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GEORGE MORTON LEVY Attorney-it-Law Rooms 7-9-11 1-7 Railroad Ave Freeport, N. Y. SIDNEY H. SWEZEY Counselor-et-Law Money to Loan on Bond and Mortgage Office, Freeport Bank Building, Residence, North Long Beach Avenue Freeport, N. Y. An American Y. W. C. A. secretary teaching South American girls who have been forced Into industry during the war to become laundresses. A growing account in a savings fcanK Is Insurance of independence. One Dollar Starts an Account! THE FREEPORT BANK Capital, $30,000 Surplus, $75,000 Main S t r e e t .......................................FREEPORT, N. Y John J. Randall, President D .‘Wesley Pine. Vice-President William S. Hall, Cashier BOARD OF DIRECTORS Wallace H. Cornwell Coles Pettit William E. Colder William G. Miller John J. Randall D. Wesley Pine Smith Cox Martin V. W. Hall William S. Hall Harvey B. Smith Daniel B. Raynor Open except legal holidays, from 9 a. m. to 8 p. m., Saturdays 9 a. m. to 18 m. Offers facilities and induoements in every department equal to those o f either the New York or Brooklyn Banks or Trust Companies, and every oseommodation consistent with conservative management. Interest at ths A te of 8 per cent, paid on time deposits, three months Drafts issUed on all parts of Europe. Safe deposit boxes to rent, $6 or more, per annum. Accounts of corporations, companies, societies, etc., solicited. A NEW STOVE? Our shipment arrived so late, owing to freight conditions, that we are selling them at U n d e r N e w M a n a g e m e n t Phone, 169 Massapequa DOMESTIC SERVICE COURSES PUNNED Trained Home-Maker Is to Have an Eight Hour Day and Stand ard Minimum Wage. WOMEN'S COUNCIL MEETS IN PARIS Eighty Well-Known French Wom en Guests of Y. W. C. A. for Opening Session. LEO FISHEL Attorney-at-Law Money to Loan on Bond and Mortgage Freeport, N. Y. MARTIN A. SPRINGSTBED Attorney and Counselor-et-Law 6 Atlantic Ave. Lynbreok, N. Y. JOHNSON & JOHNSON Attorneys and Counselera-at-Law 47 Railroad Ave., opp. Depot Freeport, N. Y. Telephone, 865 Freeport EDWARDS & BODE Lawyers Rooms 1 to 7 1-7 Railroad Av,!. Freeport, N. Y. To all who have commissioned us to serve them we have rendered a tactful, diplomatic ceremony. We furnish burials of beautiful dignity. We will carry out your plans in a faithful manner. C. A. FULTON, Undertaker and Embalmer Telephone 337 Freeport 51 West Merrick Road :: :: :: :: :: FREEPORT, N. Y It will Cook S t o v e s at . . $ 3 5 Heaters from $ 1 0 to $ 1 9 pay you to com e and look over our stock COME IN AND SEE US ARTHUR WHITEHOUSE 91 SOUTH MAIN STREET Hardware, Paints, Oils, Etc. Stoves and Repairs Telephone Freeport 384-w or call and see us TO OUR CONSUMERS TTie National Council of Defense and the Federal Reserve Beard request that the people of the country pay their bills promptly e# that money may be kept in circulation AS A HELP TOWARDS WIN NING THE WAR. As s Public Utility company we are compelled to pay CASH for all materiel used la the manufacture of gas. We caunot do this and continue to furalah gas to our consumers during these critical times, unless our consumers co-operate with us and pay their bills promptly. Every bnrinsac man and every patriotic eitisen know* that tide la a reasonable request oa our pert aad we trust that our consumers will accept H tu the spirit la which It la given. The Nassau & Suffolk Lighting Co. OHO. MACDONALD, President . Hempstead Rockville Centre Freeport Mineola Telephone, 76 Opp. L. I. R. R. Depot HICKSVILLE, L. I. Quality Plus Price Equals Patronage That is our formula for secur ing the Monument business of the particular public. We so licit but a chance to show you the characters, workmanship and quality of our stones—and to quote prices—for we know then that you will place your order with us. Will you give us that chance? Call and see our assortment of several hundred finished Mon uments, Headstones, etc. Granite Survey Posts always on hand. D. & F. SUTTER OTOTOTOTOlOlOie^ Courses for training home assist ants, who will go Into the home by the day, hour or week and work on a schedule of hours and fixed wages, have been Inaugurated by the Young Women's Christian Association as a means for meeting the problem of do mestic service. The object of this course, now being tried out in New York City, Is to place domestic service on the same dignified basis as clerical work, trained nursing or other professions open to women. The home assistant will work eight hours a day for a salary of $15 a week. She will not live In the home of her employer or take her meals there. She will have an hour for luncheon, when she can go to a restaurant or eat a lunch which she has brought with her just as she would were she employed In a factory. The employer will not address the home worker by her first name. She will be Miss Smith or Mrs. Brown, as the case may be. Applicants for the course are care fully selected, and registrants are ap pearing In large numbers. With the same Independence as to recreation hours, places of eating and living as the factory girl, house-work has a gretiter appeal, as being a less monoto nous and more Interesting work to the average woman. The course Is a thorough one In plain cooking, watting on table and door, chamber work, plain sewing, care of children, making of menus and the washing and Ironing of light things. Heavy work Is to be done by outside workers. On graduation the student receives a certificate which proves her qualification as a dependable home worker capable of attending to all ordi nary duties I d a home. The Young Women's Christian Asso ciation has been Interested In the prob lem of domestic service both from the standpoint of the employee and from SWEZEY & WILSON Attonieys-at-l,aw Freeport Bank Building Freeport New York 1 A Persistent Influence Exerted in Your Behalf Every bit of Printing that goes to serve you makes some KIND OF AN IMPRESSION. Poor printing will leave a poor impression of its user as surely as would poor clothes, a poor store or shop or office. GOOD printing will leave upon every mind an impression wholly favorable of its user. Even if but one in a thousand of these “impres sions\ really tips the scales for business, for orders, for you— GOOD PRINTING will have paid itself. You can get it at this office—whether you want a little of it or a great deal. NASSAU COUNTY REVIEW ON THE TROLLEY LINE TELEPHONE 8 (N« branch office and *e ceimeetion with any other concern) Review Building FREEPORT, N. Y. that of the employer'for some years. The first commission on Household Employment made Its report at the j House in Paris, fifth national convention of the Young Women’s Christian Association held In Los Angeles, Cab, In May, 1915. The difficulties of attracting capable women to this field of work were laid to the long hours, lack of Independence In arranging recreation hours, lack of opportunities for growth and progress and lack of social standing. Girls have acquired a distaste for the conditions which govern household work since the freedom they have ex perienced In working In munition fac tories. By standardizing domestic serv ice It Is believed by the Young Wo men's Christian Association that a higher type of worker may be at tracted to the necessary work In homes. Paris, Feb. 2.—Eighty of the most prominent women In France who i r e Interested In all women’s problems at tended the first meeting of the Provi sional Council of the American Young Women's Christian Association, held at Paris headquarters, 8 Place Edou ard VII, Jan. 30. Mrs. Robert Lansing, wife of the Secretary of State, who Is first vice- president of the council, presided, con ducting all sessions In French, as two- thirds of the members represent French associations with whom the Y. W. C. A. has been co-operating. All women In France are looking for ward to the findings of the council as of tremendous importance not only to women In France, but all over the world. The purpose of the council Is to collect and make available Informa tion about conditions and needs of wo men, to become acquainted with wo men who are identified with different kinds of work and to develop a few typical Illustrations which will set standards for future permanent work. Following are the societies repre sented : Union Chretlenne des Jeun Filles, Student Movement, Foyer des Alllees, Amies de la Jeune Fille, Na tional Council of Women. Among the delegates were Mine. Jules Siegfried, Mme. Avrll de St. Croix, Baroness Wattevllle, Countess Pourtales and Mme. Waldegrave of London. Mrs. William G. . harp, wife of the ambassador to France, Is honorary chairman of the council and Mrs. Fran cis McNeil Bacon president pro tem. Miss Charlotte Niven, director of Y. W. C. A. work In Italy, Is secretary. Departmental and provincial groups will hold meetings weekly to discuss local problems, the entire council meet ing at the end of each month. In April, at the last meeting, each group will , n in e 6 m=W i ^ 8 ln<:0rniaUo£, a°d ®r Pe\ NOTICE TO CREDITORS . rience may be used most effectively In | pur8Uant to an order of HON. the future. j LEONE D. HOWELL, Surrogate of Delegates are guests at the Hotel j the County of Nassau, notice is here- Petrograd, the Y, W. C. A. Hostess j by given to all persons having claims DR. W. G. SMITH j Dentist *< Office and Residence: 1 West Merrick Road Freeport, N.Y. ’Phone 86-R DR. G. S. SMALLWOOD Osteopath New York Office: 110 West 34th Lt. Daily 9:30-8:30 except Wed.and Sat. Freeport, L. I. 69 Wallace St. Evenings by Appointment Phone 669 Freeport DR. A. H. HAMMOND Dentist Room 4 Freeport Bank Building Telephone, 323-W H A F F & 3 6 0 JAMAICA, N. Y. Y. W. C. A. PROMOTES WORLD FELLOWSHIP Will Send Industrial Commission to Meet Foreign Labor Leaders. against Edward Smith late of the Town of Hempstead, in the said county, deceased, to present the same with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber the administrator of the The American Y. W. C. A. has open ed a Hostess House In Germany, which will serve as a residence house and social center for American women war workers who have advanced to do can teen, Red Cross and Signal Corps work with the Army of Occupation. WOMEN BEGIN Y. W. C. A. FOREIGN TRADE COURSES The War Work Council of the Young Women’s Christian Association plans to send an Industrial commission of women to England, France and Italy j in April to meet prominent labor lead ers of those countries with a view to promoting world fellowship among wo- ; '■ ¥ Swezey; Freeport, New York, on or before the 10th day of August next. Dated, Mineola, N. Y., January 18, 1919. LeROY SMITH, Administrator. SIDNEY H. SWEZEY, Attorney for Administrator, Freeport Bank Building, Freeport, N. Y. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Pursuant to an order of HON. LEONE D. HOWELL, Surrogate of the County of Nassau, notice is here- The commission will be made up of I by given to all persons having claims Mrs. Raymond Robbins, representing ! against Courses In New York City Prepare Girls for South Ameri can Jape. John J. Randall, Jr. Vice President L F. Willets Secretary j JOHN J.lRANDALL COMPANY Ernest Randall Treasurer Lally Columns Galv. Pipe and Fitting# Metal Lath Sensing a sudden call to Jobs for American women In South America, the New York City Y. W. 0. A. has opened Foreign Trade courses. Includ ing classes In shipping, filing orders, trade acceptances, tariff, consular In voices, documents. Insurance, mall or der trade and other lines of Interna tional work hitherto left mostly to men. These classes are designed to meet after-war needs. South America Is receiving particu lar attention as the Y. W. O. A. Is In formed of new Jobs that are opening In the southern countries. Many girls In New York who combine a desire to see the world with a craving for finan cial Independence are registering with the expectation of going there to get positions when their courses In train ing are completed. Charles Carroll. 1 Charles Carroll was the last to sur vive of the 57 men who signed our Declaration of Independence. He lived until 1882, having reached his ninety-fifth year. He was the most eminent of the fyur men from Mary land, and was of Irish descent, the the National Women’s Trade Union League of America: Mrs. Irene Os good Andrews, American Association for Labor legislation; Miss Grace Drake, National Consumers’ league; Mrs. James S. Cushman, chairman of the War Work Council of the Young Women's Christian Association; Miss Florence Simms, Miss Marie Wing and Miss Imogene B. Ireland, secretary to the commission, all of the Y. W. 0. A., and Miss Mary Gilson, an authority on employment management Miss Florence Simms says In re gard to the commlation: “The war has forced upon ua the bearing of International relationships In all things, and our touch with women In other countries has made ua Include In our International thinking the Indue- trlel life of women. The war hae wrought so many ebangee In this that It seems a timely thing that women In terested In the larger life of our wo men workers should take counsel to gether and express their Interest with the hope that certain minimum stand ards which seem essential to health and welfare among women may be agreed upon and obtained. Our War Work Connell is sending abroad this women’s commission from organizations In America directly con cerned with the welfare and largest life of Industrial women.\ MARGARETTA LAKE late of the Town of Hempstead, in the said county, deceased, to present the same with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber the administrator of the goods, chattels and credits of said de ceased, at his place of transacting business at the office of Edwards « Bode, Freeport, New York, on or be fore the 15th day of June next. Dated, Mineola, 29, 1918. LOUIS LAKE, Administrator. EDWARDS A BODE, Attorneys for Administrator, 1-7 Railroad Ave., Freeport, N. Y. N. Y„ November General ’ ’ SHEET METAL WORKS i Cornices, Gutters, Roofing Leaders, Painting, Sky- s lights, Repairing Office Telephone Residence Telephone 492 Freeport 60 Wsntagh ______ _ Frank L. Hack Co. \Black piague.” 76-80 Henry Street The “Black Death,\ or “Black FreeDOrt N Y Plague,\ wn* also known as the “bu- r > ' \ K“L P,-eng7 ; an,d r \ * #COKrg“ 1,1!Fire Escapes, Folding Galea, Europe and Asia in the years between j _ V • ’ , 1384-1351, when millions were swept i Railings and> W i r e Screens for zs.'S.t: zrtL'LZ'JZZz! **-*»» w- severely. Heating and Y