N BW I I JOB I PRINTING OFFICE. Wt rt-sptHMfiillv invito public attention to our I i COMPLETE JOB PRINTING HOUSE! Corner Main and Pine streets, over the : I Music Store. COMMERCIAL PRINTING AND PILAMPLET WORK A SPECIALTY. LETTER, NOTE AND HILL HXADB. ENVKLOPKH, TAGS Neat I j executed ou the shortest notice. BUSINESS, PARTY AND CALLING CARDS pointed to order. ALVOKD & SON. J Vertical 1 Feed. As usual, the Vertical Feed Sewing Machine took First Pre mium, at the late county Fair. I 1831. THE CULTIVATOR 1880. AND Country Gentleman. ' The Best of the AGUICULTUIi A L VV EKK LI Pa>. J # It is UNSURPASSED, If not UNKQUALED, for he | Amount and Variety of the PRACTICAL INFORMA TION it contains, and for the Ability and Extent, oi its CORRESPONDENCE— in the Three Chief Directions of Farm Crops and Processes, Horticulture and Fruit-Frowing, Live Stock and Dairying while it also includes all minor dcpatmcnts of rurul interest, such as the Poultry Yard, Entomology, Bee-Keeping, Given house and Grapery, Veterinary Replies, Farm Questions and Answers, Fireside Reading, Domestic Economy, and a summary of the News of the Week. Its MARKET REPORTS are unusually complete, and more information can be gathered from its columns than from any other source with regard to the Prospects of the Crops, as throwing light upon one of the most important of all q nest ion s— When to Buy and When to Sell. It is liberally illustrated, and constitutes to a greater degree than any of Its contemporaries A LIVE AGRICULTURAL NICWBP \I*EK Of never-failing interest both to Producers and Con sumers of every class. The COUNTRY GENTLEMAN is published Weekly on the following terms, when paid strictly in ad vance: One Cepy, one year, $2.50; Four Copies, $lO, and an additional copy for the year free to the sender of the Club - Ten Copies, S2O, and an additional copy for th year free to the sender of the Club. For the year 13S0, these prices include a copy of tho ANNUAL REGISTER OF RURAL AFFAIRS, to each übscriber—a book of 141 pages and about 120 ne gravings—a gift by the Publishers. All NEW Subscribers for IS SO, paying in ad vance now, will receive the paper WEEKLY, from receipt of remittance to January Ist, 1880, with out charge. ## "Specimen copies of the paper free. Adddress, LUTIIER TUCKER Alt HON, Publishers, Albany, N Y. p*OR THE PRESIDENTIAL YEAR. ■" THE LEADING AMERICAN NEWS TAPER." THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE FOR 1880. During the corning Presidential year The Tribune will be a more effective agency than ever for telling the news best worth knowing, and for enforcing sound politics. From the day the war closed it has been most anxious for an end of sectional strife. But it saw two years ago, and was the first persist ently to Proclaim the new danger to the country from the revived alliance of the Holid Houth and Tammany Hall, ajfepinst that danger It sought to rally the old Freedom and the Union. It began by demanding the abandonment of personal dislikes, and set the example. It called for an end to attacksjupon each other Instead of the enemy; and for the heartiest agreement upon whatever ii* candidates the majority should put up against the common foe. Since then the tide of disaster lias been turned back; every doubtful state has been won, and the omens for National victory were never more cheering. THE TRIBUNE'S POSITION. Of The Tribune's share in all this, those speak most enthusiastically who have seen most of the struggle. It will faithfully portray the varning phases of the campaign now beginning. It will earnestly strive that the party of Freedom, Union and Public Faith may select the man surest to win, and surest to make a good President. But in this j crisis it can conceive of no nomination this party i could make that would not be preferable to the best that could possibly be supported by the Solid South and Tammany Hall. The Tribune is now spending much labo and money than ever before to hold the distinction it has enjoyed of the largest circulation among the best peopje. It secured, and means to retain it by he coming the medium of the best thought and the voice of the best conscience of the time, by keeping abreast of the highest progress, favoring the frcees discussions, hearing all sides, appealing always to the best intelligence and the purest morality, and re fusing to carter to the tastes of the vile or the prcju dices of the ignorant. BPKCIAI. FEATURES. The distinctive features of The Tribune are known to everybody. It gives all the news. It has the best correspondents, and retains them from year to year. It is the only paper that maintains a special telegraphic wire of its own between its ollice and Washington. Its scientific, literary, artistic and re ligious intelligence is the fullest. Its book reviews j are the best. Its commercial and financial nc-s is I tlie most exact Its type is the largest; and iis ar- J rangement the most systematic. ' THE SEMI-WEEKLY TRIBUN i is by far the most successful Semi-Weekly in the ! country, having fonr times the circulat'on of any j other in New York. It is especially adapted to the I large class of intelligent, professional or business j readers too far from New York to depend on our papers for the daily news, who nevertheless want I the editorials, correspondence, book reviews, scien tific matter, lectures, literary miscellaney, etc,, for which The Tribune is famous. Like The Weekly it contains sixteen pages, and is in convenient form for binding, THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE remains the great favorite of our substantial country population, and has the largest circulation of any Weekly issued from the office of a Daily paper in New York, or, so far as we know, in the United States. It revises and condenses all the news of the week into more readable shape. Its agricultural de partment is more carefully conducted than ever, and it has always been considered the best. Its market reports are the official standard for the Dairymen's Association, and have long been recognized author ity on cattle, grain and general country produce. There are special departments for the young and for household interests; the new handiwork department already extremely popular, gives unusually accurate and comprehensive instructions in knitting, crochet ing, and kindrid subjects; while poetry, fiction and the humors of the day are all abundantly supplied. The verdict of the tens of thousand old readers who have returned to it during the past year is that they find it bitter than ever. Increasing patronage and faeilitias enable us to reduce the rates to the lowest point we have ever touched, and to ofier the most amazing premiums yet given, as follows: TERMS OF THE TRIBUNE, Postage free In the United States. DAILY TRIBUNE $lO 00 THK SKMI-WKKKLY TRIBUNE. Single copy, one year sls 00 Five copies, one year 2 50 each Ten copies, one year 2 00 each THK WEKKIY TRIBUNE. Singie copy, one year $2 00 Five copies, one year .• 1 50 each Ten copies, one year 1 00 each And number of copies of either edition above ten at the saine rate. Additions to clubs may be made at any time at club rates. Remit by Draft on New York, I'ost Office Order, or in Registered letter. AN AMAZING PREMIUM. To any one subscribing for The Weekly Tribune for five years, remitting us the price, $lO, and $2 more, we will send Chamber's Fncyclopitdia, ton abridged. in fourteen volumes, with all the revisions of the Edinburgh edition of 1870, and with six ad ditional volumes, covering American topics not fully treated in the original work; —the whole embracing, by actual printer's m