The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, September 17, 1913, Image 4

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    T
:: The Distinctive Garment Store J
Shirts made to order $2.00 and
upward.
Suits made to order $15.00 and
upward.
Centre Street at Elm, Oil City, Pa.
SPECIALISTS IN
I Women's Fashionable Apparel J
;?t$x Spy
Monday, September 22d,
and
Tuesday, September 23d,
are the days we have set apart for our
Annual Fall Opening
We shall present, in our distinctive way,
the fascinating Fall Modes in
Furs, Millinery, Wraps,
Fabrics, Accessories.
It will be worth a special trip to town, if
necessary, to view this brilliant style exhibit.
'TWAS EVEIt THIS.
There's many a man
Does all be can
To keep himself from feeling blue.
But just at the time
The outlook's prime,
Why, rent or something else falls due.
(Birmingham Age-Herald.
A man with a FOUR PER
CENT. SAVINGS ACCOUNT does
not have to worry.
Oil City Trust Company
Oil City, Pa.
AND
RETURN
One-Day Excursion
OIL CITY
75 c to or
TITUSVILLE
Sunday, September 28, 1913
SPECIAT TRAIN
Leaves Tionesta 10.56 A. M.
RETURNING, Special Train leaves Titusville 8.00 P. M., Oil City 8.40 P. M.
Tickets good only on Special Train. Baggage will not be checked.
Children 6 years of age and under 12, half fare.
Pennsylvania Railroad
Inspired Patriotism.
The Inte Senator Hour wiis once Im
portuned to UmkI tils inllucuce In lie
luilf of a chronic olllce seeker. It wns
not n dilflcult milder to gratify the ap
plicant's ambition by securing for Dim
n place as consul nt n (lUiunlnn port,
which wns not considered highly de
sirable olllce. The newly appointed of
ficial had served but n short time, how
ever, when his wife, unable to with
stand the malignant climate, sickened
nnd died. Ilsbeartetied and discour
aged, he resigned his post and return
ed home.
Some years later the senator was
mildly surprised at being again ap
proached by t he ex-consul, who asked
for reappointment to his old berlli
"Perhaps I can do something for you.''
said Mr. Hoar; "but. considering your
tragic experience there, your request
seems n little strange."
"I know." explained the aspirant, n
trifle ruefully, "but, you see, senator,
I'm married again." Judge.
The Uses of Talc.
Talc, derived from snnpslono found
In various quarters of the world and
In many states of our Fiilon. Is ns n
general thing marketed as rough from
tho mine. It Is sawed Into slabs, from
which nro manufactured various ob
jects, or It Is ground Into powder. A
preat deal of the ground talc la em-
pioyert in the manufacture of paper.
It also enters into the making of moil
ed rubber forms and foundry facings
and paints, but the form In which It is
most familiar Is the toilet powder. Not
only is talcum dusted Into gloves and
shoes to obviate friction, but It Is also
blown Into conduits to ease the intro
duction of electric wires or other con
ductors. Snnpstone Is largely employed
in the manufacture of laundry tubs
ami similar articles. The very best
grades of talc free from Haws, are snw
ed up to make pencils or crayons, (in
tips are also made from talc Harper's.
Turning Away Wrath.
The garden gale was open, nnd a
small boy paused to look at the daffo
dils within easy reach. Hp was Just
Ibout to grab one when a bedroom
window opened nnd an angry house
holder nppeared. "These need tying
up badly, sir." said the smart loy
"These big dowel's are too heavy for
their stems." There Is no question
that If that boy keeps out of prison he
will get on. Manchester Guardian.
Elevating.
"There goes u chap who does n deal
to elevate mankind."
"Who Is lie?"
"The district attorney."
"How does he elevate humanity?"
"Sends 'em up. doesn't ho?" Kansas
City Journal.
Announce An Important View of
New Fall Styles
Women's Coats and Suits. f
An extensive shoving of the most attractive styles and materials
for early autumn wear.
Distinctive Styles in Tailored
Suits.
Reproductions of the smartest foreign models. The skirts are
attractively draped. The coats are all handsomely lined and warmly
interlined. The materials represent the choicest productions of for
eign and domestic looms.
I Top Coats for Street and Motor
Wear.
Swagger English models, made up in reefer, mannish three
quarter styles, splendid examples of finest custom tailoring. Rich
materials, including velour de laine, cut velour, wool plush, chamois
cloth, peau de peche, duvetyn and chinchilla, in a wide range of
fashionable colorings. Damson, Bordeau, Mahogany, Seal, Horrana,
Oriental Blues and Greens, as well as black and staple shades.
The Distinctive Garment Store 5
Henry J. McCarty,
111 CENTRE ST., OIL CITY, PA.
CATHOLIC PRIEST
CONFESSES DEED
Says He Killed Yidim ot the
Baffling River Mystery
SLAYER IS BELIEVED INSANE
Hans Schmidt, Saying He Killed Anna
Aumuller Because He Loved Her,
Gives Detail of Revolting Crime.
Hans Schmidt, an assistant priest of
St. Joseph's Catholic church at 405
West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth
street. New York city, was arrested
and confessed that he had murdered
and then dismembered the body of a
girl, parts of whose body have been
found in the North river during the
past few days.
Schmidt's confession clears up the
mystery of the dismembered parts of
a girl's body found at different times
and places in the Hudson river, the
solution of which has baffled the police
for some time.
The murdered girl, whose name was
Anna Aumuiler, was a servant in the
pastoral residence of Rev. Father
Braun, pastor of St. Boniface's church
on the southeast corner of Forty
seventh street and Second avenue,
where Schmidt from December, 1910,
until May, 1912, was a curate.
Schmidt's only explanation of the
cause of the murder was that he loved
Anna. He said:
"She was so beautiful, so good, I
could not let her live without me. I
bad made up my mind that she and I
could not live together. I was a priest
and must remain with my church. I
could not let her go away from me."
The church authorities of New York
diocese, headed by Monsignors Moon
ey and Lavelle, who are vicars gen
eral of the diocese, held a conference
after receiving reports of an inter
view with Schmidt in the Tombs by
Rev. Father Evits to lea:n whether
or not Schmidt really Is a priest of
the Catholic church.
Schmidt made statements to Father
Evers about being "ordained a priest
by St. Elizabeth ot Hungary, who told
me to kill Anna as a sacrifice of
blood," and made many more wild
statements that inclines to the belief
that he Is insane.
There are reasons to believe, ac
cording to the church authorities, that
Schmidt is an impostor. For some
years, however, he has performed the
duties of a curate at two churches in
New York, at Trenton and at St.
Louis, and according to his own story
he was a priest in Germany before
coming to America from Bavaria in
1907.
Schmidt, according to Assistant Dis
trict Attorney Murphy and Inspector
Faurot, confessed that lie entered the
girl's room on the third floor of the
apartment at 6S Bradhurst avenue,
two doors north of West One Hundred
and Forty-fifth street, at midnight on
Sept. 2 and cut her throat while she
slept.
He tasted the blood, he says. When
he was sure the girl was dead he
dragged her body to the bathroom of
the apartment and there dismembered
it. Then he wrapped the parts of the
body up In either live or six pieces, he
doesn't remember which, and when
daylight came he took the packages
aboard ferry boats during several trips
and dropped the packages overboard.
These trips, so he told the police
iu Ills confession, took up the better
part of the day following the murder
" the next. Toward dusk o'. the sec
ond day while trying to wash away
all signs of his crime from the flat he
came across a part of the mattress
which was so soaked with blood that
he could not obliterate the stains.
Whereupon Schmidt told the police
and others he took the stained clothes
from the mattress at nightfall to a
vacant lot la One Hundred and Forty
fourth street.
In a "gospel tent" on the lot a re
ligious revival was going on when
Schmidt came there with a bundle
under his arm. Some boys were play,
ing about the lot near the tent.
Schmidt asked them to help him
gather firewood. The boys, glad to
have a bonfire, started to help htm.
They stood around while he burned
the bloody clothes.
BEATING KILLS AGED MAN
Fracture of Skull and Internal In
juries Cause His Death.
Jacob Maine, aged sixty-one, a farm
er of Wurtemburg, Lawrence county,
I'a., was attacked near his home and
sustained injuries from which he died
a short time later in the Ell wood City
hospital.
Maine was beaten over the head and
body and his face was discolered by
blows. His skull was fractured and
he was injured Internally.
James Gallagher and Enoch Maine,
a brother of the slain man, was ar
rested and locked In the Ell wood City
lockup in connection with the death of
the aged man. No motive for the at
tack could be found.
' Representative Wilder Dies.
Representitive William Henry
Wilder of the Third Massachusetts
district died at his apartments in
Washington after a lingering Illness.
Lake Heads Army-Navy Union.
Colonel H. Oden Lake of Philadel
phia, PeLnsylvania department com
mander, was elected commander of
the Army and Navy unior..
When an Animal Chokes.
Few emergencies which arise on the
farm are more easily dealt with than
choking. In enses of this kind we have
never known the white of an egg.
when poured down the sufferer's throat
to fail to give relief. To administer
the ess quickly nnd surely it should be
broken Into a wide mouthed bottle.
When such a bottle Is not quickly
aviiiliilile. however, any ordinary bot
tle can le used by using a funnel to
set Into It. and where n funnel Is not
at hiind one can he made by rolling a
piece of paper Into the desired sliapa
When everything Is ready the animal's
bend should be raised as high as pos
sible, the bottle thrust far back in
the throat and the contents emptied.
The egg will immediately pass down
and make t lie throat passage nnd the
offending obstacle so smooth thnt It
will pass on Into the stomach. Farm
and Fireside.
Some Shots at "Haste."
Hurry usually leads to error. The
motto of It.-iron Plunket was "Hasten
slowly." Chur.hill said. "The more
haste ever the worst speed;" Bolleau.
"Hasten slowly and without losing
heart put your work twenty times
upon the nnvll." "Haste mnketb
waste." said Heywood. "I am always
in haste, but never In a hurry," Is from
John Wesley. Richard III. mumbled.
"Sweet dowers are slow nnd weeds
make haste." He would have made a
successful farmer. This Is Seneca:
"Haste trips up Its own heels, fetters
and stops Itself;" Tennyson. "Raw
haste, half sister to delay."
Life fur riulayt nnd doubti no time does
dive
None ever yet made haste enough to live.
That bright couplet was written by
Cowley. Listen to Hulwer-Lytton:
nnalni'S!! dispatched Is business well done.
But business hurried In buslnrse ill done.
T.
A.
P.
Buy Your Clothing Where You
Want To.
Here is one little pellet of argument that we want to inject into
your system before we forget it :
There is no man or set of men, no firm, no corporation, no
concern in this country that offers better inducements for your
trade than we do.
If we cannot have a share of your patronage this season we
shall not be discouraged. We shall keep on trying for it and we
firmly believe our efforts will win you sooner or later.
A clothing store for the dressing of men and those who expect
to be men.
T.
A.
P.
Oil City, Ta.
Oil City, Ta.
Ruler of Kcnfc Carlo Is
Visiting Unitsd States
1 A
M
X" A
j..i .... pV
PRINCE OF MONACO.
SPIRIT OF HOPEFULNESS
Dun Reports That Business Is No
Longer Uncertain About Tariff.
Pun's Review of Trade says this
week:
"Restraint on business through tariff
uncertainty is virtually at an end and
merchants and manufacturers appear
to be of a hopeful disposition. Ex
pansion la not general as yet, but signs
of trade revival are gradually becom
ing more apparent and less hesitancy
is shown in providing for forwarJ re
quirements. "The low position of merchandise
stocks throughout the country is one
of the most encouraging features as
the growing demands necessitate In
creased purchases to replenish deplet
ed supplies.
"With the approach of the fall sea
son advices from the leading centers
record a quickened wholesale and re
tail movement, the volume of sales in
most instances being in excess ot last
year's."
An Avalanche of New Fall Mer
chandise Crowding every available inch of shelf, rack and counter space. If ever a
store was ready for a season's business this store is. Ready in the Second
Floor Garment Section ready in every one of the down stairs departments.
Come right now, today or any time it suits your pleasure you'll be most
highly pleased and profitably entertained with the endless variety and as
sortments of choice, carefully selected merchandise we've assembled for
this 1913 fall season.
In the Second Floor Garment
Section
Assortments and prices are the two big factors with which we hope to be
able to command your preference. And a glance will impress you with the
fact that we have brought together the largest and most complete assort
ments ever assembled here. And the prices nice garments are to be sold
for will please and gratify you.
We're out to establish a new high selling mark in this department this
season and garments were never pri.ed so attractively.
Faultlessly tailored perfect fitting Suits priced $16.60, $18.50, $19.60
and $20.00.
Stylish coats in an endless ran ;e of fashionable fabrics $12.60, $14.60,
$15.00, $16.60 and $18.60.
Come in today and enjoy first choice from a $2,000.00 stock of fine furs
we'll guarantee them 20 per cent, under fur prices elsewhere and we'll
give you our's and the best fur manufacturer in America's guarantee.
NO LIFE LOSS; STEEL CARS
Pennsylvania Flyer Ditched While
Going at Express Speed.
Heavy steel cars prevented loss cl
life In the wreck of the Pennsylvania
railroad's St. Louis flyer near Wylies
Station, O., when seven cars and the
engine left the rails while traveling
fifty-five miles an hour.
The observation car on the rear ol
the train was the only coach remain
ing on the rails. The train was com
posed of eight steel cars, Pullmans,
coaches, observation and baggage.
None of the passengers, was injured
seriously, although many received a
severe shaking. Engineer I. E. Rogers
and two firemen received injuries that
may prove fatal.
Former Congressman Elopes.
On last Thursday Former Rep
resentative George Curry of New Mex
ico, former governor of Mindanao,
chief of polite of Malina and captain
in Roosevt it's Rough Riders, eloped
to Rocksvilie, Md., where he was mar
ried to Miss Martha Cora Cans, who
gave her age as twenty-one years and
her residen-je as Cnlontown, Pa. Curry,
who served during tho second session
of the Sixty-second congress, gave bis
age as fort -eight years. The couple
left for a hoirynioon trip to New Mexico.
Applause and the Stage.
In the Konzert Tiisrlieiilnicli Is an
article by Felix Weingniiicr on " y
plniise." in which the dlreelor says:
"The relntion bet ween the public nnd
the artist rests on what is rendered by
Ix-itli. The artist fives liis strength,
his knowledge nnd the fruit of his
life's work. The .public onn give noth
ing but lis recognition. -As Hie Indi
vidual bus not npiMH-ttmity to .speak
his approval, the logical way to show
it Is by applause." Tile writer sn.vs
that he has never known n case where
this form of satisfaction on the part or
an audience has failed to please, nil
declarations on ti( IIlrt of modest
stage folk to the contrary tintwlih
stan'iUti!.'. ni-cthoven resented sllenre,
and Wagner "loved applause."'
Safest Sde.
Hadsiim Wliai nle li you in-MfiMI
ly take when your wire eels Into an ar
UUIilelil Willi soinelHHty ele': WiteaiTe
-Out'lde It xatet l.oiidni! lit Hit-
Women Soldiers.
In several cases Prussian women
were most capable ns soldiers, able to
command and ready to obey, as well
as being able to withstand (lie hard
ships of cnmialu'iilng To cite some
Instances. Marin Warder, n woman of
Silesia, was allowed to serve as a
hussar In the same regiment ns her
buslmnd. who was n wealthy land
owner. She was wounded in several
engagements and saw her husband
shot dead by her side nt I.elv.ig.
Eleonorn Prochaska Is one of the
better known of these heroines. She
engaged under the name r Carl Ken
In the Light horse when only eighteen,
and several poets have written of her
courage nnd of her death Just before
the battle of I.elp.ig A inomuiif nt
stands to her memory In the cemetery
at Potsdam.-liiiihn Standard.
Seal Stair Builders.
How seals cut steps in the perpen
diculur sides of Ire rakes iu order to
rise from the water for the purpose of
breathing has been recorded by mem
liers of Captain Smtt's nntai-rtic expe
dition. It was discovered that the
seals, which formerly were supposed
lo leave the water by leaping, actually
cut steps in the slippery surface with
the great rniiine or eye teeth. As soon
ns the teeth are placed in position the
head Is moved rapidly from side to
side until the Ice has been cut nway
sullicleiitly to afford a footing for the
front flippers of the animal. Each
step has to be laboriously cui after
this fashion until the Issly is far
enough out of the water to lie thrust
up the rest of the way by n kick of
the hind flippers. New York Press.
First Brides to Cross the Rockies.
Marrus Whitman. M. p.. who saved
Oregon to the I'nltcd Stales, was born
Sept '1. 1S02. nt Itushvllle. X. V. He
married Miss Narcissi! Prentls of All
irellcn. X. V.. In February. lS3fi. nnd
their wedding trip was to cross the
continent that year in company with
the Kev. II H Spnulding nnd his
young wife. The brides were the first
women to cross the Rocky mountains.
They made the journey 9f 3..r00 miles
In seven months.
Hard Luck.
Cholly-What's the matter, Fwatik
denh boy? Fwank-Oh. Cholly. Ethel
tells nie she loves another., Cholly
What hard luck, after your devotion:
I'wank-IIard luck: Why. Cholly, In
the last six mouths her father's dog
has bitten inu nine tiines.'-London Ex-nress.
Engineer's Advantage.
"It must tie hard work to run a loco
motive." "Yes. But think of the satisfaction
In being able to get off in front of the
first car Instead of lugging a suit case
the length of the whole train."-Washington
Star.
An Artiet's Slip.
Sir .li lm ililliert was once commls
stoned in llustrate n short story for a
l.on,!, hi w eekly. When he had finished
the work I lie editor remarked. "Why.
Sir .Irlm. the story says an escort of
Infa i'rv soldiers, and here on the block
you liave given ns mounted ones."
"Tr.ir nie. so I have." responded the
artist, "hut haven't time to do an
other drawing now. Can't yon mnko
an alteration In the story to make It
tit In?" The copy wns handed to a
subordinate to make the retpiisitc al
terations, but thnt gentleman forgot
to edit the chapter describing how tho
soldiers had gained the summit of a
steep mountain, parts of which they
were obliged to scale with ladders.
Horses could not have been got there
unless by the assistance of n crane.
Afterward shoals of letters from sub
scribers wished to know how the cav
alry got there.
The Golfer's Wager.
A man who knows baseball, but nev
er played golf, was talking to a profes
sional golfer and remarked that the
tatter's pet game was Ht best ouly a
piddling sort of affair.
"Well." said the golfer. "I'll wager
you that I can play n round this eight
een hole course In fewer strokes than
you can throw the ball, and you need
not bother to put it in the cups, but
throw ns far as you can every time"
Instantly the bet was made, nnd then
the baseball enthusiast liegnn to figure.
The golfer could do the course in seventy-two
strokes. To equal that the
other would have to make seventy two
throws of an average length of 'J.iO
feet, the course being (l.tXHI yards. For
an ordinary man this would he an Im
possible tusk.-Philadelphia Ledger.
His Gueet.
Bacon-Which is the proper way to
eat spaghetti with a knife or a spoon?
Egbert- With a pitchfork. I guess.
Exchange.
OilCity.Pa.
Prescription leu grinders
for the eyes, plus C'ollegN
ately trained and Inter
nationally endorsed
Kchiiid the Ciiuiiii.
NO DROPS. RESULTS DEFINITE.
Artificial Eyes in Stock.
Both 'Phones.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
Cues Colds, Croup and Wboupiog Cough,