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

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1 THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK. MONDAY. OCTORER 15. 1917.

Political Paragraphs From Queens Peter M. Daly, the Democratic candidate for district attorney in Queens, has started an active campaign and in a speaking tour of the borough he is. try.ng hard, he declares, to smoke out the position of his nent, District Attorney Demis O'Leary, who is running on the Republican ticket. Daly wants to know where Mr. O'Leary stands politically.

"Is he for Higbie, Mager or Connolly?" is one of the questions Mr. Daly asked from know and Leary. yet Mr. O'Leary received Daly is still also no to a Democrat and if he intends to support Hylan, Bennett, Mitchel or Hillquit. The Mohawk Democratic Club of upper Flushing held a banner raising Saturday night.

B. F. Egan, president of the club, presided and among the speakers were Charles L. Craig, candidate for controller; Richard S. Newcombe, candidate for justice of the Supreme Court; Alfred E.

Smith, candidate, for president of the Board of Aldermen; Maurice E. Connolly, candidate for borough president; Peter M. Daly, candidate for district attorney, 'and Thomas J. O' Brien, candidate for alderman in the Sixty-third District. President Connolly came out strong for Judge Hylan during the course of his remarks.

He said that a vote for Hylan was practically a vote cast for a resident of the borough of Queens zecause of Hylan's home was within three blocks of the borough line between Brooklyn and Queens. "To great extent, because Kings and Queens adjoin each other, their problems are the same," declared Mr. Connolly. "Queens, therefore, can be assured with Judge Hylan as Mayor that their petitions before the Board or Estimate will be accorded a and attentive ear." A banner has been erected by the 'Northside Democratic Association of The Borough of Queens, with headquarters on Louona avenue, Corona, on Louona avenue near the Alburtis avenue S' on of the Roosevelt aveaue L. Borough President Connolly's victure banner.

The the founder of the northside association. Democratic mass meetings will be nold in Corona, Elmhurst, Ridgewood and Long Island City, the latter of the month, when Judge Hylan and other prom rent candidates on the Democratic ticket will tour Queens. The mass meeting at Corona, will be held: at the Parish Hall, while the meeting at Elmhurst will be in the auditorium of the Newtown High School. Borough President Connolly will deliver his only address of the campaign in both villages on that night. JAMAICA BAY Y.

C. ELECTS The anual meeting and election of officers of the Jamaica Bay Yacht Club was held last evening at the clubhouse at. Holland's. The officers and directorg for the ensuing year were elected, as follows: Vice commodore, R. T.

Kriete; rear commodore, John Mitchel; fleet captain, Howard Wood; rec recording secretary, H. T. Tibbs; financial secretary, Cooper; house committee, S. R. Crowder; treasurer, A.

J. Hussy; membership committee, M. J. Galvin; regatta committee, Eugene Sutherland; entertainment. committee, Charles A.

Myers; directors, Philip Fetzer, John H. Still, George 'Emener and H. L. Wood. SOLDIER, DOZING, HAS MISHAP.

(Special to The Eagle.) Bellmore, L. October 15- While driving an automobile on the Merrick Road last night, Lieutenant George Reep, attached to the Ordnance Department at Camp Upton, ran the car into a pond the south side of the street. A. B. Wallace, newspaper man, happened along and helped Lieutenant Reep to get his car out of the pond.

The lieutenant told Wallace that he was on his way from Hartford, and was to be on duty at 6 o'clock today, and that he must have dozed Neither the officer nor the auto received any injuries. STROKE KILLS MRS. TEUBER. Riverhead, L. October 15-Mrs.

Apolonia Teuber, 81 years old, of Middie Road, died very suddenly yesterday of heart disease. She was stricken in front of the residence of Frank Peterson, on Osborne avenue, while riding to her home, after having attended services St. John's and St. Isidore's R. C.

churches here. She was taken to the Peterson home, but died before physicians arrived. Coroner C. C. Miles of Greenport, who conducted an inquest, decided Mrs.

cop Teuber's death was due to heart disease. She attended services at both the Catholic churches in Riverhead every Sunday. Funeral services will be conducted at St. John's Church Thursday by the Rev. Joseph Curran.

HOME GUARD IS MUSTERED IN. Easthampton, October 13- The Easthampton Home Defense Unit was mustered into the new State Guard of New York, Adjutant Gen. Sherrill performing the ceremony. and handing the Governor's commission to Captain Lorenzo Dyer. Eighty members were sworn in.

"EVE'S DAUGHTER" IS A GRIPPING PLAY The tragedy or the woman who runs away from a narrow and prosaic environment and, after playing awhile in a make-believe world of her own creation; is finally drawn back to the commonplace by. the cruel catspaw, Lite, is tellingly portrayed by Miss Grace George in a remarkable play by Alicia Ramsey that inaugurated Miss George's new season at The Playhouse, Saturday night. This play, "Eve's Daughter," is the best constructed piece of stage writing that the New York stage has seen this fall. It is hard to discuss "Eve's Daughter" without becoming over-enthusiastic. Here at last is a real play and -praises to Allah--it has a convincing ending.

The dramatist has thrown no sop to Cerberus; she made no maudlin concessions to the box-office. Rarely, since "The Easiest Way," has a 'piece of stage art been more consistently worked out than "Eve's Daughter," and not in a long time has finer acting been witnessed on our stage than that of Miss George as Irene Simpson- Bates, the heroine of this engrossing play. She has brought the almost-dead art of acting back to New York stage. Alicia Ramsey, the author of the play, has all of the qualities that have made Clare Kummer's stage work so popular, and she has something else that is vastly more important--the ability to construct a play that is meaty with action and drama, plus an unerring knowledge of life and human nature that never leads her astray. Add to these qualities a sure instinct theatrical values and an intuitive what not to do, and you understand why "Eve's Desighter" is such a good play.

TO WED AN OFFICER MIRIAM GIFFING BAKER, BY MARCEAU Miss Baker is to marry Lieutenant Earl Campbell Horan, U. S. of Bronxville and Great River, L. son of Mr. and Mrs.

James Francis Horan, attached to the Thirty-ninth Infantry, Regular Army. His brideto-be lives at 103 Joralemon street, and is a daughter of Mrs. Willard Hamilton Baker. Humane Reforms Make Inmates Life On Randalls Island More Cheerful The Department of Public Charities has been a controversial storm center ever since the 1914 inspection the home of the feeble-minded children in Randall's Island revealed flagrant evidence of inhumanity and neglect. Because of the great public feeling aroused over these findings, the magnitude of the accomplishment has paled in -comparison with the bitter pros and cons of the antagonistic arguers.

And yet, aside from any sectarian or political angles of interest, there was achieved and has been achieved constantly within the last four: years, no end of work that has benefited the helpless and unfortunate within the circle of the great city. In less heated moments this, must be acknowledged. Primarily the policy of the Department of Charities has kept company with the preventive policies and plans of other. city While the helpless and dependent population of the city have been comprehensively looked after, the keynote is the elimination and prevention of such dependency without lessening the efficiency of necessary relief. The carrying forward of this policy has necessitated finer and more searching shades of investigation than heretofore.

The work that required only the visible and material evidence of need in the past to warrant the making of a report that would bring relief now adds to such work the inquiry into the more particular reasons for need and the best way that such need may be eliminated in the future. This means that even while the official. agents of the department are performing a work of immediate succor, they are at the same time assembling data that is of the greatest possible importance in the way of insuring future prevention of the causes of public need-as far as it is possible to exercise prevention. As an instance of what prevention will work, it may be pointed out that after the inquiry into the awful conditions on Randall's Island it was immediately seen that the one sure way to keep the demoralized institutional system from falling into the same old rut was to remove the causes and prevent future slipping. So, $1,600,000 worth of modern buildings were decided upon.

The Randall's Island institutional investigation was pursued in the face of all kinds of hindrance and because of this was an all the more empha. sized piece of accomplishment. The official examination of the Home for the Feeble Minded revealed a hideous state of affairs. The buildings of the institution were old and tumbled down, -many them erected before the Civil War--infested with rats and vermin and reeking with filth in corners and with rubbish everywhere. These unfortunate children had been forgotten and neglected, not only by the public, but, apparently, by the superintendent, and it had been this way for twenty years.

Think of it! For twenty years. Brutal treatment of these unfortunates had been reduced to a veritable system. It seemed to be the general impression that to. be cruel was far easier than to be humane. The children were beaten, and when you think of a feeble- minded child being beaten, think of the depth of human you cruelty.

superintendent was removed, and a medical superintendent named as successor, as the result of an open Mayor Mitchel and Controller Prencompetitive civil service examination. dergast visited the Island and viewed awfulness at first hand. Then and the there the Mayor and the administrative associates concerned vowed that such conditions should never prevail again in any city institution while had voice or power to prevent it. they Another visit was made--this time to Massachusetts State School for the the Feeble- Minded at Contrasts were made between this, the best institution of its kind in the country, and, the Randall's Island Home, the worst institution of its kind in the I country. Plans were prepared at once duplication of the Waverly inI stitution.

Under the plans for modern buildlings, the female employees will be taken out of the disreputable cowbarn that formerly housed them. The term "cow-barn" is no mere figure of and the cows had not been so long abbarn that was used out the employees, speech--it was an out-and-out cowsent from its shelter, to 'judge by the condition it presented. The institutional building open most to criticism was called a children's hospital, but for some time of time during which there not a prior to 1914 there were longa periods single resident physician on the premises. Now there are eight physicians. There had been a dual system of medical boards in operation and this had resulted in an utterly discreditable spread of infectious diseases with no one responsible.

This has been done away with. A further reform in connection with the scandal institution was effected through the reduction of the staff of low-paid employees and the substitution in their place of a higher type of help at increased salary. Women attendants have replaced the small-pay men who were in charge of small boys. Small children are now 1 being trained to use their hands so that they may be made of some degree of use in the institutions where they will very likely remain for the rest of their lives. During the last four years upward of 126,000 families have been examined with a view determining their status as public charge and winnowing out those capable of self-support.

Another distinct accomplishment is the innovation of making the family and not the individual the unit of charitable work. In the past there has been a constant and an expensive overlapping of aid so that frequently several members of the one family have been helped because the various organized sources of help had been separately interested according to the unit of individual need. In the way of accumulative relief this had been found extravagant and at times almost ridiculously superfluous, An effective result of the department's new preventive police has been the discharge of 2.608 children from city charitable institutions since January 1, 1915. These children were found to be such as would warrant them being dropped from the municipal books. The investigation rea sulting in this decrease of inmates saved the city upward of $300,000.

Another noteworthy accomplishment of the department has been reform in the system under which the Twenty-fifth Street Municipal Lodging House in Manhattan was operated. Investigation revealed that of the 2,000 who visited the House in one year, 54 per cent. were able and willing to work. As a consequence, three social investigators, especially designated to the task, have done a noble work in the way of rehabilitating these lives. The Greenpoint Hospital, opened in 1915, gave the Borough of Brooklyn a long-needed service.

The Metropolitan Hospital has also been established, with one of the largest hospital services for children in the United States. A central storehouse estab. lished on Blackwell's Island will save the city $122,000 annually after the defraying of the establishing cost. These are some of the achievements of the Department of Charities during a Fusion administration. The record as it stands in general, however, should amply suffice to indicate what the speeded-up Department of Chariof New York has done is doing, Says Sight of U.

S. Soldiers Stuns German Prisoners "I have seen some terrible sights so far and you don't realize what war is until you have it brought right in front of you," writes Frank Johnson, a member of the United States Expeditionary force. now stationed "somewhere in France," to his brother, Edward Johnson, captain of the court officers in the Magistrates Court at Flushing. Johnson has been in several months. seen quite a few German prisoners," the letter continues, "who stunned when they see an American.

They are led to believe that there are 110 Americans in the war. Have talked to lots of the man prisoners and they tell me that they just walked over. to us to be "BARTON MYSTERY" WITH A. E. ANSON Walter Hackett's Melodrama Is Produced at the Comedy Theater.

Walter Hackett's "comedy drama," "The Barton Mystery," which had its premier at the Comedy Theater Saturday evening with A. E. Anson as the featured player, is much better comedy than drama, and has a strong leaning toward melofarce. Cut on the pattern of old-fashioned melodrama, the author seemingly weakened in carrying out his original conception and SO diluted his mystery with travesty that it is likely to please lovers of unadulterated mechanical melodrama less without wholly satisfying those who crave lighter entertainment. This result is mainly due to the fact that the central character in the play -the eccentric Beverely-who is supposed to clear up a murder mystery by the exercise of his occult powers, spends most of his time proving to the audience that he is a charlatan pure and simple.

Since the play, as melodrama, depends upon Beverely being taken seriously at times, the effect is disconcerting to say the least. Such inconstancy to theme would weaken a much more convincing story than is told in "The Barton Mystery," for it is at best very trite, unreal and unnecessarily obscure. Brooklyn Society Colony House Card Party For Settlement's Benefit. -It is an autumn of card parties more than anything else. The number announced for the next six weeks is rapidly increasing, and those who enjoy.

bridge will have ample opportunity of enjoying themselves. Among the many planned is one of marked interest, set for the afternoon of Wednesday, November 7 (a very popular card afternoon, by the way), card party for the benefit of Colony House Settlement of the New England Wornen of Brooklyn. Colony House Guild is directing this, and Mrs. John Nix has offered her home at 920 Ocean avenue for the affair. NASSAU GIRL WINS PRIZE (Special to The Eagle.) Washington, October 15-Miss Florence Greenwood of Hempstead, L.

has received one of the $5 awards and certificates of merit awarded by the National Emergency Food Garden Commission, which is affiliated with the conservation department of the American Forestry Association. Miss Greenwood gets the prize for her exhibit at the Nassau County Farm Bureau's booth at the Mineola fair recently. Announcement was made toof six awards. Every State in the day Union is represented in the competition and $5,000 has been appropriated for prizes. RUTTER- Miss Helen Ward, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Joshua Ward of Beach Seventy-sixth street, Rockaway Beach, became the bride last evening of Leo Rutter of Beach 131st street. The ceremony was performed at home of the bride's parents by the Rev. John C. Green.

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Fetzer assisted as best man and matron of honor. About fifty relatives and friends were present at the ceremony and the dinner and reception which followed. Mr.

and Mrs. Rutter left on a motor trip of several weeks, and upon their return will reside at the home of the bride's parents. AMUSEMENTS-BROOKLYN. B. F.

ORPHEUM MATINEE KEITH'S DAILY. PONZILLO AVON COMEDY SISTERS FOUR Mr. Mra. Jimmie Earry, "'The Forest John B. Hymer Others.

B. F. BUSHWICK MATINEE KEITH'S "The EDDIE LEONARD Minstrel Return." Harry Cooper, Wilfred Oths. EMPIRE Broadway Daily and Ralph Av. Bush.

Sunday Night Concerts Amateurs Every Wednesday Night MOLLIE WILLIAMS' OWN CO. Next Week. Harry Hastings' Show JAY AND FULTON STS. MAT. (TAR TEL.

MAIN 1893 DAILY Playing BROADWAY BELLES Every Sunday-2-BIG CONCERTS-2 Flatbush Ave. and State Concert Sunday Night Daily. Indies 10e NEW STAR AND GARTER SHOW Matinees Tuesday, Wednesday, 5TH Theatre AVE. Thursday Eternal and Saturday, 5th Ave. 4th St, The Magdalene Nest THE LOST PARADISE MONTAUK Wed.

Sat. 25c. 35. to 50c. $1.

BERNARD ARMS THE AND MAN SHAW'S Next YELLOW JACKET MATINEES 3 P.M. CRESCENT EVENINGS AND 8 P.M. CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG "Magda" in Victor Moore Comedy. Pathe News, Others. S.

MOSS' The Russian Revolution FLATBUSH Showing Events That Startled Flatbush the World. Church Ave. Pay Me, with Dorothy Phillips All Seats Resy'd Princess White Deer, Others. MATS. WED.

MAJESTIC AND SAT. THE 13TH CHAIR with Margaret Wycherle Next UPSTAIRS AND DOWN TWO KEITH CONCERTS EVERY SUNDAY. GRAND Mats. Pl. and Falton Sat.

St. Cecil Spooner in Little Peggy 0'Moore Delightful Continuous Sun. Concerts The Girl Who Came Back Broadway Throop Ave. GAYETY Mat. Daily--Tel.

W'msburg 524. MONTE CARLO GIRLS Extra! WEBER CERNEY, The Brooklyn Favorites AMUSEMENTS--MANHATTAN. RAYMOND HITCHCOCK'S 44TH ST. Evenings, 8:15 Matinees Wednesday and Saturday, 2:15. 00 An Intimate Revue, With Raymond Hitchcock, Grace La Rue, William Rock Errol, and Frances White, Leon Irene Bardoni, GREATEST CHEER UP, EVER SUCCESS KNOWN.

MAT. DAILY AT THE Best Seats $1.00 8:15 HIPPODROME Eves. at Carnegie Hall, Sun. Oct. 21, at VIOLIN RECITAL MISCHA ELMAN3 75c.

to $2. Boxes $15 $18 at box office Metropolitan Musical Bureau, 33 W. 420.1 West 44th St. 8:20 HUDSON Mata. Wed.

and 2:20 MISS BILLIE BURKE In Clare New Play Kummer's The Rescuing Angel LONGACRE West Matinees 48th Wed. St. and Evenings, 2:15 8:15 The Smashing Musical Comedy Success IT TO JANE BY BOLTON. WODEHOUSE KERN. Broad ur 64 Bry, W.

of B' way. Eva. 8:20 2:20 Mr. Faversbam Presents Bernard MISALLIANCE with Maclyn Arbuckle, Katharine Kaelred REPUBLIC West 424. Wed.

St. Erenings, 8:25 2:25 John Barrymore, Constance Collier. Lionel Barrymore IBBETSON MOROSCO 45 W. of B'way. Eva.

8:20 Mats. Wed. (Pop.) Sat. Oliver Morosco'n Laughing Sensation LOMBARDI, LTD, always find something different at Wanamaker's -Says a Brooklynite. A Talk With Our Patrons 'About Winter Wearables -From the Head of the House Day after day we have inquiries from hundreds of our good customers as to how the war conditions are going to affect the supplies and qualities and prices of Winter clothing.

It is a question that deserves an answer in general, so far as we can give it. The following definite and specific reports from some principal section of the Store supplying Winter wearables bring up the conclusionThat it is not so much a matter of prices as it is a matter of getting supplies. We have full stocks and ample variety---and prices lower than expected. But great many things now have we cannot replace at all and others with difficulty. We now.

think we should say this to our friends that they may act as they see fit. Women's Garments Underwear The matter of dresses is not so serious, as the We are abundantly supplied for the present with manufacturers of these goods are highly active and all good grades of women's and children's underare bringing forward about demand. wear, and, with the expectation that all of our supplies equal to manufacturers will be able to keep their agreeBut in the matter of suits, skirts and coats for ments with us, we can also meet all demands for both women and young women, there is a different men's underwear sufficient for the Winter. The situation. If you look over our stocks today, you possibility of the Government commandeering cerwill find we have an abundance of these garments, tain woolen stuffs may, however, affect the latter not only in the staple, every-day styles, but also situation.

plenty of the favorite velours, duvetyns, bolivias and such soft fabrics as are greatly in fashion's favor. Hosiery All through the season we shall be able to proWe have enough good sound hosiery in our vide our customers with good garments in the blacks, greens, navies, browns, but the "soft the New Year, and there will be rise in ownership to keep supplying our customers up until the taupes and such, so much in demand -these may no prices in these stocks on hand. no longer be had in the market. This statement applies to all practical, everyday kinds of stockings and to plain silk stockings, Shoes of high; which but there people is who plentiful are variety fastidious and about prices having not certain kinds should make their choice as soon as This is a situation that may be regarded with convenient, as particular varieties are likely to sell some complacency, in so far as the customers of down, with little prospect of replacing them. the Wanamaker Store are concerned.

Fine silk stockings for Christmas gifts should be A large foresight has brought us the greatest bought at once. supplies we have had in our history. We have more shoes in our house now than ever before, and they Furs are good shoes in full variety and moderately priced. Furs are tremendously in fashion, and there is There is no immediate scarcity in the market, a great demand. It is a season of big furs, espenor rise in price likely--at any rate, not here.

cially of foxes, skunk and lynx. Present supplies in the Store are full and in ample variety. Prices are higher than last year, Children's Clothes but still moderate. It is, however, not a question of prices so much We believe, in the absence of an extraordinary as supplies. If worthy furs were to be had any.

demand, that we can supply all necessary require- where in the world for our customers, they may be ments up until Christmas at present prices. This sure that we would get them. applies to coats, hats, underwear, stockings, sweat- Furriers who have served us through the ups ers, bathrobes, and all the cozy, warm things for and downs of many years, of course, will keep us children. Varieties, of course, will become less as in the best position--and we certainly will not turn the finer things are carried away. to keeping unworthy furs.

We have the Biggest, Finest Stock of all-good BLANKETS in all this Big, Fine City For the good of our patrons, when signs pointed to a shortage in blankets a year or two ago, we went out and bought. We bought double, treble our normal requirements. We contracted ahead for more. And now, when there is great trouble getting blankets because the government is using so many looms, WE have all the blankets our people needAnd at Low Prices nano For, you must understand, we bought so heavily that we got the benefit of quantity-buying-a cut in market prices. Since then prices have gone scandalously--naturally, because of the shortage of wool and the war's demand for blankets.

But prices are based on the old prices--and what the blankets cost us. Of course, when we begin to replenish our blanket stocks -as we shall have to do in time--they will cost us a great deal more than the blankets we now have. And our prices to you will be larger---in some cases almost double. Meanwhile, the wise housewife should look very carefully into her own blanket stocks and be sure they are what they ought to be. For the winter is going to be a cold one.

And blankets are not going to be any cheaper--at least not in price. This is the assortment 12 kinds white blankets, colored borders, single bed 9 kinds of plaid blankets, $6.50 to $13.50 pair. size, $3.75 to $14 pair. 26 kinds vari-colored Indian blankets, $5.50 to $17.50 33 kinds white blankets, colored border, double bed each. size, $3.50 to $20 20 kinds of separate blankets, $3.50 to $40 each.

15 kinds white blankets, colored borders, extra large 7 handsome boxed blankets, $12.25 to $39 size, $7 to $20 pair. pair. 19 kinds of gray blankets, $4 to $14 pair. CRIB blankets in great variety, $3.25 to $11 pair. Special attention is directed toIDAHO-blankets with 50 per cent.

wool filling on cotton warps, '60 84 inches (single bed), $6.75 pair, and 72 84 inches (double bed), $8.50 pair. COLORADO-blankets with 75 per cent. wool filling on cotton warps, 60 84 inches (single bed), double bed size, 72 84 inches, $10.50. These blankets are sold exclusively by us. The Blanket Store, Third Gallery, New Building.

WANAMAKER'S Broadway at Ninth, New York WANAMAKER'S West 45th St. Erenings, 8:30 LYCEUM Mats. Thurs. 2:30 MELODRAMA OF TIGER ROSE THE GREAT NORTHWEST ELTINGE THEATRE, W. 42 Sat.

St. at Ers. 8:30 2:30 BUSINESS BEFORE PLEASURE Cohan Harris Mate. 42 St. Wed.

de Evenings, 2:15 8:15 A TAILOR MADE MAN with Mitchell, Grant West 44th St. Evenings at 8:30 BELASCO Matinees Thurs. Sat. at 2:30 POLLY WITH A PAST PLAYHOUSE. Ergs.

8:15. Mats, Wed. Sat, GRACE GEORGE and Eve's Her Playbouse Daughter. Co. in 48TH ST.

Eve. 8:20. Mats. Thurs. 2:20 LAND OF THE FREE with NASH.

FLORENCE THE AMUSEMENTS- AMUSEMENTS -MANHATTAN. AMUSEMENTS--MANHATTAN. COMEDY Matinees St. E. of Thurs.

B'way. Sat. Eva. 2:13 8:13 The Mesers, Anson ComShubert Present edy Drama The Barton Mystery EMPIRE way 40th St. and Eves.

Sat. at 2:10 8:15 JULIA SANDERSON' in the New Comedy JOSEPH CAWTHORN Rambler Rose captured. Many of them cry out. "Mercy, or show a picture of their wife or child. They seem to be they pretty tired of it all.

I understand have severe winters out here, so I guess some of us are not going to have any picnic. Just send over a few million more men and end it soon. "I hear the National Guard are having a grant time parading and preparing come over. Tell them to enjoy the States while they can. for their good times are over when they get on the ship.

It sure is no dress parade." Johnson states that it is a luxury to get good tobacco "over there." He states that it is impossible for him to write where he is located, but he calls it "the hell hole part of the world." FEATURE FILMS SHOWING TODAY PARK SLOPE AND DOWNTOWN (TOMORROW) Crescent, Flat. Clara K. Young, Magda. The Same Duffeld, 249 Dumeld. George Cohan, Seven Keys to IL.

B. Warner HILL SECTION Cumberland, 327 Elsie Ferguson, Barbary Sheep. The Same BEDFORD SECTION Regent, 1215 George M. Cohan, Seven Keys to Feature Film FLATBUSH SECTION Bunny, 814 Shirley Mason, The Awakening of Ethel Clayton. Linden.

815 Robert Warwick, The Silent Master. Hazel Dawn Midwout, Bed. Reputation Triumph Parkside, 728 Pickford, Rebecca of Sunnybrook The Same Rialto, 1085 Flatbush Glaum, The Julian Eltinge.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1841-1963