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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

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Brooklyn, New York
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7
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02 one one 0 28, 0 7 BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1933 M2 Society University Club, Manhattan. (Photo by Jay Te Winburn.) Miss Sally Harding is in charge of the candy sale to be held in connection with the benefit bridge for Willoughby House Settlement on Tuesday at the Women's May Murray, Elvee Bynun, Catherine Burns, Helen Donohue, Cathleen Terazzo, Helen Hochschwender, Virginia Duffy committee and June Hickey. en assisting Mrs. William F. Donohue, chairman, and Matthew J.

Murray, cochairman, consisted of Mrs. Vincent J. Duffey, Mrs. John J. O'Hara.

Mrs. Francis Bynun, Mrs. Harry B. Massey, Mrs. James S.

Fee, Mrs. William G. O'Brien, Mrs. Harry Taft, Mrs. Francis Duffy, Mrs.

Harry Cohan, Mrs. George L. Twigg, Mrs. Thomas Ford, Mrs. Peter Dulligan and Mrs.

John J. Fenese. Mrs. J. Russell Clarke Jr.

will entertain next Wednesday at a children's party to celebrate the fourth birthday of her daughter, Edith Constance Clarke. Dr. and Mrs. William Barclay Nevius sailed today on the Furness Bermuda liner Monarch of Bermuda for Bermuda. Mrs.

Nevius was Miss Ruth Brownell Prescott, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thompson Prescott of East Orange, N. before her marriage yesterday. Mrs.

Raymond F. Barnes Gives Luncheon for Her Committee Mrs. Raymond F. Barnes, general chairman of the 11th annual tea and sale on March 21 for the benefit of the Brooklyn Nursery and Infants Hospital, entertained her committee chairmen at a Fall luncheon yesterday at her home, 90 McDonough St. Fall flowers and foliage decorated the rooms and luncheon tables.

The guests were Mrs. Henry C. Badgley, co-chairman; Mrs. Robert F. Barber, Mrs.

Robert G. Booke, Mrs. J. Carroll Burgess, Mrs. George Giddings, Mrs.

Onslow A. Gordon, Esther M. Hay, Mrs. William Bruce Mann, Mrs. Frank Mick, Mrs.

Walter Mitchell, Mrs. Charles E. Satterley, Mrs. Theodore C. Schleuning, Mrs.

Gordon K. Smith and Miss Sophie B. Stelling. Miss Phyllis Barnes represented the juniors of the Brooklyn Woman's Club, who will augment the auxiliary members in their efforts for tea and sale. Mrs.

Schleuning is president of the auxiliary of the nursery and hospital under whose auspices the affair will be held. Roger Hough of Brooklyn was an usher at the wedding of Miss Helen Powell Fuller of Montclair, N. and John Ballantyne Norris, also of Montclair, last evening. The ceremony was performed in St. James' Episcopal Church, Montclair.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur D'Avi were dinner hosts last evening at their home, 311 E. 72d Manhattan, for Mrs.

D'Avi's cousin, Miss Ellen Stirling, daughter of Rear Admiral Yates Stirling, U. S. commandant of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. and Mrs. Stirling.

The dinner was one of the social events of Navy Day. Long Island Society Miss Samantha G. Isham and Charles Gulden Are Engaged; Of Interest to Society Here Announcement has been made of the engagement of Miss Samantha Gaynor Isham, daughter of Mrs. Congreve Jackson of Oyster Bay and Lt. Col.

Ralph H. Isham of Princeton, to Charles Gulden, son of Mr. Mrs. Frank Gulden and' of Islip. Miss Isham is the granddaughter of the late Mayor J.

Gaynor, who resided in Brooklyn. On the paternal side she a descendant of Jonathan Trumbull, Revolutionary Governor of Connecticut, and of Col. Thomas Heyward, signer of the Declaration of Independence for South Carolina. She attended the Greenvale School and the Fermata School in Aiken, 3. C.

Miss Sybil Whigham and Robert Young Wed Yesterday In St. Bartholomew's Chapel Miss Sybil Whigham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry James ham of 471 Park Manhattan, was married yesterday to Robert Wavering Affection Brings Much Emotional Strain' House Directors Entertain at Large Tea Musicale for Members The board of directors of Colony House gave a musicale and tea at Colony House yesterday for its members and friends. Mrs.

John M. Tallman and Mrs. John R. Garnaus were co-chairmen of arrangements and Mrs. Alexander H.

Fraser, chairman of program. the artists Madame Catherine Volpi of La Scala there Opera Company in Milan, Harry Woodruff, accompanied by Miss Bertha Schneidermann, and Miss Jaqueline Tompers, accompanied by Mrs. T. A. Stoddard.

Mrs. Harry M. Rice and Mrs. Schreiber Carter poured at the tea table and those assisting were Mrs. Russell H.

Iler, Mrs. William Dunkak, Mrs. Grell H. Powers, Mrs. Bryant Gilmour, Mrs.

H. Edmund Rice, Mrs. Alfred Everson, Mrs. Frederick Lohman Miss Jeanne Newman and 1 Miss Doris Beebe. Among others present were the Misses Florence O'Malley, Virginia O'Malley, Minnie J.

Harris, Jean Singleton, Eleanor King, Isabelle King, Jeannette Ametrano, Ursula Banks Williston, Georgia LeBaron, Florence Ella Graham, Billie Brockway, Betty McQuire, Jeanne Newman, Alma R. Tollefsen, Marjorie L. Edinburg, Marjorie Woolsey, Marion Bell, Erna Kraemer, Marcia Rogers, Lucille Hoyns, Rosalie Leslie, Dorothy E. Brown, Grace Lawrence, Eileen McNamara, Aimee St. John, Betsy H.

Soberski, Helen R. Copeland, Helen Stickler, Beatrice Ruckgaber and Carolyn Kitchell, Also Mrs. Arthur Lewis, Mrs. George S. Dalzell, Mrs.

P. L. Schenck, Mrs. Rufus A. Vance, Mrs.

Henry S. Acken, Mrs. Lawrence K. Barnes, Mrs. Charles C.

Meytrott, Mrs. M. Louise Roberts, Mrs. John Gianella, Mrs. William H.

Pouch, Mrs. Ben M. Jaquish, Mrs. Louis Elbert Strong, Mrs. George G.

Worthley, Mrs. Frank A. Cooper, Mrs. Walter J. Carlin, Mrs.

J. E. MacDermott, Mrs. Thomas Henry McClintock, Mrs. Frank Herma, Mrs.

Henry C. Turner, Mrs. Lester G. Ten Eyck, Mrs. Harry Neavling, Mrs.

Harold C. Parsons, Mrs. Walter C. Howe, Mrs. William Parsons Slocovich, Mrs.

Theodore Martin Hardy, Mrs. Clarence R. Nims, Mrs. James M. Roche, Mrs.

Donald R. Baylis, Mrs. Harold E. Miller, Mrs. Henry B.

Garnaus, Mrs. Duncan Graham, Mrs. Herbert Worman, Mrs. Arthur P. Baehr, Mrs.

Frederick W. Bass, Mrs. Marcus C. Hankinson, Mrs. Tracy Higgins, Mrs.

Edwin H. Holbrook, Mrs. Albert H. StephenRobert M. Rogers, Mrs.

Frederick, O. Lohman, Scofield, Mrs. Jason Mrs. James Davis, F. Scholes, Mrs.

H. Davies Roulston, Mrs. Robert Strobridge, Mrs. George E. Morson, Mrs.

E. Clifford Place, Mrs. William A. Bonnell, Mrs. Charles Fyfe, Mrs.

William J. Baldwin Mrs. William Siegrist, Mrs. Ainsworth Smith and Mrs. Theodore L.

Vosseler. Receiving Line and Committees For Morning Choral Musicale At Towers Hotel Yesterday Those who received with Mrs. Frederic M. Davidson, president, at the Morning Choral Musicale at the Towers Hotel yesterday afternoon were Mrs. Harry C.

Schroeder, Miss Sarah M. Umpleby, Mrs. Imogene J. Crossman, Mrs. Charles Gallagher, Herbert Stavey Sammond and the following guests honor: Mrs.

R. Huntington Woodman, Mrs. A. Walter Kramer, Mrs. Sammond, Mrs.

Theodore Martin Hardy, Mrs. Charles A. Soper, Mrs. Mary W. Banker, Mrs.

Etta HamiltonMorris, Mrs. Henry C. Palmer, Mrs. Albert C. Spooner, Mrs.

John Alexander Davidson, Mrs. Robert Starr Allyn, Mrs. Raymond Joseph Allen and Mrs. William E. Mountfort.

The ushers, under the direction of Mabel Heath Kempster and Mrs. George Young hostesses, were Mrs. Arthur T. Beach, Mrs. Charles Nelson, Mrs.

Melanie Miller Doolittle, Mrs. Bjornulf Johnson, Mrs. Doris Ogden and Mrs. J. Edwin Taylor.

Miss Meta Christiansen was chairman of the music committee, assisted by Mrs. Herman N. Reisig, Mrs. Reginald B. Reed.

Mrs. J. Edwin Taylor, Mrs. Elbert W. Van Aken and Mrs.

David Ferguson. The committee in charge of the arrangements consisted of Mrs. Schroeder, Miss Umpleby, Crossman, Mrs. Charles Gallagher, Mrs. Young Mrs.

Kempster, Mrs. Charles Nelson, Mrs. George Brockway, Mrs. Beach, Mrs. Doolittle, Mrs.

Robbins, Mrs. Taylor and Miss Doris Ogdelhers who attended the luncheon which followed the concert were: Mrs. W. George Thompson, Mrs. Elsie Ahrens Mrs.

James Rowland Day, Joseph W. Genner, DuVal, Mrs. Robert Adiard, Mrs. David Ferguson, Mrs. John V.

Stauf, Mrs. George H. Gilsow, MrBs. Elbert W. Van Aken, Mrs.

Emma J. Franke, Mrs. Helen Smith, Mrs. Arthur T. Burnett, Mrs.

Byron Connell, Mrs. Louis Melson, Miss Laura Saunders Mrs. Milton P. Young, Mrs. Stuart R.

Browne, Mrs. John E. Damerel, Mrs. Harris A. Robbins, Mrs.

Imogene Crossman, Mrs. Maud Daly, Mrs. George Inge, Mrs. William Ferguson, Mrs. Catherin W.

McEwan, Mrs. Harriett V. Greebe, Mrs. Joseph Fernandez, Mrs. Barbara Meeke, Mrs.

Anna Christiansen, Mrs. Alfred Insinger, Mrs. 11- fred R. Marshall, Mrs. Fred A.

Lee, Mrs. John E. Hayes, Mrs. Wallace W. Urich, Mrs.

Alfred Lehmann, Mrs. Howard Clark, Mrs. Willin M. Umpleby, Mrs. William M.

Umpleby and Mrs. Florence C. Whitney. St. Angela Hall Auxiliary Will Have Halloween Bridge-Tea, The students who served at the Halloween bridge and tea given today by the mothers of the first and second-year high school pupils of the St.

Angela Hall Auxiliary at the school hall. 292 Washington were the Misses Virginia Titus. Madeline Bracato, Mary Sennelly, Regina Kane, Marie Martin, Anna Girl Truly in Love Plans for Marriage Sans Fear of Future Believing that many persons are confronted with personal problems, anxious for advice, but unwilling to seek it from friends or relatives, The Eagle invites its readers to write to Helen Worth, who will give each communication close personal attention. Write under your own name or an assumed one AND ON ONE SIDE OF THE PAPER ONLY Advice Dear Helen Worth--I annoying position. I want make up my mind.

I am man, (at least I think I more than anything else in the world, and then there are times when I am not sure it's love and I feel as if I could never marry him. When he is not near me I miss him. And then there are times I think we would be very happy if we were married. I tried to solve my problem by going out with other fellows, only to learn that I much prefer his company. I don't think there is any other fellow I could meet that I could like as well.

He understands my feeling, and not so long ago stayed away for two weeks. I missed him terribly. But when we were friends again I doubted if I really loved him. I do love him, but why should I doubt myself? He suggests that we continue to go on the same way, hoping that I will make up my mind. But I don't think it's fair to him.

Can you tell me what to do? I am 22 years of age. I bet you think I am very fickle. DOUBTFUL. My dear unfortunate than fickle. For surely the man or woman who can know, day in and day out, that his or her love for another is unchangeable, is saved a tremendous amount of emotional wear and tear.

Probably you love this man and if you marry him your love will grow with the years. But you are afraid of marriage and translate that doubt into questioning your feelings. My advice would be to marry him soon- -and forget the foolish fears. Alcohol Does Not Dissolve Adhesive Plaster Marks Dear Helen Worth--It's a pleasure to read your informative column. However, your statement that alcohol will dissolve adhesive marks is misinformative.

The coating on adhesive plaster compound, consisting of rubber, frankincense, burgundy pitch, sulphur, zine, OXide, etc. Rubber, being the main ingredient, is not soluble in alcohol. The following will dissolve adhesive marks: Benzine, gasoline, acetone, tetrochloride carbon, ether and chloroform, immediately. Slowly in oils, turpentine, kerosene and mineral oils. Almost daily during the Winter I have occasion to remove adhesive plaster marks and use only benzine.

PHARMACIST-PODIATRIST. Thank you, "friend Pharmacist," and I apologize for passing on any misinformation. HELEN WORTH. Write or Telephone For Information Desired Dear Helen Worth -Would you mind publishing the details regarding your Strangers' Club? I have been a resident of Brooklyn all my 24 years but find myself with few friends and would like to make new ones. Would I be eligible? What are the dues, A.

M. My dear you will telephone or write giving an address, details will be gladly furnished. HELEN WORTH. Consult Lawyer or Ignore Matter Completely Dear Helen Worth--I have been separated from my husband many years and often hear indirectly from mutual friends that he talks about intimate details of our life, giving personal details no one knows about and never will from me. This is most embarrassing or me.

Talking with him does not help this situation, just another argument. Is there anything else I can do? ELIZABETH. My dear you might frighten him into more dehavior. Consult a lawyer regarding the matter. Perhaps his conversation can be defined as defamation of character.

Only one versed in legal lore can tell the facts on this. The other course of action open to you is to ignore the matter completely. Words cannot break bones -Or reputations unless there is some foundation upon which they may, Perhaps rest. he is sufficiently malicious to enjoy hurting you in this fasion. By paying no attention you turn the tables and hurt him.

Certainly his behavior is that of a cad. HELEN WORTH. Boy, 2, Eats Soup, Dies; 2 More Ill Martin Kartman, years old, of 2814 Stillwell Ave. died of food poisoning at his home at 1:30 this morning, and his brother, Leonard, 5, and Simon Feldman, 23, of the same address, also suffering from poisoning, were taken to Coney land Police Hospital were in told critical that the condition. children and Feldman had eaten chicken soup late yesterday, and this is believed to have been the source of the poison.

Police are trying to find out where the soup was purchased. 500 HEAR INSELBUCH Samson Inselbuch, Fusion candidate for Assembly in the 6th A. spoke to more than 500 voters at a rally held last night at the 6th A. D. Republican Club, 44 Sumner Avenue, Metal Initials Stick Like Stamps When there's a will there's a way--to get your monogram on jewelry and cigarette cases.

New metal initials of gold and silver color, have prepared backs so that you need only wet them and then stick the initials in place. They'll hold fast, too. Third Hydrogen Gas, Extra Heavy, Found by Helen Worth want you to help me out of an your aid and advice to help me very much in love with a young am.) There are times I love him Institute Players In 'Apron Strings' The Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences presented a three-act comedy last night at the Academy Music before a capacity audience of 1,400. There will be a second performance tonight. Bennett Kilpack directed and took one of the minor roles in the former Broadway production, "Apron Strings," written by Dorrance Davis.

The leading parts were taken by Eiffe Lawrence Palmer and Jan Ullrich. Other institute players who appeared were: Henry Buckler Florence Keady Palmer Bennett Kilpack Peggy Paige Fills Place Next to Helium-Is More Massive Than the Kind That Produces Poisonous WaterChemical Properties Unknown By JOHN J. A. O'NEILL Science Editor The existence of a third tected. It has an atomic weight vacant position in the periodic helium.

The ordinary has an atomic weight the hydrogee, heavy hydrogen discovered about a year ago has an atomic weight of two and the new extra heavy hydrogen has an atomic weight of three. Helium, weight four, occupies the next position. Found in Heavy Water The discovery of the extra heavy hydrogen was made by Wendell M. Latimer and Herbert A. Young, of the Department of Chemistry, University of California.

