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

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle du lieu suivant : Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

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the the 1 HE. Sands, 82; Civic Worker, Churchman, Newspaperman Howerd 1 E. Sands, 82, veteran newspaperman, civic leader and one of the founders of the Vanderveer Park Methodist Church, E. 31st St. and Glenwood Road, died yesterday at his home, 858 E.

34th St. He boon ill for two weeks. For many years Mr. Sands was an associate editor and secretary of the New York City News Association, later becoming editor of the Flatbush News. He retired from business several years ago.

Born in Manhattan in 1863. Mr. Sands started his newspaper career as a reporter with O'Rourke's City Press Association in 1888. Several years later joined the news her association for which as reporter Lt. John J.

Wilson, Lost in Flight Lt. John J. Air Transport missing in a storm from Iceland to officially listed Department. He was 29. and lived at 682 Decatur St.

Overseas since April, 1943, Lieutenant Wilson made more than 50 missions over the "Hump" on the India27, China- -Burma run signed to Iceland. holder of the Air The young hattan, came early age. After ander Hamilton lin High Schools by General Electric entered the and the following of commissioned at Surviving are at and daughter, in Jersey City; Catherine catur St. address, George, Edward, the two last-named Wilson of the Army Service, first reported Oct. 9 on a flight England, has been as dead by the War J.

Wilson 1.1. John before being asHe was the Medal. officer, born in Manto Brooklyn at an attending Alexand Bishop Loughhe was employed Company. He service Jan. 9, 1942, January was Coral Gables, Fla.

his widow, Monica, Judith, who now live his mother, Mrs. Wilson of the Deand four brothers, Daniel and Francis, in the navy. Mrs. M. Lindstadt, Rites Tomorrow Huntington Station, June 28-- Funeral services for Mrs.

Margaretta Lindstadt of 245 Scudder Northport, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Jacobsen's Funeral Home, New ork Ave. The Rev. Paul H. Pallmeyer, pastor of St.

Peter's. Lutheran Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Northport Rural Cemetery. Mrs. Lindstadt died Tuesday.

She was born in Germany 80 years ago. 1886 a she was married here to Frank Lindstadt, died several years ago. Surviving are five daughters, Mrs. W. C.

Barber of Harrington, Mrs. Carl Schmid of Merrick, Mrs. Sinclair Morris and Mrs. Charles Stewart of Northport and Mrs. Gerald Strickland of El Centro, and five sons, Louis and Pvt.

Edward of the army, Harold of the merchant marine, Charles of Northport and Harry of Cooperstown. Pfc. Vito Garafalo, Okinawa Casualty Amityville, June 28-Mr. and Mrs. John Garafalo of Austin Ave.

have been notified that their son, Marine Pfc. Vito Garafalo, 19, was killed in action on Okinawa June 2. He has been serving in the Pacific area since March, 1944, and also fought in Peleliu, Guadalcanal and New He held the expert marksman's medal and other honors. Other survivors are a brother, August, and three sisters, Margaret, Isabelle and Rose. Mrs.

I. C. Scovill, T.U. Head Reprinted From Yesterday's Late Editions Funeral services for Mrs. Irene C.

Scovill, former president of the Kings County Women's Christian Temperance Union, who for many years was active in Brooklyn church and club circles, will be held at p.m. tomorrow (Thursday) at her home, 719 E. 32d where she died Monday. Burial will be in GreenWood Cemetery. Mrs.

Scovill, daughter of the late Dwight and Jane H. Rockwell, was born in Peru, in 1866. After graduating from Rockland College, Nyack, N. she was married in 1887 to Harvey H. Thompson.

In 1899, several years after the death of Mr. Thompson, she was married to Francis L. Scovill. He died in 1938. Mrs.

Scovill for eight years was head of County W. C. She was honorary president "at her death. Previously she had served as president of the Flatbush unit. She was a director and life member of the Department of Temperance and Missions of the World Union.

Mrs. Scovill was a member of St. Mark's Methodist Church, Ocean Ave. and Beverly road, a former member of Fort Greene Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Priscilla Studying Club. She had been a director of the Laborador Branch of the Needlework Guild of America.

Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Walter L. Farrington, Larremore V. V. Sweezy and Mrs.

Earl Atkinson; two sons, F. Leroy Scovill Jr. and John R. Scovill; ten grandchildren and eight greatgrandchildren. JOHN W.

LAMBUI INC. Late Model CADILLAC CARS To Hire for All Occasions 79TH ST. a THIRD AVE. Phone SHore Read 8-6700-1 Prompt. and Courteous Service 1 Behrman, Wm.

Robert L. Duffy, Catherine Dunn, Anna R. Farrell, James F. Gasser, Albert Greene, Eunice Healey, Margaret Johnson, Claus Joyce, Charles J. Junk, Emma T.

Knudsen, Esther P. J. McFadden, Mary Mullen, Catherine Draths Newark, Louts Nielsen, Viggo Nixon, Margaret T. Pearn, Edmund F. Pero, Mark J.

Poulsen, Halfdan Ruvane, Edward Rang, John W. Riley, Annie C. Rogers. James Ryan, Anna V. Sands, Howard E.

Schnur, Elizabeth Urmston, A. C. Today's death Rottees detelle of funerals or memorial services of the following who died the service of our counter: Pero, Sgt. Mark J. BEHRMAN June 27.

1945, WILLIAM beloved husband of Anna E. Behrman. Service Friday, 6:30 p.m., at Parlor of William A. Ringe, 361 7th Avenue. Interment Lutheran Cemetery.

BRUEL-ROBERT on June 25, 1945, beloved husband of Sadie Can-avan, and devoted father of Paul John C. and the late Robert J. Funeral Friday, at his residence, 251 Brooklyn' Avenue. Solemn requiem mass, St. Gregory's Church, at 10 a.m.

Kindly omit flowers. June 26. 1945, DUFFY--Tuesday. beloved wife DU devoted mother of Mrs. Florence Doherty.

Funeral from Quinn Funeral Home, 2 Madison Avenue, Jersey City, Friday, June 29, 9 a.m. Solemn high mass St. Patrick's Church, 10 a.m. Tuesday, June 26. DUNNOn DUNN of 0365 1st Street.

beloved wife of John J. Dunn; mother of Ellen, Patricia and Pic. John U. S. overseas; sister of Agnes, Helen, James and William Veale.

Reposing at Edward H. C. Dunn Chapel, 298 7th Avenue. Funeral Friday, 10 a.m. Solemn mass of requiem St.

Francis Xavier R. C. Church. Interment St. John's Cemetery.

FARRELL- On June 25. 1945, JAMES F. Survived by his wife, Josephine (nee McDonough), and daughter, Josephine; 2 sons, James and Harold, U. S. Also survived by 2 brothers.

overseater and and one sister, Irene Nelson. Reposing at Funeral Chapel. 187 S. Oxford Street. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m.; thence to the R.

C. Church of the Sacred Heart, where a solemn requiem mass will be offered. Interment St. John's CemeDirection Joseph Redmond. GASSER-ALBERT, on June 27.

1945, beloved father of Mrs. Grace Ellis. Mrs. Elsie Braden and Albert R. Gasser, Services at the Walter B.

Cooke, Funeral Home, 1218 Flatbush Avenue, Saturday, 2 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. GREENE On June 27, 1945, EUNICE of 42 Rutland Road. Reposing at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place. HEALEY-MARGARET, on June 28.

1945, suddenly, widow of Martin Healey, at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Marie Connors, 157 Kingston Avenue, Floral Park. L. I. Survived by 2 sons, Frank R.

and Leo and one daughter, Mrs. Marie Connors. Funeral from Chapel. 187 50. Oxford Street, Brooklyn.

Notice of funeral later. JOHNSON Suddenly, on 1945, at Saranac Lake, N. CLAUS, formerly of Brooklyn and a wellknown Flatbush pharmacist, beloved brother of Maria Stolp, Anna Johnson, Hilda Hill and Emil Johansson. Services at Ericson Ericson's Chapel, 500 State Street, Saturday, at 2 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery.

JOYCE -CHARLES on Tuesday, June 26, 1945, beloved husband of the late Margaret O'Hara Joyce, devoted father of Joseph Charles Mary Ursula Joyce. Funeral from the Fairchild Chapel, 86. Lefferts Place. Solemn requiem mass at St. Teresa's Church, Classon Avenue Sterling Place, on Saturday at 10:15 a.m.

JUNK -EMMA T. (nee Gilbert), on June 26, 1945, at her residence, 106 6th Avenue. Widow of Daniel mother of Edna E. Junk; sister of Mrs. John T.

Riley; grandmother of Charles and Lt. (j.g.) William Phelan, U. S. N. Miss Frances M.

Junk, Mrs. Henry Talley, Mrs. Milton Fachenbach and Mrs. Arthur Mitchell. Three great-grandchildren and one great- also survive.

Requiem mass Church of St. Augustine, Friday, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. KNUD9EN-ESTHER June 27. 1945, wife Louis mother of Carol and Lee; daughter of Esther M.

Kemmerer. Service let Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 151 Linden Boulevard, Saturday, 10:30 a.m. Interment Oceanview Cemetery, S. I.

MADIG AN--PATRICK on June 27, 1945, survived by 1 daughter, Mrs. Alice Kelly; 3 sisters, Ann Madigan, Alice Madigan and Mrs. Mary Buttermilch. Reposing at the Boyertown Chapel, 38 Lafayette Avenue. Requiem mass Saturday, 10:45 a.m., St.

Thomas Aquinas Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Direction Eugene Newman, 284 9th Street. MoF On June 26. 1945, MARY dear mother of Edward, Donald, Frank and Virginia.

Reposing at the Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 1218 Flatbush Avenue, until Saturday, 9:30 a.m.; thence to St. Mary Mother of Jesus R. C. Church where a requiem mass will be offered.

The Fairchild Policy is, and always has been, that funeral costs should never encond what a family can afford, Fairchild SonS, Inc. MORTICIANS SINCE 1886 Frank Hairchid, Licensed Manager BROOKLYN FLUSHING JAMAICA GARDEN CITY Telephone Never MULLEN-CATHERINE June 25, 1945, devoted daughter of James A. and Margaret Mullen, dear sister of Rita Moles. Reposing Kennedyand Rogers Avenues. Solemn requiem Sheridan Chapel, a corner of Church mass Church of the Holy Cross, Friday, 10 a.m.

NEWARK-LOUIS, June 27, 1945, aged years. Devoted brother Mary Feely, 'uncle of May Feely, Wilkens and Martin Feely Services funeral Saturday, a.m., at Frank J. Hans and Sons Home for Funerals, 192-07 Avenue, Hollis. Jamaica, NIELSEN VIGGO, in his 75th year. Masonic funeral services Mizpah Lodge at the Boyertown Chapel, 40 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn, on Thursday, June 28.

at p.m. Interment Pinelawn National Cemetery, Friday at 1 p.m. NIXON -MARGARET TERESA, on Wednesday, June 27, 1945, beloved daughter of the late Catherine F. and Claudius Nixon, sister Mary Veronica C. and James 2675 E.

21st Street, Saturday, 9:30 Nixon. Funeral from her residence. a.m. Solemn requiem mass at Mark's R. C.

Church at 10 a.m. Interment Gate of Heaven Cemetery. PEARN- EDMUND on Wednesday, June 27, 1945, brother of Mary M. Murray, Bernadette Tuohy, Francis, James and Robert. Funeral Saturday, 12:30 p.m., from funeral parlors, 187 South Oxford Street.

PERO- June 27, Sgt. MARK beloved husband Marion (nee Creamer), son of Joseph and Mary, brother' of John. Funeral Saturday, 9:30 a.m., from Funeral Home, 7722 4th Avenue. Requiem mass at St. Agnes Church.

Interment Long Island National Cemetery. June 1945, suddenly, at 409 59th home of his son Christopher; also Street, survived by two other sons, Holger and Martin. Reposing at Thorgesen's Funeral Home, 141 6th Avenue. Services Friday, 8 p.m. Burial Saturday, 11 a.m., Evergreens Cemetery.

RANG- JOHN WILLIAM, June 27, 1945, of 7718 5th Avenue, beloved husband of Elizabeth; devoted father of Dorothy, Agnes; dear son Elizabeth and the late William Rang. Services Saturday, 2 p.m., the Chapel of Joseph G. Duffy, 7703 5th Avenue. RILEY--ANNIE age 89, TuesJune 26, 1945, formerly of St. Cecelia's Parish, Brooklyn.

Funeral from her late residence, 107-02 110th Street, Richmond Hill, thence St. Mary's Gate of Heaven R. C. Church, Ozone Park, where solemn high requiem mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m., Friday, June 29. Interment Calvary Cemetery, ROGERS -JAMES, at his home.

116 South 2d Street, husband of the late Katherine, survived by six daughters, Mrs. Rose Bremer, Mrs. John O'Brien, Mrs. Edward Bourdonnay, Mrs. Charles Miller, Mrs.

Ann Mauro and Mrs. Edward Bourdonnay Jr. Funeral from his home Saturday, 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass St. Peter and Paul's Church at 10 o'clock.

Interment Calvary Cemetery. James F. Murray Funeral Home. RYAN-ANNA June 26, 1945, beloved sister of Elizabeth G. Ryan, and niece of Margaret A.

Taylor. Funeral Friday morning from Henry McCaddin Sons Chapel, 24 7th Avenue. Solemn requiem mass St. Catherine of Alexandria Church, Fort Hamilton Parkway and 41st Street, at 10 a.m. RUVANE -EDWARD, suddenly on June 27, 1945, beloved husband of Sarah (nee Hart); devoted father of the late Pvt.

Edward J. Pfc. John Pfc. William all U. S.

Army; Patrick E. and Celia Ruvane. Funeral Saturday, 9:30 a.m., from the funeral home Leo F. Kearns, 115-10 Rockaway Boulevard, Ozone Park. Solemn requiem mass R.

C. Church of the Gate of Heaven, 10 o'clock. Interment St. John's Cemetery. SANDS 'HOWARD Wednesday, June 27, 1945, at 858 E.

34th Street; beloved husband Julia E. Sands and father of Edna Mock and Elsie L. Gauvain. Reposing at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, until Friday at p.m. Services at the Vanderveer Park E.

Church, E. 31st Street Glenwood Road, at 8:30 p.m. Interment Cypress Hills Abbey. SOHNUR-ELIZABETH, on June 26. 1945, beloved wife of Edmund: devoted mother Edmund U.

S. Navy; Magdalen and Joseph; sister of John Newman. Funeral from Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 151 Linden Boulevard, Saturday, 9 a.m. Solemn requiem mass St.

Francis of Assisi Church, 9:30 a.m. URMSTON-ABNER on June 27, 1945, dear father of George H. Reposing at his residence, 1270 Hancock Street. Services Friday, 8 p.m. Funeral Saturday, 1:15 p.m, Interment Evergreens Cemetery.

Nicholas Blasius Jr. de Son, Directors. In Memoriam BERNHARDT -In loving memory of our dear son and brother, JOHN who died June 28, 1943, at the age of 22. MOTHER and BROTHER. DEMPSEY-JAMES V.

In memor ory of a husband and daddy, Passed away June 28, 1944. KITTY, KATHIE, JACK and JIMMIE. ECKERT In memory of CORNELIUS, died June 28, 1944. Not dead to us who loved him. Not lost, but gone before: He lives with u8 in memory And will forever more.

WIFE and DAUGHTERS. LOW -In loving memory of my dear mother, Mrs. REGINA LOW, who passed away two years ago today. Daughter and Son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.

ANDREW WILSON. McHUGH In memory of our brother, WILLIAM McHUGH, who passed away June 28, 1944. He will always live in our thougths. CATHERINE, GEORGE, FRANK. WOOD---In loving memory of our and brother, Pfc.

FRANK J. WOOD, paratrooper, killed in France, June 28, 1944. "We miss you now, our hearts are sore; As time goes by we miss you more, Your loving smile, your gentle face: No one can fill your vacant place." Masses will be offered throughout the year on the 28th day of each month at St. Catherine of Genoa's Church. MOTHER, DAD.

JOHN, EUGENE, JOSEPH and AGNES. Schupler Enters Race for Council Continued from boring 9th A. who has been odds with the regular 0 Brooklyn Democratic organization for several years. His club was one of the first to indorse District Attorney O'Dwyer for Mayor and stood ready to him in the event of a Democratic Mayoralty primary contest. Mr.

Schupler is a teacher. received degrees from Brooklyn College and University. He Was Mr. O'Toole's secretary six years before his election to the State Legislature. For Right Leadership Assemblyman Schupler declared tea opposed to political leaders and said he was a firm believer in party government.

Political parties are essential in a democracy and political leaders are, therefore, "inevitable," he added. "But political leaders should be an instrument to express the will of the electorate and not merely a refuge for those who are on the public payroll and who in their desire to hold their jobs completely ignore the needs and will of the people," he declared. Outlines Platform Schupler's platform includes a pledge to fight for maintenance of the 5-cent subway fare; full appropriations for education; more adequate wages for civil service employes; support of Mayor LaGuardia's health extension of the downtown Brooklyn plan for the elimination of blighted residential and areas. and other planks said he industrial, would announce 8.5 his campaign progresses. He is a member of Temple BethEl of Boro Park, the American Historical Association and the Knights of Pythias.

He was born in Austria in 1909 and came to the United States in 1923. He is married and lives with his wife, daughter and widowed mother in the Boro Park section. Democratic Split Seen Meanwhile, a split in the Democratic-A. L. P.

citywide coalition behind District Attorney O'Dwyer was foreseen when it was learned that Bronx Democratic Leader Edward J. Flynn has instructed all his local candidates to refuse A. L. P. support.

Mr. Flynn, originally opposed to the nomination of Mr. O'Dwyer because the District Attorney insisted on the support of the Labor party, too, is reported to have assembled the county committee and they instructed Borough President Lyons, District Attorney Foley and the other candidates to refuse indorsement it offered. Labor party officials, who admitted hearing the report of Flynn's order, but would not say if the dorsements had been offered, indicated they may stand pat on the candidates nominated by petition Tuesday, Assemblyman Leo Isaacson for borough president and George Salvatore for district attorney. Invaders Face Suicide Legions Continued from Page 1 the Industrial and urban area of Japan destroyed or damaged by B-298 to 115 square miles.

Sink Jap Convoy 4. American light naval units sailed boldly through the Kurile Island chain north of sank or damaged an Japaenlapa, nese convoy of five ships in the of Okhotsk last Monday. 5. American planes sank six other Japanese vessels and damaged off the coast of Japan and in Sakashima Islands in the southern Ryukus. 6.

Admiral Chester W. Nimitz fixed navy casualties in the Battle of Okinawa and associated fleet erations since March 18 at 4,907 dead and 4,824 wounded, bringing total American casualties Okinawa campaign to 46,319. 7. Gen. Joseph W.

Stilwell, former chief of U. S. ground forces, took over his post as commander of the American 10th Army on Okinawa, succeeding the late Lt. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner Jr.

8. Nimitz failed to confirm a Japanese radio report that American troops landed Monday on Kume Radio Tokyo no further menIsland, 50 miles, west of Okinawa. tion of the report after saying terday that the Japanese garrison was engaged in heavy fighting with the invaders. Alarm in Tokyo Radio Tokyo said the establishment of separate army defense command for Tokyo WAS part of an army program to consolidate and strengthen the defense of the homeland in expectation of an American invasion. Nine such regional defense posts of districts represented on a now have, been created, one in each civil plane by a regional superintendent general.

The system was set up with the avowed purpose of insuring a continuance of governmental authority should air raids or invasion isolate various parts of the country from the central government. Japanese broadcasts said Tokyo newspapers were predicting intensifled air raids on Japan in preparation for invasion and warned that psychological warfare can "wreak havoc with a nation the moment the people lose confidence in victory." The new American landings in the northern Marianas were designed to discover islands on or near which American airmen returning from attacks on Japan could make emergency crash landings with damaged Superfortresses or other planes. Fred HERBST Sons Morticians 7501 FIFTH AVENUE 83 HANSON PLACE 711 65TR STREET BROOKLYN. N. Y.

Earl C. Herbat, Licensee PHONE: SHORE ROAD 5-1600 Capital Wonders What OPA Power Anderson Will Get Washington, June 28 (U.P)-Congress was expected to vote today on making incoming Secretary of Agriculture Representative Clinton P. Anderson N. Mex.) more powerful than any of his predecessors. But no one knew just how much more powerful.

Even Anderson said his lawyers would have to figure it out for him. The added powers were contained in an amendment to the OPA-Extension bill worked out in joint House-Senate conference. The amendment provides that the Secretary of Agriculture's "written approval" must be obtained before price ceilings are set on agricultural commodities, including processed foods and livestock. Some legislators insist that this means Anderson can, by withholding his approval until he is satisfied, have the final say on food price actions proposed by OPA AdminisChester Bowles or Economic Stabilizer William H. Davis.

Others contend it merely gives him "more" of a say than his predecesfinal say, they "because Davis had. Davis, would have the represents the President on these things." Confusion as to Power According to a third group the amendment was vaguely to either. A conflict developed in conference between those who wanted Davis to final word and those who insisted Anderson have it. This third group says the amendment gives Anderson a chance to do as much as he wants as long as he pleases the President. Anderson would not say how much power he hoped his lawyers would find in it.

"I want what Congress wants me to have," Anderson said. "I think this gives me an opportunity to protect agricultural The amendment accepted by Senate-House conferees yesterday was not the Anderson amendment which would have given Anderson virtual food "czar" powers by giving him final say on all regulations concerning food, not just prices. That was thrown out. Despite the confusion over the one that was accepted, the OPA bill as it now stands does three things for sure: 1. It continues price control for another year.

2. It guarantees, under an Administration amendment, that OPA will fix prices beef, lamb and pork that will make each category "profitable" for processors. 3. It gives Anderson a big whack at black markets in meat. The socalled Patman amendment provides that he can certify non-federally inspected slaughterhouses for interstate trade.

He can refuse to grant or revoke a certificate from any firm whose trade is deemed to be going in "illegitimate channels." Meanwhile Anderson said he would act promptly upon Congressional criticisms of the War Food Administration and "clean up the agency, if necessary." Byrnes Choice Sure, Capital Believes Continued from Page 1 Congress last December to fill the newly created post of assistant secretary in charge of cultural and public relations. Rockefeller, who arrived here by plane from the conference last night and then went on to New ork City, said, "I will be glad to serve in whatever capacity I am assigned." Mr. Truman's selection of Byrnes will confirm long-standing reports from informed sources that the one-time Senator, Supreme Court Justice and "Assistant President" was to Inherit Stettinius' post. As Secretary of State, Byrnes will be line for the Presidency unless Congress fulfills Mr. Truman's line request of for succession legislation to the changing White the House.

While the post of Secretary of State is vacant, Secretary of Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. 1s next in line of succession to the Presidency under the present law. Stettinius' appointment to the United Nations Council added something of a story-book touch to his role in the march toward a world security organization. Handled Dumbarton Oaks As undersecretary to ex retary of State Cordell Hull last Fall, the former General Motors and U. S.

Steel executive handled Big Four world security conferences at Dumbarton Oaks. When he succeeded Hull seven months ago he turned his full energies to the task of preparing for the San Francisco conference. Here. as chief of the American delegation, he teamed with British, Russian and Chinese representatives to lead 50 United Nations toward complete agreement on a world security charter. Now, as American member of the Security Council, he will share with the four other delegates of the Big Five responsibility for maintaining peace and stopping aggression-by force 1f necessary.

He will exercise in a manner expected to be prescribed by Congress, this country's veto power over the 11se of United Nations troops, ships and planes against an aggressor nation. WHEN OUT OF TOWN REGISTER FROM BROOKLYN JERE J. CRONIN INC. Funeral Directors Featuring SERVICE ECONOMY Chapels: 115 ATLANTIC AVERUE 38 LAFAYETTE AVENUE MAin SERVING BROOKLYN ON 75 YEARS BROOKLYN EAGLE, JUNE 28, 1945 11 Heroism of Crew Saved U. S.

Carrier and editor he handled many 1m- portant stories, including the Slocum disaster. Formerly he active in the Thirty-second Ward Citizens Assogiation and other community enterprises. He was life member of Kings County Lodge of Masons. For many years he been secretary of the official board of the Vanderveer church. Surviving are his widow, Mrs.

Julia E. Sands; two daughters, Mrs. Mock and Mrs. Elsie L. GauVain: two grandchildren and a great Funeral services will be 8:30 p.m.

Friday at the Vandert, veer Park Church. Interment will be in Cypress Hills Abbey. Mrs. George H. Alberts Reprinted From Yesterday's Late 1 Editions Funeral services for.

Mrs. Jean Alberts of 453 3d died MonPearl River, N. will be held at 8 o'clock tonight (Wednesday) at the George J. Ayen Memo-! rial Chapel, 55 7th Ave. Burial will be at 2 p.m.

tomorrow in 1 Green -Wood Cemetery. (Thursday) Mrs. Alberts, who was born in Brooklyn, was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Pinkerton.

She was the wife of George H. Alberts. Besides her husband she is survived by a daughter, Edith and two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Kamp and Lillian E. Pinkerton, the latter cashier at the Brooklyn Eagle.

Pandia A. Ralli, L. I. Importer Great Neck. June 28-Pandia A Ralli, president of Ralli Brothers, 25 of Broadway, Manhattan, importers products from India.

died yesterday in his home, 478 E. Shore Road, here. Mr. Ralli's firm was affiliated with Ralli Brothers of London. founded by his ancestors more than 100 years ago.

Born in New Orleans, he was connected with the family business throughout his career and lived for some time in India and London. During World War I he served overseas with the 77th Division. Mr. Ralli was a member of the United States Shellac Association, the Cotton Importers Association, the Linseed Association and the Racquet and Tennis Club. Surviving are his mother.

Mrs. Despina A. Ralli, of Manhattan, and two sisters, Mrs. Lois Coryllos, of Manhattan, and Mrs. Ione Allen, of Philadelphia.

Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Hellenic Eastern Orthodox Church, 319 E. 74th Manhattan. Lt. George Otis 3d Killed in Reich Holtsville.

June 28 First Lt. George Otis 3d was killed in an automobile accident in Germany June 12, according to word from the War Department received by his wife, Mrs. Ruth Kolb Otis. He was 27. Lieutenant Kolb was the son of Mr.

and Mrs. George Jr. of Boston and Yarmouth Port, and a direct descendant of John Otis, who settled in Hingham, in 1630. Graduated from Syracuse Unlversity in 1934, he was commissioned a second lieutenant in the army that year and went overseas in August, 1944, two weeks before the birth of a daughter, Ruth, He was wounded last October during action with the 180th Infantry of the 7th Army. Mrs.

A. C. Riley, Catholic Worker Reprinted From Yesterday's Late Editions Mrs. Annie C. Riley, 89, a native, of Brooklyn and an active member of St.

Cecelia's Council, W. C. P. died yesterday (Tuesday) at her home, 107-02 110th Richmond Hill. She was the widow of William H.

Riley, The funeral will be held Friday from the residence, with a solemn requiem mass at 10 a.m. in St. Mary Gate of Heaven R. C. Church, Ozone Park.

Burial will be in Calvary Cemetery. Surviving are two daughters. Mrs. P. J.

Carolan of Richmond Hill and Mrs. James McKenna of Brooklyn; five sons, Thomas of Hawthorne, Michael F. of Floral Park, Charles J. of Bellaire and William and Stephen Riley of Richmand Hill. Gerhard H.

Horn Rites Are Held Reprinted From Yesterday's Late Editions Funeral services for Gerard H. Horn of 687 McDonough assistant chief clerk at Traffic Court, who died Monday in Prospect Heights Hospital of a cerebral hemorrhage suffered Saturday, will be held at 8 tonight (Wednesday) at Phelan's Funeral Home, Putnam Ave. Burial will take place tomorrow morning in Evergreens Cemetery. Mr. Horn, who was Donough a few doors from his last address, entered the city's employ more than 30 years ago.

He was a direct descendent of Isaac Van Wart, who helped capture the famous British spy, Major Andre, durthe American Revolution. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Clara Delmhorst Horn: a daughter, Clara Horn, and a son, David G. Horn. W.

PEASE SON Funeral directors 433 Nostrand Ave. STerling 3-7700 "The Most Conventently Located Funeral Home in Brooklyn" 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.

Page 3 Women, 2 Men Held After Battle In BMT Subway Continued from Page 1 is being repaired at the Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, where the Saratoga recently was made whole again. The two Japanese suicide p' caught 34 of the Bunker Hill's craft ready to take off and transformed Jana explosions. ship into a hell of fire Of the carrier's planes, only 10 that were in the air survived. Seventy were reduced to molten puddles. In the six hours that followed the two hits, Mitscher and his surviving staff members were removed by breeches buoy to the destroyer English while the Bunker Hill's stillliving officers and men braved death to fight fires, jettison ammunition and gasoline and rescue the wounded and trapped.

The ship's skipper, Capt. George A. Seitz of Coronado, a native of Rochester, N. has recommended 280 of his crew for awards, including three navy crosses. Of the men who died at their posts to keep the boilers going and the pressure in the fire mains, he said: "They died as only brave men can." Helping the Bunker Hill were the cruiser Wilkes Barre and the destroyers English, Stembel and Charles S.

Sperry. The Wilkes Barre pushed her bow against the her carrier's starboard quarter and kept hoses aboard. So much water was pumped that the stricken craft began to list and settle. The tons of water pouring upon seas of flaming gasoline and oil were forcing fire fighters back against the bulkhead. Then came the maneuver--only 60 miles from Kikai, one of the strongest staging points for suicide planes on Okinawa that might have meant final disaster had it failed.

With Seitz on the bridge were the Bunker Hill's navigator, Comm. Charles J. Odend'Hal of Arlington, Kansand City, John Mo, J. senior Hasburgh watch of officer. Reports kept coming in: "She's six degrees to starboard, captain." "The men in the forward firerooms are dying, captain." "We're on a course of zero-sixzero.

captain. We're heading straight for Kikai." Seitz instructed Hasburgh to tell the Wilkes Barre to get ready for a turn and the destroyers to stand clear, He asked the navigator what course he recommended. Odend'Hal said, true." The captain said, "Very well, make It With the Wilkes Barre her side, the big carrier turned clinging to 70 degrees, The navy described what happened: "Gradually at first, then with a roar, tons of water, burning gasoline and oil on the hangar deck sloshed away from the firefighters and poured over the edges of the deck into the sea. "In turning, she shifted the load of water across the ship from board to port. She literally the heart of the dumped roaring inferno her hangar deck into the sea.

"Men with lips too cheer rushed forward burned to with their hose. Fresh air the deck at their backs, across, whipped forcing the heavy from smoke of them." burning oil and gas While the ship was in its greatest agony no one lost his head, not even those forced to jump into the sea. One sailor, poised called to those behind: leap, to "Watch this next step it's a The fires burned from 4 10 a.m. to p.m. when they were under control and the Bunker Hill was starting home under her own decks were warped power, her de That night the and destroyer twisted.

English, in honor of its distinguished guest, showed motion pictures. They depicted the burning of the U.S.S. Franklin. Luzon Fall Frees Five U.S. Divisions Continued from Page 1 advanced 21 miles for the junction.

The remaining Japanese were split into three main pockets with no communications among them. One was in the hills southeast of Bayombong in Nueva Vizcaya Province, the second was northeast of Tuguegarao or between Highway Five and the east coast, the third was in the Kalgan on Highway Four north of Baguio. MacArthur's announcing the enommunique north Luzon campaign called it "one of the most savage and bitterly fought in American history. No terrain has ever presented greater logistical difficulties and none has ever provided an adversary with more naturally impregnable strongholds." The communique put enemy dead at 113,593, and said that the graves of many thousand more had been found but not counted. American casualties were 3,793 dead, 34 missing and 11.351 wounded.

"The entire island of Luzon, embracing 40,420 square miles and a population of 80,000, is now liberated," said the communique. The final liberation came five months and 19 days after American troops landed at Lingayen Gulf on Jan. 9. On the other active front in the southwest Pacific, on northwest Borneo, Australian troops continued to advance against very little opposition. Walter B.

Cooke DIGNIFIED As Low FUNERALS As $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden -BUckmineter 4-1200 1218 50 Flatbusa Seventh MAin 2-8585 2-0266-7 QUEENS 154-10 Hiltside 63-32 Forest 158-14 North. FLushing 3-6600 STATEN ISLAND 571 ForestAr. MANHATTAN 117 West 72nd Street TRafaigar 7-9700 1451 First Avenue 4-5800 BRONK 1 165 West E. 190th Trement 1 7-2700 347 Wills Avenue Haven 9-0272 WESTCHESTER 214 Mamaraneck Plains 30 Phone for Representative--No Obligation It was a tough fight while 1t lasted, but the law emerged the winner today when three women and two men were arraigned on charges of disorderly conduct for turning a Brighton Beach B. M.

T. express bound for Coney Island into a traveling battleground. On the losing side were Dorene Knight, 20, 216 Macon Charles ates, 30, of 34 Halsey and his wife, Dorothy, 21; Bernard Kear. 31, of 1486 E. 16th and Rebecca Silberzan, 20, of 6 Clinton Manhattan.

According police, the battle cry was first sounded by Miss Knight as the express train was pulling out of the Prospect Park station yesterday afternoon. Miss to berate passengers, according to Conductor Thomas Serridge. Mr. and Mrs. Yates and Mr.

Kear, the conductor told police, joined in and fists began to fly. Police were then summoned by the motorman's whistle. Miss Knight, Mr. and, Mrs. Yates and Mr.

Kear were arrested. At that point Miss Silberzan, a college student, told the police they were abridging the civil liberties of quartet under arrest, so the the cops proceeded to abridge her liberty by taking her along. In Flatbush Court Magistrate Solomon placed $200 bail on all but Miss Silberzan, who was paroled. Local Man Saved 67 on Carrier Continued from Page 1 "He couldn't wait until he got into action." She described her husband A8 extremely modest. She had received several letters from him since the action off Okinawa, but not a word about his personal exploits.

right," he wrote. "You'll "Don't worry about meall see something in the papers soon." Sturges was employed as a millwright in a Yonkers cable before his present enlistment. company Mrs. Sturges is now a clerk in the loss department of the Continental Insurance Company, 80 Maiden Lane, Manhattan. Johne R.

hero's Sturges, parents. live Mr. and Mrs. in Portsmouth, Va. Garten Saves Shipmates Gerald A.

Garten, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. coxswain, Alexander Garten, 116-18 131st South Ozone Park, pulled seven or eight shipmates from the machine shop on the stricken ship without stopping to get a gas mask. Mrs. Garten was so excited over her son's heroism that all she did this morning was ask over and over again: "Isn't wonderful? he simply To think he's been in the country for two whole weeks and hasn't so much as mentioned the Bunker Hill's damage to me." Telephone calls and neighbors' good wishes came pouring into the Garten home immediately after 8 telegram was received from the navy man saying, "Wire me $100.

I would like to fly home." He Just Wants a Cake Garten has been in the navy nearly two-and-a-half years. He will be 20 on July 21. In the two calls from the coast since he arrived in the Garten had warned his country, mother to believe rumors that the ship was hit. "You know how people those things," he told her. exaggerate "I want a birthday cake and I want you to bake it." "I'm so excited about I my hero.

but know he did just what any other boy would have done in the stance." Mrs. Garten said. "I'm so grateful that he helped to save lives for our country." Casualties Named Among the casualties in the crew of the Bunker Hill announced by the navy are Thomas A. Arbuckle, aviation radioman 1st class, of 58-38 168th Place, Jamaica, and Samuel D. Samuelson, storekeeper 1st class, son of Mrs.

Lillian Samuelson of 311 57th St. Students Spend Million Boston Some 10,000 students who attend Boston University every day spend $1,450,000 annually for food, transportation, clothes and board, a survey reveals. ll but Interesting- A series of facts sponsored occa. Sionally by William Dunigan Son Paul Jones, at the request of Catherine the Great. was once vice-admiral of the Russian fleet Even the lowly ants keep cows, which store UD honey -like food Sarah Bernhardt continued her career through her old age with nly one leg Cat's whiskers are very delicate sense organs wh'ch bels the animal to find bis way about.

WILLIAM DUNIGAN SON Funeral Directors 246 De KALB AVE. ROGERS AVE. MONTGOMERY ST. Tel. MAin 2.1155 U.

S. MARSHAL'S NOTICES UNITED N. STATES By virtue MARSHAL'S of SALE: a Decree to me directed and delivered, I will at sell 19 at o'clock public auction on July 12, 1945. United noon, Eastern War Time. at States Government Warehouse.

390 West 12th Street, New York City, N. Various large quantities of miscellaneous hair tonic, toilet water. perfumes, unknown alcoholic oils. tions, witch hazel, bay rum, astringent, shampoo, face of powder. bath salts, empty bottles various sizes and paraphernalia.

Ail of which will be AS IS in ONE LOT without guarantee as to condition, quantity, brand. size, quality, weight or measurement said to be contained and at set the forth U. in S. schedule of items posted 390 West Government Warehouse. which 12th Street, New York City.

N. Y. will be open for public inspection between 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on 11, 1945, and from 9 a.m.

to 11000. July 12. 1945. Docket 73-270. dated May S.

25. 1945, Miles F. McDonald. U. Attorney, Proctor for the E.

N. Y. ie25-6t lant. Spencer C. Young, U.S.

Marshal, LICENSES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT License No, G. B. 07123 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer at 1018 E. 92d for off consumption. FREDERICK PETER De PARTENIO, 1018 East 92d Brooklyn Je28-21 Th.

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À propos de la collection The Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Pages disponibles:
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Années disponibles:
1841-1963