Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Herald Statesman from Yonkers, New York • 16

Location:
Yonkers, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

of of of SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1928 SIXTEEN THE YONKERS HERALD Engagement Recently Announced (Davis Sanford Photo) MISS JEAN HOLDEN DAVIS Latest studio portrait of Miss Jean Holden Davis, younger daughter of Former District Attorney and Mrs. Lee Parsons Davis, whose engagement to James M. Brown, of 969 Park Avenue, New York, was recently announced. The wedding date has not been fixed. Miss Davis resides with her parents and younger sister, Miss Harriet Davis, at 114 Sutton Manor, New Rochelle, the family having moved from 18 Lake Avenue, Yonkers, four years The bride-to-be was born here and graduated from Halsted School and in June last, from Skidmore College.

Brown is a Yale man and is engaged in the brokerage business in New York. and evening was spent by all. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Weinberger, Mr.

and Mrs. Morris Weinberger, Irving Weinberger, Miss Florence Weinberger, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Abrahams, Mr. and Mrs.

Louis Leblang, Mrs. I. Leblang, the Misses Fannie and Lillian' Berger of Philadephia, Miss Mildred Lander of New York City, the Misses Helen and Lena Kagel, Leon Berger of Cleveland, O. N. Club First Dance The N.

Club held its first dance of the season, Wednesday night at the home of Miss Evelyn Cooper, 472 South Broadway. Dancing was enjoyed and a sweets table held cider and doughnuts. Among these present were: Misses Evelyn Cooper, Thelma Weiss, Estelle Stern, Helen Astmann, Lillian Schwartz, Alice Wender and Beatrice Harnash. Also Sol Mogal, Arthur Schiller, Sol Friedman, Buddy Kohn, Len Treiber, Moe Bodian, Milton Rockmore, Bernard Silverberg, Bob Golembe, Moe Rabinowitz, Moe Gantcher, Charles Yelin, Morton Glass. Morrelle Wolffe and Leonard Millstein.

Dance Tonight For Center A dance for the benefit of the Jewish Community Center will be held at the Elks Club tonight under the combined auspices of the La Jonfia and Tempkaws Clubs. In addition to dancing an entertainment will be offfered. Little Miss Miriam Marcus will present a song and dance number while tiny Edwin Treiner will give a juvenile conception of the varsity drag. The committee comprises, David Kopper, president of the Temkaws, chairman, and Miss Fanny Rubenstein, Miss Cecelia Pearl, Miss Frieda Marcus, Sol Bross and Herman Axelrod. Miss Lilyan Bloome is president of La Jonfia.

Mr. and Mrs. Newman Entertain Mr. and Mrs. Henry Newman, of 128 Wickes Avenue, entertained a few friends at dinner and bridge last Saturday evening at their home.

Prizes for bridge were awarded to Mrs. Charles Stiles and Vincent Napoliello for high scores, and the consolations to Mrs. Napoliello and Mr. Stiles. Those present were Mr.

and Mrs. Chester Campbell, of West Orange; Mr. and Mrs. Rosco Dumond, Dr. and Mrs.

Buel Latcher, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Napoliello, Mr. Mrs. Charles Stiles and Mr.

and. Mrs. Newman. SWORN IN AS SERGEANT Patrolman John J. McCarthy No.

3 was sworn in as a sergeant in the Police Department by Public Safety Commissioner Frenk B. Devlin today. He is assigned to duty in the Third Precinct. PARTY BY BLUE BIRD TROOP GIRL SCOUTS The Girl Scout Bluebird Troop 4, of Sherwood Park, enjoyed its annual Thanksgiving party last evening in the community hall of the Crescent Place Reformed Church. As usual, a fine program of entertainment was presented by the members of the troop.

A play entitled "Scotch Grace" was suitably given, the cast including the following: Mabel, Emma Webber; Scotch fairy, Hilda Stott: fairies, Frances Clews, Lenore Harrington and Edith McNeill; father, Elizabeth Love; mother, Louise Dreisacker. Solos were rendered by Dorothy Hall, Marion St. Ormond, Evelyn Denton and Florence Post. Dorothy Hall, Edith McNeill and Patricia Hurlburt added to the program with dancing. At the conclusion poems were given as follows: "Seein' Things At Night," by Muriel De Gance; "The Crooked Mouth Family," by Doris Isaacson, and "Barefoot.

