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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 15

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle du lieu suivant : Brooklyn, New York • Page 15

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Brooklyn, New York
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15
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or and BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1933 2 15 Deaths Bischoff, Lisette Hegeman, Adrian Fred B. Carley, William A.Ingram, Andrew Caspar, Charlotte Jackson, Hannah Cheesman, C. E. Kretz, Frank C. Costello, Joseph Leonard, Mary Dailledouze, A.

McGuinness, J. A. Dickinson, Ada L. McKnight, S. Evans, Leslie F.

Neues, Alfred Fenn, Carl D. W.Presky, Raymond Fitzsimmons, Reitter, Henry W. Thomas Sautter, Emily B. Frank. Charles H.

Sheehy, Gilbert, Labarta E. Rev. James E. Gillmor, Hattie C. Smith, Mary K.

Hansen, Henry Stubbe, Herman C. Harding, Toepfer. William Florence Tredwell, J. C. BISCHOFF-On June 6, 1933, at her home, 94-35 220th Queens Village, N.

LISETTE, widow of Charles Bischoff, devoted mother of Mrs. George H. Thompson, Mrs. Fred Vogt and Charles Bischoff Jr. Services at Fred Herbst Sons Funeral Parlors, 83 Hanson Place, corner S.

Portland Brooklyn, Thursday, 8 p.m. Interment private. BROWN--On Wednesday, June 7, 1933, FERDINAND BROWN, at his residence, 176 Schaeffer beloved husband of the late Helena Brown, loving father of Alfred Harry and Fred Brown. Funeral from Dunigan and Son Chapel, Rogers Ave. and Montgomery on Saturday, June 10, at 10 a.m.

Interment Mt. Olivet Cemetery. CARLEY-WILLIAM on TuesJune 6, 1933, in his 82d year, husband of Mary G. Carley, Fufrom his residence, 147 92d on Friday, June requiem mass at St. Patrick's Church, Fort Hamilton, at 10 a.m, Interment St.

John's Cemetery, CASPAR-On June 7, CHARLOTTE F. CASPAR, beloved wife of Frederick Caspar and sister of John, Frank and Jeannette Schellens. The Companions of the Forest of America and Star Lodge No. 01. Shepherds of Bethlehem, will services Friday evening.

Funeral from her residence, 27 St. Mark's Saturday, June 10, at 9. a.m. Solemn mass of requiem at the Church of St. Augustine, 6th Ave.

and Sterling Place, Brooklyn. CHEESMAN -On Wednesday, June 7, 1933, CHARLES EDWARD, son of the late Homer Whittemore and Julia B. Cheesman. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, Saturday, June 10, at 2:30 p.m. COSTELLO-On June 6, 1933, JOSEPH beloved husband of Catherine Costello, at his residence, 476 12th St.

Funeral on Saturday at 9 a.m. Solemn requiem mass at Holy Name Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. DAILLEDOUZE MRS. (Nee Bliss), beloved wife of John Dailledouze, suddenly, on June 7, 1933.

Funeral Saturday at her residence, 1110 E. 22d at 2 p.m. DICKINSON-At her home, 1907 Avenue Brooklyn, on June 6, ADA L. (nee Irving), beloved wife of J. Elmer Dickinson and mother of Gwendolyn and J.

Elmer Jr. Services at Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, Thursday evening, June 8, at 8 p.m. Interment private. EVANS -Suddenly, on June 7, 1933, LESLIE FRANK, beloved husband of Lena, father of Clarence J. Evans.

Funeral services at the Harris is Funeral Home, 5012 4th Friday, June 9, at 8 p.m. FENN-CARL D. suddenly, on Tuesday, at his home, Woodcliff Lake, N. beloved husband of Emma Fenn and father of Theodore and Gustave. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, Thursday evening, 8 o'clock.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. FITZSIMMONS- THOMAS, on June 6, 1933, at residence, 463 43d beloved father of Mary Fox, Margaret Galvin and Thomas Fitzsimmons. Solemn requiem mass Saturday, 9:30 a.m., at St. Michael's R.

C. Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, FRANK H. of 207 Chapman Bellmore, L. formerly of Brooklyn, on June 7, 1933.

Survived by his father, John, and two brothers, Lawrence and John Jr. Funeral from his late residence, Saturday morning, 10 o'clock. GILBERT-On Wednesday, June 7. 1933, LABARTA E. GILBERT of 1197 Brooklyn mother of Mrs.

Robert A. Williams and Clarence W. Gilbert. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Friday, June 9, at 8 p.m. GILLMOR-June 7, 1933, HATTIE C.

GILLMOR. Funeral Friday, 11 a.m., from Chapin Home, 165th' St. and Chapin Parkway, Jamaica. GREENWOOD LODGE, NO. 569, F.

A. You are requested to attend the Masonic funeral services of our brother, LESLIE EVANS, at the George Harris Funeral Parlors, 5012 4th Fri- day, 9, at 8 MORROW W. APPLEGATE, Master. Henry J. Brunton, Secretary, HANSEN On June 6, 1933, HENRY A.

