A Vast Winter Stock at Its Zenith--Best Tailor-Made Suits, Fall and Winter Coats, Exclusively shown by us. The assortment to select from is large and varied id you will have no trouble in finding a garment that is stylish and becoming the price you want to pay. Here you find hundreds of stylish tailor-made nits, marked to sell at $12.00, $13.50, $15.00, $18.00, $22.00, $25.00, $27.50, @ call particular attention to the quality and style of materials, the high de of tailoring, and the fit and finish of all our suits. Fall and Winter ts for Women, Misses and Children. You will find here a superb assort- ment to select from, Fall and Winter Coats for Women at $6.00, £7.00 and up to $25. Misses Peter Thompson Suits, $5.00 up to $10.98. Fall and Wintgr Coats for M isses, $3.75 up to $14.00. Tourist, Anfomobile and Rain Coats, $10.00 up to $21.87. Children’s Fall and Winter Coats, £2.47 up to $12.00, Another shipment of Fall Shirt Waists arrived today. Fall and Winter Coats for Children, age 1 to 6 years, $2.00 and up. Dress Skirts at $2.98 up to $11.67. Visit the Millinery Department and Select Your Fall Hat Our Fall Millinery far surpasses what we have shown in previous seasons, Goods are finer, styles prettier, assortment large. We are safe in saying that ou will be agreeably surprised at this season's showing in our millinery partment. Our Regular Opening Occurs Oct. Il, 12 and I3 Ls Silk Counter Gloves Gloves Extra good values in s Taffeta silks, G9¢ up to _ The showing of fall | 3150, 20 shades in Taf- and winter gloves 18 un- feta at 69¢. Plaid silks usually large. You'll for waists and dresses find here gloves for ev- E “ at 59¢, 75¢, £1.00, $1.25. a 25¢ to 36 in. Black taffeta silk, special at 79¢, 19 inch Bg Black Taffeta silk, 69c. Fall and Winter Hosiery Hosiery ue Furnish Homes Ladies’, Gent's Complete and Childrens Come Look Us Over Fall and Winter . Underwear We are showing com- plete lines of fall and winter underwear, in wool, fleeced-lined, and heavy cotton. You can buy from us underwear for every member of the family. A Beautiful Line of Mercerized Plaid goods, 27 in., 25¢ yd. ITH WAVERLY |ard lot on the same street, and the omission. The judge expressed steps Pay Several Bills and Direct W. EK. Secord to Place Fitney and * Fulton Streets in Former Con- dition South Waverly — The regular monthly meeting of the borough council was held last evening Those present were Councilmen Stephens, Sinsabaugh, Walsh, Mc Waverly—Mrs. Theodore Mul- lock, a former resident of Waverly, who was very well known ia this village, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Heath, at Elmira, last Sunday, Yesterday noon the remains were brought to Waverly and taken in charge by E, S. Haa- ford and buried at Forest Home cemetery, The Rev. W. H. Saw- telle of Ulster, conducted the ser- (council directed that be | his willingness to perform the cere- [taken to fasure a walk before mony but said that he could not winter, run a matrimonial bureau, and if the electric light company to place | be necessary to find the man. She | another light in the coutc | room, was very much disappointed that | the board adjourned. the thing could not be done in the —— manner that she supposed, and THIS GIRL WANTED went out im a saddencd state of couraged. 10 GET MARRIED When last secn she appeared to b= looking for something very — industriously, and if she finds a man who suits her fancy it is very Craney, Murphy and Gates. Inthe site for the Ceremony With | kidnapping, acd that the ancient absence of the president, Mr. Steph | Her But Thought the Justice | method of wife stcaling will be Should Supply Him | reversed, and that she will marry meeting. Geo, Quinn, the newly PPly him whether he will or not, appointed clerk, was on duty for] Waverly—She wandered into . the first time. (town this morning, and stayed] The matter of the cutting of about the streets for some time. | TOWN BOARD MEETING Pitney and Fulton streets by W. E, | She seemed to be ina quandary and | > cement walk, came up for discus | wanted to go. At length she went | meeting at the clerk’s office yes- sion. Mr. Secord had been notified into the office of a well known at. |terday moraing. The usual rout- £0 put the street back ia its former \torney. She wished to consult him, | ine business was gone through _ condition, but had failed to do so.|but was at first somewhat bashful with, and Dr. Theodore Snook was The committee appointed for the about stating her business. After | 3ppointed ballot clerk for the fourth * legal advice and take such steps: as | that she wished to get married, BUTE who had removed from the Were necessary to put the strectsin but when asked where the man | district. A committee was also ap- safe condition. | was she said she did not know, | Pointed to go over the road run- * Sidewalk rebates were allowed [but thought that oae could be | ing from Waverly to Leckwood, “0 Rev. E J. O'Reilley, Harry El-|found if the lawyer would only and designate the places where _ claims were late in being allowed | ed. She had heard that lawyers | road. The road for the greater ‘As the claimants were late in getting were employed to dissolve the Part of the distance runs close the papers fixed, as required, als | marriage relation, and supposed | under the hill, and when a hard “though the walks were built in|that they would be equally useful | 3torm comes on, the road is gen- time to come under this year's|in furnishing the requisites for | ally badly torn up. It is hoped of bills and the sidewalk rebates| She was advised to call on a|PUt an end to this, allowed amounted to 8116 03 justice of the peace, and she went Miss Fairchild appeared and to the office of Justice Hoagland, MRS. THEODORE MULLOCK #sked for a rebate on the cement! first stopping to call on other rs sidewalk built in front of her prop- | members of the legal fraternity, It seems that there was some | any greater success than she had contention at the time that the achieved at her first call, walk was in the street, but the | When she appeared before the present council expressed a willing- | judge she was at first reluctant to to grant the rebate, provided state the cause of her visit, but A committee was appointed to| him that she wished to enter the secure the services of a surveyor | bonds of matrimony. Whea asked | determine the location of the where the man was, she stated treet line, She also called atten that she had none, but thought the fact that a walk was that he could, through the exercise After directing the clerk to notify | she wished to marry that it would mind, but seemed in no way diss She Didn't Have the Male Requi- jeg that there will be a case of ens was placed ia the chair for the - Secord when be put in his new |a little uncertain just where shel Waverly—The town board held purpose was instructed to obtain some questioning she admitted | district, in the place of Mr. Ges lis and Patrick Lynch. These| employ the means that he possess. | Sluices should be placed under the appropriation. The whole number | getting one into that state. that the placing of the sluices will erty on Bradford street four years without, seemingly, meeting with the walk was in the sidewalk line. |after some urging she confided to seeded a $m he ove of ep ashore ply Se Tunkhannock on MACHINE HENCHMEN Sept. 20, Makes The conferees of the Lincoln party in this Congressional district which met at Tunkhaonock on Thursday, September 20, and despite the protests of the Brad- ford county delegation “ endorsed’ the Hon. Mial E. Lilley, who by trickery and high-handed political methods secured the Republican nomination for Congress at a “gum shoe” committees meeting held early last spring, prepared and adopted a set of resolutions, the pre- amble of which is as follows : “We, the regular conferecs of the Lincoln party of the Fourteeath Con- gressional district of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in conference assem- bled,"do this 20th day of September, 1006, polut with pride to the magnificent record of our eminent President, Theo dore Roosevelt. We cordially approve of the reform movement in Pennsylvania under the leadership of Lewis Emery.” In the very next paragraph, after asserting that the causes and conditions which necessitated the organization of the Lincoln party have no bearing on national issaes, the conferees pledge their cordial support to Mr. Lilley on the ground that the chief executive of the nat'on should be heartily supported in the halls of congress. Here is a brand of “logic” that has never been in use before. This system of reasoning is the same that a learned judge referred to recently as “blowing hot and cold in the same breath.’ under the “skillful” gaidance of the once powerfal “hoss ” assert that the party Las nothing in common with national issues, and then before the ink has dried on the paper they tell the voters of this county and district that they will “endorse” the Hon. Mial be- cause a Republican national administra- tion demands the support of Republican Congressmen, Really here is a joke that onght to cause anyone who reads it to forget his troubles and laugh long and loud. If the organization of the Lincoln party had no bearing upon pational issues, then why mix up with them by “endors- ing” Mial Lilley for no other reason thau a Republican President is desirous of having his support in the halls of Congress. If this is uot bringing wat- ters down to a national issue, then The Record would like to know what does, The voters throughout the distriot, and especially those who have cast their fortunes with the Lincoln party, must not be deceived. The men who com- posed the conference that “endorsed” Lilley were not Lincoln Republicags in any sense of the term. The men who sat in that conference as the alleged repre- sentatives of the Lincoln party were nothing more nor less than a coterie of political ringsters who, fram the time he first made his appearance in the arena of politics, have been owned body and breéches by “boss” Lilley; ‘men wko were sent to that conference to do his bidding, and who perpetrated one of the most outrageous political intrigues that this section of machine ruled Penngylva- nis has seen in years. Mr. Lilley was in Tunkhannock the day thé conference was held. He knew that he could not control the Lincoln conferees from Bradford county. He had awakened to the fact that his grasp on this connfy has been shaken off, so all that he could do was to import trusted members of the disintegrated machine and instruct them to pose as Lincoln Republicans. They did their work well, bat no one has been fooled. The whole transaction was too transparent, and Mial has only added one more disgraceful stant to the outrageous political methods he has enployed ever since he first Legan to pose as the leader of the Republican party in this county, The true story of that day's doings at | Tankhannock places Lilley in a more ! unfavorable light than ever before— were such a thing possible, The manner | in which the job was done should be known to every self-respecting voter of | Bradford county. The rules of the Lin- eoln party provide for holding primaries and electing delegates in much the same Grand fall opening of Mrs. Ellis' millinery parlors at Waverly this week Friday and Saturday, Oct. 5 and 6. All are invited, st manner as do the rales of other parties. Rale 7 provides that for this year the members of the county committee may to called together and hold a conven- tion. In Bradford county n thorough organization had beap parfected, county committeem n had heap appointed in every d'strict, and at a convention reg- ularly called James L Dyer was given authority to appiint confereas, himse lg to bx ons of them. The conferees thus sclected were given farther authority to confer with conferees from other regarding the nomination df a candidate for congress. A meeting was arranged to bs held at Tankhwnnock on Bept. 20, The Bradford county dalegationa went to that place on the date mentionad and found in waiting oze L. M. Atkinson of Honesdale who chimed that he was a conferey from Wayne county. He also claimed to repressnt theee other con- ferees and that ha would generously vota for the whole foar. When asked for credentials he eould not produce them, neither could he tell the names of the other thre delegates, and forther questioning developed tha fact that he had no authority whatever to use the naines of or represent anyone, He was frank enjugh to state that the Lincoln held. 8 RR. Brungess and Neil Doty of Wyoming county were also present, and they claimed ty represwnt the Lincoln mitted that no convention had been held and had no eredentials entitling them to ropresentation at ths confer- ence, At 2 o'clock the conference went into session, bot after a chairman and secre- tarics had ben appointed it was agreed not to sit in conference with the alleged representatives of the Lincoln party from Wyoming and Wayne counties, and adjournment was taken until 6 o'clock. In the meantime no one had appeared from Susquehanna county, but late in the afternoon a delegation arrived from that county. They also asserted that they represented the Lincoln party, but went directly to the Graham House where Lilley had established headquar- ters. They were joined shortly after- ward by Atkinson, Brungoss and Doty, the counterfeit conferees from Wyoming and Wayne counties. At 8 o'clock the Hradford county del- egates were on hand to do business, but after half an hour bad passed and no other conferees showed up, Mr, Dyer went to Mr. Lilley's headquarters and informed them that the Bradford county men were waiting, The Susquehanna delegation, four in number, and the spa- rious delegates from Wayne and Wyom- ing, followed by a bunch of supporters, went to the meeting place. The Brad- ford conferees told the Susquehanna crowd that they would not confer with the alleged representatives of the Lin- cola party from Wayne and Wyoming. Acting under orders from Lilley, how- ever, the Busquehanna delegates and the men who were alleged to represent Wy- oming and Wayne, began to organize another conference, The Bradford con- ferees protested against permitting the alleged conferees from Wayne and Wy- oming to sit, bat the Susquehanna men bad been too well coached by Lilley and would listen to no protests. They were there to run things as they pleased, and they did it. As tools of Boss Lilley, it was their business to “ endorse " him. That was the shameful manner fn which Lilley secured the ‘“‘endorse- ment " of the Lincola party. No wonder the Bradford conferees endorsed Mr. Kipp, a Democrat. Now that the tools of Boss Lilley have done this dirty job, they are golng up and down the district and telling the voters that the Bradford delegation bolted. The Bradford men refased to sit ju conference with a set of men who admitted the lack of ereden- tials showing the right to represent anybody, Bacon has a fine line of story books at his news room, it Rubber printing sets and stamps at Bacon's news room, it 10,000 bait fish for sale at Locks erby's barber shop, Also hair cut and shave for 25c. RiLE class of shoes on Bros. Johnson Nothing those who wish them. Also full lines of glassware, ” NN A (7 NE 5 SAYRE ITENS Congressman Lilley is in town today. Miss Laura Hatton of Bernice, is visiting friends in town. J. W. Patt, Esq, of Tunkhan- nock, was in town this afternoon. - — D. J. Pearsall of Mauch Chunk, and Henry Streeter of Towanda, were in Sayre today. —— 8 AF Max Lundergren of Schnectady, who formerly worked for the Val- ley telehone Co, arrived in Sayre today. The Cayuta Land Company u Sa Pa., desires b SALI that ey have some very desirable building lots for sale on cheap and easy terms, and that they - have placed the agency for pe them la the hands of Andrew Evarts of this place. All those wishing to provide themsglves with homes or to invest in lots for speculative purposes will do well to consult with Mr. Evarts before purchasing elsewhere. This plot trial Plantar with ‘Dopaeiin tenn dts; tr ts, a an all the advantages of a ef i own. Torna Wo is purchasers. are already g taken to supply all the land comprising this plot with ® full supply of the best water the valle affords, REW EVARTS, 108 Hospl- tal place, Sayre, Pa. Phone 244c. A quarter of a century ago we placed some gold fillings in the teeth fo a well known gentleman at pres- ent a resident of Sayre, These Sll- ings today are just as bright, firm and useful as the day they were made. We will tell you the name of the party, if you wish to see him yourself, There are variations in dents workmanship, just as there are dif- ferences in the various brands our. If you desire the highest de- gree of profictency—the skill and knowledge “that will make YOUR fillings serviceable twenty-five years from today—come in or ‘phone for. an appointment, On the othér hand, of you take pleasure in having your teeth filled over and over again every year or two, you should go elsewhere we do not do that kind of work, JW. Murrelle, DD.S.. 106 Centre St, ATHENS, PA, Valley * Phone 97 D. Read The Record. q5
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