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

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Brooklyn, New York
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15
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Englewood, IN. McKay Halfpenny McKay Halfpennny, 64, a veteran actor, died at Englewood Hospital late last night. His death WAS caused by a cerebral hemorrhage. with which he was stricken on St. Patrick's Dey when visiting his brother, James Halfpenny, who is superintendent of the Actors' Fund Home here.

Funeral services will be held tomorrow morning at the Meyer's Funeral Home, after which the body will be taken to Lewisburg, the old home of the actor, for burial in the family cemetery. George W. Cooper George W. Cooper, 50, fingerprint expert of the magistrates' courts In Brooklyn, died last night at his home, Ashford following a heart He survived by his wife, Margaret; two daughters, Margaret and Frances, and his mother, Mrs. Mary A.

Cooper. Burial will be in St. John's Cemetery. Mr. Cooper was born in Brooklyn.

Deaths LARSEN April 12, 1933, AMALIA D. LARSEN, beloved mother of Clarence, Nils, Alice Larsen and Mrs. Elvira Andersen. Services at her residence, 518 44th Thursday evening, at 7 o'clock. Interment private.

LOCKHART-On April 10, MARY LOUISE, age 49 years, beloved wife of William Lockhart. Funeral services will be held at her residence, 9029 197th Hollis, L. on Wednesday evening at 9 o'clock. McCLURE On Tuesday, April 11, 1933, MARY A. (nee Nixon), beloved wife of George mother of Edward and William McClure and Mrs.

Florence Brust. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Thursday, April 13, at 8 p.m. McMANUS- On Tuesday, April 11, 1933, HELEN J. McMANUS, beloved wife of John devoted mother of James and John; sister of Mary McGloin and James. Funeral from her residence, 107-35 106th Richmond Hill; blessing at Our Lady of Perpetual Help R.

C. Church on Friday, April 14, a.m. Interment St. John's "Cemetery. MALONE On April 11, MARGARET beloved daughter of the late John and Margaret Murray Malone.

Funeral from her home, 137 Bergen on Thursday at p.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. MEINERT-On April 10, 1933, TO TO MATHILDE MEINERT, beloved sister of Mrs. Otto Heepe. Services at her residence, 598 E.

5th on Wednesday at 8 p.m. Interment Greenwood Cemetery. OSWALD -Monday, April 10, 1933, RANDOLPH husband of Elizabeth C. Oswald. Services at his residence, 155 Ocean Parkway, Wednesday at 8 p.m.

OSWALD -Kings County Lodge No. 511, F. You are requested to attend the Masonic funeral service for Brother RANDOLPH S. OSWALD, a member of Fulton Lodge No. 216, Atlanta, at his residence, 155 Ocean Parkway, Wednesday at 8 p.m.

ALEXANDER M. STAFFORD, Master. PARKER-ROLAND beloved husband of the late Grace Parker (nee Sealy) and father of Norma G. Funeral services at his residence, 84-30 108th Richmond Hill, on Friday, April 14, at 7:30. PECQUEUX- April 11, at her residence, 176 Pine MARY widow of Francis X.

and dearly beloved mother of Florence James C. and Francis X. Pecqueux, and sister of Winifred Funeral on Friday at 10 a.m. SCANLAN- JOHN JOSEPH, beloved husband of Alice M. Scanlan (nee Kearney), on Monday, April 10, at his residence, 520 Wilson Ave.

Solemn requiem mass at the Church of St. Martin of Tours on Wednesa.m. Interment Thursday, 2 p.m., St. John's Cemetery. SEIBERT-On Wednesday, April 12, 1933, MARY beloved sister of Edwin S.

Selbert and Vinnie M. Sarvis. Services at her home, 477 Decatur Brooklyn, on Friday, April 14, at 7:30 p.m. Interment Cypress Hills Cemetery. STELLNER-On Tuesday, April 11, 1933, DR.

GEORGE M. STELLNER, beloved husband Ella Grace Stellner. Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, on Friday at 8 p.m. Interment Cypress Hills Abbey. TEALE- At Buffalo, N.

on April 11, 1933, in his 24th year, CHARLES HIBBARD TEALE, beloved husband of Edna Nunn. Funeral services will be held at the home of his parents, 51 Hilbert Hempstead, L. on Friday, April 14, at 10 a.m. WAHR On April 12, 1933, MARY WAHR, beloved mother of Mrs. Louise Volkman, Mrs.

