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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 3

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 3

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Brooklyn, New York
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3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ml THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, MONDAY, MAY 27, 1020. HOME OF BOY, 6, WHO FIGHTS 13-YEAR SENTENCE PRESBYTERIANS Repeats I rmmph in Which He Carried Away Audience PLMI NATIONAL FIGHT ON GRIME j3l HFif I' f' i 4 iMii mum flV Bi" 'Mr. ITS i iff Above (left to right) Carl slaughter, In the arms of his By MARJORIE DORMAN. Grinning impishly when he struck a wrong note, 3-yenr-old Milton Tcltelbaum, Brooklyn's newest musical prodigy, who plays by ear with his fists, sat down at the piano in the Turkish bath establishment conducted by his father, Max Tel-telbaum, at 1389 East New York ave. and repeated this morning his triumph in the ballroom of the Hotel Pennsylvania yesterday.

"First I must put my car In the garage," he said, backing his velocipede between two chairs. Then, with his father and several employees and bathers looking on, the child climbed to the piano stool and began to play. He began with "Ramona," first with one finger, then with two, and finally. In a burst of confidence. brought both fists to bear on the Instrument, beating out the air tri umphantly.

After which he played America' and "Mr. GallaKher' in. the same fashion. An Expert Swimmer. When he finished playing he Jumped down from the stool and turned a couple of somersaults, his mouth spread from ear to ear in a broad grin, his cheeks pink, hli blue eyes shining.

He Is a splendidly built child and looks more like 5 than 3 years of age. This, his father proudly explained, is because the boy takes a 'dip in the pool at the baths every day, Is an expert swimmer and an adept at the rowing ma chine. His father is training him to De an atniete. He weighs 45 pounds and yet he can't go to school for two years, said Max Teltelbaum. "He's the i baby of my seven children and the smartest.

Milton was born here in Brooklyn. I came here from Russia 22 years ago. There is- a reason. Mr. Teltelbaum believes, for the genius manifested by his baby.

This reason is heredity, which, Mr. Teltelbaum believes, repeats every third or fourth generation. "My grandfather was Meyer Tel telbaum, one of the most famous cantors in all Russia." he explains. He was cantor at Komentz-Podo-lak, and had a fine voice until he died at the age of 103 years. He created much of his music; lt is now part of the folk lore of that section of Russia.

Audience Was His. The Home Talent Academy, which gave yesterday's concert, did not expect young Milton to prove the stellar attraction. A long program had been arranged by its head, Prof. M. Major, a music teacher.

But from the moment Milton, with his grin, his dimple and his air of assurance, walked onto the platform, the gathering was his. He Just walked away with it. Looking at his audience and not glancing at theeys at all, the child relies on his ear entirely. Whert he strikes a false note his face reflects dissatisfaction, but ho charges straight ahead, and on the repeti tion he gets the right melody. "Eefore that baby was three months," his father said today, "he showed by his face he was inter ested in music.

Whistling or sing ing or the phonograph, he always 'IP Church Commission to Carry On Drive Is Pro posed Crisis Viewed, St. Paul, May 27 OP) Thad a crisis is faced with respect to enforcement of State and National laws in the United States was the message delivered today to the 141st General Assembly of tho Presbyterian Church in the United States of America by one of is principal committees. To assist in bringing about "proper respect for law" the administrative, committee of the Church's General Council recommended an elaborate plan of action, including the creation of a special commission, but specifically stated that its intention is to maintain distinct separation of the functions of Church and State and to make its Influence felt morally rather than legislatively. "While the Church ought at all times to give the Government its moral support, that duty instantly becomes more peremptory and exacting in a time of crisis," the assembly was told by the committee, which then referred to the address of President Hoover at the Associated Press luncheon at New York in April, saying: When the President of the United States can say In a carefully pre pared public address that In his opinion what we are siidering from is no passing crime wave, but that lt seems to him more like a sub sidence of the very moral foundations upon which our republic rests. there should be no doubt In the mind ol any one that the nation is facing a crisis as grave as any In our history.

The American people has seldom, if ever, received a more weighty and solemn call to rouse it-sell and fight for its life than In this address of our Chief Executive. It is like 'Fate knocking at the "With this warning blast of the trumpet ringing in our ears, shal! our Church not prepare herself for battle? Shall we ro on with our routine as if nothing unusual were happening? We cannot. We must give all help in our power." Commission Its recommendations for actiot provide for: Creation or a national loyalty commission of from 10 to 25 mem bers, headed by the moderator, Dr. Cleland B. McAfee, of Chicago, on a similar plan as the Church's emergency national service commlssiot created "when the World War burst upon us." This group would have the twofold duty of, first, giving encouragement to President Hoover in carrying out the policies "he has so courageously announced in behalf of thi observance and enforcement law," and, secondly, "of qulckenlnf the conscience of our own people observe the law themselves, both or the ground of their duty as their responsibilities as Christians." Designation of June 30, the Sunday before the Day of Independence, as National Loyalty Sunday lor the presentation of an appea'.

for better law observance in all 1U churches. Continuance of the Church's Board of Education plan of devoting its moral welfaro department to an intensive prosram of education upon this duty of obedience to and enforcement of the law within ltf constituency. Mahan, 6, sentenced to 15 vears in rsfnrnV sHmni fm- mother, Mrs. Cora Mahan; County Judge John W. Butcher who mea me case, ueiow-xne Manan home In Palntsvllle, Ky.

Wide protest has de veloped as the result of the case and a writ was obtained Saturday rullne that BntnhPr py Mahan was convlsted of snooting a playmate, Cecil Van some scrap iron. As a result of the writ the boy has been left BABY "PADEREWSKI" 4, Milton Teit(-naum. acted the same, tying to get nearer to the sound. "When he was 6 months old and could hardly do more than lisp, he began to make crooning sounds and one day his mother nearly fainted because the baoy was carryinrc a tune. Ho was humming 'Mary Lou.

'Then he began to show unusual interest when the telephone rang in the baths. His ears, it was plain to anybody, were themost alive tilings about, him. One day, here in the lounge of the baths behind the apartment where we live, some one lifted him to the piano keyboard. And that was the finish. He roared and yelled and kicked when he was taken away from it.

Ho dldnt Just bang it like any kid would he was listening to wnac nis lingers were doing. "It got so that we could only keep him quiet by strapping him Into his high chair and letting him play with the keys. And then, when he was able to run around, he astonished his mother when he was 2 years old by climbing on tho piano stool and repeating a tunc he heard on the phonograph. Then we knew we had a genius in the family, sure enouch and I remembered my grandtather ninkinfr up his own songs. "If a man stands beside him and plays a violin slowly Milton ran come along behind and pick up the tune.

He gets up beiore any one is awake in the morning and turns the phonograph records around with his fingers. Of course we are going to have him trained but this ear of his is a gift from his great-grand father, there's no doubt about that. Probe Reveals Sczur, the young mal whose body is alleged to have been found near the Institution on May 15 after he had been missing since Feb. 20, did not deny the 38 dlsaoppearances. When faced with the charge that only 20 of these missing "patient's had been reported to the State police, Dr.

Gibson admitted it was the custom to report disappearances but he defended the hospital's ac tion by stating that often the patients returned within a few hours. Today he insisted that as far as the hospital was concerned, the Sczur case was closed. Sczur's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nocolal Sczur, of 532 E.

149th the Bronx, have refused to accept the identification of the body made by the hospital and havo engaged Attorney Jules M. Crane to seek an investigation. "We are as satisfied as we can be that the body was that of Sczur," raid Dr. Gibson. In this he was corroborated by Dr.

C. L. Vaux, second assistant. vm" yBfc-ar twl iT'- Today's Big News By. H.

V. KALTENBORN fj FAILS Second Bandit Escapes. Pair Robbed of Gems in Alleged Speakeasy. A too well oiled revolver refused to fire twice when a hold-up man dug lt into the ribs of Patrolman Gretjak of the Stagg st. station.

So the patrolman is alive today and the hold-up man, Jack Aaronson, 34, of 442 Blake Is a prisoner in the Stagg st. station on a charge of robbery and violation of the Sullivan Act. Patrolman Gretjak got his man after a chase in Leonard st. When the bandit's gun refused to Are, the cop used his blackjack. Stanley BromKowsKi oi 30 uan- land st.

was the only customer in the alleged speakeass at 168 Moore st. at 9 o'clock this hiorning. The proprietor, Peter Frakowskl, was at ork. Two men came in. one ordering sandwich.

When Frakowskl turned, both men leveled revolvers, cover ing the proprietor and his first cus-tomer. They removed a' $1,200 diamond ring and a $400 stickpin from Bromkowskl and $790 in cash from Frakowskl. A passerby saw the hold-up men at work and ran to Manhattan ave. and Broadway and notified Patrolman Gretjak. Patrolman and pedestrian returned to the scene on the run.

When they arrived the bandits were emerging. Seeing the patrolman, they fled. Gretjak gave chase and caught Aaronson. The other man escaped. Aaronson struggled, thrust his re volver in Gretjaks ribs and puuea the trigecr twice.

The patrolman used his blackjack and breathed easier. Shortly before midnight yesterday two women walked into the drug store of Irving Cohen, 147 Patchen one to use the telephone and the other to have a prescription filled. A young man who had been at the cash register told them lt was closing time and that they would have to come In the morning. A minute later, the women saw two men Jump into a roadster near by and Irving Cohen dashed out of the store as the car sped away. While the women had been in the store Cohen w'as held prisoner in the rear by one of the bandits while the other rifled the cash register of $75.

About 20 minutes later two young men held up Kazie Cohen in his drug store, at 1345 Nostrana ave and got away with $51. Gunmen Get $200. Two men walked into Charles Jondeoh's drun store at 645 Van derbilt ave. early yesterday, and with drawn pistols commanded Jon-denh to keep quiet while they went througn his casn register, iney got about $200, according to the pro-nrletor. and made their escape.

Two Negroes, eacn armea wnn a sto took $10.60 casn irom tne B. M. T. station at Nostrand ave. and Fulton st.

One stood as lookout while the other rifled the cash drawer, according to the tlrket agent, Miss May Gleason, who lives at 435 Marlon st. FIRST SHIPMENTS OF PINEAPPLES IN FROM WEST INDIES 5,131 Crates Reach Here. Will Sell for From 6 to 25 Cents Each at Retail. The waterfront at the foot of Brooklyn Heights went pineapple crazy today as the first spring shipments from the West Indies came In on the Red liner Falcon at Pier 11 and the Ward liner Monterey at Pier 15. Pineapples must be green tor re- tall trade.

Overheating in tne snip nearly always spots or ripens some of the cargo, nowever, ana um morning the dock employees and longshoremen scrambled like children to eat and then hide away as many of the unusable fruit as possible. Even the men repacking the fruit would frequently reverse tneir tools and cut open a cooling pine apple. 5,131 Crates on Ship. a the shlDments increase for June is the month for pineapples-various orphanages and hospitals will be allowed to bring wagons ana trucks and take away some of the ripened fruit. There were 1,900 crates on the Falcon end 3.231 crates on the Monterey, with about 36 pineapples to a crate.

The Porto Rlcan line, which customarily brings in a large share of the pineapple shipments to its piers near the foot of Hamilton is this year doing all its shipping to Pier 27, North River. The pineapples will sell according to size, from 6 cents for a small one to 25 cents for a really large one. Plnt-Phnll( ft tncmlttri Nfw York Stork Echnc hv lusucd nalyis oi Tlmken Roller Brarlng UU TO FIRE IN HOLDUP FIGHT WITH COP 13 Insane Have Vanished, FLOS WHO SET 1MB MARK Wichita Plane Still Up. Solo Attempt Fails. Ocean Hops Delayed.

(By the Associated Press.) Activities of the air tha length and breadth of the United States, as well as abroad, held a foremost place In the public attention today. A new refueling endurance flight record of 172 hours, 32 minutes and 1 second was established at Fort Worth, Texas, by Reginald L. Rob- bins and James Kelly, who brought their single-motored monoplane down yesterday after a cracked pro peller threatened disaster. They landed with all the world's records for sustained flight. Another refueling endurance flight was In progress from Wichita, Kan, Owen Haughland and Gene Shank varied the monotony of their flight by cruising to Minneapolis, where after refueling their mono plane, Miss Ranger, in the air, they flew about over the city.

Solo Flier Forced Down. Fog and high wind frustrated the attemot of Herbert J. Fahy to set a new solo endurance record at Los Angeles. He landed after 21 hours IS minutes in the air. At Old Orchard, two planes were poised on the beach awaiting a change In the weather that would permit them to statr transatlantic flights.

The French monoplane, Yellow Bird, with a crew of three Frenchmen, is headed for Paris. The American Diane. Green nasn manned by Roger Q. Williams and Lewis A. Yancey, Is bound for Rome.

Aviation news for the weekend Included two accidents which cost at least two lives and Injury to sev eral. At Yuma. Harvey Christofferson was killed and Ernest Yrson probably fatally injured In the crash of an old "Jenny" plane. Pilot Richard Perry was killed and two passengers, Miss Helen Doman ski and Joseph Schweitzer, were seriously Injured when their plane dived to earth near Stirling, N. J.

Missing Fliers Found, Two young Australian airmen Lieutenant Moir and Flying Officer Owen, who had been missing since May 17 when they took off from Bima for Darwin, were found safe at the Cape Don lighthouse, Queensland, where they have been living since they wrecked their plane In a night landing. They said they Had mistaken the lighthouse for Dar win. The lighthouse was without communication. A new altitude record of 41.000 feet was claimed today by Willy Neunnofer, a German pilot, at Des sau, Germany. The American rec ord of 39,140 feet is held by Lt.

Appoio souceic, u. 8. N. A worlds speed record was claimed by Majors Weiss and Glrier of the French military air force, who covered o.ooo kilometers (3,105 miles) in 26 'j hours for an average speed oi no. i mues per nour.

Record Flight Ends. Fort Worth, Texas, May 27 (JP) Having added almost a full day to the world endurance flight record. R. L. Robbins and James Kelly escnewed trie admiration or the Nation and slept today while experts made a careful examination of their single motored monoplane Fort Worth, which they brought to earth yesterday after soaring almost days.

The two pilots, one an ex-cowboy, the other a former railroad me chanic, added a new line to the illustrious record started by the Wright brothers' one-minute flight at Klttyhawk, N. in 1903. by keeping the Fort Worth aloft in good and bad weatner lor 172 nours, 32 minutes and 1 second. The record beats the mark of 150 hours. 40 minutes and 15 seconds, made by the Army monoplane Question Mark, by 21 hours, 51 minutes and 59 seconds.

The Army plane had three motors, a crew of five men and an eroert around crew. Each of the pilots won a total of 11,100 from several air transport companies and a purse of $15,000 is being raised for them by the Fort Worth Association of Commerce. Tomorrow they will attend a banquet given In their honor by 1,000 local citizens. The plane used 1.510 gallons of gasoline on the flight and it is conservatively estimated that lt traveled more than 10.000 miles. Both fliers oralsed K.

K. Hoff man and H. S. Jones, the refueling nilots. for their co-ODeratlon.

Although there is no doubt but that the record will stand lt will not become official until the baro graph carried in the plane has been calibrated In Washington and Photostatic conies of the graph cer tilled to the National Aeronautloal Association. Second Flight On. Minneapolis, May 27 (IP) Better than 40 hours of continuous flytnc, had been marked up by the slngle- motored monoplane Miss Ranger as she soared over Minneapolis early 1 tndav In an attempt to break the recora oi uie xurt. wurwi. iiuic dropped by the pilots, Gene Shank and Owen Haugland, indicated thac all was well, allnying fears that Sunday's heavy rain and the resultant fog might have Impaired the efficiency of the motor.

French Fliers Here. The French aviators, Armeno Lot-tl and Rene Lafevre, who plan to attempt the Atlantic hop as soon as weather permits, came to New York this morning by seaplane from Old Orchard, to keep in direct touch a i. 1 Sacco-Vanzetti Picket Convicted of Libel for Calling Fuller Slayer Boston, May 27 JF) Henry J. f) Canter of East Boston was i' convicted of criminal libel agotnst former Governor Alvan (, T. Fuller in a sealed verdict returned by a Jury in Suffolk Superior Court today.

Canter tt charged with having car- rved a placard in a demon-stvation near the State House which declared the former Governor was the "murderer" of Wcola Sacco and Bartolom-o Vattzetti, executed radicals. Cainler was defended by Arthur Garfield Hays of the American Civil Liberties Union. RUSSIAN GENERAL FLIES TO BOKHARA AS REVOLT START? London, May 27 OP) A Rica dispatch to the Daily Mail today said a revolt had broken out in Bokhara, which is that part or Russian Turkestan which borders Afghanistan, and that General Budenny, inspector of Soviet cavalry, had been sent to crush lt. The Soviet general was said to have left Moscow by airplane. Red outposts were said to have met with serious defeats during the past month, especially near tho Afghan border.

The trouble 'apparently reached its active stage after political police at Tashkent discovered a letter in which All Khan, former Emir of Jalalabad, urged the Bokharans to rise against Moscow. ceeded his authority. Young Hoose, 8, after a quarrel over wie uuswuy ui ma parents. a i i POLICEAND LICENSE BUREAUS IN CLASH OVER 'TANGO' GAME Owner of Coney Resort, Held as Gambler, Claims Came Was Inspected and Licensed. What may develop Into a battle royal between the License Department and the Police Department opened this morning in Coney Island Court where four men were arraigned before Magistrate Rudlch and held In ball for later examination, charged with operating games of chance.

Harry Sindel of 2978 Avenue who owns a "Tango" game at 1220 Surf ave Coney Island, informed the court through his attorney, Julian Carabba, that his game had been inspected by License Commissioner John Bracken and that it had been passed upon. Magistrate Ru-dich, however, was unconvlncd. He said from the bench that the game was the same as that called "Bingo" at Long Beach a year ago. "Bingo" was condemned as a gambling device by the City Court of Long Beach. Not Guilty Plra Entered.

Sindel was arrested by Albert Pitts, a plainclothesman attached to the staff of InsDector Edward Shelvey. He pleaded not guilty and was held in $500 bail for examination May 31. Six other men employed by him were also brought before the magistrate, who dismissed the cases against them. Solomon Jacobs of 572 W. 187th Henry Cashner of 203 Montauk ave.

an1 Julius Silovitch of 87 S. 4th st. were also arraigned on the same charge. They were held in $300 ball lor examination June 4. Sindel's attorney states that he will apply to the Supremo Court for an Injunction against the police, restraining them from Interfering with the game.

458 Degrees Below Zero Achieved by Scientist The Hague, May 27-Prof. W. H. Keesom of Leyden University, who in 1926 succeeded in solidifying helium, has achieved within 82-lOOths of a degree of the "absolute zero." The temperature attained was 458.58 degrees below Fahrenheit zero, and was achieved In a space of 200 cubic centimeters 12.2 cubic inches a space large enough to permit experiments with metals and elements. with the Weather Bureau here for a few days.

The fliers were flown here with a dozen officials of airplane companies in the flying boat "Roger Q. Williams," leaving Old Orchard at 8:15 and arriving at the foot of 79th Hudson river, at 11:46. They were taken ashore In a motorboat, to be taken by Arthur Montgomery, president of the American Aeronautical Line, down to the Weather Bureau. Roger Q. Williams and Lewis A.

Yancy, who are planning to fly to Rome, are remaining at Old Orchard, receiving their Information by wire. 1 Islip Asylum (Special to The Eagle.) Central Islip, L. May 27 Charges of neglect by Central Islip State Hospital authorities in the care of patients loomed today when Sgt. Edward Havlland of the State police, who was given access to the hospital records Saturday, disclosed that since Jan. 1, 38 male patients had strolled away from the institution and that 13 of them were still at large.

Dr. H. C. Gibson, assistant superintendent, who Is defending the hospital's action in the case of Ellas St. Matthew's P.

E. Church History Read at Reception A reception was held yesterday afternoon at St. Matthew's P. E. Church, Tompkins ave.

and McDon-ough as part of the celebration of the. 70th anniversary of the church. The chief feature was. the reading of the history of the church, com-niipri bv Mrs. William Davis, the oldest member in years of member ship.

Mrs. Davis descnoea me stare of the church In a cornfield on what was then a lane and is now Throop and its merging with the Church of the Epiphany. Presbyterian Pastor Captive of Chinese Reds Amoy, Fukien, China, May 27 (A') Dr. C. H.

Hollcman, Reformed Presbyterian Church missionary at Lungyenchow, west of here, Is being held captive by Communists. Mrs. Holleman and their children and the Rev. Henry Poppon and his family escaped to Amoy and were safe here today after having lost everything in an attack by 2,000 roving Communist troops, who looted the mission, residences and Have You Ever D. Young's Key to Victory dustries and railroads canceled The Allies have promised to cancel me industrial bonds but want to re tain a mortgage on the railroads There is little difference as far as the Allies are concerned whether they hold a specific railroad mort gage or the German Govcrnment'i promise to pay, once they assume Germany's Rood faith.

Foreclosing on tneir railroad mortgage certain iy wouldn do them any eood. Dr. Schacht offers $158,000,000 a the unconditional annuity while the Allies ask $199,000,000. But they have now agreed to start with Dr. Schacht's figure and to increase it very gradually.

Here, too, a com promise is easy since both sides are in accord on the total amounts. Germany is chiefly Interested In not losing all the transfer protec tion provided under the Dawes plan And since transfer protection only means that Germany should not be bankrupted, that Is as much in the interest of the Allies as oi uer many herself. Such details as whether the new plan is to begin running April of this year or October 1 and Just what arrangement will be made about Belgian paper marks or Gcr man property confiscated after the war are insignificant in relation to the success of the conference. In anything but a mood of weariness after 16 weeks of discussion, these Issues would never have assumed Importance. They are sure to be cleared away.

Napoleon once said that his key to victory was "De 1 audace, tou Jours de l'audace." Owen D. Young'; key to victory In Paris has been "De la patience, toutours de la patience." It looks as though his rule was about to achieve a greater nnai success tnan Napoleon s. Paris Hosts Flee City And 90 Degrees of Heal Paris, May, 27 Those Americans who wereln the city yesterday de voutly wisher' they were elsewhere when the temperature In the after noon hit 90 degrees. Overcoats were worn but a few days ago and that made the heat all the more trying. The Bois de Boulogne was crowd ed with Americans, as well French, and tonight space on the terraces of the boulevard cafes and In the open-air restaurants was at a premium.

Thousands motored to such seaside resorts as Deauville, Le louquei ana cacourg. Banker, Former Prisoner, Considered for Jail Board Pittsburg, May 27 Henry G. Brock, banker, of Muncle. 40 miles from here, Is under consideration for ap point ment to the Board of County Prison Inspectors. On his plea of guilty to three in dictments returned in 1923, when his motorcar killed three persons, Brock was sentenced to three years in the Eastern Penitentiary.

There was a model prisoner and beean the rehabilitation work among convicts mat ne nas since continued. Buried Treasure Fraud Laid to Karl Graves Los Angeles, Cal May 27 (IP) Dr. Armgaard Karl Graves, self-styled former International spy, was arrested here yesterday on a charge of suspicion of grand theft preferred by Henry Klrschmann, San Francisco business man, who alleged Graves had defrauded him out of $3,500 in connection with a projected expedition to search for burled treasure. KOBACKER BUYS UNIT Kobacker Stores. has purchased the Chase Department Store of Pontlac, Mich.

Business of the Kobacker chain this year is expected by officials to exceed $25,000,000, "De la Patience" Is Owen Those Paris correspondents who have been keeping the reparations parley on the brink of failure have been thinking in terms of headlines. When an experts conference is in its 16th week and thero are no news crumbs left, desperate scribes can do little but cry "Wolf!" or remain silent. So while there Is steady progress toward agreement, "Crash Near," "Failure Imminent," Scnacht Ultimatum," "Faint Hope Left," "No Concession" is the way in which the headlines tell us that there is nothing new on the western front. Today the cable reports a new compromise proposal by Owen D. Young.

This is the American chairman's latest endeavor to bring together Dr. Schachts reservations Youn8 compromise and the Allied reservations to the Schacht reservations. The chances are that this second compromise plan wUl bring the final solution. Everyone wants agreement and no one is going to take the onus of turning down a neutral and competent chairman's suggestion of a fair way to work it out. The German experts asked for a total suspension of payments in case of financial or economic crisis in Germany.

The Allies offered a moratorium of Two years on transfers from Germany and a complete moratorium on the conditional part of the annuities if a committee from the International Bank recommends it. Obviously Germany cannot go on making these payments while she is in the throes of a crisis. It is Just a question of agreeing on who has the right to suspend payments. Germans want to get rid of all internal Allied control. They want the Dawes, plan bonds on their in 3 Pox Cases on Liner Merely Chicken Pox United States Public Health doc tors at Quarantine declared shortly after 11 a.m.

today that the three suspected cases of smallpox on the North German Lloyd liner Dresden were found, upon complete diagnosis, to be chicken pox. The three persons were removed from the vessel at Quarantine to Hoffman Island and the liner was? permitted to proceed with the rest of the 496 passengers to her pier at the foot of Christopher Manhattan. Pupils March to Safety In Rockaway School Fire When fire was discovered in a defective flue of the hot water heating plant, at about 10:30 a.m. today, In P. S.

44, at Beach 94th st. and Rock-away Rockaway Beach, the pupils in the building were led out in about two minutes in Are drill formation. Firemen were summoned and went to work on the flue, while the school children were given a recess untU 1 o'clock this afternoon. The damage was negligible. took out a.

small boat, Kaplan told police he and Pearl saw two girls Kaplan described as weighing abojt 200 pounds eacn. An invitation to go rowing was extended and accented. Kaplan said they had difficulties within a few minutes, the boat shipping a Rood deal of water. He rowed. Kaolan said, while Pearl tried to bail.

The girls became excited. Kaplan continued, and the first thing he knew the boat upset. The girls struck out for shore, then hailed a taxicab and drove oil, Pearl's body was recovered about an hour later. Considered This? The person who makes money slowly all the time, makes more money than the person who makes it rapidly part of the time and loses it most of the time. No substitute leading to financial success has yet been devised that surpasses old fashioned thrift.

Even tlirift is insufficient unless it is coupled with wise investment. Speaking of wise investments, take PRUDENCE- BONDS, for example. They are secured by conservative first mortgages on completed income-earning properties, they are Guaranteed by over $16,000,000 of Prudence funds and they are so inherently safe that banks, insurance companies and fiduciary institutions buy them in large amounts. They recognize safety, they demand it and they get it in Guaranteed PRUDENCE -BONDS. "May we send you ILlitcrature? It will interest you.

tPrudence Company, 162 Remscn St. 331 Madison Ave. 161-10 Jamaica Ave. BROOK.LYN 4nlSrrt JAMAICA NEW YORK NEW YORK NKW YORK OFFICES OPEN MONDAYS UNTIL 9 P. M.

2 OUT OF 3 BROOKLYNITES MAKE NO WILLS Surrogate VVineate says that at least two out of every three persons in Kings County fail to make a will a situation unfortunate for many heirs. Most wills contested are deathbed testaments or not properly drawn. Employ a lawyer to make your will and thus assure its locality; name a corporate executor like the Bank of the Manhattan Company and thus insure its faithful carrying out. 200-Pound Girls Upset Boat, Man Drowns in Park Lake The Invitation which Nathan Pearl 413 Halsey went to the lake and lua OUT Ml MAM. Bank of the Manhattan Company Brooklyn Division Executive Office, 26 Court Street THE PRUDENCE COMPANY.

INC AJdrtu Newest Otbct GENTLEMEN: Without oMin.iion on my pan plrasr lend dkfipuv literature abuut extended last night to two heavyweight girls to go rowing with him and his chum on the lake in Prospect Park In a rowboat designed only for two cost Pearl his life. The boat proved Inadequate for the added burden and sank as the craft reached the middle of the lake. The others were able to swim and made shore, but Pearl, who could not swim, was drowned. Pearl, 24, lived at 239 Hart st. and was a clerk In the General He and Jack Kaplan, salesman, of rruueocc-ouous.

NAME ..4 Broidwir lUvemev" St. 3S1 Arllmion Avf. 1 40 Grtnpoint A. Noitrind An. Sutter Avt.

fit Union St. Kmplr Blvd. Noitr.nJ Avt. 41 Conwnfcntt Locaud OHuti in tn BorowjK ol Qucrni FIRST National Safe Depoiit Company I ttar.ca. ADDRESS..

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