Newspaper Page Text
<E SELECTING
-YOUR-
ESENTS
CALL AT THE-
ty Shoe Store.
[e ofiler a full line of
[Ladies’ and Gents’
LET SUPPERS !
Plush, Alligator and
Ouze. A full line of
good and re
liable
ics, Shoes, Sloes;
PUSSY WANTS A CORNER.
PHOTOGRAPHING ASTEROIDS.
ror
This life Is like a monstrous plank
Out in mldurenn (tailing.
All crowded full of living men.
And ne'er a fool of railing.
Thcro all are struggling for the best.
Anti each one to his notion:
In this great struggle often some
Are pushed off In the ocean.
And some will llnd the lucky plum.
Like little Jackey Horner:
Sotno always struggle for a place,
“For pussy wants a corner!**
Borne have the claws to hold on tight.
However rough the sailing,
And hold the plank through all the fight.
With ne'er a foot of railing.
8omo things are very light to bear.
As light us ocean bubbles:
To bear with greatest fortitude,
*Tis other people's troublo*.
Borne get a very liberal streak.
Though you may deem It funny;
*Tls very easy to be free
With other people's money.
We often got the lucky plum
Through some poor brother's sorrow.
The failure he endures today
Brings you success tomorrow.
*Tis such a complicated world.
Where you uuri I are staying,
We t:cl inclined to think a bit:
Now, brethren, let’s Ihj praying.
Oh, you, who'vo found the lucky plum.
Like little .lackey Horner.
Make room for some |N»or starving one-
"Poor pussy wants a corner!"
-M. A. Butfln In New York Huu.
the Ladies, Gents,
ses and Children. All
sBcted specially for the oc-
casion. .
full line of Leather Bags,
Jinks, Umbrellas, etc., etc.,
adpopular prices.
iM’sCitfSk Stirs.
>IGN GOLD BOOT.
•>r
L L. WIGHT & CO.
FI INSURANCE ACTS,
Washington Street, Albany, 6a.
AS.
LET’S TAKE A IE!
A Story of Gcirral Grunt.
I once heard, with reverence and with
misty eyes, tlio story of ( Jenoral Grant’s
return from the last brief Journey he
ever took from tile cottage on Mount
Maegregor. The general had a favorite
walking stick, without which lie never
went ubroud, even 'on ids drives, and hir
walking stick laid its own place in tli.
corner of his room; no band bnt his own
ever put it there or took it theuce. Day
after day the journey from his chair to
that corner before lie set forth, from the
corner to his chair after his retnrn and
the replacement of the stick in its place
grew more difficult to the general's
nerveless and weary feet.
And there came thut day at last when,
on coming in, he glanced toward the
corner, stood for a moment silently,
waveringly, a little quiver oil the brave
and steadfast lips; and then, with a ges
ture which was a wordless renunciation
of life and all its dear associations, he
opened his tremulous hand and let the
old stick drop from it to the floor at his
feet. It was bnt a few days later that
he entered with a soldier’B courage the
shadowy valley of the journey through
which David said, ‘‘Thy rod. thy stuff
they comfort me.”—Dorothy Lundt in
Boston Commonwealth.
Blu.t Have Their Sea Leg. On.
“1 tell you it requires a good deni of
practice to he uble to stund in the cab of
a rapid running passenger train and fire
the coal into the firebox," said a West
Penn employee, in speaking of the risks
run by trainmen. “The engine rocks,
sways and fairly jumps at times under
hiR feot. and if the fireman doesn't mind
his p's and q's he is liable to lose his bal
ance and be flnng from the rapid gaited
train. This is more especially the case
in rounding a curve, where, if the bal
ance is lost, the firemuu may be hurled
from the train. 1 remember a case in
point which happened it comparatively
short time ago on the Port Wayne. A
fireman was flung from his engine one
dark night us the train was rnshing
along. Of course ho was soon missed
and a search made. He was found,
and, wonderful to euy. was not seriously
injured.”—Pittsburg Post
Uoiv Photography line Come to the Aid
or the thithu.lu.tle Astronomer.'
The Boston Scientific society has held
a meeting oi unnsuul interest, at which
8. C. Chandler, the eminent astronomer,
gave the first public presentation of the
remarkable work now being done by
Mux Wolf at Heidelberg.
Hu said: "The position of asteroids in
astronomical science is a peculiar, und
1 might say practically a useless one, so
far as tangible results from their dis
covery are concerned. The discovery of
a new comet is a matter of great iiniior-
taiiee, and tile increase in their number
contributes much to the knowledge of
tlie science, but witli asteroids, they
must be found in large numbers before
they become of especial significance,
and in tlim event it lias always been a
debuted question whether the Immense
amount of labor required in keeping
track of them and performing the neces
sary-computation is really worth the
while when the uctuul results obtained
aro so small.
“There are known to exist by the thou
sands and tens of thousands down to
the size of an ordinary rock, and to col
late mid preserve the knowledge ob
tained of them us fast as discovered has
been a difficulty well nigh insurmounta
ble.
“But the development of photography
in connection with telescopy has seemed
to open np an opportunity for accom
plishing something in this line. If cer
tain whole strips of the heavens could
be tracked and a record kept of the ob
servations. a long step would be taken
in solving this problem. Apropos of
this matter, young Max Wolf, of Heidel
berg, lias been making some very unique
discoveries.
“He uses a small telescope of C-inch
aperture, and 1ms devised a piece of
mechanism by which lie cun not only
follow the heavens fur a numlier of
hours together, but can put uwuy the
plate, take it the next night and con
tiuue the record consecutively from the
[mint whore lie left off. This continual
exiusuru of the sumo glass night after
night has hitherto beeti regarded us im
possible, uud Wolf was scoffed at when
lie attempted it, bnt he has succeeded
nevertheless. By this process lie lias
been enabled to discover asteroids by
observing their motions.
“Moreover, he does not nse clockwork.
His plutes are exposed, and he keeps his
instrument fixed for honrs together on a
given point by means of a subsidiary
telescope, in this wuy ho lias discov
ered seven new asteroids und fonnd be
tween thirty and forty old ones, and
thinks also that he has discovered a new
comet, though that has not been fully
demonstrated as yet.
“He Iihs also- discovered the tracks of
meteors und lias fonnd a succession of
variations of their light by means of
duplicate impressions with different tel
escopes, recording five or six distinct
oscillations in brightness. His duplicate
impressions agree perfectly. Wolf is
now trying to find the companion of Al
gol.”—Boston Advertiser.
Schools ooil the French Array.
The total expenditure for normal
schools .in France was, in 1873, near
$11,000,000: at present it is npward of
$2,1,000,000. or an increase of 137 per
cent. The French repnblio has spent
and is still spending untold millions
npon the army and navy. Bnt on ac
count of that it does not forget the
school. And without a doubt the re
publican school will outlive the repub
lican army and be a blessing to all gen
erations to come, for knowledge makes
us free.—Chicago Herald.
llomlray's Water Works.
Tlio Tansa water works for the supply
of Bombay were only completed after
very great physical difficulties had been
overcome. The work involved the con
struction of » masonry dam two miles
long to form a lake of nearly six sqnare
miles |u area. There are fifty-two miles
of ducts, twenty-seven miles of iron
mains, four miles of tunnel and nearly
a rnileof iron girder bridges.—Now York
Times.
Hows and Arrows In a Motion, Hattie.
Many readers will be as tnnch sur
prised us 1 was iu learning that at the
buttlo of Leiiisic the Russians brought
into the field numbers of Bnskir Tartars
who were armed only with bows nnd ar
rows. So we rood in General Marbot's
••Memoirs." written by himself. The
gpneval was himself wounded by an ar-
"i tlie battle.—Notes and Queries.
EASIER THAN WORKING.
A Good Ylensnn.
Little Boy—Can yonr sister play?
Little Girl—No; she makes awful
noises w’eu she tries.
Little Boy—Then wot did yonr papa
get her a piano for?
Little Girl—1 dunno. 1 gness it was
'cause lie wanted zee box for a coal bin.
—Good News.
A man named Clemtner, residing in
or near Reading. Pa., line made over 800
clay idols, which he keeps in and about
his house. At set times he worships
these gods of his own manufacture with
idolatrous devotion.
'
ft
The Barnes Sale and Livery
Stables,
fm. Godwin & Son.
PROPRIETORS.
H is new buggies and the best ot
ho; ses, and will furnish you a tum-
•ouc at very reasonable prices. Ac
commodations for drovers unex-
I celled. These stables are close to
Hotel Mayo, on Pine street, being
centrally located, and the best
place in town to put up your team.
Call on us for your Sunday turn-
louts.
i
VM. GODWIN & SON.
limns Jnlluenco Felt In School.
If the home do its work well, tlie task
of the teacher and tlio school is compara
tively easy: bnt there aro too many
American families, as every teacher
knows, where thie work line not been
done, and where, consequently, tnnch
effort has to be spent in supplementing
the lack of skill or the foolish indul
gence of tlie mother. When n little six-
year-old girl on her first day at school
tries to strike tier teacher over tlie head
witli her heavy slate because she is told
to do some little thing, wo may not un
reasonably assume that that home lias
failed of its purpose, it indeed it ever
had any.—Anna C. Brackett in Har
per's.
Naval Tactics.
Admiral Sir F.dmund Frenmntlo re
lates a story of a Yankee who wus giv
ing his experience of wlmt had hap
pened in tlie American civil war. He
had been in comraund of a turret ship.
A lady said to him, “Oh, no doubt, yon
always were inside the turret." “No.
ma'am,” he replied, “1 was not inside
the turret.” “Oh, really," she said,
“then where did yon get to?" “Well,"
was the reply, “we were generally at
tacking forts, and 1 got on tlie lee side
of the turret so as to have two thick
nesses of armor to protect me instead of
one.”
Whet Became of the Money.
Eugene Field’s wife is the financial
manager of the family, for the poet
is as prodigal in his expenditures and
as extravagant in his charities ojs a
man can well be. Not long ago
Mrs. Field intrusted him with a stun
of money to make a payment on his
life insurance policy, and in on hour
after he left the house he returned
followed by a man bearing eight
large pasteboard boxes. These con
tained a magnificent collection of
butterflies—800 specimens—and had
taken every cent of the insurance
money. But Mrs. Field's only com
plaint was, “Dear me, Gene, where
on earth can we pnt all those things?"
The house is a veritable museum of
animals and inanimate curiosities,
from rare books to canaries. —San
Francisco Argonaut
Mourning Color*.
Ecclesiastical colors include all the
primary colors and black and white,
which are used at various church offices.
Tlie curdinals of tlie Roman church have
adopted scarlet as their color, which
was originally red. In ancient Romo
the occupation und runic of many people
were made known by the colors of the
garments which tiny wore. Black is
in common use among us for mourning,
bnt tlio Chiuese Wear white, the Tnrks
wear violet, nnd hi Ethiopia brown is the
proper hue.
White was originally the mourning
color in some European countries, bnt
black is generally accepted now. Dif
ferent colors Uuv<5 frequently been
adopted by opposing parties, and the
colors of various nations are incorporated
in their flags, for instance the “red,
white and bine” of tlio United States.—
Harper’s Young People.
“C’uleb Cushing would go into the
street und ask information of the shab
biest negro, if in that way lie could
learn what ho wished to know,” said
one who was associated with Mm in
Washington.
A man never realizes how much wait
ing can be done in an hour until he
waits ontside for somebody who has
stepped into s house “just for a min
ute.”
Slender rings with open heart shaped
forms in small stones and diamondknota
are new designs in ring*.
A Hear.Clliiitilnic a Tree,
Even professional taxidermists some
times make blunders in their work. A
funny instance of lack of thought by an
animal stuffer is to be seen in a show
window of n Broadway cloakmaker,
where there is a dead polar bear in the
not of climbing a tree.
Thousands of persons pass that bear
every duy, and it is safe to say that not
one ill a million ever sees how untrne to
nature it is for a polar hear to climb a
tree.
There aren't any trees in the polar re
gions where tlie white bear comes from.
Perhaps the bears would learn to climb
them if there were.—New York Herald.'
Sulmnn Going tlie Way of tho Buffalo.
It looks as though the salmon fish
eries of tho Columbia river, which
have added enormously to the weal tli
of the northwest, would in tlie course
of a few years become exhausted.
The fate of the Columbia will prob
ably be that of the Sacramento river,
from which stream the salmon liuve
almost entirely disappeared. Fish
laws may be passed and an attempt
may be made to enforce them, but it
is not thought that anything that
can be done in this way would suf
fice to save the fisheries.
It seems that the salmon will not
remain in rivers the waters of which
are frequently disturbed by steam
boats and that flow through thickly
inhabited countries. The salmon
fishing of the not very distant future
will likely be almost entirely con
fined to British Columbia and Alaska.
—Denver Republican.
In size the son equals 1,800,000 earths,
bnt owing to its smaller density its
Weight equals only 800,000 earths.
' Taking Fkvtograplis by Balloon*
It is proposed that balloon photogra
phy should be need in sieges by the be-
liegpra. One plan is to start a small
balloon, loaded with a camera, to wind
ward of the fortress, the plates being
exposed by tncanB of clockwork arrange
ment or slow match. These, of course,
are adjusted to the time which wonld
slapse before the ballooii will reach the
point or points where the exposures are
to be made. The gas escapes, and the
balloon descends on the farther side of
the fortress, within the besiegers’ lines.
—New York Telegram.
Mrs# Browning** Sonnet*.
The sonnets from the Portuguese were
written by Elizabeth Barrett to Mr.
Browning before her marriage, although
she never even showed them to him till
some years after they were man and
wife. They were sonnetB such as no
Portuguese ever wrote before or ever
will write again. There is a qnality in
them which is beyond words, that echo
which belongs to the highest human ex
pression of feeling. But Buch a love to
such a woman comes with its own testa
ment.—Annie Thackeray Ritchie in
Harper's.
Funnyman** Misadventure.
Funnyman (finishing his story)—Ha,
ha, lull Amusing, isn't it? Well, good-
by, they suy it's wise to leave at once
after you’ve said a good thing, you
know.
Amiable Hostess—Oh, you are not go
ing yet, are you, Mr. Funnyman?—Kate
Field’s Washington.
Sliver In Soot.
In an Irish lead mine, whenever the
periodical cleaning of the tall chimney
and the underground tunnel communi
cating with it takes place, hundreds of
pounds' worth of silver particles are dis
covered in the soot.—London Tit-Bits.
A Clever Sr amp In College liaise* Money
In nii Ingenious Wuy.
Let me tell you n very strange true
story. Three years ago a yonng man in
the middle of his sophomore year found
himself in debt to his landlady, to his
tailor, to tlio cuilogo und in fact to overy
one of whom lie con Id Ixirrow or buy.
He had no parents on whom he could
call, and his future wasn’t very roseate,
to Bay tlie least,
Bnt he was a genius. He hod come to
college to graduate and didn’t intend to
drop out just because he lacked money.
There was plenty of nnemployed capital
in the country, ho wna sure, nnd he was
equally sure lie could get hold of Borne
of it, so this is what he did:
In some way lie- learned the names ot
ten women in one of the small western
towns nnd wrote them the following
letter:
Mr Dbas Mas, 1 sm s stud.nt In
colleire and am absolutely without a
cut. Unless 1 receive aid I shall be compelled
to abandon tho ambition of my lire—to enter the
Christian ministry. I am an orphan and am
aolely dependent on myself.
Will you kindly send mo ton eents and mall
a copy of this letter to ten friends, numbering
each copy 3? Please request tbstn to do the
tame, numbering their ooplee 8, and so on.
atopplng at nut-Ber la
Ten ccnta Is very little, but ten dimes makea
dollar, and a hundred dollara would be truly a
godsend to mo. Very truly yonre,
Guo nog W. Mabtih.
He figured that about three or fonr in
tho first ten wonld respond, and that
the same ratio would be kept up. So:
wonld be Ignored, some would miscarry
and in some cases several copies wottld
be sent to the same person. It is easy
to count that if every letter and copy
brought in ton eents he wonld receive
millions. If fonr in the first ten re
sponded he wonld still be a millionaire.
Tlie plot succeeded. He didn't re
ceive a million of course, bnt he did get
a very (urge sum of money. Not one
porson in n hundred wonld stop and fig
ure np tlie actual amount whieh tlie
thing would bring to the letter writer.
In some cssos ministers rend the letter
In the pulpit and recommended the
scheme to their congregation. The let
ters which he received were studies.
Borne contained stamps, some dimes
wrapped in paper, some motherly old
bouIb wrote long letters with volumes of
good advice, und some more philan
thropic people sent fifty cents, a dollar,
and u few oven five.—E. J. Barnes in
New York Press.
J • W. IVA LTKHS,
’ " ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
ITtlcticu In nil Hie Courts of tlie Albany Cir
cuit, uml vlM.-uln.-ni by *|icclnl cunlroct.
Otllee In Vuntulutt lllock, Wnslilngton eli-iet-
A Cage of Red Bird*.
A lady in Springfield has a large
cage full of red birds. She owned at
first one tame red bird, nnd one wild
bird after another came visiting him
till tho cage was occupied by the vol-
nntary captives.—Kansas City Star.
Get* Warmed Cheaply.
A Havre jeweler, who has an alternat
ing current transformer in the basement
beneath his store, has placed an iron
grating aver it. and in this way warms
his pli.ee at llie electric company’s ex
pense.—New York Journal.
A Knowing Kite.
First Boy—What does my kite
dodge down to the ground that way
for?
Second Boy—Huh! Don’t you
know? It’s tryin to get back to you
so you’ll put on more tail—Good
News, v
Several attempts have been made from
time to lime to develop balloon photog
raphy, and special cameras have been
devised lor the purpose.
A favorite dish of the East Indians is
an ant mash. The insects are caught in
pits and mashed by handfuls like raisins.
BfjagaBIlHBBii
Lord Lytton’. Method of Speech.
Lytton had u curious drawling man
ner of speech, his words being inter-
siiersed with frequent “erras" to help
him out when he was waiting for the
proper,word. Then, again, he would
empjpuUe a sentence or a single word
by loudly raising his voice, a peculiarity
which gave his talk a certain dramatic
character. 1 remember once, when 1
was dining with him en petit coinite,
tbs conversation turned npon the uni
venality of belief in a divine Creator,
and even now I fancy I hear him say
ing; “When—erra—I had the honor—
erra—of becoming her majesty’s secre
tary of state for the colonies, 1 made it
my first business—erra—to instruct my
agents all over the inhabitable globe—
errs—to report to me if they knew of
any nation, tribe or community—erra;”
thus far he had spoken in a low, melo-
dions voice, when suddenly he changed
Ms register, shot out the following
words as from a catapult, “who did not
believe in God,” Be added that he had
only found one savage community with
such a want of belief.—Uornhill Maga
zine.
Why Ha Hurrlad.
Out in Iowa some years ago a number
of men were engaged in the harvest
field. When a man is "Working for
wages on a farm there is nothing more
delightful to Mm than a little faU of
rain, it gives him a chance to stop
work and seek shelter. These harvest
ers broke for the born. When the great
body or them arrived there they fonnd
thut one of their number bod got there
alieud of them. He hud fallen prostrate
upon the barn floor, entirely out of
breath. The foreman asked blm why lie
bad ran himself to death.
"Good Lord," he replied, ”1 was
afraid the rain wonld stop before 1 got
in.”—Washington Letter.
Th. Carlo.. Beaoar 8ton..
There is now no sale for bezoar stones.
Tlie time was when this concretion was
deemed very valuable, and many living
men will remember having seen perfect
ly formed specimens sell for five or ten
dollars, to ho carried in the pocket as
lucky stones. The bezoar stone is formed
in the stomachs of cattle. It is cal
careous and as hard as a bit of limestone,
but the core is generally a mass of hair
licked from the hide of the animal and
carried into the stomach with the saliva.
These concretions ore as plentiful now
as they ever were.—St Louis Globe-
Democrat
Useless Expense.
A prince received from the house
steward his monthly statement of ac
counts, in wMch occurred the item of 1.80
lire for the keep of a cat in the palace.
The prince immediately wrote in the
margin, “If there are no rata In the
bouse, it is no good keeping a cat; if
there are any rats, the charge for the
keep of the cat is superfluous.” And he
struck out the item.—Don Chisciotte.
A Dentist*. Way of Expressing It.
A story is told about a popular dentist
who was a farmer’s boy before be studied
his profession and the metaphors ot the
farm came glibly to bis lips. He had
jnst opened an office and one of his first
customers was a young lady, whose
teeth he carefully examined and then
remarked, “1 find, miss, that one of your
hind teeth needs a little filling.”—Spring-
field Homestead.
PROFESSIONAL OARDS.
LAWYERS.
£ U. JONHS,
LAWYER AND HEAL ESTATE BROKER.
Ixwnl "Kenl Kquilalilu UulliUnx nml Losn As
sociatin'', Albany, Ua. t-ll-lUw-ly.
C. II. Wuoton. IV. E. Wooten,
yjyOOTBN Jk tVOOTHN, City Att’y_
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Oilleo I" Voiitulott’s Block, Wellington street-
Albaiiy, Ua. z-u-d.w-ly.
ytf T. JONHS,
* ATTORNEY. AT-LAW.
■ ■ •><
All business promptly nml pur*i*tontly at
tended to.
Offlco in Willingham'* lllock, lirond street..
Telephone 48.
DOCTORS.
UIJO HO U IN* ON,
PHYSICIAN AND 8UKGKON.
Office over (illici t’* Drug Store, WnHhingfc'
Htreet. Albany, Ua. ia-d*w-Iy.
12-daw-
W.
I*. DAVIS,
rilYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Offlco over II. J. Lamar & Hon’* Drag Htoo.
comer It mud and UewUlence Htreet*. Uetlden.
corner Flint and Jefferson street*.
BONDS FOR SALE.
We offer for ante tho following bond* of the*
city of Albany, Ua.:
Bonds to be of the denomination of one thou*,
and dollara each, and to boar lntero«t from the*
day of their issuance at the rate of six per*
centum per annum, IntercMt to be paid Manually..
Honda to bo fully paid off In twenty-fivo year*
from January IS, 1884, and in tlio followlugr
manner and amount*, to-wit:
On jTnn’yJS, iwi^principal f4,000, Interest fOJjgi
M
TMigiicd.l
181W,
1887,
1808,
i wm,
11KKJ,
1001.
1002.
lUull,
1004,
I0US,
1000,
1007,
1004,
1001),
1010,
1011,
*ffik
1014,
1015,
low,
1017,
1018,
ifOOO,
4,000,
4.000,
4.000,
4,00U,
4.000,
4.000,
«,00to,
4,000,
4.U0U.
4,000,
4,1*0,
4,000,
4,0*1,
4,000,
m
is
m
4,000, «-•
44*00, -
IS :
Wm, Loukkttv
Mokuih Wksi.uiky,
Finance Committed.
OFFICIAL STATEMENT.
Purposo of Immuo: For Wnterweik* and!
Sewerage.
Total amount ot issue: One hundred tUous-
sand dollar*.
Maturity: Fonr thousand dollara annualls?
for tweuty-llvo years, beginning Jan. 15, 1804..
Hate: Hlx per centum, payable annually.
Principal uml Interest* where payable: Ab.
the Mercantile National Hunk, New' V
Issued
Augusts
City of Albauy,
Vote: Kleetion held April 10th, 1801 Hour/
hundred nml. eighteen vote* cast for bonds, and:
m
ircantllo National Hunk, New York,
id under what authority: Act approved!
128111,1880. bection Mi of Revised Code ot
f Albany,(in., adopted MarchOth, 1881.
- - r for taxation*
lug relative in-
&271,UM| 1801,,
two vote* agaiurit bond*.
Assessed valuation ot ......
for year* 1880, IMiO, 1801, slur
ereuse: 1888, fljtfVJOH; 1880,
I2JUM86.
Kate of taxation: Soven-tcntliH of ono pen*
cent.
RESOURCES:
From taxation f17,2001
From licenses 84100,
Other sources 4,800*
Total .I8O4WO*
Estimated revenue to bo derived from
waterworks I 84XMH
Total
Current expenses 120,000*
.Surplus 4I84HK)
Till* is the only bonded indebtedness of the?
city.
No flouting indebtedness.
Population: Hctwccn 6fi0Q nnd Q/KKk
I hereby certify that tho foregoing stutomenr
is true and correct to the best of my knowledge
and belief.
[Signed.] W. If. GlLBVRT, Mayor.
Attest: Y. C. Bust, Clerk.
SEALED It IDS.
Bids for the aforestated bonds will be 1
ccived up to June 1st, 1802, at 12 o*eloek noon,
for the whole issue or auy part thereof.
The City Council reserves the right to rejeoi
any or all bids.
Mayor and Council.
Of City of Albany, Georgia.-
CITY TAXES.
Bigot flow Open for Retirs of Tun.
Notice is hereby given that the City Tax-
Digest is now open and that I am ready to re
ceive city tax returns for the year 1802, at my
ofllce in the Western Union Telegraph Com
pany’s office on Broad street,
aua-tf Y. C. RUST. City Clerk.
Richard Hobbs. A. W. Tucker.
Hobbs & Tucker.
ALBANY, GEORGIA
Buy and sell Exchange; give
attention to Collections, and remit
same on day of payment at i
rates; receive deposits subject ti
checks, and lend money on ap
time papers. Correspondence soli
''JbEhI
We represent a good
ance Companii
surance 01