THE RIDGEWOOD HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1927
MRS. HIRAM HAZEN
Mrs. Charlotte Hazen, wife of Hiram Hazen, manager of the Midland Park Coal and Lumber Co., died suddenly at 5 o'clock Saturday evening at her home on Lake Avenue. She had been in apparently good health up to that afternoon, when about five o'clock she fainted and never regained consciousness. Drs. Vroom and Smith, who were summoned, pronounced her death as due to an internal hemorrhage, probably brought on by the heat. She was in her forty-first year.
Mrs. Hazen was born in Midland Park and had spent the greater part of her life there. Several years ago, she and her family moved to Chestnut Street in Ridgewood where they lived for about five years. From there they went to Glen Rock, and about three weeks ago moved to their present residence on Lake Avenue, when the office of the Coal and Lumber Co., with which Mr. Hazen in connected, was moved to Midland Park.
Besides her husband, she is survived by her aged father, Henry J. Mulder, of Midland Park; two sisters, Mrs. Albert T. Smith and Mrs. Robert [sic] Vandersnow; four brothers, Albert, Henry, John and Garry Mulder, all of Midland Park and seven children, Helen, Henry, Herbert, Charlotte, Edward, Dorothy and Harold.
Funeral services will be held at her late residence on Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 and at the First Reformed Church at 2:30. It is expected that the Rev. William Charles Hogg, the Pastor, will officiate. Interment in Valleau.
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It is now known that Charlotte Mulder Hazen had an inherited disease called polycystic kidney disease that may have contributed to her early death.
THE RIDGEWOOD HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1927
MRS. HIRAM HAZEN
Mrs. Charlotte Hazen, wife of Hiram Hazen, manager of the Midland Park Coal and Lumber Co., died suddenly at 5 o'clock Saturday evening at her home on Lake Avenue. She had been in apparently good health up to that afternoon, when about five o'clock she fainted and never regained consciousness. Drs. Vroom and Smith, who were summoned, pronounced her death as due to an internal hemorrhage, probably brought on by the heat. She was in her forty-first year.
Mrs. Hazen was born in Midland Park and had spent the greater part of her life there. Several years ago, she and her family moved to Chestnut Street in Ridgewood where they lived for about five years. From there they went to Glen Rock, and about three weeks ago moved to their present residence on Lake Avenue, when the office of the Coal and Lumber Co., with which Mr. Hazen in connected, was moved to Midland Park.
Besides her husband, she is survived by her aged father, Henry J. Mulder, of Midland Park; two sisters, Mrs. Albert T. Smith and Mrs. Robert [sic] Vandersnow; four brothers, Albert, Henry, John and Garry Mulder, all of Midland Park and seven children, Helen, Henry, Herbert, Charlotte, Edward, Dorothy and Harold.
Funeral services will be held at her late residence on Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 and at the First Reformed Church at 2:30. It is expected that the Rev. William Charles Hogg, the Pastor, will officiate. Interment in Valleau.
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It is now known that Charlotte Mulder Hazen had an inherited disease called polycystic kidney disease that may have contributed to her early death.
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