Wilson of Milltown, went this morning. i , he wrote the Finnigan joke. “should hear him tell iL patrolman. D. J. Sisson went this morning. [3 Fisher of the big store is ill home on Madison street. Hammond of the post office is unable to be on duty owing regular monthly meeting of ; borough council will be evening. “Charles Utter is confined to pme on Center street by an k of the grip. Mrs. Lewis Turner spent Friday th her daughter, Mrs. C. W. Gray, ‘Soata Bethlchem. . R. Bravemen returned yesterday New York city, where he went us 8 earlier in the week. le Spencer Brougham is in Towanda today on business before rt of quarter sessions. | Delaney has returned to | University after spending the week visiting his parents in Mill. The singing at the Methodist church was excellent and greatly Thelr work is always at- Hose company this evening. bers are especially requested 0. C. Gore, father of C. F. Gore of th Wilbur avenue, is gradually i and nc hopes are entertain- of his recovery. Remember the concert to be given ] Ithaca Conservatory of Music . Company at the Baptist | inmorrow evening. ‘Watts and George Paterson went to Towanda this morning where y will serve as jurors in the crim- {nal farm that has just opened. bers of the degree staff Rebekah lodge, No. 131 b requested to meet in Odd Fellows : Ou, Turmed Aratund, and © Walked Right Back Again. There must be something in that ground bog story after all. The It- tle animal walked out of his hole on Saturday, “turned around. and walked tight back again” He had seen hls shadow, and he therefore “skiddoed” to his winter lair. The weather Im- mediately got busy. The mercury took a tumble and inside of twenty- four hours there was change of about fifty degrees. Yesterday the ther- mometer hovered below the zero mark mark all day, and a high wind led to the general discomfort. Today th: theremometer has been climbing up- ward again, and the chances are that before tomorrow morning overcoats and underciothing can be discarded | The siound hog, however, will remain in his hole. He is altogether too wise to take any chances on the somer- saults executed by the weather clerk MEETINGS WILL CONTINUE AT CHURCH OF CHRIST. = Revivalist Has a Strong Personality and the Discourses All Show Power and Thought The revival services at the Church of Christ od the West Side will con- tinue all this week. So far they have been very successful, and the attend- ance has been large. The Rev H F Keltch, who is conducting the services is a very impressive speaker, and has a magnetic personality that draws people to the services. The sermon last evening was a very strong dis- course on the tendency of a man to sin even when he Knew it was wrong, and that it would result in his ulti- mate damnation. He depreciated the practice, prevalent in sc many churches of holding fairs entertain- ments that often took the form of gambling All are urged to attend these services, Funeral Tomorrow. The funeral of Ransom P. Bardwell, the father of Mrs. J W. this place will take place tomorrow afternoon al two o'clock from the home of his son, Willlam Bardwell at Elmira. The services will be In charge of the Elmira lodge of Masons of which the deceased was a member For Your Sewing Machine. Just when you need sewing machine supplies you want them at once. You can find all kinds of supplies for all kinds of machines at D. 8. Andrus & Co's. Plano and Music store, 128 Des- mond street, Sayre, Pa. mon BREVITIES The Lehich Valley officials will pay a substantial reward for the arrest and convicition of the person who fired a tullet through the glass in front of signal No. 2702, located be- tween Athens and Sayre. It Is prob- ably the intention of the miscreant to break the glass, extingusih the signal light and probably cause a.wreck Criminal court opened at Towanda this morning. Nearly all the Sayre members of the bar are in attendance. They were greatly detained on ac count of train No. 8 running one hour and fifty minutes behind the sched- ule time, The funeral of Ransom Bardwell, the father of Mrs. J. W. Grumme will take place tomorrow afternoon at two o'clock from the home of his son, Wil- linm Bardwell at Elmira. —— E B. Plerce has been confined to his home at Towanda the last week with rheumatism. If Is expected that he will resume his duties at the Globe Warehouse in a few days. The concert to be given by the Itha- ca Concert Company in the Baptist church tomorrow evening promises to be well attended. Better secure your tickets early. STEEL HAND SLEDS EACH. To We Comin Sade. Crear the. Fact That ihe Prohibition Party Steed for Many Needed Reafrm. Engene W. Chafin of Chicago, spoke iast Saturday evening for the second time on the principles of the Prohi- bition party. The hall was well filled and the speaker Kept the audience in a good natured state throughout He sald that the meeting was called for the purpose of talking politics, and that was what he was going to do. After stating thal we are a gov- ernment bLy parties, and that there could be only one majority party. he stated that the only way for a minor- ity party to get in the majority was to raise some great moral question jand stick to It. It Is the only way to attract the rrowing generation into its ranks, and keep them from joining the other party for the reason thatit is in power, because, “Young America doesn't like to sit up with a corpse.” but he will go a long way and sit up a long thme with something that is alive, He showed how the Republican par- ty came In on a great moral wave, when it once came out and made slav- ery the issue. He sald that there had been no great {ssue between the two great parties since the civil war, The Democrats merely waited until the Republican platform was made and then came in and said it wasn't #0. The result has been one Demo- crat president and the control of con- gress for two years during the last fifty He then showed how the Prohibi- tionists had educated the people to the Idea that the jiquor iraflic was a great evil, and obtained the decis- ion of the United States Supreme court that Prohibition laws were constitu- tional, and that it was not only the right, but the duty of legislators to pass such laws. But aside from Pro- hibition, which he maintained was the greatest question, the speaker show- First, it demanded the abolition of of the president by the direct vote of He showed how the elec- toral college made it a matter of su- preme importance to both the great parties that New York state be car- ried, and how that state dictated the platforms, and decided who should be the candidate, because If it did not get what it wanted it would throw its vote against the adverse party, and defeat it. The whole counry is nul- lifled by New York state, but once elect the president by direct vote and New York will amount to no more than the majority of other states The Prohibitionists also demand the election of United States Senators by direct vote. The direct primary is another principle advocated; thus destroying the power that the boss wields in the convetion. He sald that men proudly called themselves “Jef- fersonlan Democrats,” while {f Jef- ferson should return to earth he couldn't with a search warrant find any trace of a single principle that he ever advocated, ard the same holds true with those who belong to the party of Lincoln. The speaker advocated the principal of local government In local affairs, the people of the town govern the town, the county the county, the state the state, while national affairs should be settled by all the people He stood for the Inlative, that is e right of a percentage of the peo- ple to propose laws; and the referen- dum, the right of the people as a whole to vole on and either accept or reject them: and the recall, the right of the people to vote a public official out of office as well as vote him In, The speaker went on to explain that the Prohibition party stood for the government ownership and control of all “public service utilities,” such as railroads, telephones, telegraph, ex- press business and some others. Com- petition in these matters Is a nuis- ance and a burden to the people. It becomes a monoply by its very nature and an instrument of spoliation in private lands. The public ownership : collectively owned. He then quoted Mr. James Hill, the railroad magnate as saying. that if rallroads were publicly owned they would become a great factor In and control the politics of the coun- try; then raised a laugh by saying that of course the rallroads never had been a factor In politics, but had held aloft and refused to mix in them. He maintained that to hsve the rail- roads publicly owned would take them out of politics He showed how the railroads robbed the government of $30.000000 every year by charging excessive rates for carrying the malls over and above the actual value of the service, and in proof thereof, he showed that the express companies pald only one- eighth as much as the government for the same service, THIRD NUMBER OF HIGH SCHOOL COURSE. Will Be Given on Saturday Next and Is One of the Best Humorous Eu- fertalaments Ever Given. On Saturday evening of this week the third number of the Sayre High entertainment course will take place This number will be a lecture by Strickland W. Gillllan, at the present time connected with the Chicago News as the editor of its humorous department. Mr. Glililan is also a steady writer for Judge, and most of the biight and entertaining rhymes to be found In that sheet are from his pen. He has spoken at Athens and at Towanda, and any one who has heard him once will not miss the op- portuntiy to hear him the second time His humor is quaint, and after he has kept the audien-e laughing until they are laughed oul, he will turn to some more solemn subject, until he ha: his listeners In a solemn mood when he agaln breaks out in a flood of humor. An evening spent hearing him is one that will scare away the blues, and make one feel better for a long time aflerward ALL ON SAME PLANE, Trained Nurses. Bill to Compel to Have Licenses, Trained nurses wlll hereafter be placed on the same footing as people engaged in other professions If the Mumma bill, Introduced in the house becomes a law It provides that any graduate nurse desiring to practice her profession must obtain a license from the pro- thonotary of the county in which she resides, provided she shall present her diploma with a training school at a public hospital for at least two years where she had practical and theoreti- cal training. Graduate nurses from outside of the State can obtain a li- cense, but must be identified by a resident of the county. A penalty for the violation of the act is a fine of fittey dollars. The bill Is not retroac- tive, and it does not apply to graduate nurses from another State who come to this State iu company with a noan- resident for the purpose of nursing him. The bill does not interfere with nurse: who do not profess to be grad- uate nurses Jolin Carmody. John Carmody dled this morning at 12 20 o'clock at his home on De-mond street after an illness of three months, his death being due to stomach trou- ble. He had only lived in Sayre for the past five months having moved here from Waverly where he had liv- ed for a long time. He Is survived by his wife, and three sons, Leo, Jos- eph and Edward. Four brothers also survive him: Simon and Thomas Carmody of Waverly, Mattnew of Pittston and Patrick of Junction City, Kansas The funeral will take place Wednes- day morning at the church of the Epiphany at Sayre, and the remains will be taken to the Catholle cemetery at Waverly for burial Some Good, at Least, The Record will take it all back There is at least one commendable feature of the new train service be- tween this place and Towanda. It brings the Towanda Dally Review to this place in the morning instead of at noon time. The Review Is our most highly prized exchange. It contains well written accounts of the dally happenigs in the county seat, and the fact that it reaches Sayre at an early hour in the morning is greatly appreclated—thanks to the new train service. Prohibition Meeting. There will be a meeting of the Pro- hibition club this evening at the rooms over Angell's store on the East Side. All are nivited to attend. Try the Record. William's Carbolie Salve With Arnlea and Witch Hazel, The best Salve in the world for Cuts, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Tet- ter, Chapped Hands (Question as te Whether a Justice Can Collect His Costs Will Come Up Before Judge Fanning Attorney Paul E Maynard and Jus- tice of the Peace W. T. Carey are In Towanda today to appear in the man- damus proceedings brought by Atltor- ney Willlam P. Wilson, at the Instance of his client, H. A. Kaufman to com- pel Justice Carey to deliver a trans- cript on appeal in the case of Maynard versus Kaufman, the justice having refused (0 entertain an appeal anti] the costs of suit were first pald. Dis- trict Attorney Mills, Hon. L. T. Hoyt, H. F. Maynard, Esq., and Attorney W G. Schrier of Athens, will also appear ‘n the interests of Mr. Carey. BUY TWICE AS GOOD GOODS AND SAVE MUCH OF YOUR MONEY. Sn Prohibition Speaker Gave Some Good Advice Last Saturday Evening. Last Saturday evening, Eugene W Chafin of Chicago, the home of the mall order business, spoke at Phar macy hall In West Sayre, and in the course of his talk the matter of the mall order business came up and he sald: “If you want to get skinned you can buy of Gee, Sawbuck & Co and if you don't like it you can go right across the street to Montward & Gumery and get skinned twice as bad. But there is on place that you can purchase twice as good goods and at the same time save a large part of your money, and that Is by busing at home.” The speaker further remarkéd that he hadn't been sent out from Chleago by mail order houses to advertise their business for them Many Good Seals Left. The management of the Loomis opera house states that the report that has gone out to the effect that all the seats had been sold for the performance for Tuesday night when Mary Mannering will appear Is with- out foundation While the of seals was large there are still about that may had applying at the box office, 80 all those who wish to attend still have a chance as there are plenty of sats left sale 75 good seats left he by Constaliles to Organize, The constables throughout the ctat= are making an effort to form an or- ganization relative to having certain laws enacted by the state legislature to give them better remuneration for their work. The movement started in Bucks county and circulars aie he- ing sent to all constables in the var- fous counties to join the organizc tion, which suggests an increase of one-third more fees than they are now receiving Boys Broke large Glass. Saturday evening a number of chil- dren were playing in front of Teed's store, on Desmond street, when they ran into the large photograph show case belonging to Luverne Teed A large pane of glass was broken. This morning Mi. Teed was enzaged In replacing the glass when he had the misfortune to break the one he was putting iu. Funeral of Mrs. Quinn. The funeral of Mrs. Michael Quinn, whose death occurred In the hospital on Thursday, following an operation for intestingl strangulation, vesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock from the Church of the Redeemer, the Rev H. E. Hannah officiating The re- mains were taken to Tioga Point cemetery for interment. was held Quiet In Canton. The Canton World on says: "A settlement has been effected between the hotel proprietors, and the temperance whereby the remonstrance against E. B. Loop of the Hotel Packard will be withdrawn while C. D. Earnest of the Canton House, will withdraw his application for license.’ Saturdny people Card of Thanks. We desire to express our heartfelt thanks to the friends and neighbors who rendered appreciated assistance during the time of our late bereave- ment. Mrs. James McCabe and Fam- ily Subscribe for The Record. Willlams' Kiduey Pills. Have you neglected your Kidneys? Have your overworked your nervous system and caused trouble with your Kidneys and Bladder? Have you pains in the loin, side, back, groins and Bladder? Have you a flably ap- There are two kinds of furniture— the flashy, uncom- fortable style and the good, solid, comfortable kind. The latter is our specialty and wecan surely give you sat- isfaction both as to quality and price, guaranteeing each For furnit is Jepresented s of any home and we loo 205 Desmond street. TWEEN 18 AND 60 YEARS, CALL ON CAR BROKEN INTO Thieves Break Seal and Carry OF Much Valuable Leather. A bax car enroute from Ralston and containing the tanner at that place, was broken into Fridays night on a switch near the old Barclay leather from station and many hides were taken The car had to the Towanda yards over the Susquehanna and New York from Ralston that day and while waiting to be transferred was left on a switch in the yards time during the night thieves broke th2 s2al and it is estimated car- been brought . Some ried away about two wagon loads the leather Many tracks were around the car and it is