5 . 1" - mm t i.ir iinwiiTirii-i-mi--y--i----T'r - - - ''V, Vf"-- r .. mmll...miaammswssslsmssssWk0BsWB liL i i 't 4 '! i if, i I ' : . I '' i f I 15. .1 IK - 4 - IT jit V : -M' ! I r il; f i 4' t i . ! . What Horace Greeley Knows about h V War. We bare fought and bceu Deateu. God forgive oar rulers that this is so ; iut it is true, and cannot be disguised. Tuc Cabinet recently expressing, m rhetoric better adapted to a lo?e letter, a foaroi being drowned in its on -vv bile our honor on the high seas has nly been saved by one daring and des perate negro, and he belonging to the merchant marine. The sacred soil of Virginia is crimson and wet with the blood of thousands of Northern men needlessly sbed. The great and univer sal question pervading the public mind 13: Shall this condition ol thin "3" f p.nn- nne?v" ,4lf we are ever to put down ibe re bellion we snail do it within a fev months. We have more men and more means wherewith to attack and over come the rebel armies than we shall have a year hence, should the war con tinue so long. It we beat tbcm, we shall have guns enough ; if they beat U9, the same. One way or another, we shall have peace before the close of 1SG2; and it we cannot whip tbeni with the arms we now have, we never shall. And since we need every dollar we have t can raise for present press ing use, we protest against spending one dollar for arms that are not to be in the hands of our soldiers before the 1st of May, If we should want more arms after the rebellion is put down, let 'he in be provided for; for the present, et U3 use every dollar where it will tell in the present confiiet' Tribune, Jan- ry 31, 1862. "Such was the well earucd iauie of Ktntuckians Colonel Kiuirod Wildfire, then representative before tue footlights, being represented as so spoiling, lor a fight, having been inhumanely deprived of that luxury for the intermediate space of ten days, that he would have to 4kiv cr himself in a salt barrel to keep, that we have been wondering how many invading rebels would be required to show a front in that State for the space of ten days, have concluded that noth ing less than one hundred thousand would answer. "When John Morgan made his horse stealing raid across the State last sum iner, meeting very little resistance, we explained the matter by considering that he traveled so fa at always taking fre9h hor-.es to replace those that from time to iiuie gn-'-v weary that: the 'hunters i. foresaid could cot overtiike him. But tiiis famous parade of Kirby Smith throughout the famous J31ue Grass' region does not abide that foIu- tion. Hero thousand rebe s wnc tweLty or thirty who have advanced through the very heart of the State from i ennessee to tne banss or tbe Unio, j .uting the only Union foicc gathered to detend the Capital ( which contained, vc believe, just one Kentucky regiment) and pushing on to threaten Cincinnati and Louisville -without serious opposi tion. Perhaps the interruption of the mails and telegraph Iims "left us in the dark as to what is 'going on in that quarter. The facts will doubtless soon ebine forth in all their glory and shall we be very glad to hear of the prompt and enthusiastic rally of the aforesaid hunt ers to drive rebellion and disunion into sea." Tribune, September 20, 1862. "It has pleased Congress to decree the appointment of a L eutenant-Gene-ral, and tbe President, with the entire assent of both Houses, has selected Ulysses S. Grant for the most responsi ble position. We had nothing to say, pro or con, while this matter was in progress; we neither urged the creation of a Lieutenant Generalship, nor recom mended Gen. Grant tor the position. But now that the work is done, we must respectfully suggest that the con luct of the war, under the President, be committed absolutely to the Lieutenant General, and that we all Congress, Cabinet, and t' e Press, Republican?, Democrats, Conservatives, and Radicals take hold and strengthen his hands for the immense responsibility devolved upon him. Let him not be impeded or embarrassed in his work cither by speeches or articles, advice or criticism, .until we shall have given him a fair trial. Let him not bo condemned for one miscarriage, if there shall be one, but generally trusted and sustained until he shall have decisively shown that he can or cannot put down the Rebellion. Then let us act as the good of the Nation shall dictate; but, until then, let in his behalf Stonewall Jack son's message