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Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 5

Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 5

Publication:
Brooklyn Lifei
Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN LIFE. 5 Deaths. Mr. Henry Demarest, 1050 Park Place, June sixth. Mr.

Anderson was the son of James W. Craig Anderson, one of the founders of the volunteer fire department of New York. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ida S. Chase Anderson.

KEUTGEN-Mrs. Hortense Harriet Guillaume, 138 Amity Street, June seventh. Mrs. Keutgen, who had lived for more than fifty years in the same house, was born in London and came to Brooklyn with her parents in 1850. Her husband, the late Frederick William Keutgen, died six years ago.

LOOMIS-Mr. William Henry, 168 Prospect Place, June seventh. Mr. Loomis, though not in active business at the time of his death, was interested in numerous corporations. For many years he had been active in the Montauk Club of Brooklyn and was also a member of the Crescent Athletic Club, the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences and the Pennsylvania Society of New York.

He was born April 15, 1851, at Rutland, Pa. TOWER- Mr. Lawrence Phelps, Brooklyn, June fourth. Mr. Tower, who had of late resided at 550 Park Avenue, Manhattan, for many years lived on the Heights.

He was the son of Lafayette B. Tower, who was engineer of the Croton Aqueduct. His mother was a sister of Emma Willard and with her founded the famous school bearing the latter's name. Mr. Tower was in the coal business.

He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Anna M. Hodgins Tower, and a daughter, Mrs. Thomas Reed Bridges (Adelina Tower) of 1010 Park Avenue, Manhattan. WORTHINGTON-Mrs.

Julia Hedden, 853 Seventh Avenue, Manhattan, June eighth. Mrs. Worthington, the daughter of the late Edward L. and Elizabeth Apgar Hedden, is survived by a daughter, Mrs. E.

M. Sawtelle of Englewood, N.J., and three sons, Messrs. Henry Rossiter Worthington, Edward Hedden Worthington and Reginald Stuart Worthington. Schedule of Plays. (From June 16 to June 21, Inclusive.) In Manhattan.

Casino -B. -W. $2........ "The Purple Road." Cort-48 e. of $2...

"Peg o' My Heart." Eden Musee-55 w. 23--10 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.- Waxworks, Cinematograph, Magic, Music. Elliott's-39 n. "Romance." Eltinge-42 w.

of "Within the Law." Fifth Avenue -B. 28-8- -2- Vaudeville. Forty-fourth St. Roof of B. "All Aboard." Hammerstein's-42 Vaudeville.

Knickerbocker--B. "The Sunshine Girl." New Amsterdam-42. n. $2. Follies." Palace -B.

2:30 Vaudeville. Park-59 Col. Circle 8:15 -W. Vaudeville. Princess--39 n.

2- $2.. Vaudeville. Union Square -B. 14-8- Vaudeville. Coney Island.

New Brighton--Brighton and Vaudeville. Luna Park -Sundry Shows. Steeplechase Park Sundry Shows. Hotel Arrivals. HOUSE- Charles D.

Stengel, Hugh Boyd, Brooklyn, N. H. Hall, Mrs. F. H.

Harrington, Washington, D.C.; W. L. Noble, Atlantic City, N.J.; Enoch Smith, Newport, Mrs. Waldo Hebber, Manhattan; W. R.

Furlong, U.S.N. -J. D. Pickslay, Manhattan; D. C.

Roberts, Wilkes Barre, H. C. Woodruff, Miss Eleanor A. Owens, John A. Likas, Bridgeport, Walter E.

Mallory, Hartford, Ernest H. Jackson, Harry Varien, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. J. A.

Schultz, Freeport, L.I.; S. D. McConnell, A. J. Cohen, Philadelphia, G.

E. Foot and wife, East Orange, N.J.; E. T. Shepard, Wilkes Barre, C. D.

Kingsley, Boston, Edwin Bancker, Staten Island; B. H. Vanderslip and wife, Albany, N.Y.; C. F. Buckley, Framingham, H.

T. Frost, Chicago, Joseph M. Cranford, Philadelphia, Walter E. Mallory, D. N.

Case, L. W. Denniston, Hartford, William Baylis, Halesite, L.I.; Mr. and Mrs. J.

B. Morrell, Northport; W. H. Kalb, St. Louis, B.

A. Page, Hartford, Conn. John O'Gara, John Welch, Shamokin, E. L. Patch, U.S.N.; Mr.

and Mrs. H. J. Thiele, Little Falls, N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Clark, Glenbrooke, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Edwards, Hempstead, L.I.; H.

B. Wood, Troy, N.Y.; W. G. Tillinghast, New York; Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Clark, Glenbrook, J. M. Nickell, Virginia. HOTEL ST. GEORGE- Mrs.

E. S. Hutchinson, J. H. Sell, G.

M. Little, J. P. Barry, Mr. and Mrs.

P. H. Grant, Boston, Thure Larson, Worcester, Henry Huschberg, Newburgh, N.Y.; Mrs. R. W.

Cole, Marlboro, N.Y.; A. B. Semmins, Huntington, N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. B.

L. Knowles, Cornwall, N.Y.; T. R. Delatour, Manhattan; J. L.

Raynor, Freeport, L.I.; Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Edwards, Garden City, L.I.; C. A. Anthony, William Elliott, Newark, N.J.; Mr.

