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The Idaho Recorder Official Newspaper of Lemhi County. Weekly Recorder, 1 year.........................$2.00 Weekly Recorder, 6 months......................$1.00 CONFERENCES A PLENTY. The national administration must have (jot some of its ideas about con ferences and bureaus and postmortems from the governor of the slate of Idaho, who has a bureau for this and a bureau for that for every day in the week and several other commissions include I. Down at the national cap itol there is something of the sort com ing on right on the heels of the one just gone on before. The other day the president called un agricultural con ference, as if conversation is going to do anybody any good in the wav of solving the present troubles of the lack of markets and the-dcvil-to-pay-gen erally to r the tillers of the soil. If the president had used his own ''best mind" he would have seen long ago that his own senatorial opposition to the ratification of the treaty of peace as signed by nil the other allies except the United States went a long way toward bringing about the present hard times for the farmers and pro ducers of this and every other land. Conferences at this late day will avail nothing to undo the wrong of defeat ing that treaty. But conferences we shnll probably continue to have, the latest being for Secretary Hoover to have gathered together at Washington u bunch of navy and commercial ex- 1 ports on wireless telephony to con duct an investigation looking toward restricting the use of the wireless tele phones. There is a picnic for every body these days except the actual worker and producer. FOR BETTER CATTLE ON THE FARM. From habit many farmers not ul- 1 lied with the pure bred interest dir- ' ectly, are inclined to speak with dis couraging emphasis whenever a breed er makes such un investment in cattle represented to the extent of one thous and dollars or more. The same farmers seem to forget the investment of one or two thousand dollars in an auto mobile as entirely justified. There are thousands of farms where pn Investment of a modest amount in pure bred Shorthorns would later sup ply the money for the purchase of tne car, pay the taxes on it und on the farm, pay off the mortgage, build the needed house and bams and furnish a fund to educate the children. Short horn cattle have done this many times where the owner applied business methods—they are doing it now and will continue so to do for all time to come when combined with the opera tion of the faim. How doe* your cattle impress you? Dont you want a little better bull or a couple of pure bred cows to make a further movement in the right dir ection. There is great satisfaction in seeing a pure bred cow in your feed lot. Get one and be inspired with the movement for better cuttle. KIND OF BOOSTING WE ALL WANT TO SEE By J. A. Herndon I-einhj County may expect consid erable income from the mine output the coming year. While thr runchers are wrestling with the problem of prices and crops, the mining fraternity is making def inite preparation for a season'sc ac tive campaign. The gold market is always sta tionary, no variation,and for that rea son the gold prospects ahe attracting much attention, as wages are now reasonable and money scarce, and many prospects as well us idle prop erties are being sampled and investi gated with a view of again putting the»« inti the producer class. Credit should be given to any man or set of men willing to put their time and money into an enterprise that brings new money into circulation, to wrest from the mountains wealth, und creating employment, build ing roads, and, indirectly, helping ev ery man. woman and ehil I,in the com munity. If for the next ten years ev ery man would ipend Ids money, not for more elaborate stores nor for at tractive ,li plays to tempt trade, but put it into an investment in the endeavor to get new m me y from de velopment of our natural resource-, ( ur town and our county would d iu bte m population and wealth, and then there would be such a boom ns was never dreamed of la-foie. 1 , ; : j , , f créai ting new nter reating new enter* .• loi in ing our desert our timber resources mid our ür pow» w. reclamation, etc. It i* not en mtgh th at we pay our bills, ami help i n the I .own'* needs alone. Don' t only •thing ; iwster" l»ut "get be* hind 8orn« sad boost yourself) mte of the wi •ik, and create con* fu!*nrt? >*i < »tbers 1 >y putting your own good help dollar •s into something that will every n 1 then work tire* less! y to mi like it a -uecess. Yt >u ail reinem! >er the story of the emigrant fumily of the early days, who druwm- I their one horse in cross ing a stream, and while the people of the village stoo l around expressing sympathy for their hard luck and des titute condition, a tall Tcxun spoke up and said: "Well, now, you fellows are alt saj ing how you feel, und the way I express my feelings is, that thev are worth about $5," and he tossed th<« hill to the unfortunates. In a short the family went on their wav, w Uh a new horse to their wagon. If we will all put a $& 0 r$25 bill be hlnd our "boost" and our concern for he welfare oof this community, it i* * ** hw "l>« thc money' inteil «IHM» Of all of us,, • "Äner P " y ' nK *°-* 1 iBUr ^ to th * Copper is now worth enough to 1 justify marketing after a year of de , pression and low price. The Harmony mines have begun op erations,and before the bunch grass i* green expert to Ire milling 150 tons of crude ore daily, keeping foud 4 horse Uamo-busy delivering the con centrated product to the loading, sta tion at Baker. Their present treatment, including 'flotation, is giving them a very close saving, the tailings assaying less than eno-half of one per cent and the per rentage of saving being frofn 90 to 97 of the values. R. E. Wickam, mining man, is back from atrip to his old home in Dako to. He expects to get into the mining game ut an early date either by lease or purchase, an I here's wishing him luck. Wickam made a success of his Musgrove lease last year, and there is no reason why he will not again start a paying producer. Chine*« Village* of 100,000. The distribution of the population of China Is a curious thing to contem plate. A hundred Ihou-n. <1 people nmy be gathered together within what might rightly he regarded as elty limits, but. on fbe map their city will he Indicated as u mere village that Is not worth considering. Moreover, they will not have established n single feature of city organisation, Villages of 100,000 hilmldtunts are rather <11 Ill cult to visualize, but they exist In f'hlnn.—Kleunor Franklin Egan In the Saturday Evening I'ost. Maryland Tree*. The majority of the fruit trees lower early In the spring, usually tie ore the leaves appear, and their laluty blossoms form n charming ple ure In addition to yielding ii delight ul fragrance. The upple blossoms are isually white with a red tinge or ilusli; tlie peach pink ; the peur, plum md cherry white; and the quince, vhleb (lower* luter, a delicate shell link. Open Eyes Denote Rashness. Wide-open eyes urc said to Iks indie itlve of rashness. NOTICE TO RANCHERS—Owing to the shortage of money in the coun try, 1 will from thi* date until furth er notice overhaul your car for afoy kind of hog feed, you paying for parts needed. Thi* proposition will be for any job over $5.00. A good chance to get your car in shape before spring without much cash. See The Cash Repair Shop, C. B. Brishois. _ ESTRAY. Came to my ranch ubout Nov. 20, 1921, one buy gelding, branded XI on left hip; ears both cropped or frozen; weight ubout 900 lbs. M. J. MATTHEWS, Carmen. KMH1I. WOOLGROWERS ,VNNUAL MEETING . The annual meeting of the Wool growers of Lemhi county will be held at the Farm Bureau office, Salmon, Ida. on Monduy, February 20, J922, 7.30 p m. All woolgrowers are invited. H. G. KING, _______ Secretary. *" NOTICE TO AUTO OW NERS After 1, 1922, every car* operated on the highways of the stifte, without the 1922 motor license, is,liable to seizure and sale, and the driver is liable to ar rest. License plntps must be placed on both front und hack of car. T. J. STROUD, Sheriff. W. C. WHITE, Assessor. Salmon, Fjeb.16, 1922. FOR SALE OH EXCHANGE—Well improved DAIRY FARM Just out aide city limits of Enumcluw, King county, Washington. A new modern ten-room house (except heat); barn <52x82 feet with stalls for 20 cow* and estimated to hold 200 tons of hay; equipped with Louden litte» ! carriers throughout and steel track and hay fork. Place has its own J light plant anil water system. Pho- j tos of place may bo seen at office of The Idaho Recorder. F. M. UPTON, Knumclaw, Washington, i ____ P. O, Box UM. Buy Honey THE BLVE RIB 1 BON BRAND The kind you have used and enjoyed for years. For sale in 101b, 5!b ! and buckets, at all the grocery stores. 5-gal. cans direct from the Bee yard at $8.00 per can, 2 cans, at $15.00 RIVER SIDE APIARY E. B. RANDOLPH I j j j i ! I j i j : ! I i ; i i I j Tfiscsesiszsisisisiszseszsisiszsi'i A Posthumous Laudation FÜ By CLAIRE SMITH ^2S2SE5ï5HS2S2SS52S2SaS2SBSESZ5253 ! J j i ^2S2SE5ï5HS2S2SS52S2SaS2SBSESZ5253 Copyritfht. 1021, Weatcrn Newspaper Union. Charles ÇoggswHI, president of half a dozen corporation* and a man to he reckoned with in Wall street, came out of his club at half past two. "Heigho!" lie sighed. "When u man gets to be forty-five hits trouble* mul tiply." And lie fell to thinking how hardly fate used him. A" he stepped into the street a news boy ran Into him, yelling at the top of tiis voice. He picked himself up and thrust a paper under Mr. Coggswell's nose. "Suicide of a millionaire he yelled ; and there, sure enough, wa* the announcement, in big, black lettering. Mr. Coggswell bought a copy, and the next minute was staggering hack against the wull of the club. The suicide was that of himself. When he had recovered a little he read as follows: ".Mr. Charles Coggswell, president of the United Realty and Union corpora tion, and a well-known figure on the street, shot himself In the temple ut half-past one o'clock this afternoon, lu u lodging bouse on the Bowery. Al though he had dressed himself In shab by clythes and destroyed all evidences of hi* Identity, Mr. Coggswell's fea tures were too well known for his deuflt to remain long unknown. Coggswell knew the man—n double of his, strikingly alike even to the gait and gesture. "Suppose I were dead," he thought. "Would the world he better off or worse V" If he were dead, wiped out, no longer a factor In the affairs of men, what would It mean to the world that he had known? Wlmt did his life mean? Ills death meuut releave and money to Ids wife; to his musician son it meunt the inheritance of which he wns to have been deprived. His part ner, Prentice, and he had always been at loggerhead«, and nine time*, out of ten Prentice had been rig#* Jn his views. Coggswell tried to think bf one person whom Ills life benefits*!, but could not do so. . Then why should lie not h# dead? He could lay hands upon ten thousand dollurs, It wns growing dark, when stnrtlng up from u reverie, he discovered that he was stauding In front of his house on Madison avenue. He crept up to his den at the top of the house. As he reached the hist story lie saw a figure coming toward him, followed b.v another, and shrank back Into a closet just as they came round the bend In the passage. They were two serv ing maids, and, us they paused, lie heard one of them say : "Why are you taking on so, Mary? lie wasn't no good, for all I've heard tell of him. Didn't lie drive that good wife of his out of his house and spoil her life for her?" "I can't help It," sniffed the other, "lie mayn't have lieen a good man, but he saved my brother's life." When they had disappeared lie went down the steps with n tinner tread. Nevertheless, outside the drawing room door lie paused and listened. Prentice, tils partner, was speaking. . P - "I tell you, Mrs. Coggswell," he was saying, "Charles was a good uiuji, and I know that a warm heart iltujer the uffectntlon of selfishness. I could tell you stories—" "(Hi, I know tie- wluv" (Ns r ujfe' sobbed, "it Is I who have been at fault. Oti, Charles, If you could only know, If you could only come back to me!" Another voice took up the («trahie. Coggswell started mid clenched his ll-Is In bitter remorse. The volcé was that of ills son. "1 know father meant to do well by me," he said, "You kuow, mother, ho believed that u man should shift for himself, to develop Independence of character. That's why lie left me to worry along as best l could. God bless hlm I He w as on« of the finest men that ever lived." The voices died away, and it seemed to Coggswell ns though In« luid already come to the new birth that he desired. Why should lie go away and sink his I Identity when tils life lay here? Nu, j the mil life was in his accustomed j pin «e, w ith life's struggle still before j him, enmities to overcome, faults to he i atoned for, nil the battle to'be fought ! on* over again In the accustomed bat I Befiehl. 11»* heal fa tint a moment; then j softly opened the door. Doctor Lowell Press Censor. ITesidclit A. l.aw retire Lowell of Harvard university, la asking nwvs i paper men not to report a recent ad j dress by Viscount James ltryce at : the Harvard union, used Ids own cen ! sorshlp, I Just before lie Introduced the dis i ttnguished British publicist, I>«H«tor ; Lowell loaned over to the press tables i sud told the reporters it was I.ord llryee's wish that none of his remarks be published, inasmuch as It was to i be an intimate talk to the undergradu I ate*. The newspaper men did not print j ;he address.—Cambridge (Muss.) !>(*. patch In the New York Tribune. — More Women Study Medicine. The number of women in England, who choose medicine as a career has Increased greatly. Many have just entered for the five years' course of hard study required. At Charing Cross Hospital Medical school the two sexes are about equal In number; London Hospital school has one-fifth women students, and St. Mary's school two fifths. Auction Sale of 3 PURE BRED On Wed., March 1,192: 1 will sell at Public Auction at my home on the Challis Highway, 2 miles south of Salmon, Idaho, the following described stock: 20 REGISTERED SHORTHORNS Consisting of 9 BULLS from 11 to 30 months old 11 Cows and Heifers; 4 Cows with calves at foot; 7 Cows and Heifers well along in calf. Pedigrees furnished and cattle sold subject to 60 day retest. 