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Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 18

Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 18

Publication:
Brooklyn Lifei
Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

18 BROOKLYN LIFE. with her married daughter, Mrs. Arthur Winslow Jones, who since her return from Australia, where- she iiveH of some years, has made her home at 25 University place, Schenectady, New York. From Saturday of this week until next Wednesday Mr. W.

Rutgert J. Planten will entertain nine guests at the Planten country place on Lake Mahopac. Mr. Planten's guests will be Mr. Leandart Kuhn, of Holland, who is visiting the Plantens; Mr.

Ernest C. Ropes, of Boston; Mr. William F. Atkinson, Mr. Henry E.

MacGo wan, Mr. Richard M. Coit, Mr. Ferdinand Wilcox, Mr. George A.

Street, Mr. Prioleau Gaillard and Mr. Russell T. Starr. Mr and Mrs.

Irving T. Smith, of 860 St. Mark's avenue, been making an automobile tour of New Jersey and Pennsylvania in their White steamer. They were to return from Atlantic City by way of Lakewood the latter part of this week. Mr.

and Mrs. J. Scott McComb, of Dobbs Ferry, were among the departures for Liverpool on the Lucania last urday. 7 Mrs. Albert Haley and Miss Lucy Haley, who spent the winter, abroad, have been in Scotland, visiting friends, before returning to this country.

rMrS yt' H' RandolPh Mrs. Harry R. S. Randolph, Mr. Wilson G.

Hunt Randolph and Miss Ethel Royce, who spent the early, part of this month in Paris, are now traveling on the Continent. Mrs. Joseph Francis O'Connell and the Misses Connell, who passed the winter and spring in Geneva, will also spend the summer in Switzerland, dividing the time between Interlaken and Lucerne. In the early autumn they expect to go to Paris. Mrs.

Joseph and Miss Alice Reeve Bowden are in Pans for May and June. Among the others in Paris within the past month or so were Lieutenant-Colonel A. J. Gordon Kane one of Brooklyn's most constant frequenters of Europe and his family Mr. and Mrs.

Thornton B. Penfield, who have been visiting the branches of the Young Men's Christian Association in Palestine, Turkey, Italy, Austria; Holland, France and England and who arrived in this country this week; Mr. and Mrs. Timothy M. Spelman and their grand They sailed on the Caronia last week Tuesday.

Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Le Grand Cromwell, who have gone abroad for about six weeks, sailed on the same steamer. Mr. Rufus L.

Scott, junior, will be abroad most of the summer. He will sail July first and return the fifteenth of September. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph T.

Goepel and Miss E. Muriel Goepel will leave for Europe in June. They will be abroad until October. Mr. Perceval R.

Goepel will spend the summer at Monmouth Beach. The George G. Dutchers will sail for Europe on the Prinzess Alice on the twenty-ninth of June. They will spend the summer in England? Scotland and Ireland. Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Leeming, of 492 Fourth street, are to spend the larger part of the summer in the West. Their chief sojourn will be made at Manitou Park, Colorado, where they purpose staying from July to October. Every one who can is running out to Garden City these May days, if only for a brief stay. Mr.

John F. Calderwood took out a party of friends in his automobile to spend Sunday at the hotel Mr. and Mrs. Martin W. Littleton and Masters Wilson and Douglas Littleton were there for the same day and Mr.

Ralph Peters, junior, came in from Princeton to spend Sun-. day with his father. Among the others who spent the week-. end at the hotel, some of whom are still there, were Mr. and Mrs.

R. H. Laimbeer, junior, who have one of the finest pairs of horses there; Mrs. Eugene Maxwell, Miss Mary C. Maxwell, Mr.

Morris U. Ely, Mr. and Mrs. William G. Low, junior, Mr.

Milan H. Goodwin, Remsen, Mr. J. S. S.

Remsen, Miss Frances Williams, Mr. and Mrs. James R. Ross, Dr. and Mrs.

Thomas Wells, Mrs. Philip Ruxton, the Misses Ruxton, Mr. Frank Steven, Mr. and Mrs. C.

D. Butler, Mr. and Mrs. W. H.

Townsend, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Dunning, Miss Grace E.

Dunning, Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Cox and Mr.

Foster Crampton. Other May visitors include Mrs. Charles A. Schieren, Mr. Harrie V.

Schieren, Mrs. Daniel Chauncey, Miss Julia Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. John F. Tal-mage, Mr.

and Mrs. Henry A. Powell, Miss Powell, Mrs. John Anderson, Mrs. Robert Rogers, Mrs.

