G. E. MILLER 9 SHOPMAN, Makes a Grand Offer to the Trade. A GREAT REMODELLING SALE. We Must Have Money, We Must Have Room. We are making a big change in our building. New basement new front, another and a large addition or the rear. Oui Luge and increasing trade makes it necessary for us to make this change, and to make this change we need money and room. Our Jail goods are all in and our building is packed from cellar to roof. While we don't prosposc to lose any money on these fresh, seasonable goods, we intend cutting our profits so as to make this large stock move quickly. To our old trade we just have to say to them, we are go" :g to close some goods cheap; they know what it means. TO OUR NEW FRIENDS. We wish to say that when we advertise a sale of goods it is genuine and the trade knows it and approves and profits by it. We wish to impress on your minds that just now we are having a Great Sale of Shoes, just such as you need at this time of the year. Better take advantage of this sale. C. E. MILLER. \ Free For 30 Days: c,,s SiM J After This I Will Charge My Regular Fee. v ? Dr. R.H.M. Mackenzie ) / SPECIALIST C . M > ( Mental. Nervous, Chronic ;■ ( c and Private Diseases gfo ) /MEN AND WOMEN, / Is now permanently located r ( In The Stein Building, / I Challenge the Medical Profession for a Case of S / Aithmm. DiitaHM of (WHJI Seirom Debility. \ \ Eronrliltla Disuses of Bladder. P' es. J \ * itarrh Dlsnmii of Women. Cheunijtism. C CS"'-» Uw < lst stage), E«Hep»y or Fils. J /D.spepil., Co.orrl.oe., P«b t BjJrotel#, Saltßheom / JniZi't* ors;»tn»ch, Hwrt DIMH, >ericorele. N \ Diseases of Lirer, r t That wil not read My yield to rov s /stem 0 Treatment. If you have any of these j j maladies come to wj oVce and I w !exi)la'n lo you a ,v met »od of curing l«»em. V I " will eve vou FIkLE OF CHARGE :i t loro.igh ex;im uitici. .tOKeijer with aa > i honest » id sc'euUfle opi.iiou o.' your case, and 1. you *oe« cccde to 1:m emy curt f - \ yfe red I w'.i do by you :-s I would want you to do by me I our cases were re- t \ versed. Oertaiior or aciro is what you want pnd I wnl assure you of v.-s inas- # mjc'i as I will give you a written guarantee to refund vou every cent you have j C paid me In case I fall to effect a cure. / l MII4JII-1J Cured to Stay Cured < And without the aid of a truss or a knife S / BP3 and without causing you any pain S / |lj| or detention from business. i V K3J e Sts. ueur Wes» I'ciii Eye BOTLEH .P rOhlekaator't *a«H.h ENNYROYAL PILLS fly u' 0«l» A wn, ilnp L.Diii trt JA £i(" v " DruiM far Oickufr • DimW\X Jp — 11„ Urd uJ UAd BMUW.TOV tcumi wlUt blu. ribbon. Take 9A otk«r> R*fu*e ianjwow rubttitv- ▼ hi JTfiiiu juJ frrrff fi'i — A t or mb 4 4*. L wrt—rHU »« I „ B fWr "> r*ua V" & *«IL !»,»»» T * At .11 Dnfflrtl. Ckti'hclr r llenlo.l C^. M«» KUJI" K. IUII.ADA, I °- r ' Write to: |R M < tfß !?JST i 11) Tt, Iff 6 W. R lilt t r.i. > SOO'idfct + »-. i 'lsUt I'L • - M. C. WAGNER, ARTIST PHOTOGRAPHER 139 South Main street q ver Shaul & Nast's Clothing Store M. A. BERKIMER, Funeral Director. 2455. Main St. Butler PA Adyertise In the CITIZEN, PHILIP TACK, * CONTRACTOR IN § j Cleveland Berea Grit j j BTONE i § Suitable for Building I 5 Ornamental and * Paving purposes. I This Stone Will Not "Shell Off." | Prices reasonable. * Work done well and promptly, I Stone yards on East E'na street. $ Residence on 3? Morton avenue. % People's Telephone 320. * PIANOS A Word To Piano Owners. I wish to state to pianos c.ver ers and the public in general that I have became a perniment fixtune in this city and am prepared t<"> do all kinds of repairing on all kinds ol instruments. Piano Tuning a Speciality. J. C CANER at Newton's Mus'c Store, or 109 Water Street, BuJ r ", Ta.; a'.so insiruci'on given II all ins .-u meats. L. C. WICK, DEAI.BR IN LUnBER. Practical Horse Shoers w -L ROBINSON, Formerly Horse Shoer at the Wick house has opened busi ness in a shop in [the rear of the Arlington Hotel, where he will do Horse-Shoeing in the most approved style. TRACK AND ROAD HOSRES A SPECIALTY. § West Winfidd Hotel, 0 W.G. LUSK, Prop'r. 06 First Class Table and Lodgings. AA Gas and Spring Water all through house. Good Stabling NO SHAD Of outward misfortune can darken the smile of the loyal wife and loving mother. But when disease comes the smile slowly fades, and in its place comes the drawn face and tight closed lips which tell of the con stint struggle with pain. cate womanly *7!^^ organism is dis- JUBMTMBI eased the whole SBfeybSfc Ixxly suffers ; the form grows thin, f and the complex- | £ first steji to sound 1 V't 4 IS curt- E the diseases which undermine the strength. -« Dr. Pierce's Fa- VJJ tSj' vorite Prescrip- Im tion establishes JT regularity, dries disagreeable jgl^gj^pr drains, heals in flammation and ulceration and cures female weakness. The wonderful cures of womanly diseases effected by the use of "Favorite Prescription" place it at the front of all put-up medicines speci ally prepared for the use of women. "I was troubled with female weakness for eiarht years, and suffered more than I can tell.** writes Mr*. Gust. Moser, of Ov»ndo, Deerl.nlge Co., Montana. "My disposition was affected to such an extent that to say* a pleasant word to any one was almost an impossibility. "I had two operations performed by one of the most skilled surfteons of the West, but did not get relief. Then, against my doctor's strict orders, I commenced taking Dr. Pierce s Favorite Prescription nud 'Golden Medical Dis covery,* and also followed the advice given in the Common Sense Medical Adviser. "I continued this treatment for three months, and to-dav am as healthy and well as a woman can he. i cannot thank Dr. Pierce enough for his kind letters to me." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bil iousness and sick headache. *55 VETERINARY SPECIFICS A. A. Congestion*. Inflamma* CURES > tion*, Luna Fever, Milk Fever. 11. B.}SPRAI\S. Lameness. Injuries. ciEEsJ Rheumatism. ('. C.} SORE THROAT. Quinsy, Epizootic. cuKHci) DUtemyer, SiJSijWOKMS, Bon. Urubs. E. E. (COI GHS, Colds. Influenza. Inflamed crass j Llllltfrt. i'leuru-l'neuiuonia. F. F. j COLIC, Bellyache, Wind-Blown. CURES ) Diarrhea. Byxentery. G.G. Prevents MISCARRIAGE. CTRJL ! KID\EY & BLADDEK DISORDERS. I. I. )6RI\ DISEASES. Man/w. Eruptions. CURES ) l ieerit. Grease. Farcy. J. K. ' H \ I) CO\DITIO\. Siarins Coat. CURES ) Indigestion. Stomach Staggers. flOc. each; Stable Case. Ten Specifics, Book, Ac., $7. At druKgists or sent prepaid on receipt of price. Humphreys' Medicine Co., Cor. William & John Sts., New York. VETERINARY MANUAL SENT FREE NERVOUS DEBILITY, VITAL, WEAKNESS and Prostration from Over work or other causes. Humphreys' Homeopothic Specific No. 28, in use over 40 years, the only successful remedy. $ 1 per vial,or special package with powder,for $5 3oM by I»t t r I'-t.t ; • ; I .. -i rof pric*. tflMFIlftKVB' JltD. CO., Cor. WIDIaa it John Su., Tori DOCTOR MILES' NERVINE, The Brain and Nerve Food and Medicine, Qaiets Irri tated Nerves, Soothes the tired Brain, Builds up the Vital Powers of the Body and Overcomes Disease. It Contains no Opiates not other harmful drugs. Sold |lt ill drug stores on a positive guar antee Wme for free advice and booklet to Df. Milos Mod.oal Co. Elkhart Ind. This Is Your Opportunity. On receipt of ten cents, cash or stamps, a generous sample will be mailed of the most popular Catarrh and Hay Fever Curo (Ely' B Cream Balm) sufficient to demon strate the great merits of the remedy. ELY BROTHERS, 50 Warren St, New York City. Rev. Johnßeid, Jr., of Gre at Falls, Mont., recommended Ely's Cream Balm to me. I can emphasize his statement, "It is a posi tive cure for catarrh if nsad as directed." — Rev. Francis W. Poole, Pastor Central Pres. Chareh, Helena, Mont. Ely's Cream Balm is the acknowledged core for catarrh and contains no mercury nor any injurious drr.e Price, 50 cents. Vnsurpaiied for cure pf C°UGHSi-C?lDb' s'"° IO 9 Packaged In decorated Tin Boxes - Pocket : . „ , ®2 3 C per BOX- \ bo'd by Druqqist £ everywhere er» 4 r prepaid on receipt of p- ». ZSliiftLLI 1 • 663 Broadway . N ~y ~ HO O S~l a I Jostal - card to LfmJr *HiHNt**** Phone or Bell 122-3 and W. B. McGEARY'S new wagon, ruuning'to and frctn his Steam Carpet-Cleaning establishment, will call at J your house take away your dirty carpets and return them in a day or two as cleau as new. All on a summer morning—Carpets, ruga and curtains thoroughly cleaned on short notice. VISITORS t<> Pittsburg during the Exposition season :ire welcome at our store. We shall ho glad ! to have you make it your headquarters while j here. We have no display at the Fx position. We are also headquarters for the distilleries | of the best WHISK EV on the market,such as i riKCIV, MT. VKItNOV I MTk KMIKHIKK, IMI I IM.KIC UlBSttN, .) V KllllOLT, LAK<« K, riIOHPSOIf. UhiUUKPORT, aud offer them to you unadulterated « year old at f 1.00 per full quart, G quarts, -» v "».0O. uiCAftIirATHKK'S CHOICE a whiskey guarantee 3 years old, *2.ooper iral. Ou all 0. O. I), or mail orders of $5.000r over we box and ship promptly; express charges ROBERT LEWIN & CO, 411 Water Stree Telephone, 217 c. Pittsbnu; tv Opposite II & O. Depot. THE CITIZEN. AFFAIRS OF THE APIARY. Thtairi Wfll Worth Knowing. Blrnrhlnt Yellow Sections. There is a new device for inducing bees on the wing to cluster. It is eas ily made and can put in practice by any one. Take a board about a foot square and put a hole in the center large enough to receive the end of a pole. Then put a half dozen holes in the board large enough to receive as (uany corncobs. With your pole in the center you can take the device and go with it where the bees are flying thick est. and they will cluster on the board. Then you can carry them to their hive and shake them off before it or into it, and the work is done. Those who have black bees and are troubled with worms should at once change them for Italians. Worms have no show with strong Italian colonies. They are wormproof and should for this property have the preference. Let every beekeeper attend to put ting on empty sections and removing full ones during this month (July). Give plenty of room to the bees, that they may not clutter on the outside of the hi«e anil practically do luthing. This Is easily prevented by making room in the hive for surplus honey. The same thing can be accomplished by a judicious use of the extractor. This empties the full combs and gives the bet s room for replenishing with additional !;• >ney Bees did not do as well this past sea son in cellars as they did on their sum mer stands. This i> exceptional, for a good, dry cellar easily regulated as to temperature is generally the best win ter protection that can be had. There are some excellent beekeepers, how ever, who prefer wintering on the sum mer stands, n ith large hives and strong colonies. Put yellow stained sections in a win dow or where the sun can shine on them, and they will soon be bleached white, so that they will readily sell for first class lioney. This is worth know ing, as it enhances the price of the honey. It may be worth hundreds of dollars to some beekeepers. A good way to stop robbing iu mild cases is to throw a handful of grass before the hive. For a more severe case saturate the grass with water. For a very bad case saturate the grass with kerosene oil. But "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." Be careful not to drop any honey around the hives, as this will induce the bees to begin depredations on oth er hives. —Farm Journal. Where to Cot Sprout* on Stump*. Winter cut hard wood stumps are likely to sprout the following season, while those cut in midsummer do so rarely or cease sprouting the second season. Allowing winter cut stumps to retain their sprouts throughout the summer preserves the vitality of the roots, and if early the following spring these shoots are cut off the roots are in condition to throw up another sup ply of shoots, and so the life of the stump may continue for several sea sons, according to the age of the stump—the older for a shorter and the younger for a longer time. The advantageous time to cut away sprouts is during July and August, when the foliage is fully matured. The effect is a sudden shock to vitality at a time when nature is least prepared to recover from such damage. A few ephemeral sprouts may come after a midsummer cutting, but usually no persistent growth. The long lapse of time without foliage till the opening of the next season usually suffices to de stroy the stump's vitality. Exceptional cases may be met in stumps of wil lows, aspens, mulberries, etc., which may require more continued cutting