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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
TlAd A Glance By CHARLES P. STEWAR] ® sn co cn n eds Where should one look for the upward climb of business? From tions gathered by this column cific coast. With the settlement maritime deadlock, an immense of business has been unleashed, the Pacific coast has not yet full a degree yet in the ment as the east and the mid id Such movements-depressions a% 3 recoveries-seem to sweep from @&# Ce ra gnnflruu— 4 cute copy . naw Tome 513W at a\ m Aginey, Time» Square, M. T. £555; PUBLICATION OFFICES: Rutered Prespert, X. \v Post Office as Second 7%\ ¢ ori lew Building, Sun- 7 Centre. Avenue. - messes Fi FREE TELEPHONE SERVIOE: Bockvile Contre 1800; 3827; 2000 Pree ses «000; 2it0 .s DESIGNATED OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER For the County, of the Vilage of tf o Ar Ros: m; in the guilt! Btates District Court, - ars of N. ¥. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Long Island Real Estate Board at the Hote! Biltmore in New York Saturday night found the realtors in a gay but sober There was no occasion for imbibing be- nearly caused the tragic death 'of Les- ter Carman and Charles Stenzel, 'two Behind the scenes the administration joining farm groups to labor on supreme court issue. Some the ob- servers believe that within less than two weeks President Roosevelt will have a fairly well solidified farmer-labor behind him on the issue. Then he will make a radio address, which ex= « |pected to be followed by a \popular up» \ ; |rising\ for his proposal. As already predicted here, rogressives are expected to be won over y agreement to try also for a constitu- tional amendment to curb the court on nullifying laws. yond a friendly cup for the sake of com-|i/ panionship, because. from. the tone of the meeting they have no sorrows to drown. \Typical of the real estate recovery on Long Island is the progress in Queens de- scribed by Borough President George U. Harvey in his brief talk. Permits for new construction in Queens for the first two months of 1987 aggregate $20,000,000, which Mr. Harvey said is as much as total building in any two years yesterday, that it was due to the theft of gasoline, with which their auxiliary skiff had been stocked, that they were sent adrift from their fishing waters off Fire Island. Someone had stolen the fuel in the skiffs containers and had -substituted it with water before the pair started out on their cruise. After they had reached their fishing place, the engines of the skiff failed andthe boat began to drift. Two days later the men were rescued by a pass- ing tug and were landed at the Massa- i The Nessou “W'Ml is a member of 'The V.. Amosiated Press. Associated Press !s exclusively \ mmtitled to use for publication of mews dispatches i eradited to It or not otherwise credited in this news- also therein. Save The Sanctuary P HETHER or not the voters of . the Town of Oyster Bay, at 'their referendum in the Fall, decide F -.. | v \to grant a 16-year lease of its grounds on Jones Beach to the Long Island State Park commission, it is hoped, for the sake of the birds who haven't yet been convinced they have been betrayed, that the sanctuary that has caused the dispute will be preserved. Representatives of all families of birds, some of them very rare, in- deed, to these parts, have come to know the sanctuary as the one place along the Atlantic seaboard» where during the worst part of the depression. His forecast that between $100,000,000 and $150,000,000 worth of buildings would be erected in the borough this year, exclusive of work within the World's Faip proper. Two things are contributing to heavy construction and rapid growth in Queens- two things besides general recovery. The first is the World's Fair and the second is the opening of the Jamaica Subway as far as Forest Hills This subway runs along Queens Boulevard and has given a great impetus to home building and apartment chusetts port. 5 YEARS AGO A proposal for changes in the names of 47 streets in Oceanside was ap- proved last night by the Oceanside Civic association at a meeting in the Oceanside Hose company building. The project is designed to do away ith duplications in the names of eets as well as the confusion which has “Fen from the fact that each of several streets in the community has more than one name. Residents of the Malverne school dis- Review Staff Cartoonist Teacher Urges Support of Institutions Passage of the president's s court measure would be followed g: renewed legislation on wages and hours, farm aid, control of natural resources, housing and social problems. * The administration probably considered the speech of former President Hoover as & point in its favor. Statements of cham- bers-of-commerce and other organizations of similar nature likewise are hailed. The administration is eager to prove that the \Liberty league-reactionary crowd\ is be» hind the opposition. * ® @ 3 dAPArrh'I $703!!!“ F apan worried over the huge 7 val programs of Great Britain “I“ - f R United States. It denounced house construction in areas adjacent to| trict rallied behind the standard of the t « Washt they can rest, with no need to fear|the boulevard. The sale of 1,500 building! opponents of the proposed $525,000 In EXIStCnCC Before Launch”) New Ones‘ ‘mfiraflflll‘m?’ 33:3“: the hunter and his gun. lots on Queens Boulevard in one transac-| high school project lest night and in a ' I Britain and the United States have am» They have not yet become aware tion was reported at the meeting as the of) record “if gseéefteffihzs prov (* @/ nounced such vast programs that Ja- & biggest deal of the year to date. posal by a vote of o . St 5 Editor, Nassau Daily Review-Star: fered and still offer, splendid op-|of the free county college really PMP fears It has neither the wealth nor that their haven is not so well opposition to the high school constPuc r les i tay of R the facilitles to catch up. ell pro- If a complete report for Nassau were| tion plan had been registered ever since I have just been reading your portunities in the way o\ scholar- know. Th t tected as it used to be and the idi ; pal a - editorial in The Review for to-|ships and student ald to the can- It is always better, in education, e matter is becoming considerable Te @T€| available, building operations here probably the project was first discussed. day, entitled: \S But Mis- didates who estly : to support existing institutions of an issue in the Nipponese empire. reports that some bold.-hunters have| would prove as great in proportion as those guided\ To my mind, it states |a college education. Those facili-| which have made a speciality of| THO MilMtarists are saying, \Bee we violated the sanctity of the haven by shooting birds that thought such slaughter could not occur there. It may be that these reports are untrue and it would be better could they not be substantiated because shooting birds in the sanctuary at Jones Beach is'just as unsportsman- like as the recent snatching of the striped bass off Red Hook, N. J., It would be a sad commentary, indeed, upon the hunters of Nassau were it revealed that some of them actually went into the sanctuary and mur- dered some of the wild life there. Birds are smart. They have come to know the security of sanctuaries and posted grounds and when they are on sanctuary land or in posted woods they are carefree and friendly. They know no harm will come to them. That is why they still head for the sanctuary at Jones Beach while on «their flights and it is why, too, that bird lovers all over the East came to Jones Beach for an intimate study of in Queens County. A big season in real estate appears inevitable at this time. Some of the farmer members of the state legislature ought to be able to get a good laugh out of the labor bill that is to be presented establishing the length of a day at five hours and a week at thirty hours.-Linn (Kan.) Record. Prospects still are said to be good for the manufacture of 5 million motor cars this year. So sitting down doesn't neces- sarily prevent riding.-Kansas City Star. In Memoriam William Wolfe of Bellmore DIED FEBRUARY 28, 1927 Miss Elizabeth Cooks of Uniondale DIED FEBRUARY 28, 1927 Mrs. Josephine Utz of Baldwin DIED FEBRUARY 28, 1932 George A, Wood, 81, of Hempstead DIED FEBRUARY 28, 1932 Mrs. Anna Blazo of East Hempstead DIED FEBRUARY 28, 1932 Mrs. Lillian P, Harris, 60, of Merrick DIED FEBRUARY 28, 1936 Mrs. Martha Lucia Story, 83, of Freeport DIED FEBRUARY 29, 1912 Test of Management!‘ Comes in Good Times By William H. Kniffin HE ultimate test of management, whether in personal affairs, or in business, banking, or corporate affairs, is not in hard times, but in the good. When the going is rough, and economy and good judgment are necessary to keep off the rocks, it is not difficult, to manage well. We have to or suc- cumb to the inevitable. To be thrifty in depressions is no mark of honor. There is nothing else to do. A little must go a long way. But in good times, to practice good management is not easy because it is a self imposed task. Here one can choose a thrifty or spend- thrifty course. Only governments can afford to be careless in money matters in depressions. The mark of self control is not when money is scarce, but when it is plentiful. As we look back upon the past seven years, the wonder is that, by and large, we did so well; how we came through at all. Liquidation Is Easier Than Sound Administration WESTERN banker has recently said: \Any fool can liquidate the assets of a good bank in bad times, but it takes an able man to build the situation sanely and sympa- thetically, with full regard to the underlying realities of the edu- cational situation in Nassau coun- ty. You are quite correct, I be- lieve, in saying that the move- ment to provide a free county col- lege has proceeded from two groups: Those whose personal for- tunes might be improved from having such a school and those of philanthropic inclinations, who wish to see an opportunity pro- vided for a free higher education for all the youth of the county. As you so well say, these are noble sentiments, but are thoughts which do not take into .account all of the facts. The deserving college material is not deprived, as many believe of the benefits of advanced education. Two ex- cellent institutions, Adelphi col- lege and Hofstra college, have of- tles. are being extended and amp- liffid every year, and could be made even more attractive were funds which might be expended upon a general plan of higher pub- lic education devoted to an en- largement of the already existing facilities in our two liberal arts colleges. In other words, public scholarships for Nassau residents of provgg ability, would be both a more efficient and « more sound policy than a plan which envisions the building of a large and very expensive separate junior college plant. No one would dispute the value or the usefulnes® of voca- tional training; what is very doubtful is the wisdom of estab- lishing for such a purpose of a separate institution. Would you have a vocational school or would you have a college in such a plant? I do not believe the supporters In President's Editor, Nassau Daily Review-Star: Believing your \Letters to the Editor\ columns are widely read, I would like the opportunity of using them to discuss a viewpoint which I think may be of interest. [New Dealer Sees Danger | 6 Court Proposal | 3 severe economic disturbance, will constitute a tremendous incentive for a future totalitarian or Com- munist leader to assume dictatorial powers-an incentive very diffi- cult to check effectively. education than to establish new ones of unknown worth. It is really questionable whether we do a real social service in multiply- ing the number of institutions; the initial costs and -the maintenance costs, when we make them free, are really staggering. Supervisor Sprague, in discussing the propo- sition made to the Supervisors the other day, made it clear that though the county, as counties go, is rich, yet that is no reason to think that the taxpayers would look kindly upon an appreciable increase in their obligations, as this proposal is sure to mean. Likewise, the attention he di- rected to the tremendous number of other needs of Nassau county, as for example, the Courthouse situation, was timely and well- said. Our public school system Is ex- cellent; it takes full account of the needs of individual students; it provides, In many cases, excel- lent vocational training as a part of the high school course, and does so in a plant which also prepares for the leading colleges in an efficient manner. Why shouldn't we make this double service stronger, on the one hand, and assist the well-established colleges, on the other? In that way, we may provide for the needs of all types of students without materially increasing the per capita cost of education in the told you so.\ Western domination the Far East is being held up as bugaboo. # + ® WON'T BECOME LAW The Dickstein bill to keep out talent will not become a law. It would be vetoed if passed. The New York Times says \this bill is not merely viclous; it is incredibly stupid.\ The world's greatest talent would be barred. Our ' CHILDREN By ANGELO PATR CHURCH ATTENDANCE » “MY SON refuses to go to church more. He says he doesn't sée good of it. He'd rather take a walls country or stay home and read a good His father and I do not go often, I to get the dinner ready, and my i is tired after his week's work and likes to rest and head his paper. Don't you thik a young man of eighteen ought to go to church?\ How about an old man and an. old woman, at least old enough to father and mother a young man of eighteen? «Why don't they go with the young man they Mrs. Rose N. Healy of Hempstead It will no doubt be objected that| county, which is already quite Me anxious to train in righteous ways? P and maintain a good bank in good The proponents of the Presi- o h + Dinner can be prepared on Saturday, for their feathered subjects. DIED FEBRUARY 29, 1982 times.\ The same observation is true 1d“... upreme Court proposal CUT democracy was not ruined by large. the grester part and so lighten Sunday's Time was when the birds were safe at Jones Beach. They were well pro- tected because there was a conserva- tor there to see that none molested them, much less shot at them. Hunt-|- ers now are not supposed to go into _the grounds and shoot the birds. Miss June Corwin of Freeport DIED FEBRUARY 29, 1936 Walter L. Henry, 80, of Hempstead DIED FEBRUARY 29, 1936 Angelo Pollini, 74, of Merrick DIED FEBRUARY 29, 1936 Arthur E. Ives, 79, of Valley Stream DIED FEBRUARY 2, 1932 Homer Lockwood Parsons, 57, of Hempstead of business and of individuals. What we do in depressions depends much upon what we do in booms. In de- pressions we liquidate prosperity's debts, and in prosperity we create the debts that depression must pay. Which is the reverse of the logical process. The fising tide of installment buy- ing is evidence that people are once more inclined to go into debt. Much argue as follows: 1. The proposal is constitutional -It is a check provided for in the constitution, Just as checks are provided on legislation and execu- tive action. 2. It is mild-Much more se- vere proposals, equally constitu- tional, might have been recom- mended by the President. similar action taken by other presidents. True, but we are liv- ing in a far more volcanic age to- day, an age in which the political background has changed. In the 18th and 19th centuries dictator- ships were opposed because people who had no voice in governing themselves, had no faith in kings by \divine right,\ leaders not of their own choosing. But today A TEACHER MRS. WOLFE THANKS TRIBUTORS Editor, Nassau Daily Review Mey I have your kind indul- gence in acknowledging the whole- some support by the residents of Merrick for the flood relief fund through Merrick's branch of The American Red Cross. Our total CON- labors. Father could read and rest after church as well as before it. to them. The only way to get children to church and like it is to go with Sending children to church and Sunday school is not going to keep them going there. That is done by taking them, stay- ing with them, sharing all w on there with the children and y be- having as though it were a pleasure. of this debt is necessary and perhaps . , to date is $1,002.00. I wish it ¥ Objectors to granting the lease to '. 61:13” ”can“ 1, 1912 desirable. It is good for business and A1 of these ciatements are Cue power by Cin very lege! devices were possible to thank each one CHURCH 18 HELPFUL ..' the Long Island State Park commis- ura Genevra Carley, 52, of Rockville often good for the debtor. But we must |&o why, therefore, should of popular self-government which Dersonally who aided in this great {YHURCH service is spiritual relaxation. wion base their fight on the fact that Contre of the great majority m were invented. to prevent such huraanitarian cause-the churches, At least that is what it is intended a + K - a | +8 \the state may at any time disavow an agreement with its own political aubdivision.\ ' 'They hold that the Long Island State Park commission might get a 16-year lease on' the sanctuary and then decide to use the grounds for some other purpose. This may be gonceivable but it is not likely. ~Certainly, however, there should be some agreement -possible whereby the sanctuary, again would be pro- tected by a conservator and the mi- grating birds assured of a safe haven. A LIKELY CANDIDATE w: ARE glad it is' Franklin 8. Keons' \turn\. to be meyor of Garden City, bessuse we feel. that his administration will -be a progressive one, creditable to the com tunity In avery way. Under an intatssting system that some of the other villages might emulate for the wit of pommmunity goodwill, Garden. City etlige officials rotate\ in office. The dif: feint sections of the vMage have a chance t nowe the mayor in tarn, snd amch is al ways reprammied on tha board.. No- group ainspts to parpetaaté its temire of ution This argongement prociudas the secousity of Xr: Koone sinking a fight Por (tib siffice, bar: if) he ware a cendihihe tn other ”mug-wt”). b+ .. a t . DIED MARCH 1, 1912 Herbert Tompkinson, 54, of Freeport DIED MARCH 1, 1922 Henry Leopold Cramer of Roosevelt DIED MARCH 1, 1927 Anthony Lico of Freeport DIED MARCH 1, 1932 Mrs. Mary Brooks, 82, of Merrick DIED MARCH 1, 198% William J. Roose of Hempstead\ ' ~DIED MARCH 1, 1932 A. A. Ives, 80, of Valley Stream DIED MARCH 1, 1932 Christian Schiller, 86, of Hicksville DIED MARCH 1, 1986 Mre, Mary 8. Pesrson of Roosevelt DIED MARCH 1, 1936; Dr. Wiltism Zitron of «Merrick DIED MARCH 1, 1986 RHenty Johnson of Rockville: Centre DIED MARCH 1, 1986 Dr. E. W, Lisle-Cannon, 70, of Valley The reason so many testators create trusts for their beneficiaries is that they do not trust them in % To give them outright what In= tended for them is to tempt they be- dendunnafiodauuv-gm not _ do-spend. E mint-04h demonstrated on November 3 this approval of New Deal legislation al of the forces usurpation. Today's dictatorships are more deceptive in their coming. I b that pressure will be b by the people, to bear up- on tor Wheeler's measure for a two-thirds overriding power by Congress. This, I believe to be the proper check on the court. Such a measure (which need not include a faderal hours-wages amendment) would have the fol- advantages: 1. It would correct a defect in the Constitution which, by its own vagueness, ded the loophole the Court came to its supremacy over the executive and tive branches. 2. It would maintain the its t z; “w.“- ecutive, and hfim ual h.m tu» the orig- the organizations and clubs, both schools that gave such generous donations, the North Merrick Community card party and the overwhelming contributors who so gratuitously donated. There was no house-to-house canvass not any svecial benefits given. All returns to my commit- tee were voluntarily contributed. To Mrs. Robert Mills Morley, our Roll Call chairman, and my- self, it is a beautiful demonstra- tion of loving kindness and under- standing made so substantial by Merrick's whole-hearted generos- \Xins. FRANK WOLFE, Chairman, American Red Cross. Feb. 24, 1937 be, and if one goes there with one is likely to have It realized. mood for churchgoing. . It is preparation which consists of may\ and faith. Go to church in leving and you will find rest, a moi. lasting rest and peace than or paper, read in the chair, can ever bring. oung pang!- who have the church habit seldom break it. If the routine is estal the whole family follow it thought of breaking it enters It is the thing to and it is done. that ide 'There is