Hew Advertisements Llillinery Coods! MOW OPENING AT THE OLD STAND AT Exchange Corner, Th Finest and Most Elegantly Assorted Stockof . Hffllnery anfl Fancy Etot brought to Wilmington. At leaat k.-5 what the Ladies saj, and nodody will IUMV " ' contradict them. Thenew:tock comprise all of tbe latest styles in HATS. BOMFlETr, FLOWERS" IRIBBONS, ORNAMENTS, SILK and all of the Fancy Trimmings ' V No one can possibly object on the score; of prices, as Hats may be had for 50 Cents and Up ! of all sixes and shades and shapes. Wreaths and Flowers. In this Line we hare an uhuUually large and well f elected stock among which will be found some of the handsomest WHSATHD A FXiOOTEXXS" Ail ftyles and prices that has erer been exhibited to the Ladies of Wilmington. RIBBONS i In "U- snkia and in magnificent variety. GRQS GRAIN, SATIN ana SATIN and GROS GRAIN- COLLARS AND CUFFS. The latest, newest, best made and altogether the cheapest stock in this maaket. In great Variety 1 To fit everybody and to suit eyerjbody 1 1 CREPE O00US. Be sure to examine our stock of Crepe CJoods before making your purchases. Crepe Veibi at all urices. A few bought at a great bargain vrUl be sold at a bargain. A beau tiful article for $6 25, worth S12, and others In like proportion. BUTTONS ! BUTTONS ! ah lrt-nria ef rtrosui Buttons, uniaue in AU Jfc.iH.r. - - th a latest fashion with the dress 0 J Vf ww makers and sold at a slight advance on cost. A fuU and handsome line of Pearl Buttons. Fancy and Plain, all the rage for the new Spring Dresses. SUN SHADES. Special attention is directed to our stock ftf Hnn Rhodes and Umbrellas. None better. none cheaper and none more durable ever offered In this market. Sold very low. A !faU line of Ruchlngs, all; kinds and price. Crene Llsse Ruching of all styles and at all prices. Should you want Collars and Cuflsdon'l faU to go to Exchange Corner. fihnnld .von want Ties. Scarfs or Lace Goods of any kind, unlike wha any one ' else has, don't fall to go to Exchange Corner r - Should you want fringes to match your new dress, don't fall to go to Exchange Corner. Should you wanOuiythlng, In fact. In the Millinery or Fancy Goods Line, don't fall to go to Exchange Comer. GO Something You Should Come lrS at Once and Get. A fin lot of Flower and Fruit Baskets, bought yifty per Cent, under cost, and sold at a imall margin. ' With the tame Goods I hare Two or Three Dozen WISE ORNAMENTS for Flowers, of all designs These Goods are very cheap. Call at once. H.I3PRUrJT, ayl S - Exchange Corner. : p ; 1 I . I j- The Daily Review. jOSM. t. JAMES, Ed. and Prop WllM fNGTOXJ IN- p. THURSDAY MAY 2 VIEWS AND REVIEWS. Ex-Congressman Vance; of Ohio, who mysteriously disappeared, jmd was found in San Francisco, is described as really in sane. He is pei fectly harmless and tracta ble, and claims to be unable to remember anything about his recent journey. The Shah of Tfrsia is . to assist at the ot the: Paris Exposition. There was a slight revolt lately in n a portion of his armv on account oi tne pay being larrrplv in arrears, an-i stones were thrown " , by soldiers at his carriage and at those of his Ministers. Ten 6f the offenders were instantly beheaded, ten others were cruelly mutilated, and order was restored. , Gov. Irwin of California does not be- j lievo in hanging on .Good Frjday. I He reprieved John Rurik, a murderer senten ced to be hanged on that day, j giving as a-reason "a respect ifor the religious, sen timents of a verv larce number of citizens, tbat a revered religious holiday I should not be" profaned by .. sing. upon it as a day for the infliction1! of capital punish- meat. if Gep. Ignatieff is blessed with a wife as remarkable for her talents as for her beau ty' During all the years that he served at Coastantiuople as Secretary of Legation and subsequently as I Minister, Madame Ignatieff was tbe cynosure ( off the court -circles, where her address