THE NASaAU PON. FBEEPOET. N. T.. FBIDAT. JANVAET 2S. 1816.
Groceries are Groceries
THE WORLD OVER But BABKEB'8 <^''« fresh, carefully selected, promptly delivered. Besides we mix in the pleasure of service to the hest of our ability. '<-\ And all this makee our groceries Just a little ^ bit different. 88 NO. MAIN ST, Phone 160-J FBEEPOBT.
TWO OUNCES FOR TEN CENTS ^"BEGIN THE NEW YEAR RIGHT AND BUY"
DICKIL
• FOB
LlBHICATINCi l"OLI»HIN« CLEANING
"A Frlead of lhe Mounehold in Every Sense of the Word" (Just the tblna tor %o\t rluba. Knn». «*e skatea. Opewrltera, aewlac marhlnea, bieyclea, etr. Ubiaioable «hroiiah all reliable dealera or wm wlll forward a boKle apon rerelpl of 13 cenla to mny addreaa la the lialted Siatea.
niSTRIBUTORSi
SUTTON, ASPINWALL & COMPANY, INC.,
136-140 FRONT STREET NEW YOBK CITY
HONOR FOR NEW BRITISHFFICIAL
H. L Smuel First Professing dm to Bo Home Secretary.
NOT A STRANGER IN OFFICE
WIDER jOULEVARD
Lawrence Boad to Broadway to be Made 75 Foot Boulevard.
THE REXALL STORE
SUGGESTIONS FOR THE FAMILY MEDICINE CHEST
REXALL THROAT GARGLE: superior for tonsiiitis, aore
throat; does not injure the teeth. Per bottle 25c
WINE OF COD LIVER OIL: a flesh maker and strengthener for
the body. Per bottle |1.00
EMULSION COD LIVER OIL: for that obstinate cough which
nothing else seems to relieve 50c *°<* $1.00
PEXAT.L COLD TABLETS: make them your home companion, keep away the winter colds, which often lead to a severe lllnesa. Box 25c
BRONCHIAL LOZENGES: you win be pleaaed with their quick,
soothing effect. Box 10c
AROMATIC CASTOR OIL; don't nauseate the Ilttle fellows; give the Aromatic Castor Oil and watch them smile; lesulta the same. The bottle 25c
HOT WATER BOTTLES: experience has shown that the best are the cheapest in the end. Our Bottles and Fountain Syringes are the best that can be procured and sold at fair prices.
CLARENCE S. ABRAMS, Ph. G.
Phone No. 1.
23 WEST MERRICK ROAD
*/2
GoRtury
of Success
Goetz ^ %
ONLY
2
OF OUR
BAR6AINS
Cover, Stool,
Cartage and 25
Sheata of Mutic
with thu beautiful
Upright
Scarf, Bench,
CarUge and 12
** Uia of Music
trnxA tkia beautiful
PUyer
Suoceasor of Sir John Simon Spent Four Yaars In Home Departmant as Parliamentary Undersecretary of State—Is Not Only Member of His Creed In Cabinet.
London.—For the first time iu her his tory of neariy ii.OiiO years England has a professing Jew In the role of prin cipal secretury of state to the crowu.
True, Benjamin Disraeli attained tho dignity of premier nnd died as the Karl of Beaconslleld. But he was a member of the Chunh of England, like his father tofore him, whereas Herbert Lewis Samuel, who recently 8Uccee<leii Sir John Simon as secretary of state for the home deiiartment, haa remain ed a strict adherent to the faith of his forefathers.
Nor is he the only member of his creed in the cabinet, for In the shuffle followlug the retirement of Sir John Simou jwlnp to his objections to the
z&IS
BSTON STSL. B'KLYN fl^l^
COURT A LIVINGSTON Ine MMk tream BevMwk ¦¦IlSvh lAiA Ovev S* Vesura. OPBirhYaNUiaS.
fteWen
Photo by American Presa Association. HEBBEIiT Ii. SAMUEL.
compui.sory military i^erviee law for single uit"h ileilM-rt Samuel's lirst cousin. I'MwIii MoutaKU, has been ad¬ vanced from the secretaryship of the treasury to fhe iliatifeilorshlp of the duchy of Liiiicaster.
Edwin Moiitajru, It may be remem¬ bered, ((HitriHled a matriuioiilal alli¬ ance last summer with Lord Sheffleld's younjjest <lau;;hler. the lion. Beatriee Venetia Stanley, who al>jiire<l Chris¬ tianity for the sjilce of .liulaism in or¬ der to wed her hushand. who woiiiil liv the terma of his fathers wili have been divested of his large f(i;'lniie had he married a Christian.
Herbert Samuel will lie recalled h.v many In the l'nited States as having paid a proloii;.;('(l visit a litlie over two years ago wliiie lioldiiiL; the office of poat'master general.
Ills family was founded hv hi>^ grandfather. Louis Samuel, who kept a small w.'itchin:iVerV; shop iu Liver¬ pool, lie had two sons. Moses and Ed will. Moses, marrying lOlleii Cohen, whose father was on the London Stook I"^xrlianj;e. eventually t^tahlisiied ;i banking house in Broad street. Lon¬ don, asscxiatlng his hrother Edwin In the liiisim'ss. In ISiVl, on being cre uti^l a Imronet. .MtKses Saniuel olitained a license from the crown to change his iinino to Siiniiiei Montagu and in 31MI7 was raised to the house of lords as Lord Swa.vthling.
The IJi;;ht Hon. Edwin Montagu, the new ch:in<ellor of the ducliy of Lan- caster, is his second son. The late Lord Swaythllng's brother Edwin de¬ clined to change his patronymic. Ile left two sons, the elder of whom Is Sir Stuart Samuel, member of parliament for the :rower Hamlets division of London and wlio received a baronetcy In 1912. Sir Stewart'.s younger brother Ib nerbert Louis Samuel, the new sec¬ retary of stute f(jr the home depart¬ ment. He is married to his cousin, u daughter of the late Ellis .\braham Franklin.
Herbert Samuel, who was bom at Liverjiool In 1S70 and who aa a Ballloi man graduated with flrst clas.«) honors from oxford, does not cotue to the homo deiiartment as ii stranger. He speiit four years there aa parliumen tary undersecretary of atate, from the defeat of the Unionist administration bu 190,-> until liVXt, under Ixird Clad- stone and thiw Is Intimately acquaint¬ ed with the workings of the offlce. It was during that period that he made his mark by tbe skill with which he piloted the no called children's act throughjthe house of commons. After ward, althougb he bad come to be re garded as a sjH'clalist in the problem of child legbilatlon, he showed by tbe clever manner in which he handled the liquor liceuaing measure in 1008 that he knew quite as much about beer as about babies.
He was rewarded in the following year with a seat In the cabinet as chancellor of the dochy of Lancaster and twelve months later became post- maater general.
Rockaway Turnpike, Lawrence, from Hook Creek to Broadway, is to be made a 75 foot boulevard before summer. This was decided at a meet¬ ing of local taxpayers in Firemen a Hall at which Assistant State Engi¬ neer Young. County Engineer Stark, Town Highway Commissioner Patter¬ son, Chief Engineer Powell, of New York City, and W. O. Wood, Preal-, dent of the Long laland Electric Rail¬ way Co.; the company's attorney, Counaelor Peacock and Assemblyman McWhinney were present.
It was agreed that the turnpike should be made a boulevard and that the grades should be established Jointly by the engineers of New York City and thoae of Naasau County.
HORSE HEN ELECT
Nassau Driving Club Selects Officers for Coming Year at Dinner.
Tiie second annual dinner of the Nasaau Driving Club was held last Saturdav nigh' at the Garden City Hotel, in Garden City. More than two liundred horsemen and their friends from all parts of Long Island, New York and New Jersey turned out to make the event a memorable one.
After the feast. President L. W. Boynton introduced Dr. G. 11. Kerster, of the New York Road Drivers' Asso-,' rial ion. He presented the lucky own¬ ers who scored tlio most points witli silver loving cups, which were dona¬ ted hy tlie memher.s.
Wlien the presentation of cujis wa.^ concluded Toastmaster Dr. Feister in¬ troduced many of the old-timers in tiie trotting fame and other promi- neiu persons. Aniong the speakers were K. J. Hulst. president Nassau .Agricultural Society; Luke Otten. one of the organizers of the Nassau Driv¬ ing Cluh: rounty Judge Naumer. Sid Tolman, editor of the Trotter and I'acer, and Dr. G. H. Ferster. secr(>- tary of the Road Horse Association.
Mr. Dillineham on Musical Plavs.
"In regard to the future of musical plays," said Ciiarles Dillingham, di¬ rector of the New York Hippodrome, "1 think they will grow every year, beiause it is the only form of com- tetiiion with tlie pictures. You can get fhe drama from a refiection of a magic laiUern on a sheet, but pretty girls and pretty tunes muat he seen and heard to be appreciated. One or two pictures of musical plays have seemed very silly, and were nol suc¬ cessful. The musical comedy houses in New York are the only onee whose galleries liave not disappeared. I will tell you what the flnancial re¬ sults were New Year's week. The Hippodrome played to $71,000; 'Stop, Look, Listen' at the Globe, to $23,- 400; 'Chin Chin' at the Colonial Theatre, Boston, to $2:^,000, and 'Watch Your Step' at the Forrest Theatre. Philadelphia, to ?2:',000. total, $140,300; net profit more than $50,000. That was tlie proflt for one week of four musical plays.
STIITE FKRS' IISTITIITEMEETIII6S
AT MINEOLA CONFERENCE PLANS ARE MADE FOR DISTRICT MEETING THROUGHOUT NAS¬ SAU COUNTY STARTING THURS¬ DAY.
200th Performance at the "Hip."
"Hip Hip Horray," Ciiarles Dilling¬ ham's wondrous spectacle, with its many novelties, its gorgeous masaive- neas and its winter sports sensation, which seems to have set the whole country a-skating, celebrates Its 200th anniversary at the Hippodrome on Tueaday of this coming week. U will atart on ite third century marlt with a most brilliant outlook as the advance sale today surpasses even that of the busy holiday period at this great amusement headquarterB, which is creating records hitherto un¬ known in th(>atrical circles. Matinees are given daily and a brilliant concert with Sousa every Sunday evening.
J. S. DeMott
Contra.cior And Builder
Jobbing of All Kinds
The two day State Farmers' Insti¬ tute opens in the Industrial Building. Mineola Fair Grounds, Tuesday. Speakers confine their lectures to aub- jecta (overing the work of the Farm Bureau for 1916. All the speakers were especially equipped by theii familiarity with Long Island Condi¬ tions.
Manager Simons acted as the cor¬ respondent for this Institute and Mre. M. G. Wheeler, of Central Park, as woman correspondent. The speakers were Jared Van Wagenen, on "Farm Management and Fertilizers" j F. A. Sirrine, "Fertilizer and Lime Testa and Alfalfa on Long Island"; 1. F. Rice, "Poultry"; J. G. Curtis. "Proht in Swine"; H. C. Sanda, "Food Seed Potatoes"; J. W. Pincus, "Use and Metiiods of Farm Credit"; Mrs. Ida S. Harrington, sultjecls dealing with the home.
So the Farm Bureatl may he more completely under the direction of 'he farmers themselves, Nassau County has heen divided into 1 ."> unita. An advisory council. (omposed of a chair¬ man and t<ix memliers, will he in cliarge of each unit. Tlieir duties will be to obtain new memhers, co- oiiorate with the manager in his work and to help arrange for meetings and demonstrations in tlieir locality.
The Farm Bureau Institutes wili lie held as follows:
Thursday, January 27- -.Manhasset. in 'I'own Hall. I :;!0 p. m.
Friday, January 2,S -Hoosevelt, in Royal Theatre, !i::io a. m. and l::;o \i. m.
Saturday. January 2'.i- Jerusalem, in school iiouse, icl'.o a. m. and l:;io p. m.
Monday, January :; 1 I'lainedge. in sciiool house, %'.'Mt a. m. and l::;ii p. m.
Tuesday, February 1 Oyster Bay, in tniek house, l:;'.<i p m.: in scliool house, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, February 2 Hicks¬ ville, Town iiall. 0:30 a. m. and 1:30 p. ni.
Thursday. February 3- Woodbury, Good Templars Hall, 9:30 a. in. and 1 :30 p. m.
Friday, Febniary 4—Locust Valley, .N'eighborhood House, 9:30 a. ni. and 1 :30 p. m.
Saturday, February .")- -Glen Head, Greeavale School House, 9:30 a. m.
Wednesday, February 0-- F'ranklin S(niare, Fire Hall, 1 :30 p. m.
The speakers for the local insti¬ tutes will be chosen from the follow¬ ing:
Professor C. R. Crosby, of Cornell, on "Insect Pests'; L. C. GrifTilh, of llio Federal Department of AgriLul- lure, on "Forest Insects"; G. T. Powell and George Hegeman, of Glen Head, on "Certitied Seed Potatoes"; L. R. Simons, manager of Farm Hu¬ reau, on "Demonstrations, Field Tests and Lime," and the following pro¬ fessors from the State Soliool of Agri¬ culture on Long Island, John Michaels, "Dairy"; W. B. Niasley, "Ttimato and Cabbage Improvement and Fruit Grov^-ing": H. F. Rutton, on "Soil Fertility, Cover Crops and Alfalfa"; D. B. Greenberg on "Here and There in tlie Poultry Yard."
FURS FURS FURS
remodelled or redyed at reasonable prices. Estimates cheerfully given.
No Job too large and no job too small
Estimates given on all kinda of work in our line
LEONARD AVENUE Tel. 389-W
Freeport Fish Market
Removed from lilerrick Road
7 SOUTH MAIN STREET
OPPOSITE CANNON
Fresh Oysters and Clanu on the half shell, by the plate or quan¬ tity in bulk.
ALL KINDS FISH
Drop in and get a clam or oys¬ ter on the shell.
Telephone 304-R
MRS. E. J. BARKER
South Seainan Ave. Bald'win, L. I.
Tel. 7S6 Freeport.
Late of New York, and formerly with
C. G. Gunther's Sons.
Optometrist
My new optical depart¬ ment in charge of Dr. D. A. Canter, is now open for all refracting work.
Examination of the eyes
free.
........»>... ,—
A. E. MILLER
42 So. Main Street Freeport
We Have An Idea
Tiiat if W"? rou Id induce you to visit our store you would beconie a perma¬ nent customer, i'^verytliing is so neat and clean and our stock so very inviting.
Hunts' Pineapple, large No.
3 can 20c
Hunt's Pineapple, large No.
2 can 15c
Hunt's Apricots, large No.
3 can 20c
Hunt's Plums, large No. 3 can, 20c Hunt's Sliced Peaches, large
No. 3 can 26c
Hunt's Cherries, large No.
No. 3 can 25c
Hunt's Strawberries, large
No. 2 can 25c
Hunt's Raspbemies, large
No. 2 can 26c
ARCHER J. POST
NORTH MAIN STREET AND EAST LENA AVENUE PHONE 568 FREEPORT
ANNOUNCEMENT!
CUDLIPP & CO.
FORBES BUILDING BROOKLYN AVENUE FREEPORT Will during months of January, February and March
OVERHAUL FORD CARS
Models 1913-1914-1915, furnishing and using new piston ringv, bearings, transmission-bands, gaskets, valves and wrist-pins, for
$35.
00
Special prices on other cars. We will examine and tell you just what it will cost before we do your work. Come in or tele¬ phone (1080) and let us have a talk.
and have healthy sturdy chicks ifyoxi use
Shaw&IrdesdiiiQ]^
Manubcfaired Ijy Shaw ftthiesdeU Co. Brooklyn, N.Y.^
IOB SALE BT AIX DEALKBI