SrSSIBIi'TIO* H.4TES: Tor year, in advawi Otßer-vise 00 V -■!> -n <•-,!! be discontinued until *ll -I -i- i" * '• 1' »-ioi«fcters to ' * i crilK - r ti»«J eubucription. •!, , vi,:« from otic* poMoftte* to lie St e name of the former i- ■ tont* in for ptttiicitioii ; ..-•pamed l>y tbe real * publication, but *e i ... , -.1 of ,l> 1 '«• ..Ml Jtioea must be aocompa i ; . .cp. ,-;bl< iiai ie ~ ,|i II CI I'lZh.M. BGTLEB. PA- •_i 3 Li IDii. 1 IVI I'M.KKK P.»jlkmad I. i . \!ii<«-r>tovni. • . . . it- i 7 a in , . . i Ir.iiu ihr above named • 15. Hid 7-15 »' nl , r ijtt 'ii the West : .. - ■matu . itAIl-KOAD r.! Mi l. Butler county, I 75" a. ID. , . r.- et i:45 A. , '_ V X ', ' Petrol.ii M'rtltishorif. j.. (i ~ t liil l.nd a I I ri.' ■- "" 'he "* it A roaQ l'g\>ltl,VVMA KiII.ROAD. i, ,~. •.,»» Ho'li r j Bdtb or PitU-hr.n:li Tiioe.) ,j ~ gf .. 50* i u», *or» AfMUh t» Al!e «1, *t Freeort »i'b Fro-port Accommoda tion wbH'b a.-rivi* at Allegheny at 8.20 a. in., ■siilrnnd tim<-. Prareu »' 7-21 .. m , connecting at Butler r. without of ear*. at 8.2« with X! . . . we-i. -rrfviu»i in .Allet'ienv at ».:>S rri nil E* r>w en*l .irrivintr at Blair»ville ■I !. i» a in. r.»: rn-f! time. Mail 't " V • eoiii ectin jat Butler lone iiinwiiiioui ot runs, with Ei|«* wrt, irrlviii.' <». Mle«h tiy ai 52b p in., mid Ex- earn .irrivintr <1 Bt lir-ville lnter*eciio D '• «.-t* \• w r#t»r«♦ »«*. whic hr< nofcU w«th j v r •* x r- if, u «»!» tine, iI. 7 '') » iii t'd'HC'lr *1 H 1<"I JI (* v i lie . i -> i ,1. -II 'tie M-'.l ea*t, 'I tlie 2.:?, riin i -V.I lit. 'b.- Kbibiflelphia Ex- 't Kotbr Weft Henn BIV at ■M a. it. .S « "<1 7.20 n . Butler time The C .l and S (Hi »inn .unueft »'ih rain» on h, ftutler A Krl:er K. K. -un av train arrive# i Utiilc Ht 11 !l » 10 •..iißMtiiijr with train r pjirh-r Main Line. , ,i- .iiiu-tni' ti (i>> the R.ifi. . r„ l il p. . jv ■ ' , : • »t "! W itm 7:0 . ; 7 til ; I Baltimore v y, k iiit'ait. , ... I . . !.|| .. ball P YS i \NS. JOHN E BYERS, PH'VST- i\ N m.SUPJ^ON, mVil-lvi ! ,TI f" A •K\"l- - rT I- - Y." I4i , n ,M<. <>t i- Phil , ;.i r, }*rep red V I! til' line «>t •'!» f. I- ' " ' '' *' r ,i, ~ 1 r-• Bui 1 *". D i"» Bhiel,-, Hi,- JP" 1 \ . ; SA Lt*. FOU HALE. \ i :• ix-r>><>■!• I'i'iih* liotw, located . t. iKiriliwcii rti i art <»f Butler , - 17c, All *i *iy otn'uildinsr*. y- - -.lt *|iir in»ii *:iifl !»:■! 1: ff in fonr ~ ' . ■ .. . m!*- li quire *i thi«olNee. • 4tt T'or it" vaeJi-mi "V«d faro of Be-?. W B Hntch , ~ „ i , in mr 1 f Middlesex to»u ri>j f ~• am ;y. Pit. i» ni* 1 * ffered fur sale. Id . Ii iiiii'-'it vV E FI:IS3EK, on the prem ise* *V l6tf R SALE. ji 1 \ .1 . t,. 1 nit*rir>L hi a tood lm«- i'.v ... • h. ( '!•'* who known B"ine , u- f I,ii . ••fc-ir«*d. An honest mm „ . 11 : , t w.lllrto well 10 add rest* * , (111 i iHSt* care H VI Jame*. !'i l I'll' i'li y 1 |au27-l V 1 \si HvXuis " «i« ii* !» ***«• ei] IHI9. PL\ \ A INSURANCE COMPANY ' . !! AKTK' HID, < ONNECTIOU I'. A"(*t- 111 I n-v (mill in IN, A.i'iili', Jmi'flJlv .lerter-on Klreet. Hut !«-r. Pa. i'l.- IN'( UKAM gj> 1 • ■|*•- •~i hiv r it*'l too low. ' BOl'N i V •. -;i> \ .v' DtH IfAKOKrt PKO- Cl'hEll Int'iiriiiiil .:i Irtly u. .Si?n«l itatnp for blanks. Addrec.-. .STODDABT Ac CO., Boom *,Bt. Clnuil Washington, 1»- C. Notice p. * ~n- .:*• -.r.i.a to luiv-' t'mir Old Fainiture rnpitir il or '< a \V . rk iiutde to i nter. m:ic i M ;*•!<• '' n' ■* 'ton ''ui H, VVarilrobes, Oitice ItecU. > i'ltl.liv. A".." oulddo well to call on A. 15. WILSON, Practical Cabinet Maker. I lu M that a pieee of 'tiriiiturn ta&dn lot to be examined lie foru you pay for il. If it ik not at represented it can be returneii at our expense. Send a postal curd for illus- W<>w.>«< 'O. 17 N. Tenth >it v Philadelphia. Julyll-3in Adni lirfnfra(or*N 9fo(l<*e. Letter* of udininiiArahir having been granted to the undursiirned on the estate of deo'd, late of Worth town-hip, Kutlur eouutv, l*s„ not ice in hereby given to all those knowing themselves indebted to aaid enutte, that inain' hate payment in required, and Ihow having clainiN agaiuxl the same to present them duly autheiit.caled for payment. ADANI PISOR, Adra'r. nep2'J-»)t Jackaville P. 0., Ilutler, Pa. A ' } /V per day at 1.. me Samplea worth 111 ®£.