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N EW ENTERPRISE —IN— WILMINGTON, DEL. .. - , ,| ia t many of the best customers of this city are in h' !f g..ing elsewhere for their clothing, and that entorpris • 'ns would prefer to patronize home industry, if they could """'„„„dated a» well, wo havo taken the large store, Sixth streets, known as the SaVille Building, and have ,1 flip expressly for the Merchant Tailoring and Clothing • *, where wo intend to keep the best goods that aro in the r f'r Custom Work and will have them trimmed and made f .° rv W manner. Our aim shall be to keep such goods fl I, wor k as will satisfy the very best trade We shall full assortment of clothing for Men, Youths, Boys and We buy our goods for cash, which makes us feel safe iocs shall be the very lowest. We ask a trial. I hop a m jingour prices IST. MULLIN & SON, SIXTH! AND sts, NNEBKC ICE CO ACES AND DEPOTS FOR SALE OF ICE. PAL OFFICE, 8 E. Second street. Open from 0 a. in. to 8 p. in. Sunday from 7 to 12 a. in., and 4 to 0 p. in. LfflTH AND POPLAR, open from 5 a. m. to 8 p. Sunday from 5 to 9 a. in, and 4 to 8 p. in. L.EKillTII STREET. Open from 5 a. in. to8 p. I Sunday from 7 to 12 a. in. and 4 to 6 p. in. k WALNUT STREET. Open daily from 5 a. m. to 8 p. Sunday included. joniTII AND MONROE. Open from 0 a. m. to 7 p. Sunday from 7 to 12 a. in. and 4 to G p. in. 111 III. III. !U. IINGTON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 7th. THE GREAT INDON CIRCUS MS' ROYAL BRITISH MENAGERIE, "ITU THE INTERNATIONAL TEN ALLIED SHOWS îooper, Bailey & Co., SOLE OWNERS. M Biggest Little Baby that over set the world crazy, the pderful Baby Elephant, % I A' a wu ofh'i'ril $100,000 for. Bora March 18, in Philadelphia ls luull, lis and twenty days old when exhibited in Middletown, miiiiou Mow Oiin. Four »now White. Two Blood Bay, y ' lllfti, w r of trick., equal to any elephant, horse, dog or monkey. 1 ii Huent altnu exhibits more Trained Elephants than any other '»»»»»S.J'rt 1 *'?? 1 ® 313 VRi *CH A-NIX OAMKL.1--.I3 Mor« than Hi?v'iîf e V' <irlv< n J, i »huih hh, Laudein, four «breaxl, aud tl'* ,000. Jßri? iX2a QW * W gorgeous Golden « ha» lot« which IJ*, win, i mm.,,, ufSSÎ 0A D*T lh ,°. «7 feet, «hortest 50 feet, iü LIIH JB'frlcnqilcKt mmH ippopotamus, smallest ever exhibited. 1 '®^urli, K |: H SI:Jita? ie ? eever * t * en 1,1 America. J^rg^t Pavilions -A More end better Music than any r :.' ,r i"i"K I.lid,« I »E? ,w t . '}i CH w,th grandeur! Separate dens of Wild fc Lm, jU * KLK<j* RIU L?GHT! e,,ÄI,# 4 ^ucaied Panther«, 4 royal Bengal : T\V O H I IS G N, Dual ('Ire Company ! 16 Female Gyra 1 ho world who 1«! Every riding act hrircbuck. Every artist great . No pads or c**|| r-door platform to ride on. ! Only lady '•rows 'somersault I • I ' Twelve Double Homer nu nit louper»! I rV\ ■ 1 Rent high lev,pern. licet Nlngle leapers. HIM Tumble!». HIX GREAT CLOWNS if a« m ,ny different nationalities. "Bl'.OiMiO people beneath our luxurious cut« ami have 6,nooeushloned opera chairs V We 1 ftO cm. I ( IIIIJIKKN, naider 9 years 35 C!s » hour earlier. CHESTER, Wednesday, Oct 6. *Wx Tl ,r, n ^' at ^ *nd 7.80 p. m. Doors open ^ Oct. 5. 'fe^Tbia! ""Una I w " Ü* l *P?m! e |iî harf . Wllming trv ,,r n . hoth «lue», hy y of hhirciiandise is Ii ï □snts *'t«iiv S.*ÆS» A CO.. ^Hiikliiglon 5A Glazier rk In bl, im« No, 219 7^ 3 Sh 'ola» Street. m, O THE LOVERS L Good Bread. Choicest. Louis Patent Procef Flour, only 87.00, .