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

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Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
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13
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BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, MONDAY, JULY 2, 1934 M' 13 May J. McDermott, J. G. Braun, John S. McKinney, Mary Brodie, Elizabeth Mason, Matilda starberry, Leon Metz, Herman J.

Crooke, W. Jr. Nelson, Peter Crothers, Walter Nostrand, George Devine, Frank Pagelow, Hannah Ellis, Vernona Bell Peacock, C. J. Emerson, Nora E.

Pugh, Mary Evans, Eliza Ann Schad, Ida AH. Feist, Robert L. Searles, Hollis H. Frankenhauser, Southwell, Leila E. Cassie WennerholmGoodman, Mackey Werhan, Grover E.

Gormley, Joseph McCullough, Kirk, Julia C. Kathryne Lorbeck, Chas. W. Young, Helen G. McCann, Margaret Ocatbs BOHAN-MAY J.

(nee Kellar), beloved wife of Peter Bohan of 342 72d St. Notice of funeral later. BRAUN JOHN S. BRAUN 04 153 7th Ave. Remains now reposat E.

Waldeck's Home for Funerals, 7614 4th at which services will be held Monday eveing. 8:30. officiating; the Rev. a also Williamsont. services Lessing Lodge, 608.

F. A. M. Interment, Evergreens, 2 p.m. Tuesday.

BRODIE ELIZABETH (Betty), suddenly at Kingston, N. Y. July beloved daughter of Denis C. and Bessie C. Brodie, aged 19 years.

Funeral from 415 E. 26th St. Brooklyn, Tuesday, July 3, 10:30 a.m. Requiem mass St. Jerome's R.

C. Church. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery, Brooklyn. July 1, LEON, CARBERRY- the late John and Elizabeth McGuire Carberry. Notice of funeral later.

CROOKE On July 1, WILLIAM beloved son William A. and Mary Crooke (nee Keating) and brother of James and Margaret Crooke. Funeral Tuesday at Mary 10:30 a.m. from his residence, 363 11th thence to St. Thomas Aquinas Church, where solemn requiem mass will be celebrated.

Interment St. John's Cemetery. CROTHERS On Saturday, June 30, 1934, WALTER, beloved husband of Mae Crothers and brother of William Crothers. Services at his residence, 1246 Sterling Place, Brooklyn, Tuesday, July 3, at 2 p.m. Masonic services to follow.

DEVINE-FRANK L. DEVINE, at his residence, 182 Hoyt on June 30. He is survived by a brother, James. Funeral Tuesday at, 9:30 a.m.; thence to St. Peter's R.

C. Church, Hicks and Warren Sts. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. ELLIS-On Sunday, July 1, 1934, at her home, 431 Franklin VERNONA BELL, daughter the late D'Orsey P. and Annie C.

Philip Ellis, sister of Mrs. John H. Buckley, Mrs. Gage E. Tollner and George P.

Ellis. Services private on Tuesday afternoon. Please omit flowers. EMERSON-On June 30, 1934. NORA E.

EMERSON, formerly of 125 Park Place, Brooklyn. Services at Edwards Funeral, Parlor, 86 6th Monday, 2, 1934, at 2:30 p.m. Interment Greenwood. EVANS-On July 1, 1934, at her home, 1395 Dean ELIZA ANN EVANS; survived by a niece, Mrs. Frank McCarthy, and two nephews, Tenney Saunders and Roland Evans.

Services at Fred Herbst Sons Funeral Parlors, 83 Hanson Place, corner S. Portland Tuesday, 10 a.m. Interment private. FEIST-ROBERT beloved husband of Jane Fyfe and son of Mrs. Lester G.

Tooker. Funeral services at his home, 548 4th Brooklyn, Monday evening, July 2, at 8:30. FRANKENHAUSER- Sunday, July 1, 1934, CASSIE (nee Thalmann), beloved wife of Fred Frankenhauser; also survived by her mother, Frieda Thalmann, and a brother, John. Funeral services at home, 453 Grand Brooklyn, Thursday, 2 p.m. Interment Cedar Grove Cemetery.

GOODMAN-On July 1, MACKEY, beloved husband of Lillie Goodman. Funeral services Tuesday, July 3, at 3 p.m., at Flatbush Memorial Chapel, 1283 Coney Island Ave. 7-On July 1, JOSEPH, at his residence, 1957 E. 35th beloved son of James and Margaret A. Coyle Gormley; brother of James, Raymond and H.

Kenneth. Solemn requiem mass Thursday, 9:30 a.m., at the R. C. Church of the Good Shepherd, Batchelder St. and Avenue S.

Interment Holy Cross. KIRK Suddenly, on Sunday, July 1, 1934, at her residence, 988 Lincoln Place, JULIA CANAVELLO KIRK, beloved. mother of Mrs. John M. Scoble, Mrs.

Frank H. Shelley and Mrs. Horace W. du Maulin. Services private.

LORBECK-CHARLES on Saturday, June 30, 1934, beloved father of Mrs. Henrietta E. Duryea and Charles, Philip, Lew, John, Adam and Herman Lorbeck. Funeral services at his residence, John Munson, b. on Tuesday, July 3, at 2 p.m.

Interment Greenfield Cemetery, Hempstead. McCANN-On June 30, at her residence, 27 Argyle Road, MARGARET wife of the late Daniel McCann. Survived by two sons, Bernard and Robert. Requiem mass on Tuesday at 9:30 a.m., Holy Innocents Church, Beverly Road and E. 17th St.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. McDERMOTT Suddenly, on Saturday, June 30, 1934, JOSEPH beloved son of Elizabeth Dill McDermott and the late John J. McDermott. Funeral on Tuesday, July 3. from his residence, 473 72d solemn mass of requiem at 10 o'clock, at Our Lady of Angels Church.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. McKINNEY-MARY WALKER, on June 30, 1934, in her 65th year, beloved mother of Mrs. Agnes DuBOCA, Mrs. Bertha, Gentes, Mrs. Edith Goodwin, Miss Anna McKinand one son, William H.

McKinney; a sister, Mrs. Jane Berry. Funeral service on Tuesday, July 3, 1934, at her home, 1357 E. 26th at 8:30 p.m. Burial on Wednesday at 10 a.m.

Interment at Evergreens Cemetery. MASON On Saturday, June 30, 1934, MATILDA widow of Frederick W. Mason, age 81 years. Funeral services will be held at her home, 960 E. 34th on Monday, July 2, at 8 p.m.

Mrs. H. K. Pagelow Dies at Her Home In Allenhurst. N.

J. Daughter of Late Thomas Kinsella, Once Eagle Ed- tor, Was Brooklyn Native (Special to The Eagle) Allenhurst, N. July 2 -Mrs. Hannah Kinsella Payne Pagelow, a daughter of the late Thomas Kinsella, a noted Brooklynite, who was editor of The Brooklyn Daily Eagle for many years preceding his death in 1884, died yesterday at her home, 239 Elberon here, after an illness of three years. Mies.

livede Pagelow there was for born many in Brookyears. She was married twice, first husband being Robert' Payne." a prominent lawyer. After his death married Alfred Pagelow, who was active in Democratic political affairs in Brooklyn and a leading citizen of Flatbush. He died in 1908. Mrs.

Pagelow is survived by two sisters, the Marchesa Presbitro of Rome, Italy, and Mrs. Margaret Burton of London, England; three Mrs. Sidney Barney Hannah, Paula daughters, Miss Payne, Pagelow; three grandchildren, Payne Hoffman, Miss Olga Hoffman and Mrs. Constance Young, and a great granddaughter, Barbara Young. The funeral services will be held at 2:30 p.m, tomorrow at the Burtis Chapel, 517 Bangs Asbury Park, N.

J. Interment will be in Greenwood Cemetery, Brielle, N. J. Chester J. Peacock Chester J.

Peacock, 47, of 416 Ocean a service for the Underwriters Laboratories, died suddenly on Friday, bathing at Lake Mohawk, N. J. Death was apparently due to a heart attack. He was born in Brooklyn and was a graduate of Polytechnic Institute. He is survived by his wife, Clara R.

Peacock, and his mother, Jennie J. Peacock. Services will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the home. Deatbs METZ-June 30, HERMAN J.

METZ, devoted husband of Margaret, and loving father of Charles, Walter Bert. Funeral from his residence, 1249 E. 28th Brooklyn; services Monday evening at 8:30 o'clock. Interment Evergreens Cemetery Tuesday, July 3, at 10 a.m. NELSON-On Saturday, June 30, 1934, PETER NELSON, of 9 Lincoln father of Arthur, Nels and William Nelson.

Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Monday, July 2, at 8 p.m. Interment Evergreens Cemetery. NOSTRAND-On Saturday, June 30, 1934, his residence, 378 Eldert's Lane, Richmond Hill, GEORGE NOSTRAND, beloved husband of Eliza M. Nostrand: father of George E. Nostrand: brother of Mrs.

Mary Elizabeth Highby. Services at the Fairchid Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, on Monday, July 2, at 8 p.m. PAGELOW-At her home, Allenhurst, N. on July 1, 1934, HANNAH KINSELLA PAGELOW. Service at Burtis Chapel, 517 Bangs Asbury Park, N.

on Tuesday, July 3, 1934, at 2:30 p.m. Interment Greenwood Cemetery, Brielle, N. J. PEACOCK -Suddenly, on Friday, June 29, 1934, CHESTER survived by his wife, Clara and mother, Jennie J. Peacock.

Services at his home, 416. Ocean on Tuesday, July 3, at 8 p.m. PUGH-MARY, on Sunday, at her home, 264 McKinley beloved wife of the late Charles J. Pugh and devoted mother of Florence, James Edward J. and Charles J.

Jr. Funeral will be held on Tuesday, 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass R. C. Church of St.

Sylvester. Interment St. John's Cemetery SCHAD-On July 1, 1934, IDA H. SCHAD, beloved mother of Minnie Laube and Henry W. Schad, of 111-34 113th Ozone Park.

Funeral services at St. James Lutheran Ghurch, 105th St. and 107th Ave, Ozone Park, on Tuesday, 2 p.m. SEARLES -On June 29, at Brooklyn, N. HOLLIS beloved husices at Plains, N.

Tuesband of C. Searles. ServDorothy, day, July 2, at 2 p.m. SOUTHWELL-On Monday, July 2, 1934, LEILA beloved wife of Edward E. Southwell of 279 Washington Ave.

Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Thursday, 2 p.m. WENNERHOLM On June 30. 1934. KATHRYNE McCULLOUGH WENNERHOLM, formerly of 68 Cedar Place, beloved sister of Mary, John, Cornelius and Philip, niece of Timothy McAuliffe, Funeral Tuesday, July 3, from her residence. 3665 Bedford at 9:30 a.m., thence to St.

Ignatius R. C. Church, Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. (Chicago papers please copy.) WERHAN-On Monday, July 2, 1934, at his residence, 20 Lefferts Place, GROVER E. WERHAN, beloved husband of Mary Werhan and brother of Alfred H.

Werhan and Mrs. Frank Stokien. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Tuesday at 8 p.m. YOUNG On June 30, 1934, HELEN beloved daughter of Dr. John and Nellie Young and sister of Marie, Police Surgeon John Joseph and Raymond Young.

Funeral from her home. 751 Rugby Road, on Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. Solemn requiem mass, Church of St. Rose of Lima, 10 a.m. Interment Calvary.

Cemetery. In -The Rev. CHARLES H. Anniversary mass of requiem will be at Our Lady of Victory Church, Floral Park, July 3, at 7 a.m. for the repose of the soul of the late Rev.

CHARLES H. SENNETT. THOMAS F. DALTON. SENNETT- mass for the Rev.

CHARLES H. SENNETT. Tuesday, July 3, 8 a.m., at St. Vincent de Paul's Church, N. 6th Brooklyn.

Services Tonight For William Goate Funeral services for Prof. William B. Goate, formerly a director of music in the public schools here and long prominent in musical circles, who died Saturday at his home, 699 Ocean Trinity will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in Episcopal Church, Arlington and Schenck with the Rev. Dr. George T.

Gruman, officiating. Burial will be in Lynn, tomorrow. Separate Rites For Father, Son Funeral arrangements were completed yesterday for Peter Hubhard, former clerk in the Department of Education, and his son, Robert J. Hubbardion Mr. retired Hubbard police died sergeant.

Friday night in his 81st yeaer at his home, 672 Park Place, Brooklyn. while the son expired Saturday night in the home of friends at 105-11 10, 109th Ozone. Park. solemn high the father was to be said this morning at St. Theresa R.

