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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

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of Bratha Joseph Hotter, William Edward Jespersen, Jens Baker, Mae B. Kellner, Charles Brown, Bringsjord, Ellen L. C. Kraus, Lindeman, Anna. Byrne, John Lindholm, Edwin Callaghan, Mary Lynch, Julia Carlson, J.

P. McAvoy, Harry Caroli, Therese McNiffe, Henrietta, Christian, Marion Milstein, Harry George Morr, Henrietta Coyne, Mary Mulcahy, Mary Dayton, F. Nolan, Thomas Diesen, Ernst O'Connor, Thomas Donohue, Helen Palermo, Peter Durkin, Paveglant, Paul Gardner, Grace Peluso, Isabella Gibbons, Mary Shine, Eugene Giebel, Henry Stutzmann, R. Grahl, Carl F. Walter, Florence Granchere, M.

L. Waters, Thomas Halk, Jacob B. Weber, Fred Helland, Gudrun ARONS JOSEPH, of 186 11th Street, suddenly, January 26, 1946, beloved husband of Anna; devoted father of Herbert, Ruth, and brother pf Nettie Mack. Services Tuesday, 2 p.m., Chapel of Joseph G. Duffy, 7703 5th Avenue.

ATKINS-EDWARD January 28, 1946, devoted brother of Harriett. Services at Walter B. Funeral Home, 117 W. 72d Street, N. Tuesday, 2 p.m.

BAKER--MAE of 371 Etna Street, daughter of Mary Wilson; sister of Mildred Steiner and Joseph 'McDonald. Reposing at Donnelly Purcell Funeral Home, 207 Euclid Requiem Mass Wednesday, 10 a a.m., Blessed Sacrament R. C. Church. BRINGSJORD -January 27, 1946, LOUISE of 948 55th Street, bemother of Myrtle, Naomi and Lester; loving grandmother of Anne.

Services at Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Avenue, Monday, 8:30 p.m. Funeral Tuesday, 10:30 a.m. Interment Green-Wood Cemetery. BROWN-ELLEN, on January 26; beloved wife of the late Andrew Brown; mother Michael, William and Andrew. Funeral Wednesday, 9:30 a.m., from the Walsh Chapel, 94-08 118th Street, Richmond Hill.

Requiem Mass St. Benedict Joseph Labre Church. Interment St. John's Cemetery. BYRNE JOHN on January 26, 1946, beloved husband of Julia: devoted father of Eugene and brother of Anna Peque, Claire Fox, Michael and Edward Byrne.

Funeral from the Stutzmann Chapels, 2001 Madison Street, Ridgewood, Brooklyn, Wednesday, 9:30 a.m.; Requiem Matthias R. C. Church, 10 a.m." CALLAGHAN-MARY on January 28, 1946, at her home, 119 Capitol Avenue, Williston Park, L. wife of the late Joseph, and mother of Walter, Arthur Edward Callaghan and Agnes Harbeck. Funeral from her home, January 30, at 9:30 a a.m.

Mass Requiem in St. Aidan's Church, Williston Park, L. at 10 a.m. Interment Holy Rood Cemetery, Westbury, L. I.

CARLSON- January 27, 1946, JOSEPHINE of 8124 Fort Ham1lton Parkway, beloved wife of Charles; devoted mother of Clara King and Walter H. Carlson; fond grandmother of Muriel King and 78th Street, on Wednesday, January 30, 9:30 a.m.; Requiem, Mass Our Lady of Angels Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Warren H. Carlson: dear sister of Gerda Nilson in Sweden.

Services at E. C. Waldeck's Home for Funerals, 7614 4th Avenue, Tuesday, p.m. CAROL January 26, 1946, THERESE, at her residence, 18 Seeley Street. Funeral services Tuesday, January 29, at 8 p.m.

Interment Green Cemetery. Edward F. Higgins, Director. CHRISTIAN-MARION, on Saturday, January 26, 1946, beloved mother of Frederick and George Christian, daughter of Catherine M. Asche, sister of Mrs.

Robert Bain. Funeral services at the Martin A. Gleason Funeral Home, 149-20 Northern Boulevard, Flushing, N. on Monday evening, January 28, at 8 p.m. Interment Tuesday, private.

COOK- -GEORGE January 27, 1946, beloved husband of the late Mary Carlisle; father of Mrs. Thomas J. Hammond, Mrs. Joseph R. Wright, Mrs.

William F. Shea, Robert George Frank J. and William T. Cook; brother of Mrs. A.

Carr, Mrs. H. Harring, Thomas and John Cook. Funeral Thursday, 9 a.m., from the McManus Funeral Home, 2001 Flatbush Avenue; Requiem Mass R. C.

Church of St. Thomas Aquinas. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. COYNE -January 26, 1946, MARY, at her residence, 213 Carlton Avenue, beloved mother of Mary Bonner. Funeral from the Scully Funeral Home, 203 De Kalb Avenue, Wednesday, January 30, at 9:30 a.m.; thence to Queen of All Saints C.

Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. DAYTON-January 27, of 60 Andover Road, Rockville Centre, MARGARET Monteath T. FORBES, Dayton; beloved mother wife of Doris and Douglas Dayton; daughter of Norene Cadmus Forbes; sister of Gladys Shipman, G. Muriel Forbes, Dr.

Neil F. Forbes. Friends may call at Pettit Brothers and Glayton Parlors, 20 Lincoln Avenue, Rockville Centre, till Tuesday, 5 Services at St. Mark's Methodist Church, 200 Hempstead Avenue, Rockville Centre, Tuesday evening, 8:15. Interment Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn.

-January 26, 1946, of 2042 Haring Street, beloved father of Mrs. William May, Mrs. Charles McNeill and Edward Diesen. Services at Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Avenue, Monday, 8:30 Interment Evergreens Cemetery. DONOHUE-On January 27, 1946.

HELEN M. DONOHUE, native of New Market, County Cork, Ireland, beloved wife of the late Cornelius, and devoted mother of Mrs. Kathleen Kane, Mrs. Eleanor O'Rourke, Mrs. Anna Horgan, Cornelius, John Edwin and Francis Donohue.

Funeral from her residence, 469 FUNERAL chapels Modern Chapel Available Everywhere Complete Casket Display is Our Showroom on Premises 5723 5th Ave. Windsor 9-6640 7315 15th Ave. BEnsonhurst 6-2561 DURKIN ANNE, of 705 St. Mark's Avenue, on January 25, 1946, beloved wife of Patrick devoted mother of Thomas Richard Catherine, Anne, Margaret and John. Solemn Requiem Mass Tuesday at 10 a.m., St.

Gregory's Church. Interment St. John's Cem- etery. R. J.

Irwin Sons. GARDNER of 60 Martense Street, January 25, 1946, beloved mother of Mrs. Marion Thompson, Harry and Robert; sister of William Hamilton, George Hamilton and Mrs. Florence Mcday, 9:30 Lady of PerCormick. Mass WednesRequiem, petual Help, Church.

Reposing at Chapel Albert Barron, 60th Street and 5th Avenue. GIBBONS -MARY, on Sunday, at the home of her nephew, August T. posing at Donnelly FuSimonson, 204 Logan Reneral Home, 207 Euclid Avenue. Requiem Mass Wednesday, 10:45 Blessed Sacrament R. C.

Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. GIEBEL-HENRY, on January 25, 1946, at his home, Avenue, husband of of Frederick Giebel. quiem Mass Nativity son Street, near Tuesday, 9:30 a.m. Ebbers-Hill, GRAHL- CARL 237-37 34th Avenue, Long Island, on 26, 1946.

beloved Marie W. Grahl. Fairchild Chapel, 86 Tuesday, 8 p.m. GRANCHERE on January 1946, of Florence Granchere 365 Nostrand Marie: father Solemn ReChurch, MadiClasson Avenue, Directors. FREDERICK, of Douglaston, Saturday, Januhusband of Services at the Lefferts Place, MARGARET beloved mother and Mrs.

Al- bert E. Mezey. Requiem Mass Wednesday, 10:45 a.m., Our Lady of Angels R. C. Church.

Reposing at Chapel of Joseph G. Duffy, 7703 5th Avenue. HALK On January 27, 1946. JACOB beloved husband of ANNIE (nee Hitzel) and father of Frank J. Halk.

Funeral Tuesday, 10:30 a.m., from Park Chapel, 44 7th Avenue: Solemn Requiem Mass Church of Holy Innocents, Beverly Road and E. 17th Street, 11 o'clock. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Henry McCaddin Son, Directors. HELLAND-Suddenly, January 25, 1946, GUDRUN, beloved wife of John; dear sister of Mrs.

Helmer Olsen and Mrs. Lei. Mamen. Funeral service at Chapel of George Siebold Son, 7523 3d Avenue, Tuesday, 2 p.m. HOTTER January 27.

1946. WILLIAM beloved father of Irene F. and Ethel M. Hotter; dear brother of Marguerite Yeiser, Walter and Bernard. Reposing at E.

C. Waldeck's Home for Funerals, 7614 4th Avenue; Requiem Mass at St. Anselm's R. C. Church, Wednesday, 9:30 a.m.

JESPERSEN January 25, 1946, JENS, of 1061-A 75th Street, beloved husband Petra and devoted father of Einar. Services at Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Avenue, Tuesday, 2 p.m. Interment Green- Wood Cemetery. KELLNER CHARLES, January 26, 1946. Survived by ten children, sixteen grandchildren and four great grandchildren; also by one brother, Henry.

Reposing at his residence, 68 Penn Street, Brooklyn, until Tuesday, January 29. when Requiem Mass will be offered at Transfiguration Church at 10 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. KRAUS ANNA, on January 26, 1946, at 227 Cornelia Street.

Remains reposing at G. Saitta Funeral Home, 465 Central Avenue. Funeral Tuesday, January 29, at 2 p.m. LINDEMAN CHARLES, of 317 Weirfield Street, on January 27, beloved husband of Rose, and dear father of William F. and Minnie Burcaw, and brother of Freda Potter.

Services Tuesday, 8 p.m., at Funeral Home, 15 Palmetto Street, by Oltmans Lodge, No. 446, 369, F. A. Court Unique, No. F.

of A. Funeral Wednesday at 10 a.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. Nicholas Blasius Jr. Son, Directors LINDHOLM On January 27.

1946, EDWIN R. of 422 Marine Avenue, beloved husband of Lilly T. and father of Edna I. Wikstrom. Religious service at Ericson Ericson's Chapel, 500 State as Street, Tuesday at 8 p.m., followed by the Masonic ritual by Bredablick Lodge, No.

880, F. A. M. Interment on Wednesday, 10 a.m., Evergreens Cemetery. LYNCH- JULIA, on January 25, 1946, beloved mother of William.

Funeral Tuesday, 9:30 a.m., from John J. Healey Funeral Home, 2977 Ocean Avenue. Requiem Mass St. Mark's Church, 10 a.m. Holy Cross Cemetery.

McAVOY HARRY, of 188 11th Street, retired U. Post Office, January 26, 1946, devoted of Gertrude Foti, Agnes Scott, father, Keenan, Anna Murphy and Edward. Solemn Requiem Mass Tuesday, 10 a.m., Holy Family R. C. Church.

Reposing at Chapel of Joseph G. Duffy, 9th Street at 4th Avenue. McNIFFE-HENRIETTA, on January devoted 28; mother beloved wife of Philip and of William E. and Mrs. Rose; sister of Mrs.

Edmund Waddill, Mrs. Mildred May, Philip, Henry, and Alfred Dittmann. Funeral on Wednesday, 2 p.m., from Walsh Chapel, 94-08 118th Street, Richmond Hill. MILSTEIN HARRY, suddenly, January 27, 1946, beloved brother of Nathan Milstein and Jennie Engelson. of 1839 E.

28th Street. Notice of funeral later. MORR- On January 27, 1946. HENRIETTA, wife of the late Carl mother of Carl in her 89th year. Reposing George J.

Ayen Memorial Chapel, 55 7th Avenue. Service Tuesday, January p.m. MULCAHY-MARY, January 25, 1946, at her residence, 159 30th Street. Survived by nephew, Francis J. Mulcahy.

Requiem Mass Tuesday, 10 a.m., St. Michael's R. C. Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

Direction Eugene Newman. 284 9th Street. PResident Established 3-6531 75 YEARS JAMES H. TRACY, Funeral Directors Chapels Available Business Office John Tracy, Lie. Mgr.

1597 Fulton St. JOSEPH J. KOEN, 82, DIES; WAS CITY'S CHIEF ENGINEER Lynbrook, Jan. 28-Joseph J. Koen, retired chief engineer of the City of New York, died yesterday at his home, 87 Marion Lynbrook, at the age of 82.

Prior to his becoming chief engineer, Mr. Koen served as chief engineer for the Department of Health. Koen, a native of Manhattan, lived for a number of years in Rockville Centre and then moved Brooklyn, where he lived until 1924. Since then he had made his home in Lynbrook. He was a member of the John Hughes Council, Knights of Columbus, in Brooklyn.

Mr. Koen was graduated from Columbia University in 1888. He was well known as an athlete in his younger days and in 1886 was a member of the Columbia crew that beat Oxford and Cambridge in the Henley Regatta on the Thames. He was married twice. His first, wife, Mrs.

Isabella Agnew Koen, died in 1905 and his second wife, Mrs. Margaret Donovan Koen, died in 1932. Surviving are two daughters, Sister Joseph Marie and Sister Frances de Chantal, both Dominican nuns. The former is assigned to Holy Family School in Brooklyn, and the Jatter to All Saints Convent, also in Brooklyn; a son, John Joseph Koen; nine grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren also survive. The funeral will be held tomorrow from the Brophy Funeral Home, 132 Main East Rockaway, with a solemn mass of requiem at 10 a.m.

in St. Raymond's R. C. Church, Lynbrook. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery.

Halvon Moreland, SamuelB. Donnelly, Ex- Sea Captain Ex- Head of 'Big 6' Reprinted From Sunday's Late Editions Funeral services for Halvor Moreland. 91, a retired sea captain, will be held at 1 p.m. tomorrof (Monday) in his home, 1230 E. 26th where he died Friday.

Burial will be in Bloomfield Cemetery, Bloomfield. New Jersey. Before his retirement many years ago Mr. Moreland was the skipper of a sailing ship built by his father and of which he was part owner. He was born in Norway and came to this country 50 years ago.

Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Ruth Holman, Hultberg and Edna Moreland; a son, John H. Moreland, six grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Deaths NOLAN THOMAS, on January 27, 1946, at his residence, 478 16th Street. Survived by his wife, Hannah; daughters, Grace, Gertrude and Olive, and three grandsons.

Solemn Requiem Mass 10 a.m. Wednesday at Holy Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. T. J. Higgins Son, Directors.

O'CONNOR THOMAS, Sunday, January 27, 1946, at his home, 474 82d Street, loving husband of Ellen Morahan; beloved father of the Reverend Thomas F. O'Connor, S. S. Sister M. Corinne, O.

John, Charles, Clare, Agnes and Corinne; devoted brother of Mary Jane, Matilda and Joseph in Ireland. Native of Belanagare, County Roscommon, Solemn Ireland. Requiem Funeral, Wednesday. Anselm's Church, 11 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

PALERMO PETER, aged 65, on January 27, 1946, father of Anthony, John and Mario. Funeral Wednesday, 11 a.m.; Mass St. Joseph's R. C. Church, 10 a.m.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. PAVEGLANT PAUL, on January 27, 1946, beloved husband of Rose; brother of Bernard, Joseph, Salvatore, Mrs. Ann Cassino. Funeral from the Walter B.

Cooke, Funeral Home, 50 7th Avenue, Brooklyn, Thursday, 9:30 a.m.; Requiem Mass St. Rose of Lima R. C. Church, 10 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery.

PELUSO-ISABELLA, January 25, 1946, wife of the late John; mother of Joseph, Santa, John and Mamie. Also survived by grandsons and neral granddaughters. Home, 521 Hicks Reposing Street. at Funeral Tuesday, 10 a.m., St. Stephen's R.

C. Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. L. suddenly, on January 27, 1946, SHINE of Long Beach, at Miami Beach, Florida, native of Brosna, County Kerry, Ireland.

Friends may call 7 p.m. on Tuesday at the Macken, Mortuary, Rockville Centre, Funeral Thursday, January 31, at 9:30 a.m. RUDOLPH, on STUTZMANN, beloved father of Rudolph Jr. and Frederick devoted brother of Frieda Rehberger. Services at St.

John's Lutheran Church, 114th Street between Myrtle and Jamaica Avenues, Richmond Hill, L. on Tuesday, 8:30 p.m. WALTER FLORENCE A. (nee Gillespie), on January 27, 1946, beloved wife of Axel I. Walter, master mariner; sister of Eva Vandenberg, Helen Lagois, Edmund V.

and Joseph S. Gillespie. Service at her home, 20 Rutland Road, Tuesday, 8 p.m. WATERS THOMAS of 29 St. Nicholas Avenue, Brooklyn, aged 40 years, on January 25, 1946, beloved husband of and son of Catherine (nee Schindler) and the late Thomas Waters; father of Thomas and June, brother of John.

Reposing at Skelton's Chapel, 86-08 Broadway, Queens Boulevard, Elmhurst. Funeral Tuesday, a.m.; thence to St. Leonard's R. C. Church at 10 a.m.

Burial St. John's Cemetery. WEBER-FRED, on Sunday, January 27, 1946, of 68-24 64th Street, Glendale, beloved husband of Josephine Weber (nee Niederbuhl); also survived by sister, Augusta Young. Funeral services Tuesday, 8 p.m., at George Baque Funeral Home, 614 Woodward Avenue, Ridgewood. Interment Wednesday, 2 p.m., Mt.

Olivet Cemetery, In Memoriam IHNKEN -In cherished memory of ary 28, 1945. He is gone but not forgotten. And, as dawns another year, In our lonely hours of thinking, Thoughts of him are always near; Days of sadness will come o'er us, Friends may think the wound is healed. But they little know the sorrow That lies within the heart concealed. Loving WIFE and DAUGHTER.

PETERS -In loving memory HELEN R. PETERS, beloved wife of Phineas; mother of Joseph and Ross. Departed this life January 28, 1945. GEORGE D. CONANT Moadinger Funeral Parlors Personal Service Modern Facilities Convenient Location 1120 FLATBUSH AVE.

BUckminster 2-0247 T. M. Jacomarra, Navy Casualty Reprinted Prom Sunday's Late Editions A mass in memory of the 21st birthday of Ph. M. Thomas Martin Jacomarra of 185 Park who lost his life last April 5 while serving with the navy off Okinawa, will be offered at 7 a a.m.

tomorrow (Monday) in the Sacred R. C. Church, Clermont and Flushing Aves. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas M. Martin Jacomarra marra. The young sailor who was graduated with high honors from Sacred Heart School was also a graduate of Boys High School. He entered the navy July 7, 1943, and was reported missing in action several months before being officially declared dead by the Navy Department. Besides his parents, two sisters, Rita and Dorothy, Dr.

W. F. Nolting, Veteran Physician Reprinted From Sunday's Late Editions "Funeral services for Dr. William Frederick Nolting of 389 E. 32d a veteran Brooklyn physician who died Friday in Brooklyn Hospital, will be held at 3 p.m.

today (Sunday) at the Walter J. Robertson Funeral Home, 519 Clinton Ave. Burial will take place Monday in Mount Olivet Cemetery. Dr. Nolting was 77 and practiced medicine in the borough for more than 50 years.

Born in Jackson County, Indiana, he studied at the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and the Island College of Medicine, where he received his degree in 1895. During World War I he served on a local draft board. He was a member of the Kings County Medical Society and the Medical Society of New York State and a fellow of the American Medical Association. A daughter, Norma H. Nolting, survives.

Mrs. Eleanor Park Reprinted From Sunday's Late Editions Baldwin. Jan. 26-Mrs. Eleanor Park of 112 Harrison Baldwin, died yesterday (Friday).

She was 79. She was a native of Brooklyn and had been a resident of Baldwin for the last 25 years. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Edith W. Heyl of the Harrison Ave.

address, and four grandchildren, Louis and Charles Heyl and John and Ralph Frost. Funeral services hed at 8 p.m. Sunday at the Weigand Brothers Funeral Home, 24 S. Grand Baldwin, with burial Monday afternoon in Green- Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn. Jens Jespersen Funeral services for Jens Jespersen, 54, of 1061 75th a native of Denmark, will be held at 2 p.m.

tomorrow, at the Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, Ave. Burial will be Mr. in Green- Jespersen Wood died Cemetery. Friday in Bellevue Hospital, Manhattan, after four weeks illness. He was an employe of the Wivel Restaurant in Manhattan.

During World War 1 he was in the maritime service. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Petra Jespersen, and a son, Einar Jespersen. Five More Food Relief Depots Are Opened Five new Brooklyn depots for the Victory Collection of Canned Food being conducted by the American Women's Voluntary Services, have been opened to receive contributions for overseas relief, according to Dan A. West, executive director fo the collection.

The food departments at Abraham Straus. Frederick Loeser and the Namm Store have installed barrels to receive canned food. Other food depots are at the M. C. 55 Hanson Place, the Y.

W. C. 30 3d Ave. The Veterans and Wives organization will help in soliciting Embarrassed Capitalists Kent, Ohio Americans are all capitalists at heart, but most of us are just temporarily embarrassed for Raymond K. Moran, business administration instructor at Kent State University here, told his students.

"This temporary embarrassment often lasts a lifetime," he added sadly. RUDOLPH STUTZMANN, 70, BANKER, MORTICIAN DIES Reprinted From Sunday's Late Editions Rudolph Stutzmann, 70, head of Rudolph Stutzmann Son, undertakers, and president of Ridgewood Savings Bank, died yesterday (Saturday) in Wyckoff Heights Hospital, Ridgewood. He had been in poor health since the death last May of his wife, Mrs. Augusta Stutzmann. His home was at 109-50 Park Lane South, Richmond Hill.

Mr. Stutzmann, born and educated in Brooklyn, founded the undertaking business bearing his name shortly after the turn of the century. In 1921 he took a leading part in organizing the Ridgewood Savings Bank and became its first president, a post he held up to his death. He also was a member of the Queens Advisory Board of the Bank of the Manhattan Company. Active for many years In civic and benevolent circles he was treasurer of the Ridgewood Chamber of Commerce, and a trustee of the EBBERS-HILL.

INC Clinton Avenue Funeral Chapel 519 Clinton Avenue G. E. FUHRER, Lic. Mgt. MAin 2-0531 BROOKLYN EAGLE.

JAN. 28, 1946 1 O'LOUGHLIN RECALLS: Jim Browne's Heyday In Shadow of Bridge Freehold, N. Jan. 28-Funeral services for Samuel B. Donnelly, former president of the International Typographical Union and Public Printer for the Government, will be held at 2 p.m.

tomorrow at the W. H. Freeman Funeral Home, Freehold. Burial will be in Mattawan Cemetery, McVeytown, Pa. Mr.

Donnelly, who before becoming president of the International Typographical Union served as president of New York's "Big Six" local of that union, died Saturday night at the Fitkin Memorial Hospital in Neptutfiement He about was 15 79 and years since ago had lived on a farm in Freehold Township. From 1901 until 1908 Mr. Donnelly was a member of the New York City Board of Education. He was former secretary of the Building Trades Employers Association in New York and a former president of the Allied Building Metals Industries of New York City. In 1908, after several years as an arbitrator in the building trades in New York, he was appointed Public Printer by President Theodore Roosevelt, continuing at that post under President William Howard Taft until 1913.

President Roosevelt also named him as a commissioner to study labor conditions in the Panama Canal Zone. Mr. Donnelly was born in and before becoming a printer was a school teacher and at one time worked as a reporter on the old Bayonne, N. Herald. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Mary E. Donnelly; a son, Edwin J. Donnelly, a member of the Board of Education in Hartford, and two brothers, Guy C. and William C. Donnelly.

Frederick C. Hunderford Funeral services for Frederick C. Hunderford, a retired painter and decorator of 20 Noel who died Saturday, will be held at 8 o'clock tonight at the Walter Cooke neral Home, 1218 Flatbush with burial tomorrow in GreenWood Cemetery. Mr. Hunderford, a native of Deer field, was brought as a child to Brooklyn, where he lived most of his life.

For many years he conducted his own painting and decorating business and then went to work for the New York Life Insurance Company, remaining with that concern for 15 years. He retired five years ago. Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Clara Hunderford; two daughters, Mrs.

Florence Behning and Mrs. Mabel Adams, and two grandchildren. Henry P. Weber Reprinted From Sunday's Late Editions Funeral services for Henry P. Weber, a resident of Brooklyn 60 years, will be held at 3 o'clock this afternoon (Sunday) at Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Ave.

Burial will be in Green-Wood Cemetery. Mr. Weber died Friday at his home, 5701 12th after a brief illness. He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Philip Brosow and Mrs.

Philip Cleary: a son, Louis Weber; nine grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. Delia Fogarty Reprinted From Sunday's Late Editions The funeral of Delia Fogarty of 838 E. 45th who died there Wednesday, will be held tomorrow (Monday) from the James C. Nugent Funeral Home, Avenue and E. 28th with a solemn mass of requiem at 10 a.m.

in the R. C. Church of the Little Flower, Troy Ave and Avenue D. Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. Every once in a while some old timer writes in to ask what has become of Jim Browne, my successor as Brooklyn Park Commissioner.

Some weeks ago the Eagle's "Old Timers" page carried an interesting "obituary" notice, headed "The Late Jim Browne" and relating a few incidents in his long and picturesque political career. James A. Browne, one-time Democratic leader of "Old Fulton Street to the waterfront, under and around the approaches to the Brooklyn Bridgeis very much alive and still interested in all that is going on in the political world. He lives on Ocean near Church, but has not been -for a decade or more-in any way active in the battles that have transformed the county map since the days when he was a power down- ALL- AMERICAN BABYTwo-year-old Cyril Wood i is among the contingent of babies and brides of American service men sailing for the United States on the Queen Mary but he's allAmerican. His father, Charles, is a soldier from Brooklyn and his mother, Alice, is American, too.

Reds Hurl Politics Charge at Vatican Continued from Page 1 "repeatedly spoke against peopel's democracies in liberated countries." Accuses Archbishop An analagous role was played by Archbishop Spellman who is actively carrying out the Vatican's policy of trying to persuade the American people to accept Franco," Izvestia said. "This new cardinal did his utmost to defend the Vatican when the latter, one year after Japan's treacherous attack on Pearl Harbor and in spite of countless crimes of Japanese imperialism, benevolently received the Japanese Am: bassador." Izvestia said the appointed three German cardinals "in order to aid reactionary Catholic groups which are trying to save the remnants of fascism from full de- struction." Calls New Cardinals Pro-Fascist It charged that the Polish appointee, Archbishop Adam. Stefano Sapieha, "stands behind clerical circles defending Polish reaction against the democratization of Poland and that the Hungarian cardinal designate, Archbishop Joseph Mindszenthy, recently issued a pastoral letter "packed with lies and defamation of the young Hungarian democracy." "The simultaneous appointment of four American and six Latin-American cardinals." Izvestia concluded, "shows the Vatican's efforts to spread its tentacles to the American continent where it intends to exploit for its own reactionary purposes the extremely influential position of the Catholic Church but one can confidently expect that broad democratic groups will not be deceived by talk of the allegedly new phase of the Vatican's policy which only is intended to camouflage genuine reactionary pro-Fascist activity of very many new cardinals." GO FETED- Mrs. Anna M. Dixon, Republican co-leader of the 10th A.

will be honored at the annual entertainment and dance of the district G. O. P. club on Friday night in the Hotel St. George, along with Republican County Leader John R.

Crews, who is leader of the 10th A. D. HENRY McCADDIN SON FUNERAL DIRECTORS Our wide range of prices meets every Individual circumstance CHAPELS AVAILABLE IN ALL LOCALITIES 24 SEVENTH AVENUE NEvins 8-8912 Andrew J. McCaddin, Met. LOCAL SUBURBAN DISTANT Vital notices accepted 8 a.m.

to 2 p.m. for publication the same day; as late as 10 p.m. Saturday night for publication, town. Hands Across the Bridge Thirty years ago, or thereabouts, Jim was the pivotal figure in exciting contests shook the old district to its center. There was an affinity in the old days between Cherry Hill on the lower East Side of Manhattan-where Big Tom Foley reigned as a Tammany boss--and the Democrats in Irishtown on this side of the river.

The Brooklyn Bridge was a link between these two strangely associsections. Quite often one group furnished sorely needed political help to the other- despite the fact that each was in a different borough. Foley and his crowd frequently crossed the bridge to attend affairs in Brooklyn's Irishtown and the Irishtowners as often reciprocated. The Big Span, then the only bridge between the two boroughs, in many ways made them kin, politically. With his following in the district on this side of the river, coupled with his Tammany background on the other, Jim Browne early became a factor in the constantly recurring wars in the "Old First" and soon fought his way to leadership.

He became a sewer commissioner when Ed Riegelmann was borough president and for years was the Alderman representing that section of our borough before the advent of the present City Council. Old Seawanhaka The recognized club in Browne's district was the well-known Seawanhaka, which had its headquarters on Nassau St. At many a meeting there between campaigns I addressed the boys and girls and found them tip-top company. IN NEW POST--Robert I. Helliesen of 7608 14th Poly Prep Country Day School and Colgate University graduate, has been appointed regional cargo sales manager for American Airlines in Boston.

His duties will relate to air freight, air express and air mail in New England. Throws Away His 'Luck' St. Louis (U.P) not superstitious," insisted Dick Creegan, a Daily Record reporter, when can I buy another rabbit's foot? "Five years ago," he explained, "A friend gave me a lucky rabbit foot key ring and I never lost, misplaced forgot my keys until I threw away the other day and for within the hour I lost every key I owned." Walter B. Cooke DIGNIFIED As Low FUNERALS $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden Boulevard -BUckminster 4-1200 Seventh Avenue- -MAin 2-8585 1218 Flatbush BUckminster 2-0266-7 QUEENS 150-10 Hillside JAmaica 6-6670 63-32 Forest Avenue. -HEgeman 3-0900 158-14 North.

Bid. FLushing 3-6600 STATEN ISLAND 571 ForestAv. West Brighton-Gibraltar2-5056 MANHATTAN 117 West 72nd Street TRafalgar 7-9700 1451 First Avenue- RHinelander 4-5800 BRONX 1 West 190th Street-RAymond 9-1900 165 E. Tremont Ave. -LUdlow 7-2700 347 Willis Avenue- MOtt Haven 9-0272 WESTCHESTER 214 Mamaroneck Avenue -White Plains 39 Phone for Representative- No Oblisation MEETING NOTICE STOCKHOLDERS' MEETING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT the annual meeting of the Stockholders of the U.

S. Malt Company will be held at the office of the Company, No. 251 North Henry Street, in 'the Borough of Brooklyn, County of Kings. City and State of New York. on the 5th day of February, 1946.

at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, for the purpose of electing Directors for the ensuing year and inspectors of elections to serve at the next annual meeting and for the tranaction of such other business 88 may come before the said meeting. Dated, Brooklyn, N. 1946. HENRY SCHEUERMANN. Sec.

ja28-2: In addition to Jim Browne himself, I have met Johnny Guilfoyle and his wife, Martha, who was, in those days, the co-leader. Guilfoyle was a member of the first Board of Aldermen following consolidation and had been a supervisor in the last days before Brooklyn became merged with the Greater City. An up-and-coming figure was Jim Bell, on whose shoulders fell the mantle of Browne when the latter was named Park Commissioner and me to another section of the borough. Bell is still active, but his territorial division of the Old First has been swallowed up by the new Tenth, which runs out toward the neighborhood north of Prospect Park. This elongated district is one of the queerest gerrymanders of the recent reapportionment.

However, with Jim Bell at one end of itdown toward the river -and Jack Lantry at the other, the boys and girls all seem to have made up their differences and are behaving most neighborly. Another picturesque member of the group that ran things over in Irishtown was the late Patrick H. McCann, who succeeded Browne the old Board of Aldermen. McCann's son, became president of the Seawanhakas and was later named an assistant district attorney. Great Schism of 1925 When the great schism occurred between Hylan, backed by Hearst, and Walker, supported by Al Smith, in the mayoralty fight of 1925, John H.

McCooey, a warm friend of Hearst, got behind Hylan. All his leaders loyally stood by McCooey except Browne of Irishtown. He, alone, came out for Jimmy Walker in. the red hot primary that Walker won. The first' appointment Walker made as Mayor was that of Jim Browne as Park Commissioner.

A few years later when LaGuardia was elected and revamped the park board, placing all five boroughs under one head, Browne, along with the four other park chiefs, found himself shunted out of public life. He had by that time handed the leadership over to Jim Bell and gone to live out in the Hamptons on Long Island--a far cry from old Irishtown. Later he came back to live in Flatbush. Jim Browne, for all his rough and ready ways, was a square-shooter. He never backed down in a political fight--and he had some very tough opponents down there under the bridge on Brooklyn's waterfront.

He was one of Irishtown's best-known characters. World Sits on A-Bomb, 89-Year-Old Savant Says Denver (U.P)-People alarmed by the atomic bomb will find little consolation in the theories of Dr. Bailey Willis, professor emeritus of geology, Stanford University. For the bewhiskered scientist maintains that since the dawn of time humanity has been sitting on an a atomic bomb--a restless dynamic furnace beneath the earth's passive surface. Dr.

Willis assured, however, that there was no immediate cause for alarm, explaining that it would take these radio-active elements two billion years to melt the mile-thick crust of earth. "But whenever it does the earth will become a star, and you and I little angels," grimly warned the 89-year-old scientist. Follows His Master Madera, Cal. (U.P.) Man is not dog's best friend. A doleful-eyed brown dog went to jail here because his master and some friends imbibed too freely and were confined in the county bastile.

The dog, the only sober one of the party, stood sadly outside the cell where his errant master sat until officers jailed man's best friend in the local pound. ODD but InterestingA series of facts sponsored occasionally by William Dunigan Son The opossum is America's only pouched animal A fish lives and sleeps but does not close its eyes Three-quarters of the world's coffee is exported from Brazil. Most of the roaring noise of an airplane is caused hy the propeller. WILLIAM DUNIGAN SON Directors 246 De KALB AVE. ROGERS AVE.

MONTGOMERY ST. Tel. MAin 2-1155 Wyckoff Heights Hospital. He also was a member of the Queensboro Chamber of Commerce. Mr.

Stutzmann was a member of Copernicus Lodge 545, F. A. A the Aurora Grata Scottish Rite Bodies, and Kismet Temple, A. A. A.

N. M. S. He also was a member of the Queensboro Lodge of Elks, the Arion, the Swaebischer and the Williamsburg Singings ocieties. Surviving are two sons.

Rudolph and Frederick C. Stutzmann, both members of the undertaking firm; a sister, Mrs. Frieda Rehberger, and six grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday in St.

John's Lutheran Church, 114th Myrtle and Jamaica Richmond Hill. The Rev. Robert F. Weiskotten, pastor, will officiate. Interment will be private.

Fred HERBST SeNe Morticians 83 HANSON PLACE at the L. I. R. R. Depot and 1501 5th Avenue 711 65th Street BROOKLYN.

N. Y. Bart C. Herbal, Licensee SHORE ROAD 5.1606 FORECLOSURES COURT. KINGS COUNTY -GIUSEPPE VISCO.

et ano. plaintiffa, against SONAX REALTY CORPORATION, et defendants. Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure entered herein. dated January 8. 1946, I will sell at public auction by JACK DUBERSTEIN, auctioneer.

at the BRARELYNO REAL Montague Street. ESTATE Brook- EXon January 31. 1946 at 12 o'clock noon, the mortgaged premises in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York. directed by said judgment to be sold, situate at the southerly corner of Fifth Avenue and Third Street, being a plot 37 feet in width on Fifth Avenue and In the rear by 58 feet inches in depth along Third Street and on the southwesterly side: being known by street number 321 Fifth Avenue. Bronklyn, New York, together with street rights and subject to survey, zoning restrictions and regulations, restrictions in Liber 21.

Section 4 of Conveyances, page 337. sewer agreement in Liber 4525 of Conveyances, page 32. party wall agreement in Liber 4525 of Conveyances, page 34. Reference is made to said judgment for a more complete description of said premises. Dated, January 1946.

JOSEPH SANNER, Referee. BIVONA BIVONA, Plaintiff's. Attorneys, 135 Broadway, New York 6, New York. Ja10-6t SUPREME COURT. KINGS COUNTY THOMOPOULOS.

plaintiff, against JOHN F. BLISS. et defendants. Pursuant to judgment dated January 9th, 1946. I will sell at public auction by IRVING HIRSCH, auctioneer, at Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange, 189 Montague Street.

Brooklyn, N. on February 14th, 1946. at 12 o'clock noon. premises known 8.9 Section 9, Block 2574. Lot 62 as shown on Tax Map of the Borough of Brooklyn.

City of New York, on March 8th, 1944. For a more exact description reference may be had to the. judgment. Dated, January 16th. 1946.

JOHN MANNING. Referee. BENJ. SCHWARTZ. Plaintiff' Attorney, 305 Broadway.

New York City, Ja21-6t.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1841-1963