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THE INTELLIGENCER Published Dolly, Except Sunday, by lntclligencer Publishing Co., 25 and 27 Fourteenth Street. JOHN FREW. PrcB. and Bus. Manager. Terms: Per Your, by Mull , ln Advuneo, Posture Prepaid. Dally (CI Days A*"*' Weuki 1 Your...$5.20 Dully, Six Months ~ 2.00 Dully, Three-Months , 1 MO Dully, Throe Days For Week 3,00 Dully, Two Dnys Pox* Weok..? 2.00 Dully. One Month J5 Weekly, Ono Ycnr, In Advunoo..... 1.00 Weekly, Six Months ; 00 Till: DAILY INTELLIGENCER Is delivered by carriers In Wheeling and adjacent towns at 10 cents per week. 'Persons wishing to subscribe to THE DAILY INTELLIGENCER can do so by sending in their orders to the In- 1 telllgenccr offlco on postal cards or i "otherwise. They will bo punctually served by carriers. Tribute* of Respect and Obituary Notices 50 cents per inch. Correspondence containing important news solicited from every part of the surrounding country. Rejected communications will not be returned unless accompanied by sufficient postage. (The"IINTELLIGENCER. embracing itt several editions, Is entered in the Postofllce at Wheeling, W. Va., as secondclass matter.) editorial Rooms 823 | Countlnfj Room 822 THE INTELLIGENCER. AVUKELIMm MAY 2tl. IHftl). "Why Gold Dooon't Circulate. ,The financial gonlus "who does the writing for the Register made a powerful point against the gold standard In Saturday's Issue. It is worthy of a place in next year's Bryan platform. * The New York World, a gold advocate, 1 having "discovered" that the supply of paper money is inadequate to the demands of business, suggests, as gold will not circulate, tho Issue of a new form of paper currency In the nature of warehouse certlllcates against locked up gold, dollar for dollar. "This," the "World says, "would not add one dollar to the. credit, currency. It would simply change the form of hoarded gold from an inconvenient to a convenient one, and enable everybody to use it freely." As to the merits of the World's proposition, that is a matter open l'or discussion. The Register, however, did not discuss its merits. Its comment on the suggestion was wholly confined to the I ' following able sentence: "What a pity j 5 it is that 'the best and only' money ' won't circulate among the people." c Our contemporary doesn't explain * why it is a pity that gold won't clrcu- 1 late, nor wherein Its point proves any- c thing against the gold standard, which ( is the basis of the value of all our f money, the circulation of gold coin not r being necessary to maintain it. It doesn't explain that the reason the people prefer the paper money to the gold coin is that It Is much more convenient * to handle, and likewise much safer. Just E as silver certificates are more eonve- c nlent to carry, when you have a quan- * tUy of them, than a pocket full of silver dollars. The silver dollars are a 1 great convenience in making change, * but five five-dollar certificates are better * than twenty-five silver dollars to lug r about with you. 1 When a banker pays you money, or ' a merchant gives you change, he Is Just 1 as likely to give you bank notes and j 1 treasury notes as he Is to give you sll- * ver certificates and silver dollars. That's j' ine ueauiy ox u. iou can get wnat you want, what is the most convenient to handle, if you desire It. because he has no fears that it will fluctuate in value front one day to the other. Gold is the "best and only" basis that is safe, and that Is why the people have confidence in the currency of the country which makes gold the standard of value. They do not want to be bothered with the heavy gold coins of various denominations, and the small gold coins are easily lost. . The writer, as well ns many others, has a distinct recollection of witnessing the inauguration of the resumption of specie payments in Washington In 1S79. The thousands of government employes at the capital city were paid their monthly salaries entirely In gold for several months. They received them in Ave, ten and twenty dollar gold piece*. Each monthly or semi-monthly payment put hundreds of thousands of dollars of these coins in circulation In "Washington. It was a novelty, and " the first month or two the employes and the public liked it; then the Inconven- 4 lence of handling the gold became ap- 1 parent, and each pay day th? clerks at the cashier's windows in the treasury department were kept busy exchanging f paper money In small denominations for r gold. * There Is no "pity" about gold coins not circulating. If It demonstrates anything it proves that the people of the \ United States have nn abiding confl- \ dence In the standard of their money, * and knowing that every dollar they handle, whether paper or silver, Is 1 worth a hundred cents, are not partlc- * ular about handling the gold coin. It is not ao in silver countries. m ( An Ungrateful Inhibition. r The conduct of the Cuban soldiers In ' Havana province in refusing to accept t llll' MJUiiry nviu iij nun hiin.i iminii iu be distributed among theni, rather than lay down their arms, lr? due to an un- 1 preccdentcd cane of Ingratitude on the 1 part of some Cuban officers. It shows 1 how little they deserve from the country thut came to th?*lr rescue In response ' to their petitions and freed them from ' the Spanish tyranny ngnlnst which they t had been making a hopeless fight. In other portions of Cuba the soldiers are being dlHbanded and Oenernl Woods re- ' ports that In Santiago provlnco the pco- * pie have returned lo their homes, rea 1 Rumed the cultivation of the lands, and ' that a mate of peace and quiet prevails. ^ Tn Havana province the cabal of lead- j ers who nee their power threatened If j the Cuban Insurgent army is disbanded, and who are opposed to Gome;; and the American element, lmvc. been labor- v Ing'to prevent the soldiers fiotn nc? t ceptlng the gift from the United Slates, I und have partially succeeded, for what i A . i f I purpose Is easily understood. A few ex- 1 imples should be made of these leaders I ivho fall to appreciate what the people ot the United States have done for I ihem; who petitioned and prayed In the name of humanity for the help of this jreat Nation In their distress^ and who, I now that th<; sacrifices have been made, I md the steps are being taken to cstab-, lsh for them a government they were j yalnly fighting for, are attempting to ; stir up a feeling of prejudice against their benefactor. The Cuban people are not to be ; alamed. It must be attributed to these treacherous military commanders who ire holding out for the gratification of their own selllsh ambitions. This government frill not permit it. Nor will the Duban people remain deceived and Intimidated by a few officers who are vain mough to Imagine that they can resist | this country In Its efforts to carry out ts pledge to the people of the island. An Arkansas Product. The attorney general of Arkansas, Hon. Jefferson Davis, a Populist Demicrat, is the man Mr. Bryan should enlst to write the "anti" planks of the Democratic platform next year. They ire driving out tire insurance companes in Arkansas under the operations >? the antitrust law, which 1b a little too broad In its scope, and Attorney General Davis, whom the New York Sun tescriues aH an uciopociopnonist," bus prepared a brief against the companies, [t Is notable for the vlclousness of the anguage of Its construction ami the lolatlons of the rules of English gramnar. The Little Rock Democrat has ixtracted from the document some rholce camples, such as the following: "We see from this decision that fire nsurance corporations, and the conracts issued by them, stand in bad odor >efore the law. They may exclude them 'rom Its borders. It Is the Wandering Tew of business. It cannot enter a state mly as a sneaking robber on his peril, ir by going to the gates of the commonwealth as a mendicant, and like Lazarus licking the sores of the soveriigns for permission to scavenge." This rare and unique method of expression in a legal document by an Arcansas state official will be greatly apireciated by the fire Insurance companes of the country. It will cause them o be thankful that they are being ixpelled from Arkansas. It should also )e thoroughly appreciated by the ownirs of valuable property In Arkansas md cause them to reflect upon the wislom of the people of that state in electng a Bryan Democratic ticket last fall ay 45,000 majority, and a legislature standing as follows on Joint ballot: Democrats, 130; Republicans, 2; Demo:ratio majority, 128. Arkansas has been riving such Democratic majorities since 872?twenty-seven years age. Its p*es;nt attitude toward the encouragement )f the investment of capital and the tuality of the head of its law departnent bear evidence of the results. Wliat t he Queen Will See. One of the New York yellow papers asl Sunday devoted its flaring colored lupplement to some pictures and llterLture incident to the celebration of the iightieth birthday of Queen Victoria. The yellow paper didn't do this for the inselflsh purpose of giving information o Its readers, but to use the queen of 3reat Britain and the empress of India is an advertisement. That was evllent when the yellow paper published a etter from the queen's private secreary, Informing: the yellow paper that lie queen wan "deeply touched" that It vas about to publish a "special number n celebration of her birthday," and rejuestlng "a copy of this special issue In >rder that it may be shown to the jueen." When Queen Victoria gets that copy )f an American Sunday paper, which, isld'* from the colored supplement demoted to her, contains something like ttty blpr pager; of sensational matter md pictures unlit to go Into refined lomes, lier majesty. In all likelihood, \il! understand why it Is thnt the peo)le of London gave the cold shoulder to he attempt lo introduce in England Sunday papers on the New York yellow >lan. The queen will scarecly feel Watered when she discovers the nniure of he "special edition" in her honor. But he yellow paper exploits the Incident o advertise Itself, and that was the pur>ose in the beginning. Two Newspaper Changes. According to published reports, some mportant changes are about to occur n newspaper circles In Parkersburg. Che Morning News will change hands md become the property of a stock :ompany, composed of several promtlent citizens. Mr. Kent Loomls, who iao long been connected with the State rournal, will be the editor of the reorganized News, which will support the national Republican party. It in also ttated that Hon. P. W. Morris, for years he publisher of the Ritchie Gnzette, md so well known in politics and Journalism in West Virginia, has purchased Mr. A. B. White's interest In the State Tournal and will be its editor. The combined Influence of these two lapers for Republicanism should leave 10 doubt about Fourth district politics, t Is with regret thnt the West Virginia lewspaper men, as well as the Republicans generally, learn of the retirement if Mr. White from the newspaper field. The Intelligencer hopes it will be but cmporary. Tornadoes are doing great damage In lie west to property and live stock, but 'ortunately no lives are reported lost. lotwithstanmnf? me nwrulness of the norms. The advantages of cyclone celara were thoroughly demonstrated In Nebraska, or a different story would be old. An enthusiastic New Yorker proposes hat each state In the union erect a itntuo of Admiral Dewey "at some cental point." How la that for modern lero worship? It wan a real summer day yesterday, .vlth the temperature In the nineties, >ut ououkU breeze to temper the atmos)here. Another terrible railroad wreck, In vhlch <ilKht persona were killed and *lx,een Injured, Is chronicled this mornng. Several ?