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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

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Brooklyn, New York
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11
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For Classified 'Ad Results BROOKLYN EAGLE, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 16. 1939 Telephone MAin 4-6200 11 Ahrens, George T. Michael J. Bond, Mary Bonderson, Alms M.

Brady, John C. Burke, Chapman, Markettle Clausen, George Connell, John M. Deimonico, Eleanor Dugan, Patrick Duggan, Joseph D. Dunne, William C. Eckstein, Roselea Deaths Frith, Anna F.

Froning, Josephine Gillen, Andrew M. Hanson, Marie Jones, Mary E. Larkin, Michael Meyer, John H. Norton, Margaret Rippier, Joseph H. Ryan, Alice Schreiber, Henry 8ilz, Henrietta M.

Snyder, Elizabeth Veit, Sarah Wagner, Abby V. AHRENS- GEORGE T. on Aug. 16, 1939; dear son of George and Anna, brother of Anna. Reposing at chapel, 40 Lafayette Ave.

Requiem mass St. Augustine's R. C. Church, Friday, 9:30 a.m, Austin W. Moran, director.

BENN-On August 14, MICHAEL father of Mary G. Oates. ReposStutzmann Funeral Home, 224-39 Jamaica Queens Viluntil Thursday, 9:30 a.m. Mass Our Lady of Lourdes R. C.

Church, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Crass Cemetery. BOND On Tuesday, August 15, 1939, MARY, the late Hugh Bond, mother of Mrs. Ann Murphy, Mrs. Mary Fagan, Mrs.

Loretta Buckley, Harriet, James and Hugh Bond. Funeral from her residence, 114 Prospect Park West, on Thursday, August 17, at 9:30 a.m., thence to St. Saviour's R. C. Church.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Please omit flowers. on AuBONDERSON, 1078 E. 24th beloved wife of Olaf and mother of Helen Borgeson. Services at Ericson and Ericson's Chapel, 500 State Thursday evening at 8:30 o'clock.

Interment Friday, 10 a.m., Evergreens Cemetery. BRADY-On August 15, JOHN of 9116 89th beloved husband of Frances, father of Theodora, John, Lawrence, Gerard, Mary, and Joseph; brother of Sarah Shiner, Charles J. Brady. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass St.

Thomas Apostle R. C. Church. BURKE On Aug. 14, 1939, MARY.

native of Clonbuligue, Kings County, Ireland, beloved wife of the Thomas Burke; dear aunt of John and Christopher Cocaman, also Mrs. Margaret, Dunn and James Cocaman Reposing at J. J. Gallagher Sons Funeral Home, 25. Aberdeen St.

Solemn requiem mass Church of Our Lady of Lourdes Thursday, 10 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, Kindly omit flowers. CHAPMAN-On Monday, August 14, 1939, HETTIE MAY CHAPMAN of 298 Union Belleville, N. daughter of the late Albion K. and Henrietta Holmes Chapman.

Funeral service at the "Home for Services" (Smith and Smith), 160 Clinton Newark, on Thursday, August 17, at 11 a.m. CLAUSEN-On August 15, 1939, GEORGE beloved husband of Pauline Clausen (nee McFadden), dear brother of Marie, John, Mrs. Elizabeth Sculley, Benjamin and Helen Clausen; also Mrs. Anna Ruge Denmark. Services at his residence, 150 Remsen Thursday, 8 p.m.

Interment Friday, 11 a.m., Lutheran Cemetery. J. J. Gallagher Sons, Directors. August 16, JOHN retired member of N.

Y. F. son of the late John and Johanna O'Connell. Reposing at Murnane Funeral Home, 243 6th Ave. Funeral notice later.

DELMONICO-ELEANOR, on August 14, in Gloucester, N. J. She leaves a brother, Albert; two sisters, Margaret and Elizabeth; also Aunt Florence. Funeral from her residence, 286. President on August 17, at 9:30, thence to Sacred Heart Church.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. DUGAN PATRICK beloved husband of Margaret Martin; father of Bartholomew, Daniel and I Patrick Dugan, Thomas and "Sister Rose Marie, O.S.D. Funeral George T. McHugh Funeral frome, 1016 Bedford Thursday, 9:30 a.m.; requiem mass St. Patrick's R.

C. Church. DUGGAN-JOSEPH suddenly, August 15, beloved husband of Margaret (nee Kealy), father of Margaret, Mary, Kathleen and Joseph also survived by his mother, Mary, three brothers and three sisters. Member of N. Y.

P. D. Funeral from residence, 108 Bay 8th Friday, August 18. 10 a.m., thence to Church of St. Bernadette, 81st St.

and 13th Ave. Interment Holy Cross. DUNNE WILLIAM C. of 1668 10th devoted uncle of Mrs. George W.

Schilling and Mrs. William L. Novotny. Services at E. C.

Waldeck's Home for Funerals, 7614 4th Wednesday evening, 8:30. -ROSELEA (nee McCaffrey), suddenly, Aug. 13, 1939. Survived by husband, George; 'daughter, Agnes O'Connor. A member of the Third Order of St.

Francis, also a member of Rosary Society of Church of St. Catherine of Genoa. Funeral on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. from J. B.

O'Connor neral Home, 406 Clarkson requiem mass St. Catherine of Genoa. Interment St. John's Cemetery, VITAL NOTICES (Acknowledgments, Births, Condolences, Confirmations, Deaths, Engagementi, Marriages, Masses, Memoriams, Resolutions) accepted until 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 in 90 cents per line. MAin 4-6200 Requiem Friday Dr.

Andrew M. Gillen Noted borough physician and chairman of the medical board of the Shore Road Hospital, who died yesterday. A requiem mass will be offered in St. Anselm's R. C.

Church Friday. Deaths on August 15, widow of Francis sister of Mrs. William Schindele, Katheryn, Emma and William Stanton. Funeral from Moadinger Funeral Parlors, 1120 thence to St. Francis Assisi R.

C. Flatbush DO Thursday, 8:30 a.m.; Church. FRONING- Monday, August 14. 1939, in her 66th year, JOSEPHINE, beloved wife of Louis; also survived by three daughters. Funeral services at her residence, 461, 46th Street, on Thursday, August at 8 p.m.

Funeral Friday at 2 p.m. Interment Green- Wood Cemetery. -ANDREW MARTIN, M.D., on August 15, dear husband of Anita C. Quinn Gillen and loving father of Anita C. Quigley and Sherley E.

McDermott, and brother of John J. and Joseph. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m. from residence, Pils 8024 Colonial thence to the R. C.

Church of St. Anselm's, 4th Ave. and 83d St. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, HANSON On August 14, 1939, MARIE, beloved wife of Thomas Hanson. Funeral services at the chapel of F.

B. Powell Son, 230 Broadway, Amityville, L. Thursday, at 3 p.m. Member of Naval Auxiliary No. 47, United Spanish War Veterans.

ES On Monday, August 14, 1939, MARY E. wife of the late John W. Jones, beloved mother of Mrs. Estelle Eldert, Mrs. Grace Linton and Herbert V.

Jones. Service at the Fairchild Chapel, 89-31 164th Jamaica, Thursday at 2:30 p.m. Interment in Cypress Hills Cemetery. LARKIN-MICHAEL, on Aug. 16, 1939, husband of the late Nora Fahey, father of Mary Burke, Anna Gaynor, John Edward M.

Larkin, Catherine Hanbury and Winifred Zingerman. Funeral from his residence, 239 E. 31st on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass at St. Jerome's R.

C. Church, a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. MEYER-JOHN H.

on August 16, beloved husband of Martha, father of Martha and Clara Meyer, in his 77th year. Services will be held Friday, August 18, at 2 p.m., at his residence, 160 Midwood St. Interment Lutheran Cemetery. NORTON- at her home, 3074 Fulton on August 14, 1939. She is survived by her husband, Joseph four daughters, Mrs.

Viola Bloodgood, Mrs. M. Shrupske, Mrs. Rita McKee, Miss Anna Norton, and four sons, Grover, Joseph George and William. Funeral Friday, 8:30 a.m.

Solemn requiem mass Church of the Blessed Sacrament, 9 a.m, Interment Calvary Cemetery. RIPPIER- August 14, 1939 JOSEPH beloved husband of the late brother Marie of Dorothy Olivier A. and Rippier, Edwin B. loving Chapel, Rippier. 40 Lafayette Avenue, ThursFuneral from the Lafayette day at 1:30 p.m.

Interment GreenWood Cemetery, (Detroit papers please copy.) RYAN-On Aug. 14, 1939, ALICE daughter of the late Alice and sister of Edward Philip G. Ryan, Helen M. Cussea and Gertrude A. LaMothe.

Funeral from the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Thursday. 9 a.m.; requiem mass Church of the Nativity, son Ave. and Madison at 9:50 a.m. SCHREIBER-On August. 15, 1939, HENRY (Harry), husband of Jessie, Schreiber.

father of Services Roy at and the Amelia Funeral Parlors, 437 Nostrand at Hancock Thursday, August 17, at 8 p.m. SNYDER-Suddenly on August 14, 1939, ELIZABETH (nee Ballantyne), beloved wife of Harold B. and devoted mother of Hazel. Funeral service at August Eickelberg's Parlor. 934 8th near 55th Manhattan, Thursday, August 17, at 1 p.m.

Interment Woodlawn Cemetery. VEIT-August 15, 1939, at her residence, 340 10th SARAH, beloved wife of Lawrance Veit, devoted mother of of James, George and John Brennan, loving grandmother of Marie Brennan. Reposing at Fred Herbst Sons Memorial, 7501 5th Ave. Notice of funeral later. WAGNER-August 15, 1939, ABBY beloved wife of John mother of Adolph Wagner.

Funeral from John Gallagher Funeral Home. 2549 Church Friday, 9:30 a.m. Requiem mass Holy Cross Church, 10 o'clock. Dr. Andrew Gillen Dies Here at 64 Personal Physician To Valentine Was Noted Obstetrician Dr.

Andrew M. Gillen of 8024 Colonial Road, personal physician to Police Commissioner Valentine and a widely known obstetrician and a practicing physician in Brooklyn for 40 years, died yesterday at the Long island College Hospital after an illness of several months. Death came on his sixty-fourth birthday. He was born in Brooklyn. During his career as a physician Dr.

Gillen delivered nearly 8,000 babies. He was regarded as one of the city's leading obstetricians and also specialized in pediatrics. Four years ago Commissioner Valentine appointed him an honorary police surgeon. GOT DEGREE AT 21 Dr. Gillen attended St.

Francis College and matriculated at Lon: Island College Hospital and later at the Coney Island Hospital. He received his medical degree at the age of 21. Prior to the Walker administration he served two terms as Alderman. Early in his career Dr. Gillen became house surgeon of the Reception Hospital at Coney Island and afterward was member of the medical staff of 'st.

John's Hospital in Long Island City. For 12 years prior to the Summer of 1929 he was chairman of the medical board of Coney Island Hospital. Dr. Gillen had been identified with the Shore Road Hospital since its opening and was chairman of its medical board and chief obstetrician at the time of his death. Speaking as chief of the hospital's maternity section in 1931 he said that it is not only "wise economy" but "good health practice for the modern woman to bear her child in a hospital." SURGEONS' COLLEGE MEMBER He member of the medical the Holy Family and St.

Mary's Hospitals. He was a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and a member of the Kings County Medical Society and the St. Albans Golf Club. Surviving are his widow, C. Gillen; two daughters, Mrs.

Edward J. Quigley Francis McDermott, both of Brooklyn, and two brothers, John J. Gillen of Manhattan and Joseph Gillen Brooklyn. The funeral will be held from the late home Friday morning at 9:30 o'clock. A solemn requiem mass will be celebrated at St.

Anselm's R. C. Church, 4th Ave. and 83d St. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery.

Mrs. Mark Chase, Wife of Policeman Special to the Brooklyn Eagie Bay Shore, Aug. 16-Mrs. Mabel L. Chase, 42, wife of Islip Town Policeman Mark L.

Chase, died early yesterday in Dr. King's Hospital after an operation. Born in Center Moriches, Mrs. Chase was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

William French. Besides her husband she leaves two sons, Franklin and Kenneth; daughter, Dorothy, and five brothers. Mrs. Chase was a member of the auxiliary organization of the local the American Legion, the Social Aid Society, and the Brook Avenue Mothers' Club. Funeral services will be held tomorrow at 2 p.m.

in the Bay Shore Congregational Church. Interment will be in Oakwood Cemetery. The funeral will be held from the 'funeral parlors of Sydney Y. Sullivan. Philip F.

Schmitt deputy Philip clerk F. and Schmitt, 89, interpreter formerly, City Court here, died yesterday at his home, 19 Charlton Manhattan. He retired from the city service in 1935. Surviving are his widow, Anna M. Schmitt; five sons, Grover, Anthony, August, Joseph and Bernard, and four daughters.

Rose, Martha, Clara and Grace. Mr. Schmitt was born in Bavaria had been employed in the courts for 40 years. He served in this borough for 12 years before he retired. A solemn requiem mass will be offered at 10:30 a.m.

Friday in St. Anthony of Padua R. C. Church, Manhattan. Dr.

Layton Named Insurance Examiner Albany, Aug. 16 UP State insurance fund today appointed Dr. DeForest T. Layton, formerly of Schenectady, district medical examiner with headquarters in Albany. Dr.

Layton will have local supervision of all medical problems in connection with the State fund in the district which embraces 22 counties extending from Westchester to the Canadian border. He was recently on the teaching staff of the Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn. Zionist Congress Cuts Session to 10 Days Geneva, Aug. 16 (AP) The world's Zionist Congress cut its sessions today from two weeks to ten days because of the threatening internation situation. The actions committee voted to close the congress Aug.

25. This was a compromise between a motion to end meetings in six days and another to let them run as planned through Aug. 28. 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. Charles S.

Street, Expert on Bridge Wrote Several Books On Game and Taught Persons of Prominence Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Southampton, Aug. 16 Services for Charles Stuart Street, an authority on bridge whist and the author of several books on the game, who died last night in the Southampton Hospital after an illness of three weeks, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the O'Connell Funeral Home here. Burial will be at Cortland, N. Y.

A native of Manhattan, where he was born 75 years ago, Mr. Street was son of the Rev. Thomas Street, Presbyterian minister who served in Manhattan and Cortland. He was teacher of bridge for 40 years and his classes included many persons of prominence. He continued to give lessons until last month.

His Wednesday Night Bridge Club had been meeting under his direction at Manhattan during the Winters since 1900 and at Southampton since 1914. Mr. Street WAS the author of "Street on Bridge" and a later volume dealing with the newer forms of the game. The books were in much demand by amateurs throughout the United States. In recent years he had done little writing.

A bachelor, Mr. Smith is survived by nephew, Edward H. Clark of Cortland, N. and two nieces, Mrs. Alexander J.

Inglis of Annasquam, and Mrs. George S. Brooks of Groton, N. Y. Mrs.

M. E. Jones, Church Worker Was Long Active With Late Husband In Boro and Queens Mrs. Mary I. Jones, 89, widow John W.

Jones, died Monday in Jamaica Hospital, where she had been confined for three weeks. She had been in poor health for some time. She was a native of Rome, N. Y. Mrs.

Jones and her husband, who died in 1922, were formerly active in church circles, particularly at the Dutch reformed Church in Jamaica, where Mr. Jones had been choirmaster and tenor soloist, and at the Old First Dutch Reformed Church, Carroll St, and 7th where Mr. Jones was an elder for a number of years. The couple celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 1921. For some years prior to her death Mrs.

Jones resided during the Winter with ther daughter, Mrs. George Linton, 558 3d St. She passed her Summers with another daughter, Mrs. Abraham D. Eldert of 148-49 86th Jamaica.

Besides her two daughters, she is survived by a son, Herbert V. Jones of Sutton, N. H. Funeral services will be held the Fairchild Chapel, 89-31 164th Jamaica, tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Interment will be in Cypress Hills Cemetery.

Miss Frieda Rexroth Word has been received here of the death at Wiesbaden, Germany, of Miss Frieda Rexroth, a nurse who served at Camp Wykoff at Montauk Point during the Spanish American War. She was proprietor of the Villa Prima Vera at Wiesbaden. During the Spanish- -American War, Miss Rexroth volunteered as a Red Cross nurse and later was sworn in as a regular Army nurse, serving on the hospital ship Lampasas. She also had been superintendent of nurses at Lenox Hill Hospital and head of the Rexroth Sanitarium. Among her surviving nieces is Mrs.

Hildegrade Rexroth Martens of 52 77th St. John M. Connell John M. Connell, 74, of 447 5th a retired fireman, died today. He was a native of Manhattan and lived most of his life in Brooklyn.

A son of the late John and Johanna 'O'Connell, he had been in the Fire Department for more than 20 years and retired about 25 years ago. He was the brother of the late Thomas O'Connell, Mrs. Hanna Toole, Mrs. Mary Hagan and Mrs. Norah Hagan, and was a member of the Holy Society of St.

Saviour's R. C. Church. Arrangements for the funeral have not been completed. Projectiles Expert John Carlson Engineer, formerly associated with the E.

W. Bliss Company, who died last night. He was an expert on projectiles. Services will be held Friday night John Carlson, 79, Engineer, Builder Expert on Projectiles Had Been With Bliss Firm About 25 Years John Carlson. 79, an engineer who formerly was associated with the E.

W. Bliss Company, died last night at his home, 944 74th after a brief illness. He was a native of Sweden and was an expert on the manufacture of, projectiles. Mr. Carlson had been associated with the Bliss Company for about 25 years.

After retiring, from that company he building field and built more than 100 houses in this borough, mainly in South Brooklyn and Bay Ridge. He was prominent in Masonic affairs, being a member of Bredablick Lodge, F. Kismet Temple, A. A. O.

N. M. S. Clinton Commandery, K. and Orient Chapter, M.

He also belonged to the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Carlson was the father of late John Carlson borough lawyer and instructor at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, who died three years ago. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Sophie Carlson; his daughter-inlaw, Mrs.

Ruth Carlson and three grandchildren, Marjorie, Ruth and John Carlson. A sister, Mrs. Emma Foster and a brother, William A. Carlson, also survives. Services will be held at 8 p.m.

Friday in the Charles A. Sandstrom Funeral Chapel, 4603 4th Ave. Burial will be in Green -Wood Cemetery at 10 a.m. Saturday. Tears Fail to Save Woman With Record A woman booked as "Mrs.

Sarah Miller, 49, of 36 E. 119th Manhattan," when arrested on a charge of jostling was remanded to the women's house of detention pending sentence next Tuesday when arraigned yesterday before Magistrate Vincent J. Sweeney in Felony Court. Despite her tears and protestations of innocence, Magistrate Sweeney found the woman guilty. She admitted that the name and address giver to police were false.

Policewoman Bertha Recht made the arrest. She said in her complaint that the defendant had been jostling customers in a Brooklyn department store. Magistrate Sweeney glanced at the report on the defendant given him by police, told her it contained aliases, a record of nine arrests and six convictions since 1916 for either picking pockets or larceny, and asked her if the report was true. She said it was. The defendant said her name was "Mrs.

Silver" and that she lived at 375 Central Park West, Manhattan. Albert Forss Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Yaphank, Aug. 16 Taken 111 while bathing in Long Island Sound near Woodhull Landing, Albert Forss, 57, poultryman, was helped to shore by other bathers but died before the arrival of a an ambulance yesterday afternoon. Services will be held in Ruland's Funeral Chapel in Patchogue at 10 tomorrow. Vast Building Gets Green Light As AFL Peace Plan Is Bared Details of a formula designed to eliminate costly jurisdictional strikes between unions in building and projects were revealed tohouser's Summer City Hall by John P.

Coyne, president of the Building and Construction Department of the American Federation of Labor. The formula served as a "go" signal for vast building activities in New York City, for with Mr. Coyne's announcement came one from Mayor LaGuardia and Alfred Rheinstein, chairman of the Municipal Housing Authority, that the city is now ready to proceed with construction of five housing projects, one in Queens and two in Brooklyn, costing more than $20,000,000. It WAS explained that this work has been held in abeyance pending adoption of the labor formula. One of the housing projects will be in South Juinalca, two in hattan to be known as the Vladeck City Houses; a city project, and the Vladeck Houses, partly Federal.

Mr. Rheinstein did not reveal the location of the two others, but indicated they will be in Brooklyn. In all 4,000 families will be accommodated. The formula, hailed by all concerned, as the most progressive step in the building industry in the past generation, was produced as a re- A. O.

H. Honors Dead at Boro Church Mass 611 Delegates Tour World's Fair Today -Dinner Tomorrow Delegates to the State convention of the Ancient Order of Hibernians opened their second day's activities today by attending a solemn mass for deceased members in St. Paul's R. C. Church, Court and Congress Sts.

Following the mass, which was celebrated by the Rev. I. J. Smith, pastor of the church, they marched back to the Hotel St. George, scene of the convention, for business session.

The 611 delegates, a record number for a State convention of the order, planned to take their families on a bus tour of Brooklyn, Manhattan and the World's Fair this afternoon, Many will take advantage of the open night afforded this evening in the schedule by remaining at the Fair grounds. The Brooklyn and Queens delegation, consisting of several hundred persons, will act as guides on the tour for their fellow members from throughout the State. A reception and dance last night in the Hotel St. George climaxed the opening day's round of events during which the order and its Ladies Auxiliary charted its course for the remainder of the convention and made plans for the closing dinner and dance tomorrow night. STATE LEADERS ATTEND Many Statewide dignitaries of the order attended the reception, including the State officers, W.

A. Skelly of Albany, William O'Neill and William Dennis Connelly of Syracuse, Martin Fenlon and Patrick O'Hara of Rochester, William Nolan of Buffalo and Matthew J. Murphy, deputy clerk to Minority Leader Irwin Steingut of the Assembly. Charles Connolly, editor of the Irish Echo, and Collins Healy, professor of Irish cultue at Columbia and Fordham Universities, also were present. headed committee.

and The reception, was Agnes McDonough. Others the committee were Thomas J. Condon, John Blake, James Crawford, Robert Lord, Alfred A. Cooper, Anna Cooney, Mae Mary Heaney and Anne McEnnis. William Condon chairman, and Mary O'Hagan, chairlady, were in charge of the music committee for the event, which included Joseph G.

Moriarity, Henry J. Kiernan, David Costello, Peter Dooley, John J. Wood; Richard Bolton, Arthur Cody, Margaret Farrell, Marie Morrison, Mrs. Catherine Dillon, Mrs. Sarah O'Kane and Mr.

Blake. At the aftenoon sessien yesterday the delegates decided to vote tomorrow on whether they will recommend that a chair of Gaelic culture be established at Brooklyn College. Acting on a motion made at the opening session by the Rev. Dr. Edward Lodge Curran, president of the International Catholic Truth Society, that every member bring another member into the order, the group voted an extensive six-month drive designed to double the number of persons in the order.

The drive will start next month. County President John J. Rooney announced that more than 1,900 reservations have been received for the closing dinner and dance tomorrow night. County Judge William O'Dwyer is chairman of the event, At a session of the Ladies Auxillary yesterday preliminary designation of committee heads was made with a full report expected today. Quiz Spinster, 77, In Mercy Slaying Allentown, Aug.

16 (P) -A 77- year -old spinster, one-time nurse in the homes of two industrial leaders, was questioned today in the "mercy slaying" of her sister, a patient in the Allentown State Mental Hospital. Detective James L. Christine said Miss Margaret L. Cowan shot her 67-year-old sister, Mrs. Louella Saeger, in the latter's hospital room yesterday him: "I feel happier now than I have all my life.

I have put my sister out of her misery. I believe anyone in misery like hers should be put out of Pair Held in High Bail On Liquor Theft Charge Michael Tierney, 31, of 148-29 Hillside Jamaica, waived examination yesterday before: Magistrate Anthony P. Savarese in Felony Court, Ridgewood, on charges of burglary and grand larceny, and was held in $10,000 bail for the grand jury. Wallace Jones, 19, of 155-17 113th Jamaica, charged with burglary alone was held in bail for the grand jury when he also waived examination. He and Tierney were accused of taking $75 worth of liquor from the bar and grill of Angelo Scibella at 113-12 New York Jamaica, early last Monday morning.

The grand larceny charge against Tierney was based on the alleged theft of an automobile from Nathan Shapiro of 148-41 Hillside Jamaica, last Thursday. HENRY MaCADDIN. Intelligent, Courteous and Efficient Service Funerals From $150 6205 FIFTH AVENUE Windsor 9-6130 24 SEVENTH AVENUE NEvins 8-8912 LICENSES NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT License No. GB10998 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer at retall, under the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law. at 1440 86th Brooklyn.

N. County of Kings, for off-premises consumption. JOSEPH BRUCCA, 1440 86th Brooklyn. a 9. 16 Worried Girl Pleads For Missing Fiance Fears Foul Play to Longshoreman Who Led Fight Against Dock Racketeers The story of 28-year-old Panto, A.

rank-and-file leader of Brooklyn's longshoreman, and Alice Maffla, 20, the girl he was to marry this October, is best told in the letter she sent the Brooklyn Eagle today. For Panto kissed goodby on the evening of July 14, after making plans to take her to the beach the next day, and left the house at 11 N. Elliott Place, where they both lived, to keep an appointment with "two fellows." He said he be back 'in an hour or so." never been seen nicould since. FEARS FOUL PLAY The dark-haired, unassuming girl, who works hard in a factory making moth-bags, wrote: "He never did that before and I am sure not do it then of his own free will. Something horrible must have happened to him.

I want you to help me find him. I and his father, who is old and ailing, appeal to you to use your influence with the Mayor and police to help find our Pete. "Walter Winchell, my heart goes dead when I think of it, says maybe he's at the bottom of East River. Whoever it was took hint away did so because he was a good man. He tried to help the longshoremen, to save them from the gangsters and racketeers on the waterfront, to break the kickback system and to make the union a better union for the men.

The longshoremen liked Fair Celebrates Dominican '4th' Envoy Gets Salute -Pigeons Bring Word From West Indies The seventy-fifth anniversary of the restoration of the independence of the Dominican Republic was celebrated today at the World's Fair. Andreas Pastoriza, Dominican Minister to the United States; Alvarez Pina, Dominican delegate to the Fair, and their entourage received a salute of 15 guns. After the appearance of the Dominican visitors several carrier pigeons arrived with messages appropriate to Aug. 16, which is celebrated in the Dominican Republic as a national holiday. The birds came from Washington with messages which originally had been started July 20 from the Cathedral of Santo Domingo, in Cuidad Trujillo, where the hones of Columbus rest.

300 PIGEONS FREED A flock of 300 homing pigeons, loaned to the Fair by New York pigeon fanciers, was released from cotes atop the Dominican pavilion. World's: Fair officials assured bondholders other creditors today that daily concession revenues are sufficiently large to secure a bank loan to cover part of its current obligations without disturbing the financial setup of the Fair corporation. to Bayard F. Pope, chairman of the board of the Midland Corporation and member of the executive committee of the Marine Midland Trust Company New York, who is treasurer of the Fair corporation and secretary of its finance committee, the banks originally lent the exposition $3,500,000, secured by these concession revenues. "That loan of $3,500,000 in the banks of New York has been reduced and is about $1,710,000," Mr.

Pope said. "We are going to ask the banks to lend us an additional amount up to $750,000 on the same security they now have. That security is such that it be paid to them every week share of the concession revenues. That loan, with $750,000 added to its present amount, will be paid off before the Fair season is over. "Now, that money taken from the bondholders, and borrowed from the bondholders and from the banks, will be sufficient, even if our rate of attendance does not improve, to take care of the Fair corporation successfully for the balance of this year." Heartened by a steady increase in attendance during the past week, Fair officials were confident that a rise in attendance from now until Labor Day would result in a larger total attendance than the 25,000,000 now estimated.

Final figures for yesterday showed 110,106 paid and 33,605 passes for a total of 143,711. Paid admissions on the same day last week were 96,178. Austin Kennedy Glens Falls, Aug. 16 Kennedy, 19, of Murray Lane, Flushing, L. died today of Injuries suffered Monday while diving in Lake George.

AS IMPORTANT AS A WILL! Is a knowledge of funerals and their cost, Funeral Directors 433 Nostrand Ave. STerling 3-7700 PAWNBROKERS SALES ESTATE OF EUGENE ROSENBAUM'S AUCTIONEERS. Kelly, L. Feldhuhn, I. Kirschner, J.

Schwalb, sell at 70 Bowery, at 9 a.m. Aug. 18-For M. Goodstein Sons, pawnbrokers, of 279 Bridge Brooklyn, N. Y.

their unredeemed pledges of Jewelry. secondhand watches. silverware. diamonds, pearls and other precious atones, odds ends. pledged from Pawn Ticket.

No. 25021 of July 15. 1936. to No. 32300 of July 18.

1938, inclusive: also all other pledges for any reason not sold at previous sales. nSu Aug. 21-By order Est. Chas. Kleinbaum.

493 Grand clothing. pledged from 60019 of Jan. 3, 1938 to 74066 of July 20, 1938. aul4-6t The last time called a meeting hundreds came. They, wanted to go his way because knew his way was right and he was for tmem.

That was why he was taken away. WERE TO WED IN FALL "We were to be married this October. I am a poor girl. I don't know how to go about doing the things that will find Pete. Tell the police you know about Pete and that his girl is pleading for your help.

I am hoping you will appeal to your readers do the same. Please, I beg you to do everything Commissioner of Investigation Herlands afrees with Alice Maffia that there is somethng suspicious in the disapperance of Panto, who was a militant leader of Local 929, International Longshoremen's Association, for Panto has been reported to have gathered much evidence of racketeering on the waterfront. His fiancee said at her home today that he did not talk much about his union work, but she did say that he attended many meetings each week and that his ambition was to become a union delegate. She said he was a quiet peacable man, with no enemies that she knew of. He never fought with anyone, she said.

The couple met in park four one years ago. A year ago. he moved to the N. Elliott Place house, where the Maffia family has lived for the last 60 years. "He must be alive," Alice Maffia insisted, and then she added, "I bought my trousseau already." Services Tomorrow For L.

C. Krummel Special to the Brooklyn Eagle Brightwaters, Aug. 16-The body of Louis Charles Krummel, retired mechanical engineer, will be cremated tomorrow at 3:30 the Fresh Pond Crematory, Queens. Mr. Krummel, who was 77, died Monday in his home at 151 S.

Bay Ave. The holder of several industrial patents, Mr. Krummel was born in Brooklyn, the son of Louis Krummel and Amelia Pohlman Krummel. He was a resident here the past nine years. Mrs.

Mary Bond Mrs. Mary Bond, 86, widow of Hugh 3ond, died yesterday in her home, 114 Prospect Park West, after a long illness. She was born in Brooklyn and is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Ann Murphy, Mrs. Mary Fagan, Mrs.

Loretta Buckley and Miss Harriet Bond and two sons, James and Hugh Bond. The funeral will be held from the home 9:30 a.m. A requiem celebrated in tomorrow, at. St. Saviour's R.

C. Church. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Walter B. Cooke INCORPORATED FUNERALS As DIGNIFIED As Low $150 OUR FUNERAL HOMES BROOKLYN 151 Linden Boulevard- BUck minster 4-1200 50 Seventh Avenue- MAin 2-8585 1218 Flatbush Ave.

2-0266-7 QUEENS 150-10 Hillside Avenue -JAmaica 6-6670 158-14 North. Blvd. 3-6600 98 Beach STATEN Stapleton- ISLAND -Gibraltar 7-6100 MANHATTAN 117 West 72nd Street- TRafalgar 7-9700 1451 First Avenue- RHinelander 4-5800 BRONX 1 West 190th Street 9-1900 347 Willis Avenue- Mott Haven 9-0272 WESTCHESTER 214 Mamaroneck Avenue- White Plains 39 Phone for Representative or Write for Illustrated Booklet "D' -No Obligation sult of conferences at Atlantic City last week when the Executive Council of the A. F. of L.

was in session and it was worked out with the cooperation of employers' groups, particularly the Associated General Contractors, a national organization. The formula provides: 1. There will be no stoppage of work. 2. The trade having possession of the job will continue work in case of a jurisdictional dispute until Mr.

Coyne decides in either's favor. 3. If the decision is objectionable to either side, that side may appeal to a referee. 4. The referee's verdict will be final.

An unusual feature of the formula is that it provides for a representative of an employer's group to act as referee pending a convention of the A. F. of L. building trades group in Cincinnati the last week in September. He is William Carroll, secretary to the Building Trades Employers, and indications are that he will be continued in the position by the convention.

Mr. Coyne said that so-called labor experts hare been tried as arbiters in the past but without success, and that a man who is thoroughly familiar with the ground and is trusted by both sides would make the logical referee. DOCTOR AUCTION? SALE SALES BY VIRTUE OF A DEFAULT IN the terms of a chattel mortgage in re: BEULAH MANES to U. S. AUTO MARINE DISCOUNT.

and thereafter assigned (by mesne assignments) to ROBERT HARRIS. I will sell Rockaway today at 2:30 p.m. at No. 165-40 So. Jamaica, L.

one Will Pullman Bus, No. 617-1929: one Will Pullman Bus. No. 179632-1929: White Bus, 1929-No. 537.

and thereafter at 3 p.m. at No. 8741-130th Jamaica. L. one International Bus, 1931.

Motor No. BQ711, Serial No. NIL114 or BQ725, Serial No. 54111. and thereafter at p.m..

at 5-42 47th L. I. City, one Will GM. No. 620- 1929 Pullman Bus.

and thereafter at p.m., at S. W. corner 42d St. and 11th Manhattan, N. Y.

(Gas Station), one White 1929 Bus. No. 567. subject to any and all mortgages, liens. etc.

Mortgagee reserves the right to bid. NAT GOODSIDE. Auctioneer. H. ADELMAN.

AUCTIONEER. sells August 31. 1939. at 10:00 a.m. at 186 Siegel Brooklyn, two (2) Ford Trucks.

Motor Nos. BB18-4314029. 18-2493814. account of Frank Wolk and Nicholas Rullo. au16 23 C.

H. ADELMAN, AUCTIONEER. sl1s August 31, 1939. at 9:30 a.m. at 184 Ashland Place, Brooklyn, Oakland Roadster.

Packard Roadster, Erskine Sedan. Motor Nos. L-269239, 363550, 21578. accounts of J. Miller and Harry Epter, P.

Palmer and Peggy Palmerico. Philip Rodriguez. au16 23 H. ADELMAN. AUCTIONEER, sells August 24.

1939. at 9:00 a.m. at 1236 East 17th Brooklyn. Plymouth Coach. Motor No.

PE-18029, account of Samuel Greenberg. au9 16 H. G. SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER. sells September 1at, 1939, 9:30 a.m..

824 Bergen Studebaker Sedan. Motor No. S68353. account George Heaney. J.

L. Motors. H. G. SCHONZEIT, AUCTIONEER.

sells September 1st. 1939. 10 a.m.,. Tompkins Reo Truck, Motor No. 74864.

account Alfonso Riley. H. G. SCHONZEIT. AUCTIONEER, sells August 25th.

1939. 9:15 a.m.. 51. Kosciusko De Soto Taxi, Motor No. S1-37146.

account Anthony DeMarco, Thomas Gallagher. H. G. SCHONZEIT AUCTIONEER. sella August 25th.

1939. 10 a.m.. 1424 East N. Y. Ford Coach.

Motor No. A2337175, account Clara Sherins. H. G. SCHONZEIT AUCTIONEER.

sells August 25th. 1939. 10:30 a.m., 400 Liberty Plymouth Sedan, Motor No. PJ145317, account William Augenthaler. AUG 16 PAWNRROKER SALESEESTATE OF ROSENBAUM Aug.

23-Ry order of M. Teitel baum. 1266 B'wav diamonds, silverware, jewelry, watches, cameras, musical instruments, field classes and all odds and enda pledged from No. 23156 of June 3. 1937, to 13009 nf June 30, 1938.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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