galley—honyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn96083590/1975-10-09/ed-1/seq-2.… · octobcr as...

1
PAGE TWO LONG ISLAND TRAVELER-WATCHMAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1975 ®bitttaric0 WILLIAM W. POLAKIEWICZ William W. Polakiewicz. 63. of 377 Marcy Ave., Riverhead, died in Central Suffolk Hospital, Wednesday morning, October 1. 1975. A carpent- er by trade, he was born in Wading River on November 18, 1911, the son of the late Steven and Theophila Polakiewicz. He is survived by his wife, Helen, one daughter, Mary Ann Rausch of Flanders; three sons, William of Pensacola, Fla., Peter and Joseph of Riverhead: three brothers, Steven of Riverhead, and Felix and Richard of San Diego, Calif., and two sisters, Anastasia Polakiewicz and Mary Pinta, both of Riverhead. Three grandchildren also survive. Prayer services were held at the Danowski Funeral Home on Friday evening, October 3, at 8 p.m. A Mass of the Resurrection was celebrated at St. Isidore's R.C. Church on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. Interment followed in St. Isidore's R.C. Cemetery. MRS. MARY BITTNER Mrs. Mary Bittner, 84, of East Legion Avenue, Mattituck, wife of the late Charles K. Bittner, died October 2,1975 at the Eastern Suffolk Nursing Home, Greenport. She was born in Poland on September 5, 1891 and had lived in Southold Town for 34 years. Mrs. Bittner was a member of the Polish National Alliance Society. She is survived by a son, Paul Bittner, Cutchogue, and a daughter, Helen D. O’Brien, Mattituck; three granddaughters also survive. A Recitation of the Rosary was held at the DeFriest Funeral Home, Inc., Mattituck Sunday evening. Mass of the Resurrection was celebrated October 6, 1975 at Our Lady of Ostrabrama. Interment was in Sacred Heart Cemetery. DAVID H. HUNT David H. Hunt, 50, of Overlook Drive, Wading River, died on Octo- ber 2, 1975, at Mather Memorial Hospital, Port Jefferson. He is survived by his wife, Muriel; one son, David H., Jr., and one daughter. Miss Alison Hunt. A funeral Mass was held at the St. John the Baptist R.C.' Churth, Wad- ing River, on Saturday. October 4. Interment followect'at the Wading River Cemetery under the direction of the Reginald H. Tuthill Funeral Home. FANNIE T. BLASKO Fannie T. Blasko, 81, of 609 Pulaski Street, Riverhead, died at her home, Sunday afternoon, October 5. 1975. The daughter of the late Joachim and Christina Orlowski. she was born in Calverton on July 9. 1894, and lived there the greater part of her life. She was the wife of the late Bruno Blasko, a well-known and respected farmer. Mrs. Blasko is survived by five sons and four daughters. Steven Blasko of Calverton, John Blasko of Mt. Sinai, Frank Blasko of Aque- bogue, William Blasko of Riverhead, Carl Blasko of Greenport, Theresa Mountford of Wesminster, Calif., and Leona Smith, Amelia Bauer and Christine Blasko of Riverhead. She is also survived by one brother, Bolix Orlowski of Stamford, N.Y.; and four sisters, Josephine Sullivan of New Paltz, N.Y., Rose Gradowski of Pe- conic, Christine Fordham of Linden- hurst, and Anna James of Calverton. Twenty one granchildren and five great grandchildren also survive. Prayer services were at the Dan- owski Funeral Home, Riverhead, on Tuesday. October 7, at 8p.m. A Mass of the Resurrection was celebrated at St. Isidore’s R.C. Church on Wed- nesday. October 8. at 9:30 a.m. Interment followed in the family plot in St. John’s R.C. Cemetery. River- head. EXTENDS CLINIC HOURS The Bide-A-Wee Home Associa - tion announces that the veterinary clinic at its Westhampton Shelter on Old Country Road is now open to the public Monday through Saturday. 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. by appointment only. Telephone 325-0280 or 325- 0276. Attending veterinarians are Dr. Warren G. Hoag, Chief of Veterinary Services, and Dr. Stanley G. Penny. Oysters At H a lf P rice SOUTHOLD ROTARY heard remarks from, second from right, First District Legislators Norton “ Bucket” Daniels at their September 30 meeting. Bucket was the guest of, right, Ray Rignel. He is viewed talking to, left to right, Ray Terry, John Nickles and Rennselaer Terry. The Legislator repeated his support of retaining the lone remaining county dredge, considered necessary to the east end, commented on withdrawing the Orient County Park concept after opposition from Orient residents and came out strongly opposing the change from town to county administration of welfare. Photo by Jules Rieff It Will Be A Week To Remember Fresh Long Island oysters on the half shell, produced by Long Island Oyster Farms, Inc., arc being offered at half pricc during the entire month of Oclobcr by leading eastern Long Island restaurants.' 'Jhis first-ever offer is being made’ ys a salute to Octobcr as "oyster month" on the Island, and as a special inducement to Long Islanders to enjoy their most famous shellfish delicacy at very moderate cost. Joining L.I.O.F. in making the ■ oysters available at the new low menu prices, effective for both lunch and dinner servings, are these eating places in the Greenport-Southold area: Clam Bar. Claudio's Restaur- ant, Fabri/io's Restaurant, Island's End Gold Club, La Gazelle at the Southold Inn. Mitchell's Restaurant. Old Oyster Factory. Port of Egypt. Raymond's Restaurant. Ross' Res- taurant. Skipper's Restaurant. Sound View Restaurant. The Sea Shell and Townsend Manor. In further celebration of native oysters. L.I.O.F is atjain p.TVtirip.Ttinp, in the annual Greenport Oyster Festival, to be held under the spon- sorship of the Greenport-Southold Chamber of Commerce on Saturday, October II. Tours of oyster farm headquarters and processing plant, located on Shipyard Lane in East Marion, will be offered, and a booth at the American Legion Hall here will feature the service of freshly shucked L.I.O.F. oysters. The fifth annual festival, which each year attracts increasingly large numbers of visitors to this commun- ity, will also feature exhibits of the work of artists and craftsmen in the area. Tickets to this event include ad- mission to all exhibits, one stuffed clam, three L.I.O.F. oysters on the half-shell, one beverage and the round-trip bus ride to and tour of the L.I.O.F. facilities. Festival hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; admission charges announced by the Chamber of Com- merce are $2 each for adults and $1 each for children. The busiest, most-oversizcd-in- every-dimcnsion week in this town for many a long year is being planned - as if you hadn't guessed - for 1976. Something will be happening every day and almost every minute. It will be. .of course, the week surrounding July 4. America's 200th birthday and it will constitute the very heart of the year-long celebration programed by the Southold Town Bi- centennial Committee. It will be an eight-day week, actually, starting on Saturday. July 3, and ending on Saturday. July 10. A necessarily rough, but con- sequently tantalizing, sketch of the proposed festivities was drawn for the Bicentennial Committee at a meeting at the town hall last Thurs- day night by Jonathan Richmond of Greenport. chairman of the festival committee, and his co-chairman, Richard Winters of Southold. The week's opening ceremonies, at a still-undetermined place and time, will start things off on the morning of July 3. to be followed by a sailboat race sponsored by the Eastern Long Island Yacht Club. The proposed course would be from Southold to Sag Harbor to Greenport. Discussions will be held with the various com- mercial institutions involved in the fishing industry to sec if a clam bake can't be organized later in the day. Even though the legal holiday conies on Monday. Sunday is Fourth of July on the calendar and will be appropriately observed. Church serv- ices will be coordinated in some way but no town-wide ecumenical service is in the works. High point of the day will be a reading of the Declaration of Independence, hopefully, with the aid of a public-address system, to an outdoor audience in Southold Village. Then, after a "picnic with old-fash - ioned games", there will be gigantic fireworks display. The plan is to run buses to the fireworks site, which will be near the water. Monday is bicycle day. Among other events, there will be a historic tour, a decorated-bike parade, a tricycle race and a bicycle safety program. Greenport will be the center of that day's activities and a picnic aiid a band concert are likely. A fc\f new town records may be set and certainly some town titles cap- tured on Tuesday. July 6. which is track-and-field day at Mattituck. Pic - nic and music that night - every night OPENALLYEAR!!! Galley—Ho Diiiiiers Mon.-Thurs. 5-9:30 Fri.-Sat. 5-10 pm Sundays 12-9 ^ n o r t h Everyday 18 OZ. N.Y. SIRLOIN STEAK $4.75 BOILED/BROILED STUFFED 11/2 LB. LOBSTER 5.95 FRESH BAY SCALLOPS FRIED $4.25 SAUTEED $4.50 PRIME RIBS OF BEEF DUCK A L’ORANGE $5.25 $4.75 FRESH FISH OF THE DAY_______________$3.50 FRESH SHRiMP SCAMPI__________________5.50 SLICED SIRLOIN OF BEEiF________________3.75 BROILED LAMB CHOPS (2 ) ______________ 5.95 10-oz. N.Y. STRIP STEAK SANDWICH_____ 3.75 FRIED SOFT SHELL CRABS (3) ___________ 5.00 All the above served with our Home Baked Bread, Salad and Potato Dinner Menu features other such items as... Our Famous Fi'esli Lobster-Meul-in-Bulter-Sauee Steamed Seafood Dinner • Jumbo Lobster Tails, Filet Mi^non Homemade New England Clam Chowder Clams on the Half Shell Steamers and Much More. f'nnte enjoy a Fantastic Meal at Our Low Priees prepared by our Brillant Younf! (^hef, Richard (iihbs, Jr. CurcH06ue yi. Site of the United States’ First Submarine Base Located On Peconic Bay [North Fork Shipyard] Galiey Ho Restaurant, New Suffoilt, N.Y. 734-5330 Dean Biaikie, Prop. for the rest of the week, in fact, in dilTcrent places: Cutchogue-New Suffolk Wednesday. Southold Thurs- day and Orient-East Marion Friday. Wednesday will be devoted to historic tours, perhaps a whole series ofthem with the historical societies in Orient. Greenport, Southold. Cutch- ogue and Mattituck co-operating. This could be one of the major days of the week. There will be swimming races Wednesday, too. Small boat racing will hold the spotlight on Thursday. Sailboats, rowboats and canoes will compete at spots and times yet to be decided. The boy and girl scouts will have their place in the sun on Friday, according to present plans, and there will be sailboat and power boat demonstra- tions. but without any sales pitches. What - no parade? You're wrong - the big procession, a real five-ring circus, will take place on Saturday, July 10. Floats, bands, marchers: the works! And it won't be in any one community: it will be townwide. or. more accuratcly. town-long. As of the moment, it is scheduled to start at Mattituck and end at Greenport. with the fioats chugging along all the route but the musicians and marchers Southold Club For Toastmasters The embryonic Toastmasters' club of Southold Township will hold its organizational meeting in Southold Firehouse at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Octo- ber 10. It is open to all men and women who are interested in learning to speak in public. Applications for Charter Membership in the new club will be received; the program com- mon to Toastmasters Clubs, will be presented, questions answered and being carried by buses from the outskirts of one community to the beginningof the next, where they will jump out and reassemble. There will be an art show in Greenport that Saturday and a Ger- man Festival. Goodness knows what else. Chairman Richmond emphasized that everything is still in the planning stage. Nothing is absolutely solid, he said, and there will be all sorts of additions, subtractions, substitutions and other changes before the final program is* announced. But make no mistake - it will be a week to remember. LEJAY JEW ELERS The Swiss Wafchmaker — Est. 1938 117 GRIPPING AVENUE RIVERHEAD Watches - Diamonds - Fine jevNt‘lr\ Expert Watch & Jewelry Re|)air> Diamond Setting;; — Reslvlinj: Certified Watchmaker — Diamond Expert r by Pam For Appointmenf Call 765-2040 Main Road, Southold (Next To Mullen Motors) (Closed Mondays) S o u n d P recisio n R ep a ir, in c. • Burglar & Fire Alarms installed & Serviced • Hold-up Alarms • Closed Circuit TV Free Estimates M ain Road G reenport 477-1011 PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO & CAMERA SHOP COLOR PORTRAITS - WEDDINGS Movie I.V : Still Cameras Piojcclors Enlargers Flash it Other Accessories Albums Frames & Mounts Supplies Developing & Printing Dark Koom Ecjiii,pment Open Dully 9:30-5 North Rd & Horton’s Lane SOUTHOLD 765-5777 PICKWICK SHOPPE ANTIQUES - FUPNJTURE BRIC A BRAC AND GLASS WARE BOUGHT AND SOLD WE BUY CONTENTS OF HOMES Appi'uisuliii Rutli & Hennuii Herinji Props. Tel. 516-765-3158 West MuiiiRoad, Southold, L.I. 11971 material distributed. A steering com- mittee and temporary officers will be elected. The time and dates of future meetings will be determined. A Toastmasters Club is a voluntary association of men and women who desire to gain facility in the art of communication and this they do at Club meetings by using their own resources. Toastmastering draws out and puts to use the talents and abilities of each member. A Toast- masters Club is not just another school. At Club meetings, members learn by doing and they are counsel- led only by other members. Club meetings are stimulating, happy and healthy experiences. The organizational meeting Octo- ber 10 is sponsored by Arnold Robinson and Stan Waimey of Cutch- ogue, by Jun Albertson and Art Avedon of Southold, by Mrs. Walter Kohnle of Greenport, and by John Blackwell of East Marion. A Certifi- cate of Permission to organize a Toastmasters Club here, has been received by Mr. Robinson from Toastmasters International of Santa Ana, Calif. Visit To Red China Is Highlighted Dr. Konrad Chang Hsu, Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, professor emeritus of microbiology will give a slide illus- trated talk “ A Visit to Red China in May 1975” at the First Universalist Church of Southold, Thursday, Octo- ber 16, 8 P.M. in the Sanctuary. Dr. Hsu is one of the few American basic scientists who have toured the People’s Republic of China since 1972. A graduate of St. John’s University in Shanghai, Dr. Hsu received his PhD in chemistry from Columbia University in 1924, returned to Shanghai as professor of chemistry and dean of the College of Science at Great China University from 1924- 1926 and served in various Chinese Government posts until 1937. From 1938 to 1954, Dr. Hsu engaged in the import-export busi - ness. He joined the department df microbiology of the College of Phy- sicians and Surgeons, Columbia Uni- versity in 1954 and rose to full professor. He has published over 100 biomedical articles. Most of Dr. Hsu’s research dealing with immune reactions in disease has been sup- ported by grants from the U.S. Public Health Service, including the Nation- al Cancer Institute. Dr. Hsu became an American citizen in 1962. ‘THE FANTASTICKS’ Free tickets for the internationally- acclaimed, award-winning musical The Fantasticks are now available in the Babylon Student Center Ticket Office at Suffolk County Community College, 533 College Road, Selden. Performance dates are October 15, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24 and 25 at 8 p.m. in the Islip Arts Theater at the Selden campus. There is a limit of six tickets per customer. In The Traveler Calv.<;rton 12 Churches 30 Classified 34,35 Coffee Break 7 Cutchogue Column 5 East Marlon Column 4 Editorials 6 Greenport 4 Legals 30,31 Mattituck 5 Movies 36 North Fork Living 17,18 Obituaries 2 Riverhead Column 11 Social Calendar 30 Southold Column 3 South Fork News 13,16 Sports 20-29 Patricia Wood Reports 7 Wading River 13

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Page 1: Galley—Honyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn96083590/1975-10-09/ed-1/seq-2.… · Octobcr as "oyster month" on the Island, and as a special inducement to Long Islanders to enjoy their

PAGE TWO LONG ISLAND TRAVELER-WATCHMAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1975

® b i t t t a r i c 0

WILLIAM W. POLAKIEWICZWilliam W. Polakiewicz. 63. of 377

Marcy Ave., Riverhead, died in Central Suffolk Hospital, Wednesday morning, October 1. 1975. A carpent­er by trade, he was born in Wading River on November 18, 1911, the son of the late Steven and Theophila Polakiewicz.

He is survived by his wife, Helen, one daughter, Mary Ann Rausch of Flanders; three sons, William of Pensacola, Fla., Peter and Joseph of Riverhead: three brothers, Steven of Riverhead, and Felix and Richard of San Diego, Calif., and two sisters, Anastasia Polakiewicz and Mary Pinta, both of Riverhead. Three grandchildren also survive.

Prayer services were held at the Danowski Funeral Home on Friday evening, October 3, at 8 p.m. A Mass of the Resurrection was celebrated at St. Isidore's R.C. Church on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. Interment followed in St. Isidore's R.C. Cemetery.

MRS. MARY BITTNERMrs. Mary Bittner, 84, of East

Legion Avenue, Mattituck, wife of the late Charles K. Bittner, died October 2,1975 at the Eastern Suffolk Nursing Home, Greenport. She was born in Poland on September 5, 1891 and had lived in Southold Town for 34 years.

Mrs. Bittner was a member of the Polish National Alliance Society.

She is survived by a son, Paul Bittner, Cutchogue, and a daughter, Helen D. O’Brien, Mattituck; three granddaughters also survive.

A Recitation of the Rosary was held at the DeFriest Funeral Home, Inc., Mattituck Sunday evening. Mass of the Resurrection was celebrated October 6, 1975 at Our Lady of Ostrabrama. Interment was in Sacred Heart Cemetery.

DAVID H. HUNTDavid H. Hunt, 50, of Overlook

Drive, Wading River, died on Octo­ber 2, 1975, at M ather Memorial Hospital, Port Jefferson.

He is survived by his wife, Muriel; one son, David H., J r . , and one daughter. Miss Alison Hunt.

A funeral Mass was held at the St. John the Baptist R.C.' Churth, W ad­ing River, on Saturday. October 4. Interment followect'at the Wading River Cemetery under the direction of the Reginald H. Tuthill Funeral Home.

FANNIE T. BLASKOFannie T. Blasko, 81, of 609 Pulaski

Street, Riverhead, died at her home, Sunday afternoon, October 5. 1975. The daughter of the late Joachim and Christina Orlowski. she was born in Calverton on July 9. 1894, and lived there the greater part of her life. She was the wife of the late Bruno Blasko, a well-known and respected farmer.

Mrs. Blasko is survived by five sons and four daughters. Steven Blasko of Calverton, John Blasko of Mt. Sinai, Frank Blasko of Aque- bogue, William Blasko of Riverhead, Carl Blasko of Greenport, Theresa Mountford of Wesminster, Calif., and Leona Smith, Amelia Bauer and Christine Blasko of Riverhead. She is also survived by one brother, Bolix Orlowski of Stamford, N.Y.; and four sisters, Josephine Sullivan of New Paltz, N.Y., Rose Gradowski of Pe- conic, Christine Fordham of Linden­hurst, and Anna Jam es of Calverton. Twenty one granchildren and five great grandchildren also survive.

Prayer services were at the Dan­owski Funeral Home, Riverhead, on Tuesday. October 7, at 8 p.m. A Mass of the Resurrection was celebrated at St. Isidore’s R.C. Church on W ed­nesday. October 8. at 9:30 a.m. Interment followed in the family plot in St. John ’s R.C. Cemetery. River- head.

EXTENDS CLINIC HOURSThe Bide-A-Wee Home Associa­

tion announces that the veterinary clinic at its W esthampton Shelter on Old Country Road is now open to the public Monday through Saturday. 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. by appointment only. Telephone 325-0280 or 325- 0276. Attending veterinarians are Dr. Warren G. Hoag, Chief of Veterinary Services, and Dr. Stanley G. Penny.

O y s t e r s A t H a l f P r i c e

SOUTHOLD ROTARY heard remarks from, second from right, First District Legislators Norton “ Bucket” Daniels at their September 30 meeting. Bucket was the guest of, right, Ray Rignel. He is viewed talking to, left to right, Ray Terry, John Nickles and Rennselaer Terry. The Legislator repeated his support of retaining the lone remaining county dredge, considered necessary to the east end, commented on withdrawing the Orient County Park concept after opposition from Orient residents and came out strongly opposing the change from town to county administration of welfare. Photo by Jules Rieff

It Will Be A W eek To R em em ber

Fresh Long Island oysters on the half shell, produced by Long Island Oyster Farms, Inc., arc being offered at half pricc during the entire month of Oclobcr by leading eastern Long Island restaurants.' 'Jh is first-ever offer is being made’ ys a salute to Octobcr as "oyster month" on the Island, and as a special inducement to Long Islanders to enjoy their most famous shellfish delicacy at very moderate cost.

Joining L.I.O.F. in making the ■ oysters available at the new low menu

prices, effective for both lunch and dinner servings, are these eating places in the Greenport-Southold area: Clam Bar. Claudio's Restaur­ant, Fabri/io 's Restaurant, Island's End Gold Club, La Gazelle at the Southold Inn. Mitchell's Restaurant. Old Oyster Factory. Port of Egypt. Raymond's Restaurant. Ross' Res­taurant. Skipper's Restaurant. Sound View Restaurant. The Sea Shell and Townsend Manor.

In further celebration of native oysters. L.I.O.F is atjain p.TVtirip.Ttinp,

in the annual Greenport Oyster Festival, to be held under the spon­sorship of the Greenport-Southold Chamber of Commerce on Saturday, October II . Tours of oyster farm headquarters and processing plant, located on Shipyard Lane in East Marion, will be offered, and a booth at the American Legion Hall here will feature the service of freshly shucked L.I.O.F. oysters.

The fifth annual festival, which each year attracts increasingly large numbers of visitors to this commun­ity, will also feature exhibits of the work of artists and craftsmen in the area.

Tickets to this event include ad ­mission to all exhibits, one stuffed clam, three L.I.O.F. oysters on the half-shell, one beverage and the round-trip bus ride to and tour of the L.I.O.F. facilities. Festival hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; admission charges announced by the Chamber of Com­merce are $2 each for adults and $1 each for children.

The busiest, most-oversizcd-in- every-dimcnsion week in this town for many a long year is being planned - as if you hadn 't guessed - for 1976. Something will be happening every day and almost every minute.

It will be. .of course, the week surrounding July 4. America's 200th birthday and it will constitute the very heart of the year-long celebration programed by the Southold Town Bi­centennial Committee. It will be an eight-day week, actually, starting on Saturday. July 3, and ending on Saturday. July 10.

A necessarily rough, but con­sequently tantalizing, sketch of the proposed festivities was drawn for the Bicentennial Committee at a meeting at the town hall last Thurs­day night by Jonathan Richmond of Greenport. chairman of the festival committee, and his co-chairman, Richard Winters of Southold.

The week's opening ceremonies, at a still-undetermined place and time, will start things off on the morning of July 3. to be followed by a sailboat race sponsored by the Eastern Long Island Yacht Club. The proposed course would be from Southold to Sag Harbor to Greenport. Discussions

will be held with the various com­mercial institutions involved in the fishing industry to sec if a clam bake can't be organized later in the day.

Even though the legal holiday conies on Monday. Sunday is Fourth of July on the calendar and will be appropriately observed. Church serv­ices will be coordinated in some way but no town-wide ecumenical service is in the works. High point of the day will be a reading of the Declaration of Independence, hopefully, with the aid of a public-address system, to an outdoor audience in Southold Village. Then, after a "picnic with old-fash­ioned gam es" , there will be gigantic fireworks display. The plan is to run buses to the fireworks site, which will be near the water.

Monday is bicycle day. Among other events, there will be a historic tour, a decorated-bike parade, a tricycle race and a bicycle safety program. Greenport will be the center of that day 's activities and a picnic aiid a band concert are likely.

A fc\f new town records may be set and certainly some town titles cap­tured on Tuesday. July 6. which is track-and-field day at Mattituck. Pic­nic and music that night - every night

OPEN ALL YEAR!!!Galley—Ho

D i i i i i e r s

M o n . - T h u r s . 5 - 9 : 3 0

F r i . - S a t . 5 - 1 0 p m

S u n d a y s 1 2 - 9 ^ n o r t h

E veryday★ 18 OZ. N.Y. SIRLOIN STEAK $4 .75★ BO ILED /BROILED STUFFED

11/2 LB. LOBSTER 5 .95★ FRESH BAY SCALLOPS FR IED $ 4 .2 5

SAUTEED $4 .50★ PRIM E RIBS O F BEEF★ DUCK A L’ORANGE

$5 .25$4 .75

FRESH FISH OF THE D A Y _______________$3.50FRESH SHRiMP SCAMPI__________________5.50SLICED SIRLOIN OF BEEiF________________3.75BROILED LAMB CHOPS (2 )______________ 5.9510-oz. N.Y. STRIP STEAK SANDWICH_____ 3.75FRIED SOFT SHELL CRABS (3 )___________ 5.00

All the above served with our Home Baked Bread, Salad and Potato

Dinner Menu features other such items as...O u r F a m o u s F i ' e s l i L o b s t e r - M e u l - i n - B u l t e r - S a u e e

S t e a m e d S e a f o o d D i n n e r • J u m b o L o b s t e r T a i l s , F i l e t M i ^ n o n

H o m e m a d e N e w E n g l a n d C l a m C h o w d e r

C l a m s o n t h e H a l f S h e l l • S t e a m e r s a n d M u c h M o r e .

f'nnte enjoy a Fantastic Meal at Our Low Priees prepared by our Brillant Younf! (̂ hef, Richard (iihbs, Jr.

CurcH06ue

yi.

Site of the United States’ First Submarine Base Located On Peconic Bay [North Fork Shipyard] Galiey Ho Restaurant, New Suffoilt, N.Y. 734-5330 Dean Biaikie, Prop.

for the rest of the week, in fact, in dilTcrent places: Cutchogue-New Suffolk Wednesday. Southold Thurs­day and Orient-East Marion Friday.

Wednesday will be devoted to historic tours, perhaps a whole series ofthem with the historical societies in Orient. Greenport, Southold. Cutch- ogue and Mattituck co-operating. This could be one of the major days of the week. There will be swimming races Wednesday, too.

Small boat racing will hold the spotlight on Thursday. Sailboats, rowboats and canoes will compete at spots and times yet to be decided. The boy and girl scouts will have their place in the sun on Friday, according to present plans, and there will be sailboat and power boat dem onstra­tions. but without any sales pitches.

What - no parade? You're wrong - the big procession, a real five-ring circus, will take place on Saturday, July 10. Floats, bands, marchers: the works! And it won't be in any one community: it will be townwide. or. more accuratcly. town-long. As of the moment, it is scheduled to start at Mattituck and end at Greenport. with the fioats chugging along all the route but the musicians and marchers

Southold Club For ToastmastersThe embryonic Toastmasters' club

of Southold Township will hold its organizational meeting in Southold Firehouse at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Octo­ber 10.

It is open to all men and women who are interested in learning to speak in public. Applications for Charter Membership in the new club will be received; the program com­mon to Toastmasters Clubs, will be presented, questions answered and

being carried by buses from the outskirts of one community to the beginningof the next, where they will jump out and reassemble.

There will be an art show in Greenport that Saturday and a Ger­man Festival. Goodness knows what else.

Chairman Richmond emphasized that everything is still in the planning stage. Nothing is absolutely solid, he said, and there will be all sorts of additions, subtractions, substitutions and other changes before the final program is* announced.

But make no mistake - it will be a week to remember.

L E J A Y J E W E L E R ST h e Swiss W a f c h m a k e r — Est. 1 9 3 8

117 GRIPPING AVENUE RIVERHEAD

Watches - Diamonds - Fine jevNt‘lr\

Expert Watch & Jewelry Re|)air>

Diamond Setting;; — Reslvlinj:C e r t i f i e d W a t c h m a k e r — D ia m o n d E x p er t

r

b y P a mFor Appointmenf

Call 765-2040 Main Road, Southold

(Next To Mullen Motors)

(Closed Mondays)

S o u n d P r e c i s i o n R e p a i r , i n c .

• Burglar & Fire Alarmsinstalled & Serviced

• Hold-up Alarms

• Closed Circuit TVFree Estimates

M a i n R o a d G r e e n p o r t 4 7 7 - 1 0 1 1

PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIO & CAMERA SHOP

COLOR PORTRAITS - WEDDINGS

Movie I.V: Still Cameras Piojcclors EnlargersFlash it Other Accessories AlbumsFrames & Mounts SuppliesDeveloping & Printing Dark Koom Ecjiii,pment

Open Dully 9:30-5 North Rd & Horton’s Lane SOUTHOLD 765-5777

PICKWICK SHOPPEANTIQUES - FUPNJTURE

BRIC A BRAC AND GLASS WARE BOUGHT AND SOLD

WE BUY CONTENTS OF HOMES

A p p i 'u i s u l i i i

R u t l i & H e n n u i i H e r i n j i P r o p s .

T e l . 5 1 6 - 7 6 5 - 3 1 5 8

W e s t M u i i i R o a d , S o u t h o l d , L . I . 1 1 9 7 1

material distributed. A steering com­mittee and temporary officers will be elected. The time and dates of future meetings will be determined.

A Toastmasters Club is a voluntary association of men and women who desire to gain facility in the art of communication and this they do at Club meetings by using their own resources. Toastmastering draws out and puts to use the talents and abilities of each member. A Toast­masters Club is not just another school. At Club meetings, members learn by doing and they are counsel­led only by other members. Club meetings are stimulating, happy and healthy experiences.

The organizational meeting Octo­ber 10 is sponsored by Arnold Robinson and Stan Waimey of Cutch­ogue, by Jun Albertson and Art Avedon of Southold, by Mrs. Walter Kohnle of Greenport, and by John Blackwell of East Marion. A Certifi­cate of Permission to organize a Toastmasters Club here, has been received by Mr. Robinson from Toastmasters International of Santa Ana, Calif.

Visit To Red China

Is HighlightedDr. Konrad Chang Hsu, Columbia

University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, professor emeritus of microbiology will give a slide illus­trated talk “ A Visit to Red China in May 1975” at the First Universalist Church of Southold, Thursday, Octo­ber 16, 8 P.M. in the Sanctuary.

Dr. Hsu is one of the few American basic scientists who have toured the People’s Republic of China since 1972.

A graduate of St. John ’s University in Shanghai, Dr. Hsu received his PhD in chemistry from Columbia University in 1924, returned to Shanghai as professor of chemistry and dean of the College of Science at Great China University from 1924- 1926 and served in various Chinese Government posts until 1937.

From 1938 to 1954, Dr. Hsu engaged in the import-export busi­ness. He joined the department df microbiology of the College of Phy­sicians and Surgeons, Columbia Uni­versity in 1954 and rose to full professor. He has published over 100 biomedical articles. Most of Dr. H su’s research dealing with immune reactions in disease has been sup ­ported by grants from the U.S. Public Health Service, including the Nation­al Cancer Institute.

Dr. Hsu became an American citizen in 1962.

‘THE FANTASTICKS’Free tickets for the internationally-

acclaimed, award-winning musical The Fantasticks are now available in the Babylon Student Center Ticket Office at Suffolk County Community College, 533 College Road, Selden. Performance dates are October 15, 16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 24 and 25 at 8 p.m. in the Islip Arts Theater at the Selden campus. There is a limit of six tickets per customer.

In The TravelerCalv.<;rton 12Churches 30Classified 34,35Coffee Break 7Cutchogue Column 5East Marlon Column 4Editorials 6Greenport 4Legals 30,31Mattituck 5Movies 36North Fork Living 17,18Obituaries 2Riverhead Column 11Social Calendar 30Southold Column 3South Fork News 13,16Sports 20-29Patricia Wood Reports 7Wading River 13