VOL. XXXX. February Prices Bickel's. Men's Gray Felts and Extra Heavy Goodyear—Glove Overs r - 1 Man's Extra Heavy Goodyear Glove perfections Men's first quality robbers Boys' first qnality robbers , K) Misses' Canvas boots LEATHER goods- Men's fine patin calf shoes—latest styles $ Boys " • " t ;; : - Youths i o<> Men's Heavy sole and tap working shoes * Men's Double sole and tap. box-toe shoes Boys' Heavy every day shoes LADIES' FINE SHOES Ladies' #1.85 warm lined shoes * Misses' fine Dongola shoes, sizes 11* to j. 1 lot Misses'fine Kangaroo-calf #1.75 shoes . 1 lot Ladies' fine Dongola $1.505h0e5...... ■ 0 Baker & Bowman's #4.00 fine shoes-hand turns and band welts ~ 1 lot children's 75c red shoes at • ■ .- c / s o c ' aud 6 0c Children s fine shoes All Winter Goods to be closed out Regardless of Cost. Leggins and Overgaiters at greatly reduced prices. Sample Counters filled with Interesting Bargains. Repairing neatly and Promptly Done. JOHN BICKEL, 128 South Main St., BUTLER, PA. fl HUSELTON'S N f] C. O. D. j [j Sale of Shoes 4 W There ji W Bunch of Moi\ey J r« Lost and made in Shoes this month! *2 We lose—You win! V 1250 pairs Fall and Winter Shoes. A j Men's, Women's and Children's—so far not sold will, m as is oar custom-BE CUT IN PRICE and prompt- A J ly gotten rid of! 1 1 SALE IS NOW GOING ON! 1 J TAKE DUE NOTICE! f IA. HUSELTON'S Sir | OVERCOATS | | At 1-2 Prices. ) We will sell 150 Men's Overcoats at 1-2 price i J The balance of our Men's Overcoats at a bargain. \ \ Your choice ol any Boys' or Child's Overcoat in / \ our store for just 1-2 price. y \ The public knows we only have ONE PRICE and always maice v / it in plain flguers. So when we say i price it something. V J We also have odds and ends in Suits, Shirts, Hats and Furnish- J \ logs that we will close oat at a Bargain. ( f CALL SOON—THIS SALE ONLY LASTS 15 DAYS. / d Yours lor Clothing, C |DOUTHeTT S GRAHA /V\.j £■!," 11.1 ■' JL!J i—SBLL'J-JJL JLJ4L J 1 - - - ' KECK § £| Fall & Winter Weights f\ jT C*K /]~* E H ave a nattiness about them that J|] ri Is l Ik MB / J M mark the wearer, it won't do to / [\ LC7 (d( B\ wear the last year's output. You \ y jh JTSg~V/ XrtJ *4 won't get the latest things at the 7' \CJ r? stock clothiers either. The up-to j\ Y kn\. Jlf /"1 date tailor only tan supply them, - 11l V% IIIuI (J " you want not only the latest I I till I I things in cut and fit and work | I llf ill I mansbip, the finest in durability, 1! 1 It 111 11 I •vhere else can you get combiua jrf » j n 111 M ™ lions, you get them at K E C K G. F. KECK, Merchant Tailor, 2*■ North Main Street All Work Guaranteed Butler, Pa Now Is The Time To begin to think about what papering you are going to do before the Spring rush begins. Our stock of Wall Paper for 1903 surpasses all previous seasons. Double the amount we ever carried. Quality, tasty designs and colorings can't be beat. Come in and look around even if you don't want to buy. It will be time well spent and a pleasure for you to cee the FINEST and LARGEST display of Wall Coverings ever shown in Butler. No trouble to show goods. > Picture and Mirror Framing a specialty. ,; Patterson Bros' 296 N. Main St. Phone 400. Wick Building. HAMMILL'S CELEBRATED INDI IN ROOT TABLETS Greatest Kidney and Liver Remedy. Positive cure for Sick § A Headache, Sour Stomach. Loss of Appetite, Constipation \T Rheumatism, Blood Puritter. For Sale by all Druggists, or by mail, 25c, 50c, and SI.OO HAMMILL MEDICINE CO, *va If * No. :tO2 MILTENBERGER STREET, PITTSBURG, PENN'A. Subscribe for tbc CITIZEN. THE BUTLER CITIZEN. CATARRH In ali its stages- X C- Ely's Cream soothe* and heals M the diseased membrane. It cares catarrh and drives nvray a co,d m the head qoicldy. {•ream ISalm is placed into the nostr'.U.sj • ai'.s over the membrane and is absorbed. Ite. ef is im mediate and a cure follows. It is not drying—does not produce sneezing. Large Size, 5U cents at Drug gists or by maii; Triai Size, 30 cents. [] Johnston's Beef. Iron and Wine K fi is the Bsst Tonic B j Blood Purifier. Price, 50c pint. Prepared and sold only at k ' v. Johnston s j Crystal K A Pharmacy, | V Manager, ar A J ICS N. Main Bt., Butler, Pa V Both 'Phones W 2 *1 Everything in the l! drug line. v A LJ "\ ( &HIR »i "osfc ijTTir"?, . : " ff Tits IwSmmTL 5 1 Vr ' ot }LOVfi lli OrH 11 "* rriiri "" I Men's Goods- \ J J , RIG SAIsE I J OF j i HATS J j AND J I FURNISHINGS. J J All heavy \ Winter goods J j are included in this sale. 4 S All soft and stiff hats at i off S { All soft and stiff bosom color- a J 1 d shirts at i off > J All heavy lined gloves at... \ ofT J 1 All heavy underwear i ofi 'T # All mufllers at... .. i off W 0 All neckwear at i off W m All Men's and Boys' caps i off # ? Odds and ends at any old price. 