{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, November 08, 1937, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn83031113/1937-11-08/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-11-08/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-11-08/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-11-08/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
et ides 7 3 '{_ des Reine Cake 100 - ustice Black | LUTHERAN: CHURCHES leit \es.. NM Ins eee BATE, APPEALS Ato Whitt House Three Florida Companies la Also Question Right e:. To Bench Seat A WASHINGTON, Nov. 8- [P)-Albert Levitt made a effort today to obtain moval from the supreme < , shortly before the court elf had opportunity to de- \ide whether to hear another best of Black's eligibility. former federal judge in lhe Virgin Islands, asked Presi- ht Roosevelt to start quo war- into proceedings against Black. in effect would require Black to show by what right he held the . tion. Previous Attempt Failed [Bt is unfair, Levitt wrote the president, \to compel private liti- | gants to fight against, or else suf- Ser under, an illegal condition switich you yourself have created.\ & Levitt sought last month to have ®¥ke court pass on Black's eligibil- ity, but the justices refused to Weonsider his petition. They said he Wid -not have sufficient legal in- f in the outcome to warrant a the case. contention that Black's ap- t was . unconstitutional the basis of Levitt's un- ul petition. The same t roux-Ind in a w three F companies e- Marmine Black's right to a seat. ® 'There was a possibility the jus- Hes would announce today if th 'would hear the latter ap t by the Ryan Florida cor- of Tampa, the Income r ties company of St. Peters- « Btirg, and the Florida Tex Oil gompany. Old Telegrams Again concerns sought recon- ‘finflan. in Black's absence, of court's refusal on October 18 : th the security com- , under investigation. **\ Artion on petitions involving labor disputes also was \. Constitutionality of sit - down iy was at issue in one case 6 from a controversy be- the American Federation Full Fashioned Hosiery work- and the Apex Hosiery com- $1 of Philadelphia. «.~ George R. Hammer a, 'George Reinhold Hammer, \Ofather of the Rev. E. W. Hammer, mer pastor of St. John's Lu- church, Lynbrook, will be A today in G: ceme- ' tead, at 2 o'clock with «4 hm) alter M. Ruccius, pas- ' of Exitghntnflydfuthu-fir church , 9 ting. . Ham: died Friday in Meriden City tal, Connecticut, after an 11} t hat confined him to bed in son's home since September. Hammer is in madman ye, Marie and Prederitk, Ir., 20tb year. Puneral trom the fetl« at ye 277 Pin 'Thence 16 Our Hugo L. Black's re- MISS HELEN L. JACKSON 153 Prospect street, Hempstead Here is one of the members of the fair sex who commutes daily from the Hempstead railroad station. Miss Jack- son is employed by an oil company on Broadway, New York, as a file clerk, but she is going to school nights stud- ying to be a secretary. She was graduated from Hemp- stead high school in 1932 and went to the Nassau Collegiate Center for a year and a half. She was born in Benton Har- bor, Michigan, but has lived in Hempstead for the past ten years. Her favorite sports are horseback riding and swimming and she \loves to watch a football game.\ 1,000 ATTEND RITES OF EDWARD ST. JOHN Funeral Conducted At Garden City Cathedral For Prominent Surety Man And Mason One thousand persons attended funeral services for Edward At- kinson St. John, vice-president of the National Surety corporation and a prominent New York and Nassau clubman, at the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Garden City, yesterday. Members of the Cathedral ves- try, with whom Mr. St. John was associated for many years, headed the 100 honorary pallbearers selected from his business and m- clal acquaintances. The vestry members included George L. Hub- bell, William Baldwin, James Ad- dison, John R, Miller, Lynd W. Tucker, Hall Marshall, Sherwood Hubbell, J. Wilson Jones, John G. Turnbull, and George W. Turner. The Garden City Masonic lodge, founded by Mr. St. John in 1927 and headed by him as first master, held its rites after the religious ceremony conducted by the Right Rev. Arthur B. Kinsolving, 2nd, dean of the Cathedral. Mr. St. John, 68 years old, died Friday morning after a short ill- nest. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Helen Knapp Dunbar St. John, prominent women's Repub- lican leader in Nassau, and Miss Helen Amelia St. John, a daughter by a former marriage. Mrs. Eliza Bailey Funeral services for Mrs. Eliza Bailey, wife of the late Alfred Bailey and a resident of Cedar- hurst for 31 years, 'will be held Wednesday. Mrs. Bailey died Saturday at the home 'of her daughter, Mrs. Nellie Combs at 3570 Monroe street, Cedarhurst. She was 80 years old. She had been il for the past seven weeks with a heart ailment. Mrs. Bailey was born in England and lived there until «may. Cedarhurst 31 years survived by two daughters, Mrs. par a - Battey. of Cedarhurst. Frederick R. Bates terday in checks. Many shops will display posters and Red Cross flags. The committee is stressing the nual donation to the national or- ganization. VALLEY STREAM POST INSTALLS NEW SLATE HAS BENEFIT PARTY Malverne Public Library Will Get Proceeds From Event A card party held at Queens Bert-ISM: ludltofima‘raiy night, sift that occasioned Jufi» 1. O. revolt in 1935. C. C. MEN KILLED CANASTOTA, Nov. 8 -P- Two negro members of a civilian one of three truckloads of enroll- ees overturned near here. ~ Patrolman Clark Lahah suffered an injured eye when, he said, he attempted to prevent nearly 50 negroes from the other trucks from attacking Robert Porter, 28, of New York city, driver of the overturned truck whom Lahah said the youths held responsible for the fatalities. The dead were: John King, 17, of Camden, N. J., and Thomas Boyken, 17, of Mount Vernon. SPONSORS DANCE Tableau Is Feature Of Program At East Rockaway The Armistice dance of the East Rockaway post, American Legion, presbytery of Brooklyn-Nassau. $1; i zP ; § ; g isffstiref McCullagh, president pro tem. A date will also be set for the or- ganization's first ball. The ses- slon is scheduled to start at 8:30 The Rev. Mr. Cory, who is head o'clock. was interrupted for a brief period | Saturday night, for a tableau of \Tle Tomb of the Unknown || mander James W. Brannigan cited \On Flanders Field.\ was sponsored to benefit the Mal- the ble library. Worl on the committee were Munst- glen Mrs. Edward F. Ives, Mre. rick Christoffers, Mrs. Rob m. Murphy and Harry Leon- H. H. KOCH JEWELER 37§ Sunrise Highway LYNBROOK Tel. Lynbrook 4569 THE PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK & TRUST COMPANY On the Sunrise Highway in Lynbrook Bank with the \Peoples\ Tel. Lynbrook 6000 Member of the Federal De- posit Insurance Corporation UNERAL FALLACIES ANCIFUL theories concerning funeral practices and prices are as rampant as weeds in a neglected garden. Yet the answer is absurdly simple. One man chooses a Rolls Royce, another a Ford. One man builds his home of imported marble, another selects brick of a local kiln. One man orders a massive, beautifully wrought sarcophagus, another selects a casket substantial in construction, quiet in appearance, modest in price. The significant feature of F uiton Service is that a man gets what is ordered and only pays for what he gets.. Which is fully substantiated by records that show the large number of Fulton Funerals that have actually cost less than $150.00. é t= aet 7ater