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_ A PLEASANT BUI 17 FROM TH1 USUAL SAD urn Tka Radiance of th« Season la Rat Confined to the Qowna of the Yount. But Woman of Years May Also Be Brilliant Social Corrt*pO*<Unce of tA* R«7iat«r. New York, October 29.—When the trees are denuded and everything be gins to look brown and rusty and deso late, womankind usually follow suit and nut on dark dresses, which are, they fancy, is proper keeping with the sea son, but this autumn there has been a small rebellion in that respect and dainty light colors are seen in the streets at a time when they are particu larly grateful to the eye. m handsome autumn styles. I don’t think I can remember to have ever seen such pretty colors worn at the same season of the year, and they are not given altogether to the young, for quite elderly women may be seen In combinations of color which are fea tures of this season. There Is a deep, rich, dark red called dahlia, and this, with gray, is made into a costume tor a portly and handsome matron, and it is a handsome gown. Beige with green is another pleasing combination. The skirt of beige, with narrow green rutiles at the bottom. The Henri Something basque has the upper sleeve of beige, and the revers and pocket lids. All the rest is green, and the hat is made to match. Heliotrope velvet, Louis XV coats, with browu camel's hair or cloth skirts, both trimmed with narrow gold braid, make auother striking but beautiful combination. Dark blue and Russian green are made up together, and black and yellow are seen everywhere. Black and yellow are superb when properly used together. Young girls wear costumes in one color most often, and they of beige, tan, pale gendarme or faience blue or crushed raspberry or a soft pink, w’hich has a sort of creamy overbloom. Crepon, cloth, cashmere, serge and Henrietta are all suitable for these, and they come !n all these colors. Pearl and French gray are also much seen, sometimes trimmed with colors, passementerie or velvet. The set pieces of metal passe menterie are particularly pretty. One very pretty dress made for a bride of last week was of faience blue crepon. with three narrow ruf fles at the >ttom of the otherwise plain skirt, headed by a baQd of gold passementerie. The coat basque had a semi-military cape at the top, richly braided in the same manner. The sleeves had sort of bell shaped, droop* iug cuffs just below the el bdw. It was cut double breasted, with plain crochet buttons. A cunning little tricorne hat, j FINK CREPON OOWN. with blue feathers and brown velvet, wai . to be worn with it. Another very elegaDt, but exceeding ly simple gown was made fora friend of the bride, of beige cloth, fourreau shape, with deep box plaits in the back, instead of the flat plaits so often seen now. Around the bottom w 're four rows of close feather trimming in graduated widths. The coat ba<que was bordered with the narrowest width. A tiny bon net of enjerald green velvet, Persian braid and beige plumes was worn with it. These two costumes can be copied with the certainty that they are the latest styles, and they can be made of any material that is suitable for the season. Another exceedingly pretty dress that can be easiiy reproduced is in the origi nal, made of the new pink crepon. A cut showing how it is made in the back is appended to the iilustration. At the right side there is a panel with loops of i soutache braid, and this extends to tho armpits on each side, leaving a very graceful drapery to the short basque. The skirt is prettily drapped, part of the folds coming under the panel and the i rest reaching around to the middle of! the back, where the fold falls in with those laid back of the plait. The bot-1 tom has a border of black velvet, head-1 ed with au overlay of narrow braid. The manner in which the skirt is made forms a pleasing change from the severe outlines so often seen now. Many, and in fact most, dressmakers now put large hooks on the belts of the waists and basques, which hook into eyes on the belts of the skirts, and this sustains the weight and also keeps the skirt from sagging. 