10 '' in^erS °^ Tobacco Chewers , ~ said one of the greatest thinkers people's money takes heavy toll 'ir from a man's nerves and brain. The banker who can find a tobacco that will lend keenness and calmness to his > brain without exacting: componnd inter est from his nerves, has found something to bethankful for.** PICNTC TWIST is just that «ortof tobacco —full of mildness and natural sweetness that yon can't ' find in heavy tobacco and without a heavy tobacco's ' come back' on the nerves. Only the mild mellow part of the leaf goes JjjjfH into the soft, convenient PICNIC TWISTS, Isn't that the sort of a chew you want ? PICNIC TWIST® CHEWING TOBACCO "Tht Thirteen of the Country Art the Tobacco Chetotn" The sensible, economical war to buy PICNIC TWIST \W9B Üby the drum of 11 twists, that preserves its freshness. l I THKKE VETERANS INJURED WHEN ALTO OVERTURN'S j Special to The Telegraph Lewisburg, Pa., June I.—Three | Civil War veterans were injured yes terday when the automobile in which they were riding to a cemetery to con duct memorial services, collided with another car. The machine turned turtle, throwing: the veterans in the road. The Injured men are: Philip Kisley. arm fractured in two places; George Angstadt, shoulder broken; William Mertz, slightly bruised. They are members of Tucker Post, of Lewis burg. CALPHENE ' CONDITIONS Safeguard the health of your j K*<-erpt form Report of T.tent. Colo familv hv lisinir r4I,PHF\'P tho np| William Stephenson, Inspector ■ n> usin * tAUfHhM!,, tM Instructor at t'nmp Mt. Gretna. National Disinfectant, Deodcrant The Pxcenent Sanitary condition and Germicide. Keep a can in your jof the Camp, with a minimum of Bathroom and Kitchen, flush it disease, flies and odor, lends an in ihrmiirk «■««« n ir,.. e . j„,. jterest to the methods and disln hrough the waste pipes once a daj, j fectantß use(l CAL.PHEXE was It aeflartriHc* and disinfects thes© the disinfectant used this year at Germ breeding places. Also treat Camp Mt. Gretna and while ap places like Garbage. Dampness or Parently most efficient, is the most _.t, . ' .. agreeable I have known, being of a w hcre\ er Flies and Mosquitoes Plnk Color and aromatic , n bodor breed CALPHENE destroys the It is manufactured at Lebanon, Pa.. Lavra of these insects and prevents and I recommend its trial bv our millions of Flies from coming to Army Medical Department, life. Read the Following Testi- This Cump was known as "The monlal: Camp Without Flies." FOR SALE BY ALL FIRST CLASS GROCERS AND DRUGGISTS EVANS, BURTNETT & CO. WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS HARRISBVRG, PA. — j Farmers" Excursions TO STATE COLLEGE Thursday, June 10 Tuesday, June 15 Special Train I.eavea _ . Harrlsburic - 7.53 A. M. Special Train I.eavea Tickets ftt.OO round trip. ni.rrlf.bur* - 0.45 A. M. mold, good on train, leav ing; ChnmberahurK 6.00 A. Proportionate low farm M., stopping; at principal from polnta on Middle local Cumberland Valley Dlvlnlon vreat to Tyrone, Station to HarrfMbiirjt. Inclusive. Returning, tralna leave State College 5.30 P. M. djQ.OO Round <£Q.OO Trip See Flyera. Consult Ticket vent a. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD - / l I Why Spend More? M EN who can afford any-priced cigar find I that Moja quality, quite satisfies them and leaves no excuse to spend more than the Moja price—10c. Mojas are a fragrant blend of choice all Ha vana in three perfectly-rolled sizes but all alike in rich quality. Moja 10c Cigars Made by John C. Herman & Co. T T" TUESDAY EVENING, "SPT" SCARES TRENTON i < nrrlncc Painter Stopped While Sketch ing Seeond Recimrni Armory I Trenton. X. J., June 1. The highly agitated state of the public mind was manifested yesterday morning when a "foreign spy" rumor ran through the center of the city with the result that Newman Atkinson, a carriage painter, was interrupted in making a sketch of the Second Regiment Armory by the the arrival of several policemen and scores of more or less excited citizens. Atkinson explained that he was merely making the drawing to demon strate his artistic talent for the benefit of several friends and that there was no military significance connected with his activity. PRESIDENT WILSON SEES U. S. IS LEADER Nation's Business, He Says, Is Con stantly in Years That Lie Ahead of It MAKES MEMORIAL ADDRESS "Greater Days Lie Before This Nation Than It Has Ever Yet Seen," He Declares Special to Tht Telegraph Washington. June I.—Eulogies of America's soldier and sailor dead were voiced here yesterday by President Wilson, Secretary Bryan, Secretary- Daniels and Governor Willis, of Ohio, at impressive Memorial Day exer ciser at Arlington National Cemetery. crowds seized upon every op portunity to show that the present in ternational situation was uppermost in the public mind. President Wilson, cheered on his ar rival and departure and during his ad dress. carefully avoided any direct reference to problems now facing the [United States. He was enthusiastical ly applauded when he declared that "greater days lie before this nation tlian It lias ever yet seen, ami the sol emn consciousness of those who bear office In this time Is that they must make their best endeavor to emltody in what they do and say the best thinKs in the United States.'' The President spoke as follows: "1 have not come here to-day to deliver an address, but merely rever ently to take part in expressing the sentiment of this impressive day. It necessarily is a day or reminiscences. Reminiscence is not always a profit able exercise. It generally belongs to those, appropriately to those only, who have left the active stage of life and have nothing to think about, ex cept the things that are gone and dead. "It does not behoove a nation to walk with its eyes over its shoulder. Its business Is constantly in the years that lie ahead of it, and in the present, that challenges it to the display of lt» jiowers. "But there are reminiscences which are stimulating and wholesome, and among these reminiscences are chiefly! to be ranked the recollections of days of heroism, days when great nations found It possible to express the best that was in them by the ardent exer cise of every power that was in th«in. "This is what gives dignity to a day like this. It is not a day of regret; it is not a dfty of weakening memory. It is a day of stimulation. But, my lriends, these stimulating memories we are sometimes apt to minimize, because we do not see the full signifi cance of them. We are constantly speaking of the great war, of which we think to-day as a war which saved, the Union, and it did, indeed, save the Union, but it was a war that did a great deal more than that. It created in this country what had never exist-1 ed before—a national consciousness, it was not the salvation of the Union; it was the rebirth of the Union, it was the time when America for the first time realized its unity and saw the vision of its united destiny. "The solemn lesson of these memor ies for us is not that we must be ready to save the Union again, for there are nono among us who threaten its life, btu that we must see to it that the unity, then realized, the vision then seen, is exemplified in us and the things that we do, because there is no stimulation in any lesson unless it be the stimulation to duty. There is no stimulation in any occasion, if it be merely the pleasure of recollection; it must also be the ardor and courage of hope. Greater days lie before this na tion than it has ever seen yet; and the solemn consciousness of those who bear office in this time is that they must make their best endeavor to em body in what they do and say the best things in the United States. "It does not do to talk too much aboutone's self.and I do not think that it is wholesome for the United States ito talk too much about itself. "I do not want to know what you are to-day so much as I want' to know what you are going to ilo to morrow. "The only test I know of that is competent to determine what you are is the test of what you do. Let us not think of our characters: let us think of our duties and of the anions that lie before us. I always have maintained that the man who lives to cultivate his own character will result only in cultivating an intolerable prig; be cause his object will be himself. "Character, my friends, is a bypro duct. It is produced in the great manufacture of daily duty. But duty is not easy to determine. "Duty for a nation is made up of so many complicated elements that no man can determine it. No group of men without wide common counsel can |H>ssibly determine what the duty of the day Is. "That is the strength of a democ racy, because there daily rises in the great body of a democracy the expres sion of an untrammeled opinion, which seems to fill the air with its suggestions of duty; and those who stand at the head of affairs have it as their bounden duty to endeavor to express in their own actions those things that seem to rise out of the con science and hope and purpose of the great body of the people themselves. "America, I have said, was reborn by the struggle of the Civil War, but America Is reborn every day of her life by the purposes we form, the con ceptions we entertain, the hopes that we cherish. We live in our visions. We live in the things that we see. We live, and hope abounds In us as we live, in the things that we purpose. Let us go away from this place renew ed in our devotion to daily duty and to those ideals, which keep a nation young, keep it noble, keep it rich in enterprise and achievement: make it to lead the nations of the world in those things that make for hope and for the benefit of mankind." HEADQUARTERS FOR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES V. I CABIRIA 1 Will be shown on Thursday and Fri day. | VICTORIA HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH 20% Advance on This Oil Stock Tuesday, June 8 To Investors: The real opportunity In America Is In tlie Oklahoma OH Fields at present. If you have the good judgment to rec ognize a fortune making Industrial stock when offered on a real Invest ment bargain basts, you will heed the hour of opportunity and secure a sub stantial amount of this stock before it Is advanced or withdrawn, by starting your remittance at once or by Tues day, June 8. One or two good leases may develop a rich pool and soon pour out millions of barrels and soon pay each stock holder more in dividends than you need now remit to own the stock. The Uncle Sam Oil Company has dem onstrated its ability to protect itself under the most unfair opposition. It has won its fight. It can use a little new capital to big advantage. It will raise that capital. The stock will be advanced 20 per cent, on June S and may be doubled in price again by July 8. It is now or never if you get in at this price. The Company is doing things. A little good luck and our in come from oil will reach an enormous sum. Some of the greatest fortunes ever made in the United States have been made in Oil. Oil is cash. The rich oil monopoly manages to keep its affil iated concerns out of the oil business, laying first claim to all profit direct from this rich national Industry. In the past, ninety per cent, of the oil business has been controlled by one concern. That giant trust has grown more arrogant as its wealth in creased until it lias become the black slave power of the present age in our government and nation. This oil monopoly started its grasp ing methods over fifty years ago in Pennsylvania and Ohio, spread out into West Virginia and the Southern Coast Oil fields, then west into Illinois and into California and the Northwest. When oil was discovered in Kan sas about ten years ago this monopoly tried the same old trick that had robbed the independent producers in other states. It first paid *1.38 per barrel for the crude oil. and encour aged over four hundred different oper ators and concerns to invest in the Kansas oil fields between fourteen and fifteen million dollars. Then after the Kansas pioneer had developed the field this Oil Monopoly arbitrarily put down the price of crude oil in a "few weeks from $1.38 per barrel to less than 30 cents, in a great many cases it singled out certain Kansas producers who had denounced such financial brigandage and shut these certain producers en tirely off from a market. The Kan sas people would not bow their knee and submit to pillage. The Governor of the State and the State legislature took a hand in the game. Oil laws to curb the monopoly were placed on the statute books. The then Governor no tified the World that Kansas would make the Oi l Trust be decent. The Oil Trust then raised the black flag. During these stirring times The I nde Sam Oil Company was organ ized to build up on the free soli of America a great independent, produc ing. refining and marketing concern, as an honest and successful competitor of the Oil and Gas Monopoly. From the very start the Oil and Gas Trust leveled libel and persecution at The Uncle Sam Oil Company. This Trust did not look with favor on this growing young giant that invaded its \\ estern domain where never a real competitor had in forty years before dared to set a foot. This great Oil and Gas Trust knew' then the wonderful possibilities of the Kansas-Oklahoma oil and gas fields It quickly realized that a great peo ple's company with thousands of stockholders located over neighboring states and fighting for principle as well as financial gain, would soon have its distributing stations in everv trade center in the Central West. So the Trust struck back with all its brute power of criminal money. But The Uncle Sam Oil Companv. founded on the Rock or Right, met this persecution and criminal monev and the ••Jungle" met defeat. The' Uncle Sam Oil Company won out. In every court The Uncle Sam Oil Companv was exonerated. Recently the United States Supreme Court, the most powerful court in the world, exempted the pipe lines of The Uncle Sam Oil Company from the common carrier liabilities. During all these years of persecu tion The Uncle Sam Oil Company has increased its assets until now we value our combined properties at four million dollars. This does not include a lease, proven in the Federal Court, as righK fully secured, for aboutl36,ooo acres in Osage, Indian Nation. We are contending for the validation of this lease now. This Osage lease, the richest plum in the Oil World, can be validated by the Secretary of the Interior or by- Congress. A bill has been introduced in the last three sessions of Congress to vali date this lease. We now have about • fifteen thous and stockholders, representing everv congressional district in the United States. AYe will increase our inde pendent army at least another five thousand and by the time the next Congress convenes will be so well or ganized that we should break the power of the Oil Monopoly before Congress and force justice to our persecuted Company by the validation of this great lease, provided the Secretary of Hope Is Seen in New Treatment of Cancer Special to The Telegraph New York, June 1. Dr. J. W. Vaughn, professor of surgery at the De troit College of Medicine, and one of the foremost cancer Research workers In America, has returned home after spending a week here Investigating th treatment for Inoperable cancer which is being tried out at the General Me morial and Polyclinic hospitals, and which was recently described by Dr. S. P. Beebe, professor of experimental therapeutics at Cornell University Medical College. Before leaving the city. Dr. \ aughn said that the work that is being carried on bv Dr. Beebe and his associate. Dr. Beveridge, could be described only by the word "wonderful." "It has been my good fortune." said Dr. Vaughn, "to see some forty cases in the Polyclinic and General Memorial hospitals and the private offices of Dr. Beveridge. These cases have all come under the classification of what was formerly termed hopeless cases. By that I mean that the majority had been operated upon one or several times and the cancer had recurred. MORNING SESSIONS START Morning sessions of school only are now in order and from now on until the schools close for the summer va cation, the fortunate knlckerbockered or pig-tailed youngster who hasn't reached the high schools yet, need not bother about lessons except In the mornings. To-day the one session rule goes into effect. FIND NEW BUGS Some "new bugs" new at least to V. A. E. DaecUe, entomologist of the State Bureau of Economic Zoology, were discovered yesterday by the Natural History Society which spent Memorial day on a motor trip to the old Union Iron Works near There were some thirty in the party. DW George R. Potts, president of the J society, piloted the crowd. the Interior does not open the matter and validate the lease before Congress again convenes. This Osage-Uncle Sam lease is the key to the domestic gas reserve for all the big cities of Western Missouri and Kastern Kansas and Northern Okla homa, Including 150,000 homes. The Uncle Sam Oil Company con tends that the Secretary of the In terior or Congress should not turn over the vast Indian oil and gas lands to any company without a provision written in the lease to authorize the Corporation or Utility Commissions to fix the price to the people on the oil and gas products from these great Government-Indian leases. The people are beginning to realize that The Uncle Sam Oil Company is fighting their battle, and right at home in Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma and neighboring states, consistent citi zens are daily numbering themselves among our. stockholders. Right always rises in its might in time against every great wrong. Consequently as Justice is secured in the Osage lease contest and as other big propositions are secured and de veloped the stock of The Uncle Sam Oil Company will Increase in value. Since the recent great victory of The Uncle Sam Oil Company in the Su preme Court the Oil and Gas Monopoly conspirators have about given up hope of ever really checking The Uncle Sam Oil Company in its onward drive to splendid and lasting success. If we were willing to remain a lit tle company the Trust would not care so much, but it fears a great company with sufficient capital and it knows if a few thousand red-blooded Ameri cans remit from $15.00 to $500.00 each that The Uncle Sam Oil Company in good faith will invest