Smarts S'dkdm & Centre Street at Elm, Oil City, Pa. THE Greatest June White Sale Commences Monday, June 2. White Appareling, Undermuslins, White Yard Fabrics, Laces, Embroideries, Fancy Linens, Bedding Supplies, Etc., in splendid varieties and better-than-ordinary qualities, will be included in The Summer's Greatest Econ omy Time in White Goods and White Wear of Every Sort Details of the values will appear in the Oil City papers Monday morning. They will be such as to make an early trip to town a matter of the utmost importance. Our Deposits. Regular $4,086,665.36 Trust 1,189,562.79 ToteJ ..$5 ,276,228.15 These figures indicate satisfied depositors. Your account invited. Oil City Trust Company Oil City, Pa. 75 c to OIL CITY or TITUS VILLE and return Sunday, June 1, 1913 SPECIAL TRAIN Leaves Tionesta 10.56 A. M. Returning leaves Titusville 8.00 p. m., Oil City 8.40 p. m. Tickets good going and returning only on Special Train. Children 6 years of age and under 12, half fare. No baggage checked. Pennsylvania Railroad Not Profanity. The word "dam" is the name of a small coin used In India and of very small value, and la also the name giv en by tinkers to a small wad of paper put Into a hole In tinware when mend ing It for the purpose of preventing the solder from running through. Both mean of little value, so the ex pression really means "I don't care the value of a dam." Forewarned. "Your father tells me," said the earl, "that he Intends to leave all his money to charity." "Oh, don't let that worry you at all," replied the beautiful heiress. "I'm sure he doesn't mean It He told me last night that he was going to try to find out wheth er yotT. really loved me for myself alone." Raising the Wind. V "There ain't a dollar in the :own treasury," said the mayor of Billvllle to the town marshal, "and you'll get no salary this month." "Never believe It," said the cheerful marshal. "There are six automobiles headed this way. Just make out the fines for exceediu' the speed limit, an' leave the rest to me!" Atlanta Constitution. Fashions Little Changed. From the fresco paintings of women In Cretan palaces of the period about 2000 B. C, It Is learned that the wom en of that time pinched in their waists, had flounced or accordeon plaited skirts, were an elaborate coiffure, shoes with high heels and hats which might have come from a Parisian hat shop, while one woman might be de scribed at wearing a Jupe culotte. Fortune From Small Invention. The man who was born too early to wear, as a boy, red top boots with a brass tip across the toe was also born too early to feel the true thing In the way of pride run rampant. Silver thorn brass tips, they were called, and they were most serviceable in prevent ing holes In e toes. Sllverthorn made his fortune out of them. Profit In Study of Names. To study out names may often bring a good deal of not only amusement, but positive Instruction and educa tion. Try It on your friends, or per haps, better, your enemies. For then you can prove for yourself the old proverb (hereby invented on the spot). Tell me your name and I can tell you what your ancestors were. HE KNEW 'EM. Green Did you read that story of the poet who lent an entire stranger 200? Wise Yes. Green Do you believe ltf Wise No. Never heard of a poet with $200. SURE SIGN. If fiMl Knlcker Old man Koyne couldn'1 bave been so well known after all. Docker What do you mean? Knlcker No fak9 widow has put Id a claim for his estate as yet PECULIAR BUSINESS. 1 "An auctioneer's business Is a para Jox." "How so?" "He builds It up by knocking thing! down." ON TIME. Oayglrl A man Is like a watch ifter one gets him she may find to ler sorrow that he Is too fast Gayboy And It be Is too slow he (111 never get you. EXPLAINED. iron "' " 40 "There! That refutes the comic pa per Joke that messengers don't run" "Yes, I believe there Is a dog fight jp the street." Just a Little Too' Much. A business man called his stenog rapher and dictated as part of a sen tence "quasi public Institutions." It canio to him In typewritten form "cross eyed public institutions." He has a new stenographer. For Private Telephone Service. Many British business men are of the opinion that England would have a better telephone Bervice If It were out of the government's hands. WOMAN'S EMOTIONS When all else falls we still hart tears. Beware of old sweethearts wheth er yours or hers. Intellect In children all comes from the maternal sldo. Most love affairs manage to become a matter of finance. In France they call these kissing women "deml-vlerge." The woman the product of a super numerary bore. Not original. Many a great business Is built up on the ruins of domestic happiness. Women have Inspired many great men by first breaking their hearts. We enn't live with them and we can't live without them. From In dia very ancient. All great minds come from great mothers. Imagine a great mother dressed a la mode! God made woman on Saturday at the end of the week when he was tired. Alex. Dumas Flls. Carnegie says there are two sldei to some of his associates' divorce sto ries, but none cares for the man's side. The Gimlet. SAYS THE OWL No man becomes a jailbird for a lark. The door of adversity Is never locked. It Is the doing, not the saying, tha makes the hero. The proof of the bluffer Is In his failure to