1
u- ItffrW Manhattan Avenue, Brooklyn 22, N. Y. DEATH NOTICES Gallagher Margaret Gallagher, of J42-K 91st ave.. B*UeroM. formerly of Gxeen- potot. on kit*. 8. l«5; beloved wife of Charlaa A.; dear mother of Helen Hurley. Francta X. tnd Kenneth J.: dear tUter of Thomaa, William and Junes O'Keefe: also survived by four zrmndehildren Funeral from the StaUaun Funeral Home. 224-39 Ja- maica a»e,, Queens Village on Thurs- day tt 1.15 A M Solemn mass of re- quiem at St. Gregory's. Roman Cath- olic Church. B^Ueroae. at 9:45 A.M. Burial wa* in &.. Charlea' Cemetery. Farmlngdale. Moran Patrick J. Moran, of 57 Jewel St.. on Aag. 4. 1965: dear husband of later; loving father of Francix X.: deaf brother of Helen Grundy The funeral was held .from the Edward A. Bowling Funeral Home an Monday at 9 A.M. Solemn requiem mass was offered tn St. Anthony of Padua Roman Cath- olic Churcn at, 9:3i A.M.. Burial was in Calvary Cemetery. IN MEMORIAM Maciak In .'^nd memory of our beloved friend. WALTER MACIAK. who entered eternal rev Aug. 12. 1964. MRS. KATHLEEN LEONARD «n1 MRS. ROBERT O'NEILL. Maciak In loving memory of my beloved father. WALTER MACIAK. *-!^rr» G<M called home Auf. 12. 1964. %ta» Re Rest In Peace Dauber. JACQUELINE DE DONA. Maciak In lovmz memory ->f rrv oe.-vved husband *nd father, WALTER MACIAK. *^r> -\ ed Aug. 12. 1954 Always la Our Hearts. Loving Wif». ALICE, and Son, WALTER. Maciak in .oving memory of our beloved son-in-law. W *LTF.R MACIAK. w-horr God called home Aug. 12. 1964. May He Rest In Peace. MRS LUCILLE BURKE. Dausl-.ter-ln-Law. MARION. and Son-ln-Law. JOHN. .PaaClJUC - -la fond memory . of my godfather. WALTER MACIAK,. who departed this life AM... 13. 1964. Godchild. KATHLEEN O'NEILL. HUGH A. KID Funeral Hone 1S3 Green point Ave. EV 9-3656 Edward A. Dowling FUNERAL HOME 92 Norman Ave., Brooklyn ChmptU Av*ilmblt Evtrywhtrt Air Condition** O ftf. Jff7 i el. EV 3-0777 f\ = FUNERAl HOME Fine Facilitie* 102 Norman Avenue EV 3-2626 3 A. CHESTER SMITH FUNERAL HOME \ 122 MeseroU Ave. \ Is*. IV 94077 ••i. IV 9-6713 1 •Win I. Horw.ll, Manager JOHN SMOLENSK! FUNERAL HOME int. UOB P. Klementowics AcmweS Funeral Director and Owner 1 M 4 MANHATTAN AVE. EV 9-4170-1 Obituaries Patrick J. Moran Patrick J. Moran of 57 Jewel street, died Aug. 4. He was a retired employe Of the Department of Marine and Aviation and the hus- band of Ester Moran. He is also survived by a son Francis X., and a sister, Helen Grundy. A requiem mass was of- fered in St. Anthony of Pa- dua Roman Catholic Church Monday at 9:30 A.M. Burial was in Calvary Cemetery. Mr. Moran was a life long resident of Greenpoint. Margaret Gallagher M ! «r g a r e t Gallagher of 242-25 91st avenue, Belle- rose, formerly of Greenpoint, died Aug. 8. She is survived by her husband, Charles A., a daughter, Helen Hurley, two sons, Francis X. and Ken- neth Jr.; three brothers, Thomas, William and James O'Keefe and four grandchil- dren. . A requiem mass was of- fered Thursday at St. Greg- ory'^ Roman Catholic Church at 9:45 A. M. Burial was in St. Charles Cemetery, Farm- ingdale. Mary B. Zatonski M a r y Baginski Zatonski, 51, of 198 Kings land avenue, died after a short illness on Thursday,;'Aug. 5. She was bom in Vermont and had lived : in ' 'Greenpoint for 27 years. She Was an employee of Shankman's Department Store lor many years. She is survived by a son, Thomas, a sister, Agnes Oc- zechowski, a brother, John, nieces and nephews. A requiem mass was of- fered at St. Stanislaus Kos- tka Roman Catholic Church Monday. Burial followed in the family plot in St. Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale, un- der the direction of John StoHterski.' Ontario Rebuilding Shrine STB.. MARIE AMONG- THE-HURONS, Ont. (AP) —The Ontario governmen t is spending $1 million to re- construct the first European settlement in this Canadian provinces It is a tiny, palisaded vil- lage near the shores of Georgian Bay. From 1639 to 1649 it housed a Jesuit mission among the Huron Indians. / When the p a i n s t a king work is completed in 1967, Ste.. Marie will look as it did when it housed the Hur- ons and 58 Frenchmen who in the 1640s r e p r e s e n t e d nearly a quarter of the white population of New France. The village was the home of six of North America's eight French Jesuit martyrs. Five were killed by the Iro- quois within a few miles of Ste. Marie and a shrine—St. Joseph's Roman C a t h o l i c Church — has been built nearby. The other three Jesuit martyrs died at Auriesville, N. Y., near Albany, where a sister shrine has been built. A Truly Thoughtful Servict Chapels Available In Al Uoti«M Completely AlcCondit'd MIZGALSKI FUNERAL HOME, INC. 944 MANHATTAN AYE. Cor. JAVA ST. If* Ifr ARTHUR IAVERST0CK 1 SON IMC Funeral Director OFFICE A CHAPEL *JfcC0N»tT10NE» CRAMl 1010 Lerimor Stroot Phono EV 9-3973 : ! J JOHN G. RUDY Funeral Director Chapel Accommodations In All Neighborhoods 102 NORMAN AVE. C*r. LEONARD ST. EV 3-2626 rTOllllltMil fUNERM. HOME LTD. Conditioned Chapels Available in All Areas UB8&1, Mgr. RITA 8TOBIERSK1 LUCAS •TOBISftSKl HENRY F. STOBIERSK1 UCIMSD IMOftUJCttS AVLuui EV 34127 o. EV 3-7910 GREENPOINT WEEKLY STAR, FRIDAY, AUG! *d? 13, 1933 Tel spi. on e K V ergr. en y (K",r, 3 BREB MLS The House Although homebuyers recognize the importance of closet space, many of them, especially those buying a house for the first time, often find it difficult to ac- curately appraise their closet needs. To aid such homebuyers, the Brooklyn Real Estate Board's Multiple Listing Service, Bay Ridge area, sug- gests a simple formula for determining whether a pros- pective house has enough closet space for both present and future needs. John A. Salvatore, MLS chairman, said that as a gen- eral rule of thumb, there should be a minimum of two closets for every adult and at least one for every child. He noted that it is also advantageous to have one large linen closet and also SA News Brooklyn The Salvation Army has raised $9,557 toward a $12,- 000 Brooklyn quota of the over-all goal of $85,000 for its 1965 Greater New York Camp Appeal, it was an- nounced today by Eldon C. Hanes, Brooklyn annual ap- peal chairman and general commercial manager of the New York Telephone Com- pany. He urged the public "to act quickly" to raise the re- maining $2,443 needed of the Brooklyn quota to help pro- vide Borough youngsters, many from depressed areas, with summer camping ex- periences. Hanes said The Salvation Army hoped to enroll more than 200 Brooklyn boys and girls, 7-to-16-year-olds, dur- ing its four camping periods at the Army's Star Lake Camp n e a r Bloomingdale, N.J. Colonel William E. Cham- berlain, Director of Greater New York Operations, said The Salvation Army expects to provide more than 30,000 days of camping services to children enrolled this sum- mer at Star Lake Camp during the four camping .periods that began June 29 and will close August 24. Contributions may be sent to: The Salvation Army Camp Appeal, 164-66 Monta- gue street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 11201. Air Force Counters Space Peril By THOMAS R. HENRY WASHINGTON — O n e major peril of future space flights is puncture of the space craft by bullet-like micrometeorites, believed to be abundant above earth's atmosphere. Such punctures permit escape of a spacecraft's in- ternal atmosphere, which is essential to life. The crew would soon be in a complete vacuum. To counter this even- tuality, the U.S. Air Force materials laboratory has developed a method for the immediate self-sealing of any such punctures. The method entails the establishment of two spaced, impermeable barriers next to the craft's outer wall. Be- tween the two barriers, two liquid chemicals are placed. When a puncture takes place these fluids mix and solidify, Instantly sealing the hole. NO LBJ FOREIGN TRIP WASHINGTON (AP) — President Johnson plans no foreign travel this year but hopes to schedule speaking tours to widely separated parts of the nation in the fall as part of a "Report to the People" program. /f =% The Same Pains- taking Care Is Part of Every Service it AT OUR establishment prices may vary depend- ing on the merchandise selected—but the service remains the same what- ever the price range se- lected— complete in every detail, reverent in every aspect. We do not believe in pressing our recom- mendations upon the family and their choice remains free and unre- stricted Our main con- cern is the quality of our service—it must be the hlsrhest In every instance. Evergreen FUNERAL HOME 131 NASSAU AVE Call EV 3.8600 or 0320 Pater Rag*, I k a w d Mgr. \ J> >^. Helps Hunters one or two guest closets in the house. "Of course, the more closets the better," he said, "but if a home meets these minimum requirements, there should be enough closet space." Salvatore noted that the closet needs of a family could be significantly re- duced depending on the pres- ence and size of a basement or garage. These areas, he pointed out, could be used to store various items that would otherwise clutter closets. The Bay Ridge MLS is a cooperative effort on the part of 47 broker-partici- pants. When a property is listed for sale with one mem- ber, the full description of the building and a photo- graph is mailed to each realtor. These offices are represented by nearly 200 brokers and salesmen. Sinatra Yacht In Port Frank Sinatra's chartered luxury yacht was anchored in the Hudson River off 93rd street early this morning, still apparently looking for a place to dock. The 168-foot Southern Breeze unexpectedly cruised into New York harbor yes- terday, carrying among its passengers the 49-year-old entertainer and 19-year-old Mia Farrow, whom Sinatra reportedly will marry. Miss Farrow left the boat last night for an undisclosed destination but returned 25 minutes later to rejoin the group aboard the yacht, which included many show business notables. The yacht came to New York from Martha's vineyard in Mas- sachusetts, where Sinatra and Miss Farrow started their cruise. Roof Garden For Pope VATICAN CITY (AP) - The rooftop of the apostolic palace is being turned into a private garden for Pope Paul VI. Gardeners and architects set to work a week ago after the Roman Catholic Pontiff went to his summer resi dence at Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome. They hope to have the roof garden al most finished when he re turns in September. The gardeners have strip- ped the tiles from the roof and put down a concrete foundation for dirt. The gar den will have potted flowers and trees as well as plants growing in flower beds. It will be like a "formal Italian garden" with paths and hedges, one source said * * * VATICAN circles say the garden was planned as a way to get the Pope to take more fresh air. Unlike his predecessors, Pius XII and John XXIII, Pope Paul sel dom walks in the vast Vati can gardens. He reportedly prefers not to disturb the Vatican police who must provide security if he walks in the gardens. Vatican sources say an elevator will carry the Pope up the one flight from his apartment to the roof. He will be able to visit it when he pleases, without disturb- in sr anyone. The garden is being set back from the edge of the roof so that it cannot be seen from St. Peter's snuare. But it will be visible to tourists climbing to the top of the dome of St. Peter's Basilica. KIDS, LIGHTS HEAT SCHOOL IN MICHIGAN DETROIT (AP) — A new high school in suburban Grosse He has a heating sys- tem which uses the heat generated by children and light bulbs. The self - contained unit collects and stores the heat emitted by human beings and electric lights and heats the building at about two- thirds the normal cost, ac- cording to architect Keith Wetland of Ann Arbor. He said hot air is drawn off and stored in tanks. A compressor later circulates it to rooms which have cooled off because of a drop in the number of occupants or in the temperature. ENGLISH AINDY < & > N. ***' -1 &&! r n 9-/2 SMIDGEI \ -SIGH: \FEEL LIKE WE'RE DRPTING APART.' WE DON'Tf SHARE ANY INTEREST ANYMORE.' HERE, I'LL SHARE THE PAPER WITH YOLL r NO, NO.' I MEAN WE SEEM DISTANT...WE NEED MORE TOGETHERNESS IN THE THINGS WE PO I OKAY, KNIT TO ME WHILE I REAP J „„..., BU1B -_J FRED BASSI appialir If I lay my head on her lap, and fix her with that irresistible ttpnssion of wine... THE RYAT1 SfNGAf i' NANCY lb HA HA HA HA HA HA HA ^ s? • • AUNT FRITZI — ^ LISTEN TO THlSy FUNNY ITEM jT BU SHM it CO*-* A MAN WALKED INTO THE WRONff HOUSE BY MISTAKE AND GOT PINCHED AS A .BURCrLAR T«i.'*.«. U. $. C.t. Of All '!«H» I.IM».J •£ HHfcvL'.l'r i *«••<!.» $,«<..!'« lit. MUTTftJEI FREDDt QUE LIC GREED J '< ... AT'S RIGHT, AN' YOU'D BE FOR MORE... ERNEST, YOU DON'T EVER ,PRECI«TE| WHAT DO FOR YOU/ Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

GREENPOINT WEEKLY STAR, FRIDAY DEATH Obituaries BREB … 23... · The village was the home of six of North America's eight French Jesuit martyrs. Five were killed by the Iro quois

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Page 1: GREENPOINT WEEKLY STAR, FRIDAY DEATH Obituaries BREB … 23... · The village was the home of six of North America's eight French Jesuit martyrs. Five were killed by the Iro quois

u-I t f f r W

Manhattan Avenue, Brooklyn 22, N. Y.

DEATH NOTICES

Gallagher Margaret Gallagher, of J42-K 91st ave.. B*UeroM. formerly of Gxeen-potot. on kit*. 8. l«5; beloved wife of Charlaa A.; dear mother of Helen Hurley. Francta X. tnd Kenneth J.: dear tUter of Thomaa, William and Junes O'Keefe: also survived by four zrmndehildren Funeral from the StaUaun Funeral Home. 224-39 Ja­maica a»e,, Queens Village on Thurs­day tt 1.15 A M Solemn mass of re­quiem at St. Gregory's. Roman Cath­olic Church. B^Ueroae. at 9:45 A.M. Burial wa* in &.. Charlea' Cemetery. Farmlngdale.

Moran Patrick J. Moran, of 57 Jewel St.. on Aag. 4. 1965: dear husband of later; loving father of Francix X.: deaf brother of Helen Grundy The funeral was held .from the Edward A. Bowling Funeral Home an Monday at 9 A.M. Solemn requiem mass was offered tn St. Anthony of Padua Roman Cath­olic Churcn at, 9:3i A.M.. Burial was in Calvary Cemetery.

IN MEMORIAM Maciak

In .'̂ nd memory of our beloved friend.

WALTER MACIAK. who entered eternal rev Aug. 12. 1964.

MRS. KATHLEEN LEONARD «n1 MRS. ROBERT O'NEILL.

Maciak In loving memory of my beloved father. WALTER MACIAK.

*-!̂ rr» G<M called home Auf. 12. 1964. %ta» Re Rest In Peace

Dauber. JACQUELINE DE DONA.

Maciak In lovmz memory

->f rrv oe.-vved husband *nd father, WALTER MACIAK.

*^r> -\ ed Aug. 12. 1954 Always la Our Hearts.

Loving Wif». ALICE, and Son, WALTER.

Maciak in .oving memory

of our beloved son-in-law. W *LTF.R MACIAK.

w-horr God called home Aug. 12. 1964. May He Rest In Peace.

