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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 4

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 4

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

M3 BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, MONDAY, APRIL' 17, 1933 CELEBRITIES AT HUNT UEET Sunnyside Home See Million Jobs In 30-Hour Week Tooth Chief Clue For Poliee to Man In Auto Collision Slippery Roads Cause Scries Of Car Crashes Several I Brooklynite Dies in Pennsylvania Wreck Owners Vote for Mortgage Strike' No Joint Action Planned-Each to Seek Reduced Terms of Payments Plan Anniversary Fete for Old 13th It was on April 23, 1861, that the famous 13th Regiment marched away from the Cranberry St. armory to defend the Union on the battlefields of the Civil War. Next Saturday the few survivors of that gallant band will, be honored at a review in the armory, Sumner and Jefferson in observance of the 72d anniversary of the departure. The annual dinner of their association is to be held the following II. E.

Jones Not in His Car When It Was Struck hy One Who Left Srene The National Industrial Conference Board estimated today that a 30-hour week for American minaig and manufacturing industry, as proposed in the Black bill in Congress, would increase employment by about) 1,000,000. Estimates be one Congress placed the figure at The reports covered some 35 divisions of manufacturing Industry and showed average hours ptr week to be 32.6 for February. Hours in the textile finishing group were 44, as compared to 16.9 in iron and steel. These two figures represented the range in the 35 divisions. Thief Nabs Fifty Mrs.

Thomas Hens Special to The Eagle Cold Spring Harbor, April 17 Nassau County pjlice today are seeking the hen thief who, Saturday night, walked into one of Norman Thomas' chicken houses in the rear ol his Summer home here and decamped with 50 choice leg' horns, Rhode Island Reds and Plymouth Rocks belonging to the wife of the well-known attorney and Socialist candidate for President. There 'were about 100 hens which supplied eggs for a tea room in Manhattan, which Mrs. Thomas operate, but it is believed that the htn thieves were frightened by the barking of 30 cocker spaniels which are kept on the estate before they could elf an out the entire flock. i "mm-tcace strike" has been de clared by the owners of the 563 twn nrt three family homes in Sunnyside Gardens, Long Island City. ii mass meeting Friday Saturday, April 29.

afternoon, it was decided that, while no concerted action would be attempted at present, each home owner would seek to obtain reduced payment terms In line with the reduced values of real estate and the much lower incomes of the home owners now as compared with what they were from 1924 to 1928, when Sunnyside Gardens was created and developed by the City Housing Corporation. According to J. Charles Laue, executive secretary of the Consolidated Home Owners Mortgage Committee, a survey recently made showed that three-fourths of the Sunnyside residents now have only 5 cents for every dollar they had then, while the remaining fourth have suffered a 58 percent decrease. SMd Mr. Laue: "Economic pressure is forcing peo-ru ohn have nlwavx met their obli i v.

1 I 1 i I 1 Emm! I fMmmmmmmmmximmmiircmmmrmmmtmiimmmmmmmmmmmmimm Escaped Prisoner Hit by Automobile Plalnfield, N. April 17 William Toward, 26, a military prisoner who disappeared while working in-the sawmill at Mltchel Field, L. Sunday morning, was in a critical condition in Muhlenberg Hospital here today as a result of having been struck by an automobile in North Plainfield last night. Charles Schaub of Hackettstown, driver of the automobile, said that to avoid a collision with another car he was compelleld to drive to the side of the roadway, where Toward was walking in the darkness. He took the injured man to the hospital.

At Mltchel Field It was said that Toward's home is in California and that he had been sent to Mltchel gations to stop paying. Even those You're taking no chances when you serre Vhite Rote Tea it's deservedly New York's favorite. Rich, rare flavor protected in sealed packages with the who are in tne it) perceni ciasa are uniuuiintr tn cink more money into those houses until an adjustment is Yesterday's rain and slippery roadways resulted in a number of auto accidents in and around the metropolitan area in which several per-, sons uere injured. On Brooklyn man was in Pennsylvania. Three persons riding in a car driven by Lorenzo Morv-co, 21, ol 51-52 Sheridan Boulevard, Far Rock-away, were injured when the car overturned at Rockavay Beach Boulevard and Beach lluth St, Rockaway Beach, yesterday Mary Erzarvis, 23, of 115-02 Rock-away Beach Boulevard, received a fractured arm: Phyllis Kelly, 19, 126-10 Rockaway Beach Boulevard, contusions of the face; and Moras-co, lacerations of the face.

Miss Erzarvis was taken to the Rockaway Beach Hospital. Elizabeth Miller. 22. of 127 Chester Long Beach, is in St. John's Hospital at Atlantic Beach, L.

I. today with a fractured skull and abrasions received yesterday morning when a car in which she was riding crashed into a telephone at Park St. and Mohawk Ave, Atlantic Beach. Her condition was reported hi critical. Driver Arrested The driver of the car, Harry T.

Ulmer of 225 Parkside was arrested and charged with driving while intoxicated. He pleaded not guilty when arraigned before Justice of the Peace Eckenbcrg and was held In $1,000 bail for a hearing April 20. William Thompson, 55, handyman, was given a $25 fine and six months In the county jail by Judge Walter R. Jones of Hempstead, yesterday, after he pleaded guilty to driving while intoxicated, leaving the scene of an accident and operating without a license. Thompson, employed by Dr.

Clarence Cohen, Hempstead Village Trustee, took his employer's car from the garage at 47 Cathedral Hempstead, Saturday night. At Bell St. and Cathedral Ave. he collided with another e-ir operated by Mary E. Austin of Flushing, and owned by Myron S.

Beil, 46-59 157th Flushing, a passenger in the car. After the crash Thor.icson kept going and Miss Austin drove in pursuit. After a mile chase Beil caught Thompson and held him until the police arrived. A tooth Is the chief clue which police are following in an effort to learn the Identity of the operator of a car which on Saturday night crashed into a car belonging to Howard E. Jones, well-known shipping man.

at 86th St. and Colonial Road, injuring Mrs. Jones and a friend, Mrs. Thomas J. Connors.

This was learned today from Detective Walter J. Laurie of the Fort Hamilton station, in charge of the investigation. The car which hit the Jones car was badly WTecked. The operator fled, but left behind him a tooth and other indications that he had been injured in the crash. Check of the license plate revealed that the car was owned by Jack Buttinger of 8415 4th but Buttinger proved he had not been driving it at the time and stated he had no idea who had used his car.

His teeth are intact. "We are going over the list of Buttinger's friends to see who has lost a tooth and suffered other injuries," Detective Laurie raid today. Contrary to early reports of the accident, Mr. Jones, who lives at 8220 Narrows was not in his car at the time of the crash. The car was driven by Maurice Crawford of 420 10th the Jones' chauffeur, who was uninjured.

Mrs. Jones received a fractured rib and scalp lacerations in the crash and Mrs. Connors a fractured left arm. Both were taken to Norwegian Hospital. Praises Sermon Page in Eagle The Rev.

Dr. S. Parkes Cadman, pastor of Central Congregational Church, praised The Eagle for its Monday Sermon Page, in his Sunday afternoon broadcast over Station WEAF yesterday. Following his radio sermon, Dr. Cadman answers questions that have been sent to him.

One of the questions, with his answer, was: Q. Where can I find a newspaper that prints sermons of ministers which will be helpful to me as a country pastor? A. The best I know is The Brooklyn Eagle. For many years it has published a sermon page on Mondays, carrying complete discourses of a wide variety of preachers. It should receive the support of those who are Interested in the better religious work of journalism.

blue, white and gold label that is reassuring as an old friend! You're sure of economy, too, for Mrs. Woodrow Wilson and Rear Admiral Cary T. retired, are shown at the annual running of the cup race last Saturday. White Rose prices are the lowest in years! White Rose Tea made in tne mortgage structure. 2 LI.

Boys Held In Connecticut Pomfret. April 17 Robert Hare Delafleld 16, of Hewlett, L. and John Stoddard Jr. of Garden City were out in $1,000 bail each today on charges of breaking into and entering the E. Hoppin estate, here, to remove furniture for a clubhouse they had set up on a nearby estate.

Field from the disciplinary barracks of RAUAmAr1. Telonrf fVlo TinHirfl of his offense was not revealed. Financial Independence Week April 17th to 22nd CARD Straus Investors Given Little Hope Unless the Federal Government intervenes, little help can be afforded investors who bought of real estate bonds floated during boom years by the bankrupt S. W. Straus Co.

and other underwriters, in the opinion of Samuel Seabury. Seabury states this conclusion In his report as arbiter for the general Real Estate Bondholders' Protective Committee in a case dealing with a small bond issue on an apartment house in Buffalo. He explains, however, that the case Is typcial of "thousands upon thousands now existing throughout the United The central figure In the Buffalo case is Louis R. Lurie, a Californian high Gap, near here, when an automobile in which he was riding upset and crashed into a concrete bridge. Filitowitz.

who was visiting friends at Mount Carmel, was the only occupant of the car seriously injured, although Martha Callis, 19. of Mount Carmel, received a fractured right arm. Several hours later Mrs. Katie JTniorski of Brooklyn received a fractured skull, concussion of the brain and internal injuries when a car driven by her husband, John, crashed in a similar manner at the same spot. Mrs.

Uniorski was taken to the Palmerton Hospital, where it was said she is not expected to live. Her three children, ranging from 8 to 18 years, also passengers in the car, were treated as the hospital for cuts and bruises. Mr, Uniorski was only slightly injured. An unidentified man, about 42, is in a critical condition in King's County Hospital today with a fractured skull received at 2 o'clock this morning when he was struck by a Fulton St. trolley at Lewis Ave.

and Fulton St. TOURNAMENT or Benefit of Our Lady of Grace Church Very Rer. Mijr. L. A.

Numnwy, Pulor A kin VOOR CHILDREN OF 'M(1-' Air Dlrcfi b. iLTrc $100 DOOR PRIZE Many Other Conteit Priiet I or ALL POPl LAR CARD GAMES Brooklynite Killed 'Allentown. April 17 John Filitowitz, 23. of Brooklyn, was instantly killed early yesterday at Le- and business associate of the late S. W.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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