ek Smarts The June White SaJe. A buying and saving time in white wearables and fabrics, began Monday, June 7th. We make this announcement in response to many inquiries we are having. This June White Sale is an event ot great im portance to many in Oil City and vicinage and hundreds were looking forward to it. This is the store that does doing: things is another. We do should know of our "doings." this June Sale our friends will talk even more enthusiastically. Special Prices on Porch Shades Very pronounced reduction to clean up. The highest grade Porch Shades to be had are those known as Vudor and Tusculum. In fact they are the only satisfactory shade made. Awnings and canvas curtains shut out the sun, it is true, but as they likewise prevent the circulation of air, the porch becomes an oven. Bamboo screens afford practically no protection. The sun beats through them and people outside can see right through. These shades we are now advertising at such low prices are very different, they keep out the sun's rays, but at the same time permit the cool air to circulate through, and while you can look out, no one can see in. They should be on your porch. Size 4x8 reduced from $2 to $1.39. Size 6x8 reduced lrom 3.75 to $2.69. Size 8x8 reduced from $5 to $2.90. Size 8x8 reduced from 6.50 to $4.90. HaJf Price Is the magnet that is attracting so many customers to our Millinery Department. At any time, an offer at half price is tempting. It is doubly tempting at this time because of the extent, the variety, the beauty, and the seasonableness of the collection that we have selected for this radical reduction " And in addition to the Trimmed Hats, there are Many Untrimmed Chip Hats at half price. A number of Children's Models at halt price. Hundreds of fine Artificial Flowers at half price. The scope of our sale has five hundred bunches of fine Artificial Flowers at exactly half price. The Smart & OIL CITY, PA. Write for "Booklet A" On Four Per Cent. Savings Accounts and Banking by Mail. Assets $2,687,000.00 Oil City Trust Company, Oil City, Pa. FOREST COUNTY NATIONAL BANK, TIONESTA, PENNSYLVANIA. CAPITAL STOCK, SURPLUS, Time Deposits Solicited. Will A. Watne Cook, President. A. Wayne Cook, N. P. Wheeler, A. B. Collections remitted for on day of pnyment at low rates. We promise our custom ers all the benefits consistent with conservative banking. Interest pild on time deposits. Tour patronage respectfully . . .............. m m tttttttttttttttttttttttttt I PpnnQvlvania Railroad .m. i a 1 1 m. m ji OLEAN Sunday, June 13, 1909 SPECIAL TRAIN I X Train Leaves, TitUHville 7.40 a.m. KoiiHeville H.05 " T Oil City 8.2S " I Tlnnesta H.02 " X Hickory 9.13 " Tidioute 9.2M " Olean Ar. 12.10 Noon Bradford Ar. 12.10 ' RKTURN1NO, Special Train will p. m Warren 10.00 p. tn. in consideration 01 tun reduced tare win i accepted ior passage uuiu ana ki;i unAiao oniy on srauiAL TRAIN on day of Excursion as advertised above. Baggage will not be checked. Children between Five and Twelve years of Age, Half Fares J. B. WOOD, OKO. W. BOYD, Passenger Trattic Manager General Pansenger Agent $ilkdet& & things, both. Talk is one thing We talk because you We will talk enthusiastically of been extended to include about Silberberq Co. 50.000. 190,000. pay Four Per Cent, per Annum Ebllt. Cashier. Wm.Shearb.icgh, Vice President DIRECTORS G. W. Robinson, Win. Smearbangh, T. F. Rltchey. J. T. Dale, A. B. Kellv. solicited. TT I T f 1 a jLwmm -w w AND Rate to Warren Rate to Olean or and return, Bradford and return fl.00 Sl.fin 1.00 1..W 1.00 l.f0 1.00 1.60 1.00 1.50 .75 1.25 leave Olean 8.00 p. m., Bradford 8.00 at wnkin in kkis are so 111, lney REBUKE GIVEN TO PULL-BACKS Senator Penrose Takes Occa sion to Give La Follette An other Verbal Cassation TIME FOR HARANGUES TO CEASE Editorial From Bellefonte Gazette on Efforts of Lilliputian Statesmen Well Expresses the Situation and Views of the People at Large. For the second time during tha present session of Congress, Senator Doles Penrose, of Pennsylvania, was practically forced to administer a stinging rebuke to Senntor La Fol lette, of Wisconsin. La Follette and a few other nenr-Kepubllciin members of the Senate have been forcing the policy ot delay and obstruction far beyond the line of endurance. Re cently Senntor l.a Follette spent most of a day in a political harangue in which he endeavored to establish that he was not a Republican. No one who knows him had charged him with having that particular virtue. In or der to push along the proposed tariff bill to a satisfactory conclusion the Senate was forced to hold night ses sions. After Senator l.a Follette bad con sumed much of the day in a rambling talk without point or purpose, bis friends attempted to prevent a night session on the ground that the Wis consin man was sick and was not Hble to continue his speech. This flimsy pretext provided Senator Pen rose, who launched a terrific attack upon Senator La Follette. No speech delivered upon the Hour of the Sennto since the tariff session began has caused a greater sensation. Senator Penrose charged the Wisconsin Sen ntor with wilfully deceiving the Sen ate. In tones of Indignation that brought all the members of the body flocking from the cloak rooms, the Pennsyl vania Senator alleged that La Fol-U-tte's sole purpose was to delny con sideration of the tariff bill by feign ing illness and absenting himself from the session. "While 1 have no desire to make tiny reference to the Senator from Wisconsin in his absence," Penrose declared, "I am prepared to show the Senate at any time that part of bis professional tactics is to make a pre tense of illness while be is openly abroad upon the streets consulting with the editors of yellow Journals and agents of uplift magazines. "I'pon so many occasions has this practice been maintained as to make any man in his ordinary senses abso lutely refuse to believe any statement regnrding the Senator from Wiscon sin." On the former occasion when Sen ator Penrose had occasion to call the Wisconsin Senator to account, he char acterized the tactics of La Follette as those of a mountebank vender from the tail-end of a cart. The pull-backs in the Senate, chief among whom are Senators La Follette and Heveridge, of Indiana, have be come positively provoking. They have been playing to the galleries lit the expense of every legitimate In terest in the nation, and the rebuke administered to them by Senator Pen rose has started a wave of applause which seems to be rapidly spreading to the extreme limits of the continent. The drafting of a tariff measure for this nation is a ponderous work. It requires serious and intelligent work. It has enlisted the best thought and most earnest consideration of tho trained statesmen of the whole coun try, and when the barnstormers of which La Follette Is a type attempt to sprag the wheels with harangues intended wholly for home consump tion, a vigorous, earnest rebuke Buch os that administered by Senator Pen rose Is timely and particularly pleas ing. Regarding the senatorial pull backs and grumblers the Keystone (iazette, of Bellefonte, Pa., last week printed a decidedly Interesting edi torial which is appended. It is well worth the reading: "There seems to be a studied effort on the part of some Lilliputian states men who assume to train as Repub licans to frustrate and delay the ac tion of Congress In legislating on the tariff question for purely selfish polit ical purposes. The La Follettes, Cum mlnses and Dolllvers, who are rather notorious for the wind power they possess, and who have exceedingly great personal admiration for them selves and exalted Ideas of their own abilities as statesmen, are seeking persistently to cripple the Republican party and Its leaders regardless of what it may cost the business Inter ests of the country, if they could thereby leap into the saddle and pro claim themselves as the leaders of tha Republican party of the Nation. "We have a few would-be leadew and statesmen In Pennsylvania who are Influenced by the same motives, and who desire to accomplish the same purpose. We clip the following from the Washington Observer, owned end edited by ex-Congressman Ache son: " 'The progressive Republicans In the Senate are sounding notes of warning to the leaders of the party In the de bate on the tariff question. What crimes are committed In the name of protection against the American peo pie In favor of the trusts and the gi gantic combinations of capital with watered stock on which watered capi tal they expect the people to pay the dividends and large salaries! -rn9 progressive Senators from Iowa, Kan sas, Minnesota, Indiana and other states are Just as much Republicans as Aldrich, Penrose, Guggenheim and the other coterie of Senators who rep resent the trusts Instead of the people. The prediction of the best leaders of the Republican party that unless the people are given what they were prom ised, a Democratic Congress will be elected revise the tariff from a Democratic angle rather than from a Republican point of lev, would seem to be Jut-titied by the present attitude of the Republican busses.' "The above paragraph reiterates the old, trite and worn-out statement about the tariff being the father of the trusts. It Is the offspring of either Ignorance or of a mere malicious and telllsh purpose. Acheson is a consti tutional kicker and a grumbler by na ture; and the breadth of his states manship Is limited and circumscribed wholly by his political animosities and hatred, and by personal political am bitions. "After bis overwhelming defeat by the people of his own county a year ago, and emphatic turn-down when he ngaln aspired to be a candidate for Congress, we would think that good sense nnd good Judgment would sug gest to him that Inconsplcuoslty for a time at least would best become his station In life. "Hut it seems evident that there Is a concert of effort amongst the small calibre statesmen whose Idea of tariff legislation is that the question is of a wholly sporadic or local nature, and who use the method of delay and ob struction in the legislation purely for tho purpose of embarrassing the lead ership of the Republican party. They have an ambition to become its lead ers and control It simply for self-aggrandizement, nnd to gratify their per sonal political ambitions. "They renllze that this they cannot attain to by virtue of their ability or merit as public men and statesmen, but fondly hope if they can bring about a depression of business, cause the hum of Industry to cease, increase the numbers of idle wage-earners, and then lay the cause thereof upon tin recognized leaders of the Republican party and cast the odium upon them, then It will nfford a favorable oppor tunity for these Lilliputian statesmen to open their windbags and howl cal amity and offer the country some patent panacea of their own concoc tion with which to cure all the polit ical ills of the body politic. "Cummins would, say, 'Elect me President;' Dolllver would say, 'Elect me President;' La Follette would say, 'Elect me President;' Acheson would say. 'Elect me United Slates Senator,' and then with these sclf-lauditory statesmen, all thus enthroned, every thing In the country would be happy nnd prosperous. "We say. get to work on the tariff as a broad, national question; that ef fects the country nnd Its prosperity as a w hole, and not fiddle with It as mere local or State issue." Whit a Political Speaker Enduret. The political stump speaker has many n musing nnd many unplensnnt expe 'lences. A party of us went down Into the heart of the east side of New York one night with a politician some what hnndlenped by his wealth nnd social position, who nevertheless elect ed to go to the doubtful district per sonally. At a street corner n bunting draped curt awaited him, nnd, climbing to the tailboard of this, he liegnn tell ing the ragged audience In well round ed periods how they should vote nnd why. A few Jeers begnn to crop from the tolerance of the crowd. The Jeers gained volume. He wns told to "Aw, shet up.'" "Close your bead:" "Say, give us a drink; your talk makes us t'lrsty." Somewhat disconcerted, but still determined to finish his speech, he wns continuing when something hurtled past bis head nnd splashed gently on the floor of the cart. An other something and another followed, nnd every one was dodging decadent tomatoes until. It liecomlng Impossible to bear a shout nlwve the Jeers nnd laughter of the voters, the horses were started forwnrd out of the soft, red bombardment nnd the district left to Its own political slns.-John R. Win- chell In Metropolitan Mngnzlne. Extract of Knowledge. An nrtlcle on "Examination Hnmor" In a periodical railed Normal Echoes contains some good "howlers." They nre none the less Interesting for com ing from students In training for teach ers, A criticism of William ISlnke that "as n child be wns precocious In po etry, but In later years It developed Into dogmatism," Is n lesson In the nrt of being Inarticulate, while the remnrk that "the works of the time were most ly satyrs" Is quaint, though obvious. Of course there Is boggling over proper names. There Is nothing. Indeed, so good as the description of Cromwell ns "a man with ronrse features and hnvlng n lnrce red nose, with deep re ligious convictions beneath," or the ense of the "lapsed man" who, having by way of exception nttended church, admitted to the rector's wife thnt he had benefited, for be had lenrned that Sodom nnd Oomorrnh were two cities, whereas be had nlwnys thought they were man nnd wife. Manchester Guardian. Fat and Disease. If the Medical Record Is right, man Is pursuing in the mutter of bodily weight what Is bad for him, a common trick, and woman pines for a physical Ideal that would mean loug life If achieved, something rare Indeed for women to do. Most men struggle to bo fat. Most women diet to be lean. Dr. ItrandrctU Syuionds draws from study of life Insurance weights thnt people past the nge of thirty live long er If below normal weight than they do If nt or above standard. Heart dis ease Is as rare among the underfnt as It Is common with the heavy folk, and this Is true also of Pright's dlsense, apoplexy, paralysis, cerebral conges tions nnd cirrhosis of the liver. Only In pneumonia nnd tuberculosis do the underweights carry a greater risk. In all the cases which be examined Dr. Synionds found not a single fat man who reached the nge of eighty years, while forty-four short weights passed this mark. A Valuable Milestone. A well known novelist wns touring through Lancashire In order to learn something of the lives of the Inhabit ants when he enrae upon an old man breaking stones on tho rondsldc nnd, thinking he might gain some knowl edge from him, nddressed him thus: "How far Is It to Fleetwood, my mnn?" "You'll see a milestone a bit farther on," was the gruff reply. "What's the use, If I can't read?" said the novelist, enger to draw the old man Into a conversation. "Then It'll just suit you, for there's nowt on It," said the old fellow. Lon don Graphic. Itemnrknblo Cave Discovers. Two gold prospectors recently dis covered In the Santa Susanna Moun tains, about fifty miles from Los Angeles, Cal., tho largest and most remarkable cave In Western Am erica. Whllo looking for Indication! of gold they found mi opening which they entered. The opening led to great cavern, consisting of many pas. snges, some of ihem wldo, but most ol them narrow and lofty. Tha pas sages lead Into great hnlls, some an acre in extent, studded with stalag mites and stalactites In some cases so thickly that It Is difficult to get through. The walls of one of these rails are covered wllh rude drawings, some almost obliterated, but others still clenr. The drawings represent Incidents of tho chae, showing In dians on foot pursuing bear, deer and other animals. Aiivll as A Tombstone. On the death of a blacksmith nnm. ed Moehle of Hellevllle, III., In the United States, a tombstone wns er ected to his memory In the very ap propriate form of a model anvil. Moehle was a villago blacksmith, and for over thirty years he had tolled at the same anvil, which had been given him by the old blacksmith to whom he wns apprenticed at Pilot Knob. He became greatly attached to the old anvil, and many times ex. pressed a wish that he should not b fepnrated from It In death, but that It should be his monument. In ac cordance with his wish f.ie old anvil was coated with enamel, topped with a large horseshoe, and set In a base of solid granite. The old tombstone Is one of the sights of tho cemetery. London Tlt-Blls. Pigs' Tails ns Itaroineters. The secret of "Uncle Billy" War lug's ability to forecast the weather has leaked out. Recently he has been able with an exactitude not equalled by the best barometers to tell his neighbors twenty-four nnd sometimes thirty-six hours ahead what weather to expect. His pre dictions have been of great benefit to farmers. Now It is lenrned that he gets his tips from his two pigs. In dry weather the tails of the pigs have one curl, In wet weather two curls, and Just before a rain their tails hang limp. Power of Lights. A comparison has recently been made of the power of the lights In French lighthouses at various periods 1 1 the last 35 years. In 1ST4, when only oil lights were used, the high est power was equal to 54,000 cand les. In 1SS2, when the electric light wns Introduced, the power rose to a maximum of 820,000 candles. Since then frequent Improvements have been made In the electric lights until at present the most powerful lighthouses project an illumination nearly equal to 3,000,000 candles. Lincoln on Law Observance. There Is even now something of til omen among us; I mean the dis regard of law. There, then, is on point at which danger may be ex pected. The question Beems: How shall we fortify against It? The an swer Is simple. Let every American, every lover of liberty, every well wisher to hlc posterity, swear by the blood of the Revolution never to vio late In the least particular the law of hid country and never to toleruio their violalou by others. Abraham Lincoln. Indepcndeiirc Day Elsewhere, Independence Day In Brazil Is September 7; that of Mexico Is Sept ember 16; that of Uruguay I. May 25; that of Chill Is September 18; that of Columbia Is July 20; thnt ol Haiti is January 1, and that of Cuba Is February 24 the annlve.i-ary of the beginning of the final etruggU for Independence. Novel Means of Singing Mass. A novel method of saying mass has been adopted by the cure of La Martre, In the Department of the Var, France, owing to the fact that he has neither precentor nor chorist ers In his church. He has fitted up a phonograph In the chancel, which not only makes the customary re sponses, but also Blngs the canticles. Denth From Bullet .Swallowing. It was Btated at an Inquest on a pehsant In a Servian village that the Bian died from swallowing too many bullets, which he was accustomed to take, In common with all the peas ants In that district, whenever ha felt 111. Maid Growing Rich. The head maid of the Queeu flow, ager of Italy makes a thousand pounds a year from the sale of her mistress' cast-off clothes, which are given to her as a perquisite. The purchasers are, for the most part, American tourists. Roaches for Currants In Cuke. A Chinese shopkeeper In London charged with celling a cake contain ing cockroaches Instead of currants and centipedes Instead of cnndled peel explained that the delicacy was sold In mistake; It was really a med icine compounded for his own use. $000 for a Union Jack. The union lack which flew from Nelson's flagship, the Victory, at the battle of Trafalgar and which cov ered