-I' ? in THE RALEIGH BENTINEL. MMMlklhnpnl Kate AM OfaaaM , FRIDAY, JUSE 18, 1876. . ' ; OUR STATE TICKET. ; , Im ' For Governor': !,' .'.' ' ' " ZEBULON B. VANCE, J i . -- .. .... OF MSCKtSLSBUEO, .1 4 .It. - For Zuultnant Governor tt j THOMAS J. JAIiyiS" i i 1 ' or rrrr. .1 . -1 V J. M. WORT1T, U ... , ... , ' - I For Secretary of StaU: i , I JOSErn A. ENGELHARD,' f; Or VKW HANOYULi .1 . ; '.lll.il s&:-iFor'SM; Audit ; ;. 8AMUEL. L, LOVE, i , , ; v ! or HATWOOD. . I Fr Attorney- General ! ' TnOMAS 8. KENAN, j -"or wtuoh. ' ' j for Supt. of 2ub. 'Instruction: . , J. . C SCARB ROUGH, f - ' T " or johsitojt. . ,('" . .. . J ': : "vj f For Congress 3d District: '- 7 -ALFREDM. WADDELL, Or HKW HAHOVKK. I - For. Congress Ath District: j I justrii l. VAt, AD, Or FBAHKLIB. or Cong res 5A District: GEN. A. M. SCALES, OF KOCKIHGUAV For ConqressGtk District: COL WALTER L. STEELE,5: ftt't Wf.tt?! 6r BfCHXOHI). for Congress 7th Districts , .WILLIAM M. ROBBINS,- -jjt-i orkowAjfiv1!; ";'4 ELECTORS-AT-LARGE: ) , D. G-FOWLE, of Wke, j ' ;u J. M, LEACH, of Davidson.' . ' ' ' DISTRICT ELECTORS : j r -, 2o DisTMcr-JOHN F. WOOTENi - U3 DiffrmiCT JOHN - D. BTAKFOBD, 4th DnmucT-FAR. XT. BUSBEE.I - ; . tat Dwtbict-F. C. BOBBINS, j 6ra Dnrucr-B. P. WABJNO. t ANNOUNCEMENT. , , ' TH rvTCBK Or TUB BBNTINKL. HCTCOD '-to "io i The nndenlgned bavlng purchMed good win and otcrtptionlitU, benby juinoooc ftat, on the first dey of July, they will btue firetle morning ' daily 'and weekly' democrattd , paper under the name of the Sentinel.- , They , . .hereby Infole the eupport and encour- i. w agement .ot "tfJCP10 Carolina, who desire to see permanent ly . eatabllahed at the capital of the - j-. ( i V g wide-awake, ! rigoroo 'demo cratic newspaper, worthy of one of the a L ; nobleat commonweallhe in the south.. la the meantime, the Sentinel will be continued,' daiiy ! eeml-weeVly and ''weeHy,'asatpresentJ;:ji9r5r; if'"" vi -j U The terms oftbo Daily, and j JTeekly '' Senllnet will remain' tenchanged. . ; ff:' ,-::ry;. cEO.A. SMrra. I C W, F. BATCH ELOR. - ?. . TV r-"" f t i ; .us..- The nominations on the stale ticket , are made. . What now la the duty of ijV'Vttae eonseryatiTe party iln answering 1-. tbhi qoestion, It is needless to adrert to t .the f great j Importance of J success In j ;j I fifoVemberl That ta confessed, and it is OTerwhelmlog in IU necessity. Atut the means , whereby success Is to' be v d. consiuerauon., Ane noiumees mi uieu " ?t whom we can trust, and in whom we ( bare perfect confidence." The pisiform is' (ishort, sharp and decisive." It istee the -live, principles or the present day, discards unmeaning plati tudes, and grapples with the "supreme exigencies of the preseat hour., It is enough to bind together, to hold and fuse into one common mass, all the ele- 1 menta in our state that are In sympathy with the determined purpose of the .conserraUre party to secure for the tUte a rigorous administration of , the laws upon just and bonost principles n the words of Qoverapp Vance, to : " conduct the government "upon the basis of (he tea couamandcDenU. isatoneuung u ceeaiiu. uarmdny of ideas Is good, but hearty co-operation snd earnest work ia more eSTeetual ihsn snght else for the aeoomplishment of our purposes. One idea ought to pervade the.entire party. Our differences were settled by the action of the convention. Henceforth we are bound not only by party fealty, but by our hopesf or oar- selves and posterity to the most vigor .. ouji euun iar our vmnj puooob. as oiw man we must labor earnestly, Intel)1 gently and persistently for victory, radical party ia completely organ"! for it needs only to pass the wordong the lines and it standi ready to ftecute the ardors of their leadem WIat they do from blind, nnreasening oedienoe, we exhort conservatives to' do from hearty and thorough conviction of the fact that it ia the beet means of insnr- inor uAeeML Two watch words are all that