The Darlington news. (Darlington, S.C.) 1875-1909, April 25, 1889, Image 1

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ji&i-c H & THE DARLINGTON NEWS, YUBUSHlb *V**TTHC*8DAY MOEMIWQ HENRY fTThOMPSON. PROPRIETOR. feRM-*#f ^® r Abdhbi la Adraaee. Out gqur*. tni insertion. $1.00 One Sqonre, second insertion......•••.••• .fiO gvery snbseqent insertion .AO Contract odrartisements inserted upon the sssst rcMonsble terns. Mnrringe Rotlces end Obitueries, not zcecding six lines, inserted free. DARLINGTON NEWS. ••FOR US PRINCIPLE IS PRINCIPLE—RIQUT IS RIGHT—YESTERDAY, TO-DAY. TO-MORROW, FOREVER. VOL XV. NO 17. DARLINGTON, S. 0, THURSDAY. APRIL 25. 1889. 0m BROKEN TOYS. As I sit to-night In the firelight. And Cream of the long ego, Mj thought* fljf back to boyhood. And act my aoul aglow. Obi dream* that long here vanished, Ob' rain and fleeting joys. Where are the bopee 1 cherished? Where are my broken toy*? 1 Wy broken toye-ah: Heaven, j Sadly my heart recalls The dreams that once were dearest And over my aoul there falls A shadow, like mist at evening. That drops without sound or noise, And shuts me out forever From dreams of my broken toys! TeS I dream aa t ait In the firelight, Of one who was bright and lair, With rosy II pa ami sweet gray eyes, And wavy nut brown hair; But I sit a lone In tbs gloaming, For the angels share her Joys, ! And there's naught but the memory left me Of my love and my broken toys! Perhaps In the far off future, l When the weary years are done, j And the grave has dewed above me •Neath eotne fair eternal sun, 1 shall sea, and know tbs reason , Why I missed earth's sweetest Joys, | And the pitying Ood in Heaven Will mend my broken torsi , -W Termllye Smith. WHITSUNTIDE. ‘ Whitsuntide has always been con sidered liy the Irish as a very fatal and oahacky time—for the people hold that fairies and evil spirits have then great power over men and cattle, both by sea and land, and work their deadly spells with malign and mysterious efficacy. Children born at Whitsuntide, it is said, are foredoomed; they will either have the evil eye, or commit a murder, or die • violent death. Water, also, is very dangerous; no one should liathe, or go a Journey where a stream has to be crossed, «r nil in a boat, for the risk is great of being drowned, unless, indeed, a bride Steers, and then the boat is safe from harm. Great precautions are necessary, likewise, within the house; and no one should venture to light a candle without making the sign of the cross over the flame to keep off •vfl; and young men should be very cautious not to be out late at night, for oH the dead who have been drowned In the sea round about come up and ride over the waves on white horses, and hold Strange revels, ami try to carry off the young men or to kill them with their fiery darts and draw them down under the sea to live with the dead forever more. A story is told of a man named Murrey, wiio stayed out Into Ashing one Whitsuntide, quite forgetting it was the night of the death ride. Out at last he nearal the shore and drew up his boat to unload the fish and then make his way home with all siteed. Just at the mo ment, however, he heard a great rush of the waves liehind him, and looking round he saw a crowd of the dead on their white horses making over to the bout to seize him; and their faces were pule ms the face of a corpse, but their eyes burned like fire. Ami they stretched out their long skeleton arms to try and lay hold of him, but he sprang at once from the boat to the shore, and then he knew ho was safe, though one of them rode over close to him by the edge of the rocks, and he knew him as a friend of his own, who had been drowned the year before; and he heard the voice of the dead man calling lo him through the rush of the water, saying: "Hasten hasten to your home, for the dead who are with me want you for their com pany, and if once a dead hand touches you, there is no help, you are lost for ever. Hasten, or you will never seo Four home again, hut be with the dead forever.