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Image provided by: New York State Library
'' f . : ' ■ > . S. . ' 2 ; ‘» ' ^ ^ ' •--■r ' - ^ - m - ^ - ^ i H r ^ - ^ # ^ ■ 4 —<i| r ^ ' y r f ^ '. 4, t ;' o iSALASIAJ^CA IXQUliCEK, SALAMANCA, N. Y., EEIDAY, NO vEilESB 21,1919. DAKOTA FLOUR The BEST at a Reasonable Price 1-2 Sack - - $1.85 y T t T Y T t T T T T T Y Y Y Y Y t Y Y Y t 4 4 t I I t I I 4 4 I Y ? 4 Y Y Y Y Y Y Full Size Bars Laundry Soap 4 for 25c. The Harrington-W am Company SP E C IA L F O R W E E K E N D Home Dressed Pig Pork P o r k Loin R o a s t 32c. F resh H a m , 8 to 10 Ib av. 30c. NEW YOnK NEWS ITEM BRIEF, Paragraphs of Interest toRead» ers of Empire State. P o r k Sh. R o a s t P o r k Chops, sm a ll P o r k Shoulder Sliced, F resh Pigs* F e e t F resh Side P o r k Sirloin S teak Round S teak H a m b u rg S teak 28c. 35c. 30c. 08c. 28c. 30c. 28c. 20c. Ahrens Market The Place that Satisfies. Subscribe how for the Inquirer Big Bargains in Shoe Repairing Facilities acquired by the purchase of new and up-to-date machinery enables us to make big reductions in the price of shoe repairing. OUR SCALE OF PRICES Men’s half sole and heels, sewed or n ailed ................. $1.35 With Rubber Heels, $1.40 Men’s Rubber H e e ls ........................................................ 40c Men’s half sole, sewed or n a iled ................................... $1.00 Ladies’ half sole and heel, sewed or nailed ............... $1.00 Rubber H e e ls ..................................................................... 35c Leather Heels, two pairs, ......... 35c Or one pair .......... 20c All other work reasonable and guaranteed. Return it if not satisfied and we will *'make it right” PERRY BROTHERS Y Y Y Y Y Y Y I I I I Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y I 4 Y Y Interesting News of All Kind Gath ered From Various Points In the ^tate and So Reduced in Size That it Will Appeal to Ail Classes of Readers. ■Rochester is still $8,200,945 under ( the debt limit. Pittsford will form a post of the American Legion. The third hear was shot last week in Cattaraugus county. Night school has, been opened at Mt. Morris for foreigners. Geneva factories are securing aerial photographs of t;heir plants. Coming has a surplus of $ 15,645 on hand at the close of its fiscal year Trappers in the vicinity cf Canan daigua report a big run of skunk this fall. Definite announcement »has been made that there will he no Red Cross drive in Rochester. Salamanca’s city budget will he in creased $9,000 if the prospective raises are adhered to. Over 800 former service men of Tompkins county were in the Armls tice day parade at Ithaca. Pay of substitute teachers was in creased from $3 to $3.50 a day by the board of education of Dunkirk. Prunes lasted just 40 minutes at the sale of army food in Jamestown. Ten thousand pounds were disposed of. Military training for the older boys at Industry was announced at a meet ing of the board of managers of the school. Employes of the Papec Machine company of Shortsville received a 5 per cent bonus in their last pay em velopes. The 42d annual meeting of the State Dairymen’s association will meet at the experiment station in Geneva, Nov. 18, 19 and 2'0. Supreme Court Justice Edward K. Emery died in Buffalo after an illness of several weeks. He was born at East Aurora in 1851. The Keeley institute in White Plains is about to close. Prohibition has brought about a shortage in iha crop of inebriates. Federal agents are , investigating the circulation of radical literature among the industrial workers in the Tonawahdas. Geneva Glass Products company announces that it will shortly operate on a a4-hour schedifle with three shifts of men. Lakemont grange at Dundee favors the Townsend highway bill and is op posed to the health insurance meas ure in the legislature. Business men . of Lockport sub scribed to $158,000 worth of stock of the new housing company in the first two days of soliciting. Monroe’s county farm bureau has thrown the weight of its influence into the scale to aid the poultry breeder to produce the superhen. Orleans comity supervisors recom mend that a spur of route*No. 3i>, 3^^ milos of high between Middleport and Medina be completed with federal aid. The old house at 63 Prince street, New Yorkj that sheltered James Mon roe in his declining years, and in which he dibd, will go under the ham mier. Mrs. B, R, Wakepia-n of Hornell has been elected a member of the advis ory board of the state organization of the Daughters of the American Revo lution. Niagara county Baptist churches are to combine in an effort to combat the Bolsheviki doctrine, anarchy and similar destructive tendencies of the times. Figures made public by Herbert S. Sjsson, state excise commissioner, show that 248 excise licenses were surrendered throughout the state on Nov, 1 , Consolidation of ’the four school districts in Palmyra is being consid- I ered and a public meeting will^e call- ^ • 4* 10 ^ soon to authorize the making of a union district. Elmore C. Greene of the ^ Iroquois \otel of Buffalo was elected president of the New York Hotel Men’s associa tion at the third annual state conven tion in New*York. Edgar A. Higgins of Avoca, N, Y., Steuben county, wellknown in the state as a newspaper editor and hor- ticultiiralist died at Wayland, N. Y. He was 70 years old. Edward P. Boyle of New York has been appointed by Governor Smith as chairman of the state industrial com mission to fill the vacancy caused by the recent death of John Mitchell. At a meeting of University of Roch ester alumni. President Rush Rhees, announced the gift to the uriiversitv of $100,000 by George Eastman. A campaign is on to make the fund $ 1 ,- 0fi0,<KM>. • ‘ With the prospect of a ’ w factory Churchville will have to all elec tricity ^nd will hold a spe . election to authorize the trustees .o raise the money and make the necessary in- atallation. There is plenty of gas, it is dafmed. % Proprietors of the Goodyear Repair Shops, X 24 Main Street and 11 Atlantic Street Y f X Y Y Salamanca Real Estate 4 4 Y Y Y Y t X Y X Y Y IS GETTING BETTER ALL THE TIME YOU CAN MAKE NO M ISTAK E IN B U Y IN G IT Let us tell you about it. The Hazard-Rhodes Co. 52 Main St. Phone 623 i i 4 I 4 4 Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y ❖ Y Y Y Y Y Y ❖ I* EFFICIENCY 4 IN THE Reconstniction Period Let us Reconstruct your old Shoes and Boots. We specialize in soleing and refinishing alll kinds of Foot wear in Rubber or Leather. Conserve leather. Do not throw your shoes away. SHOES MADE TO ORDER. CARBONE BROTHERS, Props. I Shoe Doctors lOAtlantk St. 4 \When loves dies marriage between unhappy couples become immoral in timacy,” said Rabbi Sidney B. Ckud- stein, in an address to the Free agogue in New York. He attacked the New York state divorce law as an instrument that make^ a mockery of marriage. With the appointment of Walter McMahon as postmaster of Sonyea the business of Mt. Morris postoffice has been curtailed and an extra clerk on duty h'as been let go. Sonyea post- office was discontinued several years ago, but has now been put into com mission again. Dr. Algernon S. Crapsey of Roches^ ter has resigned as parole agent of the State Agricultural and Industrial School at Industry, a position which he has held for six years. He gives as his reason that the place should be held by a younger man. It pays $ 1,200 a year. ’ , A controversy developed at the con ference of New York State JBoresterSi w h p Col. H. S. Graves, chief of the United States Forest service, urged restrictions on lumbermen and pri vate owners if they are to receive aid from taxpayers in reforestration, in a convention at Syracuse. Appointment of John E. Dempsey as a district deputy in the New York office of the state income tax bureau was announced by CJomptroller Trav is Ither appointments included T. J. Harding of Yonkers, Fred J. Ford Of Syracuse and B. R. Carey of Sche nectady, all as senior auditors. Fifty natural gas companies operat ing in the western and southwestern sections of New York state are asked in a resolution adopted by the upstate public service commission to conserve the natural gas supply and to pre vent the use of gas for fuel furnaces orginally constructed for coal. Constitutionality of the so-called “beauty clause” amendment of 1916 to the New York workmen's compen sation laws permitting awards for fa cial or head disfigurements, was up held by the supreme court in deciding appeals brought by three concerns from awards made under the act. Strikes during October in New York state resulted in a 2 per cent reduc tion in the number of factory work ers as compared with September, the state industrial commission an nounced. The largest reductions were in iron and steel production, steel ships, musical instruments, printing, women’s hats and canning. Extension of housing facilities at public institutions and in cities throughout the state as a means of protecting health and morals, and promoting social and economic prog ress was urged in the annual report of Rev. Augustine M. O’Neill of Roch ester, president of the New York State Conference of Charities and Correc tions at Syracuse, Two prohibition enforcement bills will be introduced at the coming ses sion of the state l^^gislature, William H. Anderson, state superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League announced in New York. The first will he iden tical with the measure passed by con gress as are necessary to adapt it to }he machinery of the state govern ment. The ^ c o n d will be similar to the Anti-Saloon League’s own bill last winter with \the modifications and im- p r o v ^ ^ s suggested experience.” I t iT ^ n o u S c e J ^ y ^ Le\ Roy” Ga zette-News that its subscription rate will be increased from $1,50 a year to. $2 on Dec. 1 owing to the iftgher cost of everything entering into the pub lication of a newspaper. “The pub lisher,” the Gazette-News says, “is paying today ror print paper $160 per ton, as against $45 per ton'in 1915, or an increase of 250 per cent and those most familiar with conditions predict that this grade' of paper will go to $200 per ton before Jan 1.” If present plans materialize AJden will beconie a center for pure bred Holstein cattle. Cattlemen of West ern New York have been obliged to consign their stock, which is for sale, either to Liverpool o r ’ Brattleboro. But with the increase in the interest in high grade stock there is a demand for a local sales center. To accom plish this the enclosed shed belonging to the local grange has been secured )y the Alden Sale and Pedigree Cat- ;le Co., which hold its fi^rst sale on Dec. 11. SENEAR & GARDNER WE ARE HOW SHOW- . IKG OUR FALL LINE OF ’ Underwear Hosiery Suede Gloves and “Ready-to-Wear” Hats For Ladles, Misses, Children New Dinnerware in American, English and Japan Makes Pyrex & Fry Glassware for Baking and Cooking McCalls Patterns The Larldn Electric Co. 25-27 CLINTON ST— PHONE 300-bt Senear & Gardner 97 Main St. As Good as Ever Bedell Perfecto Cigars Made by The A. D. Bedell Co. Salamanca, N. Y. Tested and Approved by th e Good H o u s e k e e p ing M a g a z ine. The ABC Super Electric Cabinet AMERICA'S LEAD- ING WASHER Before purchasing YOUR electric washer, don^t fail to let us dem onstrate the ABC to you, either here or in your own home. We be lieve youTl quickly rea lize why the manufac turers of this remark able machine have the largest output of elec tric and power washing machines in the world. FEATURES. Swinging Wringer— no washer is colnplete without it. Most efficient washing principle. Wash es clothes quickest. Most silent-running. The only absolutely safe washer; no danger of injury to children. Most simple in construction. Most at'^ tractive in appearance. Sold On E a s y P a y m e n ts ^N U F A C t U R E D IN PEO R lA r iLLj | Y f ij> > m ' ■■ ■ We Have Just Had Placed With Us A M o d e m ( Eight Room Home EAST SALAMANCA « a The owner is leaving Town and wishes to dis pose of the place. A RARE BUY FOR SOMEONE If interested, get in touch with KAMMIRE REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 86 Main St. Phone 572 ■ 4 . T W. H. HAZARD, Pres. P. W. KING, Treas. GEO. H. STEWART, Vice Pre». R, E. O’BRIEN, Secy. Concrete for Permanence’ Salamaiica Double Wall (INCORPORATED) Concrete Construction of Houses, Garages Warehouses, Walks, Etc. Dealers in Lehigh Cement, Spiii^ville Sand and Gravel Plaster, lim e, Etc. Ben Phone 246. 52 UNDEN STREET X , A ,