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- Mr. and Mrs. John A. Lemane
In Same Day at
Upper Saddle River Jan 13 1969 - A man and his wife died on the same day, January 10th 1969, in the Valley Hospital, Ridgewood [New Jersey]. John A. Lemane, 38, and his wife, Mrs. Gertrude Villarosa Lemane, 44, both of 31 Parker Place, Upper Saddle River [Bergen County, New Jersey], died Friday. Mrs Lemane died following a lengthy illness and Mr. Lemane died apparently of a heart attack. Mr. Lemane was a native of New York City and his wife was born in Wilkes-Barre [Bergen County, New Jersey]. They resided [in Upper Saddle River] for six years. Mrs. Lemane was employed as executive secretary for Lederle Laboratories in Pearl River [Rockland County, New York] for many years. Mr. Lemane served as an administrative executive of the New York Civil Court for more than ten years. He was a member of the Knights of Columbus of New York City. The funeral services...Church of the Good Shepherd, Broadway and Isham St, New York City. Their interment will be in Gate of Heaven Cemetery, Hawthorne, NY...Albert R. Conner Funeral Home, NYC. Mrs. Lenane is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Constance Stephen, of Wayne, Pa. and Mrs. Linda Larsen of Upper Saddle River; her mother, Mrs. Gertrude Villarosa; five sisters, Mrs. Gladys Strey, Mrs. Ruth Littles, Mrs. Dolores Bigby, Mrs. Janice McDonald and Mrs. Dorothy Gilmore; six brothers, John Arthur, Daniel, Richard, David, William, and Allan, and one grand child. Her brother, Paul H. Villarosa, was killed in Vietnam, January 6. 1968, and her father, Marcus D. Villarosa, passed away November 6, 1968. Mr. Lemane leaves two additional daughters, Dorothy and Joan Lemane, both at home; a brother, Thomas Lemane,* who is the present chief clerk in the City Clerk's office in New York City, and one grandchild.
*Thomas was featured in an AP-syndicated news filler that was published in several small newspapers throughout the country.
Strict Rules are Enforced in New York Apr 2 1965 - Room 265 of New York City's Municipal Building is the office of the Marriage License Bureau for the city of New York, which issues more licenses each year that several other whole states. The number of licenses issued in 1964 exceeded 70,000 or about 3,000 more than normal. Thomas Lemane, deputy city clerk, attributes the increase to leap year and to the many young men who got married to avoid the draft.
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