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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 22

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 22

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22 BROOKLYN EAGLE, SUM, 3AM .26, 1547 1 V. F. W. Noles Legion Holes -H VETERAN Brooklyn; By Sylvan Furman i The Army Quartermaster Crpa la distrlbutlrt a 15-paga Information' booklet. "Tell Me About My i that answers most of the question 1 that or worry the km of the By VVT JASLOW To hare an active pnt rrrecm In every Legion unit In Kir.in County on of the goals of County Commander Thomas F.

Callahan men of medicine," he said, "can be war 0ad. It is available at the Office of the Quartermaster Gen- of Invaluable assistance to members about to file claims for dabllltles- The hewinf ahortac will ran- 2S millions has Just been put up to raL Memorial Division. Washing or who wish to appeal unfavorable tin faretfr. if we do no more than meet the difference. ton 25, D.

C. decisions handed down br the Vet- we are dome, right now. It may The city hu of ronr.w heen York Per- erans Administration have been good news this week that terinf under the load of housing The Department of New Proper diagnoses of ailments bv a few hundred veterans' families nroem The of a nn' 'rat inns will sponsor a 'Command doctor who know about army or will get apartments In remodeled for low cost projects, veterans' formance'' In Madison Square Gar-navy life often have turned the" tide school buildings after the Stat, has projects and other kinds of living den June 7 by prominent artists of In the claimant's favor. remodeled them, but this move space is now so long at the City the screen, radio and sports. The second In a series of lectures mat's practically no dent In the Vacancy Listing Bureau that the Chairman E.

H. Hassemer, Suffolk for post rommanders. adjutant and real need. of gettine anv kind of roof County commander, state that sup-- service officers will be held Wednes-1 Mavor ODwyer gave out the over your head except with th( the unaertaun win as- day evening at Room 1. Borough fft the other day in Washington luckiest kind of break, are small.

xrf depr nt Hall. The subiect to be discussed. when he told the United States Ami putting thousands of families Sfrvlfe ntl rehabiiitatlon program. with Thomas r. Kilcourse.

recently Conference of Mayors that New out of low-cost nroiects because! appointed Slate Service officer, pre- York Cltv needs 750.000 new apart- their Incomes haw risen a little win' fV .7 siding, will be "Schooling and On- ss replacements for solve nothing either. GI T. tT.n m.H. the-Job Training." which wiU de- dwellings unfit for habitstion snd Probm N- a I a to Save a reo fin. Tuihii iMmm is nrt Th.

lt. rooiem i fw the N. Y. 8. E.

8. to nave a repre- win he a t.iw on hom. hni.L.- Veterans are steamed nr. sentaUte on dity dsi.y at Room have to live. On that hi.

I.Biv ill ll.r. WII i I no this whole mess and with reason Borough Hall. He Invites all ness loans. 'scale Brooklyn alone needs a qusr- cm.ntv via. rommanHer H.a.rri ,7,..

aplenty. Some lose of one seekinR assisunre in omaining em- fok i. vjK? Cv-vv -i -VRT I kffh iii i nvn uiiila. mj i rinuuri9 i Anderson, chairman of the three xehools to nrovirie SS small lcl, though; while they are io ersnip commmee. reporxs icings apartmenu, and converting faciU-," 11 01 proportion to Bu.lock Poti tie.

at noyd Bennett Field to ac ll. to. DtJ' LmuTy taU-nd County still holds the lead In Legion enrollments throughout the won make not basically a veteran commodate J75 more tamment In Prospect Hall next much of a dent in the problem. "If- night A new set of colon more than 11 000 new members. jPfent Housing Measure.

Authority, pointed out in a recent i oV.n tJ Ll Junior Past County Commander Last December, apparently re-, talk, this problem has been in the Louis E. Drago has declined to be spending to the cry for more leeway making for years because nobody cior Vice Commander Frank Fer- the guest of honor at a dinner cus-jto private enterprise. President has cared to do anything about the j8ra j. ln of arrangements, tomarily given outgoing Legion lead-jTruman removed most housing con-, very sick and inefficient building ers. He believes lt would be a drain trols; Wilson Wyatt, housing expe-! industry.

's initial athletic pro- on the finances of many who could diter, then resigned protesting that The only ray of hope for a while gram in Brookhn was such a great ill arrord to attend. His objections the veterans emergency housing was the Wyatt program under success at the 23d Regiment Armory were heeded, but Clifford S. program had been to all intents which about a million dwellings 0n Jan. 18. Past County Commander the chairman, has other plans to, killed.

As to long-range housing. ere started last year. Many of Thomas Brennan, athletic chair-honor Drago Both Joyce Kil-'nothing had really gotten started them will be completed this yearJman. is making arrangement with mer and Rugby posts have presented because the Wagner-Ellcnder-Taft but some tU be stymied by bottle- the A. A.

U. to conduct a junior resolutions to bar Axis Sally from Bill, the only hope to stimulate per- necks of all kinds. The only way championship meet here ln March, returning to this country. Petitions manent, nationwide, low-cost hous-is an overall approach, through a will be sent to the commissioner of ing. was allowed to die for all prac-! flexible, nonpartisan, nonpolttlral! War Department plans to absn- ONCE UPON A TIME you could hear these German street bands "East Side, West Side, All Around the Town." old mnu Former P.

S. 15 Pupils Had Club lmmigration ana tne uepartment ot tical purposes in committee, piece of legislation to kwvsen things don all military installs tlors not Justice Past Commander How- Realising how things are driftlngjup wherever they require loosening, deemed absolutely necessary, ln ard Brady of Edison Post is proud the Mayors conference has called And this won 'I be achieved till the conformity with the Presidential dl- of Sunset Post, which he was lnstru- for return of the Federal emergency! first order of business is not rective, inspires hope for acquisition mental ln organizing Chief Di-ihousing program and passage ofrWhat's in lt for mr?" but "How of Port Hamilton in lis entirety tr vision Commander James T. Wat-j the Waner Bill or its equivalent. Ifast can we get these homes up and Veterans Administration hospital. ters has been Indorsed for county The State program is little if into them?" And the un-l commander by Boro Park Post, of better.

Money appropriated last 'self ish approach will ultimately 1 1 II I which he is member. The other year for a program that was inade-lprove to be the profitable one, too. II A Il01r 1 candidate is Howard Anderson orquate to begin with has been ln-MMr. Furman column appears1' 13th Post County Vice Com- sufficient to meet mine costs and; Sunday. Wrdnnda.

Krid.v i un 1 1 vnwiv Wants Brass Band Concerts on Radio Editor Old Timers: rM tiniAre ore vl.n 7 announces the WRITES OF DISTANT DAYS FROM FAR-OFF MICHIGAN tiitor. Old rimers: Several times I saw Items In the old timers page about the section from which I hall, but the parties writing them would not sign their imander Gene Boylan radio fans of today, therefore It ffirst meeting ln preparation for the seems rather strange that none of 1947 baseball season will be held them have expressed any optnionsThursday at county headquarters i A record turnout Is expected Chapter 28 had an interesting ses-sion at its meeting on Wednesday night at 4-5 Court Square. Leonard, Mieselman introduced Herman Ber- 1 nard, associate editor of the Civil Service Leader, guest speaker who gave an informative brief talk on civil service problems affecting th Brept Nfltional Commander Paul! right names I have been reading letters fromrMollneaux and his son. Roland My slrl friend Helen Mclntvre residents of Brooklyn In the who rnt some time in the death 'rl house at Sing Sing but was finally nd myself. Margaret Issues of tha Sunday T0I(, bf)pk Bracken, both attended P.

S. 15 on gnd have recently returned from a Rnom With the Little Green boor." compared itn music oi uw Griffith at the Hotel St. George years gone by. Feb. 1 A re.solution asking an For example, radio broadcasts of i immediate decision by the Civil rodiv feature the extremes of mil-i Service Commission defining the if I disabled veteran.

Before Mr. Ber- State near 3d Ave. Helen lived; visit to Brooklyn after an absence! My later years in Brooklyn from An Ttertren fit. hetven Ath anri Carl 1903 to 1912 were spent on Bergen sic but neglect the middle medium veterans' (preferenre act in so far ton Aves. I lived on Bergen St.

be-iof ,15 a. i nard spoke. Max Thaler of thT Jmfl i Brooklyn Division of the March of rHT I Dimes spoke on the Infantile paraly nniH evn.rt fnnrrt manv St. between Nostrand and Bedford i.tvie music. Radio station Navy Yard employes are con fW tween 6th and Carlton Aves.

changes. The elevated gone from1 Av-ant' on Park Place near Frank-iswjn8 music, and popular music all!" be routed through State has been There used to be the Society of cf lln Ave. In the Bereen St. sectors. headquarters.

