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POUGHKEEPSIEV J PAWLING<br />

PEEKSKILL BREWSTER DANBURY<br />

YONKERS / \ WHITE PLAINS #tan&arii<br />

BREWSTER,THE HUBZJJFITHE HARLE/A VALLEY<br />

*. .\<br />

VOL-LXIV,Na.l8 Brewster, Putnam County, N. Y., Friday Sept. 2, 1932 $2.00 per year.<br />

School Opening<br />

Set For Sept. 7<br />

Half Day Session Starts the First Day<br />

of School, Sept 7. Coach Qeesman<br />

Calls Football Practice Wednesday<br />

Afternoon on Wells' Field.<br />

School will open Wednesday Sep­<br />

tember 7. The first day's session will<br />

close at noon. The high school will be­<br />

gin its session at 8:45. The grades will<br />

begin at 8:55.<br />

The faculty for the year is as follows:<br />

H. H. Donley, Principal.<br />

High School<br />

Charlotte Vandewater, English.<br />

Elisabeth Tuttle, English and French.<br />

Edith Harwood, Mathematics.<br />

Doris Qriffoul, Science.<br />

Genevieve Noble, History.<br />

Grace Lazarus, Latin and Library-<br />

Flora Miller, Bookkeeping and Short­<br />

hand.<br />

Marion Cronin, Typeing and Business<br />

Training.<br />

Grades<br />

Anna Crane, Kindergarten.<br />

Helen Sweeter, First Grade.<br />

Cora Sherwood, First Grade.<br />

Mabel Weller, Second Grade.<br />

Mabel Travis, Third Grade.<br />

Frances Decker, Fourth Grade.<br />

Sadie Nagle, Fifth Grade.<br />

Edna Sparks, Sixth Grade.<br />

Florence Fltzmorris, Seventh Grade.<br />

Evelyn Fagan, Eighth Grade.<br />

Mary E. McEnroe, Eighth Grade.<br />

Special<br />

Harold Knapp, Music.<br />

Stirling Oeesman, Physical Education<br />

Josephine Kenny, Nurse.<br />

Three of the five State Scholarships<br />

awarded to Putnam county came to<br />

graduates of the Brewster High School.<br />

The scholarships amounts to $100 for<br />

each of the four years in college. Those<br />

receiving the awards are Kenneth<br />

Cornell, who also received the Cornell<br />

Scholarship. He will enter Cornell Uni­<br />

versity. Gladys Fasoli, who will prob­<br />

ably enter Albany Teachers College;<br />

and Frances Nelson who will enter the<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> College for Teachers or<br />

Hunter College.<br />

Coach Oeesman will be in town with­<br />

in a few days. He has a fine schedule<br />

for football. The first practice will be<br />

held Wednesday afternoon of the first<br />

day of school. It is expected that there<br />

will be at least 60 boys in uniform.<br />

Brewster High should have its great­<br />

est team this fan.<br />

Somers Flower Show<br />

Roused Much Interest<br />

The Flower Show held on August<br />

27 at the Town Hall in Somers was an<br />

unqualified success, and the Garden<br />

Club finds it difficult to express its<br />

appreciation and thanks to all who<br />

took part.<br />

The exhibits were all grown by ama­<br />

teurs and lovers of beauty, and full<br />

advantage was taken of the opportu­<br />

nity to show favorite flowers and colors<br />

In the most favorable combinations,<br />

and to see what one'6 neighbors offer­<br />

ed. Many a suggestion of arrangement<br />

and grouping which one had not<br />

thought of made it quite exciting, and<br />

in all the "classes" there was a spirit<br />

of mild rivalry but above all of friend­<br />

ly enjoyment. Many said: "This is very<br />

fine for a small exhibit; let's do it an­<br />

other year. I'm already thinking of<br />

what I might have sent today, and<br />

hope to have next year!"<br />

To the chairman of the Flower Show<br />

Committee, Mrs. H. C. Wylie, who has<br />

managed it so ably, and her hard­<br />

working, devoted aides one can not<br />

speak too gratefully;—It was a large<br />

responsibility executed tastefully and<br />

skillfully.<br />

No criticism was heard of the judges'<br />

decisions, only gratification at the lit­<br />

tle explanations such as "Too many<br />

colors," "stems too short!" etc., which<br />

helped one to understand the reasoning<br />

and standards which were used. The<br />

judges task is not an easy one, but let<br />

us thank you, oh; kindly judges, with<br />

sincere appreciation of your services.<br />

The committee was surprised and al­<br />

most overwhelmed by offers of prizes,<br />

and there was many a delighted 'thank<br />

you" from the winners of blue rib­<br />

bons for theirs. Besides private dona­<br />

tions the following were very generous<br />

in presenting appropriate gifts: Ama-<br />

walk Nursery, Lincolndale Nursery,<br />

Pierson Nursery, Twin Pines, W. E.<br />

Marshall and Stump & Walter.<br />

The winners of blue ribbons were<br />

Miss Esther Allen, Mrs. O. G. Ditmars,<br />

Mr. Robert Dunn, Mr. John Karnes,<br />

Miss C E. Fellows. Mrs. George<br />

Holmes, Mrs. J. H. Hughes, Miss Ruth<br />

Jeffrey. Mrs. James Marshall, Mrs.<br />

George J. Nayesky, Mrs. North Mc­<br />

Lean. Mrs. W. B. Mead, Mrs. Mullen,<br />

Miss Arlene Parker, Mrs George Ray,<br />

Mrs. Edward Tatham, Mrs. A. B. Tib-<br />

bets, Mr. Voislawskie, Mrs. Waldo<br />

Walker, Mrs. N. A. White.<br />

The publicity given by local papers<br />

is gratefully acknowledged<br />

JULIA T. EMERSON.<br />

Chairman Somers Garden Club.<br />

OBITUARY<br />

Mrs. William E. Smith.<br />

On Tuesday morning, August 30, 1932,<br />

the death of Mrs. Eva Virginia Wordcn<br />

Smith, wife of Mr. William E. Smith,<br />

of Brewster, occurred at Danbury Hos­<br />

pital where she had been a patient for<br />

three weeks recovering from a broken<br />

arm. <strong>New</strong>s of her death, which was<br />

very sudden, due to cerebral hemorrh­<br />

age, was a great shock to her husband<br />

and the many friends who had visited<br />

her and noted her recovery from the<br />

injury to her arm. Mrs. Smith was in<br />

the '8th year of her age.<br />

Mrs. Smith was the daughter of the<br />

late Hiram and Susan Adams Wor­<br />

dcn and was born at Bedford, N. Y.,<br />

January 4, 1855. Her marriage to Mr.<br />

William E. Smith, of Poundridge, N.<br />

Y., took place in the Methodist Epis­<br />

copal church, Mount Klsco, N. Y., Sep­<br />

tember 20, 1875, the Rev. J. W. Ack-<br />

erly, officiating. In 1883 Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Smith came to reside in Brewster and<br />

their home on Prospect street Is known<br />

to many people for the hospitality ex­<br />

tended by Mr. and Mrs. Smith and their<br />

daughter, Elizabeth, for almost fifty<br />

years.<br />

It was on the occasion of the fiftieth<br />

wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Smith that Mr. E. D. Stannard made<br />

a few felicitous remarks as spokesman<br />

for the guests of the evening and con­<br />

cluded with "Mr and Mrs. Smith have<br />

something better than gold; they have<br />

the love and esteem of a wide circle of<br />

friends." What a fine tribute to be re­<br />

membered as a friend. It is as a friend<br />

that Mrs. Smith will long be remem­<br />

bered. How kind she was in remember­<br />

ing the sick or the needy few realize,<br />

but many people knew her enthusiasm<br />

and Interest in social gatherings. She<br />

loved to be among people who were<br />

enjoying themselves and liked to have<br />

young people about her as well as her<br />

contemporaries. She showed great cour­<br />

age in bearing the sorrow of the loss<br />

of her daughter, Elizabeth, who died<br />

November 6, 1031, and her efforts to<br />

keep in good spirits were appreciated<br />

by all who were closely associated with<br />

her.<br />

Mis. Smith is survived by her hus­<br />

band, William E. Smith, her brother,<br />

William Worden, of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City,<br />

two nieces, Vina and Emma William­<br />

son, two great nieces Eva Gregory and<br />

Mrs. Paul Schaefer, a nephew, Virgil<br />

Banks, of Mount Kisco, and a great<br />

nephew, Donald Banks, of White<br />

Plains.<br />

Funeral services will be held at her<br />

late residence at two o'clock, Friday,<br />

September 2, the Rev. Herbert Haz-<br />

zard, of the Brewster Methodist church,<br />

officiating, assisted by Rev. Murray H.<br />

Gardner, of the Presbyterian church.<br />

Interment wlll.be in the family plot<br />

in Milltown Rural Cemetery. The pall­<br />

bearers are Walter Howe, Daniel H.<br />

Bloomer, Howard Truran, H. H. Don­<br />

ley. B. O. Nichals and H. H Wells.<br />

o-.<br />

William E. Crosby.<br />

On Wednesday, August 31, 1982, the<br />

death of William E. Crosby, aged 90<br />

years, occurred at the home of his<br />

daughter, Mrs. Melvin Mead, Brewster,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Mr. Crosby was the son of Thomas<br />

and Anne Inchebolt, and was born in<br />

England, January 17, 1842. He mar­<br />

ried Margaret Fitzpatrick, who died<br />

thirty-five years ago.<br />

Mr. Crosby was a veteran of the<br />

Civil War. He enlisted in the 74th<br />

Regiment with the men known as the<br />

Williamsburg Volunteers.<br />

Funeral services will be held at the<br />

Church of St. Lawrence OToole at 9<br />

o'clock Saturday morning. Interment<br />

at Culvary Cemetery <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City.<br />

Money, Not Laundry<br />

Sought by Robbers<br />

While Sam Lee. popular proprietor<br />

of -he Sing Lee Laundry on Progress<br />

street, was enjoying a movie in the<br />

Cameo last Sunday evening, some<br />

smart young thieves who evidently<br />

knew the "layout" and how to climb<br />

a half inch iron pipe entered his place<br />

of business through a window some<br />

twenty feet from the ground on the<br />

south side of the building.<br />

When Sam returned to his shop the<br />

interior looked like a Chinese puzzle.<br />

At first he thought someone had lost<br />

their laundry ticket and after a futile<br />

searcn from pocket to pocket and back<br />

to pocket again they decided that in<br />

order to get a clean shirt for Mon­<br />

day they would have to break their<br />

way into the shop. But, no this was not<br />

the case. What they wanted was cold<br />

cash and after turning everything in<br />

the place either bottomside up or up-<br />

sidedown they managed to scrape up<br />

about $3.88.<br />

Sam reported the loss to Officer East­<br />

wood, who made a thorough investiga­<br />

tion and from reports the search for<br />

the thieves is well within the village<br />

limits. This is the second attempt that<br />

has been made to clean Sam, but h"<br />

continues to clean clothes in his usual<br />

good spirits—no tickle, no. washie, but<br />

always a smilie.<br />

Children Present<br />

Garden Program<br />

i<br />

Plays and Dances Presented by Young<br />

People In Mrs. Warren's Garden En­<br />

tertain an Appreciative Audience.<br />

Brewster Garden Club Serves Tea.<br />

On Tuesday afternoon, all the ele­<br />

ments seemed to combine to give the<br />

desired background and atmosphere for<br />

the program arranged by the Brewster<br />

Garden Club to be carried out in Mrs.<br />

Luther Warren's garden on Turk Hill.<br />

More than a hundred people were seat­<br />

ed in the natural ampitheatre on the<br />

lawn under shade trees when the music<br />

from a hidden phonograph signaled the<br />

appearance of Miss Mary Kane in a<br />

garden dance, a delightful prelude for<br />

the one act play, Pandora, from Che<br />

Greek myth. Mrs. Chester Beach, play­<br />

wright and director, had a very re­<br />

sponsive cast of children who spoke<br />

their lines clearly and entered into<br />

their parts with sweet sincerity. Cos­<br />

tumes after the Greek design were<br />

worn by each player.<br />

Phyllis Rahlson, as Hermes, the mes­<br />

senger of the gods, was first to appear;<br />

then came Arlene Reed, as Epimetheus.<br />

a young boy; Norma Beal, Winifred<br />

Churchill and Faith Vigurs as Leand-<br />

er. Daphne and Chloe, other children;<br />

Jane Richie, as Pandora and June<br />

Jenkins, as Hope. The wonderful chest<br />

delivered by Hermes was the subject<br />

of the dialogue carried on cheifly by<br />

Pandora and Epimetheus until the op­<br />

ening of the chest finally revealed<br />

Hope. Little June made an appeal to<br />

each heart in the audience as she kiss­<br />

ed the children who released her from<br />

the chest.<br />

Miss Rose Davison danced very<br />

gracefully to an etude. She seemed to<br />

enjoy the dance as much as the audi­<br />

ence and gave a very pleasing encore.<br />

In Vertumnus and Pomona, a play<br />

whose characters are taken from Ro­<br />

man mythology the scene was in the<br />

garden of Pomona, a young mymph,<br />

charmingly played by Marjorie Rahl­<br />

son. Constance Johnson, as Antinoe, a<br />

mymph, companion to Pomona, and<br />

Dorothy Foster, as Vertumnus, the god<br />

of Spring blossoms and ripening fruit,<br />

completed the cast of this delightful<br />

piece.<br />

At the conclusion of the program<br />

Mrs. L. S. Bayliss, president of the<br />

Brewster Garden Club, very graciously<br />

expressed thanks to the many people<br />

who had contributed to the success of<br />

the entertainment and announced that<br />

tea would be served in the garden<br />

house. There Mrs. Norborne P. Gall­<br />

ing poured tea, while Mrs. Warren,<br />

Miss Edith Warren and Mr. Robert<br />

Warren served fruit punch, and oth­<br />

er ladies of the club passed sandwiches<br />

and cakes. The company enjoyed very<br />

much strolling in the garden and ex­<br />

changing bits of conversation.<br />

LEGION LINGO<br />

Argonne's corps of convention rep­<br />

resentatives returned last Saturday<br />

with various and interesting happen­<br />

ings of the three days spent in Brook­<br />

lyn and strange as it may seem'none<br />

lost their way among Brooklyn's net<br />

work of streets.<br />

All of Putnam's delegation were<br />

quartered in the St. George and when<br />

Assemblyman Stephens and County<br />

Judge Bailey sent out a chow call for<br />

dinner on the St. George roof every­<br />

one answered "at the double." It was<br />

a real treat for the delegates and we<br />

dare say Mai and Jim enjoyed being<br />

hosts to such a congenial crowd where<br />

they could be themselves without being<br />

censured for having a good time.<br />

In the parade there were 16 sons of<br />

Putnam in line and as many more who<br />

watched from the side lines.<br />

Commander Belcher of Putnam and<br />

all bis delegates lined up for Dr.<br />

Charles J. Lawrence of Brooklyn, for<br />

State Commander and the doctor won<br />

quite easily.<br />

Commander Blaney of Argonne and<br />

the rest of the Putnam delegates were<br />

in favor of Chauncey Fish for chair­<br />

man of the Ninth District.<br />

The cash bonus fight brought forth<br />

plenty of excitement on the convention<br />

floor and when the smoke of battle<br />

had cleared away those in favor of an<br />

Immediate payment of the bonus won<br />

against strong opposition; so when the<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State delegates go to the<br />

National Convention in Portland, Ore­<br />

gon, they go instructed to vote for the<br />

cash bonus, which again will be the<br />

leading issue at this convention.<br />

The party from Brewster included:<br />

Hon. D. Mallory Stephens, W. B. Town­<br />

er, Mrs. Harold Beal, Com. Blaney.<br />

Harold Beal, Mrs Harold Jackson,<br />

Daniel Brandon. Archie Penny, Samuel<br />

Ledley, Ted Schaefer, Theodore Turn-<br />

rose.<br />

Mrs. Howard Tuttle, Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Karl K. Kernick and Miss Helen Darl­<br />

ing set out early this morning for<br />

Whitesvllle for a visit with Mr. and<br />

Mrs. Cyrus Travis.<br />

WEDDED<br />

Wiltse-Bopklns.<br />

The marriage of Miss Josephine<br />

Hopkins and Mr. Murray Wiltse took<br />

place, August 19, 1932, at Cazenovia,<br />

N*. Y.<br />

Mr. Wiltse, the son of Mrs. Sara<br />

Wiltse and the late Dr. James Wiltse,<br />

is well known to Brewster where the<br />

Wiltse family made their home for<br />

several years. The congratulations and<br />

best wishes of friends are going for­<br />

ward to 365 Earl Avenue, Oneida, N.<br />

Y., where Mr. and rMs. Wiltse are now<br />

at home.<br />

Green-Lewis. -<br />

The marriage of Florence Pauline<br />

Lewis, daughter of Henry Lewis, to<br />

Mr. Emmett Green, both of Brewster,<br />

took place in St. Lawrence church on<br />

Thursday morning, Sept. 1, 1932. The<br />

Rev. Jeremiah J. Quill officiated.<br />

After the wedding ceremony Mrs.<br />

Carl Johnson, the bride's aunt, enter­<br />

tained the Immediate families at a<br />

wedding breakfast. At noon the young<br />

couple dashed away in an auto head­<br />

ed south for Atlantic City and Phila­<br />

delphia. When they return their home<br />

will be in the Johnson apartment on<br />

East Main street.<br />

KISHAWANA KICKS<br />

Reservations for the dinner-dance<br />

tomorrow evening will close this after­<br />

noon so this is your last chance to call<br />

749.<br />

On Wednesday afternoon a party of<br />

ladles from Carmel Country Club and<br />

Gipsy Trail Club were entertained at a<br />

bridge tea at Kishawana Country Club.<br />

The eclipse was most interesting from<br />

that vantage point and all enjoyed<br />

viewing the spectacle through different<br />

sorts of glass and film. Mrs. Raymond<br />

Weeks, of White Plains, who came with<br />

a party of friends'to view the eclipse,<br />

was welcomed by the other star gaz­<br />

ers. Tea was served after the bridge<br />

and prizes were won by Mrs. Garbe,<br />

Mrs. Serrill, Mrs. Livingston, Mrs.<br />

Dounce and Mrs. Merritt.<br />

Low voltage over the electric lines in<br />

the Kishawana area is believed to have<br />

caused by burning out of both the<br />

motors that supply the club with wat­<br />

er. This of all times in the season is<br />

the worst to get a "break" that means<br />

returning home in sweaty clothes. Geo.<br />

Juengst was "Johnny on the spot" in<br />

repairing the spring motor and every­<br />

one hopes that the lake motor will be<br />

running before Saturday noon. At the<br />

time the low voltage was discovered<br />

another condition was also found in<br />

connection with the wiring that leads<br />

many to believe and some are certain,<br />

that the meter on the lake pump was<br />

running constantly whether the switch<br />

was on or not; so for the past nine<br />

years Kishawana has been getting an<br />

extra kick in its electric bills. An ex­<br />

planation of the investigation will be<br />

given at the Board meeting this ev­<br />

ening. The water in the spring is only<br />

sufficient to supply the club with cook­<br />

ing and drinking water.<br />

Another one of those Scotch Four­<br />

somes is on the program for tomorrow<br />

afternoon. The drawing will be held at<br />

2 p.m. and everyone is urgently re­<br />

quested to be at the club as near 2 as<br />

possible. If after reading this notice<br />

you can think to call Mac and tell him<br />

that you will enter and about what<br />

time you will arrive at the club you<br />

will be doing everyone concerned a<br />

great favor. All contestants in Satur­<br />

day's match will be requested to sign<br />

up lor another Scotch Foursome on<br />

Labor Day morning. j<br />

Last week end James J. Hopper,<br />

alias "Illegitimate Joe," won the box<br />

of balls with a net 69 and turned in a<br />

flashy gross 79 to do it. George Juengst<br />

was second. Two ties were played off<br />

from previous Scotch Foursome matches<br />

one a week ago between Dr. Scofleld-<br />

Ives combine and Hopper-Greene was<br />

won by the former pair. Though the<br />

doctor was ill at the time he held up<br />

his end with his younger partner. Last<br />

week end the Dr. R\chie-Hopkins com­<br />

bination lost to the Donley-E. Addis<br />

combine.<br />

Tuesday, Sept. 6, will be Kishawana<br />

Caddies' Day. In the morning twenty<br />

caddies will tee off for a 36 hole tour­<br />

nament, play 18 in the morning, then<br />

take up their knives and forks and<br />

carve out a few pars on a big roast of<br />

beef and after an hour's rest will play<br />

another 18 holes which will be follow­<br />

ed by the awarding of prizes to all<br />

who enter, low net getting first choice.<br />

Those who will compete are as fol­<br />

lows: Dalton Barrett, Harold Utter,<br />

Vincent and Nichols Chirasello, August,<br />

Francis and John Piazza, William Van<br />

Iderstine, James. Francis and George<br />

Reardon, Tttomas and John Green,<br />

Wilson Hinkley, Mathew Fisher, Jr..<br />

Edward Walsh, Robert and Eugene<br />

Blaney, Steuart Jones and Mathew<br />

Larkin.<br />

Excellent Race Program<br />

For Next Monday<br />

Next Monday, Labor Day, at Putnam<br />

Driving and Riding Club Track, Be­<br />

ginning at 1:30 P. M., Horsemen and<br />

Their Friends to Witness Six Big<br />

Racing Events. Red Hot Rivalry<br />

Centered on Handicap Trot and<br />

Pace. Prizes to be Given In Each<br />

Event Watch for <strong>New</strong>s on Special<br />

Purse Meeting Next Week.<br />

Another one of those double feature<br />

days has been arranged by the direc­<br />

tors of the Putnam Driving and Riding<br />

Club for next Monday afternoon. In<br />

making up the program they have con­<br />

sidered both those who like to see 'em<br />

trot and run.<br />

The first three events are trotting<br />

and pacing races and the last three<br />

running races. There will be prizes giv­<br />

en in each event; so the drivers will<br />

have something to drive for besides the<br />

air. The second e.vent is a handicap<br />

affair which has already started ton­<br />

gues wagging as to who will win. Sim­<br />

eon Brady, Jr., of Brewster, has been<br />

give nthe biggest handicap and for that<br />

reason many Brewster horsemen be­<br />

lieve his chances of winning the silver<br />

cup are better than an even money<br />

bet and Wittenberg who is- also-4n the<br />

same event will gladly take the odds<br />

if anybody has nerve enough to just<br />

mention real money.<br />

Here's what's goln* to happen:<br />

Class A Trot and Pace<br />

Prizes—Silver cup, blanket, halter.<br />

Horses—Dean, Wampum, Mr. Dillon.<br />

Handicap B Trot and Pace<br />

Prizes—Silver cup, blanket, halter.<br />

Laurel Gay—Scratch.<br />

Van Todd—20 Ft. Handicap.<br />

Col. Tom Scott—40 Ft. Handicap.<br />

Tramp Brooke—50 Ft. Handicap.<br />

Eileen Directum—60 Ft. Handicap.<br />

Silver Moon—70 Ft. Handicap.<br />

Class C Trot and Pace<br />

Prizes—Silver cup, Blanket, halter.<br />

Horses—Barney Hanover, Enterprlze,<br />

Claudia, Lady Hanover.<br />

Pony race for prize 1-4 mile.<br />

Running race for prize 5-8 mile.<br />

Running race for prize one mile.<br />

Eileen Directum Wins 1st<br />

Race This Season<br />

In the first event, the Class B Trot<br />

and Pace, Eileen Directum, owned by<br />

E. W. Hopkins of Hartsdale, was re­<br />

turned the winner over the field of four<br />

horses. The fastest time was made by<br />

the winner in the third heat 2:16.<br />

William Brundage's Wampum was<br />

the winner of the feature event at the<br />

Carmel race track last Saturday, the<br />

Class A Handicap Race. Whmpum<br />

started from scratch, Dean, which fin­<br />

ished second at forty feet and Mr. Wil-<br />

lon, the third horse from the eighty<br />

foot mark.<br />

Barney Hanover, owned by Jack<br />

Connors, won his second race of the<br />

season, the Class C Trot. He won easi­<br />

ly in the first heat in 2:21%.<br />

Crandell Leads<br />

Carmel Drivers<br />

(by BUI Spain)<br />

Henry Crandell, of Carmel, the<br />

trainer for the W. F. Vail stable, with<br />

half the trotting season over is lead­<br />

ing the Carmel race drivers this year.<br />

Mr. Crandell has so far driven this<br />

season at the local track seven win­<br />

ners, two thirds, and one second, giving<br />

him a percentage of 70.<br />

Crandell's perfection is driving colts.<br />

Young horses seem to go well for him.<br />

His pride is the two year old Worthy<br />

Lassie, whom he recently drove to vic­<br />

tory at the Middletown Pair. Worthy<br />

Lassie won several races at the Carmel<br />

track earlier in the season.<br />

County Health Ass'n. To<br />

Hold Annual Meeting<br />

The annual meeting of the Putnam<br />

County Health Association will be held<br />

at the Memorial Building in Carmel,<br />

Septembc- 15, 1932. at 2 p. m. The<br />

speakers wJl be Mr. George Nelbach,<br />

executive secretary of the State Com­<br />

mittee on Tuberculosis and Public<br />

Health of the State Charities Aid As­<br />

sociation, and Mrs. Simonson, director<br />

of Social Hygiene of the State Depart­<br />

ment of Health.<br />

o<br />

Lou Gehrig, of Yankees,<br />

Visits Bloomersidc<br />

Lou Gehrig, of the Yankees, attend­<br />

ed the masquerade party at Bloomer-<br />

side Wednesday evening<br />

o<br />

Tuesday, September 20. is fall pri­<br />

mary day; so you enrolled voters re­<br />

member you will have a bit of work to<br />

do. Republicans are being warned of<br />

that cocksure attitude they always<br />

take when there is a fight on in the<br />

primaries. Be sure and vote and then<br />

there will not be a single doubt of your<br />

regular candidate, John P. Donohoe,<br />

winning<br />

Plan <strong>New</strong> Theatre In<br />

Town Hall, Brewster<br />

Managers 0*Neil and Marasco of the<br />

Cameo Theatre have made application<br />

to the Town Board of Southeast to<br />

lease the part of the Town Hall used<br />

as a theatre. Their plan, if they can<br />

obtain a lease, is to refurnish and re­<br />

decorate the theatre in a thoroughly<br />

up-to-date fashion, buying comfortable<br />

seats, fine carpet and installing lights<br />

and other decorations to make the<br />

stage attractive.<br />

Probably the majority of taxpayers<br />

are hoping this plan may be carried<br />

out, for the Town Hall in Its present<br />

condition is not an object of commu­<br />

nity pride or interest, making little re­<br />

turn on the investment. Of course the<br />

"lower hall" which serves in turn danc­<br />

ers, card players, suppers, voters and<br />

litigants in justice court, would not<br />

be involved in the plan for a new thea­<br />

tre, so it is quite unlikely the taxpay­<br />

ers would be in any way inconvenienc­<br />

ed. On the contrary the taxpayers<br />

should benefit, for Messrs. O'Neil and<br />

Marasco are willing to pay a reason­<br />

able rent. }<br />

The clubs or,dramatic societies who<br />

may wish to use the theatre for bene­<br />

fit i>erformances will fund Messrs.<br />

O'Neil and M:\rasco ready to accommo­<br />

date them, other points of Interest<br />

may arise before the next meeting of<br />

the Town Board. Those who have com­<br />

mented on the plan consider it, a<br />

splendid opportunity for the Town to<br />

improve its property in a most desir­<br />

able way. to make an asset of a lia­<br />

bility.<br />

What can be done with the Town<br />

Hall? may be answered and speedily<br />

as soon as the details can be agreed<br />

upon.<br />

o<br />

I. O. O. F. Clears<br />

$50 On Show<br />

With tickets, selling as low as forty<br />

cents and the weather eighty plus in<br />

the shade and still higher in the Town<br />

Hall, last week Thursday and Friday<br />

evening, the net result of "Aren't We<br />

All." was remarkable at $50.<br />

Certainly and of course it does seem<br />

like a lot of trouble for the amount<br />

earned considering the temperature of<br />

back stage which can only be judged<br />

by the beads of perspiration on Harry<br />

Thorp's forehead and the frequent<br />

rubbing of Edward Hancock's brow, two<br />

of the gentlemen who worked hard for<br />

the fifty bucks, both on and off the<br />

stage.<br />

The show did one thing if nothing<br />

else and that was another opportunity<br />

for those of different races and creeds<br />

to enjoy working together.<br />

Having taken a part in the show we<br />

are going to say it was good anyway.<br />

We know for an actual fact that Tom<br />

Toy who took the lead started his<br />

make-up at 6:30, finished a half hour<br />

later and then assisted in making up<br />

any kind of character that stood still<br />

long enough for him to powder and<br />

paint. Miss Taylor, the coach, who<br />

hailed from Athol, Mass., was a mere<br />

youngster In her chosen career, but<br />

with Leonard Ryan, Marion Fenaugh-<br />

ty, Minnie Purdy, Mrs. Jack McDon­<br />

ald and a whole cast of former B. H. S.<br />

dramatic players she was able to re­<br />

turn with a fair week's salary and<br />

show her company that she could make<br />

a dollar in the hottest, most ill ven­<br />

tilated town hall in <strong>New</strong> England.<br />

Of the two nights, Thursday was hot­<br />

ter by, we were going to say degrees,<br />

but if you were close enough to see the<br />

perspiration—sweat come through a<br />

layer of make-up paste on Leonard<br />

Ryan's face you can bet it was hotter<br />

than oh we'll say the Main street<br />

of Danbury on a hot day. Notwith­<br />

standing the heat there was an audi­<br />

ence of more than two hundred and<br />

on the second night approximately<br />

three hundred saw the performance.<br />

One of the high lights of the show<br />

was the girls chorus, dressed in mod­<br />

est costumes. Their voices were strong,<br />

full of pep and their dance steps show­<br />

ed marked sense of grace and rhythm,<br />

Those who accepted their parts and<br />

did their best to help the show along<br />

are as follows:<br />

Thomas Toy, Marion Fenaughty,<br />

Minnie Purdy, Richard Harmon, Earle<br />

Blockley, Leonard Ryan. Charles<br />

Strang, Robert Frost, Gladys McDon­<br />

ald, George McCall and Emerson Addis.<br />

Others appearing in skits were: W. E.<br />

Smith, Gerard Mergardt. John Utter,<br />

George Enright, George Strand, Ever­<br />

ett LaMere. C. A. Hopkins, B. J. H.<br />

Goossen, Foster Garrison. Horace<br />

Genovese. Aaron Fineberg, John Pugs-<br />

ley, John Martin. Edward Hancock,<br />

Louis Sorrentino, James Foster, Clay­<br />

ton Merrick. Norman Kenney, Thomas<br />

Durkin. Clarence Foster. Clarence<br />

Drum, Roy Hancock. Carl Ekstrom. Al<br />

Sinclaire, Coleman Charter, Samuel<br />

Ledley, Mrs. Elsie Secord. Harold Mar­<br />

tin, John Furst, Harry Thorp, John<br />

McDonald. Thomas Piazza.<br />

The girls' chorus was composed of<br />

Marian Kelly, Agnes Ledley, Joan Fe­<br />

naughty, Mabel Holmes, Margery<br />

500 Visit Old<br />

Southeast Church<br />

Eighth Annual Home Coming Service<br />

in Historic Church Brings Many Old<br />

Friends Together. Fanny Crosby's<br />

Memory was Honored by Singing of<br />

Her Hymns.<br />

On Sunday, August 28, the Old<br />

Southeast church was visited by a large<br />

number of people who find special en­<br />

joyment In the annual pilgrimage to<br />

this historic edifice. It is estimated that<br />

500 persons were present. Those who<br />

were unable to enter the church gath­<br />

ered near the windows and so enjoyed<br />

much of the service. The life and work<br />

of Fanny Crosby were presented by<br />

Arthur Billings Hunt, whose singing<br />

has become well known through the<br />

radio. Mr. Hunt played his own accom­<br />

paniment. The program follow:<br />

Doxology<br />

Invocation—Rev. Melvin J. Joachim<br />

Hymn, "Near the Cross."<br />

Scripture Reading—Rev. Murray H.<br />

Gardner<br />

Solo—"Sunshine on the Hill" (Gab-.<br />

riel) Mr. Hunt<br />

Prayer<br />

Hymn, "Jesus is Calling"<br />

Offering<br />

"Fanny Crosby—Her Life and Service"<br />

(with musical interpolations (Ar­<br />

thur Billings Hunt.<br />

Benediction<br />

Rev. Benjamin H. Everitt presided.<br />

This was the eighth annual home<br />

coming service held in this church,<br />

which was erected in 1793, located on<br />

the Brewster-Patterson road five miles<br />

from Brewster village. The hymns in<br />

this service were written by Fanny<br />

Crosby, who was born in Southeast<br />

Parish on March 24. 1820. The house<br />

in which she was born, little changed,<br />

is still standing on the Fogglngtown<br />

road, north of the church.<br />

Mrs. Wells Celebrates ^<br />

Her 82nd Birthday /0


PAGE TWO THE BREWSTER STANDARD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1931<br />

PATTERSON<br />

Mr. and Mrs. William Barclay and<br />

son Kent, of Mt. Klsco, were Sunday<br />

guests at the home of Mrs. Barclay's<br />

mother, Mrs. David Kent, and Kent<br />

remained for several days.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Taylor were dinner<br />

guests last Sunday, of Mr. and Mrs.<br />

E. S. Havilnnd at Interlocken Inn,<br />

Lakevllle.<br />

Mrs. Charles Irish entertained two<br />

tables of bridge at her home last Tuesday<br />

afternoon In honor of Mrs. L. I.<br />

Haynes who Is a guest In town, others<br />

present being Mrs. O. W. Bloat, Mrs.<br />

E. S .Sloat, Mrs. E. S. Haviland, Mrs.<br />

J. E. Kent, Mrs. Towner Kent, Mrs. W.<br />

O. Taylor and Mrs. O. V$. Penny. Refreshments<br />

were served and also enjoyed.<br />

Henry Ballard has just completed<br />

drilling a line well at Lake Candlewood.<br />

William Rutledge has the contract<br />

for a large barn on the Stephens farm<br />

on which work has commenced.<br />

Mrs. Ralph Othouse entertained Mrs.<br />

Oscar Davis and children of Whaley<br />

Lake, Mrs. V. N. Kelley, Mrs. Walter<br />

Moberg and Miss Emma Denton at<br />

dinner one day last week.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ballard and Mr.<br />

and Mrs. J. Richard Turner enjoyed<br />

a motor trip through Westchester<br />

county on Sunday and calling on Mrs.<br />

Cox of Katonah.<br />

The Sunday school and Guild of<br />

Christ Episcopal church held a very<br />

enjoyable picnic last Wednesday at<br />

Kent Falls, 42 being present and enjoyed<br />

the fine auto ride, games and<br />

sports, climbing up the winding pathway<br />

to view the beautiful falls, etc A<br />

bountiful picnic dinner of cold meats<br />

and sandwiches, salads, jelo, pickles,<br />

cake and coffee was also a pleasant<br />

feature and Old and young spent a<br />

very happy day together.<br />

Miss Flora Scaperrotta and Miss<br />

Marjorle Sutton were charming hostesses<br />

last Saturday evening to about<br />

20 girl and boy friends at the Scaperrotta<br />

home. Dancing and games of all<br />

kinds were enjoyed, also refreshments<br />

of ice cream, cake and fruit punch.<br />

Last Tuesday evening seven girl<br />

friends of Miss Agnes Teske gave her<br />

a deightful surprise party, meeting at<br />

the Whaley home and going in a body<br />

to the Teske home. Charlotte Whaley,<br />

Mildred Johnson, Flora Scaperotta<br />

Helen Sutton, Catherine and Mary<br />

Lyden and Helen and Lois Schenck<br />

composed the happy group. Music,<br />

games and ice cream, cake and punch<br />

were enjoyed during the evening.<br />

Miss Florence <strong>New</strong>comb spent several<br />

days last week with friends in<br />

Hartford and <strong>New</strong> London.<br />

The monthly meeting of the Presbyterian<br />

Missionary Society will be held<br />

next Tuesday, Sept. 6, at 3 p. m., at<br />

the borne of Mrs. O. W. Sloat when<br />

Mrs. Alex Mead will be the leader on<br />

"The American Indian,," with Miss<br />

Leone Johnston devotional leader. All<br />

are welcome.<br />

Friday evening, Sept. 9, at fl p. m.,<br />

the P. T. A. will hold an Informal reception<br />

for the teachers at the school<br />

house. All parents and friends interested<br />

in the school are Invited to attend.<br />

Mrs. A. L. <strong>New</strong>comb has been entertaining<br />

her sister, Mrs. U. F. Ax tell, of<br />

Cortland, this week.<br />

Mr. Walter Moberg was heard with<br />

pleasure at the Presbyterian church<br />

last Sunday in the solo "The Name of<br />

Jesus." Next Sunday, Sept 4, both<br />

church service and Sunday school will<br />

be omitted.<br />

Mrs. Charles Slocum of Poughquag,<br />

has been visiting Mrs. D. O. Ludington<br />

and family.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Glover of White<br />

Plains, were guests of Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Towner Kent over Saturday night.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Othouse entertained<br />

Mr. Othouse's parents from<br />

Danbury over the week end.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. George Oogan of <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong>, are spending their vacation here.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. B. Ballard, Carl Ballard<br />

and Irma Cole have been touring<br />

•>-<br />

11th Annual Field Day<br />

Of Cold Spring K- of C<br />

Loretta Council,' K. of C, of Cold<br />

Spring, will hold Its 11th annual Field<br />

Day Sunday afternoon, Sept. 4, at Kenbles<br />

Park, Cold Spring. This annual<br />

affair is looked forward to each year<br />

by the various amateurs of the Hudson<br />

Valley and vicinity. Races open to<br />

all amateurs. The committee predicts<br />

this years event will surpass former<br />

affairs. Entries have been received<br />

from Peekskill, Beacon, <strong>New</strong>burgh,<br />

Poughkeepsle <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City and Paterson,<br />

N. J., the various events arranged<br />

are a baseball game between<br />

Garry of Garrison A. C. and Trinity<br />

Council K. of O, of Beacon, training<br />

their men each evening. Three loving<br />

cups will be awarded in each event.<br />

The races will consist of one half mile<br />

run, 222 yard dash, 100 yard dash. Gold<br />

silver and bronze medals will be<br />

awarded each race.<br />

A concert will be given at 2 p. m.<br />

Entry blanks may be procured of<br />

the chairmen or on the grounds day of<br />

tre affair.<br />

Committee: J. Vincent Ball, chairman,<br />

Joseph P. Shea. Peter McCoffrey,<br />

Joseph Merante, Thomas Etta, George<br />

Tierney, Joseph Deieto, Daniel Downey,<br />

John McMillen, Frank Chlcarella, Leon<br />

Pratatowskie, Dominic Deieto.<br />

Both canned whole tomatoes and<br />

canned tomato juice have all the food<br />

value of the fresh fruit. Preserve plenty<br />

of them; they mean health to the<br />

family.<br />

o<br />

To line the bottom of a cake pan<br />

smoothly trace around the outside of<br />

the bottom of the pan on the lining<br />

paper and cut the paper inside the<br />

line.<br />

through <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State.<br />

• The local fire department held their<br />

annual celebration last Friday in the<br />

form of a clam bake at the Brooksidc<br />

Tea Room in Amenia and had a fine<br />

tinie as well as dinner. There was a<br />

large number attended from here.<br />

At hough the Town Hall was not filled<br />

last Wednesday evening for the fine<br />

concert by Mme. Alix Maruchess, since<br />

music of the highest otfder iseldom<br />

draws a crowd, those present were real<br />

music lovers and enjoyed deeply the<br />

wonderful treat afforded them. Mme.<br />

Maruchess proved herself a skilled<br />

master of both of. her instruments, the<br />

viola and the viola d'amore and gave a<br />

varied program of plaintive airs, stirring<br />

melodies and 16th and 18th century<br />

compositions which held her listeners<br />

breathless and enchanted and called<br />

forth thunderous applause. Her own<br />

charming personality and beautiful<br />

costume with the artistic stage setting<br />

added to the delight and pleasure of<br />

all. She was accompanied by Mrs.<br />

Henry T. Seymour of Towners who is a<br />

sister of Walter Damrosch and herself<br />

a pianist of rare skill and sympathy.<br />

The concert was under the auspices of<br />

the Parent-Teacher Association and<br />

the receipts were about $25.<br />

Mrs. Towner Kent entertained 23<br />

guests at a large bridge party last Saturday<br />

afternoon when five tables were<br />

in play. Punch was served during the<br />

game and ice cream, cup cakes, lady<br />

fingers and coffee at the close. She was<br />

assisted in serving by Margaret and<br />

Barbara Pugsley and Miss Louise<br />

Sterling. Out of town guests were Mrs.<br />

L. I. Haynes of Dobbs Ferry, Mrs.<br />

Elizabeth Gazley of Schenectady, Mrs.<br />

George Ackley of <strong>New</strong> Milford, Mrs.<br />

Enuna Wright of Danbury, Mrs. Wm.<br />

Barcley of Mt. Klsco, Mrs. M. A. Glover<br />

of White Plains, Mrs. D. Mallory<br />

Stephens of Brewster. Mrs. L. F. Beers<br />

of Danbury, Mrs. E. S .Haviland of<br />

Lakevllle, and from this place Mrs.<br />

Arthur Baldwin, Mrs. A. L. <strong>New</strong>comb,<br />

Mrs. W. O. Taylor, Mrs. E. A. Ives,<br />

Mrs. E. S. Sloat, Mrs. Carl Gruelock,<br />

Miss Rebecca Scott, Mrs. O. 8. Irish,<br />

Mrs. David Kent, Mrs. Marion Sterling,<br />

Miss Ethel Towner, Mrs. J. E. Kent<br />

and Mrs. C. W. Penny.<br />

MOST EVERYTHING FOR<br />

Pen, Pencil, Charcoal Pastel, Water and<br />

Oilcolor Painting<br />

BEGGS ART STORE<br />

Expert Picture Framers<br />

17 Elm Street Danbury, Conn.<br />

Louis Sorrentino<br />

37 Main St. Tel. 641 Brewster, N. Y<br />

THE PLACE FOR CLOTHING<br />

Tailoring, Cleaning, Pressing. Repairing<br />

Suit, Pressed 50c Dry Cleaned $1.00<br />

Dealer for the famous International jf<br />

Tailoring Suits Made to Measure .<br />

$17.50 to $36.00<br />

Tbe Lowest Prices in Years<br />

IMPROVED<br />

UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL<br />

SUNDAY I<br />

CHOOL Lesson<br />

(By REV. P. 11. FITZWATER. D, I).. Member<br />

of Faculty. Moody BlbU<br />

Institute of Chtcajro.)<br />

(©. 1832. weetern <strong>New</strong>epaper Union.)<br />

Lesson for September 4<br />

EVILS OF INTEMPERANCE<br />

GOLDEN TEXT—Do not drink wine<br />

nor stronR drink, thou, nor thy Bona<br />

with thee, when ye so into the tabernacle<br />

of the congregation, leat ye die:<br />

it shall be a statute for ever throughout<br />

your generation*.<br />

LESSON TEXT—Isaiah 6.<br />

PRIMARY TOPIC—The Evil of<br />

Drunkenness.<br />

JUNIOR TOPIC—A Wise Man Gives<br />

a Warning.<br />

INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR<br />

TOPIC—Why Obey the Law?<br />

YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOP­<br />

IC—Observing and Enforcing Law.<br />

I. Israel, the Favored Nation (vv.<br />

1-7).<br />

This nation's unique relation to<br />

God is presented under the figure of<br />

a vineyard. Observe:<br />

1. God's peculiar favor (w. 1, 2).<br />

God did for this nation what be did<br />

for no other nation in tbe history<br />

of tbe world. He fenced it when be<br />

assigned the boundaries of Israel's<br />

inheritance. (Num. 84:1-18.) He gathered<br />

eut the stones when the Canaanltes<br />

were exterminated. The choicest<br />

vine planted therein was the Israelitish<br />

nation which had gone through<br />

the disciplinary process in Egyptian<br />

bondage. He built a tower In it when<br />

under David Jerusalem was made Its<br />

capital city.<br />

2. The obligation of tbe nation<br />

(v. 2). The purpose of a vineyard is<br />

to bring forth grapes. The purpose<br />

of God in selecting and blessing the<br />

Israelitisb nation was that it might<br />

bring forth fruit to his glory.<br />

8. It bore only wild grapes (v. 4).<br />

Instead of sweet, luscious grapes, they<br />

bore grapes of a sour and unwholesome<br />

kind. How aptly this symbolises<br />

Israel's life!<br />

4. The desolation of tbe vineyard<br />

(w. 5-7). Since all efforts bad been<br />

wasted, the owner of the vineyard<br />

now resolved to abandon it He purposed<br />

to take away the fences and<br />

leave It exposed to wild beasts, to be<br />

wasted and devoured by them.<br />

II. The Sins Which Brought Ruin<br />

to Israel (w. 8-23).<br />

Tbe causes of tills destruction are<br />

presented under six woes, each woe<br />

pronounced against a particular sin:<br />

L Monopoly and oppression of the<br />

poor (w. 8-10). The crime against<br />

which the first woe is directed hi that<br />

of avaricious grasping after property<br />

which leads to the accumulation of<br />

wealth in the hands of the few. "Joining<br />

house to bouse and laying field to<br />

field" means the sin of tbe greedy<br />

monopolist who buys up tbe bind on<br />

every side and ejects tbe small bind<br />

holder. In tbe agricultural district<br />

it takes tbe form of the "bind grabber."<br />

In the commercial centers it<br />

takes tbe form of tbe big man crushing<br />

out tbe small ones. This state of<br />

affairs met God's judgment In Judea,<br />

as seen in vv. 0 und 10, and one day<br />

it shall do likewise in America.<br />

2. Dissipation (vv. 11-17). Tbe sin<br />

here denounced is drunkenness. Several<br />

features are connected with this<br />

one sin:<br />

u. Drinking made the life business<br />

of some (v. 11). Tbey got up early<br />

and continued until late at night<br />

b. Tbe effort to give then* wicked<br />

business a show of refinement (v. 12).<br />

This is why pleasing music Is heard<br />

In dens of infamy over our bind.<br />

e. Blindness to God's warnings and<br />

judgments (v. 12). Their drinking and<br />

dissipation rendered them insensible<br />

to tbe dealings of Providence.<br />

d. God's judgments for such sin<br />

(vv. 13-17). They went into captivity.<br />

Tbe immediate cause assigned was<br />

ignorance, but it was a willful ignorance<br />

for which they were held<br />

responsible. There was a great mortality<br />

among those who drank (v. 14).<br />

"Hell hath enlarged herself." The<br />

records everywhere show a much<br />

higher death rate among drinking men.<br />

Drinking degrades all classes (v. 15).<br />

& Unbelief (vv. 18. 10). This woe<br />

Is directed aguinst the sinner who<br />

presumptuously plunges Into vice. He<br />

persists in iniquity and scoffs at judgment<br />

This is peculiarly common<br />

among those who go about winedrinking<br />

as a business.<br />

4. Moral confusion (v. 20). This<br />

woe is pronounced against those who<br />

try to adjust moral conditions to suit<br />

their sinful appetites.<br />

5. Conceit (v. 21). The fifth woe<br />

is pronounced against the sin of selfconceit<br />

which holds a false estimate<br />

of human wisdom and acts without<br />

reference to God.<br />

6. Perversion of Justice (w. 22,<br />

28). Tbe sixth woe la pronounced<br />

against unjust judges.<br />

III. God's Treatment of Israel for<br />

Their Sins (vv. 24-80).<br />

1. He stretched out bis hand in<br />

anger against them (vv. 24, 25).<br />

2. Chastised by tbe nations (vv.<br />

20-30). God gave tbe signal and<br />

issued the cull for the nations to<br />

chastise Israel.<br />

GLEANINGS<br />

The first step toward becoming a<br />

gambler is to take just one chance<br />

in a church raffle.<br />

• • •<br />

Some pastors are so busy running<br />

their church they have no time to take<br />

care of the sheep.<br />

• • •<br />

"A umu who Uvea only with himaeif<br />

and for himself is apt to be corrupted<br />

by the company he keeps."—<br />

Parkhurst.<br />

DR. E- N. RYDER<br />

Dentist<br />

Savings Bank Building, Main Street<br />

BREWSTER, N. T.<br />

Hours—9 A JUL to 4 P. ML<br />

Except Wednesday and<br />

Saturday Afternoon<br />

ARTESIAN WELLS<br />

Suburban Water Works<br />

Installed<br />

Drilled Through Earth aad Rock<br />

All Kinds of Pumplnf Machinery.<br />

P. P. BE AL<br />

DR. W. L. SCOFIELD<br />

Dentist<br />

Office Hoars—8 A. M. to 5 P. M.<br />

Telephone 539<br />

18 Park Street Brewster* N. X<br />

**<br />

Brewster Nursery<br />

H. r. HOWELL, MOB.<br />

Landscaping<br />

Nursery Stock Tree Surgery<br />

Peaceable Hill<br />

Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Phone 39-W<br />

House Wiring for Heat* Light<br />

and Power. All Kinds<br />

of Fixtures<br />

W. K. Griffin<br />

Electrical Contractor<br />

Phone 142-J Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Portly & Sinclair<br />

PLUMBING<br />

HEATING<br />

Phones 662 and 281<br />

Brewster. N. Y.<br />

First National Bank<br />

BREWSTER, N. T.<br />

Capital $100,000<br />

Surplus $75,000<br />

Burglar Proof Vault<br />

A modern burglar proof safe<br />

deposit vault has recently<br />

been installed. Boxes rent<br />

for $5 per year.<br />

HENRY H. WELLS, President<br />

J. DOUGLASS HEAD, Vice-President<br />

E. D. BTANNARD. Cashier<br />

DANIEL E. BTANNARD. Asst. Cashier<br />

FLORIART<br />

FOR<br />

Jflotoera<br />

Local - National<br />

and<br />

International<br />

Delivery Service<br />

Phone 343<br />

No. Main St., Brewster, N.y.<br />

CHURCH NOTICES<br />

Christian Science Services.<br />

Services of First Church of Christ,<br />

Scientist, Katonah, N. Y., are held In<br />

church home, The Terrace, off Bedford<br />

Road, Katonah.<br />

Sunday service at 11:00 o'clock.<br />

Sunday school at 0:30 o'clock.<br />

Testimonial meeting every Wednesday<br />

evening at 8 o'clock.<br />

Rending Room open on Tuesday and<br />

Friday afternoons from 2:00 to 5:00<br />

except holidays.<br />

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE<br />

"Man" is the subject of the Lesson-<br />

Sermon In all Churches of Christ,<br />

Scientist, on Sunday, September 4.<br />

The Golden Text is from Isaiah 64:8:<br />

"Now, O Lord, thou art our father; we<br />

are the clay, and thour our potter; and<br />

we all are the work of thy hand."<br />

Among the citations which comprise<br />

the Lesson-Sermon is the following<br />

from the Bible: "The Spirit of God<br />

hath made me, and the breath of the<br />

Almighty hath given me life." (Job<br />

33:4). The Lesson-Sermon also includes<br />

the following from the textzook<br />

of Christian Science, "Science and<br />

Health with Key to the Scriptures," by<br />

Mary Baker Eddy: "The Scriptures Inform<br />

us that man is made in the image<br />

and likeness of God. Matter is not that<br />

likeness. The likeness of Spirit cannot<br />

be so unlike Spirit. Man is spiritual<br />

and perfect; and because he is spiritual<br />

and perfect, he must be so understood<br />

in Christian Science." (p. 475).<br />

Presbyterian Church<br />

Rev. Murray H. Gardner<br />

Sunday Services<br />

10 a. m. Bible School.<br />

11a.m. Morning service.<br />

Old Saint Luke's Church of Somen<br />

Rev. Robert N. Turner, Rector<br />

Every Sunday.<br />

8 a.m. Holy Communion.<br />

First Sunday of each month.<br />

0:30 a. m. Church School.<br />

10:30 a. m. Holy Communion and<br />

Sermon.<br />

All other Sundays.<br />

2:30 p. m. Church School.<br />

3:30 p. m. Evening Prayer and Sermon.<br />

Holy Days.<br />

8 a. m. Holy Communion.<br />

ST. JOSEPH'S CHURCH<br />

Croton Fans, N. Y.<br />

Rev. B. J. Rourke, Rector<br />

Sunday Mass at 9<br />

2nd Sunday at 10:30<br />

ST. MICHAEL'S CHURCH<br />

Golden's Bridge, N. T.<br />

Sunday Mass at 0<br />

ST. JOHN'S CHURCH<br />

North Salem, N. T.<br />

Sunday Mass at 10:80<br />

2nd Sunday at 0<br />

Saint James Church, North Salem<br />

Rev. Robert N. Turner, Rector<br />

First Sunday of each month.<br />

2 p. m. Church School.<br />

3 p. m. Evening Prayer and Sermon<br />

Second Sunday of each month.<br />

0:30 a. m. Church School.<br />

10:30 a. m. Holy Communion and<br />

Sermon.<br />

All other Sundays.<br />

9:30 a. m. Church School.<br />

10:30 a. m. Morning Prayer and Sermon.<br />

Summer Schedule of Masses<br />

St Joseph's Parish<br />

Croton Falls, July-Sept<br />

Sunday Masses<br />

St. Joseph's, Croton Falls, 8 and 11<br />

a. m.<br />

St. Michael's, Ooldens Bridge, 0 a.<br />

m.<br />

Lincolndale School, 7:30 a. m.<br />

St. John's, North Salem, 9 a. m.<br />

Pietjsch'rs Auditorium, Peach Lake,<br />

10:3 a. m.<br />

REV. B. J. ROURKE, Rector<br />

Church of St. Lawrence OToole<br />

36 Prospect Street, Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Rev. Lawrence J. Costello, Rector<br />

Rev. Jeremiah J. Quill.<br />

Sunday Masses 7 a. m., 9 a. m, 11<br />

a, m.<br />

Weekday Mass 8 a. m.<br />

qommunion Sundays. 1st Sundtiy,<br />

Rosary Society, 7 o'clock Mass. Children<br />

9 o'clock Mass. Altar Society.<br />

2d Sunday, Holy Name Society, 7<br />

o'clock Mass.<br />

3d Sunday, Children of Mary 9<br />

o'clock Mass.<br />

1st Friday, Masses at 5:30 and 7<br />

o'clock. Communion also at 6 a. m.,<br />

6:30 a. m. and 8 u. in.<br />

Confessions Saturday afternoon and<br />

evening, 4:30 to 6, 7:30 to 9<br />

Thursday before the 1st Friday, 3<br />

to 6, 7:30 to 9.<br />

Thursday before the 1st Friday. 3<br />

to 6. 7:30 to 9.<br />

Church of St Bernard<br />

Towners, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

Mass every Sunday at 10 o'clock.<br />

Wrap garbage before putting it In<br />

the can and take care that the can Is<br />

covered tightly to discourage flies.<br />

Lawn Mowers<br />

Saws and Other Tools<br />

Sharpened and Repaired<br />

Hand Mowers Sharpened ffl AA<br />

Reconditioned (*Ai<br />

Truran's Repair Shop<br />

148 Main St Brewster, N. T.<br />

TeL 103-W<br />

J. DIAMOND<br />

LADIES and GENTS TAILORING<br />

Pressing JjQc Cleaning $1.00 — also Repairing<br />

Main Street Brewster, N. Y.<br />

SENSATIONAL CUT IN CLOTHING PRICES<br />

The result is a saving to yon of $5.00, $7.50 and as bigb as<br />

• $10.00 on a Suit<br />

Office Rooms For Rent<br />

Office rooms for Rent in Standard Building. Two<br />

on first floor, adjoining room, suitable for law or real<br />

estate office.<br />

Apply at Brewster Standard<br />

Telephone 82<br />

H. E. HAZZARD<br />

General Contractor<br />

Concrete and Masonry Work, Plastering<br />

Grading of All Kinds<br />

Driveways, Swimming Pools and Dams<br />

We Specialize In and Promptly Attend to Estate Work<br />

7 Putnam Terrace Telephone Brewster 86<br />

BREWSTER HARDWARE CO.<br />

W. L. DUFFEY, Prop.<br />

General Hardware<br />

Paints, Oils, Varnishes<br />

Edison Mazda Lamps<br />

Genuine R. C. A. Radiotrons<br />

26 Main Street Telephone 348 Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Safety in Strength<br />

Invest your surplus cash in<br />

Guaranteed First Mortgage<br />

Certificates<br />

5 o<br />

from day'of purchase<br />

$50., $100., $500., $1000., $5000.<br />

Mail coupon to<br />

Westchester Title and Trust Co.<br />

White Plains. N. Y.<br />

Capitol and Surplus<br />

4,000,000.<br />

COUPON.<br />

Without obligation, please send me information<br />

about your Guaranteed First Mortgage Certificates.<br />

Signed<br />

Address<br />

-%


FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1932 THE BREWSTER STANDARD PAGE THREE<br />

Designers Are in a Mood for Capes<br />

Bv CHERTF, NICHOLAS<br />

OT to be cape-conscious is not to<br />

N know fashion as Is at this very moment<br />

and as it will be this comlDg fall<br />

and winter. Everything from suits to<br />

evening gowns is being caped in one<br />

way or another. If the cape is not an<br />

actual part of the dress, as it is in so<br />

many instances, then it is sure to be<br />

one of those cunning little separate<br />

affairs made of velvet or silk or lace,<br />

or "what have you," for designers are<br />

conjuring these graceful shoulder out<br />

of most any medium.<br />

These versatile capes are adding a<br />

genuine note of Interest to the new<br />

modes for they offer unlimited possibilities<br />

in the field of design. Whether<br />

it be for the sports outfit or the<br />

afternoon costume or for wear during<br />

the formal evening hour the cape motif<br />

is made to lend Itself to the mood<br />

and the occasion.<br />

At all evening galas In Paris capes<br />

galore are to be seen, some half-jacket<br />

and some half-scarf and others Just<br />

capes pure and simple. And then<br />

there's Hollywood, our own mecca toward<br />

which all eyes turn to see fashions<br />

at their best There Is no doubt<br />

about the reign of the cape vogue in<br />

that style center. Most any day you<br />

are apt to meet pretty Rochelle Hudson,<br />

she of the smiling countenance<br />

who is waving such a joyous salute In<br />

the picture, strolling on the boulevard<br />

in her youthful looking three-piece costume,<br />

with Its Jaunty little cape and<br />

its printed blouse, Its colorful belt<br />

and tie.<br />

And there's Julia Hayden a bit further<br />

on, tastefully gowned as the illustration<br />

to the rlfrht reveals her, all<br />

SMART HANDBAGS<br />

in (in mi \K lidi. AN<br />

Those veij tine old fabrics Unit<br />

used to be seen in custom-made English<br />

riding hublis ure being presented<br />

by Important designers in coats and<br />

suits, bats, handbags, and footwear<br />

for summer. Hib-cord. as it is called.<br />

is a tine, softly land no us weave of<br />

extreme sturdlm-st. It is proving an<br />

ideal medium for pocketbooks and<br />

handbags, litre tU*o is a trio of town<br />

and country handbags of sepbyr and<br />

durene which go equally well with<br />

suits or sports clothes.<br />

Perforated Slo—<br />

Perforated white buck is going to<br />

be one of the smart and comfortable<br />

•hoe materials for summer sports.<br />

ready for a shopping tour. Brown<br />

and white print fashions her Jacket<br />

dress, which takes on a most convincing<br />

note of chic in that It flaunts a<br />

little print-lined brown velvet cape<br />

with a velvet belt to match. By the<br />

way, It Is worth while to keep tab of<br />

the many attractive velvet "sets"<br />

which complement the new costumes.<br />

It Is very stylish to wear a girdle or<br />

belt of velvet to match one's hat<br />

Charming threesomes are also made<br />

up of chapeau, cape-wrap and girdle,<br />

all of the same material, preferably<br />

velvet<br />

As to evening capes there Is no end<br />

to the procession. The prettily frivolous<br />

little ruffled fancy cape pictured<br />

in the center is entirely of taffeta silk.<br />

There is just enough protection about<br />

It to serve for a midsummer evening,<br />

and ns to "looks" It Is without doubt<br />

a prize-winning number. No one who<br />

knows bow to sew ought to be without<br />

one of these pretty shoulder wraps,<br />

for It's no trick at all to make one out<br />

of a yard or so of silk.<br />

At fashionable midnight gatherings<br />

one sees such beguiling capes as these<br />

—a ruby red velvet model with a single<br />

scarf end thrown over the right<br />

shoulder; white satin made circular*<br />

cut and bordered with white ostrich;<br />

pink taffeta outlined with a niching<br />

of the same; white transparent velvet<br />

worked with rhlnestones; many of<br />

white ermine.<br />

Autumn days will witness bevies of<br />

novel fur capes for detachable or rather<br />

separate fur pieces will be played<br />

up in great fashion during the succeeding<br />

months.<br />

©. 1131. Western <strong>New</strong>spaper Colon.<br />

FABRICS APPEAL<br />

IN FALL STYLES<br />

Fabrics are the things that make a<br />

strong appeal to the fall styles. There<br />

seems to have been a concerted effort<br />

to give them a quality value. In addition<br />

there is an eutertuWilng topsyturvydom<br />

about them—even more exaggerated<br />

than it was In spring. Wools<br />

look like crepes, and crepes like wools,<br />

while velvets have so changed their<br />

complexion as to be barely recognizable.<br />

Bagbeera velvet rich and deep<br />

In tone and having practically no pile,<br />

Is being widely used. By contrast<br />

there is a new velvet with a heavy<br />

pile that is pressed In such manner<br />

that it looks like a bunny's fur. Not<br />

so long ago we began to hear the<br />

word "croquignol" (a kind of small<br />

curly cuke) used to connection with<br />

crepes. It described then- crinkly surface.<br />

This season satins are going<br />

"croquignol." In fact there are all<br />

sorts of new crinkles and wrinkles to<br />

crepes, satins and velvets; crinkled<br />

velvet Is a luscious thing to behold.<br />

Perfumed Hosiery <strong>New</strong><br />

Delight for Madame<br />

Perfumed Hosiery is the newest<br />

thing offered milady. And those scented<br />

with narcissus are the favorites.<br />

The Commerce department reported<br />

that in a recent test four pairs of hose<br />

were shown to 20 women—one Just as<br />

it came from the factory, and three<br />

others scented very faintly.<br />

The perfume was so faint that only<br />

6 per cent consciously noticed it, but<br />

60 per cent said they liked the narcissus<br />

pair best. Twenty-four per<br />

cent chose the pair perfumed with a<br />

fruit mixture; 18 per cent picked those<br />

scented with sachet.<br />

Co*U With Scarfs<br />

Some of the new coats are sold<br />

with two scarfs—one to plain color<br />

to match the coat, the other in dots<br />

or figures. The idea is good.<br />

Offers Credit Plan For<br />

<strong>New</strong> England Farmers<br />

Announcement was-made by Representative<br />

Robert L. Bacon that a petition<br />

is in process of formulation for<br />

submission to the Reconstruction France<br />

Corporation providing for the<br />

creation of a Regional Agriculture<br />

Credit Corporation In the First Federal<br />

Land Bank District. This statement<br />

was made following conversation had<br />

by W. Kingsland Macy and Representative<br />

Bacon with members of the Reconstruction<br />

Finance Corporation, to<br />

whom they emphasize the need, particularly<br />

in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State, of such a<br />

farm credit corporation.<br />

State Commissioner of Agriculture<br />

and Markets Charles H. Baldwin, after<br />

conference with Representative Bacon,<br />

made the following statement as to the<br />

origin and purpose of the plan:<br />

"This movement inaugurated by Representative<br />

Bacon offers a tremendous<br />

potential value to farmers throughout<br />

the First Land Bank District, and particularly<br />

to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State. Under the<br />

proposed set-up the Regional Agricultural<br />

Credit Corporation would be<br />

created with a capital of not less than<br />

$3,000,000, to be subscribed entirely by<br />

the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.<br />

This Regional Corporation, under<br />

the provisions of the act, would be<br />

authorized to make loans and advances<br />

to farmers throughout the district for<br />

agricultural purposes, including the<br />

orderly marketing of their produce and<br />

the extension of necessary credit facilities<br />

therefor. Such Agricultural Credit<br />

Corporations are already to process of<br />

organization to eight of the Land Bank<br />

Districts, and definitely projected to<br />

two others, leaving out so far only two,<br />

of which the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> District is one.<br />

"This set-up would provide an immediate<br />

accessibility to agricultural<br />

Breeds Chickens<br />

To Resist Typhoid<br />

Six year's selection and breeding of<br />

chickens that are resistant to fowl typhoid<br />

has reduced the percentage of<br />

dead chicks, inoculated with the disease<br />

germs, from 39.8 per cent to the<br />

first generation down to 9.4 per cent<br />

to the fifth generation, while the losses<br />

to non-resistant flocks used for comparison<br />

ranged from 93.2 per cent down<br />

to 85 per cent to the same number of<br />

years and generations, W. V. Lambert<br />

of Iowa State College reported to the<br />

credit funds, which if available before<br />

the peak of the crop movement, will<br />

stave off serious losses to farmers to<br />

various lines of production. <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

State alone, to this district, which also<br />

includes all the <strong>New</strong> England States<br />

and <strong>New</strong> Jersey, ranks fifth to the farm<br />

value of crops and livestock to all the<br />

Unltel States. In hay, buckwheat and<br />

small fruits it ranks first; it is second<br />

to potatoes, apples and grapes.<br />

"As an instance of the vital necessity<br />

for such an agricultural credit<br />

medium to this land bank district, Representative<br />

Bacon cited the plight of<br />

the potato farmers to his own county<br />

of Suffolk. He feels that if this corporation<br />

were now in operation these<br />

farmers would be able to apply to It<br />

successfully for aid to marketing their<br />

crop to an orderly way. This Is merely<br />

one illustration of the many services<br />

that could be rendered and are<br />

greatly needed."<br />

To complete the plans already under<br />

way and to sign the formal petition<br />

to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation<br />

a meeting will be held In<br />

Commissioner Baldwin's office in Albany<br />

on Tuesday.<br />

International genetics conference at<br />

Cornell University.<br />

In the experiment, Dr. Lambert inoculated<br />

seven-day-old chicks with the<br />

fowl typhoid germ and selected breedtog<br />

stock from the chicks whose families<br />

gave the highest resistance. Some<br />

inbreeding was done. Records of mortality,<br />

kept until the chicks were 21<br />

days old, showed that most of the<br />

chicks which failed to survive from the<br />

selected strains died on the eighth day<br />

after inoculation and most of the<br />

chicks from the unselected flock died<br />

on the fifth day after inoculation.<br />

Observations of 1,568 chicks of four<br />

different breeds and from two strains<br />

of a single breed, showed the following<br />

mortality percentages: White leghorn<br />

87.7, white leghorn 865, white Plymouth<br />

rock 79.7, white wyandotte 93.4,<br />

and Rhode Island red 94.4. The differences,<br />

according to Dr. Lambert, probably<br />

represent strain resistance rather<br />

than breed resistance.<br />

Crosses between the selected and unselected<br />

stock show that the male as<br />

well as the female transmits resistance<br />

to the disease. Back crosses, he says,<br />

indicate that more than one factor is<br />

responsible for developing resistance<br />

dnd that continued investigation is<br />

necessary to establish the genetic behavior<br />

of these disease resistant factors.<br />

Where is the old 3-cent piece? Its<br />

coinage began back to 1851 and it went<br />

out of existence to 1889. They may<br />

have to be revived to pay for the 3-cent<br />

stamp.<br />

The old fashioned demagogic politician<br />

who used to rail at the railroads<br />

until he about destroyed that institution<br />

is now getting ready to start to<br />

on the telephone and power companies.<br />

In time he hopes to make a complete<br />

wreck of things.<br />

Hunting Is Fine Sport—<br />

But not all Hunters are Sportsmen.<br />

POSTED LAND<br />

protects the property owner to some extent from<br />

stray bullets and damage to fences and fields.<br />

Order at the Brewster Standard cloth signs<br />

printed in accordance with the rules of the Consevation<br />

Commission.<br />

Post your land before the hunting season<br />

opens.<br />

Tel. 82 Brewster<br />

. ..,* -<br />

SELL US YOUR<br />

UNSAFE<br />

FORASMUCH AS<br />

Regardless<br />

of make 01<br />

condition!<br />

MOTORIK<br />

SENSAT<br />

• Over half the cars on the road today are equipped<br />

with unsafe tires—tires that invite disaster. . . . To<br />

help clear the highways of this menace to life and limb<br />

we are shooting the works! During our great Safety<br />

Sale we will allow you the amounts shown below for<br />

each of your old tires, regardless of make or condition,<br />

on the purchase of new Goodrich Cavalier tires. Think<br />

of it. You can save from $6.00 to $16.00 on a set of<br />

new guaranteed Goodrich Tires if you act during this<br />

Sale.


PAGE FOUR THE BREWSTER STANDARD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1932<br />

THE BREWSTER STANDARD<br />

Brewster, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

E. W. Addis Estate, Publisher<br />

Friday, September 2, 1932<br />

Published weekly at Brewster, Putnam<br />

County, N. Y.<br />

Entered'at the Post Office at Brewster<br />

as second class mail.<br />

Putnam County<br />

Supreme Court Calendar<br />

The following civil cases are noticed<br />

for trial at the September term<br />

of the Supreme Court to be held at<br />

the Court House In Cartnel, commencing<br />

on Tuesday, September 6, 1932.<br />

Hon. Frederick P. Close presiding.<br />

1 Sarah Callaway, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Walsh Construction Co., defendant.<br />

George W. Bristol<br />

Jenkins, Dimmick & Finnegan<br />

September 24, 1930<br />

Court-Jury<br />

Action for personal Injuries.<br />

2 Chester Adams, plaintiff, vp.<br />

Daniel E. Kiernan and Frederick<br />

Kempf, Jr., defendants.<br />

Willis H. Ryder Edward A. Conger<br />

June 19, 1930<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages arising out<br />

negligence.<br />

3 Shadrlck Scout, plaintiff,<br />

Edward Betcher and Paul Berens,<br />

defendants.<br />

Willis H. Ryder Isadora Englander<br />

June 22, 1930<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for property damage arising<br />

out of negligence.<br />

4 Grace Irene Seigfried, an infant,<br />

by Daniel L. Seigfried, her<br />

guaiUian ad litem,, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Marco Centofanti, defendant.<br />

Francis C. Dale Daniel A. Dugan<br />

July 11. 1930<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

5 Daniel L. Siegfried, plaintiff,<br />

vs. Marco Centofanti, defendant.<br />

Francis C. Dale Daniel A. Dugan<br />

August 17, 1930<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is to recover damages caused<br />

by the negligence of the defendant.<br />

6 Edward B. Whaley, plaintiff, vs.<br />

George Pape, defendant.<br />

John E. Mack No appearance.<br />

August 21, 1930<br />

Jury<br />

Action—Money judgment for damages<br />

to personal property.<br />

Inquest<br />

7 Ann Crosby, plaintiff, vs. Anna<br />

Gordon, defendant.<br />

Timothy J. Healy John B. Cortright<br />

September 5, 1930<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for recovery of money.<br />

(Continued on Page 6)<br />

Appeal For<br />

Second Hand Shoes<br />

After the death of Mayor George H.<br />

Reynolds, I was asked to succeed him<br />

as Treasurer of the Salvation Army<br />

in this district. We collected $218.00<br />

and as requested forwarded It to the<br />

Salvation Army Headquarters in Yonkers.<br />

Later I wrote Headquarters to find<br />

out how much might be spent in this<br />

district for relief. I find Headquarters<br />

ready and willing to do their share<br />

here.<br />

It seems to me we should be careful<br />

not to have their work overlap the<br />

work done by other relief agencies.<br />

A very practical suggestion has been<br />

made In their letter to me of August<br />

26th. It reads:<br />

"If the Emergency Relief Committee<br />

of Brewster could collect together say<br />

fifty or sixty pairs of old shoes which<br />

could be made serviceable, the Salvation<br />

Army can have the work done<br />

immediately with some local shoemaker;<br />

this would leave the money in the<br />

town and would prepare the children<br />

•for school as well as any other men<br />

•or women who would need shoes. Any<br />

other need that arises kindly let us<br />

"know."<br />

So I appeal to you to send second<br />

hand shoes to my office In the Roberts<br />

Building between the hours of 9 and<br />

-4:30 (Saturdays till 12). At other hours<br />

'shoes may be left at the office of the<br />

Brewster Auto Supply in the Addis<br />

Building. This notice has the approval<br />

of Miss Florence Shove, the Chairman<br />

of the local Salvation Army Committee;<br />

of Mrs. Eliza W Dean, our County<br />

Commissioner of Public Welfare and of<br />

Mrs. Harriett Merrill, our county social<br />

worker representing the State Temporary<br />

Emergency Relief Association,<br />

with which association our local Red<br />

Cross is co-operating in collecting<br />

clothing.<br />

HENRY H. WELLS.<br />

Brewster, N. Y.<br />

August 31st. 1932.<br />

o<br />

Scholarships Won<br />

In Putnam County<br />

CROTON FALLS NORTH SALEM<br />

SATURDAY NIGHT<br />

At The<br />

The EMPIRE<br />

Danbury-Brewster Road<br />

with Jack Prezie<br />

and His Orchestra<br />

Dancing 10 to 1<br />

No Cover Charge<br />

Under <strong>New</strong> Management<br />

Danbury Hardware Co.<br />

Danbury. Conn.<br />

20% to 50%<br />

Reduction<br />

During our<br />

August SALE<br />

Couch Hammocks, Garden Arches,<br />

Arbors, Trellis, Lawn Mowers, Old Hlc-<br />

Following Is the list of high school 1 ; porcn ^ ^ ^ Furniture, Steel<br />

pupils of Putnam county who have *<br />

University scholarships. The hold- Gar * en Tables «* chair6 ' **«* Um won<br />

"<br />

er of one of these scholarships will be brellas, etc. In fact you will find many<br />

enti'.vd to one hundred dollars a year real savings prevail on all lines<br />

for the course while attending any col­ throughout this great Shop. Now Is the<br />

lege in the State of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> approv­ time for thrifty Buyers.<br />

ed by the Regents for this purpose<br />

Clarence B. White. 91.052, Carmel.<br />

Kenneth R. Cornell 87.263, Brewster.<br />

Alieda VanGils, 87.238. Mahopac.<br />

DANJiURr*<br />

Gladys Fasoli, 85.578, Brew6ter.<br />

Beultth F- Nelson, 84.571, Towners. HARDWARECQ<br />

In case any one of these winners<br />

should decline the scholarship, it Is<br />

immediately offered to the next elgible<br />

candidate on the county list.<br />

£49-251 Main St. Danbury, Conn<br />

o<br />

"Things that a fellow thinks don't<br />

amount to a darn, sometimes pile up<br />

Into a mountain of trouble. Just the<br />

other night my wife was working a<br />

crossword puazle and she looked up<br />

and said: "What's a female sheep?"<br />

and I said 'ewe,' and then there was<br />

another big war on."<br />

GOOD SHOE NEWS<br />

FOR MEN<br />

We Have Added a <strong>New</strong> Line of<br />

Men's Oxfords<br />

To Sell For<br />

$3.50<br />

"The Crafts" always considered by the<br />

Shoe Trade as one of the best $5.00<br />

- Shoes on the market.<br />

Square French or Narrow Cap Toe<br />

Lases or Plain Toe Blucher Oxfords<br />

See these new $3.50 shoes displayed<br />

in our North Window.<br />

THE ORIGINAL *•<br />

Fosters Shoe Store<br />

144-246 Main St. Danbury, Conn.<br />

U. S. Shoe Repair<br />

Park Street<br />

August Special<br />

Men's Soles and Heels fl» j or<br />

Women's Soles and Heel* nr<br />

Boys' Sole* and Heels QO<br />

Sale Men's • 4FO A Q<br />

Work Shoes **.W<br />

PURDYS STATION<br />

The St. James Guild will meet at<br />

^SZS^SS^i'-^Sl<br />

of<br />

vs.<br />

tne home of Mrs - Erie of this place has joined the real estate -**««,««« o««f *• a Twte on<br />

firm of Thomas J. Riley with offices at **"•*•* »«*°oi!. *pt 6.<br />

<strong>New</strong> Rochelle. •<br />

Clarence Bergh was taken suddenly<br />

Rev. Raymond S. Hornsby and Rev. ill on Wednesday morning of last week<br />

John A. McDonald will substitute for and was operated on for appendicitis<br />

Rev. Mr. Turner of Sofiiers on Sun­ early in the afternoon at the Mt. Kisco<br />

days. Sept. 4 and 11. Mr. Turner ac­ Hospital. At this writing his condition<br />

companied by his-stater and her hus-*" is fine *" which is very graitfying to the<br />

,c ""'7 ** 7'<br />

band, Mr. Perry, are taking an auto f<br />

Plains.<br />

Mahopac, during his summer vacation As this game concluded the schedule,<br />

Douglas Cole of Danbury, who has returned home Saturday.<br />

Central stands in third place, having<br />

been spending a few days with his<br />

The three schools of the Central Ru­<br />

Mrs. N. H. Vorls and daughter Mar- won six games and lost four. The<br />

brotner and. sister-in-law, Mr. and<br />

ral District will open on Wednesday,<br />

Jorie, were Wednesday guests of Mrs. Yonkers Bloomer Girls, an all star<br />

Mrs. Raymond Cole, returned home on<br />

Sept. 7.<br />

Meichelbeck of Mt. Kisco.<br />

female team, will oppose Central on<br />

Monday.<br />

the local diamond on Labor Day after­<br />

Henry Oysterbanks visited Mt. Ver­<br />

Mr. and Mrs. P. L Dann and daugh­<br />

Sabbath service will be resumed in<br />

noon at 3 o'clock.<br />

non relatives over the week end.<br />

ter Maude, were Sunday guests of Mr.<br />

the local Methodist church this Sun­ and Mrs. LeRoy Moore of Katonah.<br />

Miss Mary Fuller spent Wednesday day morning.<br />

Evidently the heat of the sun dur­<br />

and Thursday of last week with Mr.<br />

Central A. C. was defeated by the ing dog days is a little more powerful<br />

Ceylon K. Caulfield who has been<br />

and Mrs. Edw. SeBoyer of White<br />

league leading Katonah A. C. at Ka­ than usual. The Democrats are now<br />

employed at Camp Reade near Lake tonah last Sunday by a score of 14-8. claiming Iowa for Roosevelt.<br />

trip to Nova Scotia. Mr. and Mrs. George I. Hoyt and<br />

Mrs Andrew Bteind<br />

T-. . i „« «.,.*<br />

daughter<br />

j„„„i,fll. • daughter Grace, accompanied by Mrs.<br />

p<br />

Octava. of Danbury. former^tcsldents J ^ mQt_<br />

of this Place, called on friends h w l ^ ^ Mr pam)tt,8 nQme ^ Wood_<br />

on Friday. haven, L. I., on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Mr. anil Mrs. Benjamin Eells and Hoyt returned home on Monday acson<br />

and Mrs. Joseph Lyon are spending • companied by Mrs Hoyt's sister-in-law,<br />

a few weeks in Walton. JMrs. Richard Parrott 2nd, and son<br />

.w<br />

SHOWER<br />

and<br />

WEDDING GIFTS<br />

Mrs. J. Roger Brown, formerly Miss!Richard 3rd.<br />

Charlotte Decker, and son, who have| Mr and Mrs Theodore Allen and<br />

been spending a month with Mr. a; daughter Gladys, and niece Miss Alice<br />

Mrs. C. J. F. Decker have returned to Woodin, of Prospect, Conn., were<br />

their home in Panama.<br />

guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burns and<br />

The silver voicedv tenor, Joe White, family from Thursday until Friday af­<br />

radio station artist of MBC, was the ternoon. Miss Freda Burns returned<br />

guest soloist at St. Joseph's church home with them. Sunday Mr. and Mrs.<br />

last Sunday. Among the numbers were .Burns and son Billy, motored to Mr.<br />

"Ave Marie" and "Just for Today." Allen's and Freda returned home with<br />

at<br />

DAHM'S JEWELRY STORE<br />

Main Street Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Mr. White has a very wonderful voice her parents.<br />

and his attendance here was very Erie A. Tucker, sons George and<br />

much enjoyed.<br />

Robert, accompanied by Edward Leg-<br />

Frank Smith spent a few days of his gett motored to Waterbury, Conn., on<br />

vacation visiting interesting places in [Thursday of last week where they were<br />

the northern part of the state. j guests of Edward's parents, Mr. and<br />

Mrs. Everett Studley has been en- j Mrs. George Leggett. They were shown<br />

tertaining Miss Rattle Wood of Pough-! through the factory of the Scovillc<br />

keepsie for several days. [Brass Manufacturing Company which<br />

After next Sunday, Sept. 4, the sum- was most Interesting Edward remained<br />

mer schedule of Masses will end. On with his parents until Sunday when<br />

Sunday, Sept. 11, Mass will be at 10:30 he returned to the home of Mr. and<br />

and on alL Sundays except the second Mrs. Tucker.<br />

Sunday of the month Mass will be at The first North Salem exhibition of<br />

9 a. m.<br />

painting and drawings by artists of <strong>New</strong><br />

An auto driven by George Bendottl <strong>York</strong> and Westchester opened August<br />

and a large truck collided at the Cro- 20, in "Union Hall." Among the artists<br />

ton Falls and Somers cross roads. The exhibiting are Joseph Cummlngs<br />

front wheel of the Bendottl car was Chase, McLelland Barclay, Emily Nich­<br />

broken. None of the occupants were ols Hatch, Emanuele Romane, H. Mag­<br />

Injured.<br />

nus Llndlng and twenty others. The exhibition<br />

under the direction of Edna L.<br />

Michael Furlo Is building his new Ernst Is restricted to about 175 pieces,<br />

home near the residence of William thus permitting a display which Is not<br />

Luther.<br />

overcrowded. As a subject of timely in­<br />

All schools of the district will reopen terest Joseph Cummlngs Chase dis­<br />

for the fall term on Wednesday, Sept. plays a portrait from life of Rln-Tin-<br />

7. A full attendance on this date is Tln, one of the most famous and best<br />

desired.<br />

behaved of motion picture stars who<br />

Mrs. J. Robert Tompkins entertained died recently. The painting has been<br />

her brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs.<br />

autographed In approved style by the<br />

Norman Terry, of Albany on Sunday.<br />

sitter. A great deal of Interest was<br />

shown In the exhibit, both locally and<br />

Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Eells have mov­ otherwise and an unexpectedly large<br />

ed into the house vacated by Mrs. number of people visited the hall dur­<br />

Joseph Lyon.<br />

ing the opening days. The show will<br />

Real estate agent John McLaughlin continue open on Saturdays and Sun­<br />

| Whole, Half or Either End 151b<br />

YOU WILL FIND your nearest First National Market<br />

bountifully stocked with the season's choicest cuts of<br />

Beef, Lamb and Poultry. Today you will find a variety<br />

of prices and many cuts on the market Therefore, we<br />

suggest you visit your nearest First National Market,<br />

where you will be sure to get.the best the market<br />

affords.<br />

FRESH, MILK-FED<br />

CHICKENS<br />

of Katonah, has rented his home there days throughout the fall. No admission<br />

and with his family will move to his is charged.<br />

place on the Croton Falls-Mahbpac<br />

road.<br />

The food sale for the benefit of the<br />

The flower show held under the aus­ library fund held on the lawn of the<br />

pices of the Somers Garden Club at home of Miss Mary Rltch Friday after-<br />

the Town House in Somers last Saturternoon of last week was a most pleasday<br />

afternoon and evening was very ant social and financial success. Miss<br />

successful and well attended. Proceeds Ruth Keeler, chairman of the commit­<br />

are to be given the Somers library. tee in charge of the affair, and Miss<br />

Blue, red and yellow ribbons were Rltch, chairman of the library com­<br />

awarded and all blue ribbon winners mittee, wish to thank all those who<br />

were awarded prizes. The collections helped and also those who showed<br />

exhibited were well worthy of the larg­ their interest by attending and purer<br />

flower show and all who attended chasing the delectable foods. The pro­<br />

felt amply repaid.<br />

ceeds were $72.16. The library is<br />

steadily gaining in the number of<br />

books taken out and has already an<br />

established place In the life and ser­<br />

Broilers liLUL. Fryers<br />

Dine and Dance<br />

vice of the community through the<br />

North Salem-Salem Center Improvement<br />

Society. The library is open on<br />

Mondays from 3 to 5 and Friday evening<br />

from 7 to 9.<br />

3to3 We Know<br />

how to render capable, intelligent<br />

service. Callus for worth-while heating<br />

advice and coal that "makes good".<br />

EATON-KELLEY CO.<br />

Phone 67 or 87 Brewster<br />

^J3urrx^<br />

Residence - 65 PHONE Office -158<br />

A. P. BUDD<br />

Real Estate and Insurance<br />

Lb 25c<br />

FANCY. GENUINE SPRING<br />

Lamb Legs<br />

FANCY, WHITE, MILK-FED<br />

Veal Legs<br />

BEST CUTS OF STEER BEEF<br />

Lb Aver. *<br />

Lb 23c<br />

19<br />

Lb<br />

23c<br />

Lb<br />

Main Stteet Savings Bank Building Brewster, N. Y<br />

Mergardt's Market<br />

Main Street Tel. 110 Brewster. N. Y,<br />

HIGH GRADE MEATS 8 GROCERIES<br />

Rib Roast<br />

BONELESS OVEN OR POT ROAST<br />

Lb<br />

OUR SPECIALS<br />

BONELESS OVEN O<br />

Chuck Roast<br />

Lb<br />

29c<br />

29c<br />

EXTRA SPECIAL Fancy, Frcih Milk-Fed<br />

FOWL<br />

3-3 # Lb<br />

Aver 21c 53c<br />

Lb Aver<br />

POUND<br />

EACH<br />

CORNED BEEF<br />

YOU ARE SURE to notice that our Corned Beef it mildly<br />

cured, tender and free from salty taste. That's because we<br />

take great care in curing Corned Beef in our own scientific<br />

way.<br />

Fancy Briskets<br />

Lean End<br />

Middle Ribs<br />

BIST CUTS<br />

MILDLY CURED<br />

DELICIOUS<br />

HTPLAVOR<br />

lb<br />

lb<br />

lb<br />

25c<br />

21c<br />

17c<br />

^^ FRESH FISH ^^<br />

FANCY, FRESH SLICED<br />

Sword fish lb 19c<br />

SMALL FRESH<br />

Mackerel lb 5 c<br />

FRESH BOILED<br />

Chicken Lobsters ea. 29c<br />

rLOLNUfcR VARIETY<br />

Fillet of Sole K> 18c<br />

FIRST ]\ATIO\AI Srants<br />

Legs of GRADE Spring Lamb 29c lb<br />

Boneless Chuck Rolls 31c lb<br />

Cherry Stone Clams _„. 18 c dozen<br />

SPECIAL NOTICE<br />

Peaches for Canning Next Week<br />

Glass Top Jars<br />

Mason Jars and Jellie Glasses<br />

John McLean Inc.<br />

Store of Quality and Service<br />

Vogue and Bntterick Patterns. Store Hours 8:30 a. in. to 6 p. in. daily<br />

Main Street Danbury, Conn.<br />

/<br />

<strong>New</strong> Fall Dresses<br />

Here are Chic Sport Dresses<br />

for the Miss<br />

• A one piece dress of Angora<br />

Yarn, in brown, red, blue and green<br />

$9.98 and $16.75<br />

A diagonal cashmere dress in natural, blue and<br />

wine. The ideal dress for the college miss<br />

S9.98


IDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1932 THE BREWSTER STANDARD PAGE FIVE<br />

HAPPENINGS<br />

On Monday afternoon at 2:30 St.<br />

Lawrence A. C. will play Dover Plains<br />

on the Electrozone Field.<br />

Sunday church services and Sunday<br />

school will be held at the Presbyterian<br />

church as usual, Sunday, Sept. 4.<br />

Mrs. N. P. Tuttle will entertain the<br />

bridge club on Wednesday afternoon,<br />

September 14.<br />

o<br />

The Red Cross says the need of<br />

clothing for school children is urgent.<br />

Please notify Mrs. Lobdell, phone 81<br />

if you have contributions.<br />

o<br />

This evening is the latest one can<br />

respond to Mrs. McMeekin, phone 749,<br />

for reservations at the dinner dance<br />

at Kishawana, Saturday, September 3.<br />

, o——<br />

Dr. and Mrs. E. R. Eaton are entertaining<br />

Mr. Eastman, editor of the<br />

American Agriculturist. This week end<br />

they are bent on fishing.<br />

o<br />

Rev. Murray H Gardner returned on<br />

Saturday from his vacation at Fort<br />

Covinngton He was accompanied by<br />

his brother, Rev John Gardner<br />

o<br />

Miss Wilhelmina Gabriel, of <strong>New</strong>ark,<br />

<strong>New</strong> Jersey, has returned to her home<br />

after a months visit at the home of<br />

her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Behrend<br />

Goossen, of North Brewster,<br />

o<br />

Enoch Crosby Chapter, D. A. R., is<br />

planning a "Pilgrimage" for Saturday<br />

afternoon, September 17. Further notice<br />

next week.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Behrend Goossen, Sr.,<br />

