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! ~ THE INTELLIGENCER. fnHhMd 0?0r. (AC?#t S?a4?y, by - Tto Intelligencer Publishing Co., 29 AMO 27 rODSTKNIH Sltttl. ?????? Tiran Ptr A ear, b.r Mall, la Advanea, Po*tage Prrptld. Dallj (Six Daft l? IIfee Wf?ki 1 YMr.fA.90 l>?llj.au Month 0.00 Dally, Three Ma?fhs 1.30 Dally (Three Dajrila ih.Wwk) 3.00 Dally (Two Dajra la tha Waeh) *.00 Dally (Owe Month) 43 Wwklr (On* Year m Atfvanct) 1.00 Weekly (?ts Mouth*) M THE DA1LT INTKLIJGENCKR U delivered by carriers in Wheellnjr and adjacent towna at 10 cent* per weak. ?' ? TUB rcrvoni wmniuR iw buimv?ii>? >? ..... DAILY INTEIXIQfiNCKH can do so by sending In their order* to tho IN! TELLIOENCKR office on postal cards or otherwise. They will bo punctually nerved by carriers. i Tributes of Reepect and Obituary Notices SO cents per Inch. Correspondence containing Important news solicited from every part of the surrounding country. Rajected communications will not bo returned unless accompanied by sufficient postage. ' C,' r1 ?u ..J .. 1 JTbe INTELLIGENCER. embracing Its several editions. Is entered In the Postoffice at Wheeling. W. Va.. as second-class * matter.) L I1."- . TSiKNtoNK NCMasas IdKofUl laoat 823 | Comtiof Raoa. 822 THE INTETlIGENCES WIIKKLI.VG. Jt'.lF. W, lift. Readors of the Dailv Intelligencer leaving town tan have the paper sent to any address in the United t States or Canada, postpaid, for ' three months SL30; for one month. , 45 cents; for two weeks. 20 cents. EkAddress changed as often as deaired. A .Yirdlrti Fear. We arc having Just nmv a revival of . hoary old stories, purporting to comc from various parts of the country concerning the remarkable resuscitation of . persons who were supposed to be dead | sod wtio had in some instances been laid out for burial. They are the same old Atorles with which sensational newspaper fakirs regale us when news is dull, And are from time to time put in new dres*?-H and sent to ihe papers. Theje revivals are usually accompanied with Ki a general renewal of the fear among ' many people of being buried alive. With very few exceptions the accounts of persons "coming to life" In their coffins are not based on fact. 8 There are. to be *ure. instances ??f sus; pended animatton. but they are not !; mistaken for death by physicians who know their business, though they may furniah a cue to a sensational newspaper writer for a thrilling story to spread bev1' fort the country. There are so many tafeguards against the mistake of buryIn* a person alive that fears <?f the living tor any such hornole xace iw mem a>c !? neediest. The New York Herald, in discussing this question say?: There is a comfort in knowing that so far a" can be learned the testimony concerning premature burials is founded on supposition rather than on fact. The changes of position of bodies in their coffins have been proven to be due to poet mortem contractions various muscles. A notable'example of what fj would have been an otherwise unex& plainabie condition occurred at one of the German mortuaries. In those recepi r tacles for the dead a. bell rope is placed In the hand ?>f the corpse and attendants are constantly on the watch for possible developments. Although some of these institutions have been in existence for more than a century and hundreds of i- thousand* of dead during that time have been carefully watched, the bell has been run but once, and then by the hand of a corpse at the ni?>ment the arm fell after rigor mortis had passed off. In France ! mortuaries also i sist. with quite a dlffer^ ent purpose. Yet of the many dead that have been deposited in them thero haa not been a singb- Instance in which the faintest sign of returning animation has manifested itself. The morgues throughout th!? country can bear similar testi r inony. This ta fimpie mum-i ?.i i<1Cfc history as against the wild statements of sentatlonal paragraphers. There are. in fact, far greater chances for error In mistaking some of thf* post mortem changes for signs of returning Iif?? than there are for reversing the laws of death which science has demonstrated and the ; experience of ages has attested. Real death has a sure aim and never misses Are. These strong evidences pointed out by [ the Herald that there have been few if ny cases of premature burial, should be auffldent to allay the fears of anyone | who may have been affectcd by tho* pub-1 | llcat ions referred to. The certain Infal-' lible proofs that always accompany death, and which the experienced r*hy? slclan or undertaker Is familiar with, render it next to Impossible for a mistake to occur, and no one who lives In a civilised community need be disturbed ?*? ?hn f.?nr of hi?hic burled alive. ...X Kuiifinrii iii Knickerbocker*. t. Congressman Sprague shocked the dignity of I he senate the other day by appcnr.ru on the lloor during a session of that hody. arrayed In ft bioycle coslumc, a "sorrH" coat, knickerbockers and g ?lf stocking*, and the Washington Post has nobly come to bis defense against the criticisms on his action. The Post arcu'-a that as a member of the houfff Mr. Kpraguc has a right to enter the senate and H Is nobody's concern If his raiment Is not in harmony with Mr. Hoar's or Mr. Tillman's. It l< not Mr. Kprague's fault. Mr Hoar and Mr. Tillman and the rcmalnJer of the eenatc should line up with Mr. gprngue. It ill lie who is in the fashion of Mr? (Jay and not they. The Po.ft give* the senators some ox# cellent advice In a pleasant way. Let them, It ?aya, set up a bicycle apiece. Lot them icet Into knickerbockers and the swim. "If the wheel Is not adopted by the senate why should the senate object to Its adoption by the house? As n fttatler of fact," continues this chivalrous ciw j.plon of Mr. SpraRue, "Mr. Heed -wheels, k.? do Mr. Cannon and Mr. .Simpson V. < do nut know whether Sir. James Ji.imilion Lewi* has joined the movement, but we are sure he will. Th'*o whiskers w?re mode f-?r coasting. They simply woo : :\ib\ The only tfpuble Is thai Mr. dremen tho part an J they don't. All of which 1.4 true. The w1kc| Is not only becoming a necessity and a great convenience, hut It 1* revolutionizing out-door dress for botli men and women. It Is n?'t only a ouice of pleasure Cor the young but a | convenience to men of affairs. It 1? bett ter than tho crowded street car and l? n I great, solver of tho rapid transit problem. Washington, with Its broad, smooth streets, Is the wheelmen's paradise, and If our statesman who are temporarily residing there find, under these conditions, pleasure and convenience In using the ivheel. it is becoming that they adopt also the comfortable and convenient dress of a wheelman. It need not nectwsirily detract from their dignity or from the dignity of the congressional proceedings. A speech upon the tariff, or the currency, or the Cuban question would be no less effective delivered by a statesman In knickerbockers. Perhaps It would have additional attractiveness upon that account, since knlckert>ockers would serve to show off the graceful outlines of the limbs and aid In holding the attention of the eyes of the hearers. Perhaps, also, a general use of the wheel would serve to limber up the dry bones of the senate and tfiere would be. after occasional exercise of this character, less of dyspepsia in some of the speeches and more of practical business sense. A Chauce (o Kvtu. If Spain should refuse to receive Minister Stewart Woodford on che ground that he made speeches twenty-seven years ago sympathizing with Cuba and denouncing Spanish tyranny, it will be time for -the government of the United ?? ? iw.t? miiii/ipir wlilph iTVira w rr?ir? > mun , Minister de Lome, the Spanish minister At Washington, made for himself nineteen years a go. It appears that Minister de Lome is the author of a book written In 1879. In which occurs this estimate of the characterof American citizen*: "The American Is a gr?*at patriot, but h?? almost Invariably robs his country whenever he Is called Into its service." "The Innumerable lot of Jobbero and bribers. weH dressed thieves and desplcable publicans who cast a shadow upon the future of the American Union." "Liberty Ik for hotel-keepers, for stage-drivers. for train conductors, for 'Pullman car nejn^o porters, not for th?