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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 12

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 12

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
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Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE DROOKLYX DAILY EAGLE. -NEW YORK. SUNDAY. AUGUST 15. 1009.

4.. BUSINESS NOTICES. BUSINESS NOTICES. BTJSINES3 NOTICES. I feminine autonomy.

The spirit of the 'vnid to railroads for this service. Otti-leiitl conservatism will "delay the change. The airs our officials put on (Trad Mark "Eail." Registered.) porta tious under the uew tariff, thus clearing a neat profit to offset any prospective decline of trade, under the new rates of duty. Thus the Importer as well as the American manufacturer gets his "bit" out of the new tariff. Indeed.

It seems to be a beautiful tariff for everybody save "WHERE THE STARS BfflGHIM BEACH MUSIC HA ARTHUR M. HOPKINS, Manager WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY AUG. 16 LAST WEEK! THE SEASON'S SUCCESS! LAST, WEEK! THE PERFECT WOMAN "In CHARMION Every Woman May See Her Own Possibilities for Health, Happiness and Beauty." SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT The Great Pantomime Sensation SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT APPEAR" LE EVENING 370 Fulton Street, and Price IS ALICE EIS andXTTN BERT FRENCH 1LJJ The Amazing Adaptation of Kipling's Famous Poem That Has Created a Furore for the Past Month at the Fifth Avenue Theatre. Miss Eis and Mr. French Will Also Present THE APACHE DANCE ADDED ATTRACTION First Time Here ADDED ATTRACTION and GLAZIER marie du ARTHUR NAT HI AIM ViOOOO WILL THE MALAWI TROUP Italian Singers and Players.

in "THE MESSENGER BOY." Wholesale Dealers in Fun. TO-DAY- Straus', Anderson Piano ES AND ZEHD. JORDAN ZEND I METTIE VESTA I THE LABAKAHS AFTERNOON CHARSV1IGN, The Perfect Woman Clarence Wilbur's I 0 Funny Folks; Walsh, Lynch and Fantastic Phantoms and a Big Show Seats on Sale at Abraham -Rosenbaum's, Broadway, urooKiyn. SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 15. The Sunday Morning Edition of the Eagle has a Large and Growing Circulation Throughout the United States and Europe It is the best Advertising Medium for Those who Desire to Reach all Classes of Newspaper Readers in New York and on Long Island.

The only Paper in Brooklyn having the Associated Press Service. Entered at the Post Office at Brooklyn, N. November 1Z. 187, aa Second Class of Mall Matter, under the Act of March 3, UTS. (Corporate name, the Brooklyn Dally Eagle.) WILLIAM HESTER.

President and General Manager. WILLIAM V. HESTER. Secretary-Treasurer. HERBERT P.

GUNNISON. Business Manager. Address, Eagle Building. MAIN OFFICE. Eagle Building, corner vt Washington And Johnson streets, Brooklyn.

Telephone calls (for main office and all Brooklyn branches), No. 810 Main. Jamaica branch, 23 Jamaica: Hath Beach branch, 234 Batn Beach; Oreenpolnt branch. 17? Greenpolnt. BRANCH OFFICES.

A list of the Eagle's Branch Offices In Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens will be found on the first Classified Advertising page. BUREAUS. Paris-S3 Rus Cambon. London I Regent street, 8. W.

ashlngton 60S Fourteenth street. San Francisco. 45 Kearney st. Eagle readers when visiting these cities are Invito to mnkn their IwadOuartfTS In these bureaus. Information Bureau Rooms 416-424 Eagle Building, Brooklyn.

Branch 28 East Twenty-thin! etrept. Manhattan. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Esgle sent bv mall (outside of Brooklyn), postage Included. 1 month.

11.00; months, SI. 75; I months 14.50: 1 year. S8.00. Sunday Eagle, 1 year, Monday Eagle (Sermons), 11.50. Eagle Library, $1.00 per year.

FOREIGN SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Dally and Sunday. 1 year. 114.20; Dally and Sunday, 6 months. 17.10; Dally and Sunday, I month.

$1.35 Sunday or Monday Eagle, 11.00 per year. ADVERTISING RATES. For cost of advertising, apply or send for rate card, or make Inquiry by telephone, No. (200 Main. The Alphonse-Gastou attitude of China nnd Japan just now mny lie fitly styled a Study in Yellow.

The glaciers of Alaska are thawing find shrinking. Hot air about gold mines was bound to have Its effect In time. Laparotomlsts will eventually get hold of the Coney Island elephant that 4ats up diamond necklaces. That will be "another story." A fraud order against a Correspondence Cancer Cure hits about the meanest of swindling schemes. Let ihe good work go bravely on! Japanese strike agitators In Hawaii are to be sent back to Toklo.

Importing Is a bit silly when there Is overproduction at home. Hand-to-hand conflicts are to be barred In the great "war game." That is proper. Tooth-and-nall wounds are Genera-Convention inhumanities. The world of sane people note with real relief that Miss Jane Addama of Chicago Is not going to run for President. Her decision is Adamantine.

A Chicago Judge stands for a husband's Inalienable right to swear at his wife. Chicago's civilization is as crude as crude as her city government! A popular subscription for the support of Mrs. Evelyn Thaw would take Hko wildfire, If she would pledge herself to quit on statements and Interviews. Children who smashed the solid concrete benches In Central Park should be sent to the Municipal Art Commission for discipline. Their tastes are crude.

A woman pauper in the Tioga County almshouse has Just died at the age of 111 years. She had been a member of the "Don't Worry Club" or 46 years. A tent city for the poor nt College Point is a fairly Intelligent bit of philanthropy, which the Board of Health may be relied upon to checkmate In Its lnclpiency. The young Shah of Fefsla Is accused of trying to commit suicide. He can't be punished.

Unlike New York, Persia lets would-be suicides escape all penalties unless they succeed John Hays Hammond Is said to have discovered a political diamond In Bela Tokaji. Brooklyn's smile, loud and broad, extends from Newtown Creek to Coney Island. An elephant shark has been caught off Long Branch. If the elephant sharks of Wall Street could only be caught as easily, collateral on deposit would be much safer than It Rome phases of "education" the Committee of One Hundred might well leave to Superintendent Maxwell. Organization work Is what will beat Tammany If Tammany Is beaten.

A sclmol janitor In Toledo hns been notified that he is heir to a estate in Wales. Whales are not strictly fish, but there will lie wails when this Is proven a fish story. Gutzon Borglum will make a Imsl of Mr. Taft. Secretary MacVeagh will doubtless look the work over with magnifying glass to see that there are no specks on It like a vain G.

li. age may not be. must not be, cannot be. suppressed. Now for the Thaw divorce suit.

Let it' be held in a dark sub-cellar, the papers burned and the ashes sealed. Murphy of Manhattan and Cassldy of Long Island City are Twins. Gresser Isn't enough of a surgeon to separate them. Science, backed by plenty of money, couldn't make the survey yacht Car negle perfectly non-niaguetlc. Steel had to be used for two cams and two engine pistons.

Curious, Isn't it? The Duke of the Abruzzi, who couldn't reach the 'height of a graft on the Klklns family tree, has climbed feet up a mountain and broken all records. His ambition had to be satisfied, somehow. No, the spider that bit the president of the Consolidated Stock Exchange was not Inspired by any Hughes com mission. Hughes Is not friendly to big- bugs, and scorns entomological al liances. Not Bidding; for The Sea of China is far away and Interest diminishes with distance.

Having much to do at home, the owners of the Philippines do not trouble themselves greatly about the archipelago. Without being painfully conscious of It. they pay the bills and "let it go at that." It makes little difference tbut the bills happen to be large. They have been estimated at $100,000,000 a year. The other page of the ledger Is comparatively bare.

The Islnnds import about $5,000,000 worth of American goods, and, assuming the profit to be 20 per Is the offset to $100,000,000. That Is the financial phase of the case as set forth in the San Francisco Chronicle, which newspaper discusses other aspects also. It says that If we nre prosecuting a mission, It Is pertinent to ask who sent us. It protests that if the answer, "the Lord," proof of the truth of that statement cannot be supplied. Nor will It improve matters, It asserts, to say that we are In the Far East because of the "Inner consciousness" of the American people, this consciousness being greatly divided.

What follows Is worth reading: As for the Filipinos themselves, they have never liked us, and like us now a well as before acquaintance. The million and odd of them who have any education nearly all desire independence presumably that they may exploit with more satisfaction and profit the 8,000,000 or 9,000,000 of their countrymen who have to education end who some hold to be eternally and irrevocably predestined to exploitation by somebody. As for theso uneducated millions, they do not seem to caro except that they hate Americans because Americans despise them. As to what we are doing there, we are doubt- loss teaching tre Filipino to desire things which coat money which they must work harder than before to get. Thus far there is no evidence that we have Increased their happiness and contentment thereby.

Many Americans have gone to the Philippines never to return, to which fact the Chronicle might have macfe allusion. Certainly, it should figure In the "bill of costs," When it is Included, the case may be summarized in the statement that we have sacrificed many lives and millions beyond calculation for those who hate America and Americans, and' who are no happier for the' sacrifice. However, more remains to be said. This country Is destined to do much business In the Orient. It has become a great world power, with corresponding opportunities and responsibilities.

It is engaged in competition with other commanding nations, and because it produces more than enough for home consumption, it wants "a fair field and no favor" in the Flowery Land. It will get It. Having a base of operations in the Sea of China, It is reasonably sure of its share. That is the selfish aspect. Perhaps the altruistic should have been considered first there are those who will contend that It ought to have precedence.

While It may be true that American Inner consciousness is greatly divided, as stated by the Chronicle, It Is not true that anything else would have happened, even could this country have foreseen both the tremendous cost and the bitter hatred. Not In the annals of any nation on the face of the earth will be found the story of achievement compared with which what we have done in the Far East has anything to lose. It is neither here nor there, to say that the islanders are sullen, resentful and un-appreciatlve. In the archipelago the American flag Is the symbol of civilization. It la a substitute for the emblem of yellow and red blood nnd gold and not a bid for gratitude.

Nations as well as Individuals have duties to perform. Nor would it be difficult to show that when they helf others, they help 'themselves. Customs Receipts Falling Off. Further evidence that the new tariff gives revision upward. and not downward is offered by the fulling off of customs receipts since It went into effect.

For wwks before the law was signed the custom house was rushed with the efforts of importers to get tlielr goods out of the warehouses before the new duties went into effect, they being convinced that the new rate would be higher. Then, after the law was signed, there was day or two of activity in getting hides, which had been made free, out of ftonige. Then more tlinn the uhuuI midsummer dullness set in. The receipts the whole country for Amtiist 12 this year were against over yco a year ago. A further activity In Imports can hardly be.

expected until the goods taks'ii out of bon.l In anticipation of the Increased have boon marketed. Their sale will hardly bo a boon to consumers, however, because, so far as they can. the Importers will advance prices on them to the of those charged for lm- are not atmospheric. One Sure Thing. We are told that one of the objects of the coming conference at Saratoga Is to give a clearer meaning to the party name In tblg state.

Does this Imply that we are to be treated to a new definition of a Democrat? And, If so, will it be accepted as authoritative? Clearly, there are difficulties In the way. Mr. Bryan has a veto power. He Is the Democratic court of final resort. He will have a definition of his own ready by the time the next national convention meets, whatever may be said or done at Snratoga.

No matter what may happen in the interval, nothing Is surer than that, as the emblem of the party, the donkey will persist. It shows no signs of impatience. Fear a Chicle Famine. Drought has stopped the chicle bleeding in Honduras. Let us sincerely trust that no chicle famine will be created.

The spectacle of shop girls whole factories full of shop girls suffering for the lack of that whlgh Is dearer to them than caramels or peanuts; of telephone exchanges, exasperated In temper by the Irritating deprivation of central girls; of a girls high school reduced to maxiliary Inactivity; of typewriters all over town gumlcss and grimly sul len. Is a spectacle a bit too horrible to contemplate. Chicle from Honduras, the basis of modern chewing gum, Is essential to our suffragettlsh civilization. This Is woman's era. Woman unmolllfied by chewing gum Is an utter Impossibility.

Man may lire, rather uncomfortably, without tobacco. To woman chewing gum Is absolutely as needful as those patent medicines, 10 per cent, alcohol, which stir the righteous wrath of Edward Bok. No. It caanot be. A beneficent Providence will send rains, In due time, to Honduras! Funston.

General Fred Funston, reporter, botanist, Alaska explorer, colonel In the Cuban insurgents' army, cap-turer of Agulnaldo, has bought a farm at Haywards, Alameda County, California, to which he will go when he retires from the United States Army service. General Funston, born In 1865, Is still in the prime of life. He might start a department store, or enter the ministry, or make a glorious living writing life Insurance policies. He might become the most prosperous of exploiting contractors in the Philip pines or in Cuba. No pent-up Utlca contracts his powers.

He would be a success In a hundred fields of human The farm is not with him a last resort. It Is the first choice of a well-balanced mind. As General Fred Funston listens to the cackling of the latest egg-laying hen or to the crow of the early morning rooster he will find his gory memories of battle soothed. As he watches the growing of bis corn, or broods over his big alfalfa patch, or rides his erstwhile barbed steed over broad and dew-gllstenlng acres, a deep peace will steal upon him. The machete will be forgotten.

The bolo will be a misty memory. Agulnaldo will be exorcised. He Is a lucky Caesar died of dirks. Alexander was harassed to the last. Napoleon couldn't vaise alfalfa at St.

Helena. Funston will find quiet and calm and blessing, close to the heart of Nature. He has chosen the good post. It shall not be taken from hiin. Augustus Van Wyck and his fellow barmonizers know which Is the dog and which Is the tall of Democracy here.

They see that the dog must do the wagging and that the tail must be wagged. Protests from the tall are to be discounted. Jobs have been secured by the United States Government on farms for 3,000 persons In six weeks. Most of these persons may be idle after October. They will give the government a new opportunity.

A girl stenographer Is the acting mayor of Richmond, Va. As she's a cheerful person no gallant old Dbmin-ionlte will think of more than a jocular protest. Virginians are polite always and everywhere. The Now Jersey -Irarglar-murderer who went to the electric chair with a rose In his buttonhole, might have lived a florist bandit and died In his bed if the Fates had riot been unkind. Life Is much of a gamble, after all.

AN INTERBOROUGH REBUKE. Quoting the Eagle Incorrectly, Mr. Shonts' Representative Accuses the Eagle of Quoting Incorrectly. To the Editor of the Brooklyn Eagle: In an editorial in the Eagle of Wednesday you quote Mr. Shonts as follows: "The Interborough will not build any more Subways If the Broadway-Lexington Avenue Subway is not contracted tor, as now Beema to be the intention the Public Service Commission.

There Is not one word in Mr. Shonts' Interview in The World of last Sunday to this effect. The paragraph you credit Mr. Shonts with, l( you look at the article, you will see la the reporter's Introduction to the Interview which follows. What Mr.

Shonts did Baywas: "These plans are up to the Public Service Commission. The other serious alternative is the Broadway-Lexington Avenue line, which I have already mentioned. Of courae, If that line should be built as laid out, our Subway extension would not be possible. There not room enough in Manhattan for the Broadway-Lexington Avenue line and for the subway extensions we have proposed. Subway construction Is too expensive to make that possible, and I am sure that no ono would want to build the Broadway-Lexington avenue line if we are to make our extensions as planned, and we would not want to build our extensions the Broadway-Lexington Avenue route is be constructed." Yours very truly, H.

P. WAUOH. interborough Rapid Transit Company. 165 Broadway, New York, August 13th, 1808. I the poor consumer.

How long It will take him to wake up to the fact that there are robbers in the house, is one of the interesting questions of our politics. Why Go to the Legislature? In this post-Roosevelt period of our national development there Is something almost pathetic in the way all classes are depending on the agencies of government to do for them what they ought to be able to do for them selves. We note that the Retail Grocers of the State of New York, by formal resolution, have asked the Legislature to compel the closing of grocery stores all day Sunday. With the merits of the question the Eagle Is not dealing Just It Is conceivable that such a law would work great hardship in tenement house districts where poor people always rely on the grocer's Icebox. But what is perfectly clear is that there is no law now compelling the grocers to open on Sundays, and that, without any legislation.

If effectively organized, and loyal to their trade Interests, they could establish the reform very quickly and very easily. It may be noted also that without effective organization, and. mutual loyalty among the grocers, the proposed law would be more likely to prove a treasure trove for police blackmailers than a wholesome bit of Sabbatarianism. That Is something which, it seems, the New York State Retail Grocers convention In Albany has failed to consider thoughtfully and adequately. An Answer to Mr.

Shonts. In another column will be found a letter from a representative of the In-terborougu Rapid Transit Company, taking the Eagle to task for quoting President Shonts Incorrectly. Reference to the files of the Eagle will show that It made no such statement as that with which it Is credited. The Eagle did not quote Mr. Shouts as saying that the Interborough would not build any more subways, "If the Broadway-Lex ington avenue route is NOT contracted for," but, on the contrary, as stating that the Interborough would not build, "if the Broadway-Lexington avenue route IS contracted for." Between what the Eagle said and vliafttf is represented by Mr.

Shonts agent as having said, there is a wld4 difference. Unfortunately for the In-terborough's president, there Is no such wide difference between what he admits having stated and the Interpretation placed upon it, not only by the Eagle, but by all intelligent people as well. Between what Mr. Shonts confessedly declared, in his detailed statement, and the substance of his utterances, as summarized by the Eagle, there may be a distinction which the acute intellect of the Interborough president is capable of discerning. But to all other Intelligent members of the community, including the Public Service Commission, that distinction has ynis far failed to disclose itself.

Mr. Shonts says: "We would not want to build our extensions If the Broadway-Lexington avenue route Is to be constructed." And again: "My statement recently made was for the purpose of removing any Impression that might exist that, If the Broadway-Lexington avenue route were built, the Interborough would nevertheless build Its proposed extensions." The Eagle said that Mr. Shonts stated that the Interborough would not build any more subways, If the Broadway-Lexington avenue line was contracted for. So absolutely identical in substance and intent are the two statements that of them it cannot even be said "A distinction without a For Cars on Queensboro Bridge. One must sympathize with the people of Queens, whose situation In regard to transit was tersely put by one of them to the Public Service Commission thus: "We are Jilie a hungry man.

We have bread In sight and mny not eat it." The statement was made at the hearing of the application made by the Third Avenue Bridge company to run trolley cars across the bridge from Third avenue and Fifty-seventh street in Manhattan to Jackson avenue in Long Island City. The objection of the Public Service Commission is that the Third Avenue Bridge company is a dummy corporation, being made up of employes In the office of Receiver Whltrldge of the Third avenue surface company, because that company has no legal right to extend its business under a receivership. The new company hopes, if Jt gets a bridge franchise, to make an arrangement with the Second Avenue company to run the cars of that line across the bridge, or transfer bridge passengers to its cars. The whole tangle most unfortunate, and Is one of the results of the confusion into which the surface traffic of Manhattan has been thrown by placing the management of some of the companies In the hands of the courts. What ought to be done Is to carry the tracks on Fifty-ninth street straight across the new bridge and to give transfers to passengers on thai line to all the up-and-down surface roads In Manhattan, thus keeping cars out of Fifty -seventh street, where they are not wanted.

But that easy, simple unci serviceable arrangement is Impossible, and, while a substitute for It is being sought, from 7,000 to people walk the bridge dully for want of curs. The result Is one of those futilities which make municipal government look like comic opera. Meanwhile, the Public Service Commission or the Board of Estimate would be justified In taking almost any xtep that would give to the defrauded people of Queens thj service lo which they are entitled. It is the dream of the Wrights t- have the mails carried by aeropiane. Already they could underbid the rates LB CI OLD FASHIONED HAND MADE SOUR MASH Straight Pure Rye The Standard of Rye Whiskey Guaranteed Pure Rye Whiskey Under National Pure Food Law Serial Number 2163 NOT BLENDED ifjLDtOl NI ADULTERATED SOLD ONLY IN BOTTLES NEVER SOLD IN BUL" LAST SERVICE IN OLD TEMPLE, Congregation Beth Elohim Take Farewell of Its Old Synagogue in State Street.

v.trflav the closing services of tha Congregation Beth Elohim were hem tn tho State Street Temple, as they win occupy their new temple on Eighth ave nue and Garfield place, after the Bummer reccsB. A large congregation was in attendance and the choral services were imnreaaive. H. Salit and H. Hess- berrg of the congregation, which will oc cupy the edifice after the Congregation n.th Elohim vacate it, were prominent among the worshippers, as were L.

Blu- Shellenbere and B. Btraus, members of the original congregation which built the temple, twenty-four yearB ago- a. Dr Alexander ijyons, hi the services, delivered a brief address, lietannH tn with attention. WUIUU t0 vera mnnv in the congregation who wept at the thought of leaving their old church home, though the prospects of greater work filled them with inspira tion. Lyons said that twenty-tour years J.

tn lnnlc forward to. but the ohnrt Ha said that the congregation which built the temple had but eighty-five members, but had more than doubled. These were tne pew own-in tha tomnla. and those who at tended the services filled the nine hundred at the services of th congregation, ana many ana 10 excluded. While the original temple cost t3K ftrtn tha npw tmnlp wilt cost about $155,000, and wlU be the largest and finest in Brook is significant of the work and sacrifice of the members of the congregation, Kb influence will be great, and it has grown very strong, many other denominations having come through curiosity ana learnea 10 reaped iu it will, he said, continue to be a demo-rl there will be wit Mn a walla fnr tha noor afl well as the rich.

It will continue to work for righteousness. A PONDEROUS SPORT. The playtime of Taft draws from jokers a shaft Of fun that Is grateful to every wag; King Edward he smiles, for such sport he reviles, To chase, in an auto, an anise-seed bag. Some jesting, 'tis sure, Taft will have to endure. Though brave he upholds the American flfllZ.

The news has come straight that he hides not hla fate, To chase, In an auto, an anise-seed bag. Though nobody knocks him who follows a fox On horseback, and Jumps all the fences that nag; Tls different quite, when you seek this delight. To chase, In an auto, an anise-seed bag. J. A.

THE NEW MILKMAN. 'Good morning, madam," said the slen der solemn-faced man with the peculiar- lv unnatural looking hair. "I am intro ducing my new butter, which I sell at a much lower price than mat cnargea by other refiner I mean creameries." 'It has a strange smell," says the housewife, sniffing at the package. "It smells as If it had been close to coal oil." "Petroleum, madam. Is one of our greatest health-giving agents," explained the stranger.

"Besides, when the butter gets old, you can melt it and burn it in your lamp. Two pounds? Thank you, madam. We should all rejoice in doing good. Here are ten million dollars for your husband to build a college with." And the new milkman stepped blithely out of the yard. Life.

is" WE IRE THE LARGEST BOTTLERS SOUR MASH STRAIGHT PURE H. B. KIRK BEDFORD AVE. AS SPEEDWAY. Police Catch Autoists and Horsemen, Whom They Charge In Court.

Four men were. In the Gates avenue court yesterday, charged with having exceeded the speed limit on Bedford avenue. Two of the number were chauffeurs operating big automobiles, and the others were driving horses having a try-out, according to the police, to determine the better animal. Complaints have been made of late thut Bedford avenue was being used for a speedway for all kinds of vehicles returning late nights, from Coney Island. Officer Mesle, of local headquarters motor squad, went on a hunt for some of the swift ones shortly after, midnight Friday and soon landed John Pick-ler, 20 years old, of 221 East Seventieth street, Manhattan.

Mesle decided thai John, running an auto with four men and a woman in It, at thirty miles an hour, did not have much regard for speed laws, and took him to the Gates avenue station. Bicycle Officer Davenport shortly before this locked up David R. Thompson, 46 years old, of 802 Church avenue, who was running a tricycle with his wife as a passenger. Thompson was proceeding at the rate of 22 miles an hour, according to the officer. Then about midnight Officer Davenport noticed two horses attached to runabouts, speed down the avenue neck and neck and decided that the drivers ought to be taught that they were not on a race track.

He gave chase and arrested the drivers, William Welch, 24 years old, of 53 Academy street, and Louis Schroeder, 22, of 30S Jackson avenue, Long Island City. In court Magistrate Hylan 'held all tho alleged speeders for examination. CHANGES AT THE NAVY YARD. Patrick Francis Ward has been appointed Chief Clerk of the manufacturing, formerly tho construction, department of the navy yard. He will succeed W.

M. Brooks, who resigned. The promotion of Mr. Ward means a general Increase In the most prominent recipients of which will be as follows: John T. O'Grady, employment- clerk; Thomas Kane, correspondence Wllllnm M.

O'Shea, srtcbogrnrbcr; Ceij-ge re'', requisition clerk, OF OLD-FASHIONED HAND-MADE RTE WHISKEY IN THE WORLD New York, N. Y. FURNITURE Important to Furniture Buyers While we do not advertise "Special August Sales," we assure In- -tending; buyers of Furniture, who wish to secure RELIABLE goods of standard quality, and em- bracing the latest productions of the best exponents of high-class woodcraft, that their interests will be best served by purchasing at OUR establishment. PURCHASES MADE NOW WILL BE HELD FOR FUTURE DELIVERY IF DESIRED. a R.

J. HORNER CO. Furniture Maker nnd Importers IV. 23d St. I W.

24th St. 61-63-65 I 36-38-40 ROBINSON'S PATENT BARLEY With fresh cows milk for Infant Iihk l-eii tlie Ix-nt ubitnte for uiotliero' milU durJiisr the lust 70 yenrN nil over Europe, ami the name in America. BARLEY WATER made from ROBINSON'S PATENT BARLEY ia flie "Tliimt Qnenriier" for the athlete. Invalid and thonp nnfferlliK from STOMACH THO I tll.US is chenper, cleaner and more healthy than any other food. Uroeersi and IlrnsrsilMls Everywhere), i JAM P.

SMITH COMPANY, IMPORTKKS, KEW YORK. FASHIONABLE GAP.B. Mrs. Crawford So his wife is extravagant in dressT Mrs. Crabshaw Very.

Just now she's gettint a ooat of tan at a. hundred -dollar--i resort Puck. Justice Brady's decision that a man can't get a divorce Just because his wife, clad In a silk kimono, receives the calls of other men, is a new tribute to the Increasing demand for.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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