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WEST VIRGINIA PRINTING CO, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS. TERMS. PER TEAR. BY MAIL POSTAGE PRB* PAID. D.M^Y. six days In the week.JS «l DAILY, three days In the week.4 • DAILY, twe days In the week.5W DAILY, one day In the week.I WEEKLY, one year. In advance.1 ® Y 1EKLY. six months. • fi’XUAY only, one year.* SUNDAY only, six months..— I® DELIVERED UY CARRIERS. D E i er week, to he paid weekly... • Dai ; ■ The DAILY will be delivered by car riers In any other city or town at.... • Sr,s'le cop.es of DAILY or WEEKLY. § Tributes of Respect and Obituary tlces live cent* per line. 3'amps of the denomination of tw* cents and less accepted for amounts leee than one dollar. Correspondence containing Important news solicited from every part of th* •Grounding country. Rejected communication* w ill not be rw* turned unless accompanied by «*'ifllcient postage. * The REGISTER, embracing tt* sever*! editions. Is entered ut the Poftcttlce 1* heeling. W. V*.. a-*- -econd-cl*** matter. SIhTKR»VlLI.i:'> NEW lt\NK Will It*. Open for HuhIim*-*-* To-iUy-Noteii of VrM< from tli«* Oil l Uv. Sister3ville, December 1*>.—The char ter of ‘he new I'Mr-: National Hunk has arrived. The bank has a capital of seventy thousand dollars paid up and will open its doors to transact business to-morrow morning at the usual hours for bankii’g. -Mr. Stephen G. Pyle will act as cashier and il wlM be under the management of Mr. A. Jackson, for merly cashier o>‘ th-' Ty! r Count) Bank who has proven himself during the four years he has held tha* position to be tt careful, shrewd and -ici Mil bank er. The bank will have temporary quarters in wha was formerly the Mel lon Pip? Lino office on We Ilia street and will build a han2seen ‘ brick bank build ing In t<ae spring, he Icctulou of which has not yet been selected. The lad is of the M. E. Ohur-h have been prat* .-! . g 'or some time past for an en ertalnment which they will give ia the opera house to-morrow evening. The prtet: cf admission will be 25 cents and rickets are n^w on sale at Marsh’s jewelry store an i at Drummond’s drug store. The programme has not yet been fully arranged. Mike Keating has gone to Oil City. Pa., on business, and expects to be ab sent mest ail cf this week. Harry P. Camden, of Parkersburg, and Messrs. Caldwell & Caldiwell, of Wheeling, were in town Saturday en route for Mlddilebourns to attend to some legal business before the Circuit Ccurt. W. FcHx Kaiser spent Sunday with his mother at Marietta, Ohio. Al. E. Campbell was in Wheeling last night calling on frtends. M. John L. Sweeney and Ozias Shook, of Friendly, were business visitors to our city to-day. Th Farmers and Producers National p. .nk will open Thursday the 20th. Mr. W. H. Gill* -pb* wca-t do vn to Sa lem this afterno, n on business. The case of tho State vs. Harks, for felonious cutting is on trial before the Fir Hi' Court at Middle-bourne to-day. and will likely occupy all of to-morrow. The indications are thit there will be Jury trials all th* rest of the week. The eongr gatlon of the Episcopal church is making preparations for a pleasant Christmas entertainment in the way of some fine music, recitations, e t. .Mr. J. H. Hfcssom, who formerly lived across the river, but now in \\ heeling, is in. the city to-day looking after his oil in.crests in this field. Mr. Hissom. accompanied by his wlf®, well leave Thursd iv on a four months' trip through the Sotrth. They will go to Avian'a. Ga.. and spend a week at the Exposition, after which they will spend tin winter in the victn ty of Jackson ville. Fla. Rpv. L. E. Peters. cf Parkersburg. • w;!i fain :i scries of t> i tilers' meetings In’ the B fog fend continue thorn t'.M Friday even ing, holding rwo meetings each day. All th ' offi •”*s. teachers and scholars of the different Sunday Schools arc cor dially Invited to attend. WOODSFIELD. Woodsflelil. December 1*».—♦Mrs. R«':n. mother of Mrs. Lizzie Burkherd, of -his pla and si.-1 Jr of Bernard Peters, edi tor of th*- Brooklyn Times, died Friday about 3 o’clock p. m. Funeral Sunday ar 2 o’clock p. m. Interment in. Woods fldd com- cry. Rev. Alfred Wall offi ciating. Her two sons. William and pttflip. from IV reiL. Michigan, and V ang-t.-wn, Ohio, arrived Thursday before she exp.red. They both lex this morning for the r homes. M’-s. Tirzih Sinclair, of Bellalre, came on Friday to see her mother, who fell and hurt herself so badly, will remain a few days longer. Her nwher is very b^lly hurt, but the dt otors do not think her hip is broken. We have had --plendhl sleighing for the pi-’ few days anti could we have the ordering of the weather just now we won 1 isk for a lixle more snow and to lay on untit Xm?:. I\ W Stewart lcav - tc-day for his home in Allegheny, Pa., to spend the holidays. M!.- Maggie KrCterer has gone to At lant.i. Ga. Will bo gone until after the holidays. Mr Forres’ Xelaon. of Jerusalum. and Mis- C e. isreal. of Bealsvi’.le. were married las- week. James Adams has moved :n‘o his pr petty in Box Town, and Mr. Charles po::i- ni 1 s moved into Mr. Adams’ pr -p. y >r. West Church Street. Mi s ;t 1 Sprig's art l Miss Kate Ncuhart will spend their holidays at Columbus th s year. They intend go ing this week. I>r. T A Cox. of Elwood, III., died at his broth. ■ r’s. W. H. Cox. of Marietta. D. mbt*r "r t. Dr. C. A. Cox spoat sev c-al \ urs here n th his aunt. Mrs. Wm. Gibson. Postmaster L -v.s Helbllng is on the slek list. ■-o Mr. J. H. Cobb, publisher of the Mir ror. at Brocton. N. Y.. says: ’’For nearly two years the Mirror has been publishing the advertisements of Chamberlain’s Remedies. few days «go the writer was suffering from a b iwel trouble and resorted to an old remedy which did not prove efficaci ous; finally he tried Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, ami two doses did the business, check in- it completely.’* 1 ON TO KENNESAW. The Difference Between 1S64 and 1S95 as Seen by a Veteran. Henry Watterson. in the Louisville Courier-Journal, says:—The route to Atlanta via Daltou and Resaca. and I Calhoun and Cartersville and Big Shan ty and AUatoona and Kennesaw. has a significance for certain graybeanls, ^ who, though they may not be able to keep the water out of their eyes in 1805, were not wont to do much weeping dur ing the spriug and summer of 1864. Whether he wore one uniform or the other, it would do a world of good to ' everyone of these if he could make the , journey over again, as l have just made it, not through ride pits and over re doubts, inch by inch, so to say, but in un observation car, pausing a moment i near the pivotal points to look over the brow of Dalton hills and recall the brilliant fight at Rocky Face, where the Orphan Brigade, with Mr. Chief , Justice Lewis (even then "old Joe Lew is”) at its head, did much gallant work; at Resaca to peer out through snake j Creek Cap. • <> r*'call how McPhear son and Logan swept through, while Sherman flanked around those early 1 May days: to mark where Corse "held the fort” at AUatoona: to see again the ) spot where the great Leonidas Polk : gave up his life; almost to hear again the guns at Kennesaw; In short, to comprehend, after thirty years, the full import of that dare-devil march to the sett, the valor of each side actually glorifying the valor of the other side, and so on to the walis—the earthen walls of Atlanta itself, where for six weeks, wo had a panic, the like of which no man would care to repeat. It was a sight to see this same At lanta. that e\ -ting of August 31. 