Miss Mary Slnnott, of White Plains,<br />

Wilhelmina Gabriel and Mr. Behrend<br />

Goossen, Jr., visited In <strong>New</strong>ark, <strong>New</strong><br />

Jersey, on Sunday.<br />

o •<br />

Mrs. Behrend Goossen, Jr., and children,<br />

Behrend, Fred and Dorothy, and<br />

Mr. Hans Sonner are visiting in Lucernc-ln-Malne<br />

until Labor Day at the<br />

summer home of Mrs. E. Koenig.<br />

0'<br />

Mr. Junia Dykeman, of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

City, visited friends In Putnam county<br />

on Sunday and attended the Home<br />

Coming Service at the old Southeast<br />

church.<br />

o<br />

Mrs. Rosetta Brewster Lent, of White<br />

Plains, attended the Fanny Crosby<br />

Service at the old Southeast church on<br />

Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Lent, who was<br />

for many years organist of the Brewster<br />

Methodist church, was greeted by<br />

many old friends. o<br />

Mrs. Howard Tuttle, Mrs. D. E. Stannard,<br />

Mrs. Simeon Brady, Jr., Miss<br />

Lucy Brady, Mrs. T. M. Martin and<br />

Mrs. Philip Beal, Jr... motored to Bennington',<br />

Vt., on Monday and on the<br />

return journey stopped at Williamstown<br />

for dinner.<br />

There was a good company at the<br />

covered dish supper and bridge at<br />

Kishawana Country Club last Friday<br />

evening. Eight tables were in play after<br />

supper, and the prizes were won<br />

by Mrs. T. M. Butler, Mrs. C. Burgess,<br />

Mrs. George Juengst, Jr., Mrs. Joseph<br />

Losee, Mr T. M. Butler, Mr. Alexander<br />

L. Addis, Dr. E. R. Richie and Mr. C.<br />

J. F. Decker.<br />

o<br />

There is bound to be a battle royal<br />

next Sunday afternoon on the Electrozone<br />

Field when the St. Lawrence<br />

A. C. plays Jerry's All Stars of Carmel.<br />

The Carmel team is boasting of<br />

two Brewster boys, Red Cleary and<br />

Raymond Terwllliger who are expected<br />

to score the runs and hit the ball,<br />

while O'Neil attempts to stand the<br />

Brewster batters on their heads. The<br />

locals have given O'Dell one trimming<br />

this year and next Sunday they will<br />

try it again. It is doubtful If they can<br />

turn him back twice as he Is rated as<br />

one of the best amateur pitchers in<br />

the Harlem Valley. There is a possibility<br />

that Jole Scllplno may have something<br />

to say about this before the game<br />

is over.<br />

E<br />

SCHOOL<br />

BUSINESS<br />

WHITE PIJUN6<br />

aittSUwarSaJian<br />

The executive committee of the D. N.<br />

A. will meet at 3:30 p. m.. Wednesday,<br />

September 7.<br />

Mrs. Mary Foster, mother of Henry<br />

Foster, who has been confined to the<br />

house and bed for the past ten weeks<br />

was able to get out on the porch on<br />

Wednesday.<br />

o • -<br />

St. Andrew's Guild is holding a<br />

bridge party in the Sunday school room<br />

on Thursday evening, September 8, at<br />

8:30 o'clock. Admission is 50 cents Including<br />

refreshments.<br />

o<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Helnen, Miss<br />

Florence Shove and Miss Ruth Morehouse<br />

motored to Buffalo this week to<br />

visit Mr. Frank Barrett. They spent a<br />

few hours at Niagara Falls and enjoyed<br />

the spectacle of the Illumination of<br />

the falls at night.<br />

Vail's Vanities At<br />

Vail's Pavilion* Tonisht<br />

The annual Vail's Vanities to be held<br />

at Vail's Pavilion, Peach Lake, Brewster,<br />

N. V., September 2, 1932, is rapidly<br />

reaching the final stages of preparation.<br />

It is expected that the show will<br />

be one of the best ever held under the<br />

auspices of the Vail's Park Association.<br />

The first half of the program is being<br />

given over to an old fashioned ministrel,<br />

the latter part being a series<br />

of skits and novelty dances the costumes<br />

of which were used recently at<br />

the Capitol Theatre. This year show Is<br />

being coached by Elaine Oswald and<br />

Walter Hennlng, musical direction being<br />

under the supervision of Bud Goodsell.<br />

Lighting and sound effects by<br />

WAng Carver. The members of the cast<br />

include Adelaide Cavanaugh, Eleanor<br />

. Frawey, Ann Greene. Bert Heath, Ro-<br />

Mlss Margaret Connors was guest of bert K ? Ethel raingt Margaret<br />

honor at a surprise bridge party given M ^ ^ M Helen Pol<br />

by the Other Bridge Chtb at the home L^ R Qrace stemmed, Wynne<br />

of Miss Margaret Hart on Monday afternoon.<br />

Each member presented the<br />

guest of honor with a gift. Prizes for<br />

high scores were won by Miss Margaret<br />

Connors, Mrs. Donald Oothouse<br />

and Mrs. Harold Beal.<br />

Miss Alice Schaefer returned to her<br />

home In Katonah last week after several<br />

months stay at Clifton Springs<br />

where she went for treatment. Miss<br />

Schaefer returned early In the spring<br />

from Tier duties on the Presbyterian<br />

Mission Board in Slam because of a<br />

malarial condition contracted there<br />

from which she Is not completely recovered.<br />

On Wednesday, August 24, H. H.<br />

Wells attended the 62nd reunion of the<br />

13th Connecticut Volunteers, Civil War<br />

veterans' organization comprising the<br />

battalion in which his father, the late<br />

Ma lor Frank Wells, was captain of<br />

Company I. The reunion took place<br />

at Savin Rock, near <strong>New</strong> Haven. Mr.<br />

Wells Is now secretary of the organization<br />

and doing much to keep active<br />

the society which his father helped<br />

to form.<br />

o<br />

It has been announced that registrations<br />

for Marymount Day School, Tarrytown,<br />

N. Y>—Kindergarten. Junior<br />

aind Senior Departments—will commence<br />

on Thursday, September 8, in<br />

the Main Building, Wilson Park. The<br />

plan of study has been arranged to<br />

include not only the usual course of<br />

studies, but attention will be directed<br />

to choral work, diction, design and<br />

craftwork. Provision has also been<br />

made for organized sports and games<br />

for all departments.<br />

o<br />

A good suggestion has been made by<br />

the Brewster Lions Club to the Village<br />

Board which briefly requests that a<br />

sign placed on Main street directing<br />

the public to the U. S. Post Office on<br />

Progress street, would relieve a lot of<br />

verbal directing and speed up both<br />

pedestrian and auto traffic. There Is<br />

no question but thr.t our post office<br />

is a sort of hidden door trick and only<br />

if a stranger is an expert magician<br />

can he or she find it after asking the<br />

first ten people they meet.<br />

o——<br />

The Woman's Christian Temperance<br />

Union -held a successful luncheon<br />

on Tuesday at the home of the president,<br />

Mrs. J. Edson Fowler, 18 Carmel<br />

avenue. The weather was Ideal and the<br />

luncheon was served on the spacious<br />

veranda. The proceeds will be devoted<br />

to carrying out the plans of the society.<br />

Mrs. George W. Dobbs, Recording<br />

Secretary, and Mrs. James S. Stewart,<br />

Corresponding Secretary, of the Vonk-<br />

ers Union, drove up with a party of,<br />

friends to enjoy the occasion,<br />

o<br />

Brewster Odd Fellows Lodge report a<br />

net profit of $50.00 realized from the<br />

presentation of the musical comedy<br />

show, "Aren't We All," which played<br />

before a well filled house In the Brewster<br />

Town Hall last Thursday and Friday<br />

evenings. The committee in charge<br />

of arrangements as well as the officers<br />

and members of the lodge wish to take<br />

this opportunity to express their Kincere<br />

appreciation to all the members<br />

of the cast and to all those in the<br />

community who gave their whole hearted<br />

support to make the show a success<br />

and are very grateful to the editors<br />

of this column who generously<br />

gave so much time and space in acquainting<br />

the public with the members<br />

of the cast and the type of show in<br />

which they had a part.<br />

HURRY!<br />

A few more of these wonderful<br />

Kapok (silk floss) Mattresses Left<br />

GET YOURS NOW!<br />

Goossen-Wilkinson Co., Inc.<br />

92-94 Main St. Telephone 379 Brewster, N. Y.<br />

A<br />

Fine Furniture at Warehouse Prices<br />

Stumpf, Evelyn Torpey, Eleonor Wllkoc,<br />

R. Cunningham, Wm. Glessen,<br />

Ralph Juengst, Wm. Kenney, Harold<br />

Miller, Russell Moody, Robert Polyc,<br />

Alex Stelnmetz, John Wheatley, August<br />

Wllkoc, Robert Wllkoc, Ed Zlkmund.<br />

Master of Ceremony, Robert W.<br />

Black. End Men, James Freaney, Walter<br />

Henning, Edward Mann, William<br />

Oswald, Harry Payne, John Tlenken.<br />

o<br />

"Bright Sayings" From<br />

A. Danbury Boy<br />

In the Dally <strong>New</strong>s of Monday, August<br />

20, there appeared under "Bright<br />

Sayings" the following:<br />

I took Johnny to his first parade. He<br />

watched the band and the Boy Scouts<br />

pass, with much interest. When the fire<br />

engines came into view, he exclaimed:<br />

"Oh, Is there going to be a fire too?"<br />

EMILY KERNICK,<br />

80 Garfield Ave., Danbury, Conn.<br />

• o<br />

Mrs. M. A. Park, of Leonla, N. J.. Is<br />

visiting relatives and friends In town,<br />

o<br />

Mrs. James Wiltse Is spending the<br />

month at the family homestead in Constableville,<br />

N. Y. Her post office box<br />

is 365.<br />

Mrs. C. Ralph Dlehl returned on<br />

Wednesday from <strong>Northern</strong> Westchester<br />

Hospital. Her rapid recovery Is very<br />

gratifying to her family and friends,<br />

o<br />

Mrs. George Schneider, who is convalescing<br />

from an operation at Danbury<br />

Hospital, was able to sit up on<br />

Thursday. She Is Improving very satisfactorily.<br />

s — o<br />

A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Horace Bullock at the Danbury Hospital<br />

on September 1. Mrs. Bullock before<br />

her marriage was Miss Elizabeth<br />

Higson.<br />

o<br />

Howard Tuttle and Alex Addis who<br />

have migrated to the Hatch Bros,<br />

camps on Lake Champlain, near Willsboro,<br />

expect to return this evening,<br />

but If they don't return until Saturday<br />

afternoon no one will be surprised.<br />

Calling"<br />

Millar<br />

Novelty Shop<br />

Opp Railroad Station<br />

— For —<br />

School Supplies<br />

Big Values in<br />

Fountain Pens<br />

Pen and Pencil<br />

Sets<br />

At 50 Cents<br />

Phone 590<br />

Anderson Drug<br />

36- 38 Main St. Brewster, N. Y. Phones 391 431<br />

5th Anniversary Sale<br />

Starting Today, Sept. 2nd., until further notice.<br />

$1.35 value<br />

for 49c<br />

Our Big Special<br />

XI.00 Gem Razor 8 Tube Palmolive or Colgates Shave Cream.<br />

F R E E 25c cake Colgates Cashmere Bouquet Soap F R F F<br />

with each purchase of 3 cakes Palmolive Soap for 99c<br />

Palmolive Talcum ICc<br />

Castoria 9Qc<br />

Baby Bottles 3 for 1 Ac<br />

Lactogen ($2.50 reg) $ 2 10<br />

Pepsodent Tooth Paste OQc<br />

Ex Lax ... IQc<br />

Cigarettes, Luckies, Camels, Chesterfields 2-97c<br />

McKesson Milk Magnesia Paste 9Qc<br />

100s-5 gr Cascara Tablets _ 9Qc<br />

100 Hinkle Cascara Compound 9Cc<br />

35 c Flit, 29 c - 60c Flit 49 c<br />

Lucretia Vanderbilt Face Powder, Reg. $1.00<br />

Autostrop Razor, Strop & 10 Blades<br />

Unquentine Soap, Regular 25c cake<br />

Thrift Ice Cream .<br />

Mrs. Clifford. Tuttle entertained at<br />

luncheon and bridge on Thursday at<br />

Colonial Pines. There were four tables<br />

in play and prizes were won by Mrs.<br />

Birdsall T. Manning, Miss Lucy Brady<br />

and Mrs. Fred Swenson.<br />

Imagine Your Embarrassment<br />

WHEN YOU FIND VOUVE<br />

8UILTVOUR 8EAUTIFUU<br />

MEW HOME ON YOUR<br />

ENEMY'S LOT/<br />

IMAGINE YOUR THANKS at knowing our dry cleaning service is<br />

prompt, careful and moderate in price. Let us be your valet and<br />

you'll be well dressed on all occasions. We call for and deliver.<br />

THE TAEOETTS, INC<br />

LAUNDERERS • DRX CLEANERS ' D^ERS<br />

ttftlMg& PHONt v ¥&<br />

Kotex ..<br />

Modcss<br />

Frens Sanitary Napkins<br />

Kleenex<br />

Absorbine, Jr.<br />

Kruschen Salt<br />

$1.35 value<br />

for 49c<br />

...— Both for AQi<br />

Roty. Burns Cigars, 10c 3 for<br />

McKesson Milk Magnesia Pts •<br />

100-5 gr Aspirin (McKesson)<br />

Vapex<br />

Fly Ribbons 3 for<br />

F R E E ' ( " )nc Conrad Razor Blade with each putchase<br />

Don't fail to ask for one—only 500 to be given away<br />

25'<br />

23 c<br />

19 c<br />

19'<br />

98'<br />

69'<br />

25'<br />

29'<br />

49'<br />

69'<br />

10'<br />

MEN<br />

Walk Over Oxfords... $6.00<br />

Oxfords and Work Shoes $2.45 $2.95 $3.45<br />

LADIES<br />

Polly Preston's Oxfords . $3.95<br />

Pumps and Oxfords $2.95 $3.19<br />

CHILDREN<br />

Pumps and Sandals $ 1.19 $1.39 $2.19<br />

Men's work socks, fancy socks, shirts, neckties, suspenders, etc.<br />

Ladies housedresses, gowns, underwear, gold stripe silk stockings<br />

Kotex 25c<br />

NOTIONS OF ALL KINDS<br />

The Margaret Store<br />

90 Main Street. M. B. Hawkins.<br />

The Brewster Leading Market<br />

Best Service Free Delivery Lowest Prices<br />

When you buy here you buy the best and in the<br />

long run you pay less than elsewhere, for our<br />

meat is always trimmed of all surplus fat and<br />

bone before weighing and our weights and<br />

measures are always correct.<br />

Native Broilers 30c<br />

Leg Lamb *0c<br />

Fresh Shoulder ... . 10c<br />

Fresh Ham 15c<br />

Shoulder Veal 1**<br />

Fresh Plate Beef 8c<br />

Fresh Killed Fowl 25c up<br />

Smoked Ham 18c<br />

Smoked Shoulder 10c<br />

Bacon, Strip 18c<br />

Pot Roast 10c up<br />

Fresh Ground Beef 18c<br />

Prime Rib Roast 28c<br />

Special Steak 18c<br />

Also fine line of Fresh Vegetables in Season<br />

Also a full line of Fresh Killed Poultry<br />

The Brewster Leading Market<br />

R. SANTORELLI. Prop<br />

68 Main Street<br />

Phone 76 Brewster<br />

c<br />

READING NOTICES<br />

A. P. Budd, Insurance. Real Estate.<br />

FOR SALE—Alberta peaches, 60c a<br />

I basket. Phone 39-W or 315 Brewster.<br />

TO RENT—5 room house on Marvin<br />

jave. Inquire 46 Marvin Ave. Tel 91<br />

Brewster. 16p4<br />

TO RENT—5 rooms — also 4 rooms,<br />

both places have light and water. Dennis<br />

O'Grady. 9tf<br />

TO RENT—House, improvements,<br />

East Branch Ave. Inquire W. M.' Smaller.<br />

19pl<br />

HOUSE TO RENT—6 rooms, improvements<br />

on Center street. Inquire<br />

N. Hancock. I9tf<br />

POSITION WANTED as housekeeper<br />

or housework. Jennie McCabe. Phone<br />

115-J Brewster. !9o9<br />

WANTED TO RENT in Brewster<br />

parage for repair work and used cars,<br />

gas, oil, etc. Phone 2260 Mahopac. 19o2<br />

OFFICES FOR .RENT—2 connecting<br />

rooms in Standard Building ground<br />

floor. Formerly law offices. Apply at<br />

Brewster Standard. Phone 82 Brewseer.<br />

Fancy Groceries, Fresh Fruits and<br />

Vegetables. Orders called for and delivered.<br />

Holmes' Store, 179 East Main<br />

St. Tel. 143 Brewster.<br />

FOR SALE—White or Buff Mimeograph<br />

paper in stock 14"x8!£", other<br />

Colors by special order. THE BREW"<br />

STER STANDARD OFFICE. Phone 82.<br />

HORSES BOARDED—Hunters trained.<br />

Box stalls, well ventilated stables.<br />

Hollybrook Farms. Phone 572 Brewster.<br />

19o4<br />

JAMES SNIDERO. General Truck*<br />

ing. Sand and Gravel Delivered. Phone<br />

402 Brewster or Address P. O. Boa<br />

303, Brewster. 48tf<br />

FOR SALE—Seasoned hard wood,<br />

good quality, $12 per cord, delivered any<br />

length. Apply to George Strand, 22<br />

North Main St. Phone 518 Brewster. •<br />

Thiebaut's wallpaper, Columbia<br />

shades and draperies made to order.<br />

GOOSSEN WILKINSON COMPANY,<br />

INC. Tel. 379. 19ol<br />

" ROASTING CHICKENS FOR SALE<br />

—Live weight 25 cents lb. Herman<br />

Blache, Tilly Foster-Dykemans Road.<br />

Phone S8-M Brewster. 17p3<br />

FOR AUTOMOBILE LIABILITY,<br />

FIRE AND THEFT INSURANCE<br />

See Leon S. Mygatt, Putnam County<br />

Savings Bank Building. Tel. 164 Brewster.<br />

45tf<br />

TAXI SERVICE AND TRUCKING<br />

Prisco Bros, taxis take you any time<br />

anywhere. Their parlor bus carries 18<br />

persons. Trucking service a specialty.<br />

Telephone 322 or 2-R Brewster, N. Y.<br />

FOR RENT—4-6 room*, cellar, garage<br />

and big porch. Furnished or unfur<br />

nished. Also 3 furnished rooms, KMsonable.<br />

Blumlein, Sr. Daisy Lane,<br />

Croton Falls. 9tf<br />

FOR RENT OR FOR SALE—House<br />

wth garage, all improvements, on<br />

Peaceable Hill Road, Brewster. E. A.<br />

Hanna, 132 Page Ave., Yonkers, N. Y.<br />

16p3<br />

LOST—COLLIE PUPPY<br />

Reward. Four months, white breast and<br />

collar, short brown hair, tail white,<br />

answers name of Tip. Phone Brewster<br />

609 oi Standard.<br />

20 ROOM HOTEL ON STATE ROAD<br />

near Brewster, producing income at present,<br />

for sale for $15,000 with small cash<br />

payment. J. E. Merriam, iMt. Kisco.<br />

19ol<br />

FOR SALE—Two ton Dodge truck,<br />

excellent condition. $175.00. Call 245-F-<br />

2 North Salem.<br />

Eleanor Callahan, B. H. S. 32, enters<br />

St. Vincent's Hospital Training School<br />

for Nurses today.<br />

CARD OF THANKS—We wish to extend<br />

our sincere thanks to the neighbors<br />

and friends who so kindly gave us<br />

their symathy and assistance at the<br />

time of the death of our son. Mr. and<br />

Mrs. Erwin Schneider.<br />

CARD OF THANKS—We wish to express,<br />

our sincere thanks to the people<br />

of Croton Falls who gave us then- sympathy<br />

and assistance at the time of the<br />

illness and death of our beloved mother,<br />

Ellea Leonard. Mrs. May Manstrilla,<br />

Marguerite and Thomas Leonard.<br />

WANTED:<br />

A RELIABLE FARMER<br />

With capital or 15 to 30 cows, who is<br />

interested in A 1 milk farm proposition,<br />

three-year lease.<br />

P. O. Box 711,<br />

Danbury, Conn.<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

BREWSTER AND PUTNAM CO.<br />

A specialty for many years<br />

All kinds of properties<br />

EDGAR L. HOAG<br />

320 Fifth Avenue<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City<br />

BUNGALOW FOR SALE—All View<br />

avenue, five rooms, first floor, two<br />

rooms second floor. Lot 50 ft by 200 ft.<br />

Stone foundation, exterior, stucco on<br />

tile. Luterior plastered, cork tile floors.<br />

Village water, electric light, hot water<br />

heat, fire place. Good location. Fine<br />

view. The Putnam County Savings<br />

Bank. Brewster, N. Y.<br />

MALE AND FEMALE HELP for~aU<br />

positions sent without any charge to<br />

Employers. Married and Single larmiers<br />

and Married Couples our Specialty.<br />

Dutchess Employment Office, 257 Main<br />

I Street, Foughkeep&ie N. Y. Phone 1125<br />

Poughkeepsie. Our Service is Free. 16pl


PAGE SIX THE BREWSTER STANDARD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1932<br />

POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT<br />

Pond States Position<br />

To the Voters<br />

Cold Spring. <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />

September 1st, 1932.<br />

To the enrolled Republican voters of<br />

Putnam County:<br />

When a man Is serving in the capacity<br />

of an elected official the bitter<br />

spotliRht of publicity is turned upon<br />

his cAery act. It matters not how conscientious<br />

he may be in his determination<br />

to live up to his oath and perform<br />

the duties of his office to the<br />

best of his ability, some of his actions<br />

are certain to meet with disapproval.<br />

Every man has a legitimate right to<br />

express his own opinions, especially<br />

concerning affairs that are of interest<br />

to the public welfare, and every public<br />

official should be mindful of the sentiment<br />

expressed by the men and women<br />

who comprise the constituency.<br />

Interest on the part of the citizen is<br />

a wholesome sign of desire that laws<br />

should be made and enforced and that<br />

justice should be rendered, and that<br />

the wheels of government should turn<br />

with the maximum of efficiency and<br />

the minimum of expense.<br />

On September 20th, 1932, the enrolled<br />

Republican voters of our county<br />

will select candidates for the various<br />

offices who are representatives of the<br />

Republican Party platform and of the<br />

voters who have pledged their allegiance<br />

to it. The responsibility does not<br />

rest lightly upon all of us. This is not<br />

any time for quibbling, no time for<br />

carrying on our shoulders a chip to be<br />

knocked off, no time for nursing our<br />

personal grievances or private graudge.<br />

We must face the facts that confront<br />

us and face them squarely.<br />

All of us know the unrest that is<br />

sweeping the country at this moment.<br />

So long as people are employed at regular<br />

work and are receiving regular<br />

wages there is seldom a great interest<br />

taken in political affairs. Men are too<br />

busy at these times earning a living<br />

and enjoying life with their families<br />

to apend much time or energy in probing<br />

into public affairs. At these times,<br />

people vote the Republican or the<br />

Democratic tickets as a matter of custom<br />

or heredity, or they don't vote at<br />

all, as the case may be. We didn't have<br />

to be so particular about candidates<br />

. or platforms. But conditions are different<br />

now. For the first time in years<br />

the people of the country are taking<br />

keen interest in public welfares and<br />

when they speak we must heed their<br />

words.<br />

In November, 1929, the voters in our<br />

county were gracious enough to honor<br />

me with the office of District Attorney<br />

and I promised to fulfill my duties to<br />

the best of my ability as I saw the<br />

right. I am here today with no alibies;<br />

you know my record as well as I do<br />

and it speaks for me louder than I<br />

can speak for myself. The District Attorney<br />

is supposed to see that the law<br />

is enforced and that violations are<br />

punished; this I have tried to do. In<br />

most cases I believe I have the wholehearted<br />

support of every decent citizen<br />

in the county who wants to see our<br />

county a clean and law abiding spot<br />

in which.to live and bring up their<br />

children.<br />

Public opinion, in many places, is<br />

arrayed against the forces of justice<br />

when such cases are brought before the<br />

court. The antipathy of the population<br />

against this act has led to antipathy<br />

against laws in general and has<br />

brought about a widespread increase<br />

in crime. Yet, as a sworn public official,<br />

I have been bound under a section<br />

of the Penal Law to do my duty in this<br />

matter regardless of how it might affect<br />

me personally. Many have criticized<br />

me because of the expense I have<br />

been compelled to incur in matters relating<br />

to the 18th Amendment. There<br />

is not one among you who would approve<br />

if I were lax in murder cases, in<br />

robbery, or in violation of the majority<br />

of the laws. But, because I have tried<br />

to do my duty as I promised to do,<br />

there are many who have been violent<br />

in their criticism.<br />

No matter what our private opinions<br />

may be, as good citizens of this nation<br />

we should obey every law as long as it<br />

is on the statute books of the nation.<br />

U there are any provisions there which<br />

are not the will of the majority then,<br />

by action of the people, those laws<br />

should be removed from the statutes.<br />

With such action J am in hearty accord,<br />

if the people so wish it. If I have<br />

made errors during my term of office,<br />

they have been errors of judgment<br />

rather than of intent, and the experiences<br />

I have gained in making them<br />

will enable me to escape such errors<br />

in the future.<br />

I again solicit your support for myself,<br />

but I also pledge myself wholeheartedly<br />

to the support of the ticket<br />

even though you may see fit to<br />

nominate another for the office I seek.<br />

I am a Republican; as such I will work<br />

and vote for every man and every woman<br />

on the Republican ticket.<br />

Not only do we need to stand united<br />

in our county affaire but we must be<br />

together in our desire to secure victory<br />

for the state and national tickets.<br />

Depressed economic conditions always<br />

lead to a reaction against the party in<br />

power. That one fact alone shows us<br />

that the national ticket has a real<br />

struggle on its hands.<br />

If renominated in the primary to the<br />

office of District Attorney I pledge myself<br />

to conduct the office as the citizens<br />

of this county desire it conducted,<br />

—unbiased, efficient and economical.<br />

If I am renominated I will work to the<br />

end for the success of the ticket; if<br />

PRINTED CHIFFON,<br />

CREPES POPULAR<br />

<strong>New</strong> Broken Stripe on Morocain<br />

It Latest.<br />

Printed chiffons and crepes are as<br />

popular ns ever, and designers are<br />

learning danger points. We no longer<br />

see chiffons printed in stripes which,<br />

after all, do not seem to harmonize<br />

with the chiffon texture. A new<br />

broken stripe on cnarocaln is very<br />

popular.<br />

But even the least severe prints are<br />

being made %'ery simply. One very<br />

pretty floral design is being made up<br />

In many models, in black on white,<br />

white on black, or, very popular combination<br />

of the moment, cocon-helge<br />

on nlgger-brown.<br />

Many drosnes show these patterned<br />

materials as the sleeves nnd cowl<br />

front of the ever-present pinafore<br />

dn>ss. This style is too useful and<br />

becoming to die out quickly.<br />

It is good under or without coats.<br />

It can be varied by the wearing of<br />

different sleeves, and it is gentle<br />

to the not quite perfect figure. It<br />

would he a trifle longer than the<br />

very tailored walking dress, but shorter<br />

by several Inches than the afternoon<br />

frock of all-chiffon.<br />

ENGLISH TWEED<br />

Br rilKKlF. NICHOLAS<br />

This typically English tweed suit in<br />

black and white chsck is exquisitely<br />

tailored, l solid of London, court<br />

dressmaker, sponsors it There is a<br />

"touch that tells" In the detail of the<br />

pocket and the design at the top of<br />

the sleeves. White ocean pearl buttons<br />

sewn through with black faille<br />

trim the deep collar of the white<br />

marocain Jumper. A necklace of overlapping<br />

pearl leaves is appropriately<br />

worn with the costume. Now that<br />

there is such a wide selection of ocean<br />

pearl button, clips and buckles dyed<br />

in fashionable colors to be had, the<br />

outlook is for their lavish use tills<br />

fall. Elaborately designed styles which<br />

Introduce marcaslte or rhlnestone)<br />

greatly increase the scope of this attractive<br />

type of trimming.<br />

French Are Borrowing<br />

Fashions From Children<br />

French mothers are borrowing fashions<br />

from their children these days.<br />

Llttle-glrl styles, such as puffed sleeve,<br />

wide sashes tied with big bows and<br />

full frilly skirts, are among the novelties<br />

worn at some of the most sophisticated<br />

night clubs in Paris. Organdy<br />

and emeralds become partners in this<br />

new regime of young fashions, and<br />

school-girl aprons take on a new importance<br />

of style.<br />

One designer has gone so far as to<br />

reproduce, for older women, the cotton<br />

apron worn by French children<br />

and young girls as the standard equipment<br />

of boarding schools. The grownup<br />

version is an accurate copy of the<br />

children's apron, yoke, plaits, little<br />

sleeves and all.<br />

STYLE NOTES<br />

Many new huts are of stitched<br />

velvet.<br />

Early interest in fur trimmings<br />

is shown.<br />

Little fur capes will carry u new<br />

note this fall.<br />

Contrast both in color and material<br />

is featured.<br />

Ix>ug peudunt earrings are as<br />

popular us ever.<br />

Fur. beud uud fringe ure outstanding<br />

trimming Items.<br />

Suede Jacket with knitted skirt<br />

or dress is smart full style.<br />

Buttons Trim <strong>New</strong> Gowns<br />

for Summer Evenings<br />

Buttons are used to trim u summer<br />

evening gown of pink cross-bar organdie.<br />

The buttons, covered witb the<br />

same material, are set in a prim row<br />

down the front of the blgb basquelike<br />

bodice and in the back below the<br />

waist on the deep yoke of the skirt.<br />

B»»da of Wait* Coral<br />

Ileal white coral is so inexpensive<br />

your Judgment dictates that you should I u tb&e ^uyu uf low prices that it is<br />

chose another in my place I pledge my possible to get necklaces, bracelets<br />

loyalty, my best wishes and my sup-1 ttXi(j earrings for the price one paid<br />

port to him I tor imitation a few seasons ago. They<br />

Sincerely yours. * are smart witb white or dark clothes.<br />

ALVIN D. POND.<br />

Putnam County<br />

Supreme Court Calendar<br />

(Continued from Page 1)<br />

8 H. Carl Northrup, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Joseph Smith, also known as Jo<br />

Smith, defendant.<br />

Willis H. Ryder No appearance<br />

October 30, 1930<br />

Pact—Jury<br />

Action for damages arising from defendant's<br />

negligence.<br />

9 Walter Glinka, plaintiff, vs.<br />

James Apuzzo, defendant.<br />

Francis C. Dale Henry J. Rusk<br />

November 10, 1930<br />

Court—Jury<br />

Action for damages for personal injuries.<br />

10 Frank Glinka, an infant over the<br />

age of fourteen years, by his guardian<br />

ad litem, Walter Glinka, plaintiff,<br />

vs. James Apuzzo, defendant.<br />

Francis C. Dale Henry J. Rusk<br />

November 10, 1930<br />

Court—Jury<br />

Action for damages for personal injuries.<br />

11 Orson H. Lyon, plaintiff, vs.<br />

C. Arthur Heuss, defendant.<br />

Willis H. Ryder Edward P. Barrett<br />

December 7, 1930<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action on contract.<br />

12 Theodore Massey, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Manning • Kerlans and Beatrice' Kerlans,<br />

defendants.<br />

Francis C. Dale Edward A. Conger<br />

January 21, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is the recovery of damages for<br />

negligence resulting in personal injuries.<br />

13 Jacqueline Logan, by her guardian<br />

ad litem, Kenneth W. Logan,<br />

plaintiff, vs. Joseph D. Plola, defendant.<br />

James W. Bailey<br />

J. Charles Zimmerman<br />

February 25. 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for personal injuries.<br />

14 Joseph B. Rldolfl, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Harold Saunders, doing business<br />

under the name, style and title<br />

of DeLuxe Pet Shop, defendant.<br />

Francis C. Dale Thomas F. Turley<br />

February 27, 1931<br />

Action is to recover damages caused<br />

by the negligence of the defendant.<br />

15 John Allen, plaintiff, vs. Eric<br />

Angelo, James Mullaley, Arthur<br />

H. Lewis and Loren Van Schaick,<br />

defendants.<br />

Francis C. Dale<br />

Fred M. Beckwith, attorney for defendant<br />

Eric Angelo.<br />

March 2, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is to recover damages caused<br />

EAT<br />

at<br />

Pet< &r's<br />

Restaurant<br />

Steaks, Chops,<br />

Chicken Dinners<br />

We Serve To Please<br />

24 Main St Brewster, N. Y.<br />

CLEAN<br />

PURE<br />

COAL<br />

Pure coal gives more<br />

heat per ton, with less<br />

ashes.<br />

That we may deliver<br />

this kind of coal to you,<br />

we sell Old Company's<br />

Lehigh Anthracite*<br />

A. J. DURKIN<br />

Successor to "4B<br />

Geo. W. Hall Co.. Inc.<br />

Railroad Ave. Tel. 121<br />

Brewster. N. Y.<br />

OLD r<br />

COM PAN Y S<br />

LEHIGH ANTHRACITE<br />

by the negligence of defendants.<br />

16 A. O. Schoonmaker & Sons, Inc.,<br />

plaintiffs, vs. Patrick Fredericks<br />

and Nichoas Fredericks, doing business<br />

under the firm, name, style and<br />

title of Fredericks Bros., defendants.<br />

Francis C. Dale BenJ. P. Roosa<br />

April 16. 1931<br />

Fact-^Jury<br />

Action for damages for breach of contract.<br />

17 Imogene J. Dale, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Edith Van Nosdall and James Van<br />

Nosdall, defendants.<br />

Francis C. Dale McCabe & Rosen<br />

April 17. 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is to recover damages caused<br />

by the negligence of the defendants.<br />

18 Mae Flandreau, plaintiff, vs. Carl<br />

Anderson and Elmer Rosse, defendants.<br />

Bradford Klock Willis H. Ryder<br />

August 4, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages for personal injuries.<br />

19 Clifford Flandreau, plaintiff,<br />

vs. Carl Anderson and Elmer Ross,<br />

defendants.<br />

Bradford Klock Willis H, Ryder<br />

August 4, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for personal injuries.<br />

20 William Shrive, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Carl Anderson and Elmer Rosse, defendants.<br />

Bradford Klock Willis H. Ryder<br />

August 4. 1931<br />

Fact—fJury<br />

Action for damages for personal Injuries<br />

and property damages.<br />

21 Charles F. Gardineer, Jr., and<br />

Bayard O. Gardineer, copartners<br />

doing business under the name of<br />

O. F. Gardineer's Sons, plaintiffs,<br />

vs. Keenhurst, Inc., defendant.<br />

Douglas Macduff<br />

Doyle & Macpherson<br />

August 4, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for foreclosure of mechanic's<br />

lien.<br />

22 Charles V. Miller, an infant, by<br />

Christina M. Miller, his guardian ad<br />

litem, plaintiff, vs. Jerry B. Allan, defendant.<br />

John E. Mack James B. Henney<br />

August 20 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for negligence.<br />

23 Louis F. Meller, plaintiff, vs. Jerry<br />

B. Allan, defendant.<br />

John E. Mack James B. Henney<br />

August 20, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for negligence.<br />

24 Louis F. Miller, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Jerry Allen, defendant.<br />

John E. Mack James B. Henney<br />

August 20, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

25 Americo DeAlmeida, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Roach & Schakett-Scofield, Inc., defendants.<br />

Dorothy Frooks<br />

John E. Mack, attorney for defendant<br />

Schakett-Scofield, Inc.<br />

Francis C. Dale, attorney for defendant<br />

John Roach.<br />

September 28, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for personal injuries.<br />

26 Janet B. Tucker, paintiff, vs.<br />

Howard C. Parmelee, defendant.<br />

Francis C. Dale<br />

Ireland, Caverly & Hendrickson<br />

November 25, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is to recover damages caused by<br />

the negligence of the defendant.<br />

27 Harry Treacy, plaintiff, vs. Jeremiah<br />

O'Neil, defendant.<br />

Klein & Klein Willis H. Ryder<br />

November 9, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages arising out of<br />

plaintiff's negligence.<br />

28 Joseph Norge, plaintiff, vs. Jeremiah<br />

O'Neil, defendant.<br />

Klein & Klein Willis H. Ryder<br />

November 9, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages arising out of<br />

plaintiff's negligence.<br />

29 John Allen, plaintiff, vs. Eric Angelo,<br />

James Mullaley, Arthur H.<br />

Lewis and Loren VanSchaick, defendants.<br />

Francis C Dale<br />

Frank Hurley, attorney for defendant<br />

Loren VanSchaick.<br />

November 26, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is to recover damages caused<br />

by the negligence of the defendant:<br />

30 Peter Stapert, plaintiff, vs. Harry<br />

Gorley, defendant.<br />

Joseph H. A. Symonds Daniel Mungall<br />

December 14, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action to recover damages for personal<br />

Injuries resulting from defendant's<br />

negligence.<br />

31 Post Road Development Co.,<br />

plaintiff, vs. The <strong>New</strong> Brunswick Fire<br />

Insurance Co., defendant.<br />

Edward A. Conger<br />

Avery, Taussig & Fisk<br />

December 21, 1931<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action—Contract, money damages.<br />

32 William B. Gray, Jr., plaintiff,<br />

vs. Ernest S. Wittnebel, defendant.<br />

Clark & Davis<br />

Lynch, Kent, Cahn & Weed<br />

January 22, 1932<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Acti'jn is for libel.<br />

33 Eva Rabinowltz, plaintiff, vs,<br />

Sherley J- Travis, defendant.<br />

Nathan B. Rood Barton & Darling<br />

February 2, 1932<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is for personal injuries.<br />

34 Oscar Wright, plaintiff, vs. Jack<br />

Geizler, defendant.<br />

John E. Mack Louis M. Friedman<br />

February 5, 1982<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for money damages, negligence,<br />

Sale of Motor Fuel<br />

Shows Increase<br />

Motor fuel or gasoline sold and used<br />

in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> in June, as reported to<br />

the Motor Fuel Tax Bureau of the Department<br />

of Taxation and Finance,<br />

represents an increase of about 2.7%<br />

over the amount reported for the same<br />

month of the preceding year. It is the<br />

first increase in four months. The figures<br />

also show a jump over those for<br />

the preceding month of this year. The<br />

total for the first six months ending<br />

June 30 also represent an increase<br />

above the first half year fiures of 1931.<br />

According to the statistics released<br />

at the office of Thomas M. Lynch,<br />

Commissioner of Taxation and Finance,<br />

148,774,871 gallons represent the tax<br />

paid motor fuel and refunds were allowed<br />

on 2,532,435 gallons leaving the<br />

net quantity taxable at 146,242,430 gallons.<br />

A year ago the same month the<br />

tax paid fuel was reported as 149,982,-<br />

179 gallons, refunds 3,800,913 gallons,<br />

net quantity taxable 146,091,266 gallons.<br />

The net quantity taxable as reported<br />

for May, 1932, was 137,396,352<br />

gallons.<br />

The total quantity sold and used<br />

during June was reported as 153,113,827<br />

gallons as compared with 152,703,440<br />

gallons for June, 1931, and 142,795,417<br />

gallons in May of this year. The figures<br />

for June show that of the nontaxable<br />

gasoline reported 573,788 gallons<br />

were sold to the United States<br />

Government, 3,425,675 to state and<br />

municipal governments and distributors<br />

used for non-taxable purposes 339,-<br />

493 gallons. A year ago these figures<br />

were 336,004 gallons, 2,109,395 gallons<br />

and 365,862 gallons respectively.<br />

Despite the falling off in the use of<br />

gasoline over a period of several<br />

months this year an Increase of approximately<br />

25,000,000 gallons for February,<br />

1932, over February, 1931, accounts<br />

for the increase shown for the<br />

six months period. For the first half<br />

of 1932 the net taxable gasoline totaled<br />

709,456,090 gallons as compared with<br />

095,642.265 gallons for the six months<br />

period ending June 30, 1632. The paid<br />

motor fuel was reported at 723,742,098<br />

gallons as compared with 710,998,822<br />

gallons for the first half of 1931. Refunds<br />

were allowed on 14,286,008 gallons<br />

during the six months period this<br />

year and on 15,356,557 gallons in the<br />

same length of time last year. The total<br />

quantity sold and used for the first half<br />

of this year was 743,432,286 gallons and<br />

the same period last year 728,172,896<br />

gallons.<br />

property damages.<br />

35 Mary Morrisroe, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Dennis O'Connor, defendant.<br />

Raymond B. Costello<br />

William Weinberg<br />

February 16, 1932<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages arising out of defendant's<br />

negligence.<br />

36 Nicholas Prisco and John Prisco,<br />

copartners, doing business under the<br />

firm name and style of Prisco Brothers,<br />

plaintiff's, vs. John C. Weir, Sr.,<br />

and John C. Weir, Jr., defendants.<br />

R. J. Shadbolt Emanuel A. Stern<br />

March 3, 1632<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages to personal property.<br />

37 McNulty Bros.' Garages, Inc.,<br />

plaintiff, vs. Charles L. Craig, defendant.<br />

Kurzman & Frank Charles L. Craig<br />

March 18, 1932<br />

Court—Jury<br />

Action is to recover for goods sold rfnd<br />

delivered, work, labor and services and<br />

materials furnished,<br />

38 Robert N. Woods, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Vincent T. Richards.<br />

James W. Bailey No appearance<br />

Court—Jury<br />

Action for property damage growing<br />

out of negligence of defendant. Inquest.<br />

. .39 William B. Gray, Jr., plaintiff, vs.<br />

Ernest S. Wittnebel.<br />

Clark & Davis<br />

Lynch, Kent, Cahn & Weed<br />

Court—Jury<br />

Action for libel.<br />

40 John T. Jenkins, plaintiff, vs.<br />

William M. Hough.<br />

Raymond B. Costello<br />

Joseph M. Leahey<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages on contract.<br />

41 Kate F. Englehardt, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Paradise Pie Baking Corporation.<br />

Francis C. Dale James A. Nooney<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is to recover money damages<br />

caused by the negligence of the defendant.<br />

42 Charles Englehardt, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Paradise Pie Baking Corporation.<br />

Francis C. Dale James A. Nooney<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action is to recovr money damages for<br />

loss of services caused by negligence<br />

of the defendant.<br />

43 Gordon-Walter Co., Inc., plaintiff,<br />

vs. Joseph Taglamonte.<br />

Samuel S. Siavitt Ticknor & Ticknor<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for goods, sold and delivered.<br />

44 Bucaly L. Most, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Charles Miller and Julius Glarraputo.<br />

Nathan B. Wood John H. Brogan<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action negligence, property damage.<br />

45 Anthony Kouri, plaintiff, vs.<br />

Max Klein and Ethel Klein, doing<br />

business as Max Kline & Co.<br />

Dorothy Frook Engel Brothers<br />

Fact^-Jury<br />

Action for malicious prosecution.<br />

46 Dennis Williams, plaintiff, vs.<br />

John V. Alexander.<br />

Ryder & Donohoe Benjamin I. Taylor<br />

Fact—Jury<br />

Action for damages on contract.<br />

Chevrolet Picks Up<br />

During August<br />

On the basis of dealer reports of<br />

Chevrolet sales for the * first twenty<br />

days of August, this month, normally<br />

the dullest of the summer season,<br />

shows promise of exceeding July by a<br />

comfortable margin, W. S. Knudsen,<br />

president and general manager of the<br />

Chevrolet Motor Comnay, declared.<br />

Up to August 20, sales for the month<br />

were reported as 17,038 units compared<br />

with 14,698 in the same days of July,<br />

a gain of nearly 16 per cent. For the<br />

past several years July sales have consistently<br />

run ahead of the August total,<br />

Mr. Knudsen said.<br />

He pointed out that the new federal<br />

tax on automobiles was felt hardest in<br />

July, so that that month was subnormal<br />

in relation to other months of<br />

this year, but he stated that he did not<br />

believe the tax accounted for the full<br />

amount of the gain made to August 20<br />

over July.<br />

He attributed a share of the increase<br />

to a substantially improved sentiment<br />

country-wide, and a gradual rebuilding<br />

of confidence, with the result that peo­<br />

ple able and intending to buy a new<br />

car, but who have been postponing<br />

the purchase through fear of the future,<br />

are now entering the active buying<br />

lists.<br />

Some sections reported an Increase<br />

to August 20 over the same period of<br />

the month last year, and August is the<br />

first month since early spring in which<br />

a reporting period in any month exceeded<br />

the corresponding period of the<br />

previous month, Uje Chevrolet president<br />

stated.<br />

Mr. Knudsen discounted the idea of<br />

the stock market action having a direct<br />

bearing on the sales chart, other<br />

than as a restorative of confidence,<br />

although he said it may have accounted<br />

for a few additional sales in the<br />

East Atlantic section. But, he added,<br />

John Snidero<br />

GENERAL CONTRACTOR<br />

Teaming and Trucking<br />

Sand and Gravel Delivered<br />

Excavating and Grading<br />

Tel. 545 R. F. D. Route<br />

Geo. W. Sloat<br />

Funeral Director<br />

Tel. Carmel 70. Tel. Brewster 165<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City Tel. Plaza 1380<br />

N. Y. C. Office 49 West 58 St.<br />

Tony Ciocolanti & Bro.<br />

General Contractor<br />

and Mason<br />

Tel. 371<br />

Brewster, N. Y.<br />

IVY<br />

POISONING<br />

GKIN-CAL-CO for immediate<br />

Belief. Money Back Guarantee.<br />

Hope's Drug Store<br />

Brewster, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

GHINCALCO LABOBATOBY<br />

880 Melrose Avenue, N. Y. C.<br />

.4<br />

the firming of commodity prices, especially<br />

cotton, is having a substantial<br />

effect through the South, Texas particularly,<br />

and the lower Middle West.<br />

Dealer saocks of both new and used<br />

oars have been measurably reduced so<br />

far into August and now are at a minimum<br />

for this season of the year, the<br />

Chevrolet executive stated.<br />

Vinegar or lemon Juice added to the<br />

water in which salad greens are crisped<br />

draws out any lurking insects.<br />

MICHAEL FURIO<br />

Contractor and<br />

Builder<br />

Croton Falls, N. Y-<br />

Telephone 188-M<br />

DR. W. A. TOWNER<br />

Dentist<br />

Gnnssen Building<br />

Hours 9-5<br />

Phone 229<br />

Brewster Electric Co.<br />

Electrical Contractors<br />

and Repairing<br />

Expert Radio Repairs<br />

Genuine R. C. A. Tubes<br />

60 No. Main St Tel. 102 Brewster<br />

Nazzerino Tranquilli<br />

General Contractor<br />

Phone 385<br />

SO North Main St Brewiter. N. Y<br />

Telephone 534<br />

DAN CARLO<br />

GENERAL CONTRACTOR<br />

AND BUILDER<br />

58 Carmel Ave. Brewster, N. Y<br />

The<br />

Putnam County<br />

National Bank<br />

Carmel, N. Y.<br />

INTEBEST DEPARTMENT<br />

Deposit* made on or before the<br />

10th of January, April, July and<br />

October will draw interest from<br />

the first of those months.<br />

Deposits made on or before the<br />

third day of any other month will<br />

draw interest from the first of that<br />

month.<br />

Gasoline, Motor Oils, Kerosene, Greases<br />

DISTRIBUTOR<br />

Furnace 03 Fuel 03<br />

PETROLEUM PRODUCTS<br />

EDWARD C BARGE<br />

Somers, N. Y.<br />

Telephones Croton Falls 137 and 216<br />

*<br />

Night or Day Night or Day


FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1932 THE BREWSTER STANDARD PAGE SEVEN<br />

When Adolf Hitler told President<br />

Von Hlndenberg that he wanted to be<br />

Germany's Mussolini, the old man<br />

told him to go back home and grow<br />

up with the coutnry.<br />

B. T. MANNING<br />

— Successor to —<br />

Rundall 8 Manning<br />

General Insurance<br />

BREWSTER, N. Y.<br />

Phone 655<br />

Pursuant to an Order of the Bon,<br />

James W. Bailey,. Surrogate of the<br />

County of Putnam, N. Y., notice Is<br />

hereby given to all persons having<br />

claims against the estate of Sarah F.<br />

Banks, late of the Town of Patterson,<br />

In said County deceased, to present the<br />

same with the vouchers thereof to the<br />

undersigned executor of the last Will<br />

and Testament of said Sarah F. B&nks,<br />

at its place of transacting business,<br />

Cannel, Putnam County, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

on or before the 24th day of September,<br />

1832.<br />

Dated March 11, 1932.<br />

PUTNAM COUNTY NATIONAL<br />

BANK OF CARMEL,<br />

Executor.<br />

SMITH, MARY A., also known as<br />

DOLLIE A.,<br />

In pursuance of an Order of Bon.<br />

James W. Bailey, the Surrogate of the<br />

County of Putnam, notice is hereby given<br />

to all persons having claims against<br />

Mary A. Smith, also known as Dollle<br />

A. Smith, late of the Town of Southeast,<br />

County of Putnam, deceased, to<br />

present the same, with vouchers thereof<br />

to the subscribers, at their place<br />

of transacting business at the office of<br />

JOHN H. UNLANDHERM and CHAR­<br />

LES HOLLENDER, 36 West 44th Street,<br />

In the City of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, on or before<br />

the 10th day of October. 1932.<br />

Dated, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, April 6th, 1932.<br />

TITLE GUARANTEE AND TRUST<br />

COMPANY and JOHN H. UNLAND­<br />

HERM,<br />

Executors.<br />

JOHN H. UNLANDHERM and<br />

CHARLES HOLLENDER<br />

Attorneys for Executors<br />

No. 36 West 44th Street<br />

Borough of Manhattan<br />

City of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />

SURROGATE'S COURT OF PUTNAM<br />

COUNTY. NEW YORK<br />

Pursuant to Statute, I hereby order<br />

and appoint the terms of the Surrogate<br />

Court of the County of Putnam in the<br />

State of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, during the year<br />

1930, for the trial of issues of law and<br />

fact for the hearing and determination<br />

of all matters of which said Court has<br />

Jurisdiction, at which a Trial Jury will<br />

be required to attend, to be held in the<br />

Court House in the Town of Carmel,<br />

In said County, as follows:<br />

On the last Monday of the months of<br />

January, April and October, and the<br />

first Monday of June and December.<br />

, Dated, December 21, 1931.<br />

JAMK8 W. BAILEY,<br />

Surrogate.<br />

Filed December 21, 1931.<br />

PUTNAM COUNT*. SURROGATE'S<br />

OFFICE, 88.:<br />

L JAMES W. BAILEY, Surrogate of<br />

the County of Putnam and exofflcio<br />

clerk of the Surrogate's<br />

Court, do hereby certify that the<br />

preceding is a true copy of the<br />

original designation of the trial<br />

the County of Putnam for the<br />

year 1930, now on file in my<br />

office.<br />

year 1932, now on file In my<br />

JAMES W. BAILEY,<br />

Surrogate.<br />

COUNTY COURT<br />

Of<br />

PUTNAM COUNTY, NEW YORK<br />

Pursuant to Statute, I hereby order<br />

and appoint the term of the County<br />

Court of the County of Putnam In the<br />

State of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, during the year<br />

1931 for the trial of issues of law and<br />

fact, and the hearing and determination<br />

of all criminal matters of which<br />

•aid Court has Jurisdiction, at which<br />

a Grand Jury and Trial Jury will be<br />

required to attend, to be held In the<br />

Court House in the Town of Carmel,<br />

in said County in the year 1932, as<br />

follows:<br />

On the First Tuesday of June<br />

On the First Tuesday of December<br />

I further order and appoint the<br />

terms of the County Court of the<br />

County of Putnam in the State of <strong>New</strong><br />

<strong>York</strong>, for the trial of Issues of law,<br />

the hearing and decision of motions<br />

and other proceedings at which no jury<br />

will be required to attend, to be held<br />

in the Court House in the aforesaid<br />

town of Carmel on the second Monday<br />

of each month, and at the office of the<br />

County Judge of Putnam County in<br />

the Village of Cold Spring in said<br />

County, on the second and fourth Saturday<br />

of each month, except during the<br />

months of January and August.<br />

Dated, December 21, 1931.<br />

JAMES W. BAILEY.<br />

Putnam County Judge.<br />

PUTNAM COUNTY CLERKS OF­<br />

FICE, ss.:<br />

L EDWARD 8. AGOR, Clerk of the<br />

County of Putnam and of the<br />

County Court of said County, do<br />

hereby certify that the precding<br />

(LB-) is a true copy of the original derlgnatlons<br />

of the terms of the<br />

County Court of the County of<br />

Putnam for the year 1981, now<br />

on file in my office.<br />

Dated, December 21. 1931.<br />

EDWARD 8. AGOR.<br />

County Olrrk.<br />

LOUISIANA<br />

Plckanlnny Jazz Orchestra in <strong>New</strong> Orleans.<br />

(Prepared by National Geographic Society.<br />

Washington. D. c.)— WNU Service.<br />

LOUISIANA has dedicated her<br />

new domeless capltol building,<br />

a gigantic pile of limestone<br />

which rises 83 stories above<br />

the streets of Baton Rouge.<br />

Louisiana boasts many modern<br />

buildings in her bustling cities, but<br />

the fame of the state Is not confined<br />

to architecture. It is more widely<br />

known for its equitable climate, Its<br />

tranquil scenic beauty, and a hospitality<br />

which makes the manifold<br />

claims of her citizens as to the state's<br />

point of excellence seem a bare recital<br />

of obvious facts.<br />

It is one of America's leading furproducing<br />

regions, and the source of<br />

staggering quantities of shrimps and<br />

strawberries, oysters and oranges,<br />

sugar and salt, terrapins and fiery<br />

tabasco, rice and red snappers, figs<br />

and frog's legs, waterfowl and muskrats,<br />

timber and turpentine, cucumbers<br />

and cattle, sulphur and Spanish<br />

moss. Oil and gas flow from Its<br />

seemingly inexhaustible subterranean<br />

chambers.<br />

It boasts the- second largest port<br />

In the United States—<strong>New</strong> Orleansthrough<br />

which pass vast cargoes of<br />

foreign commodities, Including 23,000,-<br />

000 bunches of bananas each year, coffee<br />

for every third cup consumed In<br />

the United States, and mahogany and<br />

sisal, to our markets; while all the<br />

varied products of farm and factory<br />

originating In the lower Mississippi<br />

valley begin their sea Journey from<br />

the city's docks.<br />

Romance of <strong>New</strong> Orleans.<br />

Many writers agree that <strong>New</strong> Orleans<br />

is one of only three great<br />

"story cities" of America. And <strong>New</strong><br />

Orleans is part and parcel of Louisiana.<br />

One needs only to go beck to<br />

the adventurous times of those daring<br />

French pioneers, La Salle, Bienville<br />

and Iberville; to the days of<br />

those picturesque and honored pirates,<br />

the Lafltte Brothers and Dominique<br />

You; to quadroon balls, voodoo<br />

rites, suicide and dueling oaks,<br />

or even to the fantastic revels of this<br />

year's Mardl Gras, to find romance<br />

here.<br />

Today In Louisiana the visitor encounters<br />

romance as readily In any<br />

one of the half score lfi-to-20-story<br />

office buildings of <strong>New</strong> Orleans as he<br />

did formerly In the city's "haunted<br />

houses," absinthe bars, or charming<br />

patios rich in association with the<br />

names of Lafayette, Louis Philippe,<br />

Adeline Pattl, Jenny Llnd, Audubon,<br />

Paul Murphy and Lafcadio Ileum.<br />

For decades Louisiana's great sugar<br />

mills, set down in the midst of<br />

billows of green cane extending to the<br />

horizon, had unfailingly ground out<br />

wealth to the state's sugar barons.<br />

Three hundred thousand tons of sugar<br />

was not an.unusual year's yield<br />

from the fecund black solL But the<br />

major romance of Louisiana is to be<br />

found not in its cane fields. The progenitor<br />

of those fields, and of the<br />

entire state, is the Father of Waters.<br />

With its long, tenuous fingers of<br />

silt thrust far out Into the Gulf of<br />

Mexico, the "bird's-foot" delta of the<br />

Mississippi Is unlike that of any other<br />

major river on the globe. Between<br />

its fingers or claws are shallow, open<br />

bays, and the banks confining the<br />

great streams Into which the river<br />

divides at Head of Passes, 05 miles<br />

below <strong>New</strong> Orleans, are in some<br />

places only a few feet In width.<br />

In colonial times, when 10 or 12<br />

feet of water provided ample depth<br />

for all caravels of commerce, navigation<br />

of the main passes of the Mississippi<br />

presented no difficulties, but<br />

with the increase in the tonnage and<br />

draft of vessels the shallow finger<br />

channels were a bar to progress and<br />

prosperity.<br />

Making the Delta Navigable.<br />

Ninety years ego the federal government<br />

made the first appropriation<br />

for deepening these natural channels,<br />

and in the course of the next 40<br />

years it succeeded, by means of crude<br />

dredging processes, in increasing the<br />

depth to from 12 to 20 feet But<br />

when it is recalled that in time of<br />

flood the Mississippi brings down for<br />

deposit at its mouth more than 2,-<br />

000,000 tons of sand a day, one can<br />

realize that this was a costly and<br />

disheartening battle.<br />

By 1870 vessels had so increased<br />

in sire and draft that a deeper channel<br />

became a crying necessity. A<br />

board of eminent engineers, appointed<br />

to find a solution of the problem,<br />

made exhaustive studies of many important<br />

harbor entrances. Including<br />

the mouths of the Danube, which had<br />

been successfully improved by means<br />

of contracting jetties similar to those<br />

now in use on the Mississippi river.<br />

The board finally reported that the<br />

use of jetties would be too costly<br />

for the Improvement of the mouths<br />

of the Mississippi and recommended<br />

the construction of a ship canal from<br />

Fort St Philip (opposite Fort Jackson)<br />

to the Gulf.<br />

At this juncture there appeared before<br />

congress an engineering genius<br />

who persuaded that body to defer<br />

for the time being the digging of the<br />

ship canal and permit him, on a basis<br />

of "no cure, no pay," to attempt<br />

to provide and maintain a deep-water<br />

channel In his own way.<br />

But when congress finally accepted<br />

this "can't loose" proposition of<br />

James B. Eads, who had just completed<br />

the world-famous steel-arch<br />

bridge over the Mississippi at St<br />

Louis, the engineer was not permitted<br />

to use the Southwest Pass for<br />

his experiment as he had specified.<br />

This was the best of the three main<br />

passes, and the government was taking<br />

no chances with Mr. Eads and<br />

his chimerical proposition! If he<br />

wanted to lose his own money, he<br />

could sink It in South Pass without<br />

endangering the then best channel.<br />

The Eads contract called not only<br />

for a channel 26 feet deep and 200<br />

feet wide at the bottom, but for maintaining<br />

that depth for 20 years.<br />

With tremendous energy and rare<br />

organizing ability, the engineer set<br />

to work, and in less than five years<br />

his Jetties and his dredges had done<br />

the work. And, furthermore, he maintained<br />

the depth for 20 years, that<br />

period expiring in 1001. The main<br />

responsibility of the engineers today,<br />

so far as the mouths of the Mississippi<br />

are concerned, is to prevent the<br />

river from creating new passes.<br />

Furs From the Marshlands.<br />

It is not only the Mississippi which<br />

makes Louisiana "water-minded."<br />

The state is threaded and meshed<br />

with bayous, bikes and streams, giving<br />

it more than 4,700 miles of navigable<br />

waters—a total which exceeds<br />

by two for one Its nearest competitor<br />

in the* Union, Arkansas.<br />

Naturally, much of the bordering<br />

land in the vast delta region is marsh<br />

area; but let no casual observer be<br />

deceived into imagining that "marsh"<br />

In Louisiana means waste or unproductive<br />

land. It Is these tens of<br />

thousands of grass-covered acres<br />

which have given the state the unique<br />

distinction of being the largest furproducing<br />

commonwealth in the<br />

Union. As a matter of fact not only<br />

does Louisiana lead all other states<br />

both in the value of its fur crop and<br />

in the number of pelts marketed, but<br />

last year, and for several years past<br />

it has produced more pelts than the<br />

entire Dominion of Canada, generally<br />

recognized as one of the world's most<br />

Important fur-producing countries.<br />

The muskrat is the fur citizen mainstay<br />

of the state's pelt wealth. Mora<br />

than 5,000,000 of him were taken during<br />

the open season from November<br />

20 to February 5. 1028-29. What with<br />

muskrats, opossums, raccoons, minks,<br />

skunks, otters, wild cats and foxes,<br />

the trappers* sales last year aggregated<br />

$8.500.000—exceeding by a<br />

third the total value of Alaska's, production<br />

of gold and silver for the<br />

same period.<br />

The Evangeline Country.<br />

Journeying by a series of autobus<br />

stages from <strong>New</strong> Orleans to Lake<br />

Charles, In the southwest corner of<br />

the state, one passes through a section<br />

of Louisiana which Is redolent<br />

of romance. Here lies the Evangeline<br />

country, with its many pleasing, if<br />

seldom substantiated, stories identifying<br />

particular spots with various<br />

episodes in the Longfellow epic. St<br />

MartlnvlUe, one of the oldest towns<br />

in Louisiana, is the center of the<br />

Evangeline cult, with its Evangeline<br />

oak and its grave of the woman from<br />

whom the poet is supposed to have<br />

drawn his picture of the Acadian<br />

heroine.<br />

At <strong>New</strong> Iberia are Louisiana's<br />

famous suit mines. On an open-plutform<br />

elevator one descends for 540<br />

feet In Stygian durkness to the present<br />

floor of this salt mine. Its vast<br />

galleries are sixty feet in height, half<br />

again as wide in some places, and<br />

their winding length exceeds two<br />

miles. With electric drills, miners<br />

bore into the suit rock, set off their<br />

charges of dynamite, and blow out<br />

great blocks of pure crystal suit,<br />

which is scooped up in mechanical<br />

shovels and loaded on cars slmilur to<br />

those used in coal mines.<br />

With a production of some 19,000.-<br />

000 bushels of rice a year, Louisiana<br />

not only produces more of the cereal<br />

than any other state in the Union,<br />

but it has one-half of the entire<br />

United States rice acreage<br />

HAPPENINGS<br />

1912—Twenty Tears Ago<br />

Borden dairymen have been given a<br />

15 cent increase per hundred pounds of<br />

milk. '<br />

Rev. M. H. Gardner has returned<br />

from his vacation spent in Fort Covington.<br />

Mrs. E. R. Richie is organizing a<br />

kindergarten class. See reading notice.<br />

Mrs. L. Starr Barnum will be hostess<br />

lor a cake sale next Friday afternoon.<br />

Mrs. Mary Brinkman gave an excellent<br />

talk and Miss Edith Diehl demonstrated<br />

ability as a presiding officer at<br />

the suffrage meeting on Friday evening.<br />

John Crosby is constructing new<br />

curbing for William Walter Smith on<br />

Carmel avenue.<br />

Richard Michell placed the electric<br />

clocks in running order at Brewster<br />

High School on Tuesday.<br />

Mrs. Phoebe Hoyt has returned to<br />

her duties-at the Mamaroneck school,<br />

Mamaroneck, N. Y.<br />

The Epworth League will resume Its<br />

meetings on Sunday evening at the<br />

Methodist church. Mrs. Mingo, of Chicago,<br />

will speak on Observations on<br />

Christian Work in Chicago.<br />

Bowcatcher was in fast company at<br />

the Orangeburg Fair. Alexander Mc­<br />

Millan secured third place in the final<br />

heat. The race was won by King Edward,<br />

Blstan got second money.<br />

Labor Day was cold and cheerless.<br />

The temperature was 60 degrees and<br />

rain fell at intervals. It was a disappointment<br />

that William B. Reed, President<br />

of Kishawana Club, was unable<br />

to be present at the tournament. Dr.<br />

W. L. Scofield won the men's cup and<br />

Miss Gertrude Griffeth received the<br />

ladies' trophy. The boys cup was won<br />

by Maurice Heartfield. Refreshments<br />

were served by Mrs. W. B. Reed and assisting<br />

ladies.<br />

1902—Thirty Years Ago<br />

Samuel H. Ledley returned on Monday<br />

from three months spent in Ireland.<br />

The old Edward Howes place, owned<br />

by A. J. Miller, was sold on Tuesday to<br />

Miss Mary Roberts and Miss Edith<br />

Diehl.<br />

Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Vreeland entertained<br />

a party of young people last<br />

Saturday evening invited to meet Mr.<br />

and Mrs. D. M. Brady, lessees of the<br />

Play House.<br />

The Sodom reservoir has been drawn<br />

down nine feet.<br />

Conductor Lent has arranged • a fine<br />

program for the close of the band concert<br />

season next Wednesday night.<br />

Prof; W. S. Phasy will play the euphonium<br />

and Rev. S. C. Hearn will<br />

preach on "The Man Who Makes His<br />

Own Hell" at the Methodist church on<br />

Sunday evening.<br />

Presbyterian ladies held a bazaar<br />

tn the vacant store in the Ryder building<br />

on Wednesday. The affair netted<br />

seventy dollars.<br />

A white hand painted carved sandal<br />

wood fan was lost at the shirt waist<br />

dance on Monday evening. The finder<br />

will learn the name of the owner by<br />

returning the fan to William Losee.<br />

Rev. V. W. Benedict, who has been<br />

clerk of the Union Baptist Association<br />

for 28 years was presented with a purse<br />

of (65 at a meeting of the association<br />

held in Towners this week.<br />

George W. Waite died at the home<br />

of his son, Frank E. Waite, last Saturday,<br />

aged 89 years. Mr. WJaite descended<br />

from Revolutionary stock, both his<br />

grandfathers being aides de camp to<br />

Gen. Washington, another relative, an<br />

officer, was killed in the battle of<br />

White Plains in 1778.<br />

Brewster High School faculty are as<br />

follows: G. F. Zimmerman, Kate deF.<br />

Crane, Florence M Potter, Altie A.<br />

Kimberly, Florence B. Course, Jane E.<br />

Smith, Jennie B. Ganun, Katherine<br />

E. Totten, Mabel Horton.<br />

Jfuneral ^ome<br />

Licensed Funeral Directors<br />

and Embalmers<br />

Lady Assistant<br />

O serve our Patrons well<br />

Tand make each service a<br />

stepping stone towards their<br />

perfect confidence, is the desire<br />

and constant endeavor of<br />

our organization.<br />

OELKER « COX<br />

18 No. Main St. — TeL 675<br />

Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Supreme Court: Putnam County<br />

J. KELCEY POSNER<br />

Plaintiff<br />

—against—<br />

EDGAR SALINGER, GERTRUDE<br />

SALINGER, his wife, CHARLES<br />

B. BRETZFELDER, ROSALIE H.<br />

BRETZFELDER, his wife, YOUNG<br />

& HALSTEAD COMPANY, MONT­<br />

GOMERY WJARD & CO., FARM­<br />

ERS MANUFACTURING COM­<br />

PANY, DANIEL W. TTCKNOR and<br />

WILLIAM LABER as Executors of<br />

the Last Will and Testament of<br />

CONSTANT F. WHITNEY, deceased.<br />

Defendants.<br />

In pursuance of a judgment of foreclosure<br />

and sale made and entered In<br />

the above entitled action on the 31st<br />

day of .August, 1932, the undersigned<br />

the Referee In said judgment named<br />

will sell at public auction at the front<br />

entrance of the County Courthouse in<br />

the Town of Carmel, Putnam County,<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, on the 19th day of October,<br />

1932, at 11:30 o'clock in the fore-noon<br />

of that day the premises directed by<br />

said judgment to be sold and described<br />

as follows:<br />

ALL that certain piece or parcel of<br />

land, situate, lying and being in the<br />

Town of Southeast, County of Putnam,<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, and bounded as follows:<br />

COMMENCING at the southeast corner<br />

of Owen Gonung's land on the highway<br />

leading from the dwelling house of<br />

George Woods formerly Abraham<br />

Woods to and post the premises herein<br />

described; thence southwesterly along<br />

said highway to lands of Gilbert Bailey<br />

formerly Solomon Bailey, deceased,<br />

being the south line of Putnam County;<br />

thence easterly along said Bailey's land<br />

and the county line aforesaid to lands<br />

of Isaac Field; thence easterly along<br />

the same to lands of Solomon Field<br />

formerly Stephen Field, deceased;<br />

thence northerly along lands of Solomon<br />

Field aforesaid to land of Daniel<br />

Drew; thence westerly along said<br />

Drew's land to lands of Abraham Wood,<br />

still westerly along said Wood's land to<br />

the highway aforesaid, thence southwesterly<br />

along said highway to the<br />

southeast corner of Thacher H. Theal's<br />

land on the north side of the highway<br />

aforesaid; thence northerly and westerly<br />

along said Theal's lands to land<br />

of Owen Ganung; thence southerly<br />

along said Ganung's lands to the highway<br />

and at the southeast corner of said<br />

Genung's land it being the place of<br />

beginning; Containing by estimation<br />

One hundred and ninety-seven acres of<br />

land be the same more or less.<br />

SUBJECT however to the reservation<br />

of Isaac Adams former grantors of five<br />

acres of land situate on the southeast<br />

corner of the premises herein described<br />

and adjoining Isaac Field and the<br />

County line on the south and Solomon<br />

Field on the east as a wood lot.<br />

SUBJECT also to the right of said Adams<br />

to pass and repass over said premises<br />

to and from the aforesaid five<br />

acres as reserved above with teams,<br />

or in any manner for the purpose of<br />

drawing woods or timber off the same<br />

at a place where it will be the least<br />

damaged.<br />

SUBJECT To unpaid taxes, assessments<br />

and water rates, if any, affecting the<br />

said premises.<br />

SUBJECT to any state of facts which<br />

an accurate survey or inspection of the<br />

premises would disclose.<br />

SUBJECT to covenants, agreements<br />

and restrictions, of record, if any, affecting<br />

the said premises.<br />

Dated, August 31st, 1932.<br />

ALBERT J. APPELL, Referee.<br />

RUBIN & RUBIN,<br />

Attorneys for the Plaintiff,<br />

Office & P. O. Address,<br />

481 Main Street,<br />

<strong>New</strong> Rochelle, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />

Artificial lights for poultry merely,<br />

make a normal day during a time of<br />

on abnormal hick of light and are not<br />

a forcing process if used with judgment.<br />

The Putnam County<br />

Savings Bank<br />

Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Kodak Films<br />

Developing and Printing<br />

24 Hours Service<br />

Incorporated 1871<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Alexander F. Lobdell, President<br />

Arthur P. Budd, Vice President<br />

David P. Vail, Vice President<br />

Arthur G. Strang, Secretary<br />

and Tieasurer<br />

F. Leon Shelp, Counsel<br />

Deposits made on or before the tenth<br />

business day of January, April, July<br />

or October, or the third business day<br />

of other months will bear interest<br />

from the first of these —frft respectively.<br />

Interest compounded<br />

quarterly.<br />

Joseph Scolpino<br />

30 Main Street Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Lumber Is bought in the United<br />

States by about 40 different log scales.<br />

In <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> there Is but one official<br />

scale.<br />

Barley, oats, buckwheat and wheat<br />

all lost money for the labor of growing<br />

them in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State last year, according<br />

to farm accounts.<br />

Uncle Ab says he is not sure which<br />

is worse, the knocker or the booster;<br />

one means deflation end the other Inflation,<br />

and both are bad.<br />

Stockings last longer If they are<br />

washed after every wearing. This IS<br />

especially true in summer when perspiration<br />

is increased.<br />

UNCLAIMED DEPOSITS IN THE PUTNAM COUNTY SAVINGS BANK,<br />

BREWSTER, N. Y.<br />

List containing full names of depositors of dormant accounts, not previously<br />

recorded pursuant to the provisions of Section 274 of the Banking Law.<br />

Name Lost Given Address<br />

Mrs. Clara Stannard, In trust for Cora E. Stannard, 29-2nd Ave., Waterbury, Conn.<br />

Darius J. Bennett Carmel, N. Y.<br />

Edwin Oanong, in trust for George T. Ganong Carmel, N. Y.<br />

Edward Ballard Brewster, N. Y.<br />

John Patrick O'Connor Brewster, N. Y.<br />

Sophia W. Mead , North Salem, N. Y.<br />

LUhLEfi<br />

E0k THE<br />

IDEAL<br />

H0HE<br />

\ RE you planning to build the ideal<br />

•**home. ? Then we have the ideal lumber.<br />

Good, strong, clean lumber, that<br />

will give you a home to withstand every<br />

climate and exposure-have a handsome<br />

appearance—and cost less.<br />

"Where a Promise is Kept"<br />

Danbury-Brewster Lumber Co.<br />

Established same place past 40 years at the<br />

N. Y. N. H. 8 H. R. R. Station<br />

Phone 206<br />

90 North Main Street Brewster, N. Y.<br />

NOW<br />

THE electric range has always been<br />

Cut. But recent improvements in<br />

top-plate construction have brought<br />

even greater speed and greater effi­<br />

ciency. Just snap a switch! Almost<br />

before you know it you can have<br />

full intensity of heat. And you can<br />

have it regulated to the exact heat<br />

desired. No other method offers such<br />

control over cooking temperature.<br />

Add to this new speed, the clean­<br />

liness and convenience and you have<br />

all that could be desired in carefree<br />

cookery. That is why more than a<br />

million women have already changed<br />

to modern automatic electric ranges.<br />

Why don't you?<br />

Associated Gas & Electric System<br />

<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> State Electric<br />

& Gas Corporation<br />

Phone: 700 Brewster, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.


PAGE EIGHT THE BREWSTER STANDARD FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1932<br />

Brewster Boys Win<br />

Interesting Game<br />

Now that Nicholas Murray Butler<br />

and Henry Ford have both approved<br />

President Hoover's statement on the<br />

liquor question, that ought to just<br />

about take the issue out of Republican<br />

politics.<br />

J. J. FAHEY & SON AUCTIONEERS<br />

THE<br />

HOUSE, BUILDING SITE, THEATRE<br />

AND<br />

10-ROOM HOUSE OF FURNITURE<br />

AT<br />

PUBLIC AUCTION<br />

IN VILLAGE OF DOVER PLAINS,<br />

N. Y.—SATURDAY, SEPT. 3, 10 A. M.<br />

I will sell the Real and Personal<br />

Property without reserve at my place,<br />

corner of Main Street and Wing Ave.,<br />

Dover Plains, N. Y., consisting of<br />

Real Estate:—2 story (10 room) House,<br />

double basement (for store and barber<br />

shop). All improvements.<br />

Building Site:. 30 ft. frontage, 130 ft.<br />

deep.<br />

Theatre: 210 seating capacity, incline<br />

floor, all new fixtures, new sound<br />

screen. 1 power projector, new furnaces.<br />

Hall has been properly acoustic for<br />

sound. Passed by State Inspection.,<br />

Electric sign.<br />

Furniture:-From the 10 Room House<br />

consists of Parlor, dining and bedroom<br />

suites, Kitchen Range, rope, beds, old.<br />

chairs, stands, china, glass, lustre brie- j<br />

a-brac and variety of other old pieces<br />

too numerous to mention.<br />

Antique* and Modern Furniture sold,<br />

beginning at 10 A. M sharp.<br />

Inspection morning day of sale.<br />

Real Estate sold in Whole or in Part at<br />

2:00 P. M.<br />

Terms on Real state—10% at time of<br />

sale, balance on most attractive terms.<br />

PATRICK J. HERBERT,<br />

Dover Plains, N. Y.<br />

For further particulars apply to<br />

J. J. Fahey & Sun, Sharon, Conn.<br />

Auctioneer* and Sales Managers<br />

GRAND<br />

UNION Enjoy the Holiday!<br />

Those tremendous appetites roused by the holiday atmosphere and<br />

fresh air demand lots of good food. Thrifty housewives will<br />

prepare by taking advantage of Grand Union's<br />

CUT PRICE LABOR DAY SALE<br />

I4 C<br />

31*<br />

^re** fruits and c**** est Vegetables<br />

Peaches "tl Z9 C Potatoes 15 -17 c<br />

"Sunki«"<br />

Oranges 12' >27 c<br />

CELERY m , 1—-<br />

HEARTS Mt buoche* X> c<br />

"Sunkiw" j "Wealthy Fancy*<br />

Lemons 6»19 c Apples<br />

"Pearl PinkV Banlett<br />

Cantaloupes % *- 15 c I Pears<br />

^ _ — Pillsbury, Gold Medal or Becker's ^f^ ^ S j ^ ^<br />

FLOUR * 69<br />

FLOUR Pocono Family 24-K lb. tack 49C<br />

Coniecuoners' Town & Country dot<br />

SUGAR GINGER ALE 89 C<br />

lib.<br />

pkga. 19c<br />

20<br />

MAIN ST.<br />

BREWSTER<br />

N.Y.<br />

or LIME RICKEY<br />

CLICQUOT CLUB<br />

»<br />

Pale Dry GINGER ALE Golden<br />

Full pint<br />

bou.<br />

CERTO u.<br />

Mako Jelly Jell<br />

1<br />

29*<br />

Early Morn<br />

CoKee3 5Qc<br />

Fiekhpak with -m<br />

Beans g S c<br />

Frcahpak<br />

Preserves2 jar*<br />

Strawberry <br />

12 »<br />

OBITUARY<br />

Carmel Country Club Notes. The holiday dance at the China daughter Muriel of Larchmont, and<br />

Lake boat house this Saturday night<br />

The feature of the week end program<br />

Mr. Horace Pickford of Pleasantville.<br />

is expected to be the most largely at­<br />

of activities at the Carmel Country<br />

The trout season closed on Wednestended<br />

of the entire summer season.<br />

Brewster baseball fans expected a Club will be the aquatic meet to be<br />

day. Members of the Carmel Country<br />

The main club house and annex have<br />

keen, Interesting ball game last Sun­ held on Sunday afternoon at the fchi-<br />

Club finished their trout fishing in fine<br />

been booked to capacity. Among those<br />

day afternoon on the Electrozone na Lake boat house to determine the<br />

spirits and the biggest catches of the<br />

spending the three day week end at<br />

Field between the St. Lawrence A. O. club champions in various water sports<br />

season were made in China Lake last<br />

the club are: Mr. and Mrs. Ralph P.<br />

and Dover Plains and to their delight events, such as high and low board<br />

Saturday and Sunday. William A.<br />

Lewis and sons Ralph, Jr., and Billy,<br />

saw a contest full of thrills which was diving, 25, 50 and 100 yard free style<br />

Cornell of Pleasantville, caught a<br />

Mr. and Mrs. George Kindermann, Mr.<br />

won in the ninth Inning.<br />

dashes, breast and back stroke races,<br />

six and one-quarter pound rainbow<br />

and Mrs. R. C. Blanchard, Mr. and<br />

Joele Scolplno, who pitched for the canoe tilting and canoe races. The<br />

there Saturday afternoon, which, in­<br />

Mrs. Theodore E. Slmonton, Mr. and<br />

Brewster boys, not only played a competition is attracting many of the<br />

cidentally was "Bill's" birthday. This<br />

Mrs. Robert H. Becker and Mr. L. W.<br />

hero's role on the mound, but came club's junior members, including the<br />

was the first rainbow ever taken by<br />

Hommel all of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, Mr. and Mrs.<br />

through In the ninth with a single following: Henry Ryder and the Misses<br />

him and the largest ever caught in<br />

Frank W. Holmes of Brooklyn, Judge<br />

that brought victory to his home town. Dorothy, Ruth and Katherine Ryder<br />

China Lake since it first was stocked<br />

and Mrs. W. C. Duell of Tarrytown,<br />

Both teams went scoreless for four and Charlotte and Betty Ewen all of<br />

with this species.<br />

Mrs. H. D. Wfllliams and daughter<br />

Innings. Dover Plains broke through Yonkers, Douglas Cooley, Robert Saf-<br />

Catherine, of Westfleld, N. J., Mr. and Judge Edward J. Byrne of Brooklyn,<br />

the scoring column in the fifth on a ford and Clark Brinckerhoff of Mt.<br />

Mrs. David R. Lacraw of Plainfield, N. caught two big trout weighing four and<br />

hit by Robeda, who was advanced to Vernon, Bayard and Miss Natalie Kill-<br />

J., Dr. and Mrs. Charles S. Green and one-half and five and one-half<br />

third on two Infield outs and scored on ani of Forest Hills, Miss Cynthia Webb<br />

son Bobby, and daughter Betty, and pounds. Frank Holmes of Brooklyn, al­<br />

Tahamlne's single over short. and Miss Muriel Becker of Larchmont,<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Allan Welte all of Yonkso caught two trout, a three and one-<br />

It was in their half of the same In­<br />

Lawrence Barnett of Scarsdale, James<br />

ers, Mr. C. A. Macdonald of Jersey City, half pounder and a four and one-half<br />

ning that Brewster started some fire­<br />

Chapman and Robert Cornell of<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Karl N. Becker and pounder. B. Lawrence Hunt of White<br />

works. Brady and Eddie Tut tin hit safe<br />

Pleasantville, Reld Jewett of White<br />

Plains, duplicated Mr. Holmes' catch<br />

and a moment later Bill Kilcoyne<br />

Plains, Robert Byrne of Brooklyn,<br />

smashed a double against the right<br />

Miss Peggy Eickelberg and Ralph and<br />

field fence scoring Brady and Tuttle,<br />

Billy Lewis and Charles Carr of <strong>New</strong><br />

putting the locals in the lead by a<br />

<strong>York</strong>, Billy Miller of Bronxyille. and<br />

lone run.<br />

S. Wood Cornell and Rundle Gilbert<br />

of Carmel.<br />

"AGENCY OF SERVICE"<br />

Dover tied the count in the seventh<br />

on an error by Llddy and in the eighth The club championship golf tour­<br />

the visitors had the bases loaded and naments have reached the second and MERRIAM-BREWSTER, NY.'<br />

none out, but at this stage of the game third rounds. In the men's event Mr.<br />

Joie Scolplno turned on some reserve Leland Ryder of Carmel, last year's<br />

steam and struck the next three bat­ champion, will meet Dr. Lisle B. King-<br />

Phone 260<br />

ters out to the great Joy of a large ery of White Plains, in the second<br />

crowd of Brewster fans.<br />

round, Mr. S. W. Sells of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, REAL ESTATE INSURANCE<br />

will play Mr. Harold G. Ewen of Yonk­<br />

Only a short space of time elapsed ers and Mr. Merritt Ryder of Carmel,<br />

before Scolplno put the finishing will tee off with the winner of the first<br />

touches on the winning picture by round match between Mr. Carl North-<br />

driving out a single and by taking adnip and Mr. Rundle Gilbert, both of<br />

vantages of two wild throws he came Carmel. Dr. Morton Ryder of Rye, has<br />

home with the "bacon."<br />

WARNER BROS<br />

already reached ths third round by<br />

4 Days Starting:<br />

The box score:<br />

virtue of a bye.<br />

BREWSTER<br />

In the women's event Mrs. Ken R.<br />

ab h.<br />

PALACE SUNDAY<br />

r po Dyke of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, last year's winner,<br />

at 6:00 P. M.<br />

Waters, ss 4 1<br />

DANBURY<br />

meets Miss Ann Ward, also of <strong>New</strong><br />

Dunford, rf 3 0<br />

^ The Head Man of Humor<br />

<strong>York</strong> in the second round, and Mrs.<br />

Brady, 3b 3 1<br />

George Kindermann of. <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, will<br />

Tuttle, lb 4 1<br />

WILL ROGERS<br />

play Mrs. Herbert C. Brickerhoff of Mt.<br />

Kilcoyne, c 4<br />

1 0 15<br />

In "DOWN TO EARTH"<br />

Vernon. Mrs. James Hurley of Jack­<br />

1<br />

Scolplno, p 3<br />

son Heights, is scheduled to meet Mrs.<br />

With Dorothy Jordan, Irene Rich<br />

0<br />

McLeod, rf 3<br />

John Corley Westervelt of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />

Sunday—First show 6:00 P. M. Last show 9:20 P. M.<br />

0<br />

Maroney, If 3 1<br />

The finals in both tournaments will<br />

Monday—Continuous from 2:15 P. M.<br />

McGetrick, 2b 3 0<br />

be played Labor Day afternoon.<br />

Last complete show 9:10 P. M.<br />

Liddy, rf 1<br />

31 6 3 27 11 2<br />

DOVER PLAINS<br />

ab h r po a e<br />

Robeda, cf 4 2 1 1 0 0<br />

Benson, c 4 1 0 7 0 1<br />

L. Buna, p 5 0 0 0 0 1<br />

Tahamine, lb 5 1 0 6 0 0<br />

Herbert, 2b 5 10 2 10<br />

B. Bona, If 4 2 1 1 0 0<br />

Pelcn, rf<br />

Dobola, ss<br />

Sena, 3b<br />

Score by innings:<br />

Dover Plains<br />

Brewster<br />

4 1 0 1 0 0<br />

4 0 0 4 5 0<br />

3 0 0 5 1 0<br />

38 8 2 27 7 2<br />

000 010 100—2<br />

000 020 001—3<br />

Two bas hits Kilcoyne. Struck out<br />

by Scolplno 15, by Bona 6.<br />

——o<br />

Public Notice<br />

State of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />

Department of Public Service<br />

Public Service Commission<br />

Albany<br />

August 25, 1932.<br />

Case No. 7491<br />

In the matter of the Petition of <strong>New</strong><br />

Sugar-Cured Uouuu* Whole or<br />

Shank-half<br />

Smoked «I«H1S<br />

Center Slices<br />

lb.<br />

lb.<br />

<strong>York</strong> State Electric & Gas Corporation,<br />

under section 68 Public Service<br />

Law, for authority to exercise an electric<br />

franchise granted by the town of<br />

Patterson, Putnam county.<br />

• • • • • •<br />

NOTICE is hereby given that a<br />

public hearing will be held in the above<br />

matter by this Commission at its office<br />

in the State Office Building, 80 Centre<br />

Street, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City, on September<br />

6, 1932, at 11:00 A. M., DayUght Saving<br />

Time.<br />

BY THE COMMISSION,<br />

FRANCIS E. ROBERTS,<br />

Secretary.<br />

Fresh Killed •ROfl.KBS,<br />

FRYERS M * ROASTING &ish<br />

Chickens «*. X3 C<br />

SbortCut Smoked<br />

Tongues ^<br />

Honnel's, Quaiter-«ize and Hali-tize<br />

CANNED Hams ib. 39c<br />

HormelV Whole and Hali-size<br />

CANNED<br />

Chickens lb 39 c<br />

Hormel'i<br />

SPICED Hams .89c<br />

SMOKED<br />

ib.<br />

Fillet of Butts<br />

lb. %%C<br />

Haddock 15 SLICED<br />

Deep Sea * Boiled Ham 29<br />

Scallops M*<br />

c<br />

both as to numbers and size.<br />

As we interpret Speaker John Gar­<br />

On Sunday afternoon Harvey E.<br />

ner's alibi for not talking to Al Smith<br />

Lapp of White Plains, was high hook<br />

that important night of the Democra­<br />

with two rainbows weighing three and<br />

Lillian G. Masterman<br />

tic National Convention, the reason<br />

one-quarter and four and one-half Lillian G., wife Mr. James S. Mast­ John didn't answer the phone was that<br />

pounds. Ralph F. Lewis and George erman died at her home, 435 E. 57th Al called him after office hours.<br />

Kindermann of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, Karl* N. St., <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City, on Aug. 29, 1932.<br />

Becker of Larchmont and Dr. Clayton Mr. and Mrs. Masterman left Brew­<br />

L. Peet of Peekskill, caught trout ster a few years ago. They owned and<br />

weighing about the same and good built the beautiful home on the Dyke-<br />

catches of black bass were made in mans road now owned by Mr. and Mrs. Vail s Grove<br />

Barrett Lake, the club's other fishing Clinton Burns.<br />

water.<br />

She is survived by her husband and<br />

Peach Lake<br />

one daughter, Mrs. Colin Girvan.<br />

Golf, Tennis, Bathing<br />

ENGAGED<br />

Northrup-McKown.<br />

Warner Bros DANCING<br />

The engagement of Miss Prances V.<br />

Saturday, September 3<br />

McKown, daughter of Dr. and Mrs.<br />

Francis J. McKown, of Carmel, to Mr. Capitol<br />

H. Carl Northrup, son of Mr. and Mrs.<br />

Harry BRICKMAN<br />

Danbury<br />

Herbert E. Northrup, of Carmel, was<br />

and his Varsity Band<br />

announced at a dinner party given by Begins SAT. SEPT. 3<br />

Dr. and Mrs. McKown at the Carmel<br />

Country Club last Saturday evening.<br />

The Greatest Animal Picture General Admission 75 cents<br />

The guests included Mr. and Mrs.<br />

of All Time<br />

Donald C. Angevine, Mrs. William P. "Bring 'Em<br />

Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. S. Wood Cornell,<br />

the Misses Phillls Palmer, Helen Back Alive"<br />

Hllbert, Ann Ward, Frances V. Mc­ CAMEO<br />

Kown. Emily D. Crane, Jean North­ Begins WED. SEPT. 7<br />

rup, Dorothy Averill and Nettel-Wade<br />

Biewster, N. T.<br />

Double Feature<br />

Pant, and the Messrs H. Carl North­<br />

Telephone 295<br />

rup, Philips Partington, Harold Bed-<br />

"CROONER"<br />

Program Subjeet to Change<br />

er, Jrhn Averill, O. Rundle Gilbert,<br />

with<br />

Without Notice<br />

Jam r, M. VanBuren, W. Durrell North­<br />

David Manners<br />

Friday,- Saturday, Sept. 2-3<br />

rup end Theodore E. Damm.<br />

Ann Dvorak<br />

Marlene Dietrich with Cllve Brook<br />

Miss McKown is a graduate of Vas-<br />

Anna May Wong, Warner Oland<br />

sar College. Mr. Northrup graduated<br />

Companion Feature<br />

"SHANGHAI EXPRESS"<br />

from Wesleyan and is assistant cashier "A PASS PORT TO HELL" Comedy <strong>New</strong>s<br />

of the Putnam Courty National Bank<br />

with<br />

Matinee Saturday 2:30 P. M.<br />

of Carmel. The date of the wedding<br />

Elissa Land!<br />

has not been set.<br />

»<br />

Paul Lukas<br />

Sunday, Monday, Sept 4-5<br />

——o<br />

"BROKEN HILLARY"<br />

St. Lawrence vs Jerry's All Stars<br />

with Lionel Rarrymore,<br />

Is the game scheduled for Sunday at<br />

2:30 p. m.<br />

Nancy Carroll, Phillips Holmes<br />

o<br />

"Last of the Mohicans"<br />

Announcement<br />

A free country is one in which the<br />

Episode 12<br />

citizen is privileged to "cuss" the gov­<br />

Organlogue <strong>New</strong>s<br />

The<br />

ernment—end then remain at home on<br />

Matinee Sunday at 2:30 P. M.<br />

election day.<br />

Up-to-Date Shoe Repairer<br />

o<br />

Tuesday, Wednesday, Sept 6-7<br />

Evidently the chap who urges that 14 Main Street Brewster Buster Kenton, Jimmy Durante<br />

babies be banned from all public meetings<br />

Is not a practical politician. Wishes all newyand old customers<br />

"SPEAKEASY"<br />

Magic Carpet <strong>New</strong>s<br />

to know that we<br />

Call for and Deliver Thursday, Friday, Sept. 8-9<br />

APPLE<br />

"SKYSCRAPER SOULS"<br />

shoes to be repaired, with same<br />

with Warren William Maureen<br />

quality workmanship and<br />

O'SuIlivan, Anita Page, Norman<br />

STORAGE<br />

Foster<br />

No Extra Charge<br />

Large refrigerated apple storage<br />

<strong>New</strong>s<br />

now ready for your early fruit. for this new service we render. Just<br />

Rates on application Call Brewster 590<br />

SERVE ICE CORPl and car will be right at your door<br />

Brewster 585<br />

for shoes to be repaired.<br />

E. MASTRIANI.<br />

Saturday, Sept. 10<br />

"LADIES OF THE BIG HOUSE"<br />

Sylvia Sidney, Gene Raymond<br />

Comedy <strong>New</strong>s<br />

Matinee Saturday at 2:30 P. M.<br />

Labor Day Specials<br />

Thuringer *• JKJc<br />

Butter 20<br />

FULL CREAM<br />

c<br />

COUNTRY ROLL<br />

lb<br />

The Finest Made— None sold to Dealers PLENTY FOR ALL<br />

Gobel's Shankless Choice Lean Tender<br />

SMO. SHOULDER LAMB FORES<br />

iC tb.<br />

12<br />

Gobel's Lean Star<br />

BACON<br />

Igclb<br />

Value that can't be Beat Anywhere - The Finest Brands at Prices that |<br />

• Others sell Cheaper Grades For - None Will Be Sold To Dealers<br />

ARMOUR'S STAR - WILSON'S CERTIFIED<br />

Smoked Hams 15 c<br />

lb<br />

Sperry & Barnes Sugar Cured<br />

BONELESS HAMS<br />

25c lb<br />

No Bones — No Skin — No Surplus Fat<br />

A Big Value — Real Genuine<br />

1932 SPRING LAMB<br />

LEGS OF LAMB<br />

18 b<br />

Very Choice Meaty<br />

FRICASSE CHICKENS<br />

18 c,b<br />

Cut From Choice Prime Quality Beef<br />

BONELESS ROLLED<br />

CHUCK BEEF<br />

2T<br />

c lb<br />

FRESH VEGETABLES RECEIVED DAILY - All kinds of Fruits<br />

Phones 536 « 537 Free Delivery §<br />

E. M. Simonelli, Inc.<br />

Wholesalers and Retailers of Prime Meats<br />

53 Main St., Brewster, N. Y.<br />

mm<br />

Danbury Store. 18 Elm St.

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