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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
(9, \**\ Mb co specimen termes r int \ THL § THE\ DAILY REVIEW (“MN-m PUBLINHED DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY Mutscpd at the Post Olee at Presport, M. T., a» secasd clams matter. under. Astond March 1, 1079 Subssripiicn br wail war rear (n advance ~n*m~ 8 Res. rame an. CHARLES A. OPWICLAL NEWSPAPER for the County of Nassau Names% Conny for4+ publications OFICIAL NEWSPAPER of Nassau ae Isoa! news published b~ : An rights of republlcn carmen nd $ A THOUGHT \ \Hg is is the way of life that keopeth instruction; but he that refuseth repsbef erroth-Prov. 16:18, ‘ _\HAPPY\ The people demand a \happy ending,\ say the 'movie manufacturers. No doubt; But does a \happy\ ending! necessarily mean a stupid one, If kingdoms must be overthrown, cities destroyed, whole peoples martyred and multitudes tortured and slaughtered, ai that the final closeup may show the right man embracing! the right girl, that is \happy\ only on the assumption that audiences have no sense of proportion. Yet this is an exact description of more than one famous film. It is-a strange sense of perspective. SLANG Sometimes slang impoverishes rather than enriches the language. Take the word \dumb for instance, which is rapidly coming to mean \stupid.\ « Obviously it is the German word \dumm.\ It is more vivid and picturesque-than-''stupid\ and would be an im- provement except that it leaves us without any colloquial word meaning. \mute.\ If we are going to import \dumm then we should import \Stumm\ also. Let one who can not think be \dumb\ and une who can not speak be stumb.\ Other wise: we may- soon find our colloquial speech in- eapable of expressing the state of inability to vocalize. Nearly everybody. seems to try to qualify for the open championship contest in the National Association of Pre- a Titania, the befutiful maiden in Shakespeare's Midsum- mer Night's Dréam, fell desperately in love with a donkey. Which is not an unusual thing for a maiden to do. When a physician advises you to take a mo)“: off and reat up, he should also provide the cash to keep up your in- stailments. When a man comes to you for advice and you counsel him, against his own opinions, he loses all respect: for your judgment. Qne thing about the gruff and unsociable man, you never , suspect that he is planning to sell you a gold brick, A writer in the Christian Science Monitor complains that the American people have no spiritual ideals, But it can- not be said that they have no ideals about spirits, especially \the distilled variety. 4 It is necessary that some men should be industrious and hempmical in order to help out their friends who don't like to wo’rk and never could save anything. # “Ale-t may look at a king,\ but it wouldn't bother if there \Were a mouse in sight. f Most men know of some high salaried political job that they might be persuaded to accept. A lot of folks are too busy. doing something foolish unprofitable to have time to do anything sensible. - > Big fog in Paris stopped itraffic. Mir-uni.“ c Americans couldn't see whift they were drinking. Women are strange people. mm,hiufi if says she still loves him. o <a y , Great Britain has leased the Dagoe Islands from Estho- nis, muybe to start a fruit stand there, . Chicago burglars know their trade. 'They gagged a bar- ber, No busy burglar. wants to stop and talk, Former kaiser wants to go visiting. Wants to visit Ger. wiany, He wore out his welcotie last time, - news from Russia. Crops are some better now. Burthey won't have to eat the wolf at their door. I | By. CYNTHIA~GREY. The'. cable announcement that Mustapha Kemxl Pasha hasdivorced his. wife, Latife Hanoum, whom he married in 1921, reminds. us of- the difference in customs between the east and west, Datife Hanoum, a feminist, the daughter of+a. rich Syminan mer chant, wish. : a great influence over her husband an? was responsible for much of~the freedom women-have recently gained, such as going ou after sunset, being allowed at public funoéions,- and dropping the veil, Doubtless many the dyed-in-the land feared m When Mustapha Kemal decided he wanted this attractiv® girl with the large black eyca, who bad been edu- cated in Einglaad and France, for his wife, be did not have to go.through any campaign of courtship. All he had to do was to call a court official and make this simple declaga- tion to him: \I have decided.to marry Latife Hanoum. Wil, you kindly accom- plish the, necessary ceremonies.\ ~ Whereupon ~his \emissary made quick tracks to the parental home of the lady and said. R \Do you siccept as husband Gbaz! Mustapha' Kemal Pasha return for a gift from him of 10 drachmas of silver on condition of a mutual indomnity agreed upon by you in the event of the separation?\ ~ Her reply in the afirmative and her. father's check for 1,000,000 Turk- ish Hire, equivalerft to $650,000, com- pleted the Cansaction. . There were probably burning let ters, declarations of love and affec tion, and gifts, but these were after the main issues had been decided upon. . 'The proposal wa» of a bust: ness rather than personal nature. When \he tired of her beauty, perchance of her 'modern ideas, he issued an official statement Ing decided to separate from his wife, e had Issued a decree pronouncing a divorce, effective from August firth. Pretty soft. \ | *p % - Roosevelt party 1s seeking & lost 'race in Africa. It _ gofld find plenty at any ence track, i a> x> & andmmmdndha' They are do «bus, 'Hoston man tied his wife with one. makes a girl ally of if a alily ener foc the amily By SISTER MARY Breakfast-Orange . juice, muffina, milk, coffee, Luncheon-Cream of green- pea crisp broiled bacon, potato omelet, bran we. HAVE:NOT fi NE ¥ We have just celebrated the hun- h upniversary of. three instru- mentalities of roads, the - church Thomas \W.~ Husley. ('The frst set loose thefbodies and goods of men: the second was the first organized Americas Institution: for. the un- New York. of community life and the neighborlineas which goos with it is the one great hard- ip faced by the out-of towner comes bere to live. Out in the c New Yorkers designate any place/ then 25 miles away, people have) the strange habit. of speaking to r, whether they are acquaint lances or strangers. k A family from Berea, O., recently genly he stopped... There was a three inch cigar butt on the ground,\ As to. plolk.1t up & pmsserhy latepped on, it and ground, it under Ihi®. heel.. \Here old top, is a better lelgar,\ he said an he handed the oid a Havana perfecto. Gentlemen 'of: lelsure whogather from all corners of the world on the Bowery have becoffie a bit choicy as whackling of their spirits, and the/removed to Little Neck, Loni Island,]to Cigar butts, I am informed. Three third was {he great apostle of scien tifle freedom of thought. 'Two young ladies in their best to be témily tried and spoke Inch throwaways mre referred to as Robinson. ~Crusces and anything .. Now we have added to the railroadite everyone they met on 'the street.|SM@ler is known as\Man Priday ll). telegraph, telephone, automobile, airplane, moving picture and radio: to. the first liberal church the Hberal izing-movements in all the others, land 'to. Huxley the schools, the Scopes frial, the, Associated Press } Jand the yellow journals. Except for TEiRMER®= _ By CHARLES P. STEWART Wulhlngton.—Howl much foreign soup, croutons, celery and apple|diplofats in Washington drink !s saladapeach blane mange, milk, tea. Dinner-Fricasse of lamb, steamed rice, minted lettuce and peas, sliced wanton, chilled watermelon, sun- sh fee e “kg. graham bread, milk, cof- , The dinner meat should be cooked in the morning. At dinner time the actual time of preparation is short d the meal is made quite simple and quick to prepare. PRICASSE OF LAMB Thre or four pounds of lamb but from fore-quarter, 1 small onion, 2 tablespoons butter, 2< tablespoons four, salt and pepper. Wipe meat and. out in pigces for serving. Put into kettle with onion and pour over bolling water to cov- or.. Cover. kettle and odok slowly until-meat is tender but.not broken. Remove from stock and cool. Strain stock and until cold. Re- move fat. 'There should be about : cups of stock. Sprinkle meat with salt and pepper, dredge with flour and blywn quickly on both sides in hot fryings. Butter can be used if preferred. . Melt three tablespoons butter and stir in flour, Slowly add stock, atirring- constantly, and cook five minutes after boiling begins. Pour over prepared meat or serve in a gravy dish, Children under six years of age should be served lamb, reheated in the gravy without the preliminary saute-ing. Breakfast-Stewed blueberries, ce- real, thin ¢ré@m, graham toast, soft cooked eggs, milk, coffee. Luncheon-Scalloped potatoes and .| pears, cup cakes, nillk, tea. Dinner-Camserole of - fish - and vegetables, creamed . string» beans, cucumber jelly saind, baked apple dumplings, rye breau, milk, coffee, Thé casserole dish suggested in t in thin potatos into a if {?: EPE & &: 5 pee if none of Secretary of State Kellogg's affair, but if an embassy or legation receives more alcoholic refreshment than its entire staff can possibly con- sume, the question arises, \\What be- comes of the surplus?\ . Secretary Kellogg has certain suspicions on this score, which 'he has confided to the foreign representatives to whom they apply. . That is to say, he ad- dressed to them a polite but preity plain little note, trusting 'that' hence: forward they'll keep their anti-Vol- stead importances down to what they really need for themselves and for themselves alone. - The diplomats this communication went to are by no means all from dinky -little countries,. either. - Some among them bear credentlais from highly consequential powers. . The intimation that bootlegging 'is: be- Meved to be going on from their official residences. in. Washington must have reached them as a good deal of a jolt. . It isn't the first tims, however, that. its been broadcast from extremely well-informed sources, though never before from the Department of State. Practically ever since probibition became effec- tive the impression has prevailed that most of the really first class stuff in the capital came in under diplo matic protection/and was dispensed in the same way. As most people probably know, the embassies and legations in Washing ton are foreign soil, theoretically; The diplomats Jive under their own various countries' laws, In not many jof them does prohibtion prevail, The lettuce sandwiches, baked diplomats, then, have a right to their drinks.. The only way they can get them-legaily, and there's no reason why they should get them otherwise than legally, since they can get them that way and get a beter qua'- ity--ls from overseas,. Special per- poverty, which we have not. really tackled, the 'only shackles left are those of voluntary ignorance. It has been a dizzy century-ao swift that we have not yet adjuste our institutions -to the new machin- ery nor our minds and characters to the r maibilities of the new free- This, far more than mere dis- covery, is the task of the future. Men Must Be Adjusted to Institutions What Greece and. Turkey did to each other, Polapd-and Germany are now imitating. Because~ guns and vehicles sre commoner than ideas, and violence is easier than thinking, we are more ready to deport racial or national minorities than to devise some way of living with theni. Men must be adjusted to. institu- tions'rather than institutions to men. Like Procrustes of old. it our guest does mot fit our bed we cut off or stretch his legs until he does, or else; jas in these recent Instances, throw him out altogether. Changing the bed itself does not logour to us. If our minds can not contain the. idea that institutions might be other than geographic, then we may have to make our pophila« tions geographic. It has even been suggested that the negro question in. America might be solved by setting. aside certain states for black and others for white rule, individuals of either race to_be admitted to the states of the other only on condition of accepting. what- ever government and treatment they found there. 'That is simpler than thinking out a form of government in which both races might inhabi the same territory without either ruling the other. Government N Geographic @ It\ was not always so. Govern- ment was not always geographic For ages, sovereignty was personal rather thin territorial; it extended to certain individuals, rather than over a certain space, Each man, wherever found, was subject to the rule and judged by the law of his own sovereign. The principle mill survives, in our claim of: extra-erritoriality, in back- ward countries. An American citi men, in China, is still tried there by Anderican judges, under American laws, It is doubtless too late to re- vive this principle for the unmap pable populations of the scrambled corners of the crath; but umless we can discover something more intelll- gent than the brutality of deporta- tion or the absurdity of majority rule for there regions, they will con- tinue to hatch wars for the rest of the world. It J# not beyond the wit of man to invent Institutions that would fit this situation. It may be beyond his character to accept them. Conferonce Would Be Only an Experiment If we finally do hold that confer- ence on Chinese extra-territoriality, as - promised by the . four-power treaty, it is only jut to remember that the delay is due largely to the reluctance of China itself to have the Issue raised before it was prepared to meet it. We have agreed that our nation- als shall be subject to Chinese law, administered . by - Chinese . courts, -| whenever. China: provides modern at any rate, many of them-are en- gaged in this klad of traffic, Isn't con- representatives was highly latter are -very laws. and courts to. do It. Such courts, it is claimed, -have now been established in . the \principal cities. No one pretends that they yet exat elsewhere., must grow, . + ._. MUCB MONEY IN it Kight billion dollars are spent an- nually in the United States for auto- mobiles and their upkeep. \Two bil- Hons go for cars. 'The rest is spent for accessories, fuel.. tires, repairs and garage {tems. nage STANDARD SIGNALS The Ambrican Automobile Asso- clation fs urging the standardization and adoption of uniform railroad crossing as a practical menne to reduce the death toll at Much to their surprise few returned their greetings and some, misunder: rit that moved -the girls, offered insults. \I never saw such snobs,\ one girl \We have been here three months and everybody treats us though we are trash.\ These girls from Berga didn't un- tand that New are tim'd, afraid that any stranger they meet is ready to work some, scheme: of {-aud upon them. Even a girl with long curls and a face may, prove to be. an- Adventuress. . You never can tell-in New York. all New Yorkers aren't The other day I saw an! old, broken. down. man trudging the sun-acorched pavements with a heavy sandwich aign on bis shoulders. Sud- A_ Speaking of tramps and what they smoke, I often bave wondered where they get their pipe tobacco. Stopping iin a Bowery amoke-shop for-a stogey this- morning, T saw one furtive fel low aneak up to the cigar culter any mpty> the clipping® into .an empty tobaceo sack. He had enough tobacco for his pipe for the rest of the day Sidewalk crap games are becoming jso.numerous that hardly apyone pays any attention to them. 'The other evening I saw a gamen progress on the aldewalk at 'Times Square, with four traffic cops on duty at the cor ner and the 'evening rush swirling by. 'The strange part of it is that New: Yorkers who will gather in m crowd at almost any unusual aight were completely indifferent to the boy gamblers. > -JAMES W. DEAN. Adventures of the Twins By OLIPE ROBERTS BARTON Then they went to the seashore and left a hote at Mrs. Pelican's house, Juggle Jump and the Twina follow led Will O' the Wisp's lantern along the path in Dixie Land. Mister Will had fastened his little boat to a log at the edeg of the pond, and taken his lantern and 'walked Into the woods. \I stay in the woods or on the water most of the time,\ he said. \It is seldom that I let people come near me.\ \We are near to you,\ said Nick, \Just becuse «you have magic along,\ said the little falryman. ' Be: sides I always like to do people a favor, and if I can help the Fairy Queen by looking for Puffs lost but tons, I shall be very happy. Where mre all the notes we wrote?\ \Here!\ said Nancy, *apying apron pocket. o they walked mlong, and along and along. They left a note at Colonel Pos sum's front door under the button ball tree, sliding it in very softly so as not to waken the poor tired gen temen. Then Will O' the Wisp picked up his lantern and led the- way to the next pikce By and 'by they came, to a high tree \Mister Turkey here,\ said 'Will up? «\No need to climb,\ said Juggle Jump, - stepping . forward. - \That's what I am here for-to stretch (o the sky If necessary, All I hgve to do is to press One of my buttons her Buxzard - lives \Who will climb re- marked Will O° the- Wisp, \I would n't wind having: afew button Mke that myself, Give him' the note, Nancy and let him put it inte Mister DON'T BLAME NOVICE sar Out of 4,073 drivers. involved in automobile accidents in New York state during May, 98 per cent had been driving for two years or more. About 87 per cent of those in volved in fatal accidents had'been driving the \That's right,\ said Will O° the Wisp, picking up his lantern and walking on again. \'The next atop will be Billy Bob Cat's house.\ \I hope he doesn't waken,\ Nick. \Well perhaps it would be better if he didn't,\ said Mister Will \Hs If a touchy sort of person if he does n't know you very well and his claws are sharp.\ You may be sure that the note was slipped under Mister Billy Hob Cat's door under the big rock, as quiety as a snow flake falls on Christma. And Mister Billy Bob Cat never wakened. They next went to the tree whore Mrs. Cuckoo lived and left n note. After that they went to the hors of the mocking bird The next place was the carlinal bigt's house Then' they and left a note at house, \That's enough,\ said Will O' tha Wisp. \By nine o'clock tomorrow all Dixie Land will have the news And if any of Puff's buttbns'came this far, they are sure to be found.\ The notes all said: \If you mee m large, round, shiny, white thing. please telephone to Mister Will O' the Wisp, Dixie Land, Reward.\ (To Be Continued) FLAPPER FANNY sa said went to the semahore Mra. Pelican's peaches. a'treat; quite the best you Cm cutting while doing Their stratiia', first atep. thay take and thay'll And then, in a minute thry're all the