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Image provided by: Long Island Library Resources Council
2 f NASSAU P o a r * M e iP O K T , N. Y., THURSDAY, NOV. 12, 1914 Freeport Sea Food M a rket and O y ster Saloon B. RILEY RAYNOR, P roprietor E v e rything In Sea Food In Season We Serve O y sters, Clams & Chowders 16 W. Merrick Road, Freeport T E L E P H O N E 2-M •4040404040404040404040404040404040404040404040404040 New Indian Animal Stories Hotv the Wild Boy Became Brother to the Bear OSKISON e e $ Choice Groceries Salted Meats Cake and Pies Quality Guaranteed Prompt Service Best Prices JOHN L GERMEROTH T e lep h o n e 489-W 2 4 4 Main St., Freeport L. 1. Delicatessen and Lunch Room J. A. GOODMAN RAILROAD AVENUE Telephone 848-J SHOE SHINING PARLOR H AT S CL EA NE D AND REN OVA TE D CIGARS, CIG AR E TT E S J. A. CHARKAL1S 44 S. Main St. F R E E P O R T Tyron’s Machine Shop Olive Blvd. bet Grove & Church Sts. B E R T TRYON, Prop. AUTOMOBILE REPAIRING AND AD- JUSTING CO M P L E T E UP-TO-DATE MACHINE SHO P NEW E Q U IP M EN T Telephone 539-J Trommer’s Finest Malt Beer IS SOLD, DRUNK AND ENJOYED ALL OVER LONG ISLAND Telephone For a Case The Parson Marble and Granite Works SMITH & SPRAGUE, Proprietors Children, Color Up This Picture. Long Island Railroad Time Table (Effective Oct. 18th, 1914) Leave Merncx ror New York, Penn- aylvania Station, Brooklyn and inter mediate stations, week days, 5.16, 5.52, I. 38, 6.56, 17.18, 7.28, 8.01, 8.15, 10.13 A. M.; 12.22. 3.09, 4.17, 5.38, 6.41, 9.22, 10.59 P. M.; Sundays, 6:48, 9.20 A. M.; 12.04, 2.44, 4.28, 5.33, 8.08, 10.477 P. M. Leave Freeport for New York, Penn sylvania Station and Brooklyn, week days, 6.20, 5.66, 6.42, 7.00, 17.22, 17.47 8.05, 18.17, 8.55, 9.47, 10.17 A. M.; 12.27, 8.13, 4.21, 6.02, 6.43, 6.45, 9.26, 11.03 P. M. Sundays. 6.61, 9.24, A. M.; 12.08, 2.48, 4.32, 6.37, 6.40, 8.12, 10.61, P. M. Trains leave Freeport for Amltyvllle Babylon Patchogwe and Intermediate stations week days, na4.44, 8.10, a9.32, II. 63 A. M.; el.43, sa2.22. 2.44, a3.58, a4.69, f5.27, al5.65, a6.19, 6.45, a7.06, 7.44, a9.07, al0.47, P. M.; 12.17, 2.04, night. Sundays, 5.31, a9.20 P. M.; 12.29, 2.27, a3.52, 7.32, a9.02, all.14 P. M.; 1.42, nlghL Trains leave New York, Pennsyl vania Station, for Freeport, Merrick and principal intermediate stations, na3.38, 7.06, a8.36, 11.00 A M.; sal2.48, sa l.24, 2.00, a3.00, a4.03, f4.44, (except Merrick), iaS.OO, a5.29, 5.54, a6.17, 6.50, a8.ll, a9.50, 11.30 P. M.; al.10, night. Sundays, 4.30, a8.24, 11.34, A. M.; 1.37, a2.58, 6.39, a8.08, alO.18 P. M.; al2.35 ■w. . . M i a Trains run to Babylon only, n No Brooklyn connections, a Saturdays only. S Except Ssturdsye. 1 Except holidays, t Except Saturdays and holidays... Trains leave Brooklyn, Flatbush Ave. Station, about the same time as those shown from New York, Pennsyl vania station. This time table subject to change without notice. Clothes and The Man In these\conventional days personaPappearance is an im- portant factor in business and in social life. Clothes are not everything but they are a decided jhelp in creating that favorable impression. “Freeport’s Custom Tailor” is a builder of just this sort of garment. Material, fit and satisfaction are our guarantees r James® V enditt fTikfctnii '' 'WhiiLikS * \•* l Telephone, 583-W iS N/Mein St Freeport, N. Y. (Copyright, Long time ago, In the days when the Indian hunters followed the trail of the bear and the deer far into the mountains, the little boys would watch the hunters go away from the camp in the early morning and wish that they, toi, could go. Sometimes one boy would run after the hunters a short distance, and then an old man would call out: “Ho, little one! Do you think you are the brother of the bear, and do you go to hunt with the Wild Boy?\ Then the boy would come back to the camp. \Tell me about the Wild Boy and the bear!\ the little boy would say, and while the old man shaped a tiny arrow for the boy's tiny bow, he would tell this story: It was In the days when the people lived close beside the river which runs south, and when everybody was happy and had plenty to eat. There was a young woman who lived with her seven brothers, who were all good hunters. She kept the home for them, and dressed the skins of the animals when her brothers brought them in. And all day she was singing. But once the hunters did not come back at night, and this young woman sat up and waited for them. On the seventh night, some one came to the house where the young woman sat and knocked at the door. “Siyu!” (hello!) said a voice outside, »nd the young woman went to the door to see who it was. Out In the moonlight stood the Wild Boy, with his bow and his quiver of arrows over his shoulder. “Who are you?” asked the young woman. \I am the Wild Boy, and I have come to make a bargain with you,” said the boy, who stood In the m oonlight \I will go and find your seven brothers and bring them back to you If you will marry me. I have lived In the trees with tto^f^ees and the birds so long that I am getting lonely.\ And the young woman studied about what the Wild Boy said a long tim e be fore she agreed that If he would bring | back her seven brothers she would I be his wife. Then the Wild Boy ran away into the woods and the young : woman went to sleep for the first time : in seven nights. As the Wild Boy went swiftly through the woods he sang the song i which the young woman had always I sung as she worked. And the bear, ' who slept at the edge of a meadow be side the rivsr, heard the song and got up and went to see who it was sing ing. * And the bear met the Wild Roy In the meadow and asked him where he was going. “I am going to find the seven broth ers of the young woman who is to be my wife,\ said the Wild Boy. And then the bear laughed. “You will never find them,\ said the bear, “unless I go with you to show you the road across the notch in the mountains which leads into the Dark ening Land.\ “Then you m ust come with me right away,” said the Wild Boy. \What will you do for me,\ asked the bear, “If I come with you?\ \I will be your friend,\ said the Wild Boy. \That will not do,\ said the bear. \You must be my brother!\ And for a while the Wild Boy studied about what the bear had said, and then he agreed that he would be the bear's brother. So the bear passed his tongue over both cheeks of the Wild Boy. and the two went on to find the seven lost hunters. In the Darkening Land they found the seven brothers of the young woman and brought them back to her house. But then, when the young woman got ready to go with the Wild Boy as bis wife, the Wild Boy cried out: \No I do not want a wife, for I am brother to the bear, and I must stay to lire In the woods!\ And ever since, the Wild Boy has lived In the woods, where only the bears know where to Bad him. RAISING GUINEA PIGS EASY WILL FOOL SMART FRIENDS Excellent Opportunity Offered to Boy on Farm to Make Hie Own Spending Money. (By A LUC® MAT DOUGLAS.) Guinea pigs are easy to raise and taken all In all, are the most desir able pets that there are. Even a baby can play with them without fear of be ing scratched. Boya on the farm can earn quite a little by raising these pets and selling them In the village or city at the rate of 26 cents each. The guinea pigs should be kept away from cats, who will hunt them as they do rats. Some say, however, that when a kitten Is brought up from the very first with guinea pigs, she will live peacefully with them. One farm er boy raised a bushel of potatoes off of a piece of ground, which he traded in the city for a pair of guinea pigs from which he raised quite a litter. Ordinary Two-Foot Rule Will Not Fold Up If Properly Balanced With Carpenter's Hammer. Here Is a paradox to fool your smart friends with. Take an ordinary fold ing rule (a two-foot rule le best), and ask your friend what will happen if you tie a hammer on the end of the rule, with the hinge on the rule un der neath. Of course he will say that the rule will at once fold up, for It Expecting Too Much. Some girls expect so much from their friends that they are all the time being disappointed. They themselves lose their tempers often, but they ex pect their friends always to be sweet and polite. Sometimes their faces are overcast, and their brows wrinkled into a frown, but they expect their friends to go about smiling. It Is a mistake to expect so much more of your friends than you expect of your self, for that is one way of losing friends. will do that even without the hammer being hung on It. However, i t ’s easy enough to do im possibilities provided you know how, and that Is the case in this instance. You tie the ham m er in the rule exact ly as shown in the illustration. You may have to try several times before you will get It just right. Then when you hold up the rule It will remain stiff and straight and will not fold up, In spite of the weight of the hammer. In fact, it Is the hammer which keeps it from folding up, for the weight of it Is so placed that it produces a lever^ age upward on the end of the rule, as you can readily see when you try It. Ufce a Toll Gate. When la a deg's tall like a toll gate? When It etopa a waggln' (wagon). Has Wheels. Teacher— Tommy, what Is a dachs hund? Tommy—A little dog that rolls around with a caster on each corner. BROOK LYNSIE ADING TA l LOR S J ) Who is Your Tailor The Fit, The Style, The Swing and Lines are W hat Cause Men to Ask T h a t is th e Kind of C lothes W E M ake Suit*, Top Coats and Over coats Made to Your Measure To Order $18.00 to $35.00 riZSjpEU' Sample and Fashion Booklets Sent on Request 4 S 9 Fulton S . Brooklyn Designers and Builders of High Class Memorials. All Kinds of Cemetery Work, Lettering a Specialty . . . . Estimates and Designs Cheerfully Furnished YARD OPPOSITE GREENFIELD CEMETERY Telephone, 158-W HEMPSTEAD, L I. Ladies of Freeport YOUR SEARCH FOR T H E P ROP ER KIND OF TAILOR ING W H E R E ST Y L E AND ECONOMY GO HAND IN HAND ENDS IN T H E GOLDFARB STYLISH WAY AND AN ADDED ATTRACTION H E R E IS OUR REALLY REASONABLE PRICES W E MAINTAIN AN E X P E R T D E P A R T M E N T FOR CLEANING, PRESSING, DYEING AND REPAIRING SPEC IAL PRICES LADIES’ SUITS, W IT H MATERIAL, FROM $15.00 UP LADIES' SUITS, FROM OWN MATERIAL, $8.00 UP DR ESSES MADE, FROM $3.00 UP SKIRT S MADE, FROM $2.00 UP BROOKLYN LADIES* TAILOR AND DRESSMAKER H . G O L D F A R B 3 6 Brooklyn A v e n u e hr* e p o rt, New York T e lephone Call. 3 0 7 -J Orders for advertising in (The Krm ^furlt QJtmra received in this office at New York City Rates. The New York Times is the dominant newspaper in New York City for the ad vertiser who wishes to reach the intelli gent, progressive and willing-to-spend. The average daily and Sunday circu lation of The New York Times for the half year ended October 1st was 259,673, representing in one grouping the largest number of substantial and re sponsive readers within the reach of New York advertisers. The New York Times publishes more advertising than any other New York City newspaper, Help and Situation ad vertisements alone excepted. The advertising rate of The New York Times, 45 cents per agate line, makes the cost less than one cent a line for each 5,000 circulation—the cheapest as it is the best newspaper advertising in the world. F o r d an d C o le A u tom o b iles D istributor ol |! London Limousine Detachable Top For any m a k e of C a r Ford Parts and Repairing a Specialty W . T . H u tc h e s o n T e lephone 1 8 6 H e m p s tead 1 44. Franklin Street Hempstead N. Y Telepheoe 588 J Thomas W. Abrams Pleasant Avenue Roosevelt Moving Vans and General Contracting Cesspools and Toilets Cleaned Ladies’ and Childrens’ Wear New Fall Styles of Dresses, Suits and Skirts. Our waist department is as large as any New York or Brooklyn store—our prices lower. MADAME ANNETTE HEMPSTEAD LONG ISLAND T H E F R E E P O R T CASINO Has opened for the winter under new manage ment. The Casino, henceforth, will be con ducted only as a first class, up-to-date, clean, moral, family hotel. EXCELLENT ACCOMODATIONS MODERATE PRICES DANCING EVERY EVENING A. J. PELTIER Manager Located at the Head of Randall Bay