{ title: 'The Nassau post. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1914-1918, January 26, 1917, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071434/1917-01-26/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071434/1917-01-26/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071434/1917-01-26/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071434/1917-01-26/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Long Island Library Resources Council
THE HAftSAU POST, FREEPORT, 9 . T„ FRIDAY, JAHFARY M, 1*17 Telephone Operating as a Profession TO BUILD SHIPS AT COST PRICE Bethlehem Steel Will Make Of fer to Uncle Sam. ■ BIDS ON 16 INCH NAVY SHELLS M AN A GER OF T H E O P E R A T O R S ’ SCHOOL L E C T U R I N G ON S W I T C H BOARD O P E R A T I N G . Three governing i|iipsiionH have to be considered by the girl who can or will choose her profession thoughtfully and wisely, observes The Telephone Re view, N. Y., in un nrtlele on the pro fession of telephone 'operating. Too wften conditions urge a girl into some line of work which is at the moment most accessible, either through circum stance of environment or lack of defi nite knOXvledgc of other possibilities. But this inertia of selection Is a poor guide' to success or happiness, mid where it can be overcome the reward is great. The business » girl enters occupies the greater part of her active time, end to be a really satisfactory part of her life it should fill three require ments. It should afford her financial ly the best living she is capable of earning. It should be work that con tributes something to the sum total of the happiness or usefulness or prog ress of the world’s living so that In doing It she Is doing her share of tin* world's work. It should be to herself » gate to fuller living. This final point is perhaps the most comprehensive, for It includes not only the necessity that her work lie healthy physically, but that it afford opiKirtunitles for growth—means of self-improvement not a success of the profession she is train ing to enter. Rules of procedure at the switch board which have been evolved from years of experience, in hundreds of situations by hundreds of operators, the very concentrated essence of what has proved to lie best, are taught her. Thus her experience begins at the very furthest point of advancement that bus been reached, so that she may In turn contribute to the attainment of a great ■ er proficiency. The practice switchboards, like the actual boards at which she will soon take her place, give the student opera tor the mechanical expertness which will make every mechanical action of her work thoroughly second nature to her. This leaves her mind free to deal with the varying situations which she will meet when the public, In stead of her instructors, are at tin. other end of the wires she Is handling. Preparatory to this range of diversified demands, the instructors send over these practice wires every conceivable variety of call or question, so that the student learns from actual experience just how to deal with every contingen cy that can be thought of. Not less than in other institutions do No Chance For Profit In T h e m Under P r e s e n t Teste, Grace Says— P ossible E x p l a n a t i o n of t h e Prices Made by an English Firm Which Bids Under All A m e r i c a n M a n u f a c t u r e r s . S|ieaking recently .before the Terra pin Club of Philadelphia, Eugene <). Grace, President of the Bethlehem Steel Company, said in part: In a peculiar sense Bethlehem Steel serves the American people. For example, though we have been able to obtain in Europe almost any price, we have adhered, in our charges to tiie United States Government, to the basis of prices established before the war began. We agreed—if the Government would abandon its plans for a Federal plant— to make armor for our Navy at mil/ prise the Government itself might eon sider fair. Our ordnance plants arc at the dis posai of the nation at a fair operating cost, plus a small margin, thus saving | the Government investment and <Je- ; preciatiou. One of the special needs of the new navy is sixteen-inch guns—guns sixty feet long and capable of hurtling a L’000 pound shell with such power anti accuracy as to hit a 50 foot square tar get fifteen miles away. We have undertaken voluntarily to construct, at a cost of $4,500,000. a plant fitted to build sixteen-inch guns. Under no conceivable circumstances can orders which we may receive for this plant pay even a fair return on the investment. Considerable comment has been made upon the fact that a British maimfae turer recently bid less than American SPECIAL SALE The latest Models—the most authentic styles, prices that are possibly because we are fur manufacturers and sell furs only. Exclusive Models in Fur Coats Luxurious Styles HUDSON SEAL LEGAL NOTICES. LEGAL NOTICES. prop- T r i m m e d with contrasting furs: full flare H UDSON SEAL Full ripple 4 8 inch skirt; new models; HUDSON SEAL T r i m m e d with sk u n k border, collar and cuffs ; 4 8 inch 110.00 150.00 175.00 are cited to show cause before the Surrogate’s Court of our County of Nassau, at the Surrogate's office at Mineola, in the County of Nassau, on the third day of March. 1917, at nine o’clock in the forenoon of that day why the said Will and Testament should not bfe admitted to probate as a Will of real and personal IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF. We have caused the seal of the Surro gate’s Court of our said County of Nassau to be hereunto affixed. [L. S.] Witness, HON. LEONE D. HOWELL, Surrogate or our said County of Nassau, at the Surrogate s ! Office, at Mineola, in the said County, the 24th day of January, one thous and nine hundred and seventeen. EDWIN W WEEKS. Clerk of the Surrogate’s Court. GEORGE MORTON LEVY. Attorney for Petitioner, 1-7 Railroad avenue. Freeport, N. Y. Muffs and Neckpieces Call and See Us Before Weather Gets Cold 1 xeeptionnl Y'alnes Muffs Scarfs Skunk .................. *15.00 $12.50 lilondykt* Fox ................................22.50 15.00 Scotch Mole .............................. . 25.00 22.50 Hudson Seal .......... .............................. 18.00 16*56 Raccoon . . . . . . . . . . .................................. 1V,0 8.50 Beaver ...................... .................................. 15.00 12*50 Hudson Seal Stole ................... .............. $47*50 Seoten Mule Stole The Nation’s Furrier A. RATK0WSKY 28-34 West 34th Street, New York. only in the skill required for the work, ] ^ heads of the Telephone Operators mamlfaoturers for sixteen and four , __ a . • ..I. . ___ . • « i _ ___ * ■ u w il u v i h n M t p i i m l i n s i m r o f n o o n t i r n . bat In those fundamentals of charac ter, of mind and of manner that con tribute to the larger personality. This threefold Ideal of work may savor of Utopia, but. It Is neither unat tainable nor rare.. In the profession of telephone operat Ing may be found one manifestation of Schools vitalize and Inspire the entire school. And here is one of the great est sources of strength In the Opera tors’ Schools. The School Managers are not oi^Ay women who have attained professional success, but they are wom en of character and refinement, with force and sympathy and understand STUDENT CLASS AT THE PRACTICE SWITCHBOARDS LEARNING TO OPERATE. the ideal, and ii. is with telephone op erating in the light of this ideal of work that we are concerned. The first step inside the door of the Operators' Schools, where anyone wishing to become nu operator must first apply, begins to confirm the im pression that here is work thus trebly satisfying. Light, air and space enough are there, as In the central of tices into which the pupils will grad uate. The reception hall where the applicants sit awaiting their turn Is in truth somewhat an examination room. Every attitude- nervous, calm, appre hcnslve, stolid or unconcerned—signi fies something of character or propen slty to the experienced women who must Judge whether or not these girls are fitted physically, mentally and temperamentally, to serve the public ns telephone operators. The more school education a girl has had the better, though not more than gram mar school training Is required. Sound health, good eyesight, hearing and voice are necessary physical re qulrements for the work, as well as a stature of at least five feet one inch. Why cannot a very small girl be an operator? Because every detail of tel ephone switchboard construction Is considered in its relation to the oper ator. The number of subscriber lines which can be reached by one operator without undue effort is 10,500, and so 10,500 subscriber lines is the utmost capacity for a central otlice. lit truth, the extreme size of every central office is thus determined by the reach of a girl’s arm! When admission to the Operators' School is gained the newcomer finds are hers. For advancement, the telephone oi*>r- ntor has iqien to her the more respon sible positions of senior operator, su- . .... . „, pervlsor, “Information” ojiorator, spe- herselt In a genuine Institution of ed *. 1 , ’ . . * ’ „„-ti„,. ... ,i... r,wim =h0 ‘-‘ml operator, assistant chief operator. ami chief operator, and always, iuvreas- ucatlon. In tlie lecture room she learns the principles which are to guide her In her work: at the practice switch boards she is taught to apply those principles. And every hour of her school life she is under the tutelage and guidtiuce of those who have made teen-lnch shells for the navy. I am unable to state the basis upon which the English hid was made. It should be remembered, however, thai this bid was for a specific shell, sam pies of which are being sent over foi test—a test not yet made. Two years ago we took an order foi 2400 fourteen Inch armor-piercing shelh at a contract price of $708,000, to tit delivered, within a certain time or wt ■ had to pay a large penalty. I The only specifications for making these shells are that they shall tic of a certain size and must pierce armor-plate at a certain velocity on Im pact. It Is Impossible to foretell tin exact conditions of the tests. We bad made large quantities of shells In the past which had been accepted. But In pla Ing this particular order tije Donnrtivenr altered the ancle at which the it-eied shells must pierce armor- piuU*. The result, however, has been absolute inability o.i oi:i part to pro- i* •\ i:> any quantity, sln-Ur whMi will meet rhose novel tests. In fact, we I now of no process of projectile-mak ing through which it is possible to pro duct* in quantities shells which will conform to the requirements. Tlie result is that up to now on that contract of $708,000, we have put into • actual operating expense $447>N1., and have been penalized for non-delivery $405.744.. a Mai of $013.025., with no receiipts whatever. Such was the experience In the light of which we were called upon recent ly to bid for sixteen-inch shells. We bill on these shells at approxi mately the same rate per pound as that of a fourteen inch shell contract of one year ago upon which the Gov ernment awarded contracts. We have not the slightest idea what profit there will be in the making of these shells. We do not know that there will be any. There is no <kertuin ty that it would lie possible for Us to deliver a shell to meet the tost For officers In the Navy to assume that any bid made under such condi tlons is “exorbitant\ is utterly unfair We bid on the new battlecruisers sums which Navy department experts, after examination of our books, found would yield a profit of less than ten per cent. We agreed to assume risks for Increased costs of materials and la bor, that made It possible that these contracts might yield no profit what The costs run beyond the amount ap propriated by Congress on the basis of the cost estimates made a year ago. And because shipbuilders could not alter the inexorable cost facts and re duce bids to early estimates of the Navy Department, the prices are called \exorbitant.\ It would he a real advantage to he , relieved of this naval construction. The pensatlon of an experienced operator pj-0(i( fpnn it cannot possibly amount to much, and ,the responsibility is enor We have determined to make this offer to the American Government. “If you will build two of the battle cruisers in Government navy yards we will build the other two at the ns c e r t .lined cost of building the strips in the Government yards, without addl tlonal expense or commissions of any kind. We will also contract to have our ships ready for service ahead ol -e Government ships.\ SOME GOOD M S IN NEW YORK THEATRES personality were never given greater opportunities than in this sparkling i musical comedy, in which she plays the part of a celebrated Parisian act ress. “Follow Me\ is in three acts, from the German of Felix Doer man n and Leo Ascher, with lyrics by R. B. Nobody Will Dery It. The easiest way to arouse i enthusiasm is to show him a get money without earning It. way to AT THK SHI BERT THEATRE. \Love O’ Mike,\ a new musical comedy of youth and infectious gaiety | Smith and music by Leo Ascher and began the second week of its engage- Sigmund Romberg. The action of the ment Monday night at the Shubert play is laid in and about Paris. There Theatre, under the direction of Eliz- are twenty-five musical numbers. abeth Marbury and Lee Shubert. W i t h ------------------------- tire presentation of this entertain ment, Miss Marbury maintains her distinctive position in the theatrical world as a producer of smart and dainty musical plays, and \Love O’ Mike” bids fair to duplicate the suc cess of \Nobody Home,’ and “Very Good Eddie. ’ \Love O' Mike is the work of Thom- i*s Sydney, with lyrics try Harry M. S \.ith and music hy Jcrmr.g Kern. I' i it; til! ',fr'ern the presence at a Lv..s< party ar a fashionable country place, ui Lord Michael Kildare, a Ilri- ti*-h ex-army officer, with whom all tire young 1 tidies of the party .ar- madly infatuated. The other male members of the group, much dis gusted, seek to gain favor again in the eyes of the maidens, the while they plan revenge upon the swagger ing Britisher. II. GOLDFAKB. I,allies and Gents Tailor ITKS REMODELED AND REPAIRED 35 Railroad Ave., Freeport Phone T l x T I J. N ” '. eac and 1 Vi ater er plot- ing—In short, women of strong per sonality, whose iuiluewe builds up an Ideal not only of profi ssioual but of personal excellence. And that fully- rounded ideal is the professional ideal of telephone operating, for it is not the speed ami expertness of an opera tor alone which build the structure of her success. Uharaeter and personal ity are part of the professional re quirement of the operator and with out these she does not attain the suc cess of her profession. If the student operator shows, dur ing the training, that sire is incapable of becoming a good operator, she is dropped, while if she continues to im prove, the end of four weeks of train ing usually finds her ready for the real work of serving tire public, and she 1? assigned to a central office—usually the one most convenient to her own home. Here the new operator is looked out for by her supervisor. Formerly a reg ular operator, the supervisor is oue who has shown such ability, Insight into character and helpful spirit that she has been promoted to oversee the work of from seven to ten opera tors, guiding or advising them when occasion demands, constantly promot ing their efficiency and helping them to greater success. For several weeks the new operator Is given the simplest work of tlie office until gradually she takes positions of greater and greater responsRrllity, until the work and vom- AT THE WINTER GARDEN. ' “The Show of Wonders\ began its fourteenth successful week at the Winter Garden Monday. The big ca t includes George W. Monroe, McIn tyre and Heath, Howard and Howard, Walter C. Kelly, Tom Lewis, Marilyne Milcr, Daisie Irving, John T. Murray, Grace Fisher, Alexis Kosloff, White and Clayton, Sidney Phillips, Dan Quinlan, Edmund Mulcahy, Eleanor Brown, James Grant, Ernest Hare, Virginia Smith and others. BARG, Ten room hou electric light, heat—on large c for unusual price at Roose velt. Apply EDW. UHE Trolley stop 69 ROOSEVELT, . L. 1. LEGAL NOTH I S. IM BLIC NOTH E. Bids will he received by tlie Board of Supervisors up to 10 a m. on FRIO AY, FEBRUARY 1). 11117. at 10 a. m . for laying a Tcrrazza SUPREME COURT, NEW YORK COUNTY Henry Schulthcis, Plain tiff. auainst Bay Boulevard Realty Co. Inc., and Hart) J. Meyers, De fendants : By virtue of an execution issued upon a judgment rendered in the Su preme Court, New Y’ork County, <t transcript of said judgment having : been tiled in the Nassau County Clerk's Office on the l!Uh day of De cember, U>ld in the above entitled action, in favor of said Plaintiff am' against said Defendants, tested on the 14th dav of December, 1.416. and to me directed and delivered. I here by give notice*than on the 17th DAY OF FEBRUARY, 11H7, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, at the front door of the Nassau County i Court House, in the Town of Hemp stead, N. Y., I shall expose for sale as the law directs, all the right, title, and interest which the Defendants, Bay Boulevard Realty Co. Inc., and Harry J. Meyers, had on the 10th day of December. 1016, or at any timv thereafter, of, in and to the following described property: ALL those certain lots, pieces or parcels of land, situate, lying and being in the Village of I/ong Beach, Town of Hempstead, County of Nas- sau and State of New Y’ork, and known and designated on a certain map filed in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Nassau, entitled, \Map No. 1, Estates of Izmg Beach, William H. Reynolds, President, Chars. W. Leavitt, Jr., Lanscape Engineer. 220 Broadway, New York City, dated March, 1007 filed in the Office of the Clerk of the County of Nassau as Map No. 31, on April 30th, 1911. as ; and hy the lot numbers One 1 1), Two (2) , Three (3), Four (4), Five (5), Six (6). Seven (7), and Eight Y8). tu Block Fifty-three (53). ALSO lots One (1), Two (2), ’Hire\ (3) , Four (4), and Five (5), in Block Fifty-four (54), on said Map. ALSO lots Thirty-six (36), Thirty- seven (j!7). Thirty-eight (38). Thirty- nine (39), and Forty ( 4 0 ) in Blocs Forty-two (42), on said Map. ALSO lots Thirteen (13). Fourteen (14). fifteen (15), Sixteen (16), Seventeen ( ’7). Eighteen (18), Nine teen (19). Twenty (20)', Twenty-on ■ (21), Twenty-two (22), and Twenty three (23), in Block Forty-one (411, on said Map. ALSO lots Thirty-seven (37), Thir ty-eight (38 1 Thirty-nine (39), For ty (40), and Forty-one (41), in Block Thirty (30). on said Map. ALSO lots Twelve (121. Thirt-e n (13l, Fourteen (141, Fift\ n (15), Sixteen (16) Seventeen C ' Eigh teen (181. Nineteen (Tji > T won tv (20). TwAnt' -one (21 I. ’!'■ 'y two i 22> Twenty-three (22.). T- , niy-fou;- (20, Tv m u -liv 1 25 1 , Tv ent' -six (26). Twenty-seven (27), Twenty cj-rhf (281, Twenty-nine (2l). Thirl.' (20Y. Thi’ tv one (31). Thiriv two (32), and Thirty throe (23) in Bl»< ' Thirty (30). on said Map ALSO lots One (!) Two T v Thn 1 21, Four and Five (5) in Blue Thirty (30), on said Map. Dated. Mineola, N V., January 2 m ;. BUT P1ITNEAS A. SEAMAN. Sin riff. Nas* \in Count' \RMIN II M ITTI.EM \NN. Mtorne' for Plaintiff, -I I Cedar Street. New York Citv. Notice to Contractors ed efficiency and lengthening term of service, moan financial betterment. That the work of telephone operating fulfills, for her who will make it. the ideal of work which demands a living, AT I ME ASTOR THEATRE. The engagement of the military operettas “Her Soldier Boy,” at the Astor Theatre, continues to he tri umphantly successful, and indica tions point that this musical attrac tion will not he forced to evacuate its position on the Broadway front for many months. A cast, headed by Clifton Crawford, John Charles Thomas, Adcle Rowland and Beth Lydy, a score of exceptionally charm- j ing qualities and a book genuinely humorous combine to make the pro duction one of the most popular ever offered in New York. “Her Soldier Boy” wsa written by Rida Johnson N’oting, from the story by Victor Leon, while the music is hy Emmerich Kalman. Additional num bers have been provided by Sigmund Romberg and Clifton Crawford. A romance back of the lines in Bel gium in which an American war cor respondent is the dcus ex machlnn forms the story of the play. ANNA HELD AT CASINO. Anna Held began the ninth capacity week of her engagement in \Follow Me” at the Casino Theatre, Monday night. Miss Held’s unique charm an 1 flooring and base in the living apart ment of the Sheriff, in the Nassau County Jail. For further information apply to William B. Tubby, Esq., Architect, 81 Fulton Street. New York City, N. Y’., or the Clerk of said Board of Super visors. Pursuant to a resolution of ihe Board of Trustees of 1 hr Village of Freeport, acting as a Board of Health, adopted on the twenty-first (21st) day of December. 1916, sealed pro posals for the disposal of garbage, ashes, and other material hereinafter named, will be received at Village i By order of the Board of Supervl- n&rk office. No. 46 Merrick Rond.! so is. GEORGE M GOODAlvE, Freeport, N. Y.. until the fifteenth Clerk. (15th) day of February, 1917, at 3:30 Dated at Mineola, Long Island, N. Y., i o’clock p. in. At which time said Jan. 24. 1917. sealed proposals will be opened and ------------------------------------------------------ upon the adoption of a proposition THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF i hy the qualified electors of the Vil- NEW YORK TO MICH ELL S. lage of Freeport, a contract will he OLSEN, and ELLEN T. OLSEN awarded to the successful bidder. (HOMME) SEND GREETINGS: Specifications: - WHEREAS, ERRIKKE T. OLSEN, Contractor to to collect cans, ashes, who resides at Freeport, Nassau garbage, papers, rubbish and manure. County, New Y’ork, has lately appliel within the incorporated Village of to the Surrogate's Court of our Freeport, and dispose of same. County of Nassau, to have a certain The occupant of any building in instrument in writing hearing date > the Village of Freeport is to place all the 16th day of April, 1915, relating ‘ the articles to tie collected in proper to both real and personal property duly proved as the last Will and Testament of ED WAR'D II OLSEN, deceased, who was at the time of his death a resident of Freeport, in said County of Nassau, Therefore, you, and each of you, PLUMBING & HEATING of all Types with Modern Fixtures CHARLES FRITZ No. Main Street.* Freeport, N. Y. receptacles upon the premises so oc cupied in an accessible place within one hundred H00') feet of the street line. All house and table offal, gar bage. swill, decaying vegetable mat ter. organic waste substance, shall I* - placed in r'rtallie receptacles and provided with metallic c o m i s . This receptacle shall be placed in an ar- c-exsible spot wiihin one hundred (100') feet from the street line, on designated days of collection: nor* of which material will he permitted to he burled within the limits of the Village of Freeport. Ashes etc., sha I he placed in proper receptacles with in the same designated distance as hereinabove referred to. Waste pa pers. cans, rubbish, etc., shall also be placed in proper receptacles and placed within the designated distance The contractor must make dally collections from all business places, hotels, clubs and buildings of public character. From all other houses and build ings. contractor must make collec tions at least twice a week. Contrac tor must, if necessary, collect from a distance of one hundred (100') fee: from the street line. Collection of night soil is eliminat ed ; that to be left to private con - tracts. Contractor is, however, re quired to furnish and maintain during the term of contract, a suitable dU posai place tor the disposal of all ar tides herein enumerated to be col - levied and must also furnish and maintain during term of contract, i suitable disposal place for night soil such place or places to be outside of the incorporated limits of the Vil lage of FnM*part, and not over fiv* miles distance from the Village of Freeport, and must hold a permit from the Town Board of Health or the proper authorities for such dis- Vontractor shall also certify ratt per load that he will premit night soil to be (lumped at the place or places of disposal, and any proper licensed scavenger upon paying th* certified price per load shall be per milled to dump night soil at such disposal place. Contractors must str ictly obex all rules and regulations of t lie Board of Health. Bidders will make txxo bids, one for a one year contract an 1 the other for a five year contract. Ashes may he disposed of in the Village cf Freeport,. If free from garbage, refuse, cans, etc. If proposition is adopted by the qualified electors of the Village of Freeport, appropriating money for the public disposal of the articled herein enumerated, then a formal contract is to he entered into between the Nil lage of Freeport and such successful bidder, embodying all cnmiiiions here in enumerated. Contractor is to fur nish a bond in the amount of Twenty Thousand ($20,000) Dollars for the faithful performance of his contract. The sufficiency of the sureties of said bond to be approved by the Board ol Trustees, and the form of said bond to he prepared hy the Counsel to the Village of Freeport, and to be ap proved by the Board of Trustees No bid will be considered unless a cer tified check in the amount of ten (10 p. c.) p< r cent of the bid for a one year contract, or two (2 p. e.) per cent of the bid for the five year contract, shall accompany said hid Tin ambim’ of said certified cheen to be returned to the successful hidd er upon the- entering Lito of the for mal contract and the M'lng of tin bond as herein provided All checks will be returned at ol * < except that of the successful hidd i 6 In the event that tlie snecessful bidder shall fail to fulfill all 1 he eon dilions required in these specifica lions;, then in that rvent the said money deposited with ltie Village of Freeport by certified chick shall In forfeited to (In Village of Freeport as liquidate I damages. The Board of Trustees acting as a Board of Health of rlie Village of Freeport reserve.*-- Hie. right to reject any and all bids All bids shall lie placed in a sealed envelope mil addressed '8. U. Shea Village Clerk, Freeport, N Y .” and marked “Bid on Disposal of Gar huge, etc ,\ and no hid will he re cr i'cd later than three (3:00) o’clock on the day (hat the bids are to close Information concerning bids may be obtained from the \ iMagc Clerk or any member of the Board of Trns lees, or the Health Officer Dated Deccmhr r 21, 19 10. VILLAGE OE FREEPORT, t>> ERNEST S RANDALI. pres SILAS A. WILLIAMS HENRY L. MAX SON 101 IN II. MAMNKEY URANKLIN BEDEI.I t Trustees ' a M 'll RUNUIE. M I) lb 111 111 Officer I’leil- and Secretary. S 1’ SHEA i tiENTY ( OEKT NASS \E ) Ol NT) Harold E. William; . (’laint.iff, against William ('aim ion, Iivleiidant. By virtue of an execution issued upon a judgement rendered in (in i minty Court, Nassau County, sad judgement laving been docketed in i he Nassau County Clerk's Office on the 24 th day of January, 1916 in the above entitled action in favor of said plaintiff and again.u said defendant, tested on tin- Hfh day of'December. 1916 and to me direct -ri and delivered, I hereby gm miller that on the 27th day of January. 1917, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at thi front door of the Nassau County Court House, in the Town of Hempstead, N. Y„ 1 shall expose for sale as the law directs, all the right, title and interest which the defendant, William Cameron, hid on the 24th day of January, 1916, or at any time thereaf ter, of, In and to the following dcs cribed property: All the right, title and Interest of William Cameron in and to an eqir.1 undivided one third part of ALL those certain lots, pieces o: parcels of land, with the buildings and Improvements thereon erected, situated, lying and being in the Town of Hempstead, County of Nassau a*>d State of New York, being located near tlie Village of Freeport Nassau County, New York, and being known and designated as lot numbers fo .r hundred twenty-one (4211, four him drill twenty-two (422). four hundred tw< n'y-three • (423) and four hundred twenty-four (424) on a certain map r stub d “Freeport Manor,\ which map is now on die in $|ie Nassau County Clerk'* office as map number two hundred forty-eight (248). Dated Mineola, N Y . December 14!b. 1916. STCi-HCN D- PETTIT Sheriff, Nas sau County El.VI.N N. EDWARDS, Attorney for Plaintiff. Freeport N Y.