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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 23

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 23

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Brooklyn, New York
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Editorial. Society Financial News News Feature Fililorial, Society financial News Fashions and Schools DA 100 JTsJj JTTVF rlVL, NEW YORK CITY, SUNDAY, MAY 19, 1929. 1 1 VV JF Ifl5 ii i' Miss Elizabeth R. Qreenwood To Be Wed to W. S.

Du Bois On June 8 in Qrace Church Summer Plans of Brooklynites Favor Long Island, European And Adirondack Mts. Resorts -i A VV li I Vt 'if I SECTION rrVTC I bbvik CEirni L.XIJ Nfw york citewlun Preserve," In the Adirondack Mountains the latter part of June for the summer. Miss Marjorie Fltcb) will sail on June IS on the 8. 3. Homeric to be gone all summer ta travel pn the Continent.

www Mr. and Mrs. Allen Reynolds Bishop of 295 St. John's pi. will be at Water Mill.

L. until Aug. 1 when they will leave for Glenada, Quebec, Canada, to remain until Oct. 1. Mrs.

Bishop recently re turned from a three months trln to Europe with her daughters, tha Misses Beatrice and Eileen Cantwell. The Misses Cantwell will remain, in France until Aug. 1 and will Join Mr. and Mrs. Bishop at their camp In the Lailrentlen Mountains, Quebec, later.

Harvey 8. Ladew who went to England In January for the hunt ing, is now in Paris. Mr. Ladew will remain abroad several months and has leased his house at Brookvllle, L. to Mrs.

Chapln of Chicago. Mr. and Mn. Robert Bacon Seward of Livingston st. will spend weekends through June at their home, "Sea Gull," at Sachem's Head, and will go up for the season shortly afterward.

Mrs. Walter Truslow of 430 Orand ave. will spend the summer at Westhampton, L. and her sister, Mrs. Frederick Harrison Danker will be with her for a time.

Dr. Truslow will go abroad this summer, accompanied by his son. Mr. and Mrs. Carl S.

Voelcker of the Mohawk Hotel and Mr. and Mrs. William Young Jr. (Betty Bruning), who were recently married, have taken a house at Olea Cove, L. for the summer.

The Misses Elizabeth and Florenca Martin of 304 Washington Park sailed yesterday on the Roma to spend the summer abroad. Mr. and Mrs. Rush R. Sloane ot 421 Clinton ave.

will go to Ogonqulh, Maine, from June 10 until Sept. 12 with their children, Frank and Jessie Sloane. Dr. and Mrs. LeOrand Kerr of 460' Clinton who have been spending the week-ends at their home In Sayvllle, L.

for the past two months, closed their town house yesterday and will remain In Sayvllle until the latter part of October. Miss Lothian Kerr will Join her parents there on Friday. Mrs. Frank Morse Smith of 4a 8th ave. and her daughter.

Miss Ar-rletta Smith, will spend the summer at Canaan, Conn. Miu Arlene Zerega to Civs Tea for College Seniors. Miss Arlene Zerega of 25 Clark st. will give a tea for the seniors at Mary Mount tomorrow at BriarcluT Lodge, Briarcllft Manor, N. Y.

About 40 guests will be present. Miss Zerega Is a senior at Mary Mount. Prominent Brooklyaites Plan to Spend Summer At East Hampton, I. East Hampton, L. May 18 Summer.

1929, promises to be tha gayest season East Hampton has ever known since the village was "discovered" by a group of artists rind rest-seeking members of Manhattan's Four Hundred In the 1870's. Last year was a busy one here; but today nearly every cottage available for rent has been taken; owners of estates here are In practically every case planning to occupy them, and elates are already being set for the season's Important events. Brooklyn Is well represented In the colony. Among those owning horn here, who are expected to arriva joon for the season are: and Mrs. Howard Ognen Wood of 831 St.

Mark's Mr. and Mrs. ihn Frelinghuysen Talmage of 104 Pierrepont Edward F. de Belxedon of 163 Clinton Mrs. John Mason Please lurn Pe I r-s i Reading from left to right are pictured Mrs.

Edwin P. Maynard who was elected president of the Brooklyn Junior League this week; Miss Olga Vrecland and Miss Doris Murphy, both Packer Collegiate Institute students, who will be presented to society at a tea dance at the Ambassador Hotel on Dec. 24, and Miss Tirzah Perfect, who designed the cover on the invitations issued by the Junior League for their dinner-dance which will be held on the marine roof of the Hotel Bossert on Wednesday evening. Mrs. Valentine Kirk Raymond, the former Miss Eleanor Andrews, is shown in her bridal jrown the lower center picture.

She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Andrews. The marriage of Miss Elizabeth Reeve Greenwood, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. William Clark Greenwood of 239 Cumberland and William teanford DuBols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gilbert DuBols of Engle-Vood, N. will take place on the afternoon of Saturday, June 8.

The veremony will be performed in Grace Church on the Heights, by the Rev. Morgan Phelps Noyes, assisted by the Rev. Dr. George P. Atwater, at 4:30 o'clock.

Miss Constance Boody will be maid of honor for Miss Greenwood, and the bridesmaids will be Miss Elizabeth Deyer, Miss Barbara Bailey, Mrs. James Russell Clarke Jr. (Winifred Horwlll) and Mrs. Elmer Isaac Phillips, sister of Mrv DuBols. Gordon Bridge of Albany, N.

will art as hest man for Mr. DuBois, 'whose ushers will be Palmer Ray Foote, Daniel A. Llndley and Elmer Isaac Phillips of Englewood; William Wallace Thornton of Youngs-town, Ohio; Leon H. Albus. and Hugh M.

Miller of Kansas City. A small reception will follow at the Brooklyn Woman's Club. Miss Elizabeth Packard of Ber-rruville. N. will sail on the Homeric next Saturday to take a motor trip through Engiana.

mi Packard has taken an apartment on Park Manhattan, into which she will move In the fall. Henry Vanderveer of the Hotel Margaret has returned from a trip abroad of about three months' duration. I ru Louise Munson and Miss have eone to Klnder- UUUB hOOk, N. tO V1511 MIS. mcu Ogden Mrs Carleton H.

Palmer of 208 lua will rimtnn ave. ana ner for the summer, Palmer will Join her later for the Dublin Horse mow. Mrs. John Christopher i Meyer of 13 Monroe pi. wm th.

Gables, Rye, N. from June 1 I pntil Oct. 1 f. oh Mrs. William M.

Greve and Miss Elizabeth Greve, Mr. and -Prank BM ev ana mm T.ati will return on Tuesday from ashorttriptoUxingtonKy where thev have been visum Thev attended the famous I ldlU'Oi "Kentucky Derby In Louisviue yw l.terday. Mrs. George D. Carring 'ton of 89 Joralemon st will go to their home, "Tne noiuw-cau, Bridgehampton.

L. from the first of June until the middle of October. Mrs. Frederick H. Paine of 185 Gates ave.

and their daughter, Miss Priscilla raine. wui su Cliff" at BeUast, r. June 28. to remain until I cf 1k MISS FainO 1CI I11U.J w. No-thampton, where she wlU remain until Tuesday.

Mrs. Paine and her daujhter will attend reunion tt smith College from June 13 unlU June 19. fr and Mrs. William B. Hill of 132 Remsen si.

wiu aicu the summer traveling in me mi Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Blum 1 pierrepont si. win oe aw cajucujf point, East Isllp, L.

from June until September. Mrs. Blum's parents. Dr. and Mrs.

John T. Halbey of New Orleans will oe wun mem. Miss Elizabeth Stebbini Gives Partv for Miu Martba Caldwell. Mis Elizabeth waring steooins, daughter of Mr. ana Mrs.

Waring Stebbins of 1171 Dean st. entertained yesterday at a bridge and handkerchief shower at her borne for Miss Martha Caldwell, who will be married to Ernest oc. umir Bilou on June 1, The guests were tne Misses war nri Bitou, Janet Dalzell, Eleanor Folcer, Kathryn riscner, uiaays ilvie. Anna Marie Morales, uiaay I Mars. Muriel Slocovlch, Miriam I finvder.

Genevieve Somen, Elaine Uldlaw, Mra. Theodore G. Caldwell, Mrs. Arthur Ericsson, Mrs. V.

Hall Everson and Mrs. Reginald N. Webster. A. M.

Bagby's Musical Mornings will take pi ice next winter in December and January, as usual, but this time in the ballroom of the Hotel Astor. The members of the Brooklyn Art Guild were entertained recently at the country homes of the Misses Maud Purdy, Martha Bally and Emily Boger, In Pomona, N. Chapter officers and members of the Daughters of the American Rev olution have been Invited to attend a D. A. R.

day at Conference House, Staten Island, on Saturday, to be given by 'ho Staten Island Chap ter, Mrs. Edwin Benson, regent. Mrs. Newton D. Chapman Is chairman of the day.

Jwnior League Dinner Dance To Have Many Novel Features; Many Reservations Made. Special features of the. dinner danco to be given by the Junior League on the Marine roof of the Hotel Bossert on Wednesday evening Include a lucky number dance which will be run by Mrs. Robert A. Burdick; cigarettes will be sold by Miss Constance Boody and Mrs.

Clifton Thomson; the Misses Virginia Beguelln, Alice Bralslln and Priscilla Paine will go from table to table lb make amusing sketches of the guests which may be purchased and taken home. There is also one surprise that the committee is not announcing. The music will be supplied by Markel. Additional reservations have been made by the Misses Kathryn Fischer, Louise Goetze, Priscilla Paine, Elizabeth Halstead, Ethel Hanan, Katherlne Ross, Mary John son and Walter Robinson, John P. Hughes, Hugh Breckenrldge, Clinton Schelling, John Cerf, John E.

Field, Richard Wrigley and Mrs. Donald Snell Priscilla Bowns), Mrs. Stut- zer Taylor, Mrs. Gansen Baldwin. Mrs.

Lester Lchrenkrauss, Mrs. Lindsay McKlnley, Mrs. Clifton 8. Thomson, Mrs. Edward T.

HorwiU, Mrs. Isaac Cook, Mrs. Harold P. Kneen, Mrs. A.

DeWltt Mason. Mrs. Edmond T. Drewson, Mrs. Darwin R.

James Mrs. Otis Carroll. Mra. James Newman and Mrs. William V.

Hester Jr. Mn. Mary Thornton McDennott Selects Dates for Third Season Of Music at the Museum. The dates for Mary Thornton McDermott's third season of Evenings of Music at the Brooklyn Museum next winter will be Tuesdays, Nov. 19, Dec.

17 and Jan, 7. The recitals will be -held in Renais sance Hall. Miu Evelyn Burns Hostess For Miss Betty Bunyan. Miss Evelyn Pray Burns enter tained at her home. 387 Ocean yesterday in honor of Miss Betty Bunyan, who will be married to Sutherland Rugg Stuart on June 15.

After luncheon in Manhattan, Miss Bums took her guests to see The Misses Polly Dyck-man, "Janet Baxter, Hope Relch-mann and Jacque Berry were the guests. Miss Margaret Stevenson, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Maxwell Stevenson, will attend the spring house party at Wesleyan University this weekend.

Mist Muriel Seddon Hostess For Miss Marion Fitch. Miss Muriel Seddon, daughter of Mr. and Mn. Louis E. Seddon of 353 Ocean entertained at her home yesterday at a luncheon and bridge tor Miss Marlon Fitch, who will be married to Woodley Gosling on June 1.

The guests Misses Ruth Fitch, Dorrie Skinner, Mary Ca-baud, Althea Schweickert, Marie Schwelckert. Grace Shuttleworth Margaret Halkett, Mrs. E. Paul Amend, Mrs. Robert Heinze and Mrs.

Lawrence Ferry, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morgan King, formerly of 650 Ocean have opened their summer home. Klngsway, at Oldfleld Point, Se- tauket, L. I.

In the fall they will move into their new apartment at 125 E. 50th Manhattan. Mr. and Mrs. Fin ley Krause (Delphls King) of 1911 Albemarle rd.

will spend July and August with Mrs. Krause's parents at Old Field Point. The latter part of August they will go for a two weeks visit to Cleveland, where they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W.

arlfflng King. Mr. and Mrs. Remsen Johnson of 814 Clinton ave. will sail with their daughter, Miss Dorothy Johnson, and their young son, Dudley R.

Johnson, on June 29 on the S. S. Reliance that will make a cruise to Iceland, Spltzbergen, the North Cape, Hamerfest and Copenhagen. They will leave the cruise at Germany, motor through that country, Belgium and Holland and return in September. Mrs.

Charles A. Boody and Miss Constance Boody of 825 Park Manhattan, will open their summer home at West Hampton Beach, L. for the season on June 15. Mr. and Mrs.

Frank Chase Russell of 278 Berkeley pi, with their daughter, Miss Betty Russell, will sail for Europe on the S. 8. Vol-canla on June 7. They will take an extensive motor trip on the Continent and return the latter part of August. Mr.

and Mrs. Arthur M. Howe have taken a cottage on Bay East Quogue, L. I. They will go down the middle of June to occupy It for the summer.

Dr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Maynard Jr. of 128 Willow st.

will open their summer house at Westhampton Beach, L. the first week in June. Mrs. Edward T. Horwlll of 1180 Dean William Horwlll and Mr.

and Mrs. James Russell Clarke Jr. of 24 Monroe pi. have taken a house at Huntington, L. for the summer.

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Wldmann of 16 Remsen st. have opened their summer home, "Stonehenge," at Greenwich Conn.

Mrs. Harris M. Crist of 155 Stratford rd, with her daughter Miss Marjorie Crist, ana son, Buckley Crist, will go to Vineyard Haven, Marthas Vineyard, early in June, where they will spend the sumrnar. Mr. and Mrs.

Edwin P. Maynard of the Hotel Bossert will open their summer home at Westhampton Beach, L. on May 23 and remain there until November. Mr. and Mrs.

Edward Charles Blum of 45 Plaza st. will open their summer place, "Shore Acres," at Bay Shore, L. the latter part ot tne week. I Dr. and Mrs.

Carroll Leja Nichols of 230 Hancock st. will open their place, "Apple Tree Cottage," at Booth Bay Harbor, Maine, the first week In July. In August Dr. and Mrs. Nichols expect to go to Sachem's Head, Conn.

Mr. and Mrs. DeWltt Clinton Whiting of 1075 Park Manhattan, will spend the summer at Westhampton Beach, L. The Rev. and Mrs.

George A. Trowbridge (Jean Whiting) of 125 W. 76th st, Manhattan, have taken a cottage at Westhampton Beach, L. where they will spend the first part of the summer. In July they will go to Maine.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Maynard of 11 Schermerhorn st. will open their summer home at Westhampton Beach, L.

on May 29. Mr. and Mrs. Morton Cross Fitch i will open their camp, Dr. Jocelyn Woodman And Dr.

Henry B. Wightman To Be Married June 7. Plans have been completed for the wedding of Dr. Jocelyn Woodman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

R. Huntington Woodman, of Hicks and Dr. Henry Booth Wightman, son of the Rev. Percy B. Wightman, of Manhattan, and the late Mrs.

Wightman. The ceremony will be performed on June 7 in the First Presbyterian Church. The bridegroom's father, who is pastor of the University Heights Presbyterian Church in Manhattan, will perform the ceremony, assisted by the Rev. Dr! L. Mason Clarke, pastor emeritus of the First Presbyterian Church.

A reception will follow at the Rome of Mr. and Mrs. Woodman. S. Lewis Elmer will be at the organ.

Mrs. Plerson Curtis of Stony Brook, L. sister of Dr. Woodman, will be matron of honor and two little flower girls, Miss Wlnfred Burnet Curtis, niece of the bride, and Miss Emily Harding Mason of Englewood, N. cousin of1 the bridegroom, will complete the bridal party.

Alexander Hadden of Manhattan will be best man and the ushers will be Edwin S. Shuttleworth yr. of Douglaston, L. James B. Scott Jr.

of Manhattan; Gordon Brown of Berlin, N. and Dr. Albert Vender Veer of Albany, Y. I Judge and Mrs. Edwin L.

Garvin of the Hotel Bossert are in Pough-keepsle for the weekend visiting their daughter, Miss Elizabeth Garvin, afVassar. Mr. and Mrs. Juan A. Almlrall of 97 McDonough st.

will open Wah-kee-na, their home at Cragsmoor, N. from July until October. Lloyd V. Almlrall and Miss Juanita Almlrall will be with them. Mr.

and Mrs. Cornelius Henry Tiebout Jr. of 921 Lincoln pi. will go to Stony Brook, L. early in June, returning to town the latter part of September.

Cornelius H. Tiebout 3d will join them there. Mist Hazel Stafford Guest At Bridge and Shower. Miss Gertrude Benolt of 1050 President 6t. entertained at a show and bridge yesterday after-noon at her home, In honor of Miss Hazel Stafford, who will be married to John Howard Mason on May 31.

Those present were the Misses Hazel Stafford, Trlnette Dewey, Ruth Tirman, Margaret Halkett, Mrs. John Heltmann Mrs. Edwin A. Graham, Mrs. Jules Shuter, Mrs.

F. E. Benoit and Mrs. Jack Barlow. Miu Aimee Tweedy Honored At Luncheon and Shower.

Miss Betty Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dana Jack son oi viv rresiaent si gave a luncheon and red and white kitchen shower at the Montauk Club yester day for Miss Aimee Tweedy. Miss Tweedy will be married to William J. Butcher Jr.

on May 24. The guests were the Misses Ruth Butcher, Margaret Greerwood, Gladys Knox, Dorothea Knox, Helen Lefferts and Mrs. E. Russell Caudle. Mr.

and Mrs. Charles M. Higgins of 101 Prospect Park West will have their home in Smlthtown, L. open from June 15 until October 15. Mr.

and Mrs. John J. Schoon hoven of 773 Eastern parkway will remain in town until July 1, when they will go to their country home, "Breldablick," Pound Ridge, N. until September. Miss Lilian Sanger of 10 Montague terrace will be at "El Mirasol," Santa Barbara, from June un til Novemberi Miu Louise B.

Little Wed to T. Redmond Thayer At Home Ceremony. Miss Louise Bronson Little, daugh ter of Mrs. Frank Little of 114 Mon tague was married, yesterday afternoon to' Thomas Redmond Thayer, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Edward Claflln Thayer of 5 St. Paul's Court. The ceremony was performed at the home of the bride's mother by the Rev. L. Mason Clarke and the Rev.

Morgan Phelps Noyes at 4:30 o'clock. The bride was gowned in a pannier crepe gown, trimmed with old rose point lace. She wore a veil of tulle, caught with orange blossoms, and rarrled a bouquet of. white lilacs. Miss Isobel Kemp Cox of Englewood was flower girl and only attendant for Miss Little.

Hollls Keresey Thayer was best man for his brother. Miss Little received her education at the Masters School at Dobbs Ferry and is a member of the Junior League. Mr. Thayer was graduated from Harvard with the Class of 1921 and the graduate School of Business Administration with the Class of 1922. He Is a member of the Harvard Club of New York.

After a trip to Bermuda, Mr. and Mrs Thayer will live at 84 Remsen street. Miss Virginia Steel Hosteu At Large Bridge and Tea For Packer Claumates. Miss Virginia B. Steel, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Andrew Jackson Steel, of 1583 E. 18th entertained yesterday at a bridge and tea at the Hotel Bossert, in honor of her classmates and friends at Packer Collegiate Institute, where she is president of the senior class. The guests were the. Misses Vera Ackerson, Mary Bailey, Jean Beat-ty, Marjorie Baldwin, Edna Blatz, Jean Bodkin, Caroline Caye, Ruth Clark, VlrgUila Crlsfleld, Isabel Curts, Helen and Muriel Copeland, Julia Campbell, Betty Duffy, Eugenie D'Arsi, Ethel Ehlenberger, Marie E(eloack, Dorothy Fish, Ce-cile Forshay, Janet Flnken, Lucille Fennlman, Helen Freeman, Jean-ette Gelsmar, Ann Groff, Shirley Greaves, Helen Henjes, Helen Hor-rocks, Frances Holland, Elsie Ireland, Nancy Kent, Julie Kcenan, Isabel Llebmann, Fannie Ellis Lip-trott, Barbara Miller, Doris Murphy, Virginia Marvin, -Anne Mud-gett, Alice Margeson, Polly Nelson, Alice Nichols.

The Misses Doris Northrldge, Ellen Penny, Ruth Pollock, Marjorie Pryor, Louise Pottle, Mabel Rollins, Ruth Rowley, Virginia Reed, Viola Schubart, Jacqueline Sanford, Marion Sharman, Beatrice Splcer, Dale Schmld, Gladys Smythe, Anne-Marie Stelnbugler, Doris Thompson, Margery Trull, 01-ga Vreeland, Katherlne Wood-worth, Janet Wilson, Betty Wenzer, Lucille Weltuer, Carolyn Wldmann, Phyllis Wllilams, Mrs. John W. Page Jr. and Mrs. Andrew J.

Steel. Pardee Krech. Mr. and Mrs. Fred W.

Pardee of Ridgewood, N. and formerly of Brooklyn, announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Virginia Pardee, to Edward M. Krech, son of Mr. and Mrs. George E.

Krech, also of Ridgewood. Miss Pardee finished at' Rogers Hall and Mr. Krech was graduated from Cornell University. No date has been set for the wed-ding. Archibald C.

Scrimgeour of 864 Carroll st. and his daughter, Miss Jean Pearson Scrimgeour, will go to SByvllle. L. from June 1 until Oct. 1.

Mr. Scrimgeour will serve for his sixth successive season as chair man of the handicap and tourna ment committee of the Snyvllle poll Club (his summer, Contemporary Comment ONE OF THE GREATEST Indoor sports in May is getting out the wedding invitations. Nothing else so unites a family, so plagues the bride and brings her down to earth. Mother's writing is criticized and father's spelling. Every one's mind is a category of names and addresses and conversation consists chiefly of arguments as to whether this relative or that little brother has to be Invited.

The style of wedding Invitations hag changed greatly in the past few years. Block letters are now favored instead of script, the shape, of the envelopes Is rectangular instead of square and the color is cream instead of white. Nor does the bride have to wear the orthodox white satin. Her gown Is chosen to blend with her complexion. She wears flesh color, eggshell or suntan and her dress may be made of lace, tulle, chiffon, moire or satin.

Bouquets are not as large nor as fussy as in previous years; in fact the fashion books go so far as to state that one must carry only three or nrv i iiiiiii.tiii.i.ii.ubiiiniiiiiiiij.iiii..,rit.hii Mrs. Carl Voelcker Hostess For Miu Dorothy Campbell. Mrs. Carl S. Voelcker of the Mohawk Hotel gave a bridge and shower yesterday at the home of her mother, Mrs.

William Young, 245 Stuyvesant for Miss Dorothy Campbell, who will be married to Frank Anson Shelll on June 1. Mrs. Voelcker will be one of Miss Campbell's bridesmaids. The guests Included the Misses Minerva Campbell and Harrlette Goebel. Mrs.

F. Eugene Graessle, Mrs. Thomas Strong, Mrs. William E. Williams, Mrs.

Charles. T. Wright, Mrs. Raymond Berry. Mrs.

Sumner Jackson and Mrs. Peter Joshua, five lilies. The purity of white being discarded but a purity of line is being sought. VIGNETTES OF THE WEEK. Donal O'Brien running to catch an early a.m.

train and finding that the checkroom, In which he han. checked his luggage and brief case full of valuable papers for business trip, was closed for the night. Reports at the B. H. S.

luncheon, reports at the Junior League meet tng, respectfully submitted and In differently received. A NEW DEPARTURE for men from their usual conservatism In dress Is the brightly colored felt hat. Fedoras of red, blue, purple, green and orange now startle one in the street. For sport with a blazer they are fine but when you see several together In the drab city you think you are looking at the male chorus from the latest revue. Whtte ones have been the vogue in English uni versltles but It takes young America to burgeon forth In all the bright colors.

E. R. G. 1 i mil Mn. Jackson Entertains For M7s.

Harry Hill. Mrs. John H. Jackson gave a farewell bridge on Wednesday for Mrs. Harry Hill who will leave the city shortly for her summer home in the mountains.

Assisting Mrs. Jackson were Mrs. Thomas Prlco and Mrs. Charles Williams. The table decorations were yellow marguerites and blue candles.

Mr. and Mrs. William G. Kelso of 34 Orange st. will open their summer home at Rye, N.

on May 27. Miss Jean Kelso will go to camp for July and August. They will cjose their home on. Of 5, Jj.

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