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THE MA8IAV POST, 7BXEP01T, B. Y., nSBAY, MAT 7/1915.
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MSIiofls Visit World's Great Panama^Padfic taterflatioflat Exposttbn at SaQ Frascto
ALL RECOSDS ttm ATTENDANCE BROKEN BT MARVEL ElPOStTION CITY AT THE GOLDEN GATE.
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VAST CEO WD GATHEBED BEFOBE THE HUGE TO WEB OF JEWELS. ABE YOU GOING TO VISIT THE HUGE EXPOSITION f
THIS remarkable panoramic pho¬ tograph showa part of the rest enVwd that gathered on tlic Opening day of the Expo¬ sition, Saturday. Feb. 20. The crowd ¦was not only the greatest ever brought together in the west, but In vastness it broke ali previous exposition attend¬
ance records. The grounds were thronged with visitors from every part of the globe, and the big attendance still continues. The opening day
minutes. There were no accidents, i Prealdent Wiinoit; President Charjes C.
The photograph al>ove shows, on the j Moore ofthe I'anama-Paciflc Intcrna-
left. the Italian lowera guarding the | tional Exposition. Dr. Frederick J. V.
entrance to tbe Court of Palms, next \ Skiff, director in chief, accompanied crowd wa.<< remarkably peaceful, and! the Palace of Varied Industries and In ! hy the thirty Exposition directors, wel- no, arrests were made by the Ex posl- the center and on the right the huge comed the vast throng that assembled tlon guards or military during tbe day, grand stand built before the Tower of In van Nes.s avenue and Us lateral and but one child was lost, and It was] Jewels. Here-Secretary ofthe Interior streets and. headed by Ma.vor James
returned to Its mother within flfteen j Franklin K. Lane, acting In behalf of, Rolph. Jr.. walked on foot throuch thej huge Tower of Jewels
streets of the city and into tbe ExposI-, Since the npeninsr dny tbe Exposi¬ tion ground.'i through the Scott Street jtion has been crowded with visitors entrance to the grand stand. At the from all parts of the world. Low rail- time thia photograph was taken Lin-1 roud rales, the sunny skies of Califor- coln Beachey,.aviator, had just appear- 'nia and the opportunity to see the won- ed above the horizon in his flying ma-1 derful displays of yte forty-two ua- cblne, and the throng waa awaiting tious that are participating in the Kx- Mr. Beacbey'a approach to circle the position are drawing thousands to tbe
Exposition city at the Golden Gate.
GEOBGE A. H. SMITH, M. D.
Eye diaeases only. QAlce houra.: Tueadays and Thuradays, from 8 to 11 A. M.; and by appointment.
7 Wallace St., Comer Brooklyn Ave. FBEEPOBT, L. I. Tel. 778.
A.A.Webster Co.
JEWELEBS AND SILVEBSIOTHS
440 FULTON ST., BBOOKLYN
ARE SPECIALIST^.
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In repairing jewelry and silverware.
Old jewelry made into modern
styles; designs furnished.
1.
BLOODLESS BATTLES.
One Campaign Where a Dri^ish Army Oid Not Lose a Man.
Tlie liiittie of l-utiehporc. one of four flglU.s iu cisiit d:i.vs. In tile midst ef ii forced ni.'in h of 12(1 iiiiIeK to tlie relief of Luckninv. u:is iis fur us the sniail British fone is coiiceriieil absolutely bloiKlluss. iiud Iliivelock.'s classical "or¬ der of the day" puis the'fact ou re(.-()nl.
Ill one of the Imtlles uwiiust .Vlibur Kh.-iu ill Afgliiiiiistaii tiie result was uiinost (jjiuaiy siu'iirisiut:. It was the punitive exrMjdilioii of 1R4'J after tlie mus.s.'u-re at Kabul aud tlie iiorrlble re¬ treat from whicli only Dr. Brydon es- cajied. Tliis buttle nmde up some¬ what for the frightful disaster, for the victory could not have beon more com¬ plete.
The Afghans were driven lieudlong into the river, and cuuip. baggage, ar¬ tillery, horses, standards and urms of every kiud were captured, together witte aliiiinlaiit uiumuultiou and provi¬ sions, while Akbar fled. Vet the Brlt- isli only had teu killed.
Proiiubly the only bloodless eam¬ puign evor undertaken by the British wa.'^ the Aliyssiniau expedition against King Tlieodore led by Lord Nupler of .Miigdala. It was this bloodless War which gave him ids titie.
Although t*ie British army eonsiated of MKiAX) men and aitliougli they were
Skse SknuQg Pirfor
RATS CpEANED ANt> RKNOVATBI>-
CIOARS. cioARirrnBs
J. A. CHARKALIS 44 So. Main St. FRREPORr
One of the most up-to-date instru¬ ments of the day.
Your verdict wfll be in favor ot the PEASE PLAYER PIANO, if judged by the teet of musical results.
Aa a PLAYER it supplies thc flnger technique of the foremost artists.
Music Eoll Library Service FBEE.
WRITE FOB CATALOG
Our Partial Payment Plan is Most Economical.
Pease Piano Co.
THE MUSIC HOUSE OF BBOOKLYN
Y.
34 Flatbush Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Phone 4079 Main.
Opeu Evenings by Appointment.
Complete stock of VICTOR and COLUMBIA TALKING MACHINES. Records and Supplies. Convenient Pa.vment.s.
Baby Chicks and Hatching Eggs
Reds (Owen strain) Chicks, 15c; eggs, 5c. Leghorns (Young- Wyckoff strain) Chicks, 12i^c; eggs, 4c. White Cochin Bantama (Rey¬ nolda strain) Chlcke, 15c; eggs, 5c. Strictly Fresh Table Eggs. Free delivery on orders of over l.'i.OO. Visitors always welcome.
New Bridge Boad
HARMER'S FARM
Postoffice, Wantagh, L. I.
Smithville South
mini'
11
M0SS5 Tl
f5y
If You Appreciate Style Distinction
Model Your Figure
with a
Wade Corset
Not Sold In Department Stores
T
I
OBIGINAL in design—distinctive in style and true blue in value. Made in a wide variet7 of styles and fastenings.
MO.DEB ATE PBICES They Combine Luxurv with -Service.
Notliing but ths Very Best of Materials
go inta the oonstrootion of WADE COkSETS. Our fifty or more corset fabrics are selected yrith the utmost oare. The olaaps and the boning, the buckles and eyelets all are guaranteed to be flawless and rastprottf, and warranted not to break.
Write for the WADE Catalogue.
MRS. ANNIE ABBOTT
BepresentatiTe.
B. Col. Avenue.
Telephone 632-M.
FBEEPOBT
met by the eueiuy, who put up n orave flght, and although they stormed .Mag- dala. altuated on cliffs so steep thnt It was aaid a'cat coultl not climb them, yet not a life was lost on the British .side.
If tbe last Asbantl expedillun ngainst King Prempeh could be diguifled by the name of u campaign theu It must be added to the list of blooiiiess -wars. CerU^ly it «o3t Hie life of IMnce Henry oJ r.;iUenbcr;,', the husband of Queen Victorln's youngest daughter and the futher of tbe queen of Spain, but of other casualties there were none. —London Stray Stories.
FIGHT FOR PRINCIPLE.
A Veil and a Mirror. _______ From a feuiiuiue .source c<iuie
His Ta»k Seems a Hopele«« One, Vst I auestiou wiiich is more ea.slly ausw*
Wiiliam Penn's Measurements. Tluj lie Ight of tlie sl:itue of William I'eiiu on rbllatUiiiliia city hall is tliir- ty-seveu feer. and it weifiiis .M-'.-IOi; fiounds. It was cast in riilladclphi.i in forty-seven pieces and so skilirnlly Joiued Hint the most careful iiisiiectio;i falls to detect the juiict!in s. ll was placed iu i>o«iti(Ui in section.s. T!ie liiil is ;; feet 111 dia».ielir: rim. '2\\ I'eet in circumference; nnse. I"! iii^ hes loii-r; eyes. 11! inches lou;: yiid -I indios wile: moutii ^'ruii corner toconicr. I foot: face from luit tq chiu, 3 feet 'd iudies: hair. 4 feel ion;;; shoulders, 1!S Tect in circumference ami 17, feet in diameter: waist. 2-1 feet in circumference and .'¦ feet !) iucIies in diaineter and I feet long; fliifrers. 2 feet <1 Indies lu ditiin- eter; iiauds. !> feet il in i'es in drcuni ference. :; feet in dianu'tcs and 1 feci long; lln,:-'crs, '2 feet <> linlies k)ii:.^; flu¬ ger nails, 3 inches long, le;;s from ankle to knee, 10 feet: ankle. 5 feet in cir- cuinfcri'iice; calf of ley.s. S feet 8 inch¬ es in ilrcunifereiice; I'eet, '2'2 inches wille, 5 feet 1 liiche"-' loug.—Philadel¬ phia Press.
Turn About.
"You'd IffHer hide somewhere!." said llie rooster to the lieji. '•tlio boss has »n ax in bis hand nnd he's laying for you."
"Well." aald' the h-»n resiijiiedly. "I presume 1 hare no li-j-lit to complain. I've been iayiii;: for.liiiii for a good many years."-T'.ostor Transcript.
The feet nt fnte nre tender, for she sets her Pteps not on the ground, but DU the lionds of men - ITnnier.
He Sticks to the Job.
Kvery little while you,bear somebody say: "it Isn't the uxitense I mind. It's the piiucipie of the thiug."
United Slates tieasury officials have found that tbe couutry Is overrun with persons who feel Just thnt way. Here is one case:
Some years ago tbe crew of a gov¬ ernment revenue cutter gave an enter¬ tainment of some sort, and, according to custom, assessed tbe eost of the affair among those aboard. Each man's share was taken from his pay. One youug mau was not; In sympathy with •some featuiv of the entertainment and objected to having to pa.v Ills share. It cost llim only ;iii cents, but it was the principle of t!ie tlil^.
He began t) wri» lo the assislaut secretary of flie U'easury. who had charge of the revenue cutter service, aud demand jU!»t*ce.
Tliat was years u.uo and tlie man haa iiveraj;cd aliout two letters u woek ever since. Ho iiniulwrs iiis letters, and the last one was (limbered seven hundred and something.
Two or three years ago he resigned from tiio revenue cutter service and is now living in New York, but bo is still after his 7114 rente and tho establish¬ ment of a v'l'ent i)riii<iplo.
Wheu Charles Dewey Hllles was an assistJint se<Tetary of tlie treasury he sent the man Ills personal check for 30 cents iu the hope tliat it would end the long c<u'res'pondeii(e. imt It did not. The num promptly sent back the check, saying tliat lie did uot want tbe money luit Juslice. and that tiie 30 cents must come from tiie gffveniment Itself.
.\ml so the' corn'siioiulence goes on with MO sign of ever letting up.—Cin¬ cinnati Eiiipdrer.
Synthetic Dyet. The raw materials from which al¬ most ail the synthetic dyes are made are only nine or ten direct product,'* or coal tar. These are transformed clieni- 4cally into from '277*) to .'{00 intermedi¬ ate products, whicii in tiieir turn yield about l.L'0O_ chemically distiuct dye- stuffs. .Vmong tlie processes employed are binh temperatures, great pres.sures aud low refrigeration.
•liiis-
i silll.
Jil lirst tiiaii at .second Ihouglit -a ti/>u~that is. which is not (julte a pie as it si'ems. it is this:
Hoes a wouiuu wearing a veil see when sbe looks iu a miiTor what an¬ other persou sees wlio looks at her through her veil?
On couKldei'atioii oue realizes that the veiled woinari looks Ibfoii^b lier veil ai an Image which is itself veiled, and therefore bhe apparciit'y looks at her¬ self through two veils instead of the one v\Iiidi l-i all that dims to tlie vision of the otlier observer. Then there is the lurther fact tliat lu a mirwr wbai was riglit becomes left and vice versa, .¦^o tbat what one sees there l.s not a* picture of oneself, but of someliody wbo is like oneself only ns one of a pair of gloves Is like the otber.
That, bowe\-er, has nothing to do Willi the question as to the veils, nnd that is <iuite compllcate<l enough to stand nlone.—New York Times.
George W. Raytior
Staple and Fancy Grocer
FLOUB, FEED, BACON, BOILED HAM, ' ETC.
WK SOLICIT YOUR TRADE'
11 West Merrick Boad.. FBEEPOBT.
Telephone 837
Too Suggestive.
"Yes." s.'iid the young physician of nrlstooratic IlneaKe. "our family bns a motto, but I iirefcr not lo use it. It Is a litile too suggestive In my profes¬ sion."
"What is tlie motto?"
"Faithful unto death."—Boston Tran- ncript.
My Telephone Number is FBEEPOBT
337
C. A. FULTON
Undertaker and Embalmer
57 West Merrick Boad FBEEPOBT, N. Y.
FREEPORT POOITRY FARMS
ON POSITIVELY SANITABY IDEALS
strictly Fresh Eggs and Settings.In season. Breeders of S. C. White Leglkorns, White Orpingtons, Barred Plymouth Rocks and Rose Comb RhOde Island Reds.
STANLEY MILLEB, Mgr.
All Orders Promptly Delivered. -^
CARROLL STREET
Telephone 812-W.
POST OrFICE BOX 75
NASSAU HOTEL
LONG BEACH Long Island
New York
;»:if»:iffis»:'02»»H«3C«a2*-:
Th^ King of Summer Resorts
Open Throughout the Summer
^3G»iO'iiC*>3^'
We will be glad to make special rates to parties for Receptions, Dances and Banquets