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THB INTELLIGENCER: NJUMSIIKD DAILY, EXCEPT 8CXDAY. ?AT TIIE? IHTELLIGEIiCER OFFICE, ,?&? B, 1 IIMV, C'ASlrliKI.1, A II.V1IT, I'HOl'ltlETOUS. TERMS: * rr.n year, py ?aii, poktaof. rnrvAin. Daily, Fix dnyi In the week $ 0 00 lUii.Y, threw duy* In tho week A 00 Daily, two <:?>-?* in tho week .. 2 75 Daily, ono day In tho week 1 50 Wr.tKLY, onu year, In advunco 100 Wlkkly, hU months 60 The 1)Att.Y,lNTKLl.10r.NCEK I* delivered by ear lier* in Wheeling und odjueeut towtu ?t 1G I CCDU per Week. Persons wUhlns to nnh?crlhe to the Daily In- I TELUOKKCUl can do so by lending In their or ders to the 1 ntkllio iwckh otlico on postal card or otherwise, 'l'hey will to punctually lerved | by currier*. Tributes of Itcnpcct and Obituary Notices, SO cento per Inch. Correspondence containing Important rows colleited Ironi every purt ol tho ?urrouudlnjj country. Hejected communications will not be roiurnetl unlessne'.Hmojiiinleil by wulUcleiit}lostni,".' I The I.ntklliok.^cf.r, embracing It* povend editions, It entered In the lMolllco at Wheeling, W. Vn.. ns Mecond cliiM mutter.] TKLEl'llO.NK NUMllKlwT" Editorial Ilooms 431: Counting Hootn -lift | Afraid of Their Own. Mr. Flowor and tho rest of them on the Now York Democratic ticket are . beginning to fear that tlioy may lose votes by reason of the prominence of Tammany in the campaign. "What olso conld they expect? Tammany ruloil tho convention and named tho candidate. Is Tammany to take a back seat now and allow its i rivals to step in and enjoy tho usufruct in case of victory? It is not that kind of u Tammany. If the candidates were sure of a vic tory they would not be worried, but tho strong probability of defeat with tho Tammany Tiger growling for the spoils so loud that his voico can be heard tho State over, is what gives them pause. The Tammany boss, Mr. Richard Crocker, does not view it in this light. If Tammany was good enough before the convention it must be good enough now and to tho end. Ho recognizes that this is Tammany's light and his organisation cannot afford to bo side tracked. That would be interpreted as a repudiation of Tammany, and its in iluence outside of tho city of New York would be at an cud. Tammany seoks , to lord it over the Stato and tho eoun try as it does over the city. Mr. Flower and his associates on the ticket are in a bad box, but they were I glad of a chance to get in it and will | have to abide the consequences. Advice to Farmers. Ingnatius Donnelly, president of tho Minnesota Alliance, is a blunt states man. lie urges the farmers to hold their wheat, which may or may not bo a good thins as the market happens to go. They may sell anything and every thing else they raise, but hold their wheat. If they cannot sell enough to meet their requirements Mr. Donnelly ad vises them what to do. Ho would not have them borrow money on tho wheat they withhold. That would require tho payment of interest, and gentlemen of his way of thinking regard interest pay ing as an outrage on tho mau who pays u Jtr- Donnelly's plan is simpler? ' stand o.'r your creditors." 31c does not say how long they are to bo stood otT, but probably until tho wheat shall bo sold, whenever that may be. Nor does this ablo financier say how the creditors, who presumably aro not all bloated bondholders, are to manage during the stand-oil' period. Mavbe they could try thsir hands at standing oil; and if they failed they could go to tho wall and bad luck to them. If they arc not farmer creditors they have no business havingfarmordebtors. It* tile creditor should appear with the ; sheriff as his next friend that might complicate matters, although if the farmers have "pull" enough the sheriff , would not daro to take a hand in work ing out f bo problem. It is very easy to see that Mr. Don nelly is a man of ideas anil fertile in ex pedients. Gov. Campbell Has. an Men. The Steubenville Star has this to say of Gov. Campbell's speech in that citv: "One of Campbell's best hits was about the tin plate factory. IIo said ho had chase it out of Ohio and over into Penn sylvania and soon would havo it in ' Vales whero it belonged." j This is the Democratic idea. The tin plate industry belongs in Walcs-any where but in the United States. Tho j Democratic position is that we do not and cannot tnako tin plato in this coun ty. I To establish tho industry among us | to give employment in this country in stead of in H ales, to add that much to tho farmer's homo market, would ho to I prove that the Democratic party is ig. nora.-.t or vicious, and to prove either i or both would be to prove thatthoDem ocratie party is not worthy of tho pub lic confidence. This important fact has been shown many times?on every important ques tion tor the past thirty years?but to )>rove it again and at this particular timoin tho good State of Ohio would leave Gov. Campbell high and dry bo yond the h6}>e of rescue. Foroi&n Building; Associations. One of the western building and loan associations got into Pittsburgh to tho extent of $!>2,0i)0 shares sold and $30,000 paid in. Xow the shareholders refuse to pay any more and demand tho return of their money on tho ground that the company has broken its contract with them. There was a local board?to help the sale of stock?but that did not amount to anything,the parciitcorapany being master of the situation. Ibis is not tho first disappointment thai bus resulted from foreign building associations. They invade a Hold with a gaudy prospectus and smooth-tongued agontJ, and make tho people believe that they havo special facilities for a profitable building and loan association. Building associations havo helped every community in which they have | been properly managed, but these arc the home associations, in tho hands of men known to tho shareholders and chosen by thorn, }hoir money being lent on real estate which all tho shareholders know about. Tho foreign bulldiflft and loan associ ation with its promiso of quick and enormous returns is a delusion at best, I ami may be a carefully planned fraud. I Tho man who keeps out of it will not lose his money in it. Too Good for TIiIn "World, j A Now England farmer who had an abundant applo crop wont into execu tive session with himself to know what to do with it. There woro moro apples | than he could uso and ho feared they I would bo converted into the delusive | cider if ho sold thein. lie called in his pastor and a lay brother and among them they decided that tne dangerous fruit should bo consignod to tho mill pond. I With tho help of a hired man who re . garded tho proceedings as a sacrilege thoy etripped tho trees and consigned the aoplcs to a watery grave. Tho mil ler may havo lost his religion when ho heerd tho apples pounding in the buckets of his mill wheel, but the good men had registered their solemn protest against cidor andean nbundan'co of good apples and we'ro coiitont.j ' J tJ - ]f we only could know exactly what tho Lord of tho harvest thinks of this performance we could judge bettor of tho punishment that will beintlicted on him for being the foolish man that he is. Tho same intemperate zeal would keep a conscientious^man from growing fruit of any kind, corrr^ryo, hops or barley, but it might bo well to watch him in a horse trade. The Methodist Conference Seminary. By dint of zealous effort the Metho dists of West Virginia havo erected at Buckhannon a fine building for the higher education of their youth of both sexes. Tho institution is well ollicerod and already shows good results. Last year was its_.lirst, and the roll of stu dents was over two hundred. This was phenominal success. But the seminary is not yet able to stand alone. It is carrying a debt of about $20,000, a heavy burden for a young school. The conference now in session could not | do a better thing for its denomination, for the seminary and for the Stato than I to lay out a plan of campaign that shall insure at once enough money to dis charge the indebtedness of the Confer ence Seminary and put it on a solid basis. Tho Methodists of West Virginia are a numerous and powerful body, well able to give their institution of learning the chance it should have to be strong and useful. The history of Methodism demonstrates that when it undertakes a good work in earnest it does not fail. Tin: Empefor of Austria has not been doing anything of late to attract atten tion, while all the other crowned heads have been, keeping themselves before tho public. A little dynamite on a rail road track which went off without doing any particular harm, serves to remind the world that Ilis Majesty of Austria continues to do business at the old stand. Fit7.simmo.vs is wildly supposed to bo lurking near Pittsburgh, and the people of that lively city don't go to sleep until they have looked under the bed. Fit/.simmons is a power in his way. Tiie Itata is to be released, and this probably will be tho last we shall hear of a vessel that was nothing in itself and yet might have made a mighty bob bery. Tins is New Year's Day of o0o2 accord ing to the Jewish calendar. The Ixtel ligencku wishes its Jewish friends many happy re turns,it i, jftcnq ih Tins warm weather is playing a game of hide-and-seek this year. ItVas come out of its corner again in full blast. Pekspikixo weather in Wheeling, snow in Montana. Are we not a great and varied country? BREAKFAST BUDGET, A tramp walked into police head quarters in lloboken, N. JM Monday, and placed four fifty dollar bills on Sergeant llathgen's desk. "I found these on the railway track,'" he said, "and though I am poor, 1 hand them up because they may belong to some one who needs them as badly as 1 do." The Sergeant was astonished at this display of self-sacrifice and honesty on the part ot the tramp, ilu discovered, after inquiry, that Freeholder John Covle had dropped them out of his pocket. A 3-year-old daughter of Jacob Ziger, of Findlav, 0., fell so the bottom of a 45-foot well, containing five feet of water, Tuesday. The mother, looking down tho well, could faintly see the child with her head out of the water clinging to the pump-stock. The little one saw the anxious faces looking down at her, and called out: "Mo 'ants to yet out." A big basket was lowered, into which the child climbed, and was pulled up. She was uninjured, with tho exception of somo slight bruises and a scalp wound. "Not the least amonjr our Maine in dustries," says tho Kennebec Journal, "is that of picking blueberries to supply the various packing houses in the east em part of the State. Washington county has done an unusually largo business the past season?some families having received from $20o to $400 as the result of the summer's work. A single day's receipts in tho packing houses in tho vicinity of Chcrrylield have ofton run up as high as 1,000 bushels." A Hock of about thirty quail aston ished tho residents of P.eech street, Springfield, Mass., the other morning, by making themselves verv much at homo around the premises. They lighted on adjoining .fences and neigh boring roofn, but apparently founij most deliuht in hovering about an apple or chard, They were not disturbed. The evening before n girl living in tho neighborhood caught ono of the young birds in her hand, hut released it. The poonlo near Marhlehend, Mass., are becoming interested in tho mysteri oiia dicing which has boon gning on in tho Wyman woods for some weeks. A ditch has boon dug running east and west, 150 feet long, from live to eight feet deep and nix feet wide. Tho work has been dono at night and no ono pceins to know who has been doing it. It in thought, however, that parties aro hunting for hidden treasure. A dispatch from Mechnnicsburg, 0., Hays: "O. C. Hupp owns a bantam roos tcr which oven.' night crows punctually at 0 o'clock. It will carcely vary thirty seconds either way from tho timo. Tho rooster is a veritable town clock in its own section, and itR punctual manner of using its voice creates inuchcowmont and amusement." Tho Congrfgatlonnliit tells of an erring church brother in Vermont who got up in open mooting and mndo tho follow ing confession: "Brethren, my con science compels me to confess that when boiling down my sap this spring 1 put into tho kettlo "two buckets of wator and sold tho sugar at the samo pricc as that made from pure sap." An electrical journal tells of tho con struction, by M. Trouve, of an electric walking stick of which tho knob con sists of a small electric lamp in a thick glass bulb, tho battery being two cells of a peculiar shape down tho cano itself. Tho lamp gives sullicient light to read a nowspaper in a train, or to light tho bearer up stairs at night. Dredgers working in tho Tiber to pre pare for tho construction of a new em bankment have brought up a magnifi cent ancient Koman bronze helmet. It is perfectly preserved and is decorated with bas-reliefs. Si^nor Kossi, tho Ital ian archaeologist, assigns it to the sec cond century beforo the Christian era. In laying tho foundation-stone of a new church tho other day, Stewart Clark, exM. 1\ for Paisley, made him self responsible for a rather curious kind of climax. Having occasion to re fer to a certain seventeenth-contury di vine, ho described him as having neen "not only a credit to the name of Chris tianity but a credit to Scotland!" Tho fig is a wonderful tree for sending dow.i its roots in search of moisture. According to the Oroville (Cal.) lirguUr there is a gigantic lig tree in the yard of E. Tucker, of that placo, tho roots of which have filled the bottom of his well, which is thirty-two feet deep. A Yonngstown (0.) ministerial widow er married again, and so soon that the churches felt scandalized and none of them would have him for a pastor. Tho only thing to do with him was to promote him to bo presiding elder and this was done. Quong Yo Ick, a Chinaman, who ha? all the advantages of a first-class educa tion, has recently married an Indian woman of tho Soiighics tribe, and they will enter tho field as missionaries of tho Methodist church, to which they both belong. A clergyman in England in an earnest address to his parishioners advocating tho establishment of a cemetery asked them to consider the "deplorable condi tion of 30,000 Englishmen living without Christian burial." Tlio only pauper in Tucker county, W. Va, is handsomely lodged. The Door farm cost $U,000 and he haa it all to himself. THE GAME LAW. Adopted at the Itccent Kxtra Session of the I<ut;i?liiture. By request we publish the following amendment to the game laws, as passed by the last Legislature: Sec. 11 of etiapter 02 of the codo en acted .so as to read as follows: It shall be unlawful for any person in anyplace to catch, kill or injure, or to pursue with such intent, any ouail or Virginia partridge, between the 20th day of December and the 1st day of November following: or any wild tur key between the 1st day of January and ! the 15th day of September; or any | ruftied grouse, pheasant, primatcil grouse, prairie chicken, between the 1st day of January and the 1st day of No vember; or any blue winged teal, mallard or wood duck, or any other wild duck, wild grouso or brant, at any time between the 1st day of April and the 1st dnv of Octo ber; or any snipe except between the 1st day of -March and the latdavof July, or any woodcock, except between the 1st day of Julv and the loth day of Sep tember. And it shall be unlawful for any person at any time to catch by seine, net or trap, any Virginia partridge. And it shall be unlawful for person, by the use of any pivot or swivel gun, or any other than the common shoulder gun, or by the aid of any push boat, or sneak boat, Ur-ed for carrying such gun, to catch, kill, wound or destroy, or to pursue with such intent, upon any of the waters, bays, rivers, marshes, mud tints, or any cover where wild fowls re sort, within this State, any wild duck or brant. UtnmocK lir.oou Bitters taken after eating will relieve any feeling of weight or over fulness of the stomach. Sold everywhere. daw BafErapSlTMT Sorely Aflllcted Nearly Three Yours. Used Proscriptions from Three Doctors Without Any ltcnellt. After Using Cutlcnra Twt- Days, tlio Scabs all Dropped Off. Curs was Quick and Complete. I sufi'ercd for nearly three year* with on erup tion mi my neck, find mod prescriptions from three doctors duritiK tbut time, whicn did ine no godd. I purchased Cuticura JIcmkdus, nnd the second day nfter using it the scuba all dropped oft'and never scabbed any mora. Ifcfore 1 used up the second set of Cuticura my neck wo* en tirely well, and has been well ever since, nud all that I can say for it is. that whereas I wils sorelv utliictcd I am now well, and all from the use of CUTICURA ltr.MF.DIES. X. W. SMITH. J.ynch wood 1*. 0.. Kershaw City, S. C. This is to certify that the above testimony Is correct: as I purchased the Cuticura nnd saw Its eft'ecu- while using, W. S. Smith, Notary Public for the State of South Carolina. Skin Diseases 10 Years. Kind the Cuticura Uf.mkdies do all you claim. Have bccu suffering from skin dlsen*j ten years. Could find no remedy to cure until 1 tried Cuti cura. Very hanpv over the result. 1IENKV MOORE, Lancaster, Va. Cuticura Resolvent, The new lllood and Skin Purifier,internally,and cuticura, th'j great Skin Cure, and Cuticuka Soah, an exquisite skin Itaiutifler, externally, instantly relieve ai d orwolliy cure every disi-HPe and humor of the skin, scalp nnd blood, with loss of hair, from infancy to iu,*e, from pimples to scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price. Cuticura, 50c: Soap, 2Jic: Uesolvrst, 21. Prepared by the Potter Drug and Ciirmicai,Corporation, Boston. jjficrsend for "How to Cure Skin Diseases," 61 pages. oO lllu.-trationvnnd 100 testimonials. DIMPLES, black-head;, rod, rough, chapped t and oily skin cured by Cuticura Sqai*. 1VEAIC, PAINFUL KIDNEYS, With their weary, dull, aching,- lifeless, i vm >>'l-f^ne sensation, relieved in one \ by the Cutlcnra Antl-Palu ' J-J'tMantHr. Tho first and oulr instau taneous paiu-kllllng strengthening pltuslar. ?> ccuta. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. WANTED?A COMPETENT GIRL for geuerul houswirk. Apply to MIW. K. K HWul'K, f?S Fourteenth street oe.l QT. MATTIlHW'tf CllUKCH^-KEV. Jt. K. feWOI'E, D.D., roctor. Sorvleosat 10:30 <t m. and 7:;.Q p. m. Sunday Sehool tit 2:TO p. m. WA N T K 1) 1M M EDI ATELY?A Oompwent irlrl. Good wogea. Two in family. W. D. McMECHKN, 1U0 South Front street. of.' WANTED?SITUATION AS BOOK KEEPER. or would tnke two or threo imnll >et* of liooks. Address II. ? A1>AM.J, caro this onice. ne2l? WANTED?TRAVELING SAL MS MAN. Can make $30 per week perma nently. Trade specialties. TA1IOR, 177 Monroo ?treeI. Chicago. oe.T WANTED?TO KENT FOU MONTH or two, with prlvllego of buying. Hum* ImrtonorCallgrrtpti Tyi owrlter. Addiou"Type writer," rare intnlliuenoer oH'.eo. city. ne':o Wanted i mm edi ately?six ladles or gentlemen. Work light and respectable. ? Salary guaranteed 00 to 0) per day. Call on M1U. COOPER, 1141 Main street. seSO. T ^O THE PUBLIC. I lmvo removed my merchant tailoring busl nea to my now store room, No. 3GOOJacobftreet, where I will be pleased to seoull mv o!il frieudn, ui well ns uny person desiring goods In inv line. AUG. llELMlHUGUT. oc2 Merchant Tailor. Jl? Yi YOU WANT RICH CUT GLASSWARE For tho table, or tino engraved glasawnru for wed* fillip or anniversary jjlfta, address KWlNfl 11H OS., ret 1215 Market Street, Whjellrtg. W. Va. Jj^E UNION. Battery "D," IstW.Vu. Light Artillery. The member* of this company, together with 1 tho First and Twelfth West Virginia Infantry regiments will hold a reunion ut Martin's Furry. Ohio, on Tuesday next. October Gth, and all members who can nosMbly attend aru requested I to do no. No.marching. General geetlng dur ing the day and t amp tiros in tho evening. Come tip nnd gut some bean coup. ' ? 11. EX LEY, Jn., President. ! 23XJ03B:-TW-^S.a.,T1 s JUST RECEIVED, NEW BUCKWHEAT, PAN CAKE, LONG BREAKFAST FLOUR, oc3 AT H. F. BEHRENS*. Portraits for Christmas Presents. Studio 2154 Main Street. seto Q-uxlb ! G-ixxa.fi* ! Guna I HOGE & BRO., Dealers In Hardware and Fanners' Implements, No. 1113 Market Street (west tide,) Have just placed in stock the largest lino of ?.o-Tjaxrs Ever brought to the city. All styles end grades of guns and at prices to suit everybody. an2-t-Mws.tw HOGE & BRO. "V^OTICE ^TO CONSUMERS OF NATURAL GAS. The natural gas will 1,0 shut off Sunday mom ins. October !t!i, at 0 o'clocn for five or six hours to enable the company to make connections on the line at the wells. Consumers are requested to close all valves ut that hour. THE NATURAL OAS CO. OF \V. VA. _fiE0Rfir. llKAlin. Munacer. ???> T 1ST OF LETTERS ~ cnmm^lv* V "'?? p'?,,omc<! ? Wheeling, Ohio county, \\. \u., Saturday, Oct. 3. ?To obtain following tho uppllcant must ail; tor U(l\crtbt(l letters, gix-Iuj; date of list: ' LADIES' LIST. uSS?'\fiI!f\Srink ?Iau1' M,ss Kr.sa iS'J1* Minerva Porter. Mrs. MngRlo mSSwMII<s M'nnio TfoutriiunMiw .Myrtle JiarnctJ, .\iss Minnie Mcaver. Miss Florence GENTLEMEN'S LIST. Martin, Lloyd 'Iculds, Ed. -Ucknrt, Peter W. K. Selutub, Henry A. 1 Swanson, S. A. Slvnalt. C. II. rsrnhnm'r ir Tunior. J. II. /? ! i it ~ "ashington, Robert i GoodeH, George C. Welsh. John T i AVeedeu. G. 0. Lee, 1rank Whalhlmen, D. i White, Jatr.es, "Mavor." _ W. J. W. COWDEN. p. M. CJioice Real Estate FOlt SALE DY RIIE3ART & TATDM, 1314 MARKET STREET. I Vn 'SJl1-,.rt0C,?th strcc\brlck, all modern. I Vn an. M111'Mrocl' brirk- corner lot. in*t ?8011,11 si,le Fourteenth street, v ?,z5!'e s!rr<"' Manil, brick dwelllntr v? i'CLP1,". !0 *,rci!1' l,ril11. (even rooms. I V ?.Vricl,*',Vt f,r0Ll' krick, four rooms. Vo " m J\t /? n [rnrn^ fm'r rooms, v? vS? ?,,cP>n"cl> "??. line brick dwelling *v!!' l"i?incss block. ,W0"1I?' h ' iJ- w'V struet- brick dwelling, SI,500 Vn Sin s'rcut- trick, river view. <!'.S v"WlrMl'1,rlck- "it rooms. \-X' S ?.'r. i'ron' ?',trCL't' t*'?nd. frame ^ WTOrty-Hrst street, fine brick dwelling. WETHEXjIBTG Bridge and Terminal Railway Co. OFF ICK OF OEXERAL JIAXAGER PASSENGER SERVICE. ,.,?i?,V!.end!V: October 5.1S01. ncsscn. o?bi?"'',tliuj;': Wh?!lus u"d : ON WEEK DAYS. ? raiox STATION*, EIGHTEENTH AND MAtlKET STREETS, WliEEU.IO. "ABKET A. M.-cfcaO, 7:30, 8:30, 5:30 10:31, 11-30 1. M.?12:35, Ira-J. 2:30, 3:ao, l:a), 5:30,7:20, 8:30. iKAvt: .MAnriN'n n:;:ny station iV WtW, 10:00,11:00. i " SOT1:'0, ":0J- 3i(M'4:0l)' 5:0?. ?*?. 7:00. ON SUNDAYS. LEAVE CMOS STATION. LEAVE MARTIN'S FEr.ItY. A. 51.-0:00,10:00.11:00, 1'. 11.-3:00, i:oo, 5:00. RATES OF FARE. Wheeling and Mar Round trip?e?wecuHviJct.Uni"niid"Vfn^ 13ccnu ?Hi's Kerry.. * " Mar single trip bct\veen WhMiYnFiind i'ar cc"" 1 tin's hcrn-hnll fare in ltound trip between Wheeling unrt"\tn'i' tin's 1-crry?hull laio ' " ...... Fiitv??ffI"?utation tickets. , fifty r.fle tickets ? cr ! Twenty m e ridu tiek?>t*. SP Uorkiug.nen'smonthly tiVkeV^'y'rlTK:::::: J ? Children unilersix yenreollure ivIIMm. I...H i free ivhen accompanied b- aduh.. ri1^' years and twelve years lmlf fare "l'0" I wm1ray sr? re 'rUmr- ?! station. Wheeling 0 lMM"8or Eta ii?Kg2? employer that the appfica.it il In hu'empto " N. V/. EAYRS, WHEiiuo, w. va., OotobcM.'mi! 3,taaslS MEN'S FALL OVERCOATS-M. GUTMAN A CO. Are here in a quantity and variety never before thought of. We have failed as yet to have any gentleman inspecting our stock point out a single item in which they could be improved. We have them in exclusive styles, ENDLESS VARIETY, ALL DESIGNS, EVERY SHADE, ALL GRADES. You'll find the garments we are showing this season not only as perfect as the ready-made can be produced, but as perfect as custom garments can be made. Nothing to be gained by having your light weight coat made to measure, and from %.oo to $i j.oo certain to be lost. In Boys' Clothing We are having a most successful run, early as the season is. The stock we have to show you is not only immense in size, but has been selected with unusual care, the market being thoroughly ex hausted for novelties. SPECIAL LI35TE Of Boys' and Children's Double-Breasted Suits in all the newest shades and colorings. Call early before the assortment is broken. A guaranteed sav ing of from 10 to 25 per cent. depaBrtmewt, MAIN AND TWELFTH STREETS. AMUSEMENTS. OPERA HOUSE. Wednesday and Thursday, Oct. 1 & 8. AND WEDNESDAY MATINEE, Monroe's Celebrities, HEADED BY GEO. W. MONROE, 5, Matinee Prices?Admission 50 and 25 cents. Reserved sonta 7."> cents. Evening Pkices?Admission, 7r> ami oO cents. lUiservc l seats SI 00 Sale of seats commences Monday, October f?th, at (?'. A. House's music store. oc3 GRAND OPERA HOUSE. C. C. GENTnEIL. Manager. Thrco Nights end Saturday Matinee, Com mencing THURSDAY, 0CT03ER 1, XV. II. Power's Company in the lloinantlo Irish Dia:na( THE FAIRIES WELL. New and Magnificent Scenery, Attractive Music, Wonderful Mechanical Effects, and a carefully selected Company of Coiuudiaus, Singers and Dancers. Prices?Orchestra Chairs, oOc; Dress CirelcKc; Gallery. '?.Tip. Reserved heats on sale at Woir's. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOE5. _ A?k mr accnta for W. L. Donglnn Shoe*. ? niHt r "a,e 'u your plnco nnk your denier to Kciid for cttrnlogiir, ncciiio the nircucy, and sec theui for you. Erf"TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.-ffil WHY JS THE L. BOUOLAS CEN-fpEIVIEN TI!E BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE HONEY? It i* rx je.-amle-w ulioe, with no tacks or was thread to hurt tin) foot; nunle of tho host lluo cair, Htyllnh nurl ea*y, nnd beenuse trc make more uhoea of tl.i* Vrndr than tiny other manufacturer. It equal* hand* sewcJ Mine* C06tlui{ fr?.iu J4.0U Co ?V.ijC. CKC OO Cfonulur llu:i<l>?c? fil, tho finest calf *no? ever otTereit for $.M?; equal j French Imported shoes which cont front $itn to $I2.U). OP Ilnnd-Sewed Wei: SIiop, lino calf, *t yll.h, comforiablo and durable. The bc?t Sj:oe ever offered at thin price ; name urado oa cus tom-mndo ithoe* co.tlr:^ from $r,.cu to $m?. <2 0 30 Poller Sli?M?i Farmers, Hnllroad Men *** ,? ""d l^tterCarrleninll near them; ilncculf, s?atnleiw,mnooth ln?Me. heavy three ?o!cs, cxteu* nlnn c.Ie'p. One pair will wear nyear. CO flue* ?*nlfj no better M:oe ever offered at thU prlcc; one trial will convtneo thoso who want a Mico for comfort aud scrvlce. GO vi.1 uiul S'i.OO Workliiirinnn'a sboei IT% n ore rery almu<c nnd durable. Thoso who novo given .them a .rial will wear no other make. Ravc' 82.00 nnd SI.7.1 aehool thorn aro u.yJ? . worn by the lioys ever)-where; they sell on t.iclr rnent*, as the Increasing unlet. dhow. B llnnd.Nrwrd Klioo, best i?iOUILO OooRoIa, very ?ty ibb: equals French Import.*-.! Khoes costing from&t.'Mto jwjii,. % Lndics' tt.30. 82.00 nnd Al.JiJ nho* for >II??*s are the best llnoDontfola. StylUb and durable. (?nutIon.?Sec that W. I.. DouirlaV nan:e and prlco aro stamped on the bottom of each shoe. W. I.. DOUfiLASrnrockU>n, Ma**. Stone's Cash shoe Htohe. 1012 Main Street MENKKjiEULi; ?t Sakvlu, ulM Market Stic*^ John Deegan, CcmvuoU. Juu-niua EGGER, WARRlCKJt CO. SpecialNotice ?to? C-L-O-PC-K ?and? WRAP BUYERS. Our Cloak Room is cow fllicl with Ladies' and Misses Jacket*, coin i?risin? the Latest novelties. plain BLACK JACKETS in all ]>opu lar Cloths in Coat Skirt and Reefers. FUR TRIMMED JACKETS, KLACK and colorkd NOVELTY JACKETS, Handsome and striking, in Bedford Cords and Finest Cheviots. NewFall Dress Goods In elegant lloine Spun and Camel's Ilcir hirects, in all the choicest color ings, with Trimmings to match. Onr sl'lXULTiES aro numerous Wo only hsudie reliable goods at moder ate prices EGGER, WARRICK & CO.. 1132 whin STREET. flour. 17 IFLOTTR IB ALWAYS UNIFORM IH QOALSTY. YOU WILL NEVEII HAVE BAD bread FROM J} nana nuur. i NO BETTER FLOUR CAN BE MADE FROM WIIEAT THAN. ilfi DRUGGISTS. THE "PRINCESS" EEotidiiolio Powdoro. cukfs l.n TEN* SHNTTIX fok S.lix ilv DEUtiCUH-? photography. T. H. Higgins, Photographer.