Newspaper Page Text
EUr goujttou Ifiomc journal
PEPRY, CA.
^'■Published every Saturday
amwiwr
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PERRY, GA. ; SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1874.
NUMBER 42,
VOLUME IV
| Tools for Furn’ri'
Do not liny a chest filled •with, tools
ready for work. If you have had a
good deal of experience and know
what you want, make a ehest and sel
ect the tools yourself; hat if you get
one some one else has furnished, you
may to be sure get a good set of tools
Lut there will be many for which yon
will find but little use. Even regular
mechanics have different ways of us
ing tools, and an ingenious amateur
will often make shift to do without
certain tools, which a carpenter or
blacksmith consider indispensable.
Here arc some good suggestions: Ev
ery farmer should have a small room,
tight and warm which he can lock, and
where he can keep hiis small tools,
then he wants a good solid work-bench
with an iron vice on one end a woed-
one on the other. For iron working
he wants a solid piefee of iron for an
anvil, a seven ponnd steel hammer, a
riveting hammer, one large and one
small cold chisel, twoor three punches
from one-quarter to three eights of
an inch, a rimmer and e countersink
to. be used with bitstock, a screw plate
that will cut a screw from one-quarter
to three-eights inch; then with round
iron ot various sizes, and ready-made
nuts, he can make any bolt he wishes.
Por carpenter he wants a square, a
shaving-horse, drawiDg-knife, a set of
planes, from one.half to two inches, a
fine hand-saw, with coarse cross-cut
and rip-saw, largo cross-cut saw for
logs, and a grind-stone.
NEW MACOX ADVERTISEMENTS.
j The Black Bottle Dram.
David Wells was the greatest drunk
ard in the villiage. The boys about
town called him “Old Black,” and for
a very good reason. If on his way to
his work-shop, you might count on
seeing the month of it sticking out of
his pocket; if in his shop at work,
look sharp, and yon would te sure to
find it on a high shelf-close at hand.
When sober, he was rather ashamed
of “old black.” Then he would man
age to put his handkerchief in his
pocket so as to cover it, and at such-
A. Quadruple Marriage.
The other day one of .-the Indian
princes on arriving at his majority
(his seventeenth yearj. was-married to
four wives, and. a correspondent gives
the following interesting account of
j quadruple wedding. The prince is
I the Thakore of Bhownuggnr,! and he
was educated at an English college in
India. The correspondent 6sy8-'
He was married on the 19th of April
to the daughter of the great.' chief
of Wndwan, a princess abont fourteen
years old, and to the sister of tho heir
apparent of the Gondul dinasty—a
noble lady, as remarkable for iier wit
as for her charms and great wealth,
but whb is only fifteen years bid. On
the next day the Thakore completed
The ladies he
been better fighters than ritualists.
A few flowers are sprinkled attar and
pan distributed, the diety invoked,
and the lares and penates duly hon
ored, the! bride duly authenticated
and handed over to the bridegroom,
and then comes the moment the bride
groom first removes thesacredcaftan
end catches a glimpse of the face of
the girl he has married, and it is all
over.
When the rite was performed, the
yoang Thakore came oni to view the
loyal and .enthusiastic thousands wait
ing to cheer him in the streets. He
was in grand spirits, took his newly
made wife to the palace with him and
then left her, and then rushed off to-
marry in the. same fashion, the fair
one from Gondul. And so the four
weddings name oflj the two latter by
torchlight; and a pretty risk did the
town of Bhownuggnr run that night
from bonfires, fireworks, blazing cres-
ents, etc., which tried tlieir best to
turn night into day in its midst.
What chiefly interested some were
the trosseaux of the brides, which
were extravagantly rich and varied. I
should, say Gondul had among her
“kit” about 5,000 silk dresses. May
she live long enough to wear them out!
Wudwau’s dowry was Ks: 200,000;
Gondul also Bs. 200,000; Vankaneer,
Bs. 100,000, and Dank, Bs. 32,000.
The trousseau of Gondul was the
Professional -Cards,
Cards inserted at one dollar a lint per annum
if paid in advance, otherwise, two
dollars & line.
a F. DA.NS
I. J. TRAYWICK & CO
PLANTERS
Attornev at X,aw
FERRY; HOUSTON COUNTY, GA.
Office in ths Court House.
Special attention given to Imsiness in the Supe
rior and County Courts of Houston County,
fcbai, r lv.
FORT VALLEY, UEOKOIA.
Transacts a Gen.' nil Banking, -Discount, and
Exchange Busiuc&x.
Partienlar attention given to the collection f
Notes, Droits, Coupon^ Dividends.ete.
WARREN D. NOTTINGHAM.
A-ttornoy at Iiaw.
PERRY, GEORGIA.
Particular atbntion given to the collect
ion of claims in Houston and adjoining
oanties.
COUNTRY PRODUCE,
40 THIRD STREET,
A. M. WATKINS,
wrfif
C. J. HARRIS,
Attpraov at Law,
MACON GEORGIA.
[MILL practice law in litigated cases in the
his fourfold alliance,
married on the second day were the
> sisters were the sisters of the father
of the reigning chief of Vankaneer
aged twenty-two, and the daughter
of a very opulent landowner, of Dank,
at Talaja aged only ten or eleven years.
I have told you the Rajah is only sev
enteen; it is for your readers to imag
ine the probable emotions of a young
man distracted between the charms of
a stately princess of twenty-two and
the tender loveliness of royalty not
yet in her teens.
Long before the 19th alt., the fes
tivities connected with the fourfold
wedding commenced. The brides
liad to be brought from their several
Katty war homes to Bhownuggnr. For
this purpose, about a fortnight pr ivi-
ons to the, annual marriage celebra
tions, four old and trusty retainers of
the .Bhownuggnr Raj were dispatched
to Wndwan, Gondul, Vankaneer, and
Tultija. They were dismissed on their
several errands with all due formali
ties. The young Thakore accompan
ied them with an imposing retinue to
the city gates.
The iiajt^ife* guards mounted and
on fooF*hnge elephants lazily swag
gering under their gold and bluehow-
dahs; durbar camels, and ambling
Katty war palfreys; drummers thump-
iug away might and main on their
tom-toms; shrieks of pipe and twang
of guitar; the royal chariot, followed
by a interminable winding line of ve
hicles of all descriptions, and ov, r
aud beyond the surging mrs; the
great unwashed of Bhownuggur —all
contributed toward milking vhe de
parture of the great Eliezers a a splen
did success from a native point of view.
A fortnight passed and the proces
sions pouped in from all sides of
Bhownuggur. I refer not only to the
four great processions which had been
dismissed and now returns, but also
to scores and scores of others, sent to
Bbownugger to express their congrat
ulations to the young Thakore of the
elite of the Katty war peninsula. I
was in timeto see several of these
processions, and dozens of others in
Bho-vnuggur itself. In each there
was the same tumult, strident music,
exaggerated pomp and ceaseless noise.
Again rose the braying ot horses,
again the rockets rushed skyward.
There was the elephant with its gaudy
trappings, and the humble country
hack, painted yellow and green, with
his fail dyed red.
In the middle of the rolling crowd
came the closely-curtained cars of the
brides. I need hardly inform you
that their faces are too sacred to be
seen save by their husband. The
huge Katty war oxen dragging these
cara bad each its horns, incased in
thick plates of gold, and silver bells
tinkled from the garlands round their
throats as they trotted along. Bhow-
nugger met tne incoming processions.
With the processions I should say that
quite 20,000 of the inhabitants of Kat-
tywar poured,into the capital. Alms
were everywhere lavishly distributed
to the poor, presents in silk and gold
to the rich.
The whole population grew frantic
with gayety. Rosewater was constant
ly being sprinkled about and gorgeous
garlands flung hither and thither.
And the .Ijrides came in one by one.
They did not enter the city, but, fol
lowing the native etiquette, encamp
ed at various residences of wealthy
relations, outside of the wall till the
tenth of April arrived.
OLIVER DOUGLASS & CO
476 & 678 Broome Street,
T * counties of the Macou Circuit to wit: Bibb,
Houston, Cr&wxord and Twiggs.
J. A. EDWARDS,
Attor n ey at Law,
MARSHALLV1LLE GEORGIA.
BOOTS &- SHOES,
AT WHOLESALE.
TINWARE,
W. H. REESE,
Attorney at Law.
MAR8HALLY1LLE GEORGIA.
O-Spcdal attention given to casco in
ruptcy.
JOHN B. COFIELD.
Photcgraiil er & .Portrait False*
Perry Georgia
Ti/TLL t*k« all style** of pictures at the lowcs
n prior*. tu|d guarantee satisfaction. He in a
vtftt* eterybodv to vail and examine him speci
mens. and to compare bis work with tbit Of any
other artist. In price and style of wo£fc he defies
competition.
Gallery on Carroll Street,
U P Stairs, where he bla good sky-light and a
otherwise amply prepared to serve those who
maj cat
Dfc. 13.
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS.
The Largett Stock of
POCKET AND TABTE CUTLERY
In Macon.
DUNCAN & MILLER.
Attorixoys nt Law,
PERRY and FORT VALLEY, GA.
G. Duncan, Perry, office on Public Square
A. LMiller, Fort Valley- officoin Matliew'b Hall
Fault Culture in Florida.
But very little capital is ne eded for
the starting of a grove, and the re
wards of a successful one are very
great. Oranges sell at from S25 to
$68 per thousand in Jacksonville, and
are readily transportable to any of the
Atlantic seaports. When the necessa
ry dredging and building of canals
has been accomplished, so the Indian
river may have an outlet via the St.
John’s, tqe north will be supplied
with oranges of more delicate texture
than any it has yet seeu; and the num
ber A groves along the river will be
legion.
The fitness of Florida for the growth,
of tropical and semi-tropical fruits is
astonishing. Not only do the orange,
the lemon.
F. S. JOHNSON, JR.
HOLMES JOHNSON.
B. M. DAVIS.
Attornoy ai X.nw
PEItRY. GEORGIA.
New Goods! New Goods!!
Mrs* C. F. lEVarls,
H ating just returned with a fink
Assortment of MflUoert And Fancy Goode,
i« now prepared to exhibit to the Lad Ice ot Perry
and the surrounding county, her Stock ot Fail it
Winter Goods.
I Khali uow lie 'receiving weekly additions to
my stock, all ot whiih. arc SHlectcd with tho ut
most caro. I would be pleased to have all call aud
examine my Stock and Prices; *
My Stock in Quality is not interior to Macon Or
Atlanta, and for your,benefit I will enumerate a
few of tiie many articles now on hand.
PATTERN BONNETS ot tne Latest Import*-
tions, VELVETS of AU Kinds and Colors; BON
NETS and HATS Trimmed and Untchumed;
FEATHERS, TIPS aud PLUMES; ORNAMENTS
of almost Every Description; BUFFS, COLLARS
and BELTS; also a Select Stock of Imitation* for
the Hair. HATS for Misse3 and Boys. Yon citt
only be convinced by calling and examining the
many New aud Fashionable Goods.
W ILL practice in the CourtB of Houston
and adjoining counties;'also in the Su
premo Court and U. S. District Court.
A kind friend of his. own-age. would-
often come after tea and read to the
two. The polite toddy maker would
not think of letting him go away with
out ofiering a little “treat for his
RYBON, 8. W’. R, R. GA.
43T”Special attention given to «iollcctioii8.
MACON GA,
iOR STOCK OP GOODS IS NOW OPENED AND ARRANGED. HAVING
E. W. CROCKER
bought it for Cash, we can ami will sell ns low ns (them in the trade.
We offer among other things,—
H. Diston’s Saw Mill Goods of nil kinds,
Pools of every kind,
Buggy nnd Wagon Material.
Rubber nnd Leather Deltings,
Fairbanks Scales.
Wooden WaiS,
Hollow Ware,
Iron nnd Steel.
Attornev at X & w
FORT VALLEY. CA.
f (9-Collections end Criminal Law a speiiali?
Office at Miller, 1:1 IIIi; A Co’s.
“Come now, boys, that’s books
enough for to-night; here it is, ell
right for you, half water, sugar and
nutmeg; do you good, take it down;
nothing like a little fun after hard
work;”
But he had all the fun to himself;
fot Bob's friend was also a strict tem
perance boy.
One night Bob being more feeble
than usual, fell asleep during the read
ing. He dreamed that he died, and
at the gates of the New Jerusalem his
mother was waiting to receive him.—
Oh, how radiantly bright shone her
happy face, and how heautiful beyond
description were the golden streets and
jasper walls; and more than all tliis^
the seraphic music of the heavenly
host, singing their hallelnjahs before
the great white throne. But he soon
the lime.and the citron
flourish there, bnt the peach, the fig,
the grape, the pomegranate, thepluin,
all varieties of berries, the olive, the
banana, nnd the pine-apple, grow
luxnriently. Black Hamburg and
white Muscat grapes fruit finely in
the open air; the Concord audSbup-
pernong are grown in vast quantities.
