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I N A S S A U COUNTY REVIEW . I\ 8 FIRE EXTINGUISHERS W. C. T. U. Colnmn The well known PYRENE The PHOENIX $7.00 $1.25 Each as good as any, if not better than any in their class EVERY HOUSE, STORE, AUTOMOBILE, BOAT SHOULD HAVE ONE Lewis H. Ross Co. Brooklyn Avenue and Main Street, Freeport, N.Y. Lumber and Building Materials Paint, Glass, Hardware COAL AND WOOD Prom * Catholic Church paper: A ladies' paper says that alcohol will remove grease stains from summer clothes. Ladies and gentlemen as well might further remember that alcohol will also remove summer clothes themselves and in addition every other kind of clothes, not from the man who drinks it, but from hie wife and children. It will remove household furniture from his house and eatables from hie kitch en ; the smiles from the face of his wife and all happiness from his home. ,rx-w.,rxr-. As a remover of things, alcohol has MOTOR few equals. BOB BURDETTE ON BEER My dear boy. men have fought, bled and died, but not for beer. Arnold Winkelried did not throw himself upon the Austrian spears be cause he was ordered to close his sa loon at nine o'clock. William Tell did not hide his arrow under his vest to kill the tyrant be cause the edict had gone forth that the freeborn Switzer should not drink a keg of beer Sunday. Freedom did not shriek as Kosciusko fell over a whiskey barrel. MY PIPE My pipe I love of a wintry night While snow arobnd is lying. And ice-bound trees, a lovely sight. Give forth a mournful sighing As if Old Winter ought not bind Them with an Arctic fetter That keeps them closely so confined When freedom would be better. O yea. my pipe ! a warm old friend— Forsooth. I love it dearly; Bad spirits it does seem to mend And makes life look more clearly We care not, only give a sign, When zero 'round may hover, As long as my dear pipe and I Are warmly under cover. E. A. W. Roosevelt Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Tsbb o f 1 Brookside Avenue surprised them at their home Tuesday afternoon of last week in behalf of the Ladies’ Auxili- i | ary of the Board of Trade. Mrs. | Charles Edwards, the president, pre- i sented a large primrose plant to Mrs. i Tabb, and Mrs. Matherson, a large j bunch of pinks to Mr. Tabb. I Mr. Tabb, who has been confined to the house with rheumatism in hie * hands, was more than glad to welcome his friends. Social intercourse and j | refreshments, and the best wishes of j ’ all to Mr. Tabb for a speedy recovery, completed a pleasant afternoon. The | guests were: Mrs. Carpenter, Mrs. | Edwards, Mrs. Hange, Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Schlegel, Mrs. ; Heineman, Mrs. Mathern, Mrs. Gay- : nor, of Roosevelt; Mrs. Schults and I Mrs. Dixon, of Freeport. A report on the geology of Long Isl- Several friends from Brooklyn and and, w ritten by Myron L. Fuller, and p reep0rt surprised Mrs. Emma Dan- just issued by the United Statea Geo- jel8 a t her home Friday, February 28, logical Survey, will be of interest to a jn honor of her bjrth ,iay. An old-fosh- Telephone 393-J Freeport The Origin of Long Island v Engines For Sale Owing to combining offices we have two engines which we wish to sell. They are Fairbanks Engines 5 h. p. and 2 1-2 h. p. They cost us $ 1 6 0 and $ 1 2 0 re spectively, and w e secured them at reasonable prices, new, and we will sell them for just half of the amount very large number of persons in that thickly populated region and else where. Although the mineral re sources of the Island are not particu- _ ____ _ __ ___ ______ larly notable, some of its clays and Warren did not die that beer yinight \ sands are of economic value. Long ioned chicken dinner is what the guests found on arrival. A short talk on “ Won an's Suffrage’’ by Mrs. Annie Abbott of Freeport was most interest ing. Mrs. Lammert and Mrs. Hines illus- flow as the brooks murmur seven days ^ Island presents numerous peculiar and tra tm g and explaining the new society a week. interesting geologic features, Even the battle of Brandywine was many geologists have studied it, not fought that whiskey m ight be free, the extensive investigations of Mr. No clause in the Declaration of In- Fuller throw a flood of new light on depence declares that a Sunday concert i the geology of the region. He has garden, with five brass horns and one j found that Long Island affords partic- hundred kegs of beer,is the inalienable right of a free people and the corner stone of good government. Tea —mild, harmless, innocent tea, [ the much-sneered at tem p e rate bever- j age, the feeble drink of effeminate men and good old women—tea holds a high er place, it fills a brighter, more glor ious page, and is a greater figure in [ the history of this United States than Nassau County Review 64 S. Main St., FREEPORT, N. Y. HERE’S A PLEASED Converted by the promise on our front? Yes—we can do it—restore every article to its early beauty, paint in rainbow hues and give you back a wardrobe as good as you started with. No won der they’re pleased! Tickled to death when they get our prices, you bet! Ladies’ Gowns Cleaned $ 2 .00 up Men’s Suits and Overcoats $1.50 mmm cleaners and dyers I n c o r p o r a t e d M a d a m e Shindier, Mgr. 7 5 South Main Street FREEPORT, L. I. T e l e p h o n e , 1 0 5 F r e e p o r t Main Office and Works 2 5 2 - 2 5 4 Greene St. Brooklyn, N. Y. B r a n c h e s N e w York, Brooklyn and Yonkers ularly clear evidence as to the history- of the great continental ice sheet which covered the Northern States many thousands years ago. The southern margin of this great ice sheet extended to Long Island and remained there a long time, depositing a thick body of intermixed bowlders, sand, and clay as a terminal moraine, which is now the “ bBckbone’’ of the Island. The ice moved southward and m aterials from the dances, was a feaure of the evening and much enjoyed by all. The guests were Mrs. Sylvia Bowen, Mrs. Doro thy Lammert, Mrs. Gertrude Hines, Mr. and Mrs. Dunker, Mr. And Mrs. Keens, Mr. and Mrs. Abbott. Con gratulations and farewell completed a most pleasant day. (Item s from the Spectator) A rchitect Mole’s judgment for $79.50 against our Scool Oist., for work performd ovr a year ago, has been paid. Mole’s bill of $76 was ord- erd paid some time ago by taxpayers at a scool meeting, but the Board de cided they would not pay it now, hut ; let it be paid out of n ext y e a r’s budget. Mole engagd a lawyer and got judg ment, hut still the Board would Men liked tea, my boy, but they | brought these I hurled it into the sea in the name of ; north, dropping them at its melting I liberty, and they died rather than drink , edge. This peculiar method of deposi- ^ owll llle ,,„v it until they made it free. It seems to tion developed a very peculiar topog- ..com’e a cro88, “ and last week the case ! be worth fighting for,and the best men raphy, consisting of an irregular ag- wug tQ be taken t0 Supreme Court, ! in the world fought for it. | S \*® 1' 0\ of hummocks and hollows, ^ Jo}m L (who had been coun. The history of the U n ited'S tates is , which have produced the many beaut.- flel for Baue/ and Stephenson, Scool | incomplete with tea left out. As well ful details of configuration that make Trugtee9)| iearnjng 0f the situation, f might the historian omit Faneul Hall the higher parts of Long Island so at- paid the m0ney to Mole, and Mr Lyon and Bunker Hill as tea. But there is j tractive to lovers of nature. The most now ho)dg tht, judgm ent—drawing 6. no storv of heroism or patriotism withith j notableotable off thesehese hollowsollows in thehe morainalorainal . . . .t_ ,inst . rum for its hero. j ridge is the one holding the pictu The battles of this world, my son, | esque Lake Ronkonkoma, which lies in have been fought for grander things i 8 depression 50 feet below the sur- than free whiskey. The heroes who | rounding ridges. Several other aimi- fall in the struggle for rum fall in the ' lar P*ts are 80 to 85 feet deep, and neck, and their martyrdom is clouded 80me ° f the large Scool situation , | ' n o t h in t m , per cent in te re a Bga the District. Mr Lyon informd the Trustees that he would not longer serv as their coun sel, and advised them to seek another lawyer. by the haunting phantoms of the jim- Whiskey makes men fight, it is true, but they usually fight other drunken men. The champion of beer does not stand in the temple of fam e ; he stands in the police court. Honor never has the delirium tremens. Glory does not wear a red nose, and fame blows a horn but never takes one. I do not know one good thing about a saloon. It is an evil thing that has not one redeeming thing in all its his tory to commend it to good men. It breaks the laws of God and man ; it des ecrates the Sabbath; it profanes the name of religion; it defiles public or der; it tram ples under foot the tender- est feelings of hum a n ity; it is a moral pestilence that blights the very atmo sphere of town and county; it is a stain upon honesty ; a blur upon purity; a clog upon progress: a check upon the nobler im p u lses; it is an incentive to falsehood, deceit and crime. Search through the history of this hateful thing, and find one page over which some mother can bow her grate ful head and thank God for all the irregular hollows are several miles in length. The re port contains extended descriptions of the features of the varied configura tion of the Island, with lucid and in teresting explanations of the origin of many details. Considerable attention is also given to the character and orig in of the deep submarine channel of the Hudson, extending far out under the ocean. The older rocks of Long Island con sist of the granite floor, which cornea to the surface near East River and Hell Gate, and clays and sands of Cre taceous age, which have been found not only to outcrop at places along the , north shore but to rise into mounds of I wa)'' considerable height under the surficial deposits of a portion of the west-cen tral part of the Island. The geologic history of Long Island is the story of a vast lapse of time, but many of its details are indicated by s triking evidence in the relations of a great variety of deposits and di versity of configuration. The story as I read in this area is also applicable to I -------------- == o f REPORT OF THE CONDITION Miss Elsie Crevoiserat is about again after being unable to walk for several months from rheumatism. Marriage Licenses The following m a rriage licenses have been granted by ,Town Clerk G ilbert: Feb. 28—John W. Hoffman, and El izabeth Catherine, both of New Hyde March 4—William L. Smith of New York City and M arguerite C. Pearsall, Lynbrook. March 7—Victoria W. W hite and Lillian R. Ehlers, both of East Rocka- Looked Like Business. Father—“Jane, are that young man's intentions serious?\ Daughter —“I think so, pa; he says our carriage shed cc aid be easily transformed into a garage and the attic would make a ''anVy billiard room and bowling loon did for her boy. There is no such I Ration is also treated in Mr. Fuller’s j record. All its history is w ritten in report. Glacial deposits, both those tears and blood, with smears of shame ] c o n stituting moraines and those due to and stains of crime, and dark blots of I glacial waters, are so well exhibited disgrace.—Robert J. Burdette. ,on Long Island that teachers of geolo- | »t ih« c\»> gy and others interested in the science ! FREEPORT SANK F R E E P O R T , N. Y. nf Imsinv-fiK on l h e 2nd <1 h > of Civil Service Examinations The State Civil Service Commission will hold examinations on March 28, 1914, for the following positions: Index and Filing Clerk, $900 to $1200 per annum. Open to men and women 18 years of age. Trained Nurse, $420 to $600 and maintenance. Open to men and women. Physician, Homeopathic. $900 to $1200 per annum. Application blanks must be filed on or before March 20, 1914. For par ticulars and application blank, address, State Civil Service Commission, Al bany, N. Y. HKNOli iic k n : astute owned .... M o rtgages Owned Loan# an d dlKCiounts seci bond and n orLgnge. deed or o t h e r re a l estate c o l l a t e r a l .................. Loans and discounts secured by t h e r col la t e r a I ii r e d by Lu: •a\\11. w ith o u t coi- can find here exceptionally good Ulus i st<H. v s Hllll viz: trations in great variety. To provide I Public Securitim . M a r k e t \«1 for this demand a special table is in- , R®lll,; rSr<\nr M,uk 1 Vallm eluded giving a list of principal points of geologic interest, with brief notes on instructive features. The report includes a detailed geolo gic map and a topographic map of the entire Island on a scale of about 2 miles to the inch, together with many special maps and other illustrations. To facilitate reference to the geologic map, it is divided into rectangles des ignated from west to east by numbers and from north to south bv letters, and these references are used in the special table. The report on the geology of Long Island is published as Professional Pa- O v c n lraftH . Duo from T ru s t C o m p a n ies, banks and b u n k e r s ............. ............... Specie Legal T e n d e r No N a tional Hunks. <'anli Item s O ther Assets, v i z : Vault account $1 F u rn itu r e and F ixtures. an d N o tes o f terest not en- • MK) 00 VJO 00 f LIABII.ITIK8 : Our Home Women Have Beautiful Hair Next tim e you go to the theatre or to the “ movies” just notice, if you please, how many of our home ladies have beautiful hair—glossy, lustrous and well-dressed. Then, if you will pick out five or ten of those whose hair seems to be particularly pretty and will ask them what they use on it, we feel sure that at least more than half of them will say “ Harmony Hair Beautifier. ” It is fast becoming the rage with both men and women who are particular about the appearance of their hair. Sprinkle' a little Harmony Hair Beautifier on your hair each time be fore brushing it. Contains no o i l ; will hot change color of hair, nor darken gray hair. To keep hair and scalp dandruff-free and clean, use Harmony Shampoo. This pure liquid shampoo gives an in stantaneous rich lather that immedi ately penetrates to every part of hair and scalp, insuring a quick, thorough cleansing. Washed off ju s t as quick ly, the entire operation takes only a few moments. Contains nothing that | The bulk I per 82 of the United States Geological ; Cltpl(14l s ,01.i, Survey, and a copy may be obtained ; Sunihi#, including «ii undivided free on application to the Director of, j n-’p,,*! t „ nut preferred ji tn*7 it. r* 1*4 ' the Survey, at Washington, D. C. Heavy Traffic on L. 1. R. R. •till d e p o s it’* ■ linl er's . h ! intereti*. t b e r lia b ilities, viz li-hie r's check** o u tstan d in g *» .11 f ■J 330 (10 f Accrued i n o t tn* The Long Island Railroad carried 3,286,371 more passengers last calen dar year than in the preceding year, the total number carried being 40,- true and co r r e c t 6 0 6 , 1 8 3 . The gross revenue derived bent o f Ins knowledge and belief, from this business amounted to $7,- i nf Lid^Kaiik ^ im V i ^ d ' ‘rHilsaiu-f] \‘i T o tal $810 710 ‘'.‘j S la t e of New York, C o u n ty o f N a s s a u . h ». : W esley PinOvVice-PreHulent, and W illiam 8. Canan bn ierier o f thh ee F ree e e p o rt t Bank.ank. 1). V , H a ll. C o f t F r p o r w F reeport, N. Y.. a Bank located and doing bueinesH a t No. S o u th M ain S tr e e t in th e V illage of F reep o rt, in Haiti county, being du ly aw o rn, each fo r iiiniHelf. th a t th e HOLMES M. NARWOOD, Prop. Anything in the Tire Line Vulcanizing a Specialty AGENTS FOR REO AND METZ CARS Motor Supplies 123 S. Main Street, Freeport, N. Y. South of Merrick Road C. A. Fulton Undertaker and Embalmer 57 West Merrick Road FR E E P O R T , N. Y. Nassau Ladies Tailor g Furrier 72 SOUTH MAIN STREET American Theatre Bldg. I beg to announce to the public that I have opened my business in Freeport. Formerly Established 1895 in Brooklyn My prices will be N. Y. prices STRICTLY GUARANTEED FITTING Suits made to order for $10.00 and suits all complete with goods and trim mings for $25.00. I do repairing, Ladies’ and Gents’ San itary Cleaning, Pressing and Dyeing M. R o senblum SOUTH MAIN STREET American Theatre Building Freeport, N. Y. Telephone, 708-w Buttons Made To Order from any material ;*i (tin cr. |(3 till S3 34 ^un (10 1U7 (187 iim 18 973 00 I 39 443 3*1 SIK 885 Hi 12 32 115 100 23 I ii r>.*>2 5i j L’U 850 00 ' TWO SOWS,WHICH WILL YOU TAKE? ^T u o r foregoing R e p o rt is in all res p eel s, to th e ledge an d belie f, and * l h a t th e u s u a l business ir o m tm s B u s i n e s s a m o u m e u to <*<.- j of said Hank lias be.-n trausacKii at t!<- TART on the ROAD TO PR O S P E R ITY to d n v Thi> first milentone p r e c e d i n g * y T a r 'T n ^ i f f h l S is a BANK ACCOUNT. I t is a check against extravagance. Bead 782. T h e a v e r a g e r e v e n u e p e r passen-j mtiu l’ar\ |rriilw|'1liml1,i)' inhr,,m'pViM7l!‘“ nwi,'i! a°» the autobiography o f any of our great captains of industry and g e r , h o w e v e r , d e c r e a s e d in 1913 to nffl(‘.iai '‘»,,iic..ln‘,','iv.'<i fnlii!’ him, .i.-ivnM finance. Invariably, close to t h e opening paragraph, he w ill tell of his l\l<oftwinr!!'L.a!b>r..r. »Himi,i i w i L r ' Y i U l l FIRST BANK ACCOUNT. It was the first milestone in h i i ROAD TO by certify th a t u t the tin**, when 1 signed my _ Tr_ _ _ o a . tie h e reto, tli* N o tary P u b lic whuse nam e it oU L V ikoo ! tcheii to the e certificate r tl(irate hereinI m -I* >\ y eon- Do you aolemii- iiitainetl in the ai I ~ ' \* 14.62 cents from 14.79 cents in 1912 in consequence of increase in the num ber of commuters from 182.046 to 203,- 886 . The increase of 3,286,371 passengers i b -wear that . L - . „ . „ * ____ w .,1 *„=. forego* attac h e d to th c e her* tain e d a*ked me th e qutwtiou. ’‘D th e staburfl ! d o . ' in the total carried last year with increase in mileage operated has raised the passenger traffic density of the Long Island from 1,383,728 passengers SlHt<, (>f New y„rk carried one mile per mile of road to i . W a lter ( \ Rhode*, a Non 1.488,316, or what is perhaps the [ ^ . ‘V V r ' . H h ‘d a y ^ heaviest density of passenger traffic appeared before me D. Win shown by any railroad in the country. ; ^ “ s tatem e n t* ^ S S S S r T H E FREEPORT BANK VVM. S. HALL, <cashier. r \ f \ f \ Capital, $30,000 of this traffic is handled f NttlMHU, H*. ta ry P u b lic i d. d o her by March. 1V14. teley Pine, win i to the statem e n t and. hi th*? tini > her by certify ch M 4 tliei y P ine, who*e -ig- statem e n t h r ‘in hi th e tine* wh«*j I tty k 'd him , “ Do j Main Street J o h n .1. R a k p a m ,, P r e s i d e n t Surplus, $ 7 0 , 0 0 0 FREEPORT, N. D. W ksi . ry P in «, Vioe-Preeideut EASTMAN KODAK CO. KIEFER’S 6 0 S. Main St., Freeport We Develop eed Finish Yonr Pictures F irst-C lass Work Only can harm the hair; leaves no harshness 1 mainly through or stickiness—just a sweet cleanliness. ; and out o f New Both preparations come in odd-! vania Station, Flatbush Avenue sta- shaped, very ornamental bottles, with 'on and Long Island City ferry to East sprinkler tops. Harmony Hair Beau- Thirty-fourth s treet, tifier, $1.00. Harmony Shampoo, 60c. It is expected, the managers say, Both guaranteed to satisfy you in ev- that the completion of the Seventh ery way, or your money back. Sold Avenue Subway in Manhattan will re- only at the more than 7000 Rexall ; suit in the turning of about seventy- Stores, and in this town only by us. five P*r cent- 0* L ook Island’s traffic Thoe. Johnetcn Drug Co.. 23 W e s t; to and from lower Manhattan north- Merrick Road, Freeport, N. Y . ; also ! ward to the Pennsylvania station. Hempstead. N. Y. I will turn a large proportion away from I Advertisement ! the Brooklyn route. 1 I died xiitni-d such statem e n t. I ask- d him , “ Do you ‘free gateways into York City—Pennayl- plied. 1 * |S e a l o f Notary! W a l t e r C. R hodbm . NoUtry Public. State of New York. County of Nassau, hs . : 1. W alter C. Rhodes, a Notary Public In and for the county ol>ove named, do hereby certify that on the 11th day of March. _1W!4. there appeared before me Edgar Jtn.kaou George M. Randall William S. Hall Harvey B. Smith W il l ia m S. H all , Oaahier BOARD O F D I R E C T O R S Wallace H. Cornwell Coles P e ttit William B. Oolder Daniel B. Raynor Smith Cox D. Wesley Pine John J. Randall William G. Miller e&Balure Ii appro **l I above contained, and litjned sue illiai utement I asl solem n ly swear that the ■,tn j in the forettoiPN re|*»rt d 1 p lied. “ I do.” ked him \Do „ tem ents couthic e f ' , and I h * (Seal of Nu ary] Open except legal holidays, from U a. vative m&migemebt. m. to 3 p. m., Saturdays ti a. m. to 12 Interest at the rate of 8 per oeat. paid m. Offers facilities and inducements t|hreti months or more. those of L>rafUl mmied on nil parts of Europe. either the New York or Brooklyn ,lep08lt ^ ^ ^ Banks or Trust Companies, and every Araxrtmts of corporations, companie s aooommotlatioii consistent with oouser- societies, etc , solicited 11. whose ( i statem e n t herein- i the tim e when b»* I o'.!q | in every departm ent equal to