Boy With 'Shoes On," by Audrey Palmer. The splendid program was the result of careful direction by Fannie Wurzel. All of those present were appropriately attired in costumes to add to the merriment of the evening. Refreshments were served by the senior members of the troop, the Misses Dorothy Merritt, Helen Roeder, Gertrude Bruderhausen and Fannie Wurzel. Those present were Mrs.

William Hall, Mrs. Robert Hoffsteadt and the Misses Dorothy Love, Elizabeth Love, Frances Clews, Dorothea Schultz, Florence Tice, Winifred Eidt, Elizabeth. Frost, Jane Robinson, Dora Coyne, Florence Post, Evelyn Denton, Marion St. Ormond, Audrey Palmer, Dorothy Webber, Edith McNeill, Eme Hoffsteadt, Frieda Melinsky, Dorothy Hall, Mary Hoffsteadt, Patricia Hurlburt, Irene Clews, Rosemary Maloney, Irma Capelli, Nina Palmer, Lenore Harrington, Emma Webber, Jeannette Lyon, Louise Dreisacker, Irma Johnson, Gloria Fitzpatrick, Doris Isaacson, Muriel DeGance, Helen Roeder, Dorothy Merritt. Alice Schmidt and Gertrude Bruderhausen.

ANNOUNCE SALE OF APARTMENT HOUSE Announcement was made today of the purchase of the 43-family apartment house at 85 Highland Avenue Max Fleischer of this city. The by property was held at $260,000 and includes a 20-car garage, according to Gensler and Goodman, local real estate dealers, who made the sale. Lorna Warfield Gave Folk Song Program At Reed Home Yesterday Appearing in effective costumes ap-1 propriate to the various countries whose folk songs she interpreted in a charming Warfield, of tive audience afternoon at Milwaukee, entertained, appreciathe home of Col. and Mrs. Carl Reed, 191 Park Avenue.

A life long friend of the hostess, Mrs. Warfield consented to give this program of Folk Tunes of the 17th and 18th centuries for 150 invited guests, previous to making her New York debut December 4, at Town Hall, in New York. Gifted with a resonant and well controlled voice, Mrs. Warfield possesses the ability to enunciate clearly. Added to these requisites is a decided dramatic instinct, which lifted her performance out of the class of merely pleasing singing.

Especially happy in her group of German and Tyrolean songs, Mrs. Warfield sang the old Thuringian tune "True Love," with deep feeling, following it with a. spirited rendering of "S'ist Mir Alles Eins," an interesting contrast. In her peasant frock, a slight change of headdress or kerchief sufficing to transform the appearance of the singer and to create the desired atmosphere, Mrs. Warfield stood in the spacious foyer of the Reed home.

where her delightful program could be enjoyed by guests seated in the adjoining rooms. Running the gamut of emotions, gay, defiant, pleading, stoical, the songs of 10 different nations were interpreted. At the pian was Edward Hart, an accompanist of genuine talent. VAN ALSTYNE-ALLEN WEDDING ON DEC. 19 MISS EMILY ALLEN Miss Emily Allen, elder daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Bartlett Allen, of 16 Livingston Avenue, will be married on December 16 to Wilbur Van Alstyne, of Albany, N. Y. The ceremony will take place at 6 o'clock in the Allen home and will be performed by the Rev. Joseph O'Connor, pastor of St.

Denis' Church, Lowerre. There will be a reception afterwards at Abbey Inn. Miss Allen has selected Miss Dorothy, of Pfaff, honor of and Spuyten Mr. Duyvil, Van as Alstyne her will have Edward Barnes, of New Paltz, N. Y.

as his best man. Little Verjean Allen, sister of the bride-tobe will act as flower girl. Miss Allen, until recently, studied at New Paltz Normal School. She received her earlier education in the Academy of the Holy Name, in Albany. Later she attended the Yonkers High School from which she graduated in 1925.

She also attended the Ethical Culture School New York. She is a member of Sigma Lambda Phi Sorority and of the Clionian Fraternity in New Paltz. Mr. Van Alstyne is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Matthew Van Alstyne of Albany. He attended the Albany Academy, the Milne Academy at Albany, and is now a senior in Union College, Schenectady. He is a member of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity. The couple will reside in Schenectady. of 55 Emmett Place, a daughter, Adele, November 25.

To Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Vannatter, of 33 Riverdale Avenue, a daughter, Frances, November 25. Deaths William A. Meyers, 15, of 2 Dale Place, November 24.

Rozellen M. Roberts, 80, of 38 Pront Street, November 25. Helen Thear, 3, of 75 Clinton Street, November 26. Stephen Arce, 14, of 230 Riverdale Avenue, November 26. Mary Sullivan, 44, of 188 Saratoga Street, November 26.

Robert R. Steuart, 9, of 89 Palisade Avenue, Nov. 26. Marriages Leonardo M. Camposano, 25, of.

368 Walnut Street, to Evelyn M. Conca, 19, of 330 Walnut Street, November 24. James J. Coffey, 21, of 2 Madison Avenue, to Josephine A. Swabsin, 21.

of 2 Madison Avenue, November 23. Harry Coleman, 44, of Pittsburgh, to Christina E. Lockwood, 34, of 105 Oak Street, November 27. Benjamin Messenger, 26, of New York City, to Mary Esther Courtney, 22, of 34 Laurel Place, November 27. Michael Machuga, 62, of 21 Croton Terrace, to Mary Slutak, 43, of 9 Croton Terrace, November 28.

Archibald Lightbody, 24, of 35 Garfield Street, to Mary McGregor, 21, of 366 South Broadway, November 28. Albert A. Reynolds, 23, of 278 Riverdale Avenue, to Ruth M. Herlihy, 20, of 25 Hancock Road, November 27. ADVENT TOPIC AND DRIVE The first Sunday in Advent, tomorrow, will be marked by a celebration of the Holy Communion at St.

Mary's Episcopal Church, Sherwood Park, at the 11 a. m. service. The special topic for the day will be "The Second Coming," and the spiritual significance of the season will be set forth, as well as the various theories held as to the nature of the second Advent. A full attendance has been urged that a proper observance of the season may be assured.

In connection with the inception of the Advent season, the people have been asked to consider the necessity of a greater sacrifice with reference to church -support. To this end, a campaign has been set for this Sunday, and the members of the congregation have been asked to be prepared to receive representatives of the church and return their signed pledge cards indicating the extent of their support for the coming year. There will be a short meeting of the workers after the service on Sunday, and another meeting on Monday evening. CITY WORKERS' VACATION Two of the employes at City Hall have one more week's vacation coming to them, and they plan to take it before it gets too late. They are James Freeman, elevator operator, and Thomas Hurton, cleaner.

Both of them have taken only two of the three weeks' vacation allotted them. Complete Funeral 150 DOLLARS and upwards TELEPHONE 2700 Yonkers THE HAVEY FUNERAL HOME 107 North Broadway FUNERAL TODAY OF MRS. R. T. BRODERICK THE YONKERS HERALD (Member Audit Bureau of Circulations) Owned and published by Xavier Brothers.

Frank E. Xavier, Editor; John warberton. Manager. Post Office and Business Office Address, 4-6-8 Avenue. Telephone "Yonkers 7700' all departments.

SATURDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 1, 1928 Issued Every Weekday afternoon Editorial and Contract Departments 1 o'clock A. until 6 o'clock -P. from 4-6-8 Warburton Avenue. same address. Office hours from at excepting Sundays and holidays.

EDITORIAL PAGE Subscription Trite for The point In the United States or to delivery should be reported to the Herald: $12.00 a year, by mail to any any foreign port. Irregularity of Publishing Office promptly, National Advertising Representatives, Geo. B. David 110 East 42nd Street, New York: 1900 Wrigley Building, Chicago. Entered as second class mall matter in the Post Office at Yonkers, Westchoster County, N.

Y. SEASONABLE ADVICE The old warning, "Do your Christmas shopping early," is an annoying platitude, no doubt, but nevertheless it is a word to the wise. Only the owners and employes of the stores know the immense thought, effort and plan that precede the Christmas season. No sooner is one ended than preparation for the next begins. The world is searched for goods far ahead of the holdiays.

They are shipped, stored, held in readiness. Then, many weeks before Christmas, they are put on display and placed in stock. There can be no last-minute preparedness. Therefore the early shopper has the pick of the market, an opportunity to see and examine a full, new, scintillating collection, and time in which to judge and make up his mind. Gradually this opportunity departs as stores become crowded and stocks are depleted.

