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Newspaper Archive of
Barnstable Patriot
Barnstable, Massachusetts
October 27, 1949     Barnstable Patriot
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October 27, 1949
 
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Classi f ied Advertising Rates: Two cents a word first Insertion; one oent a word each sub- sequent Insertion. $.25 minimum charge for each Insertion. Display rates upon application. in narwicn, jonii u. uoomus mm Barbara .1. Ellis , Harwich. In Sandwich , Oct. 15, hy the Rev. J. Samuel StepheiiHon , MI HH Dor- othy R. Schneider, South Orange, N, J., und Sandwich , and Henry H. Staehllng, Maplewood , N. .1. In West Harwich, MIBB H. Bever- ley Reed, West Dennis, and Ray- mond F. MelJp, Dennlsport , form- erly ot Brldgewater. In West Harwich , Oct. 21, by Henry K. Hearse, MI SH Doris I. Baasett , Harwich , and Leo M. Hosker, Jr., Lynn. In East Harwich Oct. 15, by the Rev. Frederick Frank , .MIHH Lll- Han Chase, East Harwich , and Seaman 1/c Robert W. McGrath , Cambridge, In Concord, N, H„ Oct. 12, Miss Jean P. Geddls, Brockton and Fal mouth, and Richard V. Crocker, Falmouth. In Hyannis, Oct. 15, by the Rev. Edward C. Duffy, Miss Ruth M. Kuch, West Hyannis Port, and Neal F. Fahey, Hyannis. In Louisville, Ky., Oct. 21, by the Rev. Robert T. Weston, Ronald D. Boddy, Eastham, and Miss Jacque- line Anderson, Aneta, N. D. In Provincetown, Oct. 22, by the Rev. John A, Silvia, Miss Theresa A. Rosa and James B. Roderick, both of Proviqcetown. In every part and corner of our life, to lose oneself is to be gainer; to forget oneself is to be happy — Robert Louis Stevenson. MARRIAGES i s^ s^ j^ B J^ i ^ ^ i ^ H p j B a ap j B i l f B Si S T E E L LARGEST ASSORTED STOCK Structurals Bar Size Angles — Beams — Channels Reinforcing Rods — Plate We fabricate according to YOUR need Delivery — 40-mile radius NEW ENGLAND IRON and STEEL CO. 163 Clinton Street Telephone I Brockton, Mass. I 6677 or 3781 Our other plant is in Framingham- ^ ^ ^ '' '¦ B B aBaBBaa^EBJ^BJBJBJBJBJBEB^BaaBBBBBBBBBBBBBaBBaaBBBaBBaaBaaBE Bl AN UNIQUE SERVICE Home Casseroles offers a new service to bwsy housewives who like to entertain at home, to work- ing women' who do not have the time to prepare tasty meals, and to those women who Just don't like to cook but love to eat. ' This service waB Inaugurated by four housewives In West Barn- stable whose last names spell out the word HOME. They are Mary Hollingshead, Ellse Owen, Ruth Merrltt and Claire Everett. AH kinds ot delicious casserole dishes are prepared right In their own kitchens and ready to. serve on 24-hour notice. Among the many kinds are lobster, scallops, clams, oysters, chicken, beet—all com- bined with Other ingredients to make them most unusual and sure to please the "hard to please." They also make vegetable cas- seroles, dessert casseroles, pies, cakes and canape spreads. COMMUNITY CLUB The Community Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Henry Kaipai- nen Thursday evening, Mrs. Evelyn Drlnkwater will be co-hostess. 8UNDAY 8CHOOL Sunday School time has been changed to 10 o'clock. Three new children were enrolled Sunday. They are Jackie Leeman, Howard Hinckley and Shirley Howland. Ka ren Johnson of Centerville was a visitor Sunday. Mrs. Jenkins' class was in charge of opening exercises HALLOWE'EN PARTY Two Hallowe'en parties wert planned at a meeting in the home of Mrs. Roger Carlson recently From 2:30 to 4:30 on Saturday October 29th, there will be a part) for children up to and Including 11 years, at the Community Center Those on the committee Include Mrs. Stanley Jenkins, Mrs. Free Carlson, Mrs. George Drinkwatei and Mr. John P. Manning. Then will be prizes and refreshments will be served. Come in costume! On Monday night, October 31st. there will be a party from 7 to 1C for those twelve years and up. The committee in charge are Miss Phyl- lis Davidson, Mrs. William Hotter- man, Mrs. Dennis Cliggott, Mr. Carl Salo and Mr. Emil Davidson . COMMUNITY CENTER The official opening of the Com- munity Center will be November 4th. Officers will then be elected, FURNITURE REFINI&HING CLASS On October 19th the first meeting of the Furniture Reflnishing Class was held at the Community Center. Miss Margaret Stevens, Home Dem- onstration Agent, conducted the class. Those present were Mrs, Elwood Leeman, Mrs. Harold Wheeler, Mrs. Frank Maki , Mrs. Kenneth Bailey, Mrs. George John- son, Mrs. Norman Gaboon , Mrs. Toivo Leeman, Mrs. Heyworth BackuB, Mrs. Russell Syriala and Mr. Louis Carey. The next claBs will be held on November 2, PERSONALS Rev. V. V. Sundelln is visiting his daughter, Mrs. Felix Mayblom , in West Paris, Me. » Mr. Norman Cahoon and Mr. Nate Nickerson are in Strong, Maine , on a hunting trip. Mr. and Mrs. William Scoville are in Boston for a week visiting relatives. Rev. George Owen of Hyde Park was the guest speaker at the West Parish Church Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Hlncks, Jr., had Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. S. Purdy and son Van Purdy tor a weekend. Mrs. Hlncks entertained at a dinner party for them, in their home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Sears of Mil- ton were at their place, Mor'gage Hill on Lake Wequaquet, over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs, Kendrick Sears flew to Syracuse, N, Y„ Saturday to at- tend the Cornell-Princeton football I game. I PER80NAL8 Miss Evelyn Fish left Sunday for Brockton where Bhe will spend the winter, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Rice left Tuesday for Concord, N. H„ where they will visit relatives for a few days. Recent visitors at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dwyer were Mr. and Mrs. William Burke of Waitham and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hosmer of Newton Centre. Mr. and Mrs. Fred CarlBon and family visited Mrs. Carlson's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hartwell , In Attleboro over the weekend. Mr. Fred Carlson is on vacation. The Brownies met Monday at the home of Mrs. Louis Woodland. Mr. and Mrs. John Strom and daughter Karen of West Yarmouth were recent visitors at the home of Mrs. Strom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Wiinlkalnen, Sr. Mr. Roger Carlson is in New Jer- sey for a two weeks courBe in a school for mechanics. MrB. Carlson and two children, Roger and Eve- lyn, are visiting this week with Mrs. Carlson's Bister, Mrs. Daniel McCloskey, in New York. Next week she will visit another sister in Pennsylvania, Richard Haydon has returned to his home after Berving three years with the Marines. Mr. and MrB. Thomas O'Neil and . sons, Michael and Paul , motored to , Woonsocket, R. i., to attend the i christening of Christine Joanne , Kelley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kelley. Mrs. Thomas O'Neil , Den Mother , of Pack 53, attended n Pack and ( Committee meeting Inst Monday night at the Recreation Center In j the Synagogue in Hyannis. I Mr. and Mrs. Henry Groop, ac- , companled by Mrs. Groop's parents , ' Mr. and Mrs. James Dodds of Prov- | idence, R. I„ motored through the I western part of the state last week- , end. s Mrs. Louise Stockwell has re- turned to her homo after visiting with relatives In Maiden for several weeks. She was accompanied by j her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. t and Mrs. Harold Kllputrlck of Mai- den. Mr. Kilpatrlck returned home Sunday and Mrs. Kilpatrlck will remain here for an Indefinite stay. Mr. and Mrs. C. Carrington Wil- cox spent a long weekend at their place at Lake Wequaquet. Mr. and Mrs. H. Weston Enrle and daughter Joanne of Milton were also at their home, Blueberry Acre, at Lake Wequaquet , for the week- end. Mr. John Leeman has been 111. Mr. Robert Syranen, Jr., of New York City is visiting at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. John Leeman. .. i Mr. and Mjti. Louis Carey-and daughters recently vUIted relatives in Brldgewater. Hosker-Bassett Miss Doris I, Bassett of Harwich , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ozias H. Bassett was married October 21 to Mr. Leo M. Hosker, Jr., of Lynn, son of Leo M. and the late Mrs. Hosker, by Henry K. Bearse at the home of the bride's sister, Mrs. Paul R. Lake, in West Harwich. The bride was given in marriage by her father, and Mrs. Lake was matron of honor. Mr. Lake served as best man. At the reception which followed the ceremony, Mrs. Esther Hinckley of Hyannis, cousin of the bride, played the violin. She also played at the ceremony Mrs. Hosker IB a graduate of the Harwich High School and the Cape Cod Secretarial School, Hyannis. For over ten years she has been with the Cape Cod Chamber ot Commerce .promoted during this time to office manager and secre- tary to the executive secretary. Mr. Hosker is a graduate of the Burdett Business College and the Bentley School of Accounting, and is employed at the Lynn PoBt Office. After their return from a honey- moon trip to Bermuda, the couple will live in Wakefield. , WEST BARNSTABLE ^TTOAT_NOT . O «»- PASSBOOK LOST . „ ,? hereby given that Pass- 'TNO 9497? issued by the Hy- * 00 ? Trust Company, Savings De- »nnl8 ! i has heen lost'or de- •"'^''Irt and that applWatlon has »lro5 Lde to the said Hyannis bee". company to issue a duplicate Tru ? m accordance with the re« jgjS-r- l¦ s r «on 40, Chapter fi «g j T^weaith of Massachusetts ^ ""PROBAT E COURT j To HELEN WOODBURY, also 2i HELEN R. WOODBURY, of ca inhh. (Hyannis), in said SSF5 Barnstable/ and to her S U f, apparent or presumptive, and ?„ tlie Massachusetts Department \, Mental Health. A petition has been presented to JA court alleging that said HELEN WOODBURY, also called JELEN R. WOODBURY, is ani to fane person and praying that JAMES HENRY WOODBURY, JR.,- of Boston, Massachusetts, or some other suitable person he appointed ler guardian. If you desire to object thereto, you or your attorney should file a written appearance in said Court at Barnstable before ten o'clock in the forenoon on the 22nd day of November, 1949, the return day of this citation. Witness, COLLEN C. CAMP- BELL, Esquire, Judge of said Court, this 7th day of October in the year one thousand nine hundred and forty-nine. KENRICK A. SPARROW, Register. Oct. 13, 20, 27. . i PAS8B00K LOST Notice is hereby given that Pass- book, No. H3381, issued by the Bass River Savings Bank, has been 1st or destroyed and that applica- tion has been made to the Bass River Savings Bank to issue a duplicate book, in accordance with Section 40, Chapter 590, Acts of 1908. Oct. 20, 27, Nov. 3 Commonwealth of Massachusetts Barnstable, as. Probate Court. To MARY DE ROODE BERN- AUDI , 143-18 41st Avenue,. Flush- ing New York; CORNELIA DE KOODE D'ALEXANDRE, 167 West 87th Street, New York ; EL1ZA- HETH DE ROODE TALBOT, 11 G. I. Village, Amherst College, Am- herst, Mass., and THEODORE De ROODE, c/o Owens, Wayland, Muss. A petition has been presented to said Court by IRVING GROSS, of Ormond Beach, Volusia County, Florida , and MAX L. BLISS, of Daytona Beach, .Volusia County, Florida , trustees under the will of HELEN McHENRY MILLER, late of Ormond Beach, Florida, praying that the Court interpret and con- strue the sixth paragraph of the will of said deceased and instruct th em as to the intention of the testatrix concerning the disposi- tion of the property mentioned in taid sixth paragraph Of said will when the daughter Elizabeth shall have attained the age of twenty- live years, and as to their power ami authority to sell and convey said property mentioned in said sixth paragraph, and for such other and further relief . and In- structions as to the Court seems meet and proper in the premises. If you desire to be heard there- on, you or your attorney should tile a written appearance In said Court at BavnBtable within twenty- one days from the 22nd day of November, 1949 , the return day of this citation , and also file an answer or other pleading within Iwenty-one days thereafter. _, Witness, Collen C. Campbell, Es- quire, Judge of said Court, this 21st Say of October In the year one thousand nine hundred and forty- nine. KENRICK A. SPARROW, ' Register Oct. 7, Nov. 3, 10 PASSBOOK L08T Notice is hereby given that Pass- book, No. 14038, issued by the Hyannis Trust Company Savings Department, has been lost or de- stroyed and that application has been made to the said Hyannis Trust Company to issue a dupli- cate hook in accordance with Sec- tion 40, Chapter 690, Acts of 1908. Oct. 27, Nov. 3, 10 The Barnstable Patriot Delivered anywhere ^ $2.00 per year CHURCH NOTES . The sermon topic for Sunday's ' service will be "For This We 1 Stand.',' The First Quarterly Conference ' is to be held Sunday afternoon at 1 3 o'clock, with Rev. Albln Dahl- quist, District Supt., presiding. TEEN-AGE DANCE The first teen-age dnuce, spon- sored by the Athletic Club, was attended by about thirty. Several ' came from Osterville and Cotuit. 1 Chaperones for the evening were 1 Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Locke, Post- 1 master, and Mrs. L. G. Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Hamblin . BIRTHDAY PARTY Your reporter spent last week in E. Harwich with granddaughters ! Lynne and Lots Nickerson, while their parents were on a vacation trip to Quebec. As Monday was I her birthday she was the dinner 1 guest of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore 1 Nickerson. Her daughter-in-law , 1 Diana, made a birthday coke deco-j rated In pastel colors. Then on Thursday, another happy surprise, 1 Mrs. Ethel HuBtorl, Mrs. William ' MacArthnr, Mrs. Chester Baker and Mrs. Dorothy ChildB came to East Harwich bringing lunch even , to the cream for the coffee and . . . another birthday cake with lemon icing. It was a very happy day. BOULDER DEDICATION The boulder has been placed at the Village Green and the bronze plaque is being engraved with the names of veterans of World Wars I and II. The boulder is n thing of beauty, shaped almost Mho a heart with an almost perfect point. It is hoped to have the dedication on Armistice Day. MRS. HATTIE MECARTA Our little town has lost n beloved friend In the passing of Mrs. Hat- tio Mecarta on Thursday at the home of nor sister, Miss .loslo Crocker, after a short illness. Funeral services were held at tho ' Hyannis Funeral chapel Saturday I afternoon. Her daughter , Mrs. 1 Ernest Cameron and Miss Joslo 1 Crocker wish to thank the many I friends who Bent the lovely (lowers. Relatives from out of town wero Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bradbury ofi Brockton ; Mr. and Mrs. Hilding Peterson and Harry Lambert of South Easton; Mr. and Mrs. Wil- j liam Oldham and daughter , Marcla | of East Providence, and Frederick Mitchell of Melrose. In loving memory of Mrs . Hattie Mecarta , a beloved neighbor and friend , this tribute has been writ- ten. So fair of face , this loving friend and neighbor, It.hardly seemB that she has gono away; It seems but yesterdny we saw her standing Among her flowers in the Bun 's bright ray. So full of grace with heart so warm and tender, With nimble lingers alwayB at their best; When making now from old , with thread and needle For little folk less fortunate than the rest. And like tho flowers she loved that bloomed so freely, Shedding their perfume with no thought of pay; The eBBonce of her sweetness like a blessing: Fell on every one who passed hur way. Each quiet hour her faith grew ever stronger, Knowing that ere long the call would come; And then one day the door wos softly opened, The blessed Saviour took the dear one home. PER80NALS George Lapham and Merrill Gilford began work last Wednes- day on the Cape Cod house which they are building for Theodore Nickerson in East Harwich. Patrolman Maurice Hinckley, Jr., has returned from a two-day trip to Newark , N. J„ where ho was sent on an assignment. Miss Mary MacLeod has return- ed from Halifax, Nova Scotia, where she haB boon staying with her slstor, Mrs. Roop, for several weeks,. Mr. and Mrs. William Drlscoll and son, Hilly were in Arlington for tho week end and attended tho liousewurmlng at the new home of her brother and wife , Mr, and Mrs, Albert Collins. MI BB Jpslo Crocker went to Mel- rose Wednesday to spend a few weeks with tier niece and family. Mrs. Wllllum fierce and (laugh ter Ruth spent the weekend in Litchfield , Conn., with Mrs. Pierce's cousin, Mrs. Hester Boutelller. Mr. and Mrs. Arteraus Griffin and daughter liette , spent the weekend In New Hampshire and Vermont where they visited Mr and Mrs. Carl Bowen. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Griffin of Centerville accompanied them. Miss Bette Griffin celebrated her 15th birthday Saturday by at tending the Amherst State College Alumni banquet in Worcester wit! her parents. Only two of Mr. Grit fin's classmates, class of 21, were present. Mrs. Gertrude Thew, chairmai of the October Finance Committal of the W. S. C. S., reports that $41 was made at the recent rummage sale held at the Parish Hall. PERSONAL6 Mrs. Allen Flak and Miss Georgia Clark of Centerville attended the official inspection of Pleiades Chapter, O. E. S., in Chatham. Mrs. Wilbur Cushlng and little daughter, Virginia Lee returned returned from Cape Cod Hospital Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Wiseman and family have moved Into the Wainwright cottage for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pollard nnd Mr, anl Mrs. Maurice Hinckley, Sr„ were gueBts of Mr. and Mrs. Orestus Pollard of East Bridge- water. Mr. and Mrs. Hilding Hord and daughter Corrlne, attended the wedding of MI BB Edith Shulskey and Sydney Tankanow at Chateau, Garod in Brookline and the re- ception which followed. The bridge experts foursome met at the home of MrB. Stella Pollard for the first fall game Wednesday. Donald Baker has been elected president of the Purdue University EcnomicB Club. He is the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Baker of this village and is a senior in tho School of Science. Mrs. George Hadley has return- ed home from the Booth Memorial Hospital in Brookline where she was operated on for a sinus ! condition. Mr, Hadley is a patient at tho Pocasset Sanltorlum. Edward Morse , son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Morse, is home from the Cape Cod Hospital., where he underwent un appendectomy. MI BS Genevieve Hord went by piano with Mr. and Mrs. Kendrick Sears as their guest to Ithaca, New York, where they attended tho Cornell - Princeton football game. They returned homo by plane Sun- day afternoon with pilot Angus Perry of Centerville. Marstons Mills I HYANNIS AIRPORT (Hiirnstublo Municipal Airport) Carl Hellstrom of Harwiohport md Springfield , M IIBS ., president of Smith & Wesson Anns Company, i s still commuting wuekomls from lis bUHiness to Uyannis in the , jompany's new Hoeehcraft Hon- »i7,a. It is rumored the company , :>lans to buy a twin-engine Ileech- :raft. BUI Blckle , flying salesman for , 3ulf Oil Company, arrived in the , company Stinson from Boston with -oinpnny executives. They were . met by March Wilde, local Gulf 311 manager. Christian florn arrived from ' Norwood in his Aoroncu four-place . Sedan, Chris is owner-manager of Air Markings, inc., and has the contract for painting the numbers on our Northeast-Southwest run- way, recently soulcutood. The parking and guslng of air- craft hy tho lineman has slowed to such an extent thai Manager Al Sherman has put the boys to work painting the administration building. Bob Woodward of Portland , Maine , Northeast Airlines ticket ugent , stationed at Nantucket NEA office will soon be transferred to the Hyannis office where he will work with Station Manager Hart- ley HiitchiilB. CAS RUBS Ruckor and diet Henderson in the - twin-engine CesBiia flew newly married Mr. and Mrs Henry Staehllng to New York on the first log of their honeymoon trip to Bermuda. John McGreevy of the Veterans Administration in Providence was In Wednesday on a 'routine in- spection of training schools In Hy- annis. ('AS was given a clean bill of health. Ben Baxter, Hank Moore and John Kennedy were flown to Bos- ton Monday on business. lien 1 made an additional trip Wednes- day when ho was flown to Boston whore he picked up some company executives and flow them to Prov- incetown , then returned them to Boston, Mr. R. 13. Whitman of the GE Company WOB picked up ut Nan- tucket last night , where he had fixed the hospital X-ruy machine , and flown to Boston hy HUBS and Chot. Chut flow John Madden , James F. Burke , Cludlo Alexandra and George Wallace to Nantucket Wed- nesday, where they attended a Knights of Coltimbus initiation ami Installation of officers. They re- turned curl y in the morning so that they would be buck ut their work before 8 a.m. George Anthony and George Parnienter flew over to Martha 's Vineyard Wednesday in their twln- engino Cessna where they joined in a search for u light plane re- ported down lu tho wate r off Oak Bluffs. It apparently was a false report as nothing was sighted und no planes were reported missing on further chock. Private Hying Is an older per- son's game, in the opinion of one of the largest manufa cturers of small planes. William T. Piper , president of the Piper Aircraft Corp. of Lockhaveu , Pa. He feels that people must, have . both time and money to make full use of the long distance travel advantages ot the private plane. People who can use private airplanes are the farmers, businessmen , industrial- ists and older people who have the time and money to travel around the country, he said. UP IN THE AIR FOB GIFT8—U8E MAGAZINES Ladies' Home Journal 1 yr. 63.; 2 yrs, 66.; 3 yrs. $7. Saturday Evening Post 1 yr. $0.; 2 yrs. |10.; 3 yrs. $14. Parents' Magazine 1 yr. $3.; 2 yrs. $4.; 3 yrs. 66 HELEN M. BERRY P. O. Address, Rati River, Mass. Phone Hy. 1649-M-3 Quim^ MusteroleFor ChestGoldsI lo relieve*coughs—achy muscles The Dionne Quints have always had the best care. Ever since they were babies, they've used MuBterolt to promptly relieve coughs and local congestionof colds. Be sure your kid- diesenjoy Musterole'sgreat benefits! WILL BUY OR KENT FOR USE IN MOTION PICTURES One—Medium Size Mouse One—Flea Bitten Hound Dog One—Tired, Ornery Mule Write Carl W. Holmes, Cape Cod Productions, Hyannis, Mass. HOME MOVIE FILMS Cameras, Projectors, Screens For Sale and Hental Sound Recordings Made. Carl W. Holmes, Photographer Television's "Celebrity Doubles" 18 Vernon Street, HyannlB 691-J I Hardy Chrysanthemums New varletlOB and now colors. Visit our gardens and seo tboni In bloom, Shore Road, near Gray Gables , ltourne. A. K. KENDRICK , Grower Blizzards Bay FOR SALE Indian Arrow Points and RollcB. Box C, Barnstable Patriot. • Businew Services We are Headquarters for Hallowe'en Goods 8MALLHOFF A HAINES Hyannis, Mass. LA.tvv^>& *3LpJ j «rv<» ^ *£§sH I , fi»U. *^ MJ\ \4 U.tUeSi^ Wwt OK-**. *H*f» \Jjp West e.«%A V HV^nn' iS. yJJL Swedes jg Sjft M.*d«>» Order I AJISSK^^ Jack's Bike Shop 17 Barnstable Road Hyannis •¦•-___—__————_————-__ ——___ —. Tol. Ostonrille 4941 CLARENCE M. MaoLEOD PIANO TUNING Repairing Rsfeltlng (20 years experience) Marstons Mills Mass. t ' Insurance Real Estate J. L. ROGERS Orleans Tel. 110 Mas*. 1 u J a. '"— '¦— ' ' ' — HYANNISFISHCO. PLEASANT STREET Phone Hyannis 1266W 1 <>u the Wattrfrvai Everything in Season HURRICANE TESTED MOORING LINE) In use for ovor 12 years. Cut-proof , rot-proof , worm-proof. Insures your boat. Complete line ot Marine Hard- ware. Woolsoy 's Paint H. Olson's and Coprollgnum copper paints and pre- servatives. Wall rope. All our mer- chandise used by the fishing fleet tor years must bo able to take it In all weather. PLENTY OF PARKING. Mullins Fishing Oear, Inc. Pier 4, New Bedford. 6-7493 8CHUMAN REALTY COMPANY REALTORS All kinds of property bought and sold. Leases, mortgages, and finan- cing arranged. George J. Sohuman Ruth H. Scbuman 265 Main Street Hyannis, Mass. Directly across the street from tho HyunnlB R. R. Station Tel. Hyannis 277 Parts and Repairs For All Make Sowing Machines. Make a Portable Electric out of your Old Sewing Machine, t:i9.50. Stich-ln-Tlme Shop —the Ono Btop Shop for the Sew- ing Women, fabrics and Bowing Accessories. Ruth and Arthur Mao- Knariiuy, 9 Sherman Square, Tel. Hyannis 1K40. ______ FLOOR SANDING & REKINI8H- ING. Also machines to rent. Wall- paper Hhoppe. Tol. Hyannis 1785. PAINTING & DECORATING Kxlurlor — Interior B\ L, ROCHE & SONS Phono Hyannis 2002-M-3 — ARVID and WALTER JACOHBON, Interior and Exterior Painting. Paper Hanging, Ceilings Itoflulsb- ed. Telephone Hyannis 1142 M or 16G9-M. ALCOHOLICS-ANONYMOUS. FOR INFORMATION wrlle (Cape Cod Group) P. O. Box 761 , Hyannis. Mass. ******************************** I JAMES W. KEARNS MA80N CONTRACTOR Brickwork - Cesspools Foundations "fireplaces a Specialty " Marstons Mills Tel. Ost. 727 ENTERTAINMENT POR CLUBS, Hotels, Banquets and PrivaU Par- ties. Contact Bid Wright, Tel. Hy annls 14M-W. WILL IIUY your old cunes, Ivory articles, whale teeth , scrimshaw , old glass, old portraits, and marine I paintings and odd articles. Repl y . ' Box II., Barnstable Patriot. !APE COD AIRPORT Tho month of October has jir<>- lucod more than Its shuro of bad rent her . with only 11 of the llrst 25 lays being suitable for student fly- ng. However , on the llyulile days here has boon tho usual amount of I'tlvlt y, with checkouts rating hir.h •n the list of accomplishments, Woody Pond of Ostorvlllo has ioen filling tu at tho airport, while Urport Mana ger Angus Perry was m a CI'OBB country flight over the veekend. Woody lias also started ils checkout in tho Taylororatt. lo will lie ready for solo In this ihlp shortly. Another Taylorcraft 'an is tho "Flying Gnragomuh" .onis it. Adams of Centerville, kiule checked out In the Taylor- •raft In Just a half hour of check- ldo with Instructor Angus Perry, mil then proceeded to take Clayton McCrum , also of Centervlllo, tor (lis Indoctrination in It, Louie prac- tically loarned lo fly in a Taylor- Tiil'l , so a couple of passes al the Held refreshed his memory of the ihlp very quickly, Mr. Ken Sours of West Illim- itable chartered the Stinson 150 to journey mil to Cayuga 's Waters lo seo tho Cornell-Princeton football name at Ithaca , Now York. As IB his usuul custom when flying, he turned ilie synoptic sllnation upside down and emptied the weather bag of a colli front , which persisted In lous- ing up the trip by the time it hud progressed us fur as the valley that lies between Albany and Syracuse, N. Y. Despite overwhelming handi- caps, the trip was completed In lime for tile klckoff of the ball game . . . In the second half. It would really have heen a fuux-pus if Cornell hadn't won tho game by the meagre score of 14 lo 12. If weather bureaus evor have a dec- oration comparable to the Purple Heart , the writer of this will elect Mr. Sours to be the first holder of such a distin guished decoration. Lino Chief William Ilowon of Centerville believes In the unusual, During his lunch hour of Sunday he became a groom, tho bride , Miss Prlsclllu Whit tier , formerly of Bos- ton. Not wishing to turn this column Into a social page, we mlghi just proceed wit h the wedding trip, which was In tho Piper Super Crlu- ser on roule lo Now York City, The return trip was completed the next day, with the Hue being manned again on Wednesday. Airport Manager Angus Parry at- tended tho lour and lecturo on Jet Hying hold al Otis Air Force Iluse on Tuesday. With Colonel Agun, the commanding officer, giving the loc- luros and personally guiding the lour, It wus uu afternoon well spent, Airport managers and Operator's frorri the Capo and Islands, as well as New iiedford and representatives of the Massachusetts Aeronautics Commission all expressed their sin- cere thanks for the harmonious coiipiiralioii betwee n the Jet pilots und local pilots flying lighter air- craft. Marriage Intentions Warron H. Colo, Air Force, anil Virginia E. Sawyer, at homo, both of Bangor, Maine; Charles Arthur Archer, painter and decorator, and MrB. Vera Stanbury Farwell , doc orator, both of Hyannis. Kenneth C. Galllon , Air Korce , Berkeley Springs, W. Va., and YUir- ence lino , soda fountain employe , Falmouth. I PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISER! i l A FRIENDLY VI8ITOR IN CAPI i COD HOME8 FOR THE PA81 1 120 YEAR8.