\ars were telescoped and died upon each other, and It appears \ that the disaster was unavoidable. The train, which was enroute from Chicago to Minneapolis-over the Rock Inland road, ran into a washout t)f the roadbed, caiiacd by a cloudburst. Fate held the rails and ties together, however, and there was no indication that the road was Insecure. The dead and Injured were the victims of a storm that there had been no information about, and no one seems to be responsible for the awful result. RKF^KCTIOXS OF A IlACIIIvI.OIl. tto trian who loves a woman can be entirely Just to her. The devil begins on women by being amazed at the smallnesn of their feet. The most Innocent thing In the frank way a woman admits that you are in love with her. 'When a girl is interested In a man, If he isn't bowlegged and squint-eyed, she says he is as "handsome as a Greek god." When a married woman gets into a I iiii iiiuun pne eases n<?r conscipnce wun I the thought that it Is a compliment to her husband to have the other men nd| mlro her. There- Is nothing In the world that Ik eo shameful to a "woman as detection. The'most successful way a woman knows of deceiving her husband Is pretending to tell him everything she does. The difference between a dog and a woman is that after a man has kicked a dog it forgives him. but doesn't hang around for another kick. If more wives went away from their husbands In the summer time there would not be fewer scandals In hid life, but there would be less infelicity. If wives could get away from their husbands as easily as other women, the men would cling to them so hard that all the divorce lawyers would die of oiu.iKn.iuu.?new IUIK j runs. high lights. Never to suspect evil Is as fivie as it is foolish. As a rule, whenever we find a brook we find stepping stones. The finest green peas are not as pretty. but they are Just as good as strawberries. At a play the strange woman who borrows your opera glass always keeps It too long. Here and there we still run across a woman who carries her purse In a petticoat pocket. To say that American literature Is rurltnnlcal Is onlv to admit th:if If li abnormally decent. "When .some one tries to take your pride down you had better suspect that you have been a triflo airy. Constancy In woman Is often mere stubborness in the matter of accepting defeat or disenchantment. -Acquiring success In life is not like catching a chicken; the chicken keeps up a noise which tells the pursuer which way to turn.?Chicago .Record. Little Georgia on Kin Pa's Joke. They are Some people what think it Would he best fer Dewey to Jist Come Hoam and Be quiet. Their jealous. Last nite- paw he says to maw: "What's the Use of All This Here huily-balco onnyhow? You'd Think by the way People is goin' on that Dewey was the only one what ever Done his duty. If Dewey had of went down There In the dark and licked the Spaniards .without bein' Told to they might Be some Reeson Fer callln it a Grait act but my gee. Didn't they tell Him He Had to do it. If Georgia would mow the lawn Without bein told to it would Be somethln worth celebratin. But if he done it Jist Because I told Him to, an He knew he Had to, I Don't think they "Would Be enny sense tryin to malcc out He wus a module For other Boys'." Every Time paw Kits a chanct Ileha3 To Git his hammer out for Me. "Well." maw says, "I dunno Hut They are a Good Dral in what you say. But Llcken the Spaniards ain't all Dewey dune. They fire somcthln Better than that to show that He is fur Above Other men what I could name If I wanted to make Them mad." "What's that?" say? paw. "When He v:ot 11 {rood Job finished Tie d'den't srem to Think that ail he Had l.t iln thj r. ?l ..f 7-IU T.ifr. ii"iw i around nnd Blow about It." says maw. "That's Hire," says paw. "Teach your child to loolc doivn on his fawther. That's what fou seem to Live for. Well, I may be wrong About George, Hut I'm tvllllr. -to Give Him Credit Per Havin the Advantage over me In one way enny How." "Oh," says mn, kind of sarcatslck. "I'm surprised you Give Him that much Credit. What is It?" Paw he kind of Rolled his tung around In His checix and smiled like if He had a good one coming and Then h? sitps: "Well. He's a widower." I dunno what the Joak was, P.ut paw he nearly laft till he Busted. Maw she dlder.'t Say ennythlng, but At Dinner paw claimed all the Decayed strawberries was in His dish. GKORGIE. ?Chic;ipro Times-Herald. Mark's Sew Joke. Mr. Clemens told the correspondent that his now hook. In which ho telly ol! j the reinurkahle people he lias mot from | his childhood, will occupy a great part of the remainder of his life. It Is a bequest to posterity, and will only be published a hundred years after his death. The portraits wore drawn solely for his own pleasure In a work telling the whole truth without malice, hut without respect to persons, conventions or pruderies. The men rand women depleted will appear "with all their warts." Tho work will imt he written in Mark Twain's familiar style, which, the author anticipates, will be forgotten by the time the work Is published.?London cable to the New York Sun. Sixty Miles an Hour. A steammotorcar. designed for use on the railroad?, recently made a trial trip, going at the rate oC sixty miles an hour. This will probably ho as much of a record beater nr> har. Hostetter's Stomach r.it tons, tho quickest known road to hciilth. There 1* no quicker way for sufferers from all ptomach ills to wach strength and happiness than by this grrnt p-mecfy, It cures Indigestion, constipation, nervousness, liver and kidney trouble, and host o? all the user stays cured. Z??pliyr<;i5i{.'hiiiiiH.all now, luill'prleo to-day at Stllol Co.'n. A HA 11IS OPPORTUNITY. To Secure a Complete Sot ol'Kuoyclopodia Hritanniea. Frank Stanton Ik offering the public a fine chance to secure tho Kncycloptdla Hrltannicn, complete In thirty Miporh octavo volumes. This Incltides the recent supplement of five volumes of par- j ticular lntere.it to Americans, lr,M- .1 Minvl tln.? n.u t-?- - I * ' I- nii.i .-M.I mi;iris WOric I Is offered (It .If) per cent less tlmn It was sold by n lending Chicago daily paper ami on.easier terms. The ISncyclopedi.t r.rltnnnlcn Is on exhibition In Frank ^tantor.'p store, and they will he glad to "how It to aiiy'ono If you cannot o?ine In porBon. write thrw, and they will lo ?lad to send fott by mall fall particulars about the work and the kvc.u offer of the above onterprlfltiR firm. They have only n limited number of re!:. >ic,?..v,r. nn.l If |;n yuu chould Invcuttcuto at once. J 5 ionox. If You Want An Up-to-Date Piano that embodies all modern improvements and everything that should be found in ? strictly first-class high grade instrument, buy the StuStz & Bauer... Wonderful Tone. Beautiful Design. Marvelous Action. SOLI) ONLY BY Milligan, Wilkin & Co., 1138, 1140 and 1142 Market St. PASSING PLEASANTRIES. The king of New York beggars is said to be worth $100,000, but we are not told of which college he Is president of.?Chicago Record. The Karon?It Is nothing but a shame that he should be so rich, the old scoundrel. The Count?Especially when one takes into consideration his having nc doughters.?Indianapolis Journal. "Are you a lover of the national game?" h elnqulred as they passed lntc the ball ground. "No, sir," replied the person addressed. "I'm a base ball umpire."?Philadelphia North American. "It's no use," exclaimed Willie Washington. "I never can loarn to say the right thing at the right time. I told Miss Slimmins that her eyes shone on me like the stars above." "That's old, but pretty," answered Miss Cheyenne, "Yes. But she Is one of those remarkably tall girls who resent any reference to their height."?'Washington Star. TeniDtation. Tho Filipino soldier has been tolling through a mountain pass, which the rainy season made more than ordinarily unpleasant. "Cnp'n," paid he. "I love my country." "Of course you do." "X regard Agulnaldo as a second George Washington in hard luck." "So say we all of us." "Hut, cnp'n, as a candid man, I want to confess this much. If I thought those Yankees would get up a good roads movement us soon as they conquered the islands I'm blest If I wouldn't be tempted to desert."