u
. RATES OF ADVERTISING: '
" ' '
" ' ' ' " " ' " " ' hi in .
E-i ZtEZmnrGEB, J.:D.,; Editor.
J-
... r ' ; ; - i it - i i xi. i 1.1 i w .3 7tvv i rvi a i t m mm i ' - ... l--- : t a i t . . - rr . - - -
,J I'V . ri V C M r LJV - J.V. Mr 10 ! - : 1 - - - A
f
?KS OP JSUBSCIPTlOKt
.tW fill''.
2fp4CaA in Advance, j :
5G.00
. 3.00
' 1.60
i.ii:B0
'Three Monilis
i FUENITUEE & BEDblifG
, y JS XHS COSISTINO IN PABT py '
XIrron, .
Pwlor -
Fmraflare,
Rockers,
Socu, .;; :
StsiuUy -Tables,
'
it 35
JRw f U7uteaml amd rtl mil ty
C. A. NELSON & CO.,
Crarea Street, BEwBEEI, S. C
; : L WobUcott &1 Tinker,
TTt on hand and for sale at Wholesale and Retail, for
, cash, ajarse lpt of
COUNTRY LAUD, BUTTER, CHEESE;
Uackwheat, Graham and Family Flour of all grades, i j
Call and examine them.
JlayiUf.
"Merchants' Club House,"
. v CItATEX STSEETy :
Near the Post Office,
- NEW BERN, N
Cv;
"PERSONS coming to New Bern, Mill rfnd this a neat
x and comfortable place to stop at. jSyery attention
i : - bar -
A .
Always supplied with the hest of Wines, Liquors, and
With all the market will supply
LODGI&GS,
, -' Unsurpassed.
1
1
WM. L. PALMER.
Proprietor,
New Yoi-Ifc Bakery.
it
HAHN &i CO., 1 j;
... M'POLLOE STREETj NEW BERN, N. CC, ;
. '" '-''- ' . ,; -i . . f j .
'Aoncfo our Patrons and the public' in general.
Jul that having fitted up our i i
-v !: :,4':;
BAKERY IN THE BEST MANNER,
' -v.-i " i; i
art now prepared to furnish our customers with i
n 1 '
1 ' :
GOOD BREAD, PIES AND CAKES
f all descriptions We will also furnish at the shortest
notice, Ornamental Cakes of all descriptions, to
PARTIES, WEDDINGS, &C. I
Tendorlnff our thanks to our customers, and solicitin
t pontinuanwof the aame, we remain respectfull;
May J-l-tf.
M. HAHN & CO.
To the Public.
- .... w:
. ? J. W. VAUGHN, i
. . Cor. South Front and Hancock Street. 1
J8; pajing the "bighlst market prices for all kinds of
MANUFACTURERS' STOCK, ! ' :
' OLD IRON, I '"
" 4 " : " OLD BRASS,'
r -,t: ; OLD LEAD, !
RAOS, &c.t Ac
MayS-l-tf.
OLD COPPER,
EVKUSOX & CO.,
ntine; Distillers'
' , Millers Wharf, Union Point. " i
Also WHOLESALE and RETAIL GROCERS,
I r . F(xt of Middle et opposite the Market, i i
,MayJ4NEW BBRN' N. . j .
. x . I. . r -
HEIWOOD'S
PHO TOG RAP H ROOMS
CHATEX STREET,
d; L - i..-,.-,- : .' . . NEW BERNE, N. C,
n 'tOrroswa Nnr Bsssts Rxfcbucah Office.)
PHO TOG RAPH8, A M B R O TYPES,
A Terythlnfii pertaining to the art done in the
- Instructions giTeain the art. 1 . 1
" Stock for aale and entire outfits furniehed for small
advance on Nw York coat ;v .'. , ;--rc - u
j Mayur, ; , - : . . .. . ,
1
SOO Bbls. Rockland; lAmeJ7?
Jwox icircdaiidforaiebT ! sri
, i .. ' . :-g , P.MEBWINACO v
May 80 la-tf. '.l ' n PoUok bU New Berne.
TJTaUor .West, :
f (Successor to) '
, - . v . !' L EDWIN, WEST, J
SO OK STORE
ASV-
V IS E W.S DEPOT.
