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} CIR SI te that will “hold ’em” Most of the colors to quality, 69 cents. want “Moore” at... your wants. or tan. plays to advantage. for your convenience. White as much as you Sarn” the best made for $1.25 also the MEN’S HATS—JUST RECEIVED We have never been in a better position to supply A snappy line of the very newest things, some as low as $2.98; the very best at $5.00 and a good work hat for only ...... In addition to the above we have the sun hats; no end of them for 25c, 35c, 40c, and 48c. The servicable khaki, ventilated, for 48¢ & MEN’S SOX FOR ONLY 15 CENTS This was indeed a fortunate buy and you are bene- fitted. In all about twenty-four dozen, either black They are a nice weight and just the thing for the season’s wear. TRAE AS ya: Men’s dress sox in a variety of patterns and all the new colors, 49 cents, 69 cents.. BOYS’ OVERALLS These are small sizes only up to fives. They are fine for the kiddies and are heavy denem AS MEN’S OVERALLS A good heavy overall for wear, good fitting; not a cheap overall but the kind millions are Wearing today -..0..2.0.0... PERCALES Light or dark, standard weight. pieces to select from _. 1.69 19 select from and standard 89 Fifty ORGANDIES MEN’S SHIRTS One thing a man does want is a good comfortable fitting work shirt. We have the famous “Uncle 98 1.98 AS While they WS 89 The new arrangement of our store admits dis- You will find shopping easy because the merchandise is diplayed and marked We are making a special effort along this line now displaying many of the advertised goods. Pp TT TTT of seasonable merchandise BNanananianianeanieananianiaiaitaianiavs vanes E BOUGHT HEAVILY THIS SPRING IN ANTICIPATION OF A HEAVY DEMAND FOR WARM WEATHER MATERIALS BUT THE WEATHER HAS REMAINED COOL AND THE INCESSANT RAINS SO RETARDED THE SALE OF SUCH GOODS THAT WE FIND WE ARE OVERSTOCKED. THE SEASON IS FAR ADVANCED AND THE TIME FOR DISPOSING OF THESE PURCHASES IS VERY LIMITED SO WE HAVE DECIDED TO MAKE THE PRICE DO IT AND HAVE REDUCED TO A MINI- = MUM FOR QUICK SELLING. JANANAN SNANSNVAVAVAVANANea Vea VA VSS HESE ARE NOT SALE GOODS, NOT BROKEN STOCKS BUT NEW MERCHANDISE FRESH FROM THE BEST LOOMS IN THE, WORLD, NEW MATERIALS THAT ARE THE HEIGHT OF FASH- ION, BEAUTIFUL IN CONSTRUCTION, ARTISTIC IN DESIGN, SERVICABLE IN EVERY SENSE OF THE WORD AND PRICED LOWER AS THE FOLLOWING PRICES WILL INDICATE. UEUEUEUEUEUEUEUCUEVEIEUEUEUCETEUEIEVEIEiEUE TEESE UEUeVETCUEUEIEIEME VEE enc MEN’S TIES Many of the new snappy things the good dres. big line to select from and only —................. MEN’S UNDE King Tut designs, the new sers want. A 30 RWEAR Men’s summer underwear, the Atheletic made of the best of dimity. Men’s short sleeve, ankle length in the bal brigan unions. A splended garment.......... The boys are all wear- ing them and this season only 89 89 SHOES AT BIG REDUCTIONS We will not carry over help. There are lots to close that must go, one shoe that we can Odd sizes, discards lines, that are splendid values. One lot of white shoes for M merly sold for $2.50 now __...... A big lot of mens’ shoes, a them, you know the value .. isses that for- ee. lot more of 2.69 A lot of women’s shoes, old style, but. say the value is there. Some sold fo ean buy if your size is there One lot of Misses’ pumps that were mark- ed $2.50, black, now ............ Children’s pumps from the $1.39 and Several tables of “outs” the former value. r $12.00. You 98 1.69 1.19 for prices about half same lots at They are all marked. VOILS, THE SEASON’S NEWEST PATTERNS Why not buy for future r need. If you will but consider the values you will interest yourself in these goods. Voils, the season’s newest patterns 32-inch Ginghams _.. Frolic Cloth —.......... Standard Ginghams, only French Ginghams ................ Ratines, Crepes and plain V: cents cents cents cents oils cents 100 PIECES WOMEN’S UNDERWEAR These are drummers’ samples and were bougth at a bargain and we are offering them to you for You must endless They are on dis- less by one-fourth the former price. see them union suits, vests, pants in variety and all marked down, play. Look them over. The Big Busy Store COUNTY SEAT NEWS ITEMS. (From the Free Press) Countless fish are prevented from entering the upper Clear- Wilbur Fuller and A. P. Jarvis} water because of inadequate fish on Monday opened their new pool hall in the Crea building. They have four tables, completely re-| finished, and in addition to the pool and billiard parlors handling cigars and confection- ary. Friends here have reicived an- nouncements of the marriage in Santa Ana, Cal., of Miss Viola Rieutcel and John E. Reed, of | Santa Ana. Miss Rieutcel is a daughter of A. C. Rieutcel, now in the furniture business at Ana- heim, Cal. are| ladders at the plant of the Grangeville Electric Light and Power Co., it was reported at the Commercial club meeting Wed- nesday. Steps will be taken to provide ladders so the fish may get over the dam. H. Taylor was on Tuesday ap- pointed assistant prosecuting at- torney of Idaho county, by F. E. Fogg, prosecuting attorney. Mr.| left Wednesday on a} trip to Colorado and} Fogg month’s Montana, and named Mr, Taylor to conduct the office of prose- Leggett Mercantile Company euting attorney during his ab- sence from Idaho county. Mrs. Mary Olive Shields, prac- tically a_ lifelong Grangeville, Modesto, Cal., following an oper- ation for acute appendicitis. Mrs Shields, with her husband, John Shields, left Grangeville in Feb- ruary for California, to reside. For a number of years, up to January 6 of this year, Mrs, Shields was employed in the of- fice of Calvin Hazelbaker, dur- ing the time Mr. Hazelbaker was assessor of Idaho county. Mrs. Shields was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Van Sise, 0 resident of | died Monday, in} pioneer residents of Grangeville. She was born in Grangeville, on Sept. 7, 1887, and resided in this city all her life, with the excep- tion of a few months in Lewis- |ton and Clarkston, and the last | four months in California. She was married to John Shields in 1921. Our ads bring big: results, . We repair all makes’ of bat- teries. Cottonwood Garage, 80-tf Princess _ Flour, sack; 400 Flour $2.05 per sack. At the stores or V. C. Ca. agus Of the period. WISDOM FROM IENT SAGE ae Egyptian Knew Whereof He Spoke, and His Words Are Worth Keeping In Remembrance Today. .,Long centuries before Tut-Ankh- Amen ruled as Pharaoh in the land of the Nile, a certain Ptah Hotep served his king, Itoso, in the capacity of vizler. Very little is known about this ancient statesman-philosopher beyond the fact that, like all fond parents since the world began, he exercised his paternal prerogative by giving unsought advice | to his son. Dr. James Walsh of Fordham un!- versity has called attention to thé vizier’s letters to his boy, written ap- parently about 5,300 years ago, and preserved in what is claimed by some to be the oldest book in the world, The burden of one epistle seems to have been not unlike the oft-quoted advice of Shakespeare’s Polonius of a much later day—“Beware of entrance to a quarrel.” Other words of Hotep were: “Don’t argue with your superl- ors; it does not do any good. Don’t argue with your equals; make a plain statement and let it go at that. Don’t argue with your inferiors; let them talk and they will make fools of them- selves.” WAR IN IRREGULAR MANNER Guerrillas Have Never Been Recog- nized as Part of the Armed Forces in a Controversy. The term guerrilla is applied to armed bands who, on the occasion of foreign invasion or civil war, carry on an irregular warfare on their own account. This class of fighters belongs particularly to Spain, where from 1808 to 1814 they were systematically or- ganized against the French, whose operations they very seriously em- barrassed. The country itself also suffered from them. Many of them, particularly Mina’s band, joined Well- ington, and, after having undergone a course of discipline, rendered signal service ‘as regular