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The Kingston Daily Freeman from Kingston, New York • Page 14

Location:
Kingston, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
14
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14 THE KINGSTON DAILY FREEMAN, KINGSTON, N. FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 30, 1938. The Weather FKIDAV, UKCKMIJKlt 30, Sun rises, 7:08 a. sets, 4:28 WEST SHOKA.N West Shokan, Dec. LJO--The Ladies' Aid resumed, after last week's omission, their scheduled Shriners to Book High Class Show 1 p.

m. Weather, clear. The Temperature The lowest temperature registered by The Freeman thermometer last night was 20 degrees. The flip until church quilting on Wednesday. I Two quilts on which they arc working were made by the 7 7 year-old mother of Helle l.urgher who resides in Belfast, quilts are of an Davis.

Mr. and Mrs. John Breithaupt of North Main street entertained a group of 12 out of town guests highest point reached up noou today was 28 degrees. expcru pregcnt Weather meeting and Monday luncheon in- New York city and i i i eluded Mrs. Belle Burgher, Mrs.

Partly cloudy and colder i Alice Bell, Mrs. Florence Bell, Saturday partly cloudy and con- Mrs. Fanny Boice, Mrs. Matie tlnued Sunday warmer a probably fair. Moderate west to northwest i s.

Lowest temperature tonight about IS degrees. Eastern New York a i a Moderate cold in east M. H. Herzog, chairman of the entertainment committee for the a a Shriners' ball which will be held Wednesday evening, January 11, in thc municipal audl- attrac toril11 sal 'l today that his corn- live design and show the work of utte i Is busy booking an exceptionally high class floor show for thc affair this year. The program will be given in the center of the big dance floor a is being especially planned so a everyone will be able to 'see each number.

i The entire proceeds will be nd forms ant, a to make It the outstanding, days, capably managed her father'i ss, Baibara Tsclson of Haver- lfrair of villter sodal season farm while he was away on govern. snoni r.h,., ali)li Coheni a i a of ment business. Later she married ticket committee, stated that re- Chief Justice Pinckney and became the mother of that C. C. Pinckney who laid to France: "Millions for from every indication a.

defense but not one cent for trib- oodly sura will be realized for the home. Tickets can be secured at the Eliza Was Borne by Two Wivei of The name Eliza, a short form of the Hebrew Elizabeth "consecrated to has not retained the place in popular favor it once held, as has the longer form. Still, there tre many women who bear it, especially in cases where it is a family name, according to Florence A. Cowlei in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Two wives of Presidents have borne this name, Eliza Kortwright Monroe and Eliza McArdle Johnson.

Napoleon had a lister Elisa whom he made Grand Duchess of Tuscany. The true name of the French tragedienne, Rachel (d. 1852) was Elisa Rachel Felix. Elise straw spent Christmas here with her mother, Mrs. Mary Hyde.

Mr and Mrs. C. Davis were i tbe patron tickets entertained Tuesday evening at were coming In very satisfactorily the home of Judge and Mrs. Henry Winchell at Farm. Sunny Clill' I Larry Kelder of Montclair, N.

CONTINUED COLD was in town recently on a brief central portion tonight. Saturday generally fair and rather cold. BUSINESS NOTICES visit with his mother, Addie Kelder. Mr. and Mrs.

Donald Bishop of West Shokan heights returned home Wednesday from a week's Christmas visit upstate. The Christmas a i I Shriners' headquarters, 48 Main street, or from any Shriner. Names Officers PETER C. OSTERHOUDT SON given Friday evening at the Bush- At the or-anization meetin- of Contractors. Builders and Jobbers, kill school house was i I anlzat on I eel eT ot 80 Lucas Avenue.

Phone 616. plimented. There was a large at- I Ul Collnty Board of Elec tendance. lions held Thursday afternoon Visitors who saw Martin J. Townsend Fitzgerald of Ellenville VAN ETTEN HOGAN Wm.

S. Hogan, 150 a Every at Kingston Hospital report was elected president and Joseph i nntT nn rr of i rift I i II 1 It! it! i TI i Kpstein, newly appointed Corn- ute." Eliza Haywood (d. 175C), English novelist and dramatist, acted in the plays she wrote. Eliza Ware Farrar (d. 1570) wrote "The Children's Robinson Crusoe," etc.

Eliza O'Neill, later Lady Beener (d. 1872), Irish tragedienne, was the most popular actress of her time in Great Britain. Eliza M. Gillespie (d. 1887) became Mother Mary of St.

Angela, founded some 30 academies in the United States and organized a corps of nurses who did good service during the Civil war. St. Local, Long Distance Moving I liim in fair condition. and Storage. Phone 661.

Peace Justice Lester S. Lavis and wife attended the family! USSIOncr to SU( -'ceed a SHELDON TOMPKINS. MOVING Local, Long Distance. Storage. Modern Vans.

Packed Personally. Ins. 32 Clinton ave. Tel. 649.

SMITH AVE. STORAGE WHSE. Local-Long Distauco Moving Cargo Ins. Modern Padded Vans Agent Allied Van Lines, Inc. 84-86 Smith Ave.

Phone 4070 gathering on Christmas held at Sleight, was named secretary, the home of his mother, Mrs Katie Davis, at Krumville. Peace Justice and Henry u- Winchell at Sunny Cliff Farm en- Sh TM' ert named clerks tertained on Christmas her shter I Th raa lvas retai ei Mrs. Anna Hyatt of Franklin last year Appointment as John B. Sterley of Kingston and Miss Marguerite Quick of KINGSTON TRANSFER INC. Storage warehouse.

Local and long distanco moving. Phone 910. WHITE STAR TRANSFER CO. Moving, Trucking, Storage. Local and Distance.

Phone 1C4. Hornbeck, Painting, Paperhanglag, Tel. 1S94-R. MASTEN STRUBEL Storage Warehouse and Moving. street, Kingston, and son, Ste- Phen, and wife, of Pine i law Ulster county is Miss Cornelia Davis is home cnlltk commissioners of from Cohleskill State School en- i A a Joseph Epstein joying her Christmas vacation Wils receil appointed by the Mr.

and Mrs. Edward i Supervisors as and Mrs. Addie Kelder worn Democratic member on recom- among a local group attending the of Bernard A. Cul- Christmas i i Mass at I'lioe- Democratic chairman, and nicia. i service has for a Townsend Fitzgerald was named years been held at St.

Francis Do on recommendation of Philip Sales Church. lilting, Republican chairman. Mrs. Louisa Van Kleeck Brodhead entertained of 742 Broadway. Phone 2212.

The Daily Freeman is on saiu at the following stands in the Hotaling News Agency in New Vork city: Times Building, Broadway and Street. Woolworth Building. 643 Fulton Brooklyn. N. Y.

Contractor, Builder and Jobber J. II. Schoonmaker and Son Phones 1257-M or 20-12. Floor Laying and Sanding. New and old floors.

John Browu, 152 Smith avenue. Telephone 1193-W. HENRY A. OLSON, INC. Roofing, Waterproofing, Sheet Metal Work.

Shingles and Roof Coating. I Cornell St. Phono S40. Contractor, Builder and Jobber Clvdo J. DuBols.

Tel. 691. PROFESSIONAL NOTICES CHIROPODIST, John E. Kelly CSC the family group on Christmas. Mrs.

Helen Tweedy and young niece. Arlene Over, called oil Miss Cornelia Davis at West Sbo- kan Heights Sunday a Mrs. Fannie Boicc of Main street was entertained over Saturday night and Sunday at the Florence Stiunpf Granted Divorce Florence Stumpf of Kingston lias been granted an interlocutory decree of divorce from her hus-' home of her son. Nelson, -Molph W. Stumpf.

Wil-! ily. in Kingston. liam H. Orogan appeared for thu i i at a bearing before Ju.i- tico Harry 12. Schirick 011 Decein- her 27, 1'KiS.

By the terms of the decree' -Mrs. may resume her i Muffi Are Traced Back To Drawing Dated 1588 The muff has been in use for a long time. There is a drawing, dated 1588, in which an English lady is portrayed with a small neat muff hanging from the waist. Some muffs were made of very expensive material, richly embroidered. In Queen Elizabeth's time the muff was called a snoskin, or snuftkin.

On New Year's day, 1600, a lady presented to the queen "one snoskyn of crimscn satin, laid upon with perfumed er cut embroidered with Venice gold, silver and silk." At a lottery in 1601, one of the lots was a "snuft- bearing the couplet: 'Tis summer yet, a snuftkin is your lot, But 'twill be winter some day, doubt you not." About the year 1883, and for a long time after that date, muffs were worn by men as well as by women. In a ballad describing the fair held on the Thames during the great frost of 1683-4, tells a writer in the Montreal Herald, we find the line: "A spark of the bar with his cane and his muff." In George the Third's reign, feathered muffs came into fashion. The muffettee was a i Virgin By of Blackbwd In the Islands once inhabited by privateers and buccaneers live myths and tales vastly more enter- taiaint than the stories that were left in the wake of the European conquerors. In our American Virgin islands froup the Isle of St. Thomas was the home of two such nirates: Blackbeard and Bluebeard (not to be confused with the Bluebeard of the French legend).

Standing are the relics of their silo tike castles, eerie and interesting, relates Anson Brown in the Chicago Tribune. Each castle is perfect cylinder about so feet high and feet in diameter. They stand atop separate hills that help make up the city of Charlotte Amalie, and the gayly colored roof tops of the homes straggle down the hills from their foundations. Picturesque in the warm sunlight of the day, but when the full moon picks itself up ou' of the ocean at night and casts shadows among the loose bricks of the castles, the Negroes shudder their homes. They are almost morbidly stiticus, these black people.

They board up their windows at. night to keep out the jumby ghosts, and sleep without a breath of air filtering through their rooms. On the night when the moon is full Edward Teach, the Blackbeard, is said to come down from his castle and roam the water front. Black children of the Virgin islands fear his ghost more than American children fear the bogie man, for actually can see where he lives. Of the two pirates, Blackbeard is reputed to have been the fiercer.

He was born of good parents in Jamaica about 1670 and was soon proud of the fact that people referred to him as the black sheep. Bitterly heartless and cruel, he gradually altered his appearance by growing a long black beard which he braided in strands and decorated with pink and blue ribbons. He set out to sea with other freebooters and, by sheer force of his fearless personality, was soon ruling thc'aribbean waters. He plundered ruthlessly any merchant vessel that crossed his path. He locked up an astounding fcrtune somewhere within the confines of his oa St.

Thomas. 20 Applicants Pass Service Tests Twenty men iwued the recent civil eervlce examination for the poeitioii of mensenger-cnauffeur of the welfare department of the city It wag announced by the Municipal Civil Service Commisbion. As only one appointment will Lie made only the three leading names on the Hal will be submitted to the welfare board for cou- aideratiou. The three men whose names will be submitted are David It. Freer, Albert V.

Kelly and Louis Kolaao. The others on the list la ths order of their standing are; Ellas Nlckerson Joseph M. Pfrommer Walter E. Dutcher Kobert Hardwick Fred D. Campbell Severyn J.

Hasbrouck Frank S. Mason William Davis Robert A. Slater Cosmas Costello James D. Fitzpatrick Edwin B. Schultz Harold Keed Russell J.

Stockton George Provost, Jr. Martin F. Murphy John Gilday NEW YEAR'S Corner BROADWAY and ST. JAMES Street I Turkey 1. 00 HATS HOISEMAKERS ORCHESTRA TEL.

3556 FOR RESERVATIONS 8 Persons Held i at IBroadhead Miss Olive Bishop of Hobart Jusurg' Toward Barcelona i (Continued rrom Pace One) Street Phone 4-0 i a a i al SUI risc street. 1 hone 4.0. and 11 wounded but Manfred Broberg. Chiropodist C5 St. James Street, Phone call on the Dav'is a i at West' stnll heavy blow on her own Shokan Heights Wednesday eve- "ctmuiit.

a i and i i tho were at least nine varieties of this curious article of dress. Lauren Boice of Phoenicia, wol! known native son and A. E. F. veteran, was a visitor here on Wednesday.

Charles DulolT of Boiceville taking frequent truckloads maiden name of Florence Ford, small muff worn over the wrist- lumber to the plant of Kaymoml They were married at Port Ewuu i m.iff.prw3 nf 0 iilion i the decree is grantu 1 spending several days of her col- took place Ireland Corners on Icgc vacation here with her broth- August er, Donald, and wife. Mrs. J. Every of Travel- Hollow was i i a for Christmas dinner at (lie homo of friends in i She also visited Mr. Every at Kingston Hospital.

The West Shokan post office handled an exceptionally heavy ol insurgent men-u 1 run of Christmas mail all a week. 10 destroyer was forced -Air. and Mrs. Leland P. a i scvcn ot lier cruw Pilgrims, Puritans Were Different in Early Days During the Sixteenth century the name Puritan was -pplied in England to all persons wh urged a reform in the ritual ol the Established church.

There were different degrees of Puritanism. There were those wished only to bring about a reform of the church liturgy; others desired to abolish the episcopacy, while some declared against all church authority. The Pilgrims, as they styled BE ON TIME In THIRTY-NINE CLOCKS a i Klectric Clocks for Every Room in House. 2.95 Safford Sciidder Golden Ilule Jewelers since 1S5G 310 WALL KINGSTON, X. Y.

from Ihuniltons worn en-' LC00-ton insurgent sloop Jupiter. to a after at-j'''' 10 osc jU been a virtual prisoner in Gibraltar since lasi August when she was lorced to seek haven a another losin? sea battle with an insurgent niiiR. The routo home i the a of a friend in New i City. Mr. and Mrs.

Marcelle Maicr of i Main street a i for Christmas i her sisters, Mr.s. Heel. i Tweedy of Grahamsvillc and Mrs. Francis Whispcll, Prime Minister Chamberlain of Britain and his foreign minister, gether with her husband and fain- Vi.scount Halifax, i be received ily. Alonzo Burgher, experienced farm baud in the employ of Jordan brothers at Brodhead Heights, spent tbu week-end in Kingston.

by Pope Pius a a 13 during I i i visit to Rome to co'ifer wltli I a i i i Premier Mussolini. Vatican circles said the Pope would recommend that Europe Mr. and Mrs. Ira IJurpher and its problems wUhout son, Bruce, of Kingsloit, spent but a beyond expressing his Christmas i bis mother, Mrs. hope for peace, he would refrain Ole Burgher, and sistor.

Miss i a i politics. lie Burgher, at i West Shokan Heights homestead. French refusal to allow Chamberlain to mediate the territorial Wilson Tcrwilliger recently js uo between France and Italy, played a welcome roll as Santa a i evoked a new barrage I'lie TONTINE WASHABLE SHADES x6' 36 NOW Exclusive Agents "THE HOUSE OF QUAUTT" 119 its J'AUTT' Stock Cordts, Inc. KINGSTON, N. V.

Claus by i i i among his i shippers i November i i rheoks. The erase price received by producers i i to the Kyserikc a from the Dellwood Dairy Company. was at the rate of per dred, for per cent i Commissioner of Highways Claude Boll, Lester S. Davis and others locally attended tho a a supenisors banquet held Thursday evening in Kingston. Marvin Van Domark has finished tho task of i and sawing up his yearly of lire- wood.

ot Fascist press attacks. Kimio newspaper 11 Messagwo charged a the French attitude to Europeon appeasement. I Paris, deputies said France ask i i a from Syria because of the tension over I a i a territorial Walsh Gets Post, Lehman Reports (Continued from r.ifc One) First Ajficultural Co-operatives The earliest co-operative organizations of which records have been found were in the dairy industry. At least as long as four centuries ago, the Swiss and French peasants in the Jura mountains practiced a form of co-operation known as cheese rings. They borrowed milk of one another to secure enough to make a cheese.

This led to pooling the milk and. manufacturing the cheese at a common center, then to combined marketing. Two co-operative cheese associations in 1722 are mentioned in a bulletin of the United States department ot agriculture. The Philadelphia Society for Promoting Agriculture was formed in 1785, as was the South Carolina Society for Promoting and Improving Agriculture. Similar societies were organized in Maine in 1787, in New York in 1791, and in Massachusetts in 1792.

ony in Holland and subsequently emigrated to America, were "Separatists," so caJJed because they had separated themselves from the Church of Ergland and wished to maintain a distinct organization. These formed the Plymouth colony, which settled in New England in 1620, relates Flora MacFarland in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. In 1628 another company of Puritans came out and formed the Massachusetts Bay colony. These claimed to be members of the Church of England, and to have no desira to separate from thai body, but to be unable conscientiously to conform to the established ritual. Federal Indictments Given on Charges of Selling Irish 'Sweeps' Tickets in U.

S. New York, Dec. 30 persons, described by government officials as heads of the biggest Irish Hospital Sweepstakes tickct- selling ring in the nation, faced federal charges today, as the cli- inax of a two-year iiivestigatioa in 12 states. The eight were named yesterday in indictments which includ- ed a charge of using the expres.3 to transport tickets in interstate commerce, and conspiracy 13 smuggle tickets into the country, distribute them and return the money to the Irish promoters. The eight indicted are: GeraU Kelly, Joha W.

Kelly, John W. Kelly, 2nd, John R. Kelly, Coii- nie Neenaii and Clifford Burgett, all of New York, who were indicted in 1936 on charges of the mails to ship tickets; William i Mead, also of New York, and Jo-1 sepb. -McGarrity of Philadelphia. ft Florence Lawrence Played in City '(Continued from Paje One) worked for Lubin of Philadelphia, in tho picture, "Daniel Boone" and later married one of the directors of Lubiu I a Mr.

Zeller. "Dick" Obenaus also played with Pearl White in the "Perils of Pauline" and with Warner Oland, both of whom have since died. During his career as a movie man Dick also worked for Wharton who produced pictures for Pathe Bros. For 10 years Mr. Obenaus was make-up niau for Pathe.

Among other pictures in which he worked was "Patria" with Irene Castle and "The Great White Trail" with Doris Kenyon. "Dick" still sticks to the Show business and is frequently heard in tbe city in his own original comedy and numbers. CELEBRATE NEW YEAR'S EVE at The Avalon STONY HOLLOW, N. Y. 3 MILES FROM KIXGSTOX--KOUTE 28 TURKEY ORCHESTRA DANCEVG XOISEMAKEKS BALLOOXS FAVOKS per person--Spend It As You Like For Reservations Call Kingston 355-R-l.

Frank Jones, Prop. MAKE RESERVATIONS TONIGHT! Gala New Year's Eve Party AT THE ROSE MARIE REST FULL COURSE TURKEY DINNER-- HAXS MOItXS XOISEM.VKEKS BALLOOXS STREAMERS COXFJfiTTI' K.VTERT.vmiEXT MUSIC THE COLUMBIAXS. ALL FOR $4.00 PER COUPLE Dance the Old Year Out And the New Year In On Onr Spacious Floor by the Firelight. FOR RESERVATIONS PHONE 2655. Porpoises Not Fish Porpoises actually are not even ffth.

Members of thc whale family, they are mammals, animals that spend their lives in the water. Out of water, they could breathe, but would soon die of starvation as they can not move about on solid ground. Sailors of old-time windjammer days termed porpoises their special pets, as these six-foot "fish" followed and swam around a ship for days at a time. Porpoises once were caught for food, but today their greatest commercial value is their oil. Charles i a supervisor llic town of Rosendalu, wlio Reduced! Reconditioned Small GRAND PIANO Price Now $225 Liberal Allowance for Your Piano E.

1'MXOS STATIONERY 326 Wall Street. Tin-afro. Supervisor Charles Thielman Board's Best Wishes a Bewey "liarl deliber- ntcly distorted" tho Tacts. I i UlC v-as not as bchuitz and i i i i i rescinded i i iix when he was found in llie company of "Legs" J)ia- nipiid, underworld character. Thr a i of Walsh is f-xpected to be the change dopartment heads In Gm-- been ill for some i and iimbi-j to attend the bCSM'ons of board, will rerohe tlic New War greetings of the members of Hu; board and i hearty mid hopes for speedy reroveiy.

That action was a Friday at the. closing session when Clerk Fred Slang reported Mr. Thiolm.i.i I ill ivitli the possibility a nc cnild remain at home for soiiio time. On motion of the board clerk i extend to Thielman tlio greetings of heard for a Happy Xew Year a a speedy recovery. I i a to a tlie coming year seem more cheerful, a of (lowers will remind the ill supervisor that his fellow legislators aic i i of him.

instruction classes. oabinet as lie begins his fourth term Monday. To Make Peace Move Vatican City. Dec. SO UP) -V a i a circles said today Pope Pius would recommend a Europe settle its problems i out war when he receives Prime i i Chamberlain and Foreign i Minister Viscount Halifax "of Great Britain i their Romo in January.

Beyond ox-i pressing his hope for peace, thev i said, the Holy Father probably would refrain from talking poii-' Monument With Seven Heads Beside a well near Loch Oich stands a strange monument surmounted by seven heads, according to an Edinburgh correspondent in Pearson's London Weekly. Accused of murdering an entire family in thc Sixteenth century, seven men were executed by order of the chief of the clan to which the family belonged. The heads of the murderers were then taken to Glengarry castle after having been washed in the well, which is still known as "Ihe Well of the Heads." Kentucky's Fiddle Bow District Fiddle Bow is the name of the famous bridge grafted black oak tree that once lived in Hopkins county, near Madisonville. The tree served as the fiddlestick, while a branch, fused into the trunk at both ends, took the place of hiirs from a horse's tail. From the tree that part of Kentucky became known as the Fiddle Bow district A schoolhouse also goes by the same name.

This old land mark stood not far from the spot where a notorious highwayman, Micajah Harp, known as Big Harp, lost his head more than a century ago. This old tree illustrates how a freak of nature may distort or change the shape of a tree, making it so distinct that it becomes a land mark and is written into the pages of history. CHEEK LOCKS Creek Lochs, Dec. an-J Mrs. C.

Hermans, Miss Botty Cook, Miss Dorothy Earl and friends were visitors at the home ot Isaac Duvall. Miss Regan of Kingston spent Tuesday at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. T.

Kelsch, visited New York, arrived home on Monday evening. Miss Ilean McLaren nas some cf her Kingston friends visiting her for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Mellons entertained Mr.

and Mrs. Winchell of Kingston recently. FOR AN ENJOYABLE NEW YEAR'S EVE MORGAN'S Restaurant 322 FAIR STREET. Turkey Blue Plate Dinner with Cocktail 75c HATS, XOISEMAKERS, COXFETTI, ETC. GOOD MUSIC.

CHOICE BEER, AVIXES AXD LIQUORS. Xo Minimum. Xo Cover Charge. VACATION TIME is nearly er school begins sure the clock is right, so tho children can start the XPW "OX XlMK FOR TIME CALL TREE TIME SERVICE PHONE Siic of the Titanic The Titanic was 852 feet long, 92 feet wide, 73 feet deep, gross tonnage 46,328. The vessel had Marconi wireless apparatus, in charge of Jack Phillips, who lost his life, and Harold Bride, who was saved.

She was sailing west from Southampton to New York, struck an iceberg at 11:40 p. April 14, 1912, and sank at 2.20 a. m. next day. Capt E.

J. Smith went down with his ship. There was a loss of 1,513 lives, practically all of these representing passengers and crew who remained on board. HEAR ROGER'S BAER'S BAND EVERY SIGHT At HULING BARN Mile in European Countries The mile is not standard in every European country. It is standard only in Grca-C Britain, where it measures 1,760 yards.

But there are other older forms in Scotland (1,984 yards) and Ireland (2,240 yards). In Italy thc mile is 1,467 yards; in Spain, 5,028 yards; and in Austria 8,296 yards. Our Growing Population The following births have been tics i the audience, reported to the Board of Health: schedule for January 13. Vail- Mr. and Mrs.

John F. Fitzger- can circles recalled the Pops's aid of Connelly, a son, William, Tf1 1 rt slt.vi.iin- -i English Services English services will be liehl 1 ler of pklonCTMe. i'diurtteV: in i a God would in UIOA: Louise, at. Kingston Hospital ol and radio broadcast during the at Kingston Hospital. Czechoslovak crisis last Septeni- Jlr.

and Mrs. Herbert H. Cut- CapUin Smith's Discipline The famous Capt. John Smith, who nursed the infant colony of Vir- found his responsibilities troublesome indeed. Few of the colonists were energetic or industrious.

Captain Smith punished idleness with starvation and to cure swearing, a sin even in the wilderness, he had a daily account kept of each man's oaths, and at night, as a penalty for each oath, he poured a can of cold water down the offender's sleeve. Maple Arch Homestead One Fast Old Hurley SEW TEAK'S MXVER, J.VX. 1-2 Ginger Pine Cocktail Croninocl YoprctnWi' Soup Turkey and Dressing Jlih Roast of Bret Lemon Sherbet, Maslied Totntops Gtblct Sanco, Cranberry Uelish Tickled Apples. Fritters with Syrup Hot Crenmed Spinach Orpon Strinc Beans Fruit Salad Bowl Cookies Cranberry KaWn Pie. Lemon Pip Fruited Jpllo with Whipped Cream Candy Kindly make rcsermtlont early for tmtisfaetory nervier on New rhotie 166-R-l 1880 FilKE TIME SERVICE curators are on duty every day except Sundays and Holidays, from A.

M. to 7:30 P. M. The advertisers who support this FRKK TIME SERVICE will welcome suggestions for improvement. tell them thnt you use U.

There is no charge for this just 1880 for the correct time. Jack Welch Arrested Jack Welch of Accord was arrested Thursday by State Trooper Reiily on a charge of reckless driving. The complainant was Frank Angelo of Cllntondale. 1 There will be a hearing on Jan-! Honr r. wiii a I i I i ho conimn ovonl fonfldonce in pacific Kingston Hospital.

uary 2 before Judge Mooney ot Mr. and Mrs. Frank Krajo.wsl.i tlio town of Ulster before whom i i i i ways of a i negotiations a i 66 Third avenue, a son. Kobcrt Welch pleaded not cuilty Thurs- rmatioii lasting asrecmcnts." Francis, at Kingston Hospital. I day when arrai arraigned.

New Year's Eve at Irvington Inn WOODSTOCK Finest Spot in Catskills Square ami Round Dancing Where the fan is fastest and girls are liveliest. Everyone your friend. Food! and Drinks Excellent Xoisemakers Galore Musk: by Aden Amreflo (Cntsklll Mountaineers) cover or minimum rlmrgc. WJI. D1XSON, Prop.

SPECIAL--For your convenience, on Tuesday, January 3nl, operators' -will be on duty at 7:00 A. ONE-HALF HOUJl EAKLIKH. "pa.kda»" blli. ier OM that allowi tot Unly OM to par-- lasttad el WTtral to fit your pocfafcoek ta I A A ll uwra oil oM withe. i i Oar mufai MqulmMiil hut ite month.

For "EO.M."LoaB. war rnoiii tvqulnnml ytnr npor IWICU.MIII. Ho Uriel PERSONAL FINANCE GO. Floor 3 Room 9 MiJWIIKRKY HLDG. 319 WALL ST.

PHOXE 8470 D. B. ELLIS, Mfr. THE FREEMAN CLASSIFIED ADS BRING RESULTS.

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About The Kingston Daily Freeman Archive

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