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THE EAST HAMPTON STAR EAST HAMPTON, N. Y.. OCTOBER 13. 195S
R am blers M eet To D iscuss T im ely Topics
The Ramblers met in the Session House on Tuesday evening. The program was in charge of Mrs. Robe rt Cheney, Mrs Mark Hall, and Mrs. Alfred Thompson, who also acted as hostesses. The fourth member of the committee. Mrs. Paul Nugent, was absent
Mrs Charles Schoch was elected a member, in place of the late Mrs. George H. Hand.
The program opened with a paper by Mrs. Hall on the natural history of that venomous insect from which one of the signs of the zodiac takes its name—•'Scorpio" being the title given for the October meeting. Mrs. Cheney had compiled a long list of notable festivals, holidays and birthdays which occur in October, and described some of them. The rest of the meeting was in honor of Columbus Day. Mrs. Thompson read a paper on the life of Columbus, and Mrs. Hall told of a celebration on the island of San Salvador to commemorate the 463d anniversary of the landing of Columbus on Oct. 12, 1492.
Mrs. Cheney, Mrs. Hall, and Mrs. Thompson gave a very clever and amusing "three act play" called “Christopher Columbus," in which the three players took the parts of several characters by changing hats
S c h o o l S p o r t sby Brian Moore
BONACKERS TROUNCE E. ISLIPEast Hampton moved one step
closer to an undefeated season last Saturday with a 26 to 7 victory over East Islip at East Islip.
After a scoreless first quarter East Hampton moved the ball the
MARY ELLA PARSONS
'± K
Eunice Juckett PhotoMary Ella Parsons. 17-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry jParsons of this village and E as t, prize in this area was a sewing kit. Hampton High School Senior, willI In the regional contest she will be represent eastern Long Island in a ; competing with other sectional win- regional sewing contest and fashion i ners for a grand prize of SI,000 plus show to be held some time this a three-day trip to New York which
She made her prize-winning is given to the top four winners“ dance dress of white pique trimmed their mothers. There are also to be
East Islip 30. Joey Ambrose hit JinV with rows of rcd ribbon running $300 one-year scholarships for re- Nicholson with a pass in the right | through cr0chteted loops, between giona, winners in ,he Senjor Con_
e entering or planningflat and Nicholson went all the w ay ; May 2 and Sept. 3. The Singer Sew- for the touchdown. Bill DeBoard ing Machine Co. is holding a nation- kicked the extra point. ; wide dressmaking contest; M iss! enter accredited colleges and majoi
The Bonackers took the ball from p arsons entered a t Riverhead. Her ing in Home Economics.East Islip and moved to their 2 yard !line. Tom Taylor went around the i 1left end for the touchdown and East R jgg S tev en s To S ing | HaH- and ,he Misses Laura EbellHampton led at half-time 13-0. jn C om m unity C on ce rt and Louise Orlando: also Kennethit half-t
In the third quarter East Islip kicked off to the Bonackers. Bill A dinner was held on Monday DeBoard took the ball on his own evening at Scotch Mist Inn, South- " ar ragon. 3 and ran 97 yards for the touch- ampton, for workers in the current down. His try for the point after drive for membership in the South touchdown was wide and E ast1 Fork Community Concerts. The par- Hampton led 19-0. , ty was entertained by a soprano,
Later in the same quarter Bruce Elaine Malbin of Columbia Artists,Bistrian, after shaking off three who starred in "Kismet" and is atacklers in his 20 yard jaunt scored member of the New York City | \East Hampton's fourth touchdown. Opera Company. Workers in th e , 'The conversion was perfect. membership drive were advised that j '
In the fourth quarter East Islip their reports must be in by Satur- j / became the first team to score on day noon. Last year, there were ( / the Bonackers when they intercept- ' over 100 members from the East / ed a pass on the East Hampton 10 Hampton area and more are hoped ' , yard line. They scored on the next for this year. The more memberships , ' play. there are. the higher type talent can I '
Next week East Hampton plays at ** obtained. This year, the first con-1 /South Huntington. cert—on Monday evening, Nov. 28— ] /East Hampton 0 13 13 0—26 will present Rise Stevens, Metropob- /East Islip ............... 0 0 0 7— 7 ^ n Opera star. /
__________________ Harry Allaire is Village Chair- 'Drenching farm animals or p e ts . man„ f° r and may be
is a dangerous practice unless done r“ ched at EA *-1524 Workers for by a well trained and experienced 1 *heK ,are“ ,"51,ude ,Mm“ - „ Bf t-v 1 person. Schulte, Jean Davis, Joan Bnll, Ann
1 Stowcll. James Strong Jr. and Ed-
Keep your village clean.
M an’s RecipeLEONARD W. HALL
by Haydn S. P< COUNTRYMAN'S BLUEBERRY
OATMEAL PUDDINGI may possibly be a b it partial
toward oatmeal in various cookery products. My favorite cookies have oatmeal and I am old-fashioned enough so that I like a bowl of hot oatmeal for breakfast. As a matter of fact, both Blanche and I enjoy oatmeal occasionally for a supper dish. A bowl of piping hot oatmeal, a few hot muffins, and about a quarter of a room-temperature, juicy, deep-dish apple pie make me a very satisfying meal.
I don't claim that this is the world’s best pudding—for believe it or not, I have met folks who don't like blueberries. Seems hard to believe, but it is true. But along this time of year, a blueberry pudding, like a cherry pie, does something pleasant and inspiring to dendrites and disposition.
Use two cups quick cooking one and a fourth cups firm-packed light brown sugar, three cups canned
sugar, three-fourths cup water cup sifted flour, three-fourths melted butter or margarine, tablespoon flour, one eighth spoon salt, two tablespoons
icgar.aspoon cider
together the oatmeal, cup of flour and brown sugar. Add the melted better or margarine and mix all well. Line the bottom of a I greased, eight inch square pan with the oatmeal and flour mixture, but | save one-half cup of mixture for topping.
Combine the blueberries, tablespoon of flour, white sugar, fruit juice, vinegar, water and salt in a
Simmer this for five to six minutes, and then pour this liquid mixture onto the oatmeal base in the cooking pan. Sprinkle the top with the half cup of oatmeal-flour mixture. Bake a t 350 degrees for about 50-55 minutes and serve it hot with cream or ice cream. This pudding is at its peak when just done. So time things right if yi
DR. CURTS DAR SPEAKERSouthampton Colony Chapter
N.S.D.A.R., will meet on Tuesday Oct. 18. at three p.m. in the Chaptei House a t Southampton. The guest speaker will be Dr. Paul H. Curts of Bridgehampton, Emeritus Professor a t Wesleyan University. His topic will be "How Colleges Select Students and Why." This talk will be of special interest to mothers ol school children. Dr. Curts was a lecturer a t Connecticut College foi Women in 1932-33, a director of the Connecticut School for Boys, 1937- 52. He is author of several books and many translations.
Tea ■ d by tl
NEW SUBSCRIBERSThe Star takes pleasure in wel
coming the fallowing new subscribers this week: Warren R. Brickner, J. R. Beard, Jane Miller, Drew Lawrie, Mrs. Raymond Terry, Raymond P. McMahon, Mrs. A. A. Washton, Mrs. Wright Baxter. John O. Gundcl, Herschell P. Mathews, Out of This World Inn, Mrs. C. Talbot Squicr, Samuel Dcfalco and Roy E. Milne.
n the o it has a tex e lacking some hours
Dine by The F ireside
F ran k lin a n d L aura G u ile rm an 's
EA ST COLONY HOUSEC o n tin en ta l C u isine
LUNCHEON :: COCKTAILS :: DINNERMontauk Highway at Wainscott Road
East Hampton OPEN FALL AND WINTER
Phone BRidgehampton 2-0566
A hundred laying IWolf, Harriet Rosenberg, Louise A l-! laire, Gertrude Davis, Mary Ella
, and Anona
WATER MILL. L. I.
Complete and Delicious D inners from $2.75
■itiful overn igh t accom m odations fo r sm all convention groups.
S pecia l N ote to W e d d in g Bellesnvite your inquiries about our "Rotes and Pink Champagne"
bridal receptions.-x-x-x-x-x-x-x-:-x-x-:-x-:-x-x-:-:-x-xx-x--x-x-x-x-:-
Home Improvement Guild!East H am pton , N. Y. $Pan tigo Road
>ay " W a llp a p e r Is Smart.” Editors of the outstanding Home Magazines and leading decorators emphasize the chic and importance of wallpapers in interior decorating. We have noted the increasing demand for this and have been adding continually to our wallpaper department. We have just received hundreds of new sample papers— new designs—new colors—new printing ideas . . . we might add that the price is real down to earth also. For a real thrill, come in and look through
icw papers. Remember, you may take any of our books out for over night or the week-
WANT A CHANGE ?Lei us insta ll a Ch. 10 antenna for
those TV program s you USED to
d knit, I e beening. There's a Knit-A-Tie kit which contains sufficient yarn and complete directions to make any one of seven designs. Also a sock kit for making those new tweed designs and a kit for making either a turban, a stocking cap, a belt, an ascot or a scarf. Why not start now and make a few of these for Christmas gifts.
SEE YOU IN THE STORE.
Jim Harkness f h . m . Diamond- CALL EA 4-1036 — 34 N e w to w n L a n e
EAST HAMPTON
1 1 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 BUYERS C A N ’T BE W R O N G !
^ T ^ i £ s c h c r )PORTABLEU HEATER (
FOR
CO M FORT • CONVENIENCE • ECON OM Y
In terior D ecora tingFURNITURE ACCESSORIES
Florence Clarke Studioconomy! ORDER YOURS NOWI
229 East 49th Street NEW YORK CITY
PLaia 9-8308
Montauk Highway WATER MILL. L. I.
Water Mill 7-2247
East End Hardware CorporationSTORE HOURS: 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
PARKING IN REAR OF STORE
51 N EW TO W N LANE E. H. 4-1157
J O I N O U R C H R IS T M A S S A V I N G S P L A N NOW
PAY $2 A W EEK FO R 10 W EEKS AND GET
$22.00 W O R TH O F MERCHANDISE
A fter 3 P ay m en ts Y ou C a n S e lec t Y our P u rch ase
/ t v & t u e
19 MAIN STREET EAST HAMPTONTEL. E. H. 4-1420
BIGGEST BRAND-NEW VALUE IN TOWN!
big 21" table model-only $159.95
WESTINGHOUSE TELEVISIONLOOK AT THESE FEATURES!
• Tip-Top Comfort Tuning!• Sk«k Contemporary Dnigr!• New Decorator Colon!• New Tube-Satcr Circuits!• Kickidtt Channcl-Golde
(924T21)Coco* Browoas:
Big Trade-In Allow*
7 = ^
LE STE R & W OHLFERT, Inc.
V0U CAH ( I iU »»...l>lril
Westinghouse
PA N TIG O HILLTELEPHONE E. H. 4-1401
F O R Q U IC K RESULTS APPLY TH E M ATCH O F ENTHUSIASM TO THE FUSE
O F EKJERGV
U S E D C A R S
1953 BUICK Super Riviera
1953 PONTIAC Convertible
1952 PONTIAC Convertible
1949 BUICK Station Wagon
1951 PLYMOUTH Station Wagon I
1951 BUICK 2 dr. Riviera
1951 OLDS "98" 4 dr. Sedan
1951 OLDS "98” Holiday
1951 OLDS "88" 4 dr. Sedan
1950 BUICK 4 dr. Sedan
- E A S Y G .M .A .C . T E R M S -
F R IE D E L B U ICKA U T H O R I Z E D B U I C K D E A L E R .
MONTAUK HIGHWAYE A s t H a m p t o n 4 - 0 3 4 5
The Osborne AgencyE A S T H A M P T O N . N .Y .
Established 1875 Telephone EAst Hampton 4-12E2
Montauk Mansion wit: nicely furnished, oil-hc
FOR SALE renienl Village lane close to stores, school r bedrooms, servants rooms, three baths. :h good shade and carriage house. $21,000.
FOR SALE >cean views, live bedrooms, three baths, vater h ea t all in good condition. Includes and deep freeze. $26,000.
1956 SEASONAL RENTALS
mpton and Vicinity. Ren
Consult The S ta r Business D irectory
ROY K. LESTER^ " \C O N T R A C T IN G a n d T R U C K IN G t
PHONE AMAGANSETT 7-3807 /BULLDOZER. CRANE. AND DUMPTRUCK SERVICE fROAD BUILDING. LAND CLEARING AND GRADING f
Sand Fill Post and Rail Fencing IGravel Topsoil Cord Wood )Bluestone Manure Fireplace Wood \