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THE EAST HAMPTON STAR THURSDAY. JANUARY 19. 1939 SEVEN ^MARCH OF TIME [Continued from Page 2] licanism (eptomized by "hard- headed” Julius Peter Heil of Wis consin) in at least one state, moon- kissed California, the political pen dulum swung far to the Left. Cul- bert Levy Olson, 62, started his State’s first Democratic administra tion in 44 years by pardoning the most famed prisoner in the U. S. For 22 years roundfaced, balding Thomas J. Mooney had been sim mering like an Irish volcano in San Quentin prison where he was sent because someone put a bomb in a suitcase and left it on a San Fran cisco street where it blew up to kill ten and injure forty marchers in a Preparedness Day Parade. Charged with the crime mainly because he was a rough labor leader, Mooney was convicted with 22-year-old Warren K. Billings. Although Mooney’s friends later proved that both principal State witnesses com mitted perjury and evidence was presented to show Mooney was a mile away from the explosion when it occurred, four California gover nors have reopened the case only to snap it shut again. Last week it was opened and closed for good. Governor Olson stated before an Assembly chamber audience of 500 his conviction that Mooney was innocent, waited thirty seconds for someone to contradict him, handed over an unconditional pardon. Said Mooney: "I shall dedi cate the rest of my life to work for the common good.” Two days later, after parading in the streets of San Francisco, Tom Mooney briefly joined a picket line in front of a store, gave the strikers half of the $10 given him on release from pris on, sent the rest to other strikers in Chicago, announced his hope that Labor would now find a rallying cry in ‘‘Free Billings.” TOOTHLESS FREEDOM Jackson, Michigan.—In 1920, Michigan imprisoned Alexander Ri- pan for life. The reason: a bullet which killed his farmer neighbor fitted the barrel of Ripan’s gun. In 1929, Prisoner Ripan drove a truck out of the Jackson Prison gates, dis appeared. In 1935, Michigan found him again, a well-behaved cobbler in East Chicago, Ind. Back to Jack son Prison he was haled. Last week he walked out, after modern ballistics experts had testi fied that bullets expand on being fired, that no bullet ever again fits the barrel of the gun that fired it. After twelve years unjustly in jail, Alexander Ripan had his freedom but few of his teeth. He had pulled them out one by one in his cell so that the pain would “keep him from going crazy.” VODER Philadelphia.— "Say ‘each’.” “Each.” ‘‘Say ‘Patience’.” “Patience.” “Say, ‘Patience is necessary’.” “Patience is necessary." “Say, ‘Oh yeah’.” "Oh yeah.” This curious colloquy took place last week in Philadelphia’s Frank lin Institute, where engineers of Bell Telephone Laboratories and a trained operator demonstrated a complicated device called Voder Merle Oberon and Gary Cooper are co-starred for the first lime in Samuel Goldwyn's romantic comedy, "The Cowboy and the Lady," playing at the Edwards Theatre Sunday to Tuesday, January 22, 23. and 24. RYTEX RIO PRINTED STATIONERY A variety of designs in smart tropical color combina tions that will make your let ters as lively as a toreador's career! JANUARY AND FEBRUARY SPECIAL 50 SHEETS 50 ENVELOPES With your Name and Ad dress on Sheets and Envelopes. What has it got that gets you? Exotic colors . . . gay tropical atmosphere . . . crafty paper! RYTEX RIO Printed Stationery will delight you . . . you'll want boxes and boxes at this low price. E. H. STAR Main Street. East Hampton 477 (short for “voice operation demon strator” ). Voder creates a variety of sounds resembling human speech closely enough to be easily intelli gible. The men who built it were able to do so because in their tele phone researches they had made a close study of how speech sounds are made by the human larynx, mouth, breath, tongue, teeth and flips. They found that they could !produce 23 basic sounds; that intel ligible speech could be synthesized Ifrom various combinations of these [sounds, controlled by a skilled oper ator manipulating a keyboard and foot pedal. By altering pitch it can change from a man’s voice to a woman’s or a child’s. It can mimic animal sounds, locomotive whistles, the noise of an airplane engine. Bell Telephone picked twenty- four of the cleverest telephone oper ators from 300 candidates, gave them about twelve months’ inten sive training as Voder operators. Like concert pianists, they have to keep in trim by practicing several hours a day. The most difficult speech component they must coax out of the Voder, and the one that sounds least natural, is the letter “L.” When someone at last week’s demonstration asked for the words f’Bell Telephone,” they came out something like “Behrw Tehwe- phone.” MERCIFUL MASK Boston.— Beer, champagne, tight belts, cbtton earplugs soaked in a cocaine substitute, small doses of nitroglycerine, bromides, are all things that are recommended by travelers for seasickness. None of them, however, affords certain re lief, and the cause and cure of sea sickness remain one of medicine’s minor mysteries. Last week as the British liner 'Lady Nelson” docked in Boston, pier visitors were amazed to see a ship’s officer standing on deck, a large rubber muzzle covering his nose, a large rubber doughnut sur rounding his mouth, a limp rubber bag hanging on his chest. It was Dr. Richmond Goulden, ship’s sur geon, who was modeling an Oxygen mask for seasickness, invented by Dr. Walter Meredith Boothby of the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Boothby tried the new invention on four seasick pas sengers during the “Lady Nelson’s” 30-day trip to British Guiana and back. It gave complete relief to three, partial relief to a fourth. The merciful mask is held in place by straps fitting around the head, has two hollow tubes starting at each side of the nosepiece and curv ing down to the chin, where they join a larger tube which runs to an oxygen bag connected with an oxy gen tank. The mask permits a pas senger to eat, talk and smoke while he inhales the soothing oxygen. The whole business, explained Dr. Booth by, is not as uncomfortable as it looks. LISTEN! THE WIND! Washington.—Last week the li- OPERA STAR Elisabeth Reihberg and Ezio Pinza will sing leading roles in the Verdi opera "Simon Boc- canegra" to be broadcast over NBC from the Metropolitan Op era House on Saturday, January 21. at 1:55 P. M. brary club of New Hyde Park, N. Y., voted to boycott Ann Morrow Lind bergh’s book, “Listen! The Wind!” because of their refusal to “be a partner to any operation that means royalty or profit to Mr. and Mrs. Lindbergh in the light of the re cent publicity they have had.” That same day Mr. Lindbergh re ceived another kind of publicity in headlines announcing: “Lindbergh Gives U. S. Nazi Air Data:” “Lind bergh Bares Nazis’ Air Power.” “Lindy Air Secrets Stir Capitol.” The story told beneath the head lines was that all the time Charles Lindbergh was supposedly hobnob bing with Nazis in Berlin, and tat tling on Soviet Russia to friends of Nazis in Great Britain, he was ac tually functioning as a sort of U. S. spy abroad; that instead of letting Messrs. Hitler, Goebbels and others dupe him, he was making fools of them for the benefit of world demo cracy. H-E-L-P White Horse, Canada.