5 Jno. S. Wick £ HATTER and J MEN'S FURNISHER. t ! Opposite P. 0. $ HUTLER, I'A. i Pearson B. Nace's Livery Feed and!SaleStable Rear of Wick House. Butler Penn'a. The bout of horse* and first class rigs al ways on timid and for hire. Best accommodations In town for perma* nent boarding and transient trade. Speci al earn guaranteed. Stable Room For 65 Horses. A good c UHS of hor«es, both drivers and draft homes always on hand and for dale under a full guarantee; and horses bough lion proper notification, by PEARSON B. NACE. Telcpnoao No. 219. A Safe Investment- Fine Farm For Sale. $7,000; farm of 50 acres, 1 miles from Mars Station,one mile from brush Creek and Perrysville road: lioase of nine room-, gas. center hull, porches, two cellars; the farm is all fenced with wire, locust posts; a good bank barn 40x00, wagon shed 20x10; a large chicken house 20x:J0, piped with gas; the farm is well watered and watered in two forms; it has a large apple orchard, 4 oil wells, royalty S4O per month; 10 acres which are not leased for oil can be leased at any time with a guarantee of drilling a well; the land is all cleared, good soil; reasons for selling closing np an estate. See M. J. EHHENFELD, 1022 Forbes st.. Pittsburg, Pa. BUTLER, PA.. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY I'-'. 1903. CAPTURED ELECTRICALLY ; ...By Aivah Miiton Kerr | Copi/rioM, IMS, hf 1,000 years. TI:UI*TII' LES ii H (iciiKmiililen, "I never realized the value of time tallies until 1 got hold <>f a class of boys old i notv.li in take an interest il| geography," said a New York public school teaeher. "So far as the study of maps goes, I can get better results from the use of time tables than from .•ill the geographies in the market. Maps tlit have been prepared for the pur p of cultivating the youthful mind in the matter of locality are shunned as bv Pears by all except the studious few. But Jast set a dozen boys around a pile ..f lime tables and tell them to lo cate certain cities, lakes and rivers, and thev will work like beavers and conn* out I'tier perfect every time. For most clilldn II timetables and accompa ny; III.I i are a source of unfailing 1 both In and out of school o;:i. . It i true that this unorthodox 11i> :'i d i::ay give the boys cxagger ;otatoes until all were three or four inches high perhaps and then cultivated them up and hoed and hoed without setting them as clean as ours. Notice the time spent. I could harrow some two acres an hour. Now what (lid they get for these potatoes by the load? Just 25 cents, when we were getting 40 cents year after year. They were at the mercy of the buyers. Peddle the Few Thlni[>. "The only chance to come out wholt for these fanners raising only a few was to peddle them around the city. I preferred to raise on a large scale and make more with less trouble. One or the other you must do if you want to succeed. Miss Robbing is a New Eng land lady. She tells of having peaches to sell last fall. A dealer offered 25 cents a i>eck. she furnishing baskets and delivering them two miles. Instead of this they sold them to neighbors and at the village at retail for from 50 to 00 cents a peck, making an enormous difference In the profit in a small way. Thousands ought to become peddlers of choice products of their own growing, delivering them fresh and in perfect or der to the consumer, thus getting good customers and keeping them and se curing 25 to 100 per cent more for their products. Those not situated for doing this, who sell at wholesale, should raise their products accordingly. If you raise potatoes or apples largely, have only one or two kinds—those that will do best for you, considering soil, climate and markets."—Practical Farmer. nniHlnit Draft Horaea. The draft horse is the horse for the farmer to raise. Only the heaviest and best stallions are suitable. Even then the demand for extreme weights neces sitates the use of large mares that are good milkers. In no other way can colts be produced with sufficient and feeding quality to attain the size and finish A-innuded by the markets. The young animals must be supplied with the best of feed in large amounts from the very first. All this, as Pro fessor Davenport points out in an Illi nois experiment station bulletin. Is much like growing beef, and the draft horses are the ones to produce on the farms. They can be grown nowhere else to advantage, and when it Is re membered that the draft horse is real ly the highest priced standard horse on the market it is easy enough to see what horse the farmer should raise. Other things being equal, the price of a draft horse depends largely upon his weight and ranges from $125 to S3OO, with an increase of about 10 per cent when matched in teams. Dealers In sist that prices were never so low that a span of draft horses would not bring SOOO if they were good enough. A Good Shipping Coop. If you have a bird to ship by express, here is a handy coop and one easily made, says Farm /"\ Journal: For a / t large single fowl f | : SSi the base should Inches and the A HANDY