TRAIN HITS HIS AUTO S. & II, Green Trading Stamps with all cash purchases. Over 100 Trimmed Hats at Half Price. A genuine clearance of all Trimmed Millinery, Everything included except very late models. One glance at the beautiful creations now on display in our window will tell you lar more emphatically than words just how unusual an opportunity this is. The lot contains many of the most desirable hats in our store hats whose superior at any price is hard to find, both lor beauty of design and care in exe cution. It includes hats in all shapes and styles, and from the almost limitless choice you are sure to find one exactly suited to your taste and means. As the season is little more than half over, we are confident that this is a bargain which cannot fail to appeal strongly to you, Trimmings and All Overs One Half Price. The popularity of our offerings in Dress Trimmings and All Overs has been one of the leatures of our Half Price Sale. Every piece, regardless of its beauty and quality, which has been in our stock fot more than a very limited time, we have included in this lot. The All Overs come in white, cream and various colors, while the assortment of trimmings includes some very handsome designs both in solid colors and in combinations. Most of them were well worth the regular price at half that price they are remarkably cheap. Continuation, of Sale of Pierce Hand Bags. Hamilton Bonds in each bag. We are confident this is the finest assortment of hand bags ever displayed here. They come in all the latest popular shapes, and range in price lrom $1 to $12. Most of them are black, but there are quite a few in tan, grey and other colors, so you have a practically unlimited choice as regards shape, size, price, color, etc. The cheapest has been made with the same care as the most expensive; by the most reliable manufacturer of whom we know, and each one is warranted to give satisfac tion in every way, On the bags alone the saving is considera ble, to say nothing of the double trading stamps given with each one, The Smart & OIL CITY, PA. Pennsylvania Railroad POPULAR ONE-DAY EXCURSION TO OIL CITY and TITUS VILLE Nunday, June 25, 1011 SPECIAL TRAIN Train Leaves, or Titusvllle. Warren .... Mn Irvlneton M.M " 00 Tldloote 0 80 " 75 WM Hickory - 10. " " Tl.inesla 10.66" 75 Oil City Ar. 11.32" Tltiuvill Ar. 12.20 pm Returning, Special Train leave Tltuavllle 8.00 p. m., Oil City 8:40 p. m. Tickets will beaocepted for parage going and returning only on Special Train on day of Kxcursinn. Bagicage will not be checked. Children between 6 and 12 yeara yean of age, half fare. THE CAPITAL AND SURPLUS OF THE OIL CITY TRUST COMPANY Exceeds by Over $30,000 the Combined Capital and Surplus of all the Other Banks in Oil City. Considering the strong and excellent banks located in Oil City, this statistical fact is the strongest proof of the STRENGTH and SAFETY oi this institution, as the cap ital and surplus are the main items to be considered in select ing a bank with which to do business, Oil City Trust Company, Oil City, Pennsylvania. Silberbera Co. Fare to Oil City STRENGTH! MUST LEAD SIMPLE LIFE Ounkarde Will Diaipllno Memben Who Art Worldly. ' Heading, Pa., June 20. Members ol the Church of the Drethren (Dunk irda) returned from St, Joseph, Mo, yesterday, whero they attended th general conference of tho church. Im portant action was taken roifflrminl tho position of the church on the mat ter of dress, urging more strict con formation to the roles of simplicity ol life and attire, and suggesting thai rpeclal efforts be made to hold the young people In the church. A committee which has been ap pointed to consider thj subject rec ommended that the women wour plain clo'.hlng with no adornment whatso ever, and tliut bonnets or hoods be the head dress. The main nmmbera are to wear plain standing collars and black coats. Uold for ornament anl Jewelry of any kind will not be tolerated. It jhsll be the duty of esch pastor to tach hlx flock the simple life, and ee to It that it is observed. Those who do no; conform with the rules will be dealt with as dUoulerly members The conforenrj also went ii record as being oiinoso-l to sending a representative to the Universal Peace conference. STORM FULLY CURES WOMAN Although Long Paralyzed, She la Able to Walk to Church. Roadlng, Pa., June 20. During a