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Newspaper Archive of
Barnstable Patriot
Barnstable, Massachusetts
April 10, 1969     Barnstable Patriot
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April 10, 1969
 
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ATTENTIVE — Blue Birds of the Camp Fire Girls organization-In the. Osierville-Centerville area watch individual group performances held after the annual Blue Bird Supper.' ' l " • •' (Photo by Deborah Barrows ) MBS. CHARLOTTE A. SHERMAN Correspondent 314 Bay Lane Centerville 02832 Tel. 775-6464 OSTERVILLE LIBRARY Mrs. Margaret A. Frazier, li- brarian at Osterville Free library, has announced that four recent volumes have been given to the library. One is a comprehensive study of "Michelangelo and His Work" compiled under the direction of Mario Salmi. Another is the me- morial edition of the complete and authoritative work on "Leonardl da Vinci" edited by Emil Vollmer. "The Dawn of European Civiliza- tion" edited by David Talbot Rice and the "Birth of Western Civiliza- tion" edited by Michael Grant are the other two informative gift volumes. These works are all beautifully illustrated with numerous colored plates. The board of trustees is most appreciative for these additions to the library shelves. Mrs. Frazier attended a seminar with other village librarians of the Town of Barnstable at Falmouth Public Library yesterday. AUTHOR IN THE FAMILY Three Dickens mugs loaned to Osterville Free Library by Mrs. Thomas A. Drlscoll of Rambler Way has been on display for two weeks. Mrs. Driscoll's nephew is Ste- phen Birmingham , the author of six novels. Born in Hartford , Conn., he was educated at Hotch- kiss School for Boys, Williams College, Oxford College in Eng- land and is a Rhodes Scholar, of the 20th century, his first novels career by writing fiction novels being the best sellers "Young Mr. Keefe" the non-fiction "Our Crowd" followed by "The Right People," fiction. At present the author is diligent- ly at work on a biography of the late author John P. Marquand titled "One Will Tell Shepardi in America.'" He also writes for Harpers, Sports Illustrated and Holiday magazines and with his wife and three children lives at Rye , N.Y. UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Harvey K. Mousley will have as his sermon at the 11 a.m. service April 13 The Eternal Lure. That afternoon he and Mrs. Mous- ley will be happy to greet friends at the parsonage from 2:30 to 5. Tuesday, April 15, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. the spring meeting of the New Bedford District W.S.C.S. will be held at Whitman. Those needing transportation should call Mrs. Charlotte Neves, 428-8052 i .i WINS AWARD Mrs. Audrey A. Hinckley of West Bay Road and owner of the Flower Boutique, this village, re- cently attended the Telaflorist evening meeting at Red Coach Grill in Boston. For Mrs. Hinck- ley's arrangement of red anthur- iums (waxy heart shaped flowers on a long stem) combined with leaves in different hues of red leaves in different hunes of red and green placed in a black ped- estal vase, she won the second prize award. There are pictures of this com- position in her shop for those who wish to see it. AT HOME Capt'n Dana Marston of Mar- ston's Village has returned from two months at St. Petersburg and Long Boat Key, Fla. FLOWER SHOW CHAIRMAN NAMED Mrs. Arnold D. Burch, general chairman for the 1969 Flower Show for the Osterville Garden Club, to be held in Armstrong- Kelley Park, Osterville, July 16 and 17, has named the following as chairmen. Chairman, Mrs. Carl O. Tong- berg, club president ; Mrs. Robert