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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
Prace LS ad CD e 4 d THE Preaport, Rockville Centre, Gar- don City, -Retapstead, Baldwin, ~Ocesnside, Long Beach, Island ~- Purk; Roosevelt and Villages to the Enst. FREEPORT, N. v. FAANGO PUTS DOWN REVOLT IN HIS TROOPS lnsurgentsICommander Crushes Uprising In ® Spanish Morocco \MANY EXECUTIONS REPORTED ORDERED Pay Delays Listed Among Factors Contributing To Dissatisfaction Cloudy Tonight/and Thureday, N Much Change in Temperature (| VOL. XXXIX Ne. o METROPOLITAN LONG ISLAND, NASSAU COUNTY, hame N. ¥.- WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1937 PRICE THREE CENTS - iSiain Modes France Friend-Freactie)) S OM &F GAS TAX COMMAND jy STIRS UP ALBANY BATTLE; =e »«) NEW WAGE LAW STUDIED '\ Police Association Will { SCORES 4-CENT TAX } 2°C Republicans Call Dispatch 5 Delegates @r nn ann nn Meeting To Fix - For Cap—Eta] Duty Issue Stand WILL SEEK PASSAGE _ | EXTRA CENT HIT ~ OF HERMA—N MEASURE County Force Asks Guard Ultimatum From Governot- Says Balanced Budget y Court's Decision Brings Measure To The Front PARLEY PENDING | \ Week-end Conference Set To Decide Final Plan Against Rating \Threat\ Through Mergers George (Frenchie) Gueret, former roomer in the Gedeon home and st present an un- employed chauffeur, is pic- tured as he left a New York clty police station after he had been grilled forty-eight hours in connection with the slaying of Veronica Gedeon, artist's A committee of five members of the Police Officers and Patrolmen's Benevolent association of the Nas- sau county police will go to Al- bany within a few days to lobby for the police amendment to the Lincoln Hauser (left), 20-year-old fiance of siain model Ver- omica Gedeon, and his friend. Stephen Butter, Jr., are shown as they left the 51st street police station in New York city after charter. ' + s being questioned regarding the triple murder in which Veronica, model, her mother, and county For New Actml] H 0 L widespread | counter-revolutionary + > ® As a result of a recent mass . Ing e$ [U eV € lot to seize Spanish Morocco.! her mother, and a roomer were killed. reomer. meeting of members, Detective $ Y ' irthplace of the Spanish civil TANGIER, Moroccan Interna- ional Zone, March 31 - (P) -A war, from insurgent Generalissimo Francisoo Franco was reported to- day 'to have been crushed. Michael Hanlon, president of the association, appointed Detective Lieutenant Marcel Chagnon as chairman of the committee. Aides ALBANY, March 31-(P) ALBANY, March 31-(P) - Re-enactment of New| | -Republican leaders slated a Hofstra's New Curriculum aL AYER SOUGHT Insurgent authorities of the North African protectorate, strik- Ang at the conspirators with unex- pected swiftness, were reported by the semi-official Valencia news agency,: Agence Espagne, to have igurnmarily executed 50 men and arrested 1,100 officers, soldiers and civilians in Tetuan. Many Executions Reported (Advices received by the Con- tinental Daily Mail in Paris said 0 executions had been carried in Ceuta Sunday.) ay FNCERPRINTS Bloody Marks Are Found As Police Investigate Easter Murders NEW YORK, March 31- (P -- Offers Special Advantages \ Program Combines Features Of Country Col- lege And Urban University's Facilities A college curriculum which will combine the advantages of a | small country college and a great urban university has just been ap- proved for Hofstra college, New York university's educational affili- appointed include Lieutenant Jo- seph Stade! of the second pre- cinct; Patrolman A. Alan Feit of the fourth; Patrolman McCauley of the fifth, and Detective Henry Olin of the identification bureau. Guard Against Loopholes The committee was authorized by the association to do everything in its power which can legally be done to impress upon Assembly- man Harold P. Herman, who in- troduced the amendment, Assem- blyman Leonard W. Hall and Sen- York's invalidated 1933 min- imum wage law for women and minors was considered by the administration today after a supreme court decision up- holding the Washington statute with almost identical provisions. A source close to Democratic | Governor Lehman said a final de- cision is awaiting a meeting this week-end, probably in New York 500,000 SOUGHT - ABBOT LOW MOFFAT FOR CAR INJURIES conference of party members .. {today fo consider Governor Lehman's ultimatum that his \million dollar a day\ budget ~ be balanced by restoration of the fourth cent gasoline tax, / as he has proposed, or \spon« sor and enact other taxes,\ The chief executive placed re- sponsibility for balancing his $370,130,397 budget directly up to the Republican-dominated larger 'More than 100 high-ranking of- | ate at Hempstead, Chancellor Harry Woodburn Chase announced city, of labor department repre- branch of the legislature at a pare r Crimson finger prints with their ator George L. Thompson, the [sentatives and the governor's legal . . , ley yesterday asked by Republi. ficers, most of them belonging to a ing telftaleprecord provided today. necessity for favorable action on | staff. ‘Benjam'n Noars) Mmeo'ay can chieftains to discuss the state's the air force, were said to have detectives today with their first Principal Features Listed been implicated in the plot. The revolt, which was nipped only a few days before the con- spirators were ready to spring, was said to have been scheduled for April 3 The pl the Spanish govern- mont “I the amendment. \Members of the Nassau county police department as represented in the association,\ declared Ser- geant Chagnon, \are almost unan- imously opposed to any loopholes in the law which might make the General Support Seen This procedure was said to be receiving more serious thought than other suggestions to place the complete Washington law on the statute books and to enact the ad- | ministration's proposal already |a financial problems. Extra Cent Issue Hinge The assembly concurred last week with the Democratic-con= trolled senate in approving the budget and all of the “WW. concrete clue in the triple murders of Beekman Hill. When _ they - match _ bloody smudges on an apartment bed sheet with the arches, loops and whorls on a man's finger tips they ascertain the identity of The curriculum, effective next 11, has five principal features: 1. A four-year liberal arts program, designed after con- sultation with the adminis- trative heads of leading east Bring Action Against | ta Fellow Villagers What? Again! Officer Once More Finds Trial of the $30,000 negligence ction of Benjamin and Rose Nour agency dispatches the leges. MIMI rtm revenue raising program h to arm col H F Nassau . depa ent a 'Mexican | Dassed by the senate and now be- |of Mineola against Ernest W. Pest- | the additional cent-a-gallon gaso= said, was disclosed by‘ an officer e cal murderer of Fer- 2. A new and unique co- Hers L. Elev-ted army. W‘i’lhout the -. charter | fore the assembly, designed to | er and George Chappas of that vil- | line levy, throwing the budget out of the Italian alr force stationed | anica Gedeon, 20-year-old artists operative type of program 0 Lieutenancy amendment such 'a result is Meet supreme court objections |lage continued today before Jus-| of balance by $20,000,000 which at M a modeg. and two others Easter| which | will permit Hofstra . C2 threatened. With the - charter | When the original legislation was tice James T. Hallinan and a jury the governor estimated the gaso= Thelma first move of the counter- morning. , Check students in their upperclass ACTING Lieutenant Philip amendment adopted, it cannot | \Ullified. 2, . in Nassau supreme court. line levy would produce. fat at revolution was to have been the © ints Checked year to take advantage of Goldstein _ came - into - | happen. Whatever decision is made ap- | Mrs, Noar seeks 25,000 for per-| _ Chairman Abbot Low Moffat rest of Col.. Juan Bel In the fingerprint section: at po- some of the highly specialized Hempstead police headquar- \For the past 12 years the |Deared assured of bi-partisan sup- ) | Mice headquarters and in the bigger Ted of p ”251 injuries and Noar, $5,000, for | the alsttxenblyld WP?” JFK“??? . 5 county poli partm been A uch as Republicans in | medical nses and Jo: f his | commi sa epublica « Phpa ”filth col of prints at the depart- gag”. Mfi‘flwfi ters today. to. find himself buil zoniexuog m and m legislature have acceded to a wine: 59:35:95 foss ® tilde:- the muslin;I leiyd \21:1: leg= f <e lien lp ~ _. -| ment Ellen?! ex« \ again an acting Heuterignt, _.... . compares fa law excluding men. Injur .a islation,\ and charg at end, the revolters' oflllt'lim\ ‘w‘m‘ fied and compared t ~ \firmard pre « profes- That was only a mild sur- \| with aifiggiflment of “33122? g ~ Previously, ”Hamming\ cm | ing plaint?H:nc::;'n (11:31: Clk moo'dofiwan Qsmbgzsfflagfiu’g‘. Fk a been consolidated through mim’umoaighs?fl?dfitziyifmg§; sional programs which will prise, because every once in |the entire country. It has a | tended any substitute for the in- |Noar was seriously injured June , yway s lstizure of railroad stations and prepare for professional studies in architecture, den- tistry, law and medicine. 4. Two-year pre-profession- al programs for engineering and law. 5. Two-year certificate pro- grams which are designed to give a unified educational background to those students who cannot take the full col- lege course but wish to take as much work as possible. Kniffin On Committee On the completion of approved | curricula - the faculty of Hofstra college, will recommend its stu- dents to the chancellor and the validated act could not meet a test of constitutionality because, like the Washington act, it provided for only women and minors. With | this in view, Republican assembly leaders amended the proposal to include men after the Democratic- | controlled senate gave approval to the original law. Bennett Takes Issue trained personnel, radio alarm sys- tem and two-way radio now being started, a police airplane, a mod- ern motorized unit with various special type cars and trucks. \The men feel that in view of the progress made by the depart- ment, promotions for those who ihave proven their merit have been slow. They are not complaining, although they acknowledge this| _ John J. Ben- condition and hope to see it cor-| Nf. Jr., took issue with the su- | rected. It cannot be corrected if | PTem® court's majority decision in | superior officers in village depart- ”Ted wilvshuzgéorzh (firs “all“:hk he | ments, in many cases Outnumber- | defending its 1933 Wald law failed 1:50 13:6 psotfiflgenaegenéimmfi to ask reconsideration of the Dis- their existing rank. j of known crifninals. Strangled with her w s her mother, _ Mrs. - Mary - Gedeon. Hacked to death, his skull punc- tured, was Frank Byrnes, a bar-! tender-waiter who roomed with the Gedeons, The two-fold aspect of the hunt for the killer of the girl who knew | New York's bright spots intimately sent several dozen detectives on a round of her favorite haunts to glean what they could of her per- somal habits and history. Shapely, good-looking and de- scribed by her own father as a trifler with men's affections, she failure of the governor to provide for relief and other items which will fall due the first six months of 1938 | _ Moffat then demanded the con« ference with the governor \@ reach an intelligent solution\ of the state's fiscal problem. BOY SCOUTS ASSIST REVIEW-STAR STAFF Help lumln‘lepirtrrfl Prepare Fourth Annual Edition; Wile Ham Mills Directs Boys awhile lately, someone has been changing his title. Cop, sergeant, acting lieutenant- Goldstein has been all of these, and back again, almost. Six months ago, Sergeant Goldstein was made Acting Lieutenant Goldstein. He was given gold bars for his uni- form, assigned to a desk spot, and taken off the street pa- trol, Then, two weeks ago, an order - came - from Mayor George M. Estabrook, and Acting Lieutenant Goldstein ipublic \services throughout the olony. Pay Delay Blamed The reports reaching here said he basic reason for the plot against the Franco regime was dis- watisfaction with the conduct of the war, delay in paying salaries, and discontent over the conduct of Germans in Spanish Morocco. (Insurgent authorities at Tet- wan, in telephone conversations to Casablanca, French Morocco, de- led there had been any revolt . The officials merely laugh en asked what trouble th ed d been in Tet although our) h n Tetuan ough the; no explanation of a eral posed for artists and ”autograph- 20, 1936, when an automobile op- erated by Chappas, in which she was riding, was in collision with a car operated by Pester at Fairfield and Denton avenue, Mineola. Mrs. Noar claimed she suffered perma- nent injuries to her right leg. |_ Chappas claimed that the Pester [automobile ran into his car, the intersection being obstructed by a high | hedge Pester - contended that his car was stopped when it was struck by Chappas's car. | MINEOLA BOY FOUND IN MIAMI STATION Jobs as editors, reporters and trict of Columbia Adkins case. Th forit CT it i -- i | copy readers were taken today by ve R . i o R . R © majority opinion, written ; 13-¥ear-Old Runaway Asks Police | boy scouts of the count ress EN” interruption in communic ,- | °T® with her semi-nude council of the university for ap- became Sergeant Goldstein \Many village policemen 86° n | by Chief Justice Hughes, stated | To Help Him To Return | cluin when _ they pernryrdp the tions which had strengthened the figure blood-and-thunder detec- propriate degrees, again. Today, he had his |the movement to merge their de- [that the New York law was in- Home fourth annual organization edition eports of the uprising. tive stories and was a habitue of A curriculum committee for the gold bars once more, his desk partments with the county, a block ) validated in accord with the 1923 Missing from his home since | of The Nassau Daily Review-Star (Travelers reaching Casablanca | °*\* 420 [$31]me college headed by Dr. Rufus D. spat and street pa- |to their own promotion, unless | decision invalidating the District | March 20, Edward Fenster, 13-| The boys were also sent out on said Tetwan was quiet when they Killer k His Time ,_| Smith, provost of the university, trol cancelled. The order this |there is some method to control of Columbia minimum wage act. | year-old six-foot schoolboy _ of | regular assignments as part of left there and they had heard (1.3112: mgeggfzgvénflomg:gcm; planned the new program. Other 33:5;- \misgimrflofle Lizfi merging 2; lu”’:§\fi°“‘f“\~ “I\ : Bennett said he was \delighted\ | First street and Old Country road, | their work. Continued on Page 2, Col. 4} the killer had taken his time in members of the committee were ' many instances chiefs of smaller | with the result in the Washington | Trustee Robert J, Hartnett, Mineola, turned up in a Miami, William H. Kni R The roles in which they serv dispatching his victims. - He ap. ffin, Rockville Cen- ti ert village _ departments are - not| case but \just to get the record | Fla., police station . yesterday, | are: William Mills, Jr., \1mm“: events spent several hours in the | {® banker, and Dean Arthur D. pss iO 2 asserted - |trained policemen-and, of course, straight\ he said New York state | broke and wanting to return home. editor; Leo Zimmerman, city edie gnkmn’n iH. apartment. {In 2\; Whitman. . mi e w9ulddnot stand fo\ |they do not have to be, for the | \did ask for a reconsideration of | The boy told police, they said, | jor: Bill Franklin, assistant editor; fully washed his hands, they said, | , D\ Smith said that the commit- f e mayor's order and inter- type of police work required. They | the Adkins case.\ | that he had taken the train down | gay; Brown, sports editor; Bertram between the time he sank in in| tee had availed itself of an un- erence. do have to be policemen, however, mre mez. south, and had \had a nice time.\ Bock and Harold Goeller, copy strument in the head of Byrnes) USU®l opportunity to organize a Trustees _ Hartnett and |once they are actepted into the FUNERAL RITES SET _| Miami authorities notifted the Nas- desk men; Robert Kerth, Alex» and the moment he throttled the | Curriculum . which might | profit Bickmeyer leave the board on county department with its gen- sau missing persons bunny. WhO | ander Boecker, Raymond ' Mikan, girl from cumulative American educa- | - MO26#Y> Mayor Esta- erally high wage scale and its| Services For Mineola Girl To Be! £0t in touch with the boy's par- Douglas Fisher, Art Newill, George After brief questioning, James | tional experience brook a four to one majority. M , Psa ay s Held Tontorrow en's, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fen- | Malkowsky and Gerald Abelge Fitton, 35, named by Francis J,| . The liberal arts program for th Mayor Estabrook was the one Continued on Page 2, Col. 8 ster, Sr. Mrs. Fenster left today to wite, reporters; Lawrence Fine Kear, ' assistant chief police In- | first two years will be devoted t; who demoted Goldstein. So - uewjanang Funeral services for Theresa | bring the youth back. columnist. ' * imfir. as having threatened to|Reneral college work to provide Goldstein is waiting, perhaps SCOUT NEWSHOUNDS Bellefonte, 4, who was fatally | Another person reported missl \get even\ with the Gedeons, was released last night. Kear said Fit- ton had tried to \shake down\ Mrs. Gedeon while he was an ap- praiser in; the Home Owners Loan Corp. ,an subsequently the two women testified against him. who has undergone since Sundgy in con- ad been i pole nig today, at police were per- alibis. THREE BRITISH SHIPS ATTACKED BY REBELS be not particularly - concerned, since his pay envelope hasn't cl all the shift- ing. does reflect, however, that those gold bars are getting slightly frayed from give-and-take, headquarters is an official-notice ca all vacations, which were due to start. tomorrow. | 'The reason, the student with a broad and bal- anced cultural background as a preparation for the more vanced and specialized work in the upper years. Qualified upper- burned when her dress caught fire in her home at 8 Arlington street, Mineola, will be held at Corpus Christ! Roman Catholic church, Mineola, tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. Burial will follow at Holy Rood cemetery, Westbury. Theresa was the daughter of Anthony and Stella Bellefonte and she is survived by her parents brothers and two sisters. | during the past week, Arthur Lail | 52, a builder, of 118 Pennywood avenue, Roosevelt, was back in his home today recovering from what was described as an attack of am- nesia. Lail was found in Jamaica yesterday, Lieutenant | Theodore Magee, head of the missing per- sons bureau, reported. He had , two | been missing since the previous Tuesday, Rift Between WPA Heads Threatens Nassau Relief National, State Officials In Dispute Which May Throw 75 Men Out Of Work Confugpn reigns in local relief administration circles today over | the threat of WPA authorities to withdraw their support from the federal surplus commodities division. NO OPPOSITION 1S SEEN TO GARDEN CITY SLATE Firemen's Election To Lack Con+ tests When Vote Is Held April 8 No contests for fire department offices are expected when the [Garden City firemen meet at the Seventh street fire headquarters for the annual election, April 8, 1 was announced today by Chief Charles Nimmich. The new sate, presented recent» ly by the nominating committée, includes the following, the chief said : William _ L._ Robinson, . chief; Frederick L. Mattfeld, first assist» ant chief; Walter J, Roche, see» ond assistant chief; Thomas J, Taylor, treasurer; George Gray, assistant treasurer; Alfred B. Kim= ball, secretary; James M. Clark, George Gray, Hugh S Marion Tacchi and Walter E. Rine gle, directors. TODAY'S REVIEW-STAR DISAPPOINTED BY FIRE Kager Reporters Answer WWWn-Bflw Blaze To Mention « Boy Scouts \running\ the Re- view-Star today almost had a real story to work on this morning, ex- cept that a Valley Stream fire which they had been sent to cover allied to measure up to expecta- ione. When the alarm first came over the police broadcasting station, the scouts waiting in the editorial rooms were assigned to cover the fire. Whether it was a house or FAILS TO DEFEND suit | Shepard Barclay Internationally known Bridge authority who contributes articles to THE SATURDAY avz. NINO POST COLLIER PHE LADIES mHouE JOURNAL RED BOOK MAGALINE and other periodicals and who in the author of ,565.10 against judgment of $3 ette Viebrock, 40 South Main rara corraacr sampos - || So CUtTD® load rhnnm‘ w At COW T R A CT ' || \On Moreh WITH ANY PARTNER | || trawler BRIDGE Fun of the liner plarimme ar _, || 8 «ip ot VERSES Mt A Oisher iLesiie Wich (Angale Patri) Reviewing the Nees -- Soul Fine) REVIEW-STAR Win-April,