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WILLIAM D. SAYRS JR. had a long career in Camden's civic and political life. He was born in Camden in 1874 to William D. and Sarah Sayers. At the time of the 1880 census the family lived at 626 Chestnut Street, and the elder Sayers was working as a coremaker at Wood's Foundry. There were two other sons at home at that time, Charles P., 17, and Frank, aged 3. The elder Sayrs later moved to 633 Walnut Street William D. Sayrs was working at the age of 16 as a clerk for the Charles H. Felton & Co. at 203 Federal Street, which engaged in real estate and insurance. 1920 found William D. Sayrs married, and living at 620 Spruce Street with his wife Jennie, and two daughters, Ethel, 10, and Sarah, 3. He was then working as an architect for the city of Camden. Once women's suffrage passed, Jennie Sayrs also involved herself in politics, and was a member of the Sixth Ward Women’s Republican Club. In 1927, William D. Sayrs was elected to Camden's city commission, serving a four year term coinciding with the administration of Mayor Winfield S. Price. In January of 1928 he fell ill with diphtheria, spending several weeks at Camden's Municipal Hospital. He continued to have medical problems throughout 1928. William D. Sayrs was administering Camden's public works and streets departments, but his medical problems caused him to announce his retirement effective January 1, 1929. While serving on Camden's City Commission, many public improvements were made in the city. William Sayrs later succeeded Colonel George L. Selby as Republican registrar at the County Board of Elections. Retirement, however, was not in the cards for William D. Sayrs. At the time of the 1930 Census, William D. Sayrs, then 56, was living in an apartment at 808 Broadway. He was then working as a civil engineer for Camden County. By 1934 he had found a position as the director of the real estate division of the State Highway Commission. When the 1947 Camden City Directory was published, William D. Sayrs was renting an apartment at 932 Broadway, and was working as Camden's Deputy City Clerk. By this time Bayard Avenue, a street in the Whitman Park section of Camden that runs between Mount Ephraim Avenue and Pershing Street, was renamed Sayrs Avenue, apparently in recognition of his service to the city. William D. Sayrs died in his sleep on November 7, 1947. He was buried at Harleigh Cemetery. |
Philadelphia Inquirer - December 4, 1917 |
CAMDEN COUNTY IN THE GREAT WAR |
City Farm Gardens Another
weapon to defeat the enemy was the establishment of City Farm Gardens
in the country. They were urged by the Government and not only provided
food for city residents, but abolished unsightly vacant lots. Mayor Ellis
named the first City Gardens Committee on April 19, 1917, as follows: E. G. C. Bleakly,
Judge
Frank T. Lloyd, Zed H. Copp, William Derham, L. E. Farnham,
B. M. Hedrick, David Jester, O. B. Kern, M. F. Middleton,
Dr. H. L. Rose, Asa L. Roberts, W. D. Sayrs, Jr.,
Charles
A. Wolverton, Earl T. Jackson, H. R. Kuehner, Herbert N.
Moffett and Hubert H. Pfeil. At the initial meeting of the above date
B. M. Hedrick was elected chairman; Zed H. Copp secretary and M. F. Middleton
treasurer. Brandin W. Wright, a farming expert, was employed as general
superintendent on May 3, 1917. At a meeting on May 18, 1918, the names
of Frank Sheridan and Daniel
P. McConnell were added to the publicity committee in the
place of In his annual report to City Council on January 1, 1918, Mayor Ellis urged the appointment of a committee by City Council on City Gardens and Councilman Frederick Von Neida was named as chairman. This committee with a committee of representative citizens met in the City Hall in February, 19 18, to organize for the ensuing summer. The members of the Councilmanic committee were: Frederick Von Neida, Frank S. Van Hart, William J. Kelly and John J. Robinson. The committee planned an exposition of farm garden products for the fall of 1918, but this plan was frustrated by the Spanish influenza epidemic. The
war gardens became victory gardens in the year 1919 when the committee
met on January 29, 1919. Meyers
Baker was elected secretary and William D. Sayrs, Jr.,
treasurer. At the meeting on March 25 committees were appointed for the
Victory War Gardens |
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Philadelphia Inquirer September 7, 1919 Click on Images for PDF File of Complete Article Admiral
Henry Wilson - Charles
H. Ellis |
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Camden Courier-Post * January 2, 1928 |
BOXER, SAYRS’
AIDE NABBED IN TIPSY ROW Mickey Blair Camden pugilist, and Thomas Schneider, secretary to Commissioner William D. Sayrs. Jr., started the New Year by getting drunk and becoming both abusive and pugnacious when ordered away from Horace Brewer’s restaurant on Market street, it was testified by three policemen in Police Court today. But
Blair and Schneider as well as James Borini, who was arrested with
them, won their freedom when Judge Bernard Bertman
suspended sentence. “There is no doubt but that you were all drunk” was
Bertman's
comment. ‘Surely, if you had been sober, this would never have
happened. I know you are respectable men of the community and I regret
to see you here. I will suspend sentence”. According
to the three policemen, however, the trio of defendants acted like
anything but respectable men of the community yesterday morning when
the New Year was little more than three hours old. Patrolmen
Frank Evans, Charles Bowen and August Fortune
testified that
Blair, Schneider and Borini had been ordered away from the
restaurant by Brewer and that they had become abusive, threatening the
policemen and calling them names. Schneider
insisted that he entered the argument only because Evans was “beating
up Blair," but Evans and the other officers retorted that Blair had
warned the policemen that they would be sorry if they arrested him and
Schneider had boasted that “no cop can pinch me". All were charged with being drunk and disorderly. Blair, whose real name is Michael Tenerelli, is 19 years old and lives at 833 South Fourth Street. Schneider gave his address as 414 Spruce Street. He is acting secretary to Commissioner Sayrs as a temporary appointee. Borini, 22 years old, gave his address as 324 Pine street. |
Camden Courier-Post * January 3, 1928 | ||
Mickey Blair Denies
Charge of Police Says He Wasn't in Cafe; Blames 'Mistaken Identity' for Fuss |
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Mickey Blair Thomas Schneider William D. Sayrs Horace Brewer Augustine Fortune Charles Bowen Frank Evans Bernard Bertman Edward Kelleher Joseph Bardini |
Camden Courier-Post - January 3, 1928 |
KAUSEL IS GIVEN $4000
JOB OVER HOT PROTEST BY ‘REBEL’ IN G.O.P. Joseph H. Van Meter, insurgent Republican freeholder from Collingswood, today declared that David Baird Jr., Republican leader, had admitted that Theodore Kausel was “not the man for the job” to which he was appointed by the Board of Freeholders yesterday. Baird told him, however, said Van Meter, that a promise had been made “to take care of” Kausel because of the latter’s aid to the Republican Organization at the last municipal election. Van Meter quotes Baird as follows: “I’ll admit that Kausel is not the man for the job. But you have to help me out because we promised to take care of Kausel when he came over to us in the city election. And it was through Kausel that we got Hitchner and a lot of his crowd.” “We’ve got ourselves tied up with him. We’ve got to take him, and I want you to go along, and help me out”. “I know his business record and I know his political record. I know the freeholders don’t want him and our conference don’t want him, but we’ve got to eat crow, and I want you to help me out” Under the watchful eyes of organization leaders, Republican members of the Camden County Board of Freeholders yesterday took care of Theodore “Teddy” Kausel. With David Baird Jr. and other chieftains of the party occupying front row seats, the board created the post of “general manager of county institutions and promptly named Kausel for the job at an annual salary of $4,000. Like ghosts at a feast, Baird and the other party leaders sat silently at the freeholders reorganization meeting. Like actors in a carefully pre-arranged play, a little uncertain of their cues, 20 Republican freeholders cast furtive eyes at the group of spectators. They said no word, these freeholders. They made no reply when Joseph H. Van Meter, of Collingswood, breaking from their ranks, declared that 20 of them had told him that Kausel was unfit for the position to which he was being appointed. They listened in uncomfortable silence while Van Meter gave voice to a scathing denunciation of their “lack of backbone” and while a running fire of sarcasm from Democratic members fell upon their ears. Scene Was Drama The scene was drama. It might have been a revised performance of “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” with 28 furtive-eyed Uncle Toms and an impregnable line of Simon Legrees, cracking invisible whips in threatening gestures. And the scene was also comedy. For of that score of men who, according to Van Meter, had agreed that Kausel was unfit for the job but “had to be taken care of,” none arose to protest against the action. Within their Hearts the chorus of Uncle Toms may have been saying. The county may own out bodies, but our souls belong to the Republican Organization.” But if they thought this, they said no word. Today it was pointed out that it will not be long before freeholders come up for renomination at the primaries. Today, it was also predicted that Van Meter has signed his political death warrant so far as the Republican organization was concerned. But at least he received the ungrudging tribute of the Democratic minority on the board, who joyfully proclaimed that they had found “at last a Republican with guts.” Van Meter Fights Hard Van Meter spared no words, took no half-measures. He accused his fellow Republican members of coercion, double- dealing and weakness. He fought the appointment bitterly. He raked up the vocational school matter, in which $85,000 had been paid for the school site on Kausel’s recommendation, a price later declared to be exorbitant. Democratic members joined the Collingswood insurgent. They charges that the $4,000 appointment was the price of Kausel’s allegiance to the Republican party. They declared that he wasn’t worth it. They recalled, later, that Kausel had shifted from the Republican Organization to the Non-Partisan movement and then back again after being one of the loudest to criticize the Organization. They asserted that after his removal as chairman of the vocational school board, he had sought the appointment as city purchasing agent. They avowed that the Republican City Commissioners had ‘refused to handle Kausel” and had “wished him off on the county.” The 26 other Republican freeholders- all of those present, excepting only Van Meter- continued to listen in silence. And when the vote came, every one of the 26 voted for the creation of the position of “general manager of county institutions” and for the appointment of Kausel. A little later the reprisals upon Van Meter began. He was removed from the central plant and county farm committees of the board, shifted to the elections committee and allowed to remain on the printing and agricultural committees, regarded as unimportant groups. Reprisal Were Threatened. “It doesn’t surprise me,” he said. “I was threatened with it. They told me they’d ruin me. But I couldn’t go back to Collingswood and ask the people to vote for me again if I hadn’t fought against this appointment.” The defection of Van Meter came apparently as a surprise. The meeting had opened with the passage of the county budget on the first reading, the selection of Leslie H. Ewing, of Berlin, as director of the board, the calling of Frank P. Moles, of the Third Ward to be sworn in and his failure to respond or to appear for the gathering. Minor matters had been attended to and then Fred W. George, clerk of the board, rose to his feet and began the task of reading a long list of proposed amendments to the rules. Buried far down in the list of revisions was that which, “for purposes of economy”, sought to place all county institutions under a central head to be known as general manager. George lost his breath before he had more than half completed the lost of amendments, and George Rothermel, pinch-hitting for Walter Keown as counsel for the board, took his place. Then Director Ewing called for a vote. Schorpp Speaks Frederick W. Schorpp, Eighth Ward Democrat, was the first to speak “ I want to congratulate you gentlemen,” he said, “on the wonderful way you have camouflaged these changes. “ We have heard a long list of amendments to the rules read. But what the whole thing is can easily be seen. You gentlemen of the majority have a lame duck to take care of, and so you create this job. But I can’t see, really I can’t see why it is necessary to create a $4,000 plum for your lame duck and saddle it on the taxpayers.” There was silence in the room. In the seat of the absent Freeholder William A. Robinson sat Baird. At the press table were Sheriff Walter Gross and City Commissioner William D. Sayrs, Jr. Ranged along the front row of the spectators’ section were Mayor Winfield Price and Commissioner Clay W. Reesman. They said nothing. Louis C. Parker, Gloucester City Democrat, was next to speak. “All these changes in the rules accomplish is to create a new job,” he declared, agreeing with Schorpp. S. Raymond Dobbs, Fourteenth Ward Democrat, objected and moved that the resolution changing the rules be laid over until the regular January meeting. He was overruled by Director Ewing. Schorpp sought to have the rules voted upon separately, but James Davis, chairman of the committee, refused to accept the suggestion. The roll call began. In alphabetical order the names were called and the freeholders voted. Republicans voted in favor of adoption of the changes. The three Democrats voted against the resolution. Van Meter’s name was the last to be called. “No”, he said calmly, and there was a gasp pf surprise in the room. The clerk recorded the vote on the resolution as 26 to 4 and then began reading again. This was a new resolution. It named Theodore T. Kausel to the position just created and explained that he was to report to the “Lakeland Central Committee.” Van Meter Protests Van Meter rose slowly. He obtained recognition from the director and began, quietly but decisively. “Gentlemen,” he said calmly. “I have studied this proposition. I have known about it for three days and three nights. I have talked to 20 Republicans member of this board and I have done all I could to get then to agree with me. And they did agree with me. They agreed, every one, that Kausel was not the man for this job. After what happened on the vocational school project, when Kausel was president of the school board, he is not the man. On his recommendation, the vocational school site was purchased for $85,000. And now you want to send him where he will handle about a million dollars of the taxpayers’ money.” Van Meter’s tone was serious as he turned to his fellow members. Most of the latter sat silently in the seats. They did not glance at the Collingswood insurgent. Baird, Gross, Price, Sayrs and Reesman listened intently. A few of the freeholders craned their necks towards the windows as the Camden mummers, returning from the New Years Day parade in Philadelphia, marched past the courthouse. But Van Meter went on. “There is not one of you that has backbone enough to come here and fight this thing.” Van Meter continued. I can’t see it go through. I couldn’t ask the people of Collingswood to vote for me again if I let it go through without a fight. “You agreed with me that Kausel was not the man for the job. Haven’t you any backbone with which to fight his appointment now?” Slowly, in complete silence that followed, he turned till he faced Horace G. Githens, the majority floor leader. “Mr. Githens,” he said quietly and in a measured tone, “ if you will throw away your messenger’s cap and wear a leader’s hat, I will follow you.” He sat down and the silence continued. Schorpp Lauds Van Meter Schorpp rose again. “I’m glad to see one Republican who has backbone,” he said. “I told you there was a lame duck in this and here is the lame duck. “Woods (Samuel Woods, Republican freeholder from Haddonfield) and you others criticized Kausel and other members of the vocational school board for their purchasing of the land for the school, claiming that it was an exorbitant price to pay for the land. “And now these same men who criticized Kausel are putting him in a position where he will handle millions of the taxpayers money. Dobbs followed on the floor. “I don’t want to stand here and talk until 10 o’clock tonight just to give you reasons why Kausel shouldn’t get the job,” he said. “In the first place, I couldn’t give all the reasons in that time, and in the second place, they wouldn’t register with this bunch. “This is entirely unfair. It’s too high a price to pay Kausel to come back into the Republican ranks. The Republican leaders should pay it, however, and not saddle the price on the taxpayers. “Personally, I don’t think he’s worth much politically. We had him for awhile and have had some experience as to the value of his services. I thought he could be bought for less than $4000 anyway.” The resolution came to a vote. The Republicans, with the exception of Van Meter, again voted solidly. Twenty-six votes were cast for the appointment of Kausel. Van Meter and the three Democrats did not vote. Van Meter issued a statement after the meeting, explaining his stand. He said: “The reason I opposed Kausel’s appointment is because the man is extravagant. Director Ewing was one of the 20 Republicans I talked to who were opposed to hum, but were afraid on the floor. I didn’t talk to the Democrats. “Ewing and the other Republicans said, “What can we do. We must take care of him. We promised to.’ Charges Unfair Tactics “I knew when I went ahead with this that I’d be an outcast, but I was determined to do the right thing. This appointment is not the right thing. “They told me I’d be ruined if I opposed them. Even up to the last minute before the meeting they came to my desk in the freeholder’s room and tried to throw a scare into me. “I knew I’d be thrown out of committees and barred from the caucuses. They’ve let me remain on the printing committee. I’ve been on it a year, and it hasn’t met yet. Nevertheless, there is a $50,000 appropriation for printing. “I’ve always tried to be on the level on this job. Why they had the workhouse slated for $120,000 but I fought and fought, and finally- well look at the budget- it’s cut down to $50,000. “It’s not the first time I’ve saved them money. I don’t know Kausel personally, but I do know his record. It was because of his extravagance that he was fired from the Castle Kid Company. And when I say he is extravagant, I can prove every word of it.” The new Lakeland central committee, authorized in the resolution appointing Kausel, was announced by Director Ewing at the close of the meeting. Ewing is to be a member, ex-officio, and Horace G. Githens becomes a member by virtue of being chairman of the finance committee. The chairman of the asylum committee, of the County Hospital committee, of the Almshouse committee, of the Detention Home committee, and the Tuberculosis Hospital committee all will become members.” Name ‘Official’ Papers An earlier vote had been taken in which the Democrats moved to designate The Evening Courier as the newspaper in which the budget was to be officially printed. The Republican majority had designated two weekly papers, the Camden Argus and the Berlin Breeze. “It’s obvious,” said Dobbs, “why these designations have been made.” Parker, Gloucester City Republican, agreed with this view and declared that the newspaper with the largest circulation in the county should be given the official county notices for publication as advertising. Schorpp ironically suggested that the Christian Science Monitor be substituted for one of the two weeklies designated and the roll was called. The Argus and the Breeze were officially designated. The appointment of Kausel bought the meeting to a conclusion. Of all the Republican freeholders, Davis was the only one to speak. He merely declared that he was one not one of the 20 men who Van Meter had said agreed that Kausel was not the man for the job. |
Camden Courier-Post - January 2, 1928 |
BOXER,
SAYRS’ AIDE NABBED IN TIPSY ROW Mickey Blair Camden pugilist, and Thomas Schneider, secretary to Commissioner William D. Sayrs. Jr., started the New Year by getting drunk and becoming both abusive and pugnacious when ordered away from Horace Brewer’s restaurant on Market street, it was testified by three policemen in Police Court today. But
Blair and Schneider as well as James Borini, who was arrested with
them, won their freedom when Judge Bernard Bertman
suspended sentence. “There is no doubt but that you were all drunk” was
Bertman's comment. ‘Surely, if you had been sober, this
would never have happened. I know you are respectable men of the
community and I regret to see you here. I will suspend sentence”. According
to the three policemen, however, the trio of defendants acted like
anything but respectable men of the community yesterday morning when
the New Year was little more than three hours old. Patrolmen
Frank Evans, Charles Bowen and August Fortune
testified that
Blair, Schneider and Borini had been ordered away from the
restaurant by Brewer and that they had become abusive, threatening the
policemen and calling them names. Schneider
insisted that he entered the argument only because Evans was “beating
up Blair," but Evans and the other officers retorted that Blair had warned the policemen
that they would be sorry if they arrested him and Schneider had boasted
that “no cop can pinch me". All were charged with being drunk and disorderly. Blair, whose real name is Michael Tenerelli, is 19 years old and lives at 833 South Fourth Street. Schneider gave his address as 414 Spruce Street. He is acting secretary to Commissioner Sayrs as a temporary appointee. Borini, 22 years old, gave his address as 324 Pine street. |
Camden Courier-Post - January 13, 1928 |
SAYRS IN HOSPITAL,
DIPTHERIA VICTIM Commissioner William D. Sayrs. Jr,
director of public works, has been stricken with diphtheria and is a
patient at the Municipal
Hospital, it was learned today. Hospital authorities this morning said
Commissioner Sayrs was admitted to the institution yesterday. He is
suffering from a “mild case of diphtheria, they said, and is under the
care of Dr.
Joseph C. Lovett. Unless complications should arise, the
public works director will leave the hospital in two weeks physicians
report. His condition today was termed “good”. Sayrs entered the hospital after he had consulted with his physician, Dr. Levi Hirst, according to Frank S. Albright, city publicity agent. The commissioner began feeling ill Tuesday, Albright said, when he attended the opening session of the legislature at Trenton. Albright said Sayrs is directing the work of
his department from his bedside at the institution. A phone has been
installed at the bedside and the commissioner,
Albright explained, is able to keep in touch with the various members
of his department throughout the day. Fellow commissioners remarked on the absence
of Commissioner Sayrs from the city commission meeting yesterday, but
could give no reason for it, they said. At the office of Commissioner Sayrs this morning, It was reported that the director was ‘merely suffering from a slight cold.” - |
Camden Courier-Post - February 29, 1928 | |
CITY WILL BEGIN BIG PROJECTS TO HELP JOBLESS Mayor and Sayrs Announce Speeding Up of Municipal Improvements WILL PROVIDE WORK FOR SEVERAL HUNDRED Sewage Plant, New Garage to be Built- Follow Move in Legislature |
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Winfield
S. Price - William D. Sayrs Atlantic Avenue - Van Hook Street - Mount Ephraim Avenue - Twelfth Street Federal Street - Eighth Street Cramer Hill - North Camden - Rosedale |
Camden Courier-Post * January 14, 1928 | ||
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Slayer and Slain | |
![]() Joseph Devon |
![]() Joseph Cimini |
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Headquarters of the Sixth Ward Republican Club on Broadway
below Spruce Street is shown in the picture. The entrance is to the
left, the first floor front being occupied by a barber shop. The arrow
indicates the room where the shooting occurred |
Camden Courier-Post * January 14, 1928 |
GANGSTER SHOT DURING
MELEE IN SIXTH WARD Victim of a shot fired in a melee, the exact cause of which remain undetermined, Joseph Cimini, 31 years old, ‘was killed in the Sixth Ward Republican Club, 908 Broadway. Cimini,
declared by police to be a Philadelphia Joseph Devon, 28 years old, known to his associates as “Polack Joe’” and a colorful figure in Third Ward politics, fired the shot that killed Cimini. Declaring that he had fired in self-defense, after Cimini struck him with the butt of a revolver, Devon was locked up without bail on a charge of murder. Joseph 'Mose’
Flannery,
26 years old, picturesque Eighth ward political worker, was held as a
material witness. Detectives had seized Flannery who was to have precipitated the
battle by brandishing a revolver just before Cimini was shot. The
officers say that Flannery fled –after the shooting and was
captured afterward at Broadway
and Federal Street. The name of the dead man was given as Joseph Gannon, but shortly before one o’clock this afternoon, he was identified as Joseph Cimini, 1301 Ellsworth Street, Philadelphia. The identification was made by a brother, William Cimini, a pugilist who has boxed in this city several times under the name of “Billy” Gannon. Six
Others Quizzed Six other men who were present at the time of the shooting, or when the argument began, were questioned by city and county detectives They are Newton Blanchard, 30, 923 St. John Street, former Camden boxing referee and declared by some of the witnesses as the man who conducted the crap game at the club; Michael Dandrea, 26, 1067 Norris Street; Russell Sage, 26 years old, of 1102 Marion Street a taxicab driver who is said to have driven Gannon and Flannery to the club in his car; Maurice O’Brien, 27 years old, of 1429 Bradley Avenue, a former New Jersey State Trooper, Harry Trooper, Harry Waterhouse, 28 years old, whose address was given as the same as Sage’s; and Charles “Chick” Hunt, 27 years old, of 1218 Broadway, a former Camden boxer. Blanchard and Dandrea were released after questioning and after each had made a statement to Chief of County Detective Lawrence T. Doran. The others were held with Flannery as material witness. Differences
of opinion between county and city detectives investigating the
shooting were heightened during the afternoon.
The county sleuths insisted upon the theory that the
shooting had resulted from a feud between Flannery and Hunt, with Cimini taking the
former’s side and Devon the latter and said that the heat of the
argument had possibly been heightened by disagreement over a crap game. The
city police, on the other hand, declared that the entire affair was the
result of an attempt by Flannery to hold up the other men. Devon’s
statement to Chief Doran
made no mention of a hold-up. Building
up a case against Flannery, the officers this afternoon
lodged charges of attempted hold-up, carrying concealed deadly weapons,
atrocious assault and battery and assault to kill against him. The two
latter charges were made as the result of identification of Flannery as a participant in two recent
robbery attempts. J.E. Feinstein, café proprietor of 508 Kaighn
Avenue, declared that Flannery, Cimini, and Sage were thereof
four men who held him up on New Year’s Day. He defied them and they
left when he said, “Go ahead and shoot,” he asserted. Flannery was also identified, according to
police, as the man who had beaten and attempted to rob Henry Mehrer, an
Audubon policeman, and his two companions outside the Ringside Inn, on
the Black Horse Pike, a fortnight ago. Mehrer and Feinstein were taken
to police headquarters by County Detective Howard
Smith, who is
authority for the statement that they identified Flannery. Cimini
was shot shortly after 3:00 this morning and died almost instantly.
Doctors at Cooper Hospital pronounced him dead on arrival. He had been
shot just above the heart by a bullet from Devon’s gun. Events
preceding the shooting remain, to some extent clouded today. Chief Doran said he learned of an enmity
existing between Flannery and Hunt. Devon appeared to have
attempted to quiet “Mose”, the county detectives said. Cimini struck
Devon and Devon fired. Chief
John Golden of the Camden city detective bureau stated, on the other
hand, that the shooting had apparently followed
an attempt to hold up the other men in the room. Golden based his view
on the statements of Clarence Arthur, a city sleuth. According to Arthur, when he and Bunker appeared at
the door of the room, Flannery and Cimini held revolvers and the
other men in the room were standing with their hands upraised. According
to the story pieced together by county detectives from the statements
of witnesses, a group of men had apparently gathered at the club for a
crap game. Blanchard, it was stated, acts as the “stick man,” the term
used in gambling parlance to designate the man who conducts a crap game. City
and County agree that Flannery and Cimini arrived together in
Sage’s taxicab. Whether there was an argument, the result of an enmity
between Flannery and Hunt, or whether the attempted
hold-up theory is correct, remains to be learned by additional official
investigation. Chief Doran stated the witnesses had told him that words passed between Flannery and Hunt and that the former had gone downstairs. Returning he brandished a revolver. Two
Flee Place It was at this point that Blanchard and Dandrea left the room and fled down the stairs. On the street, they encountered Detectives Arthur and Bunker, who were patrolling Broadway in a police automobile. In
describing the subsequent events today, Arthur declared that Blanchard had
informed him that “two Philadelphia gunmen are up in the Sixth Ward
Club holding up a bunch of fellows”. The
detectives did not immediately go to the club, but found Patrolman
Frank Del Rossi and followed him up the stairs of the building. “There
were about fifteen men in the room,” Arthur asserted. “When we got to the door
Flannery and Cimini had their guns out and
apparently were about to search the others. The other men had their
hands in the air. “When
they saw us Flannery and Cimini threw their guns down
and the others lowered their hands. I went up to Flannery and started to frisk him. Bunker
went to another man, whom I don’t know, and started to frisk him”. It
was then he said that he heard the shot. Believing that it was Bunker
who was shot, he released his hold on Flannery and swung around. As he did Flannery turned and fled downstairs, Arthur declared. Bunker
said he believed that it was Arthur who had been shot and he too
released his grasp on the man he had been searching. The detectives
turned in time to see Cimini fall. “I
did it! I shot him!” Devon is declared to have shouted, throwing his
revolver on the table. According
to the story told by witnesses to the county detectives, however, Devon
had stepped up to Flannery just before the shot was fired and
had said” “Mose, you can’t get away with this
here.” Flannery is said to have had a gun in his
hand at the time. As
Devon spoke, the witnesses say, Cimini stepped behind him and struck
him with the butt of a revolver. Just then detectives entered. Devin
whirled and, drawing his gun, fired. Cimini
was placed in a police ambulance and taken to the hospital. After he
had been pronounced dead his body was taken to the morgue, where it was
awaiting identification today. Neatly dressed, Cimini is of Italian
extraction. He has coal-black hair, brown eyes and a dark complexion.
Coroner Charles
T. Murray will perform a post-mortem examination, he said. Flannery Captured When he fled from the club, according to Arthur, Flannery jumped on a Public Service bus driven by David Smith, of 423 Haddon Avenue, which was passing at the time. “Faster! Faster” he is declared to have urged Smith as the latter drove along Broadway in the direction of Federal Street. At
Federal
Street and Broadway, Arthur and
Bunker caught up to the bus and arrested Flannery as he descended from the vehicle. “Why
don’t you give me a chance to get to Philadelphia?” Arthur
declares Flannery asked him. “I can get bail over
there.” Seek
Written Statement Chief Doran stated this afternoon that he was attempting to obtain a written statement from Flannery and would also seek to have Devon sign a statement regarding the shooting. During the morning, Flannery refused to talk while Devin, although admitting that he fired the shot, declared that he shot in self-defense. He made no reference to the hold-up attempt, according to the county detectives. Cimini has a Philadelphia police record but, according to his pugilist brother, “was not bad but just wild.” He was recently arrested in Philadelphia after a fight with policemen. “But he never held up or robbed anybody,” his brother declared this afternoon after identifying the body. “He got into a jam now and then. Yes, I know that he knew 'Mose' Flannery, but I never mixed with that crowd.” It was reported at City Hall this afternoon that Samuel Orlando had been retained as attorney for Flannery and that Walter Keown, Camden county solicitor, would represent all the other men. The presence of Keown at detective headquarters, during which he had a conference with Captain Golden, seemed to lend credence to the latter report but neither rumor could be confirmed. Flannery for years has figured in police cases and in political warfare in the Eighth Ward, where he was sometimes a lieutenant and sometimes an opponent of “Mikey” Brown, the Republican leader of the ward. Last March he was arrested and indicted on charges of atrocious assault and battery on is wife and her mother. At one time he was held as a suspect is a Philadelphia shooting but later was released. The accused man, Devon, is a short, slim little man with an air of meek complaisance. He has been a taxicab driver and was last arrested on a charge of drunken driving. In May of 1926 he attempted suicide by shooting himself after he had failed to effect a reconciliation with his estranged wife. At that time, he shot himself but the bullet only grazed his chest. Joe Devon, long a political power in the Third Ward, first flashed into citywide prominence in 1925, when he was employed by federal authorities as a deputy U.S. Marshal to guard the padlocked Poth brewery at Bulson Street, just off Broadway. At the time Devon was thus maintaining the sanctity of the Eighteenth Amendment, he was also operating a bootlegging establishment downtown and had been arrested once or twice for violating the Volstead Act. The Courtier at that time exposed this paradoxical situation, with the result that the U.S. Marshal summarily dismissed Devon. He keenly resented the political chicanery that had been used to put Devon in office. In explaining how Devon was appointed, the Marshal said that he had been recommended by “prominent Republican leaders” in Camden, chief among whom was William D. Sayrs, no a city commissioner but then a field agent in the office of the Internal Revenue Department. Sought City Job Not long after Devon’s dismissal as brewery guard, Sayrs and other Republican leaders made strenuous efforts to secure a city job for him under the Non-Partisan administration. They sought to exact a promise from The Courier that this newspaper would remain silent in the event Devon was appointed to a city position. No such promise was made and Devon remained jobless, politically at least. Then came a humorous twist to the situation. Sayrs disagreed with some of the Organization leaders and, for a time, walked his own political footpath. Some of the leaders, fearful of what Sayrs might attempt politically, killed two birds with one stone by hiring Joe Devon to shadow Sayrs and to report to them the number of times he conferred with Non-Partisans. Thus, Joe had a job and Billy was watched. Sayrs knew he was being shadowed by his old friend, and apparently he knew who had hired Devon to do the work, but he refused to take the situation seriously and chortled, frequently, when he would see his “Shadow” trailing about town. In
the last year, however, Devon has again been the particular political
protégé of Commissioner Sayrs
and also has won the friendship of many other political leaders.
Nevertheless, he has not been, so far as can be determined, the
recipient of any particular political patronage, though his political
influence in the Third and Fifth Wards is said to have expanded rapidly
under the new administration. |
Camden Courier-Post - January 16, 1928 |
CONDITION OF SAYRS IS REPORTED IMPROVED The condition of Commissioner
William D.
Sayrs. Jr, director of public works, continued "good"
over the weekend, authorities at Municipal
Hospital reported today. Sayrs was admitted to the hospital last week after his personal physician, Dr. Levi Hirst, informed him that he was suffering from a "mild case of diphtheria". |
Camden Courier-Post - January 16, 1928 | |
CITY ENGINEER CLERK IS AGAIN
DISCHARGED |
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Camden Courier-Post - January 20, 1928 |
COMMISSIONER SAYRS TAKES WALK IN GARDEN William D. Sayrs. Jr, director of public safety, who left his bed for the first time yesterday at Municipal Hospital. Since he was admitted there as a diphtheria patient last week was permitted to stroll the about the grounds of the institution. The director, hospital authorities report is showing marked improvement, but will probably remain there another week. |
Camden Courier-Post - January 21, 1928 |
Veteran Traded Out of Job As Foreman Gets Pay Boost A Camden war veteran, denied a $6.3S a day
city job for which he was civil service eligible, but given, instead, a
$4 a day job as a laborer, has been “rewarded” with a raise of 50 cents
a day it was learned today. Patrick McVeigh, the veteran, named a
laborer when he withdrew as an eligible for appointment as foreman of
grading in the department of Commissioner William D. Sayrs,
now is receiving $4.50 a day. Until this work, his job as laborer paid
$4 a day. McVeigh was one of the civil service
eligibles for the post of foreman and as a veteran was entitled to
preference. Commissioner Sayrs,
however, appointed Harry F. Redding, former sealer of weights and
measures, to the job, and McVeigh, promised the job as laborer at $4 a
day, withdrew without formal protest. Increase of McVeigh’s pay to $4.50 a day was
reported to the civil service commission today by officials in Sayrs'
deportment. McVeigh is one of three veterans who have
withdrawn within the past month as eligibles for city posts to which
they were entitled. Two of the other veterans- John A. Pennington and
John R. Michaelson- withdrew after conferences with city commissioners.
Michaelson was entitled as a veteran to preference for appointment as
city purchasing agent. Pennington was slated for appointment as
custodian of Convention
Hall. Neither was appointed. The status of a fourth veteran, John W.
Powell, who has neither accepted or withdrawn appointment by Sayrs
as foreman of ash and garbage collection, had not been determined.
Powell has until Monday to answer a letter from the Civil Service
Commission answering if he is interested in the appointment. |
Camden Courier-Post - February 23, 1928 | ||||
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Camden Courier-Post April 2, 1928 John A. Pennington George Jones |
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Camden Courier-Post Dr. David Rhone
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Camden Courier-Post * June 25, 1929 | |
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Walter
S. Keown - Joseph Wallworth - Elizabeth Verga - Harry
C. Sharp - William
D. Sayrs Howard B. Dyer - Laura Silberg - Lottie Stinson - Harold W. Bennett - Edward R. Diebert Bernard Bertman - L. Scott Cherchesky - Carl Kisselman - Frank Voigt - David Baird Sr. Francis Ford Patterson Jr. - Al Matthews - W. Penn Corson - Charles A. Wolverton Clinton L. Bardo - Col. George L. Selby - Daniel Silbers |
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Robert Brennan - Marie Mackintosh - William H. Heiser -
Mary McCready |
Camden Courier-Post - June 6, 1933 |
CAMPAIGN PLANNED BY SALVATION ARMY Executives of Organization Discuss Budget for Camden and Propose Drives Plans
for a campaign to raise funds to cover the budget of the Salvation Army
Corps here were discussed yesterday
at a meeting of members of the
executive board at Hotel Walt Whitman.
William D. Sayrs,
chairman of the committee presided and requested that a successor be
appointed. The nominating committee selected Earl Lippincott, chairman;
Mrs.
Arthur Casselman and John J.
Robinson,
vice chairmen. Brigadier
James A. Harvey, commanding
the Philadelphia region of the Army reviewed the Work accomplished at
the Camden headquarters, under direction of Captain Charles W.
Schafter. An itemized report of receipts and
expenditures together with a budget outline were submitted by Captain
Schaffer. Included
among the members at the meeting were Reverend John Pemberton,
Mrs.
Charles A. Wolverton, Mrs. Casselman,
Mrs. Mary W. Kobus,
Herman Hensgen, Joseph Tweedy, Frank C. Propert, and Robinson. Other
members of the committee include Howard Hemphill, George C. Baker,
Patrick Harding, Dr. James Rodgers, Dr. F. William Schafer and Dr.
Albert Pancoast. |
Camden Courier-Post - June 24, 1933 |
SALVATION ARMY NAMES LIPPINCOTT Camden Unit Makes Real Estate Broker Chairman of Advisory Boards Earl R. Lippincott, real
estate broker, has been named chairman of the advisory board of the
Camden unit of the Salvation Army, succeeding William D. Sayrs.
Elections of officers for
the group were held yesterday following a luncheon meeting at Hotel Walt Whitman.
Vice chairmen of the organization include John J. Robinson and Mrs. Arthur J.
Casselman. Other officers include Mrs. Charles
A. Wolverton, treasurer, and Miss Elizabeth Magill,
secretary. Members of the executive committee selected the following committees: Woman's committee, Mrs. Arthur H. Holl and Mrs. Wilfred W. Fry; finance committee, Dr. F. William Shafer, William D. Sayrs, Frank C. Propert, Mrs. Wolverton and Mrs. Holl; property committee, Howard Hemphill, John J. Robin son, Herman E. Hensgen, Arthur J. Casselman and George C. Baker; public relations and publicity, Rev. John Pemberton, Joseph G. Tweedy, Mrs. Mary W. Kobus, Dr. Albert B. Pancoast and Patrick H. Harding; program committee, Dr. James Rodger, Propert, Robinson, Tweedy and John L. Shannon. |
Camden Courier-Post - June 29, 1933 |
STATE G.O.P. CHIEFS SPEAK HERE TONIGHT A testimonial dinner will be given tonight by the Camden County Republican Committee in honor of party leaders with former Governor Edward C. Stokes as principal speaker. Those to be honored are Mrs. Elizabeth C. Verga, vice chairman of the county committee and state committeewoman; Assemblyman Isabella C. Reinert, former vice chairman; Commissioner Clay W. Reesman, new chairman of the county committee, and Joshua C. Haines, register of deeds, the retiring chairman. Other speakers will include Mrs. Edna B. Conklin, national committeewoman from Bergen county; Congressman Charles A. Wolverton; former U. S. Senator David Baird, Jr., U. S. Senators Hamilton F. Kean and W. Warren Barbour and E. Bertram Mott, state chairman. State Senator Albert S. Woodruff will be toastmaster. Carlton M. Harris, chairman of the dinner committee, said last night that reservations have been made at the Hotel Walt Whitman for 500 guests and the committee is swamped with applications. Other members of the committee in charge of the dinner are William D. Sayrs, Jr., treasurer, and Mrs. Pauline Caperoon, secretary. |
Camden Courier-Post - June 30, 1933 | ||||||
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Camden Courier-Post - August 4, 1933 |
ELECTIONS BOARD NAMES
REA TO POST The Camden County Board of Elections, in special meeting yesterday unanimously elected Leo B. Rea as the new Republican registrar in the Permanent Registration Bureau. Rea, the choice of G. O. P. leaders, was elected by the bipartisan board of elections after it had accepted the resignation of William D. Sayrs, Jr. as the Republican registrar. Sayrs, a former city commissioner, assumed a new $5000 post Tuesday as director of the new real estate division of the reorganized State Highway Department. He was appointed formally to the job by the State Highway Commission. Rea is expected to begin his new duties this afternoon after familiarizing his successor as a deputy county clerk with details of that job. His successor in the county clerk's office is Edward J. Wintering, of Westmont, former Haddon township tax assessor. The elections board meeting opened at 9:30 a. m. and lasted three minutes. Sayrs' resignation was addressed to the board, attention of Mrs. Emma E. Hyland, chairman. Rea's new position pays $2400 a year, minus 30 percent under the county economy program. He was nominated for the post at the meeting by William A. E. King, a Republican member of the elections board. Rea did not attend the session, but appeared after its conclusion. He has been president of the Fifth Ward Republican Club seven years and is a member of the G. O. P. Speakers' Bureau. Sayrs' resignation follows: "I am tendering my resignation herewith and request that it take effect immediately as registrar of the Permanent Registration Bureau of the Camden County Board of Elections. "I regret exceedingly to sever my connections with the Permanent Registration Bureau because of the pleasant associations which I have had with my office associates and members of the board, particularly those of the opposite party, "I feel that I must take this occasion to comment on the spirit that prevailed among the members of the Camden County Board of Elections on the part of both parties and that while, at times, there may have been honest differences of opinion, as there must necessarily always be in such bodies, all the members have consistently acted in accordance with the principles which they thought were best for the voters of this county, whom they must at all times represent." |
Camden Courier-Post - August 28, 1935 | |
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William D. Sayrs - Frank J. Hartmann Jr. - Alfred L. Sayers - Martha Kemble |
Camden Courier-Post - August 29, 1935 |
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Albert
S. Woodruff - Elizabeth C. Verga - Emma
Hyland - Harry L. Maloney - Hotel
Walt Whitman |
Camden Courier-Post * March 13, 1937 |
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John S. McTaggart -
Frank B. Hanna -
Arthur Colsey -
Mary Kobus Edward Carroll - William D. Sayrs - John Garrity - Katherine Cunningham - Eagles Hall |
Camden Courier-Post * March 17, 1937 |
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John S. McTaggart - Arthur F. Foran - George E. Brunner - James V. Moran -
Gene R. Mariano Arthur Colsey - Ralph Bakley - Edward V. Martino - Harold W. Bennett - Horace R. Dixon Mary Kobus - Edward Carroll - William D. Sayrs - John Garrity - Kathryn Cunningham - Harold Hoffman |
Camden Courier-Post - June 1, 1939 |
POLLS AIDES, OWNERS WILL GET PAID TODAY A total of $7380 will be paid today to election board officers and owners of polling places in the recent city commission election, it was announced yesterday by Deputy City Clerk William B. Sayrs. Each of the 456 district officers, four from each of the 114 districts, will be required to present his certificate of appointment and the 54 owners of properties used as polling places must return the flags loaned for the election. The owners will receive $10 each. The remaining polling places were in school buildings. Payments will be made from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m., Sayrs said.. |
Camden Courier-Post - August 26, 1941 |
Henry Magin Laid to Rest By War
Veteran Buddies Funeral services for City Commissioner Henry Magin were held today with his colleagues in official and veterans circles participating. Services were conducted in city commission chambers
on the second floor of city hall, in charge of Rev. Dr. W.W. Ridgeway,
rector of St.
Wilfrid's Episcopal Church. The casket was carried by war veteran associates of the public works director, who died from a heart attack Friday. A color guard from the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion preceded the casket, followed by the four remaining members of the city commission, Mayor George Brunner and commissioners E. George Aaron, Mrs. Mary W. Kobus and Dr. David S. Rhone. A guard of honor lined both sides of' city hall steps, 22 policemen on one side and 22 firemen on the other, representing Magin's age, 44 years. Hundreds of men and women waited
outside the building to pay their respects as the solemn procession
filed by. Mayor Brunner had declared this morning a holiday for city
employees. The casket was borne by Thomas Jackson and Samuel Magill,
both past Legion commanders; Leon McCarty, past commander of August
Walter Chapter, Disabled American Veterans; Richard Jermyn, past
commander of Post 1270,
Veterans
of Foreign Wars; Benjamin P. Thomas, past captain of Sparrow Ship No. 1269.
V. F. W.; and William Miller, past State commander, D. A. V. Three trucks were required to carry
the floral pieces from the scene of the services to the National
Cemetery at Beverly, where burial took place. An estimated 8000 persons from all walks of life paid their respects to the late official by viewing the body as it lay in state in the commission chambers. The throng of mourners of Camden city and county was the largest to converge on a public building since the funeral of Fire Chief Charles Worthington, who was killed while fighting a fire almost 20 years ago. His body was placed on public view in the rotunda of the old county courthouse. File Past Bier A continuous progression of people filed past the flag draped bier for more than three and one-half hours. Scores of Republicans and hundreds of Democrats joined in the tribute. Services were conducted by Camden
lodges of Elks
and Moose. Military rites were conducted by the Fairview Post, American
Legion, of which Magin was a founder and past commander. The tribute
was led by Mitchell Halin, post commander, and C. Richard Allen,
past department commander. James W. Conner, chief clerk of the
city water bureau and past State Commander of the V.F.W., conducted
rites at the grave. Mayor Brunner and
Commissioners Kobus,
Aaron, and Rhone
came early and remained throughout the hours of viewing. Mrs. Helen
Magin, the widow, and daughter Helen, attired in deep mourning, arrived
shortly after 7:00 PM. Embraces Widow, Daughter Commissioner Kobus,
who knelt in prayer before the bier, arose and went over to Mrs. Magin
and her daughter. Mrs.
Kobus embraced and kissed the widow and
daughter of the late commissioner. They were in tears. Three firemen and three policemen maintained
a vigil as a guard of honor. They were Patrolmen Jack Kaighn, George Weber,
and William
Deery and Firemen
Arthur Batten,
Warren Carter and
William Reed. American Legion and V.
F. W. members
in uniform alternated as members of the military guard of honor. A
detail of 50 policemen was under command of Acting Lieutenant John Garrity.
Fifty firemen, under supervision of Deputy Chief Walter Mertz,
assisted the patrolmen in handling the crowd, which at times choked the
stairways leading to the
second
floor. Freeholders Arrive Albert H.
Molt,
director of the Board of Freeholders and Freeholders John J. Tull, Oscar Moore, Ventorino
Francesconi, Stanley
Ciechanowski, Earl Armstrong and Emil J. McCall
arrived shortly after 7:00 PM. Moore and Tull wore American Legion overseas caps.
Albert S. Marvel, clerk of the board, accompanied the freeholders. Employees of the various bureaus in the
department of public works, headed by Commissioner Magin, came in
delegations with the highway bureau having 150, the largest number. Frank A. Abbott,
acting director of the department, accompanied by James P. Carr,
superintendent of Streets; led
the
highway bureau
employees.
Abbott
is deputy director of revenue and finance and first assistant to Mayor
Brunner. He was named by Brunner as acting director until the City
Commission elects
Mr.
Magin's successor. County Clerk Frank J. Suttill, City Clerk Clay W. Reesman, Fire Chief John H.
Lennox and James A. Howell,
chief of
the
city electrical bureau, attended, as did Albert Austermuhl,
secretary of the board of education. Every city department sent a floral piece. Outstanding Floral
Tribute Outstanding among the floral tributes was a
six-toot broken circle of varied flowers, an offering from Mayor
Brunner and Commissioners
Kobus,
Aaron, andRhone. A floral chair was sent by the Camden Police
and Firemen’s Association. The word “Rest” was made up of flowers. The
offering of the Veterans League of South Jersey, an organization formed by
Commissioner Magin and of which he was the first president, was a
large floral pillow. The freeholders and county officials gave a
large floral basket. Floral tributes came from the employees of the
board of education, the RCA Manufacturing Company, the police and fire
bureaus, Pyne Point Athletic Association, the Elks,
Moose and several Democratic clubs. The floral tributes came in such numbers
yesterday afternoon that Funeral Director Harry Leonard
and his assistants could not find room for them in the commission
chamber proper. They were banked on both sides, in the rear and over the
casket. Among prominent officials and citizens who
came to pay their respects were Congressman Charles A.
Wolverton and his son, Donnell, Assemblymen Joseph W.
Cowgill
and J. Frank Crawford,
Sidney P. McCord, city comptroller, Thomas C. Schneider,
president of Camden County Council No. 10, New
Jersey Civil Service Association. Others at Bier Others were Sue Devinney, secretary to Mrs. Kobus;
Fred S. Caperoon; Henry Aitken, city sealer of weights and measures, Horace R. Dixon,
executive director of the Camden Housing Authority; George I. Shaw,
vice president of the board of education. Sgt.
Ray Smith, chairman of the Elks Crippled Children Committee
and commander of East Camden Post, V.F.W.; Albert
Becker, commander of Camden County Post 126, Jewish War Veterans; Dr. Howard E.
Primas and Wilbur F. Dobbins, members of the Camden Housing
Authority; Postmaster
Emma E. Hyland; Samuel E. Fulton, member of the Camden local
assistance
board. Also former Assemblyman Rocco Palese,
former Freeholder Maurice Bart and wife, County Detective James
Mulligan, Deputy City Clerk
William D. Sayrs, Mary King, secretary to City Clerk Reesman,
Charles W. Anderson and John W. Diehl Jr., former members of the
housing authority,
Walter P. Wolverton, chief clerk of the public works
department; Thomas J. Kenney, Maurice Hertz, Isadore Hermann, chief of
the city tax title bureau; S.
Raymond Dobbs; acting chief of city property, John
Oziekanski, building inspector, Harry Langebein, city assessor. Oliver H. Bond, housing manager of Clement T. Branch
Village; former Judge
Joseph Varbalow, acting city counsel John J. Crean, assistant
City Counsel Edward V. Martino, Paul Day, secretary of city board of
assessors, former Assemblyman William T. Iszard, Harry Roye, district
director of NYA; Victor J. Scharle and Martin Segal, Democratic and
Republican registrars, respectively, of the Camden County permanent
registration bureau. Mrs. Marian Garrity and Mrs. Mary F.
Hendricks, vice chairman and secretary respectively, of the Republican
City Committee; Dr, Ethan A. Lang and Dr. Richard P. Bowman, members of
the board of education; Edward J. Borden, Carl Kisselman,
Harry A. Kelleher,
Samuel T. French Sr., former Freeholder Walter Budniak,
Coroner Paul R. Rilatt, County Treasurer Edward J. Kelleher,
William Shepp, of the city legal bureau, Marie Carr, stenographer,
mayor's office;
Samuel T. French Jr., member, board of education. Also John C. Trainor, member of the Camden
County Board of Elections;
Antonio Mecca, funeral director; Alexander Feinberg,
solicitor of the housing authority, former Freeholder John T. Hanson,
Sterling Parker and Paul Reihman, member of the county park commission. James
O’Brien, commander of the Camden Disabled American Veterans,
was in charge of services by veterans at the cemetery. Former
Freeholder Edward J. Quinlan, county vice-commander of the American
Legion, directed last night memorial services and was in charge of the
firing squad at the grave. |
Camden Courier-Post - November 8, 1947 |
Wm.
D. Sayrs Funeral To Be Held Monday Funeral services for Deputy City
Clerk William D. Sayrs will be held at 2:00 p. m. Monday, in the Holl funeral parlor,
811 Cooper
Street. Mr. Sayrs died in his sleep yesterday. He was 74. Pallbearers for the former city
commissioner will include City District Court Judge Edward V. Martino, Advisory Master William
R. J. Burton; Thomas C. Schneider, secretary of the County Board of
Elections; Mayor Soren A. Tollefson, of Oaklyn; Andrew Mazur and
Dominick Palese. Surviving Mr. Sayrs are his
widow, Jennie, an adopted daughter, Mrs. Sarah Thompson, and a brother,
Frank, of Haddonfield, a Masonic leader in New Jersey. Friends may call tomorrow night. Burial will be in Harleigh cemetery. . |