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THB INTELLICBNCBR. PUBLISHED DAILY. EXCEPT SUNDAY. -AT THE. IHTELLI^EICER OFFICE, VDPW illMDDVt.f a. II > IIT DDnDDflTrtBB. "TERMS: m teait, it mail. fostaob fr?am, Daily, six days in the week. .$8 0< Daily, three days In the week4 Ot Daily, two days in the week.?.....-.? 2 71 Daily, one day in the woekm......^ 1 6< Weekly, ono year, in ftdranco...'. .. t 0< Weekly. six months. ........... .... 61 The Daily Intelligence* Is delivered by cju rierr Id Wheeling and adjacent towns at 15 ccni per week. Perrons wishing to subscribe to the Daily Is tklmoencer can ao so by sending la tbelr ordei to the Intelligences office on postal card c otherwise. Thoy will be punctually served b carriers. Tributes of Respect and Obituary Notices, I cents per inch. Correspondence containing important ne* solicited. Irom every port ot the suRouudlo country. Rejected communications will not be returne unless accompanied by sufficient postage. [The Intelligences, embracing its aoveral ed tloiiB, is en to red in the Postofilce A Wheeling, V Va.. as second'dass matter.] . * TELEPHONE NUMBEBH: Editorial Rooms-...431: Counting Room 41 WiTKBLTNQ, JUNE 13, M'J*. THE approaching eoutiit Is' reudero especially important by reason of the Is duatrial and financial policial of the Got ernmont being at stake. The popular d< clslon on these lssnes Is of great moyioc Jama 0. H^'mf XA.TIOXAL REPUBLICAX TICKET. FOR PRESIDENT, ? BENJAMIN HAUWSOH. Of Indiana, ton VICE PRESIDENT, WHITELAW RSID. 01 New York. "OXE GOOD TEICM DESKBVES AXOTB KR." Tho Beat Question. t The approaching campaign will b one of unusual interest and will be contest of measnrea and not of mei Tile generals the Republicans have s< lected to lead them distinctly represer the policy and the principles of goveri ment advocated by the Republics party and in all probability, the leai era te be chosen by the Democrats wi represent the policy of that party. In 4helr representative capacity tt leaders of the respective sides will tali their placed,at the heads of the two co iimns and the armies will face eac other for the contest. It is possible that the result of tli battle will determine for yean t come the main qnestions that have d videdtbo parties, particularly thatr garding tha tariff'policy of the goveri ment Upon this issue the fight wi be cnntrod. If the Republican part wins it will finally settle the matter, fc tho people will say for the second tim in eight years that they favor the coi tin'unce oi the Protective policy. If the Democrats win it will mean continued agitation of the question ft an iodefinitenumber of years, and kee tho business of tho country in an unse tied state, for the power will be give into the hjnds of a party which nevi has had and has not now a settled (lac, policy. Its only definite aim is oppot tion to Republicanism, while it offo nothing better in its place. True, it a vocates tariff reform, but is unable decide just what tariff reform mean With some it moans absolute free tradi with others it moans a reduction in tl tariff, with incidental protection; wll till nthnra it means tariff forroveni only; with others it meana wiping 01 the whole protective system by or blow; and with others it means attac ing the tariff piocemeal fashion?it most daniierous of all methods, since keeps tho industrial world in an once tain and anxious state, no industi knowing just when ita torn will con to be attacked and parhops wiped o of existence. In contrr.it to tfie uncertain polii of the Democratic party?uncertai now, though its ultimate intention mi be the complete establishment of fri trade?is tho broad American policy protection to American industries, i embodied in the McKlnley.bill by tl Republican party. There is no mista ing where it stands. There are no vai ous schools of theorists. Every Rcpu lican in the land stands upon ono pla form, hosbutonetheory and that thooi expressed in the form of a law the par has placod on the statute books theory practically applied, and und the workings of which the country h grown great, prosperous and powerft while her industrial interests have i creased and developed wonderfully. These, then, are the positions whic the two parties occupy on the eve battle. If either hai an advantage I is the Republican party, for, by reas of the certainty of ita position, becau the people know whero to find it on tl great questions affecting their welfa and happiness, and because of t magnificent record of the past thirl two yean, It possessor tho confides of the industrial and business worlc On the othor hand, the Democrat party, whose whole rocord ha* be one of opposition to evory prlnclp' every measure which the Republic* havo carried to a successful issue, frc the conduct of tho war for the Uni down to the passage of the UcKinl bill, is placed at n decided disadvaritaf Let those who discuss the possibll! that this candidate or that candidate weak or strong, is popular or unpopul in certain sections or among certs classes, bear this in mind: That theae years the personal popularity men ia not the groat issuo in a preside tial campaign. Vital principles a party records are at stake. As the sues are forced when the campaign p greases they are forced upon the pub mind. It ii not whether Benjaix Harrison or Qrover Cleveland will i tribute, the petty offloti, bat shall the principles of the Republican party prevail or ahall the Democratic party be given the power to carry ita un-American theories into effect? i ? Enoonrage tho Youngsters. The KrgitUr sneers when boys under the voting age take part in a Republican demonstration. One of the poli, oies of the Republicans .la to encourage D the boys to participate in the work of j the party. They are not voters now 0 but they will be soon. 3. Many thousands all over this broad 5 land, who four years aso marched in a Republican processions and belonged to t campaign clubs, and wore sneered at by x the opposition, will form this year the ? great army of first voters who will vote for Harrison and Reld. 0 Part of the work this year ii< to edu1 sate the youth who will vole' two years * and four years hence. Let the Republld can boys in line, with their red fire and _ vigorous yells. They are on the right I. track. The party qplrit thoy imbibe ' now will grow in them and make good = Republicans of them in the future. So long as they are encouraged and 2 made to feel at home in Republican parades and clubs tbey are not likely to ' stray after false Democratic gods. The * work is educational and is intended for = .K'Jug Americana aa well as tl:e present voters. ,t We thank the RegUle? for nnintention' ally furnishing ui with & text for those " few remarks. >Sir. Blaine's Position. Mr. Blaine does not need to say, "I am a Republican." There is no doubt where ho stands. His influence for the cause of Protection, Reciprocity and good government will be felt in the campaign. On hearing the result of the Minneapolis convention he wrote 1 the following characteristic letter: "Tho nwoltitlou, energy and pertinence whlcli [. marked tbe proceeding* of the convention At Mluueapolla will. If turned asalnjt tbe common foe. vis tho election In Novemlxr. "All minor dlflcrcttcel iboiUd bo-merged In r tbe duty of every Bopubllcan to do all 111 his power to cleat thu'.ticket this day nominated by ie the national Republican obnvention. JiMEDO. BuiJit'1 The talk about resentlulneas on the ^ part of those who attempted to dofent t President Harrison's rononination is humbug. Republicans, like Mr. Blaine, are so from principle. They, as a rule, j work for party success for patriotic reaij. Bons?because they believe in the doctrines of Republicanism, and desire them perpetuated?and not for selfish motive?. Harrison and Reid will be j_ triumphantly olected. '' While the small fry Democratic editors hereabouts are declaring that 8 "Harrison is our moat," the "very man ;? Democrat wanted nominated," &c., the great Democrrtic editors of the country are conceding tbattlie Republican nom I" ination it one of great strength. Henry