HANSEN, of 110-15 106th Ozone Park, beloved husband of Cecilia, and father of Ella Hansen. Services Ericson Monrian, Edith Clark, and Ejna H. Ericson's Chapel, 500 State Friday evening at 8 o'clock. Interment Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock. HARDING-Suddenly, on June 6, 1933, FLORENCE, beloved wife of George Warren mother of Elmer Warren grandmother of and Doris and Florence Harding; also sister of Mrs.

William T. Curtis. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, on Friday, June 9, at 3 p.m. SUPERIOR in every sense of fine and modern service. GEO.

W. PEASE FUNERAL PARLORS Nostrand Ave. at Hancock St. DEcatur 2-5700-5701 Deaths HEGEMAN-ADRIAN, on June 6, in his 78th year, at his residence, 19 Circle Road, Douglaston, L. I.

Service at Greenwood Chapel, Brooklyn, Friday, June 9, at 2 p.m. (Montclair, N. papers please copy.) -At East Orange, June 7, 1933, FRED B. ILSLEY. Funeral services at 86 Place, Brooklyn, N.

on Saturday, June 10, at 2 p.m. INGRAM On Tuesday, June 6, 1933, ANDREW, beloved husband of Phebe Ingram. Survived by three sons, three daughters and twelve grandchildren. end Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Thursday, June 8, at 8:30 p.m. JACKSON-HANNAH JACKSON, on June 7, 1933.

Services Friday, 8:30 p.m., at her residence. 306 Earle Lynbrook, L. Interment private. KRETZ-On June 7, FRANK husband of the late Valeska Kretz, father of Ernest Kretz, Jenny V. Hart and Arthur E.

Kretz. Services at the Funeral Home of Pettit Centre, L. Saturday morning at Brothers, 20. Lincoln Rockville 10 o'clock. Interment Evergreens Cemetery, Brooklyn.

LEONARD-MARY, on June 6, 1933, beloved wife of the late J. Leonard. Funeral Friday, 9:30 a.m., from Mortuary Chapel, 278 Marcy Ave. requiem mass at Church of Transfiguration. Interment Calvary Cemetery.

McGUINNESS Suddenly, June 5, JAMES he beloved of Mary McGuinness. Funeral from his residence, 362 48th on Friday, June 9, at 9:30 a.m.; requiem mass at St. Michael's R. C. Church.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. McKNIGHT At his home, 17 Webster. Place, East Orange, N. 1933, in his year, SAMUEL, beloved husband of Minnie Riley McKnight. Funeral services at the Colonial Home, 132 Harrison East Orange, N.

Friday evening, June 9, at 8 o'clock. NEUES -Suddenly on Wednesday, June 7, 1933, ALFRED NEUES of 316 Beverly Road. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, Saturday at 1:30 p.m. PRESKY-On Tuesday, June 6, RAYMOND PRESKY, loving son of William and Margaret Presgy (nee Mealia) and loving brother of Albert and William Presky. Funeral from his residence, 2713 Newkirk on Friday at 9 a.m.; thence to St.

Jerome's R. C. Church. Interment in Holy Cross Cemetery. REITTER-HENRY W.

REITTER. beloved father of Mrs. May Barr and fond grandfather of Howard dear brother of Mrs. Henrietta Kelting. Remains at E.

C. Waldeck's Home for Funerals, 7614 4th Ave. Solemn requiem mass at the Holy Family R. C. Church, 13th St.

and 4th Friday, 10 a.m, Relatives, friends and brethren of Brooklyn Lodge, No. 22, B. P. O. and Merritt, Chapman Scott Corporation employes are respectively invited.

SAUTTER--At Hempstead, L. on June 7, 1933, EMILY, BREITENBACH, widow of late William Sautter. Funeral services at her home, 205 Front Hempstead, L. Friday, June 9, 1933, at 8 p.m. Interment Greenfield Cemetery, Hempstead, L.

at the convenience of the family, SHEEHY Tuesday, June 6, JAMES E. SHEEHY, son of the late James and Catherine Sheehy. Funeral from the Church St. Frances de Chantal, 57th St. and 13th Brooklyn, Friday morning, June 9.

Divine office at 9:30 o'clock. Solemn mass of requiem at 10 o'clock. Interment St. John's Cemetery, Brooklyn, N. Y.

SMITH--On Tuesday, June 6, 1933, MARY K. SMITH, at her residence, 1656 Marine Parkway, loving daughter of Julia and the late Joseph Smith, sister of Mrs. Agnes McGrath, Mrs. Florence Buonocore and John Smith. Funeral on Friday at 9:30 a.m.; thence to the Church of Good Interment in Holy Cross Cemetery." -HERMAN on June 7.

in his 66th, year, of 7823 88th Woodhaven. He is survived by three sons, John, Edward and Charles Stubbe; one brother and one sister. Reposing at Cornell's Chapel, 1210 Liberty Ave. Funeral services on Saturday at 2 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery.

Please omit flowers. TOEPFER-On Tuesday, June 6, 1933, WILLIAM TOEPFER of 379 Putnam Ave. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Friday, 2 p.m. TREDWELL On Wednesday, June 7. 1933, 7 JAMES C.

TREDWELL of 293 E. 16th Brooklyn, beloved husband of Julia Hayden Tredwell. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Friday, June 9, at 8 p.m. Interment private. In Memoriam BUTTLE-In loving memory of our dear mother, FREDERICA BUTTLE, who departed this life on June 8, 1926.

MARGUERITE, ROBERT, EUGENE, WALTER. -In sad and loving memory of our beloved sister, MARY who died June 9, 1931. Anniversary mass Friday morning at 8 o'clock. Church of the Transfiguration. Dear Sister, years cannot fill thy place in our hearts, nor quench the love we bore Thy spirit still hovers around though thy life on earth is no more.

BROTHERS and SISTERS. HAYES -Anniversary mass for Capt. EDWARD F. HAYES and all deceased members of the 68th Precinct, N. Y.

P. at St. Michael's R. C. Church, 4th and 42d on Friday, June 9, at 8 a.m.

Any family can afford Fairchild service. A definite check on all items permits the strictest economy, FAIRCHILD SONS MORTICIANS 86 BROOKLYN JAMAICA: FLUSHING SEMPER IDE Alfred Meues, 42, Dies on GolfCourse In Thunder Storm Beverly Road Resident Is Stricken With Heart Attack as He Seeks Shelter Westfield, N. June 8-Alfred Meues, 42, of 316 Beverly Road, Brooklyn, N. dropped dead on the 17th green of the Shackamaxon County Club here last evening. He had been playing as the guest of Charles E.

Hammond, of Maplewood, and when a heavy rainstorm suddenly broke about 7 p.m., the men started to run for the clubhouse. Meues took half a dozen steps and then collapsed. He was dead when a physician arrived. Mr. Meues was secretary and general manager of the Brooklyn Bridge Freezing Cold Storage Company, with which he had been connected for about 20 years.

He was an authority on the freezing of fish. He was 8 member of Brooklyn Lodge, 22, B. P. O. and was active in the work of the New York Rotary Club.

He was born in Manhattan and is survived by two brothers, George and Capt. Charles Meues. The funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place. Mrs.

F. C. Chapman, Widow of N. Y. Broker, Is Dead Adams, June 8 (AP)-Mrs.

Florence Canedy Chapman, widow of Edwin N. Chapman, New York broker, and socially prominent in New York and Boston, on is dead in, a San Francisco hospital, it was learned here today, where she had mantained Summer home for many years. Mrs. Chapman been on a world tour. In the Orient she contracted paratyphoid and later developed pneumonia.

Mrs. Chapman's first marriage was in 1900 to W. C. Plunkett, noted Williams College athlete and member of a prominent family. TWO years after his death in 1917 she 'Married R.

Col. Henry cotton O. Potter, broker, Provi- who died two weeks later while they were their wedding tour. on, 1921 she married Mr. Chapman, who died in 1929.

She maintained a New York restdence at 350 Park and was a member of the National Society of Colonial Dames and the Women's National Golf Tennis Club of Glen Cove, L. I. The funeral will be held here on Monday. Children at Wedding The wedding of Edwin N. Chapman and Mrs.

Florence Canedy Plunkett, which took place in Adams, Oct. 9, 1921, was marked by the fact that they were both attended by offspring of ous marriages. The bridegroom had for best man his son, named for himself, then a junior at Amherst College, while the bride was attended by her daughter, Miss Lydia F. Plunkett, student at Mt. Vernon Seminary.

Mr. Chapman formerly lived at 95 Pierrepont St. and was the son of Dr. Edwin N. Chapman.

Obituaries JOHN BANEY of 493 16th formerly for many years connected with a private banking house, died Tuesday. He WAS A lifelong resident of Brooklyn and WAS a member of the Holy Name Society of Holy Name R. C. Church. He is survived by his wife, Mary Howard Baney; three children, John Mary F.

and Anna M. Baney, and two sisters, Margaret E. and Julia T. Baney. The funeral will be held at 9:30 a.m.

tomorrow from the home; thence to Holy Name where a requiem mass will be offered. Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery, MRS. CATHERINE ANGLIM of 182 Prospect Park West died Wednesday at her home, She is survived by her husband, Jeremiah; two daughters, Mrs. W. O'Grady and Mrs.

J. Ryan, and two sons, Frank, who is a member of the New York Fire Department Jeremiah. The funeral will be held Saturday at 9:30 a.m., with a solemn requiem mass in Holy Name R. C. Church.

Interment will be in Holy Cross Cemetery. Mrs. Anglim was formerly a member of St. Peter's R. C.

Church for years. MISS MARY DAVIS died Wednesday. She was born in Brooklyn, daughter of the late William and Cecilia McDonald Davis, and was a member of St. Mary Star of the Sea R. C.

Church. A brother, William Davis, and a sister, Mrs. Peter Lawson, survive her. The funeral will be held on Friday at 2 p.m. from the Funeral Home, 496 Court with interment in Holy Cross Cemetery, N.

T. G. and 3 Girls Seized in Jersey Jersey City, June 8 Nils T. Granlund, 40, of 1 W. 67th Manhattan, Broadway showman, was held in $1,000 bail, and three showgirls were held in $500 each for further earing next Monday by Police Judge Frank Eggers in First Criminal Court, ere, today on a charge of giving an improper performance on the stage of Loew's Theater last might.

The showgirls said tey are Dixie Dunbar, 17, of the Van Cortlandt Hotel, and Thais Giroux, 20, of the Century Hotel, New York, and Barbara Jason, 19, of 610 Avenue Brooklyn. The arrests were made following a performance by Granlund and the three girls on the theater stage in the course of which it was alleged the girls wore scanty costumes. KILLED IN 5-STORY FALL Thomas Quanme, 57, was killed shortly after 3 o'clock this morning when he fell from the roof to the yard of the five-story apartment house at 300 W. 51st Manhattan, where he lived. According to his wife, Quanme had gone to roof to sleep in order to escape the heat.

Muldoon Leaves Bulk of Estate To His Secretary Adopted Daughter Is the Chief Beneficiary--Two Hospitals Are Named Special to The Eagle White Plains, N. June 8-The will of William Muldoon, veteran member of the State Athletic Commission, disposing of an estate of more than $10,000, was filed for probate in the Surrogate's office here today by Charles C. Fenno, counsel for Muldoon. Fenno was unable to give any estimate of the value of the estate, saying it might be $50,000 or might be $1,000,000. The bulk of the estate goes to his daughter und former secretary, Margaret F.

Muldoon, whom he adopted last year. She receives the residue, including "business conducted by me at the Olympia," a health farm at Purchase. In addition to the Olympia property Mr. Muldoon owned 39 acres nearby at Lake in the town of Harrison. Miss Muldoon and the County Trust Company of White Plains were appointed executors and trus- tees.

$8,000 to Nephew The largest specific bequest is of $8,000 William George Muldoon, a nephew, "as a mark of appreciation for his loyalty to the United States by serving during the Spanish-American and World Wars." One thousand dollars each goes to Effie Gleason, a niece; Nima Currans, a niece, and Peter Barton, "If still an employe." A trust fund of $7,000 up for the White Plains Hospital and the St. Agnes Hospital here to share in equal amounts of the income after certain payments. A grandnephew, Robert Edward Muldoon, receives the income on $5,000 until he becomes 21, when he receives the principal, Another grand nephew. William C. Muldoon also receives the income on $5,000 and the principal when he becomes 21.

His only grant to his brother, Martin Muldoon of Warren, was the "privilege to be buried in my mausoleum at Kensico Cemetery." A clause provided that any persons claiming to be relatives, not mentioned in the will, should be disregarded. THE WEATHER FORECAST FOR NEW YORK CITY AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. probably followed by local thunder showers tomorrow afternoon or night; continued warm; winds mostly moderate southwest. EASTERN NEW YORK-Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow, probaly followed by local thunder showers tomorrow afternoon or night: slightly warmer tight in west central portion. NEW JERSEY--Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow, probably followed by local thunder showers tomorrow afternoon or night; not much change in temperature.

GENERAL REPORT light and mostly southwest. TEMPERATURES Pressure remains relatively high in the Gulf region, 30.04 at Pensacola, while other relative highs appear over the Callfornia Coast, near 30.00. and the Hudson Bay, 30.06 at Moosence. Man. Disturbances are now centered over the Gulf of St.

Lawrence, 29.58 at Chatham, N. in Minnesota, 29.56 at St. Paul, and Alberta, 29.42 at Calgary. Thunder showers occurred since vesterday from central New York vesterdav to Virginia and from the Dakotas northeastward over the Lake Superior region, the rainfall ranging up to An inch or more. Afternoon temperatures yesterday again reached 90 degrees or higher as far nohth as South Dakota and Wisconsin, while Chicago reportd A miximum of 100 degrees.

Temperatures were lower at 8 o'clock this morning than they were at the same hour yesterday over the plains and higher from the lake district south to the Gulf. In the New York area partly cloudy weather is indicated tonight and tomorrow. with probably local thunder showers tomorrow afternoon or night, continued warm. Moderate southwesterly winds. Winds along the Atlantic Coast are Atlantic City 3oston.

Buffalo. Montreal. New York. Philadelphia. Portland, Me, Detroit.

Indianapolis, Abilene. Charleston, High Low High Low 86 66 Miami. 86 78 80 66 Pensacola. 88 70 94 68 New Orleans. 92 72 72 60 Norfolk.

90 80 62 92 70 80 66 3an Antonio. 92 68 90 66 94 72 90 68 92 74 90 68 70 44 62 54 Bismarck. 76 50 92 66 Kansas City. 94 76 100 88 66 94 76 OklahomaCity 90 72 90 Louis. 96 74 90 72 Winnipeg.

70 48 98 72 54 78. 68 46 96 68 Salt Lake City 74 60 98 Los 70 56 92 Portland, Ore 66 52 84 74 San Francisco 60 50 84 78 San 66 58 88 68 60 48 Jacksonville. 94 721 HIGH WATER High Water. Low Water. A.M.

P.M. A.M. P.M. New York 8:28 8:53 I 2:34 2:35 JUNE 9 New York 9:25 9:48 3:28 3:29 SUN RISES AND SETS June 8 June 9 Rises.5:24 Sets.8:26 Rises.5:23 Sets.8:27 FLYING FORECAST Flying forecast for Metropolitan area today: Some risk of thunderstorms, otherwise mostly southwest winds in low flying level and moderate west to northwest aloft; partly cloudy weather, with fair visibility. N.

Y. License To Have More Plates. Albany, June 8 (AP)-There will be more orange in the color of New York State automobile license plates next year. The Motor Vehicle Bureau revealed today that 8 richer shade of orange has been used in the 350 passenger car plates already manufactured. Next.

year's plates will have a black background with orange numerals and letters, a reversal of this year's color scheme. Illness Forces Mattern Down Continued from Page 1 sick now, and I think I will wait 8 few hours until I get better." Asked if he had got any sleep, Mattern replied: "Not much. I have been working on the ship ever since coming down. But I am not very sleepy and I'll probably pick up rest at Krasnoyarsk. How is elapsed time from New York now?" He was assured that he was all right.

In response to a question about what his own log said, Mattern replied: "Hell! I have lost all track ot time." Doesn't Know Time Asked the exact time he landed, the flier gave the same rejoinder. "I can't tell you exactly," he explained, "but I was just four hours out of Omsk when I found out what had happened and I came down almost immediately." Having left Omsk a.m. Wednesday, Moscow "time (6:10 o.nt. Tuesday, Eastern Daylight time), his would have been some time a.m. Moscow landing, time (10:00 p.m.

Tuesday, Eastern Daylight time), approximately one hour after passed over ore Novosibirsk. "I climbed out of my plane by myself," Mattern continued, "although I was so groggy I could hardly stand. Before I knew it there were a lot of people around me but I could not understand the questions they were shooting at me, "They took me into a nearby house and by that time they found somebody who spoke English. They tried to put me to bed but I only sat down a few minutes and then back to the plane." "They have been awfully good to me, giving me hot drinks and food, but I can't keep any of it down. As soon as I get these fumes out of my system I'll be all right." Mattern's landing place was five kilometers (about three miles) from the little industrial settlement of Belovo, where miners of the surrounding Kuznetz coal basin have their homes.

To get him on the telephone it was necessary to communicate first with the manager of the Belovo telegraph station, in which is the town's only telephone line to the outside world, and to prevail upon the manager to send an automobile to get the flier. Some three hours quest was made to the and elapsed between the timpathe rethe time the aviator's voice came over the into the Assoelated Press in Moscow. telephone, Lehman Promises To Continue War On Tuberculosis Governor Lehman, speaking today at the meeting of the State and local tuberculosis committees of the State Charities Aid Association, declared the State would continue its fight against tuberculosis despite the heavy drain on the treasury for unemployment relief. The meeting, marking the 25th anniversary of the anti-tuberculosis campaign in up-State New York, was held at the Hotel Biltmore. A message from President Roosevelt, complimenting the conference on its work, was read to those attending the luncheon.

Discussing the State's plan for three new sanatoriums, the Governor said: "It has not seemed to us at Althat it would be defensible to postpone, even in this emergency period, this much needed protection of the people in our rural counties from so serious a danger. "An appropriation for the last of the three buildings was made by the last Legislature. The Senate has secured sites and developed suitable plans for all three sanatoriums and has contracts for two of the three, notwithstanding the financial difficulties through which we have been passing." Praise for Association The Governor said the association has saved between 5,000 and 6,000 lives per year, "which otherwise would have ended prematurely in the middle years, when duties and responsibilities are at the maximum." Shipping News Incoming Passenger and Mail Steamships TOMORROW Ship and Line From Due Pier AQUITANIA (Br), Cunard Southampton, June Cher- st bourg 54 W1 14th HARDING Hamburg, May 31; Havre, PRESIDENT Southampton, Cobh. 60 19th st NEW YORK (Ger), HamburgAmerican Hamburg. June Southampton, Cherbourg.

86 46th at DROTTNINGHOLM (Sw). Swedish Gothenburg. June 1....... 97 57th at SANTA CECILIA, a Francisco, Central America Hamilton AY, Bkn ATLANTIDA (Hond), American Fruit La Ceiba 8:00 a.m. 20 Peck Slip CHEROKEE, Clyde Jacksonville, June Charleston 7:00 a.m, 37 Spring at MOHAWK, Clyde Galveston, June 3: 7:00 a.m.

51 Jane st ROBT LEE, Old Dominion. Norfolk, June 4:00 p.m. 25 Franklin Outgoing Passenger Steamships MUNARGO, for Nassau, Bahamas, from TOMORROW Pier 64, N. R. (W.

24th Mails close AMERICAN, TRADER, for 2:30 p.m.; salls 5 Plymouth and from Pier 58. N. R. (W. 16th SANTA A LUCIA, for Havana, Puerto Cop.m.

St). Mails close noon (supp. mails 2 Cristobal, La Libertad, San lombia, p.m.); sails p.m. Jose de Guatemala, Los Angeles, San MINNEWASKA, for Southampton, Havre Francisco and Seattle, from Pier 95, and Antwerp, from Pier 58, N. R.

(W. N. R. (W. 55th Mails close 2:30 16th Mails close 1 p.m.

(supp, p.m.: sails 5 p.m. mails 3 p.m.); sails 5 p.m. A Steamer from Key West to Cuba and LACONIA, for Galway, Cobh and Liver- Jamaica. Mails close 8:30 p.m, and gO pool, via Boston, from Pier 56, N. R.

by rail to Key West; thence by ship. (W. 14th Mails close 1 p.m. (supp. AMOR, for Port-au-Prince, La Guayra, mails 3 p.m.): sails 5 p.m.

Puerto Cabello, Curaese, Aruba and and Maracaibo, from Pier 19, Brooklyn STATENDAM, for Plymouth, Bologne (near foot Montague Mails close from 5th St. Hoboken. 2 p.m.: sails 5 Mails close 8 p.m.; sails midnight. NEWFOUNDLAND. p.m.

from Boston to St. PAN BOLIVAR. for Aruba, from Pier 6, Johns. Mails close 8 p.m. and go by Constable Hook, Mails close 6:30 a.m.

rail to Boston; thence by steamer, Protests Spur New Tax Search Continued from Page 1 hear the discussion tomorrow." "I don't know what I am going to do," he replied when asked if he would vote for the new taxes tomorrow. "I went along in the executive session where we all expressed our views. I know that any tax is going be unpopular. "It might be that this is such an unpopular move that even Mayor O'Brien might change his mind about it. I've got so many letters and telegrams of protest here at my home that it would take me all day to read them.

I suppose that when I get to my office I will find another bunch. If somebody else has a tax plan that is better than the present one, it will be o.k. with me. "If we were to increase the subway fare, the subway riders would say, 'You let off the fellows with The whole thing reminds me of the fellow who calls up my house and says, 'Will you get that heavy trucking off my When I ask him, "Where will you put he says, 'I don't care; put it anywhere except on my Asked if he didn't think that the proposed 25-cent toll on East River bridges compared with proposed 10-cent toll on the Harlem River bridges for motorists whose cars are not registered in the city was discriminatory against Brooklyn and Queens, he replied: "Well, I don't know what to say about that. I thought my position was perfectly clear on that subject.

I said I was against bridge tolls, and I am. The first reason I voted for the tax program was that when they substituted taxing automobiles for general bridge tolls I thought people would rather pay a tax and get it over with rather than stop and pay A toll every time they crossed a bridge. There ought to be some difference, in the amount charged motorists for crossing the East River bridges as compared with the Harlem River bridges because the East River bridges are so much longer." Although maintaining a show of confidence, the Mayor revealed he was giving thought to other ways of raising revenue if the courts threw out the bill. "If there is anything invalid about the program, there will be other sources of revenue discovered, disclosed and put into effect," he said. "Some of them may be put into effect, anyway." Suggests Sales Taxes Among such revenue sources he cited specifically a sales tax, higher water rates, taxes on stock transfers and baseball parks.

Berry Asks for Earmarking Controller Berry sent to the Board of Estimate today an amendment to the tax bill "earmarking" for unemployment relief the anticipated returns from the proposed new taxes. In his letter of transmittal the Controller asked the board to request the Board of Aldermen to add the same amendment to the taxicab tax measure pending before them. Another effect of the attack by the Citizens' Budget Commission and others on excessive salaries, unnecessary jobholders and general waste and extravagance was the Mayor's letter to department heads instructing them to cut their budget requests for 1934 to the bone and then "to scrape the bone." Plans for the legal attack on the motor vehicle tax were pushed by the New York Automobile Club, the West Side Association of Commerce, the Brooklyn Motor Vehicle Dealers Association and the Jamaica Chamof Commerce. The Automobile Club of New York announced that if the tax bill 1s passed and signed by the Mayor, its special counsel, Leo T. Kissman, would apply immediately for an injunction restraining its enforcement until the courts pass on its legality, Kissman said nothing could done until tax was passed.

He advised the club that he believes the proposed ordinance is not only unconstitutional but. beyond the power of the municipal government by reason of specific statutory prohibitions. Should a test case become necessary, he expressed the opinion that the city and the courts would co-operate to bring a speedy determination. Another group of motorcar ownwas organized to fight the 000,000 motorcar tax under the name of the New York City Motor Tax Relief Committee. The Taxicab Emergency Rellef Committee, with offices at 1175 Broadway, Manhattan, which is fighting the proposed 5-cent tax on each taxicab ride, announced that it had almost reached its goal of 1,000 signatures to a protest petition.

Retaliatory moves against the proposed bridge tolls for motorists whose cars are not registered in the city and who will not have to pay the proposed motor tax were begun in Westchester County, in Bronxville, Mamaroneck and Port Chester. The Bronxville Village Board authorized Corporation Counsel Thomas G. Flaherty to find some way of imposing taxes on New York City motorists entering Bronxville. Similar moves were made in Mamaroneck and Port Chester. At Yonkers, S.

S. Eichen, manager of the Westchester branch the Automobile Club of New York, began 3 campaign against the bridge tolls. Calls it Tammany Trick The Citizens Association of Queens and Bellaire went on record as against the automobile tax and the bridge tolls at a meeting, last night. They sent a Mayor O'Brien stating their position. The ON FENCE Henry Hesterberg De Feo Realty Co.

of Brooklyn also joined the ranks of the protestants. Harry H. Altman, Brooklyn attorney, announced formation of a troup who have banded together in a determination not to pay the taxes. "We don't know and we don't care what others will do," Altman stated, "but as for and a band of loyal backboners, this tax shall not be voluntarily paid. We believe it is unjust, unrepresentative and contemptuous against the masses who pay and pay and pay.

We believe 1 it is a Tammany trick and sheer madness." The City Affairs Committee made a new attack on the tax gram through Rabbi Stephen Wise. Only one voice of influence was raised in defense of the new taxes. was Dr. Nicholas Murray ler's. Sailing for Europe, he said: "I think the automobile measure is all right.

I believe a toll should have been imposed on all bridges from the beginning. Very often the best tax program is the most unpopular." Use of Airships Due to Be O.K.'d By Akron Board Washington, June 8 (A) There were strong indications today that recommendations for continuing lighter than -air development in military operations, along with "constructive criticism" of the Navy's airship policies, will be placed in the report of the Congressional Committee investigating the Akron disaster. The committee will meet in executive session Saturday to formulate its report after studying more than 2,500 pages of testimony taken In the two and a half weeks of hearings. Recommendations likely for inclusion in the report 1-Development of weather setvice for bettering reports to government air servies; recommendation of four instead of two complete maps a day. 2-Replacement of the Akron, lost at sea with 73 officers and men April 4.

3- 3-Re-commissioning of the Los Angeles as a training ship. 4 -Maintenance of Lakehurst naval air station. 5-Continuance of experimental work in lighter-than-air by the Navy. 6-Suggestions for softening the navy practice of alternating airship personnel between airship and sea duty, and to maintain a greater continuance of command without jeopardizing opportunity for promotion. 7-Increased development of aperology -air.

The "committee will not dwell upon the commercial aspects of lighter-than-air ships, since the resolution authorizing the investigation was based solely upon the of dirigibles for military operations. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES Co- Educational "ACADEMY Mira Corner Montague Henry Sts Main 4-4957 A Co-Educational High School, Fully Accredited by N. Y. State Board of Regents Summer High School Begins July 5. Advanced nt Repeat Subjects.

Day and Evening Divisions Thorough Preparation for COLLEGE, REGENTS, TECHNICAL SCHOOL WEST POINT-ANNAPOLIS Register Now for Summer or Fall Term FRIENDS SCHOOL A Day School -Kindergarten to College Term Begins Sept. 20th 112 Schermerhorn St. TRiangle 5-2758. MISS KIRK'S SCHOOL 112 Woodruff Ave, BUckminster 2-9180 KINDERGARTEN AND ELEMENTARY DEPARTMENTS THE FLATBUSH SCHOOL The Flatbush Teacher Training Schoot. Newkirk Ave.

at B. M. T. Station Girls and Young Women SHORE ROAD ACADEMY Country Day School Shore Road, nr, 92nd 8t. ATlantic 5-6735 Dancing 25.

Years One Address Means Something REMEY SCHOOL, 65th BROADWAY. N. Y. Dancing Every Nite 8 to 1 Ladies 850 (No Other Charge) -Gents 400 Private Lessons. $1 Nine Lessona $5 Illustrated Booklet on Request Soothes' While You Shave Only Cutieura Shaving SHAVING Cream contains the emollient CREAM properties of Cutieura which soothe and heal the skin while you shave, doing away with the necessity of using lotions.

And 5 what a wonderful after-shave feeling! A skin that is smooth, cool, refreshed and invigorated. At your dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of 35c. Address: Cuticura Laboratories, Malden, Mass. Butler, Sailing, Outlines World Peace Obstacles Off on Peace Mission Aboard BerengariaHughes Leaves Today The failure of the United States to join the World Court, the beliet of the French that their national security can be assured only by force and the rule of the military element in Japan are the three principal obstacles "to the building of a new system of helpful international cooperation," Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia University, said before he sailed on the Cunarder Berengaria yesterday.

He sailed meet with ropean committee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, of which he is president. Couzens Sails Senator James Couzens, sailing on the United States liner Washington yesterday, said that unless the World Monetary and Economic Conference in London agrees on the establishment of an international currency of exchange it will be futile to attempt any readjustment of world tariffs. Sailing on the American Scantie liner Scanmail late this afternoon are Mrs. V. Fink and Miss Yvonne Fink, Miss G.

Steen, Mrs. Emily Halin, Mrs. A. N. Jenson, Miss Asta Lind, Miss Elsa Dahl, Mr.

and Mrs. Kay Thustrup, Miss E. DuTort and Mrs. Edla Lund of Brooklyn. The Kent School's first crew, which defeated Harvard's varsity lightweight shell regatta on the Housatonic River on April 4, sailed for England on the Berengaria to participate in the Henley races.

Three Lithuanians, one a priest, another a lawyer and the third a young woman, were ordered sent to Ellis Island pending a hearing by a special board of inquiry when they arrived aboard the HollandAmerica liner Statendam yesterday. Thirty members of the Newark Maennerchor Society serenaded Capt. Friedrich Buch, retiring commander of the Hamburg-American liner Deutschland, last night before the ship sailed. Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes of the United States Supreme Court sails today for Gibraltar, Naples, Nice and Genoa aboard the Italian liner Augustus. WILLS FILED BOYLE.

MICHOEL H. (June 5). Estate, $3,400. Madeline E. McTigue, ter, and Norbert Boyle, son, $5 each; Catherine Welden, cousin, 524 5th residue.

DECKER, SARAH C. (May 30). Estate, $12,000. To four children in equal shares, Executor, Thomas A. Decker, 182 Lincoln Avenue.

McCARTY, JOHN P. (Oct, 15, 1931). value not given. To Margaret McCarty, widow, executrix, 1739 49th St. Events Tonight Commencement exercises of Berkeley Institute In the Memorial Presbyterian Church, 7th Ave.

and St. John's Place, 8 p.m. Dinner and fourth annual meeting of the Regional Plan Association at Hotel Roosevelt, 7:15 p.m. Metropolitan Bag and Paper Jobbers Association dinner at the Towers, 6:30 p.m. Dave Soden Night at the Williamsburg Post.

244. Veterans of Foreign Wars. 87 Tompkins 8:30 p.m. Mass meeting of the Kings County Home Mortgage Relief Committee at Erasmus Hall High School, Flatbush and Church Avenues. Graduation exercises of Long Island University and of the Brooklyn College of Pharmacy at Brooklyn Academy of Misic.

FORECLOSURES SUPREME COURT. KINGS COUNTY The Lincoln Savings Bank of Brooklyn, plaintiff, against Kings County Real Estate Corporation and others, No. 2. In pursuance of an amended judgment of foreclosure and sale duly made and entered in the above-entitled action and bearing date the 8th day of June, 1933, the undersigned, the referee in said judgment named, will sell at public auction to the highest bidder, by NATHANIEL SHUTER, auctioneer, at the Brooklyn Real Estate Exchange, No. 189 Montague Street, in the Borough of Brooklyn, County of Kings, on the 30th day of June, 1933, at twelve o'clock noon, the premises directed by said judgment to be sold and therein described as follows: PARCEL A.

A11 that certain lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in the Borough of Brooklyn, County of Kings, City and State of New York, bounded and described as follows, to wit: Beginning at the corner formed by the intersection of the southerly side of mus Street and the westerly side of Nostrand Avenue: running thence southerly along the westerly side of Nostrand nue nineteen feet four Inches: thence westerly parallel with Erasmus Street and through a party wall forty-two feet nine and three-eighths inches to the easterly line of lot No. 26 on the Map of Land of Mrs. A. L. Zabriskie, In Town of Flatbush, surveyed by T.

G. Bergen and fled In the office of the Register of the County of Kings. July 11th, 1867, AS Man No. 757: thence northerly along said easterly line of Lot No. 26 nineteen feet four inches to the southerly side of Erasmus Street; running thence easterly along the southerly side of Erasmus Street forty-two feet one inch to the corner, the point or place of beginning.

PARCEL B. All that certain lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon, situate, lying and being in the Borough of Brooklyn, County of Kings. the City and State of New York, bounded and described as follows, to wit: Beginning at a point on the westerly elde of Nostrand Avenue, distant nineteen feet four inches southerly from the corner formed by the Intersection of the westerly side of Nostrand Avenue and the southerly side of Erasmus Street: running thence southerly along the westerly side of Nose trand Avenue nineteen feet four Inches: thence westerly parallel with Erasmus Street and through a party wall forty three feet five and seven-eighths inches to the easterly line of Lot No. 26 on the Map of Land of Mrs. A.

L. Zabriskie, In the Town of Flatbush, surveyed by T. G. Bergen and filed in the office of the Register of the County of Kings, July 11, 1867, as Map No. 757; thence northerly along said easterly line of Lot No.

26 nineteen feet four inches; thence easterly parallel with Erasmus Street and through A party wall forty-two feet nine and three-eighths Inches to the westerly side of Nostrand Avenue, the point place of beginning. PARCEL C. All that certain lot, piece or parcel of land, with the buildings and improvements thereon. situate, lying being in the Borough of Brooklyn, County of Kings, the City and State of New York, bounded and described as follows: Beginning at a point on the westerly side of Nostrand Avenue, distant thirtyeight feet eight inches southerly from the corner formed by the intersection of the westerly side of Nostrand Avenue and the southerly side of Erasmus Street; running thence southerly along the westerly side of Nostrand Avenue nineteen feet four inches: thence westerly parallel with Erasmus Street and through A party wall fortyfour feet two and one-quarter Inches to the easterly line of Lot No. 26 on the Map of Land of Mrs.

A. L. Zabriskle, in the Town of Flatbush, surveyed by T. G. Bergen and fled in the office of the Register of the County of Kings, July 11.

1867. AS Map No. 757; thence northerly along said easterly line of Lot No. 26 nineteen feet four inches; thence easterly parallel with Erasmus Street and through a party wall forty-three feet five and sevent-eightht Inches to the westerly side of Nostrand Avenue, the point or place of beginning. Dated, June 8th.

1933. HANNAH SIEGAL, Referee. HUTTON HOLAHAN, Attorneys for Plaintiff, 32 Court Street. Brooklyn, N. 108 12 15 19 32.

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À propos de la collection The Brooklyn Daily Eagle

Pages disponibles:
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Années disponibles:
1841-1963