thought that the offenders valuable s1il soon be caught A reward of 325 is offered by Guy C. Hollon, for tion that will lead to the conviction of the thieves personally any Informa arrest and List of Jurors, Following is the for list of jurorsdrawn commencing this Benjamin Adams, Canton, Arnold, Warren Elmer J Pike; Isiah S. Beebe, Ravsville, Charles O. Bradford, ens; Fred J Brauud, Asvium, Les- ter L. Bradley, Athens, Fred D Bradford, Toy, Andrew Brennan, Towanda, Willlam P. Chaffee, War ren; Burt H. Comfort, Troy, Stan- fey Campbell, Smithfield; Milard Cor son, Albany, L.eRue lin, Wyalusing, Gearge Athens; lasou P Florence E Daley, Dorst, Canton; Loren Sayre; Walter Evans, Clayton Gerould, Smithfield, Alfred Horton, Sheshequin, Alfred C. Ham- merly, Wyalusing, Lemuel Hovens Smithfield; Joh. Hallinan, Canton Fred Holcombe, Canton, Fred Hor ton, Wilmot; Hamilton Jarvis, Tow- anda, Thaddeus H Keeler, Pike, Clayton F. Knapp, Athens; William Kinch, Melvin C Leonard, Canton; B Athens, Danlel Sayre H Lynn, Morris Lynch, Burling- ton, Mortimer H Towanda, E T. Molyneux, Overton; John R McCracken, Towanda Charles H Newman, Wyalusing., John Newman, Athens, George C. Patterson Clarence W. Peck, Athens D. Richards, Sayre, Martin D. Ryder, Albany; John J. Spalding, Harry Clair Dwight Ser- geant, Springtield; Butron D enson, Rome, Alonso Snyder fleld; Augustus L. Sterigere, Joseph W. Tuttle Harvey Tracy, Sayre Athens George Wilson, Sayre Weller, Sayre; Putnam W cott, Sayre; Earl Watt vin A. Wall, Ridgebury criminal coart, morning. Ellis J Atwood, La Ath- Chamber- Curtis, Ulster. Sayre: Ed. J Dickinson Towanda, New S Carey, Canton, Martin Leahey, Loomis, Joseph Sayre; Lines, Sayre George Towanda St Sayre; Steph- Litch- Savre Wiysox Wiliam James Watson, Bir- WW ol- Mel ney 5, Sayre The Emerald Isle. in the history pictures For the first of Ireland, animated have been taken of its natural, historic and archaeologic beauties, and of the hab- its. customs and industries of its peo- ple. The pictures are the result of long and patient efforts and form a most comprehensive and entertaining serfes They will exhibited for the first time in America by Lyman H. Howe in Loomis opera house this evening. The entire series not only recalls memories and traditions in the hearts of all true Irishmen, but its complete novelty and exquisite beauty command the admiration of all. Chosen from a wealth of inter esting subjects end scenery, they bring to the minds and hearts of many, the very things they have seen to others, the very things they most want to see. They come, in fact, lke a refreshing and exhilarating breeze from old Ireland to those familiar time be wi te piece to be all that ure that will improve the ar well, and long, call at Valley Phone 191 a RY Fa ) RNY 20% AN 40 %S ITIS! INSURES BOTH SEXES BE. POLICIES COVERING Kept on the Jump. It would indeed be strange If the S & S Railroad crews were to otherwise than that the man- of the road has little cons sideration for their fealings, fudging from the way they are ordered fo move their goods and chattles from one place to the other. Last summer ill those living in Freeland and vis cinity were ordered to move to Hazle- ton and now that they are about comfortably settled {n that city a new order is issued that they must make their headquarters at Bethlehem. The majority of these employes are iried men, some of them with large {families and orders to move around from place to place at a short no- tice is certainly no joke, but a grim reality, especially In winter and when the move must be made to a place {where higher rents are paid. i [How to Lighten Mother’s work D think iEement “AN IRON FOR EVERY PURPOSE,” The Asbestos Sad Irons are for sale in Sayre by BOLICH BROS J. G. Howe—- CABINET MAKER, Mouschold and Ofice Furniture Res paired. Will Call at ilouse and Give Estimates 501 NORTH WILBUR AVENUE, 1mo* SAYRE, PA. LOOMIS OPERA HOUSE MONDAY EVENING. FiB. One Performance Only. 25th Semi-Annual Tour LYMAN 1. HOWE Prescuts the 3 CROWNING TRIUMPH OF REALISM in His New Moving Pictures. INTERNATIONAL SPECTACLF Two Hours of World Travel PERILS OF WHALING! IRELAND AND HER PEOPLE! CLIMBING UNTRODDEX PEAKS! WELLMAN POLAR EXPEDITION! MANY OIERS. THE WORLD REVEALED! Resened Seats on Sale Friday, Prices 85, 86, 80, AN