^ Then Murrey knew tliat the spirit spoke the truth, and he left the bout and the fisli on the bench and fled away liotnc, and never looked back at the dead on their white horses, for his heart was filled with fear. And never again did ho go out to fish at Whitsun tide. though the dead waited for him to seize him, but he came not, and lived henceforth safe from harm. At tills Season, also, the fairy queens make great afforts to carry off the fine stalwart young men of tho country to the fairy palace in tho cleft of the hills, or to lure them to their dancing grounds, where they are lulled into dreams by the sweet, •ubtle fairy music, and forget home and kith and kindred, and never desire to return again to their own people, orevon if the apell is broken, and they are brought back by some strong infatua- ttoo, yet they are never the same; for •very one knows by the dream look in thsdr eyes that they have danced with the fairies on the hill, and been loved by Me of the beautiful but fatal race, who, when they take a fancy to a handsome mortal lover, cast their spells over him With resistless power. A case of this kind happened some Fears ago in the county Wexford. Two orothen, fine young fellows of the farm ing class, were returning home one even ing in Whitsuntide from their day’s holiday, when, to their surprise, as they mossed a broad, beautiful field, lit up by the red rays of the setting sun, they saw n group of girls dancing, and they were nil draped in white, and their long hair fall floating over their shoulders. So |n*ely was the sight that the young men noold not chooee but atop and watch the dancers; yet, strange to say, they were all ■fenngera; not a familiar face was among Ihem from the whole country round. And as they looked and wondered, one of the girls left the dance, and, coming over H the younger brother, laid her hand on Ws arm, while she murmured softly in ■is ear: “Come, dance with me, Brian. ■ have waited long for you. Come, -1 and ah* draw him gently away, i Brian flung down his stick on the i and taking bar hand, they were whirling away la the dance, tho pair that aver trod a •“•nauro on the green sod. Long, mag thry danced, till the red light Phased away, and the darknesn liegan to cover the hills, but still they danced on and on, for Brian heeded nothing tan* tv irun-; ,;hl witli her long hair uoothj^. h ii!., shoulder and tha fire of wIioh" «yea Inirncil into his heart. At !!»:• elder Ixothcr called to him Brian, mm,, botnet !***• the dance. the mother will be waiting for us!” “Not yet, not yet," answered Brian: “I must finish this round. Leave me and I will follow you." So the elder brother left, and he and the mother watched and waited till midnight for Brian's re turn, but he never came. Then, the next morning, the brother went to seo about him. searching everywhere, though in vain. And all that day to sunset and the night lie searched, still no tidings could be had. No one had seen him in tho dance, nor the young girls with the whitedressesand the floating liair,though when the neighbors heard the story they looked very solemn and said there was no help for the doomed young man, for the fairy power was strong at Whitsun tide, and no doubt they had carried him down under the earth to the fairy palace, and he would never, never come back to his home again. When Whitsuntide came round the elder brother set out on his search, and there, sure enough, in the very same green field, with tho red sunset stream ing down, waa a group of young girls in their white dresses dancing to the music of the fairy pipes; and in the midst was Brian, dancing with his fairy bride, and her long yellow hair floated over his shoulder, and her eyes burned into his like coals of fire. “Come away, come away, Brian," cried the brother; “you have been dancing long enough, and the mother is at home, sad and sorrowful, and lonely, waiting for you. Come away, before the darkness falls and the night comes on." “Not yet, not yet,” answered Brian; “I must finish this dance.” And the fairy bride wound her beautiful white arms round him and held him fast So the brother lost heart, for he feared to enter the circle lest the enchantment should fall on him; and he went back home to tell of his failure. Then the mother rose up, and taking the charm which the fairy man luid given her, she hung it round her neck and went forth to look for the missing son. And at last she came to the field and saw him dancing, and dancing like mad with the witch girl in his arms; and she called to him: “Come back, come back to us, Brian, darling; come back; it is your mother calls." But Brian danced on and on, and never looked at her nor heeded her. Then, for the sorrow made her brave, she went over in the very midst of the fairy dancers with their glittering eyes, and taking the spell from her neck, she flung it over Brian, and clasping his arm laid her head down on his shoulder, weeping bitterly. Then, all at once, the demon spell waa broken, for a mother’s tears have strange power, and he let her take his hand and draw him away from the magic circle; and the form