Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, January 9, 1920, Page 4

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We carry a ssitale line of stat- 2 ionery, cigars and candies Theodore F. Schaecher Prescription Druggist COTTONWOOD 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 DRAY COTTONWOOD, IDAHO Have just received a new shipment of furniture and we invite you to inspect the new line The Prices are Right Nauw’s Furniture Store COTTONW OOD - . - IDAHO Complete line of Funeral Furnishings carried Both Phones. Calls answered day or night Drugs of all Kinds = We Have Just Finished Taking Inventory In going throught our stock we have found a great many articles that we can offer you at a GEORGE | MEDV ED Issued Every Friday and entered at Postoffice in Cottonwood, Idaho as second-class mail matter. Subse rigtioa one year $2.00 Six months 1.25 (Strictly in silvance) INDEPENDENT IN POLITICS Copy for change of ad must be hand- ed in by Wedne badly to insure change FRIDAY, JANU AR x 1920 THE CRASH IS COMING IN NEWSPAPER WORK. The census of print paper pro- duction and Consumption has been taken and it has been found that the big city papers use about 90 per cent of the print- paper that is used in America , and the country newspapers and small dailies use the other 10 per cent. Advertising business is good and the big dailies have in- i creased their product until they C A need that other 10 per cent and At 20 I D t | much besides, and they are buy- a C iscoun ing it up by contracting for the }entire output of the paper mills. That leaves the little fellows without paper to print on. | The entire production of print | paper for the coming year can- not be more than four billion one hundred million pounds and the hig dalies have most of that bought and have the cash ready to pay for it. The Chicago Tribune used 1,340,000 pounds of print in a single issue lately, and there are about sixty big dailies that consume it in very larg The Curtis | P ublishing company estimates its paper bill for 1920 to be seventeen million dollars. It is estimated that 2500 newspapers will suspend in the next few weeks, and congress is troubled about it. But congress has so many things to be troubl- ed about, it assigns its troubles to committees and goes on its way. That is where the paper shortage is resting now, and in the meantime, the crash is cut- ting closer to the door of the printing house all over the land. Great numbers of newspapers are raising the price of subscrip- tion 25 to 50 per cent, hoping to get paper at some price. The. News has a supply or CMUNINNNN000UH800000000 0000000 0000008480000 000A TOEEAER OATES TTT AGASEESSEASEEEEUA SESH E vim 2 Wowis a Good Time imately six months, and in the To plan the silo who have been needing meantime paper will have to be- bought as we can get hold of it. THE PAST SEASONS HAVE DEMONSTRATED THE NEED OF GREEN FEEDS FOR CATTLE OF ALL KINDS WHETHER DAIRY OR STOCK. THE SILO IS THE ONLY We invite you to look over our bargain tables as there is always something you can use at money saving prices quantities. Leggett Mercantile Co. Cottonwood, Idaho be extremely lucky if they are able to keep going at all. In the face of all this, we re- spectfully ask all subscribers to look at the date oppsite their name on this paper, and if your “It’s Like Finding Money” says the Good Judge When you take a little chew of this real quality tobacco, and the good tobacco taste begins to come. You'll find it keeps com- ing, too. The rich to- bacco taste lasts and lasts. You don’t have to take a fresh chew so often. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Pat Up In Two Styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco 0090900seseeeneeeeensenseneoneee ese esr etente ocean Sage eeectontoeteatet> GIFTS OF FLOWERS ; ALWAYS APPEALING—ALWAYS SATISFYING 4 Send Them Often To Your Friends z L. B. HILL, FLORIST, LEWISTON, IDAHO | R AN DALL’S SSN The Place To Get Those FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS and that——— ERESH PUT TARAIST tl CORN }was in Lewis county aan County Agent Wade. Here’s QUIREMENTS. AN ORDER PLACED NOW WILL ASSU ELIVERY IN > ~ | hoping our neighbor common- ee ee ees Os Say | not yet ended. 1| How about that New Year's The price is soaring every day SURE WAY AND IS AT THE SAME TIME THE CHEAPEST METHOD OF PROVID- | and all country newspapers will time has expired, we must ask ING GREEN FEED IN ABUNDANCE DURING THE FALL AND WINTER. you to please call at the office or mail us a check as_ we cannot longer send the paper unless it is paid for, Time was when it did not make so much difference whether the paper was paid for \ y | / at any particular time, but times — — have changed and the produc- se tion of a paper, calls for spot 4 | : cash, therefore we must ask you — a al ams to please look after the matter at once.—Genesee News. Idaho county is unfortunate in losing her county agent, John F. Finley, who recently resigned the position to take up agricult- | ea ams mani ome ural work for himself. He had a held the position only a few Tt] months—just long enough to ac- — = o ‘ quaint the farmers over there with the value of such an official | and it is presumed that the place rai ams i i SFESST CCHSTG! SECRESS PEATE RLURELERE LLRREALATAULUAAL FOPESEOACAGUCULOTAEUAN UARATALLANUAANANANY VOALLL will be refilled as soon as pos- i | sible. The Idaho county farm- - ~ to ; ers lost enough last season EN SSS SSS through the grasshopper pest Nw = — by alone to pay the salary of a cs 4 | farmer agent for many years, a ~ which loss could have been pre- |vented had the scourge fought in an organized way, COME IN AND LET US FIGURE OUT THE SIZE BEST SUITED FOR YOUR RE- FOR FILLING EARLY WITH FOUL OR LODGED GRAIN THAT MAY BE A TOTAI LOSS OTHERWISE. wealth may not be long without the services of an efficient coun- ty agent. Years of experience have taught Lewis county the great value to the farmer such a co-worker is.—Nezperce Herald. Hussman Lumber Co. Building Doctors, Consultation Free Probably the weatherman sent a little more snow to let the neo- ple know that the winter had; | Qe

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