The valley record. ([Sayre, Pa.]) 1905-1907, March 20, 1907, Image 2

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    Shirt Waists,
Silks,
Dress Goods,
Silks,
Trimmings.
wo
Silks and fancy materials
Prices $15.00 to $35.00.
They are model
New, jaunty styles
assortment of the latest models.
Exquisite New Shirt Waists
Wins Ost By a Geod Sabstantial Ma-
jority Nine Hundred and Skty.
Three Ballots Counted.
Waverly—Much interest was manli-
fest in the election yesterday aud the
citizens of Waverly signified their ap-
proval of the administration of 0.
H. Lawrence by giving him a good
substantial majority.
There were 707 straight voles cast,
400 of them were Republican, 52 Dem-
ocratic and 255 Citizens. The vote
was as follows:
President.
0 H 4awrence, R. & D
BS Hantord. GC. .............+. 364
Lawrence's majority 223.
Trustees.
AM. R. Bennett, R. & D.
Y
TLE 0) 0018 Wo) MG
eajEnayadwos
gopoedsu; nok Jo) uj nf ‘Lie AYlom Liars
Fajuvigon
ueuIoNEY
| and Fancy Dress
ng Novelties, together with
tion of plain fabrics.
materials 50¢
Goods.
In laces
a beautiful collec
Ly
- Prices 65c to #2.00 per yard.
solicit your Banking
and will pay you
per cent. interest per
for money left on
The department of savings
"15 un special feature of this
* Bank, and all deposits, wheth-
large or small, draw the
i every afternoon except
it 203 West Lockhart Street,
$3.00 per year; 26¢
rates reasonable, and
fred as second-class matter May
, at the postoffice at Sayre,
the Act of Congress of
the news that's fit to print”
NESDAY, MARCH 20, 1907.
’ WAVER!
KE WOOD, | Representative.
and advirtising matter may be |
Greets Racket Store, corner
8B and Park Avenue.
13 o'clock noon call the main
‘Sayre. Boh hanes.
Sebring was in Chemung this
Paine spent
————. —— ——
ry.
This is your
Carpets— 25¢
opportimity to select from the
art evening after x trip to New York
city
A. P. Merchant moved today from
Park Place, Waverly to Seneca Falls,
NY
re peemene
Glenn Barden is moving into one of
the coucrete apartments on Orchard
street
Bernard Reiner of Philadelphia was
a guest at the home of B Freedman
yesterday
Harold Skinner returned from New
York city last evening having gone
there last Friday
Mrs. Wiliam Kane and Miss Bes-
‘dle Lewis of Towanda were the guests
of Miss Margaret Kane yesterday
-
F. I. Howard left this morning for
! Providence, R. 1, and will also go to
Richmond, Va, before he returns to
| Waverly
Tinseled post cards views of New
| York city and Niagara Falls, the most
| beautiful post cards made, two for b¢
only, at Gregg's Racket Store,
Some one left a unl box on car
No. 17 of the street car/Jine this morn-
ing. It evidently contained some one's
~ | dinner and they must have gone hun-
gry
Katherine Sullivan, an infant dsugh-
ter of Mrs Cornelius Sullivan who was
{buried In Waverly four weeks ago
died in Buffalo vesterday and will be
brought to Waverly for burial today
This Is the Place.
To get your balr cut, 15;
{10¢; shampoo, 15¢;
| whiskers trimmed,
| massage. 15¢;
Haslr dyed £00
hair singed, 16¢c;
10c; sea foam, 5c;
moustache dyed, 25¢;
ladies’ balr switches,
|cheap, razors honed 25¢; Shears
sharpened. 10c, sclasors, B6e¢; ew
handles on razors, 25c. If you Foon
| eczema call and get Lockerby's ecze-
ma cure, 50c a bottle. Thousands |
of testimonials can be furnished Hait |
{fish on hand the year round Locker- |
iby is also an expert taxidermist
__ | Lockerby’s barber shop, 418 Waverly |
etree. Waverly.
Farther Lights Meeting.
| Waverly—The Farther Lights soé-
CHARGED WITH
STEALING JUNK
Speigle, a Dealer in That Commodity |
From Elmira Claims to Have Been
Flim Flammed By the Blostelns of |
This Place.
of Elmira, N. Y., came to
and entered a complaint against Jos-
eph and Charles Blostein, charging |
them with the theft of a car lo
The complaint alleges that on |
or about March 13 he came to Waver-
iy and purchased from the Blosteins |
this junk which was worth fully $200 |
and that he pald for it. He also pald
them $15 to load the same on a car,
and they were to ship the same to
Elmira to him. Instead of carrylog
out the agreement they loaded the car
and on March 16 assigned the junk
to the Citizen's Bank of Waverly, N
Y., and later it was shipped lo Ithaca
A warrant was issued on the com-
plaint, and the officers believing that
the accused persons were in Elmira
went to that place but were unable to
find them. After returning to Waver-
ly officer Corcoran saw the father of
house on Bradford Street in South
Waverly, He tried to interview them,
without success. Officer Gridley.and
lanother man watched the house un-
itil a warrant was procured, and then
{the place was entered and the war-
|rauts were served. They were both
| locked up In the South Waverly lock
oy a hearing was commenced before
Justice Edminister this morning. The
South Waverly, and the two Blosteins
| walked over Into New York state
| where they were arrested by Chief of
Police Brooks
Attorney F. E Hawkes and H H
| Rock Well of Elmira, appeared as at-
{torneys In the case. A plea of not
{guilty was entered and they wiil be
stven a hearing next Friday at 10 a
TS he two defendants were locked up
until such time au the bond could be
fixed and then they were released
The Blosteins have been conduct.
ing » junk business in Waverly on
|Charles S. Brown, R
Wesley H Brougham. R. ..
Edward E Walker, C
Nelson Lyons, C.
[oe A Smith, D
Assessor.
[Cyrus Johnson, D
Fralich’s mapority 720
Treasurer.
{Fred Terry, R. & C
{Isaac P. Teachman, D
Terry's majority 7
Collector
| Frank Clohessy, D
Brook's majority 54%
Street Commissioner.
{ Jefterson Bingham, R. & C.
{Edwin C. Palmer, D
Bingham's majority 722
| Police Jastice.
Charles 0. Hoagland, R. & C 865
No opposition
There were a few scattering voles
for men not on the ticket C. Burton
| Horton received five votes for collec
tor. and Henderson Brown had one
vote for police justice
The election board was Kept busy
| throughout the day. The greatest rush
was at 5:30 in the afternoon when the
men tion the Lehigh shops flocked
lin to cast their ballots. At one time
{%0 men voted in 9 minutes, making a
vote every six seconds
C. 0. Hoagland polled the largest
ivote of any man on the ticket, but
he had no opposition Fred Terry, the
Republican and Citizens’ candidate
| stood at the head of those who had
an opponent. Madison R. Bennett,
|who was the only trustee whose name
| appeared on two lickets polled more
| votes than any other candidate who
run for that office, receiving 600
ADDITIONAL SAYRE NEWS
In company with a lot of other boys
{Charles Mohr, aged 12, on Monday
|at Allentown, tried to jump on a Le-
{high Valley coal train He slipped
{and fell underneath the train and both
{of his feet were cut off. He jumped
{up and ran-on the stubbs for some
| distance and then fell over
{ te sa.
Mrs. Sarah E. Hagar of Canton. Pa,
aged 86 years, who died in that place
on February 17th of the infirmities
fucident to old age, was the mother of
Mrs. Cornish, of this place. The de-
[ceased had been an active member of
the Methodist church for a period of
75 years
i
|
|
J
"
| Quite a large party of Mystic Shrin-
ers from Sayre and Athens will attend
a meeting of Irem Temple of the or-
der at Wilkes-Barre on this evening
Rear Admiral Schley, Past Potuntate
Henry Collins of Turonto, and Imper-
fal Potentate A. P. Clayton of St. Jos-
{eph, Mo., will be guests of honor, and
[class of 100 candidates is expected to
receive the degree. Two or three
candidates from here will be among
them
The job of constable, no matter how
humble, these days, will be worth go-
ing after in the event of the passage
of a bill in the legislature introduced
by Representative Shields of Wyoming
county. It granfs to constables a fee
of $1 for each saloon, brewery, distil-
lery, etc, inspected, six cents per mile
for traveling expenses and fifty cents
for each report made to court. A plan
for building up fees {8s provided in a
requirement In the bill that inspec-
tions be made every three months
A high wind which prevailed in this
section last night blew down signs
and at times threatened to shake
dwellings of uncertain stability from
thelr foundations. The wind was of
an Intermitten character, and was the
flerciest that has been experienced
here for a long time Sighs were
blown down in many places through-
out the business sections, tin rofs rat-
tiled, window blinds creaked, frame
| buildings shook, and nervous people
[rae made unable to get into communi-
cation with the god of sleep. No ser-
‘and will listen to a talk by Mr. Valen-
(tine, a resideny of Waverly, who has |
pple Islands as & missionary. All
are invited fo be present
| several
difMcalty
times prior to the present
Readers of The Record, buy from
the merchants who [ave enough
Bul Ihree More Spans.
But three more spans are DOCEssary
ta complete the girder work of the
new Lehigh bridge at North Towanda.
One of the girders for the bridge
ANTI-VACCINATION.
My last article was devoted to show-
ing that in pre-vaccination times no
care whatever was taken to prevent
infection and that the mode of treat-
ment of small-pox patients was well
fashioned to kill instead of cure. In
the closing paragraph is a quotation
from the unanimous conclusion of the
Royal Commission, giving their views
of the most successful method of im-
iting the spread of small-pox and that
their conclusion was the irresistible
result of the exhaustive evidence tak-
en. None of the provisions recom-
mended by them were in operation
previous to vaccination times , al-
though late in the 18th century they
were being advocated slightly. Here
we have the best possible official
proof of one of the causes of the dim-
inution of small-pox in the present
day This commission was appointed
in the interest of the dominant opin-
ion, ns all such commissions are, yet
they do not say that. the best way to
stamp out small-pox is by vaccination
the healthy, and by disinfection.
all they can say, of any consequence,
of vaccination Is “We think: 1-—
That it diminishes the liability to be
attacked by the disease. 2-—-That |t
modifies the character of the disease
and renders it less fatal and of a
milder and less severe type” Bat
they only say "We think" They do
not say that this is an irresistible
conclusion from the evidence taken;
only “we think"
It may not be aniversally under-
that systematic sanitation, as
the term is understood today, is of
nulte recent practice. It has been
advocated for many years, but only to
a slight degree practiced. Wherever
‘it has been tried its resalis have been
marvelons, For very apparent reasons
it has not acomplished what is de-
sired and expected in certain direc-
tions but its universal benefit will,
probably, scon be seen. In small-pox,
however, thece has been no impedi-
ment to its immediate effect. We are
now living under its benign Influence
During the last thirty" years, which
mainly covers the period of its
growth, small-pox has had its most
conspicuous declliue, since yaccination
was introduced. Previous to this per-
iod, it may fairly be sald to have been
on the Increase, especially after com-
pulsory vaccination became general
throughout England and Europe. The
remission noticed during the early
part of the 19th century Is acknowl-
edged to be due to the abandonment
of inoculation, vaccination not being
sufficiently general at that time to
have had any general effect
The facts already adverted to are
sufficient in themselves to prove to
any reasonable person that the de-
cline of smual-pox at the present time
should not be forgotten that the
black death, the sweating sickness
and the bubonic plague died out
without the use of any kind of pro-
phylactic except quarantine regula-
tions. The plague, which is admitted
to have been more Infectious and
fatal than small-pox, died out almost
mysteriously. It was the scourge of
Europe and England for more than a
thousand years. What a terrible ca-
lamity It would have been to the
world if some fanatical experimenter
had succeeded In engrafting upon
the minds of the people the delusion
that something in the nature of the
plague injected into their systems
would protect them from that dis-
ease!
The plague terminated itself, but
“protection” might have been con-
tinued forever
It is most absurd to contend that
vaccination can accomplish now what
it failed to do the latter part of the
Inst century after thorough trial; and
that we may expect any benefit from
any form of compulsion, since it is
shown that where it has been tried
in its most thorough form for many
vears it has not accomplished as
much as has been done without it in
other countries. The mere coln-
dence of a decline of small-pox under
vaccination can not account in the
presence of its glaring fallures
1 have taken up much space with
this phase of the subject but the vac-
cinationists are continually crying:
‘See what vaccination has done!
Do you want to return to the terri-
ble anti-vaccination period?’ | wish
to impress the fact upon the under-
standing of everyone that this cry is
a false one. That the cause of the
decline in the number and fatality of
small-pox cases can much more reas-
onably be predicated upon on the
elrcumstances | have just narrated
than upon the myztery of the vaecina-
tion rite. Of course these abundant
facts have no established delusion or
superstition to support them. Neither
have they the Ipse dixit of a great
profession to support them. But they
have In their favor God-given reason
and many of the most prominent men
of learning that have lived during the
last century, including a host of the
greatest medical authors. The con-
And
stood
very pretty, only
CORSET COVERS,
values.
59 and 9Sec.
25 axd $e; good
be.
Beautiful Line of
2 for Sec.
Easter Post Cards,
Cor. Broad St. and
Park AVe, Waverly
nered he falls back on his presumed
dignity and says that he cannot dis-
cuss the question with a layman, and
he seems to think that abuse is a
sufficient answer {o his professional
brethren's argument. The defenders
of the superstition want to limit the
discusion to certain facts, which, they
decide for themselves in advance, are
sufficient to cover the subject. If they
can limit discussion to sult themselves
they might win. But what a spec-
tacle! A member of a great profes-
sion who prides himself on being
able to defend a dogma, not willing to
submit to the ordinary rules of evi-
dence! “A lawyer comes before the
court and says: “I will prove certain
things and when [I do you must de-
cide this case in my favor.”An old
judge would probably answer: “That
will depend upon what the jury
thinks about it. Probably you would
better not rely on these facts alone
You might lose your case.”
In my next I wish to attack other
supports of the delusion, but 1 am
loath to leave this one as long as |
can perceive any point in doubt. 1
promised not to evade anything pur-
posely and under no circumstances
will 1 do so. This is a serious sub-
ject and evasion can pot be tolerated.
Neither can silence.
E. C. RISHEL,
Yard Employe Injured.
Clarence Smith, a Lehigh Valley
yardman, employed at this place,
caught on to the ladder of a freight
car last night about six o'clock, and
after he had ridden a short distance
was struck by a switch which be falled
to see. He fell heavily to the ground
and sustained painful injuries to his
back. He was removed to his home
in this place and a doctor was called.
His Injuries are pot of a serious na-
ture.
Requisition Papers Arrived
The requisition papers in the case
of John Maroney, wanted by tle au-
thorities here for tapping the cash
register at the Sayre house, have been
recelved from Governor Stuart by Dis-
trict Attorney Mills, and the latter im-
mediately forwarded them to the gov-
ernor of New York. It will be four
or five days before the papers are acl-
ed upon by the New York state ex-
ecutive
Application for Charter,
In the Court of Common Pleas of
Bradford County, aplication to amend,
alter and improve charter.
Notice is hereby given that an ap-
plication will be made to the Court
of Common Pleas of Bradford Coun-
ty on the 12th day of April, 1807, at
2 o'clock p. m., for the approval and
granting of certain ndments, al-
terations and improvements to the
charter of the “Bethel Methodist Epis-
copal Church” of Athens borough,
Bradford County, Pennsylvania, as
follows, to change the corporate name
of the church to “The First Methodist
Episcopal Church” and to fix the man-
ner of the election of the trustees of
sald church, and otherwise define the
corporate powers of the same, all as
therefor now on file in the office of
the Prothonotary at Towanda, Pa,
agreeably to the provisions of the
Act of General Assembly of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvania approved
April 14, 1905, relating to the amend-
ment of church charters, and to the
provisions of the Corporation Act of
1874 and Its supplements
H. F. MAYNARD, Solicitor.
March 20, 1907.—-20-27-3. an
A. H.Murray, M.D.
Sandays
CONTRACTOR,
CARPENTER AND BUILDER:
Plaus drawn and estimates given.
fardwood and Stalr Work a specialty.
All Work Promptly Attended to.
Shop and Resideace, 58 Lincoln Sires,
Waverly. -
Bell "phone 204.
WANTED.
nished rogms within a short distance
ord office. 263-6*
Housekeeper—\Middle aged lady pre-
ferred. Call or write to J. G. 41% Wav-
erly street, Waverly. N. Y. 263-6
Wanted—A good girl or middie aged
women. Small family. Address or
call, Mrs. H. L. Wolcott, No, 101,
North street, Athens 01-1
Girl Wanted for general housework.
Pa
FOR RENT..
Nine room house, Cltatons a
‘ey's grocery, Waverly N. Y. 263-8
House with all modern Improve-
ments at 612 South Wilbur avenue,
corner of Madison street. Inquire of
G. W, Morse, 129 North Eimira street,
East side double house, § rooms at
303 Maple street, Sayre. Possession
immediately. G. 8. VanScoten, Valley
phone 337c 263-6
For Hent—Lower fiat, centrally lo-
cated, near shops. Inquire 319 West
Lockhart 200-6
Booms and a half houss for small
family. E. J. Neaves, druggist, Wav=
erly; N. Y. 259-8
Rooms for rent, suitable for house-
keeping. 110 Corner of Packer and
Elmer avenue © 269-12¢
FOR BALE.
For Sale—House-and lot, 129 Be
mira street, Athens, ten room house
with all modern improvements. Twa
acres or ground, frult, etc. Inquire on
premises. 262-8
For Sale—Cheap if sold at once. A
small house and lot in a desirable lo=
cation, No. 217 North street. Athens,
Pa. Apply to Mrs, Charles Claflin on
the premises
ern improvements, two minutes
from shops, on easy terms, Enqu
No. 207 North Lehigh avenue. 28
For Sale—A No. 1 rubber-tired
about wagon, In excellent cond
Bargain for an early purchaser.
quire of Paul E Maynard, M. P.
block, Sayre.
Por Bale—Fine driving horse, sc
bay, sound, kind and fearless of
objects. Also. rubber-tired top
gY. surrey, portland cutter, three
nesses, robes and blankets, a
to quick purchaser. Both phones Ji
T. Corbin. Athens, Pa 35
At Waverly, N, Y., bullding lot,
venient to car line, large enough
double house or 2 single houses. :
particulars, Apply at 135 Cha bs
street. Waverly, N. Y. 226-1n
CONTRACTING.
J. H. Snell, Athens, Pa, Co
and Builder. Also bulidings 1
on gu Sdart notice.
H.L L. Towser, M
SARE]
PIG SRR