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WEATHER INDICATIONS. he For Western tonight p and Wednesday, except showers Wednes- «loy along the litkes; rising. temperature. CITY AND VICINITY, fome folks can't mind thelr business; ~ Tho reason is, you'll Ond, Whey olttior have no business, Or glso they have no mind. Ex «-Stx members of the New York Mount | xd Rifles hyve ded since the annal reun- fon one year ago., --Thoro soveral special days nt | tho Pan-American Exposition this week, nnd a number of Lookportians are plan- ning to attend. - «-A. smull spotted dog\sith ovory indien» tion of being afflicted with rabbies, made ay dash through Markeot,Street yesterday, -Charles 3, Hnaberly is tho arrival from Niagara Folls. He isa solder and seas sont down for 18 days fornagault, third dogree. «<Willfum E. Stahler, who underwent an operation some thmo ago for the removal of his sightless oye, has so far recovered that ho is now abloito work. --A race riot on a amall scale took place at the corner of Hawley Stroot and Park Avenue lato Saturday night. Iwo negroos and two white mon fought over a trivial mattow, -Jipin is tho subject of the Missionury Gounci to he held in the Chapel of the Firat Congreguationat Church tomorrow (Wodnesday) ovening, at 4:80 o'clock, Sra. Dietrick wlll give a fifteen minute talk on Tapan and Mrs, Ormhaim will sing, «-William Bowley, the woll-known clork at the Aimertcan xpress office in this city, has been promoted to a higher position in tho company's office in Buffalo. Heo left today to enter his naw position, Leroy Kishor of this clty has succeeded to the osition left vacant by Mu, Bewley's pro- motlon. R «-Crigg Brothers applied to the Common Council last evening for permission tore» move a sudeway leading down boside their mill in order to make room for their new atopohouso. | Aldermiait Hearst expressed the option that the stairway in question was it part of a public thoroughfare, and tho matter was referred to City Attorney Vicary, PERSONAL MENTION. John Olson has returned from Port AMaylon, Ont. Miss thel Van Deason of Buffalo is vis ithhg friends in this city. Frank Rodlons of Buffalo was the guest of friends in this city Sunday. Goorge Fitzastmmons of Now York Clty 1s the guest of his parents tn this city. Mi. and Sirs. A. H, Ivina and family of Bast Avenito have returned from Olcoté. Charles Cummpbell of Harvey Avenuc re- blumed. from Port Colborne, Ont., Sun- day,. Miss Mlesrior M. Payno of Hast Avento {s the guest this week of relatives in Buf- falo. Miss Emerson of Newton, Mass., Is visit- ing her sister, Mas. Hayward of Clenosee Strock. Ars. Atnesworth of Newark, N. J. 1s the guest of Ars. 18, KH. Baker of West Aventio. . - Ates. M. Morse of Drummonsvills, Ont., is tho guest of Mrs. John Watson of Wal- nith Street. Mrs, Smith and daughter of Read City, Mich., iwo visiting Mr. and Mrs. Barher of, Gave Street. Alfred Emmet and Robert Bond of this olty left yesterday to accept positions in Cloveland, Ohio. Will Call of Buffalo passed Sunday with 'his paronts, Niv. and Mrs. Thomas Call of | Washington Streot, Miss Florence Swartout of Waverly, N. York,, is the guest of Miss Flovence Mc- Carty of Locust Street. pirs. Fred Moser of Auburn, N.Y., is the guest of how sister, Mis H. M, Van Alstyne of Hast Avontio, State Pardon Clerk John T,. Joyce of Albany, formerly of this city, is visiting friends hore for a low days, Mv. and Mrs, Solt D. Dix of Montgom- ory, Ala,, avo the guesta of Mr, and Mrs. Hiram 1. MoMeNell of Locust Street, Miss Shardt of Syracuse is the guest of 'Miss Anna Roport of Houth Eransit Street, Miss Shards formerly resided in Lockport. Miss Lucio Dichl of Middletown, Conn,, who has been visiting Miss Mnuregaret Ho- writh of Walnut Streot, will return home today, | Miss Weaver of | High Street has ro turned homo aftor a bwo week's visit in Al- bany, the guest of the Hon. and Mrs 6, C, Knight., Nits. Lotto Shaffer und Miss Marguerite Klass of Buffalo wore the guests of friends in this city Hunday. Charles Youngor and H. A. Reed, who haro conducted the night Innch wagons in this olty for several months past, lofé for Oklahoma yesterday. Afr. and Mis. Henrs - Wonver | and daughter of Chicago, who have been the guosts of Afr, and Mrs Eruncis P. Weaver, have returned to thelr home, Niss Ctrace Farrington and Mrs. Shoe- maker of Chicago, who hive heen the guests of Miss Jounle Farrington