{ title: 'The Long Island advance. (Patchogue, N.Y.) 1961-current, August 10, 1961, Page 11, Image 11', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-08-10/ed-1/seq-11/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-08-10/ed-1/seq-11.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-08-10/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-08-10/ed-1/seq-11/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
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' .T&69/ °rr 99/ £^I^ L 29/ j ; f; % VEL ««» ~ ^^35/ LUX ^- -~--—87/ GERBER ' S CADET nnr ' rnnn FLORIENUxi^i.^ '^ 79/ ! irrni i ^- \\/ r/ ^ \ A r» ^ -^ BABY FOODS DOG FOOD U V JV J rVj^J L/ ySVPX^df 3-35/ ; ^b 9^95/ 3 —- 35/ -as- 2 ^43/ CASHMERE js. uiusi 2. -31/ WISK — — ««- 73/ CALGON CA LGONITE rAT CA f L ° n CASHMERE JS. U 2. U JS, 3as3V WATER SOFTENER FOR ELECTRIC DISHWASHERS V-A\ I I v/VyL/ ACTIVE ALL • ;&£. - *2 - 29 ^ss. 33/ ^£. 41/ 2 ''^ 29/ AD »«««-» '>«»»»«' '«!. ¦ 33 / RINSO BLU E . SSPSSES .33/ VEL I CE B LUE S ECRET SECRET KIRKMAN BORAX SOAP %g11/ P OWERED D ETERGENT ROLL , ON DEODORANT C REAM D EODORANT LUX SOAP WH , TE 2\ -31/ ,^ 33/ \ -75 /-. \°r 49/ -?. AJAX CLEANSER 2?-31/ i LENDING Sl' IM'ORT to the Long Island Fund are Arthur Treacher kit , and William Gaxton of \Paradise Island\ at Jones B ach Marine Theatre. They joined Elaine Malbin and Guy Lombardo in a -series of recordings announcing the Long Islandi Fund 1961-62 Campaign to raise $1 , 250 , 000 in Nassau and Suf- folk industry and labor to hel p 58 health , welfare and hosp ital organizations. POLITICAL REVIEW The \Old Timers \ of the Suf- folk County Republican Club will hold their next get-together Mon- day, August 14th , at the Suffolk County Republican Clubhouse , Atlantic Avenue , Blue Point , ac- cording to the Old Timers chair- man , Sheriff Charles R. Dominy. The stag group, which has been adding to its membership for well over twenty years , meets around the count y throug hout the year , with the hig hlight being a beef- steak dinner served from 7 to 9 p. m. Tickets will be obtainable fiom various Town Republican leaders , Suffolk County Republi- can headquarters , and the Sher- iff' s office in Riverhead. All in- terested men are invited to attend Listen Veteran New York State Division of Veterans ' Affairs CIVIL SERVICE: A pplication. * . wil be accepted up to August 14. for the following positions in the New York State C ; vil Service: Assistant building electrical en- gineer , assistant civil engineer (design), junior public health en- gineer , Erie Count y, guidance counselor , insurance fund field service. - representative , unemploy- ment insurance reviewing examin- er , supervisor of health exhibits , photostat operator , metropolitan counties , (candidates must have been legal residents of Bronx Kings , New York , Queens or Rich- mond County for four months) senior laboratory technican (bi- ology, clinical pathology, microbi- ology and physiology), p hoto- fiuorographer , associate pub lie health p hysician (medical re- habilitation), supervising veterin- arian , senior laboratory animal caretaker , supervising public health nurse , Chautauqua County. Competitive examinations for these title- , will be held Sep tember 1G. Detailed announcements con- cerning these positions may be ex- amined in this office during reg- ular business hours. INSURANCE : A veteran in- sured under any of the govern- ment life insurance plans may change his beneficiary or the method of paying his beneficiary at any time without the know- ledge or consent of the benefici- ary. This applies to both the U.S. Government Life Insurance which was issued fi'om World War I un- til October 1940, and to National Service Life Insurance which has been issued from October 1940 to date. LOANS: Public Law 87-84 , ap- proved Jul y G , extends the vete- rans ' guranteed loan program and the direct home loan program. It also provides additional funds in the amount of $1 , 200 , 000,000 over the next six years for the direct home loan program. The extension pertain. -, to World War II veterans with service be- tween September K> , 1910 and July 25 , 1947 , and veterans of the Korean conflict