The Best Ever Offered. From the Cloth Maker to the \V earer Men's Suits at a Saving ot #5.00 and even more. Lot 3393 Black Dressy Suit (Thibet Cloth) Sale Price $7.50 worth 14.00 Lot 3391 Fancy Worsted (very neat) | Sale Price $7.50 worth 12.00 Lot 3380 Black Clay for dress wea* (all wool worsted) Sale Price $7.00 worth 12.00 , Lot 3435 Fancy Scotch mixed (all wool) ; Sale Price $6.00 worth 10.00; Lot 3363 Scotch Tweed (all wool) Sale Price $5.50 worth 9.00 Lot 3444 Black Cheviot (all wool) Sale Price $5.00 worth $8.50 Bring this advertisment with you and come to this store, and we will convince you of saving at least $5 on every suit. F»HILIF» SCHAUL, SUCCESSOR TO SCHAUL & NAST. 187 Sonth Main Street. Bntler, Pa. ***** XXXXXXIKXMX X»X 1 I Choice Fabrics for Summer W ear £ We are showing an extensive assortment of light weight materials snitable for shirt waist suits and fancy costumes. Fil De Soie g A product of the famous Arnold Mills, extensively advertised in 0 the Magazines. A very handsome fabric in choice foulard silk designs. 28 inches wide at 25c a yard. Soiesette jo Another very dressy Arnold fabric, having the appearance of a high M irrade Jap Silk. Colors, black, white, cream, champagne, light bine, navy, cardinal and brown, 30 inches wide at 25c a yard. R Silk Colienne ft Ail colon, 27 inches wide at 50c a yard. M Silk Organdie ft All shades. 32 inches wide at 50c a yard. £) Silk Muslin 3 Every color, 31 inches, extra valne at 25c a yard. & Extra low prices on Silks, Mohairs, White Goods, Lawns, Batiste, OT Dimity, Percales and Uinghains. V Notion Department u Special offerings in fancy collars, belts, ribbons, gloves, corsets' underwear, hosiery, &c. flr The New Idea Patterns and Magazine for May. & L. Stein & Son, § 108 N- MAIN STREET. BUTLER. PA £ I Kelsey, Crown, Boomer I FURNACES. I Coal and Slack Heaters, Gas and Coal I flanges and Gas Stoves. 1904 Washers, ■ Sowing jVlachines, Needles for all mal ALL WE CLAIM WE GUARANTEE W. IF FACTS WILL CONVINCE YOU. W T YOU WILL HE CONVINCED. You Insure your house against loss by fire. Why not p\ your plants against destruction? You Insure your house before It begins to burn. Why not your garden beforo it j g half destroyed? Tll'-TOF is the best and cheapest r Insurance. Booklet free. V PRICt LIST. IS2 ounce can 73c H gallon 31 &> 1 gallon sl.ur motto Cone and see us whet, in need ot anything in the Drug Line ant we are sjre you will cai! again We carry ;i full line of Drugs Chemical?, Toikt Articles. etc Purvis' Pharmacy S. G. Puitvis, PH. G Both Phones. 213 S Main St. Butler Pa. Pearson B. Nace's Livery, Feed and Sale Stable -tear of Wick House. Butler °enn'a The best of horses and first class rig-. « eavs on hand and for hire. Best accommodations In town (or perma aent boarding and transient trade. Speot il csre guaranteed. Stable Room For 65 Horses A good c ass ot horses, both drivers an< Iraft horses always on hand and for sail i"der a full .guarantee; and horses bougl jou proper notification by PEARSON B. NACE. 'V.tsuKone So. 21 GEO. \V. AMY, FRANK A. EYTH, Res. 21si W. Clay. St. Ites. 137 Ilradv St. Amy BcEyth, Embalmers ROOM FOIt FUNERAL SERVICES. Calls anwered promptly to all parts of tho county. Open all night. -47 South Main St., old Postoftice Room. BUTLER, PA. Hell Phone 2-tj. Peo. Phone (j."ll. Ring 2. HUGH L CONNELLYT" Wholesale Dealer in Fine Whiskey For Medicinal Purposes, Bell Phone 278 People's Phone 578. 316 East Jefferson Street BUTLER. PA In order to prove to you that Dr. A. W. Chase's ■v llm3 £= Ointment is a certain and 1 J | absolute cure for any form of itching, bleeding, or protruding piles, the manufacturers guaran tee a cure. You can use it and if not cured get your money bacU. Mr. Caspef Walton, laborer, Michigan City, Ind., says: "I work hard and lift a great deal. The strain brought on an attack of piles. They itched and they protruded and bled. Nothing helped them until I used Dr. A.*W. Chase's Ointment. That cured them." 50c. a box at all dealers, or Da. A.W. CHASE MEDICINE Co., Buffalo, N.Y. Dr. A. W. Chase's Ointment. See the Sign direct opposite the °* fy Old Postoffice Theodore V gsley, Real Estate and Insurance Agency, 238 S. Main St L" J'| Butler, Pa. \ £3 Tf you have properly • to sell* trade, or ren '• or. want to buy or yWA. rent cali. write or & ff uh' ne roe. 53JE3 list Mailed Upon Application Eyes Examined Free of Charge R. L. KIRKPATRICK, Jeweler and Graduate Ootician Next Door to Court House, Butler, Pa .