—To the north-country adventurer of olden days, help when he needed it came at dog-sled pace if at all. Nowadays there is new hope in the north. Re cently, scudding high over the bleak Canadian wastes near White Horse, Pilot Sheldon Loucke's eye was caught by an unusual tangle of tracks in the snow near an isolated cabin. Circling down, he saw that they spelled H-E-L-P. Pilot Loucke picked a spot, brought his ski-shod airplane down near the cabin. The anxious wife of a trapper laid low by blood poisoning had tramped out the word. A few hours later the trapper was in the hospital at White Horse, last week was reported recovering. Just an Eyeful of Suffolk County News By Frank J. Mooney East Hampton Business and Professional Directory We try to print all the news of this community. When you would like to have a news item in The Star phone East Hampton 477. TRAIN SCHEDULE NOT RESPONSIBLE—The East Hampton Star is not responsible for errors in time tables, inconvenience or damage resulting from delayed boats or trains, or failure to make connections; schedules herein are subject to change without notice. TRAIN SERVICE — NEW YORK-EAST HAMPTON Lv. E. H. Arr. N. Y. A.M. Weekdays A.M. 7:05 9:30 8:57 Ex. Oct. 10 to May 26 11:52 P.M. 3:02 5:43 P.M. 5:51 8:56 Exc. May 30. 1939 Holidays Only A.M. A.M. 8:57 Runs Oct. 12; Nov. 8, 24 11:52 Dec. 26, 1938; Jan. 2, Feb. 13, 22, 1939 only May 30, 1939 only Sundays 8:19 A.M. 7:31 P.M. 3:59 6:57 8:19 Ex. Oct 2 to May 28 10:39 A.M. 10:37 P.M. 6:44 9:52 10:39 Lv. N. Y. A.M. 5:10 9:15 PM. t 12:55 3:57 •4:30 tt4:47 ••4:47 AM. 8:45 10:40 PM. 4:51 Weekdays Sundays Arr. E. H. A.M. 9:33 P.M. 12:14 3:22 6:24 7:11 7:52 8:62 A-M. 11:34 P.M. 1:15 8:02 tSaturdays only, except from Octo ber 1, 1938, to M ay 20, 1939. • Except Saturdays, also October 10, 1938, to May 25, inc. and May 30, 1939. ft Runs September 24, O ct 1, 8. 12; Nov. 8, 24; Dec. 26, 1938; Jan. 2; Feb. 13. 22; May 27; June 3, 10 and 17. 1939. •• Runs May 30. 1939, only. The Kings County grand jury in vestigation into the Democratic nomination on October 3 last of Isaac R. Swezey of Huntington for Supreme Court Justice, to which he was elected November 8, reached out to Suffolk, when all 47 banks in this county were subpoenaed to produce records of transactions of $1,000 and over between September 30 and October 4 last . . . Mean while, the Suffolk Democratic Ex ecutive committee recommended Fred G. Skinner, Patchogue, and Thomas Gilmer, Kings Park, for ap pointment as cqurt clerk and confi dential attendant respectively, to Justice Swezey. Dog damage to fowl, livestock, etc., in Suffolk during 1938 totalled $5,147, according to claims paid out of dog license funds by County Treasurer John G. Peck . . . The figure represented an increase of about $100 over that of 1937 . . . The number of motor vehicles registered in Suffolk during the past year reached a new high—66,137 vehicles of all types, or an increase of 2,076 over 1937. Islip Supervisor Warren F. Green halgh was re-elected chairman of the board of supervisors at its an nual meeting in Riverhead . . . and Harry Tuthill of Setauket, engineer in the Suffolk Highway department, replaced Hermon F. Bishop of West- hampton Beach as county highway superintendent, a post he has held for four years. William McDermott, 60, homeless, doesn’t believe in the middleman, so, without benefit of police, he went directly to the home of Judge Don ald W. Shaw, Bellport, and said he wanted to go to jail . . . He went; 60 days on a vagrancy charge . . . Foster Smith, 40, of Oakdale, set a good example for fellow-motorists; after a pipe protruding frqm his truck broke the window of a parked car, he left a slip of paper contain ing his name and address in the car, then reported the matter to Patch ogue police. While Patchogue volunteer fire men went about putting out a roof fire at her house, a 15-year-old girl busied herself preparing the family dinner, unaware of the blaze . . . Wild ducks commanded a price of about $5 a pound for four men from Sayville and West Sayville when arraigned before Judge Donald W. Shaw at Bellport; charged with shooting eight ducks weighing about 24 pounds in the aggregate, the quartet paid civil compromises to talling $110. Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Tumm Sr., of Bellport, observed their golden wedding anniversary . . . and Brook- haven Town Officer and Mrs. Albert T. Quattlander of Centereach, their twenty-fifth . . . Re-instatement of Islip Town Officer Frank Barylski, suspended a month ago when, after his car had killed a pedestrian, it was found he had been driving without an operator’s license for three years, was sought in a petition containing 1,000 signatures pre sented to the Town Board. John C. Stark, who entered the employ of the Suffolk County Na tional Bank of Riverhead as a clerk 28 years ago, was elected its presi dent at the bank’s annual meeting . He succeeds the late Ellis S. Duvall . . . If his age of 82 were re versed, declared James R. Skinner, Patchogue insurance agent, he would willingly accept the vice presidency of the Stuyvesant Insur ance Company, offered him by Jo seph Frelinghuysen, its president. Th^ Clearview hotel, Center Mor iches, half of which was torn away by the September 21 hurricane, was destroyed by fire Friday the 13th . . . Richard Brandt, six, of Sayville, ac cidentally suffered a head injury when struck in the head by a BB shot from a gun held by a 15-year- old playmate. Martin Schmidt, 35, who, police say, lived on the Hastings farm, Coram, until a few hours before po lice raided the place two weeks ago and uncovered a 2,000-gallon still in operation there, was arrested in Brooklyn by Federal 'agents, who are now seeking George Mentessi, lessee of the 65-acre farm. An extensive investigation of a Bay Shore auto repair and paint shop by State Police and Justice of the Peace Charles H. Duryea of Say ville, an investigator for auto in surance underwriters, led to the ar rest of two brothers, Joseph Weis- ner, 25, and William Weisner, 20, on charges of operating an auto theft ring . . . Joseph was arrested at Richmond, Va., and William at Ar lington, Va., and were each driving stolen cars when caught. The 1939 two-day convention and tournament of the Southern New York Volunteer Firemen’s associa tion will be held in Riverhead the week of June 12 . . . In an effort to relieve the parking situation in Bay Shore’s business section, the Islip Town Board will lease two parking areas there. The Big Event of the Year! RY TEX DECKLE EDGE VELLUM Printed Stationery . . . in DOUBLE THE USUAL QUANTITY . . . 100 Deckled Envelopes . . . only $1 printed with your Name and Ad dress or Monogram. Special for January only!—East Hampton Star, Main Street, East Hampton. Buy your Typewriter Supplies at The Star Office.—Adv. LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT SUPREME COURT: SUFFOLK COUNTY-COMMERCIAL TRUST COMPANY OF NEW JERSEY, and another, as Trustees, etc., Plaintiffs against CAROLINE SNOWDEN WAINWRIGHT, et al. Defendants. Notice of Sale. In pursuance of a judgment of foreclosure and sale duly made and entered in the above entitled action and bearing date the 28th day of November, 1938, I. the undersigned, the Referee in said judgment named, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, at the front steps of the County Court House at River head, Suffolk County, New York, on the 20th day of January, 1939, at twelve o’clock noon, the premises directed by said judgment to be sold, and therein described as follows: Parcel No. 1 ALL that tract or parcel of land, situate in the Town of East Hampton. County of Suffolk and State of New York, described as follows: BEGINNING at the intersec tion of centre line of a Private Road and easterly line of land now or formerly of Jewett; run ning thence north 64 degrees east 115 and 90/100 feet to a monument; thence north 62 de grees 15 minutes 10 seconds east 144 and 10/100 feet to a monu ment the last two courses being along the centre line of said Private Road; thence south 33 degrees 54 minutes 40 seconds east 636 and 3/100 feet n\ore or le^s to the Beach Grass; thence along the Beach Grass 340 feet more or less to land j now or formerly of Jewett; thence north 27 degrees 48 min utes west along land now or formerly of Jewett 546 and 70 /100 feet more or less to the point or place of beginning, to gether with all right, title and j interest which the party of the first part may have to access over the private roadway above referred to, subject however, to the right of way reserved by Paul A. Salembier and Floy R. Salembier. their heirs and as signs. by deed recorded July 18. 1927. in the County Clerk’s Of fice. Suffolk County, in Liber 1283 o f Conveyances at page 374 over that portion of the premises now marked off and used as a private roadway, and referred to in the foregoing de scription as a private roadway. SUBJECT to right-of-way. if any. over that portion of the premises now used as a private roadway, and to such rights, if any, as may exist in any person or persons in or to the beach or banks of the premises herein described. SUBJECT to easements, if any, of abutting owners along the private road referred to herein. Parcel No. 2 ALL that certain tract or par cel of land, situate, lying or be ing at Georgica, in the Town of East Hampton, County of Suffolk and State of New York, bounded and described as fol lows: BEGINNING at a point which is a marble monument in the centre of a private road which extends from Apaquogue High way towards Georgica and the southeast comer of the property described and running thence south 62 degrees 15 minutes 10 seconds west through a monument 277 and 62/100 feet to a marble monument marking an angle in the said road; thence south 64 degrees 0 minutes west 66 feet to a marble monument in the centre of said road and the southwest corner of this prop erty; thence north 33 degrees 21 minutes 10 seconds west through a concrete monument on the north side ol said road and along other land of Paul A. Salembier 433 and 76 /100 feet to a concrete monument on shore of Georgica Pond, the northwest corner of this property; thence north 47 degrees 24 minutes east along shore of Georgica Pond 51 and 73 /100 feet to a point; thence along shore of Georgica Pond north 38 degrees 7 minutes 30 seconds east 111 and 6/100 feet to a concrete monument the northeast comer of this proper ty: thence south 53 degrees 13 minutes 30 seconds east along land now or formerly of Caro line A. Greer and through a con crete monument on the north side of the said private road 545 and 39 /100 feet to the point or place of beginning. SUBJECT to rights of way, if any, of the public over part of the above described premises, included in private road, on the southeast and in favor of owners bounding thereon. Dated. December 1, 1938. AUGUST G. KLAGES, Referee. Dean. King, Smith Se Taylor, Attorneys for Plaintiffs, Office Sc P . O. Address, No. 160 Broadway. Borough of Manhattan, City of New York. Carpenters and Builders Plumbing and Heating TELEPHONE 472 FOR SKILLED MECHANICS E. MARVIN CONKLIN CARPENTER CONTRACTOR-BUILDER Shop Next to School FRANK B. SMITH GENERAL CONTRACTOR-BUILDER Shop—Newtown Lane Telephone 49 East Hampton CONRAD & SHOTT CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS Contracting and Percentage Jobbing Telephone 540 FRANK JOHNSON CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Telephone 500 P. O. Box 1012 East Hampton Masons R. DIGATE & SDNS MASON CONTRACTORS IDEAL MASON’S SUPPLY YARD KING STREET Between Newtown Lane and Railroad PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN TO ALL ORDERS R. DiGate, Proprietor Phone 397 HAMPTON MASON SUPPLY YARD Dealers In MASONS’ SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS OPEN FROM 8 UNTIL 4:30 YARD: KING STREET TELEPHONE 388 EDWARD V. BROOKS PLUMBING AND HEATING TELEPHONE EAST nAMPTON 871 BOX 822 OTTO SIMMONS PLUMBING AND HEATING OIL BURNERS Expert Engineer for Service Any Make Burner Repairs on All Burners Telephone 366 N. FILLMORE MILLER PLUMBING AND HEATING Amagansett Telephone Amagansett 3464 JOHN C. GRANT City of New York Master Plumber PLUMBING — HEATING Vacuum Furnace Cleaning EAST HAMPTON Telephone 858 P. O. Box SSI JOSEPH HENDERSON PLUMBING & HEATING PETRO NOKOL OIL BURNERS INSTALLED TELEPHONE 580 GEO. V. SCHELLINGER Sanitary Plumbing HEATING SnEET METAL WORK WELL DRILLING Estimates Solicited Amagansett, N. Y. Phone Amagansett 3511 Miscellaneous S. J. LYNCH & SON CONTRACTORS FOR MASON WORK OF ALL KINDS North Main Street Phone 239 ALFRED FOSTER. Foreman JAMES O’BRIEN & SONS AMAGANSETT. N. Y. MASONS BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS Plastering, Plain and Ornamental Cement Work of All Kinds Telephone 3521 Amagansett THOMAS M. GAINES CONTRACTOR • BUILDER "No Job Too Small Or Too Large" East Hampton 785 OAK VIEW HIGHWAY Painters and Decorators H. E. FANNING PRACTICAL PAINTER, DECORATOR Fumltore Painted Estimates Cheerfully Given P. O. Box 223 Telephone V H 537 PAINTING, DECORATING FURNITURE REPAIRING FRENCH POLISHING LAQUER SPRAY WORK FLOOR SCRAPING AND WAX POLISH BY SKILLED ARTISAN I H. R. CASINI L EAST HAMPTON 645 THE HAMPTONS ROOFING & TINSMITH COMPANY LEONARD J. BAUER Telephone E. H. 750 Re-Roofing and Built-up Roofs a Specialty Metal Ceiling and Side Walla Tin, Slate, Tile and Asbestos Roofing Sheet Metal Work, Leaders and Gotten Re-Roofing Montauk Highway East Hamptoo Estimates Cheerfully Given Jobbing Promptly Attended to JOHN R. WHITBY Licensed Professional Engineer and Surveyor EDWARDS THEATRE BUILDING PHONE 412 RESIDENCE 675 F. DRAGOTTA & SON TONSORIAL PARLOR AND BOWLING ALLEYS Masonic Temple Telephone 449 WILLIAM PARK LAWN MOWING GROUNDS MAINTENANCE Phono East Hampton 692 Cooper Lane East Hampton RINGWOOD ENGINEER ING & SURVEYING CO. Engineering Design and Supervision Land Surveying. Guaranteed Till® Surveys. Sub-Divisions, Sewage, etc. Barns Blk., Newtown Ln., Phone 557 Landscape Gardeners LOUIS VETAULT & SON NURSERYMEN PLANTrB* Generai Landscape Contractors i Phone East Hampton 344 Newtown Lane Eaxt liana pun i Attorn eys-at-Lnw STEPHENS & BOOKSTAVER Attorneys and Counsellors at Law Eat! Hampton. N. Y. Hand Building E. H. 587 CLIFFORD C. EDWARDS a . b . M» n. ATTOItNty AM) COUNSELLOR AT WIIF.V It’s Printing . . . You Want your order placed here La an assurance of quality : work at lowest possible j prices . • • and choice of , HAMMER MILL papers. | ---------------------- EAST HAMPTON STAR i Corner Newtown Lane and Main Blxert Eaat Hampton RAYMOND A. SMITH LL. B ATTORNEY AND COUNHELOB AT LAW NOTARY PUBLIC The Osborne Bank BUg

^MARCH Just an Eyeful of East Hampton Business OF TIME ...nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030960/1939-01-19/ed-1/seq-7.pdf · complicated device called Voder Merle Oberon and Gary

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Page 1: ^MARCH Just an Eyeful of East Hampton Business OF TIME ...nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030960/1939-01-19/ed-1/seq-7.pdf · complicated device called Voder Merle Oberon and Gary

TH E E A S T H A M P T O N S T A R T H U R S D A Y . JA N U A R Y 19. 1939 SEVEN

^MARCH OF TIME[C on tin u ed from P age 2]

licanism (ep tom ized b y "h ard - h eaded” Ju lius P eter H eil o f W is ­consin ) in at least on e state, m oon - kissed C aliforn ia , the p o litica l pen ­dulum sw u n g fa r to the L eft. C u l- bert L e v y O lson, 62, started his S tate ’s first D em ocratic adm in istra­tion in 44 years by pardon in g the m ost fam ed p rison er in the U. S.

F or 22 years rou n d faced , bald ing T h om as J. M oon ey had been sim ­m erin g lik e an Irish vo lca n o in San Q uentin prison w h ere h e w as sent because som eone put a b o m b in a su itcase and le ft it on a San F ran­c is co street w here it b lew up to k ill ten and in ju re fo rty m archers in a P reparedness D ay Parade. C harged w ith the cr im e m ain ly because he w as a rough la b or leader, M oon ey w as con v icted w ith 22-year-old W arren K . B illings. A lth ou g h M oon ey ’s frien ds later proved that both prin cipa l S tate w itnesses co m ­m itted p er ju ry and ev iden ce w as presented to sh ow M oon ey w as a m ile aw a y from the exp los ion w hen it occu rred , fou r C aliforn ia g o v e r ­nors h ave reopened the case on ly to snap it shut again.

L ast w eek it w as op en ed and closed fo r good . G ov ern or O lson stated be fore an A ssem b ly ch am ber a u d ien ce o f 500 his con v iction that M oon ey w as innocent, w a ited thirty secon ds fo r som eone to con trad ict h im , handed o v e r an u n con d ition a l pardon. Said M oon ey : "I shall d e d i­cate the rest o f m y life to w ork for the com m on g ood .” T w o days later, a fter parading in the streets o f San F rancisco, T om M oon ey br ie fly jo in ed a p ick et line in fron t o f a store, ga v e the strikers h a lf o f the $10 g iven h im on release from pris­on , sent the rest to oth er strikers in C hicago, announced his hope that L a b or w ou ld n ow find a ra lly in g cry in ‘ ‘F ree B illin g s.”T O O T H L E S S FR EED O M

Jackson , M ich igan .— In 1920,M ich igan im prisoned A lex a n d er R i- pan fo r life . T h e reason : a bu llet w h ich k illed his farm er n eig h bor fitted the barrel o f R ip an ’s gun. In 1929, P rison er R ipan d rov e a truck o u t o f the Jackson P rison gates, d is ­appeared . In 1935, M ich igan found h im again , a w e ll-b eh a v ed cob b ler in East C h icago, Ind. B ack to J a ck ­son P rison he w as haled.

L ast w eek he w a lk ed out, a fter m od ern ba llistics exp erts had testi­fied that bu llets exp a n d on bein g fired, that n o bu llet e v e r again fits the barrel o f the gun that fired it. A fte r tw e lv e years u n ju stly in ja il, A le x a n d e r R ipan had his freed om but fe w o f h is teeth. H e had pu lled them out on e b y on e in h is ce ll so that the pain w ou ld “ k eep h im from g o in g crazy .”V O D E R

P hiladelph ia .—"S a y ‘ea ch ’.”“ E ach.”‘ ‘S a y ‘P a tien ce ’ .”“ P atien ce.”“ Say, ‘P atien ce is necessary ’ .” “ P atien ce is necessary ."“ Say, ‘O h yea h ’ .”"O h yea h .”T h is cu riou s co llo q u y took p lace

last w e e k in P h iladelph ia ’s F ran k ­lin Institute, w h ere en gin eers o f B e ll T e lep h on e L aboratories and a tra ined op era tor dem on strated a com p lica ted d e v ice ca lled V od er

M erle O beron and G ary C ooper are co-starred fo r the first lim e in S am uel G o ld w y n 's rom antic com ed y , "T h e C ow b oy and the L a d y ," p la y in g at the E dw ards T heatre Sunday to T uesday, January 22, 23. and 24.

RYTEX R IOP R IN T E D S T A T IO N E R Y

A v a riety o f designs in sm art trop ica l co lo r co m b in a ­tions that w ill m ake y ou r le t­ters as liv e ly as a toreador's career!

J A N U A R Y A N D F E B R U A R Y S P E C IA L

50 SH EETS 50 E N V E L O P E S

W ith you r N am e and A d ­dress on S heets and E nvelopes.

W hat has it got that gets y ou ? E x otic co lo rs . . . gay trop ica l a tm osph ere . . . cra fty paper! R Y T E X R IO P rinted S tationery w il l deligh t y ou . . . you 'll w ant b oxes and b ox es at this low price.

E. H. S T A RM ain Street. East H am pton 477

(short fo r “ v o ice operation d em on ­strator” ). V od er creates a variety o f sounds resem blin g hum an speech c lo se ly enough to be easily in te lli­g ib le . T h e m en w h o bu ilt it w ere able to do so because in their te le ­phone researches they had m ade a c lose study o f h ow speech sounds are m ade b y the hum an larynx, m outh, breath, tongue, teeth and

flips. T h ey fou n d that th ey cou ld ! p rodu ce 23 basic sounds; that in tel­lig ib le speech cou ld b e synthesized

I from various com bin ation s o f these [sounds, con tro lled by a sk illed op er ­ator m anipu lating a k ey b oa rd and fo o t pedal.

B y a ltering pitch it can change from a m an ’s v o ice to a w om a n ’s or a ch ild ’s. It can m im ic anim al sounds, lo com otive w histles, the noise o f an airp lane engine.

B ell T e leph on e p ick ed tw en ty- fou r o f the clev erest telephone o p e r ­ators from 300 candidates, gave them about tw e lv e m onths’ in ten ­s ive training as V od er operators. L ik e con cert pianists, th ey h a v e to k eep in trim b y p racticin g several hours a day. T he m ost d ifficu lt speech com p on en t th ey m ust coax ou t o f the V oder, and the on e that sounds least natural, is the letter “L .” W hen som eone at last w e e k ’s dem onstration asked fo r the w ords f’B e ll T e lep h on e,” th ey cam e out som eth ing lik e “ B eh rw T eh w e- ph on e.”M E R C IF U L M A S K

Boston .— B eer, cham pagne, tight belts, cbtton earp lugs soaked in a coca in e substitute, sm all doses o f n itrog lycerin e , brom ides, are all th ings that are recom m en d ed by travelers fo r seasickness. N on e o f them , h ow ever, a ffords certa in re ­lief, and the cause and cu re o f sea­sickness rem ain on e o f m ed icin e ’s m in or m ysteries.

Last w eek as the British liner 'L ad y N elson ” d ock ed in B oston,

p ier visitors w ere am azed to see a sh ip ’s o ffice r standing on deck , a large ru b b er m uzzle cov er in g his nose, a large ru b b er d ou gh n u t sur­rou n d in g h is m outh, a lim p ru bber bag hanging on his chest. It w as D r. R ich m on d G ou lden , sh ip ’s sur­geon , w h o w as m od e lin g an O xy gen m ask fo r seasickness, in v en ted b y Dr. W alter M eredith B ooth b y o f the M ayo C lin ic. D r. B ooth b y tried the new in ven tion on fou r seasick pas­sengers d u rin g the “ L a d y N elson ’s” 30-day trip to British G uiana and back . It ga v e com p le te re lie f to three, partia l re lie f to a fourth .

T he m ercifu l m ask is h eld in p lace b y straps fitting around the head, has tw o h o llow tubes starting at each side o f the nosepiece and cu rv ­ing d ow n to the chin , w h ere they jo in a larg er tube w h ich runs to an o x y g e n b a g con n ected w ith an o x y ­gen tank. T h e m ask perm its a pas­sen ger to eat, talk and sm oke w h ile he inhales the sooth in g ox y g en . The w h o le business, exp la in ed Dr. B ooth ­b y , is n ot as u n com forta b le as it looks.L IST E N ! TH E W IN D !

W ashington .— L ast w e e k the li-

O P E R A S T A R

Elisabeth R eih b erg and E zio Pinza w ill sing lead ing ro les in the V erd i opera "S im o n B oc- ca n egra " to b e broadcast over N B C from the M etropolitan O p ­era H ouse on Saturday, January 21. at 1:55 P . M .

brary c lu b o f N ew H yd e Park, N. Y., voted to b o y co tt A n n M orrow L in d ­bergh ’s book , “ L isten ! T h e W in d !” because o f their refusal to “ be a partner to an y operation that m eans roy a lty o r p rofit to Mr. and M rs. L in dbergh in the ligh t o f the re ­cen t p u b lic ity they h ave had .”

T hat sam e d ay M r. L in d bergh re ­ce iv ed an oth er k ind o f p u b lic ity in headlines an n ou n cin g : “ L in d bergh G iv es U. S. N azi A ir D a ta :” “ L in d ­bergh B ares N azis’ A ir P o w e r .” “ L in d y A ir Secrets S tir C ap itol.”

T h e story told beneath the h ead ­lines w as that a ll the tim e Charles L in dbergh w as su pp osedly h o b n o b ­b in g w ith N azis in B erlin , and tat­tling on S ov ie t Russia to frien ds o f N azis in G reat B ritain, he w as a c ­tu a lly fu n ction in g as a sort o f U. S. spy abroad ; that instead o f letting M essrs. H itler, G oeb b e ls and others dupe him , he w as m akin g fo o ls o f them fo r the benefit o f w or ld d e m o ­cracy .H -E -L -P

W hite H orse, C anada.— T o the n orth -cou n try adven tu rer o f o lden days, h e lp w h en he needed it cam e at d og -s led pace if at all. N ow adays there is n ew hope in the north. R e ­cen tly , scu dd in g h igh o v e r the bleak Canadian w astes near W h ite H orse, P ilot S h eldon L ou ck e 's e y e w as cau gh t b y an unusual tangle o f tracks in the sn ow near an isolated cabin . C irclin g d ow n , h e saw that th ey spelled H -E -L -P . P ilo t L ou ck e p ick ed a spot, b rou gh t h is ski-shod airp lane d ow n near the cabin . The a n x iou s w ife o f a trapper laid lo w b y b lood p o ison in g had tram ped out the w ord . A fe w hours later the trapper w as in the hospita l at W hite H orse, last w eek w as reported recovering .

Just an Eyeful of Suffolk County News

B y Frank J . M oon ey

East Hampton Business and Professional Directory

W e try to p rin t a ll the n ew s o f this com m u n ity . W h en y o u w ou ld like to h ave a new s item in T h e Star ph on e East H am pton 477.

TRAIN SCHEDULEN O T R E SP O N SIB L E — T h e East H am pton Star is not responsib le fo r errors in tim e tables, in con v en ien ce or dam age resu lting from delayed boats or trains, or fa ilu re to m ake con n ection s ; schedules herein are su b ject to ch an ge w ithout notice .

TRAIN SERVICE — NEW YORK-EAST HAM PTONL v . E. H . A rr . N . Y .A .M . W eek days A .M .

7:05 9:308:57 E x. Oct. 10 to M ay 26 11:52

P.M .3:025:43

P.M .5:518:56E xc. M ay 30. 1939

H olidays O nly A .M . A .M .8:57 Runs Oct. 12; N ov . 8, 24 11:52

D ec. 26, 1938; Jan. 2,F eb . 13, 22, 1939 on ly

M ay 30, 1939 on ly S undays

8:19A .M .7:31

P.M .3:596:578:19 Ex. O c t 2 to M ay 28

10:39A .M .10:37P.M .6:449:52

10:39

L v . N. Y. A .M .

5:10

9:15PM.t 12:55

3:57 •4:30

tt4:47 ••4:47

A M .8:45

10:40P M .

4:51

W eek days

Sundays

A rr. E . H. A .M .9:33

P.M .12:14

3:226:247:117:528:62

A-M .11:34P.M .1:15

8:02tS atu rdays on ly , ex cep t fro m O cto ­ber 1, 1938, to M ay 20, 1939.• E xcep t S aturdays, a lso O ctob er 10,1938, to M ay 25, inc. and M ay 30,1939.f t Runs S eptem b er 24, O c t 1, 8. 12; N ov . 8, 24; D ec. 26, 1938; Jan. 2; F eb . 13. 22; M a y 27; Ju n e 3, 10 and 17. 1939.•• R uns M ay 30. 1939, on ly .

T he K in g s C ounty grand ju ry in ­vestigation into the D em ocratic n om in ation on O ctober 3 last o f Isaac R . S w ezey o f H untington for S uprem e C ourt Justice, to w h ich he w as elected N ov em ber 8, reached out to Su ffolk , w h en a ll 47 banks in th is cou n ty w ere subpoenaed to p rodu ce records o f transactions o f $1,000 and ov er betw een Septem ber 30 and O ctob er 4 last . . . M ean­w hile , the S u ffo lk D em ocratic E x ­ecu tiv e com m ittee recom m ended Fred G . Sk inner, Patchogue, and T h om as G ilm er, K in g s Park, fo r ap­p oin tm en t as cqurt c lerk and con fi­d en tia l a tten d a n t respectively , to Justice Sw ezey.

D og dam age to fow l, livestock , etc., in S u ffolk d uring 1938 totalled $5,147, a ccord in g to cla im s paid out o f d og license funds b y C ounty T reasurer John G. P eck . . . The figure represented an increase o f about $100 ov er that o f 1937 . . . The n um ber o f m otor veh icles registered in S u ffo lk d uring the past year reached a n ew h ig h — 66,137 veh icles o f a ll types, o r an increase o f 2,076 ov er 1937.

Islip S u perv isor W arren F. G reen ­halgh w as re -e lected chairm an o f the board o f supervisors at its an ­nual m eetin g in R iverh ead . . . and H arry T u th ill o f Setauket, engineer in the S u ffo lk H ig h w ay departm ent, rep laced H erm on F. B ishop o f W est- ham pton B each as cou n ty h igh w ay superintendent, a post he has held fo r fou r years.

W illiam M cD erm ott, 60, hom eless, d oesn ’t be lieve in the m iddlem an, so, w ith ou t benefit o f po lice , he w ent d irectly to the h om e o f Ju dge D on ­ald W . Shaw , B ellport, and said he w anted to g o to ja il . . . H e w en t; 60 days on a vag ran cy charge . . . F oster Sm ith , 40, o f O akdale, set a g ood exa m p le fo r fe llow -m otoris ts; a fter a p ipe protruding frqm his truck brok e the w in d ow o f a parked car, he le ft a slip o f paper con ta in ­ing his nam e and address in the car, then reported the m atter to P atch ­ogu e police.

W h ile P atch ogu e vo lu n teer fire­m en w en t abou t putting out a ro o f fire at h er house, a 15-year-old girl busied h erse lf preparing the fam ily d inner, unaw are o f the b laze . . . W ild d u ck s com m an d ed a price o f a bout $5 a p ou n d fo r fou r m en from S a y v ille and W est S a y v ille w hen arraigned be fore Ju dge D onald W . S haw at B ellport; charged w ith shooting e ig h t d u ck s w eig h in g about 24 pounds in the aggregate, the quartet paid c iv il com prom ises to ­ta lling $110.

M r. and M rs. G ustave T um m Sr., o f B ellport, ob served th eir golden w ed d in g an niversary . . . and B rook - h a ven T ow n O fficer and Mrs. A lb ert T . Q uattlander o f C entereach , their tw en ty -fifth . . . R e-in statem en t o f

Islip T ow n O fficer Frank Barylsk i, suspended a m onth ago when, after h is car had k illed a pedestrian, it w as fou n d h e had been driv in g w ith ou t an operator ’s license for three years, w as sought in a petition con ta in in g 1,000 signatures p re ­sented to the T ow n Board.

John C. Stark, w h o entered the em p loy o f the S u ffo lk C ou n ty N a­tional Bank o f R iverhead as a clerk 28 years ago, w as elected its presi­dent at the bank ’s annual m eeting

. He succeeds the late E llis S. D u va ll . . . I f his age o f 82 w ere re ­versed, declared Jam es R. S kinner, P atch ogu e insurance a g e n t , he w ou ld w illin g ly accept the v ice ­p residency o f the Stuyvesant Insur­a n ce C om pany, o ffered him b y J o ­seph Frelinghuysen , its president.

Th^ C learv iew hotel, Center M or­iches, h a lf o f w h ich w as torn aw ay by the S eptem ber 21 hurricane, w as destroy ed b y fire F riday the 13th . . . R ichard Brandt, six, o f S ayville , a c ­c iden ta lly suffered a head in jury w h en struck in the head b y a BB shot from a gun h eld b y a 15-year- o ld playm ate.

M artin S chm idt, 35, w ho, p o lice say, lived on the H astings farm , Coram , u n til a fe w hours be fore p o ­lice ra ided the p lace tw o w eeks ago and u n covered a 2,000-gallon still in operation there, w as arrested in B rook ly n by F edera l 'agents, w h o are n ow seek in g G eorge M entessi, lessee o f the 65-acre farm .

A n exten siv e investigation o f a B ay S h ore auto repair and paint shop b y S tate P o lice and Justice o f the P eace Charles H. D uryea o f S a y ­v ille , an in vestigator fo r auto in ­surance underw riters, led to the ar­rest o f tw o brothers, Joseph W eis- ner, 25, and W illiam W eisner, 20, on charges o f operatin g an auto theft rin g . . . Joseph w as arrested at R ich m on d , Va., and W illiam at A r ­lington , Va., and w ere each driv in g stolen cars w h en caught.

T h e 1939 tw o -d a y con ven tion and tournam ent o f the Southern N ew Y o rk V o lu n teer F irem en ’s associa ­tion w ill be h eld in R iverh ead the w eek o f June 12 . . . In an e ffo rt to re lieve the park ing situation in B ay S h ore ’s business section , the Islip T ow n B oard w ill lease tw o parking areas there.

T he B ig E vent o f the Y ea r! R Y ­T E X D E C K L E E D G E V E L L U M P rin ted S tation ery . . . in D O U B LE TH E U S U A L Q U A N T IT Y . . . 100 D eck led E n velopes . . . on ly $1 prin ted w ith y o u r N am e and A d ­dress or M on ogram . S pecia l for January o n ly !— East H am pton Star, M ain Street, East H am pton.

B u y y o u r T y p ew riter S u pp lies at T h e Star O ffice .— A dv.

L E G A L A D V E R T ISE M E N T L E G A L A D V E R T ISE M E N T

SU P R E M E C O U R T : SU F F O L KC O U N T Y -C O M M E R C IA L T R U ST C O M P A N Y O F N E W JE R SE Y , and another, as Trustees, etc., Plaintiffs against C A R O L IN E SN O W D EN W A IN W R IG H T , et al. Defendants. N otice o f Sale.

In pursuance o f a ju dg m en t o f foreclosu re and sale du ly m ade and entered in the a b ove entitled action and bearin g date the 28th day o f N ovem ber, 1938, I. the undersigned, the R eferee in said ju dg m en t nam ed, w ill sell at p u b lic au ction to the highest b id d er, at the fron t steps o f the C ou n ty C ourt H ouse at R iv e r ­head, S u ffo lk C ounty, N ew Y ork , on the 20th d ay o f January, 1939, at tw elv e o ’c lo ck noon, the prem ises d irected by said ju dg m en t to b e sold, and therein d escribed as fo llow s:

P arce l N o. 1 A L L that tract or parcel o f

land, situate in the T ow n o f East H am pton. C ou n ty o f S u ffo lk and S tate o f N ew Y ork , described as fo llow s:

B E G IN N IN G at the in tersec­tion o f centre line o f a Private R oad and easterly line o f land n ow or fo rm erly o f J ew ett; run ­n in g thence north 64 degrees east 115 and 9 0 /1 0 0 fee t to a m on u m en t; thence north 62 d e ­grees 15 m inutes 10 secon ds east 144 and 10 /1 0 0 feet to a m on u ­m en t the last tw o cou rses being a lon g the cen tre line o f said P rivate R oad ; thence south 33 degrees 54 m inutes 40 seconds east 636 and 3 /1 0 0 fee t n\ore or le^s to the B each G rass; th en ce a lon g the B each Grass 340 feet m ore or less to land j n ow o r fo rm e rly o f J ew ett; th en ce north 27 degrees 48 m in ­utes w est a lon g land n o w or fo rm erly o f J ew ett 546 and 70 /1 0 0 fee t m ore o r less to the p o in t or p lace o f begin n in g, to ­geth er w ith a ll right, title and j in terest w h ich the p arty o f the first part m ay h ave to access o v e r the private road w ay a b ove re ferred to, s u b je c t h ow ever, to the r igh t o f w a y reserved by Paul A . Salem bier and F lo y R. S a lem bier. their heirs and as­signs. by deed record ed J u ly 18. 1927. in the C ou n ty C lerk ’s O f­fice. S u ffo lk C ou n ty, in L iber 1283 o f C on vey an ces at page 374 o v e r that p ortion o f the prem ises n ow m arked o ff and used as a private roa d w a y , and re ferred to in the fo reg o in g d e ­scrip tion as a private roadw ay.

S U B JE C T to r ig h t-o f-w a y . if any. o v e r that p ortion o f the prem ises n ow used as a p rivate roadw ay, and to such rights, if any, as m ay ex is t in any person

o r persons in or to the beach or ban ks o f the prem ises herein described.

SU B JE C T to easem ents, if any, o f abu ttin g ow n ers a lon g the private road re ferred to herein.

P arcel N o. 2A L L that certa in tract or p ar­

cel o f land, situate, ly in g o r b e ­ing at G eorgica , in the T ow n o f East H am pton, C ou n ty o f S u ffo lk and State o f N ew Y ork , bou n ded and d escrib ed as f o l ­low s:

B E G IN N IN G at a poin t w hich is a m arb le m onum ent in the cen tre o f a p rivate road w h ich exten d s from A p a q u ogu e H ig h ­w ay tow ards G eorg ica and the southeast co m e r o f the property d escribed and running thence south 62 degrees 15 m inutes 10 secon ds w est through a m onum ent 277 and 6 2 /1 0 0 feet to a m arble m onum ent m arking an angle in the said road ; thence south 64 degrees 0 m inutes w est 66 fee t to a m arble m onum ent in the centre o f said road and the southw est corn er o f th is p rop ­erty ; thence north 33 degrees 21 m inutes 10 seconds w est through a con crete m onum ent on the north side o l said road and a long oth er land o f P au l A . Salem bier 433 and 76 /100 fee t to a con crete m onum ent on sh ore o f G eorg ica P ond, the north w est corn er o f this p roperty ; thence north 47 degrees 24 m inutes east along shore o f G eorg ica P on d 51 and 73 /100 fee t to a p o in t; thence a lon g shore o f G eorg ica Pond north 38 degrees 7 m inutes 30 secon ds east 111 and 6 /1 0 0 feet to a con crete m onum ent the n ortheast c o m e r o f this p roper­ty : thence south 53 degrees 13 m inutes 30 secon ds east a lon g land n ow or fo rm e rly o f C aro­line A . G reer and through a c o n ­crete m onum ent on the north side o f the said private road 545 and 39 /1 00 feet to the poin t or p lace o f beginn ing.

SU B JE C T to rights o f w ay , if any, o f the p u b lic o v e r part o f the a bove d escribed prem ises, in clu ded in private road, on the southeast and in fa v o r o f ow n ers bou n d in g thereon.D ated. D ecem ber 1, 1938.

A U G U S T G. K L A G E S , R eferee.

Dean. K in g , Sm ith Se T aylor, A ttorn eys fo r Plaintiffs,O ffice Sc P. O . A ddress,N o. 160 B roadw ay.B orou gh o f M anhattan,C ity o f N ew Y ork .

Carpenters and Builders Plumbing and Heating

TELEPHONE 472 FORSKILLED MECHANICS E. MARVIN CONKLIN

CARPENTER CONTRACTOR-BUILDER

Shop Next to School

FRANK B. SMITHGENERAL CONTRACTOR-BUILDER

Shop— Newtown Lane

T eleph on e 49 East H am pton

CONRAD & SHOTT

CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS

Contracting and Percentage Jobbing

Telephone 540

FRANK JOHNSONCONTRACTOR AND BUILDER

Telephone 500 P. O. Box 1012

East Hampton

Masons

R. DIGATE & SDNSMASON CONTRACTORS

IDEAL M ASON’S SUPPLY YARD

K IN G STREET Between Newtown Lane and Railroad PROM PT ATTENTION GIVEN TO

ALL ORDERS R. DiGate, Proprietor Phone 397

HAM PTON MASON SUPPLY YARD

Dealers In MASONS’ SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS

OPEN FROM 8 UNTIL 4:30 Y A R D : KIN G STREET

TELEPHONE 388

EDW ARD V. BROOKSPLUMBING AND HEATING

TELEPHONE EAST nAM PTON 871

BOX 822

OTTO SIMMONSP L U M B IN G A N D H E A T IN G

O IL BU RN ERS E xpert Engineer for S ervice

A n y M ake B urner R epairs on A ll Burners

T eleph on e 366

N. FILLMORE MILLERPLUMBING AND HEATING

Amagansett

T eleph on e Am agansett 3464

JOHN C. GRANTCity o f New York Master Plumber

PLUMBING — HEATING Vacuum Furnace Cleaning

EAST HAMPTON Telephone 858 P. O. Box SSI

JOSEPH HENDERSONPLUMBING & HEATING

PETRO NOKOL O IL BURNERS INSTALLED

TELEPHONE 580

GEO. V. SCHELLINGER Sanitary Plumbing

HEATING SnEET METAL W ORK

WELL DRILLING Estimates Solicited Amagansett, N. Y.

P hone A m agansett 3511

Miscellaneous

S. J. LYNCH & SONCONTRACTORS FO R MASON W ORK

OF ALL KINDS

North M ain Street Phone 239ALFRED FOSTER. Foreman

JAMES O ’BRIEN & SONSAMAGANSETT. N. Y.

MASONS BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS

Plastering, Plain and Ornamental Cement W ork o f All Kinds

T eleph on e 3521 A m agansett

THOM AS M. GAINESC O N T R A C T O R • B U IL D E R

"N o J ob T o o S m all Or T o o L a rge"

East H am pton 785

O A K V IE W H IG H W A Y

Painters and Decorators

H. E. FANNINGPRACTICAL PAINTER, DECORATOR

Fum ltore Painted Estimates Cheerfully Given

P. O. Box 223 Telephone V H 537

PAINTING, DECORATING

F U R N ITU R E R E P A IR IN G

F R E N C H PO L ISH IN G

L A Q U E R S P R A Y W O R K

F L O O R S C R A P IN G A N D W A X PO LISH

BY S K IL L E D A R T IS A NI

H. R. CASINI LE A S T H A M P T O N 645

THE HAMPTONS ROOFING & TINSMITH

COMPANYLEONARD J. BAUER Telephone E. H. 750

R e-R oofing and Built-up Roofs a Specialty

Metal Ceiling and Side Walla Tin, Slate, T ile and Asbestos R oofing Sheet Metal Work, Leaders and G otten

R e-R oofing Montauk Highway East Hamptoo

Estimates Cheerfully Given Jobbing Promptly Attended to

JOHN R. W H ITBY

Licensed Professional Engineer and Surveyor

EDW ARDS THEATRE BUILDING

PHONE 412

RESIDENCE 675

F. D R AGOTTA & SONTONSORIAL PARLOR

AND BOW LING ALLEYS

Masonic Temple Telephone 449

W ILLIAM PARKL A W N M O W IN G

G R O U N D S M A IN T E N A N C E P h on o East H am pton 692

C ooper L ane East H am pton

RINGW OOD ENGINEER­ING & SURVEYING CO.E ngineering D esign and S uperv ision Land S u rveyin g. G uaranteed Till® S urveys. S ub-D ivisions, Sew age, etc.

Barns B lk., N ew tow n Ln., Phone 557

Landscape Gardeners

LOUIS VETAU LT & SONNURSERYMEN PLAN TrB*

Generai Landscape Contractors i Phone East Hampton 344

Newtown Lane Eaxt liana pun i

Attorn eys-at-Lnw

STEPHENS & BOOKSTAVER

A ttorn eys and C ounsellors at L aw

E at! H am pton. N. Y.

H and B uild in g E. H. 587

CLIFFORD C. EDWARDSa . b . M » n.

A T T O ItN ty A M ) COUNSELLOR AT

W I I F .V It ’ s P r inting . . . Y o u W a n tyour order placed here La an assurance o f qu a lity : work at low est possible j prices . • • and choice o f , HAM M ER M ILL papers. |

----------------------E A S T H A M P T O N S T A R i

Corner Newtown Lane and Main Blxert Eaat Hampton

RAYM OND A. SMITHLL. B

ATTORNEY AND COUNHELOB AT LAW

NOTARY PUBLIC The Osborne Bank BUg