Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, August 31, 1923, Page 4

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Handle your grain in bulk and save 3 to 4 cents per bushel? WHY NOT BRING YOUR GRAIN TO US AND SAVE THE INSURANCE, AS GRAIN STORED IN A CONCRETE BUILDING IS 99 PER CT. FIRE PROOF? BESIDES WE HAVE THE VERY BEST EQUIP- MENT TO HANDLE YOUR GRAIN IN THE LEAST POSSIBLE TIME. ASIDE FROM THE ELEVATORS WE HAVE A LARGE STORING CAPACITY AND CAN HANDLE YOUR GRAIN IN SACKS AS WELL AS IN BULK. TRY US. WE KNOW YOU WILL APPRECIATE OUR SERVICE, Cottonwood Elevator Co. A. B, RUHOFF, Manager Seeubeictieevenie TE ARAN TRRIT } NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. | by Turner Drug Store and Hoene a Department of the Interior,| Hardware. 34-3 ’ U. 8S. Land Office at Lewiston, ! Idaho, August 20, 1923. { Notice is hereby given that| Adam was the first man, and a Robert Forsland, of Cettonwood,! woman followed him. Idaho who, on October 21st, _ 1918, made Homestead Entry, Solomon was the wisest man, and No. 07202, for swy sw, Sec,| yet he had 800 women. “18; NEY, NEW, Sec. 23; Wi4 ee ene NWY,; Nis Sit, j & Ni SEY, sii a hes AP aeons man, and Section 24, Township 80 North, biey Range 3 West, Boise Meridian, Caesar was an emperor, but a wom- has om notice e i igri - an ruined him. make Three-year Proof, to estab- sie lish claim to the land above! And ever the lure shall draw them, described, before Hampton Tay-| and history shall be written again lor, 8 U. Commissioner, at) md over again, and always it shall ' Grangeville, Idaho, on the 26th | be made in rings around woman— day of September, 1923. Richmond Times-Dispateh. Claimant names as witnesses: Benjamin R. Cooper, of Cot- tonwood, Idaho. Edward Wiley, A T ox! SNAP of Boley pe: Be pet Ss Boles, Idaho. John. W. Roberts, of Cottonwood, Idaho. j KILLS RATS , HUGH E. O'DONNELL, Also mice. Absolutely pre- 85-5 Register. | vents odors trois caren, Ces aaah Mead cad a ckage proves this. “The Farmer’s Worst Enemy— paatong typhi mixing with Rats. The Farmer's Best other food. Guaranteed. ” Friend—Rat-Snap. 85c size - 1 cake - enough for These are the words of James| Pantry, Kitchen or Cellar. Baxter, N. J.: “Ever since I) 66c size - 2 cakes - for Chicken tried RAT-SNAP I have always! House, coops, or small buildings, if kept it in the house. Never fails.| $1:25 size - 5 cakes - enough Bae Use about $3.00 worth of RAT-} for all farm and out-buildings, ie SNAP a year and figure it saves| storage buildings, or factory me $300 in chicks, eggs and feed. | buildings. ‘ oe “rng = convenient, a Sold and guaranteed by break up cake, no mixing wi other food.” Three sizes, 35¢,) TURNER DRUG STORE 65e, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed HOENE HARDWARE (| Northern Pacific Signals Cross Half the Continent From St. Paul-Minneapolis, Duluth To North Pacific Coast ay ¢ gues half the continent—from the Mississippi River and head of the Great Lakes to the North Pacific Coast—the Northern a aes 4 { Pacific is installing electric automatic block signals, ‘This great undertaking is nearing completion. At the close of this year’s construction activities, all the main line of the Northern _ Pacific!Railway from St. Paul and Minneapolis to Seattle, Tacoma and Portland will be protected by the most modern type of elec- 1 trically operated block signals. if In‘addition the important main track between Duluth-Superior and St. Paul-Minneapolis has the complete standard installation, Altogether, the Northern Pacific has’ more than 2800 miles of i track safeguarded with automatic block signals. The cost hasbeen 4 more than $4,000,000. | Every possible care is taken to | i ‘© passengers on the Ni q 4 'acific safe, comfortable, quick and 4 comppletely satisfactory transportation y . In the last seven years the § Norther. Pacific hes carried 60,000,000 paces safely without a single fatal lent among its passengers. ' In 1923 the principal signal work on the Northern Pacific is being done on the Pasco Division, between Cheney and Pasco, Wash.