and grubbing to destroy them. This advice was originally given by such good authority as Dr. B. W. Fernow in Rural New Yorker. Cutting Bunked In Auguit, If bushes are cut in August and. are allowed to lie on the ground all win ter, they will make the grass richer and greener the next season, especially if the brush is burned just as shoots are putting out from the stubs next spring. There is nothing that so much sets back a bush you are trying to kill as setting a lire over it. ssiys American Cultivator. The bushes should be cut as early in August as possible, before their leaves ripen, as cutting the bush es later than this will do little good toward kilUog thenv. and Note*. One of the Columbia university pro fessors. who isn't alarmed at the new theory of a failure of the potash sup ply, is reported as saying: "It is not unlikely 'hat potash beds exist in this country and that they will be found. At any rate, the Saxony mines, it is es timated, ha ve a supply of 10,000,000,000 tons, sufficient to last for 33 centuries at the present rate of production. There is scarcely any occasion for im mediate alarm." Raising squabs for market as an in dependent industry, disassociated from poultry growing, is comparatively new, but said to be rapidly increasing, and is suggested as a pleasant and profita ble occupation for women. "I wish to go on record with the pre diction that in less than 20 year? the meat of Belgian hares will be as com mon on the tables of rural people as that of chicken is now," says T. Grimes in The Practical Fanner. Plows are started early in Kansas for next year's wheat crop. "We figure that it is worth a bushel an acre a week when we delay after July 1." said a prominent farmer quoted by the New York Sun. 'and every harrowing given the fir-Id is worth two bushels to the goo,l in the yield. So we begin early a\id harrow often, making the crop sure and generous." A light hay cop appears to be the general expectation. HOOD'S PILLS cure Liver Ills, Bll lousr.css, 'ndieestSon, Headache. Easy to take, easy to operate. 25c. ■RKHOMATISM CURfID IN A DAY. "Mystic Cure" for Rheumatism and Neuralgia radically cures in 1 to ,3 days. Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once tbe causes and the disease immediately dis appears. The first dose greatly benefits; 75 cents Sold by J. C. Redic, and J. F. Balph Druggists Butler \pr 96. 5 'CURES \ I THE 5 COUGH. ) v A pleasant, never - failing \ c remedy for throat and lung ( J diseases. / 5 Sellers' Imperial ] \ Cough Syrup / Is absolutely free from spiritt tor as \ )or other harmful ingredi/ar ? < A prompt, positive cikk for / n couglis, colds, flu- \ K enza, whooping cough. / I Over a million bottles BO>t iJr J \ i last few yearsattestitsj-tfpulaßtj • -\ \ < W. J. GILMORE CO- > > .. .. roTMUM . PA. v S At all Druggists. { S 25c and 50c. } Uf AXT E D Honest m:in or v.-nuian h ) trave for large house; salary JHT> immtt .ly an.l expenses, witli Increase; position p, Tman ent ;inelose sel .'-addressed stamped en velope MAXAGEii. 3JoCaxtou bldg., Cmcasjf . The Hard Work of Coimreiimcn. Let those who are blissfully Ignorant laugh at congressmen for the easy time i they have at Washington. Only those who have been through the mill know how hard a congressman must work it ! he is to fulfill his public duties. A hardworking senator said to me, "I ; might have made 550.000 during my j term in the senate if 1 had given as ! much attention to my private business j as I have given to the public business." I The amount of work which Is laid up- , on a member or senator is simply enor- j mous. What with the demand for pen sions, postoffice documents, applica tions for promotion or discharge in the army and many other things, a mem ber's time may be taken up with the ( exactions of his daily mail. A good clerk may be of immense help, but some senators employ two or three and then find there is a great deal which they must answer or attend to In person. The daily sessions from 12 to about 5 take up half a day, and committee meetings often take up the other half for two or three days in the week. It is hard to tell when the busiest mem bers, who are never absent from a ses sion or from a committee meeting, find time to prepare the elaborate speeches which they sometimes deliver. It is not strange, then, that so few members of either chamber are found in the reading rooms devoted to them In the Congressional library. When they want books from that or any other deposi tory, they have them sent to their homes.—lndependent. Crnne Carried Hl* Satchel. Arthur A. Leeds of Tioga met Ste phen Crane once under circumstances which showed how little the novelist traded upon the fame that came to him. Mr. Leeds got off a train at Del aware Water Gap. The only man on the platform was humped up against the side of the depot gazing into space, lie looked like a farmer's boy. His trousers were baggy, his coat battered and his hat rowdy. "Say, carry this stuff to the hotel for me, will you?" asked Mr. Leeds. The man grasped the bags and started in the wake of Mr. Leeds toward the hotel. When the hotel was reached, Mr. Leeds lost sight of his porter for a few minutes while he greeted friends. Looking around for his baggage," he saw the man who had packed it to the hotel sitting on the piazza with his legs on the railing. He was reading a book. "Who's that man?" asked Mr. Leeds. "Oh, that's Stephen Crane," some one said. The next day Crane left the place before Mr. Leeds had an opportunity for explanations.—Philadelphia North American. Tlie I.n»t Chinese Actre««. Many vistors to the Celestial king dom have noted the absence of women from the stage. All the roles in a Chi nese play are taken by men. This sin gular custom is traced back to a wom an's whim. The Emperor Yung Tsching married an actress at the be ginning of the eighteenth century, when women were allowed on the stage. The emperor died and the em press dowager ruled the country for her son, the Prince Kim Song. To satisfy her vanity this shrewd and most peculiar woma-n issued a decree in the year 173G forbidding, un der penalty of instant death by the sword of the executioner, an.v member of her sex to appear on the Chinese stage. "After me, no one," said the empress dowager, and since bar day no woman wlthiu the reach of Chinese law has dared to test the strength of her decree. In Hongkong (a British colony) women have played in Chinese theaters, but never as yet, we believe, in San Francisco. Weight of Women'* The woman's brain is always less than the man's. From Boyd's figures we can pick out 102 men and 113 wom en between 04 inches and 6G inches high, averaging close on 65 inches, for each group. But the braius of the men average 46.9 ounces, while those of the women are only 41.9 ounces, which gives the men an advantage of 12 per cent. There are 21 small men whose height averages <32 inches, and there are 135 women of the same height. The brains of the men weigh 45.6 ounces, those of the women only 42.9 ounces,— New York Herald. Stnue Fright. When Bob Burdette started out to lecture, lie struck the same town as Henry War<3 Beecher, who sent for him. "Well, yc«ng man. how do you like It?" "Mr. B(.-ec(ieo." he replied, "it Is aw ful. 1 'ttearly die every night from nervousness." "Let me console you, then. The long boy any injustice. I have been lookin over these market quotations, an I have concluded that Josiar does cam his salt, jest about. But If they'd 'a* said lie didn't earn his pepper I reckon Td have to give In."—Washing ton Star. TUe Snore. A certain poet thus breaks forth: "0:x the KJiore, the beautiful snore, fill ing the chamber from ceiling to floor; over the coverlet, under the sheet, from her *woe dimpled chin to he? pretty fort: now rising aloft like a bee in •Jsrm-, now sunk to the wail of a crack c-d bjissoon: now filutelike subsiding. I then rising a?ain, is the beautiful snore t of Elizabeth Jane." PATTERSON BROS' Sacrifice Wall Paper Sale Is a. .money saver to you. Large stock to select from. All must «r O . C all and get prices 011 all WALL PAPERS. Win dow Shades at Cost. Patterson Bros., 236 N". Main St. People's Phone. 400. Wick Building. Eyes Examined Free of Charge K!RKPATH!CK j Jeweler and Graduate Opt icia 1 Next Door to Court House. Sutler. Pa RAILROAD TIMETABLES. , piTTSBURG & WESTERN Railway. Schedule of Fas- ' senger Trains in effect May 28, 1899. BUTLER TIME. Depart. Arrive. Allegheny Accommodation 6 25 A M 9 03 AM Allegheny Kx press 8 05 " ; 9 13 " \ni ( tjm \ mm Ml ■ .. Ifl05••J 912 " Akron Mail 8 05 A M 7 03 P.* Allegheny Fast Express 9 53 44 112 IS M Allegheny Express 300 r. y 4 4.1 pm Chicago Exprrsri '• 3 40 pm 12 1* am AIU gheny Mail 5 50 " , 7 4"> pm . Allegheny ami New C«u>tle Actx»m 550 44 703 44 i Chicagc Limited 550 44 912 AM j Kane and Bradford Mail 9:55 AM 2 50 P. M i Clarion Accommodation 4 5"» P.M 9 4"» A.M Cleveland and Chicago Express. . C 25 am SUNDAY TRAINS. Allegheny Express 8 05 A.M 9 12 A.M Allegheny Accommo«lati«>ii 5 50 P.M; 5 oS P.M New Castle Accommodation 8 u5 A M 7 OCJ 44 • «i i_ ■ Ex| re-n '. 4 • i M am Allegheny Accommodation | 7 03 pm On Satuidayg a train, known as the theatre train, will leave Butler at 5.50 p. m., arriving at Allegheuy at 7.20; returning leave Allegheny at U. 30 p. m. Pullman sleeping cars on Chicago Express between Pittsburg and Chicago. For through ticket* t«» all points in the west, north west or southwest and information regarding routes, lime of trains, etc. apply to W. R. TURNER, Ticket Agent, R. B. REYNOLDS, Sup't, N. D.. Butler, Pa. Butler, Pa. C. W. BASSETT, 0. P. A.. Allegbery, Pa 11 O DUNKLK, Sup't. W. AL. Div.. Allegheny Pa. mHE riT TSBURG, KESSE -1 MER & LAKE ERIE R. R. COMPANY. Time table in effect May 27, 1900. CENTRAL TIME. N<»rtnward. Daily except Sunday. Southward (Pead up) (Read down) 1 14 12 STAT K>NS 1 fi 13" P.M P.M A M A.M. A.M P.M. 12 50 8 30 Erie 9 30 4 10 12 24 8 03 ar. .Conneaut.. .ar 12 24 G 28 924 637 lv.. Conneaut. .. lv 92l 4 09 112.? 7 08 Conneautville 4 10 51. 5 39 11 10 C 38 Meadville Junct. 11 10j 6 09 11 58 7 20 ar. Meadville.. ar 11 5* 6 55 10 12 5 55 lv. . Meadville. . .lv lu 1- 5 15 .11 28 6 s:)'ar. .Con. Lake..ar ill 28) G 25 10 42 6 *25 lv.. Con. Lake. lv (10 42:5 44 11 18 ♦; 44 ar .. Expo. Park.ar 11 1 * GO3 10 55. G -14 lv..Exi>o. Park.lv J 10 55 G 03 10 54 r, "J4 Hartatown IS 2S' C 22 10 40 6 <»*.♦ Osgood 11 37 G 35 G I<>! lo 33 6 03 Greenville G 3o 11 45 G 45 G'4lo 2G 556 Shenango G 40- It 52 655 5 30 9 50 5 23 Mercer. 7 12 12 23 7 28 5 06 9 28 5 00 Grove Ciiy 7 4o 12 48, 7 55 4 531 'J 1«. Hanisville 7 52 12 59 4 4"» 9 Ot Bram .uou ; 8 01 1 <* 5 35 1 65 »-...HillUrd...ar 8 55 1 65 325 1145 Ir: .. Hilliarvi. . .lv 0 4511 45 4 40 9 03 ! KcUter I 8 05 1 12j 4 25 8 4h Euclid j 8 20 1 25! 3 561 8 lh Butler i 8 s»»j 1 55 2 15j 7 00! Allegheny 10 20 3 25 'A.M.' I I I P.M.I Train 9 leaving Erie at G:3O a.m. ar rives at Shenango at 9:05. Train 10 leaving Shenango at 4:10 p. m. arrives at Erie at 6:55. J. S. MATSON, E. H. UTLEY, Sup't Transp. Gen. Pass. Agt. Greenville. Pa. Pittsburg. Pa. PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DIVISION. SCUEOULS INJ EFFECT June 30, 1900. SOUTH. , WEEK DAYS A. M - A.M. A. M. P. M P. M. BUTLER Leave 6 25 8 05 10 50 2 35 5 05 Saxonburg Arrive 6 54; 8 30 il 15 3 00 5 26 Butler Junction. . " 7 27 3 53 11 40 3 25 5 53 Butler Junction. ..Leave 7 31 8 53 11 52 3 25 5 53 Natrona Arrive 7 40! 9 01 12 01 3 3-. 6 02 Tarentum 7 44 9 07 1 2 OS ' 3 42 GO7 Springdale 7 52j 9 1G 12 19 3 62; Claremont 99D If 38' 4 0G ... Sharpsburg 8 11 9 36 12 48 4 12 632 Allegheny 8 24 9 48 1 02 4 25 6 43 A. Mi A.M. P. M.P. M.P. M. SUNDAY TRAINS.— Leave Butler for Allegheny City and principal intermediate stations at 7:30 a.m., and 5:00 p. m. NORTH. WEEK DAYS A.M.'A.M. A.M. P. M. P. M Alleght-uy t'ity. ..leave 7 00! 8 55 10 45j 3 10 G 10 Sharpsburg.... '» 12 9 07 10 571 ....1 .... Claremont \ .... ....11 04 ....j .... Springdale ; .... .... 11 18j ....; 6 37 Tarentum 1 7 37 9 34 11 2*: 3 4G G 46 Natrona 7 41 9 38 il 34 3 50, 6 61 Butler Junction. . .arrive 7 4*j 9 47 11 43 3 68 7 Ou Butler Junction.. . .leave 7 Saxon burg 8 15 10 09 12 41 i 4ii 7 24 BUTLER arrive 8 40 10 32 1 10l 5 06) 7 50 A. M.|A.M.|P. M.]P. M.|P. M SUNDAY TRAINS— Leave Allegheny City for But ler and principal intermediate stations at 7:15 a m. and 9*30 p. m. FOR THE EAST. Weeks Days. Sundays A.M. A.M. P. M. A.M. P M BUTLER lv, 62510 50 235 730 50U Butler Jet ar 727 11 40j 325 820 550 Butler J'ct lv 7 48 11 43j 3 58 , 8 21 8 05 Free port ar 7 51 il 46' 4 02 j 8 25 8 07 Kiskiminetas J t 44 75511 50 407 8 29, 8 11 Leechburg " 807 12 02 4 19 841 j 8 23 Paultoii (Ap0110)...." 826-2 22 440 858 842 SaltsLurg " 85112 49 5 03., 923 909 Blairsville „ 922 12u 5 4 952 9 4(» Blaireville Int " I 9 30 1 3»* 5 50,i10 00, Altoona " ,11 35 545 8 50, 545 . .. Harrisburg " 1 3 10 i 0 00 1 00|»10 00j Philadelphia "I 623 425 425 4 25! P. M. A. M. A. M.ljA. M.| P. M Through trains for the east leave Pitteburg (Union Station), as follows: — Atlantic Express, daily 2:50 A.M Pennsylvania Limited " 7:15 M Day Express, " 7:30 44 M tin LUM Ijiprw, .. MO Han hbtrg Kail, " IS Philadelphia Express, .. .4:50 44 Mail and Express daily. For New York only. Through buffet sleeper, no coacLes 7:00" Eastern Express, '* 7:10 " to* Ltna, 4 8:30 " Pittsburg Limited, daily, with through caches to New York, and sleeping cars to Now York, Baltimore and Washington only. No extra Ills I'ii this train I'l' • I hilad'a Mail, Sutidaj • on.) Mf Ul Fnr Atlantic Citj (via Delaware River Bridge, all rail route), 8:00 A.M, and 8:341 P.M, daily. Foi detail* .I infponatfam, address Tboa. i:. Wattyftsfc \ | Wsatoi • District, 0br«« PVMi 4T 3 25j 645 j•> 00 Salamanca »r a.m BuffaU* »» | 5 40j 7 10 SOUTH BOUND. KA"> r i:kn TIME JSj 5 I V^A ; 7 leave' a.m | a. in a.m ,'p.m p.m Roc). ester |_| »_oo| j 8 43 Biiffulo I'j 1 jIOCO Balantnnc» K n,M lv," ~ " '5 12 10 43012 20 Mr Jt*wcll ! 8 '2 12 59 5 «•[ 1 05 J!,R, n Srg» •? \ ««]?; \ « ltld 'w\\ .. 9 - 07 BockwSyVihv. 1037 2^3 23 2^ KalU Cr. i-k 7 13:10 « - 44 7 43 2 54 D,,lV,is 7 II 0" 250 7 SOj 306 a«nra ;o i 8 12 Ilam'u!i «I 211 N, i .li Point 8 2!' I Dav.on 4 Oil, 4 23 Wo,.' Mw jruvc : 9 18 Mou. -0,110-yvillf '■> C'owans% illv '.*|34 Crai*. »ville I ® 4 j7 o 13 Frnvl.on 950 _ : Buil. r 110 25 5 34, o 50 A iii-uy I 1\ .V W. Sta 11 35 « 45: 720 Pittebarg ; arrive' a.m I p.m I a.m * Daily. fJDaily except Sunday. Trains 3 and 0 are solid vestibuled, equipped with handsome day coaches, cafe and reclining chair cars Trains 2 and 7 have Pullman Sleepers between Buffalo and Pittsburg. EDWARD C. LAPEY. (*en'l Pass. Agent, Rochester N. Y. »\ UIVES A BREAD-WINNING EDUCATION. BMUHI young Hen wemcn t* meet the itwnih ol thU preaperoue coßaerdal Toi elxculmri addreti , p. BIFP i viss, «u pi UNrty sa, r». OWN AN APOLLO With one you can play on the Piano at any time the music you desire. The Apollo is a wonder. You roll it to your piano in a moment, sit down before it, put in the music, start it. and by means , of small keys control the expression and tempo perfectly. The plsying of the Apollo is so perfect, as not to be distin guished from that of a human being. All effects possible 011 the piano can be rendered with the Apollo. With an Apollo you are master of your own piano and are able to play perfectly all the most difficult works of Wagner. Liszt, Beethoven, etc.. as well as the light and popular marches, coon songs, etc. Call at my wareroom aud hear one of the world-renowned Chase Bros. Pianos played by The Apollo. Pianos, Organs, small goods aDd their fittings, everything pertaining to music sold for cash or on payments to suit you. Our customers are our references. YV. R. NEWTON, 317 South Main St- Butler Pa MCMILLANS FORMERLY IRA C. BLACK & CO., Wall Paper. Next Door to Postoffice. J. V. Stewart, (Successor to H. Bickel) LIVERY. Sale and Boarding Stable. VV. Jefferson St., Butler. Pa. Firat class equipment—eighteen good drivers—rigs of all kinds cool, roomy and clean stables. People's Phone 125. J. V. STEWART. Pearson B. Nace's Livery Feed and'SaleStable Rear of Wick House Butler Penn'a. The best of horses and first class rigs al ways 011 hand and for hire. Best accommodations in town for perma nent boarding and transient trade. Specl al care guaranteed. Stable Room For 65 Horses. ' A good class of horses, both drive-s and draft birses always on hand and for sale under a full guarantee; and horses bought pon proper notification by PEARSON B. NACE. Telephone, No. 219. Now is The Time to Have Your Clothing CLEANED OR DYED. If you want good and reliable cleaning or dyeing done, there is just one place in town where yuu can get it, and that is at The Butler Dye Works 216 Center avenue We do fine work in out- Joor Photographs. This is the time of year to have a pictur-.- o>" \ housr Give us a trial Aii.'in fu- ': r JfiluetnuM B Slht.'.V -»«j {'■, New Y : rk R. FISHER <&. SON- A POINTER! For up-to-date Photos go to the Post Office building. New designs every few days. We guarantee to please you. Branch Siudios, Mars and Evans City. A. L. FINDLEY, Telephone 236. DROP OFF WHEN PASSING and find out what's the matter with your eyes. You can never find out for your self, and we can tell you quickly and easily. It's strange; but in the matter of sight a person can have trouble and not know it. In such cases delay only makes a bad matter worse, and subtracts from the value of the remedy. Examination free. We also sell Cameras, Photo Supplies, Bicycles and Talking Machines. R. L. KIRKPATRICK, Jeweler and Graduate Optician- Next to Court House. The Keystone Orchestra, Is now ready for engagements for Par ties, Picnics and Dances, and Guarantee the best of music at reasonable rates. Address, Prof. GusSWickenhagen, 228 Ziegler Ave., Butler, Pa PHILADELPHIA ft "'"jjnSi -dental rooms.-- | ' '-VO ' iSSmM 39 * sth Av©., Pittsburg, Pa if Wo'repnACTlCA'.LYJ u l"g t l"ft j| CROWN and «orW jl 1 •A fln ur l'lUM'Org— WHY rtOT DO V • :it ftIYOURS? Oolcl CROWNSf, * -fi i «"'» BRIDGE wort •*••«<•«' * ; ,'»sH HSS PER TOOTH Also the I" I | RAPE'S j Leading Millinery House! I: Clearance Sale : ! ! ALL SUMMER fIILLINERY X ; SOUJH MAIN ST., BUTLER.j 0 THTS IS TO BE THE VEAR OF ALL YEARS FOR DEAR XllxO c jj Butler County, and as we are one the oldest firms still in the ring, we deem it our duty to celebrate in a measure, that : s, by making it the "BANNER YEAR" of our business. We have just opened and placed on exhibition, and we may add, on Sale, one of the most complete lints of SPRING GOODS ver brought into this city. In this line the following arencluded: Punjab Percales, Lawns, Dimities, Silk Ginghams, Laces, Embroideries, Puffing, All Overs. CARPET DEPARTMENT- We have no hesita 011 in saying that we have the Largest, Most Complete, and best as»orted stock of CARPET in Butler County, in cluding the ce'eb ated Hartford Axminster, Sanford & Wilson's Wil ton Velvet, the o'd reliable Body Brussels, 1, 2, and 3-ply Ingrain, Rugs of every price and description, Art Squares, Drugged, and our "Centennial Rug." size 36x40 inches, ail-wool, at 25 cents each; a \er>idble celebration in itself. DUFFY'S STORE, Butler, Pa. MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION Announcement OF Clearance Sale Great reduction in every pertaining to MILLINERY A great variety of TRIMMED HATS for Ladies, M'uses and cVi dren, all reduced to one half the former pice. Sailors, ribbo =, chiflons, flowers, ornaments, straw, braids, nettings; also all unt/im med hats, sacrificed at bargain sales, not regard'ng cost as we need the spate for fall goods. Sale will continue a'l during month of August at Rockenstein's, 328 South Main Street, ------ Butler, Pa SIZES Quantity Our sale of corks increases each year until has become a feature at this sea9oß, don't hesitate to put up your owncatsup, pickles, fruit etc , if getting corks lias been the trouble. We have them from a fourth to two aud a half inches in diameter. Is that COUGH giving you trouble again? If so'btar in mind that our Syr. White Pine Comp. with Encalyptol and Honey is the be.-t prestation on the market for bronchial end throat trouble. RCDICK & GRUHMAN, icq N. Main St,. Prescription Druggists. Hutler, Pa / OPENS SEPTEMBER B, CLOSftfoCTOBER 20. ' 1 } MUSIC BY THE WORLD'S GREATEST BANDS.' S 5 THE FAMOUS BANDA ROSSA, ITALY'S GREATEST MUSICAL ? < ORGANIZATION. Sept. sth to 15th. S ) EMIL PAUR, WITH THE NEW YORK METROPOLITAN OPERA \ ( HOUSE ORCHESTRA. Sept. 17th to 22d. I < SOUSA AND HIS BAND, DIRECT FROM PARIS. < J Sept. 24th to 29th and Oct 15th to 20th. I < DAMROSCH'S NEW YORK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, C < WALTER DAMROSCH, Conductor. 50 pieces. Oct. let to 13th. / ( ITXW ATTRAOTXOIfS. ( / JIM KEY, Tht Mtnrtllout Educattd Horse. THE MEXICAN VILLAGE. J J PHILADELPHIA COMMERCIAL MUSEUM, SptcUl Exhibit ol the Products ol th« Mtirt WorW. f C A DAY IN THE ALPS. THE CRYSTAL MAZE. / c ADMISSION, 25 CENTS. One Fare for the Round Trip on all RaHroaM. j PITTSP'jr C A DEMY fflffflTl : J 20th i Sept, 4. ? ...! I. ,r,l ~i n ..i u..k • YB3r« WA