Newspaper Page Text
" ' '
ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD: SATURD\Y, DECEMBER 31, 1892.
' ■ * " " . 1 . . ■ . ' . * ’ (•L,: '‘
ALL SORTS OF RUMORS
M BBOARD TO TDK OTIOOTSNU
1 OE DR. WOBIHItn,
EM *f Them are Anbelaatlaled—
Ulakle Did Nel Cenamll Halelde
ae wm Repaired—A Oaard
Areund the Jail
tail Night*
Special to the Hr.it ami.
Amxricus, Dec. 23.—It was rumored
on the streets yesterday afternoon late
that old Dr. Hinkle had swallowed
poison with suicidal intentions, but it
was found to be false.
The rumor Is supposed to have been
started by some friend of tbe Hinkles
with the Intention of preventing any
Attempt on the part of the oltixens to
lynohing either the doctor or his son.
Both of the Hinkles are safe in Jail.
It was also rumored, started by one
■of Hinkle’s friends, that an attempt
would be made last night to lynch the
mprderers probably in order to exalte
sympathy in their behalf, and Sheriff
Forrest wired the Governor for help.
Tbe military was ordered out and
guarded the Jail all night. It was re
ported that
THS niNKLKS WKRK VRBV UNKASY,
but there was no cause tor them to be,
And the guarding of the jail was un
called for.
Dr. Worsham was buried at 10
o’clock this morning. His wife, whose
infant is but a few days old, is in a
very critical condition and her death,
as a result of her kind husband’s mur<
der, would not surprise any one here.
The Hinkles are very rich, so 1
learn, but their friends are few and
far between in this community.
Worsham was loved by ail classes,
and was shot down
WITHOUT A WOBD OP WARNING.
He never spoke after being shot the
first time. The cause of Che killing
Vas that Worsham testitled in court
against the Hinkles, and I heard last
night that old Hinkle said before the
murder, “we will kill him, damn him,
and pay for him.”
An Obtuse Fellow.
Ono of Tennyson's old friends has
■described the odd fate of a manu
script of “The Princess.” He was
staying with tbe poet while the poem
was going through the press, and
while alone in the study one night
and seeking a light for his pipe
found some paper sticking out of his
coal scuttle. From it he supplied his
need, and on looking more closoly at
the bundle found it to consist of
’•The Princess” manuscript, the Inst
proofs of which had just been re
turned to the printer. Looking it
over ho abstracted a few sheots
which specially took his fancy, nota
bly that containing “Tears, idle
tears,” and which now hangs framed
in an honored place. But such is tko
native obtuseness of man in unfa
miliar circumstances that when the
poet came in and told his guest to
put the whole in his pocket if ho
coveted the rubbish, the two made
spills of a portion and returned the
remainder to the scuttle I—Boston
Journal.
| A Quaint Species or Crow.
1 In his subsection on “modifica
tions" of types of birds and animals
Sir John Lubbock cites what is new
est and most marvelous. He tells us
of a particular crow in New Zealand
where the male and female differ
widely as to the structure of their
Mila. The male bird has a hill, stout
and strong, adapted to cutting and
digging into the tree, but he is defi
cient in that horny pointed tongue
which would permit him to pierce
the grub and draw it out. The hen
bird has, however, an elongated and
straight hill, "and when the cock
baa dug down to the burrow the hen
inserts her long hill and draws out
the grub, which they divide between
them—a very pretty illustration of
the wife as a helpmate to the hus
band.”—Buffalo Commercial.
Paternal Advice.
Medical Student—! think, father,
when I have graduated J will be
come a specialist.
Father—What sort of specialist?
4 ‘I think I will make a specialty of
ear diseases.”
“I think you had better become
a tooth specialist. Man has only two
ears, but %e has thirty-two teeth
that are always more or lees out of
•order.”—London Tit-Bits.
Preferred Their Own Society.
Emerson suggested to his wife that
Bridget and Mary, instead of taking
their meals in the kitchen, should
thenceforth he accommodated with
seats at the family table. It being
case of conscience, Mrs. Emerson,
like a good wife, acquiesced in the
proposal, and an attempt was made
to carry it out. But the servants ob
jected; it made them very unconi
fortable; they preferred their own
society and surroundings', and the
family of course cheerfully acqui
esced.—Buffalo Commercial.
yVHITTIER, v DYING.
Breathless the mist of amethyst
That taints upon the tea.
The sun moves like a musing god—'
What sacred sight sses he?
The goldonrod doth gravely nod
Unto the beckoning bay:
The aster watches for a sign—
What alls the happy day?
On its pale lip a finger tip
The stern white Immortelle
Lays softly, like one murmuring}
"Hush! Ask not. It is well.”
Smile ye or weep, jre cannot keep
The secret that ye hold;
Deep hearted autumn that he lovedl
The solemn word is told.
Wind of the northl It has gone forth}
Breath of the pines—he dies.
Ye had eternal kinship's right
To kiss his closing eyes.
To us, wtfo Ipve as men may love,
Tender and loyal he:
But Nature was his confidant,
Sols intimate was she.
We kneel afar, where thousands arm
Gray light is on the grass:
The tide is calling from the ebb:
Lord, let the great soul pass!
Thou spirit, #ho In spirit and la truth
Didst worship utterly tbs unseen God,
Thine age the blossom of a stainless youth:
Thy soul the star that swings above the sod
No prayer to heaven ever lighter rote
Than thy pure life, escaped, ariseth now.
Thou husheet like a chord unto Us does:
Thou ctassst as thk amen to a vow.
Sacred the passion flower of thy fame,
To thee, obedient. “Write," the ange*
•frith.
Proudly life's holiest hopes preserve th>
name.
Thou poet of the people's Ohristlan faith.
Master of song! Our idler verse shall burn
With shame before thee, Beauty dedieatel
Prophet of God! We write upon thine urn.
Who, being Genius, held It consecrate;
To starving spirits needing heavenly bread,
The bond or free, with wrong or right a'
strife;
To quiet tsars of mourners comforted
By mnalo set unto eternal life.
These are thine nshers at the 8tlent Gate:
To these appealing, thee we give in trust.
Glad heart! Porgive unto us, desolate.
The sob with which we leave thy sacred
dustl
—Elisabeth 8. Phelps in Atlantic Monthly.
Substitute for Candles.
There were two substitutes for
candles. The one was the ancient
oil lamp, the croosie (Fr. creuset).
triangular metal saucer with au
upright hook at the baJe to he hung
up by. There was au inner saucer,
moveable, to graduate the use of the
oil. At the apex of the angle was
flame, coming from a wick made of
pitch of rushes, which must be cut
at full moon, as the flame was thought
to wax and wane with the moou if
cut at any other time. The other
substitute for the candle was the hog
can’le. It was mode by splitting up
the resinous logs of the primeval firs
that are found imbedded in the bogs.
They were left to dry at the fire
side over the crack or chain that
held up the pot over the fire. The
candlestick, called the peermon, was
a stone with a hole in its center, into
which was fixed a pillar of wood about
four feet high and tipped with a cleft
piece of iron, into which the candle
fitted. The nose of the candle was
always turned to the door.—Black
wood’s Magazine. --
A Legacy to Secondhand Dooksellera.
By a clause iu his will M. Xavier
Mannier, a member of the French
academy, leaves forty pounds to be
distributed among tbe sellers of sec
ondhand books who ply tlieir trade
on the quays of Paris. The money
is to bo spent by the legatees in a
feast of dinner, during which they
are to think of the testator, who is
grateful for the happy moments
which lie spent wandering from one
bookstall to another on the banks of
the Seine between the Pont Royal
and t..e Pont St. Michel.—London
Tit-Bits. .
To Seo the Heart Heat.
M. Marcey, the well known inves
tigator of aflimal movements by
means of instantaneous photography,
and the zoetrope, has now succeeded
in rendering the beating of a living
heart visible to the eye. All the
■hoses of the movement can he fol-
ewed and properly examined by this
new method. The heart employed
in his experiments was that of a tur
tle.—Pittsburg Dispatch.
Th. '(mi «r a Billiard Ball.
A Cairo doctor describes the man
ner in which an elephant raid is con
ducted and the loss of life caused in
the hunt and in carrying the ivory to
tbe shore. He calculates that a me
dium sized, faultless tusk yields two
or occasionally three billiard balls,
and every ban means at least one
murder and one great crime.—Lon
don Tit-Bits.
A Proverb.
"Johnny, give me a proverb.”
“Amputation is the thief of legs.”
—Harper's Bazar.
Tlley Freeze and Still Live.
Fish, flies and caterpillars, though
frozen solid, retain life because their
construction admits of frost expan
sion without disruption; a freezing
temperature only results to them in
torpor. —Exchange.
RON W. A. LITTLE.
THE DYING EDITOR.;
An Unknown Contrlbntor Toll.- of HI.
Wo., in Blank Van*.
The owner of n paper lay dying in
his lair, and the dew of death had
gathered on his brow so calm and
fair, but a printer knelt beside him
as his lifeblood ebbed away and
tisked the dying editor if he had a
word to say. The doomed man mur
mured softly as he grabbed the
printer’s fist: “Well, at last the
straggle’s over, and I never will be
missed.
Take a message and token to that
city man of mine—that all his worn
out chestnuts he had better put in
brine. -There’s his joke.about the
weather, which he lisod this many
years, and the gag about the fellow
who is always hunting beers, and
the item he's so fond of on the man
who peddlee books, and the chestnut
based on people who go fishing in
the brooks. Just to save the paper’s
credit and to cast no Blurs on mine, 1
would ask him as a favor to put
such gags in brine, and the lies
ho's fond of telling of the street cars
and the tackB, and tho one about
some dandy who will never pay for
clothes, and the one on' womon
cleaning house—it’s weary heaven
knows I
Oh, 1 know ITl slumber happy in
my grave beneath the vine if the
man who does the city work will frnt
those jokes in brine. Toll the man
who tends to business not to weep
when I am dead, but to buy himself
a club and hit the first man on the
head who comes in with strings of
items and requests them printed
free when the regular rates are
cheaper than they really ought to
be. Tell the foreman when he
makes up not to turn a rale for me,
but to simply print an item saying
that my soul is free, for I want no
eulogistic taffy of that kind in mine,
and I think such hoary chestnuts
should be pickled well in brine.
"Have that gay and fresh reporter
I engaged the other day put a stop
to saying ‘Belahl’ also ‘Wo have
come to stay 1’ And if .he should' say
Ye looal' you must trample in his
gore, for you know I'd ne'er allow
it- in the happy dayB of yore. And
the man who comes to tell you how
to run the paper well should he
greeted with a pewter chestnut hell.
And you’ll print the paper promptly,
he the weather full of storms, and
the foreman must he careful when
he is making up the forms that the
beauty of the paper may through all
like its neigh
ages shine, and not be
bors, only fit to put in brine.”—Yen-
owine's Milwaukee News.
A Heroic Little Itody.
A delicate little woman, who has
for years supported four persons by
giving music lessons, feels her health
failing. Her physician tells her that
she will soon be blind and may be
come insane as well.
No one outside the home has heard
the statement from her own lips,
and she has taught her family to
view the blindness and insanity as
remote possibilities. She has others
to help while she may, and she will
waste no time in self pity, nor will
she" accept anything that she does
not earn. While sight and uncloud
ed mind are hers she labors on, now,
as she has ever been, the good angel
of the household.
She sees two things demanded of
tier—that Bhe do the work of today,
trusting God for the morrow; that
she mnintain a resolyed and patient
cheerfulness, making no addition to
the world’s burden. It 1b not easy
for her to suffer and make no sign,
but she can hear anything so long as
her loved ones do not suffer because
of her.—'Youth’s Companion.
AFF*latrA t. Loak Alter Ik. Slat.’. la-
trrr.l AI.HK Ike W. A. Rend.
Special to the Hzrai.d.
Atlanta, December 28.—Governor
Nortben today appointed Hon,
W. A. Little, of ColumbDB,
special attorney to look after
the State’s property along the West'
ern and Atlantic Railroad at a salary
Of 12,000,
A Orttl.lsm ef Jenny Lind.
One day—it wad many years after
her marriage—when Jenny Lind was
staying with a relative of mine not
far from Peterborough she attended
a servioe in the cathedral. The dean
who, probably without much critics I
musical judgment, thought the stni
ing very perfect, was rash enough I
ask Mme. Goldschmidt how she
liked liis choir. Bhe looked at him
with a quiet smile and replied with
an emphasis which could not be mis
taken. "Oh. Mr. Dean, your cathedral
is indeed most beautiful 1"—R. J. Mo-
Neill in Century.
Tli« Highest Pie azure.
The man who owns a railroad
never getH half as much joy out of it
as the man who travels on a free
pasR.- Rain’s Horn.
Near the Sight ef the Crucifixion.
Tlie hill niar Jerusalem where the
crucifixion of J esiis occurred is formed
of limestone. Tho shores of the
Dead sea are lined 1 with pumice
stone, showered out of some volcano
that destroyed Sodom and Gomor
rah, which cities finally sank be
neath the waters of the Dead sea.—
New York Press.
All from Rending • Novel
There are two men in this city who
are thoroughly convinced that much
good may come oat of tbe perusal of
! lasliy novels They have been sojourn
ing iu state prison for the last live years
—one in Slug Sing and the other in Au
burn. A (lay nr two before Thanksgiv
ing they returned to their respective
homes free men. The governor had be
come satisfied that they were innocent
men. wrongfully cnnvloted. sou had
pardoned them.
Tbe reading of a flashy novel by one
of the eonvlcte while lounging in the
corridors of tbe prison led to sn inveeti-
;stion which convinced a mat many
ufluenttal persons (n this city that two
men had been railroaded to prieon—one
for afteenyosfs and tbs other for eight
een years—simply because of lack of
proper legal defense. Tbs reader of the
novel vtss so Impressed by the exu
berant sentiment that trickled through
the narrative that he made np his mlpd
that tba authoress, for it was si woman's
itory, most be very soft hearted.
He therefore lost' no time in sending
her a written statement of hia caae, with
an appeal to aid him in securing his 1 th
irty. The story touohed the heart of
tbs novel writer, and she supplied the
KOMsaiy money to have a complete In
vestigation of the case made by an em
inent New York lawyer. The active in
terest of a Naw York newspaper man
waa also enlisted, and a good deal of
hard work was dona within a .few
months. The producer of lurid novels
forgot her oalling in her enthusiastic
fight for justice, and It is safe to ssy
that the two liberated men will never
be found In the ranks of those who treat
her stories with contumely.—New York
Times. ________
For th* Greater United BUtM.
At a meeting of the youth Norfolk
Liberal association oil Haturday thore
was an almost unanimous expression of
opinion tu favor of the political union of
Canada with the United States. Fol
lowing upon the resolution passed by
the Liberals of the town of Blmooe on
tbe previous day this event indicates a
drift of pnblio sontimont which it would
be useless to Ignore or belittle. Poli
ticians of the small sort may try to make
capital ont of the foot that these declara
tions were made by Liberal conventions.
It would be easy to point out, on the
other hand, that two of the leaders in
the annexationist movement, Mr. Solo
mon White, M. P. P., and Mr. T. M.
White, secretary of tbe Political Union
association, are Conservatives, and that
a majority of tbe signers of an annexa
tionist document published in this city
ere of tbe same political faith.—Toronto
Globe.
BlsvaWd Klee trie Railway.
A syndicate of engineers has applied
for the privilege of constructing an el
crated railroad In Paris to be operated
by eloctriclty. Tho project divides the
city into two parte by a line tunning
north and south.
A uew street, 185 feet In width, will
be built, which will open Into the prin
cipal quarters, tbe Bourse, tbe Halles
Centrales, the Palais du Senat and the
Jiinlin des Plantes.
The central part of this route will be
reserved for the elevated line, which
will have two trucks resting, on four
rowa of iron columns twenty-three feet
In height. The projected line will con
nect with the Metropolitan railway and
with the important lines which ulroudy
exist.—Electrical World.
Made to Repoiit.
In his memoirs tho Marshal do
Luxembourg relates the follow mg in
cident, Tlie occurrence took place
during his service,in the army of
Flanders.
Noticing ono day on a march that
several soldiers wero not in their
places, ho sent an aid-do-camp to re
call them. All obeyed promptly ex
cept one. Tho marshal, then Count
do Boutteville and a lesser officer,
hastened to him, stick in hand, and
hreatened to strike him.
"If you do that you will ropont. it,"
cried the soldier.
Boutteville struck him several
times and forced him to return to
his regiment
Two weeks later the count offered
large sum of money to any man
who would execute a perilous errand
tor him. A soldier who was con
sidered the bravest in his regiment
presented himself for the commission
and acquitted himself with great suc
cess and courage.
Boutteville praised him highly and
(resented him with the reword which
lehad offered. The soldier imme
diately distributed the'money among
his oomradea and said:
"I did not serve you for money,
but if you think I deserve some rec
ompense will you moke me an of
ficer! Do you recognize me, sirf"
The count replied that he hod never
seen him.
"I am the soldier to whom you
gave a severe beating two weeks ago.
I said that you would repent it.”
The count embraced him with
emotion, promised to bo his friend,
and the man received an officer's
commission that very day.
Women in tbe Government Sorvlee.
At present womon are gradually
disappearing from the departments,
and within a few years there will be
lomparatively few of them in the
employment of the government at
'Washington, notwithstanding tho
fact that twice as many women
men apply for placeB. This rosult
will be brought about Inevitably by
causes which aro now in operation,
All persons entering tho classified
servioe must come through tho com
petitive examinations held under the
civil servico law. When there is a
vacancy the civil servico commission-
era send in three names, from which
one is selected by the appointing of
ficial. In five cases out of six, i
osing that the three names incl
oth sexes, a man will be chosot
preference to a woman.
This seems very unjust, but
reason for it is evident enough,
chief of bureau prefers men as sub
ordinates because he feels no re
straint in their presence. Hi
Mol Me«le for Concert*.
Bobby Do Style—Where is mamma
goin?
Ethel De Stylo—To zee symphony
concert.
Bobby—Why don’t she wear her
new dress f
Ethel—I dess it’s so tight she can’t
talk in it.—Good News.
A New England college numbers
among its students scholars from Kioto,
Japan, Thessalonica, European Turkey
and Iceland.
Sailors’ Trousers In (faience.
A sailor’s trousers are the foundation
on which the learned Professor Heilprin,
of the Philadelphia Academy of Sciences,
rests his theory that tho north pole can
he discovered, and that within a few
years This garment was tlie property
of a seaman whose ship entered tbe
arctic regions by Behring sea. Some
how the apparel got into the ocean cur-
rent, was swept away up toward the
l>ole and finally came down along the
•bore of Greenland, where it was dis
covered. A ship, argues Professor Heil
prin. can go where these trousers have
been. And it is a fact that an expedition
la going to start from Norway in the
spring of 1898 to.try it.—Boston Journal.
Would Uko Tennyson's Fiscs.
Since Mist Monroe, of Chicago, ap
peared already laurel crowned nod with
an ode that she had written herself the
bee of poetio ambition has Bitted away
and now bnixes In tho plug hat of tbs
Marquis of Lome. He waste to garb
himself in the mantle of Tennyson.
With this laudable end in view he is
boilding some verses to his distinguished
mother-in-law, and it la feared ho qpe
will dare to tell tier bow bad they are.
(Somebody who really respects the late
laureate’s mantle should swear ont. an
injunction.—Ban Francisco Examiner.
Philadelphia's Monument to McClellan.
William Waldorf Astorhas sent to the
McClellan association, payable to Gov
ernor Pattison's order, a certified check
Tor $1,000. (Sculptor Ellioott gets $8,000
for bis completed model. The stato pays
$3,000 for the pedestal, and the entire
work Is expected to coat EkUIOO. Bid*
will be opened in a and tbe
( ■resent Intention Is to unvK^the statue
u May.—Philadelphia inquirer.
General Longstreat an Author.
General Longstreet will soon have the
manuscript for his book iu the hands of
the publishers, it will be remembered
that it was nearly finished when de
stroyed by fire a few years ago. His
handsomely furnished residence, with
library, war records and manuscripts,
was entirely consumed, and he had to
rewrite the book.—Exchange.
ah Genesee county, N. Y., there
are 185 families who have never seen
a Bible. So says - an agent of the
American Bible society.
The administrators of tbe Tift es
tate will sell, on the Lawton place, on
the 2nd day of January, a lot of per
sonal property. See advertisement in
another column.
GO TO
Surprise Stoi
FOR THERE YOU FIND
flecn Goods
-AND—
LOW PRICJ
We
WE ARE THE PEOPI.I
LOOK AFTER YOUR INTEREST
likes, or ask them to do odi
which ho would not Uko to de
of women clerks. Thus It ha
that tho grqat majority of tho w
now in office here were appointed be
fore tho days of the civil servioe lav
—Washington Cor, New York Sun.
Northern China Has Many Palm.
Northern China is the country of
fairs. In any given district there 1b
a constant succession of largo gath
erings at which it is not uncommon
for ns many ns 10,000 persons to bo'
congregated. The fairs aro some
times called tho “poor man’s market"
for tho display of secondhand cloth
ing which the owners wish to dis
pose of. At Tochou and at another
point on the Grand canal there aro
annual fail’s held from tho beginning
of the twelfth month to tho fifteenth
day of the same month, at which
there is a great display of foreign
goods, especially woolens, sold at
cheaper rates than at other times.
This is called the fair of the grain
fleet, and is one of the products of
the vicious system of grain taxes.
About 400 vessels are annually em
ployed for transporting the Shan
tung grain tax to Tungchow, near
Peking, and upon their return these
vessels bring large . quantities of
goods from Tientsin, which aro sold
at the fairs. While some of tbe fairs
ore held at times rigidly fixed and
never varied, most of them are
wholly uncertain as to time.—North
China Herald.
acnnnl Work Reduced (o nn Art.
A thoroughly good school leesoi
a work of art. To witness one such
affords as much genuine pleasure as
a performance by a genius upon a
musical instrument. In conducting
a recitation the German school
master in my opinion stands pre
eminent. But even the best of
schoolmasters seldom gives a les
son which is in every way satis
factory to himself. I have attended
many lessons in Germany—and par
ticularly in Jena, one of the world's
centers of pedagogical thought—
which were thoroughly planned,
beautiful, interesting, but which
were in spite of all considered fail
ures because they were weak in one
or more elements. This is instruc
tion converted into a fine art.—Dr.
J. M. Bice in Forum.
What W*«da Are*
A weed is a plant that grows in
abundance out of desired limits.
Any plant may become 'a weed by
escaping from cultivation. Many
plants that with us' are highly
teemed in other countries grow as
weeds, while, on the other hand, our
weeds are in other countries some
times highly prized. The correct
use of the word depends altogether
on circumstances.—Exchange.
want -you to fed that when
are deeling with ns
-WHO WILL-
SHOES J_SH0ES!
CASH BBFORB DELIVERY gives .
you goods right. t
Waldrop & Williams, |
25 Washington Street.
A NEW ROUTE I
BETWEEN
Thonasrille & Atlanta,
With Through Coaohei Sail: Via
C. S. R’y and 6, M. & G, R. R.
SOUTH HOUND.
+NO. ].
tNO. 8.
Louvu Atlanta, Ga
* Mr.Honougli.Uu...
H Columbus, Ga
u •Richland, Ga
u Hudson, Ga
* illmny, Ga
Ar’vo ThotnuHvillu, Ga..
** .Jacksonville, Fla..
u llriinswiok. Gn
8:S5 a.in.
l*:o& p. in.
1:40 -
am *
»:45 •*
oiso *
8:25 u.m.
7:S5 *
H:45 p. 111.
0:80 u
n:‘J 7 -
10J00 “
5 NOIITII HOUND.
+N0.1
(NO. 4.
Leave Rruirswick,Gn
“ Jacksonville, Fla..
** Thoinn*vlllo,Go...
M Albany, Gn
44 Dawson, Gii
* •Richland, Ga
u Columbus, Gn
** McDonough, Gn...
Ar’vfl Atlanta. Gji
7::iu p, m.
o:8o *
7J5f. n. m.
11:25 *
13:10 p.m.
JJ85 *
OjJO *
0:65 *
7:50 *
8:07 u
losnn *»
+Dnlly, JTrl-weokly, Mondnys, Wcdn
and Friday*. •Dlnnnr Htatioa.
Tho only lino running through couches b
tween ThoiuuHviUo*nnd Atlanta.
Close coaaeetlon In Atlanta for all (soil
Sorta, Kant and-West*
CECIL GABBETT,
dJrmrol Who
GILBERT’
' •'.'■> TO
DRUG STOI
Ho. 9 Waskiigto St.
TELEPHONE No. 13
HAVING
A LARGE AND FINE
STOCK OF
* GENTLEMEN, BOYS’ AND *
CHILDREN’S
We are prepared to fit extra sizes-tl.e Stout*
Long and Slims as well as regular sizes; all at
Hock Bottom Prices, too—to suit tho Ilmen. A
floe line of FURNISHING GOODS. Well-a*-
sorted stock of NECKWEAR. The Leader
Manhattan Shirts. The Rockland Shoe for Gen
tlemen and Boy*—best and moat reliable in the
market. Tho Stetson and Miller llate—the lead
ers in styieei Also, other styles canicd. Nice
assortment IIntn and Caps for Uoya and Chil
dren. Samples kopt for clothing when winh to
have made. Fits guaranteed,
GIVE US A CALL.
CDTL1FF & JORDAN.
BROADWAY.