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onograph NASSAU COUNTY REVIEW. ' ------------------------------- — i.— ■INI ------------------ Victor Talking Machine Make Things Lively What better combination can be imagined? Stop and think of this, father of a family, on your way home, and then stop in and hear the machines talk and have one Sent home. A ... yery small preliminary payment will make it yours. ALL t)ie American selections to date—including the new Amberol four minute records—in stock. The only place where a com plete line of records can be found on Long Island. - 6 . C . A . F U L T O N FREEPORT, L. I. .,,.42-48 W. Merrick Road 1*4^; r ; :: ; Vjooonnooooooooooooooooooooocoooooooooooooooooooooooo H W M . G . M I L L E R Builder and General Contractor m a i n o m e n 16 Bedford Ave., BROOKLYN, N- Y. L Y. aad M. J. TelopSeeo. U9 6feeapelB« Public Buildings, Churches and Heavy Factory Building Made a Specialty i A p p r a i s e r o f R . e a l E s ttxte I ozad A d j u s t e r o f F i r e L o s s e s I KESIDENCE. FKEEPOBT, NEW TORE E gylw y K o iaw C o M a e e t l o m e —-v —— ! • F\ L TO REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS NOTICE : < j- ! ’ : i < | J I -jl j: * i 21 5 From Forest to Finish One Sm all Profit Only F R E E P O R T a n d MILTON Construction Co. ' (ail Tim b er, Shingle Incorporated Jim and Lath Mfils AND DRYING KILLS, MILTON, N. Y. - G e n e r a l Mill Works East Merrlcti RoSd FREEPORT, L. I. C o n tractors' and B u ilders' Plans and Estim a tes for all > kinds•«* building constructions MNE OEM) OF COLO ~ W M ON LIKE Crew of StOBlCar Ferry Lost in Lake Erie Storm T T - r-* r - HPORTING BRKVltlEa. BOAT FOUND BY SEARCHERS Bight, Seated Erect and Encased in Ice, Are Towed Into Erie—The Ninth Is Found Prone in the Bottom of the Boat. Erie, Pa.—Nine men, frozen to deaths covered wit h Ice, were towed here by the State Fisheries’ boat. Commodore Perry. The frigid fetters that bound them kept eight of the men seated, stark and stiff, in the little yawl In which they had struggled to escape the fate that overcame them. The ninth bf the dead crew \was prone, frozen to the yawl’s bottom. And‘there had been a tenth pas senger on this hideous voyage, for In the yawl’s bow was found every- stitch of clothing that a sailorman on the Great Lakes wears in this season. There is little doubt that this tenth man, seeing his comrades’ eyes star ing at him.through films of ice, went mad, stripped himself and plunged, to a quicker end, in the waters of the lake. The nine glassy images were of the crew of the Besemer and Mar quette car ferry, No. 2, which has been missing since a terrific wintry gale swept Lake Erie. The Commo- iore Perry, with scores of other boats, was searching for No. 2. aboard thirty-eight men, of whom six were passengers. It seems impos sible that any has escaped. Thousands of persons swarmed to the piers. As soon as the flshboat made fast a force of men with tackle raised the nine bodies to the dock, where wagons were in waiting. The procession passed through the prin cipal streets of the city with hundreds of citizens following. Conneaut, Ohio, where most of the men lived, was notified by telephone, and a hundred residents of that city arrived here and made .the following Identifications: H. Thomas, second cook, Port Stanley; William Ray, J. W. Sonars, waiter; G. R. Smith, steward; P. Steel, fireman; J. Shenk, fireman; J. Hart, oiler;,, O’Hagen, Charles Allen, all of Conneaut. The Bessemer and Marquette ferry boat No. 2 was one of the big vessels run by that railroad between Con neaut, Ohio, and Port Stanley, Can ada. She was a ateel boat, with a ca pacity of thirty-four loaded cars. The boat left Conneaut with thirty-two cars of coal aboard and carrying thir ty-eight persons. In the gale that followed, during which at least fifty- two lives were lost on the lakes, the boat foundered. It is supposed that the boat's tossing displaced the coal cars and they were pitched through the sides. Then the waves over whelmed her. James R. Keene’s Ballot returned from England, where 61s campaign was a total failure. Prominent men In American foot ball show great Interest in the plan for Canadian Rugby game. Quarterback Killer was elected cajftehr, of the Michigan football eleven et Ann Arbor for 1910. Timothy D. Sullivan la named stakeholder of the Jeffrles-Johnson fight, ,$40,000 being deposited with him. “Freddie” Welsh defeated \John ny” Summers in a twenty-round fight for the lightweight championship In England. The heads of the various Virginia educational institutions have united In demanding a revision of the foot ball rules. An offer by letter has been made to Harvard, Princeton or Carlisle to play Michigan New Year’s Day at Pasa dena, Cal., during the Tournament of Roses. Announcement is made by the Coney Island Jockey Club that seven teen stakes will be run at the June meeting and more than |75,000 is hung up in those rates. Hugh McIntosh’s agent notified Philadelphia Jack O’Brien that he can get a bonus of $12,000, win, lose or draw. If he will go to Australia for a twenty-round bout with hie old rival. Tommy Burns. The world’s record for twenty miles was lowered eleven seconds by Aitken, who drove a sensational race in a National car at the Atlanta auto mobile races. George Robertson won two races in a Flat, the first he won at that meeting. It is Said that a prominent breeder In the Argentine Republic recently q . * | offered $200,000 for the great Eng- 1 colt Bayardo, but that his owner. WOODCLEFT H#BOR ' F r e e p o r t , L o n g I e IaC* The Bungalow Section of **P°rt Electric Lights Rnlng Water Cem ent Walks Boating Bathing . Fishing Trolley Line Through tlProperty Bungalows and Lots For Sale on Y Terms. Very , Desirable Either For Oct*1* * or as an Investin' JOHN J. RANDALlCOMPANY Owner? FREEPORT, LOP ISLAND TWO WOMEN KILLED BY NEGRO. Mr. Fairle, declined with promptness. the proposition K ills Playm a te in Quarrel. At Cannelton, Ind.. Claude Wil liams, sixteen years, his mind inflamed from reading trashy novels, shot and killed James Hall, thirteen years^pld, and escaped in a rowboat to the Ken tucky shores. He quarreled with young Hall over a trifling matter and then shot him in the forehead with a small rifle. Attorney as Commissioner. Mayor Gaynor will appoint a $20,- 000 a year lawyer as Commlsslonei Of Accounts. BANK OF Explaining the Great Advant’S Of doing badness through a ** suggests the extending of this inv*>n to business men and heads of f^ee to call and inquire into par met! \°r simplifying the payment bf all { check—a method, once triedever abandoned. To the business 1 we want to point out the manifolrlv.an- tagee gained by a connection t)” 1868 his credit in the financial worlot one instance of many that we ctr8®10\8 to him. F i r s t N a t i o n a l j a n *< OF FREEPORT. <• herewith invites public ntte'” *° ita new and money-saving 'hod8- R oswkll D avis , President- J ohn K. E ldridok , . O. M ilton F ori k’ ° a8*uer S amuel T. R aynor . Ajw<8h*er‘ Village Ave H iram R S mith , President T homas G. K night , let Vice-Pres. J ohn T. D avison , 2nd Vice-Prea B ergen T. R aynor , Cashier — • ..... ' l u Z M antel.„ In Oak, Gleew Finis* He Butchers Them With an Axe in the Heart of Savannah. Savannah, Ga.—Mrs. Eliza Gribble, seventy years old, was killed; Mrs. Carrie Orlando was first assaulted and then killfed, and Mrs. Maggie Hunter was beaten so badly that she was at the point of death in a localQiospttal —all. the work of a negro who es caped. The negro used an axe In.the mur ders, dealing blows on the heads of his victims. The scene in the house was terri ble. The wom'M were found, two dead, one dying, lying about the floor. The house Is in the heart of Savan nah. FIGHT AT SOLDIERS’ HOME. Two Inmates Quarreled and William Lessenburgh is Dead. Bath, N. Y.—William Lessenburgh, a seventy-year-old Civil War veteran at the Soldiers’ Home, died of stab wotmds after saying that an unknown member of Company I at the Home attacked him. Edward Pollard, of that company, was found washing his clothes, and surrendered a blood stained knife. Pollard and Lessenburgh had quar reled in a saloon. The <Iead man leaves a widow and three sefis in' Sy racuse. TW ENTY-SIX MOSLEMS HANGED. $15 Oak Cabinet M a n tels from $12 up MANTEL 1 FIREPLACE FITTINGS ^ \ V P * . \HROOMS AND VESTIBULES TILED ORNAMENTAL CENTER, AND BRACKETS D. MORRISON Crowds Bewail Fate of Inciters of Slanghtei of 30,000 Armenians. Constantinople, Turkey.—Twenty- six Moslem were put to death gt Adana, Asiatic Turkey, by hanging. They had been found guilty of incit- ing and taking part in the massacres in which 30,000 Christian Armenians were slaughtered last April. Great crowds saw the executions. Relatives of the condemned and thou sands of others loudly bewailed the murderers’ fate. KILLS A WOMAN TRESPASSER. Board of Directors John T. Davison Austin Cornwell John W. DeMott Wesley B. Smith Hiram R. Smith Edward T. Thurston Thomas G. Knight Arrender Smith HamiltonW.Pearsall George W. Smith Wallace H.Cornwell Bergen T. Raynor James H. Southard T. D. Carpenter We do a general Banking Business of deposit and discount. Interest paid on Special Deposits. Drafts issued on England and the Continent. Your Patronage Solicited. Banking Honrs: 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. Saturday, 9 A. M. to 12 M. .♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦a F L E S H M i ® I CURATIVE AX VE ;; Patented Dec. liM “ a Preventative of ,od Po,son «► and Oan?ne 3! Cures Bites, Sore Ls> Fistulas, < > Felons, and Pnln* 5orct | is invaluable c poison. Makes j AI s up all cancer ous sores. Nther salve like it on the m a r k , To™ druggist to it*d take n0 other‘ PUCf/C, 50c »sd $1.°° -^te for sample Paler® Company bil m o r e , L. I. and cheap be without tar drawing new flesh an n. HEWLETT IIKALKR IN Hay, Feed A Nil Bundle Wood Market & Garden Seeds Seed Potatoes fertilizer D R I E D G R A I N S Church Street FREEPORT, N. T. Shrubs Illustrated and described In our catalog. S e n d for a copy now. Address GEO. E. HART Hart’s Lynbrook Nursery Lynbrook, N. Y. Tol., 15ii-J-2 Rockville Centre ; Arthur Gildfersleeve PLUMBING Steam and Hot W ater • ,31 T h e Freeport Bank Capital $30,000 Mala Street Sarplui $45,000 Freeport J ohn J. R andall , President D. W esley P ine , Vice-President W illiam s . H all , Cashier Beard of Directan John J. Randall August Immig Smith Cox William G. Miller William E. Golder D. Wesley Pine Wallace H. Cornwell Daniel B. Raynor Charles L. Wallace Coles Pettit William S. Hall Harvey B. Smith Edgar Jackson George M.Randall Open except legal holidays, from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. Offers facilities and in- duormeats in every department equal to those of either the New York or Brook lyn Banks or Trust Companies, and every accommodation as far as is con sistent with conservative management. Interest at the rate of 8 per cent, paid/- ‘Ting Freeport Cole Bard and Belle Frizzle Shot by Owner of Premises. Asheville, rN. C. — Near Dlllsboro Belle Friszle was killed and' Cole Bard sqrlonsly wounded by Elijah Children with a shotgun. It is said that Bard and the woman were trespassing on Children’s prem ises and he ordered them to leave. Children alleges that the couple then on time deposits, three months or more. Drafts issued on all parts of Europe- Does a general banking bnamees. Safe deposit boxes to rent, $5 p«f annum. Accounts of corporations, oompania, societies, etc., solicited. Entire satisfaction guaranteed. Inquiries will receive prompt atten tion and be cheerfully answered. Inspection of our modem batting rooms Invited. J.L. ARATA, Successor to T.L G-U N.Y.and N.jisW-l c d ARD ». TEBBUTT Teacher •' Fiane and Pipe Organ StutF* Conservatory Method Volee sltwre, Ita lia n Method jsons given at Stndio or PnpUs' Residences irnr ms address Fievport, L. I. Tei 60-U Freeport. j^ j^ f M ^ N D J . M I L L E R ' fire in s u r a n c e sea-A v e n u e, Freeport lA L l' - A-VA-VVlUtX. v KIG/ME’S BROOK/ l s . bb / iness college ig-s/flatbash Ire., m r f « ho « si . ^'V tbush Depot. G ram m u r C o m m e rrlel A rlthiuelU - T e l e s r u p h r Day and Night Sessions Individual Instruction Begin Any J im * . d d u a tee placed In p e rm a n e n t positions. / W rite, call or telepliono. ALWAYS in skssion . DITH M. RAYNOR Millinery all Styles Ready for lospectloa HEATING B$tlmate» Furnished b < .' r 9ftN, Main St., freeport,M.V. 3 3 M i n u t e # from F'1 Type, KpilMng C o rresjjonflcnre Long Island Railroad Time .Tehle 1909) T; (Effective Nov. 3rd, 1909) Leave Mmktk fbr New York, Brook lyn and intermediate statiode, week days, x6.14, 0.02; 6.40, 7.16, 7^B, x7.88; 8,57, 10.11, A. M.. 12.28, 2.M), *MLf».86,' 6.18, 8.19. 10.19 P. M. Sundeyst Jsfl4, 9.11 A. M., 12.44, 4.88, 5.25, 0.62, ^.89 P. ^Leave ‘Freeport x5.18, 6.06. <.44 i .!7,20, 7.46, 7.69, xfi.22, 9.01, 10.15, 12.28 A; M.; 8.04, 4.18, 6.41, 6.22, 8.23. 10.23, P, M. Sundays, 6,68, 9.15 A. M., 12.48, 4.82, 6.29, 6.66, 9.44, P. M. Trains leave Freeport for Amityvtile Babylon, Patchogne and intermediate stations week-days, ^4.46, 8.06, 48.66, 11.66 A. M., (1.64, 2.16 Pat. only), 3.66, 48.68, X45.03, X46.44. 45.67, 6.13, X46.39, 47.10, 7.35, 48.06, 49.07, 11.06 P. M„ (1.07. night, to Patchogne Sat. night.) Sundays, 6.11, 49.22 A. M., 12.28, 2.20, x8.62, 47.44, 411.13 P. M. Trains leave New York, East 34th Station, for Freeport, Merrick and prin cipal intermediate stations, 4(8.60, 7.00, 47.60.10.60, (12.50, xl.20P. M. Sat only) 1.60, 42.60, X44.00, 46 00, 46.20, X46.40, 46.00,. 6.80, 47.00, (8.00. 10.00 P. M.. 12.00 Night. Sundays, 4.00, 48.20,11.80 A.M., 1.20, (2.60, (6.40, 410.10P. M. (Train runs to Babylon only. 4Does not stop at Matzick. (No Brooklyn connections, x Except Holidays. Trains leave Brooklyn, Flatbush Ave. Station, about 10 minutes later than 84ta St. time. This time table subject to change with 0 0 1 notice.