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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 9

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Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
9
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1 1 Deaths Peter J. Breckheimer, Cassidy, Mary Christopher, I. Church, Jennie L. Cleary, Joseph J. Cotter, R.

R. Deibel, Anna Doris, Charles Eimer, Conrad G. Feuring, Mary A. Rn G-llagher, G. Gannon, William Goodwin, T.

H. Sr. Gross, Josephine Hamilton, Robert Haniphy, C. F. Hill, James F.

Hunter, Sara C. Jordan, Margaret Kaplan, Sig Kunzinger, Philip Lally, Mary A. AnnaLowy, Wolff March, Willis W. Martinson, Ida McDonald, C. E.

Miner, Alfred E. Mulligan, J.D. Murphy, Emma Murphy, Francis J. Olsen, Anna B. Reardon, Rose C.

Reid, Mary A. Roach, Russell Roberts, Ernest F. Roberts, Sarah E. Siebold, Elizabeth Slater, John G. Spalluto, Caroline Swannick, Thos.

Van Ranst, Milton Wagner, Elizabeth Warnke, Sarah Today's death notices contain the details of the funerals or memorial services of the following who died the services of our country: Gallagher, Lt. Gerard J. Mulligan, Sgt. James D. Roach, Pfc.

Russell W. ANKER -PETER on Tuesday, April 3, 1945, at his residence, 185 Hall Street. Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Thursday at 8 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. BRECKHEIMER-ANNA April 3, 1945, widow Louis beloved mother of Anna.

G. and Louis A. Breckheimer. Services Moadinger Funeral Parlors, 1120 Flatbush Avenue, Thursday, 8 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery.

DY-On Tuesday, April 3, ARY LUTTRELL, wife of John and mother of T. Cassidy, Mrs. Grace and Mrs. George Cadenas. moral from her residence, 1341 East 23d Street, Saturday, 10:30 a.m.

Requiem mass Our Lady Help of Christians Church, Avenue and East 28th Street, at 11 a.m. CHRISTOPHER- On April 2. 1945, ISABELLA, beloved wife of John, dear sister of Mrs. Mary Simpson, Mrs. George Coffin, Jennette and Leo Fitzgerald.

Funeral from the Chapel of George Siebold, 7523 3d Avenue, Friday, 9 a.m.; thence to St. Michael's R. C. Church, where requiem mass will be offered. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. CHURCH- JENNIE suddenly, at home, 39 Plaza Street, on Wednesday, April 4, 1945; beloved wife of the late James C. Church. Service Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts on Friday, 3 p.m. "Place, CHURCH--The Orphan Asylum Society of the City of Brooklyn announces with deep regret the death of a valued member, Mrs.

JAMES C. CHURCH. GLADYS F. HAMAN, Pres. Ethel N.

Harriott, Cor. Sec, CLEARY-JOSEPH suddenly, on Wednesday, April 1945, beloved Jennie (nee Keenan); son of the late Cornelius and Julia Cleary; dear father of Joseph, Helen and Genevieve, and brother of Julia, Emma, Florence, Cornelius, Francis and Thomas; also survived by three grandchildren. Reposing Funeral Home, 187 South Oxford Street. Funeral Solemn requiem Church, 10 a.m. mass Saturdavost Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

COTTER -RICHARD on April beloved brother of Rev. J. of Exeter, New Garrett Hampshire, U. S. Commissioner Nora, Mary, Julia, Margaret, Katherine and Helen Cotter.

Funeral Saturday, 9:30 a.m., from his residence, 1203 Albemarle Road. Requiem mass 10 a.m., Holy Innocents R. C. Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery.

DEIBEL-ANNA, on Tuesday, April 3, 1945, beloved wife Joseph and mother of Joseph Funeral service Thursday, 8 p.m., at the Chapel, 187 S. Oxford Street. Funeral Friday, 10 a.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. DORIS.

Suddenly, on April 1945, CHARLES, beloved husband Helena Doris; dear father of Ann Mrs. Helen Burgess and Charles Junior, seaman, second class, U. S. brother of Patrick, James, and Joseph in County Tyrone, Ireland. Reposing at his residence, 939 E.

32d Street. Solemn requiem mass Church of St. Vincent Ferrer, Glenwood Road and E. 37th Street, Saturday, 10 a.m. Interment John's Cemetery.

J. J. Gallagher Sons, Directors, EIMER-CONRAD on April 1945; beloved husband of Lillian (nee Briehl), devoted father of Lila, loving brother of Marie and Fred, Anna Kulkman, Katherine Giebel and Helen Schwalback. Funeral services April 5, 8 p.m., Rouse Funeral Home, 191-02 Linden Boulevard, St. Albans, L.

I. Interment Green- Wood Cemetery. -MARY AUGUSTA, loved wife of Henry; dear sister Charles Webs. Service at her home, 203 Grant Avenue, Friday, 8 p.m. Interment Saturday, 2 p.m., Lutheran Cemetery.

GALLAGHER-Lt. GERARD U. S. A. A.

killed in action August 26, 1944, beloved of Sgt. James J. of N. Y. P.

and Loretto (nee Battles); brother Muriel 1st Lt. Donald now serving overseas. Solemn requiem mass Saturday, April 7, 9 a.m., Thomas Aquinas Church, Flatlands. GROSS JOSEPHINE, of Lynbrook, L. on Tuesday, April 1945.

Reposing at the Flinch neral Home, 34 Hempstead Avenue, 1:30 Lynbrook. p.m. Services Interment Green Saturday Wood on Cemetery, Brooklyn. COMPLETE COST OF OUR LAST 1000 FUNERALS 120 were $200 or less 258 were $200 to $400 305 were $400 to $600 319 were $600 or over Including cemetery and all other Fairchild Sons, Inc. MORTICIANS SINCE 1886 Frank Palechild, Meeneed Manager BROOKLYN FLUSHING JAMAICA GARDEN CITY Telephone Never Sleeps" CANNON.

of -WILLIAM 75th Precinct, F. April N. Y. 3,1 P. at his residence, 1376 Sterling Place, beloved husband of Margaret (nee Deats); dear brother of Frank, Margaret Downes, Ann Reil, and Timothy Gannon.

Friday. Requiem mass St. Matthew's R. C. Church, 10 a.m.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. GOODWIN THOMAS HENRY on April 3, 1945; beloved husband of Mary E. 1 (nee Duffy); devoted father of William Thomas H. Jr.

and Harold H. Funeral from his residence, 138-33 233d Street, Laurelton, L. Friday, 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass St. Clare's R.

C. Church, 10 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery under direction of Thomas M. Quinn Sons. HAMILTON On April 4, 1945, A.

of 865 St. John's Place, beloved husband of Minnie (nee Kelly); devoted father of Elizabeth. Virginia, Lorraine, Corporal Robert A. Hamilton, U. S.

also survived by two grandchildren. Re Reposing William A. Martin Funeral Home, Classon Avenue corner Sterling Place. Funeral Saturday, 8:30 a.m.| Requiem mass St. Gregory's Church.

Interment Long Island National Cemetery. HANIPHY-CATHERINE beloved wife of the late John. Survived by sister, Mrs. Sarah Zierow, and nephew, Fred Zierow. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m., from her home.

E. 26th Street. Requiem mass, 10 a.m., Our Lady Help of tians Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Arrangements by Dawley Funeral Home.

HILL- JAMES on April 4, 1945, beloved father of Frank J. Hill. Religious and fraternal services at E. C. Waldeck's Home for Funerals.

7614 4th Avenue, Thursday, 8:30 p.m. HUNTER SARA suddenly April 4, 1945, beloved wife of Carey T. Hunter; mother of Mrs. Seymour Nedler and Joseph E. Reposing at the McManus Funeral Home, 2001 Flatbush Avenue, until Thursday evening.

Interment Norfolk, Saturday. JORDAN On April 4, MAR-: GARET of 2 Hudson Road. Bellerose, L. beloved wife of Gustav, mother of Luella and Lenore Jordan." One brother and sister also survive. Services at the Stutzmann Funeral Home, 224-39 Jamaica Avenue, Queens Village, L.

on Friday, 8:30 p.in. Interment private. -SIG, beloved husband of Bertha, devoted of Marilyn Feldman and Benson, and father, dear brother, of Harold. Services at Kasdan's, Fort Hamilton Parkway, Brooklyn, Friday, April 6, 11 a.m. KUNZINGER- On April 3, 1945, PHILIP, of 7420 Ridge Boulevard, beloved husband of Lillian Kunzinger; brother of Arthur Kunzinger, and son of the late Philip and Louisa Kunzinger.

Funeral from Schaefer's Funeral Parlors, 4th Avenue and 42d Street, Friday, April 6, 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass at Our Lady of Angels Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. LALLY- April 2, 1945, MARY native of County Mayo, Ireland; devoted daughter of Mary and the late Edward of Ireland: sister of Sister Barbara Marie, S.S.J., Mrs. Bridget Gibbons, Nora, Edward, John and Thomas, here, and Mrs.

Anne Heneghan, Mrs. Catherine Donohue, and Matt of Ireland. Reposing William A. Martin Funeral Home, Classon Avenue corner Sterling Place. Funeral Friday 9 a.m.

Requiem mass St. Teresa's Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. LOWY-WOLFF, of 2324 Avenue S. beloved husband of Pauline Mode: devoted father of the late Private Zachary Mode Lowy, killed in action February 2, 1945, in Germany.

Funeral services Friday 11 a.m. at The Riverside, 76th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, New York City. Please omit flowers. Ebbers-Hill, Directors. MURPHY-FRANCIS April 4, -WILLIS on April 1945, at his residence, 8709 5th AVenue, beloved husband of Catherine; dear father of Catherine James of F.

and Mary; also survived by five H. grandchildren. Solemn mass Friday, 10 a.m., St. Patrick's R. C.

Church, Fort Hamilton. Funeral from Chapel of F. J. McLaughlin, 8125 3d Avenue. Interment 3, Calvary Cemetery.

of MARTINSON-On Tuesday, April 3, 1945, IDA of 619 East 17th Street, Brooklyn, beloved wife the late Mathias, dear mother of Mrs. Joseph Brennan and Theodore Martinson. Services at Walter B. Cooke, Funeral Home, 1218 Flatbush Avenue, Thursday, 8 p.m. Funeral Friday, 2 p.m.

Interment Mount Olivet Cemetery. St. McDONALD On April 3, 1945. CHARLES at his residence, 99 St. John's Place, son of the late Enious and Rose; dear brother of Winifred, Mary-Agnes, Joseph and Edward.

Requiem mass Church of St. Augustine, Saturday, 10 a.m. Austin W. Moran, Director. MINER -ALFRED on Wednesday, April 4, 1945, 489 13th Street, beloved husband Annie father of Mabel M.

Church. Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts bePlace, on Friday, 8 p.m. of MULLIGAN -Sergeant JAMES M. killed in action March 1, 1945, on Iwo Jima. Survived by parents, James J.

and Marie Hall Mulligan of 107-52 87th Street, Ozone Park; two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Taylor and Mrs. Elizabeth son Ryan; two brothers, Lieutenant John U. S. Army Air Force, and Robof ert Hall Mulligan, HA1c, U.

S. Navy. Solemn mass of requiem Saturday, April 7, at 10 a.m., Nativity of St. Blessed Virgin Mary R. C.

Church, Rockaway Boulevard and 91st Street, Ozone Park, Long Island, 3, MURPHY On April 3, 1945, Fu- EMMA beloved wife of the late Sergeant Bernard Murphy; sister of Anna May Holmes. Funeral services at her home, 3613 Glenwood Road, Thursday at 8 p.m. 1945, beloved brother of Sarah James Thomas William H. and the late Anna V. Murphy.

Fu-1 neral Saturday at 8 a.m. from the McManus Funeral Home, 2001 Flatbush Avenue. Requiem mass 8:30 a.m., R. C. Church of St.

Thomas Aquinas. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. OLSEN -April 3, 1945, ANNA 14. 77th Street, beloved mother of Adelaide H. and Robert M.

Services at Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Avenue, Thursday 8:30 p.m. Interment Green -Wood Cemetery, Friday, 10 a.m. ALFRED O. TATE DIES AT 81; THOMAS EDISON'S ASSOCIATE, Alfred O. Tate of 176 St.

James Place, former business associate of the late Thomas A. Edison and his secretary for 11. years, died Tuesday in Brooklyn Hospital. He was 81. In 1893 Mr.

Tate, with a few associates, purchased from Edison the first motion picture machines and gave the first public exhibitions of motion picture machines. Seven ago he published "Edison's years Open Door," presented aS a biography but described by critics as more in the of a book of naecdotes and reminiscenes gleaned fduring his association with the inventor. Born in Peterborough, Ontario, Deaths REARDON-ROSE of 175-06 Devonshire Road, Jamaica, April 3, 1945, mother of Ann Seller: sister of Sarah Copp, devoteed Daniel Davison. Funeral from Harry A. Andrews Funeral Home, 180-04 Hillside Avenue, Jamaica, Friday.

Solemn requiem mass at the Immaculate Conception Monastery Church, 10 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. REID- (Nee Ward) MARY of Joval Court, Gerrittsen Beach, Brooklyn, April 2. Survived by six John, member N. Y.

P. William, Staff U. S. James, U. S.

Vincent, U. S. Thomas, C. I. U.

S. Lawrence, U. S. three daughters, Helen, Florence and Veronica, and one sister, Helen Deis. Funeral from her residence Saturday, April 7, at 9:30 a.m.; solemn requiem mass at Resurrection Church at 10 a.m.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. Masses appreciated. Patrick J. Byrnes, director.

ROACH -Suddenly on Monday, April 1945, at Dodge City, Kansas, Pfc. RUSSELL W. ROACH, devoted son of William and Margaret Roach and brother of Mrs. Steven Balogh. Services at the Towers Funeral Home, Long Road.

Rockville Centre, on Friday, April 6, at 8:30 p.m. -ROBERTS-Master Sergeant ERNEST of 97-34 80th Street, Ozone Park, on April beloved husband of Marie: father of Eleanor Treiber and Heiser; grandfather Dorothea, Lou and Richard Heiser: brother of Arthur and Justine Roberts. Services Thursday, April at 8 p.m. at the Clarence F. Simonson Funeral Home, 119-04 Hillside Avenue, Richmond Hill.

Interment Friday, 10 a.m., Maple Grove Cemetery. ROBERTS On April 3, 1945, SARAH at 284 Hamilton Street, Rockville Centre, Long Island, widow of William Henry; and devoted mother of William Henry, Mrs. EdF. Malton, Warren W. and Ethel M.

Roberts. Services at Fred Herbst Sons Funeral Home, 83 Hanson Place, Friday, 8 p.m. Interment Cypress Hills Cemetery. SIEBOLD ELIZABETH on Tuesday, April 3, 1945; devoted mother of Mrs. James H.

