The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, October 22, 1913, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    f The Distinctive Garment Store
Shirts made to order 2.00 and
upward.
Suits made to order $15.00 and
upward.
Centre Street at
SHOP HERE IN PERSON OR VIA
UNCLE SAM.
YOU'LL BE SATISFIED IN EITHER
CASE.
Do you realize that you can
greater than falls to the lot ot Oil
to the amount ct ?-10, we II pay
chases ol $20 or over mean that
But if you can't come in person mail us your order. It
will be forwarded the same day it is received, and delivered to
you free of charge by Uncle Sam
SMARTEST SUIT STYLES,
$11.75, $14.75, $18.75, $23.75, $25.00.
In special groups at the above prices are many different
styles ot suits that ate creations from some of the best designers
in the country.
You will find them showing
that gives them tone and entirely lacking in that sameness
that is usually found in women s
Any one would be a bargain
its marked price.
GIVE THE YOUNGSTERS A TREAT
Buy Them Underwear They'll
Like To Put On.
Kiddies are always ready and anxious to slip into the sort
of underwear that is sold at this store,
The garments are so warm, soft and snug-fitting, that you
don't have to coax the children to dress, as you often must with
harsh, uncomfortable garments.
And then you'll find the underwear we sell decidedly
economical for wear. It's long-lasting, strongly-made; retains
its shape and does not shrink.
For your children's comfort and your own convenience,
visit our Undewear Section today and select from such famous
makes as the Munsing, the Globe, the Richelieu, etc.
jsnnm
The Currency Bill
Will not lay the foundation of your future prosperity. You
must do that yourself by acquiring the Habit of Saving. Begin
now.
Open an Account With the
Oil City Trust Company
Oil City, Pa.
Why do you put up
You don't have to if
with a
Cole's Original
Hot Blast Heater
w
S. S. SIGWORTH,
Tionesta, Pa.
See the name "Cole't" on the feed door
of each ttove. None genuine without it
Subscribe for the Republican This
Year. $1. All the News.
Elm, Oil City, Pt.
shop here at an expense no
City lolks If you purchase
lor your one-way ticket pur
we pay your fare both ways.
s Parcel Post.
much originality, a something
ready - made clothes.
at several dollars more than
Wowl Cold as the dickens!
with such a nuisance?
you furnish your house
You build only one fire each winter.
It is never out from Fall till Spring.
You get up and dress in rooms
warmed with the fuel put in the night
before.
This is not possible with other stoves.
Burns anything soft coal, hard coal
or wood.
Come in and see this great fire keeper
and fuel saver.
MS?'
4 Distinctive
Individual Suits
f At Prices Others Ask for Ordi
nary
Why pay $15.00, $20.00 or $25.00 for an or-
X dinary suit the same as
can buy
f A Distinctively
That has style, individuality and all the newest
fashion touches and ideas carried out the same
as a $40.00 or $50.00 suit?
Even at these low prices you need not be
afraid of seeing half a dozen suits like yours at
church, on the street, or at the theatre.
No, Not Even Two Alike.
We have the greatest collection of one of a
kind suits ever displayed in Oil City.
Let us demonstrate to you as we have to
hundreds this season the pleasure and satisfac
tion of wearing a Distinctive Individual Suit.
i The Same We Can Proudly Say j
of Our Coat Line.
i The Distinctive
Henry J.
111 CENTRE ST.,
NOT A DEFENSE,
ONLYTHE FACTS
Has the Highway Department
Been Unduly Extravagant
PRELIMINARY WORK IS DCNE
Accurate Road Map Required Before
Construction of Good Roads Could
6 tart Otherwise Funds Would
Be Expended Improperly.
Notwithstanding the fact that Gov
ernor Tener plainly Btated, at the
Harrlsburg Good Roads Convention,
September 18, that the Legislature of
1915 wl!i have the work and responsi
bility of enacting the laws authoriz
ing and regulating the issuing of the
proposed road bonds, and a new ad
ministration the duty of putting them
into operation, provided the constitu
tional amendment is carried, there
are still unthinking people who at
tempt to argue otherwise.
