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(Successors to CORBETT & SCHARCH,)

Carriage Builders,

122, 124, and 126 West 25th St., Would call attention of those intending to buy car riages of any description to

THEIR WORK.

Our practical experience and thorough education in Carriage-Making, enables us to turn out work that is not surpassed by any other manufacturer.

The satisfaction and the favor of those who have used, and are still using, our work, is constantly attested by their continued patronage.

We keep constantly on hand a superior assortment of carriages of all descriptions such as

Landaus,

Landaulettes,

Demi Landaulettes,

Clarences, etc.

Also, a great variety of our unequaled

ROAD WAGONS.

THE SUBSCRIBERS MANUFACTURE

ROTARY PRINTING PRESSES,

With from Two to Ten Impression Cylinders. Also,

PERFECTING PRESSES

of various descriptions, with Two or more Impressions Cylinders, to be used with type or stereotype, and with one to six feeders, or with rolls of paper.

SINGLE AND DOUBLE CYLINDER PRESSES.

BED AND PLATEN POWER PRESS, for book work.

NEW STOP CYLINDER PRESS,

with table distribution, and from four to ten-form rollers, for the finest illustrated newspapers and the best book and wood-cut work.

SMALL JOB, CARD, RAILROAD TICKET AND COUPON
PRESS. SINGLE LARGE HAND CYLINDER PRESS

AND SINGLE HAND CYLINDER RAILWAY
PRESS, FOR NEWSPAPERS

of moderate circulations, printing by hand power eight hundred impressions per hour, Also, furnish every article required in printing-offices, (including type.)

PATENT LITHOGRAPHIC POWER PRESSES. HYDRAULIC AND SCREW PRESSES. Bookbinders' Machinery;

ALSO,

MACHINERY FOR ELECTROTYPERS AND STEREOTYPERS.

Cast-steel Saws with Improved Inserted Teeth.

The above are all manufactured on our own premises, under our personal supervision, of the best material and workmanship. Illustrated catalogues sent on application.

R. HOE & CO.,

Office and Warerooms, 29 and 31 Gold St., N. Y.

Manufactories on Grand, Broome, Sheriff, and Columbia Streets, N. Y.

R. HOE & CO.,

PRESS MAKERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF ALL KINDS OF

Extra Cast-Steel Saws, Including Circular Saws, with Patent Inserted Teeth; Solid Tooth Circular Saws, Mill, Mulay, Gang, and Cross-Cut Saws, Mandrels, Gumming Machines, etc., etc.

OFFICE AND WAREROOM, 29 AND 31 GOLD ST., N. Y.

CLUBS.

THE price at which we furnish THE WEEKLY WORLD to clubs is so very low that we barely save expenses without making any profit. We can, therefore, urge a renewal and extension of subscriptions without exposing ourselves to the imputation of interested motives. We honestly believe that an increased circulation of THE WEEKLY WORLD will contribute more than any thing else to the success of the Democratic party. In New-York, where the greater portion of our daily edition is taken, the party is triumphant, and nothing can shake its ascendancy. In comparing our subscription books with the returns of the recent elections, we find that the Democratic gains are uniformly the greatest in those towns where the clubs which receive our Weekly are composed of the largest number of members. From the many letters we are daily receiving at this season of the year for the renewal of club subscriptions, we insert the two following, one from a rural town in this State, and the other from Michigan:

"ELLICOTTVILLE, CATTARAUGUS COUNTY, November 10, 1870. "DEAR WORLD: Ellicottville makes a Democratic gain of fifty. The colored voters of this town voted with us, and one of them is a well-read and intelligent man. They believe Democrats are their best friends after all. THE WORLD makes Democratic gains.

"Truly yours,

(Signed)

E. D. NORTHUP."

It is an interesting coincidence that the Democratic gain in Ellicottville is just equal to the number of WEEKLY WORLDS taken in that town. The following is the Michigan letter: "TO THE EDITOR OF THE WORLD: "PORT HURON, MICH., November 11, 1870. "DEAR SIR: Inclosed find draft for $11, payable to your order. For this send your weekly edition for one year to the following persons, as an addition to our club.

"Šome three years since I secured for you in this county some seven hundred subscribers for your paper. I shall now try and beat this if possible.

"In this Congressional district the Radical majority for Congress in 1868 was 1700. It now requires the official canvass to determine whether he is elected or not. One more effort, and we expect to roll up a good round Democratic majority. "The campaign of 1872 has already begun. Do the best you can for us. We will appreciate it. Yours truly, (Signed) LEWIS ATKINS."

We could fill our columns with similar letters; but not to encumber our space we limit our selection to these specimens. No fact is better established than that the success of the Democratic party in any locality is proportioned to the circulation of THE WORLD in that locality. As we make no profit on the papers furnished to clubs, may we not reasonably ask citizens who love the Democratic party and desire its success in the next Presidential election, to make some exertions to extend our circulation?

We do not ask any body to contribute any thing to the success of the party in this direction without a full equivalent. Our agricultural information and market reports alone are worth twice the price of the paper, to say nothing of the interest of its general news and the value of its political.matter. Located, as we are, at the great centre of trade, and compelled to keep a sharp eye on all markets to meet the wants of the commercial community, we have unrivaled facilities for collecting all information bearing on the prices of agricultural products and the state of trade. There is no newspaper in the United States, of any party, whose commercial intelligence is so full and reliable as that of THE WORLD. We shall next year pay unusual attention to the agricultural department of the Weekly; and besides original contributions, we shall give all that is most valuable in the agricultural journals of this country and England. The statistics of cotton, tobacco, and other Southern staples will be given with great fullness and accuracy. Our facilities for furnishing all the current news are unequaled, and nothing of any importance or interest will fail to reach our Weekly subscribers.

But what we most desire to impress upon our Democratic friends is the importance of THE WORLD as a means of building up the party and insuring its triumph in 1872. Every addition to its clubs will make at least one additional Democratic voter in the Presidential election. We therefore ask our friends, not for our sake but for the sake of the party, to do their best to extend our circulation next year.

FOR THE NEW YEAR, 1871.

THE GREAT FAMILY PAPER.

We have just one rule in the conduct of the New-York Ledger; it is, without regard to money or price, to procure and publish the best matter that can be had in the world.

Young men and young ladies will find the Ledger full of advice and instruction especially intended for them, and which is calculated to influence, for good and for happiness, the whole future of their lives.

It would be as impossible for us to enumerate beforehand all the good things which we shall publish within the coming year, as for us to tell in advance what the weather will be for every day.

Distinguished public men, including Foreign Ministers, Members of the Cabinet and Senators in Congress, write for the Ledger.

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More money is spent upon the Ledger to make it a good paper than is spent upon any other paper in the world.

More people take it and like it than ever took any other paper on this continent.

It is so interesting that families who once begin to take it can never bear to give it up; and they always consider that the small price which it costs affords them more for the money than any thing else that they buy.

The Ledger is always full of life. Nobody ever complains that even a single number is dull.

It has the largest number-of great and distinguished writers.

It contains the purest, sweetest and most delightful love stories, striking narratives, and instructive biographical and historical sketches.

It has the most popular and carefully prepared collection of scientific facts.

All questions growing out of the domestic relations, lovers' quarrels, law and business matters, are regularly answered in its columns. A vast amount of useful information is given through this attractive department of the Ledger.

The principal Bishops, Doctors of Divinity, and Clergymen write for it.

All the old writers-their names are familiar to the public, and it is needless to repeat them here-will continue to write for the Ledger, for we pay them higher prices than any body else can afford to; and we have engaged exclusively for the Ledger the very best and most popular of the rising authors.

Good as the Ledger has heretofore been, the volume for 1871 will be better than any one ever yet published.

The BEST that a long experience enables us to select, and that money, without stint, can buy, will be constantly spread before the readers of the Ledger. OUR TERMS FOR 1871-NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE.

Single copies, $8 per annum; four copies, $10, which is $2.50 a copy; eight copies, $20. The party who sends us $20 for a club of eight copies, (all sent at one time,) will be entitled to a copy free. Postmasters and others who get up clubs, in their respective towns, can afterward add single copies at $2.50. No subscriptions taken for a less period than one year. Canada subscribers must send twenty cents in addition to the subscription, to pay the American postage. When a draft or money-order can conveniently be sent, it will be preferred, as it will prevent the possibility of the loss of money by mail. The postage on the Ledger to all parts of the country is only twenty cents a year, or five cents a quarter, payable at the office where the paper is delivered.

We employ no traveling agents. Address all communications to

ROBERT BONNER, Publisher, Corner of William and Spruce Sts., New-York.

Bankers & Brokers,

HAVE REMOVED FROM

49 WALL STREET to 11 WALL STREET,

Where, as Bankers and Brokers, they continue the business of dealing in

BONDS STOCKS, GOLD, AND EXCHANGE.

Execute orders at the Stock and Gold Boards, Buy and Sell at their counter American Gold and Silver, receive Deposits of Gold and Currency, and allow interest on same; Ne

gotiate Loans, and make

Advances, etc., etc.

Special Agents for Railway Companies.

We have also on hand, from time to time for investment, desirable

RAILROAD, MORTGAGE AND COUNTY BONDS,

paying from six to ten per cent, gold, per annum, and especially suitable for parties seeking investments for funds in trust.

FOR PARTICULARS, ADDRESS AS ABOVE.

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