20 Purebred Oxford Ewes; ~ 20 Purebred Hampshire Ewes Part of these ewes will have lambed by sale day J? _ 10 HEAD HORSES One Registered Shire Stallion weight 1680 lbs. One Shirt Mare, weight 1740 lbs., 8 yrs. old ' One Sorrel Gelding, weight 1480 lbs, 6 yrs. old Two draft fillies, two yrs. old • • Two Horse Colts, one year old One gray pony mare, seven years old One black light draft colt, two years old One registered pacing Gelding six years old All breeding stock guaranteed. All mature horses broke to work and fully guaranteed. TERMS: Eight months time on approved note bearing 10 per cent interest. Five per cent off for cash. FREE LUNCH at NOON. Sale starts at 1 o'clock HARRY L SUMMERS, Owner. W.M. Carpenter, Anct. ALIAS SUMMONS In the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District of Idaho, in and for the county of Lemhi: Lillie Roth, Plaintiff, vs. Carl Roth, defendant. The state of Idaho sends greetings to the above niuned defendant: You Are Hereby Notified that ^ complaint has been filed against you in the District Court of the Sixth Ju dicial District of Idaho, in and for the county of Lemhi, by the above named plaintiff an i you are hereby di rected to appear and answer the said complaint (a copy of which is hereto attached) within twenty days of the service of this summons if served within said Judicial District, and within forty days if served elsewhere. The said action is brought to dis solve the bonds of matrimony; to ob tain custody of the minor child; and for general relief. Ami You Are Further Notified that unless you *o appear and answer said complaint within the time herein specified the plaintiff will take judg ment as prayed in said complaint. Witness my hand and seal of said District Court this 2nd dav of Feb ruary, 1922. W. W. SIMMONDS, Clerk. By MARCIA WHIT WELL. Depute. *;• H CA8TERL1N, Attorney for j hi Intiff. Rehidence, Salmon, Idaho, l ob. 3—March 3. NOTICE OF FORFEITURE. To Georg»« Ratcliff. Orson Eastman and J. O. Anderson. You are hereby notified that I have expended $300.00 in labor and im provements upon each of the follow ing name») lode mining claims, situate in Yellow-jacket mining district, Lem hi county. Idaho, to-wit: Ohio and Copper Glance lode claims, the loca tion notices of which are recorded in books N and I of lode locations, in the office of the county clerk and re- . corder of said countv, at pages 54S and 389 respectively, in order to hold : sant premises under the provisions of I section 2324, revised statutes of the i t mted States, being the amount re quired to hold the same for the years ending December 31st, 1919, Decern- ; bor 3lst. 1920, and December 31st, r'-}; Total so spent on these claims is >800. And if within ninety days after the service of this notice by J ^ . : I i ; J publication, you fail or refuse to con tribute your proportion of such ex penditure as co-owners, amounting $600, your interest in said claims will under said section 2324 become the property of the undersigned, your owner, who has performed the nec sary labor and improvement. C. C. ANDERSON. QU VRANTINE NOTICE. Persons are warned not to violate in any manner the established quar antine around the ranch of Geo. Ham mond as defined by posted notices. At this place the regulation is neces sary to prevent the spread of a seri ous cattle disease. Any further trouble should be reported at once the undersigned. DR. W. H. LEE, Veterinarian, Salmon Idaho. NOTICE CREDITORS. In the Probate court of Lemhi county, Ibaho. In the matter of the estate of Wil liam A. Rose, deceased. Notice is herein given by the un dersigned, administrator of the estate of William A. Rose, deceased* to the creditors of said estate to exhibit their claims, vvith the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to the administrator at his office the Brown block. Salmon, Idaho Dated January 11, 1922, E. H. CASTERL1N, Administrator of the Estate of Wil liam Rose.decea: ed. VVm. Kadletz Pioneer J. Drnjevich Shoeing & Company The old reliable firm alwavs trivins- nnnorom and painstaking service Iron Work done on cars and Trucks. ' an< - -—--- The Rolling Stone. osi.. » gathering no moss, a robing o ; ; a rally gravitates down hill.— .uleiphla Record. G-p'rinin » V.'Ion a w< : Roots as Large as Tress. As a general rule roots i>.v eh side of a tree to n didnn« (lie height of the tree itself. .MEMAN & 1NGLIS ; Brown Bldg.. Salmon, I MINING and METALL' ENGINEERS Mining, Metallurgical, Valus! Efficiency Examinations. Sr ! erence to Lemhi county ore and condition* HARMONY MINES LAB IES, Baker, Idaho GENERAL ASSAYING ai ' ANAYSIS. Ore testing for Metallugical Processes, ies equipped for testing by tration. cyanidation, anal* and flotation. Tests fur samples from 51b to 5 ton* and terms on application. BURLEIGH & GLI Henri J. Burleigh I Attorneys and Counsel* Pioneer Bldg. Si DR. E. L. HUBBARD Modern Dentistry in All Office Steele Bldg., I Res. Phone 50 S t _ NEW LOCATION OF MRS. JONES -SECOND HAND BUSH BlacksmithinrÄ'Ä» tomers. When in need off Household furniture of any kind cal .1°" for second hand artic ) and Lena , stre€ts - f° r many articles as good such as stoves, tables, ch** beds, bedding, tools, etc. W.H. LEE Veterinary Surgeon Salmon