Cottonwood Chronicle Newspaper, February 13, 1920, Page 6

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GEORGE MEDVED We c carry a sodisiiete line of stat- § ionery, cigars and candies Drugs of all Kinds ae iret & —"* mail matter. ] Subscription one eyeat (Staietly in advance) Theodore F. Schaecher Prescription Druggist ed in by Wednesday to insure change | FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1920 fl] AN HONEST DAY’S WORK. = alk) Copy for change of ad must ie hand- = |= = When labor organizes for the: = and proper working conditions = it is entitled to the support of all right thinking people. When it organizes or uses its organizations to restrict produc- tion, it becomes a menace to the public welfare and merits uni- versal opposition and condemna- tion. The eight-hour day met with popular approval on the assump- tion that with the incentive of a) shorter day labor would work faithfully and diligently. It was not intended that labor | should at the same time either actually or relatively become less efficient or less productive. Had the public realized the product of a day’s labor would thereby be actually and relative- ly reduced, the eight-hour day would never have been establish- ed except for female labor. Labor is fed by the products of the raneh and farm. The ranch- er and farmer have no eight- hour day. Crops are neither sown, cutivated nor harvested on an eight-hour scale; nor do they grow and ripen by any artificial | formula, scale or rule, promulat- | ed by man. Why, as was aptly asked by a farmers organization, should a farmer be compelled to work 88 | hours a week to feed a city chap | receiving higher wages who) works but 44? Is it the divine duty of the farmer because he is not organized to feed the latte because he is? Organized labor will do well t change its course. i it ool tinues to abuse the eight-hou ij day by slacking on ie Tob w hile | | labor in other countries with! which we compete is producing to full capacity either our indus- | tries must topple and fall or the, eight-hour day must ge. In other words no arrange- ment can long prevail which does not maintain reciprocal re- lations between volume and cost of production, or which does not | contemplate and insure that for: a full day’s pay there shall be! rendered an honest day’s work. | We can succeed neither as an industrial nation or people if we 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 Have just received a new shipment of furniture and we invite you to inspect the new line The Prices are Right wl | Nau’s Furniture Store iW COTTONWOOD ° + = IDAEO Complete line of Funeral Furnishings carried “Tt’s Like Finding Money” says the Good Judge are going to spend one-third of | r our time in sleep, another in a| When re take a little rocking chair or limousine, and chew of this real quality the remaining third trying to ob- tobacco, and the good tain the greatest amount of pay | tobacco taste begins to for the least amount of work. come. No industry, no country and no people can long endure or sur- a uetninh ¢ 5 vive the blighting effect of such | + ag reggae go an economic antithesis. 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 Federal Food Administrator Williams informs us that if a family destitute of clothing Nov. | 28 had waited until February, | they could have saved $8.81 in| getting outfitted. The man’s | outfit dropped from $88.80 to RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco $82.95 and the woman's from} bs ‘ ine-cu bacco $120.90 to $112.55. We suspect} W-B CUT is a long fin t to that Williams is talking for| “psychological effect’ rather! eae cl | than on the basis of any real | data. But the sad thought oc-| " gi SHSSOGS HOSS HOSSSES | curs, if many people had not| GIFTS OF FLOWERS ALWAYS APPEALING—ALWAYS SATISFYING Send Them Often To Your Friends L. B. HILL, FLORIST, LEWISTON, IDAHO bought clothing last November | they would have no need now | for either the clothing or the} $8.81. JOBS SCARCER. Reports from all of the big in-| fi | dustrial centers are to the effect | that no longer are men being} =| added to payrolls for the mere} pleasure of having a long list. The lines that had the big boom | | during the war are getting back} J/on a normal basis. Production} M]}is what counts. The big pay} for doing nothing is a thing of | the past. The Place To Get Those FRESH ROASTED PEANUTS ——and that——— FRESH SeeTERKIST. POP CORN Guard y your health these days} purpose of obtaining a fair wage SUNN. UHURU AAU SRG vali SS T= Se | COTTONWOOD | Sane | | Some Men Can’t See Straight A BOARD MAY BE HALF AN INCH WIDER OR QUARTER OF AN INCH THICKER ATONE END THAN ATTHE OTHER, YET THEY CAN'T SEE THE DIFFERENCE. THEY DISCOVER THE DIFFER- ENCE, HOWEVER, WHEN THEY COME TO USE THE LUMBER. THEN THEY KICK. IF YOU WOULD AVOID LUMBER OF THIS KIND, BUY FROM Us. WE ARE THE MOST PARTICULAR PEOPLE IN THE COUNTRY ABOUT GOOD MILL WORK. OUR MILL WORK IS THE BEST AND OUR GRADES ARE UNIFORM SO YOU ARE NOT TAKING ANY CHANCES WHEN YOU BUY YOUR LUMBER HERE. LET US MAKE YOU AN ESTIMATE ON WHATEVER YOU WANT. Hussman Lumber Co. “Home Builders” : LTE ~UNIUUOUOUAENOSUNOUONAONACONOELUOEOAEEUAAEAOUEESOEAEROTENAA AAA WE ARE READY Now to furnish your spring and summer need at a great money saving on last year’s buy. Merchandise has advanced at least 30% above last year’s prices. A SNAPPY LINE OF SPRING SILKS VALUED AT $2.50, $3, $3.50 $4 AT A 20 PER CENT DISCOUNT MUNSING WEAR AT A GREAT REDUCED PRICE COTTON POPLIN In Assorted shades $1.00 PER YARD SHOES! SHOES! English walking, tan and black— and ten other up-to-date lasts in men’s and boy's at 20 P. C. Off RUBBER BOOTS—Men’s boys’ at 10 Per Cent Discount MACKINAWS Outing Flannels 28',¢, 35¢ and 40¢ GINGHAMS AT 35¢e, 40¢ AND 45¢ PRECALES Dark and Light 40c and 45¢ WOOL GOODS and ae $15.00 values for ........ .....10.00 by rd paaens for ; “0 $12.50 values for 10.00 50 Serge for 25 RA c: : $4.00 French Serge 3.00 $15.50 values for 11.50 $4.00 Suiting for 3.00 These are real values. There STAG SHIRTS has been a great advance of wool goods. $11.00 all wool for ... 7.50 Poultry Pays---make them lay, feed ground bone, oyster shell and grit. Leggett Mercantile Co. We can supply your wants, ETTORE TEU | ez a ~~

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