This matter the Old 15th club made up of. ta Muller's grocery and Fleck's meat onou. Ptoot iuttn because noth- former P. 8. 15 scholars.

It had a market occupied opposite corners jJlg offered. evidence. sis drive for funds. Chapter 28 members exhibited a warm respoase by contributing generously to the fund. Commander Anuskewirz said, "We are happy to be on the veterans' committee of this drive for the organization is fighting the same cause meeting place somewhere on Llv-I -r.

at Nostrand Ave. while Christ's drogi Ineston shout three vesrs ago. ih. -rtfii raal lso proaacaJM apien- gston about three years ago. Lnts a(Ur was at lhe A 1895, Rnortlv Bedford'did nVogram of svmpl ic mulle Dmlr u' hmoti.

street car strike the writer Bergen. At th. junction of Bed-; 'Zl LTt ibut this heavy music appeals to kicked around since Dec. 3 8tate Senator James J. Crawford is assured of support of all American Legion posts ln his quest for legislation permitting the playing of bingo under Stale supervision, posts could expand their programs for welfare and rehabilitation should this move succeed.

elass. third grammar. Oflr teacher folks who really understand music. attended P. S.

45 on Lafayette Ave.ford and R8er Aves. was the gro-between Schenck St. (now Emerson cerV of zinke RunKe' On Bedford rson; iPnt ii'hv doesn't some snonsor pet Place) and Classon Ave. W. M.

Jel-le. oeiow ncuie oyer an art store. ir tevervtodv llffe was nrinc.iDal while Missesi rwar Anmirai James j. ri.ane,i hand mimic, in st.vle of Snu.sa was Miss Fish. Mr.

Felter was president, also a Mr. Sherman. Another teacher was ML Granger, Major Mamm of Namm's on Fulton St. was also a pupil In our class. Albert Smith was another pupil.

Eva Ledger and Miller had charge of I u- retiree, wnoin K. or WorW "Pair TlanH. under lower eraries Mv teachers were1 lne lunerai service over Admiral the lot the Brooklyn old uaDrain ijaoarre, J. W. V.

Holes Misses Li. A. ann u. a. lrnoor .11 ron- L.

A. Ewart and C. A. How- lMu v. Bryant another pupil (her father i Yfl vi fin ormr Kr uofi ui ara.

rTeaencK w. wurster was mn. NEW OLDSMOBILE This is the 1947 Olds series 76 or 78 four-door sedan, now on display in Brooklyn showrooms. Nearly 80 percent of the new cars are being equipped with Hydra-Matic drive, eliminating clutch pedal entirely. Cars are available with six-cylinder 1 00-horsepower or eght-cylinder 1 1 0-horsepower engines in three series on 119, 125 or 127-inch wheelboses' and in 12 body styles.

Interiors have been redesigned and new colors are available. Auto World was the milkman). Eva had three nt th r.t UrnnVlvn onH F. H. E.

EPStCin. U. S. retired. ULVRV It, SHTFI.DS of assisting the bedside patient.

City Wide Radio Service of 50 University Place, Manhattan, announces that Chapter 28 disabled veteraas will be offered percent dLscounts on all purchases. Another 10 percent will revert back to the chapter when the member disclose his membership card. The National Dry Goods Association, with offices in Manhattan, has opened a Veteran Advisory Bureau with Dane F. Hahn as its director. This organization has published many booklets on disabled vet.erana and how stores throughout the country should accept them.

The Bureau of Reclamation of the- brothers Herberx. mm ana cnaries. the last t0 0 s(rve Brooklyn for Borough President Heaps of dimes and checks are we rnv ov. ourHiB -nnsnlMatert with New York on mereaoouis put, was not pouring in for the March of Dimes which will he climaxed with a gala GFX3RGE DURST. P.

O. Box 61. Jamaica. hall at the Hotel St. George next' Thursday.

Representing the Veterans Division ln the anti-polio boro drive is Arthur H. Bernstein. J. W. V.

service officer, and Henry R. Shields. J. W. V.

executive sec-, The battleship Maine was com-: me 26a Kegiment I006j missioned at. the Navy Yard on Sept wrlt" 'nok Pt in all the ree-17, 1835, and started on her career Omental activities until the regl-; which ended In the disaster at Ha- mpnt'5 hnh anniversary of its or-vans less than three vears later, ionization In 1912. Col. William To turn to the old neighborhood. Stokes was my first colonel and in i of Lafayette Ave.

and Classon h' was succeeded by Col. Frank one recalls the grocery on the south-iH- Norton, who took the regiment were held at Ulmer Park via trolleys. The RelUys were on Carlton Ave. The moving firm. This wss back In 1906 or 1909.

It sure would be good to hear from our old school chums and to see them and relive the good old days. MARGIE PARKER BRACKEN. 101 E. 31st Brooklyn 26. -By Paul Blauvelt Names Favorite Paylon Production iretary.

Bay Ririge Post 11 is also! Department or the interior an- funds for polio victims and! it costs nearly twice as much to give, at least at first, but he point-jounces that approximately 750 farm I will hold a benefit card party to-'drlve your far on dlrt on con.jed out that in the last pre-war totaling 60.000 acres of re- -i-ii. OIOI JtW lira r-. 1 Tn I night at its clubhouse, 8721 4th Ave. nlghwav, A Moyw years the various State and Fed-claimed pubiic and wiI1 opened dior Old Timers: west corner operated by one Mr.ll" "irxican noracr into ana Horhost and later bv Frederick Wil-t0 Spartanburg. S.

In 1917. The kins and Callenius Brothers. Johnion8111111 offers of Co. were Capt. Schreiber orjerated a (rrorerv and iFrederick W.

Singleton, 1st Lt. Ber- I reao. James V. Clohessy'. r-.

7: of Iowa State College reports after Tr Qisiriouiea among quaimea veterans. about Payton's old theater, and en saloon on the corner of Steuben St. Ilard Suvdam, and 2d Lt Edward H. Joyed lt very much, but I thought the Greer girl's name was Jessie, and DeKalb Ave. while John Otten Hopes a Reunion Can Be Arranged Frothingham.

Among the events the writer recalls from 1906 to 1912 were er Sam Mensch and Harry Felnberg, extensive driving tests. torists. With an expected Washington Idaho California and secretary. I According to Scienoe Service, Pro-1 000 to 15,000.000 additional tars on Wyoming will offer these farm units Jfessor Meyer's Investigation showedjthe road In the next 10 years, he! nZnnlMl ar, ivn onia First major event for all newly- 'it costs about 4 nnu miie ln gas, explained, all the highway coastruc-! "''l te a 7 elected 1947 commanders of the 80. oil.

tires, maintenance and depre-ition program could easily be cov-jp tnr operated one at the corner of Lata also he forgot to mention Claude 1 i. i ithe linVpillntr rtt fho Uahinff(nn TK. Plnn.An Aon i St I 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 TO i OXi. AlSO C8St tWO 'Plaza, the unveiling nf the father and son, both John, J. W.

V. posts in Broouyn win De rialion to drive on a dirt road, ered bv such taxes. tain Fawn who was a hero to us Monument at Fort Greene one 1 remember right. I saw all the a testimonial dinner In their honor on concrete surfacing the; He forsot to add. however, that The reunion referred to by A.

M. of the graduation class of the avanaoie to graauaie pnysicians ior cenu5 ucn woula De ca5e 11 wx the school year beginning next Fall. youngsters who lived near by Near tcry iay in November, 1908, at which shows mntionea in nis article. i scheduled Thursday evening at the cost is a little over 2 Classon on Lafayette was Lewis' liv- President-elect Taft was I leaving Payton's one Concord Ballroom, 1S29 Pitkin Ave.an uie costs being pre t-u youngsters who lived near by. Nearly nay in November.

1908, at which 7 1 mu ov'r Transfiguration School Is a splendid stopped. according to an announcement bv Idea. The names referred to caught! anri ffrt nnHnn.vi,iin between 10:30 and 11 o'clock The affair is sponsored by the the tests were conducted in mv attention while reading thi: 11.. i un. u.

rarie In Manhattan nn cnt in iono 'and the skv was nil lit no in the Kings County Council. County about 330.000 miles of driving in Surgeon General Thomas Parran of Health Service. Ap- Kaiser-Frazer has turned to spun i-ntumn am married and have wimc i- w. home to lunch. illus was tne last me, family of Uo boy and two: home Uors and marines be accepted not later Washington, D.

C. time that the downtown section, so I and my Pal Commander Nathaniel Kaplan will Iowa, Kansas, Wyoming and Mis- glass for iasulation of its in of the foreign had to see what was up, so we host. souri with standard, pre-war cars Spun glass and a fiber stock are Pn hed down 5th i down to the Fort Greene section in all kinds of weather. woven into blankets about a half-lna," War I. at the green was crowded' In b'half 0 Maintenance costs of cars oper-inch thick to absorb road rumble1 The VA ti.

Mothaniol Wonlon n-ill iy -nl K. District. County Vice Commander insurance the U. S. Public 'in 1899 the Brooklvn Bridge powers marched aving trouble with It .7.

"illuminated with a sign reading, Ave. prior. to World --j am ih program The con-ruction hM wey," and two tempo-1 um ftauonai Guardsmen will re-i a no.ses runmng MeltMr Dresented a Brother- iZ J. templated hospital const Whita. MarV McCarthy and' were erected on the can FeeKsKiu, where; we louna ou.

hoodMedal to Margaret conoola down due to 50 percent higher Veterans Ad nT Miss Adrian is Heights, I belief on Montague St. oiununea ViP. S. 64. She was the winner of aolM lw, mnr, Bas 1 bids submitted to the I R-h Th writer later lived on S.

Elliott, me runimenu, 01 iieia train- "2 contest "as the individual who in 7vi-'mnrh a two- ministration Look for a possi- v. rtf ani rue snnnnnff nrw rmra ic naa lis suioie aionusiue or iw th. mnitne oroaaest sense exempmieo uie mM tire wear. In Anvone with Ideas of solnar on VA P'au 10 Remember her? ma.ssive Tecnnical High school. uauoroui m.

11 isoirlt of common ideals of tw. Mover nolned nut. trln th h.r.iv.H.!Ptoyes from classified ClvU Service. The old 13th Armory was still t0Kether at Peekskill ln 1906 as! wild. riti7pn.i Mplt7.pr.

who ha.s been cmAfh.cm-r cqi Krt.it auam uiv, unit: iatru tu oiiiuunii-'imiwiu olsvjuv riv.o ii iiiKunay 1 1 jp, 1 1 jiiatj I never hear anyone mention a credita.ble job as brother-iroads Wi considerable, since the i as well scrap all his plans right' DJl flnnmir (Zr theater that was somewhere arounajhrMV rhairmnn for J. W. ritA st Mro Trtnitliic'nrMar tr (It a latitat lie i.f w4 VI I I III I 111 standing on Hanson Place prior toe11 as the Pine Camp maneuvers the Spanish War. It was from 198 and 1910- How O'Ryan's bat-that Col. Abel Smith led the resl-iterv did Its stuff at Great Bend, ment in 1861.

dvinir himself a few How General Clark of the Massa- I have my graduation picture taken with the group and Mon-Fignor Horan. Would any of you like to see It ln the Eagle? (The group picture). Let's hope a reunion can be arranged through tills column. My maiden name was Marion Georgens. Mrs.

D. O. BAILEY. u.c -jpresPiiKa set 01 dooks to me an hour, while on the hard-surfaced regulations tistied bv the Canadian1 stands I remember years ago Iiscftool library ln behalf of J. W.

V. roa1 it was 45. iTraffic Control Board at Edmon- ExtOIS BeOUtV saw a show there that had a lady tAIWIS ucuul7 weeks later at Washington. The brigade was taken prisoner old 14Lh Armory was then at N-jW Private McKay ot Co. of the; boxer as one of the acta.

Can any-! That information brings up Special permits to use Uie road e. a. D.oal.lwn i 1 1 .1 ji Vonlon n'ill a oiifict ertAa lrr t. Portland Ave. and Aub foruana Ave.

ana Auourn nace not wnow oai- one name mat weairr in tne om, rerommenrtatlon hv Charles i required of all travelers, and JPUI) WM UIUUIVIVII M.lare reouired of all travelers, and of Pro-; 1 TTrwh a tv onrrinAri ftrtir nf ViV a-ill nnf ho iccilA4 fnr nmrp far from the Navy Yard. It was ui ui. niauil vy Mil ulll-iraVLmi iilPttUT BJIUW Ull here that MaJ. (later Col.) Bertram P're. The Mexican Border mobiliza-thought was the best was 'f Tii' American Road Builders As.socia- vacationists.

Even if you Qualify When Dorothy Day, the gl amour T. Clayton organized Troop in ana wo.ia wax were lessonnern gnu wnn Kttt tion. 'for a permit, there are absolutely ir, with 10 years' ex- Answers From Mr. M. 1895.

Theodore R. Tinibey, who de-itnan a necaoe away out sucn tne Indian ana josepn i Mr uphsm said the nation has no service and repair shops other," Mm. Km signed the revolving turret for which did not worry the regulars or the! as the doctor. A. S.

(participate. miles of state highwavs. than gas pumps along the entire ta "llft Ilrst came ,0 Nw Editor Old Timers: Mrs. Cooney asks about the land- John Errirson pot the credit, lived National Guardsmen who did their mark at the Junction of Cumber In a brownstone house on Lafayette, bit in those far-away days. iTribute to Mr Wardell Ave npar th tielcrhhnrhnnri nf Flnallv.

how the Navv Yard ner-! Checks for the Cancer Drive 400,000 miles of county, town and 1.423-mile route frcm Dawson Creek Yrk she used to spend Sundays in have been contributed by the Sgl. village roads and 250.000 miles of to Fairbanks, Alaska, and the Ca- the Brooklyn Botanic Garden for Meyer Levin Post 169 and Parkway city streets, of which total Government warns it will "relaxation." She loved the Garden. Post 61. An additional donation amount of 1,415.000 milesnot help out except in cases of I "There are lovely sections in Oxford St. while Sankcy the felt proud ss the Maine, Timer: land-Fulton Sts.

It was known as Cuyler Square, in honor ot a famous clergyman of that name whose church was in the vicinity of the square. list lived. I think, on cither S. Ox- necticut, Florida. New York, Arizo-j Lei's pay tribute to Arthur made by Past Commander are entirely unpaved.

i "extreme emergency." -Brooklyn. Spots that are perfectly ford or S. Portland. Gunther jew-na. New Mexico.

Tennessee, Norttvdell, now deceased, but whose birth-jsamuel Gclfer of Parkway Post, i He recommends that the national. In addition, the Government re-'beautiful. Everv career man orwom-elry store was at the corner of Fort Carolina, Iowa, Missouri, and scoresiday was Jan. 15. Art gained fame! highway program allocation be.

quires that every car using the mad in New York should lake a trip Also, W. S. K. refers to the VII-; Greene Place and Fulton St One 01 smaller dui no less lamous snips in Bay Kidge as a great iooidbii; raised from tne 1946 total ot eqiupped wiut a set or cnainsjto Brooklvn and find out for him- Adopt a t-mia campaign ana nnnnon to at least a nnn ftnnonn'fiili i. nf twii tow rnne nr cahlp u.

1.1 1 day a robber entered the store and id down the ways into the East hack on the strong Sedgewlck Foot threw red pepper in Mr. Gunther River, GERALD E. CRONIN, baU Club at old McKenna's Field, nas lrpad obtained 1 trie necessary ypar by 194g gnd tnat it be kepfpk, si10vel and ax. complete firstwoman dynamo who docs 10 between 4th and 5th for this worthwhile project. at a mmimum $2,000,000,000 a aid kit, a heater, coil of copper'fatts tteekiy for WINS She writes Bay Ridge, around 1900.

Mrs. Emily Cantor C. Ritter is cnairman of Ulat many years wirei tire gauge, good tire pump heT own scripts and in-between- eyes and grabbed a tray of jewelry lage. Has he in mind tha Tower Buildings on Hicks St. from Warren to Baltic extending to the rear to Warren Place? These buildings were popularly knowns as aie Village in the early "90s.

AUGUSTINE C. MORRIS K.euy. iils stepaaugnier, manes mis, oucn a va prusiam, ne actiarea.ianu uie iuuuwuig iaiuji finds time to work with cloth but happily was soon caught. Adams' bakery was on the south side of Fulton St. while Roesler's grocery was on the north side of Lafayette The feprlnglield Plan was Ois-, beneficial nesnlts! iment request, also a sketch of his house ing manufacturers, writing fashion Formerly colonel Infantry Reserve, U.

S. and formerly major N. G. N. Y.

Reserve late Co. 23d Regiment. 426 S. Main Milford. Mich.

cussed by Miriam Mensch, deputy! It woud Drovide an economic A full set of sparkplugs, a fan later, which I believe still stands at commentary and MCing at shows. the foot of 69th Bay Ridge. ROBERT RYDER. South Ozone, above S. Elliott Place.

On Fort I Greene Place lived Gen. Edward L. 127-16 140th Park, N. Y. chief of staff of the Kings County I stabilizer in periods of unemploy-'belt.

distributor coil and points, set Ladies Auxiliary at Public eliminate the need for un-of generator brushes, full set of 179. Mrs. Mensch recently returned "made work" projects light bulbs, fuses, condenser, fuel from Springfield as an observer of SUcn as the WPA; provide a sys-jpump and two good tires and tubes, the plan in action. tem of modern highways and savej For a full copy of the regulations The discourtesy ln the city subways Irks Miss Day, a Bostonian born and bred. She recommend posting "Please Be Courteous" placards in the trains and on platforms.

Ae a tribute to Its standard hear-' nunui tua una pcuia uiousanua vutn niiuiiiidiion aoout me 'People get just as far and with as er who was killed in action, theses by preventing highway write mco loiS' Alexander Fleischmann Post 6 it lthey do without them, she contends. Q. (-vi night presented a Holy Ark to the; hI; apparently never stands still Avenue Jewish Center, Bay program would be expen-folder ready for distribution. for Misg RV n0t even ln sleep. On and E.

19th 11 was-announces three occasions she's awoke hum- by Theodore Schneider, commander Nurse lo Discuss Fulure of Service voluntary agencies lo meet the In-lming the lyrics of songs that sho pressing demands for nursing care! "dreamed" in sleep. AU three have as a result, of the present trend; own set to music but are not yet Howard health education and better jpublished. Ihealth care. Dav is referred to around the Invitations to the annual meet- jstudios as The Hat. When she arrives, Ing have been Issued to nursing Radiant with glamour and sequins.

of the post. Dr. Karl Applbaum. J. V.

rounty chaplain, is spiritual head of the center. WORD PORTRAIT Pfc. Meivin Shulman Post 335 was formally instituted on Nov. 18, 1945, to perpetu The future of the voluntarv nurK-isunervlsors in the Maternitv Divi-iher co-workers say: "She has her ate the memory of a Brooklyn hero work clothes on again." That mean of World War II. Meivin, the only.jnp; agency in the community health jsion of all Brooklyn hospitals, and son of Mr.

and Mrs. Sol program will be discussed bv Ruthlmembers of the Maternal Welfare was born on Jan. 7, 1924, at 474 w. Hubbard, director of the Visiting I Committee of the Medical Society Rlverdale Ave. was killed injNurse Service of Philadelphia andof the County of Kings, the United action at Crailsheim, Germany, on president of the N'ational Organiza-i Hospital Fund Board of Directors, April I.

1945. An honor graduate of tion for Public Health Nursine. Vlsitini Nurse Association Aux- she's bound for a fashion show or some impressive function. Ordinarily Miss Day does not wear such trappings. She is recognised as on of the city's best-dressed and most Boys High, he also attended Poly-(discussion will take place at the an-liliaries and the board of directorsifashionable women.

OLD TEAM This is the 1906 team of the Grace Episcopal A. A. os they appeared in picture taken at Englewood, N. i in June of that year. The players are, upper row, left to right, Jimmy Dunn, now in the insurance business; Lcmey Furman, Frank Bowman, Al Roberts, manager.

Low- er row, left to right, Phil Raffaele, in the printing business; Ulrich, pitcher; Roger Grothman, Billy Eaton, for many years chairman of Local School Board 32; Ben Grindrod (new a mortician and Republican leader of the 5th A. and the Rev. George R. Swartz, former professional baseball player and coach. technic Institute and took an inual meeting of the Maternity Cen-iof the Maternity Center Division.

I Vincent Glinsky, the sculptor, is N. Y. A. engineer training course ter Dlvi.ion of the Visiting Nurse! Year-end reports on the activities doing a head of Miss Day for ex. Meivin went overseas with the 10th' Association of Brooklyn to be held of the Maternity Center Division hibition purposes.

Armored Division and took part in Thursday, Jan. 30. at 2:30 pm. at will be submitted at the meeting A Miss Day has a Manhattan town assault, which crashed through the mam station. 138 S.

Oxford St. 'tea will follow the buslness'meetlng. house complete with garden and an the Siegfried Line. The Meivin' Miss Hubbard's topic will be "Our! Mrs. Edward A.

Behr, chairman Irish setter. She has a "very un-Post Ladies Auxiliary was formally Future Are We Ready for It?" of the Maternity Center Division, derstandlng" husband, who is a instituted on April IT, 194. She will outline the plans of the will be ln charge of the program, dio producer, and a son, Kent, 13. I.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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