this new capital and become a great rich competitor of the Trust. This OH and Gas Monopoly has late ly brought about a real crisis in the Oklahoma oil fields. The price of high grade crude oil has been as low as 25 cents per barrel in the last six months. To meet this crisis and help make The Uncle Sam Oil Company rich at the same time, the Board of Directors at their last regular meeting author ized the President of the Company to sell to the independent public the cap ital stock still in the treasury of the Company. This stock should bring five cents per share right now. But we believe In combining principal as well as financial gain, and we know there are thousands of substantial Americans that will be glad of a chance to help a good cause, but also like to make a profit. We can buy up producing properties along- our exempted pipe line for about 25 cents on the dollar. We also want to organize strong for the finish fight for the Osage lease. Therefore until Tuemlnj. June 8, the Company will accept remittances as per special offer herein, but promptly after that date the stock will be ad vanced twenty (20) per cent. Do not write asking any extension of time, but arrange to start your re mittance at once or not later than Tuesday, June fS. if you ever expect to secure a part of this valuable stock before a twenty per cent, advance. The Uncle Sam Oil Company has at least ten different properties where test wells should be drilled. The money you remit will help drill these wells, any one of which may open a great new oil pool, that bv drilling other wells around it. may pour out millions and make all large stockholders rich and a substantial profit for all the small stockholders. WITHIN SKVKX THOUSAND FEET OP AN S,OOO-ll IKRF.I. ntODICF-H The Company has made a payment on a wo-thirds interest in one hun dred and sixty acres in nearly the cen ter of the township that contains near ly all of the great Cushlng Oil well."-, as quick as the deed Is secured and placed ot record one or two wells will forthwith be drilled. Even an 800- barrel well on this new property would mean a fortune to our companv as it is close to our pipe line and we could soon drill a dozen wells around it and soon put our pipe line and re fineries at increased capacaties. Your remittance may be small, hut combined with a thousand others will enable The Uncle Sam Oil Company to do big things and thereby make the stock you receive all the more valu able. It is not over seven thousand feet from one corner of the new prop erty the Company is securing to an eight thousand barrel well. Do not neglect securing vour stock until some day we drill in a big well and force the price of stock up 20 to 25 times. This stock may go to one dollar per share in the next ten years. Right generally wins out. The Uncle Sam Oil Companv alreadv has 12a oil nml na« well*. TIIRRR HEFIN FRIES, 181 MH,KS OF fOM PI.KTKD PIPE MNE. R4 TANK CAMS; many distributing stations mid tank wagon* and automobile delivery trucks: thousand* of nrrca of oil ■ rases nnd over a thousand acres of deeded lands nnd much other property. Two of the refineries are in daily op eration. We want to start the third Refinery and then increase the combined capa city to 3.000 barrels daily at each Re finery, or a total of 9,000 barrels per day. PRACTICAM.Y MONTHLY STOCK DIVIDENDS. You will make a financial mistake if you delay becoming a stockholder at once. Your prompt remittance may Says Charity of America Is One Hope of Jews Some startling tales of the persecu tions to which the Jews on the slopes and valleys of the Carpathians are subjected by the invading hordes of the Russians is contained in a report, by Rabbi Louis Silver of Kesher Israel congregation, this city, who has Just returned from a trip abroad for the purpose of collecting data to submit to the Union of Orthodox Rabbis of the United States at Philadelphia, June 9. The only hope of the Jews, Rabbi Silver is the charity of America as he predicts that his people will be persecuted because of suspicion of treachery by one side or the other if Germany or Russia be victorious. Al ready S4OO has been contributed to a fund being raised by the Rabbis' Union. Fifth Street Homes English and Colonial Architecture; I magnificently finished in hardwood and Inlaid doors; vapor heat; xolld porcelain bath rooms with built-in tub with concealed fixtures, recog nized as the most expensive and sanitary installation known. North Fifth Street is considered by reliable authorities to be one of the most desirable streets In the new section up-town. These houses can only be appre ciated by personal inspection. Price and terms upon application. Mac Williams Construction Co. Office 2150 X. Fifth Street I —i M ! JUNE 1, 1915. entitle you to a conditional allot ment right on the stock still left which is substantially a stock dividend. The greater your first remittance is the greater your benefit will be un der this conditional Dividend Stock Al lotment. When you become a stockholder you own a proportionate interest in all the oil wells, refineries and all rights and property of the Company. There may be a hundred million barrels of prude oil under the leases and lauds of The Uncle Sam Oil Com pany. but we must first drill the test wells before we can hope to profit by rich oil pools. We have a substantial lease on Ranch Creek in Pawnee County, only five miles from the Boston oil pool. We have developed the same forma tions In our Ranch Creek property that are found In the Boston oil pool. In cleaning out one of our Ranch Creek wells it shows for a good well after being drilled for two vears. When you join The 'Uncle Sam Oil Company you are not securing a "wild cat" stock. Our properttes are in the proven oil fields. .Many of the new wells we will drill will be within a few hundred feet of oil wells. The chances are good for from a 200 to a 2,000-barrel well on our Ranch Creek properties. Why should 3,000 to 4,000-barrel wells be found in the Bos ton pool, five miles away, and not some of the same in our Ranch Creek Pool ? We are determined to drill in the immediate future three wells on Ranch Creek and two on the Cushing prop erty. When the Cushing deal is en tirely closed, and these five wells are completed. The Uncle Sam Oil Com pany may have a ten thousand barrel production daily. There is about one-sixth of the stock in the treasury. We offer this stock at about one-third value to drill these wells, and buy up crude oil for our Tulsa Uncle Sam Refinery. Over a thousand new' stockholders have Joined the Company during the past tew months. This notice will reach about ten million readers. This stock will be sold. These wells will be drilled. This Company will con tinue to grow in prestige and property. Be on the safe side and secure a good block of this stock, so when it reaches even twenty-five cents per share that you will have a splendid profit. Other advances are sure to quickly follow on this stock until it reaches at least five cents per share. It should bring that now. A little good luck and the price will increase to a big value for this Com pany is a needed corporation, and is popular in Kansas, Missouri and Okla homa. There is a provision in the charter that protects the Companv from Oil Trust control. Do not let some Oil Trust schemer fill you full of the bunk that the Oil and Gas Monopoly can alwavs ride rough-shod over the rights of all the people, .loin with The Uncle Sam Oil < onipany to-day. Make yourself a use ful member in a giant organization for great good. » Tl 10 . t""cle Sam Oil Company is con trolled by a Board of Directors of ">1 large stockholders. Its authorized cap italization is three hundreJ million shares. I-ive-sixth of this stock is owned by about fifteen thousand American stockholders. 0. n VI,? "'"a" pe'" cp nt. of the stock still left in the treasury will be sold for less than five to ten cents per sna re. The Company plans to raise at least another Million Dollars In new cash capital from the stock still left There s a chance for this stock to greatly '""e*se, in va J u * iri a remarkably ?,in iv, a yoiL ever expect to Company before big advances, either start your remittance at once or write quick for further Information. Cor Reference* - You can write to 21 Kansas t cfty b,C Mercantil * Agencies eiilni?. wi " e take a certain chance on every investment, and we do not want to encourage any investor to overreach, but in good conscience we can advise every honest citizen to secure this stock in big blocks. The SPECIAL STOCK OFFER ro The Unci® Sara Oi! Company, JvEm-as City. Kansas. amou.n d deVlffna'tea"i;eiow r : emUtnnCe f ° r BtoCk BS advertised prr X opposite the "" 1*222 •••• $ 1500 ••••10.000 SHARES....S 150.00 "" c $ 37,50 ••■■20,000 SHARES... .$ 250.00 .... 5,000 SHARES .... $ 75.00 ....40,000 SHARES....S 500.00 (Nanv; of Remitter.) (Street, City and State Address.) Respectfully submitted, THE UNCLE SAM OIL CO. Bj H. H. TI'CKEB, JR., rre«. (Address all letters to the Company.) KANSAS CITY, KANSAS ANNOUNCE BIRTH • New Cumberland, Pa.. June I.—Mr. and Mrs. Karle Ashenfelter of York County announce the bjrth of a daugh ter, Dorothy Frances Myers Ashenfel ter, May 23, 1915. King Oscar 5c Cigars /There s many a cigar bought / that a smoker wonders if he's / &°ing to enjoy before he / lights it. / ./This certainly is an anti quated way of buying a cigar. Jlfl s P end your nickel for King Oscar quality and know that ypv YV you are going to enjoy your ■" \ \ smoke. \ Mt's the safe, sure and sens \ *kle investment for your \ nickel. \ Because— \King Oscar quality has been Regularly Good For 24 Years Fates seem to have Tavored The Unci® bam Oil Company from the start It ts the determination of the organ izers and leading stockholders to push the Company ahead until it aecures control of sufficient oil and gas prop erties In the Oklahoma fields to make It the one great Hnnn I'l«le Independ ent producer and marketer in the Mid dle West. Many of the stockholders believe that in time this stock will gain in solid values to a H«lf Dollar per share and in ten years reach par. The Oil and Gas Monopoly lias made millions, and so should The Uncle Sam Oil Company. Our capital is not large when vou consider the possibilities of the Okla homa Oil Fields and the price of the stock now to you. With new capital we can increase our capacity several times without in creasing our rexpense over ten per cent. The Oil Monopoly weeks to scare away from the oil fields all big in v?s.ti'rs /} n , (1 kee P a " competition out of the oil business, and likewise would threaten any big bank that would ex tend a financial favor to The Undo Sam Oil Company. We were fullv aware of these conditions from the start and have always raised our new capital direct from the independent public, we do not go to the big rich looters of tile people and permit them to have bur stock at a low price and then let them se)l to the people at par but we put our cards face up on the! table and let the public have a real first chance. The curse of the age is the Monopoly press in conspiracy with big business looters that seek to over capitalize every opportunity- and then sell their watered stock to' the people at par. The Uncle Sam Oil Company offers the American people direct the oppor tunity to be the promoters and derive the profits formerly going to the Wall Street Wolves. We offer the independent investors a real opportunity to derive the full ben efits of their investment. The Monopoly Crowd speculate with trust funds of widows and orphans, and pocket the profit when they win, and l®t the bank go broke when they lose. Think it over and you will see why the big financial promoters and their subsidized press are so anxious to be the public's guardian. As before stated. The Uncle Sam Oil Company is offering the independent public a real square deal. Of course, it will be lied about, because it is cut ting into the most profitable business —the oil business—there is under the Stars and Stripes. We have whipped the gang in the past. We are winning out now. If you have lost out on other investments—make It back on this ad vancing Oil Stock. We have one well on one of our big leases in Pawnee County that Is 2.812 feet deep. In a shut down a few days last fall this well filled up and flowed out over the top. A force that will push oil up over a. half mile may develop a ten thousand barrel well at the next location. This particular lease stretches across Pawnee County from farm to farm for six and one-half miles. We should start three or four drills on this prop erty. Tn a straight forward manner wo have in this limited space tried to con vince you of our good faith, and we hope you will either write for further particulars or send your remittance at once and help increase the assets of The Uncle Sam Oil Companv until its red. white, and blue tank wagons and automobile delivery trucks will be ijf. llverlng good Oil in everv principal trade center in the Missouri Vallev states and in time cover the Uniteil States. The stock is non-assessable, and the cash payment, together with vour agreement to remain loyal to the com pany, is accepted by the Company as full payment, if the Companv approves you as a stockholder. It wants none but loyal, patriotic. liberty-loving citi zens as its stockholders, and therefore reserves the right to approve or reject any subscription to Its stock. If you should not be approved vour money will be promptly returned to you. Special offer is as wollows: MISSIONARY TO SPEAK F. E. HofTsomer, n returned mission bers'lif"ihL"?i-n' Wil .' a . f 'l'««■" the mem ties nf : W r en » Missionary sooie (I y Ht , H ,lnlon meeting by\erian y c\ f u e rch oon ' n ,he P " ton Pre *
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers