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The Evening Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 4

Publication:
The Evening Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

of of OBITUARIES Ex-Rep. Rankin Dies At 78 In Miss. Tupelo, Nov. 28 services were scheduled today for former Representative John Elliott Rankin Miss.) who helped map the GI Bill of Rights after World War II. Rankin, 78, who was elected to Congress in 1920 and served for 32 consecutive years, died at his home Saturday.

Rankin, a member of the House Un-American Activities Committee, was noted for his white supremacy and states rights stands. He was outspokenly anti-Negro, anti-Jewish, anti-Communist and anti-union. Rankin was defeated for office in 1953 by Representative Thomas Abernethy, when the First and Fourth Congressional districts were joined after the 1950 census. Rankin, who had been ill with arthritis for some two years, was one of the first to champion the Tennessee Valley Authority Act. He was co-author of the bill along with Senator George Norris, of Nebraska.

Survivors include his widow, and one daughter, Mrs. John Sanders, of Washington, D.C. Dr. Edwin Emma THE EVENING SUN, BALTIMORE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1960 Donald Belt, Seed Firm Head, Dies Funeral services for Donald K. Belt, founder and president of the Belt Seed will be held at 2.30 P.M.

tomorrow in the chapel of the Roland Park Presbyterian Church. will be Druid Ridge Cemetery, Mr. Belt, who lived at 5104 Roland avenue, died unexpectedly Saturday afternoon at Union Memorial Hospital. He was 69. Born in Baltimore, he was graduated from City College in 1908 and the Johns Hopkins University in 1912.

While at Hopkins, he played on the football team and was captain of the tennis team. Worked as Reporter, After he a reporter local newspaper, college, then entered the seed company business and in 1919 founded the Belt Seed of which he was president until his death. Mr. Belt, who was active in alumni affairs of the Hopkins, was a member of the Merchants Club and the Hopkins Club. He is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Grace P. Belt; a son, David H. Belt of Baltimore; two daughters, Mrs. Edward Turner, of Centreville, and Mrs. Dudley Digges, of Baltimore, and five grandchildren.

The funeral is being arranged by the William J. Tickner Sons, funeral establishment, North and Pennsylvania avenues. Raymond Weiss Raymond' C. Weiss, 70-year-old East Baltimorean who worked for the Bethlehem Key Highway shipyard for 30 years, died yesterat South Baltimore General Hospital after a long illness. Mr.

Weiss, youngest son of Highlandtown school teacher, was the last of nine brothers to die. He was a Mason and a World War I veteran of the Army. A lifelong resident of his neighborhood, he lived for 60 years, at 2007 Gough street. He was born several blocks away. Mr.

Weiss is survived by his wife, the former Anna Daue. Funeral services will be held 2 P.M. Wednesday at H. Sander Son, North avenue and Broadway. Burial will be in Cemetery.

Ray Jirdon Boggs Funeral services were held today for Ray Jirdon Boggs, 59, a farmer in the Bel Air area for the last 40 years. He died Saturday at his home at 54 North Main street, Bel Air. The funeral was held in the Kurtz funeral establishment, Jarrettsville, with services at the Church of the Nazarene, Hickory, Md. Burial was in Bel Air Memorial Gardens. Mr.

Boggs was born in Renick, W.Va., and came to Bel Air after attending local schools. He was most recently employed by the late B. S. Oles, in Kingsville. He si survived by his wife, Mrs.

Bertie Brown Boggs: a son, Dane B. Boggs, of Bel Air; four brothers, Forest H. and Paul, both of Bel Air; Simon, of Street, and Rev. James Boggs, of New Cumberland, four sisters, Mrs. Claude Jones and Mrs.

Vyrus Miller, both of Bel Air: Mrs. Nannie Reedy, of Momence, and Miss Della Boggs, of South Africa. Miss Della Boggs, of Stegi, South Africa. Gen. Herman Beukema Burial the United States Military Academy with full military honors is being planned for Brig.

Gen. Herman Beukema director of the University of Maryland European Extension Program. General Beukema, 69, died Saturday in Schwetzingen, Germany. He was a 1915 graduate of West Point and had taught there for 23 years. VICTOR EMANUEL SUCCUMBS Victor Emanuel, board chairman of the Aveo Manufacturing Corporation, and a director of Republic Steel, died at his home in Ithaca, N.Y, J.

Clyde Hyatt, Attorney, Dies J. Clyde Hyatt, 60, a Baltimore attorney, tax consultant and public accountant, died Saturday, at long Bon illness. Secours Hospital A native of Ellicott City, Mr. Hyatt received his law degree from the Eastern College of Commerce and Law and had practiced in the city most of his adult life. He was a member of the Baltimore City Bar Association, the National Association of Accountants and the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.

In Shrine Groups He was a member of Patmos Lodge No. 70, A.F.& A.M., and other Shrine groups. al, 2.30 Funeral P.M. services tomorrow will at be the held Wit- at zke Funeral establishment, 4101 Edmondson avenue. Burial will be in Lorraine Park Cemetery.

Survivors include his wife, Helen Kraft Hyatt, at the home, 711 Edgewood street; a son, Clyde Hyatt, a daughter, Barbara H. Hyatt; a brother, Bernard S. Hyatt, and a sister, Mrs. Adeline H. Parrish.

Mrs. Mary Jones Edie Mrs. Mary Jones Edie, for 35 years bookkeeper at the White Hall bank, will be buried tomorrow at Stewartstown (Pa.) Cemetery. The 68-year-old Maryland resident died Saturday at Maryland General Hospital where she had been confined for the last month. Mrs.

Edie's late husband, J. Russell Edie, was a painter, filling station operator and justice of the peace in White Hall. He died twelve years ago. Funeral services will be held at 2 P.M. from her home at Schoolhouse and Hunter Mill roads, Baltimore county.

Burial will follow across the Pennsylvania border. Edie is survived by five sisters, Mrs. Thomas Tracey, of Taneytown; Mrs. Owen Lee, of Monkton; Mrs. Quincy Day, Mrs.

Benjamin Hanna and Mrs. Terrence Hoshall, all of White Hall. and one brother, William Jones, of Maryland Line. Miss Bessye Boarman Funeral services will be held to, morrow for Miss Besye Boarman, 85, who died yesterday at her home at 119 East Broadway, Bel Air. Miss Boarman was born near Monkton, Harford county, and lived in the county all her life.

She was a former owner of the F. Bond Boarman Company, Bel Air, which went out of business in 1950. She is survived by three nieces and a nephew. The funeral will be at 2 P.M. at the Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Bel Air, with burial in Rock Spring Cemetery.

Arrangements are being made by the Joseph T. Foster funeral establishment. Enjoy convenient and economical Sunpapers home delivery! Relax and enjoy having all three of your Sunpapers served directly to your home. Carrier Delivery Prices The Sun (morning) per wk. The Evening Sun per wk.

The Sunday Sun. per wk. Morning, Evening Sunday (in City Zone) per wk. The single copy price of The Sun or The Evening Sun when bought on the Street or in Stores 18 7c To Start Service, Phone The SUNPAPERS LE. 9-7700 Richberg, New Deal Figure, Dies At 79 Charlottesville, Nov.

28 (P- Donald R. Richberg, who helped plan the Democrats' New Deal in the 1930's but became a selfdescribed "repentant politician" in his old age, died yesterday, The 79-year-old lawyer and author complained of feeling ill at his home here yesterday morning. Shortly afterward he was found dead by his wife. A funeral service will be held at 11 A.M. tomorrow at St.

Paul's Episcopal Church in the nearby village of Ivy. Burial will be Wednesday in Fort Lincoln Cemetery, Washington. Helped Write Railway Act Richberg helped write the Railway Labor Act that passed Congress in 1926, but his chief fame stemmed from his part in shaping President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal in the depression years. He was co-author of the National Industrial Recovery Act in 1932 and later became general counsel and board chairman of the National Recovery Administration.

When the NRA was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1935, Richberg, who had been a Chicago lawyer earlier in his career, returned to the practice of law in Washington. Later Posts He was appointed special assistant to the Attorney General in 1936, and from 1938 to 1940 was chairman of the committee on commerce of the American Bar Association. Richberg moved from Washing-, William F. Mylander Funeral services were held day for William F. Mylander, 87, a director of the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company and the head of the William F.

Mylander real estate firm. The funeral was at the Brown Memorial Presbyterian Church. Burial was in Lorraine Park Cemetery. Mr. Mylander, who lived for the past 60 years at 2134 Bolton street, died Friday after having suffered a stroke earlier last week.

He was a native of Baltimore New York, Nov. 28 (-Dr. Edwin Emma, 48, president of the New York State Society of Anesthesiologists, died Saturday. He was director of anesthesiology at Booth Memorial Hospital, Flushing, Queens. and was the last surviving mem- do not live.

There are some ber of the class of 1893 at Lehigh 1000 birds, when subspecies are distinct species of living and University. included there are about 23,000 Mr. Mylander was chairman of different kinds of birds. Of these there are about 1,500 varieties the board of the Standard Whole- whose habitat is North Amerisale Phosphate and Acid Company. ca.

In addition there are fossils He was a member of the Con- of extinct birds that suggest cordia Masonic Lodge and Tau there were several hundred Beta Pi, an engineering honor other species no longer exthat ist. society. There seems to be very little He is survived by a daughter, (probably none) cross breeding Mrs. W. Herbert Medill, a grand- their natural state, with each daughter, Mrs.

G. Harry Brugg- species grouping with and livman, and three great-grandchil-ling only with its own kind, accounts for the continuation tures, and much longer than most living things that we know today, and there is no known place in the world where birds accounts for the continuation of each species without noticeable changes. Their and south seasonal migration has long mystified man, who has yet to learn how they accomplish their miraculous sense of geography, direction and navigation. And where do they get the strength for grueling flights of thousands of miles? Each year billions of birds unfailingly migrate in each direction, and since most of the migration is in darkness, one cannot assume that they fly by sight of land marks. At least one species, the arctic tern, migrates annually all the way from the the arctic of to the the world to antarctic, the top bottom, and then back again.

Now that have good cars to take us, we humans apparently are the only ones on earth who travel almost as much as our feathered friends, and even for ordinary use good transportation, backed by a reliable dealer is a necessity today. May we serve you with the Best Service in Town? For 41 Years A Name You Can Trust A. D. ANDERSON Baltimore's Largest Chevrolet Dealer CHEVROLET 4600 EDMONDSON AVE. Route 40 At Edmondson Village LO.

6-5600 Kids! Visit SANTA in Stewart's Toyland the stuffiest TV dog you can own 3.49 Filled to the nose with a firm plush that makes any boy or girl love our big, T.V. dog even more! Sturdy rayon twill bottom will endure years of "sitting" wear. A favorite pet for most any age. Choose from red and white, black and white or brown and beige. for phone orders CALL SA.

7-6262 Stewart's Toyland, Downtown and York Road New York, Nov. 28 (A) Louise B. Wood, 60, daughter of the late Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, former Army Chief of Staff and Governor General of the Philippines, died yesterday after suffer ing a heart attack at her Manhattan residence.

Miss Wood was born in Cuba, where her father was stationed after the Spanish-American War. She went to the Philippines with him when he became Governor General in 1921 after losing the Miss Louise B. Wood Republican nomination for the Presidency to Warren G. Harding, An accomplished horsewoman, Miss Wood served in France during World War I with the late Anne Morgan's volunteers. James Erroll Boyd Sharon, Nov.

28 UPJames Erroll Boyd, 69, of Pompano Beach, who flew the first Government mail between the United States and Europe in the 1920's, died yesterday. ALBANY BOSTON BUFFALO HARTFORD ST. LOUIS WORCESTER WINTER TERM Schools--IBM EVENING CLASSES for Men Women COMPLETE SYSTEMS COURSE Wiring and machine operation: Sorters, Tabulators, Col. lators, Reproducers, Calculators, Auxiliary Machines. OPERATOR COURSE FOR WOMEN Key Punch plus basic operation of all machines.

COMPUTER PROGRAMMING COURSES SELECTIVE REGISTRATION AND TESTING -NOW! FOR DETAILS: FILL IN AND MAIL COUPON SERVICE BUREAU CORP. BLDG. WARD Schools- 1307 ST. PAUL STREET BALTIMORE 2, MD. Please send information about IBM course indicated below: I COMPLETE SYSTEMS OPERATOR COMPUTER NAME: CITY: TELEPHONE: WORKING Les Coleman Chicago, Nov.

28 (P--Les Coleman, 65, photo assignment editor for Chicago's American, died Saturday. He began his newspaper career with the Chicago InterOcean in 1915 and joined the photo staff of the American in 1919. ton to Charlottesville in 1948. Semi-retired, he was a lecturer at the University of Virginia Law School here from 1949 to 1952. He was the author of numerous books.

recent years, Richberg had sharply criticized policies of the New Deal and of former President Truman's Fair Deal, and he supported Dwight D. Eisenhower for President in 1952. Academic Background Just before announching his support of Eisenhower that year, he called himself a "repentant Richberg was native of Knoxville, Tenn. He held a bachelor of arts' degree from the University of Chicago, a bachelor of laws degree from Harvard and a doctor of laws degree from Knox College. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Florence Weed Richberg, and one daughter, Mrs. A. A. Campbell, of Wytheville. The Other Day Our friend, the student of bird lore and life, told many engagting things we'd like tc review some of the morel interesting bits for you.

Birds have been living on earth almost as long as any other A. D. ANDERSON living crea- SANTA SPECIAL Dear Children, With a strong tail wind blowing down from the North Pole, my helicopter landed last Saturday a half hour ahead of schedule. If you missed my landing, I'm dreadfully sorry. But if you did you'll have another chance to see my 'copter land here at 10 A.M.

on Saturday, Dec. 10, when I I I I I come in again with more candy for all good little boys and girls! I'll also be here every day 4 to 9 P.M. and Saturdays from 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. to welcome you all.

Santa EASTPOINT Baltimore's Busiest Christmas Shopping Center Eastern Ave. North Pt. Blvd. WEEK AP at VALUES A A requiem mass will be Wednesday for Joseph H. Carter, 75, a retired freight conductor for the Baltimore Ohio Railroad.

Mr. Carter died Saturday at his home, 4207 Wilkens avenue. The mass will be at 9 A.M. Wednesday at the Our Lady of Victory Church, 4601 Wilkens avenue. Burial will follow in Loudon Park Cemetery.

Arrangements are being made at the Howard H. Hubbard funeral establishment, 4107 Wilkens avenue. Joseph H. Carter Mr. Carter worked for the O.

railroad for 47 years in the Philadelphia division. He was a member of Monumental Lodge No. 438, Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen. His wife, Elizabeth, 73, was killed in a bus accident at Wilkens avenue and Payson street January 21. Mr.

Carter is survived by a sister. Mrs. Theresa M. Schanken, and a brother, Edward B. Carter.

Funeral services for Mrs. A. Kean, who died Saturday, will take place tomorrow at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Edward H. Copenhaver, 1301 Pentwood road.

Mrs. Kean, 85, had been ill for some time before her death. She had been making her home with another daughter, Mrs. James Georgan, at 725 East Thirty-fourth street. Mrs.

Kean was born in Baltimore and lived all her life here. She was married to James K. Kean, who died in 1927. She was active in the Rebekah Mrs. Emma A.

Kean and the Naomi Rebekah Lodge No. 6, of the 1.0.0.F. Beside her two daughters, Mrs. Kean is survived by a son, George F. Kean.

Services tomorrow are at 3 P.M. and burial will follow in Loudon Park Cemetery. Akron, Ohio, Nov. 28 -Mrs. Vera Berenyi, a composer and pianist, died Saturday.

Mrs. Berenyi, who was born in Budapest, had appeared on concert stages in Europe prior to World War II. Mrs. Vera Berenyi SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY SMOKED BONELESS BUTTS lb. NONE PRICED HIGHER SUPER- RIGHT QUALITY (7-INCH CUT) Rib Beef Steaks NONE HIGHER PRICED lb.

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30th. Quantity Rights Reserved.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1910-1992