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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 5

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 5

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN EAGLE, WED JUNE 19, 1946 Cap Pistols to Crack In Court Nuisance Test Boro Vets Staff Aids Famine Relief Drive Staff members of the Brooklyn Veterans Service Center, many ol them overseas veterans with firsthand knowledge of Europe's hunger, Lced's Milk-made Suit There will be cap pistol shooting not responded to the call of the Famine trative code, paper caps were referred to as fireworks. To provEmergencv Relief Committee by Vita nnlnt a fan fmm ths his he read from the code in Flatbush Court tomorrow when police and other experts decide spontaneous cash contribution. 35 APARTMENTS IK QUOIISET HUTS OPEN TOMORROW Thirty-five apartments In Quon-set huts will be opened for occupancy tomorrow at the Jamaica Bay Houses In Canarsie. site of the city's first emergency housing development for veterans and their families. The New York City Housing Authority reported that 18 huts have been constructed snd are now available.

There are two apartments in point and quoted a section forbidding sale of pistols which can be loaded by Michael Corliss. Purple Heart veteran of the ETO, represented the center staff and turned the money over to Morris J. Solomon, borough chairman of the famine committee. powder and ball and by blank cartridge "Nothing herein contained shall apply to the sale or disposal of what is known as firecracker pistols, tor- whether the toy constitutes fireworks or Is Just plain noisy. Magistrate Abner C.

Surpless set the date for the test after he heard the case of Mrs. Florence Cooper, 26, owner of a gift shop at 3618 Church who is accused of selling fireworks without a permit. The charge arose from her Leeds know, how you hate to give up the sull lxk; come Summer. So he fixes you upcut your Summer suit out of crisp, air-conditioned milk-extract Aralac. See it here, tropic gray skim-striped in white, sizes from 10 to $19.95.

Young Mirylin Suits on the Third Eloof The Brooklyn Veterans Service Center at 105 Court St. Is the bor pedo pistols or such pistols as dcanng hollS(, for veleran, urcu suj CAlrlwum Ui JJHA-1 uafja, flflatl's, the section continued. Taking into coasideration the coming Independence Day celebration. Magistrate Surpless said the' alleged sale of two boxes or repeating caps for 15 cents to Patrolman George Venter. The policeman also claimed he found 34 other boxes in the shop.

matter required "quick adjudication" and said there would be both audible and visual demonstrations Stanley Mrs. Coopers ttorney, told Magistrate Surpless yesterday that, under the admints- of displaced persons trying to find each hut, but one of them will remain unoccupied for at least two weeks as a display unit. The hut. were provided by the Federal Housing Authority under the national emergency housing program. The city prepared the site.

Meanwhile a tract of 86 acres in Searingtown and other properties in Nassau County have been purchased by a syndicate headed by Edward W. Clemens for the construction of 400 homes at a cost of $4,000,000. Mr. Clemens plans to start work on the development in about 60 Names Complicate Brooklyn relatives. An additional list of tlie.se persons follows: Woman's ShccrUng Our "Woman.

World" fiives a short answer to Summer breezes, afternoons in town, roof-top nights. Herewith our braid -proud, fully -lined rayon Shcerling coat in bl.uk or navy, M'j to Mii. 2S. Second Hoot Search for Kin of Jacob Gruenberg seeking Yetta Greenberg; Edzia Gutman seeking Hersz Ledernian; Adela Honig seeking Ida Hassenfield; Manfred Just-man seeking Harry Reiter; Franks Kaufman seeking Samuel Kaufman; Marglta and HvWa, Klein seeking Adolp Klein; Ruth Kohn seeking Displaced Persons days, providing there is a flow of materials. Fan! Lawski; Rosa Kon seeking Ulnick; Yudel KraviUsky seeking! Two housing developments In Queens, each costing more than $1,000,000, also were announced.

A total of 120 one-family houses will be constructed on a site at Penel ope Ave. and 76th Rego Park, and 62 single and double family homes will be erected in the Belle- Henie Slier; Dr. Alexander Madeski seeking Mrs. Elsie Wit; Rose Helen and 'Golcil Melik seeking Many Ktinitz; Boalel Mordowicz seeking Max Rosen; Jacob Rosenman seeking Moses Rosenman; Ella Salanian seeking Marton Ehrmann; Schmuel Schewach seeking Ruchel Berman; Shlomo Silberger seeking Max Brenner; Jacob Sonensliein seeking S. Sternberg; Lotte Sussman seek Brooklyn members of the National Council of Jewish Women, doggedly tracing down borough relatives of European displaced persons, are often confronted with problems when long names are Americanized.

For example, a spokesman said today, the European Mendel often becomes the American Emanuel. In other cases the European name is translated into its F.nglish meaning. Koenig becomes King, and Schwartz becomes Black. For this reason, it was explained, it is necessary to study closely lists rose district. Bl BUff photo REUNION IN BROOKLYN After a separation of 20 years, Isaac Posenitzky, left, Polish refugee, finds a haven in the home of his brother, Harry.

The brothers are pictured in Harry's home, 676 Quincy shortly after Isaac arrived on the Marine Flasher yesterday. Brother's Home Is Happy Haven Of Rest for Ex-Polish Soldier 1 11 ing Rudolph Hoffenreich; E. Szer i 1 i tX' LV- 1 i tef oiMaiaB seeking Heizer Halper, and Abraham Tamsha seeking Jack Maers. Fad Board Rules Strike of H. M.

Men Is Illegal The 20-day-old Hudson Man hattan tube strike of 650 trainmen survivors had been compelled to dig for the population of peaceful Jewish farmers and small shopkeepers who had been shot down In the streets of the village which had been theirs more than 100 years. trudged many miles about the countryside which had been Ijis home. He repeated "676 Quincy and engineers is illegal, according to the first ruling of President Truman's emergency fact-finding committee set up when the men struck over refusal of the company to grant the cents an hour in St." over and over to himself, in crease which ended the nationwide railroad strike. time to his weary steps as he trudged over the war-ravaged countryside. The address was a con The board made its ruling after representatives of the strikers' solation, and the very sound of it Got your eye on A NEW CAR? unions, the Brotherhood of Loco motive Engineers and the Brother hood of Railroad Trainmen, made an appearance for the first time yesterday before the board.

Russeks Russeks Ray T. Miller, counsel for the brotherhoods, explained the the unions had boycotted previous sessions not out of a desire to boyctt the board but to point up their These days, it's harder to find a new car than to pay for it. But if you have one in the offing, don't let the dazzling prospect blind you to the costs. Our Automobile Loans supply the additional cash necessary for the purchase and also the cost of insurance, at a money-saving finance rate. So be sure to talk to us, before you buy.

Open Thursdays Till 9 contention that a previous factfinding board had already passed on the issues and that the company To the residents of Quincy No. 676 is a neatly kept but sadly out mode 1 apartment house, with a grocery store on the ground floor. It looks like hundreds of others in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood. But to Isaac Posenitzky, who arrived yesterday on the Steamship Marine Flasher with 593 other German and Polish Jewish survivors of Nazi persecution, the place is "heaven." Isaac, a Polish farmer, paused and looked hard at the house number as he entered the home of his brother, Harry, shortly after his arrival in the new world. For to Isaac, 35, No.

676 Quincy St. has been a magic number ever since his older brother, Harry, first left the little Jewish village near Pinsk, Poland, to find his fortune in the new world more than 20 years ago. During the war the Brooklyn address became a symbol of hope to the tall young man who looks more than his 35 years. He took up arms against the Nazi invader, as a soldier of the Polish army, receiving a medal of merit in the defense of Warsaw. Escapes, Finds Kin Are Dead He was captured by the Germans on Oct.

31, 1941. The next day, while the prisoners were herded together to wait for a train to Germany. Isaac managed to escape. Aided by the underground, he made his way back to his town of Ivanik. After anxious months of traveling by night and sleeping in haystacks and woods to hide from Nazi patrols by day, the young Polish soldier finally came to his town only to find that almost the entire population of 468 had been destroyed.

This included his wife and only daughter and 100 other relatives. Heartbroken, he attempted to find soim trace of a grave of his loved ones, but found only huge community graves which a few sole had refused to abide by its ruling. Answering a company argument that the Hudson Manhattan Company was not represented in the negotiations that resulted In the 18'4 cents Increase. Mr. Miller sub mitted telegrams from Lief Erick-son and Frank M.

Swacker, respec seemed to bring it nearer. By way of reaching Brooklyn he joined the Partisans and took an active part in th: siege of Berlin. With the fall of Berlin, of privation and starvation followed for Isaac and his compatriots. But even with the defeat of the Nazis he felt that real union had not been achieved. He related last night how during those days he met another Pole who, seeing Isaac In the uniform of the Polish army, gave Isaac a brotherly hug and exclaimed, "For you I will kill ten Worked for VNRRA Isaac worked for UNRRA, supplying food and clothes for displaced persons in the year which intervened while his brother made arrangements for him to arrive here.

Harry, meanwhile, has prospered in his butcher shop and plans to let his brother work with him in his store at 178 Sumner Ave. But for the first few weeks, Harry, his wife Sylvia and three sons, Hy, Norman and Sy, want Isaac to make 676 Quincy St. a haven of rest. Isaac, grinning, says that It will take a long time to get used to the luxury of hot and cold running water, a soft, comfortable bed, and an icebox packed with more food than he has seen at one time since that day in September, 1939, when the Nazi nightmare began. tively chairman and a member of the earlier three-man panel, tp the 0 Title Guarantee and Trust Company COMPLETE IANKINO rACIIITIE effect that Hudson Manhattan was included in the earlier 1741rooiiwor JAMAICA) HO 08 Jomoito Av.

4 toil 5lh Si. BSONX: 370 Eoit 1491k SI BROOKLYN 194 Montagu. Si. CITY: Bndoo Ploza North Heads Boro Lawyers Club Of Jaufich Philnnthrnniec m-t tf MtMIFr FFDFFAI nFPrtCIT IMtlKikl! COrpOfATIOM ur big city Black Cotton Like the city in the cool dark, with sky-scraper lights-fornv ing fascinating new constellations? Then you'll like our cooli low-bowed black cotton with little green, aqua, pink and white window panes glowing hit -or -miss, just like the Chrysler Building. 10 to 18, 22.95, Cotton Shop, Fourth Floor Neil M.

Lieblich. attorney and member of the New York State War Ballot Commission, was elected i president of the Brooklyn Lawyers! Club of the Federation of Jewish I Philanthropies of New York yes terday at a dinner meeting at the Union Temple, 17 Eastern Parkway. He succeeds Maximilian Moss. i a iiiiiMi.ni.i. The meeting, attended by 150 lawyers and jurists, was addressed LOANS by District Attorney Miles F.

McDonald. Other officers elected or re elected include: A. David Benjamin, I 1 Famed Gooney Bird Still Causes Woe, Even as a Toy State Attorney General Nathaniel L.i I not Make Goldstein, Charles Jaffa and Louis Rothbard, vice presidents; Sidney nunt I I UamS AuniflM II auiue ORUir uniifn ijrr I If Vlfiv vnimij i inw vnnn. mwnivMUEa 1 Squire, treasurer; Harry Sand, sec retary; Arthur S. Hirsch, recording r.

II a luciiBtn miut I secretary; Stuart H. Steinbrink.l cosier ii The Gooney bird which proved such a source annoyance to fliers in the South Pacific when they came In for landings, today Religion, Parents Cut Youth Crime, Says Masterson City Magistrate John F. X. Masterson, who has been assigned many times to the adolescent court, spoke last night at the 68th Precinct Community Council meeting held In the auditorium of Dewey Junior High School, 4th Ave. and 40th St.

A II IOANS FOR REFINANCING financial secretary, and Emil N. Baar, Herman S. Bachrach, Murry figured in a case involving a charge ic Becker, Herman Mendes, Mr. II of disorderly conauci oeiore Mag-1 Mass, Benjamin C. Ribman and lsiraie niex riscmuv.i neoree Sylvester, honorary oresi- Convenient payments Prompt decisions loan periods up to 25 years dents.

Island City Court. The charge was made by Ernest Nillson, 25. a discharged soldier, of 61-71 77th Place, Elmhurst, against Calvin Rause 42, of B7-26 i HHP Vowr War ft Victory tana, SAVi fe a Coir ttrv BUY I I 0 166th Jamaica, inventor of a new toy called the Gooney bird. Saving Bank lifo Intoranc Nilsson, who said that he was employed by Rause as a machin Mar's loo fa Ham Own-art usHivicrx ist to set up machines for the manufacture of the toys In Rause's tt AT OtANAM AVI. rMTN II.

home, alleged that on June 7, last, after he had left Rause's employ, MAMO htmbt tojfeor fadorol Ptpvjfl fitrvroaca Carj Inquire of either office THE rJILLIAMSDUM SAVINGS DANK FounoW I SSI 1 HANSON FUCI AT fUTIUSH fily 17, N.T. Opposite long Island ft. ft. Dopof I'WAT AT DII0GJ I'klrn II, N. T.

Atanbar Fodorof Dopolif Insurant Corporation DIVIDEND NOTICE Rause came to his home and demanded that Nilsson return one of the toys that Nilsson had. Nilsson DIVIDEND NOTICE LAWYERS TRUST CO. NEW YORK. Y. June 18.

1946 The Board of Directors hn. tortav dfi said 'hat when he refused to do so Rause became objectionable and began to "push and shove me and dared a regular quarterly dividend of Addressing 250 parents, teachers and members of the council. Magistrate Masterson declared 80 percent of the girls and bojs who have come before him have only one parent or none at all. He also said very few of them have any religious training. Thomas F.

McDermott, principal of Dewey Junior High School, said the community house is what modern youths need to keep them off the streets and give them the recreation and friends they need. Mr. McDermott asserted he had watched community house centers and noted that wherever they are established less crime prevails among Juveniles. Tells How Groups In Judaism Differ my wife around in a very rough 23 ccntB a Khare on the capital stork of the Company payable July 1. 1946.

to stockholders of record as the same ap manner." Nilsson explained In court that he had left the employ of Rause after working for him two weeks pear on the books of the Company ai the cloalng of business on June 21. 1916. ORIE R. KELLY. President.

I when Rause refused to pay over time. Nilsson said that he had in war stituted a civil action to recover the overtime money. TRUST FUNDS 1 I JTOUIPM Rause gave a demonstration In court, to the amusement of the spectators, of the toy which is Tr -icv i about four inches tall, has a long needle nose, a quizzical look and can be made to bob its head and flap its wings. Samuel A. Doctorow, executive director of Yeshiva College and seventh deputy grand master of the Independent Order of Brith Abraham, spoke last night at the Ave nue Jewish Community Center, Setting up a Trust Fund under proper supervision and safeguards requires stable Investment knowledge, sound banking practice and recognition of the responsibilities involved.

This bank's facilities for this purpose are highly specialized and have a background of long experience. 321 Avenue on the difference be tween "Orthodox, Conservative and Reformed Judaism." Three Track Workers Burned by Third Rail Three track workers who suffered first degree burns when they contacted power rails on Brooklyn and Queens elevated lmes yesterday were reported In fair condition today. Louis Caiazzo of 147 Hull St. was knocked down and burned when he drove a spike against the third rail on the Pulton St. line near Sackman St.

Joseph P. Olus, 416 E. 72d Manhattan, was burned "In order to overcome anti-Semit ism," Mr. Doctorow said, "we must spend millions of dollars to promote education among our youth. Through proper education we will be able to instill in the hearts of our young folks the meaning of de mocracy and human rights." KINGS COUNTY TRUST COMPANY 342 FULTON ST.

(in the Heart of the Boro Hall District) Brooklyn 1, N. Y. Member Federal Drpn'it Inmranre Corporation when he dragged Caiazzo away from the rail. Both were taken to Kings County Hospital. Thomas T.

Sakaounis, 45, of 20 W. 109th Manhattan, was burned across the face when he slipped to usseks Mr. Dtctorow made an appeal for $5,000,000 for the support ot Yeshiva College in Manhattan, which was the first Jewish college to be established in America. Max Danzig, president of the Avenue Community Center, also spoke. Fred Schwartz, vice president of the Junior Club of the center, presided.

the third rail at Metropolitan Ave. Si on the Myrtle Ave. line, Jamaica He was taken to Mary Immaculate Hospital, Jamaica, i RUSSEKS FLLTP.N AND BRIDGE li 1 5.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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