Lebel, assistant general chairman, schedule committee, Mrs. Theo- dore Turner; staging, Mrs. James Lebel; properties, Mrs. Victor Mazzarella; horticulture, Mrs. Al- fred Neves, entries, Mrs. Harvard Broadbent; classifications, Mrs. Turner; juniors, Mrs. George E. Fickett; judges, Mrs. Tongberg. Also clerks, Mrs. John H. Cic- colo; publicity, Mrs. Burch; con- servation, Mrs. Crawford H. Hoi- lidge ; hospitality, Mrs. Clifford W. Dow ; treasurer and advertising, Miss Gertrude Hayden; program, Mrs. Frank Lambert; awards, Mrs. Audrey Hinckley; federation representative, Mrs. George Walk- er, path chairman, Mrs. Donald Leach. Consultant is Mrs. Harold Bragle. Theme for the show will be the "Sea Around Us" and will feature design classes, hort i c u 11 u r e classes, professional exhibits, ed- ucation classes, junior classes and exhibitions of various projects per- formed by the club. As it is the 20th anniversary of the club, members have voted to make it a Standard Federated Flower Show for the benefit of its Scholarship Fund. ¦ i ¦ KAREN BUSTER Services were held in United Methodist Church March 29 for Ka- ren Buster, 13, who died at Child- ren's Hospital, Boston, after a long illness. She was the daughter of Mrs. Carole (Crocker) Martin of South Weymouth and had formerly '¦ lived in Osterville. Besides her mother, she is sur- vived by her grandmother, Mrs. i Anna Crocker of Osterville; an ! uncle, Carlton Crocker of Center- ville; an aunt, Mrs. Albert Smith Jr. of Osterville ; and a great uncle, Ashley Crocker of Center- vui*. CRANBERRY FROST WARNING SERVICE The frost warning answering service at East Wareham Cran- berry Experiment Station will soon be in operation with the same tele- phone number as in the past (295- 2696). The following radio stations carry the frost messages : WOCD, Hyannis and WEEI, Boston 2 and 9 p.m.; WBZ, Boston - 2:30 and 9 p.m.; WPLM, Plymouth - 2:30 and 9:30 p.m.; WOCB, West Yar- mouth 3 and 9:30 p.m. . cm i _ -'. x!n:,-w'l ^^ ^ ^^ . m m ySTERVILLE M ^S ^^tm ^^^ ***** I HYANNIS I | @ j SERVICE I JIM ailS - TONY SENOUCIN C |725 Main SI. Tal. 7754275 Hyannis' | I 1 COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE I ON ALL DOMESTIC CARS K AND VOLKSWAGEN CARS A U-HAUL TRAILERS A ALA Emergency Service g DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY GIFTS _ ^ — — . ¦ v ' ¦ ' • HYANNIS JEWELRY SHOP 376 Main St. HyannU Meet. The season's first flounder have long since been fetched, filleted and fried, and the Division of Fisheries and Game has completed the stocking of Cape ponds and streams with trout for the upcom- ing fresh water fishing season which opens April 19. The flounder are cooperating in fine fashion with the hot spots con- centrated around Buzzards Bay, Cape Cod Canal, Falmouth, Bass River, Stage Harbor at Chatham and Town Cove at Orleans. As the month progresses, some of the more open bodies of water such as Pleasant Bay at Orleans and Chatham should really begin producing excellent catches. As far as trout season is con- cerned, The Southeastern Dis- trict , which includes Cape Cod, has been allotted more than 120,000 trout—keepers not flngerlings—so there should be plenty of fish for every one. Hal Lyman, publisher of Salt Water Sportsman magazine, pre- dicts a new year class of small stripers, a good supply of six to eight pounders, plenty of bass in the 20-pound class, a scattering of 35 to 40 pounders and a few here and there topping the 60-pound mark. Hal also predicts plenty of blues this summer. Two to four pound- ers will be plentiful, he says, along with 8 to 10 pounders and trophy-size fish pushing the 20- pound mark. Bluefin