Watteraon, for ^instance, tlie greatest y Democratic editor in the country, reir marks that "beyond question the nomi0 nation of the President ia the strongest that the Boptj|>liciy4 (Joa'A* possibly hare made." a ?. , >r SoxrAxo we are told that the mission of the _ Republican pari; ii ended: we have met our P dentin? and fulfilled it Bui tho destiny of a l.rojrrcwdve party is never fulfilled In an advancing ancf ejtpaiidlut: national life. So long n ax there remain* a wrong to be redressed; so lone as all tho privilege* of citizenship arc not Jr freely enjoyed under the guaramya tbat the .1 constitution gives to all oltlKiu ol this union, lust so long will this be a mission for the KepubII lloAn party.?CAauactpiteprajir Uiiinecpolt*. rs And Mr. Depew might have added, d- juBt ao long will Republicans stand toto eolher'in the great national contests, a. bury their persenaj disappointments J 9; and move shoulder to shoulder against le the common enemv. h le Thi gracofulnoss with which the rt anti-Harrison leaders accepted the re ,e suit at Minneapolis and declared thoir t. intention to go to work for the ticket 10 as earnestly at it. they had .had their it own way, is an augury for success in r. November, and will inspire the entire ry party with thespirlt of unity, and enle thusiasm. It means that the great Rent publican party will be solid for the ticket and the platform. y ln Thx Register's comments on the nomnation of President Harrison are much e in the same line as thoso it mado four of years ago. It isn't the first time in the u past thirty-two years that Democrats 10 have carried the country in their minds immediately after a Repufilican nomi,j_ nation; yot only once have they carried it at the polls, and then it was done by accident it- . Thx newspaper fakirx in the Texas ly flooded district were not satisfied with "a 'depicting the horrors of the situation as Br they actually were, but in their excite'j8 raent sent over the country the start' lins statement that thouiands of fish n" wore drowned in the flood. Texas reporters aro bound to be sensational or :h, nothing. 01 1 " it Thx esteemed Register has already boon gun its custoipary campaign of mis ,sb representation and bluster. Republibe cans have become so used to it that re they know just what to expect, and will he be little aflbcted by the Register's false ,y- reports about Republican meetings, etc. ce l,_ Thx smallpox scare Is increasing in ;ic Pittsburgh, and the papers of that city en say that the outlook is really alarming. lSi Wheeling should take warning, and act ns on the assumption that matters may im grow worse at Pittsburgh. "A stitch in on time saves nine." Jjf Tin Shinnston Star is a neatly printod , weekly local paper that has begun life 7 in that prosperous town in Harrison lar county. It is non- political and will 1IQ doubtless receive, as it deserves, the in cordial support of all the citizens of the 0[ community. >?- Haxkison will be the eighth Preslnd dent of the 33 who havo presided over is- tho destinies of this Republic, electod ro- to a second term. lie | ? dn "Grandfatiieb's Hat"?In hoe signc lis- vlnces. , I ' t":'Z . 4y* \ ODD ENDS. A singular boycott ?u recently onforced against '? local pedagogue at Bronkow, in Germany, by the parents of hit pupils. They objected to the schoolmaster's extreme notions of discipline, and agreed among themselves to keep their children at home. So the bell rang for two day? without the appearance of a scholar at the school room, until at last tho magistrate summoned the parents before him for conspiracy, and tho schoolmaster won the day. During tho May term of the Superior Court at Carbon, Me., a number of .. < 11 1 ?hnm | aliens were nuiurauscu, ?ujuiiK t..vu* an Irishman. When the clerk put the question: "Do you renounce all alloeinnco to the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland ?" he replied: "I'll go back on the Queen; but, young man, I'll nover go back on old Ireland?never!" The lawyers smiled, the spectators tittered, the candidate s petition was accepted and he got his papers. A few nights aco tho musical director .of one of the playhouses in Pittsburg received a very queer looking box adorned with skulls and crossbones. He was groatly frightened aud removed the suspicious looking box to police headquarters, where it proved to be a ball of yariu. A would-be joker of Rochester, N. Y., surreptitiously inserted a deck of cards in a box to bo placed in the cornerstone of the solBiers' monument The ceremonies ot laying the stono wore delayed by tills little joko and tho committee was very indignant over the affair. The best cori owned by William Stillwagon at (-clioenorsville, Fa., ate forty cakes of soap that lira, tStlllwagon had made and had set out to dry. IJalf an hour lator the cow was found with a stream of froth oourins from her mouth and she was suffocated. London Truth tells a story of a clergyman who, provoked beyond restraint by the coughing in his church, stopped abruptly in his discourse and blurted out: "This is either tho most diseased or the most impertinent congregation I ever preached to." A new arrangement for the detection ot tiro damp consists in pumping the air into a testing, room and testing it with a Bunion burner. If the air contains a dangerous quantity If fire damp it ignites, ami, moving a valve, sounds a gong of warning. A ray of light which would travel around the earth in about one-eighth of a second takes more than four hours to como from Neptuno. From Alpha Contauri, the nearest fitod star, light makes the journey in. fire and one-half years.The speed of the fastest railway is not much more than half that of the golden eagle's flight. The birdoften makes 140 miles an hour. The bicycle was invented by a German baron sixty years ago, and was first called a tresina. PERSONAL POINTS. It soems that W. S. Gilbert, who wrote the librettos of "Pinaforo" and "The Mikado," is tiio author of the air, "Ta-ra-ra boom-de-ay," which is having such a rage just now on both sides of the Atlantic. The music waa adapted to its present use without the real au* xnnann^ h'lirintr hnftn Hnlfl t n an American publisher and not copyright ed. Sousn, leader of the Marine band in Washington, tins decided to accept the ; otter of a syndicate to remove to Chicago and conduct an orchestra there. He is guaranteed a salary ot $0,000 a year | for five years with an interest in tho I profits of the organization. Frau Probst'. who enjoyed the dis| tlnction of being tho heaviest woman in Europo, has just died at Traubing, in Bavaria, at the age of forty-ono. At her death she weighed 650. Tho little king of Spain and his roval sisters have an English governess (Miss Etta Hushes), as well as an Austrian and Spanish eoveruoss, and each gets a salary of $1,000 a year. liev. C. 6. Bruner Is psstor of the Evangelical church in Lincoln, Neb., and his wife, ltov. Ella G. Bruner, acts as assistant pastor, and occasionally occupies tho pulpit. His old manager, Thoodore Bromley, is now authority for the assertion that Mr. Edwin Booth has xofused to entertain a proposition to appear npon tho outgo iiguut. The trouble with his eyesight from which Senator Hoar is suffering is now reported, tho Boston Advertiser says, to be more serious than was believed al first. Mine. Marches!, tho famous Italian vocal teacher, is German by birth, studied chiefly in England, and has her school iu Paris. She married an Italian. DON'T SMILE. The habits of a lifetime on shore are not easily shaken oil when one goes to sea. Mr. and. Mrs. Perkinaon were or their first ocean journey and were ir their state-room one day when Mr, Perkinson remarked to nls wife: "1 think it must lie raining." Mrs. Per Mnson rose, peeped out of the porthole upon the broad ocean aud said: "1 guess 'lain't rainin' much. I don't sec anybody ont with an umbrellal"Yaulh'i CcmpnrtUin. Mistross (finding visitor in kitchen)" Who is this, Mary?" Mary (confused! ?"My brother, m'm." Mistress (sut piciously)?"You're not much alike.' Mary (stammering apologetically)? "Wo were, m'm, but ho's just had hii beard shaved otT, and that makel hln look difl'erent, m'm.?Pict Me Up. Primus?"Nixon's salary is raised His employer saw him refuse to go int< a barroom with a friend." Socundus"It was a matter of principle with Nix on, I suppose?" Primus?"Yes; it wa his turn to treat."?Smillt, Gray <t Cm' Monthly, As a pleasant-facod woman passed tho corner Jones touched iiis hat to hei and remarked feelingly to his compan ion: "An, my b'oy, I owe a great dea to that woman." "Your mother?" wa the query. "No, my landlady."?Detni Free J'rtst. Jinks?"I don't believe Dante's de scription of the Inferno is correct.' Winks?"Why not?" Jinks-"Not oft of the shades said to any other shade 'Isthis.hoteuoughforvou'"?New Yor Weekly. It is conjectured thaf a specific ma; yet be fonnd for every ill that flesh i heir to. However, this may be, certain ly tho bestspeciflcyet found for disease of the blood is Ayer's tjarsaparill'a, an most diseases originate from impur blood. D4W A toll line of E. C. Burt's celebrate) fine shoes just received. L. Y. Bloxd, Bole Agent IP the awcSNor has omitted to wmc* iron, soe to It that you are listed. Yoi will be deprived nt your vote in N'r vembcr Ir your name ia not on the ai seasor'a bonk. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria ftm, ^AKIH6 nnuinpn ruvvuLn Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all lu lcaveulug strength. ?Latest U. a. Govsuikxst Food EovalBaki.no Powder Co., 106 Wall 8t, N. X. WAIFS FROM THE WEST. M, Dowling, of Minneapolis wean $000 worth of artificial legs and arms. His left arm and both legs are gone and all hiit the stumps of hia right thumb. Nevertheless he writes a good hand, gets about briskly, and does more business than many a whole man. Prof. Nelson, a geologist of Wales, has been inspecting the Southwest Missouri zinc mines in the interest of an English corfipimv. He states that European zinc ore is nearly oxhausted and that English smelters will have to draw their oimnitf am from -America. It is aaid-forty-four families at Junction City, K?n., have been conducting a co-operative kitchen lor a yoar past, and find from the annnal report of the treasurer that the total cost was {5,000 an average of $113.60 per family, or a little over'$2 per week. A candidate for a congress nomination in one of the Kansas districts was accused of writing poetry. He deniod the charge, with indignation, adding: "1 used to write verses when a boy, but I gave up the habit years ago." The mayor of Omaha haa signed an ordinance to licence gambliug-housesat $25 per month, and provides that gambling shall be done in public. This leaves no chance for petty officials to blackmail the gamblers. A Western theater which had been temporarily closed, announces that it will sjiortly reopen with Mile. Flyaway, the celebrated danseuse, newly painted and decorated. Mr. Potts, of Dade county, Mo., tasted until the forty-fourth day had pasted, then was able to take nourishment and itf now reported as recovering. The Way of It* Atlanta ConttUulion. Dear John; We're In the ocean's foam, It's brought tho color to my check; I know you'io lonesome there at homo? Seud me your salary every week. Nearly every one needs a good spring medicine, and Hood's Sarsaparilla is undoubtedly. the.besk. Try it this season. 2 TO RKPUBLIOANa * It is part of the Democratic plin to challenge the vote of every Rapabll CAM wno i HIS Ilia won MKicnntiu uiiudi th< now Wbit Virginia election law. Don't let them Una you unprepared. LS. Good sella dry goods the cheapeit. 8KF! that, yon aro awqeswod. PUBLIC SALICS. jpUBLIC SALE OF ValuaWe Real Estate. To cl<wo an estate I will offer on 8ATURDAY, JUNE 18, 189J, at 10 o'clock a. m.. at tho front door of the Court House, oflfcr for?ale tho followlnff property: A part ol lots Nos. 37 and 38, in Kast wheeling addition, situated on the northwest corncr of Wood and Nineteenth streets, on which Is erected tho two-story brick house numbered 1825 Wood atreet; contain* five rooms aud ? flifnufll1 T utTiiiu/lh' aiuro ruuui. uw?w?.. Real K?tnto Agout. , . 1210 Chapline Btreet Telephone 107. jail Lot Sale at Glendale! TUESDAY, JUNE 28,1892. Beautiful, high lying land. Most of the lots 10ft by 175 feet, some mucWarger. Throe packs. Ample street*, made very large In offect by established building line* Good neighbors and no crowding. Many shade trees, and more to be set out Electric light assured. Poles, wire and other materials already ordered. Cheap railroad . rate*. Mne trains euch way dally. Health, com1 fort anil economy in buying and building at > Glendale. i This is uot a boom movement, nor is this a , time to be booming real estate. It is the time 1 for purchasers to secure bargains. Examine the firopertv. its improvements and Its surround* ugs. Notice the march of improvement southward along the river. Thore Ic no other place within roach of Wheeling as beautiful fix Glen? dale, or aa certain to grow in value und- attract[ iveneu. Remember the day o{ sale aud be there. . Jnne&.]M2. ' For pla'j. giving full Information, apply by - postal curd or in person to the undersigned. WTC. 13RSKINE, I Trustee of the Glendale Syndicate, 1318 Market street. Wheeling. Je8 ' SUMMER RESORTS. : Deer Park and Oakland, On the Crest of the Uleghanles, . j,ooo feet above tid&watkb. \ SEASON OPENS JUNE 22,1892. I These famous mountain resorts, situated at - the summit of the Alleghanles and directly upou tho main line of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad. * have tho advantage of its splendid vestlbuled I express train btrviuo both east and west, and are a therefore readily accessible from all parti of the i country. All Baltimore & Ohio trains stop at 4 Deer Park and Oakland during the season. Bates. 180, 173 and t90 a month, according to . location. Communications should be addressed it to GEORGR D. DeSHIELDS. Manager Baltimore & Ohio Hotels, Cumberland, lid., up to Juno ID; 0 after that date, oithor Deer Park or Oakland, ; Garrett county, Md. my7-waa 1 A Delightful Summer Resort. T 8,000 FEET ABOVE TIDE WATER. 8 ; HURORH, Jh?. i the gwrrnsuiio or axebica. e The Aurora House aud annex vrttl open June l Tho flnwt health resort in the Alleganlee; free 1 from bay fevor. foes and malaria; no moiquitos; accommodations lint-class; terms reasonable. Send for circulars. my!8-w.*s J. H. SHAFFER. Proprietor. . THE STOCKTON, ? - CAPE MAY, N. J., A FIRST-CLASS HOTEL, , Will opto June 4 and remain open until OctoJ t?TL r. THEO. WALTON, 1'ropttalor. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. F)R RENT?8T0RE ROOM, GOOD locution, Id Bridgeport Inquire of a % APPKNZKLLBB, Bridgeport 0. JelO "TJITASTED?SALESMAN; SALARY it from start, permanent place. BROWN BROS. CO., Nurserymen, Rochester, N. Y. Jell* T7*ORRENT-4 COMPLETELY FURJ? NISIIED houso .for the summer? location on the Island: plenty of shade. Address "HOPSE."P. 0.BorsM.dty. Jell "11TANTED?THREE OR FOUR T T good non-union Hot Nailers; must be lober, cnt-ciau workmen: alao one or two good wide-awake gllttormen. P0TT8T0WN 1R0.VC0.. PotUtown. Pa. ,j je-11 Best quality of LIQHTN1N0 AND MASON fruit Jars -ASOJelly Glasses. ALBERT STOLZE & CO.'S. Iel8->nray Taucy Gkocrm, 1117 Market Street. QARD OF THANKS.. Tbo members of TentonU Sinking Society deriro to return thanks* to the captain and ail officers of tbo steamer Liberty for their kind and courteous treatment at our excursion SunCHA8. KRONJAfcdER, , JA13 Secretary. j^?A60N FRUIT JARS. JELLY GLASS, ' STONEWARE. All Sizes, ' O. E. MURRAY & CO., * J0I8 ? 1806 Market Street j^-ATUBAL STONE FILTER. Call and see onr new Filter?the best and eheapett yel produced^. EWING BROS., Je7 1215 Market Street GARDEN 0BX3S! We hare the Largest and Bait Selected Stock of GARDE5 SEED In tbo 8tato All New. Fresh Stock, and warranted true to name. SPECIAL LOW PRICxa to market gardener* ana dealer*. Seeds In So und 10c packots. sent by mall, postage paid, on receipt o price. K. HOGE. ap2 1113 Market Street pOR RENT. ' In the old Bodley Wagon Works bulldlnga, suitable for manufacturing or storage purposes, ono room on ground floor, 85x66 feet; one room on second floor, &x06- feet; one room on third floor. 