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I; OMINOUS WEEK Of Qalct Reported in the Iron and Steel Markets. A WAITING CAME IS PLAYED (ByEverybody?Smaller Manufacturers Buffer for Shortage of Material, teles of Pig lion Few at Top Price*. Li|t?t Ball# Going np?Effecta of PoddJers Strike. PITT8BUR0H. Pa.. Aug. The American Manufacturer will say tomorrow: This has been another ominous week of quiet. Ifanufac&urers have been on a still hunt for stray lots of material, but without results. The market is cleaned g up of every ton of unsold stuff and & everybody is playing & waiting game, p' The smaller manufacturers who buy H from month to month are suffering II r from the shortage of material and many Ut ot these are beginning to close down or to lay off workmen as a result. Larger concerns having plenty of cash with which to do business are more fortunate, but are constantly complaining of the shortage. . Bales of pig iron for Immediate or future shipments have been few and at top-notch prices. While $20 is given as the association price for Bessemer pig I iron In the valleys, the last sale report- , ^ ' ed was made at $20 25. The assoelaP? tlon'a agent reports that there Is no | metal for sale, and hence the quotation | is nominal. An advance to $21 per ton j jjr , is freely predicted. , " . Light rails have been sold as high as ? $42 per ton, and standard section at $42. i Muck bar Iron has been disappearing from the market, the last quotation be-r:. ing $2 25 per hundred pounds. The . scarcity of puddlers and the strike at t uvoni ninnfi h?vA nnuiuxl a restriction of output. The demand has been ahead of the output for several months. In j, : the eastern and central parts of PennP sylvanla puddlers have been advanced ft* to |4 per ton, a price unknown for f many years, the wages paid at the beI' ginning of the year was 12 75 per ton for the same work. Pig Irons advanced J1 per ton In Chicago. Plates are $2 higher, and mer- , !' [ chant steel Is from $2 to 13 higher on some grades. STEEL FOR INDIA. Big Contract to be Filled by the Ponn- , sylvanla Steel Company t HARRISBURG, Pa., Aug. 2.-The ' Pennsylvania Steel Company to-day shipped forty-three carloads of bridge f.: and construction steel to one of the <f.: Pennsylvania railroad docks in New p, York City, and from there it will be sent !' by ship to India. It comprises one-half of the Iron to be used in the building of the huge viaduct across the Gokteifc f."', gorge, about eighty miles west of ManB dalay. The company will get 1700,000 ;> / for the piece of work. Twenty-flve of the steel company's I own force of expert workmen will ac[ company the steei on Its long trip \\>- across the ocean, to superintend the work of construction. The steel com' pany's contract calls for one-half of the fe structure to be built and shipped dur' v fng the first week in August, and the company is almost a week ahead of the time set. The remaining half of the big consignment will be shipped late In the fall ~ and the construction will be begun In |- November after the close of the rainy season. Has no In format ion. CLEVELAND. O., Aug. 2.-Gwnd tka nrnthcrhnml of tBJCl ATUIUI, l? wis ?v. 1 Locomotive Engineers, said to-day that no official information had reached him concerning the request of the Lake Shore engineer* for increased pay. i "The grand officers of the Brotherhood," said Mr. Arthur, "will take no action - in the matter unless the request should be refused by the company. In that case we should endeavor to adjust, the ) matter for the men." It Is stated that nearly 98 per cent of the engineers on the Lake Shore are members of the Brotherhood. About | 1,000 men would be benefitted by the advance asked for. American Tobacco Co/s Purchase. CHICAGO, August 2.?Representatives of the American Tobacco Company have purchased the plant and business of August Beck & Company, for 1300,000. Only a few weeks ago the American Tobacco Company purchased the plant of Cradle & Strots. The American Company, it is said, holds an option on the plant of Spaulding &' Merrick, the largest of the three firms engaged In the manufacture of smoking tobacco in Chicago. If the American company secures this plant It is their intention to enlarge it and operate all tho Chicago factories as one. Cotton Duck Combine. NEW YORK, August &?Members of the cotton duck trade In this city are in receipt of Information that the project to form n general combination or trust has been practically brought ton successful Issue, and that a meeting will be held In Baltimore to-day or tomorrow to complete the new organisation. The greater number of cotton duck mills have their headquarters In Baltimore and some of the large comA Young Girl's Experience. My daughter's nerve* were terribly out of order, titie whs thin and weak; the lenrt nolno startled h<*r, and Nhe wan wakeful at nlfljt. Jlefurn nhe hud taken one packago of Celery King the change In her was no Cent that nhe could hardly Iw taken for the me girl. Hhe H rapidly growing witll and strong, her complexion In perfect, and nhe nloopn well every night? Mrs. Lucy McNutt, J;ru?h Valley, lTa. (.'elery KlngcnresConntlpatlonandalldlaennetiof the Nervna.Mtomacn, I,iv#>r and Kidney*. Hold by druggists. 2'kj. aodK,:. 4 [umt to m mram wo. ma '"lam ao grateful to yon for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound hai dona (or me that I fael ss ????? though I mil Wnmiw tell about It. A "Tr- JW af? 1 waa Would Sure- taken rtrj ikk. ty Try Mrs. Doetorscouiddo Pfnirfnim'a 1X10 no f00* ??lj niMivwn ? to deaden the MedMneH pain which i They Only had almost conIfjuyf &attB stantly. I got 2*"'"'* some of your JHfWa King Compound and took one bottle and received benefit from it at once. I hare taken it ever since and now hare no backache, no pain in my ride and my stomach and bowels are perfectly well. I can honestly say that there Is nothing like It. If I could only tell every woman bow much good your medicine baa done me, thsy would surely tiylf?MisrEaM.Knia, Nobtb Attlxbobo, Mass. The way women trifle with health shows a degree of indifference that la pastnnderstanding. Happiness and usefulness depend on physical health; does a good disposition. Disease makes women nervous, irritable and snapplsh. The very effort of ailing women to be good-natured makea them nervous. Write to Mrs. Pinkham, she will help yon to health and bappineas. It costs nothing togetMra. Plnkham'a advice. Her address is Lynn. Mass. panics in that city are financially interested Jn this movement Options on seven plants expired on the last day of July, but it Is understood that arrangements were made to take them up. The name of the new corporation will be the Mount Vernon-Woodbury Cotton Duck Company, with a capitalization of $23,600,006. TWO ELECTRO ATIOXS la Auburn, Xow York, Prison?Both Were Suoccssftil. . AUBURN, N. Y., August 2.-OscarE. Rice, a white man, and John Kennedy, a. negro, were put to death by electricity In the prison here to-day. The two executions took place within twenty minutes. Rice was supported to the electric chair at 5:18 a. m., in a state of collapse, but Kennedy walked without Eisslstance. A current of 1,750 volts was sent through Rice's body for fiftyone seconds. The same current was kept on ninety seconds longer for Kennedy. The executions were successful and there was no unusual Incident. Oscar E. Rice stabbed and slashed his wife Mary with a pocket knife in their home in Westfleld. Chautauqua county, on the afternoon of March 25 last. The woman ran Into the roadway, where Bhe fell. Rice threw stones at her while she lay helpless and then cut his own throat. Rice's wound was not very serious, but the woman died. John Kennedy stabbed John Humminim nine times In Hummlngs' room In Buffalo, on October 9. 