his remains on the Journey home to England, was sold recently by auction In London for $600. How Rows Begin. "Ilubby, I dreamed last night thnt fou didn't love me." "How foolish you are!" "Foolish, am I? As if I could help what I dream about!" And the fracas was on. Louisville Courier-Journal. What Kept Him. "Why couldn't you have come home It n reasonable hour?" remarked an Ingry wife to her spouse. "Could, m'dear, Jes easy as not, but I hlc was wnltln' for you t' go t' shleep!" replied the delinquent. A June Clearance qf Finest J Lingerie. Ninety five pieces of i handsome lingerie as evor found display space on the counter of a Dry Goods Store. Its particular claim for your consideration is the extremely high character of it and those women enough interested to investigate its merits, will please exam ine carefully the workmanship and note particularly the fine quality of Laces, Enibtoideries and Nainsook used. Product of one of America's finest underwear makers which we are closing. lViccb reduced nearly a half on each item. SaJe Petticoats 50c Eocch. i Black and White Striped Percale Skirt, goad width. Two styles one made with a 14-inch flounce iluished with a five inch rullle the other with a very foil eight inch rullle. We have never seen as nice skirt sold under 75o. Manufacturer delivered just halt what we bought of them about two hundred so as the quantity la limited it will be necessary to get here early. No telephone orders. WILLIAM B. JAMES. Buggies and Surreys. Road Wagons, Spring Wagons. All styles. Wheels "guaranteed" second growth hickory. I can sell you a better buggy for the money than others, because I buy in car lots. 28 vehicles now in stock. Take your choice. REE MY I Combined Potato Dinger and Showel Plow. It is I guaranteed to be O. K. IIAItXENN I Oak tan. See them. They will surprise you. I Driving harness, $11 50. WAflOXS I Kraiuer. See the Dew tubular axle. Light run- uiog and strong. FLOWN I The New Burch, Cambridge, Oliver. The Burch I is ray leader. Try one. HAIIIIOWR I Wood and steel frame Spring Tooth, Lever Spike I Tooth. Price way down. CULTIVATORS I The kiud that do not get looso in the joiots and I wabble. manure kireaierh uuaiy 1)111 MX Succtes. No bettor made. Empire, Outario and Buckeye. IIARVEKTIXU I The "celebrated" Johnston line of Mowers, Bind- MACHINE en, Itaapers, FERTILIZER GUARANTEE ALWAYS J. G. Bromley, PENNSYLVANIA CTATE NORMAL SCHOOL MOur 36th year opens September 14th, 1909. Send for mir now ritalnmip konntif nllv !1liif.f full mm... vau.Q in detail. Proper training for life 1300 feet above tha sea. Perfect influence. Dr. JAMES E. AMENT, Providence Provides for the provident It is true that the world owes every man a living but we must do our own collecting. And saving, too, for it is not what comes into a man's hands, but what he saves from slipping through, that enriches him. Provide for old age by saving in youth. Start an account with us to-day. Your money deposited here earns Annual Interest Capital & Surplus, $680,000.00 3:Uc Franklin Srusfr (fompamj FRAN K Another ) Out. Tlint there Is n stnrtllnK difference, between the temper of tho, rising Ren em t Ion nnd thnt of the youth whose young Ideas shot up nccordliiK to the tenchlng of Mrs. Iliiniuili More nnd Sanford nnd Merton hns recently been proved by a little 7-yenr-old Kill who wns laboriously spelling her way through n rending lesson. "Always speak the truth," she sold, "and ohey your pnrents. "He gentle mid quiet. Xev-er sliini the door nnd shout nnd scrmiui a bout the house. "At the tii-ble cnt slowly, not In n Sieed-'y nuiii-ner like n pig." Suddenly the lillle girl shut the book with n portentous bung and nunoiiiicefl with firmness nnd decision: "I'm not polnj; to let tiny old Third Render boss me like thnt." liochester Herald. OIL CITY, PA. Tedders, Ilskes, Disk Harrows, Ac. Eight per cent. Potash goods, with 12 per cent. Phosphoric Acid, $22 50 per ton. I make good all defects in all goods sold by me. Come in on Saturdays. Am in on that day. Or 'phone me. County and Farmer's 'Phones. Tionesta, Pa. MIIJ ...UUL. M.V. . U.. in its broadeat sen.. Ideal location, modern equipment. Scholarly, Christian Principal, Indiana, Pa. L I N. P A.i Vrlm-lllo'i l:evenga It v.-ns In the days of old wli?n Unlj;Tits were bold and dressed 'n K'eanilui; nrmnr. "CeoiKe, dear," said I'rlsellln, over hr daily task, "wilt thou not help nio with my skeins?" "Hy the tower of London no!" roared (ieorse. as he sharpened hla la nee. "You haven't a spinning wheel for n husband." Two hours later (ieorjie returned from the fray with his rriuor battered mill torn. "llearest rriscllln," lie said, softly, "wilt thou not put n few patches on n.y dross suit:" "No, ( Icoine," replied 1'rlscilla, sweetly. "You haven't a blacksmith for a wife." And the bold knlfjlit was so humili ated he went over to Y'e Frozen Henri tavern 'itnl stood the. tavernkcepcr ofT for u tankmd.