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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 1

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 1

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Brooklyn, New York
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EAGLE Rain tonight or Wednesday. Continued cool. Fresh to strong northeast winds. Temperature, 12 M. (Eagle Button) .43 Year ago (partly cloudy) 43 Mean average 10 yeara, tame 50 Complew Report oa Page 19.

WALL STREET 3TICKER VVf And Complete Long Island News 89th YEAR No. 300. NEW YORK CITY, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1929. 40 PAGES THREE CENTS Ml BANK OOKLYN DAILY CE3 ESP VJc, GRUNDY ASSAILS PLANES HUNT AIR LINER LOST YOUNG Warder Def ense Demoralized by Tompkins Ruling MORGAN PARLEY Thousands at the Tickers Watch Silently and Hope Brokers' Offices Crowded by Worried Investors, Who Ap-5 pear to Be Unable to Figure It Out Women Among Them Showing Least Concern Telephones Taxed A New York crowd, no matter where it is placed, would ordinarily see something funny in the picture of a boy stretching up on tip-toe to erase some figures from a big blackboard and dropping the eraser down on his head In a cloud of chalk dust. But some 75 or 100 men MAGIC NAME HELPS Court Holds Defendant Fully Responsible for Acts of His Department.

Defense Star Witness Gives Aid to the State. next door to the Stock Exchange, didn't laugh when it happened today. The crowd Just sat or stood around, downcast, depressed and much too worried and unhappy to think of such things as laughter. This was part of the thousands of New Vorkers who watched tickers this morning as the stock market cracked again Many of these people have been in the same customers' room all day since last Wednesday. Just watching and wait ing, and counting up their losses.

Can't Figure It Out. And the curious part seems to that they can't figure out what it is ail about or why the big collapse nas come, or what Is going to happen. 'I bought 45 shares of Cities Tl I iur" ''age z. Stocks That Have Dropped Over 150 Points in Crash Dis Suddenly aMMIarfiatei Dr. John R.

Straton. 1 1 STOAT FOE OF SMITH ilODEB, DIES Calvary Pastor Succumbs Suddenly After Heart Attack at Sanitarium. Clifton Springs, Y. 29 UP) The Rev. Dr.

John Roach Straton, noted militant Fundamentalist Bap tist preacher, died at a sanitarium here today. He was 54 years old. Although seriously 111 with a nervous breakdown for the last month, death came unexpectedly at 5:50 a.m. after a heart attack. His wife was at his bedside.

He suffered "a slight paralytic stroke last April and immediately after went to a sanitarium at At lanta, for a rest. He returned to his home a month ago, but soon suffered from a nervous breakdown and entered the sanitarium here. He was pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in New York, but by his aggressive campaigns against mod ernism, and especially evolution, he gained nation-wide prominence. During the last Presidential cam paign he took an active part against the candidacy of Alfred E. Smith, attacking him from his pulpit and campaigning against him in the South.

Calvary Pastor Since 1918. Dr. Straton had been pastor of the Calvary Church since 1918. He was born In Evansville, and was educated at Mercer University rlcase Turn to Page 7. ID Allied Chemical Auburn Auto Case Thresh.

Mach Columbian Carbon General Electric Otis Elevator Standard Gas Westinghouse CURB Aluminum Co. of Am Commonwealth Edison Deere Co Duke Power Electric Investors Great A. Midwest. til Singer Mfg Tubize Silk Appellate Division Acts Against Five Lawyers as Ambulance Chasers. Further results from the official probe of ambulance chasing that was ordered last year after the Eagle had exposed widespread evils in the chaser Industry were obtained this afternoon when the Appellate Division disbarred Samuel J.

Orange of 66 Court suspended Alexander Dollns, 26 Court st. fr Ave years; William Burke, 375 Fulton for two years; Paris Montrose, 1629 Pitkin for two years, and James P. Kohler, 350 Fulton for 30 days. In disbarring Orange, who is 27 years old and was admitted to the bar in 1926, Justice Kapper, Hagerty, Seeger, Carswell and Scudder point ed out that he not only paid professional ambulance chasers to bring him negligence cases, but that he attempted to thwart the Investigation conducted by Supreme Court Justice Faber by witholdlng por tions of his office records when he was asked to submit them for scrutiny. Orange also Induced one of his clients to commit perjury before Justice Faber and Orange himself, the Appellate Division said, told untruths both In the secret Inquiry and Please Turn to Page 2.

10 TO 15 PERISH AS VESSEL SIS; Many Go Mad, May Die of Exposure in New Wisconsin Lake Storm. Kenosha, Oct. 29 OP) Be tween 10 and 15 men went down with the lake steamer Wisconsin in a severe storm off the Kenosha shore early today. More than three score were saved many of them maddened and some near death from the horror and the exposure of hours in the wind whipped sea. The three passengers aboard were rescued.

Captain's Body Found. Capt. Dougal Morrison, bound to his duty and true to the tradition of the sea, remained aboard his ship to the last and went down with a score of shipmates. His body was picked up later by Coast Guard crews. Chief Engineer Jttdas Buschmann of Manitowoc, clung to a life raft as the steamer up-ended, rolled over and sank.

Rescuers tried to haul him from the wrter, but, crazed by his plight, he fought them off and died. Pounding waves played an obbll- gato to their conversation as crew and passengers from the foundered steamer Wisconsin told today the story of a "nightmare cruise" on Lake Michigan only one degree removed from tragedy for most of them. Dazed and chilled by exposure to the force of a storm as bad as that in which three Great Lakes boats went down last week, they huddled around a huge stove In the Kenosha Coast Guard station. Fought Heavy Seas. Hardly a minute after the Wisconsin poked her nose out of Chicago Harbor, she was caught up In the storm, pitching and rocking as she struggled up the Wisconsin shore toward Milwaukee.

About 1 a.m. the water reached the fires and the stokers had to leave to save their lives. Above, the radio operator clung to his post. On the deck, in sharp relief frrm the red light of flares, the captain, crew and passengers were calmly working to lower life boats. The life boats rocked as they were lowered and one pitched twermen overboard.

Fred Trubert of Milwaukee was in that boat but he made no outcry when his arm was crushed and broken against the steamer's side. Jokingly he watched while mates manned the oars and waited for a Coast Guard launch to pick them up. Three times the launch cruised back and forth, riding the crest of the waves. There still were between 12 and 17 men aboard when the last life boat left the sinking steamer. The crew looked back and saw through the spray Captain Dougal Morrison waving goodby.

Then mist and the waves blotted him from sight. Irene Bordoni Seeks Marriage Annulment Chicago, Oct. 29 OP) The Irene Bordonl-Ray Ooetz domestic drama has moved for the moment from New York to Chicago, with the French actress seeking In Illinois courts an annulment of her marriage to the Broadway producer. Ooetz has filed suit for divorce In New York. Ho to STAT Will explained 10:14 A.U.

Wdnd.eV Ai SAMUEL 0 RED DDR ARE SUSP DED OVER 1 RESCUED Stocks Down 100 TARIFF MEDDLING QF'POOR'STATES Says Western Senators Ought to Talk "Darn Small" About Rates. Eagle Bnreau, Colorado Building. By HENRY SUYDAM. Washington, Oct. 29 It Is "a very great misfortune" that the Constitution gives each State, no matter how "backward," two United States Spnatnre firnnrtv nrpsl- i 1J, t- dent of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers Association, told the Senate lobbyist investigation committee today.

"It's an unequal division," said Grundy. "In legislation as important as th etariff, the rich States, which support the Government, should control and the smaller States should take darn small. "The Founding Fathers did the best they could," said Grundy, "but it's been a great misfortune to have two Senators from each State." Grundy told Senators William Borah, of Idaho, and Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana, that their sense of the proprieties should silence them during a tariff debate, inasmuch as both come from States backward in resources, population and wealth. Haven't "Chip In Pot." Such Slates, Grundy said, "Haven't a chip in the pot." "Old Joe," the outstanding tariff lobbyist and famous collector of campaign funds, today gave this amazing theory of government to the lobbyist investigation committee, which sat torn between amusement and amazement.

It is Old Joe's Idea that the American system ot government is all wrong because States like Pennyslvania cannot dominate the writing of tariff legislation. "If the Constitution didn't give Arkansas, Georgia, Tdaho, Mississippi and the Dakotas two United States Senators, these States wouldn't be heard without an amplifier," said Grundy. "The States most vocal and most obstructive in fishting the Republican campaign pledge on the tariff," he continued, "haven't a chip In the pot." Idaho should "honestly" not have as much to say about tariff rates as Pennsylvania, Grundy said. Should Take "Back Seat." The amiable lobbyist from Pennsylvania admonished Senators from "backward" States "to take a back seat and keep still." He promised to prepare a list of Please Turn to Page 2. FIRM HEAD FALLS TO DEATH WHILE REPAIRING AERIAL Anthony Schneider, 60, president of the Union Tobacco Company, 511 5th Manhattan, was killed this morning when he fell from a window of his suite on the 11th floor of the Hotel Beverly, 125 E.

50th Manhattan His body landed on the roof of an adjoining five-story building. Schneider fell when he lost His balance while attempting to repair a radio aerial outside his window. When chneider lost his balance Louis Morrell of 322 E. 33d Manhattan, a waiter who was serving the tobacco man's breakfast at the time, dropped the breakfast tray and darted to the window in time to seize Schneider's left foot. For a moment he held on, then his grasp gave way and Schneider fell.

U. S. ADMIRAL ASKS DESTROYERS BE SENT TO CHINA WAR AREA Shanghai, Oct. 29 OP) Rear Ad-milar Charles B. McVay of the U.

8. Navy, today requested the move ment of a division of United States destroyers from Manila to Shanghai as the result of disturbed conditions in the Yangtse Valley, scene of the latest Chinese civil war. Severe fighting was in progress between Nationalist forces and the rebellious Kuominchun or "people's army" along the Lunghai railway, west of Chengchow, Honan province, an Important railway Junction. Dispatches said the encounters were expected to develop into major engagements. THE EAGLE INDEX Fate.

Aviation 19 laanlrlrd Ada Tralh Nollrei, Lout, Found Ill Edllorlali Feature! IS Financial 3-H9 Lent laland 18-17 Navel, Cornice ti Radio 14 Real Eilate Mil Newt It RnrlMr nporu ts. Theatera, Han Jinn Weather It Vt'oman'o Pago IS I.ONtt ISLAND NEW IN Al.t EDITIONS. riNKIU'RT, N. C. A-orl tenter, la nnly la '4 hr from N.

Y. Ret In perfect ell-mat. Luxurious Carolina now ojxiu Adv. 5 Aerial Search Starts in West After Big Craft Disappears in Storm. Albuquerque, N.

Oct. 29 (tP) An aerial search was in progress today in western New Mexico and eastern Arizona for the Western Air Express trl-motored plane missing since yesterday morning with five persons on board. Planes took off from here to fly over the region into which the miss ing plane was heading when last seen. Otner rescue planes were being held at Colorado airports because of unfavorable flying weather due to a storm which last night swept the Rocky Mountain region. George Rice, Western Air Express pilot, who discovered the lost T.

A. T. plane on Mount Taylor, left Albuquerque this morning in a trl-motored plane to Join the search. Visibility was poor. Both Forestry Department and lumber companies are putting searchers in the field in the vicinity of Mount Sedgwick, a mountain as dangerous as Mount Taylor, where the T.

A 1. ship met disaster. Two planes took off from Los Angeles today with searching parties. The giant trlmotored plane, with two passenger-j and a crew of three, disappeared yesterday somewhere along the 180-mile stretch of the nir route between Navajo, and Albuquerque. It is believed to have been forced down by bitter weather which swept the Rocky Mountains yesterday, bringing snow and rain, which caused the Western Air Express to order all plsnes grounded.

The order came too late to halt the missing plane at Kingman, Ariz. The plane was bound from Alhambra, a suburb of Los Angeles, to Kansas City. Those aboard were: Dr. A. W.

WATtn. Sun tiPtlon-ally known dental authority, en route to FVrt Worth, TM, to All apeaklng W. E. MKRTZ, Mount Vernon, N. en route to his home tamfk E.

DOI.FS, Lo Angles, chief pilot. ALLAN BARRIE. Embank, copilot. a. MUTTON, Lou Angeles, (ormerly o( Denver, iteward.

Officials 6f the comproy expressed hope that Doles had I ten able to fly over the Navajo Indian Reservation, east of the point where he was last seen, before being forced to land. On the eastern side of the Arizona-New 'Mexico boundary, they said, they believed Doles could find numerous emergency landing places. Despite hopes of officials that the plane -was safe on some Isolated plateau with one of the pilots or the steward making his way to notify headquarters, every means is being planned to search the rough territory thoroughly. Planes were prepared to sweep al as low altitudes as conditions permitted over terrain which at best presents nature In its most grim aspect, and which reports Indicated to be whitened by the first snow of winter. BERRY POSTPONES BOND SALE UNTIL MARKET RECOVERS Controller Charles W.

