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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

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Brooklyn, New York
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BROOKLYN EAGLE, TUESDAY, DEC. THE WEATHER REV. PATRICK F. PASTOR AT THE FEELY DIES; ASCENSION BULLETINS Father Appo, Westbury Pastor, Leaves $11,000 Mineola. Dec.

7 An estate of about $11,000 was left by the Rev. Locksley A. Appo. who died at West-bury on Nov. 5, according to a pe.

tftion for letters of administration filed here with Surrogate Leone D. Howell. Father Appo was pastor of St. Brigid's R. C.

Church, Westbury. and previously had been pastor of several Brooklyn churches. The petition was filed by Garnett Appo, a brother of the priest. There also are two sisters Alice N. Appo and Martha Appo, both of C.

W. Sutherland, Veteran Editor Once Represented Williamsburg at Albany Charles Welton Sutherland, 83, who had been a newspaperman for 60 years, most of the time in New York City, and who, more than 50 years ago, represented, the Williamsburg district of Brooklyn in the State Assembly for two terms, died today in St. Vincent's Hospital, Manhattan. In recent years he had lived in Clinton, Conn. Except for a period as managing editor of the Boston Herald, all of Mr.

Sutherland's editorial work was donejn New York City. He had Rites Tomorrow For Mrs. Ramsay Daughter of General Wat Native of Brooklyn South Orange, N. Dec. 7 Funeral services will be conducted here tomorrow for Mrs.

Mary Adelaide Ramsay, native of Brooklyn, and daughter of a famous Brooklyn Civil War officer, Brig. Gen. William H. McNary, who was In Europe when the war broke out and came home to lead the 23d Regiment into battle. Her mother was the former Josephine Dobbs.

Mrs. Ramsay died yesterday. She was 76 and the widow of the Rev. Dr. W.

C. Ramsay. She lived in one of the oldest houses in Brooklyn at Pearl and Tillary part of which still stands. She was educated in Brooklyn, France and Germany, and was graduated from Queens College, Cambridge. England.

Mrs. Ramsay is survived by a son, Clarke McNary Ramsay of Fairfield, and a daughter. Mrs. W. Roderick Wheeler of South Orange.

Burial will be in Cypress Hills Cemetery, Brooklyn. Continued from Pace 1 2 PLEAD NOT GUILTY TO ABOTAGE CHARGE Alec Colmer, 64, of 217 73d and his son, James 36, of 7002 Ridge Boulevard, testing room foreman and plant superintendent, respectively, of the Acorn Insulated Wire Company, of 225 King: and the corporation, pleaded innocent today in Brooklyn Federal Court before Judge Moscowitz to two indictments charging them with sabotage and conspiracy to defraud the Government in the manufacture of field wire for the Army Signal Corps. Bail for the two Colmers was fixed at $2,500 each and trial set for Jan. 10. The indictments alleged that the company had contracts with the Government and that certain standards were required and that the defendants conspired to deliver defective wire to the Signal Corps.

ROWAN'S WIDOW GETS $7,500 IN SHOTGUN DEATH A judgment for $7,500, with interest from Jan. 26, in the death of the late Queens County Assistant District Attorney Edmund. J. Rowan, was awarded to Mrs. Eileen Rowan of 110-50 213th Queens Village, against the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of New York by Supreme Court Justice Fennelly.

Mrs. Rowan had brought action to secure payment of a life insurance policy following Rowan's death by a gunshot wound in the cellar oZ i.ieir home. Fennelly ruled that testimony presented before him in Supreme Court, Jamaica, last week, bore out Mrs. Rowan's contention that her husband's death had been accidental. Mrs.

Rowan is now secretary to Queens Borough President James A. Burke. She has two sons, Edmund 21, and Walter, 18. 11 Senate Group Voles Milk Subsidy Ban Washington, Dec. 7 (UP) The Senate Agriculture Committee today approved a bill banning the milk subsidy and requiring instead an Immediate one-eent-a-quart Increase In the retail price of fluid milk.

The action came as the Senate Banking Committee considered the House bill banning all consumer subsidies after Dec. 31. Farm bloc leaders said the milk bill can be used to force the overall subsidy issue to an early decision if a reported move develops to delay action on the House bill until after the Christmas holiday. The bill approved by the committee would abolish the one-half to one-cent-a-quart subsidy paid to dairymen to help offset higher feed costs. In addition to the immediate one-cent increase In retail prices, the measure also requires an area-by-area survey of milk production costs and establishment of new and flexible ceilings which could be revised at six-month intervals.

Fined a Cent, German-Born Hero Pleads to Stay in U. S. Los Angeles, Dec. 7 (U.PJ German-born Paul Frederick Timm, who masqueraded as an American citizen so he could Join the merchant marine, and then was exposed when he became a hero, today waited for official action on his appeal to remain in this country. Timm, 51, pleaded guilty to charges of falsely claiming American citizenship and was fined one penny after judge Ben Harrison said, "he lived up to the part he was acting and that is a good deal more than many citizens have done." He waa held without bail pending outcome of an appeal from a San Franciaco exclusion order Nov.

8. The seaman served In the merchant marine for nearly 20 years and was decorated by Admiral Emory S. Land for heroism when his ship was torpedoed in the South Pacific. U. British Chiefs of Staff See Sights in Jerusalem Cairo, Dec.

2 (U.R United States and British chiefs of staff took time out today on their return from the Teheran conference to spend 24 hours in Jerusalem on a sightseeing excursion. The officers occupied the Hotel Jerusalem. The British officers acted as hosts, furnishing more than $1,000 worth of food at tha four meals and 12 bottles of champagne. 17 bottles of other wine. 26 bottles of whisky and some 1864 brandy.

After, lunch, the officers visited the Holy Sepulchre. American officers present Includ ed Gen. George C. Marshall, army chief of staff: Gen. Henry H.

Arnold, army air chief, and Admiral Ernest J. King, commander in chief of the fleet. Writer Gets Bronchitis After Dunking at Tarawa Honolulu, Dec. 7 (U.R) Richard W. Johnston, United Press staff correspondent who accompanied the marine invasion of Tarawa on Nov.

20, has been hospitalized for acute bronchitis. Doctors said the illness resulted from prolonged immersion while wading ashore and because he remained in his wet clothes fur three days on the battle-swept beachhead. Walter g. Coofet i paooaroaumi DIGNIFIED Allow JF FUNERALS lJJ OUR FUNERAL HOMES agfOOKLVW 151 Lmka gWavara SUckurintar 4-1200 tO Smtk mum 2-SSSS 1211 Fbtbiaa Ara. mir ilar 2 02(4-7 QUggNS 150 10 Hithidw am Mwgfci 4-6670 U-32 Farad Ovanae Higawian 3-0900 1SS-14 Nartk.

MaaV riuahmt -O0 BTATgN IftLAMO S71 Farait Wntarigtitim ClarartarJ 5054 MhNMATTMf 117 Waal 72n! Straai TRafaliar 7 700 14S1 First a miiiiaUndar 4-S400 aoMX 1 Waal lMtk Straat-Myiamd -l00 16S I. Tiaiiiant ItMam 7-2700 347 WHka Humi mm Mann 0-0271 wt arcMgaTga 214 Maiaanair WWH Haaat 10 Phoaa tar Na Oaltaat'M 7, 1943 Official Wcaihfr Report of in U. 5- Weather Bureau DKCtMHtR 7, IUI3 FOR ISC AST Pant? cloudv thj afternoon, tonig.tt and WfdiieNday gradually dimiiii.vluug tonight and in-creaMntt Wednesday, colder ion ism than last nitthi, with the lowest temperature 35 in the city and 25 the suburb. Temperatures Tempera lures iiow High juow Hie li Abilene Albany Amarlllo Atlanta 35 5H Meridian 3fi Miami 26 43 Milwaukee 54 65 p'ls -SI 58 26 4.1 25 35 61 76 57 72 Atlantic Citv 44 Baltimore 4S Binghamton 27 57 Mobile 51 Momgompry 42 Nantucket 51 77 50 Birmingham 46 67 New Orleans Bismarck 26 Block Island 43 43 York City 43 53 Norioik Boston 34, 41 North Platte 24 42 Buffalo 46 Okiahoma C. 41 Butte Charleston 48 Omaha 76 Philadelphia 61 Phoenix 25 41 44 50 Chattanooga 4U 42 66 32 32 44 66 Chicago Cincinnati 26 45 Pittsburgh 38 52 Portland.

Me. 24 Cleveland Denver DeR Moines Detroit Dodge City Duluth RaMDort El Fargo Port Worth OalveMnn Hartford Hatterar Houghton Houston 34 47 Portland. Ore. 39 47 Raleigh 47 25 36 Rapid Cur 23 46 50 55 30 45 Richmond 44 Rofcwpll 46 21 23 32 Sacramento 35 29 St. Loujf.

51 54 Salt Lake C. 25 45 37 25 35 Ban Antonio 65 52 San Dleao 34 60 72 Sandy Hook 40 51 22 40 Sn Frenciseo 35 63 07 70 bbuii ste. ut 22 35 Savannah 74 65 Seattle 39 43 20 46 STireveoort 69 Huron Indianapolis 3 4 49 Spokane 32 37 Jackson 52 80 Springfield. 35 46 Jacksonville Kansas Cur Little Rock Los Angeleg Louisville Macon 58 78 Tampa 60 81 52 Tucson. Arig.

46 68 66 Washington 45 63 Wllkes-Barrs 37 49 41 52 WlUUton 56 72 28 41 Pacific Drive Is Spreading Continued from Pace 1 those which aided in the conquest of the Gilberts south of the Marsh a lis. Only once before had carrier planes hit the Marshalls. That was on Feb. 2, when Jaluit was raided. Liberators of the 7th U.

S. Airforce have hit Jaluit, Mill and Maloelap steadily the past three weeks in connection with the invasion of the Gilberts. Observers have speculated that the Marshalls would be the next objective of the American mid-Pacific offensive is soon as the Gilberts are developed as bases. Climax in Solomon Allied Headquarters. Southwest Pacific, Dec.

7 (U.Pi A i a forces have sealed the defeat of the Japanese in the Northern Solomons, a field dispatch said today as a U. S. naval bombardment and heavy aerial attacks on Bougain ville and adjacent Islands bases were announced. Final conquest of the Bougainville area still may be a matter of months. United Press Correspondent George Jones said in a Guadalcanal dispatch after returning from the invaded island.

But he added that the 35.000 Japanese and laborers in the Northern Solomons on the southeastern approaches to Rabaul were facing one of three choices starvation, a fight to the death or a risky attempt to flee. American destroyers shelled the Japanese gun positions and supply areas south of the beachhead Saturday and next morning bombarded Choiseul Bay on the island by that name to the southeast of Bougainville. Suspect Admits Gambler's Murder Continued from Pace 1 ment while the three rode around in Orlando's car. Orlando is said to have shot Labadessa after accusing him of maligning his character, later dumping out the body. Labadessa's body had two bullet holeh in it, one in the chest and one in the head.

Orlando was arrested in front of his home today. After questioning him. police went to Greenwood Cemetery and found the murder gun, a J8 caliber revolver. Police said the gun belonged to Labadessa. Will Be Arraigned Later Orlando will appear in the police lineup tomorrow morning and later will be arraigned in Brooklyn Felony Court.

He is said to have made a statement, which will be turned over to the District Attor ney's office. Manhattan police meanwhile pressed their search for tlie mur derer of Leo Maimone, 36-year-old South Brooklyn hoodlum who was shot to death a block from Man hattan police headquarters this morning. Maimone, who lived at 1757 oftth had a record of nine arrests since 1932 for robbciy, assault, amo stealing and vagrancy, although he had been convicted only once for robbery with a gun. He also had been questioned in 1926 in Washington concerning branding of a girl who had testified in the Charley ijUCKy i.uciano vice case. Bus Drivers Get Tips On Saving Gas, Tires Garden City.

Dec. 7 Sponsored by the State Oifice of War Training of the office of War Transportation, the first session of a Statewide program to train school bus drivers in the conservation of gasoline, tires and other bus equipment opened here today In the Stratford Avenue school. The session will continue tomorrow. It was estimated that similar sessions held in various parts of the State will attract more than 4.500 school bus drivers. Housewife Paroled, Faces Burglary Charge Mrs.

Fay Curley, 25, a housewife, of 114 Hoyt was paroled on a charge of burglary, pending a hearing before the grand Jury, by Magistrate Sweeney In Brooklyn Felony-Court. Mrs. Anna Thompson of 167 Warren St. charged Mrs. Curley stole clothing and Jewelry worth $207 from her apartment.

IS The Origin! OEMMELE'S FUNERAL HOME Ayvime Your Burden 1230 BUSHW1CK AVE, mt. Hancock 1 FOicroft S-4J05 GLtagt.rt 2-6S7S The Rev. Patrick Feely, pastor of the R. C. Church of the Ascension, 85-16 61st Road, Elmhurst, and Diocesan examiner of ecclesiastical students, died yesterday in St.

Catherine's Hospital, after a few (fays' illness. He was SI and had been the head of the Elmhurst parish for six years. Since coming to the Church of the Ascension, which was established 17 years ago. Father Feely led his parishioners in the building of a magnificent church edifice, a church school, rectory and convent, all valued at $1,000,000. Father Feely was an outstanding figure in the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine.

Born in Limerick, Ireland, Father Feely studied for the priesthood at St. Patrick's College, Maynooth, Ireland. He was ordained in Limerick and cair.e to the United States Henry C. Smith, 79, Ex-Accountant Served Wall Street Law Firm 40 Years Henry Chester Smith, 79. a retired accountant, died yesterday in Victory Memorial Hospital after two months' illness.

He lived at 167 Bav 32d St. For 40 years Mr. Smith was an accountant with the law firm Carter, Ledyard and Milburn. 2 Wall Manhattan. He was the husband of the late Ada H.

Cropsey Smith, and for a number of years had been a member of the Society of Old Brooklynites. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. William G. Peerfect, Ada H. and Mabel F.

Smith, and a son Henry C. Smith Jr. Funeral services will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Fred Herbst Sons Memorial Chapel. 7501 5th Ave.

Burial will be in Green-Wood Cemetery. Couple Found Dead From Gas in Home John Oofton, 72. retired, and his wife, Anna, 65, were found dead yesterday on couch in their apartment at 1072 Bedford according to police. One gas Jet of a Ahearn, John I. Leibmann, Ellen Bamberger, Adele Leonard, Ellen R.

Bonneau, Anna Maloney, Delia Butler, Joseph B. McCormick, Annie Cannizzaro, Luigi McCullough, Chapman, Edna Margaret M. Christman, Geo. McCullough, Crofton, Anna Sophia M. Davison, Lucy B.

McGrath, Edward De Forest, Murray, Thomas Eugenia M. Noonan, Jane D. Fanning, Annie M. Quaid, Patrick J. Feeley, Thomas A.

Ramsey, Mary A. Feely, Rev. Roane, Albert E. Patrick F. Rockett, William Fltzsimmons, John Roy, Charles Schubert, Frank, Adele A.

Angeline Gibson, Agnes 6hanley, Harrison, Patrick Margaret Hickey, Peter V. Sharp, George Rentier, Charles Smith, Henry c. Kern, Anna E. Strobel, Andreas Kerr, James C. Ward, Frieda A.

Kohler, Julia AHEARN JOHN IRVING, December 5, 1943, beloved husband of Bertha (nee Shuttleton); devoted brother of Edward, Everett, Earl, Florence and Grace. Services at his residence, 837 New York Avenue, Wednesday, 8 p.m. BAMBERGER ADELE December 6, 1943, of 93 Parrott Place, beloved wife of Frederick devoted mother of John, Marilyn, Elaine: also survived by two sisters and two brothers. Solemn requiem mass Thursday, 11 a.m., St. Patrick's R.

Church. Reposing Chapel Joseph G. Duffy, 7703 5th Avenue. BAMBERGER The Visitation Academy Auxiliary announces with deep sorrow the death of one of its members, ADELE BAMBERGER. Body reposing at Joseph G.

Duffy's Funeral Home, 7703 5th Avenue. Requiem mass 11 a.m. Thursday, St. Patrick's Church. JULIET H.

SCHMIDT, President. Katherine Gioe, Secretary. BONNEAU On December 5. 1943, ANNA, of 325 State Street, beloved wife of Albert and mother of Alphonse Gustave and Rachel Forte. Reposing at Ericson Eric-son's Chapel, 500 State Street, until Thursday, 7:30 a.m.

Requiem mass at 9:30 a.m. at Our Lady of Mercy R. C. Church, Westchester Avenue, Port Chester, N. Y.

Interment St. Mary's Cemetery. (Port Chester Item and Springfield Union, Springfield, papers please copy.) BUTLER On December 5, JOSEPH beloved husband of Margaret Smith Butler; father of Catherine and Joseph J. Butler. Funeral from his residence, 417 40th Street, on Thursday, December 9, at 8:30 a.m.

Requiem mass Our Lady of Perpetual Help R. C. Church. Interment U. S.

National Cemetery, Pinelawn, L. I. CANNIZZARO LUIGI, of 8701 Shore Road, on December 5. Reposing at Joseph V. Sessa Funeral Home, 6924 Fort Hamilton Parkway, until Thursday, December 9, at 9:30 a.m.: thence to St.

Patrick's R. C. Church, 4th Avenue and 95th Street, where solemn requiem mass will be offered for the repose of his soul. Interment Holy Cross Cloister. Call tairchiia lervice trilh complete confidence.

Ill character unqueitionedand yon control ill cost. Fairchild Sons UOKT1CIASS Fnnk Furchilrl, U.nl Maagr bboocitm ri.riaipa Jiauic city in 1915. His first appointment here was as curate at Our Lady of Good Counsel Church, Putnam near Ralph Av. In 1932 he was made a professor of dogmatic theology at Immaculate Conception Seminary, Huntington. Later he was appointed pastor of St.

Mary's R. C. Church, Roslyn. remaining there until 1937, when he was made pastor of the Church of the Ascension, Elmhurst, succeeding the Rev. Henry Huld.

Divine office will be sung by the clergy of the diocese in the Asoen-slion Church at 10 o.m. Thursday, with a solemn requiem mass at 10:30 a.m. Burial will be in St. John's Cemetery. Father Feely is survived by two brothers.

Dr. Michael Feely and John Feely; four sisters. Sister Nora, Kathleen, Alice and Marilyn Feely, all of Limerick, Ireland. kitchen stove was open. Both Mr.

and Mrs. Croton were natives of Brooklyn. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Estella Petito and Mrs. Annabell McCormlck, both of Brooklyn, and a son, John, seaman second class, of the navy.

The funeral will be conducted from the New York and Brooklyn Funeral Home, 187 S. Oxford Thursday morning. A solemn high mass of requiem will be celebrated at 10:45 a.m. in the R. C.

Church of the Nativity. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Col. H.R.Mellon Jr. Missing in Action Col.

Harry R. Melton of the United States Army Air Forces has been missing in action in the India-Burma area since Nov. 29, according "to word received from the Public Relations Office of the New York Port of Embarkation by his parents, Col. and Mrs. Harry R.

Melton of 7119 Shore Road. Colonel Melton, one of the youngest colonels in the armed forces, was graduated frsm Castle Heights Military Academy, near Nashville, attended the University of Alabama and was a graduate of West Point. Upon graduation in 1936. he completed his training at Randolph and Kelly Fields, Texas. His father is port surgeon here and his wife, Natalie, and their small daughter, Anne, live in St.

Petersburg, Fla. CHAPMAN EDNA MILLER, on December 6. 1943, beloved wife of Frank B. Chapman. Service at her residence, 558 Argyle Road, Wednesday, 8 p.m.

(Columbia County, Albany County and Saratoga County papers please copy.) CHRISTMAN GEORGE, on December 6, 1943, aged 44 years. Services Thursday, .8 p.m., at George Werst Funeral Home, Hart street corner Evargreen Avenue. Funeral Friday, 1 p.m. Interment St. Michael's Cemetery, CROFTON JOHN and ANNA, suddenly, In their 72d and 65th years, at 1072 Bedford Avenue, beloved father and mother of Estella Petito, Annabell McCormick, Seaman John Crofton, S.

2c. Repos ing at Ntw York and Brooklyn Funeral Home, 187 S. Oxford Street. Arrangements later, DAVISON LUCY December 6. 1943, beloved wife of Gilbert: devoted mother of Margaret, Harold W.

and Wesley C. Davison. Services at her residence, 1618 Albany Avenue, Wednesday, 8:30 p.m. De FOREST Monday, December 6, 1943, EUGENIA mother of Marguerite De Forest and grandmother of J. Munro De Forest.

Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Wednesday at 8 p.m. FANNING On December 5, 1943, ANNIE M. (nee McAleer). beloved wife of the late Robert W. Fanning; dear mother of Robert, Hugh, Mrs.

Anna F. Schwerdtfeger and the late John Fanning. Reposing at her res idence, 726 Chauncey Street. Solemn requiem mass Fourteen Holy Martyrs Church Thursday, 10 a.m. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. J. J. Gallagher Sons, Directors. FEELEY December 6.

THOMAS attached to Department of Sanitation, beloved husband of Elizabeth (nee Byrnes); father of Eugene, U. 8. M. Thomas, U. S.

Air Forces and Warren; also survived by one grandchild; brother of Mrs. Helen Bohl and Hugh Feeley. Funeral Thursday at 9:30 a.m. from Funeral Home, 58th St. and 5th thence to Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church where a requiem mass will be offered.

Interment U. S. National Cemetery, Pinelawn, I. H. F.

McKeon, director. FEELY The Rev. PATRICK pastor R. C. Church of the Ascension, Elmhurst, L.

Monday, December 6, 1943. Survived by two brothers. Dr. Michael and John; four sisters, Sister Nora, Kathleen, Alice and Marilyn of Limerick, Ireland. Reposing at the Ascension Rectory, 85-16 61st Road, until "Wednesday, December 8, 4:30 p.m.

the divine office will be chanted Thursday at 10 a.m. in the Ascension Church at 61st Road, Elmhurst. where a solemn requiem mass will be offered at 10:30 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery.

FITZSIMMONS On December 5, JOHN at his residence, 213 65th Street; beloved husband of Thordis; father of Donald, John and James; son of Lt. James N. Y. F. attached to Engine 233, and Grace (nee Maher); brother of James, Thomas, Edward, Joseph, Esther and Julia.

Reposing at funeral home. 476 73d Street. Funeral Thursday, 9:30 a.m. Thence to the R. C.

Church of St. Agatha, where a solemn requiem mass will be offered. Interment St. John's Cemetery. Vital notices occeoied 8 a.m.

to 2 p.m. for publication th same day; at lati at 10 p.m. Saturday night for publication Sunday. Mrs. Weismantel, Restaurant Owner Services for Mrs.

Dorothy Weismantel, 62, owner of the Show Boat Restaurant, 814 Jamaica who died Saturday in her home, 290 Crescent will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the May Funeral Home, 66-32 Myrtle Glendale. The funeral will be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow with interment in Mt. Olivet Cemetery. Mrs.

Weismantel was born In Brooklyn. She was the widow of John Weismantel, who operated the Jamaica Ave. restaurant for 13 years prior to his death in 1938. Surviving are a daughter. Gladys and two sons.

John and Frank. Mrs. Chapman, Of Mail Ad Concern Mrs. Edna Miller Chapman of 558 Argyle Road died yesterday. She was 60.

Funeral services will be held at her home tomorrow at 8 p.m. Interment will be private. Mrs. Chapman was born in Brooklyn and was graduated from the Albany Business College in 1902. She was a stenographer in Hie financial section of Manhattan until 1912, when she went into the direct mail advertising business, In 1915 she took as a partner Ira C.

Hutchison, and upon his death in 1928 carried on the business until her death. The firm was known as the Peerless duality Companv. with offices at 35 Water Manhattan. She is survived by her husband, Frank B. Chapman.

Mexico Is believed to have raised 6.000.000 bushels of rice last year, compared with a record crop of 5.551,000 in 1941. LEONARD ELLEN December 6, 1943; widow of James beloved mother of Walter. Edmund, Charles and Mrs. Helen M. Hundt.

Funeral from residence, 525 Eastern Parkway, Thursday, 9:45 a.m. Requiem mass at St. Teresa's Church, Classon Avenue, corner Sterling Place, 10:15 a.m. MALONEY On December 5, at her residence, 82 5th Avenue, DELLA (nee Twohey), beloved wife of David, and loving mother of Cecelia Hall, Alice Doherty and Steven Maloney. Funeral on December 9 at 9:30 a.m.; thence to the R.

C. Church of St. Augustine. Ster ling Place and 6th Avenue, where a solemn requiem mass win oe celebrated. Interment St.

John's Ceme tery. Under direction E. F. Hlgglns. McCORMICK On Tuesday, ANNIE beloved wife of the late George McCormick.

Reposing at her residence, 2150 Bedford Avenue. Notice of funeral later. McCULLOUGH MARGARET M. (nee Hanley), December 5, 1943, beloved wife of William A. and devoted sister of Mrs.

Benjamin Heb-berd, Robert Anne Weir, Irene Hartman. Solemn requiem mass Thursday, 10 a.m., St. Thomas Aquinas Church, 9th Street and 4th Avenue. Funeral from her home, 344 7th Street. Arrangements by Joseph G.

Duffy. McCULLOUG On Monday, December 6, 1943, SOPHIA beloved wife of the late John L. McCullough, mother of Anita Frances and Wilfred Long; sister of Emily S. Ehlinger. Kathryn Johnson and Agnes 3.

Watts; grandmother of Anita and Anna Long. Funeral from her residence, 2785 5th Street, Brooklyn. Requiem mass at the Guardian Angel Church Thursday at 10:30 a.m. McGRATH December 5. 1943.

beloved brother of Mrs. Maurice Hasscll, Mrs. Anton Lorent-zen, Anna and William McGrath. Reposing at Walter B. Cooke.

Funeral Home, 151 Linden Boulevard, until Thursday, 2 p.m. Funeral private. MURRAY THOMAS on December 5, 1943; beloved husband of Elsie; devoted father of Margaret Anderson, Alexander, Madeline Neyen, Anna Fitzgerald and Pfc. Joseph E. Murray, U.

S. M. C. Funeral from McManus Funeral Home, 2001 Flatbush Avenue, on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass St.

Thomas Aquinas R. C. Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. NOONAN JANE D.

(nee DuganV on Monday. December 6, 1943. wife of the late Stephen; dear mother of Mrs. J. Treadwell Bullwinkel and the lateS.

Edward Noonan. Funeral Thursday, December 8. at 9:30 a.m.. from 803 E. 17th Street, Brooklyn.

Solemn requiem mass Our Lady of Refuge Church 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. QUAID PATRICK on Decem ber 6. 1943, at his residence, 65-05 Central Avenue, Glendale, L. husband of the late Mary (nee Meehan), and devoted father of Marie Sussmann and David Quaid, retired lieutenant of N.

Y. P. D. Funeral from his residence on Thursday, December 9. at 10:30 a.m.

Requiem mass St. Pancras Church, 68th Street, Glendale, L. at 11 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Direction of Gilbrtde Funeral Home.

RAMSEY MARY ADELAIDE, aged 76, on December 6. 1943. daughter of the late Brig. Gen. and Mrs.

William H. McNary. Funeral services on Wednesday, South Orange. N. J.

Interment Cj press Hills Cemetery, Brooklyn. I been city editor of the Evening Telegram, night editor of the New York American, managing editor of the Evening Journal and for a quarter of a century was on the editorial staff of the old New York World. He also was an editorial writer on the Evening World. While in Albany he came to know Grover Cleveland and later had a reporter's special part in describing the colorful pageant of the first Cleveland inauguration as President. Began Career on The World It was while a medical student in New York that he did his first writing.

He became a member of the staff of The World, then edited by Manton Marble, and for several years was a political reporter, forming a wide acquaintance with national and State figures. He was one of the 100 members and an officer of the first New York Press Club, and one of the group which formed the Silurians, an organization of veterans of the craft, and served as president. In recent years Mr. Sutherland was on the editorial staff of the American Weekly. He was one of the early advocates of the use of modern headlines for news stories.

Mr. Sutherland, whose ancestors were among the early settlers of the Hudson River Valley, was born in Chatham, N. Y. He came to Brooklyn at an early age and lived for many years in Williamsburg and in the Stuyvesant section of the borough. Before moving to Connecticut, he lived in Flatbush.

Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Rose Sutherland; three sons. Rand W. Sutherland, publicity director and former newspaperman; Floyd R. and Eugene; two daughters.

Renee Sutherland and Mrs. Alfred Stevens, and several grandchildren. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. DEATHS FLYNN MARY, on Sunday, December 5, at her residence, 425 Greene Avenue. Survived by one brother, Thady, in Ireland: three nephews and two nieces.

Funeral Thursday, December 9, at 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass Church of the Nativity, 10 a.m. J. J. Sullivan, Director.

FRANK On Sunday. December 5, 1943, ADELE beloved sister of Mrs. Paul R. Smith of Staten Island and Harold G. Frank of Chicago, 111.

Services at her residence, 184 Columbia Heights, Thursday at 2 p.m. Kindly omit flowers. GIBSON Suddenly, December 6, 1943, AGNES, dear mother of Mrs. Helen Goebel and Pvt. George F.

Gibson, U. S. Army; sister of Mrs. Nellie Aitkens and Mrs. Mae Murphy.

Reposing at Austin W. Moran Funeral Home, 121 6th Avenue. Requiem mass St. Augustine's Church Thursday, 11 a.m. HARRISON PATRICK On December 6, 1943, loving husband of Elizabeth A.

Howard; father of Thomas Lt. Michael N. Y. F. and Mary A.

Harrison; brother of Mrs. Patrick Carney, Roscommon, Ireland. Funeral Thursday, 9:30 a.m., from the Mc-Manus Funeral Home, 2001 Flatbush Avenue; requiem mass R. C. Church of Mary Queen of Heaven.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. HICKEY On December 6. 1943, PETER VALENTINE, of 199 Rutland Road, beloved son of Michael J. and the late Harriet brother of Lt. Com.

Alfred J. Hickey, U. S. N. Lt.

Arthur V. Hickey, U. S. C. Warrant Officer John V.

Hickey. U. S. N. and Mary Elizabeth Hickey.

Reposing at 187 S. Oxford Street. Requiem mass St. Francis of Assist Church, Thursday at 11 a.m. KENTLER On Tuesday, December 7, CHARLES husband of Alberta Lane Kentler; father of Daniel, Thomas, Arthur, Mary McGrath.

Alice, Alberta. Rose, Agnes and Jean. Funeral from his residence, 152 Warren Street, Saturday, December 11, 9:30 a.m. Requiem mass St. Peter's Church, 10 a.m.

KERN ANNA on December 4, beloved wife of Henry loving mother of the Rev. Henry F. Kern, Staff Sgt. John J. Kern, Marie Elisabeth Genevieve Gertrude M.

and George F. Funeral from her late residence, 56-62 64th Street, Maspeth, L. on Thursday at 9:30 a.m.; requiem mass at St. Stanislaus R. C.

Church at 10 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. KERR JAMES COGER, on Sunday, December 5, 1943, in his 74th year, eldest son of the late Elizabeth and James Kerr of Tarrytown, N. Y.

Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Wednesday, 8 p.m. KOHLER December 6, 1943. JULIA, of Freeport, L. sister of Mrs. Marie Smith Wrede.

Services Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 117 W. 72d Street, New York City. Wednesday, 2:30 p.m. Interment Lutheran Cemetery.

LEIBMANN ELLEN MARY (nee Cochrane), on December 5, 1943, devoted wife of Frank beloved mother of Nellie, Daniel and Frank Jr. Funeral from the Bergen Funeral Home. 45-18 48th Avenue, Woodside. L. Thursday at 9:30 a.m.: solemn mass of requiem at St.

Raphael's Church. Interment Calvary Cemetery. HOLB WANT ADS BRINO RESULTS CALL MAIN 4-6200 Mrs. Mary Frances Porter Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Frances Porter, 67, widow of William G.

Porter and a former resi dent of Flatbush for many years will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Place. Interment will take place tomorrow in Green-Wood Cemetery. Mrs. Porter died sud denly in St. Petersburg, on Friday.

Mrs. Porter was born in Brooklyn. She and her late husband, who engaged in the salt business in Brooklyn and Manhattan for 50 years, moved from Flatbush to Mountain Lakes, N. about 20 ears ago. Surviving are a sister-in-law, Mrs.

Lena P. Harned of Brooklyn; a niece and four nephews. Honor War Fund Leader Mrs. Vicl Rapps of Sea Gate was the guest of honor at a surprise luncheon given by the Sea Gate Unit of the National War Fund drive in the Clam Bar on Surf Coney Island, today. The affair was a testimonial to her work as chairman of the unit.

She was presented with a wrist watch. A decorticator has been developed in Mexico to extract fiber to serve as a substitute for jute from leaves of the sansevieria plant. ROANE On Monday, December 6, 1943, ALBERT E. ROANE, of 182 Crystal Street, Brooklyn, beloved husband of Annie Roane and father of Anna. Service at Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Wednesday, 10 a.m.

Please omit flowers. ROCKETT December 5, WILLIAM, beloved father of Joseph, William, Mae Jaciania, Helen. Margaret Federisko, Genevieve Gillman; brother of Maurice and Margaret Vital; at his residence, 119 Lynch Street. Requiem mass Thursday, 9:30, Transfiguration Church. Interment Calvary Cemetery.

Joseph J. Galligan, Director. ROY On December 5. 1943, CHARLES. Services at the Pease Funeral Home, 437 Nostrand Avenue, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.

SCHUBERT ANGELINE (nee Nulanz). on Saturday, December 4, 1943, wife of Peter; mother of the Rev. Stephen assistant pastor at St. Fidelis Church, College Point; Sgt. George, U.

S. Army; John Schubert, Rase Darmstadt; sister of Nicholas Nulanz and Mary Rehm; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral on Thursday morning from Darmstadt Funeral Home. Central Avenue, comer 88th Street, Glendale. Solemn requiem mass, 10 o'clock.

St. Pancras Church. Interment St. John's Cemetery. SHANLEY MARGARET (nee Doonan), on December 6, 1943, beloved wife of Edward; mother of William and Edward; sister of Mrs.

Helen Viano. Mrs. Betty Boskay, Mrs. Agnes Turner, Catherine, Patrick and James Doonan. Funeral ffom Walter B.

Cooke, Funeral Home, 151 Linden Boulevard. Solemn requiem mass St. Francis of Assisi Church Thursday, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. SHARP December 6, 1943, at his residence, 242 Clermont Avenue, GEORGE, beloved hu.sband of Bertha Sharp.

Services Fred Herbst Sons Funeral Home. 83 Hanson Place, Wednesday, 8 p.m. Interment Green-Wood Cemetery. SMITH On December 6. 1943, HENRY CHESTER, of 167 Bay 32d Street, beloved husband of the late Ada H.

Cropsey Smith; devoted father of Mrs. William G. Perfect. Ada Mabel F. and Henry C.

Smith Jr. Services at Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Avenue, Wednesday, 8 p.m. Interment Green-Wood Cemetery. STROBEL On December 6, 1943, ANDREAS, husband of Luise father of Alma, Louise and Albert. Services at his home, 314 Halsey Street, Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock.

Interment Evergreens. WARD FRIEDA on Monday. December 6, 1943, beloved wife of John daughter of John and the late Augusta Vedder; sister of Mrs. Elizabeth Maune, Mrs. Caroline Harrington.

Mrs. Catherine Gun-dersen and John Vedder. Pfc. U. S.

A. Reposing at the home of her sister, 269 93d Street. Notice of funeral later. In epemorfam CAN FIELD In memory of our dear mother and grandmother, MARY. Died December 7.

1942. Dear mother, you are not forgotten. Though on earth you are no more; Still in memory you are with ug As you always were betore. Daughters and Grandchildren. FOLEY In memory of WALTER FOLEY, who passed away December 7, 1941.

Pearl Harbor. He died to defend. But his memory wilt live forever. Mom EDDINGTON. PALMER In ever loving memory of our beloved son and dear brother, i GEORGE F.

PALMER. Died De- cember 7, 1939. Masses offered. I Mother, Dad, Sisters and Brothers. Call Turk Cabinet To Special Session Continued from Page 1 velt's special assistant, also were participating in Anglo-American-Turkish conferences.

Cairo reports have implied that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, supreme Allied commander in the Mediterranean, and Gen. Sir Henry Maitland Wilson. British commander in the Levant, both of whom presumably would be involved in any Balkan operation, also were in Cairo.

Nazis Scoff at Parley Axis propagandists today described the Teheran conference as a sell-out by Great Britain and the United States and a "diplomatic victory" for Stalin, said second-front mention was vague and declared the Allies would have realized their intentions against Germany long ago "if they had been able to do so." Prime Minister Churchill, the Berlin radio said, was "bringing up the rear in keeping with the satellite role to which England has sunk." DNB, the German news agency, in a dispatch reported to the OWI, said the Teheran communique was a "farce" and that it indicated that Churchill and President Roosevelt were "capitulating all along the line to Soviet demands." U. S. Still Holds 12 From Gripsholm Only nine passengers and three seamen, out of the original 39 detained at Ellis Island last week after the exchange ship Gripsholm brought her 1.222 repatriated Americans home from the Jap-controlled Orient, were still being held early today for further Inquiry by Federal agents. The Gripsholm's arrival in August, 1942, with her first contingent of home-comers, saw 162 detained at the island with 12 repatriates still held there nearly two months later. Two months earlier the exchange ship Drottingholm arrived with Karl Friedrich Barr, later convicted as a Nazi spy.

Of the current group releases have been speeded up. resulting in the drop from 39 to 12 now detained, because since last Friday the landing difficulties of 20 persons had been resolved, according to W. F. Watkins, district director of the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service. Among these were two' en route to another country.

Name Chairman to Head Waste Paper Campaign N. S. MaeNeish, business manager of the New York World-Telecram, has been named chairman of the New York committee of the United States victory waste paper campaign. Goal in the New York drive will be to collect 2.000.000 additional tons of waste paper to restore to full production 25 mills now shut down and 100 others operating on part time. Others on the committee include T.

E. J. Crowley, business manager of the New York Journal-American F. W. Flynn.

business manager of the Daily News; Wilbur Forrest, assistant editor of the New York Herald Tribune, and Theodore New-house, general manager of the Long Island Press and the Long Island City Star. Approve Contract Sales Of Delinquent Properties Mineola, Dec. 7 According to an ordinance adopted by the Nassau Board of Supervisors yesterday all tax delinquent properties not sold in the recent county land sale may be sold to private buyers by contract. The ordinance authorizes County Executive J. Russel Sprague to sign and deliver deeds of conveyance and authorize Eugene R.

Hurley as special counsel to negotiate such sales and make recommendation to the rountv executive. Temple to Hold Bazar The sisterhood of Temple Alia-vath Sholem will hold a bazar and turkey dinner Saturday and Sunday at the temple. E. 16th St. and Avenue R.

Mrs. 8. Kanarkk will be chairman..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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