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The Kingston Daily Freeman from Kingston, New York • Page 10

Location:
Kingston, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE KINGSTON DAILY FREEMAN, KINGSTON, N. WEDNESDAY EVENING: JANUARY 3.1940. i Financial and Commercial arket prices.put on a slout i today under the UDCH I C3F ip of the steels, motors and! i 11 With Happy Kisc New York, Jan. 3 prices.put on a slout lit-i ship rails. Although trading was quiet at the opening it picked up as the upturn continued and transfers were at the rate of about 1,000,000 shares.

Toward the hour leaders were at about their best. No particular news development could be singled out, brokers said, Women Take Up Hears Russians Warj Massing Men for Drive Million Sign for Duty in; i i setbacks, ntam; French Uirli Also Active. Although it was no runaway market Tuesday, especially as to volume, which was lowest for a I full day since December 13, stocks i on the New York Exchange began the new year with a gratifying 10 account for continuation of a yesterdays rise- One commission jn sari th? itch ancc which for scssjons was sman bcing down to 580i ooO house partne purchase was probably TM re psychological than anything dsc sharcs as against U35361 Friday with the "disappointing thirties out of the way and the market Industrial issues in the i Jones averages opened above behind the business recovery. i Satm-nav's closing Driccs ir-d Foreign markets were irregu- Saturaaj closing prices ar.cl larly higher. Bonds rallied a bit and leading commodities tended upward.

Gainers in stocks included U- S. Steel, Bethlehem, Chrysler, du Pont, Union Carbide, Anaconda, Santa Fe, Pennsylvania Railroad, Great Northern, Texas Corp and American Hawaiian. Scars Roebuck and American Telephone touched new 1939-40 highs. Western Union responded only apathetically to the recommendation of the Federal Communications Commission that the company be merged'with Postal Telegraph. Cable Corp.

Quotations by Morgan Davis members of the New York Stock Exchange. 15 Broad street. New York city, branch office, 48 Main streel, R. 3. Osterhouclt, manager.

gained steadily during the day to close at 151.43, a net gain for the day of 1.19 points. Rails showed a gain of A5 point, to 32.28 and the utilities were ahead .32, to 25.90. Thirty stocks made liighs for the years 1939-40 and one made a new low. Leadership included Sears Roebuck, Commonwealth Edison, General Motors and other issues which pleased the fancy of the brokers. Wholesale commodities closed the year at the highest level in two i years according to the National Fertilizer Association price index, which for the week ended than 1,000,000 women volunteers arc engaged in isthmus, war work for Great Britain.

No matter you go or when, you are likely 1o see in action sundry members of the WATS, 1VAAFS, WRENS, or WAFS, not to mention the ladies ot the Dorcas society rolling bandages. The WATS arc the Women's Auxiliary Territorial service (Britain's Territorials or Terriers correspond to AT.crica's National Guard). WAAF means Women Auxiliary Air force. The WRENS are the Women's Naval service, and WAFS stands for Women's Auxiliary Fire service. i Few Frenchwomen in Uniform.

Soviet Russia was re-j Four ported today to be massing seven men making up the 163d Infantry i army divisions about 105,0001 Division were drawn up on ice- 'mcn--as the spearhead for a ma-1 covered Lake Kianta when the jor offensive against the surrounded them, it was Manncrheim line on the Karelian' said. The lake is in the "waistline" Famous Organization First thousand of the 15,000 I Last World War. first American field artillery battery to go into action-in France during the last sector' of the eastern World war has'seen action for the Mary C. at 91 Gelston avgnue, Brooklyn," Tuesday. She was the mother of John Mary and Helen F- Donnelly and sister of James Fahey.

The funeral will be held Friday at 8:30 m. with a solemn high Mass of requiem at St. Patrick's Roman Catholic Church, 95th street and Fourth avenue, Brooklyn. Burial will be in St. Mary's (Previous estimates of Russia's More than 1,000 were killed before last time.

It took-part in recent manpower before the Mannerhcim a tight ring was drawn around the line upwards of 300,000 remainder, according to the Finns. Authoritative sources have said After opening up the trap to Finland has 190,000 combat Russian reinforcements to opposing the invaders on all enter, the Finns dosed in again fronts. and set up machine-gun nests army maneuvers at Fort Meade, before giving to a smaller unit. Headquarters battery at the First i field artillery stationed at Fort UIIIH. set uy Jiiacnmc-gun nesLb 4 Gen.

G. M. Stern, hero of Rus-1 along the shore, it was said. Land! le Md believed to have fired sia's Far Eastern "vest pocket! forces attacked the bottled the first American artillery shot dur- witli by night and the airforcet in Uie war, -will be disestablished an forces in 1938, was reported on by day. i line with a "War department plan December 29 to have succeeded Soviet trucks and can- i streamlining all army divisions.

The Gen. K. A. Merctskoff as chief of non dropped into the water when I new highly mobile the Finnish campaign.) bombs blasted great holes-in the i orc es with a peace-time strength of Fighting in a sub-zero blizzard ice. approximately 8,500 and a war-time which checked enemy air-, at- Pamp-strjcken, the survivors' fr nf 17 nnn havp no headauar- tacks, the Finns said Soviet at- fled in confusion but large num- footing ol 12,000 no neadquar tacks near Lake Lavajarvi on the In France, on the other hand, is verted nto Finnish victories, no great scmimihtary organization Russian front line base was of women and there will be none.

Fcw of them arc to be seen in uni- per 100 QUOTATIONS AT 2 O'CLOCK 4 2354 VL rfiVl 91 American. American Can Co American Co American Foreign Power American International American Locomotive American Rolling American Radiator American Smelt. Refin. Co. American Tel.

Tel American -Tobacco Class B. Anaconda Copper Atchison, Top. fr Santa Fe. Aviation Corp. Baldwin Locomotive Baltimore Bethlehem Steel Briggs Mfg.

Co Burroughs Add: Mach. Canadian Pacific Ry. Case, J. Celanese Corp. Cerro De PESCO Copper.

Chesapeake Ohio R. R. Columbia Gas Commercial Solvents H' Commonwealth Southern. Consolidated Edison 31 Consolidated Oil Continental Oil Continental Can Co Curuss vvngiii Cuban American Sugar Delaware Hudson 3 Douglas Aircraft Eastman Kodak 16fi Electric Autolite 39 Electric Boat IB E. I.

DuPont 1S 3 General Electric Co 41 General Motors 55'-j General Foods Corp Goodyear Tire Rubber Great Northern, Pfd Houdaillie Hershcy Hudson Motors 5 International Harvester 6J International Nickel International Tel. TeL 4 i Johns Manville Co 77'4 Kennecott Copper Lehigh Valley R. 4 Liggett Myers Tobacco lOJ 1 Loew's Inc Loekhead Aircratt 31 Mack Trucks. Inc -S 3 4 McKeesport Tin Plate 1l 7 Montgomery Ward 55 3 Motor Products l- 3 Nash Kclvinator National Power National Biscuit '-BVt National Dairy 17 New York Central R. R.

North American Co 23 5 Northern Pacific 9U Packard Motors Paramount Pict. 2nd Pennsylvania R. Phclps Dodge 4t) Phillips Petroleum December 30 stood at 78.1 cent with 1926-28 taken as per cent. The bond nmrket was quiet, with the trend, higher and speculative rails leading. Reports from foreign markets showed London and Paris steady, with Amsterdam lower.

The steel industry, recovering from the drop to 73.7 per cent of capacity during Christmas week, starts this week at 85.7 per cent. Figures indicate that the sharp upturn in railroad traftic and earnings during the last four months of .1939 were sufficient in many cases to wipe out deficits of earlier months and give net incomes for the year. Estimates indicate that industrial roads made the greatest improvement during the year, but that the soft coal carriers had best earnings per share on stocks. Pennsylvania crude oil prices advanced 25 cents a barrel first of the year. International Telephone Telegraph reports net income of 53,970,585, equal' to $2 cents a share, for the nine months to September 30.

excludes income or losses accruing from Spanish subsidiaries and excluding German and Polish subsidiaries. In the same period last year net was including net income of from German and Polish subsidiaries: NEW YORK CURB EXCHANGE 141 30 1 4 Aluminum Corp. of American Cynamid American Gas American Superpower Associated Gas Electric A Bliss, E. Bridgeport Machine Carrier Corp J5 Central Hudson Gas Cities Service Creole Petroleum Electric Bond Share Ford Motor Ltd. Gulf Oil Hecla Mines Humble Oil International Pctro.

Ltd Newmount Mining Co Niagara Hudson Power 5 Pennroad Corp Rustless Iron Ryan Consolidated St. Regis Paper Standard Oil of Technicolor Corp United Gas Corp j.VT Uni ted Ligh dt Power i Wright Hargraves Mines form except in nurses' garb. No young girls have picked up rifles and gone their brothers and their husbands to the front, like the Carmens of the Spanish civil war. But each ir dividual an, without leadership and direction, has sought her place and taken it, and, lhanks to her, when the war is over, the home family will survive and whatever may be.the means of subsistence for the family will be intact. I That up to the present point Is the greatest work the women of France are doing in the war.

It is the task offered by conditions 'and circumstances, which in France differ from those in Great Britain and in every other country involved by the war. Later, if the drain upon French man power becomes, great enough, other fields of activity will be open to Frenchwomen, and they will be there ready capable to do the work as it is needed. They will drive ambulances, they will direct and manage the work of passive defense, they will be aviation pilots, truck drivers, chemists in the laboratories, interpreters, and what not. Such however, will never be highly organized, but will be undertaken by small groups of volunteers, already preparing for the calL Substitute for Men. The vast mass of Frenchwomen will continue to work to keep the country running and to substitute for their husbands, their sons, and their brothers who are at war.

They will be giving beyond their strength to keep agriculture, commerce, and industry going, and at the same time fulfilling the numerous tasks of social service required of them in times of such stress. British women's war activities ing shell detonators to bandage rolling "bees" such as Queen Elizabeth holds each week at Buckingham palace. The WATS, WRENS and the like are recruited from all ranks, including titled bluebloods, housewives, strip teasers, and glamour girls. They are recruited just as soldiers are, wear skirted versions of military uniforms, and for the most part observe the same discipline and live in the same kind of barracks to which the troops are accustomed- eastern front yesterday were con- A reported seized. Meanwhile, reports of how Finnish troops trapped the 163rd Red army division December 29 and 30 in the greatest battle of the war, reached the capital for the first time.

bers were reported taken prisoner. Reporting new successes, a Finnish communique yesterday said seven Soviet planes were shot down. ters battery. Although there Is much- controversy in the field artillery as to brigade actually went into ac- I tion first, an interesting sidelight, In a day-long, attack by the Rus- and one that clinches the claim of sians at Aittajoki, about 60 miles I the battery was uncovered in the ojs north of Lake Ladoga, the Finns I fice of Brig. Gen.

Maxwell Murray, reported they seized and held Russian base after it had "passed' from hand to hand." 18 Persons Are Killed In Minneapolis Blaze continued, the morgue ambu-1 paratus, and water from the hoses lances were unable to take care of all the victims, and hearses were used. A caretaker said 100 to 125 persons lived in the building. Two firemen were injured. One hysterical woman was seriously injured when she writhed out of a fireman's grasp as he carried her down an ice-coated ladder from the third floor. The i cold seriously hampered firefighters.

Hoses froze to the ground, ice glazed the ap- froze almost as soon as it touched the building: John Carlen, caretaker of an apartment house across the street, was one of the first to report the fire. He said one of the three main entrances was already a mass of flames when he noticed the fire, and all nine doors leading out of the triple building were choked with flames by the time firemen arrived. The fire was the most disastrous here since the Pillsbury Mill fire of 1S78, when 18 persons died: Sales Tax Bill Introduced To Legislature by Bewley IS .5 Produce Market New York, Jan. 3 firm; spring patents soft winter straights S6.35-S6.60; hard winter straights S6.60-S6.S5. Rye spot firm: No.

2 American western domestic Reynolds Tobacco Class B- me 'ss' 5lS Sears Roebuck Co fj(J 7 Beans steady; marrow $4 50- Socony Vacuum $4,65: pea 5B.90-S4: red kid'ncv Southern Railroad Co 20U S4.90-."?o; white kidney S5.75-S5.S5. Standard Brands Cffj i Other articles stcadv and un- Standard Gas El. Co changed. Standard Oil of New Jcrscv. 4.vX| Butter 1.31.325.

firmer. Cream- er "'Shcr than extra. 31U-32: Takes Long Journey to Read Epitaph on Grave SAINT JOHN, N. A tombstone epitaph has sent Mrs. E.

J. Chubbuck of Berkeley, or, a journey of several Lhousand miles. Mrs. Chubbuck, busily engaged in rounding up a lineal record of her forbears on Loyalist stock, found that the only record of the birth of her sr an df3lher, Aaron Clark, was written on his tombstone. It stales that he "was born on the St.

John river the city of Saint John now stands." Aaron Clark, son of a Baptist minister, George Clark, left New Brunswick in 1833 to settle in TJrumbo, and later in 3855 moved to Michigan. Mrs. Chubbuck is lhc wife a retired publisher, and she and her husband came here in an. cflort to locate the tombstone. Albany, N.

Jan. 3 (Jft--As- surance that the controversial sales tax, causing one of the main behind-the-scenes struggles at the 1939 legislative session, will confront the present legislature came today with introduction of a bill providing for levy. Submitted by Senator William Bewley, Lockport Republican and newly appointed chairman of the Senate tax committee, soon after the session's opening, the measure i Jinijose a two per cent impost to be borne "solely by consumer" with the retailer re- taining one per cent for "time and trouble. 1 The proposal, effective' in 1941, aims to provide a mandatory reduction in real estate taxation by at least ten per cent, permit localities to use tax returned for home relief and reduce levjes on local income by repeal of the emergency tax. "The primary purpose of the tax," Bewley and a.

Assemblyman Maurice Whitney, Rensselaer Republican, said, "is more enuitahip rlistriVmtirm nf ii-m tax burden to permit substantial relief, for admittedly overburdened real estate." commanding officer of the Washington provisional brigade. An aide related how Murray, then a captain with the First brigade, ordered a 155-millimeter gun Tolled to the front on a truck and "fired the first shot. It was believed this gave the brigade the right to claim distinction as the first in action. Commanding the brigade now is Col. Kene'E.

DcR. Hoyle. Capt. H. D.

Baker commands the headquarters battery is brigade coiaisu- nicatioris When the brigade is knocked down, the officers will be re-assigned and most of the enlisted men will be' transferred to' Barracks, and Tort Knox, Ky. The unit is one of the most highly tschnicalized divisions of the Local Death Record services' will held at: Mr. Van Keuren's late home, 935 Danielson street," North Bergen, N. J. Friday, January 5, at 2 p.

m. on ir About the Jlrs. Margaret Anderson of the Smith avenue Bull Market, who has been seriously ill. is reported Cemetery. Kingston, following ar- improving at her home on A'I.

Qhnrn rival of the 11 o'clock West Shore train. The funeral of Mrs. Mary R. Murray DuBois, wife of the late Henry A. DuBois, who died in Brooklyn-' on December 29, was held in Brooklyn Tuesday morn- I bany.

avenue. Stephen, 8-year-old son of Patrolman and Mrs. Wesley Cramer, underwent an operation for appendicitis at the Kingston Hospital on Tuesday. His condition Burial took place in St. today was reported as apparently Mary's city.

Tuesday afternoon. The last rites at the grave were conducted by the Rev. Benjamin Mary's church. C. of -St Mrs.

DuBois is Civil Service File Is Forced Open Discovery was made Tuesday that someone had entered the of- Ruling on Tip-ups Is Given for'Area Pursuant to the provisions' of Section 216 of the Conservation Laws, J. Victor Skiff, superintendent of Inland Fisheries, Department, Albany, has issued an order specifying the waters and fixing the season for the use of tip-ups to be "operated through the ice. Old From Horsewhip Era Are Being Revised EORT WORTH--Gity. ordinances, that literally are of "horse-and-bug-- gy" days will be brought up date here by- city attorneys and national youth administration workers. Laws tliat will be changed include: time a horse may be left hitched to a-carriage parked on downtown to during daylight hours.

Prohibiting the feeding of horses, mules, sheep, hogs, cats, and chickens on principal streets. Limiting the of horses around: the-courthouse to a "moderate gait." Prohibiting use of" swinging gates, awnings, lamp posts, and as hitching'posts. A co'de of traffic, signals involving the use of whips. jfroniDiung IOUQ noises "tenaing to" frighten animals," and meeting incoming trains' with hotel hacks. Soldier of 1939 Old-Time Expressions NEW shavetail goofed off when he bunked fatigue.

That, according to Col. L. B. Magruder. Second corps area recruiting officer, merely means the second lieutenant made a mistake when fice of the municipal civil service commission, located on the third floor of the city hall, and had forced open the filing cabinet.

The matter was reported to the police department. Secretary H. L. Van Deuscn said today that he had the matter to the police and also Ulster county except waters into the civil service commission, habited by trout and except the He said that a hasty'check-up dis- I following named bodies of water: p. I Esopus creek in town of Saugerties, Ulster Lake (Cape Pond) in survived by three children, Anna, Henry and' Mary, of Brooklyn, and a brother, Joseph A.

Murray, of this city. Mr.s. Antonia Kowal, wife oE Theodore Kowal of Marbletown, died on Tueday at the Benedictine Hospital, following a short illness. Mrs. Kowal, who was 57 years of age, was born in Poland, but had resided in this country for the past 40 years.

Besides her husband she is survived, by five sons and two daughters and also leaves a sister, living in Andes. The funeral will be held from the late home in Marbletown on Saturday at 8 m. and. at St. Joseph's Church at 9:30 o'clock.

Burial will-be in "St. Mary's cemetery, The funeral-of Mary J. Terwilliger, of Silas" Terwilliger, took, place'at her'hbrne in Tillson Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 olclock, with the Rev. John Steketee conducting -the service. The" homq filled with her many friends and neighbors and a large number of relatives'.

Flowers were banked around the casket. The Rev. Mr. Steketee spoke of the Christian life of the stressed the fact of her devotion to her family and church. Bearers were Frank Earl Terwilliger, Lyons Harry Secor, all relatives.

Burial was in the Rosendale Plains Cemetery. The funeral of Rose wife of Joseph Cafaro of Ulster Park, was held Tuesday morning at her home in Ulster Park at a. and at the Church of The a Heart at Esopus at 9 where the Rev. George Beinlien offered a Mass "of requiem for the repose of. her.

soul. The casket was surrounded by flowers and spiritual bouquets in the form of Mass cards 'A large number of her and neighbors attended the'service, at the home and at the Mass at.the church. Beinlien led the relatives and friends in prayer at the 'home. Father Beinlien accompanied -the cortege to St. Mary's cemetery and pronounced final absolution at the grave.

Bearers were William Mond and William 'all neighbors a William James Van Keuren, of North. Bergen, and formerly I HOWARD of Hurley, died yesterday a 1 Kingston Hospital. JMr. Van Keuren was the son of James Van Keuren and Rebecca Ostrander and was- born April 30, 1853, at Hurley. His early Jife was spent on the farm and later as a helper in the machine shops of the Ulster and Delaware Rail- jroad.

About 1880 he became a Undersheriff J. Feeler was reported confined to his bed at his home, 115 Washington avenue, this morning. He was at his desk in the sheriff's office Tuesday, but was taken ill during the night. His physician. Dr.

F. said that he expected Mr. Feeler to be around within a few days. Lincoln R. Spencer of Boston spent the New Year's holiday with his family at the family home, 57 Washington avenue.

Card of Thanks Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Krayem and Mrs.

George S. Krayem wish to express their heartfelt appreciation to their many friends for their sympathy in our time of sorrow. We wish to thank them for the many Mass cards and cards 1 of sympathy, also for the many beau- tiful floral offerings. We wish to thank any one" who in any way sought to lessen our sorrow in.the loss of our two sons and husband, George S. and Edward S- Krayem.

KRAYEM FAMILY' --Adv. DIED DONNELLY--Tuesday, January 2,. 1940, at 91 Gelston avenue, Brooklyn, Mary C. Donnelly, nee mother of John Mary E. and Helen 'F.

Donnelly; sister of James Fahey. Funeral Friday at 8:30 a. m. Solemn Massv of. requiem at Patrick's Roniari" Catholic Church, 95th 'street and Fourth avenue, Brooklyn.

Interment'on arrival of ir o'clock train, West Shore Railroad, in St; Mary's Cemetery, Ni Y. January 2, 1940. Mrs. Antonia Koival, wife of Theodore Kowal. Funeral will be.

held 'Saturday from their home-in MarbletoSvn at 9 a. and at St. Joseph's Church at 9:30. in Mary's Cemetery. KOWAt'S RESTAURANT KOTJTE 209 Will close this week due to death in the immediate family.

he went to bed during' a lull in drills. i locomotive fireman' on" this road, Magruder got together a list of and when the West Shore opened some of the more common cxpres- i transferred to this sions used in conversation among i Coincident this new job, he soldiers. They have not changed moved to North Hudson, and The or der provides that tip-ups I 4ja 4 I nl 1 i. much doTM through the years. I closed a apparently had been taken from the cabinet, breeze, a conversation which usually ends an argument as to who won the Civil war; cabbage, money; chow hound, gourmand; circus water, iced drinks with meals; gold brick, lar.y soldier; hash, heat- but only a thorough check-up would disclose whether any papers were missing.

1 Mr. Van Dcuscn said that no money was kept in the filing cabinet, only valuable data such as the civil service records and copies of examinations that had bccn held in the various city departments recently. It is evident that whoever broke into the filing cabinet had a key to the office door, bccn forced. for it had not Jews Ordered to" Wear I S1 '9 ril 8 lo Standard Oil of Indiana Studebakcr Corp Texas Corp Texas Pacific Land Timkin Roller Bearing Union Pacific R. United Gas Improvement United Aircraft United Corp U.S.

Cast Iron Pipe U. S. Rubber Co. Prices cxira i92 score). firsts 30 SCC ndS (S4 i Cheese unchanged 06 I a Kcsalc of premium marks 25-27'-- 47U I nearby and premium 23-24'i: and miil- 37 i western specials 'JS'i: nearby and 41'A i wcstcrn mediums 20.

u. s. stcd BSU ir rf fanc 1 Western Union Tel. Co XTJS- 0 2 Westiaghoase El. Mfg.

Co. i 5 nn tca YeDow Truck Coach 19 i changed. e- LiVC ul by frright. firm for ID Most AdtZe SiGCKS 11 Chickrn? 16-ic 12-1-3- TQC 35 03 03 ToCT4ar- Jar. were: 1-1-35.

Vocks lot 'Stand cbnr.KeM-23: young tons 3S. Ducks r- 14 lEIT'-S -i. "tpress. "-5" 1 Chickens, 16'TM rr-rccac- I 1C- r. crosses lo-Jo; rois 2 small 18.

Fowls. Coral VxrJta-Parr Un Bac Crf Gas A Corp Air T. 'V x-. 3, some 24, 23; Pullets. 21-23: crosses 20; fc 10-12.

123; J'oung: torn? IS. A can lieaux daugnter Armbands in Polish Area of Sheriff and Mrs. Abram F. ir. the Kalisch whose singing and accordion playing has been a feature district of Poland, who fail to wear "Jew yellow'' armbsnds or wbo leave their homes between five p.

m. snd eight a. m. may be punished with death, according to a Lodz German-language newspaper which reached Berlin recently. The November 16 issue ot the Deutsche Lodzer Zeihing published a decree by the district president imposing the regulslions and report- ing liisi unlimited fines could be substituted for the death penalty in "special cases." on a number of entertainment programs Curing the last year or Wo and who was heard in broadcasts last year, has accepted an attrac- town of Wawarsing.

Cape Pond in I'- 61 or slum bujner town of Wawarsing, Maratanza Lake in town of Wawarsing. Awosling Lake in towns of Wawarsing and Rochester, Campher Pond in town of Wawarsing. Ulster Heights Lake in town of Wawarsing. Chodikce Lake or Black Pond in 'town of Lloyd, to take bullheads, catfish, eels, perch and sunfish. Pike, nickerel and pike Dcrch may be taken by tip- ups through the ice from November 25, 1939 to March 1, 1910, both dales inclusive.

Pilkin York. Craft Jan. Sinks and sidearms, coffee, milk and sugar; jawbone, charge it; mitt a handshaker. Population of India to Pass 400 Million Mark SIMLA, IKDIA---The population of India is expected to exceed 400,000,000 by the time the seventh all- India census takes place in March, 1941. An increase of 47,000,000 in the in Christian work, and was a member of a team of who travelled around to various meetings and conventions in connection with Railroad Y.

M. A. Among his fellow workers he had a reputation for his knowledge of the Bible. He has. been a- member of Grove Church Consistory since 1895.

In 1923 at the age of'70. he was retired on pension arid at the of his death was visiting his daughter, Mrs. Charles Gustafson, at West Shokan. Death', from complications. He is.

survived by his daughters, Mrs. Wilson Stephens of N. Mrs. J. Mayer of Mrs.

Charles Gustafson of West Snokan, and son, W. Lloyd Van sor Walter B. Pitkin's two-hulled souarc-riggcd, Diesel-motored boat 5100,000 tempt to modernize rigging hull design--found a Hudson river ice field more disastrous "roughest weather" I live offer to assist this winter as I a member of the entertainment iylafT at the" exclusive Traymorc! Hotel. Miami Beach. Fla.

Miss to damaged it was its'first last 10 years is expected to be re- Keuren of North Bergen. Mr. vealed. jVan Keuren has four grandchil- This represeals a record increase dren, WiHard of 13.4 per cent in tic population wife of the Rev. Willard "Wull- since the last census 1931.

when I schlager of Bergenfield; Mrs. at-! the total figure was 352,837,778. i Daniel Brink, wife-of -the Rev. Experts base "their expectations i Daniel Brink of New Brunswick; of this big TM ih fart that I the Misses Josephine Vir- during the 3ast been free any major epidemic or general famine conditions. xeass on the fact that the SBsses Josephine st 18 years India has' ua Ma ofp 1313 great grandchildren: a vi a XTieti as dama ed Us first voyage Xmv vnrt Sunda and Tuesday.

The! u1 hor of "Life Begins at Forty-1 aml two COTrpanJon were rescued a ripped out big hunks of I i wooden hull? in a trip from! Jersey City. N. Jan. iNewlinrsrh to Nyack ureparatory synagogue ber 15. "but a fire brigade succeeded in preventing other buildings catching Ere." 1'Uilligalors ITCC OH Bail Jersey City.

N. Jan. wo New York umigators. booked I fo additional tests in Florida wa- Thc same issue also revealed that on manslaughter charges growing tcr? a synagogue had burned on KOVOT- ut of asphyxiation of fi Irnembcrs of the crew of 1 uciucs freighter American Robin, were, Newbursn. X.

Jan. 3 OP) hold today for the Hudson county Welfare Superintendent John L. i grand jury. Arraigned before Po-i Sloan denies he has ever connived jlice Judge Anthony J. Eotti.

Frank grocers to submit fraudulent! jHalim. :2. and his FOH. Fred. '27.

relief claim orders for payment. -employes of a Newark firm, were On Irisl on charges of conspiring released in bail each. The Jo defraud welfare department; fcur.d the frozen body of John Dejcn. ship holds were fumigaJcd Monday through faked Sioan ycs-j. isnd The vapor felted lhc yrs- lorday denied discussing such ar-i Twenty-four others aboard rangcTwnts with Fried- were overcome.

roan, indicted grocer prevfcrjs- testified ho received pavment! Hunter Frozen (o Death FAIRBAJflvS. 2C below zero a searching party 2. who became sejsratcd Irani a bunting psriy. Silence and Work It New Motto in Italy line with Italy's newly inaugurated "Silence Campaign," the Rome federation of Fascist groups of combat has or- "dered distribution of posters saying: "In this office TVS do not discuss Riga politics and high strategy. Here we wcik!" The posters are cdag gi-ren ihe widest cirmla'aoa and wai be posted in all offices.

Fascist clubs. reslauraa'is, nsovies and theaters. Both Are AT Your Service Mr. and Mrs. Humiston combine their proved abilities in planning and directing memorable tributes.

Funeral Home Facilities KE8H.112 N.YPIAZA 3-78911 ELLENV1UE 332-F2Z A Turchaso ol Interest Liquidation' MONUMENTS and MARKERS Selection in Hentctl Save jit Tlicsc Rock of Afcs Granite. BYRNE BROS. B'WAY and HENBT ST. KINGSTON, X. Y.

Asks More Judges Washington. Jan. 3 UP-- Attor-i ney General Murphy asked CoTi-'dirr Today advised Joseph A. C. grcss today to authorize the secretary general of the tL- 1 wi 'League of pomosicnt of th.ee additional fed- rflajjy eral judges in the Southern iher powers, lNeJS Jan.

(Canadian Rcadv to Cooperate for faked orders and turned the; ar is. Ja'n. 3 i-- Premier Dala- money over to Sloan. Press)-- Sergeant W. A.

Eanvjs of the British Columbia police said Nations, that France Budapest. Jan. 3 Haneary CMperaw a n.f or5 ign rninSster, Count Jstvan tonight three enemy aliens were whether or not Csakj-. -will leave this week-end held by West Kootenay authori- such action advisable and the- Finns "in passible Tialian leaders on a possible Murphy said in his annual report, measure." thrust by Russia. Trail.

Smcltin? Co. plants at nearby ON PAGE 13 If You Ever Missed it Yw VHH Nev- erForglfe Yourself.

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About The Kingston Daily Freeman Archive

Pages Available:
325,082
Years Available:
1873-1977