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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

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Brooklyn, New York
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13
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pi tO pi tO -HENRY beloved husband of Marie Bokelmann and dear father of Mrs. Arnold 1 Kuesel and Mrs. John Stubbe; on October 3. 1945. Funeral service at the Schaffner Funeral Home, 119-50 Metropolitan Avenue, Kew Gardens, October 5, at 8 p.m.' -LORNE M.D..

on Wednesday, October 3, 1945, of 421 Clinton Avenue: beloved husband of Alice W. MacDougall and father of Helen W. Henderson and Lt. John W. MacDougall, U.

S. A. A. F. Service Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Saturday, 3 p.m.

Interment Brockville, Ontario, Canada. October MARINA 3, 1945, -JOHN devoted JOSEPH, son on of Mary (nee Haran) and the late James; beloved brother of J. and Mary E. Marinan. Funeral from Funeral Home, 45-18 48th Avenue, Woodside, L.

I. (Bliss Street station), on Saturday at 10:30 a.m. Solemn mass of requiem at St. Teresa's R. C.

Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. McCORMACK PETER on October 4, 1945, at his residence, 712 Ditmas loving husband of Anna (nee Gallery); devoted father of Margaret Chesterton, Mary, and Joseph; dear brother of the Reverend Joseph A. McCormack, Mary and Hubert. Notice of funeral later.

McINERNEY-ANNIE, on October 3, 1945, formerly of 254 New York Avenue. Funeral Saturday, 9:30 a.m., from the Madden Funeral Home, Franklin and Willoughby Avenues. Solemn requiem mass, $10 a.m., St. Augustine's R. C.

Church. Interment St. John's Cemetery. MICHAEL-LUCIUS on October beloved husband of Mary father of Myrtle, Lillian, Lucius and Elmer. Services at Moadinger Funeral Parlors, 1120 a.m." Flatbush Avenue, Saturday, 10:30 MONAHAN October 3.

1945, ANNIE M. (nee Carroll); beloved wife of the late Patrick Do devoted mother of Mrs. Annie Donnelly, Mrs. Mary Madden, Mrs. Margaret Hopkins, Thomas, Edward, Sgt.

Patrick, 62d Precinct, N. Y. P. James and William Monahan. Reposing William A.

Martin Funeral Home, Classon Avenue, corner Sterling Place. Funeral Saturday, 9:15 a.m. Requiem mass St. Teresa's Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

MOONEY- on October 4. 1945, at Bay Shore, L. mother of Ethel L. Mooney, Edythe M. Robins, Olivette M.

Ludwig. Services at the George White Funeral Home. 34 a Park Avenue, Bay Shore, on Sunday at 4 p.m. MORAN On October 3. 1945, A ANNA beloved daughter of Peter and the late Elizabeth; dear sister of William Peter John Mary V.

and Mrs. Kathleen Haggerty. Funeral from her home, 1355 E. 14th on Saturday at 8:30 a.m.; requiem mass St. Brendan R.

C. Church, Avenue O. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. MORIARTY-JOHN of 1588 E. 17th Street, Brooklyn, October 4, 1945, beloved husband a of the late Anne, devoted father of John, James, Kenneth, Walter, Mrs.

Edna Moran, Irene and Sister James Anna, O.S.J. Funeral from his residence. Monday, a.m. Solemn requiem mass St. Brendan's Church, 10 a.m.

Interment Calvary Cemetery. Patrick J. Byrnes, director. PYE MILLIE on Tuesday, October 2, 1945, at Wurtsboro, N. beloved wife of William H.

Pye. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place. Saturday, a.m. REYNOLDS-MARY on October 4, 1945, beloved wife of Edward J. and devoted mother of Mrs.

Marie Zinnell, James Reynolds and Mrs. Catherine Zinnel. Funeral Monday. 8, from her home, 145-39 October, Street, Jamaica South. Requiem mass at Christ the King Church at 10 a.m.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. ROBOTTOM FREDERICK, on Wednesday, October 3, 1945; dear husband of Minnie and father of Frederick J. Services Saturday, 10 the Jung Funeral Home, 796 Lincoln Place. RUDLOFF-CATHERINE J. (nee Laeger), on October 3, 1945, wife of the late Frederick C.

Rudloff; dear sister of Matilda E. Nichols and Harry A. Laeger. Services at New York and Brooklyn Funeral Home, 187 S. Oxford Street, Friday, p.m.