of the fairy bride seemed to melt into the sun set, and the whole scene passed away like a mist, (lie music and the dancers with their floating hair, and only Brian and his mother were left in the field. Then she led him home, but he spake no word, only lay down to sleep, and so for seven days they watched by him, but still lie slept. Then at the end of seven days he rose up strong and well as ever, and all the past seemed to him only as a dream. Yet, for fear of the fairies, his mother still made him wear the magic spell round his neck to keep him from harm, though in process of time a still stronger spell was woven round his life, for ho married a fair young girl of the village before the next Whitsuntide, good as well as lieautiful, and from that time the fairies and witches had uo |K>\vcr over him, for a pure, true wife is the best safeguard against witchcraft end devils' wiles that a man con take to Ids heart as the angel of the house.—Lady Wilde in Pall Mall Gazette. Writing on Commission. A publisher told me the other day a bit of business experience whieli is mildly diverting. A young woman brought him a manuscript which, after due con sideration, he expressed himself willing to publish in paper, 50 cents series, paying the usual 10 per cent royalty. The young woman expressed herself willing to accept this offer, although she frankly said that she had hoped for bet ter terms. “But," she added, thoughtfully, “if it costs much to make the book, I should not think 25 cents would leave you a great deal of profit.” “Twenty-five cents?” repeated the publisher, not at all understanding. “Why," explained she, “there are five of us girls who wrote this together. Ten per cent of 60 cents is 5 cents, and five times five is twenty-five. If it takes a quarter of a dollar to pay us girls our royalty, that leaves you just the name amount” The naivete of the proposition so amused the publisher that he declares he was tempted to leave the error unex plained. He said, however: “But, of course, you can see that wo shall not lose so much as we should if there had been ten of you, for then we should hqve to make the book for nothing and lose the booksellers' discount beside. Really, though, I fear you will be obliged to do with a cent apiece.” And his proposition was rejected with indignation, the amus ing part of the story being that the lady who conducted the negotiations declared that if there were only one author, 10 per cent would do very well, but that any body could see that it would not amount to anything divided among five people.— Book Buyer. The Mrasy Order System. It is just fifty years since the postal money order system was introduced in England. Prior to that time a similar device had been operated by private capital, but in 1888 tbs government took charge of the business. The rates have boon gradually reduced from timu to time, until now they are fixed at the very lowest figure possible. During the past year the amount of money trans mitted was over £26,000,000. litis plan I of sending money, which has been copied j in this country, is Absolutely the safest method known.—San Francisco Chron icle. The greatest mean heights and depths of rontliwpte and ocean are found in the northern hemisphere between 80 den. lOdcgs.. and in the southern be- t vren lOUegs. and ID dags. THE WOMBEYAN CAVES. Discoveries Regarding Them UThleh Here Recently Ueen Made. A few days ago a deputation waited on the minister of mines and requested that a house to accommodate travelers should be erected at the Wombeyan caves. At the same time they gave the minister some information concerning a recently discovered cave, and Mr Aui- gail without delay called for a report. The following report was submitted to the minister by the chief surveyor, W. a Leigh: I have the honor to submit, as re quested. the following report on the re cently discovered additions to the new cave at Wombeyan caves. This new series of cavee runs on a lower level, and commences at a point about fifty yards inside from the mouth of the mid dle branch of the new cave. On first entering them it was evident to the dis coverer, Mr. Chalmer, an account of the free draught and good ventilation met with, that another outlet from the caves existed. This surmise, after exploration, proved to bo correct, and the discovery must be regarded as a very important one, as the whole of the new cave can now bo ex plored without the necessity of retracing your steps. Descending about forty feet by the aid of a rope into a large pit from the middle branch cave above