and fascinations contributed ib no small degree to tne aipio malic triumphs ofj her husband. "You have but one rival General," once remark ed M. Legremond, the French Amba'ssa dor, "and that is Madame." t ' ' i 1 A convict in the Ere county peniten tiary, known as William Freeman turns out to be a woman. Her real name is Mary Ann Schafer, and fehe has worrj male attire, she sayej sraee she was elev-i 1 en years old. bbe adopted at hrst a ' " i i ' i ' ! boy's dress in ordr to! get employment on a farm and has worked put of doors so long that her face anfl hands areunfem 4lk mine, as are ner w and manner. She is 23 years old. Mr. E. A. Buck, editor of the. Spirit' of the Times) wrpte to Sothern'wifh a hint that a new clock to rcplice one that had been "stolen from his desk, would be ac cepted if offered . j ThT propei j-j (slopk used in the first scene of the 'fCrushed Tragedian," which islan imposin i tr affair i ten feet high, but only a shell, of painted canvas on a wooden frame, was immedia- tely boxed and shipped by' Mr. 1 Sothern. Accompanying the gift was a letter assur .1 a at 'a a-1 I" 1 "I . ins tht recipient that though perhaps a little large for a desk ornament the Clock was absolutelv reliable, and was warrant-l ed "not to vary a second in ten. years. Life risking performances are yet nu merous here, not witpstahdirg the tragical endingof one of them recently in Pawthck- et, Rhode Island. In he Bowery Theatie ngjiis marksman- Buffalo BUI is display ship with the rifle, th bilirli a'nart of his performance was cods idered so ; dangerous in Brooklyn thatlMay or Howell "required that it should be 'omitted Iu a Variety theatre in Broadway, the! woman who wounded another woman while try i ing to split an apple upon her head with a rifle ball, upon the stage in Pa'wtucket, is a conspicuous star n anotberj varic- ty theatre a man! who claims extraordin ary skill with the sabrdl and wlio cut a deep cash in the back of his wife's neck. not long ago, whil$!es!saiibg to halve an apple with ihe j sabre?, yit,houtl touching her neck, figures conspicuously.' Assem blyman .Moller has introduced a bill for bidding these perilous amusements. ! ! England still k keep up, as sue has for many long months kept up, her prepara- tions for war with Russia. They are carnea on more energetically man ever in these days; and surely England ought to be thoroughly prepared for hostilities when they actually begin. We learn by the despatches of late that volunteering is like y in England: that en- 80,000 volunteer have already! been i ft rolled; that the -First Army Corps and a part of the Guards are at once to i i i be sent -i ; 1 to Malta ; that many thousand stand of rifles are being taken from the Tower i for the reserves; that merchant ships are being turned into armed . cruisers at Portsmouth; that immense quantities ot shot and shell are being j issued, from the Woolwich arsenal ;i that the first part of bf native troons from the East Indies is eaving Bombay ; that naval work is prosecuted day and night at the Bombay dockyard ;iand that the native troops are filled, .with enthu siasm at the prospect jf figiitin J in Eu rope. The despatches fori a long time past nave suown mat unusn prepar tions for war are on a vast scale and 'if England has "military and naval jcom- manders who understand business pubiness, she ought to be able to make a good show ii of her power, even at the opening of the struggle PRIVATEERING. I j As was anticipated, eaya Macon -Tch graph, Russia is fnlly, on the qui rircjin the event of the breaking out of hosti lities 1 with England, as to the impor tanceof damaging the commerce of her adversary. The United States refused to sign the declaration submitted at Paris in 185G I that "privateering j was abolished. "Neither upon examination do we find Russia mentioned as a sub- . j scrib'ng party to the agreement. Most of the 3econd rate