cooi>. height 20 inches. For bottom and ends use throe-quarter inch dressed pine and for sides and top one-half inch pine. Place the slats so close that the bird cannot stick its head out. For winter use make one side solid. The Time to Prune. What is the best time to prune fruit trees? This is a question always be ing asked. The old answer that the best time is when the saw is sharp has a good deal of truth in it, though to be more precise and somewhat more prac tical it may be said that early spring, Just before the sap starts, is the most favorable season. In some places that means now. Trees that need pruning should be pruned at one?. Cat and Shredded. The easiest dollars we can make are the ones we are after. The farmer is the most Important factor on tho farm. Fruit and children are magnet and iron. Start an orchard for the boy. There is at present a tendency to ward the farm on the part of those who live iu the city. "The farmer who thinks Is the farm* er that is making money by his crops today," gays Secretary Wilson. Keep accounts and you will meet with many surprises and learn things worth knowing. "Genius is 2 per cent inspiration and 38 per cent perspiration," according to Thomas A. Edison. SPRING WORK.' ' ' Jn»l K HeV.iluder of Some of th« Many Itema of Farm Hoattue, To put iu the spring crops right one must begin to plan some time ahead Bo as not to leave any of the little tblugs undone that may tend to injure the crops, as a little neglect may make a great difference in the amount grown from year to year. This can be noticed in sowing grass seed as much as any thing else, as a failure to get a stand is often caused by waiting a few days. Timothy and orchard grass should be jown In February and clover in March In this stato (Indiana), as It will then jet u good start and will not be so apt to burn out In the summer. The breaking plow should be started just as soon as the ground Is dry enough and should be kept going every day the weather will permit. Do not neglect the plowing for some other work or later you will have to plow when It Is wet and thus ruin the laud. Through the winter get in your sum mer's supply of wood. Get some oil meal to have on hand to feed any stock that may not bo doing well. Oil meal Is almost as good as condition powders. Do not forget to plant some pump kins this year for the hogs next fall, as they are a good thing to mix with the corn when feeding. Give the cows and horses some also. Do not forget to manure the truck patch. Put on plenty, as here is whero It will do tho most good. This Is the time of year to look over the orchard. Perhaps you need some trees this spring or those already set out may need trimming. Every farmer should have a large or chard so tho family may have plenty of fruit. Trees may bo planted close to tho house on tho ground that the fowls run on, and they will furnish shade as well as fruit. I have 150 peach trees on the north west side of my tenant house. They make a good windbreak. Prairie Farmer. GRASS ON SANDY SOIL. A finnd Mixture of Seed— Early How- Inn on Well Pitted Land. As a seeding for sandy meadow whero tho object is to securo a perma nent stand the following mlrturo of seeds Is recommended by Dr. Roberts iu Country Gentleman for one acre: Hed clover, 0 pounds; alsike clover, 4 pounds; Kentucky bluo grjyyj, pounds; orchard grass, pounds; meadow fescue, 3Va pounds; redtop. 3V>j pounds; timothy, 5 pounds. The heavy seeds, as the clovers, should be sown separately from the light seeds, for If all are sown together the distribution will be uneven. Unless the land was fitted last fall it will need to bo prepared for the seed next spring. Too often the mistake is made of sowing grass seeds on land which has received no preparation, and often failure results. If the land were plowed last fall and fitted, the seed may be sown in the very early spring. It may even be sown before the snow has all disap peared. If the land was not fitted last fall, it should be given some prepara tion In the spring. The best preparation would be to plow and harrow it, making a fine seed bed. If plowing seems not advisa ble, then a disk or a spading harrow may be used. At least before the grass seed is sown there should be some preparation of seed bed. I can never understand why so many seem to think that grass seeding cau be done on soils which have received no special preparation. The mixture of seeds recommended above will almost certainly give good results if sown on properly prepared soils. Hla Hena Lay. Mary had a little hen. 'Twas feminine and queer; It laid like smoke when eggs were cheap And quit when egs» wore dear. Not so the fowls of one of New Jer sey's successful poultrymen, who al lows no trifling on the part of hens when it is a question of egg production at the time that prices of eggs are highest. According to report, his meth od of making hens lay, as described in an address before the Somerset coun ty board of agriculture. Is based upon "taking time by the forelock." In or der to turn those hens into the way in which they should go he locks them up about the middle of August where they can get nothing to eat and feeds them either sunflower seeds or cottonseed meal. Tills makes them shed their feathers so rapidly that in about a month's time their annual rest is over, and they begin to lay eggs and con tinue to do so all winter. Jfewa and N'otes. Of the $952,000,000 worth of farm produce shipped from the United States during the fiscal year 1901 more than half was disposed of In the British market. Our agricultural exports to that destination in the year mentioned had the exceptionally high value of $490,000,000. Cotton was decidedly the largest factor in the trade. A pinch in cucumber seed is reported by American Agriculturist. The Statistical Sugar Trade Journal estimates the production of sugar beets and sugar in the United States at 1,777,- 639 tons of beets and 195,800 tons of sugar. Cane sugar Is estimated at 767,- 000 atons. A Maine hen man reported a profit of $2.67 per bird in American Agricultur ist's "money in poultry" contest. It is said that Canada expects an in flux of Americans this year to the num ber of at least 200,000. Much importance is tow attached to botany as a study In agricultural col leges. American cattle have the reputation of being the healthiest In the world. The Vulgar Voice. What constitutes the vulgar voice? In an article in the London Spectator a writer concludes that this evidence of vulgarity, "springs, like almost all vul garity, however displayed, chiefly from two causes—an undue love of conspicu ousness and an undue fear of the same." The person whose chief aim is to keep himself or herself in of the world rarely makes a remark without desiring that it shall reach the ears of others besides the one directly addressed, and here the peculiarly false sound of the voice is attributed to the absence of singleness of motive. On the other hand, the wavering tone and affected accent of the timid vulgar are ascribed to another form of insincerity —namely, the wish to Imitate others with whom one happens to be when they are of a supposedly higher social standing. The attempt is sure to fall and the result only In the suppression of all evidence of the speaker's own personality—in the voice as well as In the manner. Thus sincerity, paramount In all art, Is basic In breeding as well, which is the art of life. Lrml Pencil Kxperluienta. An English statistician was asked how many words could be written with an English lead pencil, and, being de termined to answer it, he bought a lead pencil and Scott's "Ivauhoe" and pro ceeded to copy the latter word by word, lie wrote 95,608 words and then was obliged to stop, for tho pencil had be come so short that he could not use It. A German statistician who heard of this experiment was dissatisfied with It because all the lead in the pencil was not used on the work, and therefore he bought a pencil and started to copy a long German novel. When the pencil was so short that ho could nA handle it with his fingers, ho attached a holder to it, und it Is said that he wrote with this one pencil 400,000 words. Possi bly, however, his pencil was longer or the lead In It was of a more durable quality. nialiked Efotlim. "What's the matter with you?" asked his wife. "I'm feeling lonely," was the reply. "Don't yon like this town?" "I don't like tills earth." "What's the objection to it?" "People are too egotistical. If there's anything I hate it's egotism. And when 1 see kings going about confidently and doing things wrong, and diplomats try ing all sorts of insincere tricks with complete effrontery, and lawyers seek ing applause for arguing on the wrong side of a case, and everybody display ing utter selfishness without a blush, I am forced to the conviction that I am the only consistently high toned and moral gentleman on this globe. And It makes me feel lonely." A it nn I■■ I ICpitnph. Here is an epitaph which may be read lu an English churchyard at tached to Leamington church: "Here lies the body of Lady O'Looney, great-niece,of Burke, com tnonly called the sublime. She was lilaud. Passionate and Deeply Reli gious; also she {minted In water colours and sent several pictures to the exhibi tion. She was the Intimate friend of Lady Jones. And of such is the king dom of Heaven." He Knew, A truthful man who has Just re turned from abroad says he overheard the following dialogue between two feliow passengers. Said one: "1 wonder who that awfully homely woman Is?" "Oh. that's my wife." replied the oth er. "How do you know? You're not looking at her?" "I don't have to." No. 8. NATIONAL''i'HAXTOirs' GHOSTS THAT HAUNT THE UNITED STATES CAPITOL. A Story of Specters Thai Stalk at Meht When the Halla of tlon Arc Gloomy nod Deaer