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'U
Nassau County Review
Official Paper of Nassau County
FREEPORT, N. Y., FRIDAV, SEPTE.WBER 25. 1914
Vcl. XIX, No. 39
Freeport
Single copies of the Review for sale at Greeniilatt'n and lii-aithwaite's. Rail¬ road Avenue; Michnoff'h, Nasaau County Review, Da&iiva's and Go- iiet-i'n. Main Street; DaSilva's, West Merrick Road. tf
HIGHWATER TIDE TABLE
Tliese tim." HP-tlir Siiticly HrK)k. Deduct :-2 1 ir.innt-' f<ir H-ri,i,*t<ia<l Buy)
rridav, Sept.
^iHturday,
Sunday
Monday,
TueBdi.v,
V/ednesday:
Thursdav, Oct.
Fridav,
Saturday,
25
2«
27
2S
2'J
3U
1
2
:(
12:04 a.
1 :10 a.
2:22 a.
3 :33 a.
4;37 a.
5:31 a.
6:10 a.
; :4.S H.
7:24 a.
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
Ili the Fraternal Orders Local Topics
Social and Personal
Doini;
>pi.
lecrcl fraternal orjanizations of »-°»"'"«"i» ana aipipnaiiona noi aniiraly of iMainljr About Cue<l>. Vi»it» and Parties of Freeport and vicinilr. * n»w» natura, .jn %ilUi aaflalra Freeporteri and Tfceir Friendi , by tha editor.
An attempt is being made to organ-| Mrs. Margaret King and .Miss Anna
ize a lodge of the KnightH of Pythias j WHEN YOU CLOSE YOUR HOUSE Frederick of Shonnard Avenue have
in Freeport. Harry I andman. several , Captain of Police Darenberg would heen entertaining Mr. and .Mrs. Arthur
appreciate it if our summer residents P- Campbell of Krooklyn for ihe past
woulJ send word when they leave town week, and Mr. and Mrs. Charle? Pur-
News of the Churches Freeport Wins
County Baseball
Sermoni. Srrv ice»
other doin«^ in tfae ch
and churrh societies
Championship Game
In the Fire Department
¦rf int*''•* ^o and about the 6r«m«B ¦1 our local departmant
On Wednesday at the .Minena Fior The \'i.iM^re Iioard has sitziie.l » k-on-
years ago a resident of Freeport, is i agitating thi' movement. '
Progressive ('ouncii, No. ti6, D. of L. will hold a Domino Social in the lodge room, .Mechanics' Hall, next Tuesday evening, Sept.29,at S o'clock.
Pettit & Hedges, Inc., hfrve bought the Htore of Lombardi Bros., on Mer¬ rick Road
(Jeorge W. Raynor has purchaaed an auto (delivery top) for use in hi" gro¬ cery Misines.-.
It in no.v HnnouMced that the ('nsir.o will f riiJiin open all winter, under nt;W managerritnt ol A. .1. Peltier.
The lirst meeting (jf the Freeport Arts ('lull will be held at the home of Mrs. John D. Gunning, So. Bayview Avenue, .Monday, October 5. The name of the speaker and topic is prom¬ ised for our next issue.
The "Commercial" Building, owned by William G. Miller, Inc., on Main Street. oppo.site the Post OHice, ha.s been leased to Thomas Roulston, Inc., to be occupied as a grocery store. The name concern has a number of other t-tores, including RockviUe Centre, I.ynbniiik and Hempstead.
Arth'ir R wori<eil V.ith the Nassau
Wood of Hempatead. who ounty l{i- view for several years, iind v.'ho r-jKr- ried .Misa .Xnna .\. Siems of WiintJig'i, IS h'intr sued by his wife ir. an action ti-i .11- .judK'K Kelby ill Nh.ss<iU C.U.'.ty Supreme (jourt for .$12 a week ali¬ mony, pending the tri.il of her suit for ¦^epariiiion. The Woods have three children, who are now with their mother, .vhn is staying v.'ith her iiar-
Wiliiani E. Crevoiserat was award¬ ed 14 prefn:'.::..- ¦ :i 14 entries in the pouitry deiiartment of the Sulfolk County i-'hir at Riverhead last week. The awards were first and third cock, second ¦.);(! third hen, first cockerel, tirst |iullet, first old pen, single comb Buff Leghorns, tirst cock rose comb Buff Leghorns; first cock, second hen, .single cimb Buff Orpingtons; tirst eockerei, first and second pullet, first youung pen. Silver Duckwing Leg¬ horn.-'.
Primary Day
Primary day will be next Monday, Sejitember 28. Candidates for Gover¬ nor, Lieutenant Governor, Uniterl States Senator and other State officers wii' be nominated on this day by a plurality of the votes cast in each po¬ litical party.
Re|iublicans, Democrats, Progress ives, Sociiilists and Prohibitionists can only have their voice registered in the selection of the candidates of their party by voting at that primary.
Every enrolled resident of the Coun¬ ty, no matter to what political party he belongs, loses his influence in the affairs of his own party if he fails to vote.
No tiersan can vote who is not en¬ rolled in the political party with which he atiiliated in the fall ot 1913, in a place where personal registration is required, upon one of the registration days, and, in a place where personal registration is not required, on elec¬ tion day ; unless he shall have become of age since election day and ehall have enrolled by tiling application with the Board of Elections before Septem¬ ber 1, 1914.
If an enrolled voter has removed from the election district in which he enrolled in the fall of 1918, he cannot vote.
CHAPTER CONVENTION
AT FREEPORT The regular annual Chapter Conven- tirm of the Third .Mc.sonic r)istrict, for the exomi'iitication of the Standard (.'banter work, will be held in the meeting rooms of Freejiort Chapter some time this Fall. The date for this has not yet been fixed. This is the second time that Freejiort Chapter ha-i had the lionor of entertaining the 'i'ieeates ol' this district, and ilans lire being iT.Bde to entertain the guesta in ajcordiince wilh the reputation that Fri.e')f,rr li;is in this line.
in order that he may be in position to din of Arlington, N. J., for the week- know what houses are vacant during end. the winter. While this does not in- "^^
elude anv promise that such houses The meeting of the Neighborhood
will not "be. entered by burglars, it WorkersofFreeport, held at the home gives a better chance to watch them.
First Church of Christ, Scientist. Services Sunday morning at 11 o'clock : Grounds Freeport Baseball Team de- tract with the Empire Rubber C' Sunday School same hour; Wednesday evening testimonial meeting at S
o'clock; Hempstead Bank Building; partment of the game subject next Sunday, September 27, allowed six hits, Cet! "Reality."
especialli' to prevent, as much as sible, entries of this kind.
po.s
Lest we forget. All trolley cars now stop on near side of the street.
COURTESY TO NEWSPAPERS While in Hempstead recently I was stopt by a representativa of one of the Hempstead papers, who said he had noted my comn.ent regartling difficul- tys of keefiing in touch with nieetings of our viiiage boanl. He showed me a copy of a card which he said the Vi! lage Clerk, by direction of the Board always sent to all tl that village, of every meeting, regular and special, of the Hoard, and seemed sufprised that a similar course was not followed in Freeport.
of .Mrs. F. E. Story, on September Ui was largely attended and great inter¬ est was shown in the proposed work for the winter. An efficient Commit¬ tee of Ways and Means has been aji- jiointed, with Mrs. Kneeland as chair¬ man, and they are enthusiastically [lianning entertainment to raise funds for the work. Miss Childs, the trained worker, wiil take charge on Octoiier 1. (The above item was received too late for our last issue. —Ed.)
Willard VanRiper lead the Epworth Leaeue meeting Sun¬ day night in the M. E. Church; topic, "Industrial Slavery in the Light of Two Standards."
feated .Mineola by the score oi' >^ to I, outplaying their op[onents .n every de- Aithough be kejit them well scattered, except in the third in¬ ning, when with two on and two out. announced to Shad Lewi? lifted 'one of hi ovei the ra/e track in right tit home run.
pany. of Trenton, .\. J., for Soo I'eet. of Empire rubber hose, for immediate deliverv.
An attempt was made nt al nut 11
o'c ock Thursday night to tinish up ihe
shoots remains of the eld "Tiny Sniith"
1 lor a house on upper Bayview .¦\v»iiU'', whuh
was partly destroy td by lire vn May
After retiring .Mineola in the lirst. -"•'- Chief Loonam, working nearliy, Freepurt slitrted after Hallian, Nolan called nut the department, which left
An afternoon tea wili b" given the home of .Miss Ninon Dorlon.
East Avenue, Saturday. October 3. by the Sunday School classes of .Mis.s Ninun Dorlon and .Mis,-? Isabe! Hib- bai'd. Tea and cake will b- served for 15 cents. The proceeds are to be used for missionary purposes.
was .-,ife ,in H'l eri„:- i._, .~:!'.i? und cnn
tinu^d to second, P'dwards tiled to left,
19 Soper was out, Leary to Brown, Nolan
i:OYAL ARCANUM CONTEST
f'raternul Council No. I'.lti2, of the I'nya! Arcanum of Freeport, sent a delegation consisting of Supervising Deputy Grand Regent Albin N. John son, Kegent John S. Summer, and Past Regent Herbert A. Bacon, Francis C. Morse and (Jornelius S. Braren to pre¬ sent to Charter Oak Council at Rock¬ ville Centre last Thursday night a challenge to an inter Council niember- , to visit in a cemetery, but while I was ship contest. It seems that Fraternal on my short vacation 1 "took in" two Council has arranged Red. White and "f them in the vicinity
Master John T. Cotter, jr., enter¬ tained several of his young friends at his home, 12.S North Grove Street, Sat- newspapers of ""'"y "fternoon, in Honor of his sec- er 1, at 3 p. m. ond birthday anniversary. Master Elmer Lc)u:\ ; (Jotter received
VISITS TO A CEMETERY.
This is a little out of my usual line in thia column, and some of my party told me 1 was getting old, to take time
of Windham.
A I VV. Earle
Blue Teams for a contest among its ; The first one was evidently established tlirough the New England States. He
the winning team "to be j about 70 years ago, and did not con tain the inscriptions such found in the second one, which was lo cated between the villages of Wind-
own member
the uuests ut m coriciuding social event at v.jiiijh the -ecdiid team must furnish all r.ecesfijry rnu^ic and entertainment
going to third,and scoring vn Raynor's hit to ieft, Cheshire went nut. Reel to Brown ; one run.
.Mineola was blanked in the second; for Freejiort. Boyd was safe nn Sea¬ man's error and continued to se:ond, Abrams hit tn center, scoring Boyd, Pettit singled, Bedeil was safe on an inlield hit, .Nnlan forced Abrams at the jilate, Ed.vurds nut. Leary to Brown, Pettit sc'ring, Soper fannetl; 2 runs.
In thfe third, Mintola, Leary hit to right center f- r three bases, Coleman tiled to Hedeil, Hallian hit to Pettit. who caught Leary at the jilate by a ; the mnrning sermon will be "The fivud thmw to Boyd, Hallian stole sec- : Evangelistic Duty of the Church." The ond, SaUse walked, l-ewis hit over the evening sermon will be on "Industry," i track in right for a homer, scoring i the fourth of the great moral qualities , Hallian and Sause aheadof him,HBUse- | that have been discussed during .Seji-'nmnn was safe nn Raynor's error,
st card is received from George I '^^f Spier, the supervisor of music I ^^'^;::,!;rf ^^X^j !g^n^in their in the (lublic schools,has been engaged i half, Raynor singled tn center, Cbes- as musical director. jhire safe on Brown's error, Boyd nut.
Leary to Brown, Haynor and Cbes-
number of pretty and useful gifts. The guests were Marion Dunbar, Raymond Smith Pearsall, John Sears, jr., John Denton, jr., John Schmidt, jr., Phyllis Lucas, •Naomi Livingston and Charles E. Liv¬ ingston, jr. A number nf older friends and relatives were entertained at din¬ ner and for the evening.
The W. C. T. U will meet nt the
home ni .Mrs. A. P. Davisson, 32 S.
Ocean Avenue, next''hursday, Octcb-
; iir'i.:rum leader, .Mrs.
subject, "t'o-ojieratinn '
with .Missionary Societie,^'
i'RESHYTERIAN i'HURCH .Sunday, S-^jittmber 27. the subject nf
wh(
auto triji
anti ti;.- i -sl ieiir.i i.inst [irovide al! re- j ham and Ashland in the ('atskills. l.'l shtTicn's. ' On visiting the first one the first
.\i: th- r suipri:.. at the meeting was tombstones >yhich attracted my atten- 'i... :'.:..i ;...(.,ie. i,..egatiori trom liemj)- consisting of District Regent George W. Bode,
rejiorts having a delightful trip, with | were jrood roads and fine weather. His jiarty went up the State road tn Stamford, ' Bridgeport, New Haven, New London, | and are making the best nl' a pleasant | vacation. |
BAPTIST CHURCH
I hire moving UJI, Abrams hit to right
;earl CoTinci Dei uty (Iran
Kigent Frank IL Wadsworth, Deputy Pederal Court Cleik A. B. O'Neil, Past llegents Frank D. Hawkins and Wal¬ ter R. Jones, which was also anxious to join in the war. Rapid mobiliza¬ tion jf the fraternu! forces will now take (ilac in . .assau County. Charter Oak (>.)uncil .f liockville O'ntre ac¬ cepted all cliLilleiiges and the Gray- l.eiird Team led by Editor I.. L. Davis, C. D. Sessler, John C. Bucken, (jeorge I AE25. Quinn anil other expcriencetl members, j "Dear friend as you this will tight to a finish the Youngsters ! Mournful sjiot draw near I'eani, led by E. F. .McMann, assisted Remember tis your frieni by John C. Buckson, jr., and other live wires. Several clasa initiations are exjiected and a gala social time and ball will finish what promises to be a very interesting season.
tion, with big letters on the front,
were those tf Jump, and Chase. the closing
I ran across one where in an attempt Yacht Club. to be h-ld Thursday
to economize the inscrijition read tivening, October 1, to assure ts suc-
"Florence, dau. of J. H. Jones." cess. The tables are to be so arranged
For the lirst time, I also noticed the that dancing can be enjoyed lietween
advertising sjiirit carried into the the courses.
cemetery, the name ot the muker of
the stones appeared on several of the The Ladies' Auxiliary connected
older stones. with Russell Hose Co., entertained
On one of the older stones I saw this , about forty neighbors and friends at
inscription regarding Timothy D. Sut¬ ton, died of snialljiox in June, 18.51,
"The Man on the Box," in 300 scenes and with a specially selected cast of ItjO people, is the next feature to be shown at the Plaza Wednesday, September 30; matinee and evening.
Advertlienient.
Perfection oil heaters, $2.98 Cook stoves, $11.00 up. 50c Liquid Veneer, 39c Triangle O'Cedar Mopa, 69c 3600 sheets toilet paper, 25c 6 ft. (hicken wire, $3.50 roll DaSilva. W. Merrick Rd.
Tel.
386-W ; 5 and 10c Store, 330-W.
Buy your coal now before you need Freeport Coal Company.
A<lT«rtla«iiiMrt
it.
Smith & Bedell this week talk about teeth attention in their adv.
Advartlcsment.
"The .Man on tne Box," with Max Fignian and Lolita Robertson in mo¬ tion jiictures, coniei to the Plaza Wed., Sept. 30; matinee and evening.
AdT«rt<sament.
Lewii H. Rosa Co. advertises Per- fecton Oil Heaters this week. While it don't feel just like uil stoves at this writing, it won't be many days before heat will be required.
Advertliamant.
Chubbuck's call attention to their well stocked 8tati<inery department; see udv.
Adv«rtlneinent
Trees, plants and shrubs can be se¬ cured at small cost at Woodbine Park Nursery, Bergen Place and Lena Ave. John J. Randall, Freeport, N. Y.
AdTI
School Notes
The New York State school authori¬ ties are getting more rigid this year in regard lo vaccination of public school children, and consequently the Free- port public schools are compelled to be very strict about letting pujiila regis¬ ter and enter school who have not been vaccinated.
The regulations under which the schools are being run this year are as follows: All new jiupiis under seven years of age must jiresent a certifi¬ cate of vaccination before they will be admitted. All pupils, whether new or nld, who are over seven years nf age and who aie not vaccinated must be vaccinated within a few weeks after being admitted to school. They are allowed to enter without vaccina¬ tion only so that they will not miss their work, but unless they become vaccinated in a short time after enter¬ ing school, they will be vaccinated by the school physician.
"by the starting of a team of horses.''
On the stone of a man who died over
lllfl years ago, it read that he died
"while on a visit with relatives out
West." His stone goes on to remark :
"Come view my mansion
Tis your home
Where I am
, r; . , ,. i Vou soon must come."
Owing to the smallness ol the candi ¦ , , , , , .,, , ,
dates for football this year, the school i J '/>"'} "'h"« °"«^ '"«" ""*» '^'"'^'^ ''^
authorities have thought it advisable ; [^^ f»"'"K °^ " ^'*"''
to susjiend the game until next year i "A lovely youth
when the boys will be more evenly i A morning flnwer
matched with the teams which they I Cut down and withered
play. I In an hour."
Each year smaller boys enter High | On the stone of a woman who died School and each year the sehool has to | in V*'2S, is this soliloquy; play larger teams, because the schools |"The fairest flower soon will fade
i "pivot Jiarty" last Friday ev.ning in 'the meeting room of the niwly com I jileted home of the Russell Hose Co , 1 on Leonard Avenue. The Auxiliary iwill be "at home" every Friday even¬ ing beginning October 2.
Miss Florence Brown has entered the Freshmen Class at Adelphi Col¬ lege.
MARRIED TWENTY YEARS Mr and Mrs. (Jeorge W. Uaynor. West IVlerrick Road, were married 2ii years ago Wednesday evening, and jirofierly celebrated the anniversary of the event at their home, with a number of their friends, all of whom eonjoyed a jileasant evening and ex¬ pressed their best ^vishes for many hajijiy returns of the event.
The guests included: Mesdames and Messrs. Stephen I'ettit,SylvesterShea, Fred W. Greaves, Frank .Ashdown, Frank Hornbeck. VV. H. Patterson, Clinton .M. Flint, .Mordan Peck ana Forest S. Dunbar; Mesdames K. Os¬ borne, H. B. Hagen, Henry Ashdown, E. R. Bassett, I. Da Silva, Goldsmith, jiecially if by accident, or sudden, as Conklin, C. W. Raynor, Matt Raynor,
('lara Rhodes, Bedell A. Cooper and Walter Stevenson ; .Misses Louisa Da Silva, Madeline Ashdown, Janet Ray¬ nor, Vira Raynor, Ella Raynor, Ina Rayncr; Masters Gilbert Flint, Walter Stevenson, Harvey Rhodes, Kenneth Ashdown, Ralph Raynor, G. N, Ray¬ nor, Merle T. Raynor.
".An Eternal Equation; Resjionsibil-j scoring Kaynor and Cheshire; he "^ent ity Equals the .^bilitv to Respond," i to stcoiul on tne throw in, Pettit. sin- will be the suliject'of the morning ser- 1 gled to right, Abraiii.'-^ was caught at mon in the Baptist Church. In the j third, Seanian to Hausenian to Reel,
Enough tickets haJ^e been sold f(jr !'"^""'"t^ ""•' P^^tor will preach the aec-I Beilell out. Halliiiii tn Hini^n; 2 rins.
e closing dinner of the South Shore '-""1 sermon in the series on "Pojiularj Fifth Minenia, ;:!f r CuemHi: li:,d
and Pertinent Questions." The ques- j flied to Sojier. Halllai; hit in the crowd titin will be "Why Should I Become a i in right for three bases, Sause walked Christian?" That these questions are j and stole second, Lewis hit to Ed- jiojiular was jiroved last Sunday even- j wards, who threw low to Boyd,Hallian ing by the large congregation gathered i scoring, Hausetnan hit to Raynor, who to hear the lirst one, "What is a ! threw out Siiuse at the jilate. Brnwn Christian'"" answered. Everybody wiil ! hit to Cheshire,whn stejijied nn second, be heartily welcomed. ; retiring Hausenian; 1 run, the last run | i,^j,\y ^f n,ise 3
' .Mint ij.a scored
In the sixth Hedell
Dwight that lies here.
Another from an older man who died in 1863 read:
"Afflictions sore, long time he bore. Physicians' aid wus vain Till God wa's pleased, death should him
seize And ease him of his pain."
Upon the tombstone of a young lad, Dennis Judd, died December, 1862, waa found this patriotic inscription: Windham gave me birth Bull Run battle of Aug. 3il gave me
death Noble N. Y. lady friends gave me my ,
Coffin and Soldiers' Shroud And young men of kindred mind my ' Stone.
in the older cemetery were stones indicting burials ove' ID') years ago when it aeemed to be fashionable to note the cause of a jierson's death ea-
At th.' .Methodist Church on Sunda.v ; In the sixth Hedell oul at lirst, .so- morniiig next Dr. Curtice will jireach ; lan singled to center, Edwards walk on "The Sovereignty of (Jnd.' In the Sojier flied to Lewis, Nol.tn and Kd- evening the sermon will be ujion the i wards made a dnuble steal, Kavnor hit theme, "A Brief ,-ur:ni!iry nf 'v',' .;it 1 to right, .'^coring .N'olan, ami Edwards God Exjiects of a Man "' [continued to second on the throw in,
Cheshire nut, Reel to Brown; 2 runs.
of its own size, such as Rockville Cen¬ tre, have dropped the game. Conse¬ quently for the past two years the team^has been [ilaying auch schools as Adelphi Academy and Hamilton Insti¬ tute, and the results have been disas¬ trous as the record of last year's team shows.
So, after careful consideration. Coach Hawley, Captain Clark and Man¬ ager Cutler have decided with the advice of Profs. Moon and Arthur to give UJ) the idea of jdaying the heavy schedule whi':h had been arranged for this year. Almost every team sched¬ uled outweighs the high scliool boys by about 10 pounds to the man.
A meeting of the Student statf
Jews Celebrating
Holy Season
Again the Jews, the world over, are observing the holy season, whieh be¬ gan with Rosh Hashbnah, or New Vear's Day, on Sunday evening, Sept. 2ti, and ends with the shemini Atzer eth. The Feast of Conclusion, on the evening of October 12th.
In the Jewish tradition, the Rosh Hashanah marks the anniversary of One exceptionally interesting stone the creation of the world, supposed to containing information ivhich I doubt have taken jilace 5,675 years ago. very much if many residents of Wind- The present Rosh Hashanah, there- ham could give me, was that of Jede- fore, will mark the beginning of the diah Hubbard, "the first settler of year 5,675. The change of date, how- Windham," who died Dec. 8, 1822, age ever, is of little or no importance, and 82. if the Jewish New Years Day had no
further significance ita appeal to the
«r*ii "W ^^^ would be very faint indeed. It is
Y llio Arp Trustees "^' ^^^ change of year but tbe change
This life will finish soon Reflect as you stand by That soon your death wili
of life that this day stresses, that
At the regular meeting of the Board makes it stand out as one of the holi-
Friday the warrant of the tax collector est days in the Jewish calendar.
i was extended for 30 days. Herein it radically differs from our
was' Bids for tile jiipe and water pipe civil New Year; it is a day set apart
for introspection and self-examination.
held Thursday afternoon for the pur- j were opened and contracts awarded.
jiose of electing ofiicers for the coming ] The following applications were The sacred character of this day is im-
year. The meeting was called to order ' granted:
by Miss Estes, teacher of English, and < later the chair was turned over to i Frederick Clark when it was found' tliat he was willing to retain the office , of editor, to which he had been previ-1 ously elected. i
Election of oflicers then took place | and the following were unanimously {
jilied in the two other names by which
The subjei:t of discourse by K"V. A. J. Park on Sundiiy at 7:15 in 'he Prea¬ byterian Chajiel, Roosevelt, on the Babylon Turnjiike, will be "Reasons for 'Trusting in (iod." Aii are cordial¬ ly invited to these services.
County Fair this Week
The 73rd annual exhibition ni the Agricultural Society of Quei-ns-Nassau Counties opened .Monday at the Fair Grounds, Mineola. riiis fair will last until Saturday night.
The racing has attracted many of the old-time horsemen on account of the entries. The horse show, as usu¬ al, is nne of the leading features.
Today (Friday) is children's day. when the school children v/ill be ad¬ mitted to the grounds free.
No department of the exhibition has been neglected and this year's exhibi¬ tion will be the banner fair in the his¬ tory of the society. The management has exerted ever^ means to make the fair a auccess and no detail has been neglected to make the exhibition corn- jilete in every detail.
In the eightn, Nolan out at first, Ed¬ wards strolled nn four wide ones, stole second. Super flied to Hallian, Kaynor singled, Edwards scoring, liaynor vlole aecond, Cheshir-- out at tirst ; 1 run.
FREEPORT A.
Player Nolan, If Edwarda, Sojier, cf Kaynor, ss Cheshire, 2 Hoyd, c .Abrams, rf I'ettit, lb Bedell, p Kerley, cf
Total
3 b
^ 1< MINEOLA A. C.
WeeklyWeatherReport
(For our readers
in other 18-
ocalitifes) 1 Clear and ¦
Friday, Sejiteiriber warm.
Saturday—Overcast early, cleared ' off warm. I
Sunday—Clear and warm. i
Monday—Clear and warm, mid-sum- | mer weather. j
Tuesday — Continuing warm, hottest September 22 since 1S95. I
Wednesday—About the same
Thursday—F"oggy in a. m., warm. |
Town Clerk |
Gilbert Improving!
Town Clerk Gilbert is slowly recuji- erating from his recent illness. He is \ not yet able to be back at bis desk at ' the Town Hall, but is so far improved as to be around his yard during the j warm jiart of the day.
Fourteen Years Ago |
(Items fif interest from tlie Review files I fourteen years ago tbis week ) I
i Player
! Sause, 2b
I Lewis, If
[ Hauseman, •¦ Brnwn, 111
I Keel, 3b
; .1. Seaman, rf
j Lang, s-i Coleman, cf Haliero/i, p Wright, 2b
Total
2 I
Score by innings ;
.Mineola o o 3 n 1 n
Freeport 1 2 2 u ii 2
Home run, Lewis; three ba^ Lang, Haileron; struck out by 3, by Haileron 2; base on balls
,1 X--.S
e hits. Bedell iir He.
iitv- an hour's work. .At t a. remains were again |i!;izing und Hose 4 had tn answer to a still alarm.
A chimney rtre at the residence ot .Meiviii Smitb. .North Mam ."street, Thursday afternoon, was the cause of the truck being taken out, with four men. Tbe soot in tfie chitnnej which was burning was sunn cleaned nut. A general alarm was nnt nece-sar\. but the department haa been out mi calls before where tht re was less lire than this one, and the cccujiiints of the house are to be thanked for their method of summoning assistance.
We answered ouj nineteenth general lire alarni.^or 191(1 at about 1 o'clock Saturday afternoon, the nineteenth of Sejiternber, a grass fire near the ga¬ rage of "Biily" Mack, on .Madison Avenue and Porterfield I'lace Chief Loonam ordered the recall seven niin¬ utes after, no damage having Ici-m done.
DKl'AKTMENT MELTING
A sjiecial meeting ni the l)e|'iirt- inent WHS held at the engine limine nii Church Street Wednesday evi iimg.
.Mrs. .A. E. Frnst. jirojirietnr nt the Crystal Lake HniiHe, invited tiii> lire- men to attend a dance to be lieid in their liinor. in ai.iTeciatioii i I the w.rk 1 'u. :.: ',:. :': - th-re n,i Miiy 26, tile dance !n on.:!, the formal ojiening of the new building. The otfi-r waa gnitefuily accejited, and Tuesday even¬ ing, Sf iitemlier '2H, was decided ujion, BUij a vote of thanks ordered sent to Mra. Frost.
F. Har.iid Lnonani nf Hnse 1, Wil¬ liam Dunker of Hn.-e 2, David I'etti- J. Cecil Pnwers of Hose 4, Edward A. Rice of Kngint' 1 and Frank S. Snedeker, jr.. of Truck 1 were ajijininted a coniinittee tn ar¬ range for same.
I'jion invitation of the Cbajilain, Rev. A. C. Karkau, it was decided to hold the annual memorial servic»'S of the Dejiartnient at the Lutheran Church on Sunday evening, October 4
The comniittee on field day sub¬ mitted its rejiort, shnwiiig a jirnlit of •¦?114.oJ. It wa.-decided tn enter this in a sejiarate fund, to lie known as a grand atand fund. The Fire •'ouncii WHS instructed to secure bids nn a portable grand stand tn be naed in cnn- neclinn with the field day events, and to award the contract for the same to the lowest tiidder.
It waa decided to request the Chief of Police to see that a tratlic <iflicer is stationed at .Vlerrick Rnad and .Main Street at every alarm of fire and re¬ main there until the lire Hjijiaratus has jiasseil.
GLASS LIKES
While grass lirerfare -eldnm excusa¬ ble, and are an exjiensive luxury for tbe village, the following clijiidngH frotn exchanges ahow that it is rmt al¬ ways tbat the alarm is unwise, '1 hen- is no excuse for grass and underbrush being allowed to get in this condition, but oiu'e it does, and gets on fire, helji ia often needed at once :
"On Sunday a brush lire started on the Jirojierty of O. Hutchinson and made rajiid progrea.- over the dry ground. .A I'hicken house and shecl were destrnyed by the flames and bad it not been for the efliiieiit work of the Lakeview, Hemjistead, Munson and .Malverne conijuinies the house would have caughi fire."
.Malverne .News.
"A barn belonging to .Miss .M. E. Brackett on lower Lincoln Avenue, Roekville Centre, became ignited yes-
ball by Hedell, Lewi Freeport 9, Mineola ( Raynor, Cheshire and of game, 1 hr. 3n min
left ; double Pettit 2 ; umjiire.
base
plays, ; time Aldis.
bas
Miss Madeline Bedeil fell over a chair and broke her wrist.
Freeport Creek is being dredged.
New $1500 pipe organ being placed in Presbyterian Church.
Water—C. H. Frederick, Frederick it is known, viz., the Day of Memor Avenue. ial, and the Day of the Blowing of the Light-Bertram Hope, Hillside Ave- Trumpets. In the first place it is the nue; L. N. Smith, Elliott Place; Her- day of Memorial, or Remembrance. man C. Lutz, 58 Pearsall Avenue; As such, it calls upon the Jews to re- James F. Corroon, Southside Avenue; member the divine purpose of bis life;| j Albert E, Ward, Hillside Avenue, secondly, it is the Day of the Blowing ^ The question of purchasing a Pul- of the Tran.pets. Its purpose is to
elected: Editor, Frederick Clark; as-1 motor was brought up, the Clerk hav- i rouse Israel from his self-complacency
sociate editors, Marie Mahnken and I ing been instructed to secure bids, and stir him to high resolves and
Marguerite Livingston; jokes editor, j The manufacturers of the Pulmotor nobler deeds.
Joel Pitcher; athletic editor, Gecrge, offered to furnish the apparatus for In the Reform Synagogues Rosh ^^ ^^ ^
Fox ; exchange editor, Helen Turner; : $185, and a bid was received from an- Hashanah is celebrated from sunset of j ^J;"^^|r"."™"^^gj attractive pioduc-
business manager, Kenneth Curtis; other concern advising a "Lungmot- Sept. 20 to sunset of Sept. 21, buf.; ... .i... di.
advisory advertising manager, Stuart |or." This latter appliance was $50 among Orthodox Jews the noliday
Cutler; advertising manager, Thomas i cheaper, and claimed many superior does not end until sunset of Oct 3.
O'Brien; circulating manager. Rose j qualities over the Polmotor, and as the
!^*1',' ,"'' "t"! ',^';)'''J'^" 3; hit^by pitched j^^day from a field fire .Mnr'.ed twenty
feel away. The building was totally destroved. HemjHlead, Hrooklvn
Times." .Hi-jit. 17.
And the fact remains that if ttie Vil-
: lage Hoard of several yearr-ago had not altered the ordinance as jirejiared by the l-'ire Criuncil to such shajie as to make it imjiosslble tn enforce it,
^ and it con8e(juently being rejected by the Fire Council, the owners of jrfop- erty who allowed grass tn accumulate in thia rnai.ner would have been liable if the riepartment was called out.
lieaide-i the general alarms there fiave been aeven still Hlarina for grass fires this year where one or more jiiecea of apparatus have resjionded.
Frank Johns Again
Burned Out
NOTES HY AMATEUR Raynor hit three times with men on driving in four runs.
Edwards had a great deaire to walk; he only strolled three times.
Cheshire made a good catch of Sea¬ man'.* fly back of first in the eighth
Pettit's bunt in the second had the infield all out of place and he was safe easily.
The hitting of Raynor and Abrams was a feature of the game.
We are still taking off our hat to Boyd, he keejis the infield going aU the time. Tuesday morning the Inncb wagon
The homer Lewis jioled in the third of Frank Johns on Church Street, ad- was dandy, right over the race track, joining the Realty Buiiding, was jiart-
Abrams had no chance for it.
As a novel. "The Man on the Box" s now selling in its tenth edition and as a stage play ran for two seasons in
New York and enjoyed huge popular!- j both times Raynor ty as a touring attraction. It is in ; p^ttjt five parts and in addition to jiossessing many sensational featares. contains a vein of romance which makes it one
ly destroyed by tire. "Tony," who ¦Aas in charge of-'^he wagon at the time, says he was work.ng in the yard in back, and has no idea how the fire started. The fire dejiartrnent was railed out, bvt was not needed, as the fire had been extingui.shed before their
Van Rees. ' Board was not at ali acquainted with
A suggestion was put forth from the the reaiicctive merits of the appli- 2nd year ciass that the exchange edi- ! ances, the queation was referred to the tors be divided into departments, after Health Officer, Dr. Runcie, to report which the meeting was adjourned. lat the next meeting of the Board.
Coming Wednesday, October 7, at the Plaza, Vitagraph special in eight reels, "The Christian," by HallCsine, king of all photo dramas
Adver' Isement
Freeport made two fast double play-i,
one in the first and one in the seventh,
Cheshire to
Our boys played one of the most ag¬ gressive and all around games they arrival, but nol before the interior r.f have played this year, 11 hits, 6 stolen the place was badl> burned. The loss base*, 8 extra bases on throws by Min- is estimated at about ^'200, covered by eola men, ail for a total of 8 runs, insurance. S. Dimon Smith is the They poled liiem out in all directions, agent.
bunted when .Mineola ^east exjiected Johns, who is driver of Hose 2,'Wan
Try my special box of cut flowers, it, ran wild on the bases and took aJ- a heavy loser in the fire which de-
75c, for the weekend. C. R. Ankers, vantage of every opportunity ; in the stroyed the Realty Building on March
florist, RockviUe Centre, L. I. Tele- field they backed each other up in ti of tbis year, having a restaurant
phone connection: delivery anywhere, great style and above ail played a nice there ai the time. In the previoua
Advcrtisera«Dt. clean snappy game. fire he had no insurance on hi* goods.
tions; at the Plaza Wednesday, Sep¬ tember 3i».
Advcrtlsoment
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Nassau County Review 19140925 |
| Date | 1914-09-25 |
| Month | 09 |
| Day | 25 |
| Year | 1914 |
| Volume | 19 |
| Issue | 39 |
Description
| Title | Nassau County Review 19140925 |
| Date | 1914-09-25 |
| Month | 09 |
| Day | 25 |
| Year | 1914 |
| Volume | 19 |
| Issue | 39 |
| Sequence | 1 |
| Page | 1 |
| Type | tiff |
| Mode | grayscale |
| BitsPerPixel | 8 |
| DPIX | 400 |
| DPIY | 400 |
| FileSizeK | 39833 |
| FileName | 19140925001.tif |
| FullText |
'U Nassau County Review Official Paper of Nassau County FREEPORT, N. Y., FRIDAV, SEPTE.WBER 25. 1914 Vcl. XIX, No. 39 Freeport Single copies of the Review for sale at Greeniilatt'n and lii-aithwaite's. Rail¬ road Avenue; Michnoff'h, Nasaau County Review, Da&iiva's and Go- iiet-i'n. Main Street; DaSilva's, West Merrick Road. tf HIGHWATER TIDE TABLE Tliese tim." HP-tlir Siiticly HrK)k. Deduct :-2 1 ir.innt-' f |
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