* uufortunate being whose lot Is to foot the bill." Whether or not the fact that Minister de Lome was the aurhor of the above words was known to the administration at Washington at the time he was received there as the Spanish representative. we are unable to say, but should Spain object to Woodford because of his denunciation of Spanish rule in Cuba it would afford President McKInley a splendid opportunity to even up the compliment by caling Spain's attention to Its own minister's ifbel upon the people of the United States. Just what course me i-rraiucm ??*>un. u>nk ... matter, no one knows, but there would be a good deal of satisfaction expensed tf he were to indulge in a little correspondence on the line suggested. Governor Boies, of Iowa, ha* deserted the free silver cause. He has seen at last tho fallacy of it and is out with a financial proposition which recognizes the safety and necessity of the gold standard. Of course, the silverites all over the country will denounce the distinguished Iowan. Governor Boies is one of the many Democratic leaders who have followed the free silver Mas just long enough to see its mistake, and he is honest enough to admit it. There will be </thers like him before the Bryan-' ttts have another opportunity to go before th?* country. . regard to party, the sympathy country will go out to Senator Pettfgrew, of South Dakota, who was stricken with paralysis of the vocal organs Saturday while speaking In the senate. His affeetloi is dircctly traceable to the strain he has been under throughout the consideration of the tariff bill. Hopes that no serious results will, follow the collapse are entertained In all circle* at Washington and among the public generally. Another train plunges through a trestle and carries down to death a score of persons. Accidents of this nature have been frequent during the past year or i two. Whether It i? due to the faulty construction of the treaties or not is not known, but the fact that the cases of I - - ? ?1.-4 -I.- nnrW fh#? WPlirht of | iresuen ? railway trains have Increased In number Should bo reason enough for the exercise I of greater carc In the future. That was a striking Illustration of the patriotism that exists among the people of Ireland when paupers In that country refused to eat a special meat dinner prepared for them In honor of the queen's Jubilee. When even the paupers exhibit such devotion t" a eauae as to deny themselves so rare a treat, the depth of the Irish feeling agalnut English rule can be realized. The expense of the queen's Jubilee last week wan 12.1.000.000, which must be paid by the British tax-payers. This does not Include the millions of dollars that were expended by iho people themselves. In the meantime millions of the qu-en's subjects were starving and dying from famine In India, and appealn wrc being made In America In their behalf. A London undertaker who expected there would bo Innumerable fatal accidents during Jubilee week, stocked up with thousands of cofllns and still has them on hand*. He is now complaining (hat the great occasion brought him no business advantage um It <1I<1 so many others, a rather gruesome way of looking at It. This In the year In which Mark Hanna's generalship will lw? t oh ted. Any kind of a chump can vtcer a tidal wave ? Charleston Gnr.r-ttc. So It was a tld.il wave In.st fall after all, wan it? And it wasn't done by fraud and boodle?Just an old fnnhloned tidal wave of patriotism against heresy? At Shoredlteh. England. aahbln refuse In to ho utlllz -d as fuel to furnish power for the electric light plant and water works of that city of 12*?,000 Inhabitants. I K very thing seems to bo possible Ukco ltd VII Governor Hasting*. of Pennsylvania. I? winning fame with his vptOff. II wields h!f? axo men Ih ssly and haa killed wore* of schemes for raiding th" tr-.r ury. Qomex hns again he-n reported kill I Let u* hope Hint thisXory h n?> i. r-t ttie truth than those which have pro ceded It. Perhaps the Wheeling 1 II 'am think* it l? fa for t-j sit on (ho holtom rung of (he ladder* i * CUB&XHr COKMEHT. "I'm nupilaM U? my people," iiayi Poet Austin in his Jubilee ode. We now know who writes tho items in our bucolic contemporaries about "lilll Swipes the talented Hoor-walker In the City Drug emporium, Sundayed and Tues* dayed in our midst."?Chicago llecord. Tho Mugwump prcas of the country is very busy trying to discover aome ulterior, unworthy and dishonest motive on the part of tho administration for the proposed annexation of Hawaii. Tho most far-fetched, ridiculous and contemptible suggestions are made, as if it were Impossible for an American statesman to have honest and patriotic reasons for favoring annexation. These Ifthmnelites would do well to remember that President Harrison, whose motive* nobody questioned, concluded a treaty for the annexation of Ilnwall and tOfft it to the senate.?Indianapolis Journal/1 The" intemperance and increasing I shrillness of Debs' talk ?uggeststhepos- I nihility that he Is looking on the cucumbers when they are green. It is really charitable'to take this view, as the disordered imagination Is thus seen to bo the result of a functional not an or ganlc trouble. In other words ueos will Rot over It.?I*iiftlM?lel|iisiu l'rcatf. Imagination in like a magnifying glass. through which we see things larger than the?* arc in reality. It not only make* anticipated pleasures greater than real ones, but It magnifies the tils and troubles of life, so thnt one suffers more from worries than from real distress. Thus in the presence of pain a fretful person, in nn almost constant state of worry, may become calm;ln the J presence of danger an apprehensive person may be rendered cool and collected. it has frequently been observed | thnt timid women become braver than men when a sudden calamity falls upon them. The .reality does not appear to them as great as that which their i lively imagination had pictured, and I they feel .? sense ?( relief when the phantoms have vanished.?Baltimore Sun. Debs can do no harm. We ourselves believe that he will fail. It seems to um Inevitable that, among h's followers as among other human beings, the laws of nature and of life will *till hold good. Brain*. activity, determination, courage. will dominate at laftt. Weakness, inefficiency. inertia, will fall. But this is a republic. It is a free country. The right of local self-government Is as sacred on the Pacific slope .'is In New Knglnnd. No one is authorized to say that the state of Washington shall not j direct Its own destiny within the limits defined by federal law. Debs is free to fix Ms foothold where he may.?Washington Post. We submit that the Hon. Mark nan- | na by this time must hnve convinced nil his enemies as well as all his friends | that he lowers his colors to no political I manager In the country. Mr. Manna has I a wonderful faculty of winning his fights. He has a faculty still more wonderful. He delivers no wounds that makf men s?'?>k a mean r^ven^ for the i beatings they receive. He carries a county, a state or a national convention with equal ease, and he makes frlonds while fighting them. Among all the | craft that sail the greatest sea of polltics there seems no one now to dispute that th* admiral's pennant must fly j from Senator Henna's ship We saluie it while hf standi, all smiles and modesty. on his flagship, Ohio.?New York i Press. | An Inventive citizen of Malneroseflfty feet in the air a few days ago on a kite of his own making. But that wasn't a tenth as high as Mr. Bewail went la?t vear on Mr. Bryan's.?New York Mail ujkJ Express. Japanese diplomacy Is hardly diplomatic. The mikado hat overreached himself. Under ordinary circumstances the pending annexation treaty might have lingered a year or so. Hut the proteat from Toklo. revealing the mouse in the meal-tab, will tend materially to expedite the ratification of this treaty. ?Cincinnati Times-Star. The reorganization of the Democratic party, which was effected at Indianapolis last year after the dlsgracefulabandonnient of Democratic principles at Chicago and the subsequent surrender to Populism and Free Silver Protectionist-Republicanism