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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 11

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

I BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW. YORK, SUNDAY, AUGUST 21, 1932 M2 A 11 milk one cent retail here from eight to nine cents a quart. Meanwhile, barricades on Seven State and Federal Highways were Exhibitions Are Planned for Farm Strikers Threaten Revolt Over Milk Truce Piccard Flight To Test Ether CtlDae4 Tnm Tf would be Increased when the sun Political Pets Fail To Pqint City Cars As Required by Law Colony House Shows The Pathos of Needy There Are Many Laughs (Willi a Catch in Them) as It Sends Children of Jobless to Summer Camps Need. Funds Angelina, aged 5, bragged to the workers at Colony House this week about the wonders of the country. Angelina knew about the country.

She who had thought until last June that the world was just a vast expanse of tenements and smokestacks and brick pavements NO. 26 There are HUNDREDS OF HIGH PRICE CARS purchased by the city and OPERATED AT THE TAXPAYERS', expense for the benefit of political pets many of them holding easy jobs at fat salaries which they don't earn. The taxpayer has almost no means of identifying these cars when they roam the city streets during the day on business or at night when there is no business to be 'attended to, or when they roam the country highways to pleasure resorts. About the only concession made in this direction is the display of a small easily removable plate on the windshield or above the license plate and the principal purpose of this is to get concessions from traffic cops and to avoid penalties for parking violations. There is a city ORDINANCE which REQUIRES, that all CITY-OWNED CARS be plainly PAINTED with the words CITY OF NEW YORK in letters of more than five-inch dimensions.

NOT ONE of the political pets' pleasure cars are so marked. It is doubtful if any of the fleet of hundreds of these cars that are WASTING the taxpayers' money are Identified as this ordinance requires. unimpaired. No trucks Dcanng livestock, butter, fRgs, poultry, or other farm products were allowed to enter this city. Farmers who have not been converted to the holiday movement, which seeks to obtain the cost of production plus a fair profit are reluctant to hazard loss of their products or personal injury.

BERRY PICKER DIES Sag Harbor, L. Aug. 20 Anthony Wienclewski, 53, of Bridge-hampton, died from a heart attack: this morning while picking huckleberries with his wife and five friends in the pine swamp off the East-hampton-Sag Harbor Turnpike near here. WAT SttJIPPILWi INCREASED Our NEW proi-ess Wilji giiHmntee full supply or no charge. If.

A. KURRE 283 Fifth Ave, Tel. SOmh 8-1374 l.irntned Plumber STORE. ESTABLISHED 1837 Store Hour 9:30 to 5:30 i During August 4 Some Hold Priee Increase Too Small Bloekade Firm on Oilier Food Sioux City, Aug. 20 Rumbles of opposition among picketing farmers to proposals that milk trucks be permitted to pass through their blockade carried possibility tonight of new disorders in their no-selling campaign.

Leaders of the National Farmers Holiday Association, sponsoring the strike for higher farm produce prices, said loads of milk be allowed into Sioux City through the tightly drawn picket lines. Many of their followers, however, insisted the blockade should be continued against all farm produce, including milk. Several of the county officers expressed fear trouble might occur Sunday if a settlement of the new disagreement were not reached. Some milk producers not parties to the agreement announced last night, which set a new price of $1.80 a hundredweight, declared the Producers Association should have held out or the original demand of $2.17. The new rates raise the price of BROOKLYN'S PIONEER A COOLIDGEISM ''Almost all our governmental units have been taxing, borrowing and spending beyond the capacity of the people to COOLIDGE.

JU5-JU7 rULlUN a 1. I rlKUUun IU WAMIlNli I UN SI. OPPOSITE BROOKLYN MAIN POSTOr F1CE JiipI a Step Below Borough Hull Phone MAin 4-1000 Closed Saturdays Cotton "Oriental" Scatter Rugs for a time, half frightened, the terrifying beauty of the country. It is a taxing program they pursue at the settlement at 297 Dean but the Colony House workers feel that by adhering to it even in the face of present economic difficulties, they are buying community health for the future at bargain prices. They hope next year their ninth in Summer camp work-that they may reopen another cottage at Louise Tallman Camp which lack of funds this year compelled them to close.

They hope that they will be able to send away a much larger number of children for vacation, ranging from two weeks to all Summer. And, finally, they hope that the suppleuentary all-day outings which they provided this year for those who couldn't go to camp may be increased in number and attendance. This year the attendance at these outings was more than 2,000. Next year the directors will be disappointed lt it isn't at least one-third again as large. Cost So Little "The cost of the work," Mrs.

Robert Strobridge, the president, said, "is really so little. It costs only $1 a day to send a boy to camp and only $5 a week to send a girl to camp. "But the benefits they derive cannot be measured in dollars and cents." The social workers agre with her. Not only the health dividend but the amusement dividends are invaluable. There is, for example, the classic Incident of the lad mho returned from camp via a Hudson River ferry boat this week.

After gazing won-deringly at the craft for a time, he inquired of the social worker, "Missus, Is this one of them battleships they use for war?" Asks Compulsory Arbitration for Nations in Treaty A worldwide treaty of arbitration should be the goal of civilized nations, it is asserted by Dr. Helen May Cory in "Compulsory Arbitration of International Disputes," Just Issued by the Columbia University Press and called "the first full-length study to appear in English of the system of obligations whereby States have undertaken in advance to have reaourse to arbitration for the settlement of their disputes." Such a would exercise great moral force, says Dr. Cory, discussing the problem of Inducing States to promise to arbitrate, the question of the machinery of settlement, and the difficulties involved in determining the bases upon which, disputes shall be decided. "A worldwide treaty of general arbitration does not exist," points out Dr. Cory, sometime Gilder Fellow in Columbia University and lately Carnegie Fellow in international law.

fc'iti-i (j) pression of the beauty and character of these Rugs. You will have to see them to fully appreciate how faithfully the skilled had just come back from a farm to which Colony House sent her. She talked excitedly. "It was green," she said. "There were more trees than I could count.

There were real ducks. There were real turkeys. There was a cow. And what do you think I did? I squeezed the cowU' Dominic, aged 1, listened to her a little superciliously until memory tinged his altitude with sheepish-ness. Alas, no Bathing Suit What did Angelina know about the country? Hadn't he.

Dominic, Just come back from two weeks at camp? Hadn't he, on learning that Colony House was going to send him, sat up all night before the train left to be sure that he wouldn't miss lt? And hadn't he, alas! for memory is so undiscriminating neglected to take a bathing suit on that glorious outing because, as he explained to the social worker, "Mother said I wouldn't need one. She said I could have a bath when I got home." They have unnumbered laughs- with-a-catch-in-them such as these at Colony House. Within the next two weeks they will have more, for the last of some 250 children, sent to the country by the settlement, will be back in town again, sturdy enough to resist, and probably with stand the coming Winter. Budgets Pared Pared budgets and decreased allotments notwithstanding, Colony House kept its Summer camp work almost to normal this year, for its directors felt that the benefits to the children could not be sacrificed, even though economio conditions were straightened. It send 96 girls to the Louise Tallman Camp at Green River.

Fifty boys were sent to Camp Grant at Calverton, L. and 103 children, both boys and girls, were sent to various camps and farms through The Tribune fund. The Summer camp budget of $3,500 set aside by Colony House was completely exhausted. But so important Is the work in the opinion of the executives that they have issued an emergency appealappeal for funds to extend it next year. Doctors in examining the children who were sent to camp.

and particularly the children of the unemployed, found that most of them were undernourished and readily subject to the ills which follow In the wake of low resistance. The depression, they found, has gone hard on the children. Sixteen Nationalities It was the youngsters who needed camp life most who were sent by the settlement workers. Necessity was the only basis for discrimination. A total of 16 nationalities were represented In the groups.

The children came from crowded homes In the drab tenement section around the Gowanus Canal, where families range in number from 6 to 13 and where four rooms are a Most of them were the sons and daughters of unemployed masons, peddlers, bricklayers, barbers and truck drivers. But many were the children of depression widows whose husbands, finding the economic burden too great, had decamped. Some were really fatherless or motherless. And one lad told the social worker, "I haven't any father. My father's In jail." One Group of Five" There was one group of five children in the same family who had never seen the country before this They lived and since their vacation (have returned to a dear little shelter In the rear of a Red Hook store, which is their only home.

There four of them sleeo at nleht in the same bed, arising in the early morning to search rubbish cans for such scraps of clothing as may furnish varmth for their backs and protection for their feet. Their mother did not want them to go to camp at first. "They haven't and clothes," she said. "They have not even shoes, except those found In rubbish bags." But the social workers found clothes and sent them off, wide-eyed and, (j, Belgian weavers copied the costly Orientals in designs and color- ings. All in substantial weight and with fringed ends.

tern as the result of what would be ordinarily a minor accident. The power margin was so narrow that the mishap of a fortnight ago not only halted completely I. R. T. traffic from Brooklyn Bridge to Grand Central, but it reduced by 40 percent the service in Brooklyn on B.

M. T. lines which extend into Manhattan. Because the lack of power In Manhattan forced the headway between trains there to be increased from 6 and 7 minutes to a full 10 minutes, the same drop in service had to be made in the Culver, Fourth Brighton, Sea Beach and West End lines in Brooklyn. The B.

M. T. could not operate over the Brooklyn legs of these lines more trains than could be sent through Manhattan. Nothing to Be Done Inquiry in transit offices reveals that there is nothing that can be done with safety to avoid such a tie-up again any time there' is trouble in the I. R.

T. system. Electrical engineers of the company insist that a temporary tie-in with the Edison company to supply such voltage as might be needed to take the place of any loss is impractical because of danger of mixing currents from two- different sources, likely to be sufficiently different in frequency to cause serious blowouts. The engineers Insist that the only insurance against similar traffic blockades is a radical remedy. It must be either the economical plan suggested under unification and dependent upon consolidation for efficacy: expansion of the B.

M. T. plant to cover Manhattan at the cost of millions, which would be wasted in the event of future unifi-cation; or the substitiftion of Edison power throughout for a large part of one system or the other and the resultant scrapping and waste of Women'sPure ST' o(w: Irregulars 25 Maison Francaise New Proposals Made as Rockefeller Centre Men Meet Officials in Paris Further plans for novel exhibits In La Maison Francaise, the projected French building on the 5th Ave, front of Rockefeller Center, were announced, yesterday. These Include an Infinite variety of de luxe displays representative of the commerce, industry and art of France and her colonies, as well as cinema salon for the revelation of methods used in manufacturing French goods, a roof garden restaurant to be operated by one of the leading French restaurateurs and the setting aside of one entire boor for the display of modes created by leading dressmakers ani fashion authorities. Representatives In Paris The announcement was coincident with the arrival in Paris of Webster B.

Todd, one of the builders and managers of Rockefeller Center, who was accompanied by Lester S. Abberley and Douglas S. Gibbs, both of counsel for Rockefeller, Center. The American delegation entered immediately Into final conferences with Senator Jean Philip, head of the French committee sponsoring La Maison Francaise, and Edouard De Navailles, chef of the Chancel-lerie and 'Contentieux Division of Foreign Affairs. President Alfred F.

Lebrun and Premier Edouard Herriot of France, who have given full government patronage to the structure, are expected to be consulted in the final conferences. International Aspect This French governmental approval, coupled with the recent action of President Hoover in signing a bill that makes Rockefeller Center partake of the nature of a "free port." will have a significant effect on the growing International aspect of the huge mid-city development. La Maison Francaise will be the first French Building of its type to be erected anywhere in the world. Plans are being made for the installation of salons for the permanent and periodic exhibition of many lines of merchandise never before displayed outside of France. One of the floors, according to present proposals, will be devoted wholly to ornaniental display cabinets of metal and glass, comprising 437 separate exhibits.

Other salons occupying entire floors will be devoted to merchandise of greater Vulk. The main floor is expected to be given over to formal shops. Upper floors, it is planned, will be subdl- Jed into groups inside shops and glass show cases, with broad aisles geometrically arranged to produce maximum display facilities. Woods Doesn'tGive 'Tinker's Damn' for Anony Kicks mous Editor Brooklyn Daily I am calling your attention to the dangerous condition of Willow between Clark and Pierrepont Sts Center light out, leaving center of -street in total darkness. Is there any redress for heavy taxpayers? Are we obliged to pay for center light or should the cost be de ducted from tax bill which has been increased for 1932? OVERBURDENED TAXPAYER.

Deputy Commissioner Harry Woods, in charge of the activities of the Department of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity in Brooklyn, said "We are endeavoring to give the Brooklyn Heights section better lights and In the course of that endeavor we have been putting in lights that give an equal distribution of light over the whole block. In some cases where there were only two lights on a block we have been able to put three. "As to this complaint, I don't give a tinker's damn for any anonymous complaint from arty one who isn't big enough to say whd he is. If this writer wishes to communicate with the department I will give him the fullest explanation possible of anything he wants to know." Craig Claims Law Firm Owes $11,574 For Office Rental Charles L. Craig, former City Controller, is suing Powell, Lowrie and Ruch, attorneys, for $11,574.03, which he claims they owe for rental of part of a suite on the 30th floor of 120 Broadway that he leased at the rate of S30.000 yearly.

He charged that Powell. Lowrie and Ruch declared last March that they had found space in another building which would give them rent free for a year, rie declares they owed him 7.824.03 for rent prior to April 29. 1932, and he demands the. difference as having accrued since that date at the rate of SI 550 a month, half the monthly rent, which he says they agreed to pay, while he paid one-third and Mr. Kelby one-sixth.

The defendant law firm, composed of FredericS J. Powell, John M. Lowrie and Clinton J. Ruch, filed a motion in the Supreme Court yesterday asking that Mr. Craig's action be dismissed.

The grounds for the dismissal were not given. Mr. Craig is represented by John A. Miller of 120 Broadway, and the defendants by Charles H. McCarthy of 70 Pine St.

Former Justice Charles H. Kelby is a nominal defendant because of I his participation in the alleged agreement. 1.98 NOTK Due to this ridic- ulously low price, some may iorm a wrong: im- Thread Silk rjose Pair Yr. XvilC kuit I 131 'i I Pure thread silks. Also many rayon meshes in this lot.

All newest shades. Bot 33c Socks Extra Heavy Fancy Rayon Socki, all perfect; double sole, heel and A toe. Pair was above the horizon and would be decreased when the sun was on the opposite side the earth. Observations Indicated that the effects were Just as strong at midnight as midday. That eliminated the sun.

Milky Way Out, Too If the ravs came from the stars the rays should come more plenti fully from our galaxy, the Milky Way, and particularly from its cen ter, in Saggitarious. urjservaiions made in the southern hemisphere. which was the besi location for this purpose, indicated that the rays were no more plentiful from Saggl- tarius or any other portion ol the Milky Way than they were from any other section of the sky. The distant universes still remain under suspicion and probably will continue that way, although one series of observations eliminates the nearest outside universe the Nebula of Andromeda. The other outside universes are well distributed throughout space.

The only remaining sources be sides the outside universes are the supposedly empty space of our cos mos and the regions outside our cosmos. Since the rays come in equal quantity and with equal intensity from all directions, one guess as to their origin is as good as an other. Bend to Pole Since the first trip to the strato sphere, by Professor Piccard, Profes sor Compton has made a prelimi nary announcement of his researches into the cosmic rays. He found that the rays are somewhat more plenti ful toward the poles. Indicating Uiat the cosmic rays are subji-rt to magnetic influences mhlch 3d trwm out of a straight line pa" 'auia; them to concentrate extent on the polar arras.

This observation gives Kxir weight to the conclusion that the rccmic rays are electrons moving at high velocities. Professor Millikan found no such concentration near the poles and he holds the theory they are quantas of light. The stratosphere, to which Pro fessor Piccard made his Journeys, is Just the upper layer of the lower part of our atmosphere. It is not known definitely to what height our atmosphere extends. Boundary Indefinite Its outer boundaries would be rather indefinite, as the atmosphere becomes less and less dense the higher we go until a point is reached at which' the vacuum would be as good as in an X-ray tube, or a radio tube.

On the surface of the earth the air exerts a pressure of 16 pounds per square Inch on every object im mersed in it. This pressure is caused by the weight of the air above it. The higher we go in the air the less the pressure becomes. The pressure is reduced to the ex tent of the weight of air below us. We can form some clear ideas as to the amount of air above us, but the extent to which it extends outward from the earth is rather indefinite.

The lower strata of air is rather turbulent. Storms' are confined mostly to a layer of the air five miles In thickness. The circulation of the air caused by the temperature variations is lit this layer. Tell of 500-Mile Gales Above the storm area the atmosphere is more quiescent. It Is believed by some scientists that terrific winds blow steadily from east to west at a speed of 500 miles per hour above the storm area, but there is no very strong evidence to support that belief.

If these great winds do exist above the five-mile area, and Professor Pic-card's balloon got into them, he would have been blown nearly half way across the Atlantic during the few hours he was in the stratosphere. More than 90 percent of the mass of the atmosphere is concentrated in the lower 10-mile strata of the atmosphere, due to downward compression caused by the weight of the gases. By rising to a height of 10 miles Professor Piccard was able to study the cosmic rays under conditions in which more than 90 percent of the shielding caused by the atmosphere was eliminated. Sunken Steamer With Treasure Trove Located Norfolk, Aug. 20 (fP The salvage ship Salvor which has been searching for the sunken steamer Mesida, with treasure estimated at $4,0000.000 to $6,000,000.

off the Vir ginia Capes, returned to Norfolk today for supplies. Capt. Harry L. Bowdoin of the Salvor announced he was satisfied with progress" during the search but would not elaborate on this statement except to say that the sea has been rough. The Salvor went to local shipyard for repairs and probably will be in port a wek The steel observation tank which is to play an Important part in the Salvor's operations was covered with rust, showing the tank had been in decIine(, make anyF statement, lt axHim lie I7htla Pontoln PnwHnin I.

onthnrltal US sources that the wreckage of a large steamer, definitely identified as the Merida, has been located at a point approximately 65 miles off the Virginia Capes. The wreckage which Is heavily encrusted with barnacles and sea growth, lies in approximately 200 feet of water. Dr. Forth Bxaminitlon Houm 10 to 6 Optometrist Tel. TRIingli 5-5373 Eyeglasses Lentleglar-triiaa Carrecttoo ef Eye Defects Eyestrain Ophthalmic Muscular Exercises Dr.

ARTHUR FORTH, Optometrist 358 FoJtoi Street tT 1 I Girls' Misses' All Wpol Sport Sweaters Value 1 00 DVc Fancy effects, broken lots, direct from mill short sleeves; sizes 26 to .14 in. Subways Face Power Crisis Continued From Page 1 dent on one should deprive the city of the Tull use of both. Chairman William G. Fullen and Chief Engineer W. C.

Lancaster of the State Transit Commission explained that orders compelling the B. M. T. to provide its own power in Manhattan had not been pressed because an economical solution to the power problem was dependent upon whether the city unified. Installation of B.

M. power. It was stated, would cost from to $20,000,000 and the investment for which the city would have to pay if unified would be superflu ous in the event of unification. Running to Limit To this extent the question seems to Involve merely the saving or waste of $20,000,000 of taxpayers' money. But Inquiry reveals apparently a much more grave situation.

iThe Manhattan powerhouses or the I. R. T. are running to the limit of capacity. There was plenty of safety margin when the old Transit Commission waived the provision of the dual contracts compelling the B.

M. T. to furnish its own power and allowed it to buy current from the I. R. T.

But as long as four or five years ngo this margin approached the vanishing point, and the commission ordered the B. M. T. to install equipment in Manhattan. The B.

M. T. agreed and asked what kind of a system the city desired. Reveal Possible Loss It was a study of the situation made then that revealed the tremendous loss the city faced unless the question of unification already under discussion were not answered first. It was found that If the lines were unified the present I.

R. T. power equipment, with possibly some few comparatively moderate improvements, would be thoroughly adequate for both B. M. T.

and I. R. T. tubes ta that borough, while the Williamsburg plant oi the B. M.

T. could carry the co-rbined Brooklyn load, The Manhattan margin would be4 easily provided by relieving the I. R. T. dynamos of the load and waste in supplying current to the I.

R. T. Brooklyn extensions. Further Revelations It also was brought out that for future developments a more economic power might be obtained from the Edison companies, especially In view of the tie-in with up-State hydroelectric plants. Further, the possible use of the mer cury arc rectifier now being installed on the city's new lines as a substitute for the more expensive transformer sub-stations, entered, as an element.

So the Transit Commission the brakes on an immediate expansion of the B. M. T. power system to await the answer on unification believed then to be imminent and the development of the power question generally. Years have passed, the unification answer is still missing, the Edison Company has given the city a power contract regarded as so advan tageous that it was accepted as an alternative to the building of any power equipment other than the Installation of the rectifiers and a minimum of sub-stations, Narrow Power Margin But nothing has been done to in sure the city against general paralysis of its transportation sys- I Children's Charmray Brief Unions Value She 6 lo 12 Women's VulnrA lo Kroken These newest desirable for early heavier and more Pink only.

of brief Unions will be very 5 school wear. They are serviceable than ordinary sorts. Bodice top styles, shell or tight knee, regular and extra large sizes. Finest lisles and combed cottons. Men's Chalmers Flat Knit Comhinjlions The foremost dollar grade in sleeveless and knee length.

ft Also hort sleeves and knee length. Irregulars and peifert. Suit jjj Serviceable Bleached Pillow Cases I 4.x36 In. 4 ff I Special for I 1 8 Bleached Bed Sheets Church Pole Named For Lindbergh Baby The nef flag pole in the park fronting the Grace United Chapel of the Christian Church in Long Island City is probably the first to be named after the new Lindbergh baby. According to Bishop Charles Nelson, pastor, the flag pole was raised on the day the child was born.

The congregation will purchase a silver placque with the name of the child for the pole. Brooklyn Reports 27 Typhoid Cases There were 42 typhoid cases reported last week, 27 in Brooklyn, as compared with 49 cases the previous week. Health Commissioner Wynne said the spread of typhoid probaoly was due to typhoid carriers or to bathing in prohibited waters. Three cases were reported yesterday In Brooklyn. Family Trade the abandoned equipment.

Children Willed $12,000 Estate of MrssWJLCaifney Mrs. Winifred McE. Gaffney, who a led on a vacation In South Lima N- July 31, left an estate of about $12,000. according to a petl tlon filed with her will in Brooklyn Surrogates Court yesterday. She left trust funds of $2,000 each for her three sons, James, John and Paul, and the residue to her daughter, Helen A.

Gaffney, all of whom resided with her in 231 Wyckoff St. Mrs. Maria T. Schultz. who died In 921 E.

35th Aug. 2, left about $2,500, states the petition to probate her will, filed in the Surrogate's Court yesterday. She leaves her estate equally to her two sons, Charles A. Schultz. of 104-48 198th Hol-lis, and Jacob F.

Schultz, of 2401 Avenue T. i OWier wills petitioned for probate here yesterday were: Will $1,800 to Kin Abraham Tannenbaum, died July 15, last, disposing of an estate estimated a( $600 to the widow, Fannie, and the residue equally between a son, Murray, and a daughter. Ethel Tannenbaum, ail of 823 Park Ave. Jacques Klein, died Aug. 13.

leaving his entire estate, estimated at $1,000, to his widow, Sarah, of 1171 E. 92d St. Williams Jackson, died April 19. leaving $aOQ to each of his sisters, Lilly Harris and Eleanor Fonteroy, both of Richmond Va. and the rest Mary Hundler.

with whom he had resided at 77 Truxton St. ,113 i-owm; vi uaui hen home and questioned Miss Ko-valeski. a servant. As the police searched the girl's wardrobe, they saw a photograph of the maid in the Meir home at the time the $500 brooch was missed. The police said Miss Kovaleski admitted taking the brooch and showed them how she had sewn In the lining of a coat cuff the 16 jewels set In the brooch.

Blunt seized her. As he did that. Blunt snid. she swallowed four of the 16 diamonds. The others were recovered.

A search of the grounds produced the, brooch, the police said. Kon Special xJC each Superfine Viofa Unions 39c Suit '5 3 l.ol I2y2c yi. i Extraordinary J.95 54 in. White Rubber Sheeting, yd. 50e Pure Linen Dish Toweling The kind you ued lo pay 29c yd.

for. "The Coal That Satisfies" BUY IT HOW Before the September Advance in Price Adopt a Thrifty Policy Order Now Before the Advance At this time when the practice of economy is so essential QUALITY IS PARAMOUNT Bo-fore you buy your Winter's supply of Coal, it woula be wall to investigate and know the calibre of the people with whom you are about to deal.s BUY FROM US WITH CONFIDENCE i'olorrd Bordem All 16 lp. Wide Striped Linen for Sports Wear 36 In. ide 1 Value 39c yd. Ijt U.

White ground with woven hairline black stripes. Girl Swallows 4 Diamonds As She Admits Jewel Theft Toilet Specials Florida Water, 2-oz. bottle. Noted Murray Lanman brand SCEAMTOH Cz LEHIGH COAL COMPANY GEORGE J. PATTERSON, President i 293 LIVINGSTON STREET, BROOKLYN TRiangle 5-8100 BROOKLYN QfEKXS NASSAU Melba Face Powder, white, Rachel and Naturelle, usually 45c.

Imported Bath Soap. Roger Gal-let's 40c size in assorted Special to the Eagle Cedarhurst, L. Aug. 20 Stella Kovaleski, 20 and attractive, arraigned today before Justice of the Peace L. J.

Ekenberg in the theft of a $500 diamond brooch from the home of Arthur O. Melr in Oak wood April 26, when she was visiting his maid, was held in $2,500 ball for the Nassau grand Jury. Her arrest followed a complaint made bv Mrs. Arthur Cohen, 461 Ar lington that wearing apparel was missing. Capt.

Daniel Kenyon and LW Ted. Blunt went to the Co-1 Imported Beaded Evening Bafr Sample, value lo 5.00, at We Specialize in rrr a Ceylon Orange Pekoa tea 100 for 59c Te- 2 79c I Oranf Pekoe or Choice Mixed, 2 Ibi. for 69c 4.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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