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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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died his the sons. ritual. illness Rev, 624 be died No will died In Maspoth, Site Church. and 11e James home Salina Police Inspi- engine must- Hen- held $:30 Ed died and near held 1:09 Fu- Dr. and two and She her her her nil Oft his on to- of on A of Identical of sity is of a a to the of at of EL in ill Univer- aca- he- for THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE.

NEW YORK, MONDAY. APRIL 6. 1925. 3 Mortgage Money for You There is considerable real estate activity just now. Perhaps you need a loan to finance some new purchase of real estate.

Perhaps you want to borrow money on your present property so that you can take advantage of a bargain in other real estate. In either event, we have money to lend on improved property in any Borough of Greater New York. Title Guarantee Trust Co. Capital $10,000,000 Surplus $11,000,000 Broadway, New York. 175 Remsen Brooklyn.

East 45th New York. 160-08 Jamaica Jamaica. 271 West 125th New York. Bridge Plaza North, L. 1.

City. 370 East 149th New York. Mineola, Long Island. 90 Bay St. George, S.

I. Russia Fears Capital Will Enter Ranks of Labor, but Put Ideas Into Practice Eagle Bureau, 53 Rue Cambon. By GUY HICKOK. Paris, March 28-From the hotel window half of Paris was visible. The Eiffel Tower thrust its tapering spire into a low flying cloud.

Ac-oss the river the twin towers of the Trocadero made a less ambitious leap to meet the sagging sky. Further to the right the Arch of Triumph hunched its big shoulders above the surrounding buildings, too heavy to leap at all. "Communism in Russia?" said the man who had passed the last three years there. "Well, a great discussion as to how is left. thenuch Some say 2 percent.

Some say 1. My own guess is that the real figure is little less than 1 It's like monarchy in England--a word." "In that I asked, "why are they so slow letting outsiders in with capital?" "Ah! You see they are afraid capital. Capital from outside means to them capitalism with a big C. Capitalism is the bogey man. You see the Russians are just as afraid of capitalism as the Americans are of He pressed the button and when the waiter came asked for a whisky and soda.

He was an Englishman--naturally, Capitalism Is Enemy. "You see all the tife that there has been anti-Bolshevist propaganda in the United States, scaring everybody sick with the horrors of Belshvism, making everybody think that every time two bewhiskered foreigners stopped to look at their watches that they were fixing the hour for a Red revolution. The same thing, reversed, has been going on in Russia. has been painted as the dreaded enemy. Capitalism, the rivalry in trade and industry, has been held responsible for the great war.

You see wer westerners take the great war more or lugs for granted, and shudder at the horrors of the Russian revolution. They do exactly the opposite. They explain that the revolution was something that had to come, but that the great war was result purely of rivalry between British and German manufacturers and merchants. And they shudder at our butchery' just as much as we shudder at theirs. "Capitalism is man under the bed, the mysterious enemy who must he kept at more than arms length.

Capitalism is the Devil. It is a fearful force which once you let it get its foot inside the door will soon occupy the whole house. "They want capital. They need it. Somewhat AS American women might like Russian sables.

But they are afraid to offer capitalism any security, because they fear that once they give it an inch it will soon hove the whole rope. You would be surprised to hear how much some of their arguments resemble the things that Americans say about Bol- shevism. Fear of Capitalists. "Must keep it down. Mustn't let 1t get a.

start. Must not let 'Cap1talist propaganda' be circulated in the country. Must not let Capitalist sympathizers get into the government. They might undermine it. Must not let Capitalist newspapers re published, any more than Americans must let communist papers be published in New York.

They have a mysterious belief in the power of propaganda' and a fear of it, somewhat as Americans fearr red propaganda. "So when a Harry Sinclair or some other American comes looking for concessions, though they are tempted, they fear him. "When somebody in the Government comes out flatly for admitting foreign capital they are about as shocked in Moscow as Washington would be if Mellon or Hoover should suddenly come out for nationalization of railroads or coal mines. They feel it. They are frightened that one of their number has been 'corrupted' and they hustle him off to some sanitarium to recover his senses, "Yet all the time, little by little, in a retail way, they are putting capItalistic ideas into practice.

In some things they have goneup far. The British Trades Union committee. which came to Russia and wrote a report on their return, said, for example, that the Soviets were doing things that even the moderate British unions would not stand for. Have Drunken Population. "Piece in the factories, for example, which causes one worker speed up and earn more than anbther.

They have that in Moscow how. But the Englishmen conHemned it. They said it wouldn't be tolerated in England too capialistic. "They a1'0 having one fight in Russia that has something in common with early American hisory, a fight which will decide thether they will be a loose federaIon of independent republics O1 a. Antralized federal government.

here is a State's Rights movement, And a. Federalist movement. That light will go on for years. "My guess is that they will come but, evenually as a cenralized republic, not much like the American republic because their population nd traditions are different. In the irst place they have an Illiterate, Trunken, lazy, loafing population bat cannot be handled as the Amerian colonists were.

"In the second place they have the ang-overs of centuries of another kind of government, whereas the Americans started afresh in new lountry. But allowing for such difTerences the final result may be more ko the American republic than one auld imagine now." DISCIPLINE SEEN IN FAILURE TO PROMOTE GRAVES Assignment of Noted War General as First Division Chief Revives Gossip. Eagle Bureau, 901 Colorado Building. Washington, April 6-Announcement today of the assignment of Brig. Gen.

William S. Graves to the command of the 1st without promotion in rank, strengthened rumors current for some time in Army circles that the General was being disciplined. General Graves, who commanded the American Expeditionary Forces in Siberia, and who established an excellent service record before and curing the war, is one of the few staff officers whose work has not been 1 recognized by promotion since the armistice. The Army and Navy Journal said editorially today: "The long-delayed promotion of General Graves, an officer whose record has always been above the average, can only be explained by the persistent rumors which allege that foreign displeasure of General Graves' attitude in Siberia is the underlying and sole cause." It was explained at the War Department that the assignment of the General to the Important command did not necessarily indicate a promotion for him to the rank of MajorGeneral. There are no major -generalcies vacant at the present time.

Wadsworth Discards "Influences." The suggestion that foreign influences had possibly been holding up General Graves' promotion because of friction between himself and Japanese and British commanders in Siberia in 1918-1919 was discounted today by Senator Wadsworth of New York, chairman of the Senate Military Affairs Committee, which passes on all such promotions. He said it was "absurd" to suggest that foreign governments could thus interfere with an American Army promotion. Senator Wadsworth said he had heard of friction at Vladivostock when the American forces were there after the end of the war, but he did not know whether this friction was attributable to the attitude of the American commander or not. The Senator said that Graves might not have conducted himself to the best advantage in Siberia and that he might have come under War Department criticism on this score, which in turn may have delayed his promotion, but he had no information on this. But that a foreign Government could have influenced the War Department to this end, the Senator be- lives to be out of the question.

Military Journal Opens Attack. This, however, 19 not the attitude of the Army and Navy Journal, which opens its editorial relative to the Graves appointment with a smashing attack upon alleged efforts to discipline recalcitrant Army officers through channels other than military at Washington. "This assignment," the editorial sets forth, "coupled with the reading of Major General Harboard's 'Leaves From a War recalls the fact that during the recent war American general officers ot only had to face the attacks of their armed foes, but also blows in the dark from insidious enemies supposed to be friends." The editorial points out that General Graves, 08 commander of the Siberian Expedition, had no course to follow but that of strict adherence to instructions from the President. It declares that he loyally behaved in just this manner. "This, in spite of every opposititon on the part of foreigners opposed to Mr.

Wilson's policy in Siberia, and regardless of the fact that he knew continuous attempts were being made to undermine him at home. Demands Fight in Open. "Such conduct, following upon a long, honorable and unusually efficient record, clearly entitled to his promotion. those responsible for holding it up believe conduct in Siberia deserves punishment they should come out in the and make definite charges and give General Graves the right guaranteed under the Constitution to citizen to confront his accusers every in fair trial and refute their testimony." B. Johns, staff writer in the Journal, in his column on special service news and comment, frankly criticizes the fact that General Graves "has been punished because, in carrying out the orders to him of the then commander-in-chief the Army, he incurred the enmity of the diplomats of foreign "For some time," Johns wrote.

