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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 3

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 3

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Brooklyn, New York
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THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK. TUESDAY, MARCH '26, 1920. Boy Gets $35,000 Verdict TAXI if Wreck of Plane in Which 4 Died "tiP HW" DR. KLYDE'S WILL CALLED FORGERY BY HIS DAUGHTER Bulk of Large Estate Goes to Son of Deceased's Second Wife-Trial April 15. AS GAB DRIVERS BATTLE BANDITS LABOR BILLS GET DEATH BUN FHOM TRIEIDS1G1P.

Multiple Dwellings Law and Merit Bill Pawd in Haste. A iff 2.. iff- TZJs 1 'II .1,. This Ryan monoplane, with J. L.

Campion, pilot, and three thrill-seeking youths, cracked up on a fog-capped mountain near Mt. Gretna, yesterday. All four were killed in the crash. This picture shows the ruins of the plane. A sealed verdict in the Brooklyn Supreme Court awarded $35,000 damages to Sammy Mandleman, 6, for injuries in an accident.

Dad won S7.000. This picture shows Sammy smiling as nurses tell him the good news In the hospital. DAILY AIRPLANE RECORD; ARRIVALS, DEPARTURES WOMAN IS FOUND BEATEN TO DEATH IN TENEMENT HALL Believed Lured to Place and Attacked -Crime Scene 2 Blocks From Her Home. Chairs and Bullets Fly in New Lots Ave. Store as Holdup Is Frustrated.

Flying chairs and revolvers weapons In a melee at 212 New Lois early today, when 3 bandlM tried to stage a holdup on a crowd of muscular taxicab chauffeurs. Klein, 35. of 738 New Jersey avx was struck by a bullet beneath the heart, and today Is In a serious condition In the BrowtihVille and New York Hospital. Klein, who is a well-to-do owner in the business of renting taxieabs out to chauffeurs, was chatting wiUi his men In the little cigar and candy store at the above address, which Is kept by Isidore Goldsmith, Two men walked in and bought a pack of cigarettes. They drew their guns.

A third sat in a black sedan outside the door. It was 1:30 a.m. "Put I'p Your Hands!" "Put up your hands!" said one ot the guiuncn. "Everybody, up wit'a them." "We want added the other. Klein was in the back of the store, w' i -wo carat diamond ring on his r.

and $150 In his pocket, "Here I am, what do you asked Klein. One ot the Intruders started to search the taxicab magnate. Suddenly a chair came fllng at ilia head of the other bandit. He ducked. Both stepped back and opened (ire.

Chairs and bullets Hew thick and fast. The bandits slipped out with, no loot. Klein had fallen to the floor. Detectives of the Miller ave. station rushed to the scene.

Then they went to talk with Klein, who had already been taken to the hospital in a cab. Six young bandits, accused ot staging 80 holdups In Brooklyn stores in the last three months, will be arraigned today on charges ot assault and robbery before Magistrate Mark Rudich In Bridge Plaa Court. Two of the men, Andrew Mason, 20, of 164 S. 4th and William Humbert, 21. of 168 S.

4th both Jamaica, were arrested yesterday by detectives of the Clymer st. station, who said they saw the pair fleeing from a holdup in Manuel Basch's grocery store at 274 Hcwei st. After an all-day grilling the two implicated four other men, whom they accused of participating with them In numerous robberies. They named John Mason, 24. of Grand a brother of Andrew; Stanley F'relinsky, 20.

of 75 Columbia George Gardiner, 34, of 325 Division all ot Brooklyn, and Charles Byloza, 32, of 341 Wylock Mas-peth, Queens. Six Held In Theft King. Detectives John O'Brien and Frank Brierton of the Jamaica squad arrested six men early today connection with thefts amounting to more than $10,000 stolen In the last nine months from the American Express Company offices at the IOng Island Railroad station, Archer pi, and Sutphin Jamaica. Michael Carbone. 22.

of 145-07 Glassboro Jamaica; Harry Schroeder, 23, of 150-37 115th drive, Jamaica, and James Franzlno. 2J, of 109-36 153d Jamaica, em-ployees of the company, will be arraigned today In the Jamaica Magistrate's Court on charges of grand larceny. URGES BROOKLYN CITIZENS TO UNITE ON BOROPROBLEMS L. H. Brown, Chamber of Commerce Official, Stresses Need for Improvements.

