New sdeas in Heavy Knit Turtle Neck, and Vest Sweat- as. Colors: — White, Black and Oxford AT BOLTON'S. Men's Furnishings, Hats and Packer Ave., Sayre. FIRST "Towa “$70,000.00 GENERAL BANKING THREE PERCENT INTEREST Paid on Time Deposits. DIRECTORS. BP. Wilbur, J. N. Weaver, W. A. Wilbur, J. W. Bishop, J. KR. Wheelock. W. T. Goodnow, O. LL. Haverly, Seward Baldwin, PF. T. Page, RY. Page, Cashier Sweaters, Both Phones. Renting, Bstates Managed Collecting ~ E. E. Reynolds, REAL ESTATE acaiacat INSURANCE Property Bought, Sold and — Rxchanged — Investments Loans Negotiated : IIT Packer Ave., Valley Phone 230x, Sayre, Pa. ALEX D. STEVENS, INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE. Loans Negotiated, Insurance Written, Houses Rented, Rents For sale in Athens, Sayre and Waverly. "ROOM 7, ELMER BLOCK ~ LOCKHART ST., SAYRE. . Just the thing for Baby's Bath SOAP “LaPerla Brand.” 18 cents a pound, 4 pound bar, 65 cents. 'MAROLD L. GILLESPIE PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST. 301 Lockbart 5t., Sayre. The one surpassing quality of One bottle of it will more to convert than any argument of 3% priv. Try it ght or dark; ime Sr prompt A Jivery. Miss Roosevelt and Party | Start on Long Trip Home, BID FAREWELL TO KOREAN EMPEROR American Visitors Received Many Handsome and Valuable Presents. Every Conrtesy Extended Them. Return Vin Yokohama, FUSAN, Korea, Sept. 30. Miss Alice Roosevelt and party bave arrived here oii their home journey. Owing te the damage done by the recent ralos the trip to Fusan took two days The party stayed last night Presbyterian mission at Talku and to day reached Fusan, whenoe they will gu to Simonosek! and Yokohama The visit to Japan will be cutirely private Miss Roosevelt will dec any pub lic recognition or hospitality Tlie em- peror of Korea recelved Miss Roose velt In farewell audience and pre ent- el her with his autograph and photo graph, The Koreans made every effort make Miss Roosevelt's ten days’ visit pleasant. On Wadnesday she and her party visited the tomb of the late queen. Korean high officials, including Gen eral Min, formerly minister at Wash. ington, gave a dinner In honor of Sen ator Francis G. Newlands of Nevada, Edwin V. Morgan, American minister to Korea, and the other mien of the party and toasted President Roose velt. The emperor of Korea gave valuable presents to the whole party, including tiger skins, silver aud brass ware and embroideries aud extended to every possible courtesy to show his friendliness for Americans at the Hae to NEGRO MAY BE LYNCHED. Clew Fouad te Slayer of Condit Family at Edna, Tex. HOUSTON, Tex, Sept. 30 ~The bod ies of Mrs. A. J Couditt, her thirteen year-old six, eight aud ten respectively, who were murdered near Edna, Tex, by a negro, were interred in a siogle grave The discovery of a blowly adze, which the crime was committed, and a bundle of discarded clothing found by bleodbounds a short distauce from the seene of the tragedy are the ouly clews left by the murderer, However, as a result of suspicion against Hank Gibson, a seveutcen year-old negro boy, who was working in a nearby fleld and who gave the and a tablecloth with a bundle bloody clothing was found concealed between the covers of a hed. Conditt, the husband, is able to iden tity the articles the negro will proba bly be lynched. Nizem a Little Better, WESTFIELD, N. Y, Sept. 30.-— ter. While the danger line has not aged by the good progress made. gets no worse. the capital, joined Dr. Rood, ily physiclan, and Drs. Eugene Smith | pigat and told the doctors that he felt | better, Wreck at Iowa Clty. DES MOINES, Ia, Sept. 30.—Rock Island passenger train No. 23 collided A delayed freight train which was run- ning at full speed. Four were Injured, Fireman Rogers fatally gers had & remarkable escape. The trains met upon the embankment just | Victim May Be Yonle Dizon, a New York Girl NEW YORK, Sept. 30.