{ title: 'Nassau daily review and Nassau star. (Metropolitan, Long Island, Nassau County [Freeport], N.Y.) 1937-1937, March 01, 1937, Page 11, Image 11', 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/sn95071429/1937-03-01/ed-1/seq-11/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071429/1937-03-01/ed-1/seq-11.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071429/1937-03-01/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071429/1937-03-01/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
C3 - of the wassail bow!. Even sontents of the bow!, they didn't get own occasion have its members discarded their dig- sufficiently to put their arms around each other and ze on \Sweet Adeline.\ 2? association has been a very nice organization but © ydur commentator is pleased 'to note that recently it is \the bar giving indicatio tuall L There is life in the association much of Interest hap» its beautiful home, those who did not be- on the occasions it elected officers or in- in its annual holiday A wikes in which the bow! became in the nature of an association - rarely but have won for themselves the Jead story on each occasion. In- deed the dignified association figuratively bas tossed away its top hat and is going about things >\ in a more pleblu‘ manner. is an entirely commend- able change in demeanor and there are many who will mgree with your commentator that more meetings such as the + association has held within the \- Jast week should be scheduled through the year. What of it if sore of them were suspected of status was held? What of it, tod, if others got accused of pussyfooting because they \_ «- wouldn't go on record as favor- (» Illuminati? 'The suspicion of packing and the accusation of pussyfooting only bespeak a new era in the life of the bir association that => ts: bound 'to 'be enfoyed 'by an interested public that will ap- ~ preciate, your reporter hopes, the good that will come out of it. Thu“, is, in the association, - some of the best minds of the county. They give forth intelli- gent viewpoints on the main ise tas of day and it is just as all of them do not since, in their dif- the public gets a to weigh all sides of the political lines to they debated the bility of Mr. Roose- move to change the status supreme court and in the sourse of a three-hour debate that waxed very warm on sev- eral occasions they divulged \ some new and highly interesting pro and com, but mostly con. The fact that two Democratic lawyers picked to speak on the issue generally were in accord in their opposi- tionto what is called tampering with the highest tribunal in the lund didn't lessen any the '\ of the debate. __ It -was the fact that the two principal speakers were in ac- < dord thatled to the charge of packing and it is worthy of comment on the regard that the have for their associa- tossed when g; fff | bow. To get mi ee EVIEWING the [NEWS RE was a time when the bar association of dear, w old Nassau was much more staid'and dignified and lie members didn't throw accusations of \packi - **'pustyfooting\ at each other. They used to 20 occasions and their meetings were conducted in B quiet and subdued manner, except when and er on drank after they had mod the nolsy and on no until the present, of being buman. whore, in the past, there- fact that members of her sex no longer are outsiders in busi- mess, in legislatures or in the court. Law, in. particular, she said/ \is not top uninteresting for women\ and she should know since she has been em- ployed as a law secretary for seven years. She gave an interesting re- view of, the Hauptmann trial and she should have convinced the members of the bar agsoci- ation that women make good jurors.. Still, she didn't. The bar association now is looking for a woman who will step forward and argue that jury duty is not for the sex and until they find such a woman and hear what she has to say it is not go- ing on record, one way or the other, in regard to any legisla- tion. This has been called pussy- footing but your reporter doesn't see any pussyfooting to it. The association wants to hear both sides of the story and so, top, do thousands of people who are reading about what the associa- tion is doing. Life's Flashes i Scholarly Levity ERIE, Pa.-Dark threats of a sitdown strike in protest against too much home work filtered through the student body of Academy High school. . \What's the use of a sitdown strike,\ argued Principal C. W. McNary, meeting with the mal- \when that is all you do all day long, anyhow?\ The students decided against the idea. Commutation NEWARK, N, J.-Just for the won of the record, Isadore p uwart:q 87, is out of alimony ail. * \I am beginning to think I am actually sentenced to life,\ he wrote Advisory Master John A. Matthews, adding that he hadn't a dollar and had lost bis job during@his six months tenacy of a cell, He got out Kiss And Jell DENVER-To prove the bac- terlological hazards involved in kissing, Instructor T. A. Ander= son prevailed on several high school students of both sexes to kiss dishes of cold, jellied beef broth. Examining the broth several days later under microsco students found flourishing clus- ters of germs on the lip im- prints. A survey next morning showed the students were deep- ly impressed-not a one went out 'the previous evenin a dish of, cold, jelli Questionable Art PEORIA, I1.-Recrul i ficer Karl K. Jones ruled Wal- ter K. Elger would have to put some clothes on a nude lady tattooed on his forearm before he could Jain u}. navy. lained, Regulations, Jones exp forbade the enlistment of per- sons who had offensive matter \engraved\ on their epidermis. beef broth. and kissed ' Contract Bridge CAN ODD LEADS STOP GAME? ---+ C gt SCOTTS SCRAPBOOK - - - ist, ren mew Ancora» Ade or MARAIJQ, AM |SLAMPD Lying in «liz Mouth or AHE, AMAZON RNER n. Sout! AMERICA , HAYE Pis NUMEROUS ANP P UPON HERDS oF CATTLE DRAG THEM 10 SHoRe. ANP HAMMER THEM 4o DEATH MEANT \Aooff\Anp LooKED LIKE OUR MODERN LEfTER \w* -AH1S 16 Aite way Ae. PHOENICIANS WROTE IT N9 EY PRONOUNCED 1 \SHIN\ qREECs SET tir UP on ENP ,., AND CALLED M\ \SIGMA'- AnD THE ROMANS ROUNDED OFF THE SHARP EDaES, CREATING ThE MODERN Dr. Brady \ Talks on Health About Introverts A regular beriod of open air activity, even though it be only an hour of walking or some light out- door chores, is perhaps more important for the general well being of the near-sighted child than for any other growing youngster, and such out- door daily activity is the best conservation for the eyesight. Some one wrote about a girl of twelve or thirteen who has two or three undeveloped teeth in the front of her mouth and is becoming al- most a recluse in her worry“ than! her nefar- ance. It seems deplorable child should 'be denied the benefit of suitable porcelain Jack- ets or whatever denture the dentist may deem suitable to correct the prosthetic defect. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Is it true that adding even small amounts of soda to cooking vegetables destroys some of the vitamins? . . . (M. S.) Answer-Yes. Soda (saleratus) increases de- structive action of heat and oxidation, particularly upon the vitamin C in fresh green vegetables. Young woman who has taught high school for years says she managed to evade physical train- ing in grade school, high school and college, and believes her physical deficiency has made her an introvert, In high school and college she devoted her time, money and energies carrying the TEAM and getting the support of the townspeople and the students. These activities exempted her from, the physical education classes she should have attended. Now she observes the growing im- portance and dignity of the physical education of school and girls and sighs \How I would have profited by ing into games, swim- ming, dances instead of just rooting.\ Perhaps in some instances Introversion renders the individuals incapable of enjoying normal physical activities, but in most cases neglect of physical education leads to Introversion. Are you an introvert? In other words, do you tind satisfaction in the inner life of thought and fancy, have you a strong imagination, are you in- ' clined to think more and perhaps talk less than others do? A tolerable degree of introversion is normal and advantageous, It becomes abnormal when for want of purpose, interest or ambition Information alsout infecti A the cogitation drifts into idle day-dreaming. thutnholhort of health. Jl m?\t§be3§51‘$ qu F?!- A fundamental cause of spinal curvature is || (yr a. D.) Answer-I do not believe oxygen would be of any value in your case. However, your physician is the best judge. If he is not familiar with oxygen injections I will be glad to give him data on his request. Only a physician can administer oxygen injections. poor muscle \tone flabbiness of muscle from in- sufficient exercise, play or physical work. Spinal curvature, like other physical deficiencies which are in their earlier stages faulty posture, func- tional weakness, fatigue, tends to make the young person an introvert or a neurotic. Correction of the nutrition and proper physical education will prevent many of these weaknesses which other- wise develop into fixed deformities. Parents who wink at the growing child's attempt to avoid or to be excused from physical training classes are not giving the child a fair deal. Teachers who connive at this practice betray their un- fitness to instruct youth. Because he cannot see well enough to com- pete with normal fellows in active games, the nearsighted or myopic child is likely to become an introvert. He naturally fails to get much fun out of the favorite ies and exercises of boys who have normal t. He prefers to amuse himself bent over a story book or other reading. DEMOCRATS ARE SET FOR VICTORY DINNER Many, Distinguished Residents Are Expected At Hempstead Event On March 4 Rene A. Carreau of Merrick, general chairman of the plate\ victory dinner of the Nas- sau-Suffolk Democratic organiza- tion declared today that reserva- tions already made indicate it will be attended by many distinguished residents of For years I have used cold pack method, put- ting tomatoes or fruit in jars, screwing lids downl tight on the rubber rings before sterilizing. So you see the food is protected from oxidation while sterilized. Why isn't this as effective as the {vmgy method for preserving vitamins? . . . . .B) Answer-By your method probably a consid- erable part of the vitamin C is preserved in the canned food. Fresh fruits and vegetables contain considerable dissolved oxygen. Immerse them for a few hours in slightly salted water to use up this oxygen (33,011 canning. ”a 1497, John P. Diile Co.) The = Hempstead police today con- tinued their investigation of the theft of a of gloves and cur- tain material, valued at $7, which were stolen from a ked car Saturday night. Charles Nimich, of 110 Roosevelt street, Garden Cid, rted the articl len while his car was the rear of the Polish Na on Prospect street. in al hall The toughest defensive play for \ WTP > By R. J. ‘S'OOtt Pen - S state of mind into which he, with the,older inhabitants, has fallen. He takes his problem first to the curator of a nearb mu- seum, who sends him to a forbidding and annecessarily forceful psychiatrist in Lon- don. And the latter sends his new patient to the water- ing place for rest, which ac- counts for the meeting with the player. Well - if turns out that the doctor never saw a place called Cainsmarsh for the ef- fective reason that no such place exists. The hor- tible delusion 's, it further ap- pears, the result of the strong forces from the past which are overwhelming civiliza- tlon. Weak and mostly an illu- sion, civilization is succumb ing to these caveman invad- ers, and the minds of men are crumbling within their skulls. Modern man cannot withstand the strain of have ing stepped out of the frame; once he lived in the present, which was all right, but now he has projected himself into the past and the future, which is too much. And so on. One should not assume that this superficial statement ex- hausts the possibilities of Mr. Wells's little book. Neither should one assume that most readers will care to exhaust these possibilities. Truth to tell, there will be those who will yawn over \The Croquet Player;\ this creation is neith- er philosophy, fantasy, nor prophecy, nor is it a thriller. It is Mr. Wells making an- other book. COMMISSIONER LISTS MARCH GRAND JURORS Panel Will Report To Justice James Hallinan In Nassau Supremé 9mm John 8. Thorp, Nassau commis- sioner of jurors, announced today the names of high talesmen chosen for the March term. The jurors will report to Justice James T. Hallinan in Nassau supreme court during the month. Members of the new grand jury Include: Henry Van Den Hoorn of Westbury; William W. Matthews and 8. Burt Van Siclen of Great Neck; Walter S. Baker of Belle- rose; Leslle E. Bushnell and El- bert H. Griffin of Oyster Bay; Hunt T. Dickinson of Locust Val- ley; Stacy Hall of Mineola; Archi- bald Bowman and Clarence E. To- bias of Garden City; Charles F. a,“ school, Wantagh, is I ae < ~A~ l MONDAY, MARCH j.; FEW weeks ago it looked as if a monster steel strike, was in the making and would almost inevitably com@ spring. Now the situation is changed. The odds are against any strike at all. - matam tered The Fieture. One is Ue General | te the picture. One is t Motors settlement. Before that was to a head this NEW YORK -was a thoroughly satisfactory triumph for the corporation, de- flated the Lewis menace to such an extent that drastic and expens- ive measures to suppress him no longer appear necessary to the steel chiefs. ' The second new factor in favor of industrial peace is the huge British armament plan recently announced. Expansion of our own naval and military expenditures is almost sure to follow. But even apart from that, the British pro- gram alone is such as virtually to guarantee continuance of peak prosperity for the American steel industry for at least two years to come. This is a strong incentive to keep the wheels turning at capac- ity, even at the price of certain concessions to labor. The more business - and profits-in sight, the more expensive a luxury a strike would be. For instance, it would certainly be cheaper to reduce the 44 hour week now current in the industry to 40 hours-and pay time and a half for overtime-than to risk a tle-up that would jeopardize the orders now in sight. Enlightened self - interest dictates generous treatment of labor at this junc- ture. Watch for key steel con- cerns to take the 40 hour plunge in the near future. What about recognition of the C.1.O. union as a collective bar- gaining agency in the steel indus- try? Many observers have rated stubborness on this point the most probable cause of a steel walkout. WHIRLIGIG T ¢ cisely as in the General G t-without a an”. i 'They further predict that JohR | Lewis will find this ofl\ at all acceptable.\ Lewis. , not ready for a knockdown and. dragout fight in steel-and won't\ be until his organizers have Ao up a lot more members. The , eral Motors strike impressed 8 | him the danger of going off half= cocked. With beth Lewis and the = steel managements preferring peace to war for the near future, it is likely that hostilitles will be indefinitely postnoned. Behind the furore of the su» preme court argument, a nume ber of business leaders-especially those connected with Secretary Roper's business planning and ad= visory council-are working quiet ly with government officials on @ new formula for industrial regu» lation. ( In essence, this plan calls for the setting up of new hour, wage and labor condition standards for individual industries, as well a% more specific definitions of falr competition. Viclation of labd®, provisions in the new \codes\ would make the violator subject to prosecution for \unfair trade practice\ by the federal trade commission. In general, the trade} commission's powers of enforte» ment would be materially ex« panded. Many industrial conservatives, while deploring \regimentation\ as such, will nevertheless support this program. They are convinced that tation in some form is inevitable and would much prefer it along these semi-voluntary lines than, say, via the O'Mahoney fed= eral licensing bill or the Black» Connery 30 hour week bill-either of which is a possible alternative. -# -#- N PRIVATE conferences with congressmen over the supreme court issue President Roosevelt argues that the threat of a fascist or communist dictator in the United States comes from the judicial WASHINGTON By Ray Tasker rather than the executive arm of the governmnt. \nine old men\ the self-same charges He turns against the directed at himself. Mr. Roosevelt warns the legislators that economic unrest will promote an explosion unless satisfied with lib» eral measures so far blocked by the court. He cites con- ditions abroad as proof of his contention. He insists that pro- posed amendments require too much delay, and contends that they would not be ratified by enough legislature. \Skillful law- yers will block them,\ he adds. \I know thing or two about practical politics around state capitals.\ So far F. D, R. has not ap- peared to exert pressure on the confefees. He is simply can- vassing sentiment on Capitol Hill; his poise amazes those who are summoned to his desk. But one remark he lets drop con- vinces them he has set his heart on victory. \I hope to leave of- fice,\ he says, \with this re- form an accomplished fact.\ Several senators expressed grave cpricern lest packing the court set a handy precedent for the kind of dictator Mr. Roose- velt envisages. They voiced their confidence in the president's sincere and democratic spirit, but they noted that he would not \remain fn office forever.\ F D. R. replied spiritedly . Mentioning by name several recent chief executives, he de- clared that they would never have resorted to enlargement of the court under any sort of pressure. His inference was that they were not sufficiently liberal or aggressive to sponsor such a move to meet modern needs. The predecessors he named, incidentally, were arch- conservatives-and Republicans. His listeners agreed that he was probably right. \But they retorted, \there are other men who might. How about a Huey Long, a John L. Lewis, or a Father Coughlin!\ These particular legislators left the White House in the same state of mind with which they entered it-against the Roose» velt program. President Roosevelt sprinkled his message to congress on the Bonneville and Grand Coulee power projects with subtle hints to the supreme court. Five seemingly innocuous phrases re- mind the jurists that they have already given their blessing to federal development and sale of power. The key word is \Incldental which is used or paraphrased at least five times. The message and accompanying power policy re- port emphasizes that generation of hydro-electricity will be only a by-product to navigation at Bonneville and irrigation at Grand Coulee, although the lat« ter project dwarfs T. V. A. and Boulder Dam combined. In other words, production of sufficient juice to light and heat the vast northwest is simply an after« thought. Hidden reason lies in the court's Ashwander decision holding that power which is de- veloped \incidental\ to other national activities - navigation, irrigation, soil conservation -- is a constitutional commodity, More practical explanation i# that construction costs allocated the by-product under this the» How you can qualify for a LOAN On your oun signatuae yor an iif can % :< Memphis-Lacuna: HOLD FINANCE | ory will drop to the v point, thus permitting unusually cheap rater to the consumers corprorkatio® s Content Mamou Third Floor & 300 Putten Aventse, Hemqutand Telephones 574 Locally mamMAGED OfmCES «M PRINCIPAL CiTite Hes EDGAZ A. GUBIT Pevags, NBC ' °