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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 8

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 8

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY. JUNE 6, 1923. linery, In Brooklyn. Lucy Gallo Is the class valedictorian.

ADVEH.TfSKMF.NT, ADVKltTlSKMKNT. During the entire nroeram some ill 6 ARE GRADUATED BY DEAF INSTITUTE E. N. Y. HOSPITAL AWARDS DIPLOMAS deaf girls appeared on the stim'o, anil the climax of the program whs reached In a one-act play In whirl) 16 girls acted "The Garden of Heart." The program closed with Driver of Detective's Car Gives Oat Facts a flag salute.

On the 13th and 14th of tnis montn an exhibition of the pupils' worse will be held at the Institute, 113 Uul- falo ave. It Cleans Renews and Polishes To live a normal life Is th great hue and cry of the age; and befcr-t the evening was over the six girls graduating from St. Joseph's Institute for the Deaf, 113 Buffalo proved to their audience that they were Just girls normal In every wny save In hearing at the commencement exercises held In Our Lady of Good Counsel Hall, Madison between Patchen and Ralph last night. Declares Stomach Trouble Was So Bad He Actually LOST SOMETHING Tlcphon a "Lost and Found" ail now for tomorrow's paper. Stafford's Although the girls could not hear done by the ladles who are heads of departments, particularly Miss Nanes, the superintendent, and MIbs Llcht.

Other speakers followed, including Dr. Gordon. Dr. Walsh. Dr.

Flnkelstein, Dr. Dattlebaum, Dr. Albert and Dr. Jacob Schwartz. The awarding of diplomas to the 1 2 Internes concluded the meeting.

The recipients are: Drs. Irving H. Dolin. Herman H. Chester, Simon L.

Ruskin, Max Dannenberg, Charles Llpow. Oscar Blum, Jacob A. Teper-son, Meyer Kaplan, Joseph Kolder, Joseph. Ueb. Hymun Karp and Robert Rivkln.

OLD GLORY POST MEETS The bi-monthly meeting of Old Glory Naval Post, No. 48, American Legion, was held last night af the Bay Ridge High School, 4th ave. and 7th st. At the opening of the session ex-Commandant Fritz StenJton presented the members of the post with a pair of brass stands for the colors. Commanders Thomas Roberts and Thomas O'Shaughjiessy of the T.

Wlllard Sheridan Post and the Central Post, respectively, were present. Their purpose in coming was to x-tend an Invitation to the members of Old Glory Post to Join them In a reunion during the summer 'dinner will be held on Satur-day evening, June 23, at Shps-head Bay, to celebrate the 4th anniversary of the granting of Old Glory's charter. NACC the music by which they danced, they displayed a sense of rhythm much commented on by the audience. There was no faltering In their danc With $100,000 as the amount to bo raised for a now wIiir, the board of directors of the Brownsville and liast New York Hospital, East Now Nmv York, guv a dinner last night at tho hospital for the medical stan and for thn 12 newly praduated Internes. The new wins Is for a home and training school for nurses, so that the hospital can avail Itself of the services of nurses (rained according to its own Ideas and technique of aquirlnc them from other hospitals where different Ideas, mlcht prevail.

This will a'so release the present upper floor for children and more charity cases. Magistrate Hyman Kayfiel. president of the hoard of directors, opened th meetintr hy desiprnutlns Dr. Abraham Koplowitz. president of the medical staff, as toastmaster.

Dr. Koplowitz emphasized the pride every one should feel in the fact that the hospital, now only two years old. was graduating Its first class of internes, and was now beginning "to fill its duties in toto." He concluded by declaring that there was over Jl0.npo.000 In the banks of Brownsville and Kast New York from which the necessary $100,000 could easily be raised If every one co-operated to the fullest extent. Pr. A.O.

Volinsky. head of the surgical department, Impressed on Sharpens the jaded ing, apd even the Indian clubs were gesting something for me to do or take to get myself in condition. "One day 1 saw a Tanlac sign that set me to thinking. Then I watched the papers and found several statements from people who had rid themselves of stomach trouble by taking Tanlac. Says I to myself, 'it's kill or so I got me a bottle of Tanlac, and, much to my surprise and delight.

