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o PAGE SEX SALAMANCA INQUIRER, SALAMANCA, N. Y., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21,1910. Don’t Prod Your LiYor to Action NR Ovareomos Biliousness, Coiysfipa- tion, Sick Headache, Quickly. No Griping or Pain. Guaranteed. Hie organa of digestion, assimilai and elimination—^the stomach. liver and bowels—^are closely allied, ana the prop.er action of any of theso organs is largely dependent upon the (Correct functioning of all the others. \‘Whipping\ your liver into action! ■witij calomel or forcing your bowels with irritating laxatives or strong cathartics is a great mistake. A bet ter, safer plan is strengthening and toning the whole digestive and elimina tive system with Nature’s Remedy (NR Tablets), which not only brings Itomediate relief, but genuine a n d last ing benefit. It acts on the stomach, &yer, bowels and kidneys, .improves digestion and assimilation, overcomes biliousness, corrects constipation and «[uickly relieves sick headache. Get your system thoroughly cleansed and purified for once; stomach, liver and bowels working together in vig orous harmony, and you will not have to- take medicine eveiy day—^just take one NR Tablet occasionally to keep your\ system in good condition and al ways feel your best. Remember it is easier and cheaper to keep well than it is to get well. Get a 25c box and try it with the understanding th a t i t m ust give you greater relief and benefit than any bowel or liver medicine you ever used ^ no pay. N a t u r e ’s R e m e d y (NR Tablets) is sold, guaranteed and recommended by your druggist. Carl J. Nies, Druggist Better than Pills _G|ET A For Uver nis. 25c Box Loose Leaf Ledgers and Office Supplies at the Inquirer DON’T SUFFER! If you have a Cold, Rheu matism, Lumbago or any kindred troubles, try a Mineral Bath at the NEW EAGLE HOTEL PHONE 504-W D. M. Washburn New Eagle Hotel, 467 E. State St. Keogh Grocery Co. ' O Lard . .......... 40c Compound.............................30c 6 Boxes M atches ................ 35c 'Coffee . ..................... 40c & 45c TOILET PAPER ’6 Rolls f o r ......................... 25c •3 Rolls f o r ................ i . . . . 25c 2 Rolls f o r ........................... 25c FULL LINE OF VEGETABLES AND FRUIT Limpa Bread—Kringlers Swede Rye^—Coffee Cakes and Clark’s Fried Cakes ON RECORD FOR SHORTER HOURS Textile Workers Make Declara tion, Without Favoring Direct Action. SOUTH NOT READY FOR MOVE QUALITY AND SERVICE Phone^—185 — We Deliver Keogh Grocery Co. i i i Mulqueen & Son C e n t ’s Furnishing Yong’s Hats and Caps Nothing Better Big line of SWEATERS The Price is Right Overalls and Jumpers • Big line of GLOVES and MITTS See us for your Mufflers and Ties^. Big line to‘ select from. UNDERWEAR We have a big line. Let us show you. Open evenings till 8 p. m. _We can save you money on Everything 10 Main St. Look Us Up Convention Felt That More Thorough Organization In That Section is Necessary Before Success is Possible—Other Labor News. Much business of importance to the organization was transacted at the ses sion at Baltimore of the annual con vention of the International Textile Workers. The convention adopted a resolution favoring the 44-hour week, but, without taking any action looking to its enforcement, referred the reso lution to the executive council. It was decided to concentrate efforts in the South to more thoroughly or ganizing the textile workers. It de veloped that opposition to the 44-hour week resolution came from southern delegates who pointed out that in many places in the South there was in operation a 54-hour and in some cases a 64-hour week. An increase of 25 per cent in the pay and expense allowance of the gen eral ofBcers and organizers was voted! by the convention. The per capita tax was increased from 30 to 35 cents and initiation fees also were raised. Delegates to next year’s convention of the American Federation of Labor were elected.\ GENERAL LABOR NEWS TriHEATtN LOCKOUT IN SrAl.N Congress of Employers Considers Shutdown of All industries as Pro test Against Unrest. i More than 1,000,000 persons through out Spain will be thrown out of em ployment if the decision of the con gress of Spanish employers at Barce lona, declaring for a lockout, be car ried out. In Barcelona alone 200,000 men,and women will be affected by the decision. Governmental authorities are con cerned over the situation and are ex pected to exert every influence to in duce the manufacturers to reconsider their action. It is declared that if the general lockout be put into effect every factory in Spain of any importance will be closed. Members of the employers’ congress Shy the decision was taken as a pro test against industrial unrest in Spain. IN OTHER FIELDS OF LABOR New Orleans has more than 1,000 factories. New Orleans has the largest ma hogany manufacturing plant in the world. M embers of the various labor unions n Houston, Texas, have established a co-operative store. Danish co-operative trade unions have a membership of 255,000, an in crease of 93 per cent in two years. Most of the factories in Russia have been transferred to the control of the workers. A salary increase of 15 per cent has been awarded 2,500 wreckers, con crete workers, excavators and build- ng laborers of St. Louis, it was an nounced. Seventy-five miscellaneous union men struck at the Champion Engineer- ng company’s plant, Kenton, O., tying up production. They demand union recognition. The plant was picketed. Charging that wealthy Chicago wom en refuse to give their maids enough to eat and make butlers work long hours, housem aids' a n d other dom estic employees took steps to organize a union. Demand that women be represented' equally with men in all future interna tional labor conferences called’ under the treaty of Versailles was made at the international congress of working women at Washington. A strike by editors of the Barcelona (Spain) new spapers is threatened. T h e proprietors of some of the newspa pers have refused the editors’ dem a n d s and the writers affected are threaten ing to walk out. Prospects of labor difficulties. In volving car men of the Washington Railway and Electric company, who some time ago made demands for a pay raise, averaging 50 per cent, w e re dispelled when the Employees’ union announced that, for the time being, it has accepted the 5 cents an hour in crease offered by the company. Only 60 per cent of the silver mines of Mexico, once the leading producer of silver in the world, are being worked, it is revealed in the report of a commission of mining men which has assembled in Mexico City to con fer with the department of industry, commerce and labor regarding methods which may be employed to increase the production of the metal. The longshoremen’s strike at New York, on October 29 tied up 625 ves sels, said by shipping men to be the largest number ever recorded, in the port on a single day. Of ihe 540 steamships, 53 are passenger vessels, some of them the largest liners afloat. The daily cost of the tieup Was esti- ■ mated at more than $1,500,000 in de murrage alone. The Building Laborers’ union, com posed of 600 hodcarriers, was expelled from the D enver Building Trades coun cil, and other union men of the coun cil were authorized to work with non union laborers until, a new laborers’ union has been formed. Expulsion was voted because the laborers re fused to accept a compromise increase of 50 cents a day, the award of an ar bitration board composed of the Build ing Trades council and representatives of the Master Builders’ association. The men asked $1 a day increase. Fourteen thousand boilermakers joined the general strike of shipyard w o rkers, who have been out since Oc tober 1, according to an announcement at the headquarters of the Metal Trades council at New York. The men demand a 44-hour week and $1 i hour. About 200 clerks of the Maritime Underwriting agency at New York went out on strike. The men demand a 30 per cent increase in salary, an eight-hour day and the privilege of smoking in office hours. Salaries are said by the strikers to range from $io It week to $40. A new diamond field is reported to have been found in the gold coast region of South Africa. The U n ited States employm ent bu reau in M ilwaukee announces th a t it has more jobs than there are workers. Three-fourths of all the coal of the world is being mineij* in eight-hour shifts. More than 27,000,000 tons of coal was mined in coal mines of Japan dur ing the last year. Total wages and salaries paid by the United States Steel corporation in 1918, $452,663,524. From $58 to $61 per week is the average wage being received by bread makers in the United States. Steam shovel, drag line and cable- way workers in Canada are receiving $212 per month. The approximate number of steel employees affected by the strike in America is 600,000. An agreement on increased pay for postal employees was reached by the .senate and house conferees, a gradu ated scale ranging from $100 to $200 annually for general employees, with smaller increases for the aerial mail seiwice, being approved. A general strike of men employed in the building trades at Lille, France, has been declared, higher wages and better working conditions being de manded. Eighty thousand persons have been thrown out of employment by the walkout. The adoption by the Qugtrry Work ers’ International Association of North America of a new wage agreement with the principal manufacturers and* producers Of the country was an nounced at Barre; Vt. The agreement was prepared at a conference of em ployers and union representatives. Nearly 1,800 workers walked out at the South Chicago Shipbuilding com pany’s plant, their leaders declaring the company had failed to' Kve up to a promise to increase wages from 80' cents to $l' an hour. Thirty-five work ers quit at the Kraft Ship Repair com pany. The strike- in the luoaaber and l«g^ ging camps- o f northern- Mklio, western. Montana and eastern Washington and Oregon, instituted by the Industrial Workers ©f the World,, was called off at a meeting of Spokane local. No. 500, according to a report received* at Spokane. * The fight for higher wages- and shorter hours, which has been waged in Europe since the war, has atso ex tended to Sweden. One strike- after another has taken place and negotia tions concerning new stipulations with regard' to wages are- being carried on in many professions. Wages outran tlte- cost of lying in. New York state during the month of September, according