ITALIAN HOLIDAY For Bargain Hunters - NYS Historic...
Transcript of ITALIAN HOLIDAY For Bargain Hunters - NYS Historic...
THE EAST HAMPTON STAR. EAST HAMPTON. N. Y., SEPTEMBER 19. 1968 THREE
Wed In RamseyMiss Mary Ann Patricia Mahoney
and Philip Christopher McGovern were married Saturday in St. Paul’s Church, Ramsey, N. J. Miss Mahoney is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mahoney o f Ramsey, and Mr. McGovern is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. McGovern o f Three Mile Harbor and the Bronx.
The Rev. Eugene O’Brien, headmaster o f Fordham Preparatory School, celebrated the nuptial mass, and bestowed the Papal blessing. The Rev. Edward Gorman, S.J., officiated at the marriage ceremony. A reception was held at the Manor, West Orange, N. J.
The bride, who wore white peau de soie and carried orchids, stepa- notis, and galex leaves, was accompanied by her sister, Jane, as maid of honor. The other attendants were Mrs. Robert Mahoney Jr., Mrs. Edward Wallace, and Miss Patricia Anton, in blue gowns and carrying roses, carnations, rubrum lilies, and galex leaves.
The bridegroom’s brother Lawrence was the best man. Mrs. McGovern is a graduate o f St. Luke’s High School and Boston College, where she received a bachelor’s degree in nursing. She received her master’s degree in maternal-infant health, and is on the Keuka College faculty.
Mr. McGovern attended Fordham Preparatory School and also received his bachelor’s degree from Boston College. He is a student at Cornell Law School, and a m ember of the National Guard. Mr. and Mrs. McGovern will live in Ithaca, N. Y.
SCHOOL BOARDContinued From Page 1
Indemnity Company would accept the figure, it was reported. This would presumably be determined by the next meeting of the Board.
At Mr. Meeker’s recommendation, the Board adopted a resolution authorizing the employment of seven persons as substitute teachers, subject to the approval of the com missioner o f education. A ll are retired teachers.
Plans are being made for Board members to attend the New York State School Boards Association annual convention in Syracuse Oct. 27-29. Mr. Brill asked that as many Board members attend as possible to take advantage o f the equipment exhibits at the convention in planning the proposed new high school on Long Lane. Mr. Miller was elected voting delegate from District One at the convention.
Finally, the Board authorized
Jewish ServicesServices ushering in the Jewish
religious new year, Rosh Hashono, will be held next week at the Jewish Center of the Hamptons, 44 Woods Lane, East Hampton. Dr. Samuel H. Gordon will officiate.
The services, marking the beginning o f the ten-day period of penitence culminating in the fast of the day of atonement, Yom Kippur, will begin Sunday at 8 p.m. There will be a service at 10 a.m. Monday; another at 8 that evening; and a fourth on Tuesday, at 10 a.m.
Wed al St. Luke'sMiss Nancy Dickinson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ludlow Dickinson, of Mr. and Mrs. Ludlow Dickinson, of 74 Miller Lane East, East Hampton, married Charles Houseknecht, son of Frederick Houseknecht of Mon- tauk and Mrs. Richard Peterson of Gainsville. Fla., on Aug. 25 in St. Luke’s Church. The Rev. Samuel Davis performed the ceremony, which was followed by a reception at the American Legion Hall.
Miss Sally Zaykowski was the maid of honor, and the bridesmaids were Betsey Hutflas and Pat Hurley. Steven Houseknecht was his brother’s best man.
Mr. and Mrs. Houseknecht are living in Newport, R. I., where Mr. Houseknecht, a Navy radarman, is stationed.
Smith-NobleMrs. Francis Osborn Noble, of
Wainscott and New York, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Frances White Noble, to DuBois Tangier Smith, son of Mrs. Edward Henry Leighton Smith and the late Mr. Smith, of St. James. An October wedding is planned.
Players Producing Williams Comedy
At the Guild Hall Players’ first meeting of the season on Sept. 10, it was announced that the Tennessee Williams comedy "Period of Adjustment” would be produced on Nov. 9 and 16. Thomas Cullen, who will direct the play, stated that tryouts, open to the public, would be held at Guild Hall on Sept. 24 and 26 at 8 p'.m.
Lee Dion, president of the Players, also stated that the organization would present Charles Dickens’ “ ScroOge” in connection with the annual Christmas program put on by Guild Hall. The Christmas play will be given on the Friday night and Sunday afternoon before Christmas;
The Players have decided to sponsor a playwriting contest and offer an award of $100 for the best play, either full length or one-act, with probable presentation by the Guild Hall Players next season. May 1, 1968, was set as the deadline for accepting manuscripts, which must be typewritten and double-spaced. The contest is open to all comers and further details, including the names of the judges, w ill be announced shortly.
