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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 18

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 18

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Brooklyn, New York
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THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK. TUESDAY. MARCH 12, 1912. 18 SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS.

SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENTS. MISCELLANEOUS. ELDER ENROLLED REPUBLICAN CORNERSTONE IS LAID ARCHITECT BENNETT building Is a beautiful example of a Gothic type of architecture, somewhat resembling the DeWitt Clinton High School in Manhattan. It has a frontage of 176 feet on Irving avenue, and itB depth Is 175 feet, being thus about square. It 'Will be the first school In Brooklyn In (Coward Shoe For School Boys and Girls Whose Ankles "Turn-in." When your boy's or girl's ankles "turn-in" or Bag, it Bhows there is weakness in the arch-structure.

Foot ligaments, in growing feet, are non-elastio. That means, when once stretched they cannot recover without mechanical aid. The Coward Arch Support Shoe at once straightens the ankles, gently raises the arch, and. by resting the foot ligaments, helps them regain their natural position. Skilled orthopedists and surgeons, pronounce this shoe anatomically correct, and of great value in preventing and remedying weak ankles, falling arch and flat-foot conditions.

Made -with and without Coward Extension Heel (different elevations) in several leathers and styles for Boys, Girls and Parents. which all high school subjects will be taught, and a boy or girl may take the academic course, leading to college or training school; the commercial course and the manual training course, Including domcjiic econcmies lor the girls. It will be complete in all particulars In the basement will be the boilers and tne blowers, locker rooms for boys and girls and shower On the ground floor will De the main floor of the sudtlorium. which will seat 1,500 persons, gymnasiums for boys and girls, separated by rolling doors which may be rolled up whenever occasion requires; six classrooms, an engineer's laboratory and a room for the gymnasium Instructor. The main entrance will be on this floor.

On the first floor will be the second stories of the auditorium and the gymnasium, the nrlnciDal's offices, library. science lecture room, office for the even ing school principal (it Is Intended to use the building night and day), three classrooms and teachers' rooms. On the- second, third and fourth floors there Is a variety of classrooms, lecture rooms, laboratories, sewing rooms, drawing rooms, shops and recitation rooms. The fifth floor Is over the rear of the I building, and is given over to the lunch rooms for boys, slrls and teachers. There Is a spacious kitchen.

When the pupils have finished their lunch they can go out on the roof, which is to be paved. The school will be one of the most complete In the city. PRIMARY FIGHTS UP STATE. Roosevelt's Nephew, Lawrence Ab bott, and Odell Among Contestants. Albany, March 12 Contests at the primaries on March 26 for the election of delegates to the Republican National Convention from New York State are promised In only two districts outside of New York City.

Assemblyman Robin son, nephew of Theodore Roosevelt, heads a contesting delegation in the Thirty-third Congressional District, the home of Vice President Sherman, and former Governor Benjamin B. Odell la a candidate for State committeeman from the Twenty-sixth DiBtrlct, with Joseph M. Dickey and Samuel K. Phillips as the Hir- The effect on the ankles of wearing shoes that DO NOT support the arch. Coward Arch Sappert Shoe and Coward Extension Heel, bave been mad by James S.

Coward, la hi Custom Department, lor over 30 years. JAMES S. COWARD NEW YORK Mall Orders Pilled Sold NOWhere Send for CataUga. BUSHWICK HIGH SCHOOL AS IT WILL LOOK fir liill li i Republican Captain Finds He's List ed as a Democrat. The official registration liBts are mak Ing their appearance In the various election districts of the First Assembly District and already there have been some surprises discovered.

For Instance, in the Fourth Election DiBtrlct, former Assistant District Attorney Robert H. Elder, a staunch Democrat, is enroled an a Renublican. Likewise the Republl can cantaln of the Second Election Dis trict. C. B.

ResBeguie, who lives at the Hotel St. George, has discovered that he Is enrolled as a Democrat. The election law provides that such mistakes cannot ho corrected until the next offi cial registration day. It also says that a man enrolled In one party cannot vote at the primaries of any other. MARSHALL STREET CLOSING.

Manufacturing Concern Demands It Else Big Plant Will Have to Move. A lively meeting of the Downtown Tax payerB was held last night at the head quarters on Nassau street. The chief business discussed wag the attempt to close what 1b left of Marshall street, an old landmark, and three representatives of the National White Lead Co. of Water street were present at the meeting to explain to the members why this street should be closed. They were John M.

Peters, president of the company, and Henry J. Greene and Hayward P. Cav airy. Mr. Peters went Into much detail in hli effort to show that the closing of the street would be of no harm to the neigh borhood, but Instead would benefit the section greatly.

