. VOL XXVI' * * SSWS '- "R^V \ 50 S-MAIH-ST,.^. THE VERY PEOPLE WHO HAVE THE LEAST MONEY j Are your wages small. TO SPEND ARE THE ONES j Are yoU ,hfe head nl 1 I family? OUR RELIABLE CLOTHING ... . . .... With marketing mils MEANS MOST TO large? With house rent a ilrnpr on yon? Low prices for honest, long-wearing Clothing will be a boon to ycur pocket-book an»l your back. Get an Iron-clad Cloth Suit at sl2. Strongest All-W o Suit we know of. Nobody else sells it. Get.l. N. PATTERSON'S Cloth Suit at slfi. For dress aud everyday wear combined-it's wonderful value. No matter how line a suit you want for dress or business we have that at a low price. There is no oj en question about Boys' t'lothing. We are not only pioreers, but to-day's leaders in styles and qualities highest excellence and lowest pric«*s. l.ctueiultei the place. J. N. PATTERSON'S, One Price Clotliino- llouso, 29 8. MAIN ST., BUTLER, PA. THE Great Fair Now Ready For VISITORS. Wonderful Display FALL AN D \\ INTER Dress Goods, Trimmings, Shawls, \\ raps, and all kinds of Fancy and Furnishing Goods. & A* X* P 45 . Oil Cloths, Mattings, Rugs, Ac. BLANKETS, FLAN NELS, YARNS, &c. Aii Immense Stock at. the Lowest Prices Ever Advertised. BITTER & RALST( )N'S. HENRY BIEHL I I NORTH MAIN STREET, BTJTIjEIR, 3P"F] JSI HST' A DEALER IN Hardware and House Furnishing Goods. ■■ T 11 i\ LgMip SKW i\ T (r JTjUpJBj MAC 111N KS, Mm Agricultural Implements, Kramor Wagons, Buggies, Carts, Wheel Harrows, Brammer Washing Machines, New Sunshine aud Howard Ranges, Stoves, Table and |tock«»t Cutlery, Hanging Lamps, Man ufacturer ol Tinware, Tin Roofing aud Spouting A Specialty. WHERE A CHILI) CAN BUV AS CHEAT AS A MAN. BARGANS in WATCHES, Cocks, Jewelry And silverware. Finest stock of Sterling Silverware in tin? county and ;it prices not to be equalled for cash. Watches and ('locks repaired and warranted, at J. K. GrPtllCß'B N"«>. 10 South M» ill JSt., (SIGN of KI.F.CTIHC ISKIJ,), BUTLEIt, PA. THE BUTLER CITIZEN. FOR CHICKEN CHOLERA. 419 Iluron St., -jTi-il fihebojrg®n, Jk Ak • Nov. 12, fflfe?, N '"*Sk * have used /K Ft. Jacobs oil for ohhkoncl.oSia with great lac ress. F.vory fowl T/ jjnjTV affected with ntr /' - the disease was cored by it and I recommend it aa a sure cure, it lias sared j me many dollars. 11. A. KI'FNNE. Breeder of Fine Fowls. Bakersfield, Cal., Oct. 18, 1888. I have used hit. Jambs Oil for sorehead of chickens with prompt, permanent cure. One bottle will cure 10 to 15 chickens; 2to 3 drops • cure* Wheezes. JAS BET HAL. GUSERAL DIRECT I OSS. —Mix c piU of bread or domjh (saturated with St. Jacob* Oil. If the fowl can.iot f. w ilhfw force it down the throat. Mis some torn mud dough with the Oil. Gioi ! ruA.'itU'j cl*c. Tuty wiU jinaUy eat and I* cured AT DRt">iGiSTS AND DEALLBS. THE CHARLES «. VOCELER CO.. Bittlmor*. Ml PROFESSIONAL CARDS. P. W. LOWRY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Room N'o.Anderson Hulldln?. Rutler, I'a. A. E. RUSSELL, ATrORNKY AT LAW. Oflice on second floor of New Anderson lllocfc .Main St..—near Diamond. IRA McJUNKIN. Attorney :it Law, < iffice at No. 17, East Jetter- SOII St.. Huller, Pa. W. C. FINDLEY, Attorney al Law and Real Estate Agent. Of file rear ol L. 'A. Mitchells oßl< e i.u north side ol Diamond, Butler I'a. 11. H. GOUCHER. Attorii.-j-af-tuiv. < mice (in second floor <•! Anderson Lulldlii;', near Court House, Butler, Pa. JT. I . BRITTAIH. Atl'y al. La« (Mice at S. E. Cor. Main St, and Diamond, llutler, I'a. NEW TON ULAC.K. Att'y at Law—oni.