Cm f The Distinctive Garment Store f p Shirts made to order $2.00 and upward. Suits made to order $15.00 and upward. Centre Street at Elm, Oil City, P. SPECIALISTS IN it Autumn Suit Displays Await You Here. A , Showing That Includes Every New Material. No need to go to the big cities for an insight into the won derful variety of weaves which lashion is favoring this fall. A halt hour spent here in Oil City's finest Appareling Section will show every one of the numberless weaves about which you've read in the fashion boks, and which you have a natural curiosity to view. We are ready to show you, among others, new tailored suits of Duvtyn, Baby Lamb, Cut. Velour, Bayadere Broadcloth, Chiffon Broadcloth, Kitten's Ear, Matelasse, Wafel Eponge, Brocade Eponge, Ottoman Cloth, . Wide Wale Cheviot, &c. - The variety of weaves this tall is the greatest in history. That is why we suggest an early inspection of these suits, to the woman who would keep well posted on the styles. Tailored Suits all the way from $11.75 to 85.00. Ready With The Latest In New Trimmings. Ready to show you beautiful examples of every style of trimming which Fashion has favored this fall, but to describe them here well, that is another matter. For the colorings are so rich and harmonious; the patterns are so beautiful; the styles, in colored trimmings and in laces, are so exquisite and so varied; that you must view them for yourself, if you would gain an adequate idea of their charm. May we make you acquainted with them? Your Boy Is very apt to follow the training you give him NOW. If you do not teach him the value of money he will grow up to join the ranks of the great army of the Thriftless. Give him a good 6tart toward prosperity Open a Savings Account for him in the Oil Gity Trust Company Oil City, Pa. One-Day Excursion OIL CITY 75c to TITUSyILLE Sunday, September 28, 1913 SPEOIAT 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 5 years of age and under 12, half fare. Pennsylvania Railroad Job Sticks to Him. Lynn H. First, postmaster at Henrys Bend, a Rummer colony near Oil City, Pa., has a Job which he wants to let ko of and cant. Despite numerous letters to t!e postofflce de partment he has not been able to get an order to close the office. The re ceipts for the last two weeks have not averaged two cents a day. Neither Get 51 Per Cent. Joseph 0. Armstrong and Stephen G. Porter, both candidates on the Re publican ticket for mayor of Pittsburg, were nominated at the primaries. Neither man was able to get the necessary 51 per cent and the battle will now be fought out In the Novem ber election. Child Eats Poisoned Bread; Dies. As a result of eating bread which had been saturated with poison, Glenn Curtis Wilson, three-year-old Bon of Policeman Bryant C. Wilson of Greens burg, Pa., died. The bread had been placed In the cellar of the Wilson home to rid the place of rats. Loose Tonneau Kills Autoist. E. P. Connelly of Brooklyn, N. Y., was killed when pitched headlong from a speeding automobile at Wen nersville, Ta. K. F. Gaylor of Wood haven, L. I., and E. G. lleines of Phila delphia were slightly Injured. The toDneait became detatched. AND RETURN Girl baw loo Many Flln. Placing the cost on the mother ot Tiiss Edna Moore of Pitcairn, Pa., and declaring that the girl undoubtedly had attended too many moving picture shows and therefore suffered halluci nations, the jury In tho case of George Wilson, charged with misdemeanor, and George Gordon, charged with sending threatening letters, decreed that the young men were not guilty. The girl was found several weeks ago in the Moore home TviCi her hands tied. Tima He Quit. "See here, .voting mini." said the an gry father, "how ninny times have I toid you thnt 1 don't want .von to call on my (In lighter?" "Oh." replied tho suitor coolly, "about twenty." "Well." said the exasperated parent, "don't you think that's nhoiit enough?" "Yes. I do,'' was the reply. "When nro you going to quit?" Magazine of Fun. Unsettled. "I want Home sort of present for a young hwly." "Yes. sir fiancee or sister?" "Er why she hasn't said which she will be yet." Exchange. You cannot eat your cake arid have your cake. Cervantes. Women's Fashionable Apparel J Announce An Important View of New Fall Styles Women's Coats and Suits. An extensive showing of the most attractive styles and materials for early autumn wear. Distinctive Styles in Tailored I Suits. Reproductions of the smartest foreign models. The skirts are attractively draped. The coats are all handsomely lined and warmly X interlined. The materials represent ' 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 Henry J. McCarty, 111 CENTRE ST., OIL CITY, PA. WMtHIIWWWWt pgison flrjy knife FOR INCURABLES Rev. Schmidt Says He Planned Huge Job oi Killing DCESNOTFEAR ELECTRIC CHAIR Trial to Be Set For Next Month In sanity Can Be Schmidt's Only De fense, Says Attorney For Prisoner. "I don't see why there is so much red tape about this. I'm ready this minute to go to the electric chair. Any body who thinks that this life is worth while is mistaken. I have faced death many times and would face the chair without a quiver of a muscle." So Rev. Hans Schmidt, the con fessed murderer of Anna Aumuller, told his counsel, Alphonse G. Koelble, when the latter visited him in the Tombs in New York. He declared that not only was ho alone responsible for the killing of the girl he loved, but he had been plan ning to do away with the hopelessly insane, the permanently crippled and diseased Incurables by poison or the knife. The book of- certificates issued by the board of health had already con vinced Inspector Faurot and his men working on the case that Schmidt had hit upon what he believed an easy way of getting his victims under ground without exciting suspicion. Koelble said he was sure Schmidt's cool admission of his plan to put folks out of their misery for their own good was further admission of his in sanity. "Schmidt Bhowed spirit for the first time," said Lawyer Koelble. "He was mad and very excited. He was dis turbed because he said the newspapers were dragging in innocent people and touching them with scandal." "Schmidt," continued the lawyer, "said he did not want to answer the questions of the district attorney but simply say 'I did It,' meaning that he killed Anna Aumuller. "Then he made this astonishing statement when I asked him about the death certificates: 'I was planning to do away with a knife or by poison a number of people for whom life wasn't worth while. What's the use of living If life Is worthlsss? The quieter ono goes the better for them. I believe that the next world Is better for the hopelessly Insane, the hope lessly crippled and the hopelessly diseased.' "He strenuously denied that Muret, the fake dentist, is his brother or a cousin or any relation whatever. 'I have known him only ten months and not a day longer,' he said. He said that he went to Muret one day about some plates and the dentist told him he was crazy because he spoke about St. Elizabeth whereupon they had a quarrel." A cable dispatch from Aschaeffen burg, Germany, says that an invesil gation there indicates that Ernst A. Muret, under arrest in New York as a counterfeiter and an accomplice of Hans Schmidt, slayer cf Anna Aumul ler, Is Adolph Mueller of Mainz, Ger many, and a cousin of Schmidt. Sciimidt, the priest, and Muret, the doctor, says the dispatch, occupied themselves a great deal in Germany several years ago with hypnotism and spiritualistic seances. They had a quarrel and were bitter enemies for a time, but were reconciled before r'ather Schmidt left for America. The priest has said that St. Eliza- the choicest productions of for- betu ordained mm una ordered mm to kill the rectory girl who loved him. Schmidt will be brought to trial for the girl's murder next month before Judge Foster. His defense will be In sanity because that is the "only pos sible defense" according to his lawyer. "I want to get a trustworthy alienist of the highest standing to examine Schmidt," said his lawyer. "I appeal to such a man to come forward anil give his services without charge." Father Evers, the Tombs chaplain, said he is getting more convinced very minute that Schmidt was never luthorlzed to assume priestly func ;lons, but believes that the real "Hans Schmidt," the priest, is dead and that the murderer of Anna Aumuller Is a person who perhaps stole the dead priest's credentials. The police discovered a fourth flat which Schmidt used in his crime operations. It was at 124 West Eighty-fourth street and Mrs. Hander, who rented' it to Schmidt, was worry ing because she had forgot to tell In spector Faurot that wiien Schmidt vame to this Ktt he sometimes drought with him a two-year-old boy. ENDS LIFE IN NIAGARA Man Plunges Into Torrent Above Whirlpool Rapids. A man believed by the police to be John Hawkins, aged sixty-eight, ot Erie, Pa., Jumped to death Into the Niagara river from the lower steel arch bridge. The bridge spans the river just above the start of the whirl pool rapids and is 200 feet above the water. Hawkins crossed the bridge to the Canadian side and then started back for the American shore. A few minutes later two women Baw a man climb upon the railing of the bridge, They notified the bridge ticket takers. The man sat astride of the rail for several minutes looking down at the turbulent waters. When the official ran toward him he leapsd forward. Had "Henpecked" Life, Man Avers. Dishes thrown at him, his life threatened -And his coat and hat hid den to keep him at home, locked In his own house and not allow to peace fully enjoy a meal In a restaurant! Such has been the "henpecked" ex istence of Daniel Drodnos of Pittsburg for three years, according to his state ment in a bill of particulars filed against his wife and from ail these things Brodnos seeks relief by divorce. Phone Girl to Get $2,000,000. Miss Jean Connell, operator at the private telephone exchange of the Car negie Steel company in New Castle, Pa., left her job to get a $2,000,000 be quest. She joined her mother, Mrs. Agnes Connell, at Pittsburg whence they went to Philadelphia to secure their share of a $10,000,000 estate ot her grandfather, John Robs, deceased. His property had been in litigation, but this has recently been settled. Reservoir Walls Torn Away. A cavein in the Butler mine of the Pennsylvania Coal company at Hughestown, near Wilkes-Barre, Pa., tore down the supporting walls of a reservoir of the Spring Brook Water company and 1,400,000 gallons of water flooded parts of Pittston, Just below. Residences for three blocks were al most submerged. There were several narrow escapes from drowning. Likes Boy's Garb. Comfortably ensconced in a box car on the Baltimore and Ohio railroad in the Pittsburg yards with two boy com panions, Mabel Pyles, aged thirteen, dressed in boy's clothes and ready to travel, disguised as William Brown, was discovered by a policeman. The girl said she had been fatigued by selling papers and had crawled into the car to sleep. No Matter How Severe the Winter Will Be. You will never mind it if you are dressed properly for it. The time to buy is now when stocks are overflowing and the size ranges are complete. Our -Mackinaw Coats, Sweaters, Underwear, Hosiery and other of Men's Wearing Apparel are beautiful to the extreme. We afe selling lots of Mackinaw Coats these days for men, women and children, $2.50 and $7.50. T. A. P. Oil City, fa. Father Schmidt and Aumul br Girl, Murdsr Victim Hans Schmidt, an assistant priest at St. Joseph's Catholic church at 405 West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, New York, has confessed mur dering and dismembering the body ot Anna Aumuller and depositing tho parts of the torso In the Hudson river. The girl was a servant In the house of another priest. Mystery surround ing the finding of parts of the body baffled the police departments of two cities, but New York officers were suc cessful in finally running down one clue and after locating Schmidt ob tained a complete confession from him. Killed In Dash to Pay Car. An investigation into the death at Ellsworth, Pa., of Fred Reeds showed that Reeds' anxiety to get his pay envelope led directly to his death. He dropped his work and dashed between two coal cars. As he pot between the care they were run together. Schoolboy Wins Golf Championship. Francis Ouimet, a schoolboy and an amateur coif player, not only out played but out gamed Harry Vardon and Edward Ray, the greatest golfers of England, in tha national golf match at Brookline, Mass., thereby winning the American championship, MARKET QUOTATIONS Pittsburg, Sept. 23.' Cattle Choice, $S.50(g 8.85; prime, $S.25'? S.50; heifers, $54i7.75; common to fat bulls, $4Cj7; common to fat cows, $4(fi7; fresh cows and spring ers. $G0ifS5. Sheep and Lambs Prime wetlmrs, $4,851(5; good mixed, $4.50 4.75; lambs, $5(57.50; veal calves, $11.50) 12; heavy and thin calved, $7(8. Hogs Prime heavy hogs, $8.!)09; heavy mixed, $9.1 5 (?r 9.25; mediums and heavy Yorkers, $9.4 5 (?i 9.50; light Yorkers, $8.75?j9; pig.i, 8(8.25; stags, $6.757. i Cleveland, Sept. 23. Cattle Choice,. HU "Keers, ,m18.25; good to choice sleers, $7. 75fl8.25; heifers, $7fii7.50; bulls, $Gf( G.R0; cows, $5.2516; milchers and springers, $25 &(;:-. Sheep and Lambs- (iood to choir lambs, $7.25i&7.35; mixed sheep, $4 4.25. hogs Yorkers, $9.25; mixed, $9.25; heavies, $8.50(5; 8.75; light pigs, $7iS; roughs, 7.75; stags, $7 "5. Chicago, Sept. 23. Hogs Receipts, M.OOO. Hulk of sales, $S.10(f;8.',5; li;;lit. $8.40ffi9.25: mixed, $7.r5ff !).20; heavv, $7.S0(h 9.05; roufeh, $7.E0&8; pi, $GS. f ' '& " tf-llK IiHii W fx"' 'r 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 priced so attractively. Faultlessly tailored perfect fitting Suits-priced $16.60, $18.60, $19.60 and $20.00. Stylish coats in an endless range of fashionable fabrics $12.60, $14.60, $16.00, $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. -M i Cattle Keceipts, L'-'.oou. ueeves, $7.10(R9.35; Texas steers, $7i8.10; tockers and feeders, $5.40(0 8; cows rnd heifers. $3.75 ffl 8.76; calves, $8.50 11.76. Sheep Receipts, 53,000. Native, $3.75fi4.80; western, $3.90(574.80; year lings, $4.85 (Ti 5.80; lambs, native, $5.65 7.40; western, $5.S5 7.40. Wheat Sept.. 87 ',. Corn Sept., 74 . Oats Sept., 41'f.. East Buffalo, Sept. 23. Cattle Steers, $'i?7 9.2D; butchers, $7fr 8.75; cows, $3.75i 7.50; bulls, $5.25 (8 7.50; heiiers. $C.50r(i 8.50; stock heif ers. $5.25Cfi 5.75; stockers and feeders, $6(fi7.40; fresh cows and springers, $35(fi 90. Hogs Heavy, $9.10(Ti 9.40: mlxe', $9,505(9.55; Yorkers, $S.75ffi 9.55; pics, $7.50T( 8 50; roughs, $?Ji 8.10; stags, $6.50?i7.59; dairies, $C 9.r.0. Sheep and Lambs Lambs, $5.50(?D 7.75;yenrlin);s, $4.50(ffi; wethors, $5((i $5.25; ewes, $2.60(! 4.50; Bheep, mixed, $4.75(fT5. Her Eight Daily Meals. Somerset. In Enlnm. Is rich In mimes fur tho inletvnlntrrt iiienl. In "Ited Letter Mays" Mrs. Andrew Crosse give n deln'tiililo sketch of her old nurse, n Somersetshire woman, "who lived to he nearly n hundred. She used to say thai folks should take their meals reinilnr. All her life she had eaten 'n dew lilt mid liienkfiist. a stay lilt and (lianer. a iiioinnict and criim niet and a hit nfler supper' eight meals In nil." Teeth of th- Sperm Whale. Mislead of having plates of baleen the square nose.l sperm whale carries a row of tweniv to twenty five heavy teeth on each side of the lower Jnw. These ftt Into soi Uets In the roof ,if Hie moiitl) and assist 111 Imlillinr the giant squid n mt i iittlclliih pvii which tlMM-nor-nious animal feeds. Tlillld seldom nets a way from tho warm currents; hence the sperm uv.c;; -eninins In tho tropics. How io Look Yutin j. She I sent a dollar to n .voting wo man for a recipe lo make me look young. He What did .von get? Shur A curd saying, "Always nssocl life' wllh women twenty yours older thiiii yourself." Never. She-Wo women are nil misunder stood. He-Well, you never saw ono who tried to make herself plain, did .vou?-Clnclnnntl Enquirer. No, Indeed. Sllllciis-llo you believe any man Is rich enough to do alisolnti ly as he pleiis-s? '.villous - Not If he's mar-ried.-I'lilladelphla Iteoord. A coward never forgave. It (g not his nature.-l'rencli Proverb. T. A. P. Oil City, Fa. Ill Fated Explorers. Annum tlu Spiuiaiils who won fa mo as ilisi oxoiors mid conquerors In A mer lon only a very few died peacefully. Hole Is a ihi of some of the more lin w'itanl who siilTored at the bunds of fuio: Columbus died broken lieurttKl, linliliii and Itiiluiilllla were drowned. Oviinilo vol harshly superseded, Lns Casus sought refuge In n cowl. OJedu died in extreme poverty, Enclso wna deposed by his own men. Klciicssn per ished miserably by the cruelty of his party. Vasoo Xune. de Bullion was dis gracefully behendod. Narvaez was Im prisoned In u tropical dungeon and nft erward died of hardship, Cortes wns dishonored. Alvarado was destroyed In anibiish. Aliuagro was garroted. Plr.nr rn was murdered ami his four brothers out off. mid there was no end to tho assassinations anil executions of tho secondary chiefs mining tho energetic mid daring adventurers. Power of a Sunflower. "One of the most remarkable exhibi tions ()f )llnt i ft I ever saw." writes John llnrroughs In it n Atlantic Month ly article, "was In a western city, where I observed a species of wild simllowor forcing Its way up through the asphalt pavement. The folded and compressed loaves of the plant, like a inan'M list, had pushed against tho hard but flexible concrete till It had bulged up and then split nnd let tho Irrepressible plant through. The force exerted must have boon many pounds. I think It doubtful If tho strongest limn could have pushed his (1st through such a resisting medium." Remedies That Don't Remedy. "What's the matter, old top?" "Lumbago." "I have a remedy I wish you'd try." "I'll put your remedy on my wnltlng list. At my present rate of progress I'll got to It In about two years." Kansas City .loitrmil. rrcscriplioii lens grlndcrN for Hie eyew, plug Ctollegl ntely (ruined and in I or nationally endowed Itehiiid the (Jung. NO DROPS. RESULTS DEFINITE. Artificial llj eg in Mock. Both 'Phones. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Cures Cold, Croup and Whuuping Cough. t) r,