i
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THE WEATHER
1 Fiilr tonight and Tnemtav;
•rty
windi*.
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»)ooth-
irUL
DAILY REVIEW
Of Naasau County
THE DAU.r UVUt
2c
at ywr News S4aai
' ar tttamttraa at Tour Hoasa
l«c Per Week $5 Per Tear
Offidal Paper, Village of Freeport
FREEPORT, N. Y., MONDAY. APRIL 25, 1921
^
VoL XXrV, No. 53
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NO UBRARY ^.SLi<^'''™TV™* CEREPHYON ™^„i TOISSUEAIITO
SATURDAY
Rab Compelled Postponement of Ground BroakiBf Exercises la Freeport — Many Were Disap¬ pointed—Mayor Lunn Came De¬ spite Rain—To Be Held Next Saturday Weather Permitting
Frcoport, April 25.—AH Fropport Was diNappoint(>d Satunlny aftprnoon. when tho. ^round-breaklnis: ceremony wa« pout- I)nnpd because of tho weather. It I.s .icheiluled to take place next Saturday at the same time, 3 o'clock In the after¬ noon.
The fli-e whistle did not blow, as an¬ ticipated, and thc drlvlnp; lain kept many of the flaRK In that would have been out.
A« early na half past two, and in Hplte of the weather, some of the 8:rand old men of the O.A.R. ventured out and mode their way to the «lte of thc li¬ brary, only to be creetotl with a sisn tellinp of the postponement of the nf- falr.
A large feus from out of town came lumberlnpr alonjc the Mei-rick rond, fllled with people who were anxious to do their bit In ffettinR the project started, but ns they turned back to ro home njcnin their spirit wns not daunte<], nnd lhey .said that next Saturday would find them over here ngaln. ..Many of the merchants were pre-
Selects Site On Manhasset Bay To
Prepare For Coming Rght
With Jack Dempsey
Manhaenet,- the town seat of North Hempstead, has been seleoted as the training place for Georges Carpentler, the French champion, who In to meet the American belt-holder, Jacll Demp¬ sey, on July 2.
The site selected is on an Inlet from Manhasset Bay and conslsta of twelve acres. The location will give excellent bathing facilities. The place contains a modem twelve-room house and two large barns, w^lch will be converted Into gymnasiums. An outdoor ring will also be erected. The site Is near the estates of Harry Payne Whitney and L^uis Sherry.
It is not yet known where Dempsey w'ill do his training. It Is said that the champion it endeavoring to use Kid Norfolk, the colored heavyweight cham¬ pion, as ono of his .sparring partners.
It was previously reported that Car¬ pentier would train at Ijong Beach. 4_ .
UdSEPLATES
Change In Method of Distrihvtioa Adopted To Obliterate Confu- sion and Congestion—New Ar- raagemcnts Become Effectrre July 1—Qerk Cheshire Prepar¬ ing to Care For Applications
efferSMAt
SHERIFF FINDS STRIIfK RY i^^K^J DRYUWOBSERVED A »«^^^ „ I CAU MV. GOULD
A U 1 U lu U D1 L.|j I Well Known Freeport Pastor FdU
BOY DIES TODAY "''tlt.rr"*
Makes Extensive Tov of Sooth
Side of Nassaa Coanty Withont
Finding Any Violations
Mineola, April 25. — ShertfT Charles
Freeport, April 25.-*Rev. J. Sidney
A. Smith with hfs men yesterday made Eugene RhodeS, Eight YesrS Old,^*^"'- ''>""«'••'>• P^i"*- «' th" Freeport
r J r- IJU* n^., I fresbyterian Churrh, preaohe<l In Tort
Uarden City Lad, Hit While Jerrerson yesterday.
TO BUILD "LOVE NEST BUNGALOWS"
Harry E. Van Riper Starts Novel
Scheme That WiH Give Newly«
weds Chance To Own Home
Freeport. April 25.—The activity In the building line In Freeport Is at a high pitch now, with almost all of the
paied to welcome the duy. and among, ^,^^ ^^^ ^^ ^y^^ ^p^,,y ,i„^ erecting the most pi-ORres.sive of those was the' Heohive nn Merrick roud. This .store )iM(l bunting tind nags on the front of thf building, and ii large si^n, culling
attention to the fact thnt the library wns going to be started.
Stephen I'. I'ettit had an appoinment with his dentist, and intended to ru.sh up to tho site In time to see that sev¬ eml thousands of dollars were put Into the jrenefai' TlWAT'dT'^lfft'T^bniry Com mlttee, but when the library meeting was called off, the dental appointment was cancelled too.
Publicity Manager Arthur Frank was around town putting up signs, that called attention to the fact that the ground was" to be broken. In fact he did a lot of work in connection with the event, ably .as.«ii*ited by other membufs of thc committee.
None of the worker.s were daunted by 1b(> dolay, but will spend the ensuing W(ek in arousing all the enthusiasm thnt Is possible, nnd probahly the meet¬ ing will turn out all thc better for the delay.
Mayor I.unn of Schenectady, who was to have been the speaker of thc day, came to ke«;p his appointment. He gave his a.ssurance that he Would be on hnnd next Saturday.
The village bells were to have been rung, and all of the church sextons were on hand, ready to ring out the tidings, but like Paul Revere, they were notified in time, and the bells remained silent. Weather permitting, they will peal forth thl.s week.
Those who were to have taken part in the ceremony were the most fortu¬ nate, because thoy were told In ample time, but the many who Intended to be there to hear the speeches, etc., wore not notified, and the Merrick road wns fllled with disappointed sightseers home¬ ward hound.
Vlilage President Robert I... Christie intended to l>c on hand to turn the flrst spadeful of ^earth. and his enthusiasm was 80 great that he was even willing to put on rubber boots and come down nnd turn over a bucketful of mud, but he was urged to save his enthusiasm until this week.
fPcrhaps tho most disappointed of nil were Samuel R. Smith and Arthur Frank. Both of them had worked hard for the great day, and were looking forward to It wllh a great deal of an¬ ticipation.
Harold Sfnlth and hla brothcra put In considerable work to make the thing a go. and it was due to their efforts that the commuterB wore m possession of "FuctV 8,' pampMet that gave the his¬ tory of the work up to date.
Weather dopstera will t>e attidylng the dope nil \hiti week, and It is hoped that the v>eathe.°- man and Old Itey Pluviua Will not wiit the kllKKsh on the ceremony of ground-breaking a second time.
The ex;tra week wtU given an oppor¬ tunity for more publlcl^, and by the end of the wt>ek It Is expected that a large crowd wilt be on hand to make the Initial ceremony a moot succesaful affair.
BENZOaUN'r
tlM d^MBdakU hooartMM tmiamdr. (or sen lbr*«t nnd toiwllltia. M(wC oonVMlMit, tet It rwiuirM no ;B«Tallns. A ¦tandia' tlH||l •hau'd tw L awry tiomm,. (Ht . iHittle «! '¦tt' trttt atara —Ad*.
houses.
The Baumann Construction Company and the J. J. Randall Company ape ac¬ tively engaged in building and selling. Stephen 1', l^ettlt has erected a block of hou.ses, and has nruxde an attractive of¬ fer to young people just getting mar¬ ried.
Harry Van Riper has purchased a lot on Whaley street, on which he wUL. build four houses at an estimated cost of $50,000, and he" is also planning a f.erles of "love nest bungalows" on 8outh.slde avenue. They will be sold on easy terms and will present a»^,.very attractive proposition to newlyweds, consisting of four rooms, and the floor space of the whole 24x30, they will pre sent attractive little homes, and will be modern, both inside and out. Mr. Van Riper, who has an eye for beauty, ex¬ pects to have 'his "love nests" as pretty and as complete as money can make them. He has already starte<l work on some houses at Miller avenue and Whaley street.
Stephen P. Pettit is doing something along the same line, and has a most atti-active proposition. Other building is going on in a smaller way among indi¬ viduals, and it Is expected that Free- port will have several new houses by fall.
The "love ne.st" bungalows are built to sell for $5600 on easy terms, that will enable young couples to own their own homes, instead of paying rent.
Mineola, April 25.—Beginning July 1, County Clerk Thomas S. Cheshire will take over the distribution of auto¬ mobile license plates In Nassau County. This Is the result of a new system of difjtrlbution evolve<t hy the present state administration, under whioh oounty clerks In all counties, except Albany will be paid ten cents for eaoh plate distributed.
All branch bureaus which haVe been acting as plate distributing agencies, including thoae In Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Blnghamton nnd elsewhere', will close the last of June, and the county clerks will take over the work. The plan is expected not only to relle^-e congestion and subsequent delay during the rush period, but nlso bring about a saving to the, state.
County Judges, ns well as magistrates In first, second and third class cities, will have the power, from July l'7 of suspending and revoking licenses of both automobiUata and motorcyolists, guilty^ of recklesS' driving or other causes warranting such . aotion. The power of restoring ar. license will rest In the hands of the* newly created Tax Commission. By extending the power of suspension and revocation, it is ex¬ pected that there will ba a sub.stnntial check on careless driving, and that many licenses will be taken from of¬ fenders.
Hereafter the automobile year will coincide with tho calendar year, e.x cept In the case of chauffeurs and operators who will be licensed from TtnynigteJ>?-jpflBBTWr Jwheme to reUevf
a tour of the entire South Side of Nas¬ sau Coimty In an effort to learn if |>os-1 sible what prohibition laws were go- \ Ing on. i
From early morning until late laat j night he and his men went up and | down the highways ajid byways .stop-1 ping at every known hotel of which I they had knowledge, every roadhouse, i and every place that may haye been I a drinking place at some time or other, but failed to find a single violation of the Volstead Act and the subsequent Mullen-Gage law. M^ny of the places the sheriff visited were crowded . He went among the dlnern looking over the tables but saw no liquor being serv¬ ed.
Some of these places hnd upwards of 1,000 guests and in none of them were there any violations. In some places* there w«n'e signs posted In whioh the guests were notlfled that if they at¬ tempted to drink their own liquor they would be asked to leave the hotel.
GoSSing Jericho Turnpike Yes-1 '^"'^ members of the Port Jefferson J J U CI II r* J' '''"^"•'y'^'"'*'' Church were fortunate to
terday and Has IlM;all fractured have been ahle to obtain the services of
Rev. Oould. who ia missed from his pul¬ pit in Freeport.
One of his warme.'it admirers paid u vl.>ilt to Port Jefferson not long ago and gave him a warm recommendation to the trustees of the rhurch there, hut it is not known whether or not that Is tho reason of his a|)pearanoe thore now.
Dies In Nassau County Hospital Tbis Mmning
GOOD DETEaiVE WORK LANDS MAN WANTED BY ^ COUNH AUTHORITIES
Freeport, April 26.—A jMirtlcularly good piece of detective work was done hy Chief of Police John Hartman Satur¬ day night when he located and arrested a man wanted on a bench warrant from Allneola, in half an hour.
Constable Leonard Thorne canfle to FreetKjrt seeking Robert ,1. Carter on u bench warrant. Carter formerly llve<l in Inwood and was reported to be liv¬ ing in Freeport.
Mineola, April 25.—Eugene Rhodea, eight year old son of Martin W. Rhodes of the Na.ssau Bouleverd ser-tion of Garden City, waa run down by an auto¬ mobile yesterdayt at Jericho Turnpike und so badly Injured that he died in the Nassau County Hospital at 8:15 this morning.
The little fellow with his ten year old sister attempted to cross the Jericho Turnpike during the height of ' tho homeward bound automobile trafHc about 5:,10 yesterday afternoon. The ohildren succ^ssfull pa.saed the wc-^t bound traffic hand In hand, each tell¬ ing the other to be careful lest they he run down by the cars. Tht^- reach¬ ed the mictdle of the roadway and the little girl being quicker of preceptlon saw an opening between two oars and dashed across, thinking hur would follow.
Looking back she saw her brother horror stricken, his gaze fixed and his feet refused locomotion. He was struck by a car driven by Capt. Oeorgo Williams of 5 West 83rd str«>et. New York City. The Captain tried to avoid the little fellow and swung out of the path almost wrecking his machine, but the mudguard struck tlie <-hild in the head, raoturing his skull and he just escaped falling under the wheels.
He was hurried to the Nassau Coun-
SCHOOLGIRL FALI^TODEAIV FRONWINDOtf
Ocean Side Pupils Tlirown Into Panic When Limp Body of Virginia Sisson is Found On Pave¬ ment
The minister in that village gave up ] his jiuipit in order to enter the army as, a <'haplaln. He had served oversea.^ in ( that oapai'ity. If it should oomo to pass that Port Jefferson calls Rov. Gould he will live In a picturesque little villngo and the residents will have the servioos of a man who has many friends.
BEUEVED A SUICIDE
Dies in Rockville Centre Sanitar- ium Five Minutes After Be¬ ing Admitted
Ocean Side, April 25.—Vir¬ ginia Sis.son, .sixteen years old .school pupil at the Ocean Side HighSfhool, i.s reported to have .jumped from one of the upper bt^ther Meeting Called To Change Village ^'"^ow.s of the school shortly Name Doe. Not-Gvic Pride ^efo^e noon today.
ahe wa.s hurried to the Rock-
HICKSVELE CLUB J HEARS "JERE" WOOD
Theme of Lt.-Gov. Address
Minoola, April 23.—Tho meoting of the Hicksville Civic Club at Fornnery Inn on .Saturday night did not turn ihto a meeting for thi*' purpose of di.scu.sslng | a change of name for the well-known j village. In fact the matter of changing I thc naine was hardly mentioned, andi*^'*^" when the facts became
ville Centre Sanitarium where she died five minutes after ar¬ riving there.
The cause of her act is now being inve.stigated.
Considerable excitement re¬ sulted among the school chil-
Chief Hartman Immedlhtely went out | ty Hospital and an Immediate operation | then only to have speakers say that known and the faculty had dif- with Constable Thorne and in half an j was attempted In an effort to save his | Hick.svillo would remain Hlok.HVille. ficulty in quieting the children.
hour had located Carter at 37 Russell life, but he was so badly hurt that he
WOMAN'S AUXIUARY
TO SELL RED POPPIES
Freeport, April 25.—The Woman's ..Auxiliary of the American Legion met Friday evening at Hose 2 houae on North Main street, and made further plans for Memorial Day.
Memorial Day this year will be cele¬ brated by th^ Legion and its auxiliaries as "Poppy Day," when silk replicas of the Flanders popples will be on sale nil over the country.
The women of the local post, dressed m white, will have baskets of the red popples for sale at ten cents each, and the coat lapel of every man In the vil¬ lage will carry the tiny "forget-me-not" of wartime days.
The popples were made by thc French and American war orphans, who have banded themselves together to take care of the graves of the American dead still on Frenc'i soil.
On Memorial Day the graves will be decorated by loving hands of the French people, who will lay flowers on the resting places of Anreriea's sons. The money obtained from the sale of the popples will t>e used for thlK purpose.
HEMPSTEAD WILL NEED
THREE NEW POUCEMEN
Hempatead, April 26.~With the com¬ pletion of the polU« t>ootha which are to be placed at the ^¦arlous entrances to tbe viliasre, the police department will need nt least three more men.
The Board of Trustees will in all prob¬ ability appoint the men at an oarly meettnir.
No one has aa yet t)een ael^ed for any of the joha and the Board wil] con¬ sider till appiicf^tions sent In.
congestion.
Coplea of th© motor vehicle booklet containing the neiv laws will be "dis¬ tributed by Secretary of State John J. Lyons about June 1.
COST $l,5d0,000; SELLS FOR^$470,000
DuPont Estate at Roslyn Bought
Under the Hammer By Howard
C. Phipps of Westbury
Roslyn, April 25.—"White Eagle," the Alicia Dupont estate at Roslj'n was sold at auction Saturday for $470,000. The purchaser of the proi>erty was David T. Layman, Jr., of New Tork, who bought It for Howard C. Phipps rf Westbury.
The sale was conducted In the main ball room and was attended by som^ 300 prominent residents of this co^fi^ty and New York.
The bids began at $200,000 and grad¬ ually worked up to the flgure at which the property sold.
Among the other bidders were Charles Steele'of the firm of J. P. Morgan and Company and Rdmund Randolph of New Tork.
The house was completed last year and has never been occupied. It cost $1,000,000. The furnishings were worth $150,000 and the grounds cost $300,000.
Mrs. Dupont died l)efore the com¬ pletion of the residence and the proper¬ ty had to be sold to close the estate.
MIKE McTIGHE TONIGHT AT FREEPORT AUDITORIUM
Freeport, April 25.—Tonight at the Freeport Auditorium Freeport fans will probably have their share of thrills In seeing Mike McTighe In ac¬ tion against Tommy Madden.
Both boys will have a liberal back¬ ing among the fans and their sched¬ uled twelve round bout wtll probably l>e one of tbe Iieat that has been seen |iere in some time.
The rest of the card is also well worth while Aid will present a galaxy of rood Ijoxlns for the (ana.
HEMPSTEAD BOARD TO Aa ON VEHICLE ORDINANCES
Hempatead, April 25.—A raieetlnir o( tha VIHase Board will be held tbis evealns, when the proposed traffle ordlaaoce will be conaSdered, All buaiaees nen and reaidenta t^t the >tr««t8 priaclpallr ;illtected, or any citiata intereatod, will be ^iven an opportunity to be heard.
place.
Thorno placed him under arrest and took him back ta Mnieola Wh^rs'lll^ Was placed in the county jail.
Carter was wanted for n violation of thc llqtior tax law. The Indictment is an old one and not the result of the re¬ cent "bono dry" crusade..
succumbed thla morning.
STIDV CUB AT .\IRS. HOOD'S
WANT Heme TALENT
TO GIVE PLAY AT HOME
Roo.sevelt, April 25.—Groat success was attained by the Strollers' ftramatic Club of Roosevelt, of which Mrs. H. C. Albers is chairlady and coach; Mtss Elsie Clark vice-president, and Lillian Mienen, .•secretary, .in the production of their new play, "The Counti^y Boy," at the Auditorium in Freeport for the bertefit
Lieutenant-Governor Jeremiah Wood ^'"^ Sisson lives with her parents was the chief speaker of the evening,! at 47 Torrel avenue. Her mother at¬ and the keynote Thin he .•rtrUPlf'^WIipWlWit^ttjHnofjw nnd her father is u civil oa.slly the theme ot the whole ilinno'r * pnglnoor. .N'oiih,.,- wore at liomf at ilio an.I meeting. ¦ j,^^
Civic pride, the love of homo, and the! home town and home folk, was the note l''-'n'll«tl S- Taylor Johnson .Muld thai that tho Lieutenant-Governor .struck, " looked as if the child dclil.oratoly and hc builded an int«resting talk on Jumpod from the window. lhilt,-^moni.-^hing his hearers that It ,t i.., believed that the ohild was
siifTering from nerv'ou»noj4M probalily
Rockville Centre, April 25.—The Study Class of the Fortnightly Club will moot with Mrs. Walter Hood at «4 DaTison | of Kreeport I^-odge 600, I.O.OF. place tomorrow afternoon. Instead of at I .Special reque.st has bebn made for the homo of Mrs. L. Cooper, as proviou.«- thc club to produce the piny in ita own ly pro|>osed. Mrs. S. E. Bennett will as- home town, and preparations nre un- sist Mrs. Hood as hostess. j der way for its appearance here In
Mi.ss Ayres and Mrs. F'ox will read I the near future, two amusing plays.
HNED $10 FOR BEING iNTOXiaTED IN FREEPORT
Kreoport. .-Xprll 26.—Ofllcer Fechtman of the FreeiKirt Police made the first FfoeiKlrt arrest in the now dry law <-ru-
A«Mp*a Pabiaa.
It U tme tbat some "traAJlatonr of
Awop't FabiM uaa "baa" toe "soom"
in the tabia about tha golden ac8> but
th« Gr«ek ot tha "text" la '*ch«Q,'*
]?*^5J^ "** '""* ^""^^¦•" ^•^isade'Saturday'nlghrwhen"hV~pick«^ of b«n bOt ratUy meana "eooat, \ „p.. panning Baldwin of Massai)equa.
wiu) was stretched out near the railroad station and could not navigate.
A 'ffight in a cell at headquarters somewhat sobered the man, who defied the dry enforcers and he was fined $10
The accepted translators, or rathar' adapters, follow the familiar word of | 'the vast inajorlty, "gooae." It must b« j r*memlte*«d that tliere really ia noi orictbal Aesopian taxt, but only soma later tranacrlptlona of what came to ba regarded as the fables told by the! old alava. The actual fount of thaj Aesopian folklore was Babrtns, a Htl> I lenlstlc faballst at the secoad century. | wbo wrote the fables in verse. Since there have been many veralons and some years ago a batcdi of 70 more were found in the Vatican library. Thla Oreak word "chen" was pronounced "kane," and hence It haa no relatiMi to "ben" except Its belonging to tha fowl family.
f
Tfta Becret Is Out. "Why doea a woman's hnt cost so much more thnn a man's? Surely tbe trimming can't account for more than a fraction of tbe difference." "Cer¬ tainly not, but you must remember that St costs more to sell a bat to a woman. A man seldom takes up more than two minutes of the salesman's time, while a woinan will keep the en¬ tire sales staff busy for half a day." —New York 8un.
was the homo folk, the friends and neighbors, the home village and the plico where ono livod tlial mattered in life.
The Lieutenant-Governor might eas¬ ily have .said in so many words, since his talk .said it all the way through, "Lives there a man with .soul so dead, who never to himself hath said, 'This is mine own my native land.' "
He declared that it was not so much the acts of tho man ns thc life he led at homo that counted, although the two wont rather hand in hand. The good that men do live aftor thom, was his thought, and ho '.'yiid that men wore judged aocoidlng to tho memory of thom that remained after thoy wero gone.
Krom this, the Lleutenant-Goyernoi- took his hearers by successive steps fi-om the lovo of homo and the civic pride to the broader viewpoint, to lovo of country, and said that from the hum
brought on by her over atudy. Sho was u |)i-ogresHlvo pupil and (Wligont In lioi studios.
Pupils in tho school wore proparluK for tho noon day nioal whin iho ovoiii <)( currod, ^x
Virginia is tho oldest ot seven cliil- droll. She has acted ns a "mother" to thom in the abaence of hor mother at busini'»<s.
Tho fall was from the thlnl story window and it Js boliovod that sh*; wiu4 solEod Willi Hh attack of temporary In¬ sanity. The window was drawn down from the top. It would l)e nooessyry for anyone to climb to the window sill to got over it. >
by Judge John.son in court Sunday ,,,„ j^^^j^^j^j^ ,„ ^^^ ^^^^ yj,,,^^,^ ,^,„.^„^
JAPANESE OFFER YAP SEmEMENT
morning.
The Hne was \iaid.
that Americanism that has matjc us groat.
He admonished his hearer to read tho oath of allegiance to the'l'nited States in the Constitution, and stild he saw in tho ready acceptance of the educational featurea of the state and countiy tho hope of the future.
He was accorded a wonderful recep¬ tion, and his popularity was plainly manifested.
aupercllioua « The adjective supercilious Is of Latin derivation, and It lllnstrates how a wo'rd flrst nsed In a figurative sense often takes on a matter of fact meaning and Its origin in coromoQ use is lost sight of. In Latin superclllum is the word for eyebrow, and tbat Latin word Is still used In works on anatomy. It is also used In arcbltec¬ tare for certain ornaments over a door and for a small flllet f^, the base of a column In Ionic style. The adjectlva supercilious is derived from the Lat¬ in noun, superclllum. Tbe adjective ratens exhibiting haughty and care¬ less contempt as by an elevation of
tbe eyebrows, therefore, Insolently i president, Charles H. Stoll; secretary, proud, arrogant, overbearing. ! l.ouls Rlenecher; financial secretary.
¦f
Propose To Recognize America's
Cable Right If U. S. WUI
Recognize Mandate
Biblical Error. The following gc-tn was sent to the London Morning I'ost by a corre- j ROSLYN POST ASSISTS spondent, who says he had found It in private letter written by Charles
(Hr InU-rnalliHul N*w» Hrrtlre.) •—" Tokio, April 25.—tho Jupnnc»se Gov¬ ernment, It waa reliably reriortwl today, has agreed to s<'ttle the controversy ovor the Island of Yap upon tho basis The other speakers were Sur>ervisor of the following compromise: C. Chester Painter. W. Palmer Smith, , xhe United State to rocogni/... th^; Jo.seph Steinert, Justice of Ihe Peace valadity of Japan's mandate over Yap Charles H- Stoll, Andrew Heberer and inland.
F. 8. Vandewater. 2. Japan to recognize Amoric-, „
The officers of the association are: cable rigbtH
President, Augi...t P. PepplHCh: Vice- ^ho Pnited States ha.Maid claim to
tbD cable station on Tap beoause It is
th** only direct line of communication
Wilfred Schafer. and treamirer, Frank ,„.t^^^ Amori.a and th« Phlllpplno
Chlumsky. . ;
Isbinds.
.American irommerclal und military
attHches.^iave left for Chita, tbo head-
UNFORTUNATE COMRADES 'M'^rtors of the new Sit;..rian Ropublic,
_____ to make complete InveatigHtlon 'of the
Mineola. April 25.—JJoslyn Po«t of the '"""*'*^ States for recoKnltion American I^eglon has given aome gym¬ nasium apparatus to Kitigm Park Ho«.
Dream Haa Various Meanlnga. ^ _
To dream of a silver mine denotes > Dickens:. "The story Is about n Httle troqble which will be settled by tbe | boy to .whom the pews Iind been hrf>. courts. A gold mine, successrfnl love j ken by'hls mother th^Lbe wan to have suit. Iron mine, health and i^applnesa.^jFtench jroverness. ll5ttkens tells It
Copper mine, wealth, healtH'^nd pros- tluifc: 'After leaning his plump little , pital for the beneflt of those mv-nuily perity. Lead mine. unproflUble em-j cheek agsinst the window glasij In • 1 m veterans of the World War who are ployment. Tin mine, slander. Zlne j dreary little way for some minutes, ha \ confined there. The post waa conBned mine, discovery of a Mends treach-{looked around and InqnlrPd In « |ceii-i to a $100 appropriation. '
mine, dishonor. p,., appneatlon. whefh..r she .lldn't ,„>dy of th* Legion mod othe, memliers ""* """
When England was invaded b>- C^e- t"'"^ "'fl^'"* .?1TK"^.^«'*'" *"'»
great mistake a I toirether." *"
sar ,(B. C. B6I It was called BriUin, sometlmea Albion.
"Achter C61." aa Newark Ba.T. N. J.. waa called by the Dutch, meant ti>e "Back Bay."
,of the Roslyn Poet after conferring '¦ with the doctors at Kings Park Hos , piul decided on the gift of Khf. appar First Peaaltanl. te Wear a Uaart. atus. The physicians in charge had Uncoln\ waa. the first presldeat ta ¦ said that the nuMt needed thing* were; <vfar a board and Grant waa thc flnt auch apparatus aa develop tbe bodyi m*.' lo wear a uiuiiiriit'W. !and relieve the mind strain.
.MiUl. D.^VIHOX IN I)K,iU
I'iiHt Ro<-kaway. April 25.—Mrs. Mary .\lma Davison, widow of the late Cluirles Davisori, and <'>nly duuRht<>r of IlotxTt und CathorLn*^ Wright, died Saliirrlay a', her home. 0<'ean avenue. S4 yoars old. 8er\lc** will be held at ber tate home Wcnlneiidiiy ;it 2 o'olork and intfTment will I-- made In Oreenfteld Cemetery.
The Largest Bait Minea. The largest sait mines lu the world lie tliase of Wieliceka, uine mllae lUHu Crapow. Gallcla, Tn Aostrla."
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