{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, April 25, 1938, Page 7, Image 7', 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/sn83031113/1938-04-25/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1938-04-25/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1938-04-25/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1938-04-25/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
\Jenowing that the times were all © ~which practically every «raises; did he?\ T 'was something of the same old bunk that Mr. John H. Mirschel, Hempstead trustee and acting mayor '”\M“M£mag'gmm off a series of colds, handed out to cops al ann r men's 332mm association the other night. It smacked decidedly of. political banner-waving, MM for the force and its promise that the village would everything in its power to see that the cops got s when the question of increased salaries came before it, , Of course the Hempstead po- lice force is the equal of, if not _ cops. ; superior (o, any other depart- paid as a rule, ment in the county ort an gcca« . other workers-reporters, for in« won such as an annual dinner \ stance-are entitled to fatter at, which the majority of_ the\ ~ envelopes. __ cops, including» the chief, _are current present; It wouldn't be concelv= |/ tions are not favorable and un» able-that an acting. mayor. of: @\ _ til they are the boys must ex« village would take that occasion- pect to get along with their pres= to air any, internal disorders ent salaries. Mr. Mirschel should thiit might exist or to be critical have told the cops that. There Of the actions of any of the is no advantage to be gained in force. kidding people. It was an occasion for floral tributes and Mr. Mirschel did his best to scatter a few pieces among the gathered patrolmen. He was warming up for what he hofes to be a regular time at bat because it isn't any secret Hempstead aspires some day to \ Daily Review and Nassau replace in the lingup the man for whom heewas pingh-hitting: Daily Star) In other words, Mr. Mirschel wants to be mayor of Hempstead 25 YEARS AGO und be- is setting his course Construction of East Rock» . away's long-needed soad be- along that line. You tan't blame feen Atlantic avenue and the a fellow for being politically railroad {gum wg; “an“; this ambitious and there is no reason week. e ground was being n prepared through the Rhame . why he 11101131: \1:1” to be and Denton estates. The road is the mayor. ers have, 500° to be a wide, central highway successfully and some not. and is to be named Phipps ave- But I would have liked his nue, in honor of one of the vil- chances better had he come out 128®'s most distinguished ' citi- very frankly and said what was zens. what to the faces of the cops and Primt \in mom-iiommiormnu county offices or the office mot hold out encouragement, of assemblyman have been de- cided upon by the Nassau County the direction of political relorm: y. e ion of political reform. ROBABLY he had no inten- 'The county organization takes tion of bringing up the the lead from the Republicans of i ; the town of Hempstead, who in- 23,210: a?!” incre;rl::1fl:‘al::g stituted primary nominations in “fie—m7mhumfu al M in the county is faced with each 10 YEARS AGO passing year. He was forced The First National Bank of T aa = rm a Orv v e mayor wanted me to be at Sunrise highway and Park sure to give you his praises,\ he svznue Hat lC nelt price i?!‘ 825,000, i ohn « arl, president an- said and some inconsiderate cop hounced y' The bank will stopped a spoon halfway into a build a new structure on the slab of bisquet tortoni to shout site, This price, about $2,200 per \He didn't say anything about front foot, is said to be a record price in Limb viiinli’tz.ldfthe put:- 'This left Mr. Mirschel a beau- POsed new bank building is to tiful opening, of which he should cost about $230,000. have taken advantage. Instead Mr. and Mrs. George B. Gel- of dodging it with the assur- ler of 19 Lee place, Freeport, were surprised at their home by ance that the village boand was 4. \Dunn—9°! friends recently in behind them and that when the observance of their 22nd wed- question of a raise in pay for the ding anniversary. Mrs. A. Al- cops came before it the board _ fred Smith, daughter of Mr. nd \would do. everything 'in . its Mrs. Geller, was the hostess. to the contrary. power\ to see that the cops got 5 YEARS AGO what was coming to them, he For the first time in its his- should have replied with facts in tory, Nassau county received no a» straightforward manner. bids in response to a proposed bond issue, yesterday. Lehman Certainly the village board is Brothers of New York city ex- 'Behind the police force. It has plained that the bond market is got to be because it is a foree 50 uncertain they could not of its own choice. Certainly, make a bid on the proposed $5,- too, it should \do everything in mfg-go 33:11:10 ht?) Afbu'fifi: its power\ to see that the cops failure to receive bids is not get what is coming to them. considered as a reflection upon But now is not the time for in- the county's credit, but rather creased salaries, whather it be 35 81 indication of bad finan- cial conditions. It was explained in private employment or mu- that the cities of Buffalo and nicipal employment.. Whether Rochester both had failed to re- we like it or hot, now Is -what ceive bids on proposed bond is- might be called.. a \marking 84° recently. time\ era because revenues are Increased patronage of Long down and when' wevenues are . Island pleasure resorts this sum- down it isn't good business to in=. . #T is anticipated due to a re- crease expenses. When revenues fflfifim w “1:10.11; “In: go up and business is good the next week. Reductions are to normal tendency ls 'to go- along be draw nu‘ Eng-{o will and, if possible, reward wood 2Moun abou per wnd. faithful service, cent. cof the present fare, ac- Tam wild Dee fap hos in Diseases © That Have Vanished | By DR. LOGAN 'CLENDENING mums Moctors are completely unfamiliar with such iseases as chole low fever, bubonic plague and matiy otherdumvxifmeomplmwfindw tors of 50 or 100 years ago in They have disappeared.\ It is 5 easyto understand why these quite and ingect control =- yel~ - this and ried by: Ingects; cholera and- around to all the small towns. typhoid fever are carried by in=*.within a radius of 200 miles of fected. water, the Mayé cHnic, called on the' busiest doctors in each , town, . manna—w.- i;, ir: is? # r- thaimic category in a form tan—F“? of goiter: with staring refin- \In the old days - and rapid pulse, which is 0 years ago ~« when I wanted as \oworihthaimic goiter\ This to show some in my clinic I zqummn-w. “than”? He - “Mum-Millet” nah-u. Tar $1:than “Mn nome. guter wo &* In Nassau County 25 YEARS AGO that the current acting mayor of _ (From Bound Files of Nassau _ - hl bor - including the white collar men-into its confidence. Led by the U. S. Steel and other affairs of the people through attended. The lained where the income came answered questions. He used \lantern slides, He showed them that out of the income dollar, 64 cents went to manufacturing; 13 cents to selling; 3% cents to management; % cent to trans- portation; 1 cent for goods re- turned; 5 cents to taxes; 4 cents to-heart talk than to throw to reserves and 9 cents to prof- brickbats and have sit-down its, The president pointed out that the taxes paid by the com- pany would buy ev of the company a WERE Fo \ee 4.95 . KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, inc. \Manageme_nts' New- Policy Wins Labor's Confidence By William H. Kniffin that picture. money from the banks.\ As Beach Days Approach By Juliet Shelby ~ Come the hot weather, you'll be out feet first.. When the warm days arrive bathing sults and beaches will bethe only thing. So we' decided. to broach & personal subject and bave another. one of those heart to heart talks, Maybe you “no “mltflflw- Lots of our more citizens have it, mala and female. the Fimo Th 0 -arne Author sic, RISING ONE INCH ENERY strause er- file MELTiNG - Anfarcfic 10E CAPS AWAT REMAIN FROM . _ THE MOST RECENT ICE AGE -A RISE or 100 FEET in THE $EA LEVEL MAY BE ~ EXPECTED IF ALL THE PoLAR 1CE MELTS .. *~. MANY LOW ISLANDS, SUCK AS TKE, AIRPLANE BASES IN HE PACIFIC,WILL DigAPPEAR IN AGES 10 com NE YEARS, or THe Anclic Ap ff B ia 48 Honey 15 ~ Persian Brigarnos WALLED UP IN PILLARS of CEMENT AS: PUNISHMENT* ror HIGHWAY RoOBB % ' ERY VE in' a butcher shop, where be worked forhis board and cloth- ing. He go! clothes were not he quit. Then he clerked a ocery store, next a job de- milk; then a sort of odds~ and-ends person in board, «flaming BERMUDA 16 A a, cheese « BRITISH COLONY oF SoME 360 SMALL 1SLES, Have fier. OWN Po§TAGE StamP$ Zoe Beckley's Corner THE REBOUND * * We were friends as children, then drifted apart. She fell deeply in love with a no- account fellow, a drinker, indif- ferent a n- d unkind. last she woke up to his be- ing worthless and gave him § h e seems entire- ly broke and disheart- ened but goes w i t h. me when D worlds f o r her but can't get any re- sponse. Am I a fool for hoping some day I can win her? -Sad and Lonely.\ company. He says he \took a special interest\ in cheese. Note * that, you fellows looking for a He took a special interest in cheese! He learned all he could about it. He got books on cheese and studied them; during his lunch hour he used to do something he was not paid for, he went around selling cheese wholesale. That was not a part of his job, understand-he just did that be- cause he \took a special interest He used to walk home at night, instead of riding, so he could stop and sell cheese to the merchants on the way. Yes, Jason Whitney surely took a special interest in cheese. left the company to sell cheese forthe Beechnut company. And here he did something that made him appear false to cheese. He advised the head of the com- pany that cheese didn't fit in with their other products; that __ he thought they. should_stick-to--that-the-cross-section-will-be- idea of selling non-perishable products. This in cheese.\ is taking la could. buy ~new furniture for three rooms. Employees can get He told them first about the company and concerns with nation-wide ac- afterward about business in tivities, which contacted their general. The employees proved amphlets_tell- fumiggm lot of people, They _. ~ing them about the business, wanted . v e other concerns have quickly products (railway and industrial taken the cue and done likewise. In this movement it is realized - that labor is interested is going on in the affairs of the employer, Heretofore the re- ports of management have gone to the stockholders-the owners of the concern, as if they were the only ones interested in how Loyalty Of Employees much business has been done, Essential To Business how much profits have been t made, how much in taxes have S been paid, and what has been done with the profits; not over- o know \why their their original equipment) were not advertised nationally as. of 8 ation has any effect upon pres- ent business conditions\; and \why they did not sell shares to employees instead of borrowing of the company was too valu- Zble for the Beechnut company to let go-they were too scarce. So they made him manager of the Chewing gum department. However, Jason Whitney couldn't remain away forever from his first love, cheese. After he had put chewing gum into practically all the small stores, Fire under ice, I'd say. But don't expect the protective ide to melt all in a minute. Kind- ness and patience will win any woman-well, almost any. Es- pecially one whose heart is new- ly bruised. There is no better time to win a woman than during the re- bound of a disappointed love. But don't be importunate and try to rush matters. Zhis is a time for gentleness and under- standing. Be as different from the other man as possible. actions rather than words that there are still good fish in the sea-sound, dependable That's what the feminine heart longs for: Security, fidelity, The lover who stays devoted; husband who friend. wor « #* * * Having read and en- CH a meeting cannot but result in good will-a bet- ter feeling between the office looking the \balance sheet\ and the workers. They no doubt which few stockholders are cap- able of breaking down and un~ derstanding. This is a move in the right direction, very much so. Bridgeport Firm Dramatized Report To Employees 'T remained for the corporation the butcher shops, barber shops and restaurants, the work be- came easy. Nothing to do but went back to work the next morning feeling that they knew something about their company . they had never been allowed to know before. Undoubtedly they are better workers as a result of this enlightenment, more so than if they were told it was none of their business. Upon of Manning, Maxwell and their productivity, their loyalty, Moore Co., of Bridgeport to their cooperation success de- dramatize the idea. It is said to pends, be the first of its kind. The con- cern hired the auditorium of the blue picture and told them high school for an evening meet- ing. Some 750 out of 1,000 em- ployees braved the storm and up, no doubt the vote would president ex- have been to cut wages, because they would understand the why rom and where it went. He of it all. It would be well it em- ployers all over the country thus took their people into their con- fidence. The idea is going to spread rapidly, because of its soundness from 'a phychological as well as a business standpoint. It is far better to have a heart- take orders. So° Jason went to the president of the Phoenix Cheese company, asked for a job as his assistant and got it. When the Phoenix company consoli- dated with the Kraft Cheese company, Jason Whitney was the president. \Well summing it all up, J. F.,\ I said, \what do you*think was the reason for your suc- cess?\ \Hard work,\ he replied. But as I look back over his route, and analyze the man, I find other qualities consider just as responsible for his success as hard work. I find resourcefuiness, faithfulness. dence that Britain is cooking up a new secret deal with Japan, sharing control of the buffer strip clear across nerth China, become more plausible. Show her by Had the president drawn a frankly that they would either have to reduce wages or close \Ash.\ which I remains perseverance, ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE Re) Out sae -Heapunes i rl I've gone ere is no doubt in my mind that we will Yet what am I to do about my contract? I have talked to my employer. He says strikes, Most workers are sensi- years, ble and fair. But to be sensi- erg employee ble and*fair they must know $5,000 home something of the problems that on the F. H. A. Plan, or they so vitally affect them. Take Care of Your Feet be happy. i} ¥ df had. which ous: course of them breaks the news, news- rule, be : Taken\ in. Way, 'are 4 kinder to man than Edwin C Hill =-_--s, Em 'ORS of the big wire services tell me that through- utthellhimnflzmmmnzi more and“? interest in world 55m. mum-0313's; I'lgrcu-t-uwmu stories on foreign affairs. cracker-barre! are- beginning to dis- course on Pan-Germanism, the Rum“ states, the road ~ to Bagdad, collective security and isolation. The Town Meeting of the air, which has had a highly success- cent, even quietly helpful'in the ful season with its weekly na- Wufifimdcmm.|a:vw£ trend south, Tibet has an even longer of public border “firm-H \3‘s udut no; opinion, par» plains why, since the days ticularly Colonel Younghusband, Britain foreign has been getting more and more fairs. W clubby with the lamas, and now this in mind, is deep in the Far Eastern po- this depart- litical swirl involving a suc» ment called. cessor to the Panchen Lama and up the Town the political drift of the millions Meeting for a of Buddhists left leaderless by report on the death of the Dalai Lama, what In Europe, they're in a huddle are and haggle in the moment be- about this gountry's at- titude, what ought to be its attitude, on over-seas wars and rumors of hes Picker and Anal isolation of S07 plete ani ation 'of wa’ufi fifvgmlegfiu viet Russia-so the international States, Canada and Cuba, These Tall~Dirds insist But, they main= letters: come from unheard-of {AID: it Will be, in the end, a little mountain or prairie towns, AVE-power bloc, a Ave-suit from persons famous and ob: bridge deck and a five-acre pok~ scure, \rom big cities and farms. \ 4°C Their most articulate collective And, if the geography class voice is for keeping out of oth- Will again come to order, there's er people's quarrels, for ade- the Moslem bloc. | Mustapha quate national defense; for sen- . Kemal, shrewd, hard-boiled boss sible co-operation in commercial of Turkey, dominates it. It in- and cultural intercourse with Cludes Turkey, Persia, other nations-BUT, no foreign istan and Iraq, focus of iremen- war or boycott commitments, no - dous international oil interest, tie-ups which might demand Blood may be thicker than wat- that we again shed blood and °T, but oil is thicker than blood. money on foreign soil, to serve, alien purposes and leave us again holding the bag. + 0+ ® Americans Are Isolationists UCH is the preponderant opinion of this cross-section of America, and it is made clear Our Governmerit Test Out Your Knowledge 19. (a) What name has been ap- plied to the first ten (b) State briefly the content of each of the first ten pretty cross if we don't stay at home and tend to our knitting. We lost the 'lives and the bil- tossed. amendments < Ln! £1,171”? stew ugfiflfi 20. State briefly the content of dynastic hatreds and power ri- valries, but we did learn a lot of geography. We are learning a (Answers on Page 12) lot more now, as the Town Meeting letters attest, and if we F ' Fl keep our wits about us it won't ites ashes cost us a cent. For instance, If we look sharp, 1m wfl‘I rsmte that To Eu; xmv; Issue nce of Sinkiang, in Northwes China, has a long border on In- MICHIGAN CITY, Ind, - dia. And, again, keeping our Santa Claus has been made an eyes peeled, we will observe issue in a mayoralty election. that wary old England isn't Fred Parker, Republican can- pleased to see this province be- didate, criticized his Democrat- ing overrun by Russia, and iC opponent, Mayor R. C. Fed- doesn't want it altogether dom- der, for having Santa ride in the eleventh amendment. inated by Japan. She's going to the annual Indiana day parades do her own goal-keeping on all “fih August. won, the avenues and approaches to \51° not believe.\ said Park» India, Therefore, shreds of evi- °\ \we should bring Santa Claus out in such hot weather as we have here in August.\ Service Under Difficulties COATESVILLE, Pa. - The a 0% % customer wanted > a chicken. « Grocer Charles Eby's supply was England's Deep Intrigue exhausted but he drove to an- NE of the most astute stu- - other store to get one. dents of Far Eastern affairs, While he made the purchase, a a man who has lived in China policeman tagged his car for and Japan for many years and double-parking. written several books about En route to deliver the chick» Pan-Asiatic politics, tells me en, he stopped to see a friend. that this is exactly what is hap~ And someone stole the chick» pening. Britain will be compla- en. E): Harriet Benedict the last New York City waiting to pass judgment who élection the women worked . 40% the women's adoration. hard and enthusiastically to falt RB & Mettom t* 70° elect Thomas E. Dewey to the # w @ office of District Attorney. Now, swmz. changes have been Mr. Dewey is returning the I has Speaking over the radio last . Nation and a new 22-cent stamp has which will bear portrait of President Cleve« strengthened jury system son 24-cent to the $5 Calvin the few “a. time 1\ h‘: Coolidge, the new issues remain been serving. as originally announced. \They bring interest and en- The fact that the thriftiest of thusizum to their duty,\ he said. all our late presidents, Calvin “mun-mina- Coolidge, appears on so costly a between sham sticker has its amusing angle, m| to mum We “a“: hupdwmd‘olflnl “It: a.“ what sagaciout Vermori wntnemes and see that Justice would think important enough spend five dollars for postage. And what, oh what, would he ink of the spending proclivi« the t. administrg«