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TO AN OLD CLOCK.
I love your dear old fashioned fare.
Where itets tlioituu Ih*ih*hiIi the moon.
While keep your ImudN thulr wifomn puce,
As runs tny own ahiWml nut*
Toward lt« lulur afternoon.
1 lovo to hear your <*onr*t««nt Hi-uke
Ui-oti the buck of icriit'i‘l<w» Hum,
And love to mm* the curling muiouu
From (Milulvd t.lpcn, i.Ihivc* the Joke,
Of burgher* lu their sturdy prime.
The lusty cock now from his gate
Comes, with bis lordly front, to crow
Bis greeting to his mottled mate
Who croons the while he views In state
Their offspring as thoy come and go.
Far from the vales of cloistered years
The tinkle of your tiny bells
A mumYy wakes, a hope endears.
Till youth a feathYlng mist appears,
As Time uism Its echo dwells!
Afar away, I seem to see
A troop of spirits, grave and gay,
Aud then «*« hear their minstrelsy.
Low voice and sweet; then, dreamily,
• I walk i;• • i ulina •»* «****©r«Uv.
Imicli. .ijillroud Klecpers.
While William F, liuUnload, the
present general manager of the Del
aware. Lackawanna and Western
system of railroads, wus superintend
ent of the BufFulo division there was
an old track foreman, a Mr. C., whoso
abilities wore highly appreciated by
Mr. Hallstead, and who was just
about as abrupt in his speech as the
superintendent himself. One day
Mr. Hal Intend was watching a gang
of men at work under the superin
tendence of Mr. C. Observing a
number of new railroad tics lying in
a ditch alongside the track, Mr. Hall-
stead called the track foromon’s at*
tention to them in this way:
“C., what in blank are those ties
doing down thoro in that water!”
Mr. 0. turned around deliberately,
looked at the ties, and then turning
to Mr. Hallstead said slowly:
“Well, Bill, I’ve boen looking at
those ties off and on for a week jmst,
and I’ll lie blanked if I’ve seen them
do anything* yet”—New York Trib
une.
Jewelry In Europe.
For the ornamentation of the per
son tho Hushlan does not, except
among the peasant class, follow his
native style In his jewolry, hut rather
affects the Parisian elegance. In
Italy they are celebrated for their
delicate filagree work, but in other
parts of continental Europe jewelry
Is tawdry and badly made. Switzer
land excels in watches. England is
very strong in silver jewelry, manu
facturing some gold, principally
chains, bracelets and brooches, all
of which tup heavy, clumsy and not
at dll refined art. London is tho
headquarters of tho trade, where the
horrors of tho “sweating system”
among hor wretched jewelry workers
were the subject of legislative in-
quiry.'-H. P. Mawson In Harpor’s
Woekly.-
The IItippy Andorran*
We have the authority of one who
has spout several years among the
Andorrans, and who 1ms studied
them as thoy have never boon stud
ied before. No railway 1ms ovor In-'
vndod jho domains, and there are po
tolograjibs, no carriage roads, no ca
nals: ther ■ not n single wheeled
. vohiclc, i ■ mi enjipo, it-t.m
laws, » • ....... « - '",o
bt, " *'• " S , .id
ate -"-I, no
on jU.Ay,liubo/ •• <viti
tio. , ' Ac com
panies, i :t frosn the Roman
Catholic iv jtaon, mid uo foreign
commerce. -All tho Year Round.
A Riuhful Mmi's Rmo,
A bashful young man who was
afraid to propose to his sweetheart
induced hor to fire at him with a pis
tol which he nssurod hor was only
loaded with powder, and after bIio
had done so lie foil down mid pro-
tended to be dead. She throw her
nelf wildly upon tho body, called him
her darling lind her beloved, where
upon he got up and married hor—
.Loudon Tit-BitB.
I <5**1 iik Onu Better.
XfrtfeJ’ot (who doesn’t liko sloep
ing with lu-ji’ sister) - When we gets
a new house £ni goili to have a room
to myself and tt key to tlio door.
Little Sistei—Huh I 1 is doin to
haven room to myself, too, nn—mi
two hoys to zee door. —Oood Nows.
The first mention of rubber was
made by Herrera in his account of
the second voyage of Columbus,
when lie speaks of a ball used bj* the
Indians made from the gum of n
tree. It was lighter and bounced
for better than tho famous windballs
of Castile.
The investigations recently made
of the hubitatiqjis of wlint are known
as the Colorado cliff dwellers have
led scientific men to lielieye that they
were occupied by a race of peojile
fully Ib.OUiV years ngo.
Tho uiuu of an average of 154
pounds bn:- enough iron in his make
up to mi'.;- plowshare and enough
phospbinv ". l 'ion
-latch'*.
HERE IS A REAL CHARITY.
ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD: SATURDAY, MARCH-36, 1892.
In t.
ottoi .
1 a Ve
elastic,.
silk
ich
-ohly
. - 0 . n-Jiious.
The tvo:v i will be nearer right
when a hum has learued to laugh a
little less at his neighbor's troubles
'and a little more at Ins own.
The Llttln Mothers* Alii Society and the
Good Work tt It Doing,
One of the Baddest phases of child
life in New York is tho fate of the
“little Mothers" among tho very
poor. You may see them in any of
the crowded streets of the tenement
bouse region—little girls of eight,
ten, even six years, with sharp, care
worn faces, tugging smaller girls and
baby boys in their thin, bony arms.
Their poor little bodies are bent with
the heavy burden, their dwarfed
little souls scarcely lees deformed.
In such families, where father and
mother and all tho older children are
wage earners, the little girls too
small to he hired in the factories
must mind the baby, for there’s al
ways a baby to mind. In winter the
little mother is usually locked into
the dismal rooms that Buch people
call home. In summer she wanders
about the street with the baby on
her shoulder. Some of the east side
mothers sit about on tho benches In
Stuyvesnnt square, where tho smart
nursemaids wheel the dainty lace
cunujiied chariots of their more for
tunate charges.
A kind hearted lady whose house
fronts tho square used to go out
among these children questioning
them as to why they'did not goto
school, and ff they wouldn’t like to
go to tho country on Borne of the ex
cursions. and always receiving the
same answer, that they couldn’t go
bocmiHo they lmd to mind the baby.
The lady interested herself in the
matter, and with the aid of her
friends arranged a series of day ex
cursions on Saturdays when tho real
mothers are usually at homo. Five
chaperons wore employed, who vis
ited constantly in tho homes, found
out the little caretakers, arranged
for some one clso to take the charges
for the day and accompanied the
children to pleasant country places
at short distances from tho dty. But
whon tho summer was ovor, and the
money raised by volliutary contribu
tion and entertainments was ex
hausted, the lady opened the base
ment of her own house and invited
them in on Saturdays for a little les
son In sowing, and on Wednesdays
for a bit of a good time in gomes and
songs anil story telling.
If you should go to one of these
sewing matinees you would bo aston
ished at tho size of tho tiny mothers,
Homo of whom might ho culled babies
themselves. Thoy are clad in a
heterogeneous collection of things,
shabby and outgrown by the rest of
the family, for the wage ouraors
must bo well dressed. They begin
to sow on a washcloth, which, when
it is finished, they take home with
them, together with a cake of soap
and a towel, and, be it said to thou*
credit, thoy mako good uso of the
outfit before they come again. It
was the purpose of Mrs. Johnston,
the founder of the society, and Mrs.
Hearn, hor callable associate in the
work, to teach the children to sew
on garments which should, when fin
ished, he given to them. But so great
has been tho need of the little maids
that tho ladies have fitted thorn out
with clothing os fast as was possible.
The appeal made by those womon,
who, with a few others, have for
nearly two years carried on this
work, is for half worn children's
clothing. Somo of tho responBoe to
this appeal havo come in the form of
bundles of ragged garments and old
shoos that Mrs. Johnston was obligod
to paV hor ashman to remove. New
garments are loss practicable than
tiloso half worn, because parents
sometimes sell or pawn thorn.—New
York Son.
Bow Boa aaS Womon Moot Tran bio.
Men and women meet the .small
troubles of life very differently. In the
first place a woman often locks that
sense of proportion which is neces
sary to distinguish the lesser from
the greater ills; to her all troubles
are of the greatest magnitude and to
be mourned equally, The failure of
a new dress or of a dinner party ore
calamities over which she will some
times worry herself into a fever.
Most men would meet similar trou
bles with a shrug of the shoulders
and then speedily forget them. Then,
again, a woman does uot forget easily
and is given to brooding, nor is she so
swift to run away from her troubles
os a man Is. Indeed she cannot he
easily induced to run away from
them at all; the contemplation of
them has a fatal fascination for her.
In any small misfortune which
falls equally upon huslnnd and wife,
in nine cases out of ten whore the
man resolutely refuses to remember
it and hastens to turn his thoughts
Into siune other chaunelB, the wom
an wili seom to take almost a per
verse jjleaaure in recalling it to her
mind and reflecting upon its actual
and possible consequences. Much of
this difference in their demeanor is
of course due to the difference of
their life. A man can easily run out
of doors and seek distraction, whereas
a woman’s lot is to remain at home
and think. Indeed, wo should say
that very lunch was owing to the
greater opportunity that a woman
possesses of contemplating her wor-
•ics and brooding over them.—Lon
don Sjiectutor.
Pifflcutt JugfUng.
“Onoof the most difficult feats that
I accomplish, ” says Kara, the juggler,
“and one that I spent many days in
practicing, and which I consider a
really hard thing to do, is the bal
ancing of a lump, whilo lighted, on
stick perched upon my foot, at the
same time balancing a twirling basin
on a stick in 0110 hand and keeping
two plates spinning in tho air with
tho other. This, you can understand,
diversifies the work very neatly to
say the least. Another act on which
1 Bjsjut many weary hours is the
placing of a lighted lamp ujkiu my
head, tossing it by a quick movement
of tho' liewl' into tho air, where it
turns a complete somersault aud
lights ujion my baud again all right
It is a hard thing on my hood, too, I
can assure yon, but lain compelled to
practice it daily that I may not lose
my skill in the act"—Chicago Times.
What tli© Banana Miiy Prove.
■ Although tho buuauu is of Mnlayan
origin it was found by adventurers
in Mexico. It is significant that tho
Aztecs had traditions of visits by
people from ovor the sous, while
there wus, as if to confirm these tra
ditions, an admixture of tho religion
of the Brahmins in their own the-
cloy. How unlikely it would have
seemed that the humble banana
should stop forward to prove that,
before Columbus or Loif Ericson had
an existenco, somo swarthy denizens
of tho Old World bod mode their
way across the waters!—Gold-
thwaito's Geographical Magazine.
Not Cultivated.
Two farmers, discussing the mer
its of a newcomer, decided, after ven
tilating him thoroughly, that in view
of the fact that "he didn’t know
enough to take off his coat when he
-’ate his meals, ho wasn't to be culti
vated." -Warper's Bazar.
Olio Wny to Hunt the Cuntotus Laws.
An Englishman who holds a clerk
ship in one of the jirominent ship
ping houses of this city has for years
imported his clothes from London,
yet has never puid any duty and
never smuggled them in.. At least
ho has never smuggled them in the
usual ways adopted by those who
don't Bee the point of paying Uncle
Samuel for tin* privilege of wearing
English clot:dug.
His plan is 11 simjile one, but it is
not likely to lie followed by many
imitatovs. He lias a friend on the
other side who is u tailor, and he
mails as a sample of cloth one leg of
a pair of trousers, half of a waist
coat, the sleeve of a coat or half the
back, and the jiarcel is marked “sam
ple” and comes wrapped in thick
brown pajmr opened at one end.
Sometimes it takes a month or six
weeks for a full Buit to arrive, part
coming via New York and occasion
ally a part by Boston. The parts are
then sewed together by a tailor here
and the suit is complete.
Only once in six years has a parcel
been lost in transit, and it was half
the bock of a coat mode of a peculiar
shade of bluo cloth which the Eng
lish clork could not match. He hod
tho rest dyed black and got sufficient
block cloth from a local dealer to
finish the garment. — Philadelphia
Record.
Tli. rul'1 World.
Arcady novoroaroso out of sheer
gladness of heart and lustihood of
fancy. To the poetic imagination
the difficulties, depravities and insuf
ficiency of actual life have always
been especially manifest and opjires-
sivo. But tho pootic imagination at
its beet never rests in discontent, in
the mere apprehension and recital of
woes. It is creative and seeks a rem
edy, or at least a refuge. From tho first
it has found some approach to that
peace and sincerity which it cannot
do without, but which actual life
Booms to deny everywhere in nature.
Thus the poet’s favorite haunt has al
ways been the vales and the groves,
the flowery banks and the green
fields.
But nature wholly unpeopled still
failed to satisfy, and so the poets, in
their aspiration after earthly perfec
tion, fell to colonizing tlioir plncid
retreats with the children of their
fancy. Thus catno Arcady—the land
of fantastio shejffierds and slieperd-
esses, where everybody was holiest
mid simplo, where tlio tending of
sheep was but a pastime, and the
chanting of madrigals tlu> chief pur
suit.—Scribner’s.
Jew* May Have Light on tho Sabbuth.
An English papor calls attention to
nn interesting mid important ruling.
Tho Jewish law orders tliat on the
Sabbath day no fire may be kindled.
Touching lire, lighting or extinguish
ing gas lamps, oil lamps or candles is
forbidden. With tho advent of the
electric light there came tho necessity
of a ruling on the legality or illegal
ity of turning the electric current on
or off. Professor Crookes) a well
known British electrician, having'
given his expert testimony that the
electric light does not result from
combustion in the lamp, that “fire
and flame” are not n jinrt of it, tlio
orthodox Jew is now permitted to
uso tlio electric light on his Sabbath.
Wliero Alligator* Aw llnmilp**.
Though very numerous, alligators
ai-o uot generally regarded as danger
ous in Paraguay. I have often seen
the young negroes and Indian boys
swimming vrithin a few yards of
them, and the reptiles paid little at
tention to their play. Cattle, too.
wade about the flooded grass lands
in search of jiasturage and are rarely
molested by alligators. In fact, uu-'
less driven to bay or ravenous with
hunger, they dare uot attack man or
the larger animals, but they ore al
ways on the watch for smaller prey.
—Herbert H. Smith in St. Nicholas.
HOW WOMEN WERE EXECUTED.
During th© Reign of Terror the Number
Killed Dally Grew from 1 to 03.
During the Reign of Terror the
first capital sentence on a women was
passed on April 13,1793. Catherine
Cleere, a domestic servant at Valen
ciennes, fifty-five years of age, was
found at night in tho streets of that,
town, shouting “Vive le Rol” and
singing revolutionary songs. Prob
ably it was a case of in vino veritas,
albeit her master assured the tribu
nal that during five months in his
service she had shown no anti-
republican sentiments; and there
was no evidence of her having
meddled in politics.
Next day two members of the con
vention, horrified at the infliotion of
death for so light on offense, urged a
respite, but the convention declined
to interfere, and it is said that even
while the brief discussion was going
on the guillotine did its wbrk.
Two months later three Breton
womon, aged twenty-four, twenty-
five and twenty-seven, implicated
with twenty men in n royalist plot,’
detected by the digging up of papers
in a garden, suffered the some pen
alty. A few weeks more, and it was
the turn of Charlotte Corday.
By this time the Parisians had be
come accustomed to the “equality of
the sexes” before the guillotine, and
the monthly statistics—I follow tho
Jacobin culendar—show a terrible
crescendo of executions: Vendemi-
aire, 3 women (including Marie An
toinette) and 7 men; Brumaire, 3
women (including Mmo. Roland) and
83 men; Frimoire, 10 women (includ
ing Mme. Dubarry) and 57 men; Ni-
vose, 10 women, 51 men; Pluviose,
8 women, 60 men; Ventose, 11 wom
en, 105 men; Germinal, 13 women,
143 men; Florinl, 37 women (includ
ing Princess Elizabeth), 337 men;
Prairial, 33 women, 476 men; Messi-
dor, 93 women, 703 men; Thermidor,
1st to 9tli, 59 women, 383 men.
If Robespierre hod not been over
turned, and if Thermidor had con
tinued os it had begun, the monthly
number of women would have risen
to 177. As Edgar Quihet remarks,
the longer the system lasted the more
the Terrorists were doomed, to pro
long it; on eternity of murderg would
havo been necessary before the fa
vorable moment for clemency was
found. It should also bo mentioned
that tho acquittals, which at first
considerably outnumbered the con
victions, became after Pluviose a
dwindling minority, and that of the
6,000 persons still in prison when
Robespierre fell we may assume one-
third to have been women.—National
Review.
Tlio Mlddlo Georgian*
The Middle Georgian, always a
politician, a free, often clamorous,
sometimes a fighting voter,, seldom
aspired to the legislature or other
positions wherein,, besides being
ridiculous, ho might have proved a
nuisance. His social rivalries began
in country, commonly called “old
field,” schools. Children of all con
ditions attended them during their
formative years until a few left for
college, and the rest for the plow and
the hoe, or for the working tools of
tho artisan. Here began intimacies
and affections thatnosubsequent dif
ferences in culture or fortune were
destined to change.
Indeed the first settlers in Middle
Georgia, although among them were
some os well bora as any who ever
came from the old states, or remained
therein, organized society on a scale
of simplest democracy. In general,
every neighbor used to sit at every
other neighbor’s board, neither feel
ing that he was imparting or receiv
ing favors other than such ns flow
from the needs and enjoyments of
social existence, proud of nothing so
much as living in a region specially
blessed by heaven.—Colonel R. M.
Johnston in Century.
The “ring lint" In France.
Tho tall hat, variously called
“chimney pot,” “stove pipe,” “cylin
der” .and what not, became fashion
able in Paris in 1790, soon after the
death of Franklin, in whose honor it
was known as “chapeau Franklin."
In sjiite of numberless changes of
style it bus maintained its ground
ever since, unexpected ns such a re
sult would have seemed at its first
introduction. For n time this style
of hat was considered revolutionary
in Germany and Russia. Any one
wearing a "cylinder" was liable to
punishment; but the evil reputation
soon passed away, and the tall, stiff
liat, the ugliest head covering that
was ever worn aud the most ridi
culed, outlives nil other styles.—
Youth’s Comjianion.
A Cimtly Work.
j Mr. John H. V. Arnold has done
an enormous amount of private il-
1 lustration, and his collection is among
i the most celobrated of the city. His
most remarkable work had for its
foundation Josejffi N. Ireland’s “Rec-
bllections of the New York Stage.”
In 1882 Mr. Arnold had extended Mr.
Ireland's work to' twenty volumes,
had expended upon it upward of
89,000. and had sujijilied it -with 5,500
illustrations of persons and scenes
ranging over the jieriod from 1750 to
I860.—New York Sun.
A Wlf. That Waa Mlamtd.
The wife of Christopher North had
more influence over him thuu any
; other person in the world, and her
death was his greatest misfortune.—
Writer.
Oar National Bird*
It has been proposed lately to orna
ment the tip of the flagstaff used in
the regular army of the United States
with the representation in metal of
the bald eagle, which is the emblem
of. our republic. The staffs of regi
mental standards now terminate
with pikee. The eagle has already
done duty in this way upon the
standards of other nations, and par
ticularly upon those of Rome and
France. The American eagle, how
ever, is a different variety from the
eagle of France and the Roman re
public. It is of on American variety
—the “bald,” or white headed eagle.
The ordinary name of the bird is a
misnomer. It is not bald, but sim
ply whiteheaded, the f oath era on
tho head and neck of adult sjwciinens
being snowy white.
The honor of first naming this bird
as the emblem of the United States
belongs to John J. Audubon, the
naturalist, whose name will be for-
3ver associated with our bird life.
He called the bald eagle tho “Wash
ington eagle,” because, he said,
“Washington was brave, ns the eagle
is. Likert, too, b£ was the terror of
his enemies, and his fame, extending
from pole to pole, resembles the soar
ings of tho mightiest of the feathered
tribe. If America has reason to be
proud of her Washington, bo she has
to be proud of her great eagle." The
bald eagle, with wings extended or
“disjilnyed proper,” os it is called in
heraldry, was made tlio emblem of
the United States in tho year 1785.—
Exchange.
The Duke ami the Mantua,
One day us the Duke of Welling
ton sat writing at his library table
quite alone hi» door was suddenly
opened without a knock or announce
ment of any sort, and in stalked a
gaunt man, who stood before the
commander in chief with his hat on
and a savage expression, of counte
nance. The duke was of course a lit
tle annoyed at such an unceremoni
ous interruption, and looking up he
asked, “Who are you?" '‘1 am Di
onysius,” was the singular answer.
“Well, what do you want?” “Your
life." “My life?” “Yes; 1 am sent
to kill you." “Very odd," said the
duke, sitting back and calmly gazing
at the intruder. “Not at all, for 1
am Dionysius," said the stranger,
and I must put you to death.”
“Are you obliged to perform this
duty today?” asked the commander
in chief; “I am very busy just now,
and have a large number of letters
to write. It would be very inconven
ient today. ” The visitor looked hard
during a moment’s pause. “Call
again,’’continued the duke, “or write
and make an appointment.” “You’ll
be x'eady?” “Without foil,” was the
reply. The manioc, awed, doubtless,
by the stem old soldier, backed out
of tiie room without further words,
and half an hour later was safe in
bedlam.—Son Francisco Argonaut.
Hovp to Deni with “Crooks.'*
“There are various ways of mak
ing ‘crooked’ things straight,” said
Captain Reilly, of the Tenderloin pre
cinct. It was tho day after the po
lice captains’ dinner, when the genial
captain, smoldng a fragrant Havana,
made this remark, and his ideas of
things generally, and police business
especially, were of the brightest hue.
“Yes,” he said, “there are variouk
ways of making ’crooked' things
straight,” he repeated, ‘‘but there is
only one way to make the 'crook’ feel
that the law has its eyes open day
and night. That way is to nip him
every time he is found where he
ought not to bo—when, for instance,
he can’t give a good account of him
self. Every man is innocent until
he is proved guilty, hut when a man
who has no visible means of Bupport
and whose record is bad meanders
about- in quarters that are not his
naturally, the suspicion is just on the
part of tho police that he isn't seek
mg to do good for the poor—or the
rich either, for that matter.’’—New
York Herald.
J. W. JOINER,/
French Schoolboy Fr lend ship,
A delightful feature of French life
is the close, brotherly intimacy of
men lasting from early boyhood
throughout life. The “thee” and
“thou” of schoolboy days are re
sumed after years of absence. A
Frenchman will make sacrifices for
his friends as alertly as an English
man for his betrothed. One comrade
mny have succeeded in the race of
life, the other may have failed. The
fraternal bonds remain unbroken.
Heart still speaks to heart as in
that careless time when tile pair sat
side by side in the classroom.. The
closeness of tlie marriage tie among
ourselves interferes with this kind of
friendship. In France it frequently
happens that to his friend, and his
friend only, a man can freely unbur
den himself.—Fortnightly Review.
Pens In the Seventh Century.
Pens were fust used early in the
Seventh century. They were of
Course quills, and steel pons did not
come into use until 1820; when the
first gross of them was sold whole
sale for £7 4s. The quality of those
pens whs greatly inferior to that of
those for which we now pay sixpence
a gross.—Nptes and Queries.
Society Note.
Miss A.—I hear you are to be con
gratulated.
Miss B. —Not at all, I assure you.
Miss A.—Then you are engaged, to
young Dudely Canesucker after all.
—Texas Siftings.
JEWELER,
Washington st.; Opiositk Commercial Bank
%
J
Watches, Diamonds, Sil
verware, Musical Instruments
and Table and Pocket cutlery,
Fancy Goods, etc. Reliable
Goods, Fair Dealing, Bottom
Prices.
1
Fine Watch Repairing—20
years experience—all work
guaranteed.
Spectacles and Eyeglasses'^
accurately fitted at moderate
charges.
OUR
STOCK
-OF-
Spring Goods
Are arriving daily and we can
interest the Ladies who
look to their interest
See our Dress Goods and Trim
mings and it means a sale for the
salesrdan. Trimmings for dresses
we can suppl} you with any kind
you want. Crepons, Dress Goods
in all of the latest shades, from 205.
to $ 1,00 per yard. Double -Width
Silk Lustre Brilliantines in'all the
latest shades that we sell you for
20c., worth 50c per yard, and no
other firm South of New York can
duplicate these goods at prices
mentioned. We have them in
large quantities, bought by our
Mr. Reich at a forced sale. He
also bought 1 Case of Embroidery
and the prices on them will con
vince the closest buyers that tligy
are great bargains. In the lot are
some fine Swiss Cambric Mull and
Hamburgs. Examine them and
you will invest in them. Our
stock of fine Imported Black Hose
for Ladies, Misses and Children
are here for inspection. We claim
no firm in this or any other city
can show better goods 'and the
prices on these goods will be stand
ard. We will say, in buying them,
you get the value of your money.
Other goods arriving daily, of
which we will make mention later.
Feb. 20,1892.
REICH I GEIGER.
Hr
LEADING BUTCHERS!
DUHLAVY4COHAGHAN.
Corner Broad and Washington Streets.
When yon want a tender stenk, anico niece of
pork, or anything in tho meat line stop ut our
market or give your orders to our wagons. Wo
deal in Beet, Mutton, Veal, Pork and Pork Snu •
sage, and our aim is to please.
£V£>treekljr Hhipmeau of Fioe lVeei-
eil Beef Received.