T H E W A l & i t i A N (O f ' m S m m t T t a t j :
f
six
NOTICE
CUTCHOGUE DUMP
N0 RTHV1UE
To thp Public:
Quite a numlinr of local people* alNotico i.J hrrrby pfiven that the
Cutchoinic Dump will b« opnn to ihp j tcTidi'd the flower show in Now York
public to ilump rrfuae one day a: city last ivcck. Mrs. Kenneth L.
week only (WEDNESDAY) from 9, Wells and Mrt. Rh. rwo'.d M. Tuthill
a. m. to 5 p. m. No Karba«c m»r(wcnl in nn Wrdn' >lay. Miss Mary
anything that «nn be burnnd can be • Aldrich drbvf in on Saturday, tnkinj?
put in the dump. A man will bo ■ vii.h h.*r Mis < Marietta Downs, Mis.«
present to cnforcc* 1hp>n provisions
Hallock, Mrs. Vi-rnon V. Wells
and direct tho public whw# refuse Bn^"Mifi» I.nurn D-.wnn. Avon HalI q c H and Olln Tuthill a I h o attended,
shall J>e .placed. , .
■ ..
HAROLD!). t^nrr:is;,
nni,M r.‘<. Prod S. Downs and Miss
‘ ■
*9upt. of HijavWijs. K.liktn)elh IfowRlI combined tbo trip
(Per Order -Southol j. TowiV Bool'd.) yvi^h a visit^to Miss Kloise n. Downs.
Mai'lcttn. Dnwn.s and her
brother Chauncey, enjoyed a recent
trip to Floral Park and Oyster Bay,
visiting friends made when Miss
Downs was toachinR in Nassau CounFOR
i.v.
At the la.st meeting of the Sound
Avenue Orange the proposed bond
issue for a Shelter Island bridge and
BATH . ROOMS. . WALLS
other purposes was taken up and a
resolution was passed expressing a
F X ^ R S , FIRE . PLACES
.Hlronj; opposition to any unnecessary
outlay at this time of financial de
Suffolk Co. Tile flc Mantle Co.
pression. To increase taxes when so
many farmers are close to ihe break
SOUTHOLD. N j V. ‘ .
ing point was considered Wholly un
Fhonf 98 ■
justifiable. Herman H. Hallock was
appointed a delegate to present this
point of viftw at.th e meeting of the
Bodrd^^\ i f
‘'i\M week.
■^ n Wednesday; aftornoon of last
Now that we are goina to throw on week funeral services were conduct
our tables all the Fall and 'W inter ed for the six months' old daughter
c o l o n o f t h f .K e n u lh o » ‘
of; Mr. and Mrs. Everett Downs, for
p r in te il u llk 't o bo
n?
w i n p n y : • 'U c a n '\,|> « » "“ ‘ ’ ’ ' y P " . ™
merly of this place. The interment
th a t iir lc o l
T o o k o o iI I n lie t r u e !
.So t r p
i f f e r y r * 1.000 r m . h t o to K t ' t «n e v e r y
was in the family plot in the Sound,
•w a y
n n r t I f y o 'i A n il n n y t h l n i i In I t h u t
p u fc
- I lk .
p u re
.U IP .
* 1. 00 0 .0 0 1h y o u r s . Avenue Cemetery, and Rev. Wells H.
B e v e r l y p r l n t u j r c ’^ i n i w n n }}n « )ls iin O i l u r Fitch officiated a t the grave. The
a b le 32 Ip w li le .
little one had been named Mary
Faith.
The silver medal in the prize dec
F o r t h i » " 111'' " n J y « '•' " ■ • I I « ’ " H y " >
n u m b e r o f y a n lH . n n y c o ln r » . ’ n l
lamation contest of the Loyal Tem
perance Legion last week was won
by 'Frances Hallock, though Sophia
Romanowski was a close second.
B u y a ll you i-an fo r th n
1. N a v y Muo Krouml w illi^ iB iilirn o w o rH .
Others who participated were Helen
: . N a v y w ith w h ile .
3. B l a c k w ith colorK.
Kruzeski, Lydia Romanowski, Mary
4. W h i tn R rounil w i t h o iirfo W airi'flf OfiW".
7. T a n B'rounrt w ith bro w ji Midi j W i n ( ^
Zclanowicz, Alice Charkow and
5. M eillu m Wuu g ro u n rt. b f i t u n r a l doiiTRn.
George Wells. All of the contestants
• 0. R e d Krounrt w ith IH -H ujlfulflo w crs.
WJll ou tlim t. o u tw a n h aiM W liT O n n th e
h e h v y crcpcH iincl t u b nIIw
onu. except the winner will receive a
N a t i o n a l l y uilvertlMMl n t J i.4 0 u ycl.
T o year’s subscription to the “Young
p r o v e t h a t e v e r y n u m b e r Ih w o n d e r fu lly
b e a u tif u l , lot UK Hcnd yo».»a p ie ce q u ic k ly Crusader,” the leading temperance
f o r y o u r In a p e rilo n . T n In tro d u c e e u r a llk
The contest
t h r e a d wi? iin- Blvlni; ii ivK ulnr Hpiiol , t o magazine for children.
m a tc h .
/i
was conducted by Mrs. Robert Cam-:
CRANE'S SILKS, S4R Fifth Ave., eron.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis E. Downs, who
New York City
have for several days been making
-------------------C lip C’o n p o n NOWa leisurely northward tour in their
C o n iio n f o r P r i n t e d SIUU o lL . —
^
C R A N B 'S K I L K H . B45 F i f t h A v p . . N . Y . C it y ,
car from Florida, are expected home
- W it h o u t u b ll K u t lo n .to I g e p ^
aend m e
some time this week, though no defi
l^everljr
.................. } ' a r d 8 C o lo r N o ......................... jp
o w » ..,
nite date has been set for their ar
P r ln t R ( a l l p u r e H ll k ) . i i l ,58. r i > if t f * ! p e t y d • n a p p r o v a l.' B u s h .
.i.
rival.
Miss Winifred Wells was home
S i g n .........
over the week end.
The Grange players were greeted
SBND NO MONEY
by a large and enthusiastic audience
on Friday night last, and they u n it
edly carried a rather difficult play to
Sloip at F irtt.b a t^
a
very satisfactory conclusion. It
ItM !■ twelve and deUgbti’ln iargi>
wordi. When he attended his flret was a highly creditable piece of work
evening party, hie mothei^ was porioui and approximately |6 2 was netted
to know how the evening was apent, for the Grange treasury.
and whether he had a good Hma
Mrs. James T. Hallock is assigned
*^ell. at llrst it was pretty slow," he to lehd the Christian Endeavor Se
feported, "hat toward the last It got nior meeting on Sunday evening a t
Vilte light>harIous!”
6.30 o’clock. The topic is “Why
C. TERRY
TILE
$1000
R £W ^
ALL PURE SipC
58 Cents A YARD
Tliariday, March 26, 1931
Christ is a Worthy Master.” The
Juniors will have for their topic,
"Love for All.”
The Sundny school will ^tiake
offerin>r for the Hospital for Women
and (Children at Madurn, India, at
it^i session on Sunday.
At 7..30 o’clock on Munday evening
there will be presented the .^toi eop-1
ticon lieture, "A New Day in Oldi
Mndura,"
pre. entinj?
interesting^
views of the ci‘y, the life of the diwtrict and the work that is being car
ried on by f-onfn'CRational mission
aries in that place. The C. E. mis
sionary offering will be received.
A preparatory service and church
business meeting will be held on
Tuesday evening, l^iirch 31st, at 7.30
o’clock. On Wcdl^sday, Thursday
and Friday evenings of next week
our people arc cordially invited to
attend the union Lenten services
which will be held a t 7.30 o’clock
each of the three evenings. On Wed
nesday night the service will be in
the Aquebogue Church with Rev. H
L. Pyle, D.D. as preacher. On Thurs
day. night in the Wading River
Church with Rev. Wells H. Fitch as
preacher, and on Friday night in the
Riverhead Congregational Church
with Rev. Elbpdge. C. Whiting as
preacher.'
The snow storm of last week Tues
day held back-'the beginning of plow
ing for practically a week. A few
farmers made a small start on lighter
soils, but the real beginidng of plow-'
ing comes this .week, and from, now
on it will be “pii'the jumpV un|;il the
potatoes are all in. .
,
.......
<>..« -y—-------
COAL HOLDING OWN
AS ENERGY SOIJRCE
■
Commerce Pepartm ent GiWia
Result of Survey!
Washington. —Despite widespread
nse of tvnter power, petroleum and
other sources of energy. conI will remntn the major source of steam..and
sten m-eleetPle
Snoh Is tlie
Hoitr. a u th o r of
D epnrtm eht o f
i
“Cheap” Paint
is like Counterfeit Coins
Bogas money may look good— but h
I ‘ doesn't ring true! The rig h t m aterial
iia*t in it.
* So it is with “cheap** paint. For true
economy in your next painting job, use
fine old SWP— and hire a dependable
master painter. Get a lasting job that will
please you for years to come.
TUTHILL LUMBER CO.
I
(7
I..J!
m L A T r e M ff T fo
€Om
Z ealand will be th e seenu
/l b B£AC/f at tfAuuk,
___r y m___
mw iie
or a now niitoiiiobilo speed re c
VACUUM
................
k t^w' ' ZEALAND
ord In Mny, If pluns of ^forn 1an
•‘W izard!’ Snitih, A ustralian {nicer,
T he srronfer Inngtli of N i n e ty - V ie speed o f ^ l i r e e hnndrcd
pur
work out. A special c ar ^ fjbr the H«jaeh lonfls Homi! iiullioiillcs to till! liour o r Im-IUt . It i» wild to bo
niteiiipt to b eat s i r Malcolm j
u,„|. im y lo n a Heacli 1h ‘11u« iiTost emglfiil nnKflrii: i*vi*r tlttod
( .a n ip b e iis presitnl record of o v e r , r u p ijiy outliving 'fTs"' usefulness. I on ii cirasMls. .Siiilth In confiTrinK
345 miles .per h o u r In now u n d e r T he th irty iiiilu trncK. on, Ihi! New .w ith enRlnticrs o f . IJic .yuciiuin Oil
construction in Sydney.. Auslraliu. Z ealahd beach is o^ pnrfcet s.’uid Company. Pty. I<td., of Austriilia,
Ninety-M ile Beaeh a t K uitaia. so tis h lly packed ,.thajL ; a heavy ■ remnrdliijf the probleniH of fuetlinf;
New Zealand, tho scene of fHe re c pnciliniaiic tired ' veliiclb' trawliMK i an d lubrication connected with tho
ord a tte m p t provides a t low tide a t hlRh speed . le a v e s /b u t a.n lltfh t nuichine.
•’i ■
a 'hal'd n a tu ra l track, th irty miles f e ath erin g of th e Iraek where the
Specially designed radititors, new
lonir. one tho usa n d feel wide, and tires, have turne.d...oyer .the surface stre am lin in g designs to rediicn
sm ooth as plate glass. T his is over nim.' according to reports,
wind resistance to u. mlniinuin. mid
th re e tim es as long as tho fam ous
Tho engine of Sm ith's car, a sloping nose to retain trac tio n ^ at.
D aytona Beach, where recen t r o c - ! whose design is a close secret of high speed, a re a m o n g the f(>ntu're8
ords have been _made. including I t h e R ritish governm ent, is expected which m a k e Sm ith confident t h a t .
t h a t Just-, ma^de by ^ i r Malcolm r^o .develop ap pro xim ately seventeen he will -: establish a ph enom enal '
Campbell; ■
'
|Vundifi6<l.‘-liors{uiowor. a n d re a c h a record.
o f I J i '. M.
are Knsed on t^j^^lOgiCiiil. prncessefl
of'control wlildi/liave taken place In
recent years. V . The fact tliat ,the>..coul Industr^ as
a whole Is It^iS'depressed condition
Is laid hy'tlonr to the fact that the
fuel has heeii iitlMr.^ niore ert
by new proeesses, that'’.otl}er’Sq«rce»
of power are eomln^ intp•brf^d^nse»
and that foreign natlonaare n<^linak«‘
Ing efforts to produce enough cMI to
meet their own demands.
“Teehnology of the utlllzatlf^ of
coal." Hoar declared, “has advanced
more rapidly In the last few years
than at any time In its history. Lig
nite Is utilised for steam raising pur
poses; gas Is made from coal or from
oil; and In Germany motor fuels have
been recently obtained from the dlstlllates of coal.”
These new flerelopments. Hoar
points out, have resulted In large sav
Ings to coal consuming industries.
“The electric utilities, for example,
have been enabled to reduce the
amount of coal necessary to develop
a kilowatt hour from 8.2 pounds In
imn. to l.ifl pounds In 1028. a reduc
tion of nearly 4ri per cent,” he ex
plains. “The rnllroads, which absorb
about a quarter of the total fuel con
sumption In the United States, and the
Iron and steel Industry have been ef
fecting similar savings."
While a large amount of coal will
continue to be emploj’ed In the gen
eration of heat and power. Hoar de
clares. an Inereaslug part of Its value
In the future will be found in Its
chemical properties. Already one-fifth
of the annual output of bituminous
coal In this country Is being subjected
to chemical processing.
Won’t Let Dog Testify
as to Own Character
-" 3 ^ ^
PhenomenOl Speed Record To
Be Attem pted In New Zecdand
Budapest.—“I ask that Lupus, who
Is now sitting with his ears erect and
his tall wagging outside the door,
eagerly awaiting a ehance to clear his
character, be summoned as a witness.”
This was the appeal solemnly made
by Dr. Anclor Dolly, defending coun
sel, In the Budapest District conil re
cently.
The case was one in which a land
lady. &Ime. Fekety, sought an eject
ment order against a lodcrer, Talor
Bela Nager, on acount of the alleged
noisy and dirty habits of Lupus, his
Alsatian dog.
The Judge listened to the counsel's
plea that It was only fair to summon
“the real defendant'* as a witness to
his own charaeter and to give him an
opportunity of showing how well he
was diselnlined. Then he smilingly re! Jpcted the applifiirion on the ground
I that It WHS liiipiiKsiliie to admlnljiter
i the oiith to even the most Intelligent
' wolfdog.
sober-and dignified Journal; des Debats:
. : ,
.
“If ^you hear'a noise which suggests
a transatlantic liner about to leave her
pier,. you will find as often as not
that it proceeds from a miserable
onfriialf horsepower machine picked,
up as a bargain in the perambulator
<dep)Eirtment c»f a cheap store. It , Is
probably, a
carvworth about 4 soiis
which is trying W sd&nd like 4,000
fi'ancs.”
Comment ih other journals pro
ceeds on much the same lines.
Harvard Plains Business
Men’s fSchool in July
. Cambridge. ]^flSS-—Tt will be school
days again for-many business men
next July.
S A special one^. month course for
executives will be given 9A Harvard
Oradunte School of BuslnMS Adminis
Wife Discoyers Mate Was
tration.
‘‘Black Sheep’* of Family
Subjects will Include finance, pub
Memphis, Tenn.—Mrs. Claire Holder lic utility management, retail distri
said she ultimately discovered the bution. and store management, sales
truth behind thut old maxim, “Fine management and railway transporta
tion.
ftothers do not make tine birds.”
She said that a few months after
slie eloped with Morris Holder, a reg
ular Chesterfield lover, she learned he
was “the black sheep of the family.”
She has sued for divorce. M
11 Dime Necklaces
Bring $55,000 Suit
Baltimore.—A Baltimore five
and ten cent store may have
been selling $5,000 necklaces for
a dime.
That is, the sale of eleven of
the pieces of Jewelry may cost
the store $55,000, for customs in
spectors contend that the neck
laces did not bear tags, as re
quired by law, to show they
were manufactured In a foreign
country. Tiie penalty is $o,000
for each offense.
llie case will be heard in tho
Federal court soon. The com
pany contends the tags were
torn of( accidentally by cus
tomers.
Ten Traveling Dolls
Take Ten Baths a Day
Madison, Wis.—Ten dolls which
travel extensively and take three or
four baths a day have their headquar
ters In the state capltol here.
They are tlie demonstration “ba
bies” used In the Infant liygiene course
that the state board of health offers
in Wisconsin's public schools.
More than 31,000 school girls have
used the dolls since 102:1 to acquire
technique which they now are putting
Into practice In their own iioines.
Many boys are enrnlllng In the
eoui'se throughout the state, the board
disclosed, Interpreting this as a feel
ing that “the present trend of wom-«
en's activity mny bring the rearing of
future generations s<|iiarely wltliin
the mere husbonfPs province.”
Noisy Cars Made Butt of
Ridicule by Parisians Identify Dead Hobo as
Paris.—As the Paris clly council,
Nephew of Poet Heine
the elilef of pullee and the traflic
board liave failed to induce motor
owners to make as lltlle noise with
their horns as ppsKilile, a number of
Paris editors, after a eonference, have
decided to dully ridicule the makers
of such noises. Uere is a sample
printed on the tirsi piige of the vftry
was believed.;tOs:Jnive been between
seventy ;in'd elglitj;. had been destltnte
for years, nnd jiit^rly begged his way
on fftOt from v^xony to Bohemia,
where he d l^ '^;6m hunger and exposiure..’
Budapest.—Tlie “Pestl Hiriap” re
ports that an old tramp who was
found dead on the highroid near lliu
village of WIttingau. In soutliern Bo
hemia, lias been identified as the
nephew of Heinrich Heine, the poet.
Tlie tramp, Karl Hans Heine, who ^
Robbers Flee Prunes
New Britain. Conn.—A jar of prunes
routed -bandits who lie:j..nn T^nls
Nalr. Ordered by two bandits lu put
up his hands, Nalr hurled the Jar at
one of them and the bandits fldd.
“I’m getting old, so I took a chance,"
Nalr told police.
U&TTERHEADS
mm 'wm p r i n t A c m
c riile A c c y o « r
Ira riiM M p v o ^ M M
FORCED SALE
Michaels-Stem, Hart, Schaffner
& Marx and other good makes
of Men’s and Young Men’s Suits
and Top Coats.
NOTE THESE PRICES
$22i»0 SuiU........... $10.95
$25.00 Suits..........$15.00
$35.00 Suits............ $22i»0
$45.00 S u its ... .. .. .$27.75
BOYS’ SUITS
Sizes to 18 Years, from $5.00 up
KNOX HATS $5.00
LIPMAN BROS.
DEPT. STORE
GREENPORT
Next to Capt. Jim’s Lunch Wagon
and at 47 FRONT STREET
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