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hem. nDiiwn. NO WORE a HE Mr OR GOUT T SalTcyLTcA W SURE CUBE ' * Manufactured only under the abovo Trade Mark, by the EU HOPEA K Salicylic Medicine Co. or PAUIN AWH LE1PZIU. Immediate Rellel warr* Permanent sure giuiranteed. Now e.otus'vely used by ell celebrated Ftiy-iotans of Europe ami America, henomlng a staple, llanufeuaiid Reliable Hemeuyon bo.li continents. The highest Medical Academy ol Purls report. 06 cures out ol on" hundred cases within three days. Secret.—The only dissolver or the poisonous Urte Add which exists In this lllood ol Rheumatic ami Gouty Patients. <1 a bos ;S boxes lor $6. Sent to any address on receipt of price. Indorsed by Physicians (told tiy all druggists. Address wanhrlunk onIy IWJOJ SHAMES REI.tA mgglsts. UKAY'M .PEDirill ■.IDIUIHF, At (O,, No. 2151 N. n. DAN FORTH 9-4-lVdAw TAADE M»RK Ttl»*VC»' ' R»DE MARK. r.nK H»" Hrroo.lT An unUUP jng cure lor S © m t n a l •Weakness Npermatorr hea, hi '3 toncy. *■ Before Taking^ t d "J^Mer Taking; as a scqu.n •« ol Mlf-Abma; Ijoss ol * •'norr Unusual La-s.tude, F.tn Intlie Back, Dim ness of VIlies Premature (lid Age, and many other lllseasos that lead to Insanity ol Consumption and a Premature Grave, Full particulars In our pamphlet, whlet we desire to send tree to every ono. I elite MedlClno Is sold hy all drUKglst* at »1 per package, or six packages lor $», _or will [ • lent Iree by matt on receipt ol the money bj "thSoRAT MKDJUUIRFO.. No. J® Mechanics' Btock, l^r^Oltoh. dM^gold Wilmington by Z. JAMES BE3 jT, Whole late and Retail Druggist, Lor. and Mor ket Streets. And by Druggists everywhere mbiott In PRATT'S ASTRAL OIL, The Barest and Brut HUimliintlng lHSTHlon Y PURE. BURNS ODORLESS, IS PERFECTLY SAFE. REQUIRES NO CHANGE OF LAMPS. **-WlLL NOT EXPLODE-** Sold in nne and five gallon can., and ten gallon oases hy Z. JAMES BELT. WHOLESALE ANII RETAIL AGENT FOR WILMINGTON, Sixth and Market Sts. All persons d Cbein aals, or wliih or private receipts materials, A ttention. pure irrugs or tag their prescriptions oarefolly compounded ol pute ,honblgototb.Un,g ( tor.»l MnjKST ' No. 817 Markot utrcot, Wilmington, 11.1 8-10 tl UgMIEKim. •THOWH AND MILD ROASTED COFFEE, •46 CTS. PER LB —AND , GREEN, JAPAN AND MIXED TEA AT 10 ou. per pound. Thee® goods are nnoxcellod In parity. Great Western Tea Co., BLAUH w. R. BOWMAN Manager. IA E. SECOND STREET. WILMINGTON BELA WAKE. Our assortment of the finer grades of lea and Coffee, and perfectly pure pepper, acd S iloes generally, 1* one of the best, "ri «r»yi right sun/H AT COST TO CUSTOMERS. ces DRY GOODM. 8 . H. ST A ATS. No. 405 Market street, Hu onen.d tuts day, ond t> reoelvlng at nut dally IIW AND BEAITTIFYL DMIIUWB IN FANCY HOSIERY FO LADIES AND MISSES. We are also |opening a Large and Well Re looted btock el MERINO UNDERWEAR For Ladiee Oeuu and M1*M' EDUCATIONAL. HAWING. D HOMER A. HERR'S ART SCHOOL NOW OPEN. FREE-HAND, MECHANICAL DRAW ING AND PAINTING TAUGHT. Instruction privately or in class. Keening mechanical drawing class andstudlo hours— Monday and Wednesday Irom 7.30 toUo clock. Pupils fitted lor Academy 01 Hne Arts. Philadelphia. Portraits painted, Ac., Ac. All kinds of drawing designs, Ac., Ac., made In the most careful and artistic manner. Tor terms or any information call or studio room 16, Maaoule Temple, Wllmlng Kelerencc.—Col. H. S. McCotnb, J. Taylor Oause. Esq., H. C. Robinson, Esq., Dr. J. tf. Tantum. ,f II APLFWUOD lHSTlTUTK, Uonoord jyl vllle Fa., lur tiot!i soxes. Is situated on tiie Philadelphia and Baltimore Central K, K., and is cloven miles north ol Wilmington, on the Concord Pike. Students <.re proparad tor the active duties ol Hie, lor business and college. It excoll* In healt'y location g„»)d rooms, and Hrst-ciasa professor#. Little bo ere mad, to .eel Uugr nave logue cull on Dr. Market street, V/llmlngton J.SHOllTUDGB /. M. W I NTK K 1 .NSrKUCTiON8.—Private lessons In eithor Latin, Greek. Ho brew, Gorman, French, Spanlali and all E - fliih brunoho.t are given to both lad ea and gentlemen at my oltlce, 7 17 Tatuall street, or at their private residences at any time and at uioileTato rates. Apply now to I'KO*. HOt llkKl PEL. li-tfi-lmend 717 Ta imtll street. BREECH AND MUZZLE Loading Guns All Styles, Make* and Price*, to any point on appllo itton. JAMES & BROTHER. 904 MARKET STREET. J Prioes J-ent YEATERDAT. by aoHA paimv. What II but yesterday 1 laughed end said to him nay. A hen here's to-day, to day To change iny mind aud say A sweeter word than nay;' What If hut yesterday 1 told him that my uuy Could never turn to yea. Though lie should prey and pray Forever and a day . W hat If but yesterday tie swore tie would obey My cruel will, nor stay To further sue or pray— Thcn strode In wratli away What If hut yesterday Uke this heitrode away. When lu re's to-day, to day For him to hear mo V: ■; toveyou, Esivo, to-day!' ■ Fail IE I ait d'N Depression Ui« Result of Free Trade. ill he much interested in tliu following remarkable letter, wl toll appeared in tlie Sheffield "Daily elegraph:" Sm ; England has had four lean years ; is she to have seven ? As yet, alas i there is scarcely a sign of return ing prosperity. \Vages are still fulling, every lay the busy hum of our teem ing hives of industry gets fainter, in dustrial establishments are closing, our beat operatives flock to the laud of pro tection, and the nuly crumb of comfort, the only speck of silver lining to the cloud, the straw that drowning men catch at, is that America, prosperous beyond example, may perhaps draw a portion of her wants from thid country. This is no ordinary trade depression We know the signs too well ; they can be foretold like an Atlantic gale ; they their course and pass away ; hut Neither Zulu < Mir readers columns of the ruu this does not pass away, war, nor Afghau war the hud, nor even himself, nor all four combined, will ac count for the palsy that has struck down our industries. " It Is iu time of distress," says Mr. Bright, "that the unwisdom and in justice of laws come to he examined," and so it is with free trade; the soph isms, the paradoxes, the tlierfles of free trade are beiug examined with rap idly-increasing skepticism, and free traders are furious—their vocabulary faile them for want of words to denounce the fools, the idiots, aud worse, who will not read the pages of political econ omy exactly as they read them. But, after all, this exhibition of temper is unreasonable; their reading is not the general reading of mankind—it is op posed hy the practice of every indus trial notion iu the world, except the "unspeakable Turks," Iu America, France, Belgium, Germa llolland—in fact, , nor the spots on Lord Beaconstield ny, Switzerland, wlierevwr the common sense of mankind is allowed to exert itself, the firHt and great commandment, the "whole law and the l*rophetj"of political economy, is allowed to he this; "That national prosperity depends on general employ ment," The skill or industry of the workman in the trade is his capital, the "capital of labor. the capital of labor is the cliiet produc tive capital of the country, but without general employment it is valueless, is general employment tiiat turns this capital aud makes it increase aud multiply. The "capital of lalor" cannotafTord to remain long idie. If employment is denied in one place it speedily emi grates to another more oongenial. This is the first lesson of Political Economy as read hy the light of uni versal sulfrage iu France and America, and so it would be the reading in En gland, too, if we had universal suffrage. But this is not the lesson taught hy Mr. Bright aud his friends, economy," say they, "tells us nothing about general employment. Let that regulate itself; we don't recognize the in an industrial community it over "Political regulate itself; we claims of the 'capital of labor.' The one lesson political economy teaches us 'that the consumer should be enabled to buy in the cheapest market;' it is a matter ol perfect indifference to us by whom this market is supplied, whether hy our own producers or hy the pro ducers of France, Belgium or America. There is no national nonsense about us ; we are cosmopolitan to the back bone. If our producers cannot supply us as cheaply as the foreigner, they must turn their hands to something else, or leave the country, or starve." Whenever there lias been a question of commercial treaties, or a change of duties iu France or America, or Bel gium, the first question invariably asked is,"How will it affect the general employment of the people?" And. the reply to that question has invarialdy guided their decision. America,France and Belgium have never swerved in one single instance from their policy of protecting the ployment of the people; and what is the result?—that the capital of labor has been steadily turning over,accumu lating and multiplying, and enriohing all classes of the community. Iu Amer ica, especially, the effect ol protecting the employment of tile people lias been little Bhort of marvelous; the best workmen of England have flocked to her; industries that 10 years ago had existence, have sprung into vigor life; she has multiplied her make of Bessemer steel 18 times in ten years; site has 700 iron works in fall opera tion; she now Hupplies herself iu almost manufactured article she rebellion, 18 em no Oils r<' nvery quires; and neither war nor debt, nor soft money, nor hard money, have been able to cause more than a temporary derangement of iter prosperity. . This is the country that Mr. V man tells us, in his interesting notes on America, "has the curse of protection upon itand he adds, with a genu burst of free trade fanaticism, his short or iu« "where man interposes Bightod lawn, the best provision of Pro vidence id shackled and blighted." Are we to underatyuid that America is Hhackbd aud blighted, or merely that free trade Iihh a Divine origini ' what America is. What «he We i Id be if free trade had been her we cau destiny instead of protection, easily realizs. There would he no iron works, no cotton works, noglass works, no paper factories, no teeming hiyes of industries. Every manufactured arti cle would be imported from Europe. Her iron aud coal mines would still ba undeveloped. She would remain a purely agricultural country, like Rns Hia, and her progress ami civilization would he indefinitely postponed. Your columns are not the place in which to discuss the reason why French. Belgian, Herman and now American eratives produce cheaper than we do; ia auffioieut for our argument that i) ey do ; they produce oheaper than we "I It do, as the Chinese produce cheaper 'th*n the Germans, and the Japanese cheaper than the Chinese. They can and do produce almost every matufao tured article—silk, iron, glass, cotton, woolen—cheaper than we do. Hoinneb the better, say the free traders ; we shall thee import that we require from France, Germany, H-lgimu or America, cheaper than we can buy it in this country, and we shall have so milch more money to spend on something else, and by that much the country will let the richer. This is the free-trade shib boleth. l.et us take a test case No Industry slauds alone; each one is so dovetailed and interwoven with other industries that it cannot fall without bringing ruin ou numbers of others. Plate glass supports, and is supported by, and Is intimately mixed up with no less than 33 distinct indus tries, occupations and employments.— Suppose A builds a house in which the plate glass cost £200; lie perhaps gets this glass 2J per cent, cheaper from France or Belgium. "See what a grand thing is free trade," say the Free Traders. I will save £5; he will have £5 to spend on something else; there fore, to tiie extent of that £1 the whole conutry is the richer. Apply this to sugar, iron, wool, oottou, silk, &e., and you Hee at once how immemseiy free trade adds to the wealth of the country. But, as in every case, there is a reverse to the medal. A saves £5; granted; hut the plate glass workers and the 33 industries depending on plate glass loBe between them £200. Ten years ago the condition of our productive industries was nearly as had as it is now. General employment was equally depressed. Then came the years of inflation, when wages and pro fits jumped to a point never before readied. "See what free trade is doing for ub," said ite supporters; but it was not free trade at all ttiat caused those three years of inflation,it was war, sim ply war—the Franoo German war—and nothing else that for two years paralys ed the productive industries of France and Germany and left us masters of the situation to supply our own markets and the neutral markets of the world. Of course there Is a credit as well as a debit side in foreign competition. I leave tim credit side to Mr. Bright and his followers. Thedebitside is shortly as follows: The industrial community sufl'ers to the extent of forty times the amount saved by the individual A. Apply this again to iron, sugar, silk, cotton, wool, Ac., and we shall see what foreign eom peti ion is really doing for the general employment of the people. Mr. Bright and his friends overlook the point of the argument. "We will not take the whole community in order to enrich a few greedy manufacturers," says our Free Traders. "We will tax the whole community in order to tax the general employment of the people," says the Protectionist of France, Belgium and America. Foreign competition has lessened the general employment of the people. it has made the returns of labor and capital more uncertain, more fluctua ting. Supply is no 1'onger regulated by de mand, hut by the over-production aud the necessities of foreigu producers. The masters cannot calculate their profits, or the workmen their wages, for month together. it must lengthen the labor and lower the wages of the British workmen to the level of his foreigu competitor. It has destroyed the national pride iu the national industries. It has created a wild competition in price, and price only, that has ruin the quality of English goods. It has destroyed the Euglibh work man's pride in his work. Cheapness everywhere 1 akes the place of quality. Dressed 1o produce the greatest possi hie quantity, in the least possible time, at the lowest possible price, the British workman has neither time nor inducement to improve his work. nor inducement to improve his work. How will this end ? for end it must ; it cannot go on. Very soon tiie work ing classes will rouse themselves from their dream of confidence in Mr. Bright and his friends. They will say: 27 years we have sat at your feet, trusting to your predictions and your promises, applauding your fallacies as Divine revelations, aud where have they landed us ? In something very like industrial ruin. Every year we see ourselves more completely excluded from the foreign markets; every year more aud more excluded from our own market. You may say it is oar ought to work longer hours (Beven days a week, like our foreigu compet itors), he satisfied with lower wages, eat less meat, drink less beer, and it may he so, but that does not alter the fact that in asking us to produce as cheaply as the foreigner, you ask ns to do what at present we cannot do! In the same breath you say to the for eign operative: 'Send us your goods, as much as you can,' aud to the En glish operative: ' We have too much of your goods; leave the country, go to America.' Ap parently you wish to make England a land for consumers ouly. You have as much as said to the producers: • We do without you; we can buy all we want cheaper elsewhere.' You have worked hard for the consumer—what have you done for tiie producer ? You have given him cheap bread, you say. Certaiuly, but man does not live by bread alone; he wants money to buv it, and how is he to get money without employment. No doubt the aristocracy, tiie laud laws, the wickedness of Lord HeacoDS fleld, are burning questions for yon and your friends, but there are burning questions that affect us still more near ly. 'Near is my shirt, but nearer Is my skin.' General employment, pros perous industries, wages, work, protec tion, are the burning questions that most nearly affect us. Wbat do yon propose for us ? There 18,(100,000 of us engaged in and de pending on productive industries. excluded from foreign markets by prohibitory duties, and excluded from our own hy foreign 'competition, what are we to do ? Are you prepared to support us in idleness till the milleniumof free trade prophesied by Oobden in 1852 arrives, 'when other nations are compelled by self-interest and hy the reality of our prosperity to follow our example and adopt free trade,' or do you wish us to emigrate ? If so, are you pre pared to support the old, the infirm, the women and ohildren we leave behind ? If .the bread-winners leave theoountry, who is to find bread ? If the working bees leave the hive, what is to become of the drones ?" "For own fault—that we can are If we are own Your obliged, Kpwakp. Bi'LLIVAX. 13 Orosvenor l'lsoe. Hare We ■ Democreilc Parly T tot the Republican. Mess**. Editor* :—An Is well-known we have in this country a party com posed of numerous adherents, which claims to he a democratic part;; and at its assemblies and through the press, have much to say about democratic principles and democratic measures, lint after carefully noting its ante cedents in political management, l am at a loss to find in what respect it bears any likeness to a democracy, or upon what grounds its adherents are entitled to the name they have assumed. Of course, in one sense, they have a right to assume any name, hut the in ference is, that in adopting the name, it was supposed to have some signifi eance in pointing to the principles by which the party should he governed, and there can he no doubt hut that there are many Bimple minded men who (mitftakibg the ratuu for the prin ciple,) really imagine that in support ing the party, they are in fact .support ing democratic measures. "A demo crat i* one ho adheres fo a govern ment liy the people, or favors the ex tension of the right of snlTrage to all classes of men." This is Mr. Web ster's definition of the term, who I be lieve is generally accepted as standard authority. Now instead of extending the right of franchise to all classes of men,itiiaB twen and is the policy of that party, not only to prevent the extension of the franchise, hut to deprive these of the right by whom the privilege has been already enjoyed ; except there was au< assurance that it would lie especially favored by that extension. It is well known that this has been a catch name to entrap the simple, In order to obtain supremacy, or to maintain that which it has, by a sys tematic policy to that end, thousands of Republicans have been defrauded of their right; aud as tar as the ballot 1 b ooncenred, have had no voice in the government. It has done everything it could do, to abridge this privilege to political o] ponents; and I ask what more than this, could any autocrat do 1 A parly which resorts to such means to maintain its ascendency, Is not only nnwoTtby the support of a free peopje, hut it is a constant threat against the perpetuity of a free government. That it has many good and trne men among its supporters, I will not undertake to deny ; hut that they are aiders and abetters in every anti-democratic princi ples, I am free to assert. A party that has to maintain itself by fraud and dis franchisement is not only to lie regard ed with suspicion, hut has need to be watched as a common foe to political equality. It may lie said that as a party it has not justified those things laid to its charge which have been perpetrated in eel tain sections;hut when have thelead of the party protested against such Have they denounced it as era acta ? wrong and unwarrantable ? Never! I auk then in conclusion, in wbat sense are its acts consistent with tt.e princi ples of a democratic government f Will some of its Iriends please enlighten us? Ka iinkst. N.lllt George (roil llie Dragon. Who was Saint George aud what was the Dragon.' are questions which imve been frequently asked, and seldom sat isfactorily answered. The legend runs thus: "The Knight St. George was a prinoe of Cappadocia, a province in Asia between the river Halys and Euphrates. The greatest achievement was the con quest of a Dragon, by which he effected the deliverance of a King's daughter. He is represented on horseback with a formidable dragon writhing at his feet. The design is founded on the tradition that "Ajathe daughter of one of tiie Persian Kings was met by one of these monsters, which attacked her and threatened to devour her. At this fearful moment, tiie Knight passeU by, slew the dragon and rescued the lady." This legend belongs to the age of the Crusades. The ancient Chris tian Emperors bore emblems of this Knight upon their standards, and to these sacred banners they attributed a miraculous power, and felt sure of con quest while carrying them. Tiie "Dra gon" denoted their enemies the heath or Mussulmans. The patron saint of England is "Saint George" representing Christiani ty and civilization which always has and ever will he foremost in slaying the Dragon, which represents Idolatry and ignorance. This is the oor'ect meaning of the device of St. Georgs and the Dragon. HU Tbe F.qolnra. At thn earnest solicitation of many persons living on Market street between Second aud Fourth, we present their complaint to our citizens. They say that the horses and mules drawing the oity cars are ofteuoverloaded, and they unmercifully beaten to drag the fear No Christian ars ful weight up the hill. wotnau would stop a full car on mail or the hill, and no driver with a spark of conscience would Btop such a car to let tho soulless creatures in,with ouly two little mules ahead with their slen poor d«r legrt to strain and struggle iu start ing the dreadful weight. We think the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animale should present this alternation before the company, either to have a leader for every ascending car, or to make it illegal to take a standing pas In Philadelphia a hoy waits senger. ready with a leader at every steep place and placards are hung outside the cars requesting the ladies not to stop the between the corners, the strain on oars the horses iu starting is so terrible. We know a driver in that oity who lost his situation by refusiug to overload his horses—he preferred to serve his Heav enly Master rather than his earthly one. When Wilmington produces such a man we shall shout for Joy. K. W. A Lilly Knbb.d anil left Pennlle.a In a Mtrieulfe Ulty. A young lady, a resident of Now Orleans, Louisiana,who has been visit ing friendB in l'hoenixville, during the past six weeks, was relieved of a pock et book containing *150 in Philadel phia oil Monday. Sue was about start mg for her homo via St. Louis, and in company with a friend, went to the ticket office corner of Broad and Chest nut, and purchased a through ticket, which she placed iu a pocket in her dress, and replaced her pocket book iu the pocket of her co»t. She then pro needed to a dry goods house on Market street. Near the entrance to this es tablishment her attention was momen tarily diverted, aud iu an instant her pocket was picked,and the unfortunate lady left penniless,in a strange city,far from home. T he new no. *, WHEELElt SEWING MACHINE, t WILS'JN ,1 .0 ivn ns MA 7 / 1 Th* bon* family machine now In u c c, com paratively noiseless, line rimr no shuttle, sell-pel ■ i.ary movement, more speed than any shuttle machine, with loss and friction, and Is tho bos, running, shuttle r lb rhino for light longer than any three aniline#. It Is oe-talnly less com plicated than any other n.ako. a lock stick, anil has a better and more easily a^justible tension than any other, the tens ou never chang 8, as you find In a shuttle machine, once adjusted—always right. This Is not the old Wheeler it Wilson improved, but an en tire new Invention. Took the gold medal at the lave Paris Exposition, over eighty com petitors. For a <'h Istmas present net the best made, linest finis-, the simplest and lightest running machine in use. Don't buy until you have Riven It a trial. Wheeler A W lit 12-3-tf *Or Agent wanted. d will Manufacturing Co., 728 Market street, .1. H. PRIMROSE, Manager VARIETY WOKEN. THE MHUFJT. <11 FA PENT AND BENT ANNOKTMENTOr buy Boons, HOSIERY, AMI) NOTIONS. GENT'S LADIES' AND IIHILIIBEN'8 UNDERWEAR. BOOTS, SHOES AND RUBBER;;, OROOKEKY WARE, GLASSWA1-E, and TINWAUE. TABLE. STAIR AND FLOOR OIL CLOTHS. NT AIR, ENTRY. HEMP AND INGRAIN CARPETS: AT VERY LOW PRICES. Gome and examine onrutook and von will save time and money. Wo are Beflllnu cheap as tho cheapest ADA DIN & BROTHER, a y 504 MARKET STREET TOBACCO AND CIO ARK. O TTO A BUTZ Manufacturers ol all kinds of NEWAltS ! SEG AltS! NEGAftS! NO. 2 WERT FRONT STREET, WilmlmrtAn, Del. r>HN 'WT-ft JOHN WTTZ UNDERTAKER*. J WYNANS, FUHN1BHING UNDERTAKER, Nil. (0ZSHIPLEY STREET, Feililonco 115 West Eleventh street. li-28-tl L. gIMON GUTHRIE. General EnriilMtilntc Undertaker, NO. 328 E. SEVENTH STREET, Wilmington, Del. Tkims.—• 20 percent, lets than usual prices. a-a> IJIHOMAN MITCHELL, FURNISHING UNDERTAKER, NO. 4 12 KING STREET, Wilmington, Del. JOHN IS. MARTIN, FURNISHING UNDERTAKER, NO. 221 SHIPLEY STREET. Furniture neatly repaired. 1-13 3m PROFEMNIONAL CARD*. K. E. C. WELCH. D 'THE DENTIST, Has removed to NO. 513 KING STREET. WILMINGTON. J5i*Ane»thetlcs administered, and all operations in Dentistry performed skillhlly and reasonably. J^AVIDJ. MUKrilY.JK., ATTORNEY AT LAW, NO. 8 WEST SEVENTH STKEET, 10-'ZZ-tl Wilmington, Lot. TTAKKY EMMONS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, NO. 702 MARKET ST., Wilmington, Del. iaal-ly EETH FOR ALL THE PEOPLE. Beautilul Teeth at $3, *5, $8 and er set. Teeth extracted without paint3HH> by the use of gas. Over thirty years exper ience. 1>K. GALLAGHER, No. 835 Mamet street. T DWELL JONES H ELI H. CHANDLER, JONF.* A CHANDLER, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, TOPEKA, KANSAS. O-24-tf r IMF I LIME!! LIME! ! CELEBRATED WIUGIITSTILLE LIME. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. JOHN W. GRIFFITH > YARD FOOT OF WEST ST. 9-22 tl , ^iwrm-xxKU tA rt & PRDV ERLS. ElfllS. f Gil?. Hoi* Bn VMi I i ... t: ' to,, UiU. : i Iff'*rr: builds jXiy ^tsofaU j'.i ■* if nuutly cured by IiopbittcrH." ^ IIop Oonojf Crr.E is aiulboht. AskthUdnu. Tfce flop Pad for Bt uum h, Mv«r ana •i'frynirn, I.nw- KUiiP .vs, is tuperlor Itnnk- to nil otiini b,v absorptio Druggist*. D.-rTT. lr* nn almnluta and irrcnUiblo for dn:nk*'t nt'ii of ophirt.tobfueo and n&footica. All atiom inM by A drurnists. I top Bitter^* Mmmiocturing, (Jo., Uothti.Ur, N. Y. Scud for^LCIrcular. ! r.-or I 11.' 'V.V , 1 iu JLu oilliy thoili'Kt d 1 1 t^l'1'5 'Kid ,f rAd]p«, ^ do you h'-'niibyoiiil 1*ra Thunu /er ' iploiti ml Hop Miters. "The (rrcetret nn; "'"ll ilop Litters." rl t Curt-n Ai:k i ' . yt mwd 1 ijlCilOH * 1 * ilitters tlazlj •nop nut* IkcttUh.iK'iii* from inlumjic ranee," bnn ro i Us "Soxir stomach, sick ami atari ;i DUlcraouiti low dout'S." lioadiu'.he WF.lL*. Mithai BUY AW rMHREf.I.A ! HEY AN V.WHKM.I.A ! HI V AW I'Vf IIHIII.I.A ! HI'Y AN L'Mil HIM. A ! : )0 (: - AS A CHRISTMAS (JUT FOR YOUR FRIEND. It will be appreciated because of It* usefulness. be found »t An elegant assortment to select Irom will STJt VMl\S HEEIAHLF. and POPUI.AH ESTABLISHMENT SOUTHWEST OOittVI'.lt FOURTH'and MARKET STREETS. The encouragement hitherto shown us has prompted to extraordinary clfirts, in making our Holiday Display ol Umbrella# the llneitever known In this city. SILK, MOHAIR, ALPACA, SERGE, REGINA id GINGHAM UMBREU.AS In every variety of style and finish, lor Indies, Gentlemen, Misses tiro #atJs f actlon assured to all. Lad# and Children, En t. NTKANG, FOURTH AND MARKET STREET ', E. MTHAWft, 11-SU-tl E. C. fiTHAMi, WILMINGTON, DEL. TO THE LADIES! Q HAVE BEST n TRADE YOU SIX I MARK TRIED kV CORD? m X for Hand and Machlnr nur. Sold by all dealers in llry Goods'and utrons, and Wholesale and Retail by ADAMS & BRO., GREAT VARIETY STORE, WO. SOI MARKET.STREET. WILMINGTON, DEL. ORDERS BY MAIL HAVE PROMPT ATTENTION. MS tl TO BUYERS OF «! Wo arc* now Prepared toKive in lliewe Good* the Largest Assortment, and KotwithNtandiiiti; the Advance, to veil them at Lower Prices than Heretofore. We Respectfully Invite any one in want of Uarpsts, OU i Cloths or Window Shades, to Examine those we offer. We have Good! to Nult the poorest man In the elty, as well os those of larger means. G. WORRELL M A 8 O N I C T E M P L E . NO. 410 KING STREET, WILMINGTON. DEL. FURNITURE The largest and [finest assortment ol Reaxty-madc Furniture to be found in Wilmington*? the State oi Delaware, can be seen at 410 King Stroot. Furniture at a In.os any price D t on hand. Repairing promptly attended to. PAINTS, OILN, OIL CLOTHING -» \D— RUBBER CLOTHING j RUBBER door band*, RUBBER CHECK REINN, RUBBER HOKfti: COVER*, OILED HORNE COVER*, RUBBER CEMENT RUBBER NHEETING, Ac, —AT— GEORGE W. STONE, 7 9 AND II E. W ATER ST WILMINGTON. DEI*. JAMES UKAUFGHI), KAKnAOTURBR 0» PUKE UOEOKS, WHITE DEAD. ZINUS PAINTS. POOO BKOV7N AND PUTTY. BRADFORD'S KEA.DY MIXED OOTTAGE COLORS DIES, VARNISH AND TURPENTINE. WINDOW GLASS. ETC., ETC., NOS. 6 AND S If. THIRD STBfFT WILMINGTON, DEL, LAUEKBEEK. — PROSPECT BEER. A I'Flir. DELIGHTFUL HF.VERAUE DONAHOE & ROBINSON, *. W. COR. SIXTH A .RANGE NTS.,' Wilmington, Del., KerpMtfuily Inform the trade and the public generally that they are now prepared to tur nlsh this Celebrated beer in any quantity This beer has no equal in the market, an J dealers everywhere pronounoo It superior to all other brands. 8-25 ly THE LARGEST GLASS OF BEER IY THE CITY —AT— FREYE'S SALOON. NO. 17 E. SECOND ST. A FIRNT 8-12 tf ULAN* l»OOI. TABLE. MKRCHA.VF TAILORINU. WM. H. U.U(NN, Merchant Tailor. 122 m All RET STREET. All tho latest stylos ol Spring and Summet UftBBlmores and suitings ko)>t on Land, out and made in good style. Vlothes Hade to Order aw I'heap »• any entabllfiliiiient In Wiiniliig ton or lfhlln<l^li*lila. mv7-3m xTA REWARD.—For the arrost and ♦INOilY/ oonvietlonol tho party orn tied that committed highway robbery, and tempted to commit murder on the boi v o Millard T. Toll, on Saturday evening, about 8 o'clock, tiie 8th day of November, 1879, near Pennsylvania avenue and Olayton Btreeto. J. P. ALLMOND, Mayor. ar Ht 11-Utl COAL, WOOD AND LIME. Geo. W. Bush & Son., FRENCH STREET WHARF, Call special attention to their hard, pure, SHENANDOAH COAL . 1 Prepared lor Family use. Also to their BROOKNIDE LYKEN* VALLEY, SUPERIOR TO ALL COAL FOR SUM MER USE. COAL! COAL! LEHIGH AND K0HIN00R COAL! i I Best Family Coal, Carefnlly Pre pared eeprrlally Tor oar retail ■ale*. Promptly delivered In cellars at lowest mar ket price. Charles Warner & Co., MARKET STREET W HAKE. 0 41.! COAL! COAL 1 c unuiuis FAMILY COAL. STANTON, THOM AS LEHIGH AND WILLIAM PENN. the finest tnmlly coals, FI>QT OF WEST ST ll EET. JOHN W. GRIFFITH. Those arc YARD 9-11 tt FREIGHT LINE*. FQR PHILADFLPHIA ! * inn i ...... WARNER * PHILADELPHIA AND WILMIKUTON PKOPEI.Lr.RS, ball from nrket Street Wharf, Wilmington, dally, at 6 F. M. From First wharf below Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, daily, at 6 o'clock, P. IU. # xpross arrangement# in both dfcte#, by which prompt delivery of merohendlse i*. in sured. i*; Charles Warner d Co., Market M. Wharf, Hllminglou, Delaware. FOR HEW YORK! Electric Lins Steamers. Ft hi »i .street V. hart WilatniAon, . TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS AND TT K DAYS at 2 o'clock, P. M. And from Pior 16, East River JNea York, MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS, AND i RI DAYS, at 4 oolook,P. M. Freight forwarded promptly and at thei apzMy E ANDREWS, Agent. lowest rates.