supply and demand if yonr name is i this week...

1
SUPPLY AND DEMAND *- ¦ * ¦ -* > -±. Items of Interest About the Costs of Living You May Have Missed in the Metropolitan Newspapers A layoff of 1 ,100 clerical workers was announced by the Baltimore tit Ohio Railroad because of a "de- cline in trafllc and a resulting sub- stantial decrease in revenues. " * * * Hog Growers are moving their porkers to market at a brisker pace this year. Last fall's crop of pig- lets was 8% above a year earlier; but marketings (from that fall crop) in the past three months have teen running some 14% above the year-ago level. * » Sour Cherries from Michigan will be less abundant this year. Es- timated at 53 , 000 tons, the state' s crop is indicated 25% below last year' s record harvest. Michigan usually accounts for more than 50% of the nation' s sour cherry pro- duction. * * * Lemonade costs are out of step with deflation. Already a third above a year ago, lemon prices may double the 1948 level this fall , say citrus rr.cn. California' s January freeze is blamed. The 1 , 8000, 000 freeze is blamed. The 1 , 800, 000 compare with 3 , 900 , 000 a year ago. Butter Output keeps climbing. Production last month , a fifth above a year ago, was the highest for any May since 1945. Cold storage stocks are close to 50 million pounds; a year ago they were under 20 mil- lion. Worth 80 cents a pound in the Chicago wholesale market a year ago, butter is now at the 59-cent level. That' s where the government price-props it. * * * Lumber orders in the week end- ing: May 14 were 7.9 below produc- tion , according to the National Trade Barometer. They dropped 16.2 per cent under the corres- ponding week of 1948. Shipments of the 417 reporting mills for the week were 2.6 per cent above .out- pur, and 1 per cent above a year ago. * * * Columbia Broadcasting System next week will start laying off 150 employes as part of a program to reduce operating expenses by 10%. American Broadcasting Co recen- tly let out nearly 100 employes and National Broadcasting Co about 80 in a similar drive to cut costs. The networks' policy reflects un- certainty regarding the fall busi- ness outlook. Plywood Prices continue to slip sharply as demand lags. In the big Pacific northwest pro- duction center, quarter-inch mater- ial free from defect on one side is now around $65 a thousand sq- uare feet. A month ago it was worth $76. Two months ago it brought $82. At the post-war peak, it averaged $100 , though a lot sold in the black market as high fcg $150. » * Canned Fruit price cuts have perked up shi pments by west coast canners. Under pressure of huge stocks, packers have cut prices on canned peaches about 25% since late last year. And fruit cocktail prices have been pared 20%. Result ; California packers shipped 1 , 043 , - 490 cases of peaches last month , compared with 783, 635 cases a month earlier. The 616 , 447 cases of fruit cocktail moved in May compared with 501 , 127 in AprlL * * « The Federal Reserve System has decided not to keep a rigid ceiling on prices of government securities. An announcement to this effect was issued by is open market com- mittee after an all-day meeting. The committee did not say why it found a new policy statement necessary. But if prices of govern- ment securities are permitted to riso , the yields received from them by banks and other purchasers will become smaller. This should en- courage lower interest rates on loan s to business. Park Board Picks Ockers Louise A Ockers of Oakdale was elected president of the recently appointed five-member Suffolk County Park Commission during an organization meeting held at Ea- gle' 3 Nest , the 45 acre William K Vanderbilt estate at Centerport , which the late tycoon left to the county for park purposes. Hazelton explained that the Ave commissioners will be in charge of Eagle's Nest and its famed ma- rine museum. They will formu- late the rules by which the park will be governed. However, the $2,000, - 000 trust fund which goes along with the park will remain strictly in the hands of the Suffolk County Board of Supervisors. Only one of the commissioners appointed at last month' s meeting of the county board was absent. He is Norman W Roe, wealthy Pa- tchogue Republican. The other commissioners include T Harold Forbes, of Quogue, editor of the County Review ; Charles F Noyes, millionaire Manhattan real- tor , who lives in Cold Spring Har- bor and Morton Pennypacker , Suf- folk Count y historian from East Hampton. i By Ann Reynolds , Ph D i ELMER has reached its popu- larity as a result of a specifically American development. Even if the name has come to our time from the Old Eng lish "Aylmcr " or the Saxon "Ethelmer ", meaning noble and famous , it was the fam- ily name of two Revolutionary heroes that made it a favorite. The brothers , Ebenezer and Jona- than Elmer , were organizers of revolutionary militia , pamphlete- ers and surgeons. The older of the two, Ebenezer , was said to be such a fine physician that there was " no finer in all America in his time" . He imparted his know- ledge to young Jonathan , going With him in the short space of two years through all the branches usually taught at any medical school. Both of them applied themselves to the Cause of the Revolution with per- severance and devotion , and their contemporaries honored them by naming babies all over the country "Elmer " . Taking a famil y name as a given name used to be a purel y English custom that was the style among the landed gentry in Queen Eliza- beth' s time. It then was confined to ancien t families who wished to make their name live on. As a new custom, many opposed it and riled agtimbl. it. ucv^ciuSc it. V,cia ii iiimg " nowhere else done in Christen- dom" . Yet its appeal was stronger than any criticism , and the cus- tom survived. But while in the land of its origin it rather tends to decline , it caught on in the USA. By the time of the Revolution, the habit of naming baies after heroes of the war was general. John Han- cock' s name was among the first to be taken up this way ; soon George Washington ' s name ex- ceeded it in public favor , and Elmer enjoyed wide popularity. It's one of history' s ironic touches that the nahie 'Elmer ' remained popular , while the two Elmer brothers were thoroughly forgotten , until a dili- gent newspaper man revived their memory. The custom of naming boys for public figures is still very much alive. There is hardl y a presidential election campai gn which has not brought