Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
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)

THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MAY llCO ririirlnnie MMIchI School of Nw i VurR. spoke dii the topic "Urobilin YOUNG HOSTESS Homeopaths Discuss MANY PAY HONOR 'Sure ftelief a Pr io Kitm In Heart DU- i TO JEWISH SCHOOL QUEENS SCHOOLS TO COST OTHER R. E. NEWS V-HHUICU uistciscs cinidivn." The topic wan The laat niw'ms "I i i't discussed bv Drs. Maxwell Fine, Homeopathic Aledical Hiiciety of the Martin Kriedi li'li and C.

S. County of Kings was held last titelit i fall session will open with a at. Ihc Ktrvllcnl I.ihrnrv Rut rllim. Theodore 1). Adlerman, MD, 1313 Bedford ave.

Moic than 50 City of Light 9 Illuminates Self Seven Stories Above Manhattan's Busy Streets Occupies a Square Block, Hat 2 Thoroughfares, Theater, Stores, Schoolroom, Model Home, Etc. Every Form of Lighting Shown in Westinghouse Lamp Exhibit. By JOHN J. O'NEILL president, presided at last nights 6 Bell ans Hot water Sure Relief ON 11THBIRTHDAY ree Lodging and Tuition Provided by Institution to Many Poor Students. members were present, Jeremiah T.

Simonson. professor nf pediatrics of the Division of Medicine, New York Homeopathic Medical College, spoke on "The Obscure Digestive Dystrophies in Children." The tonic was discussed bv ELL-AM LIGHT SHOW OPEN'S JUNE I. Appiopriatc lighting for every place, from kltenen to airport, may he seen alter June 1 at the Wy-iniihouse LlRhtlng Institute, whirl-, will occupy the entire seventh floC of Grand Central Palace, Ycshivah Torah Vadaath and FOR INDIGESTION 26 and 75t Pki'x Sold Everywhere Mesiphta, a Brooklyn Jewish Insti Drs. H. Minion.

E. T. Redmond and Jacob L. Lowell. M.

H. Edelmnn, M.D., associate professor of pediatrics at the Past (Science Editor of The Eagle.) Plans have been filed for two public schools for Queens, estimated to cost $870,000. One of the buildings is to be erected in the north side of 80th between 207tli and 208th Queens Village, at a cost of $435,000, and the other Is for 162d between 75th and 7tth rds Flushing, to cost $435,000. The plans were filed for the Board of Eduration by William C. Martin, architect.

Ten one-family houses are to built in 52d drive, between 67th and 68th Maspeth, by Salvatore Dvago of 2459 W. 2d this boro, at a cost of $60,000. Plans for the operation have been filed by 8. Goldstein, architect. 11 I A new city, a City of Light, Illuminated itself into being, in the heart of New York yesterday.

It occupies a square ULTRA-VIOLET RAY TmVISTDN TEST tution of learning, with buildings at 208 Wilsoh st. and 505 Bedford last night celebrated 11 years of existence with a dinner at the Knapp Mansion, 554 Bedford ave. More than 500 Brooklyn Jews, supporters of the Yeshlvah, were present. block and has two principal streets, Mazda ave. and Cross with traffic lights and everything.

The principal establishments ony a 1J M-M aA.kffA.WAl A mm A -AlffedMekoa garage door that opens when the beam from the headlights of the The Yesnivan. or scnooi. eniDoaiF cars shine on It. Another spectacular effect is the automatic turning on of the interior lighting system when Mazda ave. are a theater seeting 299 persons, art gallery, bank, industrial building, electrical store, florist shop, automotive shop, transportation department, school room, and elsewhere in the city, a model home, a railroad system and an airport.

both a primary and a high school, where both English and Yiddish are taught. It houses more than 800 children, half of whom receive free CASTS GIRUS IMAGE Features Use of Mercury In-duction Tube; Confines Interception, Says Expert. tne outside daylight drops to a cer tuition, as well as board and cloth tain minimum value. When the sun shines again the lights are turned ing. Abraham Lewis is president, c.

Bernlce Rubrl. Bernlce Rubel, six-year-old off. Lights are used only wWen Eosteln is chairman oi tne noard Mazda ave. has tne distinction 01 hpinir the onlv hichwav in the city, Tailors and Breeches Makers needed. of directors and Joseph Gabriel is executive manager.

NEW CHIEF AT ISLAND. Col. William K. Taylor, recently appointed chief of staff of the 2d Corps Area under Major General Ely, corps area commander at Governors Island, assumed his new post yesterday, Ho succeeds Col. Alfred A.

Starblrd. An electric light that is lighted or perhaps the world, that is seven stories above the sidewalk. It is the with a match or a pocket cigar The dinner last night was at 580 Fifth Avenue New York Laditt Man-Tailored Riding Kit daughter of Samuel Rubel. and president of the children's division of the Brooklyn Federation of Jewish Charities, will be hostess at a charter meeting of the group at the Half Moon Hotel on June 9. lighter was an amusing and inter' estlng novelty.

A match is struck in a cmrKenea room, near an orna tended by many prominent in Jewish and political affairs. Municipal Court Justice Jacob S. Strahl, chairman of the banquet committee, was toastmaster. mental wall fixture. Immediately tne electric lamps in the fix ture flash into full brightness Speakers included Rabbi H.

F. When the match Is extinguished the Epstein, Rabbi Wolf Gold, Rabbi main artery of traiiic ana exmoi-tlon of the Westinghouse Light Institute which opened yesterday on the seventh floor of Grand Central Palace. Has Every Form of Illumination. "This institute," said E. A.

Allen, vice president of the Westinghouse Lamp Company, "is the Westinghouse Lamp Company's contribution to the electrical Industry. When the idea was first suggested the problem that first confronted us was to have every form of illumination in it, and with that thought in lights go out. The light of the OlDILIL Abraham Miller, Senator James J. match affects a selenium cell, which Crawford, Supreme Court Justice Edward Riegelmann, Public Admlnis operates a glow tube, a kind of a sensatlve relay, that closes the lamp Borne on the Invisible ultra-violet light ray, vibrations representing the image of a girl moving her head from side to side was picked up yesterday afternoon on a television screen being watched by a group of 'newspaper reporters present at the first public demonstration of ultraviolet ray televlsiqn transmission, 'which took place on the 11th floor -of Bamberger and Company In N. J.

Paul A. Kober. telvlslon engineer of- the U. S. Radio and Television Corporation, declared this apparatus constructed by him to have possibilities for secret wartime television transmission.

The comparatively older wireless television transmission may be Interpreted from any dirction, while sets using the 1 i i 1 1. 1 trator Frank V. Kelly, Assistant Dis- circuit. trict Attorney Samuel Goldstein A daylight view of the city from Benjamin Weberman and ex-State Battery Park, with the turn of Senator Louis 1 Jacobson. switch, changes into a night time The following cantors gave vocal mind we finally decided to go view or Times square with onerat ing replicas of all of the signs in through with the idea of a Light Ins Institute in New York City." that district.

40,000 Square Feet of Floor Space, The institute is a permanent exhibition in which all kinds of effects are shown, exterior and selections: Josef Rosenblatt, Jacob Siegel, Israel Shor and M. Steinberg. The banquet committee comprised Justice Strahl, Joshua Epstein, Max Blumberg, J. H. Cohen, Samuel Goldstein, Daniel Relgman, Max Singer, John J.

Grady and Joseph Gabriel. interior. The theater is complete in The exhibit occupies 40,000 square feet of floor space. Mazda ave. is 180 feet long and 20 feet wide.

Cross st. 13 85 feet long. The apparent length of Mazda ave. is greatly increased by a mirror at one end. At every detail with an elaborate switchboard that permits arrang unra-vioiei ray couia oiuy oe pitucu up by a station In Its path.

Would Maintain Secrecy. WtinfU nlvnlariAa anI chins omiIH ing in advance the complete lighting effects for ten acts. Four types the other end is an "open air" court furnished with tables and electric "terchangeabie lignung lor tne oody of the theater are shown. Proper lighting and Improper light lighted parasols. be equipped with this apparatus," he said, "and more secrecy would Though this method of transmis- alon is necessarily limited to the distance the eye can see, fog would nnt interment the rav.

The exhibit is open every day to the general public and its theater and auditorium will be available to ing for schools, homes, factories and offices are demonstrated in separate establishments. Remarkable organizations for meetings. The in color effects are included. Among the novelties incorporat stitute is under the direction of Ralph Neumuller. ing the use of light is an automatic Kings County Hospital Center Takes Shape The first move toward creation of the new Kings County Hospital center at Clarkson and New York aves.

was made today when preliminary plans were filed with the Bureau of Buildings for the erection of a temporary dormitory to house the employees. ThU dormitory, which will be one story high and extend over a site 308 feet 9 inches by 91 feet 2 inches, will cost $100,000 it is estimated by the architect, LeRoy P. Ward. The building will be used until the main building Is "I have conducted successful television transmissions with this ray over a distance of ten miles," asserted Mr. Kober, "and though it could only be used in the sea or air or open spaces where there would be no obstructions to stop the ray, I see a definite use for it." Use Mercury and Neon Lamps.

