Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

the 15. HENRY WALTER October! 14, 1945, at his residence, 368 ClerF. D. Survived by his Lillian mont, Avenue, retired colle, (nee Longfield); son, Walter daughter, Patricia, and sister, Edna Henry. Reposing at the New York Brooklyn Funeral Home, 187 S.

Oxford Street. Solemn Requiem Mass, 10 a.m., Thursday, at Queen of All Saints Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. T. J.

Higgins Son, Directors. HEROUX-LAWRENCE WILLIAM, on Monday, October 15. 1945, of 36-14 165th Street, Flushing; beloved husband of Thelma and father of Corp. Richard P. Heroux now overseas; brother of Lillian Hardesty and Bessie Heroux.

Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 141-26 Northern Boulevard, Flushing, Wednesday at 8 p.m. KEELEY October 16. 1945, ANNIE MARIA, of 8124 Ridge of levard, beloved mother of Gertrude M. Appleton and Blair H. Keeley.

Reposing at E. C. Waldeck's Home for Funerals, 7614 Avenue. Interment private. Kindly omit flowers.

KENNEY-SADIE CURRAN, October 16, 1945, aged 47 years, beloved wife of Stanley dear sister of Catherine Fisher. Funeral Friday, 9 a.m., from George Werst Funeral Home, Hart Street, corner Evergreen Avenue; thence to St. John the M. Baptist R. C.

Church; Mass 10 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. KIEFER-THERESA (nee beloved wife of the late John A. Kiefer; devoted mother of John, Lillian and Anna Brickner. Funeral from her residence 184 Power Street, Thursday, Solemn Rehis quiem 1 Mass at St.

Mary's of the Immaculate Conception Church, Leonard and Maujer Streets, at 10 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. Sayde M. Shevlin Directing.

KOSTLER-MARY SHAY. Re6th posing at Murray Funeral Home, Knickerbocker Avenue and Covert Street. Requiem Mass Friday, 9:30 a.m. Interment Most Holy Trinity Cemetery. KOSTER-October 15.

1945. WILLIAM son the late William Freda (nee Dedow); brother of Mrs. James and Charles Koster. Religious services Wednesday, 8 p.m., at H. F.

McKeon Funeral Home, 5017 7th Avenue (near 51st Street). Funeral Thursday, 2 p.m. Interment Green- Wood Cemetery. LITTLE of 122-11 Linden Boulevard, Ozone Park, on October 14, 1945, beloved husband of Lulu (nee Johnson); father of Mrs. Mildred Feeley.

Services Wednesday, October 17, at 8:30 p.m. at the Clarence F. Simonson Funeral Home, 119-04 Hillside Avenue, Richmond Hill. McDEVITT-ANNA on October 16, 1945, aunt of William Harkins, Mrs. Florence Quinn and Mrs.

Arlene Henry. Reposing at William Dunigan Sons Chapel, Rogers Avenue and Montgomery Street. Solemn Requiem Mass, Queen of All Saints R. C. Church, Lafayette and Vanderbilt Avenues, on Friday, October 19.

at 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. MULLEN-On October 16. 1945, CATHERINE (nee Murphy), wife of the late Michael: sister of Mrs. Delia Krieger and John Murphy.

Reposing at Austin W. Moran Funeral Home, 121 6th Avenue. Requiem Mass Church of St. Augustine, Friday, 10 a.m. PAULY FLORENCE ELIZA, BETH, on October 15, 1945, at 564 81st Street, beloved mother of Mrs.

Sophia Stewart, Florence, Walter W. and Dorothy, and sister of William Fraser; also survived by four grandchildren. Funeral services Thursday, 2 p.m., by the Rev. John H. Fitzgerald at Chapel, 7703 5th Avenue.

Interment -Wood Cemetery. QUINLAN-ELIZABETH on October 14, 1945; beloved wife of William, devoted sister of Marguerite Holmes. Funeral from Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 151 a.m. a Solemn Requiem Mass Holy Linden Boulevard, Thursday.

9:30 Cross Church, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, ROGERS--Rev. ROBERT, beloved husband of Susie G. and father of Florence, William and the late Robert G. Services at the Church of the Messiah and Incarnation, Greene and Clermont Avenues, on Thursday, October 18, at 2 p.m.

Interment private. ROY-MADELINE, on October 16. 1945, devoted wife of Leo beloved mother of Eleanor Dahl; sister of Julia Beckley, Fred John George, William, Harry, Charles and Albert Kellermann; grandmother of Harold J. Dahl and Madeline Benedetto. Funeral from residence, 1043 75th Street.

Solemn Requiem Mass, St. Ephrem's R. C. Church, Friday, 11 a.m. Interment Most Holy Trinity Cemetery.

RUSSO-MICHAEL October 16, 1945, of 178-37 Selover Road, St. Albans, L. member N. devoted husband of Mabel; beloved father of Michael Jr. Reposing at Chapel in the Garden, 179-24 Linden Boulevard, St.

Albans. Funeral Friday, with Requiem Mass at 10 a.m., St. Catherine of Sienna R. C. Church.

Interment family plot Holy Cross Cemetery. Frank Di Brienza Sons, Directors. SAUTTER-PAUL, suddenly, Oc- 16, 1945, beloved brother of Charles, William, Edward, Catherine Robinson, Marie Best and Helene John. Funeral service Thursday evening, 8:30, at his home, 7704 95th Avenue, Ozone Park. Interment National Cemetery, Pinelawn, Friday, 1 p.m.