They found the extra heavy hydrogen in heavy water, that is, water composed of oxygen and the heavy hydrogen of atomic weight two. They used the Allison-Murphy apparatus in which the existence of substance is detected by magneto-optic methods in which the resonance of the substance in a light beam is indicated on the basis of atomic weight. Only a a a a a a a a a a a very minute quantity of the heavy water is obtained from the evaporation a large quantity of ordinary water, and but a small quantity is available for, experimenters. The heavy water been found to differ radically from ordinary water. It has been found poisonous to plant and animal life.

Not Isolated Yet The extra heavy hydrogen has not been isolated from the heavy water in which it occurs in a very minute proportion. What its chemical prop- of The Eagle kind of hydrogen has been deof three and fills in the last table between hydrogen and Bomb Iceman's Car; Racket Suspected Detectives of the Bath Beach station today were confronted with evidence of new ice racketeering terrorism as the result of a mysterious bomb explosion at 3 a.m. that shatered the front windows in the home of Angelo Pattioni, an ice dealer, at 1920 72d Police were unable to find any fragments of the bomb, and concluded that it was a paper box and powder affair exploded, apparently from marks found on the street, under Pattioni's machine that was parked in front of his home for the night. Questioned for an hour, Pattioni denied that he had had labor or racket trouble, or that he had been paying for "protection." The detonation was heard for blocks and caused a near panic in the neighborhood. The machine did not appear to have been harmed.

erties will be is still a matter of conjecture Other scientists are working on spectroscopic methods of detecting the existence of this new kind of hydrogen, Latimer and Young announced their discovery in a letter to the editor of the Physical Review, published in the current issue. Talk About Bridge Be J. ROBERT WARBURG Four contract bridge quartets met in a semi-final round at the Crescent Bridge Club last night to determine which two teams would survive to play tomorrow for the opportunity of entering the Vanderbilt Cup fours contest as guests of The Eagle's Long Island Bridge League. In one Frank Danielson of the Knickerbocker Field Club, Nat Schwartz, and Robert and Feigus, the latter two of the Crescent Bridge Club, defeated Seymour Kaplan, Jack Shore, H. Rosenzweig and L.

Lipschitz in a nip and tuck contest by 630 points. All of the players are members of the L. I. B. L.

By 1850 Point Margin William Priggen, Herbert Seeley, J. Edward Comellas and Harold Lehr accounted for their final round berth in the other contest at the expense of A. H. Cameron, C. H.

Dill, F. R. Rojas and N. E. Schrader by a margin of 1850 points.

Feigus and Chatkin went to a small slam on one of the deals after making nine bids on the way and finally landed in a contract for 12 tricks at diamonds, although the opponents held more trump cards they. The Hand Feigus A-K-8 (2 J-5-4 0 A-K-Q-J-5 10-3 Q-4 NORTH 9-5-3-2 10-9-2 A-7-6 10-6-4-3 9-8-7 Q-J-6-2 9-7-4 SOUTH Chatkin J-10-7-6 K-Q-8-3 02 A-K-8-3 Readers Ask Advice On Care of House And Garden Plants By Jane Leslie Kift Please tell me how to keep iris. from spreading, Also, should healthy. plants lose their color as the flowers fade? Mrs. FRANKLIN D.

Iris increase quite rapidly. In: order to overcome this tendency, the roots should be lifted and divided every three years. All flowers as they become faded and withered lose the brightness of their coloring. I have some purple loosestrife. planted in a very sunny place in my garden which has never been satis-; factory.

It is in a very well drained, sandy soil and I water it every other day. Why do you suppose ib: has never done well? HELEN B. T. The purple loosestrife does best: when planted about the edge of pool or along a stream, Being a moisture-loving plant it does best in partial shade in swampy ground. If you have such a spot in your garden transplant it now.

I bought some plumbago lar-. larpentae in May and planted it in' my garden. Will it have to be lifted in the Winter? Mrs. D. W.

H. No, plumbago is quite hardy, though in the colder regions it is best to remove it from the ground TO and Winter it in a coldframe. Cover it with any coarse litter, not apply this mulch until the butter first light frost. Young, son of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Percy Young and nephew of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Langley of Westbury, with whom he resides. The ceremony was performed by the Rev.

Dr. G. Paul T. Sargent of the Chapel of St. Bartholomew's Church and was followed by a reception at the home of the bride's parents.

