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Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 2

Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 2

Publication:
Brooklyn Lifei
Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN LIFE the Executive Committee. Since the absorption of that company by the Irving Trust Company, he has occupied the position of vice-president of that company, in charge of the Flatbush office. BROOKLYN LIFE The Illnatrated Home Weekly for Brooklyn and Long Ialand Puhluhed every Saturday by Rugby Press Eagle Building, 307 Washington Brooklyn, .1 Make remittances payable to Rugby Press Inc. G. Hhbebt Henshaw, President Fed H.

Timfson, Treasurer Telephone 3603 and 3604 Main $6.00 a year in advance, postage free in U. S. Albert McDonald, Miss Elsie Weber, Mrs. H. A.

Wade, Mrs. Louis Saulnier, Mrs. Kajus Jensen, Mrs. Andrew Petersen, Mrs. Hattie H.

Cole, Mrs. S. O. Kraemer, Mrs. Edward Todd, Jr.

Mrs. Chester A. Weed, Mrs. F. L.

Todd, M. Bunney, Mrs. E. D. B.

Walton, Mrs. Maximo Castillo, Mrs. Milton Wolf, Mrs. Guy C. Fleming, Mrs.

George W. Carpenter, Mrs. Henry Rasquin, Mrs. N. I.

Von Grampp, Mrs. James J. Lynch, Mrs. Daniel V. Lani-gan, Mrs.

Wilfred Egan, Mrs. W. Heine-man, Miss Katherine Gillespie, Mrs. Edward Walmsley, Mrs. Thomas Griffiths, Mrs.

Ludwig Lutz. usual, with a house party. Dinner will be served for members, their families and guests. There will be music and dancing. The Ku Ku Karnival was held Thursday evening, December 6th.

Wednesday, December 12th, there will be a basketball game between the University Club and Lafayette College, at the Second Signal Corps Armory. Another basketball game will be played Thursday, December 20th, at the same place, between the club and Dartmouth College. A dance will follow at the clubhouse. The other events include lectures, musi-cales and round-table talks. Mr.

Lehrenkrauss on Mechanics Board Last week Mr. Julius Lehrenkrauss, of Messrs. T. Lehrenkrauss bankers at and territorial possessions: foreign countries, Hull ictruuiisfti yuaacsaivitBa iuiuku $1.50 per year extra; Canada, $1.00 extra. 359 Fulton Street, was elected a member of the Board of Directors of the Mechanics Change of address or contributions must be received by Tuesday if intended for current issue.

Rnsmirtvu in ia nn fil at all nrinrinnl ctnbs. resorts, reading rooms in both the United States and Europe. The articles and illustrations in BROOKLYN LIFE are protected by copyright and must not be used by other publications except by written permission from its editor. Copyright, 1923, by the Rugby Press Inc. Entered at the Postoffice at Brooklyn, N.

March 8, 1890, as second-class mail matter, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Bank to fill the unexpired term of the late Colonel Andrew D. Baird, who died on September 4. Mr. Lehrenkrauss and his brother, Mr.

H. Lehrenkrauss, succeeded to the business established by their father more than half a century ago. In 'addition to dealing in established securities and foreign exchange, they are the Brooklyn agents for all the transatlantic and for the Bermuda and other coastal steamship lines. Mr, Julius Lehrenkrauss has been a depositor in the Mechanics Bank for forty-five years, which is probably the reason for his willing to go on the board, for he has declined three offers of the same kind from other banks in the past thirteen years. Mr.

Lehrenkrauss is a deacon of the Evangeli No. 1757 Vol. LXVIII New York, December 15, 1923 Mr. Snyder Doing Well It will be gratifying to his many warm friends to learn that information obtained at the bank regarding the condition of Mr, Alexander C. Snyder vice-president of the Irving National Bank-Columbia Trust cal Lutheran Church Schermerhorn who last week underwent a serious opera- Street and of the Saengerbund Singhlg tion at the Brooklyn Hospital, is very en- cmmPr rwAnce at couraging.

Although he has been un- Hunti and is a fflember of the conscious, except at brief intervals, is Ba Club. reported that his physical condition has 0 tt been steadily improving and the physicians are very hopeful of his recovery. :1 his University Club Plans for Holidays, information was received on Tuesday. tIThe calendar for December of the "Lfni-Snyder who is one of the leading residents verity Club has been announced by Presi-of Flatbush', is president of the lumber dent William R. Bayes.

A number of holi-firm of Ross Snyder, which he entered day, dances, dinners and carnivals are on in 1882. In 1888 he became a partner of the program. the firm, which was then G. Ross Dr. William Seaman Bainbridge will and in 1907, on the death of Mr.

Ross, be-; speak Wednesday, December .19, on his came sole owner of the business. In 1912 experiences on the Rhineland and the Ruhr, the company was incorporated. The third annual Sportsmen's Night will That Smart Appearance When your car came home for the first time, it was so spic and span, so lustrously bright, that it gave' you a prideful sense of ownership every time you looked at it. Then, after a time, as a result of a good bit of hard wear and from going out in 1 all sorts of weather, its coat lost its ness and the car looked old and weather-beaten You, perhaps, took it to a shop, for repairs and a new coat of paint. But your disappoinment was keen when it was re-1 turned to you, looking like 'a second-hand affair.

"Why," you asked, "can't the machine look as it does when it comes from the factory?" Well, the answer is that it can, providing you take it to the proper place. For instance, the Kosciusko Street Auto Painting of 139 Kosciusko Street, makes a specialty of putting on the sort of polish that reflects your1 image as clearly as does your looking-glass. To meet the tremendous demand, this busy paint shop now offers a highly specialized branch of service to the car owner. -The finishes produced in this shop by experts very often excel the best of finishes turned out by the manufacturer. The repainting of automobiles has developed a high class of skilled artisans for this work, and the automobile painter of today offers the automobile owner a service which is just as important to the upkeep of his car as any offered by the modern garage or service station.

The finishing of the body is by far the most important part of automobile repainting. The surfaces are much larger and have greater exposure to weather conditions, and their finishes are, therefore, more liable to crack, check and lose their lustre and. brilliancy. However, the fact' that the surfaces are larger has a tendency to improve the appearance of a good job of painting and, likewise, emphasizes a poor job more quickly than does any other part of the car. 1 When a car has a smart appearance that makes it stand out distinctivvely from others, it is a source of satisfaction to its owner Personal efficiency is shown just as much the condition of your car as is by the state of your wearing apparel.

Let the Kosciusko Street. Automobile Fainting Shop dress your car up for the Winter. Mr. Snyder was active in the affairs be Friday, December 14 th, when a caribou dinner will be served. Dr.

H. A. Newton will preside. New Year's Day will be celebrated, as of the Flatbush Trust Company for more than fifteen years, occupying the position of vice president, director and member of The St. George House Card Party Eight luncheons preceded the second of the house card parties in the ball room of the Hotel St.

George yesterday afternoon (Monday) The card party was especially successful, forty-two tables being occupied, with Mah Jonggan active feature. Following the games tea was served, Mrs. George W. Ruddell and Mrs. Cromwell Childe pouring.

Yellow chrysanthemums were the decorations. The hostesses of the luncheons were Mrs. Francis C. Hill, Mrs. Henry H.

Carson, Mrs. Frank C. Sauter, Mrs. William Kiley, Mrs. T.

Hinch, Mrs. Frederick F. Marquand, Mrs. Marguerite H. Borg-meyer, Mrs.

Edwin J. Scrymser. The guests, of each of these hostesses comprised; Mrs. Hill's Mrs. Henry C.

Bainbridge, Mrs. James A. Brodie, Mrs. Waldemar Otis, Mrs. F.

F. Hill, Mrs. F. B. Cochran, Miss Bainbridge, Mrs.

Charles W. Austin; Mrs. Borgmeyer's Mrs." Gilbert Wright, Mrs. S. E.

Mallenson, Mrs. C. L. Dixon Mrs. Scrymeer's, Mrs.

Paul M. Gee, Mrs, Clinton V. Murray, Miss Emma Archer Mrs. Kiley's, Mrs. Margaret C.

