Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 18

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 18

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

his he he I As MARY LEADS FIGHT ON BOBBING: DEFEAT EXPECTED With Her Attendants, is Alone in Refusal to Heed New Styles in Hair Dress London--The last legion of the has withdrawn to Buckingham Palace to defend its long from behind the Palace walls. Queen Mary, who is never eager to adopt the modes of the moment, is It the head of the beleaguered band. This one little group of women holding the fort for the old aned style. It is composed of father titled women who attend Queen Mary, and in them lies the only British hope for defeat to the uncounted of the bobbed. It is a faint hope.

Must Win Quickly. If Queen Mary and her ladies are to win, they must win quickly. London hairdressers say that the generntion of girls now going into their teens never have seen other than bobbed or shingled hair on the heads of their elders. Unless long hair becomes fashlonable again within a year or two. hairdressers say, bobbing and shingling will have consolidated their position too strongly for it ever to be taken until a generation or 90 has passed by.

Queen Mary's brave followers probably are not all volunteers, "there is strict etiquette at court, and that etiquette forbids shingling and bobbing among the perronal attendants of the Queen. Princess Mary, before her marriage, was not even permitted to covher ears, but a photograph take. the day the ceremony showed oniy a coll of hair where her ears were seen before. There is no indication that the day of the shingle is past. Many society women have regretted shear.

ing their locks. partly because the expense keeping the hair in trim rather large, but not many have aretted it sufficiently to persevere an attempt to produce a new head of long hair. That transitional requires months, and in the stages between a bob and long hair, the looks suffer. Churchill Quits Writing; Fed Up on Book Sellers' Announcing that he is "90 fed up with the modern purveyors of books" that he has stopped writing them, Winston Churchill, author of many "best sellers" in the last quarter of a century, sailed yesterday to muda for a rest on the Royal Belie liner Araguaya. "The price of books today," Mr.

Churchill said, "is beyond the reach of those love them. People who can't afford to pay $2 or $2.50 for book now must get them out of the public libraries. Something is lost. They miss the association of good books and the pleasure of possessing them and rereading them at their leisure." while it it a Edna Simone, THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 3. 1925.

Revocation of Wine Permits Seen as Big Boom for Lovers Of the Home Made Variety By WENDELL HANMER. Instead of accomplishing its announced purpose of stopping wine making in the home, the recent discontinuance by Gen. Lincoln C. Andrews of permits, under which such wine was made, merely removes from its making all restraints of Government supervising. This is the opinion of close students of prohibition legislation and prohibition department rulings.

The permits never were officially characterized as wine permits, were in fact. They defined permits for the manthese ufacture in the home of 200 gallons a year of nonalcoholic fruit juices for home consumption. But they revealed their true import, or their character "in fact," in that they set forth that their issuance was under authority of Treasury Decision 2763, approved by Secretary of the Treasury William G. MeAdoo, Oct. 21, 1918.

T. D. 2765 explicitly authorizes the manufacture for home consumption of 200 gallons of wine a year, of of 1 percent or more alcoholic content, without any reference whatsoever to "non-alcoholic fruit juices." Camouflaged Permits. In canceling the camouflaged fruit juice permits under which the householders were authorized to make wine, the section of the National Prohibition Act permitting the making for home use of cider and fruit juices was in no wise disturbed-nor could it be disturbed by The cancellation of permits the prohibition enforcement ardent in any manner affect the exemptions from punishment accorded cider and fruit juice makers by the Vol- Primitive Movies of Penny Arcades Grind Out History Los Angeles, Dee. 3-Only a half hour's ride from the humming st.udios of Hollywood and Culver City, where the movies march on to their appointed future with a great blare of publicity, there is a place where time has stopped and where one may the film industry in its swad- ding clothes, naively offering to the passerby "Pictures That Move!" for a penny.

It Is in the penny arcades of Main Los Angeles, where Jim Jeffrics is still heavyweight champion of the world, and where, on the picture posteards of a bygone era, Gloria Swanson still wears the bathing suit of her beach comedy days. Here, in machines calle1 scopes, is the great Jeffries-Sharkey fitzht of November, 1899. Filmed by the old Biograph Company in New York, it still feeds the gaze of the ring fan willing to put a penny in the slot and turn the crank. Here Jack Dempsey is yet an unknown; of his victory over Willard no hint has penetrated this hiding place of the past. And here.

if one has a good memory for faces seen on the nickelodeon screen almost a score of yea's ago, one may recognize other features still familiar and perhaps even famous, in filmdom. To Measure Congressmen In Scientific Effort to Find Average American Man Washington, Dec. 3-Does any one, here know Mr. Average American Citizen? One hears of him constantly. Merchants address their advertisements to him.

Editors refer familiarly to his well known virtues. Manufacturers sweat and strive to meet his every want. Politicians roar of their undying love for him. One would suppose that virtually everybody at least knew him by sight. Yet who can describe him? How tail is What does he weigh? What shape his head and face? How sensitive is he to pain? Above all, how much brains has he? Alas, nobody knows.

The melascholy fact is that old Average Citizen is a plain myth. Nevertheless, he is such an important man, even though a mythical one, that a distinguished savant has get out to identify him and answer all the foregoing questions, and more, ing him. All of which is a way saying that Dr. Arthur MacDonald of Washington, is making a series of measurements upon the members of Congress in an effort to determine certain physical and mental characteristics of the normal American. At the same time he is making similar measurements upon the bodies of insane patients who die in St.