"there have been rumors current that it has been the influence of the State Department in yielding to pressure from foreign sources that prevented the advancement of General Graves. It is known that eral Graves had some differences with the English and Japanese 211- thorities during the time he was in command in Siberia." Japanese Charge Cited. In 1919 the Japanese press in Tokio made capital out of the allegation that the American forces were permitted by Gen. Graves and other officers of the American expedition to stand by while Japanese military contingent was being wiped out of existence, or Feb. 25, 1919.

One the Japanese version of the affair became public at the time, the War and State departments keeping the report of Gen. Graves on the incident a secret. However, it was understood that Gen. Graves, in his 1'C- port, set forth that the Americans did not go to the aid of the Japanese because of the fact that the latter had shot down women and children. coupled with the fact that ne did not recognize the Russians, agair.st whom the Japanese were sent to fight, as the real enemy.

Gen. Graves was one of Maj. Gen Leonard Wood's finds. APPRAISALS Estate of ADDIE C. HEBERT, died Oct.

22, 1923, appraised at $10,815.91, which passes to an aunt, Nancy H. Kilmer; three cousins, Byron S. Petit, Grace P. Barkley and Lettie Walthousen, and others. Estate of PHILIP KLINGSMITH, died May 28, 1924, appraised at $6,128.11, which passes to his widow, Mathilda P.

Klingsmith. Estate of ISAAC C. OGDEN, died Aug. 26, 1923, appraised at $64.972.26, which passes to two sons, K. Montgomery Ogdeu and Bryan K.

Ogden, and two daughters, Helen Ogden and Margaret O. Gardner. Estate of VINCENT GIGLIO, died June 29, 1924. appraised at $27.269.10. which passes to his father, Salvatore Gigllo, and others.

MISSING PERSONS ALFRED BRILL, 19, 274 Park March 28: 5 feet. 9 inches tall, weighs 160 pounds; blue eyes, light complexion, black hair: black suit. small white stripe; white shirt, blue stripes; blue tie, black shoes stockings, gray soft hat. and JOHN DWIEWINTKOWSKI, 15, 311 Water March 31: 5 feet tall, weighs 1110 pounds; blue eyes, brown hair, fair complexion: blue overcoat. white striped shirt, collar attached, brown short trouIsers, brown lace shoes, black stockings, blue cap.

WILLIAM WOLTER, 17. 234 32d April 5 feet 6 Inches tall, weighs 135 (pounds; blue eyes, black hair, light complexion: brown overcoat, khaki shirt, colattached, gray sweater black trousers brown lace shoes, black stockings, gray leap. SWEEP OLD IDEAS AWAY! Ideas about cod-liver oil should be revised. Children are often denied its health-building benefits because of prejudice. As a rule children relish Scott's Emulsion It is not a fad or fancy but its merit has been proved in a million homes during the past half century.

Give it to your child -take it yourself! All children take it as easily as milk, in fact most children have a fondness for Scott's Emulsion. Scott Bowne, Bloomfield. N. J. 24-14 Seen Punished For Conduct As U.S.

General in Russia Brig. Gen, William S. Graves. SEEKS IMPROVED B. M.

T. SERVICE FROM FLATBUSH Reader Suggests Use of Brighton-Franklin Ave. Spur to Relieve Congestion. Editor Brooklyn Daily Eagle: Isn't the B. M.

T. overlooking an obvious way to improve service for Flatbush by failure to use the Brighton-Franklin ave. spur as a means of carrying more trains--and more people comfortably--from Flatbush to Boro Hall and via the Brooklyn Bridge to Park Row? We used to have this service. Why couldn't it be restored? Brighton subway trains are jammed to a point where at times it is impossible even to get aboard a train in the rush hour mornings. Large numbers of these people work either in the downtown section of Brooklyn or within walking distance of Park Row.

22 part of the Brighton service wag carried over the Franklin ave. spur to Fulton and down Fulton st. it would give these people an added service and relieve the congestion on the lines going farther into Manhattan. The point of track congestion on the Brighton line is at DeKalb ave. and beyond, where 4th West End, and Culver, trains must crowd on the same tracks.

Out here in Flatbush, more trains could be run, even in the height of the rush hour, and it they found an outlet around the DeKalb ave. station -as the Brighton cutoff would provide--the B. M. T. would be able to give us much better service.

Yours for better S. 0. FLATBUSH. Whitney's Explanation. When the foregoing proposal was put up to the B.

M. T. and the Transit Commission several reasons were advanced against it, although it was made clear that the addition of such service was possible and would give added carrying capacity to the Brighton line. The Franklin ave. spur referred to is the old Brighton Beach line, leaving the subway route at Prospect Park station and cutting across to Franklin ave.

and Fulton st. Travis is H. Whitney, vice president of the B. M. stated that this line had been brought to a dead-end at Fulton st.

and no longer had actual physical connection with the Fulton st. line. "Further increase in service," hie declared, "is dependent, in the first place, on shops and longer platforms and, in the second place, on the completion of the 14th st. and the building of the Nassau-Broad st. lines." Transit Commissioner Leftoy T.

Harkness, referring to the lack of a physical connection and the fact that platforms had been built over the space formerly used by such connections, said: do not regard these arguments very highly. They are concerned with details of operation and would be brushed aside if there were a possibility for real accomplishment." Commenting on the proposal generally, Harkness said: "If the Fulton st. elevated and equipment were in shape for the illtensive service me would want to get out of it, the question of track cona nection at Franklin ave. would be mere detail that could readily taken care of. Would Mean Wooden Cars.

"The decisive consideration with me is this: The Fulton st. eievated as far east as Nostrand ave. is not fitted for more intensive service be. cause it can only handle the old 'L' equipment, and a limited amount of it at that. "Although wooden and steel trains are operated on the same OFFICE BOY HERO OF HOSPITAL FIRE: 50 PATIENTS SAVED John Macris Notified All Wards at Englewood, N.

Blaze. to The Lagle. Englewood, N. April 6-Joha 16-year-old office boy in the Macris, Englewood Hospital, is a hero here and to his heroism is attoday, tributed fact that there was no fatalities when fire, swept through the wards the hospital yesterday afternoon and threatened the lives of 50 bedridden patients. Macris stuck to the switchboard in spite the smoke which nearly suffocated him.

and notified nurses in all wards to prepare their charges to be removed from the hospital. The fire which started in the X- ray room of the hospital caused $50,000 damage. Four persons fighting the blaze inthe room were burned by an explosion of X-ray Alms. Their injuries were not serious and after treatement they were able to go to their homes. 20 New Babies Saved.

Miss Mary Elizabeth Lewis, 3 nurse, discovered the fire and notifled young Macris. For 10 minutes the boy stuck to his board, calling the various wards, and then lying flat on floor for a breathing spell when the smoke became 100 thick for him. Firemen carried him out and sent him home when they arrived, telling him there was no fur. ther need for him at the board. Twenty-new-born babies and their frantite mothers were carried out of the building, together with a number of other patients who were In the wards swept by fire.

Sixty other patients of the hospital in another part of the building were not removed. The Field Club. across the street from the hospital, was temporarily turned into a hospital and the patients sheltered there. The fire wrecked the X-ray room. destroyed several thousand dollars' worth of apparatus.

It ruined the dispensary and seriously damaged the operating room. "PEPPER" MARTIN OUT ON BAIL Vincent Martin, light weight boxer, was free today in $5,000 bail pending a hearing on Thursday in the Gates Ave. Court of two robbery charges against him on which he was arraigned yesterday before Magistrate Rayfiel. Martin was held with Lewis Ennis of 462 Watkins st. and George Kennedy of 184 Schaeffer charged with holding up William Bellner of 567 Wilson ave.

and John Nuerzel of 186 Covert both saloon keepers, on Saturday night. The bandits are alleged to have taken $52. JAMES CLONIN DIES; BANKER IN L. I. CITY Was Vice President of the Queens Chamber of Commerce.