Briefly, he pointed out that his company had to get possession of Marshall street or move out of the city. He went further to state that the company needed the street to enlarge Its business, in which event It would double the number of Its employes. This, It was said, would greatly benefit the community because most of the workers In the plant were inhabitants ot the sec tion, and in the event of the removal of the plant a vast number of those at present employed would lose their situations. It was voted to refer the question to the board ot trustees of the organiza- WHEN COMPLETED. tlon.

A hearing on the question will be given soon at the Borough Hall. In regard to the Navy Yard question, a resolution was passed to the effect that a committee of three be appointed to confer with Congressman Levy, who Is pushing the matter at preBent In relation to acquiring additional land for Navy Yard purposes. STORE NOTES. Wanamakers Shows Paris Models in Women's Summer Hats. For plcturesqueness and beauty, the annual exhibition-of spring and summer hats at Wanamakers Is unusual.

With a background of velvets and flowers, the hats this morning at the opening day ot the-exhibit made, one of the prettiest sights of the kind. The majority of the hats are In the regular millinery salons on the second floor, but many of the best shapes are In the French Conference, opening off the regular salona. Here besides the bats are to be found all the apparel to go with the hats, dainty shoes and gowns together, with suits and wraps. In the collection of hats here and in the salons are models from Carller, Louison, Lewis, Georgette, Royant, Lan-vin, Valentine About and the others that go to make up the exclusive circle of French milliners. There are no freakish hats in the display, and the shapes are either very large or medium with small head sizes.

The colors are the ever popular cerise, greens, blue and purple, while the trimmings run to handmade silk flowers, bird of paradise and French plumes on the more dressy hats and smart aigrettes and fancies on the tailored models. In the small hats one is seen from the Bhopa of Royant. This is a small sailor of messallne with a chic fancy topping it. The new Idea of. using bordered foulard for drapery on hats is brought out by Lewis.

Lanvin shows several polks, one being a dainty flowered silk model with a wreath of handmade flowers as the trimming. Georgette has the large hats that are demanded every season. One stunning model Is In biscuit color straw with a draped facing of the same color. Several of the hats are copies of the imported ones. One such, is from the shop of Lewis.

It is flowered china silk with a garland of handsome flowers and finished off in the back with a bow of velvet. This is a medium sized hat. Other smart effects are shown in hats that have shirred pleated crowns on a hat of straw and finished with a feather, and others show the crown nf silk, and in some instances draped of the straw itself. Theae draped crowns are mostly of hemp. In the exhibition of hats, which will last for three days, is a fine collection of mourning, children's and motor hats.

INJURED WHILE ON VISIT. (Special to The Eagle.) Waterbury, March 12 Miss Car rie St. John, of Brooklyn, a school teacher. Is suffering painful Injuries received in a fall here. She came to Waterbury to visit friends' at Southbury, a suburb, and while walking cought one foot in a rut on the rough country highway, faiiinn- heavlliy and breaking her shouuder.

she is a patient in tne vvatcrtmry Hospital. EXPRESS SIDE-SWIPES CABS. Branford, March 12 The east-bound Adams express and mail train siHn-awlnprl nn pvtrn ppichf train i this mornine. tumbllnbr four fmi.rv freight cars down an embankment to th street, where they were splintered. Vn one was Injured.

SMALL WALLABOTTT ST, BLAZE. Policeman George Bender of the Cly-mer street station discovered fire In the fourth floor of the Duhavel Carriage Company, 197 Wallabout street, about 2 o'clock this morning. Firemen succeeded in extinguishing the blaze. The damage was light. FOR NEW BUSHWICK H.

S. Patrick F. McCowan Presides at Exercises, Which Are Largely Attended. BUILDING TO BE A FINE ONE. It Will Be of Gothic Architecture, and Will Contain Every Modern Convenience.

The cornerstone of the Bushwlck High School, Irving avenue, between Madison and Woodbine streets, wag laid at i o'clock this afternoon by Patrick F. Mc Gowan, and the Rev. Nathan Krass, D.D., rabbi of Temple Israel, pronounced the Invocation. The accompanying exercises, which were to have been held on the ground, were transferred, on account of the weather, to the assmbly ball of Pub lic School No. 75, Evergreen avenue and Ralph street, occupied temporarily by the high school.

Mr. McGowan, former President of the Board of Aldermen, and now chairman of the committee on buildings of the Board of Education, presided. The band of the Forty-seventh Regiment attended, and the speakers were John Greene, vice president of the Board of Education; George C. Miller, who was chairman of the committee of citizens which agitated for six years the erection of the high school In the district, and is now member of the Board of Education; the Rev. John Lewis Clark, U.D., pastor of the Bushwlck Avenue Congregational Church; Dr.

