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

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

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
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Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN EAGLE, TVCS SEPT. 4, 1945 3 LABOR TO PRESS 1 MAi7 THREE VIOLENT DEATHS LISTED OVER WEEKEND CONGRESS FIGHT FOR JOBS BILL Washington. Sept. 4 labor regards the Congressional session opening tomorrow as th most fateful in history for American wage earners. Union leaders and their legisla five representatives disclosed today that they are preparing the strong-jest possible campaigns in support lof legislation to aid workers and veteran In tht reconversion period 'and bring the nation into an era of full employment and prosperity.

Labor spokesmen said frankly Congressmen who oppose la-jbor's program will be earmarked for political retirement at next vear'a elections. i The F. C. T. railway 'brotherhoods and United Mine Workers were unanimous in their Three persons met violent deaths from gunshot wounds and stabbing oer the Labor Day weekend.

Vincent Comando. 29. of 534 Driggs, Ae. died at Greenpoint Hospital a short time alter being taken there with wounds inflicted during an ar-gumei with his wile. Steftie, 26.

Mrs Comando told Detective Rob-i 1 1 Perrill o' the Bedford Avenue station hat her husband had accused, her uf being unfaithful as she was I Mi'iiiK with two friends In a bar and null on Bedford Ave. between 7(h and N. 8th Sts. An altercation wu melted at the bar. but when she; home.

Mrs Comando said, the; quarreling resumed. Warned Her Husband The woman told detectives she warned her husband that unless he; desisted she woldu stab him. Ac- lording to her story Comando then snici: iio ahead; I dare you." Mis. Conumm said she then plunged a knite into her husband's chest. The woman is the mother of two chiklien.

Vincent 7, and Steftie. 5. Joseph Salsberg, 52, of 2312 64th St. died lit Israel Zion Hospital from gunshots in I he abdomen inflicted Saturday night bv one of two men who attempted, unsuccessfully, to hold htm up in his fruit and vegetable store. CONGRESS FACES BATTLE OVER POSTWAR ISSUES Washington, Sept 4 'Um Congress meet tomorrow in emergency eev-ion deal and International problems ranging from' repeal ot Feocral ar time to dLs-, position of our atomic bomb The overall challenge to Congress Is the cutting of pattern for sion and our postwar economy.i War time ill to farm State President Truman has; promL-ed to make suggestions' in a message soon abon: the futuie of atomic secrets Both houses will meet at noon to-: morrow, their protected two months vacation having been cut half Wliep.

Japan unexpectedly bowed out' ol the war. Neither Houe will any biiMiie.ss belore Monday. Tiie Senate will anioum immediately until Thursday out ol re-spec! to the memory ol the late Senator Hiram W. Johnson iR C.al.'. He oied curing the ifcrss There no business ready fur the Senate floor.

House commii tec- are ready with hills for tiie disposal of surplus proper. and surplus ships but the leadetship will not attempt to legislate until moie members are present than are likPlv to be in Wellington du: ir.g the remainder c( this week. The political tfne of suits which prevailed during the war will end with a hang a. Congress meets again. So.

probably, will the political honeymoon enjoyed by President Truman since lie succeeded the late Franklin Delano Rooj-eveli on Apnl 12. Mr. Truman's five-point program, submitted before the recess is head-i lng mto trouble. He called for more; adequate unemployment compeiisa-' ATOM-IZED The once thriving industrial city of Nagasaki, target tor the secona atom support oi iuii imm D.i i i i A and lnrreased unemployment com- bombing on Aug. V.

mis sequence token IU minutes oparr snorny oner me uumu nUU dropped, shows the terrific force of bomb-burst. "The city was transformed into a mass of debris, final evidence of America's strength which brought Jap warlords to their knees. pensation. In this ther were joined by Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwel-lenback.

All of the labor groups are opposed to the passage of the Ball-Burton-Hatch bill to create a Federal Industrial Relations Board with compulsory arbitration powers. The A. F. L. and C.

I. O. havo detailed legislative programs covering almost every pending bill. They agree that the principle measure for enactment are those covering full employment, Increased unemployment compensation, broader social security, postwar housing, higher minimum wages, publio works and tax revision. Atlantic Hiroshima Havoc From A-Bomb Tops Thai of Any City told police that the men Bv JAMES F.

ly JAMES F. MrGMNCY Hiroshimo. Sept. 3 i Delayed! (U.P lelt aftter taking $10 He pursued .1 1 v. 0 -Hiroshima Ls all the ruined cities all tl' up: put sedan spvead out, LONG AND SHORT OF IT Two Brooklyn buddies nick-ncuj-ied Mutt and Jeff by soldiers aboard the hospital ship are Pvt.