powers of Europe . , , j signed i.. j But even if our j government set its face against sanctioning the acceptance of these letters of marque by any of her citizens, it would be difficult to see uer wnituD, i how they could be prevented enlist- ing as Russian sailors and j soldiers inj t; wfnnn nrnmrwl bv . ,r i i I purchase or othewise, and reguiariy commissioned under the flag of that Ination. Just as Irish, German and other foreign companies and brigades were commissoned and placed in ser-f vice by 1 the United States govern thft late war. could Russia ac cept the aid of Americans if regularly cepu w" m m enlisted ana commissiuutu sovereign. Of course those thus em- ployed would.however, forfeit claim to the protection of ! their country's flag ana bocome to all intents acd purposes Russian belligerents.1 The desire for prize money would doubtless secure as many volunteers as Russia could provide with arms or ships; and the high seas would swarm with hostile vessels . The injury to TCnrlih commerce would Jte almost incalculable, while there would be no Russian marine worth speaking of up on which John Bull coull retaliate. It! is safe to say that even the British channel would not be free from these adventurous RussoAmericaa steamers ana sw ii samug vceocio, y ..;.;iia;;,h .ripa of England, l.l ' , inc3 vsniiug WD " corrov0ration of. this view of the sub ject in the following extract from the N. Y. Evening Telegram, r c'ipped from the Herald: 1 London, April 25, 1878. The NeT? York correspondent of the London Daily Nczvs telegraphs back here the spec al cablojdispatch of the New York Hera ldt dated the 21th in- stant, which states jthat "sixty hye officers and masters joi ine xvusbisu navy had sailed for tbe United btates, - .... . m : 1 U T71 and that in the event of war withEDg- land these offic )rs would take com mand of vessels purchased in aod crewB recruited from the United States, analf each was t'ae d se tUat it brought the Wasiliagton government face 0 facejwitk the great question of international ' duty toward the two nrronf. TlftllfUlH Thb correspondent also adds that he made inquiries at the Russian Consulate and the report was declared Ua wifVirMit. frnnflation. TheTurk- ish Consul, the dispatches state, also doubted the truth of the history, j The correspondent of the Telegram, after making diligc jt inquiries, finds that the facts as stated in the Herald dispatch are approximately true, and further discovers thjit the negotiations and arrangements at St Petersburg were conducted by an American. Marvelous Fecrecy bas been pre served and the cruisers; I so far from heieff classed as privateer , will not be furtished with letters of marque, but will be regularly commissioned in the Russian navy. THE UNIVERSITY NOR M AL , SCHOOL,. Mr. Scarborough, the Superintend ent of ! Public Instruction, has sent us the following epitome oi me pro gramme of the University Normal School, and requests us to publish it in order that it may go to the greatest nnraber of neoDle possibie in the State. We p"rint it with pleasure: ! The" State Board of Education has just sent to the Count ft Board of Edu cation, for distribution, circulars giv ing the programme of the University Norual School for 1878. The school begins June I8ih, and continues six weeks.. It will be held in tuft Univer-; sity buildings at Chapel' Hill. Prof.' Ladd is Superintendent. Prof. Owens, Prof. Mclver, and six or feeven other instructors will assist. Pecuniary, as sistance' will be given to those teach ers who are unable to pay j their way. Those desiring assistance should apply to President Battle, at Chapel Hill, by j 1st June next. He will lay the ap plications before the j Board. The Railroads will pass for half price. Femalep,. as well as males, are invited. This School offers most valuable privi leges to teacher j find those desiring to teach. " What a Tottering Fabric lis a system depleted of vitality and irregu lar In Its functions. It is only J adlqlous and prompt medications which can ave it from a speedy and total collapse. The tonic and regulating properties of Hostettei 's Stomach Bitters particularly adapt that benign medicine to revive physical vigor and re- form those bodily irregularities which are a barrier to its permanent restoration. Blllfousness and constipation are totally overcome by4t, and the digestive activity and thorough assimilation which it pro motes have the effect of increasing the vivifvlntr ami nonrishinz qualities I of the blood. The Bitters are also an excellent determent of the vital current, since they eommunjeate a neaimy swuuius wj tne bladder and kidneys, ;Wl lmnftrtant channels for nica are vne most important channels for the escape of tt impurities. Pure, agreeaDie, ana oi ooianlfi origin, thorough and prompt, Dut never violent in its action, in reasons ior tne transcendent popularity of this medicine are both cogent and appreciable. . v , h- Detroit Letter to the Phila. Times. BISHOP 3PC0SKRY. A Reaction in his Favor Charges False and the Letters Forzed? -Were the Improper A strong reaction in public senti ment has aet in1 regarding what has come to be termed the McCoskry scandal. Now that Bishop McCoskry has given the stories specific, and emphatic denial public opinion has un dergone a complete change. His sud- den resignation and departure, with the intention of going to Europe, so shortly preceding ihe outbreak of thd fitorm-Vhich has arisen, I made very many people think that there was some truth in the storiea; his denial of them aftu!theexpreasiou.of hisetermmation to return have removed doubts and atj8fied the publio generally that the Bishop can readily dispose of the charges against him. It has become Irnnwn that the Derson who claims to discovered the correspondence is one George McConnell. a printer, once a beau of the Fanny Richards with whom, it is alleged, the Bishop was imnroperlv connected. McConnell says that he stole the letters irom aiiss Richards while he was courting her, ... . - and only produced them as a measure of safety to himself. Some of the let ter8 deposited in the safe of the Frs DOPited in the safe of the i?rst National Bank are eigned by the Bish op. These are letters such as any Christian i gentleman, especially a clergyman, might .write to a young female ward letterB of adv c coun sel and instruction. A father writing to a daughter would adopt. such ajtone. The indecent letters are not signed, save by a hieroglyphic cypher,1 and they are plainly the work of another hand. The language of the sigued letters is refined1 and beautifully tx pressed; in the unsigned it is coarse, and there are frequent misspellings and erasurep. Mrs. Ea lister claims that she never received any letters from the Bishop that were not sTgned, either whli as Fannie Richards, his wa d, or eince her marriage. She did not know, of the abstraction of the letters until die heard of them in the- charges promulgated in the Chicago Times. She, charges that all the unsigned letters are forgeries, and declares tbat McConnell has a peculiar fAPnltv fr.r imitatiner handwritincr. inat mis la irue i uuve letrrueu itum other fources. Mrs. Banister further stfttbsi that after she was married McConnell swore he wpuld have re venge upon her and the Bishop, for the interference of the latter and the pait he had taken in inducing Fannie to refnse McConnell on account of the in.lifferent moral character of ! the young man. Not till nearly a year after her marriage aia tnese letters me to light, some of them apparent ly newly written This same person, it ought to be borne in mind, served six months in Wayne County jail on a heib dna-zha.rss. .His moral character is of the veiv lowest. There i3 no other accuser of the B:shop. I- ; : : j (Detroit News.) i The Trial of Bishop McCoskry. Following up his denial of the charg- 1 -. . l TT: 1 ?TT1 l. es maue agamsu mm, xiauop jiixuuBii.- rv has demanded that a court ot iu orJry shall be instituted to inquire in- lo all matters appertaining to those charares. He has sent! on from New York to bis nephew, Mr. Cleveland, a Iawtpt of note, to take charere or bis case, which will be speedily tined, as the court must report to tha House of Bishopswhich meets early m June. A reporter had a conversation this morning with a prominent member of the Episcopal Church He said that a demand for a court having been made to the presiding bishop, the Right Rev Bishop Smith, of Kentucky, by Bish' 6d McCoskrv. the cburt would most undoubtedly be called to sit as a judi cial body of the church, and the only tribunal" competent to try the offences alleged. It would be composed of Bishops Gillespie (now serving both" the eastern and western v dioceses oi Michigan) McLaren, of Illinois, Bedell of Ohio, and Talbot, of Indiana, the canon prescribine that tbe tribunal shall be composed of the prelates of 4ho surrounding dioceses The court will take cognizance of the correspond- ecce. wmcu is now aeposueain tne vaults of tbe First National Bank. It will be necessary for Bishop McCoskry to be present before the court, and the indications are that he will not be present! He will be represented by counsel. The Old llouse Keppened. 'THE OLD AND RELIABLE Watchmaker's & Jeweller's i Establishment, f . A- Has been reopened by one of its former I 1 employes. Mr. J. II. AUen, jPractlcal Watchma ker, and Mr. L. S. IF. Brown, Jeweller and Engraver, will be constantly in at tendance, and wpl give their personal at tention to work intrusted to them, i , - i -. ' Chronometers Eated and Nautical Instruments Repaired ! Time taken by Transit Instrument Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware and Fancy Goods Call at the old stand of TH0S. W. BROWIi & SONS, IXTo- 37 Market Street, jan23 j J. S. ALLSN. W. H. NASH, T7ASHI05ABLE HAIR CUTTING AND JL Sharine Saloon. All work done in ths I best style. Sharing 15 cents. Hair Catting j o cents. tsnunpooine 3d cents. No 28 North FrontjS treet. i - DR. PIERCE'S 1 STANDARD T REMEDIES Are not. advertised as "cure-alls" but are specifics in the diseases for which they are recommended. 1 I' NATURAL SELECTION 1 1 - n: Investigators of natural science have demonstrated beyond contro- versy, that throujrhout the animal kingdom the "survival of the fittest" is the onlyjlaw that vouchsafes thrift and perpetuity. Does not the same principle govern the. commercial nrosneritv of man ? ' An inferior can- SScJK: ori Standard Medicines have outrivaled all others. Their sale in the United States alone exceeds one million dol- . t lars per annum, while the amount exnlortell foots un tx thousand more. No ' business could )Ois Hi) u) several nuuureu grow to such proportions ana rest upon any lother basis than that of merit. - ! i . t ' , I to such proportions and rest DR. SAGE'S Catarrh Remedy " 1. is 1'leasant to u so: DR. S AGE'S Its CureH -extend over a perod of 20 years. s sale constantly increases Dli SAO'S 1 i Gat arrh Remedy Cures by its Mild, Sootliing Effect XK. SHOE'S Catarrh Remedy Cures Cold.in Head" and Catarrh, orOzama. fi rj HUIU RockpoRt. Mass., April 2,1' 77. Ik. t Editor Having ..,, .1 : vour paper reports of the rem arlvable cures oi catarrn, 1 am liiuuceu to ten "what I know about catarrh,7' and I fancy the "snuff" and "inha tube" makers (mere dollar grabbers) would be glad if they could embla zon a similar cure, in the papers For 26 vears I suffered! with catarrh. The nasal passages became J completely rtlrtoml I'StinfF." "lnf "I "nehAS "inhaling-tubes and "sticks," wouldn't work, though 1 at intervals I would snirrup tlie so-called catarrn snuff, until I became a valuable test er for such medicines. ,1 gradually grew worse, a,nd no one can know how much I suffered or what a mis erable being I was.. My head ached over my eyes so that I was confined to my bed for many successive daysj suffering the most intense pain. which at one time fasted continu ously for 168 hours. All sense of smell aiid taste gone, sight and hear ing impaired, body Shrunken and weakened, nervous system shattered and constitution broken, and I was hawking land spitting seven-eights of the time. I prayed for death to relieve me of my suffering. A favor able notice in your paper of Dr.Sage's Catarrh Remedy induced me to pur chase a package, and use it with Dr. Pierce's USasal Douche, which ap plies the remedy by hydrostatic pressure; tne only way jcoiiipatiule with common sense. Well, Mr. Edi tor it did I not cure me iri three fourths of a second, nor in one hour or month, but in less than eight min utes I was relieved, and. in three months entirely cured, and have re mained so for over sixteenj months. While, using the Catarrh Remedy, I used i)r. Pierce's (J olden Medical Discovery to purify my blood and strengthen my stomach. I also kept 1? .i! '.11. 1 my liver active ancrooweis regular by the use of his Pleasant Purgative Pellets. If rnv experience will iu duce other sufferers to seek the same means of relief, this letter -will have answered its purpose. I i ours truly, S. D.l REMICK. A CLOUD OF WITNESSES. The following named parties are among the thousands who have been cured of catarrh by! the iuse of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy : A F Downs, New Geneva, Pa: D J Brown, St Joseph, Mo; E 0 Lewis, Rutland, Vt; Levi Springer, Nettle laKe, Uhio; Unas jNorcrop, North Chesterfield, Me; Milton Jones. Scri bal Y; J E Miller, Bridger Station, Wyo; J CMerriamrLogansport Ind; M M Post, Logansport, lnd: J W Bailey, Tremont, Pa; H B Ayres, La I'one, inu; Jessie xvi sears, Fort Branch, Ind; L Williams, Canton, Mo; W A Thayer, Onartra. Ill: S R Nichols, Jr, Galveston, Texas; Jonas Fj Reinert, Stonesvllle, Pa; S W Lusk, McFarlaud. Wis: Johnson Williams, Helmic, Ohio; Mrs M A uurrey, Trenton, Tenn; J G Joslin, lveene, N H: A J Casuer. Tahl Rock, W Va; Louis Andern, Gays nort. Ohin- f!FrfMinP T'.lL-ln.rf t,,.i. forg Henry Haight, Sau Francisco' Cal; Mrs EM Gallusha, Lawrence ville, N Y; W J Graham; Adeljowa A O Smith, Newnan, Ga; Chas E Rice, Baltimore, Md; Jesse M Sears Carlisle, Ind; D n'l R Miller, Fori Wayne, Ind; Mri Minnie Arnaise.290 Hall, Hastings, Mich; Wm ; Mars- ton, Jboweli, Mass; I W.Roberts. F Kaw, Frederiektown, Ohio; Mrs Lucy Hunter, Farmington, HI; Capt E J Smulding, Camp Stambaugh, Wyo; 1 W Tracy, Steamboat Rock, Miscellaneous. LETTEB iuaucupo. mii, viius oueianey,Har risburg.Pa; M CCole, Lowell, Mass; Mrs C J Spurtin, Camden. Ala! Cba Iowa; Mrs Lydia Waite,1l Shushan N Y; J M Peck, Junction City,Mout iienry noe, isanias, ual: Xj V Cdn?i mings, Rantoul, I 111; 8 , E J6ne Charleston Four Corners,! N Y: Geo v xian, i-ueoio, vjai: wm js Hartrie fjitriiut;, jl i, ii xx x.uon, va xenri cm reel, man Zobrist I'arrott, iMontgomerv, brook, Chatham, 111; Ohio: Li Lbti. 8B Meq.v NashportOhio; WW Warner. Norn,' Jackson, Mich; Miss Mary A Winne Darien, Wis; John Ziegle, Carlisle Springs, Pa; James Tompkins! St. Cloud, Minn; Enoch Duer, Pawtaee vity, ueu juseuu x miner, Aenia. Graham.. Forest Cove, Oreg Golden Medical Discovery ;. ' . i . . I J Is Alferative, or Blod-cleausing.. i . - , I i '; III, IjOKieil JllC(llCftl UlSCOVCrVi . 1 - i T Is Pectoral. . i i I ' 1 GOlUCIl McaiCal DiSCOVGrV r i -j'' J Is a Cholagogue, or Liver Stimulant Golden Medical Discove r . Th Ton if. -i- r Is Tonic. Golden Medical Discovery Bv reason of its Alterative pffonertioV cures Diseases of the Blood and Skin as Scrofula, or King's Evil'; Tumors- Ulcers, or Old bores; Blptches; Phn pies; and Eruptions. By virtuje of its Pectoral properties, it cure4 Bron chial, Throat, and Lung fleet ious Iucipient Consumption; kihgerin.r Coughs; and Chronic Laryngitis. Its Cholagogue properties render) it an unequaled remedy for Bilious ness; Torpid Liver, or 4Liyer Com plaint; V and its Tonic properties make it equally efficaciuos. in curing Indigestion, Loss of Appetitel and Dyspepsia. - 1 1 Where the skin is ,salIow and Jtov ered with blotches and pimples, 'or where there are scrofuIeWswellihirs ana anecuons, a lew bottles of Gold en Medical Discovery! will effect an! entire cure. If you feel dull, jlrowsy, debilitated, have sallow Color of skin, or yellowish-brown spots bn face or body, frequent headache for dizziness, bad taste iri mouth, inter nal heat or chills alternated with! hot flushes, low spirits and. gloomy fore- Krulinora irroo,iili aiAQf!tQ L, " 'b14"" ami TV,;,i T.ivor '.RI1!ftonIJa it.. Biliousness. In many cases or "Liver Complaint," only part of theses symptoms are ex perienced. As remedy for all (such cases, Dr. Pieice's Golden Meilieal Discovery has no equal, as it effects perfect cures, , leaving I the liler strengthened and healthy, i 'I U. THE PEOPLE'S MEDICAL SERVANT , Dr. R. V. Pierck is. the sole! pro prietor and manufacturer of the lore-' going remedies, all pf which arescfld by druggists. He js also the Author of the People's Common Sense Medl cal Adviser, a work of nearly 6ne-. thousand pages, with two hundred and eighty-two wood-erigravings and uuiuieu piaies. ; ne .naa aireauy soiu of this popular work . i, ju. Over 100,000 Copies,!; ! PRICE (Dost-Daid) SI. BO. r Addres.4 : I ! R. V. PIERCE. AL D World's Dispensary, Buffalo, N. Y. Jen a 1812 Pensions; f TNDER THIS ACT, an j person who W ea loarieen aavs or carUdDAted In one baitle, in the War of 1812, ia entitled to x-ensum oi 99 per moDtn irom date oip proral of act. Widows of such soldiers u hare died after similar serrice. no mstter what was the dat of marriage to .the soldier. are entiuea to tne same Fension. 1 i No other parties are entitled. All 1812 Pensioners dropped from the Rolls because of alleged disloyalty ire, re stored bj this act. j 1 I 1 1 I Applications must be executed before an officer of a court of record. Ii I Send to ns for any information or blanks needed. . ! .1 1 . , GILMORE & CO., 1 629 P 8treet, Ni W., Washington, D.I 0. h 27-ivr New York City OilCompinys HIGH TEST NON-EXPLOSIVE j Silver Light Astor Oil,1 is the safest, cheapest and gives the most bril liant light of any of the, illuminating' Mfc Millions of gallons hare been used inthU country and Europe, daring the last 15 yen Pnt up in cans of 6 galls, and in bbls. I Tie price varies with the market j 20 cts,andi cents, pr. gall, being the usual prices. , Cta be used in all kerosene lamps. I Before order injr send for price list to NEW YORKjCITf OIL CO., 124 Maiden Lane, New York l mch 19-dAw. - ..- - f T -. 1 i Why Suffer j ?v f WITH DANDRUFF IN THE ill4 ! - -I - ! when by calling at the Fashionable and pop ular Barber Shop in basemeat pf XriVf Banc building yon can purchase 11 I. Farmanski's Celebra ted Hair Inyigorator which, U br far the best , that W ever been used for that purpose, and TIttELY FREES the tiir from it aftrf uiau. iare u nut mil Dwuuf. discoloring of the hair, but it produces ? and pliable state of the hair. It it mAe oW by the undersigned, and can be bad,t Barber Shoo under ihm Frat Nationil Bss . I beg leare respectfully to refer to the tlemen named below who hare used T ricorator. and har tnthAritMi me td do l J. Rem-. R. FT. P!.iKl.I fimn A. PeCi H. Kellej and many others too numerous mention. i febg - : .-- 1 'h, D7ERTISKlN the j WILMINGTON ( Weekly) . Office corner Water and' Chestnut strpft x-msnurgn, 1 a: J it JiteVL , Samuers Depot, Kv: Henrv' , Geneva, N Y: Muss Hattit uuio, q 13 rticnoiasi waiyeston, Tex H Xi Laird, Upper Alton,, 111 John Davis,1 Prescott, Ariz; MrsiKanov as to the truthfulness ot my statement,' wit-Gen. M. P. Taylor, Hon. A. B!

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