1
^ ^Trrt?r?#«**^»<^^ :•!::; m HI I II PAGE SIX THE SUFFOLK COUNTY NEWS, SAYVfLLE, 1 , f„ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1961 WANTS ADS PHONE SA^i III 'm m m "'•'!" Ilfl mm i i : '. •mV ; ; : i , ' ; W I f. u if li il 1 , « . HBwIM ! I i HHflHI BBBfii i: ; i •• m Hih i ; * , ' ;-M*i Comi] events Friday, February third Jukebox dance held at the ' American Legion Hall on Hu- •'•: bal Street in Bohemia at 8:30 : p.m. -^admission dimes for . The Marth of Dimes. Friday and Saturday, February third and fourth —• "The Night of January 16th" presented by the SayviUe Mu- sical Workshop at the Sayville High School at 8:30 p. m. Saturday/February fourth —- Annual dinner-dance held by the.Sayville Chamber of Com- merce at Land's End at eight , •• ; . p.m. \ ' \'-% -y^' : f<\ Second annual Snowflake ; Dance "hefd—by the Sayville : Guild of Good Samaritan Hos-' pltal at Blue Point Republican Headquarters at nine p.m. Friday, February 10th—- Annual Valentine's Day dance ; Held by the Bayport-Sayville Lions Club at the Suffolk ; County. Republican Club oh 'Atlantic Avenue in Blue Point .atiiine p.m. V. Saturday, Fgbnujrf 11th '•—. ; ;Va!entine Dance held by the Bayport.; Fire Department at the fire house at nine p.m. Valentine dance to be held in Liberty Hall, Ocean Avenue, Ronkonkoma by the Pine ' i'l Lodge .Social Club.f, .'. Tuesday, February 14th — Dessert-Swap party held at '•."•.".•one p.m. at St. John's Luther- an Church on Greene Avenue, Sayville . •.-,:•; ••--:.: . - .,'-::. '}-:}••': ',-•.. Tuesday, February 17th — ^ "Wor|d Day of Prayer" held V through the s auspices of the .United Council of Church Wo- men at St. Ann's Church, Say- ville two and eight p. m. Saturday, February 18th -r- An- nual dance held by the Say- ville Auxiliary of Southside Hospital at Great River Coun- ;':• try Club. . > Friday, February 24th Annual dance held by the / B l u e Point Republican Club at headquarters on Atlantic Ave- nue, Blue Point at nine p.m. Saturday, March fourth Annual fund-raising dance held by; the Bohemia Boy "Scout Troop Committee at Is- land Hills Golf Club. William J. E. Adamec !} Funeral Chapel Boh Home Wilson || TEL. SAYVILLE 4-0669 Bohemia, L. I„ N. Y. WM. F. REYLEK, JFL ' Lie. Mgr. I 194 SOUTH MAIN STREET SAYVILLE, N. Y. , TEL. SAYVILLE 4-1472 MRS. THEODOREvC BRANDT Mrs. Olive U. Brandt, aged 69, wife of Theodore C. Brandt died on Monday at her ( home, 34 Henry Street, Sayville, alter a brief ill- ness. Born in,Sayville, the daugh- ter of the late Richmond and An- nie Huntley ydall; she had lived here all her life. She is survived by her husband and one sister, Mrs. Clarence Saw- yer" of Patchogue. Funeral services will be held at Raynor's Chapel, Sayville, today at two p.m;, with the Rev. Peter D. MacLean, 1 rector of St. Ann's EPIST copal Church of Sayville, officiat- ing, followed by interment in Union Cemetery, Sayville. MRS. WALTER BROWN Mrs. Adrianna J7,. Brown, aged 78, , of Rollestone Avenue, West Sayville, died on "Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Wil Ham Newhouse, of Division Ave- mie, West Sayville, after a long illness. ;; >v^-- : -'.. ; .;V:/.. .- 1 Born in West Sayville, the daughter of : the late John and Johanna Hage Sserveld, she had lived there all of her life. Her husband, Walter Brown, died in November 1957 and besides Mrs. Newhouse, she leaves another daughter, Mrs. Charles H. Mun- kelwitz of Sayville, one son, Wal- ter F. Brown of West Sayville, two brothers, Robert Seerveld of East Hampton, and Frank Seer- veld . of West Sayville, . a sister, Mrs. Adrian Dykstra of West Say- ville and five grandchildren. • Services were at Raynor's Chap- el, Sayville, on Tuesday afternoon with the Rev. Eric H. Rieker, pas- tor of St. John's Lutheran Church of Sayville, officiating. Interment was in Union Cemetery, Sayville. MRS, EVERETT FUCHS A solemn requiem mass was held at Our Lady of. the Snow R.C. Church in Blue Point on Thursday for Mrs; Emma Fuchs of 48 Bay- view AVenue, Blue Point who died at her home on January 23rd.' The thirty year old woman was born in New York and lived in Blue Point for the past 26 ye/irs. She is survived by her husband and three sons, Everett J., Erik F7 and Joseph ^A., all of Blue Point,' a daughter, Diane, of Blue Vo'mi; two sisters, Mrs. John Mince and Mrs. Louis Rose, both of Blue Point; a brother, Alfred J. Druhm of Remsenburg, and,her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred T. Druhm of Blue Point. . .A. rosary was recited at the Pet- tit Funeral Home in Patchogue last Wednesday. Interment took place in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Coram. •^#^## , #^#^## fc #^##^#^#^#^#^#<h##^j^. IERAK. SERVICE Est. 1874 Licensed Partners CHARLES G. RAYNOR, MgT. RALPH A. REH) 176 M A I N ST. ' SAYVILLE TEL. SAYVILLE 4-2345 # of the "personal bookkeeping" kind -— are yours when you pay all bills with bank checks. Your checkbook stubs tell at a glance what you've spent, and how; your cancelled checks are sure receipts. Before it's bill-paying time again, come in. and open a Accoum "Uystermen's I AMD TRUST COWPAHY Oakd«f« Plat* CMtkdale, N. Y. OR 131 Maki Street | S«yvill», N. Y. SA. 4-O7O0 JAMES G. SHAND James G. Shapd, formerly of Patchogue, died January 23rd in Deiand, Fla. at 85. years.!Funeral services were held there last Tues- day^ The body then reposed at the Pettit Funeral Home in Patchogue until Saturday afternoon when services were held at the Patch- ogue Congregational Church with the Rev. Stuart W. Van Cott offi- ciating. . • •;' .'.,': Mr. Shand was born in Williams- town, Mass. arid came to Patch- ogue with his parents at the age of 15. After being employed by the firm of Hammond and Mills for several years, he went into part- nership in the firm of Mathieu, Reid and Shand. Subsequently he withdrew from that company and established Shand's Stores in Pat- chogue and Bayport. ,Thfe deceased was a member and former trustee of the.--Patch-, ogue Congregational Church; a life member of Southside Lodge. F. and A. M.; and a member of the Euclid Hose Company and of the Modern Woodmen. He was the widower of former Miss Virginia Dare of Patchogue, who died in June, 1942. In Septem- ber, 1953, he married Mrs. Char- lotte Benjamin of Deiand who sur- vives him. His other survivors in- clude his three daughters, Mrs, William Underwood and Mrs. Wal- ter Williams of- Patchogue, and Mrs. George Gatje of Bay Shore;, four sons, Arthur C. of Bayport, John F. .and Harvey A. of Patch- ogue, and Malcora A. of Blue Point; a brother, Gordon Shand of Fort Lauderdale Fla.; two sisters, Mrs. Edward O'Dell of Rye and Miss Marian Shand of New York City; and 17 grandchildren and 29 great-grandchildren. . Interment took place in the fam- ily plot in Cedar Grove'Cemetery, Patchogue. ... MRS. LEWIS MATTHEWS ' Mrs. Lillian L. Matthews 84 years, died Monday at the Sayville Nursing Home following a brief illness. - Born in Burlington, N. J., Mrs. Matthews lived most of her life in (Sayville. Her last residence was 71 Macon Street. She was a mem- ber of the Sayville Methodist Church and a member of the W.C.T.U. of Sayville. The widow of Lewis Matthews, she is survived by three daugh- ters, Mrs. Vernon King of Say- ville, Mrs.' William Simister of Say- ville, and Mrs. Elizabeth Lowden of J, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; five [grandchildren and nine great- grandchildren. Services were held at the Rey- lek Funeral Home in Sayville yes- terday afternoon, with the Rev. Arthur Teikmanis of the Sayville Congregational Church, officiating. Interment followed;in Union Cem- etery, Sayville. WILLIAM NOCAR William Nocar died suddenly Tuesday evening in his home on the corner of Locust Avenue and Karshick Street in Bohemia. He was born 85 years ago in Czech- oslovakia and had lived in Bohem- ia for 40 years. Mr.. Npcar was a retired tailor. He is survived by his wife Mrs. Albina Nocar, three sons Joseph, Rudolph and William J. of Bo- hemia, one daughter Mrs. Georgi- ana Matera of Bohemia and five grandchildren. The Rosary will be said Friday at eight p.m. by the Rev. Joseph Brown at the Adamec Funeral Chapel in Bohemia. The funeral service will be Saturday morning at 9:30 followed by a requiem mass said by the-Rev. Daniel Nel- son at ten o'clock at St. John Ncp- omucene's Catholic Church in Bo- hemia, and interment will follow in St. John Nepomucene's ceme- tery. MRS. EMIL CASTKA JR. Mrs. Clementine Castka, aged 53. wife of Emil Castka Jr. of Kar- shick Street. Bohemia, died on Monday at Southside Hospital, Bay Shore, after a long illness. Born in Woodside, she attended schools there, and also the Plaza Business School in Long Island City. There- after she was employed by the A. G. .Spalding Company in New- York, and later by the Gould- Mcsereau Company in 1/Ong Is- land City. For the past 14 years she had boon a resident of Bohemia, where she was a charter member of the P.T.A. and active in community af- fairs. She is survived by her husband, one son. Peter A. Castka of Ho hernia, a daughter, Mrs. James Zoubantes of Hicksville. a sister. Mrs. Peter Neubauor of Mnspeth. and one grandchild. Services were held at Raynor's Chapel. Sayville, last evening with the Rev. Edward Porter, vicar of St. Luke's Episcopal Church of Bohemia, officiating. Interment will be in &t. Michael's Cemetery, Astoria, this morning. Burglars Strike Are A local school, a business plant and private home were struck by thieves this past .week. J . JSomeone enterd the Grundy Avenue School in Holbrook Fri- day night or early Saturday morn- ing, according to police. A door was pried open and an attempt made to open the saf,e in the. prin- cipal's office. The thief or thieves were unsuccessful,.and apparently left empty-handed after scattering contents of the desk about ' the room. The John J.' Company on Hai •ville,. was hit by "J day. They made $fy200 worth of bt including a check a computer, and chine. Sunday Mrs. \Y Greene Avenue, J that $200 worth o r y was removed between noon an< day. Third Squac investigating all t ^l&iilllli^SlMlffiMs;: .Howard Hindla, left, receives gold watch from Fritz Koster of Koster-Keunen Company for 25 years of service with the local wax manufacturers. A 'testimonial dinner for Mr. Hindla was held at Mazanek's Hotel in Bohemia over the week end. v'^\>v.: . v (Photo by^iRozycki). •asanmrasBEfciusj «*8 S MEMBER FEDERAL tt&t'OSTT INSURANCE CORt*. | Op#rt FrWay tSvs-nlnp* fi:30 to 8:00 P.M. ijiiipniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiwiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IN MEHDRIAM In fond and loving memory of our dear mother Mrs. Dingress Kwaak who passed away February | i, 1&V7. Always in our hearts. Her children, CorncHa, Edward, Lucy *an4» Sarah, : If you would like your baby's birth recorded in the News promptly, mail us the ,an- nouncement or call the; News office, Sa 4-6200. We are un- able to get them from the hos- • pitals .for at least a week and usually longer. Southside Hospital JOHNSON: Thursday,. January 19th, to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Johnson of Sayville, a son, Bruce Joseph.'_-,'., ;v: : - GIL: Monday, January 23rd. to Mr. and Mrs. Claude J. Gil of Bo- hemia,^ a- son. MERGL: Wednesday, January 25th, to Mr. and >Irs. Raymond E. Mergl of .Oakdale, a son. MATRONE: .Wednesday, January 25th, to Mr. and Mrs. Donato A. Matrone of Bohemia, a son. McKENDRICK: Thursday, January 26th, to Mr. and Mrs. John Mc- Kendrick;bf Blue Point, a daugh- ter, Christine Janet. EGNER: Thursday, January 26th, to Mr. and-Mrs. William Egner of Patchogue. a "daughter, Cheryl Ann. Mrs. Egner is the' ; former Miss Judith Kuss of Bohemia. GALLAGHER: Tuesday, January 31st, to Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gallagher of Sayville, a daugh- ter. ' r ' '[ McELROY. Tuesday, January 31st, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles McElroy of Sayville, a daughter. Brookhaven Hospital KLOPP: Saturday, January 21st, to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Klopp of Blue Point, a son. WALSH: Saturday, January 21st, to Mr. and Mrs. George Walsh of Holbrook, a son. KRESSE: Sunday, January 22nd, to Mr. and Mrs. George Kresse of Lake Ronkonkoma, a daugh- ter. SCHUMM: Tuesday, January 24th, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schumm of Lake Ronkonkoma, a son. Mather Hospital CROTEAU: Thursday, January ]9th, to Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cro- teau of Centereach, a son. Good Samaritan Hospital McGONIGLE: "Wednesday, January tlth, to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mc Gonigle of Sayville, a daughter, Alicia Ann. McGANN: Thursday. January 12th. to Mr. and Mrs. Edward McGann of Lake Ronkonkoma, a daugh ter, Deborah Joan. KOVAR: Friday, January 13(h, to Mr. and Mrs. Francis Kovar of Lake Ronkonkoma, a son, Tim- othy Gerard. Other Hospitals PANIK: At U. S. Air Force Base. Tachikawa, Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday. January 12th, to Ai/c and Mrs. Paul Panik, a son, Tim- othy. Mrs. Panik is the former Miss Marion Swe7.cy of Sayville. MRS. JOHN P. KIRKEGARD Solemn requiem mass was held by Father Joseph Brown at St. John Nepomucene's R. C. Church in Bohemia for Mrs. Edna M ( Kirkegard vho died suddenly at j her home on January 25th. Mrs. Kirkegard. 61. of Roxhnry Avenue, Oakdale, was born in Brooklyn and moved here nine years ago. She was a member of the Southside Hospital Auxiliary. She is survived by her husband; one daughter. Mrs. Rita Waldren of Central Islip; one brother, Jos 6'ph Blinked of Farmingdale; and two grandchildren. The rosary was recited Friday evening at the Reylek Funeral Home In SayviUe. ' Hervey Makes a Pernt About the Shipwreck Sayville, L, 1. January 27th, 1961 To the editor: Regarding the nameless wreck at Fire Island Pines, Charles Post has testified that he believes it to be the carcass of the Homer Alverson, and he played around it as a boy. 'Taint necessarily so! I played around her too . . . with Charley, when we camped there one summer, long, long years ago . . . and I claim it can't be the Alverson. . She was a barge, loaded with coal," I believe, and she lay head- on, right-angled to the beach -just above low-water line. All that showed- above the sand' was a small section of her topsides ... and it was charred and blackened by fire. Now, the way I heerd it, some local parties salvaged her cargo and then burned the wreck for her copper drift-bolts, etc. It must have been quite a compli- cated undertaking, for on the bay side at Fisherman's Path could be seen for many years remains of heavy, steel cables rusting away in the cat-briers. I orter know, for I tore my pants on them! Who sal- vaged her I can't remember,. not being quite that old, but Capt. Hen Locker or mebbe Will Leach can tell you. Anyhow . . . the photos you ran show a wreck lying parallel to the beach. There's a section of keel and a long line of hanging knees. Those knees supported the deck beams. Now what I bin a- coming to is that the Alverson wreck had no deck beams nor hanging knees. They'd been burn- ed away when Charley Post was wearin' three-corner sailor pants. So this wreck must be the Man- ning, or some other unknown un- fortunate, but certainly not the Alverson. And to clear up another pernt, most local folk think that Fisherman's Path was made at the time of the salvage operation, for it led directly to the wreck. Not so. It was there a hundred and fifty years ago, and how come it is called "Fisherman's" I'll never know. Its proner name is Whale Path. Even Charley Post knows that! Hervey Garrett Smith, Collector of Useless Information Here's One Reader Who Can Hardly Wait 362 Middle Road, Bayport, L. 1 January 30th, 1981 To the Editor: During the last local election. 1 asked myself if we had anywhere to go bill \m by voting out the scandal-ridden Republican group then in power. '-. > Well, you ask a silly question . I have been told I shouldn't complain because, theoretically beople get the kind of government they deserve. But my new question is, "What did we ever do to de serve the countv government wo now have, aside from voting again- st its opponents?" Perhaps there is some hope. though. Our County Executive re- cently expressed concern over whether or not his weekly news- paper columns were being read. He can ston worrying on thai score. For thrills, for spine-chill- ing, new episodes, for tears and plain old tension-casing guffaws. his column is the liveliest. clilT- hanger since, the "Perils of Paul- ine''. Will the County Executive gel his private publicity man and per- sonal helicopter? Will the roar of jet engines drown out the resi- dent's cries for help? Will tjie new bond issue cover the cost of the Old Taxpayer Homo? Stiffcrin' Suffolk! I can hardly wait for next week's exciting epi- sode in the . adventures : of Dcn- nison the Menriison! ^ ; -Kenneth Poli Didn't Do Justice to Late Stanley Hawkins ,3908 -Parragut Road, Brooklyn,. N. Y. January 26th, 1961 To the editor: > i^ : In last week's News you pub- lished an exceedingly flattering and prominent article concerning Kitty Gordon, now a resident of Sayville, who from the excellent description of your Virginia Roz- ycki, was a highly talented singer and actress and a lovable person- ality withal. Even though I have difficulty in recalling her career, I'm sure that I must have had the pleasure of witnessing at least one of her stage performances. Which leads me* to a second item in the same issue of the News. Inconspicuously, in your regular section, appears the notice of the death of Erastus Stansbury Hawkins, at the age of 91. l.had already read a three-quarters- column obituary of Stan Hawkins in The New York Time's and I was a little shocked to note the contrast between The Times write- up. and the very modest one of The News. How-your father would have extended himself to record, fittingly and appreciatively, the activities of a man so conspicu- ously a sportsman and a gentle- man! To your news gatherers of a later generation let it be told that Stan Hawkins was the captain and catcher of the famed Ronkonkoma ball team, consisting mostly of Hawkinses (five, I think, — and what a team!). In those early days Sayville had a fine baseball organ- ization too and no season was complete without two or three bat- tles with the Lake boys. Each team had its share of victories; what- ever the outcome, the Hawkins boys, playing the leading posi- tions on the team, were our good friends and neighbors', gentlemen always. Stan, as the oldest and the leader of his team, set the pace and the standard of conduct, as well. . Stansbury Hawkins, as I recall him in the old, old days, deserves, I think, this tribute from one of his earliest admirers. Don't you? J. Raymond Cambern Chamber Gives Thanks To Sayville Firemen Sayville, L. 1. January 31st, 1961 To The Editor: The Sayville Chamber of Com- merce would like to add its voice to the praise and congratulations so deservedly boing given (o the | Sawille Fire Department. In addition to their obvious fire i fighting activities these men put j in long hours' on the sometimes ! tedious duties of equipment main 'cianee, fire prevention and arson investigation. It goes almost with. r>t>t spying that were it not for the ' highly efficient aqd successful I work of the membprs of the do- I payment. Sayville wodld'Ttavo seen a horrifying'ioss in life and prop- ertv, particularly during the all- tno frequent fires of the past few years. The deepest thanks of each member of the. Chamber, is here- ' with tendered to each member of :iho Sayville Fire Department. The Sayville Chamber of Commerce 'AMBULANCE 1.00: Tuesday, January 31st • - Mrs. j Barbara Fowler of Middle Road, Bayport from Patchogue Medical Croup to hospital. Tuesday, January 31st --- Miss •Tulia Brown of Locust Street. Bayport from doctor's office to homo.'-' DON'T BORROW TROUBLE •v. •:' ;' ' & THERE IS ENOUGH TO GO AROUN .. .- ' :.f. , t »•..'.'•.-'-' KEEP YOUR MIND AT EASE AND YOUR BANK BALANCE SAFE, BY KEEPING YOUR PROPERTY CONTINUOUSLY AND ADEQUATELY INSURED COME IN! ( A. C. Edwards, L 4S.50 MAIN ST. SAYVILLE SAYVILLE 4-2107 <**HHH#SM]^ STREET MA t* SJIYFlLLi WIST SAYV1LHE ~ - 0 BAYPORT iOHEftllil HOLBf RONKONKOMi n Sale At Tiie Suffolk County Ne 23 Candee Avenue, Sayville : . AND YOUR ocal Stationery Store PRICE 50 CENTS RY8THS BARGAINS IN BOOKS FOR EVERY OCCASI . THE BOOKCAS Open dally 10—6; Friday until 9 P. / 40 S. Main Street « ****»mmmmmmmtmimmKmmmmmmm*mm* MM . ' -' ....... J! Mi i ilKi; mi. hj::;i sifts ft ; i ISIIIllillfejiiiii Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

PAGE SIX THE SUFFOLK COUNTY NEWS, … NY Suffolk County News... · son at ten o'clock at St. John Ncp-omucene's Catholic Church in Bo hemia, and interment will follow in St. John

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PAGE SIX THE SUFFOLK COUNTY NEWS, SAYVfLLE, 1 , f „ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1961 WANTS ADS — PHONE SA i

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Comi] events

Friday, February third — Jukebox dance held at the

' American Legion Hall on Hu-•'•: bal Street in Bohemia at 8:30 :

p.m. -^admiss ion dimes for . The Marth of Dimes.

Friday and Saturday, February third and fourth —•

" T h e Night of January 16th" presented by the SayviUe Mu­sical Workshop at the Sayville High School at 8:30 p. m.

Saturday/February fourth —-Annual dinner-dance held by the.Sayville Chamber of Com­merce at Land's End at eight ,

••;. p.m. \ ' \'-% -y^': f<\ Second a n n u a l Snowflake

; Dance "hefd—by the Sayville : Guild of Good Samaritan Hos-'

pltal at Blue Point Republican Headquarters at nine p.m.

Friday, February 10 th—-Annual Valentine's Day dance

; Held by the Bayport-Sayville Lions Club at the Suffolk

; County. Republican Club oh 'Atlantic Avenue in Blue Point

. a t i i i n e p.m. V.

Saturday, Fgbnujr f 11th '•—. ;;Va!entine Dance held by the Bayport.; Fire Department at the fire house at nine p.m. Valentine dance to be held in Liberty Hal l , Ocean Avenue, Ronkonkoma by the Pine '

i'l Lodge .Social Club.f, .'.

Tuesday, February 14th — Dessert-Swap party held at

'•."•.".•one p.m. at St. John's Luther­an Church on Greene Avenue, Sayville .

• . - , : • ; • • - - : . : . - . , ' - : : . '}-:}••': ' , - • . .

Tuesday, February 17th — ^ "Wor|d Day of Prayer" held V through thes auspices of the

.United Council of Church Wo­men at St. Ann's Church, Say­ville two and eight p. m.

Saturday, February 18th -r- An­nual dance held by the Say-ville Auxil iary of Southside Hospital at Great River Coun-

;':• try Club. . >

Friday, February 24th — Annual dance held by the

/ B l u e Point Republican Club at headquarters on Atlantic Ave­nue, Blue Point at nine p.m.

Saturday, March fourth — Annual fund-raising dance held by; the Bohemia Boy

"Scout Troop Committee at Is­land Hills Golf Club.

William J. E. Adamec !} Funeral Chapel Boh

Home — Wilson

|| T E L . SAYVILLE 4-0669

Bohemia, L. I„ N. Y .

W M . F. REYLEK, JFL '

Lie. Mgr. I

194 SOUTH M A I N STREET

S A Y V I L L E , N. Y . ,

TEL. S A Y V I L L E 4-1472

MRS. T H E O D O R E v C BRANDT

Mrs. Olive U. Brandt, aged 69, wife of Theodore C. Brandt died on Monday at her (home, 34 Henry Street, Sayville, alter a brief ill­ness. Born in,Sayville, the daugh­ter of the late Richmond and An­nie Huntley ydall; she had lived here all her life.

She is survived by her husband and one sister, Mrs. Clarence Saw­yer" of Patchogue.

Funeral services will be held at Raynor's Chapel, Sayville, today at two p.m;, with the Rev. Peter D. MacLean,1 rector of St. Ann's EPIST copal Church of Sayville, officiat­ing, followed by interment in Union Cemetery, Sayville.

MRS. W A L T E R BROWN

Mrs. Adrianna J7,. Brown, aged 78, , of Rollestone Avenue, West Sayville, died on "Sunday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Wil Ham Newhouse, of Division Ave-mie, West Sayville, after a long illness. ; ; >v^--:-'..;.;V:/.. .-1

Born in West Sayville, the daughter of : the late John and Johanna Hage Sserveld, she had lived there all of her life. Her husband, Walter Brown, died in November 1957 and besides Mrs. Newhouse, she leaves another daughter, Mrs. Charles H. Mun-kelwitz of Sayville, one son, Wal­ter F. Brown of West Sayville, two brothers, Robert Seerveld of East Hampton, and Frank Seer­veld . of West Sayville, . a sister, Mrs. Adrian Dykstra of West Say­ville and five grandchildren. • Services were at Raynor's Chap­el, Sayville, on Tuesday afternoon with the Rev. Eric H. Rieker, pas­tor of St. John's Lutheran Church of Sayville, officiating. Interment was in Union Cemetery, Sayville.

MRS, EVERETT FUCHS

A solemn requiem mass was held at Our Lady of. the Snow R.C. Church in Blue Point on Thursday for Mrs; Emma Fuchs of 48 Bay-view AVenue, Blue Point who died at her home on January 23rd.'

The thirty year old woman was born in New York and lived in Blue Point for the past 26 ye/irs. She is survived by her husband and three sons, Everett J., Erik F7 and Joseph ^A., all of Blue Point,' a daughter, Diane, of Blue Vo'mi; two sisters, Mrs. John Mince and Mrs. Louis Rose, both of Blue Point; a brother, Alfred J. Druhm of Remsenburg, and,her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred T. Druhm of Blue Point. . .A. rosary was recited at the Pet-tit Funeral Home in Patchogue last Wednesday. Interment took place in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Coram.

•^#^## , #^#^## f c #^##^#^#^#^#^#<h##^j^ .

IERAK. SERVICE Est. 1874

Licensed Partners CHARLES G. RAYNOR, MgT.

RALPH A. REH)

176 M A I N ST. ' S A Y V I L L E TEL. SAYVILLE 4-2345

#

— of the "personal bookkeeping" kind -— are yours when you pay all bills with bank checks.

Your checkbook stubs tell at a glance what you've spent, and how; your cancelled checks are sure receipts. Before it's bill-paying time again, come in. and open a

Accoum

"Uystermen's I AMD TRUST COWPAHY

Oakd«f« Plat* CMtkdale, N. Y. OR

131 Maki Street | S«yvill», N. Y. SA. 4-O7O0

JAMES G. SHAND

James G. Shapd, formerly of Patchogue, died January 23rd in Deiand, Fla. at 85. years.!Funeral services were held there last Tues­day^ The body then reposed at the Pettit Funeral Home in Patchogue until Saturday afternoon when services were held at the Patch­ogue Congregational Church with the Rev. Stuart W. Van Cott offi­ciating. . • •;' .'.,':

Mr. Shand was born in Williams-town, Mass. arid came to Patch­ogue with his parents at the age of 15. After being employed by the firm of Hammond and Mills for several years, he went into part­nership in the firm of Mathieu, Reid and Shand. Subsequently he withdrew from that company and established Shand's Stores in Pat­chogue and Bayport.

,Thfe deceased was a member and former trustee of the.--Patch-, ogue Congregational Church; a life member of Southside Lodge. F. and A. M.; and a member of the Euclid Hose Company and of the Modern Woodmen.

He was the widower of former Miss Virginia Dare of Patchogue, who died in June, 1942. In Septem­ber, 1953, he married Mrs. Char­lotte Benjamin of Deiand who sur­vives him. His other survivors in­clude his three daughters, Mrs, William Underwood and Mrs. Wal­ter Williams of- Patchogue, and Mrs. George Gatje of Bay Shore;, four sons, Arthur C. of Bayport, John F. .and Harvey A. of Patch­ogue, and Malcora A. of Blue Point; a brother, Gordon Shand of Fort Lauderdale Fla.; two sisters, Mrs. Edward O'Dell of Rye and Miss Marian Shand of New York City; and 17 grandchildren and 29 great-grandchildren. .

Interment took place in the fam­ily plot in Cedar Grove'Cemetery, Patchogue. . . .

MRS. LEWIS MATTHEWS '

Mrs. Lillian L. Matthews 84 years, died Monday at the Sayville Nursing Home following a brief illness. - •

Born in Burlington, N. J., Mrs. Matthews lived most of her life in

(Sayville. Her last residence was 71 Macon Street. She was a mem­ber of the Sayville Methodist Church and a member of the W.C.T.U. of Sayville.

The widow of Lewis Matthews, she is survived by three daugh­ters, Mrs. Vernon King of Say­ville, Mrs.' William Simister of Say­ville, and Mrs. Elizabeth Lowden of J, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; five

[grandchildren and nine great­grandchildren.

Services were held at the Rey-lek Funeral Home in Sayville yes­terday afternoon, with the Rev. Arthur Teikmanis of the Sayville Congregational Church, officiating. Interment followed;in Union Cem­etery, Sayville.

W I L L I A M NOCAR

William Nocar died suddenly Tuesday evening in his home on the corner of Locust Avenue and Karshick Street in Bohemia. He was born 85 years ago in Czech­oslovakia and had lived in Bohem­ia for 40 years. Mr.. Npcar was a retired tailor.

He is survived by his wife Mrs. Albina Nocar, three sons Joseph, Rudolph and William J. of Bo­hemia, one daughter Mrs. Georgi-ana Matera of Bohemia and five grandchildren.

The Rosary will be said Friday at eight p.m. by the Rev. Joseph Brown at the Adamec Funeral Chapel in Bohemia. The funeral service will be Saturday morning at 9:30 followed by a requiem mass said by the-Rev. Daniel Nel­son at ten o'clock at St. John Ncp-omucene's Catholic Church in Bo­hemia, and interment will follow in St. John Nepomucene's ceme­tery.

MRS. EMIL CASTKA JR.

Mrs. Clementine Castka, aged 53. wife of Emil Castka Jr. of Kar­shick Street. Bohemia, died on Monday at Southside Hospital, Bay Shore, after a long illness. Born in Woodside, she attended schools there, and also the Plaza Business School in Long Island City. There­after she was employed by the A. G. .Spalding Company in New-York, and later by the Gould-Mcsereau Company in 1/Ong Is­land City.

For the past 14 years she had boon a resident of Bohemia, where she was a charter member of the P.T.A. and active in community af­fairs.

She is survived by her husband, one son. Peter A. Castka of Ho hernia, a daughter, Mrs. James Zoubantes of Hicksville. a sister. Mrs. Peter Neubauor of Mnspeth. and one grandchild.

Services were held at Raynor's Chapel. Sayville, last evening with the Rev. Edward Porter, vicar of St. Luke's Episcopal Church of Bohemia, officiating. Interment will be in &t. Michael's Cemetery, Astoria, this morning.

Burglars Strike Are A local school, a business plant

and private home were struck by thieves this past .week. J . JSomeone enterd the Grundy Avenue School in Holbrook Fri­day night or early Saturday morn­ing, according to police. A door was pried open and an attempt made to open the saf,e in the. prin­cipal's office. The thief or thieves were unsuccessful,.and apparently left empty-handed after scattering contents of the desk about' the room.

The John J.' Company on Hai •ville,. was hit by "J day. They made $fy200 worth of bt including a check a computer, and chine.

Sunday Mrs. \Y Greene Avenue, J that $200 worth o r y was removed between noon an< day. Third Squac investigating all t

^ l& i i l l l l i ^S lM l f f iMs ; :

.Howard Hindla, left, receives gold watch from Fritz Koster of Koster-Keunen Company for 25 years of service with the local wax manufacturers. A 'testimonial dinner for Mr. Hindla was held at Mazanek's Hotel in Bohemia over the week end.

v '^\>v. : . • v (Photo by iRozycki). •asanmrasBEfciusj

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S MEMBER FEDERAL tt&t'OSTT INSURANCE CORt*. | Op#rt FrWay tSvs-nlnp* fi:30 to 8:00 P.M.

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IN MEHDRIAM In fond and loving memory of

our dear mother Mrs. Dingress Kwaak who passed away February

| i , 1&V7. Always in our hearts. Her children, CorncHa, Edward, Lucy

*an4» Sarah,

: I f you would like your baby's birth recorded in the News promptly, mail us the ,an­nouncement or call the ; News office, Sa 4-6200. W e are un­able to get them from the hos-

• pitals .for at least a week and usually longer.

Southside Hospital

JOHNSON: Thursday,. January 19th, to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Johnson of Sayville, a son, Bruce Joseph.'_-,'., ;v: : -

GIL: Monday, January 23rd. to Mr. and Mrs. Claude J. Gil of Bo­hemia,^ a- son.

MERGL: Wednesday, J a n u a r y 25th, to Mr. and >Irs. Raymond E. Mergl of .Oakdale, a son.

MATRONE: .Wednesday, January 25th, to Mr. and Mrs. Donato A. Matrone of Bohemia, a son.

McKENDRICK: Thursday, January 26th, to Mr. and Mrs. John Mc-Kendrick;bf Blue Point, a daugh­ter, Christine Janet.

EGNER: Thursday, January 26th, to Mr. and-Mrs. William Egner of Patchogue. a "daughter, Cheryl Ann. Mrs. Egner is the'; former Miss Judith Kuss of Bohemia.

GALLAGHER: Tuesday, January 31st, to Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gallagher of Sayville, a daugh­ter. ' r' '[

McELROY. Tuesday, January 31st, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles McElroy of Sayville, a daughter.

Brookhaven Hospital

KLOPP: Saturday, January 21st, to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Klopp of Blue Point, a son.

WALSH: Saturday, January 21st, to Mr. and Mrs. George Walsh of Holbrook, a son.

KRESSE: Sunday, January 22nd, to Mr. and Mrs. George Kresse of Lake Ronkonkoma, a daugh­ter.

SCHUMM: Tuesday, January 24th, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schumm of Lake Ronkonkoma, a son.

Mather Hospital

CROTEAU: Thursday, January ]9th, to Mr. and Mrs. Leo Cro-teau of Centereach, a son.

Good Samaritan Hospital McGONIGLE: "Wednesday, January

t l th, to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mc Gonigle of Sayville, a daughter, Alicia Ann.

McGANN: Thursday. January 12th. to Mr. and Mrs. Edward McGann of Lake Ronkonkoma, a daugh ter, Deborah Joan.

KOVAR: Friday, January 13(h, to Mr. and Mrs. Francis Kovar of Lake Ronkonkoma, a son, Tim­othy Gerard.

Other Hospitals

PANIK: At U. S. Air Force Base. Tachikawa, Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday. January 12th, to Ai/c and Mrs. Paul Panik, a son, Tim­othy. Mrs. Panik is the former Miss Marion Swe7.cy of Sayville.

MRS. JOHN P. KIRKEGARD

Solemn requiem mass was held by Father Joseph Brown at St. John Nepomucene's R. C. Church in Bohemia for Mrs. Edna M

(Kirkegard vho died suddenly at j her home on January 25th.

Mrs. Kirkegard. 61. of Roxhnry Avenue, Oakdale, was born in Brooklyn and moved here nine years ago. She was a member of the Southside Hospital Auxiliary.

She is survived by her husband; one daughter. Mrs. Rita Waldren of Central Islip; one brother, Jos 6'ph Blinked of Farmingdale; and two grandchildren.

The rosary was recited Friday evening at the Reylek Funeral Home In SayviUe. '

Hervey Makes a Pernt About the Shipwreck

Sayville, L, 1. • January 27th, 1961

To the editor: Regarding the nameless wreck

at Fire Island Pines, Charles Post has testified that he believes it to be the carcass of the Homer Alverson, and he played around it as a boy. 'Taint necessarily so! I played around her too . . . with Charley, when we camped there one summer, long, long years ago . . . and I claim it can't be the Alverson. .

She was a barge, loaded with coal," I believe, and she lay head-on, right-angled to the beach -just above low-water line. All that showed- above the sand' was a small section of her topsides . . . and it was charred and blackened by fire. Now, the way I heerd it, some local parties salvaged her cargo and then burned the wreck for her copper drift-bolts, etc. It must have been quite a compli­cated undertaking, for on the bay side at Fisherman's Path could be seen for many years remains of heavy, steel cables rusting away in the cat-briers. I orter know, for I tore my pants on them! Who sal­vaged her I can't remember,. not being quite that old, but Capt. Hen Locker or mebbe Will Leach can tell you.

Anyhow . . . the photos you ran show a wreck lying parallel to the beach. There's a section of keel and a long line of hanging knees. Those knees supported the deck beams. Now what I bin a-coming to is that the Alverson wreck had no deck beams nor hanging knees. They'd been burn­ed away when Charley Post was wearin' three-corner sailor pants.

So this wreck must be the Man­ning, or some other unknown un­fortunate, but certainly not the Alverson. And to clear up another pernt, most local folk think that Fisherman's Path was made at the time of the salvage operation, for it led directly to the wreck. Not so. It was there a hundred and fifty years ago, and how come it is called "Fisherman's" I'll never know. Its proner name is Whale Path. Even Charley Post knows that!

Hervey Garrett Smith, Collector of Useless Information

Here's One Reader

Who Can Hardly Wait 362 Middle Road,

Bayport, L. 1 January 30th, 1981

To the Editor: During the last local election.

1 asked myself if we had anywhere to go bill \m by voting out the scandal-ridden Republican group then in power. '-. >

Well, you ask a silly question . I have been told I shouldn't

complain because, theoretically beople get the kind of government they deserve. But my new question is, "What did we ever do to de serve the countv government wo now have, aside from voting again­st its opponents?"

Perhaps there is some hope. though. Our County Executive re­cently expressed concern over whether or not his weekly news­paper columns were being read. He can ston worrying on thai score. For thrills, for spine-chill­ing, new episodes, for tears and plain old tension-casing guffaws. his column is the liveliest. clilT-hanger since, the "Perils of Paul­ine''.

Will the County Executive gel his private publicity man and per­sonal helicopter? Will the roar of jet engines drown out the resi­dent's cries for help? Will tjie new bond issue cover the cost of the Old Taxpayer Homo?

Stiffcrin' Suffolk! I can hardly wait for next week's exciting epi­

sode in the . adventures : of Dcn-nison the Menriison!

^ ; -Kenneth Poli

Didn't Do Justice to Late Stanley Hawkins

,3908 -Parragut Road, Brooklyn,. N. Y. January 26th, 1961

To the editor: > i :

In last week's News you pub­lished an exceedingly flattering and prominent article concerning Kitty Gordon, now a resident of Sayville, who from the excellent description of your Virginia Roz-ycki, was a highly talented singer and actress and a lovable person­ality withal. Even though I have difficulty in recalling her career, I'm sure that I must have had the pleasure of witnessing at least one of her stage performances.

Which leads me* to a second item in the same issue of the News. Inconspicuously, in your regular section, appears the notice of the death of Erastus Stansbury Hawkins, at the age of 91. l .had already read a three-quarters-column obituary of Stan Hawkins in The New York Time's and I was a little shocked to note the contrast between The Times write-up. and the very modest one of The News. How-your father would have extended himself to record, fittingly and appreciatively, the activities of a man so conspicu­ously a sportsman and a gentle­man!

To your news gatherers of a later generation let it be told that Stan Hawkins was the captain and catcher of the famed Ronkonkoma ball team, consisting mostly of Hawkinses (five, I think, — and what a team!). In those early days Sayville had a fine baseball organ­ization too and no season was complete without two or three bat­tles with the Lake boys. Each team had its share of victories; what­ever the outcome, the Hawkins boys, playing the leading posi­tions on the team, were our good friends and neighbors', gentlemen always. Stan, as the oldest and the leader of his team, set the pace and the standard of conduct, as well. .

Stansbury Hawkins, as I recall him in the old, old days, deserves, I think, this tribute from one of his earliest admirers. Don't you?

J. Raymond Cambern

Chamber Gives Thanks To Sayville Firemen

Sayville, L. 1. January 31st, 1961

To The Editor: The Sayville Chamber of Com­

merce would like to add its voice to the praise and congratulations so deservedly boing given (o the

| Sawille Fire Department. In addition to their obvious fire

i fighting activities these men put j in long hours' on the sometimes ! tedious duties of equipment main

'cianee, fire prevention and arson investigation. It goes almost with. r>t>t spying that were it not for the

' highly efficient aqd successful I work of the membprs of the do-I payment. Sayville wodld'Ttavo seen a horrifying'ioss in life and prop-ertv, particularly during the all-tno frequent fires of the past few years.

The deepest thanks of each member of the. Chamber, is here-

' with tendered to each member of :iho Sayville Fire Department.

The Sayville Chamber of Commerce

'AMBULANCE 1.00: Tuesday, January 31st • - Mrs.

j Barbara Fowler of Middle Road, Bayport from Patchogue Medical Croup to hospital.

Tuesday, January 31st --- Miss •Tulia Brown of Locust Street. Bayport from doctor's office to homo.'-'

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