Newspaper Page Text
.'7—VX ■
ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD: SATURDAY JULY i, 1893.
-Hr
A BlnffuUr li«unton. '
A romnntlo story in whloh a young
lady who hah Dean living naar Blackllck,
Indiana county, is a prominent charac
ter comes from Curwensvllls, Clearfield
county.' In the spring of 1870 iBaiah
McDonald of Orampion Hills, Clearfield
county, married n young lady from
Michigan. After a few short mouths of
wedded life the young man got into
trouble. A separation followed, and the
roung wife returned to her western
tome.
A short time afterword a daughter
was born. The mother's death followed
swiftly on this event, and the child was
taken in charge by its grandparents. It
was years before the father knew he had
a daughter. After discovering it he
spent n great deal of money in a fruitless
endeavor to locate her.
About the beginning of last March the
daughter, now a young lady of 18 years,
learned of her father's residence. Blie
wroto to him, giving her address as
Blacklick, Indiana county. The father
was overwhelmed with joy and wrote,
giving uudeniublo proofs of his relation
ship.
Arrangements wero made for a meet
ing. Father and daughter mot at Cur
weusvillo, and an affecting scene fol
lowed. Thoy nro now living together at
Orampion. The girl is described as fine
looking. Sho has been reared tonderly
and possesses a good education.—Indiana
Onzetto.
\ vrTvTivf
Waves on the Maud of TloruBo.
UlJlll.lI ft
WELL PRESERVED OLD GENTLEMEN.
How Thor Endeavor to Conooal the Steadr
Knaroaohmeut or Time.
One of the most common conceits
of old gentlemen past BO is to claim
that they nro “just as yotrng as they
over were," “never felt bo well in
my life," “just as vigorous as ever,"
"prime of life, sir," “full of intel
lectual vigor.” Some of these elder
ly persons will wink and look wise
■and boast of their unimpaired vigor,
But they do not ride horseback any
more, “have lost their taste for such
vigorous exercise.”
They do not go over the mountains
for quail any more; they shoot duck
from a punt hid in a tule blind; they
do not dance, nor ride horseback, nor
go up two steps at a time, nor jump
upon a car while it is in motion. Just
see one of these well preserved old
gentlemen get out of a buggy or
walk up hill; hear him paiit and
wheeze; see him avoid a draft from
a crack in a door or window; see him
throw his handkerchief over his buld
head when he goes to sleep in church.
This elderly gentleman carries a
substantial cane, wears thick under
clothes, a buckskin over his chest,
corsets if too fat and a liver pad.
His hair gets thin, his legs get weak,
he gets irritable, thinks this gener
ation not bo good ns the last, thinks
the world is growing dishonest and
the country is going to tho devil.
If he is a lawyer, he has become an
old fogy, and tho boys worry him,
with sharp practice. If he is a doc
tor, he regards all young men os
quacks and all progress in medicine
as empiricism. If he is a banker, he
looks wise and continues to look
wiser, till at the age of 60 the coun
tenance is rigid with frozen sagacity.
Women never get to be BO—that is,
not by the regular process of gradu
ally growing old. The dentist, the
hairdresser, the corset maker, the
milliner, the importer of French bon
nets, form a bodyguard around the
Advancing female, and when finally
she cannot dodge old age any longer
sho just skips with a bound from SB
up to 70, throws up tho sponge and
turns pious.—San Francisco Argo
naut.
n.tszsu': newline between
the port of New York and sundry ports
of southern und eastern Africa has soiled
from here with a forgo of tnnehinery,
merchandise and lumber. She is a Brit
ish built; twin Sorew steamer of 8,000
tons, well adopted to tho trade in which
she is engaged. The British company to
which she belongs owns other steamers
of about the same power and tonnage,
and it is intended that a vessel of the line
shall leave this port every month of the
year for trading purposes.
The Worcester,.which lias just taken
her departure, will first touch Africa at
Cape of Good Hope, and after entering
and leaving the port of Cape Town will
proceed no# thward along the east coast
to Elizabeth, East London, Durban,
Delagoa bay, Mauritius and such otlior
places as may offer opportunities for
trade. The company which has estab
lished the lino is British, but its ships
are ready to transport snch American
products, goods and wares as can be
marketed in eastern Africa and to bring
here upon the return trip such African
commodities aa may be marketable in
this country.
Wo Bliall bo very well pleased to get
some better share than we now have of
the African trade, which several Euro
pean countries are desirous of control
ling, and we shall be pleased to encour
age the Castle company in its offorts to
enlarge the exchanges between the two
continents. We could wish that it were
an American company, that its ships
wero Amorican, and that its profits, if
thero happen to be any, were to be di
vided between this country and Africa.
—New York Sun.
A Cat Useful For Once.
The domestic cat lias often been
quoted as one of the readiest sources
whence frictional electricity may be
derived, but in its latest connection
with electricity it plays an entirely
new port. A building in a Massachu
setts town had been wired for elec
tric lights, and it was found necessary
to pass an electric wire from one side
of a room to the other under the
floor. This was likely to entail a
serious loss of time and labor in ex
cavating, but an ingenious ruse got
rid of the difficulty. One of the men
hit upon the plan of making a hole
at each end of the room.
Then taking a long piece of fine
twine he tied it around the body of a
live kitten, which was placed through
■one of the holes into the space under
tho floor. By a little coaxing tho cat
soon found her way to the hole at
the other end of tho room, where the
light was shining in. Thus the fine
twine was passed through and was
attached to a stronger piece, which
Was in its turn drawn through and
made the means of drawing the wire
right through the opening.—Elec
trical Review.
Growth of tho German Democracy.
In the middle of the confusion and
wrangling df other partios the Social
Democrats are full of activity and of
hope. They have many rousons for thoir
confidence. For some years past the em
peror, the political parties, the church,
even Prince Bismarck, have coquetted
with them more or loss, have acknowl
edged that their aims nro often excellent
and have promised with here and thero
s qualifying “bnt" or “if” to carry them
out as far as is humanly possible. They
aro therefore justified in the hope that
voters whose minds have been trainod to
hear them with attention by this general
chorus of approval will be the more dis
posed to listen to promises which aro not
qualified by “ifs" and “buts."
Then the Social Democrats are well
organized and know both wlmt thoy
want and how they propose to obtain it.
These are great advantages to a political
party in all countries, but are more par
ticularly so among the Gormans, whoso
natural instinct it is to obey orders and to
march in file, even when thoy are in re
volt. It is therefore quite possible that
the Social Democrats may double their
numbers at the noxt election, and it will
not be surprising if that estimate is sur
passed.—London Saturday Reviow.
A MINISTERIAL GHOST.
The Progress of Socialism.
The progress of socialism is making
the Duke of Cambridge a sadder—it cot’.’. J
not of course make him a wiser—man
It was very sad, he said at a churity
dinner, to think that the masses were
led to believe that they could benefit
themselves by pulling down the classes.
In this world, continued his royal
highness, of course it was impossible
for all of us to be on a level, for if a'i
were made equal one day some would be
superior on the morrow. Fortunately
the world was governed and ought to be
governed by common sense, and he hoped
it would always continue to be.
But the duke forgets two things. The
first is that it is quite possible to imagine
a new order of society under which those
who “would be superior on the morrow"
would be so in virtue of merit and not ol
birth. And the second is that under the
existing order of society, though proved
capacity can often ascend, no effective
means—as Professor Huxley somewhere
laments—has yet been found for making
proved incapacity descend.—Westmin
ster Gazette.
A Belgian Sunday Law.
Tho Belgian postoffice is about to issue
what is called a special Sunday stamp.
It will bo a 10-centime (2-cont) stamp
and at one end will have a little flup.
This can be tom off or left intact at the
nser’s will and will carry in French and
Dutch these words: “Ne pas livrea le
dimanche," “Nict bestellon op zontog,"
which means in English, “Tho postman
not to deliver on Sunday the letter
bearing this stamp.”
This novelty is intended to Btnrt a
popular agitation against Sunday gov
ernment work in Belgium, which is to
be stopped if possible in the future.
It is said that a large number of people
will post letters unnecessarily on Sun
day mornings in order to give expression
to their sentiments.
It will be interesting to hear how
many of these stamps are used.—Cour-
rier des Etats-Unis.
Prunes or Wheat.
Ten thousand pounds of green prunes
per acre, or 8.200 pounds of dried, is a
conservative estimate. Twenty bushels
of wheat, or 1,200 pounds, is a large
estimate per acre. The farm value ol
tho prunes this year is |030; the farm
value of the wheat is $15. OurCaliforniu
peach orchards will show os many pounds
green as of dried prunes, with half the
dried product of prunes worth this yeai
$200 per acre. We have low prices foi
fruit at times, but never down to cost ol
production. There never has been a time
when good fruit well handled and cured
did not bring a good profit.—Genera'
Chipman's Paper.
In February lost, we learn from the
United States Wreck Chart of the North
Atlantic, there were no fewer than 4.
derelict vessels in that ocean, and more
than half of them were in the track ol
-the transatlantic liners
It is very gratifying to the people
of the United States to know that the
present quarantine laws are proving
to be so effective. It is to be hoped
that the strictest surveillance will be
kept up. America has enough of po
litical plagues without cholera and
.yellow fever.
A State Without a Militia.
Delaware will soon bo without a state
militia. This condition of affairs has its
origin in the adverse notion of tho state
legislature as to an appropriation needed
for the support of tho national guard in
that diminutivo but prosperous com
monwealth. As soon as tho legislature
defeated the militia bill every officer
and enlisted man in tho admirablo and
well disciplined little force voted to dis
band, and they are now engaged in car
rying their convictions to a conclusion
that is, while personally creditable, most
discreditable to Delaware. It may oven
prove to be dangerously inconvenient,
for the posse comitatus is not the power
it once was and, in fact, can bnt rarely
be assembled, much less depended upon.
—Washington Star.
It Haunts tha Bouts ol a Brother Mlnlsttr
la an Uncanny Way.
To look at *7 St-George’s road,
Kilburn, one would not suspect it of
being haunted. It is a solid, sub
stantial, comfortable looking house,
standing in about the middle of a
rather imposing terrace, with a small
garden containing a few bushes in
the front and a larger grass plot at
the back. It is not by any means a
tew house, but it has so few marks
of age about it that a self respecting
ghost would hardly have been ex
pected to regard it as an eligible resi
dence. Yet there are three people
dwelling in the house who assert
confidently that they have each on
separate occasions been the eyewit
nesses of a remarkable apparition in
tho house. Rev. G. S. Tyler, the
minister at present attached to the
Quex Road Wesleyan chapel and his
family, who are tho eyewitnesses
of the ghost, have told a reporter
about it.
The house has for many years now
been the dwelling place of the vari
ous ministers who have succeeded
each other every three years at the
Quex Road chapel Mr. Tyler and
his family have lived there now for
18 months. “I have never seen the
apparition myself," said Mr. Tyler,
“and have always been a confirmed
unbeliever in spirit manifestations
and so on. But the fact remains, ex
plain it how you will, that my wife
and my daughters Adn and Julie,
aged respectively 20 and 19 years,
have distinctly seen a mysterious
something whioh in the absence of
any better way of describing it we
have called an apparition. They
agree closely in their several descrip
tions of the figure.
“It is that of a person attired os a
Wesleyan minister might be, in
black clothes of a clerical cut. It is
a figure of average stature with a
long gray beard and keen, peculiar
eyes. It was my younger daughter
who first met with the apparition.
She will tell you in her own way. '
Miss Julio Tyler then took up the
story. “1 was standing at the cor
ner of the stairs," she said, "and 1
saw what I took to be papa. I had
gone to coll him to tea, and when I
called him he neither answered nor
moved. I thought he was playing
with me and giving me the trouble
to go up to him, and I ran up to push
him. I pushed right through the
figure and fell against the wall,
was dreadfully frightened, but when
" told the others they laughed at me.
But then Ada, later on, suw the same
figure and then mother herself. It
was before Christmas that 1 saw it.
No. I had not been reading any
ghost stories at all then. But I have
since. So have we all.”
Miss Ada then related her first ex
perience of the uncanny visitor. She
was alone in the house with a child
one Sunday evening and saw the
figure in the doorway. She thought
u man had broken into the house at
first, until she observed tho clerical
cut of the figure’s garb and then re
called her sister’s experience. Mrs.
Tyler’s statement was that while
passing by the small room at the end
of the passage one evening she saw
Mr. Tyler Btanding in there, os she
thought She ran up stall’s to the
study and there found tho actual Mr.
Tyler in the flesh. It is in this room
at the end of the passage indicated
where the apparition has been moBt
frequently seen, and the ladies of the
household do not care to venture
near it alone. It is a small room
looking out on the back garden, but
with wooden shutters, which are
fastened over the gloss in tho even
ing. “It was in that room,” said
Miss Julie, “that I met the figure
face to face. I shall never forget his
eyes—grayish blue in color—and
they seemed to look right through
me quite hungrily."—Pall Mall Bud
get.
Mr. Hennuu's Serious Charge.
George Kennan, tho Siberian traveler,
writing on the Russian extradition treaty
in The Formn, makes the startling as
sertion “on the highest authority" that
even now “the Russian secret police at
St. Petersburg open and read tho pri
vate letters of the American minister
and the members of the American lega
tion." He adds significantly: “It seems
to me that a government which makes a
practice of opening and reading not only
the private lettera of its own subjects,
but the letters of tho diplomatic repre
sentatives of a friendly state, is not a
government upon whose honor it is safe
to rely in" a question of extradition.”
Sho Was nil Wife.
Alfred Stockham, a resident of Weth
ersfield, Conn., and his wife and one
ihild went to Hartford to see the circus,
After the procession had passed they
started np Main street together. A dis
pute arose between them, and the fellow
struck his wife in the face, breaking her
nose and felling her to the ground.
When arrested and asked why he struck
her, Stockham replied, “Why, she's my
wife."
Tile Result of a Dog’. Shah**-
A fire which destroyed tho house of
John Downey on Grand island, near
Buffalo, was originated in a queer man
ner. A large Newfoundland dog, which
was asleep in the room, shook himself,
and in so doing npset a lamp, which ex
ploded and set fire to the house.
Coinmenoemeut nay*.
Commencement days are with us once
again. Along tho streets go closed car
riages, through the drawn curtains of
which one catches glimpses of smiling
young faces, dainty diaphanous gowns
and a veritablo forest of blooming flow
ers. In all the colleges and seminaries
parents anil friends are gathering to wit
ness the graduation exercises of thoso in
whom they are interested, and to the fair
participant the day is one that marks a
new era in their lives.
As wo look upon such sights, how viv
idly our own commencement day comes
back and with it all the hopo and prom
ise of the future that was budding in
our breast that day I School days over,
our greatest troubles left behind be
tween tho closed covers of “Virgil" and
'SalluBt," wo looked forward to days of
no more Btudy as to a dream of bliss
about to bo realized.
Dear graduates, you will find, as we
have done, that thoro are loBsons to be
learned after the college doors have
banged to behind your retreating forms,
and the great halls cease to eolio to your
wonted footsteps. They will bo hard or
easy, as you yourselves make them. It
lies with you to make your life worthy
and noble or aimless and colorless,—
Philadelphia Times.
Magical Effects of the Sapphire.
To the sappiiire has been ascribed
the following magical properties
That it. prevents wicked thoughts
that it is such an enemy to poison
that, if put in a glass with a spider
or venomous reptile, it will kill it.
St. Jerome in his exposition of the
nineteenth chapter of Isaiah says
that the sapphire procures favor with
princes, pacifies enemies, frees from
enchantment and obtuins release
from captivity. This gem was sacred
to Apollo and was worn when in
quiring of the oracle at his shrine,
It was esteemed as a remedy against
fevers.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
To Dretfgo the Yukon For Gold.
The hull of the steamer Rustler of Ju
neau, Alaska, has been transferred from
Lake Washington to the harbor and ia
ready for the machinery now being
built. Tho steamer is 66 feet long, with
a 16-foot beam, and specially constructed
with a view to work on the Yukon river.
Many stories have been told about the
fabulous wealth concealed in the bottom
of Alaska’s most celebrated river, and it
is with a view to dredging that she has
been built.—Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
A Monster Shad.
What is believed to be the largest shad
ever taken in the waters near the head
of Delaware hay was cuught opposite
Delaware City a few days ago. It meas
ured 27 inches in length, 4 inches in
thickness and 19 inches at its greatest
circumference. Its weight was lOpounils.
Thu contract for the erection of two
ne* residences on the old Asa Tift lot,
corner ,, Jackson and North streets,
has been let by Mr. W. W. Rawlins.
Mr. C. D. Smith has the contract.
•The northern half of the island of
Borneo is the queerest and tobst un
satisfactory place to live that one can
imagine," said Burton Emhoff. “It
is a land of constantly recurring phe
nomena, where cycloneBare frequent
and deluges of • water very common.
The vegetation In that half is very
fine, but in all probability the wildest
and most tangled on earth—not even
excepting that of Africa. The cause
of all tho trouble is the shallow con
dition of the sea north of it, great
shoals of sand existing a few miles
out which extend along its entire
northern length. These shoals ate
covored by a depth of wator not over
five feet deep. The constant recur
ring winds that blow in that olimate
change to hurricanes and sweep the
smaller islands of all visible life.
When such a storm strikes the sand
Bhoals north of Borneo, it sweeps up
the shallow salt water into its course
and drenches the island with it
“Oftou it gathers up Band, great
massos of it, from the clear swept
shoal mid whirls it for miles high
over the island, carrying it into the
inlaud and scattering it everywhere.
The work of these storms does not
always end with that. Entire shoals
of fish, of ull sizes, have been swept
up time und again by tho fierce winds
with the wator and sand and scat
tered about Borneo. In some places
the ground would be literally cov
ered with fish, enough to supply a
heavy population for weeks. But
such luck is do reparation for the
evil the winds do, and consequently
tho northern half will never ho in
habited by those who value their
lives."—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
i
M
We take first place, as easily c
room suits hold the leading posit
the household outfit. Our 0 '
Walnut bedroom suits of tli
ten, or aa many pieces as
Strike the
At onoe. and In this ease to
buy. we can meet your idea
either in utility, solidity, or i
We know we’ve got what .
you know it; everybody know
Knowledge don’t amount to nil
unless you act on it.
7-11. Curfew In Canada.
The ringing of the curfew bell is to be
revived in tho oltieB and towns of Can
ada. Under the provisions of the new
law, or rather of tho anolent law re
vived, all persons under the age of IT
years are expectod to make for home at
the first tap of the bell. The idea is to
force children off tho streets nights and
to keep them within the benign influ
ences of the family oirelo, rather than to
allow them to learn deviltry in the com
pany of evil associates. The law is uni
versally applauded in Canada, and the
brightest hopes ure entertained of its
beneficial effeot on tho young.—Chicago
Herald.
Come, look, and buy. You ’
bedroom in a house as well
parlor. We can fix you out in
speots. Our Btook ia more I
gant; it is solid, durable, up t
style, and surprisingly ms
price. We have in stock iJ
inc of
Will Albany have any amusement
on the Fourth of July?—that's the
question.
Newspaper Men and the Fair.
The following letter and comment is
from the Chicago News-Record:
1 am pleased to see your manly defense of the
country editor In Ills relation to tho World's
fair. Your remarks apply with equal force to
editors in general, outside ilia larger cities. I
have published matter pertaining to tlio fair
which could have been billed at 81,600 weto tho
fatraprlyato instead’ of a lublie enterprise.
Tho 4-column article in this week's paper de
fending tho management nguinst charges oflu-
competency would cost any other institution
$«W, not including what I paid tho writer for
preparing the artlolo. In tho light' of such
services I agree with you in tho assertion that
it would l.e short sighted for tho maniigomont
to curtail the privileges of a clues that lias la
bored so uealously for tho bU'-cees of the great
fair. Yours truly, E. A. Ktowp..
Wo did not use tho mild opitliut sug
gested by our Michigan friend. "Short
sighted*’ is altogether too conservative a
term to apply to the policy hinted at.
To curtail to any extent tho privileges of
the country editor would in our opinion
be the apotheosis of meanness, treachery
and ingrutitudu.
The bicycle girls is now tho fad—
In fact, they aro all the go,
Hut thoir spinning whacls aro not so good
As the spinning whools of long ago.
Thoso aro tho molon-ohollo days,
Tho sndcst of tho year,
Entirely too warm for whisky
As well ns lager beer.
Tine city barracks is complete now,
with the exception of the water con
nections and looks for the doors, and
work is rapidly being done toward fit
ting up the room underneath the
Council Chamber for a City Court
room.
If some Jollification could be gotten
up for the Fourth of July it would be
developed who was the fastest bicy
clist and who was the fastest sprinter
in the oity. It is safe to say that a
good record would be made In each
race.
rarMlinunluu. I;*>ytitty.
Tho royal'family of England is Baitl to
be tho most money loving of the princely
blood of Europe. Tho quoon has accu
mulated a vast fortune front hor savings,
and sho pays her servants less than they
can get in any first class hotel. Her
daughter, tha PrincoBs Louise, inherits
this parsimonious spirit, and just now
the radical press of London is making
an ontcry heennso the princess compotod
with other sculptors for a statue to the
queen and got the contract through royal
influence, f!he princess charged full
price tor the work—$2,600—and exacted
$600 in advance. The poorer sculptors
had to stand aside. Tho Prince of Wales,
however, does not inherit the thrifty in
stinct. Ho wears 1,000 pairs of gloves a
year and buys them all from Denmark
instead of encouraging tho home indus
try.—San Francisco Argonant.
The authenticity 6f the rumor, or
oourse, is speculative, but it is an
nounced, and upon pretty good au
thority, that a certain young
lady bloyoie enthusiast has departed
from the usual mundane oourso of lo
comotion to indulge in aquarian feats
on the wheel. A duck pool iri the
baok yard was the oause of it.
Unregulated Passenger Traffic'.
A railroad man—that is, a conduct
or or brakeinan—sometimes makes
from 15 cento-to $10 extra by collect
ing fares in box cars from gentlemen
who are not hankering after noto
riety, but who are going from one
settlement to another us quietly as
possible so as not to get their names
in the paper. A dollar will carry u
man a long way in a box car, al
though it does not give him the priv
ilege of suing the company in cuse of
an accident.
Well regulated crows divide the
train into two equal parts. Tho head
brakeinan has the first half of thc-
train, the hind brakemun lias the lut
tor half and the conductor gets the
caboose fares, which ho sometimes
divides with the company, but con
ductors have been discharged for be
ing too honest in that respect. Train
masters, superintendents and general
managers have most of them com
menced by carrying water to the sec
tion crews and wound their way up
on the brakeman and conductor lad
der, and they don’t like to see old
landmark'.' destroyed or adulterated.
Some of the watermelons that are
being grown in Dougherty oounty
this year, though probably not so
large, as a rule, as some that have
been grown in previous years, are un
usually fine and delioious in flavor,
and find ready sale in Albany. The
Jones variety is, of oourse, the favorite
and its popularity doesn’t appear to
wane in the least.
Thkrk are business men in Al
bany who not only do not ad
vertise In the local papers, but even
send off their orders for what little
job printing they have done. Suppose
all of us were to adopt suoli methods—
what would become of the town and
its enterprise? But a majority of our
business men patronize home people
and home institutions in preference
to any other.
fccftoa <N. D.) Ke~
The Rev. Sam Jones says he will
begin his tirade against the devil in
Atlanta early in the fall. Tho rever
end gentleman is a great shot, but h >
will find game in iiic Capital City
worthy of his ammunition. ' f
- A lkadino physician in an out-door
clime, according to the Now York Sun,
says that he receives nearly as many
cases of rheumatism in strawberry
time as lie gets during all the rest of
the year. Both the acid of the berry
and the sugar that is eaten with it,
which is converted into acid when
oaten in large quantities, are bad for
rheumatism, which originates In an
acid state of the blood. Persons of a
rheumatic tendency, or diathesis, often
find it impossible to cat strawberries
for more than two or three days with
out experiencing ill effects, and those
who have no such tendency are apt to
have twinges in their knees and el
bows during the strawberry festival
season. ‘
ACT NO 1
Conslstingot Furniture,Htov<
ery, Cutlery, Table Linens,
ens, Mattings, Floor Oil Cli
Carriages, Willow Chairs,
Essies; in faat, everything t
-
lOtu
Fit Dp a Hoi
With. Wo will sell on easy terms,
on the installment plan to Bint you
come. Yours Truly,
layer & Crin|
BOOKSELLERS, STATION
music dealer:
•Its a I
Have 0 full stock of Blank
and Stationery Supplies. A fine lie
Tablets, School Bosks, Slates unil cv|
thing Bchool children need.
Harison’a onc-picce book
covering school nml privnte lib
books. Sanitarians condemn ell
covered hooks as liable to
convey infection. Use our
paper covers—they are cheap
Fine Key West Havana Cign:
laity. Sporting goods of all ki
Wo are headquarters for
md
MUSI
Of all kinds—p
etc. We supply
Give ui
discount.
INSTRUMI
You want. We can get It <
tice. Leave all orders ft '
pair work at our store,
location.
IOO BROAD STI :
ALBANY, GA.
DESIRI1
To close our business, w
the next thirty days our ci
ot Books, Jewelry, Sterling
Silverware, Clocks, Watohes,
Picture Frames and an nssi
of Picture Moulding*, am .
everything kept in a First-Class
Store
I’ll
ictu
Strictly At
Certified Checks on Hobb
to the amount of $10 am
ceived in payment for goods,
her, thirty days, and at actua
Cheeks on Hobbs & Tuokcr fori
accounts due us will also lie taken f
same .time.
8. 8EGARI,
Late of (lulotta & Scgart. Of C.'C
Segari & Antc
UHNEltAL FRUIT J
INDSTINCT PRINT
i
Tint steamship that cannot sink at
sea, and the railroad locomotive that
cannot Jump the track, aro things un
known, despite the claims of modern
arohiteots and machinists. No one
ever believed thnt the Victoria would
go to the bottem of the Mediterranean,
Produce Commission
NEW I
REFERENCES.—B
ional Bank of N. O., n
B. D Anguish, Clilcaj,
Watermelons a Spec!