itt St. Louis, was not intended to serve the purpose of n single political campaign. It had indeed for Its Immediate object the defeat of the Free Silver Republican-Populist combine and the rescue of the country from the vortex of Anarchy and Repudiation. directly threatened by the election of the Bryan-Sewall-Watson ticket. But ith ultimate aim was broader, de?p^r and more far-reaching. It proposed to save what was left of Democracy, to make n refuge for Democrats, and to lay and entrench a line of Democratic battle for tho future.?Louisville Courier-Journal. PUKOEHTLY PUT. There Is no zest for the wicked. NV> man would over think he wan In love If he hadn't any liver. When the devU goes on his summer vacation he goes to a country campmeeting. No man can see nny good In life when he has on a shirt that pinches him In the neck. The hardest problem In tho average girl's life is to decide in the morning whether she ran get another day's wear out of her collar. About the time a man begins to sec that he feels better when he works he begins to say th;it he isn't In business tor his health.?N. V. Press# The Kitltor Worked l'|?. Miss Kate MurrelJ has Informed us that she Is homesick, and Is going back to Kansas. May she be more anxious to g"t back to old Oklahoma than she Is to leave. Why don't some of you I young fellows spruce up and "entreat her not to leave us?" Dog our cats, if we weren't endowed with a better half since we came from the state, we'd try | it ourself.?O. T. Eagle. Itiimllr of.\"ervr?." This term Is often applied to people j whom' nerves are abnormally ?t;nsltlve. They jhould strengthen them with Hostetter's Stomach Hitter*. After a course of that benign tonic, they will asp t? be conaclou* ttint they have nervous lyitomi, sxcspft tnrouih amenable sensntkms. It will ??.'!!>! ? thein t "at. sleep nnd dlKP*t well, the three rncdl i f'?r Increasing tone nnd vigor In the nerves, In common with the rest of tlie M-fm. The mental worry begotten by nervous dysj?epsla will also disappear. _ \V. it JOHNAON. Newark. O.. snys: "One Minute Couuh Cure 5av-d my only child from dying l?y croup." It has *nv? 1 thou-and- of others suffering fiom rr>''jp. pn-omonla. bronchitis, and other serious throat md lunsr troubl. ('hail-! i: Ooetse, Market and T.vlfJh i?tr*-"t.M; Chatham Sln?lalr. l-'orty-; ixth nnd Jacob ?tre A. I- Scheele, No. f?u7 Mnln KXH-y nroj.. ivnn .* n?i n?? HtrrcH; Itowlo A Co., Bridgeport. WHI-5N y?<u '?* sulTertim from <'ntarrh or <",>|d In llu* hw??l you w.iut t"||<-f rlffht it way. only 10 < -r. < In pquired to t<"i it A <r; i our (InuruiHt for th?? trliil *lr.< of Klv'? ''r :n Balm, or l.uy tli- r.ft?? '.W m-ill U. I,LV IIJtOK.. *?C W.irren HI . N' V Cip . I wa? nfllletod with i'Uarrh I. -1 ;iufumn Diirin't 'hi* i.. ?n*' ' ''cjnbc i ton 1(1 u?".I " ! i . ; 'f iiip'll mid could h?inr i?m little. I"! ' f'r-'.rn JUl*n **nrrd It Marcus ?'?eorj;e, ShftUtK, liah.vay, N .1 That fxiMT Ft ark rnn Tw currtf with I?r. Allien' NEKVI. I'LAM'hU. Only ! R*y?l m*k?? tbr food pure, wbot(M>m? sad dallciwu. fl? &AWN0 POWDER Absolutely Puro j NOV At. ftAJCIMO M?M? CO., kCW YO**. CLEVELAND ON HAWAII. Tl?e ritmmverahlti I'onttou llr Took on Ihr ?l*irall?i? Ten Year* Ago, Host on Journal: Several years ago a certain president of the United States employed this language In a formal communication to congress: "I express my unhesitating conviction that the Intimacy of our relations with Hawaii should be emphasized. As a result of the reciprocity treaty of 1875, those Islands, on the highway of Oriental and Australasian traffle* are virtually an outpoet of American commerce and a stepping stone to the growing trade of the Pacific." Two years later he said in another communication: "In the vast held of Oriental coinmerce now unfolded from our Pacific borders no feature presents stronger nrrommendationa for congressional actlon than the establishment ofcommu-J ideation by submarine telegraph with Honolulu. The geographical poult Ion j of the Hawaiian group. In relation to our Pacific states, creates n national j Interdependency and mutuality of In- ! ti-rest which our present treaties were Intended to fruiter and which make close communication a logical and com- 1 merclal necessity." And who whs this president? It was j the Hon. Omver Cleveland, and these are extracts from his annual messages of 1886 and JftSS. They arc calculated to be rather paralyzing revelations to certain cuckoo organs which are shrilly j protesting that Hawaii is a place of no consequence to anybody, and of no ....?rihi? militoi-v t-.iiiii -ii nr rnmmer. i clal value to the United State*. It Is true that Mr. Cleveland In 1893 withdrew from the senate a treaty of Hawaiian annexation* but It VII per- 1 fectly well understood that that was j merely to not in a wh*?k at an admin- i 1st nit Ion opposed to him which had j somewhat hastily negotiated the In-' strument. Neither then nor at any time sine* has 11 r. Cleveland attempted to answer the powerful arguments net forth by him in 1886 and 1K8S. demonstrating the vital Importance of Hawaii to American commerce, and the "national Interdependent and mutuality of Interest" between It and our Pacific states. FUNNY FAICIES. No Doubt.?Wife (at one a. m.)?I think 1 hear som-'thinc moving around downstairs. Husband 'wearily)?-Must be the pas-meter?JudKe. First Stranger? I say. that's my umbrella you have. Second Stranger?I don't doubt It. sir?I don't doubt it. I bought it at a pawnbroker'*.?Tlt-Blts. Much to Their Credit?"There's one good thlnn about conceited people." '. What Is that?" 'They don't meddle Willi Oilier J/VOJM'- B UUBiiicn. vmopu Record. "I pay my child to be cood." declared the first >ro.T<! father. 'That's entirely wrong." replied the second (food father. "My child has to be good for nothing." ?Detroit Free Preps. Reason Enough?Coroner (to the brother of a suicide?"WWen you found hlin hanging why didn't you cut him down?" Pat (surprised)?"He wasn't dead, sor!"?Judge. Swelling the Total*.?"There's been a hyena lurking around one "f the Chicago cemeteries." "He's probably In the employ of the Chicago directory company."?Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Benny." said Mr. Bloonumper, "If Oeorse Washington Is the flrst In the hearts of his countrymen, who wmes second?" "I don't know about that." replied Benny, **but Independence Day is the Fourth."?Harper's Bazar. Her Strong Points.?"Mrs. Meeker," observed n. friend of the family, "is a very superior woman. She can converse intelligently. I believe, on a thousand dlff'-rvnt topics." "Yes," slRhed Mr. Meeker. "And she does."?Chicago Tribune. FEW people are aware of the variety of Roods shipped from the south to nil parts of the world. The steamer Georgia. of the Old Hay Line, plying on the Chesapeake Hay between Baltimore and Norfolk, recently brought into Baltimore for shipment consignment* of Southern goods to Cape Town, Africa. Kingston. Jamaica. Shanghai. China, and London. England. A part*of the Chlne.se consignment was cigarettes made In North Carolina. The straightening of the line of the Baltimore & Ohio near Hancock. Md.. at what Is known as Doe Gully tunnel, has beeti completed nnd trains are now using the new trackn. 8IOO Itcwunl, 9100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages nnd that Is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is t iken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, nnd giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature In do. Ing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It fails to cure. Send for list of T" tlmonlaln. Address. F. J. CHENEY ft CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. 75o. A. II. PATTKR. with E. C. Atkins & Company. Indiana poll*, Intl.. writ"*: "l have n?'vcr before itlveii a t stltnonlnl In my lift*. Hut I will *ay that for throe years wr have never been without Chamberlain** Colic. Cholera, nnd Diarrhoea Remedy In the house, and my wife would is H?K?n think of being without Hour as a bottle of thin Remedy In the summer season. We havo used It with nil tbiM- of our children ami It ban never failed t ? cure- not simply stop pain, but curt* absolutely. It Is all rltfht. and anyone who tries !t will find It so." For snle by druggista. If llic lliiliy l? ? *tf Invs Trrlll Re sure and u that old and w?U-tried remedy. Mrs. Wlnslow's H olhing Syrup. r?