{ title: 'The Patchogue advance. (Patchogue, N.Y.) 1885-1961, October 01, 1959, Page 2, Image 2', 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/sn86071739/1959-10-01/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86071739/1959-10-01/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86071739/1959-10-01/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn86071739/1959-10-01/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
Mr. and Mrs. Club to Present An Original Musical Comedy The Mr. and Mrs. club of I comedy, \Showboat .Sadie, \ an o obcr 12. \ .Showboat Sadie \ is the gro Club bus ever attempted , a spokt oxcrlb'iit story line ai . 'd is !oa<le.l with songs , dances, beautiful girls , real funny comedians and magi- cians , it. was added \Sl-owbuat Sadie \ has a play within the eom- e,!y itself called \I. ove Wins Out. \ :\:d advanced ri .>t ; t • rlaim tK- i! this play within the p lay is reall y something to see. In order to present; \Showboat Sadie, \ the Mr. and .Mrs . elub discovered , within its own ranks , one of I.ong [. -land' s outstanding talents , Irene ' ' antor of Ka-i l Patchogue. Mrs . Canto , ' wrote , produced and directed \Show -boat Sadie , \ and liy all indication s the way \Showboat. Sadie \ is shaping up. Irene Cantor and the Mr. and Mrs . club will have a hit. on th - 'ir hands . Another out- standing talent , (linger Johns ' on , is doing the cimreogi'nphv for this dpli' .rhi fill ionsiral. The music will he / ' urni. -lic.i },y the /Jell Tories , one of I, nng I- 'iand' s most famous tnii-i ' - al group- ,. The east of \Showboat Sadie \ is made uu of immh eis of the Mr. and Mrs . club: Showboat Sadie , Hose Ernst ; Susie , Si'lma N' adl oy; Mr. lirii'Iit.. Danny Her! ;-; Mr. Early. Irving Merger; Mr. Zero , the Magician , Milton 1 rust. : Magician ' s assistant, Helen Patchogue will present the music a. original musical in three acts , Oei- oatest effort that the Mr. ntid Mrs. ;esmari said. This, production has an some Harrv, Arnold Feldman; No Soul Solly, Bert Friedman; Nell , Marsha Chaskin. Chorus girls: Reina Seigcl , Barby Rosen , Eve- lyn tioidfein , Inn Wolpin , Helen Forrest. Chorus hoys: Herb Serif , Herb Sehants , Sid Handel- man , living Katz , Al Wolpin , Fat Men ' s chorus: Ed Slonim , Hal Cantor. i5allc: t solo: Inn Wolpin. Stage managers : Betsio . and Irv- ing Merger. Assistant stage man- agers : Tec Dannenberg, Rhea Chaskin , Elaine Feldman , Elaine S\rif. Costumes , Shirley Dannen- berg. The price of this Mr. and Mrs , club show and dance will also include membership in the organi- zation. Irene Cantor Friedman; Jack , Al Wolpin; Mag nolin , Shiilc . v Kal/.. In the piay within the phi; (Love Wins Out I I he cast is a follows: Maw. Ruth Berke; Hand Biz Women ' s Week Slated tor Oct. 4-10 I' roi uchaven I own Super- visor I' .-ivv B. Raynor this we. . .!-: procla i med October -1- Octoher Vi :i< .Vatiou:,! Hi.si- nes. - . Women ' s week. This annual week, sponsored through.oit the 1' niH'd Slates b y the National !• '-deration of J; u s i . '! e s s and I' rofes. 'ional Women ' s clubs , is set aside to pay tri bute to women in busi - ness and the professions and the contribu t ions they make to the nation. Tie- theme of I he I !>. \ »:* Na- tional l!u iness Women ' . , week is \\ l. 'ighl Turn to a Confi - dent Future . \ II. ading up the observance in the local area is the I' aich- oguc Business and I' lofessioa- al Wi.men ' s club of which Mrs. Lillian C.illam is president. 'Go Home Plan Discussed At Principals Conference Col. Fred J. Stacey, Suffolk County Civil Defense Director , at- tended a Patchogue school principals ' meeting on September 24 at the senior high building. The purpose of the meeting was to co- ordinate the \Co Home Plan \ developed by the principals to the rules and regulations of the Civil Defense department. Col. Stncey said the two main reasons for the emergency evacua- tion p lan are : 1. To insure the complete dispersal of the popula- tion as soon as possible and 2. To get the children to their parents so the family may work as a unit. He also stated that this plan is the official state department plan and has his approval. A fter testing with thousands of children in local districts it has been found that the student in Junior high and Sor:->r living within four miles is capable of getting home by himself within (hi- ailoted hour. Elementary stu- dents will be transported by bus. Col. Stacey stated that under no circumstances will a \Go Home \ signal be given if there is .. co.%^ than an hour between the \first knowledge of attack and the calculated attack time. He also said that there would never ho a county wide rehearsal and that if an attack signal is given it would only lie for a real emergency. Because of the importance of earl y warning a national warning control system has been established and all of the nation ' s schools can bo notified within .seconds if they have a receiver installed in the schools. Col. Stacey recommends that each school have its own monitor its in the time? of emergen- cy our normal communications arc the first to be destroyed. Although some parents may object to having their children sent home , they would have to accept this policy and make ar- rangements for the emergency reception of the children in the immediate vicinity of their home if they are not at home. Col. Stacey suggested that each school obtain a map of the school area , locate the school and then locate the perimeter students and measure the distance that they live from the school, lie suggested that the loc al Parent-Teacher as- sociations be brought into the planning to handle emergency residences for children if parents are not at home. Dr. Alden T. Stuart , supervising principal of Patchogue-Medford School district , stated that our next step would be forming a committee to work out the details of the \Go Home Plan. \ Col . Stacey stated that it is the responsibility of the boards of education to provide adequate civil defense protection plans for the schools. His responsibility ends after he has advised the schools on the policies and recom- mendations of the government re- garding civil defense for the schools. He also stated that he would be available to assist in a district practice go home drill if one is planned in the future. The major portion of any go home plan starts with the parents in the training of their children in walking home: this is most im- portant for children that ride the buses. In an emergency, the life of a child may depend on bis own knowledge of how to get home. Supers Award County Cops Hq. Bldg . Contracts RIVERHEAD— Contracts total- ing $237 , 21(1 for construction of a Suffolk County Police District headquarters building at the coun- ty center in Hauppauge were awarded hero Monday by the Board of Supervisors. In each instance , the wards were made to the low bidders. Acting on the recommendation of Public Work s Commissioner Albert Cass and architects Beatty & Berlenbach , the board awarded the $lfi7 , 9, r >0 general construction contract to Haskell-Gilroy, Inc . of Ififi Bay road , Huntington. Other lettings were : Plumbing contract , to the Hassett Plumbing Corporation , 909 New York ave- nue , Huntington Station , for $19 , - 1 ' ilV. t ; heating and ventilation , Has- sett Thermo Corporation of the same address , $29, 712; electrical , Uiverhead Electric Company, Inc., Mill road and Oncck lane , West- hampton , .$19 , 885 . Although work on the 50 x 100- foot brick and cinder block struc- ture is expected to start in the near future , the probable comple- tion date will be several weeks or months after January 1 , when the new law enforcement agency takes over police functions in Suffolk' s five western towns and four of its incorporated villages. While the one-story and base- ment building is being erected , an old frame structure on the county ' s Veterans Memorial highway reser- vation will house both the head- quarters division and the district police system. This building, soon to be enlarged at an estimated cost of $20 , 000 . will contain the r lTieos of Police Commissioner Charles It. Thorn and his staff for some time to come. In other action looking to the impending transfer of police powers from the municipalities to tho district , the board authorized Purchasing Directo r John J. Tull y to: ( 1) Appraise the value 1 of town and village police equipment and property available for transfe r , purchase or lease for th' . use of the county department; (2) to ad- vertise for bids for the microfilm- ing of approximately 15(1 , 000 police record cards , for their reproduc- tion from microfilm to standard card size and for the consolidation of the cards into one centra ! file utilizing the Soiindcx method of filing: C!) to seek bids on the dies and the police badges to be manu- factured from the dies for the use of the department. H' ville-Fville FD District Voters A pprove Budget HOLTSVILLE—Taxpayers of the Holtsville - Farmingville Fire district passed the district' s $17 , - 130 budget by a wide margin Tues- day night and also approved S1S , - 000 in other expenditures. Only a $2 , 000 proposal for remodeling of the Farmingville truck house ran into trouble , passing by a nar- row -19-48 margin. The budget passed , 79-18. A $12 , 000 bond issue for purchase of a fire truck passed , 77-20 , and the spending of $13 , 71-1.9li from surplus for the truck was ap- proved , 711-23. Taxpayers approved the purchase of $1 , 000 in uniform s , 02-3. ' :! . The firehouse expansion proposal also included provisions for the hiring of an architect. Officials of the district said in- creased property assessments would allow them to maintain the district' s tax rate at the- present i ' )0 cents for S100 of assessed val- uation. Kiwanis International Holds '59 Convention The Kiwanis club of Patchogue was represented ut the 1959 con- vention of the New York district of Kiwanis International at Kia- mosha Lake , September 27-30 , club president James Bianca announc- ed this week. Clum Bucher , a trustee of Ki- wanis International from Bloom- ington , Ind., was featured speaker at the three-day meeting at the Hotel Concord. Mr. Bucher is dean of the Junior division , Indiana university. Delegates from 295 clubs , repre- senting approximately 15, 000 busi- ness and professional leaders , par- tici pated in the various sessions. Committee conferences , a discus- sion of plans for the coming year , and the election of officers high- lighted the convention program, Mr. Bianca said. Car-Train Crash Injuries Fatal To Ernest DeVito A wt '1-known Patchogue house painter vas fatall y injured when his car was struck by a Long Is- land Rail Road train at the River avenue crossing Friday afternoon. He was Fi nest DeVito, 44 , of 53 Academy street , Patchogue . Patchogue Village police said that Mr. DeVito apparentl y was driving west along Division street, which parallels the tracks , and started to make a right turn into River avenue across the tracks when struck by an eastbound train at about J:25 p. m. He died of mul- tip le injuries, two hours later at Brookhaven Memorial hosp ital. A watchman guards the cross- ing up to -1 p. m., police said. After that , the crossing is serviced by blinker lights . Train Engineer Stephen J. Alt- man of Mnssapequa said he could not stop the train in time to avoid the accident. The car was drag- ged about 75 feet , overturned and demolished. Born in Patchogue , Mr . DeVito was a life resident here . He was a painter by trade , and* a former member of the Van Guard Hose company of the Patchogue Fire department , the members of which acted as pallbearers. He is survived bv his wife , Mrs. Dorothy Hildt DeVito; a daug h- ter , Miss Emetta DeVito; two brothers , James and Carl DeVito ; four sisters , Mrs. Rose Rizzo , Mrs. Adeline Murray, Mrs. Evel yn Davies and Mrs. Lucy Schnctzler; and his mother , Mrs. Angelina De- Vito , all of Patchogue. A requiem mass was held at 9 a. m. Tuesday at St . Francis de Sales R. C. church , Patchogue , with the Rev . F. Leo Cunningham , pastor, officiating. Interment was in H o 1 v Sepulchre cemetery, Cram. Supervisors OK Private Water Company Sale RIVERHEAD — Th» Suffolk Board of Supervisors on Monday consented to the Suffolk Water authority ' s proposed