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w/ STATE Off NEW YORK OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY * OF STATE Albany, July 24, 1909. To the Clerk of the County of Nassau S ir Nonce is H kreby Gives, that, at ~in General Election to be held * W IW UOIU 111 v ajiwo»AUt3A HtL VC, UUUUty this State on the Tuesday succeeding auditors, or other fiscal officers, author- the first Monday in November next ized to audit bills, accounts, charges, (November 2d), the following officers claims or demands against the county, may be lawfully voted for, to wit the legislature may confer such powers A Justice of the Supreme Court for upon said auditors, or fiscal officers, as the Second Judicial District, in the the legislature may, from time to time place of William D. Dickey, whose term deem expedient, of office will expire on the last day of AMENDMENT NUMBER FOUR. Conntv*ftm^hiatriftnev i ♦ v. Amending Section ten of Arr.cl** L Ll Dl*rric^0fflcer8 a 1» o to be eight 0f the Constitution, so t^at it “ i ' f r “ \la?„dar 0,, D«f T ber %Zt- ’uWe ?h»li h«eX r rnou,” Elec,tlo“ th” e ormToperty, or loan its money or credit rnrn^L 12 th® \?T ttie tool in aid of any individual, asiocia- th«repn-t.he Allowing tion or corporation 0r become directly proiwsed amendments to the Conscitu- or indirectly the owner of stock in, or __ __ bonds of, any association or corporation; AMENDMENT NUMBER ONE nor shall any such county, city, town or Amending Section twelve of Article village be allowed to incur any indebted- six of the Constitution so that it shall ness except for county, city, town or read as follows village purposes. This section shall not Sec. 12. No person shall hold the of- prevent such county, city, town or vil- fice of judge or justice of any court lag® from making such provision for the longer than until and including the last aid or support of its poor as may be au- d».v of TVir-omhor nov* =v.oii thorized by law. No county or city shall be allowed to become indebted for any purpose or in any manner to an amount which, including existing in debtedness, shall exceed ten per centum of the assessed valuation of the real es tate of such connty or city subject to day of December next after he shall be seventy years of age. Each justice of the supreme court shall receive from the state the sum of ten thousand dol lars per year. Those assigned to the appellate divisions in the third and fourth departments shall each receive in ad dition the sum of two thousand dollars, vixiiw u VM.13 DULAJU yjJL t Y> V VilUUBttllU UUUltrB, waatevavaai (./v/CAA KJJ VllO and the presiding justices thereof the naent rolls of said county or city on the c n m rvF 4-tarry 4-bir.rt on n si K ^ _____ i 1 n at\ a c c o c a m o n f •for* e f o f a y-xr* rx sum of two thousand five hundred dol lars per year. Those justices elected in the first and second judicial depart ments shall continue to receive from their respective cities, counties or dis tricts. as now provided by law, such ad ditional compensation as will make their aggregate compensation what they are now receiving. Those justices elect ed in any judicial department other than the first or second, and assigned to the appellate divisions of the first or second departments shall, while so assigned, receive from those depart ments respectively, as now provided by law.such additional sum as is paid to the justices of those departments. A jus tice elected in the third or fourth de partment assigned by the appellate divi sion or designated by the governor to hold a trial or special term in a judicial district other than that in which he is elected shall receive in addition ten dol lars per day for expenses while actually so engaged in holding such term, which shall be paid by the state and charged npon the judicial district where the service is rendered. The compensation herein provided shall be in lieu of and shall exclude all other compensation and allowance to said justices for ex penses of every kind and nature what soever. The provisions of this section shall apply to the judges and justices new in office and to those hereafter elected. AMENDMENT NUMBER TWO. Amending Section four of Article seven of the Constitution so that it shall read as follows- Section 4. Except the debts specified in sections two and three of this* article no debts shall be hereafter contracted by or in behalf of this State, unless such debt shall be authorized by law, for some single work or object, to be dis tinctly specified therein; and such law shall impose and provide for the collec tion of a direct annual tax to pay, and sufficient to pay. the interest on such debt as it falls dne, and aiso to pay and discharge the principal of such debt within fifty years from the time of the contracting thereof. No such law shall take effect until it shall, at a general election, have been submitted to the people, and have received a majority of nil the votes cast for and against it at such election. On the final passage of ouch bill in either house of the legisla ture, the question shall be taken by ayes and noes, to be dnly entered on the journals thereof, and shall be: “Shall this bill pass, and ought the same to re ceive the sanction of the people ? ” The legislature may at any time after the approval of such law by the people, if no debt shall have been contracted in pursuance thereof, repeal the same; and may at any time, by law, forbid the coutractiug of any further debt or liabil ity under such law; but the tax imposed by such act, in proportion to the. debt and liability which may have been con tracted in pursuance of such law, shall remain in force and be irrepealablo, and be annually collected, until the proceeds thereof shall have made the provision hereinbefore specified to pay and dis charge the interest and principal of such debt and liability. The money arising from any loan or stock creating such debt or liability shall be applied to the work or object specified in the act au thorizing such debt or liability, or for the payment of such debt or liability, and for no other purpose whatever. No such law shall be submitted to be voted on within three) months after its passage or at any general election when any other law, or any bill shall be submitted to be voted for or against. The legisla ture may provide for the issue of bonds of the state to run for a period not ex ceeding fifty years in lieu of bond here tofore authorized but not issued and shall impose and provide for the collec tion of a direct annual tax for the pay ment of the same1 as hereinbefore re quired. When any sinking fund created under this section shall equal in amount the debt for which it was created, no further direct tax shall be levied on ac count of said sinking fund, and the leg islature shall reduce the tax to n any or altered internet tion, be reckoned as a part of the city & I d ^ d l ^ ^ 2 d T> here^ter to be r a ^ the principal of snoh debt within fife* city purposes, in ■ i city of over one U shall lead as follows: , I t Ihw sold i It pie foe Section 27. The legislature shall, by I also to be submitted to She people ft* general laws, confer upon the boards of the purpose of voting thereon, the fol supervisor* of the several counties of ' 1~—:------------—■Urr’ . , . the state such farther powers of local legislation and adihinistration as the Legislature may. from time to time,deem expedient, and in counties which now have, or may hereafter have, county taxation, as it appeared by the assess- last assessment for state or county taxes prior to the incurring of such indebted ness, and all indebtedness in excess of such limitation except such as now may exist, shall be absolutely void, ex cept as herein otherwise provided. No county or city whose present indebted ness exceeds ten per centum of the as sessed valuation of its real estate subject to taxation, shall be allowed to become indebted in any farther amount until such indebtedness shall be reduced with in such limit. This section shall not be construed to prevent the issuing of cer tificates of indebtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the col lection of taxes for amounts actually contained or to be contained in the taxes for the year when such certificates or revenue bonds are issued and payable out of such taxes; nor to prevent the city of New York from issuing bonds to be redeemed ont of the tax levy for the year next succeeding the year of their issue, provided that the amount of such bonds which may be issued in any one year in excess of the Limitations herein continued shall not exceed one-tenth of one per centum of the assessed valua tion of the real estate of said city sub ject to taxation. Nor shall this section be construed to prevent the issue of bonds to provide for the supply of water, but the term of the bonds is sued to provide the supply of water, in excess of the limitation of in debtedness fixed herein, shall not ex ceed twenty years, and a sinking fund shall be created on the issuing of the said bonds for their redemption, by raising annually a sum which will pro duce an amount equal to the snm of the principal and interest of said bonds at their maturity. All certificates of in debtedness or revenue bonds issued in anticipation of the collection of taxes, which are not retired within five years after their date of issue, and bonds is sued to provide for ttie supply of water, and any debt hereafter incurred by any portion or part of a city if there shall be any such debt, shall be included in ascertaining the power of the city to become otherwise indebted; ex cept that debts incurred by the city of New York after the first day of Janu ary, nineteen hundred and four, and debts incurred by any city of the second class after the first day of January, nineteen hundred and eight, and debts incurred by any city of the third class after the first day of January, nineteen hundred and ten, to provide for the sup- ply of water, shall not be so included; and except further that any debt here after incurred by the city of New York for a public improvement owned or to be owned by the city, which yields to tho city current net revenue, after mak ing any necessary allowance for repairs and maintenance for which the city is liable, in excess of the interest on said debt and on the annual instalments necessary for its amortization may be excluded in ascertaining the power of said city to become otherwise indebted, provided that a sinking fund for its amortization shall have been established and maintained and that the indebted ness snail not be so excluded during any period of time when the revenue afore said shall not be sufficient to equal the said interest and amortization install ments, and except further that any in debtedness heretofore incurred by the City of New York for any rapid transit or dock investment may be so excluded proportionately to the extent to which the current net revenue received by said city therefrom shall meet the interest and amortization installments thereof, provided that any increase in the debt incurring power of the city of New York which shall result from the exclusion of debts heretofore incurred shall be avail able oaly for the acquisition or construc tion of properties to be used for rapid transit or dock purposes. The legisla ture eliall prescribe the method by which and the terms and conditions un der which the amount of any debt to be so excluded shall be determined, and no such debt shall be excluded except in ac cordance with the determination so pre- anrihed. Tha lAtrialtAtrirti mow in ita riia tto iK S Z M itis' s o u , . ^ ?^lh fed pursuant debtedness of a city valid at the time of anv Dart of^snch k 1)011 itB inception studr thereafter become in- I^irPt^ t L?^V« nfb i n ^ Jd^ ’nh0W; valid by reason of the operation of any be alVrod eh?U^n2i °f the provisions of this section. When- “ “ 7 P\* .?* 8Qch > b t ever the boundaries of any city are the - ---------- -------ibitants, or any to the sintine 8noti. city of this state, in addition to d.bt whM tS.SJ. AMENDMENT NUMBER THBEB. ^ , ^ £ = 2 8 ^ in rwpeot to county or ; 0 * ~ | stid Qtnend Btoottoa there to lowing proposition or question embod ied in Section eight of Chapter three hundred and ninety-one of the Laws of nineteen hundred and nine, herein des ignated as Proposition Number One: PROPOSITION NUMBER ONE “Shall chapter three hundred ninety- one of the laws of nineteen hundred and nine, entitled ‘An act ni^kinp> provision for issuing bonds to the ' amount of not to exceed seven million dollars for the improvement of the Cayuga and Seneca canals, and providing for a submissson of the same to the people to be voted upon at the general election to be held in the year nineteen hundred and nine’, be approved?” * Civic Characteristics. A young man who had money was out in a rowboat with three young women of the chorus. The boat sud denly developed a leak. The leak gained so rapidly that it required vig orous bailing to keep the craft afloat until the young man could row It ashore. The New York girl bailed with her hat. The St. Louis girl used her hands. And the Chicago girl utilized her slipper.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Great Seal State of New York City of Albany, this twen ty-fourth day of July, in the year one thousand nine hundred and nine. SAMUEL S. KOENIG, Secretary of State. State of New York, ) Connty Clerk’s Office, > . ss:— Nassau County. ) “What Shall I Do?” That is the problem which fre quently confronts everyone — espe- Given under my hand and j clal,y parents with small children. A Seal of office of the Sec- alight Illness treated at once often retary of State, at the saves a long period of sickness and expense—sometimes prevents death. The trouble Is that so few people can | think on the Instant what treatment to apply, even if they have the knowl edge necessary to recognize the dis ease and know what simple remedies are best. Tfr-saaeUthls want at small expense the Book Publishing House, t ___ \l-. . t , , | 134 Leonard street. New York City, L hereby certify that I have compared I . ___ , . . . . the foregoing with the original Notice of ' la 8endln6 postpaid a doctor book on General Election from the Secretary of State remaining on file in this office,and that the same is a correct transcript therefrom and of the whole of such original. Witness my hand and official seal at Mineola, this 29th day of July, one thousand nine hundred and nine. (Sealj THOS. S. CHESHIRE, Clerk. receipt of sixty cents in stamps. The book Is Illustrated, contains 698 pages, explains symptoms, causes and simple means of overcoming or dinary illness'a. It was written by the eminent J. Hamilton Ayrea, A. M., M. D. It Is a volume which should be in every household, as no one can tell what moment he may re quire the knowledge contains. NEWSY GLEANINGS. This Mantel..: In Oak, GleSe Flnlafe $15 Oak C a b inet M anta la from S i 2 ap MANTEL 4 FIREPLACE FITTINGS of all kinds, at city prices B A T H R O O M S AND VESTIBULES TILED O R N A M E N T A L C E N T E R S AND BR A C K E T S D. M O R R ISO N Show R o o m s _____________ Grove Street. Freeport D. S e t t s F. Jsattew An earthquake at Panama did not damage the canal. The Home of Gloom. The London Lancet lives in a hot rid world where whatever is is wrong. A serious epidemic of typhoid fever i All its visible universe is fraught broke out in Cobalt, Ontario. The Waters-Pierce Oil Company announced its property in Texas as for sale. President Diaz started a fund for the relief of Monterey, Mexico, with a subscription of $30,000. The mutineers at Athens over turned the Cabinet and obtained their demands without bloodshed. A breakfast in honor of the aero nauts was given at Rheims, France. Cordial speeches were made. The new City Directory showed with deadly and hideous peril. It | finds terrible germ-menace in the cel- j luloid collar button, cholera morbus, j let us say, in a leather razor strop,! sudden death in a blue shirt. What- I ever is natural and pleasant and fa miliar, that, our contemporary holds j to be fatal and can prove it. A cor I rent Lancet man would lead a life so thoroughly sterilized that escape from it in the bottom of the Thames would be the grandest joy in sight. The Lancet’s new fear that cheap Tel., 8-J Hictstille. Sutter’s MARBLE, GRANITE a n d B l u e s t c n e W o r k s H ic k s v ilie, L. I. opp. L. I. R. R. depot L*rse stock to •elect from conMivntly on hand. M o n u m enra and Uoa.dsionen at s h o rt notice I/ota enclosed w ith m a rble or granite. W o rk erected In any cem etery W o rk gu a ranteed strictly first class. OCR MOTTO: Practical W o rkm en—Heat Workman •hip—R e liable Prtcee Freeport O ffice, 2 4 Brooklyn Avenue 41,2 92 more names for Manhattan i transportation by bus and car line and the Bronx than last year. A cave-in at Scranton, Pa., did $200,000 damage. Most of the Four teenth Ward settled eight feet. The Hudson-Fulton Commission is sued an official circular announcing the program for the celebration. | The latest estimate of the damage by flood at Monterey, Mexico, is 1400 dead, 15,000 homeless and $12,000,- ! 000 property loss Joe Kane, eleven, confessed to kill ing Frances Lord, aged three, at Bur- 1 lington, N. J., and said he did not know why he shot her. Brave and cool headed nuns led 600 children to safety from a Are that destroyed St. Malaehy’s Orphan | Asylum at Rockaway Park, L. I. The police of Bar Harbor, Me., j closed a cottage where gambling had paving the way to a race of physical weaklings is relatively sane and sen sible. Walking a mile is good for the body, and most men will not do it when they can ride for tuppence. Hence the relation between tram cars and spindleshanks. But it ought tc be remembered that walking is not the only exercise in the world There are men who will ride fiv( miles in a degenerate vehicle, only to dismount at the end and work them selves into a lather at tennis, golf oi what not. A very large proportion of men are rather interested in keep ing themselves ‘‘fit.” If the buses are making them flabby they will get out and walk. Moreover, the Lancet must admit that, many men practice pedestrianism professionally. There W M . G . M I L L E R Builder and General Contractor M A I N O F F I C R 16 Bedford Ave., BROOKLYN, N- Y, *. T. and H. J. Telepkema. 187 Oreenpelnt Public Buildings, Churches and Heavy Factory Building Made a Specialty Appraiser of FLeal Estate and Adjuster o f Fire Losses mond Post Dispatch. been carried on and drove those who are postmen, for instance. — Rich- conducted the place out of town. It was said that New York City curb brokers would be prosecuted for circulating misleading information regarding mining stock s through the mails. RESIDENCE, FREEPORT, NEW YORK YelepHoxxe CommeetioRMi QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOl PROMINENT PEOPLE. J. P. Morgan, who has been enjoy- | ing a yachting trip, returned to New H York City. Former Solicitor-General Hoyt was selected as the State Department’s ! new counsel. John T McCutcheon, the artist and cartoonist, of Chicago, went to Africa to paint wild animals. Governor Hughes, of New York, en tertained Governor Fort, of New Jer sey, at Saranac Inn, N. Y. President Taft and Secretary Knox began work on the new Far Western bureau of the State Department. Mark Twain was ordered by his doctor to cut down bis smoking. He is suffering from “tobacco heart.” Ricardo Jiminez, who was favored Between Times. ‘‘Look here, Jane, it seems to me that you’re asking for more money all the time.\ \That’s a delusion, John, dear. If you'll think a minute, you’ll realize that I’m spending it, part of the time.”—Cleveland Leader. SENSE ABOUT FOOD Facts About Food Worth Knowing. It Is a serious question sometimes to know just what to eat when a per son’s stomach is out of order, and most foods cause trouble. Grape-Nuts food can be taken at any time with the certainty that it will digest. Actual experience of peo ple is valuable to any one interested in foods. A Terre Haute woman writes: \I by President Zelaya, of Nicaragua- 1 had 8uffered with Indigestion for elected P r e s i d e n t nf rw.-» Pie* ’ ! about four years, ever since at attack of typhoid fever, and at times could was elected President of Costa Rica. Jens Sverson Westengard, of Chi cago, has been appointed geueral ad viser to the Siamese Government at Bangkok. Dr. T. G. Bonney was elected presi dent of the British Association for the Advancement of Science for the year 1910-’ll. Collector Loeb, of New York City, boarded the liner George Washington to see that the customs laws were en forced strictly. Justice Gaynor returned to New York City from Europe. He would not say whether he would accept a nomination for Mayor. Bishop Fallows, of Chicago, ex pressed the conviction that communi- action with spirits is possible and soon would become frequent. The British Government decided to offer Sir Wilfrid Laurier the position of First Governor-General of South Africa as a tribute to his reconcilia tion qt rare* in Canada, Killed 14,8«6 Seals m is Year. A dispatch was received at the De partment of Commerce and Labor, Washington, D. C., from the North American Commercial Company, of San Francisco, which has the Pribi- loft Islands' sealing lease. It says that the company’s catch for the past season amounted to 14,366 skins, within 634 of the full quota allowed under their contract with the Govern ment. ... __ , _ _ Spiked in Knee by Fish. When fishing near his home at Cor sica, 8. D., Isaac Vanden Boe hooked a large bullhead, which on being jerked into the boat struck him on the knee, one of the horns of the fish penetrating the knee for some distance, causing blood poisoning to set in later. The man's life was in danger for some time. ■ffato Has am Ante I f lf e ij ■as* b2Stenr MM service against the Moors In Morocco is employed by the Moo Spain. eat nothing but the very lightest food and then suffer such agony with my stomach I would wish I never had to eat anything. “I was urged to try Grape-Nuts and since using it I do not have to starve myself any more, but I can eat it at any time and feel nourished and satisfied; dyspepsia is a thing of the past, and I am now strong and well. “My husband also had an exper ience with Grape-Nuts. He was very weak and sickly in the spring. Could not attend to his work. He was put under the doctor’s care, but medicine did not seem to do him any good un til he began to leave off ordinary food and use Grape-Nuts. It was positive ly surprising to see the change In him. He grew better right off. and naturally he has none but words of praise for Grape-Nuts. “Our boy thinks he cannot eat a meal without Grape-Nuts, and he learns so fast at school that his teach er and other scholars comment on It. I am satisfied that It is because of the great nourishing elements in Grape- Nuts.” “There’s a Reason.” It contains the phosphate of potash from wheat and barley, which com bines with albumen to make the gray matter to dally refill the brain and nerve centres. It Is a pity that people do not know what to feed their children. There are many mothers who give their young sters almost any kind of food, and when they become sick begin to pour the medicine down them. The real way Is to stick to proper food and be healthy and get alohg without medi cine and expense. Ever reed the above letter? A warn omm appears fro* time to time. They are geealae, tree, sad fall of bansae Edison Phonograph Victor Talkino Machine What better combination can be imagined. Stop and think of this father of a family, on your way home, and then stop in and,hear the machines talk and have one sent home. A very small preliminary payment will make it yours. ALL the American selections to date—including the new Amberol four minute records—in stock. The only place where a com plete line of records can be found on Long Island. C . A . F U L T O N 8 42-48 W. Merrick Road FREEPORT, L. I. ooooooooooooooooooooooovooooooooooooooooooooooooeoo Smith P. harsall Review Building NOTARY PUBLIC WITH SEAL L. A R A T A , Successor to i * fw* ■_* c yg/1 p 1' e x/vz^N/-v''-y>y*^y'N>,'-*y\zvxz'x> -«a i J • * *1 L2 *V L » C ^ Tbl. C h II N.Y nnd N J , 94 J t . VERME a CO. Wholeeale, Retell Foreign and Domestic > and Vegetable Delicacies ALSO F IN E C O N F E C T I O N E R Y City Prices Poanota a Special Goods delivered, promptly Main St.,near tholBank, F R E E P O R T D E A L E R IN Hay, Feed AND RAYMOND J. MILLER H 7 S. Ocgftm A v n u r , F r e e p o r t B h K m B u MK l t f MONEY to LOAN on FIRST MORTGAGE at ft Par Cwt laiftravaft ftaal Estate. First Mortgagee Bearing Interest *« • Per Cent. For Sale. HAFT 6 FARRINGTON, 8 * 0 VmiUtm street. JAMAICA. M. V. Bundle Wooi Market & Garden Si Seed P otatoes fertilizer D R I E D C R A I N S :horch Street FREEPOST. N. f | S i O IN S of < ■ w r n < I#