Edward L. Stevens, associate superintendent, In charge of high schools, and Alfred E. Steers, president of the Borough of Brooklyn. The benediction was given by the Rev. James J.

McCullough, S. Church of Our Lady of Lourdes, and the programme closed with the singing of "America." The exercises today mark another step in the consummation of the desire of many public-spirited intn and women iu the districts of Bushwlck and East New York, who seven years ago organized for the purpose of obtaining a school In that thickly-populated section. The next will be the opening of the school building in the spring of 1913. Building a Fine Gothic Structure. The land on which the building Is being erected was formerly part of the old Union Cemetery, which became the property of the city.

Three years ago the Park Department transferred a large block to the Board of Education for an elementary school. Part of that block was taken for the high school. There Is sufficient ground left for the elementary scnooi wnen it is needed. The new DIED. MEDD On March 10.

1912, CHARLES FRANCIS MEDD of 2019 Fifty-eighth st. Brooklyn. Funeral service at residence Tuesday, 8 p.m. Interment at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Tarrytown, on Wednes day. Train leaves Grand Central Depot a tu a.m.

NOLAN On Monday, March 11. 1912, MARY NOLAN, widow of the late John Nolan. Funeral on Thursday, March 14, from her late residence, 629 Knickerbocker av; thence to the Church of St. Mar tin of Tours, where solemn higu mass of requiem will be celebrated at 9:30 for the repose of her soul. Interment, Holy Cross Cemetery.

Omit flowers. PENNOYER At her residence. 77 Eighty-eighth st, Bay Ridge, on Satur day. March 9. 1912, ALICE HINE, widow of Dr.

James Pennoyer. Funeral services at the above residence on Tuesday, March 12, at 8 p.m. Interment at Cairo, N. Y. PRITCHITT On March 11, 1912, JAMES PRITCHITT, after a long illness.

Funeral services at his late residence, 272 Grant av, Cypress Hills, Wednesday, March 13, at 8 p.m. Relatives and friends respect fully invited; also members of St. Al bans Lodge, F. and A. Magnolia Lodge, Oddfellcws; Long Island Council, Royal Arcanum, and Veteran Volunteer Firemen.

Burial at Greenwood. PRITCHITT Brethren of St. Albans Lodge No. 56, F. and A.

are requested to attend the funeral services of Wor. Bro. JAMES PRITCHITT at his late resi dence, 272 Grant av, Brooklyn, on Wednes day, March 13, 1912, at 8 p.m. J. M.

STEWART, Master. W. B. Barnes, Secretary. ROOS On Monday, March 11, 1912, In his 52d year, at his residence, 202 Cornelia at, FRANK ROOS, beloved father of Rose, Fred and Frank Roos, and husband of the late Rooa.

Funeral services on Wednesday evening, at 8 clock, at Palm Garden, Hamburg and Greene avs, Brooklyn, N. Y. Interment Thursday morning. 9 o'clock. Friends, relatives and members of the various societies1 are re spectfully invited to attend.

ROOS De Witt Clinton Commondery No. 27, K. T. Sir Knights: You are re quested to attend the funeral services of our late frater. FRANK ROOS, at Palm Garden, Hamburg and Greene avs, on Wednesday, March 13, 1912, at -8 p.m.

Civilian dress. Commandery badge. WALTER L. SCHNEIDER, Commander. Altest: William N.

Carniichael, Recorder, ROOS Kismet Temple, A. A. O. N. M.

Nobles Noble FRANK ROOS has en ured the Unseen lemile. You are re-' quested to attend the funeral services to be held ut his late residence, 275 Ham burg av, Brooklyn, Wednesday evening, March 1.1, 1912, nt 8 o'clock. JOHN MORISON, Illustrious Potentate. John M. RlchardBon, Recorder.

RYDER On Monday. March 11. 1912 CAROLINE C. RYDER. In her 87th year.

Funeral Wednesday, 2 p.m., from her late residence. 42 Pine st, Brooklyn. SCHMALE On March 11, 1912, HENRY J. SCHMALE, aged 56. Funeral Wednesday, March 13, from 308 Seventh avenue, Brooklyn, at 1:30 p.m Services at chapel in Lutheran Cemetery.

SCHNUCK On Monday, March 11, 1912, at St. Agnes Hospital, White Plains, ROSE beloved wife of Edward F. Schnuck of Scarsdale, N. in her 33d year. Funeral services on Wednesday afternoon, March 13, at Greenville Reformed Church, ScarBrtale.

Carriages will meet New York train leaving Grand Central Station at 12:30 o'clock (Harlem Division.) TARTTER On March 11, 1912, after a short illnenB, FREDERICK TARTTER, aged 38 years. Funeral on Wednesday, March 13. at 11 a.m., from 760 Carroll st. TURNER On Sunday, March 10, 1912, EDWIN A. TURNER, beloved husband of Maude L.

Turner, nt his residence, 135 Windsor place. Relations and friends are invited to attend funeral Bervlces Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. Interment private. WRIGHT On Mnrch 11, 1912, Mi3s EMILY WRIGHT, In the 81st year of her age. Services at St.

Mark's M. E. Church, Merrick road and Village av, Rockvillo Centre, L. Thursday morning, March 14, at 9:30 o'clock. Interment at Cypress Hills Cemetery, at 12 M.

IN MEM0RIAM. CURRY A month's mind mass of requiem will be said for the repoBe of the soul of the late FRANCES A. CURRY, heloved wife of Edmond J. Curry, at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola, Eighty-fourth Bt and Park av, New York City, on Thursday morning, March 14, at 9 o'clock, COX In lovlnn remembrance of our dear father, JOHN COX, who departed this life March 12, 100S.

If you require a new COOKING RANGE Or your present one repaired, communicate with DAYTON MONTGOMERY, 63 FLATBUSH AVE. Tel 4915-49-16 Main. REV. R. N.

BOSS RESIGNS. Compelled to Leave Trinity P. E. Church Through 111 Health. The Rev.

Nelson R. Boss hag resigned the rectorship of the Trinity P. E. Church, East New York, where he waa successful for twenty-eight years. He and his wife are now living at East Orange, N.

J. Mr. Boss had been In 111 health for some time and expects to take a vacation. He was unable to attend Ills work and It Is said his resignation was made because of that fact, and his resignation came as a surprise. Mr.

Boss has been suffering from a form of nervous prostration. Two winters ago he and hia.wife went to Florida, but his health was not very much Improved by the trip. MARRIAGES too DEATHS ADOPTION. FOR ADOPTION Will give to reliable party healthy, pretty Gentile BOY; walking; age 20 months. J.

C. Box 34, Eagle office. DIED. Anderson, Frank P. Liebmann, Herman Banks, Thurza A.

Lindon, G. A. Ward. Bennet, Stewart Loftus, Jeremiah W. Buckley, Catherine Matthews, Harriet Carey.

Annie A. Medd. Charles F. Clark, John L. Cuthbert, John Goodridge, Alice Nolan, Mary pennoyer, Alice H.

Prltchltt, James Harris, Mark Roos, Frank HauBer Madeleine Ryder, Caroline C. Heeeg, Lorenz Schmale, Henry J. Klock, Eugene A. Schnuck, Rose E. Langford, Ellen Tartter, Frederick nnl la Sillo Turner.

Edwin A. Leach, Mary F. Wright, Miss Emily A T)FlRRONT On Sunday. March 10, 1912, FRANK P. ANDERSON, at his home, 2 Covert av, Rldgewood.

Funeral services Tuesday night at 8 o'clock, interment Wednesday at 10 a.m. BANKS On Saturday, March '9, 1912, THURZA widow ot James P. Banks, In her 92d year. Relatives and friends ar Invited to attend funeral services at residence of her son- n-law. jonn Keeeman.

431 Greene av. Brooklyn. on Tuesday evening, March 12, at o'clock. (Westcnester County papers (lease copy.) BENNET On Monday, March 11, 1912, ADELIA STEWART, widow of Dr. George H.

R. Bennet. Relatives and friends are invited to attend funeral services at the residence of her son-in-law, Tillman Benson. 1150 Dean st. Brooklyn, on Wednesday afternoon.

March 13. at 2 o'clock. Interment private, BROOKLYN LODGE No. 22. B.

P. 0 ELKS BROTHERS: You are requested to attend the funeral service ot our late Brother JOHN L. CLARK, Wednesday, March 1912, 8 p.m., at his late residence. 146 Decjutur st (near Sumner av). ALBERT T.

BROPHY, Exalted Ruler. Joseph H. Becker, Secretary. BUCKLEY At her home. 446 Forty-seventh st, on March 11.

1912, CATHERINE BUCKLEY, aged 58 years. Mass at St. Michael's Church, Forty-second st and Fourth av, Brooklyn, on Wednesday, March 13, at 10 o'clock; thence to Holy Cross Cemetery. CAREY On Monday, March 11, 1912, ANNIE A. CAREY, wife of Captain William Carey and daughter of Amelia, and the late Captain James Johnston.

