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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 22

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 22

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I I A THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1928. VITAL RECORDS ENGAGEMENTS JACOBS NUSSBAUM Mr. and Mrs. J.

L. Jacobs of 225 Central Park West announce the engagement of their daughter, ADRIENNE, to Mr. EDWIN W. NUSSBAUM, son of Mr. and Mrs.

H. Nussbaum of Brooklyn. Reception will be announced at a later date. DEATHS Aikman, Charles Kilholz, Frank Frank, Boyle, Carrie A. Kirby, Brush, Lillian A.

Lane, Dorothy W. Coyne, Lucy H. Martin. Arthur I. Cramp, Mary McFadden, John De Long, Mary H.

McGrane, Ellen Duff, Thomas Perry, Cornelia E. English, Daniel P. Rand, Lyman F. Farrell, Flannigan, Catherine Edith Reed, Richardson, George J. hi.

Foley, Joseph F. Ryan, Charles J. Gokey, M. Smith, John J. Hafner, William C.

Van Buren, Theresa Heffernan, J. F. Sr. Ward, John J. Hinckley, Emma L.

Wm. W. Kacer, Mary J. Wilkens, Marie ME. Kelly, Robert Friday, Oct.

26, 1928, at A Fanwood, N. CHARLES MILLEN, beloved husband of Albertine Cole Aikman. Funeral service at his residence: 1156 Dean a Brooklyn, Monday, Oct. 29, at 10 a.m. BOYLE-On Oct.

26, CARRIE, beloved sister of the E. Boyle and Mrs. Margaret Aitken. Funeral from her residence, 3302 Avenue on Monday, Oct. 29, at 9:30 a.m.

Requiem mass Lady Help of Christians Church Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. BROOKLYN COUNCIL No. 60. K. of Sirs and Brothers: Brother THOMAS DUFF died on Oct.

26, 1928. Brothers will please meet at clubhouse Sunday evening. Oct. 28, at 8:30, hand proceed to his late home, 267 12th st. Fraternally yours, ROBERT F.

MITCHELL. Grand Knight. James H. Carrick, Fin. Secy.

BROOKLYN LODGE. NO. P. O. ELKS Brothers: You are request- ed to attend the funeral service of our brother, CHARLES J.

RYAN, Sunday afternoon, Oct. 28, at 2 o'clock. at his residence, 104-29 111th Richmond Hill. EDWARD J. McCARTHY, Ruler.

Joseph H. Becker, Secretary." Oct. 27, 1928, LILL BRUSH BRUSH. Services the home of her brother, Louis F. Brush, 1522 Putnam Monday, 2 p.m.

Interment Evergreens Cemetery. COMMONWEALTH LODGE NO. 409. You are urgently requested to attend the Masonic funeral service of our departed brother, FRANK KILHOLZ. which will be conducted at the Fairchild Funeral Church, 86 Lefferts near Grand Brooklyn, on Monday, Oct.

29. at 8 p.m. ELVIN P. CARNEY. Master John H.

Wacker, Secretary. COYNE-On Oct. 26, LUCY of 45 S. Oxford beloved daughter of John J. and Mary A.

and sister of Harry Edward F. and Leonard J. Coyne (formerly of 65 Cranberry Requiem mass Monday, 9:30 a.m., Queen of All Saints Church. Burial at St. John's.

CRAMP On Saturday, Oct. 27. MARY LOUISA CRAMP. wife of Walter H. Cramp and daughter of Louisa E.

Truefitt. Notice of services later. DE on Oct. 27, in her 38th ON year. at her residence.

10 Bragg Sheepshead Bay, beloved wife of William H. De Long and mother of William. Notice of funeral later. ENGLISH-DANIEL PATRICK ENGLISH, formerly of the 7th Ward, Manhattan, died at his home, 5805 6th on Oct. 26.

1928: beloved husband of Bertha (nee Enck), also beloved father of Mrs. Catherine Brady, son of the late Catherine and Patrick English and brother of Mrs. J. C. Kearny.

Funeral Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 9:30 a.m., from the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, 59th st. and 5th where a solemn requiem mass will be offered. Interment in family plot at Calvary Cemetery. FARRELL CATHERINE, Friday, at the home of her daughter, 9421 116th Richmond widow of James Farrell: survived by four daughters.

F. Cullen, Miss Anna Farrell. Mrs. John Boggs and Mrs. F.

Granger, and one son, William. Funeral Monday, Oct. 29. 9:30 a.m.. from R.

C. Church of St. Benedict Joseph, where requiem mass will be celebrated. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. FLANNIGAN EDITH FLANNIG GAN.