" ' No. 80 Poixok Stkebt. , ,
Mnly2-.if.- ulr.' '
E. N. WRIGHT, & CO., ,
r 84 and 20 Peosle'a Market.
tfEWi njEJiir, 'nr. c
s t
PJlOCERIESj ; FORWARDING
Oommissioii Merchants;
i PATRON, " CapSvEPTilA ROSE, r
! XI IOLAj' : v,; m if,. JOSEPH ROSE,
I WILL leare marke .Wharf erery . 8aturday for Wash
j f fincton N. a and Hyde County.: , - !
I Oood8 cnt to our care will be" dclircrtd with dispatch.
P OUT MAR Y SAW-MILL: -Tfr'ptlo
of 'LmiBER kept constant on
- ' hand and for sale
iiailii1?1? r)H cash. : -
' ' " :'f ! rs,!v-: - V.-.J 'rill ' ..- 1 CI
5 1 '-:.: i-);;eW - - . - - . -- ... ' 1 , '" .' I ';.-. ', -. .. . . . .1
.yol.IHo.30.
'J' !
TUc Fate of Maximilian.
Maximilian has been srint. lw WI ... At
TIT : w " V
; What shall we say of the justice or in
justice of this act? . ;r U
' Ever and every whcfe,r we are opposed
to capital punishment; whether for hiffh
"v f w ueuier upon small offeud
eft or great. We hold with Jeremy
put a man to is to hang hini." : Wo di-
' vo WW1BL USB Vftll Mtl
au-e l ine universal abolition of the scaffold
uiuimwniicnon ot the deatl
Mcuaity., Hin some oi the. States of the
American TTn
, --.rr oyblciu oi puuilC
iumuuufc prevails; we hope to see it
prevail m t alL Hie hangman's 1 rope is
not an ; instrument of
relic of barbarism. .Twelve soldiers shoot-
ing at a man s bare breast in a prison-yard
u a.pwificie agreeaoie to Uhristiani
'if States&and Nations, as ;soon as
possiuie, nave done with all thtee ghastly
acisoi aeath. .... :
But, meanwhile, it is a solemn fact that
me aeath-penalty, either by -hanging or
7 "w""s is uie common mode, prac!
tjced by the civilized world, of punishhin
the perpetrators of capital crimes. e
The death-penalty is the Drevailinor lorn
m the United States and in Mexico. Thi$
oeing the case, on wliat criminals shall
mis law oe .executed? Shall obscure
culpnts taste the bitteraess of a bitter
iaw?, ana illustrious ofienders go free?
Shall a great hation, in meting '"out the
punishment of death, say to the world.
o-uu inuiuurer yi a man snail be hun
r
uuu me assassin ot a nation shn
pardoned?" I
be
teentn century have been Jefferson Davis
and Maximilian. The one Was miiltv nf
- v fei ctticoo viiiuiuais oi tne nine-
treason aorainst Ki
It; it is -ever justifiable to punish . any
criminal with death, the American Gov
ernment ought to have executed Jefferson
Davis, as the Mexican Government has
executed Maximilian. The onlyvindicaA
tion possible r to the American ftnw:
mentfor its release of Jefferson Davis is
a consistent policy by the Government'
juture, oi non-punishment ot any and
all criminals-by death. The esnar
Jefferson Davis onorht.
abolish the death-penalty forever from
the Republic. Since ; Uie greatest of
American criminals has gone free, theti
hereafter, while time shall last. lf. nA
other and lesser wretch ever suffer death.
We deprecate in Mexico, as in Ame-
nua, ine iaKing oi me by the state. We
believe that, morally considered, no gov
ernment on earth has a, risht to stretch n
man s neck from a cross-beam, or to shoot;
at his heart in a public square. Butl
such being the law of Mexico, if
under it has ever proved himself entitled,
to ieei its eage, tiiat man was Maximilian.
If. the Mexicans were ever justified in
nanging or shooting any criminal , they!
,tJ uJfucu. 114 luti execution ot Jllaxi
milian. Not a .villain lying, in any dun
geon in vera Jruz. tor whom thA W
halter is now waiting, could ever be iust-l
v ""xo. " iucAicu ii iuaximuian had
been pardoned. : . . '
This ambitJoiis foreigner was no doubt
an accomplished and amiable gentleman ;
but he was not shot for being a gentle
man ; he was : shot for being a brigand, a
filibuster, a pirate, a nsurner. a desnnt
we was an ahen .who entered Mexico
with ah invading army; and sought there
with to overturn the Mexican republic,
and on its ruins to erect an empire. :The !
, - r "
crime which he committed against Mexi
co was just as heinous as if he had at
tempted it against the United States or
Canada. We admit that, if his villainy
had; been s perpetrated: against our own
government, he would probably have
been bailed j but if it had been against
Canada, he would probably have , been
blown, like a Sepoy, from the mouth of
a gun. . . . .
, If Gen.. Washington had any right to
hang Major Andre, the Mexican Govern
ment had ten thousand times more right
to shoot Maximilian. ' - ,
CCTackof the twelyo rifles which
uttered this Austrian's dMtWo.OT,f
which we hope has forever, put an'end to
the divme nght of kings " on.this con
tf?en;a needful .proclamation .to the
Old World that crowned heads are in
truders on North American soil and
that foreign bayonets, pointed ;against a
North American peoplei shall be thrust
back into the bosoms of those who bear
them hither.
The army of Maximilian deserved de
feat ; and. its leader deserved deathl Sic
semper tyrannu A7". K Tiidqkiulent.
The Koran does1 not permit the Com
mander of the Faithful to leave his own
dominions; :It is his duty to conquer the
world land jnake it all, Mohammedahahd
EurppeVhas
the soil oi France on one sideband at the
gates of Vienna on the other, and but for
Martel and Sobieski, Paris might have
been juled b - a Moslem Yiceroy But
most; things in this eWorld an be man-,
aged, and to aHow the Sultan "to come to
Paris, it was : only ; necessary o; decree
.the;anhexation of France, , pro tem.'to
the Qttoman Empire; and then, when the
Sultan has finished his "visit, it will be
given ?back again to Napoleon HX bythe
grace of God and the wiU of the French
pyupie, ius ngnuui pwner. :'j i-
. f.
There are thirty. pounds of blood. in tn:e
human frame, and two hundred and fojiy
eght j tpn.es. i -.Women . Have . the . same
number, not including the whalebones -
''' I Jk m aaaa I " 1
NEW
Why lrounff rTncn not 'Marry:
- - Rev, Robert Cer,' the eloquent "Uni
tarian clergyman; recently preached a
sermon in Chicago on ' OurDaily Bread
iri the court bf which he discussed soaal
questions, and explained why young men
do notT marry:- : " ! 'trr'j ; :!
: Wheri one-said lately 'in thVpnenU
of a frank, outspoken young woman in
this city, that Jhe reason why youno- men
did not marry was that their, wives would
?otT ?c intent to begiii to live in a homel v
fashion; after they had beW raised in
luxury, she replied, "the woman1 is quite
as billing asthe: man. to do that, and I
faiQw-of '..no., woman in :tho circle of .my
acquaintance. wlK would not be content
for the; sake of the man she loved, to cast
. mm auuniaKc nis lntercstin
- , i nt 1 hear'a
man livmo-m flintnKno A .
x near-a
his attendance at pkiy and opera ay "I
dare not marry; because . I know no wo
man would ;be content to live , as one
should have to live," I say to myself.it
may be true, but it looks-wry much like
old Adam, who ate the npple and then
turned around and laid tic blame on the
woman. Let this be as it will, here is
the dismal fact staring ns everywhere in
the face, and' in no place r more painfully
than in our own city, hat for social, con
ventional, or still worse reasons, the best
youth of the countiy is held back from
its most sacred duty as well as its most
perfect felicityfalls into that sad mis
take of: a long encasement, in whirh tKo
pain and disappointment bears hardest
always on the. woman ; or. the young man
shuts his eyes and his heart when tho
spirit walking amoncr the frohlh 1,
whispers to him of some maiden, "That
is thy wife," and says, No, not vet fbr
many a year to conic" and so inarrip
at last away on in life, whon imt! i:
, - 7 uuw lUICO
have become set in their own foci,:
and their love is hardly enough to cive
them thn V5n,llv " "V"
; . T r. ,V . " U1 uiucarance to -
ward whnt. i gc mnnv ,.i x i
disposition, until they can become -
r 4jiiiiiiai in i iijii rif t- nn 1
. Self ;reverent and reverencinrr each ' ;
Alike in individualities," .
and so tlie best of the days of the best of
our youth go by and find "I darn not"
wait upon " I would." :
r In the name of all that is sacred, I ask
why this is, and get for my answer. W
cannot afford it.' The young farmer can
anora it on the prairies; the miner on
Superior; the woodman on'thn
- - . - y jl J
the carpenter at his bench: tho rtmUh l
his anvil ; the operative at his frame or!
loom ; the loriarshoreman anil t
That cluster of men down there in Penn
sylvania, and those in' Yorkshire .whose
mere young men were with me long years
ago, lost no time and asked few questions,
because some nie-ht instinr. tu ,
they must do that or worse worso m
any and every way they could look at it;
and so I can remember, as if it were yes
terday, how speedily these found the wife
and went to housekeeping in- one room or
two, as they could manacre it. and irmko
the hammer lincR ith a new musin. and
gradually, got their house and household
goods, and the world has never failed
them, no, ! not for a day: but through
dark future and bright, and sickness and
strength, they have found the deepest
experiences of their life each with the
other,' for Great Ileart and Interpreter go
Micfcuw v" "s pugnmage, aua now
hey : see' their children comincr un to
manhood and womanhood bont. thrm
with the freshness of their own youth in
iieir nearts, and know, though probably
hey cannot telL the deeD content of a life
ordered after the fashion God gave them
when he created them man and woman.'
f'But here are men with noble powers.
with faculties that will ensure them a
greater place, living in the most plentiful
land on the globe, evening themselves
through the years of their youth with
that poor lost tribe of battle-singers, the
loneliest of all those to whom; God has
given a chance, and when you get at their
. i ?. ..i . .
reai reason it is eitner one or the other ot
hese. They cannot believe what, if they
have lived in the country, they have seen
iwenry times to be true ot the birds that
sing about us everywhere ; that new exi
gencies tap new energies, and the little
fellow who, a few weeks ..ago, had quite
enough to do to take care of himself, is
now caring for a nestfulT just as success
fully. They do not believe that the Maker
who has made their life of itself ft natural
prayer for daily bread, has provided that
the answer shall be equal to the , cry ; or
when they pray;1 they mean by daily
bread, board for two' at the Sherman, the
privilege to attend parties' three" times n
week throughout ; the whole " winter, to
take a trip . to; Saratoga An summer, and
miss no chance . at . any , other ; pleasure,
howeverywpensive.", Let it be that of. a
shred of that which makes this fatal fail
ing ln the flower of the youth of America
r the men from HarvanLand t Yale and
all of their fme quality and the thought
ful cannot but deplore the education that
can so'enrse the, fair manhood and cause
the blossoming of youth to come to such
nn unomeiy end
At Rockville ; Centre, Quecn Cp.J .N.
on Tuesday a man went into a photo
graph gallery to have his picture taken,
and his own coat. being rather sedy hd
borrowed one belonging to the operator,
and .while the .artist was engaged the coat
borrower stepped out with tha good coat
on his .back; he is notknown in thft yicin
ity and has not been seeu since the ocenr
rence. !r: J k ' Hk '
of JPrcftfdeut
drew
JoTirtson, r
-Hi
Uilcigh (Nl CO 'copon'dint.b'f
-N. O. HeintlKcan far? H . - I
xneS. O. Itqntltican fyivs:
Andrew' Johnson was bom
in Ihinnnnk
"n M t ssoT Tavern," of winch Lis
mother was tho hdtisckecper or, steward
,i"?1 -Casso, the proL
" r i nqtei, was marrietl to! a
Tnerchant named Stewart in the early part
of the evening, arid the ilance in honor of
f" V nZ progressing at the time
p aw ngnt, -ljie bride, who. lived
j ou . iteu a icw years
a, dresscil the new comer in hfs swad
.lhng clothes. : His father ' JU
icr .1. i r i if m i nii nrM . i : r
son, die, four .years afterward, not from
he effect of injuries received in savin"
f r , . .
I family
i ""1
i fnmiiir i - t
ianuly were. known. as IkaUm,"
becauso tlicy lived in a locality callril
Khamkatte," which is' I suppose, a'cor
raPtlon of the word "1." : t
i ilio original generation were honest'
hardworking laborers, but having no
money wherewith to buy stores, tho sec
pud generation were degraded into' what
is now called "piny woods poor white
tnwn. JMn. Johnson, his mother, was a
woman of mre bbility for one of her 'class,
and through her Influence Jacob Johnson,
his father, was induced to obtain labor in
the city of Raleigh, and when he died
she apprenticed her son, Andrew,! then
about thirteen years old, to a merchant
tailor named James Selby. James Litcli.
ford, who is yet alive, was then the cutter
or foreman of the shop." lie gr.ys that
Andrew was not a good bov, and yet not
a very bad one, and tells many interest
ing incidents of his boyhood. TW
ple here, although they have obsequion
ly built a monument over his father?
8" v wk. upon nun as a oor white
irasu xanor, and always will.
ui uumon isj
now
iauout SIOO.000,000 ucr
T -T. - v v rLt
000,000 from pbeer or gulch goldldig.
gmgs, and $80,000,000 from quartz
ing. ui the quartz product, about tbrc
fourths is from gold bearing loxlesJhnd
one-fourth from sUver mines. In Ulic
production of goldiCanfornia'takcs-tbb
lead, yielding, about $50,000,000.1' In
silver mining, which is never done; by
uaiiu-nasmng, out solely through I the
quarrying and reduction of qtiarte, Jfc-!
vada is foremost, yreUh'ng $10,000 000
per annum. , Idaho and Oregon makSup
the Temainder; of our ilver prod act
x.u, 4a uuui uircciiv on the'
greati Comstock lode, which in tho jnst
Lbuliioo, andls.tlie richest silver mine vet
Mvwn in uie wona. lt is from 8Qj to'
200 feet in width. A single'-companv in
the same region the Gould fc CiirrT
has taken out more than 12,O00,0O0.-
1 V4- mmm. A f A 1. fl
wv ui. iimr;ui me quartz mills
have as yet proved remunerative l
A frightful accident recently occurlfed;
at Tola, an Austrian 4 scanort on '4hk
Adriatic, in experimenting with
giycerme iorf military purposes. The
i o -. ; .
con-ette captain, Count von Kidman.
segge, fractured tho leer of a cantain. rin!
rendered the colonel tX another ofticial
s . 11 j
i jMuiuar inciueut occurred in thel
1 ark Jlorceau, Paris. . On a vacant lqt of
ground iri the neighborhood grew -a large
acacia, at present ' in full ' bloxsom. 5 T
workman, 1 wishing to' borrow a branch j
iviuiuauu juuw ui gronna, ciinu1
ed tho
branch and commenced to sever it from
the trunk. But before he had had time
to make a: stroke ; he fell to the ground
insensiDie, overpowered by the carbonic
acid disengagedj from the flowers. lIM
ot aspnyxix
!
At the recent Masonic" celebration
Winchester, Virginia, tho apron worn by
the orator, Yilliara IL Travers '
belonged to General George Washington,
and was presented to him by Gcncnjl
Lafayette, and has beautif ally- wrought
on it in silver and gold the .flagv ,f
France and the United Suites comhinDll.
and forms by their combination theprib-.
ciple masonic emblems.' 'V " ! v
f The Arabs' visitetl tho TritmnAVi
royuui auu. unices on VOdpcsda-."' AlieirH
proposition to stand on their hands :ami:
let the hollows of. their "feci Ie niod as-
inKstands or thq rest of the day, was djj
clined xrith thanks. Having ascended
to the topmost floor, they crravelr noddal
their turbans arid departed tor bthV
climbsj : - ' !, -n ,V " 1 i 'J .
Forty thousand wax candJes are lighV
ed instantaneously br a sinrrlo mirh n
the Hoyal Palace in, BerliK. The wicks
are previously connected by a thread pu)i ;
from gdn cotton, on lighthig one end bf
which all the candles arc lighted imtl-
tanecmsly,:and Uius tho whole pf the eroi:
hundred apartments of the , palace arc)
. . The Marauii of vHm hn
Louden Castle, in Ayrshire; th
the Jfarquis of Hastings, for $1,735,000;
Au
nrstsneu, niletl with this substance,burst 1
m the gun, destroying it, and, blowing' to j
pieces two men who were loading it. - tit
also frightfully disfigured the face of ?the
1 "-I- .11 .
Prioo 5 Cents,
Special Notices.- !
.
t tJ W uart ft Jw-yi,- s4 u.
Ancricaa fr4 ar. brrood Ur f a
Jlatnlii-wniai K trkt1yKalJtC. am Aiarntui la-
XlCULXt CO., cSce Clf 1ttWj rw Terk Cttf.
SCsckihekaa noriraL ft Ulmitt od tarAU
clrtndplMi 'Uslaapfa U t1fa 'isnTTj tdrr
stood, wdMHIUU. t trtMtWtnkr. I ,
f IU arrlBjc qmsUttea, psticiariy tm dotk and Wt Wr,
cannot be cqs∿ and a ach. rrrvnarnd li I
onr frtenda and the peb2 gnatH. '
Horns Ini
surance
r
yaw Uattx. cvwocin ictT.
f ASSTTft, ;
$1,540,116.00:
2aso.x t Fostxe, AgtkNewBexnc.N.C.
