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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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11
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CRASH KILLS R. W. BARNES; Arthur Townsend, ITrfWT BROOKLYN EAGLE, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 20, 1940 REV. STEPHEN McMAHON, NOTED MISSIONARY, DIES Adrienne Morrison, Ex-Actress Bennett Sisters was 34.

He taught in the seminary at Oranvllle for a number of years and later did considerable mission And Mother of 3 Stricken with a heart attack at her home, 61 E. 66th Manhattan, Adrienne Morrison, 52. mother of Constance. Joan and Barbara Bennett, and former wife of Richard Bennett, actor, was found dead in the bathroom of her apartment at 11:45 a.m. today.

A maid discovered the body of the mother of the trio of noted stage and screen stars and sum- moned Dr. W. Lawrence Whitte-more of 66 E. 66th St. The physician said that Miss Morrison had been dead about two hours.

There was a slight cut on her elbow, apparently received as she fell. Miss Morrison had planned to spend Thanksgiving Day with her brother, Maj. Victor Morrison, U. S. M.

retired, at the latter's home in Old Lyme, and was preparing to leave when she was stricken. Formerly an actress, sh had re- Huge Fires Rage In Birmingham Cnntlnwed frura Page 1 Southampton and other ports and airfields came in for additional attacks. Swarms of German planes converged on the Engliih midlands manufacturing center, a city a city of more than 1.000.000 inhabitants, they said, from bases in Holland, Belgium and France. They declared Birmingham 'suffered the same fate" as ruined Coventry and expressed confidence that important cogs in Britain's war-supply machinery were smashed by the onslaught. Nazi formations, they said, found the first wave of bombers had lighted the target with more than 20 "large" fires.

Berlin, it was acknowledged of- ficially, was raided twice by British planes during the night, but the although a half down or more Oer-British air attacks were shrugged man craft were shot down, off as a failure. two midland cities were main As with Coventry, a motor-manu- objectives of the attacking air fleets, facturing center, the raid on Birm- but British sources described the EAGLE STAFF cover the German army and was with tne Germans when they entered Dunkirk following the evacuation of the British. When he later returned to Berlin, he was ordered expelled from Germany, on the ground that he had "indulged in false, hateful and sensational re porting" and ''endangered German interests." He was sent to the Balkans and Palestine before he made his last trip to Greece. PopuUr With R. A.

F. Pilots Athens, Nov. 20 (JP The British Royal Air Force command in Greece I paid tribute in a communique today to Ralph W. Barnes. "Barnes was a firm friend of many pilots and officers in the Near East command," the communique said.

"He was extremely popular with every one with whom he cam-In contact, for he had a most engaging personality. "Barnes had been made an honorary member of the R. A. F. bomber squadron in which he had many admirers.

He had lived under canvas with them on the western desert, sharing their inconveniences and dangers with them, being bombed regularly, even going on a raid over enemy territory with them." Barnes, the communique said, was eager to go on night raids and was "upset when some one else was given the opportunity to make the first flight." "When his turn, fated to end so tragically, came he was a brave man, and every R. A. F. pilot who knew him will miss his companionship." Jacob Loewer Jacob Loewer, president of V. Loewer's Gambrtnus Brewery Company in Manhattan and also president of the New York Brewers' Association, died yesterday at the Hotel Sherman 8quare, Broadway and 71st Manhattan.

He was 73. Mr. Loewer had been in the brewery business for 60 years. He was a graduate of the College Point Military Academy. He learned the brewing business from his father, Valentine Loewer, who founded the brewery company in 1869.

Two daughters survive. SMITH JOSEPH, at his residence, 204 Bergen Street, on November 18, 1940, beloved husband cf Mary A. and father of William, Esther, Paul and Hazel. Requiem mass St. Agnes Church, Hoyt and Sackett Friday, 10 a.m.

TRAYNOR MARY E. (nee Har-rlngton), on November 19, 1940, beloved wife of the late James mother of John Mrs. Joseph A. Sweeney and Mrs. William Everett.

Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m., from the McManus Funeral Home, 2001 Flat-bush Avenue. Requiem mass R. C. Church of St. Thomas Aquinas.

Interment St. John's Cemetery, A ROBERTSON PITCHER, on November 19, 1940, devoted father of Benjamin W. Woodward and Mrs. Maybelle Knif-fin. Funeral today at Watkins Glen, N.

Y. Jn Q3cmor(am LANNING EMMA LORETTA. In loving memory of our dearly beloved wife and mother. Passed beyond November 21, 1939. HUSBAND and DAUGHTER.

MULLIGAN In memory of a dear husband and father. JOHN A. Passed away November 18. 1936. FAMILY.

passes GUNN In remembrance of a kind and devoted wife and mother, MARY E. GUNN. Mass Saturday, St, Agnes Church, 8 a.m. Gone but not forsolten. HUSBAND, SON and DAUGHTERS.

For famllifi dftlrons nf rre matlon, tt ran he Bfranfftd (direct from hospital). 88 $133 to Hflft from home or chapel, In-c I tid in crrmation rharte. FUNERALS AS LOW AS $150 plus cemetery char res. 3 I vIT15Jl MEETING NOTICES A MEETING OF THE LOT-OWNERS ot the GREEN-WOOD will be held at Its office, 170 Broadway, New York City, on MONDAY, the 2nd day ot DECEMBER, 1940. at 13 o'clock noon, at which time an election will ho held for five trustees In place of those whose term of office will expire on that day.

ALFRED BEAVER, Secretary. nl7-14t on2l I Sewage Plant Blocked Here Continued from Page 1 mans Island and Wards Island plants. See Board Rejection The opinion in administration circles today was that the Board of Estimate, which authorized i acquisition of property for the Owls Head site last Thursday, will re-1 Ject the Sharkey-Digiovanna bill when it comes before it. Council Vice Chairman Joseph T. Sharkey, who fathered the bill Jointly with Councilman Anthony Digiovanna, said today that even if the board rejects the bill or Mayor LaGuardia vetoes it, it may play a determining factor in the court suits which Bay Ridge property owners plan to bring to prevent erection of the Owls Head plant.

"I believe that any court will take into consideration that it is the sense of the municipal legislative body that sewage plants should not be built near residential areas," Mr. Sharkey told the Brooklyn Eagle. One of Shortest Bills The bill one of the shortest ever dropped into the City Hall hopper-amends the city administrative code by adding the following section: "No sewage disposal plant shall be located or constructed within one thousand five hundred feet of a residential area. This local law shall take effect immediately." The bill was adopted by a vote of 13 to 4, with Councllmen Harry W. Laidler, Robert K.

Straus and Joseph Clark Baldwin joining Mrs, Earle In opposing It. Councllmen Albert E. Smith Jr. and John Chris-tensen recorded themselves as not voting. Park Commissioner Robert Moses, who has repeatedly defended the city's modern disposal plants as odorless and architecturally attractive, was quoted by Mrs, Earle as opposed to any attempt to tie up the city's program for ending the pollution of local waters as quickly as possible.

Mrs. Earle read from a letter In which Mr. Moses had written: "My own opinion Is that the agitation against the Owls Head plant has beei partly due to misinformation, partly to hysteria and partly to politics, I know from personal experience that certain people prominent in politics in both parties joined in the agitation against this plant In the face of the fact that they told me personally that they knew the plant would do no harm but that It made a good issue." Sees Protest Strengthened Councilman Sharkey was Joined In his attack upon the Owls Head plant by Councilman Edward Vogel. Councilman Digiovanna, who did not take nart in the debate because he wn rtreslrllnir in the nlace of ne Was presiaing in tne place 01 Council President Newbold Morris, 1.,, Who was conducting a budget hear- ing at the Other end Of the hall, said today that he believed the Council's approval of the bill had added great strength to the cam paign against the Owls Head plant. Mrs.

Earle, whose suggestion that the Council withhold a vote and call a public hearing at which rity 1 engineers and sanitary experts could offer testimony to the effect that modern disposal plants were in noi way nuisances or community detrt-1 ments was overriden bv the Demo-1 cratic majority, charged that the; bill had heen "Dulled out of a hat for nolitical nurooses." I DIVIDENDS Ncw York, N7Y.rNovfmlif 'mtC At a special meetlna ot the Benrd of Directors of UNITED STATES PIPE AND FOUNDRY COMPANY held on TilfMlnv. November If. 1140. an exira dividend ol fifty ctntu iSOci per nhnre on the out. standing common Mock of the corporation wn declared, pajahle December 10.

1940, to stockholders of record at. the of Mininefs Novmber 30, 1940 Thi In In addition to the dividend nf fifty 1 cents iftoci per r.hnre heretofore declared on January IB, 1940, and payable December SO, 1140 UNITFD STATES PIP AND FOUNDRY COMPANY Tyson, Secretary and Treasurer. Ralph W. Barnes I I I I FORMERLY ON Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Washington. Nov.

20 Ralph W. Barnes, American correspondent of the New York Herald Tribune, was killed with three other occupants uf a British plane in a crash yesterday near Danilovgrad, Yugoslavia, according to a report received by the State Department today from Arthur B. Lane, American Minister to Yugoslavia. According to the report, the plane carried a large number of bombs. Bodies of the four occupants were found over a radius of 300 meters from the wreckage.

Mr. Lane sent a legation official to the scene to make a complete Investigation, Ralph W. Barnes, who for more than ten years was foreign correspondent and bureau head for the New York Herald Tribune, had cov-ered the present war on many fronts. He had filed his last dispatch from Athens last Monday. Formerly en Eagle Staff Born in Salem, in 1899, Mr.

Barnes joined the staff of the Brooklyn Eagle soon after obtaining his Master of Arts degree at Harvard University in 1924. The following year went to work for the Evening World, and later be came a reporter on the Herald Tribune. He was soon sent to Paris to cover assignments for the Paris bureau of the latter paper. Among his first notable stories that of the English Channel swimming feat of Gertrude Ederle in 1928. When the tugboat following the swimmer was unable to land its passengers because of the rough seas, Mr.

Bames tried to row ashore in a lifeboat. When the lifeboat capsized he swam ashore and ran two miles down the beach to a telephone to file his story. Expelled From Germany In 1929 Mr. Barnes became a regular member of the staff of the Paris bureau of the Herald Tribune Later the same year he was put in charge of that paper's Rome bureau. Following his transfer to Moscow, he was sent to Berlin, and early last year was shifted to the London bureau.

He was correspondent with the British Expeditionary Force in France, but was later assigned to PERDUE On November 18, SARAH (nee Fitzgerald), formerly of the Fourth Ward, Manhattan, beloved wife of the late John and mother of Nellie O'Connell, Kath-erlne Haertlng, Loretta Dowling, Alice Marquart, John, George, William, James and Harry. Funeral Friday morning from her residence, 88-21 64th Street, Glendale; requiem mass St. Matthias' Church, 10 o'clock. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Henry McCaddin, directors.

REARDON -LORETTA beloved wife of Timothy J. Reardon, Nov. 18, after a brief illness, at her residence, 39 Park Avenue, Baldwin, L. I. Funeral on Friday morning, Nov.

22; thence to St. Christopher's Church, Baldwin, where a solemn high mass of requiem will be offered at 10:30 a.m. Interment at Holy Rood Cemetery, Westbury, L. I. SABBATINO LOUIS, at his residence, 855 Ocean Avenue.

Survived by his wife, Catherine; two daughters, Marie V. and Louise his parents, Anthony and Maria Sabbatino; four brothers, Salvatore, Judge Sylvester, Ralph and Charles: two sisters, Catherine Sabbatino and Mrs. Thomas Cantrell. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m.; thence to Our Lady of Refuge R. C.

Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Masses preferred. 8 A RUB I On November 18. GRAZIA, beloved wife of Michael and mother of Joseph, Peter, Adeline, Theresa and Camille.

Funeral from her residence, 288 Parkville Avenue, Friday. Solemn requiem mass St. Rose of Lima Church, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemy-tery. SCHOPPS HENRY, November 18, 1940, beloved husband of Mary; i devoted father of Mary Morgen- 1 thaler.

Funeral from Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 151 Linden Boulevard, Friday, 9:30 a.m.; solemn requiem mass Holy Cross Church, 10 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. 8ILKMAN-Suddenly at Cran-i ford, N.

November 19, 1940, IRENE E. HALLOCK, wife of the late Charles Ransom Silkman; mother of C. Hallock Sllkman of Cranford, N. and Mrs. Edward Glbb of New Suffolk, L.

I. Notice of funeral in Thursday's papers, SLANEY On November 19, 1940, HARRIET ANN, of 360 75th Street, Brooklyn, wife of the late John and devoted mother of Mary M. Slariey. Reposing at Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Avenue, until Friday, 9:30 a.m.; thence to Our Lady of Angels Church, 73d Street and 4th Avenue, where a requiem mass will be offered, Interment St. John's Cemetery.

Sprtriout, Modern Chapel for 011r Comfort GEORGE D. CONANT Moodinjer Funeral Parlors 1120 Flotbuih B'klyn Ttl. aUckitiintttr 2-0247 Attorney; Was 73 Leader in Art Clubs Polytechnic Graduate Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Montclalr, N. Nov. 20 Arthur O.

Townsend, New York attorney and graduate of Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, who returned to the United States from his home In France following that country's occupation by the Oermans, died Monday night in Orange Memorial Hospital. He was 73. A member of the law firm of Townsend, Kidleberger and Campbell, he was for many years president of the Montclalr Art Associa tion. For the last four years he and his wife, Mrs. Charlotte Braem Townsend had been living, in Brittany.

Last June Mr. Townsend became ill but was unable to obtain passage to America until September, He was a member of the National Art Club, the New York Lawyers Club, the New York County Bar Association and the Greenbrook Country Club. Also surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Richard Paxton and Mrs. Oliver Carey, and two sons, Charles and Richard W.

Townsend. Estate Lett By Miss Chapman An estate estimated at $50,000 in personal property waa left by Miss Margaret W. Chapman of 28 Monroe Place, who died Nov. 4, papers filed with her will In Surrogate's Court revealed today. Bequests of 12,500 each are made to five nieces and six nephews and to the Visiting Nurse Association of Brooklyn, in the terms' of the will.

The residue of the estate Is divided into four equal trust funds. Income on these funds will go to a sister of Miss Chapman. Mrs. Charlotte C. Turner, of 28 Monroe Place, and to three brothers, Charles H.

Chapman of Chappaqua, N. A. Wright Chapman, of 160 Hicks 8t and Howard Chapman, of Stamford, Conn. On their deaths, the funds are to go to the nephews and nieces. DEATHS LYONS November 19, PETER of 1015 77th 8treet, beloved husband of Grace; father of Margaret; brother of Mrs.

Patrick Spalght, Mrs. Theodore Genoversa, Mrs. Thomas Day. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m., from Funeral Home, 7722 4th Avenue. Requiem mass St.

Ephrem'i Church. MARTIN On November 19,1940, EMILY MABEL, beloved' sister of Mrs. Harry Olsen, Margaret and Charles Martin. Services at her residence, 1015 E. 18th Street, Wednesday, 8:30 p.m.

Interment private. MAYFLOWER LODGE, NO. 61, F. Sc A. M.

Brethren: You are requested to attend Masonic services of our Brother, BENJAMIN F. BURKHARDT, at 187 S. Oxford Street, Brooklyn, Thursday evening, at 8 o'clock. IRION C. SIMPSON, Master.

Arthur E. Sherman, Secretary. McCORMACK JOHN on November 18, dear husband of Harriet McCormack (nee Mathews), and devoted father of the late Frederick J. McCormack. Funeral Friday, November 22, at 9:30 a.m., from 94-02 96th Street, Ozone Park, L.

I. Requiem mass Gate of Heaven Church. Interment St. John's Cemetery. McMAHON Rev.

STEPHEN O.S.M., of the Sanctuary of The Sorrowful Mother, Portland, Oregon; suddenly, on November 18, dear brother of Mrs. Mary Duggan. Funeral Friday, November 22, at 9:30 a.m., from the chapel of William J. McCaw, 107-12 Jamaica Avenue, Richmond Hill. Requiem mass at the Church of The Holy Child Jesus.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. MeNALLY On Tuesday, November 19, ELIZABETH, widow of William, sister of the late Mary Ryan, formerly of 131 Baltic Street, Reposing at John F. Fagan Mortuary, Henry and Warren Streets. Requiem mass St. Peter's Church, Friday, November 22, 10 a.m.

MINER HATTIE SAWYER, on November 19, 1940, beloved wife of George E. Miner and mother of Paul S. Miner, Stanley P. Miner and Dr. Theodore R.

Miner, Funeral private. Interment Gaysvillc, Vt. MOLLINEAUX WILLIAM R. beloved husband of Florence C. Molllneaux, died suddenly at Hempstead, I November 19.

Funeral services at his home, 130 Jerusalem Avenue, Hempstead, Friday evening at 8:30 o'clock. Interment Saturday morning In Greenfield Cemetery, Hempstead. MORELAND On Tuesday, st Bay Shore, HELEN E. MORE-LAND, beloved mother of E. Lloyd Moreland.

Requiem mass at St. Patrick's Church, Bay Shore, on Friday at 10 a.m. OLSSON Suddenly, on Monday, November 18, 1940, at his residence, 480 E. 21st Street, ARTHUR OLSSON, husband of the late Minnie Olsson. Services at, the Fairchild Chapel, 88 Lefferts place, on Wednesday at p.m.

Th Rev. Stephen MrMhon. a member of the Order of Servints Mary for 48 yean, died of a heart attack Monday while rislting at the home of hU sister, Mrs. Mary Duggan, H-16 107th Richmond Hill. HO was 71.

rather McMahon had been attached to the Sanctuary of the Sorrtxrfi'l MulJtw at Portland. for a r.Urcbtr ol years and formerly (rewmrer of the sanctuary. He hi beea lu pcr health for some A native jay Ridge. Tather MtMMwi aa raised In Holy Kotary where he served as an altar bo. was educated at 6t.

Francis College and the Servite Seminary at Qranville. Wis. Father McMahon started his re-llglous career when he was 23 and was ordained In Chicago when he Louis Sabbatino, Jurist's Brother Lift Rttident of Boro Had Stevedore Business Louis Sabbatino. SO, of 855 Ocean brother of City Court Justice Sylvester Sabbatino, died yesterday at his home after an illness of two months. Mr.

Sabbatino, a lifelong resident of Brooklyn, was engaged for the last 25 years in the stevedoring business with offices at 52 Broadway, Manhattan. Surviving are his widow, Catherine; two daughters, Marie V. and Louise his parents, Anthony and Maria Sabbatino; four brothers, Salvatore, Ralph, Charles and Justice Sabbatino, and two sisters, Miss Catherine Sabbatino and Mrs. Thomas Cantrell. The funeral will be held at 9:30 a.m.

Friday, with a solemn mass of requiem at Our Lady of Refuge R. C. Church. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Father Guido Alfani Florence, Italy, Nov.

20 OP) Father Ouldo Alfani, a seismologist known to scientists for his Interest in stabilizing the leaning tower of Pisa, died here today. Arons, Joseph Bennett, Martha J. McMahon, Rev. Stephen McNally, Elizabeth Miner, Hattie Molllneaux, William R. Jr.

Moreland, Helen Olsson, Arthur Perdue, Sarah Reardon, Loretta Sabbatino, Louis Sarubbl, Grazia Schopps, Henry Sllkman, Irene Slaney, Harriet Smith, Joseph Traynor, Mary Betzel, Grace E. Bollhofer, Emllle Burkhardt, Benjamin Clark, Arthur Cull, Eleanor Davidson, Robert Dreher, John Farrell, Mary Galllgan, Frank Groves, Etta Gumbley, Harry Lynch, Thomas F. Lyons, Peter F. Martin, Emily McCormack, John Woodward, Robertson P. ARONS JOSEPH, beloved hus- band of Sadie, devoted father of Monroe and Henrietta Llchtenstein.

Funeral private. BENNETT On Wednesday, November 20, 1940, at her residence, 388-A Decatur Street, MARTHA beloved daughter of the late Thomas C. and Caroline A. Bennett. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Friday, at 8 p.m.

BETZEL GRACE on November 20, 1940, at her residence, 225 Bainbridge Street, beloved wife of Henry and mother of Francis J. Betzel and William J. Feeney and sister of Frances and William Finn and Genevieve Hunt. Funeral Saturday. Requiem mass at Holy Rosary R.

C. Church at 9:30 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. BOLLHOFER EMILIE, at her home, 1479 E.

99th Street, Canarsie, November 19. Reposing in Fuller-ton's Funeral Home, 9718 Flatlands Avenue. Beloved mother of William, Ernest, Walter and Harry. Funeral services Thursday at 8 p.m. Funeral Friday.

2 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. CLARK ARTHUR at his home, 98 Wythe Avenue; survived by his wife, Mabel; his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Bernard Smith; three sisters, Mrs. Florence Eve, Mrs.

Josephine Ferle, Mrs. Elizabeth Mc-Cluskey. Funeral Friday morning, 9:30 a.m., solemn requiem mass St, Vincent de Paul Church, 10 o'clock. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Direction James F.

Murray Funeral Home, COLUMBUS COUNCIL, NO. 126, K. of Members are requested to assemble at the club Wednesday evening, November 20, at 8:30 o'clock, to proceed thence to the home of our lat brother, FRANK T. GALLIGAN, 221 Warren SLreet. FRANCIS G.

DEMPSEY, Grand Knight. Joseph Walsh, Recorder, CULL On November 18, 1940, ELEANOR (nee Ford), beloved wife of William devoted mother of Eleanor, Alice, Ellsworth and Le-roy; sister of Miss Alice Ford and Mrs. Maude Erlcson; also survived by four grandchildren. Services at her residence, 1421 Mill Avenue, Friday, 1 p.m. Interment Ocean View Cemetery, Slaten Island.

ary work. He also wu stationed for several Tears In the mother church of his order. Our lady of Sorrows Church, In Chicago. Was Gifted Artist He was a gifted artist and painted a number of murals and paintings for the order. The funeral wili be held from the chapel of William J.

McCaw. 107-1J Jamaica Ave, Richmond Hill, at 8:30 am. Friday with a solemn high mass of requiem to be offered at the Church of the Holy Child Jesus. A number of members of the Order of Servant! of Mary, including the provincial of the order in the United States, will attend the mass. Burial will be at Holy Cross Cemetery.

Harry Gumbley, 72, Retired Postal Man Was in Charge of Bureau For Examining Clerks Harry Gumbley, formerly for several years in charge of the mail route examining division of the General Postofflce here, died yesterday at his home, 1050 E. 29th after an illness of several weeks. He was 72. Mr. Gumbley retired in 1938 after serving in the postofflce for 35 years.

He was known among the postal clerks throughout the borough, many of whom he examined twice a year on State and local mall distributing schemes. Mr. Gumbley also had been in charge of Station at Franklin Ave. and Fulton before he was transferred to the General Post- office. Leavei Two Daughters He was the husband of the late Catherine McConvllle Oumbley and is survived by two daughters, Mrs.

Robert J. Hackett and Mrs. James J. Hanratty. He also leaves two sisters, Anne and Emma, and a brother, Richard, of Birmingham, England.

The funeral will be held at 9:45 a.m. Friday, with interment In Holy Cross Cemetery, DAVIDSON ROBERT November 19, 1940, aged 68 years, beloved father of Robert E. and Elmer and brother of John. Funeral Saturday, 1 p.m., from George Werst Funeral Home, 71-41 Cooper Avenue. Interment Lutheran Cemetery.

DREHER JOHN on November 19, dear son of Mary Duncan Kelly Dreher and loving brother ol Mrs. Frank Prendergast, Mrs. John Ward and Grace. Funeral Saturday, 9:30 a.m., from his home, 81 Garfield Place; thence to R. C.

Church of St. Francis Xavier, 6th Avenue and Carroll 8treet, where solemn requiem mass will be offered. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Direction of Jere J. Cronln.

FARRELL MARY T. (nee Kelly), November 19, 1940, beloved wife of James mother of Irene and Mrs. John H. Krista. Funeral Saturday, 9:30 a.m., from her residence, 3215 Avenue J.

Requiem mass R. C. Church of Our Lady Help of Christians. GALLIGAN FRANK November 19, dear husband of Catherine Sweeney and son of the late Thomas and Mary McGee Galllgan, and loving brother of Mrs. Mary Byrne, Mrs.

Catherine Moran, Miss Alice and Joseph and cousin of Ann McGee. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m., from his home, 221 Warren Street. Solemn requiem mass St. Paul's R. C.

Church, Court and Congre' Streets. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Direction of Jere J. Cronin. GROVES On November 19, ETTA, of 93-37 208th Street, Bell-aire, L.

beloved mother of Edna A. Jensen and sister of Herbert Cotton; one granddaughter also survives. Services at the Stutzmann Funeral Home, 224-39 Jamaica Avenue, Queens Village, L. on Friday, 2 p.m. Interment Flushing Cemetery.

GUMBLEY HARRY, on Novem-ber 19, 1940, at his residence, 1050 E. 29th Street, beloved husband of the late Catherine McConvllle, father of Mrs, Robert J. Hackett and Mrs. James J. Hanratty; brother of Anne, Emma and Richard of Birmingham, England.

Fu-neral. Friday, 9:45 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. LYNCH THOMAS on November 20, 1940, brother of Mrs. John J.

Fee, Mrs. B. Reynolds, Mrs. T. Bradley, Mary, Anna and Florence A.

Lynch, Funeral Saturday morn-ing from his residence, 538-A Leon-ard Street, Brooklyn, at 10:30 o'clock, Solemn mass of requiem St. Antony's Church at 11 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Direction Joseph J. Holl-well.

A SERVICE THAT IS QUIET, TACTFUL AND DIGNIFIED "GCO.W Pease SON i Fntrtl DtrKlnn 4JS Nnitrand An. ITlrllai cently been engaged as a pUv and literary agent in partnership with Miss Mary Prichett. The latter immediately notified Miss Morrison's daughters on the Coast and received word they planned to eome East by plane. After a long absence from the stage, Miss Morrison appeared last May in Terra nee Ratigan's melodrama "Grey Farm," at the Hudson Theater. She first appeared on the stage in the arms of her mother at the age of six months.

Later she played Juliet st the age of 14 She also played other Shakespearean parts and then for a number of years was a script agent. She aim led the Children's Players, a group of adult actors who played in shows written for children. Mrs. Bennet was divorced from Richard Bennett In Manhattan in 1925. at the hardest hit areas to last week's devastating attack on Coventry.

War's Hearint Raid London, Nov. 20 0J.R) An all-night Nazi aerial bombardment of furious intensity caused huge casualties and left wide areas in ruins today in the industrial Midlandsheart of British war production. The raid was one of the heaviest, if not the heaviest, of the war. British sources estimated that more than 250 German planes participated in the main attacks on the Midlands, while others operated against London and other targets. Birmingham was one of the cities struck by the Nazis, news filtering through the censor indicated.

1 The enemy war fleets raced over the London area at a great altitude for about, nine hours during the night and headed straight for targets in the midlands, often escaping the strengthened night fighter patrols in the capital sector damage as largely confined to non-military targets. In the most heavily points in the Midlands German "wring bi me rate of one mlnut lor periods and the force used by the enemy was said to equal that of the heaviest nights of attack in September and October. In one West Midlands town at least 200 houses were reported demolished and many more damaged. Hundreds of stores In the central part of the town were bombed and debris was scattered over many blocks. Walter g.Ccofet iMOoaroaAian DIGNIFIED AiLowt FUNERALS As IkJlJ OUt FUNERAL HOMES IITN luck it, StaaMm-caraltar 7-MM MNt 1 Watt lMfc itrwt yawna' t-ltOt in a.

irwm nw.tiyw 7-zne waa flHtifia 214 SJawarawata AweaMla ffdns SQ Phont for RMrtMirtaHra or Wrftt for mtrnW or "0" OtNaaNa RUCTION C. H. ADEI.MAV AUCTIONEER, sells N. liHO. at noon.

901 Halsey Bronklyn. Indian Motor Cycle with Delivery Box. Motor No. RuC for the account of Loben and gunk Beer Pump "'I the accouni of Max and R. Garofalo M.

o. ft.S2.'i. for the iccount of AnnHHiggins. nlS-2tW a'delmVn'. aTctioxeep" si Us on nt 1 00 p.m..

at Brooklyn, all nhts. title and interest of Waltir and for Walker Henderson and Mr. 7artsky in nnd to Mack Truck and Coal Body. Motor No. NV-i'lMK.

for the account of Wnlter Henderson. Mr. Zaretsky, Walker Henderson. C. A HKLM AN I 'TIt EER.

s. Us Ik-c. nt lo a.m., at in, Atlanti, Ave Ft'klyn. Kord Sedan. Motor 2jW'7.

account ot Ruffus Manon. 1,2,1 C. ATELi-N. AUCTIONEER, sells Nov. 22.

at 15 a at SIX Clarkson Ave klyn. Packard Sediin, Motor No. XSOW. retaken from Alex H. 15.

SCMUNZKIT. Al'CTIONEKR. s'lls tier- 6. IBl'i. 11 a 4S I-afavcttc St Hiooklvn.

Foil Sednn. Motor No. re. Sol A 1 Fazio, Delia II il Si 'Hi I VTlONEKtl, sells November 2JJ. 1940, HI IS 4th Avenue, Brooklyn, federal Truck.

Motor No Dofi-lti retaken from Hebn Cheresh. StDOWSKY ACTION EER, sells Nov. 2H ll'io do tn 7 H'Kalb Ave Kroohh 11, Chevrolet Sednn. Motor No, retaken from Herman and liworkin. PI BLIC NOTICES VNITED ST ATES'PISTRUT CO vS'T EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW V11HK Nntpe 1 have arrested tha vs.

I "Carrie engines It" Ivied hv Alphonse Putter. I ft as Sutter Bros or Work Labor and Services, ne $1 Process i cturnahl Nov 27, I9W a 10 00 a in sa'd Court Tost office Buildinc, Brooklvn. All persons interested mut ihen n.e, nl their bums or be delimited and the ssid Vessel enencs e'e, be co'l'le'lin'4 ir-1 il l.I'I f'o kt TH 1st "0 vim '1 5 CR s. Marshal. MM'RICE M.

KREJ3, 1 Proctor for Lihellant, S4SmaikaMU-aMtaZ-esS6 1211 BalfclUK-iiil nil itir 2-KM-7 outre 1S4V1 MM limn lajnrim -M7 ti ll Fares) HUliaa HMO 1SM4 tor, mt mt linn MtOI VI MAM ingham was described as "retaliatory." 14 Towns Are Attacked London, Nov. 20 Waves of Nazi planes roaring over one a min- i ute rained bombs by the thousands on 14 towns in England's industrial Midlands last night and early today in a ruinous nine-hour raid likened LEGAL NOTICES File No. 79421939. THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK, by the Grate ot God. free and Independent.

TO: LOUISE OAEDECKE, send greeting WHEREAS. ALBERT F. Kl'T-SCHER and WILLIAM A. FISCHER, who reside at No. 471 63rd Street and No.

430 fi6th Street, in the Borough ot Brooklyn. City of New York, respectively, have presented their account as Executors of the. last Will and Testament ot ELISE KUTSO'HER, deceased, lately residing at No. 446 561 ri Street, the Borough of Brooklyn. County of Kings, City and State of New York, and a petition pryin- that their account may be judicially fettled, and for a direction as to the.

manner of payment to LOUISE GAE-DECKE of her legacy. NOW. THEREFORE, you and each of you are herehy cited to show cause before our Surrogate a Court of the Countv of Kings, to be held at the Hall of Records. In the Countv of Kinra. on the 24th day of December, 194(1.

at 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon, why such settlement should not be had, and for a direction as to the manner of payment to LOUISE GAE-DECKE of her legacy. In Tealinionv Whereof we have caused the Seal of our sairt Surrogate's Court to be hereunto affixed. (Seal) WITNESS Hon GEORGE ALBERT WINGATE. Surrogate of our said County, at 1he F.oroueh of Brooklyn, in the said County, the 19th day of November. 1940.

PERCY T. STAPLETO.N'. flerk nf Ihe Surrogate's Court n20-4t FORECLOSCRE SUPREME COURT. KINGS COUNTY prW4Pr VAT ALTENA and another, plaintiffs, against F.ENJA- I MIN R. REGENBOGEN.

et defendants. Pursuant to Judgment dated Novem- lr, 1'; lUlO anti inlv entered, Will at the Brooklyn Real Esiate Exchange. JHfl Montague Brooklvn New York, on IV- llth. inin. at 12 o'clock nipon.

bv JOHN A. HARTIGAN. auctioneer. i-encd bv said judg- m.nt to sold, situated in 1he Bor New York City, on Hi" northerly side 1 1 1 kr 1 1 liro'iK vn. "i of Trum.m street.

219 feet west fn.m i Ai-iiiie. i mi C. H. ADKI.M VN Al t.riUM.iK. front and far.

by Km feet depth Nl)V on each side, iind known as 9 Truxton TM(re Pl.vc. Strict and 20M Street. Brook- Sedan Moto'- No 3T17H1, lor the ar-Ivn. New York, subject to any stale roun, of jirr w. Exford nli-2t of fa.

ts an mi urate survey may snow and to reslnctivo covenants in Liber C. H. ADLLMA.V At CTION rn a.m.. at York. November W.

MS Brooklyn. Cad'llac i Coupe. Motor No. lor the a FRWK KIENI'L, Referee, count of Telliburth Burke. nl3-2t I SUPREME COUUT.

KINGS H'NTY II' 1 .1 ills as sur- viving executor of the Last Will and Testament of Lt'UIS H. VOGEL. plaintiff, against THuMAS SIWP.AGNA. et In puisuiince ot judKiiient heroin entered mid dated A.iveinlier l.nii. H140.

I will fell at public nudum, by JuHN A. HABTIGAN. suctioned, at he Brooklyn Real Estnte Km ISil Montague. Street, Bruoklvn, New York, on uecernlur llth, ui 12 ocloi noon, the luortttaged premises in the Borough ot Brooklyn, t'oiinty of Kiiiue. City nnl Huto ol New Vik, directed hy Mid judnnient to he sold, lomted on the southerly side Tluriy-eignth Street, distant eiKluy-toiir (eet westerly ltoni tne corner loiiii.d hy the inlersedion uf the southerly side ol Tlnrtv-eiKhth Street with the.

westerly side of Thirteenth heing twenty-lour leet 111 uont 11111I tent, with a uniform depth ol ti 1 n.t y-f iv feet two und otu-ell'htll Jb'lleS on either side, ii nil niore pin 111 iilarly described in inoiiKane recorded 111 Liber 7217 of Mori phkc 49, rei-erence beinat inuue to said judgment (or a more complete description thereof. ALSO all the rigid, tille hiuI inter-cm of the panics 10 this ml ion ol, in nnd to Tlnrry-oiKlith Street, Iving in front of and Bdioitung smd premises to the centre line thereof. TOGETHER with nn and right of way as created anil established hv instrument recorded in the nlftce of th" Hik'ister of Up- County of Kings, Liber 4Li- of Conveyances, pae 22.i, and In Liber lU'S ol Conveyances. ae, 360; subject, however, to a similar easement titul rikrlit of way in favor of the nd.ioitutu' owners as set forth in sunt instruments. Sl'BJECT to railroad and tel.

plume easeruenis or consents. City Zoning rian, covennnts nnd restru 11 Htiv, no' violated hy said huililing i ti the ssi premises, and subieei to a state of facia an aenitale suti.v nmy show Paled November 10411 WEiss Es'i n. i.ree WEtSMKon ft KRoER. fot Plaintiff. Office and VI 1 dre.

a Court Street, Brooklvn 1 Terlt. nJl-Si EAGLE WANT AD OFFICE HOURS FOR THURSDAY THANKSGIVING DAY 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. TELEPHONE YOUR ADS CALL MAIN 4-6200.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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