Campbell Funeral Church, Broadway and 66th Monday, 1 p.m. FOLEY On Oct. 27, JOSEPH F. FOLEY, beloved husband of Mary Foley. at his residence.

289 5th ave. Funeral on Tuesday, Oct. 30. at 9 a.m. Solemn requiem mass at St.

Francis Xaxier's Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. GOKEY-Suddenly. on Thursday, Oct. 25.

1928, ANNE M. wife of the late William Gokey. Funeral services will be held at her residence. 669 10th on Sunday, Oct. at 4:30 p.m.

Interment Kingston, N. Y. HAFNER- on Oct. 27, WILLIAM C. HAFNER.

Funeral services at his residence, 69 Summit Port Washington, L. Sunday afternoon, at 4:30. HEFFERNAN-On Friday, Oct. 26, JOHN F. beloved husband At Mary Heffernan and father of John Mary and Margaret.

Funeral from home of his daughter, 1551 E. 34th Brooklyn, Monday morning, Oct. 29, at 8:30 o'clock. Requiem Mass at St. Thomas Aquinas Church, Flatlands and Flatbush aves.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. HERBERT-MARY HERBERT, on Oct. 25, in her 86th year. Services Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock at her residence, 625 Dahill rd. Interment Monday morning, private, in Greenwood Cemetery.

HINCKLEY On Friday, Oct. 26, 1928, EMMA L. HINCKLEY, in her 65th year, at her residence, 8920 89th Woodhaven. Funeral services on Sunday at Emmanuel Evangelical Reformed Church. Woodhaven ave.

and 89th Woodhaven, at 2:30 p.m. The Funeral Home Suburban services rendered W. 396 Gates Ave. Lafayette 0531 HALF OF GREENWOOD CEMETERY PLOT sale. Buttable for five graves.

ReasonMale Boa, 9: office CHINESE CAFE AIMS TO BATTLE HEIGHTS MOVE TO OUST IT Restaurant in Churches Midst Seeks a Dancing License. Residents Fear Noise. The Orient Inn, a Chinese restaurant located at the corner of Clark and Henry has become the storm center of what promises to develop into a first-class row. The restaurant, licensed as an allnight eating place, holding a 21-year lease on the entire second floor of the three-story building on the corner across from the Hotel St. George and the First Methodist Church.

stunned the Heights when it moved in and put out a great yellow sign. The Church of the Jerusalem is at Monroe pl. and Fulton one block away, and Plymouth Church is off Henry, on Orange, only three blocks away. At Henry, corner of Remsen. stands the Church of the Pilgrims.

Reformed Church on the is near Henry on Pierrepont. If any one had wished to surround himself by churches there is no corner in Brooklyn strategically situated as that selected by the Orient. Moreover, Sunday is apt to be the big da; with the Chinese restaurant that has a dance floor. Restaurant Owner Fights. "Well, that's not why I'm here." said Max Tell, president and treasurer of the company, yesterday.

"I'm here because a great many people like Chinese cooking and cause I am directly opposite the Clark st. subway station. You can't progress and that is all this amounts Mr. Tell does not believe there is any legal way to put him off the Heights and contends that if Chinese restaurants on Fulton st. can get dance licenses, there is no way to keep him from having the same freedomine Leverich Towers Hotel has a cabaret, the Hotel St.

George, in its grill, puts on a show whenever it wants to do so, and the Hotel Bossert has general dancing on its roof all summer," he said. "How can I be prevented from having dancing in my dining room? That's all it amounts to. I have to apply for a cabaret license but I am not putting on a show. A Chinese restaurant can keep open all night, but it would not pay me to do so. After 1 o'clock things are pretty quiet around here.

I am running a restaurant and only that. But my patrons like to dance and so I applied for a license." Residents Object to Noise. More than 100 representatives of Heights churches and civic associations are expected to attend the hearing on Tuesday when Commissioner of Licenses William F. Quigley will pass on 1 whether the Orient gets a dance license. The Orient has 10,000 feet of floor space and is one the largest Chinese restaurants in the city.

Tts seating capacity is 600. Guy Du Val, chairman of the zoning violations committee of the Broklyn Heights Association, is one of the foremost opponents of Mr. Tell and his restaurant. Mr. Du Val declares that night clubs and Chinesedancing operate until the early morning hours.

The speakeasies on the HeightsH yes, there are some--keep their shades drawn and muffl their radios after 10 o'clock. None of them has dacing. The Orient, which, like all the Chinese restaurants in town, is bone dry, unless the patrons bring their own contraband refreshments on the hip, on the other hand will provide only food and dancing. It's the noise that the Heights, erstwhile so quiet and exclusive, is annoyed jazz about. orchestra On the and second 600 danc- floor, ers, the revels will be audible several blocks off declare the objectors.

MAN, HIT BY TRAIN, DYING IN HOSPITAL William Gallagher, 42. of 183 Schermerhorn is dying in the Jewish Hospital from injuries received when he was strumk by a Long Island Railroa dtrain in the freight yards at Atlantic and Vanderbilt late yesterday afternoon. Dr. Mansicalo of the Holy Family Hospital, who was summoned, said the man had severe cuts about the body and a possible fracture of th eskull. The police are unable to account for Gallagher's presence in the freight yard, as he was not employed by the railroad company.

Max Reinhardt Ordered To Pay $10,000 Judgment Max Reinhardt. Max Reinhardt, Austrian producer and impresario, was ordered to pay judgments amounting to $10,000, when Supreme Court Justice McGoldrick in Manhattan yesterday granted the motion of Philip Miner, Cleveland promoter, asking that the theatrical showman return advance royalties paid him to produce a play and a moving picture in this country during 1927. An agreement entered into on Sept. 2, 1925, between the two men called for Reinhardt to stage at least one play before the end of the next year. In the bill of particulars set forth by Miner a stipulation was also signed by which Reinhardt agreed to return the advance payment if he did not carry through the agreement, and Miner was to have forfeited the royalties if the play was not produced because of any fault on his part.

Miner charged Reinhardt failed to live up to his agreement, DIGNITY 32 Dignified simplicity in service and equipment. Geo.W. PeAsE FUNERAL PARLORS NOSTRAND AVE. at Hancock St. DECATUR 5700 Hoffman Murder Defense To Show Movies in Court Motion pictures will bb used by the defense when Harry L.

Hoffman, former Port Richmond, S. motion pictureo perator, goes on trial for the third time in Brooklyn, Nov. 5, for the murder of Mrs. Maud G. Bauer, a neighbor, on March 24, 1924.

Former Judge Leonard A. Snitkin, Hoffman's counsel, accompanied by two photographers, and a staff of assitants yesterday went to the lonely section of Chelsea, S. where the muwrder was committed and reconstructed the crime, while the camera men made pictures of the proceedings. Sperry Reveals Secret Of Solving 'Rail Cancer, An Unseen Wreck Menace Railroads Appealed to Gyroscope Maker and He Quickly Reflected Device to Discover Flaws in Steel--Disease Caused by Change in Molecular Structure. By How Elmer A.

Sperry, pany of Brooklyn, and twice ing accomplishments in the pealed to by the American JOHN J. O'NEILL. chairman of the Sperry Gyroscope Comrecipient of gold medals for outstandfield of science and invention, was apRailway Association to solve the problem of finding out the internal dition of the rails in daily use on the railroads throughout the country, and how he solved the problem within a space of a few months and scored a 100 percent record on results was revealed Friday at the meeting of the Iron and Steel Institute held at the Hotel Commodore. New steel rails were suffering from a disease--rail cancer. Rails that were perfect condition when they left the steel mills would develop rail cancer, and up to the time Sperry got to work on the problem the only way to learn of the existence of the disease in a rail was to examine the broken rail after the accident happened.

The railroads had made a practice of ripping out any rail against which there was even the slightest suspicion, but this did not solve the problem. They needed some means of looking inside the rails to determine their conditionto learn if rail cancer had developed. Life Saving Appeal. They appealed to Mr. Sperry to solve the problem for them.

He protested that gyroscopes were his specialty and gyroscopes can't explore the inside of steel rails. The railroad men would not listen to his protests, so he tackled the problem. Success meant that the lives of a great many passengers would be saved through prevention of accidents. and that railroads would be saved millions of dollars in damage suits. The life saving appeal was the primary con- a sideration both to the railroad men and to Sperry and it won him over.

He tackled the problem. A shipment of 54 steel rails were sent Sperry's plant on Flatbush ave. extension. while he took up study of the problem. In a short time he had worked out a plan and had the necessary apparatus built.

He tested it and it functioned perfectly. Tests Prove Device. Taking the shipment of steel rails that had been sent to him, he applied his device and made a blueprint showing the exact spots in which cases of rail cancer would be found. The or disprove the results, and they way caused committee the Association from rails to was the be invited American broken to at prove Rail- the spots which Sperry had indicated. In every case an internal fissurecase of rail cancer -was found within one-thirty-second of an inch of the spot indicated on the blueprint.

