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i : a f 4 ms “, PK“! (“vi“y'xfi‘ IW‘W? $736” CEPORT DAILY JOURNAT . Tt rng. 4 m\g g THURSDAY, JULY 27, 1905. fl on aam se LOCKI’ORT JOURNAL Published by £GGKBORT JOURNAL COMPANY. Journal Building, 91 Main St. K. & BOWEN, do I» SHELOON, JR. seman SUBSCEBIPTION RATHS, fling“! COPY, caa ea en a 66 e 66 6+ §. 101 Bingls copy, one Si Hinglo coDy, 81x scree eens LBJ Hinglo cOpY, O00 YOMPc. eer er ar ece. A Abpvoxmemme ratus, Advortlaing Hatos mado known at Bus- Office, Bubseribore who fall to receive the Journat regularly wilf confer a favor by reporting the fact to the Business Uffice; Lookport, N, Y‘ Enterm at the postofMice at Lock york N. Y., as socond«classa matter, Home 361-TELEPHONES-Ball 361, \W“ me stomine recres vs WORSE BEFUDBLED. The Union-Sun proceeds to make an- other bad mess In ito gemi«lccal, geral» oditorig! defonge of Its attempt fo fool the people Into belteving that the power company had won all it sousht to win in the defense of the Injunction pro- ceedings brought in the cace of Tmma | t. Staunton agatast the Niagara, Locks port & Ontario Power Company of this Coe - comment on its defense is unBccossary as It confining ovi dence that is plain to anyone 0° average In« | telligenee that the defense i= as bad as the original onumvor to tsol tha peo mu tot it suffice to call attan'xon to the fact that the Unlon«Sun claims now f that It dld mot know on Tuesday af« ternoon when if wont to press that leave had beon granted by Eustice Ken« [ cfick to ronew the application, | first application | It dil know that the had heen dlainfesed because of a techs nical etrop tn the mmmnor of seeviee af notlee of application on the defendant | company, Inasmuch as It appears | from court records that the leave to renes was granted at the mune time that the triginal application was denifed, this oversight on the part of tko Union« Sun's Informant In Builfalo, or else« where, appours rather strange, My, Thompson, acting for the plain- \H% did propate now papers {immedi- ately mnd sorved them Monday after» woot, dut that is not the point, is that the Union«Sun attenmipted to have Its tenders belfere that the Injunction hud boen finally vacated. That, at least, was the construction the readers appear to have placed on the story the Tnlon«Hun told \The Unilon«Sun quotes the Buffalo Nows as supporting Its every claim In its Monday afternoon Issue. 'The News Appears to have been ond 0\ the nows- papors whose reporter aceopted the typewritten statement which Is af- loged sto have been prepived by the meh who claimed that a great victory had boom won by and for the power} company, without vorll’ylhg the report frora the court records in the cuse, Che Buffs Commeorclil, It is said, wis handed ona of these sume state«= ments, but Its reporter toot paing to congult the court minutes and thus forracd the truth as It was told In tha paper the same afternoon the Union» Cun and the News published their at« leged inopltad reports. Possibly the Urion-Hun was lod into} ofror, although that fact does not ex=t cuss the intemperate manaer In which it reported the affair to is vreadora The Buffalo Nows appears to have ac« tually been misled, as stated, through} i bit of reportorlal carelessness which will happon in the beat rogw ated news= | papor ofllces aonee In a white. Aroto tho Uniin-«Sun charge that Mr Thompson is tryling to block the efforts of the power company to build & tranamisston fne to this elty: dt bs true that ad ian Lawyer omploved to pro- tect the Interests of i elleut, ha is pere forming the service he is pud to do and which ho would be cengurgble be- youd measure If he did not do, [t da «iso true that im a representa» tive of the people of this elty and ase combly diatrict he opposed the Leggett and legislation proposed last winter mad helped defeat ft and has not the | t The] Union«Sun dodges the {issue. The point f with tho power company As expresso by their otgan as to their ants being fo. be benefit of this cliy? As assemblyman Mr. Thompson be \rves he acted in the interest of the people as against the interest of th power company and as an attorney h «rserves the right to practice his pro without to th 'nfon-SBun op anyons clse except hi: Ment and the wart. * CHASING DREAMS. On Wednesday the Journal made lo cul note of the fret that some peopl are still clinglog to the lorg ago ex stoded idea that the city has a vall nd euforceable contract for d'gging the power canal. The soonet the people akandon the wotlon that they can compel the con truction of the caitul and realize tha hore is uo bond or other security t 'ult back upon, the sooner will they be | ikely to got down to the moat of the ower question and a solution of it. Lockport wants cheap rower; tha' ud that