mentioned, you find yourself on the floor of the main cave, which has a total length of over 150 feet by about 80 feet in width, and its mggea and precipitous walls run up to a height of over one hundred feet. Tills cave is remarkable for the mas siveness and not for the number of its stalactic formations. The immense fallen black rocks piled on each other in every conceivable shape are here and there re lieved by massive buttresses of snowy white and transparent dripstone. Borne of these very much resemble frozen waterfalls bursting through the rocks; others take the form of statuee, one of the number being a duplicate of the “Lot’s Wife” of the Jenolan caves. Con trasting with the magnitude and somber ness of this chamber are two or three small branches off it packed with all kinds of pure white and transparent crystallized lime and stalactic forma tions, os though they were chambers whoso walls are covered with jewels. After leaving this cave some two hundred or three hundred feet rather hard traveling is experienced through a circuitous passage avenging ten feet in width; the floor is perfectly level, and the roof, a bare shelving rock, doen not average two feet in height. This, of course, necessitates bringing into play the hands and knees in lieu of feet as a means of locomotion, added to this, the floor being thickly covered with a forma tion resembling small conical spikes, divided into portions at intervals by knife like ridges, makes progress rather a painful operation. Some portions of the floor resemble miniature pine forests and produce a very pretty effect. On emerging from this passage an- other largo cave is entered which is made up of large broken tmwldcrs. piled upon each other in every direction. Tho drip stone formation-', are mostly dull and de composed, the principal feature of tho chamber being .he enormous number of bats lodging in it, which, on being dis turbed by tho light, produce a sound during flight as of a roaring wind. Pass ing from this chamber through a fissure in tho rocks and ascending a short dis tance over the rocks brings you to tho foot of another passage on an incline through which daylight is seen and the surface gained, (in emerging after three or four hours’ continuous journeying through the whole cave you find your self within 100 feet of tho place of en trance, and level of the outlet on the I face of the hill being about forty feet ! below that of the entrance, which must bo about 800 feet aliove the level of tho creek.—Sydney Herald. Misses McCollough & Garvey Beg to annnnuoe that they hare rented the MILLHSTEHY IDEFA-R-TMIEISrT of Edwaids A Norment’s store and have opened an entirely new line of Newest Styles Hats, Bonnets, Ribbons, Flow ers ana Feathers. HATS TRIMMED TO ORDER and SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. OUR GOODS ARE NEW AND STYLISH—OUR PRICES EEASOISTABEE, We solicit an early call and will always be pleased to show our goods. Respectfully, MISSES McCULLOUGH & GARVEY, of Baltimore. April 18, 1889. J Begs to remind the public that he is better prepared than ever before to meet the demands of the present* season, which promises to be the most active that Darlington has seen for years. His stock, which embraces every line, almost, one can think of, taken as a whole, is probably the largest ever carried by any single firm in Darlington ; has been carefully selected with a view to meeting the wants of the multitude who favor him with their patronage. Here are a few of the many n ca- a. i : :! HIS STORE I FILLED WITH 36 inch Wool Cashmere at 25 cents per yard, worth 35 ft 36 inch Henrietta Cloth at 50 cents per yard, worth 65 cent* A full line ol Black Cashmeres from 15 cents to $1 per yard A full line of Braided Sets and Velvets at various prices and shades to match the large line of DRESS GOODS. -A. FTJLE EX2TE OF GENTS’, lADIE’S, AND CHILDREN’ SHOES. 12000 yards Plaids, bought below the market, and will be sold accordingly. 500 suits Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s ready-made clothing, at Sweeping Bargains. Hats and shirts in proportion. 