SUBSCyBI PTIOW BAfESs Per year, in advance •! 50 Otherwise a 00 No subscription will be discontinued until all arrearages are paid. Poetmaetera neglecting to notify us when subscribers do not take out their papers will be held liable far the subscription. Subscribers removing from one lxjstoffioe to another should give us the name or the former •a well aa the present office. All communications intended for publication in this paper must be accompanied by the real name of the writer, not for publication, but aa a guarantee of good faith. Marriage and death notices moat be accompa nied by a responsible name. Address BVTI|BR CITIZBH, BOTLEB. PA. TRAVELERS' GUIDE. lUTLIB, URNS OITT AND PARK-IB RAILROAD (Bntler Time.) Trains leave Butler for St. Joe, Millerstown Earns City, Petrolia, Parker, etc., at 7.25 a. m. and 2.05 and 7.20 p. m. [See below for con nections with A. V B. B.J Trains arrive at Butler from the above namec points at 7.15 a. m.. and 1.55, and 6.55 p. ni The 1.55 train connects with train on the Weal Penn road through to Pittsburgh. SHIKiHOO 4KD ALLJGHIKI *AIIJ»OAD. Trains leave Hllliard's Mill, Bntler county, for Harrisville, Greenville, etc., at 7.40 a. m. and 12.20 and 2.20 p. m. Stages leave Petroliii at 5.80 i. m. for 7.4 C train, and at 10.00 a. m. for 12.20 train. Return stages leave Hilliard on arrival ol trains at 10.27 a. m. and 1.50 p. m. Stage leaves Martlnsburg at 9.30 for 12.30 train. FBNNBYLVA.NIA RAILROAD. Trains leave Butler (Butler or Pittsbnrgh Time.) Marktt at 5.08 a. m., goes through to Alle gheny, arriving at 9.01 s. m. This train con nects at Free port with Frecport Accommoda tion, which arrives at Allegheny at ZSO a. m., railroad time. Exprets at 7.21 a. m., connecting at Butler Junction, without change of ears, at 8.26 with Expiess west, arriving In Allegheny at 9.5S a. m., and Express east arriving at Blairsville a* 11.00 a. m. railroad time. Mail at 2.36 p. m., connecting at Butler Juno tionwithont change of cars, with Express west, arriving In Allegheny at 526 p. m., and Ex press cast arriving at Blairsville Intersection at 6.10 p. m. railroad time, which connects w'th Philadelphia Kxprfss east, when on time. The 7.21 a. m. train connects at Blairsville •t 11.05 a. m. with the Mail east, and the 2.86 p.m. train at 6.59 with the Philadelphia Ex press east. _ Trains arrive at Butler on West Penn B. B. at 9.51 a. m., 5 06 and 7.20 p. m., Bntler time. The 9,51 and 5.06 trains connect with trains on the Butler A Parker B. B. Snn 'ay train arrives at Bntler at 11.11 a. m., connecting with train for Parker. Main Line. Through trains leave Pittsburgh tor the En ft at 2.56 and 8.26 a. m. and 12 51, 4.21 ar.d 8.06 p. m., arriving at Philadelphia at 8.40 and 7.20 j>. m. and 3.00, 7.0 > and 7.40 a. m.; at Baltimore about the same time, at New York thrcu hours later, and at Washington about one and a hall boon later. PHYSICIANS. JOHN E. BYERS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, my'il-ly] BUTLEB, PA. DENTISTS. DEITTISTRT. o|# WALDBON, Graduate of the Pbil ■ adelpbia Dental College, is prepared • II sto do anything in the line of his profession in a satisfactory manner. Office on Main street, Butler, Union Block, op stairs, apll BANKS. ~~ THE BOTLEB SAVINGS BANK BUTLEB. FA. NEARLY OPPOSITE I/)WHY HOUSE. CAPITAL STOCK" 60,000. Wit. CAKPBXIX, J AS. D. AJIDXBSOH, President. Vice President Wk. CAKFBXLL, Jr., Cashier. DIRKCTORI William Campbell, J. W. Irwin, Jaa. D. Anderson, George Weber, Joseph L. Purvis. Does a General Banking ft Exchange bnatneaa. Interest paid on time deposits. Collections made ahd prompt returns at low rates of Exchange. Gold Exchange and Government Bonds bought and sold. Commercial paper, bonds, Judgment and other securities bought at lair rates. ia2o:ly LAND FOR SALE. FOR SALE. A handsome six-room frame house, located on Bluff street, northwestern part of Butler. Lot 50x176. All necessary outbuildings, TERMS—One-third cash and balance in four equal annual payments. Inquire- at this office. janl4tf For teale. The well-improved farm of Rev. W. B. Hutch ison.in the northeast corner of Middleaex town shin. Butier county, Pa , is now offered for sale, low. Inquire of W. K. FRISBEE, on the fobTsalk $5 will buy a one-half intereet in a good bus iness in Pittsburgh. One who knows some thing about farming preferred. An honest man with the above amount will do well to address by letter, SMITH JOHNS, care 8. M. James, 93 Liberty street; Pittsburgh, Pa. |au27-ly INSURANCE. Incorporated 1819. /ETNA INSURANCE COMPANY OP HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT. Aiett »7.078,*24.49. Losses paid in 61 years, U1,000,000. j J. T. MCJCNKIN A SON, Agents, Jan2Bly Jcflerson street, Butler, Pa. BUTLER COUNTY Mutual Fire Insurance ' Co. Office Cor. Main and Cunningham Sts. ©. C. ROESSING, PRISIDINT. WM. CAMPBELL, TREASURER. H. O. HEINEMAN, SECRETARY. .DIRECTORS: J. L. Purvis, E. A. Helmboldt, William Campbell, J. W. Burkhart, A. Trout man, Jacob Schoene, G. 0. Boessing, John Caldwell, Dr. W. lrvln, W. W. Dodds, J. W. Christy H. C. Helneman. JAS. T. M'JUNKIN. Gen. A*'t- BUTLER FJL. " NOTICE to FARMERS. PHOSPHATE AND FERTILIZERS FOB SALE BY JAMES ENGLISH, marl7-2m POBTEBBVILLE, PA. HENRT.G. HALE, mi iiiciiii mioi, COB. PENN AMD SIXTH STREETS, Pittsburgh, Pa 13. Roessing, [Succeeeor to A. C. Boeeaing k Bro.] DEALER IN Groceries, GRAM, FLOUR, FEED, OIL, —AND— Anthracite Goal. THE HIGHEBT MARKET PRICE PAID IN W-OASH-w FOB GRAIN OF ALL KINDS. Hpitf IhtflCE .iiife tiffed VOL. XVII. BOOTS and SHOES AL,.