?AVashlngton Star. THERE Is more Catarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the Inst few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great manr years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, nnd by constantly failing to cure with local treatment. pronounced it incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires con niiuiiiuiuii iicuuin.nl. mui ^ v^uuirrn Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally In doses from ten drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any cnse it f'?il? to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address. F. J. CHEN ICY A- CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists. 73c. 11.ill's Family Pills are the best. 'Dr. L. & Co.| ISIS MARKET STREET, j; WHEELING, W. VA 1 lie Leading Specialists in Chronic. I Private and Sexual Diseases. WE CURE GLEET. Thousands of young and middle-aged (* ni-T. aro having their pexual vigor and s vitality continually flapped by this 5 disease. They are frequently unconD sclous of the cause of those sympm toms. General Weakness, Unnatural k Discharges. Failing Manhood. NerC vousness, Poor Memory, Irritability 3 :it time.'-, Smarting Sensation. Sunken B eyes with dark circles. Weak Back, H General Depression, Lack of Ambition, H R Varicocele, Shrunken Parts, etc. Gleet a R un<l Stricture may bo the cause. Don't fl allow Quacks to experiment on you.'H Consult Specialists who have made! n life Htudy of Diseases of Men and B Women. Our New Method Treatment a will positively cure you. One thousand 6 dollars for a case we occcpt for troat- S ment and cannot cure. Terms modcr- | ate for a cure. !; WE CURE STRICTURE, j Thousands of young1 and middle-B aged men aro troubled with thi? dls- H pase?many unconsciously. They may I have a smarting sensation, small, H twisting ntroam, sharp cutting pains H at times, slight discharge, dlfllculty In commencing, weak organs, emissions and all the symptoms of nervous debility?they have Stricture. Don't lot doctors experiment on you bv cutting, stretching or tearing you. Tills will not cure you. iih It will return. Our New Method Treatment absorb? thr stricture tissue: hence removes tho stricture permanently. It can never return. No pain, no suffering, no detention from business by our method. The nerves are Invigorated, and tho bliss of manhood returns. WE CURE EMISSIONS. Nothing can be more demoralizing to vnmirr nr iKnn ?lw. prcacnco of these "nightly losses." They produeo weakness, nervousness. il fooling of dlrgust and a whole train of symptom?. They unlit a man for business, married life and social happiness. N'o matter whother caused by evil hftblts In youth, natnral weakness or sexual excesses, our New Method will posltlvoly cure you. NO CURE-NO PAY. Our Treatment will euro you In a few weeks, and what Joy there Is In know* ing and fooling that you are a man once more! Your whole system undergoes a change, and vigor, vitality and manhood replace despondency and llfelesBness. 50,000 CURED. No matter how serious your enso may be, or how long you may have had It, our Now Method Treatment R will euro It. The "wormy" veins re-1 [ turn to their normal condition and I hence tho sexual organs receive proper ? nourishment. Tho organs bccomo vl* | tnllr.ed and all unnatural drains or B losses case and manly powers return. D N?v temporary benelU, but a porma- B nent cure assured. No euro, No l'ay. H No Operation Necessary, | r> ^ ? - B I inures uuaranteca. g NVo tf.it and cure Syphilis, Gloot. 8 Emission*. ImpotMiny, Stricture, Vn? B rl?TnM'lo, Somlnal I,o?*cs, Hlndder and G Kidney DImmists. Consultation Free, I Chm-Kt" Moderate. If unaM* to call. I vvrllo for a Question Blank lor Homo I treatment. Dr. LojtgvveSJ & Co., Oincc Hours: fl n. m. to S p. m. Sundays: 10 to 12 in., and 2 to 4 p. m. Umbrella*. 