of Spald- tng Street, veturned home last night. oe Trolley Semmphore Signals. Tho trolley company bas put in two semaphores on its locwl lines to signal imotormen from the office on Transit Etroot, - They each display a cluster of red lights and aro for use at night, One has toon plkced at the station and the other is in position ut Park Avenue, half way be- twoon Eranslt and Howley streets, The motormim is notified by the signal dis- played by the semaphore whon he is want« 08 for orders ut the station. Tt wasseldom posalble to stopa cnr ab fight which had started out the Hawloy Htreet Hine when orders were to be given or changed, under the old syatem of flagging, but by the sem- «phore this difficulty will beovercome, NOTICE OF MEETINGS. Regular meoting of Branch 88, TL. C. B. A. this evening. Evory member is re- quested to be prosont. Refreshments sory» ed after mecting. | An adjourned mooting of the Direct» yosses of the Home for the Friendless will I6 held Wednesday, Augustl4th, at 3 p. 1, BRogular meeting of Star of Bothlehem Gounclt, No. 81, Daugliters of Amerfcm to- night. wore Was Vislble In Toronto, A dispatch from there says the clectrlenl {1latninations of the Pan-American were plainly visible from Toronto last night. 'The iit was remarkably clear, the Ameri« can shore being visible all day, (w 'stroyed. TIE LOCKPORT JOURNAL, TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 183, 1901. mes NTERFEIT GOLD. GILDING POWDERS ARE MADE OF COPPER AND SPELTER. Oh, for a glimpse of a natural boy~- A boy with freckled face, With forchead white 'neath tangled hair And limbs develd of grace; Whose feet too in, while his elbows flare; Whose knees are patched all ways; Who turns as red as a lobster when You give him a word of praise; How the Material That Gives the Shining, Metallic Finish to Mirror and Picture Frames Is Produced. A boy who's born with an appetite, Gold Leaf Without Goll. Who seeks the pantry shelf To cat his \piece\ with resounding smack, Who isn't gone on himself; How many persons who see the shin- mirror and picture frames know that : gold does not enter at all into the com- position of the stuff that produces these ' yolden effects? The shining metallic effect is pro- duced by a fine powder made from a A \Robinson Crusoe\ reading boy, Whose pockets bulge with trash, Who knows the use of rod and gun And where the brook trout splash. It's true ho'll sit in the easfest chair With his hat on his tousled head; : mg gold in colored printing and on | That his hands and feet are everywhere, ' mixture of bronze and spelter. 'This For youth must have room to spread, | giving the rich surface demanded in | Nor deny his mother's call | wall papers, printing, lithography, fres- | Nor ridicule what his elders say | coing and in a vast range of manufac- Or think that he knows it all. '! tured articles of wood, paper and fron. | The material used is so called Dutch | metal, an alloy of copper and spelter. | The relative proportions are varied to | | produce different colors. The larger | l the percentage of spelter the lighter or ; Got THE PosiTION. figgfilwllomsh will be the tint of the | on - the | \'The copper and spelter are smelted in f | graphite crucibles containing about 400 | The New York Herald tells how a | bounds of metal, which, when com- | diplomatic young lady who understood | Dletely fused, is run off into molds. ! the weakness of politicians secured forming half round ingots two feet | some years ago a place in the state | long by half an inch in thickness. Aft: service. | er cooling these are bound into bundles | The day before the opening of the and sent to the rolling mill, where they session a shy girl knocked at the door ; RTC passed cold nine times through a of the attorney general's office. . double set of steel rolls under enor- | \Ig the attorney general in?\ she | mous pressure., This flattens them and i asked timidly. | draws them out into thin ribbons from } \Yes sald the clerk. \He will see} 50 to G0 feet long and something more | you when he gets through with this | ; than one inch wide. long line of job hunters. Just have a / der such extreme pressure makes the | seat.\ ' metal brittle, so it passes to the an- | In the numerous chairs, lounge and standing were on the office | nealing furnace, which is heated by ; 20 more | wood fire, as the sulphur in coal or | waiting for a turn to press some claim | coke would be injurious to the.ribbons. | for a position. | - | Having been softened and rendered | The attorney general was rather a | ductile by annealing, they are cleansed | gruff Jooking man, and he dismissed | in an acid bath, cut into lengths of | gach with the reroark: \I can't do any- i about three feet and collected in bun- | thing for you. Sorry, you know, but | dies of 40 or 50 strips each. They are i there are hundreds of applicants, and | laid between sheets of zine and passed | cach officer, every legislator, has a/ under hammers which beat the metal dozen begging for each position.\ | strips to the thinness of tissue paper. When the timid girl's turn came, she | This requires six successive beatings, | handed the Impatient looking officer a ; and. great skill must be exercised to | lotter. She said nothing.. She hardly | produce a uniform and unbroken foil looked into his face. | After the third beating the metal strips \I''m gorry, Miss C., that I can do} are taken from between the sheets of nothing for you. It was foolish for you | zinc, loosened from each other and to come here expecting to get work. I'd | cleansed by immersion in a bath of be glad to help you if I could; but, you i tartrate of potassium. The cleaning is seo, it's this way: I have no influence} repeated after the last beating, and the to get you a position. I am very\ ' sheets are hung on lines to dry. In the \We were speaking of that at home, j beginning the rolled strips are a dull | but I thought it would do no harm to | gray metallic color, at the fourth beat- see you,\ she interrupted, \And we ' ing the yellowish color begins to show, | wore saying what a pity it was that} and after the sixth they are clear and | you bad lost your influence.\ } bright as gold. The state official winced. He looked; The defective leaves are then thrown as if something hurt him. out and the perfect ones cut into small \Brown he said, turning to his dep-l squares, which are laid together by | uty with unnécessary abruptness, “thisi hand in packets of several hundred young lady is to have a position in the ; each and inclosed within an envelope enrolling department. See that there is | of sheet brass. The packets return to a place for her if you have to muzzle E the annealing furnace, where they are every legislator in the building.\ softened by heating and slow cooling, and then go to the beaters, where they are reduced under flattening hammers to the thinness of real gold leaf, so thin that it can be blown away by the But ho doesn't dub his father \old man' A rough and wholesome natural boy Of a good old fashioned clay- God bless him, if he's still on earth, For he'll make a man some dayt ~-Detroit Free Press, She - Successfully | Played Weakness of the Statesman,. Cold rolling un- | Devastating Power of Locusts, A swarm of these insects stopped the | advance of a Russian army. They; filled the air and blinded both officers: breath,. L and men, go that the former could give| 'The manufacture of bronze powder no orders, and even if they had done so | consists in grading, clipping and pul- the men could not have obeyed them. verizing the various bronze foils to an The horses would not face them, and | even, impalpable powder and.is an in- they lay on the ground many inches: dustry of comparatively recent date. thick. Every man and horse in the| It began as a means of using up and army was incrusted with the insects, ; utilizing the imperfect leaves which and their clothing was literally eaten! came as waste from the beaters of off the men as they stood helpless and | gold, silver and bronze. These were blinded. The railways were useless“! cut by hand into fine clippings and as the locusts covered the rails, and the | then ground to powder in hand mills of oll which exuded from their bodies| Simple construction. With the lapse of when crushed prevented the driving: | time and the spread of artistic indus- wheels from \biting.\ After they had tries the uses of bronze powder in- settled whole regiments were detached | creased until the demand far outran for the purpose of trampling them to E the supply of waste, and the leaf metal death. Trenches were dug across their | is now made on a large scale. path and filled with burning coals, but; The beating process firttens out a the crowding swarms actually smother. | pound of copper and spelter alloy to an ed the fire, so vast were their numbersj grea of about 500 square feet, and in ven in a little island like Cyprus in | this condition the square sheets as they one year one-fifth of the entire revenue] comé from the brass envelopes are was spent in destroying the locusts, | sheared into small fragments and rub- and especially their eggs. 'When these} bed with olive oll through a steel sieve eggs are laid, they are inclosed in a | having ten meshes to the inch and then horny envelops called a \pod each | passed to the stamping and grinding pod containing 85 eggs. In sevenimnchines, where they are pulverized by months 1,330 tons of pods were 'de-: steam or water power to the bronze Now, a single ton of pods, powder of commerce. 'The grinding contains 60,000,000 eggs, and yet, in occupies from one to four hours, ac- spite of this almost incredible destruc-, cording to the grade or quality of the tion, the locusts are still a dreadful powder to be produced, which is of plague and show little if any symptoms four grades, from coarse to superfine. of diminution in numbers. ¥ 'The superfuous oil is removed by heat- wonen iman { ing under pressure, and the powder Expenses of a Yacht Owner. is then carried into centrifugal clar- There is no question that modern lux-! fiers, or grading machines, which, turn- ury has reached its most extravagant| Ing at a high speed, expel the powder pinnacle in yachting, which, in the elab-| through fine orifices in the form of orate profusion of Its expense, brings: dust, which settles on inclosed shelves, us very close to the latter days of the | according to weight and fineness, the Roman empire. Take a single case. A| finer particles at the top, the coarser boat like Colonel Payne's 630 ton yacht| below, and in this way the powder is Aphrodite carries a company of 60 men | divided into its various grades.-New -captain, first and second mates, car-| York*Press. penter, chief steward, assistant stew- | ard, 2 bedroom stewards, 1'm.n'cryxmm.l1 How Customs Vary. t I She-In some parts of Australia when a man marries each of the bride's relatives strikes him with a stick by way of welcome into the family. He-¥Yes, and in many parts of Amer- Mental Quiescence, ica when a man marries each of the \Haven't you any positive opinions, bride's relatives strikes him with a on auy subject?\ - f, loan by way of welcqming him into the \No. By not having positive opin~1 family.-New York Times. fong, you see, a man doesn't have to: wear himself out backing them up.\- | Traveling Experiences. Detrolt Free Press. Mother-Sir, I hope my litle boy 8 doesn't worry you by his fretting and crying. Ke iso't well, or he wouldn't act so. > a Mr. Man-Ohb, no. All children act Slimson-How do you know? © ithat way. I'm used to it-in fact, I \Why I took them out of the water, | haven't seen a well child for 20 years.- and they turned brown in 15 minutes.\ i Chicago Herald. --Life. chief cook, 2 assistant cooks, chief en- gineer, 3 assistant engineers, 8 oilers, ; 15 firemen and 19 men before the mast. | -Leslie's Monthly. A Delusion. Willie-Those goldfish you sent home | are fakes. g A man should not be blamed for the It is a mistake to suppose that it 18 | mistakes he makes. He should be cred- always the last straw which breaksiited ag he profits by them.-Atchison < | offers the cheapest and best means of | beer a dairyman for years. the camel's _back.——Chicago Herald. i Globe. . a om - cinc rwom me MEN AS THEY. PASS. Senator Billy Mason was a school- mate of Sepator W. A. Clark at Ben- Ia. . Senator T. C. Platt loves cut flowers in his room and is particularly fond of the rich perfume of American Beauty roses.: William Dorsey Jenks, the new gov- ernor of Alabama, is a lawyer by pro- fession and has made a fortune by his practice. | Frederick Holbrook, the war govern- cr of Vermont, who is 88 yearsold and an netive man of business, says, \I read a great deal of the poets and im aginative writers, as they help to keep me a young old man.\ Frank Rockefellers cattle ranch in Texas is about S0 miles long and varies from two to four miles in width. Here i Mr. Rockefoller spends nearly all his; | leisure time, and he is then to all ap-1 | pearances a typical cowboy. The late Baron Faber, the pencil manufacturer, once said of the article! that bad made him rich, \It has done more execution since it came into use than the sword, while who can enu | merate the libels it has written?\ Descendants of Edward Ball of Brad. ford, Conn., who are blood relations of George Washington, will hold a re union at Keuka Park, N. M., Aug. 27, 28 and 20. Washington was a cousin of the Virginia branch of the family. Andrew Carnegie still has $280,000, 000 to give away in public benefac tions. Mr. Carnegie himself is author- ity for this statement, which he made recently at Skibo castle to a member of the New York chamber of commerce committee.. » General Fitz-Hugh Lee has decided that the business in which he has de- termined to engage upon retiring to private life near Richmond, Va., will i be \of an industrial character,\ .but beyond this he has refused to make. any statement for publication. Governor Geer of Oregon has again refused the offer of a great number of his admirers to buy him an executive mansion. \I am too poor to accept it,\ he says. the house I rent, and to buy a fine house for me to furnish would be lay- ing too heavy a burden on my shoul- ders.\ . The Marquis of Ripon, who recently celebrited his golden wedding, has In and about the picturesque town of Ripon, Yorkshire, may be seen milk wagous bearing his former title, \The Most Notable the Marquis of Ripon.\ He also has a milk store in London, where country dairy products are sold. THE WHIRL OF FASHION. frass linen, especially the patterned fabric, is likely to hold a prominent po- sition among gowns worn until Sep- tember is past. Black, plumb red, amethyst and gold en brown velvets will be in great use for futumn and winter dress trimmings and elegant millinery. Very elegant patterns of real vene- tian lace, with colored designs in shad- ed embroidery introduced among the filmy meshes of the lace, are the height of fashion. Broad brimmed hats of black nea. politan braid swathed with black point esprit and relieved with white or chids and roses are very fashionably worn with black, black and white and all white toilets severally. The taste for all white gowns ex- tends even to cycling costumes, white mohair or English serge models stitch ed with silk and trimmed with very narrow braid appearing among the lat- est summer creations from noted French designers. - Vivid scarlet, cream white, old rose, pale turquoise blue and golden brown satin ribbon severally, from three to five inches in width, arranged in choux or medium high loops, are seen upon some of the latest round hats, showing no other additional trimming of flow- ers or foliage.-New YorlmPost. DECISIONS IN LAW. The Kentucky court of appeals de cides to be void as against public poli- cy the assignment by a public officer of his salary in advance of earning it. A Baltimore court bas decided that an owner. of property has no right to an injunction restraining the erection. of a telephone pole on the sidewalk ad- joining his property. The court in Iowa has held that a statute making it unlawful to add wa- ter or any other substance to milk that 6s intended for sale is constitutional, even if the substances added are not injurious or used with intent to de- fraud, but are merely for the purpose of preserving the milk. The wrongful dishonor by a bank of the checks of a trader is held in J. M. James & Co. versus Continental Na- lonal bank (Tenn.), 51 L. R. &. 255, to raise a conclusive presumption of dam- uges to him, but an action therefor is held not to be an action for slander within the meaning of a statute of lim- itation. ' POWDER AND BALL. Within 12 months the greatest naval magazine station in this country, which {s in course of construction on Iona is- land, near Peekskill, will have been completed. At a recent trial at Portsmouth, fing- land, the gunners managed to fire one projectile of $50 pounds every 24 see- onds from a 12 inch 50 ton gun sup- plied with a new breech mechanism. Portugal's new compulsory military service calls for three years in the active army, five in the first reserve and seven in the second reserve. First reserve service calls for a month's training every year. - \I am living comfortably in i- ~ How THE LEas GRowW. The Shocks of Exercise Lengthen Them and Keep Them Even,. As a fact, says the author, our lower limbs are not usually both of exactly the same length, though they are so for all practical purposes. The left is usu- slly the longer, though the gait is not notably influenced by this fact. At birth the lower limbs are shorter than the upper, and their movements are rather of the prehensile type. \We are not born leggy like the foal or kanga- roo, but we gradually achieve legg ness.\ The bones increase in length, not so much by interstitial deposit as by addition to their ends-that is, by pro- gressive ossification of the layer of car- tillage which intervenes between the end of the shaft and the epiphysis. Os- sification goes on till the component parts of the bone are all united by bony matter, and thus the stature of the in- dividual is determined. OC If from inflammation or injury an epiphysis be damaged, one limb may be shorter than the other, or inflammatory stimulation may even induce an in- <creased length in the bone affected. The skeletons of tortoises, not being sub- jected to sudden jars; have no epiphy- ses at the ends of the, long bones, whereas in the leaping frog the extrem- ities of the humerus and femur long re- main as separate epiphyses. The con- tinuous concussions to which the ends of the bones of the lower limbs are ex- posed when a vigorous child is.excited by its own natural spirit to run about are doubtless of great value in assist ing the growth in length of the lower limbs, which soon lose their infantile character and become adapted for run- | k ning and walking. By exposing the lower limbs to the same influences and resistances during their entire growth we manage to maintain them of the same length, and gentle jars upon the epiphyses at the joints may be consid-. ered favorable to growth.-New York Medical Record. ' h GURES AlL eve Diseases. ENFLAMED SCALES ON LIDS, %, . GRANULATION ETC. % MURINE CURES PINK EYE STRENGTHENS WEAK EYES.. Cures red eyelids. Cures red eyes. Qures blurring eyes. , Qures inflamed eyes. TA Cures Oyclist's eyes, Relieves eye pain. Cures granulation. Is an oye food, Removes floating spots Cures overworked eyes Cures roughness of lids Cures discharging eyes Cures ulcers on eyes. §) Cures children's eyes. Cures scales on eyelids Restores eyelashes. * Ouresitching and burn- E. F. SMITH, Oph,\ D,, 51 Main Street. : WW'tuvfl Olcott Beach MONDAY, AUG. 12 ONE WEEK COMMENCING NEW YORC SPECIALTY C0 Presenting Unique Novelties in: VAUDEVILLE _ A Rich, Red Blood - If your cheeks and lips are pale and hloodless, get a 50¢c bottle of Smith's Beef, Wine and Iron, the result will surprise you, Nothing can equal Smith's Famous No. 69, for all kinds of bowel complaint. No fanx ily is safe without it. 25¢ a bot. All patent medicines at lowest popular prices at SMITH'S (Old Reliable) Drug Store, 98 Main St. Phone 22844. ryes RECEIPT - FOR SORE EYES A first-class up-to-date Specta- cle or Eye-glass properly fitted is good for sore eyes. The latest out in Eye-glasses is the \Shur On Shur\ on for good. Bring all your Eye Glass and Spectacle prescriptions to us-we want them. You know they will be § fitted properly and strictly up- § to-date at John OQutwater's 73 Main St. po CASTORIA For Infants and Children The Kind You Haye Always Bought Beats the zZ ears SW Bignature of COMFORT IN CLOTHING is the principal point, We make you stylish, comfort- able suits to your order.. Buddenhagen & Copeland, | Merchant Tailors, 9 Main Si u 2 'qt. Fountain Syrange....... . Fine Claret ............. $] Fine Sherry ...... sk. LEGAL NOTICES. STATE OF NEW YORK, County Court, County of Niagara, The Farmers and Mechanics Savings Banit of the City of Lfilckport, against Holmes A. Conkey and others. ~ In pursuance of a judgment of fore- Court in the above entitled action and entered in Niagara County Clerk's office on the seventh day of August, 1901, I, the ' undersigned referee, duly appointed -| therefor, will expose for sale and sell at ublic auction to the highest bidder, at he northerly vestibule of the Court House in the City of Lockport, County of Niag- ara, and State of New York, on the 30th day of August, 1901, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, the real estate and mortgaged premises directed in and by said judg- ment to be sold and therein described as follows: . . All that tract or parcel of land situate in the Cityiand Town of Lockport, County of Niagara and State of New York,. known _and described as the north part of lot No. one and the northeast part of lot No. three in the 14th Section, lith Township and 6th Range of the Holland Land Company's Lands, so called, bound- ed and described as ing at the northeast corner of said lot No. one, and runnin north line of said lots one and three, thirt-five chains, forty-one links; thence south on a line parallel to the east bounds of said lot three, fourteen chains and twelve links; thence east on a line par- | allel to the first mentioned boundary, and distant fourteen chains and twelve links south therefrom, thirty-five chains, forty- | one links to the east line of said lot No. lot one, fourteen chains and twelve Hnks, to the place of beginning, containing fifty - acres of land, be the same more or less; and being the same premises conveyed by the Holland Land Company to James Conkey by deed recorded in Niagara. County Clerk's Office in Book of Deeds No. 9 at page 360; excepting and reserving however, from the above described prem- > ises, one-half an acre thereof conveyed y said James Conkey to Alexander Pound by dqed recorded in said Niagara County. Clerk's Office in Book 42 of Deeds at page 264; four and 41-100 geres thereof con- veyed by Stephen W. Conkey and Holmes A. Conkey to Sarah A. Seager, by deed Liber 101 of Deeds at page 407, seven and 7-100 acres thereof conveyed by said Stephen W. Conkey and Holmes A. Con- ey to John Kelley and Catherine Jen- ney, by deed recorded in the same Clerk's Office in Liber 101 of Deeds at page 488; - two acres thereof, more or less, conveyed by James B. Conkey, Holmes A,. Conkey and Sarah A. Seager to Peter Dries by deed recorded in the same Clerk's Office in liber 126 of Deeds at page 551, and one and 9-100 acres thereof conveyed by said James B. Conkey, Holmes A. Conkey and deed recorded in the same Clerk's Of in liber 145 of Deeds at page 446; to Whig x several deeds or to the records thereof, reference is hereby made for a descrip- tion of the respective parcels so excepted. 19gated, Lockport, N. Y., August ith, 3 BURT G. STOCKWELL, - R s WM. 'W. STORRS, eferee Pliffg, Attorney, . §0 Main. Street, - , Lockport, A. Y. aug 8-10-13-15-20-27-29. , NoTIcE To TAX pavers. . _- - City Treasurer's Office, NOTICE is hereby given, that the fol-' lowing local Assessments have been re- celisgzdsggzy fme foIr) eqllectidon. rto wit: - , for a Drai 7 i vine sind? n and Water Pipe in the Common Council, August 5th, 1901, and that all persons,. corporations, or [§ associations assessed, are required to pay 32h assessrgent to tfine'c at the Sitar ( reasurer's office, in the City Bui P1633 Sttrecélt, as follows: ity Building, ne tenth thereof within twenty d from the date of this notice, withogt 1333's? and the remaining nine-tenths in nine confirmation with interest at the rate of 4 unpaid, and if the first installment is not paid within twenty days from date of this notice 2 per cent. mses will be charged for the next twenty days; and for the next twenty days, 5 per cent. fees will he charged, as required by the City Charter. L J. C. HARRINGTON, 8-905t _ City Treasurer. Wanted everybody who is interested in making money to invest with .us. We have the best-'\not something equally as goéd\; and as for priges, We‘ take pride in underbidding. our- selves. Faxon Coffee in 2lb pkgs.... 50c. pkg Libert Flour, none better.... 55¢. bag Rio and Java Coffee.......... 20c. ID Corn StArCR 0666+ 5c. pKg Home Trade Soap ... 4c. Ib «ee ++ a ee ae Saturday Only. 10ibs Granulated Sugar with other Groceries 55¢ Drugs. We are not in the Drug Trust. 49¢ .. Schlitz's Malt Extract 2 bot. for.. « 250 Cerea; Milk, the perfect food..., STc Castorit 25c. bot | a se se sees s §! Pinkhams Compound ...... 69c. bot- Wines. 25¢. bot 25c. bot Fine Port ......... Fine Sweet Catawba,........ Fine Rhine Wine. 25c. bot 50c. bot The. Bryant, a high grade Union f made Cigar this week 7 for 250. - Faxon, Williams & Faxon & cure vourseLr ?> se n e ee aa ae discharges, inflammations, \ -- irritations or ulcerations of mucous membrangs, >> Painless, and not @ p, gent or poisonous. .. | ~>.) Sold by Druggists, -/ or sont in plain wrappor li Fy express, prepaid, ' 3 Auer s Botrice, $2175 ircular sent on requodi closure and sale, duly granted by this. i-_ f thence west on the fil one; thence north on the east line of said @ a recorded in the. same Clerk's Office in fM Sarah A. Seager to James Carpenter by - Wf Lockport, N. Y., August 9th, 190L R No. 559, for a Drain a ~ | E3 2 as, in and Water Pipe in . Which 'Assessments* were confirmed by J equal annual payments from the date of . ¥ per cent. per annum on the whole amount - © 250. bot. R Use Big G for unnaturst'. $