The Forest Republican. (Tionesta, Pa.) 1869-1952, March 11, 1914, Image 4

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    THE SMART & SILBEHBERO CO., OIL CIT7.
The Spring Styles.
There is so much here to interest the woman who
follows the changes of fashion so. many ,new. arrivals
have been unpacked during the past few days that we
can do little more than hint, in this space, of therbeauti
ful new styles in Millinery, Appareling, Silks, Dress
Goods, Wash Fabrics, Laces, and Accessories, which are
crowding this House of Fashion.
Throughout the store, you will find a glad note of
spring. Will you not come and view the wonderful new
styles? They are worth a special trip . to ,town if
necessary.
If We Could Only Tell You As We
. : Want, of the Style to These
New Suits,
You'd let nothing keep you from hurrying to this great
Appareling Section at the earliest possible minute.
Here are more models than you have ever before seen
under one roof hereabouts. New crepes, gabaidines,
basket weaves, fine serges, and black and white mix
tures; in novel shades of tan, golden brown, navy, Nelio,
mignone.te, Hague, and black. Coats in Eton, Bolero,
pony, and box effects, fancily trimmed or plain. Skirts
in new tunic and draped designs,
Junior Suits, 15-17
Women's Suits
Misses' Suits, 16-18
Women's Stout Suits
..lO to, 25
$15 to $50
412 to 25
$20 to 40
House Cleaning Days Are Close
at Hand,
And with new stock arriving daily, we are better pre
pared than ever to take care of your drapery and rug
requiremenes for early spring delivery. "
Our Selection cf Draperies repute with sugges
tions carefully thought out, will please the most ' critical
housewife.
For Window Hangings or Portieres we repre
sent the Orinoka Mills, and show a complete assortment
of 32 in. and 50 in. widths in guaranteed Waterfast and
Sunfast Fabrics.
5k AmuS, Sllkdm &)
When You Think of
SAVING
Think of the
Oil Gity Trust Company
Oil City, Pa.
SPECIAL TRAIN
FOR TOURISTS
Army of Unemployed . "Passed
Along" by, Calif omians
COUNTIES GLAD TO PAY BILLS
"On to Washington" Contingent
Having Pleasant Journey I. W. W.
Oratory in New York City Checked.
A pleasant journey across the con
tinent ureins to bo the Rood fortune
of "General" Kelley's loinmand of un
employed men, on their way frohi San
KrancMro to Washington to complain
to congress of present conditions.
The communities vhicli army
lias invaded, only too glad to rid them
M'lvtii of the "undesirables," have
adopted the "pass them along" policy.
It cost Contra Costa county $703.50
in railroad fares to s'lip the army to
l:enicla, Solano county. Benicia at
once made preparations to send it to
Colo and Sacramento counties.
An appeal to the state railroad com
mission brought permission for the
SoMthern Pacific to grant a reduced
1i re, lint the railroad company itself
refused to b'i a party to any plan "for
clumping a lot of undesirables onto un
offending communities" and the
Solano county odicials then agreed to
pcy first-dins fares, as had Contra
Costa. A srecial tra'.n was arranged
for the party.
Contra Costa county was lavish tn
ils hospitality. It distributed to tho
two camps of marchers 200 loaves of
bread, C quarters of beer, ,r0 sacks
of potatoes, 12 sac'.ts of onions, a
wagon load f fish aid tea, coffee and
rice by the hundredweight.
"Colonel" Louis La Place, attached
to the staff rf "General" Kelley, de
serted and returned lo San Francisco
to resume his place ns a police de
fertive. I. a Place say the nrniv con
sists or 1,17' officers and privates and
Is growing in numbers dally; that it
plans to dl'-,de into two divisions on
reaching K nsas, one continuing to
Washington by way of Kansas City
and the other by way of Omaha.
La Place expresses little sympathy
with the personnel of the army or the
purposes of its leaders. Some of the
members, he says, are working men
who were lured from good positions
and the rest he declares to be in
curable vagrants, with no thought of
looking for work. The leaders, he
says, are all professional agitators.
Church Invaders Get Thirty Davs.
Joseph Albers, a member of Frank
Tannenbaum's Industrial Workers of
the World army, which stormed New
York churches, was sentenced in po
lice court to serve thirty days In jail.
He was convicted of disorderly con
duct and breach of peace.
William Greene, whose case came
up next, also received a sentence of
thirty days. The magistrate ruled that
the man's presence in the church was
sufficient evidence of disorderly con
duet since be was not a member. Ok-
sotT Rarston, a blacksmith, among the
prisoners, was released on $1,000 bail.
