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The Baltimore Sun du lieu suivant : Baltimore, Maryland • 21

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Lieu:
Baltimore, Maryland
Date de parution:
Page:
21
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

THE SUN, BALTIMORE, MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 21, 1963 PAGE 21 THOMAS DIES AT 51 Former Worcester County Official Was War Veteran Ocean City, Oct. 20 Dr. Nathanael Ross Thomas, former deputy medical examiner for Worcester county a general practitioner in Ocean City since 1946, died last night at his home here. He was 51. Dr.

Frank Gantz, who was in attendance at the time of his colleague's death, said the cause of death was a massive coronary occlusion. Dr. Thomas came to Ocean City after World War II, after serving in that war as an Army medical officer. A family friend said Dr. Thomas had just returned from a trip to his native Scranton, to bring his mother to Ocean City, when he was stricken.

"Dr. Thomas was a member of the Worcester County Welfare Board. He was also a member and past president of the Worcester County Medical Society and was the county's delegate to the planning council of the Medical and Chirurgical Faculty of Maryland. He was a past master of Evergreen Lodge, A.F.&A.M., and was a member of the official board of the Atlantic Methodist Church. Memberships Held Dr.

Thomas also held memberships in the American Medical Association and the American Academy of General Practitioners. Services will be conducted by the Rev. Ralph L. Minker at 2 P.M. Tuesday at the Atlantic Methodist Church in Ocean City, with burial in Evergreen Cemetery, Berlin, Md.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ruth McCabe Thomas, and two daughters, Natalie and Lynne. His home was at Riggin Ridge road, Ocean City. Dr. Thomas was a graduate of Jefferson Medical College, Colgate University, and the Keystone Academy.

C. Albert Lane Cambridge, Oct. 20 services were held today for C. Albert Lane, Queen Annes county native who died at his home here Friday. Mr.

Lane, who would have been 82 Thursday, came to Dorchester county at 13 and had operated a farm at Town Point for many years. Until he became an invalid seven years ago, he worked as a guard at the old Phillips Packing Company plant for sixteen years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Lane: three sons, Leon M. Lane, Gilbert H.

Lane, and William C. Lane, all of Cambridge; and eight daughters: Mrs. Wrightson Willey, Mrs. Wesley S. Burton, Mrs.

Jean Hill, Mrs. John Hubbard, Miss Anna Mae Lane, all of Cambridge; Mrs. Edward Kral, of East New Market, Mrs. Eldridge Rippons, of Hoopersville, and Mrs. Garland Swann, of Cordova, Md.

Also surviving are 2 brothers, Carl and Leonard Lane, 22 grandchildren, and 3 great-grandchil-1 dren. Kerry M. Fletcher Sharptown, Oct. 20 Services for Kerry Michael Fletcher, a senior at Cambridge High School who died Friday from injuries received in an automobile accident that day will be held at 2 P.M. Tuesday at the Smith funeral establishment here.

He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. John M. Fletcher, of Cambridge. Mr.

Fletcher is with the Eastern Shore Public Service Company in Cambridge. Besides his father, the younger Mr. Fletcher is survived by a brother, James Fletcher: grandmother, Mrs. Rayde R. Butterworth, of Reisterstown, and a grandfather, Homer Fletcher, of Sharptown.

Services will be conducted by the Rev. John E. French, of the Zion Methodist Church, Cambridge, of which Mr. Fletcher was a member. Burial will be in Spring Hill Memory Gardens, Hebron, Maryland.

Garden Club To Meet The Garden Club of Govans will meet at 8 P.M. tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Charles Whittington, 601 Kingston road. THE WINNER AND ONLY--Miss Eclesia Cestone of West Orange, N.J., was the prettiest study in concentration at the Baltimore Open Chess Tournament yesterday. Despite a few minor losses that everyone hastened to dismiss, she captured the women's division trophy against a field of 58 players, all of whom were handicapped by being males.

Baltimore Is Major League In Chess With No. 3 Man Baltimore, which challenges the world in other sports, is now league in chess with a city champion who ranks No. 3 in the nation. the city Actually, it champion is not so rose to much Nonas rank as that the No. 3 ranking player, Paul Benko, rose day to become city champion by winning the Baltimore Open Chess Tournament.

"All Very Tough" Benko, 35, who defected to West from Communist Hungary in 1957, handily defeated each his opponents in the six rounds of the tournament. "They were all very matches," he said graciously, then decided the toughest opponent of all was Arun Prokash Som, a 30-year-old accountant tached to the Embassy of India Washington. Mr. Benko, an International Grand Master was Hungarian champion in 1950, won the United States Open in San Francisco in 1960 and now is rated just below 20-year-old Bobby Fischer and Samuel Reshevsky. The tournament was held the McDonogh School gymnasium, an arena that was so silent during the matches it seemed that the brains could be perspiring.

One of the tournament rules posted prominently on a wall declared sternly: "Keep quiet in the tournament room when a round is in progress. Isolated comments. such las 'I resign' are perfectly acceptable." Chess is all intellect without whisper of chance. There is no such thing in the game as a lucky punch or a ball that takes a bad hop. To the uninitiated, however, witnessing the alternating decision-making is like staring at an egg in an incubator inside that shell exciting things are happening, but it simply does not appear that way.

A television cameraman, frustrated by the lack of movement he was filming, interrupted Mr. Benko's meditations to get him make a move, for goodness sake. Mr. Benko quickly consented, recklessly pushed his king knight to the fourth row as if inpawn WE CLEAN RUGS Call Herb Kraft TU. 9-4611 OrientaL Co.

EST.O 1899 Be Modern! Rent your tuxedo and always be assured of the newest styles--your exact size. Rent the finest in formals from Hiken. S. HIKEN FORMAL RENTALS Baltimore St. at Broadway BR 6-0311 3 GUSTAFSONS' FUNERAL SET Air Crash Killed Baltimore Native, Wife, Daughter New York, Oct.

20 Private funeral services will be held here Wednesday for Mr. and Mrs. Carl O. Gustafson and their 11-year-old daughter, Barbara Dell Gustafson, victims of the crash of the family's private plane Friday evening near Teterboro Airport in New Jersey. Mr.

Gustafson, a native of Baltimore, was a close associate to Laurance S. Rockefeller in vation matters, and served as Mr. Rockefeller's executive assistant when he was chairman of the Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission. He is a graduate of McDonogh School, where his only surviving child. 'Carl 0.

Gustafson, is presently a student. Mrs. Myrtie Gustafson, his mother, lives in Baltimore. Mr. Gustafson was appointed to the Palisades Interstate Park Commission in 1961, and was a vice president and trustee of the American Conservation Association.

He was also a trustee of Jackson Hole Preserve, Inc. A Pan American World Airways pilot before World War II, he entered the Army Air Cops and flew in Africa Europe through much of then conflict. He was a colonel in the Air Force Reserve at the time of his death. He attended The New School after the war, and had lived in Manhattan with his family since that time. He and his wife, Mrs.

Eleanore Gustafson, and their daughter, Barbara, were flying from Teterboro Airport to their summer home on Shelter Island, N.Y., when the plane developed trouble just after take-off. It crashed into a boxcar in the attempt to return to the New Jersey airport, with Mr. Gustafson at the controls. Charles D. Brown Charles Brown, 86, retired Federal civil service officer, died yesterday at the Maryland General Hospital after a short illness.

A native of Baltimore, he was the oldest past master of Corinthian Lodge No. 93 A.F. A.M. He was the recipient of the 60-year Masonic emblem and award. He lived at 4911 Crowson avenue.

Services will be held at 11 A.M. Wednesday at the William J. Tickner Sons funeral establishment, Pennsylvania, and North avenues. Burial will be in Loudon Park Cemetery. 73 YEARS OF SAFETY WITH HIGH RETURN ON YOUR MONEY Consecutive dividends since 1890.

INSURED SAVINGS Savings Accounts insured up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. PROGRESS FEDERAL Savings Loan Association Park and Saratoga SAratoga 7-3636 spiration had struck him, a disastrous move that he quickly took back when the camera stopped grinding. Chess players, as a breed, seem to have heavy heads. They clutch them in both hands as if they were holding swelling hangovers; they rest them chin on palm; they lean them on clenched fists. The concentration reaches such an intensity that sometimes the heads slip down and the noses threaten to dislodge the chess pieces.

(One maneuver, called "castling," enables a player to shift his king and rook simultaneously, an invention, supposedly, for clearing a space in front of the player for his nodding head.) Excitingly Swift If the thinking is methodical to an extreme, the execution of the moves is excitingly swift. Players invariably strike out with their pieces in a movement like that of a robin snapping up a worm. They do not tug their caps, spit, stretch their necks, squeeze a rosin bag and hitch up their pants, like other sportsmen. Chess but is mathematically precise, every system can be beat. For example, Miss Eclesia Cestone, of West Orange, N.J., confidently went about winning and losing Friday through yesterday, knowing that whatever occurred the woman's division trophy with its little gold queen on top was hers.

She was the only woman entered. There was one relaxing game Friday night. Three grueling rounds on Saturday and the final two rounds yesterday ended the exhausting series. Each game was limited to four hours but most of them ended in about two hours. The strain was physical as well as mental.

Conrad Batchelder, of Arlington, brought along two curved-stem pipes to relieve the tension and a bed pillow to relieve muscular strain. Churchill's Crushable "Southerly" A new concept in hat making porously felted for strength, lightness and style retention. The perfect extra hat for sports and travel wear, the Southerly is the light, strong hat that will spring back to its original smart shape after packing. Rakishly styled by Churchill for the casual look, urban, suburban or country. Select yours today.

$16:95 ESTABLISHED 1875 WARNER CO 20 East Baltimore Street MULBERRY 5-2772 WE WELCOME YOUR SENATE CARD AT WARNER'S G. G. MOORE'S SERVICE SET Eastern Shore Insurance Agent Died Saturday Federalsburg, Oct. 20 for G. Glenwood Moore, an insurance agent in Dorchester and Caroline counties, will be held at 2 P.M.

Tuesday at the Framptom funeral establishment here. Mr. Moore, who was 48, died last night at the Easton memorial Hospital. Served In Navy He had I been a People's Life Insurance Company agent for the past 25 years. His home was in Hurlock, Md.

Born in Dorchester county, he was the son of Oliver Moore and the late Mrs. Martha H. Moore. After attending schools in Dorchester county, he entered the Navy and served during World War II. Among the campaigns he participated in was the invasion of Normandy on D-Day.

Mr. Moore is survived by his wife, Mrs. Janice Wheatley Moore, and his children, Mrs. Dal Regan, of Federalsburg, Ronald S. Moore and four grandchildren.

His father and a sister, Mrs. Kemp Bramble, also survive. Burial will be in Dorchester Memorial Park, Cambridge. Howard M. Bryan, Jr.

Services fr for Howard M. Bryan, caretaker at the Robert E. Lee Memorial Park for about fifteen years, will be held at 2 P.M. Wednesday at the Burgee funeral establishment, 3631 Falls road. Mr.

Bryan, who was 60, died Saturday at work. A native and lifetime resident of the Baltimore area, his home was at 6016 Altamont place. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Glennie B. Bryan, two sons, Howard M.

Bryan 3d, and Wallace W. Bryan, and a daughter, Miss Catheryn Bryan. Burial will be in the Dulaney Valley Memorial Gardens. E. L.

Warner, Artist, Is Dead Bellows Falls, Oct. 20 (P). Everett L. Warner, a widely known painter and etcher, died at a hospital today at the age of 86. Mr.

Warner made his home in Westmoreland, N.H. He died at Rockingham Memorial Hospital. Mr. Warner was born at Vinton, Iowa, and studied at the Art Students League of New York and the Academie Julian in Paris. His work is represented in the permanent collections of a dozen museums and galleries, including the Corcoran Gallery in Washington; Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Toledo Museum; Syracuse (N.Y.) Museum; City Art Museum, St.

Louis; The Art Institute, Chicago, and the Museum of the City of New York. In World War I he did ship camouflage and originated one of the five camouflage systems approved by the ship protection committee of the war risk bureau. WINDOW SHADES Venetian Blinds Aluminum Screens Before You Buy--Call Us FOR FREE American first" Harry T. Tillman Sons 815 N. Howard St.

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