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Produce Prloe* for Week-
«*d Onlyf ,
The family pocketbook has its tongue hanging out often these days. The ter-rific
task ot having to spread its contents over a big area and leave no spot
uncovered is a real job, but Hill's comes to the rescue! . . . . If you shop your
nearest Hill's neighborhood Market you'll be well able to come up with the
right medicine for that drooping food budget.
Big Produce Specials
GOLDEN RIPE
EX. FANCY ELBERTA FJREE5TOME
HILLTOP
Ib. bag
HILLCREST
Ib. bag
PC——
AUNT
JEMIMA
20 oz.
pkg*-.
g
JUICY RIW BARUEn
Local Tomatoes \ 2 IBs. 19c
No. 2 Salad Potatoes 49 ib. bag 49c
Yellow Summer Squash Ib, 5c
HONEYDEW
STRAWBERRY
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Edam Cheese
Mild Store Choose
Gwwfiw
hnpoiitd Ib. 49e
Ib57c
pt. jar
r«9. can
pkg. of 400
lar^e cakes
Gruyere Cheese l$;jportipns 39c
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Cashmere Bouquet ';^,v2 c^fees :t7d
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FRESH KILLK5 SEEES 6'te
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BAY SHORE. NEW YORK
131 W«t Main Stre^ '
PATCHOOUE. NEW YORK
. « W«* Halo 5tT»«t
RIVEttHEAD, ItEWYORK
Eost Main Slraot •--
SAYVILLE, NEW YORK
O^Hocrt-Malii '-• Stireef—
I4MDEMHURST. NEW YORi:
1B3 Sooth W«hrood Ave.
WESTBURY. NEW YORK
174 Post Avenpo
PORT JEW. STAi. Nrvi
565 East Main Street .
FREEFOftT, NEW YORK
75 Wort Menfek Rood
MERRICK. NEW YORK
1 796 Mwrtck Aveaoe
BEVLMORETNEW YORK
.1S72 Bellmore Avoaae
AftMtMGTOErHrrr^
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MORTHPORT, MtW YOhK
"WANTA6M. NEW YORK
2843-45' Jerosalem, Avol
EAST MEADOW. tAv..
-' 803 Monte* Aveand
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FOLLOW THE
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LEADER
NEIGHBORLY
16th Year. Ndll& THUESDAY, SEPTEMBER^, 1951 FIVE OENOJS PER OOFY
BestAppearihjq Car in Soap Box Derby
•,'- . * , I . , "-"^ j- , X I • , . _ ; , /
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Harry Jensen, standing, pnsher, and his brother, Tommy, of Westbury,
seated in "car" that was adjudged.the best appearing in the sixth
annual Labor Day Soap Box Derby staged by William Clinton Story
Post, AX., at the Municipal Stadium Monday afternoon. William S.
Ashley and George V. Maurer,:members of the Deby committee are
pictured standing: left to right.'" (-Story on Page 3)
• - —Jerry Bagatelle Photo
at Desks
:StO%
v Freeport'Mchopl children are backat their desks following
•the close *>f; theVsuitee:^ The exact ntunber jg^^;y^
$2,142.000 Building
amis Proposed
For Baldwin Schools
Northwest Freeport
Residents to Vote At
Sept. 25th Election
Residents of the northwestern
section of Freeport, which forms
part- of the Baldwin School District,
are -eligible to vote at a special
election to be. held on Tuesday,
Sept. 25, on proposals estimated to
cost $2442,000 designed to relieve
congestion in the schools of Bald-win.
The proposals are as follows,
James H. Perns, president of the
Board of Education, announced to-day:
As a solution to the. overcrowded-ness
at Plaza School, the Board pro-contain,
classrooms and a kinter-gartens,
eight classrooms and a new
auditorium-g y m n a s ium, costing
$675,000.
Toorelleve Prospect and take care
of part of the excess from Steele, a
new school is proposed for the Mil-burn
Avenue site. Cost $650,000.
To take the bulk of the overflow,
from Steele School a new school is
proposed on the Hastings site.- Both!
these newr elementary schools will
contain classrooms and a kinder-garten.
In addition, tjhere will be an1
audltorlum-^gymnasium and a gen-eral
- purpose":; roonir-'In 'short, • the
F>. B. C. Members With Their Hero
overflow
! are
pupils from the Archer
street school leaving only one va-cant
room In -the building.
•rile 1051-52 school year really got
under way. Tuesd'ay morning with
faculty mee'tin'g which all mem-bers
of the supervising prin-cipals
and teachers are required to
attend.
Greetings were extended to all
by Leo P. Gi'blyn, president of the
Board of Ed.ut^ation, who also wel-comed
21 new teachers into _the
local school system. Dr. John W.
Dodd, superintendent of schools,
conducted the meeting.
Each year pr. Podd. issues a bul-letin
outlining bhe #lans for rt/he new
year and cavcring-,QSieT imvterial of
interest to the stiaif. T?his year's
Issue-is more elaborate than any
,ifliatJhatfe:preceeded it.
"~ *TMoral^"ffnd "Spiritual"'Values for
your CrfiiMrfin/'"W;e*"iUustraited;with
"ten drawings, captloned- 'THuonan
Personality," "M o r fcl Equality,"
"Pursuit of Happlne^V^'^Bespeot
*°r
tment," 'XJommonj _ _ __
. votlori to_ Truth"..and "Institutions
fta Hie Servants of Man;"
_; Improved Instruction • .
At the outset of his message for
the supervisors, principals and
teachers. Dr. Dodd said:
"Our attention 'this year will' tie-centered
on .Improvement, of class-
TOom'instruction through workshops,
courses and conferences, - audio-visual
education, scholarship, health
and safety—and *he; teaching, of
Americanism, as well as other1 pcfints
outlined in this' bulletin,' Our -lugS
record in .scholarship and exitra-curricular^-
activities-can only toe
..through .the
William Clinton Story Post, AJL.,
will have its monthly paper drive
on Sunday. It was postponed from
last Sunday because of tlie Labor
Day week-end.
Commander Frederick W. Batch-er
has requested that the people of
the~village • tie up their old news-papers
and waste paper into bundles
weighing about 15 younds each and
leave them at the curb ready to be
picked up by Legionnaires as they
make, the rounds of the village start-ing
at 9 AM. Metal and rags also
will be acceptable.
Proceeds of the^ale .of the-TJaper
and" "other .materials. ..-rcill^help to-swell
the weKare-fund-of the post.
The semi-monthly meeting-of the
Legionnaires will be held in the
Dugout to-onorrow-night." _~
~t. ^
aa dhildrenrwittuttie-kind - o f facil- ;• - A. ?8?"??1'
ities that are most conducttveto T*ort PoUce 9°ys C!nb who
w•X•*.t.h. • • ,t- ;h. -r• >e c; Tn•w • n,b ets ;o .. f t, he ,.-Fix-
Dod-gopd-
teaching,;but at the same time gers at a recent game atTEbbefc Field, Brooklyn. The boys had the
bTui.iiis£ lins8 rtboy ,D,?C ca°cvcia&conre-a <co* t?nie1 1p7r;e0s00e-n.t !i r rui- es" aat y- W^n-7i1*t^h 1 -~:M -"ft "fa ny-• NTCeTw ^ "M*WWhhnjafct wwiillll tthhiiss mmeeaann ttoo tthhee ttaaxx-I / . /
payers?" Mr. Ferns asked. "Right
now, with the $113,000 cost-of'Bites,
plus bhe $2f142,000 estimated cost of
building the Hastings, Mllburh,
Prospect and:Plaza projects, it will
add about 34 cents per $100 assess-ed
valuation to the tax rate for
retirement of bonds and interest the
first-year. That is about $17 on a
house assessed at $5,000. The esti-mated
$790,000 which will be spent
for the Clyde Road and Lenox
projects will add about 11 cents to
the* tax rate or $5.50 in taxes on a
.$5,000-house,-In other words, the
entires proposed building program
will cost an estimated'$.45 on the
tax rate or about $22.50 on a $5,000
house."
Devoid of fanfare and special ceremony, J&Q XQ9t$3ffineol&
Fair will open Tuesday morning1. The grounds will be^bpen
every day at 8 o'clock and exhibitions .at 10 and remaining:
open \mtil 11 pjn. each day through
Saturday night. In addition to -45
overflowing exhibition departments,
the entertainment features will inr
elude the following innovations: A
concert" by the 125-piecc Mitchel
Field Army Band Tuesday night
and Saturday afternoon, two sets
of daily puppet shows (one by Jer-ry
Hartnett of Unlondale), concert
by_ the Andy -Sannella Orchestra
Saturday afternoon,,., fireworks
nightly including Saturday; these
in addition to the customary school
band-concerts daily, ox-pulling .and
Pai^iapants in-^reat Caruso1 Singing Contest >f Freeport
I L .. * _,fc—l"^ ~~~ " " m " --'_' " '—-- ^ -ta-r.-- . ^
effort at all'of us Corking togetheri _
assurance tjuvt We closed last
with a favorable balance: Tt is the
'result of harmonty within the
,:: (Oontinnied on Page 0)
RABEN'S PHARMACY
dPEN ALL i>Ay SUNDAY
Main st/ will remain -open Sunday
the other druggists in-Free-sheepdog
herding dally and night-ly,
square and folk dancing^demons-.
stratlons nightly, baby show Wed-nesday
and Thursday afternoons,
amateur movie sh/ows -nigihtly,
horse-shoe pitching daily a-nd
nightly, daily dog obedience dem-onstrations
and various attractions
offered by an unusually large, num-:
aer of commercial exhibitors.
The highlight -of the Pair will
come
noon;
the last
an Armed
beginning at
Forces ""Veterans'
Association, parade, ceremony, drills
and. competitiori._Westcott*s Ranch -
Circle,-W Rodeo-ia -the grandstand^ :
attraction, and tlie Mlneola Fair-—
Board oi^^lfectors take "pride'-hv
announcing ho advance -'Inprices of
admission despite tremendous in-creases
-In costs ~of operation. ,-_^;^ „...
•> A talking robot-dressed_as,:ft fcjl-- •.
exhibits-on display In the Telemo-_
bile, a trailer unit affording public
telephone service at the Mlneola .
Pair, 'W- B. BUlmeyer,- manager
here for the New York Telephone
Co., aimounced today. There__wlil;
be a total of five telephone booths...
for visitors' convenience.
The mechanical man posted out- .
side the -trailer carries on conver-,
satlons with spectators and an-questions
on almost any sub-ject.
' . ' _ . • '
Outside the-3Q-foot mobile1 exhi-
(Continuecl on Page 9)
is 8-7777.
* Pictnr above arc -
Caruso"''singing contest conducted
Tikfct,
;Iri the <"
to connection wtth the showtbff of that f ilrn^to' thp Freeport Theatre. Pictured Irft
fftst^onoratJWaMcr^Morteiisle^
winner, and Al Barbatto. Leonard Freuna, Baaanager .of _<lic , theatre, rJs at the
Jnd^;for::t|lifcvcon Baratelle Photo
Senior Education Group '
Resumes Action Monday v
Gatherings of the Senior Age;
Group will toe resumed In'the Le-:
gion Dugout Monday; morning, AtJ
the-endr of June-when a-recess-was
.ftiken ifor .the,.summer:-these "Moix--
day i and Tuesday eyente;were;be^-
coming very popular, va3 inany es,
60 "Seniors'" getting .together for.
days of "sociability, amusement and
recreation.. *nie Group la spp
" ^
and has • the co-operation
Board of Education. ' -J •' -
_..-. -—: r^__- - n T-*,?\^* *." "'","; .*KT^>r"'i^i\"ll •#wm V->" .a-'i'^i '
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | 1951-09-06 |
| 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 Library; |
| 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. |
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