James Clonin, one of the most prominent business men of Long Island City, died yesterday at his home, 456 6th Astoria. Mr. Clonin lived the last 30 years of his life in Astoria. He was vice president of the Long Island City Savings Bank, a trustee St. John's Long Island City Hospital, vice president of the Queens Chamber of Commerce and formerly president of the Astoria Business Men's Association and treasurer of the old Long Island City Business Men's Association.

Up to a few years ago he was head of the firm of Clonin de Messenger, dealers in building materials. He was a member of Lincoln Council, Knights of Columbus, and was one of the organizers of Royal Arcanum in New York State. His wife died six years ago. Funeral services will be held Wednesday morning at the late home, followed by a requiem mass at the R. C.

Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. tracks on the steam railroads throughout the country, it is far from ideal operation. In order to relieve congestion to the utmost possible, we have tolerated this kind of operation for short periods in the rush hours, and in summer, ell the Brighton Beach line. "Similarly we have permitted some of the old. although the best.

type equipment in the Center st. loop. If this new suggestion were carried out at the present time, it would mean that we would have to increase substantially the number of wooden trains running between steel trains on the Brighton Beach line, because the wooden equipment is all that the Fulton st. structure east of Nostrand ave. will stand.

Against Wooden Cars. "Unless such a course were absolutely unavoidable I E11 not disposed to increase the number of wooden trains operating on the same track with steel trains. If the Ashland pl. connection had been built, as promised, steel trains could be operated over the Fulton st. elevated and it would have been only an operating detail to turn some of them into the Brighton service.

operating people report 10 me that there is not much demand for this Brighton Beach service via Fulton st. To my mind there is. of course, a complete answer to this: People are never attracted to service unless it is modern type and rapid. The Fulton st. service at present is neither.

Nor do I believe under present conditions, with the present structure and the present type of equipment, the old Fulton Beach service could he re-established so as to draw appreciable numbers from the rapid, modern Brighton Beach service via the subways." Fat Men Quail as Air Liners Plan Fares Based on Pounds London, April 6-Fat men are much concerned over an announcement made recently by Dr. Hugo Eckener, who piloted the ZIt-8 (now the United States Navy dirigible Los Angeles) from Friedrichshafen, Germany, to Lakehurst, N. that passengers on the air lines of the future would be charged according to weight. Dr. Eckener made the statement a lecture before the Royal Aeronautical Society, explaining that for the ordinary voyage from London 10 New York the charge per passenger wouid be about one pound Sterling for each pound of flesh.

Presenting an interesting estimate of the commercial 'possibilities of Woman Leads Thief Chase To Regain Stolen Purse Mrs. Mrs. Yetta Cohen of 645 Bedford ave. doing her Monday morning shopping the pushcart market Havemeyer in Williamsburg day when she felt tug at handher a bag. She looked down and handbag.

its contents of $19.88 was gone. "Help!" she cried. "Police: My pocketbook! He took "I cried a young man her, and began to run. Mrs. Cohen ran after him.

Others in the crowd ran after Mrs. Cohen. The crowd pursuers grew. So did the young man's speed. Down S.

2d st. he ran, down Marcy and to S. 3d At the corner he was headed off stopped. Mrs. Cohen's pocketbook, according to Patrolman Garrity, was found his pocket.

The prisoner. who was later without bail for examination tomorrow by Magistrate Dale in the Williamsburg Court. said he was Morris Cohen, of 441 Alabama ave. PEABODY HEIRS TO GIVE CHURCH A $50,000 ORGAN P. E.

Church of Holy Trinity Gets Gift as a Memorial. The Protestant Episcopal Church of the Holy Trinity, Montague and Clinton is to have installed in the church building within the near future, a $50.000 modern organ "of great breadth, solidity, and dignity of tone, brilliant and as fine an instrument as that which is now in Trinity Church. Manhattan. This is to be a gift from the heirs and surviving relatives of the late Charles J. Peabody, as a memorial to him.

Mr. Peabody was for many years, up to his death, trustee of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, was president of the Brooklyn Oratorio Society, president the Apollo Club, and a director of the Brooklyn Philharmonic Society. Announcement of the gift and its acceptance by the vestrymen, was made at the church service yesterthe church's Organ Fund Committee. day by Peter Hamilton, chairman ere The offer was made in the form of a letter to the church wardens and vestrymen, signed by the following surviving relatives of Mr. Peabody: Helen Hoyt Peabody (Mrs.

