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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 1

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 1

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C1B 279756 THE WEATHER Bf D. a. WmUmt Bums FAIK WAri TONlGBTt TOMORROW, IMCUA8INO CLOUDINESS. WAKMER, OCCASIONAL BAINS. IWMtllin, 11 ML an lr 4 Mu innn it wn mi dW 41 Baely STREET Stocks and Curb Closing Prices 95th YEAR No.

311 KNTERED AT THB BROOKLYN POST. OFPICI AS 2D CLASS MAIL MATTER NEW YORK CITY, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1935 22 PAGES THREE CENTS L. I. Bank Suit Shotgun Blast Boy Envoy Back to Mom With Brogue HARVARD-TIGER, IRISH-WILDCATS DAY'S BIG TILTS GEOGHAN QUIZZES TRUCK OWNERS ON FLOUR RACKET Australian Ace Hunted at Sea By Big Air Fleet Hope Still Is Held Out for Kingsford-Smith, Co-Pilot, Lost 2 Days Singapore, Nov. 9 C45) Desperate aerial searchers for Sir Charles Kin gsf or -Smith, missing nearly two days on a speed flight from England to Australia, refused today to abandon hope of rescuing the world famous aviator.

Contrary to earlier belief, it was learned that the missing ace's plane Delays Vacation as 7 Are Called to Pave Way for Grand Jury Action-Identity Kept Secret to Aid Probe 5 Subsidiaries AskSECRelief Kings FirmAmongThose Seeking Exemption-Landis Warns Utilities llltf ZjL Kills Trooper In Auto Chase Ex-Convict Held on Open Charge Without Bail in New Jersey Slaying Elizabeth, N. Not. 9 M3) State Trooper Warren G. Yenser was fa tally wounded today by shotgun fire from a fleeing automobile on State Highway No. 25 near Avenel.

A short time later, Edward Witow-ski, former Newarker who escaped from a North Carolina prison farm three months ago, was held on an open charge without bail today in the investigation of the slaying. "We definitely link Witowski as one of the participants in the acting Police Chief Frank Brennan said. Witowski, 26, was arrested at the Pennsylvania Railroad Station shortly after the blood-stained car in which Yenser's slayers fled had been found abandoned in the Eliza-bethport section of the city. Police said he had a long record of arrests for misdemeanors in Newark. Brennan said that information he had obtained showed Witowski escaped last August from Caledonian Prison Farm in North Carolina, where he had been sent after conviction for safe robbery.

Patrolman Edward Geiger, who made the arrest, had but recently been transferred to his uptown beat after being on departmental charges and fined sld ay off for the rest of the year. Yenser and Trooper John Matey were on patrol and had stopped at Sand Hill, six miles south of New Brunswick, Just at daybreak when a coupe with Pennsylvania license plates roared by. They jumped Into their car and gave chase, overhauling the car In Avenel after a nine-mile pursuit. Matey was driving and Yenser blew his whistle to call on the car to stop. Instead it pulled away, but Matey again overtook it.

Shotgun Blast Hits Him Then, without warning, a single blast came from a shotgun. Yenser got it full in the face. Matey fired several shots at the Continued on Page 2 U.S. and Canada To Speed Pact President Wants It to Include as Many Commodities as Possible Washington, Nov. 9 (jP) Speedy conclusion of a reciprocal trade agreement with Canada was sought today by President Roosevelt, who had the Dominion's Premier, W.

L. Mackenzie King, as an overnight guest in the White House. Observers generally noted an air of optimism over prospects for a successful conclusion of the negotiations first started last January and resumed this week with the arrival of King and his economic advisers in Washington. They found the basis for the optimism in a statement by the President to reporters yesterday that progress had been made in the cur rent discussions and in Secretary Hull's assertion that both governments recognized the desirability of concluding a treaty as quickly as possible. Mr.

