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Newspaper Archive of
Barnstable Patriot
Barnstable, Massachusetts
May 25, 1961     Barnstable Patriot
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May 25, 1961
 
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GET SET FOR SUMMER FUN ! Make sure your Motels and Cottages are in top shape for best service dur- ing the summer season. Don't let neglect of roofing, steps, docks, or railings spoil your vacation time. Visit the HINCKLEY store for all your sup- plies and materials. Free on-the-spot estimates. USE PLASTICRETE FOR A PERFECT PATIO Several Decorator Colors To Choose From We have materials for A jgy basketball backboards ^fe^k^ or other outdoor equip- j fm ment to make your / ( ^a cottage more fun. j f ^4. It's Little League Baseball Week June 12 - 18 HELP SUPPORT YOUR TEAM John HINCKLEY & Son Co. LUMBER • HARDWARE BUILDING MATERIALS Sewittf tA* G* jU Since W72 Tel. SPring 5-0700 HYANNIS ^ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ BB TH 'Prescriptions Our Specialty Dumont' s Pharmacy Depot Square • Tel. SPring 5-0210 e HyannU ¦~" ' — WANTED USED CARS Bernard C. MacQuade lyanough Road Hyannls Tel. SPring 5-9112 e SHELL FIIRNAfE rUKNAlC OIL JOB0ER W,fc ATWOOD OIL COMPANY Kerosene Fuel OH Metered Ticket Printers Tol. SPring 5-0081 DOG FOOD P U R I N A CHOW or MEAL Canned — Ranger Nebraska or Happee ALL BEEF By the Case or Can Opon 9 to S Clowd Sunday, Monday, and Holiday! CAPE MAID FARMS FAIMOUTH ROAD HYANNIS Tal. SPring S-3782 I HYDRANGEA \ SINGLE AND DOUBLE BLUE j Climbing, Bush and Rambler Roses ) Aloha Hawaii Chrysler Imperial \ Blaze - Pink Parfail - Gold Cup \ Coral Dawn - Garden Parly - Ivory Fashion \ Dr. Nicholas - Peace - Duet - Dorothy Perkins ( Annuals Perennials Vines i SMALL the Florist Route 28 EXeter 8-3228 South Yarmouth / DOLLOFF OIL SERVICE INC. 145 Yarmouth Road Hyannls, MOM. FOR HEAT THAT CAN'T BE BEAT CALL SPring 5-0050 TODAY FOR YOUR COAL OR FUEL OIL DELIVERY Automatic Dependable Service Q-3ta s&&0t3tasa-agasst* xsa2t& f asaztt » 'H H H H II II II I ^m —^ ~~%~ .^¦ fl^n^HF^aB^BHPe^E B ^BI I '"^^sH Ek* P ^ t^M t t H M M H l i f a f a * *- £ ^ P^MBML Z—¦ ™^ m I | BARNSTABLE COUNTY MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY I ROUTE 6 A YARMOUTH PORT, MASS. 1 Of fi n n f . . . I New Advantages and Old Fashioned Integrity L I r During lh» Ufa of tha company It hai never paid less f than M paraant dlvldand*. \ Application! for Insurance should be mede to any of the following: Robert G. Bowling Cecil I. Goodsiteed Hyannis Ostervllle j S Edward L Harris Howard J. Carlson [ Banwtablo Sandwich 6aa H IM nm mm u t *mw 30*s *mmmmmmmm **** QUALITY TV SERVICE i 'wlk.^^—*^ Sales - Service MOTEL INSTALLATIONS U EAST MAIN STREET, HYANNII Tel. SPring 54M1 R. E. CIFELU, Owner , CENTERVILLE PASTRY AND COFFEE SHOPPE SERVING BREAKFAST , LUNCH AND DINNER. SPECIALIZING IN HOME MADE BREAD, DONUTS, PIES CAKES and COOKIES Tel. MRS. A. BAXTER—SP 5-2438 <^' s««*«88888888888S38 888S888S88S 8e88ggg»»s»!5!W«^ ?r*^-^ --—-—' -^^nr.. . ¦ , m ' II' UJIL Ife^ie You Con Buy 10° of Post CAPE COD I TJ^l f tp' t Tli i Jl and Rail for as Little os | ^*««£ $49.00 L »»» 1 ^^WKB 5 Bte. 28 South Yarmouth | ^ ffll jflSillf CAPE COD FENCE PRODUCTS ARE ] ^ j HBl NO MONEY DOWN —UP TO I jC^ jV ^ f t SEND THIS COUPON FOR FREE EBTjMATE ^ *^ »§1 'P»L ^a h e i a ^i sl fTT' picase Send Me Your Free Catalog ft ^ iIBs^s- ^ •i i'n^»' !' ] ™ r y . "5 !enWI" l L *aoe Cod Secretarial School DAY OR EVENING CLA88E8 CO-EDUCATIONAL RESIDENCE FOR WOMEN 242 Ocean Street, Hyannls Tel. SPring 5-1372 j i^^te^ (fa cj& &* j I FURNITURE ¦ BEDDING | I CARPETING I I 427 MAIN STREET HYANNIS | j | Tel. SPring 5-2100 | BVB^H ¦ Tower Hill Jewelry EXPERT WATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIRING Authorized Dealer For LONGINE .WITTNAUER WATCHES ROYAL HOLLAND PEWTER HALLMARK GREETING CARDS OSTERVIUE SHOWN© CENTER Tel. OArdan H H 1 ^^ mmmmmmmmtmrnk © WE CAN REPAIR SEWING MACHINES All MAKU WHITE — SINGER NECCHI — PFAFF ALL Off Brand Machines PARTS IN STOCK FABRICS, Inc. 51 Barnstable Road, Hyannis Tel. SPring 54576 Francis X. Schmld GA 54265 ¦Little Green Tents" will be Rev. meDhen H. Smith's sermon Sunday, wav 28, Memorial Day Sunday, at Federated Church. The family ser- vice will be at 9 a.m., with the regu- lar service at 11, with anthem by he senior choir. There will be no more Junior choir rehearsals until fall. BIRTHDAY GREETINGS FROM JFK Vernon Snow, who was guest of honor at a birthday dinner Sunday at Bruce Hall, got a real birthday surprise in the form of birthday greetings from President John F. Kennedy, together with an auto- graphed picture of the President. MYF TO HAVE BEACH PARTY Race Point, Provincetown, will be the scene of the beach party spon- sored by the Cape and Islands sec- lion of the Methodist Youth Fellow- ship, Sunday, May 28, 1 to 5 p.m. The schedule calls for eating as soon as participants arrive. Games at 2, election and business at 3:30, and a vesper service at 4:30. Allen Smith Is president, Barry Johnson faith chairman. If it rains, participants will meet at Province- town Methodist Church, Shank's Painter Road. CHURCH VISITOR Church visitor at Sunset Manor Rest Home in Hyannis next week is Mrs. Morton Clark. WF COLLECTS JARS FOR GREECE The Social Action Committee of the Women's Fellowship is collect- ing preserving jars to be sent to Greece. Anyone wishing to give jars may leave them in Bruce Hall any- time before May 29. NURSERY SCHOOL ELECTS TONIGHT , The slate of officers for the coming year will be presented to the members of the Cotuit Nursery School, Inc., tonight, at its annual meeting at the Cotuit Elementary School at 8. Two-thirds of the mem- 'hcrship is required for the neces- sary quorum, and all parents of nursery school children have been urged to attend. Mrs. Bill Perry, Jr., first grade teacher at the elementary school, will speak on "The Transition From Kindergarten to First Grade. " Offi- cers for the past year were : Mmes. Gordon Browne, Jr., president- Theodore Nlckerson, vice-president; Robert Behlman, financial secre- tary ; Lawrence Bearse, treasurer, and Joe Souza , secretary. HISTORICAL SOCIETIES MEET The selection committee for the Donald G. Trayser museum at Barnstable Includes Quentln Mun- son, Harriet Ropes Cabot , and Priscllla Crane. Directors of the Barnstable Hy- annis, and Santuit-Cotult Historical Societies, and Cape Cod Tales, Inc., met Monday night at the home of Mrs. Calvin Crawford, president of the Santuit-Cotult society, to discuss plans for the opening of the museum the first week in July. STAMP EXHIBIT SET FOR JUNE The exhibit at the library for June will feature stamps from around the world. Stamps from Vatican City will be In a display lent by Wil- liam G. Weld of Ostervllle , while Alfred C. Knight of Cotuit will dis- play a collection featuring stamps from countries prominent In today's headlines. PERSONALS Rowena Phillips, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Phillips, graduated from West Virginia Weleyan Col- lege Monday, May 22. She plans to teach among the Navajo Indians of New Mexico. The Phillipses plan to move back to Cotuit around the first of June, and will live in the Burlin- game house at Nickerson Road and Main Street. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Crawford have returned from a motor trip to Delaware and Maryland. In Mary- land they visited their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thomas. I ELEMENTARY SCHOOL NEWS Sharon Gllbertson, fifth grader, received an answer to a letter writ- ten in geography to David Crockett School In McAllen, Texas. However , Sharon's answer was more than a letter from every fifth grader In that school, It was a cigar box with wire netting over it containing a horned toad, a native of McAllen. "Benny," as the Texas children told her his name was, was alive and well, and hungrily awaiting a meal of ants and a drink of water after his long Journey. Benny would not win any beauty prizes; in fact, he Is quite homely. Fifth graders are sure he must have caused more than one squeal as he was handled in various postal stations across the country. Third graders are planning a field trip to the Old Hoxie House in Sandwich on May 20. The children will go by bus. The Hoxle House is studied in the third grade when they learn about historic sites on the Cape. Sixth and fifth graders played the Ostervllle students in the same grades in baseball on Monday morn- ing. Girls won their game 29-15, but the boys lost 8-7. Playoffs with other schools wllll be scheduled later. CpTur (Continued from Page 1) between Providence, Buzzards Bay nnd Hyannis leaving Providence weekdays at 2 p.m., 4:45 p.m. and 9:15 p.m.; Saturdays and Sundays at 8:30 a.m., and Mondays through Fridays at 6:45 a.m., with connec- tions at Buzzards Bay. Passengers from New York will And summer train service as usual on the "Cape Codder" and the "Neptune " out of Grand Central from June 26 through Labor Day. The "Cape Codder", except on Wednesdays, will leave Grand Cen- tral at 10:55 a.m. and, leaving Hy- annls at 9:10 a.m., will return to Grand Central at 3:05 p.m. The "Neptune " weekend special will leave New York Fridays only at 4:45 p.m. from June 30 through September 5, arriving at Hyannis at 10:35 p.m. The return run will be made on Sundays, July 9 through August 27, except Septem- ber 3. The return holiday runs on Tuesday, July 4 and Monday, Sept. 4th will leave Hyannls at 5:25 p.m., arriving in New York at 11:20 p.m. ALMEIDA SCHEDULE The Almeida Bus Line schedule to the Cape from Boston will be re- sumed next week but the schedule is incomplete. It will offer Us usual summer service to Brockton, Plym- outh and Sagamore but with the privilege this year of using the Mid-Cape Highway for through ser- vice to Hyannls. It plans to shave its Cape schedule by 30 minutes to effect boatllne connections to Nan- tucket with the Island Steamship Company's vessel "Martha 's Vine- yard" at Pleasant Street Wharf and with other facilities. Hyannls, already equipped with a fine airport and a railhead , still lacks a bus terminal except for a curbing in front of a mid-town news store. Bus line officials and Town Selectmen alike have thrown in the towel awaiting the next move. (Even on Cape Cod there are equivalents to "manana" or "Qulen sabe.") But buses, planes and trains will start running this season on schedule and soon. NO ALL-WEATHER SHELTER Meantime, there seemed little likelihood that an bus terminal would be erected this year or even an all-weather shelter. Spokesmen for the Selectmen, Planning Board and Almeida Bus 'Lines said they had no knowledge of any steps to be taken in the forseeable future for construction of a terminal. Facilities are limited at present to a ticket counter and waiting area in the Hyannls News Store with no rgreement in sight regarding a permanent terminal despite avail- able properties in the vicinity . A small section of the above properties is owned by the town but Chairman Victor Adams of the Board of Selectmen said that to his knowledge no request has been filed to date for use of the land for a bus terminal. In Boston, Traffic Manager Charles W. Dow of Almeida Bus Lines said that permission recently granted his Arm to use the Mid- Cape Highway south of Sagamore might possibly allow morning and evening connections with passenger vessels operating between Hyannls and Nantucket and said that a re- vised schedule is being considered for the summer months. Within a few days, he said , he will confer with Joseph T. Gellnas, owner of the Island Steamship Company, re- garding the possibility of delivering morning passengers from Boston direct to Pleasant Street Wharf to connect with Vineyard and Nan- tucket sailings with return service in the evening. Design Train, Bus Schedules To Offset Heavy Road Traffic Miss Marianne Drott , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Drott of Drott's Red ond White Market , Barnstable Village , received the honor of being elected class presi- dent of the class of 1902 at Seton Hall College , Greensburg, Pa. She was president this year of the Junior class. Marianne graduated from Sacred Heart High School in Kingston where she served as vice-president for the senior class. She holds a merit scholarship at Seton Hill and Is treasurer of the Intercollegiate Conference of Government, the only position on this statewide board that can be held by a student. As delegate she has attended several conferences of this group, among them, one in Harrlsburg. Marianne Is majoring in political science with a minor in economics. Marianne Drott Honored At College The manner In which moral standards of communities through- out Cnpe Cod and the rest of the country are deteriorating as a re- sult of obscene and pornographic material being made available to young people was reported at a meeting in Barnstable High School recently. Represented were 75 different organizations from the Cape area. They voted to band together to form the "Cnpe Cod Organizations for Decent Literature. " The following list of officers was elected unanimously: Arthur H. Ap- pleton of Dennis Port, chairman; the Rev. Leonard J. Daley, Colonel William M. Tow, Richard O. Staff and the Rev. John H. Thomas, vlcc- chnirmnn; Mrs. Ernest M, Lenvitt, secretary and Mrs. Joseph Robin- son, treasurer. Legnl aspects of the fight against obscene literature was described by Leo Soutag, assistant district attorney general of Masnschusetts. Mr. Sonta g is legal advisor to the Massachusetts Obscene Literature Control Commission. He outlined the laws pertaining to obscenity and said that he felt they were ade- quate for control If the public would Insist that they be enforced. Sheriff Dennld P. Tulloch, tem- porary chairman of the meeting, In- troduced the Rev. Pierre duPont Vuilleumler of Craigvllle , a mem- ber of the Massachusetts Obscene Literature Control Commission and associate superintendent of the Massachusetts Conference of Con- gregational Churches. Mr. Vuilleumler was instrumental In orgonizing a highly successful campaign against Indecent litera- ture in the West Springfield area. Deputy Sheriff Louis Cntaldo ex- plained that there is a dcllnite con- nection between the prevalence of obscene literature distributed In a community and the Juvenile delin- quency rate. Ho snid , "It is a mat- tor of great urgency that we do all in our power to stamp out smut on Cape Cod. " Passed unanimously was a resolu- tion calling on Cape Cod citizens not to patronize stores selling publica- t ions "which do violence to com- munity standards. " The second resolution passed by the assembly reminds owners of stores that if Uiey do not adhere to these standards they arc liable to a proscution under law. Anti-Smut Drive Gets Underway