effie Smarts Centre Street at Elm, Oil City, fa. Have You Turned the White Sale's Many Opportunities to Account? Has this sale saved you what it is saving othersa substantial portion of the usual cost on white wear and white yard goods of every imaginable description? Each day finds abundant evidence in every department that the Sale is contin ually growing in attractivenessmore and better advantages to surprisingly reduce the cost of your shopping. Vou have until Wednesday evening, June 12th, to profit from the season's one big, peerless White Event. Decidedly it will pay you to make a special trip to town and participate in the wonderfully fine values. Charming Summer Dresses Reduced. Never was there a choice so wide and attractive I There are dresses of linger ie, marquisette, and voile, dozens of them, either all-over embroidered or lace in serted. Select the very dress that conforms to your particular idea of summer daintiness and coolness, and save a good proportion of the former cost. For Women and Misses. $ 5.00 Dresses now $ 3.76 6.00 Dresses now 4.50 7.50 Dresses now 6.75 8.00 Dresses now 6.00 10.00 Dresses now 7.60 12.00 Dresses now 9.00 16.00 Dresses now 11-26 18.00 Dresses now 13.50 20.00 Dresses now 15.00 25.00 Dresses now 18.75 Let Us Pay for Your Trip. On pnrchases over $10.00, you know, we pay your carfare one way purchases of $20.00 or over entitle you to a rebate covering the cost of your round trip. A little careful planning will enable you to fill your white wear needs for months to come at big savings and at the same time to take a pleasant trip to the city at our expense. You'll find it greatly to your advantage. Our Deposits. Regular, Trust, Total, We solicit Oil City Trust Company Oil City, Pa. POPULAR ONE-DAY TO Warren, Olean Sunday, June 16, 1912. SPECIAL TRAIN Fare to Fare to Olean Train Leave;. Warren or Bradford and return, and return. TitUBVille. 7.40 am (100 fl 60 Kouseville 8 05 " 1 00 1 50 Oil City 8 25 " 1 00 1 60 Tionesta... 9.02 " 1 00 1 50 Returning Special Train will leave Olean 8.00 p. tn.. Bradford 8.00 p. m.. Warren 10.00 p. m. Tickets will be accepted lor passage GOINti and RETURNING only on SPECIAL TRAIN on day of Excuraion. Baggage will not be checked. Children, between 5 and 12 years of age, half fare. Pennsylvania Railroad. z- frilling JAMES HASLET, GENERAL MERCHANT Furniture Dealer, AND UNDERTAKER. TIONESTA. PENN DAVC TO ADVERTISE I I I VJ I IN THIS PAPEK Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Cure Colds, Croup and Whooping Cough. SiHkdm & $3,781,601.18 259,711.36 $4,041,312.54 your deposit. EXCURSION and Bradford Fare to Fare to Olean Train Leaves. Warren or Bradford and return, aud return. iV. Hickory 0.13 1 00 I 50 Tidloute 0.20 am 75 1 25 Olean Ar.12.10 pin Bradford Ar.12.10 " The quality of Lamp Oil you use counts im mensely for or against your comfort and health. There's a perfect oil made for people who give thought. It is Family Favorite Oil triple-refined from Pennsylvania Crude Oil the bett ever made. Full white flame never flicker! no soot no odor. Costa no more than inferior tank-wagon oils -saves money as well as eyes end comfort. Your dealer has It In origlual barrels direct from the refineries. Waverly Oil Work Co. iadtpdnt Ke4nt Pittsburg, Pa. A ' Mtl-nf of fiwtol H'rti-rWv A utn (HI find Wnvrrtu (ImHttlH fromnllT obtained, or FEE RETURNED. CO YEARS' IXriRIEHCI. UurCHARCtt ARK THE LOWEST, Hwul model, photo or ftketch (or exHrt M'areh Mid free report on patentability. INFRINGEMENT nulls coiuluc-U-d before all courts 1'atentB obtained thronirh un. ADVER TISED anil SOLD, freo. TRADI-MARKS, FEN. SIONS and COFVRICHTS quickly obtained. Opposite U. 8. Patent Office! WASHINGTON, D. O. WARSHIPS BOTHER SOL JACOBS. Frighten the Mackerel Away From His Seines Off Coast. If you wero seining for mnckerel .nd luck was with you and JuHt as you vtre about to draw In your nets with i I ne catch half a dozen of Uncle Sam's batt.-hlps came along and ilg'.itened nil the mackerel away, vouUin't It give you a headache? That's Just what It did to Capt. Sol '.hc'j.' of the prime little auxiliary, rhooncr Quartette, which reached T .l'.ari. Sol had a grievance against :ie United States navy which it will ike uumy d.iys for him to live down. One afternoon when the sun was uf. about sinking in the sky and the .ater was as smooth as glass Sol pled a school of mackerel. It was the irgest Fchool he had seen for weeks. Orders were given to lower the seln ng boats and throw out the nets. The rest was easy, for the nets sank lown on the fish, and Sol stood on the eck wearing a smile and thinking of he dollars realized by that catch. nut behold, Just before the men in he seining dories had pulled in the .cU at the bottom, Imprisoning the oothsome catch, along came half a lozen of the battleships that were in the manoeuvres at Provlncetown and kicked up the ocean so that the nnckerel were frightened away. "I was angry enough," said Sol, "to fight the whole blamed squadron." Roston Pally Advertiser. Oldest Man in Scotland. James Grieve, believed to be the oldest mnn in Scotland, died at his dwelling. Coran-tee, Loch Eckslde, re cently. He was a native of Inverness shire, where, according to his own belief, he was born in the year 1S00. He fixed the date of his birth by his recollections of Waterloo. He was then a boy working In the fields, and when the news of the victory arrived he, along with his fellow laborers, rarticlpated in the general rejoicings. At that time he was 14 or 13 years of age. He nialnta:ned the use of his faculties almost up to the last, and was able to see and speak with visi tors till within a few weeks of his death. Mr. Grieve had spoken with men who had seen Prince Charlie, and had heard his grandfather describe that historic personage; and his own father and his uncle had taken part in a Highland clan feud. For almost ninety-five years he worked as a shepherd, and even after he had re tired from continuous labor he con tinued to assist In the fields, "taking a turn at the hay," as he phrased it. Westminster Gazette. Spurious Monks Attributed to Sterne. The literary pirate was not the only trouble of the eighteenth century author. There were the concoctors and publishers of spurious works un der his name, and Sterne suffered as heavily from these as from the pirates. The publication of the first two volumes as "Tristram Shandy" was followed as soon as it was apparent that the book was a success by a third, written by a hack writer and boldly attributed to Sterne. Several other spurious works appeared In the au thor's lifetime and after his death his Posthumous Works in two volumes were oblielngly written for him, as were also three sets of his Original Letters. London Chronicle. Beranger's Fountain of Inspiration. Beranger Is best known for his Bac chanalian songs. One night he wa3 at cupper with Dumas the elder. The younger Dumas, who was present, was passing through his college course and at that period was exhibiting those characteristics which unfortunately developed in later life. Noticing that Beranger had drunk only water, he somewhat indiscreetly asked: "Where do you obtain, M. Beranger, fill the wine which we find in your songs?" The poet's reply was: "From the fountain at the corner, my boy, and you would do well to make that the source of your inspiration." London Globe. Dredging for Coal. Dredging the Susquehanna River for coal has been a popular p.nd pro fitable Industry in Columbia, Montour and Northumberland counties, but it has been practiced very little In the coal regions. The Indications are that Pittston is to be a starting point of dredging work In that section. Theodore Hogan, of Pittston, who was formerly active as a mine superintend ent, is laying plans to dredge the Susquehanna, between the Pittstons, 'n the hope of finding large quantities of good coal that has been washed Into the river. The Boy on the Farm. He told his twelve-year-old son to milk the cows, feed the horses, slop the pigs, hunt up the eggs, feed the calves, catch the colt and put him In the stable, cut some wood, split the kindling, stir the cream, pump fresh water In the creamery after supper and be sure to study' his lesson be fore he went to bed. Then he went to the farmers' club to discuss the question "How to Keep the Boy on the Farm." Artificial Marble In Sicily. They are now making artificial mar ble with much success in Sicily. The manufactory Is In the shadow of Mount Etna and there common blocks of sandstone are put In a tank con taining volcanic asphalt and coal tar and boiled for thirty-six hours. The stones are then taken out and polished and it Is said that It takes au expert to tell them from black marble. How It Was In Rome. In the golden age of 300 peaceful years under Imperial Rome crime al most ceased, Gibbon says, because no matt could escape the Jurisdiction of Rome, for Rome then was the whole world. His Prospect Small Willie had worn his older brother's cast-off garments as long as he could remember. One day he Bfcid: "Johnny's got the measles. I s'pose I'll get 'em as soon as he out grows 'em." SHOOTING JAPANESE RAPIDS. Those of the Hodzu River Afford an Exciting Experience. The rapids on the Hodzu River near Kyoto must fill even the most blase of tourists with excitement. A train from Kyoto climbs slowly and painfully upward until finally It de posits Its passengers at a quaint little siding. From here, says the Wide World, one goes to the river bank ami em barks In a rude, flat bottomed boat, which Is pushed out by four men into middle of a broad river, reed ,'dgod and sleepy. For a few minutes one glides dreamily along; then rounding a nrvo, one suddenly hears the roar of rater and the boat tears down a avUl. Just missing the rocks on each 'd". The high banks race past, death "T curs imminent, and then, with one ; d swirl it is all over and the boat n the quiet, unruffled stream once TI-.'s happens again and again for i!y an hour. At first one's whole 'rd is filled with the conviction that i accident must happen, but grad- 'ly comes a delicious feeling of :'oty ns one notes the marvelous ' "! these men show In piloting the nt through the seething rapids and Is able to appreciate the beauty ( the scene. What Brought on the Fight. nishop Woodbrldge of Kentucky 'vr5 discussing the Southern mount i.lr.eers, among whom ho has lived nd worked for many years. The uestlon of family feuds was brought p mid the Bishop related the follow :ig anecdote: "A certain family had attended a eunlon which terminated In a free for 11 fight. The offenders were taken 'pfore the local Justice of the peace, tfho questioned an old woman as to he particulars of the fight. Her de-"l-lptlon was typical of the moun alneer's attitude toward strife and loodshed. " 'Well, Judge,' she said, 'Jem Lewis ?ot into an argument with Hank itidds. Hud lis smashed Jem over the head with a stick of eordwood, busting his head open. Then Jem's brother lashed Hank up with a butcher knife and Lou Barry shot him through the leg. Larry Stover went at Lou ith an axe and then, Judge, we Just naturally got to fighting.' " Philadel phia Times. Students Suppress Hazing. The students have been sucessful in suppressing all forms of hazing here this year as a result of the agree ment entered Into last year to discon tinue all such practices. For a number of years hazing has been kept In check with a fair degree of efficiency by the student conference committee, the self-government organization. In consequence there have been few serious cases of hazing In recent years. Last fall, as a result of the fact that one of the football men whom the students desired to have remain on the team was involved In hazing, the student conference committee entered Into an agreement with the faculty to abolish all hazing thereafter. Tnis agreement has been successfully carried out. Madison correspondence Chicago Post, Golf in Paris. Golf and tennis flourish on the periphery of Paris. Each day the royal and ancient game gains fresh patrons among the French. La Boulle worthily fills, of course, the place of St. Andrews among the golfing socie ties. Though not the oldest, the dis tinction belonging to Pau, which has existed for more than half a century, it is the most authoritative of the organizations, especially since the formation of the federation. But Fontainebleau, Chantilly and Complcgne, are now well equipped witn golf grounds, without speaking of Le Pccq, in the neighborhood of St. Gerninln-en-Laye, and of one or two projects for new grounds within a cab ride of the centre of Paris. Pall Mall Gazette. London Tube Receipts. Tiie five tube railway systems of London showed total gross receipts ot $4"74.043 for last year, the net re ceipts being $2,306,448. After meeting prior charges one line continued lt3 dividend of 3 per cent., another Its 1 per cent., another again skipped a dividend, a fourth paid thrse-fourths of 1 per cent, against none for 1909, and a fifth line, which paid nothing or 1909, paid 3 1-3 per cent, for 1910. The total dividends aggregated $1,1S2,238. Trains Kill Birds. A German locomotive engineer says that the trains are doing much to destroy the birds. He had picked lumbers of various kinds from an engine which runs about dawn, when the birds first seek food, and he est! mates that this one engine kills sev eral hundreds every month. Some Bad Examples. We have all heard of the butcher, who was a vegetarian, of the barber who never shaved, of the shoemaker who let his children go barefoot, but here Is a new one: A delegate to the late convention of the launderers at Lawrence wore a celluloid collar. Lawrence Gazette. Boy Hunter's Blind. A Clark county boy who killed two wild geese at one shot has a trick of leading a gentle cow so It hides him from his prospective game until he gets a close shot. Kansas City Star. Youthful Benefaction, A little boy came home with his fist full of those small ehoke cherries and a micker at his stained mouth. "Give those cherries to my baby sister," ) said to his mother; "they re no cher ries for a boy like me." Saxon Forests Large. i Though Saxony has been a center of civilization for long ages, one-fourth of the area of the kingdom Is still cov ered, with forests. You Can Tell a T. A. P. Suit Every time. There is smartness and a something about them that cannot be denied. We don't usually ever mention any names, but we have been granted the right by the men themselves to use them as a clincher to our argument. Come in and find out who the "fellows" are that are wearing T. A. P. Clothes. Or better yet select the Best Dressed Man you have seen this season and inquire from him. T. A. P. Suits Sell at From $8 to $40 Straw Hats all in and ready. T. A. P. Oil City, Pa. LUXURY OF ANCIENT EQ03. A chef, discussing the evils of cold storage, said with a smile: "And yet the Chinese, who are great gourmets, adore eggs three or four years old, eggs that have turned quits green. "Don't think they are ordinary bad eggs, these green chaps, though. If you've eaten Chinese food gelsh y main, yok amey, sea slugs, birds' nest soup you'll know better than that. The Chinese are gourmets, and their ancient eggs are rlpsned like fins cheese. "It is a science. The eggs, I be lieve, spend nine months in a hot tem perature, burled in sawdust, another nine months in a cool temperature, buried in chalk. And so forth and so on. "They are green In the end, and they have an unpleasant, putrid odor. But Roquefort cheese is green, and its odor, too, is putrid and unpleasant. "Mr. Wu, when he last dined here, told me that green eggs of the 1905 vintage cost $2 to $3 apiece in Can ton." Washington Pst. Glittering Possibility. "Professor," said the reporter, "you have read, I presume, what Edison or somebody else says about the feasibil ity of extracting gold In paying quanti ties from the dirt in the streets." "Yes." "May I ask what you think of the Idea?" "Well," sad the professor, "it seems to me highly probable that it can be done. Speaking as a tax payer, I know to a dead certainty that we link all kinds of money in our streets." Grim Consolation. "John, old boy," said the sick man to the attendant, "I want you to go out and fetch me another minister." "Why, you've had a preacher with you all the mornln'." "That's Just it," gasped the man. "He thought he was cbeerin' me up and he told me I'd meet my three wives Id heaven!" A Risky Business. "A reporter in a western town has been ordered to count all the Joints there." "Is he making any progress?" "Yes, I understand he has already counted 600 elbows." "Huh! When he starts to counting knees he'll get into trouble." LITTLE THINGS. "I never," he said, "permit myself to be disturbed over trifles. There are so many big things to engage one's attention that I consider it fool ish to let the little ones bother me. Think how many people permit them selves to go all to pieces every time any little thing happens to fall in their way. They are tho ones who make the world a dismal place. If every one would learn to pass ove the little troubles to Ignore them how much more good cheer there would be. It Is a sign of a small na ture to let a little thing distress one to wow! Oh, Lord! Oh! Oh! Blank, blank, blank, blank! ;i I've got a speok in my eye! Oh, Lord! It's killing me!" An Indication Previous. "Do you notice a tendency on the part of some Democrats to be too pre vious with a candidate in the field?" "What's that?" "They want to enter the race with k Furst in the field." Even. "That wasn't real terrapin they jerved us in that restaurant," said the epicure. "That's all right," repUed the host 'The dollar I gave the waiter was counterfeit." Shop Here At Our Expense. TIOX11STA IMTHO.VM are allowed Car Fare one way on 81000 Purchases. On $15.00 Purchases Round Trip Car Fare JEMHLiVOll IMTKOXN are allowed Car Fare one way on $10.00 Purchases. On $20.00 Purchases Round Trip Car Fare. That biings this $50,000.00 stock of Dry ('nods, Millinery, Ciuaks and Suits to your very door and enables you to shop here with as great economy as though you actually lived right here in Oil City. The Kinter Co. Oil City, Pa. Pennsylvania Railroad IMPROVED TRAIN SERVICE BETWEEN Oil City and Warren IsT OUT Leave P M 10 45 "AM 7(H) 7(13 7 to 7 111 7 21 Pittsburgh . Oil City Hiverly Rock mere Watnut Beud., Oleo polls Henry's Bend , Eagle Hook President , Raum Hunter r 7 23 7 28 f 7 32 f 736 f 741 7 48 f 7 61 f 7 55 8 02 8 09 820 f 8 211 f 8 30 f 8 3(1 8 50 II 13 A M Tionesla Jamison Dawson Run West Hickory Trunkeyville .., Tidioule , Magee Cobham Thompson , Irvlueton .. Warren Arrive SOUTHWAED. Leave A M 6 00 6 10 6 22 6 26 6 30 6 3S " 647" 0 65 6 50 7 01 7 08 7 13 7 17 7 21 7 2(1 7 33 7 35 7 40 7 47 7 54 800 A M "12 35" P M Warren , Irvineton Thompson Cobham Magee Tidloute Trunkeyville West Hickory Dawson Run Jamison TinnnxlR Hunter liaum Prexident Eagle Rock Henrv'a Hend..., OleopoliM Walnut Hend . Rock mere Hiverly Oil City HiUHburgu . Arrive f Stops only on signal or notice to agent or conductor. Convenient Commutation Service between Oil City and loinN along the beautiful Allegheny River. T. A. P. Oil City, Pa. rtTTTT TtTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT EL W AED. WEEK-DAYS 31 33 SUNDAYS 31 033 29 A M 0 00 P M 2 45 2 48 265 3 01 3 06 3 00 3 14 3 17 3 21 3 2li 3 33" 3 3tf 3 40 3 47 3 55 4 07 " 4 IS 4 I!) 4 25 4 30 4 52 I M P M 1 10 "P M" 5 15 5 18 6 25 5 31 5 31) "6 39 " 5 44 ; 5 47 6 61 I 5 6(1 I P M 10 45 AM 7 00 7 03 7 10 7 16 7 2l '7 23 7 28 7 32 7 36 741 "7 48 7 51 7 55 8 02 8 09 " 8 20 8 26 8 30 836 8 50 !) 13 A M f 2 20 f 2 32 f 2 36 f 2 41 I 48 f 2 61 f 2 65 3 02 f 3 00 3 20 f 3 28 f 3 32 f 3 38 3 52 4 02 P M 6(13 6 06 6 10 6 17 6 24 "6 35 6 41 6 45 6 51 7 05 7 15 P M WEEK-DAYS 30 32 SUNDAYS 032 34 34 A M 0 50 10 02 10 14 10 18 10 22 10 31 "10 40 10 48 10 62 10 61 11 01 1 1 00 ' 11 10 11 14 11 17 II -J "11 25 11 21) 11 38 11 45 1150 A M 5 45" P M P M 7 36 7 50 8 12 P M 4 27 4 37 4 10 I 63 4 57 5 06 5 15 5 22 5 26 5 20 5 36 5 41 5 45 6 40 5 62 6 66 8 16 j 8 20 8 20 i " 8 30 8 47 851 j 8 55 j 0 02 0 07 ! 9 II ! 0 15 0 18 J) 23 0 20 0 31 0 40 0 48 0 53 P M 6 50 (1 03 6 12 6 10 6 25 PM 7 52 A M A M A M 0 00 P M 2 00 2 03 2 10 2 16 2 21 I' M 7 36 7 8 12 8 16 8 20 8 20 8 30 8 47 8 51 8 55 una i)o7 o u o 15 n 18 !)23 0 26 0 31 0 40 0 48 0 63 P M 7 62
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers