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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 13

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN EAGLE, APR 20. 1944 Borough ALP Demands Simpler Soldier Vote Law Kin.s rr.iv mired a demand Oovernor today for an im ediate special session of tin pglslature to simplify Ihe 8ta: Idier-vote and to mend thi rie and Red Cross personnel John r.ix ford chairman Torchin. secretary, declared lie present la.v msmm bv Republican majority in the Lt e. is a cumoer.some and ve procedure requtrms 1 application bv the soldier three or ir separate steps his procedure." they added prevent a law soldier vote it. i.n the rich: to vo'c tor peo-nll over the world, should not bv their own Oov- Dr.

G. Avery to Direct Firemen's Fund Boro Botanic Garden WJSSLfcL I dowment Association of the city Of Dr. George S. Averv. pt rftfMK New York, known as the Third En-botany at Connecticut College jMTM has been ordered by been appointed the Brooklyn Botanic Garden to the m.

a has under advlse-ni vacancy rausrsi by the death HH Mannaran Supreme Court the ap- vear of Dr BT Attorney General Mw "bA Dr. Averv was graduated froiJK aH Un.versitv and received SmjM r.ent Of the MMM the Universitv ot Wisconsin MMl mWm disabllty insurance He served VP VMH peiiion funds are Duke Universif, JT mW the rank durui- the has been MW' have at Connecticut He held a A fl 'V maintained ovel a MM im rtment VP 4Wf JH dumped all seven Into the Dr. Avery wiiil and mmWK St i.atorv anency uce piesidint Botanical -aMJBam. Society of America now is "MMW MMMM He mW JBH he so- MXt Mmmm aird CietV Of Plant Ph.VSIolo Olsts Toltcv MW JB MttSKM Wlll'p vn ritnllprl u-h'lll of inv Botanical Club Sorietv for Growth MM JB ineut'" or debU and Development and Sigma MT aM He is coauthor ot a book. "Growth c'isr'ose tiir Thi-ti" Fn.

i Hormones in Plants Dr George 5 Avery dowment ha total WNCtSOt lip BKMrtmaUfa si3oooo against total TltAMlr TL 1 HabiliUea of "more than inOUSnfl IrfiK 11 806 prooL Orders liquidation 01 two IIIVHJUIIUJ IIVIX 1 Bottled under the label "Gold more Mven fundi are to be To 'Potato' Whisky rrf Caravan, of thirst, New Yorkers 'Ufv IIAIIIf FIIHHII iHQIDE GUBRD Liquor Shop. 32(1 St. and Broadway. Btt tofegword for you ond thdelt' Airlines jl.m,iy i. mny in 'iCoe m-l hr 'p, jsatisly parched throats ls a do-, A total of 394.5ti9.979 ixiunri mile, FLATBUSH AVE.

at lAFAYtTTt AVE. whiskv composed wi re flown durum the month, an oi n0 of 80 percent neutral spirits dis- increase of 131.185 751 mail pound I i'ivVViA machiini' I tlllea from culled potato's and 20 utiles over totals in Marih. 1943. 1 1 aB'rUaaAaMKWaayaH Buwri jluu BhiL rine and Rod Cross personnel A somewhat similar ri.i: last Jected by OowrttM Dewey. Crawford and announced 0 American Labor party clubs la Brooklyn were beginning a house-to-housc canvass to distribute printed war ballot application St.

Francis Prep Lists 2 Scholarship Exams Two high school scholarships be offered at competitive cxamir It tons conducted by St. Francis Pi on April 29 at 9 a m. in the sclic 1 41 Butler Place. June Candida for graduation at parochial a I elementary schools are eligible compete, and no registration PRAYER FOR HEROIC UNDERGROUND FIGHTERS During observance at City Hall of first anniversary of heroic resistance of Jews of Warsaw ghetto against Nazis, who finally exterminated them after suffering heavy losses Max Greenberg, World War I veteran, stands in foreground under flog held by Pvt. Morris Luster, while Cantor Moishe Oysher chants memorial prayer.

Mayor LaGuordia is among those on City Hall steps. A Losing Fight Is Truly 2,000 HERE PAY TRIBUTE TO WARSAW DEAD Bitter, Says Jap Diary Does your "Every day A unlike the Japanese, th Theae I soldier's sense of humor carries him Honoring these who chose a fight-1 excerpts from i dead Jap soldier's through, more than anything else. death instead of docile submis 11 now mucn the Japs 1 He closed by stating that "our for the Emperor, said progress in the Pacific Ls going sion to Nazi "liquidation in Warsaw ghetto. packed New Lots Talmud a motm. ct ii Lh.

i. ooi Scrap Paper Yield Not Good Enough Although salvage officials are still dissatisfied with scrap paper collections, it is evident today that Mayor LaGuardla's appeal to Brook-lynites to keep the paper separate from garbage has had effect. Yesterday's pickup by Sanitation Department trucks indicated that borough householders had been complying with the Mayor's plea and had been careful to remove all foreign matter from the paper as they placed it on sidewalks. The collections resulted in a yield slightly greater than that of the previous week, but officials of the drive have announced that the totals would be much higher if lull co-operation were forthcoming. The paper is rushed to mills, where it is converted into essential war materials such as food containers, shell casing, paper para Torah and overflowed into Penn- Society of the Jewish Hospital of i war and in transporting the sylvanta and New Lots last Brooklyn in the Dr.

Leon Louria wounded. AUaitonum, 474 St. Mark the The experience, of Commander of the of colonel in. s.t. 1 citrette taste different 1 Milton J.

Matzner in the medical service in a naval hospital here in the States was the second part of the society's program. He discussed the types of patients encountered in a naval hospital in tbit country and mentioned the im It was a year ago yesterday that War area, the last of 40,000 Jews, mostly the In other entries the Jap men-aged and children those unfit that many dead and wound-eompUtaory labor were killed, end-1 ed were brought in daily; that no lag six weeks of bare-fist resistance one had a cigarette; later, that he to the tough youths of the German had contracted malaria, had no army, armed with modern weapons water, and that there were no doc- factors portance of the psvehogi young iignting and tanks. tors. The Jap wrote he had prayed th. hosDitals.

Some of I hose who escaped from and that in the afternoon his tern- Matzner commented on Warsaw were in last night's audi- perature dropped. Prom that time ber of malaria cases in ence and most of the refugees wept on he recorded the names of those and the use of atabrine rtaooi oimou urouDem intoned witn mm wno cued; the last time I presslve theraov chutes and plasma holders. Five lately the Hebrew chant for honored dead. he wrote in his diary he said, "I feel 1 Major Benjamin M. Bernstein, in a daze.

surgeon in the army reserve, spoke The army medical officer related on the public health service and stories of life durine the Guadal- military meriiJhe Hp oot.linpd th El Mole Rachmim iGod, full of The impartial nature of the day's observance was stressed by former campaign and other Pacific information tauaht. to lis medieni the services. "When people fight for a common cause they know no creed." he said. "There is no line not only surgical and of the men. he pointed also fly control, sanitation, of demarcation between Catholic.

and draining swamps. "M.irv. -ti, progress has rwen made Jew and Protestant, when all fight together as brothers. Their goal is 5 1 in the control of tropical diseases," he said, "but even at the height of Among the subjects covered In this course were decorum, aviation medicine, neuropsychology, uses of sulfa drugs and penicillin and the treatment, of malaria, meningitis and tuberculosis. Presiding was Dr.

Irving Tran, president of the society. a campaign it was rare that surgical cases exceeded medical ones." Colonel Rosenzweig stated that. Bucci Appointed To Family Court Nicholas Bucci or 115 Henry assistant corporation counsel for the city in charge of education matters, has been appointed by Mayor LaGuardia as a temporary Domestic Relations Court Justice. Bucci will serve in place of Justice Juvenal MarchLsio. who has received a month's leave of absence to work for the Italian War Reliel Committee, a National War Fund agency headed by Myron C.

Taylor, President Roosevelt's special envoy to the Vatican. Another assistant corporation counsel. Ruasell L. Tarbox, has been appointed a temporary member of the Municipal Service Com Former Magistrate Joseph Gold-atein hailed the Warsaw fighters as heroes in the aicient Hebrew tradition. Reminding his listeners that Spring Is the Passover season, he recalled leaders such as Bar Kochba, -who led a guerrilla band against the Persiaas in the time of Nebuchad Appeals Conviction In Spanking of Boy, 10 "NO! I Smoke RALEIGHS nezzar, and Matthias, who headed the Maccabean struggle against the Greeks and is now celebrated i.n the I Jewish "least of lights." admitted striking the bov 20-inch ruler several til said the ruler broke.

"They fought for libei ate fighting," Goldstein they shall not have died i mon to succeed Harry W. Marsh The boy testified Mummert hit Lvnbrook, April 20 Ira C. Mummert, principal of the Wheeler Avenue School in Valley Stream for 18 years, has filed an appeal in Nassau County Court to set aside an assault conviction for spanking a 10-year-old boy until the ruler broke. Tarbox lives at 1165 5th Manhattan. Marsh is now acting as commissioner of welfare in place of Com- mm 15 or times with the ruler and that he pleaded with the principal to stop.

He also said he washed his own face afterward to Princess Royal Attends Theater on Birthday Eve London, April 20 U.R--The Kim end Queen took Princess Elizabetr eve of her 18th birthdav amnver. icled of third Mrs Har degree assault by Judge Cyril J. County police Today's Profile aary to see the musical comedy Brown of District Court and sentenced was suspended. The judge found Mummert guilty of exceeding his statutory authority and sergeant and physicians testified they saw red welts and black and blue bruises on the boy's body. ounreuung ui uie Air.

The royal party was cheered when it appeared in the royal box, and the principals of the cast, including Jack Hulbert and. Cicely Courtneidge, were received by the King, Queen and Princess during the intermission. The principal aimitted spanking Honey production in Mexico, great-the boy, Lester hankinson of 289 1 ly increased In recent years, reached Emerson Place, Valley Stream, for lover 12.000 tons in 1943; exports to Harold R. Moskovit. State president of the Affiliated Young Democrats, has the distinction of being one of the youngest men ever to crash "Who's Who in America." At 37 he is a politician, industrial, labor and public relations man.

throwing a book from the balcony the United States were nearly 8,000 or the school on Jan. 27. He also tons. Born Dec. 1908, he spent Massachuset attending Haverhill High School, Sanborn Seminary and NO Wartime Change in taste THERE'S NO WARTIME IOSS of taste or flavor in Raleigh because Raleighs laid in ample supplies of the finest field-ripened tobaccos before the war.

NOW FULLY-AGED AND MELLOWED, these brighter, more golden tobaccos bring you a genuine pre-war pleasure smoke without harsh irritants uithout loss of taste. FRESHER, because Raleighs are protected tu nays: (1) by the world's best pre-war moistening agent; and (2) by Raleigh exclusive inner rapper. Colby COI- 111 koTil lege. He 1 New England to study law here at St. John's where he edited the law yearbook and was president of the student council.

He also served as athletic director and counselor for vd eTl). settlements and boys' clubs to defray the cost of his education. At 26 he married Ruth Breitbart. They have an 8-year-old daughter. June, who attends Adelphi Academy.

They live at 1900 Newkirk His political career prospered with President Roosevelt and the New Deal in 1932 when he organized the Intercollegiate Democratic League of New York and the Intercollegiate Organizations of Amer aged and mellowed rf 3 union MADE ica, uotn were later aosoroea oy the Affiliated Young Democrats. He also founded the First Voters of America and the Young Jeffer-sonians. His work as a Democrat was recognized by the President, who appointed him regional director of the Office of Government Reports for New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island. The latest organization he ls building is the Votes for Youth which is an outgrowth of one of SMALL ARMS LAID DOWN AT ANZIO But only in song. On a brief rest from the fighting lines, these boys on the beach at Anzio join in the strains of "Lay that pistol down, babe!" Sgt.

Robert Lewis of Nassau County (front), Sgt. John Ferris of Brooklyn and Corp. Thomas Flynn of Manhattan, right, are the three men in a boat. his strongest convictions: If you are oin enough to right, enough to vote..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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