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Image provided by: East Hampton Library
EIGHT THE EAST HAMPTON STAR. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 27. 1938 ALL PRICES REDUCED somo models as much a t i cor \o i'0oT Now you can shift gears with the flick o f a finger— with only a fifth o f the effort formerly required— with your hand always safely close to the steering wheel! Simply touch Chevrolet’s Perfected Vacuum Gear-Shift— \the magic finger that shifts gears” — and a hidden mechanical servant called a \vacuum booster” supplies eighty per cent o f the shifting effort! Available on al models at slight extra cost. Performer, . . P o P t ' f e t e d In , , ST * -“Wf; Sali»lies • a s s EAST HAMPTON, N.Y Edwards Theatre Notes 'The'/////: MJUKBR^ \ r o o m s e r v ic e \ D a RING! . . . REVALING! . . . TRUE! THE GREATEST INSIE PICTURE OF HIDDEN LIVES EVR FILMED! \D A R K FAPTURE” Filmed and Recorded on theDenis-Roosevelt Belgian Congo Expdition THURS. TO SAT. NOV. 3-4-5 WALLACE MICKEY B E E R Y ROONEY IN “STABLEM ATES’ ’ A miracle o f production WORLD'S FAIR SPEAKER HERE The Cosmopolitan Club of East Hampton is sponsoring a talk to be given by Mrs. Rita Casey, who is publicity speaker for the W orld’s Fair. Mrs. Casey will speak in Guild Hall, on Wednesday, Novem ber 2, at 8 o’clock. Advertise in The Star. Howard Lee Koch VIOLIN INSTRUCTOR TEACHING IN EAST HAMPTON ON WEDNESDAYS Address c /o MRS. BEN JOHNSON E. H. 246-W. Mill Hill Lane For bargains read the classified ads in The Star. MATINEES MON. WED. 3:30 SAT. 2:30 EDWARDS TMEATRE-* i AST HAMPTON 4 4 & EVERY EVENING 7:00-9:00 and a cast o f Ian Ihoutandl DARRYL F. ZANUCK S E E Y O U R LO C A L FOR SALE COAL RANGES— Also large stock of furniture. Everything to fur nish a home. Very reasonable. John W. Nillsson, North Sea road, telephone Southampton 1434. tf. COAL RANGES— Heaters, sinks, tubs, furniture, glassware, linole um rugs, new and used, reason able. Wally Lee, Noyack Road at Trout Ponds, Sag Harbor. Phone Sag Harbor 51-M-l. 46-tf MUSCOVEY DUCKS—3% lbs. up. 25c lb. alive, 30c lb. dressed. Ap ply John Dayton, telephone East Hampton 530-R. 50-4 RUBBER S T A M P S — All kinds: Paid, date, address, collection, autograph signature, time, re ceived, self-inking, pencil top dating attachments, numbers, al phabet, pocket. Also stamp pads assorted colors and sizes; ticket punches, steel stamps; indelible, stamp holders, hand numbering machines, staplers, notary seals, stencils, etc. Reasonable prices. Star Press, Telephone East Hamp ton 477. 10-tf CORN STALKS— $6.00 per load in the field. C. C. Miller, Springs. 52-2 FOWL—30 White Leghorn fowl, 3 to 3M* lbs. each, 18c lb. alive; also a few smal,l fmllets at 50c each. E. L. Corwin, East Hampton. 1-1 FLORENCE OIL BURNER—Good as new, reasonable price, can be bought with kitchen stove or sep arate. Adam Thompson, tele phone East Hampton 952-J. 1-1 40 R. I. RED PULLETS—Hall Bros, stock. They are ready to start laying and the price is right. Er nest Dayton, Hardscrabble Farm. 1-1 POINTER—Black and white, 1 year old, Rosedale Bob breeding; also Winchester 12-guage automatic shotgun. Albert Hand, Wainscott. Telephone Bridgehampton 312-W. 1-1 FOR SALE (Continued) MISCELLANEOUS HOME BAKERY—Orders taken for cakes, pies, cookies, bread, salads, sandwiches, etc. Mrs. Charles Taylor, Newtown Lane. Telephone East Hampton 852. 33-tf NOTICE— All hunting, trapping, shooting and trespassing on the property of the East Hampton Gun Club is strictly forbidden under penalty of the law. This is exclu sive of members.—East Hampton Gun Club (Frank Johnson, Pres.) EAST HAMPTON STAR— Free for one year. With each order for wedding invitations or announce ments The East Hampton Star will be pleased to give FREE a year’s subscription to the young couple. Invitation samples at The Star, telephone East Hampton 477. 3-tf HELP WANTED GIRL— Or woman for general house work and care of small child. Sleep in. Inquire Mrs. E. Mun- roe Osborne, East Hampton. 1-1 Hall owe’en Party HUBERT’S IN N . BRIDGEHAMPTON SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29 New Five-Piece Orchestra Everybody Welcome — No Cover Charge — Souvenirs and Favors FOR RENT HOUSE— 5 rooms, furnished or un furnished; steam heat, hot water; garage. Call East Hampton 88. 49-tf BUNGALOW— On Sherrill Road; 6 rooms, hot water heat, fireplace; two-car garage. Frank Flynn, tele- phne East Hampton 152-W. 52-tf HOUSE)— 4 rooms and bath and gar age, on Pleasant Lane. Telephone Montauk Point 2338 or write Ben Pitts, Montauk. 1-1 SMALL 3-ROOM HOUSE—On Long Lane. Electric lights, toilet, garage, $15.00 per month. E. L. Corwin, East Hampton. 1-1 FOUND RING— Owner may have same by applying to Officer Richard Steele, East Hampton Police Department. 1-1 TRESPASS NOTICE NOTICE— Hunting, trapping, fishing or otherwise trespassing in any way on Gardiner’s Island is strict ly forbidden under penalty of the law. Winston Guest, Lessee. 1-tf CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank all our friends and neighbors, and especially members of the Bowling Clubs for their kindness and many ex pressions of sympathy during our recent bereavement. Mrs. Fran* Dragotta Pauline Dragotta Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dragotta LICENSE NOTICE Notice is hereby given that L i cense No. L-1471 has been issued to the undersigned to sell liquor and wine at retail under the Alcoholic Beverage Control law on the west side of Main Street, Village of East Hampton, County of Suffolk, for off-premises consumption. Village Green Wine & Liquor Store Addie B. Rose, Prop. East Hampton, N. Y. A 20th Cenhiry-Fo* Picture with TYR O N E LO R E T T A POWER-YOUNG A N N AB E L L A J. EDWARD BROMBERG • JOSEPH SCHIIDKRAUT HENRY STEPHENSON • SIDNEY BLACKMER MR. AND MRS. LEONARD EDWARDS AND FRED SCRIBNER The reason for the “Shaving off” of the famous Dominy mustache, that has been puzzling the populi for the past few weeks, was explained the other night, when Erastus broke down and confessed that it was be cause of the extreme pressure brought to bear by certain ladies of the village, who greatly objected to the presense of foliage on the Dom iny physiognomy. “Rat\ believes in giving everyone a break. For the past fifteen years he has been cater ing to the \For the mustache” group. Now it seems the “Agin the mus tache faction” have the upper hand. Backers of C. R. “ Bob” Bloomfield, who was competing with Ambrose Helier in the East Hampton “Un ruffled Hair Comb Derby,” for men only, were doomed to disappoint ment early yesterday morning when Bob, stepping across Main Street, met with disaster, as a gust of wind succeeded in disarraying his hair. Two members of the derby commit tee, witnessed the mishap and im mediately disqualified him. Again Ambrose is the “champ.” Both men have fought hard in this contest, and for months, the public has not witnessed a hair out of place on the heads of either man, until the fatal yesterday. Only once in the past five years .has there been the slightest suspicion that all was not well with the Helier Crown, and that was found to be a rumor started by a jealous aspirant to the champ ionship. Among the early morning gun ners enjoying the shooting off Na peague Beach last Sunday morning was former Congressman Lathrop Brown and his daughter, Mrs. Robt. Canfield. Reports from the shoot in dicate that the father and daughter syndicate, accounted for their share of the birds, downed. The black ducks over in Mecox Bay met defeat Monday morning. Over there at the lucky moment and hanging up a good record were Bill Rollins, Jack Sherman and Otto Mans. Seventeen birds were shot, but there seems to be a little dif ference in opinion of who shot how many. Added up, the total, taken from the individual reports of the participants, comes up to forty ducks. AJ1 agree, however, that there were only seventeen shot. Norris Hop ping, the Bridgehampton guide de luxe, ushered in the birds to the kill. Nothing so interests and awes the casual bystander, happening in at the Oaks Inn as the portrayal of Fred Blumenthal, restaurateur de luxe, firing the opening gun, at the inception of the wineing and dining, of a patron of heavy caliber. A mas ter in the correct preparation of a perfect dinner, he throws his heart and soul into the task, with all the fervor and intensity that usually ac SUN. TO TUES. OCT. 3Q-31-NOV. 1 WEDNESDAY (Matinee at 3:30) companies the first curtain of a Met ropolitan Opera star. Waiters stand at attention and at the word of the master leap into action, bearing steaming viands, ac companied by the proper wines, with all the rhythm of a swing theme. Nowhere on the Island is a patron accorded the fanfare while dining, usually reserved for visiting firemen, that he receives at the Oaks. Sell, buy, rent? — Classified Ads. LESTER MOTORS MRS. J. EDWARD GAY JR.. AND F. RAYMOND DOMINY — Photos by Lester Again More Quality AT SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCED PRICES X f i r B o d ies by Fish e r —irith The Sty le T h a t Stops E c e r u Eye! -Veir A e r o The Edwards Theatre presents the daffy Marx Brothers on Friday and Saturday, October 28-29. in \Room Service.\ their latest com edy hit. duction “Suez,” 20th-century-Fox’s entertainment achievement which comes to the Edwards on Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, October 30 and 31, and November 1. You’ll see cities and palaces built. You’ll see the Suez Canal repro duced. You’ll see the twisting, tor turing black simoon come roaring against man’s mightiest work. You’ll see the love of two women tearing the heart of a man destined to re make the world. You’ll see spec tacle and emotion the screen has never been able to capture before. “ Dark Rapture” plays at the Ed wards Theatre on Wednesday, No vember 2. The picture was made by Armand Denis, who produced “Goona Goona” and directed “Wild Cargo,” and his wife, Leila Roose velt. The famous Denis-Roosevelt expedition, which made a 42,000- mile overland trek from Belgium to the most secret and untrespassed regions of the African jungle, con stituted one of the most daring and amazing adventures of modern times. Under the trained direction al hand of Denis and with Frank Buck’s ace cameraman, Leroy Phe lan, behind the lens, the expedition brought back a breath-taking ac count of jungle life in the raw which is destined to hold theatre audiences. MR. AND MRS. BARNEY PANZER “Room Service,” a solid hour and a half of gala gags and sparkling comedy, plays at the Edwards Theatre on Friday and Saturday, Oc tober 28 and 29, featuring the Marx Brothers. “Room Service” has the Marx Brothers step into three prin cipal roles in the ready-made com edy and carry it to unprecedented uproarious heights. In the side-splitting plot, Groucho Marx, a theatrical producer without a cent, endeavors to maintain him self and his cast at a Broadway ho tel on credit while looking for a backer for his play. Through his brother-in-law, the hotel manager, he accomplishes this successfuly un til one of the hotel’s higher execu tives finds him owing $1,200. just as a backer appears on the Marxian horizon. With the added principal per formances of six members of the or iginal cast, the deft direction of Wil- lian A. Seitzer, Morris Ryskind’s superb scenario, and the handsome production by Pandro S. Berman, “Room Service” zooms across the screen as one of the most hilarious comedy smashes ever shown. It’s a real treat for the fans . . . a gen uine, honest-to-goodness “must-be- seen.” Startling and amazing is the pro- PERFECTED VACUUM GEAR-SHIFT g re a te s t d r iv in g a id e v e r d e v e lo p e d g iv in g s w if t e r , s a fe r, fin g e r - t ip g e a r - s h iftin g ! Stream S t y l i n a