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Image provided by: Suffolk Cooperative Library System
Bee Hive to Offer 'Beaut y Workshop * Teenage girls who dream of looking like a model need go no lu.tner than I' atchogue ' s Bee Hive Department Store. The Bee Hive is repeating its hi ghly successful \Beauty Work- shop \ course this year , starting October 2!l. Registration , with ¦Miss Caroline Kei ger, lice Hive ti 'cn coordinato r , is open tomorrow and Saturday. f' o-sponso:ed by Seventeen Mag- azine, the six-week charm course teaches teen girls the basic- beauty techniques. It' s free to local girls between the ages of 13 and 10 , although a small charge ($2. 50) is made for materials used. Kach student, will receive a Sev- enteen beauty book, nil attractive pink and black model' s halliox in which to carry beauty materials , and a Seventeen \ shape measure. \ When she graduates , after a com- p lete course (if \learning by do- ing, \ she receives a \di ploma \ at- testing to her skill in beauty care. i I MAKING xMmfl ! WINE W | • Wine Barrel s I i and Presses I • Grape Grinder I • Spigots • Sulphur Candles • Funnels 1 • Flower Pots ¦ All Sizes i • Wooden Plant ] ! Tubs | I ____________________. i | Stone Crocks i I Bean Pots j SHANDS | ; 71 W. Main St. PakhoKue I <; Rover 5-10G0 ! LO ST I Large Pup — Cross between Shepherd and 1 Collie. Li ght brown and tan , black eye- I brows , white ti p on tail. REWARD. Lost 3 about September 22. 3 253 BAYPORT AVENUE ; ^ BAYPORT j i - 4 QA AR HPAIPR \ erbert Oa«« » 'eft , of Bay port Sports Or\-i\D U£Jr\.LJlJ\ Car Center , Inc., is shown taking de- livery of fi rst 1MB1 Saab at dealer drive-away held recently at Saab' s Carteret , N. J., depot. At fourth annual I.ime Roc k I' ark , Conn., classic, known as the \Little LeMans , \ 19H1 Saab Sedans too k top honors in virtuall y all categories according to Mr. (lazes. 75th Anniversary: The Patchogue Electric Light Company has announced that in celebrating its seventy-fifth anniversary of service to South - ern Suffolk , it gives to its customers a birthday gift of lower costs of electric service. Accordingly, it recently filed with the Public Service Commission a revision of its tariffs for residential and com- mercial customers to become effec- tive on bills rendered after No- vember 3. The new tariffs will reduce the average cost per kilowatt hour for the minimum charge portion of the rates from eight cents per kil- owatt hour to seven and a half cents; however , due to the high cost of rendering electric service for the minimum use customers , the company requires now a mini- mum use of It! kilowatt hours per month at u cost of $1.20 in con- trast to the former minimum re- quirements of 10 kilowatt hours for 80 cents. Customers ' bills for the usage of 30 to '10 kilowatt hours will re- main the same , but all residential customers using in excess of 43 kilowatt hours will receive a re- el u c t i o n . Residential customers using 50 kilowatt hours or more will receive reductions ranging up- ward to 8.2 per cent. Other changes of the tariffs have also been made that are favorable to both com- mercial and residential customers. The smaller commercial custom- ers will benefit from the general service tariff , as it provides for the elimination of a demand charge from two kilowatts to five kilowatts of maximum demand. This means that no demand charge will be made for the first five kilowatts of maximum demand. The many customers who are now making use of \ off-peak\ electric service for heating- wate r and as a result are able to pur- chase their total requirements dur- ing the \ off-peak\ period at the extremely low rate in effect dur- ing the \ off-peak\ hours , will gain an additional advantage under the new residential tariff , which pro- vides for \ off-peak\ hours from 10::i0 p. m. to ' .) a. m. Another notable change in the rates has been to lower the lowest step of the rate from two cents per kilowatt hour to 1.9 cent per kilowatt hour. The company is pleased to cele- brate the seventy-fifth anniversary of electric service in its franchise area by making available to its customers savings in their cost of electricity and enabling them to make a broader use of its many labor-saving services both in the homes and the business places. The savings in electric service have been made possible due to the growth of the area and the en- thusiastic acceptance by old and new customers of the many labor saving services of electricity. In spite of the rapidly rising costs of labor and materials dur- ing the postwar inflationary period , through careful manage- ment , the company has been able tp constantly improve the quality 6£. *ts \ service and to expand its facilities to meet: the rapidly grow- ing demand in an efficient and economical manner. Its long-range planning for system growth and its careful financial manage- ment have made possible the re- visions which are being announced at this time. In announcing the new rates Lo employes , the company expressed its appreciation for their coopera- tion in contributing to the over- all result. Reasonable prices am- quality work set, the highest standards for wedding invitations and an- nouncements. The Patchogue Ad- vance. 20 Medford Avenue. —Adv. Pelco Tariff Change Cuts Electric Rates Dr. Barrv Slated _ r To Speak to Dist. 12 Group Today Dr. I- ' ranklyu S. Harry, vice president of the \ew York State Teachers Association , will speak before a group of Middle Island Central School District 12 educa- tors today in the Ridge Junior High School cafeteria. The hoard of education of the Middle Island Central School Dis- trict will play host to Dr. Harry and the educators in the district with a dinner at (I p. m. as part of a program to facilitate communi- cation between the staff and the board. Dr. Barry is now superintendent of the North Syracuse Centra! School System after having serve i ¦is head of the Cortland schools for a number of years. Before that be was chief administrative officer in irondeipioit , a teacher in West Winfield and a principal of South New Berlin and Sidney. Active in the Centra! New York Study Council , Dr. Barry served a term as president; has been a member of Regents committee- , and was named chairman of a 17- member committee of lay and nrofessional leaders charged with the responsibility of recommending improvements in education in New York State. He is chairman of the program for the Superintendents ' Council on Elementary Education; is a mem- ber of the advisory committee of the Salvation Army in Cortland: served in the Summer of 19\ )9 as a consultant in a directors ' work - shop at Cortland State ; was ap- pointed to the state committee of the Christian Hi gher Education Fund (CHEF) of Congregational churches in an effort to raise $7, - 500 , 000 for higher education and is currently directing a survey of the custodial and maintenance pro- grams for the board of education in Utica. He is also a member of the CARE New York State Com- mittee of School Superintendents , serving in an advisory capacity . The Co-Ed students of the junior hi g h school at Rid ge will serv e as hostesses. MASTIC BEACH — The com- mittee of the Mastic Beach Fire Department Children ' s B a n d sponsor a card and game party at the firehouse on Neig hborhood Road for the benefit of the band November 3. CARD PARTY SET I \It ' s Better . . . It ' s Baked with Butter \ ] I Whoooo! /fiSk 1 HALLOWEEN ^9| &|» PARTY TIME l Order Your S peciall y Decorated 1 HALLOWEEN CAKES I with Favors Baked in . . . & Free Fortune Telling Charts with Each Favor Cake 1 Orange Iced Doughnuts I V Halloween Cupcakes | I Halloween Pump kin Faces E i Holiday Cocoanut , Mince and Pump kin Pies J f Halloween Layer Cakes 1 % S pecial Halloween Cookies | l Bread Specially Colored J See Us About Our Halloween Special for J [ SCHOOL PARTIES J I ORDER EARLY 1 I to have the full benefit of our comp lete J a Halloween assortment J 1 MAIN STREET BAKERY ! I 24 W. Main St., Patchogue GRover 5-0451 J CW ]\CIC PiRAW an< * accurate shooting were developed V^Ulv^lV LTvrY VV by local police officers in ' week-long course given by Federal Bureau of Investigation at Camp Smith , Peekskill , recently. Pictured from left to right are Suffolk Chief Deputy Sheriff Philip F. Corso , FBI Agent John Kennedy, Suf- folk Deputy Sheriff Alfred J. Hickson , Suffolk County Police De- partment Patrolman Theodore Sedate , who is attached to depart- ment' s training bureau; and FBI Agent Charles Smith in charge of school . Course covered revolver , machine gun , shotgun , tear gas gun and grenades fired from prone, kneeling and standing positions , and also from behind barricades. There were 55 men in class , and they will now pass training on to brother officers. Major point of course was safety in handling of weapons. Temp le Beth-EI To Form County Temple Youth Bd Because of the desire of the Jewish communities of Suffolk- County to have better intra-coua- ty youth activities , Rabbi A. Irv- ing Sehnipper of Temp le Beth- El of Patchogue inaugurated a program to help form such an organization. A luncheon meeting under the auspices of the youth committee of Temp le Beth-El of Patchogue was held Tuesday, to formulate plans for organizing the first Temple Youth Board of Suffolk County. The purpose of SCOTY is to help supplement the existing youth activities of the various Suffolk congregations. The three main areas of activity would en- compass the social , cultural and religious aspects. The following rabbis who at- tended the luncheon were Simon Cohen of the Suffolk Jewish Cen T ter of Deer Park; Israel Jacobs of the Jewish Center of Bay Shore ; Ascher Schapiro of Temple Israel of Riverhead and Joshua Sodden of the I.indenhurst Jewish Center. Other members of the Rabbi- nate who have shown a great in- terest in the formation of SCOTY and who were unable to attend the meeting were : Jerome Blum. Babylon Jewish Center; Leon Spi- elman of Beth Shalom , Amityville; IJoyd Teniienbiium of the Hunt- ington Hebrew Congregation and r .ouis Wolfish of Temple Shalom , Smithtown. Letters will be sent to the re- maining congregations in Suffolk County inviting them to partici- pate in this endeavor. A meeting of all youth committee chairmen and youth leaders of their respec- tive congregations will be called soon in order to make SCOTY a reality. Activities of Interest in Patchogue The next regular Patchogue Cerebral Palsy meeting will take place Wednesday, 8:30 p. m., in the Elk' s Club building on East Main Street. Chartering a bus, 32 members and eight guests of the Original Golden Age Club of Patchogue en- joyed a trip to New York City Tuesday. The Patchogue Lions Club today will see two age groups gathered at its dinner meeting around the tables of .Mickey Felice ' s Restau- rant in the Patchogue Hotel. President George Meyer will be welcoming the sons as well as the fathers. Part of the meeting pro- gram will be a presentation by- Gil Sheffield of the Shell Oil Com- pany. It is called the \ mag ic suit- case , \ and depicts the development of the many b y-products of petro- leum , through chemistry, and the part they play in the home and business life of the nation and the world. The regular club business will be shortened to provide en- tertainment for the visiting youngsters . The River Avenue School Parent- Teacher Association will meet at 8 p. m. today in the school cafe- teria. Since last month' s PTA an- nouncement in The Advance , there has been a change in the program. The Patchogue-Medford School Board will not be present . Instead , the New York Telephone Company will show slides on the subject. \The World At Your Fingerti ps. \ Mrs. Charles Rhode , president , and John Tahone , first vice presi- dent , are representing the River Avenue School at the three-day convention of the New York State Congress of Parents and Teachers. They will give their repoils on the \ outstanding events of this meeting. Refreshment hostesses for the meeting will be the Sixth Grade mothers. Anyone thoroughly familiar with Holtsville-Farmingville and vicinity and who is interested in writing news of that area for The Patchogue Advance is asked to call GRover 5-1000 as soon as possible. A knowledge of typing is desirable but not required Prompt payment is made for all news printed. CORRESPONDENT WANTED W uiiBiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiBiBiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiBaiRiiuuuiinn i Make that dream come true with a low cost home im- provement loan. You 'll find our banking services suit- able to all your purposes. ¦ '• •• - '•v^JL$-^ - WE'RE AT YOUR SERVICE IN SO MANY WAYS ... I | A THE PATCHOGUE BANK I fS tlBr \Servi ce Is Our Business \ R ^£* _ T—— _ ' <A^ • 47 West Main Street , Patchogue GRover 5-3020 • Branch Office—468 East Main Street , Patchogue GRover 5-3035 I Friday Evenings — 6:30 P. M. to 8 P. M. S i I 9 MEM BER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. j &niniii(.uiimiuiniiiiR.iiiiiiii n _iaiiiiiii..Eii._u.iiiaiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiii.9 iniBi_k»i ^SS^Ta^W^S^w M^-Mtf ^ffl ¦Hi- 'fcHf* wmm Wi*W-mB! W sif t>m : tittHm _^_^_ H^__j_^^_^_ H _ H _^_^_^ H^_^B-----D-H--^_-_--^F'~ )'^__^^^^t? * v^mt^^^^^K^^^^^B^^K^^K^^^^t^^^^^KM H^HH^H^B H ^HHH^HP A ; >; ' ^HR -¦- ••• - % v________ H _____ B _k_^____ H n^i^^^ H^____^BH^_^_^__^^|^^^^H^Ri^^L^^^r \ r ir ¦^____ f \\ v ^¦^^H^B^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HH ¦ _ BN H ^BE^fl^^^_|^_^B^ \? - . r . IHr; r . . ' _i -*; < _ rii_____B_^_____|__g_____H ¦HB-fl_RH__i-_-__ * ^ - - • - HI *- - , Br ,% * • - _ U __HIK7ffff*BM-M-M tsaSBsSmff msBmr ¦ . 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' -_flH_-_-__-_____l JWB B ^ B- M _--HB_ H ir i__ (_B_i-_-ifc_ '' \ -j-flj-t-^-MBH \AA.AAAAAAAAA-AA-AAAAAAA.ikAAA-A AA.AAAi.AA-_AA-AAA^ j THE CASE OF THE U NHAPPY OLDSTE R! \ j Hiram Jones is bored. He just t- • • ^\^as^Sfe - lB * < sits and stares \blindly \ into .. , / ' < l__ a - ^^W ? J The Reason: Hira m is what is ( |M,iV, !i} f * i known as a low vision case; - . t ^ \ fW» > ^ ^zJ* » J often typical of the a>;infr eye. ' * ' ^T ^ v 'Bft^S^f * \ The Answer: Continental' s Ilisrh r - ^ ' f £!zf Jf e\^f t TB I 4 Power Onepiece Ultex lens of- . ; k * * ,s ?T|¥ V\rjSl far * I 1 fers fi'i'eat hel p to the so-called ' V * p j /T^ V «P ' * \ KURT ROELOFFS tm^^^,^h£ ' l i 35 E. Main Street, PatchoRue / ^^^^^^ *§ W X \ Closed Wed. Afternoon Hfc _ A _ Pv_£_^ta-»^ !? 4 GRover 5-1424 SM&j Ti ' C2^S B ^T - >l