{ title: 'Nassau daily review-star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1954, May 18, 1938, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn83031113/1938-05-18/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1938-05-18/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1938-05-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031113/1938-05-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
MAIN EDITION --* w #> Fresport, Rockville Centre, Gar- den' (City, Hempstead, Baidwi Oceanside, Long Beach, Islan Park,; Roosevelt and Villages to the East. Yalesed. Sud Clson Matier \mama-1mm! Co- operation Plan Urged To Hasten MILLIONS READY Federal Spending Curbs To: Solve Present Woes Suggested WASHINGTON, May 18- (IP)-A proposal for co-opera- tion between the government and the utilities to create thousands of new jobs in the private power industry won substantial support today in the senate. The suggestion was ad-! vanced by Chairman Philip H. Gadsden of the committee of utility executives. Gads- den, testifying before a senate appropriations subcommittee, asserted the administration's $3,154,000,000 relief and pub- lic works bill would permit |© the WPA to spend \hundreds of millions of dollars\ to duplicate existing private utility systems. , Asking the government to boundaries on its policy of dupli- cation,\ Gadsden added that \bit- terness and old wounds\ should be forgotten so that the private power industry can become 'a mighty machine for creating jobs and spreading social benefits to all the people.\ Chairman Adams (D., Colo.) of the appropriations sub-committee vou. xt xa. us U. S. PACT WiTH UTLMES GAINS SUPPORT IN SENATE Frank Curran, right, executive secretary of.the Hempstead Association of Commerce, one of the strongest boosters for the Buy It Today campaign conducted by The Review-Star, is setting a good example to other prospective buyers. Mr. Curran is shown above buying a new golf bag. \ast pf It He asserted that he in- f time but is_ mind or a ut changed TANK TRUGK AOW | | COUNCIL RETAINS church WTS doWH ACTION oN LOTTERES Gambling Regulations Held Responsibility Of Lawmakers (Picture On Page 18) A campaign for more com- municants in the Episcopal diocese of Long Island, spurred by Bishop Ernest M.| Stires's revelation that a large | number of members have al- lowed their affiliations to lapse, was in prospect today, following the completion, yes- terday, of the business of the Tist convention of the diocese | held at the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Garden City. Vote Down Lottery Ban Probably one of the most im- portant pieces of business con- | sidered by the convention, the resolution which would have in- structed delegates to the state | constitutional convention to op- | pose any change in the state law calculated to legalize lotteries and gambling, resulted in negative ac- tion, as the delegates voted down | the resolution, 150 to 123. The negative vote followed a | talk by Colonel Jackson A. Dyk- man, chancellor of the diocescfl who urged that the moot subject | | [of gambling be left to the legis- | detune moz \I will not go as far as to say | that I have diftovered greater | charity and Christian virtue at | race tracks than could be found |in regular attendance at churches, but I will say that the subject of | serted. THES NEW TO \I speak from personal knowl- edge. I do bet on horse races, but | | for years the state constitution has {| mary showed -K PENNSYLVANIA REBUFFS C. I. 0. . FOR POLITICAL POWER IN BD Defeat Gives Lewis Sharp Setback | In Ballot Test | FARLEY PICKS 1 Party Breach 'Brightens Republican Outlook For November I WASHINGTON, May 18-' (@)-The apparent defeat of Pennsylvania Democratic can- didates backed by John L. Lewis provided a stunning setback today for the C.1.0. in its first statewide bid for political power. Lewis remained silent and ex- pressionless as he sat in head- | | quarters of the United Mine Workers and studied the primary returns. They showed the C. I. O.~ endorsed ticket, headed by S. Da- mmm |_ WASHINGTON, May [MMJ Representative Martin (R., Mass.), chairman of the Repub- | lican congressional campaign | committee, said today \the No- | vember parade started yelter-1 of course, successfully.\ Umpires The Winners? Today, there was still no de- cision from the umpires, army of- ficials who were entrusted with the job of determining the re- sults of the war games, and the1 suspicion | was growing, under- cover, at Mitchel field, Farming dale and the entire northeast area that the umpires are the winnersfl and everybody else is the victim.! Major General Andrews, taking | | off from his war games headquar- ters at Mitchel feld yesterday | afternoon to return to Langley field, Va., after 14 planes had | passed in review over the local army airport, expressed, in the | yrnimeographed release,: \complete satisfaction\ over the war games. He praised the day\ when Pennsylvania's h. 'state \is back in the Republi- can . fold.\ \The most significant thing in the primary yesterday,\ Martin commented, \was the polling of many more Republi- contests and the lavish spendw |ing of state and federal funds.\ ®___________a ‘gamblinz should be left to the | can than Democratic votes de-| | Out that extensive repairs had not ISGUUNT I-IMIT‘Icgislature,\ the chancellor as- | | spite the fact of Democratic‘ | been necessary, even though ar- | vis Wilson for senator and Thomas | of \pilots and men, In” pointed out that they had carried out difficult missions with en- | thusiasm and intelligence. He said | | that the performance of men,| | motors\ and machines had \ex- | ceeded expectations\ and pointed | rangements for them had been! made, Bent Prop Only Damage He lauded the airforce for the Verbal Bombings Continue Over 'Who Won The War' | Umpires' Decision Waited In Battle Of: Farm- ingdale A. Army Checks Data The \war\ is over, But the controversy lingers on. . There's Farmingdale, blasted, razed, bombed, in ruirs-mythically, | And here's Lieutenant Colonel Walter H. Frank, chief of staff of the GHQ airforu, announcing, in a statement from Major General | Frank M. Andrews, maestro of the five-day air show: \The black out operations over Farmingdale were conducted #--- zzz a ROUTS C. 1, 0. GOVERNOR G, H. EARLE \I i 'a # Opposing Democrafic Slate Scores Win: i , \_ In Primaries </ EARLE OUT FRONT: | | | I I 'Governor, After Rebuking Farley and Guffey, Is Walkaway PRIMARY RESULTS PHILADELPHIA, May 18-@r . -Returns in Pennsylvania's state= (! wide primary gave: g tie U. S. Senator -< ! (6,210; of- 8,075 districts)-Earle, 624,746; Wilson, 254,320. Governor - (6,288 --- Jones, 489,446; Ken» , 395,608; Margiotti, 149,854 Republican U. S. Senator - (6,061 districts) - Davis, 583,380; = Owlett, 376,187. Republican Governor - (6,181 districts) - James, 746,248; Pin« chot, 344,369, PHILADELPHIA, May 18 -(ZP)-Democratic state com- mittee candidates smashed a slate backed by Labor Leader John_L, Lewis .and Joseph F. Guffey in Penns vania's primary and looked today for some avenue to peace in the bitter factional | strife. | Jones Downs Kennedy Returns from 6,258 of the state's 8,075 precincts assured victory 40 _ ‘Governor George H. Earle for tha I HUME 06:1erth genai‘orml nolmin‘fllm , . P . . ; | | 1 and to Pittsburgh's Charles vin told he thought | ; OC contained utterly futile prohibi- Kennedy for governor, was stead- fact that the most serious accident | M iod te fhowaht some Taxpayer Action Fights: Extension Denied Pending Utery, fuble | Pommes ground | during the maneuvers was a bent c s b: ; Induri ernor. 0a | Assessmen | v6 On few blocks away, Post- | propelior, \hd that no injuries . the relief bill which would \pre- '> B rLammg . A { S$ t Action | To Legislature master General James A. Farley | Were sustained by any men during Down before commiltee-en= vent private capital from being | spec.“ Counsel I At Long Beach | 'The constitutional ban, Colonel ' also had been reading the election \ the five-day operations, dorsed Jones, despite a primary« I Dykman averred, has not pre- \ Statistics presented by Major | eve endorsement by Democratic destroyed without hamstringing --- | figures. Like Lewis and Senator s pres y aj vented the placing of a bet. , National Chairman James A. Far- the government program of utili~ 'The fight to keep tank trucks A new mass protest meeting of \All it has done.\ he said, \is to | flfoé’hxfaan’fg'yfi “mgflin‘dfigz fi§?::\“ ley, went Lieutenant Governor » . i s, nom| - ® ”Ifm'Frw‘r: ible, Ad from rumbling past the Island taxpayers was threatened today if absoive the legislature from e- | lice them, he had picked one win- Porting supplies, 400,000 gallons of mig possible, ams | - | F ,I T b l W ld Thomas Kennedy. He was sup- + 8 sibility. Gambl btt r d_by Lewis, G t Park school on Warwick road took Long Beach officials refuse to cnnwtfinx‘lu‘lg‘zd buatvzollxnfanoxé tare? mer in his support of Governor %88 Were issued, (2,184 bombs aMI!Y ribuna OUIQ poried by Lewis, Guffey and the said, to impose a restriction that | ; the government could not finance - ' - - : C. 1. O.-as was Mayor S. Davis a-new turn today, with the filing of | fer with attorneys for plaintiffs vent it by law , . . let us put the George H. Earle, state organiza- “$1,“th 260,000 pounds were dis Handle Matrimomal, Wilson of Philadelphia, over= tion by ta join wh fighting the $1,352,000 responsibility squarely where it HO Candidate for senator, (ode and fen fone of (ood was a 1 | new utility construction where an action by a taxpayer to enjoin| who are fighting the $1,352,000 | | Children's Cases e . used daily. During actual opera- | wheimed by Governor Farle, ; P | belongs, on the legislature.\ |_ Two questions arose j - I Certain leaders of the trium= private' plants are rendering an the village board from paying a beachv lmprovgment assessments \n op Stires, who presided at! Where will Lewis and the C. I 3,122: ggwrldimz'zg? 52:5 hqrer: ~ phant state committee, which i% . adequate, equitable and efficient special attorney to seek revocation The city council yesterday refused the convention, reported sub- O. throw their sizable bloc of haa P miles f i ime limi ALBANY _-_(®- Cre. | headed by Secretary of the Com- service. of an oil tank permit awarded to to:extend the time limit for 25 per stantial progress throughout the | Pennsylvania votes in the Novem- and. in 21,7,000 plane hours were , May 18 Cre h ( flown. ation of a supreme court family David L.\ Lawrence, Gadsden objected especially to a th#, Bulk Plants, Inc. | cent. discounts on 'he assessments, | diocese, but deplored the fact that ber. election? The first trial of the lon \o sup \ \ were said in unconfirmed reports Pooch Sh Chuch wool (Be agoo and p tenhk at Wreek |Dending an aetfon in Nassau au: [tke Dumber of communicants | Can Farley and the Democratic telelype system used for late) ob asking President + ; - e s r e i 3 children s oosevell s m lation in e pai PWA to build power projects and Lead, outside of the incorporated Preme gout, adjourned until tions to lapse. | communication also gratified the | p June 6. . among their divided followers ADd major eneral, who pointed out| cases and domestic relations was |rOW that split an organization lease them to municipalities, Un- ater of the village, Taxpayers * Deadline Tonight The loss of membership, he said, | defeat the Republican ticket? that 39 machines sent betwfm‘prwmed today in New York's | Which in 1934 pushed Earle into der this arrangement, the munici- Drotested that trucks going to and b ; (6. | \appears to be less serious in Long | There had been some pre-pri- 20.000 and 30,000 ds dail office as the first Pennsylvania palities would pay 'back 55 per xfi‘m' in aad 4 he, shool Mfr-hue fixxffles'fitfi‘fi‘sflfi Island than in other sections,\ yet | mary talk that in the event of 'The I'Limeblraskfirds salzhent | Democratic governor in 44 years. cent, of the cost of the projects ng and caused a public nui~ f ~ it is serious enough \to receive our Kennedy's defeat, the successful j One report was that Lawrence, gt): interest, over a 25-year pe-l mi? grrid‘iajzfigr‘éizggdz: 2:11:10!“de ”bu-f: \12 anxious and thorough considera- | candidate might withdraw and let accredited to Colonel Frank the Another proposed amendment Gowrflorpgarle, Philadelphia constitutional convention. Free Speech Redefined t R tatement that Major General An- ; -- f tion. | Kennedy be designated the Dem- sdrew: was \particularly enthusi-| WOuld provide that the grant of Democratic City Committee r- Adaris said Gadsden perhaps m voted $500 to fight the per- {fiztdfidrxmgg of Fifi-2:0 at“?! There were 37,000 communicants ocratic nominee for governor» |astic about (a, co-opezninn .:,d;fr!fd0m of speech and freedorn man John B. Kelly and Matthew had '\éxaggerated the- danger of I7 installments. | in the diocese in 1926, when Some observers, however, be- |ixcellent spirit of the citizens in| Of !he Press thould not be con- | M, McCloskey, Jr., Philadelphia this ticular \section\ because Summonses were served today Yearly installments P h Bishop Stires took over the leader- lieved the victorious state organi- i » | strued so as \to excuse attempts\ co-leader, would meet hére to- ' Tew 'Communitiés would be likely to. members of the former and Wilson; attornéy for 12 ship of the Long Island ares, he zation would not now consider fainziatzmn‘fiflfiwznfl $3; f'hl‘jm individuals to advocate over- morrow. There was no indica» present village boards, in the in-| Dlaifitiffs said today, however, |siiq and only 56,000 now, d h 1 A arned from | |,, f gov by 1 to take advantage of it. juneti ct bi t by Edwin| that Mayor Logis F. Edwards ad- + 9 d + such a peace proposal, the air raid drill many things | POW Of government by force. tion, however, that they would Senator King (D., Utah), a fre- {3 hog\! 4:1: rm i at: vised hint'that once the federal [B® fact that there have been 33.-| Democratic wgrkers were hope- {which will strengthen the air de-| Th# tribunal measure, sponsored do more-than await peace over= quent opponent of 'administration C: S i311 e m' e Yovernment received 75 per cent (00 \CW members added in that|ful that in any event the C. I. O. fense of the nation.\ by Democrat Eugene L. Garey of tures from Guffey's side. measurés, told reporters the leas~ MINA” 32. Hrolul'h s tiller“; 5f the total loan. the muff“. 25 time. forces would support their party 'The temporary base camps at 19 New York city, would permit ap» Pinchot Defeated in G. O. P. ing provision was \absolutely af}, “2120.5“ %, m‘k‘l“ Def cent uld be automatically \The situation is really worse {slate. If Gifford Pinchot had won points in the northeast area were | D®8! from the court's decisions to Meanwhile, Republicans, who stupid.\ - h’ to B m“ $1.4”? ; MB than this,\ he said. \We have a|the Republican nomination for being broken up today, and by |# higher tribunal, It would ex- | nominated Superior Court 4 4 \It we would just say to the aron U who. had not already paid their growing diocese in which the governor. they said, Lewis nightfall, the last Hui, of the | clude from its jurisdiction all cases Arthur H. James for governor utilitien that the Tederal govern mh’fiflmmm “a (clematis would no inn,\ » number of persons coming to us |have taken his followers into that simulated war was to have disap- iIVolving support of indigent fam- a margin of landslide prope ment is not going: to to dupli« t al con Auld pro ired to rdi wil M pr,, camp. But the 72-year-old Pin- peared, ilies and those whose \physical over former Governor cate their plants and their in- mam“ mfmt: m g; 22.“ pay, according to Wil- Continued Page 2, Col. 5|chot lost the organization choice. circumstances establish conclu- Pinchot, raised an anti-new deal. . vestmerits, they mug.“ village andis not a public nu- Wilion and Cattornéys ~for-two 9 HURT AS ELEVATOR sively no hope for family rehabili- | battle ery and hailed the wounds a 4 Ingman,\ ther \aeon \ intormed penne expreted r=- VOLKFEST PARK ASKS tation.\ and $1,500,000,000 on construction “$33.\ movibc‘r‘n“ of I a fizpubuenn- and “m ton Democra changes in the relief measure said would oppose <the leasing : provi and would to i restrictions on government duplication of pri- vate power facilities. The. appropriations ' subcomimit« tee arranged to end closed. hear» ings - on; the lending measure) ioday. . Committeemen sance, The defendants have 20 days to will be the complaint The case POLICE DEMAND PAR! TELL SHIPPER'S NAME \'ad hin George Paris, ly $1 W t program:. City officials are said to contend, how- have been in- W“ in a correct procedure assessing d that there is no al- that th mt by PW. taxpayers, ani Lawrence Manufacturer Must Re- ternative but to proceed: withthe FALLS THREE FLOORS to reunite Pennsylvania Demo- crats, inasmuch as his appeal for a | coalition ticket of Earle and Ken- | mnedy was only 50 per cent. suc- cessful, In his election-eve state- ment he mentioned it was the first time. he had entered a primary battle since becoming national chairman. The Democratic primary, how» ever, was not regarded as a test of strength for the Roodevelt ad- ministration, since all statewide RIFLE RANGE PERMIT | Shooting Facilities Built In 1922 At Franklin Square Alth ough the Plattdeutsche Volkfest park at Framklin Square has been operating a rife range without ® license since 1922, ap- plication for a permit is now be- fore Nassau county police and the | Hempstead town board. Superin- | tendent Hetmeier, who is in char; Seth_T. Cole, Catskill Republi- can, offered the proposed amend- Brookiyu . German Unite: Use | ment which would prohibit oral or | _ Said | written inducements minst vio- lent overthrow of government with the assertion that \the ete- mental rights which form the tected and continued.\ \Under the proposed atnend- ment,\ he said, \everyone would be. free to urge any change that might be thought to be desirable so long. as it would not take away opened in the Demon-mam at presaging a Republican to state er in November, ladelphia Chairman Jay Cooke: \The Republican party come into its own in Pennay o this year and will lead the way \ A basis of our liberties shall be pro- | to Republican victory in the na» . tion ft 1940.\ \The Democrats will never together,\ said Chairman although, half « jokingly. as joined in a celebration. \Jim P injected himself into the said the bill would reach the sey» . ate finoy cither late this' week Monday, ¢ ”an???“ uni!“ NTTBES, France, 18-40) -The Duke and bushel-vol Wind- sor arvived doday for a 'Anal in- spection . of their. new - Riviera Qua-lb TODAY'S REVIEW-STAR oin races érs..of the president. of the park, made the request. Administration followers with {the basic rights without which we | ation Without invitation and could notret‘l’ilny liberty.\ out conmulting us. Now let his Provision for:a-state commission | 3°C Rims#lf in again \I“ of. municipal Anance with author- - ity to: review, revise\ or. set. aside of any county, rity,