Newspaper Page Text
r v ••• •'
/;■: •■:'--f,-"- ■ ■■ • ; ■■■■••-■j"- ■ ■ .. ' "■ ■ 1 r:; ' ; .
Jm$w?ra8s
ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD: SATURDAY, MARCH 5, 1892,
_
. ‘ vV\ jv£*V
k,
SAVANNAH SHAKEN.
Will' M9IPKON lei CALLED “SOCK.
I. VMS.”
'THU M., F. A W. KAII.WAV SHOPS
BLOWS DOWN.
A Storp From no OHlclnl Source no To
KVon- Ilo Sccuroil tho Monbriquot.
Olrslorionn XExploxion of Iho BlR Bln*
llounrr Engine. '
1 There was a frightful explosion in
Savannah at about 8 o’clock on Mon
day morning.
The stationary engine In the Savan
nah, Florida and Western railroad
shops exploded, wrecking Its own
house and ndjacent buildings nnd
killing the engineer and Ills flru-
man nnd mortally wounding the port
er, the only persons Who were in the
vicinity of the disaster.
The killed are John C. Murphy,
engineer and Jim Ohatt (colored), the
fireman; Jesse White (colored) Is tho
porter, who is also wounded.
The force of the explosion was felt
all over the city, nnd many people
who felt the jar sprang, from their
beds under the Impression tlmt an
earthquake had visited the city.
Had the explosion occurred an hour
later terrible loss of life would have
resulted. The master mechanic’s
office, where a great number of people
worked, was literally torn to pieces.
All adjacent property was more or
less damnged. The building in
which the explosion occurred is a two
story brick and is a complete wreck.
There appears to be no satisfactory
explanation of the cause of the dis
aster. The wounded negro is too bad
ly hurt to give an account of the ex
plosion. There is but little hope of
his recovery.
Work has commenced on the debris
and it Is being cleared away with all
possible rapidity.
Humors that other bodies would be
found in the wreok are without foun
dation.
Chlcnpit MttjU.
“There are thousands of persons
;vho wonder why I am called ‘Sock
less’ Simpson,” said thnt representa
tive of the State of Kansas to an ac
quaintance yesterday. “But there are
very few who know the real reason. I
was a young fellow with a considera
ble fondness for the society of young
ladles, and I was very proud of my
feet.” The Congressman stretuhed out
his neatly cased pedal extremities for
the inspection of his friends, nnd
glanced at them with pride. “We all
used to wear tight boots,” he contin
ued, “sometimes so tight ns to be very
uncomfortable. There was a fellow
who had a foot just a trifle smaller
than mine. He could wear boots a
size smaller time. I, and a mutual ac
quaintance, who, by the way, wns n
young lady, spoke about it to me one
evening. I was In the habit of wear
ing heavy woolen socks, and I knew
thnt if I should take them off I could
wear smaller boots. To my great joy,
I found, on trying, that I could wear
a size smaller than my rival, and I nt
once purchased a pair. I went to call
that evening as usual, and found him
there, proud In the possession of feet
which were really smaller than mine.
The, subject came up—I believe I
started it—about the size of our boots,
nnd he eagerly accepted my challenge
to a measurement. Of course, I won,
nnd he seemed to feel as badly over it
ns if he had lost a horse race. But the
bootmaker who wns in possession of
my secret gave me away nnd tho boys
all got on to the story.. Do I wear
socks nowf I should say that I do.”
THINKS WORTH KNOWINU.
A GOOD WASHING FLUID.
Dissolve one pound of sal-soda and
half a pound of lime In five quarts of
water, and boll for a few minutes, stir,
ring occasionally. Remove from the
fire, and nllow it to settle; pour off the
clear liquid Into a stone jar, and cook
for use. Half a teacupful of this fluid
added to n half boiler of boiling water
on wash days will save a great deal of
labor.
HOW TO PACK SILVER,
When puttIpg. away, ,pil ver 1 that Is
not to be used for a considerable time,
place it In an air-tight oase, with n
good-sized pleco of camphor.
TAKING DOWN THE STOVE
> In taking down,’the stove, if any soot
should fall upon the carpet or rug,
cover qulokly with dry snlt before
sweeping, nnd not a mark will be left.
HOW TO RELIEVE NIGHT-SWEATS.
.Night-sweats may be arrested by
sponging the body at night with very
hof water, It is n great help also to
ward toning up the skin to rub the
body Jiriskly in the morning with a
bathing towel wrung out of salt water;
the salt enters the pores and stimu;
lates the skin to healthy action.
A TONIC FOR THE HAIR.
A good tonic for the hair is salt
water, a teaspoonful of salt to'' a half
pint of water, applied to the h'nir two
or three times a week. Tho effect nt
the end of atnonth will be surprising.
1 TO MAKE A MUSTARD PLASTKR.'
For young children : Mix one ten-
spoonful of mustard nnd three of wheat
flour with water to the consistency of
a stiff batter, and apply between soft
. muslin cloths. For adults: One’part
• of mustard and two of flour.
TO TIGHTEN CANE-SKAT CHAIRS.
Turn up the chair-bottom and wash
the cane-work thorouglUy with soapy
water and a soft cloth. Let It dry lu
the air, and It will be firm as when
new, provided the cane has not been
broken.
REMEDY FOR CHAPPED HANDS.
When doing housework, if your
hands become chapped or red, mix
corn meal and vinegar into a stiff
paste and apply to the hands two or
three times a day, after washing them
in hot water; then let them dry with
out wiping and rub with glycerine.
At night use cold cream
gloves.
OEORUIA LAtVVEBS.
Chief Justice I,. E. Bleckley's
Is Posterity.
AN
f . ,1 S / ■' ■ ’
enCHAnYeo
1 fouml her deep In the forest.
The beeches and elms between, -
A delleate amber plane tree
*Mld maMUH of Immxu nnd green*
A eorrqwfnl, spellbound Princess
Awaiting her lover thore.
She said, "Ho will know me, surely.
By the veil of my yellow hair.
**He eeeka me I lie wide world ovir, •'
He seeks jne the wholo year through.
To loosen the churm that binds mo—
My Prince and my lovor true?”
She shivered beneath her foliage, "
And sighed in the twilight chiiL ■
**Ay inol wilt thou find mo never,
Thy love that thou sookest still?”’
”1 saw him,” n.lrruped a hlnckhird,,, •
”Ho passed by this vory spot;
He Is come and gono, O Princess! . >•>
He passed and he know you noil”
The cold wind rustled her branches
Till the yellow leaves fell slow—
”!le is dead and gono, O Princess,
Many a year agol”
'-Mrs. Graham Thomson.
and wear
Kriln of Bad Chirograph)-.
The trouble of deciphering the mys
terious Latin phrases of city* physi
cians as to the causd of death, Inserted
in death certificates in their usual
wretched chirography, is a work at
the health office that makes a repor
ter’s life a burden to him, says the St.
Louis Republican. This, is especially
true of the German scribes. The resuit
of their efforts is frequently not only
amusing but ludicrous, and* Permit
Clerk Jacks and liis assistants have
. treasured up a number of them for the
edification of visitors when business is
dull. .One reporter is said to have
struggled with the term “strangular
hernia” till at last he made the lucid
translation,“man hung himself.” An
other was bewildered by “milral regu-
ralion,” but, undaunted wrote “died of
military regulations.” Recently the
disease, “cirrhosis of liver,” was a cor
ker to a German stfiibe till the happy
idea struck him that disease was “a
circus rider, diec^ of injuries to his
liver." ) , ,
From the Now York Tribune.
Tile Green Bag for February la
largely occupied with the sayings and
doings of one of the most picturesque
figures In judleial life. Chief Justice
E. Bleckley, of Georgln, contributes
to the magazine an autoblogaaphlonl
“Letter to Posterity," and a portrait
of Judge Bleckley is prefixed to the.
article. Walter B. Hill, of Macon, In
the second article on the supreme
court of Georgia, in the JsameJnumber,
also devotes several pages to the wise
and witty sayings of Chief Justice
Bleckley. Judge Bleokley’s portrait
Blibwi him to-be. a broad-shouldered
and vigorous elderly gentleman with a
long white' beard, and equally long
dark hair resting on his shoulders.
Over deep-set eyes nre shaggy eye
brows and a high expanse of forehead.
He is sixty-flvd years old, and hm held
the office of supreme court justice.
After serving from 1875. to 1880 ns a
justice of the supreme court he resign
ed andiremalned in prWate life until
January 1887, when lie was chosen chief
justice. The most interesting fact
about judge Bleckley is that lie en
deavors to relieve his opinions from
the ordinary dullness by witty ex
pressions, curious phrases and oe'ohs-
slonnl poetic quotations. He has a
theorv tlmt judicial opinions might,
well be terse, crisp, graceful, animated
anil entertaining'; nnd many of his
opinions show tlmt he carries out his
theory in practice . When he resign
ed his ofllce of justice of the Supreme
Court iq l 880 he rend from the bench
ns his last act a short poem entitled,
“In the Matter of Rest.” The last
stnnza beginning, “Pence and rest, Are
they best For mortals here below?” is
a model of terse nnd thoughtful poetic
expression. * .
Judge Bleckley, in his “Letter to
Posterity,” regrets he will never meet
those whom he addresses, nnd while
claiming no right to the notice of pos
terity, proceeds to inform future gen
erations as to certain of his beliefs and
facts of his history. Home of his state
ments concerning the duty of a judge
are decidedly entertaining. He says:
“To administer law, it is desirable al
though not always necessary, to know
it. In its effect upon the deciding fac
ulty, the apprehension of ignorance
counts for as much ns ignorance itself.
My mind is slow to embrace a firm
faith in its supposed knowledge.
However ignorant a judge may be,
whenever he thoroughly believes he
understands the law of his case, he is
ready to decide it—no less ready than
if he had the knowledge which he
thinks he has. And he will often de
cide correctly, for the law may be as
he supposes, whether he knows! it or
not. * • * But iny faith in the ul
timate efficiency of work is unbound
ed. Tile law is too often unknown,
but is never unknowable. 1 finally
settled down, painful deliberation
ceases, and I doubt no more, until I am
engaged in writing out the opinion of
the court, when I discover, perhaps,
Sl» and Strength uf the Outf Stream.
Even those who navigate the wa
tors of the Gulf stream do not fully
realize the strength of its current.
Two or three years ago a government
vessel was anchored in the stream
observing the current The wind
was very light when a sailing vessel
wns sighted ahead, drifting to the
north ward. As she came nearer and
nearer it became evident that there
would be a collision unless steps were
taken to prevent it The crew of the
sailing vessel trimmed their Bails tu
the gentle air. but it was useless, for
ouwnrd she went carried by the
irresistible force of the current di
rectly toward the bow of tho steamer.
As the vessels approached each
other, by a skillful use of the rudder
on txiard the steamer she was moved
to one side, and tho sailing vessel
drifted past a few feet distant The
cuptnin of the latter was as aston
ished ns he was thankful that his
vessel was not lost. All that he could
cry out in broken English os he
flashed by was, “I could not help it;
the water bring me here."—John E.
Pillsbury in Century.
Sciven Thousand Miles of Wheels.
If nil the locomotives in the United
States were coupled together they
would make a train of solid iron anil
steel over 300 miles long. Add the
passenger cars nnd we would have
800 miles more of wood and iron;
this would give us a gigantic pas
senger train (100 miles ip length,
counting both engines and cars.
Should we want a huge “mixed"
traiu we might add the “box,” "flat"
and every other kind of freight car.
anil our train would, then haven total
length of over 7,000 miles I
The passenger cars in this gigantic
train would be capable of sentingi
1,600,000 people, and upon the freight
cars could he loaded the weight of
all the pyramids of Egypt anil all the
state capitol buildings in the United
States besides. Verily, great is the
railroad system of America.—St.
Louis Republic.
A Georgia Negro Farmer.
" There is u negro In Meriwether,
county, Ga., who has fifteen children
living. The family, it Is said, ent h
bushel of potatoes daily. They run
a three-horse farm and make., yjl
their provisions and thirty balqs
cotton .besides, They' rp^se sui—
cane and make their own sji
sugar.,, They qveh raise rice,
economize' in' every w&fo
their o\Vn plowstocks, for instani
doing their own blackSmithing, el
Every ; e<ige is mode to cut. An evi
dence of the negro’s good mnna^ti-
inont is hhown in the'fact; that lie
bus lived on the place twenty yeads.
-Philadelphia Ledger. ft
. — x—r . a
An Anlntla Alphabet. . ^
that
colleagues,
suRation; flffe i
decide it tne c
satisfied
not on (
other.”
great learnti
Mr. Hill
in man
great,
that he
sistentljj
question
m
<\ ..- '■( >. :i:...’ilii.il:', Sffe
all wrong. My
again to the coll
ider the case, and
'way. Then I am
I know the law is
t. must be on the
kley disclaims any
Her lay or legal, but
liat his attainments
s of learning are
defect seems to be
minutely and con-
i easier for him to
t than to decide.
Silas B. Beach has discovered ijn
Asiatic alphabet which has boeh
wholly taken from the vari<
changes which tho moon undergi
during the month. This curie,-.,
moon alphabet had twenty-eight let
ters, every one of which resembled
the moon in some of its phases. t
Her First query. ' ft
“My dear.” said Mr. Cubbage to
his wife, who was dangerously ill;
“Mrs. Kickshaw is down stall's apd
wants to see you." 1
"What has she got on?” asked tjie
dying woman foobly. -New Yoj'k
Epoch
A Villen f.iku a Crowd of Itoy«.
The laughing jackass, when warn
ing his feathered mates that day
break is at hand, utters a cry re
sembling a troop of boys shouting,
whooping and laughing in a wild
chorus. — Brooklyn Eagle.
Hurled Coin.
Some workmen digging up the
roots of an old tree in 11 forest had
their labors rewarded by a find of
150 gold and silver coins. This dis
cover}' was made in 1773, and the
coins, although of tho reign of Henry
I, were in a good state of preserva
tion. Sometimes the pulling down
of n house will bring a treasure to
light. On one such occasion a mason
and his laborer found a considerable
sum under d floor, but as they quar
reled about dividing the spoil, the
owner ’of the house heard of the find
and demanded the booty. Tho coins,
which were of gold and silver, were
of tho reigns of Edwards II and EH,
and looked as fresh as if just issued
out of the mint.—London Tit-Bits.
Undressed kid gloves may be
cleansed- by washing them in naph
tha. Wash on the hands and hong
them out in the air to dry.—New
York Journal.
HIBtOftV- ’OF' A BlNa T
Romance of a Jewel Owned bj the Bole
of Wellln|£^*’e Brother'! Bride.'
A gentleman well known ini busi
ness circles os a bold speculator is
one of the regular customers of a
well known money lender in this
city, and his usual pledge is a ring,
which th$-proprietor offered to show
to the reporter.
The lhnmtger took the newspaper
man to the outer room and, opening
a mammoth safe, pulled out drawer
after dratver full of jewelry, watches,
chains, oitmugs and the thousand
and one varieties of the jeweler's
art, each with a tug attached and a
aumlier corresponding with the num
ber opposite the name of the owner
in the big Isiok kept for that purpose.
After selecting a little box the man
ager resumed his seat und said:
“This nng has a history and a ro
mantic one. It has been pledged
numberless times, and the owner
would not sell it for any price on ac
count of its history, which he has re
lated to me minutely several times,
and which I know to lie authentic in
every |mrtieular. I can give names,
except in later generations, just us he
has told me.
'Charles CuitoII, of Canullton, one
of the signers of the Declaration of
Independence, had two beautiful
daughters, who went to England in
1784. One married the Duke of Leeds
and the other Richurd Wellesley,
nfterwurd the Duke of Wellington.
At the marriage of the latter, which
Psik plow in the Castle of Dublin,
the bride received this ring from Sir
Arthur Wellesley.
“You will see the two figures
iminted liy Nomnr, a celebrated min
iature painter of that date, are lieau-
tiful m design and execution, nnd the
iimuuer of the setting of the pearl*
and rubies to the eye of the connois
seui prove if to lie genuine without
doubt. Thr* ring was won nt Bins
sols the night before the battle of
Waterloo lit the party described In
the well known poem of Byron, lie
ginning •
i’lutro wtu*» mo 11 ml of revelry by night.
To make a long story short, the
ring descended, generally by will,
through di. eront members of the
Carroll family until it came Into the
present owner’s hands by gift from
Letitin, the last of the Carrolls, now
mother superior of a convent in Bid
tiuiora.
Think of the bright eyes which
have gaZed upon this beautiful ring.
“All the |ieopleHnng at the time
this' ring was given to the lieau-
tiful. bride in Dublin castle are no
more. All the great armies of Weld
-liugtou null .till these mighty hosts
which followed the war drums of bis
foe.:the great Napoleon, buve gone
itq the great beyond, while tho ban-
■ihlOs Justus bright,- the colors of -the
paintings just its clear ns ever, now
reposes in, the safe of a Boston money
lender.., From the Duke of Welling
ton to a pawnshop does this not
furnish food for thought!”-Boston
Herald- ./
.t T|i« Drill Sergimnt. •
. jAp army officer ut Forf Schuyler,
N. Y., sends the fallowing story of
nu Ifjsh d.ril.1 sergeant in,the English
amnjj., A squad of newly enlisted men
’life jipiiiW’’.fiir'^his inspcotiqii and a
.prelimipary drill. His little yisorless
forage d{ip is canted to,one side Os
Up iiffri down the Und,' fap-
Ping his’ leg gently with the iuevlia-
tile cane or switch. At lust he htdfs
in trout of an undersized, round
shouldered victim, steps buck a pUce,
places’ his arum ukuulxi and solilo
quizes: "Well, what kind-of a man
wud it lie that ’ud go uud 'list-a kun
gariKi for the army with a booinp on
his back like a dog scraping a poti
Shtipput bore. Wud ye know yor
facings? Right face I All, there , ye
go to the left,, curse yer ■ sow!; don’t
.yez know yez right hand from the
left? Which hand do ye bless.yerso.lf
wid? Ye don't bless yersolf, at all,
eh? So ye are a heretic? Git back
to the ranks!" -Sun Francisco Argo
naut.
Homo Fornlgii Coin*
,Tbe franc wns fonnefly called livre
(pound), though the connection with
any Hjieciul weight is not evident.
The name of the German coin, mark,
meaning a weight of eight ounces,
was formerly in general use in En
rol*. The name of the Italian coin
that cori , es|)onds with the franc (lira)
also means pound. The coins in pi-ci^
ent use in Spain have their names
from other souives.
Tile live peseta piece, which cone
spomls with the American dollar, is
called escudo (shield). "Peseta.” the
name of the sinuli coin representing
the monetary standard, means sim
ply "little piece.”'' "Ruble" is from
the word meaning “to cut," and wns
so culled because originally the coin
was made with an. ornamental edge.
Chicago Tribune.
A CuiioiiM 0(1(1.
Among- the most extraordinary
pieces of symbolism known to have
been used by the early Asiatics .was
a figure of a donkey’s bead used aa a
representative of the deity. There
Is no doubt whatever thnt the same
emblem was once used among the
Hittites. the Egyptians and one or
two other nations ns a symbol of
their Red God But. Tho supersti'
of the yellow donkey of India;
story of the swift ass of eastern-^
and the ass of Dionysius, and man;
other marvelous ass stories, are
HEATING A HOUSE.
Con>um|ikton of Fitol U Not tho Only
Conuldorutlou In Hooping. Warm.
, I-Iow best to keep a house warm is
a question that every, cold and biting
“wave” .forces upon the attention of
many a bousokeeper, 'Poopio gener
ally, imagine tliutwith thoso to whom
economy in fuel is no great object
the problem is simple enough and is
only a question of using more or less
coal. As a matter of fact, however,
the consumption of fuel is not the
only chief factor: the exclusion of
cold and understanding how fully to
utilize the heat obtained by tho vari
ous fires is quite ns important The
importance of the former aids to
warmth in a house is well exempli
fied in those northern countries where
necessity is the law of existence and
where we read of the Greenlander's
hut with an inside temperature of 00
degs., tho only fire being from a piece
of walrus fat, while outside it may
be 40 degs. below zero.
We would find, however, but few
advocates of this degree of exclusion
of fresh air and ventilntlon, and the
fewer the hotter, no doubt Whole
some ventilation is of vast impor
tance, but it should enter our houses
through the channels provided for
it nnd not under the doors and
through the window joints. People
who reside in town and are protected
by their neighbors an either side,
with only the front and rear, ex
posed, have hut a simple problem to
encounter. But to those who live in
the country in frame houses, whose
defenseless walls are exposed in ev
ery direction to tho cutting wintry
blasts, the subject is a very seriouH
one.
Its the west it is a common custom
to bank earth around the house to the
depth of several feet, and a single
foot of manure placed in this way
adds greatly to the warmth besides
affording protection to the vines and
plants. In old houses whose win
dow casings and door lintols have be
come loose and shrunken tiny strips
of felt put on with long, slender
"brads" will be found very effica
cious. and if cut extremely narrow
are quite unnoticeable and can be put
in many places where it would not be
possible to insert weather strips.
In heating, furnaces ore of course
tho chief factors. Of these there are
many kinds, and we are told succes
sively that each ope,, is the best.
People, themselves, toil, differ great
ly ns to what is the best method of
heating a house, some preferring
the hot air furnace, which seems,
on the whole, to bo more popular
that! any other contrivance, and
others finding steam or hot water
more satisfactory. Thero is this al
ways to be remembered, however—
no hot nlr fnrnflce will carry heat sot-
isfnctorily through- a pipe running
any distance in a lateral direction.
For a rambling house, therefore,
where there is but one furnace, hot
water or steam will given more dif
fused boat. The somewhat primitive
but most effective base burning stove
will lie found a capital supplement to
the hot air furnace, and if arranged
with a “drum” and a register in the
floor nbovn will he nearly as effica
cious as a second furnace. 1
Modorn science' has also managed
to utilize tho waste heat from down
stairs open, fireplaces in the rooms'
above In the most admirable fashion,
making every fire heat a second
room ns well as the one in which it is
laid: and when one considers the
amount of precious warmth, not to
say actual money, that goes up, the
chimney, in smolio. it would seem thnt
there is'a groat Hold for further im
provement still in practically utiliz
ing escaping heat—New York Trib
une.
flow Hloltfli Holla Are Mude.
“The making of sleigh bells is
quite mi art." says an iron founder.
“Tho little iron ball is too big to he
put in through the holes in tho bell,
and yet it is inside. How did ft get
there? The little iron hall is called
‘the jinglet.’ When you shake the
sleigh boll it jingles. In making the
bell the jinglet is put inside a little
ball of mud, just tho shape of the in
side of the boll. Then a mold is
mode, just the shape of the outside
of the bell. This mud ball with the
jinglet inside is placed in the mold
of Hie outside, and the metal is poured
in, which fills up the space between
the ball and the mold.
“When the mold is taken off you
see a sleigh bell, but it will not ring,
as it is full of dirt.. The hot metal
that tho boll is made of,dries the dirt
so that it can be shaken out. After
the dirt is all shaken out of tho holes
in the bell tho little iron jinglet will
still bo in the beU and will ring. It
took a goixl many years to think out
how to make a sleigh bell.”—Lewis
ton Journal.
Siiliimllioyi; KligllHh.
lu a recent examination some boys
were asked .to define certain words
and to givu u nenteiico illustrating the
mooning. Uere ■ are a few: Frantic
means .wild: I picked some
flowers. Akimbo, with a erooi
a dog with an akimbo in his!
letio, strong:. vinegarwaa^o
to use. Tandem, one behind
the. boys sit tandem at school
And then some sjnjde w<
fumiily explained: Dust is:
the wet squeezed out; firi| 1
wings; monkey, a small boy with a
tail; stars are the moon’s eggs; eir.
ctmiference is distance aroi
J. w.
JEWELER.
Wamiuxitov st„ OrrnsiTK Commkiiciai. Dak
... v • •vs,,
Watches, Diamonds, Sil
verware, Musical Instruments |
and Table and Pocket cutler
Fancy Goods, etc. Reliabli
Goods, Fair Dealing, Bottor
Prices.
Fine Watch Repairing—20
years experience—all work
guaranteed.
Spectacles and Eyeglasses
accurately fitted at moderate
charges.
OUR
STOC
-OF-
■
Are arriving daily and we c
interest the Ladies who
look to their interest
in:
Wii
See our Dri
mings and 1
salesman,
we can supplj
you Want. Crepons,
in all of the latest shades
to $t.ooperj
Silk Lustre’
latest shades
20c., worth 50c
other firm South
duplicate these goods
'mentioned. We 1
large quantities; bi
Mr. Reich at a forced
also bought l Case of Eml
and the prices on them v
vince 'the closest buyers tin
are great bargains. .... In
some fine Swiss Cambric
Hamburgs. Examine
you will juvest in the:
stock of fine Imported Bit
for Ladies, Misses and I
are here for inspection,
no firm in this or any othe
can show better goods and
prices on these goods Will be 1
ard. We will say, in buying t
you get the value of your mo
Other goods arriving
which we will make'mention 1
Feb. 20,1802.
the ]
ilotic
other;
are
id with
fishes'
■
survivaisof that curious form of re
ligious worship- the adoration of the middle of tho outs
ass’ head.—St Louis Republic. Bits.
——
indstinct print
REICH IGEK
l D- HOPE
Hove established a steam
SMLU CM]
Near Oakfleld, eighteenj
Albany, on the A.
road, and
pared
- -
Our timber
tinod, and till
all be flrst-cli
We soli
buildei
Wri"