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The Kingston Daily Freeman from Kingston, New York • Page 2

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Kingston, New York
Issue Date:
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2
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THE KINGSTON DAILY FUERMAN, KINGSTON, N. WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 4, 1939. 50.000 Fane See Opening of Series (Continued from Page One) ball's high commissioner, threw Grunenwald Case In Supreme Court An action in negligence growing out of a. fall which William Grunenwald. Broadway baker.

sustained in January, 1938, is being tried in Supreme Court before Justice Harry E. Schirick and a jury. The action is brought against Mrs. Mary Teichler of Kingston, owner of the property on Broadway where Mr. Grunenwald has his bakery.

Plaintiff alleges that a step on the premises used by him at a side entrance where deliveries were threw him out easily. Financial and Commercial pro ffsct sma11 New York, Oct. 4 UB--A strag-V gling retreat in war stocks was First inning Reds: Werber flied to Selkirk in left fielu, nrst pitch. No runs, no hits, no errors, none! left. First inning Yankees: Crosetti sent a high fly to Goodman.

the market today. Minor gains and losses were about evenly divided near the final list had come up a from a forenoon selloff. into utili- Increase In Steel Activity Mrs. Hand Tells Of Mission Work (Contlnutd from Put Out) Produce Markel TilUn of Hercules' Now York City Located in Morocco One at the smallest northernmost of African subdivisions, New York, Oct. 4 Flour Iih Morocco, is narrow strip sliced Mrs Saylor students.

Mrs. easier; spring patents 6.25-50; soft top of the continent at the R. C. Osborn; extension work, 'nter straights 5.60-80; hard win- western entrance to the Miss Florence M. Calkins.

The straights 5.95-C.15. various conference secretaries Rve flour easier fanc atents so told of the work done in their 5.20-45. eminwllM called the Pillars oi Her i respective conferences. i eas No 2 American which toe Iegendar7 hero it Although formal announcement ss reW( new i appointed No. 2, SUBpose to have created by slitting it is understood that regional nean It he, dd made, was maintained in a dangerous condition and that one time when he stepped upon it it broke and he was thrown to the ground and injured.

lie maintains that he had complained of the condition of the step to the owner and that some effort had been made to make repairs but that the condition was not remedied and that his injuries were caused by the negligent manner in which the step was maintained. Mrs. Teichler maintains that she is not responsible for any in- ger. 8 rd for 28 stainl same as in the previous stcel coaches for Portuguese rail- Rolfe bounced to trey set a pace of approximately to cost $1,500,000. Further 000 shares for a full session.

orders from the same source are The strategy of the trading! OXDOCtpd Brazi i ako is forces, brokers said, seemed to be ex ctcd Brazl1 also ls western CIF NY eastern Jurisdiction, Methodist Keller sent a lazy fly to Ber- No runs, no hits, no erros, none left. Second inning Reds: NY 61 GIF Church, drove down from Scran- Buckwheat easy; export 1.50 steady; marrow, new ton this morning in order to dis-1 nominal, cuss the work of the Wesleyan Beans Service Guild. Miss Drew gave 5.25-35. articles quiet and un- 1 drive to Kingston, saying that she Lombard! bounded into fast Gordon to juries which he may have suffered right, and claims that it was not up to Dickey her to maintain the step but that strikes. Dahlgren.

Craft fanned. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Second inning Yankees: Goodman took DiMaggio's fly in was called out on offerings depressed! late last year by the Export-Im-! all the ups and downs of the trip and other recent' port Bank. and the fact that she almost est -f I Pan-American Airways pur- i herself coming back at a number Nearby better than chases six additional Boeing Clip-' of points. TM" going ahead.

Most pers and 13 Douglas DC-3s for She found that fear was the commodities sagged in quiet mar-! $6,000,000 in a program of expan- kets. i sion which will include the Latin- Down 1 to more than 2 at one I American field. exchange specials 31. i i midwestern mediums Browns: extra fancy 28 Nearby mid- of the Nazis, of the Fascists, the Creamery, higher than extra 29 it was a part of the property which she leased to the plaintiff and that it was his duty to keep it in condition. She denies any responsibility.

