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Sec. S. SUM <? Co. I Seo. G. Silfel <t Co. 1154 to 1160 Main Street. mr r II Iwasnaoie Shirt Waists. Thousands of them. Hundreds of styles. Colors fast and fancy. F it?perfect, IStylC?only the choicest. PriCCS?the lowest. Waists for every woman, miss or child?48c to $4.98. Tailor made?detachable collars?wide cuffs. ' * ? lawn. Pfrralp P. K" I- t* "9 * w*av^ a o has ^ Pure Linen, Dimity.... and Cordette.N Make your choice to-day from largest assortment in the city. Geo, Bo Stlfel & Co. JD. Sundling ? Co. | 2). Bundling tf* CoIT 71 t n * tn ? I ivien s Suits 1 hat Compel Kespect! Prices That Exact Admiration! S In springtime on the seventh day of the week The young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of clothes. The trysting place for the young man and the clothes is our store. If you haven't bought your Spring Suit yet, we can give you some very interesting figures. We can give you satisfaction as well as economy. Our suits arc stylish, elegant, distinguished looking and reasonable in price. $10.00 to $15.00 will buy a first-class suit, and you will be surprised to learn how good these suits are. D. (kindling & Co., Star Gothiers and Furnishers, 34 and 36 Twelfth Street Alexander jrcw. | Alexander Drcio. o TJ * ON" bpeCial 5 Furniture, Prir^c. 5 Bed Room Suits if M jj| an(j Carpets. It's really surprising to what good advantage the thrifty housewife can now replenish or furnish up the home. Come and get the bargains. Sideboard in Golden Oak $20 Largest line Chiffoniers in the city. Special prices on Bed Room Suits on Saturday. Velvet and Axminster Carpets, made, laid and lined, $1.00 per yard Body Brussels, made, laid and lined $1 per yard Extra SuperCarpet, made, laid and lined, pervard....70c 10 wire Tapestry, made, laid and lined, per yard....80c Alexander Frew, 1208 Main Street. BRIEF 3IENTIOMXGS. Events In and About tlic City Given in a Nutshell. A light police docket will lie In evidence this morning. Last night's arrests included iwo plain drunks. The contract for painting the county Jail office and county libraries has been awarded to James Marshall. His bid was $215. C. T. Bower, of Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, news agent of the Intelligencer, and M1h8 Elizabeth Bashor. of Mt. Pleasant, were united In.the holy bond of matrimony last night by Rev. J. B. Brown. Another of the series of Demorest silver medal contests will occur at the Chapllne street M. E. church this evening, under the auspices of the Epworth T m,i. s.nn.li.'.l-'wl ? M re l?f T ll.i.n Ilton. All are cordially Invited. PERSONAL NOTES. Going mid Coming of Wheeling I'eoplo and Visitors. Ed, Custer, of Grafton, registered at tho.Windsor yesterday. John W. Crawford, a Parkersburg oil man, is at the Stamm. R. D. Orcutt, of Mannlngton, was an arrival in'the city last'night. J. T. Hervey and Foster Leap were New Martinsville citizens in town yesterday. Eugene Hern and wife of Charleston, are visiting It. "\V. Jones, of No. 24 Vermont street, Island. William Ruddlck, of Mannlngton. is spending a few days In the city, a guest of friends in the Second ward. D. Abersold and wife, G. W. Abersold and Miss Maggie Fullerton, of Proctor, were guests of the Howell yesterday. Rev. S. II. Doyle, Rh D., who graduated at Franklin College. New Athens. Ohio, In 1887, has been called to a $1,500 church in Detroit. Past Department Commander Richard Robertson, coc-asslstant Adjutant General Joseph A. Arkle, nnd members of Holllday and Stephens posts, G. A. R., returned late last night from Terra Alta, where they attended the annual encampment of the West Virginia department. The meeting was most enjoyable and was largely attended. Mr. xwouvi icon wuure a nanusome pnsi commander's badge, presented to him by the department. Trouble in Drfulc. Many highly organized persons cannot digest even one cup of coffee a day. The trouble may not show directly In stomach, but Indirectly In bowels, liver, nerves, headache or in some other organ. Stop for ten days and see if you have uncovered the cause of your trouble. Take on Postuin Food Coffee. It furnishes a pleasant morning cup, and contains the selected food elements which quickly restore the nerves and structure or body to a noririal state. Demonstratablc fact; try it. Grocers furnish it at 15 and 23 cents. THE RAILROADS. The Central Ohio Railway Company, as reorganized, held its annual meeting Wednesday r?t Columbus. President J. H. Collins and the board of directors submitted the annual report, which was adopted. The opposition of certain Baltimore parties which has heretofore existed, having been withdrawn, the old board of directors, consisting of J. H. Collins, Columbus; George E. Bradfleld, Barnesvllle; A. B. Crane, Baltimore; J. W. Garrett, and George C. Jenkins, Baltimore; John R. Hall, Quaker City. O.; John Iloge, Kanesvllle; C. H. Kibler, Newark, O.; William. Kinn:y, Belmont. O.; David L#ee, Zanesville; D. C. List, Wheeling; W. W. IVabody. Cincinnati, and James Sloan, jr., Baltimore. u-jiv nn,inlmni)?h' Th.. ?. I organized by electing -T. H. Collins president for the seventeenth year; P. C. Sneed, secretary; \V. H. IJains, treasurer, and G. \V. Booth, auditor. A NYw K?x Car. At the Ensign car works of the American Car Building Company, at Huntington, in this state, are being built 2,000 box cars for the Southern Pacific of 100,000 pounds capacity, on lines differing from usual car construction. This car is 40 feet long and weighs 33,100 pounds, which Is less than the average weight of a 31 foot, GO,000 pounds capacity box car. To accomplish this end radical changes in the details of car framing have been resorted to, as also in the treatment of the materials and in their distribution to meet pre-determined strains. All essential M. C. B. standards have been adhered to and embodied in the car. In testing, one of these cars, loaded with three car-loads of pig iron, aggregating 136,000 pounds, was run over yard crossings, sidings and switches continuously during twenty-six hours. The deflection at the center of the car on Its camber line was but five-sixtenths of an Inch, and when the load was rempved the car resumed its normal position, or exactly the position It occupied before It was loaded. It Is claimed that such results have never been attained In any other design of car, that the Canda car is therefore the lightest and the strongest car ever built, and that, nslde from the great savlncr In tho hauHnir r.f the annual repairs would bo loss than one-half those of any other car?all of which will commend it to railroad managers. The same principles of construction are embodied in the GO-ton capacity, double-hopper, coni cars, which are also being built for the Southern 1'acltlc Co., and have a like saving in dead weight. In fact, the same principles of construction are aplled to all kinds of freight cars. Mr. C. P. Huntington hns for esveral years urged on Mr. Canda the growing necessity for cars of much lighter weight and of Increased carrying capacity. The car here described Is the outcome of these suggestions. The conditions Imposed by Mr. Huntington when placing the order for the Southern Pacific Company cars were that they should not exceed in weight 33.300 pounds and should carry 100,000 pounds with the usual factor of safety. Pan Handle Officials. Superintendent George L. Peck; Engineer of Maintenance of Way Cushlng; Trainmaster McCarty, and several other division officials of the Pan Handle were In the city yesterday utU rnnon on an inspection trip. They were shown over the company's lines In this city and Benwood. and left In the afternoon for Pittsburgh. Camp Grounds Meeting. A meeting of the Moundsvllle Camp Grounds Association was held last night in the water board's olllce, city building, and the attendance was large, VIee i'resident William Dowler presided. In the business transacted was the decision to have the scries of meetings at the grounds, conducted.by Hew J. Wesley II111, I). D? of Fostorla, O., and a prominent worker for the American Protestant University, Washington, D. C. The campvmccting will be held from August 17 to August 27. PAMI1/Y "WASHING. Rough Dry Washed, Starched and DvndlJ eniil* per pound. Vint Work, Wu^hed and Ironed, ft cents per pound. All hand work finished 10 cent4* per pound. At IitJT/, 1IHOS*. Miiur HoinoMcum Laundry* LIFE SAVED BY SWAMP-ROOT. Dr. Kllincr has Discovered a Reraedj That Cures all Klduey aud Bladder Troubles. | Swamp-Hoot, discovered by the eminent kidney and bladder specialist, Dr. | Kilmer, has truly wonderful power In | curing kidney, bladder and uric acid diseases. Kidney trouble Is responsible for more sickness nnd sudden deaths than any other disease. Your kidneys filter the blood and keep It pure. lly .special arrangement with the Intelligencer every reader will be pent by mall prepaid a free sample bottle and with It a book, telling more ubout Swamp-Root, and containing some ol the thousands of testimonial letters rec rived from sufferers cured. Please mentoln that you read thin generous ofter In the Wheeling Dally Intclllgenccr und send your address tc Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blnghamton, S. Y. If you are already convince^ that Swainp-Root la what you need, you car get the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes at the drug stores or from medicine dealers. Joseph F. Kline Demi. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Kline, ot Steubenvllle, received word Thursday that hei husband, Joseph F. Kline, had died ai Columbus hospital, where he had beer for eight years. He was born In Han cock counts'. W. Vcu, and was sixtylive years of age. He was married tc Mrs..Kline, whose maiden name was Burton, In Wheeling fifteen years ago and they removed to Steubenville twelve years ago. During the civil war he served In Company B, Sixth West Virginia. Besides his wife one son, Charles, survive, also three brothers Charles, of New York; William, ol Wheeling, and Elbrldge, of Bellalre, and a sister, Mrs. Mary Roberts, of Bellalre. He was a member of Ohio Lodge No. 1, F. & A. M., and of Wheeling Commandery. An Old Veteran Dead. About three weeks ago a person giving his name as John Sullivan appeared in the neighborhood of Mt. Pleasant, Apparently he had no object In view and remained around the Dlllonvale and Long Run mines, amusing children by drawing crayon pictures. He was stricken with paralysis and died at the home of James Galloway and was burled there In Highland cemetery Monday. He claimed he was a resident of Wheeling, also Benwood and McMechen, and that he was a soldier ol Company K, First West Virginia cavalry. He was seventy-two years old, height 5 fet 10 Inches, hair and mustache turning gray. He said he was a Wheeling editor, but no one knows the facts concerning him. ^ IitiildinK Notes. 1%. :vi. iiouiuay ec Company have secured the contract for putting up the additional story of the McLure house together with the three towers. The Paxton estate will put on an additional story to the building at 27 Twelfth street, occupied by C. E. VanKeuren. The contract has been let tc Louis Hartonp. This will give Mr VanK'.-uren live additional rooms. wvvvvvwv^^^wvwvvv^w^ >5 A Man >| Ate Nothing ;> For lunch for 10 days but ?' O Grape-Nuts and cream *\ >< It was a test to see if they S #> really furnished the / O nourishment claimed O He gained 4 pounds in 10 days. *4 That was the answer. J c> Found at Grocers. < | ^VWVW\V?WWWVVVW ^ nn ^ ^ I! ^ i 8 ^ i pr ll I l iP if* | \ 11 | wP * /?S1)v' ^ I \m *' I is: HI ^ I * I 2 { wli) .? $ per roll Cils -v m after p cSSM * *u. * m 1UIU UK C??3 .tft $ fcwh *T* <t> ff ml **? " \|P | sale an< ^ ju * y?u Pai VjS?? W | with 5f jjj not yet *!* * t\? (HM s 8 * if <f?| ^ | All Firu >} ? %e6 6 : | ioill * Jlraua Sftro*. ' Cyclist Apf 1 "We have provided for the cy . t attempted !n this vicinity. A1 i J a wheelman's costume you v In Bike Suits i you will find almost a perfect ) rlcs. " Prices range We also have a largo line of Golf Trousers. We show an entirely new sh effects In checks and large pli l . In Sweaters, Hosiery and Belts i son, and at the right prices. ( KRAUS WHEELING'S FOREM j Strictly One Price. THE IVnilCTDinC I f 1 lllv 11U/UO I IVILO. The American Manufacturer In Its current Issue publishes the following on the iron and steel .situation: "A heavy I tonnage In structural material has been placed- during the week. It will materially Increase the demand for pig Iron for the second half of the year. Prices continue to advance instead of relapsing, and1 it looks as though the mills that have not filled their wants for the ensuing six months will be severely nipped by expectant high prices. Almost every furnace .and mill in the country that can be put in shape is in operation, yet the demand has kept pace with output, in fact. Is ahead of it, as steel mills have turned away profitable orders including thousands of tons. Eastern wills seem to be paying more attention to export trade than western concerns. Tlx- export trade has caused s heavy Investments In eastern properties. It Is the'oellef that the tradecaptured can be held, and new conquests made." . 1 Flocrshcfm Mines Resume. j , Henry Floersh'elm, the Finlcyville coal operator, whose Germanla and Nottingham "mines, on the Wheeling division of the Baltimore. & Ohio, railroad, have = , been Idle for several months, will put them Jn operation on Monday. This will be o celebration of Dewey Day. Mr. T Floersheim says, ns the men are an- J i xlous to return to work. About four ' hundred are employed at the two mines, and all have had work at the pits in the neighborhood while these mines were idle. There are now one hundred vacant houses, but all will be filled before j the mines are started. 5 AMUSEMENTS. J The appearance at the Opera House 1 Tuesday night. May 2, of Mrs. Fiske will be signalized by the production of one of her most recent successes. She _ will appear here in a three-act play J by Miss Margue'rlte Merlngton, entitled "Love Finds the Way." In this play i Mrs. Flske reveals fresh phases of her i genius. In "Love Finds the Way" ahe * i* H? H? CDat 'MS l??f ru $ale~* still on==fbe prices a wonders! ;, 4c, 6c, $c, 10c, 12i . It's very provoking for one to gc urchasing Wall paper- elsewheri it your neighbor has been down I AAII1T A 6. i;ti ihigiiiii 5 i bought better paper at. half the id. We started this sale.a few da >,000 rolls. There are about 23,0( sold, or rather almost given awa; r East ?batice To get 5c Papers for ^ To get 8c Papers for k, To get 10c Papers tor To get 12c Papers for To get 15c Papers for n Papers Equally Reduced. sseceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee tft tft $* f^r ^ *$t ?i? f % Rcrrnt Siraus Sjrot. jarel. cllst this season in n manner never 1 that Is best, newest and tasteful in rill find here. t assortment of moit desirable fabFrom S4.00 to $12.00. separate , . -v? ape trousers. We have all the new. lids. Prices range.... from S2.00 to S6.00. we have all the novelties of the seaborne and look' them over. BROS., I0ST CLOTHIERS, 1319 Market . Street. issunies the role of an Invalid, MadeIne, whose line and sympathetic na;ure has hecome embittered by pain md fancied neglect. The part Is absoutely unique. It treats the emotional ilde of a woman's nature In a variety )f phases. Mrs. Flske portrays the rharactor with her usual commanding kill. It Is In the scope of her achievenents not less In their Individual truthulness and force that the genius of ktrs. Flske is shown. This new play dll be presented hero with the original cenle equipment of the New York proluctlon. Mrs. Flske is always noted or the excellence of her company, and his year her organisation is prolounced superior to any which hitherto ent her aid. Besides the favorites of ist season, Frederic de Belleville. 'W31rid North, Frank McCorinack, Sydney toweil, Jl Includes such popular and ex erienced players as John Craig-, Tyone Power, Olive Hoff, Gertrude Nornand and Gertrude Bennett. To see Irs. Flske Is to admire the work^f he greatest of contemporary Englishpeaking actresses. DIED. "URK?On Wednesday. April 26, 1R90, at X a, m., ELIZABETH TURK. In her 72d year. 'unoral will take place from her late residence, No. 3112 McColloch street, Friday afternoon, at 1' o'clock. Interment at Mt. Zlon cemetery. Friends of the family Invlti il to attond. Undertaking. r . r-\ 4 Louis tSertschy, FUNERAL DIRECTOR and ARTERIAL EMBALMER. 1117 Main St.?"West Sldo. Calls by Telephone Answered Day or sight. Sioro Telephone G33. Rcsldonco, )6. Assistant's Telephone. 635. AJexander Frew, 208 FUNERAL DIRECTOR A AIX ST. AND EMBALMER ** o* Under Competent Management. Telephones?Store. 220; Residence, 750. IRUEMMfcR f Funeral Directors r j and Embalmcrs. \ Cor. Market and 22d Sts. I1LDEBRAND ( > 3 w | "* ?? I V- Ijp w $ ID I ^ ?? ? $ .* AUS? ) home t a 3, and | ^ T g " price | ^ ^'" |f?| ys ago ? , ^k! )0 rolls | T |^ I tf* ^ 2c | *3? ft 6c | ft* !/K*v< I * J if ? ffr IP iawio^J.