I soon found it exactly suited to my case. "All that is left of my stomach trouble now is the memory of it. I eat everything that comes my way and never feel a touch of indigestion. I have gained thirteen pounds and feel like an entirely different person. 1 am now happy and contented, where before I was almost in despair.

In fact, I am so thankful for what Tanlac has done for me that I go about whistling and singing. Tanlac did more for me than I can possibly tell and I sure do feel grateful." Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. Accept no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. Dreaded to Eat, But Ian-lac Restored Him CompletelyGains 13 Pounds "Freedom from bad case of stomach trouble, an appetite like a school boy and strength and energy that make life a joy and work a is what Peter Bartilucci, 4fi Queens Flushing, Long Island, auto driver for a large detective agency, declares the Tanlac treatment has meant to him.

t) "Mv stomach was so out of fix, said he. "that the minute I ate anything gas would form and cause such intense pain I could hardly stand it. I- actually dreaded to eat and denied swung In perfect unison with each other and the music. The six graduates are: Cathcrlna appetite MUSTARD PRODUCTS, "The Creamy Polish' The all-round polish for fur nlrure, floors and the auto mobile. RENOL Is one of a broad line at superior automobile spedaltlss, made bv the makers of Stafford's Inks.

INC. F. Breslin, Mary C. Benziger, Anna his audience the fact that since the hospital was a distinct Russian-Jewish organization It marked an epoch In the history Qf the Jewish race in that the Russian Jews were now coming into their own, "though thank God they are American." Mr. Isaacowitz.

vice president of the hoard of directors and Dr. Ellas Hartley also made addresses, followed hy Itabbi Maxwell Sacks of Temple Sinai. The latter urged strongly that every one do his utmost for the drive by obtaining the assistance of friends and patients, impressing on the latter that it was their hospital they were helping to better. He congratulated the Internes, stating that "the physician is minister to the body and the rabbi to the soul" and therefore they must never forget their sacred mission of mercy. Dr.

Koplowitz praised the work 42l lt At. Ilrooklrn. Y. H. Degnan.

Lucy R. Gallo, Mabel A. Mellon and Barah C. Tramuta, ranging in age from 18 to 20 years. Eaeh girl Is to step out and work nt her trade, either dressmaking or mil trving to keep off this fearful but ail my dieting nor anything else did anv good.

of my nights were spent tossin? and tumbling and I was that tired in the mornings that it nearly killed me to get up. I lost considerable weight and everyone was sug I Tanlac Vegetable Pills are Nature's own remedy for constipation. For sale everywhere. Advertisement. LSD FLATLANDS ASS'N URGE SEWER CHAM J.

NgSy Toning 7 Passengers, J174S Economical to buy, to drive and to keep AAA 1 ineMMotossTkcfe The Flatbush ave. sewer question, which has hftn the subject of much cliFcusslcn in Flatlands. again occupied the enter of the stage at last nlirht's meeting of the Flatlands Association In the auditorium rf V. P. 110, Ave.

and B. 39th St. Walter I. Rodgers, president ot the as30cintion and chairman of the meeting, stated that "in regard to All the fine qualities Stephens Six owners prize are raised to higher levels in the seven distinguished motor cars in the new Stephens line. Delcoigaition, 124-inch wheel base and 40 other detail refinements make the 7-passenger Touring Car an extraordinary value.

Come in or 'phone for a demonstration today. evepons on oiepaena motor cars now in the hands of owners supply a striking history of brilliant performance, faultless road comfort, long life and low costs. records are common. Many Stephens owners have clocked 75,000 to 100,000 miles and still find their cars economical to the report that this association had gone on record as complimenting a boro official because of the fact that a new sewer to run through Ave. I would soon be constructed, I wish to say that It Is absolutely false." Residents of the section an-against having the sewer run through Ave.

