Posted by Kristen James Eberlein | Filed under Citizenship
Consular form #211: Certificate of registration of widow or divorced woman
05 Friday Oct 2012
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted by Kristen James Eberlein | Filed under Citizenship
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted in Other photographs
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted in Newspapers
EBERLEINS WILL HAVE THE WINNERS ON EXHIBIT THIS WEEK SATURDAY
Fred. G. Eberlein took six foxes to the National Silver Fox show held at Muskegan, Michigan, last week. There were 308 entries in the show, and Mr. Eberlein came back with two of the prizes.
He won first prize, the blue ribbon, for silver adult male, pale and he won fifth place in the medium silver adult male class, The medium silver is considered a higher value animal than is the pale silver, so his fifth prize is as much to be proud of, as is the blue ribbon that he won.
There have been so many requests from people who want to see these animals, asking to go out to the farm, that Mr. Eberlein has arranged to show the two winning animals in the window of the Farmers Hardware Company all day this Saturday. The presence of strangers annoys the foxes, and so this public exhibiting plan was adopted.
The Eberleins have been in the fox business for only two years, and the winning of these two prizes is a notable accomplishment, In a few years, the fox industry will have grown to big proportions, but right now, the Eberleins can be considered as being among the pioneers of the business.
The Shawano foxes were shipped to and from Muskegan by express and were personally attended both ways by Mr. Eberlein. They attracted considerable attention at the station along the route.
Source: Unidentified newspaper clipping, December 1922, in the Frederic C. Eberlein genealogical folder.
05 Friday Oct 2012
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted by Kristen James Eberlein | Filed under Ephemera
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted in Newspapers
From DOUGLAS LOCKWOOD
DARWIN, June 12.
Mr. Justice Kriewaldt held a unique appointment in Australian law.
He was constantly called upon to impose penalties on aborigines who not only did not understand the white law but had a separate code of their own.
A Supreme Court Judge in any of the six States presides at perhaps 12 murder trials in his lifetime.
Martin Chemnitz Kriewaldt sat on 35 murder trials in his first seven years year and about 40 altogether.
A majority of those were tribal murders committed on native settlements and missions.
The evidence regularly showed that the black man in the dock had killed a tribesman on orders for his elders. Refusal to do so would have meant his own death at the hands of efficient tribal executioners.
In these circumstances Mr. Martin Kriewaldt was called upon more often than others to temper justice with mercy and always to draw upon his own knowledge of native customs.
Clemency
I never knew him not to be generous when generosity was desirable and the law made it possible.
Albert Namatjira served three months instead of six months’ gaol on a liquor offence because “the big feller judge” as he was known to the natives showed him clemency.
Frequently he allowed his deep understanding of human nature to influence his pronouncements from the bench.
In Alice Springs a month ago he directed that plaintiff and defendant in a civil action should go out in the sun and talk it over. They did.
He had what is perhaps the biggest circuit of any Supreme Court Judge of Australia — the 523,000 square miles of the NT, plus Cocos and Christman Islands in the Indian Ocean.
But I saw him in some odd corners of the outback, including a blistering week at Anthony Lagoon station on Barkly Tableland.
The temperature on the police station veranda where he heard a cattle duffing case was around 110 each day. The judge nevertheless appeared in his red fur-fringed robes on all occasions.
Dignity
Even in that remote wilderness he was determined to uphold the dignity of the court.
I remember a dramatic occasion when an accused man was found to have a .38 revolver in his pocket during the entire time the Judge heard his case.
Someone had forgotten to search him.
Mr. Martin Kriewaldt always helped junior members of the profession but was impatient of poorly prepared briefs. [Editor’s note: The clipping ends here; residue of tape suggests that there was another piece affixed.]
Source: Unidentified clipping, in the Frederic C. Eberlein genealogical files
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted in Obituaries
The judge of the Northern Territory Supreme Court, Mr. Justice Kriewaldt, died in the Repatriation General Hospital, Springbank, on Saturday night. He was 59.
Mr. Justice Kriewaldt, who was appointed to the Territory position in 1952, was admitted to the hospital on May 30.
Mr. Justice Kriewaldt is survived by his wife and five children, three from his first marriage and two from his second.
They are Robert, of Adelaide; Michael, of Cobar (NSW); Martin and Helen, of Darwin, and Mrs. J. Greenslade, of Maitland.
The funeral will be held tomorrow after a service in the Lutheran Chhurch, Flinders street, beginning at 3:30 p.m.
Source: Unidentified newspaper clipping, Frederic C. Eberlein genealogical files
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted in Wedding portraits
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted in Newspapers
… Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Eberlein and two children went to Green Bay Friday in their new auto. They went there to meet their two oldest children, Robert and Marjory who had been at New Hostein for a week, visiting relatives.
Source: Shawano County Journal, Tuesday, 7 August 1917
05 Friday Oct 2012
Posted in Gravestones