— The dismemn. | bered body of the girl found in & suit] SUIT CASE MYSTERY. ; i thought to Le that of Nonie Dixon, the} pretty nineteen-yearold daughter of: Mrs. Frank Dixon of Brookiyn Her disappearance and the events leading up te It, which reveal almost; a year of dumestic trouble, were ail} told Ly Mrs Dixon, and she is now! awaiting more news from Boston that | will enable her to say whether the body | i is that of ber daughter or not Nonle Dixon, her wothier says, either elope] or was carried away by her stepfather, Frank Dixon, and Mrs was left peuniiess I'he man has Leen attentive to his stepdaughter of his wife's protests for al most a year, and his infatuation, cording to the elder woman, reached) the point where he threatened to kill the girl If she made the acquaintance of any other man. The mother has an intuition which she cannot explain that the murd®ved girl Is her daughter Nonie save u hip without a mark, aud the mother Is now | in a frenzy of anxiety to find If the! body has: not been mutilated too much to disclose that one mark by which she | could be identified i Miss Nathan, daughter of Mrs. Louls Nathan of Baltimore, came here last] night and requested the police to show her the torso of the wurderad women. | Tbe coming of Miss Nathan has a| possible bearing on the Winthrop mys- tery, although the police do not at-| tach great importance to it. =Miss Na Maurice Scha piro, who has becn missing for nearly | three weeks, ac save she had no marks on her bly . i small birthmark on her left] The headless torso in Boston was | PLAGUE ABATES. Exists at New Urleans, NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 30 With the steady improvement in the yellow fe gradual reduction, beginning temmor row, of the forces pow employed un der the auspices of the governinent In There has been absolutely no stint at any thine in the financial resources of the hospital service, and money Is! available to run the campaign to a Some Incrense over the very low rec in view of the fact that the population | is much larger than it was a month ago the percentage of sickness Is con sidered exceedingly small. The deaths showed a decline The fecling of uncertainty regarding sident Roosevelt still exists, and there is some apprehension that the decision of the American Pub Health associatiou to have a com Public opinion is almost a unit in be- the president persoually the trip. Any anuouncewnent therefore that the visit has been de- ferred will be attributed to the pressure that apparently is being brought upon him, growing out of Ignorance of the Fever Malignant at Natches. NATCHEZ, Miss, Sept. 80. -- Two new cases and one death, a negro, are reported. The fever is assuming a more malignant form. New York Banker Shot Himself. NEW YORK, Sept. 30—~William R. | Travers, a rciative of District Attor- of Lady | | Randolph Churchill, who was related | to many of New York's foremost fam- | bridge over the Iowa river. Both en- himself in the mouth with a small re | second floor | to foot. ov Heyburn Improving. WASHINGTON, Bept. 30.-—Senator Heyburau of Idaho, who has been ill with a mild attack eof appendicitis, is Improving rapidly, and it Is expected be will leave his room in a few days. The attack mauifested itself on Tues- day night when the senntor was on a train coming to Washington from New York. An operation was found neces: sary. : French Capinin Fined 83,000, NEW YORK, Sept. 30 Collector of the Port N. N. Strauahan ordered the imposition of a fine of nearly £35,000 against the master of the French line steamer L'Aquitaine for violation of the United States passenger act in not baving the sexes properly separated in the steerage of bis ship on the voyage from Europe. Engine's Crown Sheet Blew Out. CLEVELAND, O., Sept. 30 — The crown sheet on a locomotive hauling a westbound freight on the Peunsylvania raliroad blew out near here and badly scalded the engineer, J. H. Blackburn; the fireman, 8. T. Brenuan, and the Mr. Travers, who was a banker and broker, with offices | at 37 Wall street, and who owned 0 cottage at Newport and had a villa | at Alken, 8 C., was but recently di- vorced from his wife | New York Absconder Caunght, CHICAGO, Sept. 30 Traced from New York to Chicago after It had been | discovered, It Is alleged, that he was | $18,000 short In his accounts, Charles | J. Thompson, New York manager of | the Hendricks Manufacturing company | { of Carbondale, IP'n., has been arrested here. Thompson admitted his Identity | and declared that he would return to New York 4 | T. Van Hensaclacr Brown Dead. KINGSTON, N.Y. Sept. 0 -Theo- dore Van Rensseiner Brown, treasurer of the Martin Cantine company of | Saugerties, is dead here, aged difty five years. He was born in Colombia coun ty aud for many years was general agent of the Canadian branch of the Goodyear Rubber company, with bead quarters at Montreal | Ironwerkers Want $4.50, BALTIMORE, Sept, 30 Three hun land. Fifty Cases of Cholera In Poland. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 30 Jt Is! officially announced that Aly eases of | cholers, of which twenty. elght resoited | Sept. 20 and 27. RR Iron Founder Dead, ers employed on four large bulldings In | of the local union of the Structural Jronwgrkers’ union. The | men have heen receiving $4 a day for | eight hours, bat demand an Increase to | Witte For Premier, ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 30. The decide to rec of M. W | Former Director Schiff’s Star- tling Testimony. DIRECTORS WERE ONLY DUMMIES. Head of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. Sald As- surance Society Was at Mercy of One Man—Gave Adylice Which Was Not Taken. NEW YORK, Sept. 0 Declaring iu these times the dire of great corporations and fustitutions are intents and purposes uo than dummies, Jacob H Lil member of the luternational bankiug house of Kuhn, loeb & Co. and for merly a member of the fluauce com mittee and a director of the Eq Life Assurance to which firma has sold willions of dollars fn s« curities, wax on the before the legislative mijtee He repudiated the which modern life fusurance are controlled, sald he had learned by experience not to figure as a damm) acknowledged that although a wember of the Equitable finance com mittee he did not know of clety’'s coutribution to the last Repub fofs Hors De sfnior ditabije society his staid some hours jgsurance coin system under societies the so JACOB H. SCHIFF | Hean national committee, it had been but suppos= made by personally and repudiat of the “yellow dog” James fund, Mr. Schiff said “The Equitable was at the mercy of one man—elther Alexander or Hyde It seems to me it was all Hyde. Ev erything was Hyde, “The vice of the entire insurance situation has been frrespousible power “After the last election Cornelius N Bliss told me that Mr. Hyde had con tributed to the Republican campaign fund. “1 presumed that the Equitable's money had not been spent “Responsibility for the scandalous conditibus in the Equitable lies with | the state lusurance department. Do | you suppose the directors of corpora tions cau gu after the superintendent of insurance and be his bookkeepers? “1 have not asked any favor as a director of the Equitable Life Assur- ance society. 1 have granted many | favors. 1 bave not done ns a director | of the Equitable any wrong of cow- mission. [1 may have done something by omission. It is a case of hLind-| sight and not of foresight. But my conscience frees we from any censure of wrong. 1 have been as good a director as I knew bow to be “1 never heard of J. W. A. No sunt Balley account while 1 was a director. I vever Kuew that the soclety’s nccounts wre carried In any | body else's name except its own | “I want to say here,” contfhued the | banker, “that under the prevailing sys. | tew of directorships In New York a df | rector 1s at the mercy of Lis executive officers. They nsk for advice and then | do as they please, “In the Equitable the control of the society was exclusively held by the ex- ecutive officers “It hay been my practice to belleve | that every man in this world Is honest until 1 find out that he has heen dis honest, apd In golug through this world I do not suppose that any man is dishonest nutil I find out that he Is not bouest. That has been my practice in dividually and has been my practice » director of the Equitable “No law which yon may which the legislature other state may enact—uo law, how over close It may be—will protect you aguinst dishonest actions or dishonest measures” Alfred 'W of the ciety | | as frame of this or any and | Mayne, associate Equitable Life Assurnnee testified that “Judge” Adrew legislative representative and handler of the New York Life In- surance company’s “yellow dog fund.” acted In the same capacity for the Equitable Life Assurance society Mayne sald President Alexander of the Equitable had {ntroduesd Hamilton auditor uh conjunction aR far as possible All told, In 1857, Hamilton received upward of $15,000 from the Equitable Breeokirn Girl Drowned. MIDDLETOWN, NY, Sept. 30 Miss Carrie Meyer, aged seventeen, | Brooklyn was drowned in of Shawau of a boat inte which she had stepped | 10 get an oar, Roller Mills Destrayed. ANNISTON, Ala, a 20. — Handicap Resulted in Victory Feo fharley, the Favorite, NEW YORK, Sept. 30 was the only sinning Brighton Beach, the other ing to well played second cholces a long shot The Martin worvle fay at eTientx urite go 1nd haudi=anp for two vear olds, see oud on ths victory for Charles Brookdale Nymph, two lengths back After carl, resulted in an the favorite seco, easy finishiug Investigating the runn'ng of AL Astes” Hip at Gravesend the stewards of that weet freed the « to the Jo! » fur further 1otion Net First Rae Just } Lind ied irley Brook dale Nympl pul. Fine Cloth third Third Hace Martin Irs Natlor Boy, second. Norbury, third Fourth Rac The Southerner Maxnar, second: Uncle Urigh, third Fifth Race -Oarsman, first MoCabe, second; Breeze Sixth Hace —Heaslip er, second; Laws: ww rites 18a first: Emergency seul; Nico first first first Teun ~t third nr=t sulan, third BASEBALL SCORES. Games Finyed Yesterday by the Nu. tlennl and American League Clube NATIONAL LEAGUE Louis At St Phllad Incing ! Hits Prilade rs Philigdel] teries Pitt} Schiel TABLE oO} i Er i Hat hech and PERCENTAGES Ww New York Pittsburg Chicago Philadelphia fit atl Boston Hits troit. 1 Ww arner St Louts Washington Hits § Ls rura-—8t 1 tertes—Bucha Hes don TABLE OF Philadelphia Chicago Petrol Cieseland Boston New York Washingt Bt. Louls Four Golfers to Fight It Out. NEW YORK, Sept. 0 —At the of the day's play in the nual tournament of the Nassau club near N. ¥ known golfers were left fu | premier honors This quartet up of Walter J. Travis of Clty, fore national aud Jerome DIY. Travers of the ex-laterscholastic champion, Douglaz Laird, a Canadian plaver, whe is a student at Princeton uulversity, and Allan Land of Washington con an uty Glen Cove four well for the I= ruade Garden rly British Not a Favorite Won, CINCINNATI, Sept. 30—Not a fa vorite it the grand clronlt meet ing at park. In the 2:13 trot, the first event ou the cand, Albert CO the favorite, took the first heat in a flerve drive from Boveazelle, the second choice Boreazelle easily won the ond heat from Albert © In the third beats Boreazelle and Raw fonght It out, Boreazelle win aud the Leta Doffly at Loulaville. LOUISVILLE, Ry. Sept. 30 Duffy, the olds on favorite cipta and ood fick] of two veay fillies ut Churchill Downs before crowd Iliree of form pends, winner heavily backed won Oakley wer catcher ing both heats rae ~ Leta beat ria Wd t Dig favorites wou, and play Ix ith race, was cre had a good day of the fin i. War on Objectionable WASHINGTON Postmaster General Hitohoook, cular to all po renewed the campaign st objection postoand attention to the rale bars from the a pletan Posteards. Sept, J \oting in noir isters,. hins miniledd «tin rte] recently He which very ennd bearing or langunge that indecent or improperly has Jadge ngalust inhle has called malls « Is obscene mld pestinastor a of art siggvs=tive a vonstitidad of this “Aer character Hotel Sept. So Iw summit of Neversiuk mountain ontskirts of this city tire last night I'he Neversink READING, Pa Destroyed The New on the was destroyed by builkliug,. a war erccted twelve years Ago At a cost of £10.00 How the tin originated Is not detiultely known nrg Warrant For Mre, Cabb, J ARNESVILLE Sept 30 \ bench warrant has been issued for the arrest of Mrs. Amanda Cobb, charge! with wurder. There will probably be A called tern of court to try her Gin A Town In Ruins. TOWN, Hept, 30. -A cyclone the town of Malmesbury, from bere, in rulus. Native Protest Against Par- tition of Prqvince. WILL BAR ALL BRITISH GOODS. Fifty Thousand Swear by Goddess Kall to India’s Goods. Foreign Firma Already Se. Affected Lee Only riously CALCUTTA sand Bengalis Kalizliat # Fifty thon at the Sept Fem by the tt. Brittsh gods the ple of linve sworn goeddess Kall to isn is OO protest the proving partition work of the prov thie of thie had i ar FirWws Lome and sraown to portions as to neces sitate ag divis i f the the partition of the province inte porships The Beugails at what tempt governments st} labor, hence 3} two ire intensely resentful thy haracterize as an and lm nt to spit the he scores of | popuiation its itlonality throughout pledged thew boycott, which sanction of the At Bengal the pectings people support Li ive the ived the has LOW rece The scene at the Temple of Kal Bengal shat, greatest sirik the assembiag took “in the presence of the not to use for wmls foreign w Lien iw ing cath gudde buy artic! available foreiguers Lioly s= lal CigU XK es in slioges in native shops ot thint Clijhoy on auy work be by our countrymen.” high priest vermiiion can done ihe tic of each of The seriousiy the then placed a mys oni the forehead who touk the oath ate already feellly ect of the boycott 8) mibol those foreigu fi eff Fins VENEZUELAN SUIT. Americans No Hil Testify That They Ald to Cnstro’'s Enemies ADELPHIA mony was take n suit of the Nhs igalnst the Berwudez company, which controls the asphalt prodoction, for Slo 0a (xx damages for alleged par ticipation the recent Ve revolution The sult is now in the Venezuel Joseph Mellors of this city cial commissio and Rufus B York. counsel for D. 1 fore Gave Sept i wi Fest tie mverninent this city in tuclan g il nezuelan pending au courts is spe ner for the goveruwent, Jr., of zuela, and John Andsey of New York appearasl be him, with Frank B. Steveus of South Orange. NJ lhe superintendent of the company’s plant it from 187 to 1] He was questioned whether Lie had ded the He sald be soletinies troops, but Conlng New Vel fatter was Guano THE revaolitionists Rave food to ilwavs refused aris thew ated mn nunition J. 1 to starting for Eni] - he re from Presi Drake testified Veuczuela on ed positive lent Jolin M from General Francis that previous July Ju vel nstructic Mack Green to ob Mr i u call thie ns aud also Wie ug lution Were out?’ asked Mr 1 “Yes, neutrality agement continuad gust, 1001, until August compelled to discharge Ii Clemente Urbeneja, who, it leged, had cugaged fn a plot enemies of President Castro” strict neutrality, Gales Lis attention w petding reve these carried tustructions indsey absolutely No violations of wan Au I was Manuel was al with the occurred during wy from 102 which Winters Won Three (ornered Fight, OWEGO, N. ¥ At the Tio ga county Republi onveution here Byram I. Winters of Swithboro was nominated to succeed Edwin 8 Han ford of Waverly f or of assel bly Mr. Winters nutll a lawyer lu New York city He i thousand acre farm at Smithboro [he cawpaign for the nomination this year was a three fight the two unsuccessful candidates belug Frank L. Howard, a Waverly attorney, and E. G Nowlan of Newark Valley, a former assembliyiuan Sept. oi 1h wouien Was recently owns cornernl LR Mise Plummer Elected President. LAKE PLACID. N. Y., Sept. 30 Fhe following oticers of the New York State Library association were el od: President, Miss MW 'lumiuer Pratt Institute jibrary, Brooklyn retary, Miss Caro A Utica Public NHurary; treasurer, EW Galllard, New York IPPublic library The meeting of the association closed Jast night The meeting will be held next year at Nar Pier from June 20 to July Se Underhill ne iKansett Two Hundred Sports (aptured. NEW YORK, sept. 30 Police with nxes chopped their way through the walls Into a poolroom at 116 University place in the room. This raid followed upon an ap peal which Police Me Adoo mirde to the Western Unlon Tele graph company aod to the New Yak for assistance in and captured NO nen Conimlesioner catpany Robert Averill Nominated ROCHESTEIL NY Republ of the Third trict of Monroe county last night nom inated Robert Averill for of the assembly to suceess) Charles Calla han 1 he issem bly dis Sept. G0 ths meiner Wenver Has Declined. SARATOGA, N.Y, Sept, 30.-C, 8 Weaver, nominated on Wednesday for assembly by the Saratoga ned the nomination Wenther Probabilities, Fair; variable wiods, Corsets New shapes, heavy coutil and well lay and Monday 20e, Underwear One case Ladies’ Fleece Lined heavy weight. imperfect but you well worth Saturday and Mon- Underwear, extra SCArc iy detect it, Special for day lie Dress Goods A 4 good firm hie in. storm all all Satu serge, vy weight, and staple shades Monday and ° oll wool, @ranite, worth rday and Monday 50e. Outing Flannel Best known make outing, sold everywhere for 10c. Our price Sat- urday and Monday Sc Collars Some of the new things in collars, damnty silk and braid creations with very prey. Table Damask Mill ends; only 500 yards of them in extra heavy. Good judges of linen are invited to see them. Saturday and Monday 28e, Hosiery We recommend the “No Mend" stocking for boys, linen knees, heels and toes. Guaranteed to wear lon- any hose made. rich trimmings iM) wide ger than Silks Newest weaves and colorings in fancies, plains and changeables. We have some of the most exclusive silks to be found outside New York city for less money than you pay there Dress Goods An exce llent line carefully chosen by a corps of competent buyers with years of experience. Bought diree We are glad to show them. You are not urged to buy. Talmadge Block, Elmer Ave. VALLEY 'PHONR If you want a first-class Ve have them to sell. have the following ranges in stock Sterling, Dockash, Hap Thought and Garland BOLICH BRI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers