5 Assortment. ~ GRAF New Goods. & CO. | We solieit your Banking busi- - meas, and will pay you three per cent. interest per annum for money ~ jefi on Certificate of Depcsit or Savings Account. The department of savings is a special feature of this Bank, and all deposits, whether large or : draw the same rate of interest. > B. N. SAWTELLE, Cashier. The Valley Record a. = een BH. MUKRELLE, Publisher. W. T. CAREY, Bditor. AE rece All the news that's fit to print” SATURDAY, MARCH 21 1908. “BER HEALTH IMPROVING In a commuaication reccived weeks ago for Colorado, Mr. Cary steadily improving and that both of them like the climate very much FINDING MEN IN SNOWSLIDES | Frick Learned from Indians Proves Eficacious in Saving Many Lives. | Ell Smith Is credited with having {saved the lives of 25 men at Sheep | Camp in the spring of 1595 at the time of the great spowslide on the Dyea trall. It will be recalled, says the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, that 63 men were killed by the slide, most of them { suffocating before rescuers oould | yemch them. Smith was on the trall several miles below the slide. He came | up three-quarters of an hour after the | tragedy and found the survivors fram- { tically trying to dig the victims out “Give me that stick.” sald Smith to | > man who had a fiat lathlike piece of wood in his hand The stick was turned over to Smith, who immediately whittled the end so that he could insert i{ In his mouth and grasp It Grmly with his back teeth. Then he (hrust the stick In the snow and held the end in his mouth, apparently listening. He repeated the operation at several points ia the slide. Finally he shouted: “Come! Dig here, guick!” At a depth of nine feet the rescuers took out three men, unconscious, but alive. Those three men recovered znd were all right by morning In the same manner Smith pointed out other places, which resulted In the locating of many bodies and the un- covering io all of 25 men Whose lives were saved. “Where did you learn that Smith was asked, Lhe other day “l learned that in Idaho, at Wood river,” sald he. “The Indians know that trick. i guess a wire would be better than a stick, but they don't keep wire in stock out In the wilds, so Indians always use a stick. You ree if a feller is alive you can sort of hear him breathe, or | guess it's more like feeling him breathe. If he Is kicking or moving around you can bear him plain. You just put the stick down into the snow two or three feet and you can hear a feller breathing, even If he's 20 feet further down” CABBAGE PATCH TAVERN. Future Pilgrims to the Domicile of Mrs. Wiggs Will Find a Change trick ™ Current reports from Loulsville, Ky, indicate the probability that future pligrims to the shrine of that com munity, literary and otherwise, may pause for refreshment or inspiration at the Cabbage Patch inn. At least, * ONGLES OF A TIGER HUNT. SAVED LIFE OF AN OFFICER Killed Ferocious Animal After He Had Fired at Beast and Missed— Modern Diana Has Dan- getous Adventure. Chicago —The latest adventure of a Chicago girl Is that of Mrs Lionel Warren, formeriy Miss Agnes Lae, who has returned to America from In- dia, where she has spent the summer shooting tigers. This modern Dama invaded the Indian jungles and speat days in the vicinity of the watering places and the lairs of Bengal tigers. She helped her husband organize wholg communities of barbarous na- tives into netting expeditions alter the man eaters. On one occasion, by ber accurate alm, she saved the life of an English army officer, one of her party, who was about to be attacked by a wounded tiger Mrs. Warren is the wife of a pro- fessor In the service of the Royal Bombay soclety and it was her devo- tion to her husband that led her Into the hazardous hunting and geographl- cal expedition from which she return- ed 80 fecently. She tells the story of her adventures best in m. The Rev. J. L. Shanley, Rector. Church of Redeemer Communion 8:00. Morning service 10:30. Sanday school 12:00. Evening service 7:30. The Rev. F. T. Cady, Rector. Wheelock Memorial Chapel Preaching service, 2:30, Sunday school, 3:30, Methodist Church Men's meeting, 5:30, Morning service, 10:30, Sunday school, 12:00. Junior League 3:00 5k m. Epworth League, 6:00. Evenlog service, 7:00. The Rev. J. PF. Warner, Pastor, William's _Carbolic Salve With Amica and Witch Hazel The best Sal.e in the world for Cats, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tet- ter, Chapped Hands and all skio erup- tions. [It ix guaranteed to give satisfac- tion, or money refunded. rice 25¢c by druggists Filliams Mfg. Co., Prop's. Sold by C. M. Driggs, druggist. Very Cheap Traveling Beginning Feb, 14 and continuing dai- ly until April 6th, the Erie R. R. will sell colonist tickets to all Pacific Coast and nomerous interior points at ve low rates, which will be quoted and all other information given by calling on or writing any Erie ticket nt, or J, H. | Webster, D. P. A, Elmira. N.Y. 2%0-e0d and in order to stock of CLOT prices.’ educe our. $15,000 SUITS a" €“ we i“ Men's Men's Men's 9 12 1s i“ “ “ #H “ “ “ “ OVERCOATS “" 10 to 14, MEN'S PANTS $1.50, now g8c, $1.48. FURNISHINGS three pair for 25c. finish, three pair for 25c. or single fronts, now 38c. each, two for sc. HATS hats, newest shapes, $1.28. SHOES 100 pairs men's $3 shoes, now 198. Children's shoes goc and up. KNEE PANTS soc and 75c values now 42c. 25c¢ values 18c. | 60 pairs ladies shoes, the $1.25 ' kind, now gsc. | money. ware. - A— hisWife will probably remain in gays the New York World, Mra. Wiggs Colorado for a year or more. The asnourcement that Mrs. Cary is ed with delight inds in by her many this place. and ‘Way Down East ’ PURCHASED MUSIC STORE Martin Doyle Marks, general manager of the D. S. Andrus & Cn, was in Ithaca Thursday and completed negotiations for the putchase of the business of St Creix & Caldwell, who recently opened a music store in that city. Andrus & Company have stores located in Elmira, Williamsport, Galeton, Sayre and at Painted Post, N.Y, and will establish in Ithaca what they coasider one of their WAGNER - KRESEE John A. Wagner, a foreman n the Sayre shops, who came here from Wilkes-Barre some time ago, and Miss Lydia Kresge, were mar- Presbyterian church, Rev. A. J. Kerr officiating. Afier a wedding supper the happy couple left for New York and other castern cities. They will return to Sayre in a few days where they will go to houses is disposed to rent her shanty and the would-be lessee has asked for his li- cense. It has been observed by grave writers that public houses of enter talnment have often provided the haunts of those prominent In litera ture and the arts Chaucer cheered mine host at the Tabard; Shakespeare, Ben Johnson and their fellows made merry at the Mermaid; Congreve and Wycherly bad their revels at the Half Moon, and there are othey famous ex- amples of England. For our own aside of the water we have the literary tra- ditions of the Wayside Inn, we know of Irving listening to strange tales at the old Bull's Head In New York— and we need not mention the late Subway Tavern, of brief but strenuous note. If inns may be the baunts of gen} us, they may as well commemorate transfigurations by genius Mrs Wiggs underwent ome of these She was without distinction In her own side street till she was gathered on the point of a pen and placed between book covers. The accomplishment of realizing upon her in letters was note worthy. It is perhaps mevitable that they who go to the patch therefore to wonder shall remain to drink. FUR FARMING FOR -PROFIT, Noted Naturalist Tells What Are the Best Animals to Raise. Fur farming offers a good chance for small capital. A man of experi ence may put in $1,000 and get a re markable percentage 8s soon as well started, says Ernest Thompson Seton, in Country Life In America There is no object in breeding cheap furs. A muskrat with his 15-cent pelt is al most as much trouble to raise as a $300 silver fox. Therefors only the high-class furs will be congldered What is the most valuable fur of all? No doubt the sea otter ple and magnificent robe brings vow, I am told, from $500 to $1,000, but the animal is s0 rare that a large fortune would be exhausted In getting the stock, and nothing Is known of the methods necessary for its propagation Next on the list is the sliver fox The black og sliver fox Is nothing but a black phase or [freak of the com- mon fox, just as the black sheep Is a color freak of the common sheep A pair of pure red foxes may have a black fox in their litter, and that black fox may grow up to be the par. ent of nothing but red foxes, but = red fox will bring only a dollar or two and the silver fox a hundred times as much. At the Woman's Club, Mrs. Whyte—How sweetly contented Mrs. BJenkins looks! Mrs. Browne—Yes, didn't you see ber smub that little Mra. Weathersby into the open country by the scarcity of water in thelr native lalrs. + “My first night in the jungle was one never to be forgotten. The tents were arranged io a circle around four fires. Perhaps it was the reflection of these fires, through the thin tangle of brush and trees, that alarmed the jun- gle denizens, though it may have been ®.¢ odor of the cooking. After the watch was posted, we were awakened by a shot A native hunter had fired at a pair of blazing eyes in the nelgh- boring thicket “The shot was followed Ly a plerc- ing snarl and an ear-splitting roar which was the signal for the weirdest chorus that ever assalled mortal ear. It was as If the jungle suddenly had awakened for miles around “Jackals were snarling querulously, and the laugh of the hyena echoed un- der the tiger's dominant note. As If reverberating from the very heart of the earth, the sound waxed stronger, fuller, followed by a low, ominous rumble and the sounds of lesser ani- mals betaking themselves to places of distant safety" Mrs. Warren thus recounts the story of her first encounter with the tigers: “We mounted the elephapts, and with provisions for two days, set forth. Suddenly the guides gave the signal to halt. A second later a mag- nificent tiger bounded out of the thicket, snarling with surprise and rage. Evidently the beast had been caught napping. Before he gained the thicket a shot shattered his foreleg. “lastead of turning at bay, he gave a prodigious leap into the alr, re- volving with lightning-like rapidity, and tearing at the damaged leg as IL it were the offender. Clouds of dust from the sunbaked earth hid him from view as he plunged on in his blind fury Colonel Ellis (the army officer who had joined the expedition) and three { natives dismounted In pursult of the wounded monster. One of the hunters came running toward us with a shout Colonel Ellls, emerging from the thick- et, found himself! in the open, tne wounded tiger scarcely 30 paces away The natives were too demoralized to do anything but run. Colonel Ellis fired point blank at the beast, but missed “80, scarcely hoping to do any good, I raised my amall-bore rifle against the houdah post, and, aiming at the shoulder, fired. To my astonishment the splendid brute bounded ten feet in the air, and fell in a heap at the colonel’'s feet” Noted Turk. Karatheodory Pasha, once Yurkish minister of foreign affairs, who died ia Constantinople the other day, was the last survivor of the Turkish plen- fpotentiaries st the Berlin congress. He was of Greek descent and was born st Constantinople in July, 1838. Charles Newell of Binghamton, formerly of Waverly, has returned to this place and accepted a posi- tion with the Lehigh Valley at Sayre. Fred F. Smith of the Spaulding hose company received a severe cut on the wrist Thursday evening from a piece of flying glass while working at the Tioga House fire. “Holland's Contribution to American Life” will be the subject of Rev. P. R. Ross’ address at the Presbyterian church tomorrow evening. There will be special music by the choir and Mrs. Black more will sing a solo. The program for the Imperial mins'rel will contain the following vaudeville acts: Ford Schutt, monologist ; George Swartwood, “Rube Act; Stanley Stark, buck dancer; “The Dixie Guard,” a one act farce; Chas. Vanostran, buck dancer; Sullivan and Peters, trap eze artists; Nevaro, contortionist ; and the Imperial male quartet. The second of a series of dancing parties was held by the Tioga hose company at their rooms last night. E M. Tighe presided at the piano and the young people “tripped the light” until 1 o'clock. The rooms were decorated with large flags and Japanese lanterns, and looked very pretty. Lemonade, sandwiches and cake were served. It wasa very delightful affair. The new Waverly board of trustees will hold their first meeting at 7 o'clock Monday cvening. made are chief of police, two night policemen, member of board of health, and clerk of the board. The board will be made up as follows; President, O. H. Law- renice; trustees, Brougham, Brown, Myers, old members; and Lang, Howard and Farley, new members, Advertise in The Record. MARCH 27 AND 28. Coming Attraction DIMOCK & DUNN'S Imperial All Stars MINSTRELS Benefit Waverly Hook & Ladder Co. No. 2. Prices—25, 35 and 50 Cents. LEHIGH AND SCRANTON COAL At the Lowest Possible Prices. Orders can be left at West Hoyts Drug Store, both phones; or at the Erfe yards at Bayr=. Bo'h Phones. COLEMAN NASSLER, FISH, FISH, We will have them every day during Lent. Alsoa line of meat at popu- lar prices. S.J. BELLIS, Elizabeth street. Valley Phone 66x. Bell Phone 138w R. H. DRISLANE, Contractor and Builder Plans and Estimates Furnished. 102 Lincoln St Sayre. Pa. K. J. Clements and Gertrude Clements Graduates of the American School of Osteopathy, under the founder, r. Andrew Taylor Still, Kirks- ville, Missouri, are located tempor- arily at the | Hotel Snyder, and Floor, Room 3, Waverly N. Y, until they can secure permanent of- fices in this city, and will be pleas- ed to meet all who are interested and explain the science. All acute and chronic cases successfully treat- Be Examination and consultation 18c ribbons at SATURDAY, MARCH 24 THE GREAT SUCCESS thor “Way Down East." A Play That Will Live Forever. The most original, unhackneyed and diverting play of Southern life ever written. 27—-Remarkable Cast—27 Massive Production Complete in Every Detail. Evening, 25, 50, 75 and $1.00. AGENTS WANTED. 10c; all 25 and A suit of rooms for light on the second floor In Pa. All the modern | W. H. Shaw, TTRTH