a’ the talkin’; secondly, I dinna believe in si’ muckle singin’, an’, thirdly, an’ in conclusion, ‘twas there I got my wife.”—Edinburgh Scotsman, Makes Hay Quickly. Curing stacks of huy with an elec tric blower fan outfit, described in the Popular Mechanics Magazine, is the method employed by an English farm- er-scientist, which enables him to treat his large crops without having to de- pend upon the sun’s assistance. The grass is stacked as quickly as it can be hauled to the selected spot, the stacks being built in the usual manner but having in their center an alr cham- ber to which the fan is connected. Thunderbolt’s Pranks. A severe electric storm in Easton, Md., played some queer pranks in the fermhouse of Charles Adamson while he and his wife were chasing chick- ens to shelter. A bolt entered by the front door, moved the parlor fur- niture out into the kitchen, pushed all the kitchen furniture out through the back door and then went upstairs and tossed the bedroom furniture out through the windows. The Binder that Stands the Strains wet fields—these and other severe conditions are met by the John Deere Grain Binderin away you willappreciate. And because of its great strength throughout, the John Deere gives more years of better service at lower cost for repair expense. example, steel bars are widely over- lapped and hot-riveted to- gether. are self-aligning — there's no twisting of the frame and binding of the bearings. and have wide traction-giv- ing tires. They furnish am- ple support for the machine and extra traction in wet fields. easiest to operate we have Be sure to come in and seo it before you buy. GET QUALITY AND SERVICE MAZZZZZZ IT I oo Lodged, tangled, heavy or light grain, rough or JOHN DEERE BINDER Pulls Lighter—Lasts Longer Take the mainframe, for ever seen—no particular ef- Its strong, wide fort to dump or return to position—it can be adjusted as wear develops to keep it in easy-working order. The Quick Turn Truck is another feature you will like, It keeps the binder running straight, permits square turns, takes off side draft from the horses, and because its axle is flexibly mounted, the wheels hold to the ground, It’s real economy to buy a John Deere. The main bearings The wheels are extra high Its bundle carrier is the THIS STORE GIVES BOTH . FARMERS! ATTENTION! BRING IN YOUR SMALL LOTS OF WHEAT LEFT OVER FROM SEEDING, EXCHANGE IT FOR FLOUR, AND BE ASSURED OF HAVING OLD WHEAT FLOUR TO RUN YOU THROUGH HAR- VEST. Silver Loaf Hard Wheat Patent Guaranteed Prairie Flour Mills Co. Fianna ACETYLENE WILLARD WELDING BATTERIES KELLY TIRES 30X3% KANT SLIP .-$13.18 24.20 25.10 32X4 KANT SLIP -. 33X4 KANT SLIP IT COSTS NO MORE TO BUY A KELLY Service Garage P. H. Dye Wm. Buettner Vv. A. Dye DRIVE IN: WE’RE EXPECTING YOU AUTO MAGNETO AND ACCESSORIES GENERATOR WORK