only is the reason Lockpor tis been pinning its hopes, and some» times Its faith, in the power cana womlses so often made and sovqfter broken. Not since last winter when the mei hack of the Loggett ame: -Iment re used to incorporate in that bil} . ltuse stating In so many vords tha i power canal must be huilt to thi ity under the bill, has aty rationa nan in this clty HONESTLY believe here was any Intention on the part c he power company, net? ur remote, o ver building such power canal. In this connection, it may be not hat the Union-Sun declares it poss. ile to enforce the Luthér contract. WHI the Union-Sun say who is to er creo them? If the men who last snrit ofussd to permit the iugert'on of th ,‘{‘11mupson-Lo:kport clause In the Leg ;¢ft bill, profetring to have the bill di 3 making a flat statement In the bt! at a power canal 'must be built tc bis city In order to make the other rovizsions and grants in the bill ef- rrzyflvo, will force the carrying out o wery proposition contained in the ither contracts for the protection c his clty andt to compere the oullling o | + power canal, they will fina the peop! 'olding up thelr hands to lelp then t is for those men to force the ful 'limen of the Luther contracts If they te enforecable, If they dare net endeavot to enforce earing how [utile the effort would br ikely to bo, let them get out of the way £ a solution of thoxchoup power prob | am In the best way that »%ers. Let us have the power canal, gentle» nen, If you are certain you can epmpe. nanciers to build 1h whether they sant to or not, but-If you know that here {s absolutely no hope of a power wnak do not attempt further to de- olve the- prople into a notion that where is such a hope. WHAT'S THIS? It is reported that the Ontario Power has agreed to sel electricity ot all purposes In Niagara Falls for 10 a horse power. , 'Phis is the company which is to the electric energy which it is roposed to transmit to this city and vhich men interested heavi'y in that oempany want to sell in this city for 16 a horse power In bloc's of not less han 100 horse power, at a switch- ogrd in a transformer station to bs millt something like two miles west of the clty, It is sald, however, that the Nlagara \alls pride of $10 is for largs blocks of mwer and that may in a measure ac- | count for the difference betveen price re and there. an ween re an | LACK COFFEE ANB cleARETTES. weather Imlivatlons: \tonic weather, wo un ow It is maid Raw tvencky required 113 povIidftn pages to toll how it hap- ened. That heat“ even - the yellow iewspapti accounts. # # # If the old wereld wobbles a bit, jnst | remember that BHI Taft is ou the other ide of it. Warmer. Good Lu we w A Missourl! judge has decided that % wife has a right to go through het husband's pockets while h> Is aslcop because \It is an ancient right.\ Sho'll Io It anyway, so the dec'ston is su- perilous. toe # There was a panle amang bargain \hunting women in 'Puesday ind the police wil allow no more bar | Nield loft her about $500,000 half a cen- | mate. rain day advertising. | Has it come t~ this? wee t Saturday Is the day on which all the} polftictans will be furmers for a little white. #0 t % sot changed his inland. Be disagrees Honestly, we coull varmer weather-a little we said. # #0 % Suppose we convere a Riksdag to de- rmine this power canal question. * La a By the way. It is said changes ars; making place in the canals on Mars. Possibly some of the contracts have heen signed off. - # # # While all this insurance investiga- tion is going on Tammany is getting a much needed rest. # # Ld And Tammany is keeping very still ind enjoying it. # & i Let's have a safe and sare Fourth. L # @ \ And boil the water. ATTEMPT AT DECSIT. \rom Niagara Falls Cataract-Journal The Cataract Journal alone told yes rday how Assemblyman George F. | 'hompson came here Monday night: nd again served the injunction pn—i ers upon Lawyer George W. Knox and | he other commissioners in the matter | £- the condemnation proceedings} rought by the Niagara, Lockport &} mtario Power company egainst Em-g na Stanton of Sanborn to secure land | 'or the transmission line of the Onta- | lo Power company. Thy at'lract ournal published the fact [he day be- | nre that owing to a technicality the | njunetion was, vacated, bnt Lawyer \hompson immediately corrected the ror, and. as stated, served the papers vain Moiflay night. . It appears that a deliberate attmept is been made to deceive the public in is matter. The responsibility may be hown later. On the same lay that the 'ataract Journal publishel the correct ersion of the matter the Cazette and he Lockport Union-Sun, under large seads, and in the cass of the Union- Sun with leads, told how the power ompany bad won and that the con- lemnation proceedings weuld go on. That night the same story was sent om Lockport to the Buffalo Courier, *e Rochester Democrat and Chronicle nd other papers, and yet he\ore it was inted in the morning papers the com- issloners had again been served and \e injunction was in effect. The Lockport Journal takes up the matter at length, boldly calls it a \de- berate attempt to fool the general wiblic.