a flurry of babies in its wake, named for the presidential hopeful. Often the meaning with which an outstanding novelist invests a name, remains linked with it. So it happened with "Elmer Gantry " . Sinclai r Lewis chose this name for a vulgar , hypocritical character in his novel of the same name. As the personification of a hypocrit it is still used. The idea to "Sell the Sizzle, Not the Steak", is a wide spread sales slogan originated by Elmer Whee- ler. It aims at making prospective buyers ' mouths water in antici pa- tion. Of course if you soil the ' sizzle' you must take care to come through with a thick juicy, tende r steak. Otherwise—no repeat busi- ness, and the sizzle is likely to fizzle. Ann Reynolds, Ph D (If you are interested in a par' tict'lar given name, won't you let us know ? In an earl y issue of this paper , Dr Reynolds will write about names most often requested.) Review Classified Ads are both Powerful aid Profitable If Yonr Name Is Elmer Interfaith Conference Held at Brid gehampton A group of 27 Jewish and Pro- testant college students and high school seniors representing church organizations in all five New York boroughs met last week-end at Bridgehampton for a three-day in- terfaith seminar. The . students and their leaders, Rabbi Arthur Chiel and the Rev Carl Hansen , arrived by chartered bus Friday at Minden , an eleven- acre estate , until 1944 the summer home of the late Mr and Mrs John E Berwind , which now is owned by the Presbyterian Asso- ciates. Throughout the summer , its panled rooms , well-tended lawns and formal gardens are the scene of a succession of religious con- ferences. The presen t meeting began Fri- day night with a get-together pro- gram in the drawing room, now used as an assembly hall. Seated on folding chairs and cushions in fron t of the ten-foot fireplace , representatives of the two faiths renewed old acquaintances and made plans for the rest of the week-end. Protestants and Jews were about equally represented. When asked their reason for coming by Mrs Anne Lllienthal , psychologist , of the Anti-Defamation League, who is conducting a survey on how the students react , all agreed that heir primary interest was know- ing and understanding each other better. Albert Weiner , 19 years old, a Brooklyn College student who at- tended the conference last year, enthusiastically commented , "I thought the idea of this conference so terrific I had to come back again." He then explained that he hoped this ye:ir the group would develop more active programs that •ach student could work on when he got home. Those attending, each selected for his leadership ability, evinced a keen interest in better intergroup and interracial understanding. Sat- urday 's program included a seminar on Judaism , another on prejudice and its causes , a discussion of the problems of intergroup relations and a workshop in intergroup tech- niques for resolving prejudices. Sunday another seminar was held , this time on Christianity, followed by church services and a discussion session on "How to Work Together in the Community." Between conferences , the- stu den ts, who slept in bedrooms on the second floor and ate at round tables seating six in the dining room, were free to lounge on the terrace , wander across the lawns or stroll through the formal gar- den. Plans for the conference , which is sponsored by the B'Nfli R' rirh Youth Organization and the Protestant Youth Council , were formulated last February. Another such interfaith conference was also held last week-end in Chicago, and additional conferences are scheduled for July 17 in Minnea- polis and Aug 12 in Denver. ESTATES AND WILLS WILLS FOR PROBATE Helen Penning of Sag Harbor , who died May 29, left an estate valued at not more than $500, in personal property and about $300 in realty. Mary E Archibald , sis- ter , Sag Harbor , is given the in- come for life from both real and personal , property . The will di- rects that if the income falls be- low $60 monthly for a period of four months that the testatrix 's property at Homestead Park, Pa , is to be sold and the proceeds in- vested. The income from the in- vestment is to be paid to the sis- ter and should she receive less than $60 monthl y, the principal is to be invaded and used for her benefit. If the property at Homestead Park is not sold during the life- time of the sister for purpose stipulated , the will directs that it be sold following her death and one part of the proceeds of the sale is bequeathed to Angelita Jose, sister , Water Mill and Frank Jose , 3rd , Mary Jose and Jerome Jose, nephew s and nieces , and one par to St Peter ' s Hospital , Brook- lyn, St Anthony ' s Guild , Paterson, N J and the Rev Leo Farragher of Tuskegee, Alabama. Angelita Jose is given a lot on Jermain Ave, Sag Harbor , and Mary E Archibald is to have the life use of jewelry, househol d furnishings and other personal and upon her death the same are bequeathed to the above named sister. The executor and trustee is Theodore R Jaffe , an attorney, of Sag Harbor. Roy W Spinney of Port Jefferson , who died June 18 , left an estate valued at about $2, 500 in personal property and about $5,000 in realty. Roswell P Spinney, son , and his wife , Earlin e P Spinney, of Port Jefferson , is bequeathed the testatrix' s residence property, and, furnishings and Milford P Spinney, son, Woodside and Norma T Currie , daughter , Rothesay, New Brunswick , Canada the residuary estate in equal shares. The ex- ecutors are the sons. there is nothing disturbing in the fact that the total assets ' _ ' of the four Riverhead banks dropped off #2, 923 , 841.86 between ,F the close of business December 31 , 1948, and June 30. That mi ght v create a misleading impression if we did not take the figures in contrast with those of June 30, 1948. The bank statements of that 1 date give us full reassurance for they show us that , in spite of the drop of the past six months , total assets of the Riverhead banks were still #2 , 473, 887.77 greater than they were a year ago at this time. The decline during the past six months has been due to what business is accustomed to refer to as seasonal causes. It can be explained to a large degree by the fact that the past six months has been the period when most farmers draw from their bank accounts to finance their farming operations while many business men do the same thing in order that they may expand their business interests. IT money wi thdrawn was to be wasted and squandered , banks mi ght look upon the reduction in assets as money gone from them j: ' forever but when money is withdrawn for constructive purposes— for wise business use and for the expansion and betterment of our farming projects—it is fair to presume that the money withdrawn from the banks will eventuall y return and hel p pave the way to greater bank accumulations. No , there is nothing to be disturbed about. We don ' t have to worry about our banks. They still reported #50 ,842 ,561.62 in total assets on June 30 and that is a lot of money any way you want to look at it. The Riverhead Savings Bank had total assets of #31, 665 , 448.14 and here we find an increase of #431 ,398.01 over the total of December 31. The other banks shewed Ju"t 30 as cts as follows: Suffolk County National Bank , #8, 063 , 141.87; Long Island State Bank, #5,809, 803.45; Suffolk County Trust Co, #5,- 404, 168.16. All in all , the bank statements of June 30 are nothing if they are not reassuring. They reflect prosperity—not of the few but of the many and indicate that thrift is a Suffolk County character- istic. The b?,nk statements of December 31 , 1949 , can be ex- pected to fulfill the confidence we have in Suffolk County to go ahead not onl y in normal times but in abnormal ones. / DON'T LET THIS WORRY YOU A pparentl y hopes of the passage of the Rivers and Harbors bill this year are none too hi gh. The matter was freel y discussed at a recent meeting of the Committee on Ports and Waterways held at Long Island State Park Commission Head quarters. It was re- ported that the Long Island Port and Waterway projects which received recommendation by the Rivers and Harbors Eng ineers were the Jamica Bay-Mott Basin and Fire Island Inlet projects. These are now awaiting approval from the House Public Works Committee. Representative W Kingsland Macy of Suffolk County, a mem- ber of this committee, has informed the Long Island Association that he does not believe there is any objection to cither project. He is confident that both will be included in the Rivers and Harbors Omnibus Bill when it is reported by the committee . It is im- possible , he adds , to say when the bill will be reported out. Sidney Shapiro , Deputy Engineer of the Park Commission , who represented Robert Moses, President of the Conrimission at the meeting, said that he had been reliabl y informed that the bill mi ght not be passed this year. The Committee is addrcssmg a Irtter to all members of Congress from Long Island and Senator Ives, urg ing the passage of the bill as quickl y as possible I here seems to be nothing left to do but piay a waiting game until action is taken at Washington. RIVERS AND HARBORS BILL PHONE YOUR ijSBS ^ __ ^ /sf ^ °' _ " *2§L/lf af o a Date with the ffff LOWEST- PRICED " ROCKET " ENGINE CAR ! r\\^ *' ^^^^ ^^^^^_ ^^ J3________________i_____B___ ^«iiy9M ^^^^BHB^^^^S|^^BK ^]^Pwr/^™r ^ JsBjBBgfijffl W _* Hydra-Mafic Hrd* ninntfard ^¦ Sjjjllftljjlm gy njttipmtnt on 5en>j **##" f ind O ^^^Bfip°«™5 ^^ Jv^^^f^S^^g ' t^^Sa^a^ iTO ^ ^^ r^^^wWHBdHrffiM F "SR' f motMs , optional ml extra _ \ Vl ^""ffilWljj SjW cntr on. "76." IVhit * lidetvnll tK \ » "^^JBSffiWB^jB BBHBK }^^ tirt$ optional at txtra coif, * ^ OLDSMOBILE WW wM WLW wLW ¦ ¥ ¦ ^LW MM m ¦¦ ¦ ¦ A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE ¦ PHONE YOUR NEAREST OLDSMOBILE DEALER Phono Riverhead 2033, CAULFIELD MOTORS' , INC. or visit Pulaski Street and Griffing Avenue , Riverhead , L. I. Good Food . . . Good Food fa ^ SUMMER SPECIALS Light tempting dishes that are real treats in summer, are our specials for this week. • • "Hospitality and Good Food " • • For the Finest Candy You Ever Tasted Lucy Lynne * ¦ FREDDIE'S BEE HSYE 14 EAST MAIN STREET Riverhead 3396 If there is anything about Long Island which can almost be characterized as a mortal sin it is the modesty which causes it to observe an over-discreet silence while the rest of the world engages in a noisy hullabaloo, proclaiming its own points of advantage and propounding the "How great I am" ism. Long Island has put forth little in the line of soap-box oratory and has carried its modesty to such an excess that it has forged ahead faster , perhaps , than it deserved to. 'But , be that as it may, we are now being given some most astounding fi gures as to Long Island' s growth. We are being shown that Nassau and Suffolk counties are growing at a rate of between 75 , 000 and 100, 000 persons a year. Nassau ' s population is accredited with a jump of 404, 888 to 611 , 796 since 1940 while Suffolk has progressed from 195,540 to 292 ,374. We must look to natural causes, we believe, for this explana- tion of Long Island growth. We are not rich in industrial plants which attract large armies of workers. We have not struck gold or oil to cause such booms as always attract the adventurous and cause a boom for the sections where such discoveries are made. Our growth has not been of that variety but rather has been a steady, health y consistent growth . Our proximity to New York City has been the lure which has brought thousands here to escape the crowded , restricted life of the great city. It has been a magnet which has broug ht to us many who have desired a real home they could call their own , where their children could grow up in an area where trees grow , where birds sing and flowers fill the air with their fragrance. Long Island is becoming more and more the home-owner s Paradise. It is what the average man and woman want , the freedom country life affords and an escape from the problems which make home-making in the bi g city too difficult in these unsettled times. We are not surprised at anything pertaining to Long Island' s growth which the figures present. What else could we expect when Long Island has so much to offer those who want peace and contentment and who are in pursuit of happiness? Long Island is the answer to their dreams. More and more of th»m will come to realize that as time passes and , with the realization , more and more of them will come here, settle and become our nei ghbors. Long Island is great compared to what it was ten years ago. Ten years from now it will look back and read new fi gures which will cause even greater amazement. The above editorial is inspired as the result of a feature story by Frederick Graham which was published in The New York Times on Thursday , June 30th. GROWTH OF LONG ISLAND Tuesday, Jul y 19, has been desi gnated as Grievance Day. On that day, from the hours of 9 a m to 4 p m , the Assessors will be in session in the Assessors' room , and will listen to any and all who may feel that they have cause for complaint against such as- sessments as may have been levied against them. The assessment roll has now been completed and all interested can drop around to the room of the Board of Assessors in the Riverhead Town Hall and examine it at any time during office hours between now and Jul y 19. Under our form of Government, taxpayers are afforded this privilege. Grievance Day is an old institution which gives the hi gh and the low, the rich and the poor , the ri ght to protest. Assessors as a rule aim to fill their roles in an honest and impartial manner. Being human they sometimes err but he who is wronged in any way is given this opportunity to face the assessors, tell their story and convince the officials that their assessments should be modified. Look over the assessment roll and , if you think you have been treated in an unjustifiable manner , tell the assessors about it Jul y 19. Don ' t let your grievance get you down , don ' t cuss the officials and accuse them pf having it in for you but go to them and get that grievance off your chest. They'll listen and , if you have real cause to complain , the chances are a hundred to one that you will obtain such relief as you may be entitled to. JULY 19—GRIEVANCE DAY Fire Tournament Set for Saturday Over 200 firemen and many bands are expected to participate in the 56th Annual Parade and Tournament of the Suffolk County Volunteer Firemen's Association to be held at St James Saturday, Jul y 16. At 10 a m, the vamps will be- gin their parade down Main St in St James. Awards will be made to departments with the greatest turnout of men , the best marching departments, ladies auxiliaries, and the best bands. The tournaments will begin at 12 noon. Appraise Quogue Woman ' s Estate Mrs Mary A Radway, of Qua- quanantuck Lane, Quogue, and Manhattan, who died Jan 24, 1947, left an estate valued at $164,568 net , according to the New York State Transfer Tax Department. The Quogue residence was valued at $25,195 and its contents at $1,584. The woman , who was 85 years old when she died , was the widow of John S Radway, secretary and treasurer of Radway & Son , New York medicine manufacturers. The bulk of the estate is left to her son , John Oakley Radway, with ultimate disposition to grandchil- dren. EAST QUOGUE Judge Kosizke and Mr and Mrs A Cieszo and family have moved into their beautiful new ranch type house on Sunset Ave. Mrs T Ludercar and daughter Marthann of Port Washington are staying with Mrs Ludercar ' s fath- er who has been ill. Mr Theo. Dunn of Buchann , N Y, visited for several days last week with his father-in-law Oscar Reeve. The many friends of Mr Alex Lawson will be glad to know that he is steadily improving. (Author "Elrda Around Tit Tear ") When a bumptious great mul- lein springs up in the flower bed in the midst of roses and pansies, it is viewed with amazement. How did it get there—this plant of dry fields and waste places? May be the birds are to blame , or perhaps an irresponsible breeze. But the great mullein undaunted by its stylish surroundings , flour- ishes in a remarkable way. It adapts itself to the unaccustomed rich soil and shoots up like Jack' s beanstalk. Higher and higher it grows and wider and softer the great velvety leaves. It really is a handsome plant. Seven feet high the great mul- lein sometimes grows, and it looks as if the garden visitor is out to make a record. Then come the yellow flowers at tho top of the great spike—and the Mullein ' s visit is at an end. After flowers come seeds, and it is feared that great mullein , if allowed to have its own way, might take over the garden. This was the lowly plant of which John Burroughs wrote in "An October Abroad" : "I have come three thousand miles to see the mullein <*" . !tivatcd in a garden and christened the velvet plant. " And undoubtedly if the great mullein were rare it would nave a place in the garden as a strange and interesting plant; the thick felt- like leaves of grayish green grow- ing in a rosette on the ground , and the stout woolly stem rising from it , topped by the yellow-flowered spike. As there is a purpose beneath every desi gn in nature, one might wonder as to the reason for the mullein 's winter wear in a torrid summer. It seems to be a matter of insulation , somewhat . . according to the principle that what keeps out the cold will keep out the heat ; and the great mullein has need to withstand the severities of both winter and summer. The rosettes of new plants must survive the winter in order to bloom the following summer , so the pretty gray-green leaves protected by thick hairy covering, arc imper- vious to the cold and frost of winter. Melting snow in spring dis- closes the perky rosettes all set to send up the flower-bearing stalk. Likewise in summer the mullein is protected by its heavy coat from the fierce sunlight in the dry open places where it grows. In the way of the cactus moisture is conserved within the thick walls of the plant , so the mullein with- stands the drought to which more fragile plants succumb. The great mullein is kindly to birds. As seeds follow the as- cending flowers on the stalk the goldfinches gather about them. They cling to the upright stem and feast happily on the ripening seeds. And the ruby-throated humming bird with its fondness for luxurious nesting material , gathers the soft hairs of the mullein s velvety coat to line its dainty nest. The great mullein has its place in folklore, especially in connec- tion with supposedly curative pro- perties. In the Middle Ages it was used as candlewick , also for funeral torches. And Pliny men- tions it. So, to the great mullein that rises unbidden in the garden. it would seem that a certain meas- ure of respect is due, as to an unusual visitor. I This Week Outdoors | By Lorine Letcher Butler \ Two Suffolk men , John F Don- nelly, fireman apprentice, USN, son of Mr and Mrs Edward Donnelly of Rocky Point , and Vernon L Grav- dal , fireman apprentice , USN, of Miller Place , are scheduled to be graduated tomorrow from the Navy 's Interior Communications School at the Naval Training Cen- ter. Great Lakes. 111. Navy Graduates Two Suffolk Men Official Newspaper for the United States District Court , Eastern District . ol New York \ NO ATTENTION PAID TO UNSIGNED COMMUNICATIONS. IT. HABOLD roBBES ESltor onfl Publisher IS. HABST BBOWS Associate Editor ;' PBAITB o. POMES Business Manager

Upload: others

Post on 05-Feb-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: SUPPLY AND DEMAND If Yonr Name Is I This Week Outdoorsnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84035791/1949-07-14/ed-1/seq-7.pdfSUPPLY AND DEMAND *- ¦*¦-*> -±. Items of Interest About

SUPPLY AND DEMAND*- ¦*¦ -*> -±.

Items of Interest About theCosts of Living You May

Have Missed in theMetropolitanNewspapers

A layoff of 1,100 clerical workerswas announced by the Baltimoretit Ohio Railroad because of a "de-cline in trafllc and a resulting sub-stantial decrease in revenues."

* * *Hog Growers are moving their

porkers to market at a brisker pacethis year. Last fall's crop of pig-lets was 8% above a year earlier;but marketings (from that fallcrop) in the past three months haveteen running some 14% above theyear-ago level.

* • »Sour Cherries from Michigan will

be less abundant this year. Es-timated at 53,000 tons, the state'scrop is indicated 25% below lastyear's record harvest. Michiganusually accounts for more than 50%of the nation's sour cherry pro-duction.

* * *Lemonade costs are out of step

with deflation. Already a thirdabove a year ago, lemon prices maydouble the 1948 level this fall, saycitrus rr.cn. California's Januaryfreeze is blamed. The 1,8000,000freeze is blamed. The 1,800,000compare with 3,900,000 a year ago.

Butter Output keeps climbing.Production last month, a fifth abovea year ago, was the highest for anyMay since 1945. Cold storage stocksare close to 50 million pounds; ayear ago they were under 20 mil-lion. Worth 80 cents a pound inthe Chicago wholesale market ayear ago, butter is now at the59-cent level. That's where thegovernment price-props it.

* * *Lumber orders in the week end-

ing: May 14 were 7.9 below produc-tion, according to t h e NationalTrade Barometer. They dropped16.2 per cent under the corres-ponding week of 1948. Shipmentsof the 417 reporting mills for theweek were 2.6 per cent above .out-pur , and 1 per cent above a yearago.

* * *Columbia Broadcasting System

next week will start laying off 150employes as part of a program toreduce operating expenses by 10%.American Broadcasting Co recen-tly let out nearly 100 employes andNational Broadcasting Co about 80in a similar drive to cut costs.The networks' policy reflects un-certainty regarding the fall busi-ness outlook.

Plywood Prices continue to slipsharply as demand lags.

In the big Pacific northwest pro-duction center, quarter-inch mater-ial free from defect on one sideis now around $65 a thousand sq-uare feet. A month ago it wasworth $76. Two months ago itbrought $82. At the post-warpeak, it averaged $100, though a lotsold in the black market as highfcg $150.

» * •Canned Fruit price cuts have

perked up shipments by west coastcanners.

Under pressure of huge stocks,packers have cut prices on cannedpeaches about 25% since late lastyear. And fruit cocktail priceshave been pared 20%. Result ;California packers shipped 1,043,-490 cases of peaches last month,compared with 783,635 cases amonth earlier. The 616,447 casesof fruit cocktail moved in Maycompared with 501,127 in AprlL

* * «The Federal Reserve System has

decided not to keep a rigid ceilingon prices of government securities.An announcement to this effectwas issued by is open market com-mittee after an all-day meeting.The committee did not say whyit found a new policy statementnecessary. But if prices of govern-ment securities are permitted toriso, the yields received from themby banks and other purchasers willbecome smaller. This should en-courage lower interest rates onloans to business.

Park BoardPicks Ockers

Louise A Ockers of Oakdale waselected president of the recentlyappointed five-member SuffolkCounty Park Commission during anorganization meeting held at Ea-gle'3 Nest, the 45 acre William KVanderbilt estate at Centerport ,which the late tycoon left to thecounty for park purposes.

Hazelton explained that the Avecommissioners will be in chargeof Eagle's Nest and its famed ma-rine museum. They will formu-late the rules by which the park willbe governed. However, the $2,000,-000 trust fund which goes alongwith the park will remain strictlyin the hands of the Suffolk CountyBoard of Supervisors.

Only one of the commissionersappointed at last month's meetingof the county board was absent.He is Norman W Roe, wealthy Pa-tchogue Republican.

The other commissioners includeT Harold Forbes, of Quogue, editorof the County Review; Charles FNoyes, millionaire Manhattan real-tor, who lives in Cold Spring Har-bor and Morton Pennypacker , Suf-folk County historian from EastHampton.

i By Ann Reynolds, Ph D iELMER has reached its popu-

larity as a result of a specificallyAmerican development. Even ifthe name has come to our timefrom the Old English "Aylmcr"or the Saxon "Ethelmer", meaningnoble and famous, it was the fam-ily name of two Revolutionaryheroes that made it a favorite.The brothers , Ebenezer and Jona-than Elmer, were organizers ofrevolutionary militia , pamphlete-ers and surgeons. The older ofthe two, Ebenezer , was said tobe such a fine physician that therewas "no finer in all America inhis time". He imparted his know-ledge to young Jonathan , going Withhim in the short space of two yearsthrough all the branches usuallytaught at any medical school. Bothof them applied themselves to theCause of the Revolution with per-severance and devotion , and theircontemporaries honored them bynaming babies all over the country"Elmer".

Taking a family name as a givenname used to be a purel y Englishcustom that was the style amongthe landed gentry in Queen Eliza-beth's time. It then was confinedto ancien t families who wished tomake their name live on. As a newcustom, many opposed it and riledagtimbl. it. ucv^ciuSc it. V,cia ii iiimg"nowhere else done in Christen-dom". Yet its appeal was strongerthan any criticism, and the cus-tom survived.

But while in the land of itsorigin it rather tends to decline,it caught on in the USA. By thetime of the Revolution, the habitof naming baies after heroes ofthe war was general. John Han-cock's name was among the firstto be taken up this way ; soonGeorge Washington's name ex-ceeded it in public favor , and Elmerenjoyed wide popularity. It's oneof history's ironic touches that thenahie 'Elmer' remained popular ,while the two Elmer brothers werethoroughly forgotten , until a dili-gent newspaper man revived theirmemory. The custom of namingboys for public figures is still verymuch alive. There is hardly apresidential e l e c t i o n campaignwhich has not brought a flurryof babies in its wake, named forthe presidential hopeful.

Often the meaning with whichan outstanding novelist invests aname, remains linked with it. Soit happened with "Elmer Gantry ".Sinclair Lewis chose this name fora vulgar , hypocritical character inhis novel of the same name. Asthe personification of a hypocrit itis still used.

The idea to "Sell the Sizzle, Notthe Steak", is a wide spread salesslogan originated by Elmer Whee-ler. It aims at making prospectivebuyers' mouths water in antici pa-tion. Of course if you soil the'sizzle' you must take care to comethrough with a thick juicy, tendersteak. Otherwise—no repeat busi-ness, and the sizzle is likely tofizzle.

Ann Reynolds, Ph D(If you are interested in a par'

tict'lar given name, won't you letus know ? In an early issue ofthis paper, Dr Reynolds will writeabout names most often requested.)

Review Classified Ads are bothPowerful aid Profitable

If Yonr Name IsElmer

Interfaith ConferenceHeld at Bridgehampton

A group of 27 Jewish and Pro-testant college students and highschool seniors representing churchorganizations in all five New Yorkboroughs met last week-end atBridgehampton for a three-day in-terfaith seminar.

The. students and their leaders,Rabbi Arthur Chiel and the RevCarl Hansen , arrived by charteredbus Friday at Minden , an eleven-acre estate, until 1944 the summerhome of the late Mr and MrsJohn E Berwind , which now isowned by the Presbyterian Asso-ciates. Throughout the summer , itspanled rooms, well-tended lawnsand formal gardens are the sceneof a succession of religious con-ferences.

The presen t meeting began Fri-day night with a get-together pro-gram in the drawing room, nowused as an assembly hall. Seatedon folding chairs and cushions infron t of the ten-foot fireplace,representatives of the two faithsrenewed old acquaintances andmade plans for the rest of theweek-end.

Protestants and Jews were aboutequally represented. When askedtheir reason for coming by MrsAnne Lllienthal , psychologist , ofthe Anti-Defamation League, whois conducting a survey on how thestudents react, all agreed thatheir primary interest was know-

ing and understanding each otherbetter.

Albert Weiner, 19 years old, aBrooklyn College student who at-

tended the conference last year,enthusiastically commented , "Ithought the idea of this conferenceso terrific I had to come backagain." He then explained that hehoped this ye:ir the group woulddevelop more active programs that•ach student could work on whenhe got home.

Those attending, each selectedfor his leadership ability, evinceda keen interest in better intergroupand interracial understanding. Sat-urday's program included a seminaron Judaism , another on prejudiceand its causes, a discussion of theproblems of intergroup relationsand a workshop in intergroup tech-niques for resolving prejudices.

Sunday another seminar washeld , this time on Christianity,followed by church services and adiscussion session on "How toWork Together in the Community."

Between conferences , the- studen ts, who slept in bedrooms onthe second floor and ate at roundtables seating six in the diningroom, were free to lounge on theterrace, wander across the lawnsor stroll through the formal gar-den.

Plans for the conference, whichis sponsored by the B'Nfli R' rirhYouth Organization and theProtestant Youth Council , wereformulated last February. Anothersuch interfaith conference wasalso held last week-end in Chicago,and additional conferences arescheduled for July 17 in Minnea-polis and Aug 12 in Denver.

ESTATES AND WILLSWILLS FOR PROBATE

Helen Penning of Sag Harbor ,who died May 29, left an estatevalued at not more than $500, inpersonal property and about $300in realty. Mary E Archibald , sis-ter, Sag Harbor , is given the in-come for life from both real andpersonal , property . The will di-rects that if the income falls be-low $60 monthly for a period offour months that the testatrix 'sproperty at Homestead Park, Pa,is to be sold and the proceeds in-vested. The income from the in-vestment is to be paid to the sis-ter and should she receive lessthan $60 monthly, the principalis to be invaded and used forher benefit.

If the property at HomesteadPark is not sold during the life-time of the sister for purposestipulated, the will directs thatit be sold following her death andone part of the proceeds of thesale is bequeathed to AngelitaJose, sister , Water Mill and Frank

Jose, 3rd , Mary Jose and JeromeJose, nephew s and nieces, and onepar to St Peter's Hospital, Brook-lyn, St Anthony 's Guild , Paterson,N J and the Rev Leo Farragherof Tuskegee, Alabama. AngelitaJose is given a lot on Jermain Ave,Sag Harbor , and Mary E Archibaldis to have the life use of jewelry,household furnishings and otherpersonal and upon her death thesame are bequeathed to the abovenamed sister. The executor andtrustee is Theodore R Jaffe , anattorney, of Sag Harbor.

Roy W Spinney of Port Jefferson,who died June 18, left an estatevalued at about $2,500 in personalproperty and about $5,000 inrealty. Roswell P Spinney, son,and his wife, Earlin e P Spinney,of Port Jefferson , is bequeathedthe testatrix's residence property,and, furnishings and Milford PSpinney, son, Woodside and NormaT Currie, daughter, Rothesay, NewBrunswick, Canada the residuaryestate in equal shares. The ex-ecutors are the sons.

there is nothing disturbing in the fact that the total assets'_ ' of the four Riverhead banks dropped off #2,923,841.86 between,F the close of business December 31, 1948, and June 30. That mightv create a misleading impression if we did not take the figures in

contrast with those of June 30, 1948. The bank statements of that1 date give us full reassurance for they show us that, in spite of the

drop of the past six months, total assets of the Riverhead bankswere still #2,473,887.77 greater than they were a year ago atthis time.

The decline during the past six months has been due to whatbusiness is accustomed to refer to as seasonal causes. It can beexplained to a large degree by the fact that the past six months hasbeen the period when most farmers draw from their bank accountsto finance their farming operations while many business men dothe same thing in order that they may expand their business interests.

IT money withdrawn was to be wasted and squandered, banksmight look upon the reduction in assets as money gone from them

j:' forever but when money is withdrawn for constructive purposes—for wise business use and for the expansion and betterment of ourfarming projects—it is fair to presume that the money withdrawnfrom the banks will eventually return and help pave the way togreater bank accumulations.

No, there is nothing to be disturbed about. We don't haveto worry about our banks. They still reported #50,842,561.62 intotal assets on June 30 and that is a lot of money any way you wantto look at it. The Riverhead Savings Bank had total assets of#31,665,448.14 and here we find an increase of #431 ,398.01 overthe total of December 31. The other banks shewed Ju"t 30 as ctsas follows: Suffolk County National Bank , #8,063,141.87; LongIsland State Bank, #5,809,803.45; Suffolk County Trust Co, #5,-404,168.16.

All in all , the bank statements of June 30 are nothing if theyare not reassuring. They reflect prosperity—not of the few butof the many and indicate that thrift is a Suffolk County character-istic. The b?,nk statements of December 31, 1949, can be ex-pected to fulfill the confidence we have in Suffolk County to goahead not only in normal times but in abnormal ones.

• / DON'T LET THIS WORRY YOU

Apparentl y hopes of the passage of the Rivers and Harborsbill this year are none too high. The matter was freel y discussedat a recent meeting of the Committee on Ports and Waterways heldat Long Island State Park Commission Headquarters. It was re-ported that the Long Island Port and Waterway projects whichreceived recommendation by the Rivers and Harbors Eng ineerswere the Jamica Bay-Mott Basin and Fire Island Inlet projects.These are now awaiting approval from the House Public WorksCommittee.

Representative W Kingsland Macy of Suffolk County, a mem-ber of this committee, has informed the Long Island Associationthat he does not believe there is any objection to cither project. Heis confident that both will be included in the Rivers and HarborsOmnibus Bill when it is reported by the committee. It is im-possible, he adds, to say when the bill will be reported out.

Sidney Shapiro, Deputy Engineer of the Park Commission ,who represented Robert Moses, President of the Conrimission atthe meeting, said that he had been reliably informed that the bill

might not be passed this year. The Committee is addrcssmg aIrtter to all members of Congress from Long Island and Senator

Ives, urging the passage of the bill as quickly as possible I hereseems to be nothing left to do but piay a waiting game until action

is taken at Washington.

RIVERS AND HARBORS BILL

PHONE YOUR ijSBS _ _ ^/sf °'_" *2§L/lf af o a Date with the ff f fLOWEST- PRICED "ROCKET" ENGINE CAR !

r\\^*' ^^^^ ^^^^_^^J3________________i_____B___ «iiy9M^^^^BHB^^^^S| ^BK^]^Pwr/^™r ^

JsBjBBgfijffl W _* Hydra-Maf ic Hrd* ninntfard^¦Sjjjllftljjlm gy njttipmtnt on 5en>j **##" f i nd

O ^^^Bfip°«™5 Jv^^^f^S^^g't^^Sa^aiTO ^^r^^^wWHBdHrffiM F "SR' f motMs , optional ml extra_ \ Vl ^""ffilWljj SjW cntr on. "76." IVhit * lidetvnll

tK \ » " ^JBSffiWB jBBBHBK} tirt$ optional

at txtra coif,

* O L D S M O B I L EWW wM WLW wLW ¦¥¦ LW MM m ¦¦ ¦¦ A G E N E R A L M O T O R S V A L U E

¦ P H O N E Y O U R N E A R E S T O L D S M O B I L E D E A L E R

Phono Riverhead 2033, CAULFIELD MOTORS', INC.or visit Pulaski Street and Griffing Avenue, Riverhead, L. I.

Good Food . . . Good Food

f a ^

SUMMER SPECIALSLight tempting dishes that are

real treats in summer, are ourspecials for this week.

• •"Hospitality and

Good Food "• •For the Finest Candy

You Ever Tasted

Lucy Lynne*¦ •

FREDDIE'SBEE HSYE

14 EAST MAIN STREETRiverhead 3396

If there is anything about Long Island which can almost becharacterized as a mortal sin it is the modesty which causes it toobserve an over-discreet silence while the rest of the world engagesin a noisy hullabaloo, proclaiming its own points of advantage andpropounding the "How great I am" ism. Long Island has putforth little in the line of soap-box oratory and has carried itsmodesty to such an excess that it has forged ahead faster , perhaps,than it deserved to. 'But, be that as it may, we are now being givensome most astounding figures as to Long Island's growth. We arebeing shown that Nassau and Suffolk counties are growing at arate of between 75,000 and 100,000 persons a year. Nassau'spopulation is accredited with a jump of 404,888 to 611,796 since1940 while Suffolk has progressed from 195,540 to 292 ,374.

We must look to natural causes, we believe, for this explana-tion of Long Island growth. We are not rich in industrial plantswhich attract large armies of workers. We have not struck goldor oil to cause such booms as always attract the adventurous andcause a boom for the sections where such discoveries are made.Our growth has not been of that variety but rather has been asteady, healthy consistent growth .

Our proximity to New York City has been the lure which hasbrought thousands here to escape the crowded , restricted lifeof the great city. It has been a magnet which has brought to usmany who have desired a real home they could call their own , wheretheir children could grow up in an area where trees grow, wherebirds sing and flowers fill the air with their fragrance.

Long Island is becoming more and more the home-owner sParadise. It is what the average man and woman want, the freedomcountry life affords and an escape from the problems which makehome-making in the big city too difficult in these unsettled times.

We are not surprised at anything pertaining to Long Island'sgrowth which the figures present. What else could we expect whenLong Island has so much to offer those who want peace andcontentment and who are in pursuit of happiness? Long Islandis the answer to their dreams. More and more of th»m will cometo realize that as time passes and, with the realization , more andmore of them will come here, settle and become our neighbors. LongIsland is great compared to what it was ten years ago. Ten yearsfrom now it will look back and read new figures which will causeeven greater amazement.

The above editorial is inspired as the result of a feature storyby Frederick Graham which was published in The New York Timeson Thursday , June 30th.

GROWTH OF LONG ISLAND

Tuesday, July 19, has been designated as Grievance Day. Onthat day, from the hours of 9 a m to 4 p m , the Assessors will bein session in the Assessors' room, and will listen to any and allwho may feel that they have cause for complaint against such as-sessments as may have been levied against them. The assessmentroll has now been completed and all interested can drop aroundto the room of the Board of Assessors in the Riverhead Town Halland examine it at any time during office hours between now andJul y 19.

Under our form of Government, taxpayers are afforded thisprivilege. Grievance Day is an old institution which gives the highand the low, the rich and the poor , the right to protest. Assessorsas a rule aim to fill their roles in an honest and impartial manner.Being human they sometimes err but he who is wronged in anyway is given this opportunity to face the assessors, tell their storyand convince the officials that their assessments should be modified.

Look over the assessment roll and , if you think you have beentreated in an unjustifiable manner, tell the assessors about it July19. Don't let your grievance get you down, don't cuss the officialsand accuse them pf having it in for you but go to them and getthat grievance off your chest. They'll listen and, if you have realcause to complain, the chances are a hundred to one that you willobtain such relief as you may be entitled to.

JULY 19—GRIEVANCE DAY

Fire TournamentSet for Saturday

Over 200 firemen and manybands are expected to participatein the 56th Annual Parade andTournament of the Suffolk CountyVolunteer Firemen's Association tobe held at St James Saturday,July 16.

At 10 a m, the vamps will be-gin their parade down Main Stin St James. Awards will be madeto departments with the greatestturnout of men , the best marchingdepartments, ladies auxiliaries, andthe best bands.

The tournaments will begin at12 noon.

Appraise QuogueWoman's Estate

Mrs Mary A Radway, of Qua-quanantuck Lane, Quogue, andManhattan, who died Jan 24, 1947,left an estate valued at $164,568net , according to the New YorkState Transfer Tax Department.The Quogue residence was valuedat $25,195 and its contents at $1,584.

The woman, who was 85 yearsold when she died , was the widowof John S Radway, secretary andtreasurer of Radway & Son, NewYork medicine manufacturers. Thebulk of the estate is left to herson, John Oakley Radway, withultimate disposition to grandchil-dren.

EAST QUOGUEJudge Kosizke and Mr and Mrs

A Cieszo and family have movedinto their beautiful new ranch typehouse on Sunset Ave.

Mrs T Ludercar and daughterMarthann of Port Washington arestaying with Mrs Ludercar's fath-er who has been ill.

Mr Theo. Dunn of Buchann, N Y,visited for several days last weekwith his father-in-law Oscar Reeve.

The many friends of Mr AlexLawson will be glad to know thathe is steadily improving.

(Author "Elrda Around Tit Tear")When a bumptious great mul-

lein springs up in the flower bedin the midst of roses and pansies,it is viewed with amazement. Howdid it get there—this plant of dryfields and waste places? May bethe birds are to blame, or perhapsan irresponsible breeze.

But the great mullein undauntedby its stylish surroundings, flour-ishes in a remarkable way. Itadapts itself to the unaccustomedrich soil and shoots up like Jack'sbeanstalk. Higher and higher itgrows and wider and softer thegreat velvety leaves. It really isa handsome plant.

Seven feet high the great mul-lein sometimes grows, and it looksas if the garden visitor is out tomake a record. Then come theyellow flowers at tho top of thegreat spike—and the Mullein 'svisit is at an end. After flowerscome seeds, and it is feared thatgreat mullein, if allowed to haveits own way, might take over thegarden.

This was the lowly plant of whichJohn Burroughs wrote in "AnOctober Abroad" : "I have comethree thousand miles to see themullein <*".!tivatcd in a garden andchristened the velvet plant." Andundoubtedly if the great mulleinwere rare it would nave a placein the garden as a strange andinteresting plant; the thick felt-like leaves of grayish green grow-ing in a rosette on the ground , andthe stout woolly stem rising fromit, topped by the yellow-floweredspike.

As there is a purpose beneathevery design in nature, one mightwonder as to the reason for themullein's winter wear in a torridsummer. It seems to be a matterof insulation , somewhat ..accordingto the principle that what keepsout the cold will keep out the heat ;and the great mullein has needto withstand the severities of bothwinter and summer.

The rosettes of new plants mustsurvive the winter in order to bloomthe following summer, so the prettygray-green leaves protected bythick hairy covering, arc imper-vious to the cold and frost ofwinter. Melting snow in spring dis-closes the perky rosettes all setto send up the flower-bearingstalk.

Likewise in summer the mulleinis protected by its heavy coatfrom the fierce sunlight in the dryopen places where it grows. Inthe way of the cactus moisture isconserved within the thick wallsof the plant, so the mullein with-stands the drought to which morefragile plants succumb.

The great mullein is kindly tobirds. As seeds follow the as-cending flowers on the stalk thegoldfinches gather about them.They cling to the upright stemand feast happily on the ripeningseeds. And the ruby-throatedhumming bird with its fondness forluxurious nesting material, gathersthe soft hairs of the mullein svelvety coat to line its dainty nest.

The great mullein has its placein folklore, especially in connec-tion with supposedly curative pro-perties. In the Middle Ages itwas used as candlewick , also forfuneral torches. And Pliny men-tions it. So, to the great mulleinthat rises unbidden in the garden.

it would seem that a certain meas-ure of respect is due, as to anunusual visitor.

I This Week Outdoors| By Lorine Letcher Butler \

Two Suffolk men, John F Don-nelly, fireman apprentice, USN, sonof Mr and Mrs Edward Donnelly ofRocky Point, and Vernon L Grav-dal , fireman apprentice, USN, ofMiller Place, are scheduled to begraduated tomorrow from theNavy's Interior CommunicationsSchool at the Naval Training Cen-ter. Great Lakes. 111.

N a v y GraduatesTwo Suffolk Men

Official Newspaper for the United States District Court, Eastern District. ol New York

\ NO ATTENTION PAID TO UNSIGNED COMMUNICATIONS.IT. HABOLD roBBES ESltor onfl PublisherI S . HABST BBOWS Associate Editor;' PBAITB o. POMES Business Manager