1898. Hummings died almost Instantly., Both men were negroes. The murder was committed because Hummings, who lived with a woman named Minnie Lewis, ejected Kennedy from the woman's room. Kennedy resisted and was worsted in a fist fight. He borrowed a clasp knife from his room-mate and returning to Hummings' place stabbed him to death. New Species of Bass. Special Dispatch to the Intelligencer. MARTINSBURG, W. Va.. Aug. 2.?A new species of bass Is being caught In the Potomac river near here. Thomas Hughes, a veteran fisherman, caught six In a short time. The bass Is of the large mouth kind. It is greenish In color and Is said to be broader than the black bass. About 500 of these bass were put in the river a few years ago. Mr. Hughes says he has to give up fishing now on account of the polluted condition of the river, which has driven the fish up the side streams. Very little of the polluted water is getting in the river now below dam No. 6, where It is fed into the canal, yet, Mr. Hughes says, the fish cannot stand -even the small quantlty'that gets belotf thedam. The water has assumed a coffee like 1__ Bi.Ur.?mon (ln<1 ? h(l f f h? nollu cuiur. riimciuivii . tlon is of such a progressive character, that they have to go further down the river each year In order to catch fish. Postmaster* and Pensions. Special Dispatch to the Intelligencer. WASHINGTON, D. C.. August 2.? Pensions have been granted to the following West Virginia applicants: Original?Kufus B. Champ. Jones' Springs, 16; David Watt. Wheeling. $6. Increase?Christopher C. Allies, Huntington, 512 to $17. Reissue?Daniel Hill, Waterloo, $17. New postofflces have been established In West Virginia, as follows: Manown, Preston county, with Jesse M. Johnson as postmaster: Lilly, Summers county, with John W. Hedrick as postmaster. The offlcc of Fllnttown, Roane county, haa been discontinued, the order taking effect July 31 last. S. H. Odell has been appointed fourth class postmaster at Fowler Knob. Nicholas county. W. Vn., and William II. Layfleld has been commissioned as postmaster at Cokeley's, W. Va. Petitions In Bankruptcy. Special Dispatch to the Intelligencer. CHARLESTON, W. Va., August 2.Isaao Borstein, of this city, has filed a petition In bankruptcy In the United States district court here. He gives his liabilities at $2,726, the greater part of which was contracted in Nashville, Tenn., with no assets. Petitions In bankruptcy have also been filed by M. Ordway, of Hlnton, nnd William Derbyshire, of Bluefleld, .Ordway's liabilities are $1,388, and Derbyshire's are $400. Neither has any assets. Ingenious West Virginians. Special Dispatch lo the Intriilucncpr. WASHINGTON. D. C., Auugst 2.? Patents have been granted to the following West Virginia Inventors: Alphonso F. Ulake. and E. W. Cox. Cox's Landing, window shade attachment. Thomas R. Carakndon, vehicle body. William L. Noble, Roe, rotary-knife. William II. RlfTel, Harold, handle for Implements. Belgium's New Cabinet. BRUSSELS, August 2.?The delay In forming a new cabinet Is due to the dlfllculty experienced In selecting u new :?? minister of war who will be both an officer and pledged to the principle of personal, military service. 11. De 8met de Mayer, who Is attempting to form a ministry in succession to that of 14. Van der Pereboom, which resigned yes. terday on account of the rejection of the government's electoral proposals says the new cabinet will be unanimously in favor of an electoral bill embodying proportional representation. THE PRESENT OUTBREAK Of Yellow Forer Tffll Give Opportunity for Investigation. WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.?The present outbreak of yellow fever at the Hampton Soldiers* Home will give the army corps an excellent opportunity to extend an investigation they have been prosecuting for two years past into the nature of yellow fever and the be?t modes of combatting it. The marine hospital service which is In charge of the quarantine In the Infected district has been doing similar work and Dr. Wasdln, the surgeon placed as an expert In the Hampton home. Is one of the two marine hospital surgeons who re cently returned from Cuba, where they ' studied the disease in its permanent home and made collections of culture for future study in the Washington labaratory. The medical world aj present Is very generally of opinion that the specific bacillus of yellow fever has not yet been Identified. Kecent announcement was made by 8anarelU, an Italian scientist, that he had segregated the germ of yellow fever and this claim was later confirmed by a Brazilian bacterologlst after somewhat less exhaustive research. Surgeon General Sternberg, of the army, who Is regarded as one of the foremost bacteriologists, made a close study of the subject and Isolated a bacillus which he did not claim was the spceiflc germ of yellow fever, but one worthy of closer study, calling It for convenience the bacillus X." The army medical museum under General Stern- j berg's directions took up the subject j and Doctors Reed and Carroll recently Issued a preliminary note on the museum's Investigation in which they set forth the statement that so far as determined the bacillus <of Sanarelli and the bacillus X of Sternberg were Identical in their general form and their effects on the lower animals and that both seemed to be identical or very closely allied with the bacillus of hog cholera. The Lesions produced by the three germs were the same and samples of the suspected fever germs submitted to some of the most expert scinetlsts in the line of agricultural chemistry an ai.ln.at InXnafrv war a nrnnounpcd to be the germ of hog cholera. This seemed to leave the question open, but Doctors Reed and Carroll are continuing their researches with the Intention of locating the active principles In yellow fever, whatever it is. Meantime Dr. Doty, the health officer at New York, claims to have confirmed Sanarelll's discovery and is carrying on a series of curative experiments with a serum for the destruction of the Sanarelli germ. The army general medical officers say, however, that no germ which can stand a temperature of 3S11 degrees below zero can be the germ of j yellow fever, which is known to cease j its ravages on the appearance of frost. . The Sanarelll germ was recently sub- | merged in frozen air and came out ready for business. The report of Drs. Wasdin and Geddlngs, of the marine hospital, on th?tr | Cuban researches has not yet been, made public, but It Is understood they agreed with Sanarelll. PLAIN, EASY READING. It Will do you Good to Ponder Over it. A Splendid Article Which nil the TELEPHONE GO-BETWEEN. What the Girl who Doru the Heat tor Yob Ring the Bell pays At* Hep Work?She Never Listens. New York Times: "So," said the 11 lady at the telephone, "it is absurd thick that a telephone girl listens to conversations that are going on over wires. At the central office each i has fifty wires, and you may imag she Is too busy to pay any attentior anything that Is said except as catches a word here and there. 1 have to keep going over the wire* to ten and see if people are talking still they have the people they wish, of they have finished. But when you going constantly from one to the ot of the fifty you may be sure that you not get a very connected Idea of wha going on. Th?>n vnu art? not supposed to 1U There is always some one looking ai the girln at the central office and If t were found listening to the conversai the would be discharged?not the t time, perhaps, but after once or tw Then, a telephone girl can't talk o the wires to any one on her lines exc to answer questions, and she can't swer back If people get cranky, can't tell anything that goes on over wires, either, if she happens to cs any of it. There are a great many port ant things that are said one i and another. "I knew one girl, though, who use< get good tips on the races, and she u to play them, too. I don't know how did it. I shouldn't understand It. used to tend that wire sometimes, bi never knew what they were talk about. The only time when a girl ml have a chance to listen at all if wanted to would be Saturday afterm when there Is not so much going on, v a few girls at the office and the w are quiet. I knew one girl who wa switchboard operator, who had a o talk over her lines with his girl. ( day she got the line for him, and he y telephoning and central called her up " 'Did you hear what that man ^ saying?' she asked. " 'So.' she said, 'I wasn't paying tention.' " 'He called me up.' said fcentral. * cause he didn't get the connection rlf You ought to have heard all he had say to that girl.' Then she told her w It was. "Can central hear me when I am ta Ing?' asked the man when he came of the telephone box. " 'Oh, no,' said the girl. 'Central cz hear.' But she did that time. "It Is to get to be a switchboard erator that most telephone girls 1 though If all the managers at the c tral office are pleasant and easy to along with they like the work there. I telephone girl likes her work, anyw She is kept busy all the time, and doesn't know where the time goes She 1b sorry to stay at home. There are a great many large bualn Arms that have switchboard ope rat now. They have anywhere from a a en or more room? In a building to connected, so that When a man wanti talk to anyone in the building he do? have to go up or down stairs, an< number of people can be talking outf at the same time over the four trt lines. The switchboard operator's wort easy compared with that of a telepb girl In the central office. Where central girl will have fifty wires to tend to. and is rushed all day from < to the other, she will only have ten. i part of the time she doesn't have a: thing to do. It is pretty hard for hei ft rat when she makes the change, am is all she can do to keep awake with little to do. But it Is very satlsfactt for the switchboard operator has all holidays: she never has to work on S days, she Is responsible only to the fl she works for. and the rules are not strict. Most of the girls try to switchboard positions. Usually the fl that wants an operator sends to the c tral offlo', and they send some one knew one girl who got a position for h self. The Arm that she went to sent to the central office and asked then they would send down Miss Smith. " 'She's no operator.' they said thf we will send you some one else wh< first class.' " 'We don't care about the operatl We can Judge about that for ourselv said the firm, and she got the posltloi "No; wearing the receiver is not noylng. and telephoning doesn't afl the hearing, at least it never affec mine. I have known some girls wh It made deaf. Sometimes It make? y ear sore to wear it. They are train some girls now to wear the receiver the right ear. so that they can use t ear in receiving. I don't believe I cc hear except with my left ear, I am used to taking the messages on t side. This Is most convenient, too. " always see people use the other klnt receiver with the left hand, and pu to the left ear. Then you have right hand free to write and the wlr not In the way. "To be a first class operator, n ought to be calm and self-possessed, of the kind who never gets rattled loses her head. It Is a strain when : have fifty wires to attend to. with i pie talking on all of them st once, sc the people they want, while you h of them complaining that they don't shutting off this one and putting someone else. "Then business men are pretty ap! be cranky. They are nervous and I hurry, and they don't see why they cr (ret the man thry want to speak to f thing. They don't realise that ceni has forty-nine other wlr** and c: give them her undivided attent! Some girls will sort of Jolly a man al< when hi* Is cranky. and say *numl please.' amiably and get him In a bet temper, but If a girl is nervous and man who Is cranky calls up she Is to snap out, 'Number,' as hatefully she can. "The telephone girl gets to know I little while the people on her lines v are pleasant, and she docs the best \ can for them always, though I must i the man who Is very cranky pet* wal on as soon as possible, for the girl anxious to i?et him out of the way. makes a lot of trouble for her if shr reported in any way. and ph?? likes ' work and will do the best sh?? can kepp It. "The telephone girl doesn't h cnouph of th?- conversations that go over h?r wire* to know the bu?lnesn the different people who are on the wl the most oft??n unless she happens see something about them In Ihe pap* and then she remembers the nam. s n knows who they are. She doesn't i any of the general Information that n one else coming In contact with so tnn different kinds of people would get." ALWAYS ask your grocer for Whi Ing Bakery Bread. Oood. Big. Che ITCHING piles? Never mind If i erythlng else failed to cure you. n Doan's Ointment. No failure there, cents, at any drug store. llcmarkable Krscnc. Mrs. Michael Curtain. Plalnfield. 1 makes the statement, that she caui fold, which settled on her Ionics: i was treated for a month by her fain physician, but grew worse. He told 1 she wus a hoj>elc8s victim of connun tlon and that no medicine would t\ her. Her druggist suggested Dr. Kin New Discovery for Consumption; t bought a bottle and to her delight fou herself benefited from first dose, f continued Its use and after taking > bottles, found herself sound and w< now does her own housework, and Is well ai she ever was. Free trial bott of this (ireat Discovery at I^ogan Dr C'o.'s drup store. Only BO cents and $1 every bottle guaranteed. OAflTOFlIA. Bun th? 1 to Kind You Haw Always Bou People are >otr laming Much About. What wo say Is plain, easy reading and will do you good. The people of West Virginia arc saying a great deal about Morrow's Kld-ne-olds Just now because Morrows jviu-ne-uiu? na?c cured so many bad cases of backache, sleeplessness and nervousness in this city. Morrow's Kld-ne-olds is a scientific preparation prepared in yellow tablet form, and acts directly upon the kidneys and nerves. Do not connect Morrow's Kld-ne-olds with any kind of kidney pills; they are yellow tablets and put up In wooden boxes which contain enough for about two weeks' treatment, and sell, at fifty cents a box at all drug stores. We ask you to read what a gentleman has to say about the great merit of Morrow's Kld-ne-olds. Mr. M. V. Oraham. 1222 Fourth avenue. Huntington, says: "Some time ago I was feeling badly; I had pains across the small of my back and was generally run down. I had no appetite and could not sleep well at night and it seemed that I would be more tired In the morning when I would first get up than when I went to bed. I would have headache frequently. Some of my friends had been greatly benefited by Morrow's Kld-ne-olds and Morrow's Llverlax, no I got some at the drug: store and was cured in a week after I bejenn taking them." Morrow's Kld-ne-olds are not pills. | but Yellow Tablets and are for sale at | < 'ha*. It. Goetzt's drug store. Mor- | row's Llverlax are small red granules i and cure constipation and biliousness. Kld-ne-olds fifty cents and Llverlax twenty-five cents each per box. Description books mailed upon request by John Morrow & Co., Chemists, Springfield. Ohio. NOTHING like good bread on the ta- j ble; always get Wheeling Bakery's. Tiller Iii (Jiiurantiiic. NEW YOUK, August 2.?The adjutant general at Havana has cabled the i police department at New York to ap- I prehend L. L. Sloane. a passenger of the Ward line steamer Havana, which | arrived yesterday from Havana. Sloane j who In on Hoffman Island under the I usual quarantine detention, Is accused , of stealing $1,000 from the military authorities at Havana. He will be ar- | rested to-morrow. The bout of njl rilla uroWIEOIIAM'H. Bon. Ami Cleans and Polishes m*yTMUIO--MINT, MKTALS AND OUH, ATM TUtS, OILCLOTH, TIN WANK AND MANOS. J 1 . %f- ? ' * ' i^hhbihhhhhhbibbihhwhhbhhhhhh i p^lCASTflRlfl = ?py l?iiSLL!,?'i!Ln | jTlie Kind You Have - g?ims?l Bearathe A/A> K Signature /Ayi IS! Prtmwtes Digesflon.ClrerM- Xj/ W s ksbsks: of /r\K jjj* SotNahcotic. tch %/Vn' lro" n^: ,Mn-.<MunJVQBt ly | i I & In I %Stu>' [ 11 IJ1 S s?g*J ft J. Use I S^SSg Ur For Over f.S aess and LOSS OF SLEEP- W I Ul WIUI t ttS2^ Thirty Years NEW YORK. * j "g CflSTORIB n'1 ^ ??BB? rin. ry. ?n- " ? 1=3 ?tquori financial. josTsETBOLD, Cashier. t ALL WHISKIES J. A. JISFFERSON. Au't Cashier. Are good, but aome are better than others. fiANK Qp WHEELING. ?- We Sell the Best. I to Silver Age Rye, CAPITAL fSOO.OOO. PAID IX. |?^ SI.50 per quart. $6.00 per gallon. WHEELING, W. \'JL ' Bear Creek Rye, ' tnk ? _ ' ^ _ ? DIRECTORS. St00 per quart, $4.00 per gallon. AIIen Brock> Joseph p. Paun. >n# CdrfoetR,* ???fS!&n. BttSB"? 7Sc Si0? f" 9?"??* Interest p.ld^.Sedir'dipo.lu. ?. Wo guarantee theso Whiskies to b. "W/pH WyBOLD,"1 pure and old, and on every order of myll Cashier. at one bailee or over. jgANK OF THE OHIO VALLET. ? WC ^ "Ch"^ CAPITAL-,. 7S.OOO. 'H*. and ship by express or freight, de in- pendtn. on the distance. No char*. WILLIAM A. I6ETT PreslUwil rm for packing, or shipping, either. MORTIMER POLLOCK....Vice Presides! so m , Drafts on England. Ireland. France ?ai p.*" Try a sample gallon?we knew we Germany. rm c*** please you. 2 MAX KLEIN, j William A. Isett, Mortimer Pollock. I ' ^ A. MUler. ftobert Simpson, I ' if Wholesale Liquors, ' ~ifim. piii&'k.Fr,"*a lai? J A. MILLER CwlHtr. re: 82 ffenl Street. All.,ten* Pa. OF PUBUCATION. I Bend for complete catalogue, mailed free. V/ I ng. ?~ The State Of West Virginia, Ohio County, i. iHy^j c|rcuJt ^ourt of Ohto county. West Co^tr^innn v?* Merman 8. Counj>ur The Stato^Weat Virginia to the Sheriff on VRMk^ HHHrj) ,,^'e command you that you summon hat /1Q^ IP^Bm Herman 6. Countryman. If he be found la uld i'TV/ \r/y\T\% 5*?ur bailiwick. to appear at the clerk's \ nA/y >tWA' office of the-icircult court of Ohio county so yn&r i j*?\ i qij, at rules,to ,be hold for the said court on ? h AlYf -^*?^ Y,l.!YVru t.Mak the first Monday In July. 1199. to answer rmt J hill In * chancery exhibited against 1 w- - ? - \fln- I nle CounfJyman. and have' then I 1 11 \YL\*> /v>Z"WKsll //D> and tharfr this writ. Witness, C. H. th* K jCTr/ I ?nwW\ Hennlng. ,/tferk of our said court, at the ? 1s hCrr&Ci I U LHMhk court house'of said county, in the city of ^^Hlv LjPwkS&A/iJi Wheeling, tho 22d day of June, 1899, and la Hrl nBIlN lUtlKMvrcii *Wmrrrl the thirty-seventh year of the state of ?n" j JK'fNjm y&K We8t V,Wnla* C* H* HENNINO.^ or SIIEry^P'S RETURN ? Herman* 8. POU . ~ JL jH CCA4 f f A c Countryman Is no inhabitant of my bailleo ) wick no^'round therein, this 3d day of ^ jju D. B. ror II. C. Richard,'. S.^O.^C. *m.._ . ft) The objert of this suit la to obtain a J*on M pi I$2I>?JS.S?,auc*?llke COATED WW creo for a divorce from the bonds of mata* Mcle,ne< c*n cute m rimony from the defendant by the plain: to ;W them. Kach one produces as much \f tiff. n n \ 1 SStTI. .????con* (i And it appearing from an affidavit filed in't id t V 42?*1!* raSn I?y ,n *a,d causo. at these rules. that the deirst fli ?S2jh?5 '^Ti1*' W fendanU Herman S. Countryman. is not i "5 ofner^.^,^1 Tm of the state of West Virginia. and u V ftv M hp not having been aerved with nrooeSiln in 1 7* 8?Fv on motion of the complainant by on. t\ lybydrJJhnJiib^MtiS-toSS fr hrr *Uo.mey. this order of publication U mp ?J| healthy cirealatiorLcure indlee* Ik entered against him. and it is ordered that )?*r, m tion, and I^mrt bouodinc Ifcof to R\ th?' * ? defendant above named, be and ter fl the whole ?vstem Ail wMkMlns rD ,s required to appear within one month the aB *nd tli.ueJlestrovinff drains sn5 W after the date of the first publication of H lo,?Dei; f) <hl? anil ,lo wh.t to nKfiMnr" I ll) m*y oi"->o IhmoIit, Contumption \t pro??K-t hi' IM.ixtn. II I* furth.r orJ'r*! ^ \j| and Death. tt t'mt orxlor bo published and posted aa M rrice. || per bo*: sir boxes (with W% r^ui^ed by law. n n m iron-clad guarantee to curr or re- PB " lU\?ss. C. 11. Hennlnjr, clerk of our aaid :ho ^ fund money). Is. Book containing mf court, at tho court house of said county. ,C? ^ gMitlvc pSoVInT^AdJreaP?a <luy of July. 1K9. lo-wlt: July ,?? Medldno Ce? Cievalaad, O. Rules, 1S59. C. H. I! EN NINO. Clfrtu iP? For Sale by Charles R. Ooetxc, Druggist, Published tho first time July 6th, ISM. Is Twelfth and Mnrkr-t Streets. AtteaU It ============================ C. H. HENNING. Clerk In T. M. GARVIN, Solicitor for Cojnplalr.ant. DEPOSITION NOTICE. DC a I PQTATP Minnie Countryman, plaintiff, vs. Herra?? >nr I\C/\L? CO 1AIC S. Countryman, defendant, in the circuit court of Ohio county, West Virginia. n* - e m The above-named defendant will take ' I if-1 Ck I nciiranrp notice that the depositions of Minn e *7* I ILIC 1 lloUS QllL/Ca Countryman, (leorge Charnoek. Aanle to Charno< k. Mattle Charnork. Lisile *-har? rs, rock. Nellie Charnock and Jamee M^Carn nd if you purchase or make a loan on real f} t,,' ?dire of T. M. owj ret . . . . v'?. 5^13 Chaplino atreet. in the clt> ot nv have tha tltlo Insured by the Wheeling In the county of Ohio, stnte of West Virginia, on the 14th day of AuRtisi, n> A. D. 10* between the hours of 9 o clock WHEELING TITLE & TRUST CO lUVfn ?iSrk,pH,T - ^ el- cause on behulf of the above-named a.p. Hff. And If. from any cause, the takins No. 1305 Market Street. of ,ho HH,tl de|>oaltlons shall not be cow,,>U3 ' ?<rc?. m..nc,-d. .,r bi\ng commonod. Khali ? > "* be completed on the day aforesaid. ?n? ry H. M. RUSSELL President taklr.K of the same will be adjourned ffw# RO K P. 8TIKKL. Secretary day to day. or from time to time until tn? 3 C. J. RAWLINQ Vice President same shall be completed, \VM. H. TRACY Ass t. Secretarj T. M. OARV1V Q. It. E. GILCHRI8T..Examiner of Tltlss Attorney for Minnie Countryman. ? To Herman S. Countryman. i>Al SaitA,r,. pUCATKOKWILU ' Utlrr. or Iho Clerk of the Counly rourt iyr HYGEIA DAIRY. ?i owo co.n,y. ' lo the nuitter of the probate of the ia ,r , Ilealihy milk must be derived from and testament or K. Key Mc . healthy cows. Wo have our herd examined diseased. -u i every month. Ask to see the Inspector's The object of the petition filed m *.. he I certlOcatr. . matter on the *th day of July, 1W ' nd have admitted to probate a MperW"" ? he ci.inrA.1 .... ..... . purporting to be the last will an?l te ,lx SIMPSON, "The Milkman,'* ment of F. Kay McDonald, deceased,_hw .ii. ln?j date on the 12th day of September. . ' ' 'PHONE 917. 1K10 MARKET ST. And It appearing from an affldarlin ,aM : with ine In my office that John 1*7 j,. *1 >00K PRINTING? a who Is In said I?MU? ot J* Ji Illustrated Catalotuea, plain or m ?iH,r<fald Slll lalTi1 m)n"refldert of this f0' Sja.sptrrfS JOU PIUNTJNa? MUHt?"nJ .ut. ifoSLld on ^ 'J^i Lards, Hill Heads, Circulars and all day. the 30th day of AURUit. 1W. fjr fM kinds of Job Work done at reasona- o'clock a. m., and do what Is "jecesw tie prices The best colors only used to protect his interest In suld matter. In the pr.nlIng of all work. Published the Hrst time fl'K 1NTKLI.TGBNCBR RICHARD R01IKHTW>N. Cle?j ?OB PRINTING OFPIca Geo. R. E. ailchrist. Attorney.