\ CHOICE MISCELLANY GIKs of Great Folk. That gift of $1,375,000 recently mady io Prince you Bulow has many paral 'cls in medern history. Yon Bulow: berefactor had the excuse of being re ited In a distant way to the bene ideiary. But Herr Bebel, the Socialisi leader, is today enjoying the interes: i $100,000, bequeathed to him b some unknown admiror to enable him the better to carry on his propag? inda 'The German nmpornr is one of tte thek lest men In the world in the matter o' legacies, It has become a fashion h Germany to leave him money and es tates. iwo legacies of $730, 000 each have fallen to him, besides chalets, castles and acres enough tc nike an ordinary man a great property owner, During the time In which Leo XIII wis pope the papal see was made the richer by more than $5,000,000, Queeu Victoria bad many and large gifts from Her admiring subjects. The miser tury ago, out. of which het majesty gave $4,500 npiece to the three execu- tors and $500 to a woman who had once saved ber benefactor from suicide; also a window was placed to the mein- ory of the miser in a church whose chancel the queen 1ebuut out of her legacy. Alfouso, the young Ling of Spain, has already tasted the sweets of wealth conferred by an admiring Spaniard. 'Three million pesetas was the sum. Baking Watches. \I will be with you in a moment, I must finish the baking of this batch of watches first.\ 'The spenker was a jeweler. as he worked: \I suppose you are surprised at the Idea of watch baking, I will explain. The machinery of a watch is delicate, yet it must work the same in winter as in summer, the same in Russia as In Cairo, the same in the Sahara as in Iceland., There is only one way to ac- complish this--the watch must be reg- ulated to heat and cold. \I am regulating these watches to; heat. Afterward, in a refrigerator, I will regulate them to cold. 'Then when they go out in the world they won't disgrace themselves in any cli- Chronometers must be regulat- ed more carefully than watchés. They are often kept for weeks in tempera- He said tures that are now zero and now 120 | flegrees.\--Philadelphia Bulletin, Incentives to Marriage. Apparently the German town of Haschmaun does not believe in a state of single blessedness. Annual prizes are offered to the men who wed the ugliest, the most deformed and the old- est women in the town. Eighty dollars is paid to the man who marries the ugliest, while but $60 is the reward for the one marrying the eripple. All wom- en over forty who have been jilted at least twice bring their spouses sums which vary recording to the state of - room ' floors bad rotted away, . work enabled the heir to move in. ' usual gossip about hauutal houses was [COD)’I‘ight, 19h, by R. B. One day Henri du Bois of Pans, an ornamental plasterer by trade, rc ceived legal notice that he was heir to ' a bouse and twenty acres of land in ' the province of Vendee, on the west coast of France. The house was only one story hign and was divided into siiting room, bed- and kitchen. Doors and win- , dows had long bern removed. and the but room and (A cAsE OF GHOSTS walls wire all right, and a few days' The' not lacking in this case, and some of: the stories told would have made the, i plasterer's hair curl had he not been i Arm minded. fore the ghosts came. Ie had busied himself breaking up and carting away; | 'der is swollen and hot bathe it with | Du Bois bad been settled a month he- 'hot water for half an hour three times the stones and hauling dirt in their: i place so as to have ground for a gar- U den at least. One night he was heard was that of soft footsteps. cross to a corner and return to the door | again. He knew the outside door to be locked, but he lighted a candle and got up to see what the noises could mean. They ceased as soon as he was out of ing, and he went back to bed and was soon asleep again. The incident had no weight with him next day; but, much to his surprise, it was repeated on the second night. He was awakened at the same hour by the clock, and for ten minutes he lay listening. At the end of that time the footsteps ceased, and Du Bois got up and struck a light, to find everything as usual.. The inside walls had been roughly plastered when the house was built, and here. and there it had fallen off in patches, and he determined to give the walls a close inspection and see If any- thing could be found. He meant to do this next day, but found that be had to go to a village for supplies and post- poned it. That night, at the same hour again, the noises were renewed, and on the third morning after breakfast a search was begun. The outside of the house was taken first and was gone over foot by foot. Nothing was discov- ered to solve the mystery. When Du Bois came to search the in- terior of the house he made a discovery almost at once. 