MRS LUCILLE BURKE. Dausl-.ter-ln-Law. MARION.

and Son-ln-Law. JOHN. .PaaClJUC

- -la fond memory . of my godfather.

WALTER MACIAK,. who departed this life AM... 13. 1964.

Godchild. KATHLEEN O'NEILL.

HUGH A. KID Funeral Hone

1S3 Green point Ave. •

EV 9-3656

Edward A. Dowling

FUNERAL HOME 92 Norman Ave., Brooklyn

ChmptU Av*ilmblt Evtrywhtrt

Air Condition** O ftf . J f f 7

i el. EV 3-0777 f\ =

FUNERAl HOME

Fine Facilitie*

102 Norman Avenue

EV 3-2626

3

A. CHESTER SMITH

FUNERAL HOME

\ 122 MeseroU Ave. \ Is*. IV 94077

• • i . IV 9-6713 1 •Win I. Horw.ll, Manager

JOHN

SMOLENSK! FUNERAL HOME

int. UOB P. Klementowics

AcmweS Funeral Director and Owner

1 M 4 MANHATTAN AVE. EV 9-4170-1

Obituaries Patrick J. Moran

Patrick J. Moran of 57 Jewel street, died Aug. 4. He was a retired employe Of the Department of Marine and Aviation and the hus­band of Ester Moran.

He is also survived by a son Francis X., and a sister, Helen Grundy.

A requiem mass was of­fered in St. Anthony of Pa­dua Roman Catholic Church Monday at 9:30 A.M. Burial was in Calvary Cemetery.

Mr. Moran was a life long resident of Greenpoint.

Margaret Gallagher M !«r g a r e t Gallagher of

242-25 91st avenue, Belle-rose, formerly of Greenpoint, died Aug. 8.

She is survived by her husband, C h a r l e s A., a daughter, Helen Hurley, two sons, Francis X. and Ken­neth Jr.; three brothers, Thomas, William and James O'Keefe and four grandchil­dren. .

A requiem mass was of­fered Thursday at St. Greg­ory'^ Roman Catholic Church at 9:45 A. M. Burial was in St. Charles Cemetery, Farm-ingdale.

Mary B. Zatonski M a r y Baginski Zatonski,

51, of 198 Kings land avenue, died after a short illness on Thursday,;'Aug. 5. She was bom in Vermont and had lived: in •' 'Greenpoint for 27 years. She Was an employee of Shankman's Department Store lor many years.

She is survived by a son, Thomas, a sister, Agnes Oc-zechowski, a brother, John, nieces and nephews.

A requiem mass was of­fered at St. Stanislaus Kos-tka Roman Catholic Church Monday. Burial followed in the family plot in St. Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale, un­der the direction of John StoHterski.'

Ontario Rebuilding Shrine

STB.. MARIE AMONG-THE-HURONS, Ont. (AP) —The Ontario governmen t is spending $1 million to re­construct the first European settlement in this Canadian provinces

It is a tiny, palisaded vil­lage near the s h o r e s of Georgian Bay. From 1639 to 1649 it housed a Jesuit mission among the Huron Indians. /

When the p a i n s t a king work is completed in 1967, Ste.. Marie will look as it did when it housed the Hur-ons and 58 Frenchmen who in the 1640s r e p r e s e n t e d nearly a quarter of the white population of New France.

The village was the home of six of North America's eight French Jesuit martyrs. Five were killed by the Iro­quois within a few miles of Ste. Marie and a shrine—St. Joseph's Roman C a t h o l i c C h u r c h — has been built nearby.

The other three Jesuit martyrs died at Auriesville, N. Y., near Albany, where a sister shrine has been built.

A Truly Thoughtful

Servict

Chapels Available

In Al Uoti«M

Completely AlcCondit'd

MIZGALSKI FUNERAL HOME, INC. 944 MANHATTAN AYE.

Cor. JAVA ST.

If* Ifr

ARTHUR

IAVERST0CK 1 SON IMC

Funeral Director

OFFICE A CHAPEL *JfcC0N»tT10NE» CRAMl

1010 Lerimor Stroot

Phono EV 9-3973

:

!

J

JOHN G.

RUDY Funeral Director

Chapel Accommodations In All Neighborhoods

102 NORMAN AVE. C*r. LEONARD ST.

EV 3-2626

rTOllllltMil fUNERM. HOME LTD.

Conditioned Chapels Available in All Areas

UB8&1, Mgr. RITA 8TOBIERSK1 LUCAS •TOBISftSKl HENRY F. STOBIERSK1

UCIMSD IMOftUJCttS

A V L u u i EV 34127 o. EV 3-7910

GREENPOINT WEEKLY STAR, FRIDAY, AUG! *d? 13, 1933 Tel spi. on e K V ergr. en y (K",r, 3

BREB MLS The House

A l t h o u g h homebuyers recognize the importance of closet space, many of them, especially those buying a house for the first time, often find it difficult to ac­curately appraise their closet needs.

To aid such homebuyers, the Brooklyn Real Estate Board's Multiple Listing Service, Bay Ridge area, sug­gests a simple formula for determining whether a pros­pective house has enough closet space for both present and future needs.

John A. Salvatore, MLS chairman, said that as a gen­eral rule of thumb, there should be a minimum of two closets for every adult and at least one for every child. He noted that it is also advantageous to have one large linen closet and also

SA News Brooklyn

The Salvation Army has raised $9,557 toward a $12,-000 Brooklyn quota of the over-all goal of $85,000 for its 1965 Greater New York Camp A p p e a l , it was an­nounced today by Eldon C. Hanes, Brooklyn annual ap­peal chairman and general commercial manager of the New York Telephone Com­pany.

He urged the public "to act quickly" to raise the re­maining $2,443 needed of the Brooklyn quota to help pro­vide Borough youngsters, many from depressed areas, with summer camping ex­periences.

Hanes said The Salvation Army hoped to enroll more than 200 Brooklyn boys and girls, 7-to-16-year-olds, dur­ing its four camping periods at the Army's Star Lake Camp n e a r Bloomingdale, N.J .

Colonel William E. Cham­berlain, Director of Greater New York Operations, said The Salvation Army expects to provide more than 30,000 days of camping services to children enrolled this sum­mer at Star Lake Camp during the four camping .periods that began June 29 and will close August 24.

Contributions may be sent to: The Salvation A r m y Camp Appeal, 164-66 Monta­gue street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 11201.

Air Force Counters Space Peril By THOMAS R. HENRY

WASHINGTON — O n e major peril of future space flights is puncture of the space craft by bullet-like micrometeorites, believed to be abundant above earth's atmosphere.

Such punctures permit escape of a spacecraft's in­ternal atmosphere, which is essential to life. The crew would soon be in a complete vacuum.

To counter this even­tuality, the U.S. Air Force materials laboratory has developed a method for the immediate self-sealing of any such punctures.

The method entails the establishment of two spaced, impermeable barriers next to the craft's outer wall. Be­tween the two barriers, two liquid chemicals are placed. When a puncture takes place these fluids mix and solidify, Instantly sealing the hole.

NO LBJ FOREIGN TRIP WASHINGTON (AP) —

President Johnson plans no foreign travel this year but hopes to schedule speaking tours to widely separated parts of the nation in the fall as part of a "Report to the People" program.

/f = %

The Same Pains­taking Care Is

Part of Every Service

it AT OUR establishment prices may vary depend­ing on the merchandise selected—but the service remains the same what­ever the price range se­lected— complete in every detail, reverent in every aspect. We do not believe in pressing o u r recom­mendations u p o n the family and their choice remains free and unre­stricted Our main con­cern is the quality of our service—it must be the hlsrhest In every instance.

Evergreen FUNERAL HOME

131 NASSAU AVE Call EV 3.8600 or 0320

Pater Rag*, Ikawd Mgr.

\ J> >^.

Helps Hunters

one or two guest closets in the house.

"Of course, the more closets the better," he said, "but if a home meets these m i n i m u m requirements, there should be enough closet space."

Salvatore noted that the closet needs of a family could be significantly re­duced depending on the pres­ence and size of a basement or garage. These areas, he pointed out, could be used to store various items that would otherwise clutter closets.

The Bay Ridge MLS is a cooperative effort on the part of 47 broker-partici­pants. When a property is listed for sale with one mem­ber, the full description of the building and a photo­graph is mailed to each realtor. These offices are represented by nearly 200 brokers and salesmen.

Sinatra Yacht In Port

Frank Sinatra's chartered luxury yacht was anchored in the Hudson River off 93rd street early this morning, still apparently looking for a place to dock.

The 168-foot Southern Breeze unexpectedly cruised into New York harbor yes­terday, carrying among its passengers the 49-year-old entertainer and 19-year-old Mia Farrow, whom Sinatra reportedly will marry.

Miss Farrow left the boat last night for an undisclosed destination but returned 25 minutes later to rejoin the group aboard the yacht, which included many show business notables. The yacht came to New York from Martha's vineyard in Mas­sachusetts, where Sinatra and Miss Farrow started their cruise.

Roof Garden For Pope

VATICAN CITY (AP) -The rooftop of the apostolic palace is being turned into a private garden for Pope Paul VI.

Gardeners and architects set to work a week ago after the Roman Catholic Pontiff went to his summer resi dence at Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome. They hope to have the roof garden al most finished when he re turns in September.

The gardeners have strip­ped the tiles from the roof and put down a concrete foundation for dirt. The gar den will have potted flowers and trees as well as plants growing in flower beds.

It will be like a "formal Italian garden" with paths and hedges, one source said

* * *

VATICAN circles say the garden was planned as a way to get the Pope to take more fresh air. Unlike his predecessors, Pius XII and John XXIII, Pope Paul sel dom walks in the vast Vati can gardens. He reportedly prefers not to disturb the Vatican police who must provide security if he walks in the gardens.

Vatican sources say an elevator will carry the Pope up the one flight from his apartment to the roof. He will be able to visit it when he pleases, without disturb-in sr anyone.

The garden is being set back from the edge of the roof so that it cannot be seen from St. Peter's snuare. But it will be visible to tourists climbing to the top of the dome of St. Peter's Basilica.

KIDS, LIGHTS

HEAT SCHOOL

IN MICHIGAN DETROIT (AP) — A new

high school in suburban Grosse He has a heating sys­tem which uses the heat generated by children and light bulbs.

The self - contained unit collects and stores the heat emitted by human beings and electric lights and heats the building at about two-thirds the normal cost, ac­cording to architect Keith Wetland of Ann Arbor.

He said hot air is drawn off and stored in tanks. A compressor later circulates it to rooms which have cooled off because of a drop in the number of occupants or in the temperature.

ENGLISH AINDY

< & > N. ***' -1 &&!

r n

9 - /2

SMIDGEI \

-S IGH: \FEEL LIKE WE'RE DRPTING APART.' WE DON'Tf SHARE ANY INTEREST ANYMORE.'

HERE, I'LL SHARE THE PAPER

WITH YOLLr

NO, NO.' I MEAN WE SEEM DISTANT...WE NEED MORE TOGETHERNESS IN THE THINGS WE POI

OKAY, KNIT TO ME WHILE

I REAP J

„„..., BU1B

- _ J

FRED BASSI

appialir

If I lay my head on her lap, and fix her with that irresistible

ttpnssion of wine...

THE RYAT1

SfNGAf

i'

NANCY

lb

HA HA HA HA HA

HA HA

^

s? • • • •

A U N T FRITZ I — ^ L I S T E N TO T H l S y FUNNY ITEM j T

BU SHM it CO*-*

A MAN WALKED INTO THE WRONff

HOUSE BY MISTAKE AND GOT P INCHED

AS A .BURCrLAR

T«i.'*.«. U. $. C.t. Of All '!«H» I . I M » . J •£ H H fcv L'.l'r i *«••<!.» $,«<..!'« l it .

MUTT ft JEI

FREDDt

QUE LIC GREED

J

'< ...

AT'S RIGHT, AN' YOU'D BE FOR MORE...

ERNEST, YOU

DON'T EVER

,PRECI«TE| WHAT

DO FOR YOU/

Untitled Document

file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AM

Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

www.fultonhistory.com