THE NASSAU POST: FREEPORT, N .Y, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1914
FOR AFTERNOON FROCK
DESIGN THAT WILL LOOK ITS BEST IN QRAY.
"faffeta and Chiffon Should Be the Ms-
terials Employed—Shoulder Col.
lar Alto Should Be Made
of the Taffeta.
I think If you are foad of gray—a nice silvery shade—that the accom¬ panying design for an afternoon frock should 'Strike your fancy and work out splendidly in taffeta and chltton, with a contrasting note of color in the croBB-over shoulder straps and girdle which might be petunia b^iie, purple, emerald green or cerise, writes Unian E. Young In the Washington Star. This strap arrangement Is quite a smart touch and hints a bit of the military—an Influence that will fc^e
Smart Frock bf Taffeta and Chiffon.
•widely noted In styles this season. It Is one length of satin or velvet ribbon, flrst nin under a shoulder collar across the back of the blouse, then crossed over the bust In front, and finally en¬ circled about the waist and tied In a little bow at the back. This is only a detail, but oue of those which count.
Tho dress has n long-sleeved chiffon blouse, whose lower portion Is covered with a straight baud facing of the taf¬ feta. The shoulder collar too, Is ot taffeta, while the upstanding collar and little crossed vest and turned back cuffs are all of fine white batiste.
To a straight taffeta hip yoke the long chiffon tunic is gathered. It runa down into a point In back and front and is faced with a flve-lnch hem of taffeta. A shorter tunic of chiffon Is mounted from the belt, left open in front, and flnished about the bottom with a shirred heading. The exposed portion of the underskirt is of taffeta.
The entire dress may be made of crepe de chine, if desired, or would even be a good model for serge, elimi¬ nating the short upper tunic.
MAKES USEFUL CAKE STAND
Easy to See PosBibilltles of Device That May Be Cheaply and Quick¬ ly Constructed.
There are often occasions when all the cake dishes are in use, and yet more are needed. When this happens ordinary plates can be turned into cake stands quite easily and cheaply. Purchase two or three wire holders. The sizes vary. The medium onqs are the most useful; these flt on to an ordinary pudding or bread and but¬ ter plate.
The handle can be left as it is, but will look all the daintier if swathed
with a pretty ribbon. One and a half yards of ribbon will be quite sufflcient for it.
Swathe round and round and at tho top put a dainty little bow. The color of the ribbon used will depend upon the general decorations of the room and table. When these stands are used for sandwiches a little card with the kind of sandwiches the stand holds •written on can be hung from the top of the holder.
Very pretty and useful presents can be given by thla simple means. At many china shops odd lots of china are to be had at very cheap prices. Very good plates can sometimes be picked up for a copper or so.
A holder daintily covered with rib¬ bon, and put on a decorated plate, looks quite an ipipoBlng gift, and It Is one that is greatly appreciated, for one never has too many useful and pretty stands for the table.
Wm
Many of tha new waists are msds vssr OTsr tho skirts.
Delicatessen and Lunch Room
J. A. GOODMAN
railrDad avenue
Telephone 848-J
Help Wanted and Furnished
COMPETENT, EXPERIENCED NURSES; MAIDS, COOKS, AND QENERAL 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 PLACE-TELEPHONE 890 FREEPORT, N. Y.
Good Citzenship
This Nation could better afford to part with its Army, lis Navy, its Military Science, tban to have an abatement of one per cent from- the regard which people entertain for their home town, their respect for their local laws—their quick submission to order, and their love of home.
In losing our military power, we would lose some visible condi¬ tions that represent strength—conditions that could be replenished by taxation, better than losing a small percent, of local pride, local re¬ spect, local reverence for the home town. We would part with forces Inherited from passed ages, in strength more subtle, more necessary, more important than guns or ammunition.
The success of a city or village depends much on the men behind it.
The course of an inland river, the geographical location of a town, may have some influence, but a dozen energetic, live, progressive individuals are worth all the muddy rivers, the inland locations in the county.
Men are nhat make your villages, and homes are what make men
NASSAU & SUFfOLK LIGHTING CO.
George MacDonald, President.
POWELL'S
Boat building, repairing, painting, storage, works. Modern Marine railway. Boat Supplies. Cele¬ brated cork decoy ducks.
ELLISON'S POINT
Ft. Woodcleft Avenue,
FREEPORT, N. Y.
Ford and Cole AutomobOes
Distributor of
London Limousine Detachable Top
For'any make ol Car
Ford Parts and Repainng a Specialty W. T. Hutcheson
Telephone 186 Hempstead
144 Franklin Street Hempstead N. Y.
The Public
is a-Nevc;p«per that aims to be right rather than sensational; that gives,'[in concise and plain terms, all the news that will live.
JUDGE BEN B. LINDSAY, DtnTcr. Colo.. My«: "THE PUBLIC !• one of Ihe very beit able«t contribution! to current eventt—political end economic—to be found in thit country,"
THE PUBLIC is an Editorial paper that puts all public questions io the supreme test of obvious moral principles and stands by the results.
RT. REV. CHARLES D. WILUAMS. Detroit, Mich., tayi: "The PUBLIC'S editorials ex¬ hibit a keen, clear and itraight thinking which it in marked contrast with the muddled aver¬ age editorial in the average newspaper."
While THE PUBLIC'S editorial policy is as broard as fundamental democra cy itself, its editorials and special article irequently deal with taxation be¬ cause taxation is the taproot of democratic government.
Read The PubHc for a time and Judge for yourself
Published weeltjy, $1.00 a year. Subscribe now and we will send you FREE a copy ol "Progress and Poverfy,"Henry George's greatest book. Send $1.00 to-day. We will refund, if later, you feel dissatisfied.
THE PUBLIC Ellsworth Building, Chicago
Ladies of Freeport
YOUR SEARCH FOR THE PROPER KIND OF TAILOR¬ ING WHERE STYLE AND ECONOMY QO HAND IN HAND ENDS IN THE
GOLDFARB STYLISH WAY
AND AN ADDED ATTRACTION HERE IS OUR
REALLY REASONABLE PRICES
WE MAINTAIN AN EXPERT DEPARTMENT FOR
CLEANING, PRESSING, DYEING AND REPAIRING
SPECIAL PRICES LADIES' SUITS, WITH MATERIAL, FROM $15.00 UP LADIES' SUITS, FROM OWN MATERIAL, $8.00 UP DRESSES MADE, FROM $3.00 UP SKIRTS MADE, FROM $2.00 UP
BROOKLYN LADIES' TAILOR" AND DRESSMAKER
H. GOLDFARB
36 Brooklyn Avenue Freeport, New York Telephone Call. 307-J
395 Persons Mei Srom liilicrcilMs In Nassau County During the
as
YES NO
SHALL THE COUNTY OF NASSAU APPROPRIATE THE SUfVi OF $100,000 FOR THE ESTABLSSHMENT OF A COUNTY TUBERCULOSES HOSPITAL ?
2.
3.
4.
yes; ivieams
That you want to save ihe lives of the hundreds w'jo are sick and dying from tubercuio&is in thi.'i county.
Tiicil ycx! v/ant voi'kers saved to industry— w.-.^.'i e:..n'ers saved lo tiieir £amiiic:>—mothers gavsd to t-.i2ir chi dren.
l'L~t 'yoix want to give tlie well, especially the cki:''.';c.-;, the best po3siI>le proteclion aordnst co:.5urji7.tioii by cir!n3 fer the sick in a place v'licz'c they v/iil alay and where they can not
.f~>re."<.d infeciion.
\ Tr.rt you want this couriJy to decrease the num¬ ber cf crpbano and lessen the amount of poverty by v^Iiinfj Jhe came step tliat 25 other counties hav2 already taken.
-n-
EVERY LEGAL VOTER, on Elecuon Day, November 3rd, may declare his attitude toward stncken humanity in Nassau County
VOTE THE SEPARATE SMALL BALLOT!
6r/f^
0Y5TER DAY
Ever/ one of the 395 dots on this map of Nassau Coilinty representj a death from tuberculosis in the last fdur years.
MO ivl^EArSIS
1. V/ial >oa &ie nuiVvwiing to do what you can to prev'ert deat'i^ froni consumption.
2. That you are irsdiiferent to the costly burden whicli consumtvL'On now places on this county in prev-niCvblc c'v .'.!:.-., sickness, child dependency and p>overt3\
3. Thi-i yea vcL; for fclcliness, neglec' \nd death, instead of heulih, ecien'tific care and ihe saving of lives.
4. That you are willlncj to let this county lag behind ihe 26 v.I.ica I^ve already decided this question of humanity in the affirmative.
MARK YOUR SMALL HOSPITAL BALLOT BEFORE YOU LEAVE THE BOOTH!
NASSAU COUNTY ASSOCUTION: BEEKMAN WINTHROP, President FRANK L CROCKER, Secretory