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CARPET DEPARTMENT?STONE *, THOMA3. ' Stone & Thomas Your attention is called to the (treat attraction* offered in oar Carpet Department tbii week. Aji opportunity that is seldom bad to refurnish and brighten vonr homes at A great saving. An elegant stock to elect from. Rooms measured and Carpets cut free of charge. Hemp Carpet 8 i-2c, usual price ijc. Union Carpet 29c, usual price 40c. ? Extra Heavy Union Carpet 36c, usual price 50c. CC Wool, Extra Super 49c, usual price 6jc. Best All-Wool Carpeit J9C, usual price 7jc. Agra Carpets 69c, usual price 90c. Brusseks Carpets j?c, usual price joc. Brussels Carpets 49c, usudl price 62 1-2C. Brussels' Carpets 6jc, usual price 7fc. Velvet Carpets 89c, usual price $1 2j. Wilton Velvet Carpets 98c, usual price $1 35. Smith Best Moquette Carpet i^. usual price $1 jo. exitr-A. 1 Our $3.00 Carpet Sweepers, $1.98 Stone & Thomas 1026 to 1032 MAIN STREET. LATEST FALL STYLES IN HATS-M. J. M'FADDSN. n /f _A nnr\T'o iviur ML/LJC-IN O Latest Fall Styles in Hats We call your aeeeneion to-our new shapes in Haes, the very late and best out, which we sell at our usual low prices. We ask your ii spection oe these new ones. THE "MIDWiAY." ^ THE "ALPS." favor ni The neatest and most stylish Stiff Hat th,i8 season some very finely proportio for fall and winter wear. Youwillflndit ed hats tor etyluli dressers. Onrpric jost the rifiht tbinc. $1.90, $2.40, cannot bo equaled. $1.00, $1.2o, $1.5 $3.00. 9-.00. -!?. QtSft TTo?o <61 on nhiMmin'a TTnfa nnrl Ann. nit nhflnA Utlior nun Bl/lOO IU ?? * uaw|ynvw| i - ??? ?? ?r?| ?? r? $1.25, $1.50. I nil colore, all pricos. UMBRELLAS, SATCHELS AND VALISES. fflcFADDEN'S ONE-PRICE STORE l>n" I- 1320 and 1322 Market Street. EARLY SELECTIONS-GEO. M. SNOOK A CO. ARLY SELECTIONS - E|1L FIRST CHOICE J^f. ARE THE BEST This is particularly truo of DRESS GOODS and CLOAKS. With suvon departments of Dre&s Goods and one immense doparment of Cloaks, we are in a position to moot the moat exacting demands. No important atyle or color in either plait\ or novelty weave Dress Goods but whnt has a strong representation. No now 9hape. ahnde or material in Cloaks but what can be fonnd in our enlarged Cloak Koom, which, by tho way, is on the grouMfloor?no stairs to climb. Many confined styles in both lines. In 60c DrSsa Goods alone, over 100 styles shown, including complete lines of the celebrated Jamestown Worsted Goods. Finer lines too diverse to permit description. Velvets, Satins, Novelty Silks, Braid, Silk Beaver, Jet, Metal aud other trimmings to match all Dress Goods. $1,064 worth of Readymade Suits will be sold for $470. Fall weight WRAPS, in black and all the^jrevailing colors. Tie Three Guardsmen:} In brightened armor, will be on duty at our place of business this season as usual. Geo. M.' Snook & Co . J. 3. RHODES A CO. SHOES-O'KANE & CO. A REMARKABLE ^ Suit Sale. $5790 Ladies' Serge and Cloth Suits, all r. this season's styles. These Suits ^ have been selling for S8 50, 510 oo, $12 00 and $15 00. THE WHOLE WORLD ' Is after our Shoot, and pretty much cverybod In Whoellng Is in oar iboes, too. Yoa com do Ladies'Fall Jackets comet to footwear. A bad 1 hew tonoheia tendi In Tans, Navy Blue and Black, ?po<seo(l tended'ipot?muitbe touched u?htt At It you mot to touch jrour poekotbook lljhu S;> SO and S3 graues, tor and that's apt to bo a louder ipot now^-dtj come to as tor Shoe* $3,95, O'KANF&CO. v . 1113 Main Street x RhnnAQ *j?b + w?hk* III Ml AlilvVivU IfEATLV AKD PROMPTLY EXECUTED <SC OO. AT THE I>'TELLIGENCBR JOB BOOKS' 4^- . - fb MMgewr. ^ Oflli'flt Jfo?. *5 and 117 Voiirteeuth Street. ^ New AdvartUemanta. < Pnr Sale?Dra* Btore. Don't Driuk?Ewlus Bros. . (Jove* Uoumo?AI (J. Field Colombian MJu- I troii. , Opera Hotue?Thomas Q.8aabrookeOpera Com* 1 puny tod Ballet* ] Grand Opera Hottae?"Devll'a Mine,*1 \ J-or eala? Nasbitt 6 Iseriu*. ' Wall J'aper?John FrJedol & Co. , For Item?Good Room tor Barber 8bop. Auctlou bale of Unclaimed Storage Gooda?W. j II. Hnllor. Auctioneer. , UcFadueu'a La teat Fall fitjrlea In Hata?Eighth 1 Paae. school Booka?H. F. Bebreni. ] MouougaU Coal and tJoke?K. 0. D. Willi*. A llMQdaome Present?Curie Bros. juiug uaniL'u?\j. a. ueignr. i Notice of General Meeting?Wheeling AtUlotlo Wheelmen Company. NEW, NOIJBV, U8KFCL. Call nnd ??m1n? oar handsome line of fall Woolens,foreign and domestic and em* bracing every novelty la medium weight overcoatings, suiting* and trow*erlngs. Special attention riven to fashionable get up. Fit guaranteed and price* reasonable. Ji?ro? Hygiene Underwear again handled ?nil fdren. Ofllee Cant*, Grey. Blue. Illnak, neat and comfortable. Bluer Jacket*, IIrown and Black, unrivaled for warmth and durability. 100 dosen Fast Colored, Sonmle** Half flose at 85c a pair. Just received. Dent Glove,'Eighinio Shirt and a full line of Gents' newest Furnishings. C. HKB8 ? SOflS?, Fnnhionnblo Tailors and Gents' Furnish* era, 13"1 und la?3 Market street. i 'mm IF yon cannot see and need Speotacles yon should call on us and have your eyes tested without charge. We have the finest instruments and more experience than any other optician In the Slate, aud guarantee satisfaction or money refunded. JACOB W. GUUBB. _ Jeweler and Optician, Corner Twelfth and Market. A Conductor Killed. T.L_ T? 11 t-_ -n-lil ? %iuuu ? won *uvwu AJUIHIUUIU & Ohio freight conductor, was killed < _ just m be wag leaving the Newark yards for Bellaire Sunday. As he went to jump on hl? own train he misted his / footing, and was thrown acrou the , track and stunned bo that he lay helpless, and an engine following struck ' him and hurt him so badly that he died , in the evening. , The Fire Apparatus. Clerk Fee, of the fire department, has ] received advices that the new chemical engine, hose wagon and ladder truck for the Island house would be shipped ,t yesterday, and that it is a beauty. The new truss ladders have also been shipped from Detroit The Vigilant en- ' gine is completed, readyfor service, and will be taken up to the house to-d?y. j It is now as handsome as well as efficient as a new engine. ' , Not 31r?. Or. Aduddle. Relatives of the Jennie Hammond ! who was at Bellaire years ago and who , married Dr. Adduddle in Colorado, , writo that it is not she that is to marry > the Turk and that she has not even been at the World's Fair. They are incensed over the coupling of her name with the matter. There seems to be 1(j somo mistake about the home of the 1 n woman whose fondness for Turkey has 1 es given rise to so much talk. ( m ( ' The Cl<7 Markets. I The council committees on fire depart 8> ment and markets were called to meet 1 last night. The former failed to net a < quorum. The committee on markets J passed upon bills aggregating $12.70, j and recommended their payment It 1 was also agreed to recommend to coun- ' I cil at its meetiuK this evening that the 1 election of a market master for the ' II Second ward, to succeed Mr. Kenney, deceased, be postponed one month. ' The contract for plastering and white- ' _ washing at the Fifth ward marketbouse was awarded to Sam Jennings, at hit bid of $18. ~ ? i For Robbery at Cleveland. 1 Yesterday Charles J. Denny was 1 lodged in the lockup on a charge of robbiog a man at Cleveland of a coat and vest, gold watch, chain and charm, a ; gold ring and a Hibernian pin. He had ' been in the workhouse ana the Cieve* ' land and Wheeling authorities were ' corresponding in reference to his case. { Yesterday he admitted that he stole the 1 coat and vest, bat denied that be took 1 the other thinjrs. He agreed to ratnrn to Cleveland without a requisition, and ' he will be held here until the Cleveland < officers arrive and take hi mo in custody. 1 Nearly a Fir#. Last evening about 10 o'clock one of the innumerable tolephone wires in the 1 rear of the St. Charles Hotel bv Some ( means fell onto tho exectric lighting wire there and caused it to fall unto tho roof of tho frame stable. The wire bln&od up and it looked as though the stable was. going to burn, but two or three men who saw the imminent dan- , ger got on the building and ttiriWthe burning wirofrom tho roof. The lights in the hotel all burned out. Tho electric lights in that part of town were oil for several hours. .Mr. Robrecht, of the St Charles, threatens to cut down tho the wires that cross over his promises. .A Woinuu'* timid en Death. Sirs. Rebecca Seals, aged 82 fears, dropped dead at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Mary Gill,on Deep Run, on Sunday. She was born at Greenville, Ohio, nnd had resided in this section since she was six years old. The' surviving children are'Frank and Thomas SoalsandMrs. Mary Gill and Mrs. James McDonald. Her son William was killed during the rebellion in the battle at , ? Pittsburgh Landing. Ho was a member of Company K, Fifteenth Ohio Vol_ untonr Infantry, and many veterans remombor him. Mrs. Seals, ivho was an excellent woman, was a sister of Mrs. Betsy Cbarnock, of Wheeling. The de- j censed drew a pension. Hor voucher was recently stolen and she Intended to visit Martin's Ferry yesterday to sign another one. Tho funeral will tako place to-day at 1 o'clock. A ltattla For Blood Is what IIord'? Sargaparilla vigorously fights, and it Is always victorious in expelling all the foul talnta and giving ij the vital fluid the quality arfrt cuantity . of perfoct health. It cures scrofula, salt rheum, bolls and all other troubles caused by impure blood. Hood's Paw cure all liver ills. 25c. Sent by mall on receipt of price by 0. I. Hood & Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Massachusetts. 4 IJ New Arrivnl. !'' New York State grapes at 25c a baa' " ket, at Auix. Dubdt's, 1038 and 1040 , Main street, two doors south of new ? tridRO. , f. Special Rxcmrslon to Plttabnrgh Exposition f, via Baltimore St Ohio Itallroad. ?i Thursday, September 14, the Baltimore A Ohio will sell excursion tickets to the Pittsburgh Exposition at the rate of $2 for tho' ronnd trip, including admission to the exposition, good return" ing three days, including day of sale. Eleven Dollars on WedneiMlay. ? On Wednesday, 'September' 13, .the Wheeling & Lake Erie Railway will sell round trip tickets to Cbtoago for eleven dollars, good ton days. Shortest route and quickest time. Children Cry for. PitAer's Castor^ DOMESTIC INFMilOITl'. \n CnuTorjr Cuo ltafore Squire Arkle Luc Kitnloi, A very unsavory cuo of intor-domestic difficulties cams up for trial last averting In Juitica George Arkle'i court. h'red Winters, who lives on Jacob street oetween Twenty-sixth and Twentyleventh streets, waa up, charged by Mrs, Annie Belt* and husband with Having applied various unseemly and rlolont epithets to bor, and with lmvng made an assault. The assault