with seivice be- tween June 27 , 1950 and Janu- ary 31 , 1955. This new law did not extend benefits to veterans who entered the service on or af- ter February 1 , 1955. The law only extended the deadline for WW II and Korean conflict vete- rans who were already eligible for G I loan benefits. The exten- sion of the deadline includes farm and business loans as well as home loans. The new law provides that a veteran ' s eligibility period for a G I loan will be 10 years from the date of his last discharge from his last period of wartime service plus an additional year of eligibility for each three months of active war time service. The final date for G I loans for WW II veterans has been changed from July 25 , 19G2 to Jul y 25 , 19(57. The final date for Korean veterans has been changed from January '11 , 1965 to January 31 , 1975. The new law also raises to $15 , 000 the maximum amount an eligible veteran may borrow un- der the direct loan program. Questions about the rights and benefits of veterans , servicemen , or their dependents may be sub- mitted for individual attention to the NYS Division of Veterans ' Af- fairs or the Suffolk County Vete- rans ' Service Agency at 21 Third Avenue , Bay Shore , 44 Elm Street Huntington , and the County Cen- ter , Riverhead. Lesson in English By W. L. Gordon WORD STUDY \Use a word three times and it is yours. \ Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one w r ord each day. Words for this lesson: RUCK (noun); the undistin- guished multitude; the crowd of ordinary persons or things. \Am- bitious \ young people are constant- ly struggling to rise above the ruck of mankind. \ FERjVASUVE ; spir e a ding - through; every part ; permeating. \Her personality was pervasive. \ LIMBO ; a p lace of confinement , or a place or condition of neglect or oblivion. \We can onl y pray that some day war will be relegat- ed to the limbo of things forgot- ten. \ LOQUACIOUS; given to talk- ing; garrulous. \Most persons avoid; her because she is so loqua- cious. EXPLETIVE; something added merely as a filling, as an extra word , phrase , or syllable ; also , an oath or exclamation. \He turned to fling an unprintable exp leti- ve over his soulder. \ DOCUMENTARY ; contained or certified in writing. \They pro- duced documentary evidence. \ INCESSANT; continuing with- out interruption ; unceasing. \The farmers could not work because of incessant rains. \ IDOUR; inflexible; stern ; severe; sour or sullen in aspect. (Pro- nounce to rhyme with \ poor \). \A dour expression appeared on his face when I asked my ques- tion. \ GENERIC; as a genus; desig- nating a group type; general. (Accent second sy llable). \The ge- neric term used by the speaker was unfamiliar to most of us. \ PROTRACT ; to draw out or lengthen in time. \Wh y should he protract the argument?\ LENITIVE ; having the quality of softening or mitigating. \Time is one of the most effectual leni- tives in suffering. \ RECENT OBITUARIES MAT W. SAMPLE 74 , of At- lantic Aw me , East Moriches , gen- eral manager of Anaconda Cop- per Company ' s Chuquicamata Cop- per Mine in Chile until his re- tirement in 1948 , died August ij at Central Suffolk Hospital. M'r. Sample received his B. E. degree from the State University of Iowa in 1909 , and in 1913 his civil engineering degree. He was associated with the Great North- ern Railroad in 1909 until 1911 , after which he went to Bolivia as a railroad construction engineer until 1915. He then joined the Chile Exploration Company, a sub- sidiary of Anaconda Copper Com- pany, and became general manage r of the Chuquicamata Mine. Mr. Sample was a member of the American Society of Civil En- gineers , the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petrol- eum Engineers , Inc., and the Min- ing and Metallurgical Society of America. Surviving are his wife , Mrs . Marie Sample; a son , William Boynton of Garrison; a daughter , Mrs. Mary Anne Boynton Ca^silly of Owensboro , Ky.; two brothers , Delmer and Can oil of Iov\ a Cit y Ind.; a sister , Mrs. Alta Kettle- well of Pasadena. Calif.; four grandchildren and two great grand- children. Funeral services were held at 2 p. m. August 8 at the Moriches Funeral Home , the Rev. Robert Lemmermann officiating. Inter- ment followed in the famil y p lot at Mt. Pleasant Cemetery, East Moriches. MRS. LOUISE BUSSING , GO of Woodland Avenue , Holtsville died Friday at the Ramor Nursinu Home , Patchogue. Born in the Bronx , she had lived in Holtsville for 34 years. She is survived by her husband , George of Holtsville; a daughter , Mrs. Louise Vautrin , also of Holts- ville; two brothers , Herman and William Dhonau , both of Xe.v York City ; a sister , Mrs . Henri- etta Victorin of New Jersey ; and two grandchildren. Services weie held at 2 p. m. Monday at the Ruland Funeral Home , Patchogue , the R< v. John McLoughlin , pastor of the Far- mingville-Holtsville Congn gation- al Ciiurch , officiating. Interment was private. J O HN VO O RHEES LOTT , 61 , retired banker and builder , a member of one of the oldest Dutch families in Brooklyn , died last Thursday in his home at 50 South Gillette Avenue , Bayport. Born in Brooklyn , Mr. Lott graduated from Pol ytechnic Pre- paratory School , wh^re he rasked as one of its all-time outstanding athletes , excelling in baseball , football and hockey. He was a descendant of Pieter ^Lott , one of the original Dutch settler^ , coming to this country in 1G52. He was the last one born in the famous Lott homestead in Flatlands , which still stands. He ' < was a member of the St. Nicholas and Holland Societies. M' r. Lott leaves his wife , Cath- erine; a daughter , Catherine, and a sister , Cornelia. Funeral services were conducted at the Flatlands Dutch Reformed Church Saturday, with interment following at Greenwood Cemetery . MRS. LILLIAN HA USER , 77 , of Long Island Avenue , West Yap hank , died unexpectedly Aug- ust 2 at Southbridge , Mass. while on a vacation tri p. Born in New York City, she was a resident here for 13 years. She is survived b y a daughter , Mrs. Frederic Van Dervoort of West Yap hank and two grand- children. Funeral services were held at 10 a. m. Monday at Chiist Ep is- copal Church , Bellport , the Rev. Ala n Men ill officiating. Interment followed at Greenwood Cemetery, Brooklyn. Funeral arrangements were made by Robertaccio Funeral Home. MRS. ANNA MARIA WOLLER , 81 , of 53G East Eighty-ninth Street , New York City, diet Aug- ust 1 at her home after an exten- ded illness. She visited frequently in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Shepstead of Gulldi p Road , Ridge. Born in Lichtenfels , Bavaria , Germany , she came to the United States in 1893 , settled <n Brook- lyn and mo\ed to the Yorkville section of Manhattan after her marriage in Germany to the late Karl Woller of Stralsund , Ger- man v. Mrs. Woller was a communicant of St Jo-ep h\ R. C. ('lur ch in .Manhattan and was a member of the Third Order of St. Fr.ncis . Surviving are a daughter , Mi-s Elizabeth M. Woller of X« w Yoik City ; a manddaughtei , Mrs. Anna Maiia Shepstead , and -even great- grandchildren. Uer family was with her at the time of her death. A r \quiem high ma-s was held August 4 at St. Joseph' - church. A rosary service was he Id August 3 at a ' New York City funeral home. Interment was in St. Char- les Cemetery in Farmingdale. MRS. MARIE PLUME , G4. died Jul y 23 in her home on Pleasure Avenue. Ronkonkoma , after a long illness. Born in Germany, Mrs. Plume moved to Ronkonkoma with her family from South Ozone Park in 1937. , , She is survived by her husband Clinton; three sons , Clinton , Jr., Roy and Bertram , all of Ronkon- koma; two daughters , Mrs. Marie Schuhle and Mrs. Lucille Car- michael , both of Ronkonkoma , and 23 grandchildren. Funeral services were held at 1 p. m. August 1 at the Joseph A. Weber Funeral Home , Haw- kins Avenue , Lake Ronkonkoma. with the Rev. William Gotwald of the Holy Cross Lutheran Church of Lake Ronkonkoma officiating. Interment followed in Washington Memorial Park , Coram. I For Greater Savings I Buy Direct From the Manufacturer I i rSSSSS^ • STORM WINDOWS and DOORS B Wf4 r/i sna • JALOUSIES m V ENETIAN BLINDS I ft/ * llSllffl 9 SHAI ) Ks I t ilfil GR 5 ~ 0020 BA 8 ' 1807 M SC0NZ0 & SONS I 457 EAST MAIN STREET PATCHOGUE The North Patchogue Civic As- | - i Kiation wi l l - .pon-or a flee band t oncei t unni b