Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 3

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

lit BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1930. SCIjLPtLRE TO BE EXHIBITED AT BROOKLYN MUSEUM 3 Held in U.S. Drive Against Sees Trend Toward Stronger Jawbones Americans I'aying More Attention to I 'roper Diets, Says Brooklyn Taking Iue With Speaker at Dental Society Dr. Joseph L. Felsenfeld, president of the Kings County Dental Society, today took Issue with the declaration that smaller Jaws and a physical from that of today will characterize Americans a few gen- aerations hence If present dlet- a 1 ii ii ii mm Htmii i mim' 4 Ace Wins FinaW Air Feat to End Career in Navy Williams, to Quit Serv ire Thursday, Doei! Falling Leaf for DaU Washington, May 13 iPi Lieut Alford J.

Williams, noted Naval aviator, has said his farewell to th service with a new maneuver thl lone remaining feat, he says, noi previously accomplished by aviation It is called an "Inverted falling Two days before his resignatlo from the Navy goes into rflecd spectators were privileged today reveal a flight they witnessed Saturi day, in whirh the maneuver wai demonstrated. Performing high In the air, Wil Hams fluttered towards the earthi the landing gear of the plane on top and himself hanging downward with only his safety belt holding hlnj to the craft. He tipped the plane from side side, thecking It Just short of tM point at which it would fall In 4 deadly spin, and zig-zagged downj ward like a playing card dropped from a skyscraper. The maneuver, he explained, ha4 no military use, but is of value aviators in Inverted flight to teaclj them when and how to avoid spln ning if their craft begins tipping from side to side. Williams worked out the method at home with small models, studying the characteristics of the miniature planes in the novel maneuver and calculating how he could manlpu late the controls.

The manonver brought to conchM slon a series of Inverted flight testj In which the aviator determined foj the Navy tlie proper handling of controls to avoid spins and stem 4 mounting loss of life. Newer per formanccs of aircraft, he said, can! only follow when airplanes hav4 more power. His resignation will become effec tlve Thursday, when he leaves the) Navy alter 13 years of service "to 1 -TW iTiT-: i ii nilrV" How Americans Get New Wives in Paris appearance radically different ary faults remain unchanged. This statement was made yesterday before the annual meeting of the Dental Society ot New York State by Dr. Franklin A.

Squires, Westchester district chair man of the socletty. Dr. Felsenfeld said he was speaking from his own experiences and the experiences of otner Brooklyn dentists as expressed at meetings of the local society. More Careful Today "Conditions are such today that we are progressing, not going back ward," Dr. Fclsenleld asserted.

"Be cause of educational work that i constantly being carried on, people are paying more attention to proper diets than previously. Parents are careful in preparing balanced diets and the trend Is toward a healthier development of teeth and Jaw bones. Children are profiting by the care being exercised by their parents. "The typical American diet was 100 percent starchy foods, but no longer. Today the diet is balanced and a great deal of attention is being given to vegetables and fruits.

The trend is toward a more nearly perfect development of the whole body, including teeth and the bones of the Jaw. The prevailing habit of eating such starchy foods as potatoes and white bread to the virtual exclusion of- vegetables and fresh fruits is depriving the human system of calcium and phosphorus, two vital chemicals In the development of teeth and Jaw bones. Dr. Squires said. About 80 percent of the population today is suffering from some form of faulty development of teeth and Jaws, he asserted.

More than 3.000 dentists participated in yesterday's sessions. The meeting will continue for five days at the Hotel Commodore. Manhattan. underwent one of the most difficult surgical operations known to the medical profession. For three months afterward he was confined to his bed, but had his drawing board strapped in front of him, and battled his way back to health.

He joined the Eagle staff on Jan. ID. 1929, and five weeks later drew tne cartoon which won the Prize. His work is marked by great virility and variety and is widely reproduced throughout the United States and abroad. Grand Jury Calls George Bancroft On Inn Assault Actor Denies knovtiiifj; About Attack on Man Who Had Jollied Him (Special to the Eayle.) Mineola, L.

May 13-George Bancroft, movie actor; Mrs. Ban croft and Bancrofts manager, Henry Fink, appeared today in the Nassau County Court House to testify before the Grand Jury regard ing Injuries suffered by Rutger Bleccker of Massapequa on the night tf April 4 last, In Panchard's Inn, Massapequa. Bleecker, It is alleged, was at tacked by two persons in the washroom in the Inn and smitten so hard by one of them that he suffered a broken Jaw. He is in Dr. Reed's Sanitarium in Amityville.

Assistant District Attorney Brown said Blcecker told him he was at the inn dancing with his sister, Helen. Bleecker, according to Brown, Is alleged to have Jok ingly remarked to Bancroft, George, I think you re rotten, and declaring later that he was only Joking, that he regarded Ban croft as a star actor and generally apologizing for the earlier remark. Later, Bleecker said, two men, who he believed came from the table occupied by the Bancroft party but whom Bleecker did not know, beat him In the washroom. Bancroft said that he knew nothing of the assault and that he had not the slightest idea of the Identity of the assailants. Tbey Merely Buy New Faces for Old Ones Help Experts Put Them On Frenchmen Neglect Own Women Folk By GUY Paris, May 6 American CityandI.R.T.

Hit Deadlock On New Cars Interborough and Transit Board Agree on Not on Terms By HAROLD J. BLACKFORD The question whether the city or the I. R. T. Is to "hold the bag" Is the stumbling-block to agreement between the company and the Transit Commission on plans to finance the 289 new steel cars which the Commission has ordered the railroad to provide for Improved service.

The Transit Commission has proposed that it recommend to the Board of Estimate that the city lend the 14,000.000 necessary to carry out the service order. The railroad has expressed it willingness to accept a city loan. To that extent both sides are together, and It is believed that the city would concur. But Chairman William G. Fullen of the commission Insists that the I.

R. T. place the obligation to meet the interest on the city loan on a par with the company's obligation to pay interest on its bonds under Contracts 1 and 2. This would place its payment ahead of many drains on the company reve nue, snd insure its payment to a degree which, Mr. Fullen believes, would enable the city to obtain from the Appellate Division a ruling exempting the loan from the city debt limit.

Hearing to Develop Clash President Frank Hcdlcy of the I. R. T. and" his chief counsel, James L. Quackenbush, want the city to take Its Interest out of the $5,000,000 which the railroad is now earning toward Interest on the city's investment in the subway without any preferential.

In either case the money used by the I. R. T. to pay interest on a city loan would reduce sum by a figure be tween $700,000 and $800,000 a year, But if the I. R.

T. plan were ac cepted the city would stand a slim chance, If any at all, of having the principal of the loan exempted irom me dent limit. It Is over this nhase of the flnan cial question that the chief argu ment is expected to come when hearings are held on the I. R. application of yesterday for ap proval oi an issue or $40,000,000 in 5 percent gold bonds under Its first ana refunding mortgage to meet the cost of the Commission's service order.

The I T. claims that be cause of Its obligations in 1922 for sou new cars, It must issue enouRh gold bonds to cover that debt at the same time. Question Hinges on Exemption The company also raises, as an objection to the city plan, the claim that it would be necessary to get consents or ail the bondholders be fore entering such an agreement, and that since the ownership Is scattered over the world this would be a difficult job. It is probable that the Transit Commission, however, would accept approving reso lutions by the directors and con sents of 90 percent or so of the bondholders. The a 1 if deadlock it proves to be gets back each time to the question whether the city win allow its credit to be tied un with little hope of exemption or whether the company will take th.it ioaa.

i he company takes the at tltude that there is at least a small hazard to It on the ground that opening the city's new West Side subway would cut into its revenues. It Is claimed that this might wipe out the surplus above all their preferentlals and pile up again a deferred preferential. Transit Commission experts at one time figured that the new sub way might put the I. R. T.

in the red slightly for a period of not more than "two years, but recent checkups have shown such an enormous growth In traffic as to warrant new estimates, indicating that the surplus applicable to interest on city money would never be less than $4,000,000 a year. A $4,000,000 margin Is regarded bv the commission as sufficient to insure the company against any loss and to wipe out any potential hazard to the security of the bondholders through the new car financing. The present proposal of the I. R. T.

to issue $40,000,000 bonds to cover what amounts to a total expenditure, including refinancing of the $10,500,000 of notes will never be eccepted by the Transit Commission. Ir is put out by the company as a feeler and to center the financial controversy. 2d Wife Contests Will Giving Estate to 1st Mrs. Agnes Berger of 85-40 Lef- ferts Richmond Hill, yesterday filed with Acting Surrogate Charles J. Druhan objections to the probate of the will of her late husband, George Berger.

