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THE DELAWARE TRIBUNE, it jmb 1 UM by TUE EVERY EVENING PUB Lt'UTNG COMPANY, at Fifth and Mail* ting. Tt^.r'ain* The Insurance recently p • sbiii-, *.JWy Thvr*: am/ other la. Terme, far .-or pap# pu bis wondi ij t prepaid by Jit Publisher». 'ME EVERY EVENING AND COM MERCIAL it itsued every afternoon, except Sunday. It it the oUieet Daily Paper in Wilmington and the Stale of Delaware. Term», to any Pott- Office in New Cattle county, §6 00 per annum; $180 for 6 montht ; 80 cent* per month ; to poet-office* outride of New Cattle county, $6.88 per year; $1.60 for Jvree month»; 58 eentr per month Single copie» two cent». The Publisher» prepay pottage. THE "COMMERCIAL PRESS " JOB OFFICE i» imply provided with printing material of the late»t »tyles, and it» work U equal to that of Philadelphia office», and at higlter rate». pa, the but mant that pretends suit dial courts, from against trial, caution drawing a this WILMINGTON, DEL. OCTOBER 11, WT7. Till it-*»BAY, Pesluslsr WUalsilsa unless who Fair. The great success of the Peninsular 4 groti hope is only the beginning successful Fair nt Middletown this year i fying and of a still tions. It is » g«** of the whole peninsula brought they that aid es of exhibi farmt together every year in friendly competi tion and a great opportunity for those engaged in the sale farming implements those whose custom they seek for in spection aud criticism, better accomplished at into who ment ment value The fraud manufacture of prosent them to Le All this large exhibition and Middl» town is admirably situated for a fair for the whole peninsula, being this Bide of any junction of the branch roads, and therefore readily accessible by regular exhibition as successful But trains. One os tL.it of this year, will demonstrate this rybpdy and awaken interest aud the exhibition throughout the tect to whole territory between tli® bays. Among tho people who should be the first to recognize the value of such an exhibition, drawing together people from ali parts of the peninsula, should be those of Wilmington. How interesting hibition the manufacturers of this city was shown by the fair of tho Del i Institute of Mechanic A K ' j A l '' e I Third street market house, a lanufacturcr-j "i odd . ml., [iddlelovi ago, aud if* our much effort to help the display as they did at that fair they would impress the importance of facturiug interests more f ally of tho Suite than it previously has been. and might do more than that, exhibit as would aud delight to thou ever visited, ,-arUty and extent to city's rnauu the people But they and mako such rond-, r •iy of ouriu. mko tilings Many of our manufacturer; for which there is little or down the peninsula, but oven these should gli pride aud interest to tho exhibit a help drib create a little "Machinery Hall" there that would bo to attractive a feature of the tlie gn at Machinery Halt was at Tho large manufacturers mnoli interested in the ouv city as crchauls, and the Contenu: ul. ought to bo as growth and development of the smaller • und the »lively little thing it would be a for them to do a> briugiug the city more before the people for whom it is becoming ! tlio business centre. have suggested in promirir.ntly Wl. u.vich atten ingtonians have not paid they should lo the peninsula and We do not here is a good place to begin. mnagers of ths fai doubt that if tlie would make ar efff in this direction tb: dd greatly to tho nttraetivo dmirably th Uicess of thei aged exhibition. A good dinner is a good thing, hospilabûj person able and disposed to to bo encouraged in bis id any to give laudable design, but it js not give tbe dinner that Burned if he did thoso whom he would hove invited eld havo gono hungry that day. Proplo who likely to go into auy sort of society likely to be able to satisfy tbe ings of appetite at their i c not worth while that ihoro should bo i it to much thought, worry and expou»e to feed ho them whenever they spend a few hours his together av >;y from their respective'homes, Whero a dinner is given, it is well that, the food should be abundant and attractive, for people are invited there to eat, but where eating is not the entertainment t here BhoL'ld he less thought of it than there generally is Why shouM a party of people coming together after ihd usual »upper hour for , danciug, cards or w*« versa tiou, expect or j havo provided for them a large supper? p j i actual i of -n tables Bl aud id keeping it If they ewhat late, there may be need of coffee and sandwiches other thing easily handed a long evening Is to b9 spent, ice lemonade and cake, ting d if j Uon «ni, ! the take and ■where tho horiess does undoubtedly quit refreshing. vastly jif- j say tho abominable rush for at largo parties. ' • li sily handbill r.nd these things u«d mako a pleasant interrupt! ferent fro supper so People have eed t ) eat supper at mid bo bettor without it. 1 bo , be given, let the dinners arc, to a party no larger il accommodate. I But if suppers are given than the host'» table i legant. F o .. that giving party iu volved gt>- j also a large re bo done d costly ay with, ; io . [ s city, and j . • supper could there would bo three time thero ties growling over tho dullness of suggest to the people of all tho social circles o* Wilmington that they J -V quietly give it out that iu p y shall board j themselves, hereafter. tlm; tlwy i u md a desire neither expect evening enter, ainment ival of ftocial acti vity without waiting bo Ion ' as they did for the r . tf any man thinks he j va j 1 mot ! P ver . : j of bun! on take a lunch in his stand it, he < coat pocket. The Delawarean '» opinion that Hon. | f Samuel Randall will, and -elected Speaker would count fi for that individual if the ght to be p ember of thu House paper instead of the Senate. A Wi Itaft. The Delaware State Fire and lfariuo Insurance Company, of Delaware City, recently got three gontl m< p • •• '({tli.H 'ug iuo be tnt sign a » >. fia»;: -il v the lug up to. Life by b'.udy The choice will story, story tiino tions. cannot permit it to go on large price by The 'lup; bis IHaJ» not tr wondi r l at the time what tr rascality the managers of the oonccrn wc levied but find they h their stockhokLurs, i.i conclude coat of mant that it is the reason for this whitewash. Now this oompany, at least, pretends that it is going to press a lib i suit against Evkrt E venin o and Oommek dial at tbs coming fall term of courts, and hence mty have rafralurd from anything that might appear like attompt to prejudice public opinion of the against the oonoem in advi trial, but swindling people without warning, and we caution the public that drawing a fraud far from witli denunciation of the epue by swindlers, wo la this time that it is worse than we at first to the d intend proving it suspected, abundant satisfaction of all concerned, unless it be those most nearly concerne d, who satisfaction in the result of tho ordeal wid scarcely be expected to find they have invited. Do not, then, imagine for moment that this company stands unchallenged aid sound. It is a rotten and worthless in tho people c£ Delaware that any money they foolish enough to pay, will into tho pockets of a pair of rascals who ought to be in jail. This ment is professedly laid to meet an impair ment of capital through a shrinkage of the value of securities held by the The securities in question never had an}' value to lose, fesoion of loss is a sort of fraudulent assertion of property where there i will not discuss this matter fraud and of to Le puny. for this pretended is But aud the further here. Our only object is to pro. tect tho publio against a swindle assure all whom these fellows may be trying to victimize that back (1 to the an i do not bike charges against this tho public word of and still company against It. will wonders in telegraphy or-ase? K ' j A physician of Salem, Massachusetts, cx audieuce to whom he instrument Wb hibited before diseas '' e I for f: »ling the pulse by telegraph. lie only showed his hearers his maulii est. In order ml., would been. that, would thou extent but he put it to a piacticiU to explain the variations of the ia )m, by certain diseases, tho leciur means of rnauu n wire, was, placed in telc.graphio cm. lmunication with tlie city hospital of Bostou, which is distant fYom Salem, fifteen mileß. Then, with tho apparatus referred to, the pulso bents of various patienta were receive^ and converted by means of a delicate electrometer into a vibrating ray of gnesium light which tho wall. Those experiments have been repeated at Paris with success. We are confidently expeoting at •iy tilings should V distant help day the announcement of by that will bo able, ,vL i 1 journey, als by telegraph u der it. the any point lie may froi at the as and It looks hough tlu much as r very United State» will have to supply tb-' •ith bmdiffuffs this of Europe . Tho gr bo very p ficient in quantity. Ti yW4 la also f) d grain buyepj fl ed are already i »reported thing iu quality un.l in below the usual iOUUt, both uc Wl. ■•■j atten and not ;ements for the purchase In of large amounts of cc nul wheat. Fi fai lurplusjiiud it is likely that .hi lew «P« tb: the tions of grain f s are certainly very bright for agricultural di&trio country, which will thus be able to find a paying market for its enormout grain d for tlu whole gh foreign Rtean ship tho buililing of twon-y-fivo I ships, and thinks that th way rhich to bring about renewed yfOF Mr. John Roach wauts tho Government to subsidize lines to call fo pens ât Chester. If Mr. Doubtless his groat iufi'euce lloach w with Congress and his \ v veri'uj ifftrilect to »«cure the adoption of such a mcate ho would wish no greater recompense for his effort» than he obtained fo? liis behalf of the famous Pacific Mail Bubsidy, j which was the uiolraet for building tlio ! steamers provided for. , bound to at least pretend to believe that j juror, whose stubbomues» caused a disa greement, is honest, but really nobody j docs believe this, and there arises a feeling i of bitter impatience that his wilful shut , and dcclara •anted by j the Tho disagreement of tho jury i Ot thus Bl which bring the jury system into disrepute aud contempt. ting of Jus eyes to the. j Uon of an opinio 1} utterly ! the facts has to bo accept, 'h honest opinion. Tim &u»8cx Journal thinks the Dei uvention will havo something to j say about that party's candidate for O Ijress and not ttl.ow tl ' made by the currespoinlun Is of Eve Evening ano Comme :iufttion bo .■ will 1 mg that it should, but we Ri-.-o it timely , warning that if it does rot do well we and I ticket in the Arid bearing the uarno of \V, Fiske Townsend. espondeutä will put opposa The world-renowned Swiss watch schools. ; io which tho old-fashioned method of watch [ making was taught, s tiroly passed away, the last one having j been recently discontinued. This result . • has been caused by tho introduction of machinery nnd the Aujeric u facture, by which -, iid J -V j »ynteui of watch ma oh i u a cost far below that of the old proc id . I (l j/ says thero i Tlie Situes Jo j 1 doubt that t ! P an y will bo . : build a branch j Well then let tho Journal be happy. The Delaware road will not build this branch pad C R •strained if it attempt' d from Dover to Lewes | f it is prevented from doing Tho many Methodist people of this p raiusula should give their Conféré cademv lift through its difficult! letter elsewhere. mà OUR current juiuirci«. The »amber of Ta Lrmo Aas for tho tnt week of October, begins a new ' THE volume. It ha« a valuable article on The j Stdentlftf Movcnurat and Literature from the Contemporary Review;* lug sk.-tch entitled "The Priue-ss Paolini," Cornhill; part fourth of Tho Life und Titnee of Thomaa Beck et, by tho hi»torian James A. Froude, Nineteenth Century; Green Pastures and Piccndilly, by the noted author, William Black; A b'.udy of Lower Life, Cornhill ; Oerawn Society Forty Years Since, Macmillan ; The Poetry of September, Cornhill ; Quiet People, Saturday Renie te, and tho usual choice poetry. In the next weekly number will bo begun a new serial, a Yorkshire • story, by the author of that charming story "Patty." The beginning of tho present volume is therefore an excellent tiino for the beginning of new subscrip tions. For fifty-two numbers of sixty-four large pages each (or more than three thousand pages a year), the subscription price (sfrtt) is low ; while for $10.64) tho publishers offi r to send any American $4 monthlies or weeklies with The Living Age for a year, both pot-1 paid. Little A Gay, Publishers, 17 Bro .afield plieh street, Bos Frmj'l. 0 >rr been ual long stiokin he their tho thing ionablis win certainJy do have of the beaded shoes JVJ5W ROOKS. THAT HUSHAND Sherud. "Two long legs, a cut-away ooat, a wid- -awake