{ title: 'The Nassau daily review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1926-1937, September 12, 1928, Page 4, Image 4', 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/sn95071428/1928-09-12/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1928-09-12/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1928-09-12/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1928-09-12/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
pago wev the Presport, N. Y- ke Second Claas Mat mews Braxps-tTw news stan % Cansvern- i conrousarion ler ear, 6 mouths cents weekly. woes -p. wTiLks. Caiter (nd Publisher ds NEWSPAPER for the pablica» Boa of Notice of Dankruptcy in United trlet of New|; CENTRE ~Meview lait Bogievard,_ Main Office a Mechanica) Placi Triephone 1800. Wtaes District Court. Fork ©PPICIAL NEWSPAPER for the Village Freeport for the publication otulnu mount- a} notices connected. with the elpai government wE saseny DAILY, REVIEW | is member of The Associated: Press, Associated Press exclusively: entitle to use for publication of all news dia- patches credited to It or not otherwise eredited in this paper and also the loca! mews pubiished therein. <& TASTE IN MARKERS Commissioner . John in the the ossings to direct unfamiliar motor fists and, show how far it is to various places. This is one type Nassau Daily It entrance to of sign which th w endorses for th Bouth Shore, but it says it with Feservation. . Even . guideposts, . with friendly, directions for the stranger,} may be out of proportion and ugly We hope Valley Stream and none 0 the | South will | b guilty of erecting such markers, The New York State Highway de partment has made extensive use of Shore . villages an oval-shaped metal sign supported This ign is always welcomed by the motor- In addition t is dignificd and does not detract om the appoarance of the point at by a slender stanchion or post. t because It is reliable. hich it is erected There ure many of these markers unty, but comparatively do not Suffolk c few in Nassau. county. We know whether the highway depart- ment would permit villages to make of them, but this is of small im- portance. Any sign of the approxi- mate sire and as dignificd and un- obtrusive in character would suffice. The pian of erecting signs four feet square bearing the legend \You are mow enjering Busville\ on one side wrhid \Goodbye Call Again, Bugville\ en the ether is somewhat passe While many luncheon clubs have de se of such signs, the smaller hey make them the more appropriate hey become. After it passes certain mensions, cycry sign becomes a nul- nce, no matter whether it is a road foarker or a billboard FIGHTING SPEEDERS ILLEG ALLY It hs come to our attention that h mnénrryrlv policemen in some of Shore villages are in the} habit of shutting off their headlights t night when they are chasing speffi- and other violators of the law, We Are unwilling to believe that practice has the sanction of the heads of the police departments in the ages! in which it has been noted. ie thobghtful police chief would send men out to enforce the law by folating it A policeman riding a motareycle hout & headlight, even though the light is lighted, is a menace on roag just the same as the speeder is Chasing. He is violating the w, even though he has a badge and uniform. __ Re is breeding disrespect for the law Is |rit serving the purpose for h he was on the road as he would if he circulated and) dbwn the highway to let the fnow he was watching Ht m§ypbe good detective work to ip on! «i unsuspecting driver with éark¢nBd motorcycle and give him Hieke$, ibut the officer would com- < Jag respect If he was seen first, usd WHowledge of his presence u put Publishes every stereos. escent Scar WESTCHESTER FOUGHT BILLBOARDS Fost Office cents per copy. # The Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1928 E. Baird. of Mey has been instructed to work of erecting signs at! village and at INDIRECTLY Westchester County, most of which is relatively free of billboards and ugly roadside structures, fought billboards and unfavorable building projects indirectly by enacting zoning regulations which prevented their construction. This is revealed by Wayne D. Heydecker, field secretary of the Regional Plan of New York and Its Environs, who formerly was secretary of the Westchester County Planning Federation. * Mr. Heydecker, in response to a letter asking him for information as to what the federation did to foster attractive building in Westchester County, writes: \The Westchester Cofnty Planning federation has not made any special attempt to clean up dumps and billboards and the small un- attractive shacks along the main highways. \It has, however, been promoting the employment of zoning ordinances which, placing the property on both sides of these highways outside of the business areas of the town into residential districts, effeetively stops the erection of any more billboards and signs than are at present there, and those that now exist may not be re-erected If blown down or torn down or otherwise lawfully demolished. \The work of eliminating billboards is a tedious process, involving education and in some cases costly demolition. 'The all-important thing is to prevent the erection of more bad structures which may become shacks or slums, and to prevent the erection of more billboards, because fortunately billboards do wear out a a a \Urge the South Shore villages, and more particularly the towns, to zone the margins of line highways outside of the business districts for residential property and you will put am effective stop to the spread of the billboards and hot dog blight.\ The Review is especially grateful to Mr. Heydecker for this suggestions, because they are practical. We have fostered {no hope, of course. that the South Shore might enter an extensive program of tearing down everything offensive along | is e e a \the highways, although if such a program were feasible it might be carried on with far-reaching benefits. Impatience, however, is not going to be effective in the {drive The Review has undertaken. The villages and Town of Hempstead cammot clean up overnight, but they can begin today to block everything that is unfavorable. Within a month after Valley Stream passed its billboard ordinance more than 1,000 square feet of additional billboards were kept out. If all the villages on the South Shore were Barring billboards at this rate, conditions would improve rap- idly, because billboards are shortlived. They must be repaired and replaced frequently. If ordinances prevent replacement they begin to disappear one by one and no new ones are erected to take their place. Billboard concerns do not like to operate scattering bill- I e + 1 A (C IT Hast BeEn SAME SINCE THEY MADE ME SLEEP | \WITW HIM! €\ »0 TH boards, either, and if all of the villages barred billboards the national concerns might transfer their activities to more favor- able territory. Local billboard users must be appealed to from a sense of community pride. Think what a difference it would make if twenty South Shore business firms discontinued to use billboards and sent men out to destroy the ones they now have along the public roads and village streets. A year's progress in that direction, with no additional In Nassau County] 25 Years Ago (From Review's Bound Files) nan served as captain in the United States army. was pbysical director at Manhattan college. More recently he 'was en- high school and athletic director of the Leviathan. Few of these jobs have had the at- traction for him that the work he is doing for the Long Island state park construction of an unfavorable nature, would make such obvious improvement that the fight would be easy from that time on 25 YEARS AGO pending an examination. Henry Weilbrenner by namg'Ahd in the town of Oyster Bay. of Judge Seabury, he has since | committed. to | Kings Park. rections, gives some evidence of the great prosperity and purchasing abil- ity of the people in the United States | The Reporter's Automobiles are produced more Review |_ A meeting of the dommuters and | cheaply in America than in any coun- ie.. ooo fong maths\ \A try in the world, despite high wages, By the Sta M resolution thanking the Long: Island a and the reason they can be produced) sCOFFING AT THE LAW | Kidding the cops isn't a safe pastime, but one rash fellow with an over-developed sense of humor did it in Hempstead a couple of days ago-and got away with it. Patrolman _ Philip - Goldstein. ments made at the depot was adopte It was voted to ask the company so cheaply is that they are turned out in great numbers. And the fact that such great production is possible is due to the prosperity of the United 10 YEARS AGO man who works by the day is now pretty generally able to afford some thought, so he stopped the man and asked him where he got the animal. son will be given under the auspic The lunatic who went to Sagamore Hil last week to visit and make love to Miss Alice Roosevelt was locked up He | was lived By orde Railroad company for the improve~| have the platform on the north side of the tracks extended 75 feet west Miss Priscilla Delano of 27 South The first oyster supper of the sen- te W. urday. lief fund. The goal d to more, Damage $10,000. The Louis Slater of Mincola was cs .. Northrup, _ br. # i the Insane asylum at is place . was 5 YEARS AGO A total of $329 has been contributed to the Rockville Centre Japanese Re- $1,500 confidence Is expressed that the de- sired amount will be contributed estima of the board of Trustees of the Pres- | byterian church at Oceanside in the Columbia Enging .eompany hall Sat- urday «evening, -September Al. &_ former The Mertick post office, a house and store were entered last night. Captain Will Phillips of the county police has visited the scene and stated that he believed it was the work of boys and directing traffic, saw a stranger |Park avenue, Rockville Centre, willithit little of value was taken. States, not of the rich and the near 207m?! along with a pony. The \return must” 5316625 at Priends Pize i leks a d the P river was unnecessarily severe in |academy, ust Valley, next Mon- ire last night destroyed the Peet rich, but all of the people, for the! the use of the whip, the officer |day. « less Family laundry at North Bell-| ted er, were visitors in Oceanside last Sat-| and at owned by commission has, Mr. Brennan admits \There is such a vast opportunity here on Long Island to develop a < your enthusiasm as few things could [do,\ he declared. Mr. Brennan explained that this season was really spent whippig things into shipe and that next year he expects to see the crowds taking the parks and those witnessing them show a tremendous increase And when millions are. finding healthful recreation and wholesome fun out in the country at Long Is- land's park, the state will begin to [see the wisdom of its program in making provision for their happiness, he asserts The Nation's Press » NO APOLOGIE A certain disposition to what in England they call \grousing\ about the new commercial treaty between sort of motor conveyance to take him \I stole It,\ promptly replied the back and forth to work if he so de-) OFIYeT a\; u“ \You stole It!\ exclaimed the cop, his eyes popping at this frank The automobile industry has been {mfivfuflun- \Where did you steal able to keep ahead of European rivals) \Jean» drawled the other. \i because it has the great American] got him over on Staten Island. I'm not afraid of you either, I market, a market made possible by a was a policeman myself once.\ protective tariff which has provided! Something wrong here, thought the officer, scratching his head. He led the stranger and the pony off to police headquarters. Paced by the prospect of going to the lock-up, the man finally admitted he came by his pony legitimately. He was allowed to go his way \If he had kept it up one more minute,\ vowed Patrolman Gold- stein, \I would have taken him to the lock-up sure.\ employment at high wages for every- one who desires to work. In European countries which do not have the American standard of living and the high wage theory that is now generally accepted in America by em- ployer and employee alike, the ma- jority of the people cannot afford automobiles. And the reason they cannot afford automobiles is that their standard of living will not per- mit such \luxuries\ for they so re- gard them. Therefore, without a tre- mendous home market the European automobile industry has not assumed the proportions of the American Industry H. LT. AUTUMN CARES The Incidental toll of fall, Is apt to leave me fat; Tll have to buy a new chapeau, And ditch my old straw hat A. L. H THINGS TO WORRY ABOUT We have no pass to the Mirrecia uld State Park commission. tes, arrange to handle crowds an hundreds of automobiles, In a great country like ours with more than a bundred million indus- a Newman to slow down nine ortsbsfout of ten. [E A E. OF PROSPERITY * Wigu recently lnm’yuncad by the Depart # of Commerce at Wash» d & result of the biennial eatieus | the manufactories in the Waited) dilates indicate that the out- put ot vehicles of all classes in ly for the year 1927 totaled wnd they were valued at 92, Of this total 2,073,380 mger | vehicles and (their ated to $2,174,718,077. This lude public eonveymnons \Thisab Site figures well worth pon- Wig} - Neatly, three. million mars produced in one eat, § 0#-more than two billion spli¢ of the fact that this show a greater output, [this more than two billign of automobilat pro- wed in the United States. uted doubtlessly for busi- = » detoured, bat plesaure alone the people af the tes ware while to spend so ‘uu-mrumA-tuuamnnm year the figures for 1938) more places to park in the downtown ve months in the United recall of public dfficials but thep do # great majority were pur- withmebulklwdthlhh. . some parlly for busi-) the Mepobicans for bringing the the grenter| Hiquor question into this compdfn. Now you tell a fuuny tne. automobile in one) Detfocratie party is finding it fecm- the same dina wslntain | macy bu - claims . Morih Ouralios and wigh-muntard of tring. in gite li ( Toce That Farm Help Problem Des Moines, Ia, Register trious, ambitious intelligent people, the home market is the most impor- tant, far more important than auy other, The case of the sutomobile, with the figures quoted above from the Department of Commerce amply prove this statement. PARAGRAPHS The most serious thing we have heard against Secretary Hoover's statement on the farm problem is that it was approved at the Williams- town conference, but of course Mr, Hoover isn't responible for that. Whan asked \whether he is wet or dry the diplomatic candidate will answer \yes and no.\ What the poor workingman wants district, ’ The Mexicans are in fwvor of the Chartle Rryen of Rebrasie b Por the first time in many year the It is the task of the majority: to build parks, plan recreational facili- provide roads within the parks and leading to them and perform a myriad of duties| which arise in the work of laying out a great chain of public playgrounds Ward Brennan's task is to bring the public out to the parks d be kept at a high ebb. In the beginning. to the public their best service play. \Tareq he sell ber His Job be- gins where the others finish, When the park authorities have prepared a | place for the public, it is Brennan's! Job to let the public know mbout it and induce them to form the habit of patronizing and visiting the play- rounds the state has provide. To this end special affairs are planned, swimming and field events conducted and m score of activities kept under- way, in order that public interest can | No Attractions Planned If any thought was given the matter, It was taken for granted that the parks would be crowded as soon as they were opened And in m sense they would have been. It was Mr. Bren- man's iden, however, that the parks must be used intensively to perform Brennan Finds Life Work) Teaching Public To Play Supervisor of Recreation of Long Island State Parks Says People Want to Be Enter- tained; Facilities Fail Without Leader By ARTRUR L. HODGES The position of supervisor of recreation of Lorg Island state parks, to which Ward Brennan of Freeport was appointed last spring, is distinctly different from the work of the majority of men employed by the Long Island Years of experience in public play- had taught him that the followed, in other words, he has found that the public must be entertained, or engaged in play, else it will not There would be campers and pic- nies and swimming parties, of course the United States and China, not be taken seriously. European ad- vices Indicate some feeling that the American State Department rather stole a march on European foreign offices by making this arrangement and thereby getting in strong with China. 'The European diplomats con- sider it m bit unprofessional for the} United States to do such a thing without collaborating with them Ever since the Washington disarma- ment conference, at least, Europe has known that the United States sincere ly wanted a general reorganization of treaty relations with China along the lines of the agreement now entered That conference gave some general as- surance to the Chinese, but little came of it. Now the United States, quite roperly, has gone ahead independent- y and demonstrated its good faith by making Its own treaty. In doing so it has displayed absolutely no bad faith with the other powers, but has kept the faith, so fares it can, that was pledged nearly seven years ago. The agreement is m credit to our State De- partment, and if European govern- ments are wise they will accept It as a good example rather than an offense -Washington, D. C., Herald vorers, Turn out We hope that Mark Sullivan is not wrong when he mikes the predic- tion that the vote next November will be \sensationally large.\ One oi the things that has worried a good been \sensationally\ small. According to estimates, there are $6,000,000 persons in the United Sta tes who are entitled to vote. In 1924 a trifle more than 20,000,000 perions votes for president. The that this yehr at least will go to thie pods is all guesswork. But that both fact ting Following the war he} gaged as football coach at Preeport part in the various athletic events in! need | Washington - Uncle Sam's tary world, aviation, there |of motable sporting and | inence where the how polo. stinking tractors. army next year polo lot down beside the ting a crack ut the British should challenge. I faction to m general officer [section, General Staff foul calling Even Brigadier polo gallopers. accepts foul 'Yes, - General\ Navy's \Aye-a times a. bit helps to make well as a fouls equivalen face Booth an theoretical $------ L America's democracy per subscribe to that. cates that Webster was \a born.\ tion Here in England gentlemei and not made, Ladies like members of the gentle sex [ladies when women. When a feminine one of her kind, she ca \Blood\. Tells In order to be a gentleman or a lady one's blood corpuscles must The term |tinged with blue blood\ is really.. Agurati great playground for the people of the/gamin and a little nobleman should) city and Long Island that It holds engage in fistic combat, their noses life-streams and their tears: would But you get the un- derlying idea about the theatrical dif- | would bleed identical hue {be equally saity with ference stick muker ladies or [carpenter | {aristocracy. Neither money acquired titles unlock the d upper circle: for the his kind A friend who is theson of gentlemen without the with one of the Her recent appearance al ist and ardent United States make her known. But A lecture bounds af acquaintanceship traordinary life n tary in the sultan's palace, the mother of two children and remarried to a doctor and more than once a refuge published, In closely is history ly distinguishable from the renious partisan. The Halide Edib she however, is not alone the in triot, . black _ swathed, she always the sume woma price on her head who fled bags on an ox eart, who hid hut in Anatolia, | who wounds of torn soldiers, presidency of a new republic There are times when she feminine 'person, their country's leaders. She is frank, life. She is the Turkish government, \Take she sa forms | of \spor :\ may be leas than it has been in pre- histrieaics of a hysteries! wo- We guarantee our Fir mmfiwmévmin $5.2 ceding presidential years because there $1 who is wiiling to employ any wile Mortgages because wa have to be directed are dasnas, by the satisfy her inexhaustible desires. know they are secured by With this conviction Mr. Brennan | though hat then view him through tbe largest N. Y. City property actu« sold his idea to Robert L. Méies, the| thematives Snatst magnifying glass you can find-and Ni th at Yeast chairman of the Long Island state| But #I, you'll se Mustapha Kemal Pasha ally worth a 50% park commission, and the new offor who Madame Kdib has set out to show more than the amount of was created as an experiment. One # @@ he English speaking world that the the lien-and right now seadon convinced the chairman, how.|, Tnmstmuch 'Turks were more sinned against than th ield the 1 A ever, of its advantages and. the job! have well war Her naration of Greek and ey yiel e investor as has been made a pet hrm’m be for botf mam \T a her nacl large an income as ind : rennan I - property a ground work wt Chelsea and Seward | to the polls, struggle . for . political . inde- vestment of equal 2L”. mung-uncanmmdl peodemce is sharply realistic u-mwmdmodfigh The Also Certificates -§200 upward were often visited ta many as Bremen nationalities tu one day. There were| PrOM dreams, the ploneering spirit, Lntersst begins Jews, Tallans, Greeks, Armenians, the destre to You are cordially invited to consult Chi Irish and Germane Yet one n it miy seem, Oat-f fit learned to| home smarket Monday. 'Ther sold atl was much the same xs has of love ¢hildren.\. Mr, Brenman said. $18.30 per bundredweight small boy who wpon ”mm Y During the adminitration Mapor| et of the exeiong dips.. , | Company Ing the administration of Mayor . John Purroy Mitebel, in 1912-11-14, x“..- a.“ m.“ Wmm 1? tau” p F Mr. Bremnén was supervisor of recre- story 's flght trom | ation for the cits of New York Later| undll thay made a \pretty picture.\) Baidonnel to Oreenely lilend, left | Founded 1887 he was supervisor of the Piyground| which t# made to the Chicago market this impression, 'The fight was, ad-| 161.11 JAMAICA AVE memcintion of Broakiyn and as agent] twenty mittedly undertaken in response to JAMAICA, N. Y lhmmmwmum mammoth- * M wrist sane at bMrdmen. and socta -soldiers supreime. Nobody has yet invent teries instead of puffing, stinking Army poloers are mighty busy around Washington just now. are hoping for a third go mt their twice defeated rivals of the British Every afternoon sees them surging about the hige green tomuc fighting it out in hopes of get-| And they have solved the question of referee to their own complete satis- The job has been entrusted Etigardier Gen- erat E. E. Booth, chief of the That assign- ment fixes it so there will be no sand, lot disputes about always doubtful polo Who of smaller military fry would dare cuss out a general and |action. an assistant chief of staff at that? Genewal Parker, G-3 head and also an assistant) bossed seal thief of staff, and who rides with the|cavalry school shining like a breast against him by Booth with the army|used it, and the same. horse; although some- Riley cavalry schools and ribald com- czar --- A YANKEE ABROAD - English Gentleme; Never Self-Made | By De WITT MACKENZIE ONDON-Webster says that a gen- teman is \a man well born\ Eng- land's aristocracy subscribes to that Webster gives, as a secondary mean- ing, that a gentleman is \one c' gentle or refined manners; a well-bred man\; The Encyclopaedia Britannica indi- He therefore had no personal motive in recording his second defini- He was merely being diplomatic the» first open pretty eyes, or they remain merely desires to get particularly nasty with \woman and then the fight is on The butcher, the baker, the candle-}like to play at the gentleman game never can hope to be! gentlemen, nor can their offspring be|cept in their own circle the pale term \adesman\ is anathema to the) tradesman squire, and therefore a gentleman, told me he often had heard his parents say they would rather see their daughter A Distinguished Turkish Lady American are just now becoming ac- Uinguished women in Turkish history.| Hamstown, Mass., Institute of Politics introduced Halide Edib Hanum, novel- nationalist, personality even better \The Turkish probably will best serve to widen the Halide Edib has experienced an ex- Daughter of a secre- educated at the American College in Constantinople, married to a scholar, Much of the story is known . to newspaper readers. In the retelling 'W'f,'|'i‘l\c\&\ those who lived it bring something of Her autobiography has already been \The Turkish Ordeal\ it is supplemented with an eye witness account of nationalism's travail Interwoven with memoirs that sometimes one is hard- is modern Turkey's story told by a haranguing multitudes \after the occupation . of Bmyrna by Whe Allies in 1918. Nor is| tamboul under a rain soaked heap of dressed . the served as a sergeant in the army that advanced | Mustapha Kemal sympathizing _ with the simple gossipy pessant wives and trying to enlighten them as well as descttbing Anatolian did, too, in expressing \any man from Kirke L. Sim But civilians show no such respect for the general. Recently, riding from Virginia back to Washington in his own new «nd shiny car, he stopped at a stand Yor refreshments and parked well out of the road to the right, His precautions were uscless Another motorist whooped around the corner in a roundhouse curve ant chewed off all the left side fenders and a wheel on the general's car. That was bad, but a week or sa Inter when the restored and revarnished machine rolled up to the war department Booth embarked 'at once for the polo battle ground. en he got there, he drove the machine well up on the grass to avold further possible damage and went to refereeing It was uscless, In ten minutes a loud \blam\ from the region of the |i}-fated Booth car announced new disaster. The general galloped over to find a strange automobile decply imbedded in his car's rear construc- don and a perspiring, apologetic driv- er who told of @ polo-excited wife nudging his elbow Just at the wrong moment. y I They placid. Po- ers, if they G-4 Saddle a Vetcran | 'The high ranking polo foul czar is {quite a sight when he mounts for In these non-formation forays, he insists on using © much Frank | prized\ Saumur bridle with the em- of that great French Is assessed|plate on his horses chest. He has since his the . Fort t of the|days as commandant »at So rank'ments by his cavalry colleague that actual as!it looks more like mooring tackle for of poloja battleship than horse furniture move him not -e | . dead then married to a tradesman. He didn't go quite so far as to prefer death to this disgrace, but he felt: auch the same as his pafents Occasionally a member of the aris- tocracy will marry outside the fold for financial reasons. But there: is never any camouflage about the mat- ter; it is understood by mil parties to be a money transaction No matter to what height a man rises, f he is not born a gentleman he never can require that status, No matter to what depth he sinks, if he is born & gentleman he is still one The aristocracy will condemn . his faults, but they still will acknowledge him to be a gentleman. One continually sees men of great distinction and wealth, some of them with titles which they have mequired, trying to break into the Golden Circle They might as well attempt to build a {house of feathers on the wind swept be | downs, \blue If a haps will man well m are born wise. The either are their East Sider lls her a ve. Commoners Not Bothered The lower classes in England don't bother their heads much about blood Their main worry comes If it gets 'overheated with swinging m pick or [leaning over the wash-tub, The upper middle class, however, subscribe to {Mr. Webster's second definition, and ot | But it doesn't get them anywhere, ex- | Blue. blood of ajis blue blood, and that's all there is The\ to it. Those outside the Golden Circle are nor newly|won't to characterize the attitude of oor to the|the upper class as snobbishness, How- and/ever that may be, there is no hypoc- erisy attached to the stand of the aristocracy. A man may be as poor as a church mouse, but if he was barn a gentleman he remains one and is ac- cepted anywhere son a country mans and a son of Erin. soldiers all, wounded in the same war, now friends instead of enemies. Each most dis-| writes his own version, beginning with a bit of sutobiography, and the repetition is negligible Captain Herman Koch!'s narrative is like an embellished pilot's log. Ma- jor. James C. Fitzmaurice, the \ob- server,\ recalls the emotions of the two grim men in the cockpit when danger impended. . Baron - Guenther von Huenefeld, who wears a monocle because since birth he has only been able to see with his shortsighted right eye, was in the role of passenger. As such, his time was given to philosoph- leal reminiscences and the fondling of a small wooden heart that sym- bolized his mother's love the Wil-) to the tour will Ordeal\ she was their reaction to it all, their excite- ment, amazement and enjoyment In contrast with the Bremen crew is George H. Wilkins, who reveals himself in \Flying the Arctic\ as an explorer as well as adventurer. His will to combat the forces of the north was directed toward Anding out some- thing new about this world, Stubborn determination and ability to overcome obstacles carried him through in his undertaking, a 2,200-mile trip from Point Barrow to Spitzbergen Is This Plain ? HAT do we mean by \Guaranteed First Mortgages\? Simply this: that if for any reason the giver of the Mortgage should fail to meet his obligation, we; are legally bound and we pay both principal and in« terest from our resources.) e. Bo other. It pictures, tense pa- n with a from Is- in a mud and who! to the is a very \Cupit Suites ind Profias wow $18,607,008