VOL- xxxv i CLEARANCE SALE. Oar new spring stock is arriving daily and we still have on bands many winter goods which must be closed out and closed out quickly. So to make a long story short the goods are vouis at less than one half their real value. In addition to our sale of winter shoes we will place on sale 1000 P^\ r f - Nle " s Boys'and Youths' Sample Shots made of fine Russett Calf and \ici Kid in t.ie latest styles which will be sold at a great reduction. *%%%%%%%% ******K** READ; |READ*| |READ Men's fine Raessett Calf shoes Men's fine Russett Vici Kid shoes '« i 45 Boys' fine Russett Calf shoes (" Ladies' fine Dong. Handwelt shoes (" --'5 Ladies' fine Dongola Flexible sole shoes l. Men's solid working shoes 9° Boys' solid working shoes 5o Ladies' waterproof Kanga'oo Calf shoes 9° Children's fine Dongola shoes, size's 6 to ro}£ (■■__ 5° Infants'soft sole shoes w price, then blow their little tin horn and the people will hurry to them by the hundreds They will find that a little later it will take a trumpet equal to Gabriel's to make the people hearken unto their lamentations. The people don't want to buy two pairs it once— one to pjo home with, another pair to come back with. B. C. HUSELTON'S, Slutlur's U- n'ltriK White House Opposite Hotel Ijowry. ;; I > Won't Uuy clothing for the purpone of spending money. They i > < k desire to «tt the best | | < > Cail ami examine my lar>{<- Mock of 4. ► < > SPRING SUITINGS. < > I > Rijjht til) to date, the latest styles, shade. anil colors tliat could < | 4 > fwujflit. Call and examine them. ,I t ( > Fits and Workmanship Guaranteed. < 1 > G. F. KEEN, * 1 142 North Main Street, >: Butler, Pa. ( \ * v j HE IS A WISE HAN r -WHO HFX;UBKM HIS ULOTHINU FltO.M # J # j J. S. YOUNG, J |» THK Ml'JtrilAX r TAIMHt, 4 (f Tim kr Ills Hiiitn I TELL their own STORY t. Knowledge ; Concentrated ; iii boiled down, pressed to- ] A gether is what you get in j /]\ the New Werner Rdition ] | of the ENCYCLOPEDIA] j BRITANNICA. The facts j contained therein are reli- ! able,the statements author- ! ' (lr* —itative. The index which j ! lV accompanies each set of ; i ' J books enables you to find ! *- —> the information you want j quickly, and you can rely ; J upon it, for even the courts do not question its state- ; ; ments. You can secure the entire set, complete in j thirty superb octavo volumes, of the Encyclopedia Britannica for One Dollar Cash and the balance in small mo>nthly payments. FOR SAW BY J. H. DOUGLASS, BUT CEK FA Subscribe for the CITIZEN. THE BUTLER CITIZEN. Tonight If your liver is out of order, causin" f Biliousness, Sick Headache, Heart- . burn, or Constipation, take a dose of Hood's Pills On retiring, and tomorrow your di gestive organs will be regulate 1 and you will be bright, active and ready for anv kind of work. This has been the experience of others; it will be yours. HOOD'S PILLS are sold by all medicine dealers. 25 eta. Pianos. W R NEWTON, Representing The Chickering-Chase Bros. Co. Manufacturers ot Grand and Upright Pianos AND Farrand & Votey Organ Co.. Manufactures of Organs. Can save you money in Uie purchase of a FIRST'CLASS Instrument. Call and examine them at the ware room, 317 South Main St., Butler, Pa. TERMS: Cash or easy payments to suit purchaser. YOUR SUIT lay seem dear at the stare, an 1 prove remarkably cheap befo.e you ve worn it out. j it's the long time satisfaction you get from it that decides the superiority of our mike. It does pay to buy good clothes. Our fall display is , of the kind yon would expect | to find only in the larg cities. ALAND, MAKER OK MPN'S U C/I HKS ! I f i WFt 1 ' +++ + + tte Understood After they hit him. It don't re quire any brie ks to make you understand that it is money in your pocket in dea'ing with us. This comes from the fact that we sell only reliable gooJs at a low price, buying direct from the manufactures, saving the middle profit to you. Many bargains to offer now. Ed. Colbert, Fomerly Colbert & Dale. 242 S. Main St., Butler, I'a. Braun's Pharmacy, Cor. 6th St. and Duquesne Way. Pittsburg, I'a,, 1., I). Telephone 2542. Wholesale and Retail. Importer and Jobberol I>ruj;s, Chemicals, Perfumes, Soaps, P.i ushes, Etc . The only house west of New Vork carrying a full line 01 Meyers' Grease, Paints and theatrical goods. Physicians' Prescriptions