The guava, the tamarind, the wonder
ful alligator-pear, the plantain, the
cocoanut and the date, the almond
aud the pecan, luxuriate in Southern
Florida. We have within our bound
aries a tropic land, rich and strange,
which will in future years be inhabit
ed all winter long by thousands of
families, and where beautiful towns,
and perhaps cities will spring np .—
Scribner's for Nouember.
WILL be carried on in all its brandies. Patterns
of all descriptions cut With my Low Prices and
Ckfod Goods, 1 hope to please the most fnstid-
ootifl.- sept 26 tf.
Table aud Pocket Cutlery
Builders Materials
Manufacturer and Retail Dealer in
•37XKT
COOKING STOVER,,
SHEET IRON,
TINWARE,
ET CETERA.
FjElPAtRiNG, ROOFING, GUT-
TERING, &ca done at Bhort no
tice and ili the best manner.
T. T. MARTIN,
tf. * Perry, Ga.
short, AH Goods usually kept in such a hmanessv
The Parker Breech-Loading Gun,
Togetln r with the best makes of English Muzzle-Loading Guns,
Hnzzard's Powders.
We represent
Tiie Pratt Grin
And have them of all sizes on hand.
^J-Call and See Us.
rings, massive ornaments for the fore
head, breast and ankles, necklaces
sparkling with ruby and diamond,
emerald, amethist. topaz opal and
peal; rosewater bottles of pure gold,
basins of silver, and huge brass cook
ing utensils, robes and tiaras and
chains, sapphire pendants and enam
eled jugs and ewers, silver lamps and
trinkets, rough with precious jewels,
and a hundred other articles of value
for use or ornament.
And Mind this was hut a small part
of the trousseau of one of the four
brides whom the Thakore of Bhow-
nngger had married. I was mute
with astonishment when one of the
ministers informed me, while I was
looking at the things, that I only be
held, as nearly as could be estimated,
exactly one-eigth of the trousseau of
the bride of Gondul!
DENTIST,
PERRY AND HAWKINSVILLE GA.
H E WILL SPi ND the first hair of each month
in his office in Perry, over the old drug store,
ind ono-fourth, or the latter half of each mouth
»-iU be given to his practice in HawkinsvUlc, at
Mrs. Hudspeth’s. aug23 !
F. S. JOHNSON A- SONS,
No. 31 Third Street, near City and Central Banks, Macon, Ga.
FURNITURE FREISHT FREE
AMERICAN GYGLOP/EDIA,
New Revised Edition.
^N entirely New and Elegant Stock of
i* OK-SJAT U i.LD
Just received and for sale at Foit Valley
and Macon prices.
JEff-BUY AT HOP-flE. &£
Sp'ed la Oxen.
O nr agricultural fairs have been very
generally tnrned-into mere horse races
in the rage for fast roadsters. Speed
in horse flesn is to a large extent the
mania of the day. Good draft horses
—sound, steady workers, of fine form
and powers of endurance—have had
to stand-aside and let the trotters ; oc- I
copy public attention. Bnt we have
scarcely ever seen the importance of
cultivating quickness of! movement in
working oxen alluded to. And .yet
there are farmers who will follow a
yoke of oxen around a field, plowing
or drawing a load at snail’s pace, now
and then applying the goad with a
shout of “go long,” but making scarce*
ly more than half a dozen rounds of a
ten acre lot in the course of the day.
Oxen are proverbially slow, but they
are capable >of improvement in .this
respect as well as other animals, and
\more attention nought to, be ;paid to
Cultivating in them a qnick step. In
oriental countries, especially in India,
they are used extensively for the road,
n place of horses, and they may often
be seen trotting off at a spanking gait.
We do not need Irottin;
Entirely rewritten by the ablest writers on every
subject. Printed from new tyde, and illustrat
ed with Several Thousand Engravings and
Maps.
Warehouse and Commission Merchants;
MACON, GEORGIA.
