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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

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Brooklyn, New York
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For Classified Ad Results BROOKLYN EAGLE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 31, 1939 Telephone MAin 4-6200 13 Anderson, John J. Hamill, William Balz, Mary Jane Hickey, Elizabeth Bennett, Emma Higgins, Mary Bradley, Edward WHughes, Mary M. Richard Mayer, Blanche Cavanagh, Walter McGuire, Irving A. Mrs. Ellen S.

Darraugh, McSweeney, Wm. Donnellan, Margaret Delia Mollor.Jane Eldert, Emma D. Julia Fisher, Edmund D. Matilda Gallagher, Smith, Albert Francis T. Strom, Sven G.

Gayler, Agnes Warren, Charles Deaths ANDERSON-Suddenly Tuesday, May 30, 1939, at his. residence, 918 St. Mark's JOHN JEROME ANDERSON, M.D., beloved husband of Rita, Winship Anderson, brother of William F. Anderson of William F. Le Mien.

Servicescle the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Thursday, 8 p.m. BALZ-MARY JANE, May 30, beloved mother of Mary Estelle, Philip L. Balz, Pearl Mains and Mildred Mueller. Services at her residence, 72 Barbey Thursday, 8 p.m. Interment Friday, 10:30 a.m., Green- Cemetery.

1939, BENNETT beloved Monday, sister May 29, of Sophie Middleton; also survived by eight grandchildren. Funeral services Thursday, 2 p.n., at 187 S. Oxford St. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. Direction of A.

A. Jung. BRADLEY-On Tuesday, May 30, 1939, EDWARD W. of 78-34 78th Glendale, beloved husband of Evelyn B. and father of Mildred Colligan and Edward T.

Bradley. Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 89-31 164th Jamaica, Thursday at 8 p.m. BROOKLYN LODGE, NO. 22, B. P.

O. ELKS Brothers: Funeral services for our brother, IRVING COHEN, Wednesday, May p.m., Park Memorial Chapel, 4511 Fort Hamilton Parkway. EDWARD J. CALLAN, Exalted Ruler. Thomas F.

Cuite, Secretary. CASEY-RICHARD, on May .30, at his residence, 50 75th St. Beloved husband of Alice (nee Thomas); also survived three daughCasey, ters and five sons. Requiom mass, Friday, 9:30 a.m., Our Lady of Angels. Interment Holy Rood Cemetery.

CAVANAGH WALTER 1103 Park Place, beloved husband of Emily devoted father of Dorothy Ann. Religious and fraternal services at St. Bartholomew's Episcopal Church, Pacific near Bedford Thursday, 8:30 p.m. Arrangements by Weigand Bros. CAVANAGH St.

Bartholomew's Men's Club announces with deep sorrow the death of our member, WALTER D. CAVANAGH. Services at St. Bartholomew's Church, Thursday evening at 8:30 p.m. HOWARD C.

HUCK, President. COHEN-IRVING May 30, of 1616 52d at Miami Beach, beloved husband of Annie and father of Frank, Jeannette, Pearl, Wilbur and Laurence; brother of Abraham, Samuel, Frank, Jack and Annie. Member of Congregation Sons of Judah, Young Israel of Boro Park, Brooklyn Lodge, No. 22, B. P.

O. Elks. Funeral Thursday, 11 a.m., at Park Memorial Chapel, Fort Hamilton Parkway at 45th St. COURT OUR LADY OF GRACE NO. 1103, CATHOLIC DAUGHTERS OF AMERICA, deeply regret the loss of our beloved member, MRS.

ELLEN SHEEHAN McGUIRE. Members are requested to attend solemn requiem mass at St. Brendan's Church, Ave. and East 12th Street, on Thursday, at 9:30 a.m. MARY C.

HORN, Grand Regent. Ruth Delap, Historian. DARRAUGH-On May 29, MARGARET T. (nee Delahunty), beloved wife of John and dear mother of Alexander John J. Mrs.

Helen Morton and Mrs. Margaret Mulligan. Funeral from her residence, 8813 5th Thursday, June 1. Solemn requiem mass St. Patrick's Church at 10 a.m.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. DONNELLAN On May 29, 1939, DELIA (nee O'Connor), at her residence, 137 Coffey wife of the late David, mother of Mrs. Frank Ballerano, James, William and Thomas; sister of Catherine O'Connor. Funeral Thursday, 9:30 a.m.; thence to the R.

C. Church of the Visitation, where a solemn requiem mass will be offered. Interment St. John's Cemetery. ELDERT-On Tuesday, May 30, 1939, EMMA DAVENIA ELDERT, beloved wife of the late Luke Eldert mother of Aletta E.

Seaman and L. Edmund Eldert. Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Thursday, 8 p.m, FISHER-EDMUND DREW, on May 16 at Lake Como, Italy, beloved husband of Louise Hartley Fisher. Service at Ferncliff Mausoleum Chapel, Ardsley, on Friday, June 2, at 3:30 p.m. (daylight time).

Conveyances at Hartsdale to meet New York Central (Harlem Division) train leaving Grand Central 1:20 p.m. (standard time). GALLAGHER-On May 29 at his residence, 355 96th FRANCIS T. GALLAGHER, beloved son of John and Jennie and loving brother of John Gallagher. One of the first graduates of St.

Michael's School. Funeral on Friday, June 2, at 9:30 a.m., thence to the R. C. Church of St. Patrick, where a solemn requiem mass will be celebrated.

Interment Holy Cross, Cemetery. Under tion Higgins. VITAL NUTICES (Acknowledgments, Births, Condolences, Confirmations, Deaths, Engagem ents, Marriages, Masses, Memoriams, Resolutions) acceptea wetil 10 P.M. for publication the following day or from 8 A.M. to 1 P.M.

(11 A.M. on Saturdays) for publication in the next available edition of the same day's paper. The Vital Notice rate is 90 cents per line. MAin 4-6200 Boruch Goldberg Rabbi Joshua Goldberg of the Asof the Association Reformed toria Center cd. Israel cried president Rabbis of America of 34-17 30th Long Island City, received yesterday of the death in Wilne, Poland, of his father, Boruch Goldberg, 64.

The elder Goldberg escaped from Russia during the 1917. He had built many railroads in Russia and had managed the lumber business of Radzwille. In addition to the rabbi Mr. Goldberg 48 survived by three other sons and three daughters. Paul Weilder Services for Paul Weilder, 59, of 808 Park Place, a chauffeur and a resident of Brooklyn for 34 years, suddenly Sunday of a heart ailment, were held last night in the John Jerome Sullivan Funeral Parlors, 6915 5th Ave.

He was a member of the Loyal Order of Moose. His widow, Mrs. Rose Weilder, survives. Deaths GAYLER- On Tuesday, May 30, 1939, AGNES, of Robert A. and George W.

Gayler. Services at the Baptist Home, Greene and Throop Thursday, at 2:30 p.m. HAMILL May 29. Funeral Thursday, 9 a.m., Dalton Funeral Home, Floral Park, L. I.

Member of N. Y. Stereotypers Union, No. 1. MICHAEL J.

P. HOGAN, President. J. Frank Travis, Financial Secretary. -On Tuesday, May 30, ELIZABETH DORE HICKEY, Mrs.

beloved wife of James sister of Charles F. Reilly, Mrs. Thomas J. Farrell and James J. Dore.

Funeral from her residence, Union Friday, June 2, at Re87.30. quiem mass, St. Francis Xavier Church, 6th Ave. and President 10 a.m. HIGGINS MARY (nee Kelly), wife of the late Hugh and mother of Catherine Veronica May Anne Elizabeth Bernard J.

and Frank Monday, May 29, 1939, at her residence, 648 Decatur St. Native of Brockagh, County Derry, Ireland. Solemn requiem mass, Church of Our Lady of Lourdes, Friday, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross. at Caldwell, N.

formerly of N. Y. HUGHES -MARY MARGARET, on May 30; a daughter of Mary Robinson and the late Edward Hughes: sister of Mrs. J. Cherry, Mrs.

P. W. Roland, Isabela R. and Robert P. Hughes.

Funeral services at home, 92 Central Caldwell, N. on Thursday evening, 8:30. Interment St. Michael's Cemetery, Astoria, N. on Friday, at 11:30.

MAYER -May 30, BLANCHE, beloved wife of Arthur, devoted sister of Raine Schiller. Services Thursday, 2 p.m., Kirschenbaum's Funeral Home, 345 Throop Brooklyn. McGUIRE -On Monday, May 29, 1939, ELLEN SHEEHAN, beloved mother of James Joseph Mrs. Thomas Walsh, John 7., Edward A. and Julia M.

McGuire. Solemn requiem mass at St. Brendan's R. C. Church, Avenue and E.

13th on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. Interment Calvary Cemetery. McSWEENEY-On May 29, 1939, WILLIAM, at his residence; survived by his wife, Mary, two daughters, Nora and Catherine. Funeral from Joseph Redmond's Funeral Home, 476 73d St. Solemn requiem mass Thursday, 9:30 a.m., at St.

Stephen's Roman Catholic Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. -May 30, JANE V. (nee Harmon), beloved wife of Thomas mother of Mrs. Joseph Williams, Mrs.

Joseph Baker, John Genevieve and Thomas daughter of Margaret and the late Richard Harmon; sister of Mrs. James Guerin, Frederick and James Harmon. Funeral Saturday, 9:30, from residence, 540 54th St. Requiem mass Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. NORDSTROM-On Tuesday, May 30, 1939, JULIA V. NORDSTROM, of 414 Bergen St. Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Thursday, 10 a.m. -May 30, 1939, MATILDA, dear Edward.

Services at her residence, 106 Beacon Court, Gerrittsen Beach, Thursday, 8 p.m. Interment Lutheran Cemetery. SMITH- -On May 29, 1939, in his 31st year, ALBERT of 654 McDonough beloved son of Albert and Anna Smith. Services Wednesday evening, 8:30 o'clock, at the Stutzmann Chapel, 2001 Madison Ridgewood, Brooklyn. -On May 29, 1939, at his residence, 1070 E.

37th SVEN beloved father of Carl and Einar. Reposing at Ericson and Ericson's Chapel, 500 State St. Services at Swedish Lutheran Bethlehem Church, Pacific St. and 3d Thursday, June 1, at 2 p.m. WARREN On Wednesday, May 31, 1939, CHARLES of 2109 Avenue formerly of Yonkers, N.

father of Clementine A. Warren, Mrs. C. Luther Fry of Rochester, N. and Dr.

Charles Warren Jr. ferts p.m. Interment Service at Fairchild, Chapel, 86 LefWoodlawn Cemetery, Philadelphia. Passes Passes FITZGERALD -In loving memory mother, ELIZABETH, June 1, direc-1938. Mass 7 a.m.

St. Church. Gone but not forgotten. CHILDREN. In Memoriam The Eagle has published booklet of "In Memoriam" Verses You may obtain a copy of this booklet, without charge, by calling an Ad Taker at MAin 4-6200.

Dr. J. J. Anderson, 54, Dies Suddenly Emergency Operation On Fellow Physician At Sea Brought Fame Dr. John Jerome Anderson, a wellknown borough physician and former member of the faculty of Long Island College Hospital, died yesterday of a heart attack at his home, 918 St.

Mark's Ave. He was 54. In 1930, Dr. Anderson was the central figure of a dramatic operation at sea when he performed an emergency appendectomy Walter E. Hurley of this borough.

physicians were passengers on the Panama Pacific liner Virginia when Dr. Hurley was stricken. BORROWS INSTRUMENTS It was found that there were not enough surgical instruments on the Virginia and a wireless was sent to the nearby liner Turrialba which brought the necessary instruments. Both ships stopped their engines until the operation was concluded. Dr.

Anderson was senior instructor of anatomy at the Long Island College Hospital until he decided to devote all his time to active practice several years ago. WAS BORN IN BROOKLYN A native of Brooklyn, he was graduated from Long Island College Hospital in 1911 and had practiced here ever since. He was a member of the Medical Society of the County of Kings." Surviving is his widow, Rita Winship Anderson; a brother, William F. Anderson and a nephew, William F. LeMien.

Services will be held in the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Burial will be in Evergreens Cemetery. Edmund D. Fisher Funeral Friday Funeral services for Edmund Drew Fisher, former borough banker and one-time Deputy Controller of New York City, who died May 16 at Lake Como, Italy, will be held at 3:30 p.m.

Friday in the Ferncliff Mausoleum Chapel Ardsley, N. Y. Mr. Fisher executive formerly served as sec- retary and officer of the old Flatbush Trust Company. He also was a member of preliminary organization committee of the Federal Reserve Banks in 1913 and a former chairman of the legislative committee of the New York State Bankers Association, C.

0. O. Warren Paving Expert, 76 Charles O. Warren 76, of 2109 Avenue formerly for a number of years associated with the Warren Brothers Asphalt Paving Company of Boston, died today at his home of a cerebral hemorrhage. Mr.

Warren was active in the Ocean Avenue Congregational Church and was member of board of elders. Hie was a native of Buffalo and formerly lived for many years in Yonkers, where he represented the paving concern. daughters, Clementine A. Warren Surviving Mr. Warren 'are two and Mrs.

Marion Warren Fry, widow of Dr. C. Luther Fry, former head of the sociology department of the University of Rochester; a son, Dr. Charles O. Warren who is connected with the New York Hospital, dry and two grandchildren, Clementine A.

Fry and Charles L. Fry. Funeral services will be held in the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery, Philadelphia.

Mrs. Lillian Hartt, Final Rites Today Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Northport, May 31-Mrs. Lillian Burr Hartt, past district deputy president of the Rebekah Assembly, State of New York, and noble Grand of Suffolk Rebekah Lodge, who died Sunday, will be buried in Northport Rural Cemetery this afternoon, following funeral services in the Robbins Son Funeral Home. The Rev. Dr.

John L. Gregory, pastor of St. Paul's Methodist Church, of which she was a member, will officiate. The daughter of Maurice and Maryette Burr, Mrs. Hartt was born in Kings Park on July 10, 1865.

After receiving her education in that village, she was married to John Hartt in August, 1886, and lived here ever since. Her husband died two years ago. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Charles Badger of Northport, Mrs. Franklin Ludgren of Baltimore; a grandson, William McCullough of Northport, and a brother, M.

M. Burr of Riverhead. Obituaries MRS. ELIZABETH DORE HICKEY of 871 Union wife of James P. Hickey, died Tuesday at her home.

She was born in Brooklyn and is survived by her husband; two sisters, Mrs. Charles F. Reilly and Mrs. Thomas J. Farrell, and a brother, James J.

Dore. The funeral will bu held from the home at 9:30 a.m. Friday with a solemn requiem mass in St. Francis Xavier R. C.

Church. MRS. MARY JANE BALZ of 72 Barbey lifelong resident of Brooklyn, died Tuesday after an illness of several weeks. She WAS 83 years old and is survived by a son, Philip L. Balz, and four daughters, Estelle and Mary J.

Baiz, Mrs, Pearl Mains and Mrs. Mildred Mueller. Funeral services will be held at the home at 8 p.m. Thursday, Burial will be in Green-Wood Cemetery. MRS.

JANE V. HARMON MOLLOY of 540 54th died Tuesday at her home, She was born in Brooklyn and is survived by her husband, Thomas M. Molloy; five children, Mrs. Joseph Williams, Mrs. Joseph Baker, John Genevieve and Thomas E.

Molloy; her mother, Margaret sister, Mrs. James Guerin, and two brothers, Frederick and James Harmon. The funeral will be held from the home Saturday with a solemn requiem mass 1 10 a.m. in Our Lady of Perpetual Help R. 0, church, Rites Tomorrow Dr.

John J. Anderson 4 Men Overcome By Gas in Tank 3 Workmen, Fireman Suffer From Fumes In Ex-Coffee Device Four men were overcome by gas today in a tank in a building owned by the New York Dock Company at Joralemon St. and Buttermilk Channel. All were taken to hospitals for treatment. Physicians said they would recover.

Those overcome were George Petrie, laborer, of 656 88th Patrick Road, Glendale; Frank Philblad, 27, laborer, 36, of 65-17 Fresh Pond Dunegan, 57, of 408 Degraw and James Huffey, 27, a fireman attached to Engine Company 224 and in living at 654 77th Long Island City, Petrie and Huffey were taken to Long Island College Hospital. The others to Holy Family Hospital. According to the police, the tank, about 8 feet in diameter and 50 feet long, with a small manhole at one end, was formerly used as part of a caffein extracting device by the Sanka Coffee Company. Petrie and Philblad, employed by the Astor Engineering Company of 623 Parkside had been assigned to the job of cleaning it. Dunegan, doing other work in the building, glanced into the tank at a about 2 p.m., noticed Petrie lying face down on the bottom of the tank.

CARRIED UP ONE Directing his son Joseph, 27, to notify the police and get other help, Dunegan descended into the tank, threw Petrie across his shoulder and with some difficulty made his way to the top of the ladder leading from the manhole opening to the bottom of the tank. By the time he reached the top, firemen and police had arrived. He collapsed as he started to come out of the manhole but was drawn to safety by firemen. He told them there was another unconscious man in the tank. Firemen, wearing gas masks, entered and brought out Philblad and Huffey.

Huffey, without a gas mask, went into the tank to assist other firemen, was overcome and was carried out by his masked comrades. Police and firemen said they did not know the exact nature of the gas which had overcome the men but that it was a "methane type." Hospital officials said they expected none of those overcome would suffer any permanent ill effects. Court Refuses to Halt Closing of Tavern Supreme Court Justice Lockwood today refused Henry J. Casey, proprietor of a bar at 1469 Nostrand a stay from a State Liquor Authority order revoking his license. The revocation was decided upon April 13 last on the ground that Casey permitted bookmaking on horse races in his establishment.

The latter insisted in his appeal that he consented to such activities nor did he know of nelther, them. Mrs. Claude Dolan, Red Cross Veteran Drove an Ambulance During World WarWas D. A. R.

Member Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Deer Park, May 31-Mrs. Ivy M. Dolan, wife of Dr. Claude M. Dolan, Brooklyn dentist, and formerly prominently identified with Red Cross work in Brooklyn, died yesterday her home in Deer Park Ave.

here. She was 58. Mrs. Dolan formerly lived in Brooklyn for many years, moving here four years ago. She served in the Cross Motor Corps of the Brooklyn Chapter during the World War and held the rank of first lieutenant in the organization.

On one occasion she drove a Red Cross ambulance from Brooklyn to Perth Amboy to render aid in the munition explosion at Morgan, N. J. WAS D. A. R.

MEMBER Mrs. Dolan was a member of the P. E. Church of the Epiphany in Brooklyn and was captain of the Girl Scout troop affiliated with that church. She also was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

She was born in Binghamton, N. daughter of Marcus R. and Ida Garrett Miller, and is survived by her husband; a son, Paul M. Dolan of Norwalk, and a daughter, Georgia Dolan. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.

tomorrow in Boyd's Funeral Home in Babylon, with the Rev. Lauriston Castleman, former rector of the Church of the Epiphany and present rector of St. Paul's P. E. Church, Glen Cove, officiating.

Pickets in 2 Begos Assail Lawmakers Parading pickets representing the International Brotherhood of Teamsters will march through the downtown section of Brooklyn and the Jamaica areas of Queens today in' protest against six Assemblymen and three State Senators who aided in passage of the Bewley bill outlawing trucking strikes. At the time Michael J. Cashal, international vice president of the A. union, issued a statement terming the law "the Fie most reactionary anti-labor measure passed by the New State Legislature in 75 years." bill York, is now before Governor Lehman for his signature or All but one of the legislators denounced by the unionists today were indorsed by the A. F.

of L. last November. He is Assemblyman John H. Ferril of Queens. The others are State Senator Edward J.

Coughlin and Assemblymen Bernard J. Moran, Fred G. Moritt and Charles R. McConnell of Brooklyn, and Senators Joseph D. Nunan Jr.

and Peter T. Farrell and Assemblymen Daniel E. Fitzpatrick and Joseph P. Teagle of Queens. On outside the offices John Monday teamster picketa, paraded J.

McNaboe in Manhattan. Portsmouth, N. May 31 (P) Navy divers tackled today the problem of fastening heavy chains to the flooded after sections of the sunken submarine Squalus one of the most difficult preliminaries in the task of towing the ill-fated craft and its cargo of 26 dead men shoreward. Present plans call for either looping the chain under the mud-imbedded stern by tunnelling a trough beneath the submersible with pressure hoses or fixing the chain links to the sturdy propeller struts. A messenger line with a tail of chain already has been fastened to the buoyant forward section.

After the chains are fastened pontoons will be attached--four aft and two at the bow-and air will be pumped into the Squalus to help the big pontoons lift her about 50 or 60 feet. Then she will be towed toward shallower, warmer water in three easy stages. When the $4,000,000 craft is shoaled divers put the original plan of salvage into action by lifting her to the surface with air and pontoons and towing her to drydock in navy yard here, 15 miles from the scene of the May 23 disaster. The change in plans was decided upon because of the intense cold of the water at 240-foot depth, which hampered divers and threatened serious accidents. Start Hardest Job In Squalus Salvage Prince to Wed English Girl Despite Sultan's Disapproval Oxford, England, May 31 Malay prince whose romance here with the pretty daughter of an Oxford tailor blossomed despite his Sultan brother's disapproval has come of age and plans to marry her tomorrow.

Friends said that the young man, Prince Mahmud, also had finally overcome family opposition during his period of waiting and that a civil ceremony uniting him and 21- year-old Joyce Blencowe, a chiropodist, would be held in the registry office in St. Giles, Oxford. They have reserved a suite aboard the liner Corfu, sailing Friday for Malaya. The question of a second ceremony in the Prince's country, Trengganu, is to be decided there. Trengganu is in Malaya, an unfederated State a little smaller than New Jersey, which Prince Mahmud OUR SERVICE IS EFFICIENT AND DIGNIFIED Funeral Directors 433 Nostrand Ave, STerling 3-7700 Allen W.

Evarts, Noted Lawyer, 90 Was Ex-President Of Garden City Co.Practiced 60 Years Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Windsor, May 31-Allen W. Evarts, 90, former prominent Manhattan attorney and one-time president of the Garden City Company of Garden City, L. died yesterday in hospital in Claremont, N. H. Mr.

Evarts had lived here since his retirement in 1931 from the law firm of Evarts. Choate, Leon, 44 Wall Manhattan. He was the last surviving son of William M. Evarts, Secretary of State in the Hayes Administration and later United States Sen- ator. PRACTICED 60 YEARS Mr.

Evarts, who had practiced in New York for 60 years, was graduated from Yale in 1869 and from Columbia Law School in 1871. He was associated with the Garden City Company about the turn of the century and aided the firm in the development of its large realty holdings. He was a member of the Garden City Golf Club and the Bar Association of Nassau County. A bachelor, he is survivei by a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Evarts Perkins, and several nieces and nephews.

Funeral services will be held in St. Paul's Episcopal Church here tomorrow afternoon. Jobless Misery Called Shocking Washington, May 31 (U.P.) The American Association of Social Workers today made public a survey of relief conditions which described "shocking human misery" among the unemployed. The survey has been presented to Congressional committees considering the Works Administration appropriation bill for the coming fiscal year. The association's report said that in January, 1939, there were more than 23,000,000 people dependent on relief.

The study covered 35 States and the Territories of Puerto Rico and Hawaii. It described persons dependent on "uncertain and ofttimes non-existent general relief provisions" in many States as "American refugees with no place to go." Walter West, secretary of the association, said the survey "emphasizes the need for a new approach to the problem of providing basic public assistance. No uniform and adequate system of relief can exist unless it is established by the Federal Government through Federal grants-in-aid to States." Failure of many local governments to meet the problems of relief and unemployment, the report said, was reflected in "shocking human misery." Public officials in many areas have attempted to fit a 100-year-cid relief machinery to the present emergency, it said. Workers Alliance Rally Will Hear First Lady Washington, May 31 (U.P.)-Mrs. Franklin D.

Roosevelt, Tom Mooney and Mayor Edward J. Kelly of Chicago are among the speakers announced by the Workers Alliance for its "National Right-to-Work Congress" convening here June 3. The alliance said that Mrs. Roosevelt will speak next Wednesday at a special sub-session of youth problems, in which all the estimated 1,500 delegates will participate, in the Department of Labor auditorium. The alliance has been under fire before the Dies investigating un-American activities and a House Appropriations Sub-committee studying relief--as a left wing organization.

Its secretary, Herbert Benjamin, admitted that he is a Communist party member, but president David Lasser denied a similar accusation. Alexander Gumberg Norwalk, May 31 (U.P.)- Alexander Gumberg, 51, prominent Wall Street broker and member the executive staff of the Atlas Corporation, investment firm, died last night of a coronary thrombosis. Gumberg was a former director of Conde Nast Publications, and director of Franklin Simon, Inc. His widow survives. Walter Cooke -INCORPORATED DIGNIFIED As Low FUNERALS As $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden Boulevard -BUckminster 4-1200 50 Seventh Avenue- MAin 2-8585 1218 Flatbush -BUckminster 2-0266-7 QUEENS 150-10 Hillside Avenue- JAmaica 6-6670 158-14 North.

3-6600 STATEN ISLAND 98 Beach Stapleton- Gibraltar 7-6100 MANHATTAN 117 West 72nd Street- TRafaigar 7-9700 1451 First Avenue- RHinelander 4-5800 BRONX 1 West 190th Street -RAymond 9-1900 347 Willis Avenue- MOtt Haven 9-0272 WESTCHESTER 214 Mamaroneck Avenue--White Plains 39 Phone for Representative or Write for Illustrated Booklet "0" -No Obligation LICENSES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT License No. GB 16869 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer at retail at 1092 E. 92d Brooklyn, under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Laws, for off premises consumption. LOUIS KALB, 1092 E. 92d Brooklyn, N.

Y. m24-2t-W PAWNBROKERS SALES ESTATE OF EUGENE ROSENBAUM'S AUCTIONEERS, Kelly, L. Feldhuhn, I. Kirschner, J. Schwalb.

sell at 70 Bowery, at 9 a.m.: June 1-By order of Newman Rosenbluth, 1655 Broadway, Brooklyn, diamonds, silverware, jewelry, secondhand watches, tools, guns, rifles, radios, cameras, typewriters, musical instruments, pledged from 8903 of May 2, 1936, to 25797 of Dec. 23. 30331 1936: from 5375 of March 11, 1937, to of Dec. 31, 1937: from 95 of Jan. 3.

1938, to 8849 of March 31, 1938. m25-6t oSu June 7-By order of M. H. Koski, 984 Fulton all suits, shoes, clothing, pledged from 100-A of Jan. 2, 1938, to 14136-A of March 31, 1938.

m31-6t oSu Irving A. Cohen Irving A. Cohen of 1616 52d formerly the woollen business, died yesterday at Miami Beach, after 8 long illness. Mr. Cohen was born in Manhattan, 52 years ago and lived in Brooklyn for 30 years.

He was a member of Congregation Sons of Judah, Young Israel of Boro Park and Brooklyn Lodge, 22, B. P. 0. E. The funeral will be held at 11 a.m.

tomorrow from the Park Memorial Chapel, Fort Hamilton Parkway and 45th St. Mr. Cohen is survived by his widow, Annie; five children, Frank, Jeannette, Pearl, Wilbur and Lawrence; four brothers, Abraham, Samuel, Frank and Jack, and a sister, Annie. Held Without Bail In Her Son's Death Unwed Mother, Called 'Mentally Below Must Go to Trial Camille Katchko, 27-year-old former Hunter College student and master of seven languages, "mentally below par" in the opinion of psychiatrists, was prepared today to continue 8 lone fight against charges of drowning her 10-day-old son last April 30. Unaided by legal counsel, and apparently deserted by relatives and friends, the frail unwed mother yesterday heard Magistrate James A.

Blanchfield rule in Felony Court that, despite any gloomy psychiatric diagnosis, she would have to reappear today for a hearing. Today, she was held without bail for action of the grand jury when she waived examination in Felony Court on a charge of murder. At the arraignment today, Samuel Siegel, her attorney, told Magistrate Blanchfield that his client Obviously calmer and stronger than at her arraignment on May 4, when she was committed to Kings County Hospital for observation, Miss Katchko was nevertheless shaken by revelation of the findings of psychiatrists who studied her at the hospital. "Their report," said Magistrate Blanchfield, "states that you are neurotic, emotionally arrested and mentally below par but that a summary commitment to an institution cannot be recommended. I have no recourse but to let the law take its course." "Do they really mean that I am mentally below par?" asked the defendant, speaking almost inaudibly.

"Yes, but that doesn't mean that you don't know anything," replied Magistrate Blanchfield, who later granted Miss Katchko's well-spoken request that she be transferred from the hospital to the Women's House of Detention in Manhattan. Daughter of a Jewish cantor living at 314 W. 100th Manhattan, Miss Katchko is accused of having drowned the baby in a relative's home at 1469 President St. She was found whispering poetry to the dead child in a railroad station in Philadelphia. Angry Mob Beats Man For Annoying Youths ered injuries inflicted by an angry mob in Marine Park yesterday, James Fowel, 51, of 221 Berkeley Place, admitted in the police lineup today that he had been guilty of immoral practices on more than two dozen occasions.

Fowel said he is a WPA typist and formerly was connected with the Board of Education at Woburn, Mass. Sgt. Arthur Mann and Patrolman William Scaranellino of the Sheepshead Bay precinct found him being pummeled by bitter men and women at Gerritsen Beach and Allen yesterday afternoon, and had difficulty getting him to safety. PROPOSALS ADDITION TO BUILDING LETCHWORTH VILLAGE THIELLS. N.

Y. Specifications Nos. 10179, 10180, 10181 and 10182. ADVERTISEMENT P. W.

Separate A. sealed PROJECT NO. proposals N. Y. covering 1869-F.

Construction, Heating, Sanitary Female and Electric Work for Addition to Infirmary for Building Patients), (Additional Letchworth AccomVillage, Thiells, N. 'in accordance with Specifications Nos. 10179, 10180. 10181 and 10182, and accompanying drawings, will be received by the Commissioner of Mental Hygiene, State Office Building, Albany, N. until 1:30 o'clock p.m.

(Eastern Standard Time) on Wednesday, June 14, 1939, when they will be publicly opened and read aloud. This date shall supersede the date previously advertised. The approximate amount project is $40,000.00. Proposals shall be accompanied by a certified check or money deposit of of the amount of the bid. Successful bidders will be required to give a bond conditioned for the faithful performance of the contract and a separate bond for the payment of laborers and materialmen, each bond in the sum of of the amount of the contract on contracts in excess of $500.00.

tions submitting proposals shall be authorized to do business in the State of New York. General Terms and Conditions, General Conditions, Form of Proposal, Form of Contract, Form of Performance Bond, Form of Labor and Material Bond, Drawings and Specifications may be examined free of charge at the following offices: Commissioner of Architecture, State Office Building, New York City. Commissioner of Architecture, State Office Building, Albany, N. District Engineer, 109 N. Genesee Utica, N.

Y. District Engineer, Weighlock Building, Syracuse, N. Y. District Engineer, Barge Canal Terminal, Rochester, N. Y.

District Engineer, 65 Court Butfalo, N. Y. District Engineer, 71 Frederick Binghamton, N. Y. Letchworth Village, Thiells, N.

Y. Drawings and specifications may be obtained from the Commissioner of Albany, N. upon payment for each Architecture, State Office Building, set AS follows: Construction, $10.00: Heating, Sanitary, $5.00, and Electric, $5.00. Proposal blanks and envelopes will be furnished without charge. Half of this payment will be returned if the drawings and specifications are returned in good condition to the Commissioner of Architecture, State Office Building.

Albany, N. within one month after award of contract. The State reserves the right to waive any informalities in or to reject any or all bids. The attention of the bidders is particularly called to the requirements as to conditions of employment to be observed, and minimum wage rates to be paid under these contracts. No bid shall be withdrawn until after the contract shall have been awarded, but a bidder may withdraw his bid if no award of the contract is made within forty-five (45) days after the receipt of the bid.

WILLIAM E. Commissioner of Architecture, Reverses Widow's Award of $25,000 Jury Changes Verdict Against B.M.T. When Witness Admits Perjury A Supreme Court jury has versed an earlier $25,000 verdict awarded Mrs. Dimitra Pierakos against the B. M.

it was disclosed today, and the widow of a man killed in a collision with a trolley car will get nothing. At the first negligence trial, Mrs. Pierakos won the large sum on basis of alleged carelessness by the motorman whose car smashed into delivery truck at Henry and Union a Sts. in October, 1936, fatally injuring her husband, Peter. The B.

M. T. and Mrs. Pierakos' attorney, appealed, Gondelman, and the latter's law clerk, Leber, were indicted for ornation of perjury. Subsequently the indictment was dismissed because it was predicated solely upon the testimony of a confessed perjurer, Peter Mazzola.

During the original trial, Mazzola, 20, of 192 Union swore he witnessed the collision and testified that the accident resulted from negligence by the B. M. T. employe. He admitted later that this was false and that Gondelman and Leber allegedly had indu.

ed him to give the fake testimony. It was this which led to reversal at the second trial of the widow's claim, it is believed. Sister Stanislaus, Aided Boro Poor Sister Stanislaus, a member of the Little Sisters of the Poor, died yesterday in the Home for the Aged conducted by her at Bushwick and DeKalb an illness order. of several months. She was 44.

A native of Philadelphia, she entered the congregation in 1916 and spent 14 years of her religious life caring for the aged poor in this borough. She is survived bor father, John Conway; a sister, A Deeney, and four broth John, Martin, Thomas and William of Philadelphia. A solemn requiem mass will be offered in the chapel of the home at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery.

Michael J. Thompson Emmitsburg, May 31 (P)- Michael J. Thompson, dean of American football officials, died of heart attack at his home early today. He was 62. Ill for the past two years, Thompson was recently re-elected to his third two-year term as Mayor of Emmitsburg where he settled in 1911 to become athletic director and history instructor at Mount St.

Mary's College. His first job as an official was to referee the football game between Boston College and Brown in 1897 for which he remembered he "received the large sum of $5." AUCTION? SALE C. H. ADELMAN. AUCTIONEER, sells June 15, 1989, at 12:30 p.m., at 754 Jamaica Brooklyn, N.

Oldsmobile Sedan, Motor No. F-187955, account of Thomas F. Trone. m31-2t C. H.

ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER, sells June 15, 1939, at 12:00 noon, at 23 Stone Brooklyn, Pontiac Coach, Motor No. P-570802, account of Giuseppi Reilla and Joseph Lumetta. m31-2t C. H. ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER, sells June 15, 1939, at 10:00 a.m., at 365 4th Brooklyn, Chevrolet Coach, Chevrolt Coach, Motor Nos.

1592194, 1791654, accounts of Ruth Muriel' Clinton, Chas. Zoncada. m31-2t C. H. ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER, sells June 15, 1939.

at 9:00 a.m., at East 15th St. and Newkirk Brooklyn (Parking Lot), Buick Sedan, Motor No. 1454139, account of W. Collin and Frank Curran. m31-2t C.

H. ADELMAN. AUCTIONEER, sells June 8. 1939, at a.m.. 60th St.

between 2nd and 3rd Aves. (Parking Lot), Ford Sedan, Motor No. A-170000, account of William Dale. m24-2t C. H.

ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER, June 8, 1939, at 11:00 a.m., at 1310 Atlantic Brooklyn, Cadillac Sedan, Motor No. 801519, account of James E. Bayne. m24-2t C. H.

ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER, sells June 8, 1939, at 9:15 a.m., at 9213 4th Brooklyn, Ford Coach. Chrysler Sedan, Motor Nos. 3087064, CM-13041, account of Russell N. Banta and Singer Sewing Machine Raphael Herbach. m24-2t C.

H. ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER, sells June 8, 1939, at 11:30 a.m., at 36 Bainbridge Brooklyn, Chrysler Sedan, Emma Motor No. J-217070, account of Meyer. m24-2t C. H.

ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER, sells June 8, 1939, at 6:00 p.m., at 520 Atlantic Brooklyn, Ford Coach, Motor No. 18-905980, account of First Nat'l Acceptance Corp. and James F. Cusker. m24-2t H.

G. SCHONZEIT. AUCTIONEER, sells June 16th. 1939. 9:30 a.m., 516 63rd Brooklyn, Hupmobile Sedan, Motor No.

118473, account Morton De Waltoff. H. G. SCHON! AUCTIONEER, sells June 16th. 1939.

10 a.m., 507 Sheffield Brooklyn, Pontiac Sedan, Motor No. P502724, account Chas. Sarner. H. G.

SCHONZEIT. AUCTIONEER, sells June 16th, 1939, 10:30 a.m., 1120 Washington Brooklyn, Standard Trailer, License No. 30-75-1938, account Beatrice W. Sage. H.

G. SCHONZEIT. AUCTIONEER, sella June 16th, 1939, 10:45 a.m., 739 East New York Brooklyn, Chevrolet Coach. Motor No. 3708062.

account Samuel Wils. H. G. SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER, sells June 16th, 1939. 11:30 a.m..

2 Tompkins Brooklyn, Ford Truck, Studebaker Coupe, Willys Sedan, Motor Nos. 682511. 822104, 11837, accounts W. Pabeay, William Poleroy, William Bryant, Ralph Vasquez. H.

G. SCHONZEIT. AUCTIONEER. sells June 15th, 1939. 10:30 a.m., 171 N.

1st Street, Brooklyn, Chevrolet Truck, Motor No. 5191552, account Long Island Refrigerating Inc. H. G. SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER, sells June 17th, 1939.

9:30 a.m., 13 Truxton Brooklyn, Ford Coupe, Motor No. 859582, account Nick Bora. H. G. SCHONZEIT.

AUCTIONEER, sells June 9th, 1939, 9:30 a.m.. 2920 West 20th Brooklyn, Dodge Sedan, Motor No. DK2279, account J. Garasoff, Anna Godessoff. H.

G. SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER, sells June 9th, 1939, 11 a.m., 56 Scholes Brooklyn, Ford Sedan, Motor No. 2368342, account 8. and Max Wenig. H.

G. SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER. sells June 9th, 1939, 11:15 a.m., 185 S. 4th Brooklyn, Larrabee Truck. Pontiac Coupe, Motor Nos.

16C9521, 898372, account Hyman Cohn. H. G. SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER, sells June 9th, 1939, 2:30 p.m.. 309.

2nd Brooklyn, Chevrolet Coupe, Motor No. 2462625, account Isabelle And Lonegan. to study in Oxford's cloistered halls. The Prince was persuaded to continue private studies here until he reached his majority after a series of spectacular incidents last August. Then the young Prince, returning after finishing his studies, deserted his homeward-bound ship at Marsaille and took an airplane back to England, determined to marry Miss Blencowe although his brother, the Sultan of Trengganu, had forbidden the match.

"I will work as a waiter or chauffeur if necessary," the Prince declared. "I have only £4 ($13.75) in my pocket." The next day the Sultan, from his tiger and leopard-infested country, ordered the young man to return home "immediately and unmarried," but Mahmud asserted: "I have no intention of returning HENRY Intelligent, Courteous and Efficient Service Funerals From $150 6205 FIFTH AVENUE SUnset 6-3033 24 SEVENTH AVENUE NEvins 8-8912.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963