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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 14

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

14 Ml. BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1934 will be my only boss In dictating my activities in the Legislature." Morris Pauker, president of tha club, presided. Slain Man's Widow Gets His Insurance Joseph Solevei. aitorney for Mrs. Mary Usinska, of 47 Java an and the otherwise empty and loveless life of the average basi-ness woman, to that of the wife and mother with her cosy, cheerful home, and noisy, happy, children running In and out and and ap and down stair, and an affectionate, if sometime harassed husband whom, I am sure, would, if he could, give her a maid.

I would not endure the loneliness of a single life for all the careers in the world! "I would like to remind your reader that there is something. In fact, a great deal, ahead for the drudging housewife who is helping nounced today that her suit against the Prudential Insurance Company for payment of a $4,000 life insurance policy on her husband. Adolph. had been ended with a settlement for $5,500. Mrs.

TJsinska had sued for $8,000 under the double indemnity clause of the policy, her husband having been shot to death in his beer garden at 154 Grand St. on Sept. 25. 1933. The wife was arrested but later freed.

Butter Prices Move Upward; Eggs Cheaper Loin of Pork at 18c-Leg of Lamb, 19-23c-Roasting Chicken, 25c Butter, on the upward trend In price, Is commanding attention in the food markets this week. Slowly advancing for some weeks past it took another rise of 3 cents thisj Women Can Now Declare They Like Housekeeping And Be Really Believed Mot Because They Have To but Because They Love Home-Making, as Mrs. Audrey Simon Asserts in Reply to Another Reader's Letter By JANE CORBY Woman's Pane Editor T'HE feminine sex is getting along. Here and there we hear one of its members raise her voice, not in the time-honored complaints to which Ve have become accustomed, but able to even the poorest housewife, should, and do, five the modern housewife time for a thou-and-and-one outside interests which were not possible In crinoline days. Oil burners, running hot and cold water in the house, vacuum cleaners, electric light and above all modern plumbing, have reduced the modern housewife's chores to minimum, and have given her many leisure hours each day to do with as she pleases.

"Your reader's whole article seems inconsistent and contrary throughout!" is Mrs. Simon's conclusion. She reminds me of the younger generation of half-baked high school boys and girls who are ready at a moment's notice to spout their opinions, without thought, on every subject In creation and because of their youth and inexperience, know not whereof they speak, and therefore their opinions must, of neces Cold Cites Aims Of Lehman Club Executive Member Michael Gold ef the Lehman Democratic Club of Bensonhurst, one of the new units of Democratic Leader Kenneth F. Sutherland's Coney Island organization, announced last night that one of the primary objects of the new club is the development of "a 365 days a year type of citizen Instead of the type that limits his activity to going to the polls once a year." Gold said that the club, which met at the Jewish Community House, Bay Parkway and 78th will not confine its activities to politics but will work for the establishment of a public library in the section and improve transit facilities. Assemblyman-elect Carmine Marasco, who defeated Assemblyman Rudolph Bauer, Republican City Fusion, by a plurality of more than 25,000, declared that "My conscience to build a home and molding the Ilail to a major travel event! The ocean liners Acadia and Saint John are back on the NEW YORK-BOSTON run of the 5 STEAMSHIP LINES Sailing sallr et Saturday at P.M.

from Pier IS, Nnrth River. Due Boston a A.M. next day. One way fare SA.50. soda; round trip S8.SO.

(7.50 week-end excursion! leaTing Fridays, return sailing Sunday or Monday nifhts. IE. 4lk near Stk Tol. MOrrar Rill Pirr 19 (foot of Wants T.L COrtlandt 7-9SOO. characters of future citizens.

"Love often shuts its eyes to many things, and your reader should remember always that love Is one of the things that makes the world go round; and there is nothing more ennobling than drudging for the man you love, and the housewife, with all her drudgery, has a mort-eaee on at least, one priceless pos II. Sacks Estate Is $203,333 Net; Bulk to Widow week bringing the price of tub butter up to 35 cents and print to 37 sity, carry little weight. Your read in thanksgiving actual thanksgiving for her lot as wife and mother. We suspect they are the heralds of a grand awakening, cents. Grade A white eggs, which have also been soaring in price, took a slight drop this week and are now session which all the career outside of the home cannot replace love.

74 The Eagle reader it to mer selling at 33 to 55 cents a dozen. This is for the medium-sized eggs Harry Sacks, prominent dairyman and president of the Eastern Farms Products Company, who died March 26. 1933, left a grass estate of and a net estate of $205,333. it er does not seem to understand or appreciate the relative value of things, and until the full significance of these values is brought home to her, I would certainly advise her to stop complaining and concentrate her surplus energy on her husband, children and home, and then s'he can be reasonably sure that she is at least making a good job of her career as a housewife and mother." which most retail stores are stocking in preference to the large eggs. Silleck, Joseph Vetter, Loyal G.