11% Per Cent Saved ON FINE BLACK SILK UMBRELLAS. X " ) 1 Too many high grade goods, costing from $3 to $Q each. NEW STYLES. Have marked them down one-four off the regular price. $3.00 Umbrellas for $2.25. $4.00 Umbrellas for $3.09. NEW STOCK OF Ladies' Colored Silk Umbrellas and Fancy Parasols. I ! J. S. RHODES & CO. i Slangtt and Stouot. Puritan Gas Ranges. ; Cinderella Gas Ranges. Summer Gas Stoves. I Gasoline Stoves. Ovens for Gas or Gasoline Stoves. White Mountain Ice Cream Freezers. Jewett's Celebrated Refrigerators. Water Coolers. Wire Fly ScreensBEST GOODS. LOWEST PRICES. NESBITT & BRO., 1312 Market StrccL Stationery, Spooks, 8fe. Gifts for Graduates. As is our custom each year, "wo have made preparations to meet tho demand for GIFT BOOKS FOR COMMENCEMENT DAY. Wo also have & line of REWARD and PICTURE CARDS for teachers of country schools. Don't forget that we have the two BEST ENCYCLOPEDIAS IN THE WORLDCHAMBERS' and the BRITANNICA. Sold on easy payment plan. STANTON'S BOOK* STORE. mHE PITTSBURGH DISPATCH, Commercial-Gazette. Times, Cln- j cinnati Enquirer nnd Eastern and I Western Dallies delivered. Weekly Papers, Literary and Fashion Magazines. Cheap Books, Stationery and Gospel Hymns. C. H. QUIMBY, ltil Market Street. financial. G. LAMB, Pres. JOS.~SEYBOLD, Cashier J. A. JEFFERSON. Ass't Cashier. BANK OF WHEELING. CAPITA!* 9200,000. PAID IX. WHEELING, W. VA DIRECTORS. Allen Rroek. Joseph F. Paull, Cbos. Schmidt. Henry Bleberson, Howard Simpson. Joseph Seybold, Gibson Lamb. Interest paid on apoclal deposits. Issues drafts on Er.^land. Ireland and Scotland. JOSEPH SEYBOLD, lnyU Caahlor. p ANK OF THE OHIO VALLEY. CAPITAL-SI 75.000. WILUAM A. I SETT President MORTIMER POLLOCK....Vlco President Dro-fts on England, Ireland, Franco and Germany. DIRECTORS. William A. Isett, Mortimer Pollock, J. A. Miller, Robert Simpson, E. M. Atkinson. C. M. Frlasell, Julius Pollock. jalS J A. MILLER, Cashier. plumbing, Ste. m r.t. sumtLLt. J "jSSftfggDealer In all floods pertaining to the trada. 2012 Main Streot, Telephone 37. Wheeling. VV. Vo. GEO. HIBBERD & SON, Tli? Plumbers and Gas Fitters, are now niittlTjK In th?*lr CALORIFIC Cook Stova liurnfrH for J6.C0 and JC.50. If your plumber cannot accommodate you with on?, call on ue, and we will put It In subject to your approval and guarantee satisfaction. Wo defy competition on this burner. Call at ISU Market street. JJOBEKT V,\ KYLE. Practical Plumber, Gas and Steam Fitter No. 11D5 Market ntrooL G/ifl and Electric Chandellera, Filters, and Taylor Gas Humors a specialty. rnrJ -yy-lLLlAM 1IAKE &. BON. Pracllcol Plumbers, Gns and Steam Httc.'s No. S3 Twelfth StreoL tVnrlf rtnnn nrnmntlv ? ?n.?n.w. TRIMBLE & LUTZ COMPANY. 0 SUPPLY HOUSE O PLUMD1NO AND OAS FITTING, STEAM AND HOT WATER LIE ATI NO. A full lln* of tho celrbrnted SNOW STEAM PUMP3 5)lachincry | KDMAN CO., GENERAL MACHINISTS AND MANUFACTURERS OP M All IN 12 AND STATIONARY ENGINES, i Jul! Wiiouiiuc. W. V'o. DZcio Jtdoertixement*. -\irANTKD - A MAN~~T("T~DO^rTtTT, W and Dairy Work. Addrrn p n Box 26S, Brldgi-port Ohio, or at,;)iy V; farm, && miles west of Urldgvport, on xl\ National Pike, MARION DUN.V.^^ QKOCKIIS' NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC Notice Is hereby given that all Groccrr Stores* will close at 12 o'clock noon \L morrow, Tuesday. May SO, 1S33, on account If Decoration Day. By order of the Retail Grocers' Prv tcctlvo Association. J. C. STUOKBEU Secretary JOHN W. KEN'NKN. President. Special Blend Tea. A perfect blend [or hoi or iccd I tea?60c per pound. Ask lor i sample at .< S } H. F. Behrens Co.'s. I STANDARD MALE QUART El Ttj | Of WMtlUNtt, W. V*. Open to sing at Concerts, Receptions, B Musicals, etc. For terms apply to K PKOF. T. LLtWtLYN WIIUUIS, R fel 1310 Market Slrc?t | HYGEIA DAIRY. | Some housewives consider the prlcft w\j H of the articles they buy. Otlu-rs aro mori Iffi Interested In thequalltv, believing thokf, H to be the choapeft. all things eonslJcroi H In dairy products this is especially true, t j oiuirov/ii, " inc Milkman," ES 'Phono 947. 1C10 Market Street P Baagsli Purc Paarn'ds Grccn I Bugs! Inscct Powdcrs.., ? ^ j of all kinds at g| IBiunysl i L,st's ?ruii s'<"c? H ILJLUlfeOH lolo MnlnStrcct. | Best Tonic 20 cents per bottle, P $2.25 per dozen. ...Goctzc's Cut Rntc Drug Store.