A treasurer’s report showed a net profit to the Guild Hall Players on the recent production of “ Oklahoma” of $900, it was announced.
Lighthouse Photo
Miss Klenk Weds Mr. Mondragon
Miss Pauline Elizabeth Klenk, daughter of Mrs. Horace Klenk of Clearview Drive, Noyac, and the late Rev. Klenk, was married Aug. 31 at her home to Angelo Mondragon Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Mondragon of New York. The Rev. William Sprague performed the ceremony.
The bride, who wore peau de soie with a lace mantilla, was accompanied by her sister, Jill Evangeline, as maid of honor. The flower girls were Carolyn Ann Klenk, a niece, and Ruth Virginia Barton, also a niece. David Barton Jr. was the ringbearer, and John Dugan Klenk, the bride’s brother, was the best man.
The bride is a graduate of Wheaton College in Illinois, and is working toward a master’s degree at Columbia University School of Social Work. Mr. Mondragon was educated in Argentina, and is a computer programmer in a Flushing hospital.
After a wedding trip to Puerto Rico, Mr. and Mrs. Mondragon are living in Flushing.
AAUW Planning Party Sept. 28
East Hampton’s Branch of the American Association of University Women w ill hold a luncheon, fashion show, and bridge party at the Spring Close House on Saturday, Sept. 28, beginning at noon.
Mark, e ore ana strike plans to show its line of fall and winter clothes to the members of the Association and their guests. Among the models will be members of the Association. The event w ill also include several sweepstake prizes and door prizes.
Tickets may be obtained from Mrs. John G. Strong and from Mrs. John H. Fallon. The proceeds will go into the Association’s general fund.
The AAU W met Tuesday evening, at Guild Hall, for a covered-dish supper. Edward Sharretts of Bridge- hampton, chairman of the New County Committee, spoke.
The hostesses for Tuesday’s meeting were Mrs. James Reutershan, chairman; Mrs. Edward Martin, Mrs. Strong, and Mrs. Paul Nugent.
A ARP Plans TripMembers of the local Chapter of
the American Association of Retired Persons are planning a four-day bus trip to the Amish country of Pennsylvania. leaving Oct. 14. The trip was planned at an AARP meeting at Guild Hall on Sept. 10, with some 70 in attendance.
The members also decided to sponsor a program on Oct. 15 in conjunction with the local Branch of the American Association of University Women. A member of the County Human Relations Commission will speak. There will be a regular AARP meeting on Oct. 8.
Guild Hall BridgeIn a master-point game of the
Guild Hall Bridge Club on Sept. 11, Mrs. Gordon Lipetz and Edward Brennan Jr. were first. They were followed by Mrs. Inez Daine and Mrs. Raymond Magee, Mrs. Morgan Belmont and Miss Eleanor Mulford, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Cox, and Mrs. A. Norman Gould and Dr. Felix Fuchs.
ACCABONAC CREEKContinued From Page 1
in 1935.Dr. Leon Hammer, the president
of the Civic Association of the Springs, said the section in question required that in order for a mosquito control commission to be established it would have to be located in a county adjacent to a county that has three townships adjacent to a city with a population of at least three million. “ There is only one such county,” Dr. Hammer said, “and that is Suffolk.”
Dr. Hammer, along with about 15 other local residents, appeared before the Board of Supervisors Monday to call for the removal of Mr. Williamson and the cessation of broad - spectrum chemical pesticide spraying in East Hampton Town. The Supervisors listened to their arguments for almost an hour, but took no action.
In addition to Dr. Hammer, others who spoke against the use of the spray were Stuart Vorpahl Jr., secretary of the Town Baymen’s Association; Doris Planz, a public health nurse; and Miss Ann Stanwell, who said an 87-year-old guest of hers had been made ill by the spraying.
"N o Competency"Dr. Hammer told tne Supervisors,
“ The prevailing principal and practice in this County is to put the application of potentially dangerous substances and techniques under the control of people who by their sworn testimony have no competency in the field of ecology or biology and are in no way competent to judge the effect o f these substances on living things in a particular place
Lia-Frey tagThe engagement of Diana J. Frey-
tag, daughter of Mrs. Louise Freytag of 51 The Circle, East Hampton, and of Warren H. Freytag, to Richard F. Lia, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Lia of 24 Sherrill Road, East Hampton, has been announced.
No date has been set for the wedding. Miss Freytag recently com pleted training as a hostess for Braniff International and has been assigned to work from the airline’s base at Dallas, Tex.
or time.”The autonomy of the Commission
also came under attack by Dr. Hammer. “ The present principal and practice requires the taxpayer to prove that a substance is destructive after it is used rather than to require the agency using it to prove it is safe before it is applied. With this thinking it took 20 years to bring about a moratorium on the use of DDT, during which time it was possible to accumulate more than a billion pounds of DDT in the biosphere.”
In a Suffolk Supreme Court suit brought before Judge Jack Stanis- law two years ago, Mr. Yannacone’s w ife charged that DDT, a chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticide, is residual, deleteriously affects every member of the food chain, and has stifled reproductivity in certain birds, namely the osprey.
Judge Stanislaw dismissed the suit, but agreed that DDT is dangerous. The County Board has banned the use o f DDT by the Commission for the past two years.
Recommendations Dr. Hammer recommended on
Monday that the following actions be taken by the Board:
“ 1) The use of pesticides in control
of mosquitoes, which we favor, be VILLAGE BOARD placed under the management of aboard of competent ecologists who Continued From Page 1understand the total effect of a given A in February 1966 substance or technique upon our Similar To Town'senvironment; 2) That this body or other re(]uiremcnts of ,hc nc„agency be so structured that it can- dollble_A 20nine district would be not become autonomous so as to a minimunl width at thc buM lng line allow the due, orderly public review of , 60 fce, ^ prevision identical of its activit.es; 31 That this body „ ilh ,he ironle„ , in the villagedemonstrate the safety of a sub- zone A - a trontyard setback mini-stance or technique prior to its wide- mum of 50 [eet again idcnlical withspread application. 2Qne A . and rmnjmum s;de and rear.
“ We are not against pesticides or yard setbacks of 30 feet, five feet against mosquito control. We are, iarger than zone A. however, not interested in apologies jh e Town double-A requirementsor explanations. We want an intel- include a width at the building lineligent use of pesticides, and we want Qf 200 feet, but are otherwise the a responsible control of mosquitoes,” same as those proposed for the new Dr. Hammer said. Village zone. Both limit coverage
Dr. Hammer said that on May 22 to 10 per cent of the lot. o f this year, his group had recom- Such an upzoning is described in mended that the County Board ap- the Comprehensive Plan as neces- point an advisory board to the Com- sary to reduce the ultimate year- mission that would be made up of round and summer population dens- the following experts: ity o f the Village from an estimated
Dr. Charles Wurster Jr. a biologist 17.°00 Persons or more to some with the State University of New 10,600. If the change is adopted, the York at Stony Brook; Mr. Yannacone; area involved would comprise the Anthony Taormina, the regional largest single zoning district within director of the fish and game divi- the Village, sion of the New York State Con- Text Printedservation Department; Dr. George Joseph F. X. Dunn is chairman M. Woodwell, an ecologist at the of the Village Planning Board which Brookhaven National Laboratory; formulated the recommendation. The Dr. Robert Smolker, a State Univer- text of the proposed amendment ap- sity biologist; Dennis Puleston, a pears in this issue as a legal notice, naturalist for Brookhaven National In other action concerning the Laboratory; and a representative Planning Board, the Board gave from the Cooperative Extension final approval last Friday night, fol- Service. lowing a public hearing, to the new
Dr. Hammer said the advisory Jericho Close subdivision in the board would have advised the vicinity of Jericho and Cove Hollow Commission concerning the use of Roads. The subdivision is north of pesticides and would have prepared Georgica Road and therefore is in a pesticide control law. “They were an area slated to remain in zone A.not accepted at that time,” he said. ----------------- -------------------------------------- ’‘ ‘This is kind of bad; you don’t want president. Mrs. Charles J. Hall waspolitical hacks because life is in- * ’ ’ ---------- :J— *•volved here.”
PSEE Elects Meanwhile, back at East Hampton,
the directors of the Preservation'Society met at Guild Hall following the annual membership meeting last Saturday (reported elsewhere in, this issue), and elected officers.
Morley Ayearst follows Richard C. Glennon as president of the PSEE, and Herbert E. Field is first vice
elected second vice president; Edwin L. Sherrill, treasurer; and Ormonde deKay. secretary.
Jack Graves
Charles R. Mansir, clerk, to advertise for bids from the local banks on a $200,000 tax anticipation note, and to pay the bills when they were audited.
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TH U R SDA Y■TUESDAY
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SEPTEMBER 19 • 24
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Mat. Sat. & Sun.. 2 P.M. Eves. 7 and 9
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ATTENTION: No one admitted without proper attire or without shoes.
MRS. BRAEM SAYS:Probably the best known vitamin is. “C” . The general
public tends to dismiss vitamin C (ascorbic acid), as a doubtful cold fighter and little more. The truth is however, that this vitamin is active in MORE functions of more organs in the body than any other vitamin. Through the years, researchers have shown its effectiveness in such diverse areas as, mental illness, coronary thrombosis, capillary hemorrhaging, tuberulosis, pneumonia and many of the degerative diseases including the aging process.
I’m sure you’ve heard this— “ it is not necessary to take more vitamin C than is recommended daily because the body wastes the extra dosage!” Such advice is confusing and what is MORE, it is SCIENTIFICALLY INCORRECT! In 1945, the late Doctor Henry C. Sherman who, for forty years taught food chemistry in Columbia University, recommended a “ saturation point level amount” of vitamin C kept in the body at ALL times for better health. Since the body does not store this vitamin and because it is water soluable, much vitamin C is constantly lost through the kidneys, perspiration and some goes out by way of the excreted foods we eat. Then, destroyers of vitamin C such as, aspirin, antibiotics, other drugs, nicotine, shock, stress, grief, etc., add to the deficiency of this vitamin in the body. It is authoritatively estimated that the cases o f sub-clinical scurvy today are far more common than is generally recognized.
It is almost impossible to keep up with the research in this field, for the powerful influence of vitamin C on the body is always challenging scientists to see what else this magic substance can do to keep us healthy or, if it can be used to treat an illness that seems to have no cure. For sure, it is the vital ingredient which welds CELLS together and these, are after all, the very stuff of flesh, bones, blood and organs. Without vitamin C these things CANNOT maintain themselves— and without these things, we cannot exist!
It has been pointed out by food scientists here and abroad that as we grow older, we need MORE vitamin C— much more! Even in 1940, Doctor P. Birkenau, of the Wainefird Hospital, Oxford. England, was concerned with what happens to the brains of older people: the changes that come with age and those that are called, "senile dementia, a much more.serious group of symtoms. Results from scientific research have proved that balanced dietaries along with daily use of NATURAL supplements can stave o ff the aging process.
The adrenal glands, located just in front of the kidneys, are a source of ADRENALIN which is released into our bodies whenever we are under stress of any kind— fright, anger, pain, heat, cold, fatigue, things like that. In healthy adrenal glands, there should be an ABUNDANCE of vitamin C— a great deal MORE than is found concentrated in ANY other part of the body. In 1940, scientists reported that the hormone released by a certain part of the adrenals, CANNOT be formed there, UNLESS vitamin C is present! Lack of enough vitamin C damages the LIVER. Scientists do not know exactly how vitamin C works to keep the liver in a healthy condition, but they believe that the normal mechanism in which the liver engages, turning carbohydrates and protein into a form that can be used by the body, is slowed down when there is not enough vitamin C present.
Another of vitamin C’s chores, the metabolism of TYROSINE (an amino acid which is one of the building blocks when PROTEIN is broken down), was uncovered by M. N. D. Goswami and W E. Knox, in the Journal of Chronic Diseases in 1963. They found that without available TYROSINE, the production of the hormones, THROXSINE and ADRENOLINE cannot be made and then, one uses body fuel too slowly affecting body functions including a heart which works too sluggishly. These scientists also noted that vitamin C is essential to the protection of certain EXZYMES from oxidation. It has been known for many years that vitamin C works with vitamins, A. B and E to make PROTEIN (the source of ALL life), more available to the body.
It has been proved that vitamin C plays an important part in the nutrition of the eye tissues. The healthy lens is Part>c‘U' larly rich in vitamin C, while eyes that have cataracts contain little or none. Surgeons arc being urged to administer plenty of vitamin L. BEFORE operations as well as AFTER. Since surgery is an extreme form of stress, it follows that a vitamin C build up is one of the best kinds of PREOPERATIVE PROTECTION a person can get.
The question naturally arises, “ how can If be sure that I am taking, “ saturation point level of this vitamin?" We used to be taught that 75 milligrams daily were enough. Then, it was suggested that 300 milligrams were better. We have sufficient evidence “ ..... n n im i v ,,r MHRK *h»n 300 mi iL'iams
that one may be allergic to the CITRUS family, which is the RICHEST source of NATURAL vitamin C with all its factors. You see when one takes a synthetic vitamin C (or any other synthetic vitamin for that matter), one DOES NOT get >11 lh« auociaUdVitamin iur Uldl m a im /, - • — - ,factors which make the NATURAL source far more valuab e to the bodv. And, what is more important, synthetic vitamins being R^t together chemically, cannot do the PROTECTIVE job that NATURAL ones can because the ASSOCIATED faclors arc in combination will, the basic vitamin so as to work with OTHER vitamins arid minerals for the proper functioning of ALL the body organs. The ACER JLA berry (or cherry as it is sometimes referred to) is Ole RICHEST common source of vitamin C with all lls associated p a T h ^ are rose hips oranges, grapefruit, lemoas -md tangerines one 01 BARTH S I& T U R A L color pink, ACEROLA WAFERS four oranec.s giving 300 milligrams of vitamin C BARTHS have other NATURAL vitamin offerings of C which are as I said, there are some who are allergic to any CITRUS fruits.
For NATURAL ORGANIC FOODS. FOOD SUPPPLE-
PHARMACY here and in WHITE'S PHARMACY in Bndgehampton.