1950-09-28 1 |
Previous | 1 of 6 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
THE SPERRY'CUimK AERIAL TORPEDO
Oa Ih ImmcMmg wlh e* Am%#yvill#, L I.,
, St «a*@Md wwM war J, both taa Amy
la Aa. poadkUMy @f jada* the
«oa*ro* a pO*UeM plane, loaded w*th
&? Midi*. Xa (awe day* M wa* caQed Uw *'
Way eaded Mfaw 4&e weapon wa*
and. wa* oat dardeped waUl World War If.
HIL' IS IRS W? O RUYI
HILL6REST Ib. bag FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES
CAUUFLOWER
MONEYDEW MELONS
APPLES S*l*o+*dMoln#*»h
BANANAS
PEACHES
T TT
*~ 16 0%. can I ^c
92 o%, can ARc
Strained Food"'"" 10 "87 DAIRY DEPARTMENT SPECIALS
WHITE EMS
CMW-ZEE
ROMANO CHEESE
Honeydev, M M
SHARP CESE No.2@a»24
KRAFT JAR CHEESE /#m*n*o p»v*plm?n*o
AY
FHoe* XMaaHve OntU
ef BoHnwa Taeeday^ 9ep-
%&
for Weeh-eaJ
Peisonal Ivory
Gw-Pu tog Pood
m$ d. @b* *a&* Be
bath *
'
'%^}%:^^^%%?%r,}^^v
<###%^
TUTH
FAIRNESS
' ] »tli Year No. 19 ' . . - ' - - - - . FIVE (JENT8 A0()P
Director lyan Call*
Meeting of Staff;
Asks More Volunteers
Cyril .0. Ryan, director of Civil
Defense for Presort, announced to-day
Mayor Robert L. Doxsee had
named William 8. Hughes, principal
of the Seaman ave. school, direc-tor
for the schools of Freeport. He
3vlll bis associated with Walter J.
Pope, engineer, Dr. Benjamin Fink,
physician, Police Chief Peter Elar,
Fire Chief Robert N. Klnsey, and
Milton Danzlger, civilian, who have
been named by Mayor Doxsee to
head the organization with former
Mayor Ryan, and Deputies Samuel
Mf Gerger and F.. Gordon Edwards.
A meeting of Director Ryan and his
associates has been tailed for to-night
to prepare plans for the de-fense
of Freepoft in 'the event of
a disaster, ' < " .
Mr. Ryan announced that volun-teers
were beginning to respond to
the appeal for aides to serve In var-ious
branches of the defense organ-ization.
He said the first of these
responses were received in response
to the , appeal published, !in
^Leader •; last weelL;^^aJd^^.
eyer, thatrspk'fa\n^^resp6ns
not 'been great- enough:' to meel/ the
for ^workers to complete
the defense organization) .
Mora" women 'to serve as nuraea
and f Jrst alders, typists, clerical aides
and in some forms' of communica-tions
ore needed as well as men to
help* out as auxiliary police, rescue
workers, firemen; wardens and In
communications are still needed.
New Voters May Obtain
Literacy Certificates
Certificates of Literacy will be
to "new voters" of .Freeport
who are able to meet the Educa?
tlonal 'Requirements wMAiout pass-ing
a literacy test, at the Office
of the Superintendent of Schools,
from next tnhursday through Friday
Ooti 13, excluding holidays and Sat-urdays,
from 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon
RICHARD C. GROUSE
Richard C. Crouse, son of Mr.
and Mrs. O. Clyde Grouse, 75 Har-ris
ave., died of Infantile paraly-al#
$i;nday In the New Haven
Hospital, New Haven, Conn.,
after »n Illness of only three days.
He^w,aa.o^ sophomore In Wealeyan
'University, Mlddletowh, Conn.
DIok, as he was famlllary known,
was a crack athlete and honor
student at Freeportt High School
from which he was graduated In
1048. He was a member .of the
track team from his second to
fourth years and the cross country
squad as a , se»*or« He ^yaa a mem-
Society*
and SaUey/;' Joy
A. Clordon MacRury, pastor of the
First Presbyterian « Church Is to
officiate as funeral services at
2:30 P.M., today In Fulton's Par-lors.
Burial will follow in Green-field
Cemetery, Hempstead.
Legion To
Paper Collections
William Clinton Story .Post, A. L.,
will resume It monthly collection of
waste paper ^Sunday.. Commander
Oscar. J. Pultz has requested resi-dents
of'Freeport to tie newspapers
and other paper In 26-pound bun-
<^es and leave it .at their curbs' be-fore
9"o'clock. Pour trucks manned
by Legionnaires are expected to,
tour the village starting at that hour
and continuing through the day.
^ Ruth M.'Brpwfn* member of,
m hfa Baldwin
;^^^^$;.
ewh Edwm; Way-;T«a%«; a%tmwKM&4k*t%wa3Uut,;. ^-,7-•;•.' \%Y/•';::^rt-^%%!
^;H&!;*?t%M*a [j; /...'.",...%, w^'^brpiryfjare^nia^.to^llw^^W •:•'•=•-. -"^M?j
*"'•^'' ^7 ' . . Tealey/''photogTAK^/labd ./books. . 3
??^^^«^l^^
Mao DonougJi, Baldwin librarian/ in the new WSLI radio series
rponsored by (be Oounty Libr&ry Association, was
Way Teale, Baldwin author, natural- .
1st, photographer end lecturer. In- ^^ literary work In the na-tervlewed
prior to fhe °^^^^**^-t,ui'alist, field
^ at work on" his'latest Han Outdoor Laboratory
book, "North with the Spring." ' Fi-eeport and Baldwin resident grill;
interested from his .earliest nil- t» interested to learn that the locale,.
nols boyhood in all facets of bird and I of Mr. Teale's outdoor laboratory is {
Insect life, Mr. Teale; a graduate of'an old orchard and swamp ground I
'situated bcvWeen; those, two coin?/
muhitiesJ l"he. insect" rights to that-!
tract have been rented by him and.;
there .he has planted certain ape-!
cially selected bushes and trees/Mr.
Teale reports that he has photo-graphed
and studied more than 500
varltles of birds and insects attract"
ed to his private botanical garden.
tiye membera of the Baldwin
Oiub and find Ume in tlieir busy*
lives to take part in many commun-ity
activities.
Freeporter Killed
JSarlham College, Indiana,
umbla University, has, made: his life
work the study and reportuig of the
qrorld of. nature, His- many books
have enjoyed wide' circulation in
this country and abroad and also
have been printed in Braille. In 1943
he received the John Burroughs
medal awarded annually for the
mgm
Pfci F^
Lost Ufe on Sept, S;
Corp, TownaAnd
The war in Korea was brought
! ;l
••i
aver, which he has geod reason to crow. Bo* hi* dawghter Bdr^ar* has a better; seaBoni Shp /caoght one
welgbbx; 669 pomida; They wer**^ aboard the * JpUy when they maj* Mi** hawliL 1 r v ^
"Near Horizons," his book dealing) home to Freeport during-the past
With bhe experiments made on the I wpek through the casualty, llota
local property,. was., distributed by | which contained Hie .naniea ,of o/\c
the English Readers' Union, the man killed in MtioA and anoLhur
equivalent of our Book - of - the -
MonthX^lub, Since its publication,
Mr. Teale has received letters from
readers all over the world express-
Ing tnelr interest. in the .unusual
work he does right here In Baldwin,
Mrs. Teale, who takes am active
Interest in her husband's work, re*
cently accompanied him. on a 17,000?
mile tour,of .the United Stated Their
itinerary began in Florida, in'.early
Spring. From there they. followed
the Spring season all over the coun-try.
"North with. the .Spring/' Mr.
Teale's Aext ^ook, will be an ac-count'of
that trip; with an experi-enced^
traveller'a view of i the beau-jjes..%
ol- Spring as it conies to all
parts of the .continent as well as
a scientist's .report; on ^ie bird, an-imal
and insect life, of eaoh location.
'Mr. . Teale, Fellow of the Ameri-can
Geological Socfiety and member
of -the ZxpldreraJyOlub,'. la, listed
amuHg ^ rthej ndtsbltr Americans m
".Who's/ iMio.V He la president of the
wounded. Previously Wilbur Bond,
another Freeport boy; had been ro;
ported missing m action..
Pfc, Fellx^ Garland, 21, son «of
Mrs. Bertha Garland, 36 East Mor-.
rick rd., was killed oh Sept, 5. Me
waa a member of an airborne unit
which had been transferred 'from
Japan. Born jn-)Pardee,Va, Garland
•c$me to Freeport with" his f anally in «
A943, He -attended the Cleveland avo.
school. He enlisted in 'August" 1947;
and .received his training In Texas.,
Hla enlistment woud have 'expired'
on August 4, had it not been extend-ed
for a year when the terms. of nil
men in service were frozen. .
Pfc, Garland's father, ' Flanagan =
Garland, died about ten year? , ago,
Besides his mother, he leaves two
sisters/Mrs. DAlla Gordon, of Free-port,
and Mrs. Rosalie Hill, df ' Newr
ark, N, iT, He was a/member of tho
'
Y. Entomological Society; past
president of ' the American
Study .Society ahd member of ^
N. -Y. Academy, of Sciences, Amerir
can Nature Study = Society, N, Y.
Audubon Society,: Thoreau. Society,
Second ' Chuch.
was slightly woundedj.] while in. ac-*
tion on'Sep 1. 10; ;a^ci»;ding^t@- a',teleV/
gram/received by his mother, Mrs.
Alberta .Topmseod; 60 \LlAerty; aye/
He left FreeborL-iiighV Schopipto ,
enlist more than 2 years dgo, tpbk< :
basic training at Fort Dix, N, J* re- •
Royal Photographic Society and the i ceived .further training inxtjhe South
American pmithologlat Unioki;.*^ •} and spent a ^ear? with:4he".Army of
: A contributing editbi; of
and nature %xx)lc
for the Serdld tribune, Mr. Teale .
has. contributed'
other . popular periodicals; Beadpro
will long remember 'hla beautiful
photographic essay' on Thbreau.'a
Walden, published ' In. life maga-
Occupation . before k bem^F ?ent; ta-
THE
' , Raben's -Phar^nachy, 15%'
Main at.; will . ;remaln open
On display 1 this Week • at ' e Bald
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | 1950-09-28 |
| Subject | Newspaper |
| Description | This is a newspaper distributed locally within Freeport and Baldwin, Long Island, New York |
| Creator | Linda Toscano |
| Publisher | L & M Publications, P.O. Box 312, 30 South Ocean Avenue, Suite 204, Freeport, New York 11520.; |
| Contributors | Nicolas Toscano, Michele Swersey, Joan Delaney. |
| Date | 2010 |
| Type | Periodical |
| Format | |
| Source | Freeport Memorial Liobrary |
| Language | English |
| Coverage | United States |
| Rights | Newspapers are Public Domain before 1 March 1989; and Digital Rights after that date transferred to Freeport Memorial Library by L & M Publications.; |
Description
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for 1950-09-28 1