1 think that furs of every description will be more largely used as trimming than ever before, if such a thing is pos sible. Every kind is fashionable. Trim ming made on flat bands of ostrich and peacock plumes blended, will ba very much used ou evening dreeses. Bands A GREALPAPER,; ' To-morrow’s REGISTER will con-; tiin a number of Choice Special hr-; tides, some of them of decided j local interest. i It sill contain the Telegraphic) Hess of the world furnished by the! two great Press Associations. It fill contain more Reading! ; gatter than any other Sunday pa-! I per published in the State. It will he read by over 50,000 J people. I In fact, It sill be read by every-j body,who can read,within a radius; of live miles of the city. j of white ostrich with the bronzed and iridescent ones of peacock feathers make an exquisite combination. Cloaks lined all the way through with fur of some kind or other will be very popular, the fur just showiug at the edges all around. Long redingotes are made of a beautiful camel’s hair goods incuriously mixed up figures in shaded gray and black. They reach the bottom of the dress and are trimmed with collar and bands of fur, black monkey skin be ing a favorite. Olive Harper. MB. QUAY W ANTS TO KNOW Who Allowed the Democratic Committee to Have His Questionable Check. Beaver, Pa., Obtober 30.—Senator Quay sent th» following telegram to day: “Hon. E. S. Lacey, Compttoller, Wash ington, D. C. “1 beg to be inforfned, at your earliest convenience, by whom and by whose authority or permission a certificate of deposit for $3,877, dated November 29, 1889, endorsed by John Bardsley and by me, which is among the papers of the Keystone National Bank, an institu tion in the custody of the United States, was delivered to the Democratic State Committee to be photographed, litho graphed and published throughout the state by the Democratic press as is now being done. [Signed.] “M. S. Quay.” STATUE UNVEILED. A Heroic Figure of General William Car ter Wickham for Richmond. Richmond, Va., October 29.—The city Is filled this morning with strangers and Confederate veterans and military organizations from various portions of the State, drawn together to unite in a demonstration in honor of Brigadier Genet al William Carter Wickhan, a bronze statue of whom was unveiled at noon. The statue was unveiled by Wni. Carter Wickham Reushaw,\a grandson of the General. Judge B. W. Lacy, of the Supreme Court, introduced Gen. Fitz Lee, who delivered the oration, at the conclusion of which a mflitary salute was fired. The bronze figure is seved feet high. It represents Gen. Wickham in the full uniform of a Briga dier General of cavalry, booted and spurred. -—♦ A Denver Ring Come* to Grief. Denver, Col., October 30.—Orville L. Smith, president of the Smith-Brooks Printing Company, was indicted by the grand jury on five charges of forgery, and William H. Bliss, George Raymond and James P. Hydley were indicted on fourteen charges, including forgery, larceny and embezzlement. The accused were members of a ring that has been charged with robbing the city during the late administration. Raymond was deputy city auditor, Had ley deputy city treasurer, and Bliss, who was at one time city treasurer, was connected with the Denver Carriage Company during the alleged conspiracy to defraud the city. Gathering Information. Berlin, October 30.—Mr. JesseSelig inau, the well-known New York bank er, who has been in this city, was re cently furnished with credentials from the United States for the purpose of making inquiries among foreign finan ciers in legard to the possibility of ar riving at some international agreement in the interost of bimetalism. Upon leaving Berlin he seemed to have hopes that mutters are progressing towards an international conference on the subject of bimetalism. Too Much Rone in the Meat. London, October 20.