Magistrate Campbell received a let
ter signed "Black Hand" in which he
was threatened with dynamite If the
Industrial Workers of the World men
should be convicted.
Tannenbaum's followers expected
that he would be out on bail last night
to encourage them. He was not send
ing word that he would stay in jail
until the last one of the rioters was
released.
The holding of Fr.ink Tannenhaum
for Inciting to riot sort of took the
starch out of the meeting last night
at Rutgers square. All the police had
to do was look on.
From bis cell In the Jefferson
Market prison TannenbHiini s'nt out
a message to his followers to keep up
the fight.
Man, Bonded by Snow, Killed.
Blinded by the driving snow Al
plionse Jesse, a section hand employed
on the Pitteinirg and Lake Erie rail
road, stepped in front of a train near
New Castle Junction, Pa., and was
Vi'l'd lostin,!y.
t The Distinctive Garment Store
A Revolution
IN
Women's Suit Fashions
The tailored suit of yesterday has gone.
The new suits are "untailored" much like
dresses. It is hard to tell where the coat leaves off,
and the skirt begins. The waist line is disappearing.
Coats do not fit at all, but seem to be falling off. t
Collars stand away from the neck.
The bustle effect has come to stay.
Though different the new suits are more beau- ; ;
tiful and feminine than ever with ruffles and
"poufs" and olden-day collars, and one does not
need to "get used" to them.
The Distinctive Garment Store
Henry J. McCarty,
111 CENTRE ST., OIL CITY, PA.
PtNKUSt UUI rUrt StNATE
Formal Announcement Made Takes
Pride in His Record.
Placing the tariff to the front as an
Issue and attacking the Mexican policy
of the Wilson administration Senator
Boies Penrose of Pennsylvania made
formal announcement of his candidacy
for re-election to thy United States
senate.
"At the urgent solicitation of many
persons in all walks of life 1 have con
sented to become a candidate to suc
ceed myself as United States sena
tor," reads the announcement. "I :n
vlte full discussion as to my record
during eighteen yean of service in
the senate of the United States and as
part of that discussion I welcome the
candidacy of any Republican who may
aspire to the nomination of the Re
publican party for i? office of Unit
ed States senator at tiie approaching
primaries.
"When I shall ham completed my
present term in the senate I will have
served continuously iv. legislative of
fice for a period of thirty years. As a
member of the house of representa
tives and senate of Pennsylvania and
the senate of the United States I have
given the best years of my life to the
public service. During that time I am
confident it will be found that my vole
always has been upon the right side of
every public question and it will be
admitted generally that my door has
been open to my constituents as freely
to the poor as to the rich, and to all
men regardless of distinctions.
RECLUSE LOADED WITH COIN
Found Dying in Fireless Shack With
$1,700 In Pockets.
James Loan. a recluse, aged seven
ty, was found dying in shack on Ills
farm In West Sale n township, near
Greenville, Pa. His pockets were
bulging with money. Logan wus
found in a room in which there was
neither bed of heat.
Logan was taken to the home of a
brother and. desf,l:e the efforts of
neighbors, he would not allow a phy
sician to be called, it is said. More
than $1,700 cash was found in Logan's
pockets.
Girl Frozen to Death.
Miss K1U Sweeney. - twenty-two
years old, of Kreeland, Pa., was found
frozen to death in a cutter where her
compimton, James Bartholdl, had left
her in a blinding snowstorm while he
went for he'.p. When he reached help
two miles distant Bartholdi was so
exhausted he was not permitted to return.
Prisoner Seeks Death.
Eluding a guard at the county Jail
In Pittsburg, Walter Asser, thirty
years old, a federal prisoner, clam
bered up the outside of several cell
tiers, fought off prisoners who reached
out through cell bars to seize him on
his way up, then leaped from the
fourth tier to the cement floor of the
Jail fifty feet belo'v. His leg was
broken and It is thought his skull
was fractured. His condition Is said
to be critical.
Convert Returns Stolen Watch.
Last April W. G. Conrad of Pittsburg
lost his watch. Tie bad given up
hopes of finding it. (me day recently
be received a packago and this note:
"1 Inclose your wat"h, which 1 stole
from you 1. 3t April. 1 was converted
at the 'Billy' Sunday meeting and I
want to live right. Plase forgive me.'
Man's Head Beneath Engine Tender.
An unidentified white man was
killed by a Pennsylvania train at Coal
Center, near Cliarleroi, Pa. The accl
dent was not discovered until Kn
gineer Lnpp on looking beneath the
tender of the engine found a man's
head, a leg and an arm.
Will Use Films to Warn Flirts.