STUDENTS EXHIBIT SEWING. What courses in sewing and mil linery can accomplish was demon 22 BROOKLYN MEN GET ARMY BILLETS strated today wlien Girls High School students placed on exhibit 600 dresses and ensembles of every description and 100 hats. Miss Mabel Harry, instructor in drawing, dls played costume designs for dolls. iiiotcau ui LC nig vir a regular wireless transmitting set or to land wires as has been the case heretofore, the photo electric cells which pick up the imaRe to be trinsmitted were connected to a meroury induction lamp which sent the ultra-violet ray down the corridor, varying in intensity according to the amount of light on the Jace of the ginl. Fifty feet away the ray was Major Mendenhall, Army recruiting officer at 4th and Atlantic has sent 22 Brooklyn men to various Army posts throughout the United States, and its foreign possessions so far in May, Hilmar Oram, 116 Avenue Boro Park, and Carl Oorhan, 74 Nassau Infantry; Adam Btuchlnakl.

163 Newton Coney Island, coast artillery: Benjamin saiznerg, Roeming willlnmsDurg: tit, annfhfil caf n9 thntrt lort.Hp IFW -ttUne Vncatton You can so easily refresh the "few minutes" visitor by a cup of delicious tea made with tutsua wiutn ttuvuatcu a ueuu jump, causing the image to be recreated by aid of an ordinary scanning disc and light pencil. The essentially new feature of this demonstration was shown to be In" the use of the mercury induction tube and the ultra-violet ray for carrying the television vibra-liprjs that are translated into a' recognizable Image at the receiving end. cnanes E. Nicnoison, tn ana Benjamin Becker, 373 Livonia field artillery: Owen J. Fisher, 1620 Jefferson Quartermaster Corps, all stationed in the Hawaiian Islands.

To the Pacific Coast no Paul D. Kass. 178S Prospect Louis I. Halgren, 716 57th Bay Ridge, and John Kartalls, 190 By at. John T.

Reach, 78-39, 8Mh Olendale, and Peter Blanco, 268 Front go to the coast artillery In Panama, while William I. Cunningham. 77 St. Mark's Infantry, and George Flynn, cavalry, go to the Mexican Border. Local assignments are William A.

Elrafiser. 789 Monroe Rldgewood: Louia J. Hlnkle. 456 80th New Utrecht, and Ralph Marino, 68 Ashland to the 16th Infantry, Oovernors Island. William H.

Boettyer. 235 Leflerta Instructor's office, N. Y. N. Rudolph Frank, 106-61 Ditmara E.

Elmhurst, to Signal Corps, Ft. Monmouth, N. and Peter Heiflern, 134S Sterling to the Engineers Corps, West Point. rarents entertained 0 L' I mi 1 1 WVVM liVVp 11V. M.M.V The Marcy Avenue Baptist Church hall resounded to cheers within iU ftr-ails last night, when Boy Scouts AL SMITH RESUMES POST.

Former Gov. Alfred E. Smith was ITEA-BAGS yesterday elected a director of the National Surety Company. He resigned from this position when he became Governor. "Fresh from theQardens' 997 flDnn MffiMflMMAL or- iroop 113 neia tneir sixtn annual "-parents' night "rally with an audience of 125.

A program of Scout exercises and was carried through and awards for the past season present-rd by the Rev. Wilbour E. Saunders, -pastor of the church. Highest honor available, "Good Scout Award," was earned by Harry Wiedeman, and points for attendance and uniforms by the Plying Eagle Patrol. Assistant Scoutmaster Vincent L.

Mahon spoke a few words of welcome and a Scout's father thanked the troop for its good work and influence, Scoutmaster Charles F. Walden urged the parents to send their boys to the summer camp. Prospect Park Tennis To Begin Tomorrow The tennis courts in Prospect Park will open the first time this season tomorrow, Decoration Day, according to Park Commissioner James J. Browne. The courts will be open daily from 10 a.m.

until dusk, and on Sundays from 1 p.m. until dusk. Nearly 2,000 permits have already been issued the commissioner said. There are close to 300 grass courts In Prospect Park. DDay "fundi every day Kiwanis Club Hears I Talk on 'Eyesight' More than 200 attended the weekly luncheon of the Kiwanis Club of Brooklyn, held yesterday afternoon at the St.

George Hotel. Frederic A. Woll, Ph.D., professor and director of the Department of Hygiene at C. C. N.

Manhattan, spoke on "Eyesight Conservation." Pack and Saddle and Hit the Trail iiniif And when you go "via Baltimore Ohio" you have the convenience of Train Connection Motor Coach Service from the Heart of New York or Brooklyn direct to trainside at Jersey City, at no additional charge. You can stop over for sightseeing in Washington; then journey on comfortably, conveniently to the gateways to the West, Three convenient trains to Chicago and three to St. Louis, including: The NATIONAL Limited St. Louis The CAPITOL limited to Chicago THE BR EVER CUP is a convenient and attractive way of baying Breyeri Ice Cream especially for picnic and holiday outingi. Each contains generous, individual serving.

LEASE TO SOVIET UNION AGENTS. Thoens Flaunlacher, leased to the Amtorg Trading Corporation, for the 5th Avenue and 29th Street Corporation, the remaining part of the 21st floor and also space on the sixth floor of the recently completed 25-stpjy office and showroom building at 261 5th ave. The corporation, which comprises representatives of the principal industriai and trading corporations of the Soviet Union, also occupies the entire 17th and 18th floors In this ljuildlng. The General Outdoor Advertising Company, have leased from the Aeo Motor Car Company the entire building fronting 200 feet on 150th A. Gerard to River covering a ground area of 25,000 square feet.

lease was negotiated through Brown, Wheelock: Harris, Vought Co. and the Cross Brown Company. Nights under the twinkling stars smell of the amp-fire creak of leather mountains, lakes, forest, prairie an appetite, a new joy of living can be you Go West this Summer let our Travel Bureau help you make your plans let them tell you about California, Colorado, Utah, the Pacific Northwest, Grand Canyon, the National Parks you can go even within the scope of your vacation at these Special Low Summer Fares. (EffMitt May 5, 1929) To San Francisco and Los Angeles $138.32 Circuit tour of the West and Pacific Coast $156.32 Jeittlf, Tacoma, Portland, Victoria and Vancouver 138.32 Grand Canyon, Arizona $125.82 (Effttiinjmul, 1910) Glacier National Park Station $110.32 Vellcwstons National Park Stations $108.82 Salt lake City $108.82 Denver (Gateway for Rocky Mountain National Park), Colorado Springs $93.32 Cedar City, Utah (Gateway for Zion National Park) 1 10.92 (Rilm limit if til lithll Oclobnil) Eiua charge! will be made fot toun from Etilioad Stations through the National Parka TIP at the Breyer-leaf Sign if you enjoy extra-fine ice cream No matter where you buy Breyers or how you buy Breyers you're certain of getting the same delicious, extra-fine ice cream. And the reason is quite simple.

Every spoonful of ice cream that leaves a Breyers plant is a pure blend of real rich cream, real cane sugar, a real natural flavoring and nothing else! That's why more dealers sell Breyers and more people enjoy Breyers than any other ice cream in the world. Patfnise the Breyer Dealer The outstanding "on-time" records of both trains give reasonable assurance of dependable connections for the West. Choice of many routes going and returning; stop-overs anywhere. Three Motor Coach Stations in Greater New York The new 42nd St. Station (opposite Grand Central Terminal and Commodore Hotel).

Waldorf-Astoria Station 33rd St. West of fifth Avenue. Brooklyn Station located at 191 Joralemon St. in the Borough Hall District. for Western Tours Folder, timetables and full information, tall, phone, or write the Travel Bureau, new 4211J Si.

Station: Chanin Bldg. (Phone Ashland 4401), or apply to any Coaih Station or to Consolidated TUket Offices. E. D. AINSLIE, General Passenger Agfnt J.

B. SCOTT, General Eastern Passenger Agent MASONS HOLD LADIES' NIGHT. "Aurora Grata Lodge, F. A. held its annual ladles' night entertainment yesterday at the Cathedral, Bedford ave.

and Madison with an audience of more than 500. Dr. Byron Mead spoke on "Memorial Day." The Rev. Dr. Thomas Hugh Gallagher talked on "Life's Deep Wells." The master of the loicn Is Frederic W.

Dillingham WilHam Gerlach was chairman of Music and were enjoyed. PTFT IT Special attention given to private orders of 4 quarts or more for parties, Jings, church affairs, etc. Delivered in Breyers "Wonder Box" -packed in dry ice. ft MA IMOEIE OHIO.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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