T}f£ BAZLT «£T]i£W, MOJISAY, AFBIL Ift, l»il
llieMyleview
AHD
VkMtmn County Revien
AoMUtUBstaa with IIM
SOUTH SIDiB OBSBRVSR
MS
RBMraTBAD woviiun
JTalriM K. W«lt«r 8.
tkOmi: PuMlalMr rtnMll, KKKor
OfTlbflSS: a«rt«w Botldiac. «4 Sa Main aKrwt. FrMPort Oetwrrw BaU<11ac ObMrv«r StrMt. RoekTin*
Ctstr* ^olrM- Buildine, 4( Mate St.. BMBpatMd
belfiB reu«iv»d by New Tork tennnn aud makes a comparlaoa with the retuit Vftcmm ot manufact.Mred goode. With wool at Xi(f tag hMw at 21 3c per pound, cal^Mige at $7 iwr ton and onioaa at 47q per buahel. it takes 170 Um. of I woOl to buy a ault of clothes. 240 fSm. ot hide* to buy a pair of atioes, 1(0 Ibei of cabbage to buy one dinner iu town, and 20 Ibe. of onions to buy ono hand¬ kerchief.
OmciAL HSrsrSPAPBR for Imeortmrmtmt
OtmciAV nmnOfJ^iSH. tmr Saomrpmrmimt Villas* of OMtarbWst.
OrPICXU. NBWsrAnUI (m- MaaMul Cma>t7 for mtUlcatton ot notlcea of >aakr«Mey in Dlttrtot Oevrt of IJnttwI StatM for tk* Kaatam Dlarlet of New Torfc.
A
Published Xklly Kxoept Sunday
¦t«r*4 at th* Po*t Oflloe at VTeeport, N. aa a*cott4 elam mall mattar. un4«r Aot of March 1. ]*T*.
Siibaerlptlon, fl par rear in advaaoa. BInsta eopi««, two oenta.
NOT NAMED BtT NOT WANTING
That County Judge Lewis J. 8mlth waa not appointed by Oovemor Miller to the vacancy on the Supreme Court bench in the Second DUtrict was not a. reflection ou Judge Smith but rather proof of what Justice Kapper .said at the recent Bar Association diiyier.
Thc learned Justice denounced the method of the selection of Justices at thai dinner und said thut Nassau or uny other county could not hope to get Us rightful recognition unless It was pre¬ pared to deal with thc more powerful oountles in the Judicial district hcfore- Iiand.
County Judge Hmllh Is still a young man. Ills time will yet ^ome. Ho has a habit of arriving. His whole life has been one of achlovcmeht. That his friends uud nclKhbors, uud tlicy are many, will be disapiwinted Is very true ' but this situation, just created, will only Jservc to cement that friendship that has been Lewis J. Smith's and will also Hcrvc to make him evon a, greater man in Ills home ('ounty than ever before.
He was not named for thc Judicial ]{Oi:it but he has not liecn found want¬ ing and thc people may be trusted to Hcc to thoso lliinga tliat they cs|>ccially Want.
That th(irc whh not a united dolcga- liou behind Judge Smith may have played a part In having the apiMiint- Ifteat ,go to somo othei^coSnty Is thc i>elief of some of the wise ones.
A PJROMINENT BIKTIIDAY
WII.^T THE FAHM8 NEED
An effort was recently mado to Hnd out what it would cost to equip the lai-m hqmes of New York State with modern convonlences aud to put the f«irms on a good business basis. It was found that to supply the farm homes with running water, bathnxirn, cuulp- mcnt for sewage disposal, and aome sort of furnace heat, would cost the neat lit¬ tle sum of JllO.OOO.tlOO. Providing the barns, fences, drains und lime needed to put the farms on a good business l)a mla, would cost »308,OO0,00O more. TJicse items alone amount to a quarter of the total value of the farms, but theV are by no mcjins the only Improvements that would be desirable or that would be Iirovided if the farmers had the in¬ comes to iMiy for them.
For some of thoso who wonder why young iKjopIo arc leaving the farms, tho ilgurea make IntcresUug reading. Rec ordH^t 3UU0 farms lu ull.parts of the Ktate wero secured by tho voluntary ( rop reporters of tlio V. H. Bureau of <'rui> KMtimiitoM and the results were tal>iiluto(l l.y Dr, ('.. !•'. Warren of the State College of Agriculture.
Of thc fai-m homes reported, 70 per cent do uot even have running water; MG per cent du not have bathrooms und 77 \tvr cent Uo not have furnaces of auy sort.
These llKures represent better than avertigo conditions, for the fuims re- IMirted are a third lurgpr than tho aver¬ age of the state, tfiul too large ii pro¬ portion of thera are lu the more )iro»i- perous farming sections. Ths ilgurea uiwi relate only to the^ huuaftt occupied n iivviurs and 4o noli-take lnto[ 1 iMiamirulloii the, housss Occupied by hired men.
The reports oii th6 farm improve-
meats needed indicate that, of the clear-
'd land available for crops, three-tencha
iiee^la-raort or less drainage and threes
fourths ncedx Ume. Ouly aliout two-
..thlr^te of the tam>s have adequate bams
in a fair state of repair and two-thirds
'-quMitely fenced.
lime wheo Uieae needed improve-
ajeula can be financed fi<om farm pro-
eta aeeoui' far ott when one looks •ver
the iPAaiA oiltcJal reporta on ¦'
Some thotuMuida of mpilons of yeara ago an enormous siui. probably many tbnes tho size of Old Sol, undertook to pass at great eiiecd cloee to our sun. 'Now, even todaiV, the gases In the in¬ terior of our molten aur^ are hung on hair triggers, and often they explode tremendously, so that earthly telescopes on occasion, see maases fl;^ outward for as great a distance oa 300,000 miles, said masses falling l>ack when they havo lost thcii* force to the surface of )ur Justly celebrated orb of light
Well, when that tramp sun passed. Its gravity—its titanic gravity pull— aet off ail the hair ti-lggcrs In old Sol's raging innards and out burst mass upon mass of molten rock and other stulT. But the passing tramp's pull was «o great that theso masses, which amount¬ ed to about one per cent of the sun's to¬ tal bulk, shot out extra far this time, and when they loat their explosive force, tliey fell Into outer siiacc, one side or the other of the sun, instead of batk on to its surface. You might think that they would follow thc intrud¬ er that caused all this mess, but hc was going too fast, and, besides, they were slowed up by thc gravity pull Old Sol himself still exerted on them. f They didn't como home, but the old boy never let them escape from his county! They Ijecame iiart of hia excUi eivc solar system and got to be called planets, aiul the earth was one of them. So, out in sjiace, these planets cir¬ cled around our own central sun. As they cooled off, they Iwgau to revolve on their axes with such great speed that tlicy were moulded into balls.
Very, very briefly, and perhaps Im¬ perfectly, this Is the story of the origin of our eartli as accepted by all science t(xlay. The maas that Was to be the world of human beings circled the heav¬ ens Ih darkness, and void of life for countless ages until a Great Deity jiart- ed thc black clouds and gave it light and Ufe and the riches thereof.
It cannot Ijc that we people who in luibit this globe for a short 8i>ace realize the immensity of all that has hapiwned since tho birth of the /earth wlien we make such a hue and cry over our pit fling little human difficulties and alleged annoyances that are not big enough tb be a pin prick on the scroll of Time. It took millions of years to raise uii a sin¬ gle mountain range; it has taken less than two hundred years to raise up hu- manity from next to slavery to almost complete liberty, and yet wc are not satislled with the progress of human evolution. Contrary to ajl nature, we would do everything at once. And over¬ reaching nature's laws, as in Uussia. our lust condition will bo worse than our first.
Nature Is orderly and nature knows best, folks.
HKttK 18 SPIRIT
Prohibition ia all riglit in its place tmt it hasn't any place.
MORNING EXERCISES
More than ito people celebrated the ond of night school In B. V. C.
•To Start Ubrary With Ceremony •— Freeport. .\nd to flnlsh it with noinc other money.
>i
That blessed Hempstead High School WUl now be ruahcd ahead, Althpugh the ones who started It, Prom age are long since dead.
GOOD MGHT KOR A Ml'KDKK
Dlst. Att. Weeks sayM rwnt will ko on trial rROVlDlNCf thc wltncwes arn alive when thc Supreme Court meets. Harold, .me lad, there's durty wurrrk ahead!
Oh, well, there's trial this month.
a lot uf plants on
"Supervisor's Jail Plans Approved." —Mineola. Putting up a home for him, Isn't that nice!
"W. C. T. U. will have hiK conven¬ tion."—Krcciftirt. Sounds like "We'll C. To U." Ho brave druukards!
LOST
A Kold ring with thc Inilial.s "E. A.n." in it. Did you hear of any¬ thing"/
Thc St. Mark's Church of It. V. C. Are up to date and kippy. Their Tuesday evening concert tunes. Were fllled with pep, and "Zippy."
DL'LLTH WINS
They tell about a doR juiwpinK up and pulling troliey poles off with his teeth. (Jive ihem thc cut glass ice pick.
Mayor Hylan want.s a "HUKh Week" now to .silence the knocker.s who arc continually paying tributes to Hiziilion- or. Wait until he gets out of ofllce and then they'll let up on him.
Thc Pi-ofessional Womai#s Club want.s to bur low, neckf, short wkirt.s, .silk stockings, und rouged clieeks. Holy Mo.ses, how in heck will wc know our girls then?
"Suit for slander makes entry via family wgahllne."—Jamaica. We can imag:ine what sort of suit it was now.
iusicAL Tones
BDrra r. HerarotB
¦WOMENAVTTAL FACTOR « MUSIC
^txt"^'.
i|Pad Ahkooste, Neted American Tenor, EvjpMis Wopes's b- floencelnlVllakWerU
it.s
tOMOKROiV'S C«N<KRTS
Kcethovcn Anwjclatlon will clone
aecond seaxoh tomorrow cvcaUig. ai
Aeolian Hall wltlv a program given by ; w„n,„„ bas not been altogether over- Mme. Julta Culp, Sergei Rachmaninoff., ^^^^^ j„ the recent acoompUsHraenta Fritx Krelaler, Harold Bauer and 0«8ip|,,f ^^rth while things: She has beea Oabriolowltsch. | consplcuounly in thc day's ncWu. and to
I such an cxtuiit that what she iilans and Malicl Dunning viHU give her i>o«t-. joes have come at length to be taken poncr song recital in Aeolian Hull to-if^^ granted.
morrow afternoon. , In j^e arts, however, no less than In
~~~~ ^ '"¦"" U '*^"* "'<"* practical sldeA of life has «o-
NASSAU I^IPLOYHENT SERVICE man's efforts been bearing fruit. An
American tenor—one of the most dis-
Bl'LIJerriN tintfuished-^W«a speaking of this .fact
This week we have had a numlier only a few days alnce. Thla young ar- of iiartially trained aitplicants for ; tist, I'aul Althouse, of New York's Met. cliy-lcal work. Tho Importance or j ropolltan Opera Company,,, expressed fliirshlug training, no niatte<*iwliat the , what he said ^ an eplnton shai-ed by CHX'Uimtion, c-annot Ik; overAstlmatcu.! many other profeaalonal hiusicians.
]tht following otPtmrm i'r,.^..i. <.t, 'ijencTJcv* Jiud.ion Ol t<>iton. and i jitjau. , V " ',
j The faci that tkey Were rnther tate : In organlaing doer, nbt tl>-m in the leaat, and nimor has it tli.'it they are already planning a dance. Mm. Miller has been .*-raahed to death" thc last three daya, tOttttg out excUHc blanks. And the funny part of It ta, lhey were moSlly for aiternoon ab¬ sences—w© wonder If It was Jurt a co^
ll
Parents who allow tholr children to stop before flnlsbinK a course for any but thc most urgent reasons do tlieiii a great Injustice. It should be re¬ membered that in normal times U Is necessary to secure training cither by going as a beginner on the job or fin¬ ishing a thorough iireiiaration i,i school. During: the war Imlf-trulned young people were taken out of st'Iiool and used because no one else could be
"Wointn have done so much for mu-
"drus
the
Tbc Russian Bolaheviks have turned against us now. One good turn |de- aerve another so they say.
TWO CABBAGE HEAPS
ARE BEHER THAN ONE
Irvjthe hume garden, two cabbage heads ure better than une and twenty or thirty are still better.
Cabbage is o handy crop for lllling In vacant places In the garden. It Is a sworn enomy of the H. C. L. whetlu'r fresh from the garden, stored for win¬ ter or mode Into sauerkraut.
Late cabbage planta should be started in a well prepared seed bed In the gur- deii. Sow the aeeds about half an Inch deep. Itaiire plenty of plants und uue only the largest and most sturdy look¬ ing ones, am they have been foutid to produce the best heads.
The plants avo sat In the garden eight¬ een inches apart in r^s siiaced about thli-ty inches ajiart. ,
Watch for cabbage Worms, which arc green and hard to aee. Sprinkle Paris green solution on the planta, mado In proportion of a ,toaapoonful in a gaUou of water. There te no danger in this before th^ cabbage la heading, but ff ydu are afraid of Parla green use the ¦ame amount of hellebore Inatead.
Danish Ballhead la a standard variety.
1{<\U)W1N Rfi.%LTY DEALS
reiaisull A Place haVc leased to the liufted Cigar Stores (Agency). W. Mott. for a termt of, yeara, the atore at 4 Urand avenue, Baldwin, L. I.; al-so bave aold the corner plot at Ualdwm avenue and Oakmere drive to a tocai builder; also the stucco cottage at Sfi Orlmm place, tor W. C Allen to a New vork>dleot.
WE AN.SWER ANYTHING
The KuKle run.s IJiblc questions, they ilo, and la.st niKht ws .spotted ii few and claiiu Ihat our answers arc kee-recked! They .said: "When was thc Hible tran.s- lated into Latin by .l(-ronic." Ka.sy, it was at the Thaw trial.
"What year did Heiod the (Jreat Die." Pittle, it wu.s In the lust year of his !»e. . -i,
"What feat of .strength did Samp.son perform." Why hc tackled a column In the Jehovah Herald and got ttWay with it.
NO AGE LLM IT
"Husband 70 Accu.se.s W'ife 7:2 of Flirting."—Rockville Centie. Sho had young "eye-dears" then'.'
found but they are market" at prtwcnt.
Labor conditions lu Njujsau (.'oun'y continue to be good. There Is plenty of work in evcr.v lino except automo- >)ile drlvloK. The orders for olher lines do not coine every day but tliere usually is a lanrc variety of calls dur-1, mg the week. Many of these we havyj to nil by bringing men out from New York. Kesidents of NuHsaii and ^?uf- folk Countlea who are still out of work <an afford to let us know even when lhey are looking elsewhore, Help Available
ir)19--10xperieneed concrete \vo(|k<;r in Henii>8tcad.
Sof)©—Ca'>k, widow, two lH)ys; bo.V IG years old can do cliores—full lime after June Ist., IT.'i month.
3534—Married ^rm hand, Austrian; wife will worlc on farm; Vo a. month with privileses.
3523—Salesgirl, 17, Frcei)ort. .Vlso sev¬ eral others. .
sriDT—Milker, young man, IS,
3o00—Forewoman, experioii<e<l In handling girls, also in p^^ckillg und wrapping.
3490 — EngUshtnan, experienced chauffeur and vegetable gardener.
34X8—Female bookkeeper, 20 years old, 4/^ week; Freeport or vicinity.
34S7—Kxperienced tyfilst and Iniok- keeper wants work for three or four evenings a week.
3559—Colored man, flreman, Hemp¬ stead or vicinity.
3300—Chauffeur, colored, or vicinity.
Several gootl chauffeurs drivers listed.
Positions Open
Paintws at North Shore,
Kxpert cabinet luakeis Mineola.
Boy wunted as clerk In hardware store. $15 u week. Oo(m1 opjiorlunlty.
Cabinet makers wanted In Garden City. S4t) to ?50.
Two o/Hce boys needed, $10 a week.
Seamstress needed at Oarden City.
Butchers at W<Jodmere nnd other lilaces. ^' t' f;5
Truck driver at Furmingdule, $25 a week.
Bench hand in pluning iiilll at Mineol.i.
incidence that "Thc Kkl"'was playing at the Strand on the' sathc afternoons that HO many were—need we, tmy more?
wewi
'¦"•"^'"
Ocoan Skle, AprU !«.—Miaa Ludltin*
tbe phyiikal training tearhar of the
Ocean Side S<'h«ols wnti given a Bur-
grade, last Wednesday afternoon, at the homo ot Florence Odell, Scott Place. The Rftcrnoon waa iwaaed with frames and danclpg, followed by a most Interesting courae of refresh¬ ments. Those preaent Included £lcanur Fluharty, Eleanor Wilcox. Olga Bedell. 8.vlvia RiefTel, Kntnerlne Howe, Mary McCartney, Rhth Hildebrandt, Bthel Allen and Fi>ren<c Odell.
FIUST NATIONAL BANK
FREEPORT, N.Y. TO YOUNG MEN
This Bank has special regard for the yoiing man who has shown ability and judgment in the conduct of a small business.
That a constantly increasing number of succes.sful merchants of mature busy|pss experience, find this Bank a satisfactory place to transact their affairs, is an indi¬ cation of public confidence and appreciation.
Banking facilitie.s that appear to .such men ure worthy of your consideration.
The Bank on the Triangle That Treats You Square | j
:~M-x~:<
;*<'*«m«<":~K'<'<~W'<"Wk«4<~>*w~K"X~m~w»«x~W"K«<«*<«<mh}m>.:^
Hempstead and trucK
$7 a day. wanted in
AMERICAN LEGION
"Nuyy gunner gets medal from gov¬ ernment after 17 years."—Washington. Cheer up fellers, there's a chauoo for all- of us. •
Julian Ro.ss pf Bast Meado,
Wiil slecft'On a hard prison bedo,
Thc police called his bluff,
On thi.s j>Id cave man stuff,
And dragged him away by thc lieado.
"Kngland To lie Oiven i Bust.s Of (Jeorge WaHliington,"—Virginia. That's breaking it to 'em jfenlly isn't il'^
The uUvcnt of Mpring brides iiiu^- ac¬ count for tlie abundance of April showers.
It'H a Na.s.sau.
l>ad time to dry and dry Up
We'll still getlt. Ut quantity. Too.
mvAjV wanted
Men and Women Contributors tu (his column for April, aSi-d. Apply Free¬ iwrt Office of Review.
C. H. J..
WILL GIVE BARN DANCE
TO AID STRIKE PEOPLE
Hempstead,' Aprii 18. — Hempstead Council, 1S4}, Knights of Columbus, wlU give u harn dance for the beneflt of tbe Tund for Irish relief, in the K- of C. Hall, Main street, April 29. The an- nouncement of the forthcoming affair] aays:
"The Irlah iieople have made a val¬ iant effort to care for'Tfl^ir own thous¬ ands of stricken and homeless, but in ti.m preaent conditions the wide-spread need has grown far beyond their ability to copo wltii IL"
A hungry rooster, who hud missed his meals for five hours, made a frac¬ tion over $1.15 for each Brain of corn he could goblilu in a three-hour fea:it for the women of .the American Le¬ gion's Auxiliary in Cimarron, Kan. After being sold twice and then auc¬ tioned off, the fowl netted $328 for the Auxlliar.v. Placed in a show window for hours without his breakfast, the bird suddenly facisl 1,000 grains of ten^>ting Kansas corn. (Juesses were sold at ten cents each us lo lv>w many grains ho would eat. He tucked away 28'!r'''CT*inu and retired for th^ night.
Dogs, cats, goats and bears were used as mascots by meuibei-s of Wy¬ andotte Post of the American Legion in Kansas City, Mo., when they were in the Army. To provide shelter fir their pets, in peace titne, the Post has Kone on record as favorint? the estab¬ lishment of a munieipal zoo, with the tttipulatlon that their mascots be In¬ stalled therein.
sic," said Mr. Althouse, "that their work has come to be taken a.s a matter of course. That i.s an unfoi'tunate atti¬ tude on the part of those a.s.suinins it. We are too ;apt to say: 'Oh! yes, of cour.se,' and then promptly forget all ubout it.
"What should not be forgotten for an in.stant is thc vaat labor performed by the thou.sands of women, the eoun¬ try over, in the cau.se of mu.sic. For it lias been a ledious .stiui"},>-|e for them; yeui-s of patient toil for an ideal wiiich proved a ju.st one in the ends now be- ins attained.
"1 remember, as a boy, liow skeptical¬ ly musical performances were viewed by many older persons. They were con¬ sidered luxuries. If a concert were Riv¬ en it (lid not attmct the interest which exists today. You found no .such 'de¬ cree of 'community Interest' in the ap¬ pearance of a musical artist or an or^. eranizatlon which, today, may be relied upto to attract a gratifying patronage. "It was woman who flcHt interested man in the values of mu.sic. Her in¬ nate Kcn.se of what music doe.s to help Kood citizen.shlp wa.s, I am certain, a.s much a fa(^t,or in prompting her to work for its advancement, for its widespread acceptance, as was her own appreeia tion of music for it.s own siike.
"The geneial interest dis|)luyed by business men in giving good music a lift i.s due, primarily, to tho efforts of the women. They kept at their tasks ofj proving to the skeptical cla.ss of tho imi.sculine sex that music is a pretty line thing to havo aroUnd; of our aes thetic ta.ste8, for our moral advunce- inenl, and * • • for business lt«>lf.
"Successful concerts and opera i>er- formances never could be if it were not for the women. We have in this coun¬ try several thousand women's mu.sic clubs—numbering several hundrod thou¬ sand membeiH—which li^ve done a val¬ ient .service in a gieat cau.se. We musi¬ cal artl.sts could not have gained the rccoKnition or the support whicli we have gained if it were not for thc work these sriiendld women have done.
"And so, 1 say, let us give to the wo¬ men the due whfch has been justly won, and under conditions I ^ould say are .scarcely prupitious. Kven now, with tile victory, won, the women ure continuInK: tlieir efforts to spiead a fur- thei appreciation of thc art. They are proving, In^yond all doubt, that they are supreme in places other than iu the homes."
HEMPSTEAD HIGH 8CHOUL
Th<'rc will be a recital In thc High .School ncjt Friday afternoon at 2.
(lame postponed yesterdny on account of tuin. To be held next week. C'lnpel WAH held yesterday morning,
jut which the tollowtng students render-
A rooming house to,itakc cure of a;i-:csJ pleuHln.'i ^ekcUons; "A Talk on Ar- servlce men coming to Mluncuitolle, j ijor IWy," l)^'clyn I'arsonu, and "The j Minn., for vocational training an<l to i Honomhle tJasolenc," Harry Nasbitt.! obtain medical treatment le IjcIub j There was sinKing by the student IxHly,! planned by the combined forcea of the ! atcomi>anied by flne music by the or-; Womeri's Auxiliary of Hie American , chest ra. ' {
Ix^glon in Hennepin County of that | Through thc efforta of Miss Burton} state. The high prices which disabled! in lue KnglLsh c!a«»t«, the student* j veterans have to |>ay for hotel ac- j have compiled four different books, i ^ comm^lations caused the action of the'which after belnit l>oUnd. will be pre-j women's organization. | sented tf> the school. These booksjarei
er MA»r>c rtwiprli i*''^ •¦*""'• "' '^""" *'*''' "^"'^ °" ^*'*'
91. mAIlKd LtlUAtn ,part of the students, and wUI be pre-j
TO HOLD A FAIR'nerved for the benefit of the coming gen-; Roekvllle Centre. April U.—On Thurs- ierations. and used as examples of what j 4ia.y and Frkbiy, Apill 21 and 22. St.'a student ican really dp If ho tries hard if llaik's Church will Kive a fair, all or- ¦ enough. The books are entitled: "Vo-! ganizaUons particiliating. AmoOK other catium* a High Scboof draduuto Would; things, thi '^ ' ' oclation will con- Chf>osc," by the Seniors; "History of duct a gi and the Ladlo:*' Hempstead and Otber F^icta ot Interest
Aid Hi" i< ;i cjUfe^erta mp- ; lo .Students," by the Juniorfi (Tth period J
per . ir wiTTo^ i tia- ' • Author," by the
mmvh .X. The jpro-, Juii: nnpi. ! |v
ceta;- Vi,., oo .^ ... buUduMf fuad. ' Al a wcetuig of the Freshman ciaes,
DISPLAY ADVERTISING COPY
MUST BE IN THE OFFICE OF
THE DAILY REVIEW
BY. 5 P. M.
OF DAY PRECEDING DATE , OF PUBUCATION
Inquirer Office . . . ¦> Main St., Hempstead Review C>ffice - . - - . Main St, Freeport Obe^nrer liuikiing • Observer St, RockviUe Centre
U»<H»<'»»»<'<H>»<'«<'<<'»<^'»»<'»»'»»<'<^^
Ml