to the monthly report of the industrial commission.. For September the commission found wages of factory workers were 96 per cent higher than in 1914, while food prices were 90 per cent higher. Making a demand of $40 a week, more than 1,000 fish market employees went on strike at New York, affecting 40 firms. Among the strikers are the weighers, handlers, checkers and sales men, who have been getting $25 a week. It was said six firms have agreed to pay the increased wages. The number of Belgian laborers out of work, which, at the time of the ar mistice was 800,000, has been redmied to 200,0(K), while exports have reached one-fourth the pre-war total, M. Jas- par, minister of economic affairs, has told the chamber of deputies. He also said that Germany had wanted to send an army of German workers to restore the destroyed regions, but that he had refused. All iron-working industries in Bou logne, France, shut down as the re sult of refusal of one workman to join the Iron Workers’ union. The trouble began with a partial strike in one of the least important works, some of the employees walking out because one '•vorkrnan refused to join the union. The SE^ecretary of the union dem anded this m a n ’s discharge, w h ich the m a n a ger refused. Thereupon a genera! st'-ike in the iron trade was declared. Twenty-five thousand' cigarmakers and packers returned to work at New York, ending the strike which has been in progress 20 weeks. By a 7 to 1 vote, the workers accepted a 10 per cent wage increase and a compromise agreement leaving employers the “hire and fire\ right, with factory commit tees free to In.sure against unfair dis crimination. An average wage in crease of 171^ per cent was originally demanded. The membership of the Mine Work ers’ union in Germany has risen from 101,986 before the outbreak of the war, to 422,160. i I Serving | I Thanksgiving | |. j I Dinner I I I I Correctly | I The good housekeeper is as. | I the Thanks- | I giving dinner is served as she i I is of the dinner itself. Her | I table is brilliant with silver and | I glass. Her equipment is'com- | I plete for ‘each course from | I soup to nuts and raisins. | I . - 1 I The extensive stocks of dining- | I room equipment at Norton’s | I meet fully your needs in sil- | I verware, cut glass, cutlery and f I baking dishes, in quality that | I will be a source of family 1 I pride. | I Chests of silver ........................ | I .................... $21.00 to $250.00 I I Casseroles. . . .$5.50 to $10.00 | I Baking dishes $6.50 to $11.00 | I Percolators ....5 . 5 0 to $17.50 j I Silver platters $12.00 to $20.00 | I Vegetable dishes ...................... 1 I ........................ $12.00 to $20.00 j I Teaspoons, doz. $4.00 to $24.00 | I Dinner forks, doz ............ | I ........................ $6.00 to $48.00 I I Cut Glass goblets ...................... | I ........................ $3.00 to $14.00 I i Cut Glass nappies ...................... § I ............. ............... $.50 to $4.50 I I Cheese and Cracker dishes . . . 1 j ........................ $1.75 to $10.00 I I V a s e s ................. $.35 to $20.00 | I Carving sets . . .$5.00 to $8.50 1 O V E R C O A T S Now is the time to place your order for an Overcoat for Fall or Winter Wear. We have a fine line of both medium and heavy weights at prices which you cannot afford to overlook when buying. • Tom Baird Custom Tailor 78 MAIN ST. PHONE 323-R If It’s Tailorings—^Bring It To Us. f r I E. F. Norton Co. | I Incorporated 1 I JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS | I STATIONERY— KODAKS | i 85 Main St. f 1 “The Hallmark Store” 1 § Agent for Brooks Automatic | j Phonograph. | liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuniiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiisiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii »> t T t T r t V ? V t Try Our Home Cured HAMS and BACON ♦ 5 * t t t V T t r T t T Y t Y Y and Home Made LARD and BOLOGNA Sanders Market 115 Main St. ❖ Y Y Y T Y i Y Y Y Y Y t I Y ll- ’f ❖ Y T t TRY Chase & Sanborn’s Teas and Coffees AT- Walrath-Stevens Co. 27 Main S t P. W. King KING R. E. O’Brien O’BRIEN Desirable Elast Eind Building Lots CENTRAL AVENUE Good House, 7 rooms and bath, corner lot CENTRAL AVENUE Small Store, living rooms up stairs, large lot $2700 1800 Beil Phone 246 52 Linden St. T H ^ UTNlVBR&Alr CAJft The Ford Touring Car is literally the pioneer in the solution of the Good Roads probleni, because three million or more in operation brought up to the millions of America the necessity of good roads if quick transportation at low expense was to be enjoyed. The simplicity of the Ford car, its stability in construction, the famous heat-treated Vanadium steel with its marvelous strength and flexibility, the low cost o f operation and maintaiance, its ease in operation, all have made the Ford car the great favorite in every land in the world. It’s the one car that always satisfies and serves. A utilily beyond question that alt can afford. We sell them and will be pleased to have your order. Don’t delay, because the demand is heavy all the time. We have almost everything in rnotos- car accessories, carry the genuine'Ford Parts, and assure the best in mechanical repair wor!^. W .A .a a s e 'J r V t i j t