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Image provided by: Alene Scoblete, Rockville Centre Public Library; Tom Tryniski
DEBS REFUSES HIS SUPPORT Milwaukee, Wis. Eugene \ st fight Mo W United Bept. 22 -(AP)- Debbs, speaking here or the candidagy of John Boclalist nominee for ates Senator,: declared Work to be the only candidate rep- resenting the working \peope. Me the present campaign was a fight of the working people against the \Capitalists.\ Work attacked Robert M. LaFol- Jette, Jr., Republican nominee, de- caring he was get following in the footsteps of his father, who. in the las ential left the [publican party. He declared that yojing Lob was not a real /Progres- «ive GO TO JAIL AND TWO ARE FINED Mergeant\John 1. Feeley of the Hempstead police is beginning to suspect that probibition is not in force in that village. In two hours Baturday might, he arrested fiye in- ebriated persons, four of the with} the assistance of Patrolman Wor Three of the men went to jail for ten days in default of payment of $10 fines imposed by Judge Jon :s, The other two pald their fine: Those who went to jall were Thom- aw Flynn, oJun Maroney and John Fisher, all arrested in Front street. The fines were paid by John Jos- @ph «Halligan of Richmond HIH, ar- rgbted on Covert atre and John ortiam of Long Drive. , Special Treatment for STOMACH TROUBLES CHOICE; \mm the Andes, drowned stomach, ate. TREATMENTS QIVEN 6X X-RAY BUN HAT LAMP, ©ADIANT LiGMT, ELECTRICITY AND DRUVOS D. Ralph Campbell, M. D. 44 S. Village Ave, Rockville Centre, L. L Tra.\ seo Haitian-(hm nue, Belmont, Huntington and i i 'loads would be shipped from the/day efternoon. Fredonia, N. Y., Sept. 22-(AP)- Grape growers in -the Chatangua land Erle froit.belts believe thecent 1925 grape harvest we 40 per below normal, this estimate is cererct there will be approximately The spring estimate Indicated that with a normal crop and creased acreage at least 6,000 car- Western New York grape région this year, but 1}? high winds that swept through the vineyards late in May, uprooted many. of the plants near the lake front, and in section hich escaped the wind- atorms, heavy frosts«wrought dam- age, The grapes jthese belts are. believed by the groweu to be used largely for win» and table purposes. Fdrmerly much fof the Chautauqua and Erie belt A LEFT TO RIGHT: JIM JERFRIES ND YOUNG BOB ITZSIMMONS. When Young Bob Fitzsimmons was in Los Angeles recently, one of the first things be did was to take a trip Out to Jim Jeffries' ranch \I just wanted to meet the man who witipped my dad,\ he said, con- cerning his visit, And here they are, Big Jim and Young Bob talking things over in earnest. FLASHES OF LIFE New York.-Tune in October 4 on WEAF and allied stations to hear 'Warrentath in the first of 30 big concerts by opera and other stars, Washington.-With two stitches in his heart, a five-year-old is recover- ing from the effects of falling down- stairs on a pair of scissors, New York.-Mr. Zero, champlon cf the jobless, is now urging them to fast. He has exhibited to them a weaver who he-says worked 40 days at his trade without food. New York.-They're hunting for a smioking bob-haired bandit who di- rected six youths in holding up an inn in Jamaica. Santiago.-The Prince of Wales a: last has been able to Iéave for Buenos? Aires, after much delay by suow in WALTERS GIVEN SPECIAL HEARING AND $5 FINE While he nncommodated the polic: department urn/by being intoxi- cated in public, Charles Walters of; Copague was accommodated Sun- day morning by a special frial be- fore Judge Thorp. Walters was arrested Saturday might by Patrolman Smith and! taken to the jail. Rather than have! him languish in the lock-up, over Sunday, the special hunks} was gleyn the man Sunday morning and Judge Thorp assessed him $5 (or| public intoxication which Walters paid. e ANNUAL DAHLIA SHOW IN NASSAU COUNTY The anpual dahlia.show of the Nassau County Horticultural So- ciety will be held in the Horticul- tural hall on Pratt Oval, Glen Cove, Thursday and Priday, There will be sixty-eight classes shown, compri- sing dahlias, roses, outdoor flow- egetables and dec work J. P. Morgan special prize is for the best table decora« tion of dahlias, the feature class. Among the exhibitors will be Mra. Harold I. Pratt, Mrs. Herbert L. Pratt, and M Payne Whitney. ---__-4 Hamburg.-An expedtion is just back from Island with a shark 28 feet long weighing five toms, emm 0-ame-0 HE MP S T grape harysst was used in the man- ufacture of champagne. Kemal to Have First Statue in Turkey Old Prejulice Gives Way to New Regime in Leader's Honor Gwluntlnopce opt. 22 The first statue 6 be erected in Constantinople since a Turkish con- quest in the year 1M53-will be that of. Mustapha Kemal Pasha, prost dent of Turkey. A model: of the statue, 'the work. of! the. Austrian sculptor, Krippel, has teen accept ed and the scu'ptor haw returned to Vienna to complete the work. Cast in bronze the statue will be placed on a high pedestal on Serag- Mo Point, where vessels turn into the harbor from the sea of Mar- mora. Turkey's \Statue of Liberty\ will depict its present leader stand- ing bare-headed, and behind hirf a pyramid of stone representing the mountains of Angora. The pose of the President and the background are intended to symbolize vividly the strength of the man who de- livered the nation from the Sul tap's despotism and the domination of the clergy. The failine to erect statues has been dué to the religious prejudice against any depicting of the human form. The prophet Mohammed spread his religion of the one God among a people who had been idol worshippers. An important part of his work was the des ruction of images, and as the only statues then in; was used as he 'ordered them broke. Hence the clergy in the followinx centuries propegited the belief that statues of any sort were anti-Mo- hammedan. . Now that the new republic. has broken the powe: of the clergy with the expulsion of the Caliph andthe. separation of- thurch and state, the old prejudice against statues has died a natural death E A D as HOME SITES | Absolute Auction Sale 130 Choice Lots 1 lncludmg 24 Busmess Lots mm «delfi-lSed-ldthm.‘ a California Ave- Whoa-thalam- the in-jset in attended a} / shipped east from} a few weeks ago, and made the- trip Angus of Park avenua entertained atJacuth by m 'bridge,on Saturday afternoon, -- --4= Victor bu. John. Madigan -and Allan Wright of Park avenue has Edmond Forbell. will enter New York returned to Ambierit. college. \aim-it; this fall. Frederick Forbel -is attending a Joseph Froehlich, Jr. returned. to Cornell on Monday, miltary academy in Virginia. seen mexicz « @» »»« UPLAND GAME BIRD SHOOTING ON LONG ISLAND October is esesntially the month 'of upland game bird shooting in! New York State. This is a great improvement over the open season of years gone 'by, when summer shooting: of woodcock was permit- ter, and qp quail and ruffed grouse the legal season for shooting open- ed so carly .that many half-grown theatre party in New York on Satur- Whey went to 'see \ftepping Stones.\ In the- group were the Misses Victoria Zebie, Mar- jorie Froehlich, Agnes Van Buskirk Hazel Ingersoll and Harriet Ives, The Women's Guild of the Church of the Ascension ill have un all- day meeting at the Parrish Hall on North Village avenue on Friday, September 25. It will start at 10 in the morning. A box luncheon will be werved. The object of the meet- ing is to prepare for the fair to be held on@Movember 6 and 7. open seasons on the various upland game birds on Long Island are as follows: Partridge - Hungarian or Euro- pean gray legged. No open season. Woodcock - October 1 to Novem- Jean Gaird of Davison place, who has been iU for a week, in still un- able to go out. birds were killed. At present the! DOUT Ji Things of Past, Says “Suha- Wellesley, “Ill. Sept. 22-(AP) -A. is approaching when there will mot be the violent bodms and depressions In business that have marked the last forty years, said Roger W,. Babson in an ad- dress opening the twelfth annual mational business conference here. \The great profits and the violent losses of the past twenty years,\ he said, \will not again be evident for sothe time to come. This means that the next few years will not of: fer much opportunities to the spec- ulators or any other man who is (Prying to pot something for noth jng. \Business however, will be healthier, more stabilied, and more satisfactory for those who are will- ing to render real service and give a dollar's value in commidities and labor for every dollan received.\ He expressed the opinion that there would so sufficient funds dur- Ing the next fow mohths for all legitimate enterprises, addi \This means that there should still be a good market for bonds. Most stocks, however, seem pretty clothing «bop has 343 Pine streat, Freeport, by VnHIo-taflh-uhafiwm WoOMEN's SHoP IN A A. new . women's ' childred n operied The shop is la ''Keamne-Marle,\ and will ban huh ready-to-wear and M. to-9 der clothing. papain | 9 E Your children won't be lit- tle long, but photographs will keep them as they are Miss Evelyn Creighton of Marion place returned to- Wheaton College, where she is now a junior, on Thurs- day. Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. West and Mr. and Mrs. Framk Donogan have returned from a (rip to Stamford in the Catskills. season. 31. than forty in an open season. Grouse or partridge-November to December 31. ber 30. No person shall take more than six woodcock in one day nor more than twenty-four in the open Quail-November 1 to December A person may take not more than six quail in one day, nor more 1 No person shall take more than two in any one day high prices Paris, and I expect Aid French Sept to see 22.-(AP)-A Buch- today, for all time. Telephone us today for an appointment-then make the record picture a regu- lar yearly event. KODAK FINISHING 24 HOUR SERVICE lower arest dispatch to L'Information says aix service, officers of the Rumanian air following the example of and fifteen in an open season. Wild pheasants (Hungarian, dark necked, commonly called English, Mongolian orf Chinese)-November 1 to December 31. Only one cock or male bird may be taken and a per- som may take not to exceed four male pheasants, in one day and not The Daughters of the Faith will have a reception and tea .at St. Agnes' Hall on Wednesday' atier- noon, September 23, 'The mite boxes will be given out at this time, the American volunteer aviators in Morocco, have asked and been granted permission by the French Government to form a squadron for service against the Riffians, There will be a meeling of all the fair committees of the Church of the Ascension on Wednesday evening at 8:15 in Parrish Hall Frank Creighton will return to the University of Pennsylvania on Thursday of this week. Mrs. George R. Bailey, Jr. will on- tertain at bridge at the Rockville Country Club on Wednesday after- noon. The guests of honor will be Miss Norine Gallagher and Mrs. Bailey's aunt, Miss Harriet Bryan. to exceed thirty in the open sea- son. -_--_-4-____- 300 BROOKLYNITES TO VISIT PLAYLAND PARK Approximately 300 members and friends of Lexington Felloweraft Club of Brooklyn are Expected to attend the outing to be held at Play- land Park, in Freepdrt, next Thurs- day. Buses will convey the excur- sionists from thelr clubhouse In Prooklyn to Playland Park, and then take them back in the eveningA David A. Comstock, son of Dr. [Comstock, will return to Trinity Col- lege, Hartford, Conn., on Wednesday morning. Richard C, Comstock, an- other son of Dr. Comatock, will start his second year at New York Uni- versity next week, FISHING BOAT NORMA Capt. Jim Leaves Coward's Dock * Woodcliff Canal, neat Free port Point, Sundays 7 A. M. Weekdays 8:30 A. M., Except Mondays and Fridays. Free Parking Space for Cars. . Rowboats for Hire. Miss Marjorie Angus of Pklk ave« nue. will enter Adelphi this year. Miss Margaret Davison of Lincoln avenue left Monday for Mt. Holyoke. Good Fishing From Dock. Phone Freeport 1656-M a_. Me.. arid Mrs; Wiliam Jones and MIM\ Jones' have arrived at Minmi, Florida, They left Rockville Centre Glickman Studio 30 S. Grove St., Freeport ~~ Te. 41W FORD SERVICE Complete Stock of GENUINE FORD PARTS AND ACCESSORIES G. BENNETT SMITH, INC. 23 E. Merrick Road, Freeport, L. I. Tel. 418 NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY BEFORE THE WINTER RUSH! 195 Florida Lots Located at Florida City, a Thriving City Thirty Miles South of Miami At Pre-Development Prices! 195 Don't Delay 114 LOTS—Twentyfive foot frontage . . . . . . $1000 ea. 54 LOTS-Fifty foot frontage . . . . . .. .. . . . $2000 ea. 27 LOTS-Fifty foot frontage. . .. . . . . . . .. $3000 ea. All Lots Will Be Improved With Roads and Sidewalks Easy Terms:: in three years, payable semi-ammually.