Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Troy Record from Troy, New York • Page 2

Publication:
The Troy Recordi
Location:
Troy, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE TROY RECORD, THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1959 Obituary rmtnl Of Mr. Honslnger The funeral of James Hon linger was held at 9:30 a.m. ye terday from the James J. Cli fon Bros. Funeral Home, Inc 294 4th St.

and at 10 a.m. from St. Mary's Church where a juicm High Mass was celc hrated by Rev. Joseph Barker. Miss Agnes C.

Shee ran, organist, sang "J)omin Jesu Christe" at the proccssioi si, "In Paradisum" ct the fertory and "Out of the Depths at the recessional. Bearer were John Barker, William Austin, William Osbornc, Davi H. Ho'nsinger, William D. Davi and Oscar M. Gilbert.

Inter rnent was in St. Mary's Ceme tery with Father Barker ofliciat ing at the grave. Tuesday nigh Father Barker visited the fu neral home and recited tli K'osary. Also visiting the fu neral home were Rev. Pau E.

Hook, Rev. a i Markham a a i from the New York Telephone Co. and the Troy News Co. Funeral Of Mr. Charbonneau funeral of Marcil Char bbnneau of R.D.

1, Rexford held at 9 a.m. yesterda from the Quandt Funeral Home 23 Broad Waterford, an at 9:30 a.m. from St. Mary' Church, Waterford, where a Re qiiiem High' MaSs was celebrat ed by Rev. William J.

Lunney MLss Mary E. Parker organist, sang "Miserere" at th' processional, i Jesi Christe" at the offertory am "In Paradisum" at the reces sional. Bearers, all nephews were. Alfred, Wilfred, Albert Aime, Arthur and Donald Char Interment was ii St. Mary's Cemetery, Waterford with Father Lunney officiatinj at the grave.

Tuesday night Fa ther Lunney visited the funera' home and recited the Rosary. Funeral Of Mr. Herstich funeral of Joseph Her stich was held at 8:30 a.m. yes terday from the Doran Funera Home, 2428 5th and at 8 a.m. from St.

Peter's Church Rev. Charles C. Smith officiated at a Requiem High Mass. Mrs. Agnes K.

Dundon was organist and William Duncan was soloisst. He sang "De Profunds" as the processional, "Domine Jesu Christe" at the offertory and "Out of the Depths" as the recessional Bearers were Walter J. Campbell, Robert T. Walther, Gerald E. Lovely and Dominick S.

Interment was in St. Labor Bill (Continued from Page 1) lethal weapons of unscrupulous labor leaders." listed these as secondary boycotts, blackmail picketing, "hot cargo" agreements and "no man's land" labor disputes which are not handled by either federal or state agencies. The Labor Committee chairman renewed his attack on the bill drafted by his own committee, hut disavowed by most of its members. That bill has the support of Speaker Sam Rayburn (D-Tex) and other Democratic leaders. Republicans a southern Democrats gave Harden a thundering ovation when he finished.

Most Democrats sat in silence. Speaking for the committee bill, Rep. John Brademas (D- 3nd) said some backers of the Griffin-Landrum substitute want "no labor law at all." Their aim, he contended, is "to make a political issue rather than enact a law." Hoffa Would Win Brademas argued lhat passage of the coalition-supported bill would play into the hands of Teamster i President James R. Hoffa. The Indiana congressman said this is so because he argued the Senate is not likely to accept Ihe Landnmi-Griffin Bill, which goes much further than the measure the Senate passed last Epring.

Technically, the House has had the committee bill before it since debate started Tuesday. Right after the general discussion period ended, the coalition forces formally wheeled their substitute to the firing Sine. Just as promptly, the group of Democrats favoring the bill by organized labor called up their measure, claiming it would bring about better labor-management relations. But that bill, sponsored hy Eep. John F.

Shelley (D-CaliE), was quickly voted down. Earlier in the day, the Eisenhower administration threw new weight behind the Landrum- Griffin- proposal, which Eisen- has called a good start toward a real labor reform measure. A I' Cemetery, Menands, where Rev. W. Curtis Hughes i i a Tuesday night, Father Smith visited (he funeral home to recite the Rosary There were delegations present from Tck-Hughes and Troy Country Club.

Mrs. Dora Strobel Mrs. Dora Strobel, 62, died Tuesday at her home in Malta- villc following a brief Illness. The widow of John Strobel, sh was born in Stillwater and ha resided in Maltaville the grea cr part of her life. For man years she was a masseuse at th Saratoga Baths.

She was th daughter of Mrs. Bertha Wilbu and the late Clarence Wilbu and was a member of the Roun Lake Methodist Church. He only survivor is her mother The funeral will be held at p.m. tomorrow from the Morri Funeral Home, Round Lake with Rev. Frank J.

Reid, pasto of the Mechanicville Methodis Church, officiating. The bod will thct: be taken to the Garc ner Earl Memorial Chapel i Oakwood Cemetery. Intermen will be in Dunning Street Rura Herter Cemetery. Funeral Of Mrs. VanDenburg The funeral of Mrs.

Nelli VanDenburgh was held at 2:3 p.m. yesterday from the homi 11 Hudson Green Island with Rev. Stephen W. Gillespi' rector of St. Mark's Episcopa Church, Green Island, oflicia ing.

Friends of the family ad ed as bearers. Interment wa Oakwood Cemetery with Mr 5illespie officiating at the gravi Tuesday night Mr. Gillespie vis ted the residence and r'ecitei prayers. Mrs. 'Rose Angus Mrs.

Rose R. Angus, the for trier Rose R. Ryselis, and widow of John J. Angus of 25 Simmon Cohoes, died yesterday a Cohoes Memorial Hospital fol owing a brief illness. Born in lithuania, she had been a resi dent of Cohoes for the last 15 She was a communican of St.

Marie's Church, Cohoes urviving are a daughter, Mrs, Francis X. Patenaude of Cohoes; ne sister, Mrs. Nicodemus Zilin Albany; one granddaughter Urs. Thomas R. Davenport ol 'argo, N.D.; four great grand hildren and several nieces and ephews.

The funeral will be eld at 9 a.m. tomorrow from 10 A. G. Boivin's Sons Funeral Home, 70 Congress Cohoes, nd at 9:30 a.m. from St.

Marie's hurch, where a Solemn Re- uiem Mass will be celebrated, nterment will be in St. Joeph's Cemetery, Waterford. Leo L. Parker Leo L. Parker, 67, a World (Var I overseas veteran, died 'uesday at the Vermont Soliers Home in Bennington, 'here he had resided the last ve years.

Born in Boston, he loved to Bennington, where he as employed as a woodsman, A nember of Ihc American Veterans of Foreign Wars nd the Fraternal Order of agles in Bennington, Parker is irvived by a son. Edward L. arker of Burlington, two aughters: Mrs. Kenneth O'Con- cll and Mrs. Arthur Deyorio, oth of Hartford, and 13 randchildren.

Funeral services ill be today r.t m. from the Walbridge Fu- eral Home and 8 a.m. from Saed Heart Church, Bennington, here a Requiem Mass will be elebrated. Interment will be at Soldiers Home Cemetery fith military rites. Jurglars Net $4,500 Golfing Equipment Saranac Lake (AP)--Burglars into two Adirondack rent golf clubs yesterday and ole worth of golfing quipment.

Mike Tyrell, pro at the Sara- ac Lake Golf Club, estimated loss at $4,000. He a i atching woods and irons, 18 airs of shoes and quan- ty of sports shirts and veathers were taken. Then in another pre-dawn reak, clubs and bags valued at 500 were taken from the club- ouse at Saranac Inn. Entry was gained to both hops by breaking windows, tale Police are investigating. CC Won't Prevent Train Run Washington A In- Commerce Commission aid yesterday it will not inter- re with a Rail- oad proposal to drop the Binghamton run a daily passenger train op- between Hoboken and inghamton.

The train leaves Scranlon at 2:23 p.m., arriving Binghamton 18 p.m. The discontinuance scheduled for Aug. 24. The will be kept in service etween Hoboken and Scranton. (CMtlMed freea Page 1) the one hind ind freedom in progress on the other." This can be achieved, he sale by giving proper emphasis I four principles: nonintervei tlon, collective security, effe live exercise of represenUliv democracy and respect human rights, and cooperatio for an economic and social pro gram.

He cautioned the minister not to be "deluded into mistal ing temporary disorder for cancer in the heart of peace for permanent paralysis bf.th sinews of freedom." He observed that the Amer can nations "must at all time marshal their collective effort to ensure progress toward be ter human conditions. All Earned Freedom "Our revolutions were fough --all of them--to attain a free dom, both for the stales an individuals, dedicated to the velopment and progress whic can be achieved only throug peace," Herter asserted. In welcoming the delegates Alessandri said study of varioii formulas for harmonizing meth ods to protect human right with principles of. noninterven lion "should be one of th major tasks to be by this meeting," and urge' caution in discussing Caribea: fueds. The feuds line up Cubai Prime Minister Fidel Castro am Venezuelan President Romul Betancourt against Generalis simo Rafael Trujillo, the stron man of the Dominican Republic Castro and Betancourt also ar aligned Nicaraguan i a Luis Somoza.

Tuesday night Alfredo Orti Mancia of Salvador passec around a. proposal that the OAS Council create an Inter-Ameri can Committion of Human rights. Ecuador's Carlos Tovar wa: preparing another project re questing the law makers ti write an inter-American treaty luaranleeing human rights tha would bind the members to ob- ierve its provisions. The pres ent declaration has no force be lind it. Foreign Minister Raul Roa of Uba has declared his country would.support all people strug- lling for liberty and that he would fight for conference ecognition of that principle.

The ministers plan to meel wice a day, including Saturday nd Sunday, and wind up their iusiness on Monday. Housing (Continued from Page 1) bat any stone was left urned." Johnson in the past has been riticized by some Democratic berals for giving in too easily vetoes and ireals of veto. Johnson said it was unfortun- the President has made rogram so important as hous- ng a political "football." He ssailed Eisenhower for con- renting Congress with an "all nothing" approach and a veto pistol." It was the fourth cttempt by lie Senate to override an iisenhower veto. Two of those ucceeded but failed in the -louse. With 95 senators voting yes- erday, a total of 64 affirmative otes would been neces ary to provide the two-thirds margin to reverse Uie veto.

Too Extravagant The President rejected the riginal bill on grounds that it as inflationary, extravagant nd excessive. Rumors that he would reject le compromise too helped lead to the banking committee's. 8-7 recommendation Tuesday that the Senate try to overside the veto of the original bill. The substitute would authorize urban renewal of up to $650,000,000 for two years, $250,000,000 in loans for college 37,000 new public housing units and other provisions shaved somewhat from the vetoed version. Its size would still exceed, however, the administration's proposed $810,000,000 a And the bill includes new public housing units which Eisenhower considers unnecessary and would retain financing features he opposes.

The substitute would cut $325,000,000 in loans a grants from the vetoed bill. Identify Body Found In Hudson The body of George Theiss 49, of 37 Lancaster Alban was recovered from the Hudio River near Selkirk yesterday State Police of the Selkir patrol. Coroner John J. Marra, wh investigated, said Theiss wa identified by a rent receip found on his person. The man whose wife died only a le weeks ago, had been missin from his home for about a wee! An official coroner's decision Deing withheld pending an au topsy and further investigation Discovery of the Albanian body was the second river deal ncidcnt in 24 hours.

The bod of an unidentified man wa was found floating in the Hud son off Monroe street in th South End Monday. (Continued from Page 1) ily for the consequences of tliei activities." Taking the Laos issue to the United Nations "is in itself a of the Geneva agree ments, the Chinese statemerv said. The current Laotion prqb em is "a question in which thi Jnited Nations has no right a all to intervene." The Peiping statement said: "The U.S. State Departments ilanderous i a China and North 'Viet Nam are but the clumsy tactics of a thie. ryig 'stop "The United States, in order 0 realize its ambitions of ex- ending its aggression and inter ention in Indochina and menac ng China, North Viet Nam ani he Southeast Asian countries has persistently wanted to urn Laos into an American mil- tary base and drag it step by tep into the aggressive SEATO loc.

"This naturally poses a threa' China and Vietnam, as wel to the peace of the whole ol lOutheast Asia. "We hold that, to eliminate le tension in Laos engineerec rom first to last by the United tates, all measures of the Uni- ed States and the (Premier houi) Sananikone Government gainst the Geneva and Vienti- ne agreements must stop, all merican military personnel nd arms and ammunition must withdrawn, all U. S. military ases must be abolished, the ormal control and supervisory unctions of the international ommission must be resumed nd the Geneva and Vientiane greements must be implement- 1 thoroughly." The international commission as set up as a result, of the eneva agreements. After Laos, a former French pro- ctorate, was recognized as a vereign state.

President (CmtlMci tnm 1 Intended (ike la Abllen town where (re up and did chorei i big boyhood. In raponse to of about tb Khrushchev visit here 1 month and his to RUM also'Mid: 1. He hopu his talJu wit Khrushchev will produce a be ler atmosphere 1 between the So viet Union and the wester powers. But he does not inten to engage in negotiation or ac as a spokesman for the West, He also hopes that Khrush chev will get better informatio about the United States an lhat he will get-better informa lion about Russia on his tri May Visit Camp 2. Eisenhower does not plai accompany Khrushchev tour around -the Unite States.

They may visit Gettys or nearby Camp Davit together but so far that i only a possibility. 3. His decision to invit hi-ushchev to the i States and to go to Russia is no any means a reversal of th olicies of the late Secretary State John Foster Dulles, He often talked with Dulles ibont such visits and as long a last month of-1958 they be gan to feel that their diplomacy hould be reinforced by some thing new in this respect. 4. On his own trip to Russia Eisenhower would like to se people and find out what they are like.

He said that as a 'state fisitor he will be surrounded great crowds all the time ani will not be able to see man; ights such as buildings, but hi will have a chance to get ac uainted with people and tha 1 his main interest. This was the first time the 'resident ever has held a full- cale news conference outside Washington. The setting was a gymnasium at the Hotel lettysburg. The gym was con erted into a press room at the ime Eisenhower was here re- uperating from his 1955 heart ttack. In view of his upcoming trip Europe and the exchange of "sits with Khrushchev, the main hreat of the conference was oreign affairs and foreign olicy.

But on other subjects, he President had this to say: Opposes Dynasty Politics--Eisenhower decried nything that might have the ppearance of establishing a po- tical dynasty in the United tates as the worst, thing that ould happen to a political arty. That was in response to question as to whether he ould consider his younger rother, Dr. Milton Eisenhower, resident of the Johns Hopkins iversity in Baltimore, excel- int material for the Republican ce presidential nomination. Again Eisenhower refrained om expressing any personal reference for a GOP presiden- al nominee from among nine ten' person's he has said ight be qualified. If the right kind of nominee picked, he Hid, be will dp ill he can lo mure election by pitching In to the 1MO piign.

Hie President ttld, kit does net retard his role in the selection of i nominee u. that of exercising veto power over someone who might not be lit- isfictorjr to him in terms of foreign and domestic policy. Sted Steel--Eisenhower said he his not changed in the slightest his attitude that the federal government should not intervene in the steel strike, four weeks old today. He said he has noted some suggestions in print that the strike would have to be settled before Khrushchev's visit to the United State! next month. He said we want Khrushchev to see this as a freedom-loving place, to see that people are free tb strike.

Eisenhower did say, however, hat democracy is strongest when there Is cooperation among groups rather than Famed Tenor 111 Stockholm, Sweden (AP) -The Swedish opera singer Jussi Bjoerlirig lias had a light heart ttack iud has been forced to cancel a performance in Gote- borg, it was reported yesterday i HEARING AID CONSULTATION FREE! E. K. Hiwortk Billone ComuMiit 10:10 12 Hew Art fer Mr. Hewrii'i Office KM 4A ft Hearing Test with newly developed audiometer never before used In this area. It automatically takes the uncertainty out of buying a hearing aid.

SEE! The latest fashion in Hearing yet more powerful than former models. AND! The Vi-oi. worn inconspicuously behind the ear. Mr. Hawbrth, who has served the hard of hearing in thit oreo for over ten.

years, may' be reached any time during the week by calling us. FREAR'S DEPT. STORE 2 THIRD TROY, N. Y. Phone: AShley 4-2000 W.

BENWAY, Distributor ARBIT FURNITURE HAS JUST OPENED A BARGAIN BASEMENT WITH HUNDREDS OF OUTSTANDING BUYS --HERE ARE A FEW: 9x9 TILES Rubber, Asphalt Odd Lots Each Fl. Sample T-Cushion LOUNGE CHAIRS 22 Reg. 69.95 42" SINK By American Kitchens Complete with CA95 Deluxe Faucet 59' RCA Whirlpool Imperial Washer 399.95 Window Shades Reg. 3x6 Size 3 4 0 0 For 1 ROOM SIZE FELT BASE Remnants 1 60 5-DRAWER UNPAINTED CHESTS DINETTE TABLES withou choirs) METAL WARDROBES 21 9x12 FELT BASE RUGS (choi Colofj) 27" HEAVY RUBBER-LIKE RUNNER 19.95 12.88 5.00 PORTABLE TV 17" SLYVANIA All Chan. 1AA95 Dual Anten.

ilSI PHILCO SUIT CASE All Chan. 4 4A95 17" Screen 149 WELBILT 4 H. P. AMP. AIR CONDITIONER ARBIT FURNITURE INC.

187-189 River Cor. State Troy, N. Y. AShley 2-7781 "FOR BETTER FURNITURE APPLIANCES FLOOR COVERINGS Store Fully Air-conditioned Launching Delayed Vandcnberg Air Force Base (UPI) Poor weather conditions yesterday forced another postponement of the launching of the Discoverer satellite, the Air Force announced. DO-IT-YOURSELF COMPARE SAVE ON YOUR LAUNDRY WASH DRY 10 W.ihed beautifully clMn, fluff-dried in bif commercial dryer.i Wf fabrici.

Ywr laundry III thm htur. IN 7--50-Lb. DRYERS AND 24--10-Lb. WESTINGHOUSE WASHERS COIN OPERATED SELF SERVICE (Unattmttal) COR. FOURTH ft JEFFERSON TROY, N.

Y. PLENTY OF FREE PARKING 5 5to15 Buy early bargains buy now and save at our Layaway Sale of Fall Coats. Come see for. yourself! You'll see the newest, loveliest styles, fabrics and colors Including all the new fur-trimmed you'll see low, thrifty pre-season prices. What's more, a small deposit holds the coat of your choice in Layaway.

Sizes: 5 to 15--6 to to 24Vi. FROM 28 Women Fashions 50 THIRD TROY OPIN TUIS. FRI. TIL P.M. SATURDAY TIL 1 P.M..

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 Troy Record Archive

Pages Available:
259,031
Years Available:
1943-1977