make good. It Is not necessarily true that the worst Is yet to come. The man who pleases only himself has to supply the applause. The man who lives twice as fast as he should Is apt to see double. The more style some people put on the more collectors they put off. Sidetrack fair weather friends by saving your money for a rainy day. It Is good policy to look ahead if you are headed in the wrong direction. It takes a busy man to see through a Joke and recognize the Idiot be hind It. If a man does well In a small town he soon gets the Idea that he could do better In a city. WAYSIDE WISDOM Even conscience may be over worked. A switch In time has saved many a coiffure. Love used to laugh at Locksmiths. Now he laughs at gas bills. Self-assertive humility Is only van ity turned the wrong side out. It sometimes happens that she who hesitates would be lost If she didn't. The man who gets up early enough to catch the worm, usually spends the rest of the day fishing. Being good Is like using an umbrel la you have to keep It up In order to get any benefit out of It If there Is one thing that Is harder than to be frank and popular, It Is to be economical and popular. The defaulting bank cashier has no harsher critic than the man who dodges paying his street-car fare whenever he has the chance. NUTS TO CRACK Eat, drink, and be merry, for to morrow you may be married. No matter how hard times are, B0 years hence these will be "the good old times." Laugh and the world laughs with you, unless you happen to be laughing at your own jokes. Many a man who complains that he never had half a chance wouldn't rec ognize a whole one If he saw It. KERNELS When a rogue kisses you, count your teeth. The longest stayer doesn't always win the girl. The man who despises little things, seldom gets rich. ' Envy is merely awkward homage paid to merit by inferiority. Whon summer passes, the coldklck er comes. He Is the heatklckor made ever. Earthquake Shocks Common. Earthquake shocks in Japan are very common. They average more than five hundred a year. No Time for Good Work. One of the characteristics of the present day is that everything Is done tfith a rush. Daily Thought. Guard well thy thought; our thoughts are heard in heaven. Young. Suits to Order, $12.50 to $35.00. Shirts to Order, $2.00 to $12.00. If You Were Born Neither Rich Nor Good Looking, For goodness sake don't appear poverty-stricken. Supposing all you want to pay for a Suit of Clothes is T. $10.00 If you buy it here you will get a smart, dressy, serviceable suit A at that price tailored splendidly and a fit guaranteed. If you can afford P. $12.50 or $15.00 For a suit we can surprise you with our splendid assortment. At $18.00, $20.00 and $25.00 We give you the very finest clothing produced in this great big United States. Come in and get under our flag. T. A. P. Oil City, Pa. Oil City, Ta. Secret of Influence. Force, fervor, Intensity these are the qualities which bave given their power to great leaders In all the movements by which the world has been swayed. Sometimes they have been present In men who left so little written memorial or whose efforts were foiled by adverse circumstances that we can note only the fact that they must have been remarkable be cause their contemporaries admired and followed them. They possessed the secret of Influence, though we can not tell how they manifested It. They are among the riddles of history. Chambers' Journal. Stars That Give Little Light. Scattered through space are In numerable stars that give forth verj little light or heat Either they were never, at any period of their history, bright and glowing like the myriad stars that make the midnight sky so beautiful, or In the course of countless ages' the heat they once possessed has radiated away from them Into the depth of space, and now they are, as their name describes them, "dark stars." Printing In China. If reports are to bo relied on, they had the art of printing In China "2,400 years ago." It was block printing, however, though It Is said that they had something very like movable type in the middle of the tenth century. There may be some doubt as to the ex act period, but there Is no room for questioning the fact that for many centuries before It was known In Eu rope the art was well known in China. Their Names Against Them. We are believed to believe that An anias left no descendants, but there were peoitfe so like him as to bear the name of Ananla, or again Ananian. Their descendants have to bear the brunt of ancestral duplicity. So, Mr. Anacreonte may perhaps trace his de scent back to the sweet Greek sing er of women and wine. Not unlike ly, as his greatest poetic brother, Pin dar, also has sons. Wood for Lead Pencils. The annual output of lead pencils In this country Is more 320,000,000. The cednr wood Is used In making them weigh about 100,000 tons, and nearly three-fourths of a cent's worth of wood Is required for each pencil. No other wood Is so good for the pur pose, and the timber is becoming Bcarce. Old cedar planks and fence rails now find a ready sale. Point Possibly Overlooked. .'. western man advertises for a wife, and stipulates that the woman must be the widow of a man who has been hanged. The Inference is that he wants to show up well In comparison with her former husband, evidently over looking the fact that not every man who deserves it Is hanged. Philadel phia Inquirer. Real Hard Luck. Nobody can be said to be really down on his luck to the down downd est degree until he has had presented to him a very valuable watch which every time it is repaired costs from $10 to $25. There's no place where the percentage system works so agon izingly as with the valuable watch owned by a poor man. Raisins as Staff of Life. The life of Cuba is largely sustain ed by raisins, its people consuming the fruit more generally than any oth er of the Spanish-American colonies. fa City, PA. J PrcNrriptioii lens grinders for the eyes, plu ollegl afely (rained and inler natloually endorsed 4 ISeliind (he Guns. NO DROPS. RESULTS DEFINITE. Artificial Kyett In Slock. Both 'Phones. Mid-Season Millinery Fashions. We display today at the price of $5.00 and $6.50 Some wonderfully pretty Summer Hats of white and burnt straw. Mid-season styles which reflect the latest phase of mid-season millinery fashions. Hats designed and made expressly for The Kin ter Co. and which we consider exceptional at the prices. All Early Pattern Hats priced as follows without reserve $5.00 Hats $2.00 $6.50 Hats $2.75 $7.50 Hats $3.00 $8.50 Hats $3.00 FIRST OF ANIMAL HOSPITALS More Than 2,000 Year Ago One Was Established in India, Says an Authority. The New York women who have opened a free anlmnl dispensary in this city are regarded as pioneers In a good work. As a matter of fact one must go to the Orient and look back more than 2,000 years to find the first animal hospital known. The famous Pivldhist emperor of In dia, Asoka, whose longelgn from 2G4 to 227 B. C. abounded In many good workB, was probably the earliest to establish a hospital for the treatment of animals, says Our Dumb Animals. soka was a true humanitarian as well as a most powerful sovereign and although ruling a vast domain be came deeply Impressed by the horrors of warfare. He gave up his desire for conquest and the rock inscriptions, which are still extant, record such beneficent edicts of his as the counseling of planting shnde trees, the digging of wells, sending out of missionaries, ap pointment of speckil officers to super vise charities, the establishing of hos pitals for human kind and animals. It is of Interest to know that the last remaining of Asoka's hospitals was devoted to animals. It covered twenty-five acres and was divided Into proper wards and courts for the ac commodation of the patients. When an animal was sick or injured its master had only to bring It to the hos pital, where It was cared for without regard to the caste of its owner, and where, if necessary, It found an asy lum in old age. Providence In Human Affairs. If a great change Is to be made In human affairs, the minds of men will be fitted to It, the general opinions and feelings will draw that way. Ev ery fear, every hepe, will forward It; and then they who persist in oppos ing this mighty current In human af fairs will appear rather to resist the decrees of Providence Itself than the decrees of men. Edmund Burke. Nothing To It. Patience This paper says that the French language is more suitable for use when telephoning than the Eng lish hns been discovered since London and Paris were linked by telephone. Patrice Why, that's ridiculous; I had a Frenchman telephone one day, and I couldn't understand a word be saldl Yonkers Statesman. Ready. Rev. Gude "Isn't there some one here who will help us to keep up Inter est In the church?" Deacon Tightwad (suddenly awakening) "I, for one, am prepared to raise the rates to 8 per cent, on real estate loans and 10 per cent, on chattel mortgages, If the other money lenders in the congregation will co-operate " Puck. FRIENDLY SHADOWS OF NIGHT Uncle Joe's Reply. Some members of the house heard a few days ago the strangest combi nation of sacred and profane langunge whlct had ever been uttered on that floor. During a debate Uncle Joe Can non went after A. Mitchell Palmer of Pennsylvania, and handled him with out gloves.. Cannon is a Quaker and so is Palmer. When conversing pri vately they drop into the Quaker ver nncular. After the debate Palmer went to the former speaker, who is thlrtytslx years older than himself. "Uncle Joe," he said, "thee treated me a little roughly In the debate to day." "WelV replied Uncle Joe, In a mix ture of Quaker and Cannonlan Eng lish, "perhaps I did treat thee a llttlo severely, but blankety-blank, thou de served every damned thing I said." Unanswered. "George," she asked, "if we were both young und single again would you want me to be your wife?" "Now, my dear," he absent-mindedly replied,' "what's the use of trying to start a quarrel Just as we have settled down to enjoy a quiet evening?" Chicago Record-Herald. Sores I Groutly How did you dare, sir, to kiss my daughter last night on the piazza? Freshly Gad, now that I've seen her by daylight, I wondor myself. Merely Moral Effect. "Some o' dese reformers," said Un cle Rasberry, "makes me think of 'ltastus Plnkley's oog. I says to 'ini, 'ltastus, I says, 'is dat dog good foh rats?' An' he says, 'No; he's mighty bad foh rats.' "Does he ketch 'em an klll -em?' 'No,' says 'Rastus; 'he don't ketch 'em, ner he don't kill 'em. But if they comes foolin' around him he'll mighty near skeer 'em to death.' "Washington Star.