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The Wheeling daily intelligencer. [volume] (Wheeling, W. Va.) 1865-1903, August 11, 1879, Image 3

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84026844/1879-08-11/ed-1/seq-3/

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" C1NIRAL WOTIOM? .T!
I JJOTIOR- '
I Notice li berth; given thrft from and after thU 4lt
I ilijr Of Auguit, 1879,1 dull ctrrr on tto pharmaceuI
tirmJ and drug buiinrae at my old aland, Odd Fel<
I ion lulldlnn, on the aouthweet corner of Cfaipllm
I idJ Twelfth atreeta, Wheeling, W. Va., u agent foi
Wto. H. flltapeon, truitee, 4c.
I Jut BDMUWD BOCKIKQ.
jjjofiCK TO CONTRACTORSs?l?l
uropuaaU will to race!ved at the nOce of Uie
p,C. Abuu li. W. (Jompanj at Wheeliog, Weet
Viiglnla, until 8ATUBDA Y, AUGUST 16, H7?. tor
lb*jwing work for the jhowrni Kxtanalon of tha
j?, W. A Kj. II. B. below Wheeling:;
Two (2) ?pati?, at M each, of Howa Truaa Hrlilce
ottr Wheeling C'rwk, together with tha neoaeaarr pUe
fMixUtiuu and ueeile eupporta lor tha same. .
One (I) ap^n, SO feet, of Howe Trua Bridge over
jkg<'aMun, together with the nrctaaar) pllafounda*
tieoi and trntle auppnrta fur Uie attue.
About 7,130 lineal feot of 1'lla Treatle, with tha
Cap*. 3trio<era, Bracn, Croat Tlca and Iron work for
u>? aue.
About 15,000 cuttle jarda of Excavation nnd Em
Uokufot.
Propoeala will l? rocelved for each of the above
?!? . 'Qui Haai or for the whole. I
I'Iim and ipetIBcailoov of the work ran'be seen at I
tbf offlip of J. M. Belleville, agent of the P., C. A Hi.
j II. (V. Co , at Wheeling, aftur Monday, August II,
if>;y. The 11.11. CO. rnervee tho rl*ht to reject toy
i, all pntfoaak H. J. BKCKKH, 7
lui Chief Engineer if., W. A K.
UKALEDPROPOSALSCmr
Clkrk's Ornci, >
WuKBLtXO, W. Va., Aug. GtU, 1879,/
Kralnl proposals will be received at the office of the
CUT fieri uutll TOKHDAY ,AUOU8T 12TH, 1873,at *
uVJurkH. m , lor the n-rooflug of the Heeoad **rd
Xirkti llimw. HI*** will he recolred for * shingle
rwtot the brat Quality of I'loe Bhlogles, to be laid
four and one-half ituhw to the woathor. Alao, bids
lot tbf hwt quality of Tin, Hate and Iron Kooflng,
Mill I'M* io Mao much perw|uar?. lilda tobeiddrew*
? i i, the dial i man of the Committee on Markets. The
Gramltt* on Market* reserve the right to reject any
or all bldi For any Information, enquire o( M. Edvii'la,
clerk os Wtfjnd Ward Market.
E. LABKIN,
iuft Chairman oj the Committee on Markets.
ORUCS, PAINTS, AO.
Do Not Leave Home
WITHOUT A BOTTLE OP
REED'S
DIARRHEA REMEDY!
The only mfeand sure cure for Diarrhoea, Dysentery,
Flux, Cholera Morbus, Ac.
??ti
We guarantee tho Itemedy In every case
wlisn ti.wd according to directions.
NO CURE ! NO PAY !
TRIOR FIFTY CENTS FER BOTTLE.
HOUSTON & BAER.
Proprietors*
WHEELING, W. VA.
IJ'
ATTORNEYS.
N. CURTIS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Ko. 1220 Cliapline street,
Jfl2 Wuwtwo, V. W>.
joun jacob. | x. o. auciirt | ir. B.;vjuouaaoK
JACOB, CR AC RAFT & FERGUSSON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
1IW Cbapllne Street, WHEELING, W. VA.
Will pracllee in the Court* ot Ohio, Bro?ke tod Mar ball
countlea, in the Federal Courta, and lotbe Huprttn*
Court ol Ainn-ala of Wcat Virginia. Jytf
J. W. C'OWBEN,
ATTORNEY A1 LAW,
Otfici, No, 1222 'Thapline St.,WiOTLiKO, W.V*.
Prompt Attention to |U) biuinns. ]?"-<Uw
J R.COWDEN, '
ATTORNEY AT I.AW,
No. 1222 Chaplino Street,
iuy31 Wintguwo, W. Va.
?'ci LEWIS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
1142 Chajlikr STKirr, WajatUHO, W. Va.
i*nctlcea In All Ohio and Wot Vir\lul* Court*.
CollecUoni I ml rotiYcyauclng gltpu 5l>eclal nttontlon.
del 8
J. D. KWINU. T. fl. JttLXT.
jgWING & RILEY,
ATTORNEYS AT LA TF,
1160 Main Stiem, up stairs, nozt door to tiie
Rxchange Rank,
apr3 WnKEijyq, W. Va.
1J1 J. HUG1J8,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Office, 71 Twelfth Blroet, Whkkluo, W. Va.
Practices in the 'Jourta of Ohio, Marshall and
Tyler counties. W. Va. nov!7
JJANN1BAL FORBES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Ofllco, Custom Houae.
3?12 Whiklimo, W. VA.
QKORGE P. LLNOH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Office, No, liOGEhnpUno Street, Odd Fellpwi'
liailding, Ki?m No. 1,
mr25 'Vm'klibq, W?ct Ya.
J AMES P. ROGFJUJ,
ATTORNEY AT J.AW,
Ho. 1207 lTh?j -line 8Lreet, opp, ihrCourt House,
MO WiiwaiKd. W. V?.
?)ANLEI. LAMB,
attorney at u1f,
No. 1318 ^Market Street, (over City Bank),
Whxmjko, W. Va.
J?J
CAS AIIO STEAM FITTINC.
yyANTED,"
EVERYBODY TO CALL
?XT?
humble & mimm
plumbing establishment,
Wlt.? Market Street,
A.nd examine
XUTZ PATENT
Iron h ydrant & Street Washer,
TH. * BEST IN THE MARKET.
They cai ? be repaired without digging up
Joar patero ?nt or yard.
PATENTS.1EVIH
? * UICKEL, Solicitor*.
P*UnU profiu ed on >'ew Invention* In from15
toaodivi. ?eud furclrcuUr couUlnint useftilintormaUon.
Oflie e. 181 Filth Avenne, above
fcalthfltld it mi, * >pp. M.K. Church, flttobtughtftu
SHIPPING TAG8.?WB ALWAYE
10 hareon hand?fc U linoo! VENXMOySSiUP
?22wr** -vnsgmSXSSr
3ft awl 37 I'purtMnUi 81
. MIDIOAl.
Simmoni' Liver Regnl&tor or Bedlolna
i Utmlnatljr anhllrlMlclM; bfMDf k?pl
, ready for Immediate resort will mti many au hour ?
Buffering aud many a dollar la tluia and doctors' bill*
Altar oter Forty Yarn* trial U la allll receiving tb?
i moat unqualified taatluionUla to Itarlrtuea Iron pff,
son* of the highest character and responsibility. KntU
neat phyalelanscommend It foralldlaeawisof tueLlvn
AH AM BFPCCrOAL SPECIFIC.
OPINION OF THE CLERGY.
Simmokb' LtVM? RMtfLATUR la crrtaluly
a apedfl i for that claa* ol complaints
which It elalm* to euro* II any of our
fallow helup aio auSMng (row hepatic
dlaortleraand bare doubta In relation to
the elfloaor of tbla popular preparation,
wa can only oltor them the simple and eau>
did argument of Philip to Nathaniel,
"Come aad MO." Try tbe j>roposcd reinady
and then you can JudgWor yomseltrca.
-ftor.Darld Wlllla, Pastor of Presbyterian
Chureb, Macon, Ua.
TAKK
SIMMONS' LIVER,
REGULATOI1.
I Tub Symptom* of Um complaint iri
uneasiness and pain Id the slue. Horn?*
limes the pain la lu the shouldor, and is
I UmAKMM for rbsumatUm. Tbo iountek
la aflectod with urn or ArcimxK and
ftickoo* bowels in general com vs. soinetlmeaslterlng
with lax. Tho jihad fa Iron*
bled wltb pain, aud dull, heavy sensatlou,
considerable lom ok Mkmoxy, aa-onmanlod
with painful scniation ol having
Lurt undone something which ought to
have bean done. Often cotnpbdulag of
weakness, dkmlity ?nd low spirit*.
! Bonetlmcs Iumy of the above symptoms
attend the disrate,and at other times very
lewoftbetn, but the live* la generally
the organ moat involved.
The Chenpeit, Parent iutd Host Family
Medicine in the World!
. ForDYSPEPHIA, OOK811 PAT I ON, Jaundice, Bilious
attacks, HICK HEADACHE, Colic, Deprmlon
of Bplrits, 8UUH HTUMAt'H, Heart llurn, Ae., Ac.
ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE,
MAMUrACTUKBD DT
J. H. 2EIUN & CO., Philadelphia, Pa.
Price ftl.OO. Bold by all Druggists.
Jf2iMWr*W
DR. HENRY MOTT'S
FRENCH POWDERS
Will cure Dlseeucj ot the Kidney*, Grave), Gleet, and
all Urinarv DIimum. Nimm nahlllt* I?( vi.?.
hood, tfcmkal Kutlaalon, Impotcncy caused by Imliieretlon
In youth, Excteree, Ac. FomnluWeakneM or
JJhltee, Hgnfula. Syphilis io all 1U forms, and all
Blood and SkJii Dimum speedily cured.
sratWUBttHOUCURED IN in H0UB8.-W
- lfor sale In Wheeling, WMtYlrelnla, by EDMUND
BtH 'KINQ (Ag't), Druggist, Odd Pellow/lIilL IYk*
3 00 per box. Bent by iaa?l, Meure from obMrrtllon,
on receipt of price. polfl
BOWEL COMPLAINTS
ct'hkd 1iy
PERRY DAVIS' PAIN-KILLER]
\OA(\ For thirty-nine yeara it his bad no IQ'in
IOH-U ?|u>l Id curing co? it C'bolrrn, lO/O
Cholera .lloi-btiN, iHurrhtcii, and all llowe]
Complaint*. Dunug the uiuiuer monthaurerj
houicuol4 should hare a botile nrar at hand for Immediate
um. Prlca?2fic, 60c and |1 per bottle. Hold
et cry where. jy?
einnni^
U
Pronrtttor. Adrico foe In alfdbooca. Call'or writ*
V AT JTION? Wrawer on bottle <> y*lto? prim ltd in
kiui, has pill mT?Umt,i%ad.,lKO, ? AootArr^enuOm
LOU AN, LltiT A Co., Agents, Wheeling, W. Va.
je24-nAw
PRESCRIPTION FREE
Fr the apepdy Curoof Seminal Wcaknenn, Lost
Hauhnoil, l'rrmnture Debility, Serruuanera,
Despondency, I'onfailon of Mens, Ari-nion to
Society, Defective Memory, and all Disorders
Brouuht (in by .Secret Habit.-, and Excesses. An]
dmrol.it has tho lugredlcnt*. Address,
DR. JAQUES & CO.,
130 Weat Sixth 8VGIH0IBHATI, OHKX
JattDAW
SUFFERERS S2S
vBHcnMiTlKOr, Nypblll*. or any
form of tllscaw, cwsfd at the old WEJiTKRN
MEDIC-AI? INSTITUTE, 2B0 Vine St., tinelunatl,
by tlie onlj sure and reliable remedies.
No ohnrco until enred. Cull or write for hw
ulrlco. i'lurgM low. llair rates to llie
poor. oc5-d4w
FINANCIAL.
JJANK OF THE OHIO VALLEY.
ucctpsol to thb
Pibbt Natiohai. Bank or WancLine.
Capital ?250,000.
wmi a. I?tt, Frtddent. | w*. B. Bimmo*, ylce P.
Money rewired on deposit.
Interest Mid ey rp?cUI dopoalti.
A general Banking Business conduct?! with prorajtnew
and fidelity.
stMOZov:
John K. Botaford, John L. flottw,
Jacob a. Rhodes, Henry M. Harper,
Win. A.Turner, Win. A. Isctt,
0. C. Dower. A. M. Adam*.
William B. Simpson,
oc6 GEO ROE ADAMS, Cashisr,
JgXOHANGE BANK.
j. n. taxck, pmt bam'l liuohuk, v. p.
CAPITAL ****** ..!?<),?(
LIABILITY OP STOCKHOLDERS,.. ****** 400,W
Thla Bank sucoseds to the buiineea of tho Merchant
National Bank, and duals in Coin, Coupons, Commercial
Paper and B 111aof Exchange.
Interest paid on Special Deposits.
Collection! made on all points and prooeeda promptly
remitted.
Account* of Bankers and Buiineea Men aolldt*L
Stockholder! liable to Depositors according to the
Constitution of the State tno aame aa In National
Dinks,
oikkvom:
J. N. Vanoo, 8. Horkhelmcr,
L. 8. Deli plain | D. Qutaan,
A. W. Kefir. Wn. FJllngham,
tJam'l Laughlln, John Frew.
Crawford Booth,
JyM JOHN J. JONES, Caihier.
J?EY CITY
CARRIAGE AND BUGGY TOPS
Are easily appllod to "Wagons or Buggies,
and'aro a good protection againsfiun or rain.
They can bo bought at very low priccsat
Jacob Snyder's,
Iraa WO. 1405 main street
pANGY dyeing.
Dr*M Uood?, Shawl*. Bilk* mid Clothing Uj*<l In
tlvslubl* color*; Cnipo veil* Dyed.
DRY CLEANING,
Pr?MM in nil fabric* cluntd without ripping or
rraoving tli? irlmmUig. Thu moat tltborau wutj
and Uu?t rtcal dr?HM are tbui elegantly elMntd.
Wyi 1LTF.AHD ALK. 203 Walnut 8t- Cincinnati, a
W Uaod* murnxl by upon cartful ly packed.
11. WOODS,
Surveyor and Real Estate Agent
Office No. 1140 CturusB traiBT,
,ul Wheeling, W. Va.
TNMAN LINK?UNITED STATES AND
1 ROYAL MAIL STEAMERS, WOT VUKt TO
QUKEN8TOWNAND LIVERPOOL,
Evorjr Thursday or S*tord?yOTY
OF BERLIN. - ?_H?1 Tom
CITY OP RICHMOND - ~?0J "
CITY OF CHESTER. ? - ~UW "
CITY OF MONTREAL. - M? "
CITY OF BRUB8KU4 - - JT73 "
OTY OF NEW YORK .....?Of ?
Three magnificent ateameri are among the itrongert,
Iumi ?ad f?t?t en the Atlantic, and luvo every
mod wo improvement, Including hot and cold water
and eled/i? bell* In ataterooma, revolting chair* In
mIood*. tath and atnoklnc room*, barber ahopa, etc.
Forrateaolpwaar andothrr Information,apply to
JOHN Agent, 81 Oroedwajr, #!*.
Or to JOUN CAIUl', Union R. B. Office; THOB.
O'BRIEN. WwuttHM. - .
jk.pM 4% TO ?w? A TUXll, or W to
|MJTf gMMQ
I 1 *0f? (buffi' fiwa
I a I above. Wo one Can AU to
I II make miner faat. ACJ one
I 1 U 1 can do the workA Yon ?2
ruUm frotu 50c lo 82 an hour by deroUafe
iDgi and iparo time to the trait otss. It ?*ta JTOfJ
nothing to ttj the IhI'Iocm. Nothing like It jwjr
money waking erer pfl'erod before. Buaioeai pleaaant
and etrktly honorable; Deader, tf you want to
knov all about the beet |?yl?s bwinm Wore the
public, Mod ua your a4dr*iand wo will nod you full
particular* and private terma tw; iwniHee wortfc 16
^t7iC."?Eo'i5^fe Sff&ffi
lfrina. Jemuwr
FJIHE PLACE TO GO*
If you are in a hurry for prtitltaf, b to
< The intelligencer Job Roome.
. Work mcuted in looditjls upon th?BlMrtMtaoU?
Wftt, %dAlwwctx.
WHMr pffWwFWiiiHOTWrf/fi
TERM8 OF SUBSCRIPTION.
DAILY.
Jy tmtt, to iiiwww, putagirnpaUL
On# 001 Throe munnth?.....|a I
biz mootha..,, 4 001 One month....,.-... '
IWrmd 6y Cbrrim i* OUy *4 IMwbt at 13 m
per wee*.
8KXI.WKKKLT.
Jy wit/, <n Bluww, p**toyjwyfat,
One ymr .... | 81* luontlu.....?.?. ! (
WKKKLT.
By inaU, to adtahci, poUappnpaUL
One K | Biz inonllu......-.-|t (
Clubeof flT?MIHMnuHMMH.(.MM?.amM.MMMM.9i 40 etc!
Clubo of ****** 1 25 wet
Qnbeof twenty 110 oael
Qube of twenty-Are.....?. .................. 1 00 eaei
Hample ooplM of either edition of Uo Unman
Ota eent free on application.
A d dree* nil eouununlcaUou to
F&BW A CAMPBELL,
Publlriera Intelligent,
Wheel!of, W. Yi
THE BKIDi;.
1 Her finger wee aojiuall. the ring
Would not atay on which thej did bringIt
wee too widen peck;
And to ear truth ((or oat It must),
It looked like the groat collar, luat
About our young wit's neck.
Her (eet beneath her petticoat
I.Ike little tuloe atole In and nut,
Ailf they fearod the llglil;
But oh! ihidineniurhiviv.
No tun upon an EaatoMlay
la half ao floe a light
Iter cbreka ao rare a white waa on,
No (laliy wake* companion
(Who Met tnem li undone);
For itreaka of r?d were mln|led there,
Much aaare on a Katharine p?ar.
The aide that's next the >un.
Her llpa were red, and one wai thin
Compared to that was next her chlu
(Sotue bee had atung it newly);
But, Dick, her eyes ao guard hur face,
I durat no wore upon them gaxe
Than on the aun In July.
?SuMlng.
A TALK TO HOT1LEKM.
Their Bntlea to Their Children?Aerraou
by Robert t'ollyer, Liberal Chrlatlan.
From "Nature and Life:" Boeton, 18C8: Horace B,
Fuller.
1 Samukl, ii : 18, 10. "Samuel ministered
before the Lord, being a child.
Moreover, his mother made him a coat
and brought it to him from year to year."
This is part of a most touching story,
how God gave to a Hebrew mother a man
child many years after her wedding; and
the gift was such a gladuess that she dedicated
him back to God and carried him
back to the temple, thero to miniater all
his life. Aiid once every year sho made
him a little coat and carried it up to the
temple herself when she wunt to see her
child, whom she called Samuel, which,
being interpreted, is, "He who was askeu
rst ?
We have three separate statements of
the nature of a little child. The first is
that, in sorno way. it is utterly depraved
and lost; not capable of conceiving one
good thought, Baying one good word or
doing one good thing, being?
"Sprung from th? man whose guilty lull
Corrupu bit ram and tolnU us all."
This statement, to mv mind, is untrue
for two reasons. The first is that it clashes
with the loftiest revelation ever made
to our race about the child-nature. Jesus
Baid, "Suffer little children to come unto
me and forbid them not, for of such is the
kingdom of heaven." Ono cannot help
seeing here the inevitable logic. If the
childls utterly depraved and of such is the
kingdom of heaven, wherein does the
kingdom of heaven differ from the kingdom
of hell?
1 sat at my desk, trying to put my second
and most impregnable objection, as it
springs out of tho nature of the little child
luiuu, iiuu worua. anu one sat at my
feet, rich in tlie possession of a now toy;
while another went and came, singing
through the spring morning. Then I said
in my neart, "O God, my Father! when I
can say that this morning su nshino,pouring
into my room fresh from the fountains ot
thy light, is a horror of great darkuess,
and the voices of the singing-birds are intended
to echo to us the cry of lost souls;
nnd that the everchanging glory of spring,
Bummer, autumn ana winter is but the
ever-Bifting shadow of the frown of God
on a sin-strickon world?then I can say
that the light that comes out of the eyes of
that little child, who has not yet framed
its tongue to call me father, is the bale-fire
of a soul already akin to tho lost; and the
sweet confidences of tho other, the unlearned
blasphemies of despair."
The second theorv is one that I have
heard from some liberal Christians?that
the heart and naturo of a little child are
like a fresh garden-mold in tho spring
time. Nothing has sprung out of it; but
the seeds of vice are already bedded down
into it; and wo must plant good seods and
nurso them until thero is a strong growth
of the better promiso-carefully, all tiie
while, weeding out whatever is bad as it
comes to the surface. At the first glanco
this seems to be about the truth. Still, 1
fear it has not como so much out of that
true philosophy which is founded on a
close observation of our nature as 'it has
come out of a desire not to differ so very
far from thoao who denounce us heartily
as unchristian.
Such an idea of the child naturo is, after
all, a moderate theory of infant depravity;
and as such I reject it, so far as it
ffives anv nre'oecnnation nnd nrftdnmln
anco to sin. *nd accept the third theory,
as the true gospel about the child nature;
namely, that the kingdom of heaven, in a
child, is like unto a man that sewed good
seed iu his field; but afterward, while
men slept, his enemies came and sowod
tares among the wheat, and went away:
and when tlio blade sprung up, and
brught forth lruit, then appeared the
tares also. That is tho true statement of
this fact, my friends, as I understand It
The good seed is sown Bret,?good principles'
and powors are tho first to" lie sot
down in the fresh, young heart; while
even the tares themselves aro not utterly
worthless woede, hut degenerate wheat, a
poorer grain, but never utterly useless or
worthless; for the hotter kinds of it can
be made into a rathor bitter bread, while
even tlx worst can be burnt up, and be
made to enrich the ground for another
harvest of tho nobler grain. The good is
primary, and purely; tho bad Is secondary,
and not totally bad. And every little
child ministers before tho Ixmf, and
every mother makes hl> garments from
year to year.
I propose to speak briefly on tho nature
and possibilities of this mother influence,
whatitis,andwhatitmay be. Andnoto,
first of all, that while in after-life tho father
may come to an equal or even stronger
influence over the child,?in the plastic
morning of Ufo, when tho infant soul puts
on ita first robes of joy and love and faith
and wonder, the hand of tho mothei
alone is permitted to give ;liem their rich
quality and texture; and, to Ucf loving
and skillful oyesomyis leftthe decision
of their comfort and adaptation to the
over varvlnir nature of everv IHtlo'onf
that pomes into tho world. God hoe
made it 00 in })is infinito and unfailing
providence.
"Women know
Tlit way to rear un chUdra (to be just);
Thuj knowailmple, merry, tender knaok
()(tying laahea, fitting baby-?hoea,
And itrintflrg pretty worda that make no Mn:t,
And kbalng full eenie Into empty words
Which thlnga are oorala to rat life upon.
Although luch trifles. Children Uarn, by iqcb,
Andgetlwiover-cwlr Micmnlnd?"
"Fathers Iot# u well.
. . tut allll will) IimtJv tmlDi.
And will* luoroMDKkjm]/ mpumlblp,
(And not at irfae/jr, liner lets fm/iikly."
To every child, to tho boginnlng, tbi
earth is without form ami yoM; and th
.first great light that God briugs'oiU'M th
darkness i? the face of Its mother, and th
f)r?t sound that ever enters the silent se
of the Inftpt soul is tho voice of the motl
eras she bettlsorpf jt,endeavoring t
find some answering glan.ee udut) c
recognition. And UoJ lias made it ?
that this first ?urp sound the mother eve
bears breaking out of t)>^t ijlcnce is mor
to l?r thw the great haraonlM't|)Mwer
heard when tbo morning stara |ang t<
rather, and all Bib sodi of Got} shputi
for joy. So, how can we wonder tUat tb
UtniW nature of Ohrist gathered itae
. lfltogr?T? rota*? <9 tho? who won)
hinder mothers from bringing little el
dren to blm, that he might pnt bis liar
* upon them and bless them? To me t
question is not whether the children v
- or *111 not be benefited by the bened
tion, and so whether it la worth all tl
trouble and hindrance to the Master
let them come; but whether that most 1
ble and tender of all toula shall ackno'
M edge that moat noble and tender of
i> things? the longing of a mother foi
'I blessing upon her child.
Here, then. Is the great fact sot cleat
before us. Mothers, your heart ia the II
paradise to every little child God givesyo
? he finds rivers of wator there, and t
fruit and flowers of lib earliest hum
world. While he can rest there no wl
beast can make him afraid; aud when
J last he eata of the inevitable knowledge
,. good and ovll, and 1a fallen and naked at
l ashamed, your love may so clotho hlin,
' he passes out of this Eden, that he w
always live in love of the paradise regal
ed. And ao '*wo only never call him rat
erless who has God and his mother."
Then, secondly, while It is eminent
. true that the little child has such rich e
dowment, and you have such a wonderf
pre-eminence, ft is also truo that the no
slbilltiea open oat two ways?you mi
greatly blight his life, or yon may great
less It. The garments that mothera lit c
to the spirits o! little children, like ti
garments that tlioy fit to tho outward (on
only mbre certainly, have a great deal i
do with that child's wholo future life. I.'
me give you three Instances out of man
that aro kept In the archivosof the worli
What would you Jndgo to he the for
most thing in Washington? Tho obvioi
answer is, his perfect, spotless, radiant ii
tegrity. The man does not live in th
world who bellevos that any letter or do
patch or state paper will over be found I
any country, which, If well undorstooi
can call this great quality into <iueitlor
after he had come to tho prime and powc
of his manhood,?as for that matter, i
any time iu his wholo life. Now it is a
instructive fact for mothers, that of th
few books that have come down to us wit
which the mother of Washington sui
rounded her boy In early life, tho on
most worn and well used Is a book on moi
als, by that eminent pattern of tho ol
English integrity, Sir Matthew Hale; an
tho placo wliero that book opens amies!
whero it is the most dog-eared ftud frail, i
at a chapter on tho great account whicl
we must all give of the deeds done in th
body. Before that boy went out of hi
borne, bis mother took care to stamp th
image and superscription of integrity 01
bis soul.
What, after his great genius, would yol
mention as tho most notable thing in W1
liam Ellery Cbanning? Wo answer a
once, his constant loyalty to abroad, free
fearless examination of everv queatioi
that could present itself to mm; afranl
confession of what he believed to bo tru<
about it, no matter what was said ngaius
it;.and an active endeavor to make tha
truth a part?f his lifo. Channing testified
with a proad affection, of hismother: "Sh<
bad the firmness to examine tho truth, t<
speak it, and to act upon it, beyond al
women 1 evor know." And so it was, that
when her frail boy must go out into thi
battle, she had armed him with the breast
plato of righteousness and the helmet o
salvation.
What, again, after his geuius, staudi
foremost in the life of Byron? One auswei
only can be given,?his utter want of fait!
in women. That one thing did more t<
turn his life into wormwoouand gall that
all besido. He lost faith, first of all, in hii
mother. In and through his childhood, i
was his mother that clothed him in th<
poisoned garments that so woefully pene
trated through all his after life, and mad<
him the most misorable man in his genera
tion.
And so ono might go on reciting in
stances almost endlessly, if it were need
ful, to show how true it is, that tho moth
or makes tho man.-What then, positively
shall tho mother do who will do her best'
I will answer this question first by not
ing what she shall do. And 1 cannot saj
ono thing before this,?that tho spiritua
garment she fashions for her littlo one
from year to year shall not bo black. Al
mothers know how loug before theii
children can uttor a word they can rcai
gladness or gloom in the mother's face
Let her smile, and the child will laugh; lei
her look sad, and it will weop. Now, som<
mothers, if they liavo had groat troublej
or are much tried in their daily lifo, gol
into a habit of sadness that is like a seconc
uaturo. Tho tono of their voice and the
tenor of their talk is all in tho pensive,
minor key. They oven "sigh when thev
thank God." Thoy talk with unction ol
who is dead, and how young thoy were
and how many aro sick, and what grief if
abroad altogether on tho earth. And the
child listens to all that is sad. Tho mother
may think ho does not care; but, if my
own earliest memories nro at all true tc
tho common childhood, ho does cam
Theao things chill' him through anil
through. I remembor how 1 carried the
conversation in my lioart once for dayt
and days, long after the good woman who
had spoken had forgotten all about it
Mothors, your children have no part orlol
in that matter; death has no dominion
over them, and will not liavo for thu
manyadoy to come; and it foolish and
wrong for you to lead them with vou intc
its dark valley and shadow. If one o
these little onesshould be taken from you
U n-ni lift him nnlu no U /
sleep. No sweet fruit of childhood cai:
grow amid those grim shadows; ho has hit
own little grief, too, already; ho does no:
need yours. So, as ho stands before tlx
Lord, and you fashion his apiritual gar
ments from year to year, put plenty ol
S;ladness into thorn,?lot the first fear wall
or the first sin. In the kingdom of heaven
to which ho now belongs, thero is nc
death.; his life is hid with Christ in (jod
Then I would auk that tlio gurment o
spiritual influence, which you are'eve:
fashioning, shall not be of the nature of i
atrait-iacket. lias your boy a heavy foot
a loud vojco, a great appetite, a defian
way and a burly preaeuco ultogothor1
Then thank God for it, moro than if you:
husband had a farm whero corn growi
twolve feet high; your child has in hin
tho making of a great and good man. Tin
ouly fesr {a, that you will fail to moot tin
demand of this strong, grand naturo, ant
try to break where you ought to build
Tho question for you to solve, mothor, i
not how to subduo him, but how to direc
him. Sometimes mothers are really self
iah| they refuse to pay tho prieo for thi
noblo growth of childhood. It js a ga<
mistako to suppose, that this sturdy
darling must be bad; first tho wheat, thei
tho tares. Dr. Kane was a wonder 0
boisterous energy in childhood, climbinj
trees and roofs, projecting himself againB
al) obstacles, until ho got tho name 0
being tho word hoy }fi Brfuichtown; bu
time revealed the divinity'of this rougl
life, when he bearded the ice-king in hi
own domain, and made himself a nam
in Arctic exploration second to nono. Th
tqmult, again, when Sydney Smith was:
boy, H'W & marvel of boisterous clamoi
But when ilifct voice spt {(self (0 I)
heard in tho Edinburgh Renew, it roused'
whole kingdom; and the abundant vitalit;
: that set all distracted in childhood so pod
otraieu anu imormea uie wnoio aitor-iu
as fg mokes Its record one of the best blog
raptnea 'In the English tonguo. - Do nc
break your child's passionate temper, bu
direct it. .God knows, by and by, ho wi
need it all to batter down great wrong
and plead and work (or tljo great right 1)
not (ret and (ear over the prodomlnanc
of tho animal above the spiritual naturi
ills all right that it should be so at til
atari. Thellrst man is ot tho oartl
earthy; the second man is tho Lord fro!
8 heaven. First conies that which is natun
? ?or, as the best translation has it, tin
copies that which is animal; afterwan
_ iVo'T H-hii-li fa amrihiLiI Thnrn In a mw
n wholesome oversight that to beautiful i
[. all mothers; but tho true root of tbi
q ought to be a great conviction that our ni
i( ture is loyal and needs no breaking. \\
, novpr brpftk u young tree; and, than
S mother who a)iall know this, and let o
t erygoo4 #o|fiQ4 in {hp liUle chj
J hayp its ojyn frpp play.
e Then, positively, there is one most it
II porUntprinolplp tMt no mother qrnpv
d forget A good and great wan, who
ill- children ire remarkable for nobility an
ids beantv, ulil tb me once in * letter, "
he count a great part of the grace In m;
rill children from a new reading of the ol<
lie- commandment. I read it always, 'Parent
iat obey your children in the Lord, for tht
to ia right'" That I conceive to be especial
io- Iv the true reading for you, mothera
*1- When he is altogether with you, his de
all mande are especially sacred and mustbi
- a obeyed.
I shall not speak In any material setuo
ly but when the child begins to think, he a!
ret once begins to quostlop. He is set lien
u; In a great unlvorse of wonder and mysterj
he and lie wants to know its meaning and
>n the meaning ol himself. Bui some moth
lid ere, when their children come to them
at wllli their questions in all good faith,
of cither treat tlio question with the levitj
id or get afraid and reprove the little tiling
as for asking. Mothers, this is all wrong,
ill This is one of your rarest opportunities to
n- clothe tho spirit of your child in the fresh
h- garments that will make him all beautiful
as he stands boforo the Lord. He can ssk
ly nuestlonsyoucannotanswer; but be sure
u- that the qucstious that can be answered
ul are best answered simply and directly,
e- The soul hungers and thirsts to know; inir
deed, It must know. Thoso moments sre
ly tho seed time; and If you do not then cast
in In the wlioat. tho m?m? will ?lm
m Urea.
n, Then as tills primitive woman would bo
10 overwore careful to meet tho enlarged
et form ol her child, us alio wont to see him
v stand before the Lord from year to year,
i. will you be caroful to moot the enlarged
?- spirit ol your child? I do (oar (or the
is mother who will not note how her child
i- demands and needs ever new and larger
Is conQdencot. Tho last thing mothers learn
?. often is that tho child is always bocoming
n less a child. It Is a great blessing to that
I, child whose mother can bo well-timed,
I, and yet perfectly delicate in her rovclair
tlons; wno can know when lo reveal truth
it tmd falsehood,' nobility and jioanneas.
n purity and its opjioslte?in thought and
0 word?yet not bavo the t hild loot up in
h wondor to ask what she moans; who can
-- (col, in lior prophetic anil Intuitive spirit,
e tho true time (or everything?that alio la
- never too lato and never too soon; whose
d children will bless her because hur words
11 were always moro of a revelation than ol
;, a warningorarebuke. Mothers, as (speak
s to you so ol your great trust, I feel still
li more deeply your groat reward; for yon
e aro greatly rewarded. As I have thought
s of what 1 should say to you of what you
e should be, I have seemed all the while
1 only to be recalling what a mother once
was to a child. For my spirit wont back
a through many years to a little valley.
"among the rocks and winding scaurs,
i wnere i saw a man ana woman, in tlieir
i, early wedded prime, sitting togetbor. And
i 08.1 sat with them, watching their faces
i shine iu tho summer Sunday sunlight,
b they seemed to me as the faces of angels,
t Then tho woman sang some words I havo
t never forgotten, out of a sweet old Melli,
odlsthymn. Those were tho words:?
3 "llow happy U the pilgrim's lot!
> How (roe from every auxlous thought,
I From worldly ho]ie and fear!
1 Conrtncd to uciiher court norcell,
, Ills soul diiiUlDs ou caith to uwell;
> He oulf sojourna here."
- And from that time, somehow, I know, in
f a new way, that this was ray mother. Aud
now her hair is white as snow, and she
3 bends, in the ripeness of her fruitful and
r graceful Ufa, waiting for the angels to corao
\ and carry her, aftor her lung widowhood,
) to another of tho many mansions, where
t husband and sons are watching und waiti
ing for hor coming. And is not this what
t a million sons will tell of their mothers?
3 Blessed is that man whoso inothor has
- made all mothers worshipful; blessed is
3 that man who can make such an sntrv in
his diary as this of Washington in his
prime: "I got away and spent the eve
ning with my mother."
Mothers, you have great sorrows; but
- then you have an exceeding jo v. To you,
, raoro than to fathers, belongs the respons?
ibility; but to yon, more titan to them,
. comes the great reward. No cares.no
r tears, no efforts vou mako aro ever really
I* made in vain. When your child grows up
j to his manhood, if thai is noble and beauI
tiful, ho will gladlv say, "I owo it most of
. all to my mother.11 And, if it is lost and
I stricken with sin, ho will fear above all the
sorrow of his mother, or to meet his moth"
I or, or that sho shall know of his sin. And
, the first pulses of hispcnitonce will alwayB
i come at tho thought of his mothor. And
> then if, after all your love and care, tho
I silver cord is loosed, and the golden bowl
k broken, and your treasure is gathered into
the safe keoning of tho world to come,
- there may still come a solemn gladness,
[ oven through your woe, as you realize that
ho is not unclothed, but clothed upon.
| And you shall soo the travail of your soul
, and be satisfied, because he is a nursling
, now of heaven:?
1 "For over nod for ercr, nil ill a linpnj homo;
And there 'to mnj- a little while till nil the rest thai!
come.
To Ho within tho light of (tat, like a babe upon the
j Ami the vflcludctiwc from troubling, antl the trwry
nro nt rwt."
"I .Hunt Lie Down ntid Die."
The following is nn extract from a letter
L (luted July 21,1877, to the* discoverer of Bei
thesda Water The writer is the Itev. T. B.
5 Fuller, D.D.,'D.C. L, Hector of St. Gregory's
[ Church, Toronto, Archdeacon of Niagara, etc.,
j eta The writer, at tho age of sixty years, was
f a victim of saccharino diabetes. His physician
said,(to usel)r. Puller's own words) "he
> could do no more forme than ho had done:
* that my diseaso was incurable, and that I
1 must lio down and die." [We should state
J here en jHirrnthe^it that our townsman Joseph
t Flooring, Esq., is the sole awl only author iud
5 agent for this wonderful water for this State as
. well as for Ohio and West Virginia ] To rcf
turn to Dr. Fuller: ''In four days." he writes:
"after taking tho water, I ohtalned relief, and
' since that timo I have taken no medicine,
' consulted no medical man. and presume if I
' could give myself reasonable rest, 1 would l>e
quite well."
> Such testimony, from such a source, should
r Indeed have convincing weight.
, General Agont for Pennsylvania, Ohio and
West Virginia,
? JOSEPH FLEMING,
r 84 Market street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
3 Pamphlets mailed frco.
3 Price?50 ccnta per gallon, $1 per 10 gallon
? keg, $8 per lmlf-barrel, $10 por barrel.
Looah, List & Co.,
Bridge Cornor, Main street-,
Exclusive aaents for Dunbar's Wethewla
8 Wafer in Wheeling.
? ITTTWlVImll. Pa.
1 J ? . JnTVihuK-kprwity
V, ,y *9^ torl u* ^0 BtwlM
) DH C. McLANE'fl
* Liver Pills & Vermifuge i
7 Buyers should always look for tholr signature uo
l aboroiit is on erery box or vUIofttao aenuina. Tha
f market Is full of imitations oflho namo lltUHK,
| spoiled diftorontly, but bavin* some pronunciation.
1 acll
i j.
I MARBLE ANP 8TQNE WORKEB8.
? "(1AKROLL BROa,
GRANITE AND MARBLE WORKERS
& Afld Importers of thp Beit
? BCOTCH OKAN1TB AND ITALIAN UAOBf.ES,
y Noa. A, 8 and 10 SixtMQth Street, Wbretlns, W. Va.
(. MTA Ado selection of Monumenta and Tablets con?
ilantly on band, which will be told at pricea to suit
J the times. sp2C
> IB1 cincINNATV,1 OT
O |Sl|s5ii.; 4E I Marble SI.to, &
>. SSPSaSHfci IRON MANTELS AND
,1 SBaSiggM ENAMELED ORATES
?1 Irit
? gAYE YOUR MONEY?y
'P ?
>i AMERICAN BAKING POWDER.
arO
Purity and excellence combine^,
Mr tfra Ic^t d?l?pu |yip
t ^OABPI
la now ocoqprtu v/,j my Pmfc Hoom la lb* dtj
' oa Ftlt?*nth itivot exUu?lon, botwiea Market and
Malo sqfl ?U1 hare constantly on typd a lull
? .tock ol "Hm Bo* flaa*" 8ho?l4?n
V Ifcw, Oar ?4?, tf,, *?.
1? ?tUl 8W, H, rAMUh
0
\ Financial and Commercial,
5 ?s
Money Aoll?i-B??ira?inl? Quiet?StiD
I Irregular and Uosattled.
1 Flour *Madj> and llnkmMl-IVhf.
, AMInawl lllglier?FrovUlon.
Firmer.
aw Turk lonv sad Nlotkn.
1 N?f You, August D.?Mo?n?Mark
' active at 8a7 per cant; closing eaiy at 3. Prin
I mercantile paper 3a4 per oent Sterling E:
' change It 82; eight exchange on New Yoi
Goraamiiata-Qulet.
' UmudnuiMtool IWI, enipoai ~..IM
:
NOW Stall aaaameawamlOlj
ComoeT BUw., 1SI
Railkoad Bohm?Weak.
Stati Bovm?Dull.
BrocxH-Tlie market was Irregular and ui
settled; at tho opening prices advanced a 14
5h percent, but soon after a weak feeling m
tn and thoro was a decline ofaXalXporcent
This wan followed by an advance of tfalX pi
cent, and still later by another reaction. I
tlie final dealings speculation assumed
itMillnr tnnn ???' ?? ' *
?.|U wv viuoiiik piiu-n wore m
X per cent abovo the lowest figures of the da)
Transactions aggregated 189.000 shares, o
which 6,400 were Erie, 36,000 Lake 8hon
40,000 Northwestern common, 1,400 preferred
20.000! 81, Fuul common. 1,100 pereferred. 2,
500 wabash, 11,000 Lackawanna, 0,000 Ne*
Jersoy Central, 0,700 Michigan Central, 1,60
Union Pacific, 1,400 C. O. O. it L, 2,300 d C. i
I. O.. 1.000 Hanibal 8t. Joe, 1,100 Oliio am
Mississippi, 13,000 Western lInlon,5,500Pacifli
Mail, 2,400 8t. Louis. KansaaClty and North
ern, 2,200 Indianapolis, Cincinnati & Lafay
ette, 1,600 Burlington, Cedar fiapids am
Northern.
Northern radfle....... IS BU A7|
Northern l*aclficpfd. 4fiW Ht. Paul preferred.... W*
Weetarn Union......... VSM Wabmh I7fc
QatoteUrsr U Port Wayne 111V
O^lcnlJTei pldWA Term Haute ot'd........ M
ftclflc MalT......? 15g Terre Haute pfd 1?>
Maripoea 1 Chicago * Alton...... 04
Maripoea pfd IK OhlcajcoA Altptdoi'dllS
i Adams Rxpreee. lot Ohio A MlMiMlppl._ 16 V
! Welle, PargoA Go ofd 9? Delaware & Lacka..*. flMi
American-....^. 46J4 A. A P. Tolcgraph...... M>(
I United States 44 Burtlnaton A Qulncy. 18k
New York Central...m119}{ Hannibal A St. Joe?
Erie..27>% Hannibal ABU Joe pfd u\;
RHs preferred 63 Canada Southern rax
Harlem erd. ..?..1? LoaUville ANuh....- SlG
Michigan Central 84V4 Kaiuaa Pacific.. Mk
Panama ......?....157}i Kantu A Texaa. ...... 16H
Union PadBe*. - 78s BL l. a Kan Fr*n mQ
LAM Shore Sl? 1HU L. A & f. pliZZ isQ
IlliooU Central.. 90 81. L. A 8.F.pM Or?U
FUUburgh. *.>9 8t. L., Knn.U.6 U 20%
Northwestern com~. 77 St. L..H.C. K. pfd.... NM
North weotornptd...... 98W Central Pacific DoadalOitft
aC.C,&l,.....? Kltt Union Pacific lUtf
Now Jersey Control... fioji U. P. Land Grant* 113
Boeklahurt r..M0x Blnhlog food Ill
uE*. dir.
flew Yorlt.
N*w York, August 0.?WikjI?Fine dull
and weak; medium quiet and firm; domestic
fleece 32a45c; pulled 18a 10c; unwashed 0a28c.
Leather?Hemlock solo 20a23c. Hay?Quiet
at 50c. Hops?In good demand at full prices;
yearlings 4al0c. Cotton?Quiet but firm at
113*16all5-lflc. Butter?Dull; western at
7al7c. Cheese?Firm; western 4a5Kc. Eggs
?Shade firmer; western 12c. ColTee?Quiet
hut steady; Kio cargoes llj^all}$c; lob lots
ll^alOc. 8ugar ? Nominally unchanged.
Molasses?Dull and unchanged lllce?
Firmer. Whisky?Nominal at$l 07. Flour
?In limited demand but steady and lower:
receipts 24,000 barrels; superfine western and
State $3 35a4 10; common to good $4 25a4 00;
good to choice $4 70aQ 25; white wheat extra
$4 70a5 75; extra Ohio $1 40aG00; St. I?ouis
$450a0 50; Minnesota patent process $0 75a
775. Wheat?Winter less activo; spring a
shade firmer and quiet; receipts, 235,000
bushels; No. 3 spring, 80a00c; No. 2 $1 00;
ungraded winter red 00ca$l 08, inside price
very poor, No. 3 do $1 OOul 07; No. 2 $1 08
al 08J?; No. I amber $1 08&al 00#, nngraded
white $1 05al 11; No. 3 $1 04; -No. 2
$1 08^; No. 1, sales 22,000 bushels at $1 11a
111ji; No. 2 red August, sales 128,000
bushels at $1 08%al 00Yk ; September, sales
50,000 bushels at 01>c; October, tales 24,000,
bushels at $1 09al 0W. Rye?Firm; western,
C3K<\ Bnrloy?Dull nnd nominal.
Malt-Quiet and unchanged. Corn?Less
active; receipts 120,000 bushels; ungraded
45a47>fc; yellow western 18c; No. 2 August
45%c bid; 45J?c asked; September 43j?c
bid, 4(>?ic asked; October 47jj[c bid; 47j>?c
nskpil. * > '?1
- MIU?1| Iiibv-I|iu Ul.wu MUSIIUISi
western mixed 33a35c; white western 3G}$a40c.
Petroleum?Quiet; United (?%c;crude 5a5%c;
retined 6J?c. Tallow?Steady at 5)ia5%c.
Rosin?Dull and unchanged. TurpentineNominally
unchanged, Pork?Firm; new
mess $8 76a8 80. Beef?Nominally unchanged.
Cut Meats-Steady; long, clear $4 87XA\
short clcar $5 12J?. Lard?Firm; prime
steam $5 80.
ritllAdrlDbla.
Philadelphia, August 0.?Flour ? Demand
confined almost exclusively to choice
Minnesota to meet the wants of local consumers.
Extra family, good, $5 50; choice $5 75;
Ohio family, good $5 50; Indiana do ?5 25;
winter wheat patents $5 75a650; Minnesota
patent $0 00a7 25. Ilye Flour?Unchanged.
Wheat?Demand limited; No. 2 western
amber elevator, $1 07M; No. ? rod western
$L 0714' Corn?Demand fair and nnik't firm;
high mixed, on track, 47c; yellow 48al8}?c.
Oats-Dull; now crops arriving,freely western
mixed not mioted; white western 36a3GKc.
Provisions?Dull. Mess Reef?$12 00. Smoked
flams?$10 00al060; pickled $8 25^9 00. Lard
-Western $0 25. Butter?Nominally unchanged.
Eras ? Easier. Chpeae ? Quiet;
creamery 5n5&c. Petroleum?Dull; refined
QJ?c; crude 5^c.- Whisky?Nominally unchanged.
j
Baltimore. ,
Baltimore, August 9.?Flour?Quiet and
steady without change. Wheat?Western
firmer, No. 2 western winter red sjiot and
August $1 OOl^al OflM: HonlflinWtl
1 07Jf; October, $108Kat08A- Corn?Quiet;
western mixed, spot and August, 439ia
43Jf?c; September 469iiat0Kc; Oclober 47J4a
47Ho; steamer 4iatl)(o. Oata? Lower and
fairly active; western white, 35a3(Jc; do mixed
31a34^c. Rye?Quiet al 57a00c. HaySteady
and unchaugcd. Provisions-Without
change, Ruttcr?Steady and firm; prime
lo choice western packed 12a 14c. Kegs?Firm
at llal2c. Petroleum?Unchanged. ColTeo
?Firmer and better feeling; Rio cargoes 10a
14tfc. Whisky?Quiet at fl Ofltf.
(Unevn,
Ciucaoo, August 0.?Flour?Steady and unchanged.
Wluut?Actlvo, firm and higher;
No. 1 Chicago spring ?3Xc; No. 2 84Kc cash;
85c bid Septeml>er, 85&c October; No. 3,
WAv. Corn?Steady and in fair demand
at 33Xa33Jtfc cash; 33$*c August; 3tJ*c bid
September; 34$fc Octul>er. Oata?Dull and
priccs a shade lower at 23J$? cash, 23J?c
September; 23J$c October. Rye?Kasier at
iflKc. Barley?Dull and nominal. Pork?
Fairly activo and a shade higher at $8 20
cash; $8 17tfa8 20 September; $8 25a8 27J<
October. Lard?Active and higher; ut $540
cash; $5 40a5 4'IA September; $5 45 October.
Bulk Meata?Firmer at $3 35a4 40a 1 55.
SVldsky?Steady and unchanged at fl 01.
I'hlenso Cattle Mar ?t.
Chicago, August 1).?The Drovers' Journal
re porta:
Hoo??Rcceipta 5,600 head; shipmenta
3,100 head. Heavy grades5c lower; choice
?30a3 fO; nacking $3 00a3 25; light *3G0a
3 85; good many heavy unsold.
Cattus ? Receipts 500 hrad; shipments
12,100 head. Market activo and stronger, but
not ijuotably hlghtr; no exports shipping
| here; feeders and stockera quiet but steady:
Mitmring ft OOii (0; bulcheri linn; cowa
$la>a325; bullsf2OOa'J35; westernmmlernlcly
sctive and sternly at ?2 t?0a:[ 12 U; m
TexHns stronger ?t *2 Sia3 la *
Bqpr.p-QllTol mill easy.
Cincinnati.
Ci*cik??ti, August a-Cotlon-Stcady at
1?K& FIour-Q"!.1 an<l lindwngoil. Wl'eot
-QilltltatOOaa5o;i?elpl?,4T,OOOIiui'liol?;iilili>.
nionta 4,200 btuheli. Corn?ICwier at 3J<8a30c.
Oata?Easlerat 25a28Hc. ltyo-Dull an<l lower
at 53c seller Augnit, flarley-Quiet hut
steadr. Pork?Dullnnd nominal. !j?r/i_in.
active j current make $3 37>> bid. Hulk Meats
?Kaaier; nothing doing. Bacon?Quiet ut
$3 75a3 87>*a4 85a4 U0a5 Iflafi 25. VhlskyDuli
at $1 03. Butter-Steady and Jinn for
the better qualities lJnsccd Oil-Steady and
unchanged at Wc.
Tnuno, August II?Wheat?Finn; amhe?
Michigan SSKc; August and September b7Xr
No. 1 white Michigan $t GOK bitf; fto. 3 *nibor
Mid\ignn 06Kc; No, 2 $fd winter, *pot,
03^c; AUKUgtU'TXc: September WjJfc; Octo
her Q7M; Sp. 2 Dayton Michigan red OS^Ci
rbiecled WabaSh 00<r, western aniber
No. 2^imb?^noIs OOjtfc. Corp-j'ftrm^htgli
Oi*n?KAT?! August a?Hoos?Uull; coin
man p 5<*a 30; light $3 85e35Q. packlri
13 afiaS 45; butellers' $3 45*3 65; receipts 48
head; shipments 475 head.
Dry Uuod*.
1 Niw You, August 0.?Dry good* bual
nen light to-Umy In >11 department! of trade,
Cotton goodi qulit bat Mwdjr at unchanged
kl price*. Print! In Irregular demand, and on
u?*hol?ilaggUIi. Ginghanuln blrnquwS
nd drw good! doing wall. Men'i wear
voolena quiet. Flannel! and blanket! dull.
,i Foreign goodi mora Mnght for.
Motion Wool.
Boetox, Auguit I).?Wool?In good do'
mand and prlcee much lower and remain
without Improvement; Ohio fleecoi SMOo;
Michigan and Wisconaln StaMo; combing
" and delalnea Mut.tKeI combing unwnahed38a
40c: Kaiins 18?o; Mlaonri 22a20c; tub
\ waited S7Xa41Xc.
New York Metal Market.
,. New York, August 0.?Manufactured cop,J
per?Nominal; new ahenthlpg 22c: Ingot lake
" unchanged. I run?Scotch pig, quletand firm
K at $20 WM22 00; American $10 50a90 00; Itunla
? iheetlng *11 SOalS 00. Nills- Cut ?2 23:
clinch |3 75ut 40.
|. Petroleum Market,
a PirmDMH, AuuuilO.?PiraoucK?Quiet;
it crude eailerat 79Ko at Parker1! for >hlpu
menl; refined dJKp for Philadelphia delivery,
ir Aitrwnr, Auguit O.-1'rmoi.iuM-Rcnned
n 17d.
a Haw Orlenue.
SANFORD'S
I RADIHAI HIIRF
1 - - w a mm w Ik*
; jf For
, tH CATARRH
? In a nevor-faiMnff specitic. When ovorjr other
? remedy liai failed, when physicians have pro|
nounced a euro impossible, it has by it* pow|
erful altoralivn and resolvent properties actinn
thnrush tbo blood, and by it# healing.
, balsamic properties acting upon the oiscased
I nasal surfaces, liftotl the alllicted, as it were,
I from the very grave. No otbor remedy has
, dono this, for no uther remedy pojscnaea in a
i form so pure and aimple, yet so powerfully
i effective, tho real essences, us it were, of tho
| barks and shrulw from which it is prepared,
References from well-known Physicians,
Druggists, and Citizens.
1 Geo. W. Houghton, Esq., Waltham, Mass.,
cured after twelve years of suffering. I Jr.
Cbas. Main, Boston, writes: "I consider it
superior to any preparation laid down \u any
text-book with which I am familiar." Wm.
Bowen, TSsq., of McHatton, Grant & Bowen,
225 Pine street, St. Louis, writes itt tho wannest
leruis of it to his friend, A. A. Mellier,
wholesale druggist, urging that some more
rapid means ofintrodHcing it to the people of I
his city be taken. 8. I). Baldwin & Co., 1
drucirinf?- Wn?M?n??/m tn?i ??* ???
old a remedy giving such universal satisfac- .
lion. Samuel Snlnnoy, Meadow Vale, N. 8., |
says it operated on his system in n way that
nothing ever given him by physicians had
done. Goo. P. Dinsmoro, a Boston diugglsl,
says that the euro effected in his case was so
remarkable that it seemed to many that it
could not be true. Ho therefore made oath to
it More Beth J. Thomas, Esq., Justice of the '
Peace.
SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE
'Clears tlio Head and Throat so thoroughly,
that, taken in the morning on rising, thero 1
nro no unpleasant secretions, anil no disagreeablo
hawking during the ontire day, but an <
unprecedented clearness of Voice and Respiratory
Organs." Price, with Improved Inhalcr
unit Trentisc, $1. Hold by ml Druggists. (
COLLI/VS'
VOLTAIC E9 ELECTRIC '
pMSTEfcs
IiintHiitly Annihilate l*aiu,
Strengthen Hie Weak,
iuv ? cnr/i
By instantly affecting tho Nervous System,
their influence is at onco foltat the farthest 1
extremities. Henco Pain, which arises from .
a disturbance of tho Non e forces, is cured in i
every instance as if by magic. Palpitation of
tbo Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Liver,
and Kidneys, Irritation of thoStomach and
Bowels, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Bilious Colic,
Cramps, and Pain arising from tho same ]
cause are speedily relieved. The medicinal
forces present in these Plasters find their
way into the system in a manner at once *
nivsterious and powerful. They accomplish
what 110 remedy over before has done, Viz.,
tho restoration of vital electricity, whence
comes instant and grateful reliot from Pain |j
ami Weakness, and freodnm from disease. i
PRICE 25 CENTS. J
Bo careful that you arc not deceived into n
buying some worthless nlastersaid to bo equal 1
to Coi.uss' Voi/taic Plaktkw, a union of
Klcctricity and Healing Balsoius, a? seen in |
q>'ove cut. Sold by all Druggists. anlMFAw
COURT SALES. ,
Q0MMISSI0NE1V8SALR.
Atmlla y. Woods, who men for*) la Chancery. In iliu
hertenarateuM, ts. J- Comity Court of
Robert B. Woods and others. J Ohio county, W.V*.
By rlrtunof a dccree of the County Court of Ohio
Couutr, tu tho Htate ol Wont Virginia, made anil entered
In tho nboto enUtlwl cause on the 19th day of ,
June, 1879, I will, ai Special Commissioner n|>- I
pointed for that purpose, on
Saturday, the 16th day or Auoust. 1879.
ItcginnlngMl 10 o'clock, a. m., of raid day, at tlio
front door of (be Court House of mid Ohio county.
sell at public auction tlin following described real
e.taU, sltuato at tho mouth of Glenn's Ilun, near the
City of Wheeling: Beginning ut the centre of the
county road, beiogthe northeast coruer of a portion
of nrla tract sold February 11th, I860, bjr raid Ilolwrt
n. Wools nud wife to Jacob Laab, and in the dlvlalon 1
linn between the A 1*. Woods and the Itovid Harden
tracts of land; thence with said division lino N 80XJ",
K ICO pole* to a mini I buckeye, formerly a sugar tree;
thence 8 1?, K 33 38-100 pole* to a stake corner to W.
II. Woods; thonco with hli lino 8 &)%", W OCU poles
t?> tlio centre of mid count* road; thence with aaid
road 3< i 5 poles to tho beginning, containing twentytwo
aerra, moroor Ices; a!ar?a strip ol land ten feet
wide, runulog front the ?al I county road to tho Ohio
rlToralnngtlie south line of and adjoining tho laud .
mid to Jacob buh, which was reserved for a road and (
which together with a liko atrip reserved by W. 11.
Woods, fortui a load twtnty foci wide for the jolut
use fif the Mid \V. H. and It. It. Woods and their
avians. The right of raid Uotart It. Wood* In raid
roadway is include I In tiie proi*rty to l?o sold; also,
the riant and privilege, iiudiapuU-d and untramtnelrd,
of wharfage, battling, loading, shipping and deporting
coal, grain and other umerlaU along and on tho
rivtr front and bank ol the said land, sold and conveyed
to said Jacob I*sh, together with all tho coal
In and under the landaboro doscrlhed, and alio, all
coal within the following Units and hound*, vis: He- ,
giuulng at the buckeye, formerly a sugar tree, and the
northeast co'ner of the above described land, iheuce
8P, B 93 88100 poles to a stake corner to W. II.
Woods; thonco N 80k", Kabout 220 poles to the east
line of the A. I*. Woods bill farm; thence with Mid
last named line N 27?, W about 1*8 poles lo a walnut
sturnn corner of said hill farm and Imd owurd by 11.
Cranford; thence tin9, BIOS poles to a sugar tree,
now a stump, ou the top of the hill: thence 8 1V/.;, v
W (old bearing 8 7, W) 4>1 poles to lite beginning, con- .
tslnlngabout 180 i\?rea of coal In all.
The cmlra title, Including cxpedancy of dowar, in
all the above premises will bo conveyed making the
idle In the purohsscr abwiutely perfect.
TkumhokSai.k? Ono-tblrd of tho purchase monoy
and as much more as the purchaser may i leel to pay,
lu cash, th? residue irt equal tmtsUwwn* at six,
twelve and eighteen months (row tho day of sale,
the purchaser or purchasers giving notes bean- |
lug fnhrost frem the day of sale, with approval
pejwuial security for said deferred Installments
and Interest, ana the tlUo to said property
to be retained until the purchase monoy Is fully paid
JAMK8 I*. UOOKR8, fpeelal Commissioner.
J. C. HKItVEV, Ancllouecr. jyU-MAaul*
"GLORY" TOBACCO1
CAUTION.
Owing lo tliulncrca?cd domain! anil tlio immenso
popularity of tlio alwvo colehmtofl
L'(VmK Klinm ilftntnln ? ? ? '?
" ? - v ^v.iuiy iiitcnur 10baccoa
and pcprwontiug them as Ujo 1 Glorj "
tirnml. I clnliu ilio "Glory ' fut my oxclusivo
Itjde work In this mirkcl far plug Chiton,
and no (inn ]n? a right lo NjircMMit oilier
UiljoccoMlKlllKtlioumc, Elicit llllli), litis a
gold tag u\(b tjyj word "Otonv" fipou it, mid
iiono (ilbor is genuine, as it Im-iulilvelj sold
under no other hrnvl in this city.
B.iiyere *rlU ploae War this In mind.
m. beilly,
i aphi-ht 2.18il). luj
: gku4sa oFf at cos-r, ~
,Ul1 Wom,tl'" Poi'Bullonrt
I 80
'
' IJIRUSTEE'S SALE OF
Valuable Island Property.
B? tlrlue o( a deed of tnut made by Oenrtft If.
Fauberand Anule, bis wife, to the underalgUHt
truatea, dated the itttb day ol January, 1878, and
recorded la tba Glerk'a office of the County Court of
Ohio county, Wait Vlrrlnla, In Dead of lru?t Hook
No. It, pjg? til, MB and 1(0,1 will, oa
WATUBDA Y, TUB 301b BAY OF AVQU8T, 1879.
Beginning at 10 o'clock a. K. ot tald day, sell at the
front door of the Couit lloute at eald Ohio county at
public auction the following dcocrlbtd paicela of teal
aetata. that la to aav i 1/ila numbered one (1) aud two
(2) with tbflr appurtauancca. Said lota numbers
oot and two an limited on Zuua'i or Wheeling
Island. Nutubor one oontalua tlx aaee. one rood and
thirty-three and Uftwu ono bundredtba polee, aud
number two contains (wo acrea, two rooda and four
aud one-half Qple*. Maid loU aro bounded ou tba oorlb
by tot numbered three, conveyed by Z. Jacob, Cornmlailoner,
to John tfmlth; on tbe wcat by land of Ban*
lei Z MeSwordi; oa tba aouth, aoutb weat and etui aa la
abown by tba plat and |?pm accuinpauy lng tbe paper*
Died lu tba otnee ot Ibo Clerk of tba Circuit Cburt of
laldOblooounty in tbocauaelncbanowyln which Theodore
Fiuk and wife were complainant* and I unlet
Zano'a executor* and otben were defendant*, theaaxt
line of aaus being what la called the track of the ratlroad
parcel, together with all the improvement* up?u
aald two lota; alio the right of waygrauted bi agreement
of Anion Mc8woid?, triutce, Bans. W. rhflilpaand
wllato aald (Jaorsell. Faubel, of record in thu Clerk's
offlcoof tbaCouoty Court of aald Or.lo county In Be?d
Book 83, page 398. Also all the following dcecrlbtd
real aetata, lying aud being situated on the low?r
part of Zane's Iidaml, and adjoining tbe lota
above named: Beginning at a itake la the line ot tho
IWmpfitld and Marietta and Cincinnati Kallroad
tract and corner to lamia of Joba8mlU>, Joho Fink
(?uu wiu upon u, rtui>ei; lhence with mJJ FmuIkI'*
Una aouth seven and one-quarter degree*, ea*ttw*nty
1*0(1 one-quarter polee to a ?tnko In the bedce fence
and cornrr Co Isnds of aald Kaubel and other lands of
Amon Mcdworda, trcslee; thence with uld hedge
I fence north eighty degrees, mat tlfeen polee to a stake,
corner to land* held bjr 11. W. l'hllllps; Ihenee north
nine decree*, weet twenty and one?iuarter |?lee to
take; tnonce eouthclghly-ono degree*, wcet fourteen
pclea to p'aee of beginning, containing one acre, three
rood* and thirteen and tliree-faurth* pole*, together
with all amUlugulartbelinproveuienta upon aald but
named tract ol land.
The! "hove described land la well fenced aod
baa ended upou It an elegant residence, barn and
other bulldingi beildca a slaughter-house, ice house
and other Improvement*, and U a 1 under a high state
of cultivation. The title lo the above, which the
trustee will convey, ia unexceptionable.
TtimaOKtUu*.?On* thousand dollars or** much
moro of the pin chase moey a* iho purchaser may
elect to pay In cash, and the residue in four equal Inetallmonta
payable at on* year, two year*, throe yeai*
and four years fnnn the day of sale with luterest on
aid deferred ItuWllmeuU, payable semiannually
from aald day, the purchaser to givo hit tour eevo>al
negotiable notes fur Mid deferred Installment* and Intciest
with lecur-ly to bo approved 17 the trustee,
and tho Utle of Mid real estate to bt retained until
the piirchrac money 1* raid in full.
Jyal JAKK8 P. 110(1 BIM, Trustee.
"lotteries.
THE KENTUCKY STATE LOTTERY
la drawn In pursuance of an act of the General Aetcmbiyof
the Mate of Kentucky
FOR T1IK nEJfEFIT OF
EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
TIIK
Next Drawing Takes Place
AU GUST 16,1879.
The Three First Capital Prizes:
$15,000 FOR $1
$8,000 FOR $1
$5,000 FOR $1
FIJI J, SCHEME:
1 Priie of 113,000 U ...|l!i,000
I l*r!?e of 8,ICO !?. .. ... 8,000
1 Priw of 8,000 l? ? 8,000
2 !?ri*ea of 2,300 ore... 8,000
2 PHmi of 1.C00 are.- 2,000
10 Prim* of BOO ire .. ... 8.000
80 Prim ot 100 are. ? 8,000
100 Prixen of 80 are 8,000
200 Prixra of 25 are ........ 0,000
800 Prixe* of 10 are. .... 8,000
,000 Prise* of 3 are 5,000
27 Approximation Prizes amounting to. .. 2,928
,891 Priara amounting to .... WJflM
tickets, u.
Club rata upon application.
AiMresa all orders to
WILLIAMSON & CO., General Eastern
Agents, 509 Broadway, N. Y.,
Ir our Western Agont,
unnnfn ? ?
luuiuua tuuniiunu, uovmgton, Ky.
Mut of drawing* published !n the Mow YorklloraM
ml Sun, Htaat* Zntuns, I'hilmldphia ltecnrd, l'hilael|>hla
.Sunday iJlnpaich, IMlliburgh Dispatch ami
iquIsviIIo Oitiiiuereiai. All out-of-t<.wn ticket holdra
are mallol a wpy ol tli? olUdal lUtaa aoou aa r?elwl.
i he Next Following Drawing August 30,1879
Wnntnl nt onec UcmmI, Reliable Agent*
n r.vorj Town. AdilreNM ?im above.
atn.6-o.fn
Spring and Summer Goods.
C. HESS & SON,
Merchant Tailors
Gor. Main and Fourteenth Bta., lrnve J nut
received & New Slock of
Sloths,
Cassimtres,
Veetinfls end
Ovarcoallnys,
?TO*?
SPRING and SUMMER WEAR.
*T-MEN AND BOYS' SUITS MA Mi TO
)RDER, in Latest Styles and at Lowcbt
ind a perfect fit guaranteed.
mi, UNB Oir
SENTS' FURNISHING GOODS.
White Shirts made to Order.
We invite the public to call and exantfna
iur stock, feeling insured vrecni; n/fcr siifwrior
inducements,
C. HESS & SON.
will
PINAFORE
HAT!
LATEST HTVLK
IK
STRAW
VI
HARPER'S.
' mjin

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