conlistad in throwing a stick at Mrs. Beltz, srhiclj, however, went wide of its mark. Mr. and Mrs. Winters charged that Mrs. Belli bad used even stronger and more profane language. In addition to these Gorges counter peaco warrants wero irere sworn out The evidence showed :bat white-winged peace has not reigned mpreme in tbo part of the city where hese families reside for some time. In act. no such a condition of affairs has jofin icnown in the criminal annals of the :ity for tome lime. A peculiarity of the rial m that no lawyer* participated. Urs. Beltz bandied tier aide of the case ind Mr. Winters handled the witnesses >n his aide. Tlio conduct of the case ras certainly original to say the least, ind if members of tho legal profession tad been present they would no doubt iave turned green with envy. Tbore tos aregiment of witnesses, mostly fenaies, and the testimony was of a ciiaricter not to bo printed. The squire, after hearing the testinony, fined Mrs. Bellr, $1 on one charge ind $5 on another, aud placed her under i peace bond for one year. The same ines and a?elaiilar bond were inflicted lpon Winters. A GOOD ILLUSTJt ATION )f How Soma Farm urn Fool In Thoco Times. "Seeing those sheep," remarked a armer at the State Fair lost week, 'reminds mo of a circumstance that iccnrred down our way this summer, i neighbor of mine employed an uisistant at shoaring time to help him ihear his flock. man proceeded to ?ork but bad not gone very far before .he farmer noticed that he began at the ear end of the sbeep to take oil tlie tool. " See, liere,' shouted the farmer, that's no way to abear sheep; you betin at the wrong end.' "'I don't care. Tbia ia the way I ihear 'etn thia year,' replied the hired inndj w'drking away. "'How an?' asked the aitoniahed leighbor. "'Well, you aee,' Boid the man lolemnly, 'it's just thia way: I voted :he Democratic ticket last fall, and I've jeen ashamed to look a sbeep in the ace ever since. That's why I attack em in the rear.'" A1 Field's Minstrels. The Norfolk Vi'rjiman of recent date laya: Mr. Al G. Field's Columbian Minitreia opened the preliminary theatri:al season at tho Academy of Music last ivenine before an audience which sacked the honse to the very doors, rhe company 1a not only a large one, jut it ia made up of flrst-clasa material, ind the entertainment tbey glxe ia of ,ho very be9t It ia refined and ainuang, and tbore is not n dull moment rom the riie of the curtain to the final dose of the performance. The scenery vaa excellent and the specialties new ind interesting, and, upon the whole, Fleld'a Minatrela gave the best perormance seen here for years in tho line >f minstrelsy. "Devil's Mine" Coining. Below is what the Baltimore News anv> if the "Devii'a Mine" company, which will be at the Grand next Thuraday, Friday and Saturday: A wild western drama, entitled 'Devil's Mine," waa at the Hollliday Street Theatre loat night, attracted a arge audience. The play is typical of veatern life, and replete with hair>readth escapes, gunpowder, death and .lie usual seasoning of romance and ove. Trlxy Hamilton, aa Jenny Willam*, tha heroina. and Fred Dflrev. an Tack Haicley, tho gambler, won the lonors of the evening. Pome of tho icenic effects were much above the ordinary. Jg "Th? I?!r of ChnmpnEiio." One of the funniest comedians auyrhero is Thomas Q. Soabrooke, and tno :omic opera "The Isle of Champagne," n which he ia to appear at the Wheelag Opera House Saturday night, is said ;o be one of the funniest ns well as .uneful pieces ever constructed. It Till doubtless be enjoyed by bs large an mdienco as ever gathered in tbe house. PTjfa 'is ita first presentation here, hougfflf'haa attained fame and popuaritv elsewhere. Tho Modern Uoanty Thrives on good food and aunahine, .vith plenty of exercise in the open air. Her form glows with health and her ace blooms with its beauty. If her lystem needs tho cleansing action of a axativo remedy, sho u?os the gentle ind pleasant liquid laxative Syrup of ?ig?. GOOD BUFI'KK SRfl, nt Grand Army nail, Friday, Soptwmber 15, l>y the women of the Sngliah Lutliomii Church. Alio fen Cretuu ind Cake. No ndmisition fee. Come, Assignee's 6ali of Wall Paper and' Houldlngat cojt, No. 2135 Main streot' V. W. Berry, Assignee. 1'ltUburjch Exposition. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Com>any will sell excursion tickota to tbe Pittsburgh Exposition every day from September 0 to October 21st at the rato >f $2 00, including admission to the Exposition. Tickets will "be good rourning three days, including day of iale, except that tickets sold on Friday vill bo good returning the following Monday. IT IS THE PEOPLE 00 pm TomstLBIST. AND HOT THE TESTIMONIALS OF PURCHASABLE CHEMISTS. THE FALL 3EASON-THE-HUB CU0THIER3. Now! AT THE VERY DAWN OF THE , Fall Season % ? We want our readers, customers and the public generally to know why they should deal at THE HUB. FIRST-We excel all in stock. Where else can you find the variety ? Where else can you find such an immense stock of Clothing, Hats and rurnishings under one root < SECOND-We excel in buying. Our large purchases, backed by plenty of cash, often captures bargains. "THIRD"?We excel in progress; first to continue the one-price and guarantee, and always foremost in finding the best ways to serve the public. BETTER INDUCEMENTS Than ever is what we intend to offer the coming season, so expect to be surprised often. We have the same range of Ciothing. Hats, Furnishings, etc, that were worn a year ago, but they are richer, more beautiful in embelishments and more faultless in shape. .Our numerous departments are rapidly filling urilU ^knnn nlnrrnnf rr r\r\ A r* fU Alf tirlll nil uu Willi iiicac cicgarn. auu uicy win an uc offered at a VERY SMALL PROFIT ON ORIGINAL COST. THE HUB, One-Price Clothiers, Hatters and Furnishers, Fourteenth and Market Streets. AUCTION SALE OF STORAGE GOODS. AUCTIONSALE Furniture and Carpets, AN OPPORTUNITY = FURNITURE. CARPETS* tf k of your life to ee FURNITURE. , CARPETS,. =5 Funis! Yoir Eoi 1 ? furniture. jn| , .. carpets. furniture. carpets, furniture. i TTririlTA XT ?1 A T T-I carpets, furniture. AULllUiN oALlj CARPET& furniture. < carpets, furniture. ". ' OF UNCLAIMED carpets, furniture. ? ? "it. 0arfets<! furniture. wfadorfa I a a/10 I carpeta ? mOldfiC uUOllS!?-? furniture. v/ carpets, furniture. carpets, CONSISTING OF ',...,anr, furniture. ' ? carpets. furniture. bed rooiti Suits, carpets. furniture.- par|or sets, beds, ' furniture. Snrinps Lounges ' furniture. ^ ji d j b ' carpeti furniture 0dd beds' bul'eaus. carpets. furniture. ' washstands, carpets. furniture. Chairs, Tables, i carpets. furniture. Cooking Utensils. j carpets. I FURNITURE. " CARPETS, ALSO AlLAHGE LOT OF . _ lvvvira FURNITURE CARIETS, IZ"Z, Carpets and Rugs, FURNITURE. ) CARPETS. FURNITURE. -bkginkwg- carpet& Sp MONDAY, SEPT. 18, ?? FURNITURE. In front 0f 0|j Court House, corner CAKl JJL, FURNITURE. Twelfth and Chapline streets. Sale CARPETS, furniture. ^ cahpm until the whole lot is sold. pppts. furniture. carph* FURNITURE. ?. ? CARPETS, PommjER TERMS CASH. furniture. carpus. furniture. carpets. FURNITURE. CARPETa I HALLEE, Auctioneer. ?2