«IIIFF'S TJPCIOIX BLOCK, 0 Main Street, - Butler, Pa. ) I have just received mj entire Spring and Summer stock of BOOTS and SHOES direct from the manufacturer, and am able to sell them at J OLD PRICES, s e and a great many lines at |fojf~LOWER PRICES THAN EVER. , Ladies', Misses' and Children's Button, Polish and Side Lace Boots in ' endless variety, and at bottom prices. Reynolds Brothers' celebrated fine Shoes always in stock, and is the most j complete I have ever offered. The prices are lower than ever, and styles . elegant. Parties wanting BOOTS & SHOES made to order can do no better than \ by me, as I keep none but the best of workmen in my employ. 1 LEATHER and FINDINGS will be found in my store in superior 1 quality and at lowest market rates. • g3jgT~All goods warranted as represented. AL. BUFF, I OPENING DAILY" A.T B. L HDSELTOK'S, THE LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTMENT OF Boots and Shoes To be found in any House In Western Pennsylvania, em bracing all the Newest Spring Styles in the Market. I am selling all this stock at |CSp^OLDPKICES.S Recollect, NO ADVANCE. Several lines of Boots aDd Shoes at even lower prices than ever. All my customers have the benefit in buying by getting Boots and Shoes that come direct from the manufacturer to my house. No middle profits to divide up that parties are compelled to pay that buy from jobbing houses. This Stock of Boots and Shoes is Very Large in the Following Lines Ladies' Kid and Pebble Button Boots, - - - - $1.50 and upwards. " " " " Side Lace Boots, ... 1.25 " " " Grain, Pebble and Kid Button and Polish, - 1.25 " " " Polish, - 95 " " " " Standard, very prime, 1.25 " " " Serges, in Congress and Polish, .... 75 to sl. " Calf Peg Shoes, all warranted. MT STOCK EMBRACES, IN CONNECTION WITH THE ABOVE, A FULL LINE OF ALL THE FINER GRADES IN WOMEN'S, MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S. The dents' Department is very complete in every line in Calf Button, Dom Pedros, Congress and English Walking Shoes, and especially in Calf Boots, at $2 and upwards, Brogpns and Plow Shoes, at $1 and upwards, Fine Buff Alexis and Congress, at $1.25 and upwards, Low Strap Shoes, in every style, at $1.25 and upwards. Boys' and Youths' Shoes in same styles as Men's, but lower in price. Infants' and Children's Shoes, in Colors and Black. Fancy Slippers and Walking Boots, All Colors. This stock is the most complete I have ever offered, the prices are lower t than ever, and the styles are elegant. Ladies' Kid and Pebble Button New-' ports, good, $1 to $1.25. LARGE STO.CK OF LEATHER AMP FIKBtHGS Always in" stock. None but the best brands of Leather kept, and prices guar anteed at lowest market rates. |sgT*Qive me a call and I will save you money in your Boots and Shoes. A careful inspection of this stock will convince you that the above is correct. No other house can give you lower prices or better goods. B. C. HUSELTQN, CARPETS! OIL CLOTHS! MATS! RUGS! STAIR RODS S NEW STOCK! NEW STOCK! | s * d HECK & PATTERSON'S § I NEW CARPET ROOM i x NOW OPEN"! £ g ©»• Poop Seuttt of tkair Clothing House, S Duffy's Block, aeptso-tf Bntler, Pa. S iSqOHHIVXS iSf)flH iSXVW iSHKnono isxgjavo Union Woolen Mills. I would desire to call the attention of the public to the Union Woolen Mill, Butler, Pa., where I have-new and improved machinery (or the manufacture of Barred and Gray Flannel*, Knitting and Weaving Tarns, and I can recommend them as being very dura ble, as they are manufactured of pure Butler oounty wool. They are beautiful in oolor, su perior in texture, and will be sold at very low prioea. For samples and prioes. address, H. FULLERTON, JulM-TS-ly) Butler. Pa HT3 ft Q TTQ 18 Bto P"' 8 Bet Beeds, 3 Knee UilVJt All Jdkfl wells, Stool, Book, only •87.60. 