Roosevelt said he would like to see the proposed trade pact cover as many commodities as possible so as to increase the commercial exchange between the two countries. Belfast Republicans Pledged to Break Up The British Empire Belfast, Nov. 9 OP) Belfast Republicans denounced the government today in a manifesto supporting their general election candidate, held in a Dublin jail. "Every vote for freedom is as good as a bullet in the breast of that mother of treachery, England," said the leaflet. "The sun never sets on the British Empire.

Neither does it set on the poverty, bigotry and exploitation which have followed in the train of British Imperialism. "Our voice will sound reveille to all the oppressed peoples of the Empire and we shall rise to smash that Empire and all that it stands for." Tells iloVto Make Home Safe in Quake Washington, Nov. 9 Inexnen-; Thrice-DefeatedCrimson Aims Fiery Attack on UnbeatenPrinceton 11 -City's Best Grid Fare Is Fordham-St. Mary's By GEORGE CTJRBIE Staff Correspondent of The Eagle Princeton, N. Nov.

9 While the rest of the country pants for the result of the Notre Dame Northwestern battle on the green turf of the Fighting Irishmen's Cartier Field, Harvard after a lapse of ten years is in town again, fired by the zeal of desperation. Defeated by Holy Cross, Army and Dartmouth, all it is asked to do today is to stop the Princeton Invincibles, defeated by nobody. This, the experts assure me, Is a pretty grisly assignment. Somewhere between November, 1934, and this Fall, the Crimson mislaid its attack. It has been doing mighty feats of valor defensively and going down with Its boots oh, Its drums beating and Its flags flying.

You might almost say it has collected quite a string of moral victories. But to arrive In Princeton's snug little leaf-strewn Revolutionary township for the first time in ten years without an attack to dismay what many consider to be the greatest of all Tiger teams is considered by the man-eating old grads a program offensive to their sense of amour propre. Can Harvard Hold? Because the hosts of the Sacred Cod are so very much the underdog, the town's curiosity concerns not how big a score Princeton will roll up but how low the Crimson can hold it. The optimisms among the Cambridge clans have found some encouragement in the fact that in Its last defeat, which was the Dartmouth game, the Johnnies finally eked out a touchdown and subsequently ran right over Browne. Continued Page Cuba Vows War On Terrorists Leader's Arrest Saves U.S.EnvoyFromDeath Intervention Plot in Havana, Nov.

9 (JP) An official appeal called the people of Cuba Into a campaign to exterminate criminals today after a high source disclosed that a plot to assassinate United States Ambassador Jefferson Caffery had been frustrated. The first fruits of the drive fol lowed at once with announcement of the arrest of four persons ae cused of planning to kidnap or kill police Chief Colonel Jose Pedraza. The "master plot" against Caffery, authorities said, was balked by Cuban army intelligence agents on the eve of the assassination day. Twenty-nine men were said by army agents to have sworn to kill Caffrey the first Intended victim of a terrorist campaign with the slaying set for last Friday. The arrest of the leader the day before halted the plot.

Army authorities said they believed the plot arose from a desire by radicals to draw American Intervention in Cuba, thus provoking a revolution. $318,270 Allocated For Nassau Sewing Albany, Nov. 9 (Ph-The total of funds released in the drive to put 130,000 persons to work on WPA projects in up-State New York by mid-November was swelled to today with the allocation of (601,199.56 for 11 projects. The projects Included operation of 35 sewing rooms in Nassau Conuty at a cost of $318,270. In Today's Eagle Asks Directors Pay $10,000 Hempstead Losses Laid to 12, Including Ex-Lieutenant Governor Special to The Eagle Hempstead, Nov.

9 Twelve prominent residents of this village and vicinity, among them a former lieutenant governor of the State, directors of the defunct First National Bank of Hempstead, are named i-fendants in a civil suit to recover $1,710,000 of the bank's funds which they allegedly lost through illegal transactions, it was revealed today by Edwin V. Hellawell, receiver of the bank. The summons and complaint are on file at the Supreme Court In Mineola. Those named as defendants are: Jeremiah I. Wood, former lieutenant governor and now counsel for the Town of Hempstead; Carroll F.

Norton, who rose from cashier of the bank at its founding in 1893 to president at its closing in 1933; William Plyer, hardware merchant and vice president of the bank; Lawrence E. Kirwin, president of the L. E. K. Oil Company; William T.

Hutch-eson, pioneer automobile dealer on Long Island; Richard Ingraham, officer of the Queen Insurance Company of America; William F. Fowler, Lynbrook attorney; Herbert V. Carman, stove salesman; Dr. Benjamin W. Seaman, noted Long Island surgeon; Gustave H.

Kehr, speculator; Bertram B. Tate, secretary of the Great Northern Insurance Company, and John E. Davidson, cashier of the bank. Wood, who was chairman of the board at the time of the closing, is named first in the com. plaint.

21 Charges Made Twenty-one general charges of il legal and negligent actions are made in a document containing 6,000 words. It is charged that as a result of their misdealings the directors levied p. 100 percent assessment on the 695 stockholders of the bank payable Continued on Page 20 5 Saved as Fire Traps Families Cripple and Children Carried Out in Blaze of Mysterious Cause A cripple, an elderly woman and three children were carried to safety this morning from a smoke-filled four-story apartment house at 94 St. Marks at Flatbush Ave. The fire broke out mysteriously at 8:45 In a second-floor closet.

It quickly filled the building with thick smoke. The closet was In the apartment of Mrs. Florence Soto, who tried to beat out the flames and was burned about the hands and arms. In the apartment were her son, Robert, 8, and her mother, Mrs. Ellen A.

Ryan, 65. When Mrs. Soto It would be impossible to put out the flames she telephoned for firemen. Policeman Saves Woman Meanwhile Patrolman Michael Continued on Page 2 11 Hurt in Crash Of 4 Automobiles Norwood, Nov. 9 OP) Eleven persons, including three Brooklyn, women, were injured as four automobiles collided here today.

The Brooklyn women, suffering serious injuries, were taken to Norwood Hospital. They are: MRS. FLORENCE SIMPSON of 155 74th Injuries about thp head nnl spine. MRS. GEORGE Ct'MMINU oi 352 76th fractured Inft ankle.

MRS. FLORA. Ml'RCIIINSON Of 255 79th probable fracture oi the ritht forearm. Police said the operators of the cars had their views obstructed by smoke from a peat bog fire which hung over the highway. The car of the Brooklyn women, police said, was in collision with another.

A third machine stopped to assist the injured and was rammed, police said, by a fourth auto. Man, 83, Woman, 65, Queens Auto Victims Two elderly Queens residents were In serious condition today as a result of automobile accidents. Ballums Ohmenas, 83, of 158-08 109th was taken to Jamaica Hospital suffering from a possibly fractured skull. He was struck at 7:10 a.m. while crossing at New York and 109th Jamaica, police reported.

No charges were made against the driver, Clifford Daley of 163-50 111th Ave. Theresa Elden, 65, of 107-20 131st Richmond Hill, is at Mary Immaculate Hospital, Jamaica, where she was taken last niRht. She was hit at 9:50 p.m. by an automobile driven by Rudolph Krause of 73-11 53d Maspelh, at Metropolitan Ave. and 79th St.

Her skull was fractured. No charges were placed tigainst Krause, Washington, Nov. 9 The Long Island Lighting Company and five subsidiaries have applied Jointly for exemption from all of the provisions of the public utility holding company act of 1935, it was announced today by the Securities Commission. The subsidiaries are the Kings County Lighting Company, the Easthampton Electric Lighting Company, the Queensborough Gas fe Electric Company, the Nassau and Suffolk Lighting Company and the Long Beach Gas Company, Inc. The application, made under Section 3-A-l of the act, asks exemption on the ground that the companies do all their business within the State of New York, The New Deal had Just embarked today on an effort to get utility holding companies to take the first step of compliance with the 1935 Public Utility Act.

Decision Belittled Alluding to the Baltimore Federal Court decision declaring the whole act unconstitutional, Chairman James M. Landis of the Securities Commission, jsaid the law "is valid until the Supreme Court declares otherwise." He warned holding companies that If they do not register with the Se curities commission by Dec. 1, as provided in the act, much of their corporate activity thereafter will be tainted with questionable legality. The Wisest Step Landis, In a press interview yea-terday, sought to show that regis' tratlon would be the wisest step for the utilities firms to take, and he also laid it was "about time1 they informed their stockholders whether or not they intended to do so. If they decline to register, he said, their subsequent actions such as Issuing securities, negotiating contracts, acquiring other companies, and even performing sales and serv ice contracts would be in doubt as to their legality.

The act of registering, Landis emphasized, will not prevent the companies from fighting the act In the courts. Second Student Dies After Car Plows Into Grid Snake-Dancers Saco, Nov. 9 W) A second high school student died today, victim of an automobile which plowed through 50 snake-dancers celebrating in anticipation of an Armistice Day football game. The second victim was Emlle Hebert, 15, who died several hours after Edna Rose Tarr, 17, sue cumbed. City Marshal George E.

Mapes reported that Robert Adams, driver of the machine, had been drinking. Three other students were in criti cal condition, and 12 others were less seriously hurt. 5 Girls Held in Raid On Illustrators' Show Five young artists' models were under ball of $50 each today follow lng a police raid last night on the Heckscher Theater, Manhattan, where 800 of the city's leading artists, editors, business and professional men were gathered for the annual Illustrators Show. Plaln-clothesmen, who stopped the show at the end of the first act, con tended it was Indecent. One of the models was Collette Nicks, 23, of Elmhurst.

British Flying Boat Burns at Brindisi London, Nov. 9 The Imperial Airways flying boat Sylvanus caught fire and was destroyed to day while being refueled at Brindisi Harbor, Italy, on a flight from Alexandria, Egypt, It was reported to Ci-oydon Airdrome. Geoghan Staff Faces Shakeup With Kellv Aid Leaders Told to Name Topnoteh Men for 6 New Assistant Posts By MURRAY SNYDER District Attorney Geoghan's staff will undergo a shakeup early in January when he rills six vacant assistant prosecu-torshlps and embarks on a brand new four-year term, it was reported on excellent authority today. Several assistants who were under fire during the primary and election campaigns are on the spot; they may either be demoted or given the opportunity id return to private practice, it was reported. In addition, selections for the six vacant assistant posts five of which were created by the 1935 Legislature on Geoghan's request will be made on the basis of the candidates' qualifications as attorneys and not on their geographical qualifications.

Kelly Backing Geoghan The understanding is that Democratic County Leader Kelly is solidly behind Geoghan on the proposition that, whether or not certain Assembly districts have no representation on the prosecutor's staff, the leaders have to nominate topnoteh men or their districts don't get the Jobs. Scores of applications have been made since the Governor signed the Twomey-Hawklns bill creating the five new posts last May, but Geoghan elected to postpone the ap polntments until the campagning was over. With the five new ones, Geoghan will have 20 full-fledged assistants. He announced to The Eagle at that time that he planned to creute Continued on Page 2 Hearse and Coffin Toppled in Crash With Hit-Run Car Frank Pisano, 38, an undertaker, of 85 Nostrand was driving a hearse with a body and coffin in it at 2:15 a.m. today at Hudson Ave.

and Concord when a seven-passenger sedan, going south on Hudson which is a one-way, northbound street, hit the hearse, shattered the glass, damaged the coffin and turned over the hearse twice. The driver did not stop. Pisano received lacerations of the knee and was treated by a surgeon from Cumberland Hospital. Thomas Magner, 87, of 64-70 83d Place, Rego Park, a plainclothes policeman, attached to the 16th Division, was taken to St. Mary's Hospital in critical condition today with a fractured skull and Uiternal injuries received at 6:15 a.m.

when he lost control of his car after hitting a detour stanchion at Dewey Place and Atlantic Ave. Magner was driving his private car in from Queens when he hit the stanchion. The car hit the curb and rebounded against an eight-foot concrete retaining wall of the Long Island Railroad. Sinclair Increases EPIC Ante to $100 Schenectady, Nov. 9 iP Ppton Sinclair, who last year waged an unsuccessful campaign for Governor of California on his EPIC plan providing $50 a month for the aged, ruLsed the ante today to $400 a month for both young and old.

Sinclair appealed in a speech be fore the Laymen's League of the Unitarian Church "to abolish the sales tax clause and substitute EPIC, ucnsions to old and voiinc." there will probably be a bit of light ruin during the day. according to the Weather Bureau. Tempera-; turps will show little change. Normal for today is 47. The thermometer read 50 at 9 a.m.

and the li west during the night was 43 at 6:15. to to in District Attorney Geoghan vigorously pressed his drive to break up the flour trucking racket today, delaying his vacation in order to question personally vital witnesses. The District Attorney wasted no time in paving the way for prompt action before the grand Jury. Seven truck owners were sched uled to be questioned today at Mr. Geoghan's office in response to sub-penas Issued by the prosecutor yesterday afternoon.

Their names wer withheld, Mr. Geoghan explaining that to make them public might kill his chances of obtaining evidence as how truckmen have been mulcted by racketeers. Protects Witnesses "Today Is a short day, but I want get this Investigation started," the prosecutor declared. "I am having the witnesses brought here for immediate questioning. I want to get the complete picture from their own Hps.

There will be no delay taking it before the grand jury. And the witnesses will be fully protected." He has appointed Assistant District Attorney Hyman Barshay to handle the details of the investigation, he said. "If necessary, IU put two men oa it," he added. "I want to push it. This looks like a particularly unpleasant racket.

The public ultimately pays for the boost in th price of trucking barrels of flour. Continued on Page I Mayor to Run City in Hospital Heeds Doctor's Advice on Arthritis Treatment -Direct Wire to Office An Indication that Mayor La-Guardia plans to continue his dynamic activities while under orders to rest in Mt Sinai Hospital waa seen in his request to City Hall today for a portable typewriter, pencils and paper, which wero sent to him by Lester Stone, on of his secretaries. Mayor LaGuardia was resting comfortably today in Mount Sinai Hospital, Manhattan, where he will remain for at least a week to undergo treatment for arthritis and to get a complete rest. Dr. George Baehr of 110 E.

80th Manhattan, the Mayor's personal physician, finally prevailed upon him to enter the hospital late yesterday after he had complained for some time of sharp pains in his back and legs from sciatica. The Mayor had refused to heed the physician's advice until the city budget for next year was In definite shape and ready for adoption. Even then he had declined to leave City Hall until the transit unification negotiations had reached the stage where a preliminary agreement was reached. To Carry on Work While in the hospital the Mayor will carry on his official functions as usual, 'is secretaries having been instructed to keep him advised at all times on city matters and to bring to his bedside all official papers calling for his signature. Br means of a wire he will keep in touch with hLs office.

The Mayor's ailment Is believed to have been aggravated by a heavy cold he contracted recently during a rainstorm while visiting Queens. Golly, but Mrs. Wiie does sputter every time the old car balks! He'd avoid all this if he would got rid oi eld tub and buy one of the ciood used cars advertised in The Eagle's Ad Section. MAIN 4-6000 FOR RESULTS! could remain afloat Indefinitely if he had been forced down, with his copilot, Tom Pethybridge, on the Bay of Bengal, where they were last seen fighting through a monsoon. Planes and ships searched fruitlessly throughout the day for the missing fliers, however, and darkness fell with no further word of their fate.

Rival Abandons Race Royal Air Force planes soared north, nearing the Siamese fron tier, to start a systematic scanning of the stormy waters from Victoria point, above the Malay Federated States. C. James Melrose, who abandoned his own flight from England to Continued on Page 2 Italy to Annex Makale Region Troops Move Toward Lake Tana-Path to Harar Declared Open Copyright, 193S, br the Associated Press With the Italian Army in North ern Ethiopia, Nov. 9 The high com- mand of Italy's northern army drove its advance guard past the captured city of Makale today, and declared the victory by the southern army at Gorrahel opened the "road to Harar." After pausing briefly to celebrate the passive capitulation of Makale, forward units fanned out swiftly through new Ethiopian territory to the south, east and west. Control positions were established along the heights of Enda Selassie and Donghea pathway to Selicot, 15 miles down the 40-mile line of march to Amba Alajl, next objective in the north.

Move on Lake Tana Gen. Pletro Maravlgna's column cut through territory to the north and west, protecting the right flank of the northern army and penetrating into the Adi Abo regions toward Lake Tana, headwaters of the Blue Nile, and therefore of vital Importance to British interests. In the South, the capture of the fortified town of Gorrahel carried the troops advancing under General Riidolfo Grazlani, 120 miles out of Italian Somaliland. About double that distance lay Continued on Page 2 Marion Talley Cuts Weight 26 Pounds to 105, Hollywood Finds Hollywood, Nov. 9 (Hollywood's guessing contest on how much weight Marion Talley had lost since she entered the movies came to an abrupt end today when the Kansas City opera star supplied the answer.

"It was 26 pounds," she said. Louise Long, Beverly Hills mas seuse, produced the singer's weight-charts to substantiate the statement. They showed Miss Talley was tipping the beam at 131, at the peak, and now weighs a fraction under 105. Miss Long said the singer, at first, had a daily treatment, consisting of exercises, skin-kneading, and deep-breathing routines. The conditioner believes In her self-invented system of "dynamic breathing" as a means of reducing.

She said Miss Talley "breathed off" a lot of weight. Hundreds Arrested In Drive on Socialists Vienna, Nov. 9 (P) Police struck simultaneously in all districts of Vienna today to crush what they described as an effort, to reorganize the Socialist party among street car workers. Several hundred persons were taken to police stations and their homes searched. bergs could not clean the house.

He rang the apartment bell, smelled gas and when he received no answer, called the old couple's son, Harry Rosenberg of 1241 Gates Ave. Together, they broke down the door. They found Mr. Rosenberg scalded in the bathtub, although the water was turned off as if he had tried to get out. Mrs.

Rosenberg waa lying in the bedroom. Gas flowed from one Jet of the water heater. Emergency police squads and the Brooklyn Union Gas Compnny were unable to revive them. Police of Wilson Ave. precinct listed their deaths as accidental.

John Thomas Kennedy Home Better Than Erin, hut He's Proud of Tweeds and Cane By HARRY PRICE Bay Ridge's "Personality Boy" got home to day with a bit of an Irish brogue, no blarney, a lot of happl ness spread from ear to ear, and a distinct feeling that "my mom" and home were Just about the best two things in the world. He is John Thomas Kennedy, 10, of 266 49th Bay Ridge, good-will ambassador extraordinary of the Bay Ridge Boy's Club to Alfred Byrnes, Lord Mayor of Dublin, Irish Free State, and Irish Boy Scouts. Johnny, hair-tousled, eyes search ing the dock like a ferret, came home in United States liner President Harding, after passing two months in the Free State through the generosity of S. Klein, Union Square merchant. Boat Early, "Mom" Absent Coming up the bay from Quarantine was a nightmare for Johnny, because of all things he wanted to see my ana Doyisniy, oi course, he couian realize tne instance and time that must pass be tween Quarantine and docking, nor mally about an hour and a half.

And sadly enough, he was destined to suffer liis first and biggest disappointment of the trip right at the dock, for the President Harding had made up some time and docked an hour earlier than expected. So, when Johnny came ashore he ran down Continued on Page 2 Hotclmer Calls LLR.R. Exploited Assailing the Pennsylvania Railroad as an "absentee landlord" of the Long Island Railroad, Maurice Hotchner, counsel for the Association of Long Island Commuters, which is fighting the proposed 20 percent rate increase, said today that the association feels that "Long Island and the Long Island Railroad have been exploited long enough by the Pennsylvania Railroad." Mr. Hotchner also declared that the chief reason why Long Island commuters cannot obtain "any cooperation" from the road is that it had been taken over by the Pennsylvania Railroad to be run "merely as a branch of the main system." Picket Case Put Off By Court Till Nov. 14 Magistrate Jacob Eilperin in Bay Ridge Court today adjourned to Nov.

14 the hearing of 47 women and three men arreste in connection with picketing of May's Department Store, 510 Fulton St. Joshua Hellinger of 305 Broadway, Manhattan, was attorney for the defendants. Abraham R. Kartzman, of 16 Court represented May's Department Store. Today's Scratches PIMLICO First Ste Whisper.

Kin hlli TiemiM), lomlnt Bark, Sparky, Itrhrmnth. Weiillier ciesri track food. NARRAGANSETT PARK First Insten, I'nrle July. Irish Hero, flattie Coq, Orandmas Hoy, My Date, Burnt Wnod, Samhn Jours. Kerond Cyrus, Wise Hint, Maskrd Smllf.

Third Lulu Lite, Doo Outer, Ailren Goldslrp, Slay, l.ady Tal, I.urk In, I'rynr, Fourth lllarkmall, liarden Mrssase, Miss l'urrav. Fifth hanrlns, I.sdlleld. Silh Kvrn I n. Seventh llnkllao, Top lllsh, Glrndvp. F.ishth Smili- Wave.

War Plane. Itonre, My Surprise. Move Faster, lliane Newton Helie. t'arsono. Weather clear; track fast, ARLINGTON DOWNS Fifth Trlrkllns Seventh Hand llanrer.

Sam Alexander. Fllhth Trmtlr tiuy, Or-thnprlsm. YYcalher cloud) I (rack bcavr. sive methods of buildings -vh-b it it mv "earthquake resistant" were outlined usluls 11 today by Barclay Craighead, Mon- Naples, Nog. 9 OP) Mount VesU-tuna director of the Federal Hous- vius is putting on a great, spectacu-tng Administration, who estimated 1 lar show for the many soldiers who they would reduce damage from have come to this military port.

A earth tremors by 50 He I great cloud of smoke, ten times the fald that on a $5,000 house it would 1 usual volume, is rising and at night cost only about $100 to fortify it there is a bright glow, visible at against earthquakes. 1 great distance. Man Dies in Tub, Wife in Bed, As Gas Flows Through Home Fans Get Break; Weather Man Holds Off Rain TiUT omorrow Amusements BrldtB 10 Churchas t-7 Classified Ads 18-17-18 Comics Kl Deoth Notices 11 Dr. Brtdr 10 Editorial 14 Financial 1B-IR From a Norse's 10 Guild News Helen Worth I I.ons Island News Lost a i.d Found, I Movies Noirel 10 Radio 1 Society 4 Snorts 1-0 Theaters 1 Woman's Fate 4 David Rosenberg, 63, and his wife, Anna, 61, will not celebrate the Sabbath today, as was their lifelong custom. Last night they began their preparations as usual at their home, 241 Harman St.

One of them turned on the kitchen gas water heater so that Mr. Rosenberg could take a bath. He got into the tub and Mrs. Rosenberg went Into the bedroom. Today, at 8:45 a.m., Albert Grai-schen of 245 Wilson Ave.

came to the apartment to do the day's cleaning, as he always did on Saturday because on the Sabbath the Rosen Cool and brisk with plenty of clear sunlight. That's the weather menu, served up today for the spe-! rial benefit of football fans. It will even be fair toniKht for those who have something to celebrate after the games. Tomorrow will be cloudy and.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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