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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 2

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 2

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Brooklyn, New York
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ex- BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY 7, 1937 Today on the Wires The Capital NORRIS BILL APPROVED Washington, July 7 (AP) Chairman Pope Idaho), winding up hearings today on the Norris Replanning bill, predicted his gional Senate Agriculture Subcommittee would approve the measure. The House Rivers and Harbors Committee will begin hearings Tesday on a rival bill of Chairman Mansfield Texas) and a companion to the Norris measure, introduced by Representative Rankin TAPPED WIRES O.K. "Vashington, July 7 (U.P)- memohas been sent to all Treasrandum Department law -enforcement ury agencies advisin; them that information obtained by tapping telewires admissible as eviphone dence. The memorandum cited a of Appeals decision Circuit authorized by the sender, but Court, interception of messages prohibiting unless not obtained expressly that way from admissibilforbidding information ity as evidence. BLACK TOM HEARING RENEW Washington, July 7 -The German -American gathered mixed today to claims consider commission the financial problems arising from Kingsland Block Tom, the destructive fires and explosions at than 20 year: ago.

ProsN. more of a quick settlement of the pects were dimmed three German officials here long controversy months ago. then that the Reich Govdisclosed had decided not to ratify a ernment tenthtive agreement to pay 000. STORY OF CONSTITUTION Washington, July 7 (U.P)-A bill to of Congress 2,500 give every memb a little book entitled free copies Story of the Constitution" was the Senate today bearing sent to approval. The cardboardhouse jacketed book, edited by is Represen- pubtative Sol Bloom United States lished by the Sesquicentennial Commission, tution which Bloom heads.

National LEAPS TO HER DEATH Louisville, July 7 (P)-Miss Joan Jacobs, 27, attractive brunette daughter of a wealthy and only plunged to death from the family, of a hotel here early ninth story said she left a note today. Police her room stating: "I have comin suicide. Don't blame any mitted one. Joan." GAUGES METEOR SPEED Cambridge, July 7 (A)- Successful use of a a "meteor speedometer" to, measure velocity of shooting stars was announced today by Harvard University. The "speedometer" -two telescope cameras set 24 miles apart and trained at the in space, 50 miles above same point the earth's surface--was perfected, the announcement said, by Dr.

Fred L. Whipple of the University's observatory staff. WATCHMAN GETS $650.000 Laporte, July 7 (P)-Leo Nichols, 48, a factory night watchtold today of receiving word man, from Los Angeles of an inheritance of $650,000 from the estate of his uncle, Joseph Daniels. Nichgreat ols said his uncle joined the gold rush and became wealthy. Burton Fitts, Los Angeles attorney, sent the notification of his inheritance, Michols said.

Nichols has a wife and daughter. POSTURE AND STERILITY Chicago, July 7 (A--The American Osteopathic Association was told today habitually poor posture may cause sterility in both men and women. "Reason for this," said Dr. W. F.

Rossman, Grove City, in an address to the association's annual convention, "lies in the fact that a body in faulty mechanical adjustment cannot function normally because vital nerve and blood channels are partially obstructed. GLIDES 132 MILES Elmira, N. July 7 (P)-A German pilot closed in today on Richard C. Dupont's listed American record for long-distance soaring. Peter Riedel, the German, who leads all entrants in the eighth annual national soaring contest being held here, yesterday piloted his motorless plane on a 132-mile flight Tideoute, not far from Warren.

Dupont, whose best effort thus far during the competition has been a 105-mile jaunt to Pulaski, N. holds the accepted American mark at 158 miles. SEEK CLUE WITH RAYS Cleveland, July 7 -Deputy Police Inspector David L. Cowles said today that ultra- -violet rays may give police their first real clue to Cleveland's torso slayer, whose tenth victim was discovered yesterday. The beheaded and surgically dissected body of a sturdily built man was discovered in the Cuyahoga River.

Deputy Inspector Cowles said he hoped fingerprints might be detected with ultra-violet rays. ANNOUNCEMENTS Lost and Found 10 BANKBOOK-Lost: No. 481077. Williamsburgh Savings Bank. Claims thereon tinguished unless presented before July 17, when superseding pass book issues.

BRACELET Lost: platinum diamond: Monday; bus, Far Rockaway-Sheepshead Bay; reward. Habas, TRiangle 5-9060. DOG -Lost; Spitz, white female, name liberal reward. 1824 Quentin Road. DEwey 9-7856.

DOG -Lost; small a white Spitz. male, age 10. Reward. 422 Crown St. Popper, SLocum 6-3494.

KEY FOLDER -Lost: leather. Finder please return to superintendent, 1809 Albemarle Road. WALLET Lost; tan leather, Tuesday, containing money; also Flatbush Savings Bankbook; reward. ESplanade 5-5716. WRISTWATCH gold; on Miller Ave.

between Jamaica Ave. and Highland Boulevard; A graduation gift; reward. Mrs. Savio, 213 Highland Boulevard. ANNOUNCEMENTS accepted until 10 P.M.

for publication the following day or from 8 A.M. to 1 P.M. (11 A.M. on Saturdays) for publication available edition of the same day's paper. MAin 4-6000 Lays Slugging To Ford Aides In Plant Riot Union Man Tells Board He Was Kicked Down Stairs by Ten Men Continued From Page 1 mobile Workers' organizers went to the Ford Motor Company's born plant May 26 to distribute union literature.

Reuther, president of the U. A. W. A. 'Vest Side local, was the first union member to tell his story of the riot before a aNtional Labor Relations Board hearing on a complaint charging the Ford Company with unfair labor practices.

Reuther testified he climbed a highway overpass leading to the plant entrance with Richard T. Frankensteen, U. A. W. A.

organizational director. Independent Union Barred Detroit, July 7 (U.P.)-The Board today refused to permit the Ford Brotherhood of America, to intervene in the hearings. John T. Lindsay, presiding at the hearing, rejected the petition of the independent union which had sought not only the right participate in the hearing, but to represent all Ford workers in Detroit in collective, hours bargaining. before the second day of the Labor Board hearing got under way, the United Automobile Workers Union canceled a projected march upon the vast Ford River Rouge plant to distribute copies of the union's newspaper to Ford workers.

Telegram Warns of Riot The march was called off when Frankensteen said he had received an unsigned telegram that a riot would occur when the union delegation arrived at the plant. The telegram said Ford service men had been told to start the riot, and then blame the union. Washington, July 7 (U.P.) -Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins has been asked to call a conference of Governors of the seven States offected by the steel strike, it was learned today. Steel Union Sees Terrorism Cleveland, July 7 -Republic Steel Corporation plants hummed protection of National Guard bayowith activity here today under the nets as Lee Pressman, general counsel for C. I.

O. steel strikers, charged that "a state of brutal terrorism" prevails on the Ohio strike front. Republic claimed 3.087 out of 5,000 normally employed steel workers responded yesterday at the reopening of the Corrigan McKinney plant, Upson Nut Bolt Division and the Truscon works. Republic's Steel Tubes, is scheduled to reopen tomorrow. Quiz Actress In Burglaries Continued From Page 1 counties.

When the police had passed by the man would dash into a house, grab what he could and make a quick get-away in the auto. The District Attorney refused to reveal the names of the seven suspects. Sroczwnski, accused in two second-degree burglary counts, was arrested as he was about to buy a steamship ticket for Poland. The indictments charge him with burglaries in the homes of Albert L. Nelson of 623 Park Munsey Park, on April 1, when $40 was taken and Mrs.

Rudolph Kopf of 252-20 Lakeville Road, Little Neck, on May 21, when $32 was stolen. Trapped by Fingerprints Sroczwnski is suspected of having been responsible for at least 70 Nassau "phantom burglaries," since Feb. 3, police say. According the police he admitted came to New York for several mnnths each year and robber homes in communities adjacent to the city, and spent the rest of the year as a gentleman farmer in Poland. Sroczwnski was trapped through incomplete fingerprints left on articles in the Nelson and Kopf burglaries, according to the police.

Detective Henry Ohland the Nassau identification division, was credited with "breaking" the case. important approach to the proposed Hamilton tunnel. The map indicates the new street will pass through Carroll Park. The street would not interfere with the playground activities, but would reduce the area of the park. For this reason the Borough President has indicated the layout of a park extension in the block bounded by 1st Place, Smith, Carroll and Court Sts.

The map also makes provision for the closing of a part of Carroll St. between Smith and Court Sts. CONCEALED $1085 Lost 119 Like a soft and flexible baby shoe because of its moccasin effect, tifully designed openings and its lost -so constructed that it holds the heel firmly in position and balances the weight of the foot. In blue, Argentine tan, black calfskin or in genuine white buck Many styles also in white kid at $8 85 and higher THE COWARD SHOE State Bldg. 270 Greenwich St.

37 W. 47th St. Fulton Hoyt, Bklyn. Open Thursdays till 9 M. 1 Al stores open all day Saturday Wagner Sees F.

D. Denies Political Talk Washington, July 7 (U.P) -Senator Robert F. Wagner after a conference today President Roosevet, said: "We taked about housing--that's my story and I'm sticking to it." Wagner was asked "to take an oath that you didn't talk tabout the New York City Democratic Mayoralty race." Wagner said the President agreed to help him get his -cost housing bill out of committee and before the Sena for a vote. Political Drive Laid to Hughes In Court Fight 'Real Master of Tactics Behind Guffey Says in Senate Debate Continued From Page 1 Guffey said, opening the second day of debate on the bill. "And when the Chief Justice of the United States persists in campaigning politically against the Administration's reorganization program, I intend to place that fact the record.

Logan Ky.) told the Senate that opponents of the Administration, were President using the Roosevelt, issue the to Associated Press reported. He attacked the spirit of the Judiciary Committee report, saying there had been nothing in the proceedings of the committee, indicating that the report be a "violent document" attacking the President. "If the statements in that report are Logan said, "if they are established, the President ought to be impeached and removed. And yet we are told there was no charge against the President in the Hughes, he said, is "the real master of tactics behind the scenes." Two More Votes for Bill Washington, July 7 -The Administration two more votes for the Substitute Court bill just. before the Senate began its second session of hard-hitting debate Statements of support by Senators Lee and Chavez (D.

N. gave advocates of the measure the edge among publicly committed members for the first time. This lineup resulted: 38 Senators openly favor the bill. 37 publicly oppose it. 21 still are non -committal.

The two acquisitions, bringing to fiv the number of converts since a compromise proposal was offered last week, heartened administration chieftains. They asserted they had sufficient votes to pass the newly substituted bill. 2 Parkers May Be Tried Here Continued From Page 1 the New Jersey detective and his son would depend upon the outcome of their pending appeal from their recent conviction and sentence in New Jersey. The elder Parker was sentenced last Wednesday to six years in priso and his son to three years. Asked if the department had made definite plans to prosecute the Parkers in New York, Cummings said: "We have thought of, and informally discussed, such action but no conclusion will be reached until we have ascertained exactly what has happened in connection with the Parkers' appeal." Cummings indicated that if proceedings were launched in Brooklyn the charges would differ slightly from those under which the Parkers were convicted.

In New Jersey the father and son were charged with conspiring to kidnap Wendell but Colorado Near Scene to Join Earhart Hunt Three Planes Set to Fly From Warship's DeckNew Signals Are Heard Continued from Page 1 flight, came reporte that new distress signals had been heard-signals indicating that the flier was trying desperately to guide rescuers to her position. The signals were faint. Five radio stations also reported hearing carriers signals sent on Miss Earhart's wave length today. They said the signals were "rippling" and sounded as if powered by a motor generator instead of by direct current. Cutter Gets New Bearings The signals were heard by two stations here, two in Los Angeles and one at Whittier, Cal.

The Coast Guard cutter Itasca, which had been surveying the area around Howland Island since Saturday in the hope of finding some trace of the $80,000 Flying Laboratory, reported to headquarters that new directional bearings had been obtained. Coast Guard at San Francisco said it had been checking with the cutter Itasca throughout the day but had no news of the missing flier and her navigator, the Associated Press reported. Walter McMenamy and Carl Pierson, Los Angeles amateur operators who have eight receiving sets operating, said they had heard nothing on the Earhart wavelength throughout the night and doubted if other amateurs had picked up anything because ail operators had been requested to notify them of any These bearings indicated that Miss Earhart had been flashing SOS signals from a line running south southeast or north northwest of the Island. Coast Guardsmen said this line coincided with the last position report broadcast by the flier before she and Noonan disappeared in the vast expanse of the world's largest ocean. Search Turns Southward There was no positive assurance the signals were sent by Miss Earhart, but they came on the 3105 kilocycle wave band assigned to her plane.

Previous signals came on the same line but those in charge of the search then believed that they indicated Miss Earhart and Noonan were down in an area about 281 a miles north and west of Howland Island. That section was searched for nearly 24 hours, however, by three ships. Now the search has been turned southward. As the cutter Itasca left the area northwest of Howland Island the British freighter Moorby, which had aided in the search, resumed its course for Honolulu. A Navy minesweeper presumably still was cruising to the north of the island.

Transfer of the search to the area south of Howland Island cheered Ed George Palmer Putnam, husband of Miss Earhart, who in messages from San Francisco had urged such a course. Putnam is convinced that Miss Earhart and Noonan landed short of their goal, rather than beyond it. He believes strong headwinds threw them slightly off their course and used up so much fuel that an emergency landing was necessary. not charged with transporting Wendell across State lines. Federal Attorney Leo J.

Hickey said today that other Federal aspects of the Parker case had been discussed with the New Jersey Federal prosecutor and with Assistant Attorney General Brian McMahon, but no course of action had been determined. Porter picks money out of thin air Sitting beside the open window of his hotel room on the thirteenth floor, a man was counting his cash on hand. Suddenly a gust of air whisked a banknote out the window. The man reached for his room telephone and called the operator. She in turn called the ground-floor baggage room and a porter ran to the street.

The fluttering bill fell into his outstretched hands. An extreme example of the way the telephone saves money, perhaps. But every day more and more people are turning to the telephone--from the housewife's call to take advantage of a store's advertised special, to the salesman's call to beat a competitor to an order. It pays to "reach for your telephone before you reach for your hat." New York Telephone Company. Causes Graphologist's Battle Chart Federal Judge Clarence G.

Galston had to settle a graphological problem today. Attorneys for A. Dolph Dean, graphologist, asked for an injunction to restrain Mildred Arnold of 2890 W. 21st St. from distributing certain graphological charts in connection with her handwriting-character reading in front of the Irving Baths, Coney Island, on the ground that they were like the copyrighted Dean charts.

Tut tut, argued her attorney, Edward S. Higgins, the charts used ordinary English adjectives like prudent, artistic, modest and able, and you can't copyright the dictionary. The judge reserved decision. Police to Attend Brockmann Rites North Bellmore, July 7-A group of Nassau County policemen will act as an honor guard at funeral services for Patrolman Walter Brockmann of Powell who died at the Meadowbrook Hospital, East Hempstead, Sunuay, following a brief illness. The Rev.

Paul Strenge of Grace Lutheran Church here will officate at services tonight in the home, and the Bellmore Post. American Legion, will conduct ritual. Patrolman Brockmann was a former commander of the post. Burial will be in Creenfield Cemetery tomorrow morning. Members of the honor squad, all from the 1st Precinct, to which Patrolman Brockmann belonged, are: Sgt.

Hjalmar Stewart and Patrolman Lamont Carman, Leroy Drake. Robert Dryden, Edward Eustace, Jack Jones, Winfred Lewis and Martin McCauley. Mrs. Otto Reiner Mrs. Wilhelmine Muller Reiner, wife of Otto Reiner, died Monday at the family Summer home, Crystal Brook, Port Jefferson.

She was a life resident of Brooklyn, as were her father and mother, the late Hermann A. and Marie Muller. Her home on the Heights was at 2 Montague Terrace. Mrs. Reiner was formerly active in social and charitable circles.

She was a member of the German Evangelical Church in Schermerhorn St. Her husband is a businessman in downtown Manhattan. She is survived by a daughter, Frieda; two sons, Herbert and Waldo Reiner, and brothers, Herman A. E. Muller of Brattleboro, and Herbert Muller of Lancaster, Pa.

The funeral will be held at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow Lefferts Place, with burial in Greenwood Cemetery. Senator Wagner Is Out Of Race for Mayoralty Berlin, July 7 (AP)-The chief of the secret police, Heinrch Himmler, today ordered dissolution of the B'nai Brith Lodge, its affiliated societies ani similarly organized Jewish charitable institutions. The ban was based on the law for protection of the people and the State. A majority of the B'nai Brith leaders were detained two days by secret police in April.

JAPANESE STUDENTS STRIKE Foreign DISSOLVES B'NAI BRITH Kyoto, Japan, July (P)--More than 300 students of Doshisha University, most important seat of Christian learning in Japan, were imprisoned today in the Universi.y chapel by student strike agitators. Gendarmes came to the assistance of the faculty but failed to open the chapel doors. It was feared military authorities might be required to take a hand. RUSSIA FILES PROTEST Moscow, July 7 -Russia has protested to Japan against "new, provocative Japanese Manchukuan attacks" along the Amur River in the Far East, it announced today. The protest the result of was a series of fights Monday.

Soldiers were killed and wounded on both sides, it was said. Russian and Japanese diplomatic circles predicated that the new incidents would not lead to any serious consequences. U. S. DANCERS SAIL Paris July 7 -eight girl dancers from New York's Radio City Hall entrained for Le Havre today after playing a one-night stand at the Paris Exposition.

They sail for the United States tonight aboard liner Normandie. Fellow passengers include Walter Damrosch, musical director, and the film actresses, Simone Simon and Anna May Wong. PLANS ECONOMIC PARLEY London, July 7 (U.P.) -The Daily Express reported today that Premier Paul Van Zeeland soon would take the initiative in calling a world economic conference. The conference, the newspaper suggested, would be merely to confirm what governments would have agreed on in advance, that a repetition of the failure of so the 1933 World Economic Conference could be avoided. PARIS WAITERS STRIKE Paris, July 7 (A)-The Paris Cafe Workers Syndicate ordered waiters on the Champs, Elysees back to their tables half strike, half lockcut had tied up principal cafes for several hours today.

Police guarded sidewalk establishments during the brief impasse. Chairs were stacked high on the streets. The police had little to however, except to explain to tourists why they could not buy food and drink at the Rondpoint, Marignan and Coliseee Personalities CHALLENGE TO ROOSEVELT Washington, July 7 (AP)-Michigan's 18-year-old cherry queen was ready today to challenge President Roosevelt's prowess with a fishing hook and line to lure him into this month. Miss Eliene Michigan, chosen queen of Michigan's cherry belt, is determined to have Mr. Roosevelt visit Michigan.

"I've heard about these fish the President caught," Miss Lyon said. "I'll bet some weren't fit to eat. If he'll come to Grand Traverse Bay and try for Mackinac Island trout where I fish, I'll believe him." Oddities EGGS THWART ROBBERS Boston, July 7 (U.P)-A dozen eggs. thrown by Earl Shea, 35. Dorchester chicken farmer, foiled a would-be robber in a stolen car.

Shea said the man attempted to drive off last night without turning over a $5 bill for which Shea had given five ones in change. The man dropped the bill when Shea pelted him with eggs. Alligator Vs. Caddies Tuscaloosa, July 7 (P)- Owner John Williams of the Meadowbrook golf course thinks he has stopped caddies from recovering balls from the fourth hole water hazard and selling them back to their rightful owners. He installed a five-foot alligator in the pond.

New Street Asked To Red Hook Area Would Start at Atlantic Ave. and Smith St. and Run to Hamilton Ave. Borough President Ingersoll today transmitted to the Board of Estimate for approval a map showing the laying out of a new street, to cost about $2,500,000, running southerly from Atlantic Ave. at Smith St.

to Hamilton Ave. and generally parallel to Smith St. on west side. In discussing the map, the Borough President called attention to the widening and improvement of Jay St. from Nassau St.

to Fulton St. and of Smith St. from Fulton St. to Atlantic recently completed. He pointed out that this improvement has greatly relieved traffic on Flatbush Ave.

Extension from the Manhattan Bridge southerly. He feels, however, that something more is needed. It has been found that a great part of the traffic, diverted from Flatbush Ave. Extension to Jay and Smith Sts. is inclined to follow Atlantic Ave.

easterly to Flatbush Ave. at the Long Island Railroad station, which is the most congested corner in all' Brooklyn. The new street. designated as Red Hook will have a width of 80 feet from house line to house line and a roadway width of 56 feet. It is believed that with the aid of the Police Department parking can be prevented and that with a suitable lighting system traffic should move speedily from Atlantic Ave.

to Hamilton Ave. and thence to Red Hook and South Brooklyn. It will be particular service to the South Brooklyn waterfront and an curing millions in WPA appropriations for New York ity projects. Davidson Announces Refusal Maurice P. Davidson, former Commissioner of the Department of Water, Gas and Electricity, at a luncheon of Progressive City Committee in the Town Hall Club, 123 W.

43d Manhattan, declared he was confident Wagner would not be a candidate. Mayor LaGuardia will receive what virtually amounts to a redesignation by acclamation at the Summer City Hall tomorrow by Republican, Fusion and Progressive City Committee groups. Another important development today was the likelihood that the American Labor party would speed up its machinery to nominate Mayor LaGuardia fully a month earlier than originally intended if Senator F. Wagner becomes the Democratic organization designee for Mayor. Plan to Fight Wagner Continued From Page 1 The Eagle learned today that Labor party leaders feel they will have to wage an intensive anti-Tammany campaign if Wagner becomes the Mayor's opponent and are ready to rearrange their convention schedule, which called for Mayoralty nomination in September, in order to make inroads on the labor following Wagner now has.

Busloads of Fusionists from Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx will roll' to College Point to clap hands when Thomas D. Thacher, who headed the Charter Revision Commission, and other prominent Republicans ask the Mayor to run again. Maurice P. Davidson, chairman of the Progressive City Committee. said members of his group also would be spectators.

To Let G. O. P. Run Show Fusion leaders and Davidson want it understood, though, that they have no intentions of crashing the Republican show. The only Fusionists and Progressives who will be part of delegation to call formally on the Mayor are those who happen also to be enrolled Republicans.

The others will just be a cheering squad. The main purpose of the call by the G. O. P. delegation is to impress organization Republican leaders, who have for the most part been cool toward the Mayor, with the fact that there is substantial Republican sentiment in favor of having the Mayor head the party ticket.

The pro-LaGuardia Republicans don't want to leave door open to charges by the Mayor's foes that they are the delegation with non -Republican "ringers." The Brooklyn Young Republican Club will meet tonight in the Bossert and lineup a rock-ribbed G. O. P. delegation from this borough for tomorrow's wooing of the Mayor. Mayor's Sees 1933 Aides The Mayor conferred yesteraay with, successively, former United States Attorney Charles H.

Tuttle, one time Republican Gupernatorial nominee; former Controller Joseph D. McGoldrick, Tenement House Commissioner Langdon W. Post, who headed the Knickerbocker Democrats in revolt against Tammany Hall; James Finegan, president of the Municipal Civil Service Commission and 1933 Kings County Fusion leader, and Civil Service Commissioner Paul Kern. It was noted after the series of conferences and when the Mayor left the Summer City Hall he was in a very chipper mood. He rolled away toward his Summer home in Northport in his official car at 5:30 p.m.

with a cheery "good night, fellows" to the reporters who had gathered on the portico of the old Chisholm Mansion to see him off. Peter Frank Peter Frank, born in Brooklyn 49 years ago and a lifelong resident, died after a brief illness in his home, 371 Barbey St. He was 8 stationary engineer and had retired from the Department of Hospitals. During the war Mr. Frank served in the U.

S. Navy. He was a member of Long Island Council 197, K. of Argonne Post, V. F.

and the Holy Name Society of St. Michael's R. C. Church where a requiem mass will be celebrated tomorrow morning. Surviving are his widow, Mrs.

Louise Frank; two sons, Peter and Richard; a daughter; his mother, Mrs. Ernestine Frank; a sister, Anna, and four brothers, John. William, Fred and Joseph. Interment will be in Holy Trinity Cemetery. Nicholas Garrity Nicholas Garrity.

Brooklyn-born, employed for many years on steamship piers, died at his home, 534 45th St. He was 52. He was the husband of the late Mrs. Mary Baudier Garrity and the father of Thomas, Nicholas, Mrs. William Macbeth, Mrs.

Edward Swenarski, Mrs. Joseph Daley and Mrs. William Hanna, and brother of John Garrity. Requiem mass will be celebrated tomorrow at St. Michael's Church, 4th Ave.

and 42d St. Other Obituary News on Pages 13, 15 NO MONEY DOWN YEARS at 30 Davega Stores TO PAY FR FRIGIDAIRE Fastest Freezing Frigidaire Ever Made INSTANT ICE See it in CUBE Action! RELEASE The Money You Save on Ice Will Pay for a New Frigidaire! A DAY PAYS FOR IT MODEL 437 4.1 CUBIC FEET SQUARE FEET 139.50 MODEL D-337 6.8 8.1 CUBIC SQUARE FEET 114.50 FEET Proof is Small the Illustrated Master Carrying Model Charge for 139.50 Credit OF ICE- GREATER -ABILITY DAVEGA STORAGE ABILITY BROOKLYN. .417 FULTON ST. (BOROUGH) PROTECT ABILITY .924 FLATBUSH AVENUE BROOKLYN. 1304 KINGS HIGHWAY DEPEND- -ABILITY RIDGE.

5108 FIFTH AVENUE BENSONHURST. .2085 86TH STREET SAVE -ABILITY BROWNSVILLE. 1703 PITKIN AVENUE JAMAICA. 163-24 JAMAICA AVENUE ASTORIA 278 STEINWAY AVENUE FLUSHING. 43 MAIN STREET YEAR ALL STORES OPEN EVENINGS MAIL COUPON TO DAVEGA, 76 NINTH N.

Y. C. PROTECTION FRIGIDAIRE Gentlemen: BOOK Without and the obligation. Economy send Chart tne which your computes colorfully the illustrated saving made possible by Frigidaire. Name against service expense on the sealed-in units.

Address If you prefer, telephone CHelsen 3-5255 (after 5:30 CHelsea 3-5220) B.E.7:7.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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