Albany weekly herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1892-19??, November 26, 1892, Image 5

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ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD: SATURDAY: NOVEMBER 26, 1892. BROKE HIS COLLAR BONE. !UB. A. W. nillSH II.VDT.V HURT T11IS KIORIVING. Thrown From a Horae While Enjoying a Ride With Ilia Daughter. Tram Friilny'. EVAfillio IIehai.d. ^ Mr. A. W. Muse was the rlotim .of a painful accident this morning, and sustained injuries from whioh he will suffer for sometime to come. He 'and. his daughter, Miss Mary Muse, were out en|oylng a horse-back ride, and were in the Western portion of the olty when the aooldentoocurred. Tempted by the dfiill, bracing air, they . gave their horses the rein, and were testing their speed in a regular nip and tuok race. Mr. Muse’s horse wps the swifter of the two, and soon dis- tanoed the animal ridden by his daugh ter. ' ■ | Just as he began to pull in the rein to stop the flight of his horse, one of the stirrups broke, nearly throwing him off. He recovered his balance, however, and. saved himself from fall ing. This frightened the horse, and he began running again, but had gone only a short distance when he stumbled felljind threw the rider to the ground, some distance ahead. Mr. Muse fell on his shoulder, and the foroe of tile, fall broke the collar bone in two places, besides causing another slight fracture. Dr. P. L. Hillman was called in and gave him surgical attention, and he is now rest ing easily, but will continue to suffer for some time from the effects of the unfortunate accident. Matter Out of Place. The fierce animosity some ardent housekeepers exhibit toward dust seems amusingly exaggerated to quieter souls. To the true dust hater no family trouble or family joy is paramount. With her mouth she may mourn William’s sorrow or exult over Edith’s prosperity. Her eyes are roving. They spy the bit of fluff upon tho carpet, and she checks her sobs to pick it up. The recital of Edith’s happiness is interrupted while sho walks across the floor to wipe off a table’s edge or to lament the difficulty of keeping a room clean when tho win dows are so often opened. Births, deaths or murringes may come and go in her household. Not one of ■these disturbs her equanimity half so much as having her sweeping day post poned; they are all of less importance than the discovery .that her dreaded enemy has gained a foothold in some un suspected corner. An enthusiast of this sort one evening, with a tragio air, requested her husband- to accompany her to on upper chamber. The tired lawyer was impressed by her solemn manner, andlieavily climbed the necessary stairs. Tho lady led him into a room and pointed sternly to a table. "Look at that," she said indignantly. “Three times this week I have told Mary to dust it, J believe sho neglects it purposely. I am completely disheart ened." The lawyer looked at tho table aud sighed. “My dear,” I10 replied, “today I liavo had to deal with a murderer and two burglars. 1 have nls6 examined two wife beaters and oho child stealer, but anything like the moral depravity of Mary 1 confess 1 never saw before— never!" And the lady triumphantly led the procession down stairs.—Harper’s Bazar. Hls Waterloo. “Well, since you ask me as a friend to tell you frankly what’s on my mind, I may as well confess to you that I am in deep financial distress," said Johnson to an acquaintance the other evening. “1 am done up; I’m a whipped rooster; I ain’t in it; I’m completely knocked out, and I’ve got to make a change of some kind.’’ “Why, I’m surprised to hear this!” said the friend, “I thought you were prospering nicely when I met you last spring. How' did your reverses come about?” “In this way? We moved into a new , flat in May, and another family moved in just overhead. We were friendly for a time till they rented a secondhand piano. We thought we’d play even and so we rented one. They began giving thoir daughter lessons, and in order to even up tho noise we followed suit. They bought their boys a cornet and li snaro drum, and wo got ours a trom bone and a bass drum. Then they bought a horse fiddle, an accordeon and a hurdy- gurdy, and that’s the way it’s been go ing ever Bince until I'm dono up. “I’ve got two wagon loads of noise making instruments at my bouse, but my neighbor goes right on buying every thing new and noisy that he hears of, and to make matters worse he’s got children enough to play all tho instru ments at one time. If. I had the money I’d drown that man out if I Mid to bny Gabriel’s trumpet to do it with, but I’m at the end of my string and I confess that I’ve got to retreat. I'm awful sorry " they ever ^pnted that old piano.’’—Chi cago Times. Da: Theo. B. AVardell’s campaign song, “Brothers, fill the glass to Gro ver,” ha« been widely copied by the papers in this section of the ijtate. Dr. Wardell lias made quite a reputation as a writer of campaign songs.' Jinny Thauka, Brother. From the Quitman Sun. The Albany Daily Herald now prints news fresh from the wires each day. This makes the Herald one of the best dailies in the State aud is sure to add largely to its cash receipts. The fall oyclone has commenced business in tbe.West. HE AND HIS MONEY LOOKED FRESHfT fftjt, xitfwjy •4 t : , .«tv ’ lint tho llunko Mon Pouud That the Ap- peurnneo of Each Was Docoptlve. 4 • Ho IpoRed. as green as a persim mon: in August and as Simple as Si mon found in nursery lore. Podunk atmosphere gathered about him aud he seemed timid as a hare. HI fitted •for Chicago di'd he seem as the queer looking clothing to his gaunt, un gainly and altitudinous form, Hesi tatingly he accepted an invitation from a chipper looking chap to visit a reBort where ho could get two dol lars for one dollar Without any try ing on his port, and he shrank away from a sympathetic individual who whispered to him that he was about to enter a den of thieves. Stammeringly he acquiesced in all that his guide told him, and his ox shaped eyes took on a more innocent gaze as ho listened to wondrous stories of big money made by sundry parties that had been led by said guide. When called upon to put up his money he drew out from an inner pocket a comfortable looking roll of greenbacks and - faltermgly set up a five dollar note. Timidly he drew down the winnings (ten dollars!, and was about to turn away, his inex pressive face sillier than over, when his guide whispered him he ought to try his hand again. As clay in tho potter’s hand he seemed, and next, time, at outside’ suggestion, ho put up twenty dollars and ngnin was winner. The Quincy street gang of five or Bix who wore present eyed one an other with decided satisfaction. Not often did so gullible a victim fall into their hands, and they could afford to let him win several times before scooping him in completely. What nice, crisp bills he did have, to he sure, and he couldn’t possibly have less than $300 or $400. The pals nudged one another and smiled know ingly. He pulled in again and took in forty dollars, which he stowed away somewhere about his person. Then ho said sweetly to his chaperon: “Bleegod to yer, 'n reckon I'll be a-goin.” "Don’t do It. You are in sweet luck. Try yer hand ag'in." The reticent green assented, and following his guide’s direction slapped up fifty dollars. Again he was win ner, and with a sillier expression on his face than ever turned about. What u plastic youth ho was! The guide had but to speak, and he did. Put up a hundred," said his men tor. • v And forthwith it come and forth with he won $100. That waa the last. Thenceforward greeny lost one time after another until finally, with a stupid stare, he turned to his companion and de clared himself “busted clean." “No, no. You’ve some of your winnings left. Try your luck once more," said the mentor. But greeny waa obdurate. Play he would not, but edged toward tho door; when an attempt waa mado to head him off he sprang forward like a seared rabbit and was soon kiting down the street and out of sight. The shrewd gamblera counted costs. In their possession were $450 in bright, new bills. The awkward stranger had taken away with him $360. It now occurred to one of them that he invariably stowed away his winnings and only played his new bills. Examination showed' every one of them to be a counter feit. BitorsTlo got bitten sometimes, for this is an o’er truo tale.— Chicago Mail. BERKS A SENSATION! ATI.ANTA liAWYEB’H SAY TIIE PRESENT SESSION OK TIIE LEOISLATCUR IS II.I.Eli AI.. Acconllnc la the Osnatltntlon They «l„lm It Is Nall and Volil-A Test - Vase Hi j Be Mmle-lr Such lie the VmseWe Have se lioveruer . nudne Vlreult Judge*. Special to the nxRALn. Atlanta, Nov, 18.—A startling sen sation is being stirred up by some of tile lawyers in Atlanta, They claim that the Legislature now In session was, when it first con vened, an illegal session, and that all the work done in the early partof the session is null and void. It is said that two of the amend ments voted upon at (he recent State election were not proposed in a Con stitutional manner. One of the amend ments changed the sessions from biennial-to annual sessions, and the other fixed the leugth of the, sessions, The attention of the Attorney Gen eral has been called to it and . a test oase of some kind may be made. If the first part of the Legislative session was illegal, then the Governor has not bepe inaugurated and the judges and solioltors have not been elected. Under these circumstancrssa case tried before one of the judges will be null and void. The matter presents a very interest ing situation, and is being discussed with no little interest by the lawyers of tile State whose attention, lias been called to it; YOU AND I. A Story of Corlylo’s Judgment. Among the many good stories told concerning Carlyle this is n6t the least good; “Carlyle took a friend and a much younger man out walk ing with him, and in his usual way indulged in a monologue in which nevertheless his companion waa much interested. Once or twice, however, the friend ventured to put in a word or two of objection in regard to some thing said by Carlyle. This annoyed Carlyle intensely, and when they reached home he turned upon his companion and addressed to him the following warning: ‘Young man, I’d have yo to know that ye’ve the car parity for being the greatest boro in Europe.’ The poor man had hardly spoken a dozen words, but since these had been eriticul, they had mado him seem to Carlyle a potential bore of colossal proportions.” Amount of Suit In All Oecans. Expert hydrographers and others of a curious turn Of mind and a faculty for figuring on things that seem impossible of solution have concluded that the waters of the oceans and seas of our globe hold not less than 60,000,000,000,000,000 tons of salt in suspension I If these figures are correct and the oceans Ihoulq be entirely dried up, there would be a deposit of salt 450 feet deep over every foot of the great basin 1 If taken out and spread upon what is now dry land it would give us a salt covering nearly 1,500 feet thick.—St. Louis Republic. , Tho Art of Drawing Wire. The art oi* drawing wire was not practiced until the Fourteenth cen tury, or introduced into this country until the Seventeenth century, all wire made previously having been made by hammering into rounded lengths narrow strips of metal cut’ from plates previously beaten out.- Chambers Journal. Not .ho who lays It on the wlielf. Hut ho who Hpemlx UIh talent Haven It. Ho gives indeed who glvtw liliimetr, Ami bent or woret Ik loin who criiVM It. A thouKund wish our work huctohk; One bring* us cheer beenuw* he apeak* It. A common thing Ik happlnewt; 'v* Ho only novor Amis who woka It. ^ Tho atom with the supremo sun Of Nature's plan wok mode partaken Alike haa each IU course to run. Aud show the window of lla Maker. The steady seasons come and go; Tho constant needle strangely fnltenu Tho moon drawn sea awaya to and fro; Opinions change; truth never altera. Wo may roslHt our foe's assaults, Hls aneera that sting, hla blows that Valter; Correction of our dally faults* Wo And another, harder inaltor. Self has no olalms when duty calls; Our destinies receive our shaping! Escape we may from prison walls, Hut from ourselves thore'e no escaping. The oruel oonquents of the sword Hring fleeting fame that soldiers sigh for? The cheering smile and winning word Bring lovo that thonsamla pine and die for An aooldent, a lucky star Might lead us to the ahbey'a niches; Not what wo have, but what we are Is the imperishable riches. Is there a course we should pursue? Through min's realm we must pursue It. Is there a work for us to do? Though death oonfroot us we must do It. Not how to die, but how to live, Demands our care and beat endeavor, For character its light will give When sun and stars are quenched foreVer. —E. N. Pomeroy in Youth's Coiupaulon. They Kill, but Do Not Him.ho. The average Raluli duett not regard murder oh a crime. It in kill or Ik* killed in hiH own country, aud he therefore regard** the matter of tlio taking off of a friend tnoKt pbilo eophically. “There Ik nothing to worry about; he itt dead, and J killed him,” he will tell you if you ahould inquire about a companion with whom he wait on the beet of tertnH the preceding winter. 1 have heard an Afghan, while purchasing a weapon, speak with .evident gusto of the occasion when he wouldhwo the ‘gun to murder a friend. It caused him as little concern, this contemplated crime, ns if be bad said, 4 ‘Shall kill a chicken, if God ho wills it, tomorrow for my pillau.” And yet there is something child ish and affectionate about these men. They never seem to fdrget a fitvor, and repay it to the boHt of their abil ity. Unlike other Mohammedans, they do not observe the Koran with bliud obstinacy, but occasionally stretch its precepts to accord With their ideas of religion. They do not driuk, for that is directly against the law, nor do they smoke. —Ban Frau cisco Chronicle. > The Kind of Music Ilaiideluire Liked. Literature in on the border of science, draws inspiration from it, and finds in the marvels of physi ology motifs of disquietude and fear —an unpublished shudder, in fact, U) speak a little after the manner of Victor Hugo. Charles Baudelaire eer tainly hud an influence on this par ticular movement, i bear him still telling us with a grimace uot to lie forgotten: "I adore Wagner. |He had been one of the first to defend him in Paris, j But the music 1 pre fer is that of a cat hung up by his tail outside of a window and trying to stick to the panes of glass with its claws. There is an odd grating on the glass which 1 find at the same time strange, irritating and singii larly harmonious.” -.Jules Clairette in North American Review. AN OLD DUTCH FARMHOUSE. Corlou. mid Interesting Feature, nf Same Ileal Ancient Dw-ullllig.. The old. farmhouse usually con sists of a kitchen, a -large living room, a cheeseroom;. a dairy, two small- bedrooms in tho garret, and at tho back (forming partof the main build ing) tho big cow stable with its huge loft, and a wide space in tire middle, where thrashing and winnowing ore still done iq primitive fashion, Hay ricks with movable roofs on four poles, various barns or sheds, and tin outside kitchen called the “taking house,’* where the rough work is done (food cooking ,'for tho cattle, etc.), surround the main building. The "baking house” is often usotj os a living room in summer, and is more cheerful than the solemn apart ment into" which the visitor is in variably ushered. A wide chimney lined with tiles stretches nearly across one sido of this room, but tbo open fire on tho hearth .has lqng ago dis appeared and given place to an ugly stove. Quaint brass fire irons hang behind it, and on either side is an armchair, differing from its humbler brethren only in tho possession of ■wooden arms. If thero in a baby in tho family it is likely to be reposing in a cradle, with green baize curtains, ns near ns possibio to the fireplace, in defiance of all laws of health. Two or three largo oupboards, sometimes handsomely carved, and always kept well polished, stand agninst the whitewashed walls. One of them generally has glass doors in the upper part, and on its shelves tho family china—often of great value— is exposed to view. Unfortunately these heirlooms in old families liavo been largely bought up by enterpris ing Jews. Sometimes, liowover, sontimenthas proved stronger thou the lovo of money, and the farmer lias not part ed with his family possessions. In a corner of tho room a chintz curtain, or sometimes a double door, shows where tho big press bed is—an in stitution of prohygonic times, which, to tho peasant mind, has no in conveniences whatever. In the mid dle of tho room a table stands on a carpet, and as people take off their shoes .at the door and go about in thoir thick woolen stockings, neither it nor the painted floor ever shows signs of mud. Another table stands near ono of the windows, of which thero are two or three. The linen blinds so closely meet tho spotless muslin curtains, which are drawn stiffly across tho lower panes on two horizontal sticks, that a stray sunbeam can hardly make its way into the room*, even if it has been able to strugglo through tho thick branches of tho dipped lime trees that adorn the front of the house. On one of tho tahleB a tray stands, with a hospitable array of cups and saucers, teapot, etc., and is protected from the dust by a crochet or muslin cover. The huge "amily Bible, with its big •brass clasps, has an honorable place, often on a stand by itself, Rough woodcuts 01 heap prints and a group of family photographs, which do cot flatter the originals, are hung on the walls.—National Review. FROM ATLANTA. YESTERDAY TUB (.AST DA* OF ,THIJ CARNIVAL, J W'.; ; ■ ■ . («>.r '.-i . . ■: ’’f Thu M.nnin N.l In Sinai** Thli Itiorn- l.K-IVhnl IVm D**n In iht llmM. .CKA.NRKRIMKN. Row -I* Cirak TI.nl In.li-iirn.il,I. corapiiuiinriu «r ihi, Tfiniik.gi, .. lug T(trier. OlH-cInl t,j tile HkhaI.P. - Atlanta, Nov. 10.-rThe Carnival bail and the parade last night made the grandest success in the history • of Atlanta in Any such undertaking, Joe Thomson was kit g of the carni val, and Mtss . CoriteHa Jackson wtis crowned the queen of the carnival. The gala week winds up to-day with n foot- ball game between the Vnnder- bllts aqd the Teoks. There was no session of the Senate to-day, amt the House was in session only .one hour. The only bill of importnLco Intro duced was the bill by Mel Brnnoji to reduce the ’salaries of the Railroad Commissioners to $3,000 per annum. They now get $3,500 each. .. Why Torchlight Gndijralsnlng Toys. Men hondod together are much more subject to n common impulse than individuals taken separately, nnd thore is Borne practical political sense in getting the party men to gether, and rubbing them up against one another in tho promotion of a common end. Tho contagion of en deavor roaches tho listloss ones, their interest is stirred, and they not only take hold themselves, but go out and bring other waverers in. There is no easier way of binding a man to a cause or a party than to get him to do a little work for it. All men oan- not be orators or editors or ward bosses or even patient listeners, but any man with aims and logs enn car ry a kerosene torch around the streets, and come reasonably near Steeping step with a bund. Tho tlieoi-y is that tlier fidelity of the voter who undertakes such sim ple political labor is clinched, and that his example has nn effoct Re sides on tho unorganized multitude. Of course the shinier his helmet is r.nd the more elaborate his costume, tlie farther his examplo will reach; so that very considerable sums of money nro spent every four yoars in tricking him out and paying the mu sicians whom he follows.—Harper's Weekly. Crushed Sand for Mortars. The effect produced on the charac ter of cement for mortal’s by tho size or form of the sand employed has been the subject of investigation by M. Feret, a French expert, who pre pared artificial sands out of crushed quartzite, with a view to determine its strength as compared with sand pf natural formation. The sand as received from the crusher was grad ed into three degrees of fineness. The first consisted of such grains os would pass through a sieve contain ing four meshes to the square centi meter, and were retained on a sieve of thirty-six meshes per square cen timeter; the second consisted of grains passing through a sieve of thirty-six meshes to the square ceit-. timetcr and retained in one of n muchfiner mesh, while the third con sisted of the groins passing through this last sieve. Measured dry each of these samples had practically the same specific weight, the second being slightly tho lightest. Mixed in various proportions it was found that the mixture having tho highest specific weight was one compris ing six parts of tho first sand and four of the third, the weight of this being 30 per cent, more than that of number two.—New York Sun. At the exhibition at the Photo graphic society of Great Britain there is a photograph of Mont Blanc taken at a distance of fifty-six miles. Drinking cups—in the Middle Ages, made from metal, more or less pre cious—naturally date from the re motest antiquity. ‘ • The Brazilian pottery tree contains such a large percentage of silica as to make its ashes a valuable ingredient in pottery making. When green its wood cuts like soft sandstone. There are 15,000,000 adult male white inhabitants of the United States and 2,000,000 colored, Chinese and Indian inhabitants above the age of twenty-one. It is shown that out of $23,000,000 paid yearly for mechanics in tne building trades of New York city, less than $6,000,000 goes to American bom men. Mr. I. Jacorson, the hardware merchant,' is selling a new rat trap which is making a wonderful record in catching the pesty rodents. He sold one toCapt. Y. G. Rust, who set it in his store and caught thirty-five rats in one night, This is Mr. Jacob son’s rat stbry, and the Herald ex pects to get paid for telling it. Hls Wits Worn with Him, The indnstrious nocturnal house- breaker had visited unbidden some of the nurse's bedrooms at the St. Pancras infirmary, Dartmouth pnrit, and waa quietly walking off with hi booty, which was fortunately only five shillings in cash’, when on passing out pf tho grounds by the outer gate he found himself face to face with a policoman. It was not time for dallying, and a direct “bolt" was not in the circumstances practicable. The ready wit of the imperiled thief, howevor, at once suggested a likely ruse. * 'Quick, ” said he to the consta ble, "you’re wanted inside. They’ve got a violent lunatio there, and I've got to go for further assistance." Suiting tho action to the word ho hustled Off. The unsuspecting offi cer in blue, on reaching tho hall of the infirmary, discovered that the “violent lunatio” was a figure of speech; that a robbery hod just been committed, and that if the escaped stranger wanted assistance at all it was certainly hot of the kind he could hope to get from him.—Lon don Letter. The Mohammedan Judgment Day. ' The Koran, sura lxxxi, has this to say concerning the general “judg ment day,” which nearly all religions teach in common: “When the sun shall be folded up; and when the stars shall fall; and when the moun tain shall be made to pass away; and when the wild beasts shall be gath ered together; and when the sens shall boil; and when souls shall again be joined to their bodies; and when tho girl who hath been buried alive shall ask for what crime she was put to death; and when the books shall he laid open; and when tho heavens shall bo removed; and when hell shall burn fiercely; and when paradise shall be brought near, then shall every soul know what it hath wrought.”—St. Louis Republic. Democratic success has put every body in goad spirits, and has bright ened (lie antiepations of a prosperous future. Peorle are begi nning to thI nk about what they want Tor Qbristmas, and most of us will want more than we are likely to get. A Prlnm I)ouun’« Wedding Consume, Miss..Agnes Huntington, the fam ous actress and prlma .donna, was mar- ned to Mr. Paul D. Ornvatte, a New York lawyer, at St. Thomas ohuroh, New York Olty, oh Tuesday last. It was a stylish wedding, and fashiona ble ladies will be Interested In the fol lowing brief diecrlptlon of the bride’s elegant costume, as given in-a New York special to the Philadelphia Record: Miss Huntington looked very hand some in her wedding gown, whioh was of rich white satin, with a very long court train. The train was carried by a tittle girl dressed in black. The draperies and flounces were of the finest Honiton lace and her veil wns of the same fabrio. She wore hand some diamond sprays in her corsage and to hold her veil. The Thanksgiving dinner turk should be killed on Tuesday, and ( cranberries cooked on Wednesday. More than half the cranberries I arc prepared for the table are ruii in the cooking. Stewed aranberrit in the form of a thin sauce of llqu' consistency are an_a6oiblnnt!orj. Tho only proper way to nook 1 berries Is In such a manner that t will turn out in'a solid form cold. Like othor. preserves they are 1 ter the day after they nre cooked i li when used on the same day they oooked. Enough sugar, must he use to mould them. Tbe'sin’plest rule fo cooking them Ik the best. To a qu of cranberries allow a cup of water, nnd n pint of sugar. Pick cranberries over, add the clip ol wall aud let them boil-with sumo rapidii in a porcelain-lined kettle for 30 n utes. At the end of this time add sugar and oook thorn 10 minutes long er, stirring them frequently lest burn. When they are done,turn l out Into a heavy porcelain mould. ] yon have nothing better, a "hi earthenware bowl holding a qua will do very well. Let Hiocranherr aland in ns aold a plnao as you for about 12 hours, or till you win serve them; then turn them out low platter, a perfeot form. li t incline to stick to the mould, set it warm water just long enough for l heat to penetrate to the inside of mould. If It remains too lung or comes heated through, tho ernnhee become melted and lose their form. Tine wool hat boys can got a hett grade of material for the same mmi after the fourth of March next. Mr. Love Wilder ha| a months old pointer puppy that lie very proud of, nnd hopes to train e tine hunter. He Is an unusually telllgent animal, thoroughly yurt ken, and nlrendy goes through a her of smart tricks. The Irish are having a bar with their landlords. The tenant: being evicted right nnd loft, t-lio Inhabitants are afforded lief by tho government there some serious times in the Enter before many years. Tub Negroes of Beaufort, s. t a Doinoorntio torchlight proe other night and several men rlously injured. This in om- re the enthusiasm ntjd passion -vhh lent Ropublloa’ns have incited a ignorant members of the race. It mny bo said with nlmn-l oertninty that th sesslpn of Congresi the new ndminie does Mr. Cleveland ex about the expediency of the Democratic and strongly opposed t in whatever Mr. Clevi will use foresight ui the pedplo who havo elected hin no rash steps wlli;bc taken. A LARGE ANtdlflX E -I STOCK OF * GENTLEMEN, BOYS’ ANI .va; Wo arc prepared to lit extra ni/c -the : Long nnd 811ms ns well ns regular m/i**; Hock Bottom Prices, too—to snltthe liur lino lino o( FURNISHING GOODS. V sorted stock of NECKWEAU. The Manhattan Shirts. Tho Itocklund slim* for t tlomcn and Hoys—-best and most reliable i market. The Btetson nnd Miller Hats—tho It ore in styles. Also, other style* carried, assortment Hats tand Cups for Hoys and I dren. Samples kept for clothing when wi« have made. Fits guaranteed. £*T-GIVE US A CALL. CDTLIFF & J0RDA1 86 BROADWAY. LEADING BUTCHERS COSAGHAS, Corner Broad aid Waihir.r‘:n Strti When you want a pork, or anything ir market or gi ve y" deal in Beef, MuU sage, and our aiih JG?" Weekly H era Beef ISecel' Married conplo d board. Address, statii Albany, Ga.