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New Law For Butchers

New Law For Butchers image
Parent Issue
Day
25
Month
July
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

There Is little in the outward appearance of a New York butcher shop nowadays to indícate the nature of the business carried on within, says the World. This is In consequence of the rigid enforcement by the pólice of a law passed during the late session of the Legislature, prohibiting, under a severe penalty of from $100 to $500, the exposure in front or within a store of fish, game and poultry. Strictly construed, this would require all meats and provisions to be kept in the ice boxes and only brought out as called for. The pólice are under instructions, however, to permit a reasonable exposure of goods within the store, but the lavish decoration of the exterior with quarters of beef, carcasse8 of sneep, lambs, calves and pigs and long Unes of -hickens and turkeys, so large a feature 3f Second, Third, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth and Tenth avenue markets, is a thing of the. past. A thousand dollar's worth of stock on the outside was not an uncommon thing. Many butchers kept the show unimpaired until the raeat and poultry were nearly in the condition that called for condemnation and confiscation. The health authorities were behind the passage of the new law. lts ei.roicement meets with no opposition from the better class of butchers, who only insist upon its being irapartially ob3erved. With housewives it is an esjeoially popular measure.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register