\l |)5 frse. Addieaa tiTiaaoN 4 Co., fortlsud, Mains. Uecj-iy VOL. XVIi. CARPETS! OIL CLOTHS! MATS! RUGS' STAIR RODS raiaw tock! "jsw stogej > 3 HECK & PATTERSON S | ! Bl CARPET mi { NOW OPEN I c S One Door South of their CJothiag tiQUsz t b 2* > Duffy's iUork. *ept2o-tr Butler. Pa. E ,s(joU invx< i SOilH i KLVK i S'll,!,< > r lo r IF> i JH VC) ill - fine Merchant Tailoring 141 AT .|(>ll> OMMEBT'S, ALSO X COMPLETE ASSORTS!EXT OF l-vdIEAST'S BOY'S '3 KEADY-MADE CLOTHING, AND GENTS FL'KKISIUSt't GOODS, <£C. A fine selection of I"a!l :;n the \ leinity, to call and examine our st >ck, visitors a- well lis buyers will be welcome. ji«g* 141 !HS«U S SViNuft^Bv tmmb nt VIA-SANO A Medicine recently discovrrcd used by an eminent physician with wonderful success. AH and country siorcb havs it or w:ll pet it for you Also a sure cure for I]>f DIGESTION« _DYS PEPSIA^gjg W - . ; ■ * 1 lEg:r.;» i u. '.. . fitiVIEQY F ■! : . ic-: and "itcrnal Uso, / | s 2 r '?.Z f.r all Ci::i:os for which it Is recoirmcndeJ, / ' i .7AV. r "".rECTLY SAFE In the hands of yjSag £ 7 in „7trlenced persons. ■f'f* ■ • • I re • :•> \ remedy for COKJIIS, SORE ~ I . ' • TJ »V i -t troubles; r-ffonlH inntuut rtUef / " '* ~i\- !i; :-TI.r.KIA, ttd is tho fcfcbt .... . ;:'is-.i a-.a M:i:UAI,UIA. IJ L " *' v : THi Qi. - :T- k D PJIO3T WIDELY KNOWN i. ■?% .. , -j \ :: i!E irf THE WO3LO. ;i t » J /V i>. Ti *. ' .J ' . Kiifli wonderful KiieeetiH !iii fi If, *Ji *»>\ »• '■ ' boivci- compuioth, •< <• •alia Httcrrsa-.-' :CF«ovews'CO»STAKT I la 1 / Saf v: t:: r: t. .i'sics mid curmtes, n ] L'i It\ " ' Tt ■!.!. " 1 1 J Pliyr.iclnnm Ml«lloKarll'm i-il \ if-S 11, 3. i Sir r ■ ' u-ITU «.l I'.vniiitionn, Work• Kbopn, a:id I ri JC; •■<:••• : In short, by Everybody Bl Ir IH/,0 e 4 : •» •• » f1 p 'S'l/ - ) ' "'■ ;i - ml AS A L'NU'flEM j '/'Kfi) r I :f - Pni:> 111 the Bock nud S do, ([ *'. I .. rcti f In til (.axes cf llrrl: - ;j, .42 3r» 1 1 Li 7 ' • r Neold't, etc. .. " * I V RE WITHOUT IT. It v. I.! r*yi-.—~ . i<.i l i doc-t .rs' bills, and it : rlx: it !m ko>l ut 2'tc. CVa. aad i. . .00 wfe't-- • ;. . „i . l|. in t!l (lnnrvrtrta. PEKRY 'Q'Av. r ;ovidence, R. I. Proprietors. lime of Holding CntirlN. Th* several C'mrt* of the countv of Butler commence on the flißt Uumlajf of March, June, H. jit nitier and December, and continue two weeks, or so long an II ceseary to dispose of the bun news. No causes are put down for trial or j traverse Jurors mmmoned for the lirst week of j the s»-vota! ternui. AT I OUN 10 VI i-Av\ . j PA "JTF. mtITTAIN, Office v. :th I. Z Mitchell I'iauicnd. A. M. CUNNINGHAM, Office in Hrady's I.aw Building. Butler, Va. S. 11. PTERSOL; Office on N. ii. comer Diamond, Kiddle build ing ■mi-, r.? JOHN M. GREER " j Ofßco on N. K. corner Di i ond. nov' 2 VV.M II lu.-K; ! Office with W H. H Kiddle. Khq. NEWTON H'.u.K Office on Diamond, near Court House, south K.'l ' e.T. bru«h, OHt'-i-in Kirtdle'<- t.iw Building. S K. fiOVNSEII" Office in ItiiMi 'a Building |niar!-i 7' ,f B v. ! I N KIN. tp cj-il iilf.'iitlin irlv—i* to "iillcclious O i , u ill > r d Hou-e. ToskT'Ti li. BIIEDIN, ■ IIIIPU nurih-<-."t « '»rticr ol Diamond, Butler ?*• 11. 11. GOUCnER, Office iu Bcim«idemiOi'# braiding. op .1. T DONLY Ofßco near Court House. r 74 W. I). BRANDON, «bl7-75 OfB« e In H«rg> building 1 CLARENCE WALKER, Office in I'redin Mdldtog* mar 17—1 FERD RKIBER,' Office In Herd'snew bull Ilnic, Main Hr • l- tj." l > F M EAST AN, Office in Brodin building* _ LEV. M. Ql'lS'l ION, Office Main stro-d, 1 door south ol Court House J OS. C. VANDERLIN, Office Main street, 1 door south of Court House Win A. FORQUER, tfv»~ Office on Main street, opposite Vogeley House. GEO li. WHll'E, Office N. E. corner of Diamond FRANCIS S PURVIANCE, Oltice with Oen. J. N. I'urviance, Slain street, south of Court House. _ J I> Mc.H'NKIN, Office in Sohncldeinan's bulldim.', went aide ol Main street, 2nd siju.ire from Court Hou-e. \. (i WILLIAMS. Office on Diamond, two door* wont of Cm/.E* office, HM T C. CA PBELL. Office in Horg's new building, 2d floor, oait Hide Main St., a few doors south of I.owrj House. mar3—tf ~ C A. & VI. SULLIVAN, may 7 Office S. W. cor ol Diamond, BLACK BRO., Office on Main street one door couth o Hrcd.v lllo' U, limlci. l' i. (aet'. 