KATUHJJAX, ANNE BROWN, Cabaret to Help Miss Adrian Wed ...fultonhistory.com/Newspaper 18/New York NY...

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THE NEW YORK SUN. KATUHJJAX, ANNE BROWN, EDUCATOR, DIES Founded School for Grit Here in 1880. 11 «» « AIDS CHARITAWT.F CATTRF, EMMA REDEL1 > SINGER, • T* -f • §fe Had Been Dramatic Soprano With Chicago Open. IN I II Mlii Anne Brown, who founded the Anne Brown School, a fashion- able New York institution for girls during the 80s and 90s, died last night at her home 80 East Sixty- eighth street. She was M years oki. Miss Brown was born in Toronto of Americas parents, Mr. and Mrs. Champion Brown, and she received her early education from gov- ernesses. Later shs want to Vaaaar College from which shs was gradu- ated In 1874. In 1876 she turned to teaching and took a position in a private school at the Rock Island Artenal, Illinois, where shs taught children of officers of the anny Two years later shs cams to New York and taught for two years at Wee Chapman's School, where she developed plans for her own school assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deere of the Deere Plough Com- pany of Moline, 111. Then In 1880 the opened the school at 23 Wast fifty-sixth street in partnership with Mile. Isalins Ruel In 1883 the school moved to 711 Fifth ave- nue and later the partnership was diasolved. Miss Brown's School continued until 1903, when it closed. Among the pupils at the school was fceay Astor and among its teachers, Hai Weed, who was instrumental In founding Barnard College, and Ctara B. Spence, founder of the Spence School for Girls. Inl904, Miss Brown built and opened a day and boarding school known as Htghcltffe Hall at Park £&, Yonkers, and four years later the retired and lived abroad for a while. The Anne Brown Kindergarten and Nursery School, a model school bx the New York Kindergarten Bolldlng, 634 West Forty-second street, was developed from a free kindergarten established by former pupils of Miss Brown, and there Is an Anne Brown Endowment Scholarship Fund at Barnard Col- lege. Miss Brown leaves seven nieces and a nephew, among fhom is Mrs. Benjamin Loder of New Rochelle. Funeral services will be held on Monday at 10:30 A. M. in St. Thomss'e Church, Fifth avenue and Fifty-third street, and interment win be private, Emma Redell. Emma Redell, operatic and con- cert soprano, died yesterday of a heart attack at the Hotel Ansonia. where she lived with her husband, 2, Anthony Marcus. The former Wagnerian singer of the Chicago Civic Opera Company wts born In Baltimore and passed most of her early days in Washing- ton, where as • high school student she was discovered to have vocal talent by a Y. M. C. A. organist, who persuaded her to sing In a church choir and at Y gatherings. Her future husband, then with the Department of Commerce, h*ard her and brought her here for study when she had finished high school. Mies Redell went abroad to study and in 1933 mads hsr concert debut In Budapest, which was followed three years later by hsr operatic debut as Tosea In Altenburg. Ger- Mrs. George B. St. Georre chairman of the Benefit Committee for the "Help Finland Cabarc*," to be held next Wednesday at the Waldorf-Astoria, proceeds from which will augment the Finnish Relief Fund, of which Herbert Hoover is national chairman. CrtrEPER—Charles r.mery, Febru- ary 2, 1940, beloved husband of Daphne Seybolt Culpeper, son of the late Rev. Elam and Fhalba Culpeper, brother of Frank. Wil- liam, Alvin, Joel and Mrs. Charles Green. Reposing at Frank B. Campbell's, the Funeral Church, Inc., Madison avenue at Eighty- first street, where Masonic services wni be held Sunday, 8 P. M. Rooms Lodge No. 748 F. and A. M. Funeral services at the Riverside Church, Riverside Drive and i22d street Tuesday, February 6, at 4 P. M. Interment Rome, Georgia. many. Than came three years of operatic triumphs abroad,, where shs was hailed for hsr interpretive powers and hsr ability to sing in six languages, being called "Ger- many's Ideal Wagnerian singer." Shs also sang in Italy and South Africa, and on Oct. 18, 1939, made her successful concert debut in New York at Carnegie Hall. The following year the Chicago Opera Company engaged her and in the winter of 1932-1933 she made a concert tour of Soviet Russia at ths Invitation of the Moscow Gov- ernment Since hsr return she de- voted most of her time to concert and radio work. Miss Redell was deeply Interested In the development of music in this country and was active in ths movement for the building of a modern opera and concert audi- torium in Washington. An ardent advocate of the singing of "The Star-Spangled Banner," she always clossd her concerts with ths na- tional anthem. D r . G e o r g e de Bothezat. •ROSTOV *Vb s ~pHv«t# funeral services will be ueld here today for Dr. George de Bothesat, expert on aerodynamics, who in 1923 built the first helicopter In the world to make stable and governable flights for the United States Army Air Corps. Dr. de Bothesat also invent- ed a blower used in the ventilating systems of many skyscrapers, and ha was a. mathematical physicist He.was 56 years old, and died on Thursday ui New England Baptist Hospital. He was born in Bessarabia, then a part of Csarlst Russia, and had held high scientific and technical offices in the Czarist, Kerensky and Lenin governments. After leav- ing Russia he cams to the United States, where he became a citizen. For several years hs lived in New York. Hs organised the Helicopter Corporation of America. Shortly nefore becoming ill last fall Dr. de Bothezat married Mrs. Julia Ram say Hilton of New York, who sur- vives, as do two sisters in Russia. Joseph Meyerrose. Joseph Meyerrose, former Queens county sheriff, died yesterday at the age of 80 at his home, 83-23 118th street Richmond Hill, after ft short illness. He was a Demo- crat and in 1904 was sleeted sheriff over Warren B. Ashmeed, present Queens Republican laadsr. After being sheriff Mr. Meyerrose later unsuccessfully ran for county clerk. Although hs did not seek office thereafter he was for some time a power with Queens Democrats. Mr. Msysrrose leavee his wife and two daughters. 200 Will Attend Dance Tonight At Coral Gables BSBB»SBBtoBSSBBSSjBBBSSB*SBB$BaB*a 0 Mr. anrj Mrs. James Barn- aby Entertain Tomorrow ; ior Their. Guests. Special Dtapatch to T m SON, CORAL GABLES, Fla., Feb. 3.— Three hundred hotel guests and Coral Gables cottage colonists will attend the weekly Sunday after- noon tea-dance in the patio of the Miami Bi It mo re tomorrow after- noon. Among those who will en- tertain large parties are Mr. and Mrs. James Bftrnaby of Nsw York, who will entertain for their son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Colby Harkness of Boston, who nave joined them at the Miami Bilt- more, coming by plane from Cuba. Mr. ana Mrs. Kelly Msguire of Brooklyn will entertain a party of twenty. The dance will follow the regular Sunday afternoon perform- ance of the Miami BUtmore Water Revue, and will Include numbers by the members now appearing in the supper show. Two hundred parsons will attend the dinner-dance tonight in the Glralda Room of the Miami BUt- more. Advance reservations have been made by Mr. and Mrs. Court landt Wheelwright, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. George, Mr. and Mrs. How- ard Gillette, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin March, Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Hom&n, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln F. Plant Mr. and Mrs. Keltoy Magulre, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nugent, Mrs. Frederick Douglass and Mrs. Mo- Knight Budd. Lorillard Suffern Taller of New York has been appointed chair- man of the committee on Invita- tions and pairings for the Inter- national four bail professional golf championship, which will be played on the links of the Miami BUtmore Country Club, March 3, 4, 8 and 6, T. E. Price, general chairman, an- nounced today. Theodore Luechaai of New York Is chairman of ths finance com- mittee. Nelson Daviss of New York will act as starter and Wil- liam Palrman will have charge of the scoreboard. Cabaret to Help Fund for Finland Interests Many -• Notable Persons Engage Boxes and Tables for Wednesday. The fftlft "Help Finland Cabaret" will be given next Wednesday eve- ning st the Walfdorf-AHorla before a distinguished audience. Proceeds will augment the Finnish Relief Fund. Mrs. George B, St George, bene- fit chairman, has announced box and tftble holders for ths party. Among those who have boxes are Herbert Hoovsr, national chairman of ths Finnish Rslisf Fund; Mrs. George B. St. George, Count de Saint-Qusntln, Ambassador of Francs; Don Ascanlo del principl Colonna, Ambassador of Italy, and Donna Elly Colonna; ths Right Hon. ths Marquess of Lothian, Am- bassador of Great Britain; Wolmar Bostrom. Minister of Sweden, and Mme. Bostrom; Wilhelm Munthe de Morgsnstlsrne and Mme. Munthe de Morgenstlerne, Hjalmar J. Pro- cope, Minister of Finland; Henrik de Kauffmann, Minister of Den- mark, and Mme. de Kauffmann; Mrs. Herbert Lehman, Mrs. Charles Cartwright, Mrs. William S. Psisy, Mrs. F. Kingsbury Curtis, Mrs. G. Morgan Browns, Mrs. Henry Prather Fletcher, Mrs. George H. Shaw, Mrs. Allan Lehman, Mrs. John T. Pratt, Miss Mary Gushing, and William Evarts Benjamin, Otto Lindbsrg and H. V. Sartorius. Among the table holders are Countess Folke Bernadotts, Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Hlckox, Mrs. 8. Sloan Colt, Mrs. James Watson Webb, Mrs. Evalyn Walsh McLean of Washington, Mrs. Walter Hov- lng, Mrs. Nils R. Johansson, Mrs. A. Biddle Duke, Mrs. Marcus Daly, Mrs. Price Poet, Mr. and Mrs. Lucius Boomer, Mrs. William C. Breed, Mrs. Morgan Hamilton, Mrs. Morris Hawkes, Mrs. Bryant Pearson, Mrs. J. Reginald Newton, Mrs. Edward F. ds Beixedon, Mrs. E. Graham Lewis, Mrs. Alvin Untermyer, Mrs. Ernest Child, Mrs. H Nelson Slater, Mrs. Welter Baker, Mrs. Albert Stlegttts, Miss Tessa Kosta and Randolph F. Burks and George Trommer. Miss Adrian Wed To Charles Trum At Oiurch Service Ceremony Performed by Archbishop Curley of Baltimore. AN INTERESTED SPECTATOR Richard Taylor Weds Miss Elizabeth Griffith BAMIANE-Ntchotas, February 2, 1M0. beloved husband-of Giovanna, ate Caposze, devoted father of Anna, Cerasole and Ernest Damiane. Funeral from Walter B. Cooke, Inc., funeral Rome, Jerome avenue sad 190th street, Monday, 10:80 A If. Requiem mass at S t Philip Nerl Church, 11 o'clock. MeHCTCHINSON—At his residence, 44 Danforth av., Jersey City, on Friday, February 3, 1940, James C , husband of Grace X. Edgar and father of Edgar Grace- Shaffer, Robert and Edith McHutehlnson. Relatives and friends are invited to attend funeral, at S t John P. X. Church, Summit av. at Gardner, on Monday, February 5. 3 P. M. *0TH-3anford Jacobt, darling son of Stanley M. and Ethel Jacob! Roth and beloved grandson of Florence H. Jacobl and Etta Roth. Funeral strictly private, •JTBAD Emeria Price Meriwether, February 8, 1M0, widow of fjldol- |ho Snead. Service at the Brick Pri»*hyt*rUn Church, at Park av. *nd 85th st, Sunday, 3:89 P. M. . *STAX-Carollne Sanders, beloved *«* of the late Justice Charles H. Tmax end mother of Carol and Rrio'ia. Funeral Sunday, 11 o'clock, Frank E. Campbell's Funeral Church, 81st street and Madison svenue. • OUt FUNIHAl MOMIS ^WssegTssiT IP4SW. •I*—*» *n**m*«»vi m Write rW ' SMSITM "W"m*4m ( 1^, '-HBTI Gen. George K. Hunter. WASHINGTON, Feb. S.-Brlg.- Gsn. George K. Hunter, 85 years old, retired cavalryman, died yes- terday in \ nursing homo. Hs was a member of the class of 1ST7 at West Point and was ons of ths oldest living graduates of the acad- emy. In the Spanish-American war he was wounded st San Juan HiU and he also took psxt In several en- gagements In the Philippines. Dur- ing the world war Gen. Hunter was In camp duty in this country. Joseph Hftttenbach. Joseph Hattenbaeh, treasurer and director and a founder of the New York Merchandise Company, died of ft heart attack yesterday at his office at S3 West Twenty-third street. Hs was 57 years old and lived at 300 Central Park West. Mr. Hattenbaeh was widely known for hie philanthropic activ- ities. He was ft trustee of Temple Israel, a director of the Jewish Consumptive Relief Society and group chsirman of the Jewish Wel- fare Federation and the Joint Dis- tribution Committee. He? was ft member of the Fresh Meadow Country Club. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mat- tls Hattenbaeh; two sens, Monroe and Leonard Hattenbaeh, and three brothers and three sisters. FunersJ services will he held at Temple Israel at 10 A. M. tomor- The marriage of Miss Elisabeth Frances Griffith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keenan Leslie Griffith of Bethlehem, Pa., to Richard Stock- ton Taylor of Anselm, Pa., son of Mrs. Coleman Peace Brown and the late Holllngshead Nathan Taylor, is taking place this afternoon in ths Pro-Cathedral Church of the Nativity, Bethlehem. The Very Rev. Roscoe Thornton Faust is per- forming the ceremony, and ft recep- tion Is to follow at ths Sanoon Val- ley Country Club, Bethlehem, Mrs. Holllngshead Nathan Taylor Jr. la matron of honor, and Miss Nancy Isabel Griffith la maid of honor. The bridesmaids are the Misses Carol Matcalf, Dorothea Berkeley, Josephine Grace, Antoinette Bovler, Margaret Larkln and Josephine Honeycutt. Holhngshaad Nathan Taylor Jr. is best man, and the ushers are John E. Goare, William J. Steph- ens, Henry H Patton, Charles B. Coburn, Proctor WetherlTl, Hal L Bents and Eugene G. Grace Jr. The bride attended the Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr. Mr. Taylor at- tended St. Gcoerge's School, New. port, R L; Radley College, Eng- land, and ths University of Penn- sylvania. After a wedding trip South the couple will live in Merlon, Pa. Miss Fuller Is Bride Qi William Sheerin Miss Josephine Elisabeth Fuller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Otis Fuller of 375 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn; was married today at a high nuptial mass at Queen of All Saints* Church, Brooklyn, to Wil- liam Vincent Sheerin, son of ths late Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sheerin of Brooklyn. Ths ceremony was performed by the Rev. John Sheerin of Washington, hrothsr of the bridegroom. A wedding break- fast and reception foUowed at the Bossert. The bride was given in marriage by her father. Her maid of honor was Miss Kathleen M. O'SuUivan, and her bride-maids were Miss Mu- riel Fuller, her cousin; Miss Loretto Sheerin, sister of ths bridegroom; Miss Grace Briody and Miss Anns Humphrey of Brooklyn. The bride- groom had his brother, Francis A. Sheerin, as his best man, and ths ushers were Raymond Sheerin and Charles Sheerin, also brothers of the bridegroom; Dr. Arthur E. Lamb and Arthur Reheuser. The bride was born In Denver, and is a niece of the late Col. Leigh A Fuller, Medical Depart- ment, United States Army. She Is a graduate of St. Angela Hall, Brooklyn, and attended Fordhara University. Mr. Sheerin is a grad- uate of Fordham University. Ho is a member of the faculty of ths Boys High School, Brooklyn. Miss Chadbourne Wed to F. G. Mestre Jr. Miss Ana Mercedes Chadbourne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walde- m&r Arsns Chadbourne of 160 River;'.*- Drive, and Francisco G. Mestre Jr., eon of Mr. end Mrs. Francisco G. Mestre 8r„ of Havana, were married today at the Notre Dame French Church. The Rev Henry HaU officiating. It was fol- lowed by ft* wedding breakfast at Sherry's, which was attended by members of ths family and intimate friends only. The bride was given in marriage by hsr fathsr. Miss Alette Law- rence Brooke was maid of honor while tfe bridal atendants were the Misses Marta Mestre, the bride' groom's sister, Rosalie Ramirez, Dorothy Whalen, Constance Heide, Joan Holt and Marie Leasing. The bridegroom's father was bsst man and the ushers were Carl Frederick Ficken, Louis AhaUa, Belarmino Alvares Br. and Jr., Julio Mire, Bill Jenter, John Jal- lsds and George Aeevedo. Beatrice Maris Adrian, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Adrian of 330 West End avenue, was married today to Charles Jo- seph Trum, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Trum of 301 Stratford Road, Brooklyn, Ths ceremony was performed at ft nuptial mass In Holy Trinity Church by the Most Rev. Michael J. Curley, Archbishop of Baltimore and Washington, ac sisted by the Revs. John B. Kelly, Eugene Duggan, J. B. Scully, J. F. McNiff and Arthur Qulnn. Follow- ing the ceremony a reception and breakfast was hsld at ths Waldorf- Astoria. Sister Is Matron of Honor. Mrs. James F. Byrne was matron of honor for her sister. Ths other attendants were Mrs. Charles Bryson, sister of ths bride: Miss Kathleen Trum, slstsr of ths bridegroom, and the Misses Doris O'Connor and Marlon Griffin. Wal- ter E. Trum was best man for his son, and the ushers were Walter Trum Jr., brother of the bride- groom; Donald Drummond, Thomas Conroy Jr. and Hugh Duffy. Through her mother, the bride Is a direct descendant of the Grahams of Montrose, Scotland. Her great- great-grandmother. Lavinla Gra- ham, was the niece of William Graham, Duke of Montrose, to whom the Highlanders are Indebted for carrying through Parliament In 1787 an act repealing ths act of 1748 which made penal the wearing of their tartan. She Is also a descend- ant of William Alexander Graham, former United States Senator and Governor of North Carolina from 1844 to 1848. Shs Is related to President Franklin Delano Roose- velt through Mother Elizabeth Se- ton, foundress of the Sisters of Charity, and to Mrs. Roosevelt through the Parish family of this city. Father Is a Banker. Through her father, the first vice- president of the Bank of York town, she is the great-granddaughter of the late Michael Joseph Adrian, founder of the old German Ex- change Bank, the name of which was changed during the world war to ths Commercial Exchange Bank. Hsr grandfather, the late Charles S. Adrian, became president after his father's death. The bride attended Notre Dame de Lourdes and was graduated from the Academy of the Holy Child. Mr. Trum, who Is a graduate of Brooklyn Preparatory and St. Bert Morgan Photo. Mrs. John Hay Whitney of Greentree, Manhasset, L. I., an ob- server at Hialeah Park, in Miami, while vacationing at Palm Beach recently. Mrs. Whitney is the daughter of Mrs. Nedom A. Eastman of Falls of Schuylkill, Pa. BY WAY OF MENTION NEW YORK. Members of the north shore colo- nies on Long Island who have had the late Edward S. Harkness among them as an owner of one of the large estates near North Hills, have learned that one of Mr. Harkness's Innumerable philanthro- pies has been the recent gift of thirty-four acres of the estate to the Nassau County Boy Scout Council for a summer camp. The John's University, is a member of property fronts' on I. U. Willets the Columbus Club and the Anvil „ n d ghelter Rock roads, not far Chorus. He is associated with E. | from Manhasset. and is valued st Mrs. Walter H. Clark of 1000 Park avenue gave a luncheon at the Plaza yesterday for Mrs. Ches- ter A. Braman„ Mrs. William S. Gould, Mrs. Richard H. Lawrence, Mrs. Van Vechten Veeder, Mrs. William Henry Sage, Mrs. Edwin H. Weatherbee and Mrs. William J. Hutchinson. Miss Alice Babst fv And George Bent Married Today Many OinVof-town Guests Attend Ceremony at St. Bartholomew's. The marriage of Mies Alice WO- wina Babst, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl D. Babst of 580 Park avenue, to George Payne Bent ot Chicago is taking place today in the chapel of St. Bartholomew's Church. Ths ceremony Is being performed by the rector, the Rev. Dr. George PauU T. Sargent Mr. Bent is ths son of Mr. and Mrs. George Harry Bent, formerly of Chicago, now of Pasadena, Cat, who are present at the wedding. Miss Babst is attended by her sister, Mrs. George Holcombe Par- sons of St Ravlds, Pa., as matron of honor, and Is given in marriage by her father. There are no brides- maids. Mr. Bsnt has his brother, Henry Wingate Bent of Chicago as best man, and Robert G. Anderson, Wil- liam R. Dickinson Jr., Cyrus H. Adams 3d end Theodore W. Lamb, ail of Chicago, and WUllarn F. Gil- lespie Jr. and Jerome V. Roscoe of Nsw York as ushers. The marriage ceremony at the chapel is to be foUowed by a recep- tion at the Colony Club end attend- ed by many out-of-town relatives and friends of both the bride and bridegroom. After a trip to Nas- sau Mr. Bent and bis bride will take up their permanent residence in Chicago. Among the out-of-town relatives and friends at the wedding an* Mrs. William B. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Gardnsr, Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Gardner, Mrs. Wil- liam F. Anderson, Robert A. Gard- ner Jr., Gifford Gardner, Miss Eve- lyn Gardner, Miss Elisabeth Brown, Miss Janet Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. King, Mrs. John P. Wil- son Jr„ Mrs. Bernard F. Rogers, Mrs. Cyrus H. Adams, Miss Mary Seymour Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward DsWltt Shumway, Miss Grace Shumway, all of Chicago; Mrs. Benjamin S. Warren, Mr. and Mrs. Standlsh Backus, Mr. and Mrs. Gay lord W. Gillis, all of Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Freeman of Springfield, Ohio; Marshall M. Uhl and John H. Uhl of Grand Rapids and David Anderson of Cambridge. Mr. and Mrs. Bftbst entertained the wedding party and ths out-of- town guests at s. dinnsr-dftnee last night at the St Regis. J. Trum, Inc., of which his father is president. Upon their return from a month's wedding trip to Florida and Havana, Cuba, the couple will make their home at 189 East Eighteenth street, Brooklyn. Miss Jeanne Lathe Engaged to Marry At ft cocktail party at their home this afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe S. Laths of 141 Columbia Heights Brooklyn, are announcing the en- gagement of their daughter. Miss Jeanne R. Lathe, to John B. Quincy. Mr. Qulney is the son of Mrs. Wilbur G. Quincy and the late Mr. Quincy of Hlngbam, Mass., and formerly of Elisabeth, N. J. MJw Laths is a graduate of Pack- er Collegiate Institute and Skid- more College. Mr. Quincy attended the HIU School and Yale Univer- sity, and is now affiliated with Stewart, Warren and Benson cf this city. He is a member of the Cres- cent Athletic Club. $150,000. Mr. Harkness gave the|"»f Pany were deed to the property a few weeks £ mv '" * n * Quentln F of AT THE PIERRE. Capt. Maxwell W. Balfour Tulsa. Okla.. Is at ths Pierre, BECOMES ENGAGED ago. The property will be used for a camp for all of the Boy Scout troops of Nassau county, and should the council decide to seU It the fund obtained must be used as a perpetual endowment for the council. The estate is in the immediate neighborhood of those of Mrs. Payne Whitney, Mrs. Frederic Allen, Grover A. Whslen, Robert G. Elbert and Inisfada, the Brady estate which became a Jesuit House of Studies. Thomas Hitchcock Jr., Interna- tionally known polo player, has purchased a Wasp powered Bel- lanca Skyrocket plane, which for- merly was owned by Dr. Richard U. Light cf Kalamazoo, Mich. The plane has been brought to Roose- velt Field, stored in Hangar D, and Mr. Hitchcock's pilot, Joseph Gaeta, is supervising the installa- tion of two-way radio equipment Mr. Hitchcock plans to have the plane equipped with pontoons so that he can use the ship for com- muting between his home at Sands Point and the Wall street seaplane base. Miss Suzanne Close gave a dinner in the Persian Room of the Plaza last night before going with her guests to the Junior Assembly at th# R1tz-Carlton. Among those in uaorieiia Feitner, David West and James G. Black. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Harding of Purchase, N. Y., are at the Carlyle. Mrs. Harding Is the for- mer Miss Barbara M. Stursberg, daughter of Mrs. Albert H. Sturs- berg. Palmer Loenlng has joined his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pal- mer Loening of Southampton, L. I., at the Ambassador. Mr. and Mrs. H. Alsric W. Myrin of Bryn Mawr are at the.Waldorf- Astoria for a month's stay. WASHINGTON. Secretary of Labor Miss Frances Perkins entertained at dinner last evening in honor of the British Ambassador, Lord Lothian. Miss BeUe Gurnee will entertain at a dinner tomorrow evening be- fore Clarence Streits's lecture at the Town HaU. Mrs. Warren Delano Robblns has as her guest Mrs. Sumner Warren of Boston, Mass. FOERX DINNER AT ST. REGIS. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Foehl Jr. of Orange, N. J., entertained at din- ner last night in the Hawaiian Maisonette of ths St. Regis for Mr. Mid Mrs. 8. Harrison Rolllnson Jr. of West Orange, Mr. and Mrs. Carlos D. KeHy of Rumson, Mr, and Mrs. James O. Campbell and Lawrence G. Ward jr. of South Orange. , AT THE COMMODORE. Mrs. John W. Leevltt of Brook- V.t*», Mass., is st the Commodore. Mrs. Stuart Crocker Entertains at Ritz Mrs. Stuart M. Crocker gave a luncheon yesterday in the Oval Room of ths Rlts-Carlton for Mrs. Thomas P. MandsU, Mrs. Francis Cmannings, Mrs. David H. Morris Jr. and Mrs. Joseph McElroy. Mrs. Dickarman Holllster enter- tained at luncheon there in honor of Mrs. Charles H. Taylor and Mrs. William Nichols and Mrs. Donald O. MacRae had as hsr luncheon guests Mrs. Lyttleton Fox, Mrs. George 8. Mahana, and Mrs. F 4- ney D. Ripley. Miss Nancy Handy Makes Her Debut At Dinner-dance at Hampshire House Tuxedo Residents Are Enjoying Longest Skating Season in Years Spcrtel DUpatfih *• TSTS SB*. TUXEDO PARK, N. Y., Fsb. 8.— There has been more skating here this winter thmn In any season since 1918. Due to the unusual skat- ing facilities young people who are attending private schools in New York are coming here week ends with friends. While the older set have carried out the usual practice here of pass- lag January In the city they have returned this week and will remain here for the February social and sports activities. There is a dinner- dense at ths dub tonight Over the next week snd there will be many house parties with a dance at the club featuring the social e<snts and the annual gold rackets tournament at ths Tuxedo Racquets and Tsnnis Club attract- ing ths leading rackets stars. Among those at the club this week end are Lady Camoys and her daughters, ths Hon. Nadine and the* Hon. Noreen Stonor of Lordon; George E. Dadmun, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tuekerman, Capt. Waiter Roper end Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Train. Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius 8. Lee are at the Jskyll Island Club for the wlntsr. Mr. and Mrs. David Wagstaff are visiting Mrs. Wagstaffs mothsr, Mrs. Henry Morgan Tilford, at her horns in Pslm Beech. Mr. and Mrs. Hunt Tilford WagsUff are also guests of Mrs. Tilford, Miss Bet-nice Rocker. Mr. and Mrs. Truman Parker Handy of 33 East Seventy-fourth street gave a large dinner-dance last night in the Cottage of Hamp- shire House, at which they pre- sented to society their younger daughter, Miss Nancy Handy. Later they took their guests to the third and last of ths Junior As- semblies of the current season at the Rlts-Carlton. Miss Handy, who Is a member of the Junior League, received with her mothsr. Guests included Mr, and Mrs. Fford Burchell, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell H. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Freeman, Mr. and *rs. CorUandt W. Handy, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Larkln, Mr. and Mrs. Loring Washburn, Judge and Mrs. Laurence B. Dunham, Dr. and Mrs. Mather Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander H. Hunter, Mr. «nd Mrs. F. Cecil Baker, Oscar Burke and Dr. Randolph West. The debutante and younger sets were represented by ths Misses Marlon Everett, Mary G. Graham, Katharlns D. Hamlll, Marjorie 8. Handy, Emily Hunt, Barbara King, Barbara Mallory, Patricia L. Par- sons, Elvine Richard, Betty Dodge, Mary Jellisse, Lucretlft B. Evans, Frances C. Bright, Nancy D. Mar- tin, Nancy Chalmers, Katherlne Phelffer, Phyllis Schnell, Claire Weber, Vera Richard, Julia Cor- scaden, Virginia Richards, Rsid Handy, Betty Brady, Dorothy But- ler, 3etty Green, Eleanor Starring, Ruth Burchell. Nancy Saunders, Katharine Stlllmar, Anita L. Willis, Innes Drury, Anne Colgate, Helen H. Zabriskie, Anne D. Holt and Sheila McCreery. Also John H. Duff, WlUlam Pal- mer, James C. Cleveland, Thomas A Brown, Gardner F. Gillespie, Harry Ames Richards, Arthur Worthington, Edward F. Beals 3d, James Palmer Whitlook, Edward Raymond, William P. Dunham, James A. Corscaden, James Brown, Jack Ewing, T. W. Case Jr., George E. Brown Jr., Stanley Wallace, Cyrus Taylor, James P. Furness. Paul Badger, Benjamin Smith Thomas . G. Chamberlain, Henry Loomis and Edward Ruttsr Jr. Miss Delaiield Engaged to Marry Mrs. Joseph Livingston Delafield of 1031 Park avenue and Quogue Point, Westhampton Beach, L. I., announce* ,v * »^e>«e'< > »ri#nt ^f h e r daughter, Miss Margaret Sloans Delafield, to Charles Barras Swope, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Barras Swope of Huntingdon, Pa. Miss Delafleld's father, the lata Joseph Livingston Delafield, was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Maturin L. Delafield of this city and Fieldston, Rlverdale-on-Hud- son. Through him she is descended from Francis Lewis, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and Chancellor Robert R. Livingston, who administered the Presidential oath of office to George Washing- ton. Her maternal grandparents of ths bride-elect were the late Mr. and Mrs. William MlUigan Sloane of New York and Princeton, N. J. Mr. Sloane was Seth Low professor of history at Columbia University, president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and author of "The life of Napoleon Bonaparte." Miss Delafield is a graduate of the Greenwood School, Ruxton, Md., and of Vassar College, class of '39. Mr. Swope is a graduate of Phil- lips Andover Academy, Yale Uni- versity, class of '35, and the Yale Law School. At Yale he was elect- ed to Zeta Psi fraternity and Wolf's Head. He is with the law firm of Carter, Ledynrd A Mllburn, this city. Benjamin Miller Jr. Weds Miss Stelle Miss Catherine Laurler Stelle, dsughter of Mr, and Mrs. Fred- erick W. SteUe of Ossinlng, N. Y.. wss married today at All Saints' Church, Briarcliff Manor, to Ben- jamin Franklin MlUsr Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Franklin Miller of Philadelphia, by the Rev. Frank C. Leemlng of St. Peter's Church, Peeksklll, with only ths immediate family present. Ths bride was given in marriage by her father. Miss Margaret Coo- ley Stelle was her sister's only at- tendant. Robert Dundors MUler was his brother's best msn. Miss Bernice Rocker Engaged to Marry Mr. and Mrs. Louis P, Rocker of 88 Central Park West and the Rocksr Farm, Andover, N. J., an- nounced today the engagement of their daughter, Hiss Bernice Rock- sr, to Sidney Frledberg of New York and West End, N. J. The an- nouncement was made at ths horns of Mrs. Rocker. Mr. Rocker Is a member of ths Nsw York Stock Exchange and is a partner In the brokerage firm of Adler, Coleman A Co. Miss Rocker attended the Fields- ton School and Vassar College. Mr. Frledberg Is a graduate of New York University and ths Yale Law School. Hs Is a member of Phi Beta Kappa fraternity and Is asso- ciated with the Uw firm of PhlUlps * Niter. Knickerbocker Dance To Be Held Tonight Ths second Knickerbocker As- sembly of the season will be held tonight at tiis Rlts-Carlton. Ths dstes of ths Knlcksrboeksrs ars traditional, ths flnst being held on the Saturday after Thanksgiving, ins second on ths Saturday oefore Ash Wednesday, and the final g A ^ * * ^ * hi <* ' H z e U ftTfrVurniir H.Tno^ £ Miss Loizeanx Wed To Paul Halstead -!•-• ••Mill—• ' l » ^ | , ,|| Miss Marion Loiseaux, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Leon 8. Lolsesuir of 4 Bast Eighty-eighth street and Darien, Conn., is being married this afternoon in the Brick Church on Park avenue to Paul Cotton Hal- stead, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bellamy Halstead of Nsw Canaan. Conn., by Dr. Paul Austin Wolfe, pastor. The bride \t being given in mar- riage by her father, and David Gor- don Halstead is his brother's best man. Only Immediate members of the family are attending the cere- mony. Miss Loiseaux was graduated from Saint Agatha ftnd the Katharine Cibbs School. Mr. Halstead prepared at WUUaten Academy, was a student at Dart- mouth College and was graduated trom '..he Daniel Guggenheim School of Aeronautics, Hew York Univer- sity, where he wax a member of lows Easter Sunday. P 1st rue lor of aeronaut! al sciences at In the Continental Manner No lent** deas Borep* set the Mftttn foe t r w l e i Urine> N«v it't New Ysckl And in New Yotk. eh* Pierre htm fsJIen sola hair m Aa ssom of eras Ccadeeetsl boe- pinliff. And hire, «•##, yea wgi tad that debonair foreiaa lawrnphera. lot dte Went'* mtmM9omwtm . , . its «jote locality . . . M Coatiaaruil fir, tm trwr SsWSSjS tiaJy ua- like tany i " Mlneola. all?Vc^S l rmlntr^p• 25?. »£*£""" ^ ^ **°* " consists of Mrs. Frederick W. Long- fellow, chairman; Mrs. Thatcher M. Brown, Mrs. F. Kingsbury Curtis, Mrs. Lyman Delano, Mrs, Adrian V. S. Lambert, Mrs. Wilton Lloyd Smith, Mrs. John Sloans, and Mrs. William Jay Schiefftlln Jr. When in New York—be Coetl- Beatat! Star •< die Viarr*. GUESTS AT THE AMBASSADOR. Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Thornburgh Carlton Thornburgh Jr., of Proses Points, Mich., and Provi- denee, R. I., are at the Ambas- sador, Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

Transcript of KATUHJJAX, ANNE BROWN, Cabaret to Help Miss Adrian Wed ...fultonhistory.com/Newspaper 18/New York NY...

Page 1: KATUHJJAX, ANNE BROWN, Cabaret to Help Miss Adrian Wed ...fultonhistory.com/Newspaper 18/New York NY Sun/New York NY Su… · E. Graham Lewis, Mrs. Alvin Untermyer, Mrs. Ernest Child,

THE NEW YORK SUN. KATUHJJAX,

ANNE BROWN, EDUCATOR, DIES

Founded School for Grit Here in 1880.

1 1 •

«» «

AIDS CHARITAWT.F CATTRF,

EMMA REDEL1 > SINGER, 1 • w

• T* -f •

§fe Had Been Dramatic Soprano With Chicago Open.

— • • IN I I I

Mlii Anne Brown, w h o founded the Anne Brown School, a fashion­able New York institution for girls during the 80s and 90s, died last night at her home 80 E a s t Sixty-eighth street. She w a s M y e a r s oki.

Miss Brown was born in Toronto of Americas parents, Mr. and Mrs. Champion Brown, and she received her early education f rom gov­ernesses. Later shs w a n t t o Vaaaar College from which s h s w a s gradu­ated In 1874. In 1876 s h e turned to teaching and took a posit ion in a private school a t the R o c k Is land Artenal, Illinois, where s h s taught children of officers of the a n n y

Two years later s h s c a m s t o N e w York and taught for two years a t Wee Chapman's School, where she developed plans for her own school assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deere of the Deere P lough Com­pany of Moline, 111. Then In 1880 the opened the school a t 23 W a s t fifty-sixth street in partnership with Mile. Isalins Ruel I n 1883 the school moved to 711 F i f th ave­nue and later the partnership was diasolved. Miss Brown's School continued until 1903, w h e n i t closed. Among the pupils at the school w a s fceay Astor and among its teachers , Hai Weed, who w a s instrumental In founding Barnard College, and Ctara B. Spence, founder of t h e Spence School for Girls.

I n l 9 0 4 , Miss Brown built and opened a day and boarding school known as Htghcltffe Hal l a t P a r k £&, Yonkers, and four years later the retired and lived abroad for a while.

The Anne Brown Kindergarten and Nursery School, a model school bx the New York Kindergarten Bolldlng, 634 West Forty-second street, was developed from a free kindergarten established by former pupils of Miss Brown, a n d there Is an Anne Brown E n d o w m e n t Scholarship Fund a t Barnard Col­lege.

Miss Brown leaves seven n ieces and a nephew, among fhom is Mrs. Benjamin Loder of N e w Rochel le .

Funeral services wil l be held on Monday at 10:30 A. M. in St. Thomss'e Church, F i f th avenue and Fifty-third street, a n d interment win be private,

Emma Redell. Emma Redell, operatic and con­

cert soprano, died yes terday of a heart attack at the Hote l Ansonia. where she lived wi th her husband, 2, Anthony Marcus.

The former Wagnerian singer of the Chicago Civic Opera Company wts born In Baltimore and passed most of her early days in Washing­ton, where a s • high school student she was discovered to have vocal talent by a Y. M. C. A. organist , who persuaded her to s i n g In a church choir and a t Y gatherings . Her future husband, then w i t h t h e Department of Commerce , h*ard her and brought her here for s tudy when she had f inished h igh school .

Mies Redell went abroad to s tudy and in 1933 m a d s hsr concert debut In Budapest, which w a s followed three years later by h s r operatic debut as Tosea In Altenburg. Ger-

Mrs. George B. St. Georre chairman of the B e n e f i t Committee f o r the "Help Finland Cabarc*," to be held n e x t Wednesday a t the Waldorf-Astoria, proceeds from which wi l l a u g m e n t the F inn i sh Rel ief F u n d , o f which Herbert H o o v e r i s national

chairman.

CrtrEPER—Charles r.mery, Febru­ary 2, 1940, beloved husband of Daphne Seybolt Culpeper, son of the late Rev. Elam and Fhalba Culpeper, brother of Frank. Wil­liam, Alvin, Joel and Mrs. Charles Green. Reposing at Frank B. Campbell's, the Funeral Church, Inc., Madison avenue at Eighty-first street, where Masonic services wni be held Sunday, 8 P. M. Rooms Lodge No. 748 F. and A. M. Funeral services a t the Riverside Church, Riverside Drive and i22d street Tuesday, February 6, at 4 P. M. Interment Rome, Georgia.

m a n y . Than came three years of operatic tr iumphs abroad,, where s h s w a s hailed for hsr interpretive powers and hsr ability to s ing in s ix languages , being called "Ger­m a n y ' s Ideal Wagner ian s inger." S h s a l so sang in Italy and South Africa, and on Oct. 18, 1939, made her successful concert debut in N e w York a t Carnegie Hall .

The fol lowing year the Chicago Opera Company engaged her and in the winter of 1932-1933 she made a concert tour of Soviet Russ ia at t h s Invitation of the Moscow Gov­e r n m e n t Since hsr return she de­voted most of her t ime to concert a n d radio work.

Mis s Redel l w a s deeply Interested In the deve lopment of music in this country and w a s act ive in t h s m o v e m e n t for the building of a modern opera and concert audi­tor ium in Washington. A n ardent advocate of the s inging of "The Star-Spangled Banner," she a lways c lossd her concerts w i th t h s na­tional anthem.

D r . G e o r g e d e B o t h e z a t . •ROSTOV *Vb s ~ p H v « t # funeral

services will be ueld here today for Dr. George de Bothesat , expert on aerodynamics , w h o in 1923 built the f irst helicopter In the world to m a k e stable and governable f l ights for the United States Army Air Corps. Dr. de Bothesat a lso invent­ed a blower used in the venti lat ing s y s t e m s of many skyscrapers , and ha w a s a . mathematical p h y s i c i s t H e . w a s 56 years old, a n d died o n Thursday ui N e w England Baptist Hospital .

H e w a s born in Bessarabia, then a part of Csarlst Russ ia , and had held high scientific and technical offices in the Czarist, Kerensky and Lenin governments. After leav­ing Russ ia he c a m s to the Uni ted States , where he became a citizen. For several years hs lived in N e w York. H s organised the Hel icopter Corporation of America. Shortly nefore becoming ill last fall Dr . de Bothezat married Mrs. Jul ia R a m say Hilton of N e w York, w h o sur­vives , a s do two sisters in Russia .

J o s e p h M e y e r r o s e . Joseph Meyerrose, former Queens

county sheriff, died yesterday at the age of 80 at h is home, 83-23 118th s t r e e t Richmond Hil l , after ft short illness. H e was a Demo­crat and in 1904 w a s s leeted sheriff over Warren B. Ashmeed , present Queens Republican laadsr. After being sheriff Mr. Meyerrose later unsuccessful ly ran for county clerk. Although h s did n o t seek office thereafter he w a s for some t ime a power wi th Queens Democrats . Mr. Msysrrose leavee h i s w i f e and t w o daughters.

200 Will Attend Dance Tonight

At Coral Gables BSBB»SBBtoBSSBBSSjBBBSSB*SBB$BaB*a 0

Mr. anrj Mrs. James Barn-aby Entertain Tomorrow

; ior Their. Guests.

Special Dtapatch to T m SON, CORAL G A B L E S , F la . , Feb . 3.—

Three hundred hote l guests and Coral Gables cot tage colonists will attend the w e e k l y Sunday after­noon tea-dance in t h e patio of the Miami Bi It mo re tomorrow after­noon. Among those who will en­tertain large part ies are Mr. and Mrs. James Bftrnaby of N s w York, who will entertain for their son-in-law and daughter , Mr. and Mrs. Colby Harkness of Boston, w h o nave joined t h e m a t the Miami Bilt-more, coming by p lane from Cuba.

Mr. ana Mrs. Kel ly Msguire of Brooklyn wil l enterta in a party of twenty. The dance will follow the regular Sunday afternoon perform­ance of the Miami BUtmore Water Revue, and wil l Include numbers by the members n o w appearing in the supper s h o w .

Two hundred parsons will attend the dinner-dance tonight in the Glralda R o o m of the Miami BUt­more. Advance reservations have been made by Mr. and Mrs. Court landt Wheelwright , Mr. and Mrs. H. B . George, Mr. and Mrs. How­ard Gillette, Mr. a n d Mrs. Calvin March, Mr. and Mrs. B . H. Hom&n, Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln F . P l a n t Mr. and Mrs. Kel toy Magulre, Mr. and Mrs. F r e d Nugent , Mrs. Frederick D o u g l a s s and Mrs. Mo-Knight Budd.

Lorillard Suffern Taller of N e w York h a s been appointed chair­man of the commit tee on Invita­tions and pair ings for the Inter­national four bail professional golf championship, w h i c h will be played on the l inks of the Miami BUtmore Country Club, M a r c h 3, 4, 8 and 6, T. E . Price, general chairman, an­nounced today.

Theodore Luechaai of N e w York Is chairman of t h s finance com­mittee. N e l s o n D a v i s s of N e w York will act a s starter and Wil­liam Palrman wil l have charge of the scoreboard.

Cabaret to Help Fund for Finland

Interests Many - •

Notable Persons Engage Boxes and Tables for

Wednesday.

T h e fftlft "Help Finland Cabaret" will be g iven next Wednesday eve­n i n g s t t h e Walfdorf-AHorla before a dist inguished audience. Proceeds wil l augment t h e F inn i sh Relief Fund .

Mrs . George B , S t George, bene­fit chairman, h a s announced box and tftble holders for t h s party. A m o n g those w h o have boxes are Herbert Hoovsr , nat ional cha irman of t h s F innish Rs l i s f F u n d ; Mrs. George B . St . George, Count de Saint-Qusntln, Ambassador of F r a n c s ; D o n Ascanlo del principl Colonna, Ambassador of Italy, and D o n n a El ly Colonna; t h s R i g h t Hon. t h s Marquess of Lothian, Am­bassador of Great Bri ta in; Wolmar Bostrom. Minister of Sweden, and Mme. Bos trom; Wilhe lm Munthe de Morgsnst l srne a n d Mme. Munthe de Morgenst lerne, Hja lmar J. Pro-cope, Minister of F in land; Henrik de Kauffmann, Minister of Den­mark, a n d Mme. de Kauf fmann; Mrs. Herbert Lehman, Mrs. Charles Cartwright, Mrs. Wi l l iam S . P s i s y , Mrs. F . Kingsbury Curtis, Mrs. G. Morgan Browns , Mrs. Henry Prather Fletcher, Mrs. George H. Shaw, Mrs. Allan Lehman, Mrs. John T. Pratt , Miss Mary Gushing, and Wil l iam Evar t s Benjamin, Otto Lindbsrg and H. V. Sartorius.

A m o n g the table holders are Countess Fo lke Bernadotts , Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Hlckox, Mrs. 8 . S loan Colt, Mrs. J a m e s Watson Webb, Mrs. Evalyn Walsh McLean of Washington , Mrs. Wal ter Hov-lng, Mrs. Nils R. Johansson, Mrs. A. Biddle Duke , Mrs. Marcus Daly, Mrs. Pr ice Poet , Mr. a n d Mrs. Lucius Boomer, Mrs . Wil l iam C. Breed, Mrs. Morgan Hamilton, Mrs. Morris H a w k e s , Mrs. Bryant Pearson , Mrs. J . Reg ina ld N e w t o n , Mrs . Edward F . ds Beixedon, Mrs. E . Graham Lewis , Mrs. Alvin Untermyer, Mrs. Ernes t Child, Mrs. H Ne l son Slater, Mrs. Wel ter Baker, Mrs. Albert Stlegttts, Miss Tessa Kosta and Randolph F . Burks and George Trommer.

Miss Adrian Wed To Charles Trum At Oiurch Service Ceremony Performed by

Archbishop Curley of Baltimore.

AN INTERESTED SPECTATOR

Richard Taylor Weds Miss Elizabeth Griffith

BAMIANE-Ntchotas, February 2, 1M0. beloved husband-of Giovanna, ate Caposze, devoted father of Anna, Cerasole and Ernest Damiane. Funeral from Walter B. Cooke, Inc., funeral Rome, Jerome avenue sad 190th street, Monday, 10:80 A If. Requiem mass a t S t Philip Nerl Church, 11 o'clock.

MeHCTCHINSON—At his residence, 44 Danforth av., Jersey City, on Friday, February 3, 1940, James C , husband of Grace X. Edgar and father of Edgar Grace- Shaffer, Robert and Edith McHutehlnson. Relatives and friends are invited to attend funeral, a t S t John P. X. Church, Summit av. at Gardner, on Monday, February 5. 3 P. M.

*0TH-3anford Jacobt, darling son of Stanley M. and Ethel Jacob! Roth and beloved grandson of Florence H. Jacobl and Etta Roth. Funeral strictly private,

•JTBAD — Emeria Price Meriwether, February 8, 1M0, widow of fjldol-|ho Snead. Service a t the Brick Pri»*hyt*rUn Church, at Park av. *nd 85th s t , Sunday, 3:89 P. M. .

*STAX-Carollne Sanders, beloved *«* of the late Justice Charles H. Tmax end mother of Carol and Rrio'ia. Funeral Sunday, 11 o'clock, Frank E. Campbell's Funeral Church, 81st street and Madison svenue. •

OUt FUNIHAl MOMIS

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Gen. George K. Hunter. WASHINGTON, Feb. S . -Br lg . -

Gsn . George K. Hunter , 85 years old, retired cavalryman, died yes­terday in \ nursing homo. H s w a s a member of the c lass of 1ST7 at W e s t Point and w a s o n s of t h s oldest l iving graduates of the acad­emy.

In the Spanish-American war he w a s wounded s t San Juan HiU and he also took psxt In several en­gagements In the Phi l ippines . Dur­ing the world war Gen. Hunter was In c a m p duty in this country.

J o s e p h H f t t t e n b a c h .

Joseph Hattenbaeh, treasurer and director and a founder of the N e w York Merchandise Company, died of ft heart attack yesterday a t his office a t S3 West Twenty-third street . H s w a s 57 years old and lived a t 300 Central P a r k West .

Mr. Hattenbaeh w a s widely known for hie philanthropic activ­it ies . H e w a s ft trustee of Temple Israel, a director of t h e Jewish Consumptive Relief Soc ie ty and group chs irman of the Jewish Wel-fare Federation and the Jo int Dis­tribution Committee.

He? w a s ft member of the Fresh Meadow Country Club.

Surviving are his wife , Mrs. Mat-t l s Hattenbaeh; two s e n s , Monroe and Leonard Hattenbaeh, a n d three brothers and three s i s ters .

FunersJ services wil l he held at Temple Israel at 10 A. M. tomor-

The marriage of Miss El isabeth Frances Griffith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keenan Leslie Griffith of Bethlehem, Pa . , t o Richard Stock­ton Taylor of Anselm, Pa . , son of Mrs. Coleman P e a c e Brown and the late Hol l lngshead Nathan Taylor, is taking place this afternoon in t h s Pro-Cathedral Church of the Nativity, Beth lehem. The Very Rev. Roscoe Thornton Faust is per­forming the ceremony, and ft recep­tion Is to follow at t h s Sanoon Val­ley Country Club, Bethlehem, Mrs. Hol l lngshead N a t h a n Taylor Jr . la matron of honor, and Miss N a n c y Isabel Griffith la maid of honor. The bridesmaids are the Misses Carol Matcalf, Dorothea Berkeley, Josephine Grace, Antoinette Bovler, Margaret Larkln and Josephine Honeycutt .

Holhngshaad N a t h a n Taylor Jr . is best man, and the ushers are John E . Goare, Wil l iam J. Steph­ens, Henry H Patton, Charles B . Coburn, Proctor WetherlTl, Hal L Bents and E u g e n e G. Grace Jr.

The bride at tended the Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr. Mr. Taylor a t ­tended St. Gcoerge's School, N e w . port, R L ; Radley College, Eng­land, and t h s University of P e n n ­sylvania.

After a w e d d i n g trip South the couple will l ive in Merlon, Pa .

Miss Fuller Is Bride Qi William Sheerin

Miss Josephine El i sabeth Fuller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Otis Ful ler of 375 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn; w a s married today at a h igh nuptial m a s s at Queen of All Saints* Church, Brooklyn, to Wil­l i am Vincent Sheerin, son of t h s late Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sheerin of Brooklyn. T h s ceremony w a s performed b y t h e Rev . John Sheer in of Washington, hrothsr of the br idegroom. A wedding break­fas t a n d reception foUowed a t the Bosser t .

The bride w a s g iven in marriage b y h e r father. Her maid of honor w a s Miss Kathleen M. O'SuUivan, and h e r bride-maids were Miss Mu­riel Ful ler , her cous in; Miss Loretto Sheerin , s ister of t h s bridegroom; Miss Grace Briody and Miss A n n s Humphrey of Brooklyn. The bride-groom had h i s brother, Francis A. Sheerin, a s h i s best m a n , and t h s ushers were Raymond Sheerin and Charles Sheerin, a l so brothers of the bridegroom; D r . Arthur E . L a m b and Arthur Reheuser .

The bride w a s born In Denver, and i s a niece of the late Col. Le igh A Fuller, Medical Depart­ment , United States Army. She Is a graduate of St. Angela Hall, Brooklyn, and attended Fordhara Univers i ty . Mr. Sheerin i s a grad­uate of Fordham University . Ho is a member of the faculty of t h s Boys H i g h School, Brooklyn.

Miss Chadbourne Wed to F. G. Mestre Jr.

Miss Ana Mercedes Chadbourne, daughter of Mr. a n d Mrs. Walde-m&r Arsns Chadbourne of 160 River;'.*- Drive, a n d Francisco G. Mestre Jr. , eon of Mr. end Mrs. Francisco G. Mestre 8r„ of Havana, were married today a t the Notre D a m e French Church. T h e R e v Henry HaU officiating. I t was fol­lowed by ft* wedd ing breakfast at Sherry's , which w a s attended by members of t h s family and intimate friends only.

T h e bride was g iven in marriage by h s r fathsr. Miss Alet te Law­rence Brooke w a s maid of honor whi le t f e bridal atendants were the Misses Marta Mestre, the bride' groom's sister, Rosal ie Ramirez, Dorothy Whalen , Constance Heide, J o a n Hol t a n d Marie Leasing.

T h e bridegroom's father w a s bsst m a n and t h e ushers were Carl Frederick F icken , Louis AhaUa, Belarmino Alvares Br. and Jr. , Jul io Mire, Bill Jenter , John Jal-l s d s and George Aeevedo.

Beatr ice Maris Adrian, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Adrian o f 330 W e s t End avenue, w a s married today to Charles Jo­seph Trum, s o n of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E . T r u m of 301 Stratford Road, Brooklyn , Ths ceremony w a s performed a t ft nuptial m a s s In Holy Trini ty Church by the Most Rev . Michael J . Curley, Archbishop of Ba l t imore and Washington, ac sisted by the Revs . John B. Kelly, Eugene Duggan , J. B. Scully, J. F . McNiff a n d Arthur Qulnn. Fol low­ing the ceremony a reception and breakfast w a s hs ld a t ths Waldorf-Astoria.

Sister I s Matron of Honor. Mrs. James F . Byrne was matron

of honor for her sister. T h s other attendants were Mrs.

Charles Bryson, sister of t h s bride: Miss Kathleen Trum, slstsr of t h s bridegroom, a n d the Misses Doris O'Connor and Marlon Griffin. Wal­ter E . T r u m w a s best m a n for h i s son, and t h e ushers were Walter Trum Jr. , brother of the bride­groom; Donald Drummond, Thomas Conroy Jr . and Hugh Duffy.

Through her mother, the bride Is a direct descendant of the Grahams of Montrose, Scotland. Her great-great-grandmother. Lavinla Gra­ham, w a s the niece of Wil l iam Graham, D u k e of Montrose, to w h o m the Highlanders are Indebted for carrying through Parl iament In 1787 a n a c t repealing t h s act of 1748 which m a d e penal the wearing of their tartan . She Is also a descend­ant of Wil l iam Alexander Graham, former Uni ted States Senator and Governor of N o r t h Carolina from 1844 t o 1848. S h s Is related t o President Frankl in Delano Roose­velt through Mother Elizabeth Se-ton, foundress of the Sisters of Charity, and to Mrs. Roosevelt through the Par i sh family of th i s c ity.

Fa ther Is a Banker. Through her father, the first vice-

president of the Bank of York town, she i s the great-granddaughter of the late Michael Joseph Adrian, founder of the old German E x ­change B a n k , the name of which was changed during the world w a r to t h s Commercial Exchange Bank. H s r grandfather, the late Charles S. Adrian, became president after h i s father's death.

T h e bride attended Notre D a m e de Lourdes a n d was graduated from the Academy of the Holy Child. Mr. Trum, w h o Is a graduate of Brooklyn Preparatory and St .

Bert Morgan Photo. Mrs. John H a y W h i t n e y o f Greentree , Manhasset , L. I . , a n ob­server at Hialeah Park, in Miami, whi le vacat ioning a t P a l m Beach recently . Mrs. W h i t n e y is the daughter of Mrs. N e d o m A.

Eastman of Fa l l s o f Schuylkil l , P a .

BY WAY OF MENTION N E W YORK.

Members of the north shore colo­nies on Long Island who have had the late Edward S. Harkness among them as an owner of one of the large estates near North Hills, have learned that one of Mr. Harkness 's Innumerable philanthro­pies has been the recent gift of thirty-four acres of the estate to the Nassau County Boy Scout Council for a summer camp. The

John's University, is a member of property fronts' on I. U. Willets the Columbus Club and the Anvil „ n d ghelter Rock roads, not far Chorus. H e is associated with E . | from Manhasset. and is valued s t

Mrs. Walter H. Clark of 1000 Park avenue gave a luncheon at the P laza yesterday for Mrs. Ches-ter A. Braman„ Mrs. Wil l iam S. Gould, Mrs. Richard H. Lawrence , Mrs. Van Vechten Veeder, Mrs. Wil l iam Henry Sage, Mrs. E d w i n H. Weatherbee and Mrs. Wil l iam J. Hutchinson.

Miss Alice Babst fv And George Bent

Married Today • —

Many OinVof-town Guests Attend Ceremony at St.

Bartholomew's.

The marriage of Mies Alice WO-wina Babst, daughter of Mr. a