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J NASSAU COUNTY ”o ^ L L 'd\ar^LstL 0 5 ! Naeeea, notice U 1 m ' persons having claims ADOLPH LBVT at the Town of Hampstead, in comity, deceased, to present mm with the vouchers thereof, subscribers, the executors of Will ami Testament of said J, at their place of transact- siness at the office of George Levy, 1-1 Railroad Avenue, t. New York, on or before ifrst day of April next d, Mineola, N. Y., tember 14, 1818. GEORGE MORTON LEVY, DAVID LEVY, Executors. NOTICE TO CREDITORS rsuant to an order of HON. ONE D. HOWELL, Surrogate of County of Nassau, notice Is here- given to all persons having claims ANDREW GROVER of the Town of Hempstead, in the county, deceased, to present the with the vouchers thereof, to the riber the administrator of the i, chattels and credits which were dl deceased, at her place of trans- ig business at the office of Sea- Seabury A Gehrig, Hempstead, York, on or before the 10th day I July next. Dated, Mineola, N. Y., December 1» 1818. ARMENIA GROVER, Administrator. JURY, SEAMAN & GEHRIG, Attorneys for Administrator, Main St. A Fulton Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Pursuant to an order- of HON. )NE D. HOWELL,, Surrogate of lie County of Nassau, notice is here- ~ given to all persons having claims Inst Reed Midmer of the Town of Hempstead, in the tid county, deceased, to present the as with the vouchers thereof, to the iscribers the executors of the last hll and Testament of said deceased, t their place of transacting business ; the office of Swezey & Wilson, Free- sbrt, Nerw York, on or before the 10th! day of May next. Dated, Mineola, N. Y., October 18, 1918. 1 ANNIE F. MIDMER, ft : ANNIE NORTON, S FREDERICK W. SETTLE, Executors. SWEZEY A WILSON, Attorney for Executors, Freeport Bang Building, Freeport, N. Y. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Pursuant to an order of HON. J LEONE D. HOWELL,, Surrogate of I the County of Nassau, notice is here- 1 by given to all persons having claims against Walter S. Price I late of the Town of Hempstead, in the I said county, deceased, to present the ] same with the vouchers thereof, to the subscribers the executors of the last Will and Testament of said deceased, at their place of transacting business the office of Henry L. Rupert, 1 J*’ Avenue, New York City, on , SYhe 16th day of May next, sted, Mineola, N. Y., October 21, 1818. FRANK S. PRICE, AMELIA A. WESTERVELT, Executors. HENRY L. RUPERT, Attorney for Executors, 1 Madison Avenue, New York City. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Pursuant to an order of HON. LEONE D. HOWELL, Surrogate of the County of Nassau, notice is here by given to all persons having claims against SUSIE G. FRENCH late of the Town of Hempstead, in the jgjjfl county, deceased, to present the same with the vouchers thereof, to the subscriber the executor of the last Will and Testament of said deceased, at his place of transacting business at the office of Johnson & Johnson, Free port, New York, on or before the first day of June next. Dated, Mineola, N. Y., November I jg 1918. HENRY L. GRIFFING, Executor. JOHNSON A JOHNSON, Attorneys for Executor, 47-49 Rai’road Avenue, Freeport, N. Y. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Pursuant to an order of HON. LEONE D. HOWELL, Surrogate of the County of Nassau, notice is here by given to all perse ns having claims against HAROLD M. FRENCH late of the Town of Hempstead, in the aaid county, deceased, to present the aame with the vouchers thereof, to the aubscriber the administrator of the goods, chattels and credits of said de- aeased, at his place of transacting business at the office of Johnson A | Johnson, Freeport, New York, on or I before the first day of June next. Dated, Mineola, N. Y., November I J l? 1918. _____ _ ,. HENRY L. GRIFFING, _jL. Administrator. [■ JOHNSON A JOHNSON, Attorneye for Executor, 47-49 Railroad Avenue, Preeport, N. Y. m EFi * ’ 1 ' ' BUILDER DECORATOR Painting and Paperhanging Vtffl Work Screens Hardwood Floors FRED L. J. LEE \I South Main Street FREEPORT, N. Y. I Telephone 129 n q ] X Make Old Floors New You can improve old pine floors in hallways, bedrooms, stairways, etc., and make them look like new oak floors. They can be made light or dark in shade to suit the prevailing tone of your rugs. HARRISONS Vitrolac Stain is a combination stain and varnish made expressly for use on floors. It stands the tramping of feet, the scuffing of heels and all the hard wear that comes to the average floors. Vitrolac Stain works easily, spreads out freely and can be successfully applied by anyone. It comes in cans of con venient sizes. Ask the Harrison service-agent for a color chart and full directions for using Vitrolac Stain on your floors. LEE-PATTERSON CO., Inc. SELLING AGENTS 63 S. Main St., : : : FREEPORT, N. Y. Telephone 60 Freeport Opposite Review Office T h e Policy of the Ford Motor Company to sell its cars for the low e s t possible price consistent with dependable quality is too well known to require com ment. There fore, because of present conditions, there can be no change in the prices on Ford cars. Runabout $ 5 0 0 . 0 0 Touring Car 5 2 5 . 0 0 Coupelet 6 5 0 . 0 0 Sedan 7 7 5 . 0 0 Truck C h a s s i s 5 5 0 . 0 0 T h e s e prices F. O. B. Detroit 2 3 E a s t Merrick Road Freeport, L. I. LISTEN TO THE EVERWELLS NOTICE TO CREDITORS Pursuant to an order of HON. HONE D. HOWELL, Surrogate of $ County of Nassau, notice is here- given to all persons having claims *Tn#t HENRY S. WHITE i of the Town of Hempstead, in the | county, deceased, to present the tic with the vouchers thereof, to the wcrlbers the executors of the last ■i and Testament of said deceased, heir place of transacting business i office of Edwards A Bode, Free- New York, on or before the 10th j ■fedMineola, N. Y., November 23, EDWARD 8. E. GOLF, l $ f , JOHN B. S. WHITE, Executors. QWfdvrey vow-wife ArtdL children to o - Their heAlQx \s> (2ALL a halt on ill- health. Don’t let it cross the threshold of your home. Stock up the medicine case with pure remedies. See that your home is so sani tary that contagion couldn’t get in on a bet. Do business with a first class drug store. This is the one I’m plugging for. They will treat you right. Telephone Operators* Work in France. It la difficult for us to realise the scope of the work that has been done ( and is still being accomplished by the telephone operators In France. To serve the needs of an army of two mil- I lion men, and to connect that army up ' with the French by telephone was a I , matter that required no small amount of organization and planning on the ! part of the Signal Corps. The dlstri button of the girls In the Signal Corps service asked for careful study and, met with unqualified success. Extracts from letter of Miss Helen Cook, chief operator at Chaumont, General Pershing's headquarters, read : I was In Paris for a few days last week and saw Miss Barbour, who Is now chief operator In charge of the Paris district, which Includes La Belle Eplne, a toll switching point Just out side of Paris in direct charge of Miss Banker, an exchange at Aviation, one at Crlllon, the Peace Headquarters, one at Medlteranne, one at the Red Cross, operated by French citizens and In direct charge of Miss Marsh, one at S t Anne, and a large exchange at the Elysee Palace. All of the chief op erators of these exchanges report to Miss Barbour. Miss Egan Is In charge of the exchange at Crlllon; Miss Frankfort Is in charge of the P. B. X. at President Wilson's house. All of the business In Paris is prob ably temporary. Five of the girls are In Treves, the General Headquarters In connection with the Army of Occu pation, and the Headquarters whUh are at Luxemburg. Miss DrusKla Palmer is in charge of the five girls who are at Treves.—The Telephone Review. Kindergarten Helps for Parents Articles Issued 0* the Department mi the Interior. Bureau of t'jiueetkm and the Naths — FIRE ALARM CALLS Out-Of-Town Telephone Operators in Washington. From “A Mother.” Recently In a letter to D. D. Field at Washington u mother of one of the operators from the New York Tele phone Company, who is serving there as a volunteer, expressed her complete satisfaction In the arrangements made for the girls in the following letter printed in The Telephone Review : \May I usurp a few moments of your valuable time to thank you and the la dies of the \Fairmont\ for the wonder ful treatment I received while on ray recent visit to my daughter? “I assure you there is not a thing lacking In the home life which these yoting ladles enjoy. \I am writing you because I feel so well pleased that I want other mothers who have daughters there, and less fortunate than I, being so fur away and unable to visit them, to know that everything possible Is being done for their welfare.” \Fairmont” Is five fash ionable young ladles' schools In Wash ington taken over by the telephone company for Its out-of-town operators who are serving as “volunteers” In that city. Bristol In another. “Mon roe Courts” Is n new seven story apart ment house which the telephone com pany purchased Just before its < >mple- tlon and converted Into a model place of residence for the girls. The build ings are completely equipped with every comfort and convenience, and everything Is provided by the company free of all expense to the girls who have left their homes and are doing this necessary and patriotic work In the national capital. Bristol School, which seems to be an Inexhaustible mine of possible pleas ure, has not only a theater with a well equipped stage and swimming pool, but a big gymnasium, which lends it self to roller skating. Nearly every morning, afternoon and evening groups of girls may be seen there getting good exercise and thoroughly enjoying the pleasant pastime. A group of these operators Is putting on a play called \Cupid In Khaki.” while so much talent has been found for a vaudeville performance that there are to be two entertainments In stead of the one originally planned. “Who ever dreamed we had so many clever girls?” was a remark made re cently. “It Is lucky some of us are left to be audience.” BEAUTY FOR RUTH By MRS. MARGARET STEEL HARD. One morning a few months ago I was passing the playroom, my small daughter’s domain, and stopped to glance In, but finding her absent I did not linger. However, an Impression of tlie room did linger, and It finally grew to sufficient proportions to demand my conscious thought. What was there about the charming, sunny room with Its Mother Goose frieze and carefully chosen toys that vaguely troubled me? It was too or derly. That was It. orderly In the sense of being unused. I paused and reflected how little time Ruth really spent In the play room ; she was always somewhere else. Where was she. In fact, at that partic ular moment? Brief search discov ered her vigorously sweeping the back porch where some drifting leaves had collected. “Why Is It?” 1 said to myself as I poured the boiling water Into the dish- pan and swashed the soap-shaker up and down absent-mindedly. “Why Is It that she prefers sweeping the back porch to playing with her doll's house? Why does she hang about tlgp kitchen watching me cook Instead of wing that fascinating doll’s stove of her*” Children Anxious to Help. “It Is because she craves the actual and real experience, I suspect.\ Before I knew It I had brought my small cutting table, low enough for Ruth to reach, placed It beside the sink, covered It with a heavy towel and put the drnln basket thereupon. Then calling to her I pointed to the dlshtowels hanging in n crisply folded row and said: “Would you like to wipe the dishes for me after this?” Perhaps you do not think six-year- old help very competent, but I assure you that mine has broken but one saucer In over half a year, and that the glosses and silver are not only wiped until they shine ns brightly as the crystal and silver of the prover bial fairy palace, but that by the time I have hung my towels to dry, the last dish has been put safely away, by a little girl who must use the kitchen stool, deftly maneuvered, as a means to reach high shelves. Nor has the task ever become Irksome. Indeed there has been only a demand for fur ther duties, so that dusting, putting away laundry, making her crib, and greatest of all delights, cooking the cereal and apple sauce for her own and little brother’s supper, have been added to the list. Value of Comradeship. And so the little duties grow and best of all so grows Ruth. She is find ing her diminutive place In society and feeling herself a potent member of the family group. Through actual partic ipation In the responslblltles of her home she Is gaining the power to ad just herself to life'as she finds It which Is the secret of comfort for a child as well as for “grown-ups.\ This does not begin to cover the countless avenues for explanation and discussion opened up through the com radeship engendered by doing these tasks together, nor the numerous small problems of conduct which they solve. But try It yourself. It Is not at all new. In truth I suppose It to be one of the answers to the old question: “How could great-grandmother bring np a family of fourteen children with so little nerve-strain?” FREEPORT FIRE DEPARTMENT 1 School 1, Pine *n«t Grove 2 “ 2, Seaman Ave. 3 “ 3, Archer St 4 “ 4, Columbus Ave. 5 Riot Call, Headquarters 6 General, Orders of Chief One long blast to precede every general alarm NORTH OF MERRICK ROAD West of Ocean Avenue 1 Seaman and Virginia I Seaman and New York Wallace and West Lincoln Pennsylvania and Wilson i Hansom and Lena Randall and Bayview Pearsall and Pennsylvania ; Long Beach and Randall Randall and Bergen Bergen and Brooklyn Long Beach and Olive Lexington and Madison Pine and Park Pine and Bayview Pine and Long Beach Madison and Porterfield Merrick and Park SOUTH OF MERRICK ROAD East of Ocean Avenue 31 Seaman and Columbus 32 Main and Milton 34 Ocean and Lena 35 Main and Grand 36 Grand and Columbus 37 Grand and Fredericks 38 Grove and Randall 39 Parsons and Harrison 41 Main and Brooklyn Broadway and Mount Grove and Olive Pine and Ocean Pine and Church Main and Newton Newton and Henry Newton and Helen 42 43 45 46 47 48 49 West of Ocean Avenue 51 Bayview and Merrick Long Beach and Merrick Ocean and Smith Bayview and Whaley Long Beach and Whaley 57 Ocean and Whaley 58 Archer and Elliott Ocean and South Side Atlantic and West End Atlantic and Bayview Atlantic and Roosevelt West Side and Ray Bayview and Johnson Long Beach and Cedar West Side and Front Miller and t'ront Second Alarm- East of Ocean Avenue 71 Merrick and Grove 72 Merrick and Main 73 Merrick and Helen 74 Smith and Church 75 Bedell and Raynor Sts. 76 St. John’s PI. & Mill R d . 78 Archer and East 79 Main and Archer 81 Bedell and Atlantic 82 Main and Atlantic 83 Main and Whaley’s dock 84 Grove and Ray 85 Ocean and Cedar 86 Grove and Front 1 long blast—recall -more men needed LOOK AT THIS Converted Automobile Patented December 13, 1913 AT MY REPOSITORY J. M. PALMER Demountable Tops and Converters for Touring Cars Automobile Repairing and Painting a Specialty Meaning of Name \Rachel.” The Jews were at one time a nation of shepherds, and It was probably for this reason that the Hebrew word for a mother sheep, or a ewe, was given to some of the Jewish women, Rachel TfiKu as l 4 ■A'J ARCADE PHARMACY Inc. Bartholomew A Mead H. A. Bartholomew, Reg. Phar. At the Depot FREEPORT, N. Y. ’Phones, 629 and 148 A Convenient, R< Method of conducting an expense account is tne paying of all bills By CHECK. Both men and women so4n learn its value by experience, ancf once form ing the habit, never reliieuish it. Its convenience, accuracy, simplicity and its postive up-lifting off the financial rating of both the merchant and fam ily purse-holder commeids it on sight The First National Bank welcomes the deposits of men and wo men who can appreciate its many ben efits. The First National Ban!. OF FREEPORT. N. Y. solicits your account Resources over 1700,00# THE KINDERGARTEN By DR. LYMAN ABBOTT. The kindergarten Is more than a par ticular form of school. It Is nn essen tial principle of education—the princi ple that education Is growth, not man ufacture. The kindergarten Is a child garden; the home and the school are the soil; bad habits are the weeds; the parents and the teachers are the gardeners; education Is preparing and enriching the soli, planting the seeds, weeding the garden bed; the kinder garten ploys and songs are garden tools; a cheerful spirit, a genial hu mor, a spirit of kindness and sympa thy are the necessary sunshine; sor row, trials, temptations, tears, disci pline arc the necessary rain. The pri mary school, the grammar school, the high school, the college, should aU be child gardens In which the growing youth should be guided In his growth, but always en couraged to grow naturally, simply. Healthfully Into whatever flower and t his nature fits him for. The tto for the parent and the teacher, 'should always be: \Consider the lib ies of the field how they grow;\ and the model of the parent and the teach er should always be the divine model furnished by God’s work In creation. \And God said. Let the earth bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit after his kind.\ If we will plant the children of ear Immigrants in American soil, give them American companions, teach them In the American language, let them breathe American literature, discipline them In the American art of self-gov ernment, warm their hearts In the sunshine of American tendencies, *ym- j pathy and good fellowship, and always respect the nature which God has given them however it may differ from ours, they will grow up loyal, patriotic, devoted Americana. OFFICE AND REPOSITORY: FACTORY: Clinton and State Streets Tel. Main 425 Clinton St., corner Atlantic Ave BROOKLYN, N. Y. RESIDENCE: 27 Onslow Place, Freeport, N. Y. Phone Freeport 861 - 4 *. 4 r 4 4 4 view fren C ashier Separating Photograph, From Mount When a photograph la pulled away from its mount, after being sufficiently soaked in water, the surface of the print mfy be Injured by the bending. This dm be avoided by laying the print flat on Its face and pul ling. away the mount, stripping It away in several layers If necessary.—Popular Mechan ics Magazine. r s w e a In Every Issue of This Newspaper The Merchants of This Village Talk Directly to You! The problems of our mercants are your problems. If they have solved, satisfactorily to themselves, some of the problems of buying and selling commodities to advant age, they have solved in some measure YOUR BUYING PROBLEM. In their advertisements they give you their STORE NEWS. They tell you something about the things you need —something about their special claims to your attention. If they are able to sell you some of the things you need at prices which represent a saving to you, under present eemmodity costs, they tell you th- news in thsir advertise- menta. „ You know the prices are high nowadays. Some things have gone sky-rocketing. Your dollar does not buy as much as it bought in periods when it was harder to get That al ways happens. It is an eeanomie law. When money is scarce commodities are cheaper than when money is plentiful. Your task is to make your dollars do the fullest meas ure of service—to make them buy as much as they will buy. Unless you keep in touch with the offerings of the merchants you cannot do this. For, in many small shops, prices are ex- horbitant. A small volume of business nowadays forces higher prices. A large volume of business is the only fac tor which works for lower prices—for lower per-sale profits. Know what the progressive merchants offer—know what they are doing to enhance the purchasing power of your dol lar. Know this through reading the ads. O b the Trolley Line (Ne Waacfc effitw sad «• rmstrtfac with m j etkw esawm) telkphom T ia ; , a it diBf, FREEPORT, N.T HI H I H h I