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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 4

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 4

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

tttt: BROOKLYN fMTTT TV YOPTC. WTOTTORIMY. BROOKLYN MAN LOST I5S-; FOR GHOST WINDING UP WORK OF FIRST DRAFT FAwONEH OUT ON BAIL MISS NEWMAN'S WILL BENEFITS CHARITIES ON N. LUCKENBAGH LEADS HIM TO COURT LABOR MEN CHEER WILSON'S MESSAGE Delegates Will Confer With Cov- ernment Officials on Strikes I at U. S.

Plants. Relatives and Friends Also Well Remembered. Engineer Penna Went Down I With Torpedoed Steamer. i There Gibbons Tells His Story and Subsequently Pays a i $5 Fine. the Grand Jury on a charge of causing the wires in the Hotel Uiltmoro to be tapped last May.

After a lengthy examination yes-terday Magistrate Murphy said the evidence produced was sufficient to hold Captain Falconer for trial and issued the warrant, which was turned dctct i Qib- Hngineer A ild, wenl down wit ham steamship 7. in th off tbi over to Detective Walter Coibett of the Second iiranch to serve. Today the detective said it was a very unpleasant task, for when Joined the department in tttl it was Captain Falconer, then a patrol- 200 of 293 Woodbine street, Ridge-, to lay a ghost In the home of ister-in-law, Mrs. Etta Terry of Cornelia street, same place, got into a peck of trouble and into amaiea police court, where Mrs. charged him with assault yes-y.

The charge was reduced tn Tit 'I given bj the steamship officiate aa 863 time there has bee iiK nd-lun between 1 induct by M.i gNtr.ate I E3MI Thirty-third street, but this I drOM not exist. The second ginocr of the ship. Fred olscn. I years old. a naturalized Norwegian ipredatlon for the Mille I $5 Bn In serving the warrant Detective hott expressed his sympathy foi U.S.

EXPORTS SHOW I Th" submarine that 1 Woodbine street, where the Terry tmily formerly lived. Gibbons told udge Miller that the story of the The INCREASE THIS YEAR VILLA'S MEN FIGHT taunted house" was first related to i by 1 The Institution! watch will benefit under the will me as follows: Society of St. Vincent de Paul, Immaculate Conception Day Nursery, Society for the Propagation of the Faith, Home for Crippled Children at Port Jefferson, l. j. Roman Catholic Orphan Asylum and Hospital of the Holy Family.

$1,000 each; Unman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of Brooklyn for the education of young men for the priesthood. Catholic Church Extension Society, Marquette League, $1,000 for the erection of a tablet for the Indians. A nephew of the testatrix, J. Henry Newman, will receive $25,000: Mary H. Quinn and I'hilomena Q.

Shaugh-ness, cousins, each; Thomas V. Sha ugliness and Isabella Newman, each; James Newman, John II. Newman, Wilfred Newman and $2,000 each; Ellen McLaughlin and Mary McLaughlin, cousins, and Theresa McGlinn, Mrs. William .1. P.ennelt, John J.

Iliggins, Rev. Peter (Jm-aly, sister M. Thomas friends, and Gecorge Helle- Mrs Her 1 told li about It arid had and sank in at twenty inn Lifeboats that had been swur ere lowered, but after being MEXICAN TROOPS lid that her husband, who is a chauf- sur, and who works usually until I ite at night, did not bellcvo there ere ghosts In the house, hut became i 3readstuffs, Meat and Dairy Products Have Gains. riiTI'KKICK 07 Power. tr lad on Monday.

convert on Saturday night, Novem-er 3. Terry having returned home irly and gone to bed, both he and My saved many lives, out two days before bei Chief Engineer WlUii the l. N. Luekenbach residing Bandits and Government Forces Battle at Ojinaga. I ho I In a statement issued by the of Commerce it is shown that I the exports of domestic breadstuff, I cottonseed oil.

meat and dairy prod's ucts of cotton and mineral oils from if I the principal customs districts of the United States for the nine montbf end- tag September SO, U17, were light, according to the story said he was told. Something to have hit the diningroom resounding rap. This was fol-y a sound as of a handful of Presidio. November 14 Fighting between Villa forces and Mexican government troops began at Ojinaga at 5:20 a.m., Central time. The tt of the iistrihutM The attack started from the South- up and hunted around, but beth A.

Quln follows: J. Harry live parts; Eliza- nena Sha ugliness, Sha ugliness and their own belongings, which and his wifesat up the rest i Nev MAN KILLED BY AUTO At Broadway and Varet. street, li night, Albert Holzer, 48, of 4S Ba: let street, was struck by an autom bile operated by David Kolbbrenr pronch of daylight. Into a constant Are of' rifle shots. No artillery, machine guns or hand bombs were used in the first attack.

American patrols are guarding the ford opposite Ojinaga. It is reported bullets are falling on the American side, of the Rio Grande. Firing on the Mexican side continued until daylight. Then a machine gun from the Ojinaga garrison fired three volleys. Bullets continued to fall on the American side of the ford nearest to Ojinaga.

Refugees from Ojinaga started coming across to the United States and and the morning -Mrs. Terry hi her children to my house to She, told us her husband vowed mldn't go in that house again Klection night, fiibbons and two friends decided they'd lay that Gibbons let himself and his into the Terry apartment with that lilted the lock. Midnight GERMAN AIRPLANE COMING A German airplane brought down by Guynemer, who winged fifty enemy fliers, is among the exhibits now being brought from France for the "Hero Land" spectacle, which opens at. Grand Central Palace on Saturday night of next week. Baron Huard, who is in charge of tho French War Relief Societies here, yesterday afternoon staled that several additional ''rerieh armored airplanes would be 'hovn.

These machines are now on the high seas and should arrive in this country within a few days. JOINS INSPKCTOR DIM.ON. Lieutenant Michael J. T.arkin. been for years the personal trie James Dillon, now chief insm tor of the police force, was transferr roporteu me ngnting va town.

The attack apparently was against the main camp of General Espinosa Cordovas, IV, miles southwest of Ojinaga. today from the oliico of the borou inspector in Brooklyn to that of chief Inspector in Manhattan. irrivert. Mrs. Terry "fl buns said, "and callc friends a lot of BIG FLOUR MILL BURNS 11 brothers.

Charles B. Spouocr. vice preal-u of 'IVilcott A woolen d-alfrs In Man-tttn, and Arthur Bpenctr of the Unite ites Engineers, now In France. IRS. MART UTTLH SMTTH.

wife of SAYS JAPAN CANNOT SEND TROOPS TO EUROPE nt Atlantic ports: prs Benalder, British; Danish; Mexico, American; (OH FOR MISS HYtiAN. Tokio, November 14 Lieutenant General Oshima. the Japanese Minister of War. informs Japanese news papermen that the dispatch of troops to Europe is an absolute Impossibility owing to the tremendous cost and the 9 PETER TORNER, F.5 years old Ulan, died Monday nigh t.after This Beautiful Heavier Trucks Spend More Gas Hauling Themselves than the Maxwell uses at Peak Load rVictrola will pay for itself a thousand times over in the joy and happiness it will bring to vou, your family and vour friends. SEE IT! HEAR IT; TODAY at our DOWNTOWN Victrola Store.

10 Demonstration rooms mean instant service to Men. EVERY STYLE, $15.00 to $350.00 29 John St. NtwYork Great Artists Help The Red Cross Foremost artists of the opera and concert stages have generously volunteered their services for the Two Great Red Cross Mass Meetings and Concerts Wednesday, Nov. 14, Erasmus Hall, Brooklyn Thursday, Nov. 15, Brooklyn Academy of Music At the Wednesday Concert the following distinguished artists will appear: Mischa Violin, the new genius of the violin, whose appearances in concert in Europe and South America and this country have been a succession of triumphs.

Grace Hoffman, soprano, former soloist with the Sousa Concert Company. Gifted with an extraordinary voice of rare freshness and great range. Edna Moreland, lyric soprano, but lately returned from Europe, whence her reputation as a great artist preceded her to America. The accompanist will be Domenico Savino. The speakers will he: Captain A.

Rudd, Assistant to Russian Ambassador for four years. Baron Vander Noot, eighteen months' active service in the Belgian Army. Prof. H. B.

Winslow of Yale, who was with Elihu Root in Russia. George Giver Tamblyn, who is personally directing the Brooklyn Red Cross Campaign. At the Thursday Concert the musical program will be given by: Eleanora de Cisneros, America's great mezzo-soprano, who has the distinction of having sung in practically every opera house in the world. David BUpham, the wonderful baritone, than whom there is no more distinguished American singer. A great artist whose career has been one of triumphal achievement Domenico Savino at the piano.

The speakers will include: Dr. MacRouie, recently returned from three months in France. Dr. Henry van Dyke, Ambassador to Holland, together with Baron Vander Noot and George Olver Tamblyn. You Are Invited Admission by Ticket The lowest priced one-ton truck in the world $985.

And a truck, mind you not a delivery wagon built for trucking. Truck strength and truck length. We use more brains than metal in its construction made it right to get it light Not a superfluous pound not a missing excellence. You buy lasting power not bulk. Designed for hard loads and tough roads.

Sold with the same guarantee as $5,000 trucks are. 2,400 dogged, spunky, agile pounds, and built to carry more than that 365 days in the year and 24 hours to the day. A work glutton and a tire miser. A 16-mile run with every gallon. 10-foot loading space.

The same type of worm drive that $5,000 trucks have hitherto featured as their own. Pays, its way from day to day. mged if you prefer MAXWELL MOTOR SALES CORPORATION 1410-12-14 Bedford Avenue Remember the datesNovember 14 and IS 8: 15 P. M. 1H DEE DEE AUTO SALES CORP.

1774 Pitkin Avenue Remember the places Erasmus Hall and Brooklyn Academy of Music, ernember the speakers and the artists Remember the cause The American Red Cross. Tickets may be obtained Free at the box-office of Erasmus Hall and the Brooklyn Academy of Music and at 163 Kemsen Street, the Brooklyn headquarters of the -d Cross..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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