1S61. when Hardee, having fought the battle of Jonesboro to make a diversion, those of us inside marched out and away down the McDonough road. It was a sight to seel One conglomerate mass of smouldering ruins, the lines of the streets obliterated; on every side the smoke and debris of-burning ham an l* doorated shrine; the very household flowers torn from the lintel. I drove along Peachtree street the other at ] ternoon—a street that in opulence and I beauty Is fast overtaking Third avenue | in Louisville and Euclid avenue in j j Cleveland—and, of all the ancient ! landmarks but one remained: it was aj mansion in those days; by some mira- j cle it escaped the siege; now, a little dingy brick house, crouching between ; and beneath two vast structures, sau and silent, like some poor wan woman in fading black who has seen be;ter days, as in truth this has; a simple yet royal homestead whose doorways blaz- . ed with hospitable light and warmth, and whose roof-tree sheltered noblest! and most beautiful of women, long since gone to her rest! It is well that! 1 Atlanta has left these things far away . in the past. Perhaps it is not ill that so many of those who could live only in the past have vanished from the scene, i and that the intervening years, leveling . | the graves and effacing the scarfs, have ploughed their ruthless highways un- ' consciously to those who went down be- ■ neath the drums and trampings of that1 dread time. The dead past has e’en | buried its dead. The living must e’en live and let live; and it is not for those i whose lives are behind them to lay any j cross^ upon those whose lives are be fore them, or to dispute the will of God. No dire” tes: could have been applied to a people than four years of war and thirty years of peace have applied to the Southern people; no people ever endured such au ordeal; no people who ever existed could have survived It. Bnltold the proof riglr here !n Atlanta, albeit proof is everywhere, conserva tive manhood and womanhood behold the safe guards of the future; for here. 1 here will be found the stuff to meet and \ beat agrarian encrouchments. to drive j back alike the legions of usurpation 1 and the hordes of anarchy, and to de fend and maintain orderly government laid in Democratic principles on Re publican lines. WHY BERMUDEZ MISSED. Reminiscence of a Famous Old-Time Duel a New Orleans. "Did you witness Judge Bermudez’s »el?” 1 asked au old Louisianian who had se.n many meetings under the cod?. Although a dead shot, Bermudez missed his man at five paces. ‘ Vos. You know 1..pause was his adversary and. to the best of ;uy recol lect.on, the cause that led to it was a tr. iai one—some toliHi newspaper pub licaaons in relation to the college d’Or Itans. 1 believe Lepouse, whom Gay arre has somewhat travestied in his ‘Fernando de Learns,’ was a professor lu that institution and a poet of great merit. He was as simple as a child, unacquainted with the ways of the world and perfectly inoffeu-ive, exespt when goaded by contradiction on same favorite hobby. Then, under the in fluence of hounless anger and perhaps wine his language would become caus tic and biting. He lived in dreamland, even amid the gayeties of society. Fear was a stranger to his nature, duty was his only guide. "Wall, for some reason or other, Le pouse concluded to call out Bermudoz, and knowing tha the Judge was the mo.-; export mark-man in the city with a pis tl, alto made up his mind to shor ten the distance to five paces. 'I can't hit a barn door a*, ten paces, I know, but at flw rhe case will be different. I hope. II me tuera, mais je le touchcral. j’en stris sur.' (He’ll kill me, but I’ll shoot him sure.) Things turned out as he expected, except as to the marksman fhlp part. When they reached the scene of com bat. and a? they were about being plac ed in position. L> pouse yielding ;o the force of hibit. dr-w out his snuff b:x. and. after offering a pinch to the at tendants. advanced In his usually suave, smiling and winning way toward his antagonist, over a-hose astonished coun tenance flitted a shadow c? perplexity. ‘Prenex-en; r’est du ban. o’ev du Macou b;u (Take some, it Is good, pure Ma couba.) The Judg^ bowed and accepted the compliment. There was something simple, .vet grand in -the act. It was the "i>hey stood at five paces, face to face, alliance of valor with gallantry, and fired. Both misse 1. though their pistols were directed at one another. The seconds here interposed and a re conciliation was effected. When ques tioned upon the subJectBermudex frank ly admitted that the sympathetic face of that kind and effeotionate recluse and scholar had haunted him at the mo ment of firing and paralyzed his nerves. —Now Orleans Times-Democrat Our better halves say iney could not , keep houso without Chamberlain's ! Cough Remedy. It is used iu more than hall the homes in Leads. Sims Bros., Leeds. Iowa. This shows the esteem In which that remedy is held where it has been sold for years and is well known. Mothers have learned that there is nothing so good for colds, croup and whooping cough, that it cures these ailments quickly and perma netlv. and that it is pleasant and safe | for children to take. j ANNUAL STATEMENT -OF THE Clerk of the Board of Education of the School District of Wheeling of Expen ditures for the Year Ending July 31,1895. » | » ~ j s 2 3 i o « "Sb i o | * 3 \o< S SCHOOL FUND. g 8 * « « M 5 > z ^ 2 „ i t a w ~ - t ^ — c ~ l - a te — a a Si r®, ? f3SU ~ £ 'X 05 W P H J h «__ Wa hington S hooll* 7,17> 35 $ 100 00 J 641 44 $ 56 251* 446 K> $ .* 9,"01 31 Clay School. 7.003 i " 5.T0 (»» 1.4-6 75 213 15 592 1(1 53 08 . 11 Union School., 7,158 65 400 00 52:1(57 43 251 (.-27 72 17 06 . 8,770 84 Centre School.1 6,290 00 400 00 508 88 113 00 r7>» so *5 80 .• I S' ho ;. 7,603 50 100 60 1-7 71 35 ! 32 638 51 *20 90 .1 9.9W 94 8,931 • 733 09 65 596 61 80 63 . >*' v;l ox S 648 00 932 69 196 5s • - > . .'2 L S hool. 8,105 00 2C0 00 39 23 12 : 7 308 28 9 00 . 3.703 98 . 52 19 .. 11* W Salaries of German I i I _ „„ Teachers .(.!. 1.960 00 1.9/) 00 Sal irl«* of 1 tflli era.'.(. . 2,550 00 2,550 00 Books, Stationery and Supplies. .! ..I 492 99 492 99 Printing and Ad- i 4 „_ vertising . ! 281 a7 281 a. Census .and Enu-1 l .. meration . 1. 211 11 211 41 Insurance .:. 263 00 26. 00 Comme^iement “Ex- 1 __ er ises . .. 208 67 202 67 Refund Taxes.1 257 07 257 67 ^SST "...f:”":'.i. »« • » ..'.1. 1,000 <# 1.000 00 Miscellaneous and i ‘ „ ~ Loans .|.!.j . . 10,910 2d: 10,910 25 . gS,626 gbi*3,618 00|H913 161*1,053 671*3^901 ~37[>1,615 101*18.1*1 56i*91,939 96 BUILDING FUND. Amount paid on Webster School . At hi tec* a’ Commissions. W, hater SchO'.I Building . H< m System, Webstet School Building. tarda, Webster School Building . - 11 Refund Taxes . £ Miscellaneous . bt,tl Total .*16,790 70 LIBRARY FUND. Salaries .* 2.133 00 Books . }*39® 5!) Rent ... 1 \VJSj 7,7 Binding . } Papers. Magazines and Periodicals. “it n Insaranee . i.1'! Local Papers . JJs Printing and Advertising . J” Refund Tax• s . -i !• Electric Light . 4^7 69 Illuminating Gas . - *5 Miscellaneous ..I __ Total .««•»» WALTER H. HALL, Clerk of the Board of Kducation, HAVE STOOD THE TEST. No fancy names, no compounds, noth ing but Straight Distillers' llrands,direct from bonded warehouses aged to full maturity, such ns Overholt’s, Dougher ty*. |»i:Unger's. Duckett elmer's ami i n’s. You can be inpptM with any of these goods in bottles, orbulk, at I. \. < \ICk I'A't o.’s. 1064 Market St., Wheeling, W. Va. A POINTER For Christmas Shoppers! -- Nothing i« more suitable for a pres ent than some useful article ol Furni tipc. Carpets, oil Cloths, Mattings, Shades—something, in fact, which is not only a “Thing of Llenuty,” but a thlug of utility as well. P. J, ALTMYER & CO, | Present the most varied line in tho cit y from \\ hi.-li to make holiday Se lections, and they sell for CASH OR CREDIT. Call to see us. Our Goods and Prices will do the rest. F" Cor. Twenty-Second & Market Sts, .'• The Tml.^Mkg house of the city. Sj" -ini attcntWHW-en to this depart ment._***~_ YEW YORK TANDY FAC ll TOUT IH33 Market street, having cxidlent facilities lor furnishing Fresh • audles in large and small quantities, will be able to furnish to Sunday Schools and others u better assortment of Fine French Mixed and Domestic Candies; Nats, Jfce.. than any other house in Wheeling for the holiday trade, lOo. loc and 20c pound. delira XpiNE DELAWARE HOLLY, LAUREL & FESTOONINGS. THE BEST HOSES AND CUT FLOWERS In the city for Ninas at the lowest prices. DlEZ, The Florist, delira 1004 Market stiect. Tele. 631 ^■S^IESJES t BEGINNING DEG. Hth, 1995, We will present to eah purchaser of 55 lbs. of Butter a BOX OF FINE ASSORTED CANDY! We have thetrade and arc prepared to furnish our old and new customers tbcJilarsrest lot of fine Poultry and Game ever offered in Wheeling. Our store is located rear of Stone & Thomas’ stores. MARKET STALLS: No. IS Second Ward; No. 58 Fifth Ward. E. MYERS. WILL SAVE YOU MONEY. $AM B. McKEE. CHOICE EDIBLES AND PURE FOOD PRODUCTS. 2 MARKET STREET. ’Phone 675. AN INVITATION We Invite you to call at our new store, NO. 1231 MARKET ST., And inspect our display of PICTURES, FRAMES, AND MOULDING, for framing. Hand Decorated Novelties and a fine line of imported Xmas Booklets and » ul endars lor the new year. SICOLL'S ART STORE, ~>vWeiuiv special attention to Fram ins. _dl llrit QUARLES W. SMITH, Staple and Fancy Grocer, Northeast cor. Tenth and Main Streets, i’hone Utf 55. We will linve on hand a fine lot of (’himstmas Tukkb._del it it Hess & lemmon, 1715 Jacob Street, THE POPULAR BUTCHERS. Having the best vacllities of any in the eltv, are prepared to furnish to their cus tomers their usual supply of SaUsaoks, (j (kh etc., for t lie holidays. A fulj liii** of Drehsku Pot’i.TRV. Vunison and Gamk in abundance for Christmas. Tel.3U4.lra •’WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.'1 GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF % IF YOU HAV ANY IDEAS Of vour own, Mr. Bookkeeper, that you want to introduce into vour set of books for the new year, come to us; we will help you carry them out, and won't charge you a pennv extra for the trouble. Place vour order early so as to allow time for “sea soning.” Many a good book has been spoiled by • turning out when “green. West Virginia Printing Co., Manufacturers of High-Grade Blank Books, 1225-1227 Market Street. .1 i GEO. R. TAYLOR. This Great Marked Down Sale of Muslin and Cambric Underwear, Table Damask and Napkins, Claiii and Fur Jackets and [apes! 7 i INAUGURATED 2d INST.. WILL BE CONTINUED UNTIL CHRISTMAS. Hundreds of Dress Patterns from $1.98 up were on sale to the crowds who visited our store last week. and. having added to the stock another lot of DRESS PATTERNS at tho Mai kod Down Prices, we look for even greater activity in the Dress Goods Department this week. Come early and avoid the afternoon rush. #r • • • HLL KINDS GF • • • +» HOLIDAY + GOODS In our line now in and selling fast Come and see what we have to show you. DON’T FORGET THE MARKED DOWN SALE OF Muslin and Cambric Underwear! Linen Table Damask! Napkins and Tcwels!! Ail Cloth and Fnr Garments! And 11-4 Fine All-Wool BED BLANKETS Marked Down from $6.00 to $4.25. I_—— -% Will Make Nice Present 91.4© FOR THIS FINE REED ROCKER ' FULLSIZE CASH OR CREDIT. — pp jpmgw 4H4 31.49 j WHITE, HHNDLEY 5c FOSTER, 2245, 2247,2249 Market St., West Side Lower Market House.I FURNITURE AND CARPETS—^Rl END & SON._ _ j ABSOLUTELY RELIABLE. The system of selling only reliable Furniture t and t Carpets Is strictly adhered to. We offer no goods we cannot recommend; therefore out customers ere absolutely safe in their dealings with us. These principles, loyally maintained, have secured to us an uninterrupted and gratifying success. — FRIEND & SON, 1063 Main Street. ffTUWSRAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS. When purchasing Office Stationery and Blank Books, “the apparel OFT proclaims the man," and the printed matter circulated by a House INVARIABLY proclaims the character of its Merchandise. Strictly first-class Stationery speaks as concincingly as any neatly attired Drummer in your employ. We produce nothing but first* class irorb in eceru department. Let us send you a trial order, subject to approcal. A irord to us, and urc’ll come around. Our latch-string is alurays on the outside. WEST VIRGINIA PRINTING CO. f225 <1 1227 Market Street, Wheeling, W. Va. __fOR Rr.NT. ^ refers : pOR RENT. AT I-I-ATIII'.RWooIK ,°°e liouse with ten rooms i eiftht rooms oarh; m.„!,.n. % u » • ssB&dfr.«rs£* m.S'il'y0.1"' ■"“*• 1 — ^ _ J- J JF [.!, ,U ; FOR SALS-REAL E -TAJ~ IVOR SAI-K—TIic.i J. ■ Zone stre.r, ( jiioumi. Kn(jTHri‘ FU’NTKH, adminlsii. 105 /Suite street. -_ POR SALE. The property, Vo. 33 Vir I tenements in the rear. ■ I per year. Pslce $4,000. . r p * ■ Heal estate loans n. 1 and lenders. — - .»••:* ■ JAMES L. Ux'.viFv I Reul Estate an ! ■ poll SALE. 3 lots N. Huron st., old Fair Orom u . 121 S. York st.. new 2 stum • gain. ■ lir 1"34 EofT st., can be had on . i-, 200 and 204 Main at., lot 5') r\ through to Coal st. 2 good i. low. No. 41 N. Huron st., 5 room, i house. Double brick dwelling west side \ y . No. ZiX> Jacob s’ ., . story bi 14th st., dwelling near Koft'. Two story brick, IMh st.. near U ■, Choice Market street property. MONEY TO LOAN. Personal attention given to the nut: nient of real estate. GEO. J. MATHISON, Real Fs. ■ „ . Tel. 107._1323 Mu’k.•• Sv(. Special tale oi Mi NO. $40 MAIN STREET, dwelling - , occupied by Win. A. Isett, Esy. NO. 04 VIRGINIA STKEi.T. I rooms, modern; terms Jl.cw cash.. , easy payments. NO. 74$ M/IN STREET, cor:,.: - Eighth street, 11 rooms, rents for annum, only jj.OUO. This is a barg NO. 96 TWELFTH STREET, 11 line brick and stone dwelling ,. « NO. 130 SIXTEENTH STREET. dwelling, 7 rooms. No. 19J FOURTEENTH STREET. - dwelling of six rooms and :>.i;h by steam. All modern conveniences:. >; stable, etc. la>t 32x120. l.oT 3oxl0ti fact on Thirteenth .«!:■• NO. 1121 CHARLES ST., 4 lots , :l | room house. A bargain. STOREROOM AND DWELLIN': ' rooms, corner Fourteenth and Mi < streets. THREE LOTS, each 30x120 feet, on northeast rortier of Wabash and I :„ , streets, Island. Will sell cheap. RINEHART & TATUM, City IJaxk Brildixo. Telephone 210. _Room N » TRUSTEE’S SALE. Tly virtue of a deed of trust, dated .1. < 18th. 1891, made by C. II. Hedges, to i.. d* trustee (which deed of trust is recor! book ,33, folio 6S. In tho Clerk's office - • County Court of Ohio county), I sha! SATURDAY. THE 21ST DAY OF CEM HER, 1SW. at 10 o’clock a. tn., ut the front door ■ : 'h* Court House of Ohio county, West \ r glnla, proceed to sell "a tract of lat ! dated In Ohio county. West Vi;, t, boun-led on the north by Matthias I ler. Oil the - :i.*t 1-v lands --!' .1 j. and the heirs of John Smith, -I.-. - i . the south by lands of Juek Goo- ii. au-1 the west by lan-ls of th.- heirs oi Smith, deceased, containing .'2 a re a or less.” and being part of the land veyed to c. li. fledges, bv t»tto He I . 1S58. un-1 recorded In i book So. g* page ’jx. Terms of fjale Ono-thlrd •-( -h<> pur chase money, or as ntuen more as the pur chaser may elect, cash, and the balance one and two years—the purchaser givlt for the deferre I Installments his i -. with good personal security, bearng in • est front date, and the title to be t-' t.n■ i until the purchase money is all paid. _no20sz GKO. K. I30YD. Tru:-te<* FARMS FOR SALE. Farm 130 acres, C miles east of city, v!'h splendid Improvements. Farm 61 ucres. 20 acres bottom hr . ' miles east of city, with splendid intpr inents. Farm 35 acres, 11 acres bottom hr l. Little Grave creek, 884 miles south • i cheap, on easy terms, $1,550. Farm 10 acres, 7>,i miles east of easy terms. $800. Farm 50 acres, 30 acres creek hott t 1 miles east of city, easy terms. $3,oe Farm 164 acres. $ miles east Ol Farm 145 ucr.-s, fronting Hoad.9 miles east of city. Easy t $6,500. Farm 230 acri s, 2 houses and 2 ore! ,ir > fronting oti river, 11 nnies south city; very cheat*, $3,600. Furm 40^icres, 2 miles east of th Splendid farm 15-j acres, on R tom. 100 acres of same river botn-n. > per acre. Farm of MO acres on Roundbott - I west of city, $2,:.O0. I Farm 80 acres, Belmont count) 1 west of city, $3,500, 1 Farm 30 acres, 184 miles ea f xKy. ch. ap. Farm 9 acres. 1% miles ea- ■ new eight-roomed house.-. Farm 22 acres, 1 mile froi Llm NESBITT & DEVIN Telephone 043. 1731) Mat -t -' COMMISSIONER'S SALE OF REAL ES TATE. In pursuance of n decree of the Ch Court of Ohio county, made on th day of Octob r. 1N95, in the chancery ' of Maggie Halpenny et ah, vs. Ann Sanders, et al., the undersign- * clal comtulssloiier will proceed to • public auction, at the north front the Court House of Ohio count), city of Wheeling, West Virginia, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 1 beginning at 10 o’clock a. in., the t described real estate, that Is to my Certain lots or parcels of ground m' on the east sld*- of McColloch sir Joseph Caldwell's ad-lltlon to the Wheeling, West Virginia, and Je on the plat of said addition as lots bered 29 and 3'>. I.ei'ig the same i t conveyed to the defei lant Martha Sanders, formerly Martha Ann J. - more, by Wllllurn t’louston and wlf. dee-1 dated December 22. 1871. and r*-cf • ’ in Ohio (ouiity. in defe'i book 61. pau - Said property "’ill be offered In tv arate parcels, one parcel to consist o ' 1 part of said lot numbered 39 whi north --( the line -f the partltlo; of the double frame dwelling ho said property extended to the east western boundary lines of said pi and tho other parcel to consist part of said io> numbered 19) wh south of said lino and the whole lot number.-d 2s, and all of said ; will also be ocr-red ;w> a whole, said property will be sold in wl way the best price can be obta n Terms of Sale—One-third of i chase money, or as much mor- .* chaser nmy elect, cash, and the in two equul Installments at on* years from the day of sale, with from that day, th?'purchaser t<- -' notes for the deferred javit - t terest and the title to I-- r- 'aln the payment In* full of the i money, both principal an i inte-esi. . GUY R. <’. ALL! , Special C'.imnlli; W. II. Haller, Auctioneer. r I hereby certify that t- -i 1 and a have l.ecn given by th*- said comm* as required by lav an i sa.-l de< t; * JOHN TV MITCH J Clerk of the Circuit Court of t ih 1 The al*ove sale !*-• a liouri ■ ■ 1 t” DAY. DECEMBER 7TH, 1*95. at 1 •i* tn. .a ■ f* V OUT R. c ALL! • Special Commissi'’ The above Stile lc -dJourr-J t- >■' I DAY. JANUARY 4th. 1*9’. >' • *• m‘ GUY R r AUjEN de9,13.20.27.ja3 _ Special * x-mmissl BRASS BAN!) InMnim'i I mend for Bands and Drum lx' • 1 , tit prim ever qtintni • in J Illustrations,itr n. ' [rtt ” ' , v Mtuic& Instruct .utsfor Atn-xj ,LWN & MALI - -