{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, November 09, 1937, Page 11, Image 11', 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/sn83031113/1937-11-09/ed-1/seq-11/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-11-09/ed-1/seq-11.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-11-09/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1937-11-09/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
4 “C _-=fr Arma Brownle Pack $ m Church street school, 3:30. Tr , Rockville | Centre, Preabyterian' church, 3:30. Troop 26, Lynbrook, American Legion clubhouse, 4. Troop 30, Baldwin, 3:45, R Evening hogs 11, Valley Stream, school 24, 7:30. 1mmmmumm Troop 34, Valley Stream, Meth- odiat church, 7:30. Proop 38, Valley Stream, Bap- thurch, 7:30. Wednesday Freeport district teachers' room, Grove school, 1:30, Plans Rummage Sale Girls of Scout Troop 45 met yesterday afternoon at St. Agnes school - hall, Rockville - Centre, when Mrs. William J. Sullivan taught them to make spatter prints. The scouts will hold a DO YfiKNOW? By MARIE GAUDETTE Girl Scout Naturalist How a giraffe sleeps? It sleeps standing up. committee, rummage sale, Friday and Satur- day. They have voted to give their dues of October 25 to the Juliette Low fund, and to make donations of Thanksgiving bas- kets for the poor. The troop will meet -again next Monday after- noon. Tr 48, Girl Scouts, also met yeste at St. Agnes school hall. Members will bring canned goods to the next meeting, to help fill Thanksgiving baskets. A group the troop goes to Surfside, flute Beach, to swim, each turday. Express Appreciation Mayor Walter S. Smith, honor» ary - chairman, and H. | Philip Freud, chairman, have announced their appreciation of the response of the village in the current Girl Seout fund drive. Of the goal of ba a $ mig Ce Ida Committee Selected For Dance, Entertainment. In Valle_y__&mm Mapping a program for ex- panded social activity, the Valley Stream Men's and Women's Democratic clubs will sponsor a dance and entertainment at the Dudé Ranch, Merrick road, Valley Stream, December 10, according to street lage~ take charge of a proposed pro- gram of awards to be made at the affair. Each member of the committee of 13 is to be responsible for pub- liclzing the awards in one of Val- ley Stream's 13 election districts, and each is to be assisted by the Democratic committeemen and election inspectors in his district. The group includes: Conrad Schulleri, 45th district; Philip Groenewald, 51st; Raymond Toseph Bergen, Tih; George Fope: BJ gen, rge Pape, 93rd; John King, 112th; Alfred Cosgrove, 114th; Joseph Neumann, 120th; Howard Hoyt, 143rd; John Grant, 157th; Jerry Rogers, 158th; and James Byrn, 169th, At their next joint meeting, No- vember 22, the Men's and Wom- en's clubs will hear a program program presented by the New York Telephone company, Mr. Lang announced. \ORANGE KING\ BACK Louis: Bolkess Re-opens The \Grove\ At Hempstead The \Orange King\ has returned to Nassau,. Louis Bolkess, who operated Shader's \orange grove\ in Hempstead and Freeport last winter and early spring, has re- turned from Orlando, Fla., and has re:opened \Shader's Grove\ at 279 Front street, Hempstead. The \gove\ will have its officfal has o tis week, with in Adver tisement announcing the opening in The Nasseu Daily Review-Star the day before. r-Varlety Variety Show 'Three Rancheros, Songs Per eten ewsi Music id .II‘ Bade-Bkeich Are, woR-Red I 4 P. M. to 5 P. M. U fi-‘W atch .m.rumfim thew tch 'ahma-Bach Musicale T icine sues ur Evos Tomorrow, - 1005 30 MINES It seems to be Mrs. John C. Perry. At least, it is she to whom Robert T. Luginbuhl and Mrs. E. L. Reincke are pointing. The three are members of the cast of \Look Who's Here,\ to be presented on the night of November 19, at the Lynbrook Masonic clubhouse, under auspices of the Lynbrook chapter, Order of the Eastern Star. Review-Btar Photographer bel lanned for every third NASSAU OLD TIMERS Pta, SFAR dual PLAN SOCIAL PROGRAM Organization was perfected re- | ___ cently at Bauer's Garden restau- Newly Formed Club Plans To Em, Roosevv’elt, with Mrs‘.” llvlliary tertainmsent At Its auer as vice-president; illiam hunt-“m, Mud\: Judge, secretary, and Leon Brock- man, treasurer. At the next meet- Plans are being made for social ing: 'November 19, it is expected and entertainment meetings of 1 that 50 new membership applica- the newly organized Nassau Coun- tions will be acted upon. ty Old Timers club. GOTTLIEBS HAVE DAUGHTER , doseph Schneider. of, Roosevell| .Dr, and Mrs. Lewis I Gottlisb president, announced that 50 old | of Fordham street, Hemptead, are time residents of the county al- /the parents of a daughter born ready have joined. A social meet- October 31 in the Nassau hospital, ing with local: entertainment is Mineola. Features on the Air 3:00-4:00 P. M.-United States Marine Band Concert-WJZ. 30 P. M -Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Concert-W ABC. 30 P. M.-\Inside Story of the Oho'Steel Strike,\ Governor Martin L. Davey at the Ohio Society of New York Dinner, Hotel Pennaylvania-WJZ. 9:30-10:30 P, M.-Variety Show: Bob Burns and Charles Buiter- worth, Comedians; Lanny Ross, Tenor, and Others-WEAF. 10:00-10:30 .P. M.-Symphomic Strings Concert-WOR, 10:30-11;00 P. M.-Postmaster General James A. Farley, at the Young Democrats' Dinner, Washington, D. C.-WOR. $---_----_-_-_____. $--_-_____._# 7 P. M. to 8 P. M. | 10 P. M. to 11 P. M. | # '00- wor-ay Me Strings, Alfred ro won arni At\ WJz-Generai Hugh Johnson, Com- mentator w an Orcheatre fee w Music (OM at 11) 10:18 w honette I'm-zmh-u.‘ uas Piller, at Tox \fir-w Dinner, Wain Gamba, Vislin WABC-Det anti Bong WHN-Asronion Orchestre was tor-n. “fidgu‘lu gro rou WMCA-Mawsi Music; Weather WHN-Interviews: Dance Music 11 P, M. to 1 A. M. 11:00-WBAP-What Kind choo! Dose the Present Generation Naed?-Dr. J. Oapce Mortison of New York P w * Pin-r an“; ssh-wt arte WIk- New! * WOR-Bpor WI%-Easy Aces-Aketch WABC-Jack Fulton, Tenor; Prank» MacCormack, Resdar WHN-Améteur Rour; in! . mip in Master: of gnu-o. mul- wilight wi Youl Vina-{m m mefilm Lost Per- Sons-Orama WABO-Ruth Carhart, Sopranc; Bill enor MOA'-Five-Star Pi 300 Workers Will Report On Efforts To Raise $25,000 Fund The final checkup in the block! drives conducted during the past two weeks. in several Nassau county villages will be obtained luncheon at Y. W. C. A. head at Y. W. - uarters at 75 Cathedral avenue, will f close the 1987-38 Y. W. C. A. cam- paign. 300 To Report More than 300 women who have been making house-to-house can- vasses in Garden City, Hempstead, Mineola, Stewart Manor and near- by communities are expected to report their receipts at the lunch- eon. Mrs, Franklin S. Koons, ex- ecutive chairman of the drive, will announce the total amount re- ceived to date during the cam- ”3:15“ the $25,000 goal set for this year's drive is reached when the luncheon report is made, the ¥. W. C. A's appeal for funds will not be closed at the end of the Kri block drive. Aithough the or- ganized canvass will be concluded, personal solicitation will be con- tinued to \put the drive over the top,\ Mrs, Koons said today. One way of completing the $25-, 000 sought, according to Mrs. Koons, would be to obtain enough memberships in the Y. W. C. A. \There are thousands of girls and women in Nassau county who would profit by membership In the ¥. W. C. A.\ she added. \The membership fee for adults Is only $1 per year, but enough member- ships would be sufficient to reach the campaign goal,\ Member- ships for girls under 18 are only 50 cents per year. A membership enables the bearer to enter any of the Y, W. C. A. classes, as does any campaign donation of more than $1. Meanwhile, block drives in the key villages of Nassau county were being conducted, and contri- butions continued to arrive with every mail at Y,. W. C. A. head- quarters, Mrs. E. L. D. Seymour, president of the association, re- vealed that actual receipts by mail exceeded $2,500 early this week. Receipts fronf the house-to-house canvasses are expected greatly to swell this amount. Mrs. Seymour will preside at the luncheon, Wednesday. HEMPSTEAD NEGRO IS HELD IN ASSAULT Edward Johnson Is Charged With Attack On Chester Brown With Pocket Knife Edward Johnson, negro, 35, of 67 South Franklin street, Hemp- stead, was to face Police Justice George B. Serenbetz today on a third degree assault charge. He was arrested last night after al- legedly attacking Chester Brown, negro, 33, of Sycamore avenue, West Hempstead, with a pocket knife of 26 South Franklin street. Brown received a cut on the right thumb. Johnson has 18 pre- vious convictions for assault, dis- orderly 'conduct, public intoxica- tion and other misdemeanors, He was the prisoner involved in an argument between Patrolman Daniel Marshall and Lieutenant '\ James Gallagher, which led to the filing of charges against Marshall and Gallagher by each other. Lieutenant Gallagher and Pa- trolman Marshall will face the vil- lage board Monday to answer the charges. TO FORM NEW UNIT Student Society To Have Hemp- stead Branch In Near Future Preliminary plans are now un- derway for the organization of a Hempstead unit of the Steuben society, John H. Schulze, attorney, announced today, Members of the Freeport snd Lynbrook units, who live in Hempstead, will be the charter members of the proposed unit. Several have been serted today, Lynbrook and ”Hula-r! meetings Mr. Schulze as- th officers of the be taken in the fear future. TRIMBLE TO SPEAK Lecturer Will Begin New Series As Hempstead Arthur Trimble, member of the Of Commerce Presses Member Drive 1:5. membership. drive of the Hempstead Association of Com- merce continued today with in- creased interest following a report * by John Hilliard, chairman, at the meeting held at The Place, yester- day, that 30 new members were added to the rolls during the past week, 200 Quota Set Hilliard reported that a quota of 200 has been set. He intro- duced Frank Curran, newly-ap- pointed executive secretary, who is working with him on the mem- bership campi Frederick P. J. Clark, president, appointed a merchants committee, which will deal with problems of special interest to the store man. On the committee are Maurice Roberts, chairman; Robert Shaet- fer, Harty Wolf, Harris Rosen- baum, Norman Alberts and Moe im. Horace E. De Lisser, president of the Freeport chamber of com- merce, was a guest at the meeting. He urged a closer bond between merchants and businessmen of Frseport and Hempstead. The work of the two associations could achieve the desired effect, he said. By unanimous vote it was decid- ed to reduce the board of directors | from 27 members to seven. The smaller group will be able to work | more effectively, it nounced. was an- Two new divisions of the asso-! éiation were created. They are: the home owners' division and the professional | division. meeting will be December 6. CALLING ALL DOGS! ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE '}=== When Dogs Were Sacred Some two centuries ago, ac- cording to Oriental students, dogs were regarded in Japan as sacred. This because the reigning mikado happened to have been born under the astrological sign of the Dog- star, Wherefore the mikado is- sued an edict commanding that every Japanese family should own at least one dog-the richer the family the larger number of dogs -and that shelters be built in every district of every town or city where old or sick or injured dogs could be fed and otherwise cared for. When a dog died, his owner was compelled to carry his body to the top of the highest mountain in the vicinity and there to bury it with honors. Nobody might kill a dog without special imperial per- ion. Forrester Primrose, in \The Tall-Wagger Magazine,\ of Eng- land, draws a vivid word-picture of the weary little Japs lugging the heavy bodies of their dogs to the mountain-tops, and t- 2&qu must have been glad their lo had been born under the Sign of the Dog and not under the Sign of the Horse. oday, apart from a few care- fully-bred varieties of spaniels, etc., the dog seen oftenest in Japan is a semi-tailed and stocky little bear-like beast. Nor is there, now, any Japanese code of laws which declares dogs to be sacred and non-killable. a o 1:50!!! The next § time. There are others just as lavish. At Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, the sets built for \Rosatie\ are hailed as the \most expensive\ ever erected in any studio. Sam Goldwyn must have spent $250,000 for the various \Marco Polo\ sets and consider- ably more than that for the exotic backgrounds that will garnish the \Goldwyn Follies.\ RKO, Selz- nick, Paramount-all are compet- ing with one another to stagger your imaginations. Check me if I am wrong, but I have a hunch that you are not nearly as \staggered\ as the pro-| ducers think. I believe you are far more interested in plots and in stars than you are in the size or cost of a crystal chandelier. Box office records prove it-many of the most ornate pictures ever made have been dismal flops; | many inexpensive, simple dram“; have grossed millions. \The Mir- acle Man,\ produced for $35,000, without one expensive set, still | holds all records with m gross of | nearly seven millions. | Ironically, the same producers! who are competing with one an- other to see who can spend the | most on sets, wail the loudest about the impossibility of making a profit on big pictures. It might | be a good idea for them to re« member that \the play's the thing.\ Lunched with Arthur Treacher, who punctuated three courses by telephoning to arrange steamer passage for his mother, who is re- turnipg to England after a sum- | mer- ong visit with him. \What [a trip she's going to have,\ Ar- thur enthused, \The Panama Canal, Cuba, the Bahamas-just the kind of a voyage that I want | to take some day when I have the She is in her sixties now but still keen to see things, Why, say. she has seen more of Hollywood in three months than the average natice son has seen in his entire life. I've ordered her to take a complete rest for two weeks before sailing . . .\ \I should think the voyage would be rest enough,\ I suggested. \It will be-for her,\ Arthur admitted, dolefully, '\T've| ordered the rest for my sake-I'm ' CELLA TO CHAIRMAN CENSUS COMMITTEE Named By Mayor Gold To Assist Federal Study In Long Beach Ares Mayor Charles Gold of Long Beach today announced the com- mittee to ald in the federal census of unemployed persons, to be tak- en from November 16 to Novem- ber 20. 'The committee is headed by Alphonse A. Cella. The census is being taken by the postoffice department, and lo- cal committees are being formed in all parts of the country to as- sist in the project. The mayor's committee is being organized at the direction of the federal administration for the pur- pose of fully informing the local unemployed of the necessity and importance of voluntary enroll- ment. It is hoped that effective work on the part of this commit- tee will make the task of the post- office department simpler and completely successful, it was said. TRANSFERS FUNDS Board Authorizes Treasurer To Make Accounting Changes Several end of the year depart- mental sfers of funds are be- ing made by County Treasurer Harry L. Hedger today. The board of supervisors, at Its meeting yesterday, authorized the transfer of $15, from the cur- rent surplus to the expense ac- LLYNBRbOK | Possessor night clube.\ a An ami volving ist. Grace: M little incident 1- a Lily Pons, h ig - some\ Ior \Europe: \cove \Heal gave 9 friendly rival a surprise away\ party, and had dominate the table decora model ship, carved out of solid It was a thing of real b lighted with colored lights, with flags flying and officers' ande crew . standing on . its - decks Throughout the dinner, the an. commented again and a gut-La“. the beauty of the shi herset until the party was almost . end did she explain the rm; t, was her embarrassment. _ She > changed her plans and to tell her press agent. of taking a boat to E had decided to take her trailer through Canada. One of Hollywood's more pop ular citizens is Jimmy Muno# head-waiter at the famous Cocoa nut Grove since the night 6f 40 opening some fifteen years 'dgoy Jimmy not only knows everydri@ in town but is on intimate speak» ing acquaintance with most of th® skeletons in every closet, \Thos® movie folk\ were a rowdy lot whem the Grove was born, and it is mo secret that Jimmy was hired be- cause of his reputation as a is During the first month, % gave five tipsy stars their come= uppance, brushed off their coats, and graciously escorted them to their cars. - Hollywood, at first, was inclined to resent such efficiency, but Jimmy soon won all hearts. of a million dollars worth of carefully guarded se~> crets, he never betrayed one, L. When Alice Faye first came to pictures, the press insisted on labeling her as an !mitator of Jeatt Harlow, Alice was resentful, but / helpless, and it took her years to live down the comparisons. To= day, visiting her on the set, I heard the director praise her work .\ @ in a scene, and after solemaly © crossing her fingers, Alice said herself \Don't let any one you, Alice-you weren't so good.\ Turning to me, she added, 've made a habit of doing just that whenever any one compliments me.\ 1 wonder if she « Jean Harlow had exactly the same habit-and even the same fingér= crossing mannerism? toa June Lang's director was glow= ing at lunch today about the beauty of the costume she is wear- Ing for a certain sequence-a very abbreviated costume, from his ac« count. _ \An - absolute master» piece,\ he enthused. . \Where it is, it i a triumph of man's art; where it ain't, it is a tribute to the crafte= manship of Nature. What a cos- tume!\* count of the office of District At- torney Martin W. Littleton, R Also authorized was the trams- ter of $15,000 from the current / surplus account to the administra= tion account of Welfare Commis« sioner Edwin W. Wallace. The authorized transfer of $3,800. fromm the public works - account of County Engineer John C. Guibert - to the federal commodities and sewing room sponsors' account. A renewal of fire insurance /- policies on county buildings was ordered Including coverage on the laundry, boiler house and helps' quarters at the Nassau county sanatorium in Farmingda county is now in fire insurance coverage, RIVOLI Now anowino tmz kitE \Life Begin in College\ The Picture They Said Could Not Be Shown \DAMAGED LIVES\ Suppressed! Stifled{- Concealed! Shushed! The picture that shock & Nation into action! IBM,»- she . lg;