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- i .-. • ;h '■■ *. , ' • . ■ ■ V yfe 'Auto Imurance Fire Burglary L Surety Bonds Reel Estate i M ' s r m Women can be wire of receiv ing courteous attention in this institution. W e notonly invite you to open a personal account with us, but we also will be glad to give you the benefit of our advice and experience in other business matters. W e are never too busy to be pleasant. t • »- » t I • t S t I $ < S f I $ -s - s - t - s - t Great Oaks from Little Acorns Grow THE FREEPORT BANK Capital, $30,000 Surplus, $75,000 Main Street - FREEPORT, N. Y John J. Randall. President D. Wesley Pine. Vice-President William S. Hall, Cashier Edgar Jackson William S. Hall Harvey B. Smith Daniel B. Raynor BOARD OF DIRECTORS Wallace H. Cornwell Coles Pettit William E. Colder William G. Miller John J. Randall D. Wesley Pine Smith Cox Open except legal holidays, from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m., Saturdays 9 a. m to 12 m. Offers facilities and inducements in every department equal to those of either the New York or Brooklyn Banks or Trust Companies, and every •eeemmodation consistent with conservative management. Interest at the rate of 3 per cent, paid on time deposits, three months or more. Drafts issued on all parts of Europe. Safe deposit boxes to rent, $6 per annum. Accounts of corporations, companies, societies, etc., solicited. 4 SHF. S A GREAT CAR UNDER THE HOOD BUT WHO WOULD KNOW IT BY HER LOOKS? GIVE HER A COAT OF F f f e c t o V o * ^ v t o One or two dollars invested in EFFECTO AUTO FINISH and a few hours of your time will pay big dividends in the added attractiveness of your car. Seven different colors to choose from. A full line of Pratt & Lambert’s Varnishes and Stains always m stock. ARTHUR WHITEHOUSE 91 SOUTH MAIN STREET Hardware, Paints, Oils, Etc. Stoves and Repairs Telephone Freeport 384-w or call and see us TO OUR CONSUMERS The National Qouneil of Defense and the Federal Reserve Beard request that the people of the country pay their bills promptly a* that money may he kept in drcnlatien AS A HELP TOWARDS WIN NING THE WAR. Ae a Public Utility company we are compelled to pqy CASH for all material need In the manufacture of gas. We cannot do this and continue to famish gas te our consumers during these critical times, aniens our consumers co-operate with us and pay their Mila promptly. Every business man and every patriotic citiaen knows that this is a reasonable reqaest on our pert and we trust that our consumers will accept it tat the spirit la which it is given. The Nassau & Suffolk Lighting Co. animumimwn ixuvaviuc vchitc - , rrecpon mmeom Mortgage Loans CLARENCE A. EDWARDS Opposite Depot Freeport, N. Y. > V •• .v - r j ' ? SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK. NASSAU COUN TY^—Hicks Beach Company, Plain tiff, va. Carman Frost, Jr., et a].. De fendants. In pursuance of an interlocutory judgment of partition and sale, duly made and entered in the above entit led action and bearing date the 11th day of May, 1817, I, the undersigned, the Referee in said judgment named, will sell at public arctic n, .it the > f t d icr of the Nassau County Court w'y’?e rt Min'-'Vn. Ni'snu County, New York, at twelve o’clock noon on the 6th day of December, 1918, the HOSTUTO RURAL VOTERS Candidate Smith Supported Tam many Bids to Make Voting in the C:untry as Oif- fbult as Possible. COUNTY COURT, TY.—The Freeport tiff, against Alice al., Defendants \ ■pa ~ Tape- closure and sale duly made and en tered in the office of the Clerk of Nas sau County, in the above-entitled ac tion, dated September 21, 1918, I, the undersigned, the Referee in said judgment named, will sell at public auction, to the highest bidder, a t the Rotunda of the Nassau County Court - y - 10 His Speech on “Voting the Leaves ATI — k-:\ — *—1 on the Trees and Voting the Tombstones.” • ; NASSAU COUN- land, situate, lying and being ii .port Bank, Plain- I Town of Hempstead. County of i E. Livingston, et sau, State of New York, and co In pursuance of a judgment of f< osure and sale duly made and ALL that certain piece pr parcel of being in the Nas- consist- ing of beaches, meadows, islands and land under water and more particu larly bounded and described as fol lows: SECOND PARCEL: BEGINNING at a point in the southerly line of the Post Lead Tract, which said line is South 82° 20' East 1001.30 feet from the iron bojt situ ated in the southwest comer of said House, at Mineola, in the Town of Post Lead Tract and at the point Hempstead, Nassau County, N. Y., where said line is intersected by the on Saturday, the 9th day of Novem-1 easterly line of the First Parcel, her, 1918, at 10:30 in the forenoon of which runs from the center of the Zn- that day, the premises described in the let 4287.63 feet on a course, N. 10° judgment of foreclosure and sale, as j 46' West and from said point of be- follows: ginning running thence South 10° 45' “ALL that certain piece or parcel East 4287.63 feet along the First Par- of land, situate, lying and being on cel to the center of the Inlet between the Easterly side of Wallace Street, 1 the mainland and Outer Beach; thence in the Village of Freeport, County of North 79° 16' East 3800 feet more or • \ less to the Easterly line of said prop erty; thence North to Sand Bar Point; thence North 61° 04' west 3026.12 feet ity ot Nassau and State of New York, bounded and described as follows: BEGINNING at the southwesterly comer thereof at a point where the northerly line of Woodbine Avenue so called, intersects the Easterly line of Wallace Street; running thence Northerly along the Easterly line of Wallace Street one hundred and thirty-five (135) feet; thence East erly, parallel with the South line of Seaman Avenue one hundred fifty (160) feet; thence Southerly parallel with the Easterly line of Wallace Street to the North line of Woodbine Avenue, so called; thence Westerly along the North line of said Woodbine Avenue to the point or place of be ginning. Containing all the land within said bounds.” Being the same premises conveyed “'n(l »urvey is at Inched to the report to said Charles E. Livingston by John of Charles S. Noyes, dated December J. Randall and Frances E. Randall, 12, 1916 end her-tofem fVed in the his wife, by deed dated July 1, 1909, and recorded in Nassau County Clerk’s office in Liber 194 of Deeds, page 478, on July 15, 1909. Subject to the covenants and res trictions contained in deeds of record. HENRY L. MAXSON, Referee. MARTIN V. W. HALL, Attorney for Plaintiff, 43 Cedar Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York City. While a member of the Assembly, Alfred K. Smith, the Democratic can didate for Governor, voted for meas ures that had for their object the prac tical disfranchisement of rural voters. He not only voted and worked for bills amending the election law making registration as difficult as possible In the rural districts, hut he voted for an amendment to the Constitution to re quire the personal registration of vot ers living miles from a polling place in rural communities. On July 21, 1911, when the Warren resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution by taking out the re striction against requiring personal registration In villages of less than 5,000 Inhabitants was up In the Assem bly, he voted for it. This proposed constitutional amend ment failed, and because It failed the amendment to the election law prac- to Charles Point: thence Northerly along the shore of Woodsbuwrh Chan nel to Stinking Point; thence North 2ti.r)(r feet to the point of dcally requiring personal registration. Mills Meadow; thence southwesterly d 1013 when Mr. Smith was to the center of Crooked Creek to a line in extension northerly of the westerly side of the Post Lead Tract and the First Parcel; thence south 10° 06' East 3600.50 feet, more or less, to the southwest corner of the Post Lead Tract at the iron bo’t; thence South 82° 20' East 1001.30 feet to the point of beginning, said courses and dist ances being according to a map and survey made November, 1916. Ity F. W. Conk'in the ori\\nal of which man Notice to Readers Readers of THE NASSAU COUNTY REVIEW are cordially invited to send items of interest to our office and we will be glad to publish them. Any activity in our community, religious, social, benevolent, fra ternal or civic, in which you are interested, will be given space in our columns. Please sign your full name and address, so that further details may be secured if ribccssary OUR FRIENDS ARE STRONG LY URGED TO SEND ALL ITEMS SO AS TO REACH THE OFFICE BY WEDNESDAY MORNING. Notes which arrive too late for publication in the current issue will be printed the following week if available. Write plainly on only one side of paper and send all communica tions to NASSAU COUNTY REVIEW ‘Phone 8 Freeport N s v ii’i County Cork’s Office. # TO GETHER w Hi a certain right of way across cerium land lying to plaintiff and the defendant John L. Lawrence, hereinbefore described as the “First Parcel.” fifty (501 feet wide, connecting fwith the right of way over a strip of land belonging to the estate nf Newbo'd Lawrence, de ceased. and lying between the above described nremises and the land now or late of Rufus Leavitt, such right of way to be over a strip of land fifty (50) feet in w’dth above high water Speaker of the Assembly, was declar ed unconstitutional by the Court of Appeals. In 1912, when the Loomis bill amend ing the election law by providing that In districts where personal registra tion Is not required the name of a vot er to be registered must be accom panied by two aflidavlts before it could be placed on the list, Mr. Smith sup ported the bill and In u speech reveal ed his attitude toward voters In the rural districts. On March 29, 1912, speaking on a. motion to discharge the Judiciary com mittee from further consideration of the bill, he said: “The automobile is very busy on election day. (Laughter.) Nothing like letting them work on registration day. We are trying to safeguard the people. The Court of Appeals said you couldn’t do It under the Constitu tion. We are trying to safeguard the purity of the ballot In the country dis tricts by providing that the man whose attack cooing on, ward it off by the timely use of BEECHflM'S PILLS. U322jtii «< A a , tk> W a H * C. L MOOK Chinese Laundry Opp. L. I. R. R. Depot 14 Brooklyn Ave., Freeport, N. Y. None* My service and work is first-class. Goode called for and delivered • * * COOTilTMOTURT, NASSAU JPOIJlf- e S e H . Cooper, M b wifc, Esther E. Beattie. Ethel G. Farnsworth nod Harry L. Winter, Detendanta. Notice of Sole, hi pursuance trf a judgment of I foreclosure and sale made and enter ed in the above entitled action, bear- I ing da to September 4 th, 1918, I, the undersigned, the referee in said judg ment named, will sell at public aec- | tion to the highest bidden- in the ro tunda of the County Court House, at Mineola, Nassau County, New York, on Friday, the second day of Novem ber, 1918, a t 10:00 o’clock in the ! forenoon, the premises directed by : said judgment to be sold, and therein ; described as follows: All that certain piece, parcel or plot of land, together with the build ings and improvements erected there on, situate, lying and being on the CHIROPRACTIC G. M. E.jj^ad, D. C. 84 Church St. Freeport, L. I. Hours 3 to 4 Tues., Thurs. and Sat. New York Office, 200 W. 72nd St. ’Phone 4231 Columbus Palmer Graduate J. M. HEWLETT Hay, Feed, Bundle Wood Market and Garden Seeds Seed Potatoes, Fertilizer Dried Grains Cor. Church Street and Olive Blvd FREEPORT, N. Y. rotar, 'unded and described as follows: BEGINNING a t a point formed hy the intersection of the Northerly Hue of Archer Street and the Westerly line of East Avenue, running thews Northerly along the West side ef East Avenue, One hundred and fifteen (115) feet: running thence Westerly on a line drawn at right angles with the Westerly line of East A venae. One hundred and Twenty-five (126) feet to land now or formerly of John J. Randall; thence Southerly, along land now or formerly of John J. Ran dall, One hundred one and thirty-six one hundredths (101.36) feet, to dm Northerly side of Archer Street; thence Easterly along the Northeriy side of Archer Street, One hundred twenty-five and seventy-four one hun dredths (126.74) feet, to the point or place of beginning. Containing all the land within said bounds. And being the same premises which were conveyed to Oliver W. Cooper by Dan iel B. Raynor and Annie E. Raynor, his wife, by Deed bearing even date herewith and delivered simultaneous ly with these presents, which are given to secure a part of the consid eration in said deed expressed. This being a purchase money mortgage upon the premises herein described. IT IS UNDERSTOOD AND AG REED by all the parties hereto that this conveyance is made subject to the same restrictions as are contain ed in the deed by which the party of the first part hereto acquired title to the premises hereby conveyed. Dated, September 12, 1918. JEREMIAH WOOD, Referee. MARTIN V. W. HALL, Attorney for Plaintiff, 43 Cedar Street, '• v ,. Manhattan, N. Y. Closes at 1 o’clock after July let. on Saturday* mark, lying next to the north shore ! name is added for the first time shall of the in’et, to pass and re-pass to and from said described premises with teams, horse*, cattle or otherwise, as they or their heirs or assigns may el ect, to the full enjoyment and use of the property lying east of the above described property on Hicks Beach; and also have the right to pass and re pass over said parcel where conven ient to them, their heirs and assigns, until the said right of way is located and made good and passable for teams, horses, cattle or otherwise. Said right of way. and said right to pass and re-pass being described and set forth in certain recorded deeds made by Carman Frost and Amanda Frost, his wife, to John L. Lawrence. This property, being the “Second Parcel” mentioned in the said inter locutory judgment, is to be sold as one parcel free and clear of any lien or claim, except taxes, which taxes approximately amount to $1,167.25, with interest. Dated, October 18th, 1918. ELVIN N. EDWARDS, Referee. EPH. A. KARELSEN, Attorney for Plaintiff, 87 Nassau Street, Manhattan, New York City. be accompanied by two affidavits of two men who know him and know him to reside In the place where he said\ tie resided. That Is not very drastic. Now, the man who will stand up ahd argue against that Is giving some evi dence of the truth that there Is some thing to tills business of voting the leaves on the tfqee and voting the tombstones. (Latighter.) I know that Is an old fashioned expression, and lots of people believe It, too. I remem ber an election within my time In poli tics where I was convinced of It for at least a night any way.” Because the Assembly of 1912 had a Republican majority this attack on the rural voters failed, but an amendment to tbe notorious Levy election law to accomplish the same result was enact ed by the Legislature of 1913 and was declared unconstitutional by the Chart of Appeals. Anything that would operate to re duce the rural vote would be to the advantage of Tammany, and Smith was a loyal supporter of all Tammany measures to that end. COUNTY COURT, NASSAU COUN TY.—Nassau-Suffolk Bond & Mort gage Guarantee Company, Plaintiff, against Alice E. Forbes, et al, De fendants. In pursuance of a judgment of fere- closure and sale duly made and en tered in the above entitled action, and bearing date the 26th day of Septem ber, 1918, I, the undersigned, the Ref eree in said judgment named, will sell at public auction to the highest bid der, at the Nassau County Court House, at Mineola, Nassau Co., N. Y., on Wednesday, November 27, 1918, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, the follow ing premises mentioned and described in said judgment: ALL those twelve certain lots, pieces or parcels of land, with the buildir * 1 A DEMOCRATIC BLUNDER. A Persistent Influence F.xertod in Your Behalf Every bit of Printing that goes to serve you makes some KIND OF AN IMPRESSION. Poor printing will leave a poor impression of its user as surely as would poor clothes, a poor store or shop or office. GOOD printing will leave upon every mind ah impression wholly favorable of its user. Even if but one in a thousand of these “impres sions'* really tips the scales for business, for orders, for you— GOOD PRINTING will have paid itself. You can get it at this office—whether you want a little of it or a great deal. NASSAU COUNTY REVIEW ON THE TROLLEY LINE TELEPHONE 8 (No branch office and no connection with any other concern) Review Building FREEPORT, N. Y. Ernest S. Rands II The Democratic candidate should not have said that the leading Issue Is the question of what the State can do to back up the President and the Fed eral Administration. Nor should Judge Herrick have declared that the verdict at the polls this year will be regarded as one of approval or of disapproval of the President, of his war alms and of hie conduct of the war. Equally, If not more, malapropos was the state ment of the chairman of the Demo cratic State Campaign Committee that a defeat for the party this year would be construed by our enemies as a repu-i dlatlon of tbe President This Is beginning the campaign with a blunder of the first magnitude. It Is scarcely an exaggeration to say that the people of this State are loyal to* the cause, to the last man and woman. Imbecility can go no further than It Is, carried by the Implication that the successful prosecution of the war Is In the remotest degree contingent upon this Commonwealth’s election returns next November. Some of the votes In cluded In these returns will be cast by men who are serving under Per shing. And some of them will con tribute to the Whitman total. Noth ing is to be determined except under what auspices State affairs shall be administered. The voter who reserves liberty of action furnishes proof of his Interest In the welfare of the State. For that he Is to be commended, not Insulted.—Brooklyn Eagle (Dcm.). uildings and improvements thereon, situate, lying and being at Freeport, in the County of Nassau and State of New York, known and designated on a certain map entitled “Map of Bay- view, at Freeport, L. I., Sept. 1906, surveyed by Alvin G. Smith, C. E., Freeport, L. I.,” and filed in the Nas sau County Clerk’s Office September 26, 1906, as Map No. 305, as and by the lot numbers 64, 65, 66, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 96 and 96, which said Iqts taken together are bounded and described according to said map as follows: BEGINNING at a point on the Southerly side of Archer Street, dis tant 375 feet Easterly from the cor ner formed by the intersection of the Southerly side of Archer Street with the Easterly side of Bayview Avenue; running thence Southerly, at right angles to Archer Street, 150 feet; thence Easterly, parallel with Archer Street, 75 feet; thence Southerly at right angles to Southside Avenue, 150 feet to the northerly side of Southside Avenue; thence Easterly along the Northerly side of Southside Avenue, 75 feet; thence Northerly, again at right angles to Southside Avenue, 160 feet; thence Easterly parallel with Archer Street, 76 feet; thence North erly, again at right angles to Archer Street, 160 feet to the Southerly side of Archer Street; and thence Westerly along the Southerly side of Archer Street, 226 feet to the point or place of beginning. Dated, .October 2, 1918. NEIL H. VANDEWATER, Referee. CLARKE * FROST, Plaintiff’s Attorneys, 215 Montague Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. The People of the State of New York.—To James M. White, John R. S. White, Grace L. Kuhn, Ad elaide W. Leighton and George R. White. Send Greetings: Whereas, Edward S. Egolf, who re sides at Number 52 St. Marks Ave nue, Brooklyn, in the County of Kings, State of Nwe York, hath lately applied to the Surrogate’s Court of our County of Nassau, to have a certain instrument in writing bearing date the Twelfth day of July, 1910, relating to both real and person al property, duly proved as the Last Will and Testament of Henry S. White, deceased, and to have a cer tain other instrument in writing bear ing date the fourth day of April, 1912, ^elating to both real and per sonal property duly proved as a Cod icil to the last Will and Testament of Henry S. White, deceased, who was at the time of his death a resident of 132 Rose Street, Freeport, in said County of Nassau, Therefore, you and each of you are cited to show cause before the Sur rogate’s Court of our County of Nas sau, at the Surrogate’s office at Min eola, in the County of Nassau, on the 26th day of October, 1918, at nine o'clock in the forenoon of that day why the said Will and Testament should not be admitted to probate as a Will of real and personal property. In Testimony Whereof, We have caused the seal of the Surro gate’s Court of our said County of Nassau to be • L. S. hereunto affixed. Witness, Hon. Leone D. How ell, Surrogate of our said County of Nassau, at the Surrogate’s Office, at Min eola, in the said County, the 19th day of September, one thousand nine hundred and eighteen. EDWIN W. WEEKS, Clerk of the Surrogate’s Court. EDWARDS & BODE, Attorneys for Petitioner, 1-7 Railroad Avenue, Freeport, N. Y. NOTICE TO CRED ITORS n t to an order e f HON.. th e ILL. S u rro g a te of otlce Is hereby given LEO N E D. C o u n ty o f Nee- an H O W E hav in g elalm e ag a in s t M ARY PA U L IN E H A N N IN C T O N of th e Town of H e m p e teed. in th e , deceased, to late county , th e vouchers th< uu toto rsrs o ff thh ee REGISTER. h o w e l ; sau, n e t county. at<eaffieti. to preeiuit the same wit* j ^ ----- — altd* T'Mta^ “Ain’t No U«P, Billy Uberty Loan, and It Is the duty of ev- ' uaI»B^e^bMlD«?,*t 'the of'* w.i“f U’“ ery American citizen to buy bonds to ! fL.83» Yith d^Tor No last day of the drive for the Fourth •ed . to p r e s e n t th e eam e w ith th e reof, to th e eubecrlbera the ec o t la s t W ill aad T e s ta m e n t of •aid deceased, a t th e ir place o f tran s a c t i n g busin e s s a t th e office o f J. C u lb e rt Palm e r. I t * B roadw ay, New York C ity, on o r be fore t h e first day o f N o v e m b e r next. D a te d , M ineola. N. Y., A p ril IS , IS IS . JO H N T. COW LES, CECILIA J. COW L E S . A L F R E D W. HA N N IN C T O N . AUGUSTA COLONELL. E x e c u tors. ‘ C U L B E R T PALM E R . A tto rn e y fo r E x e c u tors, 120 Broadw ay, York City. FOR SALE STABLE MANURE Shipped in Bulk By Rail and By Water Sales Agents Wanted M. McGIRR’S SONS CO. 264 W. 34th St. N. Y. CITY NOTICE TO CRED ITORS rsuanjl to an ord e r o f HON. L, S u rro g a te o f th it hereby S i V ig claim s ag a in s t L E O N E D b e C o u n ty o f N e s- eu to all persons EDGAR JACKSON o f th e Town of H e m p s tead, in tb e said nty. deceased, to p resen t tb e sam e with I, at th e office ork. the utmost limit of hi. ability. | ^ MbL& £ ^ ^ . r T s i . . Saturday. October 19, Is also the »: bmmai r ParraoM last day for the registration of voters, j BIRDS ALL JAC*|” ”^ rl Any voter whose name Is not on the SIDNEY H. swezey registry list by 10 p. m. on October 19 will not be entitled to vote oo Novem- fw JUCN y . U her & , , ---------------- ---- ------ — ----------------- Boy bonds and register. » __ N O T I C E . TO CREDITORS B e s to w Your Roses Now. Wbnt a happy world this would be If only love and friendship would pay their debt« as they go along | If the words of appreciation coaid come now thr « • d»* H •» hereby given to atl A tlS raS T * W R S S M I L L R R ___ . 4* s*w« of Hemps tend, tas the aeW •aaatg. dec ms si . te preeeat the same w ith •aid dee s a a sd. a t his Place ed it * Burglar Proof A repository in which you have your money depoeited, and maybe your valuables stored, should be strong enough to resist the attacks of ' the burglar. Entrust them to us. They will be absolutely aafe. With an account opened with ua yon can pay by check, thereby insuring accur- acq and system in your methods of keeping accounts. There is no greeter convenience Cud safeguard for hand ling money than i The First National Bank < OF FRKKPOBT, K. T. solicits your aeeeapa ■ -jak 9 0 0 m M ~ m V\ 1 *