Berry, from his sick bed in' an uptown private hospital, today telephoned a state ment postponing the city's $60,000,000 bond sale recently authorized by inking Fund Commission, 000,000 of which was for school con struction, while most of the balance was for subways. 'Owing to the most demoralized condition of trading which the Stock Exchange has ever seen, his state ment read in part, "the principal bnnklag houses and financial insti tutions which had lormed syndl cates to put in oids for the city's $60.01 000 sale of corporate stock and aerial bonds tomorrow had sug gested to the "ntroller that it would be a patriotic move and In the best interests ol the country as a whola to aid the efforts now being mad? by the large banking institutions by temporarily postponing the sale and thus help In relieving the great strain on the money market." LABOR FEDERATION MOVES TO ORGANIZE WORKERS IN SOUTH Washington, Oct. 29 UP) Frank Morrison, secretary of the American Fed-atlon of Labor, said today the heads of all national and International unions will be called Into conference before Nov. 18 to discuss methods of organizing the workers of the 8outh. The executive committee of the Pan-American Federation of Labor, headed by William Oreen, today announced the Indefinite postponement of the sixth Pan-American Labor Congress on the grounds that "the very existence of the organized labor movement" is threatened by conditions in the Southern States.

DALADIER GIVES UP ATTEMPT TO FORM FRENCH CABINET Paris. Oct. 29 C) Announcement was made late today that Edouard Daladler, Radical-Socialist leader, had given up the task of forming a Cabinet, because of the refusal of the Socialists to participate, Further Details, bee FafO 3) WITH HOARD Capital Hears Federal Reserve May Cut Discount Rate to 5 Percent HOW LEADERS FARED 2:30 Floor n.iy's Stock. Trires. t'h'ge.

ConMil. Gas ftl'i 5'i I'. S. Steel 177 .9 Scars Horburk 97 It American Tel 213 Atchison 2.11 2H Montgomery 51 4'i General Electric 225 25 American Can 119 17 N. Y.

Central 187 f- Vk Johns Manville 12'j Columbia Gas 69 l'i Texas Corp 59', 4'i Baltimore and Ohio llfi 'i Kennecott 1 Gain. Loss. By I. 51. r.l NGAKT.

Stocks crashed again today under a deluge of liquidation which the largest concentrated financial powers In the world were unable to until lt had done irreparable damage. A feeble rally soon after the opening was swept aside when the sluice gates of liquidation were opened by traders In all parts of the world, High assurances from Washington that all was well, similar statements from the greatest Industrialists and capitalists In the country, failed to stent the hysteria of bndly hurt speculators and Investors. Only after three hours of trading In which more than 10.000. 000 shares were dumped, did ths market show any of rallvlng. Then it came back quickly.

The leading bankers of tho United States were again in session at tha ulfices of P. Moibim) Co during the morniiK. Added to their number whs Owen t'io world-renowned economic adviser and a leader of corporations controlling billions of dollars After the meeting, which ended at 1 in to be resumed later in tho day, no statement wus issued, but it was understood that nssuriuioa whs given that the bottom had been seen. Out of Hand fur a While. The rally, whloh got under way soon after 1 o'clock, was as srec-tuculur as the decline.

U. S. Steel ran up from 170 to 1HH In 10 minutes. General Electric rose from. 211 to above 230.

Upward Jumps of 5 points were frequent. Individual rallies by stocks during the morning taded out and efforts on the part of bankers to bring about un up-trend failed. Those close to the bankers admitted that the situation hud gotten out of hnnd for a while. Only when the name of Young, economic doctor of Europe, was linked with the banking group did the recovery begin to show. Tim great, a director of the r'exleral Reserve Bank of New York, had been railed into consultation' riease Turn to Page 2.

BR00KHART TAKES PESSIMISTIC VIEW OF MARKET CRASH Washington, Oct. 23 Senator nrookhurt, republican. Iowa, predicted today that If the severe dr. cllnc of stock prices In Wall Street continued, "banks all over the country" would go into bankruptcy. The Iowan, ho has bills pending pioKisiiig radical revision of tha Federal Reserve law und prohibiting of loans by banks tor speculative I purposes, said a porcrntaga of money advanced to brokers came I from banks outside New York, that would lire tremendous amounts of I money if prices for stocks continued, to ko dow n.

He added that what he described a.s the "panic in Wall Street'' mU'lit i lead to a "general business name." of tar-reaching consequences. FRFAK ACCIDFNT causes death of a tii 4 a at a MANHATTAN MAN Day Shore, I Oct. 29 Angelina Giannarlno, 2.i, of 2194 2d Manhattan, who was Injuted In a freak accident at the D-er Park speedway on Sunday afternoon, died yesterday from a fractured skull la Soiithskie Hospital. Salvatore (lasquct, of driving a racing cur had tlnished a time trial and was leavin the tract when Ins car knocked down a polJ near the entrance to the pit. Gian-narino, who was stand rear bv, was struck on the head by the failing pole.

He was employed as a mechanic on one of the racing can. Coroner Grovcr A. Silliimm will hold an inquest. By FRANK EMERY. The defense of Frank H.

Warder suffered its most stunning setback in the trial of the former Banking Superintendent on a charge of bribe taking when Justice Tompkins made a hard ar1 fast ruling that full responsibility for the acts and omissions of his former department and subordinates in the $6,000,000 looting of the City Trust Company must fall on Warder's rounded and conv placent shoulders. The ruling had the effect of de moralizing the defense and allowing the State, in dramatic and effective fashion, to "kidnap" the defense's "star" witness and through him to show a flabby and incompetent condition in Warder's regime reflecting directly the defendant. The Court's pronouncement came during the examination of Samuel Rauch, Banking Department examiner who conducted the 1927 and 1928 examinations of the looted bank, by James I. Cuff, counsel for Warder. Court Blocks Defense Counsel.

Cuff was in the process of building up a defense claim that would picture Warder as standing far above the scene of the looting, and entirely out of touch with it, when he sought to have the witness say that Wardsr had no responsibility for checking up on the bank examination. The witness wasn't allowed to answer Cuffs question. Justice Tompkins replied instead, ancj his reply was emphatic: "The Superintendent of Banks is directlr responsible for all the acts of his subordinates and department," declared the court. Mistrial Motion Denied. Cuff's objection and then his motion for a mistrial were cut short with denial.

The ruling caused defense trial to ask- the Court to instruct the Jury that Warder Is not being tried for failure to discharge his duties, but this, too, was curtly denied. In cross-examination by Assistant District Attorney Ferdinand Pecora, the defense's first-water witness quickly shifted his role to an important witness for the State. The prosecutor developed, as Cuff kept punctuating the record with objections, that Rauch had reported the Harlem Bank of Commerce in a wobbly condition in November, 1927, that the examiner had reported this situation much aggravated in the City Trust Company in November, 1928, and that Warder never once called him into conference about his reports. Damaging Testimony to Defense. From Rauch also came testimony that Warder, neither in 1927 nor 1928, took a single one of the many Please Turn to Page 2.

Boy Scouts drive passes $160,000 on way toward $250,001 Dr. Gartlan, city schools music director, denies "rigging" in bids for organs Russia orders 19 more executions. Auto crali in Kingston kills Brooklyn youth, six Injured Western Air Express missing with five on board The Senate thinks it will pass some sort of tariff bill. John Roach Straton, Fundamentalist battler, dies suddenly. Age 54 Bar Association, by narrow vote, approves Justice Callaghan for re-election, despite "political plot." Women ori-Ize to avenge "Insult" against him Otto H.

Kahn is coolly viewed as a Republican chairman. Because of his cool millions, do you suppose? Offered for Halloween consumption: Milk-fed Long Island pumpkins League of Nations wants United States to enter World Court "Fixed meter taxlcab racket" troubles passengers, quite as much as unfixed laxlcab springs' racket Mexican pottery reveals civilization more ancient than Aztec's "What about the Malbone st. wreck?" asks somebody In search of a political argument. J. C.

Hunsacker elected head of Paclflo Zeppelin Transport Company Board of Estimate to take up Day it Zimmerman traf- fla recommendations Charles E. Hlgglns, ink manufacturer, founder of Kings County Historical Society, leaves $1,500,000 estate Mall plane crashes in Ohio. Pilot E. M. Kane killed.

Because she "nagged too much," Harris London's widow Is cut oft without the usual shilling in his will City asks for change of zoning law to permit erection of courthouse Ambulance chasing probe, started a year ago, has further results: One lawyer disbarred, four suspended, American Telephone Am. Foreign Power Amer. Pow. Lt Amer. Water Works Brooklyn Un.

Gas Byers, A. Chrysler Johns-Manville Macy Montgomery Ward Simmons Co Stone Webster United Aircraft U. S. Ind. Alcohol CURB Elec.

Bond Share Aluminum Co. Ltd Firestone Tire Nor. States Pow owei4 p. young Year's High Current Low 204)4 120 201 1534 210 290 91 100 255 273 432 109 75 275 275 480 240 Decline 150 396 206 18514 193 160 I52'4 1925 2841i 173)4 210 155 227 219 290 151 310 3544, 514 467 344 403 450 243J4 STOCKS 539'2 449)4 642 342 .302 494 631 550 Points or More Year's HiRh 310J4 1 901 4 175)4 199 248'2 192 .135 242)4 255i2 156 188 20V2 162 243) STOCKS 189 280 309 301 Current Low 210 501 65 146 65 2VA 109 130 50 70 84 40 140 501,4 I45z 200 155 Decline iOO'4 149 lOI'i 134 1021. 127 Why, mi' I2SI.2 4 i-7 118 I Irl 1 l32 122 1 i i 1101 1 4 109 146 Who Are Buying storks? This question has been asked thousands of times In the past four days.

There are many answers. Here are a few. Speculators who have been waiting for a break. Investors buying on demonstrated values. Insurance companies and other corporate Investors.

Representatives of banking firms who bought to check declines but probably sold again on advances. Investment trusts, buying on a scale down. Professional bears, buying stocks they had sold higher up. uii)Lui)itiiuLi Labor's situation undoubtedly was precarious enough, the government polling but 291 members in the Commons, against 200 Conservatives, and 57 Liberals enough short of a majority that a Liberal-Conservative coalition may at any time vote no confidence and bring about its resignation Labor's leaders felt they hat room lor optvilsm however, in various developments of the three months Parliament has been In recess, principal among these the popularity of Premier MacDotialds moves toward betterment of American relation. Today's News Opposing Forces in Market Who Are Selling Stocks? In all parts of the couu'ry and the world.

Pools which were caught before they could get rid of their stocks. Some Investors who think that they will never come back. Some investment companies which have been trading on borrowed money. Although 9,000,000 shares were sold yesterday lt has been pointed out that this represented a great deal of floor trading by professionals who sold and bought on small movements. Stock Market has another crash, worse than ever.

Radio off 10, Steel 15 John J. Bell Co. suspended from Curb, first broker to fall George F. Baker's losses said to be $14.000,000 at closing yesterday Woman loser in market asks for Investigation. Rally appears In early p.m., as bankers meet in Morgan's office.

Steel rebounds 170 to 180, Radio 30 to 38. The Weather: Rain tonight or tomorrow. Frank H. Warder, the careless former bank superintendent, was responsible for examining wrecked City Trust. "I will so charge the Jury," says' Judge Tompkins in trial Wisconsin sinks in Lake Michigan gale.

Fifty-three saved, 10 last, including the captain. Senator Bingham faces rebuke by co-Senators over lobby activities. If Norrls resolution is passed it will be first time Senatorial courtesy has been so frank Miss Katherine S. Hull leaves estate of $350.000 Board of Education's high-priced (and ancient) report calls school conditions "revolting." Revealed by Norman Thomas and only a Socialist would be so unkind Mayor Walker says a nice word for Controller Berry, his running mate. Courts have granted 47 injunctions, protecting wheels of chance In "charity" carnivals George W.

Haldeman, who carried first woman passenger (Ruth Elder) across Atlantic, drops in at Newark Airport with another woman passenger 'Mrs. Haldeman) Migrant, world's largest schooncr-rlgged yacht, has $30,000 trouble with her rigging Doctors start plan of periodical examinations as protection of public health. London Parliament meets today. La'oor government faces test oa MacDonald peace moves nrhi A cnf Dnch in Clot uMMif i iuhi ww Seat as Parliament Opens London, Oct. 29 Parliament reassembled today for what is expected to be one of the most Important and busy sessions of recent years.

Lady Astor. who stood at the doors for an hour before they were opened, beat out Sir Frederick Hall in a rar for the third corner seat above the gangway, reaching it a lew seconds before the Baronet in a stralgh dash from the entrance. Opposition papers warned that the virtual truce In party politics, whlen marked the initial weeks of the Parliamentary session three months no, is over, and that the labor government must now prepare to defend Its policies..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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