A Busy Weekend for the Police - NYS Historic...
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Transcript of A Busy Weekend for the Police - NYS Historic...
FOufiTSE EAST HAMPTON STAS, EAST HAMPTOX. N. SZPTEI.iBE5 13, laSB
Nursing Graduate A Busy Weekend for the PoliceThe Presbyterian Church has
scheduled a registration session for its Church school, to be held at 9:30 a.m. Sunday at the Session House. Also scheduled to be held is a rally day service at 11 a.m. Sunday, Sept. 29 in the Church.
The East Hampton Chamber of Commerce has scheduled a general dinner meeting for Tuesday, Oct. 1, at the Summer Place on the Montauk Highway.
Mrs. Harry Allaire is assisting her husband, who is East Hampton chairman of the South Fork Concert Association membership campaign here this year, as are Mrs. Cleon Dodge, Mrs. Saul Wolf, Mrs. Samuel Davis, Mrs. Robert Brill, Mrs. Robert Osborne, Mrs. John Strong, Thomas Nappi, Mrs. John Lester, and Mrs. Thomas Strong.
Mrs. Carol Lubetkin, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Renkens of Sherrill Road, has returned to Indiana University to resume graduate studies in music there after spending a vacation with her parents. She will also teach piano under a teaching assistanceship.
Janet B. Horne of Jones Road is registered for the fall term at Pine Manor Junior College in Chestnut Hill, Mass.
A bake sale will be held on the steps of the VFW Building Saturday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. The event, sponsored by the youth choir of Calvary Baptist Church, w ill benefit the Church building fund.
The Eastern Gate Garden Club met at the home of Mrs. Ellery James, Hook Pond Road on Sept. 6. Mrs. William Abel presided. The meeting was held on the patio, and then members visited Mrs. James’ workshop, where she showed arrangements of greens, dried wild flowers, and artificial flowers.
Members of the Church School will join the congregation o f the Methodist Church at the 11 a.m. service on Oct. 6, World Communion Day. The program was planned Monday evening at a meeting with Mrs. Henry Miller, president of the commission on education, and Miss Enid Hoff, Church School president, presiding.
A crib program for children three years old and under has been set up, with Mrs. Joseph Silvey in charge. Mrs. Carl Johanson will teach a nursery group, from three to five years in age.
There was a reception for the Rev. and Mrs. Donald S. Stacey last Sunday afternoon.
Miss Susan M. Abel, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. William G. Abel, has completed two years of preparation at Heidelberg College, Tiffin, Ohio, and has entered Columbia University as a junior in the School of Nursing. The school is part of the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center at 168 Street and Broadway, New York.
On Tuesday, Sept. 24, at 7:30 p.m., in the Methodist Church Hall, the local Cubmasters will meet with parents of boys interested in joining the local Cub Scout pack. Boys must be eight years old or be in the third grade in school to join.
Thomas Beebe, son o f Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Beebe, 14 Palma Terrace, left Monday for Navy recruit training at Great Lakes, 111. He will enter electronics training after basic.
Brian Jones, the son of Mrs. John Ward of North Main Street, returned on Saturday to Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y. where he is a junior.
Dr. Edwin C. Rowe of East Hampton was reelected chairman of the Hamptons Heart Unit at the group’s annual meeting Sept. 10 at the John Duck Jr. Restaurant in Southampton. Dr. Rowe reported that the 1968 Heart Fund drive had brought in $17,746, the most successful campaign here to date.
Bonnie Marie Cross, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Marc D'Eon, North Main Street, left Friday for State University Agricultural and Technical College at Morrisville, where she will be a freshman.
A four-team volleyball league is being established, and w ill play Tuesdays at the High School gym nasium from 7 to 8:45 p.m. Those interested have been asked to speak to Bernard Zeldin.
William Leese, president o f the First National Bank o f East Hampton, spoke at a meeting of the Rotary Club at the Villa d’Or Restaurant. He spoke on banking and the general financial picture.
The Rotary’s October meeting will be a ladies’ night, the Club’s first, it was announced by Joseph Fallon, president.
Miss Deborah Lawler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Lawler, Egypt Lane, left last week for the Grace Downs A ir Career School in Glen Cove, where she w ill study to be a stewardess, model, or executive secretary.
Her brother Richard left last week for his junior year at St. Michael’s College in Winooski, Vt., a week early for football practice. His brother James is a senior at St. Michael’s, and flew part of the way to school with Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Topping of Wainscott in their plane.
The East Hampton volunteer firemen extinguished a fire on Sept. 9 at 46 Sherrill Road, where Sam Stanley’s panel truck was burning. The 3 p.m. fire was extinguished with little damage.
Last Monday, a fire in a dishwashing machine at Ed’s Luncheonette, Newtown Lane, was extinguished with little damage.
The East Hampton Organization for Community Action will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at Calvary Baptist Church. There w ill be a talk on self-help housing.
SUMMER COLONYAt the annual meeting o f “ Ono
Birds Unlimited” on Sept. 13 at the Audubon Club in New York, Phillip W. Brown o f Pudding Hill Lane and Key Largo, Fla., was elected to the board of directors for 1968-70.
MISS SHARON RHODES, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rhodes and step-daughter of Mrs. Myrtle Rhodes of 18 Miller Terrace, East Hampton, was graduated from the Pilgrim Stale Hospital school of nursing on Friday as a registered nurse. She received a special award for proficiency in the geriatric nursing course. Miss Rhodes plans to w ork at Pilgrim State this fall, and will do graduate work at C. W. Post College beginning in January.
With The PoliceThe East Hampton Village Police
investigated one accident in the past week, a coming-together o f two Chevrolets at the Egypt Lane- Montauk Highway intersection at 8:10 a.m. last Thursday.
Involved were a 1959 sedan, driven by Junius B. Parham, 49, o f 111 Pelletreau Street, Southampton, which was towed away, and a 1961 pickup, driven by George Hettiger, 64, of 167 Accabonac Road, East Hampton. There were no injuries. Sergeant Joseph Loris investigated.
A t 2 a.m. Sunday, Ben D. Aiken, 23, of Ridge Road, Monmouth, N. J., was arrested on Woods Lane in the Village by Patrolman Bruce Carter. He was charged with speeding and driving without a license, and was fined $23 by Justice R. Thomas Strong.
DEEDS
East Hampton Town and State Park policemen coped with a variety o f incidents in the past week. There were accidents, lost children found, and arrests on narcotics charges.
Linda Blowe, 12. of Springs Road, East Hampton, was injured in a Friday the 13th accident while en route to school on her bicycle. In crossing Jackson Street, she ran into the side of a 1962 Plymouth, driven by Dixie J. Hayes, 26, of Town Lane, East Hampton.
Patrolmen Cesare Cerchiai and Barry Jarett applied first aid until the arrival of Dr. Lucian Capobianco, who ordered Linda taken to the Southampton Hospital, where her condition was reported as satisfactory yesterday.
Saturday was a busy day. Patrolman Cerchiai arrested Alfred L. Murphy, 50, of the White Sands Motel, Napeague, on a charge of criminal trespass. The information was sworn to by a neighbor, George A. McHatton, 43, of 102 Shore Road. Napeague. Mr. Murphy was released for a hearing at a later date.
Lost Are Found A t 11:30 a.m., H. A. Fink, of
Gardiner Avenue and Three Mile Harbor Road, reported that a boy, obviously lost, had wandered up to his home. The versatile Patrolman Cerchiai ascertained that the youngster was Peter Brown, six, of Hog Creek Lane.
Later in the day, Patricia Ryan reported a girl found at the Indian Wells Highway beach in Amagansett. Patrolman Bruce Lyons, after an hour and a half of trying, found that the little girl was Aggie A llison, two. While he was trying to find her family, leaving the girl in Miss Ryan’s custody, the infant’s father, who would not identify himself, arrived and claimed Aggie.
At The Point That evening at the State Park
near Montauk Light, Patrolman Thomas Simpson of the Park Police, observed an auto leaving the parking lot “ in a hurry.” A paper bag was thrown from it as it left.
Patrolman Simpson pursued and halted the car. Assisted by Park Patrolmen John McCarrick, Donald O’Connell, and Thomas Grenchi, w ho commands the police post at
the park, five men were arrested on charges of criminal possession o f a dangerous drug.
The police said a search of the car and the discarded bag turned up “ incense, remnants of cigarettes, hypodermic needles . . . and a considerable quantity of material which appeared to be narcotics.” The material is being analyzed at the County Police Department laboratory in Hauppauge.
Those arrested were identified as Mario Mollo, 22, of 701 Rutland Road, Brooklyn; Gerald S. Dorman. 31, of 117-37 228th Street, Cambria Heights; Charles A. Schiffmacher, 28, of 117- 12 229th Street, Cambria Heights; James I. Sandroff, 21, o f 2324 Boston Road, the Bronx; and Drian Douglas Boyle, 23, of 60 Midvale Avenue, Millington, N. J.
$2,500 Bail With the assistance o f Detective
Bruce Baldwin of the Town Police, the men were brought before Justice R. Thomas Strong, w ho set bail at $2,500 apiece. The bail was later posted, and they w ill be examined at 1 p.m. next Wednesday.
Earlier Saturday, the Town Police
GOP CLUBContinued From Page 1
arms; and Frederick Yardley of were called after a 1963 Pontiac Springs is historian, convertible driven by Ralph Virgilio, a regular slate of officers w ill17, of Hampton Waters and White- \,e nominated in December. Thestone, hit a tree just o ff the unpaved Young Republicans will meet nextportion o f Stephen Hand's Path, in at g p.m. Oct. 8 at the SouthamptonNorthwest Woods. Neither Ralph nor Elks Club, his passenger. Forbes Riva, o f Hand's Creek Road, were hurt.
At 6:30 p.m. Sunday, a 1948 Chrysler driven by John Collins, 19, of St. James, and a 1967 Volkswagen diven by Farrell F. MacTernan, 63, of the Bronx, collided at the intersection of the Old and New Montauk Highways in Montauk.
The Volkswagen, which was towed away, suffered an estimated $300 damage, and the Chrysler was dented to the tune of $100. There were no injuries, and Patrolman Harold St. George investigated.
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MRS. MARJORIE A. KENNARD, ASSOCIATELaForest Road East Hampton, N. Y.
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G J Wright to I C Topping, lot 18, Cedar Court, Amagansett.
Virginia E Hennessey to D H Gunn & w lots 21-25, Inc., Cobblers Hill Hgts., East Hampton.
Dime Sav Bk to Maude G Rhodes, Pci S S Cedar St., East Hampton.
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R E Dengel Jr to L W Gif fin, pci E S Millstone Rd., Noyac.
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Constance I Tuttle to J Fenyo, pci SE S Jobs Lane, Mecox, Southampton.
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Minnie C Smith to Marjorie R Ludlow, lot 16, Bridgehampton Estates, Mecox Southampton.
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