Ttf^ 8
TKB BAttt KEVTEW, WfaWWDAT, APUt 80. 1821
RED CROSS HEALTH LECTURES LKED
Series Ghren By Or. Cirie Creft
In Varieos VIRaf es Are Very
WeH Attended
H<>mpKt«ad, April JO.-T'ndor the aus. pices of the Nassau County Chapter of the Red '.'roits. I>r. Carro CrofT. of th« Btate Depurtment of Health gave a ser- J les of Moclal Myxlene lectures In ths j county the we<»lt of .^prll 11 lo J«.
Tho talks were In connection with the Mhowinir oT tho tlltnn, "The (lift of Life" and "The Knit pf the Road," which were shown In the following vIllaKesi Rorkvllle Centre. Hlffh Hchool Build- toff; Manhasset. Hirh Hchooi nuildln«r, and Ulen, Cove.
In Olen C6y*f the women of the City Ctub, throtiirh the (>ourtesy of thn man- anrer, secured tho (llen Cove Moving Picture Theatre for the afternoon show- InK ot "The (lift of Life" and .Miss Kdna (^peland. District nurse, received per- mission to give "The End of the Road" In the evenlnir at the Methodist church.
Dr. ('roff Is an interestinjf speaker and thorouRhly understands her subject. Thc meetings were well attended, es- fieclally in Olen Cove, where the p«>o- ple turned out In torvf.
Clubs or or«;anIzatlons deslrtnir to ar¬ range for lectures on health subjects! either with or without films or slides i may apply to the Health .Service De-' fiarlment of the ¦Na.Hsjiii Cotinty Red | Cio.v.s, Mineola, N. Y.
FREEPORT REALTY ACTIVE
NunuTfww Raie* of Hotism And Pbits
wmnpottaa
Freeport. Ap«-n ''" ~tv>,. jf,hri J.: Randall Compan-, "Id many i
propertk* in Fr^ i\'tiigm. AI-'
fred (]|l«Iman, who owns t^ atore at i Pine and Orove streets, has bou>;ht the! property he ficcuples. _ '
Other sales are: |
To Mrs. Charles Carter arvd .Mrs. Bernard Pax, Russell place; Mrs. Lil-1 lian Bates, of Brooklyn; Nelson East-1 mill ond John F. Cain of Freeport and j Adolph Haack and John Delaney of: Baldwin, two famiiy houses on Russell pla<-e, and to Mrs. Ann.i L. Parke, aj nine-room dwellhiK on west Woodbine! drive.
Also building plots to John Berfcer of Fr<'ep^)rt, on Sportsmen's avenue; Harold C. Wilson of Freeport; Hiram H. Parke of I^'VeeiKirt, corner of Ocean and I.,ena avenues; Judge Leon 8aun- ilers of New iTork City, f^orner of Wal¬ lace streot and f.iena avenue; Wallace Smith of Bellmore, on Randall ave¬ nue; Henry C. Kram; of Fr<*eport, on Wallaci! street; James Reid of Freo¬ port, on I^ong Beach avenue; Gcorpe l'"'yfo of Frwport, corner of Park ave¬ nue and Porterfleld place; Frederick .1. Bauman of Brooklyn, on Ocean ave¬ nue; D. Wesley Hne of Freeport. on Woodcleft avenue; Clarke Wood Realty Company of Kreeport, three plots on liong Beach avenuti and to Wesley J HalK of Freeport. corner of Park .ive nui- and Portfrfleld place
RIKO TMK RM-LiS
Th« CfMhnilttee in < h;trjte i>f thp If|»eport Memorial Library tins asked that the hells of thn vll-
ISK** tl*- tong fiat urday nft«-l«o<>l»
to pi'nclaim the i;round-br«akinK
for the Library, a ^ft frtnn the
pfoplf* of the community,
FLV THB n.AO
The r.-ommittee has also asked
that every fla*? in the villafre be
raii-ed on that day. to ."ihow that
Frcetwrt is behind this effort of
the people to erect a grand and
lastinic memorial to the men who
made a year of glorious history.
