V OLXXXII Both Trumps And Trumps Lead— f 1 Q ur j |ne D p me Shoes I jj A J ought to draw \ou to to the inspection of B j F | their merits Piices U ML have touched the bot- LOOK! At Our Prices. Men's Tan Shoes that sold at i ."o go at o. Men's Tail Shoes that s.iM .: "> go a; Men's Tan Sho s that s>>.d a: » '5 K° at Bov > Tan hi:-.. » that so'... at f. v "• ? Men's Calf Shots that sol«i a- *1.50 .u" a'. - v -.00. Men s Everv I>av 6'n< ts that 50... at <.1.25 go at 90c. Bov's Every Day Shoes that sola at ft.oo go at 75c. Grandest Htirpiins Ever Offered. Ladies' fine pa'ent t > -hoes at «.»x\ Ladies' flexible sole !a 'e and button at Jr.jo. Ladies ru>sett shoes hand turns at JJ.OO. Ladies' m-s rtt shoes ii-.-el or sp nig at > .00. Women's heavy tip shoes Si.oo. Women's heavy shoes button #'.oo. Missis heavy shoes in 'ace or button at 75c. Children's selioo! slio'.-s 50c to 75c. Owing to the material advance th -manu j 'tti- vs hav • ulvan - l 011 a!l tlieir goods—but as our la "-4 ■ ail and wir. > vv. "1 :s a 14 d :ly was bought before the adv.lll lam now prepared to siiow .h • -4 >t 1 -ic oi reliable Boots and Shoes evei «:o ii;'.n to 1! L'.!^-. . -IKI at sti hlem . ... i!v "o\\ p:. < thai you are sure to buv. Our - o 'ic la: ye ami eouip. I ~ oi Men and Boy s heavy Boots: of rubi>er goods; Complete stock of l-'e'.'. Boots and Shoes — Also line 01 warm !:u d Shot - ami Shop -Men'- Wum-u s ami Misses' heavy shoes in all material's ami all at the old LOW Ie H. When 111 Butler call and see me. Mail o:dc s receive prompt attention. JOHN BICKEL, lUJS IS \fciin Si reet, BUTLER, PA. Branch Store |2 5 N. riain st, 1/\DD :/.!.> in Mil- .11 aiMi I. flange t'liderv.' av at gre,.tl; * ' Reduced 1" . s. * AN<). Hi. l ; Cut tn MiUtnerv! Any flower in tlie house for 7ctj. Another table oi 9c ribbon—you will find this just as good as we sold last week. %% %% LL ot our LINhN and SILK GLOVES AT HALF-PRIC A* im M. I-. ct M. MAI IKS, 113 to 117 S. Main St. Have you SSO. We will give you for it, a nice top Buggy and a set of our own make Harness. Have You $96. We will give you for it, a .lice Canopy top Surry and a se' of our own surry Harness for one horse, and proportionately cheap for two ho r scs. These are bargains never seen before and not likely to be offered soon again; therefore come quick. Yours Etc., S. B. MARTINCOURT, J. M. LEIGHNER. s. B. MARTINCOURT ft CO., 128 E.Jefferson St., Butler Pa. BUTLER COUNTY Mutdil Fira Insurance Company, omce Cor.Main & Cunningham AI.K. WICK, Pre* GEO. KfcTTKlttft. »i.p Pres. L. S. IcJli-IKII, Sec'jr aud Trca«. DIREC i'OKS Aifre I Wick, Henderson Oliver, 1 r. W. Irvln, laint-s Stephenson, *•. \V. Blackmore, N. Weitzel. F. Bowman, H. J. Kllogler Geo. Ketterer, ( has. Kebliuo, G eo. Renno, .John Koeninij LOYAL S. McJTJNKIN. Agent. JOHN W. BROWS. V. A. ABRAMS. ABRAMS & BROWN, Real Estate, Fire and Life Insurance, HUSKLTON BL-ILDIJifI, NBARCOCRT HOUSE. BUTLER, P/. Insurance Companv of North Ain®rica. 102ilyear, A *9 363 000; Home •<"' N PW York, Amen SO. tflO.OOO; Hartford ot H*r:- fo'J, Assets $8,645,000; Phißnix ot Brook lyn, Assets J.V500.000. New Y< rk Uuder writers' Agency, - THE Bl I LKR CITIZEN. Seanor & Nace's Liveiy, Feed and Sale Stable, Kear of Wick Butler, Pa The best of horses and first class rigs always on hand and for hire. Best accommodations in town for permanent boarding and transient trade. Special care guaranteed. Stable room for sixty-five horse?-. A good clas3 of horses, both driv ers and draft horses always on hand end for sale under a full guarantee; and horses b Might upon proper noti ficati »n bv SLA NOR & NACE- All kinds ot live stock bought and sold Telephone at Wick House. A Good Appetite Indicates a healthy condition of the sys tem and the lack of it shows that the stomach and dij;estive organs are weak and debilitated. Hood's Sarsaparilta has wonderful power to tone and strengthen these organs and to create an appetite. By doiug this it restores the body to health and prevents attacks of disease. Hood's SarsapariSla Is the oi.ly true blood purifier prominent ly in the public eye today. fljslxforfo. u„_ ,1 »„ n; j I . nOOCI S Fills li. e. A drmtKlMi. . HEINEMAN & SON, 0 * | SUMMER J 9 ii> ftp!' L' » I 'IN ' FOU V WiiV I I keep fou - ' to go o ** * I I • t rtf 1 loinoniaii > *£ i 1 »nd f; V" ii" !-*-:• a ii re ■ £} I laiiiniock. tZ "5 * We bave -he !»-,-,t * PQ \ an ssold out either Wholesale < > • Retail, at — a JDOUGLASS' J j Near P. O.j £ a JN. B.—Wall Paper ha>J tale within two months. & l %■%■■%■-%■ %%%-%.'%% -a. Hotel 18. Reopened and now ready for !>■ •)in u)l»tioi o r tao :ir ei'ug put. c. Everything in first-class My'e MRS. MATTIE REIHING, Owae- M H BROOKS, Clerk. e. ; - D D." SUMMKR (}i>odw are in demand DO > iu V ord« r to get ,he be.-t ot'. ,'i S >! / r w'f provide everything need / > tul iu order to be cool and c ui £ . fortable. N Hats end Furnishings f. r ✓ / Men Boys and Children ui<- X \ onr specialties and we only $ ( an inspection of our good?. 1 C We know they are ealisfae ✓ Colbert & Dale. Hotel t> li 1 ler J. H. FAUBEL, l'rop'r. This house has been thorough ly renovated, iemodeled, and re fitted with new furniture and carpets; has electric bells and all other modern conveniences fit guests, and is as convenient, as d desirable a home for strangers ;.s csn be found in Butler, Pa. Elegant sample room for use o ommercial men Staple Groceries | ' j 1 1| Should be not only staple in name, biJ staple in quality, freshness and purity as well We never buy inferior qualities because tliey are cheap. The volume o our business conies from low prices that are made possible by selling quantities 011 close margins—etc. HENRY MILLER Opposite P. 0. HTTTLKH. PA.. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 1895. AFTER. Laugh aort seems to develop some variety of disease, liaseb&ll t-'avers become afllieted with that nsyiitrious mr»«.linw ailineut known as "charley horse."* Devotee* of tennis acquire "tennis elbow." an undesirable species of mus cle stiffening. Bowling makes the practicers arm-bound, and even writing, which isn't so much sport a-s it might be. occasionally is followed by writer's cramp. Of course, the latest mania must have its little ill to bear it com pany. says the New York Sun. and here It is fully portrayed. It is the bicycle face. The bicycle face is the discovery of a doctor who rides the bicycle with his face, as well as his feet, lie discovered it first on other people, then on him self, and finally ca;::e to the conclusion that everybody who goes forth on two wheels acquires the expression in which the new term is applied. This expression may be divided into three parts: 1. A wide and wildly-expectant ex pression of the eyes. 2. Strained lines about tlwj mouth. S. A general focusing of all the fea tures toward the center. Scientists took hold of the matter and advanced theories about it. One learned man said that the bicycle face was the result of a constant strain to preserve equilibrium. l"p popped an other scientist, who stated tha* the pre serving of equilibrium was purely an instinct, involving no strain, and that if the first man knew a bicycle fram a bucksaw he'd realize it. Thereupon the first scientist said that the ssconW had a bicycle brain, and hundreds took sides in the discussion. A prominent bicycle academy instructor here is posi tive that he has solved the seeret. The three component partsof the expression he ascribes to the following causes: The phenomenon of the wild eyes is acquired while learning the art. It is caused by a painful uncertainty wheth er to look for the arrival of the floor in front, behind, or one side, and, once fixed upon the countenance, can never be re moved. The strained lines about the mouth are due to anxiety lest the tire should explode. Variations in these lines are traceable to the general use of chewing gum. The general focus of the features is indicative of extreme attention direct ed to a spot about two yards ahead of the front wheel. This attention arises from a suspicion that there Is probably a stone, bit of glass, upturned tack, barrel hoop, or other dangerous article lying in wait there. It is temporarily lost when the obstacle is struck and the bicyclist's face makes furrows in the ground, but reappears with in creased intensity after every such ex perience. A UNIQUE REVENGE. The Trick a Pauenger Plared Cpon a Grouty Railroad Official. At a station on one of our great rail road lines there is a gate-man noted for his gruffness. One (lay there came a man who lived on the line and had an annual ticket. The gate man always passed this passenger without troubling him to show the ticket; but one day, beinp more than usually he ordered him to produce it, adding, in a severe tone: "Miud, I want to see this every time you take a train." A weOV later, at two o'clock in tlie morn ing. the gate-man was aroused from a sound slumber by a ring at the door bell. Looking out of the window, ho saw a man in a great state of excite ment. "Come down, quickl'' he cried. "Railroad business!" The official hur ried on his clothes and came down to the door. "I want you to look at this ticket," said the visitor. "I'm going on the three a. in. train, and 3*ou said you wanted to see the ticket every time." The gate-man uttered an ex clamation of rape, and slammed the door, without even glancing at the ticket; jfbd, furthermore, he never afterward asked to see it at the gate. An Egyptian Wonder. One of the greatest wonders of an cient Egypt was the artificial body of water called Lake Moeris. According to Herodotus "the measure of its circumference was thirty-three hun dred furlongs, which is equal to the en tire length of Egypt along the sea coast." The excavation, which was made in the time of King Moeris \the Memnon of the Greeks and Romans), was of varying depths, and its center was occupied by two pyramids, the apexes of which were three hundred feet hipher than the surface of the water. The water for this gigantic artificial reservoir was obtained from the Nile through a canal, which Six months of the year had an inflow and the other six an outtlow, corresponding to high and low water in the river. The canal gradually filled with sand and the lake has long since evaporated, but the bottom is still one of the most fertile tracts in Egypt. Drunk In • Coffin. An incorrigible drunkard was being treated in the Tenon hospital, Faris, for hallucinations. One evening one of the nurses was passing through the dis secting-room where there were lying two or three empty coffins, and, walking close to one of them, a hand was thrust out from under the lid and caught the girl by her dress, and a voice from within called out: "I say, where are you going to bury me?" The girl screamed with terror, and fled through the passage, calling for help. Half the house came down around her, and when they heard her story they laughed and chlded her; but she maintained tho truth of it so persistently that they re paired in a body to the chamber of hor rors. 'When they opened the door they saw to their great amazement a ma ft sitting up in a coffin. It was the drunk ard, who by some means had made his way to this room and conceived the idea of getting into his cofiin before his time. The girl was made seriously 111 by the fright. A DECEPTIVE SIGN. Farmer Woodbine Now. liuldah, that man told us 200 was down about here; there's that sign over the door that says there ain't no 220.—Texas Siftings. Mary's Lamb. And everywhere thai Mary went That lamb was at her heel; It couldn't do It now. you know— For Mary ride* a wheel —Louisville Courier-Journal. TSTo 33 CIGAR-CASE BEARER". Danger ta the Orchard* of the Country from a New Peat. A comparatively new pest of fruit tree* is the insect called the cigar-case bearer, which last year probably ranked next to the bud-moth in Xew York in desiructiveness. Owing to its small size and peculiar habits, the in sect in any stage will be rarely noticed by a fru"!t-grower, and yet the second one of the curious suits or cases wjfich the little caterpillar wears is conspicu ous enough to reveal its presence to the casual observer. It appears as a moth from about the middle of June until about th« middle of July, and lays its eggs on »hi» leaves of fruit trees. After a couple ef weeks these hatch to mi ante caterpillars, which at once cat through the skin of the leaf and mine in the tissue, leaving a tiny trans parent line behind them. Aftfcr a couple of weeks or more they cut small bits out of the leaves and roll them into minute tubes or cases within rtOAB-CASE BEARER. which they pass the winter. They cease to- feed about the middle of Sep tember and do not begin again until about the middle of April, having passed the winter attached to the twigs of the tree. After feeding awhile they mal:e a second and larger case, shaped like a diminutive cigar, and from which they can stretch forth the forward part of the body and, eatin.ir ft circular hole large enough to admit the body, commence to eat out the sub stance of the leaves, leaving the lower and upper skins Intact It still retainn Us cigar-shaped home and retires int it when at rest or disturbed. In June they cease to feed, fasten themselvc . to'the leaf in a short time ente. tho chrrsslls stage, from which thv moths issne. These cfgar-like objects can be sc.- i moving over the leaf of a plant, al though scarcely more tlyin one-fifth <> an Inch in length, and when disturb 1 the little creatures retreat Into the : The first indication of the insect", presence occurs on the swelling bud of apple, pear or plum trees. Two or three have often been seen on a sin -1 bud busily at work eating holes i:. them no larger than a pin. The work on the expanded foliage is seen in si:e ' etouized dead areas, which have no; • their center a clear cut round ho' • through one skin, usually on Hi under side of the leaf. The cater.)!: ■ lars also often attack the growing frr.i The Cornell station says that the i - sect can probably be kept in check 1 two or threo thorough sprayings i paris green, if used at the rate of o, pound to two hundred gallons of wat The first application which may be e - festively combined with the Border.:: . mixture for the apple scab fungi: should be made as soon as the lilt' • cases are seen on the opening buds. second and perhaps a third applicatii . may be necessary*at Intervals of fr< . four to seven' days on badly infest . trees. Tliese.sprayings will also che«. . the bud moth. It has also been foui. . in Canada that a kerosene emuL>i< ; spray applied'at the same time as . • rected for paris green is a still Kit. , effective «heck upon the case-bear; and will probably be so on the b • moth In" pear orchards this inse : a the psylla can be checked by . spray of the same emulsion when t - leSves opening. It should be i - b*wa4 tiat a fruit tree ou;; ta"in'-aprayed when in bios- -i >mt-_in any case will < - mMf WJiftSHßtirely upon the the - Vh Ich the work is do:.. ORCHAR'D AND GARDEN THE ski* of the banana MALIC beautiful fiber from which fine cl< . may be manufactured and the juieo the banana makes (rood vinegar. llow MANY bushels per acre v.. : blackberries yield, we are asked. Th can be murte to yield 100 bushels nnO favorable circumstances; as we reec. ly stated. THE fruit growing possibilities of I country are immense, and it may : most be said that no section ha. \ ; fully readied itslimitof fruit grow! possibilities. THE healthy, vigorous plant is in R;> free from insect depredation an i <1 case than a weak plant Hence i .<• wisdom of feeding and caring fcr plant so as to insure vigor. MANT of the tree claims of the w. ' look like a burst boot, all o.:t o." shape. Growing trees as a sped::! y is not advisable under any prit. . As a part of farm industries t growing may often be done with p; it PEon.E sometimes write us t' spraying for apple scab has not l>. > effective, and in some instances have ascertained, upon investiguU that the spraying was not thorou . enough. The tree should be thorou ly drenched with the Bordeaux ni . turc. —Farmer's Voice. Desperate. "Why was I born a queen?" .-lie waHed. Amid all these trappings of state mourned. "Why was I born a queen?" With an.energy sprung from desp tion she seized again her crown,: I tried onee more to bend it into ar proximatlon of the prevailing sliap Detroit Tribune. An Arromuodatluc Domciti". "Why didn't you come when! ra haW a Texas lady to her servant. ."Because I aidn't heah de bell. '■ " plied Matilda Snowball. "Hereafter when you don't h< ;ir .o you must come and tell me so.' "Yes'm."—Texas Siftings. Uow HP Gets FTPU. Nuwed —Yes. My wife always In sists upon giving me a box of c'.gai i my birthday. Dick—Great Scott! I don't see I • >\v you can stand that. N'uwed— That's all right, old ! give them to her father and broth- : - Brooklyn Life. Scrloua CAM* "WhyT" asked Dismal Dawson, ! itig over the fence, "why do you 1. > on diggin' when the boss ain't K: ou H • "Because 1 really like the j ' the new farm hand. "Got a real likin' fer work?" »'l»uref" "You'd orter take treatment."-In-