~n - Ci-.. . •» r. utiTSi. i»-arr«y BAD STOMACH MAKES BAD BLOOD. ! You can't make swwt butter in a foul churn. Every farmer's wife knov\-> t hi-, j Your stomach churn- nnlooU poisoning. You will have foul : breath, coated tongue, bad taste, poor appetite and a whole train of disagree able symptoms. Dr. I'ierce's Golden Medical Discovery, which is not a bever igo composed of whisky or alcohol, being entirely free from intoxicants. Is a great regulator and invigorator of the Stom ach, Liver and Bowels. "About a year aif'> I was ill with blood poi -onine." writes Miss Eveline Louis, of *9 Walter Street. Buffalo. N. Y. "I had what to be a small cold soro on rr.y Up. Ii ijtKime very angry In appearance and began to spread until It nearly covered my face. I was a frightful sight and could not go outr side the house because of ihy appearance, I used a blood medicine which did not give me any relief. Then I began to taku your Golden Medical Discovery.' 1 was greatly lienotiied with the first bottle and after tak ing the second bottle was Completely cured. The erysipelatous eruptloA dlsapi>eared and ray blood was cleansed. My complexion is elcar and frosh and I have felt better this year than I did for mi in# timo before Dr. I'ierce's Oolden Medical Discovery is cer tainly a most remarkable medicine." Don't accept a substitute for h medicine which performs such cures and which has a uniformly successful record of nearly forty years to its credit. It's an Insult to vour intelligence for a dealer to try by over-persuasion to palm off upon you in Its stead some inferior article with no record to back it up. You know what you want; it Is his business to meet that want. CRn finn GIVEN AWAY. In copies of S».% •. gfc"! gfc',ooo worth of these lnvalua- B »sfs=iX^] ble books. This year we shall I tl - Pi give away 350.000 wortii of a i them. Will you share In this It% '; S! A benefit? If so. send only 21 J f «»»*" one-cent stamps to cover cost | j of mailing only for book In L stiff paper covers, or 31 stamps for cloth-bound. Address I»r. R. Y. Pierce. Buffalo. N. Y. Constipation although a little ill. be gets big ones if neglected. Dr. Pierce's Pellets cures constipation. HUMPHREYS' Specifics enre by acting directly on the sick parts without disturbing tho rest of the system. No. 1 for Fevers. No. 2 " Worms. No. 3 " Teething. No. 4 " Diarrhea. No. 7 " Coughs. No. 8 " Neuralgia. No. 9 " Headaches. No. 10 " Dyspepsia. No. 11 " Suppressed Periods. No. 12 " Whites. No. 13 " Croup. No. 1-1 " The Skin. No. 15 " Rheumatism. No. 16 " Malaria, No. 19 " Catarrh. No. 20 " Whooping Cough. No. 27 " The Kidneys. No. 30 " The Bladder. No. 77 " La Grippe. In small bottles of pellets that fit tho vest pocket. At Druggists or mailed, 25c. each. ipff Medical Guide mailed free. Humphreys' Med. Co., Cor. William & John Streets, S»w York. "* Nasal Catarrh quickly yields .o treat ment by Ely's Cream Balm, which is agree, ably aromatic. It is received through tho nostrils, cleanses and heals the whole sur face over which it diffuses itself. Druggists sell the 50c. size; Trial size by mail, 10 cents. Test it and you are sure to continue the treatment. Announcement. To accommodate those who are partial to the use of atomizers in applying liquids into the nasal passages for attarrhnl trou ble*, the proprietors prepare Cream Isalm in liquid form, which will be known as Ely's Liquid Cream Balm. Fric& including the spraying tube is 75 cents. Druggists or by mail. The liquid form embodies the med icinal properties of tho solid preparation. PAROID READY OOFING. |>/\KOJD. The Ruofirg with NO IAP. Won't dry out: Won't £r KPRESRNTS the results <> years of Experience and Ex perimenting. /"\NLY requires painting every frwyears. -Net when first laid. T S Cheaper than Gravel, Slate or Shingles. I \ EM AND for PAROID is world wide. MADE IN 1, 2 AND 3 PLY Other Fat vd, Samples and Prices are yonrs if yon will ask uu. L C. WICK, BUTLER, PA. Special Offer To those purchasing photos of groups or views, Bxlo, at 50c each, to the amount of $lO I will present free a fine 20x40, exact reproduction that will stand washing and not fade away. No bum work, but a fine permanent Bromide en largement, fully guaranteed. This offer is good till October Ist, 1904. FISHER, The Outdoor Artist, The Butler Dye Works SPRING FEVER Good whiskey is an excellent tonic. Taken either ' 'straight" or together with a little quinine or iron, it will overcome "that tired feeling" which is on ns all about this time. We guarantee any of the following brands fit for your side board aud all right for yonr stomach. ALWAYS iN STOCK. FINCH, I.ARUE. OVERIIOLT GL'tRENHEIfIFK. ST. VKIiJON THOMPSON. GIBMtX. KILLING KB. BUIDUKPORT and otTor them to you 6 year old at $1 per full quart, 6 quarts $5 00 GRANDFATHER'S CHOICE. whiskey guaranteed 3 years old. $2 00 per f?al loa. We pny express charges on all mail orders of $0 Ol or over. Goods shipped promptly. ROBT. LEWIN & CO. WHOLESALE DEALERS IH WINES AND LIQUORS, No. 14 Smithfield St„ PITTSBURG, PA. •Phonea: Bell 2179 p. h A. I*sß. Aftermath. You didn't'get all you need ed. We didn't '"sell all our pretty things. To help us both we are offer- I ing our fancy goods at half price. ! Pictures, games, dolls and | toys at 1-3 off. China at 20 per cent, offj j Call now and get the bar gains. This is our clearance sale and your opportunity at Douglass' 241 8. Main St. | French Folia h. 'fher« wo disadvantages attached to ! (wealth trhen one was not born to It or Is slow In getting nsed to It. One that MY. Qnidsby found, says London An swers, was that tho chef always sent tip the menu written In his own lan guage, French, to which the master of the household was a stranger. "I should llko to know what I'm eat ing for once, M. Alphonse," said Mr. Qnidsby to his chef on one occasion. '%et us hare tho menn in English to flay." "Oul, monsieur," was the reply. "It ees ver' difficile, hut I reel do It so if yop veel gif me 20 dlctionnaire." A small but select party came to din ner that evening and were met with tho following bill of fare: Soup at the tail of the calf. Salmon In curl papers. Chest of mutton to tho little p<*as. Potatoes Jumped. Ducks savage at sharp saute. Charlotte at the apples. Turkey at th« devil. Fruits variegated. Quldsby and Mr?. Qnidsby agreed afterward that they bad never presid ed over a more hilarious dinner party. Just Fop Toothache. The blade of a digging hoe was sup ported horizontally on two bricks and a fire kindled on the ground beneath it. On the middle of the hoe was put a small heap of the seeds of a red fruited variety of eggplant, and over this was inverted the half of a cocoanut shell having a hole in the top. A piece of bamboo was stuck 011 to the shell over tho hole by a lump of clay. As vapor issued from the bamboo tube the pa tient inhaled this by placing Ills lips to tho top. Then he spat into a backet of water, and then again inhaled the vapor. After a quarter hour's treat ment the patient and a friend said they could see the "toothache worm" in the water. And here's a modern Chinese recipe for "painless extraction:" Cook well the bones of a rat, pul verize and apply to tooth. If it is fore ordained that the tooth Is to come out this will bring it; if not. It will become more firmly fixed than ever.—Sumatra Straits Budget. Ilia Enviable Estate. "When I come into my landed estate I'll bet nobody will put me out," said a philosopher after listening to a tale of woe by a friend who had recently lost his place in the country through the foreclosure of a mortgage. "Why, I didn't know you owned any real estate." "I don't now, but I am very positive of having some later on. It will be a very snug retreat, too—absolutely pri vate, although in a populous neighbor hood. There will be several other ad vantages too. It will be free from taxes, and I'll be exempt from jury duty." "Isn't that fine' I congratulate you. Wish I could Inherit something like that. Where is your place?" "The grave." The other man said nothing further about tlie injustice of foreclosing mort gages.—Xew York Herald. The Saw of the Monunito. The bill of the mosquito is a com plex institution. It has a blunt fork at the head and is apparently grooved. Working through the groove and pro jecting from the angle of the fork is a lance of perfect form sharpened with a tine bevel. Beside it the most per fect lance looks like a hand saw. On either side of the lance two saws are arranged, with the points fine aud sharp and the teeth well defined and keen. The backs of these saws play against the lance. When the mosquito alights, with its peculiar hum, it thrusts its keen lance and then enlarges the aperture with the two saws, which play beside the lance until the forked bill with its capillary arrangement for pumping the blood can be inserted. The sawing process is what grates upon the nerves of the victim and causes him to strike wildly at the sawyer. Economy of Heat and Health. The average humidity in artificially heated houses is about 30 degrees; the average temperature, 70 to 74 degrees. It has been found by conclusive tests that a room with a humidity of 00 degrees and a temperature of 05 de grees seems warmer and more com fortable than a room of 72 degrees of heat and humidity of 30 degrees. Dr. Henry M. Smith says that if a room at 08 degrees is not warm enough for auy healthy person it is because the humid ity is too iow, and water Should be evaporated to bring the moisture up to the right degree. In other words, wa ter instead of coal should be used to make rooms comfortable when the temperature has reached OS degrees. As wafer is cheaper than coal, the rule should become a popular one.—-Chicago Tribiiijn- Needed \o Introduction. "It pays sometimes to know a little of the family history of your clients," said a business woman the other day. "It would have saved me from making a blunder if I had known the relations that formerly existed between two men who met In my office. Their busi ness was practically of the same na ture, and as I was obliged to leave them together for a few minutes while I attended to some telephone calls I thought it would be more agreeable if I introduced them. They responded rather stiffly, but I put that down to tempeiament and went into my inner office. When I returned a quarter of an hour later the younger man dis patched his business as quickly as pos sible and got out. The other said: 44 'I was not aware that you were ac quainted with my ex-brother-in-law.' •' •Brother-in-law?' I asked stupidly. " 'Yes. My sister got a divorce from him last summer.' "—Brooklyn liagle. Schools In France. The French system of education is Intensely national. Its plan is exactly the opposite from our own school sys tem. With us tho local community controls primary schools. Iu France tho local community has no voice in the matter. Th® French system is the most centralized, the most strictly reg ulated, the most autocratic and the furthest removed from democratic ideas of any school system In existence. The exact uniformity of the schools is almost unbelievable. The minister of instruction, sitting iu his office iu Paris, can tell at auy moment just what fable of La Fontaine each child of a certain age throughout the whole of France is reciting. Teachers are not allowed any latitude at all. The result is to leave both teachers and scholars al most completely lacking in mental originality—F. A. Yanderllp iu Scrib nor'tk, Sportluv Repartee. It is doubtful, said a biographer, if any repartee ever surpassed in deli cacy the reply made by an East Indian servant of the late Lord lUifferin when he was viceroy of India. "Well, what sort of sport has Lord had?" said the viceroy one day to his shikaree, or sporting servant, who bad attended a young English lord on a shootlug excursion. "Oh," replied the scrupulously polite Hindoo, "the young sahib shot divine ly, but Providence was very merciful to tho bl*ls!" | This story calls to mind one told by the writer of some reminiscences of Sydney Smith. On one occasion the celebrated physician, Sir Henry Hol land, told the witty divine that be had failed to kill either one of a brace of pheasants that had risen within easy range near Smith's house. "Why did you not prescribe for \ came tho quick reply. i COMING I FITZSIMMONS AUCTION CO. I Im lit! It Alttl li 111 l BUTLER, PA. TOESDAy, JUNG 6th 20th Century Affair: Novel, Rlcb and Rare County Reunion. High Noon Barbecue. Everybody will be There. Plenty to Eat. Band Concerts Extraordinary. All Day by the 16th Regiment Band. COL. W. W. BISHOP, Funniest, Finest Auctioneer Traveling will Entertain the Multitudes with Fascinating Stories, Gleaned from Battle Field and Peaceful Mountains. High Diving Dewey. American's Most Intellectual Canine; Highest Diving Dog in the World, will His Make Famous Leap For Life During Hour of Sale. FREE Carriages to and from Grounds Prize Contests Open To Residents of Butler Co. Old Settlers Foot Race. Slow Horse or Mule Race. Baby Beauty Contest. Fiddlers Fun. 3 RRIIES TO EACH CONTEST OF sls, $7.50 AND $2.50 EACH Public Wedding Proposition. Open to any Respectable White Couple Getting Married on Grounds During Hour of Sale. SSO Spot Cash and Carriages for Bridal Party. Free Lot Drawing One Lot in Cottage Hill Will be Given Away Free of all Cost. EVERYBODY CAN DRAW. Butler's Gala Day THE FINEST OF PROPERTY. EASIEST OF TERMS. ALL GO TO THE HIGHEST BIDDERS. TERMS OF SALE: 1-4 Cash, Balance and 12 months Tell Your Friends About it. You Cannot Afford to Miss It. The County is coming. The City is Going. POSITIVE SALE—HONESTLY ADVERTISED. SEE FOR PARTICULARS SNAIL BILLS OR Wm. Fitzsimmons, |Vlgr. HOTEL BUTLER. PA. CENTRAL 1 '