Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, November 23, 1923, Page 4

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pe te ett IOS Og EET gE OAL aC at NER APNG Mente ET ~on pene GOOD,“ YEAR 4 Service Station 'TEADY, safe and " sure is ne of a car equ bh Goodgenr Tires with the famous All-Weather Tread. The high, thick, sh veliged blocks of that powerful tread providetheut- most in gripping traction. They give you security all the time, and promote the efficient, eco- nomical operation of your car. Service Station fe Gerlaet ayo Posen = Birt tk fanned aT Was ther. pag ang eek sta or them up w JOHN HOENE AR coop YE ( eWestern Mase tur Western T DR. J. E. REILLY 3? Dentist Office, Nuxoll Block Both Phones PDepepreraparetredop dodo sioatesde di Depatretoederaeiatoet Miveteairateateeteetedioateaioeies, DR. J. D. SHINNICK Physician and Surgeon Office over Cottonwood St. Bk. Toeeeeatecestonieceateciete ag: DR. WESLEY F. ORR Physician and Surgeon Office in Simon Bldg Both Phones Sse i ee ss ee cs Seeerereecrerey DR. THOS. J. FORDE DENTIST 521 Main Street LEWISTON, IDAHO Phone 15, Res. 3763 All work guaranteed MARKRRRRARKRD RAED Pe i i ed _ DR. C. SOMMER Graduate License VETERINARIAN Deputy State Veterinarian Residence North end of towa Both Phones POPOSSS SSS IO SHG DOO OO DOGS Se ee i es ed + KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS ‘ | Cottonwood Council, 1389 Meets the first and third Vednesday of each month. Visiting knights welcomed George Terhaar, G. K. i Barney Seubert, F. S. Da ee es hh ee te te ee KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS McKinley Lodge No, 38 Meets every Tuesday evening. 8. J. Farthing, C. C. %. M. Matthiesen, K. R. & S. JOHN REILAND ; CONTRACTOR & BUILDER Estimates furnished ow au, 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 down cost in a mutual by care- fullness and fire prevention. COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE |» GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. Subscription one year Six months ... $2.00 . 1.25 (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDEN1 IN POLITICS Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1923 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. P. B. Weller, Plaintiff, vs. W. I. Rooke, John E. Rooke, Mark N. Rooke, Vance Rooke, a co-partnership doing busi- ness under the firm name of W. I. Rooke & Sons, and Em- ma Rooke, wife of W. I. Rooke, Eddie D. Davis, O. C. Nail, and Edwin Nelson. Defendants. Under and by virtue or an or- der of sale and decree of fore- closure issued out of the District Court of the Tenth Judicial Dis- trict, of the State of Idaho, in and for the County of Idaho, on the 7th day of November, 1923, in the above entitled action wherein P. B. Weller, the above named plaintiff, obtained judg- ment and decree of foreclosure against, W.I. Rooke, John E. Rooke, Mark N. Rooke, Vance Rooke, a co-partnership doing business under the firm name of W. I. Rooke and Sons, and Emma Rooke, wife of W. I. Rooke, Ed- die D. Davis, O. C. Nail, and Edwin Nelson, the above named defendants, on the said 7th, day of November, 1928, for the sum of $4403.20. with interest there- on at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from date of judgment to date of sale besides costs and ac- cruing costs. Said judgment having been filed and entered in the office of the Clerk of the said Court, on the 7th day of November, 1923, and recorded in. judgment book 6 at page 218. Iam commanded to give notice of sale and to sell the premises described in said judgment ana decree, in the manner prescribed by law, and to apply the proceeds of said sale as in said decree mentioned, the lands and prem- ises so directed and ordered by the said decree to be sold, are situated in Idaho County, Idaho, and particularly described as follows: The Southeast quarter of the Southwest quarter (SE1Y{4SW14) Ce and the Southwest quarter of the Southeast quarter, (SW%% SEY) of Section Twelve (12), and the East half of the North- west quarter (E44 NW14) and the Northeast quarter (NE4) of Section Thirteen (18), Town- ship Twenty-nine (29). And the Southwest quarter of the North- west quarter (SWI4 NW14) Section Three (3), and the South half of the Northeast quarter (S14 NEY), Southeast quarter of the Northwest quar- ter (SEY NW14), Northeast quarter of the Southwest quar- ter (NEY%4, SW14) North half of the Southeast quarter (N14 SEY) and the Southwest quar- ter of the Southeast quarter (SW14, SEY) Section Four (4) Township Twenty-eight (28) North, Range Two (2), West of Boise Meridian, containing 640 acres in all. Notice is Hereby Given, That I will on Saturday the 1st day of December, 19238, at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M. of said day, at the front door of the Court house in the City of Grangeville, Idaho County, Idaho, in obedi- dence 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 nec- essary to satisfy said judgment, with interest, costs and accru- ing costs, to the highest and best bidder for lawful money of the United States. Dated November 8th, 1928. W. H. ELLER, Sheriff, ; By John A. Powell, Deputy. 