Flashing on moving picture screens
warnings ta men and women not to
flirt may become a reality in the down
town nickelodeons of Pittsburg. Di
rector Chrrles S tf.ihbsrd of the de
partment of public safety has the sub
vert uni'pr r1viiiniunt.
Shirts made to order $2.00 and
upward.
Suits made to order $15.00 and
upward.
T.
A.
P.
The Man Who Swallows
Dust
in a factory, mill or foundry wants the best his hard-earned dollars will bring him.
We Know
that the workingman's trade is the blood, bone and muscle of our business. We are very
careful to see that the man who works gets full measure for every dollar spent with us
Therefore we take pleasure in announcing
A wonderful stock of $1.00 Dress Shirts
A wonderful stock of COc Neckties
A wonderful stock of $1.00 Union Suits
A wonderful stock of 60c Underwear
A wonderful stock of 25c Hosiery
A wonderful stock of $1.00 and $2.00 Work Trousers
A wonderful stock of $2.00 and $3.00 Hats
A wonderful stock of 60c Overalls
A wonderful stock of Carhart Overalls
A wonderful stock of $1.00 Jean Pants
A wonderful stock of 60c Caps
The values we offer, gentlemen, are worthy the investigation of any person with true
economical tendencies.
A.
P.
Oil City, Pa.
Oil City, Ta.
Waves Uoodby to Children; Dies.
Waving goodby to his two daugh
ters, seated in a coach of an eastbound
Pennsylvania train, a man, aged about
thirty-five, leaped beneath the wheels
of the conch In which his children
were riding and was instantly killed
at the East Liberty Mat Ion in Pitts
burg. He was a foreigner named Stec.
The daughters continued their journey
not knowing the fate of their father.
Policeman Goes to Mule's Rescue.
Rescuing a mule, the heels of which
were tied to the rafters of a stable,
was the delicate exu-rience of Police
Commissioner Johnston in Pittsburg.
The police suspect that the owner hit
upon this plan of administering a
lesson that terra firma is the best
place for a mule's heels after all. The
owner of the aniinnl could not be
found.
Attacked; She Kills Man.
"I defended myself from this brute's
attack." declared Mrs. George Strain
as she led Iee Glen, superintendent
of the lunibsr camp In Hunter's camp,
near Tiones.ta, Pa., through the deep
snow to the body of Wert Allen, whom
she had twice stabbed with a butcher
knife. Allen was taken to the Him
bearing camp and died.
Drops Case After Spending $30,000.
Having spent $:!1,000 In court
actions against the M T. S. Ken
nedy company in an attempt to gain
possession of an allespd street opening
to the Beever river known as Island
lane, the Rochester fl'a.) town council
has voted to drop the suit rather than
expend another $1,000 on an appeal tn
the supreme court.
Woodsman Froien to Death.
The remains of George Mattsle.
forty-five yjars old, a woodsman, va
found in a forest one mile from South
Fork, Pa. Mattsie had been missing
since last Friday, when he went to
the woods o cut some lumber. It was
the opinion that he became lost in the
snow and perished from the extreme
cold weather.
Banked In the Cellar.
Represeniatives of the Farmers'
Trust company of Lancaster, Pa.,
which Is settling the estate of Jeffer
son Miller, have searched a basement
where he spent much of his time.
Bonds and cash amounting to $17 Ml
were found hidden. Miller who left
a big estate was afraid of banks.
Cha'oed With Attacking Girl.
Bruse Little, aged tweniy-two, wus
arrested and held for court In $1,000
hail by Justice Addison Courtney In
Beaver, Pa., on the charge of attack
ing Elizabeth Vogel, aged ten.
Treck Empljyo Killed.
On man, a foreigner, was killed
and another seriously Injured while
at work on the tracks of the Pennsyl
vania railroad at Mineral Point, five
miles from Johnstown, Pa.
iVSEjl "So Bite, JMj" if! S
wo sum, .1 mtiiK J
v fmoBi, -trap
"I I "No String.". ijgTll, , if
ifj. .miiuiiifiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiilnra
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Msjiii,wiiiij!wiijram
n
U
Go get a tin of STAG
. and be . rewarded by a
new thrill in .smoking.
: STAG has a LIVING FRAGRANCE
that Is entirely original and entirely
wonderful.
The last pipeful of the day or night
Is as fresh and tempting as the first
Convenient Packages: The Handy Half-size 5-
Cent Tin, the Full-Size 10-Cent Tin, the Pound and Half-Pound
Tin Humidors and the Pound Glass Humidor.
M
! I.
For Pipe and Cigarette
EVER-LASTING-LY GOOD
J-.
Exceptional Early Season Prices in
the Second Floor Garment
Section. -
Garments and prices that should make this an exceedingly busy depart
ment. An occasion planned (or duriug ?ur recent visit to the New York
market. At which time some verj extraordinary purchases were made in
conjunction with other members of the great buying syndicate of which we
are members. And the garments are here today at prices so much less
than garments of such character are usually quoted that they seem like re
duced prices. Just a brief summary of what this showing consists of:
All Silk Crepe de Chene Waists $3.60.
New Tailored Skirts at $2.76, $3.00 and $3.60.
A wonderful showing New Silk Dresses at $10.00 and $11.60.
A Combination Dress bodice and sleeves of chiffon and lace and
charmeuse messaline skirt, $11.60.
A half hundred wonderfully pretty New Spring Coats, Wool Ratines,
Striped Eponges, Soft Diagonals, Novelty Mixtures, Honeycomb Cloth, etc.,
at $11.60, $12.60, $14.60, $16.00, $16.60 and $18.60.
One hundred new Suits tangos, terra cottas, chickory, reseda, canard
blue styles just as attractive as the colors colors just as cheerful as the
styles, $10.00, $12.60, $14.60, $16.00, $16.60, $18.60, $19.60 and $20.00.
A SEAMLESS ALL SILK HOSE 60c PAIR.
And there's not a better hose shown on any counter anywhere for a
half dollar.
KEYSER'S CHAMOISETTE GLOVES 60c PAIR.
"Keyser" means best white, natural color or tan black or self stitch.
It's the Simplest Thing in
the World
to lo your banking by mail;
our porl'fctod system carries
every sulvantage possessed by
the city dweller to the resident
in the remotest district.
May vc send you particu
lars? Your inquiry involves no
obligation.
4 Compound I ntrit 4 ?o
Pittsburgh Bank for Savings
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Ritnbllnhcd In 1809
pie ijceiflitde usmaljf von
Brdlen.
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.
D. H. Blum,
TIONESTA, TA.
(54 finb nteljr S(ugn burd) unredjtce'
3lnpaffen bonOIafern oUburd) fonft tU
ni ruinirt toorbtm. $at ba 3lug
maftBcl&afte Refraction, Jo mufi bai
flilb allct C5egenftSnbtnatt)tinm goaie"
auf bet "JJefcljaut burd) auergttpijnlid!
IbStiflfeit iti musculus ciliarius fle
6tat, obet ba5Wb untoollfommen f cirt
unb bn3 Stcfultat toerbiinfelt SeM
mit Sd)foad)e unb Sajmerj urn 9(u
(jtn unb tint. $ie berurfad)t Com
flcftioncn, roeld)e fid) burd) fd)he Slit
flenlieber, 9Jotlje, 3uden cbtr 33rennn,
cin cfiibl, al fi Sd)mufc im Huge,
anb baufiflcn Sdjtmrj, berbunben mij
Gmpfinblidjlcit gtgen 2id)t jttgen. 3
fdimadier ba SHuge, beflo fflBarej
pbige Stjm)tome. 2lugn mflgen bbt;fifci
ftat! unb glctdjtool ft)fd)had) ftin unj
Uingelchrt.
Urn burd) GJebraud) tinet SBrttle b!
2Jiangel aufjubeben, hirb bit Ib''fi'
her SNuSfcIn geanDert, unb toenn bo
Sd)abtn toorUber cber burd) ju ftarli
pber ju fd)h)a(e Iafcrntd)t aufgcl;obci
ift, fo finb bie Utfad)en I tr Gongeftici
eber bermcljrt ftatt fcerminbert. SUcftelj
gcmifd)e SHcfractton, ttiu irgenb ti?
anbeUglaS ben Sdiabtn bcrmctjren.
?cbcr Sd)toad)td)tige foltte fid) forg:
faltig toiffenfdmftlid) unterfudien unl
ikidnt anynffenlaffen, tb trfiis in e.
braud) nimmt.
3 befonbern fallen totrben Iafcr
auf SBcftclIung gcfd)Iiffen, in jebem JaUt
horautirt.
For Further Particulars Call On
DOCTOR MORCK
Who Will be Pleased to Explain the
Above in Either Language.
Fred. Grettenborger
GENERAL
BLACKSMITH & MACHINIST.
All work pertaining to Machinery, En
gines, Oil Well Tools, Gas or Water Fit
Ungnand General Blacksmlthiug prompt
ly done-Tit Low Rate. Repairing Mill
Machinery given special attention, and
satisfaction guaranteed.
Shop in rear of andjuBt west of the
Shaw House, Tidioute, Pa.
Tour patronage solicited.
FRRD. GRETTKNBERGER