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Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 7

Publication:
Brooklyn Lifei
Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN LIFE. Th Travel raveiers. BROOKLYN'S BEST KNOWN PIANO HOUSE ONE PRICE NO COMMISSIONS VICTROLAS Leave the factory as perfect as the best human skill can make them. But we follow the machine into your home see that it is correctly adjusted teach you the knack of getting the best music from it and show you how to care for it. We are at your beck and call with conscientious and courteous experts, who, by unofficious suggestions help you to reap an endless pleasure and musical benefit.

You are welcome anytime to come and listen to the music you like best bring your friends. Easter is early this year; it isn't too early to think of the new music our Record Library is complete. We sell for cash or on the easiest weekly or monthly payments prices are from 15to MOO Sterling Piano co. Manufacturers, Sterling Building 518-520 Fulton Cor. Hanover PL, Brooklyn, N.

Y. Telephone 5600 Main Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fiske, Mr. and Mrs.

Marshall Vander- hoef and Mrs. John Campbell of Utica are guests- at the Laurel-in-the-Pines at Lakewood. Hon. Henry P. Fletcher, Ambassador to Mexico, and Mrs.

Fletcher have left New York, where they have been spending some time, and have returned to Mexico. Miss Helen Watson is doing canteen work at Camp Dix for a short time, but will doubtless return to Manhattan early in March. Col. and Mrs. William C.

Beecher are in Pinehurst for a short time. Miss Dorothy Ward is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Perry Bogue in Manhattan for a week. Mr.

and Mrs. Erskine Lott and Miss Louise Lott have been spending some time at Lakewood at the Laurel-in-the-Pines, where Mr. Lott has carried off honors in trapshooting. Lieut Hugh Ward spent the week-end with his parents. Lieut, and Mrs.

August Sartorius (Miss "Jack" Hopkins) are staying with Mr. and Mrs. Otto Sartorius at 184 Washington Park. Lieut. Sartorius is stationed at Camp Upton in the Medical Corps.

Lieut Howard Burdick of the Signal Corps Aviation Section is home on a short furlough. Dr. and Mrs. W. I.

Carpenter registered last week at the Hotel St Charles, Atlantic City. Among others who registered there for the holiday and week-end were Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Miller, Mrs. H.

B. St. Claire, Miss Grace Dunne, Miss Anna Dunne, Mr. and Mrs. Frank B.

Coates and Mr. and R. Patterson. Miss Ella Murphy, eldest daughter of Dr. and Mrs.

Joseph P. Murphy of St. Marks Avenue, has gone to a convent school in Raleigh, S.C. Mr. and Mrs.

William A. Pothier of 1280 Pacific Street have gone to their summer residence at Sea Gate. Mr. and Mrs. Almet Reed Latson and Miss Anita Latson spent the week-end of Washington's Birthday at the Laurel-in-the-Pines, Lakewood, NJ.

Mr. and A. Worthington (Marjorie J. Van Keu-ren) have moved to Trenton. N.J., where Mr.

Worthington, who is in the automobile business, is now located. Lieutenant and Mrs. Clifford Dunning have come up from Fort Worth, Texas, where Lieutenant Dunning has been training in the aviation camp, and are spending a few days at Gedney Farms with Mrs. Desmond Dunne and Miss Alice Dunne and their little daughter, Miss Alice Dunning. They will soon leave for Washington, D.

C. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sanbern and their little son are spending a few weeks with Mr. William Arnold and Miss Elsie Arnold at Westhampton Beach.

What Shall We Do Sunday Evening? An answer to this oft propounded, query has been satisfactorily furnished by the new management at the Hotel Bossert Montague, Hicks and Remsen Streets in providing an exception-v ally attractive and beauti-fully served 0 Sunday Dinner at $1.75, from 6:30 to 8:30 P. M. with music followed from 8:30 to 10 o'clock by a special program of vocal and instrumental- Concert Music in the comfortable Foyer to which guests and friends of the hotel are cordially There are man other attractive features, well worth investigating, which have recently been inaugurated HOTEL BOSSERT BURTON F. WHITE, Proprietor F.D.RAYvJiv, Associate Manager Phone. Main 8100 Unusual Art Exhibition of Sky Fighters of France." Mrs.

William Astor Chanler, Mrs. Edmund L. Baylies, Mrs. Walter E. Maynard, Baron Charles Huard of the French High-Commission and Frank Crowninshield are the Organizing Committee of a new enterprise in which society is to be enlisted to take an important part, the "Sky Fighters of France." The "Sky Fighters of France" is an art exhibit of the first and thus far the only paintings of warfare in the latest air war science.

They have been executed by a French lieutenant, Henri Farre, who, being an artist and originally a portrait painter, is an observateur, bombardier in the French aviation service. The French government has sent Lieutenant Farre over here with 130 pictures under the auspices of the French High Commission, to tour the country. New' York is to have the first initial showing, at the Anderson Galleries, Fifty-ninth Street and Park Avenue, from March tenth to twentieth inclusive, and there will be a special view on Saturday, March ninth, for notable New Yorkers. A long list of patrons and patronesses is being prepared and a special society program for the exhibit will soon be announced. An Executive Committee has just been announced with Mrs.

at its head, Mr. Walter Maynard and'Jbefrftef the members of the Organizing Committee already rianted; Mr. Alan R. Hawley and Mr. Henry Woodhouse of the Aero Club of America, Commandant Tulasne of the French High Commission, Lieutenant Farre and Mrs.

John Magee. Mr. John J. Chapman is to be presiding officer at the "conferences" that will be held during the exhibition. A Comite d' Honneur has been named in addition His Excellency Am-'" i bassador Jusserand of France, High Commissioner of France Andre Tardieu, the Marquis de Polignac, Commandant Tulasne, General Squier, U.S.A., and Mr.

Howard E. Coffin of the Air Craft Board, Colonel Deeds and Colonel Lee of the British army. The proceeds from the Farre exhibit are to go to the children of French aviators killed in action: Kit-II I II' I'M I 1 1 I.

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About Brooklyn Life Archive

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