8 Stop Organ. Stool, Book, only #63.76. Pianos, Stool, Cover, Book, 9190 to 4)256. Illus trated catalogue free. Address I apl4-3m W. 0. BUNNELL, Lewi*towu, Pa. Stock Speculation and Investment. Operations on Margin or by Privileges. Spe cial buainfßß in Mining Stocks. Full particulars on application. JAMEB BROWN, Dealer in Stocks and Bonds, 61 4 66 Broadway, New York mar!7-9m Stray Horses. Came to the premises of the subscriber, in Middleaex township, Butler county, Pa., on the 6th insfc., two stray horses, one a bay and may be 12 ram old, hipshot and curbed on the left hind lee; the other a small bay mare with no particular marks except one ear slightly de formed. The owner is requested to come for ward, prove property, pay charges and take away, otherwise they will be disposed of ac- ( cording to) law. JOHN B. MAHAJF, May 19, N*>-3t] Glade Mill», P. O. Butler Co. BUTLER, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1880. C. WATTLEY&CO ARE DAILY RECEIVING Fresh and Seasonable Goods! SUCH AS Spring Gloves, Cotton and Lisle Thread Hose, Fringes, Trimmings, Buttons, Ribbons, Laces, Embroideries, Ha n dJcerchiefs, Lace and Embroidered Ties, Summer Underwear, Elegant Neckwear for Men, AND FULL STOCK OF Ladies and Men's Furnishing Goods. |9"Our Increased Room enables us to give pur chasers the very best value for tlielr money. C. WATTLEY & CO. 109 FEDERAL ST. ALLEGAENY CITY PA. OPPOSITE FIRST NATIONAL BANK. THE Pittsburgh. Cincinnati & SI Louis RAILWAY CO. IPtW-miIDItBOIITHI Offers the liest facilities and most comfortable and expeditious Line for families moving to points in KANSAS, ARKANSAS, TE X , COLOBADO, UEBRASK A, CALIFORNIA, OR ANY OF THE WESTERN STATES AND TERRITORIES. THE VERY LOWEST RATES TO ALL POINTS IN THE WEST & SOUTH-WKST CAN ALWAYS BK SECURED VIA THE OLD RELIABLE PAN-HANDLB BOUTS. Tickets Sold and Baggage Checked THROUGH TO ANY POINT YOU WANT TO GO. We offer you the Lowest Rates, the Quickest Time, the Best Facilities and the most Satisfac tory Route to all points West and South-west. We run no Emigrant Trains. All classes of Passengers are carried on regular Express Trains. If you are unable to procure Through Tick ets to points in Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, Kan sas, Colorado, Wisconsin, Minnesota, lowa, Ne braska or California, by the direct "PAN-HAN DLE ROUTE," at your nearest Railroad Sta tion, please address o' Gen'l Passenger Agent, 'Pan-Handle Route,' COLUMBUS, OHIO. MIRK TIESE HITS HOLIOWAY'S FILLS. | Exercise your judgment.—A newer and better philosophy.—To pull down all absurd and anti quated notions of diseases and its cures, and to establish a rational system on the ruins, has been the chief endeavor al Dr. Holloway through life. Hence the origin of his celebratdd Pills and Oint ment—remedies in keeping with common sense, because subservient to nature, rather than at variance with her laws, like those in general use. To the stomach we trace dyspepsia, lieapache and general debility ; to the liver, bile, jaundice, aud yellow fever ; to the bowels, diarrhrea, dysentary. constipation, piles and nstuly ; to the lungs, con sumption, etc.; to the blood, scrofula, scurvey, and all cutaneous eraptions. By keeping these organs aud vital fluid pure and healthy we may safely defy the attacks of disease, and no medicine yet prepared for tills purpose can equal the action of these Pills and Ointment, as they dive to the seat of the disorder, and extirpating its cause, de stroy its effect. IMPORTANT CAUTION,— None are genuine un less the signature of J. HAYDOCK, as agent for the United States, surrounds each box of Pills and Ointment. Boxes at 25 cents, C 2 cents and Si each. £sy-There is consideiable saving by taking the larger sizes. HOLLOWAY & Co., New York. . HOLLO WAY'S (lINTMENT| Possessed of this REMEDY, every man may be his own Doctor. It may be rubbed into the sys tem. so as to reach any internal complaint; by these means it cures Sores or Ulcere in the THROAT, STOMACH, LIVER, SPINE, or other parts. It is an Infallible Remedy for BAD I.EOS, BAD BREASTS, Contracted OJ Stiff Joints, GOUT, RHEUMATISM, and all Skin Diseases. IMPORTANT CAUTION.— None are genuine un less the signature of J. HAYDOCK, as agent for the United States, surrounds each box of Pills and Oinmieet. Boxes at 25 cents, 02 cents, and $1 ggr-There is considerabld saving by taking the larger sizes. HOLLOWAY & Co., New York. BRENT GOOD & CO., Wholesale Agents, NEw YORK. mayl9-ly ST. CHARLES HOTEL, On th.e European IPlan -54 to 66 North Third Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Single Rooms 50c., 75c. and $1 per day. O. Schneck, Proprietor. Excellent Dining room furnished with the best, and at reasonable rates. for all Railroad Depots within a convenient distance. THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDYI GRA rS SPECIFIC MEDICINE , g ' an mifailint^cure neßS * Bi> * rmator m Before Taking Taking. versal Lassitude, Pain in the back. Dimniness of Vision. Permature Old age, and mony other dis eases that lead to Insanity. Consumption and a Permature Grave all of which as a rule are first caused by deviating from the path of nature aud over indulgence. The Specific Medicine is the re sult of a life study and many years of experience in treating these special diseases. Full particulars in our pamphlets which we de sire to send free by mall to everv one. The Specific Medicine is sold by all Druggists at $l per package, or six packages for $5, or will be sent by mail on receipt of the monev by addressing THE GRAY MEDICINE CO., No. to Mechanic's Block. DETROIT, MICH. par-Sol (1 in Butler by J. C. REDICK, and by all Druggists