hat—that's Charlie—a tbfl*door, a kiss, a hug,—and he has such tho book begins, little married t. PaOon : Lao k Y truly beads long arms, and then" "and then" comes a silly woman's prattle about her kisses, her hug gings, lier spats and her reconciliations with the aforesaid Charlie of the long , of tho irequent visits of a friend of his, of the later visit of her sister, of Mrs. Charlie's hopes and intrigues to have her husband's friend and her sister fall in love with each other, of tho success of those hopes, or me aiseovery mat nor sister is already engagod to a rich old man who loves her dearly, aud all about how ercome without blood into c£ the an}' tioii than additi silk this difficulty shed or accident, and the end of many chapters aud the book. The about ch plot as thero is of skcUton oyster, and yet despite all this the book is popular and widely read, and no who reads it will wonder that it is so. The secret of the interest in such books is difficult to discover, but we may guess way related to the I act that everybody is married, or expects to be wishes that he or she had been. The married folks like] to read about how another young married couple get along and contrast it with theirown way, and tli unmarried do the of pro. be to that it is i bike this tuino aud contrast it with what they think they would have 4one or hope to do. Again the book deals with such ordinary persons acting ' a common-place way that it meets a w sed by cx he Oh reaction public taste aguiust another style of novels. Thero i morbid character in the book. No "green eyes," "snake-liku, sinuousgr^po," ''grand married couple, of no particular account, live aud love, spat and make up in a natural way- A sister to tho wife, a fine girl who has beon taking brother's children till he marries agi approaching thirty and not love, yields at last to the importunities of a very fino old marry him ; visits her sister, inspires a lovo in the heart of a oiever young friend of her brother-in-law',falls in love with him herself, and is miserable» because she is in a fix aud has something to be miserable about. The old man discove of affairs, gracefully steps aside aud, like the good old follow ho is, sends the bride the lie order be ary they ia by ith" iy such stuff- A youug in city fYom tho of and of of her and consents to the state distant wedding present s promotion iu and busines her husband' id by we see no more of him. Had he fallen into the hands of onr iiupul.iv literally lia - îe of vel writers lie gono further and fared rould His intended snow to tho altar aud given i. pr.i.. tlu biing baud, nd her lo •d in tlie disti e "gazing w.lh d«. tb-' Pi to cyee" god all that, aud this hung around till he had con g wife's character an able. u,led the devil knows win re, that is if anybody knows. The reaction : t thi.-v stylo of book in favor of the (citing annals of honest no. It the i J ; pr wn a it wm-.id nil l.i iOUUt, ag.ii fui love i a wholes :imv !>■■ that tho readiness of i rel n .i.lus I wheat. this he sign of u c iluablo my i-e interesting d bl Kirlke i li-dNbo the puddling furnftc of Tic li. lpc: E. A O. lb s extensive rolling mill, at find a grain whole have struck, for a very ice. Au improved double siusulm- gvie puddling furnace, lately ectod, reqi of the ussi! icntly hoy but w workiug elsewhere, wa«giyeu the situation. The helpers claim that an outsider should ship not have been employed, but that one of I tlwir nnmW shoiild li»ye boon promoted. The new puddler, however, was put to way wor j î( w hen tho whole force of helpers yfOF- qifit the mills. Operation» at the mill sequeutly suspended iu I li.'.Vu be Mr. definitely. iufi'euce ifftrilect for Bubsidy, j '. tlio ! Com that disa nobody feeling shut dcclara by The hî,ot>i> Counterfeit. jngton telegrams contrauir.t " stall merit iu some uoy/epapers that the | $1,000 greenback of 1801) has boon itorfaited. It is the $1,000 greenback the Americ y,\ 4Q in 8C.2 that 1ms patiy's plate j In cu thus imitated. To enable j t<> distinguish between jbein it i the Ikut the former not« contains the portrait f De '.Yitt Clinton, and a viguetto of sitting position; whilo the yoto which has been counterfeited bears the portrait qf Robert Morris, but stated Coluuib disrepute DELAWARE AREA Smyrna hoi; a uniformed police force. They are still playing base ball in thp country. el-ting is to be held at Newark to aid of the proposed circulating A mght ii library. •load of evaporated fruit A to Milwaukee from the vicinity of Milford last Dei It is the Young Men's Reading Room i gambling den. id that a place in Milford called to O Eve bo The fruit eurers, says the Milford selling off their season's pro good prices. will Oh, don't! Tho Newark ledger says that the Citizen's Cornet Band, of that place, is the prido of the peninsula. Col. Small gave an oyster supper and dancing party to tho employees of hir canning factory, at Lincoln, last Monday. church at Armstrong's Middletown, the Second Forest Presby terian, was organized on Sunday last with eleven members. The Sentinel is of the opinion that W. R. Cooper, tho forger, fraudulent stock , flourished timely and of \V, The ne schools. watch having result of which . Ac., of 8: Fr around Smy ,1 >cti d with tho r«>! bery of safe there, of Mr. •elation i h vk of iu Peace for Kent, UauL-hl ; facti ford Net Lnu A says: Bis ;li- fi/rmer fri that ds of icily want Mr. M id said that it would not l . I poiut îiliii, a ud the in i The branch rat foriut.d by ly in Mr. ! C tp and ollte ll.iughle favor that thu Lewes 11 avoid appointing him Clerk ; if the ! of the Peace for Kent. Th" Hilf. ad N, thinks th people of that town had thu enterpri they could have tho beBt agricultural ■ society aud get up the best fair of any ; the peninsula. It urges that a ed for the | this joint stock company be fo c, and tlu d, buildings put Ac., before another s p, track laid out, OUR FFT YORK LETTER] THE fa . j plieh Mllorml IVINTER ' Topi ißt IONS A.> VILOOK, torimvk | . laths '** J 1 Treasury, cause dicatqs tion united believes tion ^ x bly , cratic ore Mm Frmj'l. 0 >rr , O b. ß.— The class of ri- h r pet hi .pa t] ,.»se went away. "They'll l$c a . o' them basements where been u hidin' all summer," »aid au indlrid ual well ini long ago. "Ï Si.'c stiokin their head., o he continued their doors bold ns lions tho taco." Doubjuss ho thing I do know, is that mouutain top, sea shore, ionablis ihd win ••y ued onth > subject all this tiiu they walk u look y right, .'bother at siuce throats." The fitted résenta» should a Mr. )ne oy certainJy nro •o in full force. 1 Mark Twain savs that if do welkin the have a top n ild remark to id. i like r I i wishes to no tlio fas ion : beads. Let tfcow et; trii itii them; buy a pair of beaded blockings (only $10) aud a pa r of shoes the tho of and, local served." subsidy in the will for personal The really tural your 1» J boarette cos organ ri tli beads to m ;ch. o beads on yournecl tie, cloak, if desired. 1 hen mice! Y ren i truly you will be fashionable, beads come the clair de b Fi ji't, Willi I connnou phrase, i bo riliter. into the bronze, jet, and to a limited extent wi see colored beads. nd"thi Theu e thrive, that than who better Au that State the latest aud down Many of tho effects produced by the ' curette cloths nro gorgeous. Swell fantastic combinations of color ns have ritnesRed—red, golden yellow, bright blue, and green in terspersed with a reckless hand and at random upon deep-toned surfaces of bronze, slate, prune, brown, blue ami green. Now in conuec bouretto cloths tioii of the day, and this is than the additi silk o for of Wi'., tl.CS: important ques m other no act be ecessity offset, tor th< material, either • worsted. Toning down becoming materials gli that refinement must be given by gentle touches, and therefore combi nation costumes which hitherto have been de rigueur , and to such extent has this been carried that fabric throughout is a thing of the past. The blank silk dress which er times was the p of so even his too to selves the tuino of it cca of all d joy forever d by" for ry occasion, hns t black silk o applies with colored silks, and it Oh Eve ust be "combined." The a fine a him in like the er f. !0 t party be repeated that plainly wi ght fabrics ' rtgaräid ary to tlie bon ret le line, to which .■ l>!tt>:.'d they offset N. Suits cf black cloth are not discarded, but they adapted to general wear, and very, very sober. u only them that At the COSTUMES. her Dresses fit as coats of ail, close to the forms which they embrace with vice-liku d while princess polonaises lead, close fitting basques and discarded, or ag ' grasp, to m find tlie princess u. One of the handsomest dress design» m the last named style i the having tho front draped aero* plaited train the back, j The " distinguish'd. 1. which tl 1" d< ■ 1 state it-. I about midway dow fan-like ffect. ■A -nique d t - ; partially id i.l •on 11 - ko. In 1. a>qn.1h ight lilting with the vest, of fared rould mute I -li k d .ho lisb. his t i w.lh d«. q Pi aud the 1 n an re, the It ; t ! ' doit b which c ki u«d, Ki-f.c "Que. U, bos ibiii v, .i.lus I ÙU-. s before cqi without j» cl. It d the d lockstitch f< . ill b the ipt cf •Oct. of $1.M) •!2â Brooii at very double In milium ; no!' plush it h : ribl lilt plush cr ]>U icntly to s but should of to mill iu side and sa velvit, a thing „ht.give-you tha As glib r. spt I; I kuow of, mid it > I Irishman juin • i y ii, Yeti' i. ni A h 1 d itli fid In alditiOi to I. -ii. i-r kinds, lu.l b ni luscious lucking b •q.pb id, uj d vlIv. he " the | boon ltd by doive eat beetle«, sv.tU U'.ttvtUiy soreams • : ik. suti lie ing He of II real life, bronzed 1 ' 1 *' 1ms ifieiall pos I opinion inner of bugs, Hies, Birds of paradis: ; of I'oatbi-rs: but strich ni of the bears stated ud civ mt iu the : tO t'i.L i and tip., which see; 0 hold own througu nit is freely employe. 1 . cv.ry ik all, perhaps, ü ■ i lune J. fold in thei, , but for tho most part displuv slightly pointed crowns oi high!, with thp lediurn brims, -w revelations. '1th the bri ude to promise of * h of The now glov<v, In avily stitched broideml on the baric of the hand, hav »ed, and clivid favor with the si If-stitched iu the delicate styles hitherto prevalent. As color, the Milford msly dv I.-.. pVl: called edi i tihudes lead, but servie-. glove» ab d 1 duo brought outi dark hues, while Milford pro s wc find all manner of pale tints to say nothing of white. d full dns» tlio " Harris Pre says that and hir Presby with W. stock cut. glove is pri f. elegant and htyiii.li. The Hi d. ris Sur ilesh is also very durable w hat the V d Dt 1 by thu judicious class of ia Mari ! Jtus.vuND May. hi xcavnting a ! r th. y 1 r in which Plitlndol bi « U j Whil cellar in New Cast! -, f l;l oui c la Mr. h. a l firmly i-i difficult !.. imbedih 1 ii Kent, II nidi tin dal pr. Bis •- That th, j ds of P uf sellar, iit.'.ii , • but y th. ! by should ! av Mr. ! the head ..Fl u; i,. i xn!n »!>!.-. . n fo th ! Clerk ; puiq V'" k'-ping In wi » i 3 , : ,, *«nd'd i of coal. Or, y . .! frit the impulse of the I I-. g the the ! from "l:. int ■ pcrluqis. liit ( any ; eat 1" r -y tl that a of tm >' the | thing tl. navi i y wail. Thu tlol ti to br. uk o out, this general example. PWMINBULAM PRESS. Mllorml Omb Vpam camst by tb« iMffra fiber* nnd N»w from moth to A Topi torimvk are 3Vwn|>hij«*i-h. . laths nomination o? the Hou. Th. J Keating us the D Comptroller of Treasury, the Centre ville Öbnerver finds cause for great rtjoioing and thinks it in dicatqs the triumph of no particular fac tion but is the work of th< whole party, united and harmonious The Observer believes that the dissension aud dissatisfac tion which havo sometimes followed party nominations in Maryland are conimeuda bly wanting this year, and that tho Demo cratic party entere into tho present c ore thoroughly uuited than it has been taken from tu Abu. I,uul being said the at siuce the bayonets throats." The Dalawarmn knows of fitted t » be Speaker of the House of Rep résenta» ives than tho Hon. Samuel Randall, good reason why ho should not be solccted to fill that position, questions his ability aud fair by tho custom heretofore observed he seems entitled to a continuance in tho oflico. But whether Mr. Thiudull be elected or not,of from 29tli, C.tJ of it the in of 1 it thing the Delawarean is certain, aud that is that tho Democrats will take espccial the House without tho dictation of President Hayes and, it hopes, "without reference to any local interests that may desire to bu served." It also is quite subsidy scheme will be considered in the choice of Speaker and that will be elected who aspires to Ihn place for the purpose of advancing private personal euds. The Smyrna Time* says it is becoming a really serious question whether agricul tural fairs It. organ his adniinistratioi that aided not getting too thiol: to thrive, and it ventures forth the opinion that most of them than faire. The Newark Ledger is congratulated appearance by a com* pondent, who declares that its openiug editorial was better than the opening of a beer saloon. Au open Perhaps it that Dorn Pedro i State ; but it's a fact, knowledge of which we the Dover Delawarean . The distinguished gentleman is now the regular literary pondent of that pap it from Magnolia. His latest effusion is entitled "Frankness," aud in proof of the axiom which he lays down "that of failures pliiuent surely, is not very g enerally known a /«rident of this vertheles*. for the indebted to frank truly great even in little things," ho invariably signs his full name, "Dora Pedro." The New» and Advertieer dr clares that tho masses of the people of this country have too great a stako in its future government to allow themselves to bocouio tlie blind devotees of any party. Parties in them selves it believes to be-a necessity of good government, aud considering tho force of formed, and the difficulty attending their creation und organization, it thinks it much better retain such parties party attachments when already in xistcuce, aud force them to work in the ight direction, rather than to ubandon for special and this them and form specific purposes. F that tho Advertiser docs not fav party scheme talked of down the State. The Newark Ledger commends President Hayes for his course toward the South, and condemns him for his Civil Service policy. At the end of upou the subject, it exclaims aloud "Let there bo true reform," and demand*, the application of the old Herculean fable iu the following language: "Turn waters of public opinion and let the Augc stables be cleansed." tho ne column editorial the I Lifts, ! E S Pin ITU A T. IS T. i.l Trial Vi nrt r.ndcl—An tan—UH hm loi Fi r.vi Big I A dispatch to tho Every Ev M onday, a the case of J cod tb. .ho jury i A. Bliss and his vile Christ»« Bliss, who hud bc( i of Phi hub 1 : n i fad •1. the bench whe b the court d that they told them they should Lave ag went ov r the evidence, explaining things which he thought had explained before. He then told them to in, but the foreman said they ild not agree he bl ■d, i i been properly v, retire i iid the Judge, have ueiiaiu rights respect, i minute. ym ivhii h I ■ 1 1 will dis. If there .-ho walked into the défendent is guilty." officer of respectfully inform Magistrate er to him the il theu formally re ar before tlie Magis , but wai guilty I'he Judge then instructed the court Smith that he handed defendant, Bliss, tied him to nppe rate, adding, "Mrs. Bliss is under bail magistrate." The ion, 11 ; for cf to appear before jury stood: For u-quittal, 1, the qne juror Leing 'dame , hatter, No. I'ho other jurors say that jlundqss s aiil : "If there eyer «V gttiRy mi i tho earth, it ia Bliss, but I will never send him verdict." The juror» also say that two of their number were npproaohed, ami that money bail been used to prevtm tiou. tha I; di 1321 Frankford jail g discharged Blis taken in charge by tipstaff Errjckscn, and removed to the o£fy;u of Alagirirato Smith, Seventh streot, below Cln-stnut, where he was held to • : wer tlie charge of nigamy m marrying one Christiana .Norton, lie having a wife living. The female Air«. Jiliss hjo. 9, or Christiana Norton, was held on the oharge of marry ing the husband of Lucy Bliss. Mr Daniel P. Clough, brother of tho original and first Mrs. Blisa, was the prosecutor. He resides in Boston. When Mr. Heveriu, who was to prosecute, arrived at the magi«*rate's office, he stated that the ready to proceed, adjourned until this *' I : 1 . ü ■ sedition i oi and tfie hearing afternoon. the A NEW COAL COM UI NATION. 5|r. OiiHcq nnd 111© Heading —A HUe in Nlocka, he Lrtl BPOta* D'spatob totba Puiladelphia, Oct. 8.—Th< very good authority of a proposed new coal combination, composed of all the companies iu the old organiza tion, but which will exclude tho Rcadiug Company, and leave Mr. Ooweu out iu the cold. Tho Reading has been yriunipg immense bqsiues« of lute, and it is said by tho officers that there are orders hand for three months' more delivery, if another one does not come in. A meeting has boen called, it is said, to bike place in New York on Friday next, ufier a gathering here on Wednesday of this week. The prescut rates of coal unromunerative, and the decke I« advance prices ' all will cut under rumors In ilesh of a paying basis, or else Mr. 0 owe D and compel reduce his prices, and e^btu-r^ ! hiqi in hiß contracte. hi nderablo excitement at tho Stock Board to-day when Pennsylvania a ! sharps, which a week ago sold at twenty y 1 eight aud seven-eighths, ran up to thirty which three, and afterward declined to thirty-one )-fonrlh. Whenever there is a it is attributed groat bull !.. •ment ho lHirchasers for Ne York especially if tho sal.-s e large, as tlie th, j s of the arkot here Tho wkdlo lis ,h d Reading closed at :e of th. ! thi d with this. d pun-fourth, m i,. i nearly tyn per share i week. th ! I'll Hcd c: In In tho United States Court to-d:iy, Judge Bradford presiding, H. E. T Or, Esq., assignee of Martin Alsberg, asked Isaac Grubb, Sheriff, for production of said Anberg before the y Registrar on the 11th iustaut for examina- j under the bankrupt law. In the .! matter of tho contributors to tlio Penn- [ the sylvama hospital versus E. Ö. Bhortlidgo J I plea of nil debit withdrawn. | cr, j ti I „f »nd 1 A MONSTER DEVIL PIS If. f' for New Hr back t4 squid. it s the city of i KTasv N»w York ,.n Wd the steamer Carta, from St. John's, Nswrotmdland, a mam- I w moth out tic-fid), tho largest ever known to have boon captured. It was u.nB'bv packed in a cask about tlm -.. r ». sugar . * hogshead, 1 ho long s of tho fish I A lUrn lflilhy«*4o«lfi.i Yrtrli-T i« l.arKCMt <' tu l. day being coiled about the body, aud the whol e I r in Ktrong bviue. The llsli, it is ] said waspnrcha,. d by the proprietor*, of the New York Aitoaiium, where it will be |hat A ■•»I placed at York World, writing pondent of tho Ni from St. John's under dato of September 29tli, gives the following particulars ol tho fish zeus re of this m • of the derqj : C.tJ •ut here at present Thu er the exhibit! of the gigantic cuttle-fish, called devil-fish. Only specimen of this ext >r previously secured—in your correspondent was ablo perfect specimen taken in Logic Bay, and forward it to Professor Vtrr il, of Yale College, who uindo an exhaustive study of it und described it in various scientific periodicals. It is now to be Peabody Museum, New lluvcu. Tlifc cap ture auil tho length and exclusively in The World at the time, and made the greatest sensation in scientific circles ns well as among news paper readers in both hemispheres. which I have now to describe is a much lurger mid finer specimen, being forty feet from the extremity of the long arms to tho point of tho tail. On the 22d instant a heavy equinoctial galo swept these shores, und this wanderer of deep was driven ashore in i condition at Catalina, shore of Trinity Bay. When stranded it was still alive, but died soon after tho obb of tho tide, which left it high aud dry tho beach. 'Two fishermen took pos session of tho tho whole settlement gathered to gaze astonishment ut the monster. F rnerly this "big squid," as the iishern call it, would lia ?o been converted into manure by tho fishermen, food for dogs : but uow, thanks to the dif fusion of intelligence, the Cataliua who knew tho importance of pre serving such n rarity, and who advised the u to St. John's. Tho two men loaded their little craft with the body of the gigantic cuttle, and arrived with it hf-re on tho 20th, in a per fectly fresh condition. As soon as the r tho ed, and the fishermen of a splendid spociuio piece •dinary animal was 1873, when Mr. o obtain a a in tho «nul were described at The hausted the northern to »1 up as a tho of and und fishermen to take it ut monster wore advised to exhibit it bef< public. The Government granted the the of tho drill-shed for the purpose, and the 11 , supported by boards, tho c s laid out in all its gigantic propor Tho lucky fishenuo golden harvest,and found the big squid by far the best catch they had ever The scene was very curious, the cuttle with its ten arms stretched two of them thirty feet in length, lmviDg s of powerful suckers eter at their broadened extremities. Tho other arms, eight iu number, were en tirely covered with suckers on the under side, and were eleven feet in length. The renw-d in the and There lay and the iu body is ton feet in length and nearly seve feet i caudal fiu two foot ni .Vhen taken from the water the color of the squid was a dusky red, but that has disappeared, and the body and The :e. aud terminates i the perfectly white. is the* usual horn.y beak, tho which project fro tlie ccntro of tli * t-like audible» of 1» jmbrauoous bag the head, and fro: io ton arms i of b. ilig radial.-. Certainly il clutched i which there coul.l be •v had cl. those Ur «I 1. aud tlu i and ibh* beak. send a shuddering thv 1 stout ftl <i •1. told of Kv.i tho Indian flatly d : atiou to they h of •( re a ; i , tho icktts bei "fi ?; ct-r. a ... expr-.v .as alive cm the b i.. the civ . said by t! peculiarly fen Africa dis. into of the re ho had .veci . half nd •rfi'l. 1 . mil in a -it Umo de nils bo •ungost alcohol. Our bail for could only continua the exhibi tion two days and a-lialf. T managed to tlm close, and hud packed il to Professor» Baird rare it fo . I fortunately in Halifax, thicu I being iu hope a ton in nat led liulf of -king it reached Halifax, fiuc llv ... !*/ *w Ive placed either iq rl.e pcabody or ümlthsoniau Museum, but tlio Jas *r violated his contract and sold it to a later aud higher bidder. 1 hnvo carefully taken tho mcsTOrcmeut of the mounter, imJ fulIowlu B are tb. diuieuslo-- . tw0 j 01jg toutaclea nro :h thirty feet; tlie body X length, making the lotul length from the m of the outstretched loug arms to extremity of tho tail forty feet. The long tentacles leather, being < fere ont l he et i tO «411 i d tough dy five inches i the extremities, w of the the this cpt they broaden out circumference. The body d aro eight Inches i its thickest circumference, There aro eight short nrms, which »> tho point of junction with tlie central seventeen inches in circumfeiv thoir eXtre like points, having t part is nearly seven feet i e, but id iuH taper dow of sucker» along kora the arm, which is eleven feet in length, two hundred and fifty large that tho eight arms d. and small; contain two thousand suckers; tho long arms perhaps two kuudred and liriy more. The head or central muss, from which the arms diato, is four and a half feet in e ferencc. Unfortunately tlie delicate eyc liad boon destroyed putting it on board; hut tlie socket of measured eight iuci.nn in ditim t -v. of the Lrtl Ui voyage or a iu said to next, of Tho nppe tho water is described by the fisherui«; extraordinary. Tbe tail h»»d fi.it fas dminiug backward, rendered powerless. In its desperate efforts to escape the tun arms darted about in all directions, lashing the water into foam, the thirty-foot tentacles in particular making lively play as it shot them out and get a "purchase" with their drag ils>4? into qjy Y.hvn it beçamo eded thut the ach it, Uh dic-n i powerful suckers, so a; deep water, exhausted fishc inode of tide roi en ventured to tipp -- moving through the unusable. Behind the head or else nected with the bronchial The visible, • breathing (limited to which muscular at ater i. organa. th( by valves, tho oiyaus dilatation of tho body ; water so admitted has c the blood it is expelled by this a oxygen to tube, just in tlio drive the gills rater, aft. r purifying the blood of iure, L; not mi r ly got lid of, 1» But then this •ifclo here is utilized s to be Bubs«' i. ni, to the - B at of . ( , U • M er thv s, by the in ml ing di u, enabled to dart nuzlng rapidity. , anil kward with mi mod of loco jtliii for low, like a hydraulic the j forms the tail acts the w pnrt of the rudder and directs ihe way. [ moves forward by J cxpauniou of ' | means of the side-fins the o cr, j The body is just isible above the surface ork be ino, ejecting the which It also l is at er, while the tans of tlio fin-like ii, d sideways by the expansions I „f Ihn miuillo. It MU> Vko use IW »™ I »nd lees aud crawl F-iodh tho bottom of - IT,i,h ita * je .d downward«. The 1 »,**., vt . r i K that which tag« and uat und i:i iln- giaut mvi.icr through the wider 1 .. back war ! mot* on squid. V,hi it s a i KTasv .i.g iU pr. y it b!i, d"sree of ro..^ lidl'.V.andl I w " " " 8 ""„vf ,. rAV on . .. . n. covered wow* the ^tro.mty u . * ' •«„.... 0 i I suokess, 01 When ? of the way tog.lu .*• which f.udowed Elk His and that object by tho rhich are quickly sharp, denticulated o pressed with enormous force ~ of tile victim. Thi'D tlwothm J tl I r owBcted ] ®dgesarc "mÄe round and grasp it, |hat e . Hil) en , b nwo Nie Alto".'thcr, Hit. gigaiitio eiittlo st wonderful of all the dcni fish is tho zeus of the great deep. In a future communication I shall fumiah furl lu r particulars of this uxtn dinary créât a it dif the and the tho l!T> TO MOTE. wn v it e WA -v r noie» With III" p-A Borrow In» Mr. Bill N eight" XeJ I*« lug illy. «> tlm Mr. Butterwick cnlled in to se other day, arid in tho course of tho c Ration he said : "I'm going to those Thompsons next door to longer. They're the awfules people borrow things that I ever saw. Coffee, and butter, aud sugar, and flour, I don't mind 't stand any I :h, although when a woman borrows high-priced sugar and Java coif aud sends buck sand and chickory. i naturally feels mad. But they' .'erything thing borrow <-d the house. pretty First it i from morning till night, right struight (dong. "Now, there's tho jioker. A poker's a piece of machinery that you'd think any body would go around and buy, or,if they couldn't afford it, they might use a fence paling to shake up the tire. But Mrs. Thompson hcouis to hanker after poker. Hbo borrows it fifteen or twenty times a day, and List Saturday she sent for it thirty-four times. $2 a week to poker; aud she used it bent like a corkscrew. "Now take chairs, for instance. 8ho asks us to lend Lor our chairs throe times oal, and she borrows the rocking chair ever}' time she wauls to put the baby to sleep. "A couple of times she sent sofa, and when tbe boy c ho said Mrs. Thompst thunder and kept growling around the house all day because tin it. Last Monday she borrowed rash boiler, aud wo had to put off wash ;ig till Tuesday. She did her preserving d tho consequence was our clothes fiber, a »1 8he pays a boy that and borr much that it's as a day at every for a back w ith it, mad castors the by Tho en The e full of preserved peaches. r BOt that I'm mighty doubtful if I'll ever get off, it's stuck <<o Ügllt. 1 'Every and theu sho ban all the parlor furnituro. wouldn't carry tho piano over for her and take down the chandelier, she told our girl that there were rumors ubout town that I was a reformed pirate. "Perfectly scandalous! They think nothing of sending over for a couple of bedsteads or tho entry carpet, and the other day Thompson says to " 'Butterwick does your pump log pull d - t-.1i irt r aud then slio has company hired girl and Ouce, because I lay of has up easy ?' ' 'And when I said I thought maybe it did, lie said : " 'Well, I would like to borrow it for a few days till I can get one, for minc'd all rotted a-vtiy.' "The ouly wonder to the well along with it. u on Thursday Mrs. Tliomp Bent tho boy ovt r to kuow if Mrs. frontdoor. of • is ho didn't try arms ilig to borr "Aud the Butt k would lend her o aid their'» wa sho said she away b-iug painted, s afraid the baby d. When I a wc re going to do t thout .my front dour said bed quilt or s h up posed I •P, ti 1 Mr ckoned Aud whej ti I ref ;od, tho boy said to nsk if I of ui told h wouldn't send over the front .1 Mrs. Butt , to ask ick to lend her a pair of ririp. d stockiu' -s and a Uorse-h bustle, • tlie coal senttlo till Monday, the n'.nxo of Moses sho is going What to do stle coal scuttle 1 1 But 11 mrsi ext mardi r ! >« «fuiy wc ]•; urth of July the boy came over and tol.l Mis. Butterwick that Mrs. Thompson would be much obliged If she'd lend her the twins fqv » few minutes. Said Mrs. ry people. de . I Fourt! bo Our to il Thump«' bottle-lop. because ok off a no made her baby sick to taste fresh IniU » rubber. Cheeky it'; Bui that» her way. BLuj don't . liulf lind it a. 'Why I've known lic-r totako off our Johnny'« punts when he's born playing with Urn children, and send Uiui bare-legged to till hi she borrowed them for a pattern- Aud Oi to tb. nro the The he .'er th other th 's birthday - bo said her house if b'd lend c-.r ours wo might come in th<; evening nd dance with the company ; wouldn't let on t'qqt uhu didn't live there. "Yes, sir ; Vm gnitig to next door to a lunatic asylum fed hoi y, tlu i if we ; I'd rather liye m and have tho maniacs pouring ►hot over the fono Indeed I would." vflho day. i tho C'icHicr County T«*nel»«rs»* liuititntp. The •xt County Teachers' Institute vill bo held in Horticultural Hall, West racing Monday, October '! id 2!lth, 1 g e' . Superintendent Harvey kora ike this, his first y effort Institute, equal ti the In st ever held i tlio couuty. In addition to "homo talent" cd I'rof. Mark Bailey,of Yale College, Prof. Johonuet, of New York, Prof. Henry IToueh, Deputy Ruperinteud ent of Public Instruction, Pa., Prof. es, Superintendent of Free , Delaware, Mr_YV. TV. Woodruff, ident of Bucks eonntv large lis lia arms The arms eyc J '■s H. G Kcho Hupe Prof. J. V. Montgo lecturer» such distil Hclniyler Colfax, I-lon. Daniel Dougherty, Gen. Davis, of Doylestown, Prof, Mark d Prof. Johonuet. One promi of the Juutiiuio will bo its practical character. The exercises will be adiijited to the needs of teachers, aud the teachers of the couuty will t»ko a prominent part. .1 cry, of Mill BviUe, d for evening nguislu-d ;n as Hon. into and their into the Uh i Bailey '.it fu Ittitrlii rilhixN Harriet Martin. with singular •orrected htr luanu rol facility, aud ript. She had o sympathy dlh Uor script for revision, nor with Macaulay's fas tness, which compelled the rewriting •hole chapter of his history to im I'l-' of lavi tidi Oi jes, bhe thought to 1 that all attempts at polishing tho stylo im paired freshness of thought and natural ness of expression. this no Hr»t i exhibited at thia office yes terday that ought to have been sent to the Middletown fair k for grown by Rufus Moucktou, hundred, of 1» this It was f Christiana d »und 'th, IV inches di: the - I' .~d 1ft} Its weight is 2} ofc consider it hesi , Mr. 7.1. doe very largo radish eitli for the table that w good eatiug, too. ing i sed as larger. It w with qritobii •ri» Shore. be the which also Denton Ut Ivies, ubout phobia ion ; A son of 7Ir. John P. f> years old, died of h}dro . the rt-sidenco of his grandfather, ty, last »ved from Baltimore a in which city tho lad Edcsville, Kent . k. The fa was bitte ily had r. e seven week's not kuowu the animal was »y by ago, but it id. »OMMO VWDlMa L ÙVX1 1 - _ ~*I r*~—~ On*.« Th.ologlo»l Samir tag« number of atmhnt* tb previous p. riod in its history, Dr. W. N. Hutchinsou, • Chester county, drowned v way home from the Middl to Friday. He attempted to ford th, Elk creek in a two uorso carriage, and wub carried away by the force of the stream His body Afterwards found lodged against a tree, about a mile below tho crossing. Ho was assistant surgeon of tho Eleventh Regiment, P. N. O., and will bo buried to-day with military honore. The storm caused the stroums in Chester county to be higher than for many years. Along their courses fully one-half of the smaller bridges have been carried away and travel greatly interfered with. On Chester Creek the bridges at Bridgewater, Presbyterian Ford, Wilcoxs's, woro swept away. On the Philadelphia A Baltimore Central railroad, between West Grove and Oxford, an embankment sixty feet i length was washed away, and travel that line will not be resumed for a ik A young lady was drowned at Oak Hill, Upper Darby, Delaware county, on night of the storm. Caturine Maurrel and Mary O'Hare, wore going home from work in the mill. It was dark and mining hard and the cirta trudged ou hardly know lug whether they were going the right not. Over tho run at the foot of the hill there has been for years an old bridge. The heavy storm hod washed this away before the girls come along. They, not knowing this, stepped into the stream. Miss O'Hare managed to scramble out, but Miss Maurrel was carried down the stream out into Darby creek and drowned. tin I EASTERN SHORE ITEMS. * J. V. P. Bioaett haa retired from tho superin tendency of the Worcester A Somerset railroad, and is succeeded bv William E. Ward. Judge Stump, of Caroline county, in charging tho grand jury last week, con gratulated them not a prisoner in the county jail. The Easton Ledger says : Joseph Waddell, husbaud of Kate Waddell, has been arrested and awaits a hearing, on suspicion of having some knowledge of the Fitzjarrell murder, and to account for a $ 10 noto in his possession, and another which he claimed to have given to his wife, and which was stolen from her by a negro woman, which noto the woman alleges was given her by Mrs. Waddell. the fact that there i When your Baby U restleis while teething get Dr. Bull ■ Baby Myrup, a doae of it wilt relieve the little aufferer at ouce. Only ai centa a bottle. * Hr ryan'N Klectr*.« oitmr and rtlnjaii-tic A p . pliancea, Bella mad Banda far MelfCur e . • N»rro sad iif I jdy »itn d offa Mt« V*1 I liltty, . _ t #> t lu A Health In/.ueneo. tb. Na , u * •■'«1 Dnbilitftted. Life, bUar^tb. In tha wan. WSfciTKO .voi.taio'and Ratio applianokh. Quadruple powe DK. BRYAN'S Recently Introdi tody _n! ul ^ re it a ELECTRICITY IS NATURE'S POWfiK* îoreroian 8p Spin*! Dt "L, ftpil d U Kidnnjrs, illy. * -ay, nnd (fi liuvù NU pl Mi *1 "ero.., Phytii ihlufs „,p| a ADDRESS, 'll. BRYAN, BnWU«* A Free Cure. ity, dy* I by pH 'X ittflu l i la I rti RUBBiNM, Y . r. 1 FIRST DOSE ON A BOSTON POLICE OFFICES, Boston, Nov. 15,1871. H. R. Stevens: Dear Sir—Iu the spring of 18691 \ flown with fever which had a lo*ag am n. Tlie beat medical advice being lunce, I was taken Vnrough tlio fevor ; but it left me terribly red.need and wunk, with ing pains in my side, back and hips. 1 whs completely prostrated with Kidney Com plaint, and no medtolno seemed to reach my __ - . -— persuaded to try > EUETINR by a friend whom it cured of tli*. , aud It teemed as though I could e effect of the lirst dos nth s stricket d uh hope! In In tlila condition I dta ttir bettor from 3 tlie Veoetink, lient tli, wliole b meniî, gradually growing I to ilay: anil I followed on wltli until It completely since which time 1 h to ny boon ablo to perfo s as a police officer, enjoying gc ; and there ia no doubt about tlie gn v , all .'? YSoKTiN» lu Kidney Complaint a similar di s ea s e», 1 am. sir, respectfullv, t-AKAYETTE FORD, 064 Broadway. v au b All Diseases of the Blood. If Ykgrtine will relieve pain, cleanse, pu rify and cure such diseases, restoring tlie pn tient to perfect health after trylug differen physicians, many re is it not conclusive i edles, suffering for ye oof, If you are a suffer this medicine p PS. red? Why Is na such great cures? It works in tho blood, in tlie circulating fluid. It can truly bo called the GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER. The great source of .lUease originates in the blood; ledicine that does not act directly on It, to purify and renovate, bos any just« claim upou public attention. Seventy-one Years of Age. '■ ' East Marshfield, Aug. 22, 1870. Mn. Stevens : Dear Sir—1 am soventy-ono of »go ; have suffered many years wltli oy Complaint, weakness in my back and as induced by friends t e best its be a oh.l» ^ .1 Vi k it of tbe kldn< tried many reniedie» for tbla relief r.s i andlnvigo lir the V . It strength >. Many of my , and I believe It_ „ _ t Youn» liP,alntl,f0r Wh,Cb U ,B recommended - whol iy. JOS1A11 II. SHERMAN. Would Give a Dollar for a Dose. • Boston, May 30,1871. H. R. Stevens, Esq.: Dear Sir—I have been badly afflicted with s; have suffered Kidnoy Complaint for tc great paiu in my back "hi . lnps and side, with ing uriue, which w difficulty i ton nnd In very small quantities, frequentlv compnnicd with blood and excruciathur in. 1 Lave faithfully tried most of tlio populnr remodles recommended for my mm. have been under tb plaint; some of tho akilful physieiiiui in Bos „„ , pronounced my case Incurable, this was my condition when I was advised by .d to try the Veoetink, id effects from tlie lirst liât moment I kept on Improving until entirely cured, taking in all, I should >ut six bottles. all who 1 I coul.l sea tlio g dose 1 took, n f a I w think, it Is Imloed a valuable medicine, and if I should bo afflicted agaiu lu tbe would eive a dollar lor a dose, If got it without. Respectfully, J. M. GILE, I could not ilrd St., So 361 Boston» Life a Burden. Bosto:;, Nov. 2, I. R. StevIv.. Dear Sir— Fr m i>oor, emaciated sufferer, 2} lie« 1 hi for year« beon a terrible, '"(I bys|tepsk ifferer from wlerinff lif« Lunker almost a . I a en I c ed u iso Of Veuk 1 will mako menti that I wa« also n y Complaint, causing ex rougli tbe small of tbe back ain ly alfo*f P. a lad the tl . red. nml I now a period r health, and l will nd«L happluew—a from the use oî a few bottlw of Vec Respectfully, H. Q. HUGHES, 1 Union place, Boston, Mass. Veoetink is composed of Roots, Barks amt Bed ll k. 1 11 Ilk Jt |^ .plaaaant W-i*k«; •▼•ry VE6ETINE IS 8010 BY ALL DRUGGISTS,