* |;| Market nnti Twelfth Streets. For Sale At special prices for Tuesday, May I 20. Ix>ts in P. Kennedy's Addition R to Park View. Not too hilly or la ^ a swamp, but line laying lots, 50x111 M feet, for 5150.00. 50 foot strc-t az\ H 15 foot alleys. A pood chanca u f& buy from first hands. Wo will bo on the grounds all day; F' May SO to show you the lots. Theo. W. Fink & Co., [ 1503 Market Street. This Week Window Screens, from 18 to 36 inches 1 high. Cheaper than the cheapest, better I than the best. GEO. W. JOHNSON'S SONS, p 121ft MAIN STPFPT Surety Bonds===Alired Paull. IF YOU WANT ' A BOND As Executor, Trustee, Administrator, |5| Guardian. Receiver, Assignee or la Replevin, Attachment Cases, ?tc? |@8 " As a Contractor, I " As a United States Olttclal. j " As a State, County or Municipal 0?T.? H j ** As an Officer of a Fraternal Socktj. fra " As an Employee oC a Hank, Corpora- S tor or Mercantile Establishment? B? We will furnish it, and In the largest Hfi company In the world, and only foreign | company authorized to transact this char- H9 acter of business in West Virginia. ALFRED PAUll, 1120 Market Si, I g ALE OP ELM GROVE BONDS. . | The undersigned commissioners, av 5f| polnK-d by an ordinance of the Town of |g| Elm Grove, adopted by the cotmcil on th* lea tii^t day of May, 2S99, anil rutlileil by a RH | vote of the electors of said town on the gn 1 twenty-second day of May, by mora H | than the necessary three-lifths majority, I : plve notice that on Thursday. Jure H nt the mayor's otllce, in E!m Grove, ggjj uhlo county. West Virginia, at 4:.^ o'clock B I p. m., they will open bids for the entln) Hj Issue of bonds provided for by said ordi- MB j nance, belnp forty bonds of the donoml- KH | nation of one hundred dollars tll^.CO) ffij I each, dated June 1. 1S39, and pavnbli Hi iwenty-nve y#?ars after date nt the Bar* of Wheeling, with Interest thereon at the | rate of flve p*r cent per annum. payaK? annually, for which Interest coupons. a'.'J payable at said hank, are attached to a.i bonds, but with the reservation that tf.-r may bo paid by tlio town at any tl.ti after ten years from their date. In pursuance of the statute, bids must benu!' in writing nnd approved by the und*rslgned commissioners, and the bonds xnujt be sold for cash. Bids In writing In seaM envelopes ur.,l marked "Bids for F.!n Grove Bonds." and addressed to the tin* derslgaed commissioners will be received by them before or at the time fixed for the opening of the same. George r. e. gilchript. CHARLES HOWARD SIMPSON, SAMUEL C. PATTERSON*. Commissioner* Elm Grove, W. Va., May 27. lKfl. !r.y~'_ FOR SALE STOCKS. Wheeling Steel & Iron Co. LaBelle Iron Works. Central Glass* Co. West Virginia Glass Co. Crystal Glass Co. Fostorla Glass Co. Riverside Glass Co. Wheeling Bridge Co. "Wheeling it Belmont Bridge Co. "Wheeling Pottery Co. Wheeling Railway Co. First National Bank of Rellalre, 0. Bellalre Gas & Electric Co. I'eabody Insurance Co. Geo. U. Taylor Co. Bloch Bros. Tobacco Co. Warwick China Co. BONDS. Fostorln OlnM Co. _ ., Moundsvllle, Benwood & Wheeling Ka-?* y. | wny Co. Ohio Rlvor R. R. Co. , ? Mononpnhola River R. R. Coal Co. Ravonswood, Spencer & Glenvllle KJ-* I road Co. AVhltnkor Iron Co. Town of Salem. Jockxon County fi por cent. , f' .j Tin and Stool Stock.*' bought nnfl! sm H <l!r??ot on New York and Chicago &?ocjs Hxchanpcs. HOWARD HAZLETT, STOCKS. DONDS AND INVESTMENTS. I XutloiwI KxchnnKO Ha:ik I'.nlMI:!.- . I SUMMER SCHOOL. LEARN to Write. LEARN to Spell. LEARN Arithmetic. LEARN Grammar. LEARN All Englisli Hrancbcs. 1 FAWN ltnnlil<orn!iin. LEARN Shorthand. j LtARN Typewriting. I lEAR* Telegraphy. LEARN MocJionicol Drawing* LEARN Business Low. ! j LEARN Gill Clerking. j LEARN Anything you vvnnt by ovpen- J onccd teachers. Call or rite for particulars. j OHIO VALLEY BUSINESS AND ENGLISH AC" \IW W- F j rpHE lN'TULfili] 1-JNCRK HUNTING H X KSTAULISHMKNT. *\cvt. Accurate. PronipU