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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 16

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 16

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

16 Ml BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, MAY 30, i930. should pay more by the foot tor a few hundred 'ON FAME'S ETERNAL CAMPING GROUND vert lie In such a way as to stimulate the reading of books all kinds ot books. In lieu of that feet of gas a month than the large consumri BROOKLYN DAILY RGLE iroandad by Xb? Vta Andan In (Trafla alar tUguierad. pays by the foot foe a hundred times as much the present war may serve the same purpose. They are not receptive to the theory 'of the Ingersoll didn't destroy the watch business, and the automobile Industry has not been wrecked FRIDAY EVENING, MAY SO.

service charge. In the first place. They insist moreover, that gas is gas, and they could shoul by Henry Ford. The movies have not ruined der the theory that, like a railroad, the com the theater, as every good play demonstrates pany should charge each class ot patrons We do not believe that cheap books will ruin literature or the book business. On the con more tan their custom will carry.

They re fuse to admit, for example, that If the com' kka.sk e. OAKMrrr. Prai taut at RBZRT ounmson. rBANB a. ihipp Cia'rmali Board ot TrustMT V10 Praalduit HAEIRV T.

HADUtN. rtJUiRIS 11. CRIST Secretary Treasurer rrtESTON OOODFOXOW AKTBT'R M. BOW. Publisher Editor MAIN OKirlcS: 1 li'-ildlnj, WutliM and Johnson SJrMt? leupucNS uaw trary, it should help tremendously in leading pany makes a special low rate for gas used In people into the habit cf book reading.

large quantities in house heating and thus sells Appreciation Vs. Performance. extra gas at something over the immediate cost of manufacture, the extra sales tend to cheaoen We are told that, according to new "syl nf all anJ 1. Is bus." the compulsory course In drawing is Manhattan. ID West lh 6L OMcafo.

400 North MlcMgaa Aw Baa Francisco. 657 atarket Bt. i'i-. Bureau, S3 Rut RATES: toward lower rates even for the small, high' charge consumer. eliminated from the high schools and the sy tem will "emphasize appreciation rather than States of mind, as well as theories, enter Into performance." The boys and girls will be 'the question.

The practice in other com tooulat Brooxlju taught to "appreciate" beauty in "color, design, 6 luc 1 I jr. 1.20 dress, the drama, graphic arts, painting, print munities might well enter Into It The Commission will need all tha expertness that it can summon and all the firmness that resides within It, to reach a fair solution. 00 3 ing, sculpture and architecture." All of which and Buacay i tally only. Uuiday only. (Sermon Pi soe 4.00 l.o ISO SS.50 4.SO a oo .80 .7 .73 sounds easy if you say it quick.

Most gener 1 (CUM Newst. allzations do. 15 What quizzical persons are bound to reflect itttunw (Church Notlceat I Wednesday or frrtdey 1-90 Poratra Kates Poeweld: on is that this che.nge is in close accord with and Sladui 00 $14.00 13 90 the trend ot the time. A girl does not learn A Dixie Attack on Dr. Cadman.

We shall enter on no encomium upon Dr. Cadman; he needs none. There he Is. Behold him and Judge for yourselves. There Is his history: the world knows it by heart The past, at least.

tivoaly 0 1000 only OO S-00 I.M -S to play the piano or make music herself. She does not leant performance. She learns appre I at wad at the Poitolflot ai Second Cla Mall Matter. TH AB80CLATEU PRAS8 elation of the radio and the Vtctroia, or maybe ot the orchestra. She does not learn to cook a dinner, but to appreciate what someone else The AJJtlated Fran la excluetvelj entitled to tha is secure.

Eloquence, like beauty. Is its own excuse for being. The spirit of concord and brotherhood is likewise its own excuse for being. has cooked. So a boy needn't do any perform ur rapubueauoo o( all newe diapatcbea ciociuw oi ai a-hertue eradltee) tn tola ppT.

and also tha But Dixieland is as intolerant of modernism n( onatn oubiiahed twretn. AU rights Ing at baseball. He may become "tan" Just by sitting on bleachers and seeing the players it republication tit special dlepatchea berets ar also as she was in the days of Hayne and Webster reserved. do his exercising for him. In books there art The attacks on Par Ices Cadman patiently listened to by the General Assembly of Southern a thousand critics to one person attempting production.

In religion the faculty of apprecla Presbyterians at Charlottesville. were based Memorial Day. On Memorial Day. at on July 4, the vast ma. tion Is almost universal; the habit of devout on his broadcasting of some liberal theology, performance ot duties is relatively rare.

and a Miami, Fla, layman noted that Dr. Cad of our people give little heed to the pur man had said: "The infallibilities of the Bible Nevertheless there are some fairly clear who will always hold that one ounce ot pose of the anniversary as first established are no longer accepted by reasoning men." So performance In any field Is as good as several far the Fundamentalists were dignified and eon They celebrate it not so much as an occasion of tribute to those who fought to preserve the pounds of appreciation, and that true apprecln ilstent with themselves. But we cant conceive tion without any effort at performance is Im Cnloa as a holiday tor recreation or rest. The how his enthusiasms can have carried the Rev minority, which engages in patriotic exercises, possible, evolving a self-deception that is quite as dead as faith without works. They are at Dr.

George Summey so far as to make him call Dr. Cadman "an inherited person." Daniel O'Connell's "rectangular paralleloplpedon" would parades where the dwindling remnants of the Grand Aiiny appear, and in decorating the graves least entitled to their opinions. I As to Negro Gold Star Mothers. have meant quite as much. Even Dixie invective should have its limitations.

soldiers, is small as compared with the mu titudes who divert themselves without more than We are glad, however, that even Dr. Summey Of the 151 Negro Gold Star Mothers who have been Invited to go to France as guests of passing thought, if any, on the significance of the day. the United States Government, fifty-five have signed protest to President Hoover against segregation, denouncing the War Department's did not side with the small minority of the Assembly on breaking away from the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, and that the Southern Presbyterians will maintain their connection with that body, which has accomplished much fer the cause of Interdenominational comity and will accomplish more we may trust, in the near future. There will always be a reverent minority to regard Memorial Day in its true light. Yet spirit that minority itself has undergone a plan as a gratuitous insult to their race and declaring: "If you.

as President of the United change. There, are men hot yet aged wjho re States, refuse to abolish this ruling we respect fully decline to make the trip to France, pre all when the celebration on May 30 brought ms-mm umm ferrlng instead to remain at home and maintain our honor and self-respect." And to them this What Is a One ot the most interesting questions In our answer comes from Acting Secretary of War 5 yM-'7'- Davison: constitutional law is raised in the formally expressed willingness of Senator Walsh of Montana and Senator Jones of Washington to let their votes be determined on an important m-th expressions of bitterness and even hatred gainst those, who from honest conviction had driven to break the union of State. That sort it tiling long ago ceased. And sinoe the tribute if Memorial Day has been expanded to lnclud the dead who have fallen to other wars since occtslon, we have come to regard our opponent in those conflicts with more of fairness than v. as apparent when we fought them.

That on good terms with former enemies is one of the happiest reflections of this anniversary. Separation into groups Is necessary to provide suitable accommodations for all. No discrimination will be made as between the various groups. Each group will receive equal accommodations, care and consideration. Which, of course, Is logically no answer at all question by what their constituents want without sacrificing in any way their "private" Evil Eye Retains Its Ancient Tower the duels are not duels at all in the accepted sense ot combats based on bad blood, but tests of courage and strong nerves Letters From Eagle Readers since the protest was not against grouping Mary 8.

Orabba, In the Kansas city Star) i student swordDlav in the Father- This is called a "representative form of gov but against the basing of any grouping on color When a young girl I went to land has been tor generations school In the Palazzo Massimo In characteristic of Kultur. Scars on Rome. The Massimo family, being i Teutonic faces have been considered lines. Mr. Davison merely makes as good a special plea as he can.

He does not choose to say what everybody Is thinking, that with the very hard up, was obliged to rent badges of honor equivalent to the in at the Whitehall St station where tne distracted mother collected her possessions and her daughter an made her escape. JOHN J. SNYDER. Brooklyn. May 26.

ernment." What is a "representative" and what are his ethical obligations? If his conscience clashes with the unmistakably expressed will of his constituents, which lead should he follow? Different minds will offer different answers with equal honesty. They have done so 'social equality" issue involved, more trouble one floor of the palazzo to our broken collar bones of the Amer-school. Prince Massimo had the ican football players. While in Evil Eye. In other words, his pres- progress the duels are bloody af- would have been caused by an anti-segregation decision.

ence brought ill luck to all with 'airs, more serious in aspect tnan whom he came tn contact. actuality. Sometimes too much in all the history of American politics. The issue is as fine an illustration as has When he ram tn nnr anart.ment, Olooa IS lost, or there Is Septic Old-timers may be pardoned for recalling the Tammany Self-Approval Editor Brooklyn Daily Eagle: The people of this great city are now being treated to the greatest farce that was ever put on stage or screen. I mean investigating of some Tammany officials by couple of Tammany distirct attorneys.

What aT whitewashing that will be. I have heard many of these officials making speeches clubhouses and preaching honesty and rHing young men how to go straight. May God bless the Eaele and help It to keep thn developed in a scries of years of the need or to pay a friendly visit the maids Poisoning. Otherwise nothing hap- Mississippi case of fifty-two years ago. At that advisability of exalting expediency over acuJemia were thrown into a panic.

Not tor time Mississippi had two Senators In Blanche worlds would thev consider answer- wn coxing considered, now- Bruce, colored Republican later and by appoint' ment of two Presidents Register of the United ing the bell Our cook. Pio, being made of sterner stuff, was pressed into service. A little pale, he would Ringerly usher In our visitor, taking care to make behind his back, wUh States Treasury and L. Q. C.

Lamar, white logic in practical affairs. Sentimentally and legally the Negro Gold Star Mothers are entitled to all consideration. Including a recognition of their growing- race-consciousness. Practlcallv the lesser of two evils was chosen. Whether political expediency was thought of we cannot know.

So far as that Is concerned a division ot opinion Is inevitable. Democrat, later a member ot Cleveland's Cab Inet and an Associate Justice of the Supreme his free nand, the corne, or Court Mississippi's Legislature directed the spotlight on all betrayers ot public that offset the evil. After his visit the maids would sprinkle the drawing room with holy water. Senators to vote for a pro-silver measure. Brucj DEMOCRAT.

trust Deflating the Bandit's Ego roblilmbua Dlapat.oh.l Florida, despite Federal Injunctions and tha scheming cf "Scar-face" Al Capone's battery of lawyers. has succeeded in making life anything but a bed of roses for tha gangster In that State. In the absei.ee of any apparent ability or the authorities to pin on the racket king any ot the major crimes or which he stands convicted in the public mind, this campaign of annoyance ts, perhaps, the next best thing. Naitirally, it would be far more impressive and more in keeping with the majesty of the law it Capnne and his large army of henchmen could be dealt with befits a "public enemy," which appellation has been given him by the law and order forces ot Chicago. If tills campaign accomplishes nothing else, the frequent arrest- did so.

Lamar defied the Legislature. The answer was this Joint resolution of the lower I frequently rode horseback on ever, there Is another story. Of late much study has been given to the condition as "punch-drunk." Many a first-class man has been ruined, mentally and phvstraily, by repeated batterings about the head. No man. It is said.

Is ever quite the same after having been knocked out; there ts a psychological reaction from such oblivion, as well as physical. That men are killed in the prize ring the records prove; that there are serious after-effects from long-continued pugilism Is also true. It is true, as well, that many men have spent years at the game and prinarcntly have suffered no ill effects. The comparative histories of boxing and student duels Indicate the sureeons of Germany are right in their conclusions. house: the Compagna.

One afternoon on my way to ride 1 met the prince. He looked not unlike Little Neli's grandfather In "The Old Curiosity Shop" long white locks, under a Resolved; That the Hon. B. K. Bruce (colored), Senator ot the United States from this State, in his recent vote for the resolution offered by the Hon.

Stanley Matthews in the Senate, favoring the remonetizaMon of silver, has reflected the sentiment and will of his constituents and said vote is hereby indorsed and approved. Not the Time. Lei us note the character of the time at whlct congress prepares to send President Hoover a measure heavily increasing tariffs. Argentina reports that it exported in total value only slightly more in the first four months of 1830 than two-thirds of the total for the Uie period of 1929. The United States exports rot far from $100,000,000 a year to Argentina.

V. Argentina herself exports less she lose3 cor- 'spondlngly in importing power. Canada, where business is reported on the 'mend, alters Its own tariff In such a manner to affect unfavorably some $300,000,000 by aiue of the annual imports from the United States. China suffers from the still unmitigated Je- line of the gold value of silver money as wen f.i from political and military disturbance, and a consequence its Import and export markets exceptional weak. We should normally -xport each year goods In excess of $100,000,000 to China.

We eppear unlikely to do so this ear in any case, and to such extent as our tariff may further discourage Imports from China It will simply Invite China to draw from elsewhere such goods as it can still Itself Import. Japan normally sends the United States or more of her exports, chiefly in raw -silk. This material has declined to less than four-fifths of the New York price ot a year ago, and the Japanese are restricting its production by 20 percent. This Indicates lower imports from Japan and the likelihood that we will in turn export to Japan less than the normal $250,000,000 yearly or thereabout. Yet we plan to raise our tariffs, knowing full well that tariffs work not only against Imports but against exports as well.

Was ever such a time selected for putting on restrictions that tend to depress both sides Of silk hat, very saintly In appearance and a great old rake. He made himself very charming. "The signorina Is, I am sure, a beautiful rider; I In Santo Domingo the winning candidate for President first Jails his chief rival for "sedition" and then offers him a place in the cabinet Anglo-Saxons will never understand Latin America. Builders and prospective Investors in building will note that the tariff "compromise" on lumber rates is $1 per 1,000 feet Class legislation hitting all home-construction is very much in evidence. Carroll N.

Brown of the City College and Lams Van Hook ot Barnard teach Greek in New York but they will not attempt to teach It as exchange professors in Athens. To know one's own limitations is the very Jilghest wisdom. Only those who remember post-reconstruction wish her a beautiful ride," which amused me, I being one of the world's worst riders. racial bitterness can understand what a con temptuous slap this was to Lamar, who had But Gulseppe, the groom, was pale voted the other way. But, in the end, Lamai with fright.

"Signorina, he has kept his party standing and retained his per brought you 111 luck," he whispered, which I pooh-poohed. I did manage sonal prestige. Perhaps that is to be antic! a pretty good fall, according to mv pa ted when any "representative" obeys his conscience Instead of obeying his constituents. American Culture Watrbury Republican! Speakers at a convention In celebration ot the '10th anniversary of the foundling of the New York art center revealed a wide divergence of opinion on the state of American culture. It was helld on one that Americans are demanding beauty in utilitarian objects, as illustrated In Mr.

Ford's capitulation to stream lines, and that they have a hlrh appreciation et Dure art. well established custom. Upon my return to the stables, a little' worse for wear, Guiseppe was tritim.phanr. almost pleased." "Did I not warn the signorina?" A Happy Little War. Brooklyn, May 28.

Best-Worst Government Editor Brooklyn Daily Eagle: What with Judjes resigning, being indicted, fingerprinted nd fired, it seems1 that some of your readers are losing faith in our system of government. The hard fact la that while we have what is perhapg the nest form of government ever devised, we nave never had the substance of good government in this country. It did seem in 1789 that our Constitution realized all that Plato dreamed ot, and William Tell fought tor, but after 141 long years of democracy, we have the most inefficient and expensive government on earth. Is It any wonder that one ot the best-known American journalists announced yesterday tbnt the statesmen of Europe made our own look like mice? I am not surprised that your Mr. Macauley won the Pulitzer Prize for his cartoons, but think his best drawing was that picturing Uncle Sam as Little Jack Horrer.

I have been watching Charley Macauley's work for the past 20 years, and the Little Jack Horner one as superb. We are a nation of little Jack Homers. HYACINTH'S Brooklyn, May 28. An Episode Editor Brooklyn Daily Eagle: Southbound train In Manhattan. Elderly gentleman reading an evening newspaper.

Seated next him, an attractive young woraar with a bright little Last summer at a dinner party, by on cnarges or vagrancy and other petty counts 3houId deflate tha 'angster's ego and seve ely damagn his prestige In the underworld. It also may topple him from the pedestal of heroism on which be ba: sat too long, to the detriment of American youth. Certain types of minds may exalt the bandit who gets away with murder, sways political groups and engineers gitantio illegal ccups, but when he is thrown into jail as a common va-rant the garment of is stripped from him. He is then reduced (o thn-level of the common bum and pett- mlsdemanant Capone and his Uk have thrived on this heroism stuff. It Is about, time they were shown up for what they are thieves and murderers, whose bravery lies onlv In their pis- tola and their political pull.

For a little war so recently started that In the Though the new bridge over the Mississippi connecting Vlcksburg with Louisiana is opened, we suspect that if the "Father of Waters" does not still go "unvexe'd to the sea," it Is more on account of flood icommlsslons than because ot the new link In a coast-to-coast highway. way of conversation. I asked my book trade is getting along famously. Pub' dinner companion if the old prince still were living. "No," he said Ushers have become aligned In opposing camps and there are few neutrals.

The issue, as every curtly. That should have warned me, but I went Dlundering on. "No? bookworm should know, Is that of selling books When did die?" I don't know. On the other side it was argued that the people did not demand beauty In utilitarian oblects. as evidenced by their accentance of the form of the telephone Instrument and the heaMnv rnrlintnr nH still more urtlv.

"His sins, bow art Rlfat Bey, a Constantinople lawyer, has to answer criminal libel proceedings merely for at $1 not all books, but classes of fiction and other works that have heretofore brought a larger sum. One group of publishers favors this they?" I persisted. This was too much. "Signora," he said earnestly nlease do not continue to sneak that their love of art was mostly policy of price slashing; the other Is opposed our foreign trade? Gas Charges Not So Simple. and sees the publishing business facing ruin that name.

You oring misfortune I pretension. not only to yourself but to me." ne braves the Jeers of the calling the Minister of Justice an idiot In a letter to Mustapha Kemal. Yet Mahmoud Essad Bey, the Minister, having tried to coerce and intimidate newspapers would almost Justify the terms used In the estimation of most Occidentals. The public is, or should be, in a Joyous mood. tiuiiuu'-Hiea to aevmre inai mere The Public Service Commission has no simple And so should publishers of both groups.

ts truth on both sides. The Amer Low Ways on Highways An American woman, married Into task in dealing with the Initial charge of a do! ican people are demanding more beauty In the thinrs which serve the Italian nobility, told me th's lSe awry. yuuug i uuc- th ax a month for gas. The demand made on the Brooklyn Borough Oas Company for cost It is grand and glorious that there should be a war over books. Such wars should be encouraged.

Every book row Is good if it stimulates discussion, and the worst thing that could More than one European visitor has found or wnom she luted ana aamirea nf it Han rrancuoo ChrotuciaJ Sufficient commentary on' highway manners: If you try to be polite they think you are trying to be funny. naa oegun 10 mane qu ie a name and wWcn chavB profanity altogether too common in the United States. But what's to be expected when the whole world has only 32,713,284 telephones and Vre measurably improved within a slun tn Rome. He acquired a vei-r com8rativ.Iy receut tme by good practice. In the midst of his of mint- a.

19,341,259 are on American soil? The nation I Islam and the Negro success a rumor began to circulate fig The radlo ta iii.ujtT.Mon. that he had the Evil Eye. Almost. I one has onlv to romm. th r.

I that has not the defects ot Its qualities is still to be discovered. overnight his practice diminished: ireivinur sets of five venrs aim rith he was shunned on all sides; he be- the present ones to get the point girl In r.er lap, both apparently By John Alden I Tha Moslems hava no color vrajurileaa. and American Naaroea hating iyndjliyt muni Buiiu9t hii irat; a lew ouects are still unal- returning from a shopping expedi If customs men seeking to mark something ob In despair he went to his frien-f i fected bv the demand for erace feara. legal dlacrlminatlon and aoolaj oatra- tion. scene defaced a gift copy of "A Story Teller's Holiday," Inscribed by the author.

"To Edinund A cartoon In the newspaper of civa- mii bln the American lady, who had both I nnd pleising colors Is rot evidenced position and riches, and told her his that the public is satisfied with story. She was Justly lndienant. I them, but that the campaign is St. George killing the dragon under-Domilam rarmlnf ra- What nonsense!" she said. "I will not, yet complete.

l'. 'u Anatolia. Elgnw-thrtt famUla Gosse from his old friend, George Moore, July 23. 1910," the offenders ought to lose their jobs. Vandalism Is as bad as obscenity, it not UiVCiuii.

wtilll, ilia give a dinner partv and Invite all my The public is undeniably much friends. You will be among them more Immune from attack in the and they will not dare to mistreat of bcai'ty It has set up In worse, and is a lot easier to prove. you in my house." eMlifori'n art than It la In Its The young man went away greatlv or pure art The people cheered. Every one accepted an. can scarcely he hld at fnu't.

how- happen to Iterate America would be for book wars to cease end for publishers to sign a disarmament treaty. And since there is a book war it may be Just as well that the price of the publishers' wares is Involved. There are, of course, two sides to this question. Is true of most controversies. In fact, that Is why they are called controversies.

Books can be published to sell for $1, as certain publishers are demonstrating. It Is true, also, that other books cannot be manufactured at that price. Curiously enough It possible to print the best and perhaps the worst books at the lower price. That is a hopeful aspect of the situation. A large part of the great store of classic literature has long been available at reasonable prices, and It has always been easy to buy certain kinds ot modern books at prices considerably below the sums charged for so-called light fiction.

This leaves a large field to be covers by books that range In price from $1 to wha'. you have to pay tor rare editions. Book publishers are under a peculiar handicap in the age of mass production and nationn) advertising. The publisher cannot advertise his trademark as the pickle or automobile manufacturer can and does. He cannot guarantee the standard ot his own goods.

He may put out everything from detective stories to modern verse. He cannot even guarantee the successlvt books of a given author. There Is one thing, however, that the puo- everthln'i wes iovelv. The evening ever, when thre Is se little astree-of the dinner arrived, and with It the exnerts as to what bean one bv one ye re-' Is riot art. It was chared grets: this one jailed away bv brei- ft the convention that neonle who data relating to this charge points to one of the difficulties encountered.

In theory each user should pay for what ne sets. Each user gets two things a quantity of gas and a meter service by means of which lie may take much or little, when and as he pleases, Instead of ordering this commodity In advance, in stated quantities, like shirts or eggs. The gas as a commodity costs something in any case, and Its sale by the meter method lorms another element of cost, separate and largely unrelated to the quantity of gas con sumed by the customer. On this theory th? company would be Justified in Imposing a service charge hateful word or such an Initial charge on a small quantity ot gas by the month as would constitute a virtual service charge without resort that Invidious term. But in practice who shall say what the meter bervice costs the company? It turned out not long ago that owners of many premises were submeterlng electric current and making money out of the proceeding money that the purveyors would rather have kept for themselves.

Thus exploded the Idea that a service charge-formal or virtual Is always a matter on which the company merely hopes to break even. Does the Initial charge of a dollar a month for 200 feet of gas merely cover the company or dors it allow an undue profit on service to small and not very wealthy consumers? That question lies behind the demand of Commissioner Lunn for data. Nor does the difficulty end there. Thousands vt ordinary consumers do not see why they tin to to from Detroit. Newa-1 From every stormv wind that blowi.

From every swelling tide of woes: There is a calm, a sure retreat Tls found where Moslems pray and meet Though Christians deal in waya unkind; Mohammefans are color-blind; There is a calm, a sure retreat, Where true equality Is sweet Behind an Anatolian plow The Ne-ro may be useful Is I calm, a sure retreat Where restful minds cheer weary feet. ness, another ind'tnosed. The up nc i'l'i'ii cu luvcia ui nri were "tiffl" wih rhpflt) ad uninteresting ori-ts and that in only relatively few homes could be shot wts that not one single guest came to the party. The hostess wa oht-ed to ttmt some things are not to be combated. Th" "7, mint or watercolor with old-fashioned courtesy, tears out the and hands it to his little neighbor, with the following results; "Mama, what is that funny "That's a dragon.

Lilla." "What's a dragon?" "It's something like a. crocodile." "Why don't they have dragons in the part roo? I saw crocodiles in the park oo." "There ire no more live dragons; thej are all 'Then why didn't St George catch thtt dragon in place ot killing him and put him in the zoo so little oov and girls- could see him ana feed him peanuts? Did draKona useo to -like "The dravr.n was a very wicked beast and St. George had to kill him. do not whether dragons peanuts or "But Marr.a hasn't 6t Oeorpe got very funny clothes? He hasn't vot ry." At this point the train pulled yoimct do-tor Orally took up his residence In London, where he ha-i a fine practice todiy. Memorial Day The breath of May Is in the breeze; Come, do not let the dirges creep Across the open, where unmoved, Our warriors sleep their happy sleep: It there are shadows on the mounds We deck today, we know the sun Will bravely scon disperse them, so Let not a shadow rest upon Our hearts, for In the spring's rebirth.

Yea speaking through Its soul, It's breath, We hear, "Tears are unworthy here, Because ye know 'there is no And so wherever In our land Our happy warriors sleep, or far In Britain's land, or graves in France, Or city where the Lindens are. Go tell those who do mourn today (Thou voice of springtime) one has said. "Throi'' spring's rebirth from dark the earth. Canst thou not see, there are no dead?" HELEN CHASE. fhW is whaps dnlirable.

but It Is much more Important that the "ennle be ireneu'lv lntercted In art end b-antv than that they shotiM II adont the same Identical One man's art may Swords and Gloves Though lower wages go with Joes, Angora brooks no lynching mobs) Trier is a calm. sure retreat Where line security complete. TNewark Svtnlnt trWv re another anathema, hnt German university duels are de- tht vhv and iml-e and fended by the Society of Surgeons a chance for exchange of opinions, of that republic as being. In the first place, less dangerous than box- Tlnr'c tUr PmMpm in, and. In the serond Place, ruite 1 51 lnc 1 rui-'u rarmlc-s to the contestcints wh-n Btata held under proper conditions.

As It Isn't to mrch the original cost a matter ot tact, say tiie doctors, of a glider as it is keeping it up. Yet from each swelling tide of woe. Few Negro folk will go, although There Is a calm, a sure retreat -Where prayer means faith, and Moslems meet lishers can do: They can get together and ad- i..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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