The will, offered for probate a few- weeks ago, was made by Berger on July 5, 1911, and leaves his estate, allied at more than $5,000 real and 10,000 personal property, to a for mer wife, Mrs. Mary D. Berger of 8 CjTiress Court, Brooklyn. Mrs. Berger of Richmond Hill yes terday told Justice Druhan that it was not the intent of her husband to leave his estate tohlsformer wife.

She said that she was married to Berger several years. The first Mrs. Berger says the will Is prcof that he wished her to get the property. Rel' Letters Traced By East Side Printer Max Wagner, Russian printer at 204 E. 10th came forward last night as the printer ot the letterheads of the alleged Soviet documents which Police Commissioner Whalen said connected the Amtorg Trading Corporation with world revolution plans of Soviet Russia.

A man came to bis shop about four months ago with three letterheads bearim: the word "Komitern." the Soviet word for the Third Internationale, and asked If he could duplicate them. Wagner said. A few days later the man returned and received two samples of each letterhead, saying he would telephone his order later. When Wagner saw photostatic copies of the Whalen documents he recognized the letterheads as those he printed, he added. over, and often supervise the Job, according to the director of one of the best known "beauty Institutes" of this city.

"They are virtually the only husbands who bring their wives to us and who often re- Scalpers Here Seized at Ebbets Field- Act to End Big Fraud Against Government Thre. of eleven men questioned after Federal agents swooped down on the outskirts of Ebbets Field Sunday and issued, summonses to alleged ticket ecalpera were arrested today on warrants issued by Federal Commissioner Fay and were arraigned before Commissioner Epstein, who held them each in $2,000 bail for a Federal hearing on 22. Each is charged with having violated the Internal Revenue law In that he failed to properly stamp on the backs of tickets he sold the names and addresses of the seller and the price charged. The three men are Marcy Cher-nofl, 23, of 1228 Grand Concourse, the Bronx: Louis Lilenthal, 52, of 170 Lexington Manhattan, and Samuel Oibbs, 38, of 1320 W. 9th Brooklyn.

Sees Huge Fraud Chcrnoff was arrested in the so-called City Ticket Office at 72 Sulli van Place this morning. Lilenthal was taken in by Federal agents shortly after at a little booth at Sullivan Place and Franklin Ave. Oibbs was found, when arrested, in fur- nlshed room, outfitted as an office. at 88 Cedar Place, also Brooklyn. According to the agents who conducted the raid Sunday with Col lector of Internal Revenue Walter T.

Corwin and his deputy, John F. Bray, scalpers have probably de frauded the Government of several hundred thousands of dollars in the Jast season or two. The scalpers, the agents said, have adopted the device of stamping the name of their agency, not on the ticket as required by law but upon the rain check. Because of the fact that few rain checks get through the main gate, the tickets sold by scalpers fail to show the source of sale find their sellers thereby escape the income tax collectors. Limn Denies Motion To End Gas Inquiry Data showing the amount of gas used by each customer of the Brooklyn Borough Gas Company in certain spoecifted districts was furnished to representatives of the city and consumers by William L.

Ransom, counsel for the company, when the rehearing on the rates charged by the company was called today before Public Service Commissioner George R. Lunn in the Commission's office, 120 Broadway, Manhattan. The hearing was then adjourned until Monday, May 26. The data supplied by the company showed the total amount of (fas supplied by the company from 1918 to 1929. Expressed in thousand cubic feet the total was 54.002.9 for 1918 and 1,964,208.5 in 1929.

Mr. Rrnsom renewed several motions to dismiss all petitions for the rehearing and they were denied by Commissioner Lunn. Relatives Get $383,579 M. H. Gleason Estate Michael H.

Gleason, who died on Jan. 21, 1929, left a net estate of 1383,579, it became known when a taransfer tax appraisal was filed in connection with his will in Brooklyn yesterday. Mr. Gleason was a well-known builder and realty operator. By the terms of Mr.

Gleason 's will goes to Mrs. Lucy S. Gleason, the widow, of 212 E. 48th St. A brother.

Thomas Gleason, of 244 Pth gets $54,534. Two sisters, Mrs. Mary E. Tischle" and Mrs. Emily C.