ia neoessarythe first ia "steady, theseoondk "forward." With steadiness, which gives each one our confidence In others, and gnaraateea an earnest sup port from ail wno are our, menus wim a consistent presaiDg on, advancing ever to the grand triumph which s waits as, if we can win it there can be no unrea sonable doubt of victory. But work is necessary, indispensable. Our leaders most be assisted. They are our eer vants, fighting only to secure our inter ests. . Our rewards are not for them unless they can achieve for ns the good that we desire, to obtain. We cannot, therefore, separate their cause from our. The election of Vance and the state ticket ia only to be hoped for, to be worked for, to be accomplished, because they are onra, and because they are rep resentatives of those principles which deserve and ought to command success. RESULT OF RADICAL MISKULE. The public debt of North Carolina up to the year 1868, when the present con stitutioa was adopted, and the supse- quent radical misrule, may be classified thus: - .v - - - - J. Bonds iMtied before the : war eauea -via dobqi - 10,373,900.00 a,27,oo6.oo 3. Bonds tuned since Iks war. but under acts paia. ea oaiore 8. Bonds k sued during the : war for Internal Imple ments 4. Bonds Issued sines the war for funding interest ; and matured bonds , 1,191,000.00 1,417,000.00 ToUL 114,815,1000.00 ' la plain word the state debt of North Carolina, aar Januarr 1. 1 868. may i ba given la round figures at 115,000,000. 00, while Got. Brogdea In his but mes sage to the Legislature puts the total debt np to Oct. 1, 1874, at '938.021, 348.05, of which he says 914,935,930.00 is the special tax bonds issued In 18G8 by the first radical Legislature, ' To make it still plainer, counting tbe interests accrued since Oct. 1, 1874,the debt of North Carolina has nearly trebled Is nearly three times as much under eight years republican rule. than what it was up to 1808, from the foundation of the government, and the debt ia rapidly Increasing by the accu mulation of interest And to with the national debt, which In 1860, was only sixty millions of dol larsis now 92,289,000,000.00. , When these figures are thrown at the republi can politicians' they lmniedlately begin to shout "Kn-Klux," "Jeff Davia' and the ConfoderacT." endeavoring to throw the responsibility upon the de mocratio party. This aU nonsense, Host of the : stealing has been done since the ; war closed. -The 'rings" that bave been swindling the govern ment, robbing it of millions and millions of dollars, have come into existence since 188.- '.- I" In 1868, when W. W. noldon was elected Governor, and with the adop tion of the preseot constitution, radical torn blossomed Into full luxuriance In North Carolina, and tinea then they have been flourinhiog like green bay trees on that sweat of our hard-worked people. ' That is where Die money has gone. Goldsboro Messenger. s , POLITICAL NOTES. The Boston Post has found "The Little Unknown.",: It's Fred's baby. , General Seldea Conner, the one- leesred Governor of Maine, will be unanimously nominated by the repub licans for re-election. 1 lion. Herschel V. Johnson, of Geor gia, who was on the Presidential ticket with Douglas, Is urged for the demo cratic nomination for Governor of that state.1 -. I Governor Haves, of Ohio, is vigor ously poshed by ex-Senator Brownlow, of Tennessee, as a man with an un questionable record, i , Some of the democratic papers have been Ditching into Bristow's war re cord. All riubU Now trot out Til den'a war record, if yon dare. Some months ago General ", Grant, when angered at Mr. Blame for ' steal ifig bis anti-Catholic thnnder, said "Blaine will not be in anybody's way.1 Is it not probable that the President knew all about Jim s bond transactions, and knew that they would be sprang on him at tue proper time r The Chicago Times objects to Sena tor Bsvard lor .'resident because ne has so many relatives. Dli family,' it says, "comprises the greater por tion if the noDulation of Delaware, and his brothers in-law lap over iatolhel surroundins sUtet of Maryland: New t . i K.nn.rL.n;. ' sffcaovrv auM A vuaai M"s"ssse"eiSBssBWMsMsWMWeM 'jQJH BEFORE ELECTION. I jjrroa Tr.r. W Tof I ww ijonsiilered by all parties to be onA(Jbemoet unportant presidential ooai our i tkation. both foreign and domeatic. Hour years at lewt, aometimes ..m.n Tears, while thev commit to I hanili of a single individual n euot Jons nower of pstronatre aud iDfiuanoe I I l.V. - I. ,11 imuIlT tnthA . the jg, of tte whole community. But the rspidly sp nroschinff election ia invested by the circumstances oi u" mu wm ejal tignoanv. It is cosoodad on all Manila that our counrrv nai reacueu inmlnff-Doint in ita career, one of the crises when a choice ia to be made be- lnn two raJiillv oeDosila and ineon- suitcnt causes, and a policy felt to be grievous by many ia to be ecafinned and sgnsvated in its effects or a new policy is to be introdncea. We are aware that it is a ounmon re tort of the newspaper wnUrs and oi popular speakers to represent every nniiticai movement wmca w" weU-being of their party, or; their own bold or prospect of owoe, aa a great crisis, bnt it ia in no eynpatny witn anon. thaS we eroreas out amw ox the maimitude , of tbe nreseni contest. Homethinff more than the in terest of the ins and outs i concerned ia it-eomethinff more than the ascendency of this action or tfcai. It is, if w may so express it, aa orgamo labor, and tbe re sult will be a very positive, unmistaka ble good or era. xne issue tspiainiy made at this eleUion ' whether the do- fenders of speonation. frsud and eor- ruption are to continue in tbe control of Um tederai govenment,or wnetner uiey are to eonaent to bke a subordinate po sition in its lair, soononmoal and honest administration ia the fdture. We: do not moan, however, to diseasa that itsne here and at this time. . Vhatever has occurred to us to any has already been said by others, and we state it simply as aa occasion ur urging nmn au wuo are voters the necessity and e duty pt making up tiieir minds upon mat issue, and of voting upon it aooordicgly. j It Is not an uncommon tbiar to Bear people, who are intelligent ant well-to-do in the world, say that they take DO Interest in politics, that one ptrtv as Rood aa another for them, and teat they do not care the snap of a finger what party succeeds, utners again, ei-gust- ed by tbe low tone of political life, the abuse and vnliraritv In which it abounds. by tbe shameless falsehoods circulated In respect to the character or candidates. steadily refrain from all manner of par- . ; l .f J 1 . 1 uciuauun, aou uu uut sv uiucuas caif u their ballots. -. ' - How many of these kinds there may be, it Is impossible to tell ; but if any one will recall the number within his Immediate acquaintance : be will tee, that the aggregate must be very great. Bouse up the clergymen and pro- lessors in colleges and schools, who conceive that it is improper for them to enter the political arena; the manu facturers and merchants who are too much engaged in their employments to give! time to anything else t tue me chanics and farmers-of ' nuiet habits, Who dread the turbulene of political campaign, and it will be found that together they constitute no inconsidera ble part ot the body politic, i Borne of these delinquents are, of conrse, kept away from the polls by illness, others by engagements at home or abroad, but the majority, we have no doubt, by their own voluntary InduTerence and neglect. The effect is that the polls are controlled by Interested or Inferior persons, who get themselves, or their fellows, into important ' trusts, and thane the laws and the administration of the laws, to suit their own debased purposes. They Increase the taxes, they dispense jobs, they peculate in the public funds, they degrade the enure Business and character of office, and arrange elections to as to secure a kind of he reditary tenure - for themselves and friendsrTBui suddenly, by "H0ui9tre mendous malfeasance, the community is aroused, and it looks with extreme surprise upon JfcfcenomrtjViL je-hicb abuses hare been carried. Why. however, should it be sur prised t was anything else to he j ex pected when all .the legislation ia the land is done by bankers, merchant, lawyers, doctors, and doers of odd jobs generally.' who from choice prefer to make a living in any other way than by hard labor. Was anything . else to be expected but riot, mismanage ment and misrule with such a combi nation of non-laborers at the head of affairs in the state or federal govern mentr As well might the farmers and mechanics expect to see the sun shine at the hour of midnight as to look for better and more healthful legislation until they are more fairly represented in the councils of the nation. If the best men of society, well Informed and upright men, withdraw from a partici pation In public affairs, leaving them to any and all aorta of cliques, or to pro fessional Jobbers, who manage primary meetings and conventions, have they any one to blame but themselves : If the clergyman and the scholar, the peaceful mechanic and the honest la borer refuse to take aa active part in nominating and choosing good, boneat. upright and reliable men from amongst themselves, thev cannot complain that the ballot stuflers take advantage of tlmir ramiasneas.i, n. . Now at all times, and In every com rovralty, lrmust be that those who are interested In - good government and wise laws far exceed those who are are interested In bad government and unwise laws. : The otuce-eeekers and office-holders, the schemes and jobber. who prefer to make a disnonest living by plunder rather than an honest one by work, are always tue lew compered wiibtbe rest. - ' I ia an uncivilized and dissolute so ciety indeed in which the rogues are in the majority : bnt if the bonester sort abandon nolitios altogether, the togae rirtually beoome th" majority. Though few as to number they are the many as to influence. They are the real, effective government of society, snd tue taieai, tbe virtue, the capacity, to which i theoretically impute the actnrd control of affairs, sink into submission and in significance. We have spoken of those who abstain from politics- as spt to be among the more intelligent and worthy aaases. 1 bo must qualify that adiwasipn to a 1 certaia extent. ITiey may be inteiu- - . c in inwir irennni m-imum wi w - tj.iii.i ... lr,,Tw,rint i of s democrats socwtv ia, . . ... . i . ff I i A l.rfVAV annt-iil It r gent, but they certainly are nos oou cientious. o man who comprehend the nature ot our domocrsuo me can SESSS that while it the exertion of I mod and beneficial foroe. it slso funuahos a wider field for the display of evil power." Its governmen onnuing its action to those few simple and pri marr inncnons wnico w w p- tioa of individuals and no further ; there ia opened an at moat unlimited arena for the encounter of the opposing elements mary functions which look to the protee- M . m- 9 M St. . .AU nf human nature, i Destructive and malignant paaaiona are unloosed by the side of the more generous quauuea - noranoe and falsehood, and seirisuness, ara tnttad. in mortal combat, against intelligence and virtus : and. in the eonteniDlation of the varied shocks, the niuid, which is not araiy act npou ww bsse of an indos tractable faith in the goodness and troth of God, often mourns amid the impulses oi imr mmx How immeaeurably important it ia, then, that every wise, every upright man, in anch a auoietr. should wield every ener gy that is given him in confronting and srrestine the doern-of wrong, and in es- Ublialuug the right against in possi bilitT of future asdsultf In other civilised nations, which are differentir constituted in Germany, rranoe. and sven jngiana iok examine, it may not be a matter of importance to the individual whether he interests him self in public affairs or not, controlled, as these nations are, by monaroha, or oligarchs, his individual opinion, to rhichhecan give no effective expres sion, may possess but blue weignu aim in this country it is otherwise. Opinion ia everything here ; the opinion of the least man has some foroe, because every thing is here discussed in open public assembly, and nearly everything decided bv the free ballot, xnere are no nereoi- tary classes educated for the purpose to whom we may confide our 1 political statesmanship. We bave retained that function to ourselves. We are our own governors. We undertake to manage and pilot the ship of state on onr os n responsitmuy, and wo cannot avoia mui undertaking, we cannot slink away from that responsibility without incurring the guilt oi a criminal non-periormanoe oi The rather or a lamuv wno saouiu allow bis" servants to eat np Lis sub stance and squander the patrimony of bis children ; the man or Diuincss, who should never look into the conduct of bis clerks until they bad ruined him bv fraud or extravagance, would be universally reprobated as a very fool ish man, and yet such a man is nor. oue whit more reckless or mora Immoral I wait Lua viusua wuu vujuja su vcuig nant riirht of smTraffe and omits its use. bunrage Is the rudder or the sute it ia its providence it is that which guides and animates as, and for any man to forego it, la not omy 10 commit political suicide for himself, but to prove recreant to his highest and noblest obli gation to his fellow man. -' Uow .frequently nave we ncara, m late vear. of the deseneracy of our pol- Iik-s The tone and vigor of public sentiment," It Is said, has laiien -we impellinjr motives of great parties are no longer- principles, but spoils-Hur i resiacnia are no more TiaanioKiooa and Madliona ; our Seuatora are dema- Koeues, who for a petty personal tri umph can betray an emttsre to servi tude : and our representauf es, who find Urge constituencies to applaud their do ings, and larger tactions to shelter them from the due penalties of public lustice and public scorn, are not a whit better. Look at tbe Benate of the United States a body which in ita palmy days wasoneoitne most oigmnea ana re spectable of legislative assemblies, now evincinir a tenacity and meanness of party spirit wholly unworthy of it. Ad mitting this we repeat the question, who ia to blame? uur position is that they are to blame who but and will not pre vent it The community itself, which refuses to exercise and enforce its dis crimination in the choice of publio offi cers and in the determination of publio policy, cannot ascribe such a condition of things to any stronger cause than its own previoas poJiuoai ..indiserenoa. While men capable of forming intelli gent opinions and capable of influ encing the general mind allow their ab sorption in business, their indolence or their disregard of the vital oonsequenoes of political action, to keep them from forming opinions and from." expressing those opinions bv tbe effective asenev of the ballot-box, they mast expect to see publio stations occupied by a degen erate class of statesmen, by persons even who sre not entitled to the name of statesmen at all, but are the merest schemers snd self-seekine; traders in politics. The functions of government on which to much of the physical and moral welfare of society depends must be exercised by somebody ; they do not execute themselves ; they are applied either by upright or vicious men, and it remains witn the people to uetermine to which of those they shall be commit ted. . , , A X ASJsTKB. COUTHERN POUCT-HOLDKB. An Insurance Journal devoted to ths inter est of Poliey-holdera. Contains all ths In surance literature of the day. Only Insur ance paper hi .North Carolina. Treats of both Lifs aad Fire Insurance, expoatnr wildcat companies snd commending the strong ones to Ua people of North Carolina, ths paper for those interested bt Insurance. guhacriptloB Si. 00 in adTanca. Advertise- saent Inserted st reasonaus rates. , , Address, JNO.C. HUTSON, . a.Oitorsni d Proprietor, Baleigh, M. septltf N OSTII CAROLINA WAKS COCNTT n tws acraafoa ooust, Februarr, Joseph D. PoweU plaintiff apsta afary M. Alien, William U. jr. rerreu, Klcnara Ferrell, Jamee w hltiry and outers, noeeca Inp for nartitioo of land. to William U. f. Terrell, one of the da- feadaata above named, who Is not s resident of this State. Toa are hereby required to appear at ths office of lha Clerk of the Superior Court for the County of Waks by tbe Slat Say of March next, lsTo, and answer toe eompiaini tied in said office, of the plalnUH will apply to tbe Court for ths relief demanded m said Mmnlaiat- c - I w- Bituwtvrt 1 - I w. H. SUilil'Ui VWI. Mooss dt OATUse aad Uarwooo plaintiffs Attssiiins.. - - ATEST XKWS I BATED HIS BACON Havtnf salted two hsndred hogs, ws are prepared ig pu oruers tor noma maaa swoon ot all kinds at P. a CHBI3T0FJIIRS CO.'S, WUmlDgtoB street, sear vwyocales. 1 mmIbI mnnl mirtlinfl. B ALLAUU & uu.t OEKCBJtli HHUIHIH UIBHUtl AXD tBALEBB 19 j GRAIN, BIDES, WOOL, TOBACCO, Rop4,Zgn, Butter. Cfceew, Dried Fruits, U.MH1. Beaoa. Poultrr. Flour, Ver etamea, xc, vc , a.'-. . WABKHUUeis IW7 A WM . BBOAB JT? , VuihAV&VFBlA, I aprd t-wm ' ' ' i B?pcd::Pt3riScra ' .' ";.,.v tuara fJcrcfula in Us Yarlouo Forma, ,'j m ii ih',Ji seen as v's Csatsrptloa b I'J EvHer sfcot, Eabrcwseat C snd UlceratiM sf ns biasosj jomki, uoass, Klincj--, V'.xui, Chresle RhsaauthfS, " IN ALL ITS FORMS DISEASES OF WOSirtf, tern ifAffttU, M ITndat. Litr Om- OEXntAt DA3 IIEAiTE, aadstttHssseioftaa ' Zt ts a Psrfeet Bsnorator. MraOSAB ALIS jra41 tes rvcty kiI oftmu aal had UhClslieLnt law 1 saUssT3tstoahalihy-isw , -prajadss Us sUjLhsJt ilOo?: . - : -T tflt Is ant t sr. t'-raea EemsCr. i Tbsrtltlisoftrfar.hhlssMcarimhis Ssrvsadsach XtUu. , -v aseosB-.J.Jiy tks .Usdleal" ? ef rS J TSsty Tna!i!i f sir Bm( Cea. rrrot tnttaMBUls r-r it awrksMa caKj, sas 'rfustiuus Aui.o"IoxU.tt7a. , .N t rasraaaa oat sv lDa.J.J.UVRERClviCO, SO, 2tiftM4r street, , , . 7r? W-e ty trasslxlt rrerywJtxa. J CUP Of GOOD TOdCL. A noted Eefftbh Traveler says, touch Tea is drank in Kniula than Jn AngiaaatM dlffsresoa Is bo probably owing to tbe Ovce u4 trnnnrtAtkB but that the Russians buy tbe beat lea frown In China, litUa of that kind going to oteer eounwwa. ;- i TUSBVSSIAN TEA COMPANY offer In this market a limited quantity of this T. T, 1. ahanlntolv Pun. - 1 Bent DT maU, prepay, 1 id. csmam, lb. tl St.-To fauedaee this Ta a libera) sample sent for 25e. KUBcIAN TKA CO., "7. '.I .. uu 1W1 rsai. Bt., fi. X . Ji GILES' LininunT IODIDE OF AMMONIA 'Gnas' lonroa or Ahvoiu u, tm mr Judgment, ths beat remedy for neuralfrla sret put oaiors us pauiic. 1 oare oeeo ainiciea with this diseasa for 83 years, and never until I fell upon Mr. Giles1 remedy did I end any assured relief. I take pieasnre hi taymf this, tnasmaeb as 1 desire always to be a bens- factor of ths human family. - Wit. T. CORBIT. Chm'n of the Methodist Church Extension." Bold by all Prurolst. lepot 461 KlxtS Arenas, N. T. Only 50 eenU snd tl sbottls. rarssis oy i - I MCUU.LWaYCO., JanlMwdtswtw. Balelsb, N. C. D. 8. Wait X O. K. WAirt -NEW$PMNGG00DSJ JtXAJtlNI PRICKS AT D 8; WAITT 1 BRO o : " f Deaters in Ready " Hade Clothing ' For Men, Fouths, Boys snd Children 1 Stylish. Durable sad chess . 4 Burs to please. - ' . , DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, Notions, Hobikby, Gext's Fuajr- isiima Uoods, GdbvES, Nkck . Wear, Coixar8 and Cuffs ; , KlBBONS, EoaiNas AXD j ' IKSKBTIONS, : IUE1TT1I FIKE WHITE SHIRTS Also ss CNLAUNDRIED SHIRT which wt , guarantee to be ot Wsmsutta Muslin ' sad Richardson's Unea well'' J : mads, warranted to Bt. ' ' : ' ' ' -t( - Only gl.00 spleos.': ' v ' . ; ' 8UOE3, BATS, BOOTS AND CAPS, UmhrellaaTranks, Vs'laea, Rubber Clothes, . Coat and Caps, Ac, Ac. Wsretwra oar thanks to our friend s sad former patrons for past t btots snd -Sol Id t a esatinuaUaa' of ths same. Our goods will be sold for cash snd s vary small profl'. Call and se 1 us St ths same old stand, two doors above tbe market east side Fsyettertlls St. . . D. 8.WAITT BBXX mar lSdSia ' M BLvrt B. Cahraa, Aasxwci L, Castss. CAItTUlt St, CATtlEU I ATlUKNYo AT LAW, ! . Asaavnxa, . a " '' rraetle U ths-Snnesms Conrt st BsXak. ssd In ths But and Federal Covts of Wef tars North Carolina 1 Claims collected oa an eoaati sf tha lUta. - ' n w . nr . . .4. . AWerk Our WfWTERN IiOUDKIf. : 1 Cornice tt and Uraptiic llhiuvy of Amtrt can that Lire loo tEaiiS AGO. ItT" thrUIInK conflicts ( Bed anJ WblM low. KselUuii aaTeoiarva, vapnvuva, roray, Sroula, FloBeer women anil bfrv. Iadlaa war-oaths. Camp lite, and fpo u. A book (or old aod' young. Not a dull page. No eonipeUitoD. E EOTmom Agenia araatea errwRera. umuwa i.irealart rrM. .i.C MeCOBlV o. ri.ilada.. Pa., jeite l&-w. AGiVrd MaaUdforTltg CtXTfcXNI 4 L BOOtoy BlUCKAFHr.criks Uraa of tbe rrest Bleu of our lirst 1(A) years . Urnd fur circulars. V. W. ZIEGLEB A CO., I bllada Pa. or Chicago UL Li.l-.i""' . i (.. 73 .' aulserlbers to one day. H-t IbLAiSitermrypap(.re Oulylt.SOa Tar. Three $10 ebromoa fra. Mcstom aroBSUUt, Faba., fulla., ra. ; s MIND BEADING. WTO AOV ANT, FaadDatioo, Sottl C banalaa, lleemcrlsni. asd MarriairaOatde, akowina; bow rithrr . may faschiats sod gain tb lots and aOectbm of soy person thi-jr choose lostaDtly, )U pares. nr sun w cis. nnuist IO., l.w e. 7th 8L, Phila. Pa. apl U-iw. , WANTED , AGENTS For the Great CENTENNIAL Cnitihiu HISTORY ts the close of the Bnt 109 Tssrs of our Ka Uonal iDdepeadeace, fnctudtncsD sreouut of the coming Uraud Cenlenolal Kxbibltioii, 700 pages, ana enrrsvioga, lrow pride, quii-k sales. Extra tenna. read fur rlrruUn. ft Vf. ZisoLsa 4) Co., PbUa. Fa. or Uk-agD Ctnght. Csldt, Botrieieu, 11J all Throat DittiHi, WtlliTarbolld T-MMi. '! PTJT T7P OKI.T IM'ULIT BOXtf. A. TRIED AND SLUE KEMEDY For sals by Dnierlsta reserally, and PbUadelpbta, Pa. Fuller. Warren & Co., MANUFACTURE R3 OF ; . STOVES, RANGES AND FbliNACES, - raa tbobot asbokthkt w trw uaukt. Our aew wood an coal cooking stoves 4 Golden Crotrn, Reporter PiniTOF'IG.- OUTIIERH GEU. AMD TUB FAiSOOa TEVARTMUPROYED Meet ths wants of every dealer. Correspondence Invited. Price list an.l cat anon antfleatfnii - ana . 1 L.LLEK, WARKES & CO, Water street, New Fork mh!44w TTn ADVANTAGES WE ENJOt J $ the result. of a long established and successful business enables us t o offer fd "cements that maket this fcnos enenf tyorthy of ATTENTION. Impostfrg ur foreign goods di fjet esriw'r?irg many heading styles of Amsraas fabrics, employing hj bctt .-.h't-Wtlcot in the production oTJTjiorftri HrJlEOTiTUnt progresV our mot'.o, wo ekin to lead tbe mar set f.r"' " - :" " READY-MADE CLOTHING, of "which we keep full lines of aU grades, for Men and Boyl In CUSTOM WORIC our p oductt are unsurpaned fof uaU ify, workmanship and elegance. In GLNTLE&S ' FURNISHINQ GOODS our-tJoik it constantly large aoi sesso-ic'ola.- We are the tola rrtanu. fctu.;t -f t?io' '- ' ! which we tupply both ready-made anJ to order. - - -; , Pricet uniformly low. Gentlemen visiting New-York are requested to call and have their ifieaiurci1 recorded upon our books System of Self-Measurement. an? jTic information prorrptly furnishid vhen desired. (- . ; AcJdrot: P. O. 0c 2256, H. ' HF.VLIN & CO. D O 1 T'l D K I A L 800 toJOQ husbeU per wiiek recelTtd and sold cheap for cash only at 1 GATTI8 A JOXF.3 QUAIIiS!, CIIAIUS! . A larre tot of Cbuntrv Made Cbsrrs in sold at low Bgnres at . (j, CHKIdTOrHERs A COS , WllminstoBwtm-t. A CKHT8 for beat chance tn tbe wort.! to J ooln jnonay Address L. t. BAj ruikti t o, riswara, n, 4. J U L.I JO t?A.Ufti w l v. . .. J

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