I and prefer It on Ave. for the reason that Ave. I is paved and has more residences on it than Ave. H. Robert Brand proposed a resolution, which was passed, to the effect that a letter be sent to Boro President Riegelmann stating that the Flatlands Civic Association wishes to go on record as favoring the plan for the sewer to run through Ave.

to Schenectady ave. and thence to Ave. leaving the sewer off Flatbush ave. entirely. The members of the association do not want the sewer to go through Flatbush ave.

because that would make It forever Impossible to have an extension of the subway in the section. The Flatlands Property Owners Association was scored for sending communications to members of the Civic Association urging them to Join the former society. There will be an early meeting of the board of directors, at which it will be planned to ask permission of the Flatlands Property Owners Association for a delegation to be present at their next meeting. The Flatlands Civic Association will then confront them with charges of proselyting. The guest and speaker of the evening was Lieut.

John F. Finncrty of the Police Lecture Bureau. Lieutenant Flnnertv delivered an interesting talk on the work of the police in rounding up swindlers cosing as ex-service men and collecting money under false pretenses. In one instance, he related, a fake veteran was picked up who said he was wearing a U. S.

Army uniform tj Cuticura Soap The Velvet Touch For the Skin 9Mp.O!ntmMt.Tilet)iTV,26c Fortajnplw irjflrtM- Equipped with the famous GMC Two-Range Transmission GMC trucks will pull capacity loads over rough roads or up steep hills. Wherever the wheels can get traction, the powerful and yet wonderfully economical GMC engine will move the truck quickly, surely and without strain. General Motors Truck Company Division of General Motors Corporation PONTIAC, MICHIGAN STEPHENS NEW YORK MOTOR CAR Inc. 1538 Bedford Avenue (at Eastern Parkway), Brooklyn Telephone Prospect 9534 TEPHEN Direct Factory Branch AH prices, b. Frteport, Illinois "Phone or tend for color catalogue Brooklyn Branch New York Branch "th Street and 11th Avcnu3 Daily use of Velogen keeps yonf hands and skin smooth as velvet.

Abo, use for sunburn. Velogen is unlike any other product; it is as clear as crystal and absolutely greaseless. At drucfitt i Ue. 620-626 Dcgraw Slrest tirr Telephone South 6969 Telephone Circle 8270 make a hit with his mother-in-law gSBBBESESSSS, New Lots Drawing Class Holds Exhibition of Work An exhibition held In the library of the New (Lots Evening High School, Sutter between Vermont and Wyona of free hand drawings and oil paintings done throughout the past term, concluded Reprinted From An Editorial in Yesterday's New York Evening Journal the season of the free-hand draw ing class of the school last night, A remarkable collection of sketches and drawings, intermingled with paintings In oil. were on view.

E. H. Singer, the art director of the class, commended the students for the interest they had taken in their work during the period of in struction. The faculty, too. ex pressed their -satisfaction with the Trying to Steal Munsey's Property Amusing Competition Among Evening Newspaper Failures.

Copyrlsht, 1023, by Star Company. efforts or the class. TOMMY MILTON, Winner of 500-mile International Sweepstakes, Indianapolis, May 30 The Instruction for the past term If 11 -Sp' consisted of sketching of living models, landscapes, poster designs, book Illustrations, and two featu-es which were added to the class routine for the first time this year clay modeling and oil painting. The work on the last two subjects was unusually well done considering the short period of instruction. "After this trip over the Santa Fe Trail in my Marmon, I arrived in Indianapolis feeling primed for the race." MR.

AND MRS. BURRILL SAIL ON HONEYMOON Among those who sailed on the Berengaria yesterday were Mr. and Ciuantitv i v. CSr Mrs. Edward L.

Burrill Jr. They were married Saturday at the home of the bride at Loemoore, Old West-bury. L. I. The bride is the granddaughter of George F.

Baker, chairman of the board of directors of the First National Bank of New York and reputed to be one of the five wealthiest men In the United States. The BurrlllR will make a three months tour of Europe. all good dealers aaaaaaaaaa err "I want you to know what a wonderful trip I had in my Marmon four-passenger phaeton in driving from Los Angeles to Indianapolis for the 500-mile race. I was seven days en route, without really hurrying, and was impressed again that of all the cars I have driven I have never seen one that stands up under hard driving, that always has the punch or that holds the road like the Marmon. "Ater this trif over the Santa Fe Trail in my Marmon I arrived in Indianapolis feeling really primed for the race, "My Marmon has now gone more than 40,000 miles and judging by the way it behaves to-day it is going to be a long time before you will be able to interest me in another "If I were not so familiar with the sturdy construction of the Marmon and the quality of materials used, I would have been amazed by the remarkably low upkeep cost of this car.

"It is one car that doesn't have to be I don't believe there is a car in the country that will stand the same amount of punishment. "Mrs. Milton drives a Marmon closed car and is particu- larly well pleased with the way it handles, its comfort and ease of control." (the above is a letter dated May 10, 1923, tddressed to Nordyke 4 Marmon Company by Tommy Milton, winner of the 500-mile race on the Indianapolis Speedway, May 30) Frank Hnnsey bought the New Tork Globe, knocked it on the bead and combined it with the Evening Sun. In doing this he rendered a lervice to all other newspaper owners in New York City. New Tork has too many newspapers second, fourth and fifth class.

They are useless to the population, a nuisance to advertisers. Munsey bought the Globe, and paid TWO MILLION dollars in cash for it. As a man he knew the wise thing was to combine that paper with nis New York Evening Sun, and he made the combination accordingly. Then came the struggle of the little evening newspaper failures, each vying with the others in the effort to steal from Munsey the Globe's circulation that he had honestly bought and paid for. It was a pitiful, not at all edifying, spectacle.

One newspaper that never was ANYTHING announces that it is now greater than ever before and would like the readers of the dead Globe to patronize it. Another, that doesn't know what else to call a failure, and so oalls itself "liberal," imitates conspicuous features that the Globe had published, and does its best to steal what it can from Munsey's honestly made purchase. Those pilfering newspaper failures remind you of unpleasant crows that gather around a dead horse. Irstead of trying to steal circulation that Mr. Munsey bought, Instead of bidding feebly and ineffectively for Globe readers who naturally should have gone to Mr.

Munsey's reading family, those editors should have called upon Mr. Munsey to thank him for helping to clear up the New York newspaper situation, wishing him all possible success in the combination of his two properties. This is a suitable occasion for paying a tribute to Frank Munsey and his business career. The other day, a rising young newspaper writer praised Munsey as a man whose career could be told in these six words: "Forty years, forty failures, forty millions." The forty "failures," needless to say, never included any BUSINESS failure, for from first to last Munsey has never had a failure or a protested note in his whole career. He has had his many failures, like every ambitious man trying the impossible.

And he has known enough to drop them when he had them. To the "forty years, forty failures, forty millions," two more words might be added, making Munsey's biography eight words long. The other two words should be "forty dollars." When Munsey came to New York as a boy, to seek his fortune, forty years ago, he had exaotly FORTY DOLLARS in his possession. With the forty dollars he has made enough to publish weeklies, books and buy heaven knows how many newspapers, in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, including the New York Herald, Sun, Press and Evening News. And out of the same original forty dollars came the two millions in cash that he handed over the other day when he purchased the Globe.

Frank Munsey is an energetio person he knows when to build up and when to tear down. ERIE RAILROAD SPECIAL WEEK-END EXCURSION To PORT JERVIS and Points West to DEPOSIT, N. Y. FOR Summer Home Seekers Special Train Leaves Jersey City, 1:35 P.M. (Daylight Saving Time).

SATURDAY, JUNE 9th Returning Leaves Deposit 5:15 P. M. Eastern Time Sunday, June 10th One Fare for the Round Trip TICKETS GOOD ONLY ON SPECIAL TRAIN GRABIE-BERGER Inc. 1640 Bedford Avenue Telephone Flatbush 2800 MAR MON For Further Information Consult Ticket Agents or A. C.

HILTON, General Eastern Passenger Agent, 110 West 4 2d Street, New York. City, N. Y. F. A.

WALDRON, Divisim Passenger Agent Erie Station Jersey City, N. J..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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