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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Brooklyn Tennis Star Gains Western Semis JIMMY BROOKLYN EAGLE, JULY 23, 1954 13 Moses Reveals He Called for Ban Prize-Winning Angler Employs Corn for Bait MURPHY'S COLUMN On Cops' Mercy Errand Speeding Southern State Parkway was packed with cars coming from the airplane plants. "4. Our police are expected GOING GREAT GUNS One of the reasons why the Redwings are tied With the St; Bernadette club in the Grasshopper Division of the Coney Island Sports League with 9-3 is because they employ major league tactics on the field. published story referred to an incident which occurred at 4:30 a.m. and that race tracks aren't open at that hour.

Howland, in his own defense, said he is on call for work on weekends and didn't see why he couldn't get an afternoon off during the They play smart, heads-up ball week by way of compensation. The Moses statement fol lows: "I read the tall tale about the Long Island Park policeman rushing to a dying boy and the crack at our very competent general manager. Suppose we now get at the facts: "1. The incident which led to the order occurred at 4:30 p.m. not at 4:30 a.m.

There were apparently several occurrences of this kind, not just one. "2. I saw the 4:30 p.m. occur rence myself and asked that the order be Issued. "3.

The policeman in ques tion was going like a bat out of hell with a wagon marked "blood bank" behind him. He was weaving in and out, al most involved my car and a dozen others in a serious ac cident at a time when the CHASE IN OZONE PARK us mey arise oponsnianMiip la uiuicu imu we jruuiigsicis and after a defeat they give an organized cheer for their conqueror. The team operates under the wholesome influence of Jack Press, who will tolerate nothing but the best of gentlemanly conduct on and off the field. It is the type of disci pline that is paying dividends for the team. Press, the brother of Joe, vice president and a member of the board of directors of the Bensonhurst National Bank, and identified with the athletic program at the Jewish Com- munity House of Bensonhurst, is a sound outstanding erstwhile sandlot player of Brooklyn.

He was a. member of James Madison High's city P. S. A. L.

championship nine of 1927 which had Jimmy Pattison, a southpaw who had a trial with the Dodgers, and Jimmy Lee as the star battery. PLAYED FOR FEWSTER Jack also played with Chick Fewster's Kings, one of the leading semi-pro clubs of Brooklyn, after Chick had finished his career with the Yankees and Dodgers. He also played minor league ball with the Harrisburg Senators, a Braves' farm when Judge Fuchs owned the club. Jack and Joe were the mainstays at one time of the old Stillwells. The mound mainstays of the Redwings are Allan Drazen, a 13-year-old portsider with the poise of a big leaguer developed through modeling his style after several National League aces, and Martin Leder, a right-hander.

Drazen, who has two no-hitters and two one-hitters to his credit and averages four hits and seven strikeouts per game, has compiled a record thus far of 6-1. Leder has a setup of 3-2. BOAST STRONG CATCHER The catching is'handled faultlessly by Paul Zaitchek, 12, built along the lines of Roy 1 Campanella, who is the club's big blaster with a .500 mark. The infield fields superbly with Bill Press, son of the manager, on first base; Lenny Spielfogel at second base; Gene Vitale, a sensational fielder, shortstop, and Harvey Snyder, third base. 1 The outfield is composed of long-ball hitters and brilliant ball hawks.

The picket line performers are Danny Kahn, Kenny Auletta, son of Pat, president of the league, and Richie Goldberg, 13, who hits the ball with the authority of Duke Snider. The club has dependable reserves in Johnny Gentile, Richie Silverman and Richie Rosenberg, who double in brass in the infield and outfield. and capitalize on the breaks HOWARD S. PRATTs I WIII.U I IMintiuk Ft. r.lrrt ltaM (Hi.

