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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
i 1 C €. For Longer g nual Stream, yesterday. relationship l w\ dependency on social security measures, pen- and- unions to the general ime situation. 14 aver county. hans, association In Scores Crime Surveys Scaring the superfluity of \crime | ion programs and s s : ignore the roots of the prob- lem,\ Mr. Bates warned of the between. the of citizens afternoon . assemb called to order by Harold */ ~ WEEKEN EDITION Sgn. its. g: * 'Rutmod a» fnd Clase Mater wt ihe. PestotMcs of Freepart, N. T, Snieys'lTi-lt Ignore Period Than One Year (Picture On Page 5) The growth of collective -sommunity - influences - the church, school, and club-will mark crime as a symptom of social degeneracy, international ~penolo- licted before the an- assau county teachers conference at the Central high school auditorium, Valley \I'd like to see the time when and girls, men and women have to work for what they and self- a re‘nlufic Over 1,000 Attend The address featured the all-day conference which was attended by 1,000 teachers in the first and second supervisory . districts . in Sanford was . Bur- resident, and woeation read by Rev. Otto Mz. William F. Houston, Cen- Continued on Page 3, Col. 4 ATTORNEY MUST Pay COSTS To REVIVE CASE Rules Lawyer Can Restore VOL. XXXIX Ne. 40 Golf Stars Will Inaugurate First Municipal Lawrence officials will open first municipally-owned links on Course On Long Island Today the new $135,000 village golf course, Long Island, with formal ceremonies club. \DATES ARE CHANGED || Severat hundred persons, includ- FOR MINEOLA FAIR Dates: for. the Mineola Fair, announced as - Sep- tember 20 25, will be Sep- tember 27 to October 2 to avoid conflict 'with the Jewish holi~ days during the second week of September and the national convention .of the American Legion, which opens in New York city September 20, direc- tors of the Queens-Nassau Ag- ricultural society said today. Fred D. Baldwin, secretary of the fair, in announcing the change of dates, also, reported that directors of the society have set October 2, the last day of the fair, for the; automobile speed races. The program for the other days in the week will be announced later. Lauded By Doctors At Lido Meeting surance law recently nor annual of which ends today. country club hotel. Elmer F. Andrews, principa co-0 their patients. the in «New York. Dr. Milton J. Wilson of Manhat~ vice - DOCTORS PMISE - NSURMGE LAN A resolution commending the state- workmen's compensation in- put into ef- fect will be forwarded to Gover- the State Homeo- society, as the re- of a vote taken at the 85th the group, The resolution states that the law \is working out well, from the viewpoint of the physician, the worker and the insurance carrier.\ The three-day meeting consisted of business sessions, a golf tourna- ment and a banquet held last night in the dining hall at Lido State Industrial Commissioner speaker at the dinner, asked the members of the society for their ation in helping to prevent accidents on the road, in the home and in industry. Calling attention Dr. Claude A. Burnett told. of plans being made to develop a medical school at Flower hospital ing town and county officials, ex- ecutives of other villages in the Branch and golf celebrities are ex- pected to be on hand when Acting Mayor Charles A. Jacobson de- clares the-course formally in op- eration at . m., and starts play with a foursome to include Trus- tee Cecil B. Rubkay, Justice of the Peace Leslie J. Ekenberg and Bernard Rose. Mr. Jacobson will act for Mayor Robert L. Hamill, who is en route to England for the coronation. Golf Stars To Play Supervisor J. Russel Sprague, Nassau Republican léader; County Judge Cortland A. Johnson, Ralph C. Cook, town tax receiver; Mayor Emest E. Elderd of Cedarhurst and members of the Cedarhurst, Hewlett Neck, Hewlett Harbor, Hewlett Bay Park and Woods- burgh village boards will be among the officials present. Many of them will play following the Ja- cobson group around the course. The ceremonies will be in charge of Lawrence Trustees Ruskay, James S. McHugh and Louis S. Weeks and an advisory committee including Mrs. Morgan S. Smith, Edmund Levinson, Willard _J. Dinan, Daniel Cox and Charles Rich. pro, former Long Island amateur champion, and Helen Hicks, for- mer metropolitan open champion, a resident of Woodmere, will be among the links celebrities pres- ent. Mayo will play an exhibi- tion match. There will be several amateur contests including a kickers' handicap, putting and driving events. Charles Seaman, course man- ager, completed renovation work on the course and clubhouse in time for the opening. Greens and fairways have been reseeded and put into condition and moderniz= ing improvements made to the clubhouse. Opening of the municipal course brings to fruition @ project initi- ated by former Mayor Kenneth M. Spence. Purchase of the bank- rupt Causeway Holding company's assets were. negotiated largely through his efforts. WATTERSON TO RUN FOR SCHOOL TRUSTEE 1 Joseph B. Watterson 'of New- bridge avenue, East Meadow, an architect with offices -at 1551 Franklin avenue, Mineola, has an- nounced 'he is a- candidate -for élection as trustee of: the + |-. Mr. has been en- dorsed by the East Meadow Civic association, Mr. Watterson served case is restored, Justice Dodd ordered that it be placed at the foot of the May 14 reserve calendar. Ferkin seeks the award for services as special counsel to the district in 1938, ® Long Island ART : as a member of the Nassau county a Hoo naan \ato Sis €OOD COMMUNITY INFLUENCE SEEN AS CRIME PREVENTION Village Officials To Root Of Problem $135,000 Linksat Lawrence @ Hit By Bates TALKS AT PARLEY Tfl‘ifl‘ Favor Contracts | to42y on the 90-acre tract formerly comprising the Lawrence country RCH MANS WL PROVIDES MONEY tla Arthur Williams, Wealthy Roslyn Harbor Resident, Aids Several Causes VILLAGE TO RECEIVE PARK AND CARILLON Trust Fund Established To Give Blind Person Dog As Guide A \blind man of good character and habits\ will get a dog to lead him about, a memorial park, in eluding a famous carilion will be established, and funds to en- courage industrial or general safe- ty will be set up as a result of some of the many provisions in the will of the late Arthur Wil- liams, retired vice-president of the New York Edison company of Brook Corners, Roslyn Harbor. The will, disposing of an estate valued at more than $1,000,000, was filed yesterday at the office of Surrogate Leone D. Hawel}. Provides For Park The famous carillon tower, op- posite the Williams home, which has attracted thousands of visi- tors, especially on Christmas eves, is included in the provision for the establishment of the Williams Me- morial Park. The park, it is pro- vided in the will, may be deeded either to Roslyn, or Roslyn Heights providing one of those villages agrees to assume the maintenance costs. A trust fund providing $250 a year is set up for the purchase of a trained dog to lead \some blind man of good character and habits, whose pecuniary circumstances are pen s , the provides, be used for any me- chanical invention or surgery which may be developed to nig- plant dogs as \the eyes of the blind.\ Williams bequeathed $150 a year to the American Museum of Safety, to be known as the \Ar- thur Williams Fund.\ for encouraging outstanding achievement by invention,. de- velopment, plan or service in the field of greater improved indus- trial and general safety. If for any reason the fund is not es- tablished by the museum, then it will be given to the National Safe- ty council, it was stated.. An ad- dition bequest of $500 a year to the American Museum of Safety was provided for the promotion and encouragement of safety, Bequests To Employees He left two month's salary each to six employees who had been in his service for a year or more; in- come from a $150,000 trust fund to a brother, Edward Williams of Pelham Manor; brother, Theodore Williams of Larchmont and two sisters, Genevieve Markell and Fannie U. Stott, in equal shares. The testator provided <a trust fund of $50,000 to nephews Arthur P. Williams and Edward Markell and a niece Shirley Williams. A trust fund of $6,000 was provided for Malcolm Boyd, superintendent of 'the Williams's estate.. Still another trust fund of $12,000 was established for the benefit of Mrs. C. S. Williams, step-mother of the All of the residuary estate was ordered held as a trust fund in ty -with various sugges- given, subject to authority of the trustees, for establishment of uhhahnhm and income pay- ments. AN LONG ISLAND, NASSAU COUNTY, N. Y¥.- He pro- vided that the money shall beused SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1937. BRITISH SET TO DEFY wwexty-two Pads i ' B a AND RUSH BILBAO EVACUATION Wreckage of this machine, 1 MEN ARRESTED ' - WNALLEGED PLOT Attempt To Steal Sadles Fails, Police Report; Girl\ Also Held 'Two men from Fort Meyer, Va., one a soldier, were in Lawrence police custody today accused of saddles from the Rockaway Hunt- ing stables and sell them to army polo players. Held Without Bail Earl Hamman, 21, a soldier at Fort Meyer, andJohn C. Vander- wege, 26, unemployed, of Virginia Highlands, Va., a suburb adjoining jail without bail today on at- tempted burglary charges. Mary Ann Pavelick, 21, whom police say Hamman brought from a Pennsylvania village and got a job asa domestic at 20 Crescent street, Hewlett, is in the county jail in defaultof $500 bail onan adultery charge. Three Lawrence policemen fig- ured in the arrests of the trio. Pa- trolman John Stankard found the two men parked in a car on Jor- gen lane shortly -after midnight They © explained they two-car accident at Merrick road and Ballard avenue, Valley Stream, late last night, was strewn for some distance along the highway by the crash impact. Police reported Philip Es- plotting to steal expensive polo the army camp, are in the county | involved in a CRASH TURNS AUTO Hospital After Crash At Mer- rick Road, Ballard Avenue said. Ethel street, Valley Stream, | multiple body bruises. chine, released after physical was juries. Patrolman Arthur The former's car ports say. wrecked. TEACHER HONORED Both For Eunice Pearson An hour later, Patrolman: Wal- ter Pitt spotted the car, this time with only Hamman in it. He took ; OVER THREE TIMES Valley Stream Man Taken To The alleged attempts of a mo- torist, later charged with speeding, to out-race a county \ghost pa- trol\ resulted in a two-car col- lision-at Ballard avenue and Mer- rick road, Valley Stream, and caused injuries to two drivers at 10:35 o'clock last night, police |_ Philip Esponschied, 40, of 106 the { motorist charged with speeding, is in Meadowbrook hospital suffer- ing from four fractured ribs, abra- sions of the face and hands and Charles McKenna, 28, of 59 Rollings street, Lynbrook, driver of the other ma- examination by Dr. Francis E. Clarke for possible in- Police reports states that Espens- chied was attempting to elude a \ghost patrol\ car being operated Klepper. race ended when ~Espens- chied's car was in collision with the one driven by McKenna. The overturned | three {times after the crash, police re- cars -. were Oceanside Faculty Gives Party Eunice Pearson, teacher in Oceanside for 25 years who is now enchied, 40, of Ethel street, Valley Stream, suf- fered four fractured ribs while Charles Me- Kenna, 28, of Rolling street, Lynbrook, sus- tained bruises. Review-Star Photographer > School TAL Ast uue AT FREEPORT | Six Cent Increase Needed To Restore Pay Cuts To Teachers With an estimated budget of $385,424 or $26,000 more than last year, school taxes in Freeport will jump from the present rate of 96 cents per $100 of assessed valua- tion to $1.02 during the coming year. The figures were announced at a public hearing on the budget in the high school library, last night, with only 10 taxpayers in attendance. Dr. John W. Dodd, superintend~ ent of schools, explained that the increase is caused by the restor- ation of teachers' pay cuts, and the hiring of two new teachers. Mem- bers cf the board spent. two hours explaining the various items. in the budget which will be voted on at the annual school meeting on s . Charles Bazaars!“ lections to many e es. - filial-LDwnrulmeldofl-h- east Civic association WW ed the board on its work, ring that the budget might even have been greater to give local school children every facility for better education. He announced that his associa- tion will ask the operation of other village lons in ar- a community testimonial to Caroline G. Atkinson, Eng- lish teacher in the high school who is voluntarily retiring at the end \ in Valley Stream _| Warships Standing Ready To Help, Report Says OFFICIALS QUIET Rebels' Leader Expected To Weaken On Stand As Pressure Increases BULLETIN HENDAYE, Franco-Span- ish Frontier, May 1-(P)- The captains of nine British merchantmen, ignoring Spanish insurgent to respect any foreign ships inside their Bay of Biscay blockade, agreed to evacu» ate as many children as pos- sible from Bilbao. LONDON, May 1-(P)- British merchantmen, aided by British warships, will carry out the evacuation of civilians from Bilbao with of without the consent of in« surgent General Francisco Franco, informed s0 ure W'A No government official, however, would admit receiving Franco's announced refusal to respect ships evacuating refugees from the be- sieged Basque capital. See Franco Binding Instead, it was stated the lPv- ernment \assumes Franco will as- sent\ tothe move. British: warships have been dered \to protect l-q refugees outside the mile limit. 'The men-of~ not, however, go within that Authorized spokesmen: pointed out Franco never before had inter= fered with ships leaving Spanish government ports, but only thase seeking to enter the ports. a Ships Stand Ready ¥ The captains of the nine j which already have reached bao' through the insurgent gauntlet, said they 'hoped to able to remove between 4,000 5,000 children to St. Jean De around the bend of the Bay him to headquarters for investiga- tion.. Shortly after, Patrolman