BREWSTER, NY - Northern New York Historical Newspapers
BREWSTER, NY - Northern New York Historical Newspapers
BREWSTER, NY - Northern New York Historical Newspapers
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POUGHKEEPSIEV /PAWLING<br />
PEEKSKILL BREW5TER DANBURY<br />
YONKERS / \ WHITE PLAINS ianhard<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong>,THE HUBZQJFITHE HARLEM VALLEY »t<br />
VOL. LXXVIIL No- 10. Brewster Putnam County, N. Y.t Thurs., June 26, )&*"M Established 77 Years $3.00 Per Year<br />
H. H. Wells Addresses<br />
Putnam Valley Class<br />
Speech delivered by Henry H. Wells<br />
at Commencement, Putnam Valley<br />
Central School, June 20, 1947:<br />
Mr. Schiei'ber, Members of the Grad<br />
uating Class, of the Faculty, of<br />
the Board of Education and Other<br />
Friends:<br />
• -* Dear Brutus<br />
Several years ago I went to a play<br />
"Dear Brutus." In the first act a boy<br />
felt his laziness came because his<br />
father had left him rich, and a wife<br />
knew she would have been happier if<br />
she had married her other lover. What<br />
the other persons were dissatisfied<br />
about I don't remember.<br />
In the second act the boy is poor<br />
and Just as lazy poor as he was when<br />
rich. The wife gets her other lover<br />
for a new husband and she is unhap<br />
py with him. Only one person is hap<br />
pier for the change. The teaching Is<br />
that we to a great extent make our<br />
lives what they are.<br />
The play is called "Dear Brutus", as<br />
you may know, from some lines in<br />
Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar**. Caa-<br />
sius is trying to stir up Brutus against<br />
Caesar and says. 'Men at sometime are<br />
masters of their fates. The fault, Dear<br />
Brutus, is«tiot in our stars, but in our<br />
selves that we are underlings."<br />
If it be true that you young people<br />
will to a great extent make your lives<br />
what they become, then you have a<br />
right to some suggestions from older<br />
people who have made their mistakes<br />
and wish to help you.<br />
My mother tried to teach me never<br />
to cry over spilt milk—not to look<br />
back—but I have had many regrets<br />
over wasted time and ooor decisions.<br />
Place To Work<br />
First. Get the right place to work.<br />
You should think hard on what kind<br />
of a place you will work in. I have<br />
heard that President Wilson advised<br />
a place of 15,000 people. Some of you<br />
may stay in Putnam Valley because<br />
you feel you ought to. Some mav stay<br />
here because you like country life.<br />
Abraham Lincoln<br />
Abraham Lincoln developed in a<br />
very small community, Salem.' Ham<br />
ilton Wright Mable. assistant editor<br />
of The Librarv of the World's Best<br />
Literature, spoke at <strong>New</strong> Haven many<br />
vears ago. I can't^ remember his sub<br />
ject but I think it was "Abraham Lin<br />
coln." He said one reason Mr. Lin<br />
coln • succeeded was that he knew<br />
thoroughlv every community he lived<br />
in. He knew Salem. Illinois He knew<br />
Sorinefleld, Illinois, when he lived<br />
there. He widened his area when he<br />
went to Congress but knew Washing<br />
ton well.<br />
Think weft on where you will work.<br />
Then go to work and avoid the coun<br />
try vice of chatting long on the street,<br />
in your offices, or in your stores.<br />
Don't chat on the 'phone.<br />
' Mr. Vreeland's Advice<br />
Next. You all have chances for<br />
leading satisfactory lives. Mv cousin,<br />
by marriaee, was Herbert H. Vree-<br />
land. He rose from lower •oosltlons to<br />
become the president of what is now<br />
the Putnam Division of the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />
Central: Later at an early aee he be<br />
came president of the Metropolitan<br />
Street Railway in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>. In<br />
Pearson's Magazine he is quoted as<br />
saying. "To win success in life a young<br />
man should select congenial employ<br />
ment and work hard at it; be honest,<br />
regular, and punctual: do a little more<br />
work for his' emolover that he has<br />
a creed to: not open his lips too often,<br />
but his eyes and ears keep always onen<br />
to their utmost. It does not require<br />
exceptional genius to achieve success.<br />
Nature give* evervone-^11 the genius<br />
necessarv. The reason for so many<br />
failures is that those aspirants to suc<br />
cess have not been sufficiently per<br />
sistent."<br />
So try to pick out work you like and<br />
keep at it.<br />
Change In Work<br />
If you work hard and learn to grasp<br />
facts in one line vou can no doubt<br />
more easilv zrasp facts in another line<br />
you may chanae to. Mr. Vreeland told<br />
me of a man who had risen to be a<br />
street railway superintendent. This<br />
man became so interested in his son's<br />
medical Kindles that he "Himself took<br />
no medicine and became a prominent<br />
Washineton nhvslclan.<br />
Detail Work<br />
Next. Do not be afraid of detail.<br />
In law. "banking, business, railroading<br />
or medicine, vou must handle drv de<br />
tails, must, have some drudgery. I Be<br />
lieve in Latin and mathematics be<br />
cause you mind is on detail in those<br />
subjects and they make hard brain<br />
work. Latin is so helpful too in mak<br />
ing us. understand English words.<br />
"Caolo" meanine "I take." makes us<br />
understand "capture." "Manus." Lat<br />
in for "hand", makes us understand<br />
(Continued on Page 4)<br />
TI'NNEY PLIES FROM ARMONK<br />
Gene Tunney. former world heavy<br />
weight chamoion. and former director<br />
of physical training activities for the<br />
U. S. Navv. flew from th*» Westchester<br />
Airport in Armonk. N. Y. last week.<br />
His destination was Southampton. L.<br />
I., where he was scheduled to play<br />
in a golf tournament. The plane was<br />
a <strong>New</strong> Stinson. four passenger air<br />
plane and the pilot was Howard Mat-<br />
teson. chief pilot at the airport and<br />
well known in the county.<br />
Mr. Tunnev uses the charter planes<br />
regularly and finds the service a great<br />
time saver, especially to points where<br />
airline connections are poor.<br />
Lecturer To Talk On<br />
Modern American Art<br />
The Brewster Woman's Club again<br />
offers the public another interesting<br />
evening's entertainment. So mark<br />
your calendars for Thursday evening,<br />
July 10th at 8 p.m. at Brewster High<br />
School. At that time Mr. A. L. Cha-<br />
nin, an American painter and lecturer<br />
on the staff of the Museum of Modern<br />
Art, will speak.<br />
Mr. Chanin attended the Barnes<br />
Foundation in Merlon, Penn. for seven<br />
years. In 1934, he received a fellow<br />
ship from that Foundation to study<br />
the collections of the major museums<br />
in Europe. Since his discharge from<br />
the Army, he has been connected with<br />
the Museum of Modern Art.<br />
The program will consist of a lec<br />
ture on Modern American Painting<br />
accompanied by slides.<br />
Mrs. J. Wellington Truran, program<br />
chairman, has made arrangements for<br />
this most • interesting event and Mrs.<br />
Paul Freeman is chairman in charge<br />
of this meeting.<br />
o<br />
Chevrolet Displays<br />
<strong>New</strong> Model Trucks<br />
Featuring the cab that "breathes,"<br />
the new Advance-Design line of Chev<br />
rolet cars and trucks is on display to<br />
day at the Brady-Stannard Motor Co.,<br />
inc.. Brewster, N. Y.<br />
"Chevrolet is the largest producer<br />
of trucks in the world," D. E. Stan-<br />
nard of Brady-Stannard Motor Co.,<br />
Inc., declared, "and its new line is<br />
undoubtedly the finest in the history<br />
of the company. We cordially invite<br />
truck owners, fleet operators and<br />
others interested in trucks to view the<br />
exhibit in our showrooms."<br />
Produced in a wide variety of mod<br />
els to accomodate practically every<br />
hauling job, the Advance-Design line<br />
of vehicles is manufactured in nine<br />
wheelbases with gross vehicle weights<br />
(combine weight of the chassis, body<br />
and load) ranging from 4,000 to 16,000<br />
pounds.<br />
"Each model in the diversified line<br />
has been precision-engineered for a<br />
specific load rating, u%h. all compon<br />
ent parts designed for the work load<br />
and to provide the utmost in safe,<br />
comfortable, low-cost transportation."<br />
Re-styled, the Advance-Design ser<br />
ies are unusually attractive in appear<br />
ance and provide more room, more<br />
comfortable seats and other improve<br />
ments for the comfort and conven<br />
ience of the "man behind the wheel."<br />
Chief of these is the ' cab that<br />
"breathes," in which a new ventilat<br />
ing system circulates fresh air in the<br />
cab and keeps windshield and windows<br />
free of fog.<br />
Completely welded, instead of bolt<br />
ed, the new cab is much stronger, and<br />
its doors have an inner and outer seal.<br />
Increased driver comfort is also ac<br />
complished through the new three-<br />
point type of cab mounting—two body<br />
tension and shear mountings in the<br />
front, and one shackle mounting In<br />
the rear center.<br />
"Windshield and side and re win<br />
dows in the cab provide greater vision.<br />
Instrument controls are re-styled and<br />
rearranged for improved driver con<br />
venience," Mr. Stannard said. "A new<br />
dome light is another cab feature.<br />
"In general, the improvements of the<br />
truck cab have been included in the<br />
panel model trucks. Bodies are wider<br />
and load space has been increased 13<br />
per cent. All pick-up bodies are now<br />
50 inches wide. Stake models now<br />
have more convenient load space,<br />
achieved through making the front<br />
corners of the body square'instead of<br />
rounded."<br />
Light and medium-duty trucks with<br />
gross vehicle weights ranging from<br />
4.000 to 8,800 pounds are powered by<br />
the dependable Chevrolet Thrift-Mas<br />
ter engine, while the equally high re<br />
garded Chevrolet Load-Master engine<br />
is used in heavy-duty units with gross<br />
vehicles weights up to the 16.000-<br />
pound classification.<br />
Chevrolet's famous full-floating hy-<br />
pold-gear rear axle provides a wide<br />
variety of capacities, and rugged dur<br />
ability. Vacuum power brakes are pro<br />
vided on all heavy-dutv models and<br />
som*» medium-duty units.<br />
"We predict that the new trucks<br />
will be enthusiastically welcomed and<br />
endorsed by truck drivers and truck<br />
owners," Mr. Stannard said, "and are<br />
confident that the line establishes new<br />
standards for the trucking industry."<br />
o<br />
Grimes Co. Sells<br />
Salem Center Colonial<br />
Vesper Service For<br />
Old Southeast Church<br />
Historic Edifice in Doanesburg Will Be<br />
Open for Special Services, July 13<br />
To September 14. Community Or<br />
ganizations to Assist Programs with<br />
"Accent on Youth."<br />
Rev. W. Dyer Blair of Brewster<br />
Presbyterian Church, with the support<br />
of The Westchester Presbytery's ef<br />
forts for Rural Church Extension Pro<br />
grams, has been engaged in a busy two<br />
months of shepherding a committee<br />
toward organizing Vesper Service Pro<br />
grams at Southeast Church in Doanes<br />
burg, for eight summer Sundays this<br />
season, July 13 through Sept. 14.<br />
To stimulate the most ' gratifying<br />
participation, those engaged in out<br />
lining the programs are attempting to<br />
co-ordinate the non-secterlan religious<br />
messages of the Vesper Services with<br />
the most significently constructive<br />
community endeavors.<br />
So that our younger citizens obtain<br />
the greatest advantages from the<br />
chedule, "Accent on Youth** win be<br />
the chief motif. Major clubs and fra<br />
ternal organizations are being invited<br />
to participate; one organization at<br />
each service, in offering special fea<br />
tures which will promote enjoyment<br />
and interest for members of all groups<br />
in the community — young and ma<br />
ture.<br />
A Little accomplished by All should<br />
continue our revered and "oldest com<br />
munity Shrine," Southeast Church, on<br />
its long and- richly deserved destiny<br />
of spiritual inspiration.<br />
The words of Macauley might af<br />
ford a beckoning signal for all inhab-<br />
bulldlng amid our lovely "Hills o'<br />
Home",—"The real security of Chris<br />
tianity is to be found in its benevo<br />
lent morality; in its exquisite adap<br />
tion to the human heart in the<br />
facility with which it accomodates it<br />
self to the capacity of every human<br />
intelect ..."<br />
Those who are interesting them<br />
selves in the organization of the Ves<br />
pers Programs have sought a key fash<br />
ioned somewhat in the above design<br />
in order that the entire community<br />
may join in ading to open the portals<br />
that veil, during these days of read<br />
justment from war and destruction,<br />
our bounteous blessings of true peace<br />
and security. The lock, perhaps, bears<br />
the- label "Good Neighbor Policies."<br />
— o<br />
"Facul Tea<br />
At JRubymede<br />
The authentic old Colonial owned by<br />
Stanley Hayter at Salem Center has<br />
been sold to Martin Koski, of <strong>New</strong><br />
<strong>York</strong> City. The house is one of the<br />
oldest in <strong>Northern</strong> Westchester and is<br />
situated next to the Town Hall in Sal<br />
em Center. Mr. Koski will further<br />
remodel the old homestead and out<br />
buildings and will occupy it as a year-<br />
round residence.<br />
Thomas C. Grimes Co.. Bedford Vil<br />
lage, was the broker who sold the<br />
1 property for the owner.<br />
Despite the rigors of a lustv sum<br />
mer down-pour, with charteristlc per<br />
severance and courage, the members<br />
of the faculty of Brewster school con<br />
tinued steadfastly on their way to the<br />
"Facul Tea" given in their honor at<br />
Rubymede, home of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Thomas L. Briggs, Friday afternoon,<br />
June 20th.<br />
The Garden party plan having been<br />
rained out, the scene was chanced to<br />
an indoor gathering around an an<br />
cient fireplace where a snapoing fire<br />
proved not unwelcome on such a day.<br />
Tea was poured by Mrs. Alexander<br />
Addis, president of The Woman's Club<br />
and member of the School Board who<br />
most graciously represented both or<br />
ganizations.<br />
Miss Rose Mary Lally, recently ap<br />
pointed head swimming counselor at<br />
Peach Lake Day Camp for the forth<br />
coming season, efficiently presided as<br />
co-hostess.<br />
An interesting incident came about<br />
by the discovery that one of the fac<br />
ulty members, Mrs. Florence Lord, was<br />
born in a first floor room of the house<br />
where the gathering took place.<br />
A few members of the faculty, main<br />
ly those whose homes are out-of-<br />
town, were obliged to leave before the<br />
date of the tea but the following rep<br />
resentative group attended: Miss Ga-<br />
brielle Blocklev. Miss Anna M. Crane,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Herman H. Donley, Mrs.<br />
OU.A\ 'uupjgum jndiuure uu 'sppoa<br />
zella. Mrs. Volhborg Duffy. Mrs. Eva-<br />
Ivn J. Faean, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon<br />
Furnis*. Miss Kdith Harwood, Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Harold Knapo, Mrs. Florence<br />
Lord. Miss Grace Lazarus. Mrs. Ber-<br />
nice McCarthy. Mr. and Mrs. Donald<br />
McLagan, Miss Jane Meldrum, Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Stephen Merrltt. Mrs. Flon<br />
Miller, Mrs. Eva Owens, Mrs. Miriam<br />
R. Owens. Mrs. Vera Owens, Mrs. Kay<br />
Pugsley, Miss Muriel Pinckney. Mr*<br />
Katherine Ronan, Mrs. Vera Ron an<br />
Mr. Kenneth L. Richards and Mr.<br />
Walter T. Reid, Jr.<br />
ENGAGED<br />
Jack Markel Wins<br />
Regis Scholarship<br />
Jack Edward Markel, son of Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Edward Markel, of All View Ave<br />
nue, Brewster, N. Y., won a four year<br />
scholarship at Regis High School, <strong>New</strong><br />
<strong>York</strong> City. Jack graduated in the<br />
eighth grade class of St. Lawrence<br />
Parochial School June 22, 1947. He<br />
took the examination for entrance to<br />
Regis and rated the high standing<br />
that merited the four year scholarship.<br />
Regis stands at the top of high<br />
schools in the United States and this<br />
fact supports the natural pride of the<br />
teachers at St. Lawrence, the parents<br />
and friends of Jack in his capability.<br />
He will enter Regis in September.<br />
Brewster Central<br />
Stndent Honor Roll<br />
Teachers Association Lists Grade' Pu<br />
pils of High Honor and Second<br />
Honor Rolls.<br />
Davis—Reid<br />
Mr. and Mrs. George Davis, of 24<br />
Carmel Avenue. Brewster. N. Y.. an<br />
nounce the engP2ement of their<br />
daughter. Lois Lucille, to Mr. Thomas<br />
Reid, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harl«nH<br />
Reid. of Dutcher Avenue. Pawling.<br />
<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />
The Thomas C. Grimes Co. has sold<br />
for Mrs. Lucy A. Meade her residence<br />
I property on the Croton Falls-Mahopac<br />
I Road. Mrs. Meads is leaving soon to<br />
live ia Chicago. The new owners. Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Robert Palmateer, formerly<br />
of Syracuse. N. Y., will take possession<br />
early in July.<br />
MIDGET RACE STARS<br />
Spicing the eight events at Danbury<br />
Speedway Saturday will be such col<br />
orful pilots as Dee Toran, Al Keller<br />
Art Cross. Len Wofsev. Len Duncan.<br />
Llovd Christopher. Johnny Zeke and<br />
Bud Tatro. A 25 lap feature will high<br />
light the night's show with the even<br />
ing's first race slated to get under way<br />
at 8:30 p.m.<br />
o • •<br />
It takes a great deal of grace to be<br />
able to bear praise. Censure seldom<br />
does us much harm.—Spurgeon<br />
The Brewster High School Teach<br />
ers' Association, at a recent meeting,<br />
inaugurated what is to be known as<br />
the High School and Grammar School<br />
Brewster High School Honor Roll.<br />
This honor roll is to be made up four<br />
times, or at the end of each quarter,<br />
during the year. First and second<br />
honor rolls will be published. The first<br />
honor roll will Include the names of<br />
pupils whose average standing for the<br />
quarter is 90 per cent and above. The<br />
second honor roll will be~ those pupils<br />
whose average is between 80 and 90.<br />
Because of lack of time the commit<br />
tee found it inadvisable to publish the<br />
high school honor roll for. this year,<br />
but the grade school honor rolls have<br />
been prepared and are herewith pre<br />
sented.. Beginning next Fall both<br />
grade and high school honor rolls will<br />
be collected and presented to the pub<br />
lic. It is hoped that the recognition<br />
of scholarship will stimulate many<br />
students to better school work and<br />
more serious application to their<br />
studies.<br />
High Honor Roll<br />
(90 - 100)<br />
Robert Williams. John Ravbeck,<br />
Vincent Genovese, Mary Jane Bloom<br />
er. Marilvn Knapp. Janet Brewer,<br />
Donald Millar, Marion J ah arias. Dean<br />
Smalley, James Truran,..Philip Blaney,<br />
Frank McDonald, John Anderson.<br />
Richard Folchetti, Daniel Force, Jas.<br />
Fulling, George Gallagher, John Lew-<br />
jis, Frederic Loomis, Eugene Tebordo,<br />
Marlere Bnilev, Evelyn Brown. Rob<br />
ert Bruschini, Alma Christensen,<br />
Theodore Dlmon. John Gilbert!. Phyl<br />
lis Gardinier. Elsa Holze, Kenneth<br />
Gross.<br />
Also, Donald Hauenstein, Stratton<br />
Kane, Elizabeth LaCondi, Betty<br />
Louchs, Faith Snow, Brenda Truran,<br />
Marjorie Tetro, Edward Conroy, Man-<br />
ley Makenny, Daniel Moore, Richard<br />
Ross, Renee Ackler. Gail Adams, Pa<br />
tricia McMeekin, Beverly Taylor, Gail<br />
VanScoy, Barbara Ferris. Linnia Gun-<br />
narson, James Healy. Wilkin Mead,<br />
Sandra Millar, Robert Pigat, Warren<br />
Radler, Marilyn Robinson, Melissa<br />
Smith, Anita Snldero, Anne Mae Snl-<br />
dero, Thomas Timms. jj?<br />
Also, Dopald Selfert, William Walsh,<br />
Georgia Freeman. Margaret Ronan,<br />
Lillian Taylor, Kenneth Eastwood,<br />
Peter .Kane, Bill Lewis, Ellen Nielson,<br />
Dorothy Petersen, Joan Ruffles, Ken<br />
neth Shuker. David Smith, Mary<br />
Storms, Justin Tavino, Rose Tavino,<br />
Margaret Tuttle, Faith Vanderburgh,<br />
Jeanette Vassak, Clara Willis, Joan<br />
Zeechin. Betsey Cregar, Janet Galla<br />
gher, Lydia Halle, Polly Hancock,<br />
Robert Millar, Robert Zecher. Joan<br />
Mattioli, Jacqueline McMeekin.<br />
Second Honor Roll<br />
(80 - 90)<br />
Doris Walsh, Helen Gallagner, David<br />
Smith, Virginia Eastwood, Martha<br />
Schutz. Kenneth Sterry, Maryann<br />
Rassow, Mary Elizabeth Bettcher,<br />
Theodore Jackson. Audrey Lobdell.<br />
Susan Wernecke, Minnie Griffin. Rich<br />
ard Cable, Donald Mill, Carol Ann<br />
Reid. Ralph Sherwood. Ronald Strand,<br />
Roberta Strand, Roberta Roberts.<br />
Ronald Michell, Richard Zeechin, Lar<br />
ry Folchetti. Robert Barrett, Ross<br />
Beal. Charles Fowler.<br />
Also. Thomas Fulling. Jds. Grand-<br />
staff. Martin McNicholas. John Peter<br />
son, Daniel Schutz. Eileen Cable, An<br />
na B. Carlone. Carol Miller. Lucille<br />
Willis. Joan Pezzulo. John Werneke,<br />
Joseph Barese, James Durkin. John<br />
Folchetti. Barbara Bailey. Elizabeth<br />
Blair, Marcelle Genovese, Donald<br />
Heinen, Donald Polverari. Wilbur<br />
j Ernst. Leigh Blake. William Foster.<br />
Richard Hunt, Betty Ingersoll.<br />
Also. Nerissa Snow, Bertha Wil-<br />
jliams, Barbara Buenger. Ralph Bur-<br />
jdlck. Lester Eastwood, Robert Ernst.<br />
Patricia Ford, Edward Grass. Cather<br />
ine Herdman, June Lois Kellenberger.<br />
Alfonso Lotrecchiano. Robert Schnei<br />
der, Donald Stevens. Jacqueline Tay<br />
lor. Shirley Teborda. Betty Weizen-<br />
ecker, Patricia Balfe, Marie Barese.<br />
Dolores Casey. Robert Gabriel. Rob<br />
ert Hansen. James Innes. Donald<br />
Ives. Orrln Penny. Edward Schneider.<br />
Mary Dennison Wins Medal<br />
WEDDED<br />
Richards—Pinckney<br />
Miss Muriel Pinckney, daughter of<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Remington Pinckney, of<br />
Brewster, N. Y„ and Mr. Kenneth Lee<br />
Richards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew<br />
Sine, of Trenton, N. J., were married<br />
at two o'clock Sunday afternoon, June<br />
22, 1947 in the Brewster Baptist<br />
Church. The ceremony was perform<br />
ed by the Rev. Harry P. Foulk In the<br />
presence of a large company.<br />
Decorations of white flowers and<br />
foliage were used at the altar. Mr. E.<br />
Clayton Hopkins played the wedding<br />
march and Mr. Harold V. Blood, solo<br />
ist, sang "Ave Maria?' "Because*v and<br />
"Thine Alone." ;<br />
The bride was escorted by her fath<br />
er who gave her in marriage. She<br />
wore a white floor-length gown of net<br />
over faille, the bodice fashioned with<br />
high neckline, yoke of net and three-<br />
quarter length sleeves. Her veil was<br />
fastened by a coronet of orange blos<br />
soms. She carried a nosegay of white'<br />
roses, sweetpeas and baby's breath.<br />
Her sister, Mrs. Raymond -Ward,<br />
matron-of-honor, wore a floor-length<br />
gown of pink dotted swiss with fish<br />
tail back and a sweetheart shaped hat<br />
to match. She carried pink roses.<br />
Miss Phyllis Gay Martin, brides<br />
maid, wore blue dotted swiss, and<br />
Miss Jeanne Durkin, yellow dotted<br />
swiss, similar to the costume of Mrs.<br />
Ward. Their flowers were old-fash<br />
ioned nosegays.<br />
Pfc. Frank P. Richards was best man<br />
and the ushers, La Verne Pinckney agd<br />
Edward Phelps, of Schenectady.<br />
The bride's mother wore a Ughtblue<br />
dress with white accessories and a<br />
corsage of peach galadioli. The bride<br />
groom's mother wore a French bluoj<br />
dress with pink accessories and a cor<br />
sage of pink gladioli.<br />
A reception at Yeomanoak followed<br />
the ceremony and a large company<br />
enjoyed the hospitality Dr. and Mrs.<br />
E. R. Richie prepared for the bridal<br />
party. Mr. and Mrs. Richards went<br />
on a -motor trip into Canada. The<br />
bride wore a light blue gabardine suit<br />
with white accessories. They will be<br />
at home after Sept. 2 at Orchard<br />
Drive, Peach Lake, Brewster, N. Y.<br />
The bride, a graduate of Brewster<br />
High School, has been secretary to<br />
the principal, Mr. H. H. Donley, Mr.<br />
Richards, teacher of commercial sub<br />
jects at Brewster school, is a graduate<br />
of the State" College, for Teachers at<br />
Trenton'. N. J. Djuring the war he flew<br />
a B-29 from a base on Okinawa.<br />
Otto—Halkh<br />
Miss Marion Henrietta Haigh,<br />
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haigh<br />
of All View Avenue, Brewster, N. Y..<br />
and Mr. Cornelius Otto, Jr., son of<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Otto, of<br />
Poughkeepsie. N. Y. were married at<br />
five o'clock Saturday afternoon, June<br />
21, 1947 at the rectory of the Church<br />
of St. Lawrence OToole. Brewster.<br />
The ceremony was performed by the<br />
Rev. John C. Lyons.<br />
Miss Francis Haigh was maid-of-<br />
honor for her sister, and Mr. Albert<br />
Cerille, of Poughkeepsie. was best man.<br />
The bride wore an off-white suit of<br />
gabardine with white accessories and<br />
a corsage of white tea roses. Frances<br />
Haigh wore a light blue suit with<br />
white accessories and a corsge of pink<br />
tea roses.<br />
A reception followed at the home of<br />
the bride. The guests were of Brew<br />
ster, Poughkeepsie, Hyde Park and<br />
Yonkers. Mr. and Mrs. Otto, left on<br />
a wedding trip to Washington, D. C.<br />
The bride's going away costume was<br />
a flowered silk dress and a grey ton-<br />
coat. They will be at home after July<br />
S at 81 Cannon Street. Poughkeepsie.<br />
Mrs. Otto, a graduate of St. Law<br />
rence school and, Brewster High<br />
School, is a graduate registered nurse<br />
of St. Francis School of Nursing.<br />
Poughkeepsie. She is employed in her<br />
profession with the DeLevay Com<br />
pany, Poughkeepsie.<br />
Mr. Otto was educated at Rochester<br />
High School and Rochester Univer<br />
sity. He served four vears in the U.<br />
S. Marine Corps. He is also emDlnved<br />
in the DeLaval firm. Poughkeepsie.<br />
o<br />
Eighth Grade Graduates<br />
At St. Lawrence School<br />
Mary Dennison, of North Brewster,<br />
graduated Sunday, June 22, from the<br />
eighth grade of St. Lawrence School.<br />
She was the winner of the medals for<br />
Excellence and Religion. The twelve<br />
year old student expects to enter St.<br />
Mary's High School. Katonah, N. Y..<br />
this Fall.<br />
Pedestrians should be seen and not<br />
hurt.—The Dummy.<br />
Exercises of the Eighth Grade of St.<br />
T awrence school were held at S o'clock<br />
Sunday afternoon in th» Church of<br />
S*. Iflwrence OToole where a large<br />
attendance indicated the deeo inter<br />
est of parents and friends of the grad<br />
uates.<br />
The students who received dio)o«n*Js<br />
from Father Joseph A. Heaney were:<br />
Dorothv Babon. Marv Dennison. John<br />
Folchetti, Ann Fox, Gregory Fox. Mary<br />
Jane Gavaehan. Marv Glowney. Helen<br />
Haieh. William Maile. John Edward<br />
Markel. William Morey. Marlene Mur<br />
phy. Kathleen Osnoe. Joseph Palmer.<br />
William Peterson. Christine Rooney.<br />
Dorothy Schlump and Claire Sharkey.<br />
The clasp entered to the procession<br />
al hvmn. "Praise Ye the Father."<br />
Father Heaney made the address and<br />
presented the diplomas and honor<br />
awards.<br />
Mary Dennison won medals for Ex<br />
cellence and Religion: Dorothv<br />
Schlump. the Excellence Medal. Marv<br />
Glowney and Jack Markel received<br />
certificates for blah standing in the<br />
Cardinal Hayes Memorial examina<br />
tion. Announcement was made of the<br />
award to Jack Edward Markel of a<br />
four vear scholarshio in Regis High<br />
School. <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City.<br />
The singing of "Ave Maria" ©reced<br />
ed the Benediction of the Blessed<br />
Sacrament "The Star Soannled Ban<br />
ner" brought the exercises to a close.<br />
Junion Drivers<br />
Attract Attention<br />
Police and traffic officers have, been<br />
alerted to check the night driving of<br />
Junior motorists. It's no surprise<br />
Brewster was a port of call for the<br />
authorities for juniors get • around<br />
here ^t all hours. What with day<br />
light saving, beach parties and the<br />
hunger that follows a swim not to<br />
mention the dance spots the Juniors<br />
are apt to disregard the passing of<br />
time.<br />
This tip goes for parents fas well as<br />
for the youngsters, it's a nice break,<br />
for offenders.<br />
——o —<br />
<strong>New</strong> Shoe Salon<br />
Opens In Brewster<br />
Xe Mar Footwear, Located in the<br />
Richie BIdg. Offers First Class Lines<br />
Of Shoes ' for Men, Women' and<br />
Children.<br />
Mr. J*. ,W. Speg, owner-manager of<br />
the Le May Footwear, announces in<br />
this issue the opening of a modern<br />
shoe salon for the needs of the en<br />
tire family at 4 North Main St., Brew<br />
ster, N. Y.<br />
The salon will feature Physical Cul<br />
ture shoes, manufactured by the Sel-<br />
by Shoe Co., of Portsmouth, Ohio, one<br />
of the leaders in the women's field.<br />
The Physical Culture line of women<br />
shoes handled at this salon are of the<br />
newest and latest designs and the<br />
styles for the Summer in sports, dress<br />
and general walking oxfords, are oT<br />
the finest material available. Women<br />
and high school girls will find these<br />
shoes most attractive.<br />
The men's line is outstanding for<br />
this section, featuring the Bostonian<br />
shoes. The workmanship and mater<br />
ials in this line is the best obtainable.<br />
Manufactured by one of the oldest<br />
men's manufacturing concerns in <strong>New</strong><br />
England. Sturdy, well built shoes for<br />
every day and formal wear up to the<br />
minute dress shoes for evening, cas<br />
ual and sport wear are available.<br />
The boy's line of shoes, made by the<br />
same company, are called the Boston<br />
ian Juniors. These boy's shoes are of<br />
exceptionally good rugged construc<br />
tion, embodying all the features of<br />
stvle and class.<br />
Mr. Speg has a number of years of<br />
experience in shot fitting and is well<br />
qualified for properly fitting men's wo<br />
men's and children's shoes. He has an<br />
honorable discharge from the XT. S.<br />
Navy having served during World War<br />
II. He is married and expects to lo<br />
cate with his family in Brewster, N.<br />
Y., in the very near future.<br />
o<br />
Rotary To Dine At<br />
Gallagher's Homestead<br />
Monday night at 7 o'clock Brewster<br />
Rotary Club will hold Ladies Night<br />
with a dinner and dance in Galla<br />
gher's Old Homestead, in the village<br />
of Brewster. The restaurant will be<br />
devoted solely to this affair and will<br />
be closed all day until the Rotarians<br />
and guests arrive.<br />
Raymond Knoeppel. past district<br />
governor and past president of the<br />
<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Rotary, is expected to act<br />
as master of ceremonies. The new<br />
staff of officers, headed by Carl Amend<br />
of DeForest Corners, president, will be<br />
installed.<br />
Rex Stout will be granted honorary<br />
membership in Brewster Rotary Club<br />
because of his inability to attend all<br />
meetings.<br />
Charles T. Wilson, Jr., of the Put-<br />
nsm County Press, addressed the<br />
meeting on advertising. Charlie is a<br />
member of Kiwanis. and a World War<br />
Two Naval officer who served on the<br />
Atlantic and on the Pacific.<br />
Some Figures On<br />
Red Cross Service<br />
In Putnam Countv tOjjft cent of the<br />
1850 World War Ily^ervicemen and<br />
women, or their famines, have received<br />
assistance from the Putnam Countv<br />
Chapter of the American Red Cross,<br />
Mrs. Ralph Smith. Home Service<br />
chairman, announced today.<br />
A check of individual case records<br />
dating back to.September 1940, when<br />
the Selective Service Act went into<br />
effect, revealed this percentage of<br />
Red Cross service to veterans and<br />
servicemen, Mrs Smith said. The to<br />
tal number of cases handled from<br />
September 1940, to d8te is 1095. Mrs.<br />
Smith pointed out that this figure<br />
does not tell the whole storv sin-p<br />
each instance of aid to an individual<br />
serviceman or his dependants is list<br />
ed under the same case number, al<br />
though many were aided by the Put<br />
nam County Chapter on more than<br />
one occasion.<br />
"During the war. we often had as<br />
many as 135 cases open a month."<br />
Mrs. Smith said. "These included re<br />
quests for emergency furloughs, health<br />
and welfare reports and requests for<br />
financial or budgeting assistance' to<br />
tide applicants over until allotment<br />
checks started coming in.<br />
o——<br />
WINS MEDICAL SCHOLARSHIP<br />
38 BHS Graduates<br />
. Receive Diplomas<br />
Doane C. Comstock, President of the<br />
Board of Education, Awards High<br />
School Diplomas to the Class of<br />
1947, Presented by Principal Donley.<br />
Brewster High School accommodat<br />
ed a large crowd at the commence<br />
ment exercises of the class of 1947<br />
Tuesday. A heavy downpour of rain<br />
was in progress as the people gathered<br />
and all were well served by police<br />
and firemen in rubber coats who as<br />
sisted passengers to leave cars and<br />
drivers to park. Within all was gay.<br />
Red and white streamers decorated<br />
the hall and foliage and roses the<br />
platform where the thirty-eight mem<br />
bers of the class were seated.<br />
Among this number several had al<br />
ready made notable records:<br />
James Terwilliger put in his fresh<br />
man and senior years in BHS class<br />
rooms; the years between in service<br />
with the Navy.<br />
John A. Schlump, who may win a<br />
state scholarship, received the Wo<br />
man's Club award of $100 for excel<br />
lence in scholastic pursuits as well as<br />
character and service to the school,<br />
also the Rotary Club student loan.<br />
Gladys Johnson, also considered<br />
among applicants for state scholarship,<br />
won the Teachers Association prize for<br />
best all around girl student.<br />
Arthur E. Hansen Won the boy's<br />
prize awarded by the Teachers Assoc<br />
iation for outstanding performance.<br />
Marjorie Howell won the $10.00 prize<br />
given by the Cecillan Society for her<br />
ability in music, also the Good Citi<br />
zenship award of the Daughters of the<br />
American Revolution.<br />
The theme "Our School," developed<br />
by the spokesman of a panel, sought<br />
questions from the audience, and pro<br />
duced comment by Mr H. H. Wells<br />
which was ably answered by Gladys<br />
Johnson. It seemed there are as many<br />
views on the educational process as<br />
students, to each his own.<br />
1947 CLASS ROLL<br />
Henrv Bechen has been awarded a<br />
nine month $1000 scholarship at Co<br />
lumbia University Medical College in<br />
<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>. He will be engaged in<br />
Health Department work this sum-'<br />
mex.<br />
College Entrance<br />
DAVID P. BRUEN<br />
JAMES H. DURKIN<br />
VIRGINIA T. DURKIN<br />
GLADYS VICTORIA JOHNSON<br />
FRANK J. McQUAID<br />
GERARD F. MURPHY<br />
JOHN/ A. SCHLUMP<br />
RICHARD E. SHALVOY<br />
Commercial<br />
MADELYN B. DENNISON<br />
GENEVA FRANCES ERICKSON<br />
ARTHUR E. HANSEN<br />
VELMA HAZEL HYNARD<br />
MARGARET ELIZABETH PERLINI<br />
ANNE LILLIAN ROBERTS<br />
MARY CATHERINE SNIDERO<br />
THERESA ALICE SNIDERO<br />
BETTY JANE TILFORD<br />
Homemaklng<br />
MARY ANNE BRADY<br />
Academic<br />
•ROBERT C. BAXTER<br />
FRANCES M. BUCKO<br />
ROSARIA ANN CARLONE<br />
•GEORGE ALFRED DAVIS<br />
LOIS LUCILLE DAVIS<br />
WILLIAM J. FARRELL<br />
PROVIDENCE C. GILARDI<br />
MURIEL E. HEINCHON<br />
MARJORIE LOUISE HOWELL<br />
LETIZIA ANN LOTRECCHIANO<br />
PHYLLIS ANNE MERRITT<br />
WILLIAM JOSEPH. NEWMAN<br />
FRED PETER PERLINI<br />
•GERTRUDE JANE STERRY<br />
JAMES TERWILLIGER<br />
•RICHARD J. TROHA<br />
DAVID F. WALSH<br />
WILLIAM J. WIEGERT I<br />
General<br />
CHARLES M. BAROLA<br />
MARIE DESTINO<br />
0<br />
GIRL TO THE RECHENS<br />
Lieut, and Mrs. Behrend Rechen.<br />
US.N., 2092 Merrimac Avenue, Savan<br />
nah Gardens, Long Beach, Calif, an<br />
nounce the birth of a daughter, Carol<br />
Cole Rechen, on June 15, 1947. They<br />
have one older child, Nancy Louise.<br />
Lieut. Rechen is temporarily as<br />
signed to extra duty on Radio at Ter<br />
minal Island, San Francisco.<br />
• o<br />
SON TO THE HOWLEYS<br />
Mr. and Mrs. James Howley. of<br />
Brewster, N. Y., are receiving con<br />
gratulations on the birth of a son.<br />
Gary William, in Danburv Hospital.<br />
I Saturday. June 21. 1947. He weighed<br />
in at 6 lbs.. 6 ozs. He is the brother<br />
of Deborah Ann and James, Jr., who<br />
are spending some time with their<br />
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Prank<br />
Darlin. on Prospect Street.<br />
• — - o<br />
DAVID WATERS ARRIVES<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Waters, of<br />
Prospect Street. Brewster. N. Y* wel<br />
comed the arrival of their first born,<br />
a son. David Bernard, in White Plains<br />
Hospital, on Monday. June 23. 1947<br />
He weighed 0 lbs.. 14 ozs.<br />
Mrs. Waters, the former Katherine<br />
Hubbard, of Coxsackie. H Y. and the<br />
boy are both very well. Mr. Waters,<br />
manager of the First National Super<br />
Market, of Brewster, is receiving con<br />
gratulations from a host ol friends.
PAGE TWO THE <strong>BREWSTER</strong> STANDARD—ESTABLISHED 1869 THURSDAY. UVNE 26, 1947<br />
iiimuiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiinwn<br />
I Happenings of Yester Year<br />
•onmttwiiinmiiiiinnniiiiiiiiminiiMMmiioiiiiiiMiiui inanninmnnniimimmniinmiiiaiinniiiffluiiuiiMmu MiiiLMMfHiinuiimiiiiiHUiiiniMMLjmwiinuuuuninntaiimiiniTic<br />
ninomiiiiniiinmiiH<br />
WWBfflt TEARS AGO—1«W THIRTY YEARS AGO—1917<br />
Mr. and Mrs. T. Reed Vreeland announce<br />
the birth of a son at Danbury<br />
Hospital June 24.<br />
Mrs. B. O. Nichols has returned from<br />
a <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> hospital after an operation<br />
for the removal of tonsils.<br />
The dates for the big fair to be given<br />
under the auspices of Brewster<br />
Firemen are Aug. 10, 11, 12, IS.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. P. L, Shelp are motoring<br />
to <strong>New</strong> Mllford, Pa., to spend the<br />
week end with the Shelp family.<br />
On Saturday the property known as<br />
Sodom School was sold at public auction.<br />
The purchaser was Mrs. Philip<br />
Beal at the bid of $3425.00.<br />
The Basset Hounds of Starr Ridge<br />
Kennels made an excellent showing at<br />
Ridgewood dog show on Saturday, Mr.<br />
Tefft's Runt taking three firsts.<br />
Hon. William P. Bleailey will deliver<br />
an address at the corner stone<br />
laying of the North Salem Junior and<br />
Senior High School to be built at<br />
Purdys. The ceremony will take place<br />
on July 9th at 3:30 p.m.'<br />
The County Memorial Building will<br />
be dedicated July 2 at Carmel. Clayton<br />
Ryder win speak at the unveiling<br />
of memorial tablets. H. H. Wells and<br />
CoL N. K. Averlll will receive veterans<br />
and their relatives. The West Point<br />
Band will give a concert. Formal<br />
dedication services will take place on<br />
Sunday evening.<br />
Mrs. James K. Smith is entertaining<br />
Mrs. Gerow, her sister, of Springfield,<br />
Mass.<br />
Mrs. H. H. Wells and children are<br />
at their camp on Mt. Riga for the<br />
summer.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. Hoyt and<br />
children will spend two weeks with<br />
Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Budd.<br />
Miss Elizabeth F. Morgan is visiting<br />
Mrs. Wieller in Richmond, Ind.<br />
She will return to her office July 5.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Chester A. Barber entertained<br />
on June 28th with a dinner<br />
in honor of the fifth wedding anniversary<br />
of Mr. and Mrs. Seeley vA.<br />
El ting.<br />
On July 4th the Ryder homestead at<br />
Peach Lake will be the scene of the<br />
40th anniversary of the descendants<br />
of -Capt. James H. Ryder, the distinguished<br />
Revolutionary hero who organized<br />
the fighting forces of Putnam<br />
County.<br />
Mrs. Mary Brandriss Lukins, widow<br />
of the late Alfred T. Lukens. died on<br />
June 30, at the home of her daughter,<br />
Mrs. Wallace Hopkins. Mr. Lukins<br />
died in 1918 and Miss Clara Lukins,<br />
a daughter, died in 1919. The<br />
surviving members of the family are<br />
Miss Grace Lukins. Edward Lukins<br />
and Mrs. Wallace Hopkins. Interment<br />
will be at Fort Wayne, Ind.<br />
The date for tne M. H. G. clambake<br />
at the milk factory will be on July 18.<br />
Rev. Thomas Bond, of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />
City, will preach in the Methodist<br />
Church next Sunday.<br />
Dr. John B. Merritt will resume his<br />
practice in dentistry- in Brewster and<br />
Carmel after his recovery from illness.<br />
The Trustees of the Putnam County<br />
Savings Bank have declared a dividend<br />
at the rate of 4 per cent per annum.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wells attended<br />
the annual convention of the Banker's<br />
Association held at Hotel Champlain<br />
and Adirondack resorts. They also<br />
visited the Plattsburg camp.<br />
At the Heartfleld farm, Milltown,<br />
Auctioneer Towner will sell 100 acres<br />
of standing grass for C. E. Scheuber<br />
on July 3rd. See ad and bills.<br />
Mrs. Anna Vail is recovering from<br />
an operation performed at Danbury<br />
Hospital. '<br />
* •—^—^~<br />
A strawberry festival was held with<br />
Mrs. George B. Griffeth in Ludlngtonville<br />
on Thursday' for the benefit of<br />
the Red Cross.<br />
The Brewster High School graduates<br />
were entertained at the Casino on<br />
Friday evening with a dance under the<br />
auspices of the Alumni Association.<br />
First Sergeant H. H. Vreeland, Jr.,<br />
Howard E. Foster, Jr., of White Plains,<br />
and Joseph Morschauser, Jr., of<br />
Poughkeepsie, having passed the<br />
"weeding out" period look good to win<br />
commissions at Plattsburg camp.<br />
FORTY YEARS AGO—1907<br />
Dr. William A. Granger, of Mount<br />
Vernon, left on Wednesday for a two<br />
months tour of Europe.<br />
Miss M. Mary Grady graduated from<br />
Packard's Commercial School "on Friday.<br />
Captain James Wells Finch has<br />
reoched Paris on his European tour<br />
which will be rather brief.<br />
Fairview. the home of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Edward H. Hatch, Jr., has been sold<br />
to Mr. Henry Ives Cobb, of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />
Professor Howard Butler sailed for<br />
London and Constantinople on Wednesday.<br />
He will have an Important<br />
work published on the Princeton Ex<br />
pedition to Syria of which he is the<br />
leader.<br />
Mrs. Margaret Strang Brewster, widow<br />
of Frederick G. Brewster, died on<br />
Wednesday in the 88th year of her<br />
age. Funeral service will be held at<br />
her late home where she had resided<br />
the 62 years of her married life,<br />
o :<br />
Teacher tourist: "This seems to be<br />
a very dangerous precipice. It's a<br />
wonder they don't put up a warning<br />
sign."<br />
Native: "Yes, it is dangerous, bu£<br />
they kept a warning sign up for two<br />
years and no one fell over, so they<br />
took it down."—Phoney Phun.<br />
Ten new Daughters of Isabella were<br />
initiated and given a banquet at the<br />
Southeast House last Sunday.<br />
Susan Emily Tuttle celebrated her<br />
fifth birthday on Wednesday, June 28.<br />
Twenty members of the younger set<br />
were seated at tyftte when the birthday<br />
cake was lighted and the ice cream<br />
served. .<br />
Martin Mygan died on June 28 at<br />
Mr. Herbert Samuel Bell and Miss<br />
Danbury Hospital aged 47 years. He<br />
Alice May Maher were married at St.<br />
is survived by his wife, the former<br />
Andrew's Church on Saturday by the<br />
Dora Brady and six children. Funeral<br />
Rev. James L. Lasher. The maid of<br />
service was held at St.- Lawrence<br />
honor was Miss Irene Bell, of <strong>New</strong><br />
Church on Friday.<br />
Putnam County Chapter of the Red <strong>York</strong>. The bridesmaids were the Misses<br />
Cross has raised $1600 for the war Marion and Emma Maher, Miss Julia<br />
Mrs. Albert Mead died on June, 30 fund. This amount will be increased Taylor and Miss Esther Scott. The<br />
at Sidney, N< Y. She was the former when extra dividends declared by cer best man was J. T. S. Klngsman, of<br />
Bertha Erickson and her age was 40 tain corporations to benefit the Red <strong>New</strong>ark, N. J. After a large reception<br />
years. Funeral service was at the Cross will be turned over to Mr. Geo. at the home of the bride Mr. and Mrs.<br />
home of Mrs. Charles Erickson on Reynolds, treasurer of the County Bell left on a tour of the Adirondacks.<br />
Saturday. Interment was at Milltown Chapter.<br />
Rural Cemetery.<br />
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THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1947 THE <strong>BREWSTER</strong> STANDARD—ESTABLISHED 1869 PAGE THREE<br />
g>00 POOOOP0OOOOO»»OOOOOOOO6»<br />
SPORT OF THE WEEK<br />
Top Trotters Enter<br />
Grand Circuit Races<br />
Goshen's Historic Track Will Welcome<br />
Record Crowds at 5-Day Meet, June<br />
30—July 4.<br />
A new Historic Track will greet the<br />
Grand Circuit Cavalcade at Goshen<br />
Monday when a five-day meeting gets<br />
underway at the half-mile oval.<br />
With $72,000 offered in purses, the<br />
five-day meeting is expected to attract<br />
the target crowd in years. The E. M.<br />
Smith Starting Gate arrived Tuesday<br />
and was installed at Historic Track.<br />
tJsed for the first time in the East at<br />
Historic, the E. M. Smith Starting<br />
Gate is certain to assure proper starting.<br />
Miss Gladys Goodding. the soncbird<br />
and organist of Madison Square Oarden<br />
and Ebbets Field, will play dally<br />
at the console of the new Hammond<br />
organ.<br />
Two $10,000 stake races are certain<br />
to provide fans with the best in racing.<br />
The trotting Club Oaks, scheduled<br />
for Monday, will serve as preview<br />
to the Hambletonian. It is an event,<br />
for three-year-old trotting fillies.<br />
Then there's the Tltan-Free-Por-<br />
All featurlne Algiers and Walter<br />
Spencer. Algiers barely nosed out<br />
Walter Spencer in the $50,000 Golden<br />
Gate Classic at Hollywood. This will<br />
be their second meeting of the year<br />
and railbirds are showing plenty of<br />
interest in Walter Spencer.<br />
Rodney, one of the top favorites for<br />
the 1947 Hambletonian, will no to the<br />
post In the Historic on Friday, an<br />
event worth $5,000 for three-vear-old<br />
trotters. This alone will provide a fine<br />
preview of the 1947 Hambletonian race.<br />
kEverv dav is a big dav at Historic<br />
"where vou will see the finest in racing<br />
and pacing. Post time 2 p.m. daily.<br />
Officials<br />
The officials named for the Grand<br />
Circuit Trottlne Meeting are as follows:<br />
Members of th* <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Stnte<br />
Haro oc « laclwr Commission• B«»ni*»mln<br />
W. Downing, chairman, Mflnh*>sset.<br />
N. Y.: John F. Williams. Recretarv,<br />
Albarv. N. Y.: Roscoe C. Holmes. Orchard<br />
Perk. N. Y.: Henry M. James,<br />
Hudson, N. Y.<br />
Stewart representing Racing Commission:<br />
Dr. J. D. Pierce, Springfield,<br />
Mass.<br />
Associate Judges: Stuart McLean,<br />
Hambure. N. Y.: jOeorge Snyder, Troy,<br />
N. Y.<br />
Starter: Dr. A. C. Goff{ Ithaca. N.Y.<br />
Timers: Robert Hoeffner, Montgomery.<br />
N. Y.: Geo. Walsh, Goshen, N.Y.;<br />
Peter Mitchell, Middletown. N. Y.<br />
Clerk of the Course: John Gahagan,<br />
Goshen. N. Y.<br />
Announcer: Richard McCarthy.<br />
Kingston. N. Y.<br />
Track Veterinarian: Dr. J. F. Kane,<br />
Goshen. N. Y.,<br />
Supervisor of Saliva Tests for State<br />
Racing Com.: Dr. H. B. RIsley. Brooklyn.<br />
N. Y.<br />
Track Suot.: Joseph McFadden.<br />
Goshen. N. Y.<br />
Paddock Judge: Harold S. Miller,<br />
Goshen. N. Y.<br />
Mutual Manager: Walter Johnson,<br />
Baltimore. Md.<br />
Marshal: Joan Chambers, Montgomery,<br />
N. Y.<br />
o<br />
"So vou -want to try that proof-reader<br />
lob, eh?"<br />
"Yes. sir."<br />
"And do you understand all the responsibilitv<br />
attached to it?"<br />
"Yes, sir, when you make a mistake,<br />
I take all the blame."—Phoney Phun.<br />
More than eight out of. every ten<br />
<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> residents live in a metropolitan<br />
district.<br />
Sick Veterans Need<br />
Cards and Cigarettes<br />
The chairman of Camps and Hospitals<br />
for the North Salem-Somers<br />
Branch of the American Red Cross,<br />
Mrs. Jeffry Nichol, has stated there is<br />
urgent need in veterans' hospitals for<br />
playing cards and cigarettes. Anyone<br />
wishing to contribute, please call Croton<br />
Falls 667.<br />
Bedford Playhouse<br />
To Show "Henry T<br />
The management of the Bedford<br />
Playhouse is happy to announce that<br />
it will present the first showing In this<br />
vicinity of the Theatre Guild technicolor,<br />
film hit "Henry V, H starring<br />
Laurence Olivier. "Henry V" now plaving<br />
a series of selected engagements<br />
in a few key cities, will be shown in<br />
Bedford Village, Tuesday, Wednesday<br />
and Thursday, July 1st, 2nd and 3rd.<br />
All seats will be reserved for this<br />
widely heralded film, which will be<br />
shown Wednesday matinee at 2:30 and<br />
once each evening at 8 o'clock (feature<br />
at 8:30).<br />
The first film ever to be sponsored<br />
by the Theater Guild, "Henry V" has<br />
become the talk of the country as the<br />
first successful translation of Shakespeare<br />
into modern screen entertainment.<br />
Set as a play, taking place on the<br />
stage of the famed Globe Theatre In<br />
Shakespearean England, circa 1600,<br />
the photographed play is a stage performance<br />
in celluoid until the camera<br />
helps the mind to piece out imper-<br />
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Competent Instructors<br />
Modern Planes<br />
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Aeronautics, Inc.<br />
AN APPROVED G I<br />
FLIGHT SCHOOL %<br />
MUNICIPAL AIRPORT<br />
DANBURY<br />
TELEPHONE 5577<br />
Have you ever tasted a<br />
"SQUAB" Turkey?<br />
V you haven't, you've a delightful epicurean experience<br />
to look forward to and your guosfs will hag<br />
remember rhe occasion.<br />
These luscious Utile bird* are only eight week* old and<br />
they're from one of the finest flocks in the East—Shagroy<br />
Farm's Broad-Breasted Bronze Turkeys. They weigh about<br />
a pound and a half each—dressed and drawn, with head,<br />
feet, wings and akin removed—ready for the oven.<br />
About ten days before we ready them for market we take<br />
them off their growing mash (which is the stuff that really<br />
pushes them along into the big, fat 15- to 20-pound turkeys<br />
we hope you'll be ordering for Thanksgiving and Christmas),<br />
and we feed them a concentrated diet of finely ground grain<br />
and skimmed mttk. That's the "finishing touch," and it really<br />
does the trick! It "plumps up" their rotund, little bodies and<br />
adds just the right amount of fat to the tender, young flesh.<br />
These Shooroy "SQUAB" Turkeys are sold only by the<br />
brace (two birds), packed in cellophane with a recipe folder<br />
enclosed, showing a few' of our favorite ways of cooking<br />
them. One brace (two birds) will serve four people generously<br />
and the price is $550 for the pair.<br />
rsosfa "Baby" Turkeys—broilers —from 4 to 6 lbs. net weight,<br />
dressed and drawn, all set for the broiler, $1.25 per lb.<br />
Early Roasting Turkeys from 10 lbs. up, dressed and drawn,<br />
ready to put in the oven, $.75 per lb.<br />
INVITATION<br />
If lime weigh* heavily this week-cod—and you're casting arooad<br />
for f^wnt-thing to do—come over and see u» at Shagroy Fa<br />
We'll do everythkng we can to make your visit cujoyablc.<br />
SsacerWy,<br />
MBS. AGNES HOSE<br />
Shagroy Farm<br />
Milierton, N. Y.<br />
TeL Miiierton SS<br />
Baseball<br />
Katonah Indians and Westchester<br />
Yankees continued their winning<br />
strings Sunday in Putnam-Westchester<br />
basball play. Behind Bob Ferguson's<br />
regularly effective pitching Katonah<br />
beat Croton Falls, 6-3, while<br />
the Yanks whipped Chappaqua, 4-1.<br />
The Danbury Lecos tripped the<br />
Brewster, Bees, 5-1. At Bedford Hills,<br />
Bud McGrath's two hit pitching carried<br />
the home team to iwin over Carmel.<br />
McGrath struck out eighteen.<br />
Peeksklll Leelonnalres snapped their<br />
losing streak by thumping Mt. Kisco,<br />
9-6. At Somers, the Elephants fell to<br />
Doug Reynold's shutout pitching for<br />
the Mahopac Chiefs, 1-0.<br />
League Standings<br />
, W L Pet GB<br />
Katonah 5 0 1,000 -<br />
West. Yankees 4 0 1,000 %<br />
Danbury 4 1 .800 1<br />
Mt. Kisco 8 2 .600 2<br />
Bedford Hills 3 2 .600 2<br />
Mahopac 3 3 .500 2%<br />
Croton Falls 3 3 £00 2%<br />
Peeksklll i 2 3 .400 3<br />
Chappaqua 1 4 .200 4 *<br />
Carmel 1 4 .200 4<br />
8omer8 1 4 .200 4<br />
Brewster 0 4 .000 4H<br />
Score: Wednesday, July 18th, twilight<br />
contest, Croton Falls 4, Mahopac<br />
0.<br />
Scores Sunday, Jane 22nd .<br />
Katonah 6, Croton Falls 3<br />
West. Yankees 4, Chappaqua 1<br />
Danbury 5, Brewster 1.<br />
Bedford Hills 10, Carmel 3<br />
Mahopac 1, Somers 0<br />
Peeksklll 0, Mt. Kisco 6<br />
Schedule Sunday, June 29<br />
West. Yankees at Danbury<br />
Chappaqua at Carmel<br />
Bedford Hills at Katonah<br />
Croton Falls at Mt. Kisco<br />
Peeksklll at Somers<br />
Brewster at Mahopac<br />
iections and breaks o through the limitations<br />
According of the to playing a recent platform Cornell surto<br />
vey bring the to cheapest the screen method the of Invasion harvesting of<br />
hay France, from the the exciting standpoint charge of total of cost the<br />
is Knights the auto of buokrake. Aquicourt, the charming<br />
love scenes between Henry and Princess<br />
Kate.<br />
2:2<br />
Etypllan Boatman Seizid In<br />
$4,100,000 Narcotic Trade<br />
CAIRO.—Police announced the arrest<br />
of a boatman accused of controlling<br />
an illegal traffic of over<br />
$4,100,000 annually in Middle Eastern<br />
opiates.<br />
Lt. Col. Abdel Azziz Safwat, chief<br />
of the narcotics investigation bureau,<br />
said Abu El Maati Abdou E.<br />
Feki, known as "the master," had<br />
been arrested with 32 other men and<br />
three women. A ton of hashhish and<br />
opium, worth more than $1,640,000,<br />
was seized.<br />
Swafat said it was "comparatively<br />
easy for the gang to label boxes of<br />
narcotics as oil, medicines, etc., and<br />
have them transported from Palestine<br />
to Egypt by British war department<br />
trucks."<br />
Explosion at Jutland It<br />
Blamed on Sunken Munitions<br />
COPENHAGEN, DENMARK. —<br />
Danish naval authorities said that<br />
they believed the explosion of 20<br />
tons of German munitions dumped<br />
into the sea by the British after the<br />
war, was responsible for a mysterious<br />
blast which rocked the city<br />
of Aarhus, Jutland. What caused the<br />
explosion was not determined.<br />
22.17 Per Cent off U.S. Costs<br />
In Germany Went for Relief<br />
BERLIN. — Public relief rolls,<br />
rising steadily in the American occupation<br />
zone of Germany, require<br />
22.17 per/ cent of all governmental<br />
expenditures for the 1946-47 fiscal<br />
year. Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay,<br />
deputy military governor, reported<br />
these figures.<br />
The American zone, which has<br />
a population of 16,231,648 persons,<br />
haa 1,130,638 on relief in November.<br />
This represented an increase<br />
of 52,653 from October.<br />
In the same period, relief expenditures<br />
mounted from $2,991,918 to<br />
$3,188,333. Public welfare budgets<br />
for the fiscal year were estimated<br />
at $139,600,000, Clay's report said.<br />
The figures also include funds for<br />
operating welfare institutions.<br />
PROBABLY that faithful Buick of yours<br />
still can show a clean pair of heels to<br />
other cars on the road — probably still<br />
rides and runs like a charm. It makes you<br />
realize how wise you were to have picked<br />
a Buick in the first place.<br />
Even though time always takes a toll,<br />
Buicks do carry their years well. They<br />
can keep their eagerness to go, their lighthearted<br />
gait and gentle comfort — particularly<br />
when they are rewarded with the<br />
considerate care that Buick dealers know<br />
how to provide. It's care that brings out<br />
your car's youthful spirit — care that lets<br />
you feel that suddenly it's young again.<br />
uddenly<br />
DAT CAMP NOTICE<br />
Registration for Day Camp at Peach<br />
Lake will be held Saturday afternoon,<br />
June 28th, from 3-5 pm. in the basement<br />
of Brewster Library.<br />
The registration fee Is $5.00. Boys<br />
and girls from school age to 12 years<br />
are eligible,. |4lf<br />
Camp opens July 7. Mrs. Sadie<br />
Nagle, camp director, will be at the<br />
Library to give more information on<br />
Saturday.<br />
The worst form of child labor is<br />
child labor by a grown man. — The<br />
Dummy. •<br />
A sailor pounding on the door of a<br />
Chinese restaurant located on the water<br />
front, hears a voice Inside saying:<br />
" 'Ello! 'Ello! rt<br />
Sailor: "How are the chances to<br />
eat?" |<br />
Chinese: *You hungly?"<br />
Sailor: "Yeah."<br />
Chinese: "You likee fish?"<br />
Sailor: "Sure."<br />
Chinese: "Come back Pliday." —<br />
Phoney Phun.<br />
MIDGET<br />
AUTO RACES<br />
Danbury Speedway<br />
I Danbury, Conn.<br />
Every Saturday Nite<br />
8:30 P. M.<br />
FEATURING THE* NATION'S<br />
LEADING DRIVERS<br />
Gen. Adm. --- - $1.20 tax Inc.<br />
All Reserved Seats - $1.80 tax Inc.<br />
Children -------60c tax inc.<br />
FREE PARKING<br />
its young again<br />
r\<br />
Buick car care is something far different<br />
\<br />
/<br />
from what's regularly called service. It's<br />
something that only a Buick man can give.<br />
Because he is trained in all the needs and<br />
preferences of Buicks. The tools he uses<br />
are the right Buick tools. And any replacement<br />
part your car may need is a<br />
Buick-engineered part<br />
So it's easy to see why your car is so ready<br />
to give you its best when it receives regular<br />
Buick car care — care by men who<br />
know Buicks through and through and<br />
love them heart and soul.<br />
UICK CARE<br />
KEEPS BUICKS BEST<br />
VAILS GROVE GOLF CLUB<br />
TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE<br />
May to Oct.—Week end ball sweepstakes.<br />
May 30-31, June 15—36 holes medal<br />
play handicap.<br />
July 4th—18 holes medal play handicap:<br />
kickers handicap.<br />
July 5-6—Best ball foursome; first<br />
round.<br />
July 12-13—Best ball foursome, second<br />
round.<br />
July 19-20—Best ball foursome, final<br />
round.<br />
July 26-27—Green Cup and Black<br />
Cup qualifying round.<br />
Aug.2-3—First round.<br />
Aug. 9-10—Second round.<br />
Aug. 16-17—Third round.<br />
Aug. 23—Pinal round.<br />
Aug. 30-31, Sept. 1—Club championship.<br />
36 holes. Also 36 holes under<br />
handicap scratch.<br />
Sept 1—12 HL. Mixed foursome; 2:30,<br />
driving contest; 4, hole In one*; 5, 19th<br />
hole.<br />
ADVERTISE IN THE STANDARD<br />
"There are two sides to every question,",<br />
proclaimed the sage.<br />
"Yes," said the fool, "and there are<br />
two sides to a sheet of fly paper, but<br />
It makes a big difference to the fly<br />
which side he chooses."—Phoney Phun<br />
o<br />
When sprinkling clothes for ironing,<br />
wrap the colored pieces carefully<br />
in waxed paper to keep them from<br />
fading on the white clothes.<br />
-rat<br />
STARR RIDGE<br />
Boarding and<br />
Sales Stables<br />
Gentle, Well Mannered Saddle<br />
Horses for Sale and Rent<br />
Riding Instruction by Appointment<br />
Horses Schooled to Jump<br />
Eugene O'Riordan<br />
Tel. Brewster' 2703<br />
A FOUR DOOR PLYMOUTH SEDAN<br />
WILL BE GIVEN AWAY<br />
at the<br />
South Salem Fire Department<br />
ANNUAL DANCE<br />
SATURDAY, JULY 12th - 9 p.m. - 1 a.m<br />
at the<br />
LEWISBORO SCHOOL<br />
BOUTON STREET - SOUTH SALEM<br />
2 Orthestras - 2 Dance Floors<br />
Inside *•*- Outside<br />
Modern and Square<br />
. Admission Incl Tax - - $1.50<br />
'°*»-«P.. "" *» wt,hZ *• 9*.,<br />
a**w;sgrVfc<br />
core<br />
A<br />
whot "dtht<br />
wr , n rr*«/,;?"rw*<br />
flio/o **d$^<br />
or<br />
SOUTHEAST MOTOR COMPA<strong>NY</strong><br />
it/floi<br />
•'«*• mil<br />
87 North Main Street Phone 2540 Brewster, N. Y.<br />
'•Po/r.<br />
,.
PAGE FOUR THE <strong>BREWSTER</strong> STANDARD—ESTABLISHED 1869 THURSDAY. JUNE 26, 1947<br />
r<br />
QDbe JJretoster fttanbarb<br />
E. W. ADDIS ESTATE, Publisher MARJORIE L. ADDIS, Editor<br />
Published Weekly at Brewster, Putnam County, N, Y.<br />
Entered at the Post Office at Brewster as Second Glass Mall<br />
Subscription per year, $3.00; single copy Ten Cents<br />
THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1947<br />
SHADING PARKING SPACE<br />
H. H. fyells Addresses<br />
Putnam Valley Class<br />
(Continued from Paare 1)<br />
newsnaper undisturbed. Oet your families<br />
to let you alone.<br />
Try to get In some reading about<br />
your work and for pleasure, so your<br />
conversation will be more interesting<br />
land your enjoyment greater by having<br />
Presumably lack of interested, active cooperation of business more to think about(and talk of.<br />
and political persons to provide adequate parking space for commut- Saturday evenings.<br />
ers and other all day parkers brought about the six month trial of General Curtis<br />
J it i i • t MI r n. ..... u»... V^AMIAI Next. I wish to warn you not to exmeters<br />
and parallel parking in the village of Brewster. How people jDect absonite fairness in this world.<br />
wish the opportunity to get the city lot adjoining the B r e w s t e r ' l ^ g ^ % ^ i * $ ^<br />
Standard had been seized back in the good old Mayor Walker days. Curtla, the hero of the Battle of Port<br />
I Fisher in the Civil War. He lived on<br />
The present predicament may turn up a vigorous movement to secure. mint* Place, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>. He told me<br />
, . - , - , * , , •. . :. „•« a t «: AU-TM£ TIME.<br />
THIS WEEKS SPECIALS<br />
UNIVERAL VACUUM CLEANERS<br />
(Tank Type)<br />
13 Attachments - 18 Ft. Cord<br />
$79.95<br />
We Carry a Complete Line of ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES<br />
from ELECTRIC RAZORS and DQOR CHIMES to RE<br />
FRIGERATORS and RADIOS.<br />
LEAR RADIOS<br />
ome unkind Salvia's Delicatessen<br />
East Main Street, Brewster<br />
Tel. 940<br />
FREE DELIVERY<br />
~<br />
See Us if You are Planning a Picnic<br />
WE CAN SUPPLY<br />
All Needs For Picnic Baskets<br />
— alsostatements<br />
I have pub-<br />
1<br />
lished. Do not be afraid to express<br />
an opposite opinion but follow my<br />
mother's advice.<br />
Sing Sing<br />
Of course you can sometimes soften<br />
a harsh statement. There was that<br />
women who wanted her family genealogy<br />
written and engaged a leading<br />
Journalist. She gave him the family<br />
Bible and old letters and old histories<br />
and he went to work. After a week<br />
he called the woman and said, "What<br />
am I going to do about your Uncle<br />
Ezra?" The woman said, "Well, what<br />
about Uncle Ezra?" The journalist<br />
said, "Oh, nothing, excejpt that he<br />
killed a man and was electrocuted at<br />
Sing Sing. I have ethical standards<br />
and must tell the truth." The woman<br />
said, "Weell, go ahead and tell the<br />
truth but be as nice about it as you<br />
can."<br />
When the book was printed the woman<br />
looked to see what the conscientious<br />
man had said about Uncle Ezra<br />
and she found this sentence: "Ezra<br />
Collins, the uncle of Sarah Collins,<br />
occupied the chair of applied electricity<br />
in fine of our leading State institutions<br />
and died in harness."<br />
Intolerance<br />
Next. Another good rule is to avoid<br />
intolerance. President MacCracken of<br />
Vassar spoke In White Plains several<br />
years ago on the intolerance of youth.<br />
Don't dislike oeople bacuse you don't<br />
wish to be thick with them. Think<br />
kindly of persons outside of your own<br />
group. Sensitive persons may feel<br />
hurt if you are not cordial. I do not<br />
believe in secret societies, especially<br />
in schools. I believe there are too<br />
many heart breaks. I belong to two,<br />
but doubt if I would loin again, the<br />
Masons and Zeta Psi. Peoole will<br />
group socially but there should be no<br />
secrecy.<br />
One girl in White Plains committed<br />
suicide because her sister wasn't taken<br />
into a sorority in school. Too much<br />
false value is put on secret societies.<br />
Respectable Sins •<br />
Next. Do not commit re8»*t*b1«»<br />
sins. At Great Barrington, Mass., I<br />
I heard an Episcopal minister preach on<br />
', respectable sins. One of these sins<br />
I WAS being cross at breakfast.. I don't<br />
i believe we realize how sinful we are<br />
when we are unpleasant in our homes<br />
and quarrel at the table and tease.<br />
President Eliot<br />
Next. Think of vour manners. Always<br />
thank promptly by letter anyone<br />
doinw you a favor. In 1909 I heard<br />
President Eliot of Harvard speak on<br />
"Preparation For an Effective Life" at<br />
Hotcbkiss School in Lakeville, Conn.<br />
In the speech he said. "The next part<br />
of education for an effective life,<br />
which I want to speak about, is manners.<br />
It would be difficult to exaggerate<br />
the importance of manners with<br />
reference to an effective career in the<br />
world. Just the bearing of the body<br />
has great importance, in business, in<br />
the practice of a profession, in public<br />
speaking to any audience, educated or<br />
uneducated, to the masses of the peoole<br />
or to a select few. The mere bearing<br />
of the body is of great importance<br />
to your success in future life. Military<br />
education has an excellent feature of<br />
this sort. In all military schools the<br />
(Continued on Page 7)<br />
o——<br />
The prehistoric woolly elephant didn't<br />
develop its woolly coat until the<br />
owning of an ice age gave him a need<br />
for it.<br />
o<br />
"Mv friends." said the campaign<br />
orator. "I am full of uncertainty."<br />
A number of people looked at one<br />
another and hoarselv whispered. "He<br />
must have been eating hash."—Phoney<br />
Phun.<br />
1<br />
Stienies<br />
Quarts BEER-ALE<br />
Cans<br />
LEGION and V. F. W. MAMMOTH<br />
CELEBRATION<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong><br />
AD Next Week June 30lh (o July 5th<br />
60 - Tons of Out-door Attractions - 60<br />
Rides - Games - Fireworks<br />
Thousands in Awards including<br />
1947Studebaker<br />
Save 2c to 1 Sc<br />
TO HELP PAY FOR<br />
Parking Meters<br />
Cigarettes, were 2 - 37c NOW 2 - 35c<br />
Cigarettes, carton, were 1.79 __.__NOW 1.69<br />
French Ice Cream, Pt., was 40c. NOW 37c<br />
All 5c Candy and Gum is .... NOW 5c<br />
NOT 6c<br />
EXTRA SPECIAL<br />
Parkers Ink was 15c .....NOW 10c<br />
Parkers Ink was 25c — NOW 15c<br />
Anderson s Drug Store<br />
36-38 MAIN ST.. <strong>BREWSTER</strong>. N. Y.<br />
Phones: 934 and 936<br />
Because Cadillac's objective is<br />
quality—first and always—it is not<br />
necessary to compromise with<br />
any element of Cadillac goodness.<br />
There are no restrictions on those<br />
who design and build Cadillacssave<br />
to provide the finest personal<br />
transportation it is practical to<br />
produce. Consequently, Cadillac<br />
excels in all the things which<br />
make a motor car a joy to possess<br />
and a pleasure to drive.
THURSDAY, JUNE 26. 1947 THE <strong>BREWSTER</strong> STANDARD—ESTABLISHED 186?_ PAGE FIVE<br />
WHAT YOUR NEIGHBORS ARE DOING<br />
On Wednesday night a small company<br />
gathered for a covered dish supper<br />
in Reed Memorial Chapel. "Why<br />
didn't I know about it?" is the rhetorical<br />
question of those who find the<br />
pace too swift even for theif^"desire<br />
to catch up with good home cooking.<br />
——o<br />
The Rev. and Mrs. Frederick A.<br />
Coleman have left for Chicago where<br />
Mr. Coleman will attend the annual<br />
convention of Kiwanis International<br />
being held in that city from Sunday,<br />
June 29th until Thursday, July 3rd.<br />
As the president of the Putnam County<br />
Kiwanis he will represent it at the<br />
convention staying at the Bismark Hotel<br />
where all the delegates from <strong>New</strong><br />
<strong>York</strong> State will t>e housed. Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Coleman plan a brief stay with<br />
relatives in Canada on the trip.<br />
O. Rundle Gilbert, auctiofleer of<br />
Garrison-on-Hudson, sold the contents<br />
of the Shove house on North<br />
Main Street yesterday afternoon. Buyers<br />
and spectators enjoyed every jninute<br />
of the day. Mr. Gilbert's tent set<br />
at ease any who suspected the weather<br />
might play tricks disastrous to<br />
hair-do and costume. Dealers of <strong>New</strong><br />
<strong>York</strong> and Philadelphia arrived earlv<br />
a6 usual at an O. Rundle Gilbert sale.<br />
o<br />
Announcement is made of John<br />
Whitnev Irving's association with the<br />
Edear L. Hoag real estate agency. Mr.<br />
Irving, a graduate of Princeton University,<br />
has spent most of his early<br />
life on his father's Brewster estate<br />
(Spv Hill Farm). He served four<br />
years in the Army Air Forces, two<br />
years of which were spent* In the<br />
Africa-Middle East Theatre. About a<br />
year ago he was placed on inactive<br />
duty with the rank of Major,<br />
o<br />
PATTERSON<br />
Mrs. Emma C. Wright was a guest<br />
of Mrs. D. G. Ludlngton several days<br />
this week.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Spaulding, of<br />
Standlordville. N. Y.. were dinner<br />
guests on Sunday of his sister. Miss<br />
Esther Spaulding.<br />
_——— i<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Joseoh Weber of <strong>New</strong><br />
Yor^ ^itv, were Sundav callers on Mr.<br />
and Mrs. T. Walter Birdsall.<br />
The regular meeting of the Grange<br />
was postponed on account of the manv<br />
graduation exercises, from this week<br />
to next Monday evening, June 30th.<br />
Mr. Edward Fitzpa trick and son,<br />
Eddie, were guests on Sunday of Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Lynn Evans in Danbury<br />
where his daughter ie staying while<br />
her mother is away.<br />
The community was deeply shocked<br />
by the sudden death of the popular<br />
milkman, Jack Henriques. who was<br />
killed in an accident to his car on<br />
the Danburv Road Friday evening<br />
about 7 o'clock. Excessive speed was<br />
blamed as the car ran up on a bank,<br />
struck a boulder and overturned. The<br />
driver was thrown out and so badly<br />
injured that he died on the way to<br />
the hospital without recovering consciousness.<br />
He was only 45 years old<br />
and was well liked by his many patrons<br />
here who sent a handsome floral<br />
piece to the funeral services held in<br />
the Catholic Church in Danbury on<br />
Monday morning as a token of their<br />
esteem. He is survived by two daughters<br />
and one son. It is probable that<br />
the milk route will be continued.<br />
On Monday evening the graduating<br />
class at the Carmel High School Included<br />
eight from Patterson: Jean<br />
Hampe, Joyce VanKeuren, Patricia<br />
Townsend, Carol Bloch, Howard Smith,<br />
Daniel Ludlngton, Laurence Nell and<br />
Haines O'Harn. Daniel Ludlngton was<br />
awarded a prize, for being the best<br />
athlete, and Howard Smith for doing<br />
the most for the school, and both of<br />
these young men received recognition<br />
for their work on the school paper<br />
during the year.<br />
o<br />
Protestant Children<br />
Need Foster Homes<br />
WORK by day or contract: Landscaping,<br />
trucking of top soil, sand and<br />
graveL Foundation masonry work.<br />
Handmade cement blocks for sale. Tel.<br />
741 Brewster. Leo Glowney, 74 North<br />
Main St. 4tf<br />
ON-PREMISES LICENSE<br />
Notice is hereby given that License<br />
No. FB 1772 has been issued to the<br />
undersigned to sell beer in Tinie's<br />
grocery store and restaurant, Fairfield<br />
Drive, Putnam Lake, Putnam<br />
County, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, for on-premises<br />
consumption under the Alcoholic Beverage<br />
Control Law. '<br />
JOSEPH MIRAMONTES<br />
Brewster, N. Y.<br />
Dated June 26, 1947<br />
Brewster, N. Y. 10p2<br />
Special This Week<br />
Hot or Sweet<br />
Italian Sausage<br />
Swift's Premium<br />
59 c<br />
lb<br />
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY<br />
Masonic Temple, Railroad Ave.<br />
Pawling, N. Y.<br />
O. B. REFRIGERATORS and Freezers<br />
for immediate delivery; also G. E.<br />
Radios, Vacuum Cleaners. M. J.<br />
Fischer A Son, 4 Progress St., Brewster.<br />
Tel. 654 or 572. 37tf<br />
ED MARTIN<br />
Main St., Brewster Phone 2556<br />
Household Furniture<br />
Chests, Beds, Chairs, Davenports, Studio Couches, Dining<br />
Tables, China Closets, Dressers, Corner Cupboards, Wall<br />
Shelves, Shadow Boxes. Dressing Tables. Children's Chairs,<br />
Beds. Baby Carriages. Electric Washer, Oil Stoves, Oil Ovens,<br />
China Dinner Sets, Odd Lots. Vases, China, Glass, Antique,<br />
.Pottery. Old Glass and China Lamps. 65 Piece Crystal Glass<br />
Set. Colored Glassware, Goblets, Glasses, Vases. Lamps,<br />
Brass, Maple Dresser and Pin-Ups, China, Glass. General<br />
Electric Radio. Metal Novelties.<br />
READING NOTICES<br />
Tonight at 8:30 the Odd Fellows will<br />
entertain a public card party,<br />
o<br />
Miss Millie Fazzinga will spend two<br />
weeks vacation in Springfield and<br />
Paterson, N. J.<br />
o—'—<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Weill will be<br />
at their home at Brewster this week<br />
end to prepare for a long stay.<br />
o———<br />
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Cutler, of<br />
Florida, have arrived at the Green<br />
Cabins for a long stay.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. John Eastwood have<br />
purchased a home at Ft. Meyer, Fla.,<br />
where they expect to live after Dec.<br />
1. Fishing Is a leading attraction.<br />
: o<br />
The Junior Catholic Daughters of<br />
America, Court Bernardine, 185, will<br />
hold a card party July 9 at the K. of<br />
C. Home.<br />
><br />
GARDNER wanted, part or full time, CARMEL—Delightfully situated on<br />
Sunday Service 10:45 a.m.<br />
temporarily. Tel. 635 Croton Falls. lOtf 4 acre hillside, overlooking two lakes<br />
Sunday School \ 10:45 a.m. ARTHUR C. HAMILTON<br />
and country, in residential section,<br />
Testimonial meeting, the' first Wed<br />
Mrs. Herbert Turner has accepted,<br />
Real Estate and Insurance EXPERIENCED BABY SITTER, built 1941, a beautiful, fully insulated<br />
nesday of each months at 8:00 p.m.<br />
a position in Stamford, Conn., where<br />
TOWNERS, N. Y.<br />
mother of five now grown np, seeks home of 10 rooms, 4 baths, 6 bed<br />
All are cordially Invited to attend<br />
employment. Tel. 2124 Brewster. lOpl<br />
she spent last week.<br />
our services.<br />
Phone Patterson 8291<br />
rooms, living room 27x17 with flre-<br />
Office: One mile east of Towners<br />
nlace; library 18x20 in knotty pine,<br />
FOR SALE—Reasonable, hot water<br />
Mrs. Hogan of Mount Kisco, Is vis<br />
o-*—<br />
bay window, open sun deck, butler's<br />
R. R. Station on Route 216 stove, pipe and connections. Box 3,<br />
iting her daughter, Mrs. Lester Pfahl<br />
pantry with dishwasher, spacious cab<br />
ON-PREMTSES LICENSE Tilly Foster, N. Y.. lOpl<br />
and family here.<br />
inets, marvelous kitchen, adjoining<br />
Sick Veterans Need<br />
Notice is hereby given that License<br />
PAINTING<br />
roofed terrace; master bed room 18x20,<br />
Mrs. Percy Hall, of Belleville, N. J.,<br />
No. SB 167 has been issued to the<br />
Cards and Cigarettes<br />
First Class at Just Rates<br />
dressing room with 4 full length mir<br />
spent one day in town last week and<br />
undersigned to sell beer in Tonetta J. STONE, Tel. 8426 Carmel 10p2<br />
rors, imported wall papers, removable<br />
called on numerous friends who were<br />
Lake pavilion, Brewster, Putnam<br />
windows, party room 30x15 satin wood<br />
pleased to greet her.<br />
The chairman of Camps and Hos County, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, 'for on-premises FOR SALE: Chest of drawers, $12; finished walls, bar room rare black<br />
The Department of Public Welfare, pitals for the North Salem-Somers consumption under the Alcoholic Bev desk, $6; bookcase, $7; four matching cypress walls, laundry, steel and con<br />
Seward Robinson, having completed Carmel, N. Y., is In need of foster Branch of the American Red Gross, erage Control Law.<br />
chairs; blanket box; packing trunks crete boiler room, G. E. oil burner,<br />
his college studies for this year, has homes for a number of Protestant Mrs. Jeffry Nichol, has stated there is TONETTA LAKE CORP. 91 np. Tel. 584 Croton Falls. lOpl vapor vacuum heat, copper and brass<br />
left for Camp Sloan for two* months children. Anyone interested, please urgent need in veterans' hospitals for Frank C. Smith<br />
plumbing, inter-room phone system,<br />
where he Will serve as counselor. contact Mr. Ralph A. Smith, Commis playing cards and cigarettes. Anyone Brewster, N. Y.<br />
EXPERIENCED PAINTERS want city Water, 5 minutes walk to high<br />
sioner, Carmel 670.'<br />
wishing to contribute, please call Cro- Dated: June 18, 1947<br />
ed. Good wages. Tel. 2458 Brewster. school and stoves. Priced to seR<br />
The many friends of Paul W.<br />
. — o<br />
ton Falls 667.<br />
Brewster, N. Y. 9o2<br />
9p3 quickly.<br />
Townsend are glad to hear that he is DAY' CAMP NOTICE<br />
recovering nicely in St. Francis Hos<br />
: STANDING GRASS, 40 acres, some<br />
new seeded, on Ronte 22. Clifford<br />
pital from an operation performed last •Registration for Day Camp at Peach<br />
Sherwood. Tel. 808 Brewster. 9tf<br />
week and will be home again this Lake will be held Saturday afternoon,<br />
week.<br />
June 28th, from 3-5 p.m. in the base<br />
WASHING and Ironing done at<br />
ment of Brewster Library.<br />
n<br />
home. 206 E. Main St. Tel. 665 Brew- I window, modern<br />
The new cement block garage of The registration fee is $5.00. Boys GOOSSEN FURNITURE CO. inc.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Hopkins left<br />
ster. 80S ><br />
Philip Buxbaum is nearlng completion and girls from school age to 12 years<br />
last Sunday on a motor trip to Ann<br />
and contains -a convenient "grease are ellgibta.<br />
Arbor, Michigan, where they will spend<br />
92-94 MAIN ST., <strong>BREWSTER</strong>. N. Y.<br />
ball" room as well as office and extra Camp opens July 7. Mrs. Sadie<br />
a few days with the O'Hern family.<br />
space for display of cars will be added Nagle, camp director, will be at the Tel. 2379 Mall and Phone Orders Accepted<br />
o<br />
later, also gas tanks. Mr. Buxbaum Library to give more information • on<br />
At Birch Hill Acres, the "former plans to build, a large porch on the Saturday.<br />
Murty estate, P. F. Beal and Sons, ar west side of his house making that<br />
o • —<br />
tesian well contractors, struck a flow the front entrance and more secluded<br />
of over 40 gallons per minute at 200<br />
" CARD PARTY TOMORROW '<br />
from the front street.<br />
" •<br />
ft. after a week's operation.<br />
Are Your Week End Guests Comfortable?<br />
o<br />
Vall's Park Association is all set to<br />
Miss Alma Ruth Ballard celebrated There was a large attendance of open the Summer card parties in the<br />
her fifth birthday on Monday, June parents and friends at the Union Community House.. The first meeting<br />
23rd, with a family party at her home School last Friday evening for the is Friday night, June 27. Mr. Richard Goosscns have many of the items you will rieed<br />
on Turk Hill. On Wednesday she en- graduation of five members of the Hlnsh, Jr., chairman, will have bridge<br />
Joyed a trip to Playland with her par eight grade who were Joyce Clark, and pinochle with prizes and refreshents,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford H. Ballard, Lucy GHara, Alice Macartney, Arlene ments.<br />
Mattresses $19.95 up Outdoor Chairs $ 3.95 up<br />
and her playmate, Sonia Wolter Slocum and William Conklin. A com<br />
„ . tio<br />
Bloomerside, N.<br />
v<br />
Y„<br />
-v<br />
Sat<br />
D.t<br />
and<br />
..j<br />
Sun.<br />
o«« 0n, view, large living room, dining room<br />
9o3lwUh bav w|ndoWt pood slw, kltche„, 2<br />
SECOND-HAND WASHERS for sale. nice bed rooms, modern bath on first<br />
M. J. Fischer & Son 4 Progress Street, floor. .larre kitchen, flne living room,<br />
Tel. 654 or 572 Brewster. J 36tf 2 bed rooms and bath on second floor,<br />
2 car parage, full basement oil hot-<br />
TRUCKING, local and long diswater boat, city water, copper plumbtance.<br />
Sand, Gravel and Wall Stone ing. A bargain at $11,250.<br />
for sale. Driveways repaired and filled.<br />
Call 748'Brewster. 5tf VA miles from Croton Falls staflon,<br />
on one secluded acre nicely set among<br />
FOR SALE—Used window frames, rare trees, shrubs and a beautiful gar<br />
complete with sash; interior doors; den, overlooking reservoir, is a 5 room<br />
bath tubs on legs, complete with fit all year home, full basement, garage,<br />
tings; lavatories, complete with fit hot water heat, good plumbing, spring<br />
tings; stairs. TeL 724 Brewster. 49tf water, large pdrch 11x44, 28 ft. livinr<br />
room with stone, fireplace, raftered<br />
ceiling, library. 2 bed rooms with closets,<br />
kitchen with wall closets and gas<br />
range. Asking $16,500.<br />
Mrs. Marv Hall, district nurse, has<br />
resigned her position to accept one<br />
as srhool nurse in Brewster this fall.<br />
She will, however, not leave town for<br />
Another year while her daughter is in<br />
hiah school and has rented the upstairs<br />
apartment in the remodeled<br />
George Chase house near the factory<br />
now owned by Jacob Bloch. We understand<br />
' that the first floor apartment<br />
is also rented and that Mr. Bloch<br />
has now purchased the former William<br />
Cruthers house in the seme<br />
neighborhood for remodeling. »<br />
About thirtv of the H. A. G.'s with<br />
members of their families and friends<br />
held an en .lovable party at the Sloat<br />
cottaste at Whaley Lake last Thursdav<br />
evening to celebrate the completion of<br />
the nlay. Some enjoyed a swim while<br />
others preferred conversation and enjoyment<br />
of the delightful lakeside<br />
view and surroundings. Hot dogs were<br />
roasted over an outside firenlace and<br />
with rolls, coffee, cakes and cookies,<br />
mad* flne refreshments for all. Personal<br />
gifts were given to Miss Jones<br />
imd Miss Anderson and gifts of monev<br />
to those non-members who assisted in<br />
the play. The onlv near traeedy was<br />
the fate of Master Jamie Genovese<br />
who went uo earlv with his brother<br />
and mother for a.swim and after teeing<br />
dried and dressed. promDtlv fell<br />
In the water again before supper and<br />
tnlsftH the fun of the evening.<br />
CEILING fixtures and rlobes. used,<br />
91.99 each. Goossen Furniture Co. Tel.<br />
2379 Brewster. 19ol<br />
WILLIE'S STORE<br />
76 N. Main St., Brewster Tel. 491<br />
Launderette<br />
8 Keeler St., Danbury, Conn<br />
21 -Automatic-21<br />
BENDIX<br />
Washing Machines<br />
9 lbs 25c - 30 Minutes<br />
We do Blankets, Curtains,, ,<br />
Slip Covers, Diapers<br />
For appointments phone Danbury 8-1442<br />
L. C. FISH<br />
Owner and Manager<br />
Next Door to Main St. A 8 P and,Large Parking Lots<br />
Mergardt's Progress Market<br />
OPPOSITE U..S. POST OFFICE<br />
Frozen Food Lockers For Rent<br />
ATTENTION - Home Freezer Owners<br />
We have what you need to pack those<br />
Early Fruits and Vegetables<br />
Containers - Cellophane Bags - Paper<br />
•<br />
We Call a Full Line of FRUITS and VEGETABLES<br />
FRESH FROSTED FOODS<br />
CHAS. G. MERGARDT 8 SON Tel. 706<br />
BATHING SUITS<br />
Misses' Bathing Suits $4.95 and $5.95<br />
(<strong>New</strong> Styles)<br />
Children's Bathing Suits — —98c to $3-95<br />
Men' Swim Trunks $1-95 and $2-95<br />
Boys' Swim Trunks $1-00 and $1-95<br />
Bathing Caps 25c to 95c<br />
Bathing SHoes r—*~r 79 c and 89 c a pair<br />
•<br />
<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Store<br />
58 Main Street Brewster. N. Y.<br />
REFRIGERATOR for sale. Frostair<br />
Duplex combination box, 7 ft. cold<br />
wall refrigerator, plus 90 cube ice maker,<br />
plus 3*4 cu. ft deep freeze. Geo.<br />
Juengst & Sons. TeL 333 or 607 Croton<br />
Falls. 6tf<br />
PRIVATE SALE<br />
Beginning Jane 26. Antique and<br />
Modern Glassware, Limoges, Wedgewood,<br />
Royal Ducal and Willow China;<br />
also also bric-a-brac. Call Thursday,<br />
Saturday and Sunday afternoons; Mrs.<br />
Albro Travis, 26 North Main Street,<br />
Brewster. - . 9tf<br />
PURDYS—7 room white colonial<br />
house on 3/4 of an acre, At condition,<br />
bath and lavatory, automatic oil heat,<br />
screened porch, garage, near school<br />
and stores, 5 minutes walk to station.<br />
Immediate occupancy. Price $11,000.<br />
Swenson. TeL 605 Croton Fulls. 9o2<br />
AN OPPORTUNITY<br />
Several owners of Putnam and<br />
Dutchess County estates offer approved<br />
buyer at VERY LOW PRICES<br />
5 to 20 acre parrels of their choicest<br />
lands. Inquiries solicited. EDGAR L.<br />
HOAG, 320-5th Ave., <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City.<br />
Phone 2595 Brewster, N. Y. 8o4<br />
TRUCK BODY for sale, rack type.<br />
All good oak planks. TeL 2051 Brewster.<br />
9p2<br />
EXTRA SIZE WORK PANTS, sizes<br />
44-50, for sale at $4.95. Buck Se Van<br />
Scoy, Brewster, N. Y. Otf<br />
WANTED — LONG LEASE on large<br />
unfurnished house by Christian family,<br />
all adults. P. O. Box 247, Rye, N.<br />
Y. 9p5<br />
BILLIARD TABLE, Victrola, G. E.<br />
Ironer, 'Baby carriage, Wood Stoves<br />
with fittings. CaU 2093 Brewster after<br />
6 ji.m. 9tf<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong> PUBLIC LIBRARY<br />
May B. Hancock. Librarian<br />
Open Dally Except Sunday<br />
2:30 to 6 pan. and 7 to 9 p.m.<br />
10:30 to 12 m. Saturday<br />
SLOATS FUNERAL SERVICE<br />
Licensed <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> and <strong>New</strong> Jersev<br />
Fmhainwir and Undertaker<br />
TeL 570 408 Carmel<br />
FOR SALE—Gas water heaters, refrigerators<br />
and ranges for bottled gas.<br />
Berk Refrigeration Sales & Service.<br />
TeL 6033 ML Kisco. 39 tf<br />
FOR SALE — Bntter churns, both<br />
hand and electric, in suitable sizes np<br />
to six gallons of cream at one churning.<br />
De Laval Sales St Service. Inc.<br />
Poughkeepsie. N. Y. 38tf<br />
* J. RALPH TRURAN<br />
INSURANCE — REAL ESTATE<br />
TeL 2064.' Coarsen Bldg.<br />
APARTMENTS. HOUSES. FARMS<br />
ALFRED n. VORES. Jr.<br />
General Carpenter Work<br />
Repairing A Specialty<br />
No Job Too Small<br />
29 Prospect St.. Brewster 2008<br />
FRlGiDAIKE SERVICE<br />
Authorised, Dependable<br />
PUTNAM APPLIANCE SALES<br />
and SERVICE<br />
TeL 686 Day — 401 Night<br />
Main St, Brewster, N. Y. 13tf<br />
CARD OF THANKS—We wish to<br />
express our sincere **"»«'"' to neighbors<br />
and friends and to the Legionnaires<br />
who gave us their sympathy<br />
and assistance ' at the time of the<br />
death of Edward P. Reed.<br />
Mrs. May Reed and<br />
Mrs. Blanche Heinchon<br />
CARD OF THANKS<br />
We wish to extend our sincere<br />
thanks to all who were so kind to us<br />
during our recent bereavement.<br />
Mrs. J. F. Keough<br />
Mrs. Ferdinand Guss<br />
Mrs. Alfred Negrey<br />
Miss Genevieve Keough<br />
CARMEL—<strong>New</strong> 4 room insulated<br />
rustic summer/ cottage on beautiful<br />
grounds of Hill and Dale Club, private<br />
beach, fishing, bathing, boating, modern<br />
bath and kitchen, large living<br />
room, stone fireplace, 2 bed rooms,<br />
flagstone natio, nicelv set on 150x200<br />
among flne birch .and maples. $6,900.<br />
Have also Cottage for rent for<br />
month of July In Hill and Dale Club.<br />
$250.00.<br />
WALTER G. LUDEWIG<br />
Realtor, Carmel, N. Y.<br />
Carmel 2136. Always Open<br />
USED WESTINGHOUSE Vacuum<br />
Cleaner $15.00. Inquire Goossen Furniture<br />
Co., Inc., Tel 2379 Brewster.<br />
lOol<br />
TO RENT—5 rooms and bath apartmint<br />
outside of Brewster, walk to station,<br />
heat furnished. $70.00 a month,<br />
3 yr. lease. Thomas C. Grimes Co.<br />
TeL 701 Brewster. lOtf<br />
PART or Full Time Positions open<br />
to men or women, $2.00 to $3.00 per nr.<br />
immediate earnings while in training.<br />
Call Patterson 3308 Inserra after 8 p.<br />
m. ^ lOpl<br />
DAY NURSERY<br />
Nursery School to be held during<br />
summer months. Ages of children<br />
from four to six years. Any one interested<br />
call Mary Palmer, 2565 Brewster.<br />
10p2<br />
FOR SALE—100 laying pullets, one<br />
yr. old; 2 cows, calves at side; one<br />
first calf heifer due next month; one<br />
John Deere tractor on rubber, 2 plows,<br />
cultivator, spring tooth harrow, snow<br />
plow, corn chopper. Call 575 Brewster.<br />
lOpl<br />
WANTED—Reliable woman as attendant<br />
to assist with care of retarded<br />
boys in small private boarding<br />
school. 40 miles from Manhattan.<br />
Write giving age, reference and salary<br />
expected. Bailey Hall, Katonah,<br />
N. Y. lOol<br />
FOR SALE—<strong>New</strong> Bungalow, prewar<br />
material, 5 rooms, bath and shower<br />
first floor, one room upstairs, full cellarp<br />
insulated, hardwood floors, garage,<br />
good high location, over acre, walk to<br />
station, school bus passes door. Immediate<br />
occupancy, sacrifice, $9,700.<br />
TeL 2297 Brewster. lOol<br />
NOTICE<br />
EDGAR L. HOAG. specialising for<br />
many years in Westchester, Putnam<br />
and Dutchess County real estate, announces<br />
that John Whitney Irving.<br />
Maple Road. Brewster, is now associated<br />
with his office. His uhone number<br />
is Brewster 2355. Mr. Hoag's number<br />
Brewster 2595. Offices 320 - Fifth<br />
Avenue, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City. lOol<br />
DAY CAMP<br />
Boys and Girls, ages 3 to 11; daily<br />
exceut Sunday, 9 a.m. to 12 and 2 p.m.<br />
to 5:39: full activity program with<br />
qualified staff, under highly experienced<br />
directorship; private lake with gently<br />
sloping sandy beach; spacious<br />
grounds. conmlete facilities: full ^season<br />
only (July and August.) Phone<br />
Brewster 642 at noon or after 6 p.m.<br />
BOATS FOR SALE<br />
1941 GAR WOOD SKI)AN. 20' 6"<br />
powered with 115 H.P. Cnrvsler Crown.<br />
Completely refinished inside and outside<br />
like new.<br />
NEW INBOARD MOTOR BOATS<br />
from $695 up.<br />
Largest display of boats in Connecticut.<br />
THE LAKE MARINE BASE. Inc.,<br />
Candlewood Isle Causeway. Route 39,<br />
<strong>New</strong> Fairfield, Conn. TeL 4747J2 Danbury.<br />
10©1
PAGE SIX THE <strong>BREWSTER</strong> STANDARD—ESTABLISHED 1869 THURSDAY. JUNE 26, 1947<br />
PEACH LAKE NORTH SALEM PURDYS CROTON FALLS<br />
THIS SPACE IS DEVOTED TO OUR NORTHERN WESTCHESTER READERS HAPPENINGS GATHERED BY OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENTS EVERY WEEK<br />
North Salem Library<br />
Entertains June 27<br />
The Women's Society of the Methodist<br />
Church held a strawberry festival<br />
today on the church lawn.<br />
CROTON FALLS<br />
Marie Tomokbis. daughter of Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Leonard K. Tompkins, of Windham,<br />
Conn., and Richard Joseph Lundv,<br />
son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin • Lundv<br />
of Purdys, N. Y. were married in St.<br />
Joseoh's Church at Willimantic.<br />
Conn., by the Rev. Joseph E. Farrell.<br />
spots of this section. A rftCeotlon wa8 heM on the lftwn at<br />
* ——--?- •D,«J„„ „,0e roil i-AnrMPnt- ' *he home of the bride's Barents. Af-<br />
«^t^Ks3£S sy-as'srss- - vntaMwn<br />
will live in<br />
0"V)en* Bridge. N. ,Y.<br />
Th*» bride is a graduate of Wind-<br />
Mahopac Playhouse<br />
Opens Tuesday, July 8<br />
NORTH SALEM<br />
Gala Crowd Attends<br />
Starlight Opening<br />
The North Salem Free Library,<br />
Dr. and Mrs. Matthew Ratchford of<br />
serving Croton Falls, North Salem,<br />
Dingle Ridge, have, left for a vacation<br />
Salem Center and Purdys, will hold<br />
trip and expect to return July 14th.<br />
the annual meeting in the library of<br />
Program with Surprise Number and<br />
the North Salem school, Friday, June<br />
27th, at 8:30 p.m.<br />
Wilder's "Skin of Our Teeth" Starts Members of St. James Auxiliary who<br />
Refreshments to Follow Unique Bus<br />
International ieasom *Mad"y Corell,<br />
iness Session ftt Annual Meeting. All<br />
Welcome.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Oothouse and<br />
daughters are planning to spend part<br />
How the North Salem Free Library<br />
of the summer at Lake Tonetta.<br />
functions, followed toy an entertaining<br />
program including a surprise number, Paul DeLaura of Mt. Klsco, broke<br />
will be the features of the Associa his thumb while playing ball here on<br />
tion's annual meeting in the North Sunday.<br />
Salem school at 8:30 p.m., Friday, June<br />
27. Refreshments will be served and The card party of the Croton Falls<br />
every resident of the North Salem Fire Department bastoall club will be<br />
School District is cordially invited to held in the fire house on Friday, June<br />
attend.<br />
27th, at 8:30 p.m. A good assortment<br />
The entertainment will include solos<br />
of prizes have been secured and ice<br />
by Miss Luella Christian, accompanied<br />
cream and cake will toe served.<br />
by her mother, Mrs. H. A. Christian;<br />
recitations by Mrs. Charles Nichols, Mrs. Edward Juengst, Edward, Jr.,<br />
and a surprise number by the famous and Mrs. Nellie Juengst visited the<br />
artist, H. Winfleld Scott.<br />
Zoo in <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> City on Saturday.<br />
The functions of the different library<br />
committees will toe described and The Croton Falls Fire .Department<br />
the respective chairmen will tell how<br />
is conducting a drive for funds to<br />
they fulfill their duties. The annual complete the building and sincerely<br />
reports on finances and book circula<br />
appeal to your generosity. All comtion<br />
will be presented by the treasurer munications should be sent to Henry<br />
and the librarians. The chairman of A. Blumlein. Box 177, Croton Falls, or<br />
the recent membership campaign wfll telephone 483.<br />
pay special tribute to the captains and<br />
solicitors who were responsible for the The next regular meeting of the<br />
outstanding success of the fund rais Auxiliary of the Fire Department will<br />
ing effort.<br />
be held on Wednesday, July 2nd at<br />
8 p.m.<br />
Mrs. E. R. Tostevin and Mrs. Blair<br />
Muller are the librarians; Mrs. Walter The Sisters of the Missionary Cir<br />
Howe, chairman of the administration cle of Maryknoll will be at St. Joseph's<br />
committee; Blair Muller, general Church next Sunday.<br />
chairman of the book committee; Mrs.<br />
Frederick Nelson, chairman of the<br />
non- Action book selection commit James D. McAuliffe observed his<br />
tee; Edward Stevenson, chairman of first birthday at the home of his<br />
the fiction book selection committee; Krandmotheri Mrs. Mary Doyle and<br />
Mrs. Albert Tibbets, chairman of the family.<br />
Juvenile committee. .<br />
The trustees are Miss Cornelia Federated Church Notes<br />
Crooke, Mrs. Walter Howe. Miss Ruth<br />
Keeler, Mrs. Howard Maurhoff, Blair Rev. Laban Chamberlin, Minister<br />
Muller, R. L. Parish, I. Hart Purdy,<br />
Mrs. H. Tappey<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Albert B. Tibbets.<br />
Organist and Choir Director<br />
The officers are: Albert B. Tibbets 10:00—Bible School and Adult Bible<br />
president: Mrs. Howard Maurhoff, vice Class.<br />
president; Mrs. Arthur H. Vail, Jr.,<br />
treasurer; Mrs. Donald Ferguson, re 11:00—Morning Worship.<br />
cording secretary, and Mrs. Edward Evening meetinc of the Young Peo-<br />
Stevenson, corresponding secretary. nle's Group and choral practice. Meet-<br />
Election of four new trustees<br />
Ins at 8 p.m.<br />
#and<br />
the officers for the ensuing year will<br />
The Ladles Aid Society wish to<br />
follow the business session.<br />
fhnnk all who through their oartlcipation<br />
made the supper on Wednesday<br />
evening such a success.<br />
Choir rehearsal each Thursday even-<br />
GOLDENS BRIDGE ins.<br />
Saturday, 9 a.m.—Junior choir music<br />
Charles Green is the only pupil<br />
»<br />
of study.<br />
the Goldens Bridge school with a per On Saturday, June 28th, the choir<br />
fect attendance record for the whole<br />
of the Church of the Redeemer, of<br />
school year. Credit should be given<br />
Brooklyn, N. Y, will hold a picnic at<br />
the little boy.<br />
Hill Top Farm. Mr. and Mrs. F.<br />
Schultz invite niembers of the conprregation<br />
to hear this choir sing at<br />
Miss Helen Burt, Mrs. Irwin Thom 7 pjn.<br />
as. Mrs. George Brown and Mrs. Jas.<br />
Gilbert were guests" of the Women's<br />
Society of the Katonah Methodist<br />
Lundy—Tompkins<br />
Church at the meeting at the home of<br />
In a verv pretty ceremony, Lucia<br />
Mrs. Oliver Todd, Wednesday.<br />
a ^?^_ t h e _, ^ i ^ * 0 ^ . m A man In a hospital for mental Salesman at an automobile show:<br />
cases sat fishing over a flower bed. "And what kind of horn would you<br />
A visitor approached, and remarked, like, sir? Do you care for a good loud<br />
condescendingly: "How many have you blast?"<br />
caught?"<br />
"Petticoat Fever" brought a fine re<br />
Haughty Customer: "No, I want<br />
sponse from the first night audience<br />
"You're the ninth," was the reply. something that Just sneers."—Phoney<br />
last Tuesday at the opening of Star<br />
—Phoney Phun.<br />
Phun.<br />
light's twelfth professional Acton#<br />
.?5^!<br />
Hollywood Star, Plays the Lead. at the home of Miss Eloise Luquer at Equity season. The play is as charm<br />
Bedford Hills, Friday afternoon, June ing and entertaining as has been seen<br />
The second season at the Putnam 20th were: Mrs. Charles Keeler, Mrs. hereabouts in many months. With<br />
County Playhouse, Mahopac, starts A. H. Vail, Mrs. Benjamin Van Scoy, David Lewis as Deascom Dlnsmore, the Cardinal Cleaners and Dyers<br />
Tuesday, July 8th, as an International Mrs. E. Kling, Mrs. T. F. Hyland, Mrs. same brilliant acting is brought to the<br />
Season in honor of the United Nations James Dbole, Mrs. Fred Tompkins and Pawling Summer Theatre Playhouse Laundry, Tailoring, Pressing, Rug Cleaning<br />
featuring eight plays from eight mem Mrs. John Meldrum. The principal that made him so popular last year.<br />
ber nations. , speaker was Miss Alice Palmer, who Lynne Carver, the new leading wo<br />
WE CALL AND DELIVER<br />
The first attraction will be the<br />
told about her work for the church at man, has both charm and beauty, and<br />
American play by Thornton Wilder,<br />
Ellis island.<br />
her scenes with David Lewis fairly<br />
sparkled, and they were, perfect in 74 NO. MAIN ST <strong>BREWSTER</strong> 2596<br />
"Skin of Our Teeth," with Mady Corell,<br />
who appeared on the screen as Mr. and Mrs. George Shott of timing and mood. Samuel Fertlg and<br />
Chaplin's wife in "Monsler Verdoux." Brooklyn, spent Sunday at their home Margaret Fullerton, direct from <strong>New</strong><br />
Just previous to that Miss Corell play here.<br />
<strong>York</strong> playing, are excellent additions<br />
to the company, which also included<br />
ed for a year on Broadway in the<br />
leading part of "School for Brides." Miss Bessie Ryder, Miss Mary Ritch, in this opening production: Allen<br />
For many years she has divided her Mrs. Charles Keeler and Mrs. Thomas Nourse, Peter Barno, William Weyse,<br />
time between Hollywood and Broad Hyland drove to Harrison, N. Y., last Marion Townsend and Cecily Bow ADRIAN CARGAIN<br />
way. Miss Corell was a member of the Monday afternoon and called on Mrs. man. The staging of Stuart Warring<br />
original group of actors who form the C. Nickerson and Mrs. E. Reynolds at ton shows great skill and sense of<br />
(Successor to the late Edward Ganong)<br />
nucleus of Jill Miller's ' company at the Miriam Osborn Home.<br />
comedy values, and the setting by Ayr-<br />
11 Gentles brought forth spontaneous<br />
Mahopac.<br />
FUNERAL DIRECTOR and EMBALMER<br />
Members of the delegations to the The June 18th meeting of the Lad<br />
applause.<br />
United Nations will Journey to Maies Aid of the Methodist Church} was Isobel Rose Jones, the managing dihopac<br />
each week to view the produc held at the home of Mrs. James Ellrector of the famous Starlight Thea FUNERAL HOME<br />
tion from their country. The other iott.tre,<br />
Introduced to the audience on the<br />
seven plays are: "Escape" toy John<br />
opening night, Mr. John Barclay, who<br />
Galsworthy, English;' "The Arbitra Mrs. Charles O'Shea, of Vista, vis will be guest star for the next play,<br />
Carmel - <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />
tion" by Monander, Greece; "Hedda ited Miss Bessie Smith recently. "The Bachelor Father," which opens<br />
Gabler" by Henrik Ibsen, Norway;<br />
Tuesday, July 1st to run through Sun<br />
Tel. Carmel 672 Day or Night<br />
"S. S. Tenacity" toy Charles Vildrac, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cooper and day, July 6th. •<br />
France; "Adam the Creator" toy Karel son, of Long Island, were recent guests<br />
o—-—<br />
and Josef Capek, Czechoslovakia; and of Mrs. George Hoyt.<br />
iiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiuitiiiiiiniiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiitiniiiiii<br />
Grimes Co. Sells -<br />
"Squaring the Circle" by Valentin<br />
Katayev, Russia. A Chinese play to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Taylor, of <strong>New</strong> Lucy Meade Place<br />
PHONE<br />
be selected.<br />
Britain, and Mr. James Hanford and<br />
grandson, Allen Vollmer, of Stratford,<br />
Conn., called on Mr. and Mrs. T. F.<br />
The Thomas C. Grimes Co. has sold<br />
PURDYS<br />
Hyland last Sunday.<br />
for Mrs. Lucy A. Meade her residence<br />
property on the Croton Falls-Mahopac<br />
Road. Mrs. Meads is leaving soon to<br />
Morey—S toiler<br />
The July meeting of St. James<br />
Office<br />
live in Chicago. The new owners, Mr.<br />
Frances M. Stolter, daughter of Mr. Guild will be held at the home of Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Palmateer, formerly<br />
and Mrs: William Stolter, of Sheno Leonard Morey, Salem Center.<br />
Brewster 2288<br />
of Syracuse, N. Y., will take possession<br />
rock, N. Y.', was married Friday even<br />
early In July.<br />
ing at seven o'clock in St. Joseph's Mr. and Mrs. Robert Milligan and<br />
rectory, Croton Falls, N. Y., by Father family were at their home over the<br />
o—»•—<br />
Res. - Night<br />
Joseph Cotier, to Orln J. Morey, son week end.<br />
CARD PARTY TOMORROW<br />
of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Morey, Purdys,<br />
Croton Falls 555<br />
<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>.<br />
Miss Margaret Burt attended a.class<br />
Vail's Park Association is all set to<br />
The bride wore a navy blue street- reunion at Smith College, Northamp<br />
open the Summer card parties in the<br />
length dress and 'wore a corsage of ton, Mass., recently.<br />
Community House. The first meeting*<br />
is Friday night, June 27. Mr. Richard<br />
24 Hour Service<br />
pink talisman roses.<br />
Hinsh, Jr., chairman, will have bridge<br />
Mrs Douglas Finch, of Shenorock, Miss Ruthanne Maurhoff, who re and pinochle with prizes and refresh<br />
SHELL<br />
sister of the bride, served as the cently graduated, will enter Plattsments. bridesmaid. She wore a white print burg College in the Fall. Ruthanne<br />
—:—r° ••<br />
jersey street-length dress.<br />
will spend the summer months work<br />
The bridegroom had as his best ing at an inn in Pennsylvania.<br />
A man never gets ahead of his bills<br />
if he lets them do all the running. —<br />
man, Mr. Douglas Finch, brother-in-<br />
The Dummy.<br />
law of the bride, as best man.<br />
Mrs. Aiken Knox has been enter<br />
o——•—<br />
Fuel Oil and Range Oil<br />
Mr. Morey attended Central High taining a friend from Philadelphia The new cars are so streamlined a<br />
School. Purdys, and served two years for the past several days.<br />
/edestrian can't tell whether he's been<br />
with the U. S: Army. He is now em<br />
' n—O I •un over or backed into.—The Dum BRADY-STANNARD FUEL CO. I<br />
ployed toy the State Highway Depart ADVERTISE IN THE STANDARD my.ment.<br />
87 North Main Street. Brewster. N. Y.<br />
A buffet lunch was served after the<br />
L. A. M. BRADY STEPHEN BROWN<br />
ceremony to about 25 guests by Mr.<br />
Morey's parents at their home on<br />
iiimnmumiiKiiiuuiiuinwuiimHnuiiim<br />
Route 116. Guests were present from The Sentimentalist Orchestra<br />
Purdys, Shenorock, Peekskill, Tarrytown,<br />
Mill Plain, Conn., and <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />
City.<br />
MUSIC FOR ALL OCCASIONS<br />
The couple plan to make their home<br />
with Mr. Morey's parents for an Indefinite<br />
time.<br />
Dr. and Mrs. E. V. Hastings and the Saturday morning, June 21, 1947, in<br />
twins have moved to Battle Creek, a double ring ceremony.<br />
Michigan, where he is stationed.<br />
The bride, given in marriage toy her<br />
«. a J .. »«- „,,A «*«. r-h.,vi«.i.-' f p thT. hM as mald-of-honor, her sls-<br />
On Sunday Mr. .and Mrs Charles Tomokins of Wind-<br />
Williams were Kuestaofjfcelr J^md-hanv the bridesmaids were Mrs. Geo.<br />
ter and family. Mr and Mrs. Raymond | Franklin. c*mn..MI»<br />
Nagel and the^oys at their home in K„therIne L Uaht of wlndham,and<br />
Miss Gladvs A. Tompkins, of Croton<br />
Falls. N. Y.<br />
Martin Lundy. Jr.. of Purdvs. N. Y..<br />
K<br />
ro^he»* of the bridegroom, was best<br />
man: Ravmond Lundv. another brothttfhomri.<br />
, Mr.nn" < & m pS n Mrs. Gordon Fear is visiting her<br />
mother. Mrs. E. Noxon, in Osslnlng,<br />
N. Y., for a few days.<br />
Mi"'^ns or th< br.de. were usher*. .<br />
dock and the boys in Virginia for a<br />
Tho hride'R pown was of white eyelet<br />
with long train, her veil of tulle<br />
short visit.<br />
was of can shane «athere^ at each side<br />
with rosettes of lace and seed pearls.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Jennings,<br />
*f *J5 EJ« in tZZm**'* for n few She carried a bouo"et of white roses<br />
who had been in the village for a lew ; ... «.*_„„.„__„ ««,» -,-u „# uftnn.<br />
weeks, left for their home in Ford.'*"* 1 Miss Kitty Ward, of Purdys, and<br />
Miss Shirley Mayes, of Croton Falls,<br />
who are classmates in the seventh<br />
grade at Purdys Central High School,<br />
celebrated their 13th birthday anniversaries<br />
on Thursday, June 19th.<br />
Mrs. Mason Ward. Kitty's mother, invited<br />
the class of twelve students and<br />
their teacher, Mrs. Everett Seldel, to<br />
luncheon at her home to celebrate the<br />
occasion. There were two birthday<br />
cakes. Two gifts were brought by<br />
each guest who presented them to<br />
Kittv and* Shirley. Miss Louise Carey,<br />
Mrs. Ward's sister, of <strong>New</strong>port, R.<br />
II, helped Mrs. Ward with the serving.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Bittner entertained<br />
relatives and friends at a reception,<br />
held at their home, in honor<br />
of their daughter. Doris, who graduated<br />
Monday, June 23 from Central<br />
Hiah School. Purdys. Among the<br />
auests were Miss June Bittner and<br />
Miss Leatrice Palumbo. of Elmhurst,<br />
streamers. The mald-of-hnnor L. I.; Bud Breeden, of Long Island,<br />
wore a pnwn of vellow evelet. match-<br />
N. J., on Saturday.<br />
formerly of Willows, Md.: and Mrs.<br />
inn: hat. She carried yellow rose buds Bittner's cousin. Mrs. Gertrude Cote<br />
and son, Wilfred, of West Cheschire.<br />
Conn, and Mrs. Melandy Hamel, of<br />
Waterbury. Conn. Miss Bittner will<br />
enter Syracuse Universitv in Septem<br />
2 ^ J & . S ? " & t o w E f S B S - * . wore . .own of ber. Her cousin. Miss Rita Bittner.<br />
who graduated with her, will enter the<br />
Washington School for Secretaries in<br />
the Pall.<br />
Miss Hildur Halvor*en will graduate<br />
from Vassar College, Poughkeepsle, N.<br />
Y., Monday. June 30th. She will<br />
from Goldens<br />
spend the summer at home with her<br />
evening Michael at Bartone the Katonah *"T High »adu'atel, school. ham Hi*h School and School of Nurs-<br />
In Bridge. the class were of among 37. Jean ^ Seymore W j \ and i n v Pt Hertford. Conn. Hosoital. She<br />
family.<br />
The Commencement, address was giv- i fj*rv#v1 i" the A»-nw Wiirsp CorDR in trip<br />
en bv the Rev. James H. Link of To#t-<br />
Miss Kitty Ward and her cousin.<br />
South Pp«*in> for m
THURSDAY. JUNE 26, 1947 THE <strong>BREWSTER</strong> STANDARD—ESTABLISHED i*«° PAGE SEVEN<br />
ADVERTISE IN THE STANDARD<br />
DAN CARLO<br />
Mason Contractor<br />
Tel. Brewster 2359<br />
PAINTING<br />
DECORATING<br />
Heppner & Sons<br />
Tel. 2150<br />
Peaceable Hill Road<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong>. NEW YORK<br />
Mid-County Roofing Co*<br />
General Contractors<br />
RESmTNG and REROOFTNG<br />
Asbestos • Insulbriok<br />
AaphaH Roofs<br />
Leafless • Gotten<br />
Free Mkthnato - No Down Payment<br />
I Toon to Pay<br />
Call North Salem 2272<br />
P. J. Cahin - E. P. Cahill<br />
Over SO Years Experience<br />
Robberoid - Flintoote<br />
Johns-ManrOle Product*<br />
THE<br />
PUTNAM COUNTY<br />
SAVINGS BANK<br />
Brewster, N. Y.<br />
Incorporated 1871<br />
OFFICERB<br />
Goorge E. Jennings, Prwklml<br />
Arthmr P. Bodd, Vloe Preatdect<br />
I. Hart Purdjr, Vloe Preatdent<br />
Margaret R. Mackey, Secretary<br />
Daane C. Comatook. Coanael<br />
Depoatto made on or eefore the<br />
tenth oootnoai day of Janoory,<br />
and July wRl bear interest from<br />
the first of theae raentht. ro-<br />
-*• - •<br />
•peciiTeiy.<br />
Member of<br />
Federal Depealt Insaraaoe Corp.<br />
• , FIRST<br />
NATIONAL BANK<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong>, N. *.<br />
Member of Federal Deposit<br />
Insaronoe Corporation<br />
Capital $100,000<br />
Surplus $50,000<br />
BURGLAR<br />
PROOF VAULT<br />
A modern burglar proof safe<br />
deposit vault has recently<br />
been installed. Boxes.rent<br />
for $5 per year.<br />
I. DOUGLASS MEAD. President<br />
E. D. STANNABD,<br />
I<br />
Vlce Prtoident and Oaabler .<br />
D. E. STANNABD, Aaat-Cuhler<br />
iiiitiiiunminfiuunuiiuiiiiunuiiiiiumwiiiiiiiiyumiimumi^gi<br />
You get what your architect<br />
specifies when you get Building<br />
Materials from us.<br />
LUMBER, M1LLWORK<br />
MASONS' MATERIALS<br />
PAINTS. HARDWARE<br />
Danbury-Brewster<br />
Lumber Co.<br />
232 - 260 Main Street<br />
Tel. 787<br />
The Methodist Social Group win go<br />
on a picnio to Pahnestock Park on<br />
Saturday, June 28. All members should<br />
be at the church at 3:30 pan. Joe<br />
Young, chairman, hopes for a good attendance.<br />
A mixed softball game Is<br />
on the program of entertainment.<br />
Marvin Lawn<br />
Mower Shop<br />
SALES and SERVICE<br />
Power and Hand<br />
Fire Extinguishers<br />
V. S. CAROLLO<br />
Brewster. 698<br />
JAMES SNIDERO<br />
Bulldozer Work and'<br />
Trucking<br />
Excavation, Road Building<br />
Sand, Gravel, Top Soil<br />
Phone 402<br />
68 Marvin Ave, firewater, N. T.<br />
HORN'S<br />
Funeral Service<br />
Our service available to all re<br />
gardless of financial condition.<br />
Pawling, N. V.<br />
Phone Mil<br />
ALFRED VICW<br />
Mason<br />
*<br />
General Contractor<br />
Phone 2269<br />
Tt Oaneel Ave, . n. r.<br />
N. TRANQUILLI<br />
General Contractor<br />
and<br />
Builder<br />
Phone 2385<br />
50 N. Main St. Brewster, N. Y.<br />
OVER 80 YEARS EXPERIENCE<br />
^<br />
Oliver was careless about his personal<br />
effects. When his mother saw<br />
clothing scattered about on the chair<br />
and the floor, she Inquired: "Who did<br />
not hang up his clothes when he went<br />
to bed? .<br />
A mufflel voice from under the covers<br />
murmured, "Adam."—Phoney Phun<br />
FLOORS<br />
Scraped - Refinished<br />
Waxed - Laid<br />
PHILIP WIRTA<br />
MT. KISCO 6337<br />
Visit Our Gardens This Week End<br />
They are Filled with Blooms.<br />
HARRY~PAYNE -<br />
PEACH LAKE<br />
North Salem 2664<br />
PBRHCTLY BEAUTIFUL!<br />
VENETIAN BUNDS<br />
Light... Lovely... Laager Lasting<br />
... Easy to clean.,. made of<br />
flexible aluminum alloy for long<br />
life. Sun-proof plastic finish won't<br />
chip, crack or peel. Custom-made to<br />
fit Come in for our estimate today.<br />
MANES<br />
Venetian Blind Co.<br />
110 Westville Ave. Extension<br />
DANBURY, CONN.<br />
Tel. Danbury 8-0931W<br />
fit H. Wells Addresses<br />
Putnam Valley Class<br />
(Continued from Page 1)<br />
proper bearing of an officer is carer<br />
Make service your object. President<br />
Hadlcy of Yale held service out as the<br />
object in life and I read a few days<br />
ago that President Compton of the<br />
Massachusetts Institute of Technology,<br />
advised the graduates of William<br />
and Mary College in Williamsburg,<br />
Virginia, to have service as their ideal<br />
fully cultivated and, indeed, the best, .t<br />
part of the physical training of a pri- "ft,?* tnan Setting something for<br />
vate soldier is what is called the •*et» notmnf.<br />
ting up" drill. A public speaker needs! Good Age<br />
to have a firm hold on the ground. It i Next. Peel you are living in a good<br />
is very ineffective to stand in a slouch- age. The good old times were not the<br />
tag way while speaking, or to limp I good old times. Protestants don't go<br />
first on one leg and then on the 6th- I to church as they did years ago but<br />
er, or to give-anyssign of body feeble- ; there has been much progress In chardlers'<br />
position of attention and re- itable work, in welfare work, in comness<br />
or limpness. You know the sol- j batting cruelty to children and cruelspect<br />
is with the heels together and.ty to animals. You have this fine<br />
body erect. That position is always school, not the same as fifty years ago.<br />
an element In the best manners, and Drinking went on in the good old<br />
there is hardly a more efficient ele- 1 times. Mr. Stannard, our County<br />
ment. The mode of speaking is im- Treasurer, told me that Senator<br />
portant. Gentleness, clearness and.Towner told him of at least one parcourtesy<br />
In speech are valuable injty, at an tan northeast of Brewster,<br />
every profession and in every business, attended by representatives of Colon-<br />
Church Services<br />
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH<br />
Rev. W. Stanley Shuker, Minister<br />
Sunday, June 20, 1947<br />
10:00 a.m.—Church School.<br />
11:00 am—Morning Worship with<br />
sermon by Mr. Donald McLagan.<br />
All welcome.<br />
o —<br />
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH<br />
Brewster<br />
Rev. 'Harry P. Foulk, Pastor<br />
Mrs. WW. WaabJburn, Supt.<br />
• •<br />
i Sunday, June 29, 1947<br />
10:00 am.—Sunday Church School.<br />
Come and meet your friends and<br />
neighbors who are now coming to<br />
Sunday School. Join them in a friendly<br />
class discussion of the lesson topic<br />
for this Sunday. There is a class for<br />
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />
Rev. Gordon E. Hohl. Pastor<br />
SO North Main Street<br />
Brewster, N. Y.<br />
Sunday, June 22, 1947<br />
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School.<br />
11:00 am. *— Morning Service to be<br />
conducted by Mr. Arthur E. Baron,<br />
student for the ministry at the Lutheran<br />
Theological Seminary, Philadelphia.<br />
• — -o — •<br />
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH<br />
Rev. W. Dyer Blair, Minister<br />
P. O. Box 655, Mt. KIsco, N. Y.<br />
iiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiiiNniiHiiiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiaiii<br />
I LIGHT<br />
DELIVERIES<br />
TO AND r*ROM<br />
D. CEASRINE<br />
Telephones<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong> 704<br />
MT. KISCO 6519<br />
iiiniiiiiiHimauiiiiimgarainuiiiiniimiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiuiiiaiiuuiiiuii<br />
Theo. K. Schaefer<br />
Counsellor at Law<br />
Br«wtt«r, N. V*.<br />
Telephone 888 .<br />
A choice •election of American<br />
o antiques In OLA88,' CHINA,<br />
CLOCKS, FURNITURE, etc<br />
FurpJture restored promptly<br />
ana expertly In our own shop.<br />
STOUT HILL FARM<br />
Croton Falls Road • Mshopse, N. Y<br />
MAMARET 8. L0IINI<br />
TeL 594...<br />
St. CAMPBELL LORIM<br />
Tony Gioccolanti<br />
General Contractor<br />
and Mason<br />
Brewster, N. Y.<br />
TeL 2371<br />
Cheerfulness of manner Is everything lal families. The women went home<br />
in some businesses. And then a real early,~the men stayed on and drank _ every member of your family. The 11-<br />
sincerity ought to be expressed in-and" thenext"day one man went back|lustrated Bible story will help your<br />
manners, a difficult, and yet, a very and paid for the broken furniture. "I child.<br />
precious thing. Frankness is a good, Forty deaths from diphtheria oc-l "500 am.—Morning Worship Servpart<br />
of it. When you shake hands with crrred in the small village of Brew-1 ice. The message of the morning will<br />
a man or woman, look in the eyes, ster about 1880—no antitoxin "such as me "Shadows." Every person is cast<br />
straight In the eyes, with no blinking we have today.<br />
ing a shadow upon some one. We can<br />
of the encounter." I You have politely listened. I hope! either be a blot or a<br />
blessing, but<br />
President Eliot urged the Hotchkiss you will listen to your parents and to; never * blank,<br />
boys to learn some skill or intellectual other older 'people thouah you may Wednesday, July 2, the Ladies. Aid<br />
factulty to give pleasure to other peo- not always think our advice good. will meet at the summer home, of Mrs.<br />
pie. You young men and women may { General Putnam ] Harry G. Buck at Whaley Lake. All<br />
go into some activity just because you | During the Revolution, not far from members are asked to bring plates and<br />
want to set in the social swim. Presi- here, in'the southwestern part of what silverware. A covered dish luncheon<br />
dent Eliot said the way to make your- .is now Putnam County, General Israel !will be served at one o'clock.<br />
selves welcome guests among the rich Putnam was stationed with his solor<br />
the poor, in the palace or In the diers. This was the first break for ' Rev. Harry P. Foulk, pastor of the<br />
tenement or on the farm, is to learn j freedom. On down through the years First Baptist Church of Brewster, was<br />
to do something to give pleasure to from 1776 'till tonight men and wo- appointed the Union Baptist Assoclaothers—learn<br />
to stag a song or to play men have struggled at home and In tion representative for the Crusade for<br />
an instrument, or to read aloud, or battle to get and keep that freedom. Christ through Evangelism, at the<br />
to take part In plavs. I accldently \ Some men and women, have made the Board of Managers meeting of the<br />
learned to Imitate President Hadley supreme sacrifice. As we think of <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> Baptist State Convention at<br />
of Yale and am often called on to those who have struggled, as we hooe the First Baptist Church of Syracuse,<br />
show off/ President Hadlev said, *Yale the spirits of those from Putnam Val- N. Y, June 2, 1947. It will be the re-<br />
Unlverslty, considered from an under- lev who have made the supreme sac- sponsibllity of Rev. Foulk to promote<br />
graduate standpoint; is unexcelled by riflce are hovering over us, let us old the Evangelism Crusade among all the<br />
any institution, but Yale, in her irrad- and young go "forth from this hall Baptist Churches of the Association,<br />
uate courses, cannot compete with in- [bent on leading lives of satisfaction to which Includes the following churches:<br />
sti tut ions situated in our large cities.' ourselves and of service to our fellow Antioch Church, Bedford Hills: First<br />
Our Incipient lawyers do not get the men. I Baptist, Brewster; Mt. Carmel, Carbenefit<br />
of the numerous cases which j As you members of the graduating mel; Cross River, Katonah, Croton<br />
come \?n in the Boston courts. Our class go forth to lead those useful and Falls Baptist, Croton Falls: First Bapyoung<br />
doctors do not get the benefit satisfactory lives I know you have the tlst. Dykemans; First Kent, Kent<br />
of the numerous complications and best wishes'of all who are gathered Cliffs; Second Kent, Ludingtonvllle:<br />
diseases which occur in the <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> .here tonight. Kent and Flshklll, Farmers Mills; Red<br />
hospitals, and furthermore our theo- o 'Mills, Mahopac Falls; Towners, Patlogical<br />
students are somewhat handl-! ORDINANCES terson, and First Baptist, Peekskill.<br />
Vacuum Cleaner<br />
WASHING MACHINE<br />
SERVICE<br />
All Makes Repaired<br />
M. J. Fischer A Son<br />
Tel. 654 or 572<br />
|j 4 Progress St., Brewster, N.Y.<br />
=<br />
Qelker & Cox<br />
Distinctive Funeral Service<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong> . MT. KIgOO<br />
Nursery Stock<br />
For Spring Planting<br />
Dogwood Trees - . Rose Boshes<br />
Perennials - Flowering; Crabs<br />
Evergreens - Tans - Phlox<br />
Giant Flowering<br />
capped by the lack of sin in <strong>New</strong>Hav- J ' I The Evangelism Crusade for <strong>New</strong><br />
en. But nevertheless we endeavor to At a regular meeting of the Board <strong>York</strong> State is a part of the Crusade<br />
teach the underlying principle govern- of Trustees of the 'Village of Brewster, for Christ through Evangelism of the<br />
tag all." 'held at the Village Office. No. 94Main <strong>Northern</strong> Baptist Convention which<br />
Not onlv learn how to give pleasure street. Brewster, <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong>, on the was adopted at their annual meeting<br />
to others by your skills or intellectual | loth day of June. 1947, a full Board In Atlantic City,<br />
faculties, but go out of your way to be being present and voting in the af- The minimum objectives for the two<br />
friendly.. Dr. Clark, who has a camp. flrmative, the following Ordinances year Crusade in up-state <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />
on Mt. Riea, Conn., near ours, said,were enacted, to wit: includes the winning of 10.000 souls to<br />
"If you want friends you've got to do I All music 'boxes, Juke boxes, phono- Christ, 10,000 non-resident re-enlisted,<br />
something for them." You don't need graphs, pianos, radios and musical 10.000 new church school pupils, 100<br />
to be amusing all the time or brilliant machines of any nature whatsoever in new teaching and preaching outposts<br />
to have friends. Through friends life taverns, restaurants and commercial established, 10 new churches organ-<br />
Is pleasanter. I establishments within the corporate ized. This will mean for eacr? church<br />
People Who Differ j limits of the Village of Brewster shall a ten per cent increase in their mem-<br />
Nekt. One very 'good trait Is getting not be operated between the hours of bershio and the Church School enalong<br />
with people who differ with you. J twelve o'clock midnight and nine rollment.<br />
o'clock A. M. During the period of Rev. Foulk will attend his first<br />
the year that daylight saving time is meeting for representatives of the I ^ f ^ e e thousand "souls.*" And tfcSJ"<br />
in effect, such time shall be deemed Evangelism Crusade Committee a$jomMn|una dallv ,,«th on_ accorri «„<br />
_ m Standard Time for the purpose of this the First Baptist Church. Albany, on K3E£3e and bTeaklna bread? from<br />
ocrat and Lincoln was a Whig before j Ordinance. .July 9. • At this meeting the state cru- K^eto house did eat the?? rmSJ<br />
GLADIOLUS BULBS<br />
$5.00 per 100<br />
the Republican narty was formed but| Any person violating any provision sade director, Rev. Gordon H. Schroe- 22g badness and sineleness3' hVarr<br />
Mr. Lincoln made Mr. Stanton Secre-'|of this Ordinance shall be punishable. der, of Syracuse, will outline suggest- Satetae God and havine favour 585<br />
tary of War. Secretary of the Treas-j by a fine or penalty not exceeding \ ed procedures for the pastors and ,, th B V And the I^rd added<br />
urv Salmon P. Chase tried to get the Twenty-five Dollars for each offense. ,church leaders to follow in attatagthe' Jf 1 Sunday, June 29, 1947<br />
10:00 a.m.—Sunday Church School.<br />
Classes for all age groups. The leader<br />
of the adult forum will be Dr. Alexander<br />
Vanderburgh.<br />
11:00 am.—Church Service,of Worship.<br />
Sermon theme: "Choose ye thia<br />
day whom ye will serve."<br />
The Lord's Supper or Holy Communion<br />
will be celebrated on Sunday<br />
morning, July 6th at 11 o'clock.<br />
A series of ten Sunday afternoon<br />
Vesper Services will be conducted at<br />
the Southeast Church beginning July<br />
13th at 3 o'clock. Dr. Philip Watters,<br />
president of Drew Seminary, will be<br />
the speaker. Other outstanding speakers<br />
will follow.<br />
ST. LUKE'S CHURCH<br />
Somen<br />
Rev. S. R. Brinckerhoff, Rector<br />
Sunday, June 29, 1947<br />
St. Peter's Day<br />
8:00 am.—Holy Communion.<br />
9:30 am.—Morn in? Prayer and sermon.<br />
Thursday, Friday and Saturday<br />
8:00 a.m.—Holy Communion.<br />
i o<br />
ST. JAMES' CHURCH<br />
North Salem<br />
Rev. S. R. Brinckerhoff, Rector<br />
Sunday, June 29, 1947<br />
St. Peter's Day<br />
11:00 am — Morning Prayer and<br />
sermon. >.<br />
-o<br />
CHURCHES OF CHRIST,<br />
SCIENTIST<br />
"Christian Science" is the Lesson-<br />
Sermon subject for Sunday, June 29.<br />
Golden Text: "Heal the sick, cleanse<br />
the lepers, raise the dead,, cast out<br />
devils: freely ye have received, freely<br />
give" (Matt. 10:8).<br />
Sermon: From the King James version<br />
of the Bible (Acts 2:38. 39. 41, 46,<br />
47): "Then Peter said unto them,.Repent,<br />
and be baptized every one of' you<br />
in the name of Jesus Christ for the<br />
remission of sins, and ye shall receive<br />
the gift of the Holy Ghost. For the<br />
promise is unto you. and to your children,<br />
and to all that are afar off, even<br />
as many as the Lord our God shall<br />
calL Then they that gladly received<br />
his word were baptized: and the same<br />
Abraham Lincoln was a good example.<br />
day there were added unto them<br />
Edwin M. Stanton, an Ohio lawyer,<br />
had been very mean to Mr. Lincoln<br />
in Cincinnati in 1855. He was a Dem-<br />
£?ch3dSMTLX Jf^QUM 2<br />
CARL CHIRASELLO<br />
Bulldozer Work<br />
EXCAVATING, GRADING<br />
Trucking<br />
TOP BOO* SAND, GKAVKL<br />
STONE, COCDERS, MANURE<br />
Brewster 2155<br />
Republican nomination in 1864 away objectives of the Evangelism Crusade. IJJVJ3M y y S Sm>UW **<br />
from the President but Mr. Lincoln' NO private vehicle shall be parked<br />
Correlative passages from "Science<br />
later made him Chief Justice of the i or allowed to remain standing in any FINDING TB EARLY and Health with Key to the Scrip<br />
United States Supreme Court. area designated as a "Bus Stop" or<br />
tures" by Mary Baker Eddy include:<br />
Character a "Cab Stand."<br />
, Much serious illness could be averted "Is it error which is restoring an es<br />
Next. I wish to sneak about char- Any person \ violating any ., F provision |ff every adult formed the habit of sential element of Christianity, name<br />
acter. President Taft was a graduate of this Ordinance shall be'punishable J having an annual physical examinaly, apostolic, divine healine? No; it is<br />
of Yale and it is said that he remark-,j>y a fine or penalty not exceeding tion, including a chest x-ray. A loss the Science of Christianity which is<br />
ed at a reunion that in the end char-. Twenty-five Dollars for each offense. ! of weight and that "tired feeling," for restoring it, and is the light shining<br />
cater was the real thing that counted.'<br />
example, would not send some people in darkness, which the darkness com<br />
Bv character I mean backbone, inde Progress Street in the Village of to the doctor for a check-up, yet these prehends not. Today the healing<br />
pendence, standing up for the under- Brewster between Main Street and _ symptoms could be signs of early tu power of Truth Is widely demonstrat<br />
doar, taking the unoopular side whenJHoyt Street is hereby designated as a berculosis. It is estimated that there ed as an lmmenent, eternal Science,<br />
riffht. treating people, old and young, j street in which vehicles shall pass in are approximately 500,000 people in instead of a phenomenal exhibition.<br />
right, honestly. _^^^^^^^ the southerly direction only from Hoyt the United States suffering from tu Its appearing is the coming anew of<br />
Decisions<br />
Street to Main Street.<br />
berculosis, yet only about half are re the gospel of 'on. earth peace, good<br />
To have good character we should, Any person violating any provision ceiving proper care.<br />
will toward men'." (pp. 347. 150).<br />
as much as possible, form our decis* of this Ordinance shall be punishable What prevents the other 250.000<br />
o———<br />
ions ahead of time by good habits—not by a fine or penalty not exceeding from seeking medical help? Many of<br />
CHURCH OF ST. LAWRENCE<br />
leave decisions to be made on the spur | Twenty-five Dollars for each offense! them do not know they have tuber<br />
of the moment. Professor James in<br />
culosis. The disease in its early<br />
Rev. Josepli A. Heaney, Rector<br />
his book on Phychojogy said that if In addition to the fines or penalties ] stages is almost symptomless, and peo-<br />
Sundav Masses<br />
a person will practice unselfish acts aforesald it is ordained each and every pie who overlook "minor ailments"<br />
8, 9:30 and 11 o'clock.<br />
day by day his mind gets so grooved violation of any of the provision of j may have tuberculosis for weeks or<br />
Novena devotions Monday evening;<br />
that when some life must be saved at any of the foregoing Ordinances or months without discovering it. Yet, at 8 o'clock.<br />
a fire that person does not hesitate parts thereof shall constitute disor it is in this early symptomless stage<br />
St. Lawrence Church, Brewster, 7,<br />
but goes up the ladder as if by habit. derly conduct, and the person violat that their disease would respond best<br />
i Bravery is a part of his character. ing the same shall be a disorderly and fastest to medical care.<br />
9 and 11 o'clock.<br />
Wendell Phillips<br />
person.<br />
The principal diagnostic device for<br />
o u<br />
Next. Take up some charitable work.! All Ordinances or parts of Ordln- detecting early tuberculosis is the<br />
FRIENDS (QUAKER) MEETING<br />
Wendeil Phillip's, the crusader against ances in any way inconsistent with chest x-ray. Chest x-ray helps find<br />
A meeting for worshlo according to<br />
human slavery, once said, "I would i toe provisions of these Ordinances are the disease before outward signs and<br />
he custom of the Society of Friends<br />
say to you, my young friends, throw hereby repealed.<br />
symptoms appear or are recognized.<br />
Quakers) is held every First Day<br />
yourselves upon the altar of some The foregoing Ordinances shall be That is why. in many communities<br />
lornlnp (Sundav» at 11 o'clock in the<br />
come effective July 1, 1947.<br />
throughout the U. S. and its territor<br />
'roton Valley Meeting House, situat-<br />
inoble cause. Enthusiasm is the life.<br />
ies, the search for tuberculosis is bed<br />
about two miles northwest of Mt.<br />
of the soul. To rise in the morning (Dated, Brewster. <strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong><br />
ing carried on among apparently<br />
218O0 near Croton Lake. Anyone car-<br />
only to eat and drink and gather gold; June 10th. 1947<br />
is a life not worth living.<br />
W. BOYNTON TOWNER. healthy people who. without even<br />
ng to worshlo is welcome,<br />
So Join the Red Cross, help the Boy<br />
Village Clerk. knowing that they are 111. are losine<br />
o<br />
Scouts, row the children at the church<br />
o<br />
their health and endangering the Grange Pays Tribute<br />
picnic if you don't go into welfare Pedestrians should 'be seen and not health of others.<br />
work as a full time Job.<br />
hurt.—The Dummy.<br />
——o<br />
To Laura W. Bloomer<br />
'Continued on Page 4)<br />
o<br />
Christian Science Radio Program<br />
The Indians and early settlers be- „ • . " "7~. ' . . . I Resolutions, adopted at a stated<br />
ilieved that no poisonous serpents ^Z<br />
would be found in the same area with<br />
The dollars $aved on every ton the Oregon ash tree.<br />
Will buy an awful lot of fun I<br />
Make Heading BriqueH your household fuel,<br />
and you'll have many an extra dollar lor<br />
shows or trips or partie*, or what you will. MUIR'S<br />
Beading Briuueu are made with wuall tixe*<br />
of genuine Vauiuub Beading Hard Coal,<br />
FOR<br />
preued into briquets, in size between stove<br />
and nut coaL<br />
They give the. advantages of large size NURSERY<br />
coal at much lower cost. Ideal for furnace,<br />
hot water heater, fireplace or<br />
wherever you use coal. Why not try STOCK<br />
them? We know you'll luce them.<br />
Wholesale ^— Retail<br />
• Rhododendrons<br />
• Azaleas<br />
• Taxus<br />
• Flowering Shrubs<br />
LANDSCAPING<br />
CALL DANBURY 8*0741<br />
W. & M. MUIR<br />
Danbury-Brewscer Road<br />
OPEN SUNDAYS<br />
1 "?^ ?° W 1S „, the s u b i e c t /V meeting of Brewster Grange. No 1344<br />
Christian Science radio program to be p of JJ . * ' '<br />
Y?ri?^tvT7l0^<br />
Almighty God ln HIS Wis -'<br />
T85L& LJ1 W J, i„„: oiJS of ovS dom has called from o^ midst our be-<br />
Chap erl 0n June 9tl 8t :3 loved<br />
tLi 2L. ? i ° Sister. Laura Waite Bloomer, a<br />
K n, |SrLv^? , th i rSZ £ro?H,JX U m e m b e f ° f ! ° n * stand!n » ° f Blw *eJ<br />
ing the courtesy System, of is the aoproved Mutal Broadcast by The - Grange.<br />
Whereas,<br />
No.<br />
throushout<br />
1344. P. of H.,<br />
the<br />
and<br />
years of<br />
Christian Science Board of Directors. her association with us.we knew her<br />
June 20. 1947.<br />
GEMS OF THOUGHT to be 'loyal, friendly and a deeply interested<br />
member of our fraternity,<br />
^^^^^ Personal Praise and<br />
«_ ..t. u j j. Whereas, as a neighbor and citizen<br />
Praise, like gold and diamonds, owes ^ win ^ ^ ^ y missedi ^ it there.<br />
its value only to its scarcity. It be- fore<br />
comes cheap as it becomes vulgar, and Resolved, that we. the members of<br />
will no longer raise expectation or Brewster Grange. No. 1344. P. of H.<br />
animate enterprise—Samuel Johnson ;do hereby express our deep sense of<br />
*L « t TT" .. l06S at her Passing and our sympathy<br />
As the Greek said, manv men know m thelr bereavement, with the memhow<br />
to flatter: few know how to bers of her famllVt and be it further<br />
praise.—Wendell Phillips Resolved. That we cause one copy of<br />
these resolutions to be spread upon<br />
It is difficult to say which may be the minutes, one copy sent to her fammost<br />
mischievous to the human heart. Uy, and one copy to the local paper<br />
the praise of the dispraise of men.— ! for publication.<br />
Mary Baker Eddy , j MERLE L. GREENE<br />
The 1947 Canning Time Table for<br />
ELLA W. STANLEY C. GRADY SHUKER<br />
Vegetables has just been completed by<br />
Committee<br />
the College of Home Economics at<br />
WILLIAM L. AVERY. Sec.<br />
Cornell. Free copies are available to<br />
0<br />
<strong>New</strong> <strong>York</strong> residents from the Mailing The praises of others may be of use<br />
Room. Roberts Hall. Ithaca, N. Y. in teaching us not what we are, but<br />
what we ought to be.—Hare<br />
It takes a great deal of grace to be<br />
o -<br />
able to bear praise. Censure seldom Speech should be free. So little of<br />
does us much harm.—Spurgeon it is worth anything.—The Dummy.<br />
READING<br />
BRIQUETS<br />
THE NEW 'STkEAMUNED" ECONOMY FUEL<br />
Eaton-Kelley Co.<br />
LUMBER — COAL — FEED
PAGE BIGHT<br />
ADVERTISE IN THE STANDARD<br />
STARLIGHT<br />
Theatre - Pawling<br />
ROUTE 22<br />
This Week thru SUN., JUNE 29<br />
PETTICOAT<br />
FEVER<br />
•<br />
Next Week: JOHN BARCLAY<br />
— In —<br />
BACHELOR FATHER<br />
Thar*. Mat. Tel. Patterson 271<br />
A Cornell farm economist . reports<br />
that saving one minute ft cow -at each<br />
milking for a 20-cow herd means a<br />
month's time saved to a year.<br />
o<br />
Think not those faithful who praise<br />
all the words and actions, but those<br />
who kindly reprove thy faults.—Socrates<br />
Antique Furniture<br />
Wanted In Any Condition<br />
Will Pay Top Cash<br />
also for<br />
Guns, Swords, Anything Old.<br />
Get My Appraisal Before Ton Self<br />
JOHN KENT<br />
P. O. Box 312 <strong>BREWSTER</strong>, N.Y.<br />
VISIT OUR SHOP<br />
Opp. Bailey Farm on Rt. 312<br />
Bedford Playhouse<br />
Phone B. V. 7348. Mats. Sun, Wed., Sat. at 2:30. Dally, 7 and 9<br />
Last Times Thursday, Jane 26<br />
Charles Boyer with Jennifer Jones In CLU<strong>NY</strong> BROWN<br />
Friday and Saturday, June 27-28<br />
Dick Haymes - Vera Ellen - Cesar Romero<br />
^ • CARNIVAL IN COSTA RICA in Color<br />
Sunday, Monday, Jane 29-30<br />
Dick Powell and Evelyn Keyes<br />
• JOHN<strong>NY</strong> O'CLOCK<br />
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, July 1 - 2 - S<br />
FIRST SHOWING<br />
EVENINGS — ONE PERFORMANCE ONLY AT 8 \ '*<br />
(Feature at 8:30) I Matinee Wednesday Only at 2:30<br />
* Admission Prices for This Special Engagement Orffy<br />
Advance Reservations Held Until Preceding Day Only<br />
LeMar<br />
of JBfc^ !<br />
— THE <strong>BREWSTER</strong> STANDARD—ESTABLISHED 1869 THURSDAY. JUNE 26, 1947<br />
Patterson Firemen<br />
Plan Celebrationi<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong>, N. Y.<br />
Patterson firemen plan a big time,<br />
June 30 to July 5, with a carnival and<br />
parade. The parade wilj consist of<br />
about thirty fire departments with<br />
about 400 men and thirty pieces of<br />
apparatus and six drum corps in line.<br />
Line of march:From Harmony Road<br />
through Main St. to West St., through<br />
West St. to Mill St., through Mill St.<br />
to Front St., through Front St past<br />
judges' stand to railroad crossing<br />
thence along Route 216 to carnival<br />
grounds where refreshments will be<br />
served to visiting departments.<br />
Prizes will be awarded as follows:<br />
Cup to best appearing department in<br />
line, cup to, department with largest<br />
number of men in line, cup to department<br />
coming longest distance, cup to<br />
best appearing musical unit^ in line.<br />
The Judges will be Supervisor Ralph<br />
8. Othouse of Patterson, Ex-Chief S.<br />
E. Green of Pawling, William Lowe, Jr.<br />
of Putnam Lake, Hon. John P. Dono-<br />
CAMEO THEATRE<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong>. N. Y.<br />
Telephone: Brewster 688<br />
Frl., Sat, June 27 and 28<br />
RONALD COLMAN In<br />
The Late<br />
George Apley<br />
and Introducing<br />
PEGGY CUMMTNGS<br />
Sat. Mat. Continuous from 2 P.M.<br />
"RAIDERS* OF THE SOUTH"<br />
with Johnny Mack Brown .<br />
Sun., Mon„ Tues., June 29. - 30<br />
• x July 1<br />
Matinees Mon. & Tues. at 3 P. M.<br />
The Yearling<br />
. Starring<br />
GREGORY PECK<br />
JANE WYMAN<br />
Claude Jarman, Jr. as "JODY"<br />
Due to the length of feature, our<br />
show will start Sunday at 2 p.m.<br />
Wed., Thurs., July 2 and 3<br />
Matinees Wed. & Than, at 3 p.m.<br />
BUD ABBOTT<br />
LOU COSTELLO<br />
Buck Privates<br />
Come Home<br />
ALSO<br />
The Big Town<br />
PHILIT REED<br />
Fri., Sat., July 4 and 5<br />
Friday, July 4th Continuous<br />
from 2:30 P. M.<br />
Saturday Continuous from 2 P. M.<br />
CORNEL WILDE<br />
MAUREEN O'HARA In<br />
The Homestretch<br />
In Technicolor<br />
Saturday Matinee Only:<br />
AN ALL TECHNICOLOR<br />
CARTOON SHOW<br />
Announces the Opening of a Modern<br />
Hand<br />
Richie Bldg<br />
Shoe Salon<br />
Specializing in a full line of<br />
popular Brands of<br />
Men/ Women and Children Shoes ,<br />
PHYSICAL CULTURE<br />
AND<br />
B0ST0NIAN SHOES<br />
Bags<br />
<strong>BREWSTER</strong>, N. Y.<br />
Hosiery<br />
4 No. Main St.<br />
hoe of Garrison, County Clerk Harry<br />
Barrett of Carmel.<br />
There will be about 20 booths on<br />
the grounds where you may enjoy<br />
yourselves at games, etc. A 1947 Fleetmaster<br />
Chevrolet automobile given<br />
away on the last night of the carnival.<br />
Large parking place. Come,<br />
bring your family and have a good<br />
time with Patterson Fire Department,<br />
o<br />
ADVERTISE IN THE STANDARD<br />
WAKNi<br />
BROS. PALACE<br />
D A N B U R V<br />
8 Days Beg. Sunday, June 29<br />
Joel McCREA - Veronica LAKE<br />
.<br />
RAMROD<br />
Plus<br />
IT'S A JOKE SON<br />
4 Days Beg. Wed., July<br />
EDMOND O'BRIEN<br />
ELLA RAINES<br />
THE WEB<br />
Plus<br />
LOST HONEYMOON<br />
William was thirsty tot knowledge!<br />
and constantly spouted interesting<br />
facts.<br />
"I read today," he said to Michael,<br />
"of the wonderful progress made in<br />
aviation. Men who can do anything<br />
—absolutely anything—a bird cart do."<br />
But Michael was tired of wondershe<br />
was more matter of fact. 'Is that<br />
so?" he quiered. "Well, when you see<br />
an airman fast asleep, hanging onto a<br />
branch of a tree with one foot, 111<br />
come and have a look."—Phoney Phun<br />
Native Turkeys<br />
WARNER BROS.<br />
EMPRESS<br />
Danbnry<br />
Starts' Friday—For One Week<br />
Gene . Rex<br />
TTERNEY - HARRISON<br />
George SAUNDERS In<br />
"THE GHbST and<br />
MRS. MUIR"<br />
Co-Hit!<br />
"THE BRASHER DOUBLOON"<br />
Cont. Perf. Sunday from 1:15<br />
Sat. Nlte Only: Doors Open 6 p.m.<br />
Performance Starts at 6:30<br />
Next Week, Starting July 4th<br />
Ann Sheridan - Lew Ayres<br />
In "THE UNFAITHFUL"<br />
HENS—15 lbs. - 18 lbs,, live weight<br />
TOMS—30 lbs. - 33 lbs., live weight<br />
WILL SELL HALF TURKEY<br />
• - Dressed weight 65 c fo*<br />
Roasting Chickens and Broilers'<br />
Fresh killed, dressed - - 55 c !&•<br />
Live weight at the farm 40 c ft*<br />
ORDER IN ADVANCE<br />
Croton Falls 618<br />
Fred W. Schultz, Hilltop Farm<br />
.CROSBY ROAD, CROTON FALLS. N. Y.<br />
He was a very aristocratic fish. His j The worst form of child labor la<br />
ancestors swam under fihe Mayflower. I cWW laDor by a grown man. — The<br />
—The Dummy. 'Dummy.<br />
}WP)PJTN AM<br />
fOUNTY<br />
pL AY HOUSE<br />
International Season<br />
in honor of United Nations<br />
8 plays from 8 member Nations<br />
OPENS 1W¥<br />
V<br />
with THORNTON WILDER'S<br />
-Pulitzer Prize Winner<br />
"SKIN OF OUR TEETH"<br />
VERNON RICE. N. Y. CRITIC . . .<br />
on our first season—"BEST among<br />
twenty-three summer theatres." v<br />
'4- M»<br />
MAKE RESERVATIONS EARLY<br />
Phone Mahopac 2026<br />
•\\i miles from Route 6<br />
312 miles from Route 22<br />
Croton Falls Road Mahopac, N. Y*<br />
CHEVROLET TRUCKS<br />
NEW FOUR-POINT DRIVER COM<br />
FORT: I. The cob that "breathe*."<br />
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and deeper—with more leg room.<br />
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teals—fully adjustable. 4. Larger<br />
windshield and windows give 22%<br />
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FLEXI- MOUNTED CAB—rubber*<br />
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CHOOSE CHEVROLET TRUCKS FOR TRANSPORTATION UNLIMITED<br />
BRADY-STANNARD MOTOR COMPA<strong>NY</strong>, Inc.<br />
90 North Main Street Phone 2180 Brewster, N. Y.