everywhere. |#-HARRIS& EWINO, Wholesale Agents, Pitts burgh. inyi2-ly. Forty Dollars Reward. HORSE STOLEN. On Tuesday night, April 27th, there was stolen from the premises of the subscriber, living in Penn township, Butler county, Pa., a dark bay horse, six years old, weighs "between 1,300 and 1,400 pounds, small star on the fore head, shoulders somewhat sore from the wear of the collar. A reward of S4O will be paid for information that will lead to the recovery of the horse. HARVY 08BORN, mys-3t. Glade Mills, P. O. Butler Co. Pa. A CITY OF WILD PIGEONS. TWENTY SQUARE MILEB OF THE BIRDS NESTINU IN FOREST COUNTY, PA. The great pigeon nesting of Forest county, Pa., covers twenty square miles. It is in Jenks and Howe town ships, near the source of streams that empty into the Allegheny River. It is sixteen miles south of Sheffield, twenty miles west of Kane, and a hun dred miles south of Buffalo in a direct line. The country is almost an unbro ken wilderness. Not more than ten persons live within the boundaries *of the nesting. There are roads, but they are as rough as Tammany politicians and surpass them in bruising power. They were made by wood-choppers and bark-peelers. Roots and stones mount skyward, and ruts and mud holes sink deep toward the bottomless pit. The country is neither rocky nor mountainous. It is a hilly slope, shad ed with beeches and hemlocks, and a few cherry, birch and maple trees. The beeches bear a crop of nuts irregularly and never two years in succession The nut is triple-sided and triangular, and grows within a prickly burr, much smaller than a chestnut burr. Each burr contains two nuts. The first frost cracks the burrs, and the nuts drop to the ground. Under a covering of snow they retain their sweetness until spring. These nuts attract the pigeons. The condition of the crop is studied by small scouting parties in the fall, and in some manner is told to the main ar my, who advance with the approach of spring. This year the advance guard appeared in the latter part of February. They roosted at the head of Minister and Porky Creeks, tributaries of the Tionesta. A light snow fell soon after their arrival, but did not prevent them from securing an ample supply of nuts. They swept downward in groups of thousands and whipped tbe snow from the ground with their wings. The con tinuous flapping sounded like the roar of a cataract. Myriads of birds poured into the roost daily for the next fortnight. They came in sheets that stretched from hor izon, and at times obscured the light of the sun. At night over five square miles of trees were loaded with roost ing birds. The noise was deafening. At times huge branches, broken by the weight of birds, crashed to the ground, throwing the vast camp into dire con fusion. The unfortunate pigeons flut tered to and fro in the darkness, utter ing plaintive cries, which were answer ed by their more fortunate companions in the trees. A heavy fall of snow or a gale after dark breaks many over weighted limbs and spreads dismay among the flock. The fallen birds skulk to cover and await the break of day, filling the darkness with their cries of terror. Farmers and others visited the roost after night-fall, and, by the light of a blazing fire, clubbed hundreds of birds from the lower branches of the trees with long poles. While sojourning at the roost the birds mate. The torn pigeon coos in cessantly, swelling his chest and ruf fling the feathers at his neck. The mating lasts three or four days. A thousand millions of birds or more are courting. The forest resounds with love-making. Frequently toms court the same hen, and a battle royal en sues. Eyes flash fire, beaks are crossed like rapiers, and the combatants use their wings as Irishmen use shillelahs at a country fair. The hens stand by, coy and modest, and give themselves to the victor without reserve. Once mated, the pair is a model of constancy. The torn is all attention and the hen all affection. He brings her the choic est delicacies and she rewards him with kisses. Woe betide the feathered roue who tries to loosen the domestic bond. Respectable married pigeons make common cause against him, and club him from the camp in disgrace. The pair, however, are not mated for life. A nesting breaks the contract, and ever after that they treat each other. like strangers. No torn was ever known to fight twice for the same hen. If a hen loses her mate she remains a wid ow until the next year. Nesting begins soon after mating. The birds never nest at a roost. This year the first corps nested a fortnight after their arrival. The nests are mostly made in leafless hard wood trees, about twenty miles from the roost. The torn gathers the twigs and the hen interlaces them. No ar tistic skill is displayed. The twigs are woven without regularity, and the structure resembles an eagle's nest on a small scale. The interior is thatched with moss gathered from the bark of hemlock trees. The torn finds the moss and the hen does the thatching. It takes three days to build a nest. When everything is ready for house keeping tbe hen lays an egg, and rarely more than one. During incubation the torn alternates in household duty. There are from ten to thirty nests in a tree. Each family strictly attends to its own business. The torn feeds his own wife and no other. The hen re mains at home and does not gad about among her neighbors. The golden rule, however, is not recognized. If a hen loses her husband she receives no sympathy. No one offers to assist her in raising her squab, and while she is in search of food to keep it alive it may perish from exposure under the eyes of scores of unconcerned fathers and mothers. The egg hatches within thirteen days, and the nest is never deserted until the squab is grown. The parents take turns in procuring food. The torn usually shelters the squab from 8 A. M. to 3 P. M., and the hen does the same during the intervening time. At night the torn roosts near her. In cold weather the squabs are fed three times a day. If Jthe days are warm they are allowed one or two lunches in addition to their regular meals. In Forest county the old birds were fly ing from thirty to forty miles in search of food. When nuts are scarce they journey over a hundred miles. They fly at the rate of about ninety-five miles an hour. With distended crops they wing their way back to their nests. The action of their wings churns the food into a curd resembling boiled rice. This curd gives rise to the phrase "pigeon's milk," two ex pressive words frequently used with out an idea of their meaning. On the return to tbe nest the squab puts its head into the parent bird's mouth, and draws the milk direct from the crop. For twelve days are they fed on this substance. They are then as fat as butter and as listless as toads at noon day. On the thirteenth day they receive their last meal from the bills of the old birds. Their throats are packed with beech juts, and they are left to their own resources. The toins and hens arise from the tops of the trees like agreat cloud, and are quickly lost to sight. The squabs lie blinking in their nests for hours. On finding themselves deserted, they toddle to the rims of their baskets and balance themselves. After a preliminary flut ter of the wings they strike out for a limb, reach it, lose their equilibrium, and tumble to the ground. They then wander about like drunken men for three or four days ere they know enough to seek food or water. Fully a week elapses before they are in good flying condition. When they become lean they readily take wing, and skir mish for themselves. Their wing feathers grow much faster than the feathers in their tails, and when flying this gives them a ludicrous appearance. They resemble boys in monkey jackets A lack of tail feathers sends them rudderless through the air. They are forced to fly in a straight line, swerv ing gently between the trees. On alighting they frequently pitch heels over head, and appear dumfounded. At first they form small flocks, but as they grow stronger of wing these flocks come together, and the downy brigade pitches for a good feeding ground. Either inst : "?tor some kind hearted old bird points the way, for veteran pigeon hunters say that a flock of squabs invariably finds the best feed. The parent birds nest anew within a few miles of the old place. If the beech nuts hold out they nest three times before summer. After the third nesting the myriad disbands and is scattered over the country. In au tumn they are found in the woods from Maine to Texas and from Wash ington Territory to Georgia. A very few mate and nest in odd places in the summer. All however, reunite in a grand army about the beginning of the new year This flock nested in Forest county in 1878, 1871 and 1867. Last year they nested in the Indian Terri tory, where .there was a superabund ance of acorns. A great crop of beech nuts is usually followed by a large crop of acorns. The two crops seldom grow in the same year. These facts are derived from professional pigeon hunters, who also assert that three immense flocks of the birds are now nesting in the United States— one in Missouri, a second in Michigan, and a third in Forest county. The professional pigeon hunter is keen-eyed, bronze-faced, and hard handed. He usually chews tobacco, drinks whisky, and indulges in pro fanity. He wears a black sombrero, a cassimer suit, and thick-soled boots. He is slouchy and reserved, and not particularly communicative. Once get on the inside of him, however, and you will fine him genial and generous. Sixteen years ago he made from SSOO to $2,000 net in a nesting season. Now he finds his receipts cut down by local catchers—men who were at first hired to assist him in spreading nets, but who have learned the calling and have gone into business on their own account. Ten years ago there were from thirty to forty professional pigeon trappers in the United States. They did nothing else. The number has been reduced until it includes Messrs. Ackerman and Jones at Co lumbus, Ohio ; Haycock and Cadmus of Geneva, Ohio ; Paxon of some town near Buffalo; Custen of Roanoke, Ohio; Little of Cartersburg, Indiana, and T. L. Utley of Neenah, Wisconsin. Mr. Ackerman is the oldest pigeon catcher in the country. He has been at the business over forty years. "I have been in the business for nearly twenty years," says Mr. Utley. '•Sixteen years ago I was trapping birds at this very roost. We trap for the market, and make more money out of them when game and poultry are scarce than at other times. I have fol lowed this flight of birds for years. Professional trappers know all the roosts, and keep each other posted by telegraph. The birds are hardly set tled at a roost before the trappers are after them with a supply of nets. Their flight is swift. I have known them to leave Wisconsin in the morn ing and roost here the same night. The nesting in Michigan is fully as large as this one. That in Missouri is much smaller. In the former they live on beech nuts, and in the latter on acorns. From my experience I should say that there are only two large flocks in the country. It would be as difficult to estimate their number as it was to estimate the number of buffalo in a herd on the plains fifty years ago. There are at least 2,000,000,000 in this flock, and probably many more. Those trapped and killed are like a pinch of grain taken from an elevator. When one of the two great flocks comes from the northwest it hugs the shores of the lakes, and then drives in a straight line for the roost. I have seen solid sheets of birds, five miles wide and two hundred and seventy miles long, skirt ing the shores of Lake Huron and Michigan. They were three hours in passing a given point. They will not cross the lakes if they can avoid it, be cause they are apt to either lose their wav in a fog or get bewildered in a storm. At such times thousands upon thousands drop in the lake and are drowned. I have seen the beach for more than a mile below Traverse City covered three feet deep with birds. At times the flock hugs the southern shore of Lake Superior, crossing the straitß of Mcakinaw, and following the trend of Huron and Erie until they are able to strike out for the east. They stream over the straits sometimes for days." Mr. Utley says that the profession als did not follow the flight of the birds into Indian Territory last year. The pigeons nested forty miles from the railroad, and would have spoiled before they could have been got to market. Besides this the Indians objected to the presence of the trappers. Mr. Ut ley is now trapping 12,000 live bird* for the New York State Sportsman's As sociation. He says that this associa tion will probably use up 1,200 dozen at its anuual meeting. Live birds bring from $1 to $1.25 a dozen, deliver ed at the depot in Sheffield. Eleven hundred barrels, containing over half a million dead birds, and many crates of live ones were shipped from Sheffield in 1878. Over $50,000 worth of birds were sold during the season. This year the shipments are much larger. Cooped in large quantities live birds become diseased and die. When they are "stall fed," to use a professional term, they become to fat for trap-shooting and are killed and sent to market They are rarely kept more than a month before they are placed in the traps, and are compelled to fly a guant let of crack shots. The fowlers begin netting the pig eons when they are forming a roost. The nets resemble common fish nets, and are usually sixteen feet wide and thirty feet long. They are spread in an open place over which the birds fly while in search of food. The net is set near a covert made of thick hemlock boughs. It is strung on a rope tied at either end to green hickory saplings bent parallel to the ground. Man is not the only agent in destroy ing these immense flocks of pigeons. Crows break their eggs and beat out the brains of their young ; an army of hawks hang around the nesting like wolves, and snatch up the unwary birds; owls prowl among them at night and destroy untold numbers; twelve years ago a snap of cold weather froze millions of squabs in their nests ; vast numbers are drowned in the lakes, and gales and snow storms break their nests and kill thousands at their roosts. So far as is known, they escape the ravages of pestilence. They are clean and trim birds, and are rarely troabled with vermin. They are strict vegeta rians, and never devour a worm nor an insect They are the sheep of the air. More innocent birds never fluttered a wing; but, like all innocent breathing things, they are a prey to the cruel and the rapacious. Of all their enemies man is the worst, for the hawk, crow and owl raid upon them for substenance, while man too often kills them in wan ton sport. A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE. A few weeks ago four prospectors, bound for the Roaring Forks country, left Leadville in a sleigh drawn by six mules. They were Charles Hart, R. S. Bryan, James Sweeny and Charles Gallagher, and being in the employ of a rich company, had everything ne cessary packed away into convenient space. Reaching Red Cliff without trouble they put on their snow shoes and struck boldly into the mountains. An the end of the first day they found that they had climbed only one and a half miles, and during the next two days they were unable to put Red Cliff out of sight. Eight days later they found that not a man in the party could tell the time of day, so swollen had their eyes become. The white sunlight beat down upon the snow in a constant glare. All the horrible symptoms of snow blindness began to manifest themselves and one dared not look at another because the redness about the upper part of the face made every man look like some wild beast. Nevertheless the party pushed on. Bears sniffed the air of the camp every night, and in the morning huge tracks could be seen in the snow roundabout. Once a grizzly sprang upon the party, but he was beaten off. The fact that the provisions were fast disappearing was a new cause for alarm. The four men drew lots as to who should re turn to Red Cliff for relief, and the journey fell on Sweeny's share. He started at once, and following on the trail reached the half-way point in three days. On the fourth day Sweeny was unable to go forward because of a blinding snow storm. On the ninth day he crawled into a dug-out on Gore creek. He was more dead than alive, and actually crawled on his hands and knees the last seven miles. The Gore men sent a relief party, and the other parties were rescued. HUNTING FOR GOLD. Of thirteen prospectors who left Pine Springs, Arizona, recently, to visit the Ava Supias Indian village, on Cataract creek, three returned rather than at tempt the trail. At many places this trail is not wider than twenty inches It winds around perpendicular walls of sandstone that loom above for hun dreds of feet, while on the other side are the darkest and deepest canyons in the world. By the exercise of great care ten of the party reached the vil lage which is inhabited by two hun dred Indians, the whole tribe. The Ava Supias practice polygamy, each male having three wives, it is under stood that they know where to find rich veins of gold, but they cannot be induced to part with the secret. At one canyon of the Cataract the Indians ex plained that no creature but the birds and no spirit but those of the dead could make successful passage. Be lieving that the Indians wished to keep the prospectors out of that particular canyon, D. W. Mooney, of Williamson "Valley, tried to make the descent. He took a small rope, hardly half an inch in diameter, tied one end to a bush, suspended it over the brink, then tak ing hold of the rope was soon dangling between the bright heavens and the dark, dismal gorge below. Suddenly Mooney gave an unearthly shriek, and letting go bis hold dropped no one knows where. A SAD accident happened to a mother-in-law down in Texas the other day. Her son-in-law being about to shoot his wife, this mother-in-law with that passion for meddling which is pe culiar to her species, threw herself be tween the man and wife, and, as a con sequence, received the fatal bullet in her own body. Mothers-in-law should cut this out and paste it in their hats as a warning. ADVERTISING BATES. One square, one insertion, (1; each subse quent insertion, 60 cents. Yearly.advertisements | exceeding one-fourth of a column, 95 per inch. Figure work double theee met; additional cliarge« where weekly or monthly change* are made. Local advertisements 10 centa per Una for first insertion, and 5 cents per line for each additional insertion. Marriages and death* pub lished frre of cli&rge. Obituary notice* charged x. advertisements, and payable when handed in Auditors' Notices, t4 ; Executors' and Adminia trators' Notice*, $3 each; Eatray, Caution an 4 Dissolution Notice*, not exoeeding ten line*, each. From the fact that the Omzn is the old**' established and moat extensively circulated Re publican newspaper in Butler oounty, (a Repub lican county) it must be apparent* to boaineea men that it ia the medium they should use in advertising their business. NO. 28, THE WHIT TAKER CASE. There was a dramatic scene in the Whittaker investigation case at West Point last week. A correspondent des cribes it by saying: It had been under stood that to-day was to bring forth a sensation, consequently everybody ia West Point attended the sitting of the court—generals .professors aad cadets. First Whittaker was subjected to a long series of questions designed to show inconsistencies in his defense against the charges that he inflicted the injuries on himself, and some of them were very successful. Then came the reports of the five experts in hand writing that had been suppressed. The entire five agreed that Whittaker had written the threatening letter. The re ports were long, but all reached the same result with positiveness. These