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PAGE S'l-XTEKN' H.R ? G AD E FREEP-0 RT,i...}J. Y. , DECEMBER 29, "1949
Pro-School P,-T.A. Group
To Meet in Seaman School
An .invitation has been Issued- to j
the parents of pre-school children
throughout the ylllage. to attend, a
, meetlngrbf "the PrerSc^ool 'droAp of
the . SeamaA^aVe. school Parent^
Teacher Association to be he)d in
the cafeteria on Wednesday night,.
Jan. 11, at 8:15,
Reviews
'of volunteers who made possible the wide
Red Gross-in .Nassau during 1940 set a peace-time
rc^rd of service fhat should be a matter of pride to ip'
'j» the county/' Franklin 6,
chairman of the Nassau Red
one
Chapter, declared today'in. re-
Following the consideration .of the Rowing Its work during tne year. M:;%^»%%L%%2:ihs port Veterans Hospital and- G.I.S at
Mitchel Field, and that its services
Art Sale Planned to Aid
The 1950 March of Dimes
of Self-Expression for. the
Child/| k^e rest of ,the evening
be combined with a bit of sooia
ty with constructive help for Hi@
parents present.
NO. 158
QfLZnnl»B-i"
Aimrtmt'nt District
of the
Change
c "A"
of Cent it In Pro pert le». *
i'J. that I he Bonn! of Tiuxtcca
nror*i»r»tf*l VIH!*«e of Freeport,
Cnimty. New York, by virtue
niithorlty In it by low vewted,
henrlnw duly held on the
61 h
(0 ,#r
(f»y, of
*' with
ordnln
inning,
wide
»nd
( N4.
woulh
December 1B40, In nccor-he
VMInwc L»w, does enact
•the following nmcndment
No. 123, zoning Ordinance
Vill»Kc of Frceport on Ihe chmnpe
from Rpwldencc "A" to
on the property bounded
BEGINNING »t the comer form-id
by the IntcrMCrtlon nf the wf'Kt»
«'ily wide of Hwyview Avcn
the northerly »!*!#• of'Mcrrlck
running thence wouth eighty
eleven mfnutfw wpw* (S. MO
II' W.) nipng the northerly
of Mcrrlck Road rlKhty.foHr
M*'vunly«nln« onc-hundrcdths
.70) fent: running thence
eighty - eight degrees fifty -eight
minutew went (S. MM degrees !i»' \V.)
wtili nlong the northerly nld*' nf
Merrfek Ro«d am* hundred twenty-
Mix nnd fifty-Civc one hundredthw
feet: running thenct* north
dewrceH twenty-Mix min-
MtuK w*'»t (N. »!) dewreo* 2«' W.*
Mtill ulnng the Hnld northerly wide «f
Merrlck Ro»d on*? hundrud nnd twen-ty
(1^0) feet t*# the corner furmed
the inter-m'i'tion uf the «'HMt<'rly
of \Vnsh !iiK*"M Sii^v-t imd ttu-bcrly
wide nT M«-n-(ck tlund;
lnw thence itorth t**l**e«'» (Ic-
**»* «r*W*nt*'* «'H*t (N
4" K.I M*0**M th#! «'HMl
B. )
to civilians, Including Red .Cross
health and safety classes In swim-ming,
home nursing and first aid as
well as the county disaster pre-paredness
setup, had tcept pace with
the growth of Nassau In 1949.
"Operation Pine lawn, through
which tens of thousands of relatives
and friends; of overseas war. dead
were served at .repatriation burials
in the Long Island National^ Ceme*
teryr was"coH tlmlea'' f or itslsecond
year by volunteers, .of the Motor
Service an^i Canteen," Kdons ex*
plained. "Our Junior Red Cross, In
which more than 100,000 children
are enrolled In all schools of the
county, deserves special commenda-tion.
"For the first time in Nassau,
college students were offered oppor-by
feet: ruitning thence
'
i »»Mt (S. NO d*yrr«i<M 3*0
on*? hundred ««d twenty (I20J
:: rtmnfn#r th«mce north thirteen
M'CM fifty-four mlnutcM !•««( fN.
13 dc#rrerH /*4' K.) fwo hun<lr*U
twenty »H(f thlrly-Hrvnh one hun«
dredthx (220.J17) f#'ct |» (he wmith-t'rly
Mkh- fif r<n'iorfn'ld rincc: ruM<
nil*;? thcnc*' no nth 4'ifrhty-nv*< J:<j
KicfM twenty mmuW-K *-Mwt (S. \."i
E.I h Inn if tin- southerly
»f PortcrHeld M«cr. i%v<* hun«
find two ;iml r»rty-nhn' on** hun-fkcdthw
(2(iU.4!i) fret to the *!nrn»r
formed by thi' fiiterHuctlnn of th<;
wouthcily wide of Porturflwhl Pluce
and Lh» wewt^rly wide of Bay view
Avtnue: running thence south thlr-tet'n
dt'Kroew fifty-four m(nuten went
(S. 13 dewrccM It4' W.) nlonw .the
wuwte: ly wide of Buy view Avenue
three hundred eighty-nix »nd nine
one-hundredth* (3H6.0,9) fi?ut.tothe
iwlnt or place nf beKlnnlni?'
Thlw Ordlnnncu »h»H t»ke cfft-et lm<
mediately.
FURTHER RRSOLVEI). t.hnt The fore-
«rd Inn nee nhmll be entered in *hr
minutt'K of thr Uoiird »f TruMteei* of the
Incorporated VHlMpe* of _
wHu County, New York, antl
the official paper of the
a printed copy thereof powted __ _
in nt leant three public plncew In
to take part In Red Cross
work as campus groups In 1949. The
first Red Cross College UnitJn the!
county was organized at Adelphl
College and the initiative and. en-thusiasm
'of the undergraduates
assured It Immediate success." ,
A thorough survey of a bldod
donor program for Nassau was
made, Mr. Koons stated. '"We
found that blood Is available In all
hospitals in Nassau through exist-ing
channels. The Red Cross has
been assured by representatives of
the Medical Society that the county
is not in immediate need of addt=
Uonal facilities.
"As we arc informed that no one
In Nassau County Is denied blood,
whether he can pay for It or not,
there appears to be less need for n,
complete blood program "here than
In other sections of the United
States. The Red Cross stands ready
to cooperate wfHi medical authori-ties
in a blood program whenever
the hospitals and physicians deem
It necessary." I
The original works of
sau County's fpremost
'go on exhibition In the Garden City
Hotel next week for the benefit of
the 1650 March of Dimes, Mrs.
George A. Stevenson, chairman of
the $200,000 campaign, announced
today.
The full' purchase price of each
oil painting and pastel water color
will go to the polio fund, Mrs. Stev-enson
said, pointing put that-each
.artist had.marked his or her paint-
Ing considerably below- Its actual
..value-irf-a generous gesture to help
the Nassau County Chapter, Nat-ional
Foundation for Infantile'Par-la
Proud to Announce the "Appointment of
AS CIRCULATION MANAGER
For UieJQ*st Possible Coverage of FREBPORT
i . READ THE LEADER
SUBSCRIPTION ?OR 62 WEEKS
$1.50
Mall $ubscrlptlons to (he
LEADER— P.O. Box 285, Freeport '
Adtlrrss
dial invitation *o the public to vlnit
the exhibit at the hotel and to drop
in at the ten. Many of the paml»-
ings on display are scenes familiar)
to every Long Islander.
Artists who have* donated
I workg to swell the fund for
January 8, between! victims' Include
its history. their
On Sunday,
3 and 6 P.M., tea will be served at and Francis Psyche Rowan of Free-the
hotel to climax the week-long'port,
display. Any paintings which have I.
not been sold up to that jLlme will SON TO ANTHONY MINEOS
where he will engage in the
Ing and repairing of television and
radio receivers,
Mr. Becker, "a graduate of Free-port
High School, now/ 33 years old,
Mi a» I has been Interested in radios since
, , • . , ,/7 I »@ was 14 years pld. During the war
_ _ ..Steve»s-st.,-ln-the-.Ereepoct-Hospital.|.ne_^aa. & radio officer for American
Mrs. Stevenson has Issued a cor- last Friday. 'Air Lines and traveled on Its planes.
Robert H, Becker Starts
Television _ Repair Business
Robert H. Becker, 144 Westslde
dve., a video engineer with the
Dumont Television Station WABD-years,
has/branched out in
for himself at his home,
Sons,
,Gyst*rBay.
Celebrate * .
The New Year .
There's no pjace
In
Fr«cniirt
M,ro,i.N ,<twh ,*.Y or."km.m ,f,o r M»ht«in'-Ant
or NEW YORK. COUNTY OF
:*:
York; do* hereby certify that the
true »ni( correct roi^y of
Lincoln Day Dinners
Urged on Republicans
ALBANY, Dec. 29—The Initial
step to stimulate Increased activity
on the part oj every party worker
in New York State was taken today
by Chairman William L. Pfelffer
of the NeW 'York Republican State
Committee wh6ri he urged the six-ty-
two county chairmen to schedule
Lincoln' Day dinners in their re-spective
counties.
In a letter tp the county chair-men
Mr. Pfeiffer noted that the
Republican National Committee has
set a goal of 2500 Lincoln Day din-ners
throughout the Nation. "It
would be a very nice thing," he said,
if New York State could lead the
rest of the States in holding these
historically significant a f f.a i r s."
Chairman Pfeiffer pointed out that
next year the Republican Party will;
be faced with the task of electing
a Govenor, Lieutenant Oovenor,}
Comptroller, Attorney General, Uni-ted
States Senator, Member .of the
i House of Representatives and Mem-
JUST CALL FREEPORT 9-4176 or 9-0160 FOR
FREE DELIVERY
fn And Taste!
-o-
8MOKED
HAMS
Shank End
Ib.
SKINLESS
FRANKS .... Ib.
BONELESS BRISKET
CORNED BEEF • • &
Brothers'
BUPER MART
fowe St* dt Merrtcfc
of Truwteea, a public hear. :
Of
.-_- -—^—.-.— ., ..*.. -u.M, on
the Oth dny »f December I!MO, »t M:00
o'clock In the ovanlng, and of the. whole
there of. »B entered unon the mtnuto*
of the iiroc«e*HngM of m&ld Board
by me an Village Clerk,
TN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have
unto a«t my hand and afRxed the cor-ponite
weal of imld VlllMwe thin 7th dny
of December 104B.
OEORCE F. HASBROUCK
Village Clerk of the Incorporated
VI Ha we of Freopor*^ New York.
Corporate SeaT
on the part of every party worker In
the State/'
Pfeijfer. Ae
chairmen "to start off the New Year
with real snowing of spirit by hold-ing
aa jnany^Llncoln. Day-Dinners,
as possible."
Chairman Pfelffer suggests that
the affairs be held between Feb. 6
and 18 and .offered the services of
the State Committee In obtaining
outstanding speakers, for the din-
A HAPPY NEW YEAR * ' ' . . r . •
.... and a, frieiidly reminder.' If you plan to "usher in the New
Year with top hat, white tie and.taila, let.a Manhattan Fbnnal
Shlr& complete the perfect ehaem*?Ie. Priced by ParkoM at
Laadlng Maherdaaber*,
AIRY
Grade A Medium
Eggs - - doz.
VITA —In (gream 8 oz.
- ar
KRAFT'S Ib.
TREAT*
LEBANOW VALLEY Owe
Beer - ? - - *
OAMADA DRY
Ale
WISE 7-ounoe
* * * Peak*
That's
World
can
WBte Rose Marachiub 4 oz.
Chenjeg ? ?
Planter'^ Oooktail
Produce
GOLDEN RIPE
Banana; - Ik
ALL PURPOSE
GLEANED OELLO-PAK
STORE
8 to 9 Frid&ys
Specials -on Dairy, Meat "and
Produce for Thura., Frl. and, Sat,
Fre epor+'s
ficial
aper
FBEEPORT* N.Y.,'THUA8DAY, JAN1.TARY B, 1050
Ceo. J. Smith Seated
As 26th President
Of Exchange Club
25th Anniversary
QfClubMapkedat
Charter Night
• Oeorge J. Smith was Installed &s
the 26th president of the Exchnngc
Club of Freeport, sucedding William
K. Blllmeyer, at the. annual charter
nlghL- and. la dies? night- marking -the
the club last
night in Guy Lombardo's East Point
House. Richard O. McChesney
served as* master of ceremonies and
Martin M. Mansperger as the in-stalling
officer.
W. Burg Anstlne, of York, Pa., the
national president, was one of the
guests of the evening. Toastmaster
McChesney, on behalf of the club,
presented h^n a resolution 'signed
by all the members, Inanxmg JRe
national organization for having
cooperated with the local group In
being of service to the order for a
quarter of a century. *
The Rev. David G. Jaxhelmer,
pastor of Christ Luhterah Church,
gave the invocation. Following the
dinner, Mr. Blllmeyer, the Tetlrlng
president, spoke a few words of wel-
March Of Dimes Drive Starts
With $5,OQS As Ldcal Quota
Freeport Bank Sends in First Check ; '
i Mrs. E!more*L;-KeenerrFreepork Chairman .*"
'Hi" ii)(uiUi-lon r a i u a i r n ol' thr Alaruli nl'. -Dimes to misr
tin.ii
n
fur nr«iMi
lu lit'l)riii
,1'u.ra lysis.
Eddie Vasil's
Introducing Page 14
Eddie Vasil's Introductlng wlU
be found on Page 14, because
the space usually alloted to this
feature 1» filled this week by the
announcement of the opening of
the 1950 March of Dimes Cam-paign*
Join
Meadowbrook Bqik
Directors to Meet
Tonight to Vote On
Proposed Merger
r su|tjiort nl" Hit? X*if imml
^*t .under \y»y this wcrk under
the chairmanship' of Mrs. Elmore
L Keener. The first contribution
was a sizeable c^ieck from the Free-port
Bank, t(%__whlc)i W. Sargc»nt|
Nixon a deled his personal contri-bution.
'
Many other Checks have bern re-ceived,
Mrs. Keener added. She said
nil contributions would be acknowl-edged
through the Leader" from
week to week during the drive. Ap-peal
letters have been mailed to
thousands of Freeport residents, she
continued, with nn nppcnl lor the
recipients to give them their im-
7 mediate con3ide?^loir"Mrsr"TCe3rieT
I added that the .unprecedented cpi-
!demic of the past summer had re-
Nassau's First 1950 Baby
Born in Freepprt Hospital
Edward Charles O'Connor, jr.,
born in.tnc Frccnort' Hospital,
cnr's. morning at 12:58
was jhc first baby to
arrive in'Xassau County .hi 1950.
Junior Is the second son born*
to Mr. and Mrs. Edward (\
Walwh, 204 Porter field pi. He
weighed 6 pounds 13 ounces, and
has a brother Michael. The
ntothcr.is the former Miss Ter-esa
Marie \Vnlnh. Mr. O'Con-nor
is employed In the nepiirl-mcnt
of Sanitation in Freeport.
Grade phnination
Hearings
Commerce Chamber
Plans Buffet Supper
To Begin New Year
Event at Lombardo's
To End on Monday " , . • • . • *' *
Opposition Expected
To Attempt tp Upset
Nicholson Testimony
Publir Service Commission hear-,
ings- on plans for' eliminating the
railroad grade crossings in Freeport
Dcobably will be brought to a. close
before . Commissioner George %i
Arkwrlght 'in Manhattan Monday.
At that time Kenneth E. Vought,
counsel for a group of citizens op-posed
to moving the station 590 feet
eastward, Is expected to attempt to
upset testimony, given by John M.
Nicholson* engineer .of the Long
Island Rail Road, at the previous
hearing, that only by*adoptlon of
en House for All possible in the cost of the elimlna-
Claude B. Lints, of Far Rockaway,
distant governor; Oer^id J. Mur-
Tf the_ directors :
vote favorably on -.the proposal,
meetings of the stockholders of the
will be called later
j suited in a heavy drain on the re-i To inaugurate the
sources of the foundation nr*U the; Free port Chamber of
funds were in severg/fieed of replen- j Lo ^We n buffet suppei
ishmg. ^ jbardo's East Point
Coin boxes, representing. Iron night at 8:15 o'clock,
lungs, have been placed in most of i president Joseph
the places of buslncsd throughout'nounced today, is
the village, and Mrs. Keener asked; the compliments
stoppers not to pass them by with-dti*
drbpoing in a cojn ^r so. ^
The village chairman announced
that a group of captains and volun-
(Continned on Page 16)
J. D. Whitmore Named
To L. L Association Staff
John.p. Whitmore, 145 East Mil-(Levy, advertising jnanager of News- Some"'this"conditlorZ Though the
(Continued on
Osteopaths to Start
Broadcast Series Today
Dr. Irving Fishman, 15 East Sun-rise
Highway, is to give the first
of a series of semi-weeRly broad-casts
on health topics to be spon-sored
by the Long Island psteo-pathlc
Society today at 1:30 P.M.
over Station WOBB. His subject
will be "The Osteopathlc Society."
Thereafter talks will be given each
Monday and Thursday at the same
hour* ^ • .
The' speaker Monday will be Dr.
Glrar<% Campbell, of Lynbropk,
whose topic will be "Relief of the
Asthmatic," while Thursday, Dr.
Maurice Golden, <)f Hempstead, will
speak on "Your Body and Its
Mechanics."
the merger. | t.on"4t%%&»' been -ap'pohited execu- | dg^: John .M.. Greene. mtmaBme Taw%r"rQpea^f tl^" que^Sn In Rev-
^Z?r^^
with others In Freeport and Mer- developmentofanlndustrlalbureau,{Council, hove been invited to briefly
rick. Tentative approval of the President Arthur T. Roth announced spenk on Nnasnu, Freeport and the
Comptroller of Currency in Wash-
August O. Weller announced.
Howard 8. Brower, vice-president
today.
^^ public relations counseling ser-vice
in. Manhattan for five years
could be done. Undqr the village
by mov-the
curve
reduced to an arc of 30
minutes and avoid encroaching on
the conduit.
West Hempstead Institution, ,-and prior to that was manager of
imporLance orr nn active Ch,amber
»ood fellowship. David Lpvy \vtll be
Lon&tmaster. ^^ ^ ^ surprise. He asked time
Members present at nn executive to study the transcript and prepare
been seeking a purchaser for the news division of the Mutual meeting add Tuesday nt ScotUc to dcoss-examlne Mie witness or to
bank since the death of execu-, Broadcasting System. Mitchell's Included Warren Samet,
"vc vice-president Edwin K. Lang : Kenneth Smith, of Rockvllle Peter Kelly. Maurice J. j"6x, Patrick his
some other
testimony.
engineer to refute
The hearing was
don about a year ago. Several | Centre, has. Heen '-named to take Sclallo, Samuel L. Israel, Abraham f!^n*n^[fmrnAH tmMi iurnS%?? _r* "« *_Z 1 * **_ *%?_: _, _r f._f_..__H -.-.: «*..!.«,.:*.. O4»^«] Alt*-..* *-« — *«. ** , m*«" MUJUUJJiCM UJiWJ AWLUflUtiJ.
BATVXEW- PHARMACY
OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY
The Bayvlew Pharmacy,
offers-'have* been received,, Mr. Wel-
Ter continued, but that of the
Meadqwbrook National was regard-ed
as the best, considering also the
local character of the bank.
The ' combined n s s e t s of the
Meadowbrook and West Hempstead
banks tota'I about $33,000,000 and
the capital stock would be about
$2,300,000 making it the second
largest commercial bank in Nassau
South j County. Mr. Brower and Daniel J.
charge of Information and publicity
for' the association.
A committee to nominate mem-bers
of the Board of Directors for | Eddie Vasll, Stuart
election or re-election to offices of; Theodore Spltzier.
Slegcl, Albert Cooper, Murray
Evans, Ian Murray, Louis"Mandell,
Thomas Murphy, Henry Schilling,
Wallace and
To Shut Off Current
President, four county vice
dents, chairman of the Jioard and
treasurer, at the annpal meeting,
Monday night, Jan. 16," in the Gar-den
City Hotel has been appointed
by President Roth. Walter B. Mat-teson.
Garden City, is chairman.
" is the aim and desire of the
Chamber of Commerce to be a
central force for attracting new in-du
«Lr
!\ the
and busmcsa to the Village
, expansion by
of new homes, nnd to
The current will be shut off
mcntarlly at" the Municipal power
house Sunday attput 9 A.M., to per-mit
the changing^ of a switch, Super-intendent
Thomas Moore announc-ed
today. The shutoff Is necessary,
added, to permit repairs to be
__.. -------- ---------- ,, -------- ............ ------- ------ ...... ., ^ ^ , ,„ ,.
Bay view and Atlantic^ aves., will re- jCdoney of West Hempstead will be I ^ An active program for Industrial , the best
^n'l^en'ain^yif^lhe "other o^ded\J\he"direct Nassau and Suffolk I dent Goldblatt said. Help by »t-
*'---" '-— ^- '--"—*-:- *—i..j..i-j i Lending this initial get-together I
,
Prceport, Presl- owners of electric clocks
at 2 P.M. [the h timber to 21 with a personnel
The telephone is FReeport 8-0134. 'of more than 150 employees.
James Smith (jets, Apostolic BZessmg
Direct From Pope Pitts %U From Rome i&
to be-adopted at the meeting and
become the principal objective of
the association during the next few Mra. Willet W. Raynor
County Employee, Retires
and
other gadgets which do not go on
automatically after there has been
a break in the .current, will have
to be on the watch for the shut off.
* Unit
M Hmltl,; HUM H « ,t h.
. Raynor. 104 West
Lena ave., for 21 years reputy clerk
of the
^ tired
LEO F. GiBLYN To SPEAK
TO COLUMBUS AVE. DADS
Leo F. Glblyn, president of the
Board of Supervisors, was Board of Education, Is to speak on
at the 1950 organization "The Present and Future of Educa-from
Pope Piux^XTT in Rome,
cherished gift on" Christmas e\re as
he lay In hla bed In the Brunswick
Home, Amityville, 'recovering froni
a nervous breakdown. ^
h
— »nApf*stf)li('
moHt
tertalned by the East Nassau Sec-
«n
Dated-Get. 11, the Blessing, In-scribed
In red ancn)lue"ah9?contaln"
ing a portrait qf His Holiness'reacUM
'Most .Holy Father ',..'
'Mr. James Smith and fanilly
humbly beg the Apostolic Blessing
and a plenary .Indulgence to * be
gained at the hour of death on con-,
dltion that being truly sorry for
their sins, _ but unable: to^i&nfew.
them ^f tb^e^iVe'lSe^Hioiy Viati-cum,
they ahall at least Invoke with
their lips and heart the Holy Name
of Jesus." - _ - -
/nie .Blessing wa.s obtained
through the efforts^ of Moat. Rev.
Joseph F. Rununel, pi)., .ninth
archbishop of New Orleans, wno 27
pastor of @t. Joaeph'g
Manhattan, -of
a p&rlahloner.
Aununel was
Church* 135th st.,
which Mr. Smith
Subsequently. Dr.
then of New Orleans, later being
elevated to archbishop* On March
11, 1947 while touring the South,
Mr. Smith visited New^ Orleans and
called on hjls former pastor.. .He
ahowed the cleric a picture he had
been carrying in hla wallet for a
quarter*of a century.
Archbishop Rummel gave his
guest from Freeport a book on the
History of the St.. Louis Cathedral,
New Orleans, In which he auto-gfap_
hed_a._picture, of^himself.- On
Sept. 10, last, Mr. Smith was at the
pier to bid Archblshq%^RummeI bon
voyage as he sailed aboard the
Queen Mary enroute to Rome to
visit, the Vatican. However, he
thought to the.
surprised
anade Bishop of Omaha, Nebr., and '& couple weeks.
gave no further
ihatter ,un.tll he .
the receipt of the Apostolic Bless-ing
at. a time when- ha was In low
spirits because of Illness. Mr. Smith
ia-rapldly regaining his health and
expects to get back Into business In
hh Women last Thursday. Mrs.
Alex Rpckmore was In charge assist-ed,
by Mrs. A. Slove, Mrs. Joseph
Nassau, Mrs. Albert Feldman, Mrs.
Walter Ketcham and Mrs. T. Wolf.
Toys and refreshments were given
td the children. Entertainment In-cluded
feats of magic by Richard
Lobenthal assisted by Ben Goodwin!
A recital was given by Audrey" Kar-pln
and 12 of her danolngrpupilsr
The Beckon is, to= give a dinner
dance in the Valley Stream Park
Inn on Sunday nigtit,_ Jan._ 22, Jor-membersrmaklng"
their pledges. En-tertainment
will be provided.
has been a Nassau County employee Columbus Avenue School Monday
for 30 years. night, ,.^,_^r-r=—-* ..'
DB. DODO NAMED
TO HtEALTH BOARD
Dr, JohrrW. Dodd, superintendent
of -schools was* reappolnted by
Cpunt^ Executive J. Russer Sprague
as a member of the Nassau Board
7of Health for another term yesferr
day. The appointment was con?
firmed by the Board o( Supervisprg.
Dr. Dodd's new term will run? until
Dec. 31, 1954. • .
CIRCULATION MANAGER OF
Says for the Best Possible Coverage of Free
RED HE LEADE
^ rr MaM SubxerlpMona to the
.O. Box 285, Freeport 1
Name * *
Address
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Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | 1950-01-05 |
| Subject | Newspaper |
| Description | This is a newspaper distributed locally within Freeport and Baldwin, Long Island, New York |
| Creator | Linda Toscano |
| Publisher | L & M Publications, P.O. Box 312, 30 South Ocean Avenue, Suite 204, Freeport, New York 11520.; |
| Contributors | Nicolas Toscano, Michele Swersey, Joan Delaney. |
| Date | 2010 |
| Type | Periodical |
| Format | |
| Source | Freeport Memorial Liobrary |
| Language | English |
| Coverage | United States |
| Rights | Newspapers are Public Domain before 1 March 1989; and Digital Rights after that date transferred to Freeport Memorial Library by L & M Publications.; |
Description
| Title | 1950-01-05 1 |
| Text |
_,,, ^ PAGE S'l-XTEKN' H.R ? G AD E FREEP-0 RT,i...}J. Y. , DECEMBER 29, "1949 Pro-School P,-T.A. Group To Meet in Seaman School An .invitation has been Issued- to j the parents of pre-school children throughout the ylllage. to attend, a , meetlngrbf "the PrerSc^ool 'droAp of the . SeamaA^aVe. school Parent^ Teacher Association to be he)d in the cafeteria on Wednesday night,. Jan. 11, at 8:15, Reviews 'of volunteers who made possible the wide Red Gross-in .Nassau during 1940 set a peace-time rc^rd of service fhat should be a matter of pride to ip' 'j» the county/' Franklin 6, chairman of the Nassau Red one Chapter, declared today'in. re- Following the consideration .of the Rowing Its work during tne year. M:;%^»%%L%%2:ihs port Veterans Hospital and- G.I.S at Mitchel Field, and that its services Art Sale Planned to Aid The 1950 March of Dimes of Self-Expression for. the Child/ k^e rest of ,the evening be combined with a bit of sooia ty with constructive help for Hi@ parents present. NO. 158 QfLZnnl»B-i" Aimrtmt'nt District of the Change c "A" of Cent it In Pro pert le». * i'J. that I he Bonn! of Tiuxtcca nror*i»r»tf*l VIH!*«e of Freeport, Cnimty. New York, by virtue niithorlty In it by low vewted, henrlnw duly held on the 61 h (0 ,#r (f»y, of *' with ordnln inning, wide »nd ( N4. woulh December 1B40, In nccor-he VMInwc L»w, does enact •the following nmcndment No. 123, zoning Ordinance Vill»Kc of Frceport on Ihe chmnpe from Rpwldencc "A" to on the property bounded BEGINNING »t the comer form-id by the IntcrMCrtlon nf the wf'Kt» «'ily wide of Hwyview Avcn the northerly »!*!#• of'Mcrrlck running thence wouth eighty eleven mfnutfw wpw* (S. MO II' W.) nipng the northerly of Mcrrlck Road rlKhty.foHr M*'vunly«nln« onc-hundrcdths .70) fent: running thence eighty - eight degrees fifty -eight minutew went (S. MM degrees !i»' \V.) wtili nlong the northerly nld*' nf Merrfek Ro«d am* hundred twenty- Mix nnd fifty-Civc one hundredthw feet: running thenct* north dewrceH twenty-Mix min- MtuK w*'»t (N. »!) dewreo* 2«' W.* Mtill ulnng the Hnld northerly wide «f Merrlck Ro»d on*? hundrud nnd twen-ty (1^0) feet t*# the corner furmed the inter-m'i'tion uf the «'HMt<'rly of \Vnsh !iiK*"M Sii^v-t imd ttu-bcrly wide nT M«-n-(ck tlund; lnw thence itorth t**l**e«'» (Ic- **»* «r*W*nt*'* «'H*t (N 4" K.I M*0**M th#! «'HMl B. ) to civilians, Including Red .Cross health and safety classes In swim-ming, home nursing and first aid as well as the county disaster pre-paredness setup, had tcept pace with the growth of Nassau In 1949. "Operation Pine lawn, through which tens of thousands of relatives and friends; of overseas war. dead were served at .repatriation burials in the Long Island National^ Ceme* teryr was"coH tlmlea'' f or itslsecond year by volunteers, .of the Motor Service an^i Canteen" Kdons ex* plained. "Our Junior Red Cross, In which more than 100,000 children are enrolled In all schools of the county, deserves special commenda-tion. "For the first time in Nassau, college students were offered oppor-by feet: ruitning thence ' i »»Mt (S. NO d*yrr«i |
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