2,1574. JOHN M MILLER «fc BRO. Office 111 Brady's l.ar Building, Main street, Houth of Court Hone. Kuoe.tic G. MILLKH, Notary PobUe. J l ":'' '5 THOMAS ROBINSON, i BUTBEB, l'A. IsST"Advertise iu the CITIZEN. . JOHN 11. NEGLEY, CiTOivbt-particular atteutiou to traimactiouh in real eMale throughout the county. Oniric ON DIAMOND, NEAR COUUT Hoowt, I." Cmzr.\ RITIMUKM K. ti. ECKI.XT, KENNBDT MAKHIIALL (Lulu ol Ohio.) KCKLKY & MARSHALL. Ollhe ill Brady's l.uv Huiidinjr. Sept .9,7-1 C~(i CIIUIBTIE, Attorney at IAV. L'-UAI bu •ine*'? carefully transacted COIICJ! ioiih made and promptly remitted. Bui-lni:.-'- correspondence piompth attended to and ai v. in 1. 'inc« opposite Li*: y House, Butler, Pa. MISCE rjj'INBOUS. McSWKKN V & McSWKEN Y, HmethpoM -iii i brndford, l'a. H. N MILKS, Petrjlia, itt. ! 't county, l'a. |jnfc i M. C BIINBUICT, janfi II I i: - lia. ISutlwr co., I'n m GRAND 80l LEVARI) HOTEL i Corner 50',' 'i !~>f. <£ Broadway, NE / \ORK. On Both Am II II and Imiopean I'lana. ' I'ront!hit on *• i • 1 ik, tin - tiiand Boulevard, ! I ltroa and 1 U' • 'li St., III! Hotel oeeu |H(-i tin' entire :',i . . .mi v.a > linii; and fur -1 ni-licd itt an ex pi ii -'t I .IT *U 11/ MO. Il Is one of I j Hie most elegant . \\ !! i.s In nil. (In- lilKrHt In- j I catcil HI the eity ; I. i . :• pa .ei,»er Klcvator and 'all modem impi' ■nil*., alid i- v. 11 111 I: one square ll] the ilrp I . ! ?;i room furnished with the hest, mid at reasonable rates. ars f«, r all Railroad Depots I within a convenient distance. National Hotel, CORTLANDT Kit i I T, NKAU lJu own, Ni ;w V<> ICKi nOTCIIKISS & POND, - - Prop'rs. ON THFC !U!i<)l'KAN PLAN. 'I'll.! ri'Hlmirant, < j- f< anil lunch room attached aru uiiHUipawMCil 1 r cl capnonH and excellence of nervice ltooiiiß 6'i cte. to #2 per day, &:i to flO per week. (Jonvt.i nl to all ferric* ami city railroads. N<.w PUUNITUUK,' NEW MANAOE MK.NT. janls-ly -r-IIK HUllltKll'l'.ll HOUSE. L NI( KLAS, Prop'., MAIN STKI:I;R, IJUTLKR, PA. Having takr. John Walcott and Peter Pindar. Tin; term Billingsgate has been pro verbial for years, and Billingsgate to day, tnorully, oratorically, and literally does credit to its ancient name. One Belin, Kin# of the Britons, is said to liave built a water-gate here Mil) years before Christ. It lias been a market since the middle of the thirteenth cen tury. There is a little retail trade done here, but the wholesale business is enormous, it is situated in Thames street, a few hundred yards from Lon don Bridge, and adjoins the west side of the Custom House. It is the only tisli market in London. The scene at this market in the early morning beg gars description. The lauding of the fish by the North Sea steamers at the wharf, the hurrying porters with their loads of lisli upon their heads, the deep tanks underueath the maikets where the scaly sole and herring' swim, the unintelligible cries, the tilth which eve rvwhere prevails, the 'coster's oath, the 'cadger's growl, makes a visit to Billingsgate Market at once a never-to be-forgotten event. The first American cattle for the butcher were brought over in 18<5."i by tbe Glasgow agents of tbe firm of John Bell A: Sons, London, and in June of that year they commenced bringing over two steers a week to see if the American animal could stand the sea voyage. On discovering that they could do so the firm began gradually to increase their importations, until now their trade has reached millions of dol lars annually and thousands of heads of American cattle. Illinois is best known in Great Britain as a meat-pro ducing district, and, therefore, a great deal of the cattle coining from other States are represented as being corn-ted Illinois. Pennsylvania and Kentucky stable-fed stock furnish sp'-ndid sjieci inens of American meat. At the start great prejudice existed against the in troduction of meat from the United States, and many efforts, Parliamenta ry and otherwise, were resorted to in order to curtail its rapid growth. Sto ries were manufactured as to plagues existing in American cattle regions, but the demand increased constantly. , One of the principle sources of com petition to American live cattle hereto fore, has been the Schleswig-Holstein cattle trade. Iu previous years it av eraged about 1,500 animals weekly, to