6-4 “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 Hable to “colds.” by. ists for over 40 Years. . J. Cheney & 10, Suitable Age of Dairy Heifer for First Calf The proper age of heifers for first calving is always a fruitful source of discussion among dairymen. One group points to the necessity of proper physical developmént before the cow ylelding milk through ten months or more of the year. The other side holds that late calving gives the beef qual- ities In the cow time to develop and encourages a tendency toward coarse- ness in the dairy animal. In the terms of ordinary dairying, the question turns on which system, In the long run, makes the most money. Does the production of the mature cow make up for the extra feed put into her during the non- earning period? Does the added year or two of production in early life of the early calver balance the possible loss in vitality and in long-time aver- age production? An experiment that has been con- ducted at the Connecticut experiment station throws an interesting light on this question. Ten cows were includ- ed in the experiment. Five calved at the average rate of two years and one and four-tenths months. The other five averaged three years and one month at calving time. In the first lactation period, the late ealvers produced at nearly double the rate of the early calvers. During the second lactation period the late calyers made a record 60 per cent greater than the early calvers, In the third perlod the early calvers made about the same record as the late calvers. One Interesting point about the re sults ig that it was not until they reached the third lactation period that the early calvers made as good a rec- ord as the late calvers made in their aged three years and one month at the time of freshening, made 13,128 pounds of milk and 443 pounds of fat aged four years, nine and one-half months at the third freshening, aver- aged 13,552 pounds of milk and 467 pounds of fat. All the cows in this test were of the same general breeding and all received the same care, The numbers involved are too small and the time covered too short to warrant any positive con- clusion. It does seem, however, that late calving has sound ground for be- Ing considered good commercial dairy practice. Find Relative Value of Different Dairy Feeds Feed stuffs as a rule are divided into concentrates and roughages, says the dairy department, North Dakota Agricultural college, in discussing the relative value of different dairy feeds. The concentrates are grains and factory by-products, oats, corn, barley, oil meal, which contain little crude fiber and are highly digestible. The roughages are bulky material like hay and silage and contain considerable fiber. Corn is valuable chiefly on account of its carbohydrates; although it con- tains about 10 per cent of protein, other sources of this material usually are cheaper. It is deficient in mineral matter, It should not be fed alone to the dairy cow as the only concentrate; however, it is an excellent dairy feed in combination with other feeds, Corn and cob meal is valuable in the dairy ration because it supplies bulk and al- lows more thorough digestion of the grain. Oats contain one pound of protein to six of carbohydrates, which in itself Is a balanced grain ration. No grain is better for milk producing cows or cows about to freshen. It is for sup- plying the unborn calf with nutrieuts for growth. It should be ground if it can be done on the farm. Wheat compares in feeding value with corn, but is little fed because of its price. Wheat bran ts high in protein, ash and carbohydrates, but its market price usually prohibits its use. It has a good effect upon the system, but it is ad- visable to feed it only to cows before and after freshening, and young grow- ing stock. Middlings are not palatable or easily digestible. Barley can be used to supplement corn and should be rolled, or preferably ground, Heavy Grain Feeding Is Not Always Profitable Heavy grain féeding may make a better showing on a milk sheet, but not in the net profits, except with those dairy farmers who live near desirable markets where they can sell their hay and dairy products for extremely high prices, If the roughage is tough and fibrous the proportion of concentrates must be larger. Efficiency in Use of Food Makes Good Cows It 1s the cow that gives the milk that makes the money, and naturally the more milk she gives, the