200 Barrels Flour bought direct from the Mills before ad vance in the market, and being sold at less than tegular price. All heavy Groceries bought in Car Load quantities, and all ia bulk at prices that compare favorably with Charleston. Handling Hlgli Explosives. Forty civilian workmen accustomed to the manipulation of explosive substances are {employed at Toulon arsenal, under the direction of the artillery staff, in charging mclcnite shells. To the latter composition, it appears, is now added another substance called "cresilite,” which is stated to materially increase tho powers of melenitc. and at the same time contribute to its preservation and safety in handling. As fast os the shells are loaded, and a considerable number arc daily filled, they arc sent away to store all the forts on the coast or Alpine line. The process of filling tho shells is sup posed to bo a secret, hut it is learned that the cresilite, a hard, gummy compound, b first melted in copper vessels, and then poured into a space occupying about two-thirds of the interior of the shell left in the casting. The remaining vac uum is afterwards flut'd up with melen- ite, rammed in by means of a mallet, and the work requires the utmost deli cacy to avoid accident. Ten men are specially selected for (he latter part of tne operation, who are kept se|>arated one from the other in compartments in closed by walls of t'mpty shells, so that should an explosion occur, there would be but one vict:m. On beginning work in the morning tho fillers have to drink a pint of milk, by medical order, as a prophylactic remedy against the noxious fumes of the sub stances they handle, which leave upon all the exposed parts of their skins a deep yellow tinge timt cannot bo removed, oven by continuous ablutions. In spite, however, of these cutaneous signs and tho forebodings of the surgeons, the men, who gain from four shillings to six shil lings per day, seem to retain excellent health and declare that the emanations from the compounds they mix endow them with inordinate appetites.—New York Telegram. Fresh Air far Oar Bo—« Tho following cheap and simple method has been found very satisfactory in solv ing the troublesome problem—how to secure fresh air In a room without ax- I posing the Inmates to draughts. Nail or screw a neat strip of wood—from one to , two inches wide—upon the window sill just inside the sash and extending across the window. Upon the topof the strip fasten a piece of “weather strip," so that there will be formed an air tight joint between the weather strip and tno lower sash of tho window, whether tho latter is closed or raised an inch or two, the lower croee piece of the sash sliding on the rubber of the weather strip as the eash rises. With this fixture tho lower sash may be raised enough to admit air between the lower and upper sashes without admitting the Wast alr at the bottom of the window. ^ The air thus entering is thrown upward and has its “chill taken off" before descending upon the heads of the occupants of the room. —Christian Union. Uur Hardware Department, in charge of Mr. J. H. Early, has in stock the largest, as well as the best, assortment of Stoves and Stove Furniture ever exhabited in Eastern South Carolina. Having bought by Car Load ent’rely, we are pre pared to make figures that defy competition. In Sewing Machines we handle the White, American, House hold and Hartford, all strickly first-class ; also machine need les, oils and attachments tor all machines. We carry a large line of Engines and Mill supplies, such as Belting, Packing, Lacing, and all kinds of Steam Fittings in iron and brass; Lubricating and Cylinder Oils Tallow, etc. Machine Bolts in every size. Agricultural machinery, such as Cotton Gins, Feeders amd Condensers, Presses, Mowers, Horse Rakes, Grain Drills, etc. Pumps for driven wells, a specialty. We are agents for several first class Steam Engines and Mills and would be pleased to give bottom figures to those desiring to purchase a ginning or saw mill outfit. September 13, 1888. New Store, New Goods, at Low Prices. I tak* pleasure in inlo-miog my friends end Ike public generally that I have open ed a full line of general merchandise, consialinv of Dry Goods. Clothing. Bools, Shoes. Hals, Csps, Drugs, Medicines, Hardware, Groceries, Ac.. Ac , at the old ■land of L. 8. Pate, at Cyproes. Darling- ion County, and that I have nothing to do with ihe books, accounts, notes, Ac., of the old hu’iness of L. 8. Pa'e. Soliciting a sbaie of Ihe patronage and hoping by bard work, and fair and honest dealing to merit the same. I am, Very Respectfully, L 8. PATE, Ageut. .Marc 14, 1989. BRICK! BRICK! We now bate on baud and ready for sale *1 Fully equal lo tboee made in Columbia or elsewhere ia lbs State. Oar price ie $8 a Thousand? AT THE KILN, wbiob ie aitaated about half a mile weet ef tbe Tewa ef Darlington. These deeiring lo purehaoe ehenld give a call, to wo guarantee that ear brick will give perfect setiofectioa. A. C. SPAIN * CO. May S, *88—If TO T1PIW! Do uot buy an