London. This year, notwithstanding the freight has been reduced to ss. a head, the trade is almost extinguished. In 1870, the demand for American beef increased so much that it was dealt in by one or two lirms beside the Messrs. Bell, but sti 1 the trade met with con siderable prejudice, although during the year there had been received at Smithlield Market 5,513 tons, which showed an increase of 37$ per cent over previous years. The new trade, how ever, increased rapidly. Steamship linos to London, Glasgow and Liver pool began to see a business that they had hitherto neglected growing at a great rate, and as it increased in ton nage it yrew in popularity. The fol lowing statistics of the : eceipts of dead meat at Stnithfield will more fully show the increase of the demand for Ameri can beef: Year. Tons. Year. Tons. l*7i; 5,513 IK7K 19,.170 1877 14,ti41 1878 20,751 A nd it here may Vie said of the Amer ican trade that while the American meat is welcomed at the table of the aristocratic and wealthy in London, as well as at humbler boards, the cheese of the United States finds its way to the homes of the poor. For a mid-day meal the farm hand has a pot of beer, a rasher of bacon, some bread, and a bit of American cheese. The well known partiality for the American oyster hv the Prince of Wales may have something to do with the growth of this trade, now increased from a few bushels a year to thousands of barrels annually. The foreign oys ter is replanted in the Med way, and there, after a brief rest from the fatigue of the ocean voyage, taken up after a few months, and found to have thrived on a foreign shore. They arc in great demand in London, and are eaten in preference to the native oyster, which has a coppery taste. OPEN Alii FOR CONSUMP -27 VES. I)r. Henry Bennet, in a communi cation to the HrilUh Medical Journal, on the influence of mountain uir in the treatment of pulmonary consumption, asserts that the temperature which ex erts the most favorable influence in the treatment of phthisis is a (lay temperature ranging from f>.> J to 02 ' or 70° Kah., and a night temperature ranging between 45° and 50 ; in other words, that the climate and tempera tare which are the most conducive to the physiological well being of the Caucasian race are also the most favor able to the treatment of phthisis, lie draws attention to the fact that phthi sis is rare among the people inhabiting the high air of Central and South America, although common in the neighboring seacoast towns. Dr. Comes, with whom Dr. liennet has lately been a correspondent, states that during u residence of four years in Quito, where he was one of the pro fessors at the medical school, physic ian to the hospital, and engaged in ac tive private practice, he only saw two or three eases of spontaneous phthisis among the natives, and in all the cases of imported phthisis from the seacoast that h<; met with the progress of the disease soon appeared to be arrested, lie also states that in a large room, without lire, and with the doors and windows open day and night, he found the temperature to oscillate all the year round between 57° and 05° Fah. Dr. Bennet relates the case of a young married lady, aged 2'i, whom he attended for two winters at Men lone. She was a native of Guayaquil, but educated and married in France, where she became a consumptive ; and finding that her recovery at Mentone was only a partial one, she returned to her native country. She has now been two years at Quito, and has become quite well and robust. But then, at Mentone, she lived shut up, while at Quito she has lived in the open air constantly, lie therefore thinks that the immunity, or comparative immuni ty, from phthises enjoyed by tint in habitants of the elevated mountain plains of tropical and sub-tropical America, from Mexico to the Argen tine Republic, cannot be owing to mere elevation—to barometic conditions — inasmuch as phthisis reigns at all ele vations, even above 5,000 feet, on the mountains of Switzerland. It cannot, either, be attributed to mere dry cold, KM the mortality from phthisis is great er in Norway, Sweden, and Northern Russia than in London or Paris. It must, then, be owing to the ideal physiological climate, which enables the entire population to live, as it were, out of doors, in tin; open air, night and day. Why should not the Andes, with a delightfully mild, dry, and equable climate, which is unequaled in any part of the world, become the health resort of the future '( WHAT WE BUY AND SELL ABROAD. The official statement of United States exports and imports, in which the returns from a!l the custom houses are corrected to August 23, gives the total exports of domestic merchandise at $823,946,353, for the year ending .June 30, while the merchandise im ports for the same time were $667,- 954,746, showing, as compared with the previous year, an increase in ex ports amounting to $125,005,563, and increased imports of $222,170,971. Of the imports, $459,652,883 were <> r! dutiable goods and $208,301,863 w- . fret* of duty. In the latter <•!.:tlie trainers of our tariff intended, in a gen eral way, to include many articles not produced at all here, as well as raw materials used in manufactures, muk making goods which were largely the product of foreign cheap labor pay a high rate of duty, in order to encour age our manufacturing industries. A large proportion of the value of the imports free of duty is covered in the two items of coffee and tea, which we received last year to the value of SBO,- 143,390, a-compared with similar re ceipts '. ii Hinting to $61,934,437 for the \ ar preceding. Of chemicals, drugs, dyes and medicines, about half our imports are free and half dutiable, the latter ammounting last year to $5,764. 698, and the former to $6,738,- 862, the free goods showing an in crease of 50 and the dutiable of 25 per cent., as compared with the imports of the year preceding. But the most re markable showing in the increased im ports of free goods is found in the item of hides and skins, other thau furs. These constitute a raw material, the bringing of which here from abroad to be manufactured involves the use of a large amount of capital and the em ployment of a great number of hands, whether the maunfacture be only so far carried out as to produce leather, or whether, as with the great propor tion. it is carred forward into the mak ing of boots and shoes. In 1878-9 we had a full average import, amounting to sls, 959, 017, but for 1879-80 our receipts were far greater than ever be fore in the his ory of the country, foot ing up $30,002, 254. In the other ar ticles free of duty which enter most largely into our manufactures, we find that the imports of India-rubber and gutta percha have increased from $6,- 068,088 to $9,606,239, rags for paper makers from $2,402,457 to $5,474,737, raw silk from $8,371,025 to $12,024, 699, and block, bar or pig tin from $2,- 312,297 to $6,223,176. The large capital and increased employment of of labor necessitated by this larger use of raw material requiring so much work to fit it for the requirements of the public will at once be evident. When we come to the imports of dutiable goods, however, such as are generally brought here in competition with the productions of.our own manu factures, we find in most branches an increase quite as great as that noticed In our imports of free raw materials, a fact which would tend to discredit our general industrial prosperity were it not th t we have such cumulative evi dence to the contrary, and can see that these increased imports, bought from the superabundant proceeds of two bountiful crops, are but supplement ing demands upon our own manufac turers which the latter find themselves unable to fill. Thus, in cotton manu factures, although the mills at I' all River, Lowell, and other places, have been producing more goods than ever before, our imports for 1879-SO were $29,929,366, as against $19,928,310 for the year preceding. So, too, in manufactures of wool, although our im ports have increased from $24,:>;>:>,801 in 1878—9, to $33,921,093 in 1879-80, the home industries in this line have been remarkably prosperous. In iron and steel and their manufactures the business has not been so steadily pros perous as in some other branches, be cause of the intense speculative fever which dominated that market during a great portion of the year, but there was a great improvement in the many industries embraced