Lawson H. Brown, assistant secretary of the Brooklyn Chamber of Commerce, last night broadcast an appeal to all civic bodies in Brooklyn to line up with the Brooklyn Civic Council. In this way. he said, all of the boro's civic problems can be pressed for solution before the city authorities with the force ot the entire civic representation ot Brooklyn making them respected at Cltv Hall. Mr.

Brown spoke over station II. "Within the governing board of the Greater City of New York," he said, "this great boro has only two clearly identified Brooklyn votes out of a total of 16 votes. It Is necessary that these two votes be reinforced with a strong and united public opinion which cannot be misunderstood or misinterpreted by the three city officials whose combined nine votes may at any time dominate the Board of Estimate and Apportionment." "MARSH FIRE" TOMORROW In tomorrow' I inttallmmnt of Matttl How Farnham'i novel, now running in thm feature jc-(ion of The Eagle, the ttory of Michael Fielding' cave man wooing of Eleanor Strutherg and her retentment of it it told. Her anger to uptett the (rnu-ouj lover that he if unable to concentrate on hi buiine, tor-get to eat, cannot eleep and tpend the night walking the ttreett. All thi tervet greatly to in-tereit hi Syrchetter neighbor, who do not fail to keep clot tab on every movement of their leading manufacturer in particular hi love affair.

McCUNN TO ASK RETURN TOMORROW OF $250J)0 RUM He Will Declare That Liquor Was Covered by Permit Gotten in 1922. One of Brooklyn's most interesting and complicated secrets is due for an airing In public tomorrow. Not much may come of it, but, nevertheless, the story of how James McCunn came to have the International Postal Supply Company's new building at 632 Prospect pi. loaded with liquor is scheduled to be told. McCunn, who is indignant over the inference that the building was used as a bootlegging headquarters, is going into the Federal Court here to ask that it all be returned to htm.

William De Groot, United States Attorney, says he Is going to battle McCunn at every step. His chief ally is to be William C. Calhoun, the chief of the under-cover agents for Prohibition enforcement In the city. While the court may decide whether McCunn actually owns the liquor legally, there is one outstanding situation in the case which probably will not come up. That concerns that wait of nine days, after the building was raided, before Calhoun and his men obtained a court order permitting them to take the books of McCunn's business and examine them.

Calhoun's reason for the delay is that it was necessary to trace the seized liquor about $250,000 worth according to estimate before any such steps could be legally taken. The books showed, when they were seized, a large amount of legitimate business: McCunn claims the liquor was pre-Prohlbition stuff and that he had a permit to keep it. The permit bureau 4n Manhattan shows that he did have such a permit granted in 1922, and so a knotty question has arisen. Is the liquor found at 632 Prospect pi. the same liquor for which the permit was granted? If why wasn't it stored in a warehouse, as the permit orders? Was it transported through the city at any time without a transportation permit? These are the questions which are expected to come up in court.

It is McCunn's contention that the seized liquor is the very same stuff that he had a permit coverage for. PETER MAPES Huntington, L. March 26 Peter Mapes, 59, a lifelong resident of Centerport, was buried in the West Neck Catholio Cemetery here this morning, following funeral services in St. Patrick's Catholic Church The Rev. Thomas F.

Murray offi ciated. Mr. Mapes was born in Center-port, the son Of William H. and Margaret Cronln Mapes. He is sur vived Dy one sister.

Beaten lo death, the body of Anna Yolk, about 29, of 79 Baxter Manhattan, was found shortly after 8 o'clock this morning in the rear of the hallway of a tenement at 25 Mulberry Manhattan. The body was found by Enrico EsposlU, janitor of the tenement. The clothing had been ripped olf. None of the tenants had heard aiy disturbance in the lower hallway during the night. Ambulance Surgeon Spickler said the woman had probably been dead about four hours.

Her Jaw had been broken and she had been beaten on the head with some unknown Instrument. The woman's home is about two blocks from the place where Fhe met her death. Police believe she was lured or dragged into the hallway and attacked. According to detectives, the woman was seen In the neighborhood yesterday, apparently intoxicated. Jewel Robbey Suspect Freed for Foiling Jailbreak Newark, March 26 Herman Lln-derman, 43, of New York City, described In police circles as the cleverest acetylene torch safe robber In the United States, was again a free man today, with trie chance to "go straight" he desired, a.s a result of his helping New York State authorities to frustrate a Jail delivery by the Whlttemore gang In Danne-mora Prison a few months ago.

Last Tuesday he was found guilty here In connection with the $35,000 Jewelry robbery from the safe of the Alberts Si Kautzman Company, Ir-vington, on Jan. 19, 1924. Yesterday Judge Flannagan sentenced Underman to seven years In prison, fined him $2,000 and then suspended sentence. 'V 5, Jenny JN-4, French type, owners Union Airway, Pine Brook, N. J.

Arrived 12:05 p.m., returned Departures Today. From Mitchel Field For West Point, Major Stratemeyer of West Point, accompanied by Miss Fetchet, daughter of Chief of Air Corps, in a Loening Amphibian. Departed 1 p.m. From Mitchel Field For Philadel-phia, Lieutenant Johnson, U. 8.

with one passenger in an O-2-U plane. AVIATION NEWS Fog, rain and generally poor flying weather has resulted in a minimum of flying activity at metropolitan fields the last day or two. Another new international air line, running between the United states and Argentina, is belna planned by Pan-American Airways. of which Colonel Lindbergh is tecnmcai aaviser. Negotiations are under wav in Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro for the early establishment of the new service, whose route will include the cities named.

Authorities at Mitchel Field were notified last nieht that, torn nlnnp en route to the field halted their nignts because of fog. One was piloted by Lt. W. E. Burn-side, who came down at Philadelphia, and Lt.

Edmund R. Gaines was at the controls of the other, heading in from Buffalo. The latter landed at Schenectady. Both planes are Curtiss Falcons. McMANUS MOVES TO GAIN FREEDOM George McManus, who has been in jail since Nov.

27 under indictment for the murder of Arnold Rothstein, will have his chance for release on ball tomorrow. His attorney, James D. C. Murray, today served notice on District Attorney Banton that he would apply for ball before Supreme Court Justice Levy at 10 o'clock tomorrow. The notice complied with the order given by Justice Levy on Jan.

25, when he said that he would hear bail arguments in 60 days if Mc-McManus is still in the Tombs, and Banton said he would oppose his release. City College Students Start Spring Recess The annual Easter vacation want ed by the trustees of the College of the City of New York to the students began yesterday. The men and women in all the branches of the college are thus the first in the public school system to be given their spring respite. The number of students totals 21.988. Of these 5.416 take courses in the Brooklyn and Queens centers.

Classes will resume April 1. On that day also the semi-annual reexaminations for students who have received conditions in subjects studied the previous semester will begin. Hold On That the document submitted as the last will of Dr. Charles Klyde. who amassed a fortune by building and operating Coney Island apartment houses, is a "forgery," was the charge made today by his 17-year- old daughter in an affidavit contesting the will.

Surrogate Wlngate set April 15 for jury trial of the case. Dr. Klyde died at his home, 834 Bushwlck on Feb. 16. His will was dated Oct.

30, 1928, and signed by Nathan B. Robbins, Benedetto A. Palumbo and John N. Geidal as witnesses. Under this will the bulk of his estate goes to Charles Leonard Klyde, son of Dr.

Klyde's seconj wife. Julia, Dr. Klyde's daughter by a first marriage, who is married now to Maurice Rosenthal, a lawyer, and living at 8835 23d receives but $500 out of an estate which her attorneys, Galitzka and Flnkelstein, estimate is worth $750,000. Allege Indue Influence. Charles Leonard Klyde, as well as Mrs.

Klyde's other child, Renee, were both adopted by Dr. Klyde at the time of his second marriage. Mis. Klyde at that time also adopted Julia. Julia's attorneys allege undue influence on the part of the widow "or some other person or persons" they claim the decedent did not possess testamentary capacity when he made his will, and they charge that lt is a forgery.

These charges are denied by the attorneys for Mrs. Klyde. KIERAN INSTALLED AS HUNTER'S HEAD Dr. James M. Kieran, third president of Hunter College, was officially installed this morning at the college, 68th st.

and Park Manhattan. Dr. Harry P. Swift, chairman of the board of trustees, officiated. Dr.

Kieran has been connected with Hunter College for 25 years, his last office being dean of college of education. Dr. Swift, in a brief talk, announced that ground would be broken within three months for the first unit of new Hunter College at Jerome Park site, Bronx. The buildings will be ready by fall 1930. Aldermanic President Joseph Mc-Kee, in an address, sharply criticized Dr Harold Clark of Teachers' College, Columbia, for stating that a college education Is a detriment to an individual's earning power.

Of the 2.000 present, 800 were from Brooklyn and Queens. Among those in the academic procession were Dr. Frank D. Blodgett of Adelphi; Dr. Parke R.

Colbe, president Polytechnic Institute; Dean George R. Hardie of Long Island University, and Dr. Ernest J. Straubel, dean of Polytechnic. Rabbi Halperin Makes Palestine Aid Plea Rabbi Harry Halperin of the Ocean Parkway Jewish Center spoke last night at the open forum of the Young Israel of Brooklyn, 583 Bedford ave.

Dr. Halperin told of the sufferings and hardships he saw while in Palestine, and urged the audience to contribute to the United Palestine Fund. He illustrated his talk with stereoptlcon views. CHRISTIAN BAUR DIES; RETIRED BUILDER WAS 81 Christian Baur, former well-known builder In the South Mid-wood section and one of the original trustees of the Kings Highway Savings Bank, died yesterday in his 82d year at his home, 464 E. 24th st.

He was ill only six days with erysipelns. Mr. Baur retired from active business about 20 years ago. He is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Wllhel-mina K.

Vom Lehn; four sons, William Frank George and John J. Baur, and eight grandchildren. One of his grandsons is Franklin Baur, prominent radio tenor. Services will be held Thursday evening at 7:45 o'clock and burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. To Your JAMAICA NEW YORK Knule It arena.

Capitol llallilinv. By CLINTON I. MOSHER. Albany, March 26 Aroused from its doze of three months duration, the Legislature had its eyes wide open today and was working at top speed to clear the decks in time to start home the end of the week. The Senate remained in session untily 1:30 o'clock this morning, passing a number of Important bills, including the hotly contested amendment to the Multiple Dwellings Law.

The Assembly worked until after midnight, the outstanding event being the slaughtering of the Democratic laDor bills by the Republican majority. Both houses reconvened at 11 o'clock this morning and continued the mad rush to clean up the calendar. The fact that but a few days remain in which to round out the record with speeches for home consumption has elevated to the soap box senators and Assemoiymen heretofore content to allow the floor leaders to do the debating. Rollcalls and Oratory. The session has become a wild carnival of rollcalls and fine oratory.

The dignified Senators are eating their lunches from paper plates on the corners of their desks. Over In the Assembly the members are tearing up bills by the handfuls for the paper showers that forecast the end of the session as accurately as the first flurry of snow announces the arrival of winter. But the mad rush, according to present indications, will not prevent "an extraordinary session of the Legislature to provide money to run the Labor and Law departments. Governor Roosevelt Is expected to sit tight and veto the Republican budget bills that would require the heads of these departments to seek approval of the chairmen of the finance committees in spending their lump Little Chance for Agreement. Roosevelt probably will bring the Senators and Assemblymen back here on Monday unless an agreement is reached, and the chances are 10 to 1 that none will be arrived at.

Then the Republicans will pass another set of budget bills and dump them on the Governor's desk. Roosevelt may even go so far as to call another special session the following Monday. The budget row has been reduced to an endurance contest. In the end, if the majority party sticks to Its guns, the Governor will have to approve the bills, being satisfied that his protest has been vigorous enough to satisfy the record on which he intends to appeal to the people next fall for a Democratic majority in the Legislature. Divide on Methods.

The Law and Labor departments can't get along without money any more than the average father can keep a roof over his brood without a ateady income. Roosevelt knows that. He contends that under the Smith plan for reorganization these two departments need lump sum appropriations to the reorganization. The Republicans argue that under the finance law the chairmen of the finance committees must stand as watchdogs over the department heads who get their money In lump' sums lest there be waste of the taxpayers' contributions to the government. One side or the other has to give In before July 1, when the till runs dry, otherwise the game of put and take could be played all summer.

Says G. 0. V. Ignored Will of People. The Republicans bolstered up their side of the controversy last night with an opinion from Attorney General Hamilton Ward, Repr'ilican.

which held that the majority party ss within its legal rights. Roosevelt countered with a statement In which he said there are twr; sides to that question, adding thnt the Republicans have ignored tr will of the people who passed the amendment to the Constitution providing for the troublesome executive budget. There were those among the majority party who saw in the Governor's statement the possibility of conciliation, but the latest advices from the Executive Offices ware to the effect that Roosevelt has not deserted his original stand to perfect the record by protesting to tfce last ditch against an interpretation of the' budget amendment, which would conflict with his idea of how it should be handled. Row Over Taxes. Then there is the row over the gas tax and tax reduction.

Both parties agree to the 2-cent levy on gasoline. The Republicans stand firm for the elimination of the direct tax on real estate and the raising 'of the exemption on Income taxes for single persons from $1,500 to $2,500, and for married persons from $3,500 to $4,000. Roosevelt wants a straight 20 percent cut on all incomes. The debate on the Multiple-Dwellings bill was the feature event on last night's card in the Senate. It passed by a vote of 28 to 22.

The Democrats, with the exception of Stephen P. Burkhard and Alfred J. Kennedy of Queens, stood with Mayor Walker and voted against the measure, senator George n. Fearon, Republican, Syracuse, joined hands with the Democrats but the rest of his party jammed the bill through. Walker's objection to the bill was that it violated the principle of home rule.

Senator Charles E. Russell, Democrat, of Brooklyn, opposed the bill on the ground that the up-State solons were attempting to prescribe for the ills of New York City, which alone is affected by the measure. Senator William Lathrop Love spoke along the same line. The Senate, by a vote of 26 to 25, passed the so-called Merit Bill, which would compel district superintendents and high school principals to pass examinations prepared by the board of examiners instead of being appointed by the Board of Education without examination. The Democrats voted In the negative.

Over in the Assembly the City Conventions Bill, originally designed to prevent Congressman F. L. La Guaidia from maKtng a primary fight for the Republican nomination for Mayor this fall, was passed by a vote of 84 to 54. the minority party opposing passage. The Assemblymen got into a spirited debate over the labor bills, on behalf of which Roosevelt recenUy sent a special message to the lower house.

To keep the record straight when defeat seemed certain. Minority Leader Maurice Bloch made a number, Electric Utility Service No Dollar You Spend Buys More Value Flying Conditions (S a.m.). Visibility Three-quarters of a mile; fog and smoke. Ceiling Overcast sky. Wind Northwest, eight miles at surface.

Humidity 86 percent. Barometer 29.83; rising. Forecast. Flying forecast for this afternoon Metropolitan area: Shifting winds, with showers, probable thunderstorms; surface winds mostly moderate northwest, west gales aloft; varying visibility. Arrivals Today.

At Naval Reserve Aviation Base From Lakehurst, N. Lt. L. A. Moebus, U.

S. commanding officer with mechanic in a Consolidated plane from Finucane searching party. Arrived 12:25 p.m. At Mitchel Field From Washington, D. Captain- Dingerpilot, accompanied by Congressman James, chief of Military Affairs Committee; Gen.

James E. Fetchet and daughter, in the famous Question Mark Fokker C-2 Army transport. Arrived 1 p.m. At Mitchel Field From Schenectady, N. Lt.

E. T. Gaines in an O-ll Curtiss Falcon plane. Arrived 11:30 a.m. At Newark Airport From Teter-boro Airport-rR.

L. Perry, owner and pilot in a Challenger plane. Arrived 10:30 a.m., returned 1:20 p.m. At Newark Airport From Pine Brook, N. D.

Probst, pilot, accompanied by C. L. Newman in a BURGLARY SUSPECT LINKED TO MURDER Samuel Goltz, 22, who said he lived at 345 W. 45th Manhattan, was arrested at Atlantic and Pennsylvania aves. by Detectives Miller and Beron of the Miller ave.

station last night on a charge of burglary. After his fingerprints were compared, he was held on the additional charge of being Implicated in the fatal shooting of Dr. Jacob Gross, a dentist, of 29 Columbus Manhattan, on Oct. 28, 1927. In the burglary case the complainant was Edward Sachs of 3923 92d who charged that Goltz, on Feb.

17 last, broke into the office of the Embassy Theater, Fulton and Richmond and stole $500. Mystery Veils Lindgren Alleged Slander Suit Considerable mystery veils a threatened alleged slander suit for $250,000 damages, for which a summons has been served on Julia Claussen, opera singer ot.the Metropolitan forces, by Lydla Lindgren of Flushing. Chances Airplanes Win have specialized in South Atlantic flights and made fine records for themselves in hopping from Europe to Brazil. Ignaclo Jimenez and Francisco Iglesias took long chances in their single-motored Spanish airplane. In distance several fliers have surpassed their record.

Last year Fer-rarin and Delprette flew from Rome to Brazil by way of the Cape Verde Islands, covering 4,600 miles in 59 hours. But the Spaniards scored a notable achievement in travelling from Seville, Spain to Bahla, Brazil, a distance of 4,000, in a single forty-four hour hop. The time seems ripe for the initiation of a trans-Atlantic mail service by three motored seaplanes. The Zeppelin service which has been promised for several years is much less likely to materialize now that heavier-than-alr machines have progressed so far. ADVERTISEMENT.

STOP child's cold with tOUlMTorp. latest scientific discovery Try safc.quick treatment on your child. Put dome Mi tol up the 4j none with a dropper! 'J at the first. col J.Mlitnl check a running nose. Re lieveMnulflra.

Makes breathlngearier. Oct a bottle today. Your druggist has it. 1 1 gffSSi -1 Today's Big News By. H.

V. KALTENBORN REDUCING OUR INVENTORY Supplies worth millions of dollars arc kept in storerooms located at strategic points in the territory we serve. These storerooms arc open twenty-four hours a day to issue lamps, meters, machine parts, cables, transformers, street lampposts, any of the hundreds of items we have on hand to meet ordinary demands or emergencies. Savings Account! It is a tribute to PRUDENCE-BONDS that so many people want to close their savings account to buy them but wc could not be a party to such a proposition and be worthy of their confidence we recommend a savings account! that is the first and most vital step in Thrift and no investment, however good, should induce you to abandon it then buy PRUDENCE-BONDS to supplement your savings, but not as a substitute for a savings let us help you build your financial structure but do not ask us to imperil the foundation! TOur descriptive literature wiilll Hjnterest you. Write for it today.

tPrudence Company Vnitt bArmin rfKim Ytrk Sum Bsniin Dtfl 162 Remsen St. 331 Madisoa Ave. 161-10 Jamaica Av. To hold too many supplies is expensive; to hold too few might he disastrous. Through unified operations of our companies have been able to pool the stock in our storerooms for use wherever need arises.

Thus we may reduce our inventory and cut our expenses. Wc shall save about a hundred thousand dollars on rabies alone in the next year in this manner. Wc consider it a duty to operate this business as economically as is consistent with supplying high-quality service. Stocks Down Rebel Stocks go down as money rates go up. Wall Street had a real fright today after yesterday's preliminary scare.

When call money jumped to 15 percent at noon lots of stocks were dumped for whatever they would bring and scores of Issues touched new low prices for the year. The big bunkers have mode up their minds to let the market take care of itself. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon gave the lead not long ago when he said: "It's a good time to buy bonds." Those who followed his advice are not sorry today and may be glad by tomorrow. Too much margin buying and too much discounting of future profits had forced stock prices to an artificial level. Thousands of amateur stock gamblers, lured into the market by advancing prices, are being scared out by falling prices.

Fundamental business conditions are as sound as they were a week ago when stocks were still going up. Most recent reports of earnings show gains. But so much Wall Street gambling has been done with borrowed money that higher money rates squeeze lots of gamblers into selling. And when the little gamblers have become sadder, wiser and poorer the big gamblers whose manipulations have helped to force prices down, will buy at the bottom and. then force them up.

Mr. rebel gentleman from Mexico, tells The Eaele today that General Calles has been so victorious that he is about to be defeated. According to him, most of Mexico is pro-rebel and the Federal armies are about to have their communications in several places. itoubtless General Culles has hard fighting ahead of him. Perhaps som of his scattered forces will be defeated.

But this will delay without preventing the ultimate Federal victory. The rebels have yet to score one military success. The Mexican Government plus the help of the American Government could defeat the revolution even though nine-tenths of the country's population were backing it. But stamping out rcbeksmudges will take time. The South Atlantic has been crossed successfully for the seventh time.

This compares with one successful West to East flight across the North Atlantic. Italians. Spanish smmsft mitypsn atewa 5rd Stmt uvw vabit President BROOKLYN NEW YORK OFFICES OPEN MONDAYS UNTIL 9 P. M. rim mn mm The New York Edison Company The United Electric Light and Power Company Brooklyn Edison Company, me.

New York and Querut Electric Light ami Tower Company E. 1428 TirH PRUDENCE COMPANY, INC. Addren NnrM Oftc GENTLEMEN: Without ablltn on mr pirt pleuc Mfld dachptrT Uicnnu bot Pnuicao-Boufc. The Yonkers Electric IJght and Power Company NAME- ADDRESS. int r.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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