Then the rails were more completely broken apart to ascertain if other cancers existed which the device had not detected. Not a cancer outside of the ones indicated was found. The device had proven itself 100 percent perfect. The device is mounted in small railway cars and these are now being run over existing lines of railroad to detect cancerous rails. Reveals Secret of Device.

The secret of operation was closely guarded until Friday, when Mr. Sperry for the first time revealed how he had achieved, his results. There no other scientific technical or device which uses so hign an amperage and so low a voltage as that in the Sperry rail detector. He used 2,000 amperes at a pressure of one volt. This current is generated in the test car by an engine and dynamo set and led to two brushes which rest on the track a couple of feet apart.

Midway between these brushes and a short distance above the track, but not in contact with the rail in any way is the wireless detector. Flaws Disturb Current. As the test car moves along the track the heavy current flows along the short section of the rail between the two brushes. If the track is perfect nothnig happens, but if there is the slightest flaw or fissure in the rail the flow of current is disturbed and this affects the wireless detector. The effect is very slight, but by means of an amplifier similar to that in an ordinary radio set, effect is greatly magnified.

It is stepped up to such an extent that the output current is sufficient to operate recording devices which leave a pen and ink record on a long reel of paper of the exact condition of the rail, the location of each defect being clearly indicated, and in addition a splash of white paint is automatically applied directly to the rail at the point at which the rail cancer exists. Rail cancer is actually a disease of the steel. It develops in the rail after it has been in use. It grows in the rail due to changes in the molecular structure of the metal. Sperry's device takes the unseen danger out of railroading, and he received the enthusiastic applause of the steel makers yesterday for his accomplishment.

AFRICAN PLANT HUNTING PERILS TOLD IN LECTURE Plant hunting strikes one as being rather mild pastime, but when the plant hunting takes place in the animal-infested regions of Africa it becomes quite a different thing. Leonard W. Kephart showed this to be true last night in his illustrated lecture on "Plant Hunting in Africa." given at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, under the auspices of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences WE CAN SELL YOUR REALESTATE CHARLES A. O'MALLEY Associates BROKERS AND APPRAISERS 26 Court St. Triangle 6467.

SUSPICIOUS BLAZE IN SCHOOL STARTS HUNT FOR 'FIREBUG' Two Fires Found on First Floor of P. S. 3 and Another on the Fourth Floor. Detectives and men attached to the offics of Fire Marshal Thomas Brophy were looking for a "firebug" last night after firemen extinguished a suspicious fire in P. S.

No. 3, Hancock st. and Bedford ave. Pedestrians passing the four-ste brick building at 8 p.m. say smoke coming from windows on the first and fourth floors and turned in an alarm.

The firemen found two fires in separate class rooms on the first floor and a third fire blazing on the fourth floor, all the fires originating in desks filled with papers. The two on the ground floor had gained some headway and required a fight to put them out. The third blaze was easily extinguished. A description of a man seen in the vicinity of the school not long bafore the fire was discovered was given the detectives. The Fire Marshal decared the tallied with that of a man known to be a pyromaniac.

BEETHOVEN GROUP SEEN IN DISSOLUTION "Nothing Left to Manage," Says Ex-Manager's Aid. Following the cancellation of a concert by the Beethoven Symphony Orchestra at Carnegie Hall Thursday night there came other evidences yesterday of the impending--or already accomplished -dissolution of this organization. Two of the orchestra's chief supporters, Mrs. Clarence Chew Burger and Mrs. ichard Dorsey, were reported to have resigned from the executive committee, and Paul Berthoud, manager of the orchestra, it was learned, had severed his connections with it.

Berthoud himself could not be reached, but at his headquarters his representative said: "Mr. Berthoud is no longer connected with the Beethoven Symphony Orchestra" was the reply. "Who is maneger to succeed him?" was the next question. "I don't think there is anything to manage," he answered. COULDN'T BE HELPED.

The patient was describing his symptoms to the doctor. "I'm sure there's something very wrong with me," he said. "Whenever I lift my right hand to my forehead, then raise it a few inches. and drop it down again to my side. I suffer agony." "Why go through such a silly movement?" asked the doctor.

"Well," answered the patient, "it you can tell me of any other way of taking off my hat I shall be glad to hear it." -London Tid-Bits. Twenty thousand mourning banners and 200 papier mache effigies were carried in the funeral procession for the late Chinese general, Chang Tso-Lin. PERJURER'S STORY HIT IN RUM CASE "When Shadows Gather" FRED HERBST SONS MORTICIANS FUNERAL PARLORS 83 HANSON PLACE 697 THIRD AVENUE NEVINS 5860 HUGUENOT 1600 TA 1 8 DEATHS -MARY Oct. 27. mother of William Kacer sister of Josephine Brown and Edward A.

Killina. Funeral from the chapel of Charles Belsky, 336 E. 72d Monday, 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass. Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, E.

61st 10 a.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery, KELLY- On Thursday, Oct. 25, ROBERT, beloved father of Robert, Frank, Charles, Harry and Joseph and Helen and Marion Kelly, Funeral from his Charles' residence, 256 Webster Monday, Oct. 29, 9:30 a.m. Requiem mass at St.

Rose of Lima Church, Parkville 10 a.m. KILHOLZ FRANK KILHOLZ, suddenly, at his residence, Hotel St. George. Oct. 27.

Masonic services at Fairchild' Parlors, Lefferts Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Burial at convenience of his family. He is survived by an only daughter, Mrs. A. Henry Schmidt of 57 Rutland Flatbush.

KIRBY-On Oct. 26, FRANK JOSEPH, beloved husband of Catherine Grady Kirby and father of Evelyn Regina, James Francis and William Vincent, at his home. 111 Joralemon st. Funeral Monday at 9:30 a.m.: thence to St. Charles Borromeo's Church, Sydney pl.

and Livingston where a solemn requiem mass will be offered. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. LANE-On Oct. 25, 1928. DOROTHY WILLIAMS, beloved wife of Arthur B.

Lane. Funeral private. MARTIN-On Saturday, Oct. 27. 1928, ARTHUR INGLIS MARTIN, husband of Rena Wilson and youngest son of the late William A.

and Margaret H. Martin, aged 54 years. Funeral private. McFADDEN-On Oct. 27, 1928.

JOHN, beloved husband of Mary McFadden and father of Harry. Funeral Tuesday, 8:30 a.m., from his residence. 535 Bergen st. Solemn requiem mass at St. Joseph's Church.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. On Oct. 26, ELLEN McGRANE. Funeral from her residence. 1088 Fulton on Monday, Oct.

29, at 9 a.m.; thence to Church of the Nativity, Classon ave. and Madison where a solemn mass of requiem will be celebrated at 9:30 a.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery. PERRY-Entered into rest on Saturday, Oct.

27. CORNELIA E. PERRY. beloved mother of Mrs. Annie Hollerin, Mrs.

Estelle Atwood and Miss Nellie Heins. Funeral services at her residence, 204 Rutledge on Monday, Oct. 29, at 6 p.m. Relatives and friends respectfully invited. (Norwalk and South Norwalk Conn.

napers please copy.) RAND LYMAN FISKE. beloved husband of Mary C. Rand, on Friday, Oct. 26. in his 8ist year.

Futhe home of daughter, Mrs. neral services Sunday, at 4 p.m. at George W. Tucker, 264 vaterling Brooklyn. Interment REED Suddenly, on Oct.

26, 1928. GEORGE W. REED, beloved husband of the late Elizabeth T. Reed, at his residence. 142 Henry Hempstead, N.

Y. Funeral on Monday, Oct. 29, at 9 a a.m.; thence to Our Lady of Loretto Church, Hempstead, N. Y. RICHARDSON JAMES beloved husband of Catherine Richardson; father of Grayce C.

Smith, and brother of Capt. John W. Richardson of Virginia, on Oct. 26. Funeral services from his home, 18018 Wexford Terrace.

Jamaica Estates, on Sunday, Oct. 28, at 8 p.m. Interment Monday, 10 a.m., Evergreens Cemetery. SMITH-On Oct. 25, 1928.

at his residence. 509 Baltic JOHN behusband of the late Ann Smith; beloved father of Theresa O'Connell. Funeral from his home on Monday morning at 10 o'clock: thence to St. Agnes R. C.

Church, where solemn requiem mass will be offered. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. VAN Friday, Oct. 26, 1928, THERESA MARGARET. beloved wife of William B.

Van Buren. Funeral services her residence, 490 Macon Sunday afternoon, at 4 o'clock. Interment private at the Cypress Hills Abbey. WARD-On Oct. 27.

JOHN beloved brother of Margaret M. Ward. Funeral Monday, Oct. 29, at 9 a.m., from the Church of St. John the Evangelist, 21st st.

and 5th ave. Solemn requiem mass will be sung for the repose of his soul. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, WEST- Oct. 27. 1928, after a lingering illness, WILLIAM.

husband of Elizabeth West. Services at his home, 107-11 112th st. Richmond Hill, Monday evening, 8:30 p.m. Interment Cypress Hills Cemetery, LKENS On Saturday. Oct.

27. 1928, MARIE widow of Martin Wilkens and mother of Martin Marie Clarence H. and Frieda J. Ruhmshottel. Services at her restdence, 1864 Nostrand Monday at 8 p.m.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS SWEENY-Gratefully acknowledging the very kind expressions of sympathy extended by the clergy, nuns and friends. LUCY SWEENY MEKLENBURG. UNVEILING GRINTHAL-EDNA STERN, beloved wife of Jack Grinthal and devoted daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Stern.

Unveiling of monument Sunday, Nov. 4, 3 o'clock sharp, Machpelah Cemetery. In case of rain, following Sunday. RESPONSIBILITY A special characteristic of our service is the careful attention given to every detail. Harry T.

Pyle Mortuary 1925 Church Avenue AT OCEAN AVENUE Tel. Buckminster 0174 GREENWOOD LOT FOR SALE Near Ninth Avenue Entrance High Ground Reasonable for Cash Estate, P. O. Box 276 Grand Central Station New York Manufacturer Wins Review of May Wed British Wealth Miss Betty McCormick. Miss Betty McCormick, pretty Albany shopgirl, may be wed shortly in Manhattan church to Robert Lawco English millionaire and former husband of Barbara Guggenheim, American heiress.

According to reports the pair are now engaged. No confirmation has come from either party. CHARLES M. AIKMAN SERVICES TOMORROW Funeral services for Charles M. Aikman of 1156 Dean banker and textile manufacturer, who died Friday at his country home in Fanwood, N.

will be held at his home here o'clock Aikman was tomorrow a vice morning. president and trustee of the Brevoort Savings Bank and was also vice president and a director of the Collins Aikman Corporation, prominent textile manufacturers. He was made a trustee of the Brevoort Bank in 1911 and became a member of the finance committee in December, 1914. He remained in this capacity until 1925. when he was elected treasurer of the Brevoort.

In April, 1926, he was elected vice president of the bank. Mr. Aikman was also known as an astute realty operator and was a controlling member of several realty companies. He was well known throughout the Bedford section, where he had made his home for many years. He is survived by his wife, Albertine Cole Aikman.

Nine- Year Search Ends; Murder Suspect Seized Detective Michael McTiernan of the Hamilton ave. station ended a nineyear search last night when he brought back from Elm Crossing, Mahopac, Putnam County, N. Philip Marino, wanted in connection with the murder, on May 7. 1919, of Vincenzo Locestro. 32.

of 487 Hicks st, BOY DYING FROM FALL. Ten-year-old Gerald O'Grady of 19 Berkeley pl. is in a dying condition the Methodist Hospital with a fractured skull received in a fall yesterday afternoon while sliding down a banister leading to the yard of St. Francis Xavier Parochial School, 6th ave. near President st.

REFEREES APPOINTED. BY DIKE, J. Debany vs. Adeeb, William G. Bushell.

Fried vs. Ran Building Walter C. Randall. Boller VS. Malage, Benjamin Cohn.

Title Guarantee Trust Co. vs. Poliakoff, Bertrand Ettinger. Beckman V5. Breen, Leonard A.

Barthel. Harlink Holding Corp. vs. Ida S. John Hill Morgan.

De La Motte vs. Krams, William R. Dorman. nel Realty Corp. vs.

Guilfoyle, A. Lloyd Lott. Matter of Quint, Samuel Fingerhut. son vs. Spindler.

Eugene Sherk. Zwiebel vs. Chereskin, Michael Diemert. Teitelbaum V8. Namm, Elmer G.

Sammis. IN MEMORIAM BURKE-In loving remembrance of our dear devoted mother. CATHERINE A. BURKE, who departed this Oct. 25.

1927. May she rest in peace. CHILDREN. GRADY-In constant and loving memory of JAMES GRADY, who passed away Oct. 28, 1916.

WIFE and FAMILY. GRADY-JAMES GRADY departed this earth Oct. 28, 1916. Gone but not forgotten, WIFE and FAMILY. HAND -In memory of my beloved husband.

CHARLES HAND. died Oct. 28. 1926. HIS WIFE.

JENSEN In sweet and loving memory of our beloved brother and con, I. WESLEY S. JENSEN, who died be Oct. 28, 1926. Though lost to sight, to memory dear.

FATHER. BROTHER and SISTERS. McGOVERN-Month's mind requiem mass will be offered for the repose of the soul of FARRELL J. McGOVERN Monday, Oct. 29, at 9 a.m., at Holy Name Church.

Prospect Park West and Prospect ave. O'REILLY Solemn anniversary mass of requiem at St. Martin of Tours Church on Monday morning, Oct. 29, at 9 o'clock for the repose of the soul of the late pastor, Very Rev. Mons.

BERNARD J. O'REILLY. SHEVLIN-Month's mind mass for the repose of the soul of ANNE JEFFERS SHEVLIN at 8:15 o'clock, Monday, Oct. 29, 1928, at St. Augustine's Church, 6th ave.

and Sterling pl. Joseph A. Donnelly Formerly of Edwin Bayha FUNERAL DIRECTOR 613 Vanderbilt Ave. NEVINS 1365 Revocation of Permit. The affidavit of a perjurer is not a sufficient ground for the revocation by the Prohibition Administrator of the alcohol withdrawing permit manufacturer of products employing specially denatured alcohol, Federal Judge Marcus B.

Campbell ruled yesterday. His ruling was contained in a write ten opinion granting Emil Clemente of 3019 Fort Hamilton a review of a revocation of his permit. The revocation was based entirely on an affidavit by Joseph Weber, owner of the former Weber Chemical Corporation, 1145. Teller Bronx, that he had certified receipt of $2.377 of merchandise from Clemente during 1925, when in fact, he alleged, Clemente had diverted to bootleg channels the amount of alcohol represented by this bill of merchandise. Weber, who operated his concern merely as a "cover for alcohol diversions by insecticide and barber supply manufacturers, according to the papers in the case, pleaded guilty last year to an indictment charging perjury.

The indictment was based on his false, testimony, before the Federal Manhattan that he had received and certain insecticides which had really never been received by If the permit of Clementte is to be diverted for the diversion purported in the Weber affidavit, Judge Campbell held, testimony, of such diversion must be trial. PEA. Seizure of Karolyi's Huge Estates Upheld By Hungarian Court A COUNT KAROLYI. Vienna. Oct.

27 Count Michael Karolyi, before the war one of the richest in the Balkans, has lost a nine- year fight to retain estates of 500.000 acres, valued at $15,000,000, and is now a virtual exile in the country of which he was once Premier. decision of the Hungarian Supreme Court this afternoon affirmed that of a lower court, which upheld the original action of the Horthy government in seizing the estates, on the ground that Karolyi had committed treason against his country in concluding the armistice prematurely. 500 CHILDREN FETED AT GARDEN FESTIVAL A dump heap that was transformed into a garden at Driggs and Manhattan ave. something over a decade ago, through the efforts of Mrs. Camden Dike, was the scene yesterday afternoon of 15th annual harvest festival for the children of Greenpoint.

Nearly 500 children, who have spent the summer nurturing individual gardens there, swarmed over their tiny plots for the last time this season, stripping them bare of the hardy flowers and vegetables that have withstood the frost so long. John J. Downing, supervisor of recreation in the Brooklyn Park Department, congratulated the supervisors of the garden, Mrs. Kathria Edes, Miss Margaret Donaldson and Mrs. Margaret Reilly, on their work.

Four loving cups and 11 medals were awaded the embryo farmers by Alderman Peter J. McGlinness, who also congratulated the garden directors on their work. The cups were awarded to John Do Branski. for the best general garden work, Alfred Sirutis, for the best cultivated plot, Marion McKellop, for the best flower bed, and Irene Malosinaka for being the community worker. Silver medals pester given to Eleanor Do Branski, Helen Pietrzyk, Lillian Krajei, Antoinette Madonna, Angelina Aveno, Aimiel Schlegel, George Weinberg, Andrew Stransky, Robert Carey, Anthony Stransky and Frances Meyer.

EX-COP ASKS COURT FOR REINSTATEMENT Peter Smith, a former patrolman, has brought certiorari proceedings in Supreme Court through his attorney, Edward J. Reilly, seeking reinstatement to the Police Department, from which he was dismissed last April after being ten years on the force. The former patrolman, who lives at 114-21 130th Richmond Hill, was accused of playing "William Tell" in a series of bizarre shooting stunts at a gasoline station on 133d Manhattan. Smith says he was not guilty cf the charges and that the evidence did not justify the removal decision. Leaky Ice Boxes Relined and Re-enameled WILLIAM CONLEY, Ime.

860 Coney Island Avenue Phone Windsor 8159 PUBLIC NOTICES. REGISTRATION OF AMBROSIA, AS trade- mark for soft drinks, has been recorded by the Secretary of State to Orange Drink: Product COED. Brooklyn A Kentucky railroad with 40 miles of track announces it is the first in America to obtain, without additional cost to shippers, insurance fully protecting cargoes in case of damage by wrecks, cyclones, fires or other catastrophes. LOST AND FOUND BEADS Lost; amber; on Clermont, De Kalb or Clinton avs, between Masonic Temple and 274 Clinton av; reward. Return to Craig.

Masonic Temple. BRACELET--Lost; platinum, diamond, sapphires; around Newkirk section and Flatbush; liberal reward. Phone DECatur BRACELET- Lost: with 3 diamonds, 2 sapphires, Thursday. Reward. Call BUCkminster 8218.

BRACELET- silver, links, dark blue stones, Broadway elevated, Oct. 22, 8 a.m.; valued as gift. BARclay 5374. Ogden. BROOCH -Lost; cameo; Prospect Park of Flatbush av car.

350 Ocean av, Apartment 14. DOG--Lost; wire haired fox terrier, female, 6 months old, white with brown spots over eyes; on Brooklyn Heights; reward. seph Timmins, 150 Clinton st. MAIn 1669, or MONument 0490. DOG--Lost; small black Pomeranian, 15 on Livingston reward; no questions' asked.

H. T. Dinworth, 302 Livingston st. CUMberland 2784. DOG -Lost; police, German, black and brown, answers to name Cap; reward.

Call MIDwood 3302. DOG- Found; young female, very dark gray, almost black. Owner or good PROSpect 2623. DOG -Found: police; also collie. Phone MINnesota 8164.

EYEGLASSES Lost Saturday and morning; New. Flatbush T. sta tion; reward. Finnblade, 2323 Newkirk av. EYEGLASSES- -Lost: in leather case.

between 86th st. Manhattan, and Woodhaven. Call MICHigan 0937. GLASSES -Lost: tortoise shell; on Av or in taxicab Friday night. Phone BEAchview 3438.

KEY RING- Lost; gold, with 2 penknives, pencil, 3 keys; between St. James pl and Strand Theater. PROspect 6689. NOTES Lost: denominations $5. $75, $100, $150, $200, $300, $400.

signed by Demetrios Rangaves, Nicholas Alexander, payable to A. Trifatis, 294 Fulton st, Brooklyn, as per letter from payee, which guarantees payment if same are presented: notes have been replaced by makers, who are not sponsible for first set. DEMETRIOS RANGAVES. NICHOLAS ALEXANDER. POCKETBOOK- -Lost; green; Monday night on Merrick rd, between Baldwin and Kings Highway; money, beads.

auto license; re ward. CUMberland 9138. SLIDE RULE Lost: on the 4th av way. Finder please return to Geo. Logan, 59 94th st.

Reward. WRISTWATCH-Lost; gold, with monogram M. going from 36 Plaza st, Brooklyn; to Vanderbilt av to Park av to B. M. T.

subWAY or on train, Friday morning. Finder will please telephone STErling 4269 or call 36 Plaza st. Monday evening, after 6 o'clock, M. Ellsworth. BE Introducing Pictured at SERVICE the right you A Symbol NOT MEASURED BY see, perhaps GOLD for the first time, the emblem BUT BY THE of a national group of funeral GOLDEN RULE directors, pledged to certain high standards of conduct.

ONR1925 We are proud to be the local member of the Order, for such membership is a mark of dis- Phone tinction. 1219 MAIN 1259 IEIDWIN IBAYHIA alt CORP. 219 ATLANTIC AVE. MORTICIANS I PHONE FLATBUSH 9406 Walter B. Cooke (INCORPORATED) 1358 Flatbush Avenue Complete $150 Auto Funeral READ WHAT I WILL FURNISH Halt Conch Casket, Illustrated above.

in polished hardwood, black or any color plush trimmed with silver bar extension handles, engraved name plate and lined with silk pillow to match. Strong outside burial box with mattress. Removing Remains from hospital. Embalming and care of Remains, Gentleman's suit or lady's dress. Use of candelabra and candles when requested.

Use of draperies and 2 dozen chairs and Automobile palms, Hearse. Flowers One on door, Limousine Procuring local Burial cemetery, Permits. $150 Delivering box cemetery. Total Complete $225 Funeral Complete $275 Funeral With Solid Oak Massive With Metal Casket Square End Half Couch Casket Guaranteed Not to Crush Use of Chapel Free Home Office: 1 West 190th Street Telephone Raymond 0384 BRANCHES 293 Willis Ave. Mott Haven 7070 893 10th al 43rd St.

Phone Chickering 1268.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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