The golden days slip by, never to return. The strain on clerks and delivery men grows greater as the holiday approaches; it is not their fault if service slackens and personal attention becomes a matter of growing doubt. It is not the blame of managers if the supply of goods fails and cannot be renewed. The Post Office, by annual campaigns many times repeated, has fairly well educated the public into the necessity of early mailing. Therefore do your Christmas shopping early, and before December is half gone, feel the satisfaction of a good job accomplished and out of the way, leaving a clear field for untired holiday rejoicing.

THOUGHTS OF COAL Coal, as we think of it who must buy it to keep warm in Winter months, is something to burn. Originally, ever, coal was a piece of glowing carbon or charred piece of wood-an ember or a cinder. It was not until the discovery of coal as a combustible mineral substance that it became the name of fuel to burn instead of fuel already burning or burned. Residents of the eastern States will probably burn hard coal, or anthracite, this Winter. People who live nearer softcoal mines, as, for example, Kansans, will probably burn bituminous coal.

The softest coal is lignite, or brown coal; next is bituminous, then anthracite, and finally comes graphite, the product which contains the most carbon. Anthracite comes from the Latin "anthracites," a kind of bloodstone, from a Greek word meaning "like coals." It differs from bituminous chiefly in haying only a small amount of volatile matter--which is to say substances readily vaporized or turned into gas. Anthracite coal therefore burns with a flame which is almost nonluminous; that is, its flame gives very little light. Bituminous means literally "containing bitumen," or "like bitumen." Bitumen is Latin; originally it meant a mineral pitch. Lignite is coal in which the texture of the original wood can be seen.

That i is how it received its name, from the Latin "lignum," meaning wood. It is intermediate between peat and bituminous coal. Peat is nearer vegetable than mineral, and is of several kinds. It ranges from a turf to a slime. For fuel its use is familiar chiefly in European countries and in the British Isles.

A RAILROAD PROBLEM An analysis of the cost of operation of the motor truck as a freight carrier is of interest, as indicating the extent to which this service is likely to prove a disastrous competitor for the railroads. No room i is left for doubt as to the effect of the truck upon short-line routes. Many of them have been put out of business. Experts agree that on hauls up to 45 miles the motor truck is an economical transportation agency. Beyond that distance it cannot compete advantageously with the railroad, it is said.

Understanding of the part the truck is to play in distribution of freight is essential in shaping the attitude of cOm1munities toward them, and in settling the use and the responsibilities of short-line railroads now under consideration in connection with various rail merger proposals. Being comparatively a new agency in the business, time is needed to show where the truck fits into the general scheme of transportation and satisfies public needs. If something less than 50 miles is the radius of profitable truck operation, the problem of the railroads is simplified somewhat. But the more important phase of the statistical studies in this field is that they confute the notion that trucks can do the work, without reduced efficiency, of the short-line railroads whose owners would like to see scrapped because they are. money losers.

This emphasizes th indispensability of these short lines to many communities which are entitled to protection. BEAUTY, BRAINS AND BUSINESS A novel of several Summers ago told of Sally, a girl so distractingly pretty that as soon as she stepped into the street a crowd collected about her. She was only a simple village maiden and quite unfit to cope with the devastating effects of her bewitching beauty. Had she been a modern miss, working in a business office, it is a question whether her extreme good looks would have been an asset or a disadvantage. It is certain that they would have.

been the cause for many wasted minutes if her desk were placed in the same room with male workers. Opinions solicited from prominent business men pretty well agree that good looks in a business woman are not a drawback. The business girls themselves seem to subscribe to view, for most of the ambitious ones are keen to this appear at their best. Personal Mr. and Mrs.

Emmett E. Dugan and daughter Madeline, spent the holiday with Mr. and Mrs. William E. Conroy, Stamford.

Conn. Mr. and Mrs. DeLacey C. Frisbie and daughter, Miss Lyla Frisbie, of Peekskill, N.

spent Thanksgiving Day with Mr. and Mrs. George M. Frisbie, 16 Yonkers Avenue. City Treasurer Frederick D.

Breithack, of 16 Gilbert Place, and Charles Buckley, of 451 1-2 Bellevue Avenue, returned Wednesday from a hunting trip in South Carolina. Douglas Halstead of Cornell University is spending the Thanksgiving recess with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Halstead of 415 Marlborough Road. Mrs.

Henry C. Cheston, of 89 Bruce Avenue, with her daughter, Mrs. Percy E. Williamson of 15 Caryl Avenue, left yesterday for a fortnight in Washington, D. where they will visit relatives.

Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Haver and family of 464 Marlborough Road spent Thanksgiving Day with Mr.

and Mrs. Jean Haver is spending the weekJames es Haver of Beacon, N. Y. Miss end with her parents. Mr.

and Mrs. O. S. Stearns, 185 Saratoga Avenue, are entertaining over the holiday and -week-end, Mrs. Louise Bennett and her daughter, Miss Louise and son, Ames, of Scranton, Mrs.

Mary V. Reay, 40-A Locust Hill Avenue, spent Thanksgiving Day with her granddaughter, Mrs. Waldo U. Wagner, of the Bronx. Mr.

and Mrs. Wagner motored to this city and Mrs. Reay returned with them. Miss Dorothy Bush and Miss Eleanor Forger, groduates of the Class of '28 at Roosevelt High School, are home for a short vacation from Syracuse University, where they are studying dramatic art. Elmer S.

Frisble, 16 Yonkers Avenue, is spending several days in Schenectady, N. Y. On his return home, Mrs. Frisbie and their daughter Lorna will accompany him. Mrs.

Frisbie and daughter have been spending several months in the up -State city. Miss Besse Reay, 40A Locust Hill Avenue, was a guest on Thanksgiving Day of Dr. and Mrs. James R. Joy, at their home in Plainfield, N.

J. Dr. Joy is editor of the Methodist Christian Advocate and Miss Reay is his Miss Lillian E. Partenheimer, 43 Cedar Place, Miss Margaret Curran, 93 Elliott Avenue and Miss Gertrude 70 Radford Street, sailed toEdwards, board the steamship Franconia for a 14 day trip making stops at Hayti, Kingston, Jamaica, Panama, Nassau Havana. Miss Ruth of Cornell Avenue, was a guest at a dinner party given Wednesday evening last by Miss Alice Buchanan, at her home in Riverdale-on-Hudson.

Frederick Longacre, of 375 Park Avenue, was also a guest. Later in the evening the young people attended the Thanksgiving Eve dance at the Riverdale Country Club. Ralph R. Mulligan Jr. and his brother John spent Thanksgiving Day their parents, Mr.

and Mrs. with Ralph R. Mulligan, 598 Palisade Avenue. Ralph, who is a sophomore at Colgate University at Hamilton, N. is spending the week-end at home, John returned on Thursday evening to Annadale-on-Hudson, where he is a freshman at St.

Stephen's College. Former Police Chief Daniel -Wolff, who recently underwent an operation for removal of cataract from his rignt eye 'in the Manhattan Eye and Ear Hospital. East 64th Street, New York City, will re-enter that institution on Monday, December 3, ot undergo a similar operation on the left eye, which will: be performed by Dr. Alfred D. Mittendorf, New York City.

Miss Phyllis Burritt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bailey B. Burritt, of 16 Prospect Drive, is a patient in the Ithaca Hospital, following an operation for appendicitis performed Wednesday. Miss Burritt, who is "Is her first year at Cornell University, reported to be making favorable progress toward recovery.

Mr. Burritt went to Ithaca Tuesday morning, returning to Yonkers Friday. Miss Emily Hicks. of St. Andrew's rectory, daughter of the Rev.

Dr. and Mrs. W. C. Hicks, has had as her house guests for the past week Miss Ruth Pfaff of Louisville, Ky, and her fiance, Mark J.

Gunn, of Cleveland, also for over the holidays, her brother, Dr. H. R. Hicks, of Doylestown, Pa. Miss Katherine Terrell entertained for Miss Pfaff last Tuesday, at her home.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hamilton, 11 Belmont Terrace, have their son, Robert Beaty Hamilton and their daughter, Hamilton, with them for the holiday and week-end. Robert is now -in Los Angeles, and Miss Muriel is a student Syracuse University.

This is the first time in four years that young people have been home at the same time. Social Tea For Bride-To-Be Mrs. Franklin Coe, of 215 Palisade Avenue, gave a tea Thursday afternoon in honor Miss Elizabeth Billings, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Blair Billings, of Providence, R.

whose engagement to Mr. Roger Jewett Coe, elder son of Mr. and Mrs. Coe, has been announced. Assisting the hostess were her daughter, Miss Katherine Coe, also Mrs.

T. L. Frederick, Mrs. Wilson Parkhill, James Mrs. Joseph.

L. Weinert, Mrs. Dunlop Ewing, and the Misses Susan Olmsted, Charlotte, Turk, Jennings Alice of Turk. Bronxville Mrs. and Miss Mary Louise King, of 222 North Broadway, presided at the tea.

table. The guests, to the number of 75, were of the younger set. Miss Billings is a graduate of Miss Irwin's School in Boston. Mr. Coe is an alumnus of the Engineering School of Cornell University, Class of 1925 and connected with the New England Power Plant in Boston, Mass.

Mr. and Mrs. Weinberger Entertain A real Thanksgiving gathering was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I.

Weinberger, 17 Intervale Place, on afternoon, November 29. Thursday, fashioned turkey dinner was served, and an enjoyable afternoon When Your Physician Does Not Answer His Telephone, Call YONKERS 4173 We will locate him for you, Physicians Surgeons Exchange Day and Night Service Correspondence The Herald publishes no unsigned or initialed communications The Late Campaign To The Yonkers Herald: In your issue of Nov. 28, there appeared a letter from a Mr. George Stoll in which he attributed the election of Mr. Hoover to the issue of prosperity, stating that this firmed by the votes of Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

May I suggest that Mr. Stoll study up the history of prohibition legislation in those two states? It may give him an idea. If prosperity was the deciding perhaps he will explain why pestle. sylvania, suffering from a great mining depression remained in the Republican fold. Shall we infer from the vote that the great mid-Western agricultural states are enjoying unbounded prosperity? Does he believe that Florida, North Carolina, Virginia and Texas voted for Hoover on a prosperity issue? As.

for the proposition make the election in 1932 unanimous, perhaps a little time devoted to the study of the form of our government will indicate to him the necessity of second party as a check on the first. This is fundamental knowledge, the acquaintance of which should preclude such For the information of Messrs. Hallenbeck and Bootman, whose communications dates appeared in your paper under of Nov. 26, I wish to say that the writer is non-Catholic and normally Republican, and was one, who was an intensely partisan supporter of Alfred E. Smith.

Governor Smith attempted to conduct his campaign on the theory that the principles of the contending parties should have been discussed in the form of a debate between the candidates on their respective representatives. His opponents did not accept the challenge and in endeavoring to get, them to participate, the Governor had to criticize the opposing party. To indulge in "mudslinging" there must be come, mud. Evidently Mr. Hallenbeck believes that the Anti-Saloon League is both judge and jury when the question of the people's morals are under discussion.

There are some of us who do not believe it. However, the AntiSaloon League would like to construe the results of the election as a mandate to Herbert Hoover that the country wants prohibition enforced more then it has been. This is mereanother case of the "wish being father of the thought." It is the opinion of the writer that Tammany can take lessons from the Anti-Saloon League when it comes to interfering with politics. Certainly, the Republican Tammanies, under the tutelage of Vare in Philadelphia and "Big Bill" in Chicago, have nothing to learn from Judge Olvany. Speaking of alma maters, there is an old saying that "the man makes college and not the college makes the man," so Tammany can be very proud of our Governor, Alfred E.

Smith. JENNIE M. TAYLOR. 55 Mile Square Road. Vital Statistics Births To Mr.

and Mrs. Rosario Siciliano, 104 Livingstone Avenue, a daughter, Mary, November 16. To Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Anthopoulos, 377 South Broadway, a son, Ernest, November 19.

To Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Di Tullo, 247 Riverdale Avenue, a son, Louis, November 18. To Mr. and Mrs.

Antonio Rinaldt, 28 Madison Avenue, a son, Ignazio, November 19. To Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sorge, 45 Park Hill Avenue, a daughter, Janet, November 20. To Mr.

and Mrs. Eugene P. of 64 Catskill Avenue, a son, Thomas, November 19. To Mr. and Mrs.

Michael Makar, of 441 Nepperhan Avenue, a daughter, Irene, November 20. To Mr. and Mrs. Pasquale Mancuso, of 159 Oak Street, a son, Carmine, November 20. To Mr.

and Mrs. John Di Renzo, of 11 Elliott Street, a son, Anthony, November 20. To Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rube, of 73 Cornell Avenue, a daughter, Gladys, November 20.

To Mr. and Mrs. Cristoforo Figliolino, of 7 Grove Terrace, a son, Giuseppe, November 21. To Mr. and Mrs.

Andrew J. Purcell, of 252 Ashburton Avenue, a daughter, Marion, November 21. To Mr. and Mrs. James Zottoll, of 76 Maple Street, a daughter, Lorraine, November 23.

To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Moniz, of 223 South Broadway, a son, Harry, November 21. To Mr. and Mrs.

John Di Barnardi, of 154 Willow Street, a son, Carmine, November 21. To Mr. and Mrs. William H. Andrews, of 823 Mile Square Road, a son, George, November 22.

To Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Durniak, of 30 Madison Avenue, a son, John, November 23. To Mr. and Mars.

William A. Tavenlere, of 153 North Broadway, a son, William, November 23. To Mr. and Mrs. Ignatz Poleshuk, of 47 St.

Mary's Street, a son, Peter, November 23. To Mr. and Mrs. Peter Chwanda, of 120 Herriot Street, a daughter, Helen, November 24. To Mr.

and Mrs. Frank A. Graus, of 4396 Martha Avenue, a daughter, Joan, November 24. To Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Driscoll, of 35 St. Joseph's Avenue, a daughter, Mary, November 24. To Mr. and Mrs. Harold S.

Davidson, of 22 Woodworth Avenue, a son, Russell, November 22. To Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Valli, of 135 Scott Avenue, a daughter, Gloria, November 23. To Mr.

and Mrs. James W. McCubbin, of 88 Ash Street, a daughter, Annabel, November 24. To Mr. and Mrs.

Walter A. Costello, THE LITTLE FLOWER SHOP Allan Crough FLOWERS For All Occasions 110 New Main Street PHONE YONKERS 6568 The funeral of the late Mrs. Agnes Fee Broderick, died after a long illness on Thanksgiving Eve at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Fee, 132 North Broadway, was held this morning.

A Solemn High Mass of Requiem was sung at 10 o'clock in the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary by the Rev. Bernard F. McQuade, rectro, assisted by the Rev. Edmund P. Whalen, assistant rector, as deacon, and the Rev.

J. Kane, assistant rector of St. Denis' Church, as sub-deacon. The responses were sung by the boys' choir, directed by the Rev. Joseph F.

Flonnelly. Harold Land, well-known baritone, rendered two solos during the service. He was accompanied by Mrs. John Colville, church organist. Mr.

Lang sang "Pie Jesu," by Leyback, and "The Christian's Good Night." Interment was in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Scores of friends the late Mrs. a Broderick as well as her husband, of, Richard T. Broderick and other members of her family and relatives attended the service.

A delegation representing the Alexander Smith and Sons Carpet Company, with which the father of the deceased is prominently associated, were present, including Richard Edie Arthur Land and Mrs. Land, Thomas Ewing George L. Moshier and Frederick B. Klein. Others at the church included Supreme Court Justice William F.

Bleakley, Assemblyman William F. Condon, and Mrs. George Kelly, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Muth, Dr.

Walter Halloran, James V. Reed, Raymond Hays, Gerald Nolan, City Judge Charles W. Boote, Acting City Judge John J. Broderick, Alderman Joseph F. Curran, Mr.

and Mrs. Dennis F. Morrissey, Thomas M. Tobin, Mr. and Mrs.

Francis Duffy, Mr. and Mrs. Matthew A. Broderick, former Police Sergeant and Mrs. Patrick Flood, James J.

Hare, Peter Curley, J. Emmet Hannigan, Mrs. James J. McCann, George McCann, Mr. and Mrs.

J. Raymond Broderick, Patrick McCabe, Joseph Ford, Mr. and Mrs. Henry O'Rourke. ELKS MEMORIAL SERVICE TOMORROW The annual Memorial Service of the P.

O. E. will be held tomorrow night at the Elks Club on South Broadway. Sixteen members who the year will be commemorated, among them being former Mayor Thomas F. Larkin.

PHILIPPINE DEATH TOLL 125 Manila, Dec. 1 AP) -Belated reports of last week's typhoon damage disclosed that 11 seamen were drowned and four reported missing when the inter-island steamship Euzkadi grounded at Sa nJuan Island during the storm which swept the central group of the Philippine Islands from Thursday to Saturday. The Manila Bulletin today placed the storm's death toll at 125. Property damage has been estimated at $3,500,000. Died DUNNE- In this city, on Friday, Nov.

30, 1928, Mary, beloved wife of the late Michael Dunne. Funeral on Monday, Dec. 3, from her late residence, 15 Jones Place, at 9:30 a. m. Solemn High Mass of Requiem at St.

Joseph's Church at 10 o'clock. Interment St. Joseph's Cembtery. JUNG-In this city on Friday, Nov. 30.

1928, Henry Jung. Funeral service at his late residence, 3 Lafayette Place, Sunday, Dec. 2, at 3 p. m. SHAUNNESSY-On Thursday, Nov.

29, 1928, Josephine Shaunnessy. Funeral from the Maloney Funeral Home, 11 Ludlow Street, Sunday, Dec, 2, at 2 Services in the Church of the Holy Eucharist at 2:30 Interment St. Mary's Cemetery. Mass of Requiem Monday at. 8 a.

m. STANIAWSKI--In this city on Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1928, John Syaniawski. Funeral from his late home, 11 Van Cortlandt Park Avenue, on Saturday, December, 1, at 1:30 p. m.

Funeral services at the Holy Eucharist Church at 2 p. m. In Memoriam In memory of our dear mother Mary Anderson, who departed this life December 1, 1927. She shall never be forgotten, Sweet Nor shall her memory fade, Around thoughts the will always linger, Sadly grave where she is laid. missed by her HUSBAND AND CHILDREN.

A Month's Mind Mass will be offered on Monday, Dec. 3, 1928. at 7 a. m. in St.

Peter's Avenue and Ludlow Street for Church, Riverdale the repose of the soul of the late 2, 1928. McMahon, who departed this life Nov. Helen For Personal Service Call Yonkers 413 Ackerman Clapp Incorporated Funeral Directors Funeral Church 63 So. Broadway George W. Ackermar Howard H.

Clapp LADY ATTENDANT WM. H. HEALY SON Funeral Home 271 Warburton Ave. Nepperhan 545 OAKLAND CEMETERY Omce Room 5, HOLLAND BUILDING 51 WARBURTON AVENUE be nite of to tion prot diss by fror the had 000 for pres no view buil mai the yest of pla $43, bal bee: mis boa tha has per tior pas act. the its mei this the boo sho bee vie agr 60 ed, cur tro gre sar the in mu top bee ver is lar ho1 of COl mt by the lar tri sid cla thi tin Nc an ter mi th bil lic do an th fo 81 7 bi Receiving with Mrs.

Reed, and assisting in the room. where a collation was served, later in the afternoon, were E. Hunt, Mrs. Mrs. R.

A. Stevenson, Mrs. Lew Palmer, Mrs. Edwin Stanton George, Mrs. Robert P.

Sniffen, Mrs. John J. Quencer, Mrs. Elmer E. Gorton, Mrs.

Oliver Carpenter, Mrs. William Langford, also Miss Dorothy Bemis, of Philadelphia, a sister of the hostess. Mrs. George and Mrs. Miner presided at the tea table.

Colonel and Mrs. Reed entertained at dinner last evening for the assisting hostesses and their husbands. Among the guests at the musical were Mrs. Philip H. Abbott, Mrs.

Richard H. Abbott, Mrs. Frederick H. Clark, Mrs. Henry J.

Kaltenbach, Mrs. Henry Willis Phelps, Mrs. Frederick M. Cook, Mrs. Thomas W.

Casey, Mrs. Dennis F. O'Brien, Mrs. Thomas B. Lawler, Mrs.

Frank L. Reed, Mrs. William P. Buckner, Miss Irene Lawler, Miss Muriel Lawler, Mrs. Angelo Smith, Mrs.

Lewis, Miss Margaret George, Mrs. Louis E. Turk, Miss Charlotte Turk, Miss Harriette Hubbard, Mrs. Emmons Bryant, Mrs. Francis A.

Winslow, Mrs. William H. Taylor, Mrs. Fred Ross, Mrs. Robert T.

Lyons, Mrs. Joseph E. Freeman, Mrs. Elton G. Littell, Mrs.

John C. Ten Eyck, Mrs. Gerald Couzens, Mrs. Elijah Yerks, Miss Farnham, Mrs. Carl F.

Golling, Mrs. Richard Sweet, Mrs. Robert Boettger, Mrs. James Taylor Lewis, Mrs. Bertram Ball, Mrs.

Richard W. Bogart Jr. and Mrs. H. L.

Brown,.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Herald Statesman Archive

Pages Available:
1,106,378
Years Available:
1891-1998