;ny, tmursoaV, dec u, itU
¦^¦¦^¦BRsaaBRSHaBBBniBn
Eat Quality Home Made BREAD
Made of the Purest and
Best Materials Obtainable
IT COSTS YOU NO MORE THAN OTHER BREAD
QUALITY BAKERY
Cor. Grove St. and Olive Blvd. FREEPORT
Teleiihone 402-1^
M^ing Shopping is always picas int at tliis^Storc
We carry the C'i:>ic3st Freih Fruiti and Vegetables besides FANCY AND STAPLE GROCERIES
''SEAM ANS"
27 W. M:jrri~k Road Freepo. n 1. 1. Telephone 710
r'-tj^sae.'mfjriTr srstrvaJtr'VjiiRrc v»»r.
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^^'^%^LL
Freeport Poultry Farms
On Positively Sanitary Ideals]
Sanitary Houses and Pens—The Finest Bred Stock—Produces the Best Eggs &nd Stock— Always Open for Inspection—Choice Broilers Always Ready for Immediate Delivery. •
All Orders Promptly Delivered CARROLL STREET
TELEPHONE 812.W POST OFHCE BOX 75
Ford and Cole Automobiles
Education Is The Best Investment
G)mmercial Exlucadon is the Most Rapidly Acquired and Pays the Biggest Dividends
"Browne's Business College'"
BOOKKEEPING
STENOGRAPHY
TYPEWRITING
STENOTYPY
TELEGRAPHY
WIRELESS
PREPARATORY
AND PRIVATE
SECRETARli\L
COURSES
Ticket blanks fur¬ nished Long Island students, securing rail¬ road rates lower than commutation.
Flatbush and Lafayette Avenues, Brooklyn, N. Y.
TELEPHONE, MAIN 1356 One Block From Long Island Railroad Depot
WE HAVE NO BRANCH SCHOOLS ANYWHERE DAY AND EVENING SESSION
Individual Instruction. Graduates Placed. Open All Summer. Begin Now
Write for Illustrated Catalog
Help Wanted and Furnished
COMPETENT, EXPERIENCED NURSES; MAIDS, COOKS, AND GENERAL HOUSEWORKERS,- PIECE AND FAMILY LAUNDERING. HOUSE AND FURNITURE RENOVATING. MEN BY DAY, WEEK OR MONTH. ALL KINDS OF WORK BY CONTRACT.
Anderson's Employment Agency
12 WAVERLY PUCE-TELEPHONE 890 FREEPORT, N. Y.
Distributor of.
London Limousine Detachable Top
For3«ny]|niak« of Car
Ford Parts and Repairing a Specialty
W. T. Hutcheson
Telephontt3186i;H«iBp«tMMl
144 Franklin Street Hemp«tead N. Y.
WINTER CARE OF PULLETS.
V*«jnfl Poultry Nood Roomy Quarter* and Geed Handlir^.
In caring for young poultry stock In winter I try to give it enough room In which to develop and tben feed it more Uberally than the older fowlii, write* H. E. Haydock in tbe American Agrl- cnltnr^t__^ercrowdlng i« one of thn gravest dangers to guard against.
There are two methods of handling pollets—one so aa to get eggs !• win ter; the other so that by feeding tbey will be in fine laying condition tbe fol¬ lowing spring. In keeping pure bred atock I flnd it the best plan to nse tbe latter method, t>ecaaae where eggs are scarce In winter they will batch better the following spring, and also they arc
Egi^ Eggs
We want to aerre )«b wltfc freak egga produced from the cleanest fowik and food under perfect aaaltary ooa- dltlona.
We aoUeit aall ordars—«• AaUTear by Parcel* Poat
Standard Leghon Fam
SMITH •TREET MERRICK
TEU Sit J.
Aittnio Pafemt
General Gmtractor and BuiU-
ex. Sted Stnicturai Work .
AU Kinda of Concrata Werk
EatiniatM Cheadully
Fumiahad
TeL 52-JWaitaili
Offiea A iMiiwc* BalkBare,L I.
CHOICE
Fruits and Vegetables
PRICE QUAUTY QUANTITY
EMPLOYED JUDICIOUSLY
Hoyd G. ZuUi
PROPRIETOR
TWO STORES
POST St CONKLIN BUILOINC
North Main StTMtt
ADEL'S MARKET
So. Maia SItmI
Clothes for Young Men
The Fuvcrolle breed ot poultry was pnictically unknown outfiUlo of France prior to 1896. They have since beiurno popular in America as a Knneiiil purpose f(j\vl. Fave- rolles aro Hood winter layer.s. Their eifKs arc larue and brown tinted in color. Climatic conditions have lit- ¦ tie eflect on thein as they moult early in thlB country and t^rvw heavy feathers for protection. Tlwy are also valuable as spriiiK broil¬ ers, the chicks welMthinB one luid one-halt to two pouiiils at the two months' a'.,'e. Tluy are bred in bcv- eral colors—salmon, ermine, lilack and white. The cock shown is a salmon Fuverolle.
obtniii.'iblc ill firoator numbt-r.s nt the tiint' of liigh prices for liatt-liiut,' pur¬ poses.
Wliore winter <';r.t;s arc to Ih> prt)- ilticed it is iKM.'t^sary tiiat tlie pnlk'ti* iife liatflit'il early iti tlie iiievious spring- Tills iiK'tiiis a siualler percenl- aKe of eliieks liatelied, iih at lliat time the oKf-'s sliow less vitality. 1 linve .'ilso found it more dilliciilt to rai.se the cljieks. As e^r>ra eoiimiaiHl the lii-st price iu tlie spriii;;, tliat lliey tlo not hatch well means a greater cost for each chicle. .\l^ton,crh tlie.se piilli^ts will lay in winter wlicn ck^s coniniani.1 the highest iirice for inarlict purpnscs it will still be necessary to fiiinisli proper food and care. Kven theii soiw may ])ui on nesn msceua or prouticmg
c>:k«-
I Iind that the best food Is whole fjraiii, meat scraps a^nd green food. It is also iniportJint thut the pnllets be kept out of tile snow and above the frozen {rronnd, for cold poultry pro¬ duces few ef-'Ks. With pure bred poul¬ try 1 flnd It advantageous to keep sev¬ eral of the best cockerels until spring, when (hey can be sold to advantage as ireoders. This, however, would not do if mixed brtKid fowls were kept. The purpose of the keeper must be borne In mind when managing a flock of young poultry stock in winter.
REPAIRING A "BLOW-OUT." In its dep.'irtmont "Short Cuts nnd .Minor Methods," The New York Tele¬ pbone Review publishes an account of n simple method of vulcnniz.ing tubes with a standard flallron. usetl suc¬ cessfully by oue of the contributors to the magazine:
The tube is cleanetl carefully aionnd the puncture .'ml coated with a cement made of raw ruliber and gasoline: tho patch is then trgitted in the s:ime man ner. and when tho cement is nearly
On* Way to Vulcanize a Tuba.
dry, the patch ia placed over fhe pune- tnre. An ordinary flatlron. whicb baa been heated in tbe meantime, ii placed on the tube, rrbich is pnjtected by a Itiece uf newspaper. Tbe iron ia heat¬ ed Just hot enough ao tbat it will nut burn the paper, and is left on the patch until it haa ctjoled, when It la found that the patch baa Srmly united with the taba.
FOR the Young Fellows who are nearly Men, but who are a mighty •Ight more particular than meet Men —who know what's what, when It •omes to the shape of a Coat or a pair ol Trousers for these exacting Young Fellows, we have Just the SuUa they will like. They are always look¬ ing to us for everything that's fashlon- uhle and snajipy.
Long or Short Trouser Suits in a Tariety of new Fall Fabrics. There are SiriiK-s, Broken ("hecks and Mix¬ tures in Worsteds, Cheviots, Tweed*. *c., &c. Single or Double-Dreasted.
Vi>i
You get something more than good material and strong Tailoring when the noys are Clothed here! You get style, originality, and fltting with an individual effect, nnd above all the •satisfaction of knowing that you liaTe the right thing at ihe right price! >w''re the Store for Young Men!
65 S
Barasch's Dep't Store
THE CLOTHIERS
So. Main Street FREEPORT, L.
TKLtPHONE .•?92-J
Sj.CJfJT Cornets ill I J>jmrfilt irini Defect., of Vision. -
^¥%'m> "^tVnrSTei-k-testing free I
"^iJ^ EAJtnh Consult at Once.
A^i(.
u¥vs Greatest Grocery Store
The Store of Greatest Stocks The Store of Best Service The Store of Greatest Economy The Store of Strongest Values
'niese are facts well known to all. They are {acts in which we are justifed in taking pride, as they reflect the confidence reposed in this houfe by the people in this territory. They are facts which mean much to everyone who has purchas¬ ing to do at any time, as they give assurance of most satisfactory qualities and varieties from which to select—and make possible very impor¬ tant price-advantage for ths buyer.-
WE GUARANTEE OUR GOODS
Henry G, Schluter
ti'
The Quality Grocer"
33 W.J^Merrick Road Freeport, L« L
TELEPHONE 635
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