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mh^ICAU Myeai 8?^7tanJIea .nrtliln* which k?t? E'^Uon lor Wood or Skin DIkum CLA11K .1 BCLATER Danville, \ a. MjlHeWgbMt eiiirfsaloniot wf^Z ,nJ Bltal Ulwun. f?: WSI. I.ITTKUKR & CO., Nuhville, Tenn. , . Mtisfaction than any rtni* S'f1" I diimwi *o > ?? ever handled. >>IW SC1UIXKII A 6TF.VKN8, wasmngum, u. v. fbpici?M now recommend It lf?i'"I*C^j,ANSFIELD A CO., Mempbla, Tenn. , Vj, linn MtT nallsfaotion tbnn Si Louisville, Ky. v.yr u*Aki In the highest W ff I.. ME38ITEIt, l?=)0lS' Denver, Col. gUH i;V AM- DltllGOISTS. UlffiiLle A6eut, Wheeling, W., Va. Jl / #J> #vV/ #/# The 0,000,000 Children In the United Stiitei Who SufT?r PaJn, Who Kret and Cry, Who Have I'ale rnw Who Have lUd HreaU), amid r>c Lsuelillii'K Worm Sfroj n* Child Who** !?l*P Is Disturbed, Tb? CtilM Who Wakes In Terror, The CtlM Whose Ap|wt te Is \ oradou, Tfc? Chilrt Wh???e A pilip \ ?r1f,,,__ . The Child Who Doe* Not ThriTi, The Child Who 1* Kmaclated, The Child With Internal irritation, The Child With Sallow Completion, Should IV Liuslilln's Worm Syrup So Dlwav* So Daneerons Ai Worms, So Oilld Is Free From Them. hfr Cause Hlseas* Themselves Ti*r .Uravaie Othar Complaint*. 11k Child's Cure When Toothing: LAUGHUN'S INFANT CORDIAL iomxsTHtorus: allays Tain* ; iikdccw INFLAMMATION: COXTHOLfl TIIK SoWKLM, Cru.su Sr* M KK COM 1* LA INT. DVH1CNTKKY, llUKAHCA, rLATULtNCK, COLIC, *TC. will find It very valuable :tb? child will ImrrUrtJ.ft iniongnUie itrrp.urut ttxileupchfrr^ fli. inm, ix.il frrltng ri,mforlaUr. We Rtiaran te? w;h boulf.tml will it-fund the price of every on# w iSubj u represented. Sold l>jr all drugjisla. 'JJ Price 25c. per Bottle. LAUGHUN BROS. & CO., Propricloi., WHEELING, W VA. DR. J. E. SIVIITH, NO. 1117 CHAPLINE STREET. T^besttrldenco of a phplcian's success Is the tc* tlaooy of bis patients. The increasing demands for C7 piofesional services prove that 1 have dealt kcconWjr and fairly with those who have consulted at 1 nerer use a patient's name without pennlsta,tbou5h I have many hundred certificates from Uwewhota 1 have cured after they had been profiocacvd incurable. A thorough medical education, 1th caay years hospital experience and familiarity "fAtberaputic agents, a close observance of temWvaeaul peculiarities aniT strict attention to fcjctalc management insures luccea, if euro is P?&<e, and I frankly give the patient my opinion. HOMEPROOF iwsfy anc Liver Diseases and Rheumatism.? Klfctd Terribly.?"Nothing seemed to help me: fflUootcetout of b?l. Dr. Kstith cured me." ZEPT. PHILLIPS, r..._v ... - Wheeling, W. Ya. rutj-pusoi ,->o=e, impaired voice.?sulfite inn; patent medicine filled to help inc. w.fiBlllicooBlotcly cured me. CilAltLES CH ADDCCK, of Speidel Ji Co, Wheeling, W. Va. W]ca and ulcerated Stomach.?"Treatment wjfta filled to give me relief. Dr. 8mlth cured B?-' THOMAS HOI.T. Insurance Agent. fia.-"IUd them lor fourteen yen*. Dr. Smith twrfse." LOUIS F. WASHINGTON. RcnnlngSores on Head.?"My son wai JBCftlbr fourteen years. Nothing seemed to stlphln. Dr. Smith cured him." mrs. Catherine caps, Markeutreet, Wheeling. W. Va. uar*r.-"Suffcrcd for years with cancer. Had It W act three times. It returned after each opera&*. Dr. Smith cured me without knife. cau?ticor Vb." MRS. II. M. ORCUTT. Flrtula of Anus.?Flat of my back for IS fch. Reported dying. Dr.Smlth cured me withWtaife, la Ave week*. _ THOMAS COLVIN. nietaale Grocer, Main St., Wheeling. W. Va. tkie.nJoa? of Rectum, Pro laps us and I'iloL? *u pren up to die nnd pronounced Incurable. ?.icub cured me without knife." WASHINGTON DELANY, Martin's Ferry. ??.n.O. Ladd writes?"Dr. Smith's professional In my family have been most satisfactory J? I commend htm to all u a gentleman and a **~nil phj^tclAis." an. kanntet Kolb says'?"I had been suffering wwrra ywr> and treated by many phyalciaus for nr. emith said 1 had a tape-worm and toujMhour* removed a monster 109 feet long." ?rukCon,,uinu-Three yearn in hospitals for '<= **. Eire me peculiar advantage* insuch cases, rewta furvd of catarrh, diseases of heart, liver, kidneys, *kln, blood, nervous affections *eakn?<* of men ami youth, scrofula and "VJU tntlly to my success. cured without the knife. "Utnts at a JUtdiit ?n*r K.? trnotA.1 fc* Intlor nnd WdiaiM nimntttd. A ChsrtlM w(f vat oa receipt ol two three-cent ?tamju, aua returned live. . . . Ctamlution at office free. OQlcc hours irom 9 a. to *r.n., daily. (*11 oa or mWwi J. E. SMITH. M. D., _g?U So. U17 Chtplluest-. Whaling. ? ? WKMV3 ECliECTIUC MEDICINE li apodUve and tff?ctnal remedy (or *11 Nerroui D1mi? In cTery itasc o! U!c?young or ola.maie or female: inch u Impotency, Prootratlou, Ixwol Strength, Lous o! Vitality, Detective Memory, Ixnjalred Brain Power, and diu.>aM? Irom which an naaatural wwte o! life ??rlc*\ all of which cannot tail u undermine the whole ?y?tem. Every organ l? weakened, every po*er yro?tr*ted, and many lonai of dlwe are Reiserated which, li notchecicd. fare the way to an early death. It roinrfn*t#? ?* ?? .eiuTiKortws youth. Ench package contain* nSdent for two weth' treatment. Write fori*ia" J&Jtt. which will be *ent Irv*. with (all particular*. sold by ill Dniortst* at 50 cent* a package, or twelre t*ckisw for $5 00. Will t* lent free by mall on rtctlpl of nonejr. br add resrins ^ WEBB'S KCLECTKIC MEDICINE CO., ACBKgiMnutccd. Buffalo,h. i. UXiAK & CO., Wboltude and B?Ull Areata, Kline. OAW-]a27 SpEraana cur? far all Dlacbanrea. J?**8*. B manic * una P^iaful Btniationa of tbo ftMHAHY PASSAGES | B BaBESPgi i ii ] B?irrrgrr??* H RSI orjpcrbottll,-yor,^*b7fcll5ri5l B R PIVJ V. trtat-. or sent by K*tu"VnvT 8 M ?'P101 prlc?. JOHN D. r-tMiS vri* 175 vjcl 177HytxtaorflBt CINCINNATI, OHIO. I'leAM) Enaction thU?*P?r. ** * . faulctTUBthlln BTCT.&P. ' J^lUilG'S MALT EXTRACT, St. Jwobs Oil. anil l)r. *?< Knnirf. H?m arg Funily Medicines, wholesale and retail Forulett iyl4 H. F. BEHKEN8'. medical* ' 0SHSIEB| ^ 181 ^ \jy THE WONDER OF HEALING] Pfltflrrll Tb? Ratrael li (he onlj UttLttliU, apocltfo (or ibli rtlww. Cold lnllftd, if. Our'X'atnrrbCure,' rw>cl*lly prfptml to mwt i*rlou? cut*, Ouj Natal Hrringe lnraluablo for uio In it. tarrlnl affccUow, la dtuple and itiespc&tlr*, Rhenmalism, Nenrateia, 5jxr Hon bu cured to mwiy cam* r.f tlifta ills, troulng complAlnta u the Extract. Hemorrhages. "T'TS.'r." Rtornicb, Koee, or fromftnjrcftuer, Uepecdllj coutrollcil md atoppod. ? Diphtheria and Sore Throa!. promptly. It la * tare euro. IfcUjr li dftngcroui. Far Pilra, It Unci, nitrdini or Itchla the greftleet inown rtmuJy, CauHon.?POSD'S EXTRACT hat been imU tattd. Tht genuine han the uvrds 1*0.SO'8 EXTRA CV 'bUnen in tU ijlau. and our picture trademark on eurroundinj bvfwapper. Stmt other <i penuine. Jhenyt inaUt on hating POXD'S EXTRACT. Take nootker preparation. It U nettr told in bulk or by mtature. arrmmM axo Tortrr auttpi.