C. Church, Brooklyn, at 10 o'clock. Interment was to follow in Calvary Cemetery. On Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock. a solemn high mass will be said for the son in St.

Simon and Jude R. C. Church, Calvary Cemetery. The son made his home with his wife, Mrs. Grace Dooley Hubbard, at 2086 Gravesend Brooklyn.

His father-in-law was Police Inspector Robert Dooley. He joined the Police Department 26 years ago and retired sergeant from 69th Precinct, Brooklyn, six years ago. He was 47 years old. Five children, Catherine Gaveson, John, Mae, Elizabeth Kissane and Andrew, survive the father. Church Pastor to Remain Special to The Eagle Setauket, July 2-The Rev.

Charles A. Livingston will remain as pastor of the historic Caroline Church, he informed his parishioners following the weekly services yesterday. Many had expected him to leave following his legal victory over Miss Julia Smith, president of the disbanded Ladies Aid Society. The church, organized in 1723, has been accepted into the Long Island Episcopal diocese and will be operated as a mission, Mr. Livingston said.

Suffragan Bishop J. I. Blair Larned asked him to remain' in charge when the church surrendered its independent status, he added. Miss Smith, who paid Mr. Livingston 7 cents by direction of the court in his suit for slander, did not attend yesterday's service.

A suit contesting the legality the decision of the vestry to affiliate the church with the Episcopal diocese is still pending. Obituaries ROBERT L. FEIST, son of Mrs. Lester G. Tooker and husband of the former Jane Frances Fyfe, died yesterday at the M.

E. Hospital after an operation for appendicitis. He WAS 23 and had been married only a short time. He was in the insurance business. He was born in Brooklyn and was a gradaute of St.

Paul's School in Garden City. Funeral services will be held tomorrow evening at the hame. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery, MATILDA W. MASON, 81, a resident of Brooklyn all her life, died Saturday al her home, 960 E. 34th St.

Funeral services will be held there tomorrow 2:30 p.m. Mrs. Mason was the daughter of the late Christina and Henry Van Fleet, and the widow of Frederick W. Mason. Surviving are two nieces, Miss Lydia M.

Toohey and Mrs. John A. Meyenhause, and a nephew, George Gray, of Mackensack, N. J. Events Tonight Dinner to new internes, Brooklyn JewHospital, Prospect Place and Classon 6 p.m.

SCHOOLS and COLLEGES Co- Educational SUMMER HIGH SCHOOL Fully Accredited July 5 to. Aug. 21 Day and Night Co-ed All Academic and Commercial $15 Subjects. Passing regents here A Subject on Aug. 21 eliminates home in the school Sept.

conditional. Day Request School Boro Hall Academy Circular 366 Flatbush Avenue Ext Opp. 8'klyn Paramount Theatre Phone Seeretarial or Commercial Course MAin 4-8358 3 Months, Day, $35; Evening, $20 PRIVATE INSTRUCTION and coaching in Elementary and High School subjects by college graduate with teaching experience. INGERSOLL 2-3046 Henry, cor. Montague PEA SUMMER Begins July TERM 5 BUSH SOR00 Flatbush Teachers Training School Newkirk Avenue at M.

T. Station COL BY ACADEM SUMMER HIGH SCHOOL Cor. Bedford Snyder Brooklyn, N. Y. BU.4-6678 If no answer, call BU.4-7746 or LA.3-9673 MISS KIRK'S SCHOOL Kindergarten and Elementary Departments 119 Woodruff Ave.

BUckminster 2-9180 BEL A I Kindergarten to High School 176 Brooklyn Ave. Tel. LAf. 3-4992 PRE KINDERGARTEN THROUGH HIGH school. Chartered Board of regents, 22 Buckingham Road.

Bklyn, BUck. 4-7400. Boys and Young Men MARQUAND SCHOOL FOR BOYS Eighth Grade to College 65 Hanson PI. STer. 3-7000 Girls and Young Women SHORE ROAD ACADEMY Country Day School Shore Road nr.

920 St. A Tiantie 5-6735. Dancing STAGE ART SCHOOL 305 Washington Brooklyn. MAin 4-1148 LICENSES NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT liquor license No, R. L.

8195 has been issued to the undersigned to sell liquor. wine and beer at retail in A restaurant, under Section 132-A of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law, at 1000 Surf Brooklyn, New York, for on premises sumption. ALFRED FELIMAN, 1000 Surf Avenue, Brooklyn, CHARLES FELTMAN, 130 8th Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Man Dies, 23 Hurt As Autos Crash in Brooklyn, Queens Fatal Rockaway Parkway Accident Sends 2 Other Victims to the Hospital One man was killed and 23 others injured, several serlously, in automobile accidents in Brooklyn and Queens yesterday.

Louis 23, of 257 W. 116th Manhattan, died of a fractured skull following a collision between two cars at Flatlands Ave. and Rockaway Parkway. Felix Lozardo, 21, brother of the dead man, of Nicholas Manhattan, sustained fractures of the hip and right collar bone. Jack Devine of 12 Sane Court, Gerritsen Beach, was rushed to Kings County Hospital with a skull 11 fracture.

John Lego, 29, of 1002 Hopkinson Ave. suffered a wrenched shoulder, and Acosta Hipolito, 27, of 47 St. Nicholas Manhattan, was taken to Kings County Hospital with possible internal injuries. Car Strikes Children While crossing Ditmars Ave. at Shore Road, Astoria, just before noon yesterday, three children were struck by an automobile.

Rudolph Boracci, 6. of 21-15 24th Road, Astoria, was removed to St. John's Hospital in Long Island City with a fractured skull. His sister, Irma, 14, and Lansier Eiedemann, 14, 24-11 35th Astoria, were treated for bruises and pemitted to go home. Four persons were injured yesterday morning when two cars collided at Ralph and Flatlands Aves.

They Mrs. Tomasina Matolice, 35, of 2476 Ralph her husband, Anthony, 38, and their daughter, Mirina, 2, and Paul Squellace, 48, of the same address, operator of the car, all of whom were taken to the Beth El Hospital with skull fractures. Jacob Isenberg of 99 Malta operator of the other car, was treated for minor injuries by Dr. Stein of Beth El Hospital and then arrested by police of the Vanderveer Park station on a charge of thirddegree assault. Magistrate Gasper Liota held him later in Flatbush Court for further hearing July 10.

Bail was fixed at $500. Five persons were injured yesterday afternoon when two collided head-on and overturned at Rockaway Parkway and Avenue N. They were Ylyes Henry of 435 Warwick fractured left shoulder; Needham White of 921 Sutter lacerations of the head; Leo Kincberg of 1315 E. 91st severe head injuries; Mrs. Blanche Kincberg, 32, his wife, severe head injuries.

and Selma Kincberg, 5, their daughter lacerations of the right ear. All but White were removed to Kings County Hospital. Four persons were injured in the a afternoon when a car struck a father and son who were crossing Coney Island Ave. at Foster Ave. and then ran into a trolley car which had stopped to pick up passengers.

They were Joseph Kalb, 37. of 630 Rugby Road, lacerations of the left shoulder and contusions of the left hand; Howard Kalb, 5, his son, concussion of the brain; Picollo, 21, and her sister, Helen, 25, both of 864 E. 15th contusions and abrasions. Three persons were injured in the afternoon when the car in which they were riding on E. 2d St.

at Avenue collided with another car. They were Mrs. May Casner, 24, of 318 6th shock and contusions of head; Oliver Sandkaut, 32, of 1645 E. 2d fractured 1 nose and concussion of the brain, and Mrs. Irene Sandkaut, his wife, shock and injuries to the back.

They were all removed to the Coney Island Hospital. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS TO BIDDERS ON WORK TO BE DONE FOR OR SUP. PLIES TO BE FURNISHED TO THE CITY OF NEW YORK. The person or persons making a bid for any service. work, materials or supplies for The City of New York or for any of its departments, bureaus or offices, shall furnish the same in a sealed envelope, indorsed with the title of the supplies, terials, work or service for which the bid is made, with his or their name or names and the date of presentation to the dent of the Board or to the head of the Department, at his or its office, on or before the date and hour named in the advertisement for the same, at which time and place the bids will be publicly opened by the President of the Board or head of sald Department and read, and the award of the contract made according to law as soon thereafter as practicable.

Each bid shall contain the name and place of residence of the person making the bid and the names of all persons interested with him therein, and if no other person be SO interested it shall distinctly state that fact, also that it is made out any connection with any other person making a bid for the same purpose, and 1s in all respects fair and without collusion or fraud, and that no member of the Board of Aldermen, head of a department chief of a bureau, deputy thereof or clerk therein, or other officer or employee of The City of New York, is, shall be or become interested, directly or indirectly, as contracting party, partner, stockholder. surety or otherwise, in or in the performance of the contract or in the supplies, work or business to which it relates, or in any portion of the profits thereof. The bid must be verified by the oath in writing of the party or parties making the bid that the several matters stated therein are In all respects true. No bid shall be considered unless, AB condition precedent to the reception 01 consideration of such bid, it be accompanted by a certifled check upon one of the State or National banks or trust companies of The City of New York, or a check 01 such bank or trust company signed by duly authorized officer thereof, drawn to the order of the Comptroller, or money or corporate stock or certificates of indebtedness of any nature issued by The City of New York. which the Comptroller shall approve as of equal value with the security required in the advertisement to the amount of not less than three nor more than five per centum of the bond required, as provided in Section 420 of the Greater New York Charter.

All bids for supplies must be submitted in duplicate. The certified check or money should not be inclosed in the envelope containing the bid, but should be elther 1.closed in separate envelope addressed to the head ol the Department, President or Board, al submitted personally upon the tion of the bid. For particulars AS to the quantity ano quality of the supplies or the nature and extent of the work reference must be made to the specifications schedules, plans. on file In the said office of the President. Board or Department.

No bid shall be accepted from or contract awarded to any person who is in arrears to The City of New York upon debt or contract or who is defaulter, as surety or otherwise, upon any obligation to the City. The contracts must be bid for separately. The right is reserved in each case to reject all bids if it is deemed to be for the interest of the City so to do. Bidders will write out the amount 01 their bids in addition to inserting the same in figures Bidders are requested to make their bids upon the blank forms prepared, and furnished by the City, a copy of which, with the proper envelope in which to inclose the bid. together with copy of the contract including the specifications.

in 'the form approved by the Corporation Counsel. can be obtained upon application therefor at the office of the Department for which the work is to be done or the services are to be furnished. Plans and drawings of struction work may be seen there. Puneral services will be held tomorrow, 10 a.m., at St. Gabriel's R.

C. Church, East Elmhurst, for John La Duke, 73, retired contractor and former president of the Queensboro National Bank of Corona. Mr. La Duke died Friday night at his home, 102-26 29th East Elmhurst. John La Duke Mrs.

Sarah Bailey Dies; Was Long Ill Mrs. Sarah Thomson Bailey, 83, a member of an old Brooklyn family, died Thursday at her home, 5 Monroe Place of a cerebral hemorrhage, after an illness of 10 months. Mrs. Bailey was born in Brooklyn, daughter of the late Thomas Knott and Sarah Thompson Lees. Her father was a prominent utility official and at one time was president of the old New York Gas Company.

Her husband, the late Albert W. Bailey, was a well known lawyer, Mrs. Bailey was of English and Scotch ancestry and had a keen knowledge of financial matters, handling her own estate with remarkable success. Her friends frequently sought her advice on financial matters and profited by her counsel. She was a student of art and music and had studied under William M.

Chase at the Shinnecock Hills artists' colony. For many years she was a subscriber to the Brooklyn opera. Services were held at the chapel Greenwood Cemetery yesterday with the Rev. David T. Atwater, rector of Grace P.

E. Church, ofofficiating. Mrs. N. E.

Emerson Funeral Rites Today Funeral were to be held this afternoon Mrs. Nora E. services, Emerson, widow of Charles F. Emerson of an old Brooklyn family, at the Edwards Funeral parlor, 86 6th Ave. Interment was to follow in Greenwood Cemetery.

Mrs. Emerson was 84 and died Saturday in a sanitarium in Yonkers after a long illness. She formerly lived at 125 Park Place and was a sister-inlaw of the late Mrs. Cornelius Zabriskie, long a leading figure in Brooklyn, who was Orlena A. Emerson.

Held for Killing Negro With Knife Samuel Watkin, 47, of 327 Powell St. was arrested early today by the police of the Liberty Ave. station. charged with homicide. The police allege that Watkin was the man who last night stabbed to death George Carmichael, 47, Negro, also of 327 Powell St.

WINS THIRD STRAIGHT The Beth Page polo team chalked up its third straight win yesterday afternoon when it defeated the South Shore Polo Club, 6 to 3, at Farmingdale. Fred Miller was the outstanding man for the victors, while Bernie Blausen and Bill Miller stood out for the losers. You to read ABOUT This is a frank about Enzyme therefore it is a nical. Please read carefully. It will the truth about you drink.

INZYMES are not They helped make 4 of beer 7000 years ago Egypt. Only the enzymes is new. That is tion modern science has art of brewing. Enzymes are Nature's transforming substances, all beers, in almost all foods. The ripening of a banana the action of one kind Green bananas contain and oils that give them a puckering taste.

But the bananas change these acids quickly in the sunlight, in your kitchen -into cious flavors. So it is with apples. Jos. Schlif TUNE IN on the Ban on Indecent Films Ordered by RKO Head Kakane Eliminates Productions Which Scoff at Chastity and Sanctity of Marriage or Which Make Heroes Out of Criminals In a letter directed to all dent of RKO Studios, all materials offensive to ferred in the letter to the educational groups to bring about a boycott of indecent films. "While our company has faith attempted to keep its productions free from legitimate criticism, a few of our pictures have been included among those criticized," he wrote.

"It is imperative that henceforth still greater care be taken to avoid objectionable themes and offensive scenes and lines, No Appeal to Coarse Minds do not have to eliminate 'sex' situations from our pictures. If we are to present honest dramas of human experiences, some scenes of sin and wrongdoing must necessarily be depicted. But there is no need and no excuse whatever for productions which scoff at chastity and the sanctity of marriage, present criminals and wrongdoers heroes and heroines or in which smut and salaciousness are deliberately injected for the they may have to coarse and unrefined minds." Jacob N. Rose Jacob Nathaniel Rose, 53, of 148 Bay 22d active and civic affairs in Bensonhurst, died last night at his home. He was a druggist at 1927 Bath and was a native of Oshmeno, Poland.

He came to this country in 1900 and was a graduate of the Brooklyn College of Pharmacy. He was an active member of the West End Society and the West End Chamber of the Visiting Sick Society of Bensonhurst. His wife, Nana; three children, Beatrice, Muriel and David; Dr. two Samuel brothers, Rose, Dr. and a Benjamin sister, Mrs.

Anna Finkelstein, survive. Services will be in the West End Society plot in Mount Lebanon Cemetery. A CORRECTION Retail coal prices printed in The Eagle Saturday for Retail Trading Area No. 1, comprising Brooklyn and part of Queens north of Forest Park and Union Turnpike, that, should have read as follows: Buckwheat, $8 per ton; rice, $6.75, and barley, $6.15. The yard cost for unequipped sealers for pea coal should have been $7.35 instead of $7.75.

owe it to health this statement statement Control- bit tech- slowly, tell you the beer new in beer. first glass in Ancient understanding of contribumade to the invisible present in illustrates of enzyme. certain acids sour, bitter, enzymes in and oilsmore slowly fragrant, deli- Green apples are sour and will give Ripe apples are healthful. Enzymes ence. But--after enzymes food, they do not something stops them.

destroy--to spoil vors they have produced. So in beer, enzymes friend and a lurking same time. Enzymes are always stage of the brewing the malt house to the in all breweries. If to work properly, activities must be That is the reason for Control. This expensive, controls the action accurately, so rigidly, tees perfect beer Beer -ripe, mellow, delicious.

When the work of incomplete, beer raw acids and noxious indigestion. When enzymes is overdone, partially spoiled, may liar heavy odor and you have noticed in Schlitz Beer smells 15 good. In of the enzymes, Schlitz Brewing Company, THE BEER THAT Schlitz all-star program every Battalion Chief Edward Quinn Dies Hero of Many Fires Won Highest Award of Department for Saving 3 Lives-34 Years on Job producers, B. B. Kakane, presltoday ordered the elimination of decency and good taste.

He recampaign waged by religious and 2 Grandchildren Of L. I. Couple Die In California Fire W. H. Erhart Kin Found Locked in Each Other's Arms When Home Burns San Mateo, July 2 -Henrietta and John Ruggles, 8 and 6 years, respectively, were burned to death, their arms locked around each other, in a fire which swept the Ruggles home here yesterday.

They wer grandchildren Mr. and Mrs. William H. Erhart of Lawrence, L. I.

The mother who returned from a dinner party while the building was collapsed and was taken to a hospital, Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Erhart, are expected here today. They boarded a transcontinental plane at Newark last night after they had learned of the tragedy. Servants escaped from the building by jumping from the windows.

Failure to get the children was ascribed to the fact that each believed others had already attended to them. Leave for California Special to The Eagle Lawrence, July 2-Mr. and Mrs. William H. Erhart left here last night for California immediately after they had learned of the death of their two grandchildren.

Mr. Erhart is chairman of the board of Charles Pfizer manufacturing chemists of Manhattan, and a director of the American Water Works and Electric ComTheir daughter, now Mrs. Ruggles, eloped in 1925 with John R. Ruggles, She obtained a divorce in 1932. HATTIE HALDENWANG, wife of William Haldenwang and native of Brooklyn, died yesterday at the Victory Memorial Hospital, She was 40.

Besides her husband, she is survived by a daughter, Marie; her parents, Karl and Hedwig Schellhorn, and a brother, Richard. Funeral services will be held at her home, 725 49th tomorrow at 8 p.m. Interment will be in Valhalla Cemetery. your BEER you indigestion. delicious and very make the differ- have ripened a stop work unless They go on to -the delicious Ala- are its kindest enemy at the at work in every process -from ageing cellarsthese enzymes are every step of their perfectly controlled.

Schlitz Enzyme secret process of the enzymes so that it guaranevery time- Schlitz fully fermented, the enzymes is may contain the oils that cause the work of the beer may be have that pecutaste that perhaps some beers. good. tastes Schlitz the work controlled at every for 85 years MADE Battalion Chief Edwin A. Quinn, hero of a number of rescues during his career in the Fire Department, with which he had been connected for 34 years, died at midnight Saturday in the New York Hosiptal after an operation performed last Wednesday for an intestinal ailment. He was 62 and lived at 106-07 220th Queens Village, Queens.

Chef Quinn, who was born in Greenwich Village, leaves his widow, the former Mary E. Gormley; two daughters, Mrs. Commy, wife of a recently retired fireman and Mrs. Edward Demarest, wife of a member of Engine Co. 265.

Arverne, and three sons, Edward, Lt. Anrrew X. Quinn, of Hook and Ladder Co. 10, and Harry J. Quinn of Engine Co.

5. He joined the department July 6, 1900, as a fireman of Engine Co. 29, Manhattan, and was successively lieutenant of Engine Co. 33, captain of Engine Co. 14, and acting battalion chief of the sixth district.

About 10 years ago he became battalion chief of the same district. Rescued Three Girls On Nov. 3, 1933, Chief Quinn won the highest award of the Fire Department, the James Gordon Bennett Medal, as well as the Dr. Harry M. Archer Medal, for rescuing three girls from the fourth floor of 8 burning celluloid factory at 16 E.

13th Manhattan. The funeral, with departmental honors, will be held at 10 a.m. Thursday, with a mass of requiem at the R. C. Church of Sts.

Joachim and Anne, Queens Village. Burial will be in St. John's Cemetery. Chief Quinn was a member of the Holy Name Society and the Cycle Club of the Fire Department. Fairbanks Rites Held in Huntington Livingston Fairbanks, a retired broker of Chicago, died yesterday morning in the Huntington Hospital after a short illness.

He came to cold Spring Harbor about two weeks ago to visit his brother, Wallace Fairbanks, and was stricken at the latter's home. Funeral services were held privately yesterday afternoon at the funera. home on New Huntington, the Rev. Albert E. Greanoff, rector of St.

John's Protestant Episcopal Church officiating. Cremation followed at Fresh Pond. Mr. Fairbanks was born in Chicago on 11, 1880, the son of Nathaniel Septic and Helen Graham Fairbanks. BOTTLED BREWERY BOTTLING THE BREWERY'S OWN CONTENTS MADE MILWAUKEE step, is stopped when the beer reaches the peak of perfection.

Drink all the Schlitz you want, without fear of headaches, gassiness or indigestion. It has won highest awards for absolute purity, Schlitz Beer is good and good for you. Instead of asking merely for a "glass of always ask for "Schlitz" and get the protection and the finer flavor produced by Enzyme Control. brewers of MILWAUKEE FAMOUS Eastern P. M.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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