tuna should run even larger than last summer, along with a fairly plentiful supply of 130 pound fish. Lyman even ^predicts an upswing in weakflsh—squeteadue here on Cape Cod—which is really going out on a limb since most Cape salt water fishermen wouldn't know a squeteague If they saw one— they've been that scarce In recent years. The English languag e has changed considerably In the past three centuries. When K i n g James II described St. Paul's Cathedral as "amusing," "awful," and "artificial" In the 17th cen- tury, the architect, Sir Christopher Wren, was not offended. The king simply meant that the cathedral was pleasing, awe-msplrlng, and skillfully constructed. * HUNTING AND FISHING NEWS * SENIOR CITIZENS MEDICAL EXPENSES Medical expenses of taxpayers 65 years of age or older are sub- ject to the same rules that apply to younger taxpayers. Taxpayers who list medical ex- penses on their 1968 Federal re- turns may deduct only the total expenses that exceeds throe per- cent of their adjusted gross in- come. Medicine and drug ex* ceeding one percent of income should be included in the tax- payers' other medical expenses. Cost of premiums paid for med- ical insurance, up to a maximum of $150, may be deducted by tax- payers who itemize without re- gard to the three- percent limita- tion. For taxpayers 65 or older, one-half the cost of supplementary medical insurance under Medicare may be deducted Under the same tax law provision. The remaining costs of insurance premiums should be added to the taxpayer 's other medical expenses and reduced by three percent of adjusted gross income. RAINBOW SUNDAY IS APRIL 13 Rainbow Sunday will be ob- served by Cape Cod Assembly, Order of Rainbow at the 11 a.m. service of Hyannis Federated Church on April 13. Officers , members, advisory board, parents and friends will hear Dr. Carl F. Schultz speak on Promoting Prin- ciples Which Mean Most To Us at that time. IRS Information , —_ Go ahead... I mtii / / ^^^ ^^i^i^i^Hr^ lP^^^B ¦ ""¦• €•*- ~ zzzJT^JULu. ' - ¦ Ryot > ^a^H ¦ > «<»»OM - ¦ IH^ HI ^BJ^J^^^l^^^^^^^^^^^BPifeBafpaa^,^ aaatt^MSJaJEEwBrlF ^^'^Tr^l l l MaP ¦Sbs L^^ L jK M^ jJal H m . -'-.v I •» afl P^^^^^B .' ¦ B¦ ^r ^ '^B H9^ EIIII HUHY~9H EfvIJ IfcifSif i ¦IIEEESSSEE »!«RE«E« make your reservation for a glorious vacation with a low cost loan II "III Vev/ elleOLJ. 0 Fly off to some romantic South Seas island . . . enjoy a fling in the big city . . . schuss down a mountainside . . . do it with a low cost vacation loan. Start planning now . . . visit any convenient office of the Cape Cod Bank and Trust Company. 2 OFFICES IN HYANNIS • OSTERVILLE • SOUTH YARMOUTH • J. HARWICHPORT • ORLEANS YOU'LL SEE TOO! > < HOW SAFETY PROTECTS YOU > « : DON'T DELAY . . . ; Come in for your Safety Inspection : . < Sticker Today!! > < : GRANITE CHEVROLET, INC. I Ridgewood Ave. Hyannis 775-1843 .. . ! L ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ i 1 im,\ y 1 g§ | 5|^ IT""-¦ o§ H PROTECT YOUR BUSINESS g §§ INSURE NOW! If g§ Leonard Insurance ^^ §g Agency <|I «§o 13 Wianao Ave. Osterville ^ o | B^ Tel. 428-692 1 3 g ^MmwmmmM TRY OUR Hyannis Pharmacy ¦ ¦ James M Hoberl, Reg. Pbarm. O M KUMffilZ ol©U#l/ «£••£ C A N D I E S 362 Main Street Hyannis WM Free parking in rear WmmmmMMmmmmmd NOW ¦¦ - 1 — ¦ ¦¦ - ... . . . ¦ . — . . . ,woQQc-aoooQQQc-soQflOBge-aoooDaoeoei | INSURANCE (3£ ) || | and ANN UITIES ^ ^II j| Frank G. Thacher Insurance Agency 11 11 ROBERT G. DOWLING - ROBERT G. DOWLING, 3rd jj jrj 251 South Street Tel. 715-1820 Hyannis, Mass. X iheObdlcmuvi "A man could retire ninely in his old age if he could dis- pose of his experience for what it cost him."