in this line as compared with the condition of the trade for the year preceding. It is to lie particularly noted also, in this con nection, that while our increased im ports of this class were enormous, by far the largest items were of pig and old and scr ip iron, which, considering the work necessary to turn them into marketable products as finished goods may properly be considered as raw material. In fact these two items alone constitute more than half our imports of iron and steel and its manu factures for the past year, figuring for $27,956,144, as against $2,054,885 in Ix7B-9, while all our other imports in 1 this class, such as casting, steel and iron rails, machinery, cutlery, files, saws and tools, foot up to about $26, 757,844 in 1579-80, as against $7,- 392,363 in IB7X-9. When we turn to the other side of the account, however, and look at the items which make up our increased ex ports, it is not at all surprising to find ' that in the shipment of manufactured 1 goods w" have only just about held our own, and that our larger shipments are almost entirely in grain, cotton and provisions. Of the latter we had an unprecedented abundance, and the marketing thereof furnished the people with the abundant means which has enabled them to purchase so freely of manufactures. On this account the ambition to build up a trade in our | manufactured goods in foreign markets has been, this year, to a great extent, held in abeyance, in the presence of an active and generally more remunerative home trade. Of course this has been on I v a temporary condition, to be prob ably followed by more earnest efforts than have ever before been made to en large the sale or our manufactures abroad, for, aside from the fact that we can hardly expect a continuance of such magnificent harvests, the great enlargement of our manufacturing fa cilities during the past year will com pel those interested in such lines to seek wider markets, if they would place their trade on a permanently prosperous footing. 1 here never has been a time more propitious thau the | present for the putting forth of the most zealous efforts in this direction. Labor is comparatively cheap, but at the same time all the necessities of life are sold at such reasonable rates that the condition of the workman is much better than in former years, when we had a vitiated currencv and wages were much higher; American manu facturers, too, have now won such a position in most ol the markets of the world that they will not have to en counter the prejudices which were for merly a chief obstacle in developing foreign trade, but they will find cus tomers everywhere not only willing but desirous to meet them on grounds which cannot fail to be mutually ad v .mtageous.— Scientific American. JIO W TO~TREA T A WA TCH. Having obtained a really servicea ble article you should, in order to pro duce satisfactory results, follow out these rules: Wind up your watch every day at the same hour. This is generally done at the hour we retire to rest, or perhaps better still the hour we rise. Avoid putting a watch on a marble slab or near anything exces sively cold. The sudden transition from heat to cold contracting the metal may sometimes tuu.v the main spring to break. Indeed, the cold coagulates the oil, and the wheel work and pivots working less freely affect the regularity of the time-keeper. When we lay our watch aside we ought to slope it on a watch-case, so as to keep it nearly in the game position as it has in the pock et. In laying aside your watch be sure that it rests on its case, as by sus pending it free the action of the balance may cause oscillation, which may con siderably interfere with its going If you would keep your watch clean you must be quite sure that the case fits firmly, and never put it into any pock et but one made of leather. Those pockets which are lined with cloth, cotton or calico give, by the constant friction, a certain quantity of fluff which enters most watches, even those the cases of which shut firmly. If the watch is not a "keyless" one, the key should be small, in order that we may feel the resistance of the stop-work; then we can stop in time without forc ing anything. It is also necessary that the square of the key should cor respond with that of the watch. If it be too large, it may in a short time cause the wind-up square to suffer from under wear and tear; the rectify ing of which is rather expensive. The hands of an ordinary watch can be turned backward without much risk. It is, however, always better to move the hands forward to adjust your watch to correct time. A skillful watchmaker one day thus reasoned with a customer who com plained of his watch : "You complain ed," said he, "that your watch gains a minute a month. Well, then, you will congratulate yourself when you have heard me. You are awa'e that in your watch the balance, which is the regulator, makes five oscillations every second, which is four hundred and thirty-two thousasd a day; so that your watch, exposed to all the vicissitudes which heat and cold occa sion it, the varying weight of the air and the shakiug to which it is subject ed, has not varied more than a minute u month or two seconds a day It is only acquired with each vibration of the balance a variation of the two hundred and sixteen thousandth part of a second. Judge, then, what must be the extreme perfection of the mechan ism of this watch!" A watch cannot go for an indefinite period without being repaired or cleaned. At the expiration of a certain time the oil dries up. dust accumulates and wear and tear are inevitable re sults to the whole machinery, the func tions becoming irregular and frequent ly ceasing to act altogether. A person possessing a watch of good quality and desirous of preserving it as such should have it cleaned every two years at least. But care should be taken to confide this cleaning or repairing to careful hands; an incapable workman may do great injury to a watch even of the simplest construction. 110 W DIAMOND MINES A liE WO UK El). The system of working the diamond mines is described bv an operator as follows: The ground being picked loose by natives and broken up, is hauled out of the mines in tubs running on in clined wires; from these tubs it is transferred to a sifting cylinder, which removes the coarser stones, the re maining soil being mixed with water and slowly stirred in a flat pan of cir cular form, by means of arms fitted with teeth, this pan varying from crt:><*rueiits. and payable when handed in Auditors' Notices. J-t; Executors' and Adniinis t rat or.-' Notices. £3 each; Est ray, Caution ane Dissolution Notices, uot exceeding ten lines, each. From the fact that the CITIZEN is (he oldea' established and most extensively circulated Re publican newspaper in Butler county, (a Kepub licaii county) it must be apparent to business men that it is the medium they should use in advertising their business. NO. 49 AME RICA N WE A L TH. It is a stock remark that Americans love the dollar The saying, like most stock sayings, misses the point; the real point is, not that Americans love money more than any other people, but that they love comparatively few things besides money. VVe hare fewer objects ot serious pursuit than other Western nations have ; we do not, as a people, pursue the fine arts, or liter ature, or scholarship, or society, with the zeal or the fruitfulness that we And in European communities, and so we are regarded as being still somewhat deficient in our duties as a civilized na tion. We love these things less than the Old World communities love them. We do not love money more than they —probably, indeed, not so much as they. It is the exclusiveness, not the zeal, of our pursuit of money that is the thing to be regretted. Some day, perhaps, we shall try to do better than this; meanwhile, most of us pursue the dollar, without thinking ot stop ping much for rest until we take rest where no work is. Xo community thinks so little about rest from work as ours. We seek money, ami wo linil it; yet do we love it either well or intelligent ly enough to use it fruitTully, to keep it safely, or to bequeath it wisely ? First, let us gin nee at the wealth we possess as a nation. Let us see what place a century of money-making has given us. We call ourselves a rich people : how rich a people are we ? A very little comparison of figures will show. And first, where do we stand as to the total valuatiou of the national wealth ? We stand near the head of the list— third on the list of the Western na tions. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland heads the list with a capital valuation of 44,000 millions of dollars; then come France with 3f>,- 700 millions, the United States with 32,000 millions, Germany with 22,- 000 millions, Russia with 15,000 mil lions, and the Low Countries with 11,- 140 million dollars of capital collect ively. These are the valuations made by those countries of their entire re sources. What is the average annual income per inhabitant in various coun tries ? We come to the front in this comparison. The average annual in come in the United Kinkdom is $1(55; in the United States, §lO5 also; in the Low Countries, $l3O j in France, $125; in the British Colonies, SOO ; in Ger many, and also in Scandinavia, SBS. In this reckoning, Russia, with her ninety millions of people, is out of sight as yet: she will not be very long. Once more : taking the question from another point of view, let us ask, What is our annual accumulation of wealth, as compared with the annual accumulation of other nations? And here we step far in advance of any community which gives us full esti mates ; it should be borne in mind, however, that the rate of interest for agricultural capital, with us, is doublo the average rate for Europe. The annual accumulation of wealth, tin n, in Germany, is 200 millions of dollars; it is 325 •millions in the United Kingdom, 375 millions in France; in the United States it is 82:> millions! Our increase of national wealth since 1850, says a good English authority, would be enough to pur chase "the whole German Empire, with its farms, cities, banks, shipping, manufactures, etc. The annual accu mulation has been 825 millions of dol lars, and therefore each decade adds more to the wealth of the United States than the capital value of Italy or Spain. Every day that the sun rises u|>on the American people it sees an addition of §2,300,000 to the wealth of the republic." These are figures to make a poor man expect wealth; but let us hasten to say that they do not prove us any happier, or wiser, or more estimable in tin: sight of the world, than many an other poorer nation is. What these figures do prove is a different thing: they prove the bounty of nature toward an energetic race ; they do not prove what we sometimes take for granted on the strength of them, that our na tion is great or admirable in the greatest and most admirable things. N'u: we have been busied with neces sary things ; in great and admirable things our record is still, for the most part, to be made.—T. M. CO.VN, in Harper' H Magazine tor November. A CHEAP WELL. Dig down to a depth of five or s : x feet a hole four feet in diameter ; brick it up using water-lime mortar. Be low this dig your well in diameter a little less than the bricked top, and as you go down plaster the dirt or sand un the sides with water-lime mortar. A well dug and plastered in this way costs one-half the price of an ordina nary well of the same depth and diam eter. and is proof against all kinds of vermin, nor can any dirt wash down from the sides. 1 have a well made in this way, that has done excellent ser vice for eleven years, and in that time it has been cleaned out only oace. There is no need of cleaning such a well, as there is no accumulation of tilth in it. The bricking at the top is done to avoid injury from frost, as the plaster peels oil' where the ground be hind it has frozen. "• W. T. "In pursuing my theme i should like to cover more ground, but—" "Buy shoes big enough for your feet and you'll do it!" was the impudent sug gestion from the crowd. "Smantha, I'm going to let go <>f your hand for a minute, but you won t lie mad, will you darling .' I wouldn't let go till you di«i, only some sort of a bug is crawling down my luck, and 1 can't keep my tiiinh on you and bugs at the same time." A gentleman, recently about to pay bis doctor's I.ill, said, "\\ ell, doctor, us my little boy gave the meaecls to all my neighbor's children, and us they were attended by you, 1 think you can afford at the very least to deduct ten per cent, from the amount of my bill for the increase of business wo gave you."