>r chimp n i^ining. n > the ] child. soft n? the guui.i. ollny* n'.l pnla, i cures win I colic ami in th?* i?ost remedy . f..r diarrhoea. Tw6nty*flvt ^ nts .1 liottltf. nnvf.U'. groceries. SOMETHING NEW. $ ^ Van Csmo'j Mao -"il uni ^ Ci ccsr. prepared with To" f rmto Saucc. 9 , HUEP ' 's C.HOCKNY HOUSE. I 4 J2.11 Marltrt Str?M. WALLfAPBR. Let Us Show You Bom? new pattern* in wall par**r j * that are away above the avnra?;e . In dMlfO, Jexture and general I . Tli? latent produr tlona of tho leading manufactur era and sold at the price you would pay for much poort-r ftock. Our 6c and Sc papers are the best In tho market. . . . JOHN FRIEDEL & CO., 1119 91AIV sTKKKr. J. 8. RHODES Ac C2. MARKED DOWNT" SILK SALE. You will never have a better opportunity to buy a Dress and Waist Pattern cheap. 00c and COc Printed Foulards reduced to 39 Cents. 1.4-inch Twilled Foulards, neat a tripes, reduced to 49 Cents. New Ail-Silk Checks at 39 Cents. 15-inch Printed India reduced ' I 19 Cents. High grad? Twilled Foulards, worth from T5c to tlM, reduced t 59 Cents. J. S. RHODES & CO. MERCHANT TAILOR. ipcTcALr^ jg Spring Suitings & $15.00 Up. | 88 Trouserings ? >? $4.00 Up. & 88 C. E. CALLIGAN, 8X XX AGENT. OO SUMMER RBSORTS. Hotel Metro pole oaxv two or ww yokk avlwl ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. Strictly first-class in all Its appointments. write for rates. nyV FRANK H. STAMM, Proprietor. MT. LAKE COTTAGE FOR RENT: newly papered throughout; everything In good order. A. T. YOUNG. Sixteenth and Jacob atreots. my!7 BROOKSIDE 1,0,11 *SlT*0IS Now open. Most Ideal family resort In the Alh-Khanles. T? n mile* from Oakland. Swimming pool, tennis, bowling, bill room and complete llvrry attached. Wrlto for Souvenir Booklet and full particulars. Low ratr*. 8 PRE8COTT WRIGHT, Proprietor. llnvik.l.l.i VV. Vt. THE ALBEMARLE AND COTTAGES, Atlantic lity. *. Virginia Avenue, Near Reach. A beautiful hotel with all the modern convenience*. location Is central. $2.00 to ?..V> per day: 110 per week and upwards. Excellent table service. Write for booklet, showing hotel, etc. Ecntcrtalns 300 guests. jul9 J. P. COPE. + BERKSHIRE INN, + Ocean End Virginia avenue. Atlantlo City. N\ J. Capacity M0. Passenger elevator to street. Full view of ocean. Terms mo?leratc. Writ? for booklet, showing hotel, etc. a. FRANK COPE, Owner and Proprietor, late of Kenliworth Inn and Grand Atlantlo Hotel JuM THE GRAND ATLANTIC. An Megan! New Hotel. Yirqinla Atrnua and the Heath, Atlantic Clt>, N. J Luxuriously appointed. Every modern convenience. Passenger elevators to street, yno beautiful suite*, having two to six windows each. Many with bath attached. Special weekly rates for spring. Write for booklet, showing hotel, diagram of city, etc., *t<\ roach meet* nil trains. myfi CHA8. E. COP.1S, Proprietor. Oakland Hotel, On Top cf the Allcghanics. | OAKLAND MARYLAND. 4'. Hour* from Mlterlinq Without Hiinijr of lar*. OPENS JUNE 15. O Repainted and rrnovate*! throughout, and many improvement* added, Includlm; electrlo Ilaht through hotel uml ground* For Hlustrntwl booklet, diagram of rooms, and urnm, apply to GEO. A MILLS & SON, <Jri?f on," Wa<liit)|(t??ti, !?. Jug OCF.AN CITY, N. J. "Tlie Perfect Resort" OCEAN CITY, N. j? in known n> the mort perfect p^nshoro resort on the ' Mantle rea*t, because it contain!1 feature of natural prrft'otloh lth municipal regulation*, prohibiting tin- ?mI> Ot liquor an.! mnklnj: a l?tnii moral itamlard t>'' iMimajiont fcun>iat|nn ??r the liiunti ipallt> . : i "'Mii . and Ituihln^ an- <up*ti? <*oininndioi>. boiri-' and cottaci * nun ? the P? ?.:i < of t?:e r ...mi. it i t. m-Ih.i via ti IVnnxyh-anla railroad. the Ilnltlmoie \ Ohio tail-.ma, and Heading railroad. <ni>it|nc: with Month Jet . > railroad. Wrlto lor Cireuluni | to Clljr Clerk. tul? NEW ADVERflSBMENTR. I osT-a~cuTlds rkefer jacket. j brtw?n Inland Mini Al<f."ollo<h street. Itewaid will l-e paid if returned to thin ofllca. ju;-. SUMMER RKBORT?A LIMITED numRKR of boardf-r* can And acr-otnmoda* tlon hi the Pln? Valley Farm, l*rw and commodious rooms, i:ood water, d'-alrahWMirroundiiiRK. excellent roads for bicyclist*. Rath room accdmraodatlons Every comfort ot a country home. For partlculata address mrs. o. b. ono, j\:2$* In'lonv.i;.