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MC School District Sets Adult Education Registration CENTEREACH — Registration for adult education classes ii the Middle Country Central School district will be held Septembe: 8, 9 , 10 from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. at the Unity Drive school here The district is now entering its fourth year of adult educatioi and is looking forward to serving the people of the community more effectivel y than ever , a spokesman said. Increased interest has been shown in the services offered each year , and new courses have been added to the curriculum to insure greater interest in the program , the spokesman added The Adult Education Advisory committee , a group of local citizens , has been working hard in order to make adult education of more hel p and service to the peop le of the com- munity, he said. This year the district is inau- gurating several firsts in the area in adult education. Among these are a comp lete educational and vocational guidance service , par- ents ' role in a child' s reading, reading study skills , a series of four medical lectures on top ics of general interest , adult education chorus and gardening. Classes offered are : Monday — high school equiv. — Eng lish so- cial studies . . Americanization — citizenship, typing — beginning, gardening, physical fitness — men electronics I , group guidance , cer amies 111 , piloting and adult edu cation chorus. Tuesday — app lied psychology typ ing — intermediate , shorthand I , general n edlecraft III , medical lectures , reading study skills , p hy sical fitness — women , industria. math I, individual guidance am. high school equ.v. — mathamatic- science. Wednesday — c o n v e r sational Spanish , high school equiv. — English social studies , advanced sewing III , parents ' role in child' s reading, elect.onics IV , woodwork- ing, ceramics I and ballroom danc ing — beginning. Thursday — high school equiv. — mathematic-science , general needlecraft I , amateur radio , ba ll- room dancing — advanced and sewing — beginnsrs. Driver Education will be sched uled in the future. Adult Ed. Sessions to Start Sept. 14; Offer 58 Courses The Patchogue Schools Adult Education program begins Sep- tember 14. Personal registration is scheduled from Monday through Wednesday of next week from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. in the Patchogue- Senior High school cafeteria on Saxton street. The new fall brochure is ready for mailing. For a copy, those interested may write Frank A.S> Juzwiak , Director of Adult Edu- cation , Patchogue Senior High school , Saxton street , Patchogue. Brochures will be left at the fol- lowing locations in town: Bonnie Mart , any of the three banks, Swezey Newins and the Patchogue Electric Light company. The courses being offered under their general headings are : Special Interest — algebra , ad- vanced mathematics , industrial mathematics , driver training, high school equivalency, law for the layman , self anal ysis , investments and securities , human relations in business , law for secretaries , child psychology. Languages and Self Expression — creative writing, conversational French , conversational Spanish I and II , conversational German, speed reading. , speaking, improv- ing your English. Realm of Music — piano play- ing and musicianship, orchestra , choral society. Business Education — bookkeep- ing, typing I and II, shorthand I and II. . Shop and Technical courses — drafting, electronics I and II, TV mechanics I , II , and III , photo- graphy, upholstery I and II , wood- working for men and women , auto mechanics , gas engine mainten- ance. Home and Family Living — Clothing I and II , household sew- ing, interior decoration, rug mak- ing and caning. Arts and Crafts — art work- shop, art in oils , watercoloring, ceramics , leathercraft , jewelry making. Physical Fitness and Recreation — p h ysical fitness for men and women. Community and World Under- standing — Americanization , great books. The following courses are non state-aidable: Ballroom dancing, cake decorating, contract bridge II. An Officers Training school pro- gram has been established so that college graduates who meet the needs and standard s set up by the Air Force may receive com- missions as Air Force officers. Sgt. Louis C. Lucas , local Air Force representative , says that many colleges don 't have an Air Force ROTC prog-am , thus deny- ing many qualified young men an opportunity to receive a commis- sion. Therefore , the OTS program opens up new vistas for young men interested in a military ca- reer. If accepted , an applicant will be notified and sent to Lackland Air Force base , Tex., for three months of officer training. On successful completion of the course , he will be commissioned into the Air Force as a second lieutenant. Sgt. Lucas added that the Offi- cers Training s c h o o program should not be confused with the Officer Candidate school , and that all persons interested in the Offi- cers Training school program should contact him at his office at 8 West Main street , Patchogue , or call GR 5-0259. Air Force Officers Training Program Is Now Underway MASTIC —¦ The Junior Demo- crats of the Mastic Beach Demo- cratic club will sponsor a rock and roll dance at 8:30 p. m. Sat- urday at the clubhouse on Locust drive. Refreshments will be served. Tickets will be available at the door. All are welcome to attend. MB Jr. Dems to Back R & R Dance Saturday f f^C T \Jeepers , \ light tan male cocker spaniel owned by Lt\JO 1 Mr. and Mrs. Adol ph Breitenbach , Jr. . of Main road , Aquebogue , was lost in vicinit y of Route 25A. Miller Place , August 26 , after he jumped out of family ' s parked car. He was not wearing his tags at the time. Raised from a puppy by the Breitenbachs , he is 7*£ y«ars old , doesn ' t bite and is strictly a \house dog. \ Three children are crying for him , and the Breitenbachs are extremel y distraught over his loss , for he has been like one of the family to them. Call Mrs. Justine Breiten- bach at JAmesport 2-3578 if you have any leads or know of his whereabouts. There ' s a $25 reward for his return. Bee Stops Early Bird Stung for Hour Delay: Dick Lea , 28 , a circulation man for The Patchogue Advance , received two adrenalin shots and a vial of pills free of charge Monday morning, but wonders if it was worth it. Mr. Lea, of Richmond boulevard , Lake Ronkonkoma , arrived early at the Motor Vehicle bureau ' s office at 28 Lake street , Patchogue , and figured his promp tness would pay off as the doors opened shortl y after 9 a. m. He wanted to fill out an application for a chauffeur ' s license. At approximately 9:30 a. m., he was stung on the left arm by a bee as he was filling out the form. It was the last thing the bee ever did. But aside from a nasty welt , Mr. Lea thought no more of it aside from casually mentioning the incident to Mis. Paula Mathewson , manager of the Patchogue office. That started the wheels turning. At tho solicitous insistence of Mrs. Mathewson , Mr. Lea went to the Patchogue Medical Group center at the corner of Roe boulevard and North Ocean avenue , where he received the shots . His next stop was Steiner ' s Pharmacy on East Main street , Patchogue , for the pills. The cost of the treatment is paid by the Motor Vehicle bureau , Mrs. Mathewson explained , as the injury took place in the office. Mr. Lea ' s was one of several stinging incidents this summer. The application was finally filled out at approximately 10:30 a. m., Mr. Lea reported. \It was just a passing remaik , \ he said. \I wouldn 't have mentioned it if I knew all this was going to happen. \ News Items of The Ridge Mrs. Glorya Riley YAphank 4-3222 Mr. and Mrs. William Haight and Mrs. Betty Haight of Mollis were guests of Mr. and Mrs . Ar- thur Pe terson at their home on Middle Country road last Thurs- day. Mrs. Wayne A. Riley was a luncheon guest Friday of Mrs. Ro- bert Rusunann of North Patch- ogue. Mrs. Martha Mayers of Richmond Hill and Mrs. Josep h Hauser of North Patchogue were also guests. Helen Ann Martz , daugh te r of Mr. and Mrs. William Martz of William Floyd Parkwa y Extension , celebrated her third birthday last Thursday at a lawn party held at the home of her grandmother , Mrs . Edwin Schmidt of Sall y lane. Guests were Mrs. Eugene Day and children , Eugene , Warren and Joan , Mrs. Charles Zackman and Eric Struckman of Brookl yn; Mrs. William McSteen and son , Wil- liam , of Riverhead; Mrs . Louis H. Zackman and children , Louis , Tho- mas , Philip and Carol of Bright- waters and Mrs . Bernard Bergman and son , Cory, and William Martz , Jr., of Rid ge. Four generations of the family wer-e represented. They were great-grandmother , Mrs. Louise Amter of Hempstead; grandmother , Mrs. Edwin Schmidt of Sally lane , mother , Mrs. Wil- liam Martz , and guest-of-honor. Mrs. Amter is spending several weeks at the Martz home. Mr. and Mrs. Day and children are spending a few days at the home of Mrs. Day ' s mother , Mrs. Sch- midt. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Nielsen and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Quinn of Old Saddle road and Mrs. Fred K. Blum and son , William of Giant Oak road returned home from a vaca tion spent at Queechy Lake , Canaan. The first annual dance of the Suffolk chapter , Children ' s Re- search Institute and Hospital of Denver , Colo., will bo held Sep- tember 19 at the Ridge firehousc on Middle Country road. Fred Korte of Eagle drive is president The Mr. and Mrs, club of St. Mark' s Evangelical Lutheran church met August 25 in the Church hall. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Korte were host and hostess. Pres- ent were Mr. and Mrs. Alfred' Schoch , Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Brodman , Mr. and Mrs . Edward Ball , Mr. and Mrs. Franz Nicolay, Mr. and Mrs. George Balas and the Rev. Harold A. Drum. Worshi p services at St. Mark' s Evangelical Lutheran church are at 8 and 10:30 a. m. Sunday. Sunday school classes for children of all ages and for adults are at 9:15 a. m. The /Church council will meet Tuesday. Read all ab.mt them , many more timely bargains this week in the classified pages. —Adv. This year the Ridge school will open its doors to 330 youngsters in grades kindergarten through the eighth . There will he two classes of second graders and two classes of eighth graders. Due to overcrowdert condition* in the first and seventh grade , some of the children from these grades will attend the annex building and the Charles E. Walters school in Yap- hank. Parents of the children at- tending these schools have been notified by John Anastasi , princi- pal of the Ridge school. School will open September ' .). The school will be in session all day and parents are requested to have children bring in lunch money or lunch from home if not eating in the school cafeteria. This year , kindergarten will at- tend , as aii other grades , from 8:30 to 2:30 p. m. Registration ior all grades may be done from today on with the exception of September 8. At this time exact transporta- tion routing's are now being de- termined. Fuil details of bus stops for new pupils and kindergarten may be obtained by calling Mr. Anastasi at the Ridge school. The Ridge school faculty for the 1959-00 school year is as fol- lows: Kindergarten , Rita Dunaif; grade one , Audrey lustrum; grade two , Dolores Brandon; grade two, Sandra Caldcria; grade three , Vera Cornell; ' grade four , Mary Gow; grade live , Grace McKernuu; grade six , Robert Til p; grade seven , Robert lioyt; grade eight , Frances Lazzaro; grade eight , Guy Mastrion; and Principal , John Anastasi. Parents are requested to attend the first Parent-Teacher associa- tion meeting which will be held Sep tember 15 to meet the new teachers and welcome back the familiar faces. Host of Marching Jnifcs in M. Beach Firemen ' s Parade MASTIC — The Mastic Beach Fire department' s annual bazaar was highlighted by a gigantic pa- rade August 21 with 23 fire de- partments in the colorful line of march. the procession , starting from oonunack and Neighborhood roads , \ was ied by a Brooknaven Town police contmg nt , followed by the .vlas^ic Beacn color guard , banner j curcrs Jack Haughn , William iVuikor and Fred Truxel , and Fire Chief Michael Ghewski with his arst and second deputies , Russell ii ker and Al Harrison. The maj- o ett. s , led by Rose Mary Keenaii gave an ' exhibition ot marching and twirling. They were fol- .owed by the Mustic Beach Fire depart- ment band and lire department members. Th; parade proceeded along Neighborhood road to the Five corners where each company gave a show and was judged Dy Justice of the Peace Erling A. Larsen , Angelo Orlando , Nicholas Bouhou- ris , Charles Stevens and Isadore Sirulnik. Iroplnes were awarded to the following departments: Suffolk Air Force base fire department for the best float; Medford F. D. most men in line and best ap- pearance; Lakeland F. D., Junior band; Mastic F. D., Senior band ; Riverhead F. D., Civil Defense unit-rescue truck; Manorville F. D. Ladies ' auxiliary, best appear- ance; Sag Harbor F. D., for com- ing the furthest distance; and the Port Jefferson F. D. Ladies ' aux- iliary for the most in line. The parade ended at the fire house. All fire department color guards stood at attention while the Mastic Beach Fire department band played \America , the Beau- tiful. \ Lt. Richard Kreite was chair- man of the affair. Retite d Co uples Prove Good Market at Shirle y SHIRLEY — Reti red couples are providing an increasingly strong demand for low-cost homes in suburban locations , according to developer Walter T. Shirley, who reported approximately 700 of the 3,500 home owners at the 15-square mile Shirley