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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 22

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 22

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1933 M3 22 Yankee Boy Sets New PLANS OUTING i Inverted Flight Mark TokioHearsU.S.Seeks A New Naval Base Tokio, Aug. 11 OP) Vernacular newspapers printed what they called "reliable information" today that America was negotiating with Mexico for a naval base in Lower Charles A. Gorman Resigns as Head Of Batterman Co. 'iMirrors' Reflect Wall St. Giants as Much Overrated Los Angeles, Aug.

11 (Pl-A Yankee boy who practiced his stunt in an old kitchen chair has relieved Nun Inherits Bulk Of Property Left Bv Mary Reynolds tesies extended to me and to say-that I have the fullest faith that the H. Batterman under your personal management, will continue to manifest those evidences of healthy growth that have marked the progress of the store." Mr. Batterman, replying, stated: "In accepting your resignation at this time, I wish to express my appreciation of the services rendered by you during the process of reorganization of the H. Batterman Co. and extend my best wishes for your continued success." Lieut.

Tito Falconi, Italian royal air force officer, of his upside-down flying record. Milo G. Burcham yesterday flew nv. On 1 DON'T BUY YOUR COAL an understanding he had with Henry L. Batterman, chairman oi the board, last February.

The understanding was that when Mr, Batterman was free from other business dutes to take over the management, Mr. Gorman would be relieved of the responsibilities he undertook. Mr. Batterman resigned on July 24 as president of Adolf Gobel, and now is free to devote himself to the Batterman Company. This situation was disclosed in an exchange of cordial letters between Mr.

Gorman and Mr. Batterman. After citing the understanding, Mr. Gorman's letter bf resignation continues: "Now that the time has come when relief from other responsibilities has given you the time to assume personal direction of the H. Batterman Company the work.

I undertook to accomplish has been Curuch Passes Scrutiny With Flying Colors J.P. Morgan 'Not Iike Father' head downward lor an nour, io minutes, 59 seconds, from San Diego to Los Angeles. He lowered the record by 39 minutes, 59 seconds. Hard Work Agrees With Gen. Johnson Washington, Aug.

11 OP) Hard The financial giants of America, or at least of New York, are ap Charles A. Gorman today resigned, as of Aug. 31, as president, director and general manager of the Henry L. Batterman department store, at Boadway, Flushing and Graham Aves. Mr.

Gorman's active' association with the firm ends today, as he is leaving on a vacation that will extend to Aug. 31. On his return, he will reopen offices in Manhattan as a business consultant which he closed last February when he undertook to reorganize and manage I until yon see the sensational announcement on Automatic Oil Heating to appear praised as a good deal less than simprmpn bv the anonymous au- work is agreeing with Hugh S. John i son, Recovery Administrator, un Mother de Sales Head of Visitation Monastery, Legatee Oilier ills The Rev. Mother Mary Francis rte Sales of the Monastery of the Visitation, Riverdale.

inherits the bulk of the $000 estatSe of her sister Mary C. Reynolds, who died at her home 390 Eastern Parkway on Aug 3. according to her will filed for probate today in Surrogate Win-gate's court. The will also directs that $500 of the estate be used to purchase a gold chalice set with jeyels she owned and to be given to the Visitation Monastery as a memorial to her mother and father. Other bequests are: $2,000 and jewelry to a C.

P. A. COACHING COURSE For N. f. State C.

P. A. Examinations. October 23-25. Walton Examination Coach-In? Course used.

Attend free lecture. "Problems." Friday. August 11th at 6 P.M KNICKERBOCKER SCHOOL OF ACCOUNTING AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION i Rector Street WHItehall 4-2921 in The Eagle the job an average of 15 hours a day for the last three months in his effort to get wage earners a 40-hour PI thor of The Mirrors oi wan Street," published by Putnam today. As in other "Mirror" volumes, which took the political figures of Washington for their subjects, the 13 men of Wall Street here dealt with are painted with a brush the Batterman business. completed.

I wish to express to you week or less, he has gained several pounds and an inch or two about the waist line. His resignation Is in accord with my appreciation of the many cour dipped in vinegar, and only Bernard M. Baruch comes out of the pages it 1 of the book with colors still flying, 'Wall Men Overrated' It Is in the chapter on Baruch that the author quotes, apparently Charles W. Philipbar (above) Is general chairman of Masonic Day Committee of LongI Grotto which is arranging for an outing of Master Masons at Luna Park on with approval and as also his own estimate of the big money men, this fried. Mary L.

Kiernan; sauu ana jewelry each to friends, Margaret and" Joan Kiernan. Meilech Katz. who died at his home, 200 Wilson St. on July 12, left an estate valued at $50,000, according to the petition filed today A trust fund of $5,000 is left to each of the sons, Joseph S. Katz and Moses Katz, and they also receive Jewelry and other personal effects.

Rabbi Israei Friedman of Galicia, receives a bequest of $500; $50 each goes to four Jewish Institutions and Following is a Reproduction of a Telegram to remark from Baruch "When I first went down to the eneral Sept. 7. He is also chairman of the Board of Grievances of the Grand Lodge of the State of New York. Christopher C. Mollenhauer is honorary chairman of the Masonic Day Committee.

Tornado Levels Camp of Troops Lewes, Aug. 11 OT A tor Street, I was taught to respect certain great minds of those days. I found they were a pretty shallow set; in fact I found there were more overrated men in Wall Street than in any other street in the world. "So I borrowed a motto from a prizefighter Was it Sullivan or Fitzsimmons? "The bigger they come the harder they There-after I did very nicely." No such praise is extended to J. P.

Morean. The "Mirrors" say that $100 goes to the Allied Jewish Federation. The residue is divided among the children of Mr. Katz In the following proportions: Pincus Katz, 25 percent; Irving Katz, 15 percent; Anna Lieber, 12 percent; Bertha Weinstein, 12 percent; Fannie Ger-vltz, 12 percent; Joseph S. Katz, 12 percent, and Morris Katz, 12 percent.

fi rom nado which swept In from the sea levelled every tent In the Delaware JOHN in 1929, Morgan's father "would have been impelled by every impulse of his soul to warn the country he loved so well that it was following false leaders to destruction." The author relates how in a few National Camp near Bethany Beach, unroofed buildings and injured many of the 800 guardsmen hours after Great Britain declared President The Great ATLANTIC PACIFIC Tea Co war in 1914 the British Ambassador, Sir Cecil Spring-Rice, obtained Mor William G. Gardner, who died at his home, 258 Fenimore on July 28, left an estate valued at $10,000, Recording to the petition filed with his will. The widow, Mrs. Martha Gardner, gets the residuary estate and a provision Is made that in the event she remarry, the estate goes to their three daughters, Emma J. Gardner, Marha P.

Downes and Marjorie Gardner. Anoher will filed today was that of James Clayton Watts of 280 Bay 11th who died June 20, 1932, at the Madison Park Hospital, leaving an estate valued at $6,700, which goes to the widow, Mrs. Ella Frances Watts. gan's agreement to throw the Morgan financial power on the side of early today. Lasting only three minutes, the tornado was gone before most of the men knew what had brought the tents down on their heads.

Sentries said the twister looked like a "spiral full of water" and some expressed the belief that It was a spout from the sea, only a city block distant. Great Britain. John D. Rockefeller George F. Baker, Thomas W.

Lamont, Win-throp W. Aldrich, William C. Potter, Charles E. Mitchell, Otto H. Kahn Clarence Dillon, Walter P.

Chrys Hit ler, Eugene Meyer Jr. and Charlss G. Dawes are the others but with KJCGESTION CO' CHECK BY CRITIC less asperity than Morgan and less approval than Baruch "mirrored." Picketer Killed Sees Church Stand As a Depression Aid Americans are veering toward the "happy medium" endorsed by Catholic teaching in their present efforts to clamber out of the depression, Leo J. Hickey declared last TO mFAH. Resisting Arrest StRVICE 5 0F night at a meeting of Friends of I FULL HURT IN AUTO CRASH Norristown, Aug.

11 (P) John K. Strubing, 35, former Princeton University football star, and Clarence Gibler, Manheim school teacher, were injured today in the collision of their automobiles on Ridge Pike, five miles east of Norristown. I oeFt the Franciscan Brothers held at St. Francis College. The meeting was held in anticipation of the celebration this Fail of the Brothers' Diamond Jubilee in this diocese.

I RIGHT liatT Lti. NIGHT chK John F. Maher, 30, of 324 Classon a bartenders union organizer, was shot and killed shortly before midnight last night In a struggle with a policeman who attempted to arrest him. Maher, who was organizer for Local 3 of the Bartenders Benevolent and Protective Association, had been picketing the Paradise Club, a beer garden at 1576 3d Manhattan, because the four bartenders there had not joined the union. Complaints were made to Patrolman Edward F.

White of the E. 104th St. station, who asked Maher if he had a permit and arrested him on a disorderly conduct charge. As Maher was being led to the police precinct he suddenly punched White, according to the patrolman, knocking him down. White dragged 19.M HEW Blue Eagle Luncheon the bartender down with him and there a struggle began for his service revolver.

In the struggle the weapon went off three times, killing Maher. Two Girls Thrown From Sneedins Car nun? THE BUSINESS MEN, YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE BLUE EAGLE LUNCHEON, MONDAY, AUGUST 14th. AT TWELVE-THIRTY O'CLOCK, HOTEL PENNSYLVANIA. GIVEN TO HELP SPEED RECOVERY BY THE ADVERTISING CLUB OF NEW YORK AND THE BETTER BUSINESS BUREAU OF NEW YORK CITY WITH THE CO-OPERATION OF THIRTY CIVIC AND BUSINESS ASSOCIATIONS. THE SPEAKERS WILL BE HON.

ROVER WHALEN. WHO WILL PRESIDE; JUDGE SAMUEL ROSEN-MAN FOR THE NEW YORK BAR, MAJOR 'BENJAMIN H. NAMM FOR MERCHANTS, MR. MATTHEW WOLL FOR LABOR, MISS FANNIE HURST FOR THE CONSUMER. MAIL YOUR CHECK (SI.

JO) TODAY FOR LUNCHEON TICKETS MADE PAYABLE TO NEW YORK BLUE EAGLE LUNCHEON, ROOM 137, PENNSYLVANIA HOTEL, COMPANY Cr Ar.TFlC TBA vQUR jja TO Ml'u muw tUJ, C0V pHVe -THROUGH GIVI8G AND IS STOP hU WO EFFECT THE TO PUT COUTICOOP, FIRST AUGUST A Ptf 000ff AS POSSIB TTjcT keeks 1 The police today are searching for two men. alleged to have tossed two young women from a speeding motorcar at Ocean Parkway and Quentin Road at 11 o'clock last night when the girls rebuffed advances. The two girls, both suffering from concussion of the brain and body and head lacerations, are in a serious condition in Coney Island Hospital. They are Miss May Steuart, 21, of 1404 E. 7th and Miss Marian Marans, 20, of 1215 E.

8th St. They told the police that they were in the Bath Beach section when they met the. men, who offered to drive them to their homes. The girls were found unconscious In a gutter on Ocean Parkway by a passing motorist, Gus Trombetta of 197 18th who took them to the hospital. NBA NRA OF THE FOR TO Vff AEL2 TO BE UNDER Ttt' 1 TflCREASE BUSINESS TO OUR STAFF OPERATION OF OUR mn EMPLOYEES FOUNDED ISfiO THREE HU vnuR ON HFTi 0F Eiunx THE TPtia stop STOP THIS Hiw FETI DAUS 5iw THROUGHOUT tAL Bee yXGURES CREASE THESE SO) --i 1 pff.AT ATu1 TO SEW QUICKEST SD1 THE U.S.

ieVHlNJ WE DO OUR PART TGL.JGF. 3-1200 noRTH omeRicon baewiriG co.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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