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The Troy Record from Troy, New York • Page 13

Publication:
The Troy Recordi
Location:
Troy, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE TROY RECORD, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 20, 1962 13 The Troy Record TKOY, N.V., AUGUST Z0, 19C2 During Job In Rensselaer IIOUKI.V TUAJPUUATUKES (At Kccord Office) P. He Abandons Commercial Daylight Robbery Nets Embruces An or Arfg Suke Next Door To Police Sent To FBI Ltib Aug. 18 4 a. m. 5 a.

m. a. m. 7 a. in.

8 a. in. 9 a. m. 10 a.

in. 11 a in. 12 noon 1 p. m. 2 p.

in. 3 p. m. p. in.

5 p. m. li p. m. 7 p.

m. 8 p. m. p. m.

10 p. 11 p. m. 12 Mid. 55 54 53 51 52 50 58 61 J5 63 73 7B 73 80 78 70 70 GO 00 64 62 3 a.

m. 4 a. m. 5 a. m.

0 a. m. 7 a. m. 8 a.

m. 9 a. m. 10 a. m.

11 a. m. 12 noon 1 p. m. 2 p.

m. 3 p. in; 4 p. in. 5 p.

m. 0' p. m. 7 p. m.

8 p. m. 9 p. in. 10 p.

m. 11 p. m. 12 RcnssclaiT police are continuing Ihcir probe of a daring daylight robbery of a gasoline service station next door to City 56; Hall and Police Headquarters on Broadway at Derrick street 521 56 60 66 70 74 76 about 3 Saturday. McKay of East Green, bush, an attendant at lhc station operated by Charles Wood of Castlcton, told police that a man came in and asked for change to use the telephone.

McKay save him the change and 78 then went lo work on an a 82' A time later, McKay 84'came back-and the youth was 88'Zone, and so was S90 from a cash 86 drawer. 84 It was not determined whclh- the youth had an auto nearby or whether he fled on foot. McKay described the youth as being white, a 20 years old. weighing about 180 pounds, and Aus. If! 1 a.

m. 60 2 a. m. 58 about 5 feel 11 inches tall. Aus.

20 I He said the robber had black 1 a. m. 63 hair, wore a black and green 2 a. m. 62 3 a.

m. 61 Yesterday's weather: fair. i temperatures in the i to no avail. striped checkered shirt, black pants, and had a pimply face. Police were notified immediately and a search i i but eighties.

Sunrise today: 0:06 a.m. Sunset today; 7:59 p.m J. SLATTERY SK. E. J.

Slattery, County He Can Win Sfe Rep. Samuel S. Stralton told a gathering of the East GreenbushJ Democratic Club yesterday was the lone Democratic candi-j date for governor, "announcedjy-w or proposed." capable of defeat-' A iiiE Gov. Nelson A Rockefeller A and i a Democratic- 000 ally-controlled Legislature" i 1 November. This is the second i the gasoline station had been i bed.

When it was operated by another persons it was the scene i A small roadway separates llhe station from the city hall I building. Police headquarters 11111 is in (he rear of the city hail! a a from the station Chief of Police Charles Stew- I art is directing the investigation. Edward J. Slattery a i I Trojan who a his residence for the last two years at 52 Ford A with his wife, the former A Bobrinitz, died yesterday morning a Leonard Hospital after a short illness. He retired two years ago as bar manager of Airport Inn.

Mr. Slaltery, brother of the laic Capt. John Slattery the In a speech prepared for A fire of undetermined origin Trov Fire rj ep ij vec 0 Democratic session at the Hide-' a large barn and a 1-Janto his "life in the a section of away Grove, the a a i i on the rpruperty the city, congressman said key to nichaJl J. Bunk Pine He nrvcd in the a in i of a Democratic Lcgisla-: Woods road. Town of a i 1 World War II.

from 1942 to lure lay upstate and only an up-! oke. between Melrose and 1945, a a i i the rale of ma- slalc candidate could carry cinstrcet Park, about class. Ho was ricts needed to upset the a a and kept i a i a of Sacred Heart on the Crcw4 on sccne nii Church, a member of its Holy By RICK WAK.NIUI "Art for art's is a cliche that has been used time and time again. It is not uncommon to hear of an artist who has forsaken his creative ideals for the more prai'tical rewards of commercial art. It is uncommon, however, to hear of a commercial artist going creative as one Trojan.

Stewart H. Bender of 34 8th has done. Mr. Bender is a retired commercial artist who has developed a series of intricate pen- line drawings and designs a i from portraits, done from memory, to immensely detailed China plate patterns. His collection of work, accumulated since his retirement in 1952, includes a number of religious drawings, crests and coats of arms and historical impressions.

The most i i a of Mr. Bender's art is its emphasis on detail and the precision of designs created with no other i a a simple compass. Each is a work of craftsmanship achieved through tedious labor on every small aspect nf a work. Effective colors have been produced with moistened crayon pencils One series in the collection, which the artist is currently developing portray scenes from the life of Jane M(Aac taken from a historical account of a young Fort Edward girl at the time of the American Revolution. In first.

Jane receives messages from her British lover. a i a Jones. In another, her brother, an American colonel, pleads i Jane In end her romance. The other two depict I i a massacres of the McCrac a i and the Allen family near Argyle in 1777. Mr.

Bender began his career at 17 when he entered the Army during World War I. He started producing re-- A the war he did a great deal of commercial illustrating, having earn ed a reputation in the Army. Theatrical and movie posters were his specially for a while. He worked for the Union Pa cilic Kailroad as an i a tor for several years and a opened a sign a i i shop in Syracuse. He has been a resident of Rensselaer since 1936.

In this lime he didn't restrict his talents to art alone but exercised a literary flair by completing a novel- and Iwo plays. Tracing his ancestry back lo live prominent upper Hudson Valley families, Van Cortlandt, Delancy, Schuyler, Ov- crdonk and Van Benher (Bender), has been a side interest with hirti. He has decided a Rensselaer County is where he belongs i i i i posters and cartoons a backward evolution of the and illustrations for the serv- artist from commercial to ice publication and creative. entrenched GOP hold Legislature. i 10 a.m.

yesterday. Name Society and a member of a a a Post, Ameri- The East Greenbush organi-j Fire Chief a i a Baisley of Noble zation has taken the lead in pro-jHemstreet Park Fire Legion, moling a slate of convention! reeled i from his Surviving besides his wife delegates in Rensselaer i and a a aid a are a son. Edward J. SlatKry pledged to Stratlon's crew from Metrose. two sisters.

a a torial candidacy. Bunk told i officials i Slattery and Leonard Stratton said. "The key lo a the blaze was discovered of Troy: and several nieces and election of a Democratic I i Ros-s. a a farmer, i nephews, islaturc lies upstate. We a a a i Hemslreet The a will be the New York City legislators', Park i i i Mr.

day at 9 a.m. the No Word As To Identity Of Body Found In River Who was (lie middle-aged man found floating, face-down In Ihe Hudson River Saturday afternoon? As deep as the current of the Hudson is the mystery which Ms drowning. i He may be Larkin." Mis a le "Burns." The number "55842" may have something to do i his identity. Saturday afternoon, a doctor from the staff of St. Mary's Hospital, cut off both hands of the drowning victim.

These were immediately sent by airplane to the FBI laboratory in Washington. D. C. In Washington it will be determined whether the man was .1 veteran of military service or had a criminal record. This information will be forwarded to Troy.

The Troy Police Rensselaer Coroner Anthony E. Matera and the personnel of the James J. Clinton Bros. Funeral Home( where the body is bein" held) are awaiting word from the FBI. As of press i early i morning no i i a i hail received by any of the three.

His possessions were clean, I but meager, when his body was searched by police Saturday. Only a dime and two pennies found in a pocket of his He was clean shaven. His 'clothing was inexpensive, but showed repeated washings. The body was first observed I I A IUE1IAM Indonesian Girl To Attend Area School An Indonesian girl. 18-year-; a pleasure boat owner as it was floating south in the swift current near Division street.

i 12:45 Za(m old Meilia Ideham of a a 0 cc mat masin. Borneo, will a the press and rad Columbia High School. East i and television media to find Greenbush. for the year starting! 5 0 1 0 wh i 5 c- i description, in a i was sent in September. a a Meilia, who will live with via radio and TV.

Newspapers Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R. Sanford! carried description of his phys- of Nassau during her stay i i a this country, is the first i student lo attend i a under an international scholar. He was described as being a man in his early 40s.

His weight was listed as 175 pounds and he stood about six feet in TROJAN ARTIST--Stewart H. Bender, 62, of 34 8th a retired commercial artist who has gone creative, looks over pen line portraits done in a style he has developed over the last 10 years. His drawings are characterized by an emphasis on minute details and are products of painstaking craftsmanship. ana yS Many Traffic Accidents Library Sets now, but we need to carry As-i whose home is some distance a Home. 493 a i TXT 1 1 I sembly districts and Senate dis- away.

and at 9:30 a.m. A I Ol IvSllOlJ i upstate." When i a i I he i Sacred Heart where a'JLll CCl Cl TT CCIVC'IIH A "In all frankness," a of Ihe large 9 0 4 0 ft Requiem Mass will be i nr ur '( 111 Sfni'lPS said, "not a single one of I a was a a i in'-crno. a I will be other announced candidates Lost in the blaze were a cow in St. Mary's Cemetery. governor, and certainly none of and calf and some 1.300 bales these weekly i a balloon can-i hay recently placed in the a didates that we are being treat-: Mr.

has estimated his loss cU'll). Accidents on area highways over the weekend included: A three-year-old girl's a i from a moving car, three Trojans; when their a knocked down a utility pole, a lone driver provided by East Green- i His hair, receding from bush Chapter, American Field i fo chca(I was a i 0 bc bc 1( curly and black. He wore size She will continue to study i shoc a 38 illch lavonle subjects, book-! Ht had no tattoos or keeping and economics, at a a wcrc cal umbia Meilia a speak ng-j a fingernails lish, German and Arabic. and an writes in an a i a i i by the man a Her interests include! singing, volleyball, a i and swimming. After her year at i a the I i a sirl plans to re- i turn to her homeland where AVJll will i studying eco- I i at a university.

A vi A i i I A I The American Field UAlllcll I sponsorsiiip of i i a was sup-; (ported by Ihe Sliidcnl Councils Columbia High and East; The Troy Public Library will Greenliu-h i Schools. Mrs Catherine McTigue of (Continued on Page 2U BODY host a workshop on chi.dren's story hours Wednesday at 11 I injured when his vehicle cu to now. can possibly hope to a between S7.5CO and S8.000,' a power pole in half and the -ere removed to make any inroads upstate a i a covered by insurance. WealllCl 1 Oil i a a cal a TM i He charged Gov. Rockefeller! Also los! was a rake a a four-car crash in Troy.

Hudson Library Federation had neglected the upstate wagon. Mr Bunk said. I Get out the fans and up jhree-vear-old Juliana Saxby, 1 According to hospital author- lies. "If he Governor) had Fireman had to a water the air conditioners. The muggy xassau was playing in i i Miss Breen and Kennedy Lincoln former vice refused examination.

Thurber transportation to Ihe i president of Troy Division, e5CUC a.m. in Ihe a i library. States, travel here, and a a AOH Auxiliary, died yesterday session is sponsored by the Up- allowance. i at her home after a Meilia's regular residence i she was (he wife with her parents in a a -mrrin masin. a city with a a i 0 I a The leader will be Mrs.

Elizabeth Lockhart of the Contra of 176.000. II is the capital i Mrs. was daughter Costa. California, County i a i a a Province, in 1 of (lie late Patrick and Mary and injureo tne UJCK it i her head, authorities Investigating Patrolman Wil- the New York State Library. The children's She was treated at Samaritan Iliani E.

Plummer of Water- The program is open grocer. ollc tic legislators you after the i had been; a ked' with "temperatures in i HospUaTforT in Rensselaer brought control. Mr. the moist 80s and the nights! a an abrasions jber said he was traveling sou a is a added industries lo the state, a Ihe Hudson River several Reason is back in town, for ibac'k' of her father's car he claims, then what has been: miles i a I few days at least. The day morning and acci- was treated for a lacerated done for Rensselaer County?" The barn a a slate roof predicts higher i a a the door nose and facial abrasions, a ockhart was 1 5 0 a a of BoTMTM 101 Burke Hannigan.

A native of "I say in all humility that I which a collapsed and the I temperatures and increasing she 0 the pave-1 signed himself out of the hos-! a miles from the Java Sea. i i a j.cTi-ue had ream the only announced or and leanto were leveled, i i i today, tomorrow and a injured the back a i cnitctren consultant i sis(er a a broll cr i pective candidate who has The large a i of hay Wednesday, remotest chance of helping elect i to smoulder for several a cloudy days will be Democratic night Stratton said. said a there was be harbored in the a Stratton attacked Douglas I chctricity in the barn and 1505 Expected showers are (o! Hudson, Rensselaer County i he nor Mr. Rose could a publican chairman, saying he; venture any cause for the blaze. i i I "failed miserably to "look Chief Baislcy is continuing an A low pressure system, hover-1 for Ihe economic interests of the i i a i A fire western Great I uceration on the Police slated a I i a i a us tees an abrasions jber said he was traveling south hnn i rtp 0 i Boulder.

After in the road about 4:45 a.m.. with ch school peisonncl and iur inu CLUUUIIUL IIHUIuiia UL me over tne western a i i QQ county." i Mechanicville Fire Dept. Lakes is a a wilh County Route 89, He concluded by staling a was sent to tfrs Park fringe of i i primary vote for Stratton would iire station lo a by. a Tllc a a 0 i of aS; au the child was rc-' i Breen a Kennedy in interested in the lechni- cm auo when he was of story telling. Mrs.

Lock- The'mishap occured at 11:30 blinded by the high- a ent series to chil- ySterday on of a ge of fivc 99, about a S6 in the Thurber told Officer Plum- a a i at i a a "strike a blow for a better break for Rensselaer County, and chance lo restore some of the DIED late has shifted to the south- COLLIS--At Ihe re Ion Ave Cohoo sidcnce. 21 Johns-! 7 13. 1962. a power pole on the i i i a east side. The auto.

Green-bush Station i i a of pll mmer said a lane, rojd lhc hc Troopers from the East; i i The scattered i I one and one-half fool thick jobs and economic activity this! William J. Coins, husband of a 5 jn hring showers i county of Uncle Sam so urgent-! sevorai nieces possible but no ly needs." Apparently blinded by (wo Hc said the hicle Mrs. Opoka Stricken At Home, Dies Mrs. Mary Cicha Opoka, 55. leader will discuss the i pies of story telling, sources of was fatally stricken early yes- Man's Wife Finds His.

Stolen Auto A car owned by Robert Haynes of Hoosick Falls and reported by him as a i been stolen at 2:30 a.m. yesterday was found by his w'ifc in a North street a i lot in 'Bennington. Vt. The discovery w'as made before it had been reported to Benninglon police As the thief had taken and nephews. Funeral Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock from lhc 'Stanton a Home, 326 Columbia a 0:30 at St.

Agnes' Church whore a Solemn High Mass "ill be celebrated. I St. Agnes Cemetery. a i and i mny call at the a home Monday afternoon a evening. At Sand Lake, X.

Aug. 17. Itcv. George Wallace Doherty, husband of Mildred Hillis Butler: a of Mrs. John Tashjian of Mechanicville and Robert C.

Wllkanowski of Northport. 1, a a of David a a a a Tashjian. i Lynn and Susan Wilkanowski: of Mrs. i i a Hammond of Baltimore. and Mrs.

J. Harmon Wilson of West Orange, N. J. Funeral service Monday after. car kev.s with i the a i 1 noon at 2 o'clock at the First i Presbyterian Church of Sand Lake.

(OH police niOVCCl (he Car to a interment Union Cemetery. Sand location and locked (he doors i Mr. Haynes come a i BORN BOYCE At a a i a Hospital. Aus. 17.

1962. to Mr. and Mrs. Boycc, a son, James A. to Kenneth and Charlotte.

