The Albany news. (Albany, Ga.) 186?-1880, July 01, 1880, Image 1

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THE ALBANY NEWS. 01,1) SERIES—Vol. 37. ALBANY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 1. 1880. i NEW SERIES-Vol. 14, No. 32. THAT I AM STILL HEADQIARTEBS For the SplekllJ 1 .Ight-runnlng WHITE W’G MACHINE In Tdlftmil itjla,at prlco from 92S to $45 com* Remember, alio, that I cany a splendid stock of General Merchandise, Fine Liquors, Tobaccos, Cigars, etc. rail a ad price my goods before buying elsewhere. I mean business. Very respectfully. It, S. STEPHENS. January 22, iSSrt-t'm LAWYERS Z. J. ODOM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, A I. BA XT. GA. IWlftfionv Uw or smill. a i iml |.r>«ipllj NplS-79 1- ..1 W. T. JONES, JESSE W. VAI.TEK8. JONES & WALTERS, Attorneys at Law, ALBANY, GA. Office over Centra* Railroad Bank. la»»S-ly Lott Warr en, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ^ALBANY. GA. DOCTORS- J.t HOLMES. W. M. DkMOSS Drs. Holmes & DeMoss, ALBANY, 0 - • GEORGIA. Office and laboratory over Poet Office, Washington IV. A. STROTHER, 11. D. ALBANY. GEORGIA. Qfice over Gilbert’s Drs Store. Dr. E. W. ALFRIEND, on Pine street. HOTELS The Old Reliable BARNES HOUSE, rue SI., Albany, Ga., THE JOHNSON HOUSE 8MITHVILI.E, GA., In the piece to stop and get a GOOD, SQUARE MEAL. MARKET SQUARE, SAVANNAH, GA. Rates $1.50 to |2.00 per flay, according to location of rooms. JOSEPH HERSCHBACH, April 20, 1830—ly. PROPRIETOR “GOOD-BYE TO EDWl.V BOOTH. KKAl> BY WM. WINTER AT T1IK BOOTH BREAKFAST IN NEW YORK, .lUNK 11*. His barque will fade in the mist and night. Across the dim sea line, And coldly on our aching sight The solemn stars will shine— All, all in mournful silence, save For Ocean’s distant roar— Heard where the slow, regretful wave Sobs on the lonely short*. But, O, while winged with love and prayer. Our thoughts pursue Ids track. What glorious sights the midnight air Will proudly waft us t>ack! What golden words will flutter down From many a peak of fame, Wliat glittering sh:i|H*s of old renown Thai cluster round his name! in. O’er storied Denmark’s haunted ground Will darkly drift again. Dreamlike and vague, without a sound, The spectre of the Dane; And breaking hearts will be tlie wreath For grief that knows no tear When shine on Cornwall’s storm swept lieatli The blazing eyes of Lear. IV. Slow, mid tlie portents of the storm. And fate’s avenging powers. Will mood}* Richard’s haggard form Pace through the twilight hours, And wildly hurtling o’er the sky 'Hie red star of Macbeth Torn from tlie central arch on high— Go down in dusky death! But—best of all!—will softly rise His form of manly grace— The noble brow, the honest eyes, The sweetly patient face. The loving heart, the stately mind That conquering every ill". Through seasot trouble, cast behind, Was grandly steadfast still. VI. Though skies might gloom and tempest rave, Though friends and 1io|k*s might fail. His constant spirit, simply brave, Would meet and sutTcr all— Would calmly smile at fortune’s frown. Supreme o'er gain or loss; nd he tlie worthiest wears the crown That gently Itori* the cross. Be blithe and bright, thou jocund day That golden England knows! Bloom sweetly ’round the wanderer’s way Thou royal English rose! And English hearts (no need to tell How truth itse If endures!) This soul of manhood treasure well. Our love commits to yours! Farewell! n«»r mist, nor flying cloud, Nor sight can ever dim* The w reath of honors, pure and proud, Our hearts have twined for him! But hells of memory still shall chime, And violets star the sod. Till our last broken wave of time Dies on the shore of God. State and General News. There is a negro man In Talbot county ninety-eight years old. The grasshoppers are at work on the oung cotton in the vicinity of Milledge- ille. The survey of tlie Jefferson andGainu ville railroad is being pushed forward rapidly. Copious showers have fallen in the neighborhood of Conyers during tlie past week. Complaint is made of the iincleanlines.s of Augusta and a typhoid fever is predic ted as the result. At the Athens Commencement this year the State University will graduate twenty-five students. Talbot county has sent four crazy peo ple to the State lunatic asylum within the last eight weeks. Tlie nominating convention of the second Congressional district will be held on the 21th of August, at Dawson. News from all over the State report tlie crops in excellent condition, hut just now in most localities needing rain. Mr. Banks Winter, of Macon, is second tenor of Haverly’s Mastodon Minstrels and will go to Europe with tlie troup. Colonel Tom Hardeman will to-mor row night deliver the literary address at South Georgia Agricultural and Mechan ical College. The revenue collectors are hunting up the moonshiners in the vicinity of Elber- ton. One still and one thousand gallons were destroyed last week. J. W. JOINER, WATCHMAKER and JEWELER LOCATED AT W. II. Gilbert, Ag’t, & Co. BROAD STREET. Speci-lies Nominating Hmii’ock. Mr. Dan Daugherty, of Pennsylva nia, then proceeded in the |>lnlfonn amid {treat applause and spoke as follows: I propose to present to the thought ful consideration of tlie Convention the iiniue of one who on the field of battle was styled "the superb” leliccrs], yet won the still Holder re nown ns a military Governor, whose lirst act, when in command of Louis iana and Texas, was to snlutc the 'onstitutioii by proclaiming that, the military rule shall ever he subservi ent to the civil power. [Cheers.] Tlie plighted word of a soldier was prov ed by the neks of a statesman. I nom inate one whose name will suppress all faction [cheers]; will he alike ac ceptable to the North and to tlie South; a name that will thrill the Republic; a name, if nominated, of a man that will rriisli the last embers of scctiounl strife, and whose name ill lie the dawning of that day so long looked for, the day of perpetual brotherhood among the people of America. With him ns our cham pion, wc can fling away our shrouds and wage an aggressive war. Witli him wc can nppcnl to the supreme majority of tlie American pcoplo . ainst tlie corruptions of the Repub lican party and their untold viola tions of Constitutional liberty. Witli him ns our standard-bearer the bloody banner of Republicanism will fail palsied to the ground. Oh, my countrymen, in this supreme hour, hen the destinies of the Republic, lien the imperilled liberties of the people are in your hands, pause, re flect. take liccii, make no misstep. I say I nominate one who will carry every State of the South. I nominate one who will crrrv Pennsylvania [loud eliccrs], carry Indiana [cheers], carry Connecticut [cheers], carry New Jersey [eliccrs], carry New York ork [loud cheers.] 1 propose the name—[a voice : “Carry Ohio”]—aye, and carry Ohio [cheers], I propose tlie name of the soldier statesman, hose record is as stainless as his sword, Winfield Scott Hancock. [Loud cheers.] One word more, if nominated lie will take his scat. [ Loud cheers.] After Mr. Daugherty left tlie plat form he turned and rnnic hark. “Al low me to say one word more,” lie said to the Chair. Permission was accorded, when Mr. Daugherty cor rected his speech, ns follows: Gentlemen of the Convention, I pray your pardon for one word. I said that “(/"nominated;'’ I should have said “if elected” General Han cock will take his scat. [Cheers.) The Chair—The name of Wintielil Scott Hancock is nominated for Pres ident of the United States. [Cheers.] Prejudice Kilts. “Eleven years our daughter suffer ed on a lied o< misery under the care of several of the best (and sonic of the worst) physicians, who gave her disease various names hut no relief, and now she is restored to us in good health liy as simple a remedy as Hop Ritters, that we had poolicd at for two years, before using it. Wo earn cstly hope anil pray that no one else will let their sick suffer ns wc did, on account of prejudice against so good a medicine as Hop Ritters.”—The Parents.—Telegram. AND JEWELKY! 8TOTK COMPLETE! Repairing a Specialty! 4^-Custom solicited. Ftb It, 1880-till no* 23. President J. If. Estill will please accept our thanks for a copy of the Constitution of the Georgia Press As sociation anil minutes of its last meet ing in Cuthhert. The Chair—The Chair has the hon or to present to tlie Convention Gov. Hubbard, of Texas. Governor Hubbard—Gentlemen of the Convention : I have but a word to say. I rise by request, a request which meets the impulses of my own bosom, to second the nomination of the soldier statesman, Winfield S. Hancock. [Applause.] Men of the Convention, it is peculiarly til that Texas, thatLoiiisinna, should respond to that nomination. Hear me for a moment. When the war closed, when the flag that some of us followed was furled forever, when again the Con stitution of the fathers was tlie su preme law of the land, as it is now and ever shall be [great applause and cheers,] there came down through tlie Southland, through my own State, and Louisiana especially, a race of carpet-baggers like tlie Vandals of old, preying upon our wasting sub stance. Military Governors filled the bastiles with prisoners from civil life; men who had committed naught but fancied offenses against tlie Gov ernment were crowded in every jail and in every bastile, front tlie Rio Grande to the “Father of Waters." In that hour when wc had lost all, when by the side of every hearth stone were weeping Rachels, when the wolf was howling at almost every door, when there was widowiiood and orphanage everywhere, there came a voice in that darkness of the night-time that said to us, “I am your military ruler; the war has closed: unbar your dungeons; open your Courts and be tried as the Con stitution prescribes. [Great applause and cheers.] That man was Winfield S. Hancock. [Renewed applause.J It was an easy thing to he a summer friend [laughter], hut nt the time of our sorrow, when lie held his office at the hands of the great Republican party, who could cut off his bread, and did remove him, there stood a man with the Constitution before him, reading it as tlie fathers read it. that tlie war having passed, wc re sumed tlie habiliments that belonged to us—the rights, not ns a conquered province, but as a free people. The voice of a man like Hancock, who risked his rcputntiou anil Ids place and power in the very frown and teeth of the Republican party, is man that it will do to trust the stan daril of your party to. [Great ap plause and cheers.] Sir, he is not only a solilici—that is something in tlie coldest that is to lie waged, as tlie gallant Hampton lias told you. The South will be united whoever you may nouiinntc. Rut failing in principle, failing upon ev cry issue upon finance or ol reform or of good government, to attack the record of the Democratic party, mark it, tlie slogan will he “Tlie bloody South ; the old haven of re hellion still lives.” You will hear of it from the mountains and your high lands; you will hear it all along the lines. If you nominate Hancock [up plausn], if you nominate Hancock, where is the argument? We can say everywhere, here is a soldier second not even to tlie silent man on horse hack. [Applause.] Here is a sold icr that bore down even upon us like i<- brigade at linlnchtrn, like a plum- I knight to the Iron) ; here is a man hem one hundred llinii-iiiid Norlli- rn soldiers, if they are tike S uitherii diliers, will rally armnid Ids stand ard. heeause he was a great soldier, and a good man and a faithful eiti- I hen the war was over. I Ap plause.] Oentleineii, 1 believe him to lie timliiy tlie most aviiiltthle candidate of all tin: great names that have been presented in this great presence And, us 1 said nvlnlu o. wliat wv want is vntes, more of lliem. in God's iinuio. whether from Republican soldiers or otherwise, | Applnuso and laughter ] General Hancock is not wanting in all tlio eloquence » the statesman Rend Ilia letter to Governor Pease It is worthy to be enshrined. It is worthy of bviug pine cd ripou tlio proudest pages of American history. In tlie letter lie discussed and asserted the superiority mid supremacy uf the civil power over tho sword speur. have imthhig more to say except this, that if you nouiimitc him, uol only the Smith will stnnd around him as the old guard did around Napoleon, but 1 believe soldiers ol the groat North, the meu who honestly fought its in the greatest of hu man conflicts, Amt with Hint a record that is willmul statu mid without reproach: with no Credit Moliilicr scandal or Hu Golyer fraud, armnid him [Laughter and chers.] With n stainless name blending together the soldidr and tlie stales un we will win after a quarter of a century Wc w * 11 wiu the contest, and when won if there is a mail living in the broad con fines of this great country wtio will wear these honors, it is Winfield S. Hancock of Penusy'.vanin. [Loud and loiig-coii>< tinued applacsc ] . Beautiful Wisdom. CHOICE EXTItACTS KIIOM MU. IIOUATIO SEYM OP It’s AIIIIKESS TO THE STU DENTS IIP WELI.s’ FEMALE COL LEGE, AU1IOI1A, N. V. Youth Is beautiful in the eyes of jo, ami it looks with admiration up on the courage witli which the young on front the uncertainties of the fu ture, and the faith that lends them to look forward to happiness amt gne iss. Seif-cheating is the most common form of fraud. It is a good rule, when you find that subject* of im portance or objects of value are mat ers of indifference, to conclude that there are some things which you do not, hut which you ought to know. There is nothing you can learn about any subject which will not jive it new interest in your eyes.— The deeper your learning the better, hut the quality of knowledge is like that of gold, which, although it is is reduced to the thinnest leaf, yet makes all things glitter that it touch- Atiiong tlio Turcoman. A PEOPLE WHO AltK PAINFULLY *r- KI.ICTKII WITH POVKtlTV AND 1IILIOUSNKSS. A correspondent of tho London News now in Gentral Asia, writes us follows of tho liahlts of the Turco mans: “Here, in the midst of possi ble plenty, the Turcomans lead but a Tlio Gubernatorial Knee. Meriwether Comity Vindicator.] In a quiet way the gubernatorial problem seems to lie claiming consul erablo attention from our citizens. From the best information that we can gain there is no use disguising the fact that Governor Colquitt's friends in Meriwether are growing in numbers and confidence every day. Were a test vote to he takeit miserable life. Indeed, thcseGoklan ''""a ' . L, ,. V: 1,6 Tcpc Turcomans aro the very poorest nZu .-ne ZLel v « „ r I liiLVt* v<*t tin*! with OrtllMfLiMlv tin* » J imfsoiiio majority. One worGt of nomads may he miicl to Vo ^relatively T {" Mn C """ iy *" t,ie lo. They have food in aim..- . a , It is true that some whose judg ments are impaired by the end less exhibition of forms and develop ments of life have tallcn into the strange superstition that the world lias made itself, and that the sources of this power of production and pro gress must lie looked for in the low est forms of matter. Surface knowledge is lightly spok en of by the learned, but it is infor mation worked out in the past by toil mid study until it is brought within the reach of all. In the course of my lifo I have studied all classes of men with care, and, as a rule, I have found those to be most cheerful and wise whose habits of observation have given the widest range to their mental action, and have brought within the scope of their thoughts the most varied topics, although they may not have been learned with regard to any of them. Men do not live in the same world. When wc look around us, we sec that they live in very different hous es; 'some arc humble houses, hut poorly furnished ; others are costly residences, adorned with paintings and statuary and everything that can 'O to gratify tlie taste. We make the world in which we live. It is more disreputable to live in one that is dull nml barren than it is to make our homes in poor anil di lapidated houses. Intelligence will enable you to cope with the problems of life, to en dure its-mistortuncs with fortitude, anil to bear its successes with moder ation end wisdom. The office of tlie eye is to give facts to the mind. Things arc not seen in their true sense merely because they arc brought within the range of the vision, hut when they have stirred the miml anil thoughts have been evolved. So strong arc the enjoyments of looking upon famous objects, or treading upon ground made sacred by events, that men cross broad oceans to visit them. And through after life they are wiser and happier for the knowledge thus gained. It may bo that some arc gifted with aptitudes in certain directions beyond others; that some have faculties for icaruiug, for nrts, or for science, that give them peculiar advantages in their pursuits. When I am visited at my farm by those who feel no sympathy with na ture, and say that they have no taste for country life, I make up iny mind that they do not like it because they do not know enough about the world around them to enjoy its beauties. No one who 1ms reached the age of three score years and ten would, upon reflection, lie willing to rub out from the experience ill life, tho sorrows which.have softened his character, the mistakes which have taught him wisdom, or flic wrongdoings which ho Ims ever regretted nml which, liy their influences, have made the gold en threads which may he formed in the texture of his moral character. well lo do, dance, such al it is, and are always well clothed, and one rarely meets one who, besides his herds, has not also at least a horse, and that, too, usually of a very superior breed.— Hero, on the contrary, tho people seem wretchedly poor. In the kibit- ka, where I am staying, there is but one ragged patch of felt horse-cloth on the bare ground beside the lire, on which my host mid his wife sit all day long. Resides mi old Russian musket, a Koraisnu salire, nnil two worn saddle-bags, there is little else in the place. The only food they could oiler me was coarse, hitter, brown bread, baked among the wood ashes of the hearth. At first I thought my host might he exceptionally poor, hut visits to the other kibilkas show ed mo that tho other people were in the same condition. The moiiilah, or priest, seemed the only person tiil- e'alily well off. This extreme pover ty seemed strange, nomddcriiig tho propinquity of tlie Russian camp, mid the amount of trade which goes on between it nml the border Turco mans, in hay, firewood and cattle.— Many of these people seemed alleet- cd by a bilious malady, which 1 have frequently observed at Gumucuc Tope and elsewhere, and from which I ntysclf have occasionally suffered. Its symptoms are soreness in the re gion of the stomach, violent vomiting mid headache, accompanied by wast ing away of the body, tlie face assu ming a jaundiced appearance. 1 at tribute it to continual attacks of marsh fever, a malady for which they follow no medical treatment, anil which, I believe, when long neglect ed, ultimately affects the liver. I ain continunllv licing plagued by these people for medicine, as every Euro pean is not. only supposed by them to be skilled in the healing art, but also to carry about him a large stock of medicine for the sick people he may meet during his travels. This malady produces many deaths, and those who remain alive are the wrctchcdcst-looking objects imagi nable, As the Turcomans keep tip their mourning for the dead for many months, one rarely passes a lady in one of these delta villages without witnessing their singular manner of demonstrating their grief by walking round the hut which had been occu pied by the departed person and howling in the direst fashion. It was no later than last night, as I sal writing, a little past midnight, that some Turcoman, either coming in from a journey or from a neighbor ing village, passed by the kibitka in which I was. A light at that unusual hour probably called tip slumbering recollection,and apparently recalling that some one of liis friends had (lied there perhaps six months before, he suddenly broke out into the most lamentable erics, wailing and sob bing ns if his heart were broken.— The old woman within answered by whining in an odd, rhythmical way, clapping her hands in unison. To do this with bettor effect she rose from the miserable mat on which she had been sleeping for the last four hours. It is a curious fact that though the village dogs will ordina rily, on the slightest nocturnal noise occurring, bark savagely, they took not the slightest notice of the car- piercing outcry around by lodging. I suppose they were too accustomed to it to pay attention.” ed largely of our lies! citizens in his old army brigade. These men fol lowed his lead during the trying times of the Into war and learned to love and trust him then. The confi dence then inspired has not been shaken by subsequent events. They ndmit that, liku other mortals, their old commander may have made mis- akes, hut they claim that his motives are ns pure and his integrity as un doubted ns when he stood shoulder to shoulder with them beneath the stars anil bars of the Southern Con federacy. Another source of Colquitt’s strength here is the bitter and relent less war that has recently been waged against his spotless record ns a true Christian. That we have “Christian statesmen” who “steal the livery of the court of heaven to serve the devil in” is true, but in such cases theclov- n foot always appears. Rut when n man stands for years before the pub lic without the slightest stniu npon his personal character, they are not slow to resent insinuations and vague hints of wrong-doing which arc un supported by any tangible proofs. The fact that good men will not de sert a man whose life presents every day evidences of honesty mid integ rity is one of tlio strongest safe guards public men possess. The oili er fact that charges savoring of per sonal dislike or malice force the best, men of the country lo rally around an honest man unreasonably assailed, explains the secret of Governor Col quitt’s strength with the good men of the county. The time lias not yet conic for a man to be condemned be cause of railings against his private life and character when his daily walk affords no evidence of these ac cusations. Like the official record of all public men, something may be found which is open to criticism but these mistakes of General Colquitt arc to be set down to a mistaken judg ment and not a corrupt heart. General Gartrell has developed strength in the contest and number* among his friends some of the Icail- g men of the party. Although many of his old friends would lie glad to see him Governor, yet Judge Hiram Warner’s age seems to have practically ruled him out of the race. It is true that few men of eighty possess his physical vigor, and it is also a noteworthy fact that his friends at our late county meeting mssed some resolutions rccapitnlal- ng his public services and recom mending him as a suitable candidate for Governor, yet these resolutions scent to have been intended as compliment to Judge Warner’s long public career anil residence in our midst, rather than an entering him as a candidate for Gubernatorial honors. Many of his friends arc open advocates of Colquitt's re-election, upon the idea above mentioned, that tlie Judge is not really a candidate. Judge Warucr not being in the race and a hitler war being waged against Colquitt, these men feel that they owe it to themselves to stand by the friend needing their aid. A darkey at. Sparta had his skull frac tured liy a base hall a few days ago. Senator Brown’s Last Speech. Boston Post.] The new Senator Brown, of Geor gia, made a speech in favor of pen sioning tlio soldiers of the Mexican and Indian wars, and, independent of the merits of the measure, placed himself at once in the front rank in point of forensic ability. He com pletely turned the tables on Senators Coukling anil Blaine in discussing the old questions of slavery and se cession. He pointed to the fact that New England and old England plant ed it in this country, alter which the South took the system prescribed for them and the guarantees which the statesmen of all sections established after its ndoptipn. But notwithstand ing this, it had been overthrown by the war, and though lie would have given his life in defense of constitu tional rights the issue was by that settled forever. The issuo of seces sion he also considered forever set tled. lie gave an array of facts touching the education of blncks in Georgia, which is highly coinplimcn tary to that State. As to their treat ment and the feeling toward them, the following extract will show: “Wo employ the colored people. They arc the best laborers wc enu get. You may talk aboutGcrman immigration, Chinese immigration, or any other immigration into the State, I would not give the negro as a laborer in the cotton field for any man of any race. They arc laboring there faithfullv and we are paying them justly, anil wc intend to continue to do so Many of them are accumulating property. AVe arc glad of it. Wc feel kindly towards them. AVe wish them well. You made them citizens and we now wish to aid them to he good citizens, nml to become useful members of society. To tlmt cml we shall do all in our power.” Agita tors and Southcrn-halcrscannot make much out ot him. WILLIAMS & WATSON COMMISSION TOUTS 12G% Bay Ktkekt, SAVANNAH, GA. April 20, 1880-1 y. Tlie Vesuvius Railway. It is not only in view of a possible sudden eruption of Mount Vesuvius that the railroad to the top of that volcano is encircled with a halo of romance. There are other possibili ties which make a trip on it different from one on any other known rail way. The ascent is on n frightful steep grade. For tlie first quarter of the road it is at the rate of forty feet in a hundred. Then for a considera ble distance it is sixty-threo in a hun dred. As soon as a passenger begins to go up iic feels sca-sick and wishes he was somebody else. As lie rises higher, holding nervously to the car for fear the cable will give way, he becomes hot and hotter and is lialf- suffocatcd by sulphurous atmosphere Near the top of the ground on which the road is laid presents a singular phenomenon. Great puffs of smoke sometimes burst out from where they are least expected, and these cause the passengers to sneeze and feel as if they were going to be smothered. In most cases the inconvenience is but temporary. Tho speed is quite rapid, the whole ascent being made in about seven minutes. There aro instances, however, in which, with the issue of a puff or column of dense sulphurous vapor, tho ground opens into a great chasm and suddenly closes. In such cases anything that happens to be in tlio way runs the risk of being swal lowed. Some of these days a section of tlie railroad will ho suddenly call ed in, possibly witli a train on it.— The cable which pulls the cars up is composed of forty-nine strands of steel wire, and covered with tar to preserve it from rust. Mark Twain wrote that lie made tlio descent of Vesuvius in four minutes. If this forty-iiiiic-strand cable should hap pen to give way all of a sudden, the descent will be made in much less time than that. Notwithstanding the romantically dangerous features of this enterprise, the road is already well patronized. The old fashion of clambering up on foot was terribly destructive to good hoots. The Baptist Seminary at. Gainesville, graduated six young ladies last week. HEADQUARTERS GREEK AND DRIED FRUITS, iNTUTS, -O' oi Ay m GAISINS, ETC \ J. B. REEDY,V) GROCER AND IMPORTER,' SAVASTSTAII, - . CA. FOR SALE OR RENT! LARGE TAVO-UOOMED STORE HOUSE Arlington, Georgia. 8SP* APPLY TO A. W. TURNER, LEARY, GA. GENTLEMEN'S AND YOUTH’S FASHIONS —AT— D. W. PRICE’S TMLORI3S6 \ UstalrZlgliMCBt, (Over Gentral Railroad Bank.) Please call and examine Sam ples, Plates and Patterns. No Bogus Material 1 Good, Honest World D. AV. PRICE, Merchant Tailor. Albany, August 28,1879-tf LIME! LIME! Lower Price than ever. $130 per Barrel. Use it a a Disinfectant. Bricklayers, Plasterers, Whitewashes, etc., should call on me for the very beat article, cither by letter or In person. I. J. BRINSON* juiylO Albany, tin.