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Image provided by: Guilderland Public Library
THE ENTERPR I8E, ALTA^N1f^%yf^pAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1957 Studler - Bacon Miss Alice Jane Bacon, daughter of M »;i an £ M ^L John w - Bacon « 15 s Lagle St., Albany, and Richard Ed- ward Studler, son of Mrs. Albin A. »tudler, 64 Wellington Kd„ ueimar, and the late Mr. Studler, were mar- ried Saturday in the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. The Rt Rev. Msgr. John Gorman penormea the ceremony which was followed by a reception in the Polish Community Center. The bride, given in marriage by her father, was attired in a princess style gown of Alencon lace and p.-au de soie having a full skirt with cotillion train. Her three-tier silk illusion veil was attached to a match- ing lace shell cap trimmed with seed pearls. She wore matching lace mitts and carried a prayer book with ' white orchid. Miss Janet Bacon, maid of honor for her sister, wore a bouffant gown of fuchsia chiffon,over taffeta with matching coronet of velvet leaves. Mrs. Roderick Stanfield, the bride- groom's sister, was bridesmaid and wore moonlight blue chiffon and taf- feta with matching coronet of velvet leaves. They carried cascade bou- quets of gold fugi chrysanthemums. Albin A. Studler, Jr., was best man for his brother. Ushers were Roderick Stanfield, William Weber and George Kass. Mr. and Mrs. Studler left on a southern motor trip, the bride wear- ing an avocado knit suit with brown feather hat. They will live in Cen- ter Lane, Glenmoni. The bride is a graduate of Cathed- ral Academy and is -with the Menands office of the Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation. The bridegroom is a grauuate of Bethlehem Central High school and Albany Business College and has served with the Merchant Marine and in the Air Force. He is associated with Studler Sales & Service, Delmar. Subscribe to the Altamont Enter- prise — $3.00 per year. President's Thanksgiving Day Proclamation HERE IS THE TEXT OF PRESIDENT EISENHOWER'S THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION: THANKSGIVING DAY, 1957 By the President of the United States of America A PROCLAMATION At the autumnal season of the year our hearts move us to follow the wise and reverent custom, inaugurated by our Pilgrim fathers more than three centuries ago, of setting aside one special day for expressions of gratitude to a merciful Providence for the blessings bestowed upon us. It behooves us to dwell upon the deep religious convictions of those who formed our nation out of a wilderness, and to recall that our leaders throughout the succeeding generations have relied upon almighty God for vision and strength of purpose. _____ As a nation we have prospered; we are enjoying the fruit of our land and the product of our toil; we are making progress in our efforts to translate our national\ ideals into living realities; and we are at peace with the world, working toward that day when the benefits of freedom and justice shall be secured for all mankind. For such blessings let us be devoutly thankful, and at the same time let us be sensitive and responsive to the obligations which such great mer- cies entail. Now, therefore, I, Dwight D. Eisenhower, President of the United States of America, having in mind the joint resolution of Congress ap- proved Dec. 26, 1941, which designates the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day, do hereby call upon our people to observe Thurs- day, Nov. 28, 1957, as a day of national thanksgiving. On that day let all of us, in accordance with our hallowed custom, foregather in our re- spective places of worship or in our homes and offer up prayers of thanks for our manifold blessings. Let the happiness which stems from fam- ily reunions on Thanksgiving Day be tempered with compassion and in- spired by an active concern for those less fortunate in our own country and in other lands; and let us ask God's continuing help and guidance in our conduct, both as individuals and as a nation. PAGE THREE AJS^M^SSS^ A special V^mT*=rSJ ervice 1S an^u^edby^|«#«stian Sci- ence society feSfgrii, 1 \- Thanks- giving Day. MzJS^ will be held in UasmW 1$ Kenwood Ave. aiid A4aitffi#'|elrnar. Open, to ihelMW; ^.service will include \ volu S_K no, ? ies of gratitude toy -<&SSg|*tentitts for God's goodness M& ln spiritual growth, physical-'i^ms, and other blessings. 'k^Wu. a A lesson-serniofcWthe day en- titled 'Thankfgl^g.^11 be read in all Chr4stl4n ! ;j|Stc? churches. Consisting *>f *%$&$.. from the Bible and froro-$M$TOan Science textbook, \S«f M*f*alth with Key to the SfW' by Mary Baker Eddy, th.Mf ^rmon will emphasize the injp^ante 0 f express- ing gratitude toJ3ofl Wdeeds as well as in speech. • ;.V The service is'0]>?n \ty th e genera i public and \ocai£^Mi members have invited ever^e^attend. 'tfAugust, Septem!p£atf October have proved to be the 3$?*active months for hurricanes, aworapjg to records compiled by the.slav$ Hurricane Hunters. Since JgF'vapproximately 173 have becurrepj5«» «ptember, 143 in August, and iSsjin °**er. July, ovember and June?are nat in f™>„,, Q „_ cy in that order; Delmar Reformed Church Rev. LeRoy C. Brandt, minister. Sunday, November 24th: 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 10 a. m. Arnold Bible class. 11 a. m. Morning worship. Ser- mon, \The Business of Being a Christian.\ Thanksgiving community service on Thursday at 10 a. m. in the Delmar Methodist churoh. Dr. Brandt will preach on \The Concerns of Thanks- giving.\ No junior choir rehearsal next Fri- day. Sunday, Dec. 1—\Sunday Night at Church.\ 5:30-6:30 p. m. Special moving pic- tures for juniors in the Bennett par- lors; business and discussion for the Youth Fellowship in activities room; picture and discussion on \Under- standing Personality\ led by Dr. Hudson Bates for adults. 6:30-7 p. m. Worship for ail in the sanctuary. 7-8 p. m. Refreshments and social hour in dining room. Nearly 600 Americans die each year in accidents involving bicycles. Two-thirds are youngsters between the ages of 5 to 14. The truest greatness lies in being kind; the truest wisdom in a happy mind. — Ella Wheeler. Wilcox, 4-H Leaders To Meet The November meeting of the Al- bany County 4-H Leaders association will be held Tuesday, Nov. 26. at 7:30 p. m. in the new Glenmont school located on Route 9-W, between Bethlehem Center and the Thruway underpass. Professor L. W. Knapp of Cornell will introduce the new project, \Fire Control,\ to the agricultural leaders. Homemaking leaders will learn un- usual and interesting ways to wrap gifts. The program committee for 1958 will also give its report. The Roll'n Pin 4-H Club will serve dessert at 7:30 ,p. m. Club Plans Dinner The Mr, and Mrs. Club of the Del- mar Methodist church will have a spaghetti dinner at 7 o'clock tonight in the church hall. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morton and their committee are in charge of preparations and Mrs. Morton is handling reservations. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tisdale, en- tertainment chairmen, have arranged for a talk, illustrated by color slides on a trip to Alaska. The Tennessee Valley Authority has reported that its coal stockpile at the end of the latest fiscal year, June 30, 1956, was 3.1 millions tons or suffici- ent coal to operate for 62 days. — AVAILABLE — MATT MURPHY'S MUSIC MEN Specializing 1 in WEDDING AND BANQUET MUSIC 10 DARTMOUTH ST. ALBANY, N. Y. Phone 3-1096 Bonds & Insurance Old Line or Mutual - Automobile and Fire CLYDE L. BALL BERNE, N. Y. ' Tel. West Berne 2001 \Comfort li Our Butinew GIVE MORE COMFORT TO PROBLEM FEET 0 for Aeh»i ft Strain INCLUSIVELY AT SHOE SPECIALIST Opm Thursday Till t P.M. Dally 9 A.M. t* I P.M. MIMBER of PARK and SHOP SI Chapel St. — Opp. Tan lyck ALBANY, N. Y. Visit Your Foot Doctor, Plan Christmas Project The Business and Professional Wo- men's Group of Tawasentha Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolu- tion, met recently at the home of Mrs. Raymond E. Foskett, 339 State St., Albany. Mrs. Fred A. Steinke, chairman, presided. Mrs. Max J. Schnurr, chapter regent, reported on chapter activities. The Christmas project of the group is sending gifts to a student at the DAR-sponsored Tamassee school in South Carolina. The group also voted to continue the clothing scholarship for a student at the school. Mrs. Consuelo S. Graham and Mrs. William B. O'Brien were guests at the meeting. Others present were Mesdames Harold C. Cliandler, Reyn- old Doerer, Frederick C. Elze, Wal- lace D. MacBride, Arthur M. Main, Daniel J. McDermott, George J. Righter, George' J. Roth and Miss Ruth G. McClelland and Miss Fran- ces M. Smith. Salute to WOKO A special salute to Albany's \Easy Listening\ station, WOKO, will -be broadcast from the Netherlands on Sunday, Nov. 24, at 2 p. m. \A Garland of Music,\ featuring the iRoya'1-.Marina \Band IHollandjs Dolf Vah- \der Linden Orchestra; Dutch music hall stars and a children's chorus from the city of Yeyden will be dedicated to station WOKO and its listeners. The song by the school children of Leyden will be specifically a salute to the. school children of New York's Amsterdam, Rensselaer, Voorhees- ville, Watervliet and other communi- ties with Dutch origin located with- in the station's listing area. In cooperation with WOKO, this pro- gram is produced and narrated by Alan Rowe, as a salute to WOKO's listeners from the peiople of Holland. 'Christmas City' To Debut Tomorrow At Latham One of the largest and most color- ful Christmas ceremonies ever staged in the Tri-City area will take place at the new Latham Corners Shopping Center Saturday at 7 p. m. The center will be festooned with $25,000 worth of Christmas decora- tions for the opening of the holiday season. More than 2,000 feet of gay red, green and silver wreaths will be strung from the J. C. Penney store at the north end of the center to the Grand Union supermarket at the south end. Scores of huge red bells, each one illuminated, will be hung from the canopies over the store fronts, while on the leading edges of the roof tops there will he illuminated candles, each five feet in height. Five of the seven 70-foot parking light towers will be strung with red, green and silver garlands, to form huge \trees.\ The footlights at the top of each tower will illuminate these decorations. On the roof of the Boston Store there will be a 30-foot tableaux of a Christmas scene, with life sized fig- ures and a massive cathedral \win- 3ow\ before which the figures will be grouped. High point of the ceremonies on Saturday evening will be the formal christening of the center as \Christ- mas City.\ This portion of the event will be followed toy the ceremonial lighting of a 40-foot Christmas tree, located at the north end of the park- ing lot that parallels Route 9. The lighting of the tree will be fol- lowed by a program of Christmas carols sung by a combined 100-voice choir, consisting of employees of the Latham Corners Shopping Center and members of choirs who live in La- tham. The public will participate in the carol singing. George Fisher, general manager of the center, and the merchants asso- ciation, have extended an invitation to the residents of the area. to at- tend this formal opening of \Christ- mas City\ and participate in the ceremonies. Gansevoort Chapter, DAR Gansevoort Chapter, D. A. R., cele- brated its 60th anniversary and guest day tea at the Ten Broeck Mansion Nov. 18. Many regents from neigh- boring chapters were present, as well as representatives from Daughters of 1812, Mayflower society, New England Women and Pine Hills Fortnightly club. Following .the welcome given by Mrs. Earle F. Romer, regent, the official guests were introduced. Mrs Thurman C. Warren, New York state regent, was the guest speaker, also guest of the B. and P. W. group at a dinner meeting at the Wellington in the evening. Music was provided by the \Albanettes directed by Marie Gutta Franke. Hostesses were past regents, includ- ing Mesdames Lloyd L. Cheney, Al- fred A. Hall; Cornelius M. Edwards, George L. Nickerson, Louis W. Op- penheim, Edgar L. Potter and Ernest H. Perkins. Mrs, Hall was chair- man of the affair. Mrs. Averell Harriman, Mrs. Paul Taylor, chairman of the New York State Joint Legislative Committee on Preservation and Restoration of His- toric Sites; Miss Amy J. Walker national vice chairman of D. A R credentials, and Miss Lucie Van Den- burgh, past state treasurer, presided at the tea table. Official guests were Mesdames Eras- tus Corning II, Albert B. Corey, Thur- ™A Warren, gChappaqua; Frank B, Cuffv White Plains; B. Weslev Middleburgh; Edward J. Reiliy, Garden City; Kenneth G. Maybe, Syracuse- Otto Welch, Wellsvillef J. Glef Sta* ers, Scotia- Edward Holloway, Scars- dale; Donald B. Adams, national vice president general; Miss Edith Abbott, Yonkers; Elsie Failing, Fort Plain and Page Schwarzwelder,. national honorary treasurer. Mrs. Theron C Hoyt read the president general's an- niversary message. Many- presents were donated bv chapter members (under a beautiful • Christmas tree in the hall of the man- sipn) to be distributed amting the southern mountain pupils attending Tammassee D. A. R. School, South Carolina. He who has conquered doubt ahd fear has conquered failure. — James Allen, thousands of our customers have extra money for Christmas shopping Over 15,000 of our customers throughout Northeastern New York will shortly receive their Christmas Fund checks totaling $1,600,000. If you were not a member of this year's club, why not plan now to share in our 1958 Christmas Fund? You'll, be surprised how your account will grow week by week and how wonderful it will be to receive i*is money just priof to Thanksgiving, next year. ' For Christmas cheer next year open your Christmas Fund now! NATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY mar ALTAMONT Elsmere Mehibtr F«d«rol Deposit ln«uranc» Corporo»io« 23 Offices Serving Northeastern New York Cobleskill •***