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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
6 ss - HOME EDION Freeport, Rockville Centre, Gar- den City, Hempstead, Baldwin, Oceanside, Long Beach, Island Park, Roosevelt and Villages to the East. pr THE WEATHER: Showers, Colder Tonight; mi Partly Cloudy and ecu-g YOLs XXXI We. PRICE THREE Pai o s ane ins - *~ Hernia tes meee ho noen i aat a me- --f - --- mg ran mgd DICTATOR: CRIES - NAZI PRESS OPENS ATTACK _ TRAIL HEPBURK'S es AMERICA on spp; _ ACAIMST AMERICAN CHURC Fraternity's Special & Films Used To Raise: Committee Confer || Strikes at Cocktail Party ‘ A. 1. 0. Forces Demand Premier Withdraw From Labor ~- - f Negotiations ToPave Way For Dominion Inter- \i AES on |., <= »» Refugee Funds Scored vention; Two Cabinet Members Resign to change the name of hors d'oeuvres, extended maneuvers Fee - Sputting Anomeys today to include the cocktail party. Targets Of Campaign i; {CLA \° Just change its name,\ he snorted, \let's) |'Stirring Up Hatred Behind The Altar,\ Papers Charge Now. Und®TWAY at ihe ide nomenciatine of fors the Sues; Uta-ted 5°8th LLaborhIrofibles And . Feature southern Lynching News OSHAWA, Ont., April 15-(P)-Oshawa's embattled C. I. O. union of General Motors workers demanded today that Ontario's premier withdraw from strike negotiations, accusing him of a \dictatorship\ that would rob workers of their right to strike. . Byzformal resolution, the local of the United Aytomoblle Workers of America, an affiliate of John L. Lewis's Com- mittee for Industrial Organization, sought to shove Premier Mitchell Hepburn out to make way foz.dominion intervention, Refuse To Negotiate The workers went on record \as refusing to conduct any negotia- tions as long as Premier Hepburp is a party to them.\ The General Motors employees' Charging that prosecution of| burly Texan said the authors charged him with not going ambulance-chasing - lawyers - in| | far enough. other places is driving them into \Almost to a man,\ he added, \they command that we} the \fertile felds\ of Nassau coun-) declare war on these afternoon filtherinzs over anchovy ty, the Bar association and District] and alcohol-and they aren't prohibitionists either?' Attorney Martin W. Littleton He listed his objections to the cocktail get-together: moved today to banish the illegal They give a timid talker too much false courage. practice. B They give a large talker too big an opportunity. Serenbetz Rallies Association They give the average man a cross between an ear \An investigation is now on,\| ache and & stomach ache. BERLIN, April 15-(P)-Nazidom, hitting out at direct or implied criticism from abroad, struck at 'Americat churches today for allowing \vicious machinations under the cloak of religious observances.\ The Nazi press loosed furious tirades against the shoOW» ing in the Riverside memorial church, New York, of an antl Nazi film seeking to raise $400,000 for the relief of Chris tian German refugees. J. Cuff, general chairman. NEW MAIL ROUTE urged him to step out \and allow resolution accused the provincial executive of having \substituted compulsion for arbitration\ and the Dominion department of labor to act as mediators.\ The resolution was adopted at a meeting of 2,000 men and wom- en last night after Hepburn forced resignation of two members of his wabinet, Labor Minister David Croll and Attorney General Ar- ur W. Roebuck, . Both Croll and Roebuck were considered extremely liberal members .of the Ontario govern- ment, They were labor layryers before joining with Hepburn. Hepburn Adds To Power After the resignaiions the pre- mier took over the labor portfolio himself and one of his first acts was to ask the Dominion govern- acome of the reques for Egan-“mien from Ottawa doubt- Labor Minister Norman Rogers and Prime Minister MacKenzie King indicated there would be no federal intervention, however, in the absence. of requests from Hep- 231.1: or General Motors of Can- Hepburn, meanwhile, declared he had \no immediate intention\ of calling & general election, to meek a mandate on his attithde toward the Lewis labor movement. He said, however, that circum- stances might arise at any time to make such a course necessary. Roebuck, relieved of the attor- ney gengralship, wrote to the pre- mier his argument \the unions of this country have an undoubted legal right to organize in such form as in their wisdom they saw and should have an equal free- m with employers in choosing eir affiliations and representa- tives.\ Labor Strife Spreads The dominion government and several provinces were confronted with a rising tide of labor disputes, Widely separated strikes held more than 4,400 workers idle, in cluding those in Oshawa, while 8,000 Montreal garment workers North Bellmore. Man, 60, In Critical Condition At Hospital | Thomas Cook, 60, of Waltoffer avenue, North Bellmore, is in critical condition in Meadowbrook hospital . with injuries suffered when the car he was driving col- lided with another machine at Jerusalem road and Merrick ave- nue, East Meadow, shortly before 10 o'clock last night. Three young women, slightly burt in the crash, are recuperating at their homes. Pinned In Wreckage 'Cook was driving east on Jeru- salem road, according to police, when his car collided with a ma- chine being operated south on Merrick avenue by Alfred Cal- cagnino, 27, of 44 Catlin avenue, Roosevelt. Cook's machine over- turned and was demolished and he was pinned in the wreckage. Po- lice reported that both driver: ap- arently failed to use precaution £1 approaching the intersection. Calcagnino was not hurt, but his wife, Dorothy, 22, suffered lacera- tions of the right hand, possible fracture of the right ankle and contusions of the left ankle. The Misses Sally, 21, and Geraldine Jansen, 19, of 154-18 20th avenue, Whitestone, who were riding with Cook, were also injured. The former suffered lacerations of the right hand and st and her sis- ter lacerations of fhe forehead and right leg. All of the injured were treated at the hospital. County Detective Matthew Sim- mons of the first squad, Merrick, investigated and Sergeant Thomas Brockel and Patrolman Henry W. Rose assisted at the scene. POLIGE TO CHECK declared Judge George B. Seren- \Good conversation,\ he said, \can't be manufactured JOINS 2 SHUHES betz of Hempstead, president of | by soaking the tongue in a concoction with a name like Truck Will Ply Between Mineola And Freeport After April 26 Cross-island mail delivery serv- ice between villages on the south and north shores of Nassau county will start April 26, according to information received today by Thomas J. Hartnett, postmaster at Hempstead. Official notification of the approval of the new service was received from C. N. Cole, sec- ‘fie plhix. t‘which was sponsored‘ by the Postmasters' association of Nassau county, calls for one round trip daily on a \star\ route. This will handle first, second and third 'class mail- and packages of all descriptions. Truck To Carry Mail One truck will be put into. op- | eration on the new \star\ route. Mail from south shore villages in- tended for this route will be sent to Freeport and the truck will leave that point at 11:10 o'clock every morning. On the way to Mineola the truck will pick up mail bags at Roosevelt, Hempstead and Garden City. Mail for the north shore vil- dages will be put on the train at Mineola and mail from the north shore villages for south shore communities will be picked up at | Mineola at noon. To Save 24 Hours The new service will save near- ly 24 hours in delivery of mail be- tween the north and south shore villages, The present system car- ries the mail to New York, from where it is put on another train to come back to Nassau county. John Hardy, superintendent of the second railway mail division, the association, \to stamp out am- V‘ bulance chasing lawyers of every type. We feel it is the duty of as- | in this type of probe and all evi- dence gathered will be submitted to the appellate division of the su- preme court.\ David Hill of New Hyde Park, {Samuel Greason of Garden City and Jerome Loewenberg of Sea) fClifl were appointed to represent | \the association in gathering com- plaints and evidence. They con- ferred yesterday with District At- torney Littleton. Prosecutor Littleton stated that {his entire office will give 100 per |eent. co-operation to the commit- {tee in its efforts to weed out » In & joint statement) Hill and | Greason said: \Heretofore the law itself has not been definite enough. That has | been corrected. Complainants have been reluctant to bring complaints against one lawyer to another. \Lawyers who have 'been IH a position to know circumstances of ambulance chasing and fee-split-} ting have been reluctant to turn over-their information to proper | authorities. \We now have a wealth of infor- | mation, which does not yet repre- | sent lega' evidence, relative to| ambulance chasing and fee-split-| ting lawyers. It is not confined to | non-resident attorneys but there is every indication that there are} some right here in the county. \Various methods are resorted to by the ambulance chasers, There are indications that \go-betweens\ are making a business of drum- ming up litigation for unethical lawyers, to the detriment of the ethically practising attorney. \We are informed that gifts or cash payments are being made in some police stations and hospitals 'by lawyers, law firms or their rep- resentatives. There is a suspicion that some of these contact people are hospital attaches or policemen. | 'Horse's Laugh,' or 'Red-headed Archie.'\ His remedy for curing the hors d'oeuvres situation was to call them dingle doos, which he said the average sociation members to take the lead) | man could pronounce without a French lesson. | He doesn't know what he can substitute for the cock- tail party- but he's invited to one this afternoon and may get an idea. 4 Days in Washington Wait Nassau's Champion Speller Boys, Girls Attention! Winner Of Review- Star Contest To Seek National Title By MABY RITA HALPIN Sp: ingtime is spelling time again, boys and girls. Put away your bats and jump-ropes, and dip into your dic- tionaries. The Nassau Daily Review-Star once more invites the county spelling champion to-spend four days in Washington D. C., and compete with the country's best in the 1937 national bee on.May 25. On May 14, all you grammar school word handlers will meet at the Hempstead high school on Greenwich street, at 2:30 p. m., to fight for the chance to be that champion. And, we hope, to de- cide the future winner in the country-wide tilt. This year's representative of Nassau in Washington will be our fourth aspirant to the national crown. Way back in 1934 a Sea Cliff lad, Edward Meany, intro- duced the county to contenders from other states. His successor, Virginia Chimeri, of Roosevelt, beat his reeard in the big bee but failed to ing home the title. Trygve Tholfsen, 1936 county champion pushed the standing up several more notches but he, too, dropped out in the final joust. Trygve took second place in the state bee at Syracuse last fall, and person, be post- The outbursts carried s Wem headings as \anti-German 'Iyimg film!\ and \Jewish emigrant BRANCH WOM Police Seek Polite Thug,] After Brutal Holdup At Lawrence Lawrence and county police | pressed an intensive search today for a holdup man who seized a 58- year-old woman, threw her brutally to the ground and robbed. her of her purse in an isolated section of Herrick drive last night. The holdup, similar to several other attacks on women in the past two years, brought five radio cars from Lawrence and fourth precinet to the village. 'They scoured an area of several square miles for two hours without find- ing a trace of the man, described & as being a white, about five feet, @ n_. STATE INCOME TAX | RETURNS DUE TODAY) Tonight's the last night to file state income tax returns. | less the returns are made in they must marked by midnight to avoid | penalty. A last-minute rush is | expected. The return must be accom- panied by payment of at least | 50 per cent. of the normal tax and the total 1 per cent. emer~| gency tax, Where returns are | filed within 60 days of today, | the penalty may be 5 per cent. | of the total tax, The minimum penalty is $2, with 1 per cent. ! per month interest charges FATAL ACCIDENT two inches tall, wearing a light overcoat and using good English. Was Dragged Into Lot Mrs. Elizabeth Reynolds, 58, of 119 Monroe street, Lawrence, was walking through Herrick drive | shortly before midnight. As she reached a point about 300 feet south of Central avenue, she heard footsteps behind her. As she started to turn around, the man | éthrew himself on her, dragged her into an adjoining vacant lot, wrestled her about and flung her on her face to the ground. Her lower lip was cut as her face hit the ground. \If you scream I'll kill you,\ her attacker warned her in low, cul- | tured tones. He picked up her pocketbook from the ground and fed. Mrs. Reynolds went to the near- est house and told her story. The householder telephoned police and a radio alarm bringing the five cars was flashed immediately. stirring up hatred before (the altar!\ \Un-Christian\ Methods Cited The official German neWi agency, Deutches Nachrichtenbur® said, in discussing the film which has Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, pastor of the Riverside church, for its chief figure: \This film reveals with terrible clearness the un-Christian meths ods with which a new anti-fig: man drive is to be launched in American churches by a small uns American clique whose aim 4s to misuse Ameri religious sent» ments for nefarious ends.\ The Kreuzzeitung in“ \painful indignation\ and: \We can not believe the pafl of the United States do not re whithe se vicious tions undef the cloak of religious observance must end.\ Continu« \ Friendship Urged The paper expressed the the case would not \tean the in- herent friendship of the American people for Germany.\ At the same time the press playedsup the lynching of two ne- groes at Duck Hill, Miss., sparing their readers none of the details of the torture The press in its anti-American campaign also has stressed dis- astrous economic consequences of the strike wave in the United States. The attacks on American churches, economic and living com» ditions, however, was just ome phase of the widespread onslaught on all anti-Nazi activities. Heightened by what was dee scribed officially as \a very sharp protest\ to the vatican over Pope Pius's Easter encyclical accush the Reich of violating the 1 concordat, wide publicity has been i'ven to revived prosecutions Of! Catholic priests and nuns for vig, lation of foreign exchange rm,“ tions and charges of high treason and immorality. - Organs like the Stuermer and wy intend though rules bar his admission to Correct Grammar Cited Das Schwarze Korps have M6 m; under c to quit work conducted a condi= firmxzn’ for to “gm the New York state contest again, Because of the darkness, Mrs.| doubled their attacks on Cathol€® C. I. O.-affillated mairiers, 1,000 tions in Nassau county c0-O0per~ ue, Owl-“271011“! at. |it is known he will make another Reynolds was unable to give @n as well as Jews. strong, threatened to strike at ation with officials of aches to enter a ward and talk :| HY 10\ the Washington trip. He accurate description of her assail= Indications point to renewed Fernie, B. C., unless demands. for ters! association, the without the patient} is now in the eighth grade at the ant. His correct English and un- anti-semitic drives, the signs M= wage increases and union recogni- =-- plan to the authorities at Wash- £ Belimore public school. | -- 2:1\in demeanor frigid! the great- cluding the uo—dayl ban on Java: | ington. Continued on P 3, Col ightened. A mpression on her. atherings, extra close segre; fiofixgrjhfls Oshawa's mayor, Score Of Cases Mark“ , Col. | But do not be frigh by Agreement Reached Just] Three other women have been fmd strict enforcement of the Alex Hall, awaited reaction the international border to his \ultimatum\ to Homer Martin, SEAMAN IS INJURED mas OF NEGROES such competition, Each and every IN EXPLO_S__I(_)_N ON SHIP Off List As Result Of ; Suleviy w IN CITIES IS STUpiEp| Continued on Page 3, Col. 5 Schroeder Arrest attacked and robbed under similar | Numberg race laws by sever@ circumstances in Lawrence in the penalties on relations between past two years, all in high-class Jews and Aryan women of whith | Before Trial; Amount Not Announced -As w. A. h residential areas within a half- today's Stuermer enumerated 10, mm‘f.°§y‘£‘.‘1m‘.fiu‘m ii. Man Is -Taken Abcard BY Assembly To Voie On Pian To TO RESUME SESSIONS f mile of last night's scene, In each cases. A United States in support of the|. Nassau detectives today started Name Commission To Start yupor Naval Miliis Will Meet At\ Settlement for an undisclosed attack, the assailant has made| Other opponents of the Nal Oshawa workers, a systematic check of \phantom Probe School Tonight amount was announced today in £004 his escape despite a swift regime who have remained in the | Unless an Oshawa peace is con- burglar\ reports to close them the $50,000 death-claim of George Police net without leaving a clue, country are not generally mol | Battalion 31, Junior Naval |E, Fahys, Jr., of 100 Seventh street. ppopr e: ank to long as they avoid the slight A muffin against the Long Is- ACE PRETZEL COMPANY j“13mm\ a: satibveraiveet‘l/cgvlflt‘ road. nrepentants, ow Jury Was Drawn FIGHTS $2,500 VERDICT | made to feel the full force of the . Elvin N. Edwards, former dis- Seeks To Have Award Set Aside 1m: ‘Z’nd‘h'mfiiimimf g I trict attorney, counsel for Fahys, As Excessive; Decision closely watched fry agents 'of a '|haited the trial after a jury bad Is Reserved party's foreign organizations. been drawn before Justice Charles Justice Charles J. Dodd reserved ____--_-_--- 1 J. Dodd than”; viurfamnzd cgurt deciuirlmg yur‘vte'rggo on a Togo; to | R yesterday. war inform us- {set aside the $2, away rs. held / lice Dodd that he and counsel for Mary Noro of 70 Floral boulevard, today und from 10 a, M the railroad had agreed upon a | Floral Park, against the Ace Pre- |ig 5 p, m, at 74 North Village ¥@= settlement amount. zel company of Brooklyn. nue, Rockville Centre, 'by Fahys sued as administrator of A jury in Nassau supreme Court women's guild of the «Church the estate of his wife, Kathryn J. awarded the verdict in Mrs. Nor0'®| mme Ascension. Mrs. Charles Fahys, who was burned to death $10,000 negligence action a@8Nst porpely js (n charige, when the car she was driving was the defendant company. Counsel - struck by an electric train at the fof the company moved to have Meadow 'street crossing, Garden tht verdict set aside as excessive. Mrs. Noro contended that she ane 2000) $00 589 | way injured March 11, 1936 when contended. the car in which she was riding, Wind, Heep, | driven by her husband, John Noro, cluded this week, Hall telegraphed from the active files. to Martin, 'United States members To of the union mhust strike. Failing this, I am advising all Canadian workmen Monday t to aban- don recognition of union idea.\ He said he would tell the Oshawa strikers \they are being fooled and hoodwinked and that the interna- tional union is not playing the game with them.\ e resigning minister, Croll, led anpburn for his opposi« ion to the C, I. O. movement, say- ing the union members bad acted \within their rights as citizens of Cannda- and the empire.\ \You base your attack upon a conviction that the °C. 1.-O. should not be permitted to invade Can- ada,\ Croll. wrote to the premier, \when you must have known that agreements. had already been SPEAKER \EWING ”I'm, ed by the C. L O. with th ~s £1sz {Annarfiunnl ”J’T'T; Baseball rue-mm wa and the Goodri ire \Satefactory\ ruc company o END HAM FAKING company of Kitchener,\ ‘m Lewis. in Washington, denied \Tris une baseballs im- % In the premier's charges that C.-L O. and Communism were \marching on Mmhw def= hand-in-hand.\ & feact lhl D and Aver for and 16-foot *A DRIVE ON Narcotics fe . ramen ao “MM-Huh” . . . the opeh road Reefer\ Traffic beckoning to happy ALBANY,. April \18 - (P) - days . , ..and Satur- Groundwork for a new offentivs against the narcotic traffic w»s started today with senate approval of a bill almed st distributors of \reater\ clgarettos and the marl« juana drug that forma their base. again-cred by Senstor John J. MeNaboe,. New York. city,. tha mossure provides for, the sstab- ment of a burseu. of marcotic Com day the Review Star Classified will exploit murdeipal - court lest WASHINGTON, April 16--2M-| pleaded .quilty to | The position of. the treas on yate of 60 riles | April | 13: receipts: $15,474,077. n street, East | expenditures, $18,280,148 bal- } summoned by | ance | - customs Edward | receipts) for. the month, 010.701.-g o - s. 0+ ¢ e : y\. ° #