Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, July 4, 1919, Page 4

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COTTONWOOD _ CHRONICLE Ee GEORGE ~“MEDVED: Bank : : b} i Issued. Every Friday and entered at ~ FERDINAND, IDAHO Postoffice in Cottonwood, idaho as second-class mail matter. A GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS DONE Subscription one year Six months Our facilities for serving you are the best, and we aim : : to satisfy every customer. Your account is invited (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS a te kc el E. M. EHRHARDT, President HENRY KUTHER, Vice-President — i . : Copy for change of ad must be hand- F. M. BIEKER, Cashier Is J. KINZER, Assistant Cashier ed in by Wednesday to insure change FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1919 metre rans reves opens swear erry see, BANKING CAMPAIGN A campaign of newspaper ad- vertising in behalf of the banks and trust companies with tne particular object of encourag- ing thrift was recently run in For Sale = Five acres of good timber and land Cleveland, Ohio. : , a ae Good Milk Cow Some of the wane va aa “Take our word for it, Nell, you’!l never spend time again a‘ campaign were most astonish- aki dresses, onc , * . Good Second Hand Cars ‘ ign One clued avenue shank making your own dr @ you’ve worn a Mina Taylor’ One heating stove was visited by three Assyrians | There are a lot of tremendously important and necessary things for every woman to do One oil stove who deposited over $30,000 in| nowadays. And the more she can save her time and energy to do those things, the more Some good furniture currency that they had buried in truly economical she is. ar Oe fact, stimu tes tala sient te The real thrift is in conserving time and vitality to the utmost, rather than figuring that SEE 0) idea of putting it in a bank. something has not cost much because you took your own time to make it. The enterprising banks of the Me Fegan Phones Ber Matte tue my ie Mina Taylor Dresses crease their business is to show “ . ” W. R. Rogers, : Cottonwood, Idaho the other fellow how to get True Thrift Dresses ahead first. In doing this they) Mina Taylor Dresses are the product of You’ll find them here, well cut, beautiful- = ee ee alah etd hog the ae gle skilled workers, trained to achieve as nearly ly finished, every dress full of charm. : ee Gnine gyont national pve as possible perfect garments. The mater- You'll find the pattern which will 2 in teaching the public the idea of |ials are of the best, the workmanship ex- please you, the color which you’ll like and Si m O n Bros. business and thrift. pert, the finished garment twice inspected. at a price which will be most moderate. The two most fertile sourses : of new savings deposits are the Wholesale and Retail : “stoiking bank’ of the foreign- B UT C H ER S er and the pay envelope of the prosperous wage earner. Prosperous industries and a Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry | thrifty people make a solid foun- : dation for any financial institu- tion. ’ COTTONWOOD, IDAHO a caaaapemmamacairmaey : 3 WOOL BRINGS HIGH PRICE | : Deis edi il sirnues for | Over 3,000,000 pounds of gov- | ee pee ernment wool was sold at auc- tion June 10 at Portland Colum- : . bia Basin Wool Warehouse. It ME INE : E was the most successful of three » sales and on a scoured wool basis brought higher prices than at | basi Boston i hee a hae : hen it is realized that Port- ‘ land is second only to Boston as Large Stock Always on Hand a wool center, the present de- : mand for wool, speaks well for the future of the wool industry . in western states. Bedsteads Library Tables Growers are realizing the ad- Paes vantage of grading up flocks Lounges Dining Tables whose fleeces command highest : | price. This coupled with mod-| Davenports Dressers j|ern grading and warehousing such as the Columbia Basin af- Dining Chairs Rocking Chairs |} Mords zives the grower every | penny there is in his wool clip. i All high-grade goods at lowest prices }}) T!8! WiLL BE CoaL SHORTAGE In the southeastern fields there is estimated 58,000,000! tons shortage of normal coal 3 production. Both Phones, Calls answered day or night United Mine Workers demand ; a 6-hour day, five days per week \ ; 7 or 5 hours production at pay of | 48 horus. Nau s Furniture Stor e€ They —demand. still further! nationalization of coal miners, | COTTONWOOD # IDAHO j/ which means applying govern-! —SLE SSS =< : 4; ment inefficiency to production. | 7 With the first signs of labor! ‘fH | trouble in July the railroads will) make a demand to take over the | | bulk of the supply. In the excessive and unusual} demands of the miners’ unions, the consumer is entirely over- looked. | It looks as if car shortage would accentuate coal shortage! thus adding to the burden of the | public. : PUBLIC KNOWS FACTS ma = rs ‘e}/ If radical labor leaders in the | ; Coeurd ’d Alenes should succeed | “Ma be bod h t Id » | : forcing a ohne Mey will have | | dealt labor an e state a sev- - LYDE nob y as 0. you, ere blow. ™, Employes and the public know says the Good Judge— that the mining industry as a v whole has labored under a great, The Modern fs Sinbad RE ASIAING PSII We have taken a notion to sail o’er the ocean _ of business in search of new trade With decks cleared for action,good grades theattraction and prices as low as are made--- This broadside we fire at the man in the mire , of doubt and a maze of confusion; Don’t fret and don’t fuss, buy yourlumber from us, Your satisfaction will be no illusion. | | i | Complete line of Funeral Furnishings carried The Place To Get Those FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS ——and that——— FRESH BUTTERKIST POP CORN The keynote of our success is our eternal effort to give every man a little better satisfaction than he can get elsewhere, regardless of whether his purchase amounts ‘to one dollar one thousand. ; Why ae good a handirep fos the ed six ments | co cos Ss : ue OC. 0. orders, aling . ane ~ nig theo prices and high cost of opera-/f If you have never traded here you still have some- satisfaction with a The mines have made great thing to learn about lumber satisfaction. Why be : : sacrifice rder 4 | - : small chew. It gives all, and have paid wages higher | Satisfied with second best when the best costs no more you a ite pemenee than prices of metal justified | t ste. tlasts andlasts. ut they recognized the fact that | ea * 174 s ° %”? | You don’t need a [fine ca pad et drome The Yard That Satisfies | fresh chew so often. correspond with drop in metal ; nH ! It saves TUN, RONEY € ro a who start trouble in E> | R - TOBACCO CHEW inl Range of any —— 4s ‘ i a 1s e, Can Only cause loss : “eer to labor. No strik be suc- sccaagaerrh een suit" naeraotens | Hussman Lumber Company RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco beactiastig toy 14 ea a to ‘“ . ”? EPEAT iy @ long fosomt sabacco ennmreste the situ The Home Builders

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