to his superior: 'Send uie more meu and fewer orders.'" Tribune, March 5, 1864. . A decimated and indignant people will demand the immediate retirement of the present Cabinet from the high places of power, which for one reason or another, they have shown themselves iucompoteut to fill. Give us for the President capable advisers, who compre hend the requirements of the crisis, and arc equal to them and, for the Army, leaders worty of the rank and file, and our banner now drooping, will soon float once more m triumph over the w nolo land. With the right men to lead, our people will show themselves unconquerable." Tribune, 7y2o,1861. What H. G. Knows about Democ racy. The utter impotence anct paralysis Into which the once proud and power ful Democratic party, has fallen is evinced in many ways, but in none more strikingly than in the character ot its lies and liars. How its orators aud journals used absolutely to ruin calumnies on Adams and Clay and Harrison, and in later days on Seward and Fremont! none of your little, con temptible, picayune falsehoods, but great, fat, black lies, that had venom and sting in them lies that evinced originality, audacity, and even genius." Tribune July 0, 18G0." "To Lieut. Gen. Grant the Nation's Joye and gratitude will be fervent and unmeasured. The Army of the PjCtora ac hardly knew him a month 'ago; it knows him now and ever more. Had he shared the current estimate of its capacities, his - misconception would have been natural; but he. knew its worth instinctively and trusted implic itly to its valor and devotion. The j result proves that Le was right, and that that Armv has at last found its true leader. Let. us harbor do shadow of doubt that under his guidance that Army will promptly and . thoroughly complete the work to which it has been called, and to which it has now proved itself so nobly adapted." Tribune, 1 May 14, 1864. Tlie election of Grant teeures the as- cendency of Llbebtt, JUSTICE, and Pbace. It is the Appomattox of oui civil conflict. It insures that ours shall be henceforth a land of equal rights and equal laws. It makes our recent history coherent and logical. It de monstrates that the discomfiture of the Rebellion was no blunder and no accident, but the triumph of princi ple and an added proof that , God reigns." Tribune, August 15, 1868. The world will be moved to mirth if it reads the manifests of the National Democratic Executive Committee dis owning the Democratic paternity of the pamphlet. 'Concession or how the Lost Cause may be Regained, and the Inde pendence of the South Secured.' No body supposed that the National Dem ocratic Committee had authorized the issue of the pamphlet; but it i3 Demo cratic in tone and temper, for all that, and it speaks the honest sentiments, no doubt, of thousands of Southern Dem ocrats, who will, in defiance of repeated winks and nods of disapproval from the Managers, persists in talking about the possibilities of the Lost Cause at the most unseemly tives. But the sugges tion that the Radicals have concocted this precious farrago of nonsense and treason for electioneering purposes is quite as ludicrous as the vaunt that the Democracy is the only party that can bring about return to honesty and con stitutional laws. This last phrase is exquisite tooling." Tribune, September C, 1871. "To 'Love rum and hate niggers' ha so long been the essence of the Demo cratic faith that the cooler, wiser heads of the party vainly spend their strength in efforts to lift it out of the rut in which they plainly see that it can only run to perdition. While slavery en dured, negro bate was an element of positive strength in our political con tests, so that the Constitutional Con ventions of this and Other free States j were usually carried by the Democrats on the strength of appeals to the coarser and baser whites to Let the nigger know- his place.' " Tribune, April 7, 1871. " Tho Democratic party ot to-day is simply the Rebellion seeking to achieve its essential purposes within and through the Union. A victory which does not enable it to put its feet on the necks of the black race seems to the bulk qf its adherents not worth having. Its heart is just where it was when it re garded Slavery and the Constitution as two names for one thing. It hates the Generals who led the Union Armies to Victory, and rarely misses a chance to disparage them. It clings to that ex aggerated notion of State Rights which makes them the shield