1937-09-03 - Northern New York Historical Newspapers
1937-09-03 - Northern New York Historical Newspapers
1937-09-03 - Northern New York Historical Newspapers
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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, <strong>1937</strong> THE BREWSTER STANDARD — ESTABLISHED 1869 PAGE FIVE<br />
HAPPENINGS<br />
School will reopen Wednesday, September<br />
8.<br />
o<br />
John Smith Is on a two weeks vacation<br />
visiting his parents in Alabama,<br />
o<br />
Prenatal consultations will be held<br />
at Carmel school from 1-4 p. m. Friday,<br />
Sept. 10.<br />
o<br />
The September card tournament at<br />
Kishawana will start Wednesday, the<br />
8th.<br />
o<br />
Miss Arlene Reed, a 1936 graduate<br />
of Brewster High School, has enrolled<br />
In Gaines School, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City.<br />
o<br />
Judge Edward Ryan, of Kent, has<br />
been appointed comtmlssioner of elections<br />
filling the vacancy caused by the<br />
recent resignation of Elijah Tompkins,<br />
o<br />
Rev. Stewart J. Vcach, of the Mahopac<br />
Palls Baptist church, will conduct<br />
the closing outdoor Vesper service<br />
on Bloomer's Bill at 6:30 p. m.<br />
Sunday.<br />
o •<br />
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Wells have left<br />
Mt. Riga for a vacation trip by automobile<br />
in <strong>New</strong> England. They may vis-<br />
It friends at the Oape and at Martha's<br />
Vineyard.<br />
o<br />
The Highland Garden Club, Cold<br />
Spring, will hold the annual fall flower<br />
show In Haldane High School, Thursday,<br />
September 9, from three o'clock<br />
until nine.<br />
Mrs. John Homer Smith returned to<br />
her home in Washington, D. C, on<br />
Saturday, so no one had a chance to<br />
talk over the Cornell auct.on with her<br />
and get the exact age of the items in<br />
which they are interested.<br />
o<br />
Assemblyman D. M. Stephens and<br />
family are expected home this week<br />
end. Willis is coming along fine and no<br />
set backs are expected. They will be<br />
most welcome here at school and on<br />
the political front.<br />
o<br />
Commander SpafTord entertained<br />
Midshipmen Francis Welch and Cecil<br />
Bolam and several other Midshipmen<br />
from Annapolis at luncheon on Monday<br />
at his home, Eght Bells, Dingle<br />
Ridge, Brewster, N. Y.<br />
o<br />
Summer must be abou: over. The<br />
A. J. Mackey family send word from<br />
Whitney Point that they are returning<br />
to Brooklyn this week end. They do<br />
not say anything about a stop over *n<br />
Brewster on the way down. Maybe<br />
our modern Labor Day program appals<br />
them.<br />
(>—• —<br />
Rosh Hashana will be celebrated<br />
Monday and Tuesday, September 6<br />
and 7. During this time Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Jacob Susnitzky and family will attend<br />
services in Danbury. The <strong>New</strong><br />
<strong>York</strong> Store, of which Mr. Susnitzky is<br />
proprietor will be closed Tuesday as<br />
well as Monday.<br />
Trap Shoot starts at 10 a. m. Sun Brewster School Opens<br />
day at the <strong>Northern</strong> Westchester<br />
Trap, two mifes below somers oh j Wednesday, Sept. o<br />
Route 118.<br />
Jane Lobdell's black Shetland yearling<br />
pony colt won first prize in his<br />
class at he Dutchess County Fair at<br />
Rhlnebeck on Wednesday.<br />
Mrs. E. A. Haufler and Miss Helen;Richie, Croon Falls, is a member of<br />
Tunstead, of East Orange, N. J., who | the September class of the Household<br />
were returning from Martha's Vine-j Nursing Training School for Attendyard<br />
and Bowne on Cape Cod, stopped; ant Nurses hi Boston. This class, flllfcr<br />
an overnight visit with Mrs. Wil-jed to capacity. Is the first one of the<br />
liam Kent and Miss Elizabeth Kent, new school year. Before being sent to<br />
Brewster High and Grade School<br />
will open Wednesday, September 8,<br />
<strong>1937</strong>. The opening session will close at<br />
noon. The school day Is from 8:45 to<br />
3:30. Kindergarten children should be<br />
four years and nine months to enter<br />
that department. School busses will<br />
follow the same routes and time schedules<br />
as last year.<br />
The faculty for the year Is:<br />
H. H. Donley Principal.<br />
Howard Mulholland, English n, m<br />
and IV.<br />
Edith Harwood, Mathematics.<br />
Kathryn Hubbard, Social Studies,<br />
Business Training and Typing.<br />
Carolyn Kramers, English I and<br />
French.<br />
Grace Lazarus, Library and Latin.<br />
Judge Arthur S. Tompkins will attend<br />
the annual Rockland County Agricultural<br />
Fair at Orangeburg on Labor<br />
Day. Arthur P. Budd is going to<br />
of Forest Hill. N. J., who are staying |one of the small general hospitals af-!^ 01 *^ for * week. So Dr. Vail and*<br />
with Mr. H. H. Vreeland at Rest-a- ] filiated with the school, Miss Reeves Willis Ryder will carry on at Carmel.<br />
While. will spend a preliminary six weeks at<br />
o (the school studying home management'<br />
Mortimer Bloomer of Prospect Hill i and dietetics under the direction ofj Harry Reynolds. Town Clerk, an-|<br />
is enjoying his vacation th.s year by'the school dietition. Upon completion nounced that his office is equipped!<br />
way of water instead of auto. He left of the course she will be capable of with the new forms required by the |<br />
Ossining Sunday morning en route to caring for convalescent patients in [change in the marriage license law!<br />
Lockport with his daughter. Mrs. Don-1 the home. effective Sept. 1. The Justices andi<br />
aid Ward and family on board a cabin j o j clergymen are also ready to follow the |<br />
cruiser lately purchased by Mr. Ward. \ Miss Carol McNally, of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>; requirements of the new law.<br />
They go by way of Albany on Hudson j city, soprano, was the guest soloist at I<br />
River through the Barge Canal, One:- st. Andrew's last Sunday morning,: °<br />
da Lake and into Lake Ontario cover-, singing "God Ls Our Strength" bvi «« «« «., * ^ , ,<br />
ing about 350 miles^ B e ^ Han^ble. Mr ^ b l e n £ l & g S X t ^ » ^<br />
John M. M^Tuctloneer o f e T ^ ^ I ^<br />
Greenwich Conn., is offering an ex- ha., become most enthusiastic about j J S * * TiSSav tt Sorted ^?J? i<br />
traordinary lot of items at Bedford the beauties of Putnam County. Mta 2 S j ? 2 ? * S L * HZftLSS<br />
September 11 His advertisement offers; McNally is a pupil of Miss ttaffnerKf conLc? Ma?y ha? the to-'<br />
enough to satisfy some of those who and is the possessor of a beautiful Cession S L , S?fl2ft h£ Si<br />
bid too late at the Cornell auction, voic .She was the week end guest of ]^ff , ^SS lI" , *" *** bUt ^ l<br />
Vacation travelers back from <strong>New</strong> | Miss Shaffner at "Brookwillow." Mr. explaining.<br />
England will find Westchester auctions Hamblen is the eminent American<br />
FINGER PRINTS TO<br />
PROTECT CIVILIANS<br />
Increasing Number Being<br />
Recorded in Washington.<br />
The Maine Lumberjack Band, under<br />
supervision of Lowell Thomas, radio<br />
commentator, will be a feature of<br />
the annual carnival of Hasler-Kamp<br />
Post, American Legion, In Pawling, tonight<br />
and tomorrow.<br />
The regular monthly meeting of the<br />
W. C. T. U. will be held at the home<br />
of the President, Miss Minnie Hay;.<br />
on Tuesday, Sept. 7, at 3 o'clock. The<br />
L. T. L's. will have charge of the program.<br />
Come and bring your friends.<br />
Flora Miller, Business Law, Book-<br />
Kenneth Blake's catch a gorgeous i keeping and Shorthand.<br />
trout, 4 pounds 8 ounces, taken from J. Wellington Truran, Science and<br />
the East Branch near the ball lot, gave Mechanical Drawing.<br />
pause to the crowd that were going Alfred E. Watson. Economics and<br />
over the fight The speckled bcautj History.<br />
is the largest taken In Putnam streams<br />
Grades<br />
this year and Henry Rocano and Don Mary E. McEnroe, 8th.<br />
ald Siillman will have to go some to Florence Fitzmorris, 7th.<br />
beat it. Needless to say the fish did Margaret Edwards, 7th.<br />
not have to go to court.<br />
Edna Sparks, 6th.<br />
Sadie Nagle, 5th.<br />
Among the horses that gave an out Grace Browne, 5th.<br />
standing performance at the Wacca- Catherine Pugsley, 4t4i.<br />
buc Horse show was "Kathleen Ma- Mabel Travis, 3rd.<br />
vourneen," a grey mare owned by Dr. Mabel Weller. 2nd.<br />
R. VanNettan of Ridgefleld, Conn., Cora Sherwood, 1st.<br />
trained and ridden by Ernest Russell, Janet Barnes, 1st.<br />
of the Maple Vista Stables of Ridge Anna Crane, Kindergarten.<br />
fleld. "Mavoumeen" received a great<br />
Special Teachers<br />
hand from the ring-side spectators as Sterling Geesman, Physical Educa<br />
she daintily stepped around the ring tion.<br />
after the blue ribbon was placed on Harold Knapp. Music.<br />
her bridle in the Road Hack Class. Veronica Moore, Nurse.<br />
Helen Darling, Secretary,<br />
The Southern <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Fish and<br />
o<br />
Game Association, with headquarters i Mrs. D. E. Stannard is entertaining<br />
in White Plains, has completed the j at cards this afternoon.<br />
largest plant of adult pheasants ever o • •<br />
made in Weschester when its members Mrs. Charles Carroll and Miss Helen<br />
of the group released 1,500 birds. A | Berger are spending the week with Mr.<br />
campaign had been instituted prior to j and Mrs. Albro Travis.<br />
the conclusion of the Spring meetings! o •• •<br />
in which the members purchased the; Miss Jean curley has entered the<br />
birds with pledges of money and funds j Training School for Nurees at Danalso<br />
being used from the association's J bury Hospital,<br />
coffers in accordance with a plan instituted<br />
by the game committee of the Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Lobdell, Mr. and<br />
organization.<br />
Mrs. A. F. Lobdell, Jr., and Jane are<br />
visiting on the North Shore this week<br />
The Labor Day Dance at Kishawana<br />
end.<br />
Country Club tomorrow evening will<br />
o<br />
include >se>jeTal entertainment num<br />
Mrs. George E. vonGal and sons, of<br />
bers and novelty dances besides an<br />
Danbury, who have been spending<br />
excellent orchestra. Ralph C. Morgan,<br />
some time with Mrs. vonGal's father,<br />
president, Is assisted by a special com<br />
H. H. Vreeland, have returned to their<br />
mittee. Alex Addis, J. M. Adrian, Mrs.<br />
home.<br />
Hazel Bergen, Mrs. Sherman Bljur,<br />
Mrs. Simeon Brady, Jr., Mrs. A. P. Mr. and Mrs. Richard O'Brien gave<br />
Budd. Mrs. Robert S. Cleaver, Doane a dinner party on Wednesday evening<br />
Comstock, Miss Helen Field, N. P. in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Simeon Bra-<br />
Gatling. Jr., Bernard Hope, Mrs. Ken- dy ' *•{ * h o j* weddm * anniversary<br />
neth <strong>New</strong>comb. Ralph Proctor. Mrs. E. *<br />
R. Richie, Mrs. Arthur Ridley, Mrs.<br />
D. E. Stannard, Maxwell Scott and<br />
Mrs. James White, Miss Agnes<br />
Clifford Tuttle.<br />
j White and Mrs. Elbert White have returned<br />
from a motor trip through <strong>New</strong><br />
4 vI d s s Parrott at<br />
Miss Dorothy Reeves, formerly em- W ? **•* f* ^ _<br />
ployed in the office of Dr. Donald! Augusta a , nd Washington, D. C—"Realizing<br />
that finger prints may be an effective<br />
means of identification in case<br />
of death or amnesia, increasing<br />
numbers of civilians are having<br />
their prints recorded at the federal<br />
bureau of investigation, a division<br />
or the United States Department of<br />
Justice that is perhaps better<br />
known as 'the G-Men,'" says the<br />
National Geographic society.<br />
"Visitors are conducted on tours<br />
through the identification division at<br />
the rate of several hundred a<br />
day. Many remain to have their<br />
fingerprints taken. In long chattering<br />
lines, busincssTnen and their<br />
wives, giggling girls, and solemn<br />
small boys pass before the recorder<br />
with his yellow stamp pad and<br />
small white cards marked off into<br />
spaces for each finger's print.<br />
"A young girl approaches, holding<br />
out red-nailed white hands. The<br />
recorder presses her right thumb<br />
firmly on the stamp pad and then<br />
down on the card, rolling it from<br />
right to left. 'Just relax, don't<br />
try to help me,' he instructs her,<br />
for if she presses with her thumb,<br />
it overinks and smudges the pattern.<br />
Offer Telltale Evidence.<br />
"He takes the marks of her right<br />
hand's fingers, one after another,<br />
and then those of her. left hand,<br />
individually.<br />
"Next he records, at a single<br />
impression, all the fingertips of her<br />
right hand, and, with another impression,<br />
all those of the left, as<br />
a check upon the sequence of the<br />
preceding prints. She stares<br />
amazed at the dark whorls on the<br />
card made by her unstained white<br />
fingertips. The colorless chemical<br />
solution on the stamp pad acts on<br />
the chemically-treated card, but<br />
remains invisible on the hand.<br />
"The federal bureau of investigation,<br />
with 237,000 sets of fingerprints<br />
in its civilian files, is increasing<br />
them at the rate of almost 800<br />
a day. The bureau does not search<br />
for fingerprints of criminals among<br />
the prints in these files, but it may<br />
search for them among the prints<br />
of civil service employees, which<br />
are filed to keep men with prison<br />
records from holding positions of<br />
public trust.<br />
"Exhibited on the wall of the<br />
federal bureau of investigation is<br />
a device like a large automobilemileage-meter.<br />
Each time the last<br />
number on the right changes, it<br />
marks, not another mile, but a new<br />
set of criminal fingerprints received<br />
at the bureau. The number changes<br />
about 175 times an hour. The bureau,<br />
on duty twenty-four hours a<br />
day, receives during that time<br />
about 4,200 new records of people<br />
ent on to Bar Harbor<br />
*<br />
for a week end.<br />
under arrest. These are sent in<br />
from more than 10,000 law enforcement<br />
agencies all over the United<br />
States und from eighty foreign<br />
countries.<br />
It iVorlts Th's Way.*" -<br />
"Imagine that a suspect, Bill<br />
Smith, is arrested in Los Angeles.<br />
His fingerprints are taken with<br />
printer's blcck ink, which, with<br />
his photograph, are rushed to Washington<br />
to the federal bureau of investigation<br />
There they will be<br />
checked against fingerprints in the<br />
criminal files to see if he has a<br />
previous criminal record. If the<br />
check reveals that Bill Smith is<br />
really ex-convict 'Butcherknife<br />
Joe,' wanted in <strong>New</strong> Orleans for<br />
murder, two telegrams are sent,<br />
one to inform the Los Angeles authorities,<br />
another to tell <strong>New</strong> Orleans<br />
officials the Los Angeles police<br />
have their man.<br />
"Fingerprints found on weapons,<br />
woodwork, glass, and articles near<br />
a scene of a crime are also checked<br />
against prints in the bureau's criminal<br />
files and aid in capturing law<br />
violators.<br />
"Since no two fingerprints have<br />
ever been discovered whose patterns<br />
were identical, fingerprints of<br />
will equal any sales in Maine or Vermont.<br />
Gecrge E. vonGal, Jr., of Dan- '•<br />
o<br />
bury, Conn., will arrive in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />
The Neighborhood Garden Club,<br />
;<br />
today on the Bergensfjord, from |<br />
Oslo, completing a summer vacation ;<br />
composer, who is known throughout<br />
•his country and England for his<br />
splendid work.<br />
o<br />
Shrub Oak, N. Y.. will hold the third j<br />
annual Fall Flower Show. Sep:. 9, from \ trip of several weeks in Europe. Lewis!<br />
Soa ^ e ot tn e hard working secretar-<br />
3 to 9:30. Amateurs are invited to com- ies of clubs and societies in Putnam ;F. Beers, of 21 Deer Hill avenue andj<br />
pete. Exhibits are to be delivered at J County fail to get their notices to the; Charles Jennings, of Hearthstone, who!<br />
the Odd Fellow's Hall. Shrub Oak, by I papers now and then In time for pub- i accompanied them to Europe early in<br />
11:30 a. m. on day of show. Mrs. Les- !iL 'ation, so conflic s arise that cut the summer and traveled with them.<br />
ter Perry, Jefferson Valley, Tel. 30-F- down the attendance at bridge parties for several weeks, returned home two'<br />
11 is in charge of entries. Exhibitors and dances. When several are disap-| weeks ago.<br />
are asked to commnicate with her V,y! pointed on: usually suggests. "Why not'<br />
Sept. 6.<br />
| a county clearing house to set up a I<br />
social schedule that would click." Thei The Kishawana Contract Tourna-<br />
O. Rundle Gilbert, youthful auction-' si nation needs attention before the ment which starts at 8:30 p. m. Wed- 1<br />
eer. conducted the sale of the estate campaign opens and those church sup- nesday, Sept. 8, is open to all con- •<br />
of Harriet N. Cornell at the Cornell' P* r tickets get going. The politicians tract players. Games will be played at!<br />
residence. 48 Prospect Street. Friday, i would appreciate the break if there, the Club on four Wednesday evenings.<br />
August 27. <strong>1937</strong>. more than a hundred j w e r e less than three fer such tell-tale evidence that criminals<br />
have tried to change theirs.<br />
But they cannot be entirely<br />
changed, even by the painful process<br />
of removing the skin.<br />
"The federal bureau of investigation<br />
has nearly seven million criminal<br />
fingerprint records on file, in<br />
more than 1,000 great green cases<br />
stretching for two city blocks within<br />
the building. Only 300,000 of these<br />
are records of women, the rest are<br />
of men. Workers search through<br />
these prints by hand, to check an<br />
incoming set of criminal prints<br />
against them. If the incoming fingerprints<br />
fall into a certain common<br />
classification, chiefly the ulnar<br />
loop type of pattern, the search is<br />
speeded up by a machine which<br />
^PPers a night the 8th. 15th. 22nd and 29:h. The fee automatically sorts the cards at the<br />
years after many of the items found during October,<br />
for each evening is 50 cents for each I rate of 475 a minute."<br />
their way to the north end of Pros- I<br />
person. There will be prizes for the<br />
pect Street. Mrs. Cornell would have<br />
winner.-, each evening in addition to<br />
the grand prizes to be awarded on j Children Borrow Rats<br />
been pleased to welcome to her home' Dixie Roberts, a graduate of Carmel<br />
such Interesting young people as Mr. High School In the class of <strong>1937</strong>. is do- he 29th.<br />
From Mir.um for Pets<br />
and Mrs. Gilbert who showed p keen i lng a dance number at the Paramount<br />
Springfield, Mass.—Lending rata<br />
appreciation of all the persons and Theatre. Times Square. <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>!<br />
to boys and girls who like them for<br />
property concerned. Young men and City. Miss Roberts is paired with Rob-1 Members of the family gathered at pets has become quite an extensive<br />
women who knew Mr. Gilbert as a ert Nicholsberg in the feature num-1 St. Lawrence church Sunday aiternoon practice with Trailside museum, u<br />
hockey player, a tennis player and, so ter of the curren: week's program, ho witness the christening of Mr. and bureau of the Springfield Museum<br />
on were surprised to know the boy has Nicholsberg is a former student of the i Mrs. Robert H. O'Brien's daughter.; of natural historybecome<br />
quite experienced in the past Lake Mahopac High Schopl. Miss Elizabeth Crosby. Rev. Thomas G. The museum breeds the rats lor<br />
ten years and is known to many per- Roberts is a tap dancer and taught a Phil bin administered baptism. The! study purposes.<br />
sons concerned with the settling of class of j^rl* wbjlc atii-numa .#>chuol. sponsors were Mrs Prank Wells Mc-' When a child borrows une he can<br />
estates. Rain threatened, now and She u, the da-ji'h'^r: of Mi, a/ijfi Mrs. Cube, of Albany, and John A. Good-| keep it at- long as he likes. Some<br />
again, but the faU was slight and al- H, Robert, oj .f**e- Vl;ia./ffr*. ©he '• win. of <strong>New</strong> Milford, Conn., formerly boys try their iuck in training sev<br />
most everything was claimed by a new' look part in a dinner program arrang-; of Brewster. Alter the service all eral rats at different intervals, s.':I<br />
owner before five o'clock. Copies of ed by the American Legion last fall were en-.ertained at the home of Mr.! this is ali right with the museum.<br />
the St. Nicholas and Goudy prints are 1 and was applauded heartily by 2501 and Mrs. H. H. Wells where the Some of the rats have been bor<br />
still in demand by those who do not 1 patriots<br />
know the auction is over. (ford.<br />
including Commander Spaf- O'Briens are living for a few weeks rowed and returned<br />
I before returning to <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City. I three or four times<br />
as many as<br />
mmtnttmiinmnmmmmminmmtramnflnmnnmmim^<br />
ANDERSON'S DRUG STORE I<br />
"Always Reliable'<br />
Main Street Brewster, N. Y.<br />
10 th Anniversary Sale<br />
STARTS<br />
SATURDAY, SEPT. 4<br />
TiiniiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiim<br />
ATTENTION, MOTHERS!<br />
Here's a<br />
Lesson<br />
in Thrift<br />
School<br />
Clothes<br />
For JBoys<br />
and Girls<br />
DRESSES, SWEATERS, SHIRTS<br />
UNDERWEAR, SOCKS<br />
A visit to our st6rc will pay you You will find Bargains in<br />
every Department.<br />
NEW YORK STORE<br />
58 Main Street<br />
Brewster, N. Y.<br />
Specials For Saturday<br />
•<br />
Leg of Lamb ----- - lb 33c<br />
Roasting Chickens - _ lb ^11 c<br />
Fresh Fowls lb Jgc<br />
Fresh Broilers lb ^Jlc<br />
Fresh Frygrs — lb 3gc<br />
Pork Loin lb £Qc<br />
Bacon —- . - Vz lb pkg 24 c<br />
Rump of Veal lb 37c<br />
Premier Grape Juice pts 23 c 9 ts 39 C<br />
Mcrgardt's Coffee ..:. - lb £7°<br />
ALL KINDS OF BEVERAGES ON ICE<br />
fllergardt's Progress Market<br />
Telephone 110 Brcwsier. N. Y.<br />
Attention, Land Owners<br />
NOW IS THE TIME<br />
TO POST YOUR LAND<br />
Order Your Signs Here<br />
The Brewster Standard<br />
Phone 82<br />
N<br />
READING NOTICES<br />
A. P. Bndd. Insurance Real Batato-<br />
WANTED a 3 or 4 room apartment.<br />
Tel. 596 Brewster. I9pl<br />
WANTED—Employment as a cook;<br />
willing: to go anywhere. Write The<br />
| Brewster Standard. 19tf<br />
i<br />
FOB BENT—First floor In former<br />
i Holmes house. East Main street. TeL<br />
| 314. P. F. Bcal, Sr. 18- f<br />
i REAL ESTATE—PUTNAM COUNTY<br />
COMPLETE LISTINGS<br />
EDGAR L. HOAG.<br />
320 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK CITY<br />
UENBY DALE, JB*<br />
Beal Estate Broker and Property Mgr.<br />
Putnam Lake, Patterson, N. T.<br />
TeL Brewster 729<br />
FOB SALE—A hand cider press<br />
which cuts apples first, then presses,<br />
in good condition. D. O'Grady.<br />
16tf<br />
FOB SALE—Slightly used valve re-<br />
I facing machine, 2 air compressors.<br />
George T. Tator, South Salem, N. Y.<br />
17tf<br />
FOB AUTOMOBILE LIABILITY,<br />
FIRE AND THEFT INSURANCE<br />
Spa Leon S. Mygalt, Putnam Count]<br />
Savings Bank ltuilding. TeL 164 Brew-<br />
•ter, 45U<br />
BREWSTER PUBLIC LIBBABY<br />
May B. Hancock, Librarian<br />
Open Daily Except Sunday<br />
2:30 to 6 p. m. and 7 to9p.ni.<br />
Also 10:30 to 12 m. Saturday<br />
MONUMENTS — HEADSTONES<br />
Markers in granite and marble. "Se-<br />
• lect" Barre granite a specialty. O. H.<br />
i Purinton. 18 Crosby St., Tel 2893 Danjbury.<br />
Bes. 42 North St. Tel. 4395.<br />
Beal Estate In North Salem<br />
and adjacent territory<br />
Duncan Bulkley<br />
Dongle Ridge Farm, North Salem<br />
Telephone Brewster 275<br />
FURNISIU3D HOUSE for rent.<br />
Available after Sept. 10. Ten rooms,<br />
completely furnished. Oil burner.<br />
Spacious lawn. Price reasonable.<br />
j Phone 28 Brewster. 17tf<br />
THOMAS PIAZZA<br />
The Barber<br />
Now Demonstrates the •,«•<br />
SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR<br />
Chronic or Stubborn Cases of<br />
DANDRUFF and IRRITATED SCALPS<br />
88 Main St. Brewster, N. Y.<br />
GIBL WANTED for mothers helper,<br />
to live in. High school girl desired<br />
with privilege to attend White Plains<br />
High School. Write qualifications. B.<br />
F. Sanford, 8 Hewitt Avenue, White<br />
Plains, N. Y. 19pl<br />
FOB BENT—Apartment, 4 rooms by<br />
month; also 3 furnished rooms for light<br />
housekeeping; 2 furnished rooms for<br />
light housekeeping, ail improvements,<br />
garage and cellar. Blumlein, Daisy<br />
Lane, Croton Falls. 52 tt<br />
CABD OF THANKS—We wish to<br />
express our sincere thanks for the<br />
kindness and sympathy of neighbors<br />
and friends who gave us tlieir assistance<br />
at the tune of our bereavement.<br />
Mrs. A. Harris and Family.<br />
HUNTEB HACK for sale, handsome<br />
Virginia bred bay gelding, 16 hands,<br />
6 years, will sell for reasonable price<br />
as owner travels most of year. E. E.<br />
Joy, .121 Deer HBU Ave., .Danbury,<br />
Conn. 18o4<br />
PLUMS FOB SALE—Purple prunes<br />
and English Damsons. Also yellow<br />
freestone peaches, fine for table or<br />
canning. Very good dropped Mcintosh<br />
apples at bargain. Albert J. Potter,<br />
Joe's Hih Boa