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Nassau County Review Official Paper, Village of Freeport FREEPORT, N. Y., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1913 Vol. XVIII, No. 52 Freeport Single copies of the Review for sale a t G reenblatt’s and B raithw a ite’s, Railroad Avenue: K iefer’s, Nassau County Review, DaSilva’s and Go- betz's, Main Street; DaSilva’s, W est Merrick Road. __ _ tf. HIGHWATER TIDE TABLE (Tlieso times Fro minutes for .^amly for Hemps1 Hook, Dedoct 32 tend Hay) Friday, Oct. 24, 3.10 a. m. Saturday 25, 4.13 a. m. Sunday, 26, 5.11 a. m. Monday, 27, • 6.05 a. m. Tuesday, 28, 6.55 a. m. Wednesday, 29, 7.45 a. m. Thursday, 30, 8.34 a. m. Friday, 31, 9.26 a. m. Saturday, Nov. 1, 10.20 a. in. H. Schloss spent Sunday with his Our Traveler ! News of the Churches near Mexico Our Busy Schools , 7 , . „ The first social affair of the class of The Ladies Aid Society of the M. : 191B took p|ace Bt the home of Marien /P irtk r otto.. Trovolino ^ hurch wl11 hol<^ 8 rummage sale Paterson on the evening of October Correspondent ) ? Traveling m the vacant store sout^h of the Free- 17 The affair wa8 calle^ a Hallow- I did not go over into Mexico, as I lions are requested of all kinds of ably fpent in playing6\ ^ Local Topics Freeport Wins at Golf In the Fire Department had intended. Not because one could household goods, and men’s, women's not go over, but because the getting and children’s clothing. Goods can be back did not look promising. I went sent to store on days of sale or to along the border the greater part from Mrs. Lucas, 102 N. Grove St., or El. Paso to Del Rio, but there s'eem- Mrs. v H umphrey, 258 South Ocean ed to be a sign out “ Abandon all Hope Avenue, any time befor# the sale. Ye Who Enter H e re,’’ and I had more hope than anything else, and I ! The Guild of the Transfiguration did not care to lose it. Secretary will hold a peanut party in the base- Bryan said don't do it, and I pinned ment of the church next Thursday my faith to the orator of the Platte, i evening, October 30. Refreshments But along the border, in every little will be served. Proceeds will go river town, in Sanderson, Comstock, toward the building fund of the new parish house. parents at Bridgeport, Conn. Mrs. Morris Miller is spending A concert will be given by the Dickson-Wynder Company of New J e r sey at Bethel A. M. E. Church on Fri- i than over the line in the ranks. I In these towns you find the adven turers, the Soldiers of Fortune, the R‘: EH£fr tB: HC;'!' \ M. ftoiiscn, in tvew io ric : rebellion than 'th e barefooted soldiers sale. Refreshments will be sold after Mrs. S. E. Carman and Miss E. J. 1 wh° out and get shot the entertainm e n t. Rev. S. H. V. Carman V Brooklyn T v e n u e ” la v e ' He^e you will see the ten to-one ! “ . P ^ to r , is in charge .of this hppn visitimr relatives at B elleville, I Chance Amer.cans, the fellows who entertainm ent. _______ ! just hang onto this revolving old ________ sphere and yank a living off of it as it Isabel Hibbard is announced to lead , „ —o— - t-i ------ ---------- Mrs J H Kelsev and son o f S t o u g h - rods over. Disguised as cow punch- the Epworth League meeting Sunday Rhodes, Peter Elar, Joseph Kelly, Ar- ,iveg in Bu,dwin, Bellmore Mr.8;_J : H: _Kcl?e^ , “ Ipr, With unshaven faces, th e v k e e n \ight in . t h e M E. C h u rch; topic, thur Keens, M err.t Cutler and S t u a r t ' p o r t We want all t o come tune telling. About twenty-four of the high school students and their friends were present. Although no game was played on Saturday the eighteenth, the Freeport High School team has been practising almost daily for the game with the strong Flushing High School team at Flushing, on the twenty-fifth. Under the leadership and coaching of Mr. Jones, the team has greatly improved upon its condition and playing abilities at the Beginning of the season, but Golf enthusiasts from this village, representing the south side, went to Massapequa Saturday and defeated the experts from that village, thereby winning the championship of Nassau M a t t e r s o f I n t e r e s t to e n d a b o u t t h e 6 r e e in o u r l o c a l d e p a r t m e n t b y H . K. P . An old member of the Fire D epart- the hard schedule has made the win ning of games a very difficult m a tter. However, as the schedule for this, year C o m m e n t s a n d e x p l a n a t i o n s n o t e n t i r e l y o f a n e w s n a t u r e , o n v i l l a g e a f f a ir s by t h e e d i t o r . REGARDING OW NERSHIP OF VILLAQP LOT. „ . „ „ „ I, r, .T v . . Countv and the Challenge trophy. It Counsellor Swezey says that he is W8S the de c ja j n g game 0f a ger j eg of ment asked me one day recently what not yet prepared to render an opinion threei each team havj WOn one on had become of the old hook and ladder to the Village Board regarding the previoUs Saturdayi. The result of the tr»ck. the original one. I might say, ownership of the village lot a t the cor- wag jn doubt t0 the en(j ^ | to be brief, it is now undergoing a ner of Pine and Church St As noted then it wag won b y onlv a gi ,e second childhood. A fter being pur- in the Review a few weeks ago, the pojnt T h e s c o r e w a s'lS t o 12, H a m il-! chaSed by William H. Patterson, at deed for this lot is in possession of ton Kjng for Freeport, returning the | ,he auction sale of unused apparatus Counsellor George Wallace, and he has w j n n i n g card for Freeport. The play-1 several years ago, it was taken to his promised to get it for Mr. Swezey. ers of Massapequa gave a good account ! >'ard' and there rem ained inactive un- and Mr. Bwezey says th a t he wil! look of themselves and proved to be worthy til early in September, when it was this deed through, and see just how it opponents. taken out and an exempt company Massapequa won the first game of ^urmed to airend the b ijp a .a r i e jn e series by a close score, but the : York City. A fter being brought th is deed through, and see ju s t how is made out, before rendering any opinion. th e series by a close s c o r e , __ ____ _ - , _ _ visitors evened m a tters when they | back to Freeport it was loaned to the nosed Massapequa out. The result of ' Juvenile Hook and Ladder Compiany, ________ , __________________ ____ ___ . . . the two games made the third a keen- which up to th a t time had be. i with- is now arranged the team is trying its not t0 t be man who idly waits for his |y interesting one and the links were j out any apparatus, and is ;n their best to overcome these handicaps. I Breat opportunity, but to him who crowded with interested spectators. possession at the present tim<, h- ng Those who have been out for positions j 9e' zes what ever opportunity comes Following close scores all through | *<eP^ 'n t be barn of William Hors- on the team are: Fred Clark, Jesse and makes it gpeat. System. the afternoon it was 12 to 10 in favor! bdd. °n W est Merrick Road. y,eorge ------- r,.i— ------------- of Freeport when Hamilton King and* PATRONIZE HOME STORES FIRST Dr. C. T. Haight of Massapequa Smith, G Mulcahy, Rollin Baker, Howard Thomas, H e rbert Seaman, Edward Keogh, Wiliam Downs, Har- Again lest we forget! Buy at home gaged in the last round. Dr. Haight old Goller, Elmer Johnson, Joseph what you can arid help your home vi|. brought the score to 12 to 12, but Rigby, Thomas O’Brien, A lexander | lage This applies whether the reader King turned the odd point over for his ' 1 • ? , i • v-e i. __ Tx ___ .ciflp « n r l t h p r p h v u r n r i f h p e p r i p a T h p ton, Mass., are vis iting a, the home of ers, with unshaven faces they keep , mg n t m ^ X ' Mrs. Kelsey's father, John Andersdn, , along the border, ^mix 7 th Mexv | ^ b r i s t and the Modern bocial 1m of Grove St. cans disturbers, help set up the pins, and when they have half a show for Freeport Club Activities Miss Louise Chapman, West Mer- their allies they jump over and take a rick Road, entertained a Five Hun- chance of being shot in the back as dred Club Tuesday afternoon. This ! Madero was. was the first meeting of the Club for J But it isn’t these uneasy fellows I u„in„ the fall and winter season. am going to write of. You know nlf Th* ------------ ! them. T h e U . S. is full of them. I planned a the Freeport Club. The W. A. Morrell, who has leased the | am going to tell you a little about l’?vyllnB a l'eys open and in prime con- building south of the Truck House of ; the common herd of Mexicans, the j dlVon' Saturday night high score Company No. 1 on Church S t , has i men who live in the interior. ; Prl^ es,9 t a , ,9.^\ , \ , , opened a poultry store,' and will keep j Like the Italians, there are several i Pool and billiard tournaments under \\\ \ ~ .................... \ay- _ , | ly, of the Seaman Avenue team, ! village in which you live co City way vou see one class, the job 1 The entertainm ent Committee is in j crossed their opponent s goal line on B ^ holding class, the “ b e tter’’ class, so ; charge of L. S. Mabee and the Tourn- g run around left end. The line-ups C 8 Hed ament Committee N. T. Cole, and an Over in Northern Mexico you see . active and winter season is being another class. These fellows don’t | P 'a!1r‘ed•\ hold any job or have any pull. They | , _ e dancing classes, so popular1 Mrs. John W ermuth announced the engagement of h er sister, Miss Martha Ruth Godfrey, to John Jay Randall Jr., at a luncheon given last Satur day, Oct. 18, at her home in F ishkill-, just get ou\ and make trouble, join I *ast season’ will be renewed soon, on-the Hudson. 1 any old thing that promises scrap. | T*10 annua* chrysanthemum dinner — -------- j It is said, and I believe on the a u - ' which was such a big success last A t the regular meeting of Freeport thority of the New York Journal (and 1 year wil* be held on or about Nov. 11. Lodge, No. 600, I. O. O. E., Monday ! E d itor Hurst has big mining interests evening, the initiatory degree was in Mexico) that the common class of conferred on Thos. St. John Baldwin, Mexicans tight just for the deviltry of of Freeport and A rthur Christensen, it, and that they don’t know what they of Roosevelt. are fighting about or for. It would almost seem so, but why it A t the meeting of Freeport C h ap-, seems so is that we Americans do not ter No.1 802, R. A. M., last Wednes- understand the Indians. day evening, the degree of Mark Mas ter was conferred on one candidate. At the next meeting next Wednesday evening, Oct. 29, the P a s t M aster de gree will be conferred. The grand parada and Fiesta under auspices of the Club, is scheduled for next Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday OBITUARY JACOB MUNZINGER Jacob Munzinger. age 64, of Porter field Place, died of heart failure Wednesday morning of last week, at the Hotel Belvidere, in Baltimore, Md. Funeral services were held Saturday morning in M anhattan, with the Elks These men are ignorant, deplorably ignorant, and they don’t go after things the way a white man would. It would seem as if they did not know what they were after. Some disturber . . will come along with a little gold Miss Louise Chapman was surprised j braid and a few brass Buttons, and i burial service. Mr. Munzinger was = by a shower from a number of her | he can gather a bunch of followers in j popular member of the Elks Club and friends Saturday atfernoon at her 1 j ugt ab0ut thirty Mexican minutes. 10f the Freeport Club, and had ex home on^W est Merrick Road. Miss : A nother fellow with a yard or two j pressed a desire for the burial service Chapman s engagement to Mr. Aubrey I m0re braid and a few more buttons ! 0f the Elks at his funeral, which was MacCarey, formerly of this village, , can be the first fellow of his army. It i accordingly given by Freeport Lodge hut now m business tn Boston, Mass., would seem they were a crazy lot, not l 0f Elks. has recently been announced. knowing or caring much who they) Mr. Munsinger was widely known While Mr. and Mrs. William G. » Ught ^ bUt ^ man..who knows • a t the race tracks (hroughout the Miller and Miss Florence Miller were at Brookline, Mass., last week they visited Dorchester cem etery, where the body of the late F a ther Logue had been interred. They picked some sprigs from the shrubbery and mailed them to the sisters of Father Logue, Bernard J . Loonam, C. H. Frederick, Mrs. Bridget Carney and othersi who thoroughly appreciated the tokens. Mr Miller says the cem etery is a beautiful one, and th a t the plot in which the remains of Father Logue are resting has a commanding view of the large cem etery.—Observer. Charles O. Niles, our secretary, the man who showed the stuff he was made of at the power house accident, !.:s . his leg badly crushed Wcd iesJev r . ter- noon by the pin in the wheel of his motor boat. Dr. Newton attended him. “ Charlie ’ will probably be confined to his home for several weeks. Rockville Centre and Lynbrook worked the “ reciprocity a c t '’ early last Tuesday morning, when the Lyce um Hall at Lynbrook burned to the ground. Some months ago Rockville Centre had a big tire, and Lynbrook sent willing assistance. When the Lynbrook departm ent found the fire apt to get beyond their control Tues day they immediately sent to Rockville Centre and that departm ent responded just as willngly, and their combined Oo Monday night the organization j efforts have much to do with Lynbrook A GOOD EXAMPLE. known as the Ku Klux of F r e e p o rt; being on the map at the present time. / o r Grove Street, right en d ,' Xhe fol|owing affidavit is published held its regular monthly meeting in j — -------- Wil is Johnston; right tackle, Warren^ gt of * e gi the basement of the Episcopal church. A « l P m h l v M illard; right guard, Richard Cole; L t . The club is a boy’s a thletic associa- m C U l U U I b l S 111 A b b C I H D l y center, Howard Spiegel; left guard. finnL l ^ connected with the Episcopal W alter Rollo; left tackle, John Mey- will not drink any intoxicating liquors ch h but meml)er8hjp j9 „pen to ers; left end. Irving Schwab; quarter «r beveraKes for two year9 from th ' 9 n,ha, ‘ back, Fred W are; left half back, 1 d a te- A rthur Keens; right half back, Free- s‘de and thereby wort the series. The to Free- individual points were as follows: Cutler. t ! p o rt frem the surrounding villages for h rceport—•Hamilton, King, 1; Dr. The Grove Street gram m ar school, what their home stores cannot furnish Fu er, 3; R. Ihom . 2; H. Osterhout, football team played a team from t h e 1 them, as they naturally can find a lar- d l Clyde Wallace, 2; W. C. Story, 3; Seaman Avenue school on Monday af- ger assortment here, and all Freeport ^ r \ Curtice, 1; Samuel R. ternoon. The Grove Street players ers interested in the growth of the Smith, 1; F. E. Story, 0. Total, 13. were finally victorious, by a score of village will not go to the city for their Massapequa—Dr. Haight, 2; G. thirteen to six. fn the first quarter supplies until they are assured they Hsight, y. g Van Schaick, 1; h red Ralph Randall, full back for the Grove are unable to secure the goods a t home. 3 I W. Brice, 0; \C a lter Saw- Street team, scored two touchdowns, ^ The practice of some few of our resi- yer' b • Nelson C linch, 1; Fisher Good- the first on a long end run, and the dents of buying their groceries, dry bue' F,r- Taylor 8. Total, 12. second on a line plunge through cen-1 goods, notions, hardware and other ------------ ter. No further scoring occurred un- sim ilar articles out of town, is indica- til the last quarter, when Joseph Kel- tive of a very small interest in the Y i i Y ' l u v F l o / ' t c In C n n rva o r\ A i r a n n o f o o r w ^ - . i l l — —. — i — - - . t - i —l - - 11 V s X# l V Frank H. Seaman. Lester Danley ; full back, Ralph Ran dall. For Seynan Avenue the players' October, 1913. w e re: R ight end, Joseph Meaney; Howard E. Pearsall, Notary Public, right tackle, Thomas Cunningham; ^ as3au Oo right guard, William Downs; center, George Fox ; left guard, W right Lewis; left tackle, B. T r u tte l; left end, Tony G iriono; q u a rter back, Joseph K e lly; members of other churches. A t the meeting two new members c . , , ritum ii. oca'uou. were admitted, Kenneth Curtice and Sworn to before me this 21st day of p rederjck Qjibgrt The Captain of the football team, Willis Johnston, resigned, and Howard Thomas, W alter Rollo and Fred Ware were nominated to fill the position and Fred Ware was finally elected. Plans for two football games were N. Y. SOME PUM PKINS, received at our office the ful'l1 b'acL9 a 1 fred R o ^ d • le\^half-back’ a ’'gwri'sc] id**1 p u m p k i f r o m 'The dis:ussed, one with a team from Bay- Mortimer PostTrig^^hatV b a c ltf ^Etay- ^arm 0^M^ ' Cp ? T 8 ^ la*<e ^rom b'a 1912 view Ave., and the other from Rock- mond Amador. ' =roP\ , Mur‘ Blake he , , and I ber of these pumpkins and also some j of the 1911 crop, as good as when they were first pulled. has a num- v*Be Centre. The members of the Ku Klux are: Berning Hughes, Willis Johnston, Bradford Southard, W arren Millard, Irving Schwab, Lester Danley, Mer ritt Cutler, Thomas Spence, Earl Maxon, Ralph Randall, W alter Rollo, Cadman H. Frederick of Freeport is Howard Spiegel, Frederick Plump, DONATION APPRECIATED DaSilva, W. Merrick Road Flower Pots, all sizes Jardiniers, 25c — Oil Heaters Stone Crocks, 25c up; all sizes 25 lb. Flour Canasters, 59c Coal Sieves, 10c Copper Bottom Wash Boilers, $1.00 up Glass Washboards, ific Kitchen Stovee, No. 7, $18.75 Boat Stoves, $8.76 Large Preserving K ettles, 28c Potte Irona, $1.00 s e t Dietz Lanterns, 50c Universal Bread Mixers, $1.75 Orders delivered. Phone 885-W. Advertisement There is so much deception in rub ber goods th a t it pays to buy articles like syringes at a store th a t is relia ble. See Smith & Bedell’s adv. in thia issue. Advertisement. Mexicans, knows the conditions under which they exist and who understands the Indian ways of the Mananna peo ple, this man knows that there are reasons, just reasons and big reasons for the uprising in Mexico. And the real reason is that Mexico’s land is in great holdings and the com mon man has no chance. There is no hope for him. An existence is all there is before him. He lives in poverty, deplorable poverty. All he can hope for is enough to eat and half enough to wear. . And these men make up the rebel army of Mexico. Given half a chance they would be peaceful and contented. But seven thousand families own all the arable land of Mexico, and millions of the working class are little better than slaves as a result. Feudalism flourishes in Mexico, as it has long flourished. The common Mexican has something to fight for and he is fighting for it—going up against it hard. Feudalism has ever died hard. It is dying hard over the Rio Grande, but it loeks as if it was going to die. From Sanderson they told me I could cross the river into Northern Mexico without much trou ble but they told me it was all up to development whether I ever could get back again, and I showed the yellow. I talked with an American who had been down in the interior. He had He said country as cashier, for Sol Lichten stein, a bookmaker. He had returned to his hotel in Baltimore from a race track when he was stricken. He is survived by his mother, hiS wife and a son, Edward Munsinger, of this vill age. ESTHER ANN CHARLES- WORTH PAULSON. Esther Ann Charlesworth Paulson, aged 60, died at the residence of her daughter, Miss Estelle Libert, Casino and Roosevelt Aves., Tuesday, Oct. 21. Funeral service was held this morning, Rev. A. W. E. Carrington, pastor of the Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, officiating; interm ent in Greenfield cem etery; Southard & Moore, funeral directors. Fourteen Years Ago (Items of iuterest from the Review files fourteen years ago this week) Electric lights replace kerosene lamps in Review office. Capt. Gus Smith initiated into Free port Lodge I. O. O. F. Mrs. Frost gives out contract for a new cottage at “ Silver L a k e .’’ Yacht Club Closes Season Henry L. The referee was Fred Clark, Elton Austin, timer. A poster in the class room of Miss | Edith Fitzgerald announces that all : the students who wish may compete for the prize offered this year by the Sons j of the Revolution of the S t a t e of N e w , a public-spirited citizen of the right Fred Ware, George Baker, Richard York. The subject this year is the j sort. Instead of s itting back and ad- Cole, John Meyer. Fred Joerissen, services of Benjamin Franklin to the ! vising what ought to be done, he goes George Beaubian, Frederick Gilbert cause of American independence. The j ahead and does it, tc w it: He offers and Kenneth Curtice, prizes are, first, fifty dollars and a | to presenrthe village with a site for a bronze medal; second, thirty dollars firehouse if the village will erect the building.—Eagle and a bronze m e d a l; third, fifteen dollars and a bronze medal. The com petition is open to all students in the high schools of the State, and the awards are based upon essays of about 1700 words in length. In the small cupboard at the back of the Study Hall there is a collection of about fifty college catalogues, to aid those students who intend to go to higher institutions than a high school, in choosing the places they would like to enter. Edward Lee of Hemstead, is now attending the first year courses in the Freeport High School. The janitor of the high school build ing, John Neundorfer, is now employ ing a helper who is known to the high school boys as Joseph Pietro Condole. Purdy Williams, a student at the high school last year, is studying at Friend's Academy, a preparatory school at Locust Valley, L. I. Mr. Jones, the treasurer of the Stu dents’ Association, has chosen Alfred Rollo, Theodore Wassung, and Mary Fox to aid him in collecting the an nual dues o f the organization. Two classes in elocution have been arranged, to be taught by Miss Ethel Moulton, teacher of elocution, English and French. Leslie E. Osterhaudt, a graduate of Unclaimed Letters (Freeport Poll Office) ^ in i n . He 5 j ^ | for, but that they threw him in and We are showing the very latest and popular long vamp, narrow toe shoes for women. Our patent leather shoe ......... ................. ......... ^ __ ............................................. ................................... h t ffreetCHe^rn^nd ^ o T h l r ’ /rld f s ^ a n d ! United n H e d 's tateT b a r rV n g T ^ n rters' He 9nt and with a balancc of *419-9;> in , school' last year is now teaching in the in gieat demand. Other grades and [ _ u_ , _____ , ___, _ ___ , the treasurv. Nine meetmtrs have I Hierh School at Rockville Centre. leathers carried in stock. Full line of storm shoes, for Men, Women and Children. never knew what they stuck him up ; h '^ T ^ c l u ^ U about to clo s e T t^T J J - the machine covered, so th a t the stu- for, bu t th a t they threw him in and entb seaHO,..' the rennrt hrvm ..Th dents cannot learn to typew rite without for sixteen week, he got “ tosst, stale the report says The | , kj h letters of the keyboard, bread and the holy Bible’’ and he said ^r 8 t . m eet,n^ . waa be d 0!} Thursday, * A D , • v u L he had a standing challenge to quote ®venmK- APn l 10- at tbeL Benson, Roacoe A Pfiul, who taught the fhore scripture than any man in the House with twenty s i r m e m b ra pres-1 eighth grade boys m the Grove\ Street , U S tates, b a rrin g m in isters. He i *n t and w,th a ba,ance of .*419-99 ,n , 8ucho° laat ye a r' 19 now teaching said he .had no part or interest in the ttte ^m e meetings have : High School at Rockville Centre. thing not nailed down, when he was the >ear tbe membership roll has been dayg of October 16, 16 and 17 was ose present.’’ -ugm ented by fifty five members and one hundred and th ir t b ^ corn for me>.. j decreased by resignation, from tb.r- t two cent 0/ t he number en- said the Irishman. • 8 , 7 Kam at the beginning of the term. „ , V , , I I t ’s- a irreat came this war sam e 01 twenty-four and making the pres-! The pickling season ia here and in | 4 j^thtok xTith men who ent membership 815. I Almost forty High School graduates order to get good results use good vin-' d the ooruer is thick with men, who . ,.No 8Ccident or migfortune hap. ! are now attending colleges or institu- egar. the beat Is the cheapest. Heinz a | noht 1e|aa”t ^ etouch foT a Tourt pened in all the club events during the tions beyond the high school they went year\ We are Proud of/ our club,? and The etudents in all the Englisi of the rapid advancement it has made. ! are required to read a nu They have all been over there, all | The transform ation from a desert apot hooka outside of the regular school THE PROPER WAY m , v,.,, ,, Allston, Mrs. Wm. The idea of Village President Cox g a8hr George that all complaints regarding village g ake’rj Mr. A. T. affairs should be in w riting is more Clement Frank (2) tnan proper—it ia certainly the only Castilio,' Mr. Tony way to do business. D u r k i n Miss F A The members of the village board , Luthrin’ghaU8er/ Ge0i(2) receive no remuneration^ for their work Maci{ Mrg G and have scores and even hundreds of Overtoil M propositions and many necessary com- s m jth plaints to consider and the least any person desiring redress, or a favor, can do, is to write down just exactly what they want the village Board to attend to. This Paper Free All new subscribers entered, from now to January 1, 1914, for one year, / Robt. J. Anderson, P. M. Oct. 12, 1918. Breaks Leg on Boat Engine C. O. Niles, village electric light trim m er, had his leg broken Wednes- will be entitled to the Nassau County day afternoon while cranking his motor Review free year. for the balance of the Assaulted By Highwaymen A vicious highway hssault was com m itted late last Tuesday evening on a lonely part of Grand Ave., connecting -=K. \ ™ ue,u\ “ ,e a',ee; nnrth -nA B W n n -t mh-n breaking and badly smashing several boat, a t the dock at Archer and Main Streets. This break was caused in the manner so common on motor boats. The pin in the wheel used for turning the wheel to s tart the motor did not spring back in place properly and Mr. Niles stept too close to the revolving wheel, so that the pin struck the front of his leg, several inches below the knee, north Merrick and Freeport, when . Frank Miller, of Miller Place, Merrick, Donee’ was attacked by a band of thugs, beat en rfhd thrown into a brook. There is The mid year assembly of the N. Y. Ea«t Conference of the M. E. Church, was held at Hempstead M. E. Church Monday and Tuesday. Monday’s ses sion was started with devotional ex e r cises by Rev. F. H. Torrey, of Sum- merfield church of Brooklyn. The session was presided over by Rev. W. A. Layton. The following were the speakers: Rev. Charles W. McCor mick, of Grace Church, Brooklyn, on “ Directing the W o rship;” Rev. E. A. Bent, of the First M. E. Church, New Haven, Conn., on “ Organizing the Forces;’’ Rev. G. C. Fort, of the Han sen Place Church of Brooklyn, on the “ Gathering the Resources;’’ Rev. V. G Mills, of Bayside. on “ S inging.” The evening session w m presided over by Rev. F. B. Upton, with Rev. J. S. Chadwick, of Richmond Hill, conducting the devotional exercises. An interesting address was made by Rev. W. R. Oldham, D. D., secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions, on “ Extending the Borders.” At Tuesday’s session addresses were made by Rev. I. J. Lansing, W ashing ton, D. C., on “ The Physical B a s is ;’’ Rve. B. F. Kidder, Grace Church, Bay Ridge, on “ All Things to All M en;” Rev. Daniel Dorchester, of St. M ark’s, Brooklyn, on “ T rained to the Times.” Rve. F. G. Howell, of Andrews Church, Brooklyn, conducted the devo tional services at the afternoon ses sion and Rev. Robert McLaughlin, of the Park Congregational Church of Brooklyn, spoke “ On the Line of Dis covery.’’ Professor William North Rice, of Wesleyan University, Middle- town, Conn., on “ Twentieth Century Preaching, ” The day’s programm e concluded with an address by Rev. John F. Carson, Central Presbyterian Church, Brook lyn, “ The Life that is Hid in C h rist.” The committee on the mid-year as sembly is composed of Rev. W. D. Beach, chairman ; Rev. S. O. Curtice and Rev. C. H. McCormick. The New Parada and Fiesta Beginning Tuesday, October 28th., and continuing for four days, the New Parada and Fiesta will be given in the American Theatre, formerly the “ Sig- mond Opera H o u se\ at Freeport, un der the auspices of the Freeport Club, with over 200 people in the cast, and under the direction of Capt. Chas. W. Eddy, assisted by Miss Marion A. Glynn and Miss Miriam L. Eddy. Rehearsals are being held daily and the production will be larger and better than before with practically everything new. « n « ”g A t W a E ’e Delicatessen T l ' ™ar t i T t o g e ^ t h e S i^U .Z y T e n t ! ^ We are proud 0 0 ^ clu b and I The students in ali the English classes gallon. At Wahlen a Delicatessen, 71 acroaa ( g | r jver J o f the rapid advancement it has made. ! are required to read a num ber of Goldsmith and Charles W are at Seam an’s. Values will w w call atSeeman,a D riWdB Store man'a'wi’n. dreaacdwhb a'grey flannel berf to and to b e a r,ower t0 ba Helen Seaman i, now attending Advertisement, shirt, and laced boots. I waited roy , reckoned w,th ,n yachtmg circle* gen-, Wellesley College, in Massachusetts; chance and spoke to him. So long as crally’ Ite P0Pulerity eince the day Harold Humphrey, Cornell Universi- ♦ H a t i n n m a o nf 1 n r l it* a trx/slr b i r t h h&S bc<?n Oil tfac Dr. Smith, eye treatm e n t o r g laseee; Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8 to 11:80; end by appointment, at residence, 7 W allace S ^ , corner Brooklyn Ave. tf ▲drertlMMnt the conversation was confined to stock : 01 lta D,rtn nas Deen on the increase,1 t y ; Astrid Nygren, Emerson School conditions in Texas, the chances for and under thu leadership of our com-j o f Oratory, Boston, M assachusetts; rain and how sheep were doing, he modore, Charles H. Southard, it has j Jam es Mulcahy, Brooklyn Law School, -% become one of the strongest orgsniza- j and Lawrence W right, Brooklyn Poly- (Continued op page 8) Hons of ita-kind on Long Island.” technic Institute. Dr. Newton was summoned, and Mr. Niles removed to his home on .... .. , w Pine Street, where the bones were set no perceptible motive for the action. . . , ’ . ,, riORgible Miller had several dollars with him, leg hxt as well as possible, , , . . * . tw • # with the assistance of Dr. Dean, none of which was taken. He is fore- rp, _ ____ , . „ _ ___ . _ man of a gang on the L. I. R. .R. and and will heal slowly so th a U t will be it is thought that his assailants may geveral L e k s before Mr. N ile, will have been diacharged Italians seeking be able t0 get around. In the mean. vengeance. l k a . time, Engineer Smith, in charge of According to Miller, he had gone to th |i„ h tini, . vltem h a r a n - Freeport earlier in the evening on an proved tKhe a p p L L e n t of’ William kland R ailroad went into effect T u e.: h i a * w»yr * back “ t o ' CM e rr i c k\ a bout\ ten C,ark t0 tem PorariIy 6\ Position, day The principal changes are a , fol- h a way back to Merrick about ten whjch Mr Nj|eg ha(| arranged fo lows: o clock, when, at the concrete bridge withjr) a few hourg after he ^ hurt 1 Bound. on Grand Ave. seven men leaped on Mr. Niles, it will be recalled, was the Train arriving at 7 :08 a. m. discon- electrician who gave such effective ae- Time Table Changes The wintpr tim e table of the Long tinued. Train arriving at 10.25 a. m., him from the shadows and before Mil- F r s l i ^ ^ r - V “ K m i ^ y ^ s changed to 9 , 2 a. m. heavy jagged club inflicting a deep k„ led, and has the sympathy o f . host Saturday trains arriving at 1:31 gash. The footpads, frightened per- of friende 0 n ,y a few weekg ago hjg p. m. and 2:21 p. m. discontinued. & r , X i : i o T = b , r wbl1’ •-s”\d ,r’1- r\ cbir'a and fled. ’ V J 8 r ' Miller came to consciousness-* half hour later, almost frozen from the r * n m i n < r F v e n t e cold w ater xyhich is only a few inches W U S I l l g t i v C I I l e . deep. Nearly dead with exhaustion. Nov. 21, concert by Dickson-Wyn- and loss of blood he crawled up the te r Co., at Bethel A. M. E. Church, bank and in a delirium reached home Oct. 24. Old Folks concert by two hours later. Summons was sent Bethel A. M. E. Church. and 6.59 p. 10.52 a. m. 6.17 p. m., discontinued. W est Bound. Train which form erly left here at 11.80 a. m„ now runs at 10.56. Train leaving at 1.40 p. m. is dis continued. to Dr. Rhame of W antagh, who found it necessary to sew up the wound. On account of the darkness Miller could not recognize any of the men, and not a word wee spoken among them, so that not even their nationality could be detected. Sunday trains leaving. Freeport at 8.44 and 10.63 p. m ., are discontinued, Oct. 80. Peanut Party by Guild of making the last west bound train the Transfiguration. Nov. 12. H arvest Home Festival by Ladies vf the Frqsbyterian Church Improvement Society. . Oct. 28-31 Parade at American Theatre, benefit of Freeport Club. 9.46. There are a number of changes in the running times of the other trains, a few minutes one wey or the other. The complete revised tim etable ap pears in this Issue.