Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, November 14, 1919, Page 6

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FUPUEUEt | COTTONWOOD CHRONICLE NADA ONONGHO SIDES LE BEA Lit NGO TLIO NENA ISS AMM hI GORE MESSED lcs : i . PATHE PHONOGRAPH The Pathephone has long been established as the leading talking machine in Europe, and is now rapidly es- tablishing itself in America, Pathe Saphire Ball. This exclusive feature consists of a highly polished ball-shaped jewel. A genuine saphire, used in place of sharp metal needles to play Pathe Records, This means long life to the records. THEO. F. SCHAECHER second-class mail matter. | COTTONWOOD DRAY AND TRANSFER LINE CAMPBELL & ROBBINS, PROPS. Light and Heavy Hauling Done on Short Notice Simon Bros. Wholesale and Retail BUTCHERS Dealers in Hides, Pelts, and all kinds of Poultry COTTONWOOD, IDAHO J| FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1919) GEORGE MEDVED Issued Every Friday and entered at| Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as Subscription one year Six months (Strictly in advance) INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS | Copy for change of ad must be hand- | ed in by Wednesday to insure change WHO PAYS. | Some 400,000 coal miners are | on strike in the bituminous coal | fields for a six hour, five day | week. As many more steel workers | are on strike for the “closed: , In New York drivers for' butchers and provision dealers| are on a strike for a 6-hour day and a scale running from $102 minimum to $245.50 a month. In Pacific coast cities, tailors; are on strike for a 45-hour week with a wage scale of $1.00 an) hour, including full pay for holi-| days when no work is performed Thousands of other strikes are | in progress all over the country. | Some of the strikes are justified | by conditions; others are politi-| cal and with the avowed inten- tion of confiscating property and | bringing on revolution. American workmen are losing Makes an ideal Christmas Gift Make your selection early And get what you want Nau’s Furniture Store COTTONW OOD im = - IDAHO Complete line of Funeral Furnishings carried Both Phones. Calls answered day or night “Take it from Me” * says the Good Judge Wise tobacco chewers long since got over the big-chew idea. A little chew of this real quality tobacco gives them better satisfaction and they find their chew- ing costs even less. With this class of tobacco, you don’t need a fresh chew so often and you find you’re saving part of your tobacco money. THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW put up in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacca 3ruton Company, 1107 Broadway. New-York City LDPE P Eee esteeete eseateatete neonate ateeteeatoaeteateatetiateateteateaetoateegetoatesgeds L. B. HILL, FLORIST, LEWISTON, IDAHO Flowers for all occasions. Artistically arranged. Direct to you by parcel post or express. Paper White Narcissus bulbs to grow in water are ready now, 10c each $1.00 per dozen ANDALL’S ae The Place To Get Those FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS and that: Ps sight of one great point: It is; their own job they are endanger-| ing, their own dinner buckets | which will be emptied, their own | homes which will suffer and) their own nation which will be, crippled. Following commands of radi- cal labor leaders in their present | program of destruction, is like) following the Pied Piper, the music is sweet but the end will be swift. Labor car go the limit, wreck industry and cause a_ panic. This will automatically settle the labor problem. The “open” or “closed” shop will be a thing of the past for men will be glad to work for anything they can get in any shop. Labor better think is over. At! present it is like a drunken sai- lor spending the savings of a} successful voyage and taking no | thought for tomorrow. Its leaders, who are not workers, but who draw high salaries from the toil of labor, are like the leeches who prey off the sai- | lors, when the crash comes, it is | the sailor and labor who pays. FOREST FIRE PREVENTION. For hundreds of years prior to the advent of the white man, the Indians, who were then the only custodians of our forests, pre- vented destructive fires by peri- odically setting surface fires, to remove the litter of dead leaves, twigs, underbrush, ete, thus preventing its accumulative to the extent of furnishing fuel for destructive or crown fires. That this method of prevent- ing destructive fires was suc- cessful is shown by the fact} that the forests taken over by the white man rarely bore scars of trees destroyed by fires. On the contrary, these forest in- cluded the Big Trees, thousands of years old; also the ordinary forests intact, with trees unin- jured by fire, hundreds of years old. Almost all of these trees, however, bore evidence, by their charred bark, of the surface-fir- ing practiced by the Indians. Notwithstanding the fire pro- tection afforded to the forests by the Indians, the white man, oblivious of the wisdom he might | have learned from the Indian, in- sists upon rigid suppression of | all forest fires, with the result that the accumlation of litter in afew years furnishes the fuel| for conflagrations which en- tirely destroy the forest. Captain Joseph A. Kitts of | Grass Valley, California, a civil | engineer of years experience in| the woods,, has prepared a plan which deals with the historical | facts of this situation, and eluci- dates the practical methods/| which might be adopted by our Government to protect our for- ests from destructive forest fires and encourage the refore- station of areas now bare of trees. Such reforestation is J} but is now largely delayed and essential to our timber supply, prevented by the . inefficiency 4\of our fire The cold days have come. Your dollar will show great purchasing power at our counters in winter wear Soedeateeteeteteateeteeteetoetoegectontentent A Complete Line of Snappy Dry Goods & afeefoafeefeatoateeteaten Seedectonteatoegecs Gents Furnishings In Winter Wear IN WINTER WEAR. A NEW “ 5 Soe es sestonte Sot “ Sree Seeded 1 cectontoe netted etetnreedetetededieetetetet So Soet petetetectectectectecteccteceeecececececeteee set seteeteteted “ % L ALL WOOL MEN'S CREPE DE CHINES hist — a ss a a AND BOY’S SUITS, OVER- GEORGETTES soe eee COATS, MACKINAWS, STAG eS 5 SATINS Soateese SHIRTS, SWEATERS; READY % 5 eeteet Metets TAFFETAS \ E D DE SILK POPLINS TO WEAR AND LABOR MA detetedeted Ste 5 SILK AND WOOL POPLIN SHOES WE STILL HAVE A NUMBER SILK AND COTTON POPLIN Sentence setedeteteteted FRENCH SERGE Sete Seat s COTTON SERGE PAIR OF SHOES TO GO AT A GINGHAMS SPECIAL PRICE, MEN’S, VOILES: Seeteeteeeateesententeent ws WOMEN’S BOYS AND GIRLS. fe etetetetetetetectetetectoctetedeereneeendeeende ented ge eeeeteneneteneeaete so sSeetestentecteogecteceetentontontestengentetenteatentesfoctecfectetoateatentectectectoetpate ahetteeseoteoteateeteeseesecteatenteeteesentecteatenteateetensestenenteeteeseesestentententeeseesecsete Ladies’ Ready to wear department snappy styles Suits, Coats and Overcoats We have what you want in the grocery line Leggett Mercantile Company AMELS expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos answers every cigarette Gesire you ever had! Camels give such universal delight, such unusual enjoyment and satisfaction you'll call them a cigarette revelation! If you'd like a cigarette that dces not leave any unpleasant cigarett aftertaste or unpleasant cigaretty odor, smoke Camels! If you hunger for a rich, mellow-mild cigarette that has all that desirable cigarette “body”—well, you get some Camels as quickly as you car! Camels’ expert blend makes all (hi5 Camsts are sold everywhere in scientifio- delightful quality possible. You: ally sealed packages of 20 cigarettes; or TSO! i a~ ten packages (200 cigarettes) in a glass- Ci nal test will REOve that Camel ine-paper-covered carton. We strongly igarettes are the only cigareitcs recommend this carton for the homes or j pommend ge) osrfan for the | you ever smoked that just seem made to meet your taste! You wi!l RJ. REYNOLDS: beamed COMPANY prefer them to either kind of to- wre bacco smoked straight! Compare Camels for quality and satisfaction with any cigarette in the world at any price! The Chronicle _ The Family Paper $2.00 Per Year Circulates among Farmers and Stockmen

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