*0^J
THE WEATHER
<icn«riilly fair tonlaht nnd Wed-
io»1ay, with rlslnir tpmperntiirc.
L -
A
DAILY REVIEW
Of Nassau County
THE DAILY REVlEl
2c
a« ymmt Newa 8tea4 or tPMtrmtmm at Year Uoaaa
lOcPerWedt $5 P« T«w
Official Faper, Village of Freeport
FREEPORT, N. Y., TUESDAY^ APRIL 19, 1921
VoL XXIV, Na 48
MTHERWINS FRON SON IN REALH FIGHT
FRESIDENnEAVES
WASHmnm for
ntlP TONEW yoM
WHI Unveil Statue of Simon Boli¬ var, in Ceatral Park and Re¬ turn At Once To Capitol
K ROOSEVET BOOMED FOR I
THE ASSEMBLY!
MISS STIRUNG, AMERICAN WOMAN GOLF CHAMPION LEADS IN OPEN TOURNEY I
Washlnirton, April 19.—Accomp.inied hy a part>« of offlcial guests, thc Pi«>sl- flcnt -and Mrs. Harding left WurMiii,'- toa this morning for New Tork, Whi-.re late today the Preaident will unveil the Htatute of Simon Bolivar, th.? great South Amerlcnn liberator, in Central Park and make his flmt nppcch ax Presld»>nt awa.v from Washlnif'.on.
It win be a flying trip for the Pre*l- dcntlal party. Only three hours will he s|)ent In New York, the President
Supreme Court Decides Mrs. Vogel¬ sang Entitled to Property Sbe Transferred With Provision Son Remain Unmarried and Support Her—He Married and She Sued For Recovery
Hemp«t<ad, April 19.—Mrw. Ijcnit
VoRi'lHiuig of H(fnp»tc.'id ha."? won her
criMe In the Appellate DlvlHlon of the
Hupreme Court, agalnnt her son, Chris, j
Vogelsang through a de<-tj.lon h.ir,(ic<l | and his guestB returning to Waahing
down Saturday.
Mr«. \'V)gel8ang Htarted nn action
more than fi ye;ir ago lo set asid-! u
deed sho had given him of n houKc and
lot on the agreement. It Ih alleKcd. rhat
hn would supiwrt her for the re.st of
her lifo nnd wonld not marry. l.Hter
the son married and the mother st'ii iod
thf action to H<>t aside the deed. The case was tried Ijcfore Suprem<
Court .Tivttlpc. Benedict who reujlriid a
decision to tho effect that .Mr.s. Vosel nimg WUH entitled to a llen on the property for her expectancy of life. Which he Iixed nt $2,800. In cjiho lhe amount wa.s not paid in thirty riays, he oiilered that the property be Hjld. Pay¬ ment wns not marte and the property was sold, Mrs. Vogelsang hiiyin.,- it.
Mr. Vogelsang then appealed lo thc Appellate Uhislon, which lias now af¬ firmed unanimously the decl.slon o/ lu.s- tlce Benedict, which means thnt .Mrs. Vogelsang la held to Ih' legally entitled to the property.
Mrs. Vogelsisng was representeil by firilMlhs & Kornlikcr. wliH.' Seibiiiy, Seaman & Cehrlg appearc'l for Mr. Vogelsang on the trial of the '-aM' and Lincoln ». Tlnskln appeared .''nr him on the appeal.
T¥0¥HrClmCTED OFSTEAllNC "BOOZE"
Took Thirteen Bottles From For¬ mer Hotel Proprietor At Port Wasbington
Mlneola, April 19.—Wllllnm Bideon nnd (Jeorge Dewoy Manila Townsend, coloi-ed were convicted of robbery in the t^ounty Court ye.sterday afternoon. They were tried before ./udge Lewis 4- Smith and a jury. Assistant District Attorney Kdwiirds prosecuted the case.
The two young men were accused j of stealing thirteen bottles of rye whis- j key. Including: "Old Crow" and j "Scotch" and n bottle of wine from Stephen Smith, formerly a hotel pro¬ prietor of Port Washington, but who Huys he kept tho liquor for his own ¦ use after prohibition came Into force.
Mr. Smith, when aaked If he was sell¬ ing "hootch" now, refused to answer j on the ground that It might incriminate him. Hc placed a value of |6 a bottle on thc rye and "Scotch" .stolen from him and some of the habitues of the court room seem to think that the val¬ uation wns low.
"Joe" l.abacotta nn>l Ralph I.inong plln, charged with i-obbery. wtrc ill.s- mlssed on the plea of their counsel. Harry Moore. The complaining witness In the ca.se wns said to have trie<l to effect a money .settlemeht Instead of prosecutlns: the cnse. /¦'¦
London. April 19.—Mlm Alex Stirling, American woman golf champion, led M-lM C.rahnm, hor op[>onent In thc annual women's open tourney at Rane- high today by flve strokes for the flrst I nine holes. Miss Stirling turned Ih a I card of .^5 and Miss Graham a card of
Wife of Asnstant Secretary ofi Tt^e Anierl<«n playen 'lOwwed the Navy, Who Was tbe Assembly* I greatest of care and steadiness In mak-
man, Put Forward To Succeed, *"« "*''¦ ''^<''''- "*"'" p'ay'nR wa» re-
II tii.J'i'i»_ i markable considering the fact that the
Her Husband m Lefulature—! ..^urs^ is strange to h.r.
F. B. Davidson Not a Candidate I miss i^tch turned in n card of 72.
——— I considered very good for the Rcnelagh
Hemr>.stead, April Ifl.-The women ofj course. The play In the open tourney Oyster Uny hnve started a movement | Is medal play for the Gold Challenge
medal.
ton Immediately after the cevemonlof nre concluded In the park.
In the Presidential jiarty when It left Washington were. Col. Oeorge Hnr¬ vey, the newly named Ambassador to Great nritain, Senator Krelinghuysen and Edge of New Jersey, Brig. Gen. Charles E. Sawyer, nnd otlwrs. -The party will be Joined In New York by other officials and many member? of the Washington Diplomatic corps.
It Is expected that the Prea'dent's apeech will be devoted largely (o I.atln- Amerlcan affairs, and the need oi ilos- er unity between the Ri'publlcs of the Western Hemisphere,
The President will reach New York at 2:30 p. m. He will be driven from the Pennsylvania Railroad Station to the Waldorf where a brief r.^ceptlon will be held, and following that will tnke pnrt In the parade to the I'ol'var Statute In CentrnI Park. Ther^ hc will unveil the statue and after the tere monies return Immediately to the sta¬ tion to return to Washington. Enroute to the state a brief hnlt will be mn<lc at the "Light Housp," a schtool for the blind, in Fifth *treet.
Tho President and his party are due to arrive In Washington at 10:30 to-- night.
Uj)tnwn Xew York wns In gala attire early today apd crowds l)egan to scram¬ ble ^for -vlantage iKtInts long 'toefqre President Harding nnd a party of (JoV- ernmeht Ofliciala w^re to arrive for the unveiling this afternoon of the statue of Simon Bolivar, presented to the city of New York hy Venezuela. The monu¬ ment to the great South American liberator stands bn Bolivar HIII in Cen-' tral Pnrk, oppo.<iit9 BIghty.thIrd atreati i Governor .Miller and Mayor Hyland | will represent Now York State and > City, respectively. Rene Vlvlanl also will be there, representing France.
HUGHES SENDS NOTE TO ENGLAND RELATIVE TO COSTA RICA OIL QUESTION:
for thc nomination of Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., an the successor, to her husband, who recently resigned his plnce In Ihe A.ssembly to become n.s- sistnnt secretary'' of the nnvy, which pliici' his father once filled. '
Mrs. Roosevelt has not given her con. ssnt to be n candidate, but it is known that she is receptive, and fbiit becau.so of her keer\ interest In whatever hei- j husbnnd did and does she hns a grasp of slHte p.lTaIrs und politics in general, i It is said that during the last pre.sT. I dential and state campaign, when her j husband was campaigning for President Harding, that .Mrs. Koo.«'evt*lt took the I .slump in .Vassau Connty in the Second .\s.sembly Di.strict tq boost hei- husband's; cau.so as tho candidate from that district for member of Assembly.
Mrs. Kdward Blssa.swayof Oyster Hay. one of the few woman attorney.s in active practice in Nas.sau County, an- nounceil the plan to launch Mrs. Room;- velf a week ago. At that lime it was intended to have Mr-.s. Roo.sovelt .sn> ceed her hu.sband In the present Assem¬ bly, if it were po.ssible to have a special election for that purpose, but because lhe plnn was launched only a few days before the legislative .session adjourned it was planned to leave the whole mat. tei- In abeyance and to put forth a boom for Mrs. Roosevelt's candidacy in the election next fall.
-Mrs. Sioosevelt will reside in Wash¬ ington with h(w husband as .soon us he riturUM from a aouthcrn¦ 4our of duty as part of his work as assistniit .sec¬ retary of the navy.
It wa« thought several we<J<s ago that' Frederick Trube David.son, .son of Henry B. Davidson, would be a candi¬ date for the iepr«*sentative in Assembly in the Second District, but Mr. David, .son is still in law .school, and an election: to the Legislature for hfiti would mean he must forego his studies.
Recently he announced he was not a candidate for the vacancy in the As. sembly.
Miss Stirling, with a card of 37 for the second nine holes, tied Miss Cecile I.#ltch's flne card of 72 for the course. Miss Graham, with whom she went around, flnished with another 40 for a total of 80.
The American Champion suffered the misfortune of losing a stroke out of bounds on the sixteenth hole.
Mlsa Suttle's card, also a 72, tied those of Miss Stirling and Miss Leitch.
MRS. MACKAYE'S BODYFOUNDlNRlYERj
Noted Suffragist Had Disappeared
From Husband's Side In Grand
Central Station
Xew York. April 19.—The ho<ly of Mrs. Jesale Hardy Stubbs Mackaye. noted suffragist and wife of Benton Macknye, forestry expc-rl, was found In the Enst iflver off I.x>ng Island dty last night nnd positively identified to¬ day by Charles Whitaker and Mabel Irwin, friends of the woman.
Before breaking away from her bus. band at Grand Central Station yester¬ day, prior to departure to the country for her health. Mrs. Mackaye was itnld to have threatened to throw herself in the river.
Mackaye. the woman's husband, was notified Immedlatel.v,
The identifij'atlon was made at a morgue In Ix)ng Island Cit.v.
SUPERVISORS Aa UPON SERIES OF LESSERMATTERSi
Adjust Series of Routine Matters!
At Meeting—Cbainnan Smith
Confined To Hb Home
Mineola. Aprtl 19.—When the Board of Supervisors' met here yesterdny, j County Tiea.surer William R. Luyster I .sent a ier>ort to the effe<-t thnt the Iwnk ' tax moneys for 1920 amounted to }:i\..l 6U.99 and that he was holding them ' against such lime as they should be ! apportioned to the various towns. Thei report was refet\:ed to ("ounty .\ttorney i H. Stewart McKnight fnr ar>portion- ment.
Supervisor Remsen presided at the meeting because Chairman Hii-nm R. Smith is conflned to his home in Free. port by a .severe cold.
The committee from the P>;ir .Vssocl-
NAKAUCOONTY
JAENEEDSTO
BE ENLARGED
State Prisons Commission Inforni Board of Supervisors That Fu¬ ture Requirements Makes Nee- essary An Extension To The Jail —Contract With Westchester County Affords Temporary Re« lief At Present
ution heade<l by County Comiitroller The body had been In the water al)out! Benuelt and Henry 1,. .Miix.son, which
CARPENTIER-DEMPSEY HGHT IN JERSEY CITY, JULY 2
New York. April 19.—Jersey City gets the Uemiisey-Carpentler light scheduled for July 2. Promoter Tex lUckaril made this announcement at noon today.
nickurd Is considering three siies In Jersey City for the building of nn arena and will pick out a—Ai^lnitc ".spot" later.
In announcing his decision to give the fight to .lersey City, Rickard .said:
"Jersey City Is admirabl.v located, close •to Xew York and easily reached from all parts of the metropolitan dis- trU't. Police arrangements there, too. will lie fine, arid I am cnntldent th.il tbe handling of the crowd vyill be made efTlclent there because of the ad\an- tages of the loi'ation."
two hour.s.
Mr. Whitaker made arrangements for the funeral tomorrow. The iKxly will be cremated.
. Mackaye was so prostrated at the news of his wife's death he was unable to visit the morgue.
Mrs. Mackaye was 45 yeara old, waa born In Chicago und became widely known as Jessie Stubbs. mlllitunt suff¬ ragist. She was responsible for the famous "Suffrage Hike" from *.'<;w Vork to Albany In 1912, when the Suffragists presented a petition to Governor Sulzer asking for the ballot. She wns also 11 leader of the great mass meeting of Suffragists at Washington on the subject of "Votes For Women."
committee last week presented pjctuies o'f Inte county Judges and surrogates to the county, reported that the> would like to have the pictures hung in Sur¬ rogate Howell's court room where the men had r)resided during their terms of offlce. The board concurred In the report at the Instance of Supervl.sor Doughty.
.Mineola, April 19.—The State Pt-isong j Comml.ssion has Just told the Board of : Supervisors Ihnt the pre.sent nnd fu¬ ture requirements of the Nas.sau (>>un. ity Jail make necesNiry .in ext<;nftlbn ot Ihe Jail facilities. I This information Is contnined In n report of the jail inspection on Apiil 6. This report Is sent to the Super¬ visors by John S. I\enneil>-, chnlrman I rtf the i^lales Prisons Comtiil.ssion.
It sets forth that on the dny thc in. ^ spcctlon was niade ther«;,wei-e twenty- eight prisoners there nnn that Ihey were tindei-'proper classification. Thia was done, thc report al.so says, by put-
Clerk Merritt wns in.stiucted to,write I^'""^ *'* "''*''' Pii-'oners in the recer>tion
Legion MeetinK Thursday
Roekvllle Centre Post, 303 .American Legion will meet Thur.sday at 8 o'clock in tlie Live Oiik Engine Hou.se. Wash¬ ington street. Matters of vital import¬ ance are to be considered.
SCHAEFFER RESIGNS AS POLICE OFFICER
ECONOMIST ASSERTS S MEN NOW CONTROL 99 RAJLROADS
{
Representative of Railway Employees Also Says Organized Capital Is ''On Strike'^ To Crush Organized Labor and Has Deliberately Planned Era of Unemployment—Interlocking Direc¬ torates Means of Control
I rtfi I
Henry Pler.son, a real estate operator in Brooklyn, to thc effeit that Na.s,suu County ha<l not and does not intend to permit tax exeiniitlons on new buildings erected in the county. .VIi-. Pierson had written to the board to the effe( t that he had, put up twenty.flve. hoaseh in <jueens Counly because property was exempted there and sincr' he wns in- tei-ested In pioperty in Westbury ho tlio\^.uht Nassau County tniftlit act un¬ der fhe law .llso. The supervisors have innintaine<l that ll is not nece.s.sary In .Nassau County that the taxes must bo pairl by all the people and that the only one to benefit by such ex^mrilion would 'be the nian building a mansion who Is well able to i)ay his taxes.
William H. Cocks was awardisl tho contract for the construction of a con¬ crete gutter In Glen Cove avenue, 0\. .ster Bay. The cost i.s $2BI.II'I.
Crampton Bros, were uwarded the ciiil- tract for- the iminovenieiit of Bayview avenue from Cutter .Mrll road to Arr.in-
i room nnd by putting witnesses in whnt iwas foimeily known ns the tramp I room.
j The commission further' says that tho Icontract with the Westchester Cotinty i l'enlten|ia<y to take care of' r>ri.soner« j has helped tempo.iarily but tVint the u.so of the basement for witnesses not ac¬ cused of any crime is riuestionahle.
It also says, "I'nder the present con¬ ditions if iMisoners require classillca- tioii other th.an that which existed oil the day' of inspection il would be im¬ possible to make proper .sx'gi-egat ion. There can be no iloubt that the-pre.sent anil future requirements of this lounly make necessary an eiitension of the jail facllilies. Tlic matter shuuM be cai<- lully followe<l by lhe Commission."
The jnaVter of extending the ja^l fn- illitles lias been before the bojird at other times and in dilTer<«it guise. 'I'hn Staler Prisons ('omml.ssiolis recommend¬ ed that it be done at a prior titne but the matter' wus held up when a'llriuid
Chicago. April 19.—Organized capital is "on strike" to ciTish organized labor,
Turns In Badges When Informed!''"" '^f "^''b-'^'-'y "'"""f «" •"•'^"'f
n f, .. C . Uf IJ unemployment, hunger and distress to
By taptam services Would Inccompii.sh this purpo.se w. Jett i^tuck.
Terminate With Month !'econo,m»«*CJfor the milwiiy employees,
-• 'charged in a brief pre^jirnted to the
Rock^^llc Ontre, April 19.—"l.arry" | Cnlted Wlates Railway Labor Board .Schaeffer of Lynbrook, a member of lotJ^V-
the Police Department for seven ^he railway employees played their „.. . ,1 ...... a ; trump card today, when I.,auck filed his
The no e was dispatched by 8ecro-^«nth.s„ when Informed Inst night by i^.iblt, entitled "Human .Standards and Jtary of State iHughes on April 15. be- p„„^^ (.^p,^,„ ^,,„„ ^^^^ ^,„ services ] R^^^.^y Policy." , Lauck charged that
on the force would terminate with the la small group of bankers and flnanciers end df the month, immediately tendered ;control the entire railroad industry and
closely allitHl industries, and that they are In a criminal conspir-acy to crush
(Bjr InterMitloBal News Htrvlrr.)
Washington, April lii.—The United; States hrfs sent a note to Great Britain dealing with the so-called Amory Oil Concession In t^osta Rica and the al¬ leged criticism by British officials of the action of this government In refus¬ ing to support the concession. It was learned here to<lay. ms dll of State iHughes on April 15, be Ing forwarded through the American Embass.v at London.
The Qommunicatlon was In the nature
his resignation to take effect at once.
of u protest, having been prompted by
the speech of a British official In the j The Board of Trustees are fcheduled
House of Commons on March 1, dur-j to meet Thursday night, and the resig-
.„ I Ing the course of which It was mtl-' ^jj^^ „.„, p,.„bably be acte<l on then.
PERFORMANCE TOjmRROW J™X.'t Z^ZrZ7Z:"c::li «"•'-"¦¦ '-«- —« '•«— •»
FOR LEGION'S BENEFIT) Mca. l,a,l ™*.«.oml toprop.rly ,„j'"to»l-'«l''-"™-
I procure the annulment of the concession i ,, , t. .. .. «, . ^ .•, . . _. • „,
Hempstead, April 19.-"Nothlng But j or an oil company in which British cap-, ^'^'^'^ P<>'"-«7"; '•*" f"l ^'^"^'^^'T:7f ^Jr^'T.'"-i h^ The Truth," which wa« produced toL«, ^^^ mterVsted. ' ^''^'*''' "<"'¦ ^""''^" »''-«^«'<l*'"' Wallace !divide 193 railroad directorships, among
full hou.ses by th^ Loretto Dramatic ¦
Boa I'd of Trustees Kenneth Frost, motor-
labor.
Through a vast system of Interlock¬ ing directoi'ates. liftiick's brief alleges, the firm of J. P. Morgan and Company virtually conti-ols the entire flnancial .situation as it affects the railroads.
as Chief of Police, accepted the reslg-j them, and absolutely control 99 class nation nnd asked the Board to sane-{one railroads. This coterie of Inter- tlon his action at thc meeting Friilay, {locking directors, Lauck allege.", abso- April 8. It did. ilately control 211.280 miles of railroad,
William N. Jackson, of this village, ior 82 per cent of the entire railroad
system of the country.
The show greatly plea.sed those who saw U iK'fore, and Its reputation at tlsiil time will no doubt ttm welcome to the many who mi.s.sed It before.
nXES RESPWTSIWUTY FOR TRAIN WREa AT PORTER
I vacancy caused by Frost's resignation.
I AUGUSTA VICTORIA LAID
TO REST IN POTSDAM
Society a short time ago, will be «'ven | „n-0 » om TA PACC VUtW
again tomorrow evening in tho Village i mtrAAtJll IU rAOo lkn\/A Hall, for thc beneflt of Hempstead Post, i PEACE RESOLUTION
American Legion. i i, . . «,. .w
The post will use the money to defray ! Washington. April 19.—Passage of the, was appointed on probation to nil the the expen.ses for thc Memorial l>»y ob-|Knox Peace Resolution hy the Senate, servunce on May 30, when a ixirade j Immetliately foltowing the predicted will be held, and the graves of deceased j ratlflcatlon of the Columbian treaty by veterans properly decorated. the Senate tomorrow, was agreed upon
today by Republican leudei-s of th«
Seiiate. j Potstlum, April !».—Augusta Victoria
I It was declared Ilttle difficulty Is an-1 "Brnprt^s of Sorrow." was laid to her! *«'•*> o' eleven, and Baker and Van- ! tlclp&ted In jamming the> Knox meas-1 i^st rest hei-e today In the "Antlkenj"lerbllt'of ten each. ur« through both the Senate nnd House' Tempel," an unique mausoleum just offj These directors. It was also pointed i within the next Yew days. jthe Palace Sans Sou el, built by Pred- «>u'. control twenty-one of the largest
A meeting of the Senate Foreign R«*| ^rlck the Oreat. The old Prussian king »»««• ^hd equipment plants of the coim-
jlatlons Committee will be held Thuni-j|,ad named It so because It was the (try In connection with banks and i-all-
^,,,.11, 9.—The dlriH-t !*'**¦ *° r^vort the resolution favorably | pjace where he forgot his canm andifonda, including tbe United States Steel between I *"** promptly to the flenate. Senator | gorrovi-s. ! Coii>oration. ,
' IxHige. Republican of Massachusetts.! Tbe fune'.-al of the ex-Kalserin waaj Fifty-flve directors knit flfte^ of New the committee chairman, announced, jthe moat-Imiwvlnc eveot seen within j York's biggest flnancial Institutions to-
Robert S. Lovett, William Rockefeller, H. W. T>efcirest, A. H. Smith, G. F. Bidfer and H. 8. Vanderhilt were named as the chief offenders.
I.iOvett, it yfmi* charged. Is a director of twelve roads; Rockefeller. Deforest and
i Willis avenue, Mineola, on the ground [that it WJIS erroneously assessed becaust- [it Is a charitallle institution.
For- the piir'iiose of widening Middle
N'eck Koad ill Port Washington, the [ county has arranged to pur-chase the
lands that will be needed.
the result of a strike of organized capi
tal against .society and capital,-nationilfi^ ot $18,000 against th ly and internationally organized, and concentrated t.akes the stand that <-api- tal shall go on strike until labor conies to ils knees arul consents to sweeping reductions of wages, and also consents to surrender its right to bai'guin col¬ lectively on a .scale of co.extension with th«v organization of the employees.
"This evidence shows that there is a capital combine of the major Imnks. railroads and industries controlling bn.'^io materials, and that this combine has nnd exercises a jiower over the econor.iic destiny of the Cnlted States. This li¬ ter-related capital groui 'deflat ed
took by pre<'ipit.ating inilustiial stagna¬ tion to 'deflate" labor.
"This evidence shows that within one and the same identical caiiitallstic group Ilea the power to adjust or- mis- adjust relative prices In a manner that will stimulate or suppress industrial ac¬ tivity."
The railway employees make no Is¬ sue, the stateriient .say.s, of the propri¬ ety or po.ssible necessity of a Central¬ ized system of economic <o-ordlnatlon, but they "challenge the uncons<-lonable mi.suse which this great co.ordlnatlon has made of Its i>ower."
dale avenue, Nor-th Hempsteail. Tho j Jury i'eported Ihat tho extensions wero cost is $74,410. The road is to be paved • unneces.sary. The Prisons Commission, with concrete and thei'e ni'e numer-ous I er'S took the matter to court and a lef- cntcli basins and drains to be put in. )«<ree has just i<oturned. his flndings.
The moneys received from dog li-j which culls for l-ertaln chjinges in tho censes, reported last week, have been! jail.
niiportioned to the various town as fol-j 'piils report was before the board to- lows: Hempstead, $2,087.11: N o r t h {day but nonaction was taken In lela- Henip.stead, !)tl,I!ll-79; Oyster Bay. $4:i3.-;tion In il. 7.S nnd C.li-n Cove, $l,18..-.8. • ^
The bill of Philip Kelly for the,de¬ struction of dogs amounting to $'J«fi,40 was ordered paid.
l'he board lancelled the assessminl Children Home In
MERRICK MARY LOST IN FREEPORT
Perplexed Men Who Misunderstood
"A-Merick-a" for America
Took Her To Police
Freeport, April l!l.--( leoige Nagol o( The continci for the Improvement to I •'">'>'<lyn in coiiipnoy with two coimwn-
deliberately the farmers and then uniTf r-
the East Wiliiston rond was let to .An¬ drews Bros. •
The contr-ac't for tho improvement of Neptune nvenue, Woodmere. from Broadway lo Browi-rs Poi't Branch, a distance of 2100 feet, was let to Both & Weston for $ir),:'50.
BIG CATCHES AT NEW FISHING HOLE
Hifh Winds Drive Herrinf Up Mill
River—Are Easily Caufrht At
Reservoir Outlet
Washington cauae of the side colllnlon pasaenger trains of the Michigan Cen¬ tral and New York Centnil nt Pt.rter, Ind., on February ST. which resulted In the death of thirty-five pas.'tengei-i and two employees and the Injurv m e>levt>n pasacngers, two employees and
-^
< 0.\L PRICKS REDl'CBD
Washington, April II—Reductions m
the former German empire since theJKPther, and to the Arm of J. P. Mor days of the Hohenaollern r«i«n. [gan an<i t'omiwinV. it was declared.
In fMimp and nva«iyt||^nce It lacked} Summarized, the charge of the lail- ot the old time Imperial displAy- At'«ay employees is that a circle of banks.
seven other peraons. was the failure, of the price of retail coal of |l to $2 per this caWtng no unoward incident had j rail roads, cement, steel and other Indus- en»ln»er Long of Michigan (.Vn tra I ton were announced here today. Theoe-j occurred, though the «tmo«ph«re WMi tries has been welded together Into a i.'aln No. it), to obeeive and obsy t h» i reductions Include all grades of coal tense, particularly In Beriln. where. ac-!ria»ntlc conspiracy to control basic ma ¦iaaal ImUottloa ot t*» hooi* «l«ntil trow ruia-or-n»l«e to tlio htctwat »!*«««, I according to telephonk: advlcea. the au-terlals, i«il traiispftrtation and flnance, gOMraina Vtxa movwnwit of trslns over Prenont prices, taktnc tl»» rctluetlfms {thorltlee »re theroushly prepared for land to beat down labor, thf) owwing at Sorter, thf InlM'ftste; Into e«nB»«»Uoo. nuj^e from M ror | any attempt by oxtremlatai or cMiMrva- -The present industrial situation-of Coi^merce Commlsaloit nnnounred lo^jton for slack, or run-of-mine, to $10.50 i tt vea to nuike the fiinoral it the e<-«n- paralysis. /Which has stafrgered An(»er- day. ' for choice Montevailo a«aii^ I presa thc oecaslon for a a«tBOiwtntt1on. tat," Lwick'-s statement declarea, "ta
Rockville Centre. April 19.—" 'Tis an III wind that blows no man no goo<l "
This old adage was demonstrated during the past few days to the resi¬ dents of the lower section of the vlilage, "The great national paradox of the j when boys, and later men, gathered at
banklng-rallway-industrlul combine, and the outlet of the flrst reservoir and
its proflts is thrown Into bold relief," ! flshed. •
the statement continues. "The rail- ' The two pipes passing ur\der the rail¬ roads are pleading poverty. The^mnks rood tracks and the wall over whl<:h
are making unprecedented pwl^s and the surplus water flowed from fhe
declaring unprecedented dividends. The' reservoir, formed a natural trap for
same applies to steel, cpal, railway hundreds of flsh: The |»tlence of u
equipment and similarly situated oon. hook and line was not needed.
cems. High top iHMitsand a crub net roHUiled ,h^ police to dlrwt Mary how tfl get
"The capital combine, in preparing'In ratches which fllled bushel liaskets
ta precipitate unemployment, adopted a and burlap sacks so that It requlrMi
policy that the rallroadM sliould 'do If tWo to carry nway the load.
first." Railway improvement programs The flsh are believed to lie herring,
were deferred; railway maintenance t(iiM with now and thfn a perch. Tbey are
reduced below minimum legal require. Ipijesumed to have been blown tn by the Ht'Hulfz
ment.s; a kink was put In the purchas-j high winds and wbrked their way up i,, |."
lug power of the American people, and Mill River to fhe ["fishing hole."
Industry was sent head-on [Into stag-i When they reached this plnce they
nation. ; could n<»t swim over the emlK»nkm«iflt
"The welfare of •4.000.000 workers and and were easily caini'itf.,
their families. toUlinc another J2.«00,(KM) ¦ '_ _,"¦':.• ¦
Nzai
ions brought u young giri Into pollen hend<4Uar'teis Sunday and deposited her with the kind ofllcers.
No, she was not under Ihe inlluenco of any drug or l(i|Uid; she was not l» Victim of osi)hasiu, the young men hnd not Hbdiicted her and then become (on- science stricken—she was merely lost.
.Mar^'^S<'hultz. nge IX. .i doniestic in the lanilly of T^iank Wolfe of .Menick had her first day olT, and waiidereil loo l>r. Getting out of Merrick Is easy, two steps and therr you are. tb-ltlng ImtV is a differ-ent matter, unless you know tho lundmaiks.
.Mary Schultz did not know fhe Innd- rnaiUs und w.is lookini; behirul every heilge she came to for .Merrick. Wheu st!>i)ped iiy the young men who noticed her strange actions and asked whero she wanted lo .go. she said, "A-Mor- rick.a." ^ It whs repeated again, being sure they wer'o In America, they were perplexed. KInally they decided to tako her' fo the FreoiKU't police .station.
Ho .Mary landed In headiiiiarters still waichlns for tbe plnce of her em|>l«y- inelif. .Ml. Wolfe, who lives on Hernp- sfrad BouleVHrd, wns flailed and when (old of the affair ftj*ked the cops to bold . the line a minute. A thorough senich of*Mary'« room rev«>aled the fact that she wa«i' not tbere and Mr. Wolfe told
;«r .Merrick. ¦
In the ruliiie Muryils going to talto a night voarHt- irr»n itand .McNully'M nnd when she goes abroad uhe Will wj'AC in a conspicuous pluce .1 fi£;n, "M:iry retuin to F. Woi-
BBNZOMlM'r
!he awn lie M« iwMMikeld raoMdr, for kraal and toMOlUe. MmK
ooaVMilant. for
She suld thai ull towns on n\< isi.'iO't lookitl alike to her and thut the only difference between thom was a few centn i-nrtare. Mary will not get the wsiiider- liist again until she has manlered the Ke<wr<iphy of the IjOng Islnnd Kttn • on the main tine including the
or IS,000,000—nearly one-fifth of oun
population—if! at the mercy of tboKe j *•
tvhose mi.<^uided financial policy can [a tmmaini ao a^raut%g. a atandtar' tkai; ai>out leaving on track Ko. ^^, ami do
plunge them Into uaemjployment." i f!:^*^^^ mmX—Aat"*' °** * *'**^ *^ 'not leave unj*articles In the car."
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