{ title: 'The Nassau daily review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1926-1937, October 26, 1927, Page 5, Image 5', 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/sn95071428/1927-10-26/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1927-10-26/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1927-10-26/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1927-10-26/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
atk a 'in the-«ginty me _;tmeuf_toolldl hooting here has \ \| It is to the credit of the Nassau pail¥ AiyiEW CorroRaTion at the. Preeport, B. Y., Post Office # manuemmmmm men that they catch more their o Araders .. W, ie f Retest At All --- By Bertrand Keane CALL OP THX sEART _> -a- Fur from the city of fruitless strife; Far from the dollar-crazed throngs; Out in God's country where life is life- That's where my Weart belongs. nag Fo Second Class Mattor. ©TANDS-Two cents per copy, at al} news|quota of outlaws, but they do not! create a public hazard by wild shoot- ing while they work. Germans Miss | Universities Alarmed Because Americans No Longer Come There to Study WHY WORRY ABOUT WHAT HE SAID! NEXT YEARS LEARYEAR., ISN'T IT? Out where the sunshine reigns supreme; Where life courses on in songs; Where happiness runs in an endless stream- That's where my heart belongs. alarmed at the spparent reluctance of foreign to come to this country, which was once publication Notice Bankruptcy in “mumwgtmnuMEtdlatuqmmm-MMGJW-mln search of lesening. Outin the wilds where Nature's folk Apeak in a thousand tongues; Free from the strain of Convention's yoke- That's wheremy heart belongs. I fact which is much regretted here. Thirty years ago 20% of all young Americans who went abroad to study came to Germany. Now Goettingen and Heidelberg know them no more-cer(ainly not to the extent of former times It is true, of course, that opportunities for study at home universities in the United States \have grown enormously of late years, but it is equally true that American students since the war have gone in increasing numbers to England and France. Ob, could I but free myself from that yoke But sever its binding thongs, I'd fling to the winds Pormality's cloak -And go where my heart belongs! -J G ABSAU DAILY REVIEW is a member of ’lg¢A-ncluedm The Associated Press is entitled to use for pubhcation of all dispatches credited to It or not otherwise ted in this paper and miso the local news blistbed therein. --- THE HAPPIEST KING y releasing the treasures found in Its deep biack come. In the midst of what once was an aimost inpenetrable jungle and waste lof swampland, more than a thousand men, women and children are caring for five thousands mcres of celery, onions, lettuce and like garden truck lof the choicest quality. Each acre will produce a crop of upwards of $500 in value it is estimated. Eight thousand acres of the valuable land are awaiting reclamation, it is said. The Associated Press informs us that Mr. Henry J. Allen of Kansas, in New York on a visit, likes the big town more every time he sees it. \New York City,\ he is quoted as saying, \seems to grow better and better and I have been coming here 30 years. . When I first visited the city every fifth door led to a saloon.\ The boy king of Roumania, whose migth birthday was celebrated yester- day with a solemn service at the Pstriarchial Cathedral in Bucharest in - . Fie -And what's the percentage now, Mr. Allen?- “1,3 preheqce of (he foreign munslen: in the United States. Russians, who were very Every second door? lik mnid the diplomatic corps, RAS NOt Y@l\numerous nere before the wat, now prefer Paris learned the suffering that goes with . «o> | the joy and honor of being a king. or Prag And, apropos or Mr. Allen's findings, we find j his t to his throne and Scandinavian and Balkan students alone have/news of a startling discovery in New Jersey in the M33 prefers Mit ioo Io antes taa | remained more or less faithful to German high [following mssociates. His birthday anniversary “PAW\. N. J., (P) —x;clnnceuor Vivian 'passed without him knowing of the . um; {mummy men as a Republican discovery of a plot to re-establish the \MM-Mn t or governor, is,in possession of infor- exiled Prince Carol, his father upon c is inl aid from werlth * ma hat there are saloons in this city. 'the throne in his place. ment grants or finane tom wealthy philan-| -which leads us to ask why the term \blind\ . u thropists so that Germany may once more attract should be limited to the names of the places them- t_ Perhaps Prince Carol plays AS SMAM|roreigy students to its seats of learning. selves. We were in Paterson once and-well, we 'm part in the intrigue to put him upon mimost had our eve put out by more than one the throne as does his own small son. AIt is a game of diplomats and trained swinging door. {politicians and leaders, some with noble aims, others with only ambition greed. Some play the game for the love of Roumania, others play it betjause they _love power and the things they may gain by its abuse. ut Michael is not aware of the grgat turmoil into which his country hag been thrown because he is king. Nalcrown ever restd more lightly upon It is estimated that 10,000 Chinese students are receiving their university training abroad, mostly BOY KING'S PICTURE To DECORATE A NEW STAMP + little son, the boy-king, Mihai I, to be used for the new stamp soon to be printed. She hesitated for some time, 'The collection was m large one. One photograph showed the little boy ser- lous and pensive; another showed his ”gunman mlert and still anoth- er, happy and smiling. It is the latter that Queen Helen has chosen, a little bust portrait with Mihai wearing a white ailk blouse, low collar and white te. He is smil GREAT MIDLAND BANK OPENS NEW BUILDING Reinbold Schairer, financial head of the German Students' Amociation, who sets forth the above facts in a report, appeals urgently for govern- © 1927 by King Features Syndicate 1= Gone Biman reeves lu te -o- Berlin pedestrians are tired of having their shoes, trousers or skirts bespattered by automo- biles. 'They have appealed to the chief of police for relief The police is now experimenting with mud- guards of a type successfully used in Japan and there made obligatory by law. 'These mud guards are affixed to the hubs of the wheels and encose them on their outer lower halves. In a city like Berlin, where there is much rain and where the autos are allowed to drive by m stopping street car or omnibus, the nuisance of ¥---- Service By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. Cecen Personal HealZH Last Saturday afternoon we were treated to a bit of excitement here in the office when the partly finished Sunrise Highway caught fire just a few blocks from us, and since that time, many explanations of the cause of the merry blaze have reached our ears. One of the theories advanced was that one of the village young bloods had just purchased a new second-hand flivver and pro- ceeded to burn up the road in trying it out, but London.-The second largest bank- Ing building in the world-the new Bank of England is the largest-that of the Midland Bank in the street known as Poultry, is just opening its doors. Facing the Bank of England, it has a frontage of 190 feet, and will have a floor space of over six acres, It will be ten stories high-a great altitude for a London building-and will provide Dr. Brady. Noted Physician and Author, Fallacies We Reluct to Relinquish . [accommodation for a staff of 2,000 . while that may seem reasonable enough, we don't) /r; has the la U rgest T s - the head of a monarch, No soverelxg mud spattering is a trying one. If the chief Of) believe it to be the true cause of the fire. An-|Britain. the door of “3n7J’i’f’fiJS 6 ‘xuguzg‘ffjffizm' Signed letters pertaining to per Tell me mfi‘xafifii‘mm a seed r poxi-gtetslsed a kmgdarp thsfipzus? police finds the Japanese mud guards serviceable. other explanation laid the blame on a band ot [EH, \HiCK weighing nearly thisty sonal health and hygiene not to Tuy T [ ig as little worry as King Michael's|, ibe them for Berlin automobilists by ; A young man sustained a fracture| disease diagnosis will be answered Answer-For years I never kuew dogs today e can preset fo t utom t Y| wandering colored musicians who paraded up and _ --- of the leg bones near the ankle (Pot's 0th what a seed warl was or how to dis i A _o, -__ |a simple ordinance down Observer street screnading the village with G BEST way To fracture) while in swimming, A com-| \°\C ng to the large |ynguigh it from the common garden he sympathy of the world is with o-- an assortment of noises. Our informant hazarded ueaRN Goon manNErs n who offered first aid made 4| of letters: received. only a fow |variety, until some kind reader gave the little king, not because the world ducted by the director of whilc U iquet with his handkerchief and - me the low down on it.. Then I knew | ng, , se | Test examinations conducted by the director opinion that the negro jazz artists played London.-Dancing is the best way|KEP! UP VETY painful pressure around| C80 be answered here. No trPl} |for years. New the old amnesia bas w hhnlps kings as it once did, but b?» the Dresden trade school on 100 young people/such \hot\ music that the highly inflammable|to learn good malmers necording \J \the ankle until the doctor artived t| can be made to queries not con- |\¢Curred and T can't remember what cause it worships children. Mich&el'8|apout nine months after thtey had left the public i I t c rom .t rtur overcoat the new road is wearing just naturally Dr. William Shuckburgh Swayne, tne the, Hiewm, from, the tortur wéuld be a happy and singular reign ja seed wart is, but if you are willing R 65-year-old Bishop of Lincoln. 'The first aid entbusiast thought it] forming to instructions. AC~ /to take a chance TH suggest that you . ' P . schools revealed an astounding lack of erudition,/burst into flames fam spontancous combustion.) \Not only are the boys and necessary to hold the broken! gress Dr Wiliam Brady, in care it with the familiar corn remedy indeed if it continued to bring him the \Vossisehe) » who come for bones together | -paint the wart once daily for a week writes Professor Paul Hildebrandt in the However, we think that explanation is also f . confirmation strikingly of. this newspaper joy and affection he now Was @Mdlzcitung ~ andsome,\ says the Bishop, \but they A man with a broken arm Name your far-reached and agree with the fellow who said Tmt he beficved the Foud started=burning=of its Wn volition. being so Thnoyed at the delay in Its completion and the talk going around about it (ust | are well-mannered and I am “wayslnbovc the wrist, Colle's fracture) pro- SBU: with e seriousfiess=af. their ABSted -Is bit wigen the agp demeanor. % bad been restored to use, He based \In the old days they were protest on the ground that the} and there was always a tendency to fajle&to brig the Bitter expertencesi= thiit othercking's have mown. - or two with a solution of thirty (30) grains of salicylic acid in. one-half (kei ounce of-fexible eeltodion. If Uf falls, better have your doclor re- move the wart\ By some oT the num- Bimple-questions mheited. sweh startlin@gzanswers [s: \NapdTeon was Tfle first (@ the American continent,\ \Columbus invented the city on your return envelope Don'T say *~ QUICK WITH THEIR GUNS aw wrist was measurably larger than it| \t” Fimbe Potting Teen h we a s a beast prey.\ etc Iitegle. They don't giggle now. They (had been before the injury, He ad-/and save some patients. altho a far. No Harm Bi utting Teeth north pole,\ \The mouse is of prey that it simply decided to make things hot for Al |pave gained poise and self-respect. \ |mUtted he had perfect use Bf the arm |more practical. humane und (aol proof |_, 18 there any harm in w baby gertoug . T-. Only 42% of the examined youths and maidens/concerned Hence the pyramids \I Attribute much of the change to PUE SUIL the doctor had failed to do/method is available to any |m)au..u|\l\ woper teeth first? Pod o wo imnocent men died who Napoleon was, 51% that Prussia was the lessons learnt in the dancing 85 good a job as the Creator had done mind is capable or following rn‘laxrfijo’x'nx'” of babies cut tha ct h P areless s . - on e arm new channel -the methi nown as * the victims of wild and careless $h00t-|ine kingdom of Frederick the Great, 56% could! Not so long ago we commented in this column \. ing by policemen. I he dat f the beginni d end of th =_ Many readers have seen victims of |Hodgen's suspension Should Kits Be Bathed® give the dates of e beginning and end of the I suspect. the | ' q Recently: you advised @ correspr on the probate effects of Mustapha Kemal - fractures of the femur (thigh bone) [feason why many doctors still inflict] / \ - « a - rea , R-SINGER, BA9CK IN U. S.), c s extens . p [dent that kittens should not be bathcd Kieorge R. Ganley, 21-year-old bOY|world war, and the same percentage that water|400,000 word speech, which he was at that tim: ---.. v. s xfifi;“‘,’l’;ufr’fi°h‘fglg' ide Temur in that the docifis Kindly tell me how to nd them of of Montclair, N. J., a star pitcher ON|reezes at 0.0\ C ' preparing to broadcast to all who couldn't PSM Reimers, America's foremost/with a contrivance of cards, weights [Can't Quite grasp. the scientific. prin- | NCAS 1 gore Mom a exeniin bath oner hi§ high school nine a few years 2@0,| -ne i for the . singer of German \Lieder.\ has re-/and pulleys to pull the patient's leg |CPleS which are brought into olay ADG intended to repeat it. Ts there gn tubi t se results acted ms an incentive for the/eeed in tuning him out -Well, he's done It accord-[turned from a tureign tour, and will This contrivance, known 55m.” the suspension method.. For one|2D9 batm in doing so? Is there mi «dlitid as the result of a ~shat inflicted |Dresden Teachers' Association to repeat (he ¢X- ing to schedule and our prophesy is borne out more lac. Luce-rd through station WGBS,|tension method, literally puts the no fatirons, or sushweights or UNDE belter? (Mis 8. P. M i la§t February when a Clifton PAtTOl-/amination questions, this time on 200 under- imbel Brothers, on the National or less In the following Associated Press report CONSTANTINOPLE- There seems to be no record of how Turks who had the radio going felt man fired at a group of young boys he mi§took for automobile thieves. i y strange coincidence the other tim on the rack; it is torture for even a vigorous person to be so tied down for weeks on end; it is fatal in too & ',] Anewer-I know of nothing better bricks are used to pull the patient's leg in the suspension treatment And [I Just Thrant that cate are naturally yet a much more constant traction is |Ce#® and naturally averse to water Women's Party Program at 9:10 p. m., Thursday, October 27. Mr. Reim- ers. who Is now on the faculty of the graduates of the city's grammar. schools, with better results, 77% could correctly designate the Juillard Foundation, will include. \Ou feeble to begin with \ But it io (ims and accordingly\ the. fragments | m 'as abn 52% vear present century, 79% were familiar with Napoleon, about it, but as President Mustapha Kemal Pasha] Wings of Son,\ \Du Bist Wie Eine. dard. conscrvative. and ue (are KFD! In much momt constant ap | \ PARITONES_ BROADCAST vigtim, a man 53 years qld, also WAS|pre, knew that Prussia was governed by Fredetick|ended his 400,000 word speech to the national 5:53am\? Mary\ and other songs |cause the doctors employed it 50 or |P9S!tion in this method than. is Pos- Another half-hour program. \Around naiined Ganley. He died in New YOTK|ine Great, 71% knew the dates of the world wat assembly, deputies as well as the president him-| graph as recorded for the phono- |a agngrdmyeués ago and saved, some mini\n\&7\v£\1hf‘ “T'r'liff- [the -¢P.\\-°1} featuring the | baritone yesterday from a bullet wound T€-lang 895 that water freezes at 00° C self were In. tears.. For delivery the speech. took patients the doctors still emPl% @t) of hi bed and enables him to Goma) Broadcrating®Comparct through celved Monday when a New York i- g.__- 36 1-2 hours, spread over a week |help himself.. without disturbing: the| WJZ, New York, at 10.00 oclock Fi- * policeman fired at a hold-Up MAN O0) mow Robert Schumann, the composer, on one ’ ong n> | [fracture day night. October 28 the street. The New York man was an e & [| Doctors and folks still share an! Pq\ the most part, the thirty min- oceasion in his younger and poorer days satisfied THE war is over YOHT BO And Yo\ Girl | |antiquated notion that the setung or UWS Will be occupled with vocal solos express company GYPDIOYQA He was his craving to play piano, is recounted by the -o- y standing in front of a branch office of and quartet numbers, with instrumen lal selections by Messrs. McLeod and Buckley reduction of fractures requires some strength and once the broken bone has been set it must be kept so by force. This is &n error that is ac- countable for a great deal of need- less disability and for excessively pro- longed convalescence in many cases of broken bones As a rule a Colle® fracture \Germania \ Schumann and the later famous writer, Wili- bald Alexis, were on a hike through the Rhine country, when one day Schumann felt an uncon- trollable longing to play piano. But the two wan- derers did not know m soul, so they plodded on, Schumann's hankering for some music of his own making increasing with every step. . Tired and dusty they finally arrived Th Praiik- Torf-on-Main, where the budding. composer hi#company when the two patrolmen with were chasing Peter Virgi, a hold- up} man, fired past him at the flee- ing bandit. is small consolation to the express- man's family to know that the police- méh also hit the burglar and that he is ded. Cases where men, women or chil- d are wounded, frequently fatally, not rare. During the past few wéeks several innocent men have been illed by the New York City patrol- n. Two men were killed in one wgek not long ago. The time is coming when officers 0 thp law will be held accountable fo hr mistakes. A: officer whose judg- t is so poor tha e ded “rad. tzhfueuxfléhtlfo'm It is ® painful duty to record that f0r| delay the return to a friendly ufderstanding.- hilting the criminal are so small ang) once the great composer did not keep his promise.) york. 'Times. ro chances of an innocent party be ' sttuck so great, innotwonhywhll: Waise teeth made of steel are among the pesce -g-- sted with a gun. A gun in the|Droduts which the Krupp firm of Rssenu Are (WM-| CENTERVILLE, Mich-A lock weighing Whatever fears certain people may have had that the American Legon is bound to keep alive the hatreds of wartime should be dispelled by the act on Friday night of the American Legion Post at Freeport, L. L, in entertaining the commander of the German raider Seeadler. Although this was done by a single post, it cor- rectly reflects the attitude of most of the mem-~ bers of the legion. During the war-and after- there was often more bitterness of feeling among promptly sought out the foremost firm of piano-/civilians than among the combatants. *lrou mot write one for those who wre forte dealers and introduced himself as tutor of an The legion is following the example® of the|interested in various phrases of Com- 'English Jord for whom he hed come to select 2|Grand Army of the Republic. It was, to be sure, MTC! Art? 'Think of the prettiest room you bave ever entered. suitable piano, regardless of the price. harder for the Northern and Southern soldiers of|was it so beautiful? Could you He was immediately shown the five best inatru-/the Civil War to forget, since quarrels are[7our room at home more fmhumhmmwmmmwwmmmm played to his heart's content the classics and hi#\ strangers. Fortunately;the German veterans have cwn improvisations. 'Then he left with the pro®-| avoided the Hiiterness of the professional pro- By ARTHUR DEAN, Sc.D. GLADYS WALSH IN PROGRAM _ . Gladys | Walsh, twenty-year-old THE PARENT COUNSEL or pianist, will be the artist hid In the Young Artists concert on Priday after- noon, October 28, beginning at 4:15 o'clock, through WEAF of the Na- tional Broadcasting Company Miss Walsh has studied in Europe for three years and is now studying with Max Hillaberg. Her debut recital In New York is scheduled in January By Request \You wrote ap article for youngibrand d P it B if LATEST NEWS IN Rabio \The Radio World\ is the title of a mum‘m meries of talks which “i! be Funds of such an officer ceases to be|!N Out now. Various grades of non-rizing tet! pounds adorned the first jail in Bt. by Hetman Bernard. rade of public protection, but|have been on the market for some time, but the/county, it fi related in the Michigan . questions answers op Tt iP ome a n WP befomes a menace, just as much \run-Mltnhl‘MHfl magazine, A Jocal gunsmith in the days of 1840 Ivy and Polson Ork. Bernard will describe recent logisia- thi bandit wielded it. It is the invention of Professor Btrauss, of the/made the lock, and he took delight in creating a ago I wrote you about [ton afecting radio listeners latent de. h (Policemen are human and many of|Kryb» Works, who gained the gold Burfsen and complicated mechanism that by int, the case ivy poisoning, seemingly a |Yelopments in transmitters and re- Alim very “gable. Their anger at flat” tg IJ trim Mond weight nearly broke down the jail door. tled to a yg'aqufiyfii land so forth in are claimed 'to superior =-- select, posed, so as . have taken w-a~---_-- it in; icndmml; cmpa “fix: 2): yold in durability and at the sume tise are much FAKE HOLD-UP TALES 'ou m rmmw‘m THE CHILD WiLL wear be! he of jkudg'mg as thaly 3mm}, cheaper. three for you. z. C ”m. fe -.'$'.i‘m““ émchmlldrm' {fulfil $353“ in the wake e man C n =_. n a we 7 after l’A erica the sentiment “arm. public! - Tko ous co M2011:- CcoRNER g Jihad ”an“ mme pat- At the 'Oimbel .As that it is better for nine criminals to/ IOWA PALL®, Jown-A leather bound book of wont to write. in tact I do write stead of Em L have | pe punishment than for one inno.| tures bitcry, probed in Rogtad in 16%, me' tints Tor 'alyie and' see affects from it. Ia\ him got man to be sentenced. The same|PHiMd pesseon of Joriph <P. Grem of prose. / poison onl? (Mrs. 8, P. should hold true of arreats.~ Pals. 'The volume is in good -condifion, with the ~ woune Ne, poison oak is similar, t If a criminal cannot be apprehended{exsption of the bindings,. which are slightly Thare are except at the cost Of some innocent|steked. Oren t with the police. n plays a tune when picked up was bequeathed ione hive of man.: The knif®| red and ten wensels \the Oty ENW~MMHMNw~w~~gb f i nt! y headings: } of poison sak - Rhos said 'lil ancestart stopped. thetr 1-Prose - for | Oriidciem-Edgar commen on the Pasific . person's life, let him go. nmmmmofihbffi: c 4 Pier \oe the matene pori ot the' soomity: and * _ Cms “Et‘u middle | outhymywuylnnnnnbs‘m? udd_~4-_— 3J-Ptase \Been - Matyille, mutt-gm The Daily Review speaks in general! LONDON (P)-A gold, peart and enamel knife ie Trim y Toile, \th mre 'of war a * of the habit policemen in some leatured solotst in sev- York night clubs. She rend