created a great sensation in the court, and the expressions were freely made that Whittaker's case was up; but the crowning sensation was yet to come. Expert South wort, of Boston, had made a discovery. A letter which Whittaker had begun to his mother was among the papers found in his room and submitted to the experts with the anonymous threatening let ter. Expert Southwort, after satisfy ing himself that the handwriting was the same in both letters, discovered that the threatening note had been written on a slip of paper torn from the letter begun to the cadet's mother. Placing the two side by side the edges matched perfectly, and where a bit had been torn from one side the correspond ing piece that fitted it was on the other. Where the paper was thin in spots in one the same thinness matched tho other. The expert brought the letter into the court room fastened between two pieces of window glass in such a manner as to show conclusively that the two were from the same original piece of paper. Everyone in the court room could see at a glance that it was so. The court was in an uproar of ex citement in an instant. Cadet Whitta ker did not move a muscel or show a bit of emotion. No one spoke to him. Whittaker, however, continues to be have with coolness, and not only de nies that he sent the note of warning or that he bound and injured himself, but his friend, Prof. Greener, insists that the evidence is all circumstantial, and there is nothing in it to fasten the guilt upon Whittaker. His room, he says, was always unlocked, and it was an easy matter for whoever wrote the note of warning to enter his room and take a piece of paper from his desk. It was on his desk after he had been ab sent some time that he found the note. This would account for the fact that the sheet on which the note of warning was written fits the sheet on which a letter to his mother was written. But it does not account for the fact that five experts agree that Whittaker wrote the note of warning; still they may be mistaken. One of them found another lot oT man uscript, which*he was certain was written by the writer of the note of warning, and this was not Whittaker's. The theory of Whittaker and his friends is that his hand-writing was closely imitated, and that the paper on which the note was written was stolen from Whittaker's desk. The investigation is about closed. Whether or not intentionally so upon the part of the conductors, it has from the start seemed like a prosecution of Whittaker, the burden being put upon him to show that he did not mutilate himself. Possibly the last of the case has not been heard. BXJRDETTE ON COMMERCIAL TRA VELERS. What would I do without the 'boys?' How often have they been my friends. Igoto a new town. I don't know one hotel from another. I don't know where to go to. The man with the samples gets off at the same station. I follow him without a word or a tremor. He calls to the 'bus driver by name and orders him to 'get out of this now,' as soon as we are seated. And when I follow him I am inevitably certain to go the best house there is in the place. He shouts at the clerk by name, and fires a joke at the landlord as we go in. He looks over my shoulder as I register after him, and hands me his card with a shout of recognition. He peeps at the register again. 'Ninety nothing,' he shouts, 'who's in 15?' The clerk says he is saving 15 for Judge Dryasdust. 'Well, he be blow ed,' says my cheery friend, 'give him the attic and put this gentleman in 15.' And if the clerk hesitates he seizes the pen and gives me 15 himself, and then he calls the porter, orders him to carry up my baggage and put a fire in 15, and then, in the same breath, adds: 'What time will you be down to supper, Mr. Burdette V and he waits for me, and, seeing that I am a stranger in the town, he sees that I am cared for, and the waiters do not neglect me. He tells me about the town, the people and the business ; he is breezy, cheery and sociable, full of new stories, al ways good natured; he frisks with cigars and overflows with thousand mile tickets, he knows all the best rooms in all the hotels; he always has a key for the car seats, and turns a seat for himself and bis friends without troubling the brakeman, but he will ride on the wood-box, or stand outside to accommodate a lady, or he will give his seat to an old man. I know him pretty well. For three years I have been'traveling with him, from Colorado to Maine, and I have seen the best and worst of him, and I know the best far outweighs the worst I could hardly get along without him, and I am glad he is numerous. —The difference between having a tooth properly drawn by a deotist, and having it knocked out by a faTl on the pavement is only a slight distinction one is dental and the other is acci dental. —Grace (whispering)— "Whatlove« ly boots your partner's got, Mary I" Mary (ditto.) "Yes, unfortunately, he shines at the wrong end." —A serious drawback—A Mister be* tween your shoulder.