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11 4., PAGE SIX « » THE LONG ISLAND TRAVELER - MATTITUCK WATCHMAN THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1940 THE LONG ISLAND TRAVELER MATTITUCK WATCHMAN The Long Island Traveler ..................................... Established 1871 Mattituck Watchman ............................................... Established 1826 Pt.mi,TBT»Rn IH U H S D A Y S AT 8 0 0 TH O L D PRBDBRIOK C HAWKINS. Owner and Editor WALTER B OAOEN. Ajisoclate Editor Dlsplny Advertising Rates on Application Entered u Scuono Class H>HMer at the Post Offlce at Southold. N Y. un* der the Act of Congress on Marok t, 1879. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1940 Editorials The Election Franklin D. Roosevelt has been elected as President for a third term. No matter what we think about a third term, he has been elected by a vote of the majority of the people. However, that does not mean that he has receivd a “mandate from the people.” And of course we expect, as promised, a square deal for everybody and a law against a third term or a fourth term for anyone else. Aside from that, let’s call it a day. But let us get promises before election on the statute books right after election, without delay. **Hallowe*en** Some discussions have been noted lately about the proper spell ing of “Hallowe’en.” Well, this is the correct spelling, but we are not so much concerned about how it is spelled, as what use .is made of it. A little fun accompanied by amusing but harmless pranks are to be forgiven, but when the day or rather the night is made the ex cuse for vandalism, it is time to call a halt. Naturally we expect an occasional specimen of the Chic Sales a rt to be overturned, or a few portable objects placed on the neighbors’ lawn, but we cannot con done wilfull and wanton destruction of property. Smashing of signs is an example. An artistic sign costs money. It’s destruction should be punished. It’s about time that vandalism in the name of fun should be stopped. : Several years ago steps were taken to prevent these things, but this year apparently things got out of hand. We trust that future Hallowe’ens will be c e le b rat^ in a spirit of real fun, rather than be made an occasion for destroying property. The damage this year was not wide spread, but it was enough. The perpetrators should in future be trained to refrain from damage, or their acts should be punished as an example to others. A Victory For Trtxdition The result of Tuesday’s general election in Suffolk County again was proof that the people are pleased when they have county officials who serve them well. They also had highly efficient legia* lative repreventatives and they decided to retain them in office The' overpowaring pluraUtiM rung up for the nominees was a vote of confidence which Republican laadera will not take lightly, and which will spur them on to atiU greatar achievamenta. Nationally the Republican Party and the various allied groups were not able to elfict W*ndell L. Willkie, but locally the voters registererd tiiemselves strongly against a ^ r d term for President Rooaevelt. The people were strongly against breaking tradition in this respect. They believed, and still do, that tradition should be i^iheld. Locally the people have known right along that the greatest good for the n e a test number is possible only through strong, determined leadership. Their vote pro> ^ that conviction. Tradition is not easy to break, although it seems that on Uie nation-wide scale where convictions are not so deeply rooted as in. Suffolk, this is possible. The New Deal did not have much atrength in this county because it was ready to smash tradition, and to establish precedent. The sweep in the county had been expected. There never was any doubt of the. result. I t was merely a question of how many thousands the pluralities would run into. That the record-breaking Dewey plurality of 1938 would be biuried under an avalanche of additional votes had been predicted long before the election. Even the opposition leaders s e n s ^ what w ia in the air and ware reluctant to fly in the face of the inevitable by making extravagant claims. Their apparent lethargy contributed to the debacle of their party. Suffolk County has prided itself a long time on the type m men it produced for public office. These officials, whether in Albany, or in Riverhead, have always been eager to represent and serve their constituents in a manner compatible with the ideals set up by the leadership of their party. Close team work of this kind has brqught about best results. We have seen the product of this effort of years’ standing and are happy in the achievement. It, too, has gotten to be tradition and the people by their vote on Tuesday gave their unstinted approval by upholding the party of good government. They are certain that the officials whom they either elected, or returned to office, feel the deep sense of obligation and responsibility which has been assumed. The election was a double victory for tradition. The voters of Suffolk refused to break tradition about a third term for a Pres ident, and they upheld the Republican Party’s tradition of making available good, substantial and efficient men for county office. This seems to be the American way of doing things. Suffolk County is steeped in American traditions, it having been one of the 12 original counties of colonial New York and the residence of one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. •— The Smithtown Star. The World’s Newt Seen Through T he C hristian S cience M onitor faTti Am IntermtiomU Daity Newspaper ihfiil—CenttnKiiv«<—Unbiaied—Free from Swuatianal* ina — Bdiloriak A m Timaly and iMtructiv* and Iti DaUy FMlufM, TogMher with i I m W m U v Magaiin* SeciioHr Make iha Monitor an Idaal Ntwspai^r for tht Horn*. Tha Chriitian Scianc* Publishing Socisty On*, Norway Str«M, Boicon, MaMachuMtti Price 112.00 Yearly, or 11.00 a Month. Saturday lisua, including Magasin* Saction, ^2.60 a Year. Iniroduciorv QflFer, 6 I mum 2) Cants. Nam* ........ ................................. — - -------------------------------- Addraa........................................................................................ SAMPLE COPY ON RBQUBST F a r m T o p i c s GOOD DAIRY COW PAYS ITS ‘BOARD’ TM^ ’i P r o d u c i n g A r ’m a l s . Prove wiore Fro.^table. \ By ELAir.U J. rr-iAD?)V.V, One dairy cow that pro ’m xs 545 pounds of buUei iai a >car will re - 1 turn as much n-oney above feed tjs t cs two cowa iliat produce 350 pounds, or more than 13 cows that average 152 pounds of butterfat an nually. That’s what experim ents at the Colorado State college indicate, says Elm er J. Meadows. One 545-pound cow will return $108 above feed cost during a year, ac cording to figures Meadows has compiled from actual experience. This figure is based on b u tterfat sell ing at 40 cents a pound. Two cows each producing 350 pounds of butterfat a year will re turn only $4 a year more above the feed cost than the 545-pound cow and will cost $168 to feed, compared to $110, the feed cost of the large producer. Thirteen 152-pound cows will return $101.40 above feed cost during a year, and it will cost $689 to feed them. If the e x tra labor required to milk and care for 13 cows produdtng 152 pounds of butterfat each compared to 2 producing 350 pounds each, is figured, it would further emphasize the necessity of keeping and breed ing only cows with the ability to produce large am ounts of milk and butterfat. And so the question evolves— \Why not take a few cows that pro duce at least 3S0 pounds of fat a year rather than a whole corralful of the 152-pound group that produces only about 20 pounds less than the average dairy cow in the United States’ ” Skim Milk Is Used In Making af^WooV It h as long been a wonder to many that when a black cow ate green grass it gave yellow milk, b u t it’s even more of a wonder nowadays when a chem ist takes the skin) milk and makes wool out of it. The chem ists extract the casein, soften it in water, and dissolve the result ant eompeund in a solution of caua> tie alkali. It becomes a thick, stiekjr mass. After working into the proper een- sisteney by aging and add i^ other Uquida the mixture Is forced through a spinneret, hardened, and tt ia ready to bo spun. The cost of the finished product win be about 80 cents a pound when put on a commercial basis. It may be tised la preparing garments tor persons allergic to natural wool and fbr other uaes in which natural prod* uets have been undesirable. Population Is Shifting From Cities to Farms n has been apparent for some time that tha p o t a t io n trend la away (tom the eitita and toward the farm. Mow the (act seem s to be offlelaDy proved by the advance tty* out In the 1940 federal census. Two counties in Indiana were selected by the flovemment for the prelim* Inary count. The first figures have been released, showing that St. Jcaeph county haa gained aome- nrhat In its rural areas, the two principal eitiea. South Bend and Mishawaka, have decreased by a lew thousand. The difference waa alighter in the ease o( Marahall county and ita county seat, Plym* outh. The town gained a little, but the county gained more. These are only two sm all straws, o( course, but they show which way the wind la blowing and the (act is significsnt after a tong period when the “drift to the cities” was regarded aa a se rious social problem. Farm Notes AXIS COM Er.ENCE Mus!-(i: ni- Wi’ll! Von Ribbentrop—You took the Aiifil ou' of my rrifHith! fTusFiilini—Whul explanation has 11 ii : p »- III n-ake to p-e? Vnn Ritibentrop- Explanation for Mussolini—He was to have licked England by August. I had his word for it. Von Ribbentrop-'Everything in a war can’t be done according to schedule. Mussolini—This is a fine time to tell me! • • • Von Ribbsntrop—Germany can’t help it if the British fail to give up in accordance with our expectations. Their slowness in surrendering is very disturbing to Herr Hitler. Mussoltni-T-lf it disturbs Hitler, what do yo.u think it does to me? ^ « Von Rilibentrop—But there is nothing for us to worry about. Mussolini—Did you ever try stand ing for any length of tim e with one foot in the middle of a desert, one in the middle of the sea and the other foot in the middle of Europe? Von Ribbentrop—You are giving yourself too many feet. Mussolini—Before I get through I may need ’em. I don’t like the looks of things. Von Ribbentrop—Why did you come into the war? Mussolini—You know very well why 1 cam e in: You gave me a complete scenario, showing that France was finished and that Eng land was as jiood as sunk. Von Ribbentrop—Everything will come out as we promised. All we need is patience and a new plan. • • • Mussolini-i-Why can’t you mop up England the way you did all those other countries? There m ust be traitors, fifth columnists and quit ters there, too.' Von Ribbentrop—Yes, but Eng land has ’em all in jail. Now lis- sen, Der Fuehrer says you have got to take G ibraltar. Are you ready? Mussolini—Who? Mel Von Ribbentrop—We must have the eo-operation et Spain. We must move (aat. MiMoUnl -> My troops never moved (aatelr than they did when ttwy were u Spain. ^ 1 1 1 lU b b e ttti^ T h ia time U’a got to be In the right direetion. • • • Mussolini—There are momenta when I think maybe we are biting off more Otan we can chew. Von Ribbentrop—You have my as* surance ttila iprlU be done on a S040 In blocking a gate against hogs, swinging the foot back and (orth la more effective in keeping the ani* mala back than waving the arms. • a • Corn and sorghum silage may both be success(ully fed to sheep, but the quality must be good. Moldy or spoiled silage will often cause colic, scours and other digestive ailmenta. a a • Whitewashing the walls in poultry houses where artificial light is be* ing used will aid much ia spread* ing the light over the roots, aa well aa on the floor and (eed hop* pers. • a • Bots in horses may be controlled by washing the horse’s legs with a S per cent cresol solution when tha weather ia (reesing, and having tht veterinarian give carbon d isu lfid e capaules a month later. a a • The place to fight a guUy is at tha top o( tha slope. Ever notice how a guUy (orma at the (oot ot the slope and eats ita way upward? Ever t » to \doctor\ a jniUy at the foot «l tha ah»a by fllUng it with trash «r • bruu dam? It washes out with eaeb hard rain. Mussolini—)What do you mean by that? . Von Ribbenprop—Germany will do the biting; y w can do the chewing. MussoUni—ffhe more you talk the more nervous I get. Von-Rlbbentrop-?Brace up! Don't you know Germany and Italy are super races? Don’t you know they are ttte two greatest Powers on earth? Don’t you know they are nations with a destiny? Don’t you know they will rule the world? Mussolini—I know it, and you know it . . . but does the world know it? • « • NEW UNE-UP The Japs now join The Nazi deals And sihg, “HeU, Heil, The gang’s all heels!” # • • General De Gaulle is making the mistake of assuming that the Freaek realise what has hap pened to France. * * • A man showed up at an army re cruiting station the other day with a portable radio. Vet there are peo ple who scoff at the talk of a new and terrible weapon in modem war. • * • German submarine commanders must