purchase of a privately owned water company which pre sentl y supp lies some 1. - 200 families in Commack. Th > $r>{i0 , ()00 ao.iiiisition must also re- reive the approval of the Public Sen ice commission and the Water Power and Control commission. Organized several years ago to service the mushrooming housing developments honk-ring Jericho turnp ike , the Indian Head Water Company now operates three' wells and owns some S9 . • \ >()() feel of six to 12-inch pipeline. according i>. David L. Gliekman , counsel to the authority. Included in the system are 175 fire hydrants . In a letter to the county board , Mr . Gliekman said the Indian Head system has been pronounced a \ modern system in good operating condition \ b y the Stone and Web- ster Engineering Corporation. \The authority, which now has active operating facilities both in Kings Park and Smithtown , feels that th. * inclusion of the Indian Head Ware;- Company properties into its operations will hel p to form :i\ integrated system for this area , \ the attorney stated. The water authority, of which Franklin S. Koons is chairman , has been under mounting pressure to expand its facilities , particularly in the fast-growing communities of Western Suffolk. E^^ IMHtlf^HMWIiil ^ |^B^__ • ¦ I K -^m m ^ m? ~ '^^^m ¦*^^ E f ' ' J . ' *^r -^^^^^^^^^^L ' -^B' ^BB^^P it'jJi ft(i > I ;*W M <W 1 tTi Vt^i «H, v 771 kjfl r^^^ T^^^^-o^^^lIsr^ ^HHii^HH^BHiHfi^K£^^^KiBMiiHHKH^MHMi^^H^^^^^H^^^I^H^^HB^I^^r >^ i - ~ i^^r ^B^^^^^^H H^^^^HM^^^^^^^^^^^BB^^I^^^^^H^^H^^H^I^ H ^^^^^^H^^^^^^^^ B HRI^H B I^H^^I I ' - - \' flv w*^^n Hill^^rala i! ¦ K. 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It ' s Baked with Butter \ I ( YEARN FOR THAT 9 W m I ffp f* ashione<I BREAD? | I *% fft • s OUR RYE 1 1 _E?) Iffl? * PUMPERNICKEL 1 1 ' 5 ' ®y^w^ N * CORN B^EAD I ! ,^ilC/|im • EGG BREAD • i 'HSKJ cDIm * GERMAN RYE 1 l@f ! f BSS fiflPi* PUMPERNICKEL I I AND * 1 a variety of good eating baked fresh every IjM day, to p lease the famil y appetite. m MAIN STREET BAKERY II W L_ ; M I 24 W. Main St., Patchogue GRover 5-0451 M m -~- -*-¦ -*+~- ^^ ^ -^- ^ ~-+- -*~~~ -^^ -~~ -* J OT ! ENJOY good vision and good looks KURT ROELOFFS 35 Knsl Main St. Patchogue ' Phono GRover 5-M2J »»» \- — —.—, i— i ' J ' W—»! ¦ i . ———P1W PRINCIPALS' CONFERENCE C T F ST&LS: Suffolk County Civil Defense director , center , last Thursday at I' atchouue Senior High school building. Purpose of meeting was to coordinat e \Go Home Plan \ for school children. Among those attending conference .was Robert Hildrcth , principal of River Avenue school , left, and F. Alton Cri ppen , Patchogue Junior High school principal. , —Russell Wygand Photo Just Arrived ! VA/ DUTCH BULBS® DISCOVER THE REAL HEAIITY OF YOUR HOME Plant Onl y the Best TULIPS 15 Varieties 69c doz. —$5 per 100 DAFFODILS :i Varieties $1.25 per doz. HYACINTHS I Colors 2 for 29c—$1 .59 doz. C R O C U S 39c doz. —$2.95 per 100 PAPERWHITE NARCISSUS 19c ea.—6 for $1.00 GRAPE HYACINTHS 39c doz. All No. 1 Uulhs SHANDS' 71 W . Main St. Patchogue GRover 5-lOfiO f \ ~ ' I \Oct it STRAIGHT ' from the .¦ ¦ ^X ^^ * } ' Moulh! \ « f(r^^^\ Xevcr take a \tip \ —never I trust a rumor. Instead—get I the facts from a man who knows the business . That ' s I the horse-sense way to choose I stocks and bonds. We 'll bo glad to help and ' advise you. That ' s our busi- i ness. Why not stop in for . a chat' . ' Or phone us for our 1 helpful booklet — \DIVI- I 1) E N I) S 0 V E R T II E I YEARS. \ It ' s free! I GROVER 5-2111 I ALBERT /.. KIZZUTI I PURCELL & CO. I REGISTERED I INVESTMENT ADVISORS I Member: N. Y. Slock Eichnnge ' American Slock Exchange u 10 SO. OCEA N AVE. ! PATCHOGUE , N. Y. WHMnBBMHBOnnlHi The Golden Ape Social club of Patchogue met at PEI .CO last Thursday. Charles Kattau. president , pre- sided. A get-well card was signed by all members and sent to Mrs. Gertrude Dittmier who underwent surgery and is now recuperating. A luncheon is p lanned for 1 p.m. next Thursday at Tojens Restau- rant. Coffee and cake were served by Mrs. Sophie Tietjie , hostess. Golden Age Social Club Plans Luncheon Oct . 8