{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, October 28, 1937, Page 15, Image 15', 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/sn83031113/1937-10-28/ed-1/seq-15/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-28/ed-1/seq-15.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-28/ed-1/seq-15/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-10-28/ed-1/seq-15/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
1 a sarin: of @uplionts a RC | < £07 m - ID - - - a f want MB-Tdedicoe Redivile Contre 1800 Additonal News OF Social Roose—v_c|t Unit‘ | Fas Garment Display Annual Exhibition Held in Church ; Hall v Roomsvelt branch, NW ot America, has 100 gar« more than last year to dis- to the needy from its an« m garment collection dinghy-d yesterday afternoon in the velt Presbyterian church, Babylon dent, presided. Major J. L. Honsberger of the Wayside Home School for Girls, VAL; Stream,. guest speaker, ex- pressed her appreciation for the germents contributed from the guild to her project. Mrs. Fred Groepler sang several solos. . A banjo duet was given by Laurence £. Andrews, Jr., and A}« lan Molloy. The Roosevelt Pat- ent-Teacher association Glee club, undl'ur the direction of Mrs. Fred Karl, sing. Mrs. John Cornelius, past presi- dent, received a bouquet of flowers from directors. The Rev. Arthur Pennell gave the invocation. Gar- whents from the collection which numbered 760, will be distributed to needy families. Following the meeting, refresh- ments were served by directors. Miss Wilson Will Be Married On:November 14 Mr.. and Mrs, H. Norman. Wilson pf East Stanton avenue, Baldwin, Bave announced that the wedding of their daughter, Miss Christina Wilson, to Christian -P, Holz- son of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. an, of Hampton Bays, will take place November 14. © The ceremony will be privately film-mud, with Miss Nancy: Wil- s her sister's maid of honor, and Robert: Pagett of Hampton Bays as best man. After & 'month 'in Maine and Miss Winifred Elizabeth Enge daughter of Mrs. Walter ony will be per- Church of the Cls Shown . in are Armstrong, of the Roosevelt branch, Needlework Guild of America, showing some of the garments exhibited yesterday at the an- nual \ingathering\ of the branch. HEALTH CENTEA SUPPORTS CLINIC Group Backs Fund To Aid Massachusetts Birth Control League The Mothers' Health center of Nassau and Suffolk counties is actively supporting the Birth Control league of Massachusetts in its court defense of the legality of maintaining medically directed birth control clinics in that state, it was announced today by Mrs. Franklin Koons, chairman of the Mothers Health center at Mine- ola Decision Important \As a member of the New York State Birth Control federation, which is one of the 25 state mem- ber leagues of the American Birth Control lulu?\ she 12:4, “lwe are bo- sting in '@ national cam- lime raise a defense fund for fl. use 'of the - Massachusetts league. The outcome in setts is .of great importance to the progress . of the birth control movement.\ The health center has received * | a communication from Mrs.. Mar» Minn?“ footywuru Guild at America, place Tuesday a “34 Oceanside Lutheran: church. re. tion. Captain 'William DeVoto of: the Malaya 21 of. Pompton £31221“ been set for the wed- a“. ant was: announced at & mm wi also masked the days of five merh~ bort of) tha family. whose birth secur in October, ay ara Mrs Laue te M ¥ L fill: with Miss Claire Boudreau Is Guast At Shower - Miss Claire Boudreau of Grand avenue, Baldwin, was guest 6f honor a. bridal shower given by Town Visa . Mury-~ Kri Amt-m avenue, L at «her. Roru@, aldwin, Nussday vests included: Mrs, W.. W., Boudreau, Mrs. Misi May Boudreau of w of Country Club® Ausiliary cles crete r. Rogan Willesd °R. wh ware co- shairraca. yeriatday, nt Tne firme iad hth, etc to Mov. ard Mre. *L ea cs fase © im guerite Benson, executive direc» tor of the American Birth Con- | trol who points out, \In the long run fae police interfer- ence in Massachusetts will ad- vance the movement | This tempt to enforce an archaic sta ute may well be the last of such trials, as: a decision favorable to the league in Massachusetts may be a precedent for the several other states where such laws still stand, The Massachusetts ' league stands firm and means to win. if necessary, there will be an ap- peal to the supreme court.\ PLANS BARN DANCE West Hempstead Vamps To Give Event Friday Night -y A F, xq, ~ * 1 Mrs. William ley Stream, is is Mrs. Arthur Mrs. Arm- STUDIES MODELING Hus. whl miss: mazjonm Miss Arnold, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kilburn S. Arnold of Cochran place, Valley Stream, is enrolled at the Eastman school of. modeling, Manhattan. She is a graduate of Valley Stream Central high school. LAD, 13, TO ASK MINT TO SCAN RARE NICKLE Experis, Bankers Puzzled By 1913 Liberty Head Coin}; Only Six Were Made MEXIA, Tex., Oct. 28-@P)-- Thirteen-year-old Carroll Wade may ask the mint bureau at Wash- Ington to determine whether a coin he received last week really is a very rare liberty head nickel minted in 1913, Mexia bankers suggested this course after they .were unable to determine whether the coin is genuine, William Clark, assistant curator of the museum ofthe Numismatic society of America, speaking from New York said: \There were approximately fifty million 1913 buffalo head nickels struck. Wan 'avenue, Wo well M“ o m (Wantagh): Mr.and Mre. Charles who dof LJ strong is at the left. Major J. L. Hornsberger of the Wayside Home School for Girls, Val- in the center and at the right Friend, a director. Review-Btat Photographer VILLAGE LEADERS AI MERCY ORNE Many Officials Named To Head Committees In Hospital Campaign Strong support of the $500,000 Mercy hospital building fund cam- paign which is being continued this fall, was indicated this week in the acceptance by prominent persons of leadership in the volun= teer organization which is under» taking to raise the balance of the fund. Chairmen Appointed Supreme 'Court Justice Thomas J. Cuff, campaign chairman, an- nounced that honorary chairmen have been appointed in most of the larger communities, These leaders, including many village heads, are as follows: Horace L, Allen, Rockville Centre; Herman H. Bagr, New Hyde Park;-Howard S. Brower, Hempstead, with George Estabrook as associate chairman; William H. Dickson, Jr., East Williston; Hamilton Gaddis, Malverne; Franklin S. Koons, Garden City; James H. Magee Bellerose; John McNeill, Floral Park; Joseph Nohowec, Mineola; William K. Ross, Lynbrook; James Sheeran, Stewart Manor; Walter Eugene Smith, Williston Park, and Henry Waldinger, Valley Stream. Appointment of honorary vice- chairmen. and 'other leaders will be made shortly, it was stated. Judge Cuff said also that mem- bers of the clergy of Nassau coun- ty, including all denominations, are being invited to serve on a clergy committee to add their en- dorsement to the movement. Installed ' Complete STAIR CUSHIONS . f.50 \Evenstioon td rive Fon Funds Campaign For $25,000 is Opaned Atitkuncheon ( . In Hogans“ .W. C.. A. headquarters at 75 Cathedral avenue, Hemp- stead, where Mrs, K L. D. Sey- Ange mour, president of the association, announced that $700.in intensive block drives in several villages and personal solicitations were carrying throughout the rest of the county the ¥. W. C. A.'s appeal for $15,000 to liquidate a mortgage on its Hempstead prop- erty. and for $10,000 to continue the unit's activities during the coming year, Mrs. Seymour presided at the luncheon yesterday and intro- duced speakers, who included Dr. Frost, professor of education at Adelphi college; the Rev. Karl F. Moore, pastor of St. Marks Meth- odist Episcopal church, Rockville Centre; Mrs. Arthur R. Lillicrapp, executive secretary, and Mrs. Franklin 8. Koons of Garden City, executive director of the drive, Dr. Frost, endorsed the cam- paign by placing the work of the Y. W. C. A. among the character- producing forces of the modern world. Such forces, he said, play a | vital role in modern civilization, which he defined as \a desperate race between forces that would make us mad and forces that pro- duce character.\ Release from religious restraint and the \eternity-reducing\ dis- coveries of modern science, Dr. Frost said, have caused modern man to come \dangerously near being inadequate to meet the de- mands of the environment he is creating.\ Citing mass violence in the world, he said that character- building forces are the world's only protection against forces that mgrr \drag. us. down into. the | whirlpool of mass insanity.\ \If the forces that produce char- | acter are to win,\ the speake said, \the loyalty and unstintin support of every right-minde individual must be devoted t those institutions which have been founded and which exist for the building of character,. | \You have a tremendous stake | in this race,\ he told his hearers. \You are to go out from here to | solicit the financial support of the | eltizens of Nassau county for an | institution which is administered in all its branches in the interests of character, You seek a sum of | $28,000 with which to retire a mortal-lo and provide a budget| for the coming fiscal year. You shall ask for money. But your task is far greater. You go out as | teachers to educate this commu- nity.\ The Rev. Mr. Moore, who of- fered an invocation and a bene- | diction, also spoke on character- building.as a purpose and achieve- | ment of the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. Koons spoke briefly on plans for the fund drive, and Mrs. Lilli- crapp described | classes, . clubs, John King's Scotch Holland WINDOW SHADES | « 50 There is no better shade at any price Other Quilitiuhm.“ 6s: VENETIAN BLINDS 4.95 \-. We guarantee to save you 20% under the regular prices of the * did-nag . Donald Smith, Matthew Steele, Mrs, Henry Bruyn. and Mrs. Theodore Ripsom, all of Hempstead. Also, Miss Susan Hamlin, Mrs. J. W. McConnell, Mrs. C. R. Cheshire, Mrs. Edward Kiley, Mrs. L. P. Brown, Mrs. Edmund Platt, Mrs. A. M. Hopper, Mr. Frank Robinson, Mrs, B. L. Van Schaick, Mrs. C. Kenser, Mrs. C. L. Day, Mrs. J. E. Ramsey, Mrs. J. H. Blake, Mrs. Warren Carpenter, Mrs, Ernest Nichols, Mrs. Robert Hodgson, all of Garden City; Mrs. J. T. Thatcher of Stewart Man- or; Mrs. Katherine Bergh of Min- eola; Mrs. A. M. Brunkhardt of Hempstead Gardens; Mrs. Albert Briggs of New York city and Mrs. Amos B, Thatcher of Garden City, past presidents of the Nas- sau Y. W. C. A, and Mrs. H Schuyler Cammen of Merrick, one of the trustees of the associa- tion. KOPP THANKS AIDES Finance Committee Chairman Sends Message To District George Kopp, of Hicksville, chairman of the Republican fi-| nance committee for the Hicks- ville - Plainview area of the United Republican Finance com- mittee of the second assembly dis- trict, today extended the thanks of the workers to local contribu» tors. He also urged others wish» ing to make donations to submit them as soon as possible. [Lins >>> SEVEN LIBAMIES . | opened on June 18, is outst . | in- cireulation. <- More than 8,000 books had been borrowed there up to October 1. It is headed by Mrs. Marjorie Keck, who-is assisted by Mrs. M. O. Hendrickson, Mrs. H. A. Terrell, Mrs. H.~B.-Koch and Mrs. George Burkhardt. The Oceanside libri commit- tee has obtained a small building which was moved more than half a mile to a site loaned by a promi- nent merchant. A sponsors' group of 128 have purchased honorary memberships to supplement the book fund. 'The bode repair proj- ect has prepared 1,800 volumes for circulation after the owing. ten- tatively set for Novem 16, Mrs. Oliver Wright heads the commit- tee, which also includes Mrs. Ed- win Sager, W. S. Boardman, high school principal, C. G, Truit and S. Taylor Johnson, superintendent of | schools. More than 300 volumes have been prepared for the opening of the Manhasset Valley school li- brary, to be sponsored by the nursery school mothers' club, with | Mrs. Estelle Rave and Mrs. John Duffield as co-chairmen. A small but efficient unit is in operation in the Polish national home at | Glen Cove, where 500 volumes were circulated between August 13 and October 1. John Somoski and William Burczak are in charge. ganized at Kings Park, West Islip and Brentwood. About 60 young women have been assigned by N. ¥. A. officials to act as library NEW FALL SUITS by JOSHUA TRENT From the pure, fine, weighty worsteds to the careful stitching and handsome made to our own rigid specifications. styling these suits were That is why you'll look far and wide before you find their equal at the low price of . . . *20 OTHER SUITS AT $30 and $38 Alterations Free SPECIAL OFFERING! WHITE These are: not ordinary shirts, SHIRTS but SUPER-HADDINGTON®, which means that the fabric is Sanforized super-count lustrous broadcloth, that the seams are extrg-fine quality, 'the sollars are truben- twed, and that they should really sell for $2.00, All stzes anf sleeve lengths ...... French-sewn, the buttons are 81.65 KWE A R- /»mporred Fabrics 16 the best of our knowledge, that im- gharacter have been made jo at thie low price Other libraries Wave been ob} ved from Island Park, Franklin Square and Residents of Nassau and folk counties are being m assist the N, Y. A. project by giv ing books for the use of !! mm pective donors ~may e library, sponsor, Nat Youth administration, 1661 Fragile lin avenue, Mineola, We can satisfy your floral needs, whatever they may be and, § & price within the reach of sm¥ KER PE 9% NORTH 'PARK AVE. ROCKVILLE CENTRE The R. V. C. 2831 Loren EveRy Eveninc ExcePt weonEsbay Modern i9f1 _ A. L. FRANKS, Inc. MENS & BOYS' Sho