'The ghostly footsteps had led from the outside kitchen door to the northwest corner of the room, a distance of about nine feet. About a third of the plaster had fallen off that wall, and as the man inspected he soon came upon a stone differing from the others by being better dressed. It was plastered in as firmly as any of the others, but it ssemed to have been set In after the wall had been built. R It took Du Bols: ain hour to loosen and lift out the stone, but never was a man more liberally rewarded for an hour's work. The stone was the Goor to a cavity a foot wide and four fect long, and in that cavity rested a' treas- ure amounting to tens of thousands of dollars. It was in gold, silver and jew- els, and there was not,. so mich as the serap of a pen to say who had con- céealed it. As near as could be ascertained by the legal records of the province the house had been erected about forty-five years. It had been built and inbabited by an old min and his wife, both of whom had diced within a few years. The place had then been tehantless for some time and had then been taken possession of by a fisherman. He had vacated, and another man had come, but for a score of years before Du Bois took possession no one had occupied the place. Du Bols did not herald his good for- tune over the country. Like a wise man he said nothing and secretly re- moved his find to Paris,. The stone was reset in the wall and the plaster re- paired, and he had hardly made the re- pairs when he was waited on by an of- ficer of the law, who informed him that a queer mistake had been made. The property had been left to another by his name, and the new heir would shortly be on to make good his claim. The plasterer did not wait for the rightful beir to turn up. He had never been satisfied as to how he came to in- herit, though he had gone on the iden that the law could make no mistakes. jewelry and exchanged his coins and then did a prudent thing by setting sail for America, He had not been gone from Paris four weeks before he was being looked after. In spite of the repairs the new heir had discovered the stone and the hid- ng place. Perhaps ghostly footsteps had also sounded for him, though they had ceased for Du Bois as soon as he discovered the treasure. At-any rate, le wanted information and an account- {ing. He reasoned very naturally that the cavity had been made to hold a treasure and that it would not have been so carefully concealed again if nothing bad been taken from it, Du Bois was out of France and liv- Ing in New York when the officers of the law sought to interview him, and he since. The story is from his own lips. The value of the treasure he has not stated, but you have the worl of the one who writes the story that his search for ghosts brought him a com- petence. It might have been hidden the fund, which was left by a rich resident of the town. The average price paid Is $50 to cach unless they shonld be ungsually numerous, while ' ithe trustees are empowered to pay a | larger sum when, In theiv Judgment, it | gsvmns wise to holt forth a special in- | stand a little: some prr < ducement to procyre the marriage of tmfortunate woman, thy smugglers, robbers or a miser, but | Self. i that the ghosts would have | day? ML. QUAD. bed, and, naturally enough, the man; believed that he had been half dream; He hied himself back to Paris, sold his. They | © seemed to enter the kitchen door and l t has not returned to his native land | HINTS For FARMERg Treatment For Cowpd®» Cowpox (variola vaccine) is the sAMm6 disease which is utilized on a large scale for the purpose of securing vac- cine matter for the purpose of pro- | m- | The disease is not at all serious, and usually requires very little treatment. If the teats or udder is very sore it would be best to use a milking tube for drawing the milk, An any rate, the vesicles or little blisters should not [be broken. If the cow has much fever she should have one pound of epsom salts and an ounce of ground ginger, dissolved in half a gallon of cold wa- ter, as a drench. After the physic has operated, give one-half ounce of salt- peter twice daily in the drinking wa- ter for three or four days. If the ud- |'Gdaily, and after each bath use a little ; 'of the following: One ounce sugar of lead, one quart of water. If there is no fever and no swelling, only the eruption on the teats, no treatment is | ened by a curious sound coming from | required. The disease usually runs i the kitchen. He slept with both inside} its course in about two weeks, if not I @ doors open, and there was no cover of? irritated.-Atlanta Constitution. {0 $ i any sort ou the floors. The noise he! d Watering of the Horse. the average farmer is how and when | {the horse should be watered. We have 'seen farmers-in fact, the majority of them-in the morning fill the mangers with bay and the feed boxes with dry feed. Ag soon as these are eaten they lead the horse out to the trough, allow him to drink all he can hold, then hitch him to the plow and work him bard for two or three hours,. 'These same farmers are all the time wonder- ing why their horses are not doing bet- ter and why they can't be kept up in flesh like Farmer B.'s horses, across the way. 'The horge should be watered before he is fed. Then feed and curry him at least an hour before going to work. Just before you go to work wa- ter him again.-Detroit News-Tribune. To Preserre Goat Skins. We give two metods of preserving Angora \oat skins for rugs, says Farm ard Ranch. Flesh with dull knife; rub with freshly killed animal's brains to soften; use one teaspoonful of alum and saltpetre, pulverize, mix and sprinkle on fiegh side; 1nb in and brush - off. Soaking Bix hours in lard or oil will soften if brains are not available. The second method is as follows: Re- move all flesh from fresh hide; rub with pulverized alum, then with pul- verized cbalk until dry. Fold fiesh sides together and repeat the treat- ment next day. Repeat the third day. On the fourth day stretch and let my in the shade. Feeding the Horse, The horse needs a variety of grains, just as his owner needs a variety of feed. A diet suggested by a practical and successful farmer is: \A ration mixed in the proportion of fifty pounds \'of oats fifty poundssof «ornnnd-tawen- ty-five pounds of bran will always be relished by the work horse, and it will be fourd infinitely better adapted to his needs than straight corn. Nor is it so very much more expensive either at the present prices. The average farm horse will cat from fifteen'to twenty pounds a day of this mixture.\ The Dry Feed System, The dry feed system is becoming move and more popular for raising chickeos. It is claimed that the labor and bother are much reduced and the chickens grow better and the death rate is &maller. Some growers feed ouly once a day with the grain and meat mixture, but the more common -metbod is to feed several times daily. It is fed mixed with chaff and gravel, (finch the chickens have access at 111 times and look after their own feed and exercise for the most part. Eny Rams Early. Last year those who bought rams late in the season had some trouble in finding them and still more in getting what they wanted, if they were at all particular. 'This year it is going to be the same way. The early buyer will get his pick and is very likely to buy cheaper than later in the season. 'There is going to be a big demand for breed- ing stock this year, and breeders have only to put their sheep before the pub- lic to find a market for them.-Nation- al Stockman. The Stable Doorwd‘y. Many farm horse stables have door- ways that are too narrow for large horses to pass through safely. It is a trick with many horses to rush through a narrow doorway quickly. 'They have had experience in getting knocks from one side or the other, and they want the ordeal over with as soon as possi- ble. The narrow doorway may cause the most valuable horses to injure a hip. It costs but little usually to move a post and put in a wider door. Exposure Injures Foals,. Young foals that are stabled with their dams during cold rainstorms will thrive much better than those which are not $0 protected, says American Cultivator. The idea that exposure to is fallacious. Those that are naturally 'the most hardy will be least affected ; by hardships. The weaker ones will {die if the hardships which they are {forced to endure are too great. i tecting human beings from smallpox. ° An important thing overlooked by | § inclement weather makes a foal hardy, || Goops RIGHT, PRICES RIGHT, Drugs and Medicines we || OFFER Stomach, At Shearston's | _ Department Store _ - Each Department Complete. \ Jelly Glasses 25¢ and 30c per dozeu,‘ Pint Fruit Jars 60c per dozen, THE SOUTH AMERICAN REI IEF, a remedy to be re- || lied upon for derangement of the Kidneys, Liver and 25¢, 50c and $1.00 per bottle, 90 and 92 Mam Street. Fine urocerlegyf-k'; | l W R.! hearstons |[ The Playground of theWest | is traversed from end to end by 26 NEW YORK BUFFALO DETROIT From delightful De- troit to the cool re- treats of Mackinaw, Michigan is a vast | pleasure ground.; §P Hunter, Angler, Society People and those in search of | peace and quiet, all find