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THE DAILY SUN. LOGKPORT, N. Y., SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 16, i892. r un. Cit Cand BF, 14c. Cans g, ALASKA +: SALMON, 120, Can. Goto MEbpaL FLOUR,| (BRST you. Bag. EXTRA LEMONS, C 20¢. Dor. por HIRE'S ROOT BEER 230c. Bottle. a YERKA'S| 100 Main St. t ar core sHoO FLY] creen Doors wes-Al Cofipleto---- ONLY $1.00. SCREEN wibows, Fit Any Window :~ ONLY 25c¢, L DON'T Buy Cheap Irom: Wire kcreon when you can buy GOOD | | TEEL WIRE SCREEN at J. s. & 9th, Nosq$ MAIN ® STEEET, | LOCEP ORT. WELEPTIION® 106. i GRAND - This hotel has been refitted, and is modern in every respect. | ste dato an vats. M. WITBECEK, Lockport, N. Y. The Niagara. Lockport, N. ¥. mnusssnse fomié-Itomodolod nnd Newly Furnished Throug out. fe StonmaHonk,. Hloctrio: Holl#: and Flo Altrm. in in. KiveryRoom-No:-Extem Chirgo. ‘lomomuwruluulon. Kyorything First-Class Dollyory. Good Stabling, Wolophono - This Haro to Day: Guosts, f noun/Al: THE : STOMACH, LIVER: AND BOWELS, . AND: PURIFY THE BLOOD. S A RELIABLE REMEKOY For ; ¥ndigeatton, Billowmmenss Hondnche, Conntt« ; pattem, Dysgepata; Chronto Livor Troublons . Biustness, Bad Comploxlon; Dysoutery, Offenaltg: Mroath, and all disiritern of the: : Mia-lulu lllv|sr and Mowolxe B tt Tabulon: rience | geen Aip (he wt by malt THE RIPANG® CHEMICAL co. 10 SERUCE ari Naw york orry, eqscccecece ecscses u fruit Lookport, N. Y. (Gare we Atem ight the Pictu BURGESS ART STORE, | LOCKPORT DALY SUN The Officio Paper of the Cily. Bright, Newsy, Clean ant Unconditionally Democratic, Contains alt the News of the world, for only & Donny. A Pully Equipped Job Offtee in Connection. Publication Oflce: Vem Wagoner Ztock,20 and 28 Merket street, Lockport, N. Y. «ldvertising rates and Prices for Job Printing dude Known atthe Busluess Oflice. TELE PION NUMBER 201. WUDSCRLPUION RATES, Tho Dally Sin by the week...... | Whe Dally Siw by the month. | the Dally Sun by the year.. All communtcations should be addressed to The \ Dally Sun, 20 and 28 Alarket street, Lockport, N. T,, and not to. any tndividuat employed thereby. Vo attention will be paid to anonymous com- munloations. manuscript cannot be returned unless postage (s enclosed to defray expenses of same, Obftuaries inserted free; obltnary poctry ter cents a thie, The &un does not publishcards of thanks, DEMOCRATIC _ NOMINATIONS, For President, GROVER CLEVELAND, oF NEW YORK. For Vice-President, ADLATL E. SEEVENSON, or ILLINOIS. ELECTORS. Wiiam Steinway, Erastus Corning. 1, Fredorlck Hachman 19, Iulus Ht, Davie - 2. Folin ¥. Moléanc 10. Edward A, Mahor % John 3L Grrhtm 20. Edward Wemplo 4. 1. IL LlichHleld Ut. Pat'k C. MeRory t. John. Webor #2, Wilbur F, Portor (. Edward Kearney % Alex, T Goodwin 7. Thomas 21. 11. D,. Withorstein 8. John., McCall 20. William F. Gaynor 9, Fogoph.d.0'Donohue26. George F, O'Ncil 10; Joln.D. Grimming: 97. Willan Melntyro 1« Nolson. Smith 2%. Th L. Smurtwood 12. Jacob Rupport 20. Charles ¥. Walker 1}. Isang Wormsor 80. Donild MeXnughton M4. Marthn d. Keough 81. J, 16. CrlaGold 10, Whomas Finogin: 12. Chatles A. Sweet 10. Philip G. Rolliy Wh Witlitm C. Greene | M. David Kennedy #. Potor IL Hoyt Vol. 21. ~ SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 16. EVENING wHEN YOT LCZAVE Tan orry Send us your postoflice address and 'The Daily SUX will be malted regularly without oxtri charge,. 'Theaddressmay bo changed as often as desired. A SOUND virw. \The Watertown 'Times, n Republican nowspmpor, does not permi{t partisanship to: blind it to the manifest rights of In- bor, and the manifest wrong of Carx®- <crs's conduct toward his workmen. It sys: 'The rights of capital and Isbor will be much discussed In view of the trouble amb Homestead. I6 appears clear that '¢chpltal his a right to its own property and to hiro its employes as it can in the Isbor market. And yet has capital the right to collect several thousand men mround an industry they have ostab- lished, on which flhey become depend- ont, mhout which they build homes, and then by any whim be able to siy we do not waut you, leave your homes and go 'olsewhoere? Doos not labor require a | moral right In that business, and a right to consideration in any contemplated change? Aro they to bo used as more mirchines or as reasonable human be- Ings? Thoro is where eapitat often errs, abAcast by corporations. Private ownor- ship rarely does, 'The line of the rights : of cach in it busitricss on whicltboth are ; depondont is hard to draw, but fair ars bitration ought to be able to protect both cqlually amid do justice to all inter- osts. Tho matter will be much discussed, but, we