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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
BNIP surview coronation ft Cee instances of this kind could be cited HTHIOM-/Puo Grats per copy at Dere in Nassau County Instead of making the final selec- W MMNIL~-47 a your, 6 months £130 R/ CABRARI-11 cents weekly tion, we believe the bar associations, Ams E. Baier and ravuiage, DY Closer organization and by insist ing upon higher ethical standacds, Y nti Hui Dowlevard Main Ofc -Mechnoreai Plast. \T oil Nassam inrwaraPin for the on of Betices of Benkrypter ates Dinnet Court bf New York wewnrarin (or ihe Vi Freeport tor the publication: of a I motices connected with the muni- Wipal guvernment. NARSAD, DADY REVIEW is a mem- oa Te I Peat ceuiice \to Mea Pr exclusively. entitied to tated \Pr Teer tion of news d- hes evedited to it or not othervige in this newspaper and also the Ien! mews published therein Saturday, June 29, 1929. - NO GRAVEL WALKS The Vilage Board . of- Rockvilic like \took. the logical course pen: at its other night Men it refused to permit a developer construct waiks in one of best of the lage When s community the point where it is spending (000,000 on a sewer system, the from only meeting. the gravel : residential districts u has. advanced Mins arrived to get away i fown, country hubits While is about . the butes of laying the concrete side- falkm which the Village Board de- c we hope he will lay them high actiough so every little rain does the developer hid lelive them under several inches | pf iwaiér, which is exactly what hap- ln all sections of the village WPB incident is typical of the de- Aloe 'the Village Board must con- tity make. . It reveals how much mulige might be done if the village were not alert to the best in- | k of the community \Phere are always builders anxious ito pets the building code and similar pulpa.and ordinances so they can get by | cheaper | If any signs of laxity mre dhown there is no end of the leampromises that will be requested. An' agreeable board might be a birch of good fellows, but the village would) look pretty: common. #4 LUNCHEON CLUB HARMONY The | Rockville: Centre | Exchange Olub 'paid a unique Edwin Wright. attorney, Thursday when he 'was clected president Of the or- for the eighth time, As nel ews elected president \ax usual.\ 4 and (could become influential enough to 'be instrumental in naming the various at. tor the Coustr candidates for the judgeships from --- |ameng the best members of their publica- United Eastern District | profession. - Rarely is there only one man capable of filing: these offices 7 and the final selection should rest with the people, who will be infucnc- »4 by the recommendations of '.: bar associations in proportion to the pres- tige they command in the community or district by virtue of their works CLASSIFIED AD STARTS PANIC =- I o just been learned that simple, - unpretentious Classified Ad which appeared in The Review this week almost precipitated a tate panic | The Classified Ad described a house price $9,000, with a descrip-! ot! the plot and some of the features of place - Readers interested. were| directed to call at a certain address} on the Merviek road . in . Rockvile} Centre I |_ Numerous . persons .. thought .- it {sounded like a bargain and flocked to the address, delighted to find It \was an attractive, modern: residence) with a great deal mare land about it than the average place has a real es- [for. sale tion of the number of rooms. siz the \ Ome young woman drove up in| front of the place, rang the bell and told the owner she had come to look at the house \Delighted to show you over the) |pimce.\ said a courteous gentleman.] |\Just a minute until I get the keys! aod we will go right over\ | BSempewhat taken back, the young! lady inquired, \Why isn't it this house?\ ; \Why bless your heart the! owner, \this place couldn't be bought! tor $30,000. The place I have ad- vertised for $9,000 is on the street! [just back of this.\ | ! Bo that Is how disappointment came to more than one person this, week, but Merrick road property| owners will be pleased to know that their places have not slumped in price because thélr neighbors: are Isetiing out for m song | | IT WORKS BOTH WAYS said Representative Florence Kahn has) |introdueed ® bill providing for the © he depen- . t had it, he was| Payment\ of $25,000 to t o lents of any person, wantonly and negligently killed\ by any prohibition ## 4 interesting to find one organ- of this type which is nol | m by. opposing factions and Indi- ¥idials who have the destre lo rule Mr Wright's re-election cannot be! taken as a sign of passiveness on the per at] the members, because. week Wid¢ Lwkek the club's. attendance. is I e. Men of all professions Biikiness occupations leave their MWW -an hour and a half to meet Urdfeli®gd lunch together \Where is a fine spirit of fellowship m“ merchants, bankers, and others, which did not few years ago, chiefly because i kein didn't-know each other. so af 11.1 Wright has attempted to re- Ung N several occasions, but the sorflimant of the club \Has always Boe lint it would like to have him eontiiiue to serve. | \the in re-electing Uk # officers year after year les in, 'fit that all of them are loyal $mergetic enough to give. the Wie time it requires to keep it} . I There must be a moving sptrit in of this kind, someone x a {ammail group able to keep the theris «interested without arousing animosity because it looks like they are rumming things all of the time. Rarely | has | this . condition been mors Ideally typified than in the harmdriy with which the Rockviile Cantry Exchange Club operates. | officer not acting in self defense So far, so good. But why not a} similar appropriation of $25,000 for| the dependents of any prohibition officer killed the proper perfor- mance of his duty? Probibition officers engaged in. the! enforcement of the law aginst or- ganized and armed gamgs and syn- dicates take their lives in their hands. A number of such officers have been killed. Their deaths do mot seem to arouse as much popular motice or resentment as the killing of citizers (by prohibition agents| without justification through error, carelemsmens or recklessness, Out of the large number of prohibition agents there are sure to be some who should not be entrusted with au- thority or firearms. At the same time, there are hundreds, if not thousands, of law violators who are quite ready to shoot an enforcement! officer in a pinch, And when pro- hibition officers are given the same consideration as Mrs. Kahn's bill proposes to give those who muy be Victims of unwartanted and inex- cusable attack, Justice will have been done the fearless. and conscientious prohibition agent as well as the vic- tim of the occasional irrésponsible in the federal service. The Cuban ambassador, Orester Ferrara, says the countries of the Western Hemisphere should strive to eliminate anobbishnems. Well, he might start by getting the owners of in JUDGES NAMED BY BAR ASSOCIATIONS A. Davison Rurney, (who served tor several years) as ”an of the Nassau rmuncy‘ par iation, has . Just Issued. m CB t in which he declares that! thi bigeition of judges should, | Lynbrook at-) # pollticz.furenirusted to the ., nw | vq \} thimk of any more com-| bian lo do this than members of N péfermcn,\ said Mr. Davisow. While, Mr. Davison is promptid Bi i Mil he has long fostered in mak- suggestion, soch a radtomi 46- would not very quickly be em-| By the people as a thei | , Mie American people ure jeal- indifference in many tn-| ndlliy) Kindiy opon any movement Mib tool <(be- selection of pubtic ait C the popular vote. | the six-ylinder cars to stop high -hatting | four-cylinder contingant -| Senttle Daily. News, The man who used to be abjz \Jr name all the has a son who can the volees of the} Tad'% ahfiSuncers before they reveal) Their identity.-Indianapolis News. _--_-% Says =| + The big priv fight at the Yan- kee stadigm Thursday night netted $180,000 \to buy milk for the babies. We mo¥é that half the. proceeds of the nes$-woild war be used in estab- A man paid $15 for a hyena at the Bronx perk auction | The Review Cynic There are li thelr Pranchise und would 0t/sesersl» oot om our street be could | have had for nothing. A Lqmbrook man 4s suing to recover Willtam Pox, the moving pic- ture producer, and his family are residing in the Burns Cottage in East Rockaway road for the sum- mer Miss Edith P. Mcintosh, music editor of the Observer-Past, and Mrs. Helen C. Balcom left Rock- vile Centre Thursday for Keuka Lake, No Y, where they will spend the summer months Mrs. Clinton M. Flint and Miss Nina | Humphrey | entertained . @ number of friends at their home in Bouth Ocean avemue last Monday evening. The evening was passed with music, after which a collation was served Fisher Goodhue of Massapequa has returned to business with the New York law firn he had a connestion with before going to France 5 YEARS AGO Edward Panchard, - owner. of Panchard's Inn, will inaugurate an added novelty to his interest- Ing establishment today in > the form of an airplane field, where patrons of the tmn will be able to take a ride between dances on Saturdays and - Sundays . from now on. Vibration in the vicinity of the power . house at Freeport, which has been a mooted question in the village for more than a year, was definitely decided upon - last night when the firm of T. How- ard Barnes of New York, was en- gaged by the village board to make an investigation and report on a cure ‘yDldiYou Ever Stop | To Think? W. B. Foshay, presiden( of the W._B. Foshay company says That years ago lots was said about \trust\ and \trust. bust- ing.\ All such seems to have passed if you can judge by the popularity of Investment Trusts, The exception seems to be the mythical \power trust.\ From the best information ob- tainable,\ the Elpctrle Bond & Share Company is the largest owner and operator of electric utilities in the United States, but they only control about 17 per cent of the total electrical output In the United Stated. From the best . information available, one group 'of newspa- pers controls cver 18 per cent of the | dally . circulation - in - the United States. Therefore, it there is a \power trust\ there certainly is a \newspaper trust.\ My personal opinion is that combinations lend to better and cheaper service. . Certainly . no class of bustmeme in the country gives more for the money than do newspapers, and yet I'm in- clined to believe that the news- paper business is mare closely controlled than the electric util- ity busimems. of the large panies, and then think of the number of large utility compan- les of which there are some thirty-five in the United States Not all of the owners or oper- tors of businesses are perfect not do they always forget their own relfish - interests . and thing is true of owners and op- erators of utilities, but after all these people are simply ordinary hunt ii beings with the same thoughts and impulies and good and bad ideas that all it; thiis +- the ments, this great country of.bur® would not oniy €Xe8) 6very other country in te\ world, but ImproPé -& much that it would that none of us would recognize It as the same dear old United Btaies after such a policy had been in force by all of the people for a period of a couple or more years Mtg};é:litor ~ BAKING pOG«NUISANCE Wiitor, Réman Daily Review H mag-tad your (”it‘ll-Ia | t5 menace of stray doga mm muzzled, and would like to to whom I can report a dog thst does nothing but bark dn- |termittently all night long. This dog has deprived my family of sleep many nights and ~I ewner about it. but he pays no at- pnulnA | CHARLES STROUT I Merrick, L I -» A Washington Daybook By Herbert C. Plummer this does not take care they are | expected . lo And they must at least yo through the motions It is fortunate for them that in Washington's code of etiquet, except usually shifts the responsibility to his wife, his daughter or his sister. This gress. Any social duty that may be| their lot must be discharged by them And what a problem it is. Luncheons Are Out First of all, they cannot make en- gagements for luncheon, convenes at noon. Neither are they free at tea time, for the . sessions recently ane or two had to send last! regrets | when was impending cept entertain or _be entertained at the disease and they are said to be immune. This ~rocess has been con- tinued without discomfort to the child | and without giving any evidence that It is going on. The child is not sick he does not have a \mild case of diphtheria,\ he is merely being en- couraged to produce within his own body the same protection which he} would be given if he were taken sick with diphtheria and were given anti- toxin to save his life. - Of course therc are a few rare in- dividuals who cannot produce their| own antitoxin; a few cannet produce | enough to protect themselves. . But in the overwhelming percentage of| cases the child will produce enough protection to make sure that he will} never have the diseate. The others! will usually produce enough so that | HE REVIEW has received of 521 West liith street. New York letter to the doctors of Nassau Coun- ty. demanding that they prove vac- letter | follows the - Nassau Jorailpox eases. The An open letter to County Doctors: Dear Doctors We have just heard how you have been almost forcing these: folks: up there to have their children infected by vaceination-what's the matter Is business getting bad? Got to do someting to get more patients haven't you? But I think you could do something more honorable than infecting the poor helpless children. By the way, why in all that's holy 'why don't you prove that vaccination 'has prevented smallpox in just one ease and collect that $50,000 the anti-vaccination | league is offering? You know land I know you know that vaccination is a filthy practice de- aigned to encourage f!lth, Theoret- feally it prevents smallpox, actually It does nothing of the sort Vaccination is a worn out mum- ery handed down from the days of witchcraft Vaccination is piling one filthy dis- ease on top of another. I dare you to prove one of my statements to be untrue The Anti-Vaceination Committee, 5721 West llith bt New York City Because of the nature of this let- ter, The Review doubts that it should be printed. In the first place the letter was illiterate before it was re- vised to the extent of spelling \vac- cination\ correctly. It does not pre- sent a learned argtment with that improvement In the second place, the anti-vac- cination committee makes an unfair attack, nasailing the integrity of hun- dreds of pbysiclans instead of dis- agreeing. with them on theory. . More reasonable people would at least grant that those who hold other ideas might be as sincere as themselves The only reason The Review pub- lishes this letter is because the prejudice and ignorance of this group cannot be invoked against it to the point of saying it is afraid to pub- lish their letter On the other hand if there are those who can be Ti- fluenced by such tactics as this com- mittee has resorted to, anything this paper might exclude from publica- tion would not prevent them from be- ing influenced in other quarters What Is Antitexin? In editorial comment on another letter attmeking vaccination and the juse of diptheria toxin-antitoxin and antitoxin, published in this paper un- er date of June 18, we sugested that the time will come when the public practice of medicine and the ¢ue land prevention of @izea: .. The Ndiet] Gf the County f Nasal. through its Executive Sec- retary, Mr. J. Louis Neff, has imsued the following statement which at- tempts to detcribe in iny language me of the questions which were raised by our Baldwin correspondent and incidentally servor me a good re- ply to the above letter: Rditor, Nassau Daily Review To answer specifically some of the questions raised by your recent cor respondent regnrding the use of ser- jms, vaccines and similar preparn- tions, let us start with the \worse diseases than smallpox\ which he claims have been wiped out by noth- Ing but better standards of living and better sanitation Yellow-Pover _ was be transmitted to means and by one buman must- be. bitten imaie of the Ste have spoken to the{the or antitoxin is nesded, beemuse | by fAnding the chuse, the method of pre- vention was easy; merely keep peopie from being bitten by female Stego A tew Yunmgmhmnwpv—m Ay (mire come andar the Jurisdiction. of Uheffiyih mosgulicex which have come (n dinged oy (ikd \eme tore | whe @b pay taints muat for ca “it: Call studied Ny popilat ole th- nich ought To hone 18; T. he bind! Tf tne palice 40.0 Sen dunno -lngtcbnduines. w-w— tact wilh yellow fever patieats. ove, «kill the- wseeguitiues ~hy sirumps and tmmting their can safely be told f bout . th mets | about ml.\ f {Theory of Vaccination and Benefits I | Explaiwlleqi By Nassau Medical Society. from .a yellow fever patient is not bitten by recovered some of whe antitoxin theyteen years of age the Anti-Vaccination mosquito which can get away to| have produced bite a well person. This simple ex- City. what purports to be an openipedlclll has made yellow fever largely a memory Typhus Pever tlith eliminated by keeping camps and places: of has been of -lice! Black Death or bubonic plague, has [not been eradicated Itoll of hundreds of thousands yearly in some parts of the world. Tt is kept from sweeping over the rest of the jworld by trapping, poisoning, kill- {ing the common rat, for the disease lis transmitted to humans by rat-fleas. No need of serum, vaccine or antl- toxin here either; the cause is known, the prevention simple. It isn't sun shine, it isn't baths, sewers. sanitation or standards of living, it is nothing [but killing rats -no rats, no rat- fleas; no rat-fleas, no bubsnic plague Malaria Tansed By Mosquito Texas which once was dreaded disease of cattle has been eliminated by dipping in pol- sonous baths which kill the particulat |kind of tieks which carry the parasite Jof the infection Malaria is not caused by bad air (mal-afr) as was once believed, It is caused by a parasite which must spend one phase of its existence with- in the body of a particular kind of mosquito, and the other phase with- in the bleed of a human. Therefore {kill as many of the mosquitzes as pos- wble and keep those that are left from biting humans and malaria also is conquered. But the problem of smilipox or of diphtheria is not so simple. They are not transmitted to humans through ithe kindly ministrations of some in- weet. Diphtheria is transmitled by the micro-organism known ma the Rieb- LoefMer hncillus . This tiny murderer {of children, only . one - twenty-five thousandth of an inch long. is found In the excreta of the nose ind throat of diphtheria sufferers . It is trans- mitted directly from one person to another, or sometimes through . the meditim of milk or other food pro- ducts, or of articles which the sick person has used-his towel, handker chef, spoon or toys. But. the milk or the other articles must have got their Infection from a human sufferer from the diserse. . There is no insect we can eliminate here. so we must (ind something else to serve as a preventa tive The diphtheria organism lodges in the throat or nose of a human. It grows and multiplies. In growing it produces a poison or toxin which is a {absorbed by the body of the sufferer mu ri “gr-m is caused by. suf- ntion to the peculiar - brane-like growth of the hank-Ken the nose or throw . 'Jetaify the death ia erused by the action of the polson Antitoxin is the antidote for the poison. It is produced within the body of the sufferer. If the person's body can produce enough antitoxin to neutralize the toxin, the patient gete well. If the person's body . cannot produce enough of its own antitoxin. the patient will die unless he is given more of the antidote or wniitoxin. How Antitexin. is Product Fortunately for the human race they pro- to | neutralie . it 'They are then _ given . larger . and Murger _ doses of the . toxin . until thetr bodies have produced ro much antitoxin that the animal exnnot get (& sick from diphtheria. . Understand, these are mot sick animais, they are well; animals, and they are animais, fed. better cared for than the most expensive race horse. From the blood of these well animals is duce antitoxin _ Ne Secretarial - School Merrick Road at Main Str ¥reeport, L. 1 Summer Session Starts July 1, 1929 i Day and Evening Sessions E |Reeretarial, General Business and |S Civil Carse F- Advanced Dictation and Re- | view Classes ‘ a pestilence which eimation has reduced the number of |once visited crowded jails, ships, army not these jpiaces free of filth, but by getting rid it still takes its If they should contract the disease} It will be in a mild form and will be} f easy to cure I The best proof of the value of} antitoxin and of toxinantitoxin are} found in the ree In the clty of New York the death rate from diph-)f theria during the period from 1874 to | 1878 averaged 636 deaths for ever; hundred thousand children under Af- In the period from to keep themselves|1924 to 1928 the rate was only 38 from getting diphtheria. This anti-|The medical profession believes that toxin is then used as an antidote to|since the spectacular drop in the the diphtheria poison in humans. It!death rate started al the time when is glven to the patient to neutralize/antitoxin was introduced and that the diphtheria petson in the patient's/since the decline in the death rat body. It keeps him from being 'has increased as the use of antitoxm ed to death by diphtheria toxin the saving of life is (| mmmunpmucecnmhol‘m large measure to the use of ant the same antidote, the same antitoxin, |toxin. A similar drop in the ems to cure him of the disease [rate after the introduction of toxin |_ Toxin-antitoxin is another material/antitaxin leads one to a natural sup- entirely and it is frequently confused [position that toxin-antitoxin has help with antitoxin. We showed how the/ed to reduce the total number of animal can protect itself against large cases, This supposition is borne out doses of diphtheria poison by firstby the experience of several cities being permitted to protect itself/where the use of toxin-antitoxin has against small doses, As Tast as the/been more general than in New York., animal produces antitoxin to offset! Before the toxin-antitoxin . cam the effect of the small dose of toxin.|paign in 1921, New Haven, Conn., had f more of the poison is administered /a death rate from diphtheria of 144) |f to encourage the production of more'per hundred thousand of population of the antidote, until at last the ani-|In 1927 it was 16, Auburn N. Y. by! mal has stored up so much of the|immunizing 85 per cent of its school' the antidote that additional doses of|children and a large percentage of its the poison have no effect. A sim-\younger children changed its death [ilar thing could be done in humanirate from 384 per cent per hundred\ beings, but there is a simpler and|thousand to zero for three successive less annoying method {years, San Joaguin county. Ca! drop- | A mixture is prepared, consisting of|ped from 51.0 to 2.9 after a cam some af the toxin (poison) and some|for immunization of the antidote for that potson, anti- No M Results In City | toxin. 'This is known as toxin-antl-<' In New York city there have been| toxin. A small dose of It is given the more than 500,000 children immu-} child. His body is thus encouraged rized in the past few years. There to produce some of its own anti-| has not heen - reported one single dote, its own antitoxin. 'Three doses) death or real sickness crused by} of toxt-antiforin are given at weekly) toxin-antitoxin properly administered |Interval®, That starts the child's own 'in this entire time. Within the last antitoxin production. This production} three months New York city. chil- continues for from four to six months | dren have received more than 300,- At the end of that ime most child-/ 000 treatments without one unto-| ren.will have produced enough of their |ward incident to mar the perfect tic-| own antitoxin to protect them from ord of safety \n Festtulness of Green to your grounds. | to take home and transplant. § A plants and frees are guaranteed. for dinner or sending of cards is recognized as proper. only one of the group who has duties to complicate matters for her. 'The Arkansas representative still is in mourning for the death of her husbang whom she sucoseded with Repre- Rdith Langley social sentatives Florence P. Kahn, Nourse Rogers and Mary T Norton, have no escape. is one of the busiest of Mrs. McCormick still finds time for one of those well-chosen dinner par- ties for which Mark drugh- usually run well past this hour. long bas been famous \commanded\ to one|Attorbey general and Mrs of Mrs. Hoover's congressional tea erh‘” s parties because an im at roll cal (hostess to the secretary of commerce porta and Mrs. Robert P. Lamont There is nothing for them to do ex- | ~~=~==-=~~- - P neenee ener e nene terre They are priced reasonably-and like all Hi luncheon calls, Cards Bave Them The three Ruths-Representatives Ruth Hanna McCormick, Ruth Brysa Owen and Ruth Baker Pratl - upon this pian. They solved ther problem by together sending out an emissary to leave their cards where- ever calls from women representatives were expected. Bit Mrs. Pearl Peden Oldfield is the But the three Ruths Katherine no Of these, and despite the fact she Bhe has entertained once for At another time Your Boy's Eyes . . .. THEY are his most precious possession, So isn't it worth while to protect them from needless strain by hav- ing him fitted wit glasses if necessary Our examination will determine whether or not he requires optical aid. B. & L. D. Gutowitz Jewelers-Optomaetrista 276 Fulton Avenue Hempstead, L. I. EVERGREENS ARE ALWAYS IN STYLE -and ate always in bloom, lending tue joy and We have thousands in the Nurseries ready for you You can take your pick from our large assortment in the Outdoor Showroom-or if you prefer, drive through our acres of nursery stock and take your pick. | hi HICKS' NURSERIES Jericho Turnpike WILL PLANT Telephone Westbury 67 , Westbury, B, I. «alk When You Antwar This Advertismscot Kindly Meniion The Weesa Dally Review the group, the william D she was one ttr