Goodsoa of 343 E. 9th re-reive $53,643 each. The Roman catholic Orphan Asylum receives Sj.COO and smaller legacies go to ref alives and friends. The estate In ended $314,378 in real estate. PERSONAL I AM NOT RESPONSIBLE lor ny debts jncurrea ny my wile, Blanche Bender.

Altx. Bender, 31 9 2a College Point, WHtKL'ABOUrS Daniel Shoenberser. nirny oi ureenoim. uommumcaie Sorhie Vahlbncch. Fflrmincdale.

L. I. LOST AM) FOUND Afocrl inetnents inserted in the Loti and found columns of The Eayle be BROADCAST every Tues day at 12:05 Nooh and Thursday vl 10:15 A.M. over station WITH. TUB VOICE OF UROOKLYN." AIRL1MLE ire-haired.

brown and black mule. Rewaid. 062 Bergea St. STErllng iB. BANK BOOK Lost; No.

Ban of America, 204 Livingston St. Payment stopped. Return to bank. BAR PIN Lost; diamond: Saturday, between Woodhaven and Fulton St. shop ping district; reward.

viKgmia ov.o. BILLFOLD Lost; containing money: laxl or Frankiln near Eastern Farkway. Nfonday morning, PROsect 1570: reward. COLUE UOO Lost; brown and wnlte fe male, named reward. LAray-ette U819.

PIN Lost; platinum: three diamonds and emerald: vicinity of Loeser's and Telephone about noon, Tuesdav. Reward if returned to owner, Mlfs Zejda Condit, 187-40 115th Road, St. Albans. Tel. LAUrelton 0B97.

DIAMOND RINO Lost: gent'a; Sunday. May 11. Gates. Bushwlek Aves. or Weir-Held St.

and Knickerbocker Ave. Keepsake. Reward ofTered. B. P.

Uogan, 1131 Jefferson Ave. DOG Lost; Collie, bronn with white collar and markings, five years old. answers to name Jerry. MAfn 1731. 169 Clinton St.

DOO Found; police, black, tan; also young collie or setter, brown, white. Owner or home. HADdingway 4783. DOG Lost: Russian reindeer, light tan; on Flatbush near Newklrk; reward Grossman. 1245 Flatbush Ave.

EYEGLASSES Lost: tortoise shell in black case: Saturday. Culver line; reward. EERkshlre 4440. POCKETBOOK Lost; lady's; black: containing change, keys, teetii; 8unday, St. John's Cemetery to 71st St.

McDonnell 387 6th St. HOUth 6904-W. SCARF Lost; pointed fox. in Mercury tai. Sunday night; reward.

Tel. BRYant 07.17. W4LLFT Lost: by workingman: containing license and mom-y; vicinity Fresh Pond Road and Metropolitan llbetal reward. Phone JUNiper 1313. V.RISTWATCH-Lost; oblong, gold; black ribbon: Initialed; Sunday afternoon; re-ward.

FLAtbush 08..5. lion GOLD-BACK BILL Lost; Monday afternoon, loser a neeriv person. Reward. Mr. Hall, superintendent.

2-0 Parkside Ave, corner Platbusb Ave. a NAME BANNED Prince Carol Bucharest, May 13 The Rumanian Government today ordered confiscation of any paper which mentioned the name of the exiled Prince Carol, wno traoea his right to his country's throne for love of a woman with red hair, Mine, Helene Lupescu. The action was taken in consequence of publication by Vintlla Bratlanu, former Premier and leader of the uocrai tor cippo sition party, of 100,000 copiea of vitriolic pamphlet accusln? the gov eminent and Regency Council of plotting to bring about return of Carol as a member of the Regency Council. Carol Is now in Paris. EAGLE CARTOON WINS THIS YEAR'S PULITZER PRIZE Continued from Page 1 award, however, was made.

Nor was there any award for the best editorial. "Green Pastures" Stage Choice The Pulitzer prize of $1,000 for the original American play "which shall best represent the educational value and power of the stage" was given to "The Green Pastures," by Maro Connelly, still running at the Mansfield Theater, For the best American novel the prize, also $1,000, went to Oliver LaFarge, author of "Laughing Boy" (Houghton Mifflin Company). Other awards were: For the best example of newspaper correspondence during the year, $o00 Lcland Stowe of the New York Herald Tribune. For the best example of a re porter's work, $1,000 Russell D. Owen of the New York Times, for his radio reports of Admiral Byrd's expedition to the South Pole.

A special award of $500 was also made to W. O. Dapping of the Auburn Citizen, for his report of the Auburn prison outbreak in December. Van Tyne History Wins For the best book on the history of the United States, $2,000 Claude H. Van Tyne.

for his "The War cf Independence" (Houghton Mifflin Company). This was a posthumous award. Professor Van Tyne, who was head of the history department of the University of Michigan, died in March. For the best American biography. $1,000 Marquis James, for "The Rave, a Biography of Sam Houston" (Bobbs-Merrill Company).

For the best volume of verse by an American poet, $1.000 "Selected Poems by Conrad Aiken" (Charles Scribuer's Sons). Scholarships Presented The following traveling scholar ships were also awarded: Three scholarships, $1,800 each, to graduates of the Columbia School of Journalism, to give them a year ot travel and study in Europe- Wayne William Parrish of Decatur, George Worthington Post of New York City, and A. H. Cunning-, ham of Stamford, Conn. Alternates for.

these scholarships were named as ronows: Dudley B. Martin of New York City, Emily A. Genauer ot Staten Island and David A. Davidson of New York City. An scholarshin to a music student' to permit him to continue his studies in Europe: Mark Wesscl of Chicago.

An $1,800 scholarship to the most "promising and deserving" art student Sidney Fischman of New York City. Just in Day's Work Asked to explain how the Idea on which the winning cartoon was based came to him, Mr. Macauley said that it was "Jiist part of the day's work." "The hope of the world then, as now," he said, "was that war was dead, and the old adage about 'paying for a dead horse' suggested both the motif and the caption for the drawing." It is a coincidence that Macauley was for 10 years, from 1904 to 1M4. employed by the World as editorial cartoonist. His work In that ca pacity attracted the favorable attention of Mr.

Pulitzer, who sought Macauley's advice in shaping plans for the Pulitzer Prize awards for cartoonists, editorial writers, reporters and other newspaper workers. Has Had Long Career Macauley has been a cartoonist ince 189::. He is a native of Ohio, and his first work was lone for the Canton Repository, lie has also drawn lor Puck, Judge, Life and the New York Herald. He is the creator of "the Big Stick," which will always be associated with Theodore Roosevelt, and also of the camel as the symbol of the drys and the hippopotamus as that of the wet faction. In 1927 Macauley was stricken with tuberculosis of the spine and i Five pieces ot sculpture are being placed outside the Brooklyn Mu seuni as a part of the first large sculpture exhibition opening there Saturday.

The pieces outside the building fshown above) are the work of Charles Carey Rumsey and Bryant Baker. They are Pizarro, the Bull, the Archer, the Dying In dian and the Pioneer Woman. Museum Exhibit Of Sculpture to Open Saturday Will Include Between 500 ami 600 Pieces I lira- lreI Sculptors Display Between 500 and 600 pieces of sculpture will be on view at the Brooklyn Museum at the exhibition which will be opened there by Boro president Henry Hesterberg on Saturday. Some of the pieces, too large to be exhibited in the Museum galleries, have been placed outside for the duration of the exhibition. Most of the pieces outside are the work of the late Charles Carey Rumsey, and his widow, the daughter of Mrs.

E. H. Harrlman, is taking charge of them here. More than 100 sculptors will be represented at the exhibition, which will be open for the remainder of the summer. The pieces that are being erected outside include "Pizarro," "The Bull," "The Archer," and "The Dying Indian" by Rumsey, and "The Pioneer Woman" by Bryant Baker.

DK. NANSEN, POLAR HERO, DIES AT Continued from Tage 1 68 Royal University of Christiania, made a special study of zoology there and, while still a university student made a trip in a sealing vessel to the waters of Greenland thus getting his first taste of Arc tic exploration. In 1887 he began preparations for an expedition across the great ice fields of Greenland. It started in May of the following year, and on July 17 Nansen and five companions left the sealing ship on which they had sailed north and made their way on foot across the Ice to the coast of Greenland, a distance of 10 miles. They passed the winter in the ice-bound settlement of God-thaab and returned home In May, 1889.

Ioe-Drift Trip Made Dr. Nansen then conceived the plan of crossing the polar regions by getting his ship frozen In the Ice north of eastern Siberia and having It drift toward the coast qf Greenland with the drifting ice. The plan was hilariously ridiculed by Arctic experts, but in June, 1893, Nansen started with a number of companions on the ship Fram. In September she was frozen in at 75 degrees north latitude, and by March, 1895, had drifted to 84 degrees north. From there Dr.

Nansen, accompanied by Frederick HJalmar Johansen, a lieutenant in the Norwegian army, proceeded on foot, reaching 86 degrees. 14 minutes north latitude, the nearest point to the North Pole thai had yet been reached by man. This expedition returned in August. 1896, and at once gave to Dr. Nansen place among the out-standingtexplorers of the world.

He entered the field of politics in 1905, during the crisis whlrh ended with the separation of Norway and Sweden. He wrote political pamphlets In favor of the separation. At the establishment of the Norwegian monarchy he was appointed Minister to England and was created a Knight of the Royal Victorian Order. He had written extensively on zoological and scientific matters and on Arctic exploration. Since 1927 Dr.

Nansen had decided to leave humanitarian work temporarily and return to the field of his first renown Polar exploration. He began negotiations for an airship to fly over the Arctic but various troubles caused postponements. He planned to search for Ro-ald Amundsen, his intimate friend and Rone Guildaud, who were lost in 1928 in a hunt "for the airship Italia, commanded by Gen. Umber- to Nobile, which had met disaster. The explorer felt that a dirigible would be ideal for polar exploration, considering that it would hold ample stores and would be reasonably safe.

He desired particularly to take soundings in the polar sear and planned to use a base in Norway and one at Fairbanks, Alaska. JVDGES STRENGTHENED The Pine Bluff Judges of the Cotton States League were strengthened by the addition of First Baseman Fitzgerald and Pitcher Fianni-gan, both of whom were obtained from the Shreveport Sports of the Texas League, sponsor a speed program that wUl bring back to the United States thtf world's airplane speed record." llouxc Vote Asks Adams To Provide Byrd Medals Washington, May 13 The House of Representatives has nn- passed a resolution author. 1 -Secretary of the Navy to medals of gold, silver and for presentation to memben Byrd Antarctic Expedition. A number of Brooklyn r. on the expedition will receive medals.

They Include Bernt Balchen, who lives at 35 93d John Jacob- sen, who makes the Navy Y. M. C. on Bands his home; Rlchara Wesley Konter, recreation officer of the expedition, and Charles J. Mr-Guiness, chief mate on the City of New York, whose home is at 7405 5th William Gavronski also receives a medal.

Seckt Federal Utility Fanwood. N. May li S. Frellnghuysen, who is the Republican nomination for United States Senator over Ambassador Dwlght W. Morrow, the organization candidate, launched an attack on the Public Service Corporation here last night In a campaign speech.

He demanded national legislation to provide lor tho Investigation and regulation of interstate public utility holding companies and directed a large part of his talk against J. P. Morgan te of which Morrow formerly was a member. Certified ICE The plumpest, juiciest oranges come to you carefully wrapped in tissue bearing the guarantee of the grower. The shells of the finest walnuts are proudly stamped with, the certified brand.

The best butter, the richest milk, the freshest eggt are of certified quality. If there were some way to stamp the purity of each cake of Knicker bocker Ice, it would be so marked. But by its transparent purity Knickerbocker Ice carries its own certificate of quality, X'hen you keep your refrigerator well-filled with sparkling Knickerbocker Ice you can be certain that you have the finest ice obtainable. Knickerbocker I E' Company you; things seem to VdW Ii wHA tm tonight. You 11 find in ao NdI smiles in every way Uockwwk-1 1 without bsing recognized.

main to see the work done," he said. Thus Is one more added to the long list of Indulgences which American married men are reputed the world over to shower upon their other halves. We may be dull. We may know nothing about anything but making money for wives to spend. We may be unromantic and prosaic.

We may not be able to give them the things they won ask for. But when they ask for a new face we let them have it. Scandinavians, on the other hand, are supremely indifferent to what their wives do with their faces. They neither participate in nor object to the liberties taken with eyebrows, noses, crow's-feet or superflu ous hair. 1 The Other Ratings English husbands are like the Americans but less so.

Italians and Spaniards are about half and half. Frenchmen married Frenchman on the other hand are practically all against the beauty specialists. They try to keep their wive3 in the status quo, plus the natural effecls of age. Naturally the beauty specialisis do not like French husbands. They call them "insupportable" and "reactionary," while Americon husbands they estimate as perfectly charming.

King Albert of Belgium, in Paris incognito, tried to attend a motion picture theater near this corner without being recognized. He got in line before the ticket window along with ordinary mortals, and was perfectly happy wnen the manager of the theater saw him. The manager eyes bulged. Tl-veins of his forehead swelled. He made a lunge to get through the crowd in the lobby toward the King.

"Leave him alone! Leave him alone!" hissed one of the King's attendants. "He does not want to be recognized." The manager hacked up to the door and waited. In a moment the King came along, ticket in hand. 5 md HICKOK llarle Bureau, Rue Cambon. husbands like their wives made "Which way shall I go?" askcJ Amert i.

"This way, your majes begun the theater manager. Then, remembering that for the moment Albert I was not "His Ma Jesty," he tried again. "This way this way Mon sieur le koi. on, I beg your pardon. The King smiled at -his embarrassment.

"Never mind. That's all, right," he said. But he breathed more easily after he got through the door. The girl usher did not recognize him and took him to a seat like a common citizen. U.

S. O. K'g Watermelons For Child Vitamins tarle Bureau, Colorado Building. Washington, May 13 Good news for the boy whose mother raises him on a schedule of vitamins each day with a taboo on those foods which dietitians will not confirm as healthful. "Refreshing, juicy, fine-flavored watermelons have still another virtue for the customer who is interested in food values," announces the Bureau of Home Economics of the Department of Agriculture.

Experiments performed by the bureau disclose that watermelons are a good source of vitamins A and and contain also vitamins and G. 8 Brooklyn anil L. I. Men Enlist in Navy Eight young men from Brooklyn and Long Island have enlisted at the Navy recruiting station, 8 4th and have been transferred to the Naval Training Station at Newport, B. it is announced by the recruiting station.

The recruits are: Elmer J. Bates. 41 Fre-nort. Harold P. Brown, 1641 Broadway, Brooklyn.

Edward P. Browne. 37S 6th Brooklyn. John J. rielsclt 1824 E.

Brooklvn. Klrhard A. Mitchell. 360 50th Brooklvn. Edward J.

Moran. '63 60th Brooklyn. Robert P. Connell. 1060 Brooklvn.

William E. Tlmm 805 Nassatt Bell-more. ship, he frequently visited Senorita Calles here. He was with her last Easter Sunday, departing the following day for Mexico City. They were to have been married this summer, though no definite date had been set.

Mexico City, May 13 w. The body of Col Pablo Sidar, noted Mexican airman, who was killed Sunday night while on a nonstop flight from Mexico to Buenos Aires, will be broueht home from Costa Rica by air. This morning an amphibian "air hearse" took off from Valbuea Flying Field, near Mexico City, and headed for the Central American republic, where the famous flier's body now rests. The body of Capt. Carlo Rovirosa, Sidar's companion on their ill-fated trip, also will be brought back in the amphibian.

mile I WHEN you are brimming with pep, energy, and optimism, yoa have a real wholehearted smile, because yon feci ao almighty good People are glad to see Death of Flier Reveals Him As Fiance of Calles9 Daughter come your way. Here's the secret, learned by thousands ot happy people: Clear the natural poisons out of your body regularly. Your doctor will tell you tins and he will also tell you the right way to do it by the Nujol treatment. When you cleanse your face, you don't harshly scrape it with sandpaper, taking the kin off with the dirt. If you want to clean the poisons out of your body don't use habit-forming laxatives use internal lubrication, which your body begs for, just like any other intricate machine.

Nujol colorless and tasteless as pure water makes you feci like a million dollars, yet it costs only a few cents I Nujol is not a medicine; it contains no drugs. San Diego, May 13 Shocked by the news of the death of her fiance, Col. Pablo Sldar, Mexican aviator, Artamisa Calles, daughter of the former President of Mexico, was' in seclusion here today at the home of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. E.

Ferriera. Fer-riera Is the Mexican Consul here. Senorita Calles, who is 16. Is attending a private school here. That she had been engaged to marry the flier was not generally known until the news of his death was received Sunday.

His plane crashed during flight from Mexico to Buenos Aires, Argentina. Senorita Calles and Colonel Sldar first met in Mexico City two years ago. Six months ago. when the young Colonel was in California supervising the of his Start the Nujol treatment a whole lot of healthy, happy rystar-clear bottle! nature's IVX I arl 1 tfl II I xvi it i TO. HEALTH ANCLrtAPPlNESS-;.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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