judge, the simo conclusion will be reached, that boards of arbitration, with somo, powers, aro needed every- whore aud should be appealed to in such emergoncies. We recommend the above paragraph to: the reflective and studious attention | of our scholarly coutemporary,the Hon, ' WirbarD A,. Cosn, who will notice that tho views enunciated by the 'Times aro gimost identical with the opinions, advanced by the Styx. We havo ut no timo been disposed to deal unfailly with CanrnBQi®s side of the question, nuit havo frankly admitted | that thero are two sides. - For the rea- song we have stated at sonic length, we 'strongly endorse the position of the | workingmon ns on the whole far the Justor, however, mud are led to that conclusion largely by the monstrous Ampositions practiced upon them by Canxrats and the Republican party, whorcby they find the goldon apples of hopo freoly displayed on tho McKinley brinchos turned to: the ashes of disap- pointment and betrayal. - Ono docs not need to be a partisin 'of the Demoerntlc party to read the les- got of Homestend. 'The 'Times is a Ropublican paper, but thero aro out- rages L6 cannot stomach. 'This is one of thom. It will bo righted in Novom- bor, whon GARNECIHS sccond contribu- ; tion to Irlumphant Democracy\ will be given. to the public. |_ Wo-commend to the Niagurn Falls Cataract and the Buftmo Courier the following from tho New York World, {if relation: to the #!Iver velurgeques- tlon: s 'The.rorf truth is that both parties aro diytded upou it, nnd that tho quostlon g now gous Into limbo. ihatisgood enough Democrtey for By and lias the added advantage, from. ir atnndpoint, of being the truth as ell as good politics. The Peoplo'® party lias nominated w¥IU8$ - DONNELLY for governor nesota, IGNATIUS Is tho man gure BACON wroto KEg- like, but we bavdU®enini'ts MAD. dix j Al f I ~ ry Sir Dicks has been elected to the English parliament in spite of a determined and righteous opposition. As a rule private character is not a cri- terion of public usefulness, a fact re- peatedly demonstrated in American clections, and voters are usually justly impatient of its introduction into a can- vass. But Dios, while aman of much mental brilliancy, stands convicted of so shameful immorality: toward a ward of his own household, whom he was bound by every cousideration of honor to de- fend, as to mike his election a disgrace to his constituency. Even the arrival of non-union men to take the bread from their family's mouths will not produce another riot on the part of the Homestead workmen. Only the presence of the detestable Pinkerton Hessians did that. Can any- one doubt that these mien are far more sinned against than sinning? CuEyELAXD has the smallest feet of all the candidates.-Rochester Times. Well, what of it, so long as his head is large and proportionately well stocked with brains? His feet are several sizes too big to fill Mr. Harrison's shoes, and quite large enough to walk away with the presidency. How do you like our new head ? THLEZNE WSPAPEE OF THE FUIURE As the influence of the daily journal for all that is good must from the very nature of the case continue to grow on all sides, the instrumentalities through which the newspaper exercises that in- fluence must, as a matter of course, grow proportionately in number and development. It is exceedingly unlikely that during the remainder of this cen- tury at least there will be any marked deviations from the general form and arrangement at present in use by the best newspapers on this continent. Changes there must be, in time, in all respects, methods, and instruments, but tho present state of mechanical per- fection which has been attained by the higher exponents of the newspaper art is such as to preclude any sig- nificant and startling> changes in the neargo future. What those changes will be in the number, size, quantity of columns, quality of matter and mechanical device, is a fruitful sub- ject for speculation, I will touch upon it father on. Those would require other changes also in the distribution, number and goneral arrangement of the work- ers, In time, no doubt, a single great newspaper may be compelled to employ hundreds where it now finds work for scores of men and women. That there can be any great improvement in the morale of the mass of working journal- ists, in their audacity,courage, intuitive \nose for news,\ instinclive loyalty to the newspaper,not the man, and patient cudurance of privations and lack of ap- preciation which would discomage al- most any other class of workmen, is hardly fto be expected. It seems, in- deed, hardly possible-John A. Cock- crill, in August Lippincott's. A REPUBLICAN TRIBUTE. 'There is a big, honest tribute to Davip B. HILt in a single sentence of the Judge SRep.) 'No small man, without a dollar to his name,\ says the Judge, \could have accomplished tlxgtsucccss he has won.\-Elmira Ga- zotte. NOT ALL HEROES, Engineers Who Stick to Their Engines Aro 'Too Scared to Jump. ''Yes, I've been pretty badly scared soveral times since I begin railroading, fifteen years ago,\ said an old freight con- ductor, \and don't really know which one was the worse, although of course I al- ways thought the last was. 'Wea're all of us human, and if a man tells you he doesn't get served railronding don't you believe him. I've scen lots in tho papers ahout heroic engineers who staid at their posts and sacrificed their lives trying to save others. When you show me one man that takes those chances for humanity's sake, as they say, T'll show you a hundred who staid just because they were too scared to jump or didn't have time, \A man thinks mighty quick sometimes, but he doesn't always have time to think of anybody that's behind him. When a fellow's running across the country a mile a minute in pitch dark and all of a sudden a big headlight flashes in his face or a pair of red lights show up in front, he is mighty apt to forget what the papers will say about v hero at his post. If he can move at all he shuts off and throws her over and plugs her with oue hand, working the air brake just becuse it's second nature and ho can't help himself, It's what they call mechanical, and. a man will do i6 without really knowing what ho's doing. 'Then he'll Jump if he can. \'Palking about these herocs, I'm one of them: myself, I've u big reputation un north as a man who'd stick to his post. - It was when: I first went to railrouding. I'd been raised in my superintendent's family, and when I got old enough I went to firing on the Milwaukec. About three months after Pd gob a regular run I was out on a freight over night. We'l had a rush and I was pretty tired, and about 12 the head brakoman took the fire for awhile and 1 went to sleep. .I was sitting on the front end of the seat, dead to the world, when a couple of red lights on the tail end of a caboose showed up. 'The freight ahead of us had broken in two nnd we caught the hind end inn cut. 'he engineer shut off, but he didn't Lave time to throw her over and plug her, and he and the brakeman both jumped without even waking me up. \We hit the enboose pretty hard, I tell you, but instead of breaking her up or ditching, the pilot went under the car rand raised it right up till it slid balf way up the Loiler, 'The shock woke me up, but1 was only half awake then. She was mov- ing along slow yet, und when I saw the red lights on tho caboose the first thing that struck mo was that we were on a siding and that the engineer had got off, leaving the engine in forward motion and sho had leaked or sprung her throttle and ; gone into another freight on the siding ahead of us. \I jumped over to the engineer's side and threw her over and plugged her hard. T6 didn't take much to stop and Istood there fora. minute commenting profunely ° on tho engineer's leaving her in forward motion, and yet if I had been wide enough awake to think of jumping, you bet. your sweet life some other fellow would have been tho hero and I'd tried to beat the engluser and brakeman out of the cab window.\-Ennsas City Star. ton- (f s Tabules : for bad tempor. SURGEON AND PHYSICIAN, Kow tho Use of Anrsthoties Has Iaised the Character of the Newer Profession, The physician and surgeon are now social equals, and receive exactly the sume pre- fessional education; while many general practitioners ate mon of the highest attain- ments and skill, obtained from familiarity with the Protenn forms of disease. 'The universities now grant a degree in surgery, and the colleges of surgery have censed to exact apprenticeship in oven the nominal form demanded thirty years ago. , Surgeons who have been made knights or baroncts are quito as muncrous as the members of thesister branch of physic, and the incomes earned by the operators are assuredly as large as those enjoyed by the prescribers. But the surgeons have won the position they now occupy only by the brilliant advances which their art has rarde, and by the skill and courage of a long line of practitioners. From Ambrose Pare, the barber who fol- lowed thearmics of FrancisI, to John Hun- ter-who, as a Hunterian orator only lately remarked, more than any other man helped to make surgeons gentlemen-is a long jump. - Yebeven John Hunter was a rough and ready person compared with the ten- ants of Harley street today. 'Those who remember Liston, Syme, and Chassaignac, Travers, Clive, Ferguson and Von Grafe, the Langenbecks, and Abernethy, £15111 Ast: ley Cooper, Brodie, Bell and Guthrie, can not but wonder at the progress which the art, as known to those great men, has gnadu within the last thirty years. - Indeed, it has advanced more rapidly-or, ab leastf its achievements are more obvious and ap- preciable-than has been the case with medicine, in which advance must necessar- ily be tentative and discovery has to re- main for a longer time in the hypothetical stage. The surgeon does not now use his knife as freely as his predecessors did. He is more conservative than of old; moreanx- ious to save a limb than to remove it. An- tiseptics have within the last twenty years reduced the mortality from operations to an extent which wassearcely credited when Lister introduced them. But the greatest reform in the modern history of surgery was when chloroform was discovered to be an anesthetic capable of destroying pain, permitting the surgeons to operate quictly, without the cries or groans of the patient disturbing his equanimity. For the first time the-delieate operations could be performed with accuracy. It is, indeed, not too much to say that it was only after this most beneficent of all the gifts of science to suffering humanity was put into surgeons' hands that many men of high culture and sensibility cared to prac- tice surgery.--London Telegraph. The Cost of Keoping an Elephant. All the elephants used in the Indian army as drafé animals of the artillery or commissariat, or as baggage avimals in the transport department, are very care fully attended to, and in every way treated with the greatest consideration. Their keep is rather expensive, being about thir- ty rupees or seventeen dollars a day, in- cluding, of course, the wages of their mahout and grasscutter. 'They ave fed principally on unbusked rice and grass; of the former they get about 250 pounds and of the latter about 400 pounds per diem. The very large female cats, after the first day or two, about 750 pounds of green fodder in eighteen hours; this is exceeded often by large tuskers, so that 800 pounds is about the right amonnt to be placed ba for full grown elephant, with a margin to allow for waste. Asn good load for an elephant is about £60 pounds, it will be seen that the amount he will cat per day will be as much as he can carry, and this will also be the right proportion for the smaller ones.-Caton Woodvilic in Har- per's. Wo Enow Very Little About Stones. I am confident that sooner or later some, if not all, of the stones deemed precious will be reproduced by artifice. 'The chem- ists who have hitherto confined their at- tention to taking things apart are begin- ning to learn how to put them together. All the gems are very simple in their com- position, and the problem is merely to make their elements erystalize properly. In all such knowledge science has made little progress as yet. We do not «ven know for what reason one substance is transparent while another is opaque, though presumably there is some relation between the irrangement of the molecules in the transparent body and the length of the light waves, which, in the case of the trunsprarent body, permits the latter to pass through.-Interview in Washington Star. . A Way of Preserving Milk. 'There are many ways of preserving milk so as to keep it sweet, but one of the most satisfactory is that which is at present practiced at an establishment in Texas. 'The milk, fresh from the cow, is subjected to a boiling hent, and after all the air has been expelied from it the cans ave hermet- ically sealed. When the process was first invented, about fifteen years ago, several dozer bottles were sealed up. Every year some of these are opened, and after fifteen years' keeping the milk has in every case been found perfectly fresh.-St. Louis Globe-Democrat. A Dangerous Compound. The most unstable compound known to chemistry, and therefore the most ex- plosive substance so far discovered, is chlo- ride of nitrogen, which probably consists of three parts of chloride united with one of nitrogen. | Its terribly explosive character, which has so far prevented its recurate analysis, is due to the fact that it is a com- bination of one of the most active with one of the most inert clements in nature.- New York Journal. A. Very Old Love Letter, A small clay tablet, made of Mile mud, inscribed with about a hundred lines of cunciform inscriptions, has been found in the British museum, which, being trans- lated, appears as the marriage proposal of a Pharaoh for the hima of the daughter of the king of Babylon. Tt is apparently the office copy of a letter written about 1520 B. C.