Charles A. Ringe, Director. VAN GOSTEIN- October 1. 1945. WILLIAM, retired patrolman, formerly attached to Traffic survived by his wife, Anna (nee Beagan); children, Rosemary, William, Jerome, Philip, James; John and Jeanne Holmlund, stepchildren; brothers, James, Joseph and Thomas, Funeral from his home, 182 Miller Avenue, Saturday.

Solemn requiem mass 10 a.m., St. Malachy's R. C. Church. Arrangements by John Metzner.

WELHAM--On October 4. 1945. ETHEL, of 270 Eldert Street, beloved wife of Henry J. and mother of Lt. Wilfred U.

S. Army, and Victor Welham. Services at the William C. Funeral Chapel, 1230 Bushwick Avenue, Saturday at 2 p.m. Interment will follow at Evergreens Cemetery.

WILES -LILLIE. October 4, 1945, at her residence, 1562 Hendrickson Street, beloved wife of the late Lionel, mother of Mrs. Grace Bacon and Frank McCumber: also survived by three grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Services Saturday St. at 2 p.m.

Interment Evergreens Ber- Cemetery. In Memoriam The of In Memoriam -In loving memory of our dear mother, JANE died October 6, 1943. Masses offered. LOVING CHILDREN. MILMORE -In loving memory of MARY V.

MILMORE, died October 5, 1943. Masses offered. In our home she is fondly remembered, Sweet memories cling to her name; Those who loved her in life sincerely Still love her in death just the same. Husband, Children, Grandchildren. WEIS -Memorial services will be held for our son, Pvt.

WILBUR STEPHAN WEIS, on Sunday, October 7, at Trinity Lutheran Church, 18th Avenue and E. 8th Street, Brooklyn. Good CEMETERY PLOTS SACRIFICE FAMILY CEMEA TERY PLOT -Perpetual care. Value $400; will sell for less. Three graves, six interments.

Valhalla Burial Park, Staten Island. Telephone TRilangle 5-5700. Mr. PHILLIPS. St.

John's Home To Offer Mass For Its War Dead A high mass of requiem will be celebrated tomorrow at 10 a.m. in the chapel of St. John's Home for Boys, St. Mark's and Albany for the 18 boys from the home who were killed in action, some in the Pacific area and others in Europe. The mass will be offered for Louis Abbruzzo, Edward Bass, Joseph Camassa, Mark De Bernardo, Ralph De Prisco, Thomas Flynn, John Horgan, Robert Theodore Kochen, Anthony Lawrence, George Matthews, Patrick Albert Mulesky, Charles J.

Nattel, Dan O'Donnell, Robert Reilly, Al Struller and Kenneth Whalan. Orphans from St. Joseph's Home, the Convent of Mercy and St. Vncent's Home for Boys, as well AS the boys of St. John's Home will attend the mass.

which will be celebrated by the Rev. Joseph Tetzlaff, assisted by two priests of the order of the Fathers of Mary. Former District Tax Supervisor David F. Soden has arranged the plans for the mass. Harry Cottam, 64, Retired Machinist A requiem mass will be offered tomorrow at 10:30 a.m.

at Our Lady Perpetual Help Church, 111th Ave. 114th Richmond Hill, for Harry Cottam of 104-42 Lefferts Place who died Tuesday at 64. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Mr. Cottam was a retired machinist and a former member of Company D.

14th Regiment, N. G. N. Y. He served in the army during the Spanish-American War.

He was a former warden of Loretta Council, K. of and a member of the Holy Name Society of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church. He is survived by his widow. Catherine: a daughter, Clara; five Prsons, Corporal Harold, Corporal Francis, Private Girard. Harold and Charles, and four grandchil-27.

dren, one of whom is in the navy. Rev. August Steitz, Ex-Boro Pastor Jersey City, Oct. 5-Funeral services for the Rev. Dr.

August Steitz, Methodist minister and professor of Germanic languages at New York University for 25 years, will held at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in Simpson Grace Methodist Church. Burial will be in Restland Memorial Park, East Hanover, N. J. Dr.

Steitz, who was 69, died Tuesday in the Bethany Deaconess Hospital, Brooklyn. He was formerly pastor of a Methodist church in that borough and served pastorates also in Manhattan and Bridgeport, Conn. He was ordained in 1903. He became pastor of Union Street Methodist Church here in 1942. Surviving are his widow.

Mrs. Amelia Schmitt Steitz; a son, Wallace. and two brothers, Julius and Lewis. Frank S. Corcoran, Brewery Salesman Frank S.

Corcoran of 87-10 63d Rego Park, a salesman for the Schaefer Brewing Company, died Wednesday in Queens General Hospital, Jamaica. He was 56. Born in Scranton, he lived in Greenpoint 38 years before moving to Rego Parember years ago. He had been a of Fidelity Council, Knights of Columbus. Surviving are his widow, Mrs.