Funeral Wednesday, 9 p.m., at her moth-er'i residence, 293 Seventh av, Brooklyn. Interment private. CLARK On Monday, March 11, 1912, JOHN L. CLARK, son of the late David and Ellen Clark and brother of Thomas Clark and Mrs. Walter E.

Washburn. Funeral Thursday, 9:30 a.m., from his late residence, 146 Decatur st, Brooklyn; thence to Church of Our Lady of Victory, Throop av and McDonough st, where a solemn requiem mass will be celebrated. I CUTHBERT Suddenly, at Freeport, Sunday, March 10. 1912, JOHN CUTHBERT. Funeral service at his late residence, 27 North Ocean av, Freeport, Tuesday evening, March 12, at 8 o'clock.

Interment private. GOODRIDGE On March 10, 1912. ALICE, daughter of Adelaide and the late Hugh W. Goodridge of Barbados and N. Y.

Funeral swrvice at her late residence, 981 Greene av. on Wednesday evening, March at 9 o'clock. HAUSER On March 10. 1912, MADELEINE SLOCUM HAUSER," Infant daughter of August C. and Lorna J.

Hauser. HARRIS On March 10, 1912. at 589 Halsey st, Brooklyn, MARK HARRIS, 67 years of age. To be burled Wednesday at 2 o'clock. HEEG On Monday, March 11, 1912, LORENZ HEEG.

in his 76th year. Funeral services tvUI be held at 1102 Putnam av, Wednesday, 9 p.m. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited. KLOCK Suddenly, at his home, 148 Hendrix st, Brooklyn, EUGENE ADEL-BERT KLOCK, D.D.S., aged 62 years and 2 months. Funeral services at his late residence on March 14 at 8 o'clock.

(Herkimer County, N. papers please copy.) LANGFORD On March 12, 1912, ELLEN FRANCIS LANGFORD. Funeral services at her late residence, 24 LivlngBton st, Brooklyn, on Wednesday, March 13, 1912, at 3 p.m. Interment private. Kindly omit flowers.

LAPOLLA Sunday, March 10, 1912, SILLO LAPOLLA. Funeral Wednesday, 9:30 a.m., from late residence, 23 st( New York City; thence to Church of tX. Jacks, Roosevelt St. Members Stereo-typers Union are requested to attend. THOMAS J.

CARROLL, President. Charles W. Coons, Financial Secretary. LEACH On Sunday, March 1912, MARY the beloved wife of Henry J. Leach.

Funeral services at her late residence, 1617 Av. corner East Seventeenth st, Brooklyn, Tuesday, March 12, at 8 p.m. Interment Wednesday, Darien, Conn. (London papers please copy.) LIEBMANN On the morning of March 11, 1912, HERMAN LIEBMANN, beloved father of Jennie, Robert and Estelle, In Ills 65th year. Funeral from his late residence, 632 Jefferson av, Brooklyn, on Wednesday, March 13, at 10 o'clock.

LINDON On Monday, March 11, 1912. GRACE A. WARD LINDON, widow of FrpnclB V. Lindon, at her residence, 575 Fifty-ninth st. Requiem mass Wednesday.

March 13. at St. Alphonso's Church, Fifty-ninth st and Fifth av, at 10 o'clock. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. LOFTUS On March 10, 1912, at 523 Forty-seventh st, JEREMIAH W.

LOFTUS, beloved husband of Mary E. Daily. Requiem mass Wednesday at 10:30 at St. Michael's Church, MATTHEWS On March 12, 1912, HARRIET BURCH MATTHEWS, In her 71st year. Funeral from her late residence, 805 Snedecor av.

Union Course, on Thursday, at 1:30 p.m. Relatives and friends ar invited to attend, I Meets Members of Brooklyn mittee and Goes Over Preliminary Ground. URGES 0'KEEFFE PLAZA IDEA, Development of Borough to Conform to Present Plans of City Officials Regarding Improvements. Edward H. Bennett, the Chicago architect who has been engaged by the Brooklyn Planning Committee to bring about the architectural development of the borough, has come on from San Francisco, where ho has been at work along similar lines, to take up with the Brooklyn committee the plans for immediate improve ment.

These Include Bridge Commissioner Arthur J. O'Keeffe's plan for a Brooklyn Bridge Plaza to replace the present railroad yards, lumber yards and many ramshackle buildings, and the working out of details for the development of an art and, science center in the vicinity of the Prospect Park Plaza. It Is recognized by Mr. Bennett and the City Planning Committee that the development movement must be outlined to fit in with the present plans of the city officials. The official programme of clvlo Improvement, such as the location of the new Municipal Building south of the Borough Hall, and the selection of the new Brooklyn Public Library site, at Flatbush avenue and Eastern Parkway, will not meet with Interference In the plans of the committee and Mr.

Bennett. But some broad, general plan must be mapped out for the future, and in this connection the O'Keeffe Brooklyn Bridge Plaza project, In conjunction with a civic center. Is of Immediate Importance. Before the details of this plan take shape along too definite lines, suggestions' will be made to the city officials regarding the selection of sites for the new Court House, a public school, a model tenement and for the location of park land and transit routes through the plaza. Playgrounds and the reserving of land by the city for future civic development are also Important features of the O'Keeffe plan.

The problem requires considerable study before definite suggestions can be put forth by Mr. Bennett and the committee, and the architect is here to familiarize himself with the details and to become acquainted with the members of the Brooklyn committee and to go over various suggestions With borough and city, officials. The first of a number of conferences between Mr. Bennett and members of the executive board of the committee took place yesterday afternoon at the office ol Alfred T. Wiiite, treasurer of the committee.

This conference was attended by Frederic B. Pratt, chairman of the committee; Major John W. Tumbrldge, secretary; Edward M. Bassett, chairman of the special committee on legislation; Charles J. Peabody and others.

There was general discussion of the preliminary steps to be taken while Mr. Bennett is In town. Tomorrow Mr. Bennett and Mr. Pratt will visit Bridge Commissioner O'Keeffe and take up the Bridge Plaza project.

Mr. Bennett will make known some ot his impressions on the possibilities of Brooklyn's development when he appears at a meeting of the executive committee In the Arts Building, 174 Montague Btreet, at 4:30 o'clock Thursday afternoon. An important feature of Mr. Bennett's activities here will be his address at a city planning dinner of the Municipal Club, to be held at the Brooklyn Club on the evening of March 26. While iu town Mr.

Bennett will consider city planning in Queens and other Long Island counties In conjunction with Brooklyn's development. He will go over the ground personally and get In touch with committees which have organized to extend the Brooklyn development plans. In this connection the leaders of these committees have been Invited to attend the Municipal Club dinner. Another speaker at this dinner wil be John H. Fahey, chairman of the committee which is planning Boston's architectural development.

Mr. Fahey will tell what Boston is planning along this line. BOY HIT BY A CAR. Pushed Along 30 Feet by Fender, but Escapes Serious Injury. While running to recover a ball batted to him by a playmate, Stacy MacCurray, 15 years old, of 539 Fourth street, was struck by a Sixteenth avenue, Greenwood-bound ear, at Second street and Ninth avenue yesterday afternoon.

The boy failed to Bee the approaching car until It was almost upon him. Then he attempted to save himself by grabbing the fender, but the car struck him, and he was thrown down and pushed along the ground for a distance of about ten yards. Young MacCurray was unconscious when taken from under the car by a priest from St. Saviour's Church, who was near by. A doctor who witnessed the accident revived the lad, and after an examination stated that the Injuries were not as serious as at first indicated.

The parents of the boy were not willing that he should be serft to a hospital, and he was removed to his home. SAILOR DIES SUDDENLY. (Special to The Eagle.) Rutherford, N. March 12 George Relger, attached to the battleship Florida, at present stationed In the Brooklyn Navy Yard, died suddenly In a room at the Palm Hotel, East Rutherford, yesterday. Death was due to heart trouble.

the body was taken to the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The same feet fn apairof Coward Axch Support Shoes ankle strain entirely relieTed. RED- U. S. PAT.

OFFICB CELEBRATED HATS Fully In keeping with their establish ed reputation for Style and NEW YORK Chicago Philadelphia Agencies In All Principal Cities LOST AND FOUND. LOST, lady's old WATCH and VOB, Creacent Theater, Saturday afternoon. Ha ward if returned to 477 4th St. ft LOST, on Sunday afternoon, between Park- way Bath House and Brighton Beach etatioti. pearl SUNBURST.

Reward to flfl Hughy road, Flatbush. FOUND, on oorner of Ijifayette av and VatH derbilt, a pair of rold-rlmmed aPECTAQLEB In case marked B. HOECKER." Th loser may reclaim his property by communicating with W. M. VAN SANT, AO Clifton placo, Brooklyn.

PERSONAL. ON and after this day I shall not be re-ponslble for any debts contracted by my wife, who has left my home. AUG. W1X, Brooklyn. 1 WANTED GARAGE.

WANTED, private place to store touring qarj neighborhood of Halsey st and Reld av preferred. BOTTS, 99 Maiden lane, New YorH City. I TRAINMAN KILLED IN WRECK. Rochester. March 12 In a rear-enJ collision between two freight trains thli morning, the conductor of one of tfcs freighL3 vns killed in his caboose.

rilOPOAfyS FOR BIDS AND ESTIMATES FOR THE CITY OF NEW YORK. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS TO BIDDER' The person or persons making a bid or estimate for any service, work material or aup-pllea for The City of New Yor.c or for any of Its departments, bureaus or offices shall furnish the same In a sealed envelope, Indorsed with the title of the supplies, materials, worlc or service tvr which the bid or estimate la made, with his or their name or names and the date of the presentation to the president, or board, or to the head of the department ae his or its office, on or before the date and hour named in the advertisement for the same, at whlrh time and place the estimate rocelved will be publicly opened by the President ot Board or head of said department and reada and the award of the contract made according to law as soon thereafter as practicable. Each bid or estimate shall contain the naaM and place of residence of the person making the same, the names of all persons interested with htm therein, and If no other person be wm Interested, shall distinctly state that fact, also that It Is made without any connection with any other person making an estimate fop the same purpose, and Is In all respects fair and without collusion or fraud, and that member of the Board of Aldermen, head of department chief of bureau, deputy thereof of clerk therein, or other officer of The City ot New York is. shall be or.

become directly or Indirectly, as contracting party, partner, shareholder, surety or otherwise. In or In the performance of the contract or la the supplies, work or business to which It relates, or In any portion of the profits thereof. The bid or estimate must be verified by th ath. In writing, of the party or parties making the estimate that the several matters stated therein are In all respects true. Each bid or estimate shall be accompanied by the consent, In writing, of two householders or freeholders In Th City of Neir Tork, or of a guaranty or surety company duly authorized by law to act as surety, and shall contain the matter set forth In the blank form mentioned below.

No bid or estimate will be considered unless, as a condition precedent to the reception or consideration of any proposal. It be accompanied by a certified check upon one of the tat or national banks of The City of New York, drawn to the order of the Controller, or money to the amount of five per centum of the amount of tho bond required as provided In Section 420 of the Greater New York Charter. The certified cheek or money should not ba Inclosed In the envelope containing the bid or estimate, but should be either Inclosed In a separate envelope addressed to the head of the department, president or brmrd, or submitted personally upon the presentation the bid or In ate For particulars as to the quantity and quality of the supplies or the nature and extent of the work, reference must be made to the specifications, schedules, plans, on file In the said office of the president, board or department. No bid shall be accepted from or contract awarded to nny person who Is In arrears to The City of New York upon debt or contract, or who is a defaulter as surety or otherwise upn any obligation to the city. The contracts must be bid for separately.

The right la reserved in each case to reject all bids or estimates if It be deemed to be for the Interest of the city so to do. Bidders will write out the amount of thdLf bids or estimates In addition to inserting tnT am In figures. Bidders are required to make their bids of 1 estimates upon the blank forms prepared and furnished by the city, a copy of which, with the proper envelope In which to inclose th bid, togetherwlth a copy of the contract, including the specifications In the form, approved by the corporation counsel, can be obtained by application therefor at the office of the department for which the work Is to be don. Plate or drawings ot construction work ssfleTJ alto be seen there TO POWER OF PATENTEES Several Bills to Meet Conditions Referred to by Chief Justice White. RESTRICTIONS ARE ONEROUS.

They Are Used to Bring Articles ot Common Use Within Monopoly of a Patent. Washington, March 12 Several bills to curb the monopolizing powers of patentees over unpatented articles used In operating patented machines, began to Bhow life today In Congress. Some old bills were revivified and new ones drafted In response to the appeal of Chief Justice White, of the Supreme Court, for Congress to change the law which a ma jority of the court yesterday found gave patentees practically unrestricted privi leges regarding the manner In which their patents may be used. E. B.

Moore, Commissioner of Patents, has prepared a bill to amend the law so that patentees may not Impose onerous conditions upon purchasers of their pa tented article. Senator Gore may rein- troduce a bill he presented to Congress last year regulating "license restrictions in the sale of patents. The Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce has re cently Investigated patent monopolies along with monopolies not sanctioned by law. It has been understood that the committee would deal with the patent ques tion In any recommendations It might make In regard to changing the anti trust laws. Senator Brown, chairman of the Senate Committee on Fatents, and members of the House Committee on Patents, have expressed themselves, since the court's decision, as willing to at promptly.

An amendment of the patent laws agreed upon will contain in some form a blow at the comparatively recent plan ot putting a license restriction on the in of patented articles sold by the pateuteM. It would be designed to correct the etil which Chief Justice White spoke of he said: "It is a matter of common knowledge that these restrictions have been frequently resorted to for the purchase of bringing numerous articles of common use within the monopoly of a patent where otherwise they would not have been embraced therein, thereby tending to subject the whole of society to an undisputed monopolistic control." The proposed amendments would endeavor to bring within the law "the vast area" spoken of by the Chief Justice between the restrictions placed on rights by the patent law and the "laws uf the land." Representative Littleton of New York after conferring with the Commissioner of Patents, announced today that he would Introduce a bill to meet the "legalized monopoly" decision handed down yesterday. Mr. Littleton's bill will seek to limit the sweeping power given to patentees by tbe court's decision. CADMAN GOING TO ENGLAND.

Central Congregational Pastor Will Spend Summer Abroad. The Rev. Dr. S. Parkes Cadman, pastor of the Central Congregational Church, will take his vacation a little later than usual this year.

Re will sail for England on July 3. Last year he went away on May 20 on account of a somewhat severe nervous breakdown, but he Is now In his usual health, although he decided for some time past to refuse many engagements. He will return to his pulpit, It Is understood, for the second Sunday In Sep- tember. In the meantime the Central and the Tompkins Avenuue churches will hold union eervices during the months or July and August, alternating each month In each church. Tho Rev.

William Mulr Auld, assistant to Dr. Cadraan, with Mrs. Auld, will sail ffor Scotland on April 2o, where he and his wife will celeDraie xne nrsi anni- vorsarv of their marriage. Mrs. Auld came to this country Just a year ago, and thev were married in Church.

They will return the latter part of June, In time to take up the work at Dr. Cad-man'B departure. NEW SPANISH CABINET. Madrid, March 12 The Spanish cabinet which resigned yesterday has been reconstructed -today. Premier Canalejas retained the leadership.

nominees tor national delegates against the organization ticket headed by Lawrence Abbott of the Outlook, who Ib favorable to Colonel Roosevelt. Hamilton Fish, of Garrison, is opposing Mr. Odell for member of the State Committee. The period In which certificates of Independent nominations for candidates to be voted on at the primaries may be filed with the Secretary of State closed at midnight last night. S.

S. COLUMBIA IN HURRICANE. Wind 100 Miles an Hour Steel Gates Wrenched Open by Waves. Two days overdue, the steamship Columbia ot the Anchor Line, arrived here today from badly battered, and with a tale of the stormy sea that has seldom been equaled In the history of the North Atlantic. Captain John Black said that he had been In many a cyclone, but that the one through which the Columbia passed during this trip was by far the most tem- pestous he ever encountered.

'It was fatal lor any man to let go of a rail for even an Instant, he said, 'for the wind, which came In spirals and twists, would have torn him from the deck and sent him overboard in a twinkling. Only a strong man could even hold on witti one nana, wnne ine weaker ones either, had to remain be low or take a desperate chance. For twelve hours the wind blew at the rate of one-hundred miles an hour. At 11 o'clock last Wednesday night a big sea came aboard. 1 was on the bridge at the time.

The sea simply enveloped us from end to end, and In less than two minutes all the damage was aone. The gangway gates were as last as steel bars could make them, but nothing could have withstood the strength of that torrent of water, and tne gates were wrenched open and bent as if they were paper." CRITICISE LEADER LINEBURGH Fifth A. D. Republicans Accuse Him of Breaking Faith. A fight started because of dissatisfac tion ov.t representation on the Kings County Republican Committee came to a head at a meeting last night of the Fifth Assembly District Republican Club, when Leader Thomas B.

Llneburgh was criticised severely not recognizing a fac tion not In sympathy with hia leadership. It was charged that although he had publicly promised to do bo, Llncburgh did not put any of the minority members of hlB district on the county committee. Llncburgh himself denounced members ot the Roosevelt committee for opposing him for delegate to the, national convention. At the meeting Lineburgh was told that his opponents had obtained 600 signatures to a petition for a primary ticket onposea to tne slate ne neaaea lor State delegates and county committee men. Those back of this Independent ticket are said to be working for the return of Robert Sharkey to the district leadership.

MORE CUCKOOS. Editor The Brooklyn Daily Eagle: Inclosed find Borne more "Cuckoos' received in my Eagle of yesterday FAIR PLAY. Brooklyn, March 11, 1912. "Cuckoos" referred to by Fair Play were two In number. One was a full page Imitation of the product of a regular newspaper, bearing the advertisement of The Berlin.

The other was an olaborale advertisement of an ont-of-town correspondence school, Bhowing that the scheme of stealing newspaper circulation at less than newspaper rates is broadening Its appeal Ed. Kagle.) ATTELL DENIES FAKE. San Francisco, March 12 Charges that Abe Attell tried to fix his light with "Harlem" Tommy Murphy here last Saturday were denied by Attell In an interview..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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