Direction, Estate of George Peth. SHEEHAN-GEORGE, on October 15, 1945, beloved son of the late Daniel and Norah (nee Heffernan), brother of Mrs. Grace Benson. Funeral Friday, 9:45 a.m., from A. W.

Blizinski's Funeral Home, 167 Metropolitan Avenue: thence to St. Peter and Paul's R. C. Church. Mass at 10 o'clock.

Interment Calvary Cemetery. SIMONSON, OSCAR, on October 16, 1945, beloved husband of Hilda and devoted father of Charles, William, Olga Campbell, Esther Black; dear grandfather of Edith Peterson and Olga Penchard. Funeral services at his residence, 113-08 111th Avenue, Ozone Park, L. Thursday, 8 p.m. Funeral Friday, 2 p.m.

Interment Evergreens Cemetery. 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.

DR. ROBERT ROGERS DIES; RETIRED EPISCOPAL RECTOR The Rev. Dr. Robert Rogers, 78, who was rector of the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, McDonough St. and Lewis for 45 years, died of a stroke yesterday afternoon in St.

John's Hospital. He was taken ill Monday night soon wife, Susan, also suffered afteroke in their home in the Hotel Granada. Mrs. Rogers is under a doctor's care at the hotel. For 25 years Dr.

Rogers was secretary of the diocese and he had served also as vice president of the Church Charity Foundation. He retired as rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd in 1943 after serving there since shortly before the turn of the century. Dr. Rogers was born June 5. 1867, and was educated for the ministry Virginia Theological Seminarthe For several years after he Ensign M.

T. Gill, Pilot in Pacific Bellerose, Oct. 17-A solemn requiem mass for Ensign Martin T. Gill, 22, of 248-17 88th Road, Bellerose, a navy pilot, will be offered at 10. a.m.

Saturday in St. Gregory's R. C. Church. He was killed in action July 30 in the Pacific.

Ensign Gill was the son of Martin M. Gill, formerly a detective in the Queens County District Attorney's office and a veteran of World War I. Surviving also are his mother, Mrs. Lillian Gill, and a sister, Dorothy. Deaths SMITH--Suddenly, October 12, 1945.

JOHN, husband of Winifred Smith (nee Griffin): father of Catherine, Dorothy, Elenore and Frank; brother of Mrs. D. Clinton and Edward Smith. Funeral from Park Chapel, 44 7th Avenue, Thursray, 9:30 a.m.. Requiem Mass, St.

Augustine's Church. STEELE-MARY, on October 16, 1945, at her residence. 996 Bergen Street. Survived by daughters, Mary Krieger, Susan Kehoe, E. Martha and John Hal- ligan; sons, Robert B.

Steele, and sister, Susan Muldoon. Reposing at the Funeral Home, 187 S. Oxford Street. Solemn requiem mass, 10 a.m. Friday, at St.

a mes Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. T. J. Higgins Proand Son, Directors. -Of 59 Highland Place, Brooklyn, on October 15, 1945, in his 85th year, HAMILTON STEWART, beloved father of Alexander Stewart, Claire S.

Hauck and Lucy S. Karutz; also survived by two grandsons, Alan H. Stewart and Wallace S. Karutz. Funeral services at Klages Funeral Home, Ridgewood Avenue, corner Richmond Street, Brooklyn, Wednesday, October 17, p.m.

Interment Evergreens Cemetery, Thursday a.m. STRATTON-On October 16. 1945, JESSIE; beloved wife of George Stratton; devoted mother of Madeline Roth and Edward Tucker. Also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral from Schaefer's Funeral Parlors.

4th Avenue and 42d Street, Friday, Octobes, 19, 9:30 a.m. Requiem Michael's R. C. Church. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. SULLIVAN GERTRUDE (nee Finley), beloved Timothy, mother of James, sister of May Finley, Mrs. Elizabeth Jerebach, Mrs. Catherine Paulsen, James and George Finley. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m., from O'Neil Funeral Home, 7106 Ft.

Hamilton Parkway. Requiem Church. Mass at Interment St. Ephrem's Holy R. Cross C.

Cemetery. THEIS On Monday, October 15, 1945, FLORA, beloved sister of Mabel Erbelding and Arthur R. Theis. Reposing Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 1218 Flatbush Avenue, until Thursday, 9:15 a.m.; solemn Requiem Mass St.

Francis Assisi R. C. Church, 9:45 a.m. WALTHER-GEORGE suddenly, on October 15, 1945, beloved husband of Lillian; father of of of of of of of George and William; brother of Martha of Martin. Services at his home, 78 Fountain Avenue, Brooklyn, Thursday, October 18, at p.m.

Interment Friday, 10 a.m., Evergreens Cemetery. WEHRUM MARY A. DUNN. October 15, 1945, beloved wife of the late John mother of Mrs. Lewis O.

W. Quick, Mrs. Stephen A. Kearney, Mrs. Lawrence J.

Hughes, Mrs. Renzie W. Lamb, Charles C. and John E. Wehrum.

Funeral Thursday at 9:30 a.m. from the McManus Funeral Home, 2001 Flatbush Avenue; Requiem Mass R. C. Church of Our Lady Help of Christians. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

WOLTZ-RAY suddenly, on October 15, 1945, at his residence, 649 47th Street, beloved husband of Mildred, father of Gloria and Grace. Reposing at Lockwood Chapel, 4617 7th Avenue Funeral services Wednesday evening, 8 o'clock. Funeral Thursday, October 18, at 2 p.m. In Memoriam -In memory of our beloved son, Lt JACK BRYER DOHERTY, former member of 101st Cavalry. Killed in action in Germany October 16, 1944.

Our most treasured thoughts and love are with you MOTHER, DAD, BETTY JANE. HEFNER-In memory of my beloved father, PAUL. Died October 17, 1938. What would I give to clasp his hand. His happy face to see, To hear his voice and see his smile.

That meant so much to me. Daughter, ANNE NAEKEL. McCADDEN-In sad and loving remembrance of our dear sister, HELEN, who left us one year ago today. Mass at St. Anne's Church, Garden City.

Always in our thoughts. ANNE and TOM. 13irthday Remembrance loving memory of LEO F. CUSACK. Born October CUSACK 17, 1919, who gave his life on the battlefield December 13, 1944.

Until we meet again. Your loving WIFE and daughters, ALICE and PAT. Break Seen in Tieup Of Army Ships Continued from Page 1 rebellion against a union leadership which they charge is dictatorial, remained the only center Port of Embarkation at which the cargo ships overe not being handled by stevedores. There were 800 men working at Staten Island. 450 at Earl, N.

100 at Caven Point, N. and 70 at North River piers. Troopships were being handled in routine fashion by longshoremen, it was reported by the port spokesman. Gangs at both army depots enthe terminals under police protection. There was no disturbance.

Rebels Have Tight Grip Elsewhere on the Brooklyn waterfront, however, the rebels held A tight grip on the situation in face of a union claim that the backbone of the strike had been broken. Rank-and-file activity was humming as rebels apparently decided to fight it out bitter end. Permanent headquarters were established at 636 Hudson Manhattan; quarters were set up at several Brooklyn spots, a welfare committee for needy cases was organized first strike bulletin was issued. According to the bulletin, the dock workers on strike are "standsolid" and "only Ryan's goons are working." The leaflet was signed by James Glasgow, chairman of the rank-and-file strike committee. As almost 400 police continued a close patrol of Brooklyn docks to prevent any incident, Joseph P.

Ryan, International Longshoremen's Association head, announced that the back-to-work movement was sufficinetly prevalent to warrant resumption of contract negotiations with the New York Shipping Association. Negotiations had been broken off with the rebellion of the stevedores. Mr. Ryan claimed that 7.000 longshoremen were back at work in the port and that 4,000 other I. L.

A. members, including watchmen, clerks, carpenters and checkers, had returned. He said additional thousands would be back today. Some 1,000 men, representing six striking locals, assembled at 7 a.m. at Columbia and Union distributed picket signs and split up into small units to picket Brooklyn piers and approaches to piers.

The sign read: L. A. Longshoremen on Strike." There was an A. F. L.

designation below. "No one will go to work today." was the flat statement of Samuel Conzo, rank-and-file chairman at the meeting. With traffic in the port at A standstill except for troopships operations, other developments in a situation rapidly becoming more serious were: More Support I. L. A.

1-Support for the I. L. A. came from several sources, including the powerful A. F.

L. Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York. 2-Charges that Communists were seeking to obtain control of the maritime transportation industry in the port were heard in several quarters. 3-Sponsors of a petition for Federal arbitration claimed 700 names. The sponsors believe that the real issues are hopelessly smothered in a political and jurisdictional battle between rebels and union leaders.

4-Another petition called attention to the plight of several thoumerchant seamen who disap-ers prove of the tactics of their C. I. O. leaders supporting the isnurgents but who powerless to act. They face induction if they quit their ships.

Support for the Ryan faction in the jurisdictional struggle was forthcoming, in addition to the building and construction group, the Seafarers International Union, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and Chauffeurs and the national office of the American Communications Association. The A. C. A. action was in contrast to that of its local affiliate, which has backed the insurgents.

'Campaign by Communists' Charges of Communist infiltration in rebel ranks were made by Louis Waldman, I. L. A. attorney, described the rebellion as "nothing less than the beginning of a campaign by the Communists to take over and dominate the maritime transportation industry. "The I.

L. A. and its membership," the Brooklyn lawyer said, "will resist to the utmost the invasion of the New York Port by Harry Bridges and his ally, the Communist-dominated National Maritime Union." In announcing aid for the I. L. A.

by the Seafarers' International Union, Harry Lundgren, president, said, "we are 100 percent behind you to knock out the Communist party disrupters." General Sessions Judge, Jonah J. Goldstein, Republican -LiberalFusion candidate for Mayor, today termed the walkout "a public scandal" and pledged, if elected, to set up a bureau of industrial relations. The petition for Federal arbitration started off with 200 names yesterday and added 500 today. The plea, started by John Hucker, longshoreman in Local 808, is addressed to the National Labor Relations Board, 120 Broadway, Manhattan. "The rift within the I.

L. the petition states, "has aroused fears among Brooklyn longshoremen that their proposals will be lost sight land the strike merely become a facIm-Itional fight for leadership of the I. L. Brooklyn rank and filers held another mass meeting late this afternoon at Hicks and President Sts. Then many of the strikers went to Manhattan, where they joined in mass picketing of Maritime Exchange Building, Broad where many shipping companies have their offices.

Fred HERBST Morticians 83 HANSON PLACE at the L. I. R. R. Depot and 7501 5th Avense 711 65th Street BROOKLYN, N.

Y. Bari C. Herbat, Licensee SHORE ROAD 5-1600 BROOKLYN EAGLE, WED, OCT. 17, 1945 13. Deaths G.

Koster, William Charles A. Little, Edwin Barritt, A. S. McDevitt, L. Black, Lotta M.

Mullen, Catherine Brennen, Harry C. Pauly, Florence Bressert, Elizabeth Quinlan, E. M. Burke, Dennis Rogers, Rev. R.

Collins, Mary Roy, Madeline D'Arcy, Mary F. Russo, Michael Delisio, Pasquale Sautter, Paul Finfer, Sheehan, George Fitzgerald, T. J. Simonson, Oscar Flanagan, T. E.

Smith, John Friedel, Martha Steele, Mary Hartcorn, Jennie Stewart, Hamilton Henry, Lester I. Stratton, Jessie Henry, Walter W. Sullivan, Gertrude Heroux, L. W. Theis, Flora Keeley, Annie Walther, George Sadie Wehrum, Mary Theresa Woltz, Ray F.

Kostler, Mary ATTARIAN EDWARD suddenly, at Amityville, N. on October 15, 1945, husband of Marion Wyckoff Attarian; son of Mrs. Mary Sutton Attarian. Services at 33 Bennett Place, Amityville, Thursday, 11:30 a.m. Interment Maple Grove Cemetery, Suffern, N.

2:30 p.m. BAKER CHARLES on Tuesday, October 16, 1945, of 187-10 Keeseville Avenue, St. Albans; beloved husband of the late Grace (nee McMenomy); brother of Anna G. Turner and Rudolph A. Baker.

Funeral from the Fairchild Chapel, 89-31 164th Street, Jamaica, Saturday, at 9:30 a.m. Solemn Requiem Mass at St. Gerard Magella Church, Hollis, 10 a.m. BARRITT -A. SIDNEY, at residence, 401, 8th, Avenue, beloved husband of loving father of Capt.

A. Sidney Barritt M. A. U. grandfather of A.

Sidney 3d and Margaret. Requiem Mass Thursday, a.m., St. Saviour's R. C. Church, 8th Avenue and Street.

Interment private. Kindly omit flowers. BLACK -LOTTA MITCHELL, Tuesday, October 16, 1945; beloved wife of the late William J. mother of Florence Rackett Robert Black. Service at her residence.

E. 28th Street, on Friday, 8 p.m. BRENNEN -HARRY on Tuesday, October, 16, 1945, beloved band A. Brennen. Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 89-31 164th Street, Jamaica, Thursday, 8:30 BRESSERT ELIZABETH, October 15, 1945, beloved wife Ernest, and devoted mother Marion Craven.

Services at Stutzmann Chapels, 2001 Madison Street, Ridgewood, on Wednesday, 8 p.m. BURKE-On October 15, DENNIS, beloved son of the Patrick and Mary (nee Reil; voted brother of Edward and Catherine Mooney. Funeral Walter B. Cooke, Inc. Funeral 347 Willis Avenue, Bronx, Friday, 9:30 a.m.

Mass St. Church, 10 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. (V. F.

W. of Brooklyn please note). COLLINS -Suddenly, October 1945, MARY, beloved wife of late William F. Collins of Hendrickson Street; dear mother Mrs. Leonard Lowe and Mrs.

Harold J. Olsen. Reposing J. J. Gallagher Sons Funeral Home, 25 Aberdeen Street, near Broadway.

Requiem Our Lady Lourdes Church Thursday, 10 a.m. Interment vary Cemetery. D'ARCY-MARY on Tuesday, October 16, 1945, beloved wife of late Thomas devoted mother Mrs. Margaret Decker, Dennis T. Bernard T.

D'Arcy, Funeral her residence, 34-39 82d Street, Jackson Heights, Thursday, October 18, 9 a.m. Solemn Requiem St. Joan of Are Church 9:30 Interment Mt. Carmel Cemetery, Plattsburg, N. Y.

DELISIO-PASQUALE, on ber 16, 1945, at his home, 297 pect Park West, devoted father Anthony, Salvatore, Gerard, Mrs. Alfano and Mrs. J. Bo, Stella Delisio, Mrs. E.

Botti. Funeral from dence, Friday. Requiem Mass a.m. Holy Name Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, FINFER- suddenly, tober 16, 1945, at his home, 373 Street, beloved husband of Mary (nee Bua); dear father of More and Pvt.

Robert Finfer; er of Harry, Milton and Edward Finfer. Masonic funeral services at the Chapel of George Siebold Son, 7523 3d Avenue, Thursday, p.m.; religious service Friday, a.m. Interment Green- -Wood tery. Kindly omit flowers. FITZGERALD-TIMOTHY 2047 Haring Street, retired member of N.

Y. P. suddenly, on October 16, 1945. Survived by sister, Fitzgerald; brother of the Lt. John N.

Y. P. late and late Catherine Fitzgerald. neral from Byrnes Funeral 2384 Gerrittsen Avenue, Friday 10:30 a.m. Solemn Requiem Good Shepherd R.

Church at a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. Patrick J. Byrnes, Director. -THOMAS on tober 16, in his 63d year, member 104th Precinct, N.

Y. P. husband of the late Lottie McDicken Flanagan and loving father of Mildred P. Funeral Friday, a.m., from his residence, 199 A Avenue; thence to Blessed ment R. C.

Church, where a Requiem Mass will be offered a.m. Interment Holy Cross tery. Benjamin Grindrod, Director. FRIEDEL October 14, MARTHA, beloved mother of dolph. Services at the Walter Cooke, Funeral Home, Flatbush Avenue, Wednesday, 8 HARTCORN-JENNIE, on day, October 16, 1945, beloved of Esther Elizabeth, Alice er ginia, Ralph, William and Adam Hartcorn.

Service at the child Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Friday at 11 a.m. HENRY-LESTER October retired lieutenant N. Y. F. loved husband of Mary dear father of Marian Anne Marie: brother of Edna and Mrs.

Marian Reposing at his residence, 318 tic Street. Requiem Mass day, 9:30 a.m., St. Paul's Church. Interment Holy Cemetery. was graduated he served as an 86- sistant at Calvary Church, later coming to Brooklyn to act as assistant in Christ Church, Clinton St.

He was next placed in charge of the Christ Mission Chapel in Red Hook and from that post was called 1899 to the rectorship of the Good Shepherd Church. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Church of the Messiah and Incarnation, Greene and Clermont Aves. Bishop James Pernette DeWolfe of the Episcopalian Diocese of Long Island will officiate and will be assisted by the Rev. Ernest A.

Harding, rector of the church. Burial will be in Green -Wood Cemetery. Besides his wife, Dr. Rogers is survived by a daughter, and a son, William K. Another son, Robert died Sept.

23. Edward G. Attarian Amityville, Oct. 17--Funeral serv-. ices will be held at 11:30 a.m.

tomorrow in the home of Mrs. Paul Bailey, 33 Bennett Place, for her brother-in-law, Edward G. Attarian of Albert Road, who died Monday. Burial will be in Maple Grove Cemetery, Suffern, N. Y.

Mr. Attarian was a superintendfor the Standard Oil Company, with which he had been associated for the past 16 years. He was the son of the late Dr. Megerdich Attarian of Bainbridge Brooklyn. He was born in Manhattan in 1893 and was a graduate of Pratt Institute.

During World War I he served in the navy. Surviving a are his widow, Marion; his mother, Mrs. Mary Attarian, and a sister, Mrs. Salome M. Domchian.

Mrs. E. C. Elford, Former Teacher Funeral services for Mrs. Janette Clark Elford of 95 Linden vard, who died Sunday in the Methodist Hospital were held today in St.

Bartholomew's Episcopal Church, Pacific near Bedford Ave. Interment was in Green- Wood Cemetery. Mrs. Elford, a lifelong resident of Brooklyn, was the wife of Edward C. Elford.

She was a member of the Woman's Board of the Church Charity, Foundation and for 20 years been a member of the Senior Guild of Colony House, Dean St. She was active in the work of the Woman's Auxiliary and the Community League of St. Baruate of Girls' High School and the tholomew's Church and was a a a a a a a a gradBrooklyn Teachers' Training School. Prior to her marriage she taught in the public schools. She and Mr.

Elford moved to the Linden Boulevard address five years ago from the Bedford section. Joseph Levy, Head Of Show Light Firm Joseph Levy, president of Century Lighting, 419 W. 55th Manhattan, manufacturers of theatrical lighting devices of his invention, died yesterday in his home, 515 E. 19th St. He was 52.

Before founding the company in 1929, with Edward F. Kook and his brother, Saul Levy, he was tion manager of the Display Stage Lighting Company, 102 W. 3d Manhattan. He held patents on a number of widely used stage-lighting devices and designed ultravioletray spotlight during the war for use on aircraft carriers. Mr.

Levy was born in Omaha, and was brought to New York City when a small child. He was a graduate of the Hebrew Technical Institute. Besides his brother Saul, he is survived by his widow, Mrs. Sally Kleiman Levy; three children, Walter, Barbara and Linda Levy; another brother, Irving Levy, two sisters, Mrs. Belle Feigen and Mrs.

Mary Blassman. Scan Todd Payroll For Slaying Lead Continued from Page 1 Brooklyn yard. Barney Dowd, who formerly was an acting captain in charge of detectives operating out of Thomas E. Dewey's office when the Governor was a racket-busting Manhattan District Attorney, is in charge of company police at the yard. The payroll records were obtained about three months ago.

Grand Jury in Session Meanwhile the special grand jury investigating law enforcement in Kings County its session before Mr. Beldock, today. The jurors yesterday testimony by stenographers and police in connection with the 1931 unsolved murder of Guido Ferreri, Brooklyn clothing manufacturer, and the 1939 slaying of Peter Panto, waterfront labor leader. The alleged "pigeonholing" of 28 election fraud case papers in the office of former District Attorney William O'Dwyer also was believed to have been discussed. At the same time the belief grew in police circles that the Panto murder is having repercussions in the current jurisdictional waterfront union battle.

Panto, it is believed, was murdered and his body tossed into a Lyndhurst, N. lime pit, because he attempted to overthrow the leadership of the International Longshoremen's Association. Many of his followers are believed to be involved in the present fight. EBBERS-HILL. INC.

Clinton Avenue Funeral Chapel 519 Clinton Avenue G. E. FUHRER, Lie. Mgr. MAin 2-0531 Fleet Vanguard Arrives in Port Continued from Page 1 after discharging personnel and taking on stores, will later head for Navy Day celebrations in Portland, and Providence.

Because its antenna could not clear the Brooklyn, Bridge, Naval the Supply Portland Depot at Bayonne, N. instead of the Brooklyn Navy Yard as planned. Aboard the Enterprise was Vice Admiral Frederick C. Sherman, commander of the 1st Carrier Task Force and Task Force 362. Proud to Bring Fleet Home reporters who went aboard after inTo vessel docked, Admiral Sherman said: "Ships of the greatest fleet in the world have dropped anchor at the greatest city in the world.

Both stand as a symbol of the things we think of when we think of America -a powerful air-fighting navy that pounded into submission those who wanted to terrorize the world and New York City, which, in its immensity, represents what a free and unshackled people can build through the right to live and work under liberty. "American blood has been shed on virtually every ship which New Yorkers will see on Navy Day that this day of victory may have been possible. All Americans can be proud of the job accomplished by carrier task forces in the Pacific. They spearheaded every drive and blasted the way into Tokyo. I am humbly proud to have the honor of bringing this unit of the United States Fleet to New York." Navy bands played stirring march music as the sailors trooped ashore on leave after vessels docked, and Red Cross workers distributed a doughnuts and containers of fresh milk.

From the Bataan 240 convalescent sailors filed off at 9:15 a.m. Chartered buses took 100 to St. Albans Naval Hospital and others to the hospital at Sea Gate. Pier Closed to Relatives and friends of the The pier was closed tomfamilies men, and no civilians except newspaper reporters were at the pier to welcome them. Civilian visitors will not the permitted aboard the ships until Friday because of the time needed to clean up the vessels, set up guide rails and make other preparations.

Four thousand men were aboard the Enterprise when it docked beside its smaller companion, the Monterey. They included 1,149 passengers, 825 of them wounded or ailing sailors in the ambulatory stage of recovery. Regarding postwar naval policy, Admiral Sherman said this country should have a. fleet large enough "to meet the combined fleets of the rest of the world" and that it should be based primarily on carrier power. "Naval aviation." he said, "can carry the atomic bomb as well as any other type of aviation." Boro Men in Carrier's Crew Brooklyn men of Enterprise personnel included Ensigns Seymour Altman of 602 Avenue and William F.

McCullough of 388 Argle Road. Both were among the airmen of the carrier who flew to Floyd Bennett Field yesterday. ist's Class Kenneth R. member, of the crew, MachinSmith of 494 14th told reporthe was sure, when carrier passed Bedloes Island, that the Statue of Liberty "winked at me." New York, as he saw it from the ship in the bay, had looked to him "just like fairyland." Others included Marine Sgt. William F.

Robinson of 256 Sterling Place, A veteran 26 months 2d Class "ethe Isaacson of 755 E. fighting Pacific; Signalman 51st Radio Technician 2d Class Herbert Ross of 294 Webster Water Tender 2d Class Bernard Robinson of 500 Montgomery Water Tender 2d Class Albert L. Delcore of 356 69th Seaman 1st Class Tony Forte of 1838 Prospect Place and Musician 3d Class Arthur Madarassy of 469 Prospect Place. WHEN OUT OF TOWN REGISTER FROM BROOKLYN Walter B. Cooke DIGNIFIED As Low FUNERALS As $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden Boulevard -BUckminster 4-1200 50 Seventh MAin 2-8585 1218 Flatbush -BUckminster 2-0266-7 QUEENS 150-10 Hillside Avenue- -JAmaica 6-6670 63-32 Forest HEgeman 3-0900 158-14 North.

FLushing 3-6600 STATEN ISLAND 571 ForestAv. West Brighton-Gibraltar2-5056 MANHATTAN 117 West 72nd RHinelander TRafalgar 1-9700 1451 First AvenueBRONX 1 West 190th Street-RAymond $-1900 165 E. Tremont LUdlow 7-2700 347 Willis Avenue- MOtt Haven 9-0272 WESTCHESTER. 214 Mamaroneck Avenue- White Plains 39 Phone for Representative--No Obligation FORECLOSURES SUPREME JOHN'S COURT. KINGS UNIVERSITY.

COUNTY BROOKLYN. etc plaintiff. against GEORGE EDWARD DONOVAN, et Pursuant to judgment of foreclosure and sale entered herein dated September 28. 1945, I will sell at public auction to the highest bidder by G. V.

McMahon, auctioneer, at the Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange, 189 Montague Street, Brooklyn. Y. on October 24. 1945 at 12 o'clock noon. on premises the north side of 71st Street, 123 situate in Brooklyn.

N. V. feet 6 inches east of 8th Avenue, being 20 feet in width front and rear by 100 feet in depth on either side, sidelines sideline partly 8th through Avenue a party wall, with and westerly subject to and together with driveway easement, more particularly described and directed to be sold by said judgment. Said premises known A9 817 71st Street. JOSEPH MENDOLSON, Referee.

ALEXANDER G. HESTERBERG. Attorney for Plaintiff, 32 Court Street. Brooklyn 2. New York.

03-6t V. S. MARSHAL'S NOTICES UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT. E. D.

N. have arrested 2 barrels, more or less, of an article labeled in part "Spiced Anchovies (Spratts) Brand Steamboat for breach of the provisions of the Federal Food. Drug and Cosmetic Act, approved June 25. 1938 (21 U.S.C. 301 et 342 (a) (3).

Process returnable at 10:30 a.m. on November 7. 1945, in said Court. U. S.

Courthouse. Brooklyn. N. Y. All persona present must then present their said 2 claims or be defaulted and the barrels, more or less Anchovies be condemned as forfeited to 1130 of the United States of America.

Docket 452. dated Oct. 11. 1945. T.

VINCENT QUINN, U. S. Attorney. Proctor for the Libellante: SPENCER C. YOUNG.

11 S. MARSHAL, E. D. N. Y.

CAFE OWNER SHOT; HIS TWO STORIES CLASH Dr. Frederick H. Knubel Dr. F.H. Knubel, 76, Lutheran Leader The Rev.

Dr. Frederick H. Knubel, first president of the United Lutheran Church in America, a posting he held 26 years, died yesterday in 201 Hamilton New He was 76. Dr. Knubel was elected Nov.

14, 1918, at the first convention after the General Synod, the General Council, and the United Lutheran Synod of South were merged into the largest, Lutheran body in America. terms Dr. Knubel was and on Oct. 12, 1944, reelected the church convention unanimously made him president emeritus for life. Dr.

Knubel, who was born in Manhattan, was educated in the public schools, the College of the City of New York and Packard Business I College. He was in business several years before he began to study for the ministry. He was graduated from Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, and later studied at the University of Leipzig, Germany. For many years Dr. Knubel was pastor of Church, of the Atonement, Manhattan, he founded.

He became la a a a a a a a a director of the Deaconess Board of the General Synod, and was active in the establishment of the Board of Inner Missions. During World War I he was president of the Lutheran Commission for Soldiers and Sailors Welfare. In World War II he was chairman of the American Section of the Lutheran World Convention which distributed millions of dollars for overseas relief and orphaned missions. Services will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Lutheran Church of Our Savior's Atonement, Bennett Ave.

and 189th Manhattan. The body will lie in state in the church from 2 p.m. tomorrow Burial will be in Green -Wood Cemetery on Friday morning. Dr. Knubel's first wife, the former Christine A.

Ritscher, died in 1923. He is survived by his second wife, the former Jennie L. Christ; a daughter, Helen, and son, Dr. Frederick who is president of the United Lutheran Synod of New York. Bishop at Mass For Father Cottone A solemn high mass of requiem was celebrated yesterday in Our Lady of Miracles R.

C. Church, 757 E. 86th for the Rev. Stephen Cottone, pastor of the church, who died Friday in St. Mary's Hospital.

Bishop Thomas E. Molloy of the Brooklyn Catholic Diocese presided at mass, which was celebrated by the Rev. Eugene Cottone, O. F. brother of the deceased.

The Bishop gave the final blessing. In the sanctuary were about 50 priests of the diocese and a group of Franciscan Fathers. The eulogy was given by Monsignor Raphael A. Cioffi. pastor of St.

Rosalia's Church. Officers of the mass were the Rev. Thomas Sala, pastor of the St. John Evangelist Church, deacon, Liberty, and pastor the of St. Rev.

Lucy's Anthony Church, de- subdeacon. About 350 persons attended. Interment was in St. John's Cemetery. Father Cottone was a native of Italy and had been a priest for 30 years.

He was pastor of Our Lady of Charity Church for 13 years before becoming pastor of Our Lady of Miracles in January, 1943. Anna L. McDevitt, Retired Principal Anna L. McDevitt, retired school principal, who was with the city school system more than 40 years, died yesterday in St. Peter's Hospital, where she had been a patient since May.

She lived for many years in the Hotel Granada. Miss McDevitt was principal of Public School 137. Saratoga Ave. and Chauncey when she retired 13 years ago. She was a graduate of the College of New Rochelle and long had been chairman of the house committee of the college.

Active in various Catholic charities and a former parishioner of the Church of the Assumption, she formerly served as president of the maculate Conception Day Nursery. She had been active also the American Red Cross. The funeral will be held at 9:30 a.m. Friday from the parlors of William Dunigan Son. 317 Rogers Ave.

A solemn requiem mass will he offered at 10 a.m. in the Queen of All Saints R. C. Church, Lafayette and Vanderbilt Aves. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery, A nephew.

William Harkins, and two nieces, Mrs. Arlene Henry and Mrs. Florence Quinn, survive. GEORGE D. CONANT Moadinger Funeral Parlors Personal Service Modern Facilities Convenient Location 1120 FLATBUSH AVE.

BUckminster 2-0247 Police are investigating the mysterious shooting of Saverio Maimone, 32, of 1757 58th who walked into Israel Zion Hospital with bullet wounds in both shoulders early today and told conflicting stories of an attempt to kill him. Maimone, the owner of a restaurant at 233 Columbia on the Brooklyn waterfront, first told Detective Thomas O'Brien of the Butler St. Station that he was shot by an unidentified man in the elevated station of the B. M. T.

at 62d St. and New Utrecht Ave. as he alighted from a train. After police checked the story and found no witnesses, Maimone came up with another version. He said he was driving his automobile along Henry St.

when he was forced to the curb by another car at Kane St. and an occupant of the other car jumped out and shot him. In great pain, he declared, he drove to 37th St. and Fort Hamilton Parkway. Second Version Seems True His own car broke down, he said, so he hailed a cab and was driven to the hospital.

The second version apparently was true as a car was found deserted at the spot Maimone said he left his. Maimone's wife, reached at their home, could give no reason for the shooting and police said they had found no definite motive. Officials at the hospital reported Maimone told various versions of the shooting when he walked in, at first claiming he was held up, and later telling of the attack in his automobile. Maimone was transferred to Kings County Hospital, where his condition was reported fair. No Link to Dock Strike Police said the shooting had no connection with the longshoremen's strike.

The mystery was increased through an apparent attempt by Maimone to keep his secret, for he used the name Emanuel, not Saverio, in his restaurant and telephone listings. Lewis Orders Soft Coal Tieup Ended Continued from Page 1 strike was "taken in the public interest." The issue UMW efforts to organize from 38,000 to 50,000 supervisory mine employes for purposes of collective bargaining. Operators refused to enter into negotiations on the demand on the grounds that mine foremen executive employes and shouter not be unionized. A new threat to industry was posed, however, when the C. I.

O. utility workers council ordered a strike against the Consumers Power Company, serving 2,200 Michigan communities with gas and electricity. The coal strike entered its 26th day with more than 208,000 miners idle and with a daily production loss estimated at 1,151.000 tons. Oust Strikers a la Avery Hollywood, Oct. 17.

(U.P.) Police sheriff's deputies cleared a path through 350 unresisting, sitdown pickets in front of Warner Brothers studio today by carrying them away from the gate. However, no workers entered the studio. but InterestingA series of facts sponsored occasionally by William Dunigan Son July 2 is the middle day of the year William Dawes is the name of the little known man who rode with Paul Revere Rembrandt van Rijn, the famous Dutch painter, was known "the prince of shadows." WILLIAM DUNIGAN SON -Funeral Directors- 246 DeKALB AVE. ROGERS AVE. MONTGOMERY ST.

Tel. MAin 2-1155 in judgment. Dated, October 1945. J. COHEN.

Referee. 08-6t FORECLOSURES SUPREME William Ginnel, KINGS COUNTY Plaintiff, vs. Rosalia Pullo, et Defendants. Samuel R. Kurzman, Plaintiff's Attorney.

505 Fifth Avenue. New York. New York. Pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure and sale dated October 1, 1945. duly entered.

I. by Elmer W. Donovan, auctioneer, will sell at public auction. to the highest bidder at the Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange, No. 189 Monon tague the Street, 30th day of Brooklyn, October.

New City, 1945. o'clock noon, the premises with the improvements thereon erected. situated in the County of Kings, State of New York, on the northerly side of Devoe Street, 99 feet 3 inches east of Lorimer Street, being an irregular plot 50 feet more or less. in width front and rear by 100 feet more or less, in depth on each known as No. 61-63 Devoe Street, Brooklyn, New York City, subject ments to covenants.

restrictions, easeof record and tenancy. occupation, all as more particularly described Miss 9:30 Grant SacraSolemn at 10 Ceme- 1945, RuB. 1218 p.m. Tuesmoth- VirJohn Fairon 14, beGordon; Patricia, Charles, Stewart. BalThurs- R.

C. Cross Supreme Court, Kings County- The Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn. both plaintiff, against George H. Oakley, individually, et defendants. Pursuant to judgment dated October 6th.

1943. I will sell at aucby Fred B. Snow, auctioneer. at Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange, 189 Montague Street. Brooklyn, New York.

on October 31st. 1945, at 13 o'clock noon, premises in Brooklyn described as follows: Beginning at a point on the easterly side of South Elliott Place, formerly Hampden Street, as laid down on map of property belonging to the heirs of John Jackson, deceased. Brooklyn, May, 1839, surveyed by Silas Ludlam and being part of lot No. 331. distant two hundred -four feet one-half inch northerly from the northeast corner of said South Elliott Place and Lafayette Avenue, running thence northerly along the easterly line of South Elliott Place fifteen feet and eleven and one-half inches to lot No.

332 and thence easterly along the southerly side of lot No. 332 and parallel with Lafayette Avenue one hundred feet. thence, southerly parallel with South Elliott Place fifteen feet and elev ond one-half inches, thence westerly and again parallel with LAfayette Avenue and part of the distance through a party wall one hundred feet to the easterly side of South Elliott Place, the point or place of beginning. being part of the same premises conveyed by deed to Marie Alsgood. dated March 15, 1887, recorded in the Kings County Register's March in Liber 1721.

page 349. No. 61 South Elliott Place. Dated. October 8th, 1945.

JOSEPH J. REIHER. Referee. 010-6t WAN.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963