troops. On the conclusion of peace large numbers were organized into robber bands. In most of the civil wars of Spain since 1820, guerrilla warfare, especially in the Basque provinces, played a promi- nent part. "In the Civil war of the United States, bands of guerrillas com- mitted depredations on both Federals and Confederates. Remarkable Oak Grove, A member of the forestry service states that near Champaign, IIL, there exists an {isolated oak grove, about three miles long by one mile broad, and that this is indeed a pe cullar phenomenon. It is known as Burr Oak grove and is surrounded on all sides by open prairie, being situ- ated at a considerable distance from the nearest stream, whereas all the other forest tracks in central Illinois lie along the larger water courses, It is believed from the character of the trees in the grove that it ‘“ml- grated” into its position, from the northeast. It lies on a large glacial moraine, formerly, it is believed, cov- ered with similar trees, and has been protected from forest fires, which have destroyed the remainder of the wooded area, by the water standing in the low grounds scattered through- out the grove.—Washington Star, Skunk Cabbage Has Its Uses. The skunk cabbage, although Its blossom has, as its name implies, an extremely unpleasant, malodorous scent, is, nevertheless, a flower. Despite the fact that the skunk cab- bage is despised by most flower lovers, it nevertheless plays a somewhat im- portant part in nature’s wonderful scheme. With the earliest days that have a suspicion of spring warmth the bees commence to leave the nooks and crannies where they have been hiber- nating through the long winter months, and start out in.search of that which they are most in need of—food. This, were it not for our lowly swamp dwell- er, they would be unable to find, says Nature Magazine, and they would all perish miserably of starvation long be- fore another flower could supply them with the needed food. Gottland “Pearl of Baltic.” The saga relates that the discoverer, and first settler on the Isle of Gott- land, was a man named Thjelvar, From the same source one learns that the island was then in such an un- stable condition that it was sub- merged in the daytime, and rose to the surface at night, but Thjelvar ex- terminated with fire the trolls and evil spirits that infested it, and never since that time have the waters broken over “the Pearl of the Baltic.” In later years, the early Middle ages, Gottland was ingeed a power to be reckoned with, and it is the combina- tion of ancient fairy lore and an inter- esting historical past that makes the island so attractive and a favorite spot for tourists intent on exploring strange ground. Worthy of Her Great Brother. Betty Washington Lewis is pictured as more than a sister to the Father of his country, She was “consoler, comforter, advisor and friend,” accord- ing to Virginia authority. Her hus- band, Col. Fielding Lewis, a man of means and position socially and polit- ically, gave his sword to his country, not alone, but sacrificed his fortune to supply the needs of soldiers. Within the beautiful walls of Ken- more, some of the decorations of which Washington is said to have planned for his sister, were frequently as- sembied the military and civic person- Painting Papering Redecorating Calcimining Estimates on any work gladly given upon request. SEE ME FOR SAMPLES FOR WALL PAPER Wm. Kelsey, the painter Only *34.32 Round trip from Cottonwood Yellowstone Park See Geo. A. Poler Agent ee SEO eeererceeteceateeseceegeceetectetecteteateteateeateedy = STRAWBERRIES ARE WOW READY! They are nice. Order now at $1.50:a crate. Mission Creek Berry Farm C. 0. McFARLIN Culdesac, Idaho. Berries delivered the same day they are picked at any point on the C. P. R. R.. PRICE $1.75 F, O. B. Culdesac Culdesac Berry Farm 24-3 Culdesac, Idaho SLPSOP EOE STS OUR MOTTO: Fresh berries, full weight. JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Repairing promptly done. BRIGHTEN UP ¥ r