$6 00 liy Flour. Excellent F Handsoine superfine These Hours can't be beat. Make beau tllul white bread. *OUNI>8 BEST FLOUR On CENTS, AT l, (Ml 28 w. n. chandler; . Ao. tfllM ABKtfT STttKKT, seplß-tf. Half way between «Ml dr 7tli ini'MTN W4NTKn for tlio Best Book toSÄ? T1IK ■HI6TOKY of Ihe lUIU.K fil'i.BwniD Htkki. "'J L'lipif j#. ..vary Subscriber. Agents arc SKnV MB teSIOO P« r w«« k - ö ''" d rur Special l'arm» to , V i HUNKY BILL FUBLI8HING L0, t ■ep23-4t Established 1817,] New Groocls. S.H. STAATS No- 405 Market 8t.. Hast Opened Thin Day And U receiving almost dally NEW & BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS — IN — FANCY HOSIERY —FOft— Ladies, Gents and Misses Also Opening a Large ana Well Selected stock of MERINO UNDERWEAR —for— LA DIES, GENTS and MISSES. r|lHE VAKIKfl 1'ALACE. Adams & Bro., 504 MARKET STREET, BICYCLES, BICYCLES, A huudsome lot of now Children's car- 1 rlages Just lu; call and examine them. l>rn Goods, Hunier h ,Q Notions, Carpet*, Flour, Stair and Table Oilcloth*. Window Shades,Glass, Tin,Crockery and Wooden Ware, Cutlery, Hugs, Games. Stall Rods, ItraoketN, Rase Bulls and Bats Musks, Express Wagons, Vela, ipedé* Rocking Horses, Doll Carriages, Wheel barrows. Fire Works, Flags, Lanterns, Drums, Looking u lusses, Toys, Fansy Goods, nd Dolls, Of all kinds. BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBERS, Agents tor John Clark's mile end cotton George Clark's O. N. T. cotton, uullaman • tic cotton, and sole agents lor Bralnard, Armstrong Sl Co's ilks Cheapest place tu the city to buy uuyihlug, at 504= MARKET ST. ■nur WM. B. aHAKH 4ih mill viaK hr r ntn NtW liKtSb CiOOD AT It EDUCED PEIOK8. Col d ol Black Silks from the Importer. Di C10THS & CASSIMERES Tne largest stock nave ever offeree A Imo a full Hue of Carpets and Oil Cloths From 35018 to kz.oo per yard. wwi. B. SHARP, 4th AN MARKET HTH fjpHE ART1ZAN8 HAVINGS BANK 602 MARKET STREET. INCOKPOKATKD JANUARY 24til, 1861. Open to receive deposits dafl> ... M«. until 4 P. M., ami on Tuesday_ uruay evening» from? to 8 o'clock. SEMI-ANNUAL DIVIDEND, regularly made in April and October. When dividend« are not withdrawn« they are accounted as deposits. Thus p»-r • manful deposit« compound their interest twice In each year. MANAGERS. Clement il. Smyth, I George W. Bush, Chus. W.Townsend I George S. Capelie, NuLhan'l K.Henson, | M. L. Llchensteln Henry F. Dure, | Edward Darling lot W. Hustings, I Job H. Jackson, Edward Pusey, | Wm.H. Swift, Anthony Higgins. GEO. W. BUSH. President KO. S. CAPELLE, Vice President. leb'Jl-lv E. T. TAYL OR Treasurer. ' LHttHT NATIONAL BANK Repository or the Public Money and FINANCIAL AGENTS OF TLIE UNt TED STATES. EDWARD BETTS. President. GEO. D. ARMSTRONG, Cash IKK P*l«l III» • - |<iou,oou. Philadelphia, New York aud Bouton E change lurniHhed to regular DepoellorH without charge. OF WILMINGTON DiHConnt day«, Mondays aud at 8.3U A. M. urudH. DIRECTORS. Clement B. Smyth, John 11. Adam«, Henry S. McOornb, Daniel James I George W. Uuh.. I Eli Garrett, I Sam'I Buucroft. Ii , I William Ttttnal , Edward B-tU. iaul-lv For Immigrants and Capitalists ABOUT HOMES AND INVESTMENTS IN TE AH those Intending to locate lu Texas or wishing to luvest their money safely and most profitably In Real Ewiate, will llud it to their Interest to subscribe for the ••UNION LAND REGISTER," the oldest Real Estate Journal in Texa*. Published weekly at Boerue, Rondell county, Texas. Subscription price $2.«H) f>«r annum. Specimen copy, new ma pamphlet pertaining to pu descriptive circulars ot this ddress upon the receipt of 5" ceutw. I« of Tex»», Idle land and State sent to y « IV J7- ifiidaw. SCHOOL STATIONERY. ALL KINDS OF ARTICLES NECES SARY FORSCHOLARS CAN BE HAD OF E. S. R. Butler, No 120 NlKHKT NTRKET, Wii.minciton, Dan. sep'2. WINIÜ AND LIUIIOHN r riie J «fii'ltre&t G1 «sn —OF— In the City at FREY MS 9 M No. 17 K. Mecund Nlreet Pool I ai it Jyl9 Lovers of Pool can find a ill bare,_ Y«ll WILL FINI» Gla»§ of lleer In the city, at A. Hauber's Saloon, 300 WENT NK4'ONI> STREET, Everybody «ays so. Tin* l.i Mt lanil. TIMELY TOPICS. We shall never know exactly of what "tuff dreams are made. Notwithstand- ing the unbelief of those who disclaim all superstition, strange cases of occult liy constantly come to the sur- hat was a curious one brought out by the death of Miss Faulkner, of Chicago. Her aged mother lives in Ottawa, Canada, and when asked by a correspondent if she bad a daughter in Chicago, she burst into tears, a ylng : 'Tell me what is the matter. I unearned last night she was dead." On being in- formed that the dream had indeed been fulfilled, she wept distressingly. Can all the schools explain what pictured the girl as dead in her mother's mind when her body lay uncared for in a Chicago tenement bouse. - • " The time that is saved be hurrying to meals and elsewhere comes out of a man's life sooner or later," says a phil osophic paragraphist. It is true, yet in spite of the knowledge the American people go through life on the jump, and posât of it Any town whose citizens incline toward deliberation in their business is considered "dead." C_1 the places where they all hurry an "splurge" are supposed to be "alive. The popular idea of being alive is being in a hurry. That goes by the name of " business," though absurd haste would be a more appropriate name for it. There is no time saved by hurrying. Whatever is gathered up in small quan tities is clipped off at the end of life in a solid piece. Women and children are employed in tolerably large numbers in the Knglish mines. Out of 18,796 persons engaged above ground about the metalliferous mines, 3,193 are women and girls, and in addition there are 317 males of the tender ages of between eight and thir teen. Of girls thirty-six are employed between eight and thirteen years old. thirty-two of whom are in the Cornwall Devon district. Of girls between thirteen and eighteen years there are employed 793, Cornwall and Devon em ploying 645 and the North Wales dis trict 106, the only other largely-employ ing district being that of Ireland, where twenty-seven are at work. Of girls above eighteen years old, there are 1,365 employed. The Iyondon World made the startling discovery that kleptomania was com mon in fashionable society, and that thefts of jewelry, furs and wraps were frequent in the ball rooms ana cloak rooms of the W est Knd. Instances were given, names and places being sup pressed. Truth followed in the same strain, and told how a light-fingered lady of title stole a sable cloak from a ducal mansion ; also how another lady of title lost a diamond necklace. It was said that these conveyances of property could not have been inadvertant, seeing that expensive overet a's, costly lace shawls and other proj er y were invari ably replaced by sha' by articles. In several cases the Ihievi s vere caught in the act, but protesting error, were per mitted to go on restoring the plunder. Time is now supplied to street clocks, Ï iublic oflices, hotels and private dwel ings in Paris, like gas or water, from a central station, by means of compressed air conveyed through underground pipes. At the central station there is a reservoir of compressed air, and for the first twenty seconds of every minute, as given by a standard timepiece, a current of the compressed air is allowed to Bow through the pipes to the receiving clocks. By means of a small bellows, whic h is expanded by the transmitted air, the works of these clocks are kept going at a practical uniform rate. The street mains are of wrought iron, about 1 1-16 inch in diameter, and these are connected to service pipes of lead 1.5 inch in diameter, while the different stories of a building are supplied by rubber tubes one-eight inch in diameter. Any number of clocks can be actuated in this way within a radius of two miles from the central station. face. Onl 1 and • • Professor Forbes, of