10 MEET THE DEMANDS OF THE TIMES, WE DETERMINED, EARLY IN
in the Spring tot ttemptarednction.in thc rates of Storage and Commission on
Co.ton, and now acnonncc; he following changes: -■
OLDRATES 1 PRESENT RaTES :
Commission.............. 1} percent domniissioa.: ..1} per cent
Storage ... ..: 50c per bale. | Storage :... . 25c per bale
Thankful for thelibcrality of our friends in th ’ part we must look to them for in
creased patronage to enable us to adhere to the low rates we have inaugnated;
Me. J. W. Stubbs, a prominent Granger and Planter of Bibb County, will be Our
Weigher the present season.
We guarantee our best efforts for the interests all who favor us with business.
_^S~lhc usual Advances made on Cotton in store.
CAMPBELL & JONES.
Where whn.11 W e Put Hanure-
A correspondent says: It has long
been the custom of our farmers to ap
ply tlieir barnyard manure to the stub
ble and plow it under for wheat, and
a majority still carry the clan out. Is
it the best one. Its disadvantages are
t wo-fold; the work comes during the
warmest season of the year, just be
fore plowing, when our 1601113 need all
tlieir strength and endurance—in fact,
no more unfavorable time, so far as
the teams aae concerned, cbnld be sel
ected—and the manure must be kept
in the yard fr-m the time the stock
is turned ont in May, until the oats
crop is harvested, and, even
in the best arranged yards, it loses
some of its value during this time. If
there is a loas'in a well arranged yard,
how much greater is itin three-fourths
of the yards, in which very littie care
is taken to guard against waste?
Would it not be better to apply i t
to the sod before turning it under for
com? The advantages of this plan
are-—the hauling can be done during
the open weather of Winter or early
Spring, when the teams are compara
tively idle, and the farm. hands have
mostiiesnre time, There will be no
loss from remaining' in the yard - du-
ring’the Summer, and the crop of-
corn, which, is one of the grossest
feeders, is materially increased! An-
other advantage on strong land is,
that*we shall avoid in .great measure
our annual loss ' of grain from the
wheat going down (lodging) before is
OOF^INTS.
A Hearse can be fumis'licd to order at any
time, on short notice. I can be found in
the'day time at my store, next to the Hotel
at night;, at My residence, adjoining that
Furniture Made to Order,
nd repaired at short notice.
BURIAL CLOTHES,
Ready-made, for ladies, gentlemen and
MERCHANTS. READ IT!
children aljrays on liana. ~
GEORGE T?AXJJL.i
PERRY, g a/.
IT’S MEANT FOR YOU!!
BYINCTON’S HOTEL,
FORT VALLEY. GA.
'3 THE BREAHI AST HOUSE for Oik »jmu
._ Saiannah. Angiifita aud Macou to diliimbiis:
Dinner House for the train from Eu/aulx and Al
bany to Macon. Snpj. r Hou.-.c fortue train from
ColumbuH to Haeon; Savannah aud Augusta.
Large tomforiable rooms with fire-places and
every cc ivenieo^*- au&23 tf
Groceries and Provisions,
oxen, but a
fast walk is of great importance,—
Doubling then; speed would double
their value as working, cattle, Why
may notour agricultural societies offer
prizes for the fastest walking oxen as
well asThe fastest horses?'' It wonM
take some years to rear, a race of good.
walkers, bnt it is worth ail effort, and
worthy of enconrageinent. One of
tin. strongest objections to the use of
oxen on the farm is that they ar ? slow „
Thi3 objection can’ and onglit to be
hansted the pale dreamer,- but the last
thing his eyes rested on was the bowed
form of his father, tightly grasping
his feverish, hand. And there on his
wicked knees; his - poisoned, breath
went tip even tokhegreat white throne;
“God, be mercifal to me, a sinner.”
Reader, what do you suppose awoke
Robert the next morning? Why
nothing, more or less than the smash
of a great black'botfle' on the chimney
comer: Thank God, it can now no
longer bar the gate of pearl, for it lay
in twenty -bits on -the now" brightened
and happy hearthstone.
