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SE Cigars Tobacco Soft Drinks and Candies is the inspiring roar of Old Ocean and the charm of its many beaches where those glorious VACATION haunts are. It will be a great surprise and delight to see the vast improvements that have been made to insure the pleasure of visitors to North Beach Clatsop Beach Tillamook Beaches or Newport where every conceivable form of restful health-giving recreation may be enjoyed. Ask our agent for our Z ww, “Outings in the Pacific Northwest” and “Oregon Outdoors.’” They tell the whole story in word see and picture. Then purchase a Round-Trip Summer Excursion Ticket via Union Paciric System eee that wonderful trip through the Columbia ver Gorge. O it will be glad itinerary and iba Your padi ny Agta hh GEORGE POLER, Agent Cottonwood, Idaho WM. McMURRY General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM We Don’t Like to Read SET ADS There is such a sameness about them and the usual speil goes right thru from one ear to the other without making an impression. If you are going to have a new line of harvest dishes just tell ’em. That’s our policy. If you have a good heavy overall at 1.69 that is what people want to know. If you have made a mighty good buy on can goods for the harvest trade that is mighty good news for the farmers who are trying to save. Honey at fifteen cents is more information worth while (bring your can). Uncle Sam work shirts at 1.25 interests the man who is wanting work clothing. Sun shade hats at from 25 to 50 cents. We mention this in case the sun should shine and you would need straw hats. We are throwing every yard of summer goods on the table at a bargain and you will be interested for the prices are almost cut in two. We will not carry over a yard of seasonable merchandise. > Leggett Merc. THE BIG BUSY STORE. Evangelist from Arizona ON DIVINE HEALING —At The— BAPTIST CHURCH SUNDAY, 2:30 and 7:30 p. m. and every day next week at 7:30 Hear testimonials of those heal- ed. The sick, lame, deaf and blind are invited. Jesus heals today as he did 1900 years ago. of Indian music is the lack of definite pitch. The Indian begins his song where the natural quality of his voice and his mood at the time render It easiest for him to sing it. The pitch of the song depends upon the individ- ual.—Washington Star. No Doubt About It. Mr. Newlywed was on his honeymoon, 'TSTORY MADE IN FACTORY ee French Revolution Said to Have Had Its inception in Institution of the Reveillons. Included among the first wall paper makers in America was Joseph Bum- stead, of Boston. He traveled in France in 1824, and also ten years later. He left an interesting diary of the industry. Bumstead visited the Zuber works in Alsace and in his diary wrote that Zuber had succeeded in 1829, In making the first paper in con- tinuous rotls at his paper factory in ELOISE IED, SCOR IOR ORO TORO OT. | Ropperswiller, and had sold the Eng- lish rights for $5,000. In 1850 Zuber took back from Manchester, England, the first wall paper printing machine used In France. A few years later near- ly all wall papers were machine printed in designs that were mostly bad. History records that it was at a wall paper factory, the famous Royal Manufactory of Reveillon, that the French revolution broke out on April 18, 1789. Reveillon employed more than 300 workmen. A rumor had been clir- culated that the workmen were to be taxed 15 sous a day, and that “bread was too good for them.” A mob as- sembled and proceeded to pillage the factory. The furniture and fixtures were thrown out into the street. The troops were called out. Revelllon fled to London where he passed the re mainder of his life. CASTE PREJUDICE IN INDIA Not a Bar to Any Occupation, Though the Observance Is Most Rigidly Enforced. There are four main castes in India —the Brahmans, Kshatriyas, Vaisyas and Sudras, corresponding traditional- ly to the occupations of priest, warrior, trader and artisan. But, though this would suggest that caste was at one time a class distinction, yet at the present day a caste may Include all classes save that of priest, which fs reserved to the Brahmans. Caste is no bar to any occupation. A rajah may be a Sudra. His cook may be a Bruhman. The rajah is of a higher class than his cook, though of a very much lower caste. And though the Brahman will cook the rajah’s dinner, he will not eat it with him, or permit his daughter to marry the rajah. Though it is not looked upon with approval, marriage is possible between eastes which are not widely separated. In particular, a legal marriage can take place between two contiguous castes. But in all such mixed marriages the children belong entirély to the lower caste, Music of American Indians. The music of the American Indians {s solely and simply vocal. It seems to be generally agreed by musical authorities that the Indians’ songs have in them nothing borrowed from instruments, nothing of artificial in- stigation. An Indian melody never serves two sets of words. There is no instance, {t appears, where the people have sung the different stanzas of a ballad to the same air. A large proportion of Indian songs are entire ly without words at all, syllables be ing employed to carry the tones. Perhaps the most striking peculiarity and as he had married a very pretty young wife, he lost no chance of telling everybody with whom he came in con- tact that he was a married man. “I want rooms,” he announced, as he approached the hotel reception clerk, trying to appear as nonchalant as possible, “Certainly, sir,” said the clerk. “For how many?” “For myself and my wife,” replied Newlywed. “Yes,” said, the clerk, “Suite, sir?” “Sweet?” cried Mr. Newlywed. “Of course she is!” Deer One of the Family. At Matamagon on the east branch of the Penobscot, where a supply depot is maintained, there is a tame deer which enters the house occasionally and eats food from the table. The deer prefers to sleep in the open at the edge of the woods, but during the day plays around the dooryard of the farm, following a dog, of whom it ap- pears to be fond, wherever the animal goes. Several times when the deer has been in the house and has wanted to go out it has leaped through a win- dow, taking out sash and glass with it. —Portland (Me.) Press. According to Nationality. Accent apart, there is sald to be a tea-table test by which the national- ity of a hostess may be determined. In serving tea the Englishwoman se- lects one or more lumps of sugar, ac- cording to the capacity of the cup. The Irish hostess hands round the sugar basin so that guests may help themselves, In Scotland, however, the guid wife fixes her eye on the guest and inquires sternly: “Are ye sure ye've stirred it?””—Chicago Daily News. All at Sea. Bewitt—He is an ignorant man. Jewett—I should say so; if he were to have a corn removed, he wouldn't know any better than to charge the operation to “overhead expenses.” COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE —llISSSSSaaBnBDaaanan9na9n&KXzYTT—"Y—N—=T@WHWD@DD | GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. Subscription one year Six months .......... (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1923 AMERICAN MEN OF LETTERS Writers of Note Have Not Been Ac. corded Proper Recognition by Ac- knowledged English Authority, ‘When John Morley started the “Eng- Ush Men of Letters” series in 1878 he did not include an American author excepting Hawthorne; not even Emer- son, for whom he was later to ex- press his high regard. And it is char- acteristic of the difference between the American point of view and the British that all the volumes of the “English Men of Letters” series were issued in the United States, while only two or three of the corresponding “American Men of Letters” series were issued in Great Britain. We are interested in their authors and they are not interested in ours, or at least such interest as they may have In ours ts sporadic and intermit- tent, accidental and uncertain, I know only one British history of the litera- ture of the English language which pays any attention to the American contributors to that lterature. This sole exception is the brilliant book by Andrew Lang; and I have reason to believe that he gave adequate consid- eration to Irving and Cooper, Emerson and Hawthorne, Longfellow and Low- ell, Holmes and Poe, only because I urged him to do so.—From “Some Trans-Atlantic Perspectives,” Brander Matthews. VICTIM OF BRAIN DISEASE Affliction From Which Lord Byron Suf- fered Has Been Diagnosed by Modern Physicians, Lord Byron’s lameness, which soured his life and puzzled his biographers, but did not prevent his swimming the Hellespont, has been submitted to mod- ern diagnosis and found to be a brain disease, according to the London Daily Express. Dr. H. C. Cameron, in a lecture to the Royal Séciety of Medicine, report- ed in the “British Medical Journal,” suggested that Byron had “Little’s dis- ease,” in which a certaln injury to the brain at birth brings a stiffness and awkwardness usually confined to the legs. “The gait of Little’s disease,” said Doctor Cameron, “is stiff and awkward. At rest or during sleep nothing amiss is to be noted, but when a voluntary act such as walking is attempted the limbs are gripped in