{ title: 'The Nassau daily review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1926-1937, September 16, 1929, 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/sn95071428/1929-09-16/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1929-09-16/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1929-09-16/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071428/1929-09-16/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
avery afternces exirpt Bonder - v ~ manly aaviel conron attom mpstead, Y Tion' orric®-20 Feites d. H. Y General { Pinot: Punrlsa Mighreny. . Centre, m. Y fill‘l? avi a the dlow of Notices of Benkruptey tm United District Court, Wasters District FEES AT THE STATE PARKS Executive Secretary ° Benjamin | L. Van Bchaick of the Tong Isiand State Park Commission says there has been some criticism of the park~ *M ing and bath house fees at the suate parks. . ~ It is natural that some veld would resent paying even a quarter for parking their mutomobile while they-went in bathing, but we do not believe more than 1 per cent ol the public tee} that way about it. The Review | has | been . inclined however, to applaud the commission's policy in making the fees nominal The parks have been widely acver- wersified mature having nothing Inj ised as a program to give the masses except volume, whether the increased recreational facilities and publio takes kindly to such free @00/ anytning but the most modest charg- - mmoonditional entertainment Of Ot. would necessarily deprive some of Bas been opened on such broad lines n, peole who need recreation the What it is not improbable It MAF, #5| mos, fiom enjoying the parks c>cept the dealers amhu.‘ reach the Bu- pericdically. - pteme Court of the United States be-| we nad occasion to visit Westches- fore a final settlement is reached. ter County parks during the sumifer \ Douched in legal phrases tDM M-\cua rund that the park system u waive and mystify all except the DMCA rio, county 1s virtually - Mamentary mind, problems of C96) log ung the prices fairly high, al- kind that anyone would not hesitate - though the management is excellent. 40 pass snap Judgment upon one way r another, according to how it) 190% Iland people should be grateful that their recreational facil- mérikes him, sometimes cause unrea- , at - motisble perplexity in judicial circles. isles are being provided vritually The radio dealers are fighting for] Cost in comparison with those Westchester is selling the thelr constitutional rights on the plate that liberty and a few other D°OP!c As a rule people appreciate the things they buy more than those Wbimgs. the constitution assures the Individuai . have been - encroached) Which are given to them, and It will upon from a new and unspeakable] be this way with the bathing beach angle. es, but those who are able to buy The Review is not in a position to| only when the price is very low must Judge whether or not Rockville Cen-| be considered too. W ¥re's ordinance providing for the re-| If everybody had plenty money #§rietion of radio broadcasting is con-| there would be no need for public Wtitutional. As we see it the ordi-|parks, because they would seek their mance has little bearing upon the own amusement in more human. relationships involved in the) surroundings. ase, which, after all, are the issue. The legal process by which the prop- # eqtiation between individuals is #eached is the medium, not the ob-) Zect, in all cases of this kind. H human relationships were al- ways tempered with tolerance, good mature and co-operation cases of this} rind would not arise and justice J would be served without the tedious of summation and elimina- Mon by delving into all the statutes, I precedents and decisions in an effort #o find the dividing point where one sean's liberty and pursuit. of ment Oni be crimped th dg? from the natural meighbor. There are many paralicls of the adio case, even in contemporary Hong Island life, and the trend of the ubtlention of ail ith the muni- Monday, September 16, 1929. RADIO: LOUD-SPEAKERS § AND THE LAW 'The fight of the radio desiers to their right to entertain the 6 mith bromdcastings of a di- exclusive GEOGRAPHY AND MORALS Morals are: largely geography. The other day Judge Edward T New of Lynbrook felt no compune- tions whatever in sending to jail two men who tried to go swimming minus clothes in 'the Valley Stream State Park, Public opinion will most cer- anyblpphud his action. . We recall very well. however, thdt in another part of the country used to go swimim{fg almost every day during the summer in one of the Inland rivers, During all, the time we swam there we never saw a bath- ing suit, and if anyone had been so a matter . of 'the law would indicate that the ra-| DZ®TaTe as to appear in one undoubt- «ilo dealers are wrong. Ese a num-, ber of other laws regularly enforced wiso sre unconstitutional, \nu Village of Freeport has adopt- 2M wh ordinance based on a law re- Wagenlly made effective in the State of Mew York, which makes barking wogs & public nuisance. There is s wrong parallel here with the radio loud speaker case. 'The radio deal- ars claim public broadcasting is es- . sential to the welfare of their busi- ° mess and consequently to their liveli- ' hoods. The dog fancier might claim that batking is essentini to the hap- of his and the hispptnices of dog essential to the »pursult of happiness of members of his family, Obviously there is a point of de marsation both in cubical-M . tng and in barking dogs and it is ex- ~ aeedingly difficult to determine: just ) how such a dog can bark or how wud and long a radio loud speaker __ win be trained upon the public ear !t becomes a nuisance. Cer- winly mone of us would go to court wer ane song or one \bow-wow.\ Préquently compiuints have been wade mpminst vibrations from Diesel] Im Yiew of the experience of 'the \\ wnginiss in ice plants and municipal! Tyers we are from him just for fun. The swimming hole of which we speak was within 100 yards of a large highway bridge and people used to stop their carriages on the bridge to watch the boys in swimming, al- though at that distance it was not possible to identify them. Outside of this there were no spec- tators except the raccoons and the crows. A mischievous group about the town once sent the judge of the cir- cult court \a petition demanding that the side of the bridge looking toward the swimming hole be boarded up lo keep the swimmers from being cm- barrassed by passersby, 'The petition was signed by ''The Dirty Dozen.\ The }Gdge held this to be coritemigt of court and ordered generous fAnes entered against each of the dozen, but for want of information as t who composed this group they were! never collected. PARAGRAPHS edly the others would have torn. it~ power plants. These complaints have! WDOdertng whether Noth didn't find ween acted upon on the m-Mwnffnnghem that, the vibeations const a pub l mutéance, menace to\ hedlth, éto.| NOt Only is it possible now to Where suthorities have been slow to MAW and dyspepsia. cures \in act, The bursssed residents drug stores, but a local pawn- Tanéiite of lis enact monotony drave Sheth frantic. Without jooking for He 'rights \In the' case, the- qlllage reduced the light and, win -- Sitbainated the ~Tisihing festure. In Fur purpomes, the barking ding! €Maruticis from. Dirsat awn-1 Amatier \ '| Pessloc Pray Pinabing Tighth And. UD you Lang will Eadie af (a; Fh huflV‘i, Lang. nimesif \In “chitin-mu 25 Years Ag one of the trustees of the public cemetery. also has declined to run for office. Filty new members were ad- mitted Monday night at the ban- mer meeting in the history of the Rockville Centre American Le. glon post, which was held in the basement of the library building. The Observer-Post, formed by merger of the Nassau Post of Freeport and the old South Side Obserysr of Rockville Centre, ap- peats in enlarged form, the size having been. increased from six to seven columns. Work on the First National Bank Building on Merrick road, Lynbrook has been delayed By m bricklayets' strike. 'They . wank $10 a day FIVE YEARS AGO _ Women and children riding in a large seam were badly fright- ened Saturday afternoon, when the sedan suddenly burst into flames on Grand avenue near the Baldwin Wibrary. Frank M. Healy of the Baldwin Battery and Tire Bervice rushed to. the ret- cue with a fire extinguisher and soon bad the flames extinguished. Hempstead has 2800 pupils al ready enreiled in the public schools, which Is 69 more than the total registration last year, It is expected that the number will exceed 3,000 by the time some of the late arrivals have been Usted. A bre in the dump on East Merrick road, a holdup and a score o( negroes shooting craps In the weods occupled the at- tention of Freeport yesterday aft- wd gave the police and fir ® busy day. William Ritchie, . who lives on .Commer- clal stroet, started for the fire, taking a short cut through the woods. Coming upon the negroes shooting craps, they stopped him and demanéed money, but. having mone thy let him ge-on. He re- ported the matter to the police, who went to the place and five of about 20 of the men were captured. [ Did You Ever Stop To Think? By Edson R. Waite Shawnee, Ol. youthful enthusiasm and patience afe so far apart. The in, is orer a rocky. and over a rocky . with many a hm tion to the spirit in be- tween. Both are of great importance in the world\bf business and perhaps © Hho, King Syadiente, loc. Grou: Beitain rchin furcrvec. the engagements of Cullenbong Aligangan near Bodoe river, and awarded two silver gallantry in action McKinley climbed became a colonel he was appolnied Personal Health Service BY WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. THE HARD OF HEARING NEED NOT B& DUMB I% is well known that most mutes! are born totally deaf, not bard of | hearing but without the . sense of | hearing. That is why they cannot learn to talk-they cannot hear words and hence cannot utter them, I But that is ° not the . kind wl‘ dumbness I am thinking of, I meen | dumb in the vernacular. How very dumb the hard of hearing are, one | may judge by a glance mt a little | pamphlet published ten ot fifteen | years ago by the American Medical about \Deafuess Cures\ 'and gives association, Chicago, IL. It is all you inside information on ten of the foremost fakes in the field. If the reader of this column is bard . of hearing and interested in any such | article or remedy, I earnestly advise him to look over this little pamphict | (which costs & dime, I think) before he signs his name on the dotted lins | [Ducks Mimic Air Fleet | After Formation Flight and so assures for himself an eternal | piace on the sucker list As a matter of fact, I do not think the hard of hearing are at all lack- ing in intelligence, On the can- trary. I'm rather hard of hearing) myself. But what I mean by the dumbness of a great many persons ¢ -¢ | THE NATION'S PRESS | GOOD FOR CHINA! An everpresent characteristic of revolutionary radicalism is its gloomy Man studied the flight fect the first airplane. are studying the flight of airplanes, in order to know bow to behave in the air No less an than the Hagerstown, Md., Globe will vouch for this. 'The Globe's .official staff ornithologist and nature lover hap- pened to be prowling about the Hagerstown City park when She \Sky Fleet\ of a tire and rubber company flew in military formation above that city, while on its 50,000-mile tour of the United States, Cubs, Canada, and Mexico ' His scientific eye noted that a flock of ducks in the City Park pond the plines circling the park in the form of m perfect V. After the \Sky Fleet\ had passed over, as though at a pre-arranged signal, the ducks rose from the City 1752‘th marine. is an interesting story of the development of our shipping from of the National Republic. It was written under the eaption \Romance . Depart- menting 8. Mer-|matal could be used in He put flapping wings on the first planes he tried to build. Now, conditions are reversed. Birds was paying very close attention to * ’ AmericangRéalizing Need For Big Mgr~ United States Shipping Suffered Decline Dur- ing Civil War; Has Never Regained Position It Once Held Comparatively few Americans are familiar with the story of the American merchant marine, its romance of the earlier days, and its decline during the Civil War period. It is only of late yearsthat the public has begun to awaken once more to the necessity of the American the' days in the current issme ne,\. by Wil- m \I \is said that confidence !s of of birds when he tried to per- # ‘Plrk pond and, after mneuvznng’ a bit, arranged themselves in a V-) shaped formation identically like that of the monoplanes and flew about~ the vieinity of the park for some time in perfect formation. If they had been wild-geose, of course, the Giobe's bright young or nithologist would have thought vothing of it for wild geose, as any- one knows, spend most of their leis: ure time flying about in the shipe of a V. But these were ducks, usually regarded as too stupid to know the difference between a V and an H or trite saying that 4t 48 use- try to teach a duck to swim mirplanes can at least terch ducks w to fly-if you belleve the Hag erstown. Gilobe ornithologist. Is a to chant Marine *- - - -- ‘mm.memmeflm ltntn-lftgndz-ny gave way to their more certain if less graceful com- slow growth, and so it took a long time to convince the shipbuilder that wrt to re ghee wood. 'The fist metal vessels ullt in the United States were the this property, which bull by the horns in the matter of Russian jdom and courage in this me [Diane [lon and Galatea, attributed to the paychology-its total Tack of a sense of humor. This has been Wustrated anew in the solemn pronouncements of communist leaders in Russia pro- testing against China's \violation\ of the property rights of Soviet Russia in electing employes and oMicials of the Chinese Eastern Rallway who were conspiring to overthrow the with defective hearing is the way they bite on these mail order swin dies that purport to cure deafness or restore hearing | They should read Emerson, these “Gully deaf duffers, Not that Ij ie read the old boy, thought I have earnestly tried to do so. Only r I harbor a vague opinion that It was Chane ”figment“ u , [none other than Ralph Waldo who coutse the existing government/composed that little paragraph about In Russia has seired without scruple /the world beating a Scam to the door hundreds of millions of dollars worth of the chap who invents a better of foreign.owned property in or something like that. The present regime is based upon A| well, now, beating in mind that I denial of the validity of property jam plenty deaf enough to be as dumb rights. Yet soviet leaders, baving/as the next duffer, ind so I have; for some years been engaged in UVY-|iooked into this deafness cure thing | ing to induce the Chinese to- carefully, I assure you; isn't| the of confiscation, now |it fair and reasonable to assume that complain that their pupi has learned {jr \Bpecialist Fow?!\ br \Dr. himmer\‘ the lesson land proceeds to apply it, really -has a ~remedy, treatment or assuming that Russia is right in that \helps deafness, claiming there has been a seizure of /numhers of deaf folk, will-storm his the Chines@inead@uarters for his help, just on government denies. the word of their deaf friends who | Now that there is some prospect of} have tried Fowl of Trimmer and peaceful settlement of the contro-/found him worth the trouble? Wouldt versy between China and or Trimmer be complied to soviet 'horn-tooters in the United thousands of dollars annuaily | States will be found Mos-\tm order to convince prospects of | cow for having finally decided, afterthe worth or efficacy of the unml many threats, not to go to war with|offered to help deafness? China. In this case, however, virtue) 'There are signs and portents, has become a necessity and discre (though feeble ones, I fear, that an tion has proved the better part of|awakening of public conscience is valor. Although maintaining & bUgt|coming and federal kuthorities are | army, the soviet government to try to clean up some of keep it in European Russia, astride/noisome fraud and deceit that the the neck of the Rustin misses, in/government has long countenanced order to maintain security for the}in these contemptible medica! awin- Moscow masters. The beginning of idles. a foreign war would be accompanied} In various cities there by uprisings at home. C . \regularty organized societies to bring xince military threats have failed, ideaf people together and to help Soviet Russia shows signs of willing-/them help each other, batman-J League for the Hard of Hearing in are now ness to settle by negotiation. Nationalist China is entitled . to credit far having taken the bolhevik revolutionary . propaganda and intrigue. Chine has shown wis be- yond that of soviet revolution! In- trigue, 'That other powers permit Moscow directed. communism to foment insurrection within their and openly develop military |= New York Long ning September 23, 1929, Credit Courses Business English (Monday example, Moscow-(P)-A statue of Premai- French sculptor Palconet who lived mamm.hlhmld in reserve stock of the Museum of Ikons and Paintings, Palconet Russia in 1766 and remained One of his works is the The Short Story (Monday, cooper equestrian statue of the Oreat in Leningrad. if Hf have saved. vault of this bank. Box rentals from $3.00 & year upwards. Why not stop in and aclect one this week? FIRST NATIONAL SAFE. DEPOSIT COMPANY Pennies Will Buy This Safety! 1 Once a year, if you wish, come in and pay for your safe deposit box with the spare pennies you . Jost a penny or two a day will more than pay for a private, double-Jock, steel-door safety de- posit box_in the modern, completety-equipped Private Secretarial Duties Non-Credit Courses zalmunmnulmmunfiumuummunumuifm\mlnmmm Extension Center At Hempstead, The University Extension Division of New York University announces courses to be given at the Hempstead Center, Hempstead, Long Island, begin- Elementary Retail Merchandising (Monday, 8.00-9.45 P. M.) General Psychology (Monday, 8.00-9.45 P. M.) British and Americun Literature (Tuesday, 8.00-9.45 P. M.) Real Estate (Tuesday, 8.00-9.45 P. M.) Advertising (Friday, 8.00-9.45 P. M.) Contemporary Drama (Friday, 8.00-9.45_ P, M.) Understanding and Appreciation of Music (Monday, 8.00-9.20 P. M.) 4 your town if you are seeking such counsel or aid. questions an» answers. Amhaie Uncle Sam's Dust. You are dead right about the excessive amount of dust in postofices from the cheap twine. Many of us believe this i: counts for the increased sick and ao sence rate among postal employes. But you might as well save your energy. do tor. Wconomy is the essential thing, the health of employes is mo concern ol (ne department's (CCAD Answer -Well, I just thought that. by barping a bit on this shoddy string ws might make that Seotehiman who super vises the saving of the pennies Uncle Sam on string realize thal sickness and absence from work wipes: oul. the saving and then some. If we bad s hexith commissioners or oficer who is not afraid of mis job, he might notify the department to cease using the twine, as it is a source of harmful dust Bananas Are Fine (or Bimbes our suggestion of aily portion of {banana saved the day with us. Altho ou: year old baby had never been sick she had always been terribly constipated. Our doc tor tried everything, and at lst we had been giving her yeast, but this made so much more gas we sow your sus geetion. Now she bas about a third of « ripe banana daily, and there is nol the leest trouble with her bowels v wom o R Answer --Banana is aa excellent food for infants from the age of 4 months to 18 years. Only thoroly ripened banana should be given to young Infants When well ripened a banana is rich goiden yei low, flecked with brown spets (not. black brvise marks) prt perly ripene not mushy. Bui and rich in Vit The banana pulp.. when aweet and soft, but is bighly nutritious, A, B, and C. Aside from ita value in the diet when the baby is castive, this dosd. will actually resiore some infants to health from maluutri- tion (Copyright. John P. Dil Co 1 Earnings 2.4 Times Interest Requirements Associated - earnings are over 2.4 times the interest requirements on the 6% Convertible Debentures now be ing offered. To invest, inquire of the security representative at the Associated Syste m company serving you. Associated Gas and Electric Company Far Rockaway N.Y. agimin G El 3 University Island , 8.00-9.45 P. M. $19.00 per term 8.00-9.45 P. M.) $19.00 per term $19.00 per term $19.00 per term $19.00 per term $19.00 per term (Tuesday, 8.00-9.45 P.M.) $19.00 per term $19.00 per term $19.00 per term $12.00 per course Interior Decoration (Tuesday, 8.00-9.20 P. M.) Special R $12.00 per course : The Modern Novel (Tuesday, 8.00-9.20 P. M.) $12.00 per course Courses In Aeronautics dates : September 16 to September 20 from 4.00 P. M. to 6.00 P. M. and 7.00 P. M. to 8.00 P. M, at the Hempstead High School. For further information, write to Mr. W.oP. 5 amas th aer wane mei le +9 7m hac nlite a- dnl Chand jal i oa 64':