Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, November 9, 1923, Page 4

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GOODYEAR Service Statron Zs high, thick, sharp-edged blocks of the Good- ear All-Weather Tread keep the max- imum traction and safety under your car every foot of the way. They resist sideslip and skid- ding, help make the most of fuel, and protect your motor from the strain of stalling or spinning wheels. As Goodyear Service Station Dealers we sell and recom- mend the new Goodycar Cords with the beveled All- Weather Tread and back them_up with standard * Goodyegr Service JOHN HOENE DR. J. E. REILLY Dentist . Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones PPPIILIGIGH9G0006000000000 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 DR. THOS. J. FORDE DENTIST 521 Main Street LEWISTON, IDAHO Phone 15, Res. 8763 All work guaranteed DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Deputy State Veterinarian Residence North end of towm Both Phones KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Cottonwood Council, 1389 Meets the first and third Vednesday of each month, Visiting knights welcomed George Terhaar, G. K. Barney Seubert, F. S. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No. 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. 8. J. Farthing, C. C. 2. M. Matthiesen, K. R. & S. JOHN REILAND CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished om any class of Work. Repairing promptly done. 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 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 ; cost in a mutual by care- fullness and fire prevention. WHEN CRABS WEAR HELMETS Members of Popular Lebeter Family, When Very Young, Wear Spiked Cap. You can see from his legs and claws, and from his armor-plated suit, that the crab is related to the lobster. But what bas happened to his tail? It is there all right, but he wears it tucked up uaderneath him. Turn him on his back and you will see it. In his young days the crab is like a tadpole, except that he has on his head what looks like a little round helmet provided with a long sharp apike. At this time of his life he swims about actively, Presently he sheds the skin he is wearing, and emerges a totally differ- ent creature. The spiked cap has gone; the eyes that formerly were flush with his head are now mounted on stalks, The tail has grown long- er, and it is armed with a row of swimming paddles. At the next change of skin the body is shorter and broader and the tall is smaller. Successive “moults” bring him gradually nearer and nearer to his final shape, and eventually he tucks hig tail under him, adopts a sideways gait, and becomes the crab as we know him. DRINK.WATER AT CEREMONY Members of Royal Family and Offi- cialis Participate in Program at Bangkok. | Twice a year a water-drinking cere- mony takes place in the principal tem- ple near the royal palace in Bangkok, Siam. On this occasion all the mem- bers of the royal family, as well as the military and civil officials, gather in the temple, and each in turn pre sents himself before the king, making a profound obeisance, falling on his knees, and then drinking of the water contained in the golden jar, in which are soaked spear-heads and other in- struments of war, and sprinkling it on his forehead. This is the great oath day, and for- merly the officials on taking the oath were paid the next six months’ salary In a lump sum, says the Detroit News. The officials who live far from Bang- kek, and cannot personally present themselves before the royal presence, gather in the office of the chief func tionary of the locality, where the holy water has been sent from Bangkok, and go through a similar process of drinking and sprinkling. It is sald that of late years some of the foreign employees have been taking part in the function, to testify their loyalty to the Siamese monarch. Object of “Round Robin.” “Round robin” is a name often given to a petition signed by a number of persons in circular form. By putting the signatures in a circle undue prom- inence to any particular person is avoided. This method is often em- ployed when the leaders of a secret undertaking for redress of grievances are afraid to sign thelr names at the top of the list on a protest or remon- strance sent to one in authority. If a round. robin is properly signed it is impossible to detect which signatures were placed’ on the paper first. The | principle is similar to that which caused the legendary King Arthur to seat his knights at a round table. Ac cording to tradition Arthur’s council _| table was semi-circular in form and each knight present was the same dis- tance from the distinguished king. The round table was to avoid jealousy among the different members of a company—the round robin is to pro- tect the leaders of a possibly danger ous enterprise, Camels Induced to Smoke. In Morocco, when the natives are training wild camels, they make them docile by jnducing them to smoke tobacco—a cigar, loosely rolled, and placed in the end of a three-cor- nered piece of wood through which a hole has been drilled, says the Irish Tobacco Trade’ Journal. “As soon as the camel begins to draw he becomes docile and quickly grasps the art of inhaling the smoke and emitting it through his nostrils. One defect of the training is that Mr. Camel is apt ever after to insist on smoking at work.” Silenced. A newly-married couple were enter- taining their friends, and amongst the guests was one whose continued rude- ness made him objectionable to the rest of the company. His conduct, although almost unbearable, was. tol- erated for some time, until at supper he held up on his fork a piece of white meat which had been served to him, and in a vein of intended humor re- marked, “Is this pig?” “To which end of the fork de you refer?” asked a quiet-looking man sitting at the other end of the table. Such a Question, Mrs. Muleahy-—An’ why did yez keep Mickey in after school? Teacher—I asked him who George Washington was and he only stood and looked at me. Mrs, Mulchay—lIt’s dumfounded the poor b’y was at yer ignorance.—Bos- ton Transcript. Sticking Close to His Job. Retired Auctioneer—And what can you give my daughter? Prospective Son-in-Law—A thousand dollars a year allowance, an auto, a country mansion— Retired Auctioneer (absent-minded- | agp wou. OF BUSINESS FAILURES ARE CAUSED BY Credit Why Not Pay CASH COME IN AND LET US TALK IT OVER Service Garage NOTICE TO POTATO EATERS. Have a fine lot of Netted Gem potatoes grown from certified seed assorted and free from scab.. Try a sack of Pinnacle Gems and you will use no others. Free delivery to nearby points R. J. Carlson at Pinnacle Ranch. 45-tf Congress, gilt edge, playing cards for sale at the Chronicle office, 41-tf Glycerine Mixture Prevents Appendicitis Simple glycerine, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adlerika, helps any ‘case gas on the stom- ach in TEN minutes. Most medicines act only on lower bowel but Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes all gasses and poi- sons. Brings out matter. you never thought was in your system. Excellent for obstinate constipation. Guards against appendicitis. C. O. Perrenoud, druggist. LUDENS MENTHOL COUGH DROPS for nose and throat Give Quick Relief “COLD IN THE HEAD” is an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh. Those subject to frequent “colds” are generally in a “run down” condition, HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is a ‘Treatment consisting of an Ointment, to be used locally, and a Tonic, which acts Quickly through the Blood on the Mu- cous Surfaces, building up the System, and making you less liable to ‘‘colds.” Sold by druggists for over 40 Years, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lewiston, Idaho, October 8, 1923. Notice is hereby given that John M, Walker, father and heir of Charley C. Walker (deceased) of Spring Camp, Idaho, who, on June 30, 1919, made Additional Homestead Entry, No. 07894, for SW, SW, Sec. 25; Sis SEY, S44 NWY% & SW\ NEY, Sec- tion 26, Township 29 North, Range 3 West, Boise Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Three-year Proof, to es- tablish claim to the land above described, before the Register of the U. S. Land Office, at Lewis- ton, Idaho, on the 13th day of November, 1923. Claimant names as witnesses: William I. Rooke, George J. Smith, William A. Spivy, John L. Rooke, all of Boles, Idaho. HUGH E. O’DONNELL, 42-5 Register. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE UNDER AN ORDER OF SALE. In The District Court of The Tenth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, In and for the County of Idaho. C. E. Bender, Plaintiff, vs. Wilbur R. Coulter and Lucy Coulter, his wife, Defendants. Under and by virtue of an order of sale and decree of fore- closure issued out of the Dis- trict Court of the Tenth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in Building for Growth | ata in advance of actual work telephone construc- tion must be foreseen, engi- neered and financed. Many men and many ma- chines, unseen by you, are working to provide you and your neighbors with adequate service. If you had magic eyes, you could see, all over America, thousands of towns where work is in progress. Every working day the Bell System’s bill for new construction is over three-quarters of a million dollars. All of this new construction benefits you. Every extension of telephone facilities, any where, increases the value of telephone service everywhere. Every dollar’s worth of new Bell System construction en- ables each community better to work out its own destiny and knits it and other commu- nities more closely together in- to a national commonwealth of One Policy - One wherein C, E. Bender, the above named plaintiff, obtained judg- ment and decree of foreclosure against Wilbur R. Coulter and Lucy F. Coulter, the above nam- ed defendants, on the said 22nd, day of October, 1923, for the sum of $4690.13 with interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent and for the County of Idaho, on the 22nd, day of October, 1923, by per annum from date of judg- ment to date of sale, besides costs and accruing costs. Said judgment having been filed and entered in the office ot the Clerk of the said Court, on the 22nd, day of October, 1923, and recorded in Judgment book 6 at page 209. Iam commanded to give notice of sale and to sell ‘the premises described in said judg- ment and decree, in the manner prescribed by law, and to apply the proceeds of said sale as in said decree mentioned, the lands and premises so directed and} ordered by the said decree to be sold are situated in [daho Coun- ty, State of Idaho, and described | as follows: The Southeast quarter of the Northeast quarter, the North one-half of the Southeast quar- ter, and the Southeast quarter of the Southeast quarter, of Section 17, all in Township 29, N. R. 1 E. B. M. containing 160 acres, to- gether wth all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining. Notice is Hereby Given, that I will on Saturday the 17th day of November, 19238, at the hour of 2 o’clock P. M. of said day, at the front door of the Court House in the City of Grange- ville, County of Idaho, and State of Idaho, in obedience to said order of sale and decree, offer for sale at public auction, all the right, title, claim and interest, of the above named defendants, of, in and to the above described premises or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said | judgment, with interest, costs | and accruing costs, to the high- est and best bidder for lawful money of the United States. Dated this 25th cay of Octo- Universal Service speech, Bell System And All Directed Towards Better Service System CREDIT is the renuation of all business CASH Pay cash and receive more for your money WE DO A CASH BUSINESS THAT IS THE REASON WE CAN SERVE YOU FOR LESS. TRADE WITH US AND GET MORE FOR YOUR MONEY We Aim to Please You Cottonwood Garage HUDDLESTON & SPECK, PROPRIETORS Berto aeteatoaenonoeetesteetecteteatoateatententenoneeseteatoateatoatonteetegeateetretoateagoatengecteegeateantecteateth BUY COAL Now } Buy it even if you have to beg or borrow the money to pay for it. Heavy shipments of grain and fruit will take most of the ert. Order now before the price advances—be pre- pared. ber, 1928. W. H. ELLER, Sheriff, MADISON LUMBER & MILL CO.

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