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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 19

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 19

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE PICTURE AND SPORTING SECTION. PICTURE AND SPORTING SECTION. NEW YORK CITY. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 19 12. BROOKLYN SCHOOL ACTIVITIES TOLD IN PICTURE FORM Sill 1 lillfciaSi aij-ih -ja Hi tv.

Aitmrser, I I eT-T'''? v-. i. Public School 165." A New. Building on Hopkinson Avenue. Elevation of -the Proposed Bay; Ridge.

High School, from the Architect's Drawing, ODD BITS OF DAILY NEWS the Knobs, and Us fur was sold ia this city for $300. Jeffersonville, February 8 Search by a father, whieii ended hero, revealed ths fact that l'crcival an Inmate of a Toronto, Canada, insane asylum, has been doing time in the Stule Reformatory under the name of James Morgan. He cscapei from the asylum last August, according lo his father's statemeut, and was suLt here on a charge of housebreaking lu November. His father said he became mentally unbalanced from reading "Yellow-backs." When the facts were intida known, Governor Marshull ordered How-ei man's par.iU so that be may be taken back to Toronto. February 8 Efforts to placo in the Chicago public schools a substitute for "The Slar Spangled Banner" have failed.

The Hoard of Education, after leading and passing on several thousand songs submitted by authors and son writers, made the statement through In president. Dr. J. B. McKatrieh.

that no song had been received which was wortliv of being written into the history of the United Stales ns a national unthem. Dr. Chicago, February A man walkort Into a jewelry Btoro here yesterday, picked up two sample eases full of jewelry, walked out and has not been found by the police. Ia the cases were Jewels wortli $20,000 owned by a Ntw York firm. They had been taken to the store by 0.

A. Holbrook, a salesman. Aa man was leaving, a footman atoppod hiin, but was told the salesman hud directed that the cases were to be taken back to a hotel. Later, Holbrook appeared and learned the jewels had been stolen. Dallas, February 8 W.

B. Barnes, a machinist, shot and killed his wife lu their room ut a boarding house MeFatrich made the recommendation that the "Star Spangled Banner." as a patriotic hymn, be taught more widely lo the schools. Boston, February 8 Mrs. Henry F. Du-rant, widow of the founder of Wellesley College, is the defendant in a suit tor tiled here by a firm of Boston The suit in to recover $20,000, the balance due on hooks which the publishers say Durant contracted tor and which were to have been left lo Wellesley College at her death.

Anion? (he books are a $1,000 Bible; a $4,500 set of Dickens: books on Egypt and India worth works of Webster, $1,080. and works of Thackeray, There are sixteen sets of hooks priced at an average of nearly $1,500 a set. rnl L. 1 11rJt. Vhl here late yesterday, and then fired a bullet into his own brain.

A 5-ycar-old daughter of the couple was the only witness to the shooting. "Mamma had been cross to papa," the child explained, 'but pupa had not bacn crosy v'. Loursvllle, February 8 Residents of tiio Indiana Knobs, opposite this city, have taught glimpses of a rare black fox, whose fur is the most valuable of any of the North American foxes, and an old fashioned hunt is being organize. I by sportsmi'ii In the hope of call l.in it. The black fox is a native of Alaska, and it is thought this may bo a lrenk of the ordinary species.

A year ago Canadian silver fox was captured among Sigma Delta Gamma, a fraternityif the Bedford. Section, composed of-Brooklyn High School boys will assist- the Delta Society of Girls High School in presenting "The Obstinate Family at the Cortelyou nShttf, on February 16.f The -boys of Sigma DeltaGamma, 'shown above, are reading from left to right (top row) Howard Crosby Beam, Paul M. Willis, Archibald Meserole, R. Gary S. Clinton.

S. Janes. 'Bottom row: Eliphalet Snedecor, William S. Stewart E. Brush, Jerome A.

S. Kerry, Daniel S. Brush. T-'- 1 I 1 U' fT7 1 COMMERCIAL HIGH SCHOOL CHORAL SOCIETY ORCHESTRA Gordan, Lawrence Siry, Sidney Green-hause. Second Violins: Raymond' L.

Boyle, Carlton M. Burr, John Birnie, William Martin, Norman Hill, Herman Dauch, Al- Sopranos John Bahr, Joseph F. Bush, Frank E. Carroll, Walter D. Christianson, Herman Donepp, Christian b'ynard, Sydney First, Charles R.

Gigerich, Albert A. Gombar, Charles Griglick, Harold Gross, Herman A. Hollings, George W. Isaacson, George Jacobson, James Kelly, Walter Kelly, Robert Kind, William Kratzenstein, Edmund I. Mackert, Worthington May, John H.

McFarland, Reginald F. Moser, Allen Mulcahey, Alexander Murray, Nathan Naitove, Christian G. Planck, Henry R. Robertson, Marcus Schulley, P. Richard ired Meyer.

Violas: Herman Baker, Gustive Hot-tend'orf, Henry Samuel M. Dor-teck, Howard Hand. Violon Cellos: Ernest Isner, Alexander S. Allan, Howard L. Brin.

Flutes: Foster House, Fernando Callejo. Cornets: Joseph L. Leansky, Robert Horns: Louis Shimberg, Louis Bienstock. Clarinets: Robert Ludgate, Alfred W. Blendow Trombones: Theodore H.

Eisner, Thomas Uiartwick, rytnpani and Drums: Ferdinand Glackmeyer, Louis W. Bleser, Daniel M. Stern, Charles Ivers. Bass Toba, Louis Katzoff. Contra Bass, Eilery C.

r-oik. Piano. Julian Bermas. Edward J. Director.

Schultz, William Schwartz, Harold F. Shot-ten, Fred Silence, Rollin Steiger, Louis Stemler, Clifford Terry, Hewitt Silence, William Templeton. William Walsh, Clarence G. Wilson, William Woodward, Harold Young. Altos Alexander Barris, Alexander Berko-wltz, Benjamin Brown, Edward A.

Din-neson, Henry B. Gruenberg, Alfred F. Georgl, Lester Hamilton, Daniel Lorey, Arthur E. Roeser, Alec C. Sehlmeyer, Harry Stubenwoll, lsadore Shapiro, Henry I.

turgen, Joseph Wolt'son, Herman Wohlgemuth. Tenors Harry Alislon, James Brophy, Francis J. Clancy, Louis G. Dooley. Fred Fisher, Herbert Gesregan, Melvin Green-lull, Ralph P.

Griffith, Fred C. Huelgan, Foy Harrington, Harold Kronenherg, Mitchell Kripsel, Herbert Marcus, Harry Michael Margiotta, William M. Onleyv Henry G. Ritter, Harold WykorT. Basses George Bettex, Leonard De-Groot, Albert Feirstein, Mortimer Heii- NEW HIGH SCHOOL WEEKLY.

Several of the City Schools Are Represented In Its Management. A meeting was held last evening In the West Side V. M. C. Manhattan, of delegates from many of the high schools in tho city to perfect arrangements for the Issuing cf a high school weekly journal, to ba known as Scholastic News.

Those on the staff represent the following high schools: Commercial, De Witt Clinton, Commerce, Jersey City, Morris, Newtown and Stuyvesant. Invitations were sent to all tho Brooklyn high schools, but Commercial was the only one which responded, its representative i lug Harold B. Bosnian. The first number is to be published February 12. Bosnian informs Tho Eagle that the main purpose of the paper Is to unite tho spirit of the various schools and nrunn, Henry Btck, Harry G.

Ernst, Robert Williams, Fred Meyer. Leslie Levy, i Albert Lifshits, Stuart N. Mapes, Thomas Newton, Henry Arthur C. Spiess, Frank Scott, Joseph Rechltz, William R. Rockel, Joseph W.

Ryan, George Vortref-' lich, Charles L. Wood, William E. Vasi Irving R. Waite, Charles Willets, Alfred! Zeiner (director). acquaint each school with the doings of the others, It is the materialization of an old idea which existed around VM'd.

The backers of the scheme have Interested Dr. Campton of the P. S. A. L.

and The Eagle Photographers, who took this picture, ere treated Mrs. E. M. Avery. Mrs.

K. K. Miler is the principal. The Miss Elizabeth Genuity, Miss Gertrude V. Nelson, Miss Orchestra First Vloiiiui Charles Messerve, Ernest Williams, Cad Heller, Leon B.

Bronstein, Otto Vollmer, Adelbert Haas, James Abraham Girls of Evening School No. 15, shown in the above picture have learned lots about the real art of cooking this winter, to. a feast on the occasion of their visit to the school, and want it-made plain that it was all right. The girls' are taught by young women in the picture are: Mrs. Agnes Holt, Miss Sophia Hothenberger, Miss Florence Nelson Miss LMelle Hill Josephine U.

MacDonald, Miss Edith M. Schaefer, Miss Mary Mitchell Miss Anna Touhey. have received the backing of that or- gamzuuuo,.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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