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N A S S A U C O U N T Y B B Y I X ’W WOLVES OF THE ARCTIC. LIFE IN OPORTO. GRAMOPHONE TRICKS. R e v e r sing a Chime of B e ils P r o d u o e e a Most Peculiar Effect. Many remarkable tricky van be played with a gramophone, tricks >nc would never have dreamed poe- Theee W h ite Coated C o w a rds Sw a rm Won P ictu r e of ■ Bu^/ Seaport C ity I* O ver th e ley North. N o rthern eortu g e l. It was iikv, a picture from one of The life of the common people of the old books on travel in .Siberia. Oporto centers in the Vraca da Ri- Twelvo width wolves were leaping beira, an irregular little tuputre, fool over the anow directly at uk . and dust swept, down by the river 1-ible on an ordinary machine, and f iction would have uf now fight- front. Here ox teams and long- with a few seconds preparation ling for our lives, knives between i shoremen come in contact with the only. Indeed, a highly comical ef- teeth and rifles constantly going. : ((ueer craft of the harbor and take | fc l . an be obtained by twisting the On the contrary, we prayed that . up their burdens. Here one max |tiin e button\ sharply up and down they would not stop, hut keep com-1 best studv the strange rigs of the ; »i every note while you are running ing on. Undoubtedly they would boats and the picturesque hulls oi j sentimental love duet. Have you have done so had we hoen able to ihe barvos <le toldv, shaped like gon- over tried it? When the lady sings control our dogs, who were now doles; the ilat bottomed punts and. , nigh, run it up to a perfect shriek, wild with excitement, whining,y.- lp-g most characteristic of ail, tin- high i ing and straining on tin- traces. pooped barcos rabello, the great We shouted and threatened and boats that bring their precious car- lashed with tile whip, the same time : goes of port wine thiough shoal ami holding buck with ail our strength vancl bar down the turbid Dntirn to ion the upstindcrs of the sledge, the warehouses of Oporto. I The leader of the band stopped, stir- Colliers from Kngland, coasting | ven d us critically for ati instant 1 .hips from Bordeaux and tialtciu ai d wheeled, followed by the others, and native vessels from the Azores ml then, when the loving bass comes iu, run him down into the .■liar. The effect i> charming bv- \ mid description. Verliaps the ino.-i curious experi ence in human life is to hear back wards. Such an idea seems impos- ri. The M an orAflfaman That Banks Money „ Piles Up a Store or Comfort and P rosperity Ity the time that we could tear the complete the background. I covers from the rifles they were out larger liners no longer ps of range. reacherous liar, hut anchor instead I have no compunction whatever in the new artificial harbor at l>-ix- in shooting at these sneaking cow- , ucs, a few mile. away. ; ards of the animal world. Axel The broad quay that skirt, the Heiberg Land is infested with them* j river reflects this cosmopolitan life their tracks being found intermin- iind recalls picturesque Santa Lucia gling with those of the musk ox and in the liex’dax of its squalor and ac- white caribou. A mother and her tivitx. The citx wall that borders young are surrounded, worried to jt js honeycombed with the trog- deatli and torn in pieces. During lodvtic shops of ship chandler#, sail- Sverdrup'a expedition the wolves or#’ retreats and evil smelling bur- camr into camp, attacked and kill- | rooms. The houses that overlook it cd some of the dogs and later, or flaunt drying linen and pots of iihe trail, even attacked one of I he mmdx flowers to the sun; the motley . men who had no other weapon to throng that crowds its granite quay -ible. It is quit on a. gramophom GRAND OPENING O F T H E GOLDEN RULE M ARKET M . F . K O C H , P r o p . F o r m e r l y t h e F r e e p o r t M a r k e t 7 4 S. Main S treet, Freeport, L I. SATURDAY, FEB. 19th O U R O P E N I N G Legs of C a n a d a Lam b California H a m s R o a s t i n g P o r k S t r i p s of B a c o n DAY S P E C I A L S 1 8 c lb . 1 2 1 - 2 c lb . 1 6 c lb . - 1 9 c lb . ; defend himself with than a ski No animat in the north is so eu during, none has such a wide range, TH E F R E E P O R T B A N K C a p i t a l , $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 S u r p l u s , $ 7 0 , 0 0 0 Main S t r e e t - - - FREEPORT, N. Y J e h n J . R a n d a ll , P r e s id e n t D. W e e le y P i n e , V i c e - P r e s i d e n t W illia m S . H e l l C a s h i e r Edgar Jackson George M. Kandall William 8. Hall Harvey B. Smith B O A R D O F D I R E C T O R S Wallace H. Cornwell Coles Pettit William E. Colder * Daniel B. Raynor Smith Cox l). Wesley Pine John J. Ran lall arc sturdy sen folk, bronzed and weathered by wind and spray. The houses rise abruptly one above an other. topped at last by the huge bulk of the hirihop’s palace, looming ut the end of the airy bridge, the Ponte de Dom Luiz Primeim, that leans the ITouro from bank to bank on the daring sweep of it. single .keleton arch. The streets that lead from the - -- ------------ iiuux to the upper town are quite W h y C u v i e r W o r e , B . e r d . __ m<.(ji,.Val in character— dark, tortu- “To save tunc is to lengthen life . <]U> 1#ues overshadowed by tall houses and further shaded by j»ro- und none has oaaier existence, their food being musk oxen, caribou, arctic hare, lemmings and possibly foxes. There is also every evidence to believe that wolves prey upon seals along the ice foot.—Donald ti. Macmillan, Leader of (’rocker I,and Expedition, in Harper’s Magazine. Open except legal holidays, from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m., Saturdays 9 a. m. to 12 m. Offers facilities and inducements in every departm ent equal to those of vative management. i is a proverb found in one form or another in almost every language, and Cuvier, the great naturalist, William G. Miller | f0iulj ijfe tou gbort to accom- simplc •'trick\ You have seen. The ; dniibtless, a lilm run through ba< k- Uic ward at the kiui-matograph enter tainment#. It cuu lx- done m exact l\ the same manner 'in lbe gramo phone, only xxc are dealing, of ' nurse, with sound instead of action. The operation i- xen simple. I'wist the “sound box\ into a per pendicular position, or, r a t l in, xvith i slight slope backward, in order that the disk max la run in the op nositc direction in xvhal is usual. | •'lari the pin near the center of the j • li..k, turning lighth xxith the linger, i 11 will not injure the much inert ol the gramophone, but it is ad visable not to experiment with a favorite record — at least to start xxith—as one is liable to gel a verx bad scratch right across the plate, and very deep! -But the effect is xvort.h I he danger; it is unique. If xou plat a brass bund even the emu- poser himself would tiol recognize in* masterpiece. If you put on a talking record the man appears to he speaking a foreign mullIsonous language. But the most remarkable effect is to pul on a “chime of hells.\ In this reversed manner there is no “strike\ of the bell; the -mind sim- T E L E P H O N E 851 - W The New York Coffee Mills P. J. K E I R N A N 48 S. MAIN ST., FREEPORT, N. Y. O p p o s it e P e s t O f f ic e W H O L E S A L E A N D RETA I L It’s all in the Blending Our Teas are Simply Delicious j it Thirty Years* E x p e r i e n c e a t Your C o m m a n d O R D E R S D E L I V E R E D jeeting balconies. In their | ply ru*lics tin in ever increasing hops cobblers and carpenters, sad- | waves nun ihen snddnilv plish all he w ished to do, though Interest at'the rate of 3 per cent, paid ! m08t econom ical of the hours, time deposits, three months or more. foun(]- hc “that mv Draftfl issued on all parts of Europe. , • , . r Safe deposit boxes to rent. $5 per; shaving took me a quarter of. an either the New York or Brooklyn annum. hour a day. 1 hi*' iiuikes seven ar<l Banks or Trust Companies, and every Accounts of corporations, companies, u half hours in a month and ninety accommodation consistent with conser- societies, etc , solicited. hours, or three days and eighteen hour.-, verx m arly four i U ix - a year. DANIEL M ORRISON R e s i d e n c e an d S h o w R o o m s 41 N. Grove S t. Freeport, L. I. In my s h o w ro o m s you will find at City P r i c e s C a b i n e t and Tile M a n t l e s A n d i r o n s =nd Fire S e t s B a s k e t G r a t e s G a s G r a t e s and Logs S p a r k G u a r d s a n d S c r e e n s Tile B a t h R o o m s an d V e s t i b u l e s This di-coverx siuggi'ivd me: Here was I cxiinplaiiiin. that time xxas too short; that tin- year# flexv by too swiftly; that I had not hour# enough for work, iind in the midst of my | complaining I was xv as ting nearly ||(,r-!. ^ four days a year in lathering my -— ---------------- face with a shaving brush, and 1 re- How W e a s e l s C a r r y Eggs, solved thenceforth to let my beard j One morning grow.” __ prised crossing the public highway t]lei> and bookbinders ply their just when xou are rvpeetiiig the ! $ trades, using tools and implements clash of the'hammer The sound of ’ $ itl centuries ago. 1 especially re member one dark alley tilled with -mit hies, in which was such a din of hammers hearing on brass, copper ami zinc, reverberating, thrown back and fortli from xxall to wall, that mv -crises were hexvildercd. 'let vliil- dten plaved pcacefullx in the gut ter.-, while liouscwive- hung out their linen on the balconies over head, quite oblivious and sceminglv Ernest Pei.xolto in Serib- the liell i- rever-ed, and the ear is j $ I I A not .dartled xxiili a -uddeu strike. The ellcct i- pallietii and lieauliful, something like . ai- at night.— Lon don Strand Magazine. Foolish W o r r y . Ii - pitialile i\ ..... iiuxx ul'l some i lolks b e e o l l i e I l l - l u r e l i e . I'earll mill- A die life. Tliex uiiilcrmiiu ilu'ir own ; A live- by eari xing liurden- that never j j materialize. Tiny are alxvn > I1111' j 2u roxving trouble ami making them-j Jr selves ne1'ilv-- \ on: . \nd the sail 1 T- i ...... I'srt of il all is ihni mental trouble I weasel was sin- ! , , . , i- xer. real. It - a lugger Inirden Ilian pliy-ii al weights. If folk-* could only be lauglit they would • leading from .Jedburgh into Oxnniu B . . Reel P o w e r In t h . World. Wal,.r | t W.|S ..l^ervcd to be elirrv- It is a great t h ing to start out m ; s„im,t|lill!f im(lPr its chin and ' sr1\ 11 \ \l lllv n ';' h\'u»; active life with Hie resolution that : U(Ta]ns, it(, s,,.m,n . Ml.vk, , gl'‘s that deepen thmr wnnkf - and you will not he a mere cipher m ; /U1|1 wlllin vl>llu, d()g belonging to your community, hut a real <<'u-; ,|H. „nlookcrs made a dash structive force; t h a t you will stand ,lt vhe littk, t.rpature it dropped its for aonieUmig more than a real liv- ||l|nlt.n_ lt lM.n-s egg—and, gliding umler tlu* roadside hedge, disap peared in ihe woodhmd. On being pjckrd up the egg was tound to lx1 11 • I f I I Z v 1 I t U / - V • 1 i unstenilx their steps. Worn is far more enervating. Utah\ any physical » » A » & We beg to announce to the public that we have increased our lumber yard facilities, and are adding to our Flock of building sup plies. so that xve will soon be in a position to furnish any kind of Building Material. We intend to make our# the most completely equipped yard on l-ong Island Our stock will include Brick. Lime, Cement, Sewer Pipe, Flue Linings. Patent Plaster, Plaster Paris. Wall Lath, Metal I.ath, Stucco Board and all kinds of Mason M ater ials; also Timber, Sheathing, Siding, Shingles, Flooring, Mouldings. Beaver Board, Sash. Doors. Trim, Millwork, Roofing and Sheathing Paper.-; also Glass, Builders’ Hardware and Paints. Mr. Wallace R. Post, for several years Vice President of the Lewis H. Russ Company, will he in charge of the deliveries, which we will endeavor tv make promptly as required. Our shop for the filling of order.- for Storm Sash, Screens, Frames and other millwork will be m charge of Mr. George W. Earle, who will see that all such material supplied by us i- satisfactory in every respect. Our Mr. Ernest S. Randall was for many years associated with Mr. Lewis H. Ross in the management of the Ross & Randall Com pany (afterw a rd the Lewis H. Ross Company) until his retirement from that Company five years ago, and is familiar with every branch of the retail lumber business Our grades and prices will compare favorably with any other lumber yard, and we would tie pleased to estim ate on and to receive your order- for anything you may requin- in the Building Material fine. Si miii after January 1, I91ti, our office will be located at our yard. No. 15 North Long Beach Ave . Freeport, L. 1. A A £• A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A $ SOLVE THIS MYSTERY FOR YOURSELF ing g etter or a dollar gatherer; that S p e c i a l t y you will not he merelx one more i citizen, hut a sl rong. robust, vigor- ------------------' on# force, a power respected, a force that moves things. To he known as a progressive man who stands for everything that is for the better ment of his community, every one should l)C ambitious to be some- W a s h i n g Money, thing as a citizen besides a special- T|,e ma< limcv fiir wash mg soiled ist in his vocation. bills at the treasury department in Washington are electrically opera! JOHN J. RANDALL COMPANY Present Office, No.