MAKING AMERICANS OF FOREIGN BORN
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(CoirtlBiwi fron vmga 1)
"Deniilte All the anli-dry parades, you will never s«e. the 'T'rohiMtlon. ainen4l- ntrnt repealed," he tlef-tared.
The JiMtice spoke of attempts to rem¬ edy every trouble by leffiwlatlon and nald a lArse percentage of the schemaa for aeiMiratlnK the Rovernment from cjish would not stand the teat when thpir mcrlta were inveiftisated. and were? Ren. ei-ally found to be schemes to take the monoy of tho man .wh»> works ami «l>ends It for the benetit of those who do not.
"We must Ret down to tha fundamen¬ tal (concept that we must earn our fir»-ad by the sweat ot our brow," he nald. '
JUHtk'p Ma(!C;rate made a stro/»|f pU>a for greater work In Americanization of Hiienti. and declared that the so-mlled mob ran be miide to listen to reason if a reasonable person can be found to talk to It. Tho trouble iti, he held, that we , let the radical and the B<j|tthevlk hav«- the Held to themselves and then damn tbe 5eld ,for the results. He urped that one of the grc:itc»l meantt <if achlevliiB the desinKl restilts la to have men In ptibllf places talk to thetiC' jieople.
"Wf mtiHt rmake them feel tho touch of American hearts and American hands and when thoy have come to look ujion tbls country as their country, all the soup boxes In the country will have no cfTtH't," h«i del larcd.
The upeaker deprecated the tfnden«*y to refer to foreigrn l>orn icHldcnt.i of the country by Insiiltinigr nanu-M and tainted to the record of the fOrelKn born in the Wiir and those who Ilo bculde American drad in France. "They are not asiham- ••fl of them," he mild, "and nnle.ss you can bri^K youi'.scif to the iioliit where the living will have the fraternity of the d?ad. we will never weld the people of ilils nation together."
.lustlce MacCrate. was heartily aji- jilauded at the cluMe of his address iind a rlHing vote of thanks was given for hi» comifti;.'
Dr. Saul O. Curtice, luistor of the Methodist Church, declared the iiresent is the most critlciil time for the country In years. He urge<l men to be willing to Viake the same sacrlHceM now a,s th<i.'<c who gave u|i iniuh lo .sei-ve th cdiiiitry in the war, anil at whatever cost to uphold divine law.
The Rev. .S. W. Stack house of the Haiillst Chunh urged a greater bond ol fellowship between this fountry and (iieiit Hiitain, the two great (.'hristian Angln-Siixiin nations, as the only guar antoe agJiin.st future wars.
The Itev. J)r, Kerr of the Presbyter ian ('hurch also sjioke, and tho story he told about weeing a sermon in every liliule while pushing a lawn .iiower over tin; gr.iss and being told to cut them shiirt, illustrated the brevity^ of his tipeiM'h.
$1,000 REWARD FOR MURDEREp ARREST
(Contiiiiieid from page 1)
was run down until the foundation of it was proven or shown to be without foundation,
Dr, August koughcaiigc, of Sea Cliff, who has had his pdlice tlog trying since eurly Wednesday evening to pick up the trail of the man who cominltted the Clime, Was^oine<i yestertlay by two oth¬ ers with Belgian police dog.s.
Mrs. I.eo Warner and Mrs. Morgan Helmont, from the millionaire colony in Westbury, came over with two tine po- llcti dog« and they sought a trail along the same route that Ur. KoughcaugcH " dog had taken.
The respknso of the lUemen to Dis¬ trict Attorney Charle.s It. Weeks' call for volunteers to Join in the man hunt was as hea»-ty and earnest as It wa» pfompt.
Volunteers In Man Hunt
It WUH a tine response, said Distriel Attorney Weeks, to the appeal to the public and he is grateful fur the effort.
Tht; Hremen wore called when the dis¬ trict attorney Ielt that there was a {^ance that tho slayer might have tried to hide near the scene ot the crime, be- <'ause he thought he could fipt get far away.
AVhtm the alarm was sounrJed to call out the volunteer ix)lleemen they-i'amc without reservation. Business men left their places of business, mechanics left their benches, dusks left stores and those who had little to do even left that to res)K>nd to the call for aid.
It was a motley gathering, but un earnest t>ne and If needed no exhorta¬ tion to join In the hunt for the murder¬ er. One received an undercurrent from the searchers that If the murderer was found It would Ins better if found dead,
but thia waa not voleMi and tti« March¬ ers gathered around thoae In authority to haar what was iHanned.
Od« htmMy es-dou«liboy, who tArrioA A big serv\be gun and whose breadth of shoulder indtcatad tliat a gun for him was excess baggage, waa heard to re¬ mark to another Ijws sturdy saartWr: 'If you don't know what to do with him. if you^ gtt him, turn him ovar to me." His vqice ahow«;d that bo was prepared to deal out piinlnhment then and there tf tha slayer fell into hto hands. Edwards Leads Through t^saMp Assistant District Attorney Bdwai'ds explained to tha searchers what waa planned and then announced that he was ready if they were. I.,cadlng them. Mr. IiMwards and the volunteers, state police, county ofncerx and Hempstead police officers starte<^ on a trip through ttie swamps and wiiods that tarried them (ibout three miles and conHuminj more than two hours of the hardest kind of work.
Mr. Kdwards, at times waist deep in swamp water, couHtantly urged them on and where he went they followed to a man. That their effort was all in vain does not dctr:ict from the sincerity of their effort, deciared the county author¬ ities.
It ban i)C€n established now that the terrible batt^^lng of the victim wus done with a pl<<-e Of Inch pipe al)out eight inches long. This weapon jvas found by Charles Hansen of the District Attor ney's offlce.
Phone Message E.tplaincd The mysterious mestuige that came by phone to Mrs. Bartlett, of which she spoke to her sister, Mrs. Robert Hea- bury, by phone before the crime was (•ommittcd, has been cleared up. Mrs. Kllzal/efh Borgwardt, of 107 Front street, ha« told the authorities that she 'phoned Mrs. Bartlett, knowing her house w(u< for salty and said that she wanted information regarding It for a •Mr. Quinn. It was a natural query of a jieraon who hnd friends who wanted t.i buy, the iiollce any.
.Msn Has Face iikratrhed The whole search now centres on th:' m.in with the scratched face whom Mrs. lOvelyn Jack.son anil Miss .lane Ward, colored women of this village, declare they saw in \he woods not far from the scene of the crime last night,! Dr. A. D. ,Ta(|ues says Mrs. Bartiett's finger nails had dried blcMjd antl flesh under them.
This rnan is described as being about five feet eight inches tall, wearing a oaii and faded blue coat. He accosted the two women, who were frightened by Iii.s manner, which they doscrllied as "^vifd." They hurried away from him, but not until they had observed that his face was scratched from the rtsits of his hair to the point of his chin and that tho scratches were .so recent thut the blood had hardly dried.
Marked as he is by his victim his ar rest aeemfi certuin.
All the county authorities and the po¬ lice of Hompstead village are putting forth their best efforts ^to bring about an arrest in the quickest i)0.ssilile time. There is a feeling that this man must be captured.
.Sheriff Charles W, Smith, Dejiuty Sheriff Kmil Morse, Motorcycle I'olice- mtn Frank Craft and several othtn-s of this branch of the county service. Coun¬ ty ]>tective Miller, Constables William Strohson of Lynbrook, and Charles An¬ derson of Mineola, together with Chief Seaman, I'atrolman Ricker, (^dicers Snedeker, Feeley, King, .Sergt. Byk and Troopers liennelly and Lester and oth (*s of the IfH'al force, worked untiringly yesterday and late last night as they bad the night before to close avenues of escape and to round up the slayer.
Detectives Felix DeMartino and .lohn Ji'ogarty have developed several imiiort- ant leads that may bring early arrests. Charles Hansen, finger i»rint exiH-rt, has been able to get valuable prints thttt will serve well the moment arrests are mado.
HucUley Not Considered John Buckley, who was held yester¬ day for examination, says he has a per¬ fect alibi and declares he knows nothing of the crime. He says that all Tuesday afternoon he was at the residence of the Rev. C. H. Snedeker, of Prospect strtwt, and that he slept that night In a bai-ii in the rear of his sister's home In Hen¬ ry street.
"1 never did this thing," said Buckley to a reporter for The Dally Review yes¬ terday. ',; "I wouldn't have the nerve to kill .a cat even," and his hands tremliled as he Vvlped his di\v lljis. He freely admitted that he was the victim of bis own habits at times.
Those who questioned him said his replies have been conflicting but those who know him attach no significance to that.
1iSm^m!i^kt<'r<^^>*^^-'r<si9mifi'*m^'jism»t!m'
Think not of yourself as "the archi¬ tect of your career." but as the sculpt¬ or. Expect to have to do a lot of Imrd hamn(\erijig and chiselling and si'raping and polishing.
TO ORGANIZE POST. V.F.W.JTMEETING AT l&TCHE FIELD
Mm Wko Have Served U. S. m Foreign Laadlf or Waters Invit¬ ed !• Jnk M Jnne 30
Hempstead, June 24. —A meeting will l>e heUl at tife enlisted men's club, Mitchel Field, on Thur.s<lay evening. June »0, to organise a post of Veterans of Foreign Wars In Uempstead. K. J. IJepmann, at the Field, has authority from the national organization to form the local i»ost. He urges that all vet erans who hare sewi service In foreign countries or on foreign waters, attend.
The Mitchel Field meeting place wa.s ofIerp<i gratuitously. About 25 men ar the fleld will become memt>ers. ,
One activity of tbe Veterans of Foi- eign Wars is tliat of raising $200,000 for the relief of di.sahled soldiers and for dependents of soldiers. The only other post In Nassau County is • at Rockville Centre,
MARRIAGES
Ware—Doyle
Miss Ignatia Loyola Doyle, daughtei of Mrs. Joseph S. Doyle of 247 Wash ington street, Hempstead, yesterday bC' came the bride of Robert Francis Ware, a lieutenant in the I'. S. Arm.v, formerly stationed at Camp Mills. The ceremoii.v t^'-as performed at 10;3U a. m. in the I'hurch of 8t. Ignatius I.oyola at I'ark avenue and (list street, Manhattan, Xew Vork. The Rev. George F. Kittell mar ried them. .Mrs.' William P. Sexton of Hempstead played the organ and Mists I'aullne Jennings of Hempstead sang during the ceremony. A wedding break¬ fast followed at the Waldorf-Astoria.
They will reside kt 247 Washington .street, Hempstead,
PIATT CONKLIN DIES; 82, AT FREEPORT
(Continued from pai^e t)
later demltted to Massapeijua I,o<lge and was made a lift member. He was also a member of the Freeport Chapter, 30tl, It. A. M. Masonic services will be con¬ ducted at the conclusion of the church services.
Burial will take place Sumlay in (ireenlield (^emetery at the convuniencn <if the family.
Oldest (if Nine Children
Mj'. Conklin was the oldest of nine cliildren of the late Xathaniel Conklin and Fmily Augusta Brush, one of the oldest families of Huntington, Ij. I. Twu daughters, Mrs, Ida B. I'owell and .Mi.--. Ji'lorence Carman, of Freeport, survive him. Two brothers, Jesse Conklin, of Palm Beach, Fla.: Xathanie! Conklin, of Itrookiyn: two sisters, Mrs. David .\lillei of Freeport and Mrs. Frank K. M<K)re, • if Brooklyn: one grHiidchild, Kliy.abcth Carman, and two great grandchildren, Helen Adincne Cori>y and Roberl Ed win, of Freep'iit, also survive. Active in .Hasonic >Vork
Piatt Conklin was born in the Wll- liamsburgh section of Brtsiklyn In 183a. He became interested in ma.sonic work in early life and had been a Mason for over 50 years. He belonged to the
BnwUyit Masonic VetarsBe aad was a | "I'atrtarcA.". meatting a 'iiaaon *fho' bad "become of age" in Jfanonic work. or in other words had spent 31 years in the. quArrlas at masonry.
He was a anaster of the third veil in' Freeport Chapter, R.A.M.. a iioaitlon bo lield ever since the citapter was insih tuted In 1*08 and although he might liave advanced, he preferred to remain In this position. Mr. Oonklin has an . envious record for attendance at the \ chapter, lietng present at every meet¬ ing unlesa too sick to leave his home.
Mr. Conklin has traveled all over the world and u.sed to entertaia his friends, with tales of things he had seen in various parts of the globe. |
Organised I<lre Company |
Mr. Conklin was a charter memlxT and one of the organisers of Kxcetsior, Hook, and i.adder Co., the olde.st flre company In fhe village, now known as Truck 1, and was its flrst caiilain. Hc was also very active in forming the: I-'reeport Cluh, and did much to place I it in the exalted position that it holdiv i today.
When he was Ifl years old he went to! Australia and joined the gold rush, and ' later shipped to Japan, He was on the first merch^t ship that went into Na-j gasnki. He al.so traveled in China and' India, and could relate many interest¬ ing tales of life In these foreign cllme.s. Worked For Freeport Interest '
He came to Freeport al)oul !J0 year.'^i ago and at that time had a cork fat- j tory in (Itecnpoint, which wa.s thought. out by the .Armstrong Cork Co. He was taken into the lirm, and when 70 j years old was retired on half pay. i When he flr.st <Mme to FreeiKut he; engagts) .in the business of sinking* wells, operating in the territory between' Itocltaway and Babylon. I
He was at one time a trustee of thej Freeport school.s. I
Mr. Conklin was a monibor of the: Methodist Church, and very active in j its work, in fact hi.s activities were no-j ticcablo in everything ,he undertook. His enthusiasm and efflcienty won an V enviable reputation for him.
On June 18, 1892. twenty citi/.en.s met | at Van Hipei's Hall in Freeport and ! discus.sed the subject of iiuoi poiatinK j the village. Piatt Conklin and Hiiiiiii i R. Smith were api>ointed a committee j to take steps towards incori>oration. By : a vote of the citizens of the territory] the incorporation was accomplished.
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I NASSAU \ I Dectro Plating Works, Inc. :«
•|^ 66 E. Merrick Road, Freeport j
\ General Electro Platers .| •!• and Polishing 't
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X Expert Workmen >;
X We PUite and Poli.sh Any- | X thing in '^
^ Gold, Silver, Nickel, Copper, y^ X Brass, Ctonze, Brass Beds, X 1^ Chandeliers, Silverware ...;«; \ AUTO PARTS RE-NICKELED |
X rK<).MI"K W<H£K
TO MAKE THE MEAL AND THE DAY COMPLETE, ORDER
T I F F I N ' S
Genuine French Ice Cream
- . AND - -
DELICIOUS FRENCH PASTRIES
Deliveries Made Anywhere, Anytime, Including Sundays
BRINKERHOFF BROS. , THE FOUNTAIN, Freiport
TELKPBONESi
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BANG! BANG! BANG!
f^'ireworks—Fire Crackers DA SILVA STORES CORPORATION
FREEPORT STORES
3 AND lb Cfi(T STORE, NtX to Pnrt Ofiw VARIEIY STORE, <n Menidt Rottl
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ROCKVILLE CENTRE STORE
ON VnXkCE AVENUE
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Tbe orlgteal GookUa Hamsstead was 031 Half Hollow Hills near Deer Park. Ii>. I. It was aold to General Osaey. a brother-in-law of Oeneral Qraat. wben Mr. Oonlclin'a father went to tha West. Latei- it l^ecatne tha poaaesaioa of aome Catholic institution and about a year ago burned to tha ground.
THE MARGUERm
BoardKag Hmue 118 Sevwtk Slre«l OARDEN an, N. Y. .
TitucKiNO A«n> rroRAmi
ALBBIIT K.
OCNKRALiTm DAFLT TRIPS TO S7I S. MAIN
WRKmOHt
TKJBPHOMB ItM-W
I "One Man on the Block Makes i
Public Opinion^^
No matter how good our service is, there is usually one man on the block who is forever finding fault with it. You know the man we mean. He is a good fellow at heart and talks sanely enough upon other subjects, but when he discusses this company's service h« loses his balance completely.
What we regret most, however, is not that this man is soured against us, but that his attacks arc permitted to go unchallenged by his friends who are also our friends.
In other wotds, you and hundreds of other satisfied customtrs in the same neighborhood take good service for granted, accept it, and say nothing atmut it. Your silence thus becomes hia golden opportunity. With lips sealed, you innocently give him an encouraging slap on the back.
We value your good will, everyone's good will. This company is your company, the public's company. Now let ut work togstbat tu convert this man from s knocker into a booster.
HASSAU & STTFFOLK UGHTING CO.
OEO. UacnONALD. rrnildent Oflrea at : Qeoipatcad. Frecitort. BovkTlUe Orntrv, Mineola
MEMBER OF THE AMERICAN QA8 ASSOCIATION
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The Car Yoii * Want The Price You Want
For One Week Only
Commencing Thursday, June 23
We w3i offer our complete stock of Used Automo¬ biles without reservation at prices cut so deep that they do not even vaguely reflect the values offered.
These Prices Will be in Effect One Week Only
Come Early—Get Yours First
Wo h^ve a splendid assortment of u.sed cars, including, Buick, Nash, Olds¬ mobile and Oakland, and other cars. All are in mechanically perfect condition. Many are refinished and all are over¬ hauled and put into splendid condition for consistent performance. AH used Buicks carry the same guarantee as new cars.
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We want to move these quickly to make room for new cars. Nobody can earn or save money any faster than to spend a day this week selecting the car of Ms choice.
The good used car today represents the "inside buy" in the automobile lines. In no case has the used car^Hepreciated in proportion to its price reduction. The original owner has sacrificed a heavy percentage of his original inveiitment. The dealer handles the car without profit, sometimes at a loss, covered by his profit on the new car sold when the used car is traded in. Always far, far under the lowest price levels possible for any new car, the used car is the thrifty man's best b^t.
Those who have been recently kraking at some of t^se cars, but not yet decided which to buy^ will please take notice that first-comerf at this Used-Car Week Sale get first choice. No cars WlH be reserved or withheld. Our entire Used-Car Stock goes into this sale Wednesday morning.
D. A. ELDREDGE
334 Fulton Avenue Hempstead
TELEPHONE 748
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