xotmtof the auspicious
ae^ttinvS- Then about noou of that^ .day, a pro-
a'pwg&'of cession longer and more noisy than
than any previous one passed ont of
ng and care- . .. . ,
most ample the city gates, under the - waving
jessfnl termi- p a p us aD ,i quivering tamarinds. In
plates liove f rQn t went the young bridegroom to
. printed On * - ■ _
cyclopaedia, fetch 1 is first, bride-—she of W uawan;
mditttrefa?d then surged the. enormous crowd,
leaving behind it a cloud of bhnding
need for the dust. . . . —
e been added The' Thakore was in capital spirits
ijgLtfentlu and laughed and joked with his couri^'
iers and Brahman, guests as he went
sen«ryi.arcbi- meet his fair betrothed.' By this
ms processes. . ■
AiUiougii 4U- lame, sbe,.too, ; *had set out on her
journey toward him- Her raith, or
ndaweiSme car, came.in sight. The.yoring Thai- !
if the Cyao- tore alighted from from his splendid
only,payable Eattywiir mare, and having duly con-
SSSSSiSs gregated the guardians of the pre-1
.with several cions treasure witliin the raith (and,
;Uinumeronsj - . - „ , ,
| by the way promised them Handsome
iding. 1 presents for bringing bis wife to him
$5 oo | safe and sound), ho entered and sat
| himself down by the side of the Pnn-
-. cess. On the meeting of t’ue pair, the
i<er'°_ • 10 w I cor tege proceeded to the house j
once i of a near relation of the Thakore. j
n Cydopaslia i There, in the central hails, jealons-
■wiii be sent jy excluded fr tm all but about a hun-
T3 wasted i^ re< ^ the ablest rajpoots of Katty-:
I war, the marriage took place. The
1 Rajpoot rite is a simple one; men of
iwav.S;.’x. I that caste from time immemorial hare •
ANOTHER CHANCE.
FIFTIf AND LAST GIFT CONCERT
In aid of the
Public Library, Kentucky
Postponed to
November 39, 1874,
DRAWING CERTAIN AT
Tliat Time.
LIST OF GII Ti.
; One Grand Cash Gift S250.000
One Grand Cash Gift 100.001
One Grand Cash Gift 75.000
One Grand Cash Gift 50,000
One Grand Cash Gift 25,000
o Cash Gifts, $20,000 each, 100,000
10 Cr.-.h Gifts, 14,000 each, 140,000
15 Cash Gifts, 10,000 each, 150,000
20 Cash Gifts, 5,000 ea- h, l«.i,000
2a Cash Gifts, 4,000 each, llK),000
30 Cash Gifts, 5,000 each, 90,000
o(> Cach Gifts, 2,000 each, 100,000
100 Cash Okts 1.000 each, 100,000
24i l C»h Gifts, 500 eaca, 120,000
oOO Cash Gfits, 100 each, 50,000
19,000 Cash Gifts. 50 each, 950,000
Grand Total 20,00o Gifts all Cash~lT2od7000
PRICE OF TICKETS.
xPw tU’!?’k 550 ,J0
Half Tickets 05 OQ
TentliH, or wtob Coupon 5 00
11 Whole Tickets for 500-00
22J Tickebior 1,000 00
Our Goodsare Fresh. They are Full Weight. They are
Bought Right and will be Sold the Same Way.
We Can’t be Undersold by any House in the South.
Seymour, Tinsley & Co.,
MACON, GA.
Hot Eland. ■
Demonstrating that the South has
had the m ist patient people in the
world under the greatest wrongs; the
Sh Louis Repnhlicaa says:
It is all well enough, to say that the
Alabama white man must be made to
accept the results of the war, respect
the black man’s rights, recognize the
Federal supremacy, and submit to. the
changes of the list thirteen years;
hard as all this is, he may manage to :
dc it. But when he is expected, in
addition, to submit to be fobbed by
law, to have his property confiscated
by taxation, to see his county govern
ment administered by convicts, and to
1 endure the official insolence of aliens
and indicted felons, we are exacting of
him what would produce twenty-one
1 revolufionsin the twenty-one Northern
States is a single day.
FIRST"STilEET, CORNER OF CHERRY.
WAREROOjMS; Poplar Street; Between Third and Fourth Streets,
macon, C3-YX. • ':imm
GUERNSEY, BAETKUM & HENDRIX,
DOORS, SASH AND BLINDS, WINDOW AND DOOB FRAMES BALUS
TERS, NEWEL POS LS. SCROLL WORKS, BUILDERS’ HARD
WARE, GLASS, OILS, PAINTS, PUTTY, ETC., ETC.
A full line of tlio above always in stock, and supplied to eitv and country
on short notice ‘ June 27. dm