|6 Brooklyn Ave., FREEPORT, L. I. train, and the worst of il i- that [ mo.-t things we worry about x e , - * A A A A A A A A A A A A A » A A A A A A A A A A A A A A A 0 5 ' ^lappell. IT- tlii- di\ipating factor j that's so potent in pmduimg Xmer- ii uniti-. I’eim-ylxania Grit. „ Somewhere in this vicinity is a. person with whom yon have business to transact. It may he that your business with this person is tp sell or to rent property—to sell used furniture, machinery, fixtures, an auto to interest this person in some en terprise of your own. Or, it may he that this person, among all the people of the neighborhood, is your “logical” employer. But the person is elusive. You do not know the name or address. You do not know whether the person is man or woman. You do uot know whether you have ever met the person. So far as you may know it may l»e someone whom you do not know personally. It’s a real mystery—one calling for yowr own solution. And, if you have a little of vision, a little of courage and persistence, you can solve the mystery—and get acquainted with the person with whom you have busi ness to transact. You can solve it through your intelligent use of classi fied advertising. Your offer or your quest, segregated with others of like character in the classified columns of this newspaper, will attract the attention of your elusive “sotue|>ody.” Not, perhaps, in a day -although that frequently hap pens. But with the same |>ersisto»ce which you apply to other, perhaps lesser, tasks you will lie successful. It’s an amazingly interesting experiment- this matter of making a classified advertisement a tracer, a detect ive, nix investigator for you —and a salesman as well. NASSAU COUNTY REVIEW T E L E P H O N E 6 A N D 9 without h crack. The nearest juml- lr\ run i- about !100 xards distant from the place where tlu weasel wa- i 11 tereepted.—Scotsman. Boy’s Apt Reply. c(] .ul(j p-nded by two girls The soiled lulls are laid on u m i n ing belt and a- they are carried inl “One of (lie p rettiest compliments I have ever had paid to me,” said Mine. Melba, “ xxas at one of the smaller Australian towns, Mount Morgan by name. Two little boys j |jfi||, |i(,lwv,.M t w „ These belts Even T h e n She D i d n ' t Smile. The young woman had -pent a liii.-x day. She had broivheuten fourleeii -alespeople, bullyragged a floor-| Gold xvalker. argued \ivlorinusly xxith a milliner, laid doxvn the law lu a mo- di-te, nipped in the hud a taxi ; ehautTeur'- attempt to overcharge her, made a street car conductor i -top the car m the middle of a ] Painless D entistry S peciaity C r o w n and Lady B r i d g e W o r k in A t t e n d a n c e 1 the machine another holt clones j block for her, discharged her maid over them so that they are securely , , , r , ,l> i are of blanket material and between the hall, ami I let them come in 1 - ......... . > and engag'd another and otherwise refused to alloxv herself to he im- posed upon. Yet she did not smile that night xxhen a young man begged: ‘Let me he your protevtor through Kansas City Star. were unable to gain admission , . them the bills pass over and around and sit behind the orchestra At fl of rol]s in a tank of soap- thc end of the concert 1 told them , <m|_ Tllih ,ss both cleanses , that they owed me a guinea apiece. an(| gU,ri|ij,,,g They are then life The older of the two rose to Ins , 8(,d through rinsing water on to feet, saluted, and said. Madame, rolls, wliielt drv and iron a Test of Sociability, we owe you much more than that. , t]|<in| ' “Mi- Eliza Beenii- is ju.-t a- uice Don’t you think that was a great sb,. be.” declared her neigh- compliment ?” said Mine. Melba. No.. Ring.. bor, Mr.-. Elderly, “but thereV one Hindu married women wear a thing about her that I don’t like, nose ring of the value suitable to she isn i sociable, their position. Sometimes it is situ- |j(.r i i icnd expre—ed surprise al ply a wire of gold; sometimes it is this accusation anil began to defend set with valuable and brilliant dia- ! Eli,.,, monds. Of whatever description, j -q | knoxx.\ mi id Mrs. El- breaking in. “that's all very . . .. . , thing. If von are not careful how U(,n ||Ut t„|| m,. thjs; |>jd vou sequently in other states. At pres- v<m k with t(|„ ,ady ahout it or , ,.ver M.„ „in , al, iun,i to th,. ent the greater par of the sheet .f v<>. sav ..T,lPn. is m^iece-sity 11mi„raU> Nl, b o u r s e not. and so mica is used m the electrical indus for wearjnp SUv|, ,, useleafc thing.”-, , (|,in-, s,.v call lu-r trv. and most of the scrap mica i. | Rhe wi|) un,bin,tand by this that you „„ iable—r.-al -oc mlde, that is.”— ground for use in the decorative . wij|| |i(,r |iiisL!im1N:fleijtk O F F I C E h o u r s : Daily 9. A. M. to 5 P. S u n d a y s and Holidays, 9 M. 12 A. Mica Mining. Mica mining in the United States started early iu the nineteenth cen tury in New Hampshire, which state supplied all the domestic production until about 18(>8. when mining was ^ nr)!lp n n mOHt hallowed ; ,i(,r| v starteil in North Carolina and sub- , f l.Ari.fll| m.w T e l e p h o n e , N o 3 3 3 R o c k v i l l e C e n t r e DR. GEORGE E. TRAVIS R o c k v ille C e n tr e , N. Y. O P P O S I T E P O S T O F F I C E ;j trade, especially in wall paper P a l m i . t r y . i Balmistrx iir its modern aecepta- ! (ion is divided into two branches— 1 chirognoiux an«l ehinniiancy. (’hi- I rognomv deliiivr tin' oyfward shape j of the liaml and of it- member-, the I thumb and lingers. Chiromancy is ! also derived from the Greek and 'signifies divination by the hand— ! that is. by the line#, mounts and ' other mark- on the palms of the I hand. C leaning P h o t o g r a p h s , Photographs which have been pro tected with glass and have become aolled either by dust or fly specks may be cleaned very easily by wiping them off with absorbent cotton dampened with pure alcohol.—Woman's Home Companion. : Youth'- Companion. Inventor of t h e Sandwich. Tin' -andwich i- said to have tak en il- name from the English lx>rd Sandwich, who liked to gamble too well to leaxi (he table, so had a servant bring him chunk- of meat hidden hct'VOi'li slice- «>f bn TV1. \ L e t t e r Boxes In France. Thi' modern French letter box has the shape of a pillar, profu-ely Pmamented xvith rlv conventional lilx. The xxliole box or stand is fn-hionod after a plant, and the top . . , ■ , i , i resemble- a bird. The bodx is sur- hiingry tramp getling 'lns handout ; r,inn(1(>(| ,1<ira| u r eath- or fe at i he back door would never have! written about the sprightly Lord S. the words of a contemporary of his: Too Infamous to hax’C a friend. T o o h n d fo r bad m e n to co m m e n d . J. M HEWLETT Dealer in Hay, Feed, Bundle Wood Market and Garden Seeds Seed Potatoes, Fertilizer E s tim a te the distance carefully ere , Cor. Church Street and Olive Boulevard Peace I f a blessing that runs no risks you try to negotiate it. -Boston Rec- F R E E P O R T , N. Y. °* disillusionment.—Toledo Blade. In B o s toneee. toons, and the base is funned by urge leave.-. Tin boxes an- placed •igainsl buildings and have a very pretty^'fTeet. Steadfaef and True. Nothing is steaJraat that Is insin cere. —Cicero. B l e s s i n g s of Im a g i n a t i o n . Though a man never fights, he can Imagine himself a scrapper, and the nation that remains on good terms with the world may still have the comfort of believing that i would clean up all comers if driven to it WN th e logging cam p s, on t h e farm s , in th e m in - 1 ing d istricts e v e r y w h e r e you will see hard w o rking m e n w e a ring stu r d y w a ter-proof H u b -M a rk Shoes. W o rn over heavy socks they give perfect protection ag a i n s t w e t an d cold. H u b - M a r k R u b b e r F o o t w e a r is m a d e in a w ide variety of k in d s a n d etylea to cover th e eto r m v w e a t h e r n e e d s of m e n , w o m e n , boy* a n d ;!rls in to w n or co u n t r y . T h e H u b - M a r k sa y o u r va lu e m a r k . HUB-MARK/RUBBERS The World-* Standard Rubber Footwear BROS. 1 r'rTj'Y- ilu k