Eleanor Corcoran; a daughter, Eleanor, and three sisters. Lucy, Estelle and Mildred Corcoran. The funeral will take place at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow from his home, with a requiem mass at 10 a.m. the R.

C. Church of the Ascension. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. Rev. Eugene Gray Rites Set for Today Middle Island, Oct.

5-Funeral services for the Rev. Eugene F. Gray, 85. retired Presbyterian minister, were to be held today at che Middle Island Presbyterian Church, where he was pastor in 1925 when he retired. He died Wednesday in the Nassau-Suffolk General Hospital, Copiague, after a brief illness.

Born in Michigan, he was graduated from Olivet College in that State. served as pastor of eral churches in the midWest before coming east, Prior to becoming pastor of the Middle Island church he was pastor of the Presbyterian church in Yaphank. For many years he had been active in the Boy movement on Long Island. Scout, wife, Mrs. Frances E.

Gray, died some time ago. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. William Koschara, with whom he lived at Coram, and Mrs. Earl C. Norris of Manhattan; five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

Josiah Q. Perry Belfast, N. Oct. 5-Josiah Perry, 60, chief revision clerk of the State Assembly, died at his home here yesterday of a heart ailment. He had on the Assembly clerk's staff since 1933.

He formerly practiced law in New York and was widely known by legislators representing metropolitan districts. Passes Passes McENTEE -In loving memory of a devoted and loyal friend, MARGARET LAVIN McENTEE. Mass at St. Charles Borromeo Church, Saturday, October 6. at 12:20.

HER FRIENDS. 1.e0 S. Sheridan Funeral Service 2603 Church Cor. Rogers Tel. BUckminster 4-3637 Dr.

J. T. Hatfield, Educator, 83 Chicago, Oct 5-Dr. James Taft Hatfield, 83, professor emeritus of German at Northwestern University, died here yesterday after being stricken with a heart attack on his way to his home at Evanston, Ill. Born in Brooklyn, Dr.

Hatfield studied at Rugby Academy, Philadelphia, and Northwestern University. He received doctorate in philosophy from Johns as Hopkins University after two years of study at German universities. Dr. Hatfield left his academic duties in 1898 to enlist in the navy during the Spanish -American War. His wife.

Mrs. Estelle Caraway Hatfield, died in 1940. He leaves a son and four daughters. Edward L. Collier, Retired Lawyer Reprinted From Yesterday's Late Editions, Edward L.

Collier, a retired lawyer and a former Brooklyn Assemblyman, who died in the Rockville Centre Sanitarium, was buried today (Thursday) at Coxhe entered the sanitarium four years sacksie. N. Y. He was 84. Mr.

Collier lived a in Brooklyn until ago. A Republican, he served in the State Legislature in 1899 as the representative of 10th A. D. He had served on the Board of Education, the executive committee of the College of the City of New York and as a trustee of Normal College of the City of New York. Two nieces survive.

Lt. George Otis, 21, Auto Crash Victim Reprinted From Yesterday's Late Editions Holtsville, Oct. 4-Lt. George Otis 3d of this village was killed in an automobile accident in Germany June 12. according to word from the War Department received by his wife, Mrs.

Ruth Kolb Otis. He was A son of Mr. and Mrs. George Otis Jr. of Boston and Yarmouth Port, Lieutenant Otis was a descendant of John Otis, who settled in Binghampton, in 1630.

He attended Boston University and the College of Business Administration, Syracuse University, from which he was graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Science. He went overseas in August. 1944, two weeks before the birth of his daughter, Ruth Kolb Otis, and was wounded in action in France last October while serving with the 180th Infantry in the 7th Army. Mrs. M.

L. Brereton Rites Saturday Reprinted From Yesterday's Late Editions A requiem mass for Mrs. Mary L. Brereton. widow of Richard J.

Brereton and mother of Police Capt. Richard J. Brereton of the Butler St. station, will be offered at 10 a.m. Saturday at the R.

C. Church of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal. The funeral will take place at 9:30 a.m. from the chapel at 66-04 Fresh Pond Road and burial will be in St. John's Cemetery.

Mrs. Brereton died Tuesday in her home, 9935 3d at the age of 65. She had been in ill health for some time and her death was believed to have been hastened that of her husband May 16 last. She was a lifelong resident of Brooklyn. Surviving, besides her son, is a daughter, Mrs.

Rita Simanowith, and two grandchildren. Lt. R. McGuinness, Plane Navigator Reprinted From Yesterday's Late Editions Second Lt. Raymond J.

McGuinness 22, of 21-10 149th Whitestone, a -navigator with the 8th Air Force, was in action over the Ruhr Gertilled, many Sept. 11, 1944, according to word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J. McGuinness.

He had previously been reported missing. A graduate of St. Francis Xavier College, Manhattan, Lieutenant McGuinness enlisted in the army air forces in August. 1942, and went overseas in June. 1944, three months after receiving his commission.

Surviving besides his parents are three brothers. Warren, James and Donald McGuinness. O'Dwyer Men See Truman O. K. Soon Continued from Page 1 welfare services, for slum clearance and for better housing should come rfom the surplus fund.

"The has come," he said. state, "whe nwe ought to expect decent returns from the taxes we pay into the State." Outlining a series of reforms which he to put into effect. the Democratic L. P. candidate said, "This will take a lot of money, It can't come from the city but we have the right to expect some of it from the State." Mr.

O'Dwyer was joined on the platform by his running mates, Vincent Impellitteri, for City Council President; Borough President Cashmore. seeking re-election: former United States Attorney Miles F. MacDonald, candidate for District Attorney, and Assembly Minority Leader Irwin Steingut. Support for Mr. O'Dwyer, with one dissenting vote, was approved by the Representative Assembly of the Newspaper Guild of New York, it was announced today.

EBBERS-HILI. INC. Clinton Avenue Funeral Chapel 519 Clinton Avenue G. E. FUHRER, Lie.

Mgr. MAin 2-0531 Blind Newsie Plans' Fight for His Dog As Court Test Case Edward Burke turned his face toward the window and the bright October sunshine streaming in. Blind since 1933, he could only feel its warmth. "I think I'll fight it out right here." he said. way I see it, it's a test case.

I mean it they do this to me they can do the same to blind veteran in the United States who comes home with a seeing-eye dog. Kids are alike wherever you go. There'll always be some who pester dogs." Mr. Burke's German shepherd, Ginger, was accused of viciousness after nipping four persons at his newsstand at 3d Ave. and 106th Manhattan.

City authorities demanded Ginger be examined to determine if the dog must be destroyed. He had Ginger taken to New Jersey, "Now I've been ordered into court next Tuesday," he said "They tell me that I'm supposed to sign an affidavit to keep Ginger out of New York and they'll leave him alone. I don't know what I'll do yet, but I think I'll stay and fight. I wouldn't give Ginger up for Mayor LaGuardia and the whole darned town." O'Dwyer Ducking Issues, Foes Claim Continued from Page those in all boroughs, have adequate and decent housing, he said. "My teammate, Controller Joseph D.

McGoldrick, has already started to do something about this problem. We propose to do much more." Controller McGoldrick, a subsequent speaker, outlined his downtown Brooklyn land rehabilitation program and said he had discussed it with Judge Goldstein Justice Nicholas M. Pette, his running mate for Council president, that they were in accord on a proposal to apply the plan to other parts of Brooklyn and the older rundown sections of other boroughs. Former Municipal Justice Benjamin Brenner was chairman of the meeting after the rally had been opened by, Abraham Roth, the Brooklyn Liberals' executive di- rector. Other Candidates Heard The speakers included Justice Pette, District Attorney George Beldock, Public Service Commissioner George A.

Arkwright, nominee for Borough President, and other candidates on the Liberal party ticket. Among the latter were Irving M. Getnick, nominee for the Supreme Court; Louis J. Merrell, candidate for Municipal Court Justice, and three nominees for City Council, Louis P. Goldberg, John F.

Kelly and Maurice Bernhardt. Former Justice Brenner predicted that the Liberal party's Brooklyn vote on Nov. 6 would reach at least 200.000 and said he would not be surprised if it approaches 250.000. The party polled 131,000 votes last year. Oil Men Still Out Of Seized Plants Continued from Page 1 way of the adequate supplies of any kind for our armed forces and for their proper redeployment and demobilization." Old Wage Prevails The navy immediately telegraphed plant superintendents to operate the properties under the same wages, hours and other working conditions prevailing before the shutdown.

This precluded putting into effect immediately any of the 15 percent wage increases offered by several of the struck companies. The union is striking to obtain a 30 percent increase in basic wage rates to maintain average weekly earnings for 40-hour week at $60, the wartime income for 48 hours a week. Without waiting for the oil workers' answer. Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach and the Solid Fuels Administration tackled the job of trying to halt the spreading strike of supervisory workers in the soft coal fields.

The strikes for recognition of the United Mine Workers as bargaining agent for the supervisors have closed 450 mines, adled 120,000 miners and are costing 661.000 tons of coal daily. Mr. Schwellenbach planned to invite the soft coal operators' tiating committee M. W. president John L.

Lewis to a conference tomorrow to discuss a procedure for settling the strike. Some 465,000 U. S. workers were idle in strikes and shutdowns, according to a United Press tabulation. of Disabled Vets Believed Employable Chicago (U.P) -Ninety percent of A America's disabled veterans are employable, according to Milton D.

Cohn. national commander of the Disabled American Veterans. Since the Veterans Administration provides total disability compensation for about 10 percent all disabled veterans, he said, "it must be assumed that the other 90 percent of them, who are only partially disabled. are employable." The disabled prefer employment to pensions. Mr.

Cohn said. and more jobs for these men would relieve the potential burden of the taxpayers. "Government agencies." he saul, "should set the example for private industry by employment of more than their share of service disabled Preferences for the disabled. he maintained. "are justified on the basis of special sacrifice that service disabled veterans have made." GEORGE D.

CONANT Moadinger Funeral Parlors Personal Service Modern Facilities Convenient Location 1120 FLATBUSH AVE. BUckminster 2-0247 BROOKLYN EAGLE, 272721 WINGS OF MERCY- Respirators, 800-pound iron lungs, are loaded on an Army Air Transport at LaGuardia Field for the use of infantile paralysis victims in Belgium in response to a plea for aid from the Belgium Government. The lungs were bound for Brussels today. Phones Silenced In Tieup Today Continued from Page 12.000 local operators, and the United Telephone Organizations and the United Communications Organizations, representing maintenance and commercial workers, respectively. In assailing the decision of the NLRB Mr.

Beirne said Charles W. Whittemore, trial examiner in the case, "was one of the 1937 crop of NLRB agents who favored the C. I. Appeals Again to Dockers Joseph P. Ryan, I.

L. A. president, promised the longshoremen would be back at work Monday. He had appealed for a return to work before but indications were that his orders now would be followed. It was evident the dock workers' strike was too paralyzing to last long.

Some 170 ships were tied up yesterday, 40 of them in the stream awaiting dock space, and additional vessels are arriving daily. In addition supplies for army personnel in Europe were being delaved and transports were being held up from the important job of returning soldiers from the European theater. The longshoremen no doubt will return under the terms of their present expired agreement pending new contract. They are satisfied with hours and wages but demand lighter loads. a minimum four -hour day and double time for lunch periods worked.

The bus drivers' slowdown was halted to the evident satisfaction of both union and employers. The agreement provided for payment of a seven -cent pay increase, retroactive to Oct. 1, 1944. All other differences will be settled by an arbitrator appointed by the War Labor Board. The main dispute centers about one-man operation of double-decked buses.

The arbitrator will advance plans for employment for operators and conductors displaced if this system goes into effect. Railway Express Tieup Looms In addition to the menacing telephone dispute one other major walkout loomed in the city todaythe projected strike of 3,000 Railway Express Agency employes, set for Sunday at midnight. This walkout has been voted in the city as well as in seven other cities. If it is staged the worst traffic jam in the nation's history would result, company officials predict. The produce market and the garment industry would be hit especially hard.

The strike would involve members of the Railway Express Drivers and Helpers Union, affiliated A. F. L. International Brotherhood of Teamsters. Settlement of the New Jersey bakery drivers' walkout ended black market practices during which as much as 40 cents was charged for a loaf of bread.

Carloads were smuggled past strong picket lines and housewives pooled cars to go across State lines for bread. No new developments were seen today in the walkout of 85 wholesale bakery drivers, which is halting deliveries to neighborhood bakeries, or in the threatened walkout of motion picture operators set for Oct. 19. Meanwhile, officials of the United States Conciliation Service were attempting to avert the threatened walkout of 1.500 employes of four hospitals, including three in Brooklyn. Another conference was scheduled today.

Borough institutions affected are the Israel Zion, Beth El and Beth Moses Hospitals. Soap Features Reopening Dayton. Ky. (U.P)--A costly fire forced a local grocery store manager to close shop for two weeks. He decided the best way to let customers know he was reopening was to place a hard-to-buy commodity on sale.

Dayton housewives were told the store had bar soap, soap backed up his advertising judgment and no casualties were reported. Fred HERBST SOM Morticians 83 HANSON PLACE at the L. I. R. Depot and 7501 5th Avenue 711 65th Street BROOKLYN, N.

Y. Earl G. Herbet, Licensee PRONE SHORE ROAD 5.1600 OCT. 5, 1945 13 Deaths Andersen, Haakon Luttmann, H. D.

Philip MacDougall, Lorne Brereton, Mary J. J. Burchard, Betty McCormack, Peter Cottam, Harry McInerney, Annie Cusack, John F. Michael, Lucius M. Davis, Frederick Monahan, Annie BIl, Charles Mooney, Annie E.

Empting, Sister Moran, Anna Mary Imelda Moriarty, John J. Feeks, Jeremiah A.Pye, Millie Gonsalves, John J. Reynolds, Mary Grace, Mary Robottom, Green, James Rudloff, Catherine Hart, Susan P. Van Gostein, W. Kelly, Mary Welham, Ethel Kimberly, William Wiles, Lillie Leonard, 1 M.

F. ANDERSEN HAAKON, former resident of Brooklyn, died at Northern Westchester Hospital, Westchester County, on October 3, 1945, after short illness; beloved husband Laura Andersen and father of Rolf, U.S.N.; Allan of Katonah. Funeral services will be held at Clark's Funeral Home, Katonah, N. Saturday, October 6, at 2 p.m. BARTEL-PHILIP, October 1945, aged 75 years; beloved husband Caroline dear father of Lillian M.

Fischofer and the late Elizabeth, Holzberger; grandfather Philip C. and Janet D. Holzberger, Mids. William C. Fischofer Jr.

Service Sunday, p.m., at George Werst Funeral Home, Hart Street, corner Evergreen Avenue. Funeral Monday, p.m. BRERETON-MARY, on October 1945, widow of the late Richard and devoted mother of Richard Captain of 82d Precinct, N. Y. P.

and Simanowith. Funeral Saturday, dElta 9:30 a.m. from chapel, 6604 Fresh Pond Road. Solemn requiem mass Our of Miraculous Medal, 60th Place, Ridgewood. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. Jere J. Cronin, Director. BURCHARD-BETTY AUGUSTA, on Thursday, October loved aunt of Mrs. Alfred Grass.

Service at her residence, 1233 E. 28th Street, Sunday, 8 p.m. COTTAM October 2. 1945, HARRY beloved husband Catherine; father of Harold. Clara, Charles, Pvt.

Girard, Corp. Howard, Corp. Francis, U. S. Army: brother of Mary Coade.

Funeral Saturday, 10 a.m., from his residence. 104-42 Lefferts Boulevard, Richmond Hill; requiem mass Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church, Richmond Hill. CUSACK Reverend JOHN pastor of the Cure of Ars Church, Merrick, L. suddenly on October 3. Funeral Monday; divine office at 10 a.m., solemn requiem mass 10:30, at the Church of the Cure of Ars, 67 South Merrick Avenue, Merrick.

L. I. Interment Holy Rood Cemetery. DAVIS-FREDERICK on October 3. 1945, husband of the Margaret; beloved father of Harold, Helen, William, Margaret, Frederick and Robert.

Funeral Saturday, a.m., from John J. Healey Funeral Home, 2977 Ocean Avenue; requiem mass Good Shepherd R. C. Church, 9:30 a.m. Interment St.

Charles Cemetery. ELL CHARLES. of 867 Knickerbocker Avenue. Reposing at Murray Funeral Home, Knickerbocker Avenue corner Covert Street. Requiem mass 9 a.m.

Saturday. EMPTING SISTER MARY IMELDA. on October 4, 1945, at Clare's Hospital, N. Y. C.

Requiem mass Saturday, October 6, 10:30 a.m., at Convent of Our Lady of Cenacle, Lake Ronkonkoma, L. Interment Cenacle Cemetery. FEEKS-JEREMIAH of 93-31 123d Street, Richmond Hill, suddenly on October husband of the (nee Kiernan) and brother Eulalia, and Elizabeth Mullins. neral on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. from the Walsh Chapel, 94-08 118th Street, Richmond Hill.

Requiem mass the Church of the Holy Child Jesus. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. GONSALVES- on day. October 5, 1945, beloved band of Lulu, dear father of Anna Anderson, Irene Pensa, Rita Dick, John, Edward, Frank and Arthur, at his residence, 102 Clermont nue. Notice of funeral later.

GRACE MARY (nee Hurley), October 3, 1945, wife of the Patrick; beloved mother of James U.S. Army, and Catherine Brunner. Reposing at New York Street; requiem mass Monday, Brooklyn Chapel, I 187 S. Oxford Family R. C.

Church, at 10 Interment St. Raymond's Cemetery. Edward Meyer's Son, Director. GREEN- of 192 Covert Street. Reposing at Murray Funeral Home, Knickerbocker Avenue corner Covert Street.

Requiem mass 10 Saturday. HART-SUSAN on October 1945, formerly of Brooklyn, N. dear daughter of the late William and Helen Hart, and devoted of Helen. Funeral Saturday, a.m. from her home, 11 Norman Road, Upper Montclair, N.

J. Solemn requiem mass 10 a.m., St. Cassian's R. C. Church, Upper Montclair.

terment Holy Cross Cemetery. Jere J. Cronin, Director. KELLY-MARY, on October 3, her home, 631 51st Street, beloved mother of James, John, Mary, trude and Margaret Kelly; sister Mrs. Helena Fewer, Gregory Bernard Kennedy.

Funeral Saturday at 10 a.m. from R. C. Church of St. Agatha, where solemn requiem mass will be offered.

Interment John's Cemetery, Direction of nard S. Murphy. KIMBERLY-WILLIAM C. Association of Manufacturers Confectionery Chocolates nounces with great sorrow the of its executive secretary and urer, Mr. William C.

Kimberly, members and friends requested to attend services at the residence, 1320 E. 23d Street, Brooklyn, on day at 8 p.m. LEONARD MARY FLORENCE (nee Feely), October 2, 1945, beloved wife of William mother of William J. 9th Armored Division, U. S.

Army; Pfc. John Jerome, Air Force, U.S. Army; Vincent and Mary Eugenia Leonard; of Helen L. Cobb, Frank and Feely. Reposing John T.

Gallagher Funeral Home, 2549 Church Avenue. Requiem mass Church of the Shepherd, Avenue and Batchelder Street, Saturday, 10 a.m. Vital notices accepted 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for publication the same day; as late as 10 p.m.

Saturday night tor publication. Reich Occupation By Neighbors Was Morgenthau Plan Washington, Oct. 5 (U.P)-Former Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau proposed to President Roosevelt 1944 that the job of occupying Germany be left to the armies of Germany's European neighbors, it was revealed today. In his controversial "Morgenthau plan" for control of Germany Mr. Morgenthau proposed that neither American nor British military forces participate in the long-range job of policing and administering defeated Germany.

this program United States troops could be withdrawn within a relatively short time," the Morgenthau plan said. Mr. Morgenthau specified that the occupation job be done by the armies of Russia. France, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Greece, Yugoslavia, Norway, Holland and Belgium, but that the United States retain full military and civilian representation on commissions set up to execute A L. 1 2.

the German program. Outlines Quebec Plan 2 Mayor Nominees Deny Foreign-Born Punished Patton Two of the city's Mayoralty candidates were on record today with vigorous criticism of a published report that the successful drive to "disgrace" Gen. George E. Patton Jr. was engineered by the "republic's foreign- born political leaders." Before delivering his speech in Brooklyn last night, General Sessions Judge Jonah J.

Goldstein took issue with the report, which appeared in a Daily News column signed by John O'Donnell. "The Daily News had a signed article by a man named O'Donnell in which he talks about the reprimand which General Patton received and he said that this punishment was engineered by the Jewish people." said Judge Goldstein. "Even if that were true, and it is not. there is no justification for writing such an article. The truth is that these were the facts.

"If you are going to start monkey business like that all over again, then we've lost the peace before we've signed it. It is sickening to see these things popping up again. Let's get it stopped and keep it stopped." Mr. O'Dwyer, in a statement, said he was "shocked beyond expression at the realization that the racial and religious bigotry which cost so many lives, including our own American sons and fathers, has now again reared its head in our midst." Two Mexican Reporters Learning Story of Texas Fort Worth, Texas (U.P.) Two young Mexican reporters, Senorita Esperanza Gutierrez Camacho and her brother, Hugo Gutierrez, both veterans of Presidential campaigns with Lazaro Cardenas and Manuel Avilo Camacho and co-reporters at the Conference of Chapultepec in Mexico City, are on a tour of Texas cities to gather information for magazine articles this Fall. Reporting for two of Mexico's rival weekly news magazines, Manana and Todo, the two writers are gathering notes on Texas people, business and businessmen background, so that read can may articles and know where to 20 in Texas for what want, and what to expect when they get there.

With only three months study of English, Gutierrez and his sister were undaunted with their job of reporting in Texas. Although young, the two worked up to their "foreign" assignment through years of newspaper experience. She started out as "clipping girl" with Nacional, worked up to doing a "question of the week" for La Prensa, and now is with Todo. Gutierrez' desire to take an active part "in bringing real liberty to Mexico" gained experience on the lecture platform as well as with the pen. Natives of the southernmost state of Mexico, Chiapas, they received their high school education there.

Surplus Radio Equipment To Be Sold by 225 Makers Chicago 000 and $5,000.000.000 in electronics and radio equipment, produced originally for armed forces, will be sold by approximately 225 radio manufacturers throughout the nation, according to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Included in the equipment, the RFC said. will be thousands of walkie-talkies which will be adaptable for use by police and fire departments. The manufacturers will also dispose of mobile radio communication units, field telephone sets, radar devices and mine detectors. all with reconversion applications for commercial use.

Walter B. Cooke DIGNIFIED As Low FUNERALS As $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden Boulevard Inster 4-1200 Seventh Avenue- MAin 2-8585 1218 Flatbush 2-0266-7 QUEENS 150-10 Hillside Avenue- JAmaica 6-6670 63-32 Forest Avenue-MEgeman 3-0900 158-14 North. Blvd. FLushing 3-6600 STATEN ISLAND 571 ForestAv. West Brighton-Gibraltar2-5056 MANHATTAN 117 West 72nd Street- TRafalgar 7-9700 1451 First Avenue- RHinelander 4-5800 BRONX 1 West 190th Street-RAymond 9-1900 165 E.

Tremont Ave. -LUdlow 7-2700 347 Willis Avenue-MOtt Haven 9-0272 WESTCHESTER 214 Mamaroneck Avenue--White Plains 39 Phone for Representative--No Ooligation This was revealed with publication for the first time of the text of the much-debated "Morgenthau plan" in Mr. Morgenthau's book, "Germany Is Our Problem." The book contains a photographic copy of the plan. which the late President asked Morgenthau to draft before the RooseveltChurchill meeting at Quebec in September, 1944. Mr.

Morgenthau said his plan embodied the philosophy which eventually went into the formation of added the summary initial steps American Policy, at Potsdam. But he taken by the Allies in Germany since surrender show a lack of awareness of what it will take to prevent future German aggression. Mr. Morgenthau called for total elimination- -not just control- -of all German heavy industry and an industrial counter to put future emphasis on German farms instead of factories. U.

S. Specialists Helped Brazil in Food Production Lansing, Mich. (U.P.) With the help of specialists from the United States, our largest South American -has made great strides in agricultural development during the war. That's the opinion of H. A.

Cardinelli, Michigan State College research horticulturist, who was lend leased to Brazil as senior agricultural extension specialist with the food supply division of the Coordinator of Inter -American Affairs. Cardinelli's job was to help increase civilian food supplies in the days when submarine warfare was at its worst off Brazil's bulging coastline. Hundreds of Americans soldiers, sailors, engineers, research workers -had been sent to Brazil to build naval and air bases, to construct dams, power plants and factories, and to help, get out vital supplies. additional mouths" to feed strained northern Brazil's food supply, limited even in normal times. Agricultural specialists faced complex problems in developing the country's productivity.

They found a feudal system in operation, with large landowners growing wealthy and tenant farmers struggling. There was either too much or too little rain. But the speicalists' approach to the first problem was simple. They put thousands of cotton-chopping hoes into the hands of destitute farmers. They were loaned.

sold on credit or paid for in seed or money at the close of the season, with the record of 97.3 percent of all loans repaid by the end of 1944. Farm workers were persuaded to leave their homes along the coast and at the mouths of rivers to venture into the interior. where the soil is more fertile. Sixteen farm workers' training schools were established. Improved practices in producing rice, beans, poultry and cattle were instituted in a program which is being turned over to the Brazilian Department of Agriculture as Americans leave the country.

"We are leaving Brazil awakened to the possibilities of a brighter agricultural future," Cardinelli said. Trade School Reserves Classes for Vets Only Philadelphia (U.P.) Ex-GIs know that their future success depends a great deal upon education. Take, for example, the situation at the Spring Garden Institute, oldest trade and vocational training school in America. So many applications have poured in that the institute has decided to reserve its day classes for ex men only. The institute trained some 3,500 ex-service of World War I for civilian occupations.

From present indications. the institute announces, it will train a far greater number of World War II veterans. Bank Deposits High Combined resources of Wyoming's 56 banks are at the highest peak in the State's history. Resources total $176.744,227. but InterestingA series of facts sponsored sionally by William Dunigan Son Confederate money was called shin plasters during the Civil War Queen Victoria celebrated two jubilees: her golden Jubilee in 188; and her diamond in 1897 The 18th Amendment, Prohibition, Is the only Amendment of the Constitution to be repealed.

WILLIAM DUNIGAN SON Funeral Directors 244 DeKALR AVE. POG EPR AVE MONTGOMERY MAin 3.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963