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MEN OF MILLIONS CHIEF FARMERS AT MINEOLA FAIR Belmont, Gould, Willets and Others Show Prize Stock and Pumpkins, BEST IN !TS 70 YEARS. | Sve Is Real Old-Fashioned Exhibit and Well Worth a Visit. DR Wat HART DEXTER th You biase New Yorkers who think the whole world is paved and painted, | money mad by day and pleasure med by | Right; who know naught of nature and | mow “Home, Sweet Home," only ae @ | ee RNR 7 a EA FERRE Th THE, RVENI Miss LB, wacey 3 eg year, rée jovel \ aa all spores Joverts me while. Sather and the Parody in & Broadway musicel show, | had best hie you over to Mineola, L. 1, and attend the Queens-Nassau County fair. - Me is the same county fair you saw when a lad back home, long before your temples grayed. The prize porkers grunt in piggish complacency, the honored cow moos in the self-same way, the record ‘trotter gladdens the hearts of the David Herums, the largest “punkins” ever are on display and the bed worked over 0 long and (the evenings when her day ‘The only modern intrusions that dis- un your dream of that boyhood fair ts chugging automobiles, the power- @riven agricultural machine nd the Weird birdlike = machin above the horizon at Na Aviation field five miles away wise it is the same fair, wit) larger @x~ hibits, of course, that has been held ‘on Long Island for over half a century. In fact this is the seventieth annual ex- hibition of the Agricultural Society of Queens-Nassau counties. The fatr will f Saturday night. *REGULARS” WHO WAVE AT- ) TENDED FOR MANY VEARS. \ There be many about the fair grounds who have attended the exhib! tion regularly for half a century. Uncle Nick Hallock, of Milton, N. Y., hae been acting as a judge for fifty years. He began in 1859 as a judge of pige and ts flow passing officially upon the merits of fruit and vegetables, | Along the race-track rail, where the (rotting races are held, the Davia Ha- tums foregather to exchange views on the various thoroughbreds, Here you Will find Arrender Smith, of Rockville Centre, who has been an exhibitor at the fair for forty years. He and bis 4, John Ludlum, of Hempstead, will fall up tho past performances of the best horses that ever a sulky Around the dirt tracks of Queena and Nassau counties, Here that veteran starter, Frank Walker, sees to it that the beasts of speed get away property ‘and his basso profundo voice roars or- dere across the field until the deafest pn hear and understand. ‘The busy band when not eat wiches and “‘punkin” ple is grinding out “Alexander's Rag Time Band.” And ‘above all the voice of the hot dog man {je heard in the land, Outside the fair grounds on the Free Midway the entrances ‘with golden ing eand- promises | ¢, of the wonders to be seen “for a dime, ten cents,” inside the tent. GAME OLD BALLOON WITH NEW “AEROS” NEAR BY. It ie the seme old fair on # larger wale, It brings bhck memories to the man who was not born and ratsed in Meuhattan, It is a touch of the old daye that takes you up to that New Bngiend farm or out to the rolling prairies or down on the"old plantation. ‘And they are baving balloon asceny sions daily. ‘ re you ready, Capt. Santiago?” ‘Tem, air, Cut her i if And up into the alr a the same ‘old balloon that you aw soar aloft ‘when you were “knee high to a duck” and made you gasp and hold your breath 2 the betighted and bespan- Ged acronaut waved good-by to the But in the balloon ascension You see the old compared to the new, for after the balloon is up you gaze to- ward the West und vee the aeroplanes Garting to and fro against the setting of the men who are promoting the fair at Mineola are retired farm- ers, “Retired farmers" on Long Island, be tt said, are men who are forced to spend their declining years on a mi million or #0. But they are as keenly interested in the produce and live stock displays us if they were out in Kansas tnstead of twenty miles from the na- neck. Mr, Willets Is a f 4 chairman of t fon, “DYING OUT,” HE SAYS, John H, Vanderveer of Elmhurst, an other director of the fair, was discov ered in deep meditation as he yy Kerry cattle. “Just think,” I mean by that tha milk. eli ful quarts a day. they give twenty quarts of pure ih may be made forty by a a metropolitan milkman.” Alanson Abrams of Hempstead, presi: dent of the Agricultural Society, is & et | proud man. for has he not been chi Gxecutive for three years and ts thi t the most successful exbibition th elety has ever held? “They say that int dying since the advent est in horses 1 bile,” observed Mr. Abri Tt in not =, for our horse entr re greater by far than ever before, We have 485 horses entered show besiier seventy-fiv And for i Rie vers saat ma! a larger exhibl- spcllecles Uh afer jets of Roslyn was found pen containing ix with ite round its rector of the Horse Show | pin wae admiring | fashions and romantic young men. INTEREST IN THE HORSE NOT you get into tho fair grounds you seam ‘gazed | money, pon Howard Gould's exhibit of Dexter | he observed, “those little the m4 cows will produce as much as twenty ft the automo. ye ere ‘Conweuvs, UUDERHILG fa oriten CENSUS TAKER, Gar, SU Workers at Mineola’s Two-County Fair 1.CORMELL RGM SEN, DuRgETOR DUM and Ou Timen: JOnN Sv wo WILLSAMILLION WITHOUT NAME OF ASINGLE WITNESS Last Testament of Suicide Col. Seixas Illegal, but Is Probated. over at the race course and poking around the pig pens, mother and the airin are over in the woman's bullding, admiring tie great display of needie- work and embroidery. ‘gms aispiay proves one thing if noth: tng else, that sewing 1s not becoming @ jont art, ready to wear garments and the sewing machine to the contrary, notwithstanding. The bedepreads with scores of colors there in dance, although it ts admitted by George H. Baukney of Hem) 4, superintendent of the woma! exhibit, that it Is the mothers and | atandmothers and not the daughters who are doing t a schools and | colleges, and ork that can | be worn enhance milady’s beauty. Miss L. B. Whaley of Hempatead, sistant superintendent of the woman's aghast at the thought of coming a lost art. “There !* more fine needlework aver before,” said Miss Whi than Although the will of Col, Henry 0. Geixas, u wealthy real estate owner, who shot and killed himself in Central Park last May, was made without wit- nesses, contrary to the New York law, Surrogate Fowler held to-day that it should be admitted to probate here, but ag a will of personal property only. ‘The Surrogate based his decision on the fact that Col. Gelxas' legal residence was in Louisiana, where the law does not require attesting witnesses to a will. Col, Bel: was a bachelor and had no immediate fami; To quote the Surrogate, he was “a man of pleasum, having no periaus responsibilities and being much in Paris, much in New York," although he regarded New Or- Jeans as his Joga! domicile. #au County schoo) exhibit are the model aeroplanes made by boys of grammar schoo years, BOYS RATHER BE AVIATORS THAN “INDIAN FIGHTERS.” James 8. Cooley, School Commisai of the Second District of Nassau County, says the boys of to-day are forgetting about wanting to be India: cowboys or bloodthirsty pirates and are bullding flying machines. Walter &. Perry of the art department of Pratt da 1s the judge of the echool ex- pact Hyg man on the whole fair Secretary.” He is here. there uadveverse | The will, written by Col, Seixas him- where. He is a mine of information. | Self @ yrar prior to hie death, left the He reeks with He merrily informs | bulk of his estate, estimated at more old who the pig judge ts, whose pump-! than 91,000,000, to two nephews and @ tntston Th tee Rute last year and the friend who live in New Orleani. ‘There Face without cateh-| were bequests of $10,000 each to two ing hie breath, Robert Bacon's womgn friends and one of $%,000 to an- other woman. the Ber! re class won first prize in erday agoinat | the entries of Frank!in B, Lord, muel| While Col. Seixas is reputed to have Wihets Aid Jacob Williains. Ax. Haoon, | owned much valuable real estate in this it said, te United st Ambassador | city, the will, so far ae tt affects this oattle gxhibit the a Roslyn, Robert Bacon of Westbury, Sam- uel Willets of the Brighthome Farma, Franklin B. Lord jr, af Cedarhurat, J. W. T. Nichols of Cold Spring Har- bor, 8. Taber Willets of Roslyn and Colgate Hoyt of Oyster Bay evenly matched that the ju having some diMoulty in telling Is best. Dr. William Hart Dexter of the Department of Animal Industry at oe ia cattle judge for the ir. FARMERS BELMONT AND GOULD SHOW PUMPKIN: wetable exhibit August Bel- George C. Hoye of rt Simonson of Glen Head, yer of Woodbury, Howard | property, must be probated in New Or- Jeans, under the Surrogate's decision. * New York home was at hirtieth street, esd Ee EXPERT IN WOLTER CASE SUES CITY FOR $1,900. Dr, John ‘H. Larkin’s Bill Includes $250 for “Immunizing” Some Rabbits. Dr. John H. Larkin, expert patholo- gist, to-day fled sult in the Supreme Court against the clty for $1,900, which he claims to bi due him fo Alcea in A. Wolter, convicted t Washington and 8, Taber | Ruth Wheeler. Willets of Roslyn have large displays. | » Great interest is be i he 6a enesaya 57 hown in th y as an expert and bull contest for the ailv eu lig * by Charles H. Jones of Gold, spring |#ubmite an itemigad bill for services Harbor, The cup ts offered for the best | AMONK other things he charges 0 for the care of some rabbits for one month, These were used for a serum tent for human blood on clothing. Dr, Larkin charges $250 additional for immunizing” the rabbits and $100 ‘The fair offtolals are seq | Dieeding them for four hours. Anot! with the attendance. nd $10) is charged for exhuming the vod far in wagons, buggies and automo. of the Wheeler ginl and removing parts biles the visitors are coming. In the for examination, For serum tests ap automobile park the cream of Long plited to handkerchief and clothing $50 Island society sits and watches tau !* charged, and ler sixteen hours spent r To walk along in front of the, in contrasting tests for human blood Automobiles Is to sea an exhibition of | with the blood of animals there is an- the prettiest girls in or about New York, They are not on the programme, but they are there, nevertheless, and as) days spent court testifying Was Keenly interested In the prize porkers, | worth $20, w wan charged for a the mooing cows, the big cabbages, the | consultation he beld with an Assistant | Dedigreed chickens and the fast-step-| District-Attorney, and 635 for 8 visit he horses es they are In opera, Py three-year-old or over and must three times before hoiding ow: Clarence H. Mackay of Roslyn won | ip. | the cup in 190%, also in 1910, and he hae the same bull entered this year. other charge of £400, | It's not so far to Mineola, but when $2,500,000 tn Por transported thousands of miles from| wWAasHINGTON .| the paved strests, the thundering “Li | WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 “land mon who think of naught pat “ice Department to-day announced It ts like going back home for that the balon: t é who got the first bloom in hig rom country sun and wind, and etropolitan whe ni know of Joys will forget his ennui in @ the balan: newly discovered country. he heeki aster-Gen ‘al expects “| i | “I never ate Such Griddle Cakes. Mrs. R. Van Vechten, 228 No. Sth Ave., Mt. Vernon, No ¥, SELF-RAISING FLOUR For Light, Delicate Pie Crust, it, Pastry, Dumplings and Pan Cakes. | The physician estimates that the two ‘arixjpaid to a police station to examine a| marble slab and some clothing. pec : that will be increased by about $1,000,000 during the present month, LEVY IS LOVEJOY. Permission to te Name ta Cantorm to Rrothe | Clement Levy of No, 73) East One i dred a Bixtleth was more | fortunate to-day in having ble name changed by Justice Bijur In the Supreme Court than was, Reuben Walter Levy hefore Judge Niemann tn the Nassau County Court yesterday, Reuben Levy wanted his name changed to Leigh because he objected to being taken for a Hebrew, stating that he wan a native of the West Indies. Judge Niemann denied his application. Clement Levy told Justice Bijur that he had been living with his brother, who had assumed the name of Lovejoy, and that all of hts brother's friends knew him (Clement) as Lovejoy. Jus- tlee Bijur granted the permission: bake lla HUNGARIAN: STEALS A HOG. GULFPORT, ~—"Mister" Johnson, th who has ex- fifty men during his official lite, serving a jail sentence to-day aling a hog. He arieves lest his conviction may jose him his easy position. | ms ¢ je Onnensee™ th ee heady 23rd to October 4th. and remunerative| We will have the there, and you will find | BURLARS GE DO ANDSTOOOVIOUN "APARTMENT HOUSE Hundreds of Dollars’ Worth of | Jewelry Also Phunder' From A 91,00 violin, a toy spaniel, Jowelry and other belongings have been stolen in the Inst few weeks from the Lin- coln apartments, Nox. 200-310 West Fit- | ty-flret street, and from an adjoining | apartinent house at Nos, 902-do1, 1t was | discovered to-day, Residents have just | advised the police of the West Forty seventh street station, who are in | tigating. | ‘The last robbery wan Monday night, | when the apartment of Hdward Keys, | on the sixth floor of the Lincoln, was entered and jewelry worth $800 stolen. | About the same time a valuable violin | Wee stolen from the apartment of John Laverman, who lives tn the nelghboring fifth floor cf the Lincoln, reports that | Sept? 21 a toy apantel valued at severa! hundred dollars was stolen from iit rooms, | The burglaries closely followed the | perauens of & young man who suc. ceeded in getting money from a do- | mentie employed by J. E. Hardenberg by telephoning up a request for a | dollar to be rent down on the dumb-| | walter to pay for an express packs; . | |The Aoiler went dawn and ¢ man fied, ‘Three days later, | made a sect when he ‘ond attempt at the same | is chased by Ernest Me! | y id captured, He! in now serving ninety days In the worX- house, Staten Islanders Call Me test Aga! A mass meeting will be held this evening in the parish house of St denounce the Baltimore and Ohio Rail- road for maintaining @ nuisance along | the west water front of the island. | The mecting was called by the Rev, Father Charles A, Cassidy at the re- quest of many citizens, * The complaint against the ratiroad is that the nojse of shunting trains, blowing whistles, ringing bells and let- ting off exhaust steam have made sleep almost impossible ‘Some Ah® northwest shore, where the inal yards of the rallroad are, and that th trouble has been increasing in spite of con | tinued representations to the company. | kg WORLD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1911. | | | West 51st Street Residents. |staran \By Wrong Methods house. Witilam Lowe, who lives on the | FIRST—You can’t fit them ————_— eee CALL B. & 0, A NUISANCE. THI Peter's Church, New Brighton, &. 1, to |e | 350 Sixth Av., 22d St. 17 West 42d—Be' CONDENSED MI HAS NO EQUAL FOR INFANTS AND” GENERAL HOUSEHOLD purPosts Don't fail to visit the Borden Booth at the Domestic Science and Pure Food Exposition, Madison Square Garden, September gest and most comprehensive displ ch of vital interest to you. since pocketa were invented. GIRL. TURNS DETECTIVE AND BEATS REGULARS, “ighteen- Year-Old Irene Reilly _ Causes_an Arrest and Prisoner about the Jewelry, ‘The detective: were sent for and Marshall was ar regted, He protested that a designin qhemy must have put the wrappers at him tn Gates Avenue Court to-day Is Held. and held him for the Grand Jury Willan ‘4 & mbddle-seyid man . ot N@ 1003 DeKalb avenue, “Brooklyn, had until recently been # tenant of Jamed Reilly. Marshal! was, behind sith Als rent. Instead of evicting him, Reilly saved the rent and Marshall, too, by taking bim into his own house at Chauncey street. for JEWELRY, Not for Fame We do not speak of our tong rec ord of perfect reliability and low found that joalt box Which had been t i of the room used by| | prices because it is a source of pride ail had been tampered’ with. A/T with us, but because it protects our atch and a diamond ring wrapped customers. Yet when you buy a dia- mond engagement ring at Lamberts you do not pay for reputation—only for a precious stone, guaranteed to be all we say it is, and the solid 14- karat or 18-karat gold or platinum in which our workmen mount It. How much you save when you y diamonds of us you can tell by comparing our prices with those of any other firm. Our spot-cash buy- ing and direct importation enable P THEREFORE SAVE MONEY FOR YOU, With middlemen's profit added the Price of this fine diamond in hand- made mount! of solid 14-kar in chamols skin and paper had been taken from 1 Miss Irene Re ter Detegtives jan had falled to find any trace of t jewelry, went to Marshall's fe he wae asleep and rifled hie fter the manner of woman en years olf, hand Kauft- Pehabchd tng | You Can’t Get The Right Glasses 850.00. Diamond of fine color and ex lent. cuttin, ind-made_ mounting of solid 14-karat gold. Lambert methods make’ it yours for $175.00. ai 00, WEDDING RINGS To please every taste we have Wedding Rings in all styles and widths, and we guarantee every one to be solid gold and seamless; that is, made without solder. THIS GUARANTEE 1S IMPORTANT be- cause nothing in jewelry under- goes harder tests Car ring. NO CHARGE FOR Lambert Brothers Third Ave., Cor. 58th St. of durability than 1 at, Bebe RAVING. LE Rar Bas Antara Nishts Veh 10, to yourself. Glasses that merely seem to be right may be so far wrong as| to injure your eyes. ECOND—You can’t trust an ordinary optician to) examine your ey: His| work is the making of; glasses, and however) good he may be at that, he has not the knowl- edge of the oculist (the Registered Physician) about the eyesight. RD--The safe way is to have an oculist examine theeyes. By our method glasses are fitted and made onlv according to oculists’ examinations Eyes Examined “iitsc'| By Registered Physicians, Oculists of Long Experience, | Perfect Fitting Glasses as Low as 82.50 | le | 4 there 1s sure to come physical suffering Oculists’ Opticians at times—suffering hand Dobtereaten 223SiathAv.,15thSt, 217B’dway, Astor House ing which will be followed by serious 101 Nassan — Ann St.| sickness, if the first symptoms are Sth & 6th Aves., New York | neglected. 498 Pulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brooklyn. But this suffering will soon be for= “gotten, atrd there will be no after conse- quenes if retlef is obtainéd from a safe, reliable, natural corrective medicine, BEEGHAM’S PILLS ought to be on hand ii every home ready for use at first sign of trouble. Thie famous family remedy hae proved in years and years of trial, ite pr to correct. physical trouble and ward off diseane, ‘Try for yourself—or in your home, a few doses and see how the bodily system {s strengthened and refreshed and how surely and effectively they Relieve Suffering Your drugeist In bosee Wid belpfel directiees’ Wer and'aae, IF YOU NEED A MEDICINE, Although there are hundreds of prepa- rations advertised, there is aly one that really stands ovt pre-eminently remedy for diseases of the kidneys, li and bladder. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root stands the highest, for the reason that it has proved to be just the remedy needed in thous. ‘ands upon thousands of even the most listressing cases. $ t makes friends quickly nee |d and immediate effect is joon realized. It is @ gentle, healing vegetable compourd. Dr. Kilmer’s Swemp-Root is 9 ph; ‘iun’s prescription for special di vhich is not recommended for hiog. ‘A Sworn Certificate of Purity is with every bottle, For sale at all drugstores, in bottles of fifty cents and one dollar. SAMPLE BOTTLE FREE BY MAIL. In order to prove what Swamp-Root, he great kidnoy, liver and bladder rem- dy will do for you, every reader of the New York Evening World who has not bottle by mail absolu ir. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. ¥, Write to-day. J.MOR WEFURNISH HONES COMPLETE SEsRiare “744998 4 2otistere 47 +748 SSohiere Ar4124%) apis FuenruRE ay, Bhe found the wrappings which had there, but Magistrate Kempner laughed _. YOU SHOULD HAVE THE BEST, ilready tried it may receive a sample tely free. Addrons s Meister Piano isa great addition to the home TRY IT FOR ONE MONTH FREE OF ALL EXPENSE It’s part of your home life to entertain friends. there's nothing in the world that helps entertain so much as a iano. We have received hundreds of tters from purchasers stating the MEISTER haa bean the beet im- vestment ard her “nage for the rea son given in addition to educating, the children. We'd like to send you a MEISTER! —any one of our cight styl thirty days’ free trial. ‘Try it in the entertainment of your friends and see, what they think of it. We'll pay the. cartage if you live in the city and the freight to points outside. ~ You are under no obligation, If the MEISTER piano proves its quality to your entire satisfaction and you desire to buy it mol we will sell it to you on the following definite terms: NO CASH PAYMENT DOWN NOINTEREST NO EXTRAS Payments as low as $1 aweek. Piano Stool and Cover FREE under & Company's Ploy, no agents, middlemen or commission The profit on each instrument is reasonable. Where you buy from dealers you pay these extra profits which we save you. . That's the req son why we save you from $100 to #200 on each piano we sell Write, Telephone or Cal! at Our Salesrocms. We'll Do the Rest You ul of i My choose from ER and we fo jou for = month fr different styles I Tend the sustrumnt of all cust Prices $175 to $350 We pay the freight ne matter where ysu live THE MEISTER PIANO CO. Eastern Branch New York City Giszendon Bldg... 18th et. de db as, Tel, Stuy. 980-24, Tako elerator to 10th 1100 1-4 Carat, $10 1-24 3-4 1 DAY “tye and ce F ment. CHARLES A. KEENE, Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry. 160 Broadway Open until OP. M., § $ CREDIT OPENS AN ACCOUNT [NO DEPOSIT REGUIRED| Kalmus S 107-109 WEST I25 sr OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS