VENETIAN BLINDS ^| E| 1 -...

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BAYPORT BRIEFSf kast Friday afternoon the followingprogram was presented Iii the Bayportschool under the direction of John ,C.Schneider, niusic director: Flag saluto,led by Merle Johnson ; songs by Grade3: Snowbirds , Little Eskimo; pianosolos, Phyllis Newciell: Adieu to the(Piano , Beethoven , Merry Parmer,(Schumann; songs by Oracle 4: Skating,Follow, Me;, cornet solos, Ronnlci

: Piatt: Mnrch - Onward , Country Gar-dens; accordion solos. Richard Schmidt:Beautiful Heaven , Marine Hymn;songs by grade 4: Blue Bella of Scot-land, Folly "Wolly Doodle; clarinetsolos, Lois , Piatt: Man on the FlyingTrapeze,' To Each His Own, Carry MeBack to Old Virsinny : group singing-

'America, the Beautiful , Yankee'Doodle.• The Morgan cottage on Main Street ,probabl y the olde.it landmark in thevillage, will soon be moved south ofits present, location and will be plncwlon the Morgan estate by Mrs. Martin¦V. Caliagy, ft granddaughter of thelate Mr, and Mrs . John Morgan. Thequaint old house is well over 100 yearsold arid was Tiought froin Mr. and Mrs.John A. Hlcta, by Mr. Morgan in 1890,as it adj oined the gate entrance toills estate . The post ollice occupied itfrom 1892 for many years, while "Ed-die" Woods was postmaster. Just .who

' built the residence and at what dateseems to be lost in the distant past.Mrs. Caliagy plans ta renovate it Xoiher own residence.

Mr. and Mrs, Paul Spahn and theirson, David , of East Orange , N. J., spentlast. wcek end here with Mrs. S. Web- '.ster Marvin . Mrs. Spahn and Davidremaining ior several days.* The Bnyport unit of the Home Bu-reau will meet for (he third lesson insewing on Thursday of next week, atthe home of Mr.s. A. O. Bernhard from10 to 4.

Mr. rind Mrs. Arnold J. Hanson , MissDoris Hansen and Arnold Jr. spentSunday in Jnckson Heights with Mrs.Robert Hanson.

Mrs. Merrill Bachelor and her twochildren Scott and Elizabeth , of Flem-liigton, N. J., have been spending this

..Week with Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Liltle.t The Fire Department w?is calledout on'Tuesday ' afternoon and workedlor about a half hour putting out afire in the wiods on Sylvan Avemie'!¦ ! This evening at Smithtown the Bay-port High School basketball team willplay Smithtown at 7 :15.

,' Mrs. William Otlo is recovering fromJJ severe cold which Tcept her confined

' .to her bed] for « week,;• -|Mrs. /Rudqlpht:(yQ*£rlsa ¦entertained

• |rer , clubv on ? Tuesday evening.

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•' ¦ jf !'-,'Ic», yoii know ," remarked the: .' teacher, "will keep things from be-: feg spoiled,"Zy {'That's not always true , loach-'

. .' ., Ifer ," remarked one of his brighter. ¦ [pupils.

. ¦;" ,'.£• ¦"How so?" asked the teacher,Rf "Because last week I was out[skatinj, but I slipped on the ice so

.(much it spoiled my fun ." ':¦ ; ' ' .jte , ¦ • ¦ .' , ' . ' —¦—————" ' -rv.*] iW] Postiionetlf 'After a ' few words , mostly spokenp y the - ' young : wife, her hubbysprang to his tcct.t "You've gon'e . 'loo far I" lie ex-claimed angrily, "This is our lastqunrr<>\, I'm golnj ! r iglit out of your

;Hte:>'v "Oh, .Henry, darling, - whore aro,

. you going?" she cried.'¦ .' '"Where I'll never troubl e you

figl/.n ," ho replloc ) , ns ho" started toopen tlio front door of ,tlio li l t le homein whieh they hnd such pvldc—unlilnow. "I'll find a.place whore wildiidventure will wipe out the memo-ries of this- ' moment—-perhaps inthe jungle —or on the - stormy sons, "

- , As he spoke he opened the door ,Mien lie closed it nguin mid turnedbternly (o his wife .£"It's' lucky for you it' s raining! "

I 11 Ira in V., Meeker' Hiram E, Meeker , . executive vleopresident of the First National Bankof Lindenhurst slucc 103H, died Mon-day In Dr , King 's Hospiial in BayShore of pneumonia nf tor n brief ill-ness, Mr. Meeker , who lived at H7Soutli Welhvood Avenue , Lindenhurst ,Was 53 years old,

¦f Z "_ . -Unattractive Habit- . The , (oiiRud lapping of animals, -While a very unattractive habit ,seems to cause no more harm than;tho thumb-sucking by a child. Some<e(iws have the inclination te Jap anddroll the ton-gtiG , but just tlie same,

i»bey give their live gallons of milk;j day, - when fresh;

Mrs. Lillian Albrecht announced theengagement on Sunday ol her daugh-ter . Miss Dorothy 33. Albrecht , aridWilliam T. Sawyer, son of Mrs. WilmaSawyer, of Center Moriches. Thetveddhig will take place on Sunday,February 23rd, in St. John 's LutheranChurch in Sayville ot 4:30 with theRev. Louis Martin officiating. MissAlbrecht- is the daughter also of thelate Paul Albreclit, of Bnyport. Sheis secretary, to H. Garton Lewis, prlii rcipal of the Bayport school. .. ._ •

On Sunday afternoon Valerie Hei-"/nonen entertained several friends ' incelebration of her sixth birthday. Herguests included Joy Giacobbe;' FrankCostclizo, Charles Worthingtori, Phyl-lis Lipson , Joan Bartelme, LorraineBanaszak , Harriet Brown, " Mari lynSchmidt , and Sandra Stoll . '

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Elwell Palmer, of Sayville , has been'havin g some work done on his Bay-port- property, formerly known as the?Champ.s Elysees development, andreaching fro m Middle Road to the'bny.The brick wall has been taken downand one of the roads straightened.

Guests on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. ,Russell Lechner included Mr. and Mr^' jRobert Lechner. Floyd and BruceLechner , Mr. ami Mrs. Hewlett ' Craft ,of Springfield Gardens , and Mrs . Kath - Jerine Abrams of Leeds, N. Y. •¦ '¦ ,

Skeet shooting rvery Sunday. 10 a/iri. jSayville Skeet Club , Montauk High- ,wny, West Sayville. Visitors welcome, j

• - . , . '9812,Mrs. Howard Petersen and her in-

fant daughter , Kathleen ?,, returned "o'fFriday from the Mather MemorialHospital , Port Jefferson, where tne ibaby was bom. Mrs. Petersen is the..jformer Miss Eileen Deacon: • I

Part of Baypor t was in darkness lateMonday afternoon , when the house 'lights in a part- of the village were out jfor afeout a half hour.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Basil , of Brook-lyn , spent- Sundny with Mr. and Mrs.Robert T. Buttelmnn.

Mrs. Robert- Hope, of WesUleld , N. J..spent, the week end with Mr. and Mrs.David Hope.

Mr, arid Mrs. Peter McGovern movedon Monday to their, new home' ¦inDouglaston. '" ¦' -:• "-. ' ¦

Mrs. Ellen O'Reilly is planning; ;tocelebrate her 90th birthday on; 'Mon-day.

Supreme Court .lurors DrawnFlora May Antos and Lillian R,

Case, : both i of-sayville ; Elizabeth T.Allies. Holbrook, and Adelaide.. Rob-erts, Blue P6inty;-;are; -ntriong tfttfcotrial jurors drawn to serve at the termof t-h e Supreme Court In Riverheadwhich begins on February 3rd.

Safe DistancieThe safest distance at which to

follow another car is one ear-lengthfor each 10 miles of speed. At 30miles an hour, for example , the safe""following" distance would be threecar-lengths.

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T O M O R R O W S

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Also available for Immediatedelivery, Many beautif ulplated patterns , complete Incliesl-s from SIK.OO up,

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Stores hi lsllp and Hay Shore

CContlnued from page one)

green gutters. His face blanched andhe shoved the heavy truck into 'higli jgear. A mongrel dog sniffed at thegutter lh front of the bank. He sti£- !fened , then stalked away.\The reporter w?as struck-by an in-

spiration. Find a vagrant, he toldhimself. ? A tramp. They usually sleepin^g'utters. And where do you usuallyfind-tramps? - At the railroa d station ,f it. course. . - , • ;f At the depot he found just the fel-low; he was ' looking for. His clotheswere in tatters. Bread criinibS clungto -his beard; . He. was dirty. He was.disheveled. , Ah.;gdod I ' • - .< -? ; "Well," he commented , accepting; acigar from the news hawk.. ••Well , I've''slept In gutters.; from .'New. York 'toi§niu 'e 'Fe and from Chicago , to Blrm-'Ingham. I've awakened to find my-self in the company of dead cats,

' empty booze bottles aiid cigar butts,j But not once have I awakened in aI green gutter " He shook his head sad-ly. "What kind of a town is this ahy-

j way?" he nske'd acidly. "Green gut-j:tcrs!" • ¦ '

i Shortly after noon the mystery un-ra veiled. The weary reporter saunteredinto a grocery store. The proprietorsold him a package? of cigarettes. •'The¦green gutters,"' -he began . .. .. ...

-yes!" : the reporter prompted.-T know the answer ," declared the

proprietor , who .for . the sake of the jrecord ..can - .be -y identified as . -¦ MickMalsch. . -- ..:- -- • . .- -. . - . ? . .; ? ; , I

"Ton- know "that-dye;the;Navy '-at- 'I(aches- to life preservers,"- 'he ¦ quizzed;-1

I We did. "Well , a kid was hoirie'' on !Heave " from the"'Navy last -night. HeI liad a 'package of the stuff ." they use'j i t so thai survivors at sea can be spot-. ted from the air. He dumped it into' the gutter. It turned out -a prettyi green , didn 't it?"

The reporter checked the stosy. It| rang as ,true as the dollar sign onI Malsch's cash register.

Mick had a suggestion. "Don't usethe kid's name in the paper," he cau-tioned. "If that stuff doesn't comeoff tires a lot of people will be afterhis scalp." .;. • . '. -'.- ; . - -• . ' . .- -.• - ."

• Your- ireppr fer rushed^back f itoj lthe: dc-pc*. to. teii i lthe traVntyij-j He^fclioLigHtThe ought io' know!' "i>'yb, "e'lV?""ifte'I '.rainp replied, accepting another cigar.

"Crazy kids. They 'll never amount tonothing."

lie spat on the ground and stalkedoff along the tracks.

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|t - t Roman PlautlitsJ Snapping the fingers and wavingi handkerchiets were forms of ap-] plause among the Romans.

My stery of GreenGutters Solved

Republic Emp loyeesFile PortaUo 'PortalClaims in U, S. Court: Employees ;. . ,of . Republic . .. AviationCorp, have ; joined the hundreds ofother industrial firms thi'ouglioiit the-nation ' iii seeking portal-tb'-portai pay.Thousands.^of : men and ' .women em-ployed by the company during the waryears and after , now want to be paidfor thc time it took them to reach theirparticular' station once th<!y arrivedat the entrance to the plant property;This chore of walking, it is maintained ,is the ' equivalent of six hours a' week!;

.'Attorneys': liave been retained by .the.'employees,: ahd suit has been- filed . litli. S. District-Court/ This actio'n:was'taken on Friday of last -week.-? T ? , -

Tlie matter' was deemed' to be .or,klch importance chat', the attorneysfor . the".employees' mailed - out a ptib-.iic'ify Release' on the subject to news-papers'' fcierore ' the cbmpariy was; awareof the suit.'; ' The statement- : followsin part:-''' . '¦¦ • ¦. . ¦

"During the period of the ' war ,:about . '15,000v'.empioyees were employed byRepublic v Aviation; Because of ? tne.size of the Republic plant- and thesubstantial'- "period of - time ¦spent .- iirwaikiiigvfrorii ' the plant- gates to ...the;production- buildings at the beginningand end' of " every day, it Ls claimedthat each- e'niployee will . .he' entitled to"about six-hours of retroactive pay forevery week ' he worked at? , the -. plant".The complaint filed in the DistrictCourt makes no estimates ?-as to ;-theamotint to- which the employees ..areentitled' to' recover, but it is likely. thatiUie .sum-.wi'li.bVlarge.". ¦; . - - .: , . : .;

<: zz =:¦< ' .: Thaw Poultry - : '. ¦¦¦-..-. When , .thawdd before cooking,poultry* 'copies ri\ore, ey;enl'y and .with',greater economy of fuel. It may bethawed slowly in a refrigerator. Athree or four pound bird .will - takeovernight, or longer to thaw com-pletely, or ,it may be thawed' at roomtemperature , in-which ca§e it shouldbe watched closely. Once thawed,cook poultry without delay becausethawed meat is more perishablethan meat freshly killed. Don't tryto hurry thawing by soaking the fro-zen meat in water , hot or cold.Soaking, causes loss of good juices.

1/ '] / - _ "'Z:t. J?ejl- Gvvyh' f iZZZZ/y " ;TSeYl Gwyn .jj ijglish actrjq^ dfj th e

17tH;century. -&afe illiterate1 landJwithdifficulty scrawled an awkward E.(Eleanor) G. at ' the bottom of ;herletters, written for her by others.

22,000 BABY CHICKS -FI.OWX ' ,TO illacARTHUK AlKPOItT

- Some '22.000 baby chicks, who fromnow on will get no higher ofi the !ground than a roost, were flown, from

? New , Hayien, ? Cohri.. to MacArthurField last Friday fri'a' transport planeof Island s Alr PeiTies.

- •''¦ The ?3hiphicrit , whfch weighed. 2,9^0pounds,' -was • consigned . to WendellStill; well-known' Coram faring-. Theyshowed no ill effects from the swiftvoyage.

• ; Salad ; DressingCabbage salad may be hot

dressed j ar cold dressed , depending;on. whether.a'; wilted or a crisp slaw•i_y .J wilipte'd! '.¦' Hot dressing wilts'.shredded - .cabbage' somewhat, aridtliis .litQpriess;is preferred ,by some.!F,pr,V tj ios?5. who' want their cabbage. crisp,v?dd 'cold, • dressing just before'.serMihg\ For ' cole slaw' many peo-..ple lik? a' s\veet-spur. cooked dre'ss-,ing,; "well ..'seasoned ,. with mustardaridJ c'elerx? seed, ^ .- , ,/ - . . . .

; ' : ' , .:;' •':' ; Gains Farmlands ¦ .;. Illinois h.Ss gatned nearly 600,000

i acres 'iri .farrrilands since 1940.

KENNY'S TAXI,.i£ALL SAYVILLE 75

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^Miiii niiiuiiii iiiiiiiiiMiiiriiiriiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiii<ii ' '£

3 Formerly THe Heiiry Schultz Mkt. S

= ' . CKurch St'.', Bohemia- §

3 . Z ' . STORE HOURS 8 A. M. - G P, M. ' " ' ¦ - .§

' = POUTEmiOUSE - sintoix LB. IOASTIN-C ' LB, =

j STEAKS Sllc P(M S c |§ UPM"E CURED SMOKED' LB. GEN. SPRING Ril* LB,; §

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IS LOINS' OF LR. ' 3ENTEU CUT ' LB; =

| PORK 4f c Pork Cho s S5t J1 BONKLESS l'Of LU. BOHEM IAN' LB. §

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| Corn BEEF 8©c ROASf 45c |S Krgtuniii); Tuesslay, Jaiiunry '4K, we will hnv 53 . Honu'iiiiule ,liiteriilct- S

r i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i iMi i ^

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j Bayp'ort 1512 1 Sayville 3*11

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