BAYPORT NEWS BRIEFS Mrs. Kdmund Brown . BA.port S-2570 < I'ISS U E C K I V K A W A R D S AT M A R C H PACK MEET I .NC. An iiii|,iL ' ssiv v candlelight ceremony was conducted bv Cubmaster Edward Divis at ' the Cub S. out Pack meeting March 30 in the auditorium of the high school. As Cubmaster Divis gave the fi rst Cub law he lighted a candle, and a Cub from each den lighted candles as he gave the other laws. This was followed bv presentation of awards and a" "knighting " ceremony. The boys wore helmets ami curried shields and swords in keeping w ith the theme of the month , "Knights of the Uound Table." As Mr. Divis presented each boy with his award he dubbed him "Sir- Wolf" or whatever badge he had earned. The awa>iis were: Den 1—Gary Divis , Bear badge: David Hope, W e b i* I u s graduation certificate; Wesley Little , graduation certifi cate. Den 2—Daniel Perlman, Wolf badge. Deri :$—Paul Bell , Wolf badge; Peter Foster , Bob Cat badge; Xelson Jackson , Chief Denner stripe; Harry Rogers , Assistant Denner stripe. Den 4— Quentin Beitel , Den Chief and one-year pin; John Nowhouse , two Silver arrows under Wolf; Thomas Kallman , Chief Denner stripe; Kldon Routh , Assistant Denner stripe; Justin Scott , Silver arrow under Lion; Gene Carlson, Silver ' arrow under Wolf; Jack Schneider, Gold arrow under Wolf ; Douglas I.amy, Gold arrow under Wolf. Den 5—Paul Behrmann , Bea r badge; Chris Van Weele , Gold and Silver arrows under Wolf; Lee Vignato , Gold arrow under Wolf; Timothy Hopkins, Gold arrow under Wolf. D e n ti-— Arthur Snyder, Wolf badge, Gold and silver arrows under Wolf and one-year pin; Robert Scott, Den Chief cord ; Nelson Duiiand, Chief Denner stripe; Walter Benaszak , Assistant Denner stri pe . Gold arrow under Wr olf; Douglas King, Gold and Silver arrows under Bear; Robert Misch , Bob Cat badge, and John Rae , Wolf badge. The boys practiced marching in preparation for the April Pack meeting, when they will march up to Camp Kdey for an outdoor meeting. The Ruth circle of the WoSociety for Christian man 's Service met at the home ' of Mrs. Duane Hawkins in Blue »Point last Thursday night. Those present were Mesdames Donald HusVictor zagh , Quentin Beitel , Schwaegler, K r u d Stadtmuller, LeRoy Hopkins, Donald Heath , William Bledsoe, Jacob Iverson and Edward Jackson. Plans were discussed concerning a luncheon that is planned for the middle of May. Mr. and Mrs . Xorman Dobson entertained at a family dinne r Sunday at their home on Suydam lane in honor of their daughter, Miss Mary, who was confirmed Sunday morning at the Bayport ?»Iethodist church. Their guests were Mr. and Mrs. William Bain of Bayport , Mr. and Mrs. William Dobson of Baldwin and William Bain of East Northport. Mr. and Mrs. Ira Levy and their children , Joel and Anne, are spending two weeks in Sanford, Fla., with Mr. Levy 's parents , Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Levy. The Patchogue Advance is on sale at Ernie's Delicatessen, and at the Village Market in Bayport.—Adv. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kreimeier of Oakwood avenue celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary at their home March 27 with a " buffet supper. Their guests were their SOB and daughter-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kreimeier, and children, Enid and Thomas, of Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs. George Bedell of Hempstead, Mrs. B. Timmerman and Mrs. Mathilde Scharf , both of Great Neck, and Mrs. Alfi-ed Merdes of Bayport. The Girls Scouts and Fly-Up Brownies will go to New York city next Monday by bus for the annual trip. They will attend the circus at Madison Square Garden. The buses will leave ' from the high school at 10 a. m. Mrs. Herman Hegge is in charge of the trip. The Bayport Republican club will meet next Thursday night in the Bayport firehall. Isli p Town Supervisor James Willis has been invited to install the new officers. Members of the Town board have also been invited to attend. Refreshments will be served following the meeting. Miss Patricia Yates and David Yates of *New York city spent the weekend at the home of their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert A Yates of Bayport avenue. family party was held Sunday in honor of David's birthday. Yaphank News Items Sarah E. Aiej, M. l>.. YAphank 4-24:9 A stork shower was j^iven for Mr.*. Fred Trusnovec of Main street by Mrs. Oscar Thomas and Miss Carol Meyer in the social room of the Presbyterian church March 29. The mother-to-be sat and opened her gifts under a pink and white umbrella showered with streamers .and tiny umbrellas. The table wa.s gayly decorated with small safety pins and Rum drop stork s ' were used as favors. The Kuests were Mrs. Walter C. Voll of Middle Island, Mrs. Xorman Freest- of Manorville , Miss Willa Morrissey and Mrs . Wallace Anderson of Lake Ronkonkoma, Mrs. Ray Burr of Centereach , Mesdames Leslie Marchant , Andrew Kukta , Harry Meyer , Eunella lloman, Ernst Preuss, Frank Hulse , Arthur Davis , Frank Mapes , Robert O'Connell, Douglas Davis , William Sheridan , Rose Earll , and Misses Constance Thomas, Carol Krauss , Kathleen Raymond and Ramona Lewin, all of Yaphank. A number of beautiful K'f'ts were received by Mrs. Trusnovec. Refreshments were served. A tire of suspicious origin began early Friday afternoon south and west of Brookhaven National laboratory, betwee n Smith and Longwood roads. Firemen from Yaphank continued to battle until about midnight. About 5,000 acres were burned over. Ridge firemen and those i'rem the BNL also assisted. State Conservation men were there with their equipment, as well as Chief forest ranger Robert E. Richards. Holy communion was celebrated at the Yaphank Presbyterian church Sunday, with the Rev. Walter C. Voll in charge. Mrs. Theodore Penske united with the church. The service Easter Sunday will be at 9:45 a. m. The Junior sermon topic will be "Boaz" and the Senior topic, "And He Closed the Book." There will be special Easter music by the two choirs. The ushers last Sundaywere H. T. Avey and John Craig. Next Sunday, Frank Hulse and Andrew Kukta will be the ushers. The Men's club sent out invitations to all who wish to meet with them at 6:30 p. m. Apri l 14 in the church dining room for supper and to enjoy a program which will follow. The Yaphank Mrs. Edward Divis as an adult Presbyterian church session meets adviser will accompany a group .April 15. This includes the minof Senior Girl Scouts who have ister, the Rev. Walter C. Voll , and enjoyed camping at Camp Edey the elders, Harry T. Avey, Leslie to Cedar Hill Girl Scout camp at Marchant , Mrs. Howard Ralph and Cedar Hill , Mass., where they John Craig. will spend next week for advancThe Women's Missionary . socied and primitive camping. Mrs. ety of the Yaphank Presbyterian Vernon Havens of East Moriches church will meet with Mrs.;,Arwill be the other adult adviser- ¦ " thur Reed at her new home, 255 Misses Virginia Meissner, Ruth Schoenfeld boulevard, Patchogue, Harding, Joan Albrecht , Dorothy at 1 p. m., Tuesday to begin the Schwaegler, Toni Calder, Bette study of the book on "Man and Kehine and Mary Dobson and God in the City " by Kenneth D. Arthur Leuchner and Quentin Miller. Yaphank is near enough Beitel were confirmed by the Rev. RIVERHEAD — A Supreme to the great city of New York to Theodore Bennett at the 11 a. m. court jury before Justice L. Bar- share the concern and interest in service in the Bayport Methodist ron Hill awarded $4,000 to Har- solving the problems of "T h e church Sunday. After confirma- ry Blank of Floyd road north , City." Refreshments will be served. tion they were accepted into the Mastic , in his negligence action There will be services at St. membership of the church. The against George J. Scott , Jr. of Andrew's Episcopal church at 8 members of the class will receive Elmhurst here March 30. p. m. on Good Friday, tomorrow, their first communion" tonight at Blank , 37-year-old clerk in the with the Rev. Willard I. Kile in the Maunday Thursday service. A employ of the Republic Aviation charge. Easter Communion will reception will be held in the corporation, Farmingdale, h a d be at 9 a. m. instead of at 7:30, church 'rooms following the serv- sought $100,000 damages for in- as previously announced. Easter ice in honor of the class. Mem- juries sustained on December 22, plants will be distributed to the bers of the Ruth circle of the Wo- 1951. Cars driven by the two liti- children in the church school durman's Society for Christian Serv- gants met in a head-on collision ing the service at 10 a. m. ice will, be hostesses. at the intersection of Francis ¦ William Sheridan is building an The committee in charge of Lewis boulevard and Jamaica addition to his home on Patchogue road, a kitchen and dinette. Little League activities in Bay- avenue , Jamaica. The Yaphank schools will have port met at the home of Nils Blank claimed that, the auto of Fairview avenue crash left him with severed ten- Easter vacation from Apri l 8 iS'ilsson March 29 to discuss plans for dons in his left hand, making it through 11 inclusive, that is, inthe coming season. Those present impossible for him to earn $90 and cluding Good- Friday and Easter were Quentin Beitel , David Hope, more per week as a truck driver. Monday. The Yaphank Girl Scouts met Gerald B o u r g u i g n o n , Robert His present earnings average at the Charles E. Walters school Swords , Robert Sheffield, LeRoy around $70 a week. Joseph T. Mirabel of Brooklyn, March 29. Some of the girls finHopkins , Donald Huszagh and Huntington appeared as ished their . Easter hats. Others Edward Gushing. The f.rst prac- and tice session of the season was counsel for the plaintiff. Greg- learned group games. Those presheld at the high school Saturday ory Lee of Mineola w a s trial ent were : Elinor Kroncke, Kathy Kaimond, Ramona Lewin, Janet counsel for Scott. morning. Hansen, Linda Neuss, Leola Zeigler, Kathleen Harvey, Helen Kalbach . Patsy Behn, Marjorie Behn, Shirley Spillett. The leaders were Mrs . Herbert Faust, Mrs. Robert Schaefer, and Mrs. Franklin Knispel. The Yaphank Brownies met at the Main street school March 31. Those present were : Nancy Briggs, Kathleen Gordon, Patty Herold, Lou Carol Hodukavich, Mary Hopfe, Susan Hololob, Nancy Ka^ rrC^ !<«^==;:=:::r zel, Martha Kiezel , C a r o l e You don't have to wait anN^ to fix your Schoch, Frances Stroud, Veronica ^ day other ^ home gVj li^oN ^> Wilde, Deanna and Donna Zim\ ^ ^-^S _ ^ repair your car. Borrow merman. Mrs. Alice Havens taught / or gL J^si^^B ^^ _^^^_: some songs and dances. The leadyou need —===::: money at ers were Mrs. Franklin Knispel ^\j ^^S^g^!\iiu^'the and Mrs. Robert Robinson. _\^A^^ r%T^_ Y Household Finance.You get Please say, "I saw your ad in friendly service, z_*zz-J 5 *5J?S^ The Advance."—Ad*. i^wrJ A fast ,endorsers. Borrowwith: out with fA Those who wish to go on the ^^^^__ / ^ ^_ ^A C confidence from America's special - bus during Spring vaca^^^^^^^ 0^^^ tion to see the circus in New York ^ finance oldest and largest consumer city must let Mrs. John Davis _^^^^ _ _^^_ ^ ^^3 know by A'pril 8. The bus will "^ \Ssg^^j^||i^7 company. leave at 10 a. m. from the Yaphank firehouse. Mothers and children will be expected to take their lunches and they will stop Cfet *20 tO »500 MONTHIY PAYMENT PLANS g^ somewhere to eat. f .» e * 20 is n 6 Eosy-to-meef requirements Mr . and Mrs. Walter T. Gordon P *ymtt paymtt paymti paymt t —One-day service f are having a new house buil t on $ 50 S 4.87 S 9.08 property they bought on Main Choose vour own «» S 6.41 5 6.97 9.75 18.15 street | where the old ¦ firehouse | ,«n-«m«n? plan olan fo to m fit repayment 13 7g lg 33 M0 n used to stand. your income 300 18 80 20 46 28.82 54.02 Ten-year-old Jenette Kerri gan, Loans also made ro pay daughter of Mrs. Estelle Kerri| 500 | 30.22 | 33.00 |46.94 |88.83 Old bills, shopping H OUU IIO WM Omu it ZH% P~ tmmth an bclgan of Crescent street, was workancas.of 9100 ar Uis and £% p t rmonthon that • —~~A MittBil reason any good , ^>iht taloM> in „«„ ofsioo and not <n expenses, _..., ing at the kitchen stove Satur. . txcta of tJOO. and H of I X f t r month on that . day morning when her dress caught tart of the balance in eiuest of1300to fSOO. Phone or Stop in today1 fire. Her twin brothers, Joseph and Michael', about two years older, were in the next room and heard her screams. They came and ¦ — ¦ crushed out the fire, and asked , *i £zoyturte £li0 ^Sjff iF— their neighbor, Mrs. Henry Krauss 1 East Main Street, 2nd Floor for help. She telephoned for a doctor who called the Brookhaven PHONE: Bay Shore 7-0297 ambulance and Jenette was taken to Mather Memorial hospital in Opm FridayEvnlngtUeltt BM P.M. Port Jefferson; Word was sent to Tempting Army Positions Miller PI. Breaks Send Bay Shore Man to Sing Sing Offered to WAC Recruits All women between the ages of 18 and :!4, who are single, physicall y /it , high school graduates or the equivalent , and who satisfy certain other requirements , are eligible for the Women '.-- Army corps, the Patchogue Recruiting station announced this week. Many courses in diffe rent skills are offered those who qualify. Foreign travel and vacation and retirement benefits are also available for WACs. Mrs . Kerriga n who was in Patchogue. Jenette is still in the hospital for treatment. Tribute should be paid to her brothers who used their Boy Scout training, put out the tin- and i:il!ed for help. The annual meeting of t h e Yaphank Cemetery association was held at the Charles E. Walters school Monday night. Trustees elected for three-year terms were Louis Vogel and Mrs. Mary Walters. Louis Vogel was reelected for one year as president, and Mrs . John Sheridan was reelected CC\1 PiFM V P A P «* marriage was marked March 29 by for one year aw secretary" and VJVJ 1_.UIL.1N l i-..rtr\ » n and M rs. Edward F. Howell of treasurer. The grounds , commitUnion avenue . Center Moriches, shown above with a flowery tee was also reelected fur one testimonial to their 50 years together. Mr. and Mrs. Howell year, James Kinsella of Brookwere honored at a party last week given by their daughter, Mr*. haven as ' chairman, Mrs. Mary Forrest Yeager of ' Riverhead at their home. Walters , Mrs. John Sheridan, Mrs . George Prosser of Middle Island and Harry T. Avey. Considerable ISLAND NEWS BRIEF $94,000 addition to Town hall j money had been spent to clear up here. The project ia expected to the trees which fell during last SMITHTOWN — Ground was year's hurricanes. broken last week for the new be completed by mid-September. * H. A Patchogue Advance specialty! Wedding invitations whose perfection in printing, design and paper quality, cannot fail to please the pocketbook.—Adv. SNEDEC0R Coal & Fuel Co., Inc. 3 COAL "OT FUEL OIL NOW FEATURING 24-Hour Emergency Service Phone PAtchogue 3-0132 rrMJlNCJ BAmort MIH 118 West Avenue Patchogne RUSSELL HAASE IN S U R A N C E 10 ETHEL PLACE, PATCHOGUE PAt. 3-3693 MU 5-4880 . ... . * * R I V E R H E A D —- LeRoy Herbert Smith, 39, a hotel worker , of 140 South Clinton avenue. Bay Shore , drew a Sing Sing stretch in Suffolk county court here last Wednesday, while his woman accomplice in the looting of two Miller Place homes was given a suspended sentence. Sentenced as a second felony offender . Smith, drew two and one-half to five years at hard labor on his recent plea of guilty to second-degree grand larceny. According to the office of District Attorney Harry C. Brenner , Smith served time in Elmira in 193S for burglary. Mrs . Dorothy Brisson, a 42year-old divorcee of 67 Manton street, Sayville, was placed on probation by Judge Fred J. Munder. She had filed a plea of guilty to petit larceny. Smith and Mrs. Brisson. who is the mother of six children , plundered the summer cottage of | Matthew J . Morrissey of Mt. ! Vernon last November 26 and j on the following December 26 looted the summer home of Mrs. Flushing. Boschan of Charles Twenty-five bottles of liquor, $11 in cash , a motion picture projector and other articles were taken fro m the Morrissey residence, while the second raid yielded clothing and canned goods. "You get an extra trade-in allowance on your present jK' w car if you act by • 'Easter Sunday!" ' ^ ^m^^^ SAYS H> SULUVAN my^^^jf ^BHai -- ' Mastic Man to Get $4,000 Damages In Car Crash Case t ^^SJ^BHS3K^^^3gj>3]hruM ^ ^ ^^^w*>wSR8RrV ^sffife i^'l':->. '>ivi-/>^^i':'./T>>^SSQfi^M§^^BBflfl^^^^^^^^MStoia(y>ft fc.^._. _ __\ •j S m & m t^ vMM&trti6&&mw S S o o ' ¦* Jr> ^HHHTvoy . Make¥«£repairs w r ^^S^mS -^ ^ ' wx&JcSSSS^^B' ' '' ^^^^^^ M^^M3fiBBB5^5JKL4»'' ^ ' l^^[^B^^B^^^ BB|el^^^^Iv. jj^^E^^^^SftSftftHftB^B^^^^M^^^ i ¦!j&$£Bm&cmw ^^mMmmwttB&' ^^^yrfJj<Wnfi?fflf|Hffl ^^ ^^ ^ i^OUSEHOLD FINANCE power in the Mercury Custom (shown above) and Monterey; 198 horsepower in the Mercury Montclatrs. Remember, too, Mercury has a 3-year record for the highest resale value in its field. You help protect your investment. ~~ " ' I Our delivered price for this Mercury Custom is ?Mercury Custom 2-Door, 6-passenger •• lower than many models in the so-called "lowSedan $2297.00 or„only $11.51 per priced " field. Our allowance for your present week after usual small down payment.¦_ r is based on high-volume sales. (We can ~afford to be enerous And our tenw are taiS '> ^S ^lS^^^^ll r T^t in adjoining communities. Whitewaii tires, two- • lored to meet your personal needs. Come in , tone paint, bumper guards and factory-installed •'""-•"»» ¦?== -'— | . • „ T „ , u_ .„ „„„ u™. «.» ,,„ „ T ^X M™^ ™Y •* '• A PATCHOGUE, N. Y. ^ IMDA —' . ,_ _ .„„_ __ IT PAYS TO OWN A ___ Bill tfMfc flP ¦ * tf>H ¦ ¦¦ I \_W _| | 1 PK I 1 K f BLM I¦ I¦ IL 1 1 I¦ I¦ I ¦ ¦ ¦ " ¦¦ ^ai ^iW ¦ FOR FUTURE STYLING - SUPER POWER Young &. Young Lincoln - Mercury, Inc. 320 EAST MAIN STREET ; ^^^^KKSJJEngBB^^^^H^^^HHBB^^^B withan H FC loan HERE'S WHAT YOU GET: Exclusive styling shared by no other car. 10 models in 3 series to choose from. A bigger-all-over Mercury—in length, width, and wheelbase . A hew super-compression SUPER -TORQUE V-8 engine—188 horse- . *' TEL. PATCHOGUE 3-1100 j
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