Mrs. Boyce is the former Beverly Coons. IN MEMORIAM ABBOTT In lovijic memory of a i Kelson passed Aug. 20. 1938.

would 1 alvc to clasp i liaml, His dear kind face- to cr: To a his volte, io see his smile, That meant so much to mr. DAUGMTKH, SADIE. MAXON In loving memory of my mot hoi and grandmother, C'lytic Maxon ho 20 1957. WAUGirTEK KLSIK AND A I I MAXON nod railed Lake. In lieu of flowers conlriliu- lions to the First Presbvtenan Church of Sand Lake will he appreciated.

a i A 18, 19GZ. beloved husband of Helen J. O'Brien: a of Bart J. McNally. William T.

and P. Fcnnclly; brother of Mrs. Catherine i a of Albany, Joseph J. and Mrs. William Cone; also survived by nine grandchildren.

Funeral from Leahy's Funeral Home. 336 Third Tuesday morning at 9 o'clock, thence Church at 9:30 a Kcqiltcm High Mass will be celebrated. Friends may eall Monday a and cvcninR. FORD At Masonic Home, Utk-a. Aus.

17. 1962. Belle Lowric of Wa- tcriord, of the latr Gcor.ee W. In i mem Maxo Ford; aunt of Charles fi. Si-.

Kunt'ral from I Finn Funeral Home. 102 Third a Tuesday i al I I o'clock with the Rev. Fred. Rogers officiating. Friends may call al the funeral home Monday from 7 lo 10 p.m.

L. of 16 tievan St Coluies at Cohoes i a Hospital, A widow of Charlrs .1. of Ver, home, -i vears a.qo today. A 1937. I cannot Hvr Ihc days Your hand I cannot touch.

1 treasure golden memories Of mother I loved so MEDICI In lovins memory of my mother. Marie who oasscd away 7 vears aeo A 20, 1955. God saw Ihe road was seltlnt roush. The hills were hard to ellmh; He renlly closed her lovlnR eyes. And whispered, "Peace he thine.

Her weary hours, her day of pain, Her weary nlshls are pasl; Her ever a i worn ou! frame, 1 nnn C. Orosc of Cohoes: i of Mrs. i i of a a Funeral Tuesday Afternoon at o'clock from the Durresnc a Home. 21fi Columbia St. I i iti Oakwootl i Troy.

Friends may call Monday after. noon and evening. I A Samaritan Hos- nltal. Aus. 17, 19B2, Helen F.

Hulchlnson of i Hudson Green Island; riaup liter of the late Samuel N. and Kmma Taft Hntrhiiison; stater of i i a F. iliilchlnsftn of Latham and E. Warner Hutchliibon of Modesto, Calif. Funeral al the Funeral Home, M7 Hudson Green Islaiv'i, Monday a at 2 o'clock.

I In Oak wood Cemetery tinuous rain is in sight. DIED -At 5 a a i Hospital, 1862, Mary Elizabeth Mc- I of an auto carrying two pas- in Waierford-'Mechanic- carried 20 or more fee, and sengers JEAVONS Aug. 17 wife of Robert .1. Jeavons; daughter of Isabel Campbell and the laic Thomas H. McGrath sister of Mrs.

M. Boucher of Cleverdale, N.Y.. Mrs. John J. Cietck and Thomas H.

Mi-Grath botll of Wynantskill; also survived by sev. 32 nf cral nieces and nephews. a from tne i Funeral Home. r.4:t Third Wa- tervlict. morninc al 8:45 o'clock, thence to St.

a Mie Apostle's Church. Troy, where a Requiem Hiph Mass will bc celc- brated at 9:30 o'clock. I St. Patrick's Cemetery, Watervliet. I A St.

Mary's Hospital, A 1C. 19G2. James" F. Kcrwin, son of the a Stephen and Mary Kelly Kcrwin: brother of Joseph Marie Lawrence and the a John J. Kerwin.

Also survived by 13 nieces and nephews. Funeral from the residence, 305 Third St. at Ida Monday morning at 9:.10 o'clock; thence to St. Mary's Church where at 10 o'clock Solemn High Mass of Requiem villc road crossed Ihe highway, struck and sheared off a power pole early yesterday morning. came to rest on a roadside lawn.

Officer Plummer said the driver of the other auto was unknown and no arrests in the William H. Thurber. 24, a 5 werc made. A routine '03 Burden operator, cc 0 the smashed car re- material, the types of stories and other points of interest for the benefit of the adults. i Two other workshops on this 1 subject are scheduled by the 'federation.

The iirst is tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. in Rensse- lacrvilli'. and the second will be Thursday at 10:30 a.m. in Berlin. Miss Barbara Breen.

20. of 661 vcale'd no mechanical defects, 7lh and Joseph passengers, (Continued on Page 31) ACCIDENTS Collecting Coupons terday i at her residence. 870 51 Ave. Mrs. Opoka was administered oxygen by Peler Hickey.

i i a iMcNa- mara and James Dion of the Pneoiator Squad, and laler removed to St. Mary's Hospital aided in Troy 60 years. She was a i a of St. Joseph's Church, and member of the Rosary Society. i Surviving are four daughters, Mrs.

Alfred Toombs, Mrs. Joseph Hull and Mrs. Charles Carroll of Troy, and Mrs. Henry i a of Levittown, L. four sons, Edward J.

and Francis P. McTigue of Troy, a i JlcTigue of Florida, and John T. McTiguc of New York City; three sisters, Mrs. Charles Mc- Caim and Mrs. Frank Bohan Troy, and Miss A a Hannigan of Ireland; one brother, Peter a i a of Ireland; 13 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.

Funeral services will be Wednesday at f) a.m. from Purcell where she pronounced Bros Funeral Home, Jackson dead on arrival. Rensselaer a a from st Joseph's Church County Coroner Thomas A. where a Solemn Requiem Mass Styles was called. Patrolmen I will be celebrated.

I SL Joseph's Ceme- of Berlin arc collecting be (Philip J. Purcein Funeral Home, Jackson and Third 1 dav i at 9 o'clock, tiier will be sung. I St. Joseph's Church wlicrc Comet cry. Relatives and friends o'clock a Solemn i i llcqtiiem Mass will be celebrated st 9 o'clock.

Friends are invited and may rail at a home Tuesday from 3 to 10 o'clock. Interment In St. Michael's Come- are Invited. MALONEY--Joseph D. of It.l).

No. 1. Crooked Lake, Aug. 13. 1962.

a of Margaret Fountain: a of -Mrs. Daniel Cunning of Troy; Robert of Edward of VJsrhors Ferry and Richard of Cohoes; brother of Mrs. A W. Coon of Crooked Lake; Mrs. Irving Woodin of I Tuesday a and evening.

Plense 'omit flowers. A 18. 19G2. Cfcllc DeHsle. u-lfc of William G.

Xully of 6 a a a of Mrs, a a Pellsle of Cohoc.s; sister of Mrs. Thomas a a a of Schenectady; Mrs. Kearney of a a Long Islnnd; Mrs. Honi Mirto of i cry, a i Mrs. A Frlnk of Little Silver, Now Jersey; Mrs.

Beatrice Jarvis, Mrs. Patrick O'Rourkc and Arrhond Dcllslc of Cohoes: of William F. of Cohoes Funcrfil 10:30 a.m. Tuesday from A. G.

Rolvin's Sons Funeral Home, 70 Congress Colioes, Solemn Requiem Mas? St. 1 Asncs' Churcli 11 a.m. may rail Monday a a evening. Schencctadv; Mrs. Inez Xicgler of Troy; James J.

of Albany and John .1. Maloney of Colioes. Funeral Wednesday morning at 9 o'clock from the Dufrcsnc Funeral Home. 21fi Columbia St. and 9:30 o'clock from SI.

A Rues' Church where a Solemn Requiem Mass will be offered. I Si. Agne.s' Cemetery, Cohoes. Frit mis' may call Monday evening and Tuesday a and evening. A I a i a Fischer a of Dutch Village, I I al Alba Menand.s N.

Auc. 1962.1 leal Center, A 17. i of Dr. Thomas McC.raii, M.D.; mollier of Mrs Willl.im K. Jr.

of Troy, N. Martin A. Delancy Jr. of London- vlllc, N. and Thomas H.

Mr- fJrall of McI.Cfln, slslcr of Mrs. Fdward Rerg o( Y. Mrs. Burl Hariincion of ton. and Mr.s.

Archibald Rascy of Aliadona, a i She Is also survived by ten a i dren. Funeral pi I vale at I ho convenience of Ihe family. Kindly omit flowers. Those who wish may Tiinkc contributions In lhc A i can Cancer Soclciy. A a by M.

W. Tcbbutt'i Sons. Hose i of the a A J. Phillips mother of the Rev. George A.

Phillips, St. Mary's Church. Onconta, N. and A .1. Jr.

of Tioy; of Mrs- a R. Nugent and Miss Mac of a N. the Misses Anna and Marguerllc Jtidpc of troy, and Mrs. Norman Bolt of Xor'tli Cambridpc. N.

also survived by two a i a from the J. W. Burns' Snns, I Fifth A a Chapel, Monday morning al 10 o'clock, thence to St. Peter's Church at 10:30 o'clock a Solemn Requiem High Mass i be Mine I In SI. Peler's Cemetery.

ROY Uoherl. of a PM.VS. L. on A 17. iband nf Iv late" ca'pti" John Slattery.

T. F. n. and a i Opoka; four sisters, first Funeral i at pr a nciS Dilda of A a I Stupplcbccm. construct the sidewalks in Bcn- Tuesday evening at o'clock and members of the Holy Name Society will meet at 8 o'clock.

A At Leonard Hospital, 19, Sahlna S. of Ml Second Finipr. ncsdav at 8:3 services will bc cd- Brother-in-law, on sidewalk con- Jl 1H-O II i i I nl- am. from WM- i and as a letter i liam A. Toohey Funeral memorial I r.oi 543 2nd Ave.

and at 9 a.m his rolircmcnl in rail al the a horn Monday i and TiiPMla a am! i Mcd- Fran- els V. O'Brien of i wick. husband of a a O'Brien: a nf Carl Frank a .1, O'Brien of Center Brunswick; Teresa O'Brien of Santa Monica. and Barbara A. O'Brien of Center Brunswick; or? Harold M.

O'Brien of Raymertown and also the late Mrs. Lucy Kaukol; also survived by len grandchildren. Funeral Monday from the Howard B. Talc Funeral Home, Raymertown, at a.m., thence to Our Lady of Victory Church at where A Solemn Requiem Mass will he cclebrAled. I in St.

John's Cemetery, iD-baml nf a am; i i i i Services a Brocket! a A Leonard llosnllal. A i I I a L. L. a Any. 20th al 11 a.m.

I Oakwood Cemetery, Troy, 2 p.m. '1'ucsday. SAYERS--Suddenly al St Mary's i Hospital. Aug. Ift, Myron K.

Sayors, beloved hus-band of Dorothy Wager Savers; devoted a of'lUchard E. Sayers and Mrs. John Salmon; step-son of Mrs. ficraldlne Sayors of Plllsfield, grnnd- a of William and Mary Ann and Tammy Salmon. mortal Chanel Crematorium In Funeral the John J.

San-lonhwooct Cemetery for follow- vldge Funeral Home. St, and his: Fourth Tuesday KTHKI. in. a A. Weber, a 1 of Kllcn SnrdPcnr; a of i I F.

and Edward C. Weber: i nf Mrs, Faniff: ur- vivetl by ton a i and five jireal-grandchildren. Funeral from Fonda's Funeral Home, M7 River Wednesday at a lime to be a i the last week services were held In the (Jnrrtner Karl Me- at 2 p.m. FrifVJHl.s may call Monda a and evening, I Kaglf: Cemetery. HELEN M.

LAMSON, C.XOROK PFKUFFF.R, LUCIA 11F.KKS. Survivors itu'Hule one Mrs. Trlrsphore a i i i a i nnp son Kretlcnck'of Newark, onr brother. Royal of a a one The Rpnscslacr County Mrs. I.aurn Webster ol cular Dysti-ophy Assn.

i firnnington. and one grandson a Rubie corrcsponfl-l a i 15 3rd SI. A card parly for the build- Plans also were discussed ins of Berlin's First Bap- the Junior-sponsored a list will be held i a urday at Central Park in Sclir-al n.m. in Veterans Me- npctady a Home in.

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About The Troy Record Archive

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