community are retirees. The many years of economic prosperity, the wider adoption of pension plans , for workers and greater investment activity of the average person are among the factors in the increase of home purchase by those approaching or at the retiremenc age , Mr. Shir- ley noted. Along with the financial ability to carry a home , retirees today also have an outlook for healthy longevity made possible by the constant flow of medical advances , he added. As a mature element , retirees add a welcome balance to the community, and as full time resi- dents provide a sound consumer economy for goods and services within the community, Mr. Shirley asserted. A survey among those home owners who are retirees revealed that the vacation-type facilities of Shirley constituted a prime factor in their decision to purchase a home , Mr. Shirley said. He said dredging operations have been completed on a 1 , 600-foot long, 190-foot wide marina to accom- modate 400 boats , and the marina will be expanded to a 1 , 200 boat capacity at a later date. NO! I'M NOT NEW I was REUPHOLSTERED w/ ^mWUS^ W,TH ALL NEW ^mW ^^t^ wWS M ATERIALS IkfV ^^ ft V » \ < **\ * .». FARRICS ^iss®i^ ONLY G ROVER'S • NEW M A TERIALS • CHOICE OF NEW FABRICS • SPRINGS RETIED — REWEBBING G ROVER SLEEP PRODUCTS 116 South Ocean Avenue Patchogue GRove r 5-5176 FREE PICK- UP and DELIVERY j i^^^ iki'T PAY BILLS j Uv N I BY CASH! PAY BY CHECK ! : HERE IS WHY : ! • You save time and steps , • Your cancelled checks are > paying bills. No standing in receipts that stop arguments ! line. No bother. before they start. 5 • You avoid the risk of Ios- . • You have a permanent ing large sums. You carry « record (on your stubs) of how your cash in your fountain \ much you spend and for what. pen! I TINKER j NATIONAL BANK \ Centereach Rt. 25 & Henry Rd. JU 5-8300 ! Eas t Setauket SE 6-1600 E j Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I CTgywCTWfyyw yy yy vvYyyTfyTflnfyyv www ^ t\jLXXXA*Xfl*XXiqWiXKftXX^ ^ 2 ' 1 ' ¦ ' ¦ ELECTRIC HEATING IS BEST j ¦ ' ' | FOR ANY FAMILY , Says Mrs. CamW/ r **B) ff y mm\mmwmmwBI ^M * i * ^H^HH^Er \^ ^ H^^^^B &tW^l^i^HW'VTl^iHi^HI^H 1 -«t^HHi^i^i^H V I \ 1 wtmMmMwM i -*\** ^ mMmMW^LmMmh^^^ \ wk J\ \i wSB^aMW ^^ U^^EBBwm\ ^N^^^^^H^H^^H^^^^K ^ ^R LJ IttjflHMP ' K ^H K * flKftai^ifli^^HKv H ' I I ; ! Mrs. Joseph Cantwell , 118 Chapel Avenue , East Patchogue , !' with four of her six children. 1 1 i 1 1 i ' i i I' ' 1 ! . ' ji Mrs. Cantwell says: \We have six active children and we decided j V that they should have the best so we installed Electric. Heating with j i| thermostatic individuall y controlled heat for each room. It has ¦i exceeded our expectations. It is safe , healthful , clean and there ii are no drafts or cold spots , and yet we find that it costs no more j i i ji than other , miexior types of heating. \ 1 ! i ' i ' ' i ' ; Uj ^hl now is I lie time to buy YOUR Electric* Heating ... see ; ; your dealer or electric contractor. j • [ i ¦i ! ^^^^^^ —^- pgp^gH^MgnM pMM I ^Ei J I I Jfl T \i ul ^m I i lYli I I tJSk wm H Urn Atii H m I A B S W\ T tfM * trnmrn AT m\ 1H1 \'¦' l^ r't f 1 . . rjr iv 'l Lif ' -^p ^ j Servinq Southern, Suff olk. Since Joo6 ~* s =s — i ' - ... ^.... ^^^^^^^ JUW ^ JIM ^ II ^ M IIMMWWWVW ^^ J ROELOFFS 1 FITTED MY NEW j I CONTACT LENSES § NO MORE EYE STR A IN AND YOU ' D \ § NEVER GUESS THAT I NEED | 8 GLASSES | I KURT ROELOFFS 1 § 35 EAST MAIN STREET GKover 5-1 121 PATCHOGUE X $OOOOOOCX>OOOOOOOOOOOCK}00<XXX><X)OOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO AWARD S PRESENTED Co,onel Moriches , left , and James Walsh , Peconic , both * tr-n » .j . t , F L an ! t aircraft mechanics with the 52nd Consolidated A. Hill , center , base commander at Suffolk .. - . „ . . . County Air Force base , presents management Aircraft Maintenance squadron, improvement awards to John Sprague , Center —Official USAF Photo MASTIC — The Bits N Boots Trail Riders club will hold its first annual horse show came day starting at 9 a. m. Sunday at Titmus Memorial park here. Proceeds •will go toward the Mastic Ambulance company. -uj Area Trail Riders Set 1st Horse Show Sunday Your friends will know good taste and skilled workmanship have been embodied in the wed- ding invitations you order , from The Patchogue Advance—at bud- get prices. —Adv. Education means developing the mind , not stuffing the memory. A Patchogue Advance special- ty! Wedding invitations whose perfection in printing, design and paper quality cannot fail to please the pocketbook. —Adv. \Until I sold my business with a Want Ad — I always bad a headache1\ g^ g^