a kind of spasm. The knees tend*to be pressed together and the body rises stiffly on the toes.” IN AND ABOUT THE CITY Some people take things for grant- ed, whether they want them or not. A pedigree is all right in its way, but the apple of discord grows on many a family tree, Good goods come in small packages, A pint of happiness is worth a peck of trouble. No man has ever become blind to his own interests from looking on the bright side of life. You never can tell. Many a man rises in his own estimation who hopes to be let down easy. In spite of the fact that It takes 100 cents to make a dollar, lots of people have more dollars than sense. No, Maude, dear; there is no simi- larity between the milkweed and the cowslip, nor do buttercups grow on either, Of course a musical education counts for something, but at the same time lots of people put on airs who can’t carry a tune. The high flyer should remember that mighty few fellows, even when they do take a tumble, have the foresight to pick out a soft spot. Billy—“Darling, I love you from the bottom of my heart.” Milly—‘What’s the matter? I always thought there was plenty of room at the top.” Blobbs—“How did Polly Peaches get so many medals as a_ life-saver?’ Slobbs—“So many fellows have told her they were just dying for a kiss.” Muggins—“You can reach a man’s heart through his stomach, but it takes flattery to reach a woman's heart.” Buggins—‘“In other words, stuff them and they are yours.” NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, June 12, 1923. merly Minnie | Notice is hereby given that|ed, before James Lenon, U. S. At the stores or V, Cash Specials ‘Special Prices Until Further Notice When BAKER & SON give you cash. prices by can depend on the prices given are a low as an ee ae chandise can be sold and give you quality. Wes ne by our word when we tell you what we are selling you being what we tell you it is. You all know what the word PETER’S SOLID LEATHER SHOE MEANS. It means you are getting the best all leather shoe made for the money. MULE SKIN SHOES with a hard leather sole for ELK SKIN with solid leather sole for -...-..----------------- $2.75 ‘SS RATHER SHOES in three grades re tor wines __. $3.50, $4.25, $4.75 MONEY CANNOT BUY BETTER SHOES We still have our bargains in canvas shoes 69e, 98c, $2.98 LADIES’ OXFORDS. Regular prices are $4.25 to $5.75 For cash we will give you a discount of 50c per pair. We are going to have hot weather and you had bet- ter hurry if you are koing to get in on that price of tis- sue ginghams at 65 cents per yard. All colors. Just received several patterns in All Time Crepe $2.25 Tissue Ginghams, in assortment of colors -...-. 65 Other Cinghams, 25c value, now -......-.----- 19 Other Ginghams, 35c value, now - +29 Percales .. .........---- 19 Organdies in all color 19 Linen towling, unbleached . +35 Ladies’ Hose, good value .. .25¢, 35¢ Men’s khaki Coats, each . $1.75 Men’s Work Shirts 95 Men’s Work Shirts, none better $1.25, $2.25 Men’s Work Sox, 20, two pair for -.......2-.--------------2-2++ Men’s Straw Hats from es 45e to 85¢ A close out on Men’s Straw Hats and Panamas 98 Men’s jersey and canvas leather lined gloves... 50 Rice, 11 pounds, $1; Beans, 11pounds, $1; Macaroni, 11 pounds, $1; Yeast, 3 packages for 25c; Can Corn, 2 cans for 35c; Tomatoes, 2 cans for 35c; Peas, 2 cans for 35¢; Just the same Coffee you buy in tins and pay 50c. We have it at 40c, 42c, and 45c. Try it. BRING US IN YOUR EGGS AND BUTTER. WE PAY AS MUCH AS ANYONE. ra J. V. BAKER & SON Where Quality and Prices Meet It's“Usco’ Time Again United States Tires are Good Tires My HE 30x32 “Usco” is still the fabric money’s-+ worth of America. If your dealer tries to sell you some- thing else he won’t be surprised if you tell him “No.” “Usco’s” are built by the same people who make Royal Cords, This fact counts. Where to buy US. Tires SERVICE GARAGE, COTTONWOOD, IDAHO FERDINAND GARAGE, FERDINAND, IDA, Minnie McConnell Nichols (for-| Commissioner, at White Bird j McConnell), of| Idaho, on the 18th day of July, Spring Camp, Idaho, who, on! 1923. é June 30, 1919, made Additional Stock-raising Homestead Entry, No. 06836, for Lots*1& 3, & SEY NW, Sec. 5, Tp. 28 orth Sec. 32, & 33, Township 29 North, Range 2 West, Boise Meridian, has) 25-5 ; SEY SW, SEY, SEW,| Idaho. Picket. Ch cli Wig SW, Section| White Bird, Idaho HUGH E. O’DONNELL, ea notice od Re a to make Beeier- ree-year Proof, to establish! Princess F] claim to the land above describ-| sack; 400 Plone $2.08 i sak. Claimant names as witnesses: George Brust, of Joseph, Ida- ho. William I. Rooke, of Boles, Idaho. John E. Rooke, of Boles, C. Co. Whse.