get instructions, “Proceed with the atrocity; we are ready with de nials.” • • • WHAT A MFE! This is his pain And this is his sorrow: It’s hair today— And gone tomorrow. —Richard Avedon. I • • • I CANDIDATES FOR THE FIRING ' SQUAD A man i ’d smack upon the kisser Is Crabby Ca), the Newsreel Hisser (Unless he tskes to tactics new And hisses when I’m hissing, too.) • • • New York schools have stopped buying msps. Boundaries chsnge so often that the schools draw maps on a blackboard and make erasures or additions as news from Europe' oomes in. “The class in geography will now look at yesterday’s map and give all the errors.” Wsshlngton, D. 0. GERMAN MORALE SUFFERING U. S. observers acquainted with the morale of the German people are getting bullish about Britain, in view of the heavy R.A.F. bombings of Germany. These ofUcials point out that Ger* m an conquests on land, even if they should be extended beyond the Bal* kans into Egypt or even to India, do not relieve the problem of the 80,000,000 Germ ans who m ust con tinue to take punishment from B rit ish bombing. It has been proved already that the m ilitary genius of the Germans is in land movements. They have no strength at sea, and they have failed to gain complete m astery in the ahr, though at times they have come close to it. This leaves the British with an air force growing daily stronger by arrival of Cana dian and American planes, to bomb the great German cities in an at tem p t to break civilian morale. German conquests abroad do not relieve the distress of people in such heavily populated centers as Berlin, Dresden, Leipzig, Hamburg, and Munich. So long as these people m ust spend cold winter nights in the cellars, with no rest, there can be no real victory for Germany. • • • . ROOSEVELT BORROWS The other day Postm aster General Frank W alker called at the White House with William Knudsen and other defense commissioners to sell the President the first 100 new “Na tional Defense” stam ps, which come in one, two and three-cent denomi nations. “This is a strictly cash on the line proposition, Mr. President,” said W alker. “Have you got six dollars?” Roosevelt reached for his billfold. It contained one five-dollar bill, no more. “Hmmm—short a dollar,” he mused. Borrowing, as Shakespeare said, m ay “dull the ^ g e of husbandry,” but on the other hand not everyone gets the chance to lend the Presi* dent of the United States a buck. Everyone in the room grabbed (or his wallet simultaneously. But W alker was the first to produce the dollar. Grinning, Roosevelt promised to repay Walker on “my next pay day.” NEW ARMY TANKS The United States army ia now building a tank which wUI be the equal at any «Mch the Nasia aent against France wifli their fomoua panzer divisions. These new war monatera each will can y one 75-mm. gun. Thia ia the (amoua field artillery piece whldi the French atm y used during the World war, and mhkth the Ameri* can Expeditionary force later adopt ed. It haa noiw become tha atandard field artillery (or more than haU the armies o( th» world. However, ndt until the German divisions rolled into Flandera, did modem anniea conceive ot moi|n^ ing guns as heavy aa thia hi tanks. But (rom now on, even ttie medium t ^ buUt (or the U. S. a n w will carry one French 75, plua a ST-mm. gun. plus (our machine guns. Thia tank win weigh between S5 and SO tons. Note—It is impossible to estimate the cost o( the mobile (ortress carry* ing a 75-mm. gun, and the war de* partment is nM even troubUng to ask for estim ates. At least three o( the companies will proceed with pro* duction on a “cost plus fixed foe” basis, and when the tanka begin to come off the assembly lines («Mch will not be before next May) Uncle Sam will pay the bill. • • « lE F F DAVIS VS. LINCOLN 0 ( all his predecessors. Secretary o( War Henry L. Stimson has chosen the portraite of Jefferson Davis, presi^nt of the Con(ederacy, and Robert Todd Lincoln, son o( the martyred President, to adorn the wall (acing his desk. Both Lincoln and Davis served as secretary of war. Mr. Stimson sits at a great, fiat carved red mahogany desk, which has been ia the war department more years than anypne can remem ber, and which is ornamented by two round globe lighta on either side, designed to burn kerosene hi the days before gas and electricity. These have now been revamped for incandescent bulbs. A grim note is Stimson's side table, a somber black piece used by Gen. Phil Sheridan as a court mar* tial desk. This supporte a huge silver cup. a tennis trophy won in previous years by Mr. Stimson, and a mantel clock, which is wound by a key. and strikes the hours and haU hours in deep sonorous tones. • • • MERRV-CiO-ROUND Proudest boast o( Sen. Homer T. Bona ot Washington is a bet he won over a Civil war maneuver during the Union army’s siege ot Vicks burg. Though his opponent was a participant in the action, Bone was right and won the wager. • a a George T. Summerlin, who gete $9,400 a year as chief ot the state department ot protocol, saves |51 a year by rolling hia own cigarettes. His job inchides entertainiM visit ing dignitaries. N e w s p a p e rm a n Stu!l Charles Chapin, who was city edi tor of the New York Evening World ot the beginning of the century rever drank, and w.ns intolerant o others who imbibed , Johnny Quinn, a young reporter who worked uridrr in nn occa sional glass of beer, and Chapin sternly lectured him about it . . . Quinn became ill one day and died shortly afterw ard, leaving a wife and children. The boys on the World, knowing the family wasn’t too well off started a collection, with each man giving what he could afford. When they came to Chapin for a contribution, he brusquely dis missed them . . . “Don’t expect ansrthing from m e,” he growled. “I won’t encourage young reporters who drink beer to figure they can depend on the staff to help their famUies after they’re dead” . When aU the contributions were in, a group of the boys took the money to Quinn’s widow. She was touched by their generosity, and tears trick led down her cheeks . . . “The World has the finest men on e a rth,” she exclaimed. “ Do you know, boys —we couldn’t have buried Johnny if ' Circle, it hadn’t been for Mr. Chapin’s ' check.” Odds and Ends A copy of an old magazine contains the following article entitled; ■rhe Dael Between Mr. Shett and Mr. Nett A duel was' lately fought in Texas by Alexander Shott and John S. Nott, Nott was shot and' Shott was not. In this case it is better to be Shott than Nott. There was a rumor th a t Nott was not shot, and Shott avows that he shot Nott, which proves either that the shot Shott shot a t Nott was not shot, or that Nott was ^ o t notwith standing. Circumstantial evidence is not always good. It may be made to appear on trial that the shot Shott shot shot Nott, or as accklents with fire-arms are frequent, it may be pos sible that the shot Shott Shot shot Shott himself, when the whole affair would resolve itself Into its original elements, and Shott wouM be shot and Nott would be not. We think, however, that the shot Shott shot shot not ^ t t , but Nott. Anyway it is hard to tell who was shot. • • • Then there was the cross-eyed teach er who couldn’t control her pupils. • • • The only way to develop the ability to do things is by doing things with out help. Many a married man wishes his night out might last as long as one of those winter nights above the Arctic A> new assistant editor at the Reuter’s News agency, in London, was once handed a brief cable from New York. After a perfunctory glance at it, the lad filed it with a lot of other m aterial that wasn’t of urgent importance. “Those Y a i ^ ! ” he m uttered. “They seem to think we’re interested in their President’s hunting expeditions!” . . . “What do you m ean?” his superior asked . . . The new assistant picked up the cable and waved it in front of him, explaining, “New York seem s to think it’s worth five cente a word to tell us that McKinley’s shot a buf falo!” . . . The editor did a double- take and, with a beUow, snatehed the cable from his assistant’s hand. It read: “McKinley shot Buffalo” . . . The first news of the Presi dent’s assassination. Several yeara ago Alexander Woollcott checked into a New York hospital tor observation, and one o( the newspapers received an errone ous tip that he was dying. A re porter phoned the hospital and checked the report with WooUcott’a nurse, who deiided i t . . . Woollcott, heari^ the conversation, insisted on to: tfai.''r«Ekffter and. phonAtV^muced himseU. reporter ftp^atid the rum or. . . * ^ t-tl^ ^ tot-tutted Woollcott, *Tm Just here for observation” . . . **itien you’r i obt djrtag?” aaked the ttd . . . ••Ot courae notl” aaid Woollcott . . . \Wen queried the nporter, “what ARE your plana?” N e w Y ork H e a r tbeat The Rig Parade: Hoot Gibaon, the gw^at big cowboy, dodging taxis and looking Beared stiff, at 46th and Mad ison . Hatlesii Hooe Hampton holding hands with hubby, hurrying home . . . Tommy Corcoran, all .work and no play-boy . . Guy Lombardo and Ben Bernie—melody- land’s Sweet & Low . . . Karen Van Ryn, the gorjiss Duteh ballerina— glammer competition for Vera Zori- naahhhh . . . Afternoon stroller on E. S8th Street—Peggy Fears to sil ver (ox coat, red boodwah slippert and blue slacks . . . George Raft, the Merchant of Menace, watching the floor show at Leon and Eddie’s, while the Leon and Eddie’s floor show watches him. The tobacco raiser is one fellow who likes to see his crops go up in smoke. • • * Seneca said nearly 2000 years ago: “Fire is the test of gold; adversity of strong men.” * * * And Syrus said: “It matters not what you are thought to foe, but what you are.” Here is another of his maxims: “It matters not how long you live, but how well.” Of this also we approve: \It is a very hard undertaking to seek to please everybody.” • • • A friend of ours says life may begin at 40, but so do fallen arches, bad eye sight, lumbago, and the tendency to tell a story to the same person three or four times. • • • “Johnny,” said the teacher to one of the b ( ^ in the class, “What is Uie spine.” “The spbie,” said little Johnny, \is a king, limber bone. Your head seto on one end ot it, and you set on the other.\ • • • H ie manager ot a light and power corporation said, irioudy, “I am very muote e 0 pmoi ta tbls Of ~jvans peopto sitting around In the daric. It is all wrong.” Tlie first thing that happens when a young man calls on a ghrl Is the tam ing off ot all the Hghte to the room. Nobody knows what’s going on but them, and they don’t give a dam. Oer- toin^ It Is a m atter that shedid be looked toto. I t is a thing that causes me mueta eoneem. I am thankful to say that X am no reformer. Neither am I the father of any of the younger generation, of whidi X am still more thankful. X object ve hemently to the practice for the one reason that, while it may be nice for them, it Isn’t cood for me. SalUes to Our Alley: Dorothy Park er was being bothered no end by mag editor Harold Ross, the town bore. He kept interrupting her par ty of friends in an East Side joynt with; “The revolution is comtog! The revolutkm is coming!” When he said it for the steenth time, Park er popped .him with: “And when it does it’U be EVERYBODY against Harold Rossi” . . . Dorothy Thomp son has denied the rumors that Sin clair Lewis was in Reno for a di vorce . . “It’s not true!” she ejaculated to a columnist, “un divorce m e!” . . . “I will not,” he told her. “everybody to town knows that you switched your affections to a fellow named Roosevelt!” Texaco Water White Kerosene At Tank Wagea PricM E. W. BAKER Bank of Soutiiold s o i r n i o u i. n . t Manhattan Murals; Sign in a 3rd Avenue beanery: “This is Noise Abatement Week — Don’t Gargle Your Soup!” . The Pullman por ter on the M erchants Limited (very fast train from Boston to N. Y.), who announces the arrival like this: “Hunnerd Twenney Fitt Street Sta tion of the World’s G reatest City— Noo Yawk!” . Those new dice that light up when you throw a 7 \. . llte drunk downstairs in the 50th Street subway—waiting for a bus! Memos of s Midnighter; H(tw truzit that Charley Gehringer, the Detroiter, will wed into the Dodgf millions via a widder? Tom Harmon, M ichigan's sensational All- American (m ost publicized athlete tiie year) will be engaged Decem ber 1 to M argaret Thom, daughter of a naval ofTlcei and the prettiest co-ed at Ann Arbor . Dick Rob ertson, the co-writer of “ We Three.” 1g DOW'walking with his shadow and taUitog with his echo since the di vorce . . Herbert Bayard Swope aays he merely twisted his knee. OBTOSITOaS IN m iR BANK ARB IN S r a iD With MastaiaBi Immmnt* el isaw ler Baeb DeposMw AOCODNTS IM V rm> Osposlte Received Subject to Otaesk Intersst sUowed on eertlfimt«s of deposit and w time depotiM. OPFIOEKS (toward O. TuthiU ................ PvaridsM \lbert W. Albertson ) « Ernest Boisseau f iiiohard T. Merwto .............. Osshisr Mils B ile H u m m el ....... Asst Oashisr Oeoris C. Tmrrf, OounssJ BOARD OP OIRBOTORS Josspb H. Halioek W. Oorav Howard O. TuthUl AitMrt W. Aibertoor I. Bmest BoUieau rwiorge H. Diokersoo Henry P. Dickerson Capital Stock Uft.000 Surplus. 181,OM 8»f* Oeposit Boses for Rsat leasonaUs rates. Opsn dally Iran • ». n to I p i taturdsy* from • a. Bi. to II St oiMMi on aU puMle hoUdars