-, < ^TOCKHOLDERB' MFETING. "The annual meeting of the stockholder* of the German Fire Inaurance Co.. of Wheeling, W. Va.. for the election of nln* directors and consideration of aueh oth*r business uh may be necessary. will take place on Monday. July 12, between th?* hour* of 2 and 4 o'clock p. rn., at th* oM of tho company. No. 2!? Fourteenth street _Ju? F. KiOtTCH. Hocrttarj puu HALK. Hie Lamb Kfililrnc, !(?mb?r?t(i 3001 Cil Iplllir Mrumt. Corner Lu . KltfuntYnrd. \jkrgm, l-'liif, nubit?ufliil HulMliig. i'riem U?ii?onnt?l?. Term* Applr to iMMf> ?- IIAWLKY, R?l nntl I.-mo Agent, 1063 Mm la Mft. JJEFRIGERATORS. t This ha* been an unusually good yehx for idling Good Refrigerator*, but we have not sold out yet. Call or tend for n descriptive circular of the AMERICA. GEO. W. JOHNSON'S SONS, 1^10 Main Street TCED TEA. OITR SPECIAL BLEND OP TEA AT 60c PER POUND WAS NO EQUAL FOR ICED TEA. H. F*. BEHRBNS CO.. ttil MAftKKT WTKF.KT. . . . GERMANIA . . . HALF DOLLAR SAVINGS BANK Has moved Into their own building. No. 1501 Market street. All patrons and friends of the hank, as well as the general public, ar? invited to call and receive a souvenir. GEORGE HOOK. Ju2l Pr?ldent. Vanilla Extract. Prepared from the Mexican Bean, especially for family u*e. Also Lemon, Strawberry, Pineapple and other flavors. At ....... . ^List's Drug Storey 1010 MAIN STREET. Try our Puro Ground Pepper. Celebration of the Glorious fourth. GRAND PICNIC 10 cms er THE GtRMASlA HAIL ASSOCIATION Saturday* July 3, on th? New Fair Grounds. i-?t- ? ?i?? ? - ?* TJMIH A JUIiy KW" Willi- ^imumx u. <>v~ .... following programme: Itaces by the famous horses owned by the following well known icon tinmen ?/ Wheel In*: 1. G. Dillon. H. W. McLure. O. Stntler, A. M. Hamilton and Nate Foil. First prize, an el^ant set of trark harness; second orize, a beautiful blanket, third prize, a line whip. Has? ball game between two picked nines. Ladles' bicycle race. Foot rao-s. Amusements of all kinds. Fun for the children. Concert all day. Danclnc commence* at 1 o'clock. Music by Mayer s Brass and String Band. Admission II ccnta. \ Ju2S Baby Carriages. NOWS THE TIME TO BUY. $4 50 ^ar~ QQ Buys a regular $10.00 Car You buy now for <tl"3 * Downloq Sleeper, worth 3)|jtjU SIS.OO. CARRUGCS rROM44.SO TO $40.00. JOS. GRAVES' SON, NO. 26 TWF.LFTII 8TRE1IT. " ? fFsEASIioSl&TI S f excursions! j low Rates (or Vacation Trips and Outings Along the Ocean. Round Trip from Wheeling Only $10 To Atlantic City. Cape May. Avalon, Son Into City, Anglesca, Ocean City. Holly Heach or Wlldwood, round trip tickets to either resort being obtainable at the same rate, 'J'lw first excursion will bo run Thursday, July II*. followed by othern on July August 12 and 21. Hound trip rates to either Atlantic City, Capo May, Avalon. Sea Isle City. Anglesca, Ocean city. Wildwood or Holly Beach, Now Jersey, will b? 510 FROM WHEELING. Excursion tickets' will be pood leaving Wheeling at 1:2S p. in. and 3:&5 p. m. (city time) on the above dates. The 12:80 p. n?. train connects in Pittsburgh I'nlon Station with throuKh trains to Philadelphia and Atlantic.Clly. The :?.v. p. m. train will !i:ivo Slf'mlnk far* frum WIiociihk 'through Pittsburgh and Philadelphia to Atlantic t'lty. via Dotawaro River Bridge Houto without change. The rc.turn limit Will rotor txvolve ?!?*> * Including Unto of snln. which will boatopl<? for cu?totnnjT ton ilnya' vacation. I "or further Afilrrd Information, apply to J?o? 0. Tomlln*on? Ticket A pent, or adareP" Jv. IMIIon, District I'u singer Agent. I"n burgh, for particular*. 1 Hum rated ?' I . flptlou ?.r v,-.<ortM to which r>eurnion tf-'kel* will he void, with ti?*t of hotels and Iwnrritnjr huui'ow at each. will l?o furnlshe-l upoii application. Ju-S r 11 in-: i.vtki.!.u:::Ncnn pp.in?" J l>?tablishmout?Noat, accurate, proni. -