85x66 feet. All of above connected by cle valor. Ono room on ground floor. 35x66 feet; one ro-ira on reeond Boor. 30*00 feet. Steam power furnished with nay of the above rooms if desired. Apply to the West Virginia tobacco co. myl6-Mw*p FORTY-FIFTH Annoal Commencement ?AT? MT. DE CHANTAL, June 15,1892,10:30 a. m. A spoclal B. & 0. train will leave Wheeling at 10 a. in. and return at>/:30 p. in. No one admitted without card of invitation. Safroshmenta will be sold by Mrt. Zclgoner. Dinner will bo served by the Sisters to pupils and their parents. jelS IfATTUT TU flUff NT XT JILVUiU I/G UllttlUflli, JUNE 14, 1892, 8 P. M. The young ladles of the Academy will pro* duco the beautiful ope/etta entltlod THE CULPRIT FAY, On which occasion the friends of the institn* tlonwill bo entertained; with wnarkling music, rendered by the best talent of Mount Do Chun/ . A special train will leave Wheeling at 7:30 o'clock, returning at 10:15 p. m. Admission. Including roundirlp from Wheeling by Ik 40. R R.,ei00i * Tickets and Librettos can be hod at F. W. Baumcr's music store, C. Schnopf's drug storo, and M. J. O'Kano's shoe store. after Juno 1st Owing to limited space tickets should be pro* cured at once. my27-xw*y ' SUMMER SESSION ?OP tub? Wheeling Business College! For tho benefit of tcachws and others desiring SHORT COURSES in BOOKKEEPING, ENGLISH, SHORTHAND and TYPEWRITING, beginning MONDAY, JUNE 20, 1802. SPECIALLY LOW RATES. OPEN DAY AND EVENING. Those who deslro can enter now. Please call early and make arrangement*, or addrew as above for circular. jol SUMMER GOODS! In Great Variety. "Jewett's" Refrigerators, "White Monstiio" Ice Cream Freezers, "Aurora" Yapor Stoves, "Aurora" Gasoline Stoves, "Sunbeam" lavn Mowers, "Fowler's" Latest Improved Fly Fans, "Jewett's" Water Coolers, "Royal" Oil Stoves, "Reliable" Gas Stoves. BEST GOODS. LOWEST PRICES. NESBITT~& BJSifL ja!3 1812 Market Street Presents for tbe Graduates! AT;?EDW. t. ROSE &GO.'S Bicycles fro# $20 to tljo. Tricycles from $6 to $25. Typewriters from (5 to $100. Cameras from $2.50 to $65. 1 The Instruction, roN<;inFR 1 The^ Enjoyment, CONSIDER >The Usefulness, J The Sweet Memories That each one of .the above" mentioned articles is capable of bestowing and call at 51 Twelfth Street. 3. L. BALLARD, Manager. SUBSCRIBE FOB WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER t SI 00 PBRYBKR. J, S. RHODES & CO. M NEW ~ .Crepe de Chine n.s i AT? a 251 d) V h f,f. ? _ THE HANDSOMEST FABRIC &Oo - -j ' FOrJEvanlng Wear Out This Season. In Cream, Blue, Pink, Nile, Cardinal and Yellow. J. SIM. TO THE LADIES. P (Trade n*rk.i |-v & r KID GLOVES U^Wsvm>^V! Iglp FUR SALE BY Geo. E. Stifel & Co., Pole agouta for tbo above brand* of Kid Gloroi FLOUR. NEWSPAPERS Are Yalnatle for Advertising! THE FAMILIES USING THE GALAXY Are Our Best Advertisers. Jo2-MATh JEWELRY. Commencement Day Presents, SOLID SILVER PENS, PENCILS, PEN TBAYS, INK STANDS, LETTER OPENERS, BOOK XABKS, ETC, SILVER AND GOLD BOW KNIT PINS Of All Kinds. And hundreds of Nice. Bright Article* which will bo sure to please you. CLASS RINGS AND PINS I Made on 8hort Nottco. I. G. DILLON & CO. INSURANCE. ' RALPH WHITEHEAD, city agent American Insarance Go. orWnmtKo, W. Va., Can place your Insurance la Flrst-clw Companies, such ?s American, of Wheeling; Underwriten. of Wheeling; Norwich Union, of Eu?< land: Westcrti Assuranoe. of Toronto: Va. F. A M. Insurance Company, of Richmond; Homo Insurance Company, of New York; Manchester Fire Assurance C6mpany. of England: StaU; Investment and Insurance Company, of California. Pennsylvania Firo Insurance Comnany.of Philadelphia; New York Underwriters. of New^ork. REPRESENTING #10,000,000 ASSETS. I rospeetfullv solicit a share of your buslncis. Telephone jfo. M. apQ7 ^ PICTURES A. ART MATERIALS. | J^OOKING GLiUSSES AND PICTURES 4' | Framed to' Ofder on Short .Notice, . _AT? | ART BTOHB, 1222 Market Street. mm . ' E. L. NICOLL.. (') ?ARTrST ? \y 8tudlo2l54 MalnStreot. t >C U