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Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 38

Brooklyn Life from Brooklyn, New York • Page 38

Publication:
Brooklyn Lifei
Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
38
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BROOKLYN LIFE. expect to spend the summer in Europe visiting Naples, Venice and Rome. They will sail on the Cretic on June the twentyfourth. Mr. and Mrs.

Charles S. Mellen returned to ivew Haven from Council Grove, Stockbridge, on Monday. Among those from Brooklyn registered at the Inn, West Hampton Beach, L.I., last week were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur D.

Pratt, Mr. Foster Crampton, Miss Dorothy Thurston and Mr. James R. English. Paris is never more delightful than at this time of the year and consequently it is full of travelers though not quite as crowded with them as in July and August.

The latter part of May there were many from Brooklyn in the city. Among these were Mr. and Mrs. S. Edwin Buchanan, who had previously been staying in London.

Mr. Buchanan sailed for home by the Amerika on May twenty-eighth. Mrs. Buchanan and her daughter, Miss Janet Buchanan, who has been studying abroad for a year, are to return by the same steamer, sailing from Hamburg on July twenty-ninth. Mr.

and Mrs. James N. Jarvie of Montclair, N.J., have left France for England, where they are to make an automobile trip. Mr. Henry Batterman is spending a month at Friedrichroda in Thuringia.

He has previously been at Frankfort. Mr. and Mrs. H. P.

Ellis have registered at the Chalfonte, Atlantic City, N.J. Dr. and Mrs. John W. Begg of San Jose, Costa Rica, who have been spending several weeks with her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Henry E. Bowns of the Shore Road, are to sail for Europe to-day, Saturday. They will be away about two months. Miss Emma Thursby and Miss Ina Thursby sailed for Europe by the Patricia last week Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. William Ray, Miss Mabel Ray and Miss Helen Ray of 377 Grand Avenue, Mr. Herbert F. Gunnison and Colonel William Hester are passengers on the Moltke, which sailed last week Saturday for Genoa via Gibraltar, Algiers and Naples.

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bliss have gone abroad. They sailed Tuesday by the Kronprins Wilhelm.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Powers and their guest, Miss Jennie Hinman, left the Swan Hotel, Wells, England, for Bath in their automobile on May twenty-sixth, Mr. and Mrs. W.

Seward Webb, have returned from the Adirondacks and are at Manhasset, L.I., where they are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Pulitzer. Mr. and Mrs.

Edward E. Shaw of 27 South Elliott Place sail for abroad by the Adriatic next Monday. They will be in London during the coronation and afterwards go to northern Wales, where they will spend the summer. They will return in September by the Olympic. The George Gordon Brooks nave opened their cottage in Delano Park, Cape Cottage, after having spent the winter at Hotel Bretton Hall, Manhattan.

Mr. and Mrs. William Jay Madden of 220 Garfield Place THE WHITE WYANDOTTE HEN FROM THE CONEJO STOCK FARMS, HUNTINGTON, L.I., Owned by Mr. Roy Rainey, which was the second prize pullet at the Jamestown Exposition and second prize hen at the Huntington Show, 1911. Former Brooklyn Man Married in Manhattan.

The chapel of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Manhattan, was the scene of the wedding of a former Brooklyn man on Wednesday morning, when Mr. Thomas E. Oliver was married to Miss Ethel Lee Sanford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Milton Lee Sanford of Warwick, N.Y. Miss Dorothy Oliver, the fifteen-year-old daughter of the groom, acted as maid of honor and Mr. Paul A. Griffith of Philadelphia as best man. There were also two ushers, Mr.

Frank J. Oliver of Hackensack and Mr. James H. Oliver of Flatbush, brothers of the groom. The Rev.

William J. Martin officiated. Only the immediate families attended the ceremony and the wedding breakfast which followed at the Hotel Astor. Mr. Oliver, who is president of the Oliver Brothers Purchasing Company of Manhattan, makes his home at 1 Erwin Park, Montclair, N.J.

He is a member of the Montauk Club, the Hardward Club of New York, and the Golf and Athletic clubs of Montclair. His first wife was Miss Dorothy Wilson, daughter of William Wilson, U.S.N., of Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver are making a motor tour of the Berkshires and the White Mountains.

The Travelers. A MONG those sailing on the California to-day, Saturday, for Scotland was a party of young people chaperoned by Mrs. William Clifton Todd of 85 Willow Street, which comprised Mrs. Curtis Paxton and the Misses Paxton of Lowell, Miss Louise Babbidge, Miss Marjory Todd and Miss Beatrice Todd. On arriving in Scotland they will start on a coaching trip through the English lake region to Warwick and Stratford-on-Avon.

From Oxford and London they will go to France, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Switzerland and Italy, sailing for home from Naples on the thirtieth of August by the Carpathia. Miss Marjory C. Todd will spend the month of July at Sceaux, France, and during August she will be in Paris studying at the Alliance Mrs. Walter King Rossiter, accompanied by her daughters. Miss Marie Louise Rossiter and Miss Helen Rossiter, of 161 South Oxford Street, expects to leave Brooklyn on the nineteenth to be absent for six months.

They will take the Great Lakes route to Calumet, where they expect to visit Mrs. Rossiter's son-in-law and daughter, Dr. and Mrs. Peter Duncan MacNaughton (Ethel Rossiter). Mrs.

Adolph T. Goepel and Miss Muriel Goepel of 113 Remsen Street sailed for Europe last week Thursday by the Cleveland. Mr. Percival R. Goepel is staying at the Standish Arms.

Mr. and Mrs. Theodore F. Jackson have returned from abroad. They arrived by the Caronia last week.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Mallory sailed for Liverpool by the Lusitania last week Wednesday. Mr.

S. Bradford Dewey and Mr. Ralph C. Dewey were in Paris last week. Mrs.

Gould and Miss Gould of 6 South Oxford Street have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Healy at their country home at Cold-Spring-on-Hudson, N.Y. Summer Plans. and Mrs.

Darwin R. Aldridge of Hicks Street will spend the summer at Shelter Island. They have taken a very attractive cottage for the season. ANOTHER PRIZE WINNER FROM THE CONEJO STOCK FARMS, The Plymouth Rock cock which took a first at the Huntington Show, 1911..

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About Brooklyn Life Archive

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