Tinkler, Fltzhugh B. Jones. Gardner Kirsten and Donald Manley. Deputy Commissioner of Markets Frances Foley Gannon explains, however, that the housewife is apt lor whiiih women, especially American women, are due. We feel sure that these brave souls represent the New Woman, who will be a true homemaker.

Mind you not because she has to, by way of getting a living, and not because her eyes are not open to whatever advantages there are in what we now refer to as a career; but because she honestly and truly loves homemaking and her home. There have been women like then in all eras, hut since the first clamor for "freedom" started, the home-loting woman ha too often felt it necessary to apologise for her attitude was revealed by the appraisal filed by State Transfer Tax Appraiser David F. Soden. Stock holdings, mostly in the Eastern Farms Company and the Sacks Holding Corporation, totaled while the real estate was appraised at $80,000. Debts of $10,027, mortgages totaling $20,354 and administration expenses accounted for the difference between the gross and 16 From Poly Tech Join Fraternity Alpha Zeta chapter of Phi Lambda net estates.

TJpsilon, national honorary chemi If told, sternly, by her advanced contemporaries that contentment teat her merely became- she didn't kmiw better, she had no refutation to offer It mat true she had no other way of supporting herself. cal fraternity, has announced the Under the will, the Pride of Judea Orphan Asylum will get $3,000, and the Brooklyn Hebrew Home and Hospital for the Aged and the Jewish Sanitarium for Incurables $2,000 election of 15 students and one Jane Corby IF THE mad rush for jobs outside" alumnus of Polytechnic Institute. Nervous? Her it medicint which quiets quivering nerves. You eat better sleep better. 98 out of 100 women say "It helps me' John R.

Brierley, '10, Is the alum cenary that she prefer a career outside of the home to that of the life of the average wife, may I remind her that women throughout the ages, regardless of their greatness, have run true to form in their desire for love, and must have felt that their power great at it might he was indeed an empty thing without it. Quite evidently, Cleopatra of Egypt, Elisabeth of England, and Catherine the Great of Hussia, were of this opinion. "We women were made for love, and deny it as we may, are creatures of sentiment, invariably thinking with our hearts instead of our heads; and I believe this is the way men would have us be. We clamor for reforms, but when they are within our reach we become reactionary. There is no woman in the world who would not exchange the fickleness of fame and fortune for a pair of loving arms and the lovelight in a man's eyes." IT IS not as If, Mrs.

Simon points out, the housework usually termed drudgery comes under any such heading in these days. "The old adage: 'A man works from sun to sun, but a woman's work is never is as out-of-date as the crinoline," she says. "A little system, coupled with the innumerable mechanical household appliances which are avail- each. to pay more in the end for the smaller eggs unless she buys them by weight. Large size Grade A eggs should weigh about 24 ounces to the dozen.

Price-Range on Meats Loin of pork is selling as low as 18 cents a pound. Leg of lamb, another good weekend standby, varies in price from 19 to 23 cents a pound. Smoked hams are 20 cents a pound and roasting chickens are offered at 25 cents a pound. Florida oranges are still unsatisfactory in quality and sell for about 30 cents a dozen on the average. Florida grapefruit is superior to the oranges, good-sized fruit selling for three for 25 cents.

Tangerines are beginning to show In the markets and are of exceptionally good quality, selling at about three for 10 cents. As for vegetables, string beans are found to be high at 18 cents a pound, with peas running about the same. Cauliflower sells for about 15 cents a head. California carrots are now in plentiful supply and bring about 10 cents a bunch. Two children.

Jack Sacks and nus honored. The students are Robert Ginsberg, Jerome Freedland, 1 the home has accomplished nothing else, it has given all women a weapon with which to defend their delight in an art that is at once commonplace and rare the Sophie Cohen, were bequeathed $5,000 each and the residue was left William Lindsay, Henry Myers, Carl A. Setterstrom, W. Fred Schurig, in trust to the widow, Sarah, of 451 George Gibson, Samual D. Gold Crown St.

Eleven grandchildren are art of true homemaking. Now i Is i berg, Anthony Robertson, Clarence to receive $1,000 each, to be paid from the principal of the trust fund if they marry before the death of Mrs. Sacks. and when my family stood around the kitchen table and watched with wide-open eyea the evolution of what to them seemed a work of art on top of a birthday cake; and so for the housedress which she objects to so much, I cannot think of anything more becoming to a woman than a dainty housedress which can offset feminine charms to greater advantage than a tailored suit. "Granted, as your reader says, that lamb-drippings and garbage pails are not the most Idealistic things In the world; I wonder, though, if she would prefer res-taurant diet day after day instead of a home-cooked meal; and a bleak, and lonely hall bedroom.

For PRICE 7 I Mrs. McCracken Beneficiary Thomas McCracken, 780 St. Mark's who died Oct. 28, made his wife Hannah his sole beneficiary, according to his will filed for probate with Surrogate Wingate. An accompanying petition formally ap lt-r praised the estate at "more than women can say they like housekeeping, and their statement will be accorded the dignity of belief.

One of our readers has done just that, in a letter that might well serve in part, as a creed to which all homemakers could subscribe. Writing In aswer to another reader, whose letter published recently, voiced strong discontent with routine housework, Mrs. Audrey Simon, 1080 Rockingham Place, proves herself an intelligent spokeswoman for modern homemakers. High spots of her letter are given: "Your reader lays it on thick and furiously," she says, with considerable vigor, "about 'dear mother watching the cradle; dear mother baking pies'; and 'dear mother in a housedres washing the lamb drippings from the roast $20,000." Kirschbaum Estate in Trust An estate of "less than $10,000" in WMill 0 PROOF 1L III asaafl FIFTH A PINT "For five years I suffered terribly with headache and backache and was so nervous I would have to go to bed. I took different medicine but with no results until a friend told me about Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.

After taking four bottles I am a different womaru real property and "more than $10,000" in personal property was left by Louis I. Kirschbaum, 1365 E. f7 13th according to the petition. The entire estate was left in trust to two daughters, Roslyn and Irma Kirschbaum, both of the E. 13th St.

BROOKLYN EAGLE HOME GUILD 305 Washington Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Admit one to afternoon program at The Home Guild, beginning at 2:00 o'clock. Present This Coupon at Home Guild Entrance, Fourth Floor Original East. Bonding I only wish I had started on it when I 6rst had my troubles." Mrs.

H. B. Lusby, 202 N. 34th Louisville, Kentucky. address.

William Riley Will William Riley, 698 Park Place, who ing pun and gazing with raptur died Oct. 19, left an estate of "more "Before my baby was bora I was rundown and nervous: My mother told me totakeLydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to ease my nerves sod prepare me for childbirth: After only a few bottles I was up and doing my work cheerfully. Childbirth was very easy, thanks to your Mrs. lohn Ellis, 6.508 So.

Campbell Chicago, Illinois. than $2,000" to his sister, Helen ous eyes into the overflowing garbage pail. She seems, however, to overlook the fact that we dear mothers were created by the Almighty for the very job she finds Riley, of the same address. "Mother gave me the Compound when I was 13: I took it at childbirth and at the Change. It has been won- Mrs.

John W. Applegate, On any basis) for every purpose COMPARISON Ask for Free Recipe Folder, 'The Truth About Adam 'n Eve." Iff Stolij NAME. so distasteful, and for the funda 3,000 Commercial Teachers Fight Tenure Danger Bulletins urging teachers to cooperate for the defense of tenure rights are being distributed today to all the city's elementary and high schools by the Joint Committee of Teachers' Organizations. The bulletin announces that within the next few days the committee will ask for a united protest and appeal to the State Commissioner of Education for amendment and modification of the proposed new State rule, which teachers insist threatens tenure. "If protest and appeal alike unhappily should fail, the joint committee in defense of the right of tenure now enjoyed by teachers will carry the issue to the courts," according to the bulletin.

This distribution of bulletins brings to a head the protests registered individually by practically all teachers organizations which comprise the joint committee. The position taken by the committee is being defined in a brief being prepared by a sub-committee of its executive board composed of Dr. Frederick Houk Law. chairman; Dr. Abraham Lefkowitz, Miss May H.

Vail, Miss Dania Kysor and Robert Conin. ADDRESS LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND mental purpose of bringing babies into the world who have to be rocked because they cannot rock themselves, while father is away earning a livng for the woman who finds her home and family to tiresome and nerve-racking. "I happen to be one of those dear mothers. Some of the happiest Educators to Meet More than 3,000 administrators and educators in the commercial field will attend the annual Fall convention of the Commercial Education Association, to be held at the Hotel Pennsylvania tomorrow.

