§ i SAYRE, PA. §) DBRS AND PREPAY § FREIGHT OR EX. PRESS ON PUR- CHASES OF $s.00 OR OVER. a g 4 but all strong values, . LS Opeuing Announcemeat will Read y-to-wear It's not unlikely Lots t) select g 37 19 from and all sizes. Men's, Boys’, Children's r Easter ap- , «ent | Basem copies of oil Subjects elc. Also 100in Rockinghsm Tea Clothes Pine, per Tubular Lantern $1.57 1095 50. Our lar Pines re made later. ent Specials “Early Spring,” " “Stag at Bay,” Oval Frames, similar subje-ts, Pots, - dozen Globes 29 01 04 casions and seasons; every material to finish 44. 73, Toc, $125 $2. have indi a patiatus, all at { ¥2 por yaid | price, 23¢c per box. pattern contains size waist, 32 to The way they in profusion. All to $1.75. Rubbers, 35c; Childs Child's Su aes SP NP TERS ats for faverly, Weare its and Garments ela pi “2 + / % ROORIS AR — Muirolle s. Printing | Office fave the Tlmudge Buln. Elmer Ave., Sayre, | Yalley Phone 128x. WE PRINT The Valley Record 6. J. Kivou, SAYRE'S LEADING DRAYMAN. tention given to moving of Pianos, Household Goods, Safes ote. HILL & BEIBACH care Lockhart St. A z= ve ¥ La) VERN TRA | The Season Proper oper Has Been Supple- | | mented by a Winter Influx of People A visit to any one of the fashiona-! ble restaurants will suffice to prove’ | Suze doubt that London now enjoys two seasons—the season proper and | the winter season, says the Express. { One of the attractions which has [ kept such a remarkable number of well-known people ln town Is Lhe ex- cellence of the Italian opera at Covent’ Garden. Then dinner parties and even small dances are the order of the day. The resisurant proprietors all declare that never before have 80 many people clung to London st this time of year. ' | The Riviers mo longer attracts in the way it did a few years ago, and the i Calro season js only for the few Hunting men, 00, are showing = disposition to rush to town immedi stely a frost Jets in, instead of re maining at headquarters, with the result that London hostesses can al- ways rely on sacuring men, at any. rate occasionally, for a cheery winter function, The motor car is, of tourse, respon- ju sible for the number of county people | who now come up to town to put up at, botels and “do” = few theaters YEARS OF LA LABOR LOST. | hee Singular Experience Related by | a Man Who Once Wrote | a Book. { “I have been told” said a man of | experiences, “that it is pot unusual! | for men to spend much thought and | | att over inventions of ome sort and | another, only to find when they took | these things to Washington to be pat | ented that the same ideas had long | before been worked out by somebody | | else and that patents had already been | issued on them. [ had that experience once with a book. “l spent "14 “years ovce, writing a book, and I had it all but completed. And then, stopping at a second-hand book stall, | picked up from among a lot of books offered at five cents each one that bore a title in the very words that | had decided upon for the title of my book: and the opening-sen. tence in this book was almost dent! cal with that ln my own. “Somebody else had had the same iden that | Bad worked over so long i and had writtes and published a book | about it 50 years before™ | Photography in War, The newest thing In war is to pho- tograph the enemy's troops or defenses by a cameras raised hundreds of feel in the asireby a balloon or kite, thus obtaining accurate information at a distance 6f tes or 12 miles Views of the cofintry to be fought over and plo tures of fortifications are Invaluable Tha expert determines by photos i ST Ses fo RAR — | Wild Bouth African Species That Have Been Brought from South Africa Perhaps one of the most peculiar animals ever seen In this city Is now on exhibition at the zoo menagerie, It is a wild all the way from the jungles of that Horn, proprietor of the zoo. In order to secure the animal it was neces sary to make a trip of 9,000 miles Undaunted by this, Mr. Horn seat one of his employes from this city to get the affimal. It arrived in this city A few days ago, and {3 now on exhib tion. The sheep is the only one of ia In looks it resembles an ordinary sheep, with the exception that It has four horns, instead of two. Two of the horns project spward, while the others eirve downward. During the past week Mr. Horn has {animal, wanting to buy it, and offer. ing exorbitant prices, but Mr. Horn bas steadfastly refused to sell The animal stands about four feet high and has a remarkably thick crop of wool. {ture it is necessary to keep It chained land in a cage. What X-Ray Injures. X-rays as death giving instead of life giving Instroments are a discoy- ery in connecuon with many lower organisms. For sxample, their preven- tive effect on the growth of seeds has | been observed, and experimentally ! proved. Similar results have been ob- | talped In experiments with the larvae of battles, changos of such a character being induced in the body tissues that development does not normally take place. The extraordinary effects of radium emanations in inhibiting growth are alsn well recognized No race ror mua. House Agent—Yes, sir, I've got the very thing that will suit you—beautl- ful house and fine situation, Client—Fine situation, eh? “Splendid situatiom, sir” “Healthy place? “Healthy! I should think so. Wty, pir, in that distriet sickness Is prac tically uwnknown.” “Ah, well, them, the house won't sult me. ‘You sec, I'm s medical man.” —Chicage Jourumal Equaliy Hazardous. There seems to be little choice In bazardousness of occupation between being a diplomat at Caracas and aa admiral in the Rassian navy~N Y Tribune , Joo. Rad} UHSOYON Ww. G. Schrier’is today. D:Witt Andrews is home from R J Mulligan went to Towanda this morning. Misses Mirtha and Edith Stulen are in E'mira today. E B Carner is confined to his home by a severe cold. John G ippin is able to be out after a stvere attack of the grip. Miss B atrice Dw arrived home from Vassar coll:ge last evening. EE ————— ER HE Cn.ff:e of Sheshequin, was calling on Atheas friends to. day. J. F. Young cf Chestnut strect bronchitis. Rev. W. H. Sawtelle will preach his farewell sermon at the Presby- terian church tomorrow. i Country roads are becoming passable, and the farmers are bring ing in a large supply of eggs. S H Davenport of Elmira, is in town today. He has just solda house and lot which he owned here. L S. Stacy is filling the Stimson House ice house. The ice is being cut on the Susquehanna near the ize house. J W. Beaman, Esq, went to the death of his grandmother, Mrs, Almira Beaman, Don Henry has recovered from a severe attack of rheumatism, which had confined him to the hous: for two weeks: F. D. Estabrook and wife, and Mr: Estabrook’s sister, Miss Mabel Stevens of E'mira, will spend Sun- day with E C. Potter, Paine street — a —————— We are unable to state exactly the number of Athens people who went on sleighrides last might, but a conservative estimate places iwat 1187. Miss Katherine Young, who works in Jordan's printing office, had the misfortune t8 severely lacerate one of herfingers while f ¢ding the press. The sul j ct