{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, October 08, 1937, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-08/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
op A%, Wantagh, 7:30 p. my, Park. school. F: afficers of Mothers' patrol of Scout Troop No. 32 of Lyn- c were unanimously re- at the first fall meeting 'of Pi- LL =_. _-_--_-_-__-_._-» | : DO YOU KNOW? By MARIE GAUDETTE Girl Scout Naturalist What constellations are visi- in the northern hemisphere e around1um‘ Di Dipper, pper pela, Cepheus and the Mrs, Charles O'Regan is hos- chairman, Plans were made for a com- breakfast for the Girl of the troop, at Henri's on ton avenue, Sunday, October \84 The girls will first attend com- at St. Raymond's. It is . to make this an annual - ts and bunco fol- the business session, the being Mrs. Gilligan, Mrs. «A. B. Mathens and Mrs. Catherine Meetings of the group will here- wher be held at the homes of indi- vidual Mrs. O'Regan be hostess at the next meet- at her home on Wilson street, | Bast Rockaway. Wil Meet Tuesday Girt Scout troop of Mineola will meet Tuesday afternoon at M5 in the Girl Scout little with Mrs. Andrew Riedell captain, Miss Florence Chap- 'man of Hyde Park, Heutenant, and Mrs. Thomas Scott and Mrs. #. Rhodes Stanforth, two. mem- pm of the troop committee. \Mrs Arthur Stewart is chair- 3A of the cookie fizz. wh‘w‘h a ow wunder | pleted cm: next meeting or a Halloween party. $2 Return Pledge Cards _:Only 72 families in Rockville tre are sufficiently interested Scouts to to the 500 members. chairman. Rockville Centre Girl Scouts liwho have made coolte posters for South Nassau contest should deliver them to Mrs. Charles Van 17 Osborne place, on Thurs- October 14. Mrs. Van Fleet attend to the delivery to the ontest committee. | Mrs: Herman Wenzel was ap- o chairman of the cookie h starts October 25, and through the month of 3 Other appointments were Mrs. C. Schmidt,. as chairman of a ge sale to be held on No- ber 12 and 13, the place to be m later; and Mrs. Van Fleet, Mrs. Van Fleet all girls who have outgrown if uniforms, and who wish to M0! them, to get in touch want-mural!“- - t ts, Harry bberd j. Mrs. James T. Lipford. \ Meeting Canceled 0 Troop 19, Girl Scouts, has < d. a meeting scheduled 4 w.au.wfim new United States flag is fAy- from the top of the new rast brook, OFC (gt Mrs, Louis Walter and Mrs. David Wolf, Conference delegates will For the benefit of the welfare fund, an inspection of a local tu- neral parlor was planned for Mon- day £1. at 8 o'clock. A bridge October 21, in. the com- ernoon, com- munity room of the school. Pupils of the fifth grade enter- tained with-a playlet, \The Bad Baby Molar.\ Participating in the cast were Helen Smith, Lionel Gillespie, Marjorie Carl Henry, Teranskey, Violet Rbdnhnr‘t’.’ hm? WM Wil Ham White and Martin McKee- man. Miss J6hnson's second grade re- ceived the attendance award. Urges More Co-operation Purther co-operation between the home and the school was urged by Mrs. Violet Skogsberg Bergey in an address before the Parent-Teacher association of the Archer street school in Freeport, \Education is a process from which there is no recess, education is a challenge to make .us want to do a thing,\ declared the speak- or Mrs, Robert Doxsee presided at the session and greeted the mem- bers and friends, and Mrs, G, Bet:- nett Smith, program chairman, in- troduced the speaker; Mrs. Wal- ter Vogt announced a card party, October 27, in the school audi- torium, at 2 6'clock. 1 Mrs, Doxsee, Mrs. L. A. Howe, Mrs. Thomas Gurney and Mrs. Ralph Golden were famed dele- efferson, October 20, are Mrs. Otto: Jack Priedman, Mrk. Vogt and Mrs. Henry l{full-1.1111, well enter- Seated As President At Event Sunday Morris Fennenbock of Reyam road, Lynbrook, will be installed as president of Temple Emanu- E1 at exercises to be held at the temple, Langdon and Lyon places, Lynbrook, Sunday evening at 8 o'clock. Others to be installed in- clude: Morris Karp, vice-president; Ira M. Pike, treasurer; Mrs. William Van Aalten, corresponding secre- tary; Mrs. M. C. Green, recording secretary; Julius Shapiro, finan- cial secretary, Board of directors: Isidore Weidhorn, retiring president; Samuel Rossby, Moe Brody, Sid- ney Benjamin and Dr. M. C. Green. Finance committee, Sid- neg-lawnmln and Carl Heller. bbi Harold I. Saperstein, Robert Weinstein, chairman of the board of directors and Alfred Nauheim, retiring vice president, will bethe installing officers Harrison Robitzek I‘m senfeld, as guides. A musleal pro- gram will include vocal selections by Marjorie Robb, accompanied by Walter Blaille. Mr. Fennenbock replaces Isidore Weidhorn as president. He has been active in temple, fraternal and civic affairs in recent gem He was chairman of the United Jewish a in 1936 and treas« urer in 1937. He organized and served as chancellor of Nassau lodge, Knights of Pythias. A reception will follow the cere- monies in the community room of the temple. TO OPEN BINGO SERIES Freeport Elks Welfare Group To Start Games Tonight A fall series of bingo parties sponsored by the welfare commit- tee of the rt lodge of Elks will start in the clubhouse tonight and contin each Friday night until . Chri , Past Exalted Ruler Arved Larsen, chairman of the committee, announced today. Final plans for the the rt of the Elks Good ¢ in the basement of the municipal building and for ber Revision Unit Guest At Merrick / hardt, Alfred chairman of the commission for governmental re- vision, gave an exposition on the new charter. Oakwood avenue firehall. . Smallwood is chairman of the campaign committee. Announcement was made of a dinner to be hum“; at Fe- lice's, We e aus- pices tat-“WWW workers of election district No. 89, Merrick, with Mrs. William A. Rochester as chairman. Following the meeting, mem- bers played projecto, thr the courtesy of the Merrick Gables theatre. _ Plans Card Party North Merrick Republican club will sponsor a card party October 23 at 8 p. m., in the Camp avenue firehall, to raise campaign funds. Plans for the party were made at a club meeting Wednesday night in the hall. John Worthing, chairman, will be assisted by Emil Johnson, Mrs. W. B. Pollack, Al- bert Schade, Mrs, Edward Wilson and John W H3. J. M Schaar- schmidt, J. Edward Wilson and John M. Bartow, Republican com- mitteemen of election districts numbers 71 and 144 were named as a committee to plan a campaign rally to be held later in the month. Return From Europe . Mr. and Mrs. Otto ¥. Amendé and family: of Norwood avenue, Merrick, returned Wednesday on the 8. S. He de France from a summer in Europe. Three of their children, Kuft, Marianne and Su- gan, returned home with them. Their older daughter came home a month earlier to enter the train- ing school for nurses, St. John's hospital, Brooklyn. The family passed three months touring Ger- many, Switzerland and France. To Sponsor Benefit Mrs. Albert M. Brown, president of the Merrick branch, Needle- work Guild of America, has an- nounced plans for a benefit card party to be held October 22 at 1:30 gum. in the parish house of the urch of the Redeemer, Merrick avenue. The affair will be a des- sert- . Mrs, William A. Rochester is general chairman of the arrange- charity work, were made at a| ments committee. Serving with meeting of the committee in the| her are Mrs, Kenneth Ely ml”; promote inde oor bingo . parties was based on the success of the games held under the ices of the lodge in th mmmammxnem: CHIEF BELL SPEAKER Miss Louise Pasco Christoffel, Mrs. Amlmm - thur G. Hoelseth, Mrs. L. Hambley, Mrs. James C. S. Carter, Mre. ur T. Bieghler and Mrs, Augustus B. Weller. sp . rs. gum Harbor 'and Miss to the: did flp 55 houses nurseries the LLP. Poi ESS CPIO Sprague Denounces Waste, Added Tax Burden At Long Beach Political maneuverings which have caused waste and extrava- at Long Beach are penaliz- the majority of Long Beach taxpayers, asserted Supervisor J. Russel Sp in that Democrat- ic last night. Use Of Taxes Supervisor Sprague, candidate for county executive, spoke at a Republican rally which over- flowed the Masonic temple. He, and Lorenzo C.Carlino, Republi- can - mayoralty - candidate, were given an enthusiastic ovation upon their introduction by Chairman John J. Knob, More than 700 per- sons were in the audience, one of the largest in the campaign to date. \If elected officials of any mu- nicipality met the exacting du- ties of their office,\ asserted Coun- ty Leader Sprague, \there would be no time for political bickering. \Relations Wm county gov- ernment are s because ci Officials collected a half 1111ng dollars of state and county taxes and held tax funds for city uses. This placed a burden on the tax- payers of the county and Increased man load of Long Beach resi- \The Republican party in the | county, and, as reorganized in this city, offers a program of perform- ance, and not one in which public officials are elected and then re- pudiated before their term ex- pires.\ John J. Knob presided. Freeport Republicans were hosts to judgeship candidates on the Hempstead township ballot at the Spartan club. Various aspects of the new district court procedure and of judicial problems were pre- sented by County Judge Cortland A. Johnson, George 8. Johnson, Leslic J. Ekenberg, Samuel Grea- son and Norman F. Lent, district court candidates, and Elvin N. Edwards, candidate for reme court. Judge Lent char that Opponents' issues were \publicity inspired nonsense.\ Edwards, former district torney, discussed the attitude of supreme court judges towards Parl ) Schomen s a - told the Oceanside Mum in the Salamander hall, that Su- at- { { ert mother, Miss Mildred Pouch also of the Conte studios, gave mono- Mark's church. The Rev. Karl F. led the devotions. Mrs. R. F. Woodhull \Dawn \Little Old Woman of Mine,\ \Homing\ and \Birthday.\ She was accompanied at the piano by Mrs. A. J. Stanton. Mrs. Gilbert H. Gendall will di- rect a Christmas sale under the sunflower group, at the church hall, December 3. Mrs. Earl J, Bennett, Mrs. Ru- dolph F. Bogen, and Mrs. Benja- min Brindley were hostesses dur- ing the social hour, TO HAVE DISCUSSION Philip Sprague, Mrs, H. Emo- gene Hoagg, Miss Marian Holley and Robert Quigley will lead a discussion on \The New World Order\ ata youth group meeting. tonight at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thurston H. Vaughn, 25 South Sycamore street, West Hempstead. Mrs. Hoagg is passing a few weeks in West Hempstead, and is conducting many forums in connection with the Baha'i Youth movement, We Carry theFull Line of NATIONAL DISTILLERS PRODUCTS Just Phone R. V. C. 38 WE DELIVER HOFF M A N'S 369 LONG BEACH ROAD OCEANSIDE C. A. MOTT for your LIQUORS We Carry a Large Stock of OLD QOVERHOLT CRAB ORCHARD TOWN TAVERN GILBEY'$ GIN Black & White Scotch WINDSOR CHAS. A. MOTT 14 Greenwich St., Hempstead Thousands say, \'Fine Kentucky Bourbon!\ Czab Orchard... Rich, smooth, mellow Kene \ tucky bourbon-that's Crab Orchard. 93 proof, and with the color, taste and brilliance that mark truly . fine Kentucky whiskey. It's great value, PJ proof ~~ Grand Old Kentucky Bottled-in-Bond pail Borriz-m-Bonn under U. 8, Goo't Supervision 83. £53 0t./ A great whiskey with a grand name-you can serve it with pride, for it's Ken- tucky bottled-in-bond bour- bon =- bourbon at its best. 100 proof AGED IN DEEP-CHARRED BARRELS! \GOOD DRINKS BEGIN WITH GILBEY'S GIN\ GILBEY'S ”Wt. zeasssss J47 +/.Q% 914 Pt. . drinks, —J“’: giny- there's a \soe res (