Newspaper Page Text
THE EASTMAN TIMES.
B. S. BURTON, Editor arul Proprietor.
NOVEMBER 5, 1873.
" SALUTATORY.
Inasmuch as the individual wlio
formerly slung ink for the editorial de
partment of this paper has seen fit to
voinose this ranche, and leave this ar
duous duty to be performed by the un
dersigned, it may be necessary for us
to state what we propose to do in that
direction ; and we will do so by sta
ting that as very many of our ex
changes are ably edited, and we have
a good pair of scissors, and a tolera
able grip in our fist, we will princi
pally rely for our editorial matter up
on the brain scintilations of our’ tal
ented cotemporaries. Some of the
employes of this office having threat
ened to strike tor lower wages unless
we gave them more work to do, and
being determined never to accede to
so unreasonable a demand, we pro
pose to devote the most of our lime
to the case, and thus be secured from
the humiliation of feeling that our office
is not in our own [grids. If any of
our editorials arc not satisfacto.v, any
one dissatisfied, will please address
this office, and we will take great"
pleasure in rcfeHng them to the edu
cated Bohemian, who got up the
particular article. Under this ar
rangement, with a corps of thirty-five
editors, located in every town in the
State, we expect to knock the Atlanta
Herald completely into pi in the
amount and va. ietyof our news.
R. S. Burton.
Whisky Drinking.
This detestable habit seems to 1>:
gaining ground throughout thd length
and bieadth of the land. llow un
fortunate that no means can be devis
ed to put a check on the growing ev
il. The high and the low, the rich
and the poor, the young and the old,
and in many instances, even those
who profess to be followers of the
meek and lowly'Jesus, all participate
in dram-drinking. If the practice is
not abandoned, we shall soon have a
world of drunkards, wholly unfit to
perform the ordinary business'trans
actions of life. How do young men
expect to obtain situations of a re
sponsible nature, where a clear head
and reliability are indispensable requi
sites, when they arc constantly under
the influence of intoxicating drinks ?
liven H.c always
sclent a sober man in any branch of
business, in preference to one whose
brain is constantly crazed with the
fiery liquid. But outside of the gen
eral benefit that accrues from a sober
life in a worldly point of view, the
obligations we are under to him in
whose image we are created should be
some inducement to a man to prevent
him from making a beast of himself.
The Effects of the Panic.
The accounts that come to us from
the North are startling. So far from
tiie monetary disturbance being over,
it seems to be spreading. Every
where laboring operatives are being
discharged. At Fall River, Massa
chusetts, the largest cotton and wool
en manufacturing centre in the United
States, the mills have been put on
half time. Tljp great house of Sprague
in Rhode Island, with its millions of
juiTl business, lias failed. This in
volves half the State. The rest of the
cotton mills North are nearly all con
t’ cciing ope ations. The great shov
ed and iron wo.ks of Roy & Cos., at
Fort Schyler, New Yo;k, have been
p’aced on short ibnc, with the pros
pect of en.irc stoppage. The i*n
mecse won interests at Albany, Troy,
Pa.lc son, Pittsburg and oilier places
have all contracted. Patterson alone
lies five thousand operatives discharg
ed. The famous sewing machine fac
to, les at Bridgeport, Conn, a c dis
c-’j ging hands, and one has stopped.
The la:ge carriage factories of New
Iloven have contracted. In the man
ufacturing towns on Naugatuck Riv
c Couo t thirty thousand men are out
of wo k.
Bui it is needless to enumerate. The
tbuaron : s getting alarming North-
A 'crdu Co:isliiution.
Cwsar at the Wljite llouse.—Police
man Chase, the officer on duty at the
President’s house, Wednesday, took
into custody a crazy German who was
loitering about the premises. When
questioned he stated that he had been
appointed to take charge of the Uni
ted States Government, and had walk- 1
ed all the way from Massachusetts.—
He demanded to see the President
f< >i thwith. He was conducted to po
lice headquarters, and among a vast
quantity of papers and rubbish on his
person was a hand stamp which makes
the impression, in circular form, of the
legend “U S. Governmeut,” and across
the conter “President ” It is likely'
the unfortunate man will commence
his supervision of national affairs at
the Government Insane Asylum.
Washington Star.
l'Ue Fever in JBainbridxe.
Bainbridge, Nov. 3.
Only one mild case has been devel
oped since yesterday.
Mr. Met Griffin, it is reported, died
in the country to-day.
Mr. W. 0. Dickinson died of pneu
monia in town this morning, lie was
one of our oldest citizens.
Mr Mack Gross, who contracted the
disease while attending Mr. Engel,
died in Albany . his morning
Miss Ida Pearce, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. George \V. Pearce, both dead,
is the most dangerous case in town at
present.
1 think the epidemic is about over,
unless the present warm weather re
develops it,
Dr. Harrell is better at Whighani.
I will send further particulars by
mail. Absentees arc not invited to
return yet. B. E. R.
LATER.
Bainbridoe, Nov. 4. 1813.
There are no new cases reported to
day.
Mrs. Jesse F. King, whose husband
died two weeks ago, died this morn
ing.
Mr. Green Perry, a young man,
who caught the fever from Mr. T. J.
Will ams, died near the city last
night. B. E. R.
TENNESSEE.
Trouble o tlie East Tennessee
And Georgia. Railroad from
Reduction of Wajes.
K;:oxv'\l2, Nov. 2, 1813.
On account of the gene-ai icduct'on
of the wages of iiie employees by the
East Tennessee and Geo.gia Ra ; lway
Company, for wl ’ch the engireeis,
firemen ,rnacV'..ists and bkicksiniJis
quit work, some de'ry i-i Dams has
reseUcd out the conpaoy has sue
ceeded in sup dying tiie places of en
g'oeers and li.emen, so as rot to in
terfere w in tiie passenger service.—
The company ordered 20 per cent, re
duction of wages. The employes
were willing to submit to short tune,
bui io no decrease of their per diem
The company will roc recede. No
demons*lation lias been made by Hie
employes.
t.atb:r.
K Noxviir.E, Nov. 3, 1813.
The trouble between the employes
and the East Tennessee, Virginia and
Company is unad
justed. The men obstiucted running
of freight trains, but no interference
with mail tnaios.
War of Races in Texas.
A Washington special to the Balti
more San of Friday says : Attorney
General Williams to-day received a
report from United States Marshal
Ochiltree, ot the eastern district of
Texas, detailing an account ol a se
rious hostile feeling between a party
of desperadoes, led by one Jim Roan,
and the colored people on the line of
Galviston, Harrisburg and San Anto
nia Railroad, resulting in the atrocious
murdeivof two well known and peac
eable men, brothers, named Wright,
who were going from the plantation
upon which they were employed to
Eagle Lake on horseback, with a sack
of pecans, which they proposed to sell.
They were met by members of the
Roan party, ordered from their horses,
tied together, and shot dead. Friends
of the desperadoes say that the diffi
culties began in an attempt of Roan,
the leader of the desperadoes, who
had been deputized by a constable to
arrest a colored man, and upon his re
sistance struck him over the head and
severely wounded him. Roan was ar
rested, tried, and acquitted ; and it is
alleged that on the following night his
house was fired into by unknown par
ties, but neither he nor his family was
thei e.
This seems to have been the origin
of the organization of the desperadoes
against the colored people, culminating
in the murder of the Wrights, which
creates much excitement among the
citizens. There is danger of further
difficulties between the. Roan gang and
the negroes, which may result in furth
er bloodshed at any moment, as Roan
and his associates, as well as manv
colored people in the neighborhood, go
heavily armed.
Hon. A 11. Stuart, one of the old
time statesmen of Virginia, made a
speech recently, in which he advocat
ed the idea of colonizing the colored
population of the United States on the
Island of San Domingo. lie asserts
that the antagonism which exists be
tween the two races must eventually
lead to the adoption of some similar
plan. Mr. Stuart gives Grant credit
for great foresight, and declares that
this is his programme for the future of
the freed men, and that is his reason
for being so persistent in his efforts
for the annexation of San Domingo.
He is regarded as rather visionary
in his notions, especially about the de
signs of the President.
There are eight hundred thousand
Jews in Poland, the number having
nearly quadrupled since 1816.
A Belgium Story.
We quote from the Belgium news
papers the following account of a
dreadful tragedy that occurred in a
little village near Brussells :
A farmer and his wife had plotted
to murder their niece during her sleep,
to rob her of one thousand eight hun
dred francs that she was taking to her
sick mother. In order to foil the fu
ture searches of the police, they, pre
viously to perpetrating trie crime,
were engaged in digging a large hole
in the garden so as to bury the body
in it, when the girl who, not being
asleep, had-hcard her terrible sentence,
rushed out by the window and ran to
the police station, one mile distant.
But as soon as she was out, the
daughter of the farmer, who was not
expected home that night, came buck,
and not wishing to awaken anybody
in the house, went noiselessly into the
bed where her cousin had been lying
a few moments before. She soon fell
asleep, and thus her mother, not being
a ware of the providential substitution,
owing to the darkness of the night,
broke her own daughter’s neck with
an axe.
This being done, the two were go
ing to the garden, carrying the corpse,
enveloped in a bedspread, when two
gendarmes, accompanied by the fugi
tive girl, rushed into the house with
lanterns in their hands.
At tlie sight of their' niece, whom
they thought they had murdered, the
two wretched culprits took off the
covering and found their unfortunate
ch'lu k’lled by their own hands.
The man took out a large butchers
knife, plunged it into his breast and
fell dead fto the ground. As to the
woman, who was prevented from
committing] suicide, she became in
sane, a id is now'shut up in a lunuHc
asylum, where she is expected soon to
die from mental exhaustion. A more
horrible account has rarely been reg
istered in the annals of crime.
A New Crime.
The Pennsylvania Constitutional
Convention propose to make it a crime
to bore a fellow—that is, a legislature
or official fellow, and to punish it with
a severe penalty. The following is
the proposition which has been ap
proved in committee of the whole of
the Convention :
The practice of boring shall be de
fined and punished by law, and shall
include any corrupt solicitation of
members of the General Assembly, or
of public officers of the State, or of
any municipal division thereof, and
any 'occupation or practice as a com
mon borer for or against the passage
or approval of laws. The punish
ment for the offense shall be by fine
and imprisonment.
A Colored Verdict.
In one of the towns of Mississippi,
two colored men were arrested on the
charge of burglary. The Jury before
whom they were tried was colored.—
After the case was tried all retired
and made up a verdict, which was an
nounced to tiie court. On being call
ed, the Judge asked for the verdict,
which the foreman delivered :
“Dis jury find dat one of the ’cusses
busted in de ’sto and stole dat bacon,
an’ dat de odder didn’t do nuffin.’
‘Which one do you find guilty ? ask
ed the court.’
‘Dat’s de question, boss,’ returned
the foreman ; dat’s jes what we can’t
find out, and I recommend dat de ’on
orable court jes hub anoder trial, aid
find out which one of dem two niggers
stoP dat bacon/
Labor and Wages.
The New York Journal of Com
merce holds these views : Wages
must go down or work will not go on.
The absurd eight hour system must be
abolished or manufacturers must fail.
The time has now arrived for these
fetters on business to be removed. In
everything else but wages there is a
falling oft, and the turn has now come
for wages. Either there must be more
work don* per day, or there must be
less pay for a work. From this
alternative we think there is no escape
and the failure in manufacturing es
tablishments, which we are beginning
to record, are the prelude of a general
movement for the reduction of wages
to a standard more reasonable than
the present one.
A Detroit wife lias demanded a di
vorce from her husband upon the fol
lowing grounds : 1 He is inebriated
on an average 21 days in .every
month ; 2 lie cut off her hair while
she slumbered ; 3 He is accustomed
to wake her at daylight by throwing
several pails of cold water over the
bed : 4 He has attempted to force
kerosine oil down her throat ; 5 He
has forced her go without shoes
and stockings ; 6 He put hot pota
toes in hei hands aud then mashes
them by squeezing her fingers. It is
thought by a majority of the best law
yers in Detroit that this singularly
treated dame is entitled to a separa
tion ; but it isn’t a case upon which
we should like to express an opinion
until we hear what the husband has
to say about it.
The Disgraceful Goat.— There is
an old goat owned on Lewis street,
which has received a great deal of
training lrom the boys. Last Fourth
of July they discovered that if they
stuck a frecracker in the end of a
crate and held it at William, |he
would lower his he and and go for them,
and they have practiced the trick so
much that the goat will tackle any
human being who points a stick at
him. Yesterday noon he was loafing
near the corner of Third and Lewis
streets, when a corpulent citizen came
up and stopped to talk with a friend.
They happened to speak of sidewalks,
when tli € corpulent citizen pointed his
cane just to the left of the goat and
said : “That’s the worst piece of side
walk in this town.” The gat had
been eyeing the cane, and the moment
it came up he lowered his head, made
six or eight jumps and his head struck
the corpulent citizen just on the belt.”
The man went over into a mass of old
tin, dilapidated butter kegs and aban
doned hoop-skirts, ar.d the goat turn
ed a somers au t the other way, while
the slim citizen threw stones at a fioy
seated on a who was laugh
ing tears as big as chestnuts and cry
ing out : “Oh 1 its ’nuff to kill a fel
ler.”—Detroit Free Press.
The California Slavonians.—Cali
fornia has a nest of semi-savage Sla
vonians, who are banded together in
an organization and are endeavoring
to engraft certain peculiar customs of
their native land into California life.
One of these pleasant Slavonian so
ck* 1 laws is that when a man woos a
girl she must either become bis wife
or die. George Sorchovich, of Chero
kee Flat, a locality whose name is fa
miliar to the readers of sketches of
California life, became enamored of a
young lady named McDaniels, and of
fered her Ills hand. She refused the
offer, and tiie barlfMlan waylaid her
on her return fiomiW evening party
and cut her throat from ear to ear.—
Cherokee Flat regarded Mr. Sorcho
vieli’s proceeding as wholly unsuited
to California society ; so its citizens
hunted him, shot MVulown, and pitch
ing his body on the i?Tof of his cabin
burned it to the ground. It is said
that a regular organization of Slavon
ians exist in California, who take the
lives of all persons who incur their
enmity.
The New York Sun announces with
satisfnet on that at hist the country is
to have an account of the war from
one of the greatest Southern Generals.
It refers to the forthcoming octavo
volume \>f Gen. Joseph E Johnston,
which will soon be published by the
Applet* ns. The volume -v-dl be a
comprehensive history of the distin
guished writer’s campaigns, and will
be embellished with portraits of emi
nent officers, and furnished with com
plete maps of the various scenes of
tlie great General’s immortal military
operations.
The perils that encompass a teacher
in the Newport, Kentucky, schools in
these troublous times are many, and
of a peculiar character. Mr. Suton,
the Principal of a Newport school, re
cently tried on the charge of whip
ping a pupil with unnecessary severi
ty, has received the following note :
“I have children at the school you are
placed over, and take notice ; if you
whip any of mine, by the Eternal I
will shoot you as dead as hell. I will
put six balls through your d—d body
as quick as a revolver can send
them.”
Marking Down the Dry Goods. —The
leading New York houses in the retail
dry goods and fancy goods trade are
marking down their stocks on hand,
as well as of goods purchased since
the commencement of the panic. Silks,
which sold a few months ago at $1.50,
are now put upon the market at 75
cents. All goods arc offered at rates
far less than when the financial trouble
began.
They have a clergyman at Evans
ton, Illinois, who is bound to be pop
ular. At the laying of a corner-stone
for anew church, recently, he said :
“If boys and girls do their sparking
at church, I say amen to it. I have
a daughter whom I cherish as the ap
ple ol my eye. When she is of suit
able age, 1 had rather she should be
courted in the house of God than in a
theatre.
A Te rre Haute editor, who spoke
with the air of a man who had dis
covered anew fact by experience, said
that the way to prevent bleeding at
the nose is to keep your nose out of
other people’s business
Thirty-nine thousand dollars is the
amount, that Gen. Grant spends annu
ally foi the support and education of
his family.” This, too, although a
couple of his sons are past education,
and enjoying soft places of support at
Government expense. Such is the
statement of Roderick Randum But
ler. We must confess that $39,000 a
year would have beggared any previ
ous President since 1789. But Grant
has imperial notions.
Milton Malone, has been re*sentenc
ed to hang on the 28th of November.
The last hearing before the U. S. Su
preme Court has not been had yet ;
but the hope there is very slim and
then the Governor’s interference is the
only hope, and unless he goes back on
his precedent established in such eases
that is still slimer.
The weather in Butler county, Pa.
is so dry that water is selling at $1
per barrel. We fear that unless
there is a rain in the county soon the
people will have to abondon the use
of water altogether and corner on
whisky.
* *
A Troy policeman swore as follows
against a prisoner : “The prisoner set
upon me, called me an ass, a precious
dolt, a scarecrow, a ragamuffin and
idiot—all of which I certify to be
true.”
T 1 icre are about seven hundred
Methodist clergymen in lowa in the
regular work of the ministry, besides
local preachers. The Methodists in
lowa number about seventy thousand.
Increase of the Public I)ewt.— A
Washington dispatch to the NeW York
Post says : It is estimated that the in
crease of the public debt for the pres
ent month will amount to above five
million dollars.
Tears of thankfulness till the eyes
of the editor of the Concordia (Kan
sas) Empire, lie has been presented
with a loaf of bread, a squash, a lot
of big turnips, and a peck of pop
corn.
A little German boy attempting to
repeat the first verse of “Mary had a
Little Lamb,’’ rendered it as follows :
Mary's got von little sliepes,
His vleece was vite us vool,
And every place vere Mary’s pin,
Dos little shepes vos come there too.
Owing to a war among the dry
goods merchants at Denver, calicoes
were reduced to two cents a yard,
and every printer and minister in the
place now wears a shirt—gaudy in
some instance, but still a shirt.
~" NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
H. MIBRMAN &>SON,
Keep constantly on hand
The Laryeri and Bot Aborted Stock of
DRY-GOODS,
Cl OTHINCx,
DOTS A SHOES,
HATS A CAPS,
NOTIONS,
TOBACCOS
GROCERIES, ETC.,
to be found in this market, all of which they
propose to sell at prices to suii toe panic.
Call and see them and price their
goods.
Nov. 5, ’73 If.
AdnrnLu'atOi’s Sale.
M ill be sold bcloie tbe Court House door in
the town oi Eastman, during the usual hours
of 3.ile, on the first Tuesday in Decembei nest,
the following prope- iv, to-wit : Lot of land
No. 216 in the 14th district of Dodge county,
as the mope l l v of Nancy Cobb, deceased.—
Sold for division among the heirs. Purchaser
to pay l'oi ilrafiuig deed.
NOAH COBB, Adm’i.
Nov. 5, '73-tds.
THE ALBANY HOUSE,
Merrick Barnes, Pro p'r.
ALBANY, GEORGIA.
This house is well furnished and every way
prepared for the accommodation of the travel
ing public; entire satisfaction guaranteed.—
The table is supplied with the best the country
a fiords, and the servants are unsurpassed in
politeness and attention to the wants of guests.
Omnibusses convey passengers to and from
the different railroads promptly. Charges to
suit the times.
Change of Schedule.
SUPERINTENDENTS OFFICE,
SobiH WESTERN RAILROAD OFFICE, )
Macon, June 13, 1872. j
On and after Sunday, the 16th, Passenger
and Mail Trains on this Road will run as fol
lows :
DAY EUFAULA PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Macon 8:00 a. m.
Arrive at Eufaula 4.42 p m
“ at Clayton 6.15 pm
“ ftt Albany 2.40 p m
“ at Fort Gaines 4.40 p m
Eufaula Mail Train connects daily at Smith
ville with Albany Mail Train, and at Cuthbert
with Fort Gaines Mail Train.
Leave Clayton 7.20 a m
Leave Eufaula 8.50 a m
Leave Fort Gaines 8.35 am
Leave Albany 10.45 a m
Arrive at Macon 5:25 p m
EUFAULA NIGHT, FREIGHT AND ACCOMMODAT ON
TRAIN.
Leave Macon 9.10 p m
Arrive at Eufaula 10.20 a m
“ at Albany 6.45 am
“ at Fort Gaines 11.52 am
Connect at Smithville with Albany Train on
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday nights,
and at Cuthbert on Tuesday and Thursday.—
No train leaves on Saturday nights.
Leave Eufaula 5.15 p m
Leave Albany 8.40 pru
Leave Fort Gaines 1.10 p m
Arrive at Macon 5.20 a m
COLUMBUS DAY PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Macon 5:45 a m
Arrive at Columbus 11:15 am
Leave Columbus 4:10 pm
Arrive at Macon 9:35 pm
VIRGIL POWERS,
Engineer &. Superintendent.
GEORGIA MUSIC HOUSE.
Having established agencies in most of the cities of the South, we have selected \L.
as the best distributing point, and have located * co *
Our Great Piano and Organ Depot,
AT 84 MULBERRY STREET.
We have the largest stock” of Pianos and Organs in the South, which we will sell at lows*
prices and on better termh than are offered by any other house. Pianos and Organ* will b
delivered free of expense to cash purchasers in any part of the South with written warrant**.
Mho make the best Pianos and Organs? After an experience of more than eighteen vears
as General Agents for the Principal Manufactories, we do assert and are prepared to prov#
tha the
CHICKERING PIANOS AND ESTEY ORGANS!
*re in purity of tone, elastically and evencss of action and durability the best in tha world
Strings, violins, guitars and all kind of musical merchandise sold at
NEW YORK PRICES.
Our stock of sheet music is exceptionally large. Georgia Musical Electric only $1 ,^ r
annum. Send for specimen copy and price-lists of pianos, organs and musical merchandise to
GUILFORD, HOOD At CO.,
Macon, Gu.
"“ “ -
BERND BROTHERS,
v
THIRD STREET, MACON.GA.
MANUFACTUREKS OF
.4P
Saddles, Harness, Collars, Bridles, Ac., Ac.,
IN .ENDLESS (VARIETY.
ALSO, DEALERS IN
SADDLERY, HARDWARE, HARNESS-MAKERS' SADDLERS' AND
SHOE-MAKERS' MATERIAL
f
\
M ith our increased facilities wo arc again enabled t> offer M’ork of our own tfmnifarture a*
Reduced prices. M r e make GOLD, RUBBER AND SI EVER M< )UN lED H IKNESS. V well
as the cheaper grades. Saddles in great variety. Also, Wool-faced Team, Coach and Hiipj;.
Collars. Also, keep constantly on huud a a Ltrge stock of Harness Leather, Skirting, Brie It
Leather, Oak ami Hemlock Sole Leather,
UPPER KIP AND CALF SKINS, AMERICAN AND FRENCH.
Patent and Enamelled Leathers and Cloths, Lasts, Boot Trees. Pegs, and Shoemaker's Stcxk
generally. To prompt M holesale Buyers we are prepared to offer unusual inducements.
Merchants and Planters will find it to their interest to give us u call when wishing (tc
buy Goods in our line. M o pay Cash for Hides. Purs, Skin., Wax, Woo., 1 allow ami 1-ccir,
in tue rougn.
Macon, Ga., October 8, 1873. otB 4ia.
JOHNSON cfc SMITH,
Wholesale Grocers, & Produce Dealers
AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
MACON, GEORGIA
Nos. 74, 76, 78, Mulberry Street, under the 3/asonic Temple,
Opposite the Lanier House.
o
Ollter to the citizense of Dodge and surrounding Counties one of the largest, best assort *<
and cheapest stock of Groceries and Plantation Supplies evt r brought to Georgia—for Cash o:
on Time —consisting in part oi
300,000 lbs. C. Pi. SIDES, 100,000 yds. BAGGING—aII kinds.
50,000 lbs. LONG CLEAR SIDES, 51,000 lbs. “ARROW TIES.”
50,000 lbs. BACON SHOULDERS, 1400 barrels SUGAR, A. Ex. C. k C.
50,000 lbs. Lard, tierces, kegs, etc., 150 Syrups and Molasses
100 tierces Choice Hams, Fresh Corn Meal, always on hand
30,009 lbs. Flour—all grades Gilt Edge Butter. Fine Cheese,
225 sacks of Coffee - Java and Rio, , Candles, Starch and Soap.
Fine Teas and Canned Goods, Fresh Mackerel, Moopen W’ap.e,
225 boxes Tobacco, cheapest to best, 175 bids. Liquors, full assortment.
Large stock of Smoking Tobacco, Osnaburgs, Sheeting and Shirting, Salt, Pnjier,
Twine Blacking, Oats, Corn, Rye, Barley, etc., etc. [octß-3m.
Three Hundred Stoves Guaranteed! '
We have just received two car loads “Barley Sheaf' Stoves, and have in store with them th
“Great Benefactor,” “Sunny South,” “Cotton Plant,” “Stewart,”
And other first-class Cooking Stoves ; also, a fine assortment of Heating Stoves. Also, from
| ie Barlow Knife to the finest
POCKET CUTLERY!
And from the ch npest to the best j
VORY HANDLE TABLE CUTLER-VI
A large lot of M T ood and Willow Ware, Crockery andGl ~*™re, and full line of Ho**/Fur
nisliing Goods. Call or send your orders, as now is the time to buy your fall stock
ware and House Furnishing Goods, on as good * n W'.
Prompt attention given to all orders. OL*l * EKi 13UL GLASS •*
oct Q *o. 12 Third Sxelez, Maq*- n g **