of all manner ot w-ongs and abuses. It takes counsels of its hates even more than of its aspi rations and will be satisfied with no tri umph that docs not result in the ex pulsion ot all active, earnest Republi cans from the South. Tribune, March 2U, 1871. t 1 "The great Gorilla of the Democracy is tilling the air with his demoniacal howling, and beating his breast like a tremendous drum, to express his savage joy over the first full meal he has had after years of enforced abstinence. Eat your fill now, Gorilla, lor you will never have another chance !" Tribune, No vember 11,1867. What H. G. Knows about Seecs- sion. " Wuit 1 demand is proof that the Southern people really desire separation from the Free States. Wheneuer assured tlutt such is their settled wish, I SHALL JOYFULLY CO-OPERATE WITH THEM. TO SECURE THE END THEY SEEK. Thus far, I have had evidence of nothing but a purpose to bully and coerce the North Many of the Seces sion emissaries to the Border Slave States tell the people they address that they do not really mean to dissolve the Union, but only to secure what they term their rights in the Union. Now, as nearly all the people of the Slave States either are, or have to seem to be, in favor of this, the present menacing front of Secession proves nothing to the purpose. Maryland and Virginia have had no idea of breaking up the Union ; but they would both dearly like to bully the North into a compromise. Their Secession demonstrations prove just this, and nothing more," Tribune, January 21, 1861. "We utterly deny, repudiate, and condemn the pretended Right of Seces sion. No such right is known to our Federal Constitution, nor,in fact, to any civilized framework Of government. No such right was reserved,. or supposed to be reserved, when the States ratified or adopted the Federal Constitution. We do not believe that a mere majority ot a community may, in disregard of all existing forms, upset an existing gov ernment and put one of their choice in its plaice. We do not believe the whole population we will say of Nantucket or Staten Island have a right,1 moved by a prospect of unlimited gains by smuggling to the main land, to break oft from the Union and annex their island to Great Britain or e?t up for themselves. 'We do not believe a nation is, like a mob or mass-meeting, to b dispersed by a thunder-shower or steam fire-engine playing upon if Tribune, June 3, 1862. . . - " Tbe advocates of Disunion, we mean those who do not cautiously hint, but who do obstreperously halloo howl their nonsense, which 1 is not respectable enough to be called treasonons, are usu ally half witted" Members of! Congress and quarter witted .Editors. Itia veiy easy fori some i newspaper man, who, when he bought his 'types, did not buy Murray's grammar, and who considers Webster's spelling bookto be a vile in cendiary publication, to stab the Consti tution dissolve the Union, and anbiliate New York and Boston, make an occi dental London ot Charleston, buildup an imperial miracle of a State, which shall cast the ancients into oblivion and drive all other moderns to despair. Wrath whisky and tobacco are wonder fully rapid architects, onlytheir fabrics are base'ess, and when they fade away they leave not a wreck, bnt'only a head ache behind." -Tribune, July 21, 1850. J. S. TOPHAM & CO.. No. 8 South Front Street, MANUFACTURERS AND Wholesale and Ketail Dealers in SADDLES, HARNESS, TRUNKS & TRVAKLING BAGS. Collars, Hames, Trace Cnains, Whips, Spurs, Dog Collars, Saddle Cloths, Woolen & Linen Horse Covers Fly Nets, Feather Dusters, ; Axle Grease, Bridles, of all kinds, Sad ; dlery Hard ware, &c. A. X. F O , SECOND HANP HARNESS, SADDLES, REINS, &c, CHEAP FOR CASH, june 7 1-ly Beware of Counterfeits 1 JOB RI0SES1 ""ULMKSMlff8 arc extensively cotthtkrfkitid. BUhonut Drug' gists endeavor to sell the counterfeit to make greater profits. The genuine have the name of J ob Moses on each package. All others are worthiest imitations. The gekuinb Pills are unfailing in the core of all those painful and dangerous diseases to which th female constitution is subject. They moderate all excesses and remove all obstructions, from "what ever cause. i TO MARRIED I, AD FES they are particularly suited. They will in a short time bring on the monthly period with regularity; and although very powerful, contain nothing hurt ful to the constitution. In all cases of Nervous and Spinal Affections, Pains in the Back and Limbs, Fatigue on