OFFICE AT BIGBOOT?
T. POWERS,
Soutli Front Street, -
XlflVjIFItXF, X. C, . .
Iraxorlcr and 0aJfr in
WOREIGX AXD DOMESTIC
WINES,-
UdUOES
: & CIGAES.
1 ! '
i
5 Tilt tUOXCXST C RANDS Kf STOHE.
Accnu for SlTirs a4cWatcd
i Present Use and Stock Ales.
,TbU ALE la Drcwcd txxj tot SanOcra AUrkcu,
aad WARBAJfTED TO KEEP IS AXY CLIMATE.
Bring exdtulrtij tcyil la ibe abort bubvw , I
am; prrprcd to offer SPECIAL rXDCCTJCE'CTS to
parties partLAatrj la mj line.
4 . j T. rOWEES.
Msj S-UL ! !
Lorch Brothers,
... , xftatxaa n
GROCERIES,
1 5 PROVISIONS, . .
j DRY GOODS,
.. .. .UoOTS and SHOES, Ac
1 '
rAncery Produce alvars on Land,
for Farmers oa the pmaUcs.
ArcotsrMdatlon
1
BROAk STREET,
H
3Uj 2-MI
?fTW JJERX, N. c
Exchange Hotel,
POLLOK ' STREETm
cxt door to 1
. BAER & EPPLElt,
i
MARTIN J. McXAMAUA
' I'ropHctof.
! The above Ilotcl having been renovated arid
refitted, is now open for the ixxnriraodatlon
of jthc local and travcIlBg puLIlc,
" r ..... ,
T.IJDIjJSS
Furnished with the best th market can afford.'
FfrEE LVNCn EVERY UVENIXO AT
y s acLocic ' ;
A PS Table, tnc of taarre, for Uc mof Cecsi.
"Hats ! Hats J I Hats I ! !
I-'... i
LEAVZ TOWS. OB STAT IX TOWS AST
LONGER. WrrnOCT CALLTXO AT
IfHAIll & FAKE'S,
j 'UV(7. ,40 BOZZOJC ST' ,
C j i ' . srrcca a li
FINE FUli OR STIt!AW HAT.
r-r.
LESS TJlAJf VniOLESAtE t RICES t
And caa abow more
FIFTY DIFFERENT STTLES.
Jj;..-i j. .; 'AUrseTarktj.of
Dna Goods, Bottom, ,
TrtaaoOa-,rdsie, tacertie-n, :
jr" , - w Sisfaaciolra -plala aad cbecfad,
i . ,
3XaraaI3e. drgferws. rrtau. JLeix.' ".
II
J5Ck ad Ctotk Saofoca'aad GaW
t jaiTUes of Hoop Cldrta. UUml ttjV.
1
iix or
vox at adu at rii '
LOWEST PHIQES POSSIBLE,
ji-
(4 1 Hf l-l ."
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ASTROLOGY;
. The World Astoaislic-d
5
3IADK BY.1 GI1KA AitllOLOatSTj
GubmoIL A PEIlRIGO.M
to to;t4rM ItoM bo, trvm duUtl cTmu,- eTW.
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oj c4 txiwr, f turv txnM hArc ti
atot, torubT tkoM- lotf Ppnru4. trlr. t&2urmaUcS
conatiilrx aWni firtkd r kmn, nm
8d to porrw a4 ta hat r1 ta b nxro.
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WUbt of tsm. Kail to tmmnM lUm rwiM II!
twf nrrtr aota V.re faun an cMrci'r
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Marvin's PatontT"
AI.uil AND DRY rUVSTEIt,
FIRE A XI) BURGLAR PROOF
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prr Com not oaJr caAa tix Lair, bet lararau.
beaatlfira aad cWaaoa U ; la t-VUy aad AVrrti-'aT
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rrraES Vr tLc of db. joixvnxr? n rrm
V V jca caa be cared prnaaaraxtr. aad at a Crlf.aaj
Ta aatoaS.Ufc aam-aa wUda kaa attoadad Ola la
TalaaUe aaarUrlaa ior Paraioal aad &inm aTiaiaws,
fxtcral prUStr aa4 PaaaUaUoav Loot as UrnJmr
arrrr. IwruUwj, off ay of Caa uuaaiwai trm of
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paraUoa ever Clacrrrcrad. .
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or rrU prtWr. t.
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