—A report sent to the official headquarters in regard to the recent troubles among the Greua dier Guards, practically confirms 'IYuth's story of yesterday, except that it says only the corporals wore arrested, as it was impossible to discover who threw th$ food out of the window. Tbe report denies that there was any muti ny, and declares that the trouble was merely a childish refusal on the part of the men to eat the food provided for them because there was too much bone in the meat rations. An African Town Rarned. Paris, October 30.—The Petit Journal to-day publishes a dispatch from Mada gascar stating that Majunga, an im portant town on the northwest coast of that Island, has been almost entirely consumed by a conflagration. Only ten houses are reported to be standing, and the loss is estimated at about ?200,000. Majunga had an extensive trade In cat tle products. Ask Damages for Injuries. Johnstown, Pa., Octorber 29.—Dr. D. J. W. Hammond and wife entered suit to-day against the Southern Pacific Railway asking $00,000 damages for In juries received in the terrible disaster on that line on November 12, 1390. The couple were caught in the wreck while on their wedding trip, and have never fully recovered from their injuries. For Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neu ralgia, Cramp and Colic there is no remedy superior to the genuine Dr. Thomas’ Eclectrie Oil. An Old Man and a lloneer. Oakland, Cal., October 29.—Captain Thomas H. Wackraan, a Southern Pa cific watchman, was killed by a train to-day. Captain Wackman was one of the pioneer railroad men of the country and was oue-of the first engineers who ever ran out of Chicago. IF TOVB BACK ACHF*. Or you an? all worn out, really good for noth ing, it is general debility. Try BROWX’S 1ROX HITTERS. It will cure you, cleanse your liver, and giv» a good at petite. BROWN'S IRON BITTERS Cures Dyspepsia, In digestion & ^ebility. THE COMPLEXION. HOW TO MAXI IT BIAUTIIUL AND MAIN TAIN IT la That Ooodition—Suggestion* From Women Who Are Beantifnl and Who Have 8oft, dear Skias—Health and Cleanliness. A good complexion Is lovely woman’s first birthday gift. If it doesn’t come then she is doomed to war with her looking-glass all her days. Public women, that is to say, those gifted and ambitious mortals who de pend upon popularity for a steady in come, understand better than any other class the science of good looks, and the suggestions from a few of them here with submitted may not be uninterest ing to the great army of robodies who care to be pretty and don’t know how. Lillian Russell has a complexion like a roseleaf. Miss Russell graciously writes in reply to the writer’s question: “I hold that plain food, very little wine, a great deal less ice water aud plenty of exercise do more for the beauty of the skin than all the preparations known to the chemists. Whatever overtakes or prostrates the action of digestion alTects the whole system. If the stomach is out of order the complexion will be un healthy. Exercise, regular and system atic, Is the price of my health. Before retiring I bathe my face in hot water, in which a few drops of tincture of benzoin have been dissolved, making a milk white, soapy, fragrant bath. After a thorough washing I rinse it in cold water and dry well. I then apply a very little cold cream, work ing it into the skin with ray hands until my face perspires at every pore and rub with fi&nuel uutil it Is dry. After my bath in the moving I dust my face with a little pure rice powder. That catches the dust that otherwise would lodge in the pores of ray face. I always wear a veil in dusty, windy weather and also when traveling to keep the soot and smoke from getting i into my lungs and skin. There isn’t much to tell, you see, and the only secret about a good complexion is good general health. PAULINE HALL is another favorite who is blessed by Nature with a lovely skin. There is much wisdom in her little letter on the subject: “I consider absolute a,nd un compromising cleanliness a positive ne cessity to a good complexion. Plain, wholesome food, an active life, exercise in the open air and plenty of sleep will make almost any woman good-looking.” Miss “Jackie” Bennett, better known as “My Pretty Jane,” has the pale, creamy beauty of the oalla lily in her cheeks. She modestly writes: “There is no secret to my complexion. Being of French and Spanish extraction I naturally have a colorless skin, which is considered'anything but beautiful, I believe. I use no preparations except on the stage, and consequently have never had even the slightest blemish.” Jessie Bartlett Davis, the honey col ored contralto of the “Bostonians”, is blessed with a clear, smooth skin that takes a blonde Japanese and Moorish finish and comes out of a pot of cold cream as good as new. “I don’t use anything at my face bath,” she says very modestly, “but water and soap, the best and purest I can buy. The temperature of the water depends entirely on the town. I am in. If I happen to be a denizen of Butte or Helena, Mont., I take ray bath any way I can get it, usually below zero, bat when I come to New York I have it as I wish—blood heat. Complextion is a good deal like a baby according to ray way of thinking and wants constant care, not directly s6 much as indirectly for whatever affects the general con dition of the body is almost certain to manifest itself in the face.” MISS BEATRICE CAMERON, the fiancee of “Beau Brummel,” has the red and white complexion peculiar to British women. “There are no secrets about it,” she writes, “and no mysterious vials on my toilet table out of which cheeks, lips and chin are con structed. The only cosmetic I use is warm water night and morning, and an application of cold cream if I have been out in the wind or under a shower of coal dust and cinders in sleeping cars. I am not an advocate of washed-out beauty. I think the face too delicate to withstand scrubbing, steaming and massage treatment. I clean my face much more frequently than I wash it, using old pieces of linen and soft towel ling iustcad of crash or chamois skin.” Simple living, regular habits of life, outdoor exercise and freedom from the use of “beautifiers” will, I think, pro duce a good, clear complexion. To recapitulate, a woman’s complexion is a delicate thing and wants delicate handling. Two baths daily in warm , water with pure castile soap Is all the scrubbing needed. Any other cleansing can be done with a soft cloth and as much cold cream as the finger tip will hold. For blotches, eruptions and like blem ishes look to the blood. By way of ex periment try a change of diet. Eat brown bread, drink milk instead of t< a or coffee: three nights in the week make a dinner on rare beef or broiled mutton chops, broiled onions and stewed tomatoes, with cracker and an aople for dessert. Breakfast on fruit, soft eggs and cotTee, make a lunch on a bowl of soup. An actress who prefers to withhold her identity has a supper before retiring selected from this Dili of fare: Toasted water biscuit with a bunch of celery, a quart of apple sauce, cup of bouillon or a melon and a pint of hot tea. She dines at 5 p. ra. and her complexion is as fine as a child's. Another lady who sings like a lark has nothing to eat, for her lunch but two slices of zwieback and a cup of claret. She sleeps eleven hours a day and is physically beautiful. From Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher. ‘40 Orange St., Brooklyn, N. y., ) February 11,1$90. ( “I have used Allcock’s Plasters for some years for myself and family, and, as far as able, for the many suffer ers who come to us for assistance, and have found them a genuine relief for most of the aches and pains which flesh is heir to. I have used Allcock's Plas ters for ail kind of lameness and acute pain, and, by frequent experiments, find that they can control many cases not aoticed in your circulars. “The above is the only testimonial I have ever given in favor of any plas ter, and if my name has been used to recommend any other it is without my authority or sanction.” Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher. Indiana Forest Fires. Indianapolis, Ind., October 29.— Specials from the southern Dart of In diana say the forest fires have assumed alarming dimensions. The fire is now within a half mile of New Albany, with several houses in that city on the hiU Bide now burning. iUn> atfrtyertig<mtnf. __r__ THE CRESCENT IRON CO., OF VIRGINIA. Recently organized with a Capital Stock ot $500,000, issued in shares of $10 each, full paid and non assessable, now offers The assets of this Company consist of one ot the rich est producing iron mines in the South, together with 500 CHOICE TOWN LOTS; and are so valuable as to ena ble the Company to pay very large dividends to stockhold ers, from sales of ore alone and extra dividends from bales of lots. The Quality of the Ore is the Richest Found in the Val ley of the Appalachian System of Mountains Any where Between Massachusetts and Alabama. Every feature of the concern is specially tavorable to the individual stockholder, and careful investigation and examination of the property, plans and propositions of the Company are invited. — DIRECTORS. THOMAS WALLACE, Wallace A Sons, Brass and Copper Rolling Mills, An Sonia, Conn. HON. EDWARD LAUTERBACH, Hoadley, Lauterbach & Johnson, 120 Broad way, New York. JOSEPH RENSHA W, Jr., Capitalist, Baltimore, Md. HON. ALLAN TV. PAIGE, Speaker Connecticut House of Representatives, Bir mlngham, Conn. COL. THOMAS A. HULME, Capitalist, Baltimore, Md. E. BURGESS, Ex-Register U. S. Land Office of Arizona—Baltimore. FRANK R. BIEDLER, Wholesale Merchant, Baltimore, Md. L. ADELSOS, Retail Clothier, Grafton, TV. Va, D. J. AARON, Merchant, Ml. Olive, N. C. G. TV. GALL, Jr., Cashier The TygarCs Valley Bank, Phlllippl, TV. Va. OFFICERS. FRANK R. BIEDLER.President. THOMAS WALLACE.Vice-President. JOSEPH REN SHAW, Jr.'Treasurer B. C. GETZ.Secretary Copies of Reports, Maps, etc., and all further informa tion may be obtained from, or subscriptions will be re ceived by G. W. GALL, Jr., Philippi, W. Ya. J. H. KNAPP, Philippi, tf. Ya. FIDELITY AND DEPOSIT CO,, of Maryland, Baltimore. WHITCOMB, WEAD & CO., 38 Equitable Building Boston, Mass. LOPER & DOUGHTEN, 435 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa 6el5eopqj- _ . A Wise Merchant Is never content to stand still. Stagnation is death —in Trade as in other things. New customers should be sought after all the time. There is only one way to gpt them—uso the Advertising columns of Good Newspapers. ROXIE8, JUBAbEfc AND ALL KINDS OF Blenlra tor aele at the Bmistu Couatlaf Kooib BE A MAN APOLLO WAS A PERFECT MAN. PERFECT IN FORME-MATCHLESS IN WARE So MLLtou w«rr O' imIidu for (taiwart mro tkU P'tny boj« »' Mrth »«( pat to death. Everr KaN can ba STRONG and VIGOROUS la all respect!. YOUNG MEN OR OLD, offering from NERV0U3 DR* BXUTT. Lost or Tailing Man hood. Physical Exeex***. Mental Worry, Btnnted Dcrelopmcnt, or any PERSONAL WEAKNESS, can ba raatored to PERFECT HEALTH aud the NOBLE VITALITY of STRONG MEN, the Pride and Power ef Nations. We claim by years of practice by our exclude method! a uniform ' MONOPOLY OF 8UCCE83" !u treat* Ingall Diseases, Weakness*!and _A Affliction! of Men. Testimonials ' from 60 States and Territories. AIID UP VII onftH tru; o< tent free, sealed, pout* UUn ItfcW DUlm paid, for* limited time. Oct ttwhllo you can. Foil Explanation* for HOKE TREAT KENT. Ton can bo FULLY RESTORED a* Tboa.anda Oavo boon by n. R*i4 our tecttnonlal*. Addr.ocat ooec ERIE MEDICAL CO. BUFFALO. N.Y. West Virginia Printing (^o. PUBLISH!** AND PROPRIBTORS OP THI WHEELING REGISTER. Railroad, Steamboat aad Commercial Book ctnb 3ob Printers book; binders -AND PLANK POOK MANUFACTURERS, | 1 2ios» 1225 db 122 7 Market Street, j I “Wheeling-, -w. Va. PROGRAMMES, ' POSTERS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADINGS, BILLS LADING, DRAYBOOKS, DRAFTS, CHECKS ^LETTER i PRESS i PRINTING** ■ XICUTIO ID A ATV1.1 UNSUAAAAAI*. Pnra BOOK WOBK .A. SPECIA1TT. _ FOR RENT—A now being constructed fr,*,t3,*U »->■ Main street and the sam* 0*‘u ** * OB and WO feat on Tenth street v*f^£l rentao as a whole it will be d'triH anu. The cellar and the seco'n'1 d ing 900 by 07 feet, are alsoTo •l'."! JAS L. HAWLEY, U», yU.^ C:! Aor &ait. FOB sALE OH Rr’.NT-Tn* Block, No. 9019 and 2021 v.i„ KQgw west corner. Enqmrecf JOH\ lEvS^K the building, upstairs. Entrant*. first street. Terms easy. °c gALOON FOR SALL Owing to the death of my i&t, BADCLIFF. dec'd, the 's*iooa 7** *1 Apply to the undersigned tl v. , street. ‘ Mi* *** SAMUEL LA|Vc . W heeling, August 89, 1801 ‘ lb s^a-nu 6 Wheeling Bridge A T R p 11,000 each. ' “* «°*1 10 • hares (Etna Iron and Nail itvV 29 shares United States Glass ,.AA 90 shares Warwick China st One Main street Building. 13): ..a (iO shares Wheeling Pott*rv a RR Telephone 459. Trios. o rp k -_!L«a»S4 Cheap Homes lot jjj 1700 for a frame cottage with portw ro. in- and kitchen, head of Ninth »t*. * fl.OOdLfor frame oottage. lot tony v CclK>«'b street. *■*! f 1.250—One-story brick, Are rooms w. South Huron stieet. ’ S1,S.V}—Two story frame, six . stable in rear, SftUU Jacob street ‘ *5 11,4110—Frame cottage and lot fc. * _ Woods street; rents for flb.aj per c, »u * |l,500—Two-*tory fratu*. f ur rv kitchen, lot 24x100, Chaplitt- itre*t • * Wheeling. ^ W 11.660—Two-story frame. four lirg..;,., kitchen, almost new, lot V5iKv; chftn 8,11 It .450—Two-story brick, four r4., kitchen, lot 30x00. alley 15 #1.710—'Two-story brick snd lot ga , MoColloch 6treet. w 11 ,mX»-Two-story hrtck. Are rooms \ ?l,v5>—Ftu* two-storv frame, tight r« basemeut. lot25\HW, Elm street. ' ' fl Sxi—Two-story brick, Are room* 2634 Main street. #2.600—Tsvo story hrlok. *u rooir., .. . good cellar, lot 30x100, 3-;lh* Chaplin Fl.UOd—Two-story brick, seven r,. hall, lot 22xU0, 1131 EofT srr-et 12 600—Two-story brick, stx rooms. ** Eighth street. f.3 5u0—Large txro-story brick bulldlt* , store-room and six rooms and lull, lot 41 all in good condition. Terms tc ». . chaser. 18,500—Frame house and lot »jU\ « street, north of Eighth, wresutde i>»,. ll.^UU—Two-story frame, lot 3h;J:. g, street, east side, between Eighth »&• v streets. §afT Ail property can be sold on »ut 100 Building Lots in all parta ortbr CU«. G. A. Schaefer & Go, Real Estate and Notarial Buthtn Cor. Fourteenth and Market S’;r*u,opj^ Opera House, Wheeling W Vs. 4 FOR SALE 91.000 will buy a five rocarj hour ;* street. Centre W heeling. No. ».S03 .Inc »b street, 9I.3.V) Lots in S S. Blooh addition on Sooth N and Lim streets Lot on South Front street. Island. Il Mo One of the best manufacturing sites at city, fronting oa two railroads . Good business corner in Oen'er Whnl.n House of six rooms, £3h0 Woods i'..*»< good condition, 8.200. House of seven rooms. K«>fT street 81 Mouse of four rooms, ooruer Eighteen'.! ia and Alley G; >1 OOU. Lots on North trie and South Penn i.i IslHtul. f.TW to #400 each. Full lot on Jacob street, wrlth a fitr fst brick house in tim rear. #U,IAW. Lot on McColloch street, north of E»m stree'. Half Lot on North Main street, 33 t.j 111 •KJUQ. .. Half Lot on Eoff street, south of T«a eighth *tre< t.#l,UU0. Beautiful lots in A H Patterson's to Elm Grove at low figures. Choice Lots in Glendale. House of five rooms in good candidal Jacob street, ground 3oxlU0. Il *•> Two Lots in very desirable location uM.u ville at low figure. Large Lot at Kdgington Lane. Lots in Fifth ward In Fllan A WhyUtif tiru. Half-Lot at east end of Twenty-sevsitbia 86N). _ ^ . Six room house, northwest cornsr CbiH and Twenty-fifth streets NESBITT Sc DEVINE ocffh _CT»M.rt.lln« FOR SALE. A fine hill farm of one hundred aadtAM nine acres, sivjate in Marshall county •" five acres of timber land, balance undere«» tion, good farm house and earn, p>nt*« P water, and the whole underlaid withooa. J be had on cany term* and low price. A few choice building Iota in Pie*'*11*' ~ fronting 50 feet on National road Wood atreet lot 5ft feet front, IW South Jacob atreet, lot .Vi f**et. No iS2f» Wood street, *1 (X*) No. 33 Twentieth street, H.V*). No 45 Tbirteeuth atreet, I!..'»*) td.OOO to loan on realeoute a* '-unty. OEO J MATtU^* UflO Cbapllaa K’w T^l^oh^n* Vo 107. ^ twmm, ■■ ■ ■■■■■■ ■■ ■ ■■ Jlavci' an& Valnit • THE LATEST. New Wall Paper AND DECORATIONS, WALL MOULDINGS * FOR THE SEASON OK H' All the Latest Styles and at tb* Prices ever shown In tbecity all Colors. Ulaaa of all aiiea. Hro»b« kinds. Painting and Paper iiaaf-H branches done en short notice. GEO.E. KURNERM 39 Twelfth St., Near Market* D. O. KURNER —faactica^ Painter, Gralner, Glailer, Slji —AMT>— PAPER HANGER Dealer m Painu, OUa. Varni* Glass, Bruahea, Paintera* Sappl*-1 ] UTEST MTUTS HIT IHHOYtMlITS. .rn •*? 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