THE HERALD. CARLISLE, PENN'A 0. L.-Haddock J. M. Weakley. EDITORS AND PaOPRIETOILS ; Volume - -11EPUBuCAN ATIONAI, TICKET, FOR PRESIDENT, GENERAL U. S. GIZANI DIECIGEE2 POlt VICE PRESIDENT 4 HENRY WILSON, . OF lIASSACHUSETTB F..s 4 c FO.ll GOVEIINOI. GEN. JOHN V. TIMITHANE,T, =II _ SUPREME JUDoL. HON: ULYSSES - MERL It qr BRAD YU 71 AUDITtat Oh:NEI:AL. GEN. HABEISON ALLEN, OF WARIe'r.v,I.V.V7'I =2E= Gon. Lemuel Todd, of Cumberland Gon. Harry Wham, of Indiana. DELEGATES AT LARGE TO THE CONSTITU TIONAL CONVENTION. Wm. M. Meredith, Philadelphia ; J. Gillingham Fell, Philadelphia ; Gen. Harry White, Indiana ; Gen. Wm. Lilly, Carbon ; Linn Bartholomew, Schuylkill ; H. N. M'Callister, Centre ; William H. Armstrong, L.icomin , t William Davis; Monroe ; James L. )Reynolds,' Lancaster ; Samuel E. Dimmick, Wayne ; Goo. V. LaWience, Washington : David - N. White, Allegheny, W. H. Ainey, Lehigh ; John H. Walker, Erie. AB will bo seen by the head of our paper, a change has been made in its editorial and business management. Mr. Wallace, who has been associated in the conduct of the paper for nearly three years, having disposed of his interest in run, 'HERALD, retires, and will be suc ceeded by Mr. 0. L. Haddock, of Phila delphia. The dissolution of the old firm has been entirely amicable and mutual, Mr Wallace desiring to engage in a more act it a business. During his connection with the business from which he now re tires, ho has made hirrielf many friends, by his kind and generous nature, and his integrity of character. Wherever he may go his warm and kindly disposition will secure him hosts of friends, and he has our best wishes for his success and pros perity. Mr. Haddock is a geutlmnau who is thoroughly familiar with every depa4t- ment of newspaper business--]cluing seen considerable service, as riTi'llter, publisher and editor. lie is mi ardent . Republican, and is hlcays eag.er to render his best services to promote tho success of the . party. lie received his collegiate education and is wall and favorably linoun in this community. His actual connection with the business will begin next. week. :13:1 000,000, one.sixth of the ~ .abt :'tended jof [nem. They, m lllety 11111 some debt of the nation, ereatod by a Demo-4 thing to unit yiduate Lfiemielres, and wet e erat ,, . rebellion, hat. beet. paid ,rnong their co- tetnpurarfe,s, Gr: at'• inauguration. 'lllO DemocratiJimiaj 1,,, ial, k jt j j ,w,lota, o, how he, pat y lIICO its Lid Is 11 , 1 ;. I juin 81 this yet cr• tion 1 l a Clow con,eient post L, help this I)eni,,,!at ° jay the liel,, of A pi”, 111 )11 sh:,, 4.1„.., :oat the unpm•tants. • :I' sclodrug sui di d egates to tint ( - 011,f it utional : Cot lei Glen is not sufficiently appreciated in is county. This Senatoi to I district is a titled to three delegates if, the Con- stitklional Convention. They appears to I •• an impression abroad that these . , deli ales are to bp, chosen en the eumu lati • system. This is tut the case. Tin ," are chosen by a limited, instead of a can illative vote. No per.ionTi can vote for''erullnin.two delegates, mid though ho •i, : yivote for but one, ho eau east but. ogle vote; ft is governed by the San • rule that regulates the choice of insilctors of elections, in which but a sint,M person can be voted ler, although two .ire to be chose/LP' The design is to inswe a represontatien of cacti party Prot . each district. r - Franklin county friends have chamn John Stewart, esij., Of Chambers- ' burg, as their. candidate, and wo hope our friends in Cumberland may ho ' fortunate in making a selection. This district was really carried last year. ph WO State' ticket. — It is true that thiiril was an aiparont majority of about soy- t enty against Stanton, hut UM; wig; camied by lie remarkable fig firing of the return judgus, by which he \was cheated out of 1 110 votes in- the Shippensburg district. hail that vote Veen fairly counted wp ( would have had a majoiity iu the districe In view of this we think our party should nominate two good nice and go.to work heartily to elect them. We are sure of one o ia any event ; lot us make a good square light for two. THE. BALTIMORE NOMINATIONS. 