VOI-.* xxxvii nlCkCl S Footwear! Extremely large stock of winter footwear at away down prices. If you are in need of boots, shoes or clippers of any kind call and see us and we will suit and please you. S Have ou been thinking of Xmas, we have a large tock • f Holiday slippers—al' the new and latest pattern* —at very low prices. LADIP;s FINE SHOES. "SOROSIS." The New Shoe for women— The ma-'erpiece of the shoemakers art and standard oi the worid. High or medium cut box-ca'f, fine dong >la, enamel and patent leather, button or lace in Tight or heavy soles. Cudiionet turn shoes unequalled for their comfort giving an', lone w-ari ig q-.i'i'iti-s—all styles. n t > i ~»ck »f The Nettle ton fin- shoes for men in the latest style s. , , , re-t- ckof Gokey'B sh«.es—High cut, hand-pegged box toe bo >» a.. sfcoes for Our line of school felloes » com plete G kVs high-cut copper toe shoes lor boys and high eut heavy kip r girL. We wish to call your specia. attention to our extremely I • :;e s lock of FELT and kUUHKK goods which ue bought early. Ve are prepared to ofler you some great birgai s. J aree v..ck of Ladies' and Gent's overgaiters and Ladies and Chil dren's a.,e Jer-ey Leggins. Full sto. k of sole leather and shoe maker. supplies. Sole leather cut t any amount you wish to pur chase High iron stands with four l ists at 50--. Sample Counters Filled with Interesting Bargains. JOHN BICKEL, 128 SOUTH MAIN STREET. - - BUTLER, PA 5 Honey Saving Opportunities, g 8 THESE PRICES MEAN $ BIG SAVING TO YOU V. U -J. JM'UHS CAPES »M. K, ,«S t-ls.-wliyr.oU U) ■ [Muidi, Cloth andOol'f' apes. Si.OO to rli-O 1 !. & }TI rV.yK Misses Jackets and Iteefers. r - .30 to il».00. -"V U WJ Floe Fur Neck Scarfs. *I.OO. «.«) and up. MB WIRM Bl.A>Ki:rs The Ularire and the prlees , v ]■ f #1 arc as i*omfortalil«* as you'll find tie* .tlankets them- Jpp JLJ9 g selves l,am' entto'i blank' ts, worth ".'»<• at tvi.- JTJ ?k \ Searlet anil plM'l t lanki-ts. #orlh at yi.M. U m ! \\Vl \ V All wool Willi.- i.lank-i>. ?i !Kil and r m m * UNDERWEAR. m( '* ! \ For Men, Wonvn and Children. Men's heavy fleeced underwear 50c. M flr Men's natural wool underwear 11.00. X Women'-. fleeced underwear •£> and fin c. JS Women's fine wool underwear »1.00 and -I-.,. 0f fO Children's underwear In cotton and w »)l at I<-. prices than elsewhere. g LINENS. V 5 Every careful housewife worth the nam#;, cherishes o c> handsome damasks. You might as well hav»* the new (a est designs an not. Lots of new ones here. We quote .jmyfi Jast two sample values: Heavy cream damask. 6* inches wide, all pure linen, regular &V goods at 50c. 'jr Uk fK Fine h!» acli«*«i double damask, G- wide, all * Spb pure"linen, worth sl.2sat SI.OO. |L. Stein & Son J 5 108 N. MAIN STREET, BUTLER, PA £ fyrr K E C K iW I hi/y I Men don't buy clothing for the jp | 1 \ff | 1 jurpofe of spending money, 'fhey im Vst' II desire to get tbe bept possible re- Pj M "C 1 suits for the money expended. Not / jli" 7 J cheap goods but gocds as cheap as jCyilr, ii-.il they can l.e ;o!d for ;nd made up lIIWV rlTffl properly. If you want the correct iji II lbinp at the coirect price, call and \ 'I it examine our large stack of FALL g\ I \ Wl if i AND WINTHR WEIGHTS;— L' \l RIW J\jl -j LATEST STYLES, SHADES' I \l^ ll ' // ANIJ COLOHS ' fU K E c K Fit and WorknrianshiD Guaranteed. G. F. KECK, Merchant Tailor, 142 North Main Street, Butler, Pa Subscribe for the CITIZEN 1 A & h. % what docs the clam- H I 1m r% 'h- * I a^ r cts. CATARRH LOCAL'DISEASE and is the result of coldr. and ;rr : Colp» sudden climatic changes. SjjfHEAD I For your Protection Kj** FEVER we positively ftat'i tuat th.s r ' &■ y merenry or any other injur- Ely's Cream Balmw&lS! is acknowledged to be the most thorontrh cure for Nasal Catarrh, Cold in Head and Hay Fever of all remedies. It open* and cleanses the nasal j assages, allays pain ana inflammation, heais the S' r« pro tects tne membrane from co!'!