SATURDAV. APRIL 23
I.S THK DAY
Undtr' PowaHuJ Prottction. On A traliseoQtInental Santa Fe train we sav two Interesting kiddles, a boy of threo and a girl of six, who were bound frora Albuquerque, N. M., to Omaha. Tbo Ilttle girl wore a stoat manlla envelope plnneO to her frock, with the ticket Inclosed. On the outside of tlie envelope vere their names, parents^ names and des¬ tination, and some few odd charac¬ ters, which showed they were chlldrea of n member of one of the world'a mightiest fraternities. Many train¬ men belong to it, and in every car full of peoplo yoa will see several vafxp who are entitled to wear It but don't
Y.IICA.Pi!OVIDaiG EDUCATION FOR 136 FORMER SMCE lii
Sciiolarsliqis Representiiig a Total of $9,672 For Nassaa and Suffolk County Awarded—Every Sort of Giurse and Kind of School Included— 88 Beneficiaries From Nassau '
Mlneola, April 2ft.—The Young Men's Christian As80<<tatlon Is providing for iihe better education of 138 ex-service men In Nassau and Huffolk counties through .scholarships furnished by the National Wac Work Council of thti Young Men'.i Christian As.sociation, .snys the headquarters of the "\" for lln'so two counties today.
The awards made for these .scholar¬ ships represent a total of $9,672.25, which is even more money than i.-r us¬ ually allotted .since the allotments are made on the population of thlP di.strict .served. The moneys come from the na¬ tionwide educational fund .service.
Hpeaking as chairman of the romi/iif- tee, which has administered the funds for Na.s.sau County, V. H. Ru.ssell, gen.
Libraries In Hiatory, Harvard college led the way In America to the flrst Ilbrary. This In- atltatlon was established io 1088. Six¬ ty years later, in 1700, a public library was founded In Kew York city. The foUowlng year the Yale library waa founded and in 1781 Benjamin Frank¬ lin started a subscription Ilbrary In PhUadelphla, the flrst of Its kind in America. The United States llbrory, now called the Ilbrary of congress, was established In 1800, but in 1814 it wns burned by the British. It was rebuilt and now contains neoriy 2,000,- 000 volumes, and is one of the llnest in the world. As fnr back as 540 B. C., the flrst public library known to the world wns founded at Athens. England's flrst library was established at .St. Andrew's In 1411,—Chicago Journal.
»¦
Cripple's Vision. Sometimes dreams have been the means of briaging about extraordinary enres. A cripple, who for sixteen years was obliged to walk on his hands, because Iho mnscles of his legs were so contrncted|that he could not use tbem, was nsiek when therb came to him o rlslnn of a certain well tn CVimwall, and He renll/od some¬ how, In th^' .vay cne does In dreams.
Finding of Gold In Australia. The knowledge of Anstralla's won¬ derful resources of the precious metal dates from 1851. One day In April of that year there walked into the ofllce of the chief secretary at Sydney a bnshman named Unrgreavcs, who produced a tiny and closely folded bit of paper containing a few shiolcg grains, so smnll and so few tlim i':p chief secretary had to put on hi. » glasses before he could see tht'in. . j- body. It Is said, ever got so nin(;h wealth out of an Australian mine as Hargreavea him,self out of these grnln.Sv for he wns rewarded for his discovery by nn fippointment as com¬ mi.ssloner of crown lands, a grant of £10,000 and a pension of £250 from the New South Wales parliament Later he received £5,000 from the col¬ ony of Victoria.
» ,'
Melon Tidbit of Ancients. : Melons were flrst e.^tensively 1 cultl- rated In France early in the Seven¬ teenth century, but were known Jo the ancients from tho commeuceme/nt of our era. The Egyptians "grew jthem. They are snid to have been carrjed to Americn by Columbus, and to tlip Ma¬ lay archipelago by the Portuguese. No other fruit Is so variable In follagfc and habit, or undergoes so many metnmor- phoses by crossing its varieties, jail of which are fertile. They are gcovf-n ex¬ tensively in Asia, but little care lis be-
These symbols would have carried the
children from Uz to TImbuctoo, or any-1 eral manager of the Curt i.ss Engineer- where in the civilized world, in as ab-{ ing Corporation, Oarden City, .states solute safety as men could furnish, j that the number of men given a.s- ond In every car they met men who j .si.stnnce was Increa.sed through the will-
that If he washed In that well he i stowed on their cultivation, and[ they
would bo cured. The drenrn made such an lniprcs.slop on him Hint he made the Journey nnd bathed In the well, and aa a resalt bis lameness left lilm and he was itble to walk ns well as anyone. Of course, this Is very easily explained ns fnlth-hcniing, but still. It Is qnlte u remarkable Instance of the inflaenee of dreiuns,—London Tit- Bits.
African's Attitude Toward Work. The African male bas peculiar Ideas of his own dignity where work is con¬ cerned. He will work for a white man but he will never do anything for him¬ self if tbare are any^women about It Is beneath hla dignity to work. He will flsh and hunt, make nets and crude im- pliements and canoes, or pass away hla time smoking strong tobacco and dos¬ ing, but he would not think of lendlag his wife a helping hand. Be compels her to cu: down the treea for firewood and for his dugout canoes, and when they arrive at the spot in tbe forest ot jungle where he decides to build hla town the women must clear away tha tangled forest. To dvillzod mlnda tree felling, wood carrying and jungle clear¬ ing are certainly Inhorlous work for women, but an African womnn knows Bothing else, yet hers are much more healthful taaka than the white worn- an'a.
4 .
Not Approclatatf.
At one of the chaplalndea abroad tbe chaplain was a somewhat dour •Iderly Scotsman who persistently r*- ¦anted an innoration in the serrlcoi. A ffenerons and wealthy member of the congregation, tiiinklng it wonld be desirable to have the lesson read from a lectern Instead of frora the prayer desk, presented the chnrch with a handsome braas on>i in the form of an eagle; The mialater, how¬ ever, did not take kindly to the lec-
conseqnently never Improve. ,'They grow On sandbanks left dry by thej fall¬ ing rivers; if near a town a portion of the crop cnn be sold, but most of lit is valueless," as It rots If taken anj^ dis¬ tance by cart or boat.
Bread Kneaded on Korean Strneta Bread Is kneaded ou the stiteeta and with an excellent thoroughness, In itorea.'?' After mixing, the douih Is placed on a bonrd In the rond In front of the Ilttle bakeshop. Then two Istal- wart Koreans proceed to pound It with great beetles. The natives do/ not claim that the quality of the brefad is Improved by the addition of InipuW- ties in tlie way of Insects, and)dust which naturally result from the air treatment, says a bulletin of the National Geographic society. Bnt if one objects to eating It. a native will qnote a proverb which, being jlnter- preted, runs: "He who would anjoy his food sliould ""•• '""•' "''«•'• ' ' kitchen wnll."
not look over ' th#
Have Abject Belief In Fate. ' In the Koran Is found tbe idea tbat tta the brow of every human being an Inscribed invisible characters whIdi decree the events of hla life and his appointed time. The first Is termed "Kismet" the second "Edjel." F*om this belief springs ^jnquestioned aut)- nisslon to the decrees of fate. Death la considered by Moslems terrible only In the abstract and when viewed from a distance. In polite society it is nev¬ er mentioned aave under some poet¬ ical nami^. .."Cupbearer of the spheral Is one i)f the more common phrasea And never la It mentioned except wfeea prefaced by the words "Far be It frma you." '
¦— ¦ Had a Long Family Tree. Queen Elisabeth-was a victim to tbe weakness for long pedigrees. Among tern, and declined to use it the first the treasures of Hatfleld la a genealet-
morning, but toward evening he re¬ lented, and at the close of tite aervice be astonished and entertained his coo- f««Catlon by colemnly making the fol¬ lowing announcement: "I give notice that on Sabbath next the gospel wlU bo read from that burre<L"'^lfi(Unb(UKli Ban lama n.
^
Swiss Buy American Cheese. Talk about carrying coals to New>> castle I exclalnu the Philadelphia LecU ger. Pennsylvania is sending swiaa cheese to Switzerland. Grove bity is tbe place tbat made the record. Two carloads were ahlpped in 1920. It passed In Swltserland as the home¬ grown article—Scbwelzeckase ot fame. ' Grove city's dairy wonders do not end with tba manof actnra of "mai" \ swina cheese. Tbey include roquefort I cheese, too, exactly like the kind of^ whidi America custonnarUy imppitaj aoma 118,000,000 vrortb a year, except
leal tree, forty-two feet long, which was drawn up for Elisabeth, tracing ber decent back to Adam. In tbe Moro modem portion of the pedigree admirably painted coats of arms are attached to all the names, together with the dates of birth and death. It Is curious to note that Queen Elisa¬ beth's coats of arms fllled up one side only. The other side la left blank, presumably for the arms of the hua¬ band wbom it was thought ber majesity would aoma tlmd or other deign ta accept
— ' '
Knock at the Door to Qet Out Greek and Roman doors invariably open outwards. A person passing out ta a bouse Is, therefore, obliged ta knock on the door beforo opening It to avoid a colllsloo with a passerby.
- f ^'——
Honor In Left-Hand Qi«ei.mi]. Tb© giving of tlie left hand lu gwiet that Otvtt Olty*! article Is made trtaa I Ing Is a compilment in France, aoQ it pmra cow's aiUk and the Fianctjb pro^ { rewrved for relatives, or tboea beid Ir •et ll |flIH«ll«A Sb tlui mttk ot i^ta, aigh esteem by the givar.
would have risked their lives for tbem if necessary.—Kingston Journal,
, f ,
Indians Onee Lived In Spain. ,, Thnt the remote nncestors of tbe Amerlcnn Indians may have lived In Spain In prehistoric days Is Indicated by some very remarkable^ discoveries of rock paintings that nVlieologlsts have made at El Bosque, in the hilly country north of Alpern, a Spanish town about half wny between Albe- sete, situoted In the plains of I>a Mnnchfl. and Alicante, on the Meili- terranean. Anthropologists also say thnt these discoveries throw n fresh llgllt upon the life of prehistoric mnn In southwestern Europe during the Magdnlenian period of the great Ice age. These Pnlaeolithic tribes, whon not compelled by the vigor of the climate to flnd their dwelling In cav¬ erns where they obtnlned protection Bgnlnst both the Intense cold nnd the nttncks of ferocious animals, lived nnder rock shelters on the sides of vnlleys.—Detroit News.
ip
Deep Sea Bolshevlsta. The habit of attacking and endeav¬ oring to overthrow vonernble and other Institutions Is not consigned te human outlaws. One of the most per¬ sistent and ingenious of nature's icono¬ clasts la u marine worm, com¬ monly known as the shipworm, which swarms In certain waters, especially on the coasts of East Africa. It aj)- parenOy resents the introduction of wood into Its domain, and ^vhenever It comes across a ship, wharf, or pier formed of tlUs material. It takes at once direct action. Its method is to bore Into tho timber, following the trend of the grain, and whenever it encouuters a knot it mukes a slight detour, and again forges ahead. Tlius tbe erection, whatever it may be. Is rapidly undermined. It Is stated that a T'ooden viaduct which was erected across the arm of the sea which con¬ nects Mombasa with the mainland was practically destroyed by these veruiin of the deep.
__—^_f
"KIst of Whistles." The flrst organ ever used in a Scotch Presbyterian church was built by the famous Inventor, James Watt It was a small chamber affair set up for hla own use. Upon going to Birmingham to live he left It behind him In Glas¬ gow. There It came Into the posses¬ sion of the minister of St Andrew's church. For some time the organ was used for weekday choir practice only. Op a Sunday In August, 1807. however, an organist of the Episco¬ palian faith earned that denomination the name, of the "whistling kirk." The shocked presbytery declared the use of the "kist of whistles" contrary to the kirk law, and It was Ignominious- ly cast out after a single service. Not until 1860 waa the organ tolerated in St. Andrew'a. The ancient instrument ejected by the Presbytery of St. An¬ drew's is said to be still In exlstenca in the house of a Scottish squire near
BIggar.
»i II I a—1*1—^—
Buddhist Priests Tame Flsh.
Tbere is a certain bend of a certain river in Burma, where the flsh ara venerated, tametl, treated as pets and called to meals by priesta Just why this particular bend of this special river should be so signally set apart Is not known, but as these priests are Buddhists there is perhaps a connec* Uon between tbis favoritism and tha fact that in eve'ry land where Bud¬ dhism Is tbe faith, there are cerlain places dedicated to Buddha, und strange superstitions woven about tbe place. These fish are a species of cat¬ fish which grow to a large slxe, and they swim to tbe bank wben called. The priests not only feed the flsh, but they pet them as we do a dog or a cat Somo are so tame they do not even equina in fright when they are picked out of the water and gentif handled.
— '
Reoord Qeneotogical Tree.
A Spanish nobleman, the Count (t Orra, has a geneaiogienl tree complex In vtary branch fraoa Noab downward. A Bokten azk^flgtmoa io tbe family asfiiliieMwit. aad tlw count wiit^ffi^M thai '^ **^ coagnbaBMimtM the aarr- leas waBsi'rt to hagptuMt hr hla aa* aaator at tbt tlna tt tba Dthtgp.
ingness of a large percentage of the ap¬ plicants tn bear part of tho expense themselves. This made it possible for the committee to help many more men, and to give tho.se who stood in greater nee<l on account of physical disabilities and additional family burdens, corre.s- pfindingly larger scholarships. Some men voluntarily w-ithdrew their applica¬ tions as soon as they understood that in doing so fhey could help serve fel¬ lows less fortun;>te than them.selve.s. The .same can be .said for the .Suffolk County men.
Of the 136 awards, SS are from Nas¬ sau Connty, distributed among 24 com¬ munities, and 48 are from 26 communi¬ ties of .Suffolk County. The nearness of
whioh 2? are In city Y. M. C. A. schools. Whereas most awards could be appnoved flnally by the local oounty committee, applications for college courses had to t>e pa-saed upon hy the Educational Her¬ vlce Committee foli- New York State, of which A.ssistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt Is chairman. This committee authorized 19 collegiate awards for Nas.sau and Suffolk Counties.
Thc Young Mhn's Chrl.itinn As.soci¬ ation of Nassau and Suffolk counties. Inc., with offices at Mlneola, was charged with the responsibility for dis¬ tributing the funds allotted to its fleld. It did thia through two committees, one of each county. Each committee consl.sted of a representative of the ex- service men, on employee, and an em¬ ployer. K. H. Russell, genemi manager of the Curtiss Engineering Corporation, was chairm.an of the Na.s.-^au ('oiiiity committee, of which the other members were F. A. Suter of the American I.,e- gion (.'ounty Executive Committee, and C. J. Wllhelm, of Doubleday. Page A Company. The Suffolk County Com-j mlttee consl.sted of William M. Hudson, of Mattituck, chairman, Joseph
AMmiER TREAT DUE FANS
Card rW .Mendar To Be Pint nana .m iil 11 Tf MrH Mctlahe
Freeport April 2e.—If the flght fans of (he Aoaitorinm are treated to as good a card neat Monday as they were last week, there will bm no kick wTotn- Ing tronv any of the thousands who attend.
Mike McTighe who beat Battling Le- Vlnskey and HSrry Oreb, and who sto^pft4 the winning streak of Battling Ortega in Boaton will meet Tonuny Madden, a Imy that tUl Nassau County known. It -^ught to he a great mill.
Johnny Oaonon, who has won his last four flglits via the "K. A O. R. R..." will meet Joe Clifford, the boy who put Charlie Steele from Erin asleep In the heather wh«in he was here liwrt.
Paddy Bums sxnd Benny Williams for six (ounds, aiKl Walter Smith and Btily TWle for four rounds will com¬ pute the bill. Smith and Tine will be flghting for the championship of Hell- more.
^
Kratovillc. of RiverheaJ, and Marshal I paradise. Hny, of Southampton. ¦
Althougli the funds apixirtloned to Ixing Island were exhau.sted somo little time ago, a few belated cases .are still pending the receipt of flnal reports from New Vork as to whether or not fiirtliec funds 'remaining from apportionments to other parts of the state can be used | to cover these awards. In any case, no more applications for free .scholarships
Turks Witheut Pear of Death.
One of the reasons the Turks used to be such good stridlers was becanaa contempt for life is the essence of tbe faith for which tbey fought "Dlvlnaiy calm" tra worda that bave been em¬ ployed tp deacrtbe the profound and complete resignation to the will of AUah which is an integral part of the Mohammedan faith. The pious Mo¬ hammedan bas ever present In his mind the end of earth and the begin¬ ning of Ufe beyond. The Turk Is said to consider himself as an individual camped lu the world, as his nation has so long been camped in Europe. And he conrtders the Joys of life oniy shadows In comparison with the ever- ^-1 lasting delights which await blm in
mmgagmmmmsmBmmmmmm
Where Lincoln Waa tefng. A characteristic story of Llneela hi retold hy hla biogtapher. tba Bwr. Dr. Joha Weaicy HUL la 184a wben Lto- cola BMda bla atngte-temi race for eoa- greaa, be waa prevailed apMi to attaad a revival meeting condactiid try tha renowned evangeliat, Peter Cea%- wrigbt The famoos eachoKer called oo all desiring to gc ta hapym tt stand up. AU arose but tinoola. 'Aca be asked all to rise wbo <Bd not waat to go to belt Lincoln ramained Mill seated. "I am surprised," aald .iMttiar Cartwright "to see A|>e Lincola ttt- ting back there unmoved by tlieaa a^ peals. If Mr, Lincoln does not waat to go to heaven and does not want to escape hell, perhaps ha will t^ na where he doea want to go," Llncoia slowly arose and replied, "I am going to congress." And he went for ona term, aa per "gentleman'a agreement"
t>a! I : f ^
No Timbering in Thla Mine.
Tbe world's northernmost coal mlaa ta in Spitsbergen, well within tbe Are» tic circle. It lies nnder a depth of a thonsand feet of solidly frozen earth. The temperature In the rooms is 7 da> grees Fahrenheit 25 dacrees beloW freezing, the year round, and, natQ< rally, thei^ is no pumping. The trosea roof holds and there Is no timbering. The julne employs two hundred to th'kefe hundred men, an<^ there is said to be a constant waiting list of ona thonsand. The heating value at tba coal Is 14,873 B. T. U., and 80,000 tons were produced In 1919. The mine Is operated by American methods and with American machinery, having been purchased in 1904 by a Mr. Longyear of Boston, and later sold at a hand¬ some proflt to n Norwegian firm.— From the Compressed Air Mngaalna (N. Y.).
. 1
Women Predominate in Church.
In the United States there nre four times ns mnny women church ineia* bers ns men.
Nassau County men to the night and '"an be received. Many ex-.service and
technical .schools of New York City a counts to a groat extent for thc larger number of awards there.
How Awards Are Distributad
These .scholarships were awarded on an ahsoluteiy iionsectarian basis. As <a result members of all the largest de- naminations and men of no religious preference are Included among the .suc¬ cessful applicants.
Almost every sort of cour.se .and every kind of school are included in the range of .scholarships gfiinted. Embalming and landscape gardening are perhaps two extremes In the list of subjects. Others are plumbing, mechanical engi¬ neering, law, accounting, automobile con.struction and repair, and, in fact, practically every branch of technical, mechanical and commercial study.
Correspondence courses have been the most popular by a wide margin, 77 be¬ ing of this kind. Night and technical schools come next with 40 awards
other men interested in raising their ef¬ ficiency by further study are taking at their own expense, the correspondence coursps which the Y. M. C. A. is pro¬ viding !if cost, without any proflt. A large number of inquiries have already reached the otilce of the Long Island y. M. C. A. at Mineola. Following out tho motto, "The most service for the least money," the prices for these coins, es are considerably lower than tho.se charged by commercial school.s, while the standard of instruction .service are the highest.
Holy Cities of Old World. Allahabad Is the holy city of tlie In¬ dian Mohnmnicilnns, Bi-imres Is the holy city of the Hindus, while Cusco is that of the nnclent Incns. Jerusa¬ lem Is the holy city of the Jews and Christians, Mecca, Medina nnd Damas¬ cus hnve first plnce In the nffectlona of of the Molinmmednns.
EFFECTIVE AT ONCE
FORDSON TRACTORS
REDUCED TO
$625.00
F. O. B. DETROIT Representing a Reduction of I168.M
^lE
—.-rr^.
iSAtt^B^:''
^^H^^^^^^H
WB^'- «>.
¦H^H
MmmMm
¦K"
This Indlapenaable Farm Implcntent ia now wl(Un the reach of aO
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
The Ford Motor Company advises us that Ford can are now at the lowest possible figures and no further reductions can be expected.
Ali indications point to an active demand in thei early Spring and the temporary shutdown of the Ford factor' ies -win to some extent retard production. In order to have your car when you want it. it is ad¬ visable that you BUY OR ORDER NOW. We have a few cars on hand, but they will not last long \s^en the rush starts. The following prices are quoted f. o. b. Detroit
WITH SELF^TARTER
RimalNMd, |4€5.(KI lemat, $510.0«
Coope, $745.SS Stigm, 1795.00
FordioB Tnd«r, 1025.00
WmiOUT SELF-STARTER
Ckatm, 1360.00 Track, (PteBvaMlk tirct) $545.00
Complete line of genuine Ford Parta, acoessories, three, tut>eo
oils, greaata. etc.. etc
RBSPAIllINO AMD OVBEHAUUNO BT COMrvnBNT
MVOBANICS
W. T. HUTCHESON, Agent
SdeiffBMM wai Serrice StalieBB at Lyfcfk taA Wmetka TeLlOO. iyt«iATCBiiJft«dKiiiSt,|laip4MMl,l.L
1 N G E R^
j PORTABLE ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINES
We Have Them in Stock
FKEE TRIAL EASY TERMS
LITTLEFIELD-ALGER ELECTRIC CO.
235 Merrick Road
RockviUe Centre Tel. 1476
—ANNOUNCEMENT- ALBERT W. PEARSALL and FRANK C. PLACE wuh to an¬ nounce the consolidation of their offices in the new boild¬ inf, 2 Grand ATenue, Baldvrin, L. I., at Station. Phone 1080 Freeport. Real Estate and Insurance in all its branches, and said bilsineu wiB be hereafter conducted under the name of
PLACE & PEARSALL Rendering the same service as in the past,-^-Prompt, Efficient and Courteous Methods. Trustinij^ be favored with your patronage, we beg to remain,
Albert W. Pearsall -:- Frank C. Place
Upholstering knd Interior Decorating
FAY AND FAY
OUR SPECIALTY IS
RE-UPHOLSTERING your old furniture equal
to new.
DRAPERIES made io order.
SUP COVERS CUSHIONS MATTRESSES
CABINETMAKING FRENCH POUSHING
RenHsmber, we are experts, and we gladly give you an eatimate and tuggestionB free of charge.
NO ORDER TOO SMALL. No distance to far to go.
Our Sanitarjr Work Shops are
Located at 48 Soutli M#in St, Freeport, L L
(UPSTAIKB)
O^poiite Post Office
Telepiione, Freepert 1132-J
nmmn