y the Noith Pat- i hos 'ue File Depat tment Band at S p. m. Aumist 20 at Hallock l' .uk P..u mn A\ c nuo and R.ch mend \\cnue ; n Not h P atchogue I he b and, conducted b y Euuen. ' I' 'I' M \ . \ill p ' .i\ .i \ , ined progiam liihid.n u maivhe. . ovi i tutes , an i some light music in the popular vein. Among the selections to be given will be the \Klaxon Mai eh , \ \Champ ion of Champions , \ \Ar- gonaut Overture \ and se\eral numbers from Glenn Osser ' s \Sing Along \ collections . The afternoon of August 20 , the association will have a p icnic at Hallock Park. Per-oris are reques- ted to brinu their own food. Free soda pop wi l l be pi ovided for the (hildren. There will be g lines and piiz< s . All members and resident ol X'oitn Pafchouue are invited. An Advance specialty! Wedding im itations w hose perfection in printing, design and paper qual- ity cannot fail to please the pocket book. —Adv. Nortli Patchogue Band Concert Is On Aurast 20 Dull moments end when you get your hands on The Patchogue Ad- vance news and advertisements , fresh from the printing press. —Adv. May M. Morris of Mastic Beach , who died' April 21 , left an estate valued at $5, 000 in real property and at less than $10 , 000 in per- sonal property. The will of the decedent , offered for probate , dis- poses of the property as follows: Jeanne Patricia Mitchell , niece , re- ceives the sum of $1 , 003; John J Mitchell , nephew , of East Islip, $1 , 000; Adelaide M. Nagle , friend , of Mhstic Beach , $1 ,000. The re mainder of the estate is bequeath- ed to Iren- Mori is Duncan , thj testator ' s sister-in-law. The will of Walter D. Jacque s of Lake Grove , who died April 12 , disposes of real property valued at about $3 , 000 and of personalty valued at about $1 , 500. Except fo ' i certain gifts , amounting to $900. the residue of the estate is shared b y Elizabeth H. Markert , foster daughter , her husband Herbert Markert. and their children Rus- sell H. and Roger D. Markert , all of Centereach. Sarah Speed , who died June 15. a resident of Blue Point , bequeath- ed her estate valued at $10,000 in real property to her daughter , Beatrice Farrell of South Yar- mouth , Mass. The will of James Wilson Young of Bayport , who died June 6 , be- queaths an estate valued at $100 , - 000 in both real and pergonal property entirely to his widow , Marjorie C. Young. Alexander Glencairn Acheson , a resident of Setauket at the time of his death June 5 , left an es- tate valued at about $14,000 in personal property to his widow , Marion Becker Acheson. The will of Karolin Buchler of Ocean Avenue , Ronkonkoma , dis- poses of personal property valued at about $22 , 000 and of real pro- perty of less than $10 , 000. The testatrix , who died June 13 , left hei entir\ estate to her husband and executor , Joseph K. Buchler. Letters of Administration A pp lication has been made foi letters of administration on the estates of the following: Barbara Mernak ol ' SayviUe. who died September 5. 10(!0; value pf estate , about $10 000 in real property; Frank C. Mernak , son 50 Manton Street , Sayville , peti- tioner. Estates '6 , 196 ; Highest Weekly Payoff Play POST POSITION in the New York Mirror PET TIT FUNERAL HOME JSjElJl Thia Home is Dedicated to Those Who in Eternal Sleep Repose Herein , and Is for the Use and Comfort of Rela- tives and Friends. A. C. PETTIT , Lie. M*r. 126 E. Main St. PatchoKBe Telephone GRover 5-00S2 I Robertaccio Funera l Home R. J. ROBERTACCIO Lie. Manager A Service That Satisfies • . • 85 MEDFORD AVENUE PATCHOGU E GRover 5-0135 C. W. Ruland Sons I INC. ! FUNERAL DIRECTORS j John R. Ruland , Lie. M ET . More than 100 Years of Dependable Service 500 NEW N ORTH OCEAN AVENUE, PATCHOGUE Phone GRover 5-0098 I WINNERS—Mr. and Mrs. Frank KampuUu of 3 Princeton Place, East Patchogue , were first week' s winners in Patchogue Electric Li ght Company ' s Hawaiian Living Exhibit. Field Adams of Patchogue Electric Light Company ' s sales department is show n presenting happy couple with guest ticket entitling them to evening ' s entertainment at Hawaiian Room in Hotel L -xington , New York City. Each week in August , PELCO w ill announce winners of free drawings.