{ title: 'The Nassau daily review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1926-1937, August 15, 1927, 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/sn95071428/1927-08-15/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1927-08-15/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1927-08-15/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1927-08-15/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
Births wi To Natha sad Mande uarge Walker, Jefferapn street, Laike~ August T, a «daughter: named iyn Marriages RHODES--SCHAEPFER | The Rev. Harold Por 1 Cart, co-pas- tor of Bt. Mark's Methodist Episcopal Ohurch of Rockvilis Centre, ofeiated N. J., at the home of the bride's , Mrs. Ellis D. Crane of 106 \ine , Rockville Centre, Srturday eve- FARMERS FEL - - DAY TOMORROW Annual Program of Events Will | Be Held at Long Island I Research Farm Mineola, Aug. 15.-The Long Island farmers annuml field events will be held at the Long Island Research Farm at Baiting Hollow, Suffalk County, tomorrow. 'The party leaves the Court House sere at 10 o'clock Boing by Jericho Pike to Smithtown and wort Jefferson where a stop will be made for lunch. They are due at the Research Farm at 2 o'clock. E. J. Hambleton, entomologist of the Nassau County Far 1 Bureau said here this morning that there are many and varied interesting experi- ments being carried on at the Re- search Farm which are of vital im- portance to vegetable raisers. They will all be explained by the staff in charge The following comprises only a few of the most important studies being made. Dusting and spraying to pre- vent injury caused by flea betties, aphids and leafhoppers on potatocs. Laboratory tests of different insecti- cides and fungicides to determine their toxicity and effect on plant and insect. life: Tests using nictoine dusts and sprays in protecting cauliflower, cab- bage, cucumber and other seed beds from injury. Cabbage maggot control, fucumber beeties, dusting and spray- ing Boil acidity, cover crops, fertility tests, cultivation, swet or suckering and breeding Beed treatment: Cucumber mosaic and wilt; spraying.and dusting experi- ments. German Airmen Hop Off for U. S. | On Non-Stop Try (Continua from rage One) Jmany, alter 6 o'clock last night in trmpany with her sk'er plane, the Murops. which was destined for New Nork but which had to come down Bremen because of engine trouble. e Europa was out over the North flee when it had to make its way Wack to Germany for an emergency landing, in which its undetcarriage mnd propeller were broken. Weather Conditions Bad The Bremen amd Europa got away head of half a dozen other expedi- Hons which have been awaiting an tipportune time for esssying a wost ard trans-Atlantic flight to America. e start was made, Prench aviation @xperts declared, in the face of un- $avorable weather conditions. 'The French pilots declared that from the weather reports, there seem- ed little prospect of their | starting within 48. hours. The Bremen's pilots are Herman Moch! and Priedrich Loose, who have filded much to the record of German Aviation achievernents. 'They have as their passenger Baron Gunther Yon acoocomuss To REFUSE F000 Forcible Feeding Probable as .\Poland car was thrown heavily against Prisoner Enters 30th Day Of Hunger Strike Boston, Aug.\ 15.-(INS) for the thirtieth time. Dr. Joseph 1 was considering forcible feeding. hospital for the insane at Bridge- gloomy today. Bartolomeo Vanzetti had the regu- two sliees of ary toast and coffee: sister, Luiga, due here from I'aly this week to make a personal to Gov- ernor Alvan T. Puller. Chief Delense Attorney Arthur D. Hill today completed his brief in t Jntest proceedings in the world-famous case. 'Tomarrow Attorney Hill will eros verbal swords with Attorney General Arthur K. over exceptions to the denial of a mew trial by Judge Webster Thayer and to denial of a writ of error by Supreme Court Judge George A. San- derson. water.. Bacco appears week and - Nicola Bacco waved away breakfast today Mclaughlin, state's prison physicias, Bacco was within one day of tis previous fasting record-31 days in 1923, when he was sent to the state lation breakfast--cream toast, egg nog, Vanzetti appeared in good spirits. eagerly awaiting the coming of his Reading the state supreme court full bench) Two - Sacco-Vanzetti - committees were operating today-the old com- mittee in modest headquarters in the north end and the citizens' national committee, composed of \intellec- tuals,\ who seek presidential interven- tion. An echo of Sunday afternoon's clash between Sacco-Vanzett! sympa- thizers and police came in Municipal Court with the arraignment of Powe: Hapgood, 28, of Pittsburgh and In- dianapolis, tormer Harvard athlete, and Stormy Petre) of the middle western mine fields, and Cosimo Gat- votta, of East Boston, Police broke through a crowd on the Common tn arrest Hapgood as he began pleading the Sacco-Vanzett! cause without s permit and demanded the right of free speech. Carvotta tried to stop police, crying \Long live Mussolini.\ GOTHAM PASTOR IT ST. MKG Miss Hazel Tuthill Wins High Praise - at < Rockville Centre Church The Rev. Dr. Christian F. Reisner. pastor of Broadway Temple, Manbat- tan, and one of the best-known pds- tors in Methodism, his wife, and a party of friends, were distinguished visitors at the morning services at St. - Mark's | Methodist - Episcopal Church, Rockville Centre, yesterday morning. Another large congregation turned out and enjoyed the Rev. Harold F. Cart's inspirational sermon on \Per- sonal Liberty,\ which was.the motn- ing c. A t21m: of beth the morning and the evening services was the singing of Miss Hazel F. Tuthill, famous radio artist, well known to thousands who have listened to her splendid singing over the air, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday and at the ves- ver services at the Waldorf Sundays Many | fiattering . comments have been made by members of St. Mark's regarding the singing of 'Miss Tut- hill, who has attracted fully as audiences by the magic of her during the month of August as the engagement of the popular Mark's quartet, the\ artists who ceded the well-known radio-artist. The Rev. Wilfred Clark Pheips Washington stated that he was ing a splendid vacation. Merrick Woman's. . Skull Is Fractured In Mineola Crash Mineola, Aug. 15.-When a cat driven by Atherly 8. Poland of Mine- ola was struck by a passing auto the a tree in Old Country road near Cur- Uss Field, and Miss Anne Scare of Merrick emerged from the wreck with a fractured skull. Miss May Wagner, of Main street, Mineola, another oc- the car, was slightly in- hep: I women and three en in fingging her. Florence, Ala, Aug. Bertha A. Slay, principal in the most sensational of Alabama's tangled chain of flogging cases, will appear in criminal court here August 1 to dragged her from her bed, bound her to a barrel and whipped her with limbs of trees and an automobile fan belt. The whipping followed Mrs. Slay's refusal, she told officers, \to confess to some neighborhood scandal.\ The five masked and robed persons forced their way into the Slay farm home near here, tied the woman's husband land her sister, Miss Lulu Dodson, to their beds and dragged her out of doors, where the floggi~~ took place. She said nothing of the affair for several days. then told county officials that members of a hooded order were responsible for the attack Limbs of trees A an automobile fan belt were said by Mrs. Bertha A. Slay (left) to have been She is shown holding sticks of the sort used by her attackers. husband (and sister, pictured at righ t, were tied to their beds by the flog gers while they whipped Mrs. Slay, changed her story, saying she hadjin an effort to \check mob viol=nce.\ recognized two women in the party \by their long hair and small feet,\ and absolving members of the secret testify that two women and three men organization. Arrests followed. \alter K. Mc- Adory, chief of the state law enforce- ment department, conducted an inves- tigation and swore out warrants for Mr. and Mrs. Allen Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lindsay and Charles Lindsay, all of Florence, charging them with complicity in the flogging. All five are held in the Lauderdale county jail pending hearing of the charges on August 1. The Slay fogging is one of five sim- ilar affairs brought to the attention of Alabama authorities within two weeks and which have caused Governor Bibb Graves to order special state invest- Later shelgators to co-operate with local officials youth, was taken into a dense weeds of Arthur Hitt, negro landowner, who day by two bile 4 by iwo Slay's Jeff Calloway, Oneonta, Ala., farm by a band of masked men and flogged into unconsciousness. Officials of Jefferson County, Ala- bama, were looking into the whipping was flogged when he refused to sell a tract of valuable land for a nominal sum. Three days efter the whipping he transferred his land for a price said to have been one-sixth of its value. Other flogging cases under scrutiny are those of Eston Murchison of Bes- semer, Ala., who was taken from an automobile and whipped because he was riding wit' \two strange girls,\ and Hugh McSweeney and Pearl Boggs. who were lashed on a road near Birmingham several weeks ago. | London, Aug. 15.-The popular con- ception bred of the movies that the is a romantic-minded person who, dashes about the desert on a fery steed kidnapping beautiful wo- men and taking them to wonderful desert palaces is wrong, and very much wrong at that. Ahmed Bey Hassenein, first Cham- berlain to King Fuad of Egypt, who made the arrangements for the state visit of his master to England, has once and for all shattered the popu- lar ideo. \The sheik is not a romantic hero of the desert,\ Ahmed Bey told in- terviewers during his London visit. \Contrary to the common belief, fost- ered by such films as 'The Shelk' and others in which Rudolph Valentino appéeared, the Bedouin and Arab shelk is generally quite a poor man, em- ployed in the rising of sheep and camels or in the still less romantic business of transporting merchandise 'and passengers across the desert. Only Simple Men \A shick !s a simple man,\ Ab- med Bey added, \with simple tastes, wholly uneducated, often very poor. His wife, or wives-a sheik has never more than two-weave their own and their menfolks clothes. 'They also sometimes help with the animals. Frequently came! meat figures on the daily. menu. Desert Sheik Not Romantic In Spite Of Movie Thrillers \The sheik is the acknowledged head or leader of his tribe-a band of Bedouins who, by rearing camels age to eke out a meager existence. In the Libyan and Sahara deserts a sheik and his followers lead a noma- dic existence. 'They are entirely de- pendent upon the weather for their living, having to pitch their tens whenever there is a fall of rain. Are Not Nomads \In the Assyrian desert the {ribes are not nomadic. 'They live in texts on a stretch of land which they o m, but in habits and customs they are similar to the Libyan Bedouins. There are, however, two distinct kinds of sheiks-the Egyptian sheik and the Arabian or Bedouin sheik. In Egypt the title of \Cheik\ is applied to a man who is conversant with and skill- ed in the application of Mobamme- dan law. He is a religious man. 'The desert sheik was originally the chief of an Arab tribe, holding his position by virtue of his superior intellect and mature years. 'The word sheik means an old man. The title is hereditary, the power it commands supreme.\ Lovers of the late Rudolph Valen- tino and his doings will read this per- haps with mixed feelings, but never- theless it is the very sad truth. Paris, Aug. 9.-(P) - The \yellow perl\ which has threatened for sev- eral months, is to become & certainty this {all, dressmakers' forecasts show. be one of the smart- est evening shades of the season, de- signers believe, oithough most of them house shows a in saffron yel onnaires At Find War for velvet, one dressmaker says, His|ning almond evening dress/and a shade , and severaliblack is used by some designers farina C in the bull-ring. of banana yellows. mqnmm’ Sicus To Yellow Dominates All Colors In Current French Style Shows houses shows beige almost exclusively for daytime and sports wear, There is hardly an important collection which does not recognize the steady vogue of natural and light tan toncs. One new shade for autumn is a gray-olive tint which one dressmaker] calls Lava Green. This house uses mhlntulnmdcnce of green is almost Battle Fields Ancient History iz & ® t : H tike} ¥ | unanimous ory, sweeping the_atens | f | LADY ASTOR FAILS TO | TEACH NEW TRICKS TO PARLIAMENT MEMBERS . London, Aug. 13.-Although | she has been in the House of Commons for nine ears Lady Nancy Astor, England's Amcrican born women Member of Parlia- ment, confesses that she has not taught its members anything new. \You can't teach old dogs new tricks,\ she declared at a dinner here. \I have been in the House of Commons for nine years but I have not taught them anything. The people who maiter are the people who think, not the people who rule,\ she added cryptically. Famed Toredo Main street. 'There will be prizes for players and non-players. Cafrds: start st 8:30 o' . Runs Away at §:30 o'clock. Admission will be Madrid, Aug. 15.-Bulfights are a very complicated institution in Spain. They have a traditional moral code, | that requires on the part of the for- I eigner an extended study to only be- / gin to understand, and then be can | never appreciate as well as a Spaniard | can, the question of whether the bull f is a real bull-fighter, and whether the bull is a real bull. Exactly what a bull should be or what he should not be, and what a orero should do and what he should not do, are technical questions in an art that can count among its true devotees, only those of Spanish up- bringing. But a recent scandal broke if lout in the bull-ring in Madrid, that even those who have never seen a bull | fight can appreciate. | Chicuelo, the famous bull-fighter, had to stab fourteen times, before he succeeded in killing his bull! Hoots, shouts, whoops, whistling, stamping I of feet: I Crowd is Angry | \Out with him! Out with him!\ f \Que se vaya!\ roared the furious pub- He, But little did they dream of the |f unheard of spectacle that was still | awaiting them. | \Down with Chicuelo!\ came the \ Mke a storm, Was he the hero of | yesterday? 'That does not mater. Down with him today! 'The Spaniards Chicuelo stabbed fourteen times be- uelo run bunt, from Others Are | mi\.- huh“: mint-m: WTO MISHIPS IN |&2e BELMORE HURT ? Two persons: were injured as the result of automobile accidents yester- County Police. when a horse on which he was rid- ing became frightened by an automo- so doing threw the horseman to the ground. Cora Wilks, 30 years old, of La- Tayette bruises on the upper lip and right cheek when an automobile in which she was riding and driven by Joseph C. Wilks, same address, collided with that of Ottomar Schermer, 28 Cottage Place, North Bergen, at 7 p. m., Sat- urday, According to police reports, Ochermer was driving a Ford sedan least on Newbridge Road, Bellmore, and at Bellmore Avenue collided with Wilks who was southbound. The Wilks machine was overturned by the crash The injured woman was taken to her home after treatment by Dr. Newsom of Bellmore, Edward Paulkey, Bedford avenue, North Bellmore, sus- tained injuries to his back and lacer- ations of the right eye when he was thrown from his horse which became! frightened and tried to jump over the automobile operated by William E. yoml.“ Cit“ West 102nd street, o y, at Newbridge Road and PFullings Drive, North Belimore, at 6:20 o'clock Saturday night. according to police reports, was driv- mg east on Pullings Drive, and mak- Ing a left turn, but had not quite completed the turn into Newbridge! Road, when Faulkey's horse, south no Newbridge Road passed a bus which had stopped on the right side of the road. 'The horse, on LL~ ing Goebel's auto, became frightened and tried to jump over the hood. The rider was thrown to the ground. Af- ter treatment by Dr. Newsom of Bell- more, Faulkey was taken to the hos- pital. CHICAGO & ALTON ROAD GIVEN TRACKAGE RIGHTS IN HLINOTS The Interstate Commerce Commis- sion has made public an order (Dock- et 19918) requiring the Toledo, Peoria 4 Westerri Railroad to permit the use of its tracks between Washington, 111., and Peoria, IIL, by the Chicago & Alton Railroad pending further ac- tion. ARTHUR HAAB RETURNS HOME Arthur Hamb, a former resident of Rockville Centre, twin brother of Al- bert Hmab and brother of Frederick C. Hmab, of Park avenue, wife returned to Chicago via automo- bile today after spending three weeks mt his mother's home, Centre avenue, Rockville Centre. v. Sergeant Kimball Post, veterans of Foreign Wars, of Hempstead, will hold a card party on this evening. No. 16 ughboy Plat}: To Hike From New York To Paris Danvers, Mass, Aug. 15.-New| mm“!!! to Porter, approx!: ..tely York to Paris, not mirplane but |© years will be consumed in his afoot. ®r task perhaps more with the possibt» ity that some 15,000 miles will be cov» ered before the finish. ._ Will Lecture: Encedie Porter is m native of the town of Marblehead, the town that claims to be the birthplace of the American Navy. Walking is his chief hobby, Even now Porter thinks no more of walking thirty or more miles a day through the woods and different neighboring towns. During the World War, Porter was a member of the 20th Field Artillery. He served two years in France ard never {c. 'red once during the long hikes that were prevalent during those day He is a magazine salesman by oc- cupation and is known to have visited practically every college in the coun- try during the past ten years. Porler will turn to lecturing at various points enroute. Porter is now working during his spare time making plans for his un- dertaking The latter part of this month will see John Oliver Porter, of Danvers, starting his jaunt to Paris from New York \I want it understood-not by air- plane, but afoot,\ remarked Porter He seems to be wondering as to whether the folks back home will be calling him the \walking fool.\ \Paris is my goal,\ declared Porter, \Just watch me! Such is the intention of John Oliver Porter, world war veteran and globe trotter extraordinary of this % \Quite a task,. yes, but I'll it,\ jhe declared with much. empbnsis. \They laughed at Lindbergh and no doubt they'll do the same to me. but I'll see . Puris.\ Porters's declaration has set this quaint little New England town agog. It's the chief topic of the day. Many of the \bays\ go as far back as Co- lonial days, when Danvers, once old Salem village, was cradle of witchchaft where men' of strange ideas were punished by death. it being taken for granted that they were possessed of some evil spirit Only Way Left Since travel to Paris has been ac- complished by almost every means conceivable only ong, way remains and that is to hike it, aecording to Porter Porter will begin his trek to Europe the latter part of this month. From New York, he will move to Canada thence to Alaska and the Behring Sea. What next? There according to Porter is the greatest handicap of the hike. A sixty mile stretch of water is frozen solidly for a period of three months or more during the | course of winter. Indians and Es- kimos living in the vicinity are known to frequently cross that great streteh during winter time. Cold, yes, very cold, they tell us. perhaps 70 degrees below zero or more. But, according to Porter, sixty miles is not far when a man is properly clothea ana with a suitable guide the move can be made without any undue exer- tion. Once across, Porter then faces a in the Bellmore territory covered the Merrick Precinct, Nassau Oue was injured when automobiles collided and another and tried to jump over it and in street, Bellmore, received 18 years old, of CoPYRE GHT TO STAND IF TITLE IS CHANGED A change in the title of a book does not render it eligible for a new copy» stretch of Asiatie country covering a | right. according to a rullce just made stretch of several thousands of miles.\by the Register of Copyrights, Thor» Dangers are many among them being vald Solberg. in response to an in- the cold. quiry. New Goebel, going If the Owner of the Car Bearing This New York License Number 91-59-90 Will Present This Advertisement to The Thrift Service Station Main and Bedell Sts., Freeport, L. I. They Will Have Their Tank Filled Abso- lutely FREE With Tydol Gasoline. _--_____ and his F. W. CARD PARTY TONIGH‘T Read our advertisement daily, your number may be next. All the Comforts of Home Attractive, pleasant-to-live-with furnishings and decorations make your home a place in which you can take genuine pride and satisfaction. If there are still some things that you would like to add to your living- room or bed-room, your potch or your kitchen, this is the best season of the year for. buying th e m . Unusual values at special prices feature the offers that are being made these days i the \Household Goods \ Column of our Classified Section. Many of the best stores in the city are making 'w.dm%°‘%£fl-An¢m ices equipment now,. pri mmethefimefwywhhhudv-quofthecr: Tummtoflio— \Household Goods\ Colman in the Classified Section