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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
* “v. never sat with him before, Mrs. and I've heard stories \ Cops Seek Sneak Thiet Who Looted Empty Bus Hempstead police today are looking for the thief who looted a parked Hempstead Bus Lines bus this morning and made off with 50 round-trip tickets and $44 in coin. According to police, the driver, Donald Scott of 35 Wellington Street, Hempstead, left his bus at 8 P.M. on the west side of station Plaza near Jackson Street and went into the Hempstead Bus Terminal for a cup of coffee. Following usual practice, the bus was taken to the nearby garage by a mechanic and a new bus was rolled into the station ready for Scott to take out on his next run. Scott told police that when he entered the new bus 25 minutes later he expecied to find the money changer tickets at the drivers seat, transfered there by the mechanic who changed buses. They had disappeared, however. Hults Denies He Killed His Own Insurance Bill Slate Senator William 8. Hults of ted when he ordered an assistant Port Washington today in Albany,/in bis Albany office to withdraw denled rumors that be bas asked/requests to pull the bill out of com- the Assembly Insurance Commit-\mittee early this week. The assis- tee to delay action on his compul-/snt accidenially submifted the re- sory suto insurance bill, becaust/quests without his permission, a compromise bill would be presen-/guits said. ted which objectors would like bet- 'The legislation is divided inta ter. two perts, The Motor Vehicle Pi- He said 'There is no foundation for the rgponfe‘ He expluxnedflzuw- nancial RetbonaibMity Act, and the ; Assigned Case Plan Act. ever, that he doesn't want the bill The first zequires every motor to come out of commitjee for m ¥ote until Wednesday or inter, so|ehicle in the state or operated an state highways to be covered by committee members will have proof of financial responsibility, time to study it. He sald features in the blll that! 'The second pertaing to accident brought a flood of objections from|cases in which ''ghost\ drivers, brokers and some companies at such as bX - runners and stolen first bave been ironed out. He feels car drivers are Involved. Buch a [one will be assigned to an atuo the more study it gets, the more insurance company to dispose of »shance it will have of getting m} favorable committee report, 1\ If it were the Insurer of the vehicle involved. Ex -Bank President, Clerk Will Go on Trial Monday \The trial of William H. Abel, ous-. McCarty, charged with one count ted Central National Bank of Min-/of forgery and one of conspiracy, eola president, and Joseph McCar-|is a former bookkeeper of Ideal ty, both of Mineola, will get into Insulators Company, whose exect- full swing Monday before County|tive, Mrs. Lillian B. Robinson, 47, Court Judge Norman P. Lent. lof Roslyn Heights, has admit- our days of painstaking masterminding the fake Joan ination of almost 500 prospective! scheme. jurors was completed yesterday] Mrs, Robinson pleaded guilty with the swearing in of an all -iTuesday before the tris) got. un- male Jury and two male alternates Manny and is free on $40,000 bail Werbert Alcorn of 84 Bates Rond, sentence on 50 counts of Great Neck, is foreman. He's 45, forgery and one of conspiracy, car- married and & statistician with the rying a maximum total penalty of New York Life Insurance Com-|801 years in prison. a Another defendant in the case - Abel is charged with 50 counts of James J. Goldin of Flushing, a forgery and one count of conspir-'former Ideal Insulators bookkeep- groups in the area to vols in March to join its program to enlarge every district, bring in Industry, and get a firs. grade post- office to serve three times as many residents as at present. Highlight of the meeting in the Bethpage Police Boys Clubbouse was announcement by James Nor- man, Republican executive come mitteeman, thet \Kingelhosfer's post-office will not be built.\ Bethpage Postmaster James Kin. gethoefer announced Thursday that a contract was in the works for Bam Kellner of Hicksville to bulld a 3,000 square foot postoffice st Park and Central Avenues, ~ Norman said, \We want & first grade post office, 6,000 square feat at least, in: another section of town.\ The first step in the expansion program, establishing the civil de- fense and lighting districts \can detnitely be arranged\ according to Norman and Bud Massara, Town of Oyster Bay civil defense director. Norman also said the Bethpage election districts can be enlarged through arrangements with execu- tive committeemen from other communities. The gfoup will not push for a Bethpage telephone exchange \be- cause It looks hopeless.\ Val Mihic, chairman of the telephone com- mittee, said the telephone company) Norman Strax of Great Neck, the | 'has agreed to print Bethpage in|inventor of the lawn mower that! the directory after the name of any /cuts grass without anyone's help, resident who so requests: summed up his feelings today, A petition mgainst the post office|about the nation's capital today in Rabbi Milien Arm of the Glen Inventor REVIEW - STAR WASHINGTON BUREAU ‘ DIETARY LAW -- Representatives of 13 villages discuss plans for maintaining and enforcing Jewish dictary laws at & meeting in Hempstead's Congregation Beth Israel. Lefi to right are Benjamin Mandelker of Lynbrook, chairman; Rabbi Harry E. Schwaris of Congregation Beth Israel and Great Neck Youth Tours Washington Cove 'Tifereth Isfael Finds Capital 'Terrific' er operate on a plush carpet of|ited the National Bureau of Stand- the botel Statler here, admitted it/ards and the Naval Ordinance La- looked \kind of slow moving.\ borsiory, On tap wre lectures by But he quipped, \it doesn't mat-/some of the nation's leading sci- ter bow slow it goes, because it/entists . doesn't take up your own time.\} 'The son of Dr. Philip Strax of 'The youthful inventor put in over|10 Somerset Drive was too busy 5 proposed by Klingelboefer was cir- culated today by the Improvement Association. The petition says the building would be in fact a third grade post office servicing only one third the popul altbough Beth page Is rated a a first class post- al sone; the site would add to tra- fle congestion since it is in a heavy business section near a iwo - lane highway used by Grumman em- ployes,and would obstruct fire ser- vice since the site is opposite the firehouse. Auxiliary Police: Form Pistol Club The Hempstead Auxiliary Police formed a pistol club last night. Purpose of the club will be to train members in the handling of firearms to sid the Hempstead Po- lice Department in event of a na- tional emergency. Club officers elected were C. Vincent Tatem, president; Joe Karr, vice-president; Jack Geer, secretary, and Allen Hopkin, trea- surer. Hempstead Civil Defense Chief Wil. liam O. Goulde, Charles Baladino, Lawrence Gumbinner, Paul Steeg- er and Albert Van Tassell. Police Captain George Graham, auxillary executive officer, appoint- ed Adam Stein as range officer, counsel. Boy, 4, Injured In 2-Story Fall A 4-yemr-ola boy has a possible brain concussion after s fall from the second floor landing of the out- Lido Veterans Housing project, Police said \Timothy Costello, aon The board [of directors Includes} Frank poerr deputy range offi- cer and George Ammerman club side stairs at Bullding A in the) one word . . . \terrific The 17 + year - old Long Island- er is one of forty finalists here competing for $11,000 in Westing- house scholarships. Arthur E.; Pearlmutter of Forest Hills also is| a fmalist. Norman, watching his lawn mow- two years' work on the mechanical|setting up his mechanical brain for brain which operates the mower.|the judges to worry about whether \Don't worry,\ he said, \I do oth-jbe will win any awards. er things too.\ He likes to play| \You Just can't tell,\ sald Nor- the guitar annd call square dances.\man with a shrug of his shoulders. Norman, in the second day of bis|Winners in the fifth annual West- ‘Ilve = day all - expense - paid vis-|inghouse sclence talent search will it to the nation's capitol, has vis-/be announced Monday. Three Nassau policemen will be| awarded commendation certifi- cates Tuesday in the Police Hend- quarters ruditorium, Mineola, Cer-| tifleates for excellent police duty| will be given to 54 others. | The three to receive the com-| mendation are Pat:olmen Second | Grade Alexander Glenbocki of mm. ‘eollHOernld M. Higgins of Willis- ton Park and William W. Jones of Valley Stream. Jones and Rigging rated the hon- or by capturing auto thieves. Glen- bocki will be cited for having nabbed a youth who confessed to mine burglaries. s * THE 54 MEN scheduled to re- ceive excellent police duty certify cates are: Lieutenants John Gsell and Mau-| 3 Cops to Get Commendation Awards; 54 Earn Honors for Excellent Police Duty rice P. Van Dyke; Sergeants Her-\men P. Altomare, Lynndon . bert R. Carter, John W. Delaney, a\ final; 3:11:31: jail: rry, Jose . Ber , Jose Wilson L. Graham, ATROM C:\G pregger, Kerl H. Enstad, LS Smith and Arthur R. Van Peltilue w, Foss, James A. Germain, Detectives First Grade Harry O.|prancis J. Gros, Andrew J. Hat- Liljegren and Michael F. O'Brien, vey, James 8. Hurdle, Daniel J. and Detectives Third Grade Ed-\yrzeger, Joseph A. Koster, John ward F. Curran and Robert Norman L. McNamee, Honeyman. (Michael V. Murphy, Barry L. Pis Patrolmen First Grade Robertjer, Truman A. Rogers, Vincent J. Burke, James P. Costello, Ed-\Bchwarting, Edward Thomson, ard I. DePrimo, Jerome A. ECk-|John F. West, Robert A. Weston jart, Roland W. Grant, John F./and Edward J. Zielaany. Hale, John J. Kapler, William Ko-| Probationary Patrolmen Thomas logy, Michael M. Massel, Thomas|E, O'Donohue and Adrian A. Wal- M. Mears, John Miller, Anthonyjters, % A. Mirenda, Robert A. Monroe,| 'The awards are made 'on the Robert M. Nolturno, Edward M.\recommendation of an awards com- Ryan, Walter A. Schneider and Ro-imittee headed by Deputy Inspec [bert L. Witzig. tor Theodore 8. Dixon Jr. of Free- Pntroimen Second Grade By RICHARD PRUSSIN The executive committee of the Oyster Bay Civic Council last night) summarized arguments against a joint Levittown recreational dis- “rich 'The Civic Council opposes entb- hm. legislation permitting the town! boards to create the Joint district of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Costello,|Which was introduced in Albany lost his footing about 2:30 P.M.|Feb. 10. Formed this month, the yesterday and plunged to the grasa|@TOUp represents eight Hicksville acy in connection with a scheme to milk his bank of almost half a mil- er - also pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentence on a charge of Mon dollars during the past four one forgery count and one conspir- (acy count. aes | \ M i% M M ANOTHER BRIDGE TO CROSS... ''How shall I finance new car?\ Our customers tell us my that our low-cost, con- venient financing plan is the finest way to pur- chase a new car. Come in and see for yourself why so many people finance cars through us. 3% .._ ) Ite mamascx an P NBROOK NATIONAL BANK ' ANDTRUSTCOMPANY M. ¥. Membets Prdersi Deport; Tnmuruns Oort. ¢ below. He was treated at Long Beach Memorial Hospital and sent home. First Precinct Patrolman Peter Martoglio assisted at scene. Branch Group Pleads Clemency for A-Spies A ples to President Eisenhower to grant clemency to convicted atom aples Jullus and Ethel Ros- enberg has been sent by the Five Towns Committee for Cleraency in the Rosenberg Case. The telegram was sent to the an Inwood church, Most of the 80 worshippers present were commit- tee members, spokesmen say. RABBIS OBJECT The New York Board lie schools. MOTHER GOOSE the President after a prayer meeting at of Rabbis has registered ''Btrong disapprov- al\ of daily prayers in state pub and Plainview civic organizations. The joint district, according: to the council, means splitting the Civic Council Lists Arguments Against Bill Creating Joint Levittown District six-year-old Hicksville Park andnot want the split. Parking District, by extending the| The council argues that residents Levittown Park District north to in-|of the Levitt - built ares do not clude 20 per cent of the Hicks:/Want to become part of any Levit- ville. district, in the Levitt-buiit/town district and the rest of Hicks- area of Oyster Bay Town, wille does not want that to happen. The civic council is against the) The enabling bill says the Oyster split because the residents of the|BAY Town Board: \upon its: own Levitt-bullt area voted against it)motion and without a petition may in an official Town of Oyster Bay|divide any park or public parking referendum Jan, 30. district within such town, or in They are against it because the|the case of a park and parking matter was thrashed out one year|district, divide the same into one ago with residents convincing the|or more separate _park or parking Oyster Bay Town Board they did Senate Probers to Check On 'Policy Sabotage' Senator Joseph McCarthy (R., Wis.) moves his Investigating Sub- committee's probe of the Voice of American back to New York City today to check further into \al- leged policy sabotage.\ 'The Wisconsin lawmaker's only comment prior to the Senate group's televised public hearings was that the testimony would deal with \alleged subversives\ as well as possible policy - wrecking. Hope Admits It-He's Great! Bob Hope received \$60 dinner in Manbatian worth\ of praise last night from {for which those who could crowd in 1,200 comedians, statesmen and/willingly paid $50 a plate to hear tans, then broke down and heaped on Hope until he ted they bad convinced him be i®/found it difficult to get up on his ”lull\ t L What is more, the comedian with “f; ml him. I'dl’bona’n. run. over the skijump nose made % the/py mopnie Tucker. I keey saying hard way\ - not as a comedian|., myself, 'No man could be this but as a warm-hearted humani- great' But ya finally convinced tarian. me!\ It all took place at & weiiow comics Iauded and lam- Find This Man MATTEO DE LORENZ® is want-| ed by the Pederal Bureau of In-] vestigation in New York for steal«, Ing from interstate shipments ofl woods. A Federal Grand Jury in- on and maccassine a I Can You Help the FBI [pooned him at the Waldorf Astor- in's grand ballroom for two hours In the best funnyman tradition. But the serious purpose was to honor Hope der an \amasing record of showmanship plus humanitarian- tom.\ «p « Besides raising Hope's morale, sponsoring Priara Club an nounced, the testimonial dinner raiseq $00,000, most of which will Asnwurane at alf timen - |Taxpayers and Businessmen's les G. Schlimm, who was re- mmmhmupuuumx- Otto Neuman, found the A police search for' two missing girls ended yesterday with they safe return home, but a missing persons alarm was still out for a Bethpage resident. Twelve - year - old Anna Grauet, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert imam: of 139 River Avenue, Ps chogue, was discovered in Lyn: brook at 11 P.M. last night, curled up asleep on the baci seat of a car parked near the LIRR station. Fifth Precinct police also can celled an slarm for Penny Wil Mams, 13, of 96 Melrose Street, Valley ' Streath, a Valley Stream Central High Bchool student, after ber safe return was reporled by an uncle, John F. Gleason. Penny, 'who disappeared from 'her home Thursday, refused to say where she had been, according to police, The Patchogue girl was found by Mrs. Edward Cunningham of 46 Weber Avenue, Malverne, who came in on the train from Man- Commuter Group [Miitibreo® pores said ws & . % ied by her father, Th To Aid Bus Riders ang Patchogue Police Chief Rey- nolds Wicks. She was too tired and Bteps to help bus commuters » . -'sleepy to be questioned last night, as well as Long Island Railrosd/and refused to reveal where she . . . obtain better service/bad been, police said. and lower rates will be undertaken 'The | brown-halred, | browh-eyed Long Island Commuters, a sixth grader in Pat- by fhe s As |chogue's River Avenue School, dis. ;s {appeared from her home Feb. m, and was the object of a wide- spread police search. Police said would be questioned further to- day. similar condition in the urea and indicated each owner will be served a summons, sociation when its membership (10111th William Marks of Rockville Cen- tre, head of the commuters Int: told the newly formed Unqua Ct A missing persons alarm is still Association of MassapeqU® 188/ou, ror Callum Bruce, 30, of 10 night that bus commuters Will D8lrciten street, Bethpage, reported a major concern of the missing since Feb. 5 by his wife, He stressed that at Teast 200,000 Josephine, to 260,000 members will be needed to make legislators in both Albany and Washington take notice. 'The New York Water Service Corpora- tion, he said, was jolted from vocating rates In casters Memsau when civic groups protested the rate hike, The primary concern of the com- mulers' group st present, Marks said, is getting the LIRR away from the Pennsylvania Rallrosd and into the hands of the Long Island Transit Authority. Cove Housing Up For Discussion Gien Cove's controversial low - rent housing project proposals will be aired at a mass meeting March 17, Mayor-Bupervisor Joseph A. Stanco revealed last night. Housing Authority and City Coun- cil members will be there to an- swer . qu after . residents have ”km sbout erect- Ing the apartment development at Hill Street and Row. A record crowd-packed City Hall 'Tuesday to fight or support a peti- tion which demanded the site be relocated. The major camplaint on the 1,200-signature petition | was that the site would reduce the val- Community Envoy an Gets Backing 'The Dads Club has gone ot rec- ord as the first Long Beach organi- zation to offer its backing to m community afibassador project in that city. The program calls for sending mbroad a junior ambas- sador from Long Beach this sum- mer, scoording to Herb Zeisler, Dads Club spokesman. Through the program, devised by the Experiment in International Living of Putney, Vt., and fos- tered by the State Education De- partment, local communities se- lect young persons to go abroad and live for a month as guests of foreign families, . .. During the second month over- seas the \ambassador\ tours the country to promote better inter- mational understanding . . , and broaden the education of the youth. \Potel cost of sponsoring an am- bassador, Zeisler pointed out, is about $900 including traveling ex- penses. More than 20 Long Beach organi- [zations already are considering the plan. They will 'discuss the good ue of adjacent homes. Leaders of the faction opposing neighbor project Thursday night at a meeting in the high school. the site's location were to have met next week with the Housing Authority. John F. Finn, Housing Authority chairman, last night post- poned the meeting until after resi- dents have stated their views at the mass meeting. The Ression will be held at 8:30 P.M. in the Glen Cove High School auditorium,. No one will be admit- ted to the muditorimm until 8:1 P.M., a school s anid, in order that students holding a play Civics Dance Tonight Ends Membership Drive East Meadow's East End Civic Association Will hold its first dande tonight st the Newbridge Road Bchool, climaxing a drive which brought membership to 380. Featuring squares dancing, the dance will start at 8 P.M. At a meeting Tuesday, a talk on rebearsal will not be distracted. \How to Baye on Income Taxes\ will be presented by Harold H, Bloom of East Meadow, lax con- sultant. BIGGER ..... BETTER 39 Gamblers Fined Total Of $1,250 Judge Samuel Greason gave a Bookie and two policy collectors three-month suspended sentences and fined them a total of $1,250 In Mineola District Court ysster- day. impson Hass, 81, of Manbat- tan, -a clerk, arrested Thursday night for bookmaking at §) Front Mo ut- o |dictment on January 19, 1951 to to the United Cerebral palsy [BW RookviN® Centre, paid #500. might an the stage of the Mef- |Chargos him with theft and con- Pund, Hope's tevorite charity PD Sill were Gar. urn-nouns”... wpiracy to commit the theft, , zener Brooks, 20, of 103 Mill Road, lean Madeirs sang in the see- ALIASES: Malloe Vincent De Red i SCHOO' Freeport, and Henry Backar®, 77, and sceme of the first aet of Maitio Di Lorenzo, s in S of 90 Underhill Avenue, . \The Inh‘w a* Marty. ow: . . Brooks paid $500 and was Toa ee. \ . n a it so Face Twin Probe |\=zs m= C---R hrothel keeper. helght, five feet, seven inches, They were arrested Jan. 6 in a For the rest of the opera |weight, 170; medium build: brown ans Thelost parked on Buatise Highway C ----§ the donned the wary beardAnd |hair, greying at temples and thin- House Un - American Activites Wantagh. Both men changed ¢ar- Tark, » bearded Indy from the \white race: fistionpationality. Oo. Tor an Te } wate Teleaned ban Ing' Tce rok cen oot on Eaters Joined toross totng io step [reb 12, and wore reamed in bail inning The dual role resulted from [Scars and marks: large burn scar; mu. ef - i [tor - Sunday M a the iimess of Martha Liptem, or- |on back of right shoulder, notice Congressional sources said th¢|CUBS HONORED . mar. mmhtfl-m able peck marks on faoe, De Lo- \ double ~ barrelled Inquiry will get| Twelve Cub Scouts ~ were pre- IN THE er Goone, Miss Madeira's per- mao likes to gamble, The accom- MATTEO DE LORENZO My next month when the achievement awards last *C formance was believed to be panying picture was taken in 1944.) p House group and the Senate at the snmug! Bive-Geld ¢i>-|. LONG ISLAND the first time ane person sang CRIMINAL RECORD: He has CAUTION: This man may be/mittee, headed by Senator Wiliam/ner of the Mineola Pack beld in Twat-hhm-r been convicted previously for lar- armed and should be considered|Jenner (R-Ind.) plan to hold joint/the First Presbyterisn Church of