-New York Sun. Divided by ia Line. There is in Lawrence, Kan., a partner ship store in which the members of the flrm each conduct their own separate busi- ness. | 'The front of the building, the floov, walls and ceiling are all marked by a line of paint in order to keep each on his own territory, Ledger. Doubt versus Reality. Before marriage a man is generally greeted by his sweetheart with \My dat. ling, is it you?\ But after marriage she generally rushes to the door and suours, \John Henty, wipe your boots.\ - Ex- change. ----__-_-4@-w-___.. If itis not convenient to call at our Manin street store, you will get the same goods at the same prices at our branch store on Locust street. C. M. LEE. _ How to Judge Cheess, Most housakeepers quail before that park of the fumily marketing which relates to the purchase of cheuso, and wish the man of the house, who is usually the chief con- sumer as well as the connoisseur, would always buy it. Such may find the words of an arthority of value; \A. cheese with an indication of goodness will stand square ou the shelf, and will have an even colored not mottled rind. The moment you press your finger tips on the rind you can begin to judge of the in- ferior makeup of a cheese, If it yiclds readily to the pressure of the fingers, and the tind breaks, or does not spring back readily when the pressure is wishdrawn, you have struck a soft article, caused by the slack cooling of the curd, a want of acid or both. At best it will have an in- sipid flavor and will 'go off' as it ages. Cheese which feels so hard that you cannot press it on the rind is either sour, salted too henvily, cooked too much, skimined or suffering from a touch of all these com- plaints. \A good cheese will be mellow to the touch, yet firm; its rind will be of an even tint, elastic and free from puffs, and the sample will reveal firm, close grained, but- tery cheese of a nutty flavor.\-New York Times. + The Rat in the House. Man has no more constant compmnion than the rat. The little animal is by no. means a desirable companion, for he is not honest, he is destructive and not alto gether cleanly, even when in robust health, When it is known that he is probably a disense breeder, or at least the transmitter of disease, how much more will his pres ence be deplored and dreaded! In the house the rat bas the man at a disadvantage that is direct. When he gains access to the pantry and nibbles the cheese, the cake, the oust or the pic, may he not, if a tubsreulosia victim, leave enough poison behind to inoculate with the discase all who eat of what he has pol- luted? A.single breath from his pest lado lungs will breed in the sleeping babe a malady that all the scientists in the world cannot cure. In a word, the diseased rat has ab his merey the master of the house, his wife and his children. Right here I would suggest that the children of the house should be interdicted from petting pussy, who is a mouser, 'To keep the cat away from the rat infested cellar, see that she is always well fed. Never let her become hitngry, and she will lose her taste for rat fiesh.-Dr. S. H. Weber's Lecture, Miss Grant, Seniptor. |_ Miss Grant's name is inseparably con- nected with the best ecclesiastical feulp- ture of the century. Perhaps the moss important ecclesiastical work she has ac- complished is the reredos in Edinburgh cathedral, representing the erucifixion. Although her grandfather, the Earl of Elgin, had brought the Parthenon mar- bles to England, Miss Grant, of Kilgras- ton, exhibited no very special interest in sculpture until some wax placed in her hands by a dinughter of the late royal en- .grawer, Pistrucei, awoke in her a taste for modeling. Several early successes encour aged her so much as to lead her to serious study under Fantrchiotti, in Florence, afterward under Merier, in Paris, and sub- sequently with Mr. Foley, R. &. From the year 1861, when Miss Graut ex- hibited the bust of her uncle, Sir F. Hope Grant, at the Royal neademy, to the pres- ent day, she has been nlinost yenrly an ex- hibitor, and should the Royal academy ever call ladies within their body, undoubt- edly Miss Mary Grant would be among the first to deserve that honor.-Hearth and Home. Why Men Admire \Miss Smith.\ \Miss Smith is always so well put to- gether,\ said a gentleman the other day, \it is quite a pleasure to see her. If girls only knew how quickly men noticed any untidiness rbout their dress and what a disagreeable impression any lack of neat ness in a woman produces, they would be more careful in looking themselves over after their toilet is completed. Now, with Miss Smith, for fustance, nothing is ever amiss; her skin, hair, hands, feet and dress are all carefully attended to, and al- though she is not strictly pretty, she is | more attractive to nine men out of ten than a beauty who often neglects essen- tials and gives all her nttention to what she considers is most becoming to her face. \A woman who is neatly finished of, whose gowns always fib well, whose hair is invariably well arranged, who can face wind and weather without becoming un- kempt, who dispenses with superfluous or- nament for the sike of having neat shoes and gloves-that is the girl for me, and most men would say the same.\-San Francisco White Hair Turns Black. There is nothing unusual in hair turn- ing white, but a case in which the hair turns black agrin after being white was recently told by a gentleman from Detroit. Alady of that city originally had black eyes and hair, but in course of time, when she had attained the nge of about seventy years, her hair turned pure white. This was expected, but about a year ngo her hair began darkening, and is now as black as jet. There is no doubt about the change, nor was any artificial means used to produce it, so that the case is certainly one of the most remarkable recorded in the annals of medical history. | The lady was not con- scious of noy change in dict, or in her physical condition that would justify the curious phenomenon, so it is absolutely inexplainable on any known hypothesis.- St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Women Who Own Costly Jewels. Two hundred thousand pounds is the price of the five chains of pearls forming the collier of the Baroness Gustav de Rothschild, and that of . the Baroness Adolphe de Rothschild is almost as valu- able. Both theseladies are enthusiastic collectors of pearls, and their jewelers have instructions to buy for them any pearl of unusual size or bemuty which they may happen to come across. The sister of Mme. Thiers, Mlle. Dosne, is also the owner of a very valuable chain of pearls, which she has collected during the last thirty years of her life, Of socalled black pearls the empress of Austria possesses the most val- uable collection.-Pall Mail Gazette. Reading for the Young. Tt is the wretched stuff that lies about in the shape of books that is the greatest source of danger to the child, and the only way to neutralize the influence is to fur nish sometliing better; - cultivate the child's ideas, encournge it to form a library of its own-biographies of really great men in history, art, science and poetry. Pictured books of travel are al- ways interesting to the young, and it is sometimes usefal to encournge them to collect sernps, pictures, all that they can find about a person or a place, and make cooks of their own. -Ffomemikor, ga -__ Try Davis Bros. Mince, Pumpkin and Apples Ples, they are fine. - Ask your grocer, or them. . Bakery 295 and 297 Clinton street. » L HGA L. P o Notice of Intention. To extend the Water District of the City of Lock- port, N. Y. VOTIGE 1S HEREBY GIVEN, That the l Common Council of the City of Lockport, X. Y,, intend to order the extension of the Water District of said city, so as to embrace the property hereinafter descrined: Lots 23, 81. 92, 21, 86, 88, 40, 42, 44, 48, 48 aand 50 on the south side of Stevens street, lols 1,3, K. T.. ML. and N. on the south side of Willow street. Lots 2 and 4, on the north side of Cedar siveeb; Lots 50, 61, 68, 05 on the west side, and the north 500 feet of Lot 0 on the east side of South Transit street: Lots 99. 92, 94, 90, 98, and 100 and the north 200 feet of Lob A, on the west side and lots 75, 77,79, $1, 83 and 85 on the cast side of Pine strook, yefor- ence being had tote maps of the Third and Fourth. Wards of the City of Lockport, made by Julius Frghsec, Surveyor, and Med in the oflice ef\ the City Clerk, June 6th, 1881. All persons oyposcd to said extention are here-. by notified to file their objections with the City Clerk at his offica, Hodge Oper House Block, gity of Lockpork N. Y. 'before 6 o'clock P. M; Mondgy J uly 25,1802, and at 8 o'clock in the oven- Ing of said Monday, said objections [if any are dled] will will be heurd and disposed of by the said Common Council, and any and all persons desirous of being heard thereon, are hereby noti- fied to be present on said Monday, at 8. o'clock P. TL, at the Common Council Chambers in said city. By order of the Common Council. w. C. OLMSTED, Cuy Clork. Dated, Lockport, X. Y., July 18, 1802. PH Wor port, N , July 13, NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. CITY CLERK'S OFFICE, E LOOKPOXT, N. Y., July 13, 1802. EALED PROPOSALS will be received by. the undersigned, at his office, No. 38 Hodze Opein Hoase Block, unfil Monday, July 18.41. 182, at8 o'clock P. M , for the follow.ag nama improvemtat. Tits LAYING OF A WATER PIPEIN Wire pow StrEEr From Locust To Soutut Traxstr StrEmy. In accordance with the Specifications made therefore and filed in the City Clerk's Office, Each Proposal muss be accompanied by a Bond, with two sureties, in a sum equal to twonly- that the party proposing, if the work is awarded to him _on his proposition; will within five days tract for the performance of eaid work. five per cent. of the amount of the ind, conditioned | after being notHed of such awayil, enter into con- 4 The Common Council hereby reserves the right ¢ QUPREME COURT.-NrAGARA COUNTY- L3 Wilfred D. Streeter, Plaintifl, against Jolin Parker, defendant. . 'To the above named defendant :-You are here» by summoned to answer the coniplaint in this action and to serve a copy of your answer on the plaintif?s attorneys within twenty days after the service of this summons, evelasive of the day of service, nnd in case of your failure fo appear or answer, judgement will be faken against you b detultfor the relief demanded in tlie complaint Trial desived in Niagara County. Dated May 16, 1892. Brapumy & | Attorneys for Plaintif, 15 aud 17 Main Stzeck, _ Lockport, N. Y. 'to JouXN PARKER, Defendant: The foregoing summons is served upon you by amblicu tion pursuant to an order of the Hon, Loram L. Lewis, Justice of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, dated the uth day of July, 1802, and filed with the complaint in the office of the- Clerk of Ningara Co., N. Y., at the city of Lockport, New York, & MenrRInt, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 15 find 17 Afrin Street, 7-5 Fri, Ow Lockport, N. Y» ELEVATOR COAL YARD - THE RELIABLE TRE LEADNG TARD N THE GC 'WE HAVE ON HAND THE ~ CUMBERLAND Smithing Goal to reject iny or all Proposals. . By order of the Commen.Counci£ W. C. OLMSTED, City Clerk. Notics to Tax -Payers. City OFFICE, Room _No. 11, Hodge Opera House, . Lockport, N. it, July 7, 1692. . Notice is herchy given that the following local assessments have been received by me for collec- tion, to-wit: R No. 485, for a stone sidewalk on a portion. of both sides of E. Genesce street, from 'Wushburn street to Locust street. _ . XNo+ 486, for a plank sidewalk on a portion. of both sides of, Maple stvect, between Price street, and Millar Place. W hich assessments were duly confirmed by the Common Council, June 1st, 1802, and ihat ail persons, corporations or associations assessed. are required.to pay their assessments to me, ab my ofli¢e, No. LL Hodge Opera House, as follows: . Kor twenty days from the date of this notice 718 d8t. by the City Charter, J.C. HARRINGTON, T7 5b City Treasurcy, Notice to Creditors. By order of Chauncey E Dunkleberger, Surro- last will oflice of Ellsworth, Potter & Storrs, No. 1 Central Block, Main street, in the city of Lock- ness on or before the lath day of January next. Dated Lockport,N. Y., July 20, 1892. SUSAN CUNNINGHAM, Bxecutrix etc., of Jane Dunbar deod. KOTICE TO CREDITORS. By order of Chauncey E. Dunkleberger, Surro- gate of Ningara County, notice is herchy given, according to law, to all persons having claims or demands against the estate of D. Fletcher Cobb late of the Town of Newfane Ningarn, County, N. Y., decensed, to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, the adminis- tratrix of the estate -of said decensed, at the Inw oficcof Cliarlcs Hickey, Adkins Block, in the City of Lockport, in said county, on or before the 15th day of August next, CARRIE E. COBB, Adiministratrix. CraRoss Attorney for Administratrix, Adkins Block, Lockport, N. Y. 72 Sat Gm. 2-13, Sat Gm, NOTICE TO CREDITORS. ° By order of Chauncey E. Duknicherger Surrognte of Ningara County, notice is hereby given, according to Jaw, to all persons having Claims or demands against the estate of Thomas IL LaRoche late of the town of Locport, Niagara County,N. Y., deceased to exhibit thesame, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, the Adminis- rator ofthe goods, chattels and credits of suid deceased at his place of business, No. 1 Opert Ifouse Block in the city of Lockport in suid ; County on or before the 17th day of October next. Dated Lockport, N. Y., Avril 9th, 1892, CHARLES P. T. LA ROCHE, 4-16 Sat. Om. Adininistrator, Notice to Creditors. By order of Hon. Chauncey E. Dunkleherger Surrogate of Niagara County, nolice is heréhy given, necording to law, to all persons haying Climg or demands against the estate of Ephrizm C. Ellis, late of the town of Somerset, Ningan County, N. Y., decensed ,to exhibit the same, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, the ex- ccutorof the last will and testrment of snid deceased, at his residence in the town of Somerset in said County, on or before the tenth day of December next. FRANK 0. ELLIS, Executor. Crarprs HMioxEY, Attorney for Executor, 5 23 Sat Om. - Adkins Block, Lockport, N. Y. SHERIFIYS SALE. OUNTY COURT-NraAGARA Honry W. howe, Pluatif®, against Stephen Edward £ Cox, Defendants. In pursuance and by virtue of a judgment of forclosure and sale, made in the above entitled action at a term of the County Court of County, held at the chambers of the Goun{y Judge of said county in the city of Lockport, N. Y., on the ith day of J uly, 1892, and on that day duly en- tered in tlie office of the Clerk of Niagara Colmiy, I, the subscriber, as Sherif of Niagara Coun iy, for that purpose in and by that judgement duly ap- pointed, will sell at public auction at the ont steps of the court house. in the City of Lockport in said County of Ningarn and State of New York on the 22d day of August, 1892, at ten o'clock in the forencon of that t'l’ny, the following described lands and. premises, viz : All that tract or parcel of land, situate in the town of Lewiston, County of and State thirty-three, in the fourtcenth township and eighth range of the Holland Purchase [so-called J and known and distinguished on a certrin map or survey of a part of sud furm Jot into village lots nod called the age of Sunborn] made by Jesse P. Haines, Surveyorand dated 1864, and recorded In Niagart County Clerk's oflice as village lob number nine aud sixteen fect off of the north side of lob number seyen on the west side of Pearl street, and being sixty-six feet front and rear and one hundred and. fifty feet deep or back from the west line of Pony! street, | Reference being had to said map as aforesaid. Dated at Lockport, N. Y., July 9th, 1892. NATHAN D. ENSIGXN, Sheriff of Ningara County, D. E. Bnoxe, Attorney for Pluintif!, No.9 Main Steet, Tt Sit. Lockport, N: Y. Blankbook manufacturing, Box-making, City: Maps in any quantity for advertising purposes at A. X, withoubdees; for the next twenty days, 2 per cont fees willbe charged, and for the next twonty days 5 per cent fees will be charged, as required inte of Ningarn County, notice is hereby given, according to Itw, to all persons having claims or demands against the estate of Jane Dunbar, Jate of the city of Lockport, Niagara County, N. X., decensed, to exhibit thesame, with the \vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, the executrix of the and testament of said decensed, at the port in said county;. her place of transicting busi- |: Covary.- [ Pelit, Louisy Pettit, his wite, Joseph Schenk aud t of New York, and being part of farm Jot number |- Our Steam Coal is the best to be: had IT I$ SOMETHING SUPERIOR We Sell the best Anthracite Coal im the market. FERRIN BROTHERS CO. (Incorporated.) TELEPHONE No. 282. Lockport, N. Y., July 1, 1892. GOAL We keep only the best grades of LEHIGH Wififiwénfimm Coal, f Well Screened and delivered by careful drivers. Also Steam,. Gas And Smithing Coal. Chas. Whitmore & Co. Market St. Office, Telephone 319. Hawley St. Yard Office, ' 'Telephone 248. M. W. Carr {Is now prepared to furnish his | mustomers with all kinds of C O A L. Wood Yard in Connection. ALL: ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED. CIVE HIM A CALL. 07, 59, and 61 Buffalo $1. (Telephone 292.) 7-28 th a Leave Your Coal Orders «~--FOR THB i AT WEAYERS DRUG SHORE, OR TELEPHONE 334. S. N. COOK. Call on the q Sun Printing P ”5111131 c 4 a} ublishing Co. B § R For to d c oviexLy, THOROUGH%\', FOREVER CURED y y _ a now perfected sclentifc method that cannot fail unless tho caso is beyond human ald, You feel improved the first day, feel a bene- fit every day: soon know yourself a king amon f mon in body, mind an ® heart, Drains and losses ended. | Ivery obstacle to happy married moved, erve fore will, enemy. brain power, when failing or lost ard ostored by this treat- Trent, All smalland weal qmrnuns of the body en- urged and strengthened, Victims of abuses and excesses, reclaim your manhood ! Sufferers from Tolly. health, regain your vigor! Don's despalr.cven if in the last stages, Don't be dishcart ened if quacks haverob- yfghygufi‘Lc?“ show you builgfis $2an 5g! exist; 1new go «granadcllegcgmd tie Books with explanations & ; malledscaled free. Over 2,000 magi??? Bookbindery > -/- _ Lockport N.Y. z M ams ERIS MEDICAL C0., BUFFALO, N. ¥