■ THE CITIZEN. ■ FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 1, 1889. B Km t h haa a population or over Wt. |t is thr county scat of Kutl<-r county. with ■ Four railways. natural gauftl une.|U«ll«*d H !*iUU<-s fur tii&auiartun-s. ' Mrrywhejv: new buildings, new uuuiufart un-s. a growing and prosperous town TRAINS AND MAILS ■ * ti*T I-KVN K it Train* leave Duller for V rrr* p..rt P.iairs.llle. lUMbun: at ;ai iM vs.. ■ tly and CIS U ™> M « n " _ ■ umv puiu- ai - a- ™ a»nl 2*« p. i«; and *'r ■ rtve *» Ht."v«a. ni and p in. ■ K i: Trains h-ave tor (ireenville ■ jj,, ai,j ii ii... ai . and fcu. p. tti Malls elude at Cju ~ii.l law a. I.i and arrive at -■ 3 and £!3O I p. m. I I'iW R It -Trams I'-ave llutierfor Alle ■ cb»-n\ at l-t >». i"a:, a n».. and lot ana«rju I tDi lor tl.. North t«:lj I". and »:3o p. 10. I Mail*- clow lor the W«t at saw a. m.; for I littst»uiv iUiurv and local at l(e4n. ■ Millers!, « n p. ni ; rittsburg at lL'ttjaud & k p m. ParV'-r and North at fr.?> p. in V" arMßorrc- 1 laity mail for Mt. Chestnut ■ arrl\<-, at 11 a.m. and leaves Itutler P. <>. at 1-* H ni. lially mail to North Hope. Hooki-r and K tttv irriv. vat llum and departs at V 1-.TB p m ■ Mon<-> Kiteis ran br KCWd at the post - ■ at imth-r. Prospect, stinhury (CuUlter ■ *ll*e P. t» Mtllerstnwn (llariilmrt Mills H < rtjtr iIIV ,M;pi- frrock). I'etrolla. Karns ■ C4tv and Kentivw. Tin- f ■ anitmlt cost 1 rents for $Y or less. 1 soci ELTIES. UK'AI. ASSEMBLY k'.h.s, Kaigbliof U ■ fcor nierts every Friday night in the Car- B penter* and Joiners Hall, third floor, llusel- W ton hmMin*. Wv. M. C.I.FSN, Rec. Sec. ■ New Advertisements. W Public sale of stock in Middlesex twp ■ Marks Millinery. I Kukri's IVxvts and Shoes. H Ilr Sttnp-on, in llutler Nov. 5. ■ Kilter Js Ralston'.- Wraps, etc. ■ Cbinene Medicines. ■ Snperflnon* hair. ■ Clnbbtng Noti«-e. ■ X«itk — All advertisers intending to make change* in their ads. »hould notify us of I their intending l<> do so, not later than Holiday morning. LOCAL AND GENERAL —Who is W. M Sickle. —Where did you get that cold' —Job work neatly done at the ClTllK.s o®c». —The frost has curled np the front door step parties. —The pumpkin crop is immense, this year. —Rubbers are now called "sneak »fcoe« " —The circulation of the CtTUKN con tinues to increase. —Reader, it pays to read the advertise ■tentv —Kvery man in town, excepting Voje l»y's Indian, has a cold. —The price has gone up. but the beer will g« down the same as ever. —The hogs in parts of Armstrong and Indiana counties are dying of cholera. . —Jas. Wright, a brakeuian on the P. not proud of his coun try hasn't mnch else to be proud of. —The Butler P. O. does a business of over ten thousand dollars a year. —Kig builder* in the 100-foot field are baring trouble in securing their supplies. —llr. F. W. Huidckoper of Meadville has been appointed Receiver for the P. S. A L E. K. R. —The Sallivau hair cat is no 1 jnger fash ionable; the Buffalo Bill cnt is the style now. —The Western and Atlantic Pipe Line Co. haj rented a room in the Geo. Reiber tailding on Jefferson St. —The official map of the borough is hanging in the office of the Marshall Bros , where it can lie seeu by any body. —lt's only seven weeks till Christmas, and taat's the reasou Johnny Stehle is getting in his Holiday goods. —A Teacher- Institute will be hold at Kiddles X Roads in Clinton twp. next week —Mr. W. H. Ritter returned from New Tork. last Monday, bringing an immense stock of Dry Goods with him. —Our readers would confer a special fa vor upon us if they would send us all items faf local news. —Krupp, tho great gun maker of Ger many is sai.l to be buying property up the Monongalia! a. —Put a pinch of salt on your chestnuts a* you eat them, and thus improve their flavor and save trouble. —lt will be to the interest of any sol diet confined in a Southern prison duriug the war to his name and address to R P. Scott. Esq. Butler. PH. —Me fcigbth Annual Convention of the Butler county W. C. T. C. will meet in Butler, on Thursday and Friday. Nov. 21 and 22. —Some Iteautiful Chrysanthemums are in bloom in Butler. Those in Mrs. Henry Wagner s parlor window arc admired by all passers by. —The anniversary meeting of the Butler T. X. C. A. will l>e held Sunday evening. i«r. 1», and will be addresseed by Rev. John Prugh of Pittsburg. —"Apple •chniuings - ' are now in order in the country and there is more fun to the square inch at a •'Sebnitzing'' than any amusement we can think of. —From the crowd on our streets crerv Saturday afternoon, one would judge But- Wr merchants did a large business that day. —The West Penn B. R. was inspected by the general officer* of the Company,last w»ek. They came a few weeks to late this time —ld the -pnng a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love, but the craze catches the old bachelors along about the fall of the year * —The tax rate of Butler, at present, is high—higher tb;.n that of neighboring towns —and we swn should something to show for it. —Fourth-class postmasters were ap pointed for this connty. last Thursday as follow*—Valencia, J A. Anderson; Sandy Point. A C. Mcyuistion Chas. Book was appointed for Harlansburg. Mercer coun ty. Mr. T. n. Burton succeeds Mr. Donthett as P. M. at Brownsdalc —The wintcry wind i s bringing down the leaves. —The Misses M. F. A M. Marks have re ceived Uieir Fall stock of Hats, Bonnets, Tips, Plumes and other Millinery. Sec their new card. —The law should require every man to give from three to six month-: pnblic no tice of his intention to do so, before it al lows him to transfer his property to his wife. - The • liinny" seaaon is here. While .-.ome boys were shinnying an old tin can,on TV Pearl St. one day last wcek.it was knocked into the face of one of the boys and cut him hadiy. —The manufacture of lamp black is ono o barrels, and opens up some new territory. As we go to piess the indications are good for another first class well on the Thomas farm. The well is situate close to the maiu road leading to Six Points. The Thomas 4 Cooper well which was struck two weeks ago is pumping 50 barrels a day. —Parker Phoenix. The Harmony Oil Co. is drilling on the Frank Wilson farm below Jijlienople. Mr. I. S. Yard, rig contractor and builder, has four sets of hands at work in the hundred-foot territory. Sueo tiller who applied for a mandamus on the Conrt to grant him a license: the second was that of three men convicted of illegal liquor selling after taking out a County Treasurer's license, and the third was the appeal of James Sellers, of this county, from the judgment and sentence of the Quarter Serious here At Sept. T.. ISB7. on grounds of the unconstitutionality of the act, defective title, etc. The Court in its opinion holds that the act is sound and constitutional, that the title is a true index to its contents, and that as the license was granted in April, 1887, prior to the passage of the Brooks law, sentence should not have been passed according to the pro visions of that act The J ustiee said the object was to leave intact the laws enacted prior to the adoption of the present Consti tution, and when the defendant accepted his license he did so subject to the laws then in force, or that might thereafter be passed. The Commonwealth does not in tend to barter aw»v the right to legislate on the subject of intoxicating liquor. Error in the trial was not shown and the judg ment of the lower t'ourt i- allirmed and record remitted. Xo other Butler county cases have vet been decided. The Supreme Court ha-* refused to inter fere in the case of Zach. Taylor, of Greene Co., sentenced to be hanged for the murder of the drover McCausland, and who appealed on the ground that one of the jurors was incompetent for the reason that he made the remark, "We will hang the whole gang of them." and also that some of the jurymen had read the accounts of the murder. The Chief Justice says: ""We have repeatedly held that the test of the competency of a juror in a capital case is hi° ability to render a verdict upon the evidence alone, uuinfluonced by any opinion he may have previously formed from newspaper or other reports of the crime." In the l". S. Court, last Friday, the sen tence of R. 0. Day, convicted of counter feiting, was again suspended; and young Texter, convicted of opening letters, was sentenced to one year in the county jail. At Pittsburg, last Saturday. Judge White sentenced two j-onng men, one to six years and the other to three years in the penitentiary, for enticing a 15-year-old girl to the city "for immoral purposes. One of the men sentenced was a merchant of Scottdale. A novel point came up in the criminal court of Delaware county, Wednesday, in volving the construction of the Brooks high license law, a yeung man in Chester being indicted for giving liquor to a minor. The Brooks bill fixes a penalty for giving liquor to a minor, "with or without a license." The court held the party was not liable to indictment, as the title of the act was "to regulate and restrain the sale of liquors, etc.," and that it only applies to persons who are in the business of selling liquors, who give to minors. The case was taken front the jury by the judge and the defen dant acquitted. General Kpwley, of Pittsburg, and sev eral others have brought suit vs. the P. R. R. Company for damages caused by the accident at Sarver station. Special Court for the trial of civil cases meets in Butler next week. The following cases are on the trial list: Pringle for' use vs. Christie; Stayton for use vs. Graham ct al; Xegley vs. P. & W. R. R.; Stephen son et al vs. Bovard et al; McElroy, trus tee, vs. Klingensmith ct al; Kaylor ct al vs. Kaylor ct al; Bole vs. Mcßride; Wal ter vs." Lawall; Boylo for use vs. Smith man; Dal/ell Bros. vs. P. R. R. Company; Titley vs. Pierce et al; Marshall vs. Mc- Kee; Wilson vs. Frazier; Gibbs «i- Sterritt vs. Hazlett ct. al.; Brackney A Hunt vs. llusclton; Bartueski vs. Magee et. al.; Donnelly ct. al. vs. Billiard et. al.; Don nelly et. al. vs. Norcross et. al.; Dindinger vs. Kin rick; Cranmer for use vs. Tebay; Knapp vs. Earhart; Hartzell vs. Titley; Magee vs. W. it A. Pipe Line; Kennedy vs. Crawford; Kelly et. al. vs. Uildebran'd et. al.; Kilroy vs. Poor District of Petrolia; Magee vs. McCrea; Harbison vs. Shnster, 2 cases; Daniel vs. Hays Bros.; McCandless vs. Humphrey et. al.; Scheel vs. German; Armor vs. Vogeley et. al.; Tiflt Sons it Co. vs. Stoughton. Letters of administration were granted to Eva Kehling on estate of Jos. Kehliug, of Summit township, also to Adam Byerly on estate of Eliza Byerly, of Buffalo, also to Erailinc Croup and Samuel Schlagel on estate of Lyman Croup, of Butler township. Chas. Harkless had John Vogel returned for stealing a dog. and W. E. Reed re turned Paul Mcßride for surety of the peace. The will ol' Satuuel Sheldon, of Parker township, was probated and lotters to W. A. Fleming and John T. Barr; also will of Elizabeth Pfeister, of Oakland township, no letters; also will of Rheinhart Dmshell, of Forward township, no letters; also will of Henry Rape, of JSelienoplo, and letters to A darn Rape. L. S. Merit is in jail on a charge of as sault and battery. The County Commissioners are sending out the election papers this week. LATE PROPERTY TRANSFERS. Jas. Bredin to H. 11. Goncher, lots in Butler for $3,000. L. Hammond to AV. E. Reed, lot in But ler for $4,200. G. K. Keck to Ada Albert, lot in Butler for $250. A. B. Eshenbaugh to "W. D. Eshenbaugh, 93 acres in Clay township for $5,000. John Berg to D. B. Campbell, lot in Butler for $3,500. J. G. Hoffman, trustee, to S. M. Gold, 120 acres in Butler, Centre and Franklin townships for sl. G. C. Roessing to J. M. Leighner, lot in Butler for SI,BOO. M. E. Cooper to J M. Leighner, lot in Centrevillc for S4O. I). A. Renfrew to R. S. Kirkpatrick. lot in Renfrew for $75. M. E. Bole to Mary Gray, lot in Donegal lor S2OO. F M. Campbell to Eliza McXanghton lot in AVest Sunbury for S4OO. W. H- Bitter to Geo. H. Lcidockor lot in Butler for $3-100. Marriage Licenses. Wendcl Aschc Summit twp Katie McDowell Summit twp George Black Rochester, Pa. Nancy Johnston Harmony, Pa. Anderson J. Kennedy Adams twp Sadie Rosebaugh Adorns twp Chas. L. Patterson ...Middlesex twp Jennie BotUU. --, T Penn twp JaUii A. Lackey Oakland twp Emma Hamilton Fall-view twp John Huggins Allegheny county Emma Day Clay twp James B. Nicholas Butler twp Nannie Bell Summit twp James D. Todd Winfield twp Lilias Amelda Clark " At Pittsburg—Monday, Edward C. Dap ple. of Allegheny, and Anuip C. Helmbolu. of Butler county. —J. W. Xunstie, of St. Joe sta tion, was operated upon (or cross eyea by Dr. Simpson, the oculist, dar ing bis last trip to Butler, lie went home much pleased with the result and was charged only a third of the price asked before by another oculist. Silks and Fine Dress Goods. A larger stock and finer assortment than you cau find in the combined stock of all other dealers, at RITTEI'. ui~ne« for nine years; al*o why we liad hx-ated at But ler. And lastly, we told you of onr success in business. Now we are poinjr to tell you something that will be especially interest ing to you if you want a vehicle of any kind or a set of good harness for a very low ]>rice. The winter is approaching and we are selling lots of work., yet we liud that unless we sell at least one hundred buggies spring wagons, buckwagons. 4c., during the next month, we will not have room enough for our large stock of sleighs, oth be disappointed. Certain drugs if not properly taken eare ol become in»-rt and if dispensed are worthless. We make a specialty of Idling physicians' prescriptions and home recipes and none but pure drugs dis pensed, every article "guaran teed to be just as represented. It we do not have in stock what is wanted we lrnnlky tell you so and will be glad to get it for you at the earliest pos sible moment. We are head quarters for the Drug Trade of Butler county and it is seldom you will find us out of what is called for. We ask you to come and see us, make our store your stopping place when in town, leave your packages and call for them when you wish. Respectfully, C. N. IJOYD, Druggist. Diamond Block, Butler, Pa. Notice. Parties wishing to invest monej', certain to bring fair returns, are invited" to care fullv investigate the inducements offered bv "THE BUTLER SALT-MANTFAC TI'RING COMPANY AND CBEMICAL WORKS." The stock consists of 8,000 shares, the par value ot which is SSO. For the farther developing of the works, some of this stock is put on the market. For prices and particulars inquire of JAS. F. BHITTAIN, Butler, Pa. Office on Diamond. If You Want to see the largest assortment of Ladies', Misses'and Children's Wraps go to Bitter { cents. Large liuoof Fine Dress Ginghams, Zeph yrs and Seersuckers at 10 and 12A cents at L. STEIN & SON'S. —A full line of childrens' hats and caps at J. F. T. STEIJI.E'S —Consult your own interests and examine our stock of furniture, uphol stered suits, chairs, mattresses, etc., before purchasing. MILLER BRO'S., No. 19, Jefferson St. —Great bargains in Caps at J. F. T. STEIILE'S. —Good carts for sls at Martin court *r? s uit fcuoJ., I-