Studebaker is all set - NYS Historic...
Transcript of Studebaker is all set - NYS Historic...
FOURTHE EAST HAM PTON STAR, FR ID A Y, M AY 29, 1931
D I C T A T O R E I G H T81 horsepower, eight- $1 1 ̂ cylinder performance JL _L \J
I. Y. Halsey Automobile Co. C O N S O L I D A T E D
Society Nevus and Notes
Devon Yacht ClubOpens Tomorrow
The Devon Y acht Club is opening for the season tomorrow, Saturday, May 30, and It Is expected that many o f the summer residents who will ba down for the week-end will have luncheon or dinner there as the club’s restaurant is now open. Arthur Varcu is returning as steward after a num ber o f successful seasons and is planning to care for more guests than ever this season. The club has had the kitchen enlarged and there will be facilities for handling larger crowds than heretofore.
% Mr. and Mrs. H en ryR . Sutphen, who were down last week-end, had a party o f twelve guests at Devon for luncheon on Sunday.
Members of the club who are planning to be at Devon over the weekend are requested to make their dining room reservations early.
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Mix, who o c cupied one o f Otto Simmons cottages on Clinton lane last summer, are re turning to East Hampton again this year and have taken the same house.
Mr. and Mrs. David W. Peck have rented the Frdnk Neilson house for the season.
The June meeting o f the Ladies’ Village Improvement Society will be held on Monday, June 1, at the home o f Mrs. Frederick Hollister on Drew lane.
William R. M aloney underwent an operation a t the D octors’ Hospital, New York, last week, and is now m aking a good recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. George Roberts and family are expected at the Maidstone Arms today, to remain until their new summer home is ready for occupancy.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Shepard have been at the M aidstone Arms this week.
Mrs. M cAlpin Barton and Miss Jeanette Barton, who were at the W ey- lin, New York, are now in East Hampton. ,
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Nadal will again occupy the Austin Culver house on Dunemere lane.
Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Reid o f New York, will again occupy the M ulford house on Main street, which they had last year. Mrs. Reid ’s sister, Miss Baird, will be with them.
Miss Evelyn Davis o f Brooklyn, has been stopping at the M aidstone Anns this week.
Dr. and Mrs. John F. Erdmann are expected at their Lily Pond lane home early in June. Mr. and Mrs. Sturtevant
Erdmann and their baby daughter are to spend the summer with them.
The M aidstone Inn will open its doors for the summer on June 26.
Stanley Carr o f W ashington, D. C., has been at the New Weston, New York, for a few days this week. Mr. and Mrs. Carr are to pass the summer in East Hampton.
Mrs. S. Fullerton W eaver was among those entertaining in the Tapestry Room at the Park Lane, New York, on Tuesday.
Miss M olly Shonk is to be a bridesmaid at the wedding o f Miss Mary Delafleld, daughter of Edward Coleman Delafield, and o f Mrs. Margaretta D ela- fleld, to A. Ludlow Kram er jr., son o f Mr. and Mrs. A. Ludlow K ram er o f Westbury, L. I., which will take place at Rlverdale-on-H udson on June 20.
Mrs. Dickson B. Potter was a luncheon guest o f Mrs. Edwin N. Chapman at the Central Park Casino, New York, on Tuesday.
Mrs. Harry L. Hamlin was a member o f the executive com m ittee for the "R adioland" benefit for the Salvation Army, given Tuesday night at M adison Square Garden, New York. Fifteen thousand persons attended the affair. A cast o f 1,140 musical, dancing and com edy stars perform ed for the Salvation Arm y’s $528,000 maintenance campaign. Edward F. Hutton and Mrs. Grover A. W halen headed the general committee for the benefit.
The cornerstone o f the new Seabury Hall o f General Theological Seminary at Chelsea Square, New York, was laid Tuesday afternoon by Bishop Paul Matthews o f New Jersey, with Samuel and W illiam Seabury, descendants of three generations o f Seaburys prom inent in the Protestant Episcopal Church, taking part in the ceremony. The function was a preliminary ceremony to the com m encem ent o f the seminary held on Wednesday.
The cerem ony was opened with a prayer by Bishop Matthews. Samuel Seabury, who is now ch ief counsel to the join t Legislative pommittee investigating the city administration, handed the Bishop the trowel with which to lay the cornerstone. The trowel has been used in laying the cornerstone o f nine buildings o f the seminary.
Bishops, alumni, trustees, the faculty and students walked in the procession to the building site. They included Bishop Benjam in Brewster o f M aine; Bishop W ilson R . Stearly o f Newark; the Rev. Caleb R. Stetson, J. W ilson Sutton, Charles A. Jessup, Floyd W. Tompkins, W illiam P. Niles, Ze Barney T. Phillips and Origen S. Seymour; Samuel O. Hoffm an, Joseph G . Mlnto, Frank L. Polk, R obert L. Gerry, Rear Admiral Reginald R. Belknap (retired) the Very Rev. M ilo H. Gates and the Very Rev. Hughell E. W . Fosbroke, dean o f the seminary.
Seabury Hall will provide auditoriums and rooms for social occasions and suites for younger instructors and tutors.
NEW TOW N LANE E. H . 173 EAST HAMPTON, L. L
_ . i r - . / v . it .
J. 1(1-21
1.50-20
L o w e s t P ric e s E v e r /Fam ous L ife tim e G u ara n te e d G oodyear Pathfinder
$ 4 . 9 8 $ 5 . 6 9
g .6 © « £ £ 6 . 6 5— All Sizei Low Priced—-
Factory Firsts
L Y. HALSEY AUTOMOBILE CO.NEW TOWN LANE, EAST HAMPTON
TELEPHONE EAST HAMPTON 273
GUARANTEED TIRE REPAIRIN G — GOOD USED TIRES
BETTER BE SAFE THAN SORRY
CONCRETE PRODUCTS COMPANY
SPECIAL 15% DISCOUNT ON ABOVE PRICES
FOR JUNE WEDDINGS
Ross M. FanninfiJeweler
Main Street East Hampton
Decoration Day SaleWE HAVE GROUPED
DRESSES
KIP H A T SHOP IE
S c t o s j . o o s t o r ePHONE EAST HAMPTON 277
B e a c h
PartiesA re Not C o m p l e t e
UNLESS YOU CAN BE COM FORTABLE IN A LARGE COM FORTABLE BEACH CHAIR, W ITH A FOOT REST AND A “ SUN-FAST” CANOPY, OR UNDER A NICE, ROOM Y SHADY BEACH U M B R E L L A - SPARKLING W ITH COLOR— BUT SUNFAST.
PRICES ARE REASONABLE— COM PARE!
AVOID FLYING GLASS
RIDE SAFE BEHIND
TRIPLEX
65% o f all Injuries caused by flying glass.Be fortified against careless driving and collisions which give no warning. It’ s better to be safe than sorry. Equip your car throughout with TRIPLEX.
HOW MUCH DOES IT COST? SEE US TODAY
EARLY INTEREST IN LONG ISLANDAS SUMMER PLAYGRUND INDICATED
Early interest in Long Island as a summer vacationland, as well as a rapidly growing center o f summer homes for people residing in other states, is indicated by inquiries recently received by the Inform ation Bureau o f the Long Island Chamber o f Com merce.
Applications have com e from several western states for literature descriptive or illustrative o f any part o f Long Island, for distribution at travel bureaus. There is a steady call for maps o f Long Island, in form ation concerning camps, bungalows, shore resorts, various outdoor sports and other attractions.
That such inquiries are also received by Long Island, business m en is ind icated by calls upon the Chamber’s In form ation Bureau for facts as to population, valuations, and similar statistics for use In printed folders. G reen- port as a com m unity has recently issued a booklet with m any photographic illustrations setting forth the attractiveness o f the seaport village. A n a ttractive, inform ative booklet descriptive o f G reat Neck has just been published. An important group o f Long Island business men is preparing an illustrated book to attract hom e builders to Nassau and Suffolk Counties. One Long Island organization, w ith a group o f underwriters representing Long Island hotels, will ‘distribute 100,- 000 Long Island travel maps. This in addition to the map o f the Sunrise Trails, issued yearly by the Long Is
land Chamber, which has had a cir culation during the last five years of hundreds o f thousands. This year's map will embody a number o f changes to make it even more valuable to Long Island than any previous editions. M any Long Island business houses are ordering these maps in quantity to carry special advertising.
There is constant demand for fo ld ers descriptive o f communities on Long Island and the Inform ation Bureau reports it could do m uch more to ad vertise some o f the little known resorts on the Island if they would be less modest about announcing their attractions.
Proprietors o f hotels open only in summer are preparing for a busy season. Som e already offer week-end service in advance o f the fu ll-tim e opening at the end o f June. They especially offer facilities for conventions, outings and similar events and some im portant bookings are reported.
Long Island fe m e s are preparing for a greater business than heretofore. G reat South Bay ferries are preparing summer schedules more extensive than In past years.
A manufacturing company, moving its entire staff o f more than 400 £rom Boston to New York City, applied to the cham ber for aid In locating homes for its employes on Long Island. S im ilar proposals in lesser number have com e to the Chamber when branch ex ecutives were transferred from other cities to New York, Long Island appeal-
ATLANTIC
1000 Feet South Montauk Highway
A n Eventin S t e r lin g H istory
S T U D E B A K E R S I X70 horsepower 114' wheelbase
Allpricts at tki factory. Bun‘ 8 9 5
P R E S I D E N T E I G H T
‘ 1 8 5 0122 horsepower $ 1 130' wheelbase
A ll Free Wheeling, with positive gear control and one shift lever, instead o f two
Teaspoons, regular. Salad Forks, Ind.. . Butter Spreaders. .Oyster Forks............Iced Tea Spoons....Coffee Spoons........Dessert Knives........Dessert Forks..........Dinner Knives........Dinner Forks..........
IN PRICES RANGING FROM
$3.75, $6.75, $10.75
GROUPS PRICED AS LOW AS$3, $5, $7.50 to $10
THESE ARE OUT OF OUR REGULAR FINE STOCKBEGINNING TODAY UNTIL M AY 30
ing to them as the ideal place for their new homes.
Strong indication o f interest in homes on Long Island noticed at the Chamber's Inform ation Bureau is the steadily increasing number o f calls for the 1931 Long Island Yearbook, the Islandwide Survey o f Communities. This will be ready for distribution in May.
Acknowledgement c a r d s in any quantity may be obtained at The Star Office. Tw enty-four cards and envelopes, $1.20. Name imprinted, 75 cents extra.—Adv.
Northwest M ay 24. 1931.
Quite some idea I should say, putting bells on cats to get them hung up on trees and shrubs to strangle to death! Besides, if cats are well fed and cared for they seldom, if ever, bother birds; I have raised and trained enough to know that.
M uch better if they gather up some o f the stray dogs that annoy people night and day, and chase cats a n d : steal their food, and probably killed
m y little black pet because he was lam e and could not clim b a tree to get away from them.
M any a poor cat and kitten dropped in the woods to hunt a hom e and something to eat has to live on birds and wild game or starve. Also lots o f young rabbits are killed by dogs running at large. I f a dog is kept chained and ha lf starved, when let loose he will go miles to find food o f some kind. G od ’s pet birds get fed every day when I am at home.
This from a friend to cats or good, ] well-trained dogs. A lso to G od ’s dear I little birds.
Studebaker is all setNo Summer model changes
C O M M A N D E R E I G H T
* 1 5 8 5124r wheelbase $ 1 101 horsepower
CEMENT BLOCKS AND TILE— POW ER TAMPED
TEN months ago Studebaker pioneered FreeWheeling.. .and today it seems the
world of motor cars is planning to vindicate the pioneer . . . proposing to make Free Wheeling as universal as the electric starter.
With FreeWheeling, Studebaker is inaugurating new principles of propulsion without which any modern car is already old! . . . principles that save 15% to 20% in gasoline and o il. . . reduce clutch-pushing and ease gear-shifting . . . provide new measures of safety already approved by traffic officials from coast to coast!
But deeds speak louder than details! .. . the speed and stamina of Studebaker cars are established by official stock car records . . . and their thrift with Free Wheeling is certified by Studebaker’s recent capture of the national economy championship from 39 cars of 19 makes.
These four FreeWheeling Studebakers are years ahead of their time! Whoever buys a car bearing the Studebaker name and the impress of Studebaker workmanship, is protected by Studebaker’s 79-year policy of progress with permanence.
TUCKER & MURRAY GARAGE CO.BRIDGEHAM PTON, L. I.
.$ 5.00
. 7.50
. 6.00
. 5.00
. 9.00
. 4.00
. 12.50
. 12.50
. 16.50
. 16.00
A 16-piece Honeymoon Set consisting o f 4 each Dessert Knives, Dessert Forks, Individual Salad Forks, Tea Spoons— all heavy weight in the new—
/V4 i $ $ A l v i n patternfor only ,2 5
Reg. Price $25 Special, $21.25MISS ALVIN IS AS U P-TO -D A TE AS THE LATEST PARIS GOW N—H A R M ONIZING W I T II T H E VERY LATEST TREND IN DESIGN— THE M ODERN EMPIRE. M ISS ALVIN IS AN OPEN STOCK PATTERN— ALL PIECES PRICED TO SURPRISE YOU— FOR INSTANCE—