Charles Jones), Dudley Hoyt Peabody, Gertrude Hill Peabody, Eva Peabody Bacon (Mrs. Clarence Everett), Clarence Everett Bacon. Georgia S. Peabody Mrs. Royal Canfield), Charles Samuel Peabody, Alice Bowden Peabody, Carlys Georgette Peabody, Royal Bowden Peabody and George Foster Peabody.

Raise Maintenance Fund. The church had for some time planned to have a new organ in its building. For this purpose an organ fund committee was appointed, with the purpose of raising $50,000 for the purchase of the instrument. Of this proposed amount $37,000 has already been raised by contributions, the largest individual one of which is $10,000 from George Foster Peabody, the original donor of the present small organ. The new offer contains a condition that the total $50,000 hitherto contemplated be raised by the church as planned and that this amount be used for the maintenance of the new organ "in fine condition Any surplus left from the interest on this amount is 10 be applied toward the salary of the organist.

Mr. Peabody came Brooklyn from Georgia in 1865, when he was A boy of 9. He was interested in Brooklyn and had an active role in a variety of its community interests. His business career started as 811 errand boy at the age of 11 and ended as a member of the New York Stock Exchange and senior member of Spencer, Trask investment bankers. He was associated with the Reformed Church on the Heights from 1866 until his death, except for a period when he lived in Albany and was a member of the Madison Avenue Reformed Church there.

OBITUARIES CYRES BEASLEY. 66, of 1055 Madison died yesterday at his home. He was 8. salesman, and was a lifelong resident of Brooklyn. He is survived by his wife, Amelia: two 80119 and a daughter.

Funeral services will be held tomorrow night at 9 o'clock, the Rev. George E. Bishop, pastor of Bushwick Avenue Central M. E. Church, officiating.

Interment will be in Evergreens Cemetery, MRS. ANASTASIA WHITE of 144 Beach 138th Belle Harbor. L. died yesterday after a short illness. She survived by her husband, Nicholas: four sons, Charles, Nicholas.

Martin and William: four daughters, Alice. Josephine, Mary and Helen, and two sisters, Mary and Catherine Morris. She was 8 member of St. Francis de Sales R. Church where A of requiem will said Wednesday mass morning at 10 o'clock.

Interment be in Holy Cross Cemetery. MRS. HEDWIG R. ROCHOW. clan, formerly of 63 Ft.

Greene suddenly on Friday at Fordham Hospital. She was the daughter the late Ferdinand and Emilie Roschow. Funeral servfees will be held tonight at Lefferts the Place Chapel, 86 Lefferts pl. MRS. EMILY HORTON, wife of Daniel Horton of East Norwich, L.

home yesterday after 17 short illness, WAS her 77th Funeral services in year. will be held tomorrow afternoon at Mrs. Horton by and HARRY BERNSTEIN, husband, 11 grant, died suddenly Saturday 51 year. He survived Mrs. Dora Levy Bernstein: David.

Joseph Tessie and brothers, and Isidore Isaac five sisters. Mrs. Ray sie Netburn. Mrs. Minnie Kramer and Mrs.

Funeral services were held at n'elock home. Boro Park, with interment Cemetery, Cypress Hills. Joseph's Brothers conducted LOCIS HENDRICKSON. 212. died on Saturday his 34th wife, Mrs.

survived Gertrude aril sons. Louis Hendrickson: Peter Hendrickson: father, Peter retired police by his wife. three children. Bernstein: Bernstein, Mrs. Silverman, Bes- Rosenthal.

Mrs. Lillie Flanders this afternoon in Machpelah The Society 212. 7th st. and two brothers. Nelson Hendrickson.

Funeral services tomorrow held morning at 1525 Stephen 9 o'clock. with quiem mass at Matthias R. and interment in Calvary Cemetery, CHARLES GILMORE. 60, A policeman well in Elmhurst. L.

known the Prospect Heights survived his wife. A. services Bittman morning 0'elock MRS. HELEN SACMER DAHLINGER. She born Manhattan Husband: two tomorrow night ward P.

Wittiam F. Dahlinger, daughter, Mrs. Florence H. Kushner. neral services be tonight at o'clock with interment tomorrow in Green- wood Cemetery, A Guarantee That's as Good As Gold The Prudence Guarantee is not a mere advertising device to sell Bonds -it is an integral part of the Bonds themselves -it is written on the Bond where you can read it -it is written in a language you can understand and it pledges the safety of your interest and principal with our capital, surplus and reserves of over Plus millions in First Mortgages on Income- -Earning Properties of BlueDiamond Worth! Mail Coupon for Booklet OFFICES OPEN MONDAYS UNTIL 9 P.

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331 MADISON at 43d NEW YORK 162 REMSEN STREET, BROOKLYN CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND RESERVES PRUDENCE OVER $2,800,000 COMPANY, Inc. 162 Remsen Bklyn. DENOMINATIONS: Gentlemen: Without obligation on my $100 $500 $1000 send booklet part please Bonds Provide the Guarantee that Prudence demands." Copyright, 1915, The Prudence Name. 8 Address. PARISBy Day' and Night By GUY HICKOK Eagle Bureau, 53 Rue Cambon.

Paris, March three different places in the desert I met a group of eight young American girls in coats and trousers who, with no masculine escort, were making a tour of the Sahara. And there was something at once original and charming toward 10 o'clock each evening in spectacle of these eight thro women, magnificently drunk, imitating vocally and choreographically a jazz band," writes George de la Fourchardiere, a famous French humorist, just returned from a trip in North Africa. "Eighty percent of the tourists I saw in North Africa were English and American. Englishmen travel just to travel, to give themselves the illusion of ubiquity which is one of their divine prerogatives. But Americans, if one can judge from what I saw, seem to come to North Africa because they find that the desert is less dry than their own country.

For them the desert is one of the wettest spots in the world. They reach the end of a day's journey and before anything else wash down the sand with several cocktails. After that they take their places at the table and begin again by drinking champagne out of large glasses and finish with assorted liquors. They have enormous resistance, and are able ordinarily to get up alone and go to bed France Asked to Protest Our Occupation of Haiti. Another opportunity to see out.

selves (this time politically) as others see uS is given in the document handed to Premier Herriot by the League of the Rights of Man, an old organization consecrated to reform and to almost lost causes. The league wants Herriot to bring the United States before the Council of the League of Nations. It seems that while America has been looking askance at the occupation of the Ruhr and the prolonged occupation of Cologne, certain Frenchmen have been saying to themselves: "But you have a mote in your own eye," and thinking that worrying about military occupations, like charity, should begin at home. The document reads: "On July 28, 1915, United States Marine Infantry, commanded by Admiral Caperton, landed in the Republic of Haiti for peaceful occupation. "This step had not been solicited by the Haitian Government.

It was likewise unprovoked by any motive which may, if not justify, at least explain the intervention of one State in the affairs of another 'State. No Amercan citizen had been persecuted or injured, contractual debt bound the 'Antilles Republic to the United States. No misunderstanding had arisen between the two States. The United States assumed 8t mandate as a protecting power over a. nation whose sovereignty had until then not been questioned.

"Following this action, Admiral Caperton issued on Sept. 3 a proclamation in which he declared that he assumed control of the government, decreeing martial law. And on Sept. 16, 1915 he imposed a conventionwhich, the Haitian Government was obliged to accept, under the menace of American forces. Customs were seized, banks occupied and military courts were substituted for national jurisdiction and all constituted corps were placed under the authority of the American Army.

"The war, which at that time claimed the attention of the whole world, did not give the chancelleries any opportunity to settel the extraordinary situation which had created at Porte au Prince, notwithstanding the repeated protestations of the Haitian Government. The press timidly mentioned the matter. This event, one may say, passed almost unnoticed in Europe. "The same state of affairs continued after the war, when at the peace conference the Haitian delegutes submitted the question to President Wilson and to Mr. Lansing, Secretary of State.