Dr. John L. Tildsley, acting superintendent, in charge of high schools, will speak at the luncheon. moments of my life were those when I rocked my children to sleep; JgggL pi! Kura-MIH' rTIfsaMa.aaaaaMaa"aaaalaa)a1taMaaaMaa 1 -SAVE MONEY! MtKI YOUR OWN WITH iiPirlriimil) RYE GIN RUM 10 OtMIt HAVOft At rti Omg Starts CORPORATION NOTICES I I I I I HUPFEL'S BEER adds zest to an evening "snack" A comfortable chair a bite to eat and a tall, golden glass of Hupfel's what a pleasant way to say "welcome" when a friend drops in! You'll notice a difference in Hupfel's. It's unusual because there is no trace of bitterness in its full-strength goodness; and because its smooth, creamy body is light in weight and not too filling.

stie STans iiKe Sealed Bids will be received by th Co mm i oner ol Purchase of The City of Npw York, at his Office, Room 1900, Municipal Building, Manhattan, until 10:30 a.m., on Wednesday. Nov. 21. 1934. Borough of Brooklvn FOR FURNISHING AND DELIVERING BTOCK FRUITS AND VEGETABLES TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALS.

The time for the performance of contracts is from Dec. 1 to Dec. 31, 1934. No bid shall be considered unless it Is accompanied br a deposit. Such deposit shall be in an amount not less than one and one-half per cent of the total amount of the bid.

The amount of security required 1b thirty percent of the contract amount awarded. The bidder will state the price per unit, as called lor in the schedules of quantities and prices, by which the bid will be tested. The extensions must be made and footed ud. as the bids will be fmm "why not Tydol is Lubricated Qreased Lightning" the total, and awards, If made, made to ina lowest Diaaer on each or class, as stated In the schedules. Specifications referred to In the schedules may be had upon application at Room 1900.

Municipal Building, Manhat iafSaaaaaataa i WHEN your motor does not start instantly on a cold morning it means battery drain It means also that on dry cold spots of upper cylinder walls, metal grinds on metal and causes damage to your motor. Two things are needed to prevent these dangers. A fast-starting gasoline and a lubricant that pro tects upper motor parts. Tydol, the gasoline that lubricates, offers you this combination at no extra cost every charge of this fast-starting gasoline that enters your motor there is a positive "film of protection" that not only aids fast-starting but lubricates upper motor parts the minute your motor starts. tan.

Blank forms and further Information may be obtained at the office of the Department of Purchase. Room 1900. Municipal Building, Manhattan. RUSSELL FORBES, Commissioner. frSee General to Bidden Obituary Page.

(C-257 SEALED BIDS WILL BE RECFTVED BY the Commissioner of Purchase of The City of New York, at. his office. Room 1900. Municipal Building. Manhattan, until 10:30 a on MONDAY.

NOVEMBER 19, 1034. Borough of Brooklyn. FOR FURNU3HINO AND DELIVERING COAL TO THE DEPARTMENT OF SANITATION. The time for the performance of contracts la Xor the period ending May 31. 1935.

FOR FURNISHING AND DELIVERING POULTRY TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALS. The time for the perfeormanct of eon-tracts la from Dr. 1 to Dec. 31. 1934.

FOR FURNISHING AND DELIVERING VEATS TO THE DEPARTMENT OF HOS-flTALS. The time tor the performance of la from Dec. 1 to Dec. 31. 1934.

No bid shall be considered unlets It is Accompanied by a deposit. Such deposit shall be in an amount not less than one and one-half per cent, of the total amount nf the bid. The amount of security required is thirty per cent, of the contract amount awarded. The bidder will state the price per unit, as lor in the schedules of quantities and i.ricea. by which the bids will be tested.

The extensions must be made and looted lit), as the bids will be read from Proved by Byrd at 60 Below Don't handicap a fast-starting gasoline. With Tydol, useVeedol cold-proof motor oil, 100 Pennsylvania at Its finest. Tydol and Veedol make an Ideal winter combination and are used exclusively by the Byrd Antarctic Expedition. "ASK THE MAN AT THE PUMP" IB niVEEDCtj 17 Ti.le Waler Oil Company, 17 Battery Place, New York City -1 (Standard 12. oz.

size) Alio larg. family-sire bonlc-4 full lasses for 8( (both price, plus deposit) rne total, and awards, If made, made to a bottled beer that tastes tne lowost Diaaer on eacn item or class, as stated tn the schedules. Specifications relerred to In the schedules may be had upon application at Room INSTANT STARTING INSTANT LUBRICATION HO tXTRA COST IQL iutm. Municipal Building, Manhattan. Blank forma and further Information may be obtained at the office of the Department of Pure rinse.

Room 1900. Municipal Bulldlntr. Manhattan. RUSSELL FORBES, Commissioner. Vsee General Instructions to Bidders an obituary nag, (C-266 aS-10t OIU a.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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