Molineux, Mrs. William Jurgens, Mrs. Harry Hanson Mrs. Sauter's, Mrs. C.

Royal Fraser, Mrs. Max Freiberg, Mrs. Philip Wolf, Mrs. Fannie Somers, Mrs. William A.

Price, Mrs. W. Frank Hope, Mrs. Adolf Weil, Mrs. Max Schwartz, Mrs.

Harold Hall. Other card party hostesses of the afternoon were Mrs. William Burr Hill, Mrs. Josiah P. Geran, Mrs.

William Jennings Weller, Mrs. F. F. Hill, Mrs. William Pierson Cook, Mrs.

David M. Ressenguie, Mrs. Julia Mrs. E. C.

Skinner, Mrs. James Sherill, Mrs. L. P. Hinch, Mrs.

Walter R. Jones, Mrs. Thomas Fal-vey, Mrs. William H. Bliss, Mrs.

G. E. Aitken, Mrs. H. J.

Donevin, Mrs. William T. Liston, Mrs. A. C.

Bellows, Mrs. John Dialogue, Miss E. Paul, Mrs. Jesse Mrs. Brett, Mrs.

Victor B. Wolf, Miss Frank J. Wood worth. Further players of the afternoon comprised Mrs. Harry B.

Shaen, Mrs. George B. Goodwin, Mrs. W. Leroy Coghill, Miss Elizabeth Rogers, Mrs.

G. Roy Hall, Mrs. George Wykes, Mrs. Charles W. Shelton, Miss Iride de Luca, Mrs.

Charles A. Kittle, Mrs. James S. Robb, Mrs. I.

H. Schaper, Mrs. George H. White, Miss Caroline Weber, Mrs. George W.

Naylor, Mrs. Gustave A. Preuss, Mrs. Henry DuBois, Mrs. Eugene W.

Sutton, Mrs. Henry M. Crane, Mrs. Thomas Bowling Coles, Mrs. Russell L.

Walker, Miss Hyatt, Mrs. George B. Rooney. Mrs. John McFarland Weir, Mrs.

John Rhinelander Bleecker, Mrs. William Fort, Mrs. W. J. Slinkard, Mrs.

Eva Mersereau, Mrs, Harrison Martin, Mrs. Charles Resse-: guie, Miss Martha Coghill, Harry i Plummer, Mrs. Annie L. Ward, Mrs. J.

Merwyn Erikson, Mrs. Robert Forrester, Mrs. Marie Fuller, Miss Marie BrandeisK Mrs. W. E.

Mrs. William A. Phillips, Mrs. Stoker, Mrs. F.

William Barthman, Mrs. John Caslier, Mrs. W. A. Higgins, Mrs.

Sydney Fisher, Mrs. Edward Grotecloss, Mrs. William Swan, Mrs. Edwin Hillyer, Mrs. A.

B. Mann, Mrs. George Marvin and Mrs. A. C.

Hamilton. Miss Helen Moorhead, MrS. Douglas Eastmead, Mrs. Charles McChesney," Mrs. Confidence Confidence is that "something" which establishes friendships and accelerates progress.

It must be inspired by factors of known worth, without which con "si it fidence becomes disappointment. The Nassau National Bank has won and held the confidence of suc-: ceeding generations of Brooklyn men and concerns who have found here the safety, counsel and service that have played an important part in their business growth. Ask the Man Who Banks Here NASSAU NATIONAL BANK OF BROOKLYN 7.. 1 .1 46 COURT STREET What They All Think Nit "What did he say to the Dean when, he was fired?" Wit "He congratulated the school on turning out such fine men." Purple Parrot. Talaphene Starling 4558 Fir it Clan Hair Gotds Silver Medal for Marcel Wave and Hair Dressing Miss Hilda's Beauty Shop 341 Flatbush Avenue Coratr Park Plats Brooklyn, N.

Y. All Kinds of Beauty Treatment Scalp and Facial Massage; Manicuring, Marcel Wave; Hairdyeing and Bleaching and Hairdressing.

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About Brooklyn Life Archive

Pages Available:
53,089
Years Available:
1890-1924