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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 2

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 2

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1933 Xavv Arcs in Flight That Upset Balbo's Record Beauty Shop Code Blocked CAR STONED Cuban Jim a To Retire and Pick President Bv Terrorism 2 'A n. 1 fl E' End Food Aid For Jobless On Sept. 22 About 40,000 Families Will Be Affected by Emergency Group Act The Emergency Unemployment Relief Committee will discontinue the distribution of food to the families of New York's unemployed on Sept. 22, Frank Kidde, chairman of the food and clothing division, announced last night. An average of about 40,000 families Plan Aftrr Demands ji J( rrr Leaders Fear Sabotage-Store Here Attacked-2 New Disputes Arise Strikes, alleged terrorism and H'df hein-latrinent fontinnrd from Fasr 1 threats of strikes are keeping thousands away from their normal em-uloyment, it was reported at NRA the I A.

it 7L. 1 I rrfri rMPPfint merit nv headquarters in Mannattan day. This is the third time since tne 'recovery movement got under full i swing locally that labor troubles have engaged the attention or Grover Whalen, City Chairman, and i his stac. The first was the strike IIP' Junta "All officers are constantly re-frmne from rorrx.t.ils and rnliMed mm in this movi wnt." Frrre Mid later. "Thfv nrr icxs thr Affirm to resume mrrrranda and act for the wrvvini nf thn fnrnirr Onvrrn-rwnt.

"Ilr offsrrr-. limvrvrr. arc advis-in; amaiM any violent men 115 in rrd'T avoid and they are hnrnre tr-a' ho present, Oov-rirwiit will realise the situation and surrender power to avoid threa'n of American Intervention." no formal demand apparently was made by his organization. Joaquin Martinez Saenz, leader of the A. D.

C. Revolutionary Pocieiv. faid his group also was of 60.000 dress workers and the second the walkout of 35,000 employes of cleaning and dyeing establishments. The newest difficulties Involve beauty shop employes, merchant tailors and specialty bakers. Charge Terrorism Leading beauty shop owners complained yesterday that the "chiseling fringe of their Industry was resorting to terrorism and sabotage to prevent an agreement on a code.

Pottsville, Sept. 9 () An automobile carrying William Carey, former president of Madison Square Garden, New York, was stoned today as several hundred pickets again prevented contractors from working on a coal shipping operation at Jackson. Two men were arrested but later released. Carey is a vice president of one of the two companies which have the contract to strip the soil from the coal vein. presviic for the return of the An investigation was immediately started by Benjamin H.

Freedman of the compliance staff. Inu some beauty shops, to was explained to Freedman, operators have a week had been receiving heip from this source since it was opened late in November of 1932. The food was distributed with the co-opera-tion of several hundred social agencies. "The committee Is obliged to make this announcement because the large quantities of flour appropriated by the Federal Government has been exhausted," Mr. Kidde said.

"We have now in our warehouse enough jpackaged food to proceed with the regular distribution through our 22 depots about 10 more days." Gave Out 22 'i Tuns Including the stocks now on hand, Kidde, added, the committee will have distributed more than 22 'i tons of food in about a year. Some 1,500,000 units of 30 pounds each were given othe unemployed. The food came to the committee by way of the Brooklyn and Manhattan chapters of the American Red Cross which shared ln a distribution of Federal Farm Board wheat. By authority of Congress lt was able to exchange the wheat for flour and the flour for other food products at cost. "Although this pioneer co-operative effort for relief has to cease at this time," Kidde concluded, "It is hoped that the families' that have been receiving the food units will, where necessary, be cared for to that same extent in some other way through the various social agencies.

Cespodes cabinet. As far as could he learned the Government apparently made no attempt to enforc an ultimatum fmr.s the army officers until 10 a m. today to obey orders that they return to their posts. Keplv tp I'ltimatiim rolor.el Fulpencio Batista, former fe.rieant ho was elevated to the i miles, surpassing by some 300 miles the lightest non-stop hop of the Italian armada commanded by General Balbo. Above are the officers and men of the Navy's VP-5F flight of six planes before taking off at Norfolk, for Coco Solo In the Canal Zone.

