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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 6

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 6

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TIIK liHOOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, NO VEMBElt 17, 1925. 7 'nir1' -T3i--- "IzfEs ECTR VICE od Fie applications at once for new installations wanted before Christmas. We want to serve you promptly. We can and will, if you give us the chance. brightest Brooklyn has ever had, and we want to do every thing in our power to hel make it so.

To avoid disappointment because of the holiday rush, applications for new electric service installations should be filed at once either at our main office or at any of our branches. Thousands of Brooklyn people are building new homes or planning to brighten up their present ones by installing electricity; They will want the cheer and comfort of electric service in time for Christmas. This Christmas should be the happiest and Ed ison rooMym Main Office, Pearl and Waiougnby Streets Branch Offices: 21 Snyder Avenue 5123 Fourth Avenue 1258 Broadway 270 South Third Street 1308 Fulton Street 529 Surf Avenue 100 Cheiter Street President IL IL HOSPITAL SEERS COMMUNITY AID half. There are no colored students in the university, as, according to Its president, the State of Tennessee paced a law forbidding inter-racial education. Dr.

Hutchlns is former pastor of the Bedford Presbyterian Church, which he left to teach In Oberlin College. From there he went to Berea as president. Funds to augment the work of the college, Dr. Predicts Future of America Lies With Pure Anglo-Saxon Strain in Kentucky Backwoods tical Public Speaking Course, or-ganlzed by Ralph Jonas, president of the Chimber, met last night for the first session. They made two-minute speeches on why they were taking the course and other topics of interest.

'This section of the course will meet each Monday from 6 to 7 p.m. for 16 weeks and will meet as a group without the presence of the Instructor for practice after each session. Another section Is scheduled for Friday evenings. Chamber Oratory Class Learning How Fountain Pens Should Not Be Worn NaophyUt Alio Being Taught Hem lo Conceal and Ftet While Talking. HAND WILL HEARING ORDERED BY COURT Riverhead, L.

I Nor. 17 Surro-gate Robert 8. Felletreau signed an order yesterduy on the application of former County Judge John R. Vunk directing Dr. Frederick Flnoh of Amagansett and Emil Gardell Br.

of Easthampton to appear before the Surrogate on Dec. I for examination before trial In the contest Instituted to set aside the will of the late Henry C. Hand of Amagansett. Dr. Finch and OardelL who were neighbors and friends for a number of years of the decedent, are bequeathed the bulk of his estate by the paper purporting to be his last will and It was wrong for him to do so.

And fall not to remember that there is no such word as 'blcwln'. Public speakers should not drop their g's." "What shall I do with my feet?" asks a. neophyte In the gentle, art of public persuasion. "Put over your message and forget about your feet," is the instructor's reply. And so It goes.

An engineer talk for two minutes; the head of a trucking firm follows; an executive in the business of making glass containers comes next; tho presllont nf a Arm tell how long he has been In the Some one with two cigars showing In his outer coat pocket talk for two minutes. The Instructor objects. Forty men, members of the Prac Its Hutchlns said, would extend privileges over a larger area. Delavan L. Plcraon presided.

Classified adt for the Sunday Eigls will bs accepted up to 4 P.M. Saturday. To Insure jroper classification ids should bs In Tht Esgle Office Saturday noon, Phone early to MAIN 6200. KXGAGKvMFA'T AXXOfXCED. Easthampton, L.

Nov. 17 Miss Jeanette Frances Edwards, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. J.

Edwards of Easthampton, has announced her engagement to Arnold Rattray of San Francisco, Cal. Miss Edwards has been for a year engaged In Journal-lMio work In the Orient. Quick, nervous, with brows drawn into a frown, Dale Carnegie, Instructor in public speaking, berates his pupils. His high, light purple collar drawn tight about his neck, his precise suit piped about the edges with black silk, he holds up a business man as a horrible example of the what Is not done. Alas! the poor Hollow has come to the Chamber of Commerce class in public speaking with a fountain pen in his outer coat pocket.

"Only recently In Washington I saw a great financier with three fountain pens so worn." this pale-fuced precise teacher exhorts, "but and seems at times almost discouraging." Course Coats IMS a Year. The president outlined the work of Berea, College. It has several schools, from the primary to college. Men, he said, of 27 years, some married and with children, are In the primary school and the cost of the college course Is only Si 46 per year. "The Illiteracy of these people Is due to natural conditions," he declared, "The topography of the country favors Isolation, for, If pictures of the roads were shown to you In New York, It would seem dlsgraco to the people of the United States.

The younger mountaineers have an Intense desire to learn, but the older ones who cannot even sign their own names have no Interest whatever in education." Student a Given According to the plan worked out by Dr. Hutchlns and former President Frost, the students who are TRAXSIT MEETING TONIGHT. The transit committee of the Queens South Ride Allied Association will meet tonight at Eplphanv Church Hall, 103d st. and Klmbi.ll p.v to discuss plans for transit relief for the south sido of the 4ih Ward. All StyUs All Leathers All Ont Frict Predicting that In the mountaineers of the Tennessee and Kentucky backwoods lay the future of America, the Rev.

Dr. William J. Hutchlns, president of Berea College, Kentucky, Addressed a large number of friends and former associates who tendered him a reception at the home of Harriet T. Rlghter, 1357 Dean last night. Dr.

Hutchlns described In detail the people who he says seem a race apart. 'They retain today peculiarities of the English tongue common In the days of Chaucer, and the'girls sing arias of the time of the Crusades, which have been handed down from generation to generation," he said. "Nor Is the art of weaving by hand loom entirely lost, because," he explained, "the civilization of the country neems to have nrflwed around these people without touching them, and the women being not at all dependent on the machines for weaving, rely on their own skill. Old Anglo-Saxon Stock. "The origin of these people have always been questioned.

They represent the finest Anglo-Saxon stock today and, according to records, it Is believed that they are the descendants of nine brothers who started out westward after colonizing her soon after the discovery of Columbus. They do not belong lo the later colonists. It Is one of the Advisory Committee Appointed for Norwegian Institution. In an effort to widen the horizon of the Norwegian Hospital In Its public' relations, an advisory committee of business and professional men of the community is being formed, whose chief duty will be to create a greater feeling of community responsibility for the work done by the hospital and for the provision of facilities for that work. The Rev.

Carl O. Pedersen, superintendent, said today: "We want to associate ourselves with the soul of the community, and felt that the quickest path to that closo communion was to reach a wider circle of members of the community through Its business and professional men. We wish to widen cur horizon and we will be glad to receive and accept advice from those who will inlereRt themselves In our problems. We are receiving- a gratifying response and hope that the new coinmitteo will be of great as-Kistance in spreading the gospel of community service which Is exemplified In the work of our hospital." Of the following men Invited to serve on the committee the majority have already arretted: K. Cappelen f-'mith, Orhardt M.

Pahl, Herbert 1 Gunnison, A. F. Jones, Hans lray, A. Heilbronn, ex-Kederal Judge Oar-vin, James h. Meeks, Robert S.

iar-neo, Henry Kee. ('apt. John 121-liers, ('. J. Obermiiyer, Frnest Tutlnn, George W.

Gren, Edgerly M. Srhnilih, John Musaus Br, A. J. Gonnoml, t'. Ilerhst, Prs.

H. Ft. Dela-tntir. I). I'erris, K.

E. Cornwall and W. Shipley. Delivers "Play Ball" Sermon Tho Kev. Dr.

J. Whltcomb llrottghor of Los Aneeles, delivered his lecture, "Play Poll," at the Knptlst Temple last night. Tr. Ilrouglier clerlured that If church member had the characteristics necessary to ballplayers they would be able (o startle the world with inelr achievements. There aro church members In the T'nlled Stale, lie said, and If each of these averager two convert every one in the nation would be a unable to pay their expenses are given work in the various institutions the college maintains.

There Is a broom manufacturing plant, agri cultural lands, gardens, etc. The students perform the entire work of the college, working half of the Sixof the Sixty, day and studying during the other 'Ont PrU nine brothers who migrated Into Kentucky and became the progenitor Few Women of the Blue Grass aristocracy. "The mountaineers now number more than 3.000,000 and are ver Illiterate," the president continued, referring to the educational work (61 of the college, "and the work of Berea College 1 a mere drop In the ocean. The task of educating or even scratching the surface In the way of learning is a prodigious onu Still use old hygienic methods. Charming freshness now everyday Chicago to (gaWoDimaiia A FXT.

The Sextette from Regal in the Spotlight of Style The six models listed above received more applause from the public than any Style Sextette now appearing in any American city. We know, because we presented this Style Show in all the principal cities and the box office receipts tell the whole story. The Opera Pump was never in better for The Three-Button Sprayed Strap effect and the Ribbed Front Gore are perhaps the newest style notes to step into the limelight. The Low Broad Flared Instep Strap and the High Riding One Strap deserve their well earned popularity, and the revival of the Colonial made a hit in every city. They are all headliners and represent the six bestsellers in the Regal line.

But the best of it is, you don't have to pay a speculator's price. They are all $6.60. 'V. AMI.KTISF.MFNT. is 101 Paid fyusfosfop Colds a paid $1,000,000 for Hill'a Caicara-Bromide-Quinine became it il the belt hrlp HAIR-GROOM" SmtiTtW liaaif through a strairo scenic rimdeilana Keeps 1 lair Combed, Glossy ever found lor a cold.

Hill "at (topi a cold Well-Groomed all Day tiafeft TO meet every day OBhandi-eapped, to brine; back the days women used to lose is the object of new hygiene for women. A way that ends the hazards of the old-time "sanitary pad." 8 in 10 better class women today employ "KOTEX." Wear lightest gown and frocks without a second thought, any day, anywhere. times as absorbent as ordinary cotton pads I Deodorizes. End ALL fear of offending. Discards as easily as piece of tissue.

No foundry. You get it at any drug or department store simply by laying, "KOTEX." No embarrassment. In fairness to yourself, try this new wav. Costa only few cents. Twelve In a package.

T6X No lammlry-dlicard Uks timu within 24 houri. It andi the fever and headache. It chrclu grippe in 3 dayi. hi action it complete, Il not merely lopi colds, but remove! their polioni, It openi the boweli tonci the entire lyilem. It creatri the force lo reitore your vitality.

A cold it a irrioui matter. Over 150,000 dealhi yeaily reiull from rauiei due to col ill. One ihould Hart when the cold ilarli. Don't let tlui grrm attack get a hold. Check il with llill'i.

Have the tabled on hand. The lonnrr you Hart, the quicker the cold will end. All dtuggiitl aril llill De Sure lti ll. Price 30c "Halr-(iroomM it a dignified combing cream which com only a few crnti a I jar al any drug llore. Million ute it became il givea lhal natural gloat and well groomed effect lo tin hair that final touch lo good J.H.

lu.lt. Itaiai. REGALBSHOES its an ovations V7 details UO. U. a.

AT. Off, E. T. Burnu, tlat. paa.

Ant, Santa FaiRy. IDS nrth Avo. Nw Turk. N. I.

i'boasi Vandtrbllt 357 Fulton Street 4 Flatbush Avenue 466 Fifth Avenue 137S Broadway 5422 Fifth Avenue 301 Broadway 1049 Broadway CASCARA jl QUININE and on locial Derations. Even itubborn, Unruly nr hair atayt combed il day in any k'yle you l.ka. "Haif-Groom" tgiaairlauf la0 brlpt gtur thick, heavy, uul Lac. pooa SOS GrtUfrft vuii portrait.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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