here their heart's desire. Tell your «gent to have your ticket read via The Michigan Central. Direct connection and magnificent trains between BOSTON CHICAGO MACKINAW J- W . Chief Ass't G,. P. A. The Road i to Michigan All trains via Niagara give passengers a view of the Falls. Stop- V over for the asking. For full information address D A L Y BUEFALO, N. Y. SON & BOYNTON Furnaces of its own 6 Pine Street, InTime of Peace Prepare for War We are going to have some cold weather. this Fall and Winter and you will need one of our celebrated RICHARD, will cheerfully give you an estimate on the cost, an d would |, advise you not to delay until busy season starts in .. . Step in and see our line of SUMMIT STOVES and RANGES. There is none better and has features strictly Wim. Walker & Son, to warm your house We nnd gn G¥prirened tp f ende Lockport, N. Y. LEGAL NOTICES. THE PEOPLE Of THE STATE OF New York, To the children or des- cendants of William Gombert, who em- igrated many years ago from Germany to South Africa, and whose names and addresses afe unknown and cannot be ascertained; the children or descend- ants of Ferdinand Gombert who once lived at Walmore, Prussia, and whose . names and addresses are ui :nown and cannot be ascertained; the children or descendants of Lizzie Wenke, who once lived at Walmore, Prussia. and whose names and addresses are unknown and cannot be ascertained; and to El- nora Pechuman, of Royalton, N. Y., Eva Donner, of Royalton, N. Y., the Eastern District of the German Evan- gelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio and other states, John Quinter and William Pechuman, creditors, next cf kin and legatees of Christoph C, F. Gombert, ton, N, Y., deceased; 'You and each of you, are hereby cited, _ to appear before the Sur- 'rogate of the County of Niagara, at “he Surregate's office, in the City of Lockport, in said county of Niagara, on the 9th day of September. 1905, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of that day, then and there to atend the judicial and testament of the said deceased. And such of you as are under the age of twenty-one years.. if any,\ required to' appear by your guardian, if you have one. of if you have none that you appsat and apply for the appointment of a special guard- ian, or in the event or your neglect of failure to do so a special guardian will be appointed by the Surrogate to rep- resent and act for you in this proceed- ing. . ° In Testimony Whereof, We have {enuzed the Seal of Office of our said Surrogate to be hereunto afxed. Witners, Hon. Charles Hickey, Sur- rogaie of said County, at Leekport, the 15th day of July, in the year one thous- and nine hundred and five. WILLIAM J. HOOPER. Ill Treating the Horse. |_ The farm horse which is driven to ; : town and made to eat \post meat\ | 'two or three nights a week after a> | hard day's work can hardly be blamed f {as to that he has never concerned him- | a ¥ While: the treasure technically { belonged to the true heir, who can say ; e helped him - {do recover it and that It woulkl not be | lrestlng In that eunning hiding place to } amine them for Hee. 'or not laying much fat on his ribs.- ural New Yorker. Look to the Chicks. If the chicks are not doing well ex- Wommon allment of the, young chieky. 'This is the most | Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. _RANSOM & FRITTON, Attys. for Executor, 73 Main street, Lockport, N. Y. : Note-Persons cited to apepar are not | obliged to do so, but if they fail, will be regarded as satisfied wih the ac- ‘cnum as filed. T-27-46ts-Th. ] Advertiss In the JournaL late of the town of Royal-. settlement of the account of William @ Pechuman as executor of the last will & are (3 general & moe Uld Catarch Curea. General J. Parke Postles, of Wilming« ton, Del., says he had a bad case of satarth. The Nasal passage was entirely closed, so that he talked through his nose for 10 years, 'The doctors and all the catarrh cures failed to relieve him. Finally his physician advised the use of Brazilian Balm, which soon opened the Nasal passage, and made a complete cure. He says \undoubtedly Brazilian Balm is the greatest medicine ever dis- covered.\ . For Sale by W. CI Parson's and Zir-merm.an's Drug Store. a THE WHIRLPOOL RAPIDS BY SEARCHLlGHT Exculsxon on the New York Central every Tuesday, Thursday and Sdtur- day orly 75c. Leave at 7:07 p. m. and arrive in Lockport 10:45 p. m. 7-18-482 4¢ R8. LaFBBHEfl 8 EBMPOUHB Bafe, speedy roguintor; 25 cents. Priggists or mail Buok “span-ea. DRJmFRAhCO PHladeLin \HEALTH INSURANCE} » As fl the excellent . \ANGELUS FLOUR\ which possesses more gluten and B a phosphmtefi—the nutrients - than Z any other flour. Healthy children X and adults are so because they eat @ § sood bread. Angelus Flour makes ‘ the best in the world. ~