Elizabeth's Hospital, which is the Government institution for the care of demented soldiers, sailors and marines. By comparing these measurements he hopes to define the differences which distinguish normal men from abnormal men. Identities Concealed. It might be supposed that some Senators and Representatives would shrink from having their brains weighed and measured. And it is fact that the statistics will remain anonymous, but this is in the interest of scientific impersonality rather than to preserve any guilty secrets.

In fairness let it be said that the members of both Houses are cooperating cheerfully in the experiment, and it appears now that most, if not all, of the 531 members will submit themselves to Dres MacDonaid's calipers, algometers and other instruments of precision within the next few months. On Meager Salary. European university professors, Works in Two Rooms. The aged scientist's own history comprises an epic of scientific martyrdom which might form the theme of an Ibsen drama. For 30 years he has subsisted on meager Government clerkships while carrying on the researches which established his fame throughout the laboratories of Europe, His most celebrated work was written white he was employed as a night watchman at the Government Pension Office.

At the time when he was collaborating with the great Lombroso in a study of criminology, he was carried on the Government payroll as a clerk. He was receiving $2,000 a year- his sole income- -when he was elected honorary president of the International Congress on Criminal Anthropology, a scientific society composed of 600 Long yeurs after "Who's Who" had begun to record achievements, and his books had been translated into every European language and the Japanese, long after had become an intimate of the philosopher Friedrich Paulson, and the psychologist, G. Stanley Hall, was enrning a Government salary which 110 bricklayer's family could live on. Even two barely furnished the plaza from the rooms across Capitol, he patiently and devotedly Hello Girl Awarded $500, Gold Medal for Bravery MISS ANNA LENNAN Miss Anna L. Lennan, chief operator of the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company, Piedmont, W.

has just been awarded the coveted Vail fund gold medal and a cash award of $500 for her bravery in staying at her post a disastrous flood which threatened to wash away the telephone: exchange at Piedmont, W. Va. Charles Noyes, 21. .58 Piercepont st. Virginia McAuley, 19......170 Hicks at.

Angelo Chimigo, Jefferson ave. Sadie Arnone, 22.. Jefferson ave. Thomas McHenry, Kingaton ave Catherine Braek. Frank, Paone, 21..

166 9th st. Nelite Gallie, .166 4th st. William Sherman, 24.200 W. 96th Man. Anna Baum, 4408 ave, Wallace Parosino, 176 Tillary st.

Elydia Palmaccio, 20..7 St. Edwards st. Harry Fish, 27.. ....101 W. 112th at.

Lily Kaufman, 1708 Hooper st. James Wallace Jr. 21....90 Ainsile st. Josephine Kingsley, 21. Pleasanton, Tex.

Fred Marino, 22...... .620 Henry st. Mary De Geunaro, 22.191 Huntington st. John Wilson, 21....... 049 17th st.

Jean Ryan, .567 56th st. Andrew Krovscenka, 24, 614 E. 11th Man. Theresa Sokoloff, 19....400 Wytte ave. Israel .810 Greene Ave.

Eva Goldstein. 829 49th st. Paul Chesterson, 28. Clerniont ave. Sadie Hinchman, 19..1131 Belmont ave.

Salvador Dogostino, 28, 1N2 Forsyth Man. Buscem! Pavline. 24......8482 17th ave. Heinrick Kuhn, 28... Buffalo, N.

Y. Margaret Pirnan. .564 2d st. Gustaf Larson, 28.. Chicago, Hanna Magnusson, $2......

Chicago, I11. William Hill, 25.. .10 Pheific st, Evelyn Gross, 10 Pacifo Anonio Norberto, 83.. New Rochelle, N. Cecelia Micell, 13.

276 Jay Newton Gladstone, Broadway, N. Esther Weinstock, 620 st. Nathan Rosenberg. 4409 14th ave Rose Schine, 21... 23 47th st.

Al Sheer, Willnughby ave. Frieda Silberman, 19..779 La Cavette ave. Louis Josephine Desiderio, Albans. 21.. .4..17 Garfeld Utica ave Arnold Crawford, 27.

...1170 St. John's pi. Victoria Golden, St. John's pl. Hyman Golob, 27...

159 Ross at. Esther Krinsky, 18. 509 Gates ave. James Burke, 4th st. Alice Young.

18. ..5003 3d ave. Sydney Robbina, 24 .:136 St. Mark's ave Jeannie Klapp, 22. 808 Alabama Antonino Colletti, 22.1136 ave.

Margarta Libaral, 18..292 Stanhope st. Oscar Hopke, 29. .549 E. 26th st. Meta Frese, 22.

217 Wyckoff st. Eugene Mortillaro, Union st, Philomena Pascone, 18. .637 30 av. Tony Guidice, Bellville, N. Anna Casselli, 23......248 Warwick st.

Joseph Policastro, Ozone Park, L. I. Helen Raymec, 19. ...353 Central av. Sam Taylor, 37...

1401 Fulton at. Eva Williams, 903 Dean Henry Meyer, .864 Herkimer at. Frieda Krumpf. 46... 854 Herkimer st.

Harry Epstein, 22. 206 E. 10th st. Mildred Lipps, 843 Stone AV. Major Blocker.

.2044 Dean at. Alma. Walton, 2044 Dean st. Elliott Bailey, 23... Bronxville, N.

Y. Philomene Seymour, 20..651 Madison Joseph Greco, 1789 E. 13th at. Sadie Liotta, .....91 Truston at. Harry Gurian, 22....10 Pitt st.

Manhattan Hophie Shulman. ...185 Amboy st. James Bywater, 102 Milton st. Nellie Ferguson, .661 E. 2d st.

Izra Zafrani. Bay parkway Rachel Monaura, 48. .6702 21st Abraham Kucker, 24....1612 Bedford av. Betty Pressier, 22......1619 Bedford av. HANA Hansen, 26.

728 45th st. Tobine Olsen, 23. 1536 63d at. Guiseppe Carbone. 778 Liberty av.

Concetta Grispino, Dean at, Joe Fishinan, 20. .269 Division Zlotn Soller, 1869 66th st. Morris Tempkin, 26. 302 Watkins st. Saral: Spector, 335 Williams et.

Hymnan Hasten, 25. 8109 20th Betty Baron, .8109 20th Nathan Krupat, W. 27th st. Fant Robinowitz, 22....2949 27th st. Charles Stautenberg.

18..1073 Nostrand av. Agnes Smith. 18... .255 Wyckoff st. Emilio Kelley, 30......

Ozone Park, L. Violet Harris, 315 Eidert st. William Chestnut, 42..126 Portland AV. Viola: Holder. 92....126 N.

Portland RV. Jacob Borkotsky. 28. 1831 Marmion Bronx Pauline Colman, ...105 St. Mark's av.

Egil Johannesaon, 681 61st st. Alma Wunderilch, 34......316 60th Peter 34.. 3d Jenny Hansen. 35. 219 11th Hoboken, N.

J. Samuel Rudetsky, .1004 57th st. Bertha Weisberg. Bay 224 st. David Ageloff, 21.

...194 Reid Evelyn Greenberg, 662 Greene ave. Bru Leitner, 21. 227 Linden st. Annie Plata, 19 Division Joe Klanovaky, .1662 Carroll st. Ida ...838 Cleveland st.

Louis Spivak, 24. 478 Bedford ave. Lima Shapiro, 102 Wilson st. Harry Amater, 25. .1023 Hope st.

Ella Kazonofaky, 57th st. Irving Waxman, Johnson ave. Roslyn Busch, 18 .38 Jonnson ave. Solomon Linden, 688 Stone ave. Fannie Nisenbaum, 25..175 Riverdale ave.

Robert Grocoff, 31. .355 E. 46th st. Fannie Rabinowitz, .180 Moore st. Morris Hatkin, 31....

.1510 Pitkin ave. Father 23....1876 Bergen at. Frederick Coffin, 31...... Foot Bay 45th st. Anna McGory, Bay 44th' st.

Alex Pasamanick. 22....1637 President st. Anna Schneider, 21......315 S. 90th st. Leonardo Di Mato, 24.....

Woodhaven. L. I. Rosalia Acquavia, Wilson ave. Alex Nedelman, 433 Berry st.

Sarah Blustein. 25......428 Bedford ave. Leo Harnstein. 83 So. 9th at.

Gertie Blustein, 20.. .423 Bedford ava, Sol. Rothstein, 25 10824 116th R. HIll Marie Brandfeld, 24.... ...119 So.

4th st. Jacob Geiger, 23. 357 Hinadale Anna Zaraloveta. 20...318 Riverdale ave. Max Gottesman, Hinsdale st.

Rose Brelt, .1306 Decatur at. Samuel Racer, .3613 15th ave. Bertha Wechater, Cooper st. Thomas Clancy, 24. Prospect pl.

Leonie O'Neil 1452 Myrtle ave. Willie Dinita. New Jersey ave. Anna Winokin, 21.,,240 New Jersey ave. Sydney Loupe, Minneapolis, Minn.

Helen Cuff, 23.. 1047 74th st. Louis Sonsky, 1313 44th Rose Portnor, Rockaway ave. Sam Farber, 99. St.

John pl. Sylvia Weinstein. 23... Barrett st. Louis Cooper, 26.

94 Herzl st. Reba Malamut, 21... Alabama ave. Edward Norton, 29th Anna Coldewey, 36 Jewell Walter Rudious, 33. 1029 President st.

Gertrude Bohen, 21.....1068 Carroll St. John Small, 212 Hull Ruth Gardner, 3437 Fulton st. Joseph Silverstein, 24....240 Thatford ave. Dora Berkowitz, E. 7th st.

Hana Fjeldso, 26. 6th ave, Agneti Moe, 24. 589 88th at. Jullus Krowite, 656 Osborn Bessie Fregub, 656 Osborn Timothy Curtin, 1503 Ave Constance Hussey, 93.1976 Coney 16. ave.

Emanuel Schwarth, 21.594 Van Sicklen ave. Irene Goldstein, 20....149 Chauncey st. Nick Steahko, 29. .....96 Bay 26th Anastasia Steshko, 28. ...30 Bay 25th Frank Carlos, 24.

.821 Madison Blanche Smith. .135 Putnam ave, Max Granoff, 21...11201 109th R. Hill Mary Marosoff. 21 .605 Myrtle ave. John Lombardi, 92..441 117th Mats.

Pietronilla Lombardi, 30.68 Johnson Harold Garret, 30 Clinton pl. Emily Kacer, 19 Hill st. Harry Cohen, Jefferson st. Jennie Solomon. Debevolse Reuben Pions, 26.

Stockton Frieda Buch. Eastern P'kway. Maurice Silverstein. Buy P'kway Jeannette Berlin, 2220 39th nt. Barney Daucks, 41....

Newark, N. Iva Minte, 205 No. 24 st. Vietor Gabriele, Lafayette Katherin Esculish, 18.,.64 Lafayette Iterman Levy, ..170 Pulaski st Helen Lafayette ave. Kiva Ching.

Centre st. Ruth Martin. Centre K. OF C. MUSICAL VESPERS.

Marquette Council, No. 268. Knights of Columbus, will hold their annual musical vespers at St. ard's R. C.