«. restores t.ie senses of tast« and smell. I*ricesoc.at limcgisuorhy majl. ELY BKOTIi£RS, 56 W'oxreu Street, ; Litler, Pa. *lapi .ill ~ J^Ki.ooO.fir 1 Surplus and Profits - - S2OO, /'rwidm .i. HKNIt Y 1 KOl"l SI A N Vutf-Prrhic-ii' WM. CAMPBELL, lr * uilur I.OUIS B. fc "'N lell^r I»IKH Surplus and Profits - S6O, coo.o Jos. Hartman, President; J. V. Kilts, Vice President; John G. McMarlin, Cashier, A. G. Krug, Ass't Cashier. A general banking business transacted. Interest paid on time deposits. Mor;« y leaned on approved security. Wf* invite you to open an account wit h this bank. rT DIKECT'JRS—Bon. Joseph Hartman. Hon. W. 8. Waldron, Dr. rS. M. Hoover, ll Mc- Swi'» ney. C. I'. Collins, "• G. J?inith. L» s ie I'. If aziet t, M. W. H. Lark in, Harry Hcaslev. l>r. W. C. M«*Candiefcn. Hen »eth. W. J. Marks. J. V. KiL»s. A. L Kelber TI-IK Farmers' National Bank, BUTLER, PENN A. CAPITA!. PAID IN, $100,000.00. Foreign exchange botiKht and sold. Special attention glveii to collections. OFFICEB8: JOHN VOl NK INS President JOHN liI'MI'IIUEY Vice President A. BAIf.KV 1 ashler K. W. KINOII \ M Assistant < ->».!er J. f'. UUT/.I.KK Teller DIRECTORS. John Younklns. 11 L. Cleeland, E E Abrams, < .N. Boyd. W. 1' Metzgi-r. Itenry Miller. John Humphrey. Thos. Ilays. 1.i.vl M. Wise and Francis Murphy. Interest paid on time deposits. We respectfully solicit vour business. HDfID aiJO n al v' d tb I Ini I a or call u i j 4« Phone or Bell 122-3 and W. B. McOKAkY'S new wagon, ruuning to and frt.iu nis Steam Carpet-Cleaning establishment, will call at. your ln.nse take away your dirty carpels and return them in a day or two as clean as new. All on a summer morning—Carpets, and curtains thoroughly cleaned on short notice. BUTLER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, ISOO -s »-»•» t» T 'a * t" ■%* •%* II JOHN TOPP.PIRATE I! r.— • * v : By Weather by Chesney and Alick Munro. i * T copvr.rcnT. 1900. BV WCATHI:[IHV CHV.S.VEY AND AUCK ITTS'.TJ. T | UXITATFTATIO-VS ITY H. & COULTAS. I iriii i t i i - xa - w -1. » < i- «*-*t ~t" »V#t^l«t«t«l#t«t#l#t»t»t CJIAPTER XI. The Spanish gold mine was a hell in the midst of a paradise, a loathsome canker on the fairest piece of earth's bosom. The air was loaded with s«eet perfumes and foul with Castlnan oaths. It murmured with tiie songs of beautiful birds aud shivered with the crackings of slave drivers' whips. The humming music rf the waterfall was marred by the discord of clanking fetters. Nature had done her best. Man, as if in jealousy, had done his worst. It was the garden of Eden, but in the midst of it yawned a loath some chasm, girdled with unsightly debris and alive with swarms of filthy, ragged slaves. T'or eight horrid mouths Alec and 1 and 20 of our men worked in the chain gangs at these mines, aud of the torments we endured no words of mine are strong enough to give conception. To the human fiends who were our taskmasters no pleasure was like that of making au L.i_hsli!:::iii suffer pain and no sp rtucL so humorous as to sec him undergo indignity. They drove us like entlli- to the work; they made us toil when the tierce lit at of ihe day would i.liiiost c!rii:e the lungs; they fed t:s on putrid uiiat aud sour maize biirjioo wheu sweet that's tlesli and deih oi:s fn.it cliisii i- were to be had as c:.ea;i!y: tli :•> jailed ns at night iu a - jiiai I. i..li, lioond taivel and chained us up like wild leasts, so that in the end tin y look from ■ ■ even the power to restore oilr j.i>. ■ euet'gies with sleep Once during a moonless trirht we broke the fetters and trieil to escape Once ou a rainy day we rose ou the guards aud made for the woods, but both efforts were In vain, atid those that did u»i g;'t cut dim n or shot out of their i: T\ were flogged till the bleeding liesh hung in shreds from their backs. And of our fellow slaves, the mild eyed Indian peasants mar vi-led in stupid wonder at our foolish daring, ami the fierce eyed Spanish thieves and murderers gloated over our recapture and punlshmeut. Tortured, reviled, despised, we lived for eight months within sight of the beauties of a paradise, enduring the agonies of a liell. aud then came a change. We were summoned one morning not. to work, but to toe a line before the treasury. Great skin covered packs of metal, as much as a man could stagger under, were brought out and strapped ou our shoulders. Then we were all liuked to a chain and driven off down a narrow trail. Where It led to we did not know, and 6o one would tell us. but. long though the way was, we marked every inch of it with »we%t from our brows, with Mood from our blistered feet and with muttered curses against our merciless captors. Could we but have snatched arms and liberty for a few moments there would hav* been a bitter reckoning among those tyrants. They knew It. too. and taunted us with our helplessness, but the light of hatred in our eyes must have scared them a little, else why did they half starve us if not to keep down the growthof superabundant muscle? High mettled horses are not fed too well when tliev are set to do farm work. After a march of 20 days, during which one poor Mlnehead lad died through sheer exhaustion, we arrived within view of the blessed sea once more, and the sight of it sent new en ergy pulsing through the veins of ev ery man of us This our Spanish mas ters observed and grimly bade us mod erate our joy. for the inquisition had need of os. hereticos maldettos that we were. And then they laughed at their own wit and playfully flicked us with the slave whips. But the freedom of the sea breeze had entered iuto our brains, and we were sanguine, though heaven knows there was but little cause for hope. The man next behind me in the chain gang, whose shoulders were smarting from one of those humorous lash cuts, whispered, "We'll get to wiud'ard of these devils yet. Master Topp, and then"— I nodded uiy bead, and, absurd though it seemed, I had a feeling that he was right and that we should have our turn soon. Dipping into a deep ravine where the tree tops arched above our heads,/ we camped for the night beneath their cooling shade, and perhaps because some spark of pity touched them, per haps only because they were tired of torturing us. the Spaniards did not pre vent us from trying to cool our hot, bleeding feet with the Juice of sueli leaves as were within our reach. With but little sleep we wore through the night and next day passed the fortifi cation and entered the town. Treasure trains were evidently not an everyday occurrence, for the whole town turned out to look at us, and when they saw we were English a movement went through the crowd, and the bootlngs and revilings made the echoes ring again. Of noble spirited pity for a fallen foe there was no trace. All faces were cruelly exultant. Even the women laughed with mock ing glee at our wretchedness and bade our drivers "lash their cattle into a trot for the last stage." And at this there came Into my eyes that which all the lashings could not bring, for in my folly 1 had fancied that a woman's heart must needs be toft. The gold was unstrapped from our Weary shoulders and ntored in the treasury, and then those of us who were English, all except two that was. were umrched to a building whoso grim and forbidding front needed no signpost to tell us what went on with in its stern white walls. We passed through an Iron studded gate, whose disiual clanking as it closed behind us sounded like a warning voice telling that life and hope were now barred out from us forever, and so across a court yard Into which opened a great bare room with high, closely barred win dows where for a little time we 'Were left to our own reflections, umj these were none of p,le^santes|. Before kiighUuli guard of soldiers came unit unlinked us from our chains. Alee and I, as the leaders of our party, were separated frotu the rest of the brave fellows. A small supply of wa ter In dirty earthen Jars and a handful ■if coarse broken crusts were given to eaeh of us. Then we were led down a flight of Well worn stone steps; a door was opened;, we were sent headlong forward into the darkness; the duor; swung to behind us. was bolted with a click and a double snap, and the foot steps of our jailers echoed along the passages and died away to silence. At first the dungeon seemed to us black as a slave driver's conscience, but gradually we noticed that a faiut light was coming iu through a heavily grated window in the wall. Bruised and shaken with our fall, we lay on the pavement and wondered what would be the next evil to come to us. "Oh. ho. ho! Ah, ha, ha!" laughed a weird, unearthly voige from the murk iest corner of the cell. "So they've given you water in pitchers and then caused you to spill the water aud break the pitchers in the hurry of your entry! Oh. ho, ho! 'Tis a merry jest. They're funny dogs, these noble Span iards." 