-e on Soutli side of Diamond Butler. I'a. JOHN M. RUSSELL, office on Sout h aide of Dia mond, Butlw. I'a. C. F. L. McQUISTION, K\«.l\E£lt AMI Sl'K\ KVOK, OFFICE OH DIAMOND, RDTLEB, 1*«. G VI. ZIMMERMAN. I'Ji VSIOIAN AHO SCRGEON, Offleeat.No. If>, K. Main street, over KraiiU & no's Di lift Store. But ler, I'a. SAMUEL M. BIPPUS. Physician and Surgeon. No. 10 rt'est <'unuini;liftm St., B IJTIiER, '^V JOHN E. HYERS, PHYSICIAN ANn SURGEON i U'tiee No. fts South Main Street, BUTLER, - PA W. K. TITZEL. PI IVSICIA N ANn SU RG EO N. S. W.Corner Main and North Sis. SB UTL BE, PE JM IST' A. DR. S. A. JOHNSTON. DENTIST, - - BUTLER, PA. All work pertaining to the profession execut ed in the neatest manner. Specialties : -tjuKl Killings, and Painless Ex traction of Teeth, Yllalueil Air administered, onire on .Irlfenuin Street, one ilnor Ka«f of l.onry limine, ( i> Maim. Office open daily, except Wednesdays and Thursdays. < omniuiileatlons by mail receive prompt attentiun, N. 11. -The only Dentist In l!utler|u*lng the IM%I maker, of teeth. L 8. McJUNKIN, | Insurance mul Hral Estate Ag't 17 KAST JEFFERSON ST. I BUTLER, - PA. I'i K A Bit AMS& 00 I'ire and I die IN SITI! A N E Insurance Co. nl' North America, iu«*or porati-«l 11 !• 1, 1:11»i ia I : and oilier i slrnug i'oui]» 4i»il run ahoat i fire feet on the ground. I -aw a very large wa>p. aliont two inches long, following the track of the spider on the tree. The w B -p was running and dapping hi* wing, m a nervous matiuer. I>nt was not flying at all In a few minutes the wasp arrived at the spot tthera the spider had dropped off. off. which, by the way. was about ten feet from the ground ilere the wa«p became very much excited, and ran rapidly hack and forth about a minute Then he took Hitrht. flew to the root of the tree, w here I saw him at first, and rau up the track again Soon he arrived at the jumping-off place, and again became very excited, ruu ning round and round, and dapping his »ILL;S nervously Suddenly the wasp >toji pi il. and appeared to be tkinkiit _«ki in cold cash to settle a breach of promise suit. I feel as if a ten ton sand hill hail been taken off my shoulders " "Then as I understand it," I remarked, "you and Mary were in love—engaged— and you broke your promise. "I'erzactly. Couldn't hit it stranrhter The trouble was I couldn't remember that I bad ever asked her to marry ine. I kin der loveil to pass away the time. Jist felt spooney, and so I spooned Stnii k a irirl alter while whom I wanted to many, and Mary .lane bobs up with a breach of prom ise, damage $20,000 Told her to whistle. Didn't believe she could prove anything (.'ouldu't remember of writing her more than three letters. She whistled Mary dul She also employed a lawyer to wins tie. He came down and showed me ;>2 ot my letters, every one spouting as a whale spouts water. "That was queer. "I should smile! Hadu't the slighest re collection of theiu epii-tles, but they were mine just the suuie, aud. lnor'n that. I'd signed the bulk of'em. Yours forever aud ever, with lO.ihhj kisses.' "Then you bad no defence. "Not a shudder I was ready to swear I'd never hinted marriage, hut the lawyer had marked twenty -ix different paragraph reading: M» augel one Heaven designed you to be my wife. Set the day as soon as possible.' Mary J. had me agiu Then she had made affidavit of my hugging and Mjiier/ing and railing her pet names, and it »•».( no a e for me lo stand out. Wort gaged my l.md aud dipped down and cried and got a settlement. "And it is a great moral lesson to you "You chuckle? Ii a pan ■■ in my mad ea reer re a lovi t It's a setback to my l<». • ways of doing business. No gal on the face of this earth will ever git that sort of a bulge on me agin. "Bat you have another love affair »n hand. ".list no, but what I done' Taken a copy of every letter writteu, and done all our talking in front id' the old mail More't that. I've obliged the gal to give me a cer tificatc every Saturday night that I haven't popped the question up to date kissed her once, but had two witue. es hid 111 the sheil to see that it was a calm, brotherly kiss, and the only time I ever sqnof* her hand I put the date right down. Oh, no. they don't Mary Jane me agin—Uut for Joseph and all his relation*! Why They Lead. Mr. I'ieree'n medicines outsell all other*, because of their possessing such superior curative properties as to warrant their manufacturers in supplying them to the peiqde l as the) are doing through nil tlruk gista) on such conditions a» no other medi cines are wold under, vi/ that they -hall either benefit or i ure *tbe palieut, or all money paid for them will lie refunded The "Golden Medical Discovery" i- specific fur catarrh in the head and all bronchial, throat and lung diseases, it taken in time •Hid jriven a fair trial. M"iie\ will lie re funded it it does not benefit or cure Mall doesn't feel like writing sonnet* on "a woman s crowning glury when he sees it in the top bureau drawer. The Man-eating Tigress. A 4 orr*" , p«»ii«lt*nt writing from liuiui to the f.Mylitli UnhiiHir ly The notonou' Jmi 11 tar man eating time** h»« at last been killed by a young foreet i.lb.*r Tb» tigre-- ha- he« n the scourge of the neigh horhood of I'hakrata for the last teu yean, and her victims hare lieen innumerable On one netHUtjim 'he -cired one ont of a number of forester- who were sleeping to get her in a hut, carried him off and de lilterately made him over to her cubs to play with, while she protected their in nocent gambols from being disturbed. Hi* companions were eventually forced U> take refuge in a tree from her savage attack* Here they witue»sed the following ghastly tragedy. The tigTess went back and stood over the prostrate form of her victim and purred in a cat-like aud self-complacent way to her Cubs, who were romping about and rolling over the apparently lifeless body She then lay down a few yards off. and with blinking eyes watched the gambols of her young progeny. lu a few moments the mau sat up and tried to beat the young brutes off They were too young to hold him down, so he made a desperate attempt to shake himself free, and started off at a ruu, but before he had gone twenty rard* the tigress bounded out aud brought him back to her cubs Once more the doomed wretch had to defend him-elf over again from their playful attacks. He made Dewed attempts to regaiu his freedom, bnt was seized by the old tigreas aud hroagfat back each time hefoie he had goae many yards. His groan- and cries for help were heartrending; but the men on the tree were paralyzed with fear, and quite unable to more. At last the tigress herself joined in the gamltols of her cubs, anl the wretched man was thrown about and tossed over her head exactly as many of ns hare seen our domestic cat throw rats and mice about before beginning to feed on them The man's eliorts at escape grew feebler For the last time they saw him try to get away ou bis hands and knees toward a large fir tTee, with the t übs clinging to his hubs This final attempt was as futile a« the rest. The tigress brought hnn back once again, and then held him down uude* her fore paws, aud deliberately begau her living meal before their eyes. It was this formidable beast that the young Cooper's Hill olheer and a student attacked on foot. They were working np her trail, fifteen yards apart, when sudden ly Mr O uiaston heard his younger com panion groan, aud. turning round, saw him borne to the ground by the tigreas. Mr. Omnastou fortunately succeeded in shoot iog her through the -pine, and a second ball -topped her iu midspnng Meantime his companion rolled over the bill, and was eventually discovered insensible a few feet away from his terrible assailant. Ha i* terribly mauled, but hopes of hi* recovery are entertained. The F.I led of Tight Clothing. Now that rational ideas as to drea* have acquired a definite place in public esteem, it may be imagiued that the practice of tight lacing and customs of a like nature, known at all. are n>t what they used tn be A case of sudden death lately report ed firoin Birmingham proves that it is too early to indulge in such illusory ideas. The deceased, a servant girl of excitable temperament, died suddenly in an epilep toid fit. and the evidence given before the coroner respecting her death attributed the fatal issne to asphyxia, doe in a great measure to the fact that both need and waist were unnaturally constricted by her clothing, the former by a tight collar, the latter by a belt worn under the stays. We have here certainly those very conditions which would lead ns to expect the worst possible consequences from a convulsive seizure There l» no organ of the body whose free movement is at such tunes more iiuportaut than the heart. Tet here we find, ou the oue hand, its movement hampered by a tight girdle *o placed that it could with difficulty he undone at a critical moment, on the other, a coatnv ame admirably adapted to allow the pas sage of blood to the brain, while impeding its return. This is uo isolated case as re gard* its essential charactei "Vnyh. hap pily. somewhat singular in it* termiu."—*«. Miuor degrees of asphyxiation. w« fear, are still submitted to by good a many self tor turing children of vanity. The tight cor set and the hich heel still work mischief on the bodies of demoted wearers Taste and reason, indea. combine to deprecate their injurious and ml«ar bondage, and by no means unsuccessfully Still, the evil niaiutaius itself Cases like that above mentioned ought, if they do not. open the eyes of some self worshipper* wf the other sex, who heedlessly stnve by such means to excel in a sickly grace. We would strongly impress on all of this clase the fact that beauty is impossible without health, aud would ad rise them, in the name of taste as well as comfort, to avotd those methods of i outortiou. one ami all. by which elegance is only caricatured, and health may l>e painfully and permanently injured. l.anrtl Bill Arp's Sound Advic*. Rill Arp in Atlanta Coaetitatioa. It is au old saying that if a young man saves his fir t 91.1M10 he will get rich—thai is so in uine cases out of ten —yes. if he will save bis first he will succeed, and any young nian can save that in a year M he will let whisky and tobacco and the *• ciety girl alone Society will keep a poor ynmtg man poor It keep* married folks poor I am thinking now of a married man Itowed down with debt while his fa«a ily is trying to keep on the r»rr«l edge of society. Such people are the town talh and don't know it. There are nice yoaa* tnen iu every town who hare been rlerkia« for years and haven't laid up a dollar Capital is very particular nn* a 4ar- Kamily influence isa t worth a cent aow A yonng man stands on hi* merits, hie | habits, his associations. Yonng man. there is a blue I took in every toWn and ywar name is on it. Ilut there is ao exrnse for a man failing to get employment in this blessed couutry. If he does not it Is hi* own fault If be mil tie fin young aad work bard and brhaTe himself he will accumulate a plenty for his old age Old age wants some money. It want* rest and should have it. 'Otiuiii •um dignitate is l.atiu for dignified leisure, but 1 heant Judge I'nderwood «ay it meant - rest comes alter digging " Ihg hr«t and rest afterwards The bustle dies hard There i*u'l much ptdlbe* afloat —There is no nere ,||r for a man being idle in this town —Sly Cupid did his Work well this uier, aud the lesults are appareut l»r I'ietce'. I'ellets— genUy laxative or actively cathartic according to do*e. i*> Cents Miow fell iu Dakota last week, "Unn't h< aidi. ted with yoarself Or Judge by thimble measure Dou t hate your humor* like your aches; Ooji i nouuee ou other folks' mistake*. Don't lie that gruesome ass wb<« rr.ake* \ svlemti thing a pleasure. NO. 45