slight exertion, Palpitation of the Heart. Hrsterics and Whites, the? will effect a cure when all other means have failed. The circulars around each, nackasre eive full directions and advice, or will be sent free to all writing for them, sealed rrom oDservation. N. B. In aU eases where the ozhcihk cannot b obtained, One Dollar enclosed to the Sole Proprie- Injure a bottle of the genuine, containing Tifty Pills, by return mail, securely sealed rxom any , Knowledge or its contents. RELIEF IN TEN MINUTES. hryaxh pniiMoinfl wafers Cure Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Buohchitis, Sobs Throat, Hoarsbmbss, difficult iskiitiiio. an- oifisst Consumption and Luito Disbasss. They have no taste of medicine, and any child will take them. Thousands have been restored to health that had before despaired. Testimony jriven in hundreds ef cases. Ask for BRYAN'S PULMONIC WAPIRS. Price 35 cents per box. . JOB MOS1S3, rropno- tor. 18 uortlandt street, rnew i one. THE GREAT FRENCH REMEDY. DEL, A II ARTIE'S SPECIFIC PI1LS.' Prepared by J. UAKANU1J5K.E, No. $14 Rnn Iinmb&rd. Paris. These pills are hirhly recommended by the entire Medical Faculty of Franco as the very best remedy in all cases or Spermatorrhoea, or 8eminal Weak ness : Niehtlv. Dailr or Premature Emissions : Sex ual Weakness orlmpotency ; Weakness arisingfrom secret iiaDits ana sexual .Excesses ; lieiaxaiumoimB Genital Organs; Weak Spine : Deposits in the Urine, nnd all the ghastly train of Diseases arising from O veruse or Excesses. The v cure when all otherrem- edies fail. Pamphlet of Advice in e&rh box, or will do sent Jb reo to any aaaress. jrrice si per is ex. Sent bv mail, securelv sealed from all observation on receipt oTprice. OSCAR Q. MOSES, 18 Cortlahdt Al T V . S A A. M A . BT.,axw xBK, soie uenerai Agem tor Amnc aug 8 10-ly QUARANTINE NOTICE. i AN and after June 1st, 1872, the folio-wine v Quarantine Regulations will be enforced: All vessels from ports south of Cape Fear will stop for inspection at the Quarantine out HUll. All vessels having sickness on board, on arrival, or havlnsr had sickness on board dur ing the passage, will stop for inspection at me uaranuue otauon. , Vessels not included as above, may pro- vcevi iaj vy muingxon wiuiput detention. Pilots and Masters of vessels will please F. W. POTTER, Quarantln e Physician, may 28 9-2taw UNov Tu&Fr TWENTY DOLLARS FOR ONE ! A 125 SEWING MACHINE, FREE ! I SUBSCKIBB NOW FOR OUR WEEKLY, A lirst-class, twenty-column, Literary Fam- xi. at me iu w price oi ONE DOLLAR A YEAR ! 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G THE NEW YORK TIMES SCElAAirEOlTS NEWSPAPER. , - r.CAMFAIGN" EDITIONS ' During ihe ensuing Presidential Canvass, we shall publish a Special Wbekj-y ift Tiosfor the" convenience of those who qe-v sire the latest and most ; trustworthy politi cal intelligen :e. f Haying made ample arrangements lor se nnrintr t.n earliest renorts oi meetings, con ventional and other occurrences of political j interest, we ehau, mrougnoui me rrceiuvu tial canvass, puolisk fuUer iuformatiou re lating to the progress of the campaign than any other New-Xorit " paper.- We aim only at supDlying.the public with the fcnost com plete information on ail current affairs. Subscribers to our Campaign Edition will threlore secure ah exhaustive summary of the political news oi the day, besides receiv ing the general news from all parts oi the World, obtained irom the best sources, and rearranged and prepared specially lor thi& edition. j The New-Yobk Times is a Kepuvlican newspaper, and will, duiing the cauyast, now fairly commenced, steadfastly main tain the established principlts of that Jfari, It will support the regular nominees oiUhu rhiladelphia Convention, and do its share n stcuiiDg their triumphant election in November. It rega;ds the success ol the Republican Paity as an object of the very lirst importance, and will give no support to irregular or bolting " nominations, which can only re&nlt in "the return ol the Democrats to power, 'there are projects ol all kinds on foot for dissolving the Kepub licau Party, and the Times win oppose them all. Its course in reference to the Tamma ny Ring, at a tsme when all the other daily papers in .New-York obstructed and discou raged its efforts, attests its sincerity in the cause oi Kciorm. Tho Times stood uonc in demanding Reform from l&WJto the close of 1871 now other journals are attempting to make political capital out of the mere repetition ot the cry. There is no sincere and honest proposal for reiorm, in any branch of the Government, which will not be heartily supported by the Times. 