1 started to my feet and stared hard into the corner, but th» darkness was too thick for me to see what manner of thing it was that had addressed us. "Oh. ho. ho!" cackled the voice again. "More flesh to frizzle and crackle in the tiames. though there isn't over much fat on it. More skin to be torn by the pinchers, more stout limbs to wear the irou boot! Ah. ha. ha! More sweet work for the kind aud gentle Spaniard!" "Who are you." cried Alec sternly, "man or ghoul, to take such delight iu horrors 7" "Cli. ho. ho! It's the name you'd like, my masters? But they know that, aud I'll not tell you. I publish uo autobiography till I'm ra'kud for It. "I'isti't safe. Walls have ears, and recanting in the iu.'trumeut room where they've got sawdust on the floor, remember is wearisome to the flesh. But." he added, with evil glee, "you'll know that better by and by." A sliiiiiiii'i of loathing ran through me at his words, ami I trembled as a man does when the demon of fear takes hold of him. And yet I do uot us; : i!y show it when I am afraid. But this man was a very high priest of horror. "Well, friend." said Alec after a uiomcut's silence, "at least you will come to the light and let us have a look at you. There's no danger iu that." "Oh. ho, ho! Been gazing at the day light. have you? Eyes uot attuned to the darkness, eh? Ah. ha, ha! The noble Spaniard will teach you how to see like barn owls before you've drunk down all the gentle medicine for sick souls that they will offer you. Are you tough, my masters?" A bony claw seized me by the leg, and I could feel the hard fingers press j ing into my flesh like iron talons. "Ho. ho! Good! Good!" he cried as he felt the toil hardened muscles. "Here are good, stout thews and sin ews to be •anied!" And he rubbed his hands and jangled his fetters joyously. "They'll not set the little pot bellied knave to man the handspike when they lay you on the rack. You'll have the greater honor. It will be the tall, lusty one with cross eyes. I used to know j his stroke well. Ah, me! I'm getting an old. worn man now, and the pot bellied racker serves my turn. Ah, ha, i ha! D'ye fake? Serves—my—turn! I Oh, ho, ho!" The cell rang loud with Ills ghastly I merriment. ] "The poor fellow's mad," whispered Alec to me. "Tortured out of his rea son perhaps. Still he's an English man and may be able to give me news of my father." And he added aloud, "My good man. did you ever meet or hear of Captain Ireland, who sailed out of the port of London for Manoa and was taken by the Spaniards on these coasts?" "Oh. ho. ho! Ah, ha, ha!" burst out the unearthly cackling again. "Cap "Ho, ho! Good! Good!" lie cried. "Here p let me hear a good north country hall. There's a dead line in the blttacle there. Take It forward with you and put a hand In the chains to try for a sounding occasionally." I went forward. "Here, Pengony and Frehallon," 1 cried, "take the deep sea lead to the chains. Don't let It go too deep while we're scudding at this rate." "Ave, aye!" cried the men. and 1 No. 48 wont forward myself to the forecastle head. The galley ivas plunging desperately, ripping up tlie seas with her keen beak, dipping her stem into the green bulk and sending great masses of foaming water curling over the fore castle deck. All our bulwarks had for tunately been torn away—else we must have foundered with weight of water they held—and I found it no easy work to keep my post. Stand ing was Impossible, so I sat down on the streaming planks, holding on to the breaching of a gun. and. straining my eyes into the howling darkness ah?ad whenever the interval between tho waves left my poll uncovered. Now I could feel tlint we were rushing up a liquid hill, now tearing down into a raging valley; now the galley, bad sea boat tliat she was, would rip through a crest and settle down sluggishly, now she would shake herself clear and race forward afresh, but not a fathom in front could 1 see. We sped out of inky night astern into inky night ahead. The darkness ot" Acheron was on us. I uiust trust to my ears alone. But it was a very Babel of sounds that filled the spume sown air—the groaning of timbers like to part with their straining, the fury of the wind among the rigging, the roar of the seas as they ground against one another like liquid millstones, the terror shrieks of the Spaniards, the duty bawls of the seamen, made up a din indescriba ble. I might just as well have been aft for all the good 1 could do, but while Alec stuck to his post at the tiller I would stick to mine at the bows. Heavens, what a turmoil there was! The spirits of the storm were out and busy, taking vengeance on us for dis regarding the old man's words when he bade us surrender the Spaniards to their grasp, and in their heavy anger they tossed our crazy bark about among the waves like a chip of wood in a sluice run. I feared much that Alec's chivalrous generosity would cost the lives of more than one of those under him. But avast mooding! What Is that? Surf? Breakers? A reef? A sea broke over me, and its crash drowned all more distant sounds. It cleared away. Yes, the shore Is close aboard us! I had Just opened my mouth to hall when down plunged the galley's head again, and souse I went under in full cry. The next minute, when that wave set me free, I yelled as I had never yelled before. Down went the helm as far as Alec dare press It, and over heeled the galley's lee gunwale till the wave heads came pouring in among the ter rified slaves. "Breakers still ahead! My God, they are all round us!" All hands could hear them now. We saw their white, curling crests beckon ing to us, and in a moment we were rolling among them. There is one clear spot on the lee bow. "Hard-a-larboard. Keep her way, Alec, for your life!" Now we are through the channel and heading to the next line of surf. The water is smoother. Can we round to for an anchor? No; she would only drift Into the rocks broadside on. At them, then, straight, and, please God, we may be carried over somehow! Crash! She struck upon the reef, and then crash again and crash! Every timber shivered, and the fore mast came down within an Inch of my arm. The terrified soldiers below burst up the fore hatch and streamed on to the deck. The waist was full of foaming water and struggling men. The heavy seas were making a clean breach over the poop. Crash, crash, crash! We ground and bumped upqn the cruel rocks, and, for aught we could see in the gloom, the reef might be a flood washed rock in the midst of a desert ocean. [TO BE CONTHTUED.] The Pope's Offlcli^Rlnci. The pope has three special rings for his use. The first Is generally rather a plain gold one, with an intagl io or cameo ornament This is called the papal ring. The second one, called the pontifical ring, because used only when the pope pontificates or officiates at grand ceremonies, is an exceedingly precious one. The one worn on these occasions by Plus IX was made during the reign of Pius VII, whose name is cut on the inside. It is of the purest gold, of remarkably tine workmanship, set with a very large oblong diamond. It cost 30,000 francs (£1.250) and has a contrivance on the inside by which it can be made larger or smaller to fit the wearer's finger. The fisherman's ring, so called be cause It has a figure of St. Peter in a bark throwing his net into the sea, is a plain gold ring with an oval face, bear ing the name of the reigning pope en graved round and above the figure of the apostle. The / ring weighs I ounces. It was first a private and not an official ring, though It has been used in the latter way since the fif teenth century and is now the official seal of the popes and the first among the reigns.—Golden Penny. The Taw». On the west coast of Africa the na tives call the raspberry a yaw. It hap pens that one of the pleasing diseases that come out from that quarter of tho globe Is characterized by dusky red spots that appear on the body and soon grow into ulcers about the size and looks of the raspberry. So this disease is called the yaws. It is contagious and downright disagreeable. White sailors bring it back with them to their own discomfort aud the disgust of those at home. Yaws prevails also in the Fiji islands and in Samoa, but in these two places children mainly are attacked, and the natives regard the disease in the same light as civilized persons look at measles -almost a cer tainty to have and the sooner over with the better. Mat lie. "You have a good deal of assurance to couie to me for charity," said the man of the house, "with your face all bunged up from lighting. You're noth ing but a bruiser!" "No, sir," replied the seedy vagrant, who was not wanting in spirit. "The other filler wuz the bruiser. I'm tho brulsee."—Chicago Tribune. Independent. We admire the Independence of a western poet who says in a preface to his volume: "If the critics don't like tills book, I wish to say to them that I do. If they tear It to tatters, I shall pick up the pieces and embark in the plastering business. I am here to stay, and you bet I've made up my mind to It."—Atlanta Constitution. lint Water Peddler*. In northern China hot water peddlera go about with a whistling kettle, the whistle announcing that the water is at a boiling point. When they hear the whistle, tiie people run with their tea pots and buy enough hot water fyr their day's tea.