the star coming up -...

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THE EAST HAMPTON STAR, EAST HAMPTON N T„ SEPTEMBES 26, 1968 THE *£5 Published Every Thursday STAR 153 Main Street 324-0477 Mrs. Jeannette E. Rattray, Owner ."‘T'rmtigo , j, . Subscription Rates Entered at the Post Otf.ce at East A Y[.ai. PayaWe in Advance Hampton, New York, as second-class Six Months matter. Single Copies _______________ $5.00 $4.00 .. .10 evening at the Yardley and Williams Funeral Home, and the mass was offered Tuesday morning at Most Holy Trinity Church by the Rev. Peter J. Garry. DANIEL MULVIHILL Lieutenant Commander Daniel OBITUARIES DR. CARNES WEEKS Dr. Carnes Weeks, a retired New York surgeon and former summer resident of East Hampton, died on Sept. 15 after a long illness at his Francis Mulvihill, USN Ret., of home in Tucson, Ariz. He was 67. Brickkiln Road, Sag Harbor, died Dr. Weeks was born in Cedarhurst. Sept. 17 in the Southampton Hos- He wasa graduate of St. Paul's pital. He was 85, and a veteran of School and of Yale University. He the Spanish-American and First and received his medical degree from Second World Wars. Columbia University College of Commander Mulvihill was born in Physicians and Surgeons. Danbury. Conn., in 1883. His wife After serying as ? resident at the former Anna McDonough, died Bellevue Hospital, he began practice in 1964. on New York’s East Side. He served Surviving are two sons, Dr. Daniel as a lieutenant commander in the Mulvihill Jr. of Sag Harbor and Navy during World War Two and William P. Mulvihill of Glen Cove; was a member of the staff of Admiral a daughter. Mrs. Dolov.-s Zebrowski; William F. Halsey. After the war, five grandchildren; and one great- he opened an office at 244 East 68th grandchild. Street, where he practiced until his Commander Mulvihill joined the retirement in 1950- Navy in 1899. During World War He is survived by his wife, the One, he was a gunnery officer aboard former Ellen Jordan of Tulsa, Okla.; the battleship Oklahoma. He later by two daughters, Mrs. Nora W. commanded the Naval Torpedo Fac- Preston of Woodbury, Conn., and tory in Alexandria, Va.. and the Mrs. Margaret W. Valentine of Old Naval Mine Depot at New London, Saybrook, Conn.; two sons, Carnes Conn. He retired in 1933, but was Jr. of Amenia, N. Y„ and the Rev. recalled for World War Two. Robert C. Weeks of New York City; The requiem mass was offered a sister, Mrs. Marjorie Stewart of Sept. 19 at St. Andrew’s Church by Bayport; and 14 grandchildren. the Rev. John Drab. Burial was in His burial was private, at Wood- St. Andrew’s Cemetery, bury, Conn. TOWN POLICE Continued From Page 1 police reported, that Davis was real- Coming Up A weekly calendar of social, civic, fraternal and governmental events. To have informa tion listed, call 324-0002. Times given for public meetings of local governing bodies are those regularly scheduled, and are some times changed with little or no notice. f V VOLUNTARY AGREEMENT signed recently by most of the property owners along the ocean between Indian Wells Highway in Amagansett and the Maidstone Club in East Hampton, pledging themselves not to build south of the second line of dunes for 50 years, was a pet project of Mr. Frankel's for many years. He owns some of the property affected, in the Town Mile Hollow area. THE STAR TALKS TO: ‘it im n in A Man With Ideas—and Sculpture MRS. MARY WICKHAM Mrs. Mary Wickman, 82, died in “What's the name of that tree ginning to be felt in this Town, “This is the lesson, then, written there?’’ which has been somnolent and self- as plainly as possible. To ignore “That has a funny name to it,” satisfied for so long, created by the it is in a sense suicidal.” answered Evan Frankel’s housekeep- impact of a 550-acre estate having “I think if it were put this way, er, Mrs. Nora Bennett. “Where’s the been put on the market. each man, woman, and child would gardener gone? Anyway, Mr. Frankel “The Bell estate; and 550 acres want to subscribe.” will know." is big even in Texas. It’s a spread, Folding his hands, he continued. She went back inside the Tudor ancj y0u can quote me on that! No- “And now I want to show you the carriage house off Hither Lane in body ever dreamt anything would philosophy of a man who is a true East Hampton, a building her em- ever happen to it. The rumors were conservationist, instead of all this Hein, the police said, had been ployer hadconverted 22 years ago that it was going to be willed to talk with so little really getting done, operation. Mrs. Wickman was known absent without leave from the Army, into a homefor himself and his charity, to the Catholic Church to As you walk over my land with me, at the Maidstone Club, East Hamp- at Fort Bragg> jsj q since Sept. 3. collections of sculpture, paintings, use as a retreat. But now. . remember that you are one minute ton, as ‘‘Beach Mary, and had made Hein and Macauley were held in and books. Frankel fingered his fore- from Bohack’s and one .minute from hundreds of friends during the more ]ieu of bail> $250 for Macau]ey and Looking from an ivy-covered patio, head ' „But nQw Twenty-odd the Montauk Highway, and then tell than 38 years she had been m charge Q00 for Hein> by Justice R Thomas out across a lawn sloping gently ‘ ,. * ' . acauired me how far away you think you of the ladies locker room. She re- S#1WWT Hnwn and then un. one could s e e ..................... oro ” tired in 1964. Mrs. Wickman was born in Ireland THURSDAY, SEPT. 26 Montauk School Board, at the School, 8 p.m. FRIDAY, SEPT. 27 Public hearing on proposed amendment to Village zoning ordinance creating Residential District AA. Village Hall, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY, SEPT. 28 Cake sale, eighth graders of Public School, White’s Drug and Depart ment Store, Montauk, 10 a.m. Cake sale. Youth Fellowship of Springs Community Chapel, VFW Building. East Hampton, 9:30 a.m. Luncheon, fashion show, and bridge, sponsored by American Associa tion of University Women. Spring Close Restaurant, noon “The Caretaker," Film Club presentation, Guild Hall, 8:30 p.m. SUNDAY, SEPT. 29 , ^ Covered-dish dinner, First Presbyterian Church, East Hampton, 3:30 p.m. MONDAY, SEPT. 30 Voter registration, all polling places, 5-10 p.m. TUESDAY, OCT. 1 Sag Harbor Village Board, Municipal Building, 8 p.m. Montauk Parent-Teachers Association, Public School, 8 p.m. East Hampton Chamber of Commerce, dinner-meeting, The Summer Place Restaurant, 7:30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2 Town Board, Town Hall, 10 a.m. Town Zoning Board of Appeals, Town Hall, hearings: Application of Eugene and Madeleine Johnson for sideyard vari ance, Three Mile Harbor-Hog Creek Highway, East Hampton, zone B, 7:30 p.m. Application of Griffith E. Harris for sideyard variance for already constructed shed, Second House and Delrey Roads, Montauk, zone B, 8 p.m. THURSDAY, OCT. 3 Voter registration, all polling places, 5-10 p.m. Fashion and jewelry show, sponsored by Rosary Altar Society, audi torium of St. Therese’s School, Montauk, 8 p.m. FRIDAY, OCT. 4 Voter registration, all polling places, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Roosevelt Hospital, New York, on ]y one christ 0pher James HeSn, 18, Sept. 18. She had been in the hos pital since Aug. 2, following of 8 Polo Lane, Westbury. Strong. down and then up, one could see ,and which was ,n a sense going are. Early Morning Beer Mi. Frankel s objets were not Pegging at the time. But I could Walking along the pool, Mr. on Oct. 26. 1886, the daughter of At 6c am- ****** Detective a» hous^To Thf left^eu^eyed 1 f0resee suddenly t,here w™}d come Fran,kel said> “* havKe a tenet thf Patriot and RHHoPt Hnnlev Mar Thomas Scott arrested a man ident- Ine nouM- 1U ine e-’eu d a time when people would be eager people are more touched by example Namara She w af the widow of ified as Amh°>"’ Camilleri, 48’ T’ *? , build- than * rhe,oric- What 1 have done August Oscar Wickman. She came 401 East 50th Street' Manhattan, “ emy Moore fernalsa‘- the “More and more tracts suddenly is to simply use the gifts of nature, to East Hampton in the 1920’s near the Vlkm£ Gnl1 at the Mon_ wmte columns. came intQ thg market and just as L00k at the way this ivy is. I was after having lived for a short time' tauk docks- He was charged with “What’s the name of that tree 0 qUickly were developed intensively, in Ireland the other week; hell, ours in the Adirondacks selling beer between 3 and 8 a.m., “A catalpa,” said Mr. Frankel as wjthin the zoning regulations. I’m is greener!” She is survived by a daughter a violation of the Alcoholic Beverage he led the way down brick steps aiways thinking imaginatively, ’way just Some Rocks Miss Ann Wickman of Kew Gardens! Cont ro1 Act. and was later released between ivy-colored walls to his ahead of the mundane, day-to-day. He pointed at a brook running by a son, Paul Wickman. of Boston. m the custody of his attorney by swimming pool. He chose a seat thinking. I’m what they call a land down the hill: at one end of the Mass.; and by six grandchildren. Justice Strong. upon