John Smith, Amboy, N.J.; Admiral and Mrs. Billings, C. A. Boteman, John R. Buchanan, Washington, D.C.; Mr.

and Mrs. G. F. Noonan, Danbury, Frank J. Cadwell, Hartford, G.

H. Wells, Waterbury, Jacob M. Spitzglass, Jules Smucker, Chicago, Mrs. Henry Clark, Jacksonville, Mrs. A.

B. Bennett, Los Angeles, A. J. Visel, Santa Anna, W. A.

Griffon, London, Eng. METROPOLITAN, Asbury Park, N.J.- -R. D. Lord, J. M.

Farrar, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Powelson, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Earle Alexander, Mrs.

E. Kirk Patterson, George French, John Osborne, R. S. Elliott, L. H.

Peech, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stelzle, L. C. Barnes, J.

E. McAfee, H. C. Herring, Charles L. Thompson, H.

C. Olin, R. L. Breed, M. T.

Demarest, J. J. Lyons, Mr. and Mrs. Edward H.

Long, W. T. Shiver, John Jennings, Mr. and Mrs. G.

Y. Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. T. K.

Slocum, Charles W. Shellon, F. H. Wright, C. H.

Richards, J. G. Lavender, Mrs. Charles S. Day, S.

C. Day, Mrs. C. S. Deschere, Miss Deschere, E.

H. Richard, I. R. Hoos, R. C.

Lambert, Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Smith, J.

F. Kelioe, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith, W. H.

O'Gorman, N. E. Bates, F. B. Cox, W.

S. Pounds and J. H. Inman, Manhattan. -Mr.

and Mrs. T. L. Meyers, G. D.

Ensworth, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Bellknap, J.

W. Sammins, Henry Schurr, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Swartz, Andrew J. Oakman, Mr.

and Mrs. G. W. Brewer, Philadelphia, Floyd Knoble, Easton, W. A.

Bootle, Lakeville, L. N. Cooper, Darien, C. W. Lauterback, New Haven, G.

W. Healy, Seymour, H. F. Cairnes, Hartford, Mr. and Mrs.

James J. Collins, New Britain, P. W. O. Droyer, Manhattan; J.

F. Rose, Mr. and Mrs. J. S.

Jackson, High Bridge, G. T. Laidlaw, Bayport, Mr. and Mrs. J.

B. Barnes, Islip, L.I.; W. B. Goodwin, Rochester; Mr. and Mrs.

G. L. Laidlaw, Bayport; R. A. Bartlett, St.

Johns; William G. King, Detroit, P. W. Bristol, Rochester. Plays and Players.

LL ABOARD." The newest show in town, "All A Do has the best die prospects for spending the summer in the roof garden of the Weber Fields Music Hall, where it was placed on view last week Thursday evening. Styled "a musical comedy panorama," it is just the sort of thing that will delight those who like that sort of thing. In other words, it caters successfully to a contingent whose good appetite may always be counted upon however much the discerning may cavil at its sense of the artistic. It is funny and it has an abundance, if not even a superabundance, of color. The fun, for the most part incidental to the seven dreams of a Dutch sailor, Jan van Haan, is at its merriest in Ned Joyce Heaney's interpolated sketch, "When Women Rule." This is a clever 2013 perversion of certain 1913 conventions that is well calculated to make the suffragist join heartily in laughter with the anti-suffragist.

The book in general is by Mark Swan and E. Ray Goetz, while the latter, with Malvin Franklin, is responsible for the so-called music--refreshing notes in which are a few bars of the "Estudiantina" waltz and a suggestion of "Carmen" so faint as to be in the petty larceny class. The performance, as a whole, is an excellent one, with the humor honors going as fairly to George W. Monroe, who plays Nancy Lee, as to Lew Fields, the "star," whose role is that of the Dutch sailor. Each appears in various guises, SO that there is variety as well as distinctive merit in their entertaining.

Various guises fall, too, to Carter De Haven and Flora Parker-De Haven, who are frequently in evidence and to whom falls the most taking of the songs, "In a Garden of Eden for Two." Then there are Lawrence D'Orsay and Zoe Barnett and half a hundred more who are all named on the program, down to the last of the eight chorus men. Of the here unnamed it is sufficient to say that the "show girls" have been selected with due appreciation of the requirements of the case. As for the other scenic effects, rather gaudy visions of China, Holland, Spain and the Sierras are the chief pictorial features on a large scale. THE week big will event be a at the reunion New of a Brighton new Theater combination the of coming Four Mortons, Sam and Kitty appearing in "Back to Where They Started," and Paul Morton and his wife offering "My Lady of the Bungalow." Other features will be the celebrated hypnotist, Pauline, who will offer a marvelous exhibition of his science; Edwin Stevens, the musical comedy star, assisted by Tina Marshall, in "The Course of True Love Never Runs Laura Guerite, who will sing a new repertoire of songs accompanied by a lavish display of stunning Parisian gowns; Mosher, Rayes and Mosher, clever cyclists, and Warren and Ardizoni, singers. THE BOARDMAN UNDERTAKING ESTABLISHMENT A large chapel for services.

Woman embalmer. 18 Clinton Street, near Fulton Street. Telephone 2419 Main.

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About Brooklyn Life Archive

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