The former announced that he was too busy settling world peace, while the second declared that he was a delegate at the conference at Paris, and Secretary of State only in Washington. "The American Senate did, in fact, hear a few protests, notably that of the Republican Senator of Illinois, Mr. McCormick, who declared on March 22, 1924, 'The continuation of martial law in Haiti and the subjugation of Haitian citizens to the judgment of United States military courts are antidemocratic and anti-republican acts contrary to American "The state of siege persisted, the press was muzzled and journalists imprisoned; the foreign occupation was so brutal that the of Haitian peasants killed during this period is estimated at 3,500. "No modification of this regime of force which was imposed on the Haitian people by the United States had been brought about. We ask you to submit this Important affair to the League of Nations Council, that it may, without delay, be solved by the re-establishment of right.

"We would be very grateful to you if you would I let us know the decision taken by the French Government in this grave circumstance." Hits Efforts to Declare Many Missing Heirs Dead If the court should declare missing persons dead on the testimony of those who want their money, the death rate would be exceedingly large, Surrogate Wingate today told for the $20.000 estate of attorneys David Dorfman, who died at. his home, 241 Powell in September, 1920. Abraham Dorman 293 Hooper a son, through his attorney, declared in court his brother, Charles Dorfman, also an heir. bad been ST. JOHN'S ALUMNI DINNER.

The St. John's College Alumni dinwill be held this year on the ner evening of April 15 in the Hotel St. George. The dinner committee comprises the Rev. James Smith, chairman; Frank Callahan and the Rev.

George Dawson of St. Paul's Church. who is treasurer. The Rev. Edward J.

Higgins is president of the assoelation. Cardinal Hayes of New York. Cardinal Mundelein Chicago and Bishop Molloy are among those invited to the dinner. 4 DEAD, 23 INJURED, IN TORNADO SWEEP, EVERGLADES TO SEA Miami. April (AP)- ---Death of Mrs.

John T. Simpson of Westwood Park, today, increased the list of dead from yesterday's tornado here to four. Twenty -three persons were injured as a result of the tornado, which swopped down from the Everglades and caused $150,000 property damage before it vanished out over the Atlantic. Most damage was al the White Belt Dairy. six miles west of Miami, where Mrs.

Mathilda Schultz, 70. Was killed, several injured and six buildings demolished before the storm arose to strike again at the Westwood Inn. a roadhouse near Little River. Two died there, John Wasdin Simpson. 8.

and F. E. Sullivall. Several were injured. missing for ten years and that he desired the court to declare him dead.

Dorman's attorney said the last trace of Charles was a letter mailed from Russia 10 his mother. Mrs. Goldie Dorfman. 319 E. 8th in 1915, shortly after the war began, in which Charles said he had obtained for a passport and was sailing America.

Surrogate Wingate said he would not declare the son dead and ordered the attorney pay Charles' share of the estate to the City Chamberlain pending his reappearance. COLUMBIA GETS BORO MAN IN LAW FACULTY AT YALE Prof. Llewellyn Quit as Undergraduate to Serve as Officer in German Army. (Special to The Eagle. New Haven, April 6--Prof.

Karl Nickerson Llewellyn. who left Yale as all undergraduate to become an officer in the German army during the World War, has resigned front the Yale Law School faculty to professor at Columbia. He come a was made member of the Law School faculty here after his return from his war service, in which he was wounded and received medal bravery by the German Government. Professor Llewellyn was a member of the class of 1915 in the Yale demic department. He prepared for Yale at his home in Brooklyn.

Prof. Hans Oertel, who was dean of Yale Graduate School when the war began and who resigned to join the German army, has never returned here. He said to be health in Germany. Yale has not only allowed menbers of the German army who were students or faculty members to return following the war, but has Voled to send to Germany the first proof fessor any American university since the World War. Professor Borchard Yale Law School will deliver course lectures on international law Berlin next summer.

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The fare of £125 to £150 for each passenger was considered low. and the Zeppelin Works president believed that as soon as feeling of safety had taken hold of the general public there would be a great scramble for bookings on the long distance airships, member a will 1, Marion Brooklyn.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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