MacLellan, Mrs. Herbert F. Gumper, Edmund F. and Corp. J.

Siebold. Service at her residence, 144-46 73d Avenue, Flushing, on Thursday at 8 p.m. SLATER--JOHN April 3. 1945. at his home, 141 Richardson Street, Brooklyn.

Survived by his wife, Lena; two sons, Frank and James; two daughters, Julia and Mrs. Louis Chicceiello: and mother, Julia. Funeral Saturday, 9:30 a.m. Solemn mass of requiem at St. Cecilia's R.

C. Church at 10 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. William P. Murphy Son.

-CAROLINE (nee De Meo), on April 2, 1945. Funeral from Fairchild's Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Friday 9 a.m. Solemn requiem mass St. Patrick's Church, 9:30 a.m. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. SWANNICK On April 4, 1945, late Mary; dear Sister THOMAS, beloved husband, of the Mary William, S.S.J., Mrs. Sarah Hayes, William, Elizabeth and Thomas Swannick; dear brother of Mrs. Annie Mills. Funeral from his residence, 1021 74th Street, Saturday.

Solemn requiem mass St. Ephrem's Church, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, VAN RANST-On April 4, 1945, MILTON beloved husband of Emelia Ayen and devoted father Milton A. Alfred son of Jennie A. and the late John Van Ranst.

Reposing George J. Ayen Memorial Chapel, 55 7th Avenue. Notice of funeral later. WAGNER Suddenly, April 2, 1945, at her residence, 134 Henry Street. ELIZABETH WAGNER.

sister of Mrs. Olga Carney, Mrs. Mary Davies and Captain Frank Wagner of United States Merchant Marine. Services at Fred Herbst Funeral Home, 83 Hanson Place, Thursday, 8. p.m.

Green- Wood Cemetery. WARNKE-SARAH, April 3, 1945, at her residence, 161 Willoughby Street, beloved mother of Mary McGlynn and Edward Warnke; dear sister of Mary Shaddock. Requiem mass St. Boniface R. C.

Church, Friday, 10 a.m. Afrangements Jere A. McClean. In Memoriam AYRES -In loving remembrance of dear DONALD. FLORENCE E.

AYRES. BRENNAN- -In memory of DELIA; died 1942. Three years have passed since that sad day The one we loved was called away: God took her home, it was His. will, But in our hearts she liveth still. SON and DAUGHTER-IN-LAW.

GARDNER In loving remem- brance of JEANNETTE V. GARDNER. B. F. GARDNER.

Masses COAKLEY- WALTER A. U. S. M. C.

Memorial mass Friday, April 6, 1945, at 8:30 a.m., at Holy Cross Church, Church Avenue and Veronica Place. JOHN W. LAMBUI INC. Late Model CADILLAC CARS To Hire for All Occasions 79TH ST. at THIRD AVE.

Phone SHore Road 8-6700-1 Prompt and Courteous Service L. I. Father of 5 Killed in Action Mr. Tate took up the study of telegraphy as a boy and became an operator at 15. Shortly afterwards he went to work as train dispatcher for the Midland Railway at Fort Hope, Ontario.

After working for several roads in posts of increasing responsibility he came to this country as a railroad motive power expert and eventually joined forces with Edison when the latter was launching a long series of inventions, Mr. Ttate participated in the commercial and industrial development of the Edison electric light and telegraph and in 1832 was made vice president of the North American Phonograph Company, After a brief, period as a mining expert in California he came to New York where his researches resulted in an improved type of electric storage battery. Shortly after the outbreak. of War he perfected a process for waterproofing textiles. For some time he headed two New York companies and one in Canada devoted to waterproofing by the use of his formula.

A daughter, Mrs. Anne Duffield of England, survies him. Mrs. S. E.

Robbins, Old L. I. Resident Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Halesite. April 5-Mrs. Sarah E.

Robbins, 91, one of the oldest residents in this section, died Tuesday the home of her son, Russell Robbins of Cove Road. She was born in Rahway, N. July 20, 1853, the daughter of Jacob and Pauline Baheme Eaton. The family moved to Huntington in 1870. She was married July 20, 1871, to William Robbins, captain of a sailing vessel.

He died in November, 1940. Mrs. Robbins was a member of the Ellsworth Rebekah Lodge of Odd Fellows and St. John's Episcopal Church at Huntington. Surviving are three sons, John, William and Russell; two daughters, Mrs.

Ida Bloxsom and Mrs. Willetta Young; 11 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. Rebekah services will be held in the home tonight at 8 o'clock and religious services there tomorrow at a 2 p.m., with the Rev. Albert E. Greanoff, rector of St.

John's Church, officiating. Interment will be in the Huntington Rural Cemetery. Christian Loeffler, Employe of Club Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Melville, April 5-Funeral services for Christian Fred Loeffler, 68, were to be held today in the Jacobsen's Funeral Home, New York Huntington Station, with the Rev. Paul H. Pallmeyer, pastor of St.

Peter's Lutheran Church, officiating. Interment was to be in the Melville Cemetery. Mr. Loeffler was stricken with a heart attack at the Huntington Club, where he was emCrescents Saturday and died Monday in his home on Broadway. He was born in Germany, June 3, 1876, anda had lived in this country many years.

His wife, the former Louise Thomas, died in 1943. Masons Hold Rites For F. C. Baker Religious and Masonic services were held for Frederick C. Baker in the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, last night.

The Rev. Dr. Cornelius Greenway, pastor of All Souls Universalist Church, officiated at the religious services. The Masonic rites were conducted by officers and members of Acanthus Lodge. A large delegation of businessmen from the wholesale cotton goods industry, with which Mr.

Baker was associated for 60 years, was present. Officers of his former firm, Kendall Mills, 40 Worth New York, were among the 100 persons attending. Mr. Baker, who was born in Brooklyn July 4, 1863, was the son of the late Thomas and Mrs. Melissa Baker.

He is survived gy two sons, Frederic N. of Baldwin and Raymond M. of Cranford, N. a granddaughter, Beverley R. Baker; three sisters, Mrs.

John Carruthers of Brooklyn, Mrs. E. Harvey Hunter of East Orange, N. and Mrs. Robert E.

McKay of Queens Village. Interment took place today in Green- Wood Cemetery. Charles McDonald, Of Revenue Office A requiem mass will be offetred Saturday at 10 a.m. in St. Augustine's R.

C. Church, 6th Ave, and Sterling Place, who died in his home Tuesday night. Burial will ge in Holy. Cross Cemetery. McDonald a deputy collector of internal revenue in the Manhattan office, was born in Brooklyn 41 years ago.

He was a member of the 10 A. D. Democratic Club, Knights of Columbus and the Holy Name Society of St. Augustine's Church. Surviving are three sisters, Windfred, Mary and Agnes, and two brothers, Joseph and Edward.

Jerome H. Louchheim Philadelphia, April 5 -Jerome H. Louchheim, 71, financier, prominent contractor and turfman, died at his home here yesterday. Louchheim was widely known as a race horse owner and breeder, and was an officer of the Columbia Broadcasting System and a director of the Tradesmen's National Bank. His contracting firm built Philadelphia's N.

Broad St. subway. GEOW. PEASE SON Funeral directors 433. Nostrand Ave.

STerling 3-7700 "The Most Conveniently Located Funeral Home in Brooklyn" Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Patchogue, April 5-Pfc. William Keuch. 38-year-old father of five children ranging in ages from 3 to 8, was killed in action March 16 in Germany, according to a telegram received by his wife, Mrs. Bernice Brown Keuch of 133 Washington Ave. Keuch, who was inducted less than a year ago and had been overseas two months, was a truck driver prior to induction.

Also surviving is a brother, Charles, who recently returned home after serving as a paratrooper in the Philippine invasion. Rites for Mrs. M. A. Tully John F.

Cullen, Served on Carrier John Francis Cullen A solemn mass of requiem for Aviation Machinist's Mate 2d Class John Francis Cullen of 279 7th who died of wounds Nov. 6, in South Pacific, will be offered at 9:40 a.m. Saturday in St. Thomas Aquinas R. C.

Church, 4th Ave. and 9th St. He was 23, a member of the crew of an airplane carrier and previously had taken part in several major engagements. He was born in Brooklyn and was graduated from St. Thomas Aquinas parochial school and St.

Francis Preparatory School. Before he enlisted in the navy in June, 1942, he was employed in a machine shop in 56th St. went overseas about two years ago and home furlough a year ago wore four stars on his service ribbon. In a letter received by his mother, Mrs. Margaret Cullen, the chaplain of the carrier said her son had been hit by shrapnel during an attack and died next day.

He was awarded the Purple Heart posthumously. His father, Dominick Cullen, died several years ago. Besides his mother he is survived by two brothers, Gerald and Staff Sgt. Charles Cullen stationed in an army camp in Texas, and two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Plummer, wife of Lt.

John F. Plummer, with the army overseas, and Celia Lewis, wife of Howard Lewis, with the navy. Crisis Forces Jap Cabinet to Quit Continued from Page 1 tion of the Koiso cabinet, as quoted by Tokyo, was AS follows: "In view of gravity of the war situation, the entire Koiso cabinet decided to resign en masse. Premier Koiso, after having assembled resignations cabinet members, presented them to the throne today." The Koiso cabinet came under particularly heavy fire of elder Japanese political leaders, including a number of former premiers and members both houses of Japanese Diet, following the start of B-29 raids on Japan. These leaders pressed for a more vigorous prosecution of the war, including total mobilization of Japan's manpower and resources, and openly criticized what it called the laxity of the Koiso cabinet.

The government took a number of steps toward meeting the demands and appeared to have satisfied its critics up to the time of the invasion of Okinawa. Among the members of the Koiso government, sworn in 22, 1944, only five days after Tojo's resignation, were Mamoru Shigemitsu, Foreign Minister and Greater East Asia Minister; Field Marshal Gen. Sugiyama, War Minister; Admiral Mitsumas Yonai, Navy Minister: Shigeo Odachi, Home Minister, and Juichi Tsushima, Finance Minister. Tells of Cruelty In Bilibid Camp Continued from Page 1 compound or we would be shot. Up to that time we could not predict what would happen when rescue time came," he said.

A lawyer, was called to active service on June 2, 1941, and sailed for the Philippines, landing at Corregidor coast artillery unit. He was wounded twice. "We were treated by the Japs as criminals all the way through-not as recognized prisoners of war," he said. "Fed on 176 grams of rice per day and about 150 grams of very thin soup of greens and hot water, equal to half a canteenful, we rapidly lost weight. I went down from (175 to 90 pounds.

"Rank meant no difference to the Japs, officers and men alike being forced into slave labor. Doctors, corpsmen and chaplains all had to toil in the fields and do menial tasks gardening, chopping wood, cleaning latrines, moving shacks and building airports and bridges. "Gardening was on a 500-acre farm, with the crudest of implements. We wore only a loin cloth, shoes, and rough treatment for no reason at all was daily occurrence. It depended entirely on the whim of the supervisors.

Attempted escapes were punishable by execution without benefit of a trial. "Starvation, dysentery, malaria and lack of medicines resulted in many deaths. At one time we were burying as many as 50 to 60 per day, and at first the Nips would not allow eve nthe services of the chaplain." Fred HERBST Sons Morticians 83 HANSON PLACE at the L. I. R.

R. Depot and 7501 5th Avenue 711 65th Street BROOKLYN, N. Y. Earl C. Herbat, Licensee PHONE: SHORE ROAD 5.1600 A solemn requiem mass for Mrs.

Mary A. Tully, 80, former district State field director of the Women's Benefit Association, was offered yesterday at St. Francis Xavier R. C. Church, 6th Ave.

and Carroll St. The Rev. James J. Tully of St. Teresa's R.

C. Church, a grandson of Mrs. Tully, was celebrant. Deacon was the Rev. Ronald McCarthy of the Trenton, N.

Catholic Diocese, and subdeacon was the Rev. Peter L. Nolan, assistant pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church. Burial was in Calvary Cemetery.

R. Ferdinand Horn Funeral servicas for R. Ferdinand Horn, who died Monday, will be held at the Fairchild Chapel, 86. Letferts Place, at 1 p.m. tomorrow.

The Rev. Herbert H. Peters, pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church at 59 Schermerhorn will officiate. Interment will be in Cedar Grove Cemetery. 3d Drives to Cut Germany in Two Continued from Page 1 dispatches telling of collapsed German resistance indicated that a full-scale drive across the river was impending.

Beyond the Weser, the northern road to Berlin lay wide for a stretch of almost 100 miles back to the lbe River. British airborne troops raced 36 miles east of captured Osnabrueck to join the Americans at Minden, and wheeled northward seven miles to Hille. Unconfirmed reports said the Tommies crossed the 80-yardwide Weser in a strike for Bremen, 49 miles to the northwest. German resistance was melting away before the northbound British and on the Canadian 1st Army front farther to the east, where Dominion troops won a new crossing of the Twente Canal and advanced six miles beyond to capture Almelo. The fall of Almelo cut one of the two main railway lines still open to the German 25th Army in western Holland.

United Press war correspondent Richard D. McMillan reported the British-Canadian advance was going ahead so rapidly that many German towns were untouched. At some points the British rounded up newly arrived German troops from Denmark who still were waiting to receive weapons. See Last Stand at Elbe The sudden German collapse west of the Weser River pointed up reports brought back by Allied fliers that the Germans were abandoning all of Holland and northwestern Germany and falling back for a last stand behind the Elbe River. Headquarters spokesmen cautioned, however, that there has as yet been no definite evidence of a Nazi evacuation on that scale, bevond the aerial reconnaissance reports of a large German transport movement eastward from Holland and the Bremen area.

The combined British and American forces at Minden were only 52 miles south of Bremen and 97 miles southwest of Hamburg, Germany's largest ports. They were in position to drive across the Weser and northward against the seaports or east for Hannover and Berlin. Other British forces to the west were advancing rapidly northward on both sides of the Ems River within 50 miles of the Ems estuary. Slug Way Into Holland Canadian 1st Army troops on the extreme northwestern flank of the Allied line slugged their way into Central Holland against stiffening opposition. Late dispatches said the Canadians were across the lower Rhine east and west of Arnhem, 22 miles or less from the Zuider Zee.

An advance to the Zuider Zee would split Holland and trap perhaps 50,000 Germans along the V- bomb coast to the west. Another 150,000 Germans were pocketed in the Ruhr basin to the south. American 1st and 9th Army troops were grinding steadily into the trap from all sides and there was no sign of a major German attempt to break out. Gen. Dwight D.

Eisenhower's headquarters revealed that the 9th Army, shifted to Field Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's 21st Army Group command during the battle of the Ardennes last December, had been transferred back to Gen, Omar N. Bradley's 12th Army Group. The shift brought well over 000 troops of the U. S.

1st, 3d, 9th and 15th armies under Bradley's direction, giving him the largest field command in American military history. JERE J. CRONIN INC. Funeral DIRECTORS Service and Economy Chapels 115 ATLANTIC AVENUE 38 LAFAYETTE AVENUE LAin SERVING BROOKLIN OVER 75 YEARS 197 ROCKETS WARM UP OKINAWA Stream of rocket shells from a landing ship prepares for invasion of Okinawa April 1. Japs on Okinawa Fight for Airfields Continued from Page 1 campaign with the capture of a ridge above Ishado on Nakagusuku Bay naval anchorage.

Flame Throwers in Lead The 184th Regiment meantime was attacking a Japanese pocket on the west coast. Flame-throwing tanks were spearheading the attack. The army advances on the southern front, with a marine push deep into the narrow isthmus between southern and central Okinawa, gave the Americans control of 80 square miles-one-sixth-of the island, only 330 miles southwest of Japan. The campaign already was 12 ahead of schedule, with invasion forces controlling 17 miles of the west coast and 12 miles of coast, including half the shoreline of the vital Nakagusuku Bay naval anchorage. Swarms of carrier planes and the big guns of warships were supporting ground troops in the assault on enemy positions guarding the airfields and Naha.

Martinus Kuiper, Ran L. I. Estate Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Huntington Station, April 5-Fu neral services for Martinus, Kuiper, former superintendent the Mrs. Robert B. Strawsbridge estate at Old Westbury, were held yesterady afternoon at 2 o'clock in his home.

Beverly Road, where he died of a heart attack Monday. He was born in Holland, Sept. 17, 1884, the son of Maartin and Meltje Oom Kuiper, and came to the United States in 1909. In December, 1910, he married Dirkje Heek at Whitensville, Mass. Surviving besides his widow are a daughter, Mrs.

Arina Scheffler of this village and a sister and three brother in Holland. The Rev. Thomas McIntyre, pastor of Bethany Presbyterian Church, officiated at the services. Interment was in Huntington Rural Cemetery. SAVE FATS AND WASTEPAPER Walter B.

Cooke DIGNIFIED As Lowe FUNERALS As $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden 4-1200 50 Seventh Avenue- -MAin 2-8585 1218 Flatbush Ave. -BUck minster 2-0266-7 QUEENS 150-10 Hillside Avenue- JAmaica 6-6670 63-32 Forest Avenue- ME geman 3-0900 158-14 North. Bird. FLushing 3-6600 STATEN ISLAND 571 Forest Ay. West -Gibraltar2-5056 MANHATTAN 117 West 72nd Street TRafalgar 7-9700 1451 First Avenue- RHinelander 4-5800 BRONX 1 West 190th Street-RAymon 9-1900 165 E.

Tremont Ave. -LUdlow 7-2700 347 Willis Avenue Haven 9-0272 WESTCHESTER 214 Mamaroneck Avenue- White Plains 39 Phone for Representative--No ObNeation STORAGE NOTICES NOTICE OF SALE On THURSDAY. APRIL 19th, 1945. at 10 a.m., HOME STORAGE WAREHOUSE and JAMES JUas HOME STORAGE WAREHOUSE CO. 218-252 17th Street.

Brooklyn N. Y. Mrs. Bradley, MarT. Cleary, Lucia Della Paoli, Elsie Jensen, F.

Johnstone, Ann Kelly, Mrs. Margaret McGrath, Frank Medaglia. Olsen, Albert Mrs. Mueller. Lillian Charles Quinn, Olsen.

James Scarpati, Mrs. M. Scarpati, Mrg. V. Snyder.

Dominick Squillaro, Sophie Valente, Evelyn Van Camp, Stanley Mrs. Ruth Begley, Harry Ekblom, Joseph J. Mrs. J. J.

McCormick, Mrs. F. Pendergast, Mrs. W. H.

Van Derveer: You and each of you are hereby notified that the time for the payment of our lien upon the property hereinafter described having expired, after due notice thereof had been given you, we will cause such property, to wit: Household goods. consisting of library, parlor and dining room furniture, couches. desks, upholstered chairs. tables, rockers, sewing boxes and mechanical refrigerators. bedroom, living room, dining room and kitchen furniture, rugs.

carpets. oilcloth, table and bed linens, pictures, paintings, boxes, barrels, chests and trunks and their contents. consisting of books, china, glassware, clothing and furs, jewelry, laces. silverware. plated ware.

miscellaneous and personal effects. pianos. radios. and all other goods stored by you or in your name, or on your account, in the Home Storage Warehouse or Home Storage Warehouse to be sold at Public Auction at 231 15th Street, Brooklyn, N. on Thursday.

April 19th, 1945. at 10 a.m., according to the statues in such cases made and provided, to satisfy our liens. If for any reason the sale shall not be completed on the said date it will be continued on Thursday, May 10th. 1945. at the same time and place until all goods are sold or until the lien is satisfied.

HOME STORAGE WAREHOUSE HOME JAMES STORAGE PULIANO. WAREHOUSE PEPE, Secretary. m29-2t Th Hitler Begs His Troops to Hold Continued from Page 1 assassins killed two Gestapo guards and their chauffeur. The dispatch speculated that the assassins had been gunning for Goebbels, but halted the wrong car in error. The German Government has offered a $40,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of the culprits.

Reliable sources identified the gauletier Greiser, who, the Soviet war news said, had been captured by the Red Army at Poznan, actually as Arthur Greiser, Nazi overlord of the Poznan district and one of the most detested of the Nazi war criminals. Greiser ranks next to Rudolf Hess, former deputy Fuehrer of Germany and now in British haids, as the highest German war criminal yet captured. Among crimes for which he was wanted was the shooting of 100 Polish political prisoneres in 1942 in retaliation for the killing of two Gestapo men by a Polish sergeant. It was taken for granted that the Russians, or possibly the new Polish Provisional Government, PUBLIO NOTICES NOTICE TO NASSAU COUNTY TAXPAYERS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that Sales Lists have been made of unpaid School District taxes for the year 1943- 1944. State.

County. Town and special district taxes for the year 1944, on real property situated in the towns of Hempstead, North Hempstead and Oyster Bay. Sales lists have also been made of unpaid State and County taxes for the vear 1944 on real property situated within the territorial limits of the Cities of Glen Cove. N. and Long Beach, N.

Unless such unpaid taxes. interest and accrued penalties be paid on or before the first day of May, 1945. the tax lien on the property against which such taxes are levied will be advertised and on the second day of July thereafter, sold. The Sales Lists will remain open for examination in the County Treasurer' Office. Old Garden Country Road at (P.

City, Nassau County, N. Y. O. Address, Mineola. N.

Y. until the first day of May, 1945. Any taxpayer interested may send a brief description of his property to the County Treasurer, and bills for the amount of unpaid taxes, if any, will be forwarded to HARRY L. HEDGER, County Treasurer. a4-st FORECLOSURES SUPREME COURT.

KINGS COUNTY -Solomon Schiffer, Kate Chinchin, et defts. Pursuant to judgment herein I will seil at public auction by N. V. Rothenberg, auctioneer. April 11, 1945.

12 noon, at Real Estate Salesrooms, 189 Montague St. N. Y. improved real property in Brooklyn known as 377 Sackman beginning at point on east side of Sackman 158' 47 north of corner of Sackman St. and Sutter measuring 37' 6" front and rear by 100' deep each side.

For further particulars see judgment. Dated, March 16. 1945. MAURICE SMILEY. Referee.

mh20-6t SUPREME COURT. KINGS COUNTY -Title Guarantee Trust Company, as Trustee, plaintiff. vS. 35 Orange Street Corporation, et defendants. Pursuant to judgment herein, dated March 23.

1945. I will sell at public auction, by McGuinness Reilly, auctioneers. at Real Estate Sales Room, 189 Montague Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. on the 20th day of April, 1945, at 15 o'clock noon the premises designated as Sec.

1. Block 220., Lot 16 on Tax Map of the City of New York. Borough of Brooklyn. Said premises are described as follows: Beginning at point on the westerly side of Hicks Street. which is opposite centra of a party wall between the house on premises conveyed by deed dated April 29th.

1905. recorded May 6th, 1905 in Liber 24 of Conveyances, page 295. the Section 1, and premises adjoining on north and distant one hundred (100) feet eight (8) inches northerly from the northwesterly corner of Hicks and Orange Streets: running thence westerly through the centre, line of said party wall, and parallel with Orange Street, one hundred and one (101) feet: thence southerly parallel with Hicks Street. one hundred (100) feet eight (8) inches to the northerly side of Orange Street; thence easterly along the northerly side of Orange Street. one hundred and one (101) feet to the northwesterly corner of Orange and Hicks Streets: thence northerly along the westerly side of Hicks Street, one hundred (100) feet eight (8) inches to the point or place of beginning.

Together with all the right, title and interest of, in and to the land lying in Orange Hicks Streets. in front of and adjacent to said premises to the centre line thereof. Together with personal property more particularly described in the aforesaid judgment of foreclosure and sale. Dated, March 27. 1945.

MAXWELL M. Referee. FEINSTEIN' ROSSMAN, attorneys for Plaintiff, 26 Court Brooklyn 2, N. Y. m29-6t NOTICE OF SALE SUI -THE REME COURT.

KINGS COUNTY GREEN POINT SAVINGS BANK. ZMORSZENSKI. Plaintiff, against STANISLAW et Defendants. Pursuant to judgment herein, dated March 23. 1945, I will auction, by the JOSEPH ROSENBLUM, auctioneer.

at Brooklyn Real tate Brooklyn, Exchange, New 189 Montague Street, York, on the 26th day of April, 1945, at 12 o'clock noon, the premises in Kings County directed by said judgment to be sold, situated on the south side of Huron Street. 275 feet west of Oakland Street, having dimensions of 25 feet in width, front and rear. by 100 feet in depth on each side. reference being made to said Judgmeat for a more complete description of the premises. MORRIS A.

SIDIKMAN, Referee. C. T. PERRY. Attorneys for Plaintiff.

New 845 Manhattan Avenue. Brooklyn, York. a5-6t.

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Pages Available:
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1841-1963