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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 9

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle du lieu suivant : Brooklyn, New York • Page 9

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Brooklyn, New York
Date de parution:
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9
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4 ARTHUR RUTHS, PURCHASER FOR EBINGER FIRM, DIES Arthur Ruths, for 18 years pur chasing agent for the Ebinger Baking Company and formerly active in the wholesale bakery and actioners' supply business, died Thursday in his home, 118 Hawthorne after a long illness. Mr. Ruths, who retired from the Zoinger Baking Company in June, was a native of Manhattan and resided in Flatbush for the last 40 years. He had his own supply firm Eric P. Lindahl, Plumber 42 Years Had Contracting Business In South Brooklyn Section Eric Peter Lindahl, 68, who was In the plumbing contracting ness here for 42 years, died yesterday in the Van Wyck Hospital, Richmond Hill, after a brief illness of pneumonia.

Mr. Lindahl, who had lived for the past year at 101-06 110th Richmond Hill, was born in Brooklyn and started his career 50 years ago. He became master plumber eight years later and was in busiheas at 348 8th St. Surviving are his widow, Mabel; son, Arthur daughter, Mrs. C.

Taeymans of Babylon, and three grandchildren. Funeral services wil be held at p.m. tomorrow in the Fred Herbst Sons Chapel, 88 Hanson Place. Burial will be in Flushing Cemetery. John W.

Boyd, 38, Western Union Aide John W. Boyd, assistant to Alexander Simon, general manager of the Metropolitan division of the Western Union Telegraph Com114 W. 183d Manhattan, after pany, died yesterday, at his home, brief illness. Mr. Boyd was born 38 years ago at Dobbs Ferry, N.

Y. He entered the Western Union service as commercial on March 16, 1929, and became the superintendent of district Queens, Suffolk and Nassau Counties in 1033. Two years later he be-. came the district superintendent of the area between 14th and -26th Stay Manhattan. He was promoted to the office of chief clerk to the general manager on Feb.

7, 1938. Surviving are his widow, Eva, and two children, John Jr. and Margery. Funeral services will be held Sunday, at 8:45 p.m., at Cooke's Funeral Home, 190th St. and Jerome the Bronx.

Baeder, Amelia Hughes, Andrew Baldauf, Charles Kroos, Otto Brisk, Lillian Lindahl, Erick Brosnan, Loughman, Anna Catherine, Lyons, James H. Child, Mary McCauley, Clarkson, Harriet Catherine Coleman, Arthur Melgood, Conk, Josephine Benjamin Coombs, William "Miller, Annie Cornell, Anna Miller, George Dunlop, George Oetjen, William Eddington, O'Reilly, Thomas Florence Rorke, William Epple, Pauline Ruths, Arthur Hall, Emily E. Samenfeld, Lee Hettrick, John Spear, Clarence Holmberg, John Stall, Margaret Holsten, George Welsenstein, Howell, Jennie Bertha BAEDER-On Nov. 21, AMELIA, aged 51 years, of 55-25. 68th Street, Maspeth, L.

sister of Louis and aunt of Louis and Everitt Gerbe. Funeral service at the Chapel of R. A. Skelton, 86-08 Broadway, Elmhurst, on Sunday, 8 p.m, Funeral Monday. BALDAUF--Nov.

22, CHARLES, beloved husband of the late Mary, father af Mary and Catherine, brother of Mrs. Louis Maron, George, Frank and Margaret Baldauf. Funeral Tuesday, 9:30 a.m., from his residence, 162 Centre: Street. Requiem mass St. Mary Star of the Sea Church.

BRISK on November 22, beloved sister of Raymond and niece of Henrietta 'Abrams. Puneral Monday, 2 p.m., Oxford Street. BROSNAN-On Thursday, November 21, 1940, at 188 St. Mark's Avenue, CATHERINE BROSNAN, beloved wife of the late Andrew Brosnan. Survived by a son, Harry J.

Brosnan. Remains reposing at Edward 1 H. C. Dunn Chapel, 298 7th Avenue, Funeral Monday, 10 a.m. Solemn mass of requiem at St.

Joseph's Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. CHILD--On Saturday, November 23. 1940. MARY AGNES, of 726 Marcy Avenue.

Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Monday at 3 p.m, CLARKSON--November 21, 1940, at Newton, HARRIET PERKINS, widow of William B. Clarkson, formerly of Schenectady and Brooklyn, N. Y. Notice of funeral later at. the Harry T.

Pyle Mortuary, 1925 Church Avenue, -ARTHUR of 1114 Halsey Street, on. November 22, 1940, beloved husband of Estella L. Reposing at Hill's Chapel, 396 Gates Avenue, where services will be held November 24, at 2 p.m. R. A.

Litchfield, Ex-Legion Chief Electrician, 51, Lived In Bore, Queens 20 Yrs. -Services Set for Today Richmond A. Litchfield of 90-22 202d Hollis, an electrician and past commander of Charles: B. Finnigan Post, 242, American Legion, died Wednesday after brief Illness. He was 51.

Mr. Litchfield was born in Boston and lived in Brooklyn and Queens for the last 20 years. He served in the United States Navy during the World War and Was member of the Electrical Construetion Post, A. at his death. He also was a member of Local 3 of the Electrician's Union.

Surviving are his widow. Charlotte Sohn Litchfield; four brothers, Ira, Lawrence, Charles and Edward, and a sister, Mrs. Mary law. The funeral was held from the home at 9:30 today with solemn mass of requiem at the Church of the Incarnation. John J.

Hettrick, Retired Custodian John J. Hettrick of 107 Douglas St. died Thursday at his home after short illness. He was 79 and formerly for many years was custodian of the Brooklyn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children building at 105 Schermerhorn St. He in 1934.

He was born in Brooklyn and was the husband of the late Jane Cassidy Hettrick. A son, Sylvester Hettrick, survives. The funeral services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday with A solemn mass of requiem at St. Agnes R.

C. Church. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery, Mrs. Maude Bogart Screen Star's Mother Hollywood, Nov. 23 3 (P) Mrs.

Maude Humphrey Bogart, 75, mother of Humphrey Bogart, screen actor, and a noted artist in her own right, died last night. Mrs. Bogart was born in Rochester, N. Y. Her drawings often were used on magazine covers.

She was noted, too, a8 an Illustrator of children's books. The widow Dr. Belmont de Forest Bogart, New York surgeon, she also is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Frances Rose, of New City. DEATHS HOLMBERG- November 22, 1940, JOHN ERIC, of 765 Anderson Avenue, Cliffside Park, N.

beloved husband of Cecelia M. and father of Mabel, Marion and John, in 61st year. Masonic services by Lodge, No. 745, F. the Colonial Stuyvesant, Home, 789 Teaneck Road, Teaneck, N.

Sunday, 8:30 p.m. HOLSTEN-GEORGE on November 22, 1940, beloved husband of Clara and dear father of Roy, at his home, 437 E. 49th Street, Brook- lyn. Services at Rugby Congregational Church, E. 49th and Snyder Avenue, Sunday at 3 p.m.

HOWELL-JENNIE beloved wife of Frank on November 23 at Sayville, L. I. Services Monday, November 25, 2 p.m. at Raynor's Chapel, Sayville. -ANDREW.

on Thursday, Nov. 21, 1940, of 104-40 116th Richmond Hill, L. I. Funeral services at the Kohlmier Funeral Home, 103-27 Lefferts Boulevard, Richmond Hill, L. Monday, Nov.

25, at 2:30 p.m. Interment Cypress Hills Cemetery, Brooklyn, KROOS-On November 22, 1940, OTTO C. KROOS, beloved husband of Margaret Kroos and father of Helen Braisted. Funeral services at his late residence, 191-03 104th Avenue, Hollis, L. Sunday, 4 p.m.

LINDAHL On November 22, 1940, ERICK PETER, of 101-08 110th Street, Richmond Hill, beloved husband of Mabel and loving father of Arthur M. Lindahl and Mrs. Charles Taeymans. Services at Fred Herbst Sons Funeral Home, 83 Hanson Place, Brooklyn, Sunday, 9 p.m. LOUGHMAN.

On November 22, 1940, ANNA, beloved wife of John E. Loughman; mother of Agnes M. La wesson and Helen P. Aylward, and sister of Sister Clare Joseph, 8.8.J. Funeral from her residence, 1950 E.

29th Street, Monday, 9:30 a.m.; requiem mass at Good Shepherd Church at 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, LYONS--On Nov. 21, JAMES HENRY, beloved husband of Mary E. (nee Boylan); son of the late James and Catherine Lyons; father of Florence Angela Mary Alice Mrs. Roger Heisler and Mrs.

Frank Baxter, and brother of Katherine A. O'Brien. Funeral from his residence, 60-61 69th Avenue, formerly 147 Foxall Street, on Monday, 9:30 a.m. Requiem mass St. Matthias Church.

Interment Holy I Cross Cemetery, Attorney's Son, 14, Is Killed, 5 Boys Hurt in L. I. Car Crash Bay Shore, Nov. 23-John R. Davies, 14, son of Julian T.

Davies, prominent New York City attorney of 29 N. Sequams Lane, Babylon, died yesterday in Southside Hospital of a skull fracture received in an automobile accident shortly before midnight Thursday. Five other youths were injured, none seriously, in the accident. A tire of the automobile in which all were riding blew out on Sequams Lane, Babylon, and the car skidded into a tree. Police held Edward Morgan, 17, of 238 Fire Island Babylon, driver of the car, on a charge of criminal negligence.