'lin die is met. The old Demdcratic party ilefeated and vanquished every time k has come before the people has at_l.ist ventured its separate - existence as a party, on the success or failure of an experiment heretofore untried in our politiLs: Last year in most of the States it' "C . :e.t aside its former devotion to blind prejudice, oppression rind injustice, and putt-ended to acquiesce in the meas ures el right which Republitanism had engrafted in our constitution. Its re pentance, however, came too lite to beet 11. them. The people preferred to stand by the party whose principles' the Deniue env had been • compelled to ac cept. in their final desperatisin this yea;, .J;O3 , cast aside not only- llfose prin ciples which aro now -hold by all the wol Id to be infamous, but they go be yond i i , pale of their party and take for their I, ;tiers two men who never had or. pr0f05.....1 a single principle in ceininon . with the Democracy, wile have steadily . dcnonecod'all their actions,. and 'whose 'vanes would never have been breathed in • a Iniavocratie convention had there •been•a tiemocrat llving„whose nomina -1 than wrlild have offered boi) of sue- COE4B:. all Understand' that if this ei:ptrlment • Democratic • party Melt foroVer disband ; Ind that if it sileceed Wine 'may be' lioPo that the nceideete the. fuluro will again give it a lease of power. • liVili,;the' nomination of Greeley, and :rows—this_surrinidee of prinCiPles and, sacrifice oi.lcadcrs-bring victmq tolho. crushed and gfisping Democracy ? WL3 hate no fears that it will. .The experi. moot will prove . that, the POoplo' thor oughly undorstand tho hypocrisy of the politicians, who attempt , to ‘ obtain throUgh bargains - and • barters, / the' power which has been so long kept from their giasp. •We do not underestimate the importance of the coping struggle. We know tinit all thm*plionees, with „which deSperarii and unscrupulous politMmmi are familiar, will be used faiic the Democratie party to cast its tinited vote for (lrecloy.' I,Ve know, rit'o, how readily all the disappointed, place,-seekers of the dominant pirt/liof l be ready . to emr.bine their efforts With thpfDemecraciy, to avenge -some real or` innkivary gqikance, or to open up 'some pat.lo - hjrtaallich they may walk easily to places AA', , IQ'tYr and. profit. But we tiiitt there, is a limit to tie W. 111.1, solicraiug I,nhtiehmns have power to ac:oteplish. The p'.!ople cannot mail,: to forst.: the glorious triumphs he infamous hu 1 1 h - 21110er:icy. Their remein qtanee oi lil;nit . s 11006,111, valor and i.ltar , an.l his seise, 011.' ;1;41.1 .ii,;l4ted 3t,tesmanslicip cautiot Ire oldit crated by the pihlui prOonal attacks by his revilers seek to tarnish his fair fame. Aftta all file ititir.isu and censure which :venal politicians invent has been-ex pended, the people will 'sustain the Ad ministration of the - President, who has been faithful to all Ids trusts, and whom) personal career forms one of the bright cgt chapters of the National history, No. 80 I,ot nu man be imposed upon or de luded by the loud boasts of the Democ':' racy, that their candidate, •Buchalow, will be elected. .That is a part, and a largo of o, of thefi• system of electioneer ing andands been their main reliance in all times past. ,it each election we have heaTd similar confident predictions and reckless assertions, but the remit proved' how unfoithded they wore., and how im pudent were their pretensions to prophetic knowledge. Just now, their boasting and confident assumptions are as unreli able and as little entitled to respect as ever. Then• wish is father to the thought and this Icicle there to atlirm as a fact, that which is but the prequel of their• def-ire. What new virtue fias the Demo crahe party acquired that it should be trusted HOW after into ;lig bee n iepcatedly repudiated and defeated Tint same men who fornmily led it and .composed it, ate identical with those who now (hied, it. and form its. rank and file. They arc gov e rned by the sonic wishes ~td a in at (Ito .saute t‘b,teels Fs Corteeily, l i and all.; 110 111,./re to tiay, worthy of the confidence of the people than in former times. And as to their eandidate,..how does lie differ from the men who hereto form,„ were nomiwitod them for the position Can be column,: with Wo.ilward, Foster or Clymer ]'al, each of these were disastrously defeated, I.e . aits , the, people xin not place their It 1:4 in ,t patty Lief hat been rt.:cue:int • t• ,tlt i•riat:iple and taitidet, ;ttn,.;ty attti I n to ail I;iiiikak_si, it, it hoe .11 the ;mute Coo ItitIVON% ii111 , 11:1,1bittOl ,t , 1,14 politic,' life e,treLie devotion to the ex pidtled :mil dead which 11 r ood. AN:O.d... were eel! Cll, rind Irh 1.. nOL our, InCh in advance of them. Nay, lie 1, Lir Intel ;or LO ally one ~~: .;u~mri ~r :,•• otne,s, W.- I /had splunthil ol , pot .11•,, ;es Lot t/'it-elt4 , lll.y.t•lhle,L;elkitts ty,ti•.4ll„aild ',-.1,•,•.)(1 ill the 1;(`I y „1;:u(1 Lvent-, liar. 'thni ha,i `he • , el' •• , 01.:our h , mu] k hits prosev,...•r2 I••••• '.' For ::!1 Ow, he has era :•• he might as well hate 1), ou inatl(.: and peen vidli.)al the rvtl t,r of 5p(21261. . *kat into give I,9piliadity to ~nett x •1111111.' his admirers I,r specified, t po,int v,twil nd where he earned their laudations:, and how .their b . ,nl..;Litig . eau be justiticd. The triith is, its a game or brag, intended to impose upon the timid and credulous, and to opeiatt• on the Iloatiirg vote. But, 118 1151.1,11, il, 'Win fail them ano add one more unit to their, disappointment without teachlng them wisdom or honesty. The people are too intelligent for such tactics and cannot be driven' into the support of a iniumfactdieed great man, when the workineic are ILIAVII botches and liars. AT a I teent sessi, i of the Supteme Corot, in Philadslpl la, the wiestion Of the eonstiNiti , niality of the Local'Option Nti, NV:II4 taken up and postponed until next January. The ..i ty solicitor re `iiiiiclied that he would ask the Counhis newrs of the city, to grant .i lieenses in Ili: ward for e hitil the special act was. ls.ed the 'wOue as if no lam e.riNted. To the 'ainazoment of every ono present, Chief Justice Tht»noson remarked that lie hoped they world do so, as that would be au easy solution or the difficulty, The next morning the venerable head of tle court found it. necessary to explain I Is nuts; extraordinary remark - ,and to.dc., iy that he intended to advise or suggest the disregarding of the law, until there was an ad ve'rso decision upon it. It is must remarkable to ns, that the Chief Justice should have so far forgotten -himself, as to suggest or even, tolerate the idea that any law could be disregarded,. until it had-beet .judicially,detopnined to lie . miconslitutional. It wae his thity 'to have rebuked ' the city soliettei• t'or making any such intimation, instead of encouraging it. A' changc - iii plio of dm judges of the tinfireme Court this "all, would, we I 11111 k. lie. ;Ittl'illit'll ' with oX cellent. ivoilts. . . 'Cot— McCtunt: ponouneed at. Ball:' more Itbi istoutioo to support Ay. t low for Covoraor. This will iloubLleeo act ouro I the Deuweratic candidate pro 'digiously, for of course he did not; dream, fill i pohsiblo until be Loud We have, no doubt also, that, Col. Mc. Clore was deliborathuj; prayerfully ovei , .the queptiou on to thovilfy day on whiel.t ho Alcule this anuouncentent. ,(tb, y dear, good Ropublicans,who conscion , tiousb vu sal for the &mair from tlo Fourth' DisVricts.uuticr tho idea of re- Tottnn;,-you now under:Amur the of that pulitidal "bridge? if you, ha on not, had Anlibticht already to domonstral your follyi.:Prit tarn to now and la 1p; to . elect t./rtancy.: and then you. can e`;-• peat t t it . l.lte romainder of Your livev, S. S. Cox, whoni Mr. Grooloy 81111 Iliul Slinitet," iviim robbed 'of hi watch find abain. 811(1 a considerable SUM of milt%roilitto^attetaling the llalthnoro• Convention... • attonded Doinooratio'conientions long enough to know bottoo than• to ltavo alyint his person in.tbat 130(t of crowAit.. LooK out for a Republican victory. in North Caryjina next month:, The Demo - over the vast cd - rrirptio&- fulid+ which has boon sent down', there. Whenever a lintrnicrat roldizeh:that the people have' made up Moil" minds' to clean out his: party,le begins . to howl "money," "fraud," " corruption," 'Aley, aro 'conced ing the result' already doWn in the Tar State. Wonder hovi much these'conscl entions fellows will swear was spent to rlect after next November? • , A VOTE for Greeley moons hid and comfort to the persistent enemies of the Republican partyyits measures and pol icy.- It inEvs end ratement to the defiant rebel spirit which scorns and vie.. latea the law of the' land, enacted or thn protection Inl-111d r -I•berty - add 'property. It meads a tudllingness to restore to, power _ the Democratic party, aud.con fide to its levering dud direction Lieu trusts which it abused and betrayed. It incites a sorrender of the administration. of the Government, into the hands of the men who labored and fought to destroy it, and a, condemnation of the men who stood liy it thrtandi all perils dialtrettly and herontly rislrod tb,l lives and property to defend 011(1 maintain it. It means ingratitude to our benolactors and snviJars, ;Ind a mistaken and haz ardous confidence in the authors and perpetrators of our National calamities. It means the vet-opening of the questions Bottled by the N'4 ., ar, and a jeopardizing of the rights which 'were the fruits of the ,Union victories. It 111011115 agitation, dis turbances and conflicts, both in political and economic relations, and the unset tling of private and public, affairs. - It means the overthrow of safety and se curity for the hazard of an experiment that mayprove most disastrous. .It means the exchange of a (tortoni good for a doubtful one, of a fixed and satis fabtory policy for an erratic and experi mental ono i, of tried and reliable offic ials for inexperienced and visionary ones in connection with others proved to be corrupt and unfaithful. It means this and 'more and worso, whether intended by him who casts it or not. Let him, therefore, who moposes to vote for Greeley, thoughtfully consider the consetruenees,"and rigidly interrogate his judgment and' conscience before he commits himselfj)9.yond recall. Let him reflect whitheV‘he is drifting, into what company ho is entering, in whom he is placing his confidence, and_what will be the results. Let hint ask himself if he is ll ' il l bsistent and faithful to his honest con victions, and true to the great principles of justice and freedom, that hemtofore guided his alfeetions anti actions, and whether they still lead his heart and eon ibict. Lot hint not unrellet tingly allow old confidences to blin'ti Irvin to piesent unfaithfulness, and pi even' bim flotu . perceiving the wide chasm :hat2 , yawns between them. Let hint inqUire how it Nimes th,it Greeley bas abandoned the Rept,liiican ',tidy, and it in do m e and eentshml uu 'elution with the patty and men whom lie wiaparingly denounced and opliu:cd ye ,:is and how it happens that the worst elements of that party, coMpOSlng Tainmany and its v.otst associates and subside try gangs of thieve, tepeaters and rutli .no, are now hi, rinse .lutient and t',nspir , lous &Mulls 411 , i Let ldm ask in whom hasthe change been WI ought , and Whet her it not more probable that Greeley has gone over to his now allies; than that they have, as a bed y„recan t id4lmic long convictions and furopt,l his? lid even youvii:ce luni..cli of Greeley':. lolitic.,l integfify, let Itimillouiro Iffiv• that integrity could be ma ful allied or eNefeiNed if, throig,l, him, the 11e1110 , 101 le patty is pla,:•ed to power and put in possession of all influ ential positions. Would he control that p„fly, off the pitrly 111111 ? W 110 trutticl he the most dependent, the least powei . - f' WOI/111 stand most ill moil of the other " \Vile would have the hoolc , ill the nose ? The histsry of tho pilot answers these questions. No roan ever left Ins patty ant acted with its Tl , o ll ellts " ilhuul beoiluing etc of them iii feeling and action, and no President ever was able to catry out it poliei or embody his views it legislation without a supTierting party. They nat urally gt aviti.te towards cacti other, and inevitably itssiMilate— iti.onger and most numerous' absorbing :Aid merging the wealter and less numerous. By this lai'; should Greeley be elected, he and his liberal reform sup ,t,orters will be lost aturdlliappcar in then urasbes of the Democratic party, to be head of no more forever.,„, " 'mown y retipondd to Ulf: 17,01111iitait , ot the N•alional !Jon veation at Boltiotorc." nose wall.° the words inscribed on a lkinner unfurled from the city ball, New York, omithe receipt of the news of the nomination af Greeley. Is any 'other ovidenoe needed to prove Oreeley's bargain with the 'Tammany thieves? This corrule, ming, front Its head centre, presided over by Mayor Hall, who was Bayed from expulsion from ollico by the Tammany Republicans, flout, in tho face of the world, its impudent joy over . the nomination of its favorite and con federate, and gloats over the prospect of, regaining its-Power amtplunder. ' • Melt all mOiltion Ve"nough to sicken honest men, and make them shudder at the bum idea of the eleOtiait of a man who is the"cliMien leader of a gang of scoundrels, who have amazed and horri fied the world by their stupendous frauds and villainies. M this signal from their chief, the lesser rascals, who crOwd4he shahs and grogg,nriea of tic city, and . enact the role of peiJurc,l repeaters, kink up the cry and decorated their dens with bunting and transparencies, laudatory of thr nit whose fortunes were bound up with their own. How can the friend ship and support of such men for iffreeley j he accounted for, w.f.:vitt open the theory V that he is conimitted to their base pm roses ? Is it conceivable that they have. been won over from their crimes and, degradation, by love and admiration for the imputed virtues and purity of °me i! ley, and that they have voluntarily aban dotted their evil' praCtiees,'Und j suddonly p become 'honest men and good citizens ? :I No, that is too improbable an idea for 11 the Most emdulous.. Their adoptien of ()reeky lain only be explained on the hypothesis, ,that his election will enure to their advantage and subscrvo their t ends. Ptirtially beaten and brolcen-- Ipartinlly driven front place and plunder, they are necking rho means of protection . and safety, and : ultimate restoration to j the thieving uppoitudities thoy once 'enjoyed ; and no ,sooner is the nomina tion of Giceley,SuppoSotl tgbo attainable, than:they, uro seen to emerge from . thole' retreats• and looneealmigs, and. labor to make it a Alqainty. Oath() instant thet nomination is ,made„ they, boldly, eon- j flout an indignant nation;. and .loudly nod olionsively problaim their. approval ' 'of it. " Trunmanylesponds:" ' To what commendable act Aiit it ever before respond? When did its approval ever before indicate worth in the re: cipientt, When did -it ever ally itself With an he — nest-cause or cast,lts fortunes • Iyitli a good (inc.?: Lot the history of its Career answer, :IF; written in the liyes, thefts and peijuries Of Tweed, BA Connelly, Sweeney and their associated bandits. And let every. honeSt man:asli himself. the question, can iletTice.Grce loystuyontuled by such itssociates - and gn them, be a tit .-poMon to be (intrusted with the destinies of our great , Country, and ought - not the alliance be kween him and ',hem .sel)arato hiui from the support and e:Mlldenee of all 'honor able and true 111G11 event, since the assassination of _Lincoln and the at i ciitasy of Johnson, has so delighted the rebMs and • copperheads as the -nomination of Greeley by ibe'i Democracy at Baltimore. They fairly boil over with exultation, and exclaim, '• tet lot Pe' ye rt 4 . loWs uggestive' tile their toy and expres:dons, and how Plainly do they indicate the animus that , led them to make that nomination, No ri...can be so simple as to be deceived by the transparent - fraud and h~-pocrit icnl of repentance and renun cfn; ion :if all their desfiuctive principles and ir [relit the geneineness of the dtinveHi..ii c Lich transforms a whole party in the tWinkliing.of en. eyc, i'rem opposers and haters of relaibiican prin ciples and measures, into -warm and ardent supporters and friends'.' Such a belief is negatived by the Whole consistent history of the party, and is irreconcilable with human nature. No, Use Democracy aro, to-day, the same they were during all lhe years of the viar and since—the same negro-hating party —the same rebels and sympathizeta with rebels—the same enemies of reconstruc tion—the .same opponents of the Thir teenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth con stitutional amendment, as ever ; and the Cincinnati platforin no more ex presses their opinions and principles to-day, than it would have done four years ago, when Llteir platfirin distinctly and emphatically denounced and repu diated all that it titi,l,ains and declares. Then, they denounced all the now amendments, and demanded that they should be set aside as illegal and uncon stitutional. Then, they clamored for the repeal of s all thu reconstLction acts. Then, they liercellassailed the eufram , chist. mold. of the negro, and ctied about for . a White man's government; and then, proclaimed their pu . ..p.,se to ropu , , diate the war debt or the country. Since then, in all then county and State con ventions, they have le-asset ted aid re-, iterated the same e:entiments. What, has so suddenly revolutionized turned them inside out IV.hat bccn the prate:;, awl the infltionee" 1;y v.lo.se wuntler-worl:.ing hand has the mist is aru wiungl4,' IVe answer, that thc whole performance . is a fraud 111111 pc' practiced for I. sole f regal powet, that 1.11 o .) ,coist.t.e their old xiews, nu , t iret•c.o th, which prevai iLd !II ISo: ;iceoropii:.ll those cud:, t toy now pr.. 10,. ., to ho'd io abeyaucc ilidt In In Loth. and to have become lot lowers of time ."swe heads,'' in older, by thin onin, to de feat the I:eicubliean,party, which origi- Rnied, 11111,111lil. .111. i now .111- 11Ulthl all the np.sosttlesot tioor Ile profession. • Tlll, realm's of the 11E1:AND will tnelnittic the I:hat:noted-A to eOll% o'll.joll o 1. •II 17-; 1 01•5110 , .' 1100110111 : Id . :New . 1 ~•• nn,i I'.'- .eolid ,v;,it.,,11 .0 the ral.clitl.t.te:, allog.:d I 0 t, 3 sm :a • F.,100 tleruia of New: Yuri:. tnan Libel al Don:ma:at:it: Avltioll w,:11 111 fo, :tied nI tog.ill; to the ti "Pi" - ion cl file Getill:111, 0: NeW VOlll, ILI ils issue :if the twelfth Instant, with regard to tills petit:on : "In collecting and counting these 1. - I,i'lott the same' at itionet it: gas cer:. la•cit used, whico 11. l cacti:wit in Ihe dranglit 11101 e.11(101,‘ liMlt of our goin:t litittse hills. in It hioli the addition of a :awe - ) did 1101 11111011111, to lunch. • 'Phis suppustion is titii — tt - ore as the gent lonlon who attebtletl to the business of collecting sign:times to this communication 7,111 a [mod oprort u y a Lei t•;/ ouch eight are required In homy other nawhines. Compared Critic Others the is SO loin that every thrifty farmer stay readily erminte the owner for Itimaelf,r n enmi,oriand Cnl lOh Thrasher and Separator for pm initiwnt use uq his barn floor. Parini,' would do melt In Fall :Ind examine It. s TII E CA II LISLE CIDE It Al I 1„ made :rt ,„ our eMoLoooonoot, 100, work Om highte.l recommendations front nil abut linen tried it. It both plead mid rrnthee tlu. .attics. It therefion roliehls liclitor pressure and pitehices the largest gonittl•y of cider froth the noinont of apples put Tho Willoughby Patent GUM SPRING GRAIN DRILL is xo Wl-1I 1(11000 to far 1.111.1,111 otoxt part, of Pohl,. that no need not I peak at any length of . Its milt, We nose hppa It with op witliont timing Altai ot, atal-with the •nos els so lttachoil an iq witch no en nigh tranli 01 - xig-Siigi w liteh ov?Is pie: fi,re.l: To ld are also pot on by soli new patent airaogoinent, is Inch gisem them areatec flexibility and hum r ottaclontnt to the Drill: NG' gooil farmer,nn ntf,rd In Jn 0111..1(tbe WiilonA h y thin Spring 111111. bavo 010,1)0 on bond N Fply of odder Cutters, Corn of:dl,Nl .and If ',flirty of nth, i l / 1 1.10111111118 115111,d by throws ff, RI Ihe lux vet juices. • F. CIARI)NER A:: CO.' Carl I , .11111 P , 1872. • r•j07231,, HATS AND CAPS: jr . ( 3i CALLIO,'' No. 29 WEST MAIZI F.TitNZT C,A.I3IJSLE, Tho unTTEIS of Oarlintali Thu lIATTIIIt of elliiiMlo I The latest styleiJust rseelvoil l, , Tllll.lll4ttiNt G Lyleq slways on hand .111,1 S lIATri fritul bat Malltiftcylrys I IiASIIIQN/111.1:11A:T . Sjot4 0A1.1,10 wishes to coil ittt potion to his lars MS 11 A Tk? aND CA p,9 oluaultfit,c,t9rtp Ll f tt!, W ov4. 2.. 01, :lie bast Atit!znurtts for coloring. - IIALc W • Ooodt. nnA e.fop.ts, ' • Thd highosCdA3ll VI:101 , 9 pnid for C 1J N , nim A ll= lihri49 1 111111