13 tit it will not conspire in assisting ambitious politicians or demagogues to reach power under lalse pretenses. It will hot encour age defection from the party. It regards the Philadelphia Convention as the only body authorized to speak and act lor the Republican Party. TERMS : The Campaign Edition of the New Yoke. Times will be iurnished to mail subscri bers for the six months next eusuing, for the Bum of FIFTY CENTS. All copies sent to the same Post-oliice to be mailed to one address. THE NEW YORK TIMES, As a Republican journal, will be devoted, asm the past, to an intelligent and firm support ot the Republican Tarty. It will sustain, with all the force and in fluence at its command, the principles and policy which have rendered that Party so justly famous in our history. It will advo cate those measures by which the honor, the peace and the prosperity of the nation can ue best conserved and promoted: ataiteu iu September, lool, TLe TiiiKS thas lor many yeart iieea recognized u 'among the most successful, popular, and inllueiitial newspapers in thfc country. Two ofiti original proprietors stiii direct i is policy ; aud, witn greatly-increased re sources and experience, will spare no paino to extend and strengthen its claims upon the confidence and support of the public. its Editorial Department wiii be con ducted iu a spirit oi fairness and imparl iui itj ; lree alike from sc:f interested ainis-, political jooberv, or 'undue favoritism, -it will represent tlie great body of pub ic rather than any clique of prof essional '.'pol iucians." It has no one connected witn it who seeks oilice, or who wiii become u can didate for ohice. Its CoKiiEsPONDSsc'E wiii be lull and timely, mid its Reports wiJi by prepared with tne utmost care. lheLii ekaky OjepaktmssiT will be in thoroughly capable hauas, and will present u lull re view of the literature, the fine arte, the music, and the drama oi the day. As a family paper, free from all appeals to vulgar and impure tastes, the Timks. will continue unexceptionable, and may be suie ly admitted to every domesticeirc;e. Th Sunday edition of the Times in cludes! in adcltion to all the uew, selected and original literary matter oi the most aried; and " agreeable character. Special arrangements have been made to impart new attractions to this feature of the paper. The Weekly and Semi Weekly editions of the Times are compiled with the greatest care, and will contaiu selections from the most important contents of the Daily issue, besides matters of interest to the agricul tural sections of the country. AU who prefer a newspaper but once or twice a week will find these editions admirably suited to their requirements. A special edition of the Times lor Euro pean circulation is published every Wednes day and Saturday, iu time for the European mails, and will be valuable and we come to our friends abroad, whether Americans or of any other nationality than our own. All these editions of the TImes are of the very largest size, oa large quarto sheets, each containing fifty-6ix columns, printed in clear and legible type, at the following rates : mail subscribers. The Daily Times, per annum, including the Sunday Edition $iy The Daily Times, per annum, exclu sive of the Sunday Edition , jo The Sunday Edition per annum. 2 The European Edition, per annum postage extra 4 SECI AL BATES FOR THE WEEKLY A2sD SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES FOR 1872. The Weekly Times, per annum l CO The Semi-Weekly Times, per annum. 2 50 Subscriptions to either of our editions, except the weekly, received for a less length of time than one year at the yearly rate. These prices are invariable. Remit in drafts on New York or Post Office Money Orders, if possible, and where neither of these can be procured, send the money in a registered letter. All Postmasters are obliged to register letters when requested to do so, and the system is an absolute pro tection against losses by mail. Address The New York Times New York Citv. JAS. A. LOWERY, CORNER THIRD AND PRINCESS STS., Opposite City Hall. fJARRIAGE MAKING, PAINTING, AND V rprtni finer noafl-vr r1rrtk ehnrt n rrr After Thirty Years of experience at the busi ness, I am prepared to do the finest and best work in tho City. novl6 149-ly T. A. GRANGKB, W. H. CH1LKS. n. c. ; Late of Richmond. Va NEW HOTEL, GRANGER & CHILES, Proprietors, ' WEST CENTRE STREET. i - - GOLDBBORO, N. C. Convenient for the Trains leaving for tho North, South, East and West, ang 29 S8-2m k. a. UHmTo READY RELIEF 1'.. - . K. 4 t ill it- i i v.ti.'j Aug, tviv ucviuCDl JitTtJ a ONE fcUFFEK WiTU I'Alb, KADWA YJa KEADY KELIEE lb H C k run EVEUY PAIN. fc It was the first and is The OfiiSs Pain ItVinccJv that in&tuutly biops. the inost excrurini;. pams. ana s In inanimations, and Uongec-tions, whether oi ihp t;: fin-... 25f0L-acb, Bowels, or other glands orortr&r' by one application E8 IN FROM ONE TO TWENTY MIN-Ux i no matter how violent or excruciating . pain tne RHEUMATIC, B'ed-ridden i firm, Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgic n prostrated with disease may sufl'er, ' RADIVAY'S READY RJEHjyf WILL AFFORD INSTANT EAtoV INFLAMMATION OF THE KIDJSEY INFLAMMATION OF THE BLaDIh . INFLAMMATION OF TliE BOWELS 1 CONGEiSTION OF TLiE Ll Mn SOKE lllKOATDIFFCULT BKEA'J IV v?: PALPITATION OF '1HE HEART UYSTEJH1CS, CROUP, DIPTHEKlA i CATa liKfi, INFLUENZA HEADACH'- , TOOTHACHE, i A' NE L'iiALGlA, RIlEUMATIfiM COLD CiilLLrf, AGUE CHILLS. ' The application ol the Ready Rclil( to the part or parts where the pain or diffi culty exists will afford ease and comfort Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will iu a few moments cure Crami Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick ih.u-j.icui, iiaimeu, lysenterv. Col.,. Wind iu the Bowels, and all Internal Pains Travelers should uiwifys carry a bot Relirf vL-iti. ue o; Jtuuivny7 iteuUy sickness or pains from change of water It is better than French Brandy or Bittern timulant. as a st. VTR AJV1) AL'fc. Fever and Ague cured for. fifty cenu There is not a remedial agent fn this world that will cure Fever and Ague, and al other Malarious, Bilious, Sca-lt, Typhoid Yellow, and other Fevers (aided bv kAn' HEALTH 1EEAU1Y!! STRONG AND PURE RICH 131 uob INCKEAoE OF FL EcJR A NI WEIGIiTi CLEAKfeKlN AND BEAUflFUL COM I'LEXLv L iiEI To ALL ik. m a. n ut a - s yAESAPAiilLLIAN RESOLVENT HAS OLjAiis; cOC2UiCK, SO KAFIu'aJJU; THE CHANGES THE BODY UNDEK GOES, UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF THIS TKULi WONDEKFUL MEDI CINE, THAT id WtiSflit is Si'in nil l U THE V R EAT- ii LUO I V URiFI IAI . Every drop oi the fi:'r.pariliian Kesoi vtnt communic-atcs Ihrt.uhthe . Blood oi the bife.oin nc Vi-,r of Ufo; for it re pairs tho wast s i the hotly with new aud ; !'ULC . uiatt:"ai. fccioiida, Syphilis, Con gumption Gland ujardte, biccrsin the .'J.UUIU, IlJUJOl-b. i0()('K n th Glands and other pai ls ot the syrtem, 8ore r,ycs, -btrumorous .iieharices from the and tuc worst luriub oi Skin diseases, .rijptiOi3S, W JSoj cs, Scald JKad, King, vvonu. MiitRii-feum, Erysipelas. Acne Chemistry, and u fw Hkm1 U6e will prove to any person .using it lor either oi these forms of disease its potent power to cure them. 1 -If the paiitnt, d.tiJj. hvcomir reduced lj the UhMen and decoiupotiitioii that it eoa.iuu ti.j progressing, sueceeds in arrest in thtsc wiistes, and repairs the same with new material made from healthy blood aud this the Sarsaptfrilliau will and docs secure a cure is certain ; for when once this leineuy. commences its work ofpuri ncatiou, and succeeds in diminishing the lossol wastes, its repairs will be rfpid, and every day the patient will feel himself growing better ad stronger, the food .di gesting better, appetite improving, and llesL and weight increasing. ; Not only does the Surapariilian Kesol-' vent excel all known remedial agents in .he cure otijhronie. Scrofulous, Constitu Uoual, aua Skiii diseases ; but it is the only positive cure for , . 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Fnrely Vegetable, containing nO mercury, minerals, or deleterous drugs. . 2"Observc the foliowmg symptomJt resulting from Disorders of the Digestive Organs: Constipation, Inward Piles, rnllness of the Blood in the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust ol Jood, Fulhicis or Weight in the 8tomacbi Sour Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering atthePitof the Stomach.' A few doses of RAD WAY'S PILLS will free the system from all the above named disorders. Price S3 cents per 'Box. Sold by Druggists. , READ "FALSE AND TRUE." fiend one letter-stamp to RAD WAY A CO., No. i W arren Street; corner of Church Street, Aew lork. Informations worth thouaandi will be sent you. June 29 iso-U