Compounded Day or Night by "Registered Pharmacists" only. Wholesale and retail dealer in Lubricating and lllumriiating Oils, Capital Cylinder, Dynamo, Water White and Standard (las Kngine Oils, Gasoiein, Ben zine, Paraffinc Wax and Petrolatum. Address all mail orders to W. F. Brau n. . ALWAYS USE . ark would It be, and drear. Without the bright ray on the floor. And the bright face shining he-re! "God owns the sunlight, but He gave This precious beam to mother Content am I to call c *z *'sr i% I THE CALIPh'S CUP 1 I or WATER 3 v/ By David Kerr '5 np UK iun was Ketting red and snllen- I over a battlefield in western ,\ ; ijport which two great arinic-K had if hi contending since daybreak. HartU 15 years had elapsed since the death of Mohammed, and already the strong arms and sharp f,\\ords of his soldi, r disciples had spread lhc faith of Islam through every land from Syria to Morocco, and now the turn of l'ersia had come 111 last. The native warriors fought as stout ly as men could do; but they were matched with men who had never met their equal in war. Caliph Omar, wiping his heated face with the sleeve of his robe, watched keenly the giving away, little by little, of the pointed Persian helmets before the white Arab turbans, and hurled up on the wavering enemy, just at the de cisive moment, the thousand picked men whom he had hitherto held In re serve. "Fight bravely, my sons!" was his last charge to them; "for God Himself fights for you. But should ye meet with a I'ersiau chief, wearing a lion-skin cloak and gold-inlaid helmet, whose I name is llarmosan, the satrap (gov ernor) of Yezd, kill him not, but bring IT ON THE GROUND, rbim to me alive) for men srty he is the bravest warrhor in Persia, and I would fain see him with my own eyes." TMs sudden charge of fresh and vlg orou* troops upon men exhausted with a long day of hard fighting was quite Irresistible, Tin; Persians gave way on all sides; the sacred standard of the shah was trampled in the w I bid him drink and live."— Golden Days. Worked ln In liri Alicnil. "Young man," said the long lrnlred passenger to the stranger In the oppo site seat, who was ou very intimate terms with a |xj<'lhlo State Journal. Hurt! lo Milt"' « ' In,lee. "Young man," mi l the milliliter to the heedless sinner, "have you ever thought on your future life?" "Yes, a glial deal, and, do you liiumv, I cannot make up my mind between I'orto Itico and the Philippine*."- Kun $ TIM BRANIGAN'S 1 COURTSHIP;! By B. W. Chaniiing BItA>"XIGAX carried ice for the Syl van Spring lee company. He was a goodly young fellow, standing six feet one in his stockings, with a eountfnar.ee deeply bronzed by weather, out of which his wide blue eyes laughed unceasingly. His flannel shirt, open a little at the base of the strong, round throat, and his broad felt hat, indentetl with a ver tical "Denver poke," gave him a cow bow effect. He wasperfectly cognizant of this, and traded on it with the maids at the various houses on his beat, before whom he swaggered not b little, drop ping hints of a western past, ttrewn with Indian scalps. "And was you ever there, now, Mr. Brannigan?" one of them once asked him, and he answered, ambiguously: "Aw, an' if I hadn't a-been, how would I get the wownd on me crown?" "What wownd on your crown? Go on I" "I'll show it ye if ye'll step over here." Brannigan bent his burnished curls, and pretty Xorali stretched on tiptoe to meet them. But just as the two heads reached one level, the hero lifted his own quickly a»d kissed the frcsh- I colored face that looked so intently at him. "Shure, the situation was that eon i vayuient, I cuddeu't help it!" he urged, | fleeing to the door with a smart cuff ringing In his ears. But he was to learn that there was a ' type of womanhood demanding more : deferential approach. The first time he saw Alma was on a j hot afternoon in August, when she had just come down from Nova Scotia, and was feeling the atmosphere of the South end oppressive. Her mother, who kept a boarding house, and had combined with that re sponsibility the care of a shiftless sec ond husband and his two small boys, bad written lo Halifax that Alma was needed. Alma was a slender, dark- "I AM NOT THAT KIND," PAIU ALMA. haired girl, with a delicute complexion, and slim, ladylike hands. Brannigan, swinging in with his huge ;ice block, took a swift, appreciative look at her, dumped the ice In its re ceptacle, and stopped on the retui u swing for conversation. " "Tla a warm day!" "Dreadful!" said Alma, listlessly. "I didn't see you before?" "No. I've just come." "Ye'll not stay here! the old can't kape no gyurl more than a week; 'tis a hole of a place!" "I'm Mrs. Brown's daughter, from Halifax." Brannigan went away at that, sud denly speechless. He saw her nearly every day after, but he did not seem to make much head way. A packet of chewing gum, which had appeared to him a graceful atten tion suitable from any gentleman to any lady, was received with disappoint-, ing coldness. "It's very kind of you," she naid, "but I never use It. Mrs. Kalby, where I lived In Halifax, thought it was common." One day about a month after her ar rival, he found Alma alone In tliv kitchen - and marked with concern that her eyes were red with crying. Now, Brannigan had a man's philosophy re garding tears. "Aren't ye well at all?" he asked, coming up beside her. "I'm all right I" said Alma, holding her head down, and plunging her thin little arms into a tub of soapsuds. The next moment she was startled and scandalized by the clasp of an urm about her waist, and the touch of a brow n mustache on her cheek. "Ah, cheer up!" whispered llrauni-, gan, tenderly, "it don't sthorm lvery day!" lie stepped back to avoid the expected slap; but the ».• Irl made no sort of dem-i on si rat lon. She simply stood I here with a white face and looked unutterable re proach. Tactics of so novel a kind were dis composing liraniilgan's bronzed cheelc flamed, and the laugh died out of bin eyes. "Say. I'm mighty sorry I" he mur mured; "I niver thought but ye'd llk» It! The gyurls mostly does, 1111' 'tis 1101 harm at all." "I'm not that kind," said Almu, sternly. "I'm mighty sorry," he repeated, and, its Alma showed no signs of relenting, went dejectedly lo the door. " "I'wai sweet, what I got of it," ho mused, "an' 'tis bad luck I'll get no more. She's not the kind, il s true for her." The next few times that he carried ico to the house he did not see Alma, ami when, he did, on the fourth day, her manner was excessively dignified, ilut Brannigan was hard to snub. Instinct ively, he reconstructed his too florid vocabulary, and altered some of his ways. "She's worth tali la' trouble for," ho said to himself. His gentle persistence had its reward, and after awhile they lind become so fur friend* that Brannigan hazarded a new depart lire. "Do you IvorgooutHunday avenlns?" he inquired one line Saturday. "Sunday afternoons I do," AlmOr amended. " 'Tit great, out !u the park." "I've heard it wys nice." "I'd be proud If ye'd ride out therft with ine tomorry?" Alma's delicate color deepened. She gazed 11 xeilly at lit'- handle of the door.' "Let's say three o'clock." "I'm not through my work till four." It was the same thing iik nil assent "l'll call for ye at four!" lie went off beaming, but her voice made him turn back In sudden panic. "Don't call for me," she said, lit alow, hesitating lone; "you I'd rather you wouldn't Maybe I'll be at the corner at four." Th 6 ride out on the open car was very pleasant. Alma enjoyed every bit of it, though she asked herself frequently what was she about. Brannigan was not introspective; be sides, he knew what he «as about per fectly. He paid Alma's fares with an authority she dared not gainsay, and sat with his arm on the back ofThe seat behind her. His heart swelled; he almost wished some man would do something for which he could knock him down. He- Lad the primitive instincts of the tribal lover; he wanted to show his strength to tlie woman he desired, and to have . her know that strength would always 1 stand between her and danger. This feeling increased as time went on, and he saw more and more clearly that Alma was unhappy at home. Her eyes were often red. She complained of headache, and on being pressed con fessed that "the boys were tiresome." One afternoon a strange man came with the ice. "Tim Brannigan's hurt," he ex plained. It appeared that Brannigan bad been at a fire, and rushing out of the burning tenement with a forgotten ! baby, had broken his leg. Ilewasinthe | city hospital. The nest day Alma dressed herself with care in the blue gown Brannigan liked, and the Sunday hat with its soar ing plumes and outspreading ribbons, and started for the hospital. When Brannigan saw Alma enter the ward his face was irradiated with joy. j And yet, when she reached the bedside, ' he was lying very still, with closed eyes ; —or, with eyes that seemed to be closed, j "Ah, an' is it you?" he asked, faintly, , | feigning a languid awakening. " "Pis good of ye to come, but I'm that wak? j I can scarcely take it in!" "O, but you'll soon be better, Mr. ! i Brannigan!" she snid. struggling not , to cry. "Ah. an" do \e think so?"' he asked, ' feebly. 1 Alma looked down at his splendid j porportions in perfect seriousness. "Do you feel pain anywhere?" she ' u-sked, fearfully. "Ahful, just here!" said Brannigan, I laying a muscular hand upon the car- \ diac region. Not a muscle of her face changed, as he saw through his half-shut eyes. A < ripple of laughter passed over him, and ! he bit his lips under the long, tawny ' mustache. And while he laughed, he j could have fallen at her feet—she was | so adorablv innocent! Alma saw and wholly misinterpreted the tremor which shook him. "Are you cold?" she inquired, anx iously. She knew that it was a bad sign to feel cold in serious Illness. "I'roze out!" said Brannigan, in a choked voice, another and more violent tremor convulsing him. "Don't they give you anything for a chill?" she asked. "They can't give me notliin'," he whispered, " '(wouldn't do 110 good!" Poor Alma began to cry. She did not know people never died of a broken leg; and with Brannigan's young strength and health it was inexplicable. But, certainly, he was near his end. Reckless of observation, she bent her face to his and kissed him. And then a strange thing happened, for (he helpless sufferer revived, rc turned her farewell salute with inter est, and held the girl close In a clasp of astonishing vigor. "0, my! Mr. Braimigan, aren't you ashamed? And nie thinking you that illl" gasped Alma. "I niver told ye there was anything wrong wid me ormsl" he- cried. "An' I wns lu«t sutTerin' for 11 kins, dear! ic h ia me nave one ..»i now , repaid himself for tho deprivation). Ah, Alma, dnrlin', say ye'll go to the priest wid me when I'm out o' here! I've a tidy lilt in the bank, an' niver a soul depending on me, an' I'd make ye so happy ye'd not know yerself—" He became aware of the severely-dis approving regard of a liiiddlc-agee clulist entirely without language ap propriate for the emergency. lllu strated American. fUmiilluli 111 for the Anliual "According to the witnesses," said tjio police jus' e, "the man called jou vile names and }'V U I'a id no attention jo him, but wben he spoke to the m,nu key you picked upu brick and knocked him down." "Yowa," replied the 01 g.in gi iinler. "Ho tali de monk II looka like me."— Chicago Tribune. OpiM>lM-■•11; A ciMini |il I* ticfl. "Did you ever irnve any trouble la getting out of town?" asked the friend to whom Mr. Stormlngtou Barnes was relating his theatric experiences. "None whatever," was the answer. "The town* we played were I*l small that all we liuiil to do ««» to walk two or three blocks." Washington Star. I : M oll«lleal. "The trouble with him," said the ) oung man who had l>ccu 11 ing to fit , 1 ugly describe au acquaintance, "Is that when he dipped into the sea of knowledge he thought he brought up m* much that thi* blamed thing went I to sign a paper or anything?" "I think," said Mr. Johnson, slowly, "that we'll leave that over until you pay, the money, ma'am. I'll only charge yo(i reasonable interest, for such a short loan. 'Of course, ina'ain,you'll not mention thirf little transaction to anybody," lie add ed, anxiously. "We always keep ties# matters quiet—very quiet." "Oh, to be Bure!" laughed ths g for a son-in-law? I* it because I liok merit? Pnterfamlllus (old jvurnalistlo hindV, —Oh, no; it is simply on jwcOUWl & lack of spaoe. We ar* really crowafiO for room liere now.—Tlt^Dit*. Too True. "Dearest," she murmured, "I'm eo afraid you'll change." "Darling," lie answered, "you'll never flne« tneiislreis ho trlumph nnlly ahrokled. Hut her i»a abruptly entered and lis loosed his eiliiKlnK clasp. 'Ton tlio ending vf ill# romance, but he hain't >'et I fssnil tolling Of ths ijßinuiahla tlirie no had a fortuno