terrlflo electrical storm, which awept over this region last week, Mrs. Mary n. Wentzell, who had been a paralytic for three years, found herself able to move her arm. I-ater she was able to stand, and yesterday, for the first time In months, the walked to church. Her strange cure was announced from the pulpit at the morning's service by the Rev. A. R. Tost, whose statement answered the question on the lips of many persons who could not un derstand how Mrs. Wenttell came to be In her long vacant pew. Mrs. Wentiell's cure is attributed by the minister to prayer. Members of the congregation, he said, bad al wavi remembered the woman's afflic tion when asklzg for DiT-ne merer. Mrs. Wenttell was in bed during the storm. Tb Kghtnitg played around fcer kx alT4t cooticaoosly. Hnd Ir.g trwJ at to move she cried oaL Her fancy Be!;-e4 her to her feet and gnicaTy ker raascU strergtienel and she was at to itand alone. FISH BITE MAY BE FATAL Talk of Amputating Leg of Man In Attempt to Save Life. Philadelphia, June 2. Bitten on the ankle by a bluefUh last week, Paul Jacquette of 117 Kalghn avenue, Camden, Is suffering from general blood poisoning in the leg in the Cooper hospital, and Is. not expected to live. Physicians may amputate his leg at the knee today in an effort to check ft further spread of the poison. Jacquette wrns one of a party of amateur fishermen who went down the Delaware in a motorboat to try their luck. They had much of It, and were kept so busy that the captured fl6h were thrown Into the bottom of the craft. Jacquette took off hla shoes during the day, and in walking across tho pit was bitten by a big fish on his exposed ankle. He paid no at tention to the wound until blood poi soning developed. The First Oyster Eater. The gluttonous Vltelllus is reported to have eaten 1,000 oysters at a sitting, "lie was a very valiant man who first ventured on eating of oysters," King James was wont to declare, a senti ment echoed by the poet Gay: The man had aura a palate covered o'er With brass or steel that on the rocky hore First broka the ooiy oyiter'a pearly coat And risked the llvlnf morsel down his throat Trying to Help. Hotel Clerk (to rural guest closing front cntrnnce)-Hey, there! What are you trying to do? Uncle Eben Don't git excited, young fellow! I Jes' thought, seeing as how I was prob'ly the last one in tonight. I'd do the right thing and lock the doors 'fore going to bed! Puck. Artist W. J. Munce Killed Nsar Wash. Ington, Pa. Attorney Esoapea by Jump. Washington, Pa., June 10. W. J. Munce, a wealthy arlist of Washing ton, waa killed and H. B. Hughes, a lawyer, was severely Injured Inst even ing when their automobile was struck by a Pennsylvania pnssenger train two miles north of here. Mr. Munce wis driving and stoppod to see If a train was approaching, but cars on a siding obstructed his view. Mr. Hughes Jumped In time to f-ave himself, but sustained a sprained leg and painful bruises. The men were driving to the Wash ington Country club when the acci dent occurred. Mr. Munce was a son of W. J. Munce, one of the widest known wool men In the United States. POPULAR SINGER STRICKEN Harold Stahler Makes Futlls Fight Against Spinal Disease. Allen'own, Pa., June 20. There Is much sympathy over the condition of Harold Stahler, who has spent nearly he If of the last four years in bed, fighting spinal disease. Mr. Stahler, who has one of the finest baritone voices In America, first became af llllcted six yeara ago. When able to get out he Immediate ly secured an engagement through Walter Damrosch. and was hailed as a great artist. He waa one of the most popular singers in the Last, ' Child Burns to Death. Sharon. Pa., June 20. Ivy, the eight-year-old daughter of Rlma Dllley, was turned to death yesterday morning, when the house burned. The mother Jumped from the second-story window to the ground, but the daughter fell backward into the Are and perished. Her charred remains were found later. The origin of the Are Is not known. Caurtaut the Wolf. Paris has forgotten the time when it used to go In terror of the woivea which carried off women and children from the streets and even raided the graveyards. At one time they became so mad with desire for human flesh that In a single week they devoured fourteen persons, all between Si out mart re and the gate of St Antolne. On the vigil of St. Martin (says Grace James in "Joan of Arc") there was bunted -and taken a horrible wolf, "which it was said had done more, and more cruelly, than many others put together. That day be was killed. He had no tail, and from that he was called Courtnut. There was as much talk about him as if he had been an outlaw of the woods or a cruel cap talu, and when he lived )lk said to one another as they went forth to la bor in the fields, 'Look out for Cour taut.' And on this day he was tnken through Paris In a cart, dead, with his great Jaws open, and all the peo ple went to see, and they made holi day and rejoiced, because Courtajit could trouble them no more." Ranted Wadding Cakes. There was something wrong with the cake, the bnker said. It looked all right, and It smelted all right, but his artistic seuse told him It would not taste all right "Then fix it up with an extra coat of Icing and we will keep it for a renter," said the proprietor. "Who in the world would rent a cake?" houio one asked. "Wedding parties," suld he. "They want a big cake In the center of the table for show, but a cake of that size good enough for a wedding would cost more than they can afford to pay, so they order fine cake put up In Individ ual boxes for the guests and use the bride's cak just as an ornament. They don't buy it; they rent it Sometimes a cake Is rented a dozen different times. After ench wedding it Is fresh ened up with a new coat of Icing and looks as good as new for the next oc casion. A good renter fetches about $3 a wedding." New York Tress. Matter of intelligence. Mrs. Suburbs John, did yon call at the Intelligence office today to Inquire about a mnld of all work? Suburbs f es, my dear. Mrs. Suburbs Couldn't vou find one? Suburbs Oh. yes; I fonnd a dozen, but they were all too intelligent to come out to this place. Chicago News. T.A.P. Oil City, Ta. HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Diet and Obeeity. Obesity cannot be controlled entirely by diet, although It Is the principal factor. It Is cus tomary to reduce the amount of water taken to not more than one quart, the normal quantity being; two quarts. Including; all drinks. The foods to be espe cially avoided In obesity are sweets, pork. veal, prepared dishes, potatoes, white bread, oatmeal, hominy, rice, fata, beets, carroU, turnips, parsnips, cream and soups. Fish and lean beef are the least objectionable of the meats. Stale graham Is the best bread. Shut Her Up. A. young wife was coutluuouMly pos tered by her mother in law about the way she waa bringing up her firstborn babe. Tho young wife waa Intelligent and capable, and bIio wag really doing very well with the baby. Vrom her mother-in-law, however, she got noth ing but sour advice, warnings nnd veil ed abuse. One day the mother-in-law, looking fixedly at the mother with her baby on her lap, said angrily: 'A woman has no right to bnve a child If she doesn't know, how to hold It" "Xo, nor a tongue either," was the quiet reply. Detroit Free Press. Berlin. 'Iterle," from which Berlin hns caught her name, means uncultivated land. Slavonian Wends, tho earliest settlers on the sandy plain, could make but little out of the soil. The popula tion In 1832 was only 2u0,000. Less than forty years Inter It was 80O,(MH, and now It runs Into 2.000,1)00. The man who pave to Berlin Its present form was Frederick II., but Frederick the Great ami the Great Elector started the noble hobby of beautifying the wonderful city. The Mantle of Charity. Tho lady was making some remarks about the kind of clothing some other ladies at church had on. "The finest garment a woman can wear," said her husband, "Is the nun tle of charity." "Yes," sho snapped, "and It Is about tho only dress, judging by the fuss they make over the bills, that some husbands want their wives to wear." Sweden's "Church Boat." Tho "church boat" Is a popular Insti tution In Sweden. It brings families to service from the farms around Lake Siljan to lksnnd. The water route Is the nearest and most convenient, anS Bo tho big boat goes from farm to farm along the shore picking up the church goers, who later return by the snme route. WSile World Magazine. T lira rfVlAt- Lamp Oils as a v sunny day is to a 3 cloudy day. Burns clear, full and steady. Burns to very last drop 5 WllilUUl IC-HUJUSUIig 4) wick. The best 2?5 oil made, ythaninferiortank-waeon oils. Your dealer has it 2f in original barrels direct from 3 our refineries. 3 Warwy Off Work Co. . INOEPINDENT REFINERS NTTaaURQ, , Also makera of Waverly Special Auto Oil and Auto 'erly I lines, waveriy uaso- EMEU Prcmptlr obtained, or FCC RCTURNCD. 10 VE' EXPERIENCE. OurOHARCta ARB THI LOWiaT. aeud model, photo or ikvtch for expert eearch and free report on patentability, INFRINGEMENT tuiu oonducted before all oourta Patents obtained thrmiirh UK, ADVIR TialO and SOLD, free. TRADI'MARKa. PEN eiONS and COPYRIGHTS quickly obtained. Oppoalte U. Patent Offloei WASHINGTON, D. O. ""IffKb aCHinsv vou eoats no more V. "1 Hi! WM sr Twenty-One Innings And the Game More Interesting Than Ever. For 21 months we have been doing bueioeai in Oil City, although we are known to oil section people for nearly 31 yean. So far as we know there is not a score against us, and so far as we are able to avoid it, there never will bo. We will be only too glad to rectify any errors that possibly may have crept in, io spite of our care and attention. If you ever bought anything at this store and it proved other thiD satisfactory, bring it back. It's never too late for us to make amends to your satisfaction. We want your business. We need it. We want you to know how good our merchandise is. We want that man who swims to see our NPECIAL BATH I Mi SUITS at tl, 82, $3 and $4. Beautiful color combinations. Suit Soliloquy ! To buy or not to buy that's the question ! What hop nnhlar in lha mind In anflr the trash of "TUrcein Hales." or to buy a guaranteed suit of ours and . a ... . l y ;j action aiso euu ine neari acne ana bvoiu 'Tie a consummation devoutly to be To Buy a Suit at and Perchance Get a Poorer Suit than We Sell for $15, There's the Rub ! When we have sbufHed off this mortal coil, it matters not about our raiment but, today we are particular You may suffer the pangs of the law s delay and the msolence ot othce they are but the heritage of man but when it comes to a man's attire, we have the kind you want or we will our own quietus make. Max Jacobs, One Trice Store, Clothier and Bhoer, 233 Seneca Street, - Oil City, Pa. Buy Your Luggage Here. We carry in stock a large and complete line of Trunks, Suit Cases, Traveling Bags, Ladies' Hand Bags and Leather Goods. Dress Trunks lrom 3.50 to $25.00 Steamer Trunks from 5.00 to 25.00 Wardrobe Trunks from 25.00 to 65.00 Hat Trunks from 10.00 to 20.00 Suit Cases and Traveling Bags in the popular cane and matting from 1.25 to 8,00 Brush Sets, Toilet Cases, Portfolios, Bill Rolls, rocket Books, Flasks, Etc. CAELON & CO., Palm Beach, Fla. JAMES HASLET, GENERAL MERCHANT, Furniture Dealer, AND UNDERTAKER. TIONESTA, PENN J. L. Hepler LIVERY Stable. Fine carriages for all occasions, with first class equipment. We can fit you out at any time for either a pleasure or business trip, and always at reasonable rates. Prompt service and courteous treatment. Come and see us. Rear of Hotel Weaver TIOlsTEST, TJL. Telephone No. 20. CHICHESTER S PILLS YiEN TIIK DIAMOND BRAND. A Led leal A.k Ckl.caee-ter'e l-lli. in Kr4 huiei. M.ll Take ather. llmraLt. Askfn,t'll. irKH-TKRS DIAMOND It KAMI PILLS, for lit. ran known as Bat, SIK. AJwtvs Reliitla yoor vruulat for a I Ul.-on JTlrmdA tnd Jold mrulllcWy with ttlua ltin lt...-r .. V T.A.P. Oil City, Pa. end a sea nf troubles, and by the -l ..I. -f j: :. . me euocs. oi uiaui"tuiiut. wished. $18 Elsewhere, and that doth give us pause. Oil City, Pa. WHY WE ADVERTISE IN THE NEWSPAPERS Because we want you to know of tbe clans of work turned out in our estab lishment. Because we ester to the Intelligent clas and they read tbe papers. Because we can talk to more people through tbe newspapera, at a greater dis tance, in less tiine and at a more reasona ble price tban io any other way. Because newspaper advertising brings the best results when placed in a first clats medium. Because we know It is seen and read by almost everyone In the house where the paper goea, Ulorck Optical Co.. OIL CITY, PA. FlrBt National Bank Lenses for tbe Eyes Building. Kxoluslvely. Fire Fire Fire PROTECTION. Insurance at Living Rates. Real Estate Bought and Sold on Commission. W. M. WOLCOTT, Agent. Office north of Bridge Street and Killmer Block on Elm Street. TIONESTA, PA. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers