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I HE NASSAU POST: F R E fr.-JK r N. Y., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1914 Nassau P oh I WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 1914 Published W ednesdays and Saturdays by tiis nassaij ruat riBuianiNO coMrANT, 21-24 South Grore Street, Freei/ort. Nassau County, New York. , James E Stiles and Hand W Snther and, ow n er- and publishers HAND W. SU 1 HI. It LAND, Editor JAM E S E S i l l ES, Uusine M anager suDscRirnoN t e r m s ONE YEAR ......... ........................................ 12 80 SIX MONTHS ................................................... II 40 1HKEK MONTHS .................................... I 70 O NE MONTH .............................................. 28 AUVKKTISING KATES U.N AI HUCATIUN \Entered as Second-class matter A p iii -1, 1914, a t the post office a t Freeport, New York, under th e S ; t of March A, J57l>.\ ELIOTS POEMS FOR THE CHILDREN Thla last of three poems wh'di Charles W. Eliot, former president of Harvtiid UnivertltV iGeomuionils Ihal every child ahould read, strikes horae a lilllo cloter Uian any of Ihe others, for William Cullen Bryant, ita autho •, wad once a leeident of Long inland. His remains are burled at Itoslyn. It is conceded lhat the ilitue poems which Dr. Eliot has chosen from hun dreds, are all of them pormJAr. “The Village Blacksmith,'' by Henry Wads- wcii.h Longfellow and \Abou L e i Adhem,\ by Leigh Hunt, are eagerly sought t y literally inclined minors hb well as grown-ups alike. It is a Question whicu cf them Is the moreijioi iilan Freeport, Roc j \ i h e t’entn , Lynhrook and other villages of the South Sid n uet have a jiiefeience. It would be IntereBiing to test the popularity of the three among the thlhlren of ihe schools in these various places. Each of 'tl.em is a part of ;he reading courses of Nassau County schools. A vote may easily he taken . If piinvipais are so inclined and tne results are forwarded ILe Nassau Lost v ill gladly give space to their publication in detail. All com rmiincalion etiuuld o* sddreaeeti u> 1H K N AoSAU I'U b r . Mam UtHcw ....................... Freeport, L. 1.. N Y MuhhielIan Vfhce. 6 Biekm a i. dt., I Mh Moor.# liianchee m Va ie> Stream, Lynbruok East Hvckaway, Rtrckvill# Centre, Long Beach, Ucean Side. UakJwm, , Merrick, Uell- mnre, WantagL, o e a /ora. lierupeVead and Mm- T tlephune .............................................. Freeport B A L D W I N ’S BOOM The steam dre Ige which ipng ago tcok Its place w.th the tunnel bvr--r and toad tnachin) as an assistant in the work of maki ig the map what ad vancing civiiizallcn would have It, may he credited with deserving progressive wcik at Baldwinf*. Milburn Bay not long ago was little better than a water waste. It wat a shallow stretch upon which the tideu efcLed and llov. ed. but it offered pca- fciblllties which the Baldwin Harbor Really Con.puny was not slow to runl- iie. The company saw in this adjoiuiiu; acreage nr. o r r o 'utiL; lor uevelop- meiu und fn the water waste a chanev for the creation of a real hay with CGiineeting canals reaching the main , land. It required capital and energy to cany the Improvement forwaiu. Ai a rc-LLlt of the working out of the ccn r a u y ’s plans, the buy has been dredged to a (’epth sufficient tor the easy movement of sailing craft tl.lough its channels and by means ol the eonneulng canals yachts ani1. small boniB can sail within 150 fee*. ! of the boulevard. Baldwin Harbor now becomes ex aclly what Its name says. It is a 1 modern hoine'settiement right on the bay. Few places Indeed are so favored I Fortunate la the man who loves the : subuitan life If he makes his home In a place like Freeport, Baldwin m- Rockville Ccntie whcie he may hav good storcB, schools, churches, fire and police pi election and also enjoy tk- country and eLoro. TO A WATERFOWL. Whither, midst falling dew, While # low the heavens with the last steps of day, f ar, through their losy depths, doth thou pursue Thy solitary way? , Vrinly the fowler’s eye Might mail: thy distant flight to do thee wrong. As, darkly reen ^gainst the crimson sky, 'thy ligtirc floats along. E i r k ’rt thou Ike plashy brink Of v.ei dy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the locking billows ilse and sink vn the chafed ocean-side? Theie is a rower whose care Teaches thy way along that pathless coast— The u sen and Illimitable air— Lone wandering, but not lost. All day thy wings have fanned At t h a t far tc-ight, the cold, thin atmosphere. Yet stoop not, weary, to the w.lcon.e laud, 1 ncugh dark night is near. And soon t h a t toil shall end; Soon ishali Ibcu find a summer home, and rest And scream among thy fellows; reeds shall Lend Soon, o'er thy sheltered nest. Tbou’it gone, the abyss of heaven Hath 1 'Xalluv. ed up thy lonu; yet, on my heart Leeply lias sunk the lesson thou has given. And shall not soon depait. He, who from zone to zone, Guides through the boundless sky thy certain flight, In Ihe Jong way that 1 must tread alone, Yill- lead my steps aright. EXPOSING VACCINATION FALSEHOODS SPANKING THE CONTINENTAL LIE As promised Unmy last article, published in the daily papers of May kSth, and entitled \The El cry of A Continental Lie.\ I am now prepared to give this great vaccination falsel.rcd such an obliterating punishment with my new LIL SPANKING MAClliNI that it will never again be able to show ita dis graceful form on any editorial page in New’ York hereaftet. It will be rernembtioa that this great editorial lie appeared in an evening papefr of May 7th, in substantially these words as here framed:— BE VACCINATED THOSE WHO ARE VACCINATED DO NOT GET SMALLPOX and Whoever Doubts This Is an Idiot and an Ignoramus Sir Thomas Lipion has been fined for speeding, but It was not afloat. The exquisite lino \To a Waterfowl\ were written at Bridgewater, when William Cullen Ji.yanl was but twenty. He was still pursuing the study of law, v,Tn.ch ai i>nt rt to have been distasteful to him. The ocuciu- ding verse sank deeply into a heart that needed its pious lesson. The lawyer-poet had a long way before him, hut h did not tread it alone- for, after being admlntd to ihe bar in Plymouth, and praelieiug lor a time at riainficTd, near Cunning* am, he removed to Great Barrington In Berk shire, Mass,, where 1* et.<iv\ the dwelling of the Genevieve of his chilly lit tle \Song hfs Genevieve being Miss Frances Fairchild of that beautiful town, who he married in Lis twenty-seventh year, and who was the light of Ida household fc.i nearly half a century. ♦♦♦♦During the last thirty years of his life Mr. Btyanl devoted himself to journalism. He was asso ciated with many Meiropulnau newspapers, lateily with the Brooklyn Daily Times. He maintained a Leautilul summer home, “Cedarmere,\ at Itoslyn, 1- 1., where kc wrote many of his last poems. Bryant died on the morn ing of June 12, lb\.K from injuries ho received la a fall a few days before, lie was buried at Itoslyn. • Governor Glynn says he wouldn’t walk act oks ike su e e t to get a nomin ation of any kind. He says nolbing about running for It. Weakflsh and fluke are running and the reason may be said to be fairly under way. TH E REAL LND OF L I t E There’s a wo; Id of wisdom in the statement of Charles W. Eliot of Har vard, that the real end In life is hap piness. In proof of this he referred to the Lecluralion of Independence, w hich sets down the pursuit of happ1- ness as one of the things to which mar is entiilcd. Mr. Eliot once, said to the writer thai. but one good road of forty miles; now there arc about 1,000 miles. Produc tion of sugar has grown from 05,000 tons a y ear to 005,000. Foreign com- meice was about (20,000,000 a year. Now, I want to say at the outset that my new Lie Spanking Machine pioceeds on a mw principle in Penology, and that is the psycho-ethical principle, w hich punishes iht crime and not the criminal, according to the <i eat moial tkcoiy taught Ly Socrates (and much misunderstood) that Know- f ^ u g e is the basis of ad X'ir-ue, and that if we only take away men’s ignorar.ee and uiieve them oi then delusions and show them the actual demonsirablt iLiuth, they will teioim and become geed immediately and spontaneously. Let me now Introduce you to the Hall of Truth in which.my Lie Spanking Machine is elected. The Chair of Truth, in which the offending falsifier is politely reqursied to teat him.-eil lor treatment, is placed directly in front of the spanking machine and in direct line of view with the spanker or flail of baches. Beneath this spanker, or hail, is a large, rounded. Inflated bulbosity representing the gluteus maxiruus—not cl the criminal, or falsifier, but of the crime or fn.’teheed ot which he Is guilty. Aud on this elastic bulbosity la printed In vio let ink the lull to>:t of iht lx to be spanked and thus obliterated from tne sight of man. The lalsilitr to b<- purged of his sin or crime does not need to be loiti-d into this chair or clamped down In It, as in the well knov,-n Electric Chair, hut It teems to atiraei him with a wonderful psychological curiosity and tv.tuna lion as pieseiuing conditions so new aud strange to some of our journalists lhat he t-nit-is it eagerly and settles himself down iu u with a moial pome aud calm nexvr bi-ime felt. On the front of lit- machine above the spanker and facing the occupant of the chair is a framtd panel containing an exact Imprint and full text cf the lie under correcuon ar.d on this plays the white light of Truth, making i*. stand out above everything else in bight. Alongside ot this panel of the lie is a laigei panel or i.lumlualed s c iten on •which vrbal or pictorial facts .n iclunition of this he and iu demonstration of tne truth are hushed from time to lime and in unison v. Hh every wack or stroke of the spanning flail as descends on the i landed luibosity. Ail being now ready, the force which operates the machine is turned bn, and at this moment, cm ot me expectant silence, a grand crash Is heard and the lirst whack of the spanker is seen to descend on the nranded gluteus and Umultaneoutiy mis iiibt relutauou is flashed on the screen. WliAL'K FIRST—: *' Department of Health, City of New Y'ork, Smallpox Epidemic 190?, from printed circular sent to doctors:—\Experience In the recent out- bit as iii New , r rk City, contrary to the geneial opinion, has shown that the majority of the cases occurring here uie not in uuvaccinaied persons, but in tiio.-e who have been vaceinaied successfully some \v<iis pievioiiEly,\ signed Ly l.r. F. J. f.etleilv, lecent Health Commissioner of New York City, and Dr. l u i m a n n M. Elggr. 1 1 < sent Health Commiss oner-of New York State. At the same time a moving picture ot the hundreds of well vaccinated persci s 1 .asl.es past us on u.« tcrten, all allowing their bare anus with good vaccination ‘marks and smallpox piiK all around them to prove how false the medical lie is thai \The \uc< i..a:ed Do Not Get bmallpox.\ The resounding whacks ot the-spanker ou the gluteus and the refuta1 ions of the lie on the aurcui now continue succasively as follows: — WHACK SECOND:— Ileaitu Uiiiccr Raymond, of Brooklyn, in the Brooklyn Eagle of June 5, 1902, declared that hi our hist greatest epidemic of smallpox In 1902, lor tlie first Loll of that year, there were 857 cases ol smallpox iu Biooklyn and --22 el intx cases were all vaccinated and only 35 cases tin vaccinated. WHACK THIRD: — Tne cii.-t of Japan. Japan is pcikaps ll.e Lvct vaccinated country in the world, with a rigid compvlrory law binding on the v hole population and requiring the vaccination of all infants in Ike first year, the le-vaccination of all children at six and twelve years and the le-vaccinuimn of every child and adult every live years there after. And yet this heavily vaccinated and revaccinaled country has had the worst vpidt-i .cs oi smallpox in modern times! For the ten years from 1898 to 15C8 it had i L k c g n a t epidemics, in which the mortality rate constantly r o s e 'from :! per i < nt. to 35 per cent, and which amounted to a total iu the tl.ice epiciei: les of 117,7111 eases and 50,197 deaths in a population of 4.8 millions! bee L . S 1 ublic Health Reports September 2, 1910. This ic-aiiul smallpox tecoid lias not been equalled or approached in any poorly vaceinaied coerury in the woild! In fact, in Lngianu, vliieh is one of the poorly vaccinated countries, the English Minisu.r of Health, lion. John Burns, stated in Parliament, April 12, 1911, t h a t : — \Just in propoilion as, in recent years, exemptions (Tom vacclnajtidn) Lave gone up from -1 per cent to 30 per cent, so deaths from small pox have declined,\ WHACK FOURTH:— From l e p o n ot Kegktrar General of England for 1902, the last great epidemic year: — Total deaths fiom smallpox, 2,404. Vaccinated cares ...............................................................................................................................................................................i ........................................... 821 11nvaccinated cants ........................................................................................... ....................................................................... ................................................... 791 Condition not slated ........................................................................... .. ..................................................................................... .. ................................................. 852 WHACK M F T H .— Smallpox in Germany, the best vaccinated country in Europe, as given in L'. S. Public Health Report, January 23, 1914, Page 167: — Oilicial lecord of cases and vaccinal conditions for three years 1908, 19U9 and 1910: — Total cases, 917 Yacinaied and ke-vnecinated........................................................................... .......................................... ............................................................................... 671 Unvacillated .......................................................................................................... ........................ ................... •................................................................................ ' Unknown ................................................................... ............................................. ............................................, . .................................................................... 128 Vaccinated unsucee: afully or too late ................................................ .. . ................................................................................ ............................................... 75 Here v.e plainly see tiial even in ibis much vaccinated Germany--the piide and mcui 1 of > .nalors—tne cases of smallpox among the well vac cinated and re-vaccinated aie UVEIt FOUR TIMES the number ot the cases among Lite uuvuci-imued: How vediculously and sbamelully false it. is, there- Jote, for any one to dare to say that the vaccinated do not get smallpox, ou which dangerous and ,; iniiu lie the whole barbarous aud murderous cull of con.pu’umy vaccination is bared! w , WHACK SIXTH: — Epidemic of smallpox in the well vaccinated and re-vaccinated crew of the V. S. Battleship Ohio at Cuantanamo, Cuba, December, 1913, and Janu ary, 1914: — Cases 29, deaths 5, in a total, ship population of about 700. • . ' .». I \ REAL ESTATE Prediction is made that as a result of the sale of 700 acres ot land ad joining Long Beach on the north a n ' now it is nearly (100,000,000. i ----------- - ---- - .............. ....... ---------------- ----- -- .— , Hawaii has been extrcmel ros e- ! Al lllis lalio- iu lilfc' I,0DuHtion of 40,000 in the poorly vaccinated city oi Niagara Fall o.i-r which so much false statement has been made, It awa.i as ee.i ex rente y prospc. woulj miUile over 1,200 cares and over 200 deaths to equal the epidemic coimluous in the utii \; 'ciliated battle ship, whreas iu Niagara there were only ous since it came permanently undui ^ ilefe l0 {GU1. i-lU11ditd mild cares with only ONE death, while there were TIIRLL deaths ui.uli.: lium the vaccination raids. ike American flag in 1900. The as-j At this point 1 stop.the machine, as 1 believe the Continental Lie mV.si be punished ana < ni.Lentud enough by tins time. And I now gntly ask the sessed value of the sugar crop more editorial penitent in ihe chait as to who he now' thinks was the real “idiot” and “ignoramus a. . < -.LDLLOLS bi.Yii Li-'iON when he wrote Ins great edi- the man who lived cicse to nature goi I lt 1;n doubled, deposits in banks treb- l<-'1‘ul vitli its big lie and spread this lie all over the continent, to the deception and iiijiuy <i un pi.uple aud the gieui benefit of vaccinating doctors aud more out of life than anyone else. Tha* :, , , , , w , , , , vaccine mamifacturc-rs? J :lcd and in savings banks quadrupled . , , ,, . is why living in the delightful atmos 1 . . . I ^ next turn toward the machine and politely call out: ------ “Mr. Glutous Maximus ol .Medical Falsehood, have you had enough yet of the lilrch?” of Long Island makes for con- !1 a 'W\ * ” £aU°n b>i’lem 18 1 ' e mar\ But there is no audible respome. ln=tead, I notafan odor in the air like unto h,uiiing rubLer, and .. I look at the spanker 1 see It almost glowing with the \el of the engineering world, and the heat of peicussibh and 1 note that the inllated-hifiLosity with its branded lie bus disappeared in a mint curl ol barely visible smoke, and at ibis 1 tutu o£f quantity cf sugar produced per acre ’D.e curient lully and lemove the spell from the occupant of the chair. pl'.erc of Long Island makes for con tentment. The late Thomas Dolan began life faking toll at a highway gate where extending well up toward Oceanside,' 1;i8 falher wag tollkeeper. With this en.biaclng the Barium Island tract, a real estate development will he under- tal.n on a scale larger perhaps than any of recent years. It hap long been in evidence that the south shore of Natsau oCunty Is a place of opportunity. The growth In population fiom Lynbiook east t) start it is not surprising that he amassed his great fortune by apply ing the toll taking idea to trolleys. far exceeds Lhat of any other spot on . the globe. | \The Alaskan islands and main- | land,\ says the report, \cost us $7,- 5CO.COO, an expenditure that many he- The author of \The oCnfessi ms of an Inconctant Man,\ published by tli-a Applelons, is our old friend \Anony mous.\. Obviously the author of a Mussapequu is already within the cKc- ; Look with such a title had to hide his til fit d znpe of I Oii6 itlatnl Ex t e a - 1 identity, elon of tUs zone will c00n thy entire south shore within the favored section. The specvlati\-3 buyer who picks h's property wisely ie sure iu uke profit ou the normal advancement in values. OUR ISLAND The' National Geographical Society has keen good enough to forward to us a report of 7,999 islands, whlnh with our own Long Island make up The '.ome-buyei will And on the south | t i e total cf S,C00 owned by the United sherq opportunities suited to nlmo<r Stales. It will be noted that all the facts I have given above are taken from high class govtrnr i-nt icports and also from the mouths of the arch vaccinat ors themselves in the poisons of Drs. Lederle, Biggs and Raymond. As to ti.v unaiipox on \i.c well .uccinated Battleship Unio, the medical authoriiies at Washington roem to have done eveiylhing they could to keep tills fact from '.Le pjahlic and 1 »«■ no. lubiickcd u even in the weekly U. ti. 1‘uhiic Health Reports where ail Ike cities of smallpox occuring in cities throughout the count.y nrj published, and i, tfierelore, hud to gel the facts I have here given fiom the Asti: tank Seereiary of the Navy through my oCngressman, Hon. Will .am .d Caldu. h is therelore, not too much to now say that the whole cult and practice of tUneral i'ubiii Vaccination and particularly of Compulsory Vaccination lieved t o t e unjustifiablo; yet for many *1*‘c a^* 6rect intrenched evils, has originated in falsehood, has continued in iauenuou and t x i . i s today on lukehood and concealment, viz., falseiLood as to y ears the annual value of sen) skins *la il*;!-0*ule efiicii ucy and certainty in protecting against smallpox, falsehood as to the nvee:: ny ut gaiioial vaccination to prevent smallpox epidemics aud gioss ialsehood as to its perfect safety and freedom from danger to human health and file. a.Oi.e appioximated ll.e coat of the on ( The fact is that, vaccination piolecls some person only for a short time and must he repeated every few months or each year tcPglve any contin- Gie area. At present the value of the utd irrir.umty and lor other or highly susceptible person it practically grants no immunity v.fiatevtr and lor sull others it is not needed at ail, as suc h canned salmon sent us from Alaska persons are naturally immune against smallpox, it being e. timaled that from 5 pe: ti-iu to lv t-er cent ol the human lace is so immune, it should also be in a Eingie year is twice as much au the entire possession cost.\ At least two score of Long Island men are identified with the civic ad ministration of these islands. any pocket-book. Freeport, with its 7,500 of popula lieu, is at the mov-ient the centre of real estate activity. Within six years It is reasonable to expect reeport t . add to Its population the 2,500 people to Vi Ing its population to 10,000. Freeport is destined to be a city. In reply to a query addressed to us frem Rockville Centre we assert It a., a fact that the American Polo Team lest tke first game because ol the rj- verse English. known that the age which m most naturally immune to i-mailpox is THE SCHOOL AGE, between n and 19. the age on whicu compulsion is placed by our e.il, stupid and uangeroue school vaccination law, whereas the intant age unde-r 5, and the voting age ovvi 20, on which no compulsion is placed, are most susceptible of all! Tlie actual danger cf vaccination to human health and life is therefore the most important anti significant of all questions, whereas Uie actual degjjgo cf protection f u ruithid by accinalion against smallpox (small as it really has been proved the past centuries did give some protective power against natural smalipox, but i t vt 'thelesS it was finally abandoned and prohibited by penal law LccuuKe, on me whole aud iu the long run, it was found more ------ ----- __ | dangeious than natural smai pox itself and actually caused more disease and deatn than the ualuial disease. In tlie same way, arm-to-arm vaccination Water oCmmissioner Williams ha>, followed Pinalipox Inoculation and which Jenner used), al rough It was also admitted to give .ome proteciion against natural smallpox and which . , , Y k B d f f M |louz'*dl12(l l ° r over half a century, was finally abandoned as one of the most vi.e anti dang.eious n.edl< H devices ever devised lor the infection and dif- a.i.cu ti e e oi oar o Jusion cf human and animal disease-from oue person to another. Now lids iliiid evil scheme oi Bovine \ accinalion oi ihe present day, however little or mate to employ Dcios F. \\ i cox at a much protection it may give against natural smallpox, is not essentially diffeitnt fiom its two evd i e l a u . e s and piohibit<;d predecessors of the jiast cen- (50 a day in investigating tlie values turles teiauEe its geni tal cr widespiead use is in fact more dangerous to human health and life limn natural smallpox and now actually causes more dls- jef privately owned water companies ai,(l death Uian inni pox. I l^ave already proved that fact beyond question in some of my piess i.n.cles previously published In Ifiis series and in my ! in Brcoklyn and Queens, which the zu* ' lV imtnphlcts, and we v. .11 jirove it further beyond a peradventure or a doubt and in a way that will shock the Public Conscience to the core, as soon ! . , . . * r H a$ ar<1 ab!e ' ° con‘Fei <‘\ 1 Health Departments in City and State to fully d me lose to the public U.tir du-.th certificates and vital btatistics in which they 10,GCC,C0O and a commerce ot (300.- j r l l >' 1;a6 Ucn a£Kea 10 Duy- woul(i | have been concealing thc$e facts from the public for years, but which, as I have alieady hown, aicSlemly disclosed in the honest statistics of England— 060,000 and investments of Amerlcat | t e 'vortl1 Ur,() a da> t0 8et at rPa' .which arc net wholly doi mated by doctors and vaccinators, while our statist ick and Lei.Kh ilcpanments are c-ntiiely so dominated, as 1 will show later on. capital of $400,000,060. j values of these water companies. Ev-J In order to again forestall the shameful misrepresentation of vaccination ipiiutits and falsifiers ah to our position in tills whole movement, 1 want The feature of me report Is the de- !cr since the Long Island water com-j again t0 wnphaFike the ir.ct that we make no objection to any person resorting to l i e u and voluntary vaei ination as much as he pleases if he thinks it These Islands have a population r J relcpnent cf Porto Rico, Hawaii and the Alarkan Islands. It shows that whetv Porto Rico con e under Ameri can rule fifteen years ago there was but one school building on the Island, while today there are 1,200. There were 25,000 pupils enrolled in the first year of American administration, now there are 175,000. Then there was panics started to unload their hold H ° od or P e s s a r y thing, ns we stand for full Medican Freedom all around. We oppose only the lorcing cf vaccination on any child or adult in any form. I - Pa n n ihe'citv t h e r e h a s been ta\-1 ^ ‘v “ U l u e and ,0!l' ' r t ’ and we protest against Ike continued denial and cone >afi..c-qi ;n our vital statistics of deaths caused directly and indirect- tngs on me cuy tneie uas oeen is .. ly by vaccinations and against the/CONTINENTAL LIES that general vaccination is absolutely necessary to prevent smallpox epidemics, is sure and cer- nf scandal. tain in its protective power and is entirely safe and harmless. 1 will have something more to say on this general subject within a few days, or next week, before I close my campaign for the summer vacation CHAS. M. HIGGINS, Treasurer Anti-Vaccination League of America. 271 Ninth S t , Brcoklyn, N. T. ’ \ June 4, 1514. NOTE:—Please look for Important article tomorrow or next day entitled \Vaccination Outrages cn Working People.\ \A Call to Labor Organita- tions in This City and Ttaie.\ • C. M. H. — Adv. We are authorized to announce that the regular meetings of the well- known Ananias Club will be resume;* In a short time. Several foreign mem bers have been proposed for member ship since the last stated session.