which tfye; waning_rays o e hog - pool: “This does not cost any money; The rosary was recited at Yardley Later that day, Patrolman Finnell sun wele smning, ana oegan t - Tender Handling they’re just some rocks I had brought and Williams Funeral Home on was called to the west jetty at Lake line a p “When I buy, I don’t sell. In over from Stony Hill. And yet, if Friday evening; and the mass was Montauk, where Barbara Hewkell, Bell Estate fact, I sell more rarely than I buy; you look at it, it could be a water- offered at 10 a.m. on Saturday at 49- °f Bayside, had fallen and suf- “There’s a dreadful . . . a need that's why the real estate brokers fall in some tropical place.” the Church of the Most Holy Trinity, fered a severe cut and a possible . . . a desperate need that is be- don’t likeme, because there’s no Up the steps from the pool, two Burial was in Most Holy Trinity broken leg. She was ordered to the -------------------------------------- -------------- turnover. The tender handling of stone gladiators appeared in a de- Cemetery. Southampton Hospital by Dr. Sidney p 0iiceBoat, commanded by Sergeant land pays off rather than flash-bang clivity of the lawn. They were watch- Robbin. William C. Jacobs, was dispatched development. ed over by one of Albert Price’s Patrolman Finnell was called to to Cedar Point where a boat was “What a pity if a general effort massive wood sculptures, the beach again Monday morning, reportedly in trouble. A 32-footer weren’t made by everybody, not only Throughout the estate, the Springs JOHN J. MAKIN, 55 John Joseph Makin, 55, of Atlantic this time at Ditch Plains. Montauk, ownecj by Theodore Zucker of Mer- the Town, the County, but the peo- man's sculptures are juxtaposed with Avenue, Amagansett, died at his where a boy, Steven Cabot, had rjck was towed to Three Mile Har- Pie themselves, because it is they classical figures. Twenty-six of Mr. home Saturday. He was a retired suffered a back injury while swim- bor; jts engine had failed. who will ultimately have to pay. I Price’s works are in bowers, glades, Navy man, a veteran of World War ming in the surf. Steven, a resident jn anticipation of the hunting sea- made a quick calculation that if the copses, broad expanses of lawn, or Two and the Korean War. of Huntington, was also ordered to son Sergeant Fred Notel conducted Town, for instance, were to buy 100 under the natural cathedral of Mr. Makin was born in East Hamp- the Hospital by Dr. Robbin. a hunter-safety course, required be- acres of the Bell estate with an at- sycamores lining the driveway to ton on Oct. 25, 1912, the son of Found Staggering fore a first hunting license may be tendant amount of beach, which in the main house. John and Pauline Rozmislouski At 4 a.m. Sunday, Patrolman Bruce issued, for 23 boys and two adults the future will be priceless, based on “Look at the power, the size, the Makin. He married the former Joyce Lyon arrested a man identified as on Friday. There will be a final a reasonably accurate sales price of feeling for the wood, the solemnity, Clock, who survives. Also surviving Peter E. Scott, 32, of Washington session at Town Hall at 7 p.m. Oct. $250,000, and the interest about four the perfect expression,” Mr. Frankel are a daughter, Mrs. Paul Tarazavich, Street, New York, on charges of 18. per cent, there would be a per capita observed. He is a great admirer of of Lexington Park, Md., and a public intoxication. There had been A pre-season deer fatality was re- cost to each resident annually of the former West Virginian, a tree grandson. reports that someone was trying to ported by the Town Police on Sept. about $5. surgeon turned sculptor. A brother, Peter Makin, lives in get into homes near the Amagansett 17, when an auto driven by James “Now what do you think? Would Not Faint Praise Wyoming, Del. Mr. Makin, who at- Fire House, and Patrolman Lyon Reutershan of Amagansett, hit and we be willing to pay $5 a year for the “DeKooning says Price is as good tended East Hampton High School, reported finding Scott staggering in killed a small deer near the Surf preservation and use of 100 acres a sculptor as he is a painter, and was a member of the American the vicinity. He was fined $25 by ’n Sand Inn in Montauk. The carcass of that property? Oh, I know people that’s not faint praise, considering Legion. Justice Strong, and released. was taken away by the Conservation always say ‘We’re paying high deKooning is an acknowledged mas- far end: “See, there the vengeful queen stands. She has just sentenced a disloyal subject to be hung from a limb; the cadaver swings and a vulture is picking away at him. His mother mourns. It’s a doleful scene. “This is the way sculpture should be displayed. It would never have this impact in a gallery or museum. “Now you’ve seen death, the macabre, and now I show you life.” He pointed toward a massive Price sculpture, a stork carrying an in fant. “This is heroic.” He removed the baby from its wooden swaddling. “Every time I’ve given women this baby to hold they instinctively put it to their breast.” Like a Stage “You might say this is like a stage in a medieval allegory — that’s a good line.” Mr. Frankel pointed to a Henry Moore near the horise. “Here, you have an East Hampton tree worker, a man who has never been in a museum, never had a lesson, and there the greatest sculp tor of the day, and this and that cope, so to speak. . .” He walked down a path shaded by an arch of privet, and said, “Now you are about to enter a new world, the world of children. A Hansel and Gretel world. There’s their house and the Old Lady in the Shoe, and the Tin Man, which Mrs. Price did. The amusing part of this is that I am a bachelor. But the neighbors’ children come here. “All of this is grapes; here is the final secret garden, no adult can enter.” Lift To The Spirit He looked up. “There are masses of pink roses that climb way up, and the jack-in-the-box, and wild flowers. All of this enchanted place is theirs, you see.” “Now, do you want notdog stands or this? This is just as nature is, with a little assist here and there. It doesn’t take much to do this, but how many places have you seen, homes owned by people with the means, which have no lift to the spirit? “Of course, there are some who do, but you can see, can’t you, how important it is to preserve? Sure. I'm safe in these stone walls, but to revel in that is a common error. I’m just as concerned about the periph ery, for every ugly part, every hot- dog stand, every ugly sign tends to vitiate the whole.” Jack Graves The rosary was recited Monday At 8 a.m. that day, the Town Department. BEFORE YOU BUY ANY CAR . SEE WHAT'S ON DISPLAY NOW! AT PLITT FORD-MERCURY BRAND NEW IDEAS TO EXCITE YOU IN '69' 1969 Marquis Colony Park station wagon Ford's 1969 XL two-door Sports Roof model PLITT FORD-MERCURY (where you'll find the car of your dreams) MONTAUK HIGHWAY 324-0228 EAST HAMPTON enough taxes,’ and so forth and so ter,” he observed, on, but if the rate of land value “Now we are going down the Via increase is projected, then in five Seductione. There’s the lilyofthe to ten years it will be worth four valley, a perfect symbol. This sheer, or five times what it is today.” simple beauty — to think that it all The Sea Spray could be destroyed. You see, some- “Ten years ago, the Sea Spray day this will be a museum, sort of was for sale at $125,000. Imagine, like the MacDowell Colony or 18 acres of beachfront. Today, it Yaddo, where artists, composers, would be worth four times as much, writers and sculptors can come to The price for a beachfront acre thenlive and work for a year.” was about $7,500; nOw it’s $75,000.” Standing where a grasstennis Mr. Frankel’s thin lips and intense court once was, surrounded by the hazel eyes produced a knowing smile, white columns, Mr. Frankel pointed and his left hand made a flourish, to an opening in the hedge at the the ! POT BELLIED STOVE ANTIQUES GIFTS GUESS WHAT . . . The Pot-Bellied Stove Montauk Highway Montauk 668-2254 WILL BE OPEN ALL YEAR-ROUND DO DROP IN ! "SAVE A BUNDLE" DURING OUR ANNUAL CLOSE OUT SALE BOB ROBERTS SAYS: Drive over now and let me save you “bundles of money” on any brand-new ’68 RAMBLER of your choice. Yes, it will pay you to take a few moments to check here, with me, especially so, if you’ve been offered a so-called “fabu lous deal” on a RAMBLER . . . or any new '68 car. I have a nice selection of handsome new RAMBLERS: sedans, station wagons, hardtops and those sporty AMX and Javelins . . . at extra ordinarily low prices. Come in and browse around! It’s a short pleasant drive from wherever you are—to our three beautiful showrooms in Southampton. Always sincerely, Bob Roberts P.S. The NEW 1969 AMERICAN MOTORS Cars will be on display here beginning Tuesday, October 1st. DRIVE RIGHT IN FOR AN APPRAISAL THE IRVING GARAGE RAMBLER HEADQUARTERS Where you always get a good deal MORE than just “A Good Deal” Authorized Fiat Sales 8c Service Select Used Cars Corner Windmill Lane and Hill Street SOUTHAMPTON, L. I. AT 3-0253 AT 3-2170 OPEN EVENINGS INCLUDING SATURDAYS

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THE EAST HAMPTON STAR, EAST HAMPTON N T„ SEPTEMBES 26, 1968

THE * £ 5Published Every Thursday STAR 153 Main S treet 324-0477

Mrs. Jeannette E. Rattray, Owner ."‘T'rmtigo, j, . Subscription Rates

Entered at the Post Otf.ce at East A Y[.ai. PayaWe in AdvanceHampton, New York, as second-class Six Months

m atter. Single C o p ies_______________

$5.00 $4.00

.. .10

evening at the Yardley and Williams Funeral Home, and the mass was offered Tuesday morning at Most Holy Trinity Church by the Rev. Peter J. Garry.

DANIEL MULVIHILLLieutenant Commander Daniel

OBITUARIESDR. CARNES WEEKS

Dr. Carnes Weeks, a retired New York surgeon and former summer resident of East Hampton, died on Sept. 15 after a long illness at his Francis Mulvihill, USN Ret., ofhome in Tucson, Ariz. He was 67. Brickkiln Road, Sag Harbor, died

Dr. Weeks was born in Cedarhurst. Sept. 17 in the Southampton Hos-He was a graduate of St. Paul's pital. He was 85, and a veteran ofSchool and of Yale University. He the Spanish-American and First and received his medical degree from Second World Wars.Columbia University College of Commander Mulvihill was born in Physicians and Surgeons. Danbury. Conn., in 1883. His wife

After serying as ? resident at the former Anna McDonough, died Bellevue Hospital, he began practice in 1964.on New York’s East Side. He served Surviving are two sons, Dr. Daniel as a lieutenant commander in the Mulvihill J r. of Sag Harbor and Navy during World War Two and William P. M ulvihill of Glen Cove; was a member of the staff of Admiral a daughter. Mrs. Dolov.-s Zebrowski; William F. Halsey. After the war, five grandchildren; and one great- he opened an office at 244 East 68th grandchild.Street, where he practiced until his Commander Mulvihill joined the retirem ent in 1950- Navy in 1899. During World War

He is survived by his wife, the One, he was a gunnery officer aboard former Ellen Jordan of Tulsa, Okla.; the battleship Oklahoma. He later by two daughters, Mrs. Nora W. commanded the Naval Torpedo Fac- Preston of Woodbury, Conn., and tory in Alexandria, Va.. and the Mrs. Margaret W. Valentine of Old Naval Mine Depot at New London, Saybrook, Conn.; two sons, Carnes Conn. He retired in 1933, but was Jr. of Amenia, N. Y„ and the Rev. recalled for World W ar Two.Robert C. Weeks of New York City; The requiem mass was offered a sister, Mrs. M arjorie S tew art of Sept. 19 at St. Andrew’s Church by Bayport; and 14 grandchildren. the Rev. John Drab. Burial was in

His burial was private, at Wood- St. Andrew’s Cemetery, bury, Conn.

TOWN POLICEContinued From Page 1

police reported, that Davis was real-

Coming UpA weekly calendar of social, civic, fraternal and governm ental events. To have inform a­tion listed, call 324-0002. Times given for public m eetings of local governing bodies are those regularly scheduled, and are some­times changed with little or no notice. f

V

VOLUNTARY AGREEMENT signed recently by most of the property owners along the ocean between Indian Wells Highway in Amagansett and the M aidstone Club in East Hampton, pledging themselves not to build south of the second line of dunes for 50 years, was a pet project of Mr. Frankel's for many years. He owns some of the property affected, in the Town Mile Hollow area.

THE STAR TALKS TO: ‘it i m n i n

A Man With Ideas—and Sculpture

MRS. MARY WICKHAMMrs. Mary Wickman, 82, died in

“What's the name of th a t tree ginning to be felt in this Town, “This is the lesson, then, w ritten there?’’ which has been somnolent and self- as plainly as possible. To ignore

“That has a funny nam e to it,” satisfied for so long, created by the it is in a sense suicidal.” answered Evan Frankel’s housekeep- impact of a 550-acre estate having “I th ink if it were put this way, er, Mrs. Nora Bennett. “W here’s the been put on the m arket. each m an, woman, and child wouldgardener gone? Anyway, Mr. Frankel “The Bell estate; and 550 acres want to subscribe.” w ill know." is big even in Texas. I t’s a spread, Folding his hands, he continued.

She w ent back inside the Tudor ancj y0u can quote me on that! No- “And now I w ant to show you the carriage house off H ither Lane in body ever dream t anything would philosophy of a man who is a true East Hampton, a building h e r em- ever happen to it. The rum ors w ere conservationist, instead of all this

Hein, the police said, had been ployer had converted 22 years ago that it was going to be willed to talk w ith so little really getting done,operation. Mrs. Wickman was known absent w ithout leave from the Army, into a home for himself and his charity, to the Catholic Church to As you walk over my land w ith me,at the Maidstone Club, East Ham p- at Fort Bragg> jsj q since Sept. 3. collections of sculpture, paintings, use as a retreat. But now. . rem em ber th at you are one m inuteton, as ‘‘Beach M ary, and had m ade Hein and M acauley w ere held in and books. F rankel fingered his fore- from Bohack’s and one .minute fromhundreds of friends during the more ]ieu of bail> $250 for Macau]ey and Looking from an ivy-covered patio, head ' „But nQw Twenty-odd the M ontauk Highway, and then tellthan 38 years she had been m charge Q00 for Hein> by Justice R Thomas out across a lawn sloping gently ‘ ,. * ' . acauired me how far away you th ink youof the ladies locker room. She re- S#1WWT Hnwn and then un. one could s e e ..................... • oro ”tired in 1964.

Mrs. Wickman was born in Ireland

THURSDAY, SEPT. 26M ontauk School Board, a t the School, 8 p.m.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 27Public hearing on proposed am endm ent to Village zoning ordinance creating Residential D istrict AA. Village Hall, 7:30 p.m.

SATURDAY, SEPT. 28Cake sale, eighth graders of Public School, W hite’s Drug and D epart­m ent Store, Montauk, 10 a.m.Cake sale. Youth Fellowship of Springs Com munity Chapel, VFW Building. East Hampton, 9:30 a.m.Luncheon, fashion show, and bridge, sponsored by Am erican Associa­tion of University Women. Spring Close Restaurant, noon “The Caretaker," Film Club presentation, Guild Hall, 8:30 p.m.

SUNDAY, SEPT. 29 , ^C overed-d ish dinner, F irst Presbyterian Church, East Hampton, 3:30 p.m.

MONDAY, SEPT. 30Voter registration, all polling places, 5-10 p.m.

TUESDAY, OCT. 1Sag Harbor Village Board, M unicipal Building, 8 p.m.M ontauk Parent-Teachers Association, Public School, 8 p.m.East Ham pton Cham ber of Commerce, dinner-m eeting, The Sum m er Place Restaurant, 7:30 p.m.

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 2Town Board, Town Hall, 10 a.m.Town Zoning Board of Appeals, Town Hall, hearings:

Application of Eugene and M adeleine Johnson for sideyard v ari­ance, Three Mile Harbor-Hog Creek Highway, East Hampton, zone B, 7:30 p.m.Application of G riffith E. H arris for sideyard variance for already constructed shed, Second House and Delrey Roads, Montauk, zone B, 8 p.m.

THURSDAY, OCT. 3Voter registration, all polling places, 5-10 p.m.Fashion and jew elry show, sponsored by Rosary A ltar Society, audi­torium of St. Therese’s School, M ontauk, 8 p.m.

FRIDAY, OCT. 4Voter registration, all polling places, 10 a.m. - 10 p.m.

Roosevelt Hospital, New York, on ]y one c h ris t0p h er J a m e s H e Sn, 18, Sept. 18. She had been in the hos­pital since Aug. 2, following

of 8 Polo Lane, Westbury.

Strong. down and then up, one could see ,and which was ,n a sense going are.Early M orning Beer Mi. Frankel s objets w ere not Pegging a t the time. But I could W alking along the pool, Mr.

on Oct. 26. 1886, the daughter of A t 6 c a m - ****** Detective a» h o u s ^ T o T h f l e f t ^ e u ^ e y e d 1 f0resee suddenly t,here w ™}d come F ran ,kel said> “* havKe a tenet th fPatrio t and RHHoPt Hnnlev M ar Thomas Scott arrested a m an ident- Ine nouM- 1U ine e-’ eu d a time when people would be eager people are m ore touched by exampleNamara She w a f the widow of ified as Am h°>"’ Camilleri, 48’ T ’ *? , build- than * rhe,oric- W hat 1 have doneAugust Oscar Wickman. She came 401 East 50th S treet' M anhattan, “ em y Moore f e r n a l sa‘ - the “More and more tracts suddenly is to simply use the gifts of nature,to East Hampton in the 1920’s near the Vlkm£ Gnl1 a t the Mon_ w m te columns. came intQ thg m arket and just as L 00k a t the way this ivy is. I wasafter having lived for a short time' tauk docks- He was charged w ith “W hat’s the nam e of that tree0 qUickly were developed intensively, in Ireland the other week; hell, oursin the Adirondacks selling beer between 3 and 8 a.m., “A catalpa,” said Mr. Frankel as wjthin the zoning regulations. I ’m is greener!”

She is survived by a daughter a violation of the Alcoholic Beverage he led the way down brick steps aiways thinking imaginatively, ’way ju s t Some RocksMiss Ann Wickman of Kew Gardens! Cont ro1 Act. and was later released between ivy-colored walls to his ahead of the mundane, day-to-day. He pointed at a brook runningby a son, Paul Wickman. of Boston. m the custody of his attorney by swimming pool. He chose a seat thinking. I ’m w hat they call a land down the hill: at one end of theMass.; and by six grandchildren. Justice Strong. upon which tfye; waning_ rays o e hog - pool: “This does not cost any money;

The rosary was recited a t Yardley Later th at day, Patrolm an Finnell sun w ele smning, ana oegan t - Tender Handling they’re just some rocks I had broughtand Williams Funeral Home on was called to the west jetty at Lake line a p “When I buy, I don’t sell. In over from Stony Hill. And yet, ifFriday evening; and the mass was Montauk, w here Barbara Hewkell, Bell Estate fact, I sell more rarely than I buy; you look a t it, it could be a w ater-offered at 10 a.m. on Saturday a t 49- ° f Bayside, had fallen and suf- “There’s a dreadful . . . a need that's why the real estate brokers fall in some tropical place.”the Church of the Most Holy Trinity, fered a severe cut and a possible . . . a desperate need th at is be- don’t like me, because there’s no Up the steps from the pool, twoBurial was in Most Holy Trinity broken leg. She was ordered to the -------------------------------------- — -------------- turnover. The tender handling of stone gladiators appeared in a de-Cemetery. Southampton Hospital by Dr. Sidney p 0iice Boat, commanded by Sergeant land pays off rather than flash-bang clivity of the lawn. They were watch-

Robbin. W illiam C. Jacobs, was dispatched development. ed over by one of A lbert P rice’sPatrolm an Finnell was called to to Cedar Point where a boat was “W hat a p ity if a general effort m assive wood sculptures,

the beach again Monday morning, reportedly in trouble. A 32-footer w eren’t made by everybody, not only Throughout the estate, the SpringsJOHN J. MAKIN, 55John Joseph Makin, 55, of Atlantic this time at Ditch Plains. Montauk, ownecj by Theodore Zucker of Mer- the Town, the County, but the peo- m an's sculptures are juxtaposed with

Avenue, Amagansett, died a t his where a boy, Steven Cabot, had r jck was towed to Three Mile H ar- Pie themselves, because it is they classical figures. Twenty-six of Mr.home Saturday. He was a retired suffered a back injury while swim- bor; jts engine had failed. who will ultim ately have to pay. I Price’s works are in bowers, glades,Navy man, a veteran of World W ar ming in the surf. Steven, a resident j n anticipation of the hunting sea- m ade a quick calculation that if the copses, broad expanses of lawn, orTwo and the Korean War. of Huntington, was also ordered to son Sergeant Fred Notel conducted Town, for instance, were to buy 100 under the na tu ra l cathedral of

Mr. Makin was born in East Hamp- the Hospital by Dr. Robbin. a hunter-safety course, required be- acres of the Bell estate with an a t- sycamores lining the driveway toton on Oct. 25, 1912, the son of Found Staggering fore a first hunting license m ay be tendant amount of beach, which in the main house.John and Pauline Rozmislouski At 4 a.m. Sunday, Patrolm an Bruce issued, for 23 boys and two adults the fu ture will be priceless, based on “Look a t the power, the size, theMakin. He m arried the form er Joyce Lyon arrested a m an identified as on Friday. There w ill be a final a reasonably accurate sales price of feeling for the wood, the solemnity,Clock, who survives. Also surviving P eter E. Scott, 32, of Washington session at Town Hall at 7 p.m. Oct. $250,000, and the interest about four the perfect expression,” Mr. Frankelare a daughter, Mrs. Paul Tarazavich, Street, New York, on charges of 18. per cent, there would be a per capita observed. He is a great adm irer ofof Lexington Park, Md., and a public intoxication. There had been A pre-season deer fatality was re- cost to each resident annually of the form er W est Virginian, a treegrandson. reports th at someone was trying to ported by the Town Police on Sept. about $5. surgeon turned sculptor.

A brother, P eter Makin, lives in get into homes near the Amagansett 17, when an auto driven by Jam es “Now w hat do you think? Would Not Faint PraiseWyoming, Del. Mr. Makin, who a t- F ire House, and Patrolm an Lyon Reutershan of Amagansett, h it and we be willing to pay $5 a year for the “DeKooning says Price is as good tended East Hampton High School, reported finding Scott staggering in killed a small deer near the Surf preservation and use of 100 acres a sculptor as he is a painter, andwas a m em ber of the American the vicinity. He was fined $25 by ’n Sand Inn in Montauk. The carcass of th at property? Oh, I know people th a t’s not fain t praise, consideringLegion. Justice Strong, and released. was taken away by the Conservation always say ‘We’re paying high deKooning is an acknowledged mas-

fa r end:“See, there the vengeful queen

stands. She has just sentenced a disloyal subject to be hung from a limb; the cadaver swings and a vulture is picking away a t him. His m other mourns. I t ’s a doleful scene.

“This is the way sculpture should be displayed. I t would never have this impact in a gallery or museum.

“Now you’ve seen death, the m acabre, and now I show you life.” He pointed toward a m assive Price sculpture, a stork carrying an in­fant. “This is heroic.”

He removed the baby from its wooden swaddling. “Every tim e I’ve given wom en this baby to hold they instinctively put it to their breast.”

Like a Stage “You m ight say this is like a

stage in a m edieval allegory — th a t’s a good line.” Mr. F rankel pointed to a H enry Moore near the horise.

“Here, you have an East Ham pton tree worker, a man who has never been in a museum, never had a lesson, and there the greatest sculp­to r of the day, and this and th at cope, so to speak. . .”

He walked down a path shaded by an arch of privet, and said, “Now you are about to en ter a new world, the world of children. A Hansel and Gretel world. There’s their house and the Old Lady in the Shoe, and the Tin Man, which Mrs. Price did. The am using p art of this is th at I am a bachelor. But the neighbors’

children come here.“All of th is is grapes; here is the

final secret garden, no adult can enter.”

L ift To The SpiritHe looked up. “There are masses

of p ink roses th a t climb way up, and the jack-in-the-box, and wild flowers. All of this enchanted place is theirs, you see.”

“Now, do you w an t notdog stands or this? This is ju st as na tu re is, w ith a little assist here and there. It doesn’t take m uch to do this, bu t how m any places have you seen, homes owned by people w ith the means, which have no lift to the spirit?

“Of course, there are some who do, b u t you can see, can’t you, how im portant i t is to preserve? Sure. I'm safe in these stone walls, b u t to revel in th at is a common error. I ’m just as concerned about the periph­ery, for every ugly part, every hot- dog stand, every ugly sign tends to vitia te the whole.”

Jack Graves

The rosary was recited Monday At 8 a.m. th at day, the Town Departm ent.

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enough taxes,’ and so forth and so ter,” he observed, on, but if the rate of land value “Now we are going down the Viaincrease is projected, then in five Seductione. There’s the lily of theto ten years it will be worth four valley, a perfect symbol. This sheer, or five times w hat i t is today.” simple beauty — to th ink th at i t all

The Sea Spray could be destroyed. You see, some-“Ten years ago, the Sea Spray day this w ill be a museum, sort of

was for sale a t $125,000. Imagine, like the MacDowell Colony or 18 acres of beachfront. Today, i t Yaddo, where artists, composers, would be worth four tim es as much, w riters and sculptors can come to The price for a beachfront acre then live and w ork for a year.”was about $7,500; nOw it’s $75,000.” S tanding w here a grass tennis

Mr. F rankel’s thin lips and intense court once was, surrounded by the hazel eyes produced a knowing smile, w hite columns, Mr. Frankel pointed and his left hand m ade a flourish, to an opening in the hedge at the

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