{ title: 'The Patchogue advance. (Patchogue, N.Y.) 1885-1961, September 11, 1952, 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/sn86071739/1952-09-11/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86071739/1952-09-11/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86071739/1952-09-11/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86071739/1952-09-11/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
PEOPLE DON 'T— Go driving just to read the billboards PEOPLE DON 'T— Have windshield wipers so there will be a place to tuck advertising matter PEOPLE DON' T— Build front porches to have a place where circulars , shopping sheets , etc. can be thrown BUT When they lay a dime on the line for a copy of The Patchogue Advance , you can be sure they bought it to read. You , advertisers , are assured they will get their dime ' s worth by going throu gh the paper carefully. Ev ery Dollar spent in newspaper advertising will net far better re- turns than ten times the amount spent for any other kind of adver- tising. If you doubt this assertion , we 'll be pleased to prove it. Throughout This Locality, Nearl y Everybody Reads u% llatrijiuiue A imattr? 11 Nort h O cea n Avenue Tel. Pat chogu e 3-1000 Hospital Drive < ' onI 'd. f n>m p;ijr> ' 1 , this section east of Kast Lake , as was an- nniiiH 'cil earlier , on a tract of land deeded to the association by the County Hoa rd of Supervisors . As sketched by the architects , .1. J. (Jloster <£• Sons of Now York city, the hospital the association lias in mind is a one-story build- ing of modern design , faced with sandstone colored brick and high- lighted with flagstone , lime color- ed structural cement blocks and structural glass. SO-Bed Hospital It will contain 80 beds in three wings off the main corridor and administrational and therapy sec- tions. These three wings , all self- containing units , will provide 30 beds for medical nursing, 30 beds for surgical nursing and 20 beds and —*» bassinets for maternity nursing. As .Mr. Zwissler explained , the operating and other facilities , as p lanned , will be adequate even if more rooms for patients are add- ed later. Both speakers were introduced by Joseph \V. Harrison , Patchogue postmaster , president of the Brookhaven Memorial association and the man who several months ago revived public interest in a hospital for Patchogue project. Mr. Harrison , who has been un- der tire in recent weeks from Frank J. Mooney for his handling of the project , received an en- thusiastic standing vote of confi- dence for his leadershi p from the Rotarians and their guests yes- terday. That motion was made by Alexander W. Pfeifl e , Patch- ogue manufacturer and Brook- haven Town trustee, who asked for the floor before the formal program began. Mr. Pfeifle said the editorial in this week' s issue of Mooney ' s paper criticizing Mr. Harrison \ was the meanest thing I' ve ever read. We ' re all with vou , Joe , and we want you to know it. \ Further support for the drive came at the end of Mr. Zwissler ' s address , when Lincoln G. Schmidt , president of Rotary, called on all Rotarians , \ now that you ' ve heard the truth , \ to support the associ- ation and work for the hospital. Several members of the hospi- tal association ' s Board of Direc- tors attended one or both meet- ings , and were introduced by Mr. Harrison. They included Frank Silverman , treasurer; Tracy B. Terry, vice president; Louis Car- danione , chairman of the build- ing committee; John White of Bayport , Alfred Roe , Mr. Brown , Mr. Zwissler , A. J. McRae , Dr. David Jellinger , John P. Cohalan , Jr., of Sayville , and H. William Berger of Lake Ronkonkoma. Also introduced at the Kiwanis meeting were four representatives of Community Counselling serv- ice, John Galvan , John Eneelskir- ger , Richard Pfeifer and James McCarthy. Mr. Engelskirger and Mr. Pfeifer will be directly con- cerned with the drive here. ' • EAST • PATCnQGl/t • SCHOOL • - * „ • FR.AWK • * • WtBBtR. , „ • *. <tcnntcT • . MCW CrUAHI f or East Patchogue , as sketched by iNHW X H UUL Patchogue architec t Frank S. Webber , will loo k like this if approved by the voters Tuesday. Plans call for a one-story building with seven regular classrooms , a kinder- garten roo m , an arts room , a spec.al actmt.es room «•¦£«'-¦ auditorium and gymnasium. The cost is not to exceed >.>2., . 000 , to be paid for by means of a 20-year bond issue. RIVERHEAD — Chest X-ray examinations for all patients over 15 years of age admitted to the Centra l Suffolk hospital heic hencefo rth will be routine proce- dure . Administrator Blair M. Patterson announed this week. lie raid the hospital is participating in a New York State Heai'h de- partment program aimed at tuher- tiiosis. Mr. Patterson said no charge will be made for the examination , nor will it be obligatory. The pro- ject was endorsed by the Suffolk County Tuberculosis and Public Health association as another ad- vance in the relentless war on tuberculosis. Central Suffolk Hospital To X-Ray Adult Patients Chief Challenges Cont'd, from pag-e 1 , this section threat to the economic . - .talus of the county, going on to explain his fears that the possibility ex- isted that shellfish , dairy and poultry, as well as other agricul- tura l and food-producing interests would be hurt. In view of these facts , he asked that the labora- tory be located elsewhere and then introduced Mr. Dodge. In presenting his testimony, Mr. Dodge declared that the intent of Congress had been violated in that no location could be chosen if the majority of the residents within a 25-mile radius of tfte proposed site disapproved the project. He referred to the fact that the great majority of the population within this area reside in the State of Connecticut , separated from Plum Island by 10 miles of navigable water , and is not vital- ly interested in this matter. On the other hand , he said , all of Suffolk county is vitally interest- ed in this matter , yet less than 5 per cent of the population from Suffolk resides within this a: ti- ficial 25-mile radius. In this con- nection Mr. -Brannan admitted that 75 per cent of the area in the ~ 25-mile radius is water. Continuing, Mr. Dodge contend- ed that insufficient notice was given of the hearings and charged that no \lega l notice \ was ever published in any newspaper . This was admitted by the officials of the Department of Agriculture in the course of the 90-minute hear- ing. Mr. Dodge further objected to the \ arbitrary \ manner in which the hearings were conducted , claiming that the people were not given an opportunity to ^j ice their opinion within a reasonable time , that the government officials were biased , that no vote was taken of the people present , that no verbatim notes were taken at the hearings and that such notes as were taken had never been transcribed . To this there was no denial en- tered by the Washington officials , which led Mr. Dodge to point out that Mr. Brannan had no notes upon which to base his determin- ation and decision on the use of Plum Island. Cha rging that the hearings were not carried out in the true American manner , Mr. Dodge sug- gested that Mr. Brannan had al- ready made up his mind on Plum Island even before the act passed Congress , and Mr. Dodge says that the Secretary admitted this to be a fact. Outside of his attitude that the project was being made a politi- cal issue , Secretary Brannan ex- plained he had received no objec- tions and said no one had said anything against it except foi \ all the objections and uproar \ on the part of the Board of Su- pervisors. To his claim of no opposition to Plum Island , Mr. Dodge intro- duced and furnished the Secre- tary with a certified copy oi a resolution adopted four years ago by the Board of Supervisors and forwa rded at that time to the De- partment of Agriculture , cxpi eas- ing opposition of Suffolk county to the opening of any hoof and mouth disease laboratory on Long Island. Mr. Dodge also referred to many individuals and groups , including the Long Island associ- ation , that had forwarded protests to the Secretary. In commenting on the result of the hearing in Washington , Mr. Hattemer declared : \This is a first class examp le of the manner in which one indivi- dual bureaucrat of this Fair Deal set-up, which we have in Wash- ington today, can assert his own personal authority. Not only has Mr. Brannan ignored the wishes of the people most affected b y this p roject but he haB also seen fit to thwa.i, the will of the duly elected representatives in Congress to make certain ' ;hat at leiut one 'Brannan plan ' is put into effect before he goes out of office. The ' very fact that he ad- mitted to us that he had selected Plum Island even before the en- abling legislation had been enact- ed is proof of the autocratic tac- tics which he has consistentl y pursued in this particular matter regardless of the consequences to Suffolk county. \ In addition to Supervisor Hatte- mer and Mr. Dodge , the other members of the Suffolk group in- cluded Supervisors Norman Klipp of Southold , Walter Fasbender of Huntington , Republicans , and Jo- seph V. Kelly of Riverhcad , a Democrat , and Fred B. Hose , Jr., clerk to the board . Woman Is Killed Cont'd, from page 1 , this section west on the highway, about half a mile east of Camp Upton road , when an eastbound car driven by Pringler sideswiped Smith' s car and then hit Connor ' s car. In the confusion immediately following the accident Pringler was not missed. He was found a short time later by Patrolman Paul Eve , walking along the high- way without his shoes. Ptl. Eve arrested him for pub- lic intoxication , then brought him into the police station , where the officer learned of the accident. Pringler then was brought before Justice of the Peace Donald W. Shaw in Patchogue , where he was convicted of public intoxication , driving without a license and having the wrong license plates on the car. The fines totaled $85 , and when Pringler failed to pay them he was given a 45-day jail term. He was treated first for lacerations of the scalp and pos- sible broken ribs , then sent to jail. In the Smith car , Mrs. Julia Smith of Freeport was treated at the scene of the accident for mul- tiple contusions of the arms. Two children in the car and the driver were not hurt. In the second car , Mr. Connor sustained lacerations of the scalp and Barbara Connor , 12 , lacera - tions of the face. They were taken to Mather Memorial hospi- tal in Port Jefferson for treat- ment, then released. Those injured in the Pringler car , in addition to the driver , were John Reed , also of the Young camp, lacerations of the left hand , treated at Mather and released ; John Red , also of the camp, Wal- ter Wilson of Calverton and Naomi Francis of Greenport , all taken to Mather with possible in- ternal injuries. The injured were treated at the scene by Dr. J. E. Corrigan and Dr. M. J. Schweidel , both of the Patchogue Medical group. The Selden Fire department ambu- lance and the ambulance from Mather hospital responded. The accident was investigated by Pa- trolman John Clark. • * t A Brooklyn man was issued a summons for driving while in- toxicated following a three-ca r ac- cident on Montauk highway in East Patchogue Monday that end- ed with one of the cars crashing into the show window of Herbert Lipson ' s auto supply shop. The accident occurred at 3:10 a. m. Monday at the Donegan avenue intersection. The police report indicates that an eastbound car driven by Carl Ursum of Hickory road . Mastic Beach , was passing another east- bound car , driven by Vito Pas- cullo of Montauk highway, Mas- tic , when the Ursum car met a westbound car driven by Oscar L. Reksten of Brooklyn. The Ursum car and the Rek- ste n car were in collision. Then , police say, the Ursum car swerv- ed , hit the Pascullo car and went off the road , landing in the show window. Reksten , the only one injured , sustained cuts and bruises over the left eye and was treated at the Patchogue Medical group by Dr. Schweidel. He was issued a summons for driving while intoxi- cated by Patrolman Cecil L. Rich. * * * Two men were injured at the intersection of Laurel street and Cedar avenue at about 10:15 a. m. yesterday, when a grocery truck driven by Denis E. Girod of East Patchogue and a car driven by James F. Ryan of New Hyde Park collided. Martin O'Sullivan , 25 , and Joh n J. Lynch , both riding with *4yan , were treated at the scene and at the Medical group by Dr. Schwei- del , O'Sullivan for abrasions of the left elbow and Lynch for a broken collarbone. The accident was investigated by Sergeant George Meyer of Patchogue Vil- lage police. FALL M&xm m 1 COKGOWALL lQc sg ft ] . fH FELT BASE LINOLEUM ©9 C wBSBS/Sgbk 6 AN,) 9 FT - WIDTHS — WHILE IT LASTS \> VI> wBSW INLAID LINOLEUM ®1 95 ^^^HS pjjj^r STANDARD GAUGE WHITE HOUSE PAINT 2-«5 4 RUBBER TILE-6x6 10* eacl WALLACE PAINT & WALLPAPER CO. CONGOWALL ~~ LINOLEUM — FLOOR TILE 48 South Ocean Avenue PAtchogue 3-1$ Inlet Group to Make Plans for Next Year A special noon luncheon meet- ing of the Fire Island Inlet com- mittee has been called for Sep- tember 30 in the Patchogue hotel by the group ' s chairman , Leslie Weiss. The committee , which has fought unsuccessfully the past two years to have federa l funds ap- propriated for maintenance of the inlet , saw its proposal pass the Senate this year only to be knock- ed out in a conference committee between Senate and House. This meeting, Mr. Weiss said , has been called to lay plana for next year ' s campaign. yMWMWMWW tW W WWW W WW W Wt t WH W WW To Celebrate 60 Years of Continuous Service j TV Antenna Installation ' 3951 Now through September 30 Regularl y 55.01 ; Slightly Higher Beyond 5 Mile Limit > • The Following Dealers Carry Top Name TV • JACK AND JERRY STORKS ; THE BEE HIVE PARDl . W- ' , All electrical fixtures and table lamps in o* ; \House of Light \ 20% Off or More ¦¦ ^Hai ^BaM ^H^B, ^.^^^ ,^.^^ .^.^^ ^ I ALDRICH ELECTRIC CO., DK ; ALDRICH BUILDING 51 NORTH OCEAN A fl j Pat ch o gue 3-0200 — 3-0133 Est. l89! iMWHHtUMMMtMAMtMMMMMUMMtMtMVMMM ^ Cont'd . fromj Kige j , ^ \fire zone \ on Un^rnT^ Lake avenue hehvee,, th.V? and Jennings avenue t(f! Chief Pane explains ,,,, kick of park.ttsr Uwiliv^ , men has resulted in M r ' f .stances of trucks lieinM,, i* 1 lirehouse ^ =¦., alarn 1\ hounded . Six pieces „f .. ,, are expect,,) , ,, ,, ,„ „„ '* alarm , the ch.ef pointed o envers , when they ca ,„, 5 parking space , sometime. » right on to the scene of \l Should the \fre l0 J& hshed , a no-p arking rule * m effect m the are a 24 U day. ™ Police Chief Reynold R 1 announced that three ' ;. would be deputize d at xC Avenue school to provide ,, protection at that school. Th, ter of police protecti on ,, school has been the sul,;^ wrangling, with the ' Top Brookhaven ami Village of P ogue claiming jurisdictional its would negate the t !t ' ,. R ench. The board approved the p, ional appointment of p st {, Harold Tolley \<> replace V man Vernon j . Tule V who i« resigned. Mr . T..lley ; s appoint effective September ]\ ) „ .;jj until the next civil service e ination. Trustee Robert T. Waldj the police commissioner , rf j that Alfred C:iti. r<> will cos as a temporary school p<i|; c at Patchogue High school on ' l Ocean avenue until a repjj, cer is hired. Trustee Waldhauer also m that five parking meters lo on the north side of South ( avenue , in front of the Tow have been unproductive and may be moved to Church i after a public hearing at the board meeting in October. In response to an appal businessmen in the West street area , the hoard vote install 38 new street lamps ! crease the lighting power 6 , 000 to 10 , 00(1 lumens alot? street and Ocean avenue . Tin will be approximately $30(1 to balance of the vear. Benkenstein B] AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAU 4 4 4 \Service is our Busine 4 4 j Charach & Si 8 WEST MAIN \ STREE 4 Patchogue 3-20QQ I featured at SID GREENWALD SHOES and created fo r y ou... « *£_ m b y / Qdf i&$£^~ ^ ¦S^BflHjjI^^^^^ H^H RHYTHMIK ¦p ^^B^^^ vSifc^^ i^^HH^^^B Capezio sandals represent ^K ^^ ^Tt^iJBB^ ^^^^H^^BH functional perfection , co m* ^ft ^t^^^P ^^^^HB hining the basic need of H t _ V *^^ ^^^B modern dance , acrobatic flRn&===2^^^L 30 gym °nd physical educa- ^HJHHH Mj & ^^^^gtfggy fl tional work. BHHBii^BBttMHHMHI Capezio , the Dancer ' s Cobbler j fl y iince 1887 hag sent his footwear Wc ' round the world for over sixty-five in^ years on the enchanted feet of the w|A world' s most fainons dancers. You , ^SHE\ MODJRN! too , will find joyous allies to your ^K\ \0TA?D dancing in Capezio ' s flawless func JBt One P^ leo^ tional desi gning and skilled crafting. f^H sleeves , zipper V ^ yj closing. Two f^i^B^i^i^i^l^i^iMi^is^i^i^s^i^^^iSB \ I / piece style B^^^^M^^M^H^^^^^H^^I^ H \ / / a ' f ° ^Q9sfl^fl^K^^H I^^H^H>^H // / A H3MUB^2V9« V^ I^^ S^ P4B Yd 7 '' ne °' Capezio ^M^g^^B^^aHtfliBiBMK^^H Y I leotards is now ^H^sv^B^HBS m^R^HHHi < / our ^M^^^^ Q^^^^^H x% I IHMH M BHMBHMPBI^I^MII S ^I^B ^* ( 21 So. Ocean Ave., Patchogue tr ' For the Most Complete News of Suffolk County Read The Patchogue Advance Cont'd, from page 1 , this section would he financed through a 20- year bond issue. Al.so on the ballot will be a proposition authorizing the Board of Kducation to buy 20.3 acre s of land in the rear of the pre- sent school site to provide for future expansion and to provide additional playground space. This property would be paid for out. of surplus funds now on hand. Louis Gallo is president of the board , and Mario Donofno is its clerk. Other members are Alex - ander Waugh , Orlando Maletta , Louis L. DeLia and Adolph Olt- mann. Voting will take place between 5 p. m. and 10 p. m., at the school , although the meeting will open at 4 :.1 0 p. ru. New School