SAYRE, PA. WE FILL MAIL OR- gi) DERS AND PREPAY /® | over night. FREIGHT OR EX- g&F BN, | Jos. W. Besman, Esq, went to PRESS ON PUR- og ' Towanda this morning. CHASES OF $so00 \3¢ —— OR OVER. 0S Miss Nina Hall returged to her #4 home in Towanda this morning. ¢, RY E H. Cook went to Hackets- ‘town, N. J., today to visit relatives. prices prevailed before the “Big Store dictate to you what did it. SHOULD KNOW ‘our class can command. © To give our patrons distributors of high class merchandise, a partial list of well known makes, a stand «nd of excellence that this intellizeat people ‘od their lines oxclasively with us for Waverly, Sayre and Atheas, § the Big Store came into existence last March. ‘Towanda this morning to be used > at the fair. 4 Rev LB Twitchell of Empori- Ne um, Pa., will preach in the Baptist > church next Sunday. - 8 2) lol, % | J. L. Dyer shipped his tent to > i With Little Prices” came to Mrs. Fred Gustin went to-To- ‘wanda today to visit with her par- Q ‘ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baker, (N p> Miss Nellie Moon of Eudicott, 26 Pa, who has been visiting at the j@ | home of Charles Menigas, went to N > | Towanda this morning for a short el@ visit, ee ig will Heavner, who left for Bed- mikers and articles that have ; 5, lford, Ohio, a week ago to enter Basement , Cambridge art pottery and Rozane ware, Elwin M. Knowles China ( Poreelain Co. — Liverpool's leading patterns, the Bassett Co, China and Johnson Bro's. ware. & ' the employ of the Interstate Engin A | ccring Co, has been honored with P)/ the foremanship in the template 8 | department. Nixd : 2 | The tickets for the congert at Street Floor ehildren, Sorosis for women, Crawlords for men, and a hall dozen other These fabrics in black and colors, Roens taffetta silks, fully guarantesd. pe had anywhere but throagh this system stores. R | High school hall Oct. 16, are being pe taken rapidly. They are now on 7 sale at Sanford's drug store. This & will be a very fine enternment and i 3 | those who go will enjoy it. D> ra 48 | Troubles of a Night are syndicate products not to 4 NY | Athens—Last night as Constable by {F. H. Sherman was going to his Harvard shirts, Y. & K. sweat- less adopted makes. Rubdry Second Floor Wooltex garments, Printzess garments, made to iron like log. Queen Quality top skirts, and a dozen other confined features in gar ‘ {home on Elm street he was annoy- \ ed by something following close to Da his heels. When he got into the ® house a friendly little animal ON slipped in after him and on being 90a driven out left a disagreeable odor «+ ‘behind. He had just settled down York maker. = : lin an easy chair when a cry of | our syndicate. Fars from the Northwest {where caught), through a New Fourth Floor PP. R. Mitchell fathers, pillows, ete; orlee to show choices things: Dobson's earpets and rugs, Karpen Bros’. Beds, Hasler kitchen cabinets, Block go-carts and baby carriagss, L. & | American Chair Co's. prodacts, aud numbers of back or goods exchanged with pleasure. ‘alarm was heard from the river and 3 a man cried “Help, or 1 drown.” He went to the scene and found a man whose brain was befuddled J | with the strange illusion that he ‘was going to be drowned. He irescued the man and once more M8 | scttled down in his easy chair when, an excited rap on the door G. Stickley mission furniture, Summer Vacation Js the time to have the children’s £5 daughter may owe ED peants to her perfect, | keep them so they must be : for. There is no nook or cor- ner in Sayre where The Valley Record does not cir- culate. ¥ some day for | Bhe will thank you | : ig her disfigurement wad |The Largest Circulation Prices for July and Au- i GIVES THE Or. W. B. McDonald, DENTIST. LARGEST PUBLICITY EEE ATTTESEEET, | . H. Mercereau, | Attorney-at-Law Notary Public fipecial attention to Pension Papers. | : Valley Phone 11 x. Josncd Breet Sey=| ‘There is no nook or cor- : ; ner in Sayre where The Valley Record does not cir- ‘culate. & BEIBACH CAPT COAL est of Everything J. W. BISHOP | There is as much difference in| the quality of coal as there is | between white and yellow sugar. | We sell nothing but the celebrated | Lehigh Valley fresh mined anthra- | dte. We also sell Bituminous and | — | Loyalsock coal and all kinds of upholstered, | ,..4. 3 ne» ss renovated, Um- | Our specialty is prompt service ‘Subscribe for The Record. COAL COAL re-covered and re- 250 patterns of up- and the lowest market price. to selec action guaran: J. W. BISHOP, (03 Lehigh Ave, Lockhart Bldg ' OO |again disturbed his attempted rest @% He opened the door and Game | Protector W. E. Shoemaker, ac sowed 10 « | companied by two men, appeared. Brooklyn, N. Y~Towed by a sun- |The game protector had arrested fish 20 miles to ea is the experience | . enjoyed by BE. W. Scribaer, of sag | Mahlon Johnson and, Richard Harbor; Arnold Mulford, of Bridge- Hansworth of Sayre, who were hampton, and George Lynch, of Mon- : : : 3 tuk Point. The men were out in a fishing with a basket device ia the small power launch, ind managed to Chemung 1iver, and he brought get fast to the fish by means of a har- | Eo wma fu, which weighed al of | them before Sherman on the charge £00 pounds, immediately started sea- |Of illegal fishing. Sherman knew yn The men Soni Jot su near the men and they were allowed to «nou ance it, and after being | : towed many miles, cut 100M; a4 a depart under promise that they heavy fog was setting in. would appear whenever called ‘upon to answer to the charge of | violating the law. a @ & Sunfish, FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL. Closing Stock Quetations, | Money on call steady at #4 per cent; | prime mercantile paper, 4%Q0 per cent} — Nice Point of Law | Athens—District Game Protect- jor W. E. Shoemaker overhauled .1@% Mahlon Johnson and Richard "2 | Hansworth of Sayre while they 1% | were fishing on the Chemung river Southern Ry... Blast evening. They were using Suir ne in | the fish basket belonging to J. E Union Pacie um | Allen, which the game protector U8 Sut of. tou | 33y8 is an illegal device. They are Closing prices Amal. Copper étchison .. 90% B&O... .....101% Brooklyn R.T. W C.C.C.& StL. Chess. & Ohlo 57 4 D.&H..........%388 Erie arasssess HA Gen. Electric... 152 ii. Central...... 180% Lackawanna... 450 Louis. & Nash. 154% Manhattan. 16444 Metropolitan... IN Missouri Pac... Wo% N. Y. Central.. Norf. & West Penn. BR. R... Heading Rock Island. st. Paul....... Southern Pac... a3 U. 8. Steel pf... : West. Union... 8% | to answer before Justice Meredith lat Towan 'a tomorrow. Mr. Shoe- New York Markets. ' maker had the screen that he took tember, 3 UNC WHEAT-Quist; contract grade, Bep- COTS andy September, $900%c. from them at the station this morn- t—-Creamery, extras, i : : ah" GUEST: “Leather EAR ing, together with the fish captured quetation, extras, rats r., 60 2 nds. ise thirds, GIT state | and shipped them on the carly 2 R . Bes : * . seccran Tisgite his Ge > ‘train. The screen has a wire bot- HE state, full ~ - | : ored and white, fancy. igo air to choice, | tom, and Mr. Shoemaker claims Lull , IATE., jored and while, an- | » 1 indi a to choice. Tiglite: Lehi that it should be made of wooden sims, cholce, OC. . part skims, pr i . aN good. THUR. Common wa aie, slats half an inch apart. There Ac full skims, 230 INC. i, . . bockoh State. Pennsylvania and nesrdy, | will be a nice question of law for selected, white, fancy. new lald, 4 . = choice, MgTic. ; mixed, extra. | some one to decide in this case. te extra firsts nga . dirties, 13g18%<.; | checks, 13 15¢ ; refrigerators, 17gqc LIVE ULTRY~Chickens, spring, pot | Japan's War Fund. “Weil All told, foreign loans, domestic oe loans, war taxes, Increased customs DRESSED POULTRY—Turkeys, spri gry Poked, mised bes. pes yl 4 fe etc. Jagan bas raised suapl) we. , scalded, .; chickens, pr : 000,000 f WAr purposes. a Phitindelphia, choice to fancy, WE XC. ; i er Pennsylvania and a aa %o fan. Wages in the United States are at ey. Walk; fair lo good. Le; oid ks, Jeast six times higher than in Japan, und, rs 3 ¥ i Ou I ar a, | the amount raised by that country is | equal to our raising $6,100,000,000. Jo, ennsyivania, Jersoy and Connec ot Further, as the population of Japan is 13016 ; squahs, prime, white. 8 po % domen, r dozen, $33G1Le. Jovads onan up only 48,000,000, while ours Is $4,000, ‘! 000, we should really bave to raise pound, lic. roosters, old, per pound, b 1 wgLH; § pounds to A is; ; dark, LBL mized. UGLY culls, ac DREsaBD MEATS — Fair d od 1 : ’ ao E AED ated Jai Seta or about $9,000,000,000 to equal Japan's nd for . tive sides and sn Uttie fancy beef ry i effort. ‘ ing quotations. calves firm at 130. pound for city dressed veals, with sel i carcasses reaching 19%c.; country dr | at 7912; mutton firm At 7@%. per po il t at Regie. } { Ave Steoek ——————————— One Cargo a Year. {a possibly known in the Keys a port of entry cargo of turtles given upon Markets. i ht: market Juady| “STORY OF LOW FOUR SWEETHEARTS CAUSE DEATH OF A HUSBAND. TRAGIC ENDING OF DRAMA Brother of Italian Countess Tells How Sister's Spouse Was Slain— Case Is the Sensation of Europe. Rome. —The Banmartinl murder trial at Turin, which ended the other day In sentences of from ten to thirty years for the defendants, has for nearly three years been a sensation in Europe. Over | 400 witnesses were examined. Count] Bonmartinl. the murdered man, was| the head of a prominent family; his widow, an accomplice in his morder, is the daughter of Italy's foremost physi clan: her lover, Dr. Secchi also was prominent In medical circles Her brother, the actual murderer, was 2a member of parliament. Countess Bonmartini and Dr. Secchi, | then her father’s assistant. were lovers | before her marri to the count, but| Prof. Murri forced his daughter to marry | the count, who, although of high lin- | eage, proved to be a man of revolting | character. i The countess went to live in Venice | with her children. There she was fre quently visited by Secchi, who had won | fame in his profession and still loved | her. There is no doubt that a guilty in- trigue subsisted between them. Corre- | spondence between the prisoners, num-| bering 5.000 letters, suggests relations | between the countess and Dr. Secchi, | and Tullio Murri, her brother, and Rosa | Bonetti, the countess’ confidential mald. | The countess gave her key to the count’s apartments in Bologna to Rosa Bonett!, who on the night of Aygust 27, 1902. admitted Tullio and Dr. Naldi, a clever but disreputable surgeon. The first plan was to overpower Bonmar- | tin and kill him with an injection of | curare, a rare African vegetable poison, to be administerd by Naldl but owing to | the probable difficulty of holding the victim down this plan was abandoned in favor of the knife. - i When Count Bonmartini entered hia apartment at five p. m. on the following day, August 28 Tullio flung himself | upon him, Naldi, with surgical skill, giv- | ing the fatal thrust in the throat i News of the deed was conveyed to the count’s brother-in-law, Tullio Murr, as has proved a - i WILLIAMS TYPHOON SWEEPS MANILA. Native Districts Sefler=Five Theu- sand Homeless, MANILA, Bept, I most de structive typhoon that Las visited this sity since 1552 has burst upon it, doiug Immense damage to life and property. Hundreds of stone and woxden Lulld hie The native districts were half swept away. Trees were uprooted every- where, and dozens of vehicles were up- et. Traffic has been suspended, and the streets are deserted. The trolley lines The police stations are feeding and sheltering 05,000 homeless persous and the churches 3,000 more. It is belleved ing of though the ships bave been invisible on account of the rain and have net com- municated with the shore ‘Bring Your Job Printing to Office | From four to eight skilled job ‘printers and a new, up-to-d ‘equipment are at your service. a ' disposition to ae ne Talmadge Building, Elmer Ave., Sayre, Valley Phone 142a. pinos were injured, Gaugs of wen are engaged in clear All business ls sus- Transport Delayed hy Typhoon. WASHINGTON, Sept. 27.—The war department bas recelved a cablegram Logan has been delayed from salling NALD! PLUNGED THE KNIFE INTO | THE COUNTS THROAT he was sitting In the provincial council, | of which he was the secretary. “It must have been robbery,’ he sald. “Bonmar- tio! must have been killed for his money.” So far everything seemed to confirm Tullio’s simple theory. Two days after the discovery Tullio set out from Venice with his sister, the countess, intending to go to Switzerland. A doctor and the children went with them. On the way Tul- lio showed a wound and had it dressed. The doctor may have been of an inquir- ing turn of mind. At any rate Tulllo blurted out that he got the wound In an encounter wis the count and that it was he who slew him. Then he left the train and set out for the Balkans. The coun- tess proceeded to Switzerland and Ger- many. Tullio was a gambler and a spend. thrift, & writer of some talent, and a so- cialist. He is a man of great physical strength and violent temper, with low tastes. His most creditable trait is love of his family. After wandering about Switzerland and Germany Tullio gave himself up at Ala eight days after his father told the police. The same day Rosa Bonettl was taken In the tangle of this miserable drama and its dreadful culminating tragedy, the malin inspiring influence was the count. | ess’ love for Dr. Secchi. [It marred the bappiness of her home, estrangsd her | husband's love, and led her on to con- | sent to the violence of Tulllo, possibly | led her to urge him !o the crime, It was | Rosa Bonetti’s overmastering passion | for the gambler Tullio that took her into | the maze of crime and made her oné of the prime instruments In the execution. | S———— / Huckleberry Ple Bursts. Paterson, N. J —Mrs. Robert Jamie- gon, keeper of a boarding house, was scalded about the hands and face the | other day by the explosion of a large | huckleberry ple. The ple had been | baked without any alr holes In he: top, and was placed upsn the dinner | table steaming hot afier the boarders had seated themselves. When (the | boarding mistress sunli a knife dnto the crust-the ple burs. with a report that could be heard all over the house. The julce scattered all over the table, stalming the clothes of the boarders snd burning Mrs. Jamieson's hands and face. Woman Artist's Offer, | Mra. Ellis Rowan, the famous Bower artist, has received an offer of $75,000 by the German government for her 500 : a his a dd STOKES ATTACKED BEAMAN. Military Surgeons’ Congress Opemed With War of Words, DETROIT, Mich, Sept. 27.—An at in the United States navy, upon state ments made by Major Louis L. Seaman of New York In utterances contrasting the results obtained during the Russo Japanese war by the Japanese medical officers with the medical history of the Spanish-American war and Philippioe insurrection was the feature of the fourteenth convention of the Assocla- tion of Military Surgeons of the United States. Dr. Stokes sharply challenged the accuracy of a number of Major Sea- jan's statements and statistics. Dr. during the Spanish war the propor tional battle casualties to those of disease were 1 to 14. He then quoted the report of the seo- retary of war for 1508 as showing that this proportion was 1 to 14 “Ma Seaman makes the proportion of battle WE PRINT The Valley Record $ i i (In effect June 38, 1988.) RASTBOUN D. 3 AM. 2a for Towands, Tunkbas- Baltimore and Washington. and Washington. i . A. Rly MJ) Wek 5 [Massie 3:50 AM. Lm 3B 3 Haven, Nai Haven Jumction, Shi NR | York, i i i i tinued Dr. Btokes, “while the proper- tion as shown by the medical and surgical history of the rebellion was 1 to 2." The speaker then quoted an of 5,000 men sent howe had died and said: “He must have been in error in Forty cases of sudden death at Emhbhalmers’ Convention. SYRACUSE, N. Y. Sept. 27.—More than a hundred undertakers and em- convention, which has opened its sixth annual session + eye — - Deep Problem. This was taken (rom the question box in the juvenile Sunday school class at Erie a few Sundays ago: “Dear God—What made ye put tails on kats fer?"—Kansas City Journal us. 1S E RE -
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers