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... li ,U iliHM KABDtUD aj.iT 1 l-i. TUI-WKKKLY AND WKK1C L.Y-KY TIIK ERA PUBLISHING COMPANY. 1 Jut o of ulcriilloii ; ;'. Tki-Wkkkta One year. In advance, $.1 (XX 0 months, iii advance, 2 (X), 3 mouths in advance, A 01 1 month, , in advance,, ; 30 Wkkkia-One year, in advance, 00 Six months, in advance, . , fjO ' ton lh oil!)'. vine square, ne ii:m - l t'Aiv " r 1 Mi: : three timew.? ,2t A square t the xculth of a cohLutatuui ! 1 I flit il ..U J.i 1 2L Contract Ailverlk t 1 1 -r T1JT takci isemcnta en lit troptiitlonatctr to-vrratcsr vol. I. RALEIGH; N. C., THURSDAY, OCTOBER; , 4 8, 1 ' 1871. ''Nov IXT' - ; 83. to t PwfcsHroiiilCitl.M:nitexceotlinu bwiuare. I! -h' 51 TTTr il t- f-rr.i-irrrrm: ! .v t. . -i . . l,. I . ' r - - ft. 1 r II I - i - . x ; , K JM - . . ; ..'r. . . - i , , ' Tiiton HeVaked., - f; JjHKie Mitrital Ndtion Ienountal A L'i'.'i' b T.'ieorlorc Till on by a :,'! 11 o- mtut'it Artcocule." - ...; .'..! l-'nnn the Chicago Jonrnal, Sept. 20. - I)i:au Siu: iou have recently said, in The. GvltU'H Ayei " I hold that love,' a!'l love only, constitutes marrijge; that marriage makes the bond, not the 1kih? the niarriage ;andthat,asthe cou tr.ic t is to love and nonor, so that wjieu the love am1 honor end, the contract dissolves and the marriage ceases." Doubtless this is practically true. If you fail to do what you promise to do ; "if the fulfillment ceases entirely, and the bond is bv you utterly broken and thrown awa undoubtedly your crime is the death of the contract. That fact was tolerably fain il liar as far back as The Stone Age, thesavage philosophy of which you will badly be able to prove a golden fruit of new culture. There probably is not a decent woman on the globe who, properly comprehending your statemcnt;vill not confess its ugly truth. A promise to pay dies when the paying finally ceases. A promise to love and honor dies when the loving and honoring finally cease. The bright honor of the promise being gone, its veracity gone, everything that it was entirely gone, of course it is gone, with an which it creaieu. -Vim mat in your theory of the treatment of woman, to get rid of the marriage by getting rid of the contract creating it, and to get rid of the contract by the method of dis honor ! I take in hand the ease which vou commonly put, that of the mini against the wambn. You say, "I would no more permit the law of the land to eiP chain me to a woman whom I did not love than I would permit the same law to handcuff me as a slave." I omit part ot your sentence, which docs not atfect the case of man simply, in his treatment of woman and wife. In what I quote vou declare that you will not permit the law of the land to hold you to your own free promise and sacreu contract. Have you no logic? Is this a question of taking you by force and handcuffing you to a woman against your will ? If it is not, then there is no argument in your comparison. Is .Slavery the slave's i"nt and honorable contract? if it is not, then there is not a jot of reason in the assumed analogy. No, sir ; this is a question of your contract with a wo man, -made upon free and urgent de sire, freely and deliberately made,made with the combined seriousness and sa credness of religion and law, religion for the reality of the bond, and law for the cover and form of the bond, the re ligion not leaning one whit for truth on the law, nor the law intruding one hair's breadth upon the religion, but both agreeing to seal a contract the most firm and secure, as it is the most free and deliberate, known to human economy. The matter of some other relation than a niarriage of love and honor would of course raise other questions. Hut these I need not discuss. If one wants a concubine, one or more, the world is wide, and hell thereof suffi ciently accessible. Hut I assume that vou mean, not that consciously and de liberately, but good and true marriage. Therefore, I am bound to find in your words the declaration that you will not let the law of the land hold you to your own free and solemn contract. And your reason for refusing to have the form of honor maintained by law is that you do not mean to be held to the fact of honor. It is not that you would have religion alone constrain you to fulfill your Contract, but that you want a chance to violate your contract. You sav "love should be like religion, free from mandate by the civil law," and vou prophesy that "the next generation will gild thissentiment with fine gold." The sentiment has been done in brass a sufficiently long time to be familiar, and would not be much improved if the next generation would make of it a golden c-alf. I mean the sentiment of love free to violate contracts. You seem to invoke religion; in met, you invoke nothing but rascality. For you demand freedom to violate the religion, as well as the law of marriage, to break your religious promise as well as your legal. You only care to have the law let you alone in order that you may leave the woman to whom religion has bound There is but one ground which I need to consider here to make plain the in famons character of the license to vio late both religion and law which yon demand for yourself ; and that is the reason which the woman you wish to put away had to require of yon a con tract, a deeply religious and firmly le gal contract, as the lwsis of marriage. You desired her to give you, irrevoca bly, that honor of person and of life, which is the sacrament of her existence. You wished to take from her sureties of marriage which once given are for ever given. There doubtless are fe males diseased in body and imagina tion from their birth, to whom honor is not honor under any constraints of solemn promise of unchanging fidelity. Hut the average decent woman, to whom nakedness is not necessary to the perfect luxury of chastity, ruqainw, ud mast always require, the strongest as surance of that protection for her honor woman in marriage, then you do not mean love and honor, and propose a marriage whicji is a swindle, and an outrage. Such rascality is but top pos sible where there is question of winning a woman, the winning to enjoy is so much more to UtfLaverage male mind than the winning to love and honor. In a state of double guardianship of woman, bv religion and by law, it is which only a deeply religious pronu of unclmngin fidelity can give; -If you .i i rt npr this In seeking a j still a fearfully common thing for men to i simulate or imagine, underthe impulse ; of desire, love and honor which do not i exist. . Hence the necessity to woman j of law to gve form to the fact, or the ! fancy, of love and honor, which form her sole security in marriage. Law will forbid the man to let his desires wan der ; it will at ' least- compel him to maintain a decent form of permanent protection for woman. The double con- tract, religious for the real fact, and le gal for the outward cover and torm, is no more than woman may demand. I have s no ken only ot the woman's honor. It were enough to speak of that. Hut beyond that is her chance in, life, which, on the average, is terribly in iured by the miscarriatre relation. She ! t-an trive but once the fairest freshness she must remain a rejected thing, per- hat)3 helpless to live, except by meth ods of direct toil or uttermost shame. It must be more than a slight cause, more than an ordinary reason, which can make her willinsr to foreero the form at least of love and honor, which jnay be decent even if it be empty. But, still more, there is motherhood, adding in every way to the stringency of the necessities already considered. The mother and children must live, must have care and kindness for years onward into the future, must depend on the marriage already existing, and on the husband and father whose is the sole responsibility in the "matter, and must look for love and honor, in form at least and decency, if not in fact and blessed sveetncss,to the man whostands before God and the law held to render these by the most solemn of contracts. Therefore women cannot but ask for, yo'-i, insist on, this double contract. Religion alone would answer the pur jose if it would enchain wandering de sires and handcuff libertine rascality. Hut this religion alone cannot do, as surely as law. with reliirion, can do it. The man who honestly means a reli gious contract, cannot refuse to woman the added assurance of the legal con tract. If any man does not honestly mean what he promises,to enchain and handcuff him is utterly and absolutely necessary, if restraint of wrongdoing is anywhere a necessity. No other than a criminal can feel his contract with a woman in chains and slavery. What then, Mr. Tiiton, do you mean bv your declaration that you will not let the law of the land hold you to a contract which you wish to violate? If you mean criminal outrage, you will find the law of the land able to hold you, or at least able to brand you as a monster. In the last issue of The Golden Aye, you argue the matter again. You say that "Love is love not liking, not friendiness, not kindness, iot esteem, but love and if a man has ceased to feel it for the woman who sits at the other end of his breakfast table, which is the most moral or the least immor al! if you will for him to break the chains which bind him, break them as gently and unselfishly as he may, but in some wise set himself r?e, put him self in a position to live a true life; or to wear, his fetters uncomplainingly, silently, but invoking meanwhile all the lightnings of heaven to do for him what he has not the courage to do for himself?" If this were meant for the persiflage of a gay rake, justifying variety "at the head of his breakfast table," I could understand it. You speak of the man only, as if the woman were not of much accouut in the matter. You seem to hold her cheaper than men of free lives commonly hold a mistress. Her honor, which you cannot give back, her wifehood, which rests on her honor, her motherhood, which must continue none the less for your deser tion, and to which you owe eternal fi delity, these you make of no account she merely "sits at the head of your ta ble," and it is a question of leaving her to sit there alone, or of driving her out into the world. And that you call the Age of Gold. It looks to me more like the time when tools were first made of bronze after the coarse patterns of the Age of Stone. There is not so much manliness in your whimpering appeal to the moral law as ruled the breasts of rude cave-dwellers, who would have broken your head with a stone hatchet, and served you right, if you had thus proposed to quit your marital obliga mi timis. You mitrht easily be set down as half fool and half knave in this plea, if it were possible to see inai in euner character vou are at all deficient. You sit there wishing her de-ad; you con fess that what you thus do "Aa the spirit of murder in it." You quote a church member who said that it was impossible for human nature not to cherish this murderous wish under such circumstances ; and then you tri umphantly ask whether it is better to murder the woman or to put her away. Either raav be better for the woman, but the question is what you are bound to do, not what is worst of the crimes vou say vou intend to choose between. ' You go on with Stone Age morality of this sort: "What if the woman who pleased vou r youth has no charm for your manhood ? What if you married, as most men do who marry young, m utter ignorance of yourself and your own need? You wake up some -day to realize that you are a stranger at your own hearthstone that there is no one there who comprehends your puposes or shares your tastes? ' Just when you have settled yourself to your fate, you meet does God or Satan throw it in your way? the not im possible she who can command your squI. , Before you know it you love, simplv as the earth grows warm when the sun shines on it. Some Mm Innp-les in vour wife's voice the xrnire is well enousrh. the discord is be cause you hear at the same time anoth er voice in your ears. 'If I were but free, if I were but freeF goes dizzil v through and through your lirain like the refrain, of a hunting song." woman? Well, T. Tiiton, I candidly ; SUMPTION. -The pnmsrV cause of Lm advise you to get your sweet young j sumption is derangement of tho 'dt-estivd soul-damned to everlasting perdition j-organs,: This durahemcnS pwiluca: itlea rather tlian forsake the wife of .your sclent uatrition aul atimiiiktHn IU youth, l ou might Have chosen better; but VOU CilOSe, ana nonor, wnirer man heaven, binds you. About the bind- ing of the woman I not speaking, xi bin; nus uuuer iu Bu w. PfV confesses to murder lurking in one eye;jnionH vMlit and lust leering of the other. ! You might be tempted tosend her on a Sun day excursion to Staten Island ; or you might burden yourself with two domes- j tic establishments, to the great peril of; the Affe of Gold. Probably the woman had better leave you if she can, but lay not the flattering unetKm-4e-your soul that you are a mc, even of the Stone Age sort. You are an incipient hellion, if I may be pardoned for a strong but not unsuitable term. You have hell on the brain, you that think that to be kind and friendly, and full other woman who mitrht be more to yon than the wife can be. You talk about "so to situate yourself so that you can live an honest and true life !" You are already situated with the damned, and this hankering of your soul for some other woman, and wisli that the one you have were dead, is a foretaste of deepest hell. Let me show you the path to heaven. Your wife, we will assume, cannot fol low your soaring genius. You are po etic, and she prosaic. Apollo would envy your beauty, and she is homely. You "command" no end of women, and she cannot command even her hus band's honor, not to sieak of his love. The world rings with your praises, and she scolds and frets in your kitchen. I imagine I put it pretty strong, espe cially this about your praises, but never mind. Now, T. Tiiton, get right down from your stilts, clean down upon your knees, and try to imagine at least that not all the great-gods nod when you nod. You probably can't humble yourself. even before God Almighty, enough to feel that vour wife is quite as good as you deserve not to say a great deal better, liut vou are pernaps come down enough to partly understand what a knightly humility is. Then you may remind yourself what your con tract of love and honor is, and swear by bright honor's self that you will keep your promise made to the woman who has given you her all. Never mind occasional Christians of the Afri can convert tvpc, who would kill and eat the old wife to be free with a fresh "not impossible she." The notion that you cannot be decently and happily true, at least in some large measure of unwearied courtesy, and kindness, and esteem, and fidelity, is one of the dev il'sown. Better co to hell with a red hot stopple in your gullet than put your lips to that cup of perdition, the notion that desire for another woman is your supreme necessity. Desire is doubtless a thorn in the flesh of sweet young things like you, but you can be a man nevertheless, keeping decently and honorably the womau you are by holy honor enchained to, and manfully denying, destroying even, the desire which is not of honor any more than it is of law. Try that for ten years T. Tiiton, and though many virgins will tempt you, and desire may continue to trouble, there will be neither murder nor lust in your heart, but a manly ef fort at least for the honor, which will be the very gate of heaven to you, and and a world of comfort to the woman nrVw 111 ill) man too young and too weak to put in- tellisrence and conscience into o cue most solemn contract which any man can make. M POUT ANT LAND SALE! United States of America, ) CircuitCo't nitric! of North Carolina. i 4th Circuit A. V. Parsons, Executor of James Ilenbam. against j m r.qmty. The Heron Mining Com- j pany. J In pursuance of a decree, in tho case wherein A. V. Parsons, Ex'r., &c.t is plain tiff and The Ileron Mining Co. is defendant, made at Juno Term, 1870, of the Circuit Court of the United States, for the District nf North Carolina, on tho 11th day of Octo ber next, I shall sell ll,atthedoorofthocourt .ounty, " r; public auction, the land House of Wake County Unleisrh. N- C. at public described in the pleadings, containing a larse and valuable dcposite 01 grapu.ie l?"1 i.S!:"1 2 of 1.100 acres, in the High, Jones, McDade, ai-ro, in u c s -v Snelhng and Stewart tracus ; No. 6, of 1, ) lone tracts: ISo. 4, ot ISo. 4, ol !,:i acres, me nnipl Simmons. Saunders and Wetmore j r tracts. Also, I shall then and there sell the Min ing interest in the Spikes tract of 344 acres, or so much of said land and interest as may be nccessarv, and subject to a mortgage upon two-thirds of all said land arid mining interest executed to Peneloieand Mary A. Smith by said company-. Terms Six months credit, bond and surety. N. J. RIDDICK, Clerk U. S. Circuit Court. Sept. 12, 1871. 4 lui. -JgUY YOUR Mouldings, Stair Work, And everything in the domain of - -WOOD TRIMMINGS FOR BUILDINGS, .. Of I. A, HANCE, 376 Third Ave., cor. Twenty -seventh street, New York, in market. They aro the best and cheapest aug. 17 -3m. of gracious respect to your wedded wife, ; bowels of all the dead and morbid sjinie is a mean and empty and comparative- j is causing disease and decay hi the w Iv immoral thine:, because mere is an- Svstem. fhev 'will clear out the liver Sill' SpeciailNotices, T . - ' ClTltT Ub COX- . i dilation, tmeaii- that prove? ..bjr . which the nutriment of the, food -is converted into 1 UooiV and thence into the solids of the body, ) v With ' digestion tims impaired, - - lwvfn the sli-htest predisposition to' 'ul 1 very iihivwh iiiave V'02isiiiiirn.-HHi m iik; " Xiuiigs imsome of its forms ; and IJioid jit. wilt be jmpossibio- to i euro any . ciise ; qf Consumption; without lirst estorhi digestion and .healthy assimilati a imilation. The very first thing to be done is to cleanse, the stomach and ixWels from' all ' diseased1 mu- cus anTslriTrerhieli is clogging these or so that they eumot perform their functions 1 and then rouse up and restore the liver fco-a. healthy action. For this purpose the surest ! and -best remedy is Schenck's Mandrake I Pills. These Pills clean the stomach and that 1 hole of all diseased bile that has accumulated there and rouse it. up to a new and healthy action. by which natural and healthy bile is secre-ted.-- ' ' ' ' ' The stomach, bowels, and liver are . thus cleansed by the use of Schem k's Mandrake" Pills ; but there remains in 'the stomach an excess of acid the organ is torpid and the appetite poor. Iu the bowels the lacteals are weak, and reqhl ing strength and support It is in condition : like this that Schenck's Seaweed Tonic proves to be the most valua ble remedy ever discovered. It is alkaline, and its use will neutralize all excess of acid, making the stomach sweet and fresh ; it will give permanent tone to this important or gan, and create a good hearty appetite, and prepare the system for the tirst process of a good digestion, and ultimately make good, healthy, living blood. After this prepara tory treatment, what remains to cure most cases of Consumption Is the free and perse vering use of Schenck's 'Pulmonic Syrup. The Pulmonic Syrup nourishes the sys tem, purities the blood, and is. readily ab sorbed into the circulation, and thence dis tributed to the diseased lungs. There it ri pens all morbid. : matter, whether in the form of abscesses or tubercles, and then, as sists Nature to expel ail the diseased Matter; in the form of free expectoration, when once it ripens. It is then, by the great heal ing and purifying properties of Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup, that all ulcers and cavi ties are healed up sound, and my patient is cured. The essential thing to be done in curing Consumption is to get up a good appetite and a good digestion, so that the body will grow in ilesh and get strong. If a person has diseased lungs, a cavity or abscess there, the cavity camiot heal, tho matter cannot ripen, so long as the system is be low par. What isneccessary to cure is a new order of things, a good appetite, a good iiur triti.)n, the body to grow in flesh and get fat; then Nature is helped, the cavities will heal, the matter will ripen and be thrown olf in large quantities, and the person re gain health and strength. This is the true and onlv plan to cure Consumption, and if a person is very bad, if the lungs are not en tirely destroyed, or even if one lung is en tirely trone. if there is enough - vitality left in the other to heal up, there is hope. I have seen many persons cured with on ly one sound lung, live and enjoy life to a good old age. This is what Schenck's Med icines will do to cure Consumption. They will clean out the stomach, sweeten and strengthen it, get up a good digestion, and give Nature the assistance she needs to clear the system of all the disease that is in the lungs, whatever the form ma be. It is important that while Using Sci" enck's Medicines, care should be exercised not to take cold ; keep in-doors in cold and damp wether; avoid night air, and take out-door exercise only in a genial and warm Sun shine. I wish it distinctly understood that when I recommend a patient to bo careful in re gard totakingcold, while using my medi cines, I do so for a special reason. A man who has but partially recovered from the oH-t if ii had cold is far more liable to a re- J lapse than one who h-.is been entirely cured, " . . .7 .r:7." "; sum ption. So long as tne lungs are not per fect! v healed, just so. long is there 11111111 nenUlanger of a full return of the disease. Hence it is that I so strenuously caution pulmonarv patients agaiiist exposing Ihein .sel ves to an atmosphere that is not genial and pleasant. Continued Consumptives' lung, are a mass of sores, which the least change of atmosphere will inliame. The grand se- cxet ol'inv success with my medicines con sists in mV ability to subdue inHamniation instead of provoking it, as many of the fac ulty do. An inflamed -lung cannot, with saiety to the patient, be exposed to . the bi ting blasts of Winter or the chilling winds f Spring or Autumn. It should be carefully shielded front all irri ating influences. Tb utmost caution should be observed in this particular, as without it a cure under almost any circumstances is an impossibility, j mm . 1,1 1 M L-: f 1 111 m win .lf;i 1 (IP 1 mXuTrid6us7 McKlicines; continued until tho body has restored to it Hian,!l,ra1nnantitripSlnmlKta I was myself cured by this treatment of lm w-ri-t kinfJ if i Junsnmnuou. and nave li ved to got fat and hearty these many yea. s , with one lumr mostly irone 1 I.rvo eu red . .,1.. ... irirtr ii-nitf hnvfi 1i;n - . H . tiealment whom I have nerer scei About the 'First of October I cxicct to t;ike possession of my new building, at the Northeast Corner oiSixthand Arch Streets, where : 'shall be pleased to give advice to all who may require it dies, so that -a person in any part of the ,-.-,t,i ,...1. iu ri.-l'i?v f-iircrl bv 11 strict 6b- servant; t the same. '. I' J..1I. SCIIENUK.I- 1V - Philadelphia. Priceof the Pulnionic Syrup and Seaweed Toni l.o0 a lttlo, r SlJAi a half dosn. Mandrake Pills 25 cents a lx. . For sideb all druggists' and' 'dealers. ! ,,r JOUN -FdlENRYi fU 8 College, Place, New A'.ork City, 4 Sept 9. 42 Cm. Wholesale Agent. f r'-. --I'"' ' "1 ' ' . ' j CHEAP ADVERTISING, WE WILL J insert aii advertisement in Eight Ilun- f dred American Newspapers, for six dollars per line, pec week.: One line one wcok wui. st siTdpllars, two lines will cost, , twelve dollars, and ten'Unes will cost sixty dollars 4AAfnrinrtntt HsL Address ' I Send for a minted list Address j GEO. P. RQWELXCO., Advertising Agents, No. 41, Park Row, N. Y. , . 1 June 8, 1871. a r; rii 1 1 ! i t t' 1 1 'Redden of the' iM ' ! f vh .the. periodical ; readi,ju. tfxeytwe from I ims. at a mucii reuucoacudi HIVA .made tile necessary a'rmnmen w 'witli t Jte a- 1 tprpis; On the receipt at one time of ?0 we vluul is i?o ?J i; liiii send tlie wfcKKfcY, or -for' U the 'skM-' vi-kx.V and bnejot the tJdlowing'ItcIijrious Papers 1 r . 1 ;.r ! 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H - : J; V'lU'AAXJ.i (O'il "t r Be ure and roadihe excellent. ?irticle on the second page, on "Intemperance and .Na- tional Integrity," by Aaron M. PpweU, wnien we mre wiKcw iruui iu " Jleraldpf HcaUK Iffnght toj !beLread ,ln,j every temperance organization, and aw temterance man.5 1 " ' " ul f P. O. Box. 14J6,. New, York, . ,1 or Wm. P. TbMtiNSOXi Publisher, ! June 8. Nb. 39 Naman street. .publishers of several. !llohgius and , As cultural papers, and also Monthly Mag zittes, '''enabling lis ttf Otter the' lollowi BromO'nloralum, ; ,7 , ITON-POISOrt OUS, ODORXltS, Sid 'nr. -tJ-v.irirowKRPUi.". itJ ' i,:ti iil DE0bOIU2ER: : AND : DlilrrWCCtkHT. KNTIKELV: 1IA1UILES4 'AkD'B.iil I AUKliSTaiAyD.PJlKVKX W ttlXTOIOX. 4 -Upod: iu prirate d welling, If oXcL, jrestau r allts, " public' school-, hospitiUs, Insane jiWlumJ dlpcisnrie, Mail, brisini' 1vor- J.lious,os,-jnships, ;fteaiWbVtstf and in.tcne- inciu-inses, inarKcis, ,iur waicr-ciiw'vw, urinals; Isinks; ewt-rs,' cWsijMs,' stAblw, Ac. r A specific in ttf,l contagions an I iteMilcHtial 'ihtasekf- A mrtU-ra tyjmrt" iWcr, ulilp ley er. sail id hfp x H.wlet leitut; uioasl 4 J I i eases of auhn.ds. Ai ,, prepared, nidy )ix ''i'!,i-'TILDEW 4k CO.V x7 W.llUuti St., rl. Y. . jSld by all druggets. H ' .i) n-'ni. jPOK,. TIME, -,r Clothes and Fuel SAVSD" , . j by P511H vK QPj ; ,XLD W'ATHH ,1 U .,.,,,( .iSEIiEnaJV Washing Sp! r : . . . . i 1 ,1 ! 1 SEND- ii OR I CIRCULAR' AND! PRICE' iJlST. Sole Agents forAlie StatosRof yirgluja, North ahtf South' Carolina,' Ccorgia ''" !Floridftl 'r"t Htid t n trees! : Hi Fruit '"tod lOriiamental; ' FOU AUTUMN OF 1871.. w e invite the attention. of Planters and Dealers to our large and complete stock of Standard and Dwarf Fruit IVtes.' ''.''' Grape, Ifiw and fiuiall Fruit , f 5. , Omarnqnlal Trees, Shrubs and Jlants. ' New ami Rare FnMt & Orthirientat Trees. Bulbous Flower Ituots. , - , ; , y ? j 7 j DescriptivOjaid Illustrated . prjocd, , Cata- lognes sent preiaid on receipt of stamps as follows:; ' . : , . . 1. '. . ' No, 1 Fr.wits, 10c. N. 2 Ornamental Trees, 10c. No. 3--Grcen-housej 10c. No. --Wholesale, free. No;i 5 Rulbs, frw. Address ..... : ... ELLWANGER &' BARRY,' Established 1840. Rochester, X. . Appleton's Journal. , jSue..SES Persons not now subscribers to APt'kKTON's Journal can, as a trial subscription, obtain the remaihihg issues for tho current j'oar from Sept. 2d FOR ONE DOLLAR, m This largo reduction is offered to new km h scribers to enable those not now acquaiottMl with ! tho Journal 10 fully test Its merits. Remittances must bo mailed direct Ur tho publishers. Applktox's JounxAC Is 'published week ly, and consists of thirty-two page. quarto, each number attractively Illustrated. Price 10c. per No.; 'regular subscrlptio'h price &1 per annum, iu advance. D. APPLETONA' CO., Publishers, New York.' rnrr foH on k 'month to alt r nLL . ask ton it: t.k-. to jn.. m WIIO to Jul v, '72; ?2.o0 to Jan., '73. TJIE MlsTPliODZT. . Erf ry, week it 1 .Iuturc Room Talk, by peeciier; Sermon, or article by Tahnagc (hiocond 'only ' to' iicccher in ppularityhMrs. Wllliqg'a groat serial Ury exposing wocret workings of Roinanim in America, and 'much other good reading. Cr. Halstedi 1 14 Nttssdn St' New Yot k.i ' . . . t'-i-- -'t- i-H-'M -rf -I - FREE TRY SAMPLES t oar.gruat K-uukc, ?!; 'niUNtnacl wccklyilf k tablished. :u Fiue Kteel' ei!"xaTiuioifrde to subscribers. .Agents make & a Uyr, Senl fdr Saturday (iuzette, Ilallou'elli'Me.' ' ,.t .1 4-4 f ' f ""f f -'4 i " ! - ' ' ' 1 - - t ; j , BAND ; JL-ICVP J III Ftvr; something intorftuMni enl -ytair ad dress to .GEORGE W. OATKS, Fmukrt, v-!,vi! I . 1 :.: 1 t; n ,4 -ti t.i i. . 1 . , . , ' Ti-nr if; itrv 7-r-rr,:HT'r-'mtf T idUORS, RAY.jRUM.JUlTEItS, and JL SYRUPS of all.Tclnds can 'bo easily made for less tjlarv hair tli6 usual irate by meaus of EICIILER-H .RwipU., .Prici $2, delivered by mail. 1 Proof Sheets and Index sent free br F. A.1EICHLER, 400 NSd St., PhiUdeIplHaVa, ,11 r. - ;i . A THE 'GtJTl&Xtist ''ti'ATrftfip. How ti1 I1 1 llonH'Jiand' ; ' wlu'! does It. 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PIillaIelpiihi; Pa. .-p 1 1 111. J4 -" a tl HARRIS,- , ,: 4,1 . ;? 1 f ' 1 ' f f J 1 'u 'Aitoiun irv Ar .La wv I onw.;.i.i,irs4ii!JrKiit.iur.i inh.iiu pW. .WM . w. ...... .. f U, nil ylUirftiinaUfahAM uS. h!J rPracticM Intlie CourtHdf Wakeaikl befibro (U S Commissioner, oudk , give , ppecial , at tention to the. arguing 01 caus.es In tho Supreme ' iCourt of North ' Cardliha.' " All busmesa entrusted! -toi him.: will ..'roeeiyo nromut attention jf"" VCt- V ?. X xiwrrt4Vt , ! !: "p' i"f I) R.'C'RXHvS COMPOUND r. ,. ,,Slwuld,beiAken byill . , ' . . . requiring a remedy 'bnnake pure blood. V.
Tri-Weekly Era (Raleigh, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1871, edition 1
1
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