more money she makes. Efficiency in the use of her food ls what makes a cow a good one; lack of efficiency is characteristic of a serub. Feeding corn or other feed to serubs is just as wasteful as burning fuel in a poor stove, because it could be used to a far better purpose by good rows. * begins on its very arduous task of | first lactation period. The late calvers, {| in their first period. The early calvers, | ‘AUTOMOBILE MIGHTY HANDY FOR FARMERS 'Faster Than Any Other Means of Transportation, A writer, in discussing the relation ‘of the automobile on the farm, says {that after a hard day’s work it is a {pleasure to get into a car and take a | 25-mile spin. We rest as we do, and study the methods of our neighbors. Moreover, the automobile has an- other service to perform. It can bring (more rapidly than your best horse “first ald to the injured.” If there is ‘an accident to a child or man, and a doctor or a surgeon is needed in a hurry, the automobile can bring him faster than any other means of trans- portation, If there {s trouble in the fleld, if |some part of your farm machinery Is broken down, the automobile can |bring from town the needed help or | the parts that you need to set the ma- chine In motion again. Again, the automobile brings the farmer closer to the market, whether it is the local or the distant market, {and enables him to market his produce more rapidly and on better terms. The writer to whom we have referred says that he has a machine that has | run for 16 months on the original set ‘of tires, with only $3.25 expense for patching tubes. He says the purpose of his machine is pleasure, business | and marketing; that he has hauled ap- ples, potatoes, oats, eggs, butter, pigs, calves and hitched it to the hay rope to unload hay into the mow. AVOID TRAILING IN TRAFFIC | No Use Running Risk of Bumping Into | Expensive Cars on Congested City Streets. Here is a hint for the man who drives through congested city streets: Don’t trail behind expensive cars, The best of drivers find themselves | ramming into the rears of other cars | Don’t Trail High-Priced Cars, | or clipping off rear fenders, It’s inevitable in traffic such as we know it today. But there is no use running the risk of bumping a $10,000-gold-plated-pal- ace-on-wheels when there are thou- sands of dilapidated buses to stick be- hind. The owner or driver of an expen- sive car is much more likely to raise a rumpus if you hit his property be- cause a slight scratch looks like the dickens. Some drivers of fiivvers, or near-flivvers, are likely to mistake a bump for pep in the motor, Farming Is a Business And like every business, it requires forms, records and blanks that give you the facts about your farm, just as a business man has them about his business. We print forms and letterheads (every business farmer should have his own letter- head) on Hammermill Bond, the Utility Business Paper. Let Us Show You What We Can Do for You MENTHOL COUGH OROPS for nose and throat Give Quick Relief 4 {Peery | TAXIDERMIST 4 Trophies mounted true to ife at reasonable rates. aa a ee tee 1 a4 Harry Klapprich Peete emecteeeeeseedeetete eee eed Many Have Appendici- Much _ so-called trouble is really chronic appen- dicitis. This can often be re- lieved by simple glycerine, buck- thorn bark, etc., as mixed in Ad- jlerika. Most medicines act only on BOTH upper and lower bowel, and removes all gasses and poi- ‘sons. Brings out matter you never thought was in your sye- .tem. Excellent for obstinate constipation. C, 0. Perrenoud, |drugest aa tis and Don’t Know It! stomach | on lower bowel but Adlerika acts | Want a Good Tire? a 7 THE BADGER None Better Cottonwood Garage HUDDLESTON & SPECK, PROPRIETORS POPP eres o rari | UNION | FLOUR Made by a home concern for home consumption | Every sack is guaranteed We exchange 1 bar. of flour for 6 bu. of wheat | Farmers’ Union $ Soedoshedrespeteedoccrste ste eSonde de Gre edendentesteesoesotondosteseteateat eheede Of an investment is a ten year run of dividends. The Grangeville Electric Light & Power Company has ' just issued its fifty-third quarterly dividend. The annual rate has never been less than 7 per cent and most of the time 8 per cent. Why look further? O Grangeville Electric Light & Power Co. Farmers We now have plenty of good millfeed of all kinds, also rolled barley and oats, and the prices are right. We will either axchange for wheat or sell for cash. Now is the time to bring in a load of wheat and exchange it for some good SILVER LOAF fiour. The flour is absolutely guaranteed, and is giving good satisfaction everywhere it it used. We also have fresh ground graham and whole wheat flour, and farina, in any size package you want. PRAIRIE FLOUR MILLS CO. 3 *

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