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Daily News from New York, New York • 264

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
264
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

daily neWS, rtffiSD ay! January iitdss EklvTi. Sec 7 No More Aufo Rides For Jail-Bound Villages Study IPIan To Boost Police Pay Officials of the largest villages in Nassau are studying proposals to increase the pay of policemen to equal the pay-received by county police under terms of the new countv' Wards Island Park Speeded by ILelimaii The evacuation of Wards Island, another proposed link In the city's growing chain of recreational areas, received impetus yesterday when Gov. Lehman instructed state officials to meet Park Commissioner Closes and work out preliminary plans. Under state island must be mitt charter, ThereTI be no more pleasant motor rides through the country for the boys bound from Suffolk County jail in River head to Sing Sing. Sheriff Jacob S.

Dreyer has announced that from now on all prisoners will be taken "up the river" by train instead of by car, so that the county's automobiles will be available for other uses. Besides, the county is allowed 2 cents a mile for these one-way trips on the railroad. Dr. William J. Tiffany, Commis The move has gained considerable headway in Hempstead.

Similar moves are under way in Free-port, Rockville Centre and Garden City. J. Eugene Geer, village trustee, is leading the battle to obtain higher pay for police officers in he says, overpays inexperienced pa trolmen and penalizes men with seven years of experience. Hempstead is the largest nd busiest village in the county, policemen there should receive the prevailing pay of county copsj said Geer. It is estimated that $8,700 would be needed to raise the pay of the department's thirty-four men.

sioner of Mental Hygiene, in charge of Manhattan State Hos Musical Aids P. T. A. Proceeds of a musical recital by Mrs. Cecilia S.

Rockmore of Sea Gate. Brooklyn, at the Half Moon Hotel Wednesday night will forward the program of the Parent Teachers' Association of Abraham Lincoln High School. Hempstead. He has rapped the present system of inequality, which. pital on the island, and William E.

Haugaard. State Architect, were the officials named by the Governor. Completion of the 177-aere park is one of Moses pet dreams. He once said he had been working on the project for ten years. When opened, the island will be a equipped recreational ground, reached from the upper Manhattan and Queens shores by foutwaiks.

There are to be three play fields for children of the upper Kast Side and a picnic ground in the southeastern corner for older people. While evacuation of the existing structures is being completed, the Park Department is going on with its plans for landscaping. It is planned to open part of the area in with completion of the development expected by 1943. Parents Seek w-yii imi Yrtm iii i i iw rmT" rr urn i ntiirm ffi rfiin miitf rn'iTt 'wnlf Trmiir tun wThir itiitii iiirtii 1 mtm in- ii irrrtnii -iif7 i--tn ii New School in P. S.

92 Area A mass meeting, at which Assemblyman Charles B. Brekbart anil Councilman Alrert I. Schanzer will speak, will be held tonight in the auditorium of P. S. 02, Park-side and Rogers to demand greater school facilities for children of the area.

The Parent-Teacher's Association v' c- nrp Look fxWM' IF IS what i at Mays 38 .0 52 W. is circulating a petition calling urfrt the city build a new school and ri m-xlcinize V. S. 92, which is tlescriU'd as "old, unsafe, dangerous and unsanitary." According to the association, the area has grown in population from liS.IXN) to 1.50,000 in the last quarter century. As a result, a stagger system has been inaugurated, forcing -many children to walk long distances at odd hours of the day.

Ex-Cop Holds Out and Gets Jail Shelter 0 -Kil 1 14 to 20 jV IZ" I Navy with 1A I I 1 A Felt Nailheads I I Redingotes 'X LJ-01 Lingerie Trims 'y Persistence has its reward in Coney Inland Court. Frank Rogers, 4'J. a former cop, discovered yesterday. On Sunday, he asked to be locked up fr six months. He didn't care much for hustling fixxl and shelter in the Winter, he said.

Magistrate James A. Blanchtield suggested he was drunk and that he'd better take a day to think over his request. He was remanded to.Ravmond Street Jaf. Yesterday. Magistrate Mark S.

Rndich aked him whether he had changed his mind. He hadn't, so the Magistrate obligingly sent him awav. kjGfe Self -Setting Pertonalit (KOOl K.Md wwi 3llj CAHIEIS HAIR WOOL tt in- S3 5 Soil ai rf Jets rwn 6-9051 Macbinelesj Fentutil "in I 75 hit. tut I i SIZES 12 fo 28 S3 to AS rll '( 5- i Other Fine Coats CL'stn Beauty Parlor 500 FULTON ST, B'KLYN Hex- Eim St. wtxt eC--r IS Nil..

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Pages Available:
18,846,294
Years Available:
1919-2024