Whether rightly or wrongly, a senti
ment seems to exist in the minds of
some persons that the State Highway
Department has been unduly extrava
gant In the expenditure of the State's
highway funds, but few of the persons
making such suggestions have ever
read the highway law, or know the
details of its provisions.
While this phase of the road sub
ject has no direct bearing on the
constitutional amendment, which
must be passed if the roads are to
be built for the use of the present
generation, it is wise to correct mis
apprehensions which may exist in
connection with highway subjects.
One of the provisions of the Sproul
highway law was that accurate road
maps should be made ot every county
in the State. This is a work of
great magnitude, requiring the sur
vey and measurement by skilled sur
veyors of every mile of road in Penn
sylvania. Not only must the location
of the roads be established, but the
width; the radius of curves; the Ir
regularities of property lines; the
streams; the drainage area and water
outlet, all must be included in this
permanent record. Its immediate
practicability concerns mostly the
roads included in the State highway
system, for it will frequently be neces
sary, in improving these highway, to
change locations to secure better
grades, correct the alignment, avoid
grade crossings, and secure better
lines of sight for the avoidance of
accidents, buying or exchanging road
property. In order to do this the
maps must be perfect and must bo
kept corrected as such changes are
made.
This surveying and map making,
requiring the services of skilled and
competent men, is expensive. Up to
the date of the last report of the De
partment more than thirty-five thou
sand miles of the highways of the
State had been surveyed and placed
on the maps, and the cost of survey
lny and mapping each road can be
found In the published reports.
A close study of the reports dis
closes the fact that in nearly every
instance, the work was done at a
cost considerably less than would
have been charged by an engineering
and map-making firm. Wherever coun
ty surveys were available In accurate
form they were utilized; but it fre
quently occurred that there were
errors in these county surveys that
had to be corrected, and in most
counties the surveys were so incom
plete as to be of little use.
This is not Intended as a defense
of the present highway department,
Ones.
you have had when you
Individual Suit
Garment Store
McCarty,
OIL CITY, PA.
out merely designed tT how the facts
to those who openly allege that the
highway funds have been squandered,
and who argue against the proposed
amendment to the State constitution
on the ground that much of the
money might be wasted or worse.
The Sproul law and the 1911 appro
priation contemplated the making ot
these surveys and maps. They are
necessary in building a State road
system. Every State which has built
good roads has had to make similar
maps of its highway. Without them
the roads could not be improved,
nor could intelligent plans for good
road construction be made.
In this, as in a great variety of
other subjects connected with the
roads there is only needed a plain
statement of the facts to change an
objector into a good roads advocate.
There seems no possible argument
against the contituttonal amendment
providing fifty million dollars with
which to build the roads that a close
study of the facts themselves will not
overcome. The exercise of ordinary
horse sense in getting at the truth
of the subject in all its phases will
compel every voter to see for himself
that not only his own best interests,
but the best interests of the Common
wealth as a whole are in the direc
tion of the adoption ot the constitu
tional amendment; the issue ot bonds
by the Legislature of 1915, and the
building of a system of highways
which will develop Pennsylvania's
resources, and place its people on an
equal footing with those of other
advanced States in the pursuit of
wealth, health and happiness.
FfRMERS FAVOR BONDS
The Defeat of Bonds Would Possibly
Mean a General State Tax.
No farmer should vote against the
Bond Issue, for its defeat may mean
a general State road tax which wonir
l.-.ce the burden on the land not o
'( corporations.
DIVORCED FROIvTdEAO MAN
Queer Requirements Made In France
That Official Records May Be
Completed.
In France, as in some other coun
tries, every citizen has an official his
tory. Not as varied and Interesting
as his real history, but atlU import
ant. From this there follow at times
quaint consequences. If a woman is
married, for example, a wife she re
mains officially though the husband
may be missing.
Consider the case of the paintet
who went fishing on Anthle bay. H
has not since been seen. The body ol
one man who went with him was
washed ashore lifeless. You would
call this tolerably convincing prool
that his wife had been made a widow.
She thought so and in due time she
sought to have it recorded in her of
ficial history that she was a widow.
We are familiar with applications to
a court of justice for leave to pre
sume the death of persons who have
vanished. But the French Judge was
not to be so easily persuaded as our
courts. The wife was in her official
history a wife and there was no certifi
cate to justify her appellation being
changed to widow. Without a certlfl
cate or reasonable documentary evi
dence no man obviously ought to die.
There was a way round. The be
reaved woman applied for a divorce on
the ground of desertion. Since death
is beyond dispute the most complete
kind of desertion, the court of Mon
treal decided that she could not be
denied. So the widow is recognized as
an independent woman and apparently
both the law and she are satisfied. But
you will observe that the official his
tory must now record the wife of a
dead man as a divorcee, which does
not seem very creditable to official
history.
Some Tailors Know As Much
About Making Stylish
Clothes
As the Deck Hands on a Tramp Steamer.
The men who design T. A. P. clothes, and the men who sew them together, are engaged
only after they have proven to possess brains and ability. "A Jack of All Trades" tailor stands
co show whatever in the factory that makes T. A. P. There is no discontent, no petty jeal
ousies, no spite nor ill temper sewed in a T. A. P. garment. The men are hired for their
ability and intelligence.
The high grade character of T. A. P. clothing is manifest in every detail of the garments
themselves. T. A. P. is the kind of clothing that lifts a man from the commonplace to the
dressed circle of distinction.
Suits and Overcoats $20 to $35.
Bristling with crispness and freshness.
T.
A.
P.
Oil Citj, Pa.
True
Vuluft
Trui
Vuluti
dress goods
liiack and White Shepherd
Checks imported and hue do
nicotic makes 50 to 56 inches
wide. $1(HJ. $1J5, $150 and
$2 00 yard
New Imported Taffeta satin
Mripe, all wool lustrous, soft
Cadet, Taupe, Plum, Olive,
Hrown, Navy 43 inches wide,
$l '.)o yard.
Wool ".pontes solid colors
medium weight for dresses or
light weight tailorings all col
ors, P.lack or Cream 54 inches
wide. $'2.00 yard.
children's dresses
r reach Nainsook Dress 4
inch skirt hem, hand embroid
ered yoke neck and sleeves
trimmed with embroidery and
lace edge sizes 0 months, 1, 2
years, if 1.50.
Handmade Nainsook Dresses
neck and sleeves lace trimmed
4 inch hem fine tucks at front
neck and rows of hand embroid
ered garlands sizes 6 months,
1, 2 years. $2 25.
Nainsook Dresses pretty
model for boys or girls tucked
back and front turn-over em
broidered collar sizes 6 months,
t, 2 years. $2 00.
BOKGS & CUML
ITTSBURGH. PA.
Made - To - Measure
Clothes of the
Highest Quality
may be purchased here at the
most modest prices in town,
See our marvels of beauty at
$15, $18 and $20
and our wonderful importa
tions at
$25, $30 and $35
Fit and finish guaranteed.
Blum & Anderson,
TIONESTA, PA.
Prescription lens grinders
Tor the eyes, plus C'ollegi
ately trained and Inter
nationally endorsed
Behind the Guns.
NO DROPS. RESULTS DEFINITE.
Artificial Eyes In KJock.
Both 'Phones.
3BS
Showing New Trimmed Hats at
$3.50, $4.00, $5.00 and $6.00
Shipped us last Friday by a prominent New York milliner. Mid-season
styles, many of them with a touch of fur trimming.
Hats with some style to them original in design and no matter how
large the variety there's never two alike.
We shall show you hats at these prices worth from $6.00 to $8.00.
$20.00 Astrachan Coats $14.50
Coats bought through the large buying syndicate of which this store is
a member.
Brilliant closely curled Astrachan in black, navy blue and brown.
Coats are full satin lined. Shawl collar, reveres and cuffs of plush.
Draped back with double rows large velvet buttons.
Ladies' Tailored Skirts $2.75
Here's a wonderfully nice skirt made of a good quality navy blue serge
nicely tailored and a splendid fitting skirt.
Skirts very little better are being sold for $5.00.
Forest Mills Union Suit $1.00
We consider this far and away the best $1.00 Union Suit on the market.
Full bleach fine rib snug fitting garment, beautifully finished.
High neck, long sleeve low neck, short sleeve high neck, elbow
sleeve high neck, short sleeve.
Regular and "Out Size" $1.00 garment.
LAST EXCURSION
of the
Oil City and Titusville
Sunday, October 26, 1913
SPECIAL
Fare to Oil City or Titus- I
ville and return
Glade 9.43 a. ra. $1.00
Mruthers. . . 9.46 a.m.
Warren 9.63 a. m,
Irvineton 10.06 a. m
Tidioute 10.30 a. m,
l.uo
1.00
1.00
-751
Returning, Special Train leaves Titusville 8.00 P. M., Oil City 8.40 P. M., War
ren 10.00 P. M. Children 6 years of age and under 12, half fare. Baggage will not
be checked.
Pennsylvania Railroad
Great Writer' Idea.
"There is an idea- abroad among
moral people that they should make
their neighbors good. One person I
have to make good: myself. But my
duty to my neighbor is much more
nearly expressed by saying that I
have to make him happy if I may."
Robert Louis Stevenson.
f hnrb
Istnition xjt.
PowtWui. dean exolotioa.
b.i no car d on
Hvt 1
EWaverly Gasoline 13
feli refined distilled not crude f-vl
M'i compressed gas. C?
MX. FREE-320pwbook-.il
WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO. 1
LAMP OILS LUBRICANTS
LAMP OILS LUBRICANTS
JAMES HASLET,
GENERAL MERCHANT
Furniture Dealer,
-AND
UNDERTAKER.
TIONESTA. PKNN
Fred. Grettenborgor
GENERAL
BLACKSMITH & MACHINIST.
All work pertaining to Machinery, En
gines, Oil Well Tools, Gas or Water Fit
tings and General Hiacksmi thing prompt
ly done at I.w Kates. Repairing Mill
Machinery given apecial attention, and
xatiHfrtction gtiarantneil.
Hhop in rear of and hint wextof the
haw Uotinn, Tidioute, Pa.
Your patronage solicited.
I' RED. UKISTTENBEHUEK
T.
A.
P.
Oil City, l'a.
4
Season to
TRAIN LEAVES
Fare to Oil City or Titus
ville and return
West Hickory 10.46 a.m. $0.76
I iionesta 10.66 a. m.
Oil City Ar. 11.32 a. m.
I Titusville Ar. 12.20 p. m.
.76
At the
Racket Store
BARGAINS
in
Graniteware, Tinware,
Glassware, Chinaware,
Stationery, Hosiery,
Wall Paper, Window Shades
Elm Street,
Tionesta, Pa.
J. L. Hepler
LIVERY
Stable.
Fine carriages for all occasions,
with first class equipment. We can
6t you out at any time for either a
pleasure or business trip, am) alwavg
at reasonable rates. Prompt service
and courteous treatment.
Coon aud see us.
Hear of Hotel Weaver
TIOUESTA, IE?A..
Telephone No. 20.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
W TUB IHAMOND IlKAM. A
DIAMOND lilt AMI IN 1,1. for tt&
year, known as lint. Safcit. Alwtvt Kellal l
i,aui'l At I your UruccUt for a
'ills in lU'il ft.i-i (.ulj meulliAX
l, imIcI with Htue Ril'bott. Y
TuL no til her. Ituy of jour "
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS tVERVWHLRf