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THE LOCKPORT JOURNAL, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1901 WEATH ER INDICATIONS. Tor Wostorn New York-Snow tonight, Saturday, generally cloudy, snow along the Inkes. Frosh to brisk winds, dimin- ishing in oxtrome west portion. EVENTS AND MEETINGS. Rogular meoting of HydrantHose Com- pany tonight. Regular meeting of Lincoln Council this evening. Regular mooting of Niagara Council No. 8, Ir. 0, U, A. M,, this evening at 8 o'clock, in Jr. 0. U. A. M. Hall. There will boe an emergent communica- tion of Niagara Lodge No. 87G F. & A. M. tonight at 8 o'clook to take suitable action on the death of our lato brother, Daniel K. Stevons. Regular meoting of William McKinley Council, Jr. 0. U,. A. M., this evening in the Adkins Block, at 8 o'clock. Drill of dogreo tomm, Doputy State Councilor W. I. Davonport will be prosont. PERSONAL MENTION. Tosoph Allon was In Buffalo Thurs- day, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Eastman, of Buffalo, spent Thursday with friends in town. Mr. and Mrs. Black, of Buffalo, took Thankeglving dinner with her mother on Transit Street. Miss - Male - Dickson, of Hawley Street, - spent | Thanksgiving | with friends in Buffalo, Miss Minnic | Peneills, - spent | Thanksgiving frlends in Buffalo. Fred Walker, of Orchard Street, who has been confined to his home by 'liness, is convalescent. Mrs, Wood, of South Street, réturn- od Thursday ovening after an extend- 0d visit, with her daughter in Medina. 'Dr. M. Elizabeth Schugens, of Buf- of South with falo, was the guest of Mrs, Ellen H.} James, of Hast Avenue, on Wednesday, Rev. B. P. Marvin, who is holding mostings in Brooklyn, N. Y., expects to roturn home on noxt week, Tuesday, Mr., and Mrs. McMullen and daught- er, of Buffalo, spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Hartley, of Park Place. i Miss Tessle Scott and Cieorge Oakley, of Buffalo, took Thanksgiving dinner with Miss Scott's parents on Locust | Stroot. Mr. and Mra. George Reeves, of South Royalton, spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs, Herman Bradlaugh, 61 Locust Street. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam G. Masin, of Buffalo, wore the guésts over Thanks- giving, of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Ben- nott, of GeCollum Street. Prontice Fellows, Fred Fellows and the Misses Clara and May Fellows, of 801 First Street, Magors Falls, wore the guests of Mrs, Helen Urth and «laughter yesterday. Tho Missos Lillian and Sarah Wood, of South Street, and Mrs. George P. Knight, of Church Street, spent \Thanksgiving in Medina with their sistor, Mrs. Murdock, Miss Erma Duork, of Juniper Street, roturned this morning from a visit in Buffalo; while thers sho attended the wodding of Hdwin Kellar and Miss Eleanor Kring, on Tuesday evening. Dr. W. Swan, of New York City, is the guest of his niece, Mrs. Jacob Fisher, of Walnut Street, When Dr. Swan roturns to New Yorl Saturday, ho will be accompanied by his niece, Miss Carolyn Fisher, who will spend the holldays in the metropolis. HAVING FUN WITH HIS NAME Hrnost Scton-«Thompson Not ObJected to by the Author, After all, {t is Tirnost Seton-Thomp- son. 'The namo will be kept as a nom do plume, says a Chiengo dispatch to the New York World, Ho has ten brothors, ind twenty years ago they , wll agreed to chango their name by process of law. 'They were senttered throughout the world, and for some reason tho step was not tiken. \That Is the name under which I am 'known, and, although Scton is the cor- rece name, I have no objection to Se- ton-'Fhompson. 'The bright boys In the nowspapers can have their fun, but I am stilt with 'the wild animals I have known.? \ Opossum Skins Become Valuable, The opossum has risen in the senle of things and becomes decidedly aristo- cratic, Possum skins are quoted at 50 gonts aplece in tho market at Cinein- matf, and the tong, handsome boag are mainly responsible for the fact. says tho Now York Times. Within the last fow months a method of dressing and dyeing opossum skins so that they re- sembled the skins of rare animals has been discovered, and immediately the skins went skyward in price. Northern Waters In Winter. “lime the lonoly shore stray snowflakes fall. 6 waves crash on the shattered ice and crush The surging flocs upon a rock fangea wall 'Tinged gold and saffron with the evening's ush, The tm goes down behind a blood red wost, One cold stax glitters In the pallid light, And all the stlont world draws to (ts breast The threofold calm of water, snow and night. , ~Artliur Stringer in Alnslco's Magazine For Do- comber, FAVORITE _| SCRIPTION o of & . FoR wiEaK women. When Grandma was a Girl \fler mother gave her Downs' Elixir when she had a cold or cough, whoop- ing cough, or croup. It was the best medicine known then, and it is the best now. Seventy years of cures has established its merits. Sold every- where and money back it is does not «Bure. heavens + BOON TO CONSUMPTIVES Interesting Features of a Col- ony Started In Colorado. WORKED ON COOPERATIVE LINES It Is Intended For Poor Men Who Cannot Afford to Be Idle and Planned to Be Self Supporting-Pa- tients Live In Tents and Work Out- doors. A co-operative colony for consump- tives, planned to be self gupporting, in which patients in the first stages of the disease can live in tents and work outdoors in the dry, health giving air of Colorado, has made a start in a ten rere tract of fruit land near Barnum. It is backed by several men prominent in business in Denver, and about twen- ty physicians of high standing are watching the experiment with interest. If it is a success, the colony will solve the biggest problem that the sanitariums of Colorado have to face, and It will probably save the lives of thousands of men from all over the country who discover the disease while It is still in an incipient stage, but can- not afford to go to Colorado and re- main there in idleness, says the New York Sun. The great problem with the majority of consumptives who go to Denver is how to stay in Colorado and to support themselves by some healthful occupation during the long perlod in which the wasted lung tis- sues are repairing in the mountain air. Hundreds go there each year, effect [& partial cure and then, because their money has given out and they cannot afford to live any longer without work- ing, return to their old homes and un- healthful occupation only to succumb to the disease in a few months. Hun- dreds more go to work in offices and stores, with the result that they de- riveélltfle benefit from their change of home and only succeed in delaying the end for a little while. For these two classes of patients the colony is founded. It has been incor- porated as the Rocky Mountain Inde- pendent sanitarium. Its present quar- ters are ouly temporary. 'They would not give the colony a chance to ex- pand, and the dream of its directors is to see It occupying about 2,000 acres, self supporting and independent of out- side labor. It is not a charitable institution, nor is It a money making concern. Its con- stitution is framed with a view to pre- vent it from becoming the latter. It has been started and got under way by a few Denver business men as their contribution toward solving the tuber- culosis problem, and their idea is sim- ply to help consumptives to help them- selves. Only patients who can do outdoor work or have money enough to pay for their board for the present and are likely to be able to join the ablebodied workers before that money is spent will be accepted at the time. They will have good medical treatment, but It is upon the outdoor life that the principal reliance is placed to effect a cure. To insure. the patients being in the open air all the time they will sleep in tents and will even eat their meals outdoors. This is the plan followed in the temporary quarters at Barnum, and the results have been most satis- factory. There are now about twenty consumptives there. Among them are a carpenter and a shoemaker, but the majority find work on the fruit lands which now comprise the home's terri- tory. The institution will stay, near Bar- num till nest spring. Then it will seek larger quarters. When it is well estab- lished, it is expected to make it capa- ble of lving entirely by itself, its in- mates supplying all its wants. The idea is that men of all trades will go there and ply their trades, so that the home will not need to buy much of anything but materials. Even in the winter the pationts will continue the tent life. That is the pivot on which the whole system hangs. Some of the present patients have been at the sanitarium for about six weeks, aud they find that their con- dition has been very perceptibly im- proved by the life outdoors. They say that it is uncomfortable to go into heated rooms since their lungs became accustomed to the cold air. The superintendent of the colony is a convalescent consumptive. She is &ffss Margaret S. Dunne. In the war with Spain she served in Cuba as a nurse, and at the close of the fighting she was put in charge of the officers' wards in the military hospital in Ha- yana. There her health gave way, and | she came to Colorado. She Is trying to found auxiliary oranches of the home in the east with a view to interesting philanthropic in- atitutions throughout the country in it before it launches out on a more ex- tended scale. The land it will take will be used principally for fruit cultiva- Hon,. as that gives the best field for Iabor, but some of it will be grain and pasture land. If the experiment continues to fulfill the promise wih which it has opened, there are plenty ef physicians ready to sneourage it, and it will have the most modern and complete modical equip- mont that it is possible to obtain. Glass Road In Paris. The Rue Trouchet in Paris, which has been paved with a new glass proc- bss Invented by M. Garchey, has just been opened to tho public, says the New York Sun. Contrary to the expec- tation of many, it forms an excellent foothold and promises to be without dust and not to absorb waste. By the process the inventor has been erabled to utilize all kinds of glass debris. s o The Finest Cleaner Made Will not scratch. AMUSEMENTS. AlllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllIll“! HODGE OPERA HOUSE. KONDAY, DEC. 2. DELCHER & BRENNAN PRESENT KATHBYN KIDDER IN GLEN COMEDY DRAMA, MOLLY PITCHER #THE IEROINE OF THE AMERICAN REYOLUTIOX\ PRICES-Orchestra, $1.50; Dress Circle, 50c, 75¢, $1.00; Bulcony 25¢, 50c. Seats now on sale. ORIGIN OF POPULAR PHRASE How \Go 'Way Back and Sit Down\ Was First Used. \The popular phrase, 'Go 'way back and sit down,' has been credited to many sources,\ said a music publisher to a reporter of the New York Sun, \but the true story has never been printed. \One night about a year ago several solored sports gathered in a saloon in the Tenderloin owned by a negro and patronized chiefly by men of his own race. In the party were Smithy, the tenor, and Bully, the tout. Smithy came from the west and dressed in the height of fashion, while Bully's home was in the south. \Bully had had quite a turn of ill tuck, and his attire suffered in conse- quence. Smithy began kidding him about it. Finally Bully got angry. He sized Smithy up from head to foot for a few geconds and then sailed in: \'Yo' am er dude, yo' am,' he began contemptuously. 'Yo' done come round here an' try to lit de folks know dat yo' rm livin' on easy street. \'Don't yo' fink, man, dat dem horses am a-gwine to run fo' yo' in de snow lis winter. Yo' ain't no steel rod. Yo' kin git broke. \'Say nigger, do yo' see dat chair yonder by dat stove? Take mah advice an' go 'way back an' sit down, an' wen yo' git dere stay deore an' don't come back no more tonight. Understand, honey? \Smithy did go 'way back and sit down and was not heard of the rest of the night. Al Johns, a coloreq‘ musi- clan, who was present, thought the phrase was unique, and the next day he told Elmer Bowman, a negro song writer, about it. \Johns thought it would make a good title for a song, so Bowman wrote some verses which Johns put to music. In the story of the song Bowman stuck to the incidents that took place in the saloon that night, and when the song was published it at once became popu- lar. \The phrase was used a good deal by the opposite political parties in the last campaign.\ FATE OF THE DECLARATIONN\ Text and Signatures to the Original Copy Have Faded Away. The original copy of the Declaration of Independence is no more, accord- ing to a Washington dispatch to the New York Sun. The stirring text and the signatures of the members of the Continental congress have faded away. This precious document is preserved in a cabinet in the state department libra- ry, but it is now practically nothing more than a large sheet of parchment. Part of the words, \Declaration of In- dependence,\ which were written in large letters with many ornamental flourishes, are decipherable, but not a signature is visible to the naked eye. One hardly discernible stroke of John Hancock's pen is all that remains of his bold and vigorous autograph, which he purposely made large, so as to show the British government that he bad no fear of being known. 'The Declaration is preserved in a narrow drawer, glass covered, which slides in a steel safe with heavy double doors, locked by a combination. After its removal to the state department from Independence hall in Philadel- phia, where the Continental congress held its session on July 4, 1776, the Declaration was placed in a glass case and exposed to the view of visitors. Owing to the strong light to which it was subjected it began to fade, and it was then removed to the drawer in which It is now preserved. This was several years ago. The fading contin- ued, however, until now the noted doc- ument is nothing more apparently than a mere blank sheet of paper. Jefferson's original draft of the Dec- laration, with insertions in the hand- writing of Franklin and John Adams, is still exposed to public view in the same ease where the formal decument was formerly on exhibition. Strangely enough, the isk on this draft has not faded. 'The writing is still as clear as it. was 125 years ago, when Jefferson and the other members of the drafting committee wrote the words that bade deflance to the British crown. a BUSINESS NOTICES, California Illustrated. Copy of the illustrated monthly, The Chicago 400, a journal of travel and topics, reachs us by the courtesy of the Chicago & North-Western Ry. It is one of the finest lilustrated publica- tions that we have ever seen. The tinted half-tones rival those of the finest magazines, and the letter-press of the whole edition is as perfect as that of any publication ever issued, pictorially and descriptively mirroring California's wonderful scenery. Copy will be mailed to your address upon receipt of 2 cents postage by W. B. Kniskern, G. P. & T. A., C. & N. W. Ry., Chicago, Ill. Low Rate Buffalo to Chicago. Via Nickel Plate Railroad, tickets on sale December 24, 34, and 4th at fate of $14.00 for round trip, good returning to November Sth. Choice of three fast through trains fully equipped, afford- ing every comfort to pessengers. In- quire of Local Agent, or write F. J. Moore, General Agent, 291 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. 11-20d-e0d to 12-3 California-Oregon Excursions. Every day in the yeai. The Chicago, Union Pacific and North-Western Line runs through first-class Pullman and Tourist Sleeping Cars to points in California and Oregon daily. Person- ally conducted excursions from Chi- cago to San Francisco. Lowest rates. Shortest time on the road. Finest scenery. Inquire of your nearest ticket agent, or write. 10-26c-10t8 FOR SALE-On account of removal of occupant, that fine residence, No. 162 Cottage Street, Lockport, N. Y., will be sold cheap and on easy terms of payment. No better chance to secure a desirable home can be found in Lockport. Jas. At- water & Son, agents, 10 Opera House Block. 164-2w Card of Thanks. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Ferguson wish to extend their sincere thanks to their friends for the many kindnesses dur- ing the time of their sad bereavement. 290-1t Robert Lincoln Cigars. Long filler Sumatra wrapper, pack- ed in boxes of 25 for 63 cents, while they last. FRANK J. REYNOLDS, ~ < en wANTED-Managing farmer to su- perintend six teams and the tilling of 300 acres. Good judgment, some education. Reliability appreciated. Apply to A. H. Lytle, 200 Market Street. 250-3t-1tW ZANTED-Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Niagara County; also and history of Niagara County, city or town-must be in good con- dition and cheap. Address \In- surance\ Journal. 25d-5t WANTED-First-class experienced cutter on ladies' shirt waists. Apply, J. B. Schwaegler Co., 481 Washing- ton Street, Buffalo, N.Y. 29d-2t The ladies of the Baptist Church will hold a Rummage Sale Tuesday, De- cember 3, one week, at No. 4 Cen- tral block. - 290-3t WANTED-A competent girl for gen- eral housework. Good wages. Ap- ply 94 Niagara Street. 29d-1t B CA BEBT OER EIA. iThe Kind You Have Always Bought go- - , Bears the Signature of GIVE THANKS E8 Ing week will not be complete without them. We've set out to be known as the best place to buy Groceries, and to do this we work ceaselessly to gather the cream of the mar- ket, with the barest possible margin of profit. Granulated Sugar, 10 Ibs. for 506 {(When bought with other Groceries) FRUIT. New Raisins, Currants, Citron, Lemon and Orange Peal, Fard and Persian Dates, Figs, Snow Apples, Navel Oranges, Lemons, Malaga and Niagara Grapes. Queen Olives, pint bottle 25¢, in bulk 40¢ gt. NEW NUTS. . Mixed Walnuts, Almonds, Brazil, Pecans, Filberts, Hickory and Chestnuts. * Standard Oysters, gt....... 25C ._ DRUGS. Swamp Root, large bottle.. 6gc Gray's Balsam, bottle...... 12¢ Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- tion,bottle............... 69¢ Syrup White Pine and Tar, bottle. 20c 2 qt. Hot Water Bottle each 49c¢ WINES, Special Brew Beer dozen.. -50c Schlitz Beer, 'dozen........ oc Port Wine, bottle. .... .... 2ge Rhine Wine, bottle.... . 2... 50C State Seal Champagne,quart $1.10 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY OKLY California Hams, lb........ 8c Fancy Dairy Butter, lb..... 22¢ Faxon, Williams & Faxon -| Hogs, cwt ..... ”Theughts \ Every | Day | Living\ § BY MALTBIE D. BABCOCK AT OKEEFE'S)] Book and Wall Paper Store. AGENCY for SMITH PREMIER TYPE WBITER. Machines sent out on trial. LOCAL MARKETS. Prices Paid to Farmers. Cabbage (Danish), ton ..........$5.50 Cabbage (domestic), ton ..$5.50 to $6 Apples, fancy No. 1, bbl ........ $3.00 Apples, fancy No. 1 (bushel) ....85¢ Apples, Fancy No. 2, bushel 50c to 60¢ Quinces ............... ... $1.50 to $2.00 Pears ........... $1.50 to $2.00 Potatos, (car load), bushel 45¢ to 50¢ Potatoes, bushel,from wagon 40¢c to 50c Onions, bushel .......... ae $1.00 Squash, per ton ......$12.00 to $15.00 Beans, PeQ .............. $1.25 to $1.60 Beans, Marrofat .........$1.50 to $1.80 Beans, Medium ...... .. $1.25 and $1.60 Beans, Red Kidney ...... $1.30 to, $1.90 Beans, Kidney....... Butter, per pound .. .18¢ to 20¢ Eggs, per dozen ............ 18e to 20¢ Wheat ........... ...6... ..T5e to T6e Corn, State, bushel .........68¢ to 66¢ Oats .......... sek.... eee +s 42¢ to 45¢ Barley, bushel ..............50c to 58e fickwheat ..................50c to 60¢ Clover seed ..... s..... to $7.00 Timothy seed ............$2.25 to $2.65, Rye ........ sas to 69¢ HAY nse .... $9.00 to $12.00 Straw, ton ........ ...... .$6.00 to $6.50 Baled Hay, ton ........ $10.00 to $£8.00 Bailed Straw, ton ......$7.09 to $8.00 Live poultry, chicks ..... verse see e> edd Fowls .............. see see ee ses ee ee »TC Dréss:d Poultry, (chicken)..10c to lic Dressed Poultry, (fowls)......8c to 9¢ Dressed Poultry, (turkeys)..l11c to 12%¢ Dressed Poultry, (ducks)....10c to lic sa eessae as ++ +$7.50 to -- Lamb, pound .. ... 8C to 10¢ Beef, Cwt. ................$6.00 to $7.00 . .$1.50 to $2.00 Wholesale prices paid for manufactur- ed products, etc. gran, ewt ...... to 95¢ Middlings, owt. ...........95¢ to $1.00 Bran and Middilings. ton $18.00 to $19.00 Corn Meal, coarse, owu............ $1.25 Corn Meal, coarse, ton .......... $24.1 Oil Meal .......... oak s e ea e es » + Retail Prices. - } Potatoes, bushel ..........50c to 60c Onions, peck.......... ......25¢ to 30¢ Cabbage, each ........ ....... .be to 60 Celery, buncl-......... vse ece... .. 100 Apples, peck ........... .... 20¢ to 40¢ Oranges, dozen .............85¢ to 50¢ Lemons, dozen .............. 20¢ to 30¢ Bananas, dozen ............. 20¢ to 25¢ Figs, pound .................15¢ to 20¢ Butter, pound ...............22¢ to 28¢ Eggs, dozen ..................220 to -- Cheese, pound ard, pound ...10c to 18¢ Granulated sugar ................5¥%e COff@G, A ess ake eae sneek 06+ Coffee, C ....... we se e ere nes seee ee s e +50 Corn meal (fine) pound ......1% to 2¢ Corn meal (coarse) ..............$1.25 Ofl IM@AL ks ses ie ess $1.60 Barley, bushel ....... ......55¢ to 60¢ Corn, Western, bushet ......65¢ to 68¢ Corn, State, bushel ................720 Oats, bushel ................400 to 42¢ Beans, Pea ...... to $2.00 Beans, Marrofat ........$2.00 to $2.25 Beans, Medium .........$1.75 to $2.00 Beans, Red Kidney ...... $3.00 to $2.25 Haw, owt. .......... to 80¢ SHAW, CWE .......rek 00s ess kk Best Spring Flour, patent ......... B5¢ High Grade Winter .........50c to b5e Family Grades ........ .... .48¢ to 50¢ Fowls ........ kee ees ve ea e eae wee .... 18¢ RICKENS . 606k 0606-2150 SPADER & CO. New York Stock Exchanges, Ellicott Square Bldg., Buffalo, N. Y. Stocks. Bonds and Grain Bought and sold for cash or carried on margin. On application will mail you our DAILY MARKET LETTER. JOHN T. DARRISON BEST.... «4 00. Pastry and Pancake Goods. Opposite Big Bridge, Lockport. LEGAL NOTICES. NOTIGE TO GREDITORI-Dy order of Hon. Charles Hickey, Surrogate of Niagara County notice ishereby given, according to law. to Ali persons having claims or demands agxinst the estate of Charles A. Murphy, late of the City of Lockport, Niagera County, N. Y., deceased. to exhibit the wime, with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber, the exocuirix of said decessod, at the offive of E. J. Taylor, No. 98 Main treet, in the City of Lockport, in suid County, on.or before the 31st ary of Murch vext. . MINNIE K. MURPHY. bmc u sys Executrix, B. J. TAYLOR, ' Lo Cs Attorney for Executriz, No.93 Main St., Lockport, N. Y.. 9-2746mPF § | have one,and ifthey havenone that they ap- Lamb .... ae e ne mes eae ek 15 to 200 Hams .... a sea srs e nee} 14 to 18¢ |. Shoulder .......... ....... ..10 to 12e Pork, salt ............. .....10 to 1%0 Pork, fresh ...... see ea a se sea a sa eee 14¢ BACON ................1....+:12 to 14¢ LEGAL NOTICES. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK K, To Elizabeth T. Darlington, Emily T. Doane, Lewis L. Trowbridge, Frederick F. Trowbridge, heirs at law and devisees under the last will and testament of Cornelia 8. Trowbridge, late of the Village of Lewiston, in the County of Niagara, deceased, and to all creditors/of and other persons interested @ in said estate, if any there may be, Greeting: | You are hereby cited and required to appear before our Surrogate, of our County of Nia- 5am, in our Surrogate's Court, on the lith ay of January, 1902, at 10 o'clock in the fore- noon of that day, at the Surrogate's Office, in the City of Lockport, then and there show [ cause, if any there. be, why the Buffalo Loan, ° Trustand Safe Deposit Company ofthe City ofl Buffalo, New York, should not be appoint- j ed administrator with the will annexed up- f on the estate of the said deceased. ' And if any of the aforesaid persons are under the age of twenty-one years, they will please take notice that they are required to appear by their general guardian, if they pear and apply for theappointment of a spe- clal guardian, or in the event oftheir neglect or failure to do so a special guardian will ba npgqinted by the Surrogate to represent and act forthem in the proceedings for the pro- bate of said will. p In Testimony Whereof, we have caused the Seal of office of our said Surrogate to be hereto affixed. (LS.) Witness, Hon,. Charles Hickei. Surrogate of said County, at Lock- port, the ?th day of November, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and one. WILLIAM J. HOOPER, Clerk to the Surrogate's Court. To Emily T. Doane, Lewis L. Trowbridge, Frederick E. Trowbridge, and to all creditors of, and other persons interested in saidestate, if any there may be: - The foregoing citation is served upon you by Elblicatlon, pursuant to an order made, by Hon, Charles Hickey, Surrogate of Nia- gara County, N. Y., dated November %, 1901, and filed with the petition in this pro-. ceeding in the Surrogate's Office of said County of Niagara at Lockport, N. Y. CHARLES K. ROBINSON, Attorney for Petitioner, 408 Mooney & Brisbane Building, Buffalo, N. Y. COUNTY COURT-Niagara County.-Herbert | J,. Chadwick, Plaintiff, against Simon Miller, Julia Miller, his wife, Thressa Smith, Fred J. Smith, Defendants. In pursuance ofa judgment and foreclosure and sale duly granted by this Court and en- tered in Niagara County Clerk's Office, on the 16th day of November, 1901, I, the under- signed, referee duly alfpointed therefor, will expose for sale and sell at public auction to the highest bidder itherefor, at the northerly l vestibule of the Court House, in the City of Lockport, N. Y., on the lith day of @ December, 1901, at ten o'clock inthe forenoon, the real estate and mortgaged premises di- rected in and by said judgment to be sold, and therein described as follows: All that tract or parcel ofland, situate in the City of Lockport, County of Niagara and State of New York, known and described on Freh- see's map of said city as lots number two and. , four, on the east side of Ransom Court; said lots being bounded and described as follows; viz: Beginning on the southerly side of the [IR State Road, so-called, at the point of intersec-, B tlon ofthe southline thereof with the north line of farm lot number fifty-eight; running thence southerly along said State Road, nine- ty-seven links to the east line of said Ransom. Court; thence south one chain, fourteen Hunks along the said east line to the northwest cor- ner of lot number six, on Ransom Court; thence east at right angle two chains to the northwest corner of-lot number eleven on South Transit Street; thencenorth parallel to [§ the west line of South Transit Street, one I chain and eighty-nine links tothe north Hine ofsaid farm lotnum ber fifty-eight; and thence - west along said north line to the place oi be-, MB ginning, containing more or less. hill - Dated Lockport, . Y., November 18th, 1901. GEORGE W. BOWEN, Referee. Enuswort®, Porter & StoRRS, - Attorneys for Plaintiff, Lockport; N. Y. 11,10TuP7t6 SALE OF LAND. STATE OF NEW YORK, OFFICE OFP THE STATE ENGINEER & SURVEYOR, ALBANY. \_ November 20, 1901 PURSUANT to a resolution of the Com missioners of the Land Office passed at a meeting held on the Slst day of October, 1901, MM and by virtue of power vested in me by law, B 1 shall offer for sale, for cash, at public auction, at the office 01; the State Engineer fil and Surveyor, in the City of Albany and if State of New York, on Wednesday, the 2nd day of January, 1902, at 12 o'clock noon, all M the title of the State of New Yorkin the lands described as: \ Niagara County, Lockport city, Main street, (East,) North side, . Lot5, B'd beg. on west line of lot 7, 60 tect: M N. from Main street; thence S, 71 degrees 2 minutes W. parellel to Main Street 28 feet; thence N. 18 degrees 40 minutes W. at right angles to Main street 27 7-12 feet; thence S. 71 degrees 20 minutes W. 8%4 feet thence N. 'at | right angles to Erie canald0 feet to Erie canal; thence N. E'ly along Erie canal to lot 7, and. thence along lot 7 to beginning, f EDWARD A.BOND, 11-2200tF State Engimeer and Surveyor. 24 SALE OF LAND. STATE OFP NEW YORK, oFrFicr® OF THE STATE ENGINEER & SURVEYOR, ALBANY. - November 20, 1901. a resolution of the Commissioners of the Land Office R assed at a meeting beld on the Sst MW ay of October, 1901, and by virtue of power @ vested in me by law, I shall offer for sale, for Mil cash, at public auction, at the office of the @@ State Engineer and Surveyor, in the City of Albany and State oi New York, on Wednes- day, the 22nd day of January, 1902, atl2 o'clock noon, all the title of the State of New York, in | the lands described as; 4 Niagara County, LocTiport City, Mulberry Street, South Side, ® Lot 23, West 34, 112209tF PURSUANT to EDWARD A.BOND, State Engineer and Surveyor. SALE OF LAND. STATE OFP NEW YORK, Office of the STATE ENGINEER & SURVEYOR, Albany, October 16, 1901 Pursuant to & resolution of the Com- missioners of the Land Office passed at & meeting held on the 27th day of Sep- tember, 1901, and by virtue of power vested in me by law, I shall offer for sale, for cash, at public auction, at the@® office of the State Engineer and Surveyor, in the city of Albany and State of New York, on Wednesday the 18th day of De-f cember, 1901, at 12 o'clock noon, all thei title of the State of New York in the lands described as follows: Niagara County, Lockport City, Irving Street, north side. Lot $5 and 37. EDWARD A. BOND, State Engineer and Surveyor. 1018d-09w Fo . a SALE OF LAND. STATE OP NEW YORK, Office of the STATE ENGINEER & SURVEYOR, Albany, October 16, 1901 Pursuant to a resolution of the Com- missioners of the Land Office passed at sili meeting held on the 2ith day of tember, 1901, and by virtue of vested in me by law, I shall offer fou sale, for cash, at public auction, at thd office of the State Engineer and Surveyor in the city of Albany and State of New York, on Wednesday the 18th day of De® cember, 1901, at 12 o'clock noon, all thd title of the State of New York in thd lands described as follows: ' Niagara County, Lockport City, McCollum Street, West side, Lot T... a* ~_ ' EDWARD A. BOND, R State Engineer and Surveyor. | F . - «