Wilhelmina Stahle and Mrs. Caroline Fell, in her 80th year. Funeral services Saturday afternoon, April 15, at 2 o'clock, at Roemmele's Funeral Church, 1230 Bushwick Ave. Interment Lutheran Cemetery. -On April 11, at the age of years, JOSEPH of 139 Willow Hempstead, L.

husband of Anna M. Weimer. Services at the Funeral Parlors of Pettit 70 Washington Hempstead, L. Thursday evening, 8 p.m. Please omit flowers.

Acknowledgments FARRELL The family of the late GEORGE F. FARRELL deeply thank the Reverend Clergy, Sisters, members of New York Fire Department, Twenty-Year Retirement Association, relatives and friends for their kind expressions of sympathy and floral offerings received in their recent bereavement. The FAMILY. In Memoriam ALEXANDER -In loving memory of our dear mother, CATHERINE BRACKEN ALEXANDER, who died April 12, 1931. MAE and GERALDINE.

BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1933 15 BANKER DIES Clinton D. Burdick War in South America Hit Continued From Page 1 to find acceptable peace formulas in both instances. "Your Americanism and must be a structure built of confidence, cemented by a sympathy which recognizes only equality and fraternity," said the President. "It finds its source and being in the hearts of men and dwells in the temple of the intellect. lems, and, to speak the inall of us have peculiar, probterest of our citizens in each instance, come first.

"But it is equally true that it is vital importance to every nation of this continent the American governments, individually, take without further delay such action as may be possible to abolish all unnecessary and artificial barriers and restrictions which now hamper the healthy trade between the peoples of the American republics." The President also joined in tribute to Francisco de Miranda, bust was presented today to the whose Pan-American Union by Venezuela. This is one of the first speeches made by the President since inauguration day and the first to deal directly with Pan-American relations. Bernt Balchen Off On Two-Year Trip To the South Pole To Pilot Ellsworth on 900-Mile Flight Over Antarctic Continent Bernt Balchen, famous Brooklyn flier, sailed from the foot of 30th St. today on the Norwegian America liner Stavangerfjord on the first lap of what will be a two-year expedition to the Antarctic. Balchen will be pilot for Lincoln Ellsworth on the final phase of the expedition, an atempt to fly 2,900 miles across the unexplored Antarctic Continent from the Bay of Whales to the Wedell Sea and return without a landing.

Accompanying Balchen today were Mrs. Belchen and their two children, Jr. and Marie, and Christopher Braathen, airplane mechanic who will also go on the expedition. Also on the Stavangerfjord was the all-metal Northrup Gamma monoplane, in which the expedition hopes to fly over the Pole. The plane will be loaded aboard the expedition ship Fanefjord at Bergen.

Among those in the seeing Balchen off was Frank Hawks, the speed flier. Wilkins Sails Meanwhile Sir Hubert Wilkins, another member of the expedition, is sailing with Mrs. Wilkins on the Canadian Pacific liner Empress of Britain. The expedition members will gather in Bergen, Norway, and from there go Dunedin, New Zealand, en route to the South Polar regions. Others on the Empress of Britain besides Sir Hubert are George Bernard Shaw, Carl Laemmle film producer; Holtz, comedian, and Diana Wynyard, English actress.

The Harding United is sailing States today liner President, Plymouth, Havre and Hamburg with a group of Army officers including Maj. David L. Stewart, Maj. Lee S. Tillotson, Capt.

Hugh G. Culton, Capt. James D. McIntyre, Lt. Clifton C.

arter and Lt. Arthur Peterson, going over to arrange the next pilgrimaget of Gold Star Mothers to France. Voyagers departing for Cobh, Cherbourg, Southampton and Hamburg on the Hamburg-American liner Deutschland include Dr. Albrecht of the University of Hamburg, Hans Opera Clemons, Company tenor of and the Arthur Metropolitan Balsam, pianist. YOU SEE I HAVE CAMELS, TOO THEY DO TASTE BETTER YOU GET COSTLIER TOBACCOS IN T.

M. Alexander, Mabel Angus, Albert E. Bailey, Helena J. Ballantine, Catherine Bolen, Sarah Burdick, C. D.

Carter, James Collins, Mildred R. Cosby, Hiram V. Crane, Helene L. Gerken, Anna B. Gourlay, S.

G. Harrington, J. J. Howell, Mary H. Deaths Kearney, Mary F.

Larsen, Amalia D. Lockhart, L. McClure, Mary A. McManus, Helen Margaret Meinert, Mathilde Oswald, R. Parker, Roland K.

Pecqueux, Mary Scanlan, John J. Seibert, Mary E. Stellner, George Teale, Charles Wahr, Mary Weimer, Joseph H. AHEARN- Tuesday, April 11, 1933, at his residence, Marion TIMOTHY M. AHEARN, retired captain N.

Y. husband of the late Mary T. (nee Downing). Saturday, 10 a.m. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. ALEXANDER-On April 11, 1933, MABEL E. ALEXANDER, beloved wife of George Alexander, devoted mother of Mrs. Collins Moshier and Adelaide Alexander, and loving daughter of William Palen. Services at her residence, 439 74th Thursday, 8 p.m.

Interment Greenwood Cemetery. Suddenly, on Wednesa ANGUS, 1933, at his residence, 170 E. 17th Brooklyn, ALBERT EDMUND, beloved husband of Isabel Slote Angus. BAILEY- On April 11, 1933, at residence, 85-04 113th Richwond Hill, HELENA widow of Chis Bailey and loving mother of Mrs. James Kane and Mrs.

Peter Redicani, Funeral. on from Friday, her April residence; thence to the Church of the Holy Child Jesus for final blessing at 11 o'clock. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. BALLANTINE- On April 11, CATHERINE, widow of John Ballantine. Survived by five niecesMay, Ann and Margaret Dowd, Mrs.

Catherine Hines and Mrs. Elizabeth Gibbons. Funeral at her residence, 956 Park Place, on Friday, April 14, at 10 a.m. Interment Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Newark, N. J.

BOLEN-On Monday, April 10, 1933, at the residence of her daughter, 311 Caton Newton Brooklyn, W. SARAH, beloved wife of Bolen and mother of Mrs. Frank Widlake. Service at the residence Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. Interment at Fairview Cemetery, North Bergen, N.

Thursday at a.m. BURDICK-On Tuesday, April 11, 1933, at his residence, 135 EastParkway, CLINTON D. BURern DICK, father of Howard and RobBurdick. Services at the ert A. Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, Brooklyn, on Thursday, at 2 p.m.

Interment private. CARTER- JAMES A. CARTER, April 6, at his home, 351 Carlton on Ave. An employe of the Tenement House Department, Brooklyn, 25 years. Friends are invited to tend funeral Thursday from Parlors of Jere Cronin, 115 Atlantic 'at 2 p.m.

neral Interment Mount Olivet Cemetery. COLLINS- On April 10, MILbeloved daughter of DRED 'Charles and Amelia Collins. Funerat her residence, 159-49 al services Jamaica South, Grayland Wednesday, at 8 p.m. Interment Thursday afternoon, 2 o'clock, Evergreens Cemetery. COLUMBUS COUNCIL 126, K.

of are requested to assemble at the club Wednesday eveApril 12, at 8:30 o'clock, to ning, thence to the home of our proceed late Brother JOHN J. HARRING- TON, 502 4th St. JOSEPH P. WALSH, Grand Knight. Joseph L.

Walsh, Recorder. -On Wednesday, April 12, 1933, HIRAM VANDERVOORT, beloved husband of Carrie L. and father of Dr. Ethel B. Cosby, Gerald P.

Cosby and Dorothy A. Cosby and brother of Edith B. Cosby. Funeral services will be held at his residence, 319 Hamilton Hewlett, L. on Friday, April 14, at 8:30 p.m.

Interment private. CRANE On Tuesday, April 11, 1933, at her residence, 47 Waldorf Court, Brooklyn, HELENE L. CRANE (nee Jacot), beloved wife of Frank of Helene Jacqueline, Virginia H. and Ruth J. Crane.

Services at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, near Grand Brooklyn, on Friday, 2:30 p.m. GERKEN- April 10, 1933, ANNA B. GERKEN, in her 73d year. Services on Thursday at 2 o'clock at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Ethel Duffy, 108 Garfield Place.

Interment private in Greenwood Cemetery. GOURLAY STEWART G. B. GOURLAY, at his residence, 724 Halsey Tuesday, April 11, 1933. Survived by his wife, Delia, and son, Everett, and brother, James.

Funeral services will be held on Thursday evening at 187 S. Oxford St. at 7 o'clock. Interment Friday at 2 p.m. in Evergreens Cemetery.

HARRINGTON- JOHN 502 4th April 11, son of the late Maurice and Mary Harrington (nee Costello), beloved brother of Mrs. John J. O'Brien and Mrs. Margaret Drew, beloved uncle of Mary T. Drew, also Mrs.

Florence Mason, Mrs. Grace Rainey, Mrs. Gertrude McKenney and Madeline O'Brien and three nephews, Joseph, Walter and Arthur O'Brien. Funeral from his residence, Friday, at 10 a.m, HOWELL-MARY HALSEY, at her residence, Quogue, on April 1933, in the 82d year of her age, wife of the late Josiah Pierson Howell and beloved mother of Mrs. B.

Woolsey Rogers, and grandmother of Concha de Rivas Georgeson. Funeral services Presbyterian Church, Quiogue, L. on Thursday, at 1:30 p.m. KEARNEY- Tuesday, April 11, MARY beloved wife of Jeremiah Kearney, at her residence, 3121 Snyder Ave. Notice of funeral hereafter.

Lester W. Hill FUNERAL HOME COMPETENT PERSONAL SUPERVISION Ernest J. Ebbers 896 Gates Ave. LAfayette 3-0531 Dr. A.

D. Rockwell, Electric Chair Inventor, Dies Authority on Therapeutics Was 92, Soldier, Surgeon and Scientist Dr. Alphonso David Rockweli, who invented the electric chair, died at 8 a.m. today in the home of his daughter, Mrs. Suzanne Knowles, 147-14 Barclay Flushing.

He was 92. Death ascribed to natural causes. At a party celebrating his ninety-second birthday recently Dr. Rockwell declared himself opposed to capital punishment. Dr.

Rockwell earned distinction as a surgeon, a soldier and scientist. Born at New Canaan, in 1840, he lived in Flushing some 35 years. The den of His home contains mementoes of 23 Civil War battles in which he was engaged. At 23 he served as surgeon-major in the Union army. Substitute for Hanging In 1888 when the Gerry Commission urged New York State to find a substitute for hanging, Dr.

Rockwell was named with Dr. Carlos F. MacDonald, the then chairman of the State Lunacy Commission, and Thomas Edison as a committee to find a new method. Dr. Rockwell was the ranking American authority on the then popular science of electro-therapeutics.

The experiments were begun in the Edison laboratories at Orange, N. at time when Edison was seeking a in means of reproducing the human voice. Research was conducted in Auburn, Sing Sing and Clinton prisons. Nineteen animals were killed with alternating electric current. In all except one case the animals died from the first shock.

Experiments were completed the same year, and Dr. Rockwell was credited with the invention of the electric chair. He is survived by three sons, Harvey of Manhattan; Charles of Jersey City, and Alphonso David of Goodrich, Conn. A brother, Phelon C. Rockwell, 87, of New Canaan, also survives.

Funeral arrangements have not been completed. Hold Burial Rites For Dr.H.van Dyke Princeton, N. April 12-Funeral services for Dr. Henry van Dyke will 1 be held at 4 p.m. today! in the First Presbyterian Church here.

Dr. John Grier Hibben, president emeritus of Princeton University, and the Rev. Dr. Charles R. Erdman, pastor of the church and president of the Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions, will officiate.

The honorary pallbearers will be Edward Duffield, acting president of Princeton University; Walter E. Hope, Dr. John H. Finley, Charles W. McAlpin, Henry Morgenthau and Robert Underwood Johnson, all of New York; George A.

Armour, the Rev. Robert Williams, Professor A. H. Phillips, Professor George M. Harper, Henry G.

Duffield, Dr. Charles Browne, Howard R. Tutler, Dean Christian Gauss, Edward L. Howe, Walter B. Howe, Dr.

Herbert Adams Gibbons, Dr. Joseph H. Dulles and Dean Andrew Fleming West, all of Princeton; the Rev. Dr. Lewis S.

Mudge of Bryn Mawr, and Struthers Burt, of Southern Pines, S. C. WILLS FILED ARONSON, MEYER (Jan. 28). Estate, $8,000 real; $250 personal.

To Brooklyn Hebrew Home for Aged, $500; Pride of Orphan Home, $500; Tefereth Israel Talmud Torah, $500; Stone Avenue Talmud Torah, $200; Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim, Berlin, $300; Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, Congregation Beth Hanedrash Hagodol, $50; Hebrew Ladies' Day Nursery, $100; Jewish National Pund, $500; other charities small amounts; Barney Aronson, income from stock; Fannie Aronson, widow, executrix, 579 Pennsylvania residue in trust. Executor, Philip Andron, 1137 E. 24th st. CHINSKY, MEYER (April 7). Estate more than $20,000.

To Israel Zion Hospital, 60 percent profits from testator's business; 40 percent profits be distributed to other Jewish charitable Institutions by executor. Simon Glazer, 345 W. 65th Manhattan. COHEN, COLEMAN (April 4). Estate, about $1,000 real; about $1,200 personal.

To Hannah Cohen, widow, eexcutriz, 81 Arlington residue after personal effects to others. COLVER, EMMA I. (March 18). Estate, more than $10,000 real; less than $100 personal. To William 8.

Colver, husband, deceased. Executor, Harry 8. Hammond, Fairview, N. J. FRIEDRICHS.

JEOLINE (March 20). Estate less than $10,000 real; 1656 than $10,000 personal. To four children in equal shares. Executor, William O. Friedrichs, 1392 Park Place.

LANAGAN, GEORGE E. (March 30). Estate, $5,000 real; $19,000 personal. To Ellen Lanagan, widow, executrix, residue; others small amounts. MEISELMAN.

MARY (March 4). Estate, $3,500. To husband and three children. Executor, Ben Meiselman, 1344 54th St. MEINHARD, JULIA M.

(March 22). Estate, $2,600. To Charles Meinhard, husband, executor, 216 Cleveland St. MILLER, ELIZABETH 8. (March 10).

Estate more than $5,000 real; more than $5,000 personal. To David P. Miller, husband, executor, 1374 E. 27th St. RIVERE, ALEXANDER (March 23).

Estate, $9,000 real; $8,500 personal. To Bertha Rivere, widow, executriz, 209 Utica Avenue, RUBIN, FRANK (March 28). Estate $1,000 real; $10,000 personal. To Razi Rubin, widow, executrix, 1228 55th residue; Nathan Rubin, son, Philadelphia, Irving and Martin Rubin, sons, 1228 55th $6,000 each in trust; three other children, $3,000 each. TAYLOR GEORGE (March 27).

Estate, about $100. To Annie M. Taylor, widow. executrix, 5406 18th Ave. THIEL, CHRISTIAN (April 3).

Estate about $2,500. To Harry C. Thiel, son, 466 E. 136th Bronx, Robert H. Capian, Bloomfield, N.

$500; Kate O'Neill, $2,000 and residue; Louis Friedauf, executor, 16-18 72d realty. WUEST. CHARLES (March 12). Estate, $5,000 real; $4.000 personal. To Augusta Wuest, widow.

executrix, 199 Sunnyside Avenue. Capt. T. Ahearn Capt. Timothy M.

Ahearn, former commander of Fire Engine Co. 34 in W. 33d Manhattan, and a veteran of 30 years service in the department, died yesterday at his Marion St. He was 75 years old and retired from the department in 1910. He is survived by five song and a daughter.

The funeral will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday and interment will be in St. John's Cemetery. J. J.

Harrington, Columbus Council Founder, Dies Succumbs to Pernicious Anemia Was Telegrapher for 40 Years John J. Harrington, 64, 502 4th long active in Knights of Columbus affairs in Brooklyn and one of the founders of Columbus Council, 126, K. of died yesterday of pernicious anemia. Mr. Harrington was born in Boston and 1 for about 40 years was connected with the Western Union Telegraph Company, being supervisor at the Cotton Exchange division of company when he retired in 1929.

He was a member of Long Island Chapter, Fourth Degree of K. of and a director of the Knights of Columbus Institute. He also was a member of the Holy Name Society of St. Saviour's R. C.

Church. He resided with his sister, Mrs. Margaret T. Drew, and a niece, Miss Mary T. Drew.

He is survived also by another sister, Mrs. John J. O'Brien; four other nieces, Mrs. Florence Mason, Mrs. Grace Rainey, Mrs.

Gertrude McKenney and Madeline O'Brien, and three nephews, Joseph, Walter and Arthur O'Brien. A solemn blessing will take place tomorrow at 10 a.m, Albert E. Angus, Chemical Bank Official, Dies, 63 Albert Edmund Angus, 63, assistant treasurer of the Chemical Bank Trust Company New York, died suddenly at 7 a.m. today at his home, 170 E. 17th of a heart attack.

He had been at his office usual yesterday, although he had suffered at times recently from heart trouble. He was born in Brooklyn and entered the employ of the Chemical Bank Trust Company 43 years ago, being one of oldest in point of service in the company. He had been for a short time in the provision business before deciding to enter banking. He was a charter member of the Garden City Country Club and also a member of Fort Greene Council, 1048, R. A.

His wife, Isabel Slote Angus, and two brothers, also bankers, survive him. The funeral services will be held privately. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. Dr. Stellner Dies Of Sleep Sickness Dr.

George M. Stellner, 57, of 955 E. 34th formerly for 14 years a medical officer in the United States Navy, died last night in the Medical Center, Manhattan, of sleeping sickness, which followed a long illness of influenza. Dr. Stellner for the past 15 years had given up his practice to be associated with the drug concern of E.

R. Squibb Sons, and was the leading salesman for the concern in Brooklyn, where he was known to many physicians and druggists. He was born in Indiana and was graduated from a medical school in Chicago. He is survived by his wife, Ella Grace Stellner. Services will be held at the Fairchild Chapel, 86 Lefferts Place, at 8 p.m.

Friday. Interment will be in Cypress Hills Abbey. THE WEATHER FOR NEY NORK CITY AND VI-Possibly rain early tonight; tomorrow fair and somewhat warmer; strong Northwest winds tonight. EASTERN NEW YORK- possibly rain or snow in extreme east portion early tonight; tomorrow fair with slowly rising I temperature. NEW JERSEY- Cloudy; rain this afterand possibly on the coast early tonight; tomorrow fair; little change in I temperature.

General Report "The pressure continues high over the Gulf of St. Lawrence, 30.60 at Harrington. The southern part of the trough of low from the Upper Lakes to the East Gulf has advanced northeastward to the North Carolina coast, 29.88. The north portion seems to show a slight decession to the northwest and an extension southwest from Manitoba to Colorado and Wyoming, 29.74 at Lauder, A redevelopment of the Pacific Coast high has carried the pressure to 30.34 at Portland, Oregon. "In the New Yorf area clearing weather this afternoon is likely with strong northwest winds and colder.

along the Atlantic Coast are fresh to strong, south to southwest from City Hatteras to to Boson; Cape May; souheast east on the Maine from Atlantic coast and easterly to northerly from Halifax eastward." TEMPERATURES High. Low. High Low Albany .54 38 Pensacola ..78 50 Atlantic City. 48 48 New Orleans. .74 54 Baltimore ...54 42 Norfolk .62 64 Boston 48 40 Raleigh ..74 48 New York.

.48 Antonio. .72 56 Philadelphia .58 42 Savannah 76 60 Pittsburgh ...60 .82 68 Portland, 38 Bismarck ..34 24 Washington .54 40 Kansas City, 44 Chicago .48 36 St. Paul. 42 26 Cincinnati ...58 36 Oklahoma 64 44 Cleveland ..66 36 St. Louis.

.58 42 Detroit ..52 34 Sheridan 46 30 Indianapolis .50 36 Denver .48 38 Louisville 52 38 Helena .42 26 Milwaukee ...46 34 Salt Lake City.52 42 Atlanta 76 42 Los 56 Abilene 78 44 Portland, 36 Charleston ..70 66 San 52 Jalveston 74 62 San .72 52 Dallas ..66 50 Seattle 48 40 Jacksonville 74 64 Bermuda .72 64 Miami .86 HIGH WATER High Water. Low Water. A.M. P.M. A.M.

P.M New York 8:51 9:17 2:55 3:00 APRIL 13 New York 9:42 10:07 3:47 3:48 SUN RISES AND SETS April 12 April 13 Rises.5:21 Sets.6:32 Rises.5:20 Sets.6:33 C. D. Burdick, Title Head. Dies Continued from Page 1 Protestant Episcopal Cathedral of the Incarnation in Garden City, L. in addition to his other positions.

Last year a luncheon in his honor was given by the Alumni of Wesleyan University to mark the completion of 25 years service as treasurer of the university. Under his management the institution's endowment had grown from 500.000 in 1907 when he took office to $5,133,000. The income from that fund was 5.71 percent in 1931, said to be one of the highest yields of any college endowment fund. Born in Smyrna, N. Y.

Mr. Burdick was born at Smyrna, Chenango County, a son of C. Cornelia T. Beach Burdick. He was graduated in 1886 from Wesleyan University at Middletown, Conn.

and received an M.A. three years later. In 1921, Wesleyan awarded him a Doctorate of Laws. In college his high scholarship brought him membership in Phi Beta Kappa. In 1888 he was admitted to practice at the New York bar.

Shortly afterward he entered the employ of the Title Guarantee and Trust Company and subsequently became assistant secretary, secretary and vice president the year before he became president. In his annual report to the stockholders of the Title Guarantee and Trust Company in January, 1931, Mr. Burdick Said: "We are asked almost every day how soon real estate times are going to get better. We are frank to say that we gave up prophesying many years ago. There are too many factors in the problem for anybody to tell in advance what is going to happen to the real estate market." In January this year Mr.

Burdick recommended a reduction of interest rates on guaranteed mortgages, stating that the mortgage borrower should be entitled to some consideration in view of the conditions of the money market. His Business Connections Mr. Burdick was a director of the Corn Exchange Bank Company, the Baltimore American InE surance Southern Company, Railway the Company, Kansas City the of Home Life Insurance Company New York, the City of New York Insurance Company, the City Real Estate Company, of which he was also vice president; the E. W. Bliss Company, the Home Insurance Company, the National Liberty Company, the Queen Insurance Company of America, the Title Realty Safe Deposit, Company, Valhalla Burial and the Westchester Title Trust Company.

He was vice president of the Long Island Safe Deposit Company, president of Montague Court, a director of the Mount Sinai Memorial Park, vice president of the Nichols Security Company and vice president of 198 Montague Street, Inc. Among Mr. Burdick's clubs were the Bankers, Crescent AthleticHamilton, Garden City Country, Riding and Driving and the Brooklyn Club, of which he was a diof the $3,000,000 drive of the Y. M. rector.

no He was associate chairman A. in Brooklyn and Queens in 1929 and had given his aid to the M. C. A. on many other occasions.

Harris Mindlin, 65, 0fGreatNeck, Dies Harris Mindlin, a general agent for the Equitable Life Assurance Society and prominent in Jewish philanthropy, died Monday in the Presbyterian Hospital after an illness of three months. He was 65. Mr. Mindlin had been with the insurance firm for 26 years. He had.

lived in Merrivale Road, Great Neck, until he left for Florida for his health and returned to enter the hospital. Born in Russia, Mr. Mindlin came to New York at 16. He entered the insurance business as a salesman at 22. He helped found the Jewish Culture Society and Sholom Aleichem Schools.

Services will be conducted at 2:30 tomorrow from the Riverside Memorial Chapel, Manhattan. Mr. Mindlin 1s survived by his wife, Bessie; an adopted son, two sisters and three brothers. Events Tonight Eleventh A.D. headquarters, 352 Greene to hear Dr.

Russell Forbes on "New City Charter," 8:15. Brooklyn Hebrew Home and Hospital for the Aged Auxiliary, meeting in Concert home, Howard and Dumont Aves. by Leo Low and chorus to follow. 8:30. Meeting in commemoration of Jefferson's birthday.

Roosevelt Brooklyn Club, 613 Myrtle Ave. 8:30. Norfleet Trio benefit concert for American Dalcroze Institute. Auditorium of New School for Social Research, 66 W. 12th Manhattan.

8:30. Protest meeting to consider elimination of grade crossings and extension of Fulton St. subway east of Rockaway Ave. 22d A. D.

G. O. P. Club, 236 Barbey St. 8 Presentation of bronze plaque to Election Commissioner William J.

Heffernan by John F. Agoglia, 7th A. D. Democratic Association, 523 46th St. Business and Professional Women meet In Hotel Granada.

8:30. Review of 14th Infantry In 14th Infantry Armory, 1402 8th Ave. 8:45. "Analysis of Starlight," by Dr. Dean B.

McLaughlin, Academy of Music. 8:15. Supreme Court Justice Strong speaks before Merchants and Salesmen's Club, 937 Eastern Parkway. 8. EVENTS TOMORROW Union Lenten services under auspices of Brooklyn Church and Mission Federation.

Albee Theater, Albee Square, 10. Community Lenten services, Church of the Holy Trinity, Clinton and Montague Sts. 12:05. Rabbi Benjamin Schultz to address Sisterhood of 8th Avenue Temple, 8th Ave. and Garfield Place, "Hitler Casts New Light on Palestine." 2.

Aldermanic President McKee addresses Rotary Club and Its guests. Bossert Hotel. 12:15. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES Co-Educational FRIENDS SCHOOL Day School Kindergarten to College Enroll Now for Fall Term 112 Schermerhorn St. TRiangle 5-2758.

Dancing 25 Years One Address Means Something REMEY SCHOOL, 65th BROADWAY. N. Y. Dancing Every Nita 8 to 1 Ladies 250 (No Other Charge) -Gents 500. Private Lessons.

$1 Nine Lessons 65 Illustrated Booklet an Request CA 66 YEARS of 60 69 SOUND BANKING 60 6A Organized 1800 Lincoln Savings Bank Main Office 531 Broadway Bay Ridge: Fifth Ave. Cor. 74tt Street Flatbush: Church Ave. Cor. Nostrand CA Williamsburg: Graham Ave.

at Bway 6 BROOKLYN ff ADVERTISEMENT Bright Woman Lost 20 Pounds Feels Much Better "June 28th, 1939, I started taking Kruschen SAlts. Have lost 20 pounds from June 28th to Jan. 10. Feel better than have felt for four years. Was under doctor's care for several months.

He said I had gall stones and should have operation. Krusehen did more than I expected." Mrs. Lute Bright, Walker, Minn. (Jan. 10, 1933).

To lose fat and at the same time gain in physical attractiveness and feel spirited and youthful take one half teaspoonful 'of Kruschen in a glass of hot water before breakfast every morning. A jar that lasts 4 weeks costs but a trifle at any drugstore in the world but be sure and get Kruschen Salts the SAFE way to reduce wide hips, prominent front and double chin and again feel the joy of living--money back if dissatisfied after the first jar, "How to Bake the Sunshine' By Mrs. Hope Browne Minor at the Home Guild tomorrow -Courtesy General Baking Co. Don't you, marvel at the things science has learned about vitamins? How sunshine is baked into your food so your body can absorb the wonderful health qualities of the sun vitamin? Mrs. Hope Browne Minor explains the baking process- a story of research, experiment and scientific magic that is tremendously interesting.

Hear this thrilling tale tomorrow. Mrs. Hope Browne Minor Their many friends will be pleased to The Home Guild Is Sponsored by know that Mrs. Marjorie Wardman, Brooklyn Edison Director, and Miss Corelli Alger, Company Assistant Director, take part in the Brooklyn Union Gas Company Lecture Demonstration programs al Kings County Lighting Company 2 o'clock every afternoon at the Guild. Brooklyn Borough Gas Company Admission by Coupon From Home Guild Page in Daily Eagle.

You Are Cordially Invited Bring Your Friends With You. Brooklyn Eagle Home Guild Fourth Floor, 305 Washington Street, Near Borough Hall.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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