{ title: 'The Long Island advance. (Patchogue, N.Y.) 1961-current, September 28, 1961, Page 6, Image 6', 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/sn95071025/1961-09-28/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-09-28/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-09-28/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071025/1961-09-28/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
Continued from page 1. this section until they were removed Friday. Buildings which lost windows were Two Guvs of lol We . -t Main Street , W. T * . Grant & Company of 60 East Main Street , Castro Convertible Corp., of 200 East Main Street , U. S. Army Reserve Training Center of 84 Division Avenue, all ol ' Patchogue; Patch- ogue Ford of oOl Medford Avenue, and I' ergament Paint and Wall pa- per of Sunrise Hig hway, both of North Patchogue , and Zeidler Mo- tors of Route 112 , Medford. Double Police Patrols \There was less damage than we expected. \ said Capt. Irving Week- of the Suffolk Count y Po- lice , Fifth Precinct. \We were set for more than we got. \ Police squads were doubled at 8 a. m, September 21 , he said, as the mid- niuht to 8 a. m. shift continued until noon and the 4 p. m. to midni ght crew came in at midday. Two cars each were present from the traffic division and the tacti- cal • -(iiiad and approximately 12 auxiliary policemen were called out to pro\ ide police protection of •11) ni\ii on each 12-hour shift . Cap t. Weeks said. From the Sixth Precinct Capt. Dominick Chiuchiolo reported that there were a \lot of boats broken :n Port Jefferson marina and Se- lauket Harbor as tides ran about two feet above normal. \ He said he also doubled his police squads, used auxiliary police and received assistance from the tactical squad and traffic and marine divisions. \I have seen worse , \ Capt. Chiu- chiolo said. \Others hit hard and left. This storm stayed around longer. \ Power Cut Off By 10 a. m. Friday a spokes- man for Patchogue Electric Light Company reported that about four per cent or 1 , 100 of 27 , 000 buildings were .still without pow- er and b y 8 p. m. Friday power had been restored througout the PELCO area. The spokesman said power went oif between 5 and 6 a. m. September 21 in Patchogue , About 11 a. m. the same day, he said, a large tree fell across a 2o , 000-volt transmission line just ci'st of Bellport and power ceased from Bell port to Eastport and inland to Manorville and Cal- verton. PELCO' s service area cov- ers approximately 240 square mi- les. Throughout Suffolk 155.000 ho- mes were reported to have been without electricity at one time as PELCO and Long Island Lighting crew s sought to bring service hack to normal. To increase PELCO' s emergen- cv force two crews were sent from NY State Gas and Electric Company, three from Niagara Mo- hawk Corp., two from Pett y & Worrad , Inc.. electrical contract- ors , of Medford , and one from Con- necticut. There were 80 men in the field at one time , the spokes- man said , in addition to clerical and fiscal employes who worked extended shifts. In Patchogue alone police recei- ved reports of wires being down on East Main Street , Academy Street , Terry Street and River Avenue. The wooden fence next to 15 East Main Street was blown down on the vacant lot and struck an unidentified boy. About 5 a. m. a chain-link fence was blown down on the south side of the Patchogue swimming pool. At 6 a. m. last Thursday the light truck of the Patchogue Fire Department was used to provide power for the alarm and lighting system at the Lake Street tire- house. The truck was used until 2:25 September 21 when power was restored. Winds set off a fire alarm system at 4:56 a. m. last Thursday in a house at 21 Clif- ton Drive , East Patchogue. Both the Patchogue and North Patchogue Fire Departments res- ponded to a fire which started at a store at 423 East Main Street , Patchogue. when hot wires fell on the roof about (5:45 a. m. Septem- ber 21. The fire was quickl y ex- tinguished. Patchogue Superintendent of Public Works John Belzak report- ed that three men were hired to assist in the cleanup since three of his force were on vacation when the hurricane struck. He said an oak tree fell across a telephone line at the southeast corner of North Ocean Avenue and Cedar Grove Street. Also , a large tree came down in front of the home of Mrs. John J. Roe on East Main Street. Mayor Robert T. Waldbauer an- nounced that the village will pick up branches and limlb s through to- morrow if they are left at the curb, but the service will not be provided beyond tomorrow. Telep hones Hit Beginning at 3 a. m. last Thurs- day and lasting from 18 to 20 hours 27 buildings of the New York Telephone Company were on emergency power , according to a spokesman of the firm in Patch- ogue. Mbst of the telep hone fail- ure was caused by cabl^ breaks, but high water damaged telephone facilities on South Fork in the Montauk vicinity. According to readings made at Brookhaven National Laboratory temperatures were moderate dur- ing the hurricane with a high and a low of 71.5 and 63 on September 20 and 69 and 62 on September 21. Damage to shore front homes , marinas , and boats may total up to $3 , 000 , 000. Hardest hit in Eastern Suffolk was the Barrier Beach along Westhampton Beach , Quogue and Hampton Bays. Dune Road was covered with water and sand , be- cause of the ocean pouring over the dunes into the inner bays. Several homes , Summer cottag- es and restaurants on Dune Road were badly damaged. Montauk was isolated for several hours as the ocean flowed over the dunes at Napeague , covering six miles of the Montauk Highway with up to four feet of water. Some erosion damage was caused along the north shore as beaches in River- head and Southold Town were slammed by the gale-force north- east winds that lasted for a full day. The highest recorded winds were 92 miles an hour at Montauk at 6:05 a. m. last Thursday. A total of 5.23 inches of rain fell between Wednesday night until Thursday evening. Crop damage may run to $500, - 000 , according to Count y Agricul- tural Extension Agent Horace Wells. Peach , apple, and fruit or- chards suffered the worst as tree ri pening fruit was knocked to the ground by the winds. While da- mage to Suffolk' s potato crop was slight , 25 per cent of the cauli- flower crop may be ruined , liter- ally torn apart by the gale. TO UK SUCCFSSFiri, — ADVKRTFSK Hurricane g^ijB unm .HUUlU * WANTADS ^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ] BARBARA MAXFIELD j | SCHOOL of DANCE j I Re-Op ening \ I OCTOBER 2 , 1961 j i All T ypes of Dancing f, | All A ge Groups ? 4 f i FOR REGISTRATION CALL I < GRover 5-1216 t < 115 JAYNE AVE. PATCHOGUE \\ Sr-w ^^.-T^^.^.^.^.^.^.^.^r^.^.^.T,,^.^.^.^.^.^.^.^.^.^.^.^.^-^-^.^^.^.^.^.^^.^.^.^.^.^^^.-, Harbor Plan Hit Continued from page 1 , this section Bloom , president of the Brook- haven Taxpayers ' Association , ac- cused Mr. Stout of alleged \double talk , insincerity and callous in- difference to the taxpayers ' views. \ Mr. Bloom argued that ¦'No opportunity was given to the residents of Brookhaven Town to make suggestions covering the proposed development , \ but Mr. Stout said this was not true and that suggestions were accep table from the residents. Other persons said a condemna- tion proceeding would not be jus- tified until more extensive plans have been made. However , the town board wishes to be sure 1o have the land before making fur- ther p lans. Mr . Stout said plan. - would be aired and discussed by the Planning Board . He said , \Cur p lan represents p lanning and de- velopment of the whole harbor . \ The map of the area which i> being used is identical with the one prepared for the count y, when the county shelved its p lans for Mt. Sinai Harbor acquisition earl- ier this year. Not evi ryone present was op- posed. \1 want to commend the board , \ one man said, \fo r think- ing of something constructive , rather than destructive. \ Eng lishman Continued from page 1 , this section When he applied for an exchange teacher position , his app lication was accepted in an unusually short three weeks. After a month of formalities , he was on his way to America. One of Mr. Sharp ' s interests , sports , is being utilized at the high school ; he is helping train a soccer team. He also enjoys singing in choral groups works , such as \Oklahoma. \ A widely traveled man , he has seen much of Europe , but remem- bers above all the Soviet Union. Mr . Sharp says that he needed only \ a visa and a guide \ and that it was comparativel y easy to travel through. \I have already relized that people are not really very different throughout the world , \ he reflected. Some comparisons between the English way of living and ours are that refrigerators are not as much ii necessity as they are here because of the cooler climate. Yet , Mr. Sharp is p leasantly sur- prised by our numerous iced drinks. \If you had a Coca-cola in England , it would probably be warm—unbearably warm , \ he add- ed. Also , most English peop le have never even heard of an air conditioner. He remarked that our houses have a great variety, and each is \ rather different. \ As for culinary differences , Mr. Sharp finds that we mix sweet and savory foods more often than the English , and that we have more salads. In his opinion , the typ ical English dinner would con- sist of roast beef , Yorkshire pud- ding, potatoes , vegetables , Brussels sprouts and pie. Tea time is con- sidered a regular meal and is us- ually from 4 to 5 p. m. What is called \high tea \ would be around 5 p. m. or 6 and is ac- companied by cold meat and sal- ads. For the Englishman , the main meal is in the middle of the clay, around our lunch time , and is call- ed dinner. It is followed by tea and a light snack befoie retiring. The English system of educa- tion is more complex than the American. From five years to 11 , a child goes to elementary school. At its completion , he takes his \11-f \ Exam. If he is among the 25 to 30 per cent who pass the exam , he goes on the \ grammar school\ , or secondary school. The course is mostly academic , with woodworking and home economics , as in our system. In the main , they are geared towards training the child for entrance into a un- iversity. Most of them are not co- educational (Mr. Sharp ' s was). At 1(5 the student is again ex- amined and takes the \General Certificate of Education \ or GCE Exam. It is divided into two parts , the \ ordinary \ level and the ad- vanced level. About six to eight subjects are studied for it. The average person will pass five of those subjects. Those who don 't have enough passes will leave. The exam does help these in get- ting jobs in Civil Srvice or ap- prenticing at a trade . Those who are capable of con- tinuing their studies at a univer- sity are called the \VI Form \ . These students are not supposed to be disciplined like others , but help the teachers in watching the younger children. The purpose is to give them a sense of respon- sibility. This training lasts two or three years. Then they take the second part of the GCE Exam , the A level (advanced level ) to qualify for the university. They are tested on three or four sub- jects , to a much higher standard of accuracy. University studies of three years earn the student a B.A. or a B.S. The 70 per cent or so who do not go to grammar school attend what is called \Secondary Mod- ern Schools \ . If a boy who did not pass his \11+ \ shows signs of being more intelligent , he can be put into grammar school. In the Secondary Modern Schools they continue with academic sub- jects , but devote more time to \ vo- cational\ subjects. There is a glimpse of how one Englishman sees the English. Not knowing the Americans yet , he de- clines to make any criticisms. One person did make a remark about him , however. It was Mrs. Betje- miann , who answered the question: \What do you think of your new- boarder?\ , with this: ' \I think he ' s wonderful. \ Business will probabl y keep rig ht on being good for those who are aggressive , give good values , good services and advertise in The Advance. —Adv. Continued from page 1 , this section could be purchased , and building maintenance was reduced to that the school board considered was \below safe , long-term levels. \ Organizations favoring budget adoption were the Parent-Teacher Association Council of Central School District 4 , the Citizens Council and the N >rth Bellport Taxpayers Association. Opposing the budget was the Taxpayers Association of Central School District 4. At Monday ' s budget hearing Emery L. Van Horn , board pre- sident , gave a brief talk to about 150 persons present on the his- torical background of the district before , during and since centrali- zation. Board members were pre- sent to answer questions from the audience. Copies of the budget were distributed and the various categories described. Some com- munity members talked on various topics concerning the budget and educational program. Dist. 4 Budget Miii niMiiiiiiimmmimminmininiimiiimiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirvininiHuuui; RUMMAGE SALE I 5 = TUES. , WED., THUUS. | OCTOBER 3, 4 , 5 | 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. § j CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH I 95 East Main Street | I Patchogue , \. y. | nlllHHHlll IJIJ IIIHIII1llll»HII11l11IIHII)ll1»MIIIIMIII1IHIIHInnull1l1l1lllllllll, ^ n illllllllllllllllllllllltlll!ll!lllllllll!l!lll!llll!lll!lllllllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllllllllllllllllll!lllllh 1=3 H ^B DAHB I^B V DM BS BH B H BI ^^^BB* V^B D ^ H ^ D ^^. tfftBBY flMH^H9Hn QB DH HB HW . flBnfiB MfLmmmmW .^ D ^H^B D ^. BVBBflBBjMBHfl .^¦^ D ^B BW . BBHBBBDBfch. .^B DBDDI B^B D ^BBM^. D IB D BB D ^ B ^. HPASBflBBflB ^^^kA ^¦¦ami Hfl^^k. ^¦¦maMmnnanaMn .^^h ^^ =1 mr ^ Jm^mV F ES H ^^^V B ES M THBT^^^ B W. ^BWT ^^B B BB ^^H^ ^BBflA K B KM mm^^T ^^Bmm^ mW ^ tmmm^^^^M mmWm\* ^^BLmm. IS^^^^^BBV Am ^T ^^R ^H^Bj ^^^BBA. ^BB^^^^H^B L B I D W^^^^B Jmm^^^^K ^H B ^^^H ^S H A. ^yi^BP^H AmmW^ QU I • LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • MERCURY • COMET... 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Dick Zeidler knows it . the lovely model fr om Swezey s knows it , and YOU will too , as soon §, as you can get down for a test drive. There ' s nothing to compare with this ! THE , 'Y EK n 1 ! {V ^ ()ViEREY CONVERTIBLE is the big style leader of the popular price field I THE COMET S-22 is the slickest personal compact car on the road. Everyming about this sprightly I i \-\' ' • - f: \ ' d ' , d vim extra \alue. You tra\el in real style—with the go power of a mighty i j beaut y marks it deluxe—from biicket type fron t s.ats to integrated rear grille and tail light styl- I H \ -S at voi r command and the satin smoothness of Mercury Monterey ' s exclusive cushion-link ' — = ing. Extensive insulation lowers sound level. Choice of thirteen colors. I g ride to cradle \ OLI in luxury. ¦ | ROUTE 112 , MEDFORD FASHIONS COURTESY OF SWEZ EY & NEWINS Telep hone : GRover 5-2900 | r ,iilllll ll lll ll lill lllll lll l lll l llllll ll 1ll l ll l lllillllM i iiiiiiiiiiiiimniiiiiiiii [iiiiiiiiiii[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiTnniiii imiimnnWHUii i iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii ^ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii IIIHIIHIIHII iiiiiHiiiiiHiiiHiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiii mini HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII iiiiiiiiliiiiRttiifliflitiflifliliiiiiiitoiiiW mini iiiiiiiiiiimiinnnnnimin.,.J . iiiiiiiii i mimi iiiiiiiiiiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiniiiiniiiiini iiiimiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii niiiiiiimiiiiimii niiiiiinimnniniiiiiiiig WHAT ARE YOU j I Looking For In A Home I TREES ? WATER? ( I We have them BOTH at. . . ! CO LONIA L L\ \I I I In Bellport , L. I. 1 ! C'Mininl Lane Homes at Bellport is a way of life. A sportsman ' s | E paiadi-e . it ol 'fd-s golf, fishing, boating, swimming, beaches , | 1 all within 5 minutes drive from your home. Colonial Lane | I Ilcim * i- not dev elopment but rather a distinct community that | I ofters the unusual to the discriminating buyer. | • . \ > Models to choose from on » All Jilectnc Kitchen tea- | M ) \I. ) U plots Turing Hotpoint Kange and | 1 • 3 to 1 Bedroom Designs Wall Oven 1 1 9 Dounie-coi.rse C edar and • Custom-made Fruitwood | C lapboard Exterior Cabinets | I • 1 or 2 Ceramic Tile Bath- • City Water | I rooms • Excellent School System | I i I c SI i# z8- *S® » ' » y to 3u § tro m V JL G «^dSl fcJ' ^F years mortgages | I COLONIAL HOMES IN BELLPORT , L. I. | Opposite Entrance to Heliport Golf Course i I CALL: ATLANTIC 6-9S65 1 F ^iiiiiiiiiiii uiiiin iiuiiiiiiii iimiii»ii mium niuuimiiiiiiiiii» ;nn[iiimiLim nnmu muii i niim dnniiimiim uiimiiiiin iiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniir' STRONG WIND — Hurricane velocity winds knocked down brick wall rising above roof level at Floyd Bennett store September 21. No one was injured by falling brick and store remained open. Wall was 16 bricks high and destroyed area ex- tended for approximately 300 feet on Patchogue building. —Maple Leaf Photo Service