Illinois, gn _ .. as his opinion that at least two-thirdsol the food ot birds consist of insects, aver aging at the lowest reasonable estimate twenty insects per day for each individ ual of this two-thirds, giving a total for the year (which is surprisingly low) ol 7,200 per acre, or 250,000,000,000 for the State. This number placed one to each square inch of surface would cover an area of 40,000acres. In connection with these ligures th9 following estimates by Mr. H. D. Minot, one of the Boston naturalists, are interesting. He states that in Massachusetts alone there are annually destroyed not less than 50,000 partridges, 30,000 woodcock, 15,000 quail and 5,000 snipe, or 100,000 game birds while in the same State 250,000 wild birds (counting their eggs) are placed hors du combat. Mr. Minot places the number of birds annually destroyed in the United States at 1,000,000,000 roughly estimated. According to the American Naturalist a young mocking-bird, raised from the nest, has been known to eat 240 red-legged grasshoppers in a day, equivalent to at least 480 average in sects. The Massachusetts board ot health reports that adulterations of staple gro ceries are not as common as the publio have been led to suppose. For tbe pur pose of test, the expert of the board took samples of flour, sugar, bread,soda, cream of tartar, and baking powders, obtained in stores in forty cities and towns. The flour was found in all in stances to be wholly free from all foreign substances, and, with the ex ception of one or two coarse varieties of ' brown sugar, no adulteration was per ceptible in that article; and in these isolated cases there was reason for thinking that the defects were due to imperfections in the process of manu facture. The soda examined, although sold under a variety of names, such'as saleratus, bicarbonate, supercarbonate, and cooking soda, was all found to be much the same article, and nearly all of It good. The poor soda was that which had not been properly purified of the crude soda ash, but this sulphate is not injurious to health. Baking powders were found to be pure in twenty-four instances out of thirty-three. The adulteration consisted in an excess of flour or starch over that needed for mix ing the soda and cream of tartar. There was also some alum found. In cream of tartar a considerable amount of adul teration was detected. d An exchange gives the following remedy tor earache: Take a small piece of cotton wool, make a depression in the center and fill it with pepper; gather it into a ball nnd tie it up; dip it into Bweet oil and insert it in the ear. In stant relief will follow. Anotherremedy Is to dip a Chinese firecracker in nitric acid, put the cracker in the aching ear and explode it. The acid will prepare the ear for the fireworks.— Picayune. a a ANOTHER FEMALE MANIA. TIIE LATELY ACQUIRED TASTE FOIt BEDROOM DECORATION. The newest mania among fashion able women, married and unmarried alike, is to make their bedrooms beautiful. The lately acquired taste for decoration is taking that turn just now to the utter neglect of par lors and other apartment. Pillow shams and bedspreads are laborious ly and expensively covered with needlework and lace; dressing cases are furnished with elaborated and ingenious reccptables for toilet articles: bottles and boxes of the fin est material and workmanship hold her ladyship's cologne, perfumery and powder; more or less excellent pictures hang on the walls, or the walls are wholly covered with lace. In short, the rage for sleeping in beautiful rooms has possessed every woman. Even her toilet crockery must now be of no ordinary ware. She washes her hands in a ceramic bowl, colors her lips and eyebrows out of a crackled Japanese saucer, and uses a Pompei an hand-glass to see her back hair. The ideal bed ol the day has a canopy over it, and this is made as tine and beaut iful as tlie money and taste of the woman will permit. The frame-works are made ef metal, commonly burnished brass or nickel. Chintz and cretonne are ordinarily used for the curtains; but satin velvet and the better laces enter into the combination. Unmar ried women affect white and the most delicate colors for these cano pies, and put white doves atop, as emblems of purity—so that the mid night marauder may comprehend the situation at a glance. A novel de vice is a rack,handsomely construct ed of black walnut or ebony, with hooks for hanging a woman's under wear handily. The chemise, the corset, the stockings, the shoes, all have their places, so that a woman may be as orderly as she likes in un dressing and without the old trouble of using all the chairs in the room. Some of the bedrooms of the period are really marvels of exquisite taste —too sweet and dainty by far to deserve the rude occupancy of hus bands. However, the best of these apartments belong to maidens, who show them with coyness and pride to their male friends. The dazed fullows stand palpitating on the threshold, gazing in at the vision of innocent somnolency and swearing on the spot to marry the tenant of that beautiful bed or die. The nat ural result of all this will be an un usual number of weddings this wiu Duel 1er. OCTOBER PRICES FOR COAL. The receivers of the Philadelphia ami Reading coal aud iron company havo issued tlio following circular of the line and city prices at Scuykill Haven for October : Lump and steam boat, $3; broken, egg and stove, $3a3.25; chestnut Ko. 1, $2.75a8.25; chestnut No. 2. $2.60; pea No. 1, $l.75rl.85; yea No. 2, $1.50. Tlio col leges will be idle on the first six days of October. Tlio harbor prices for coal delivered free on board vessels at Port Richmond are to be as follows : Lump and steamboat and broken, $4.60; egg and stove, $4.60a5; chest nut, $4 3Ca4.50; pea, $3.85. PERSONAL. Hon. Goo. Bancroft, tlie historian, celebrated his 80th birthday at bis sum mer residence at Newport, It. 1., yester day. The sale of subscription tickets for i he Bernhardt season at Booth's began Oct. Is', at that theatre. There was a rush ol applicants. The price of season tickets is $00, and in less than an hour 400 of the choicest orchestra cl airs had been taken representing $24,000. Tbe Washington Critic says:—Mrs. Read nee Datieren, who has been spend ing some weeks in our midst, lias deter mined to take a house for the season and pas-8 the winter among her old friends. She is now at her elegant home in Wilmington, but will return about the first of November. Dr. M. L. Yoat, a well-known phi lanthropist of Bethlehem, asserts that ihe practice of riding on velocipedes ii very injurious to youth. He says that he has hud a practical illustration in his own family, from the fact that his young son, who has been indulging in this kind oi exercise tor 6ome time past, is becoming humpbacked. Tlie N. Y. Hun says :—Mr. Abram S. Hewitt is now entertaining at his spa cious and beautiful country seat, King wood, in the midst of the irou mines of New Jersey, his Excellency the Gov ernor of tlie Fiji Islands, with the Hon. Air. Eden, Capt. Herbert, and nine other eligible and doubtless charming young Englishmen who compose the Fijian dignitary's suite. Besides these a num ber of tlie young friends of Mr. Hew itt's daughters have been invitvd to meet these "South Sea Islanders," one of whom expressed the naive hope that '•-he them, as if he chanced to be hungry he would probably slay and eat her!" Gov ernor des Voleux is fortunate in being the gin si of a man who can show him one of the finest irou regions of the world, aud iron works as extensive and profitable as any in the old country. lil not be left alone with any of K.-A A YAKS, AlVKt.M, WATCH AJ A K Ï I And dealer m ALEKIOAN AND SWISS / w ATCMi K CLOCKS, J E W ELK \ lcles, EYE-GLASSES, JFEO'l SILVER W A RE, $ NO 805 MARKET STREET Wilmington, dil. Particular attention paid to repairing :n d its brauoh^s ; also, nil .aging spectacle asses. Has ago«»* 1 wo^imsut of glassy «nsuxiitlj o.i in ud. ii • tVUdd U» call Che public is Cora » ESTABMHHED 1889. I8-«. EISING & LANGE, «2 cd « ' w •• —A N I*— All Kinds of Provisions. 409 Orange Street, WILMING T< N. Dt L n.arü-l d EDUCATIONAL. ILMINGTON w ATHENÆUM, Allmond Building, 8th & Market Sts., OPEN nd-NIGHT. Private lessons given to young ladles and gentlemen, boys and girls in LATIN, GREEK, HEBREW, GERMAN, FRENCH, SPANISH, AND ALL ENGLISH BRANCHES, Terms, $15 a quarter. Lessons are also given ut pupil's residences. Call at once on PROF. P. W. HOCHKEPPEL, 717 Tatnall street. DAY aug27-tf. S ELECT SCHOOL. MIbh Mahattÿ'e school will reopen on Sept. 6, at No. 2 West 10th street. au25. wmim FEMALK COLLEGE, Wilmington, Del. Pleasant home, modern convenlen ; healthful city. Two degrees confer red, or select courses. 60 per cent, in crease of boarders last year. Net charge #19o a year. Forty-fourth year begins September 9th. For Catalogne, address, Rev. J. M. WILLIAMS, A. M., Pres. D tMivu : KKOPENING OF A. 8. WEBSTER'S SE LECT DANCING ACADEMY. Thumlay Evening, September 9lh, AT THE MASONrC TEMPLE, Wilmington, Del. Ladles and Gentlemen, Misses and Mas ters wishing to become proficient In all the dances of the day, and to learn the new and more fashionable ones, will find It to their advantage to begin with the opening of the season. EVENING CLASSES. Commencing Thuisday, September 9th. Gentlemen's class Monday and Thursday evenings from 8 to 10 o'clock. AFTk RNOON CLASSES. Commencin Ladies aud _ Thursdays from 5 to 6, and .Saturdays, from 8.80 to 5.80. Private lessons given at uny hour to suit convenience. GLIDE AND RACQUET WALTZES TAUGHT in a few Lessons. Special arrangements for Schools and Seminaries, and ior private classes ol ladies or gentlemen, can be made by ap plying at the Academy, at Kobelln a B ro.'s, No. 710 Marketstreet. or by mall to A. H. WEBSTER, Masonic Nempie. lg on Sal unlay, October 2d, Misses and Masters' class Me->14 PROFESSIONAL. JOHN BIUUII, At torney-at-Law, No. 1 W. SEVENTH STREET, Wilmlngton, Del . »1'7-ly. |£AKRY r.JDIU.IS, ATTORNET-AT-LA 9 702 MARKET ST., : Wilmington, D» l. jani^ly jOHN C. COLE JUST1CJÜ 0Jf THE PEAGE, AND NOTARY Offloe ö, W. Corner of Third and Market dicels. Pensions, Patenta and Passport* procured. no2«-ly PUBLIC. WILMINGTON. DEL K. PRNJNGTON ATTORJSMY-A'l-LA fT, No. 2, WEST TTH STREET, Wilmington. Del U. avlJ-v THE HONANZ V lor ROOK-AflENTN is selling our two hooks, life of Af written by his IjP life-long friend,'*™ Hon. J. W. Forney (an author of national ante), highly endorsed bv Gen. Hancock, theparty leaders aud press ; also, life of 6EN. BARFIELD HSS Gen. J. S. Bkisbin, (an author ol wide celebrity), also strongly endorsed. Both olllclaj, immensely popular, selling over lO.unO a week. Agents making 810 a day. Ou fits 50c. each. For best nooks aud terms address quick Hubbard Bros., 723 Chestnut street. Phila,. Pa. lendidiu illustrated sepll-3w. GENTS' SCARFS SOo, FORMEE PRIuE $L00 W . 13. COLE. Men's Furnishing Goods 202 MARKET STREET. PRATT'S ASTRAL OIL. The safest and best Illuminating oil. IS STRICTLY PURE, BURNS ODORLESS, IS PERFECTLY SAFE, Requires no ciiange of lamps. WILL NOT EXPLODE. Sold in ten gallon cascB by and five gallon cans, and Z JAMES BELT, Wholesale aud Retail Agent for Wilmington. Sixth and market .St«., WILMINGTON. DEL. ^ow is the lime TO BUY ÏOUK STOVES AND GET YOUB Heaters Put in Order. 1 have just reduced the prise of all Cook Parlor aud Heating Stoves to suit th aard limes. 0*11 a»id see the prices before yon boy, It. MOimiSMOA, Cor. TI*I>V mil 8'hl|i Healeri. cheaper man ever A FULL. IHMOlITflENT —OF— Books anti Stationery, Dull» uuil WeeklJ PAPEHS A MAGAZINES . -AT— .G U TLiER'H, 420 IWL% KKKX^TB A m 'X xj 1) yspepsla's tortured victim. Why cross the ocean tide To drink the Beltxer water By Nature'sfouut supplied? When at your bedside, science Presents the self same draught. Ebullient as the Beltxer From Natu Vj fountain quaffed, In Tarrant's Oool Aperient, Yon drink each healing thing That God the Great Physician,■■ Has oast Into the Spring ! SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. aug!7-2w RAILROADS. JULT 28TH 1*8'). Trains will leave Wilmington aafolkiwsI lor Philadelphia and IntermedlateSUMwu. f.ou. s.io, iu.su a. rn. ; a.au, 4.00. jjSk ijU P. m. 6 -*°- *■*». *•«. 10.02 a. m. 2.08, 0.48 p. m Phil a. and New York 2.28,0.80.7.00, 10.02 a. m., 12.39, 12.48, 2.08, 6.07 p. in. Baltimore and Intermediate StstloBi b.85 a, in. 5.22 p. m. Baltimore and Bay line, 7.06 p. Baltimore and Washington. X0Q. 2.16 886. a. m. : 12.52,1.04, 4.Î6, 7.08tpTm. Trains for Delaware Division, leavË for New Castle 6.00, 9.25, a. m.j ljjfc g.tû, §,8$ p. m. Harrington and Intermediate Static** 9.25 a. m. ; 1.06, 6.85 p. m. Delmar and Intermediate Stations, 0 .» m.; 1.05 p. m. „ LI1 , , SUNDAY TRAINS. Philadelphia and Intermediate Station« 8.10 a. m. ; E.00, 6.80. 9.50 p. m. Philadelphia and New York, 2.2S a. m. Baltimore and Washington, l&ffl, fcW For further information passen g referred to the time tables posted at Ml d®V°' H. F. KENNEY, Superintendent T II 15 HAT TER * No 2 E. Third St* WILMIH4IT#M DHL. David M'Closkej FASHIONABLE H a 1 1 er 414 Market Street, Adjoining the Garnett« Ola WILMINGTON, ML. A Fine Assortment or Danes and Nm jre1 ""- _ansU-lT Coal ! Coal ! ! ENTERPRISE COAL, ORANGE STREET WHARF, ENTERPRISE COAL. Lime ! Lime ! ! BEST BUILDING LIME, ORAJSUE STREET WHARt, JACKSON'S WOOD BURNED LIMB. Coal ! Coal ! ! KOH-I-NOOR COAL, MARKET STREET WHARF, OLD SHAWNEE COAL. Sand ! Sand ! I SHARP RIVER SAND, ORANGE STREET WHARF, BPST BUILDING SAND. Coal! Coal!! OLD LEHIGH COAL, MARKET STREET WHARF, GEORGE'S CREEK COAL. ORDERS WII.L BE PROMPTLY FILLED tflTALITY GUARANTEED, PRICES MOST FAVORABLE Charles Warner & Go, <nnj7-1** 1 "**" N,rs ®' For New York! Electric Line Steamers; From King 81, WL»rI, Wl mlugUm, TUEöDAYd, THURSDAYS A SATUR DAYS at 2 o'clock, p, 0,. And from Pier 1«, tail River Hew Yor*. MOHDAYS, WEDNESDAYS AWD FKI DAYS, at 4 o'clock, p. m »■Freight forwarded promptly and at ne loweat rate«. I K ANDREWS. Aeu 4. S TRAWBERRY PLANTS. All the leading varieties, Cresocnt, Col. Cbeeney.Sharpies«,Kentucky, Green Prolific, Ac., on baud aud for sale cheap The plauts are vigorous, aud are now In fiu« condition to transplant. Now is the time or very soou, If you want a cro * next year. Plains in pots, 75 oents per hundrel taken ITow tue bed $2^o per thousand, or cents per hundred. All orders promptly attended to. A. E. KITTENHOUSE, State Road 1*. O., New Castle Co., Dei. Road Station, Del. R, K. ANCHOR LINE. UNITED STATES MAIL 6TBAMEBS Ball every Pntarday. NEW YORK TO OLASGO CABINS, $<K> to |HO. STEERAGE. 128 These steamers do not carry cattle, sheep or pigs And every Saturday, YORK TO LONDON^DIRECT. CABIN8, $4.1 to ffl.V Excursion at Reduced Ratas Pasnenger accommodations are uunnrpas«ed. All Staterooms on Main Deck. from an> w. ■ IB fl l'asaenpors booked at lowest rates to ihulroad Station In Europe orAmerlc*. Diafi« at lowest rates, payable (free of charg«.; throughout England, Scotland and Ireland. Foroooks of Information, plane, Ac., apply to Bbndkbson BiorpiK^i 7 Bowuxo Gbsbs, N. 1 Adams KxpfeHs, Wilmington, 12 Or to S apri'i-