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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 46

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 46

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tin: nnooKiAN daily kac.ui slmxvy. it 1001. 70 omen's Uattor- 7ace Suits, jfso Coats of Siroadtai't 90 COSXECTIOK WITH AXY OTHER STORE Tlomcn's J'tir- i Coats, jfso Coats of Persian jCcimb. THE bIG STORE ACJTflTI ITSELF mm SIXTH AYE. COKKCCT DRESS I OR WOMEN.

NEW YORK Our Horse Show Display and 5pccial Values Continue Throughout Week. Itouble A lirccn TreJinf Stamp Moraines This Week from Till ii o'clock. Thereafter. Single Stamps I mil Closing Hour. ff 14 XL Tjftis Season Popular Stylti.

Fur-Lined Coats. Fur Lined Coat Headquarters. OLR COATS ARE MADE, shaped anj lined as fur lineJ coat shoulJ be. Two i lexer models, made in fine broadcloth, in blacks, tans, browns, j-2375 blues, hites, grays and reds. Handsomely squirrel lined.

JjJ.oo values Made, as illustrated, of good quality ft Broadcloth, in black, blue, brown cr p- twii v.irriii i rnuBivT om i smart fur mii.rc UrieA squirrel lining, made of best broadcloths, in blacks, reds, gras, browns, ''36. 50 tans and blues. Soo.oo values Tailor-Made Suits. Made, as illustrated, of excellent quality black, blue or brown, Lymansville Cheviot. The Coats are 26 inches long, handsomely trimmed with tailor stitched straps, made with fitted back, fly front, leg-o -mutton sleeves with cuffs, and are lined with heavy taffeta.

The Skirts are nine-gored style, trimmed with tailor stitched straps to rnrrpcnnnrl with mat: Evening Coats. wry i Hi red, 43 in. long, and lined throughout with German Squirrel; large shawl collar of Sable Raccoon or Persian Lamb; loose back, double-breasted front, full plaited sleeves, with cuffs; trimmed with silk braid and velvet; two large side pockets, jr IS) Carefully tailored, ZO, UU Persian Lamb Coats. shaped and tailored as smart dressers desire them. Your choice of many creations and in all shadings.

35.00, 45.00, 55.00. foot kilts; excellently 25, 00 Dress Coats, In models and weaves that are most correct, and in al ues unmatchable, 15.00 to 75.00 Waists, Smart fitted dress models. Values and ideas found here only, in Chiffons, Louisines, Nets, Crepes, Laces and Messalines, 12.50 to 65.00 LEIPSIC DYED PERSIAN LAMB COATS, 22 inches long; made as illustrated, of selected full skins; fitted back, double-breasted box front, high storm collar, with deep revers and a decidedly new-shaped sleeve; lined throughout with heavy satin. Other Broadtail Plush Coats. They are made just as illustrated, of excellent quality black Broadtail Plush, 42 Inches long, lined with Skinner Satin and interlined; collarless style, with semi-fitting back, fly front, leg-o'-tnutton sleeves with cuffs, and fif) sr.

so handsomely trimmed with silk braid. Very carefully tailored, LCX styles with collar and revers, of Chinchilla or Mink. Regularly this sale, (Fur Uooms. Second Floor, CenUT. Velvet Suits, Long, medium and short coat and blouse ideas.

Several smart models in blacks and shadings; $40.00 to $60.00 values, 29.75 and 45.00 (Women's Outer Apparel Sections. Second Floor, Krolit I AAA AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAeWAAeWVWA Wee Trotting Frocks. pronounced the most useful and stylish of this season's creations; several new-models in plaids and plain weaves, $45.00 and $55.00 values. 39.75 Tourist Coats Not one model, but many for selection, in Cravenettes, Coverts and Imported Mixtures. All shadings, 15.00 to 55.00 20 West MULLINS SONS, 23d Street, Opposite Fifth Av.

Hotel, New York. 78 TO 84 MYRTLE AVE. $10 50 Morris Chairs for $4 79 Damderiinie Will Less Than Half Price. Grew Miss Densmore's Hair And every Distressing Irritation of Skin and Scalp Instantly Relieved by a Bath with, Week. AND WE CAN reive IT.

This handsome Morris Chair, oak or mahogany, finish with handsome hair cushions.will wear a life- A 7Q time; worth double its price; only Ti I Cash or Credit. Homes Furnished 1 .00 a Week. EVERYBODY CAN AVK XICE BAIK NOW, and yon don't bar. to wait around weeks and months for results either. You will see improvements from the very first application.

ULLINS SONS 78 TO 84 MYRTLE AVE. 5 WE LEAD IN PRICES AND Her Hair Takes on New Ufa and Grows 37 inches longer than it was Before. KXOWI.TOX DANDEItKfK Gentlemen: My linlr has drown 37 Inch" since I beenn nslngyonrDaudcrlne, and It keens rlprht on growing. It seems to fairly crawl out of myscalp. It is now eight feet three Inches loug.

which I believe beats the world's record for long hair. Sincerely. MAY DEXSMORE. MICHAELS BROS. (Mint Drnnmore in now tli langeat It at red lady in the world, nmrle ho by the use of this Great Hair Growing NOW at alt druggists In three sizes, 25 cents, 60 cents and $1.00 per bottle.

FREE To Bhow how quickly Danderlne acts we will seud a large sample (roc by return mail to anyone who sends this And a single anointing with CUTICURA, tne great sfciri cure and purest of emollients. This treatment, when followed in severe cases by mild doses of CUTICURA RESOLVENT PILLS, to cool and cleanse the blood, is the most speedy, permanent, and economical cure for torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted, and pimply skin and scalp humours, with loss of hair, ever compounded. CURED OF ECZEMA BY CUTICURA I bad suffered terrible agony and pain for eight long years from a terrible eczema on the scalp and face. The best doctors were unable to help me, and I had spent a lot of money for many remedies without receiving any benefit. My scalp was covered with scabs, my face was like a piece of raw beef, my eyebrows and lashes were falling out, and sometimes I felt as if I was burning up from the terrible itching and pain.

I then began treating myself at home, and now my head and face are clear, and I am entirely well. I first bathed my face with Cuticura Soap, then applied Cuticura Ointment to the afflicted parts, and took Cuticura Resolvent for the blood. To my surprise and joy I was greatly relieved after the first application, and continued Use of tiae Cuticura remedies soon made a complete cure, (Signed) Miss MARY F. FAY, Westboro, Mass. jT Send for "ill About the SMn, Scalp, and Hair." Pottet Drug Chera.

Boston. advertisement to the Knowlton Panderine Chicago, with their name and mid res and ten cents In silver or to pay postage. 5th AVE 9th BROOKLYN. Carpets On Our Famous Credit System. $35.00 Purchase, 50c.

per Week. $50.00 Purchase, 75c. per Week. 75.00 Purchase, .00 per Week. CLOTHING FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY- mot- OPEN AN ACCOUNT, mmmm 00 Down and 50c.

per Week on a Purchase of $10.00. We deliver goods to all parts of Greater New York i i MISS MAY DENSMORE, 34 Delaware Place, CHICAGO, I IX. FOR SALE AND GUARANTEED BY BOITON DAUG CO CHURCH TO CELEBRATE ITS GOLDEN PIEE. SHOWN II VOTE CF 1814: in unmarKeci wagons requested. OPEN SATURDAY AND MONDAY bVENINQS.

Leg.s, of 1906 Expected to Make a General Respoortion-ment of Votinpr Districts. St. Boniface's Will Have Reached the Fi.tieth Milestone on November 20. tut: lished In 185.1. was the first church to be dedicated by Ihe laie Bishop Loughlin.

The congregation then occupied the frame struc has been paid off. nnd the parochial school has been pul in a condition commended by both the Board of Health and the Hoard ot Education, he interior of the. church has been reno- OME CHANGES IN PROSPECT. Is now tied to Nassau County, that string will probably be cut loose, as It Is the state policy 10 have no Assembly districts divided by county lines. Probably two Assembly districts will be made out of the towns of Flushing, Jamaica and the Rock-awaya, thus giving Queens County four Assemblymen.

Nassau County will have a population of over tifl.uuO. thus entitling it to an Assemblyman by itself. No change will be called for in the Suffolk districts. A change will probably be necessitated also in the senatorial districts. The aver-nvJ population of ihe senatorial district in 11MI0 was Hr.37G.

Next year It will be not far from lti4.000. The population of Suffolk will next year be 87.0nir, it is estimated, and of Nassau or more. That will entitle these to a Senator and the resent Illogical and alleged unconstitutional arrangement of the First Senatorial district will be donj away with and a homogeneous district formed of Suffolk and Nassau counties. It Is contended that Richmond county is a part of the City of New York and its Interests are In no way identified with those rural Suffolk. Moreover, the Constitution provides that Assembly and Senatorial districts shall be formed out of contiguous territory as far as possible.

There are three counties and several Senate districts lying between Suffolk and Richmond counties. The rapidly growing County of Querns, which next year will, it Is believed, have a population 2W.0UO ami upward, will be abundantly entitled lo be a district by Itself. In fact. Long Island City. It Is claimed, should be annexed to a Manhattan or Brooklyn district, es there will ar exress of I GREAT PRESENT DAY THEMES.

BLESSING FROM THE POPE. They Will Be Mostly In Qu9ens County. Society Originally Established in Brooklyn by German Catholics Father Lang's Good Work. ture corner Wllloughby and Bridge el recta, which had formerly been the property of the congregation of St. Thomas Episcopal Church.

The' properly was purchased from the latter congregation for $4,500. After the necessnry repairs and alterations had been completed Bishop Loughlin dedicated Ihe church cn January 1854. There was a scarcity of priests In the dlo. ee-se at this time end no permanent pastor could be assigned to new paish, which was consequently attended by the Rev. Man- i rus Ratnsaner of the Order of St.

Benedict. who came from N'cw Brooklyn to say mass every Sunday morning. He was, later ap-! pointed pastor and remained In this capacity for three years, when he was succeeded by i the Rev. Bonaventure Keller, O.S.F., who had been Induced to come from Austria to America. His delicate health compelled him to relinquish tho task of looking after the On Sunday, November 20, St.

Boniface's A Series, of Addresses in PLYMOUTH CHURCH, Brooklyn, N. On Some of the Great Problems of the Day, Beginning Sunday, Nov, 13, and Ending Nov. 20, By Dr. W. J.

DAWSON, Of London, England, nnd the Rev. NEWELL DWIGIIT HILLIS, Of Plymouth Church, will be published in full in THE BROOKLYN EAGLE, together with pertinent contributions by prominent divines and laymen. The reports will fill an entire page of the Eagle, which will be edited by -The Rev. Dr. HILLIS.

The issues of the Eagle sent to special subscribers for 25 CENTS. To subscribers of the Monday Eagle ($1.50 a year) these 'issues Nassau and Suffolk May form First Senate Distiict. Imperial lo the Urinle.) L. November 12 Tlie rapid growth of Long I.slan.l as liidieaiofl by rriurns 01 liliid ami the rapiillv iu-cr'asittK every year from all it voUuk prtMitirtH that when. followitiK the state cLii.suH of H0.i.

a new aijportioiiiueiii. Is Dliille by the Li'rIbIm I Ul ot IMUti, utlilm' the irovisiuus of the suite eonftjtuiioa. there b5 a tfenf ral rearrHnsi'iK of Assembly ami Senate dUtrk'is affecting all three eonnties. Aeeonllni; 10 the last. I'nlted States census, the averaKc pejuilntion of eaeh vsseuibly District in state was IS, to-', yet in UK'O ihe population of the i'lrsi Assruibly District of (Queens, cotiiprfsing Long Island City und Newtown, Hfl.opo, Ilai(in( aj etitimate of Hie population of the above named two towns or wards- for upon their growth for Ihe ten years from lul'd lo and it is Keiiernlly conceded Newtown baa exceedt 1 thai Ilaud City will have next year a of' and Newtown a pop-ilation of Ttl.tKjO.

The averasc growth of the State of New York has been 25 per cent, er en years, With th" number of Assetnblynun at l.VJ at i lie next npport lonnicnt the popitlat ion aver.lKe per Assembly District will be about It will be secu l.ou Isbltld t'lly and Newtown will i ai have a population far In exeess of ihe aveiane-Atseml-iy District. Jamaica will. It is estimated, next year have a population of anu probably more, tltua enilltinK It to tneiii-Ler. As the Klith Wurd (the Ilockaays nearly mu.uuu over rne average population of the Senatorial districts of the slate. There will he no changes made in the Congressional districts until the year lull.

As lo the politico! advantages of the pro-nosed. change, one party would probably be benefited as much as the other. The Democrats would have two sure As-embly districts. Long Island City and Newtown, where they now have one. Were a part of Jamaica to be tied lo Flushing and the Kockaways united to the remainder of the town of Jamaica, there would be two districts in which both parties tvould have a good fighting The Nassau and Suffolk districts would be sure fo- the Republicans.

The Firs Senatorial 'District would be sure Herubllcaa and the Second as at pres-fttt surely Democratic. will be sent free. Address BROOKLYN EAGLE, Brooklyn, N. Y. Roman Catholic Church, on Duffleld street near Wlllnughby, of which the Rev.

Martin Lang is rector, will have reached the fiftieth milestone of its existence, and tho celebration of the golden Jubilee of the church will begin wiih a trtduum preceding the solemn celebration. The Right Rev. Mgr. will celebrate the solemn high mass of th" occasion, and he will bo assisted by the Bo John B. Wlllnian as deacon and the.

Rev. George Feser as sub-deacon. The- sermon will be preached by the Very Rev. Michael Decker. In Ihe evening solemn vespers and a sermon will be given by the Key.

John Lambert a native of the parish. Following the morning ceremonies. Mon-signor McNamara will Impart the papal blessing to those present, to which- will be at inched a plenary Indulgence granted especial occasion hy Pope I'lus by liriument signed In his own handwriting. During the fifty years of its existence endless trials and financial struggles have had to be overcome lo continue the work of this mission, which was established originally bv Ihe rinan Catholics of Brooklyn. Five yiars ago It jteemed as if the work muiit I bandoned for the lack of funds.

It was then that Ihe present rector, the Rev. Marlin Lung, was soul to the rescue, and through his zeal and earnestness Ihe wonderful results were accomplished. Through his effprts much of the heavy 'won gage Qf the church GUI growing parish. The Rev. Joseph Brlmo-niann.

also a Franciscan, succeedod him for a year, ur.a he In turn was followed In the pa i-torato by the Rev. John Hummel, a Benedictine monk, who remained In charge of the parish until 1664. The Rev. Michael J. Decker, then an assistant at St.

James Pro-rathedral w.u his successor and it was during his pastorate that the work was begun for tho erection of the present edifice, but he did not remain to see its completion, as the proved too burdensome for his delicate health. Aft-cr his resign, tlnn Ihe Rev. Joseph Hsuber remained In rharRc for a few months r.nd wa succeeded up until 1871 by Ihe Revs. Obcr-srhnelder nnd Kranels Batlffl, and It was during the latter's pastorate that the corner stone o' the new church wa.a laid. In 1S72, under the p.t.torate of the Rev.

Peter De Berge, the new church was completed and dedicated. II Is of flnthlc architecture and seats about 400. The entire cost cf the new churih wai about J44.00O. Ihe old property was then sold und a new plot purchased on Wllloughby street, near lJutlleld. where now stands the purochi.

I school and rectory. In 1876 Father De Berge. resigned his charge and was uc-ceeded by the Rev. Peter Sihwnrz, who tenialu.d a year. The Key.

"IfiitT srB TWO FINGER 3 CUT OFF. I In working steam rip saw in the luiiil" EXPENSE CEETiriCATES FILED, Albany N. Noverhber 12 Among the certificates of election expenses filed to-day with the Secretary of State were, the following: Henry A. Van Alstyne, Republican candidate for Slate Engineer, William E. Werner, candidate for Associate Judge of the Court of Appeals, nothing; Frederick L'hlmann.

Republican presidential elector $2,000: JameB W. Wadsworth, Republican candidate for Congress, Thirty-fourth District, Lucius N. Llttauer, Republican candidate lor Congress, Hermit Kidder, Democratic presidential elector, $1,000. John B. Wlllnian was the next pastor.

He remained in charge for a period of ten years. ins en.rgetlc laDors the parish was In a flourishing condition when his successor, the Rev. George Feser, took charge. I'nder the latter's I hi. section of the city became a bmlness center, forcing the removal of his parishioners to the suburbs and uptown.

After a severe attack of typhi Id malaria, following which It wus feared he wouid become totally blind, he wc transferred from Ihe pastoral duty and wa.) succeeded In 1901 by the present pustor. the Rev. Marlin Lang, who In three years succeeded in paying off $11,000 of the debt of the chu ch and renovating the entire edifice to the amount of $14,000, fully paid for. I yard of Curtis RroihTs. nt 1.11m riy and Vesta avenues, iinst New York, yes'erday i The Eev.

ITartin Lang, uf St. Boniface's k. I'hurcli. viitid from cellar to dome, Willi modern heating nnd lighting apparatus Installed. Magnificent stations of the cross adorn the also beautiful stained glass windows, all of which will have been paid for by lie litre th Jubilee celebration will have commenced.

The church, which was unieticnlly estub- nlttrnooit. Henry Riedeniuin. .17 years old. of 7(1 Chestnut street, hail two fingers of the right hand or! Tite man suffered much frtun loss of blood and was removed by I Ambulance Surgeon Johnston to Ihe Brud- I lord Street Hospital. II.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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