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Newspaper Archive of
Barnstable Patriot
Barnstable, Massachusetts
May 8, 1958     Barnstable Patriot
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May 8, 1958
 
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The Barnstable Patriot Founded 1830 Published every Thursday at "I Pleasant Street, Hyannis . Mass. By The Patriot Press TBRStSl S8.00 lior year In nilrnnrr. »l * monllis 92.(10 men vim ii. HASKIXS, Publisher nnu General Siaanser .1. ii oui'.iii' ivi.it sii \\\ . Editor IvI'.VM' .TH It. I,WON \HI) . Ailvrrtlwlim: llfpri-MiMilnllvc The Barnstable Patriot is entered as seoond-class matter at the Hyannis Post Ottiee under tho Act of Congress of .March 3, 1S79. We assume MO nnanclnl responsibility for typographical errors In advertisements, hut will reprint that part of an advertlsment in whirl', the error occurs. oiiU'c: Patriot iiiiiliiinu. Hyannis, Mass! Telephone! Hyannis -1 NELSON BEARSE 1 RICHARD LAW - SURVEYORS - CENTERVILLE TEL. HY. 4860 or 270-B L -rr-1! OVER STOCKED New 1957 Lawn Mowers at cost Plus small handling charge. Take advantage of these pre- season bargains. Bass River Service Co. Route 28 South Yarmouth EXeter 8-3411 . rejuvenate fine furniture. At your merchant's . Product of Your Local Hardware Store or Barnard Polish Co. South Yarmouth EXeter 8-2012 BARNICOAT MEMORIALS M o n u m e n t s Before you buy a memorial , large or small , compare our prices and ttuality. 30 IynnoiiKh Koad Went Yarmouth , Mans. Tel. HjiiiiiiiH 1401 [ WILLIAM BOULE j Painter and Decorator Dry Walling Osterville Tel. GArden 8-2138 I ffiglg l ^ z n d a t c ^ o*t (fe&e @od I Wg -Jf SINCE lees H. V. LAWRENCE, INC. 1 A LIVING PLANT FOR MOTHER ON MOTHER'S DA* I SUNDAY, MAY 11th | H A R^t S H S I " ^°ny Cd0rS * DAPHNE - Garland Flower - Rose Pink 3 Well Budded - From $3.50 ci„,.,„„ c .. S **w Flowers, Fragrant $3 00 S MAYFLOWER VIBURNUM - Just Coming «*«,. » . . „- „ „ S Into Bloom, Very Fragrant - From $4 50 FlOWER| NG CRAB TREES ¦ Many Colors J FLOR.BUNDA & HYBRID TEA ROSES CcTrful °f ^ T H " J"'"8 * I For Color From June 'Til Frost C°lorful Fru" ,n Fali ' From *-00 | Will Bloom This year - From $2.25 MANY OTHER FINE IDEAS. | THE CAPE COD NURSERIES & GARDENING CENTER 1 ROUTE 28, E. FALMOUTH _ PHONE KI 8-2493 — KI 8-2492 I OPEN DAILY MONDAY - SATURDAY-8:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAYS 1 KITTY'S KITCHEN Speciali zing in Home Cooking DAILY SPECIAL 95c complete dinner , What Foods These Morsels Be i 279 MAIN STREET HYANNIS 4?^icaes£at=nr3t=ct=a=8seaMs=aM* I HINCKLEY'S ' ROD and REEL SHOP I Oliie and Ollie I Complete Line of Fishing Equipment | I for the Fisherman I I Skiffs and Outboard Motors f Live Bait j I 271 MAIN STREET HYANNIS j 1924 - 1958 5 34th Anniversary j S A L E j Speci al Values to Celebrate j J this Gala Event in ) All Departments j ? t^Ska. & MOOWN ¦ Tt'?;^ >¦¦- >-- i.-iKM ANQ aova f > «^R^^^ MVANNI» JRHATMAM \ ) Open Friday Evenings ] Fresh Garden Asparagus is in QUAIL HOLLOW FARM ROUTE 130 SANDWICH , MASS. Opposite the School PERSONALS Mrs. Clifton Thomas is a patient at (lio Cape Cod Hospital. Mrs. Oertrurtfl M. Hall , mother of Mrs. Laura FiRiieiredo , passed away In Scltuate last week. She had spent the last two summers with her daughter who is the own- er of the Barnstable Lobster Pool on Mi 11way. Airman Alfred H. Crocker has returned to his base, Caswell Air Force Station , Limestone, Maine , after visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Crocker. Carpenters have begun construc- tion on the new home for Mr . and Mrs. Robert Schroeder. Richard Nickerson , son of , Mr. and Mrs. Wintleld M. Nickerson, lias undergone surgery at Pratt Diagnostic Hospital in Boston and expects to return home this week. The Barnstable Woman's Club annual banquet will be held May 12th at Wimpy 's in Osterville. Gerald White and Miss livelyn Carlson were winners of the first prize Friday night at the Waltz Dance. In the second Waltz Dance first award went to Richard Gal- lagher and Miss Jey Jones held at the Woman's Club by the Girl Scouts. Mrs. Clarence L, Anderson and Mrs. Walter S. Brown are visiting Mrs. Brown 's daughter and son-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. John Butler , Pawtucket. FLOWER GUILD ALLIANCE Barnstable Flower Guild Alliance of the Barnstable Unitarian Church met Wednesday at the church for a business session and musicale. Hostess was Mrs. David L. Crock- er. Officers elected at the annual meeting were Mrs. Roger Lyon, president; Mrs. Kenneth Barnard , first vice-president; Mrs. Howard K. Jackson, second vice-president; Mrs. Dorria Weber , recording sec- retary; Mrs. Kenneth B. Doyle, corresponding secretnry; and Miss Hazel 0. Young, treasurer. The Annual Spring Rummage Sale of St. Mary 's Guild of Barn- stable will be held in the parish house of the church on Thursday, May 22 starting at ten o'clock. UNITARIAN CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH Sunday, May 1 1, 9:30 a.m. Sun- day School ; ll.dO a.m. Worship Service and Sermon: "The Church as a Home". 4:00 p.m. Lothrop Guild (high school age.) Friday, May 16, 3:00 p.m., Junior Choir rehearsal at the Clowery home; 8:00 p.m., 'Senior Choir re- hearsal at the cliurch. State Representative Nathanie] Tilden of Scltuate, candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress from the Ninth District will speak before the Combined He- publican Women of Cape Cod at a dinner meeting at Coonameesett Inn , Friday May lfl at 6:30. Attend- ing the meeting will be members of the Upper Cape Women 's RB- publican Club - Lower Capo Wom- en's Republican Club and the Cape Cotl Republican Club. Republican Women Will Hear Tilden "r- *pn^ 3| Ensc n,H JHI-I' M * w tf \, , , ,s>' Schedule '(•RB^P^KH^JI w'"* a \Wwfl : *tr^' al ^ « (ftp^^ '">-... >'*'«> dFmmm VWNWV. ^^S^^ lm\\mW These longines-Wittnauer aula- molici are tailored lo order far 7 human dynamos who lead an ae- live life. They 're self-winding - ' Ihe right lime on your wrist — always. Unaffected by normal shock , and waterproof* . A variety ' of styles—come in and see them all. A-IONGINES AUTOMATIC. $110. FTI B-WITTNAUE/t AUTOMATIC. $59.50 FTI • as l o n g as c r y s t a l , Itmm one/ hack are intact. Hyannis lewelry <£=£» Shop (/ijnina1! M ( ^Jp> 376 Main Street Hyannii BARBARA W. WYMAN GArden 8-2145 HOSPITAL PATIENTS Mrs. John Rosa has returned to her Main Street home from Cape Cod Hospital where she had been a patient for several weeks. Mrs, Louise Williams, Pine Lane has returned to her home after undergoing surgery at Cape Cod Hospital last week. Louis Bowes, First Avenue , is a patient at Cape Cotl Hospital where he underwent surgery on his knee last Thursday. Mrs . H. W. York has returned to her East Bay Rd. home from Hon- olulu. Hawaii. She has been con- fined to St. Francis Hospital there with a broken hip for most of the winter. COMMUNITY CLUB The last Community Club busi- ness meeting for this year will be held at the home of Mrs. Carl Rie- dell, Scudder Road at 8:00 P.M. Hostesses will be Mrs . Howard West , Mrs. Paul Williams and Mrs. James Moran. It has been announced that the annual banquet will be held at the Wayside Inn in Chatham, May 26 at 7:00 P.M. Reservations should be made, with Mrs. Everett rtoseen at Garden S-2767. WINNERS At the Firemen 's Club meeting, Monday, winning members were drawn for the chair and lamp, for which the firemen had been selling chances. Winner of the chair was C. Roscoe Hinckley ; and winner of the lamp was Karl Chadwick. CHIJRCH NEWS Baptist - Rev. A Alan Travers Monday at 6:30 the Teen Age Youth Fellowship will leave from the church for a Roller Rally at tho Mill Hill Kink. Tuesday at 7:30 the second ses- sion of the Personal Workers Course being conducted by the Navigators , for the Torrey John- son Campaign. Friday, the 16th , the young peo- ple of this church will journey to Duxbury lor the Inaugural Rally for the new High School Bible Club in Duxbury. The, speaker will be Tal McNutt , founder of Tokyo Youth for Christ. PERSONALS j Miss Joanne Gardner has re- turned to her Main Street home from a ten day vacation spent in Bermuda. She went by plane both ways. Mrs. Fred S. McLane, First Ave- nue, spent a few days with friends and relatives in Fall River last week. Mrs. Margaret Sullivan, Barnard Road, is spending several days In Belmont. She was called there by the death of her brother , heo A. Gill. Thirteen Pioneer Girls and their guide, Mrs. Albert Williams , went on a three mile hike last Friday. After lunch they enjoyed a Nature scavenger hunt and later returned to Mrs. Williams' ,home for re- freshments. Mrs. Florence Jacobs of Sunset Lane attended Homemakers Day sponsored by the Cape Cod Exten- sion Service in Eastham last Wed- nesday. Misses Margerie and Geneive Leonard have returned to their Scudder Road home from Clear- water, Fla. Their niece , Mrs. Ira Click, of Mnlverne, N, Y., met them in Clearwater and drove their car back to her home where the Leon- ards visited befor e returning to the Cape. Also home from St. Petersburg, Florida are Mrs. Austin Larabee and Mrs. Charles Powers of Parker Road . Mrs. Larrabee's granddaugh- ter, Susan Kershaw, of Braintree has been visiting them for several days. Mrs. Sidney C. Boyer was at her summer home at Oyster Harbors for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. John Linehan and Maureen spent a few days In New York City. Mrs. John Rosa has returned to her Main Street home from Cape Cod Hospital where she was a patient for three weeks. Community-Methodist Rev. E. MacKinnon White Next Tuesday at 7:30 P.M. the Quarterly Conference of all church members will be held at the church. The Women's Alliance will meet in the Vestry next Wednesday at 10:30 A.M . for the second annual Coffee hour and Book Review by i Mrs. Samuel number. J yDsTERVILLE (Continued from Page 1) We have been informed that the group selected Barnstable as headquarters for their project because of our accessibility by air (Munici pal Airport) and wide variety of recreational facilities. Incidentally, the town will receive some remuneration from ; the government for the use of the new school building. —Luther H. Howes • • • • • SOME PEOPLE SEEMINGLY NEVER ARE SATISFIED Last Summer Cape Cod and all of New England had its most .successful season ever. Tourists Hocked here in such num- bers that, to our knowledge, there wasn 't a single complaint from a person who had an honest investment in a legitimate enterprise catering to the tourist trade. What happened last year reaffirmed a fact which has long been obvious to Cape fodders. Namely, that if the weather is fair and warm, our seasonal business will boom , otherwise it will be spotty. Judged by the general tenor of an editorial which he wrote for the edition of Monday this week, the editor of the Cape daily refuses to recognize this simple fact. This gentleman is still hammering away at the need to spend more money for promotion. "It is no longer possible to fill a vacation resort with word- of-mouth promotion or long-standing reputation , " t his editor contends. A fair conclusion from this well could be that the editor of the Cape daily won 't be happy until all of Cape Cod is over- built as is Route 28 through West Yarmouth and Bass River. —Luther H. Howe* CHANGE THE MENU One of our readers who apparentl y has a yen for some- thing different to challenge the taste buds has come across with the following. We present it for what it may be worth. Why don 't you give your husband something different to- night before dinner. Instead of the same old tomato juice, cheese and cracker deal , how about some octopus on skewers or roasted caterp illars ? There is a counter in one of the super markets that has a selection to delight or fri ghten the most fastidious appetite. Such things as fried bumble bees, quail eggs, truffles, diamond- back rattle snakes, and salted whale skin all put up in the incest looking cans or glass jars. You can top them off with fried grasshoppers , salted cherry blossoms, lil y bulbs or fried •ang le worms. I am afraid f am an old run-of-the-mill eater, good old hamburger, fried chicken , pork chops and ham seem to follow one another on my table in a monotonous routine—but if the fancy strikes to branch out into something new, it sure is not because you can 't find something different. There certainly is something different around if you have the courage to try it. All a matter of habit , I guess. What seems strange to me is probably everyday stuff to another. The only worm and eater- pillars I have met were mean looking specimens out in the tomato patch. You come across something different every day. These mor- sels are different enough for anyone. We 'll dare you ! • • • • * MYSTIC LAKE GROUP UP IN ARMS Residents of the Mystic Lakes area are up in arms over the proposal in Senate, Bill 6 1 0 , Department of Natural Resources, requesting the right of eminent domain , t o acquire areas for purposes of public recreation. Especially, residents of the area are read y to fight on the proposal that a tract of land in the Mystic Lake area be taken by this process. The area in question has been described by the State as an "abandoned duck farm '' . Those who are objecting to the seizure of land at Mystic Lakes for recreational purposes, agree thut there is an aban- doned duck farm in the area , but that the area is also highly residential, with about 50 permanent residences already in the area and several others in the planning stage , and a consid- erable amount ot acreage already improved for residential building. Property owners in the Mystic Lakes are of the belief that property values would be seriously impaired if the State were allowed to take land FT recreational purposes, or they would be forced to locate elsewhere- The group is also 01 tile op inion t h a t should the State decide lo develop certain areas as parks or beaches, land should be acquired by direct purchase rather t h a n by etnirienl domain. Barnstable Under-Currents e SHEU FURNACE JOBBER UIL ATWOOD OIL COMPANY Kerosene Fuel Oil Metered Ticket Printers Hyannis 81 BAXTER'S FISH MARKET The Foot of Pleasant Street, Hyannis FRESH NATIVE FISH LIVE LOBSTERS NATIVE SHELL FISH Wholesale and Retail