He suffered lacerations and was removed with Mayor Asks Probe Of Collier Corporation United States Attorney John T. Cahill in Manhattan today had request from Mayor LaGuardia to Investigate the affairs of the now bankrupt Collier Advertising ServIce, and the Collier Service Corporation, which formerly had advertising and vending privileges on the I. R. T. and B.

M. T. lines. The Mayor asked the Federal Attorney to look for possible violations of the Federal Bankruptcy Law. After the contracts of the two companies were automatically sumed by the city through unification, the Mayor said, it was discovered that large amounts were in default.

He asked Mr. Cahill to determine whether payments were unlawfully withheld. 2 Held in Mulcting Of Stamp Collectors Emanuel Bondell of 403 Georgia Ave. and Rabinowitz, owner of the Stamp Bazaar, 165 Fulton Manhattan, were being held in Manhattan in $500 bail each today for Federal grand jury action on charges of mulcting philatelists by affixing spurious overprints to common stamps. Arraigned before Federal Commissioner Garrett W.

Cotter yesterday, Bondell, also known as Manny Davis or Rothstein, was said to have had plates and other equipment for overprinting in his home, and Rabinowitz was accused of having had a similar setup in his place of business. Overprints are applied to stamps which change their value or place of use, or commemorate a special event. Released by the government in restricted numbers, the overprints command high prices among collectors, some of whom allegedly paid the defendants as much as $1.35 for a 5-cent stamp bearing fake overprint. McCAULEY-CATHERINE, wife of Daniel J. McCauley; mother of Frank Nagle and Anna McCauley Nagle and Daniel McCauley Jr.

Funeral Monday, November 25, from Duffy's Funeral Parlor, 9th Street and 4th Avenue; requiem mass Holy Family Church, 10 a.m. MELGOOD-BENJAMIN, after A lingering illness, dear cousin of Bernard Melgood. Services Sunday, November 24, at Flatbush Chapel, 1283 Coney Island Avenue, Brooklyn, at 2 p.m. MILLER-ANNIE, on November 20, at her residence, 317 22d Street, beloved mother of Anne and David and wife of the late David Miller. Remains reposing at Lock wood's Funeral Chapel, 255 21st Street.

Funeral services Sunday, November 24, at 2 p.m., by the Rev. Dr. Davidson of the Twelfth Street Reformed Church. Interment Green- -Wood Cemetery. MILLER November 22, 1940, GEORGE, husband of Mary Daley Miller; father of Mary, Susan Dros, Eileen, Joseph, Thomas, Lawrence and James.

Funeral from his residence, 305 Lafayette Avenue, Monday, November 25,. at 9:30 a.m.; thence Queen of All Saints R. C. Church. Please omit flowers.

OETJEN- -November 21, WILLIAM P. OETJEN, 'beloved husband of Cecile Oetjen and father of Dorothy and William P. Oetjen Jr. Services at his residence, 208 Bay Front Drive, Baldwin Harbor, L. Sunday at 2 p.m.

-THOMAS on Nov. 22, at his residence, 64 Roosevelt Street, Garden City, L. beloved husband of Marguerite, brother of Albert and Frances O'Reilly and Genevieve Altman. Funeral from his residence on Monday at 9:30 a.m. Solemn mass of requiem will be offered at St.

Ann's R. C. Church at 10 o'clock. Interment Holy Cross. Direction Thomas F.

Dalton. RORKE HENRY, on November 21, 1940, husband of Margaret Hayden Rorke and father of James Hayden Rorke, Hayden Rorke and Edward Francis Rorke; son of the late James Rorke and Mary Doherty. Reposing At Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, until Monday. Requiem mass, 10 a.m., St. Augustine's Church, Sterling Place and 6th Avenue.

Interment private, Holy Cross Cemetery. Vital Notices accepted 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. for publication the same day; as late as 10 p.m. Saturday night for publication Sunday BROOKLYN EAGLE, SATURDAY, NOV.

23, 1940 9 for 26 years at 336 Greenwich Manhattan, before joining the baking concern. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Alberta Louise de Chutkowski Ruths; three daughters, Mrs. William 8. Grierson and the Misses Eleanor V.

and Alice L. Ruths, and a grandson, Stanley Oliver Grierson: Services will be held tomorrow p.m. in the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place. Carlos Mayer, 56, Ex- Shipping Official Was French Agent Here During World War A man who died Thursday at the Polo Grounds while attending the Fordham Arkansas football game WAS Carlos Mayer, 56, of Hewlett Harbor, a former Philadelphia shipping executive who recently had been engaged in the promotion of light armor plate, it was learned today. Mr.

Mayer acted as business agent for the French Government in this country during the World War and was an executive in a concern which bought and shipped to France 200,000 horses. He also arranged for the transportation to France of 3,000.000 tons of American produce. He was decorated by the French Government with the Legion of Honor and- -also by the Italian Government. Identification of Mr. Mayer was made at Bellevue Morgue by his brother, Francis R.

Mayer, who WAS at the football game but in a different section. Falling to meet his brother after the game, he sought police aid in locating him. A sister also survives. Otto C. Kroos, 76, Ex-Sugar Worker Otto: C.

Kroos, 76, of 191-03 104th Hollis, died yesterday at his home following a brief Illness. Mr. Kroos was born in Manhattan and lived in Queens for 13 years. He retired about eight years ago after 33 years of service with the American Sugar Refining Compapy, where he worked in the dock department. Surviving are his widow, Mrs.

Margaret Kroos; a daughter, Mrs. Helen K. Braisted, and three grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at the home at 4 p.m. tomorrow.

CONK-JOSEPHINE (nee Werner), November 21, 1940, of 297 8th Street, devoted daughter of Catherine; sister of Catherine, Mary, Agnes, John and 1 George. Solemn requiem mass Monday, 10:30 a.m., St. Thomas Aquinas R. C. Church.

Reposing at Chapel of Joseph G. Duffy, 237 9th Street. COOMBS WILLIAM husband of the late Catherine; father of William E. and George. Reposing at 217 Reid Avenue; requiem mass Lady of Good Counsel Church Monday, November 25, at 9 a.m.

CORNELL On November 21, 1940, ANNA, beloved wife of the late John Cornell and mother of Mrs. Charles Swenson, Mrs. John Lennon. Funeral from the Funeral Parlors of John J. Flood, 254 Hoyt Street, Monday, 9 a.m.; thence to St.

Agnes' R. C. Church, where a solemn requiem mass will be offered. DUNLOP-GEORGE, on November 21, 1940, at his home, 74 Weldon Street, in his 68th year. Survived by his beloved wife, Elizabeth; one daughter, Elizabeth; son, George; also three grandchildren.

Funeral services Sunday, 5 p.m. Interment Monday, 10. a.m., Cemetery, EDDINGTON FLORENCE on November 20, In her 45th year. Survived by her husband, Benjamin; a daughter, Muriel; a son, Robert; mother, Mrs. Delia Dee; two sisters, Mrs.

Mary Kutchenrider and Rita Dee. Funeral Monday from her home, 223 Covert Street, Brooklyn; requiem mass 10 o'clock Church of Fourteen Holy Martyrs. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. EPPLE PAULINE, on Nov. 22.

of 2220 E. 13th Street, beloved mother of Mrs. William Schmalix and William Epple, sister of William Hoffman. Services Sunday, 8 p.m., at John J. Healey Funeral Home, 2977 Ocean Avenue.

Interment Cedar Lawn Cemetery, Paterson, N. J. HALL--On Thursday, November 21, EMILY beloved wife of the late John R. and mother of Russell, Norman and John L. Hall.

ServIces at her residence, 520 Argyle Road, on Sunday at 8 p.m. HETTRICK On November 21, 1940, at his residence, 107 Street, JOHN, the beloved husband of the late Jane Cassidy Hettrick and father of Sylvester Hettrick. Funeral from his home Monday, 10 a.m.; thence to St. Agnes' R. C.

Church, where a solemn requiem mass will be offered. the other boys to the hospital, but later was discharged after treatment. Others taken to the hospital and released later were Fred Schrieber, 14, of Eaton Lane, whose nose was fractured: Chester Greatsinger, 17, of 30 Smith who also suffered broken nose; Edward Skeffington, 22, of 63 Wyandanch also with A broken nose and an injured eye, and John Arink, 17, of Sammis who was severely bruised. The Davies boy's father 1s member of the law firm of Davies, Auerback and Cornell in tan. His mother, Mrs.

Faith Robinson Davies, is socially prominent here. James H. Lyons, Long in Ridgewood Member of Old Family Lived There 70 Years James Henry Lyons, a member of one of Ridgewood's oldest families, died Thursday in his home at 60-61 69th Ridgewood. He was born 70 years ago in the old Lyons Homestead adjoining Highland Park, son of the late James and Catherine McCarville Lyons. The family at one time owned a farm comprising 37 acres in Ridgewood and also was in the lampblack business.

Mr. Lyons was a grandson of Patrick Lyons and WAS educated at St. John's and Manhattan colleges. Surviving is his widow, Mary E. Boylan Lyons; six daughters, Florence, Angela, Mary Alice, Mrs.

Roger Heisler and Mrs. Frank Baxter; five grandchildren, and a sister, Mrs. Katherine A. O'Brien. The funeral will be held at 9:30 a.m.

Monday from the home with solemn mass of requiem at St. Matthias R. C. Church. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery, Bennett Sisters Arrive For Mother's Funeral The Bennett sisters arrived at LaGuardia Field yesterday to attend the funeral of their mother, Adrienne Morrison, former actress, today in Old Lyme, Conn.

They flew from Los Angeles in an American Airlines plane. In the party were Constance nett, Joan Bennett and her husband, Walter Wanger; Barbara Bennett, who is Mrs. Morton Downey, and Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks Sr. Mr.

Downey met them at the airport and left with them. RUTHS-On Thursday, November 21, 1940, ARTHUR, beloved husband of Alberta Louise de Chutkowski Ruths; devoted father of Mildred E. Grierson, Eleanor V. and Alice L. Ruths; grandfather of Stanley Oliver Grierson.

Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Sunday, 3 p.m. SAMENFELD LEE, suddenly November 21, husband of Emma; father of Eleanor and Mark. Funeral Sunday, 1 o'clock, Levinger's United Chapel, 1202 Broadway, Brooklyn. Omit flowers. Private.

SPEAR- on Thursday, November 21, 1940, at Belle Island, CLARENCE beloved husband of Alice F. and father of Charles F. and Stoughton C. Spear. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Sunday at 4 p.m.

STALL MARGARET, on November 21, 1940. Survived by her husband, August; one son, Nicholas Bachert; three grandchildren, two sisters and one brother. Funeral from Englert's Chapel, 115 Evergreen Avenue, Monday, 9:30 a.m.; solemn requiem mass at St. John the Baptist Church, 10 a.m. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. WEISENSTEIN BERTHA, November 22, at her residence, 108-02 95th Avenue, Richmond Hill, beloved wife of the late Philip; mother of Jacob; also survived by two grandchildren, three greatgrandchildren, sister, Tillie, and brother, Carl. Services Sunday evening, 9 o'clock. Interment Monday, 2 p.m., Evergreens Cemetery. John L.

Bader, Director. In Memoriam: -In loving memory of my beloved mother, ELLEN A. BARNETT. Died Thanksgiving, 1932. Mass on November 25, 7 a.m., at Church of Assumption.

Daughter, EILEEN. BARNETT-MEEHAN-In loving memory of my beloved FATHER and SISTER. MINNIE MEEHAN GRAHAM. DRESCHER. CATHERINE.

In memory of my mother, who died November 24, 1939. Dear mother, you are not forgotten, Though on earth you are no more, Still in memory you are with us AR you always were before. Loving Son, ALVIN. HAUSER-LEOPOLD. In memory of a devoted husband and ther.

Died November 23, 1938. A silent thought, secret tear, Keeps his memory ever dear. WIFE and SON. -In loving memory of our dear mother, JOHANNA M. HERBST.

who passed away November 23, 1920, CHILDREN. Savants View Bones of Shark Once in Sea on Site of Buffalo Buffalo, Nov. 23 (P)-Scientists this shark and said it is the first figuratively spanned 250,000,000 time opposite sides of the same years today as they studied remains specimen of the species has been of reproductions of prehistoric ani- shown. They came from Buffalo mal and vegetable life that flour- quarry. ished that long ago on the Niagara Carter also showed a new gerrus frontier.

and species of fossil "fish." A Among creatures of the Devo- ptyetodont tritor, found in Ononnian Age that aroused the interest daga limestone in quarry at of those attending symposium Cheektowaga. It has no living desponsored by the Council of Scien- scendants. tific Societies of Western New York Neither has the teratapsis, a was an Onondaga fin spine shark, crablike animal that lived in a with jawbreaking name, which coral reef and remained there until once swam in a sea where Buffalo Irving G. Reimann, curator of geolnow stands. and his descendants ogy at the Buffalo Museum of still swimming in salt water far Science, scene of the symposium, away.

dug it out of a limestone quarry in Alick L. Carter of the Buffalo Williamsville. Reimann made A Society of Natural Sciences exhib- restoration which he says is the ited a pair of pectoral spines of world's largest. Publish Analysis Of Quiz on Cancer Mineola, Nov. 23.

Prepared by Miss Muriel F. Bliss, executive secof the Nassau County Canretary cer Committee, an aralysis of the quiz on cancer held at the health corner of the Mineola Fair in September has been published in Nassau Health, bulletin of the County Health Department, and in Nassau Medical News, publication of the Nassau County Medical Society. The analysis that of the 655 persons who answered the questions 65 percent knew that radium will cure cancer and 95 percent knew that cancer is not catching. The article declares: "These answers, supplemented by answers to a similar questionaire last year, furnish a fairly good index of what people in Nassau County know about cancer at the present time. They indicate that most people know that they should go to a doctor when the first symptoms of cancer appear, but they also show that the average person does now know what the doctor can do to help him." Nassau Relief Cases Cut By 945 During Past Year Mineola, Nov.

23-Excluding duplications, the net total of home relief and WPA cases in Nassau on Nov. 1 was 945 less than a year ago, according to a report by County Welfare Commissioner Edwin W. Wallace. Wills Filed The following wills are on file today in Surrogate's Court: BECK, AEGESTA (Oct. 30).

Estate, $5.000 real and $7.000 personal. cousin, Alcesta P. Cook, 66 Bulwer Place. executrix. CHARLES J.

(Nov. 14). real and not more than FLESSA, tate, $15,000 personal. To daughters, one-half Anne K. Schilling, 231 Dorset residue: Gladys Novotny, 1668 10th property at that address and onehalf residue.

Willia L. Novotns, 1660 10th executor. McCORMACK, IRENE (Nov. 3). Estate, not more than $10.000 real and not more $10,000 personal.

To father. residue. Nichthan olas McCormack. 415 72d Lillian McCormack, 275 Brooklyn petitioner. PFAFF, ANNA B.

(Nov. 8). Estate, not than $6.000 real and not more than more $20.000 personal. To Anna Kraft, 2504 Palisades Weehawken, machine and $500: Paula Gloeckler. 54 Chestnut $500; Maple Grove Cemeterr.

Kew Gardens, Road, Kew Gardens. nephew, Herman Gloeckler. 54 $350: Chestnut St. property at that address and one-eleventh of residue; brother, Christian Gloeckler, $1,000. Nieces and nephews, 92.

Marie Schwenninger Schlenker. both of Werastrasse Germans: Richard Gloeckler, 83 Miller executor; Viktor and Tina Gloecker, both of 70-06 Woodside 176-76 80th Woodside: Anna Gutman, Road. Jamaica: Bertha Meincke, 76 Centre Woodmere: Christian Gloeckler, 58 Fairview Teaneck, N. Frederick Gloeckler, 75 Garden Bergenfield, N. Anna Lange, 52 8.

lin Bergenfield. N. and Christian Gloecker. Steigstrasse. 86 Tunningen Tuttlingen, Germany, one-eleventh of due each.

about $7,500 real and more than 1 $10,000 POPPE. ARTHUR J. (Nov. 14), Estate, personal. To wife, Mary H.

Poppe, 250 Monroe executor. QUIGLEY. CATHERINE M. (Oct. personal.

12). Estate, $5.000 real and $8.000 To brothers. Patrick F. Quigley, executor, and Thomas M. Quigley, and sisters, Helen V.

Quieley, executrix, and Mary Quieley, all of 638 60th one- -fourth of residue each. SALTER. FANNIE B. (Oct. 18).

Estate, real and $4.500 personal. To Society for the Care of the South Cemetery, Portsmouth. N. $900: nephew, Wendell L. Peterson, York Village.

$100; grandniece, Geraldine 0. Detlets, 2842 Grand Concourse, Bronx, executrix. cemetery plot. specific realty and content, personal effects and residue. Katharyn G.

Geerlofs, 105 S. Lake Albany, executrix. Letters of administration have been granted on these estates: GANS. JOSEPH (Oct. 18).

Estate, not more than $35.000. To wife. Delia L. Gans, 824 Greene Ave. Other heirs, two sons and a daughter.

KOLLER, TERESA (Nor 13. Estate. not more than $10.000. To dauchter. Anne Koller.

414 61st 8t. Other heirs, son and two daughters. AUCTION SALE SALES. H. G.

SCHONZEIT. AUCTIONEER. sells November 25. 1940. 12 noon.

56 Scholes Street, Brooklyn, Oldsmobile Sedan, Buick Sedan. LaSalle Sedan, Buick Coupe. International Truck. G. M.

C. Trucks, Motor Nos. F8395-70. 63624869. 2-295085, 43491010.

13894, 525 R10325. 2605814. H. G. SCHONZEIT.

AUCTIONEER. sella November 25, 1940, 11:30 a.m.. 729 Kent Brooklyn, Packard Sedan. G. M.

C. Truck, Motor Nos. X19548, 13311356. H. G.

SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER. sella November 25. 1940, 11:15 a.m., 35 S. 8th Brooklyn, Oldsmobile Sedan, Motor No. F51316.

H. G. SCHONZEIT. AUCTIONEER. sells November 39, 1940, 10:45 A.m..

1524 Bushwick Brooklyn. Hudson Tudor Sedan, Serial No. 4075151. H. G.

SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER. sells November 39, 1940, 11:00 3.m.. 1460 Bushwick Brooklyn. Nash Sedan. Serial No.

R304541. Feldhuhn, I. Kirschner. J. Schwalb.

sell at 70 Bowery, at 9 a.m. Nov. 28 By order of M. Bruck helmer Sons. 705 Grand diamonda, silverware, jewelry and secondhand watches pledged from 1569 of Jan.

12, 1937, to 35439 of Oct. 14 1939 n2Ndt 03u PAWNBROKERS SALES ESTATE OF EUGENE ROSENBAUM'S AUCTIONEERS. J. Kelly. Strike Peace Delay Blamed on Simpson RITES TODAY- -Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.

today in the Masonic Temple, Clermont and Lafayette for former Municipal Court Justice William D. Niper, who died Wednesday. New Grand Jury Listed by Thorp Mineola, Nov. 23-County Commissioner of Jurors John 8. Thorp today made public the list of grand jurors who will serve during the term of the Supreme Court here which opens Dec.

2. Supreme Court Justices Charles C. Lockwood and Isaac R. Swezey will preside. Those selected for the panel are John Herdman and Clifford F.

Knowlton of Lynbrook, H. Irving Platt Samuel Sandman and H. Ridgely Bullock of Glen Cove, Arthur 8. Underhill of Syosett, Frederick L. Cantwell of Massapequa, Pomeroy Lee and Arthur C.

Vogt of Great Neck, John F. Bermingham of East Norwich, Harold Brindley and Thomas A. Dolan of Rockville Centre, W. F. Scott of Port Washington, Frederick H.

Pearce and Frank R. Smith of Garden City, Walter E. Smith of East Williston, Albert Z. Gray of Locust Valley, Paul Halpin and Jacob Post of Freeport, Charles W. Ludlum and Edwin F.

Griffin of Oyster Bay, Ernest Stelger of Roslyn Heights, Andrew McTugue of Lawrence and Thomas M. Danderfield of Hempstead. Philosophers Weigh Plea For Independent Cabinet Philadelphia, Nov. 23 (AP)-A proposal that the next forward step in American democracy should be Presidential cabinet with more independent powers was before the American Philosophical Society today. It was made by Edwin S.

Corwin, professor of jurisprudence at Princeton University, to the annual Fall meeting of the society last night. "I am of the opinion," he said, "that the enlargement of Presidential power within recent decades confronts the American people with task of deliberate constitutional reform; and further that this just consist in stabilizing in some wayperhaps by a new type of cabinet- of the relationship between the President and Congress, for this day, with the rapid relegation of the Supreme Court to a secondary role, is the center of gravity of our constitutional system." Appraisals The following appraisals, reported by State Transfer Tax. Appraiser David F. Soden, are on file today in Surrogate's Court: CONNERS. JOANNA (Dec.

17. 1938). Gross assets, net, $9,306. To friend, the Rev. John O' Brien, $100: brother, Jeremiah P.

Neville, residuary estate. Chief assets, real estate, mortgages, notes, cash insurance, Jointly owned property. $8,363. Joseph E. Keenan, attorney.

Court St. FREISINGER, EUGENE (April 27, 1940). Gross assets. 036,217: net, $28.932. To Hattie Freiainger, wife: Frances Freisinger and daughters, Joan and Judith Freisinger, in specific shares.

Chief assets, real estate, $300: stocks and bonds, 500; mortgages, notes, cash and insurance, 82,417: miscellaneous property, Herman S. Axelrod, attornes, 39 Broadway. Manhattan. JACHENS. JOHN H.

(Feb. 15, 1940). Gross assets. net, $12,710. To grandnephews.

HAnk and Julius Oestermann, and nephews, Albert J. Claussen, $500 each: Carl F. Jachens, $200; Richard and Diederich Jachens and nieces. Adelaide J. Wendelken.

Lilly Gerken, Ada J. Ablers and Alma Siedhoff, $1,000 each: brother. Diederich Jachens, personal effects and one-half of residuary estate: sister, Anna Buscher. onehalf of residuary estate. Chief mortgages.

notes, cash and insurance. $14.660. Edward A. Bidman, attorney, 189 Montague St. JOHNSON, MARY E.

(Oct. 16. 1939). Gross assets. net, $11.126.

To half-sister. Hannah D. Taylor, and nephew, Chester Dayton, one-halt of residuary estate each. Chief assets. real estate.

$1.500: notes, cash and insurance, $11.315. Irwin T. Longworth attorney, 253 Sunrise Highway, Rockville Centre. MALTZ. TAUBE (Bept.

1. 1939), Gross assets. $17.042: net, $16.299. To daughtera, Mamie Nader, Esther Goldberg and Rose Eichelbaum. and sons, Louis, Samuel and Maxwell Maltz, one of residuary estate each.

Chief assets. mortCAReS, notes. cash and insurance, $14.532: jointly owned property, $2.510. Feldman Barrett. attorneys, 6 East 45th Manhattan.

ROTHSCHILD. EMMA (June 21. 1940). Gross amets, $93.445. To grandsons.

Alvin Jerome D. And Emanuel R. Blumbers. $2.000 each: daughter. Sadie Blumbers, jewelry and one -half of residuary estate: son.

Irving G. Rothechild. specific realty and one-half of residuary notate. Chief assets. real tate.

stocks and bonds. $163: mortgages. notes. cash and insurance, $84.049: miscellaneous property, $495 I transfers, $2,833. Frederick W.

Kiendl, attorney, 2634 Atlantic Ave. WOLLIN, OSTA8 (Dec. 14, 1933), Gross net, $15,076. To ters. Yetta Lippan (deceased), Bella Goshin.

Fanny Browds, Sophia Grunas, Lena Barron and Lillian Selditch, and grandson. Maxim Newmark. In specific shares, Chief rent estate and personal properte. $15,777 Newmark A Schlossbere, attorneys, 36 W. 44th Manhattan.

Downey, Nov. 23 (U.P) Walter J. Smethurst, international representative of the United Automobile Workers of America (C. I. charged today that Maj.

Sidney Simpson of the War. Department had held up efforts to negotiate strike settlement at the Vultee Aircraft Company's plant. He said he and Richard Millar, president of Vultee, had arranged to resume negotiations today, without a third party. Smethurst said he was forwarding his statement regarding Simpson to Phillip Murray, new president of the C. I.

O. His statement was shown to Simpson in his hotel room. "It's a lie," he said. "It doesn't analyze." Smethurst charged Major Simphad contributed to "the confusion" attending negotiations. He was sent here by the War Department to further negotiations.

Both sides awaited the arrival of R. J. Thomas, president of the United Automobile Workers, en route from Philadelphia by plane. Canadian Flier Begins Jail Term for Bigamy Toronto, Nov. 23 (U.P) -Donald Willis, 27-year-old India- born flier who fought for Finland against Russia and later helped fly captured German plane from Norway to Great Britain, today began serving a nine-month jail sentence for bigamy and perjury.

Willis pleaded guilty to both oftenses. He married Mary Kathleen Krouse in New York City on April 10, 1937, and applied last Oct. 31 at Hamilton, for license to marry a Toronto girl. At the time of his second application for a marriage license Willis described himself as a bachelor. Willis admitted serving 14- month term in Alcatraz for assaulting a man while in the United States Army.

Dinner to Climax Drive The annual dinner marking the climax in the appeal by radio, music, refrigeration and allied industries on behalf of the 116 welfare agencies affiliated with the New York and Brooklyn Federations of Jewish Charities will be held tomorrow night in the Waldorf -Astoria, Manhattan. Jules M. Smith and Max Kassover, co-chairmen. report receipt of more than 1,200 reservations at $100 a couple. Walter 3: Cooke DIGNIFIED As Low FUNERALS As $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES 151 1218 154-10 63-32 Ferest 158-14 North.

117 West 1451 First 165 E. 347 214 Avenue Phone for Representative or Write for Mustrated Booklet "D' -No Obligation LEGAL NOTICES AT A SPECIAL TERM, PART II, OF THE CITY COURT OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, held then and for the County of Kings, at Court House thereof, at 120 Schermerhorn Street, in the Borough of Brooklyn, City of New York, on the 19th day of November. 1940. Present: Hon. LOUIS GOLDSTEIN, Justice.

In the Matter of the Application of MORRIS JWREJ and ESTHER JWREJ for leave to Assume the Names of MORRIS IVER and ESTHER IVER. UPON READING and filing the petitions of MORRIS JWREJ and EsTHER JWREJ. verified the 8th day of November. 1940. praying for leave tr assume the names of MORRIS IVER and ESTHER IVER in place of their present names, NOW on motion of BENJAMIN MENN.

attorney for the petitioners, and the Court being satisfied that there is no reasonable objection to their change of names, it is hereby ORDERED that the said application be and the same hereby is granted. and the petitioners authorized to assume on the 29th day of December. 1940. the name of MORRIS IVER in place of the name of MORRIS JWREJ. and the name of ESTHER IVER in place of the name ESTHER JWREJ, and it is further ORDERED that within ten days after the date hereof this order And the papers upon which the same granted be filed in the office of the Clerk of the City Court of the City of New York, County of Kings, and that within ten dave after the entry thereof copy of this order be published in the Bronklyn Daily Flagle, A per published in the County of Kings, And that within 40 dava after the date of this order An affidavit of publication thereof be filed in the office of the Clerk of the City Court of the City of New York, County of Kings, and after the said' requirements have been complied with by the netitioners that on and after the noth dav Derember.

1940. the shall he known by the names then authorto MORRIS IVER and ESTHER IVER, reanectively, And by no other names, Enter: LOUTS GOLDSTEIN, J. C. C..

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À propos de la collection The Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Pages disponibles:
1 426 564
Années disponibles:
1841-1963