**. POND'S EXTRACT 50e., SI.OO, $1.76Toilet Cream. i.00 Catarrh Curs 75 Danttfrica- 50 Plaster 25 UpSalve 25 lnhaler(Glai?50c.)t.OO ToiletSoJtpC3Cakes). 60 NaulSyrlnge-.... 25 Ointment 50 Medicated Paper... 25 Family Syringe, S1.00Tanr?L md mora 13. IK. 91 and 2fi of our New Pamphlet, which accompany each bottle. 0TOva N*?r Pamphlet with Hiitobt or oca PazrAJUTioKi 8?t fltCE ox arrucATioM Bond's extract co., * 14 West 14th St, NdVr York, lull line of above preparations dlsplnyt in one of Tond's Ex tract Co.'s Show Cnsesar sold by Logan it Co., 953 Main Street, Whet inp: alsobyC. Moenkemoeller, corner Mark and Twenty-teiond Streets, Centre NVheelir jel5-TTbM.tr TWTS~ PILLS orasrassBB A DISORDERED LIVER IS THE BANE of tho preiept gcnorqtlon. It Is for tho Sure of this dlMQio and lta attgndflpu. SICK-IIEAD ACHEi BILIOUSNESS, PVSfEPSlA, CONSTIPATION, PILES, etc., that fUTTS PILLS have gained aworid-Wido reputation. IJo Bemody haa over bean dlacovorod" that acta bo gently on tfio digestive organs, giving them vigor to aa? almilato-food. Aa a natural reault. the &orvoui~8yatem la Braced, the Muaoloa aro Developed, and the Body Robust. Cliills and Poror. E. RIVAL, a Planter at Dayou Sara. La., ears: llj plantation la In a malarial district. For several years I could cot cia-o half a crop on account of bilious diseases and chilli. I was nearly discouraged when X began the aae of TOTT'8 PILLS. The result was marvelous: my laborera eooo became hearty and robust, and X hsro had no farther trouble. Tlicy rfllftf the raeorcrd Lirer.flraoM the Blood frtnu poleotioas hornort, und wnir Ibp boMda to art natnrally, Willi, out wlilclinooneean frclnrll. Try (hi* rrmrdy talrlr, and yon will rain a hralllty IHsnllon, Viffonioa Ilod r. Pare Hood, Strong: ?r*r*? and a ftuund Llrrr. PriW.Ul'fflU. omre. 33 array *L, X. Y. TOTFS HAIR DYE. (J hay IIaiiior WirttKEiM chantrcd toaOLov?r Black by h single application of tills Dye. U Impart* a natural color,and acu Instantaneously. Sold by Dru?ti?, or sent by express ou rectlpt of One Dollar. Office, 83 Murray Street, New York. (Dr. Terrs 3SAXVXL of raluabla\ Information end I'oeful ltrerlptm B irlff be tnailnl ftEI on application. J? laiifc, Wives, Mb! Hi discoverer'of "db". 'Wncmsrs CATHOLICON, A POSITIVE CURE FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS. This remedy will act in harmony with the Fetnalo sj?tem at all times, and also immediately upon the abdominal and uterine muscles, and restore them to a healthy and strong condition. I)r. Marchlal'i Uterine Cathollcon will euro faninn of the womb, Leocorrbfra^Chronlc Inflammation and Ulceration of the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful, 8nppress?d and Irregular Menatrnation, Kidney Complaint, Harrrnneas and U especially adapted to the change of Life. Send for pamphlet free. AH letter* ol inquiry freely answered. Address M above. For Mle by all drepgista. NewMzeSlperbottlr, Oldnlze .SI.50^. Be sure and aslc for Dr. liarchisi'a Uterine Cathollcon. Takenoother. Wholesale and RoUll by I.or.AN * CO, Cares Rheumatism, Lumbago, Lame Back, Sprains and Bruises, Asthma, Catarrh, Coughs, Colds, Soro Throat, Diphtheria, Burns, Frost Bites, Tooth, Ear, and Head' ache, and aIIpains and aches. The Uil Internal tad citertul tract!? la tH? world. Every bottle cuinstced. Sold ty istdUiae dr?ltr? everywhere. Dir?t?oo* la eight Prke 50 cents ?nd Ji-nx FOSTER, MILBURN & CO., Prop'ri, BUFFALO. K.Y.,U.S. A. * pocndMandlntroduwdtothcmedlcalprofes- * klon and tho public at Urge by 85. II. Hartrain, M. 1>., of 3C I'esn Axe., Pittsburg. 9 Pa., who Ins prescribed mooter 40,100 pa- 3 tlentA, and In every com with the raost gratl? * Its effect ujioiitho?^ion^rnurviyaaiuc that of any other remedy, and U tho only m medicine needed In alnttot every disease to 8 which flrsh Is heir?Kpllcpnr (tailing Kits) * bclnir the only exception. In this I'EitCNX a shoaM not bo used. In Constipation and 3 Diseases of tho Venial? Organs and Madder, MANALIX should bo siren with It. I'tnuxi 9 UctmiposM of purely vegetable Ingredients. 3 each one, according to medical author*, a . r--' rimxlv In USJIH.p.p!RLUI |. -J.-. C -Dr; II art man ha* tnccwied incziracuuc ? thoacUvo principles from theso Ingredients - and In combining ihetu IntoonoJlmplo mm- * * pound, which at onco coincides with tho Vis 8 MsutCATRtx N ATX'RA in eTery di.?cav, anil e tho work of restoration commence* with ttm ; first dose. There I *not an organ that it will not reach BoradL<casoItwHlnotcur<?. Tor M particulars tend for a jomphlet. EBOOSBSB Sold hg all drnggista and dealers in riwUch J)OG COLLARS, DOG MUZZELS, DOG CHAINS, The largest assortment in the city at t Hardware and Housefurnlshinc Store of XESBITT & BRO., Jylt) 1312 Market Street -[ikMgmca: . oflirm ,Ko<. 33 unci 27 Fonrtegntblitrfrt. y I'onrlh Article from Sir. E. Sf.Tnraeron the Tariff. Edltom Inlelllxeucer s Huiraiox Coi'XTr, July 22, 1882.?In your reply to tboCUrluburg jVnn, on "Ilio Matter ol Taxra," you soy, "All tliat tbo farmer pays In the way of tariff duties ia mode up to him iu the enhanced prices he receives for his products through the diversification of labor." ^lay I oak who pays i the enhanced price? Is it not the persons | who are engaged in the diversified indust tries, according to your argument, and . whoso wages yon claim are increased by a protective tariff? But if they havo to pay increased prices for farm products and everything else they .buy, bow can the higher wages bo of any benefit to them ? And if tho farmer gets all his money back from somebody else, how is that any benefit to the protected industries t If everybody is benefited alike, then wo are no better off than under free trade; for if everybody pays out again as much as he receives, or if everybody receives as much as he pays out, as you say the farmer does, then I acknowledge that I am too dull to bo ablo to comprehend without farther explanation, how protection can benefit anybody. Protection either benefits some of our people or it doeanot. If it does not it ia of no use to anybody, and .should be abolished. If it docs, it doea it at