The Navy men covered 2,059 been receiving no salary, oepenamis entirely on tips. The code requirement of a $15 a week minimum bears heavily on them and they are bitterly protesting, he said. Mediates Tailors Strike Whalen announced yesterday that he had agreed to act as mediator In a strike of merchant tailors. About 15,000 are expected to walk out of their shops on Monday. The City Chairman, who success ranit of army chief of staff, deliv H.

Rouse of the Typographical union but that employes flatly refused. The bakery union is the one whojse picketing was recently restrained by order of Supreme Court Justice Se-lah B. Strong. Mayer said that he hoped Strong would refuse to sign the formal Injunction in the light of the employers' refusal to accept the arbitration agreement. ered the order last nipht a hotel meeting.

Tax Protests Flood City Hall thaH i rru -i YfT k.i The repely to his ultimatum a declaration by the officers New Hop Looms For Naval Aces Continued frum ge 1 Intervention! As A1er accKS as uul He also stated that bakers who persisted In their refusal be de fully mediated tne recent aress strike, also revealed that 25,000 undergarment workers are expected to they did not recognize the preseent Government. Maior Alfredo Boflll, deposed police chief, slated the stand of the officers in thesee words: "We are unanimous in the decision not to prived of the NRA emblem. Continued from Page 1 i New York Curb Exchange, New York At the Custom House offices of James Flinn Hodgson, district man Continued from Page 1 go on strike shortly. Bakery owners were accused of attemDtlne to substitute an open ager of the Department of Com merce, 3,683 new NRA agreements were received from employers yes shop for union labor in a statement Issued bv Henry Mayer, attorney for return to our posts until the com- islroyer Overton at Cienfuegos. after and Batista are ousted." 'having; stopped at the Isle of Pines; Reports reached the capital today he destroyer J.

Fred Talbott at that tension remained high in the Manzanillo and the destroyer tevant at Santiago, all on the south- Workers at Camaz.irv picketed em side of the island; the Coast terday. Of these 518 were from Brooklyn. the Bokkery and Confectionery flight, but it was Indicated that the planes would arrive i ntime to take part in Pacific fleet maneuvers. One naval official said today that whether the jump was attempted as non-stop would depend upon weather and other conditions. Should it prove feasible when the take off is made, it was said, the effort would be made to set a new mass formation record.

New York, Seamans Bank for Savings. South Brooklyn Board of Trade, Socialist Party, Saqua Democratic Club. United Auto League of Owners and Travellers, United Real Estate Owners A-ssocation, United States Life Insurance Company, Workers Committee on Unemployment, Wo-me'n, Veterans and Local Taxpayers Association and Yorkville Chamber of Commerce. Employes of brokerage offices and taxicab drivers yesterday were organizing to make personal visits to the Aldermen of their districts to protest against the tax measures. the highways out of the city after Guard cutter Gresham 8t Matanzas Group Investment Bankers Association, New York Life Insurance Company, New York Security Dealers Association, New York Stock Exchange, North American Reassurance Company, National Board of Fire Underwriters, New York Tele phone Company, New York Stock Transfer Association, Paramount Cab Corporation.

Queensboroueh Chamber of Commerce, Queens Council of Civic Associations, Real Estate Board of Workers International Union of America. Mayer asserted that employes were ready to abide by recent decisions of an arbitration board consisting of Mrs. Elinore M. Herrick, chairman; they heard reports that officials of on the northeast coast, the cutter Yamacraw at Puerto Padre, and the cutter Unalga at Antilla, both the Consolidated Railways who had refused recent strike demands in iinmiiiiin Gen. James G.

Harbord and Leon Two of 1 near by; the destroyer McFarland 1 on its way to Key West to refuel tended to leave that plac the ofSclals are Americans. Sixteen persons, mcludins one befor cotng to Cardenas. Praises Ship Admiral William K. Standley, chief of operations, had no public Other Vessels Standing By Lost and Found Lost and Pound drMif ments of tht Wert- will bt rtDMttd her MCb Saturday. EXTORTION SUSPECT Maine at Repeal Polls Tomorrow army sergeant, were imprisoned at jMiiiga.

where tne destroyer Stur-tevant put in earlier this week. The prisoners were taken to Santiago in trucks after arrest at Bayamo on charges of rebellion. American officials of the man-ranese mines at Cristo. in Oricnte Provlnre. expressed concern over t-ha labor situation.

Guantanamo also In Onente Province, was re In addition eight Coast Guard destroyers, a naval destroyer and a cutter are standing by at Key West, 100 miles from Havana. Later Ambassador Espril conferred with Assistant Secretary Jefferson Caffcry. supposedly concerning the Argentine note. bee comment upon the possibilities of the new flight. Asked if the planes might be selected for a return visit of Balbo's ocean hop, he said that if orders came today for such a flight, these planes would participate.

"Built for long range flying, these ships are as good as we have In the Navy today," Standley.sald. "Whether the same would be true tomorrow or next week I don ot know, since aviation seems to be advancing rapidly." President Roosevelt formally commended the naval fliers who made "TUB VOWI Or BROOKLYN" Ativertiitmentt inserted in tht ani Found column Tht will BKOAO0A1T ttrrt Tneidai at A.M. unit rftHtwrny St AM. vtt nation Wl.TH. Espril described his government's Maine, birthplace of prohibition, will vote Monday on ratification of repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, to be followed the next day ported relatively quiet after an at tempted prison break last night in -communication as "a very inenaiy which guards killed two persons and Ho said wounded two others.

ln tenor flS that sent yester BANKBOOK Lost; No. 16S94D. of the Bi'fcvort giving Bank. Payment hat been stopped. Please return to the bank at 1281 Pulton St.

by Maryland, Minnesota ana Colorado. If the four States favor repeeal, 29 of the 36 States required to day oy Mexico. While declining to discuss the ob- DOG Lo.it: bull, 9 month, female, black I) IVllirT ''rct "'s vlsit Caffery, the rice white markings; named Snooky; re-ward. 8herman, II W. 2Sth Brooklyn.

envoy said nis government tra- oitionally opposed any kind of in- jterventlon by one state in the affairs SUITCASE Part who found mltrase containing girls' clothes on (Jro Bay Boulevard, call J. King, Lynbrook the record non-stop flight. In a message addressed to Acting Secretary Roosevelt the President said the flight evidenced the efficiency of naval aviation and gave to the officers and men, led by Lt. Commander Donald M. Carpenter, the record and honor of making the longest non-stop seaplane flight ln formation in the history of aviation.

1150: lultable reward, Vexes Johnson Continued from Page 1 ianorner, an oinat tne Argentine communication had been designed to carry out this principle in the case of Cuba. He sad the note did not directly request the United States not to intervene. 1 dgUd I I I PERSONALS otkers and to straighten out the Cleveland street car dispute. The flight from Norfolk to Coco abandon prohibition will have registered their approval of the change. Drys insist that when Maine votes the.

State's traditional prohibition attitude will be malnained. Repcalists contend that Maine, which went "bone dry" in 1851, will abandon the prohibition cause and join the 25 States which have voted to ratify repeal. The Maine ballots will be complicated. Its courts have ruled the wet and dry allegiance of 80 delegates to be elected cannot be designated, according to the Associated Press. 40-Ton Coal Theft Solo, Canal Zone, covered a distance of 2,059 miles.

DIVORCES IN MEXICO Ten days. Free In-formation. International Law Office, 441 first National Bank 1 Paso, Texas Bituminous coal' protests poured In upon Johnson, with Alabama fiO Cppfcinjr RplpaSP nperatnrs telling him the rode he i t-vMlIj; XTFZ2 Attack Indicting Jury submitted a formal lutt. of objec- Philadelphia, Sept. 9 (P) State tinns.

including opposition to the 1 Rfnat.nr John MeClure nnd fi2 FIND FLOATING BODY The body of Anthony Guidisce, 59 of 506 Humboldt was found floating in Newtown Creek, off the foot of Van Dam yesterday, ac 3 a day basic wase rate ln Ala I WILL NOT ba rMoonslble tor any debts contracted by any one other than myself. Harold W. Morris, 2S1U Foster Brooklyn, N. Y. I WILL NOT be responsible for any debts Contracted by any one other than myself.

Charles W. Eckerl, 131 I. 54th Brooklyn, I WILL NOT be responsible lor any debts contracted by any on other than myself. Harold Sorensen, 1662 Hi Brooklyn. other Delaware County residents to-1 day asked the United States District 1 Court to iuash Federal Indictments 1 charging them witn.

conspiracy to jvlolat the prohibition act. The pe cording to the police. Captain Ol-sen. whose barge Is tied up at the foot of Van Dam found the body, and identification was made by Guidisce's son, Dominlck. bama.

'Flayed for 8uker' Frank E. Taplin of Cleveland, president of the Pittsburgh Terminal Cnal Cnmnanv. visited Jnhn- Lands Trio in Jail Three men were arrested yester titions ask abatement on the ground that the members of the indicting Grand Jury were improperly rh (h il 12, vt 14,15,10,17 for a few of the items from the greatest preparation has ever made for Fall in sein's office and, on leaving, in- formed newspapermen he had told the Administrator Johnson had been "played for a sucker" by the Appalachian operators. Tre produrrrs yesterday told Johnson the code was so rh'eetionable a.s a there was no use to detail peific objections, i Thcv were expected, however, to fend ln a formal statement. The retail code, ranking Jtift be- YOU ARE SMARTEST IN day in connection with the theft of 40 tons of' coal from the yards of the De Orr Coal Company at 104th St.

and East River, Manhattan. Carl Behling, 28, of 489 Central and Benjamin Doughton, 28, of 2 Danforth were aoiussed of loading the coal on a truck early Friday, The third. Benjamin Tekas-kin, 38, of 503 W. 107th Manhattan watchman at the coal yard was orarged with accepting $30 to permit the men to load the coal. The coal, IH NT HIT-BIN DRITKR William Jaeger, 82, of 65 Grove was injured yesterday when he was struck by a motorcycle at Wilson Ave.

and Menahan St. Detec-; tives are looking for the hit and run Captured on the Suburban Lower Merlon estate of Cardinal Dougherty of Philadelphia, this man, who identified himself as George Havinch of Pittsburgh, was charged with attempting to extort from the prelate. He was held for a hearing and an examination by alienists. hind as one of the primary trn.s taken tei Wvckofl i valued at $270 was found yesterday in Glendale. NRA problems, a being drawn, con-j Heights Hospital, where he was tamed cost-plus section which, treated for a possible fracture of the except ln specific instances, would I shmilder and a broken ankle, require re'ailers to se'j goods at1 800 STUDENTS TO START WORK HERE 1 lri 0 am 'i 'J1 ''lit- it f-ftvM -r- 'V-r 1 1 V-k i lot 1 il i fe? i A hz-tm i 'U 'Jim tfI 8i il r- irfr, I i 10 percent or more above the cost' i the ltms.

A special committee was st up ftv the Cabinet Industrial Recnverv Board to study the cost-plus ques. tion, Representatives of several Federal departments and the Agricultural Adiustment Admmistratinr were put on the committee. In advance of a rearm: wt frr next week lor the silk rod'1, meet. with striking workers w'ere in progress in New and 5r.a:or Wagner 'D N. Y.i.

chairman of the Labor Board, and E. F. Mr. Grady, an assistant administrator, planned to go to Cleveland on Monday. A fresh conflict, reminiscent the automobile code deadlock, wis In prospect for shoe who planned to insist upon the merit labor clause In their code, despite an earlier declatation by Johnson it would te excluded from future trade charters.

The merit clause provide, that servers mav he empiov d. promoted, di-charsd or retained re-tardless union C. C. WiiUams. a depu'y administrator who will orfn hearings on the shoe code Tueiriay.

said manufacturers would be to withdraw it, bu; the employrrs a.vser'ed privately the request would be declined. An NRA ruling that educational Institutions are exempt from tr.e recovery law was hailed today by the American Council on Education with a promise that schools and colleges will work the harder for the Roosevelt reemployment progiam. Charles R. Mann, director of the council, who appointed the committee nhich obtained the ruims. san the action shows.

fully the NRA "rrsDects-the necessity for freedom In American education," If you know your millinery, we needn't tell you thai ontelcpe is jusf about the smartest material you con have In your new Foil hat. The model sketched is ol the finest French ontelope, ond the lustrous appeoronca is further enhanced by a chromium buckle. 15 RAICH PRICE nai maim ii in 1 1 "iiilf hit1 mi irannarii i Tiv 'T tt.Maitajwl T- imii iiii iwaiatawinnn FULTON AT SMITH STREETS, BROOKLYN Tartial ocrupancy of the new Prnnklyn Terhnlral High School (above) Is scheduled with the opening of the city's Fchnols tomorrow. The building, located on De Kalb hftwrm Fort Greene and 5. Elliot Place, will be occupied by BOO students.

It accommodates 5,0..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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