—129 miles of track. Dakota Division, between Man- den and Jamestown, N. Dak.— 106 miles of track. Fargo Division, between James town ard Fargo, N. Dak.—150 On your next trip over: the Northern & " Pacific watch pie pioee siepalke q Notice the ecouracy operat: They are representative of the scientific al and genius which goes to. Say, Prnton of the Northern oO N N For tickets anywhere see GEO. POLER, Agent Cottonwood, Idaho Century. Stand as g. Challenge = to ‘the Werld. oat }) carving,.in the pti g the temple of Cheona Kesave, at Belur, In¢ was bufit in the Twelfth century .to cele Jain ruler. Fergusson says of this par- which each particular facet of this porch displays is such as never was bestowed on.any surface of equal ex:" tent in any building in the world.” Another masterpiece of sculptured stone, at. Hullabid, India, ten miles | from Belur, {s greatly ruined now, and many of its gems have been removed } to the museum at Bangalore. When Intact it was the finest specimen of Indian art in existence, This column |} is one of the most marvelous exhibi- tions of human labor to be found even In the patient East—far surpasses any- thing in Gothic art. The effects are said to be just what the medieval architects were aiming at, but which they never attained so perfectly as was done at Hullabid. Fergusson fur- ‘| ther says, placing the Hullabid temple and the Parthenon in Athens as the two extremes of architecture: “It would. be possible to arrange all the bulldings-of the world between these two extremes, as they tended toward the severe intellectual purity of the one or the playful, exuberant fancy of. the other; but perfection, if it existed, would be somewhere near the mean.” HELD IN MUD FOR CENTURIES Delicate Organiams Have Been Won- drously Preserved During the Up- building of the World, Fragments of a colony of marine anl- mals on a slab of black rock, with many trilobites (dark) and shells of the Sidney crab. (light), were discov- ered by C. D. Walcott on Mount Wap- ta. These creatures lived before the day of.the fish or any other vertebrate animal, and when land plants, and even marine vegetable life, were al- most unrepresented. Other animals of the sea, however, existed In great profusion, and here and there condl- tions were so favorable for their Vurial in the mud and sand of the Cambrian sea that they were preserved un- broken, and throughont all the proc esses of rock-making and m6untatn- building escape? destruction. In one of these favorable places in the Canadian Rockies the most delicate of organisms, like the jelly fish, have can hardly realize that they. were buried in the mud fifteen to twenty million years ago, and have remained undisturbed while several miles of thickness of sediment were deposited over them, changed into rock, elevated into mountain masses, and later eroded into the present mountains and can- yons, China's Sacred Mountains. Thousands of pilgrims come every year from all parts of China to visit the shrines and temples of the sacred mountain of Hunan, Nan Yoh Shan, one of the five sacred peaks of China. Barly in October more than 10,000 pil- grims arrive daily. Some of the pil- grims travel from their homes on foot, coming great distances. They kneel and bow their heads down to the little stools, which they carry in their hands, every five, seven or ten steps, accord- ing to the vow they have made, At one end of the stools are made sticks of Incense, the burning of which is part of their worship. ’ In a large majority of the casey the vows have been made on behalf of: sick mother, and the journeys are ing In. case of recovery, or asa prayer for mercies In the other world in case of @ fatal issue of the illness. Pigeons In Primitive Times. Pigeons have been domesticated from the earliest times. They were looked upon with much affection by primitive peoples, and one of the in- dications of wealth was the number.of dovecotes aman possessed. Mention of turtledoves-and pigeons-in the Bible usually is in connection with sacrifice. Ae in the case of the parents of Jesus (Luke 2324), the poor. were:allawed to bring, instead of a jamb, two turtle doves or tv » young pigeons. The first known law for bird. pro- tection, found in Deuteronomy 22:6, forbiding the killing of a. mother bird on the nest, probably was largely for the benefit of the pigeon. PHny wrote .of pigeons, especially noting their man- ner in drinking—‘not holding up their bills between whiles.” Yeo, He Was First-Class, Bart Kennedy, chiet deck steward of a transatlantic liner, tells this one: One morning between six and sev- em o'clock a second-class passenger climbed over the first class promenade to enjoy a stroll on the long deck. He did some elively walking and some bing the deck, and, feeling that he should .not permit the rules of the ship to be broken even at that early hour, intercepted the passenger and asked: “Are you first-class, sir?” ‘The passenger laid his hands on the sailor's shoulders and replied: “I never felt better in my life.”— ; Judge. Cinnamon as.a Perfume. Cinnamon is. referred to among per fumers as early as 1491 B.C. It was found by Ullboa, in American forests, in 1788, was cultivated in Jamaica 50 years later and is now grown in Cey- jon. r Work of Architects of the Twelfth brate the conversion to Vishuuism of a |! ticular temple: “The amount of labor | fiz been so exquisitely preservgd that one | taken as an expression of thanksgiv- || fancy calisthenics. A sailor was scrub- |} . O! Mother! — COME TO RICHARDS AND SON TAILOR SHOP AND GET A SCHOOL SUIT, OVERCOAT, SWEATER OR RAINCOAT FOR THE BOY. EVERY SUIT HAS AN EXTRA PAIR OF PANTS, TAILORED IN THE LATEST STYLE, ALL COLORS OF MATERIALS AND ALL WOOL. WE SAVE YOU FROM $4.00 TO $8.00 ON EVERY SUIT OR OVERCOAT. COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER. TEN DAYS WILL GET YOUR BOY A SUIT, TAILOR MADE. LOOSE NO TIME. Gentlemen . YOUR SUIT OR OVERCOAT MUST BE MADE BY RICHARDS AND SON IN ORDER TO FIT YOU. THE 46 YEARS OF TAILORING EX- PERIENCE MUST SURELY GIVE YOU CONFIDENCE IN THEM. WE HAVE SOLD 300 SUITS IN 20 MONTHS WHICH GOES TO SHOW THAT OUR WORK IS SATISFACTORY. WE ARE SELLING SUITS AND OVERCOATS EVERY DAY. NOW IS THE TIME TO GET YOUR SUIT OR OVERCOAT BEFORE THE CLOTH IS ALL PICKED OVER. OUR PRICES ARE CONSERVATIVE WITH THE TIMES AND OUR TIME AND SERVICE IS YOURS AT ANY TIME YOU COME TO.OUR SHOP. DO NOT FORGET THAT CLEANING AND PRESSING OF YOUR OLD SUIT OR OVERCOAT. WE MAKE THEM LOOK LIKE NEW. Richards & Son The Cottonwood Tailors TIRES! TIRES! We Have Them? WHY SEND AWAY TO BUY TIRES WHEN YOU CAN BUY AT PRICES LIKE THIS? STANDARD OVERSIZE CORD TIRES THAT ARE GUARANTEED BY STANDARD MANUFACTURERS. LOOK THESE PRICES OVER AND THEN COME AND GET ¥OUR TIRES. TIRES 30x3 Fabric Tire -30x3 1-2 Fabric Tire 30x3 1-2 Oversize Cord Tire 31x4 Oversize Cord Tire 32x4 Oversize Cord Tire 33x4 Oversize Cord Tire 34x4 Oversize Cord Tire 33x4 1-2 Oversize Cord Tire 34x4 1-2 Oversize Cord Tire 36x4 1-2 Oversize Cord Tire - 88x5 Oversize Cord Tire 35x5 Oversize Cord Tire 84x4 Tube 382x414 Tube 833x414 Tube 83x5 Tube .WE AIM TO PLEASE YOU COTTONWOOD GARAGE Houddleston & Speck, Prop.

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