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TEX ujuu ?oR,'nEEroxT, M. T., nnuT, mfHuuaa a, um.
Smith
67 South Main St.
B R E A D
Bakery
Freeport, L.
N D
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A K
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S
WHY BE DECEIVED?
"Iloino-niadr," "Unalll.v" nnal "Mothrr'a" arr naniri) an rommonlr nard hy bakrra tkat moat p««|>lr aay. "Ira, all bakrra nar it," bat It la abao- lotrly falart thr brrad ia madr in a dirty and naaly barkroom or crllar and of thr moat Infrrlor quality aud no mothrr rver arra It, until prr- rhanrr it la brousbl lo brr tablr aa food. Kind frirnda wr wlll not drrrlvr youi wr do onr baklnit in our own privntr homr aud ovrn and .MOTHKK doea il aii.
-We ran bakr only a Ilniltrd amount but what >ou ordrr ia cirau and awrrt and conira to your door rarrfull.r nrapprd and uncontaniina<r,d by llira add fllth. 'I'ry ua and br piraard.
MADE OF THE PUREST AND BEST MATERIALS OBTAINABLE
IT COSTS VOU .NO MOUK THAX OTHER BREAD
QUALITY BAKERY
Comer Grove Street and Olive Boulevard FREEPORT Telephone 402-R.
l^LllMh
:fg^?»i;'.
FREEPORT POULTRY FARMS
ON POSITIVELY SANITARY IDEALS
Strictly Fresh Eggs and Fresh Killed Broilers direct from farm. Also breeders of S. C. Wliite Leghorns, Barred Plymouth Rocks and S. C. Rliode Island Reds. ' •'
SETTING EGGS ALWAYS ON HAND.
; ) STANLEY MILLER, Mgr.
All Orders Promptly Delivered.
CARROLL STREET
Telephone 812-W.
POST OFFICE BOX 75
ADDRESSES HEN
PROMINENT BABYLON LEADER MADE SPEECH.
At the Junction of Main street and the boulevard, Freeport, a street meet¬ ing was held Wednesday evening. Miss Nichols, who Is known to be one of the beet speakers sent out by the Empire State campaign committee, talked to tbe men present in a thor¬ oughly convincing manner, backing up all her statements with statistics and showing tbe good that had come of equal suffrage in the states wbere it has been granted. She also tried to impress upon them that women did not want to hold offlce or do any of the public work being done by men. Woman's reason for wanting the ballot is only ttaat she may have a power in her hands that will enable iier to protect her home and children by being able to help select the man
While in Mineola
STOP AT
HENRY C. KRAMER'S
Hotel Nassau
Where you will meet your Friends.
JUNK DEALER
Frank Farmlet
16 Grand Avenue Freeport
Tel, 17 7-M.
Rags, lc per pound
Rubber, 4c per pound
All kinds metal, market prices
ease
layer
iano
One of the most up-to-date instru¬ ments of the day.
Your verdict will be in favor of the P;::ASE player piano, if judged by the test of musical results.
As a PL.\YER it supplies the flnger technique of the foremost artists.
Music Roll Library Service FREE. WRITE FOR CATALOG
Our Partial Payment Plan is Most Economical.
Pease Piano Co.
THE MUSIC HOUSE OF BROOKLYN
34 Flatbuah Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y,
Phone 4079 Main. 'Open Evenings by Appointment.
Complete stock of VICTOR and COLUMBIA TALKING MACHINES, Records and Supplies. Convenient Payments.
THE STEWART HANDY WORKER
With Drill in Place
Complete, as shown, with all attachments, $12.50
The above illustrated article is no doubt one of the most practical devices that onyone can p^sess.
We carry the largest and most complete stoc^ of general hardware, farm, g^den, carpenter and mason tools, glass ware, dishes, porcelain and agate ware, gas, coal, wood, oil and gasoline stoves, paints, oils, varnishes and bruihes
ON LONG ISLAND and a 1000 other necessary and useful houjtehold articles.
W. A. MACFARLANE
29 SOUTH MAIN STREET, CORNER OLtVE BOULEVARD FREEPORT
who go to Albany and 'Waahlngton and make the laws that effect them.
Sues L.LR.R. for $10,000.
Henry de Vadder, residing at Baby¬ lon turnpike, Roosevelt, through his attorney, Elvln N. Edwards of Free- port, haa brought suit against the Long laland Railroad Company for
$10,000 for permanent injuries re- i»iived while a paasenger on one of the trains of the Long Island Railroad on July 24 last. Mr. DeVadder was seriously cut and lacerated about his left forearm, injuring the nerves and bones of that arm.
The case will probably be tried at the October term of the supreme court in Nassau county.
OUR PUBLIC FORUM
Peter Radford
On Too Many Lawyers.
«'
•H*u» ¦
Wben the sherifT cries out "Oh! jea. Oh! yes, the court is now in session," the farmer should tighten th« belt around his belly for it is he who pays the cost When the lawyer says "May it please the court," ths farmer has to shorten the shirts of his children for the; must foot the bill and when the legislature announces "Be It enacted," tmbom tmbes may well kick againat their pr.ison walls for they may live to pay the penalty. We have too many laws, too many lawyers and too much government. No man dares to run a business without lawyers to the right of him and lawyers to the left of him, Expensive litigation and excessive legislation are clogging the wheels of progress. To meet this situation tbe railroads are ofttimea compelled to take off a train and put on a lawyer; the manufacturer is oft- times compelled to close down a furnace and put on a lawyer; the farmer ia 4fttimes compelled to sell a steer to pay the lawyers, for the man who digs In the ground usually pays the freight and every article which he buys carries on the price tag court costs and lawyers' fees.
There are in the United States 115,000 lawyers and about twenty thousancl courts of various jurisdiction which cost the people of this nation approxi¬ mately $1,500,000,000 per annum. It costs more to run the legal affairs in thla nation than it does to clothe all the people. It coats more to settle legal dis¬ putes than it does to run our educational and religious inatitutions and care j for the health of all the people combined. Less than three per cent of our! population are able to employ lawyers to interpret the mass of legal lore I that burdens our statute books. The remaining ninety-seven per cent have! to take the raw stuff right out of the mill. |
We are a government by lawyers and for lawyers. It is they who are responsible for the legislative cure-alls, espionage, unrest and business dis-: turbance that infest our statute books, for at the source of most every law I is a lawyer. They have In no case lowered the price of the commodity or. benefited the people but they have burdened Industry and restrained com¬ merce and have built up their profession until it dominates government, tyr¬ annizes business and terrorizes progress.
There is no more valuable citizen in our land than a patriotic, able, I conscientious lawyer, seeking to direct the ship of state through the tor-, tuous channels of L'Oth century civilization; piloting a business through the' legislative billows that dash with maddened fury across Its pathway and whose genius can calm the fear and command the confidence of the people in the integrity of Republican Institutions, but there is no greater peril to society than a political lawyer who seeks to prostitute government, stain buslneas with suspicion and arouse distrust in the minds of the people. Unfortunately the latter class are a strong factor in the profession, ofttimea in high places, and unless the better class unite in driving the quacks from their midst an outraged public opinion will administer a rebuke that wlll humble the pride, crush the hope and smash the power of the profesaion and reduce its possibilities to ashes.
"PERFECT SODA"
AT
THE REXALL STORE
A drink at our new SODA F'OUNT.MN is a ireal. Creamy, cold, delicious soda water aerved wilh crushed fruits in season—crn.shed fiuit syrup—carbonated soda waler—delicious smoolli, rli h lc<' cream. A drink of my luscious soda will satisfy yon.
We use PIORTON'S SPECIAL ICE CRE.V.M, tho ,,,;reat .md best cream made. Fresh shipments dally,
TRY OUR PEACH ICE CREAM—"ITS SIMPLY GRAND"'
BATHING GOODS FOR REAL COMFORT
You bathe for comfort and for your heallli's sake, but wiieu you bathe why not have the right batliing goods, and the mosl con- veiiienl kind. Let us sup])ly you wltli all your bath needs.
BATH SOAP BATH BRUSHES SEA SALT SPONGES TOILET WATERS WASH RAGS NAIL BRUSHES, ETC.
THE REXALL STORE
CLARENCE S. ABRAMS, Ph. G.
Phone No. 1.
23 WEST MERRICK ROAD
Answer Your Telephone Promptly
ORDINARY courtesy demands that you answer your telephoae as promptly as you^d answer the knock at the door of your home or office.
C But there's another side to the matter.
C If the telephone is not answered promptly, the calling party may receive a report of "Don't answer"
C And who knows but what the ring of the tele¬ phone bell may be the NEW YORK knock of Opportunity at TELEPHONE CO. youT door? i^.
Increase Your Efficiency 100 per cent. How? This Way-
PURCHASE AiN "EXPERT" BICYCLE, ROLLER CHAIN, AND MUD GUARD $17.00
or a
VICTOR, $22.00; WITHOUT COASTER BRAKE, $18.50
Claude W. Brotheridge
HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, ETC. 91 SOUTH MAIN STREET FREEPORT, N. Y.
JOHN BIRKHOLZ
Jihl,c.:^,m±J
DELICIOUS SODAS FRESH CANDIES
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL CANDY AND ICE CREAM
MANUFACTURER
ICE CREAM CANDY SODAS
CIGARS CIGARETTES
119 SOUTH MAIN STREET ' FREEPORT, N. Y.
I'hone L'iMl-W.
C. A. RTDER, Local Commercial Manager. 26 Sonth Grove Streei
FBEEPORT, L. L
eAKEIRY
BREAD, PIES. CAKES, ETC.
176 NORTH MAIN STREET FREEPORT, N. Y.
TELEPHONE CONNBOTION
ORDERS FOR WEDDINGS AND PARTIES PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO