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The Post-Star du lieu suivant : Glens Falls, New York • 16

Publication:
The Post-Stari
Lieu:
Glens Falls, New York
Date de parution:
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16
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1 B10--Post-Star, Glens Falls, N.Y., Saturday, Aug. 25. 1990 Obituaries Review Robert J. Miner Angela Angiolillo Pops concert fim for all at SPAC PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Angela Angiolillo, 100, of 4127 Wilde died Sunday (Aug.

19, 1990) at Roxborough Memorial Hospital following a short illness. Born May 16, 1890, in Campbasso, Italy, she was the daughter of Francisantonio and Maria Victoria Garzia. She was united in I Angiolillo HUDSON FALLS Robert J. Miner, 65, of 38 School died Thursday (Aug. 23, 1990) at his home.

Born Feb. 6, 1925, in Montpelier, he was the son of Robert George and Eva (Tanner) Miner. Mr. Miner was employed for 27 years at Ciba-Geigy of Glens Falls. He was a member of the American Legion Post 574 of Hudson Falls, the Glens Falls Post 2475 Veterans of Foreign Wars and the Whitehall Lodge 1491 Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks.

Mr. Miner was a United States Navy veteran of World War II, serving from 1942 to 1945, aboard the U.S.S. Indiana, and was decorated with one Silver Star and four Bronze Stars for participating in operations against or engagements with the enemy. Deaths in By Don A. Metivler Special to The Post-Star SARATOGA SPRINGS Eyeryone had fun at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center Friday night the conductor, the musicians and the audience, especially the audience.

The Philadelphia Orchestra was joined by guest conductor Erich Kunzel and members of the Empire Brass for a light-hearted pops concert. Once again, rain hurt the size of the lawn crowd for a pops, performance, just as it had for the appearance of Skitch Henderson with the Philadclphians two weeks ago. The orchestra and Kunzel had fun with a variety of music in the first half of the concert, which was highlighted by a Dixieland band within the orchestra during an encore of "Saints." While the orchestra is still best with the great music in its book, it showed there's some swing on stage as well. Led by clarinetist Ron Reuben, trombonist Glenn Dodson, the Philadelphia's "Man With a Horn," principal trumpet Frank Kaderabek, along with Mickey Bookspan and his crew in percussion, the group left the audience cheering for more as intermission arrived. There were several nice moments in the orchestra half of the program, "Canon for Strings," from the film "Ordinary People," and a piece Leopold Stokowski transcribed for the orchestra many years ago, "Minuet." Kunzel has found his place on the podium as a pops conductor.

He has great rapport with the audience and seems to get the players into the spirit of the light programs, something the Philadclphians were loathe to do for decades. The Empire Brass, a group which, along with the Canadian Brass, are credited with the surge in popularity of brass music in the nation, were at the top of their form. "This is our debut in Saratoga with this orchestra," Jeffrey Curnow told the audience, "and we are thrilled." The brass players and the orchestra members exhibited great respect for each other and the music took on great life from the spirit which built up on the stage. The Boston-based group showed some brass acrobatics with the playing of the 1943 movie music Prokofiev wrote for Lt. Kije, and their work with the Shaker song, "Simple Gifts," from Aaron Copland's Pulitizer Prize-winning score for Applachian Spring, was a marvelous bit of music.

They got the audience cheering with Billie Strayhorn's theme for Duke Ellington's band, "Take the A Train," and the trombone work of Scott A. Hartrnan on Ellington's "Caravan" was superior. Tuba player J. Samual Pilafian demonstrated that some fantastic sounds are possible from an instrument that is usually just in the background, and following one of his solos even the staid orchestra players cheered. It was a fun night, nothing too serious, just happy music played in a happy way and that's what it was supposed to be.

Former congressman Edward Pattison dies marriage to Antonio Angiolillo for more' than 62 years. He died Feb. 2, 1983. Two sons, Frank Angiolillo and Anthony Angiolillo, both died before her. Mrs.

Angiolillo was a communicant of St. Lucy's Catholic Church of Manayunk. Survivors include two sons, Joseph Angiolillo and John Angiolillo, both of Roxborough; two daughters, Carmella May of Roxborough and Victoria Centritto of Manayunk; five grandchildren, including John A. Angiolillo Jr. of Eleanor i CORINTH Eleanor E.

Feulner, 78, of 201 Maple died Friday (Aug. 24, 1990) at Glens Falls Hospital after a long illness. Born May 27, 1912, in Amsterdam, she was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Bellinger.

Mrs. Feulner was a graduate of Amsterdam High School. She was employed irt offices at the Mohawk Carpet Mill in Amsterdam for several years and held several office positions at International Paper Co. mill in Corinth and General Electric offices in Hudson Falls. Mrs.

Feulner attended St. Luke's Lutheran Church of Amsterdam and. was also a member of the Corinth First Presbyterian Church. She was a member of the Kappa Epsilon Society. For a number of years, Mrs.

Feulner was a member of the Silver Threads Senior Citizens, member of the Tri-County Senior Citizens and the American Association of Retired Persons. She and her husband, Loren L. Charles BOLTON LANDING Charles B. Brown, 44, of 3 Maple died unexpectedly Friday (Aug. 24, 1 990) at Glens Falls Hospital.

Born Feb. 6, 1946, in Glens Falls, he was the son of the late Benjamin F. Brown and Nellie (Smith) Brown of Glens Falls. He and his wife, Janet (Trent) Brown, were married Jan. 3, 1981.

Mr. Brown owned and operated Charlie Brown's Garage in Raleigh, N.C., for many years before moving back to this area. Formerly he had worked with his brother at Brown's Sunoco in Glens Falls. Mr. Brown enjoyed working on cars and hunting.

Survivors besides his mother and wife include two sons, Tyler Brown and Ryan Brown, both of Bolton Landing; one daughter, Courtney Brown of Bolton Landing; two sisters, Mrs. Frank (Marie) Dagles Local Walsh to pursue plans for car crushing business Memphis, Tenn, formerly of Wells, Michael G. Angiolillo of Whitehall. N.Y., and Frank- L. Angiolillo of Wells, one sister; seven great-grandchildren; several nieces, nephews and cousins.

Services were conducted Wednesday, Aug. 22, 1990, at the Roller Funeral Home, 6835 Ridge Roxborough, followed by a Mass of Christian burial celebrated at St. Lucy's Catholic Church. Burial followed in Westminster Cemetery, Belmont Hills. The family suggests that memorials take the form of donations to St.

Lucy's Catholic Church, Green Lane, Philadelphia, 19128. Services were under the direction of the Michael G. Angiolillo Funeral Home, 210 Broadway, Whitehall, N.Y. E. Feulner Feulner, operated Feulner's Tavern in Corinth from 1945 to 1978.

He died in 1973. One son, Peter Feulner, died in 1962. Survivors include two sons, Lt. Lewis "Mort" Feulner of the Florida Marine Patrol, and David Feulner of Corinth; seven grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. Services will be conducted at 1 1 a.m.

Tuesday at the Densmore Funeral Home 7 Sherman Corinth, with the Rev. John Aldridge, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Corinth, officiating. Burial will be at the Corinth Rural Cemetery. Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at the funeral home.

The family suggests that memorials take the form of donations to the Corinth Emergency squatter the Corinth Volunteer Fire Depa B. Brown of Bolton Landing and Mrs. Leigh (Linda) Bartlett of Glens Falls; four brothers, Larry Brown of Troy, Frank Brown and Ralph Brown, both of Bolton Landing, and Gary Brown of Glens Falls; one aunt and one uncle; several nieces, nephews and cousins. Services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Monday at the Alexander-Baker Funeral Home, 1 14 Main Warrensburg, with the Rev.

Vaughn S. Parks, pastor of the Bolton Landing Assembly of God Church, officiating. Burial will follow at the Bolton Rural Cemetery. Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

The family suggests that memorials take the form of donations to the American Heart Association. maternal grandparents, Christopher Holmes of Albany and Jeannette Walkup of Glens Falls; several aunts, uncles and cousins. Services will be conducted at 10 a.m. Monday at Sullivan, Minahan and Potter Inc. Funeral Home, 67 Park Glens Falls, with the Rev.

Joseph Faletta, pastor of St. Alphonsus Church, officiating. Burial will be at Union Cemetery, Fort Edward. Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Stewart nieces, Thelma Petty of Granville, Diana Cole of Wells, and Marsha Smith of Hartford; several grandnieces and grandnephews. Services will be conducted at 1 p.m. Sunday at the Robert M. King Funeral Home, Granville, with the Rev. James Hutton, officiating.

Burial will be at the Elmwood Cemetery, Middle Granville. Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today at the funeral home. The family suggests that memorials take the form of donations to the Granville Rescue Squad. MARKERS See our large display priced to fit your budget Quality, Craftsmanship and permanent Beauty are found in every marker and monument we sell.

WEST SAND LAKE (AP) Former congressman Edward W. Pattison, who as a freshman Democrat assisted in toppling the blind seniority structure in Congress, died of liver cancer. He was 58. "Ned" Pattison served in the United States House of Representatives during the 94th and 95th Congress from 1975-1978. He was president of the 75 freshman Democrats of the "Class of 94" who with other reform groups were successful in revising several rules which had prevailed in Congress.

Pattison was manager of the comprehensive modernization and reform of the federal Copyright Law enacted in 1976. He founded the Congressional Institute on the Future and served as its chairman until his death. The Troy native received his undergraduate and law degrees from Cornell University. He was later a fellow at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard Funeral Rita M.

Buell SARASOTA, Fla. Mass of Christian burial for Rita M. Buell, 9:30 a.m. Saturday, St. Joseph's Church of Greenwich, N.Y.

George Daniel Nichols Services for George Daniel Nichols, 1 1 a.m. Saturday, United Methodist Church, 227 Main Hudson Falls. Charles Leathers MIAMI SPRINGS, Fla. Services for Charles Leathers, 1 1 a.m. Saturday, Regan and Denny Funeral Home, Quaker Road, Queensbury.

Jeffrey Neal Cotton CASTLETON Services for Jeffrey Neal Cotton, 10 a.m. Saturday, First United Methodist Church, East Greenbush. Obituary Policy Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Ronald (Gloria Jean) French of Glens Falls and Patricia Ann Miner of Hudson Falls; three sons, Robert James Miner of Cleverdale, Michael Wayne Miner of Liverpool and Seaman 1st Class Guy Robert Miner of Hudson Falls; three sisters, Mrs. Alvin (Dorothea) Martin of Hudson Falls, Mrs.

Austin (Laura) Daley of Virginia and Mrs. Frank (Josephine) Scevitti "of Zephyrhills, six grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. Memorial services will be conducted at 1 1 a.m. Monday at the Regan and Denny Funeral Home, Quaker Road, Queensbury. The family suggests that memorials take the form of donations to the Fort Edward Rescue Squad, Schuyler Street, Fort Edward, 12828, instead of flowers.

the News University and taught public policy courses at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Antioch-New England Graduate School. Pattison was a partner in the Troy law firm of Pattison, Sampson, Ginsberg Griffin, P.C. and served as president of the Rensselaer County Bar Association in 1974. Earlier this year Pattison received the Elihu Root-Henry L. Stimson Award from the New York State Bar Association for community service.

He was elected Rensselaer County treasurer in 1969 and 1972 and served until his election to Congress in 1974. Pattison is survived by his wife, Eleanor Copley Pattison; son, Mark Paine Pattison of Troy; daughters, Lynn Pollart of Colorado, Laura. Ball of Massachusetts, Wendy Pattison of Troy; mother, Elisabeth Royce Pattison of Troy; brother, John Pattison of Vermont, and nieces and nephews. notices Robert A. Bralm SARATOGA SPRINGS Mass of Christian burial for Robert A.

Braim, 9 a.m. Saturday, St. Clements Catholic Church of Saratoga Springs. Casimir Tomanek Mass of Christian burial for Casimir Tomanek, 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Our Lady of the Annunciation Church of Queensbury.

George C. LaRock LAKE LUZERNE Services for George C. LaRock, 10 a.m. Saturday, Connery and Gunning Funeral Home, 26 Father Joques Place, Ticonderoga. Kirk J.

MacDonald BOSTON, Mass. Memorial Mass of Christian burial for Kirk J. MacDonald, 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 1, 1990, at the Church of the Immaculate Conception, Palmer Avenue, Corinth, N.Y.

FRESH SILK FLOWERS tot ar occasions HOME OFFICE PLANTS 2 (Mwxiato Drtv a.m. to pm rvilvm In Town and Around The World Wt Crooht Th Tropics To Oar Crevnhocm. 20 on mi Greta Flowering Plants EXTR A MEarmr nuns 6 Inch Tropica! FoOagt Ptenis Or Persian Violets By Anne L. Simko Special to The Post-Star WHITE CREEK A Wifite Creek resident says that he intends to pursue his plans to open a car-crushing yard in the Ash Grove district. Resident Patrick Walsh has been trying to get town approval since he proposed the business in November.

The town board granted him a junkyard permit the only town permit he needs in January but rescinded it in April because Walsh also needed to file an environmental assessment under the State Environmental Quality Review Act. Faced with opposition from other Ash Grove residents, the board ordered the town's engineering firm, Clough, Harbour Associates, to review Walsh's plans. A firm engineer reported in July that the business would have no adverse impacts on the area. The board re-approved Walsh's permit at its regular August meeting, but set 18 conditions. They include restrictions on hours of operation, installation of three monitoring wells and an impermeable liner under work and storage areas, and hiring of a New York state licensed engineer to design and oversee construction.

The permit is renewable yearly and can be revoked if the conditions are not met. Walsh called the conditions Terry L. Morehouse II "almost incredible" but said that he would study the costs of complying and "give it a shot. This is something that I want." Walsh already has a state license to operate a mobile crusher, which he is finishing now. Until he has his junkyard permit, he will use his six-acre site on Ash Grove road to store his crusher, a diesel power unit to run it, empty barrels for the fluids he will drain from the junked cars, a modified payloader for handling the cars, and a truck and trailer to haul the equipment.

The cars will be crushed at their location and hauled directly to a shredder, Walsh said. He will also take automotive fluids directly to handlers. The state has no restrictions on where a mobile crusher can work and no regulations on disposal of automotive fluids, such as antifreeze and hydraulic fluids, but Walsh said that he wants to handle them safely. "Everything I've done has been way beyond state regulations," Walsh said. Walsh needs the junkyard permit to get a state dismantler's license, which would allow him to have more than two unregistered vehicles on his property and to sell the parts.

Walsh said that he hopes to be in operation before winter. He already has arrangements to process a lot of 40 cars and knows of other accumulations. back of a pickup traveling on Kathan Road on Aug. 19, said Meredith Fiel of Adirondack Save-a-Stray. The dog broke its hip, but has recovered and is being adopted by an area family, Fiel said.

Fiel said anyone with information about the incident should call her at 654-6220. 793-8555 $500 reward for information The Post-Star publishes obituaries of residents and former residents of our circulation area. We believe obituaries are the stories of people's lives, and we treat these stories with care and respect. Obituaries are printed free as a service to our readers. Obituary information comes toThe Post-Star from funeral directors.

We welcome photos to accompany the obituary. Black-and-white photos reproduce best. Obituaries are edited to maintain a fair and consistent style for everyone. If you have questions about our obituary policy, call The Post-Star's City Desk at 792-31 31 WARRENSBURG Terry L. Morehouse II, 8, of Mud Street, died Thursday (Aug.

23, 1990) as a result of injuries sustained in a bicycle-automobile accident. Born Oct. 27, 1981, in Glens Falls, he was the son of Terry. L. Morehouse of Hudson Falls and Cindy Morehouse of Warrensburg.

Terry Morehouse was a member of the Warrensburg Little League and attended Warrensburg School. Survivors besides his parents include one brother, Michael Morehouse of Hudson Falls; his Pearl E. MIDDLE GRANVILLE Pearl E. Stewart, 87, died Thursday (Aug. 23, 1990) at Mary McClellan Hospital, Cambridge, after a long illness.

Born April 4, 1903, in South Granville, she was the daughter of Edward and Susie (Maney) Duel. Her husband, Ernest F. Stewart, died in 1982. Mrs. Stewart was- former employee at Wassaic State School in Wassaic.

She was a member of the Middle Granville Presbyterian Church. Survivors include two nephews, Kenneth Duel of Pawlet, and Richard Duel of Hampton; three CEMETARY WELSTONE The Saratoga County Animal Welfare League is offering a $500 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the individuals involved with throwing a dog out of the back of a moving pickup truck in Day earlier this month. A witness reported someone that someone threw the dog out of the QUALITY CONSTRUCTED 6TOQAGE SHEDS flpdtjyo'oi II 111 -i--r i COUNTRY CARD ENS 4 FLORIST IFresfiCy Cut, Long Stemmed gsts Many stylos and colors to choose from. Free set-up and delivery available. 8-8 10-6 SUN.

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