Anthony Panico of 2178 Atlantic Ave. Metti and Pfc. FrtJ Mulafronte of 1434 Greene Ave. On St a ten Island. Lester 25.

attached to the Fox Hills army contonnient in Stapleton. was fatallv shot when a revolver he was Yet only one bomb did it a single atomic bomb dropped bv an American Superfortress on Aug. 6, the first atomic bomb to be loosed on a carrying arciueiuaiiy -ns- ilostjie anj, icharged. w. drove into the center nf what According to police, Gray had held gg0 was a up a guard at one of the gates jt the army camp and two military every direction found nothing but policemen and robbed each of his' milpt.

rnin lion, for a "lull employment" mitment. bv the Federal Govern- moot, lor all-out reorganization of the part ol the Gov-ernment, lor new surplus property Eisenhower Seen As Successor lo General Marshall By MEKK1MAN SMITH Beldock to Name New Aides Today District Attorney George J. Bel-dock is expected today to appoint several new assistants and rieputlea to serve in his Republican administration of the prosecutor's office. Mr. Beldock wound up dismissals in former Prosecutor William O'Dwyer's staff last week.

He is, however, continuing his investigation into a missing file of homicide, cases from a locked drawer and biding his time until a special grand Jury to Investigate the Dwyer administration of the office goes into action. revolver. He was carrying the three By Aug 20 UlP Japanese had mins and his ow when one. stuck Counted 33,000 dead among those lnf of nw tl0llrs ruins. The (otal reached 53.000 last discharged Saturday and more are still dving He was found oead by Sgt.

George dav hrmitaU around Hirn- legislation and for continuance of some of the functions ol rmergenoj war agencies. It is up to the Democratic House i K.H-hman and Patrolman Robert shima Thilty thousand persons are Washington. Sept. 4 (UP' Willi Burns ot die m. ueoige station iu.ml.vjnKi No one knows how many and Senate leadership, meantime, to head otf any opposition move to proclaim the end of hostilities bv world hostilities over, Gen.

Uwight tl" driveway of a private house wounded. U. Eisenhower ws being Osgood Ae. Police had been yfar Many A(, Doomed turned lodav as a likely replacement summoned by a man who had seen) jaianese doctors fear thai every- lor Gen. George U.

Marshall as the wounded soldier staggering 1 one wounded, no matter how slight Armv Chief of Staff. through a vacant lot toward thr ms is doomed. They say Marshall has long sin.e served aarf-ss out the noimal teiui of an Armv BIT V. S. WAR BONDS AND SAVINGS STAMPS Chief of Staff.

President Truman. 1 the death toll ultimately may exceed half of Hiroshima's pre-war population. The doctors teil how the wounded 's hair drops out gums bleed, their kidneys refuse to function, how the number of their white blood corpuscles are found to total only one- following his pulley oi selecting World War II veterans lor Gov Lehman Urges 450 Million Grant ernment positions atTectitn' military pohc. is to pick Kisenhower as Mai'shail's successor Other tup braekets of the armed forces and the Cabinet which will see changes the Presi For Aid to Italy Congressional action. S.icli a proclamation would start ticking off the 60-day period at the end of which the various war powers including price controls would Pressing some of Mr.

Truman's proposals for Congressional attention and supiwrt are other some of them of equal or greater political or economic significance. There is rising in both houses a demand for more information on Pearl Harbor. If the War and Navy Departments fail to proceed with courts-martial to bring out more information it is likely that Congress will order us own investiga-t ion. Heavy Cream Due Back Tomorrow jsewnth what they should, how they grow weaker and weaker, and how i they finally die. We cannot check on the accuracy geneiai of the doctors' testimony just vet.

OKAY, OKAY, if you gals feel you haven't got a chance against those Brooklyn beauties I'll just have to bar them. dent in toin.iin i Plans for a Trans were among But we can eonlirm at- rrcl relief piogiam for Italy to be un una duel ot Nhh1 Open; U)i K. i i i. dei a Ken bv the turned Nations Re Now hem Ijv Am Kniest lr, hei and Reuabi nation Administra King. This post will probably go counts of the terrible destruction tlia! manV of them s0011 als0! prisoners of war in Japanese camps wrought bv that lone bomb a month be among the dead are jaVa.

ago next Thursday. unable to romprehend the disaster T1P broadcast said most prisoners ti t. .1,.. 1 1 I Sit PIKJ'O OPERATION SUCCESSFUL Gunner's Mote Harold E. Fowler of Dublin, who was transported In mid-ocean from the Louisa M.

Alcott to the Jarrett M. Huddleston for an appendix operation, He is now in the Brooklyn Naval Hospital. ai I ov ioi mer uov. ueroeii it is almost inaescriDable No one uicini-nnni m-riu. fip nn uiu iaiii ujnsaiiii iuu Hal lllla llan' I.ehiutin.'tJNKRA's dnectcu- geinual in the United States c.mld conceive Oig Through Rubble Bandoeng.

Fisures were provided who foresees the relief organization; or ever know that it is like unless, The poked through the piles of by the Japanese. Commander of the Army Air exhausting it funds bv the enii he has seen it, or unless God for-! stone and wood that, once were their The prisoner included 3.98R Dutch. Forces now held by Gen. H. H.

(lM fa'r. To carry out plans foi.bld! an atomic bomb some day 'homes. They knew they had little 1,259 British, 366 Australians and Arnold, win) has been in ill health 0 jiiy and to continue the falls on America. chance of finding anything salvag- scattered numbers of other nalion- dunng recent war months. T.

treatlv expanded program of -iwh (,. I able, but somehow these piles ol alitics. 1'poch of Deslruelion' iogiea. successors ate Gen. Carl A iivrra a uiant of $2,000,000,000 in; 'rubble Ture.senied a link with the The trip through the suburbs 50 ANN I.V ARY YEAR PILGRIM LAUNDRY 1 102 l'ropect Avenue Brooklyn 18 -SOuIn 6-4567 i Veit HempiteaJ, I.

Garden Citj 80fil -j Spaaiz or Lt. Gen. Iia C. F.akeiv i the shoc of The War Production Board has1 really whipped something up this time Heavy (ream, the kind that used to float on the top of your colfer 1 total deva astatinn awaiting us in the ri i io 1 1 nriin i. in.

i iiimj.i. i.s irt 10 i ii uils miiii unr past and with sanity. 1 LIK6 crayon fn their eyes when we pawed was Drawinq by Nazi PW all the hale that it is pas- sible for a human lo muster. MemphU.Trnn. German Our guide was a young Japanese fJ yr proved a craj-on center of the city.

veais old anrt is. knnu tn rtt-tv I1MPRA rnniwil has rprftm mpndMl There were bombed and btirned- A II I'OflroiiiAnl II, o.ia or, r.f tlit. wav oacK in ir.e good oirj days isis ana k. m. r.

men yr. out buiidmas in the shuri ir a 111 a 11 I in 1 II I. I 1111 I I lilt, i. Ill, in, Id lit DU I Ml I II 1942, will be released for deliver tomorrow. mi- i i u.j naval etuc iaiii wno was uorn 0H fflhAf.i weapon.

HewiPidPd the crayon with Cloy, present Assistant Secretary' non-invaded United Nations, ne niivi ininL iui Colongne and Mu- Sacramento, Cal. tricls in London, Due on Four Ships considerable venom to "slay" his of War Some sources rue agltat-isaid. Officials of the She: field Faim.t Company and the Borden Company! still lives there. His mother brought nich. W.

Hart Jr. of ing for the appointment of Gen. Mr. Lehman, who returned Friday i i.nsn' renrc ion Ben (ontinned from Page 1 Douglas MacArthur to this from a two-month inspection of the' 1 inU he had spent 12 years in the United 'Memphis. airl thev are ready to resume fulli deliveries.

The Granville Dairy of! Brnnklvn said there may be a Slight double In a recent letter to his parents Out. Mar Arthurs 1 i.n 1 rSC ra'Inf Hr.iiV in 'nifiiiw 11 inwir uinn St ales. just another bombed city. It is an In Memphis, Corporal Hart enclosed i celebration to the men net rank i. not held likely.

lis now in Washington urge Con- I asked him: "How do the people epoch of destruction. caricature of himself, drawn by aooarn tne nuoaieston, wno nsienea Secretary of N.uy Recunent to grant the $1,320,000,000 that Bv the end of the week, however, to broadcasts of the official Mir- rv.ei i ir The center of Hiroshima literally fpel abo1" 1)0 lhpy hal' I t-t ri ennor housewives mo id he ah. in net nrutar nt Iiimih 11 had been bombed flat Onlv a few 113 "From the looks of the carua'ure wui ifs 1 nere nas wen no 111- ot 71 iwreeni ot he tola reauesten enough wnip up a good prewar It was the first real vie ton1 party 'dH-at inn to -v, u. Diiuaings appear still up-1 ts still my enen.y. Corporal for Sgt.

Charles Ferraro Jr. of 522 his successor will be i I Ulee 7' fleht nnd.thosp little more than fJ 'Hart's letter said. e.u,,. i i ion.lC.fl iKnni Thew 1 hn.n.Jl uu. Itaiiaiiti.tiJjEblJiitiiWitlil'llllli.UiltillUliliilllMiilnniililUit-Ultilillilli.illiUtlr ABRAHAM if fu ni 'hold' on the outnd thestee, girders th a -nfirmauon men much to us.

because we were known to be willing to have Trke Her Oil Boardwalk Stroll te thp battlefields of 61 Yanks in Prison CamDS Tremaine to Head U. P. Tokyo Bureau Tokvo. Sept. 4 (URi Frank fUlION il.

91 HOYT eartnoiomew, united Press vice- he tne ser- remain iiu a. i vl "'it iii' uuiurji 111 ciri-'- president rharae of the PacUic gear: I said Icke.s ieei is i 1 Ry' ep 4 lrvln "rager, manS were left to bloat in the Sum- Ut Japanese On Java area, announced tne appointment ol The men who supported the 20th the Goierimient 'i'hm "i mX'r "dvertistng mer aim. London. Sept. 4 cjpi-The New I today that 61 Amer- name iremame as iokvo bureau Corps ol the 3u Armv in it? drive of mom hs lnt "vmg na Japanese doctors I Delhi radio said manager for the United Press today.

tn driei io race a iwo-eai- Mr 'T'rn ti. volume oi i lou-sti fjpoi l. is in no wav committed to Hisen-1 ihowee ti i -lira ser was strolling wtlh an cl me ouieau. oy tne japa- blacKcut lor a week after the an riese at the outbiealt ol tiie Pacifu 'iiouncement of peace. is, however, that! John Davitl Knout Brooklyn Men Brooklyn Men Know mm ii; r.iri..i guoo we maul are snow our lieaus Marsliaus normal term Chief ni.a.n- ai ii i.i.r i.

AII1UOW.S tear of 114, 1 1 1 14 t.iem blown oil; of SUIT ended tn tiie Fi li of m.i Koosevelt oiowo mi, -j iu-i. 1 ue iica irom Serjeant Ferraio. a se. tH.ri chief, and tiie Pi esident mutu, Jin. now.

or Kimiiru. coimnui 11,111 111 ollii mdeliniielv ur.iiairi ui. we giii ail tne tinie in tne wona to assure Uie FIND YOUR PERMANENT PEACETIME POSITION at AsS ui.interiuii'ed prose- tin c. uiiiiii.ut 111 wow-it 11 celeDralinu ctltlou o. he war.

Mr Tinman unidentified lady companion on the boardwalk at Plavland, Westchester County amusement renter, here, when he was seen by his wife, Mrs. Florence Schraeer of Norwalk, and their two small sons, asred four and six. Boih parties were enjoying a holiday online. Mrs. SchraKer, who said her husband left her two years aso, summoned Westchester County Parkway police, who arrested Schrager on a Is a.s not (iamaned badly (rite a meuical dischurae I10111 2R other ei'errm! X)int Elisen- 1,1, is 11 st" IWe IP Sllllinmo 1a Pertonol Notice 11 "i ,1 11 4m- Amun Hie other Brooklyn men inander.

wh.o led the wny to victory who look for discharge were Pfc. over Genua ny. ALLIGATOR 'STORMWIND" RAINCOATS Ml50 NOT HI? tiir dflu I win Rei.i Co.i.i.o ol -KT Pearl PU. it'iiiT Connecticut warrant. ilenw.ll Inumnv n' H'i Atl.ntl, I a mountain Plant bk ftsspris'stai Ftei Mala front of I4lt4 Greene Produces Gliders Font I WTII.

NO' incur: I House Group Shapes Bill iiiif tj'liet nan Br, v.e, oveiseas i iiionuis uearuorn Mich. A D. lit A.i patients on tne Hutklietor records sn by the Ford Motor Com-' Jfv' "uumM8 Ali.di lioi ked at hi. aieu pain 's Willow Run hnmiwr Washington. Sept.

4 (U.R1 The I Nut BK KKSPONSIWS lr dfbu 'l: .1 -pi 4 1' r'PSUKip ui O.ITV n.i'ii'minri. Isl.iiut Aete 'akeii i'j H.illutan (ien- also are bem mane bx its miwi. House Military Affairs Committee iipw iror: a prtfe cl.li H'j))lta! stMi dmi. or or- to -jt i pi one ho was troop-carryin! slider plant at worked on legislation io encourage ai Mason General Iron Mountain, Mich. recruiting of army volunteers today iiiu.

i-uuii pit.tl. F.le'.cn Gt and 413 This plant is tne l.irnest rlirlpr' as Representative Adnlph J. Sabath TK.arig 11.L NOT BK HKSrflVSIBl.l! lor Marines aboaid the AI- producer in the Uniied Stales anrii'D- III-), joined those calling for a whicn docked at Pier li, were already has sent out 4.000 CG-4A revision of the army's io Camp Kilmer. N. I.

t. pe gliders. At present eiuht sliders 1 lion program. rt p.i n-: nNn rr.y-.p.I B. S- lb Public Noticet -vi Pa-i'ie.

wiih oailv are being turned out. and are I The committee has Indicated a American soldiers and 777 heri from the Ford airport by willingness lo go along with the onswallv whenuled to d. C-47 A I planes. The tow olanes' ministration, at least for a while, in MOt'TOV I.AMB r-rifTS iipt im- d. mini- Pier Staten make two round daily Irom keeping the Selective Service law in ica a iat.G, i( llior C'H 4 4 .41 JH.TMAN HAIR tl timet, 'ft or I'l' i.o A mii' Iron Mountain lo Milwauk LB operation.

iv 34 Uf.m .14 if oil pond FA f0 -Arraign 4 Today rBn 'iiab, 3Uo Bri.BP 6..., 1 liigll1. i.p V.EI'IHT AS OF'JrLY; lfM. t5 In Nassau Probe -CVS' H1VIDEXD SPOI KEUDCTlrjN fin rl'M rlroif b'ha pxpirif, x-n or tr i. vin $1 SO trinj ind ouie Ir.1" rior.slp' OOKftF) INSrilUllON lit 4 'd NYC 8 1 r.rplioii Wlnon.n lias immediate openings permanent openings! for peacetime positions. If you're looking for a position that'a more than just a job a position with a real, gainful future, you can find one in the friendly, family atmosphere that has mlde Brooklyn's favorite store.

Those men and women who are qualified for selling and non-selling positions will find a complete listing in the classified advertising section under the proper classification headings. I There are full lime and pari lime positions open. Remember, too, that will train you with pay! before you actually. start working. Slop in for an interview today! IMPLOYMtNT OrFICI EIGHTH FLOOR, EAST Miii-ila fep- 4 -The veil of mys- rV is exnecied to be lifted todav 'lie tour defendants named ii IN'TEHPIS riNO o-fi i foi to'.

Hoj vptrr: FOB In 'ii a -f rhnrch nut) Niw two IndHtmeih handed down her bv a special gr.itid jury hist week iiiev are arraigned on charges lo Lost and Pound iirowir.g out; of alleged Bambhna- JlANKBOOK o-' V' ritO B-? rt. ri'n: ii 1 Aim iri'j'' bf uudf 'Tor refiniocing jout pment mortgage, or for prospective Home Bujrtv Write or call ffimt fuU partxylan ami learn book in N'lsfau Coiuity. A' tor ue James Gehrig, conducing the n.xes'.ga'ion. has Mn an" 'k oi ii' No 8SfQ. c.4im niu1 or nfw no' four be anauned in br niAOA tn'to BANKROOK pAv.r.i Hnr.

d.l irtl on lei XJuUra. It tiie (loiintv Court Here tmiay before Judite Henry J. A. Collins, IXXl L-w b.Ark lorkfr pnl; lm. unit mnrltiriin on tnrorti; don ho accepted tiie indirtrnents fol of TJIERIGHTMORTGAGE For XCUTORS OR TRUSTEES wishing to Jiquidate ihor ooi' jgt mvestments.

Consult us. FbUi Ftxtnfi 9-1800. CAUIMPC Akllf town Br.iokin child owner nr, r'broHen a 1 3-jour grand Jury session ALWAYS A C00D ASSORTMENT OF ALLIGATOR RAINCOATS $1150 to $31 'last riiiirwlav. Bencu warrants HBTTRir ADD tNO MACIIINK lJST'l rrxv.ahi) WAiKiNS wai pl-eVioiUx indie that the TJK cl asp l.o-t od with rtn n. inxeftigation was by no means i' Hair B'f: rwrd Box i '49 E.f pie'e and that other indictment might fol Ion- I irn-Kni ioiit- i 26 COURT STREET CORNER REMSEN Opn 9 a.m.

to p.m. t.mhtn r-jH-x-ii iiuii ftp rw( ch -Vh VGATtS AVT. BROADWAY, BROOKLYN N.Y. ha todav eir.fiain wi be gambiers. I tr'-'m cifrfj.

I cod rid if 'wit i. hi: 'iiritiuB'iMiivif iii.hi'i'.'y i.i liRtlier than officers, I ijfjili.lWMlr4J.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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