Miss Jean Hollins was maid of honor for the bride, who had as her other attendants Mrs. John R. Fell, Mrs. William Van Allen, Mrs. George Elliman, the Misses Dorothy Fell, Nora Grace, Anne Valentine, Audrey Davies and Virginia Kernochan.

Maureen Grace was flower girl. Earl S. Potter was best man for Mr. Young, who had as ushers Harry S. Cram, James L.

Van Alen, William L. Van Alen, Henry B. Robinson, Stephen C. Clark Hardie Scott, Malcolm McConihe Jr. and Mr.

Cortland Young T. Hill. and his bride left for a wedding trip to Washington in an airplane owned by Mr. Langley. Mr.

and Mrs. Herbert Lyman will give a dinner dance on Wednesday at their home in Boston to introduce their daughter, Miss Lydia Lyman, and Miss Margot Warner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Langdon Warner of Cambridge, Mass. Miss Warner is a granddaughter of Mrs.

J. West Roosevelt of Oyster Bay. Mr. and Mrs. Howard C.

Brokaw of Mill Neck gave a dinner at the Piping Rock Club at Locust Valley last night to celebrate the former's birthday anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. G. Chester Doubleday will give a housewarming at their home in the Piping Rock Club colony tomorrow.

Mrs. was Miss Mary Pat Kelley, of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius F. Kelley, before her marriage in June at Manhasset.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Grace have taken an apartment at the Ritz Tower, Manhattan, and have come in from Manhasset to occupy it. Mr.

and Mrs. Francis Gordon Brown of Glen Head announce the birth a son, Francis Gordon Brown at the Harbor Hospital yesterday. Mrs. Brown is the former Miss Natalie Ponvert, daughter of Mrs. Antonio Ponvert of 410 Park Ave, and the late Mr.

Ponvert. The child is a great-grandson of the late William A. Nash, prominent New York banker, and a great-grandnephew of the late Mrs. Pierpont Morgan. Mr.

and Mrs. Oliver De Gray Vanderbilt of Manhattan and East Hampton will be given a dinner by members of their family to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary at 87 Evergreen Place, East Orange, N. on Nov. 8. The sixth annual Halloween masquerade will be given this evening at the Lido Country Club, Long Beach.

Among those who sailed for Bermuda on the Furness Bermuda liner Monarch of Bermuda today were Eliot Cutter and John Eliot Cutter of Westhampton. 'OLD FIRST' BAZAR DEC. 8 The Ladies Aid Society of the First Reformed Church met yesterday at the church parlors. Plans were made for the twentieth annual Christmas bazar on Friday evening, Dec. 8.

Mrs. Fenwick B. Small is president of the society and Mrs. John Livingston Spence is chairman of the bazar, assisted by Mrs. Charles H.

Krueger, vice chairman, and a large committee of men les and women of the church. SON BORN Mr. and Mrs. William Kruse of 2425 Kings Highway announce birth of a son on Tuesday at the Peck Memorial Hospital. Mrs.

Kruse is the former Miss Ruth Goldsborough, daughter, of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Goldsborough of 2103 Avenue M. Mr. Goldsborough is well known as a turfman and trainer of race horses, Have Your Horoscope Read by Eagle Expert The Kagle has arranged with the Rev.

Arthur W. Brooks for herescape readings for readers of this paper. Brief horoscopes will be mailed to those who send 15 cents and self-addressed 30 stamped envelope, together with their full name and address, day, month. year, hour possible) and place of birth. No personal questions will be answered.

The will cover rising and sun signs of the zodiao analysis only. The Eagle will print occasional horoscopes after receiving permission. All birth data strictly personal, Address Dr. Arthur W. Brooks, Brooklyn Dally Eagle.

Name Address Birth Forecast for Sunday, Oct 29 The moon continues to pass through Pisces Sunday and enters Aries 41 minutes past midnight Monday morning. The slightly adverse between the moon and Venus early morning may aspect, tend to some displeasure in social matters, but this not be alarming, since the aspect is not very strong. The moon's favorable aspect to Mercury, which prevails during most of the day, makes the day propitious for study, correspondence, communication with friends and relatives and all matters of social contact. Persons whose birthday anniversary occurs Oct. 29 should be very discreet about their contacts with superiors during the year and should guard well their prestige.

A child born this date will be pleasure loving and is likely to marry young, being very fond of the opposite sex, attractive and magnetic. Board of Estimate May Leave Budget Cuts to Aldermen Whether Samuel Untermyer's suggestion of a general average 5 percent budget reduction is to be adopted probably will be decided by the Board of Estimate on Monday. Monday's gathering, it appeared. will be the last or next to last executive session on the document, because before midnight Tuesday it must be adopted. The fact that the board labored an hour or two on the budget day afternoon without announcing action led to a belief last night that the Board of Estimate may leave the task of making further cuts to the Board of Aldermen.

Aldermen Have 20. Days Under the law, the Aldermen are given the budget for 20 days. They cannot increase it, but can cut items out. Usually they don't cut much. Last year was an important exception and some feel this year may be a record breaker.

A departure from the rule against filling vacant positions came yesterday when Police Commissioner Bolan announced that he would appoint 52 new patrolmen and fill vacancies of one deputy chief inspector, two inspectors, two deputy inspectors, seven captains, one acting captain, 22 lieutenants and 52 sergeants. 89 New Firemen And Fire Commissioner Dorman swore in 89 new firemen and announced that he hopes to promote 45 men to lieutenanteies and 22 to captaincies. Following a complaint from the Automobile Club of America, Dock Commissioner John McKenzie yesterday revoked concessions for parking privileges on piers at W. 55th 46th St. and Leroy Manhattan.

CHINESE MINISTER QUITS Shanghai, Oct. 28 -T. V. Soong, the National Government's Minister of Finance, tendered his resignation today. It was understood to have resulted from mounting financial difficulties.

The government was not expected to accept. Coercion Charge Made Against Nine Labor Union Men On warrants issued in special sessions after a complaint had been received that restaurant and dellcatessen employes were being intimidated by union representatives, detectives of the Manhattan District Attorney's office last night rounded up nine of 25 men charged with coercion. The identity of the complainant was not revealed, and the nine were taken to police headquarters. All had been released in $2,500 bail each by 4 a.m. today.

The prisoners included one lyn man, William Wesevich, 32, a counterman, of 1460 Sterling Place. The others were booked as ham Borson, treasurer of the Delicatessen and Cafeteria Countermans Union, 249 W. 80th John J. Williams, secretary, 304 W. 97th Joseph Meyers, 141 W.

119th Morris Turner, 63 E. 118th Irving Epstein, 801 Riverside Drive, all of Manhattan; Max Pincus, organizer, 15 Marcy Place; Isadore Gluck, organizer, 250 E. Gunhill Road, and Hyman Goldstein, 1565 Boston Road, the Bronx. Arrest 3 Brothers In Farm Strike Death Neither side vulnerable. South the dealer.

The Bidding South West North East Pass 30 Pass 302 34 Pass 3 N. T. 40 Pass 4 Pass 50 Pass Pass 60. Pass Although, as the cards lay, the six bid was safe, inasmuch as two leads of spades would have dropped West's queen. Feigus set up the fourth in dummy for a discard instead of trying a spade finesse or playing for the drop.

Another hand which was bid to six by Kaplan and found Danielson and Schwartz stopping Shore, at a mere game contract. Kaplan made thirteen tricks in the play while Danielson cashed but twelve. The Hand A K-10-9-X-X de A-X-X A Q-X-X J-X-X-X NORTH K-10-X-X J-X-X X-X-X J-X-X-X-X K-10-X EAST SOUTH A 02 A-X-X-X-X A K-Q-10-X-X-X Both sides vulnerable. The Bidding South West North East Pass 14 Pass 202 Pass 24 Pass 3 N. T.

4 Pass Pass Danielson at this point, while at the passed. table Kaplan carried on to the small slam. The final round, at 60. boards, will be played tomorrow afternoon and I evening. Madison, Oct.

28 (AP)--Three brothers were in jail today as a result of farm strike outbreaks that resulted in the slaying of one man when trucks defied picket lines. The victim was Gundar Felland, Dane County farmer, killed by a bullet fired from an automobile acting as a convoy to a bound truck last night. Frank McCorison, 31, of Madison, and his brothers, Jack, 24, and Harvey, 26, were arrested. Phones Your (order today for RENKEN'S Superior MILK RENKEN DAIRY CO. MAIN 2-6740 HOLLIS 5-7650 MEGEMAN 3-6212 ROCKVILLE CENTRE 1400.

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