some one's expense; if that some ouu gets back his expense by an increased price of what he has to sell, then he must get it back from those others who are benefited; and that iajust arguing in a circle, for nobody is benelited. But if that some one does not get back bis expense then he is injured, And no hocut j/oau ringing the changes on "tho pauper labor oi Europe" will enable you to avoid that di d lemma. If the farmers have nothing to 'd complain of, why did you sav on June !l* 27th that "we think it is to some extent et true (that a poll of votes will show a major's ity for free trade in every State west of In _ diana); and that "hence there is all the more necessity that the tarilT bo so amended and reduced, where amendment and reduction are necessary, as to take away all jultf ij rounds of accusation against it?" lithe tariff nives back to the farmer in increased : price lor his products all that it takes from nim; what difference can it possibly make i to him how high the tariff ia? Doea not all , the increase of the duty, according to your ( theory, goto tho work ingmen? And what "just"ground of accusation" can there be if nobody is injured t You say lurther in your reply to the Xcict, that '"the farmer has the consolation of knowing that if he pays any more for the woolen goods which .he wears on account of a tariff on woolen goods, the same tariff gives him protection on the wool which he raises. Does it? Let us see. The report of the Director of the Mint for 1S81, page 00; shows that the average price inXewYork of common wool for the year of 1840,?CI was thirty-two cents per pound, and this under a revenue tariff during a part of whtch time there was no duty on wool, if I remember correctly; while from 1802 to 18S0 the average price was twenty-nine cents, and this too with a duty of thirty-live per cent, on wool since 1SG7. So much for the protection on the farmer's wool. But admitting, for the sake of argument, that the price of raw wool is raised to the extent of the duty, let us see how much better your argument becomes as a consolation to the farmer. The.tariff on manufactured woolens of all kinds has this thirty-live per cent, added to it, to reimburse the manufacturers for the increased price he pays for the farmer's wool, and besides that there is an additional duty of so much per pound or per yard, which ranges from thirty to sixty per cent. ' more. So that tho manufacturer takes back from the farmer all the thirty-five ? per cent ou the raw wool and more' than thai much additional So I fail to see much consolation in that Besides, not one fanner iii 11 scuic imsea aucvf, mure man enuugii to supply wool for stockings for his family. ! Bat till farmers must buy woolen goods, if they can afford it But you say that "most > of their clothes are bought as* low as they could imnort European goods, if there was ; no tariff. Is that so? Then please tell me irhut you icaiU with a tariff tax of fifty cents per pound and forty per cent, on the value of woolen articles of wear aud ready made clothing? Would not a less rate produce more revenue. But you further say that this cheapness of clothing "is particularly true^of cotton goods. We presume two-thirds of the goods used by the farming people of this . country are in whole or in part made of , cotton." Why should that be so, if the farmer gets such line prices for wool, and "enhanced prices" for nis other products? 1 Ditohf liIt nnt trt nlilo f/v n'lmr u-nnldti clothes? The fact is that your "annotation" , tariff has reduced the price of raw wool, and doubled the price of manufactured woolens. .But your workmen in iron mills, I understand, are compelled to wear woolen clothes on account of the heat incident to the character of their work. IIow do they get back the extra price of woolen \ goods which they buy? I have never learned that they have succeeded in making wool grow in a puddling furnace, or an iron baror a steel rail; and I tear they must lote that extra price which the tariff makes them pay on woolen goods. But the woolen goods they do buy are not more than half woolen,"and your assertion was quite correct that two-thirds of the goods used by farmers are in part made of cotton. The tariff duties have so stimulated the manufacturers of the coarser kinds of woolen goods that a ruinous competition has set in, and this has led to the use.of "shoddy" and cotton as a mixture with wool to eheanen the cost, so that it is almost im* possible to get an article of common domestic manufacture that is not adulterated. But I will let Mr. Edward Atkinson, a New England manufacturer, state the case. He suites in a recent letter to the Iowa State Isader, that since the first protective tariff in 1824, the highest averago price for wool has occurred when wool was free of duty, and the lowest price when wool was sub ject 10 nign larui. Ana men ne Bays: "ine reason of this is not difliealt to see. The woolen manufacturer needs every variety of wool in order that be may freely choose what is best for the great variety of fabrics which can be made. American fleece wool, while very admirable for a large number of purposes, does not meet all the neccssarv conditions. Hence when foreign wools are excluded, or made more costly by the imposition of a duty, the machinery of the country is turned more and more to fabrics which "can be made to the best advantage of American wool. Presently the manu? facture of such special fabrics is overdone; the home market is overstocked, and therefore the demand for American wool is speedily checked, and the prices fall. There being no possibility of export of woolen fabrics as long as there is a tariff tax upon wools, dyestuffa, in this country, it therefore follows that free wool is essential to farmers in order that manufacturers maybe able to buy their wool and 6cll their goods for export when the homo market is overstocked," So I think that all the "contolation" the farmer can get out of the tariff on wool is only a sort of Job's om/or.rr, and a cotton on^at that. On November 17? 1SS1, yoa said "One of Mr. Clav's favorite maxims was that protection begot competition in our midst, and would in tirno enable us to defv com* petition abroad. And so it has, for instance, in most lines of cotton goods, and in several lines of glass and hardware." In your replies to me you uniformly take the position that no competition between ns and Europe is possible except by reduction of our wages to the "cheap labor" standard of Europe. You say that free trade will force such a reduction. Let us see what Mr. Clay's "favorite maxim" of compdiiion ? undrt a proltctirc tariff has done in tiie way of reducing wages in this country in cotton manufactures, in which you say we are jjC able to defy competition abroad. Mr. Blaine, while Secretary of State, made a report to Congress on "The cotton goods , trade of the world and (he share of the ''Y^" r" ^ t r ^ ^ ? .United States therein " On page 032 that report, after comparing the wages paid in the cotton mills 01 Massachusetts and those of Lancaster,. England, showing a slight difference in favor of Massachusetts, and statins that the wages paid in tbatStato are slightly higher than those paid elsewhere in cotton manufocturee in tills country, says: "Undoubtedly the Inequalities in the wages of English and American operatives arc more than equalized by tho greater efficiency of the latter and their lonaer hotin of labor. If tills should prove to bo a fact in practice, tm it seems to be proven from ofllclal statistics, it would be u very important element in tho establishment of our ability to compete with England for our share of the cotton goods trade of tho world." And this Is tho result of Sir. Clay's "favorite maxim" of competition antler a protective tariff! Operatives in Massachusetts cotton mills working for the samu wages oh the pauner labor of England receives in Lancashire! Are you not aware, also, that in Massachusetts the struggle for existence among tho working classes under this wonderful protective tariff has become so pressing that children scarcely able to do tho slightest manual labor havo been crowded into the cotton and woolen mills to such an extent that tho legislature passed a law forbidding any person to employ in a mill a child under ten years of age! We knew that this had been tho result of protection in old England, but protection in Xew England is all for tho .benefits of tho workingmnnl Whither, then, have all these benellts of a protective tariff to tho workinginan van* lahed? In your article of Nov. 17,1881, you said: "One of the most important features of the tariff is that it gives the American work- 1 ingman Buch wages as enable him to live 1 well and raise his family respectably." 1 What your Btandard of living and respectability for workingmen may be, I do not know; but 1 hope it is something better 1 than tho net result of protection in the cot- 1 ton mills of Massachusetts! 1 Are you not aware, also, that England, 1 which RPomn In ho tho nnn nhiorf nf ?ln>n<! I to all protectionists, enforced the system of | protection for more thau 200 yearn by laws whose severity almost rivaled those of Draco, and brought her working people, as the net result of it, to such a condition of poverty and starvation that a popular agitation "of seven years resulted in tho complete abandonment of the system? Arc you not also aware that since England declared for free trade in 1840 her commerce has doubled, her consumption of foreign Eroducta has doubled, and yet the wages of er working classes have increased, while at the same time thejtriceoi her manufactured articles has decreased 20 to 100 percent? And is not the working of your protective tarif! producing the same result liere as it iid in England ? I showed in my second article that the average wages paid to your protected workmen in the iron industry in 1SS0 was $1 31 per day. .In discussing "The Labor Problem" on July 8th, you jav: "The great influx of unskilled labor which has marked the immigration to this country this year, and the present struggle for employment at wages hardly remuneritive, are leading to some remarkable occurrences." And then you quote from the CJlica Herald that a number of raw foreign aborers are employed in building a railroad in New York State and receiving $1 37 per day. This you say is unskilled labor, ind the wages hardly remunerative. How ioesthis look alongside of tho $131 average laily wages paid in the iron industry j>roected by the tariff which you say ."gives iie American workingman such wages as ;nable him to live well and raise his famly respectably ? Truly tho benefits of projection are past finding out! But let us look for a moment at another a jbase of this question. I asserted in my xrticlc in the. Ann on "the .6trike," that fthile the tariff protects the American Manufacturer ajpiust the competition of , ;he product? of the cheap labor of Europe, it does not protect the American working- f nan against the competition of the labor tfdf. What do we epo in the Cumberland . :oal region ? The miners on a strike for 5 aigher wages and the owners sending off ind getting foreign miners or raw foreign- _ ;ra to take their places. Here is no pro- ? lection to the workingmen against coinpe- i( lition. In Cleveland we see the Cleveland 3 iron-rolling mill company employing foreigners to take the places of tne striking iron workers. In Michigan we see the J Canadian foreigners brought over the borJer to take the places of the striking luml?cr-workmen who want a reduction of work ? from eleven to ten hours. In New England fc tve see the mills becoming crowded with ? Canadians also, who come over and earn ill they can, and go back across the boriler, thus uot only taking the bread out of ^ the mouths of our own people, but also t carrying out of the country the wages they a receive. This was the great objection to t the Chinese. Yon say you do not want r any Chinese cheap labor in this country. 1 Why do you not, therefore, do something c to protect the workingman in j'acl as well 1 as in name. 1 Your whole protective scheme is a fraud , and a false pretense. You profess to be t the great friend of the workingman, and i yet you give biin less wages than he can t earn on a farm. You profess to lie the c friend of the fanner, and yet you compel him to buy in a dear market, while you will J not take his products except at a price fixed * by what you call in derision the pauper labor market of England. You become the great national beggar, and go to Congress and beg for your tlinjnnt" industries, in order that you may employ workmen at hich wages, and yet you go back to your mills , and pay your workmen starvation wages t (else why do ther strike?) and you pocket dividcuus varying from L'O to 100 per cent on your capita'1. You say that goods are * cheaper than ever before and that compe- \ tition under the protective tariff brings uown uio price, ana yet 11 any one men proposes to reduce the tariff you throw up your bands in holy horror and all exclaim "with one accord that any reduction to our tariff will be ruin to our infant industries, and all our rich workinfjmen, who are getting such high wages, will be thrown out of employment and will compete with the farmer and lower the price of his products and the country will all go to the "demnition bow-wows!" If any one in Congress proposes to reduce, the tariff on any particular article, Mr.Pig-iron Kellv, of protected Pennsylvania, jumps to his feet and says: "This "tariff is a system. You cannot touch i one part of it without hitting it all over, i Congress must not deal with this subject- j It is too vast and intricate and Congress is I not smart enough. We must have a com- 1 mission to investigate tbis question and instruct Congress in its dttlirs." And so you pass the Tariff Commission hill because ' .u:? -it i lino mini 10 a S1BJV4U, aim h muok ill I uu If vised together so as to make it harmonious. 1 And in two months?nay hardly two?of- 1 ter the bill passes, and after you have heard that a majority of the vote west of I Indiana if for 'fret trade, and after the exposure of the gigantic monopoly known as < the Bessemer steel ring, you suddenly forget that the tariff is a system and begin to tinker at it bv amending a bill from Pig- 1 iron Kelly's Committee, to reduce the duty on Pessemer rails to $20 per ton, and oh sugar 25 ner cent, and raise it on woolen , knit goods from 35 to 85 per cen; and on hoop iron (cotton ties) about the same. 1 And all this is done for the exclusive benefit of American workingmen! Selah. In conclusion, for I cannot allow myself ! to trespass upon your courtesy in another : artjcle, there are some things" which you, j Mr. Editor, as a publicist and a leader of , opinion, are bound to take notice of in this \ txiiuiuj. iuu uiuc jo i.uiuiugt ana it is not j far distant, when great changes are to tako : place in this country. The enormous ae- 1 gregations of wealth in the bands of individuals and corporations controlled by individuals is daily attracting more and ] more attention from the great masses of people. They aro beginning to inquire now men can, in so short a time by fair , and horuri butinttt, accumulate such vast j sums as are now controlled and owned by , the Vanderbilts and Goulds and others. | The power which this wealth gives these < men is incalculable. Look at our railroad corporations. They are another object of interest and dislike to the masses. The protected monopolies of this country are 1 another. Look at the Bessemer steel monopoly, which you yourself acknowledge is protected beyond all reason. The mass- J esare beginning to inquire how it is that in a 'fret country, where all men are sup- i posed to have an equal chance, these vast inequalities should exist, and why one man should have more actual wealth than ail thi xcaget paid in a \cholt year to all the men employed in all the iron induttria of this country'. The laboring class is not contented; nay, ure not as prosperous n? they have a right to expect to be under h tariff which they are told was intended for their benefit. They are beginning to want to know if it is not timctuey were having some of the benefits of this protection. Look at your Amalgamated Association; 1/^1/ ..I vn,i. 1 iwnui/VMM itiUKUUIVl 1.IUUI UI)(UllUailUU) your United Order of American Workmen: your Miners' Union: your Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. If labor is ?o well paid under d protective tariff why all this discontent and organization for self-protection against capital? I am no alarmist. But it behooves ua to look these questions squarely in the face and prepare for what is coming unless something is speedily dono to relieve the laboring people of this country from tho burdens of utuqual taxation. For your tarltT taxes a mau not according to tho amqunt of property, but according to what he 1m to buy, and hence tho tarill' tax falls with ten fold more weight upon tho poor man than on tho rich. Unless something la done, and dono si>eedily, the time la not far distant, in my judgment, when there will be seen labor troubles in this country before which the riots of 1877 will "pale their ineffectual fires." As Mr. Hewitt said in thesneech from which J quoted in my last article, "With a failuro to comprehend the situation it (free trade) will como through convulsions and revolutions, from the sutlering!* and horrors of which I prefer to turn;awav in silence. But there is 1 one aspect of tue case to which I cannot ( ol.ii* f I... 1 ? ?iu? ui; vjco. xiivnuuiu airuciuru iiliu ; genius of our government must bo changed in order to meet the primary necessity which will thus arise for preserving Bociul onier. With the general occurrence of strikes and lockouts will come, as in the :aseof the railroad riots of 1877, the demand upon the Federal government for the pretence of troops to maintain order ind put down violence and inobn. With a large standing army as a National : police, under the direction of our execu- , ive whose authority will thus be as om* ail?otent as his troops will be omnipotent, I ;heera of free government will have pass?d away, and the reign of despotism will lavecouimenccd. Such a calamity ought lever to come'to pass, amfcit never will :ome unless this geuemtion of men md the representatives of this i ;eneration upon this floor fail to cotnpre- i lend the warnings of the time: when espial and labor, mobilized by the discovery )f new laws of force and by the progress )f invention, demand and will receive the ame fret interchange for their products which hey have already achieved for themselves; vhen all thoughtful men now see and know { hat "the glad tidings of great joy" proilaimed two thousand years ago of "peace ] >n earth and good will to men," are, after he lapse of ages, to be made a reality, hrough the \tntrammeled intercourse of men md nations with each other, bringing to laught and utterly confounding the doc- i rine born of passion, prejudice and ignor- | ince, which regard? men cm natural enemies, nstead of proclaiming them to be the :hildren of the same Heavenly Fathor, 'whose service is perfect freedom.'" With many thanks, Mr Editor, for your curtesy in allowing me the use of your t olumns to answer your criticisms of my i rticles in the Sews, and to give at lea*t 1 ome oi the reasons which have influenced nc in assuming to defend the interests of he great laboring and farming classes of his country from the injurious effects of i rlint I conceive to be a mo3t oppressive nd unjust tariff system, I am Yours respectfully, E. M. Turner, j "Hacimktack," a lasting and fragrant per urae. Price 25 and 50 cents. Siuloh'b Curb will immediately relieve Iroup, Whooping cough ami Bronchitis. ? Fou Dysi'EWLk and Liver Complaint, you ave a printed guarantee on every bottle of < hiloh's Vitalizes It never fails to enre. A. Nasal Injector free with each bottle of hiloh's Catarrh Remedy. Price 50 cents. Sold by IS. Booking, agent, under Odd Feldw's Hall, and by It. H. List, 1010 Main : treet. pit" Ask your druggist for a copy of "Young leu's Friend"?and rend it! { Not an experiment or cheap patent raediine is Brown's Iron Bitters. It is*prepared iy oue of tl?e oldest and most reliable J hemical firms, aud will do all that is | laimedforit daw Why W1U Too Ultra* a cold to advance In your system and j bus encourage more serious maladies, such : j Pneumonia, Hemorrages and Lung j roubles when an immediato relief can be so eadily attained? Bobchk's Gebmax Stbup ' las gained the largest sale in the world for the , :ure of Coughs, Colds and the severest Lung , )iseases. It is Dr. Boschee's famous German )resciption, and is prepared with the greatest are, and ne fear need be entertained in ad- ) ninisteriuR it to the youngest child, as per lirectionf. The sale of this medicine is un- | >recedented. Since first introduced there has ' >een a constant increasing demand and withmt a single report of failure to do its work i n , iny case. Ask your Druggist as to the trath >f these remarks. Large sizes 75 cents. Try tand be convinced. Tih6AW Fon piles, constipation and a torpid liver, lever fail to take Manali.n. , Skinny Men. Wells' Health Hen ewer restores health : >uu ?igur, uuieau^spcpsja, impotence, sexual lebility, $L A Cocoii. Cold or Sore Throat should be itopped. Neglect frequently results in an ncurable Lung disease or Consumption. Brown's Bronchial Troches do not disorder :he stomach like cough syrups and balsams, aut acts directly on the intiamed parts, allaying irritation, gives relief in Asthma, Broti:hitis. Coughs, Catarrh, and the Throat troub,es which singers and public speakers are mbject to. For thirty years Brown's Brou- . :liial Troches have been recommended by physicians, and have always given perfect jatisfaction. Having been tested by wide and constant use for nearly an entire generation :hey have attained well-merited rank among ihe few staple remedies of the age. Sold at 15 cents a box everywhere. nh&fcw Live niul Let Llvv. Life is not always under our own control, sut can be prolonged by care and prudence. Burdock DIood Bitters as a laxitive, alteritive and duretic medicine tend materially :o restore health and lengthen our days. L'rice $1. A surk, positive cure for costiveness. Man vu The IUv. Geo. H. Tiiaykr, of Bourbon, [nd., says: "Both myself and wife owe our lives to Shilob's Consumption Cure." Abe yoo made miserable by Indigestion, : Constipation. Dizziness. Loss of Appetite, fellow Skin? Shiloh's Vitalizer is a j>ositive :ure. Why will you cough when Shiloh's Cure will give immediate relief. Trice 10 cts., 50 cts. and $1. Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy?a positive enre for Catarrh, Diphtheria and Canker Mouth. Sold by E. Bocking, agent, under Odd Fellow's Hall, and by R. II. List, 1010 Main street. Personal! To Men Only 1 The Voltaic Beit Co., Marshall, Mich., will >end Dr. Dye's Celebrated Electro-Voltaic Celts and Electric Appliances on trial for thirty days to men (young or old) who are ifllicted with Nervous Debility. Lost Vitality ind Manhood, and kindred''troubles,guaranteeing speedy and complete restoration of health and manly vigor. Address as above. ST. B.?No risk is incurred, as thirty days' trial is allowed. ttbaw Never forget that biliousness and constipation are entirely curable with Maxalis, Short Urtntli. 0. Bortle, Manchester, X. "Y.. was troubled rrl.K Akllinm .!???? tt_ju "xiau o^en ibhged to sit up sometimes ten or twelve nights in succession. Found immediate relief from Thomas' Eclectric Oil, and is now sntirely cured. Ok* hckduxd boixaes reward for a better remedy. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment Js uure core for Piles. daw Go to your druggist for Mrs. Freeman's N'ew National Dyes. For brightness and dursbility of color are unequaled. Color from two to five pounds. Directions in English nd German, Price 15 cents. daw THE OBEAT I NATURE'S GIFT TO r THE Cures Dyepopila, Scrofula, Fever anil Acne, the Liver iiml Kiilnov* // hm Sitt+,1 Mnrt ><Aer Jfcdicina. The old lndinnsljolU'VO that tl will have no jdeknost. FOR SALK BY ALL PITTSBURGH Fl PITTSBURGH CONI One Hundred full Music L* Bercn distinct ?chooK Twentr^lcht tearhfers In Liberal Ana, Music, Drawing, Valnim*. KJocu work. Charge* lev* than anvwiual school In Ui Member (lb. fiend for new Catalogue to PLUMBING, GAS AND STEAM F1TT1HO. TIRIMBLE A LCTZ, PLUMBERS, Gas and Steam Fitters, U18 Market Street. Heating anil reutllatlug or public build' ngs, dwellings anil factories a specialty. *U2? pHOMTSON & UIBDEKD, PRACTICAL I'LDHLERS, 3as and Steal Fitters, 1314 Market St., Wheeling, W. Va. Dealer* la *11 kind* of lend, wrought end coet Iron ilpcs, sewer pipes and chimney tops, 6te?un and later nugea, siphon pumps, safety valres, bath ob?, rink*, ?fcc. cole agents for the Celebrated Cameron Steam Pump, , ind Underwriters' Gm Machine. Order* from the country promptly filled. m*23 J^UKE F1TTON, Meal Plumber, Gas and Steam Fitter 1416 Main street. All orders promptly attended to. ja4 yyM. HARE & SON, 'RACTICAL PLUMBERS, GAB A3D STXAM FITTER3, No. 33 Twelfth street All wort done promptly at reasonable prlcw. INSURANCE. JUDGETFOR YOURSELF Compare Asset*, 1SS2, Mutual Life Insurance Co., OF NEW YORE, n round numbers.....*. 891,000.000 few Yorfc Life ~ _ 47.000,000 few England Mutual lC.OOft.OUO ?cnn Mutual. ..... 7,000,000 Mutual lieuerit .... 25,000,000 In rutlonf rnannpiMTi?>Tit ?rwni?. ?/. ??v?oi or issii, compare lEe 1 Slntual Life Ins. Co., or X.Y., 01-10 per ct with the s'cvr York Life ..? 210 per coat s'ew England Mutual _13 910 " Pcnn Mutual .. ..15 4 10 '* Mutual .. 10 U-10 " Which are the l<owcst Uates ? \nnual Premium for an Insurance of SI,WW, ago 35. Mutual Life Ins. Co., of X. Y. - $2:! 4*2 S*ew York Life *2GSS S'ew England Mutual. ........... 26 AO Penn Mutu*L...~.M...~~~ 26 22 Mutual Benefit, ? 20 00 For other comparisons *ml information, cnll at : fETKKcON'S AGENCY. royl5 lion Vmn street. PHOTOGRAPHY". pLUMMER Has the Largest an?I FJnot I? liot ogra pli Gallery ls* the city. Best 80.00 Cabinets 4Dly 83.oo per dozen. j*> nas mais street. /) Photographic Studio, 1-05 market street, jrt Oppolto McLnre noim?. QRAYON PORTRAITS AT MYLES' ART STUDIO, So. 21M MA FX STKKST. - .twit- ? ? a--Tt~:V.. TXJ 1?5 IMPERISHABLE perVUHB ux? ?s=snr zau**? rz;. \ Murray k I-mrr.an's FL6B/BA fffiTER, Best for TOILET, BATH . and HANDKERCHIEF, GREAT jARGAINS! CLOSING OUT ODDS & ENDS OP Hfinftratftri Tea and ninnp.r Warp MAJOLICA WAItE, YACES, FANCY GOODS AND GLA8SWARE. riea?e call and examine my stock. JOHN FR1EDEL, 3y2l 1130 MAIN STREET. NDIAN REMEDY. IJAXUHB'S OHILDBEN. Biliousness, Constipation and all diseasesof ru and Mailt More Permanent Cures than 'all ic blood is the life. Keep that pure and you nnrOfUSTS. mvP-m MALE COLLEGE SERVATORYof MUSIC. ttona for Eighteen Dollari. - Attendance Mat year <31 Snporlor advnntiuros itlon. Modern Langu&KCfi, Xc?lle-Work, and wax ? United HUH*. Twi'iity-ciRhlU year oi*tis N??p. 11KV. I. U. I'EltaUtXO, P.P., Plttoburgh, Pa. BAKING POWDER. ^ipSSiw1 iSf *sp si ii^fi This Baking Powder Is made from rtrictly pare ;T*pe cream tarter, and every can la warranted to Ito satisfaction ?r money refunded by LANG, GHABK & BAIRD, . MANDFACnmiM, ]e28 Uto Main itrcct. Wheeling. THE COMXSaST! While other Baking Powders arc largely adulterated with Alum and other hurtful > drugs. _ ___ \ has been kept unchanged in a/I its original purity end strength. The best evidence of its safety and effectiveness is the fact of its having received the highest testimonials from the most eminent chemists in the United Slates, who have analyzed it, from its introduction to the present time. No other powders show so good results by the true test?(he TEST OF THE OVEN. IT IS A PURE FRUIT ACID BAKING POWDER -MADE BYSTEELE & PB.ICE, VUlCllgU, XII., UUU Ob. JJUU13, JUD.i S*anf*rturrr? oftopulln T???t Gfo?, I?r. Prl?*'i 8p*?Ul k'Utsrlac tilrwu, kail Iir. frlcc't t'nltue I'trflMM. INCREASE s|jg YOUR CAPITAL. Investors of small ami raodlum Aa/7f\ nmounts in Grain, Provisions nnd W~Jbh- blocks as fulljr nrotoct/nl its most oxtflnaivoandinnnontlaloperator*. r Our successful, itilly tried, olil e? ? tM>listied plan. Try IL lU-porM WHEAT Fontwptkljr.dividendaiioliluionth" ly. Send at onco for explanatory >4m<8 / * ci real lira tod past rccord. ranc. SJ? 3 Uiviilondspalduurincpostthirtoiin fcsMW months on this fund *nn.7l per V" ^ sharo. Address l-LKMMING ?ft ? Mi:Ult!AM,l41 & 143 LaSullo STOCKS .St.. Chicago, III. oxwuivo aj-Wo want a loral ocent In . ovcry town. Excellout induce. E-lfaea xneut*. Good pay to a ronpousiU*.***ri?n*aum. Writo for Fall lln? of 6UAFTiyr, and TCLLET8 at boilora pricr?. At?nt? for ?U- MKTttf BLOWKK8 BTEAM WMySoUU gtad'*. KNOINKERgl bflfrHUES. ADEN i Sii AnSjTY;yo? f WANTED! CHftKBERS;pDiCTIONARY Universal Knowledge. COMPUTE CYCLOPEDIA OF USEFUL INFORMATION Thi rao?t uccful.cocipoct Uten?ry Achl?v*mentof tboAee. Ha* no competitor*. Competent Rotlcitoni wanted. No Poddlnra oeod apply. Read for full Dc?cripUroCircular* J. H. CHAMBERS & CO. _BT.XOUI3.Oa. CHI CAPO, 111. ATLAJiTA. Oa. HARRIS REMEDY CO.,BT?ii??Si!iii OITg lliaaul.U aa4h?U I'nip'i ( PROF.HARRIS' PASTILLE REMEOT Vaaat JUn ?al Mbrr? *bo ?u(T?r from .S'ritotii at,l l'fc?iU->I D?bU IIT. Prmalare KihasiUoa *M maor (knisj ma^atBra, _ , . , . . *** qslcklr an4 radical!? ew?4. Tt? Km?4j 1? pot ?p lo boxta. * . 1 (luUe< a tae&lh). It > . J l??ngrt to ?-?et * cert, eaWu la a<f?raca*??.) SS i >*.1 (iMUefihrw *>coihi). V. f*ot b; dUI la Dlala r?w?n. Mmtlaat for UlacanMpaa; rath Bat. Paa|.tUt<tt*crt> Un< ttia dl*ca*a and Bele af eata nut walad oe ipiilleaUoe Jsssmm *>et la curio* diwtifi ?f U* lllootf. gkla ud w'T" fr"" ImpoitMT, Urrmala iff^r?4' <-?r,rrW- */P??IUU? JUrrr.rUl Wi?r *** ' irrmlej tu *ft?sUA? ^topki, *iia ?*fa u?l im* macdin. c?ll er ?rtu far U?l W yw*. U?*j ?a b* by Ui^iJoifUn by cull .r~-t.?fr,r1.?frv? Kaplan thatM ?ra4 tk?ir <J4rx*.\ V"4 u ?* ?' UtaalM*. It t. M< a In..) MJdrtM, |)R. IIL fTK, 14 5. Nik SL. hi. U?W, a*. EflTAUU?l?Ll) OVKIt TUlltTV VKAffu. SBf" FREE! S^EUIBLE SELF-CURE, ' A furorlt? prescription of one of tbo taojt nU?r<l and tnectuful ?j?Ti*lUw In tbeC.H. Inow rulrwl) for lh?ciir?>i>f.YrrruM?> />rb(lltuf X.o it JTrtHhauit, *ti(J I fray. Hoat tQplAlnKoaltMciivriupe/fce. UnicsliUtaaflUlw Addreit DR. WARD & CO., Uuiiliru. Mo. QATTLE AND HOG FEED v ::. , r * For Sale Cheap. iiueeiiiij? brums Migarunu Kenning l'o. L A. 0. EQEHTKlt ?prl8 8ecrtUry, LEOAL NOTICB3. ISTHEOO^.COBnoP umo 01"" '? ? Tho State o! Wert Virginia, To the bljerlir of Ohio County: nil lulr*at-lau'of Sarah J, llruwn, ilweaird; the I!0*1? ? Commluinncr* for Foielxn MlaUoni of Utt'i^iV rTh^ni!*5! c],"rih North America; the Truite?? w.tho Board of HomeiJiaakMUol the l'rc*brte-rtaii < liurch of North A merle*. au<l ibu Tmuuivr of nre me at 117 offlce In the cltj- of Whetlluir In th^ oouniy Mid ifiate aformld,on MONDAY, the ai.t i*1o( July, a. D., loo, to ibow wtiwwb'r IS wrlliny, bearta* naif the icth d?y of Jnly^S!3 nurpordnr to be the vtin ?r *,.iww r. v.li.'Z.' VJ _ - - ?."?J M. IIHIIIIOU, Uf" V.,!pi5 < cased, offered (or probate by Kdnard M. Atkluaon, houldnot be admitted to record. ami hare thin and there tbUMilt, with your return thereon, iu? tine the time Mia manner of executing the nunc, W Itnewi: (leoruo Hook. Clerk of the County Court of Ohio County aforewld, thUiwthday of June, A, i 1). 11*2. GKOIIQK UOOK, Clerk. It appearing from the return of the Hicrlff of Ohio county, and from amdavit filed with me iu myofllce. that Jeawo K.- Hiown, Julia A. Ihowo, , ' Nathaniel 1'. llrown. Helen McK. Hrowu, Infant I chlldicn and heln-at kw of bareh J. llrown, de? v, j ceased; the Hoard of CommUaloneia for Foreign, Mladona of tlio Presbyterian Church of North America; the Truitev* of the Board of HomeMUI ilona of tho lYo'byterian Church of North Amer1 kw, and the Treasurer of the Amcricau Missionary i Association of New York city, are not reildcntaof the bUto of Weit Virginia, nor found therein, It la ordered that they do appear at my oHlcc according ; to the tennt of tho above lummons, and for tho \ pun<ow thcitlu mentioned, aud do what iliall be Herniary to protect thtlr Interest In the?aldnutter, UKOHQK HOOK, Clerk. T. F. Jokw. Attorney. ]v4 Tiv ^ ' COM MISSION EU'8 8ALK OK A VAL- ? UAULK OHIO COUNTY FAKM. In the ClrcultCourt of Ohio County, W. Va.; garal, Jaue luy and other?| ,Q |of Alva TJ.CurtU aud other*/ tlou* In puriuancoof a decree entered In the above entitled cau?o ou tho 14th day of April, 18&!, tho , undertlened 8|?dal Commlmloner will sell at I'ub* llo Auction, oil the premise*, ou THURSDAY,THE9th DAY OF JUNK.1M2. Commencing at 10 o'clock a. m., tho tMct of land known as the John Curtis Farm, ccntalulng 2?>4 . r acre*, more or kta. Said fann U situated on tho hcadwateriof caitlcmaa'a Hun, In Mid county, at tho junction of tbo Wheeling. Clinton ami ?vn#w mac, and the West Alexander and Wait Liberty roads, being mile* from Went Al?x*uder ami miles from *U*t Liberty. Tlio land livery fertile,' lie* welL li well watered, bos on It plenty of Rood fruit. Also a pood two-story britk house, a good ; lam andolherontbulldlngs.withordlnaryfetrlng.' TKiuisorSiLfc-One-thlrdof thepurchasemoney, ami m much wore a* the purchaser may elect to. pay. In cash, and the residue In threo equal an* nunl Installment*, with interest from the day of ' sale, the pun baser Riving bis note* for the deferred payments, secured by a deed of trust on the proin ; * erty. I. H. JONES, Jefrmw Special Comml?loner. The above sale I* adjourned nntll THURSDAY,: JULY 13th, 1SS2, at the same place and hour. 1. F. JONES, Jyl-wsdir Spcelal Commissioner. The above wile is adjourned until TH URSDAY, , August 10, 1882, at 10 o'clock A. w., Bt the tame. n'ace. at which time laid properly WILL l'OSIriVKLY UK SOLD. I. F. JONES, JylSww Social Commissioner. Bond and security bu? u:<n given by the Special i 'Tomml sloneriu the nrnw m by v:'S law. SAM'L B. McCULLOCH, Jy25 Clerk Circuit U?mt.Ohio o. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, DfSl'KlCT OF W1*T VIRGINIA. H.3. Wit iKEas, a Ub;l ban been filed in the District Court of the United State* for tho District of West , ' Virginia, on the Mb day of July, 1882, by tho kVheellcg.l'arkersburg aud Cincinnati Tiansporta- ' i lion Company, ovrccra of the steamboot K-Ioto, ' . '"r, tgit'nit the steamboat John Lomas. her tackle, ap* : " Ireland furniture, Alleging in substance thaton '.;v ihutthdayof July last said steamboat. John Lo-, Hi mas, co)U<ifd with and sunk the steamwm Scioto. -vv through the negligence of the >i*stcr and crew of' said steamboat, John Loinss, and that tudd Scioto . 1 was thereby damaged to the amount of 14.0.0. And rl'V&Aa praying proccss against said steamboat, John Lomas. C' her tackle, apparel and furniture, and that the said steamboat, bertackle, apparel and furniture mar be condemned and s^ld to pay such damages with >' *:*?& costs, charges and expenses. - Now,therefore, in pursuance of the monition nn leriuejcal ol theiujd Court to rae directed and delivered,) do hereby Rite public uottco to nil persouiclaimiRR tha said steamboat,her tackle, at?* ' . p*rel and furniture, or In any manner inu?K*ted ' j therein, that they be and appear be'ore the mid V i btriet Court to be held at the city of Wheel'nfj; In . -v- ind ior the District of West Virginia, on tho 29th J ilaj of July. 1SS1 at eleven o'clock in the forenoon , ' )f that day (provided the tan e *hail be a doy of |u isdlctlon, othewDeon the next day of Jurisdlo- y tion thereafter) then and there to in'.errosc their: slnlms. aud to make their allocations In that behalf., tow Dated the lith day of July. 1881 ' 0. W. ATKINSON,U.S.ManluL B. B. DOVENEB, W. P. Hubbakd, Proctor for Llbellant*. jyJO LOTTERIES. ??46th-^? ~ Popular Monthly Drawing or tiio InllioCltyo( LoulvTlllc, oti Monday, July Hist, 1882. Tfcese Drawings occur monthly (Bundayi except* ed) under thcprovisloaiof an Aci of the General \ss?nbly of Kentucky. . i . ii The United States Circuit Court on March 81fct (>iii fAllnwtn? ' ' ** 'Tst?Thiit llio Conmouwcaith i>Utributlon Com* N. B.?Tic Company hiu now on hand a lareo Kexerre Fund. Read carefully the list of priiea lor JULY DRAWING. m l Prize,; 580,000100 Prize* 1100 each,110,000 1 Prize, 10,000 200 Prize* SSO each, 10,000 1 Prize 5,000 COO Prize* S20each. 12,000 IXiV; 10 Prlze*$l,000each,10,000 1,000Prizes 110each, 10,0C0 v V3! 20 Prizes .'X-OCACII,10,060 9 Prize* S3CO each, Approximation Prize*, 12,700 9 Prize* S200 cach, " " _ 1,800 ?i*riaa JIM each, " " 900 l%0 IVaei 1112, iOO Whole Tickets $2. Hair Tickets, $1. 27 Tickets, $50. 55 Tickets, $100. Bciali iloney or Bank Draft In Letter, or send by .:V3; Srprm iMn't send by Retfstcred Letter or Poetsilce Onler. Orders ?f 85 and upwards by Express, can be nent at our expense. Addref* all onlera to R. M. BOARDMAN, Courier Journal Bulldlnr, LunirrHlc,^Ky^, or P.. M. BOARDMAX, SM^ItrtMid. WV lyl"TT^W FINANCIAL. . DANK OF THE OmO VALLEY. CAPITA! *173.000 Wu. A. Predd?nt tjtL B. Sntrww? Vlce-Pretldenl Dot* a General H&uklug Husluca. anaemia: . '-'V. ffm. a; Isett, I Wm. B. 8lmpfion, J. A. Miller, John K. Bouiord, ^ ~ L. M. Adam.*, I ? Victor Rosenborg. HaBWCr' y. K JKPSON. Cashier. jgXOIULNGE BANK. CAPITAL 000.000 J.N.Vakc*. ? ...... President '5%$ Baxtje. Lacghuk? ??Vice-President anuecroBS. J.N.Vance, 8. Horkhelmer, 3. Lanchlin, W. KMnghaia, L. S. Iwlaplaln, A. W. Kelly. John Frew, fftg JOHN J. JONTfl. rmhler. :*?$ attorneys. GEO. R. E. GILCHRIST. %M ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office with Taylor A Barr, No. 42 Twelfth Street Admiralty and MaritimeLawaipcclalty. Colleo ttom promptly made. ao24 : ft$ WJ. W. COWDEN, ; !% " ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office, No. 1222 ChapUne St., WhoeUof, W. Va. Prompt attention tn nil huMnew . JfiTniw 1 BBifl JK. UO WDE.N, > attorney at law. ^Q' 1222Ch*pllnc SU, Wheeling, W. va. myfl Hannubal fokm-x attorney at law, OCTO. OcHom nome. Wheeling. IV1. Vi. 1,13 TiMES P. ROGKHS, 'J attorney-at law, ifctSZ "W St- ?nxx"e ti? ,km" I \A.N'LEL LAMB. v .... ? ATTOUsh at law, lai??"v^">et (0TO "'I1 ^*nk'l WlMl. PICTURES AND ART MATERIALS. = QHR0J103 AND l'AINTINGS. "~ A largo, frcah topply, inst received at 1(v> W. a il UTOHIXS', -II Twelfth Street. THAMES! FRAMES! ~ 'i. All styles Card, Cabinet, Panel and Bou- ' (loir, at KIRK'S AJiT MTOP.r^'Wpg )y5 iqqs Main atreetl bTOCK OF EXGilA ViXGS, wwfill**nSoa3tc" iMtnicllns. omcllu' RetrirtSSui PJl^rim Kxttts. Return of the 2Uoy Flower. CtuUciiK*,- Tolling Hell, t'j*re tho Weed*. i>eer ?uj. JcrwyVilUge Elr??, T**o at theConrtof FJ?ra7l21,V,c*J,*.*.r0 tofoni U!i*bctii ?aa many Qtberde*ir*ble?ubjc?u. C*lln?d &*? them. E. U NICOLL, Agent. rayi i ' VcLai? Room Art &o;?.