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

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle du lieu suivant : Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

Lieu:
Brooklyn, New York
Date de parution:
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13
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a a the of of of Deaths Ka herine Koester, Louise Blasquez, Theresa Lewis, Joseph V. Charles M. Lindner, John A. Burklund, C. Long, Edwin M.

Burns, Catherine Marler, Annie M. Carlin, Wilfrid J. Mason, C. F. Cleaver, Mary V.

McMenomy, Frank Dietrich, Bella Petty, Doris C. Finn, Dennis P. Rumpke, Louise Fullam, Jerome Ryan, Anna Galli, Giovanni Schmitt, Jacob J. Gibson, James Stelljes, Henry Guckian, Michael West, George H. Humphrey, R.

M. Zimmermann, G. Kelleher, Michael -KATHERINE, on August 27, 1945, beloved wife of George; sister of Rose Savage. Funeral Thursday at 8:30 from Joseph Tari Chapel, 121 Park Avenue. Interment John's Cemetery, BLASQUEZ-THERESA, on August 27, 1945, devoted mother of Gloria Kresmery.

Reposing at the Park Chapel, 44 7th Avenue. Fuheral Thursday with requiem mass, 10 a.m., St. Athanasius Church. Interment Calvary Cemetery. BRADY- suddenly, August 28.

beloved husband Ruth J. (nee Straus); dear father Maureen; loving son of of Mrs. Ellen Brady; dear brother of Mrs. William Fox, Beatrice, Francis and Walter Brady. Reposing at a a the Walter B.

Cooke, Inc. Funeral Home, Flatbush Avenue. Brooklyn, until Friday, 9 a.m.; thence to Our of Refuge R. C. Church, where leave requiem will be offered.

BURKLUND-On August 27. 1945, CHARLOTT, beloved wife of Charles and mother of Evelyn and Charles R. Services at Woods her residence, 532 62d Street, Wednesday at 8:45 p.m. BURNS CATHERINE M. (nee Kearney), on August 28, 1945, beloved mother of Maude McLoughlin, Mary and Pic.

Thomas Bryan grandmother of Elizabeth Kampe, James, George, and Francis Mcgrandmother of Loughlin; Joan Kampe; also survived by three nieces and three nephews. Funeral from Walter Cooke. Inc. Funeral Home, 50 7th Avenue. Solemn reHoly Family R.

C. quiem Church, mass Friday, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, CARLIN. WILFRID JOHN, P. killed in the line of duty, of Helen E.

Carlin and beloved son late Fred W. Carlin dear the brother of Sister Evelyn Marie, Order of Notre Dame. Alvin J. Carlin, S. S.

P. (Y) and FredCarlin, S. 1 A. M. Noeric W.

tice of funeral later. CLEAVER August 27, 1945. MARY of 7410 Narrows Avenue. beloved wife of Lt. Col.

Thomas devoted mother of Maj. Eugene, S. Army: Lt. Thomas L. U.S.

Lt. Col. William U. S. and Walter C.

Reposing at Army, C. Waldeck's Home for Funerals. 7614 4th Avenue. Solemn requiem mass at Our Lady of Angels: R. C.

Church Thursday, 10 a.m. DIETRICH BELLA. beloved, wife of Daniel: devoted mother of Anna, Edward, Rita, Arthur and Robert: also survived by five sisters and three brothers. Funeral services at United Chapels, 1202 Broadway, on Thursday, 2 p.m. FINN-DENNIS PATRICK, on August 27, 1945, at Mary Immaculate Hospital, Jamaica, father of the Rev.

Dennis Mrs. Charles Gallic, Mrs. Edward Curry, brother John F. Finn of Kingston, N. Mrs.

Mae Sullivan of Riverside, also survived by nine grandchildren. Funeral from his late residence. 105-14 220th Street, Queens Village, L. I. Solemn requiem mass Friday, August 31, at 9:30 a.m.

at the R. C. Church of SS. Joachim and Anne, Hollis Avenue and Springfield Boulevard, Queens Village. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

Please omit flow- E. H. Lockwood, Director. on August 28, JEROME, Suddenly five years; beloved son of Jerome and Rita and dear brother of Rita Marie, Nelson, Catherine and Kevin. Funeral from Darraugh's Funeral Home, 8813 5th Avenue, Thursday, 2 p.m.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. GIOVANNI, died on August 27, 1945; husband of Maria; father of Rose, Ida and Mrs. Annetta Maresca and Nicholas, Maurice and Corp. Louis.

Reposing at funeral home of A. Gennarelli, 4101 10th Solemn requiem mass Thursday, 10 a.m., at St. Catherine of Alexandria Church. Funeral Thursday. Interment St.

John's Cemetery, GIBSON JAMES. August 27, aged 44, beloved husband of Catherine: dear father of Elizabeth Jane Gibson. Reposing at the Halvorsen Chapel, 5310 8th Avenue. Services Friday, August 31, 10 a.m. Interment the Evergreens.

GUCKIAN August 27, 1945. MICHAEL beloved son of Mary Glancy and the late Michael loving brother of James U. S. N. Funeral from his residence, 436 Clermont Avenue, Thursday, August 30, at 9:30 a.m.; thence to Queen of All Saints R.

C. Church. Interment St. John's Cemetery. HUMPHREY RICHARD August 28; beloved father of Alice McGill, Richard and William Humphrey.

Reposing at Pettit's Parlors, 20 Lincoln Avenue, Rockville Centre. Requiem high mass at St. Agnes Church, Rockville Centre, 10 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. KELLEHER-On August 29, 1945.

MICHAEL beloved husband of late Rose (nee McGarvey), devoted father of Mrs. Margaret ReinMrs. Anne Snyder, Mrs. Agnes Hagerty, Thomas J. and Gerald W.

Kelleher, brother of Mrs. Jane Dwyer. grandfather of Barbara Hagerty and Pfc. William J. Snyder.

S. Army, at his residence. 1548 Albany Avenue. Funeral Saturday. a.m.

Requiem mass St. VinFerrer R. C. Church. Interment.

Holy Cross Cemetery. KOESTER- On Tuesday, August 1945. LOUISE, beloved mother Walter Alfred George L. Raymond S. Koester.

Funeral services will be held at the Baumuller Funeral 23 E. 33d Street, Bayonne, on ThursHome. August 30. 8 p.m. Interment View Cemetery, Jersey City.

LEWIS -August 27, 1945, JOSEPH beloved husband of Mildred father of Joseph H. Services at residence, 498 E. 7th Street, Wednes8 p.m. HAMILTON MERRITT WEED, RETIRED BUILDER, DIES Amityville, Aug. 29 Hamilton Merritt Weed of 94 Bennett Place, a former building contractor with offices at 200 5th Manhattan, died yesterday at Southside Hospital, Bay Shore.

He was 80. A native of Glens Falls. N. Mr. Weed went to New York City at an early age and started in the building contracting Many of the large apartment houses in Manhattan, including Dorilton Apartment at 70th St.

Broadthen way, were built by him. He also built the New York State Normal School at Potsdam. N. Y. In 1908 he built All Souls Episcopal Deatbs LINDNER- on Tuesday, August 28, 1945, son of Catherine and the late John Lindner; beloved husband of Marjorie devoted of Marjorie Ann and John Joseph; brother of Edward and Gerard.

Funeral from his residence. 253 Carlton Avenue. Friday, August 31. at 9:30 Solemn requiem mass Queen of All Saints C. Church.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. LONG-EDWIN August 28. 1945, beloved, husband of C. Eliza beth father Clifford Graham; brother of Joseph Mrs.

H. Muller. Mr. G. Clark Long, Mrs Dupuis and Mrs.

Ernest De Revere. Service at the Franklin Funeral Home. New Canaan. Conn. Thursday, August 30, at 3 p.m.

MARLER-ANNIE on August 28, beloved mother cf William A. Marler and the late Mildred Marler Jackson; sister of Henry Tonyes; grandmother of Mrs. Mildred Marler Schlesing and Mrs. Geraldine Jackson Coors of Denver. Colorado, and the late William Telbot Jackson.

Services August 31, at 2 p.m., at Clarence F. Simonson Funeral Home. 119-04 Hillside Avenue, Richmond Hill. Interment Lutheran Cemetery. McMENOMY-FRANK, on gust 26.

1945, beloved husband of Teresa. Reposing at M. J. Smith Memorial, 248 Prospect Park West, until Thursday, p.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery." MASON CHAUNCEY FRANK, at his residence.

89 Rolling Street. Lynbrook. N. August 26, 1945; loving husband of the late Emma (nee Edwards): loving father of C. and Sadie Cline.

Reposing Balder Funeral Home, 507 Liberty Avenue. Brooklyn, where religious services will be held Wednesdav, at 8:30 p.m. Interment family plot Cypress Hills Cemetery. Thursday, 10:30 a.m. a PETTY- -DORIS suddenly, on August 28.

1945, beloved wife of Petty and mother of James McGarboy. Services at the Fairchild Chapel. 86 Lefferts Place. Thursday at 2 p.m. RUMPKE- On August 28.

1945. LOUISE, 945 69th Street. wife of the late George F. devoted mother of Fred H. and Carl F.

Rumpke. Services at Fred Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Avenue, Thursday. 8 p.m. Funeral Friday, 10 a.m. Interment Lutheran Cemetery.

RYAN ANNA. on August 23. 1945, at her 637 48th Street; beloved of Mrs. residence. Thomas O'Dea; also survived by four grandchildren.

Solemn requiem mass September 1. at 9:30 a.m. at the R. C. Church of St.

Agatha, Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. E. H. Lockwood, Director. SCHMITT-JACOB son of the late Jacob and Regina, at his home, 261 Maujer Street, on August 28.

1945; survived by his wife, Barbara; three sons, Harry, Oscar, technical sergeant in Italy, and Jacob: two daughters. Mrs. Daniel Williams Mrs. William Walker: one brother, Harry. Funeral on Friday morning from his home, followed by a solemn mass of requiem at the Church of St.

Nicholas at 10 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. Wm. P.

Murphy Son. STELLJES on August 28. 1945, aged 78 years, beloved husband of Anna (nee Grotheer), and father of Mabel Rope, Bertha and Helen Stelljes, Services Fridav, 8:30 p.m. at Robert Wasmund's Chapel, 6630 Fresh Pond Road. Ridgewood.

Interment Saturday, 2 p.m., Lutheran Cemetery, WEST--Suddenly, on August 28. 1945. GEORGE H. husband of Charlotte Jane; father of George son of Rosa J. and brother of Walter West.

Services at the George W. Pease Son Funeral Home. 437 Nostrand Avenue at Hancock Street, Thursday, 8 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. ZIMMERMANN-GEORGE on August 28, at his residence, 105 Autumn Avenue, beloved husband of Hannah and father of Marie Charles, Evelyn and Agnes Voellinger and brother of Daniel, Edwin.

Mamie Sohl and Elizabeth Neuman. Reposing at Donnelly Purcell Funeral Home, 207 Euclid Avenue. Funeral Saturday. Requiem mass at Blessed Sacrament R. C.

Church at 10 a.m. In Demoriam CALLAN-Sacret to the memory of HELEN G. CALLAN, who died August 29, 1942. Mass offered St. Agatha's.

FAMILY. JESSER In loving memory of MARY A devoted wife and mother, who departed this life August 29, 1940. Now in God's loving care HUSBAND and SON. MULLADY In memory of our beloved mother. NELLIE who died August 29.

1942, and of our dear sister. EDNA who died September 2, 1942. FLORENCE and ALBERT. O'FLAHERTY-JOAN. No one knows the silent heartache, Only those who have such can tell of the grief that is borne in silence For the otie we loved well Aunt HELEN.

FRANCES and Grandma SHINE. RENOUARD-OTTELIE. our beloved mother. Died August 14, 1930. Never to be forgotten GEORGE, BLANCHE, BERT.

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, Board Maps Plan For Boro Trolleys Continued from 1 Tompkins Ave, and the westerly of the McDonaldroute. Buses will run where street now operate along the routes these lines: Bay Ridge and 86th Jamaica Myrtle -Court Norton's Point (renamed Mermaid), Gate (renamed Surf).

Sumner Union St. and Wilson Ave. To Start New Lines Recommended for completes scrapping are these lines: Broadway, Bushwick Gravesend-Church Greenpoint McDonaldVanderbilt Aves. (easterly half will be discontinued) and Union and West End Aves. New bus lines will run along lantic Ave.

and Columbia St. These bus lines will be retained: Avenues J. and Bay Ridge Parkway. Brighton Beach and Carlton Concord. Crescent and Decatur Sts.

East New York and 18th Fort Hamilton Parkway, 49th-53d and Fulton Sts. and Gates. 'S Gerritsen, Greenpoint and Hamilton Aves. Also Kings Highway, Manhattan Bridge. Marine Parkway.

Meeker and New Lots Nortons Point, Oriental Boulevara, shuttle, Pitkin, Ralph and Review Ave. (formerly known as MeekerMarcy shuttle). 60th 3d and Voorhies Aves. and Wyckoff Ave. (formerly known as Myrtle- Wyckoff Aves.

line). $2.600,000 Income The study predicts rerouting at certain points in present trolley and bus lines. New depots and shops will have to be built and others rebuilt or scrapped. The report states be cheaper to revamp the whole transit system than replace equipment on established routes. Pointing out that the annual net income from running existing Brooklyn trolley lines, as of June 1.

1944, was $2.607.291, the report states that if these lines are maintained, without rerouting or without initiating entirely new routes. the replacement cost for rolling stock would 1 be $1,500.000 for the first five years. Reconstruction of 68 miles of double trackage would cost $6.800.000 for the five-year period. while 525 new buses to replace broken-down old ones would cost $6.562.500. Adequate shop and garage facilities the new buses would be $4.255,440.

while 300 new street cars to replace those breaking down will result in a cost of $5.700.000. The total five-year rehabilitation cost for existing lines would be $24,817,940, the report predicts. If carried on for the next five years. from 1950 to 1955. another $16.300.000 would have to be spent.

making a 10-year total of $41.117,940. The report looks for the trolley and bus lines to show net income annually, after operating costs are deducted. The engineers figure that street car trackage will no longer be required on 38 lines or parts of lines as a result of the revamping. In addition, adoption of the full plan would mean the removal of overhead trolley wire of 129 route miles, of which 122 are in public street, with a salvage value of $128,600. 'Sound Engineering' The new bus routes would be on Atlantic between East York and Jamaica and along an Erie Basin route between Borough Hall and the basin The Utica Ave.

car line would be extended from Avenue to Flatbush while the Crosstown line would be rerouted through Wythe Ave. from Broadway to S. 8th St. The report To said: "The estimates are based on sound engineering principles and good operating practices." The report states that the economic life of a street car is 20 years, while a bus lasts eight years. Huge Sign Says: '3 Cheers' for Yanks Continued from Page 1 Close behind trailed the American battieships Iowa and South Dakota and the British dreadnaught Duke of York.

Warships Fully Lighted All four battleships dropped their anchors together. Five miles away lay the half-sunk, battered hulk of the battleship Nagato, with which the Japanese once sought to challenge Allied might. Off the Missouri's bow rose the great smokestacks of Yokohama, There was little evidence of Japanese activity ashore -just a few automobiles and bicycles driving along the coast. road. An atmosphere of peace was almost overwhelming.

if you ignored the bomb ruins. Last night our ships were fully lighted for the first time since the sneak attack on Pearl Harbor Dec. 7. 1941. Aboard transports marine officers were briefing their men for the landings tomorrow.

A marine brigadier general told the devildogs who make up the main landing force: "If there is no opposition, we must nonetheless be firm and just and alert, conducting ourselves in such fashion that there is not any incitement or provocation. "It is our honor to represent the entire marine corps. which has played such an important part in the Pacific war. We must, therefore. at all times by our personal conduct and soberly appearance conduct ourselves SO as to be a credit to our illustrious corps." spleen.

the kidney, the lymph gland the marrow. which revealed "the same effect as 1f they had been exposed to a high -powered radio and beam." In an earlier broadcast radio Tokyo revealed that 2.031 passengers and crew members were killed and 2,427 others were injured as a result of Allied air raids on Japanese railways. BUY U. 8. WAR BONDS AND JUST A BUNCH OF PALSI Church at St.

Nicholas Ave. and 116th St. On the day it was to open it burned to the ground, and he immediately started work to rebuild 1 it. He retired in 1920. Before coming to Amityville, he lived for inany years in Manhattan.

He was a member of the Episcopal Church. Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Martha R. Weed: a daughter.

Dorothy Weed; a son, Donald and two sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth D. Spear and Amanda Weed. Funeral services will be held at 11:30 a.m. Friday at the First Methodist Church, Amityville.

Lt. A.L. Glicksberg, Army Navigator First after the was Balaton 1944, 2d vin L. berg of Ave. officially dead.

He the Mrs. Glicksberg. Born cago, Glicksbe1 to Brooklyn Lincoln to work 153 Brooklyn listed in 1942. man Field, Besides vived by Glicksberg, China, Harriet, father, 29, reported missing in action B-24 bomber of which he navigator was shot down over Lake. Hungary, Aug.

22. Lt. AlGlicks- 8416 21st has been listed was 20 son of Julia in Chi- L.t Alvin L. Glicksberg was brought as a child He was graduated from High School and then went for the S. J.

S. Mimeograph Pierrepont attending College evenings. He enthe army air corps, Dec. 3. was commissioned at in April, 1944.

his mother, he is sura brother, Corp. Raymond with the air force in and four sisters, Florence. Jacqueline and His Bernard Glicksberg, died Pfc. G. M.

Strype, Memorial Mass Pic George ported missing in last Dec. 17 while Pfc. George Strype, Parochial School Preparatory School. ing Brooklyn when he entered in March, 1943. Camp Hood.

Texas, der the A. S. T. State University, to Camp Maxey. Besides parents by a sister.

Jean. brated for him at St. Philip Nert. the family has Summer. M.

Stripe, reaction, was killed serving with the army in Belgium, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George M. Strype of 102 Visitation Place, have been informed. He was 20 last Aug.

31. A graduate of the Visitation and Brooklyn he was attendPolytechnic Institute the armed service After training at he studied unP. at Louisiana and then was sent Texas. he is survived Mass was celethe Church of Northport, where been spending the Joseph V. Lewis, Of Old L.

I. Family Funeral services for Joseph V. Lewis will be held at 8 tonight at his home. 498 E. 7th where he died Monday.

The Rev. Philip Ahnstedt of the Lutheran Reformed Church will officiate. Burial will be tomorrow in St. Ann's Cemetery, Sayville, Mr. Lewis was a member of an old Long Island which settled in Suffolk County, He had been a salesman with the New York office of the Standard Register Company for the past 13 years, and was a member of Connetquot Lodge, and of Sayville.

Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Mildred Knaup Lewis, A son. Joseph; three sisters, Mrs. Lillian Bodfan.

Mrs. Edna Davilda and Mrs. Mabel Gaiser, and a brother. George. Mrs.

J. G. Meade, Rites Tomorrow Funeral services for Mrs. Jennie Goodenough Meade, 82, formerly of 295 Washington who died Monday, will be held at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place.

Burial will be in Kensico Cemetery, Valhalla, N. Y. Mrs. Meade lived at one time in Westchester County where her husband, the late Jared E. Meade, once was a farmer.

He died in 1924. A nephew survives. Death Still Stalks In A-Bomb's Wake Continued from Page 1 fact. she left Hiroshima for Tokyo unaided. "However, she complained of a growing weakness, while her appetite was such that she could take a only a small amount of drinking water.

At the hospital a blood test revealed she registered only 500 to 600 cubic millimeters of white corpuscles, or one-tenth of the normal which is between 6.000 .000 and 8.000 cubic millimeters. Her red corpuscles registered about 3.000,- 000, out of a normal of 4,500,000. Hair Fell Out "Her resistance was exception-: ally weak. Four days after hospitalization, and exactly two weeks after the Hiroshima disaster her hair started falling out, and the bruise on her back took a turn for the worse. A blood transfusion was carried out, and despite the patient's courageous fight, the condition worsened and she succumbed on the 19th day.

Radio Tokyo said A postmortem examination disclosed striking changes in the woman's blood -making organs, such as the liver, the San Francisco, Aug. 29 (U.P.)Painting a rosy picture of the impending Allied occupation, radio Tokyo today reported an a spirit of co-operation toward the landing forces, while Tokyo newspapers prominently displayed photographs of American airborne units at Atsugi Airstrip and naval craft in Sagami Bay. According to the broadcast, "all feminine telephone operators at Yokohama since yesterday have been attending classes in conversational English. The telephone bureau also is compiling a telephone directory in English for the use of the Allied occupation forces." Page Yanks Pour Ashore At 5:15 P.M. Today Continued from Page his flagship, into Tokyo Bay with scores of other Allied warships, transports and hospital ships today in preparation for tomorrow's landings.

General MacArthur left Manila after inviting Lt. Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright, his successor on Bataan and Corregidor 111 the dark days of 1942. to be his guest at the surrender ceremony aboard the Missouri.

General Wainwright accepted. Members of General Wainwe wright's staff and Lt. Gen. A. E.

Percival. the British commander who surrendered Singapore, also will attend the ceremony as General MacArthur's guests. All were liberated from a Japanese prison camp in Manchuria and flown to Chungking yesterday. Reveals Timetable Rear Admiral Oscar C. Badger, commander of Tokyo Bay task force.

revealed the final timetable for the sea-borne landings to correspondents aboard his flagship, the cruiser San Diego. Fifteen minutes after a marine battalion takes over the three fortified islands on the approaches to Yokosuka naval base tomorrow. a picked crew from the American battleship Iowa will go aboard the wrecked hulk of the Japanese battleship Nagato just outside the base at 6:30 a.m. (5:30 p.m. today, Brooklyn time).

Although the Nagato is half-sunk. her 16-inch guns still may be useable and represent a potential menace, Admiral Badger said. Only after the Nagato and the three islands have been secured can the fleet enter the Yokosuka base, he explained. Set for 'Realities' The Japs outwardly are exhibiting a co-operative spirit." he said. "They have obeyed all the demands submitted to them so far.

However, we are not modifying in any way our intent to land fully armed and prepared. "The realities remain to be seen." He said 300 Japanese officers and 1,000 enlisted men and workmen with special identification armbands would remain on duty temporarily at the naval base until the Allies take over. Admiral Badger said his flagship would enter the base and tie up at 10:30 a.m. (9:30 p.m. today, Brooklyn time) under the present schedule.

Other seaborne infantry will land on the shores of Sagami Bay only a few miles south of Atsugi. Prepare MacArthur Plans for the airborne landings call for the first waves of airborne troops to clear a specified area around the airfield in preparation for the arrival of General MacArthur and his staff about noon (midnight tonight, Brooklyn time). General MacArthur probably will set. up temporary headquarters on the airstrip in buildings formerly occupied by a Japanese suicide squadron. Later he and his staff will move to the Hayama-Zushi area, south of Atsugi and site of Emperor Hirohito's Summer palace.

First to alight at Atsug! will be the 1tih Airborne Division. After securing General MacArthur's headquarters area, the troops will move southeast into the Havama-Zushi district to link up with the seaborne forces at Yokosuka, 20 miles away, Must Wait Strong Force Since only 200 to 250 transports a day can land at Atsugi, the initial occupation troops will steer clear of the Tokyo area. Once sufficient strength has been built up, however. the troops will move into the city and General MacArthur will establish permanent headquarters there. Thousands of carrier and landbased planes will fly overhead on the watch for any Japanese treachery.

Guns of warships will be trained on the enemy shores and the occupation troops will be fully armed--just in case. Enters Bay Triumphantly Admiral Halsey triumphantly entered Tokyo Bay aboard the Missouri at 7:08 a.m. today (6:08 p.m. Tuesday, Brooklyn timer. He stood on the bridge as battleship slowly negotiated the mine-swept Araga Straits from Sagami Bay.

The Missouri dropped anchor less than five miles from the wrecked Nagato, once the pride of the Japanese Nary, and within sight of both Yokohama and Tokyo. Escorting her were the Presidentially cited destroyers Nicholas, O'Bannon and Taylor. Close behind the Missouri followed the command ship Teton, which will serve as General MacArthur's floating staff ship; the American battleships Iowa and South Dakota, British battleship Duke of York, the American cruiser San Juan, and three hospital ships, the U. S. S.

Benevolent. the U. S. S. Solace and the Dutchmanned, British-owned Tyitjaleneka.

Behind them stretched a seeming never -ending procession of ships seeking anchorage in Japan's last and greatest fortress harbor. Rear Admiral Kawaba, chief of staff of the Yokosuka naval base, and nine subordinates went aboard For your comfort our Chapel is Air Conditioned GEORGE D. CONANT Moadinger Funeral Parlors 1120 Flatbush Avenue Tel. BUckminster 2-0247 BROOKLYN EAGLE, AUG. 29, 1945 13 FROM WITHIN- The sick bay of the light cruiser U.

S. S. Birmingham after it was hit by a Kamikaze May 4, 1945. The plane ripped through three decks before the bomb detonated, killing 45, of whom 19 were medical officers and hospital corpsmen. The tail wheel of the plane can be seen protruding from the rubble in the center.

A. S. U. E. of ers.

E. the feld, U. A 9:30 cent 28. of and day, Bay day, FROM WITHOUT--The ages on three occasions, as was torpedoed; in October, the doomed carrier Princeton, the cruiser San Diego, flagship of Admiral Badger, for a final prelanding conference. Badger kept Kawaba and his staff waiting in the sun.

however, while he conferred lengthily with International Red Cross representatives. Dr. Marcel Junod, a Swiss who arrived in Japan Aug. 8, and Noto Nohara, a Japanese civilian. Junod presented Badger with a list of 8,000 war prisoners in the Yokosuka area and said most were in poor physical condition.

Then Badger received voluminous charts, diagrams and data pertaining to the Yokosuka naval base from Kawaba and his aides, Air officers who helped fly the advance landing party into Atsugi airfield reported the landing area was in excellent condition. They said the Japanese had agreed to bring urgent hospital cases among Allied prisoners to the airfield tomorrow for flights to Okinawa. Meanwhile, MacArthur's headquarters in Manila announced that all Japanese forces on Morotai and Halmahera Islands in the Dutch East Indies surrendered to Maj. Gen. Harry Johnson, commander of the American 93d Division, last Monday and now were being disarmed.

American forces invaded and captured part of Morotai last year, but never landed on Halmahera. The bag of prisoners on the two islands totaled 5,000 navy personnel under a Captain Fufita and 3.170 army troops under a Lieutenant General Ishi. On Luzon Maj. Gen. William H.

Gill. commander of the American 32d Division, offered to provide food and medical supplies for holdout, starving Japanese troops if Lt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita, the "Butcher of Bataan." would surrender them. Yamashita already has expressed willingness to surrender once Tokvo has given him the necessary "authority." Campbell's Family Joyous at Pardon Continued from Page thing for the children it they had doubted their father, but they didn't," she said.

"As for me, I knew him so well The specially worded pardon that Mr. received 111 Governor office yesterday Campbell, after he had been called to Albany by unexpected telephone cell will have the place of honor in the Campbell home. It opens the way for Mr. Campbell to seek redress from the State for his wrongful conviction. He may sue the State in the Court of Claims.

It 1S expected, however, that a special bill will be put through the Legislature granting him something between $20,000 and $25.000 "A million dollars." Mrs. Campbell said, "would not make up for the last years of my husband's life." She expressed the hope that they EBBERS-HILL INC. Clinton Avenue Funeral Chapel 519 Clinton Avenue G. E. FUHRER, Lic.

Mgr. MAin 2-0531 light cruiser U.S. S. Birmingham, she looked last October. In 1944, she was seared and and last May a Kamikaze would get enough for them to buy a home of their own.

Campbell an became a public figure when Alexander D. L. Thiel, notorious forger, revealed at his arrest for another offense that he had committed the forgery for which Mr. Campbell had been convicted. Machinery was then set in motion to obtain a full pardon for Mr.

Campbell. At yesterday's ceremony in Albany, Lt. Col. Joseph E. Brill, now an officer in the airborne infantry, who as an assistant district attorney had sent Campbell to prison, was present.

Probe Petitions For Masterson Continued from Page 1 ward a possible reversal of Board of Elections decisions, Herman Mendes, counsel for the American Veterans party, planned to seek an order in Manhattan Supreme Court to get O'Dwyer ticket back on the Veterans party line in November. Harold Burke, chairman of the vets party, insisted there would be no appeal, though. "We have no funds," he said. At yesterday's public hearing on petitions, the board invalidated the party's petition containing some 30.000 0.000 signatures, although only 7.500 valid signatures were needed. The petitions had been circulated to place former District Attorney William O'Dwyer on the American Veterans line for Mayor, while also indorsing State Senator Lazarus Joseph and Vincent R.

Impellitteri, his Democratic- -A. L. P. running mates for Controller and City Council President, respectively. The petitions were rejected on the ground that they used 1944 election districts of the signers, rather than the October, 1945, district numbers, required.

Benjamin Gassman, an attorney who sought to invalidate the petitions. said they contained "forgeries," and photostatic copies of the petition pages to Manhattan District Attorney Hogan's office. Retain Nominations Meanwhile. the board knocked out the Fusion nominations of District Attorney George J. Beldock and George A.

Arkwright, candidates for prosecutor and Kings Borough President, respectively, for lack of enough valid signatures. Assemblyman Lewis W. Olliffe, candidate for the Municipal Court bench in the 1st District. lost his Liberal party nomination, while Borough President Cashmore lost the Veterans. No court action is Walter B.

Cooke -INCORPORATED DIGNIFIED As Low FUNERALS As $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden Boulevard- 4-1200 50 Seventh Avenue- -MAin 2-8585 1218 Flatbush BUckminster 2-0266-7 QUEENS 150-10 Hillside Avenue -JAmaica 6-6670 63-32 Forest Avenue-NEgeman 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 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 Oblisation which suffered battle damNovember, 1943, the cruiser scarred by explosions aboard plane crashed into her decks. contemplated to upset these cisions. The candidates affected did not lose other lines on the voting machine. Mr. Beldock and Mr.

Arkwright will remain as G. O. Liberal party nominees for their respective offices. while Assemblyman Olliffe will retain his Republican nomination. John Bradley Patterson Funeral services for John Bradlev Patterson of 43-17 48th Long Island City, a former sales manager for the Midvale Steel Company of St.

Louis, Mo. and Atlanta, will be held at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at St. John's Church, Pleasantville, N. Y.

Mr. Patterson, who was 82, died Monday in BelleVile Hospital. but InterestingA series of facts sponsored sionally by William Dunigon Son President Johnson was a tailor by profession St. Peter's in Rome is the largest cathedral in the world. An archangel is an angel of the highest rank The New York Aquarium was originally built as a fort.

WILLIAM DUNIGAN SON Funeral Directors 246 De KALB AVE, ROGERS AVE. MONTGOMERY ST. Tel. MAin 2-1155 LEGAL NOTICES THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK. by the grace of God free and independent To Raful Boruchowich Za-lovsky and Nuchim BoruchoWich living.

and if they he dead. then any and all unknown names parts whose names, whose place places dence unknown and cannot after he ascertained. their heirs at law next of kin, and of the said distributes, of kin of otherwise legal husbands or any. successors SEND GREETING who 9016 Avenue Brooklyn. Brooklyn.

City York presented his account estate of Ben lately residing at the Borouch County Kings, City and New York. and a petition prayhis account may be judicially NOW THEREFORE. you and each of Voll are hereby cited to show cause before Surrogate's Court of the County of Kings, to be held in Room 25-A at the Hall of Records in the County of Kings, on the 24th day of September. 1945. at 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon.

why such settlement should not be had. IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF we have caused the Seal of our said Surrogate's Court to be hereunto affixed. (Seal) Hon FRANCIS D. Surrogate of our said County, at the Borouch of Brooklyn, in the said County. the 20th day of August.

1345. AARON L. JACOBY. Clerk of the Surrogate's Court. 8122-4: PROPOSALS NOTICE TO BIDDERS Sealed proposals will be publicly opened and read by the Long Laland State Park Commission, at the Administration Headquarters, Belmont Lake State Park.

Babylon, L. 1. at .00 p.m.. Eastern War Time. Wednesday, September 5.

1945. for furnishing the necessary, labor. materials and equipment to break up, remove and replace 60.000 square feet of concrete walks, installation of approximately 4.200 linear feet of 6-inch tile pipe (pipe to be furnished by the Long Island State Park Commission) at Jones Beach State Park. Wantagh, Nassau County. N.

Y. Proposal forms may be obtained from the Long Island State Park CommitFinn. certified check for mately of the bid in exact accordance with schedule given in the contract documents, must accompany each bid. The Long Island State Park ston reserves the right to reject any ol all bids. a.

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À propos de la collection The Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Pages disponibles:
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Années disponibles:
1841-1963