Joseph M. Campbell appears for the plaintiff and Arthur B. Ewig appears for the defendant. Jurors not engaged the trial were excused Thursday. until 10 o'clock Kingston Hospital i September Gifts Donations to the Kingston Hospital during September were as follows: Copies of Daily Leader.

Magazines for children's ward --Rosemary Clare. Magazines--Miss Maulerstock. Magazines--Mrs. William IIo- Brig- H. gan.

Magazines-- Mrs. W. ham. Magazines-- William Hiltebrant. Subscription to A i a Home.

Magazines-- Mrs. John Riccardi. Copies of War Cry-- Salvation 'Army. Bundle of linen-- Mrs. Lawrence.

Pair of crutches and cane-- F. A. Lawrence. One bfi pan, one pair of crutches, bandages and dressings. Gold fish for children's ward-Waster Joseph Netherwood.

Cut flowers-- -Mr. Gourlcy. Flowers for ward-- West Park Flower Show. Flowers-- First Dutch Church. WCTU Votes on Chicapo Rochester.

N. Oct. 4 UP)-The executive committee of the Women's Christian Temperance Union decided today to hold next year's national convention in Chicago, probably in July. Air Service Resumes Copenhagen, Oct. 4 Iff)-- The Danish airline resumed regular Johns Manville, Great Northern heavy melting scrap steel at Pitts- Selkirk second straight strike-, Youngstown Sheet.

preferred, Caterpillar Tractor and I burgh. The latest rise was $1.50 out for Derringer. No runs, no hits, no errors, none left. Third innings Reds: Berger fanned. Myers singled into right field.

and broucht the price to S24 50 a Tending higher were Chrysler, ton, which is 50 cents above the General Motors, American Tele-' peak for 1937. phone, Sears Roebuck, Loew's and Secretary Perkins' determina- Westinghouse. lion of prevailing wages for the Derringer sent a fast ground I menbers of the New ill which, touched Ruffmg's hand Stock Exchanee. 15 Broad Co ball and continued on to'Second base. Crosetti made a barehand pickup, flipped to Gordon to force Myers manager.

and Gordon threw to Dahlgren in QUOTATIONS AT cv time to retire Derringer on a spec- tacular double play. Ruffing was' TM- oyers credited with an assist. No runs, one hit, no errors, none left. Third inning Yankees: Gordon fouled out to McCormick. Dahlgren thrown out, Frey to McCormick.

Ruffing singled into left. First Yankee hit. Crosetti fanned, swinging. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. Fourth inning Reds: Crosetti threw out Werber.

Keller took Frey's long fly. Goodman walked. Goodman stole second; Dickey's throw got away from Crosetti. No error. McCormick's hard grounder passes Rolfe for single scoring oodman.

First run of game. Quotations by Morgan Davis i ot a st eel dustr was TM to be illegal, arbitrary and unjustified by law in a decision rendered by the District of Columbia York street. New York citv. branch office Main street, B. Osterhoudt.

Lombard! out. bounced to Ruffing, One run, one hit, no errors, one left. Fourth inning, Yankees: Rolfe fiied to Goodman. Keller fanned, called. Derringer's fourth strikeout.

DiMaggio singled past Werber at third. McCormick put out Dickey unassisted. No runs, one hit, no errors, one left. daily service today between Co- Indictment Asked Mauch Chunk, Oct. 4 grand jury was asked today to indict Benjamin Franklin, 33, a suspended state trooper, in the killing last June 5 oi Joan Stevens, 14-year-old Nesquehoning school girl, who was shot to death tions available to Rome, Budapest, Athens and Koemgsberg.

Night Football Kingston Yellow Jackets vs. Newburgh Recreations FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6th 8 P. M. AT KINGSTON MUNICIPAL STADIUM General Admission 40c Student Tickets 25c Sponsored by Kinfiston Council, Knights of Columbus. a subordinate questioned her about a purported bank robbery scheme.

Franklin told a coroner's jury he fired in self-defense when the Stevens girl suddenly drew a pistol from her purse and threatened to "blow my brains out." The pistol turned out to be a toy. Custom With Variations Wilkcs-Barrc. Oct. 4 an old custom among highway workers in Luzerne county to toss a dozen hats into the last few feet of a new concrete paving project. One group varied the custom by tossing their foreman into the concrete to get his "body-prints." False Alarm Raton, N.

Oct. 4 Colfax county jury summonses were a false alarm. All but one defendant pleaded guilty, the judge in his case was disqualified and no civil suits were docketed so the term was called off. That sent Sheriff B. PI.

Mitchell racing about to tell jurors not to report. Accent jttf latunl ytor glamour score. Formfit is the aiswir aid this week is tbe tine. WEEK vrdles $3.50 up $5.00 up (Ponrtiercs are ready the newest styles, inspired by Schiaparclli, designed to bring out your figure glamour. See the newest Formfits today.

THE SMART SHOP The Most Complete Corset Dcp't in Ulster Co. 804 WALL ST. KINGSTON, N. V. American Can Co 113 1 American Chain Co American Foreign Power.

American American Locomotive American Rolling Mills 20 American Radiator JO's American Smelt. Refin. Co. 541 American Tel. Tel Hi2 American Tobacco Ciass 78 Anaconda Copper with most people refusing believe anybody or anything.

bo Sf ChicSs Miss Aguirre Speaks fryers roasters Speaking with a touch of accent Fowls 36-42 Ibs. 11-16; 48-54 that added piquancy to her de-j 12-17; 60-65 Ibs. 14-19. Old roos-' livery and showing a remarkable ters Turkeys, northwest command of English for one who, 17-24Vs. Ducks, bbls.

12V2-14. but a very short time since made Frozen, boxes: Chickens, broilers her first attempt to use it in pub-' 18-25. Fowls, 36-42 11-16; 48- lic, Miss Maria Aguirre of Santi- 54 12-17; 60-65 14-19. court of appeals yesterday, in a i ago, Chili, furnished the feature Old roosters 12-14 Turkeys, case brought by the "little steel" i tne session Tuesday evening northwest Ducks and involving contracts 'of the three days meeting of under the Walsh-Healey govern- New York branch of the Women's i Live poultry, by freight un mcnt contracts act. The suit Foreign Missionary Society of the'no quotations.

By express: Weak; dustrie in morocco leather tiles challenged the cents a hour Methodist Church. The sessions i chickens, reds 15-16. dustries morocco icatner, minimum set by Secretary Per-' are being held in the Clinton Ave-1 rocks 17-19; crosses col-, a mountain in two. The Spanish zone of in the Sultanate of Morocco it only about one-sixteenth of the whole country. Most of the Sultan's territory it under French protection, with the thin layer of Spaniih Mo- rorco on top and the tiny international rone of Tangier chipped off the upner left corner.

The area of Spain's zone is a little larger than Mar; with half that state's population. Texas could swallow up ten Spanish Moroccos. Most of it is wild mountain country, with a rim of coastal plain that is fairly broad and fertile along the Atlantis, but rather 'narrow along the 200 miles of Mediterranean shoreline. The few important cities are widely spaced along the coast Starting at the southwestern cor- ler of the country, comes upon the port of Larache, on the Atlantic coast, and its neighbor, the fishing village of Arzila; then Ceuta, at the country's northern tip, and tha Mediterranean mineral port of Melilla near eastern end. the capital and largest city, is comparable in size to Lorain.

Ohio, baby metropolis of 44,000 people. It lies just inland from the undeveloped port of Rio Martin, and has developed small in- Atchison, Top. Santa 31 Aviation Corp 534 Baldwin Locomotive 1914 Baltimore Ohio Ry Bethlehem Steel 8S" Briggs Mfg. Co 2jtj Burroughs Add. Mach.

Canadian Pacific Ry 5 7 Case. J. 85 Celanese Corp Cerro De Pasco Copper 41 1 4 Chesapeake Ohio R. Chrysler Corp 0 i i Columbia Gas 7 Commercial Solvents 13 '4 Commonweal th I Consolidated Edison HO 1 Consolidated Oil S'H Continental Oil '4 Continental Can Co Curtiss Wright 7 Cuban American Sugar S'4 Delaware Hudson 2-Ps Douglas Aircraft Eastman Kodak Electric Autolite Electric Boat 15H E. DuPont 179'4 General Electric Co General Motors r4 General Foods Corp Goodyear Tire Rubber 2S Great Northern, Pfd 30 Houdaillie Hershey Hudson Motors International Harvester International Nickel 'M International Tel Tel 5' Johns Manville Co 75 Kennecott Copper Lehigh Valley R.

R. kins. jnue Methodist Church and are toured 15-15 reds 15-16; leghorn! With several railroads report- continue through to 3:30 Thurs- 16. Fowls, colored leg-1 ing the largest shipments since da afternoon. It is the 70th horn 13-14.

Pullets, rocks 24, med- 1930, freight car loadings for the annual meeting of the organ i i urn 20; crosses, medium 20, last week in September are esti- nation which next year will con-, small 17-18; reds 20. Old roosters mated at around 835,000 cars. tinue its activities in a new 13. Turkeys, young toms 18. This is close to the peak of 843,861 due to the recent unification of in 1937 and outside of that the tne Methodist Church South and best since November, 1930.

the Methodist Episcopal Church, Boosted by earnings improve- wltn consequent necessity for ment in August and a further sub- general reorganization of the vari- stantial spurt in September, West- ous church boards and societies. ern Union operations for the first i Mis Aguirre, who not only is nine months of the year were in international secretary of the black, the improvement having Federation of Methodist Women more than offset the operating I in South America, but was pre- deficit of $481,909 recorded in the sented by Mrs. Victor, president first seven months. In the first th York branch, as one nine months of last year the com- i tne outstanding women of that pany's deficit was $1,548,153, com-1 country, stopped in Kingston for pared with a profit of $2,825,457 in tho present meeting while en route the like period of 1937. Federal court has approved Reo to Pasadena, where she will be one of the signers of the new Motor reorganization plan which' declaration involved in the provides for voting trust certifi-1 church's unification program.

It cates to replace stock. is her first Atchison will spend 510,000,000 States and on new equipment, to include 1,800 Abrupt Recess In Martin Trial (Continued from I'ngt One) he said, purported to show Martin used his official position to encourage investment in the corporation in which he had 5,000 shares of stock in his wife's nams. Ryan, a former secretary-treasurer of the company, testified, however, he could not recall if the letters ever were sent to prospects. visit to the United she said that she Liggett Myers Tobacco fifi' Loew's Inc 33 Lorillard Tobacco Co 21 3 Mack Trucks, Inc -'S' McKeesport Tin Plate Montgomery Ward Motor Products Nash Kelvinator National Power fe National Biscuit National Dairy lo New York Central R. 20 North American Northern Pacific It 1 Packard Motors 4 Paramount Pict.

2nd 24- Pennsylvania Phelps Dodge 4'' 1 2 Phillips Petroleum 444 Public Service of N. SS-'s Pullman Co 3 Radio Corp. of America Republic Steel Reynolds Tobacco Class Sears Roebuck iSocony Vacuum Southern Railroad Co Standard brands Standard Gas El. Co Standard Oil of New Jersey Standard Oil of Studebaker Corp. 'Texas Corp Texas Pacific Land 'Timkin Roller Bearing Union Pacific R.

R. United Gas United Aircraft United Corp U. S. Cast T-on Pipe U. S.

Rubber 4 U. S. Steel Union Tel Co Westinghouse El. Mfg.Co.. 11' '-t Wool worth, F.

Yellow Truck 10 3 48 273; 46 49 101 13 7 i box cars, 200 ballast cars, 250 gondolas, 450 refrigerator cars and 100 flat cars. Chicago. North Shore and Milwaukee asks court approval of purchase of two-four- unit articulated streamliners for $299,000. Chevrolet's 1940 models will be introduced publicly on October 14, day before tiie opening of the New York Auto Show. General Sales Manager Holler expects the 1940 year to exceed the annual average of more than 1,000,000 units of recent years.

Volume of transactions on the Stock Exchange picked up Tuesday, to 1.000,000 shares, but prices continued downward, with a flurry of selling and additional weakness in the afternoon. Industrials in the Dow-Jones list showed a loss of 1.18 points for the day, closing at 150.23; rails were oil .50 point, to 3435 and utilities lost .05 point, to 25.00, There was some re- Food Sale The Ladies' Aid Society of the covery in trading. There were the last half hour of wide declines in commodities yesterday and the of her two grandmothers but one! Dow-Jones inrinx showed a Inss or i T-, Dow-Jones index showed a loss of 1.15 points for the day. Cotton was 10 to 13 points lower. Wheat was off 2 to 2-74 cents at Chicago.

Crude rubber prices moved downward and futures here lost as much as 80 points. Domestic and world sugar futures suffered a sharp setback. NEW VOKK CtittB EXCHANGE QUOTATIONS AT 2 O'CLOCK Aluminum Corp. of Amer-- I3i American Cynamid 32 3 American Gas 36 TS American Superpower 5 Associated Gas Electric A. 3 i Bliss, E.

Bridgeport Machine Carrier Corp Central Hudson Gas Cities Service Creole Petroleum Electric Bond Share Ford Motor 7 6 Gulf Oil 4-U Hecla Mines Humble Oil found everything new and inter- Mt. Marion Church will hold an esting She told the convention'all-day food sale at the Smith ave- delegates and others who filled nue Bull Market on Friday of this the church Tuesday night that'week, she had always looked to them with wonder as an outstanding illustration of the work women can do. Very Young In Continent Protestanism is very young in South America, Miss Aguirre told her audience, but added that a generation was now reaching maturity which had been brought up in that faith and was now taking up the various lines of Christian work and carrying it forward with vigor. The speaker commented at some length on the educational privileges so long enjoyed by women in this country, something, until comparatively recently at least, unknown in her native land. "Two generations before me education was not for the women," she said.

The men were given educational advantages and the place of women was distinctly in the home, under their husband's protection. and The second and third largest cities do not belong to the Protectorate at all, but are Spain's own territory. Ceuta, governed as part of Cadiz, was taken by Spain in 1530, and Melilla has been since the days of Columbus. Ceuta lures riany visitors, and its crowded oriental bazaars attract them with rare brassware prized in Europe since the Middle ages. This ancient city, once a slave market, was the first in Africa to have trans- Atlantic telephone service.

who traced from English descent, was educated. "My grandmothers had no troubles--they had husbands," said Miss Aguirre, as she halted a moment in search for just the right word to express her meaning. A change is coming over the country, however, and today women in Chile are to be found in all avenues of activity in the professions, as factory workers and in other lines. They have acquired a new idea of their value and they are fighting for extension of their rights as they begin to realize that if they are producing wealth they should have something more to say about its disposal and the conduct of affairs in general. "You cannot appreciate these things here," said the speaker, "but the Latin-American women today are looking toward the future as a wonderful adventure." She declared that there had been a wonderful change in sentiment since the Methodist missionary movement was started in Chile some 16 Communication Revamped by Mussolini Eenito Mussolini's conviction that highly developed communications are indispensable in time of peace or war has spurred Italian engineers to prepare for either eventuality by building machinery and technical equipment probably unmatched by any other nation.

Italian engineering genius has given to Italy the world's fastest electric locomotives and the most powerful radio shortwave station in existence, and is engaged in plans for laying down a telephone cable between Sicily and Africa which will be the world's largest Over a network ol 4,000 miles oi track--the largest network of electric railway yet built by any nation --Italian locomotives pull passenger trains at speeds varying between 60 and 100 miles an hour. On a test run between Naples and Rome recently an electrically powered passenger train averaged 103 miles an hour, attaining a top speed of 125 miles. When these electric behemoths whiz through the quiet Italian countryside watchmen close the gates at road crossings five minutes before the train is due lest any peasant with his horse- drawn cart be caught on the track. Electricity, generated from Italy's only major natural resource--water power--is gradually coming to be the most used fuel in Italy's transportation system. Italy's subway train, which will transport 92,000 passengers an hour to the site of Rome's 1942 World's fair, will be operated by electricity.

Already almost a third of the capital's busses are electrically run. Mussolini's prophecy that Italy's destiny "always has been and always will be on the sea," has been nf -v or 18 years ago. Many of the anticipated by the construction ol International Petro. Lockheed Aircraft 2S 7 and the men have come to Newmount Mining Co recognized the great help that Niagara Hudson Pennroad Corp. Rustless Iron Steel.

Ryan St Regis Paper Standard Oil of Kentucky women have uncovered great tal- a merchant marine the equal of any possessed by the great nations oi the world. Twenty-five new motor 73; women's societies are able to give. 1U Great Responsibility Felt Miss Aguirre said that the women have come to feel a great responsibility for national problems, not only in the church but in general. She gave some inter- ships to engage in world trade, each capable ol cruising speeds ol 16 knots, are being built in Italian shipyards. Latvia consists of the former Natural Gas Less Toxic Artificial Product Natural gas in general is not considered as toxic as the manufactured gas, which has a higher percentage ol carbon monoxide.

"The American Cyclopedia" tabulates the constituents ol various natural gases and compares them with coal gas. It shows Irom 80 to 98 per cent marsh gas (methane) up to 14 per other hydrocarbons, 0.4 to 4.6 per cent nitrogen, up to 0.2 per cent carbon dioxide, 0.4 to 0.95 per cent carbon monoxide, up to 1.5 per cent hydrogen. Coal gas is given an average ol 40 per cent marsh gas, 4 per cent hydrocarbons, 2 per cent nitrogen, per cent dioxide, 6 per cent carbon monoxide, 46 per cent hydrogen. The first gas company in this country was the Gas Light company of Baltimore, incorporated February 5, 1817; it made and distributed coal gas and the first street in Baltimore was lighted with the gas on February 17. The first natural gas company was the Fredonia Gas Light aM Water Works company, organ- ir-'d in Fredonia, N.

in 1865. Natural gas had, however, been used as an illuminant in Fredonia as early as 1824, a pipe line having been led from a well to the hall where General Lafayette was given a reception. A few years later natural gas was being used for fuel and light in Findlay, Ohio. Game Conservationist, 1 The maternal instinct in dogs apparently knows no bounds, says the Country Home Magazine. II you don't believe this, witness the cases of two canine mothers--one, a springer spaniel on the J.

J. Caldwell farm in Wyandotte county, Kansas, and the other, a collie on the Ted Konsteri farm, near Duluth, Minn. The collie is raising three tiny beavers, born to a trapped mother which later died, and the spaniel is mothering an equal number ol small cottontail rabbits, which she stole from their nest and brought home with her. Both mothers and infants are doing well. Funeral services for Graves of 20 Franklin held TJesday afternoon fnm W.

N. Conner Funeral Horn? Fair street, and were in of the Rev. William R. pastor of the Clinton AVI. Church.

Burial was cemetery. W1UO Edward J. Keane of son avenue. New York city i merly of Kingston and Port iw died Monday at his home vivmg are a brother, William and sister, Mary F. Keane, who i sided with him.

While a residai Kingston Mr. Keane was eS? ed in the transportation busing and later went into the electoral supply business in New York Ih, funeral will be held Thursday with a Mass of requiem i Ignatius Church, Fifth avenue ani 84th street, New York city and interment in St. Mary's Cemetery Kingston, on the arrival of the p. m. West Shore train.

William H. Votee died early this I morning at his residence 343 Washington avenue. He had been a resident of Kingston for manv years and was a painter by trade Mr. Votee was a member of St James M. E.

Church of this citv Surviving is his wife, Margaret Votee; one son, Harry Votee, ana one graddaughter, Kathleen Votee, all of Kingston. Two sisters, Mrs. Mattie Johnson of Hobert, Mrs. Minnie Pulver of Waiden, and one brother, Everett Votee, of Arkville, also survive. Body may be viewed any time at the W.

N. Conner Funeral Home 296 Fair street, where funeral services will be held Friday at 1 p. m. Burial in Tongore Cemetery. The funeral of James S.

Sullivan' was held from his late home, 151 Newkirk avenue, at 9 o'clock, a at St. Mary's Church 9:30 o'clock where a high Mass of requiem was offered for the repose of his soul by the Rev. William H. Kennedy. The funeral was largely attended i by relatives and his many friends.

There was a profusion of flowers and Mass cards. Tuesday evening the Very Rev. Martin J. Drury, i assisted by the Rev. Peter Fox, led the Holy Name Society in reciting the Rosary.

The casket bearers were Charles Murphy, Wilson Boyce, Arthur Van Nostrand, John Worf, George Haley and Edward Smith. Burial was in the family plot in St. Mary's cemetery, the Rev. Benjamin C. Roth giving the final absolution as the remains were laid to rest.

Police Take Oath Kansas City, Oct. 4 City's 600 policemen, recently wrested from Democratic Boss Tom Pendergast's control by Gov! ernor Lloyd Stark, took an oath i today they are not paying and never will pay any "lug or tribute" to a political organization. At Stark's demand, the legislature took the Kansas City department front municipal control and authorized him to name a state board to direct its activities. Baron Fairfax Dies London, Oct 4 UP--Baron Albert Kirby Fairfax, 69, former New York bank clerk who succeeded to his title in 1900, died today. Descendant of a family prominent in British and American colonial history, he came to England in 1902 for the coronation of Edward VII.

He became a British citizen in 1906, and the house of lords confirmed his title two years later. Priest Dies of Injuries Englewood Cliffs, N. Oct. 4 Rev. John J.

Croke, 39, of the Rosary Hill Home, Hawthorne, N. died today from in- I received when his car was in collision with one operated by Frank Grande, 19, of this city. Catherine Donahue, 35, New York city, who was riding with the priest, was critically injured. i 1 1 1 6 ave some mier- Technicolor Corp a 4 csting of tho ak Russian province of Corn-land. our Gas Cm? the women of Chile in the cam: southern districts of the Russian United Light Power Wright Hargraves Most Active m.

i The ir. mo.t sctue Stock sMios on October -'the women of Chile in the cam i for the election of a new ti r. X. Y. (Viitr.il.

l. onirai Possibly No Armistice Motors. Denver, Oct. 4 Colorado I will not observe year follows Gov. Ralph Carr's suggestion.

that everything this i Armistice Day, It appears observance 1 province of Livonia and three president last year, when they; west rn districts of the former fought against special privilege, i Russian province of Vitebsk. the prevalence of bribery in pub- lie affairs, and although they i were not privileged to vote, Very few women, she said, in all wielded an influence that was I Malaya, can read or write, "xc't I tent and resulted in the election The Tuesday night session open- Volume Close the candidate they favored. In- ed with an organ recital by Mrs. "5U --i, jcidentally the new president Ellison, followed by a dc, the same name as the speaker votional service in charge of the i Tuesday night. Rev.

Arthur G. Carroll of St. SSVi The second speaker Tuesday James Church. Mrs. Clinton Cous.

1S.SOO 18,100 liiiSOd 10.700 111.700 10.700 9.400 .1.4110 8,800 tune i i i stands for is gone," he said. He will await public reaction belorc sornny-vnc. deciding whether there will be any official state observance. Cuiibnal Is Rammed Chungking, Oct. 4 UPi---The United States gunboat Tutuila, sister ship to the ill-fated Panny, was rammed and damaged badly to- night was Miss Mechteld D.

sen, who told of work in Sitiawan, Malaya, with special reference to the great work done by a native I girl who developed an unusual Morris of Hempstcad. treasurer, with Mrs. Edward S. Burdick and Mrs. Thomas G.

Spencer, presented reports on the financial condition of the society. Scroll of Peace The Scroll of All Nations or the Scroll ol Peace is an illuminated document, inclosed in a leather case, which the Flying Hutchinsons (Lieut. Col. George K. Hutchinson, Mrs.

Hutchinson and their two daughters) are carrying on a flight around the world to obtain the signatures of all the rulers to a pact of peace. They have already secured the signatures of President Roosevelt and the Latin American presidents Judicial Baby Talk When Judge N. J. Bonelli of Chicago says "Him gets SO days," don't take the jurist to task, his grammar is perfectly 0. K.

The "Him" in this case happens to be Yee Yuen Him, a dishwasher, accused of buy. ing liquor and charging it to tbe restaurant to annoy the cook. The judge said he (Him to him) would have to repent 90 days in jail, and i then Him wished Him weren't a wee bit like baby talk! DIED FREER--In this city, October 3, 1939, Bella Ackerman Freer, wife of Fred Freer of Esopus, New York. Funeral at the parlors of A. Carr Son, No.

1 Pearl street, on Thursday at 4 p. m. Relatives and friends are invited. Interment in Wiltwyck Cemetery. KEANE--At his residence, 1227 Madison avenue, New, York city, Monday, October 2, 1939, Edward J.

Keane, formerly of Kingston, New York, brother of William, Helen and Mary F. Keane. Funeral be held at St. Ignatius Church, Fifth avenue and 84th street on Thursday morning. Interment will be in St.

Mary's Cemetery this city upon the arrival of the West Shore train Thursday afternoon around 2 o'clock. VOTEE--In this city, October 4, 1939, William H. Votee, husband of Margaret Votee, and father of Harry Votee. Body may be viewed at any time at W. N.

Cornier Funeral Home, 296 Fair street, where funeral services will be held Friday at 1 p. m. Relatives and friends invited. Interment in Tongore Cemetery. HOWARD B.

FUNERAL The Joitiert day by the Chungking city ferry in the Yangtze river. No one was injured. News of rnUirwt to Fraternal Thr Ladies Auxiliary of A. 0. H.

Division No. 4 will meet tonight at the home of Mrs. M. Hanson, 3 Hone street. talent for teaching.

She was Members of Boy Scout 11 of i Paul A. Cohen, a founder of the given encouragement and was re- St. James Church did their "good Jewish Welfare Society, and its sponsible for a great development' turn" Tuesday night and were honorary secretary an- in the work being carried on helping delegates locate nt Sitiawan. The latter, by the way, their hotels or rooming places and nounced TM his return from a is not a single town, but a collec- also assisting the women of the, world tour that large sums of tion of towns and one locality in- church in setting tables in the money would come to Australia WHAT TO DO IN BEREAVEMENT You will be wtee to entrust solution of your bereavement to the skill and experience of Mr. and HomiftoR eluded was said to be two hours distant by boat.

The people are very poor and only about three out of 100 can read or write in the Chinese characters used. dining room in Epworth from influential Jewish communi- where a dinner was served at 6 ties in Great Britain and the o'clock Tuesday, and where a vie-1 United States, to be used for the tory luncheon was to be served at i settlement of refugees on small 12.30 today. farms throughout Australia..

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About The Kingston Daily Freeman Archive

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