UM.i ^MM ^N.HW ^HM.W.WWM.HMM ^MHM. ^HM...

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The Mid - Island Mail •ESTABLISHED 1935 MEDFORD STATION. L. I.. NEW YORK Published every Wednesday afternoon by the PATCHOGUE ARGUS CORPORATION at 11-15 North. Ocean Avenue, Patchogue, Long Island , New York JOHN T. TUTHILL , JR FRANK P . JOHNSON President and Publisher Secretary and Editor (On Leave in the MARY CAMPION United States Navy ) Advertising Manager UM . i ^MM ^N . HW ^HM . W . WWM . HMM ^MHM . ^HM SUBSCRIPTION RATES $1.50 a year anywhere in the United States , payable in advance. 5c a single copy. ADVERTISING RATES Display advertising* rates on application for rate card. Legal advertising* at legal rates. Front page reading notices loc a line , inside run of paper position 10c a line. Cards of thanks C>0c. Birth , mar- riage and death notices free. A _ char£ _ is always made for advertising reading notices of u. money-making- affair lor churches , clubs and other organizations. National AdverlisinK Representative AMERICAN PRES S ASSOCIATION 225 Wis t 39th Street, New Yolk City Entered as second-class matter Novem- ber 4 , 1935 . at the postoffice at Medford Station , New York , under the Act of March 3. 1879 . The Mid-Island Mail assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertisements , but , when not : .fied promptly will reprint that : part of an advertisement ix\ which the typographical error occurs. Belle Terre Lodge Buildings Come Down in Las t Act of Era Axes prompted by taxes are being wielded on much of the last vestige of another Suffolk landmark , the re- maining* buildings . of Belle Terre lodge , widely known in the past as a summer hotel. The main building burned down. The lodge , which early in the cen- tury was the social center of the village of Belle Terre , a picturesque and restricted summer colony sit- uated on the east side of Port Jef- ferson Harbor, passed throu gh a suc- cession of ownerships and weathered _ the early years of the depression until fire destroyed the main clubhouse sev- eral years ago. Acting as trustees for tlie certifi- cate holders interested in the ¦ guar- anteed mortgage on the 107-acre property, the Suffolk County Trust company of Riverhead recently award- ed the contract for the wrecking of .the r:- .Mining* buildings to the North Fork Wrecking company of Matti- tuck. The buildings to be demolished in- clude the " annex , " a rambling two- story frame structure, a second large building which "was converted from. a stable into a combination restaurant and kitchens ,, and a 20-car garage. A bathing* pavilion on the- Long Is- land sound shore , some distance re- moved from the other club structures , will be left standing. Much of the material and all of the fittings of the three doomed struc- tures are being carefully salvaged by the wrecking company, wh ich has de- molished many famed Long* Island landmarks , includin g the Huntington Bay club and the palatial Shelter Island mansion built by "Borax King" Smith many years ago. The immediate aim at Belle Terre seems to be to bring about a reduc- tion of the taxes on the property through the elimination of the as- sessed valuation represented by the buildings. It is probable , however, that the extensive tract of high , wooded laud , with its beautiful show- front, ultimately will be cut up into home sites. , although no plans.for its development have yet been announced. The Belle Terre club , established in ! !){)(-; , was the nucleus of the en- tire Belle Terre development , created by Jean A. I void , a well known real (estate! ope rator , on property pur- chased froin the Strong family. Mr. Aivord. who now lives in retirement in Florida , patterned the resort after exclusive Tuxedo Park , N. Y, TOV^N OF BROOKHATBN Deatlis— August 14—Abraham Edwards , 57, Moriches , in Suffolk Sanatorium , Holtsville, August 16—Mrs. Frances J. Wil- liams , 49 , Brooklyn , at Miller Place. August 18—Mrs. Clara L. Murd ock, 56, Center Moriches, in Math er Memorial hospital , Port Jefferson. August 19 Kate Crampton , 8'0 , Woodside , at Quogue place , Mastic Beach. August 19—Konstance Lorine Bry- son , 3 , Selden. August 20—James V. Sposoto , 35, Huntington , in Suffolk Sanator- ium. August 20—C h arles F. Howell , 81 , 245 Maple avenue , Patchogue. August 20—Jacqueline Waclvter , 3 , Glendale , at Church street , Lake Eonkonkoma . August 22—Randall Vause , 21 , Hunt- ington , in Suffolk Sanatorium. August 23 Antonio Barone , 51 , Poughkeepsie , in Mather Memorial hospital. August 23—Dennis Emanuel Bergen , 65, Brooklyn , in Blue Point, August 25—-William F. Mebus, 12, Patchoeue. VILLAGE OF PATCHOGUE Deaths- August 24—Nathan Frederick Smith , 61, Patchogue. TOWN OF BROOK HAVEN Births- August 1;>-- A. dangliior , Hor! , - Do- lores , tr > Jolir** and Fr:nH:es "Volenti CJazzota . 47 U' u.-;'iiir.jv * '>n avenue , Pak'hogui. - , in Patrbo-y. !- , ( ' ' .;>¦ .era 1 hospital. August 15 - ,A (inlight i .T , A nnette Mario, to Harold and Mart'/ l ,o. -;- choni Ui-xie , Fori. .j - . -l ' TiM' . - 'on Sia- i'ii 'Vi , August , 1 7 —A son , Gieoiu* . ; , to Stev- en and Mary Ann 1>_ Dio Vak-nli , Center Moriches , in Palchogm* Gen- eral liosp ital. August 1 8----A son , Joseph Edward , to Charles and Ruin Deorhani .Plumber , Center Moriches. August 21—A son , to Hilhm. ii and Rebecca Davidson Lontin , 220 North Ocean avenue , Patchogue , in Math- er Memorial hospital. August 21—A son. to William and Rosetta Cooper Keane , Port Jeffer- son , in Mather hospital. Manias* Licenses— August 20—Francis Lee Smith , Islip, and Josephine Eleanor Leasing, Port Jeffe rson. August 22—Sterl ing Russel l Da rling, Stony Brook , and Helen Marietta Hulse , Setauket August 23 ~ William Arthur Zeh , Calvcrion , and Dorothy Ann Vicik , Eastport. August 24—Leslie John Swain , Port Jefferson Station , and Charlotte Julia Malkmes , Port Jefferson Sta- tion. August 24—Gerard Theophane Bour- guignou , Baypoit , and Mary Agnes Graham , 25 Baker street , Patch- ogue, August 24—John Frederick Niebling, 94 Robert street , Patchogue , and Helen A.ufeusta Jansen , 27 Wood avenue , Pntchog-ue. August f M —DonaWl Hancock Bartow, Miller Place , «n<l Elizabeth Rashida Ward , Miller Place. y_, ,. . ,_K. -> - V - V-.4» * | A. " »*-* * A * » >, «• > * » * * f /L W *m >w WWTVV W w » y*?v<^'> '*"> CHILDREN WSK LIVES In sp ite ol repeated warnings from police , teachers , Scout leader: ' and other" , many fhildrtu i still go about Licyeling in a manner that risks their lives. They dart throug h heavy traffic , scarcely loo-king when tliey dodge in and out , th ey go in groups and , on seeing a vehicle approach , some go to one side of the road , some to the other , they ride one another on handlebars in violation of the Jaw , and they ride at night without lights in violation of law. Children cannot be expected to have the discretion of adults. Proper conduct in such matters must be drill- ed into them by their own parents , bac ked up with sharp discipline , or they will continue these heedless risks, In most of these cases the fault lies right straight at home. Register ing Alton Postponed Few Days Because all the l'equirod forms have not yet bee n rec cjive d , the work of registering aliens at tho Patch- ogue postoffice , as part of tlie na- tionwide proj ect that is expected to take . four months , will not bo start- ed until earl y next week , says Post- master Edgar M. Mapes. In the early reports on this work , it was said that alien registration would be handled by first and sec- ond class postofflces* and at the coun- ty clerk' s office , but recent reports show that in Suffolk , the county clerk's office will not figure in the work , due to the fact that ltivor- hend, the county scat , has a first class nosfcofllco. WHY NOT TOUNG MEN? The State Department of Labor , -through its placement division , calls attention to the fact that " urgent need for tool and gauge designers , ¦tool makers and machinists has caus- ed the Watervliet , N. Y., arsenal to raise the ' age limit for qualified ap- plicants to 62 years. " Many thousands of young men out of work , or muddling along with in- significant jobs when they have suffi- cient brains and latent skill to hold real places! There are several reasons for this condition , and the fact that this par- ticular ite m refers to arsenal jobs should not cause the situation "to be misunderstood. The arsenals are speeding up because of war scare de- manding armament; likewise other shops on military work . But there are thousands of other plants in this country which , despite vaunted America;* superi ority; have been running downhill in equi pment for seven or eight years , and just to prepare for producing again on a prosperous scale will require great numbers of skilled mechanics. Eco- nomists, notably Roger Babson , made this point several years ago and pro- phesied a shortage of such workers. A national political policy of per- secuting business and laying on puni- tive taxes has driven capital into hiding and kept industry down, if giv- en a chance it will expand again and make jobs . Now some sections of in- dustry are about to benefit imme- diately through armament—n o credit to the prevailing administration in Washington. Meanwhile , through these back- ward years , various things " have tend- ed to limit , tragically, the training of hoys to seize the opportunities now opening up. Two of the worst are selfish union labor rules limiting apprenticeshi ps , and too muc.t " education " for vague white-collar prospects. The oppres- sive union rules were made by mid- dle aged men sold on the false doc- trine that limitation , forcing wages up unnaturally, makes for prosperi- ty. They failed to see that this also forces prices up unnaturally and tends to restrict production , which is the real basis of wealth. So there the boys coming up into manhood have got a poor deal. The white-collar education excesses liavo resulted partly from false pride (maybe girl-boy attitude has had something to do with that), and part- ly from educators failing to fight ef- fectively for real trade schooling, "Manual training " or " shop classes " are. a sop to hoys who have had all the hook learning they can take , or will take , but they do not teach any boy any trade at which he can make a living. MY" FRIEND S! This Is Another Promise "It is my ptedge and promise that rigid government economy shall be enforced by. a stern and unremitting government policy of living within OUT income. I ask you to assign to me the task of reducing the annual oper- ating expenses of our national government . Stop the deficits. " —Campaign pledge, 1932. lias tossed the other platforms into the discard. Now, when it is hardly fresh news , we get , under federal mailing frank from Senator James M. Mead , a leaf- let of this document , which bears on its title page the words : "Printed in the Congressional Record" and "Not printed at government expense." Also "United States Government Printing Office. " Perhaps you , too, reader , get some of that kind of mail occasionally. It' s quite likely to be an out-and-out poli- tical speech by Mr . Roosevelt or one of his " stalwarts , printed on a card , with all the earmark s of political ad- vertising, which is what it is. Don 't be fooled* by the naive line: "Not printed at government ex- pense." These booster circulars are printed by the government at nom- inal rates, and they are mailed free of charge, In other words, at public expense. We get px-etty - sick of receiving them. The practice , no matter what may be the political color of the send- er , is an abuse of privileges allowed to national legislators , for the pur- pose of keep ing the citizenry inform- ed on especially important public matters . The subject covered may, in- stead be utterly remote from the deli- berations of congress. A senator or representative can , by leave , get into the Congressional Record almost anything, on down to an account by some humorist of a dog-and-cat fight. The legislator does not even have to make a speech , and if he made it nobody would he listening, . We generall y waste-basket these of- ferings with scarcely a glance. This time a copy of the paper will be sen t to Mr. M«ad , as acknowledgement , with no thanks. The people oi the United States do not send representatives to Washing- ton for sudi - ' work" at this , and their money should not bo wasted this way . NO THANKS FOR THIS Some weeks back we read in the daily papers the platform adopted by the renomination meeting in Chicago which Mr. Hopkins ran for Mr. Roose- velt , commonly referred to as the Democratic Nat ional convention . What was in tho platform does not matter much , considering how Mr. Roosevel t _ -. (~ r --riiwB-»MiiiiiiB Hi_iiiiiiiiinuiwiiiu»mLJ-L-Li _ - ___-_. ( Ch ecking Accounts We solicit many small checkin g accounts. As lime goes on. small ac- counts develop into large accounts. We would like to have you open your checking account with us , though it may be small. The Patchogue Citizens Bank and Trust Company . Member Federal Deposit ¦ Insurance Corporation Member Federal Reserve System ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ *•¦ alaua <" a »"m«MBa-_«in)_waanMM _u-a__i r 8 ^^®~jSi^ s^rli II REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST , 11 il DISTINCTIVE EYEWEAR fi Wl 10 SO. OCEAN AVE. PATCHOGUE 1005 Iffl

Transcript of UM.i ^MM ^N.HW ^HM.W.WWM.HMM ^MHM. ^HM...

Page 1: UM.i ^MM ^N.HW ^HM.W.WWM.HMM ^MHM. ^HM …nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn95071326/1940-08-28/ed-1/seq-8.pdfstory frame structure, a second large ... son, in Mather hospital. Manias*

The Mid - Island Mail•ESTABLISHED 1935

MEDFORD STATION. L. I.. NEW YORKPublished every Wednesday afternoon by thePATCHOGUE ARGUS CORPORATION

at 11-15 North. Ocean Avenue, Patchogue,Long Island, New York

JOHN T. TUTHILL , JR FRANK P. JOHNSONPresident and Publisher Secretary and Editor

(On Leave in the MARY CAMPIONUnited States Navy ) Advertising Manager

UM.i ^MM N.HW ^HM.W.WWM.HMM ^MHM. ^HM

SUBSCRIPTION RATES$1.50 a year anywhere in the United States,

payable in advance. 5c a single copy.

ADVERTISING RATESDisplay advertising* rates on application

for rate card. Legal advertising* at legalrates. Front page reading notices loc aline, inside run of paper position 10c aline. Cards of thanks C>0c. Birth , mar-riage and death notices free.

A _char£ _ is always made for advertisingreading notices of u. money-making- affairlor churches, clubs and other organizations.

National AdverlisinK RepresentativeAMERICAN PRESS ASSOCIATION225 Wist 39th Street, New Yolk City

Entered as second-class matter Novem-ber 4, 1935. at the postoffice at MedfordStation , New York, under the Act ofMarch 3. 1879.

The Mid-Island Mail assumes no financialresponsibility for typographical errors inadvertisements, but , when not :.fied promptlywill reprint that :part of an advertisementix\ which the typographical error occurs.

Belle Terre LodgeBuildings Come Down

in Last Act of Era

Axes prompted by taxes are beingwielded on much of the last vestigeof another Suffolk landmark, the re-maining* buildings . of Belle Terrelodge, widely known in the past as asummer hotel. The main buildingburned down.

The lodge, which early in the cen-tury was the social center of thevillage of Belle Terre, a picturesqueand restricted summer colony sit-uated on the east side of Port Jef-ferson Harbor, passed throu gh a suc-cession of ownerships and weathered _the early years of the depression untilfire destroyed the main clubhouse sev-eral years ago.

Acting as trustees for tlie certifi-cate holders interested in the ¦ guar-anteed mortgage on the 107-acreproperty, the Suffolk County Trustcompany of Riverhead recently award-ed the contract for the wrecking of.the r:-.Mining* buildings to the NorthFork Wrecking company of Matti-tuck.

The buildings to be demolished in-clude the "annex ," a rambling two- •story frame structure, a second largebuilding which "was converted from.a stable into a combination restaurantand kitchens,, and a 20-car garage.A bathing* pavilion on the- Long Is-land sound shore, some distance re-moved from the other club structures,will be left standing.

Much of the material and all of thefittings of the three doomed struc-tures are being carefully salvaged bythe wrecking company, which has de-molished many famed Long* Islandlandmarks , including the HuntingtonBay club and the palatial ShelterIsland mansion built by "Borax King"Smith many years ago.

The immediate aim at Belle Terreseems to be to bring about a reduc-tion of the taxes on the propertythrough the elimination of the as-sessed valuation represented by thebuildings. It is probable , however,that the extensive tract of high,wooded laud , with its beautiful show-front, ultimately will be cut up intohome sites., although no plans.for itsdevelopment have yet been announced.

The Belle Terre club, establishedin !!){)(-;, was the nucleus of the en-tire Belle Terre development, createdby Jean A. I void , a well known real(estate! ope rator , on property pur-chased f ro in the Strong family. Mr.Aivord. who now lives in retirementin Florida , patterned the resort afterexclus ive Tuxedo Park , N. Y,

TOV^N OF BROOKHATBN

Deatlis—August 14—Abraham Edwards, 57,

Moriches, in Suffolk Sanatorium ,Holtsville,

August 16—Mrs. Frances J. Wil-liams, 49, Brooklyn , at Miller Place.

August 18—Mrs. Clara L. Murd ock,56, Center Moriches, in MatherMemorial hospital , Port Jefferson.

August 19 — Kate Crampton , 8'0,Woodside , at Quogue place, MasticBeach.

August 19—Konstance Lorine Bry-son , 3, Selden.

August 20—James V. Sposoto , 35,Huntington , in Suffolk Sanator-ium.

August 20—C harles F. Howell , 81,245 Maple avenue , Patchogue.

August 20—Jacqueline Waclvter, 3,Glendale, at Church street , LakeEonkonkoma .

August 22—Randall Vause, 21, Hunt-ington , in Suffolk Sanatorium.

August 23 — Antonio Barone , 51,Poughkeepsie, in Mather Memorialhospital.

August 23—Dennis Emanuel Bergen,65, Brooklyn , in Blue Point,

August 25—-William F. Mebus, 12,Patchoeue.

VILLAGE OF PATCHOGUEDeaths-August 24—Nathan Frederick Smith ,

61, Patchogue.

TOWN OF BROOK HAVENBirths-August 1;>-- A. dangl i ior , Hor! ,- Do-

lores , tr > Jolir** and Fr:nH:es "VolentiCJazzota . 47 U' u.-;'iiir. j v * '>n avenue ,Pak'hogui.- , in Patrb o-y. !-, (' ' .;>¦.era 1hospital.

August 15 - ,A ( i n l i g h t i.T, A nnetteMario , to Harold and Mar t '/ l ,o.-;-choni Ui-xie , Fori. .j - .-l' TiM ' .-'on Sia-i'ii 'Vi ,

August , 1 7 —A son , Gieoiu* .; , to Stev-en and Mary A n n 1>_ Dio Vak-nl i ,Center Moriches , in Palchogm* Gen-eral liosp ital.

August 18----A son , Joseph Edward ,to Charles and Ruin Deorhani.Plumber , Center Moriches.

August 21—A son , to Hilhm. ii andRebecca Davidson Lontin , 220 NorthOcean avenue , Patchogue , in Math-er Memorial hospital.

August 21—A son. to William andRosetta Cooper Keane , Port Jeffer-son , in Mather hospital.

Manias* Licenses—August 20—Francis Lee Smith , Islip,

and Josephine Eleanor Leasing,Port Jeffe rson.

August 22—Sterl ing Russel l Da rling,Stony Brook , and Helen MariettaHulse, Setauket

August 23 ~ William Arthur Zeh,Calvcrion, and Dorothy Ann Vicik,Eastport.

August 24—Leslie John Swain , PortJefferson Station , and CharlotteJulia Malkmes, Port Jefferson Sta-tion.

August 24—Gerard Theophane Bour-guignou , Baypoit , and Mary AgnesGraham , 25 Baker street, Patch-ogue,

August 24—John Frederick Niebling,94 Robert street , Patchogue , andHelen A.ufeusta Jansen, 27 Woodavenue, Pntchog-ue.

August fM —DonaWl Hancock Bartow,Miller Place, «n<l Elizabeth RashidaWard , Miller Place.

y_,,..,_K. -> -V -V-.4»*| A.">»»*-* * A* »>,«•> * » * *f

/L W *m>w WWTVVW w »y*?v<^'>'*">

CHILDREN WSK LIVES

In sp ite ol repeated warnings frompoli ce , teachers , Scout leader: ' andother" , many fhildrtu i still go aboutLicyeling in a manner that risks theirlives. They dart throug h heavy traffic ,scarcely loo-king when tliey dodge inand out , th ey go in groups and , onseeing a vehicle approach , some goto one side of the road , some to theother , they ride one another onhandlebars in violation of the Jaw ,and they ride at night without lightsin violation of law.

Children cannot be expected tohave the discretion of adults. Properconduct in such matters must be drill-ed into them by their own parents ,bac ked up with sharp discipline , orthey will continue these heedlessrisks,

In most of these cases the faultlies right straight at home.

Registering AltonPostponed Few Days

Because all the l'equirod formshave not yet been rec cjived , the workof registering aliens at tho Patch-ogue postoffice, as part of tlie na-tionwide proj ect that is expected totake . four months , will not bo start-ed until early next week, says Post-master Edgar M. Mapes.

In the early reports on this work,it was said that alien registrationwould be handled by first and sec-ond class postofflces* and at the coun-ty clerk's office , but recent reportsshow that in Suffolk , the countyclerk's office will not figure in thework , due to the fact that ltivor-hend, the county scat, has a firstclass nosfcofllco.

WHY NOT TOUNG MEN?

The State Department of Labor,-through its placement division , callsattention to the fact that "urgentneed for tool and gauge designers,¦tool makers and machinists has caus-ed the Watervliet , N. Y., arsenal toraise the 'age limit for qualified ap-plicants to 62 years."

Many thousands of young men outof work, or muddling along with in-significant jobs when they have suffi-cient brains and latent skill to holdreal places!

There are several reasons for thiscondition, and the fact that this par-ticular ite m refers to arsenal jobsshould not cause the situation "to bemisunderstood. The arsenals arespeeding up because of war scare de-manding armament; likewise othershops on military work.

But there are thousands of otherplants in this country which , despitevaunted America;* superiority; havebeen running downhill in equipmentfor seven or eight years, and jus t toprepare for producing again on aprosperous scale will require greatnumbers of skilled mechanics. Eco-nomists, notably Roger Babson, madethis point several years ago and pro-phesied a shortage of such workers.

A national political policy of per-secuting business and laying on puni-tive taxes has driven capital intohiding and kept industry down, if giv-en a chance it will expand again andmake jobs . Now some sections of in-dustry are about to benefit imme-diately through armament—n o creditto the prevailing administration inWashington.

Meanwhile , through these back-ward years, various things " have tend-ed to limit , tragically, the training ofhoys to seize the opportunities nowopening up.

Two of the worst are selfish unionlabor rules limiting apprenticeshi ps,and too muc.t "education " for vaguewhite-collar prospects. The oppres-sive union rules were made by mid -dle aged men sold on the false doc-trine that limitation , forcing wagesup unna turally, makes for prosper i-ty. They failed to see that this alsoforces prices up unnaturally andtends to restrict production , which isthe real basis of wealth. So there theboys coming up into manhood havegot a poor deal.

The white -collar education excessesliavo resulted partly from false pride(maybe girl-boy attitude has hadsomething to do with that), and part-ly from educators failing to fight ef-fectively for real trade schooling,"Manual training" or "shop classes"are. a sop to hoys who have had allthe hook learning they can take , orwill take , but they do not teach anyboy any trade at which he can makea living.

MY" FRIENDS!This Is Another Promise

"It is my ptedge and promise that rigidgovernment economy shall be enforced by. astern and unremitting government policy ofliving within OUT income. I ask you to assignto me the task of reducing the annual oper-ating expenses of our national government.Stop the deficits."

—Campaign pledge, 1932.

lias tossed the other platforms intothe discard.

Now, when it is hardly fresh news,we get, under federal mailing frankfrom Senator James M. Mead, a leaf-let of this document, which bears onits title page the words: "Printed inthe Congressional Record" and "Notprinted at government expense." Also"United States Government PrintingOffice. "

Perhaps you, too, reader, get someof that kind of mail occasionally. It'squite likely to be an out-and-out poli-tical speech by Mr. Roosevelt or oneof his " stalwarts, printed on a card,with all the earmarks of political ad-vertising, which is what it is.

Don 't be fooled* by the naive line:"Not printed at government ex-pense." These booster circulars areprinted by the government at nom-inal rates, and they are mailed freeof charge, In other words, at publicexpense.

We get px-etty - sick of receivingthem. The practice, no matter whatmay be the political color of the send-er, is an abuse of privileges allowedto national legislators, for the pur-pose of keeping the citizenry inform-ed on especially important publicmatters. The subject covered may, in-stead be utterly remote from the deli-berations of congress. A senator orrepresentative can , by leave, g e tinto the Congressional Record almostanything, on down to an account bysome humorist of a dog-and-catfight. The legislator does not evenhave to make a speech , and if he madeit nobody would he listening,.

We generally waste-basket these of-ferings with scarcely a glance. Thistime a copy of the paper will be sen tto Mr. M«ad , as acknowledgement ,with no thanks.

The people oi the United States donot send representatives to Washing-ton for sudi -'work" at this , and theirmoney should not bo wasted this way .

NO THANKS FOR THIS

Some weeks back we read in thedaily papers the platform adopted bythe renomination meeting in Chicagowhich Mr. Hopkins ran for Mr. Roose-velt , commonly referred to as theDemocratic Nat ional convention . Whatwas in tho platform does not mattermuch, considering how Mr. Roosevel t

_-. (~r--riiwB-»MiiiiiiB Hi_iiiiiiiiinuiwiiiu»mLJ-L-Li_-___-_.

( CheckingAccounts

We solicit many smallcheckin g accounts. Aslime goes on. small ac-counts develop into largeaccounts.

We would like to haveyou open your checkingaccount with us, thoughit may be small.

The

Patchogue CitizensBank and Trust

Company .Member Federal Deposit¦ Insurance Corporation

Member Federal Reserve System¦¦¦¦ *•¦alaua<"a»"m«MBa-_«in)_waanMM_u-a__i

r8 ^®~jSi s^rliII REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST , 11il • DISTINCTIVE EYEWEAR • f iWl 10 SO. OCEAN AVE. PATCHOGUE 1005 Iffl