Church, Wilson Jefferson on Sunday evening. Dee. 6. The Rev. Father George D.

Saunders, pastor, will receive the mombers, and his assistant, the Rev. Father Joseph B. Frey, a member of the council, will deliver the sermon. Buried City of Glacier Age Is Unearthed in Missouri; Expect to Find Treasures Quiney, Dec. 3 (P) -A buried city, the site, perhaps, of a glacial age civilization, has been found in excavations in Pike County, Missouri, six miles from Mississippi River and 50 miles from here.

Beneath 12 feet of glacial drift a well-defined shaft has been uncovered leading to a floor, 65 feet down. A wall leads from the foot of the shaft, crossed by a similar wall, either dividing the passage from subterranean chambers or supporting the roof. Hope to Find Treasure. Workers have concentrated efforts on a point 25 feet from the foot of the shaft at the edge of what they believe is a room. In it they hope to find gold, pottery and possibly mummies or skeletons of the city's ancient inhabitants, Search for buried treasure led to the discovery of the shaft.

An expedition headed and financed by R. D. Burchard of St. Louis, investigating old Indian legends of buried toned divining rod. Burchard treasure, found it.

By means of an instrument similar to the old-fash- a claims to have traced the walls of 42 underground rooms and geyen passageways connecting them. Burchard has staked his life's savings in the belief he is on the verge of a discovery that will startle the world. The. excavations so far have cost him nearly $20,000. Expert Physicians Banish Fear of Disastrous Effects From Use of Anesthetics "An operation! The doctor my appendix must come out.

He says I'll never be well until it does." "But, my dear, aren't you afraid to take ether? It's frightfully apt to affect the heart, you know. I've been needing an operation years, but I know my heart wouldn't stand it, so I just suffer along. "The time's past when I'd rush into operating room just because operations were being done and every woman of my acquaintance WAS having one. better be perfectly sure heart's all right before you let your anyone put a cone of ether over your nose. It's better to endure a little suffering than it is to pass out." "Well, of course, my heart's never been strong, either, but the doctor says it's all right and I'm going over to the hospital this afternoon and stay there a few days before the tion.

"It will take place Thursday morning at 10:30. Dr. Sharpknife is going to operate, and you know what a wonderful surgeon he is." Typical Conversation. All of which 18 a typical conversation between any. two women, one of whom has received from her physician the information that a surgical operation is necessary to cure what alls her.

Years ago the comic weeklies and professional jokesmiths evolved reams of "copy" from they termed the Vogue for operations among women and no daughter of Eve felt quite sure of her social position who could not cite at least one experience under the knife. Like all cycles, this, too, has passed and in its place there apparently exists among women of today a widespread conviction that their hearts are not by any heart means all be. that a well- regulated ought to Makes Good Story. Therefore, they must suffer torture instead of the knife. It makes quite as good a story and seldom fails of effect.

When it comes to the actual business of taking and giving an anesthetic, however, the process has the paradoxical characteristic of an exact science and an adventure. An experienced anesthetist, informed in advance concerning the physical condition of the patient to whom he is to minister, knows ly what particular substance (or substances) to use to produce the desired effect and how to use It. The conduct of the patient, however, gives opportunity for all manmer of variations and imbues the performance with a cient amount of interest to keep the anesthetist from becoming bored to ex- tinction. Some Men Fight. There are, for instance, according to a physician expert in the administration of anesthetics, men who will fight with all the strength of a bunch of assorted wildcats while gOing under.

Soft-voiced women with gentle manners will reveal themselves as complete psycho-neurotics when they are placed on the operating table, and women who have had eight or ten operations and recall distinctly all the unpleasantness which has followed the anesthetic will place themselves in the hands of the physician who must put them into this position again with the meekness of the traditional lamb. In fact, says this physician, it 19 possible to learn more about the character of a patient on the table than it is from years of close acquaintance or from any other form of pathological observation. It is there that all barriers of reserve and expediency go down and the inner of the patient is revealed. Several forms of anesthetic are used in hospitals. Ether is probably the one most frequently employed.

Laughing Gas Used. The customary procedure In inducing anesthesia for an operation like appendicitis is the administration of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, with oxygen until asphyxiation has been produced, following this by ether until the patient is in the desired state of insensibility, An operating room in a hospital, Just before operation be performed, takes on thomething of the atmosphere of an army head- 3 OFFICERS OF NAVY COURT FOR SINKING OF SHIP Washington, Dec. 3 (P) -Three naval officers were ordered tried by court -martial today as a result of the collision last September of the light cruiser Milwaukee and the American schooner Benjamin A. Van Brunt off Hampton Roads. They are Capt.

Frank Ta, Pinney, commanding the Milwaukee: Lt. Thomas A. Cory, officer of the deck of the cruiser Raleigh. and Ensign Elliott F. Moore, officer of the deck of the Milwaukee.

In addition, the Secretary directed that a letter of admonition be gent to Capt. William C. Watts, manding the Raleigh, leading vessel of the naval formation at the time of the collision. Vice Admiral McKean, now at New York, has been directed to 80- point a court which is expected to sit at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The Van Brunt, which was sunk, belonged to the Ford Construction Company of New Fork.

No lives were lost. APPRAISALS Estate of LEONARD M. PESSIER. died Jan. 27, 1996, appraised which passes to his widow, Anna Petaler, and six daughters.

SPLIT IN LEAGUE COUNCIL ON MOSUL ISSUE IS FEARED Clash Between Turkey and Britain Looms, With Former as Possible Aggressor. Geneva, Switzerland, Dec. 3 (AP). Great uneasiness is manifested in League of Nations circles over the Mosul dispute between Great Britain and Turkey, on which the League council must make a decision, because it is realized thet it may be difficult to reach the unanimity in the council required under the recent ruling of the Permanent Court of International Justice. Another disturbing factor is the announcement by Turkey that 19 unable to recognize any decision which fails to meet with her views.

It was learned today that the situation is 50 critical that various members of the council already have been privately consulting one another during their meetings in the various European capitals. Should Turkey, after refusing to comply with a ruling by the council, resort to hostilities, the matter would then come before the council as a separate problem under articles 16 and 17 of the League coyenant. 16 states that any member resorting te war in disregard of its obligations under the covenant "shall ipso facto be deemed to have committed an act of war against all other members of the League, which hereby undertakes immediately to subject it to the severance of all trade or fnancial relations, the prohibition of all intercourse between their nationalg and the nations of the covenant-breaking States, and the prevention of all financial, commercial or personal intercourse between the nationals of covenant-breaking State and the nationals of other State, whether a member of the League or In deciding the sovereignty, of Mosul unanimity in necessary with the exception of the vote of Great Britain and the vote of Turkey, which le A temporary member of the council while the boundary dispute in being discussed. TROLLEY MANDAMUS FAILS AFTER DELAY Cannot Compel Restoration of Lines, Says Court. After a delay of more than two years, due to the failure of some of the lawyers to send in their papers, Justice Van Sicklen in Supreme Court today denied a mandamus that was sought in a motion argue Oct.

16. 1923, by the Transit Commission to compel the restoration of certain trolley lines in Brooklyn that had been abandoned. The Legislature had passed several acts intended to compel resumption of through service on the Tompkine-Culver line; the 39th st. Ferry-Coney Island line, the 16th ave. line and the Slope line.

There is now no ownership of franchises or other legal or physical paraphernalia, the court declared, which could be directed to obey the special laws passed by the Legislature some years ago, and for that reason the mandamus is dented. GEORGE POTTS SR. DIES; WELL- KNOWN BUILDER builder George and Potts real estate da Well-known 1418 President died yesterday afternoon at his home following an operation a few weeks ago. He was born in Barton, Staffordshire, England, April 14, 1864, and came to this country in 1889. He was for 35 years in the building business in this city and waas at one time in partnership with the late Charles F.

Partridge. He is survived by his wife, Harriet Lester Potts, whom he married in June, 1922, and seven children by a former marriage, George Potts John Potts, a In ryer: Mrs. B. R. McGuire, Mrs.

Frank H. Lester, Mrs. William Murray, Mrs. C. C.

Franklin and Mrs. G. Hobby; 13 grandchildren, and two elsters, Mrs. Charles Harris and Mrs. William Beal.

His first wife, Eliza Bull, died in 1920. Funeral services will be conducted at the Church of the Latter Day Saints, Park pl. and Schenectady Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. "DRYS" BLAME COOLIDGE FOR LAW'S FAILURE Continued from Page 1. stead Act, which provides ishments and penalties for makers, sellers, possessors and transporters of whisky and other liquors.

In canceling the wine permits, it is felt, General Andrews simply was washing hands of a ridiculously impossible feature of his job, hoping the while that the cancellation really would stop So some persons from making wine. But indications are that more persons will now engage in home wine making than ever before, the practice being no longer inconvenienced with the necessity for registering at the offices of the local prohibition administrator and the local collector of internal revenue, both whom might inspect the premises at will under the permit system. Only 200 on File. How many persons made wine in their homes without permits it is impossible to estimate, but the num ber doubtless was far greater than 900. Yet only 200 permits for wine making in the home were on issue in Brooklyn, Long Island and Staten Island at the time of their cancellation, according to George Eilperin, chief field agent of the Internal Revenue Bureau.

Besides home brewed, wine for home consumption, there was brought to or manufactured in the Brooklyn, Long Island and Staten Island district by eight licensed wine wholesalers from July 1 to Dec 1, according to the computation of Collector. of Internal Revenue John T. Rafferty, approximately 234,000 gallons of 14 percent or more alcoholic content and 130,000 gallons of lighter wines, such as claret. In the same period these wholesalers disposed of in this area for medicinal and sacramental purposes 215,000 gallons of high-powered wines and 120,000 gallons of the lighter kind. MARRIAGE LICENSES Louis Simolinnas, 39....

Binghamton, N. Y. Ursula Mameniskinte, 28..1097 Dean st. Angelo Vecchi, 33... 1060 39th st.

Marianna Baldoni, 32......1069 39th st. Harry Schneer, 23, 1619 Washington Bronx. Bella Gardenberg. 166 S. 1st st.

Arthur Alfke, 24... 77th st. Florence Porter, 24........259 C1st st. August Buckholz, 37... City, N.

J. Rosanna Elliott, 30....352 Midwood at. Lipman Gelernt, 29....194 Koselueko st. Ray Samuels, 720 DeKalb ave. Martin See, 53..

.737 Lexington ave. Harriet Kneeland, 44.140 St. Mark's ave. Eugene Brown £1....718 Steriing pl. Margaret Murpliy, 21..124 Adelphi at.

Anthony Zambianchi, 21....36 Liberty Lucy Mapelli, 21. .329 79th st. Bernhard Schwed, 38....606 6th Man. Buchsbaum, 33..1623 President st. Francesco Emanuele.

61....8630 19th ave. Carmela Mandanici, 50...42 Bay 20th st. Cyril Farnum, 30.... .358 Halsey st. Beryl Barnes, 26........312 Decatur st.

Nathan Marion, 47....993 Jefferson ave. Ray Solomon, 780 5. 4th st. I asquale Vona, Bedford ave. Anna McGarren, .183 8.

8th st. Ralph Cohen, .1690 President at. Etta Glazer, 23.. ....1508 St. Mark's ave.

Edward Pines. 29.. .1541 43d st. Molly Schaffer, Avenue W. Robert Glaser, Hinsdale st.

Tachel Gutchman, 19....121 Powell st. Maurice Goldberg. 21....938 Jefferson ave. Rose Moser, 28.... 404 Junius st.

Gerald Hibbard, 20. 1. 501 4th st. Bessie Edmond. 031 4th st.

James MacDermid, 23....1019 Lincoln pl. Sarah Ross, 18....735 Manhattan ave. Thaule, 6th ave. johannes Ingeborg Thordahl, 21..... 18th Christian Johnsen, 342 54th at.

Bergliot Jansen, 18...... .4712 4th ave. Paul Mars. 119 Grove Elsie Daenecke, 25......119 Grove st. Louis Santello, 23..

at. Auna Blancati, 364 3d st. Joseph Vatalaro, 29. 149 Bay 29th st. Celia Marchese, 76th George Horner, 21.

866 Grand st. Evelyn Shaughnessey, 18.111 Engert ave. Edwin Smith, 30.. Park, Grace Roche, 34....1249 New York ave. Albert Henry, Clinton ave.

Almetra Johnson, .62 Clinton ave. Everett Proper, 29..103 W. 89th Man. Edna Grass, 29. 415 09th at.

Rios, 23.... 62 Puctfe st. Jose Laboria Rosado, .62 st. Clarence Lord, Wyona st. Irene Goddard.

20......30 Lefferts pl. James Westerfeld, 27.. Englewood, N. J. Charlotte Weiman, 21....1257 E.

40th st. Charles Belkin, 26.. 155 Siegel st. Freda Subin, 20......31 Manhattan ava. John Gillies.

40. 463 Bainbridge st. Gertrude Kinze, 40....463 Rainbridge at. Morris Gorenstein, 28.. New Haven, Conn.

Mary Yediln, 23. .1224 Pacific st. Monroe Siegel. 26....... .7:9 Avenue Eva David, 1860 40th st, Bergstein, 090 So.

2d at. Samuel Ethyl Brandwein, 19... .377 Rodney st. Abraham Levy, 33. 385 So.

3d st. Litaky, 22. So. 3d st. Lillie IliJa Washko, $37 Smith st.

Weronika Dembek, Smith at. Irving Chirick, 26......1714 President st. Anna Lefkowitz. Albany ace. Sclomon Rosen.

25. .580 Ralph ave, Freda Weinberg, .190 Penn Edwin Wadsworth, 36.... Charlotte, N. C. Edna Benjamin Egbert, 27.

597 Putnam ave, Alter. ...1357 47th st, Sylvia Ostrowsky, 22..464 Snediker ave. Gustave Schultz, 780 Myrtle ave. Frieda Schwarz, ave Philip Kressel, Portland aLve. Ruth Witt, 22.

148 Portland are George Davis, Avenue 17 Helena Grover, 18......2782 Ocean Herman Lefkowitz, 28... Sea Bright, Sarah Vurman, 21..138 Coney Island ave. Isidor Friedman, 28.. 112 Amboy st. Sarah Itzkowitz, 22....611 Sackman Nt.

Paul Morris, 32...:....31 Lexington ave. Bertha Williams, Clifton pl. Israel Backal, 40.......703 5th Man. Frances Richman, 25..1629 St. John's pl.

Andreas Natwig. 23.. So. Oxford st. Gudrun Rasmussen, 23..1997 E.

2d at. Arthur Fischer, 26....27 W. 11th Man. Felix Piacolo, 26. W.

16th ave. Celia Bruder, 22......299 Sheield st. Consulo Canciello, Stillwell are. Louis Silverman, 28....1664 President st. Lottie Belous, 26.

E. 7th Henry Vogeler. 26.. Madison Kiara Benediex, 339 Melrose Philip Salat, 30. 144 So.

4th st. Bitty Dannenberg, Rush st. Paolo Sampino, 24.. 1st pl. Gaetana Cosenza, .125 1st pl.

Hyman Herman, 26. Ridge Man. Bertha Merker, .7250 3d ave. Joseph McCauley. 6th st.

Catherine Ward, 32. 377 8th st. Gaetano, Leccese, 28.626 Coney Island ave. Lina Caccaro, 23..687 Coney Island ave. David Hofman, 40 409 E.

15th st. Isabelle Cohen, 27 859 Rugby rd. Salvatore Zuagleo 171 Nostrand ave. Morris Sicarl, 18 Myrtle ave. Helen Gervis, 28 Sterling pl.

Sigfried Lenora Berman, Whipple Elsa Larson, 27 ....55 Pineapple John Dahiberg, Prospect pi. Crawford. 31 121 E. 17th Helen Plunkett, 185 Amity st. Glovanni Gargano, 67th st.

Josephine Natoil. 20 .192 Sackett st. Louis Cohen. 23 ..1779 Madison Man. Lillian Aaron, 20 .4535 16th ave, John Von der Velde, 39 Sumpter st.

Ema Riedel. 24 ......13 Sumpter st. Alfred Braunstein, 25, 687 E. 129th sti, Bronx Charlotte Polash, 19 ....1897 Bergen Peter Ingoglia. 28 2417 Dean st.

Anna D' Apice, 31 Herkimer st. William Hicks, 40 911 Myrtle ave. Alice Boyle, 46 204 Throop ave. John Sayers, Flatbush ave. Margaret Alexander, 2112 Flatbush ave.

Basilisa Rodrigues, 31 ..1191 E. 34th st. John Carrosco, 30 .320 Bond Inocencla Ramirez, .320 Bond st. John Unger, 25 Hollis, 1.. Lillian Knott, 18 .1005 Broadway Clarence Lowman, 653 62d st.

Margaret Nelson, 19 5th ave. Efisio Onore, 37. Lee Plerina Mossenz, 37 Lea Ernestos Condidia, 30 60th ave. Angelica Lekithaoks, 50th st. Frederick Meyer, 36 E.

38th Elisabeth Tisch. E. 38th Frank Burger, 37 La Agnes Brophy, 37 86 Bogart pt. Giuseppe 28 Manhattan ave. Ida Sergio, 20 India Howard Baker, Vernon, N.

Y. Gertrude Cook. ....1021 Ocean ave. Gluseppe ho Forte, 116 Madison Stan. Tessie Rodesta.

25 232 4th ave. Jordan Bassett. Hamilton Man. Elizabeth Zimmer, 22..431 Lincoln Sol. Wolfsh, 23...

Gouverneur Man, Sophie Fogot, Wethe ave. Edward Thomaun. Willow st. Grace James, Brooklyn ave. Harry La Valley, Stans.

Irene Bostonian 16th ave. George Hartman, 323 Menahan Mary 528 Menahan Atrah Dn vison Lenox rd. Ruth Adame, Albemarie rd. Morris Kaplan, 30 Eagle Bronx Anna Snadow. 54.

Reaver st. Antonio Russo. Rosa Martire. W. 16th Stas we.

Man. Beatrice nicola De 190 320 Gulato Piccolo, 120 224 Lester Blundon, pt. Devid Shea. .192 Park pl, Anna Warne. Lafayette ate.

Astoria, L. Evelyn Partett, Union assuming piety added, 'So help me, "Our appeal must be to him," continued the letter. "It must be made 50 loud it will be heard. Only the appointing and pardoning power 19 sufficient in this hour." Copy Sent to Coolidge. A copy of the address, which was declared to express the opinion of the organizations assembled.

was sent last night to President Coolidge at the White House. Representatives of the following organizations joined in the charges and opinions expressed last night, Mr. Howard declared: The Associaof Catholics Favoring Prohibition, Baptist Social Service Committee, Catholic Clergy's Prohibition League, Women's Christian Temperance Union of Delaware, Church Temperance Society, Disciples of Christ, Board of Temperance and Social Welfare, International Order of Good Templars, Women's Christian Temperance Union of Florida and the Flying Squadron Foundation, International Reform Federation, Massachusetts Prohibition Committee, Methodist Episcopal Board of Temperance, Prohibition and Public Morals, National Civic League, National Reform Association, National Temperance Society, New York Civie League, Pennsylvania Prohibition Committee, Women's Christian Temperance Union of Pennsylvania, Presbyterian Department of Moral Welfare, Prohibition National Committee, Reformed Church in the United States, Sons of Temperance, United Society of Christian Endeavor and the Universalist Department of cial Service. quarters Immediately preceding a zero hour. Perfectly trained and thoroughly Instructed persons go through prescribed motions.

White gowns, masks and caps are adjusted, instruments are sterilized, waiting walk up and down while the' operating table is made ready. Then the door opens. The patient is brought in sitting in a wheel chair. It it be a woman, her hair is drawn back tightly from her forehead and tucked unbecomingly under a coarse white cap, giving her a cutriously strained and inquiring expression. Go Into Action.

Immediately the entire operating room corps goes into action. Not a motion is lost and not A gesture ig superfluous. The patient-for the sake of illustration let it be supposed that the patient's appendix is chronically Insubordinate and is, consequently, the organ to be severed from the patient's interior--is 88- sisted to the operating table. There she is made as comfortable as possible, and invested with a coarse white gown, which is to be worn during the operation. Physicians hold last-minute consultation while the white-clad nurses complete the preliminaries.

Once the physicians are notified that everything la in readiness, the tenseness vanishes and there is no portant than a to transindication that anything, more Impire. Braced For Battle. "Sleep last night?" inquires the anesthetist, his apparatus in tone. Then, being informed hand, in an ordinary, conversational that the patient's rest had been more or less satisfactory, "how often have you had ether before?" "This will be my sixth operation, doctor." The anesthetist braces himself for battle, though he gives not the slightest indication to the patient that he is on the lookout for trouble. "Well, well." is his comment.

"Now take me firmly by the wrist and hold tightly. While he is talking a mask is placed over the patient's face, a stop-cock is turned on and a mixture of "laughing gas" and oxygen is set flowing in the proportions demanded by the patient's condition. "Hold tightly to my wrist," he repeats. "Tightly, tighter, stili tighter, The patient's hand dropped limply, was caught and placed easily at her side. She is in the first stage of anesthesia and the process has required less than half a minute.

The expected battle did not materialize. Process in Full Swing. Another stopcock 18 turned and ether is set Mowing into the mask over the patient's nose and mouth. A clamp is placed over the tongue 10 keep the patient from swallowing that troublesome member, and a free passage of air from the lungs is assured. The process of etherization is in full swing.

Throughout the entire operation the anesthetist stands by the patient's side, keeping careful watch. Years of experience have taught him exactly how to regulate the mixture. Now and then he lifts the patient's eyelid and looks closely at the pupil. In the light stages of anesthesia the eye is fixed and staring, though approximately of normal size. In the deeper stages the pupil is dilated, and it is the extent of this dilation which 19 the anesthetist's best guide to the proper regulation of the quality of the vapor the patient receives.

"It is highly desirable that patient be sufficiently relaxed for the operation to take he explains, "but that the anesthesia does not go this point. "Naturally, it is important not to induce any deeper state of insensibility than is necessary. "If the surgeon performing the operation tella me the patient is not sufficiently relaxed to enable him to proceed properly, I increase the proportion of ether just to the point where relaxation is in the proper stage, but not bit more. "The deeper the anesthesia the harder the Journey back to normal conditions. "Ether is a heart stimulant, and the danger in administering it to people who have heart trouble is in the after -effects rather than in the preliminary stages.

To offset this hypodermic injections of morphine are given before the operation takes place." WILLS PROBATED GERTRUDE ERZINGER. ELIZABETH A. SCHERMERHORN, JOHN R. GLOVER, JOHN C. BARGES.

DAVID A. NOLDS, GEORGIA A. JENKINS, CES C. HEILAND. EAGLE CLASSIFIED ADS Are the lights of opportunity.

ADVERTISEMENT. HAVING SELECTED CALIFORNIAfor your permanent residence, or winter sojourn, the next important thing is transportation. The Crescent Limited, New York to New Orleans, and the Sunset Limited, New Orleans to Los Angeles and San Francisco, all Pullman de luxe trains, traveling in the path of the winter sun, afford the most popular comfortable way during the fall and winter months. Three other good trains between New York and New Orleans. Reduced round trip fare tickets now on sale.

For particulars as to fares, time of trains, Pullman sleeping car reservations, please call upon, or write R. H. De Butts, Gen. Eastern Pass. 1,52 42d New York Citv.

Telephone Wisconsin 2205. SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM. -Adv. HE PROFITS most who reads most Eagle Classified Ads. Have You direct current in your home! If you have, by all means use FRESHMAN MASTER Eliminator and forever do away with the troubles and inconveniences of B' batteries FRESHMAN MASTER B' 1750 Eliminator for direct No tubes required.

nothing else to buy Bold by Authorized FRESHMAN Dealers Only, Chas. Freshman Inc. Freshman Building 240 W. 40th New York goes ahead with the work to which most of his 69 years have been dedicated. Seeks Key to Character.

Much of his work has been directed to the discovery and definition of abnormality in mankind. He hopes to ascertain not only the causes but also the identifying of the habitual criminal, the Insane, defective and degenerate, the chronic pauper and alcoholic. As a background for the pursuit of these inquiries he studied anthropology, insanity, psychology, criminology and hypnotism. In addition to this technical equipment, science demands facts, facts and more facts. What is an abnormal man? He is A man who is not normal.

Therefore, it we want to know what stitutes abnormality in man, we must first know what constitutes normality. Having arrived at a satisfactory definition of a normal man, we could say that all who failed to fit that definition were abnormal. Hence, the first task in the identification of the abnormal man is the identification of the normal man. What are his physical proportions? What is the size and shape of his head? How does he react to pain? Most important of all, what is the size and contour of his brain? Obviously, it would have been a difficult if not impossible task for Dr. McDonald to visit every section of the United States and pick out specimen of the normal man for measurements.

It was not necessary. The nation had done that job for him. Just across the Capitol plaza, in the House and Senate office buildings, were 531 men chosen by the people of the country as the representatives of their common opinions and desires. If any group could be called representative of the normal citizenry of the country, they could. It only remained to get their consent.

and most of them readily assented. How Brain 1s Weighed. Dr. MacDonald worked out a form of examination which, he believes, will meet his purpose. A vital part of the examination consists of mens.

uring and weighing the brain. Now. of course. no Senntor or Representative, however obliging, would consent to have his brain removed from his head long enough for it to be weighed and measured. Therefore, it is necessary to weigh and measure it where it is.

Such a Job might seem impossible to the Inyman. But it can be done, and with it fair degree of accuracy, through the use of a. formula which is the product of three scientific minds--that of Alice Lee, biometricion and mathematician of the Galton laboratory, in London: of Welcker, the German biometrician, and of Dr. MacDonald himself. Put Gauge on Pain.

Measurement of the subject's sensitiveness to pain is accomplished with an instrument called the algometer. It is a cylinder with a piston -something like a small bicycle pump minus the wooden handle. Ag the end of the plunger is pressed a zainst the nerves of the temple, a on the eide of the cylinder registera the severity of the presure. the pressure is increased, the subject is told to speak "the moment it becomes the least bit This test serves a double purpose. It not only registera the of the nerve, but it afterda the EXperimenter an insight into the subject's idea of what constitutes "disor pain.

In such testa upon girl students, at Cornell University the average wast right temple, left temple, 1,832: upon group of washerwomen the average was: right tentpie, left temple, 2,410. Stop Wasting Tea TAO TEA BALLS Any package of Tao Tea is an economy. But the fifty-ball Caddy will serve the average family for almost two months with this supreme delicious tea, and -it's only a dollar! The Most Economical Package of All A Perfect Holiday Gift exquisite aroma and delicious flavor of Tao Ten, combined the practical and economical qualities of the Tao Tea Ball, have won favor from coast to coast. The Tao Tea Caddy, handsomely lacquered in black and gold, is a gift that will last because a "refill" from time to time will keep it in use long after the original fifty Tao Ten Balls are gone. TAO TEA TAO TEA COMPANY, 103 Park New York CADDY 50 DRINK PLENTY! Ball Caddy For Immediate Delivery The Best Grades of Coke $13.50 Soft 8.00 Buckwheat 9.50 Pea 16.50 Egg 23.50 Stove 23.50 Nut 23.50 Putnam Coal Ice Co.

Haddingway 1000.

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