VM Mink Itf Passerby Fingers Pair As Payroll Bandits Has your fishing been bad lately? Maybe Its the bait you use. Well here's a tip from 13-year-old Dennis Norwood of 177 Putnam "Use corn." Young Norwood tried it at yesterday's session of the Abraham and Straus Fishing Contest at Prospect Park Lake and hauled in the biggest fish, a three-pound 12-ounce German carp, 19 inches long, First prize brought Dennis, who represented he Park De partment, a complete camera kit and a rod, reel and line. Some 20 private and public agencies providing supervised recreation for children took part in yesterday's Invitation Day which marked the halfway point of the four week Junior Angler contest. The group Included the Boys Club of the Navy Yard District, the New York and Brooklyn Councils of the Girl Scouts, the Brooklyn Council of the Boy Scouts, the Camp Fire Girls of Greater New York, the Police Athletic League, the Catholic Youth Organization, the Y. M.

H. A. and Y. W. H.

A. of Borough Park, the Y. M. H. A.

and Y. W. H. A. of Williamsburg, the Brooklyn Central Y.

W. the Park Department playground programs and others. The kids are competing for over 223 prizes, including $325 in IT. S. bonds and four bikes, in this year'a contest, the third annual competition, Close to 7,000 youngsters have signed up to date.

Contestants can fish at Prospect Park sev en days a week from 8 a.m to 8 p.m. Boys and eirls through 15 years of age may still register for the contest at either the sporting goods department at or at the Model Yacht House in Pros pect Park. Richard M. Jenkins, Depart ment of Parks borogh director for Brooklyn, awarded the prizes to the winners. Meadow Brook on Top Westbury, L.

July 23 Dev Milburn's goal in the final chukker enabled Meadow Brook to nip Blind Brook, 65 in the semi-final round of the Hempstead Cup's 12-goal tour nament at the Meadow Brook Club yesterday. HOW DODGER HURLERS COMPARE WITH CARDS DODGEM Vt. CARDS Ufetlae ISM Wea Leal Pet. Wea Laat Pel. raklaa IS .750 2 1 .067 Labia 3 I .71 1 l.aot IS 1 1 1 Neweeaka 1 .58 Pe4rea 1 1 .50 1 1 Wade 2 .50 MUUkea 1 1 .50 Hathea 1 I 1 1 .50 Merer 1 .462 I l.ao Pallea 1 I .167 Leea 2 .60 1 CARDS VS.

DODOEE9 Wea Leal Pet. Wea Leal Pet. Llfethae ISM Bratle 13 7 .656 ,6 Haaall 4 3 .571 1 1 .50 Staler 16 IS .406 1 1 JSft Baaeal 1 2 .33 1 2 .33 Peaalakj 2 .286 1 .50 Preeke 2 11 .154 1 1 .50 Laareae 1 .06 1 .000 Two Brooklyn men were under arrest today, captured by police after a wild chase in a stolen car, and identified as payroll stickup men by a woman who was walking by as they were nabbed. The prisoners were William Lupo, 21, of 133 Ellery St. and Joseph Russo, 27, of 331 Mer maid Ave.

Both were booked on charges of assault, robbery, passing a red light and fleeing the scene of an accident. Their troubles with the law began at 3:30 p.m. yesterday, police said, when the stolen car in which they were riding passed red light at 101st Ave. and Woodhaven Boulevard, in Ozone Park. mm and era Champaign, 111..

July 23 (U.R) Allan Silverman, Brooklyn, N. upset top-seeded Earl Bucholz, St. Louis, 64, 63, to advance to today's semi-final round of the West ern Junior and Boys Tennis championships. Another Brook- lynlte, Ron Holmberg, bowed to Art Andrews of Iowa City, Iowa, 61, 63. In the Junior Singles quarter finals, top-seeded Jerry Moss, Miami, ousted Allen Quay; St.

Petersburg, Fla, 63, 4 6, 61, and Gregory Grant, San Marino, 36, 6-4, 9-7, to gain a semi-final berth. GOLF HERE'S HOW I By Sam Snead win i urtatMr riaysr-TsseBtr Recently I told you golfers how to shoot an intentional slice. Today let's try to hook. You can probably use a hook more often than you can the slice, since most dog-leg holes are built so that the green is to the left. Well, breaker jumpers, a hook is made by an insiae-out swing.

Heres how: first, move your left hand more on top of the shaft and your ight hand more un der it. Close your stance by moving vour right foot back from the line of normal flight of the ball. Swing the clubhead back in side the line of flight. Keep your right elbow especially close to the body. Then as you hit the ball, the face of your club will pass inside out across the line of desired flight and Impart a right-to-left' spin to the ball.

This will cause it to curve to the right in the air, and to roll a long way after it strikes the ground. Today player has drawn his right foot (A) back, and has his left hand (B) almost on top of the shaft. That Is correct. Start Pee Wee Loop The Coney Island Baseball League is starting a Pee Wee League for 8-12-year-olds. Try outs will be held tomorrow morning at 9:30 at the Kaiser Playground, Neptune Ave.

and W. 28th Diamond No. 2. Whltey Costa will be in charge of the tryouts. All youngsters attending will be placed on the various teams.

Play will start early next month. Anawar ta Vaataruy'a ru.e DOWN 1-Metal I Time gone by 3 Restrains 4 Handle 5 Light rain -Worthless leaving T-Natlv to V.t. I Fruit .1 Great Lake 10 Cronies 11 Instant (abbr.) 17 Mediterranean Island 1 Female ruS Zl-Clan 12 Accurst 13 Cleaner it Sovereignty 27- Notrlp 28 State in Arabia It Kind of leather 21 Stalks SS Catkins It Spread for drying 40 Fork prongs 41 Box 42 Story 48 Dry 44 South Africa fo 48 Prefix: bafort 48 Noise 48-FlnUk I. A ii -JRIEIAICITI WAS. A 5i.P EL LMSDSE wiECgIA Eit.rnaii kTO1t sBy Top Transit Officials High Tide for Eagle Anglers Given Salary Boosts M.1A.M-.

r.H.IA-U. r.H.A-M. r-M. By Harry J. Roth With three events, the men's pairs and women's pairs and the mixed pairs completed today, the.

two main events of the Brooklyn Championships, the master's and non-master's pairs, will be played tomorrow at the Hotel St. Both contests will be played In two sessions, the first at 2 p.m. and the second at 8 p.m. The open team-of-four and the individual championships will be played on Sunday at p.m. These two contests will conclude the three-day tourna ment which Is expected to at tract the leading experts in the East.

A special master point game will be held Sunday evening, open to all players. When the dummy was spread on today's hand the South de clarer realized that he would get a bad score for making the six-spade contract he bid as six no trump was cold and he knew most of the other pairs would De in tnat contract. His only hope was to take all the tricks, if possible, but. how could he avoid a heart? De clarer decided to give the hand play and eventually he dis covered a way to swindle his West opponent out of a trick, South dealer Neither side vulnerable 4.AQ974 OAJ A105 4863 NOITB ate None 108764 00863 9632 3 0107432 AJ87 OUT! 4.KJ1052 OKQ 4KQ4 With normal bidding North- South landed in six spades and West opened with the three of spades. East showed out and discarded a heart.

South won the trlclc and cashed two rounds of spades, took his three top" clubs and two high dia monds to strip the hand. Declarer now made the play that gave him all the tricks. He laid down the ace of hearts, West was no dope. He realized that the only chance to beat the hand was avoid being thrown in with the king of hearts and having to make a lead that would give declarer a ruff-and-sluff. He honed his partner would have the queen-ten and some small hearts, so he dumped his king under the ace and South made seven and got a top score on the deal.

BORO PARK Friedman Chlded By Dem Rival for Switch in Votes Joseph Kottler, Boro Park insurgent seeking the Demo cratic nomination for State Senator in the 15th District, chlded the Incumbent. Louis L. Friedman, last nidht for what he termed Friedman's "unpleasant trick" concerning compulsory automobile insurance legislation rejected by tne legislature last year. Kottler told a meeting of the Independent Democrats for Good Government lii the 2d and 21st A. D.s that Friedman had voted for the insurance measure wnen us defeat ap peared probable, but that he had then switched his vote after Governor Dewey declared the bill a "must" in a last- ditch retrieving effort.

Milton Goldner, co-chairman of the sponsoring group, also addressed the meeting, held at the Kingsway Mansion, Avenue and E. 18tn St. BUSHWICK Bandit Nets $50 In Liquor Store A lone bandit fled with $50 yesterday after holding up a Bushwick liquor store. Mrs. Annette Sinacore.

36. was alone in her Pine Liquor store at 642 Evergreen corner of Weirfield when the thug entered, police said. The bandit ordered a bottle of wine, then thrust his hand In his coat pocket as if he had a gun and forced the woman to hand him the money from the register. mm ftt To Get in Clear Albert Greene, Brooklyn theater manager who ran Into trouble with the Secret Service because he chrome-plated pennies, was In the clear today. After managing to recover 23,000 of the shiny coins, he had them de-plated, then carried them to the Secret Service office at 90 Church Manhattan, in six sacks.

Greene spent 90 minutes In the Secret Service office and emerged with an "all-is-for-given" smile. He was still carrying the pennies. Greene had them chrome-plated originally as a Btunt to protest the new city amusement tax and distributed them at his Avenue Theater. BRIDGE Giving his own version of a crackdown on Long Island parkway police for taking part in mercy -errand blood -bank races," Robert Moses said to day he was "sick and tired of the horrible maiming of Innocent people by speeding cars." noses revealed that it was he who had prompted Arthur E. Howland, general manager of the Long Island State Park Commission, to censure police for excessive speed on park ways.

Noting there were several recent incidents involving speeding police, Moses revealed that one "exhibitionist cowboy policeman" nearly Involved Moses' own car and a dozen others In a serious accident. Moses, who Is president of the L. I. State Park Commission, replied sharply to a pub lished remark, attributed to an unidentified police source, that Howland was not always avail- abel for consultation on emergency matters because he was often at the race track in the afternoon. Moses pointed out that the MILL BASIN Cops Rescue 2 Boys Stack In Mad Flats Stranded for three hours In Mill Basin marsh, two mud dled teen-age boys were finally carried to safety by police last night.

A Harbor Precinct launch went to the youths' aid when a motorist, driving along the Belt Parkway, spotted the boys stack on the mad flats north of the Bill Basin Bridge shortly after 9 p.m. The shallow water halted the launch far short of Joseph Callahan, 16, of 102 Lott St. and Brendan Hegarty, 17, of 2530 Tilden seated In their high and dry rowboat. Young Hegarty is a paralytic. Patrolmen Edward Pisano and Joseph Pender proceeded to wade through waist-high mud to rescue; the boys.

ine launch took them to Flatbush Ave. and Avenue where a waiting ambulance carried them to Coney Island Hospital. They were treated for exposure and sent home. The boys told police they set out at 1 p.m. yesterday In the rowboat from a boat station at 2801 Flatbush Ave.

with three other chums William Boyce, 16, of 2535 Church Roger McClean, 15, of 1370 New York and Daniel Carroll, 15, of 284 E. 31st St. About 6:30 p.m., as they were returning to the boat house, they lost an oar and the receding tide left them stranded on the mud flats. Finally, Boyce, McClean and Carroll managed to reach shore through the mud. plan ning to obtain aid for the pair left behind.

But the passing motorist beat them to it. Garden Teachers Hold Conference The annual Summer confer ence of the School Garden Teachers of Brooklyn was held yesterday at the Brooklyn Bo tanic Garden. Romaine Button, city supervisor of the School Garden Pro gram, and Richard Kinney, Brooklyn supervisor, presided at the conference. The teachers who are in charge of 50 Summer gardens in Brooklyn schools, inspected the Botanic Garden Children's Garden, whose Summer registry boasts 180 children from 67 different public and private schools. STATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE OFFICES MOVE Two Brooklyn offices of the State Employment Service, which fills approximately 60,000 needle trades and household jobs a year, are moving from 205 Schermerhorn St.

to new premises at 73 Rockwell Place. Service at the new offices will begin Monday. Harold Montross, New York City director of the employ ment service, citing the ad vantages of the new location, observed that at Schermerhorn St. the offices were on the 8th floor, and when traffic was heavy elevator traffic snarled and Job-seekers were often backed up Into the street. PARKVILLE RESIDENTS FOR ONE-WAY STREETS Residents of four blocks In the Parkville area are busily rounding up signatures on petitions asking the Traffic Department to designate their streets as one-way routes.

The petitions will be pre sented on Saturday to Assem blyman Thomas A. Dwyer, who Is co-operating in the effort' to secure the change In regula tlons. Streeti affected are E. 7th, 8th, 0th and 10th Sts. between to enforce speed limits to prevent accidents, not to drive like fools and cause accidents.

Fixes Responsibility "5. The officials who make the rules must be responsible for speed and accidents, not doctors at distant hospitals or individual exhibitionist cowboy policemen. "6. There is not the slightest evidence that traveling 70 or 80 miles an hour on our parkways in so-called emer-gencies is in the general public interest. I am sick and tired of the horrible maiming of innocent people by speeding cars.

An entirely innocent couple were killed on the Wuntagh Parkway only last week returning from Jones Beach. "7. What on earth has Mr. Rowland's attendance at a race track on his time off got to do with a speed incident alleged to have occurred at 4:30 a.m. What race was being run at that hour?" Patrolman James McCauley commandeered a passing car and gave chase.

The fugitives rammed a car as they were being pursued and got out and fled on foot. They were caught at Rock-away and Woodhaven Boulevards by two cops. The patrolmen returned them to the scene of the ramming and it was there that Mrs. Mary Jane Illardo, 19, a passerby, identified them as the pair who held her np July 9 and who took an $800 payroll. The holdup occurred at the Jomac Sportswear Company, 531 Ridgewood where Mrs.

Illardo Is a bookkeeper. salary from $20,000, the figure he had received as chairman of the old Board of Transportation, to $32,500. Others getting increases included Harold L. Warner, general counsel, from $17,500 to Edward T. McNally, general superintendent, $18,500 to James H.

Griffin, chief engineer, $20,000 to and William Jerome Daly, secretary, $11,000 to $12,500. Leo Casey was given full charge of public relations and was handed a $45,000 appropriation with which to establish a monthly magazine for employes. law but by contiguity' will be the result. Even children can be affected by such a development, Mr. Gregory said, for they will then be attending "mono-racial" schools which will leave them with a "one-sided" viewpoint, making it all the more difficult for them to dwell in complete harmony with members of other cultural groups.

Mr. Gregory said that the" 53 percent-43 percent ratio will be maintained at Forest Houses, if at all feasible, in the hope that the pitfalls which have befallen other housing projects can be avoided there. Forest Houses is to be the test of the plan and, if It proves a success there, he will strive to have it put into effect in housing projects in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Harlem, South Jamaica and other "segregated" communities. COLLECTION collected, not the present 3 cents. Attorneys for four Queens theaters which had brought the action Involved were no more pleased with the decision than the city.

All It will do is save the customers some pennies, they pointed out. Forest Hills Gl and Pal Held for Being AWOL East Hartford, July 23 (U.R) Police today held two soldiers reported AWOL for three days from Fort Dlx, N. J. Pvt. Raymond F.

Simmons, 17, of East Hartford and Pvt. Stephen E. Jacobsen, 17, of 6538 Booth Forest Hills, N. were found sleeping last night In a car that police said The Transit Authority lias handed its 47 top executives salary boosts totaling $80,000 annually, with the biggest single increase, $12,500, going to Sidney H. Bingham, executive director and general manager.

The raises were announced immediately after the authority and the C. I. O. Transport Workers Union signed a contract providing pay increases of from 6.5 to 11 cents an hour for 37,000 employes, total cost of which will be $9,000,000 a year. Bingham's boost lifts his CXOSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS Says Racial Hurdle Plagues City Housing JJ Girl's nam 14 Written document 17 Chart SS Mohammedan prince Babylonian hero 41 Psrt of dower 44 Mine entrance 45 Plant of parsley family (pi) 47 Naked 0 Mohammedan name el High, craggy hills ft! Ireland 63 Crrmsoa 64 Dirk 65 Dispatch 1 Diplomacy a Ancient Syrian kingdom SUnHo.

flnl.t 11 Russian nam 13 Clrl's nam lt Hastened II K', II Ready-cut de signs in paper llVrtil, fair 10 Most unusual ll.TWI,n J3 Evergreen tree 25 Formal training SO Plays on wordi Ji Angio-Baxon money ISanay Hmi TidM, Jul- it RttiwUr. Jul 14- SI 1:10 1:13 1:41 ufldtir, July 25 lumlihed bf U. S. Caul art OtodetU lunar- Just go fishing, that's all Fluke, blues, blackflsh, sea bass and porgies are around. Stripers along both Long Island and New Jersey shores and school tuna, about 30 miles out.

Something for the nimrods that looks good. More deer than ever before are being ine seen in many parts of Maine at present and a record kill may be established in the Fall, if hunting conditions are favorable then, State outdoor officials believe. Assistant Chief Warden Charles Head of this city (Au- gusta) says, "Central Maine is away ahead on deer. Wardens here are seeing many more deer tlian usual and in places where deer haven't shown up previously." The same story is true elsewhere in the State. This writer saw more deer in the stretch between Stratton and Klngfield recently during an evening drive, than he ever had seen in a similar distance previously.

There are many deer in the Fish River Lake section of Aroostook County. Indeed, trips along the coast and across the State have re vealed many deer this year in all parts of Maine. The State of New Jersey has tompleted its first State-owned email marsh waterfowl project, the Division of Fish and Game, Department of Conservation and Economic Development, announced today. The project was patterned closely after similar improvement in New York State and is designed to improve habitat for waterfowl. Such developments will increase production of ducks throughout the Atlantic Flyway as well as furnish a PARTY BOATS SHEEPSHEAD BAT FLUKE 8EABASS fORGIES Majestic I 0(1 Shore Flirjrni Dillr 1:00 A.M.

Capt. Jim Majaitia Tel. EV. 1-5197 RANGER FLCKI DEAL llbACH PIER II 7 A.M. Sandpiper riaki DiIIt 1:00 A.M., :10 A.M.

NEB Blue Flihint Dally SUrtlnr Monday Capl.Dickr7"AM VICTORr 8 A. M. NEB I EVERT DAT NEW, PAST, 11(1 FT. BOAT Spatial Aueamedatlrai far UhIIm REABASS rOROIES fXVKI GLORY TaV 7 A.M. PIER 1 SHEEP8HEAD BAT PIER a P-L-D-E! AMBERJACK II 1:0 A.M.

twy dy, Pier I SR. 0-1 ISA Caal. Jim 41 Pier 1. Dili 7:14 AM LarriB 11 out. tel.

Dl. I-M44 Yankes PUKE PMJKI PUB 1 1 A.M. H. MMl 1A.M. i isi 17 la I I ii i3 3TJ2 15 55 35 3b mi 35" 37" AM.

P.M 4:11 1:3 in 4:54 lit ID 4S1 1:00 1:11 4:11 1:11 1:531 1:15 1 4:4 I MI 1:34 Add aaa bout tat DejUfbt Swlni tint. better hunting facility for sportsmen. The newly-created marsh land is located on the Haines- ville Public Hunting and Fish ing Grounds in Sussex Coua ty. Wildlife managers and maintenance personnel con structed a 22-foot concrete spillway and an auxiliary spillway of stone and mortar. A substantial earthen dike re tains the water at levels satis factory for the production of waterfowl food.

The Brookwood Gunners Anglers Association, held a 200-yard, heavy caliber, rifle match at Camp Smith, July 10. John Sander and Grant Seraydarlan won the club medal award for highest scores. In a regulation trap shoot on Sunday, Lt. Hammond Fox took "high gun" honors for the day. While the Cape Cod Canal appears to be the "very hot spot," activity in the Falmouth and Provincetown derbies is light A new leader has taken over at Provincetown In the only catch of any size during the week.

He is William Sny der Jr. of Huntington. L. I.J who caught a bass weighing 48 pounds 1 ounce at Race Point on a blue atom. Another outstanding catch was registered in Cape Cod Bay.

L. P. Pruyn of Richmond Hill caught one of 36 pounds. Yesterday's Homers NATIONAL Reeet, SnMer. JtduM 1 Baker 1.

Kluumkl, Bell. Mtthevt. Witt. AMERICAN Bern Hurtle. Baarntaa.

gkewrea, Werti 1, Smith, Ananit, Kuana, un.rai, oouuif, lwiudv. PARTY BOATS SREEPSHEAD BAT Nautilus II NEB 4 Hel. A D'y A.M. C. DaFlaa ELAINE B.

PLUM A. Tier 0 Dally CAPT. I. BACMANN. NI.

S-104B PILOT II PIER 7 DAILY A.M. CAPT. BABRT PHILLIPS fil PA1 Doily 7 A.M. VTAjavr A A-M4 Cltt I Cett Kaiiar VI. 8-iSM OEBBITTSBN BEACH Maggie Taataaaa Inn Peel Ckaaael At.

8 (L Neal NL I-144 7 ALOHA Ona far Week-Dey. Caerter SUN. :00 A.M. CAPT. EDDII KBUM Phana NI.

S-tl OKATX1IND BAT FLtTK ananna NELLIE BLY FISHING STATION Bawamta Darin Baaabaata Oalboarti kmn-MHnn, mm jonniaa Mosar aaer, Faat Bay St. Ball tawl. ES. I-M70 MARINI SUPPLIES EVINRUDI ALL MODELS la SUek. Baa Eleetrie Bl Twine THOMPaON WNIRLWINbWTOPPIS Baaa) SCHINELLER BROS.

Kaekiwar BlTi. Allaaila A Dun AM I. fat-tat. PM. Mi.

I-Ull Fort Greene and other housing projects are plagued with! a lack of community spirit because a "proper" proportion of tenancy between races has not been maintained, according to George Gregory, newly appointed member of the Municipal Civil Service Commission. Mr. Gregory, who is supervising a "balanced community program'' proposed for Forest Houses, a public housing project under construction in the Morrisania section of the Bronx.j spoke at a meeting of the Catholic Interracial Society last night at 20 Vesey Manhattan. Unless a ratio of approximately 55-1j between whites and non-whites is maintained, he added, the white families will move to other sections if they possibly can and another community "segregated not by COURT BANS lM tw, ilV 1. II eY IDtHM-IYIQAUte m'0VJWM Pennies OF MOVIE TAX BREAKAGE i That 5 percent amusement tax, from which the city had expected to collect $16,700,000 a year to help make up any deficit, will yield considerably less than that if a temporary court ruling In Queens is made permanent.

There Supreme Court Jus tice Nicholas N. Pette yester day Issued an order barring the city, pending a later deci sion following full hearings, from collecting "fractional taxes that is collecting a full cent where 5 percent of the admission price comes out with a fraction of a cent. Thus the court banned any tax at all on less than 20 cents admission, and on a 50-cent admission, of which percent would be 2Vi cents, the court BOATS JOR SAUJ BOATS FPU SALI AUXILIARY ICHOONFR St IEITM eCOTT J. aUBUENII kino Hi aa lr rankest, SIM. rlaleaa Ate, a4 waaa CU 3-MS Call DSwtr 1-113.

after BARBODB 14'. IS I. Jokaiaa SMkerae, 8WAF teak, rttn.lt etatrtl Urtlllt, IMS H-tM Cknralat track far alkeur4 Ittrini ahttl aetimrlM. Mr. fraaaeL east! "IS" awtar esUeaal.

IS. 1-7M7, WOrta 4-1738. NI. -87. Ml.

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B.r.i slat pa 4 seemiee lie. VLtltr 4- 15-roOT BOAT vtth U-kateaaawat aiatari 1404. alBaat am aaU aaaratlta. U. i- tilt.

MERCURY I Br. LIGHTNINQ, enellaal MrRCURY 1M3 lt k.e. Mark IB eetkasN, 2.1S1 eeMitle. Cell SBtaakaa i- MARINI SUPPLIB MX 1 BINOSBOtO MARINI ICTrLI MOTOR BOAT II'. etMiMaa, nar I), t.

Oer'l Naalttal Ckarla aaaipMalr attrkaala. aaal, Itlaraaa OatataH Matara JkaW, Vaa Blake aualltU, kaarr alf ATLANTIC AVI. (Oar. OraM) Wlltrrl srles MO. CL.

I-I3II. after B'KLYW la, N. Y. MB. I-IITI SAILBOAT IS" NATIONAL, 1 aat mala- I LOIN MOTOR aalla, atw leak eaarati reals te (a.

Msa- TH I N1W IIMI nee l-IHT. CAU MAIN 1-111 Foster Ave. and Avenue H. ordered that only 2 cents be was stolen July 1 in New York..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1841-1963