M. E. Southworth and Mrs. M. S.

Bertrand. The intercollegiate golf tournament, in which St. Paul's won the first prize, naturally attracted a great many to the Garden City links last week. An event in the near future which is arousing much interest at the hotel is the third annual bench show of the Ladies' Kennel Association of America, which is to take place on the Mineola fair-grounds on the seventh and eighth of June. Mr.

and Mrs. Andrew Ditmas and Mr. Charles A. Ditmas, of 60 Amersfort place, Flatlands, and Miss Katharyn Holmes, of Tennent, New Jersey, who left the early part of last winter for Berkeley, California, are now returning to the East. After an extended tour through the Southern States they spent the remainder of the winter at the home of the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Ditmas Mrs. Joseph Duke Harrison who, it wili be remembered, was married from the old Ditmas home at 60 place last October to Mr. Harrison, who is at present superintendent of construction of the new California State University located at Berkeley. Mrs.

Harrison has been entertaining extensively since her arrival in the West. A farewell dinner was given for Mr. and Mrs. Ditmas, Miss Holmes and Mr. Charles A.

Ditmas the night before they left, to which only a few very intimate friends were invited. The table was most artistically decorated in true Californian style. The after-dinner coffee spoons, which were embellished with the seal of California, were retained as souvenirs. On the return trip the party will stop at Chicago, Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Albany. Among those booked to sail for Europe next month are Mr and Mrs.

Ludwig Nissen, of 1397 Dean street, who will be passengers on the Bluecher, which sails on the eighth The Nissens expect to spend two months in London and Paris returning about the middle of August. Mrs. Lesbia H. Hill, formerly of this borough, but now living in Duluth, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Robert Ormiston, of 117 South Elliott place.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Oxnard and their two young children, who spent the winter in Oxnard, California, are in town for a few weeks. They expect to spend the summer in Europe Mrs.

Benjamin Lewis, who sailed on the Baltic on Wednesday of this week, has gone abroad for the summer and will not open her country place at Lake Kiamesha, New York Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd B. Sanderson are returning from Europe on the Hamburg, which is expected to dock on Sunday. They will spend the summer at their Monmouth Beach place Mrs.

Sandersons parents, Mr. and Mrs. Silas C. Force who are spending May at their Spring Lake house, 'will also 'be at Monmouth Beach from June until October. Mr and Mrs.

Frederick T. Sherman are to sail for Europe on Saturday of this week. They will be abroad until the first of September. Mr. and Mrs.

Charles D. Pearce, of Gates avenue, will spend the summer automobiling through England and France The Misses Tucker, of 254 Gates avenue, will also spend the summer abroad. Miss Theodora Elwell is to spend the summer abroad. Her mother, Mrs. M.

Huntington Elwell, is to be for the summer son, mr. nermann n. bpelman, who will leave for London about the first of June, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.

Prank-ard, who have since gone south but will return to the French capital next month. Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Emery, Mrs Frederic A.

Ward, the J. S. Ogilvies and Mr. Emil Pfizer were Paris last week. The Rev.

Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Lyman, Mrs.

John W. Dunnell, the Misses Dunnell and Judge Robert J. Wilkin were among last week's visitors at Atlantic City. and Mrs. James Stokes were in Paris during the latter part of April, while the jubilee convention of the Young Men's Christian Association was in progress in the Galerie de la Chante.

At the incidental reception given by General Horace rtf, American Embassy Mrs. Stokes (Florence Lnatfield) played the harp and sang to her own accompaniment Mr. and Mrs. Stokes have since been in Italv, where Mr. Stokes had a special audience with the King last week Mr.

and Mrs. Alfred Bedford and Mr. H. E. Bedford junior, of 183 St.

James place, will spend the summer in Europe, sailing June twenty-second and returning September SIXth. Mr. F. Augustus Heinze, of Butte, Montana, is in town with a party of friends from the same city. Last week he organized the Montana Association of New York, which on Saturday had its initial dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria.

DEPARTURES FOR THE COUNTRY. 1VIR. nd Mrs. Joseph O'Brien, from 194 Clinton street to 1 VX Listowel," Bridgehampton, Long Island May twentieth to remain until November. Miss Madeleine O.Brien is to spend part of the summer in California and will start on her trip the first of next week.

Mr. and Mrs. John C. Zimmermann, from 876 President street to Milford, Pike County, Pennsylvania; May twenty-sixth, to remain until October first. Mr and Mrs Don Carlos Seitz, from 310 Stuyvesant avenue to Belmildon, Cos Cob, Connecticut to remain until No- vember.

1 v--, Colonel John N. Partridge, from 829 Carroll street to West- port, Connecticut; The William J. Carrs. from 8t narmlt'ot Cliff," Good Ground, Long Island. Mr.

and Mrs. Feriwick Small, from 669 Jefferson avenue if' WuSlancd; J1? twemfifth. to remain until October fifteenth. The Smalls have leased the Martin cottaee on the corner of Eighth and Carpenter Mrs. Alfred C.

Chapin and Miss Grace- Chapin from 24 East Fifty-sixth street, Manhattan, to Pointer-Pit Province of Quebec, Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Amherst Wisner, from 452 Washington avenue to "Robin Brae' Warwick, New' York! Ma twenty-fifth, to remain until November, ths;.

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About Brooklyn Life Archive

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