Engine, Boiler, Saw-mill, Com mill, Colton Gin, or Cotton Presa, until yon write to me Tor price*. I AM GENERAL AGENT in this State for tbe well-known Aim ol TALBOTT# SONS, Richmond Ya., and offer to yon tbe beat maebinery for ibe money that is sold in tins market. Agents for HALL, EAGLE, and LUMMUS GINS at |>opular prices. Write In m (be fore } ou bay V. C. BADHAM, Colombia, S. 0. or Talbott ft Sons, Richmond, V«. Mav 17, ’88- CM FOI TAXES Notice is hereby given that tbe Taxes for tbe current year are cad ed for, payable to tbe Clerk at his office, from April 18th to May 20, 1880, inclusive. All persons failing to pay within that tine will be sob- jeeted to the oanal penalty. By order of Coooell. J. O. WILLCOX, Mayor. 8. 8. Bunch, Clerk. April 18, ’80. WHOLE NO 745. JOB DEPARTMENT. Our job department is supplied with ever facility necessary to enable us to compete both as toprice and qaalily ef work, with ever those of the cities, and we guaraatee aaiis faction ia every particularercharge nothing for our work. We are always prepared to fill orders at short notice for Blnnke, I’.il Heads, Letter Heads. Cards, Hand bitlr Posters, Cireulars, Pamphlets, Ac. All job work must be paid for Cash on Delivery* •S' FIRE -aw i s xt n c ns -A.OE3STT. REPRESENTS TEN OFTHt*. LARGEST AND OLDEST COMPA- NIES IN THE WORLD. iuRtirpH hII clanttfii of property, including Gin HmiKeH, in any part of tbe County. Office over DARLINGTON NEWS building. P Dccemmlter 6, 1888. BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS a. <1 CAPS. A FULL LINE OF EACH IMew Roods, EOWEST PRICES -A- F. 3D *W .A. IR, 33 o#r C4DST! Groce." its A Specialty A.T Enterprise Grocery. A. S WHITE, Manager. September l.’J, ’89 Istw cut >* OIO. W DAROAM. HKNBT T. THOMPSON DARGAN & THOMPSON, Attorney! at Law, F*Noi(beast side ot the Publio Square f Darlington, S. C. I. I. WARD. n. 0. WOODS WARD & WOODS. Attorneys ft Coanielori at Law, DARLINGTON, 8. C. Wil practice in all State and Federal Conrte.l Special atteniii n paid to all mat ters pcrtam.ng to the buying, cell ing, renting or leasing of tedl ornate. Any party having btiMnecs in this line would do well to call on tbe firm, who have control ol aome of tbe moat desirable property in tbt Town and County. A. B. NCTTLCS. c. a. NRTTI.R* Nettles & Nettles, Attorney! ft ( otmielori at Law, llarlluaton C. H. ( S. C. Will practice in all the State and Federal Courts. Prompt peraonal attention given to collection of claims. Sep. 2, ’86 ly. TTBrSHE Attorney at I c.w, DARLINGTON, C. H., S. C. Will practice in Circuit Courts and Supreme Court of South Carolina. Prompt attention given to all bit- sines*, and Hpecial attention given to «ol lection*. a. W. BOYD, 0*0 W. BBOWX BOYD & BROWN- AtUrnaya and Counselors at Law Office in rear of Daringtou Nation al Bauk. DARLINGTON C. R., 8 C. PKOMPT PERSONAL ATTENTION TO ALL BUSINESS. Fvb. S, ’97-ly. W~ F. DARGAN Attorne y-at-L&w, * Darlington, - • • S. C- Office up ataira, over the Pwat office March 28, ’89 ly^ C. P. DARGAN Attorney at Law and Trial Justice, Practice* in the United 8i*lea Court asd in tbo 4lh aad 6th circuit*. Prompt atio«- lioa lo ol buttaeoo oatraoted t* him. Odteo ib Rxehaago Street, aeg*. tko'Das- aarox Now* Otter. CHEAP STATIONERY. Lead pencil*, Slate pencils, Falcon pt-ns, Pen bolder*, Ink, Mucilage, Letter |>H|M‘r, Envelope*, 5 centd each 5 cts each. 5 cts each. 1 cent each. 5 cts a bottle. 5 cts a bottle. 6 els a qi ire. 5 ct* a pack. Photograph album*, 15 cts each. Testaments, 5 cts each. All of tbe altove articles are of tbe very beat quality, and can be had at The Book Store, DHrlingion News Building. March 28, ’89. tat Music lone. J. B. KILLOUGII baa moved to tbo M*reo Building, ou D*rg»n Street, ood hat in .lock Pianos and Organs, Sbest Music and musical Mercbsndi'e. Ha is prepared lo duplicate any offer made, be ing backed up by com. of tbo best music bouses in the couatrj. He is bow pre pared lo lune and repair Piauos and Or gans. Joseph Leisch is his workman and has served his tims in a manufactory ef Pianos and Organs. Call or wril* to J. B. KiMough, Drawer D, Florence, 8. C. He will not he undersold. Jan 31, ’89. CbtueiNAT iQtl 'WlUL CORRECT «*ANB4* PRESERVE THE SIGHT • SOLO ONLY BY * . J. H. MASON Optician, Public Square, Dailington, 8. G* Ml Gtris lluruM axo. X. TOALX. MKMRV COVER Geo. E. Toale & Co, manufacturers —AND— WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Doors, Sash, Blinds^ Builders' Hardware, AND BmumI Builtiiifl MlttfiiL OFFICE AND 8ALK8EOOXR 10 and 12 Haync Strtet| 0RARLE5TON, - • 8. « Write fer Estimates^ May 31,1888,