two months will be a thing of the past. Positively no longer. for at prices you never before heard of. for the next 10 days to come. gale is in force. Act today: tomorrow may never come, _- Y It is easier to save now than ten years from now. He who hesitates is lost Men's Heavy Fleeced Underwear at 29¢ each Overalls and Coats to match at 39¢ each ‘Knee Pants, while they last, at 11c a pair Men's Extra Heavy Socks at 4c a pair Red and Blue Handkerchiefs at 3c each ‘Man's Black Sateen Shirts, the best in the land for only 39c each : Men's $2.50 and $3.00 Stiff and Soft Hats, while they last, at 98c each Men's 50c Caps at 19¢ ~ Children's All Wool Sweaters at 39¢ 950 Children’s Suits from 98c to $2.98 400 pairs Men's Patent Leather and Box Calf Shoes, the $4 grade at $2.60 " “Men's Overcoats, full length, sold $10, now $5.98 * About 1 dozen Dress Suit Cases left, at 98¢ Men's Dress Shirts, worth from $1 to $1.75 each at 69¢c each = Men's and Boys' i-ply Linen Collars, all late styles, 3 for 25¢ Have a look ness wear, at $6.98, cheap at $15 34 to 16. think of it your last chance The man who saves will soon find he is earning twice as much all It would be round and sizes run from They will go This is The 2 Joc grade ——————_ ON'T GO TO SLEEP AND FALL OVER YOURSELF. I when such bargains were offered 7?” ~ awake. Remember, this sale means Stock to Go Out and Cash to Come In. . you can judge for yourself. > is sufficient. It will be easier to save now than ten years from now. “Where was why not vou? This A word to the wise LOCKHART STREET, SAYRE, PA. ~ PEOPLE HAVE DIED Pron serious trouble resulting from bad condition of teeth. disorders and severe neuralgia can often be traced to decayed or ulcerated teeth. BE WARNED Do not impair your general health and personal appearance by lack of care for your teeth. Now is the time to escape neuralgia. 1 give the benefit of over 30 years continuous practice at the following low prices: Eo Gold crowns, 22k, 30 gauge, seamless $4 | Amalgam or silver fillings, 50c to 75c. to $5. Cement fillings, 50c. Goi work, Extraction, 25c. Gold fillings, ‘$1 Plates, $5.00 to $8.00. r tooth, $1. 1 up. | AGENTS WANTED. Everywhere to sell teas, coflees, ap'ces, extracts, baking powders and fine soaps, . premiums with all orders, soch as lace curtains, dishes, eto. A good chance for boys and girls to make money after school hours. We also give prizes to as amount, as le uiunhy | wrist bracelets, guns, stick pins, ete. These prizes come extra and do not include your regular commission. Suck making” a good In- come off our plan. Write today for full information to the SAYRE SPECIALTY WORKS, Box 115, Sayre, Pa. | | New and Up-to-Date. First Accommodations. Thomas Ave, Opposite L. V. Station Sayre. Specialties. metallurgists of the United States, which is sufficient guarantee of its ex- cellence, as any dentist will tell you. DR. J. W. MURRELLE, 106 CENTER STREET. JOHN C. PECKALLY, AWS & 'WINLACK, DEALER IN Foreign and Domestic Fruls. of pure are Olive Oil just re- 500 g 300 boxes of macaroni and im portad cheese. All direct from Italy. fo. 8 Elizabeth St., Waverly ATHENS, PA. C. J. Kiron, SAYRE’S LEADING DRAYBAN. ‘Bepecial care and prompt at. tention gives’ to moving of Pla v : Attorneys and Counselors at Law. A GENERAL LAW BUSINESS Hours—7 ofa m,1t08,7to 8p. m. OFPICE-SAMUELS BLOCK. Valley Telephone 27x. 138 Lockhart St A.E.BAKER, Carpenter and Builder. 17 Pleasant St. Waverly, N.Y. Read The Record. A.J.GREEN = MANY THINGS OF INTEREST IN EASTERN METROPOLIS. (THE LAUGH ON JUDGE DEUEL His Suit Against Norman Hapgood | Proved a Sad Mistake—The Pub- lic Entertained at Society's Expense—Other Gossip, EW YORK: Fora comparatively small matter the town if get- ting much eanjoy- ment out of the discomfiture of Town Topics by Collier's Weekly.’ It is more than a’ quarre between two newspapers and the cause of v2 (H ae » i = i most lost sight of lao the relish of the consequences Judge Deuel of the court of special | ! sesslons—about the grade of a count* judge In the country—sued Norman | Hapgood, editor of Collier's, for erim- | jiual libel in having printed that it was | ia disgraceful thing for a man like Judge Deuel while drawing a salary makes a specialty of “soclety” news, sometimes rather spicy. That suit was 8 bad mistake, and Hapgood has been acquitted. Collier's was “loaded fer bar” The proprietor, a very rich | man, In society himself and with a son and daughter-fu-law high in the charmed circles, spared no expense {a preparing his editor's defense. Edward M. Shepard and James W. Op- borne, the former the ablest Democrat In the state, the latter the defeated candidate for district attorney and a terror in cross-examination—were en- gaged and a mass of testimony gather- ed which proved that Judge Deuel was in receipt of salaries from Town Top- lcs and from one of {ts subsidiary pub- lishing companies; that he acted as libel expert and general adviser and wrote some of the livellest para- graphs; and also that he helped direct the campaign to get subscriptions for “Fads and Fancles,” a publication of the company, at prices ranging from $1.500 to $10,000, It was the contention of the defense that people who subscribed, or who lent money to the proprietor were nicely treated, while the people who refused were criticised. Perry Bel) mont, for lostance, was nicely treated. his brother O. H. P. Belmont, who tes- tfied that he refused a loan, was not. of Vanities—All Is Vanity. HE whole country knows about the “Fads and Fancies” matter through the wide pablicity given to the subscription list of men and women willing to give up thousands a book containing a few selected names and” plc- tures and a little reading matter about them. President Roosevelt [8s one of those whose portrait was obtained for the book. In his case no subscription was asked, and a reputable southern ady was employed to obtain his photo- graph, without suspicion upon her part of any Impropriety. The president promptly denied having understood the purpose for which the portrait was obtained. The highest price paid for a subscription was, it is sald, the $10,000 of Mra. C P Huntington Some of the phrases occurring in the lattars of Judge Deuel and Col. Mann, the president of Town Toples, are be- o ming part of the slang of the day. In one case the editor was bidden to “let up on Henry T. Sloan.” In an- otNer to be sure to say that the Perry Belmonts—the good Belmonts who “gave up" as contrasted with the bad 0. H. P. Beimonts who didn‘t—went to all the nice places. As for the bad Belmont he was sald in Town Topics to have been “read out of his family" and “read out of the Democratic par- ty” as well, and to be “Nicking the feet of Bryan ut the Dallas round-up.” This Mr Belmont is about as @se- fully employed as any man | know of just now in urging the passage of cor- rupt practices acts fn Washington. and In the stale capitals, so that Town Toples’ scoldings needn't annoy him, In another fustance Town Topics told of a woman In New Orleans who got drunk and had to be carried out of a fashionable assemblage by her hus- band. “Her father and grandfather were among the heaviest drinkers of thelr day.” the paragraph sadly con- cluded. Col. Mann ander cross-exam- ination admitted that such paragraphs werd “often useful.” The Beason of Balle. HE ball situation in New York has changed utterly in teu years. There is no” longer any such great round- ty ball used to furnish Society itsoif dispenses with any but invi- tation events In private houses and with a few carefully guarded cotillions fo semwl-public. The smartest great giving balls eighty yedrs, the Emerald “The balls that peal are not society events at all, but the annual free-aud-casy affairs, of {14 attended by many prosperous Ger- | man-Américans and their families and their artistle talent makes it a delight- ful spectacle, with fancy features not carried beyond the bounds of good taste. The famous French ball is a money making scheme pure and sim- ; ple—not 80 very pure or simple either, come to think about it. Much of its too weak (o fight, that had from the home nest in an oak U With a cheerful disregard for possibilities in the way ment, the Chaplus promptly adop the helpless strangers into the not even permitted to be gay and earn its wages, at that No more may the festive coryphee kick off the police- man's helmet or pour wine at $4 a quart down the back of the elderly rounder. Most of the gayety nowadays consists In soddenly and suddenly get- ting drunk and being oblivious lo the remainder of the proceedings. “Beef and" In the White House. “JOHNNY" MEE- han Is as famous in New York as the mythical Mr Dooley or the real Baltimore John in Chicago. His re- cent visit to Presi. dent Roosasvelt by invitation was the first day In thirty years he had missed being at his place of busi- ness Meehan was until Dolan's death the “nephew” in the firm of P. Dolan & Nephew. He is a tall, Intellectual look- [lng man of slender build who looks | well In a dress suit—and owns one. For though he spends ten hours a day dealing out “beef and” from behind : his own counter with his own hands he ls a rich man Dolan Invented the business. He framed up a short list of easily pre- pared and simple articles of food 40 years ago and hung it on the wall [t has never been changed. You can get bofled eggs at Meehan's and dry toast but you can't get poached eggs on toast or fried eggs. They're too “mus- sy” for the shade of the departed Do- lan, which rules not the roast but the “beef and.” Everything on the short list is good of its kind, the “sinkers" man being an artist in his line. “Sink- ers” are deadly but Johnny's are only slow death Greeley used to eat al Dolan's. Jay Gould walked up from Wall street to | take luncheon there President Roose- f velt often ate there when he was po- lice commissioner, and be remembers | the place. No one forgets Dolan's be- ciuse it has individuality. It has made two fortunes. Three Boys of Destiny. HE grandson and namesake of the late Marshal Fleld has been staying in Lakewood, N. J., a little way out of the city. He is the third in a fa- mous ttio of boys who are being reared with care to take great re- sponsibiiities Vincent Astor is the oldest of these boys. He is dell- cate; at one time It was feared that he would never reach man's estate. He 8 the sole heir of John Jacob Astor, and though John Jacob's estate is only half that of Willlam Waldorf, it is ‘enough and growing. The mother of the boy was Miss Ava Willing of Philadelphia Young Astor is educated with as great care and as much attention to his phy- sical exercise and nutrition as If he were an emperor expectant Curiously, he suffers from rheumatism, like young Fleld. Field Is 12 yearys old and Is under treatment for rheumatism, for which the mild, dry alr of Lakewood, sheltered by its heavy pine growth, Is ravorable, He {3 a dashing horseback rider amd has ponles, dogs and every- thing that heart could desire. Also he works; for he will one day have charge of the greater share of the Field mlil- llons—perhaps of all of them, for the principle of community of interest is more and more recognized In handling big inherited estates llke those of the Vanderbiits,. He is an excellent stu- Jent. Young John Nicholas Brown of Rhode island, long known as the “ten milifon dollar baby,” is the youngest of the trio, though no baby now but a sturdy little chap with none of the Astor delicacy. His mother. was a “They will Le so lovely for the children to play with, Fred,” sald Mrs. Chapin, bending over the blinking Ue balls of fur curled up In apron, “and” we'll get a cage for them when we get back to Chicago.” “If_you ask me,” sald Chapin, who bad studied the squirrel In its Bas tive haunts, “I think we would belter get three dog collars and chains for them when they get = title bigger. Maybe we could train them lo har ness so they could pull the baby's” wagon." 3 Mrs. Chapin met ber husband's suggestion with silent scorn and pro- ceeded to feed the squirrels on broad and milk, which they absorbed with refreshing enthusiasm. In a forte night they had all developed teeth and an appetite for walnuls. “1 think it would be the better part of wisdom to leave thése frisky desi- reps of the forest on this side of the lake,” sald Chapin when the family was preparing to return to colvillza- =~ tion. “I fear they would not be happy in a modern Chicago home unless we put up a tree for them in the parior - and that would mar the color scheme of the room, not to mention injuring the rug.” “Don't be silly, Fred,” sald Mrs Chapin. “We can take them home fa a box with a piece of wire window screen over it for a cover, They will be all right and when they get quite tame the children will have a good time playing with them. They're much prettier than rabbits, 1 think” “Yes, and they're fonder of chile dren,” said Chapin. “In fact, IT be : lieve they'd eat ‘em alive If they got a chance. However,” he added with nm patient sigh of the dutiful mar- ried man who does just what his wife wants, “If you think three boxed squirrels would add to the oy of liv- ing, Florence, 1 suppose we'll have to transport them.” The next day the scared squirrels, saugly boxed up and supplied with a winter's rations of nuls, were deposit- ed in the dark basement of the Chapin bousebold and left to thelr own de vices while the establishment was: righted after its weeks of idleness. But no self-respecting squirrel, able to guaw a hole In a 50-yeardld oak tree, will aliow a litte thing like the side of a pine box to interfere with the freedom of its movements. When Chapin went to the basement In the dark that night for the baby carriage and groped along the wall, a squirrel took a flying ieap from the stationary laundry tub and alighted in his sur prised countenance, where It clung desperately for a moment. “] knew they were pretty lively,™ he remarked later as he dabbed arnjca” on the scratches that made him look like a Heidelberg -student, “but 1 didn't think they were flying squirrels, “You probably frighténed it.” wg gested Mrs. Chapin. Her husband, with stern self-com- mand, refrained from answering. : Two days later the squirrels were. missing from the basement, but when Marjorie's tam o'shanter and Bar 3 pard's stockings. and one of Mrs. pi Chapih's opera slippers also disap- 3 peared a graye suspicion developed : that the Michigan pets had not aban. doned the Chapin menage. x “It's ten to ote they are setling housekeeping on their own hook,” Chapin, “and the only thing I regret. ts that the children will not have a ™% chance to play with them. They are ¥ 80 much prettier than rabbits, ro A know.” When a hole in the side of Chaplin's ulster and a faint odor of peppermint = were all that remained to tell where a patket of lozdnges had been, there was some talk of a punitive tion to locate the squirrels and er fcate them. But when they i : themselves, bright-eyed and a = ly happy, in the basement box with Xo the llckorynuts, the Chaping’ melted and forgave “them. pi It remained for Miss Hortense Me & Dermott, lineal descendent of a ng ¥ 1% 3 = b - Dresser, a sister of Mrs. George Van- dervilt York with his mother, and just before | Christmas was a fréquent and welcome guest at the toy-shops where under supervision, he bought liberally of toys for other children, rich and poor, of his acquaintance. Perhaps | might add a fourth boy— ' the adopted son of the late William Ziegler, who If his adoptive father's wishes rule his grown-up conduct may oue day set out to find the north pole | Millions were left him, left him for | that purpose, one might almost say; and as the thoughts of the other three boys are Insensibly led toward business studies and problems, so his have al. ready been engrossed Ly study of the daring feats of exploration and adven | ture. Which is the fairer prospeet? OWEN LANUDON { Can’t Use Corustarch. _ In Greece, for some reasons, climatic 5r other, It seems absolutely impossible of utilize cornstarch In the manufacture of cambrics and other textiles, although many trials have been made during sev- e149] years past, as the spindles, especial- ly in the case of colored textiles, clog. Too Conspicuous. Tor madatn pict lo al ft halt rs oft. Wih all he line of Milesian kings, to Issue the final decree. “Ill be leavin’ you Ssturdah, she announced simply, to Mrs. Chapin at breakfast on Wednesday. “What Is the matter, asked Mrs. Chapin. EE a “Tis thim squirruls, ma'aip; sald Miss McDermott, firmly. “I've bad thim in me flour barrel an’ | sald wothin® whin they scared the heart out of me; I've had thim clmbin' down me back in the dark cupboard an’ scramblin’ out av the cake box | But last night settled It for me, ma’ : 'whin I found the whole three av thite in me bed. 1 give you notice oh I'll be goln' to me cousin's av no urdab, ma'am.” Miss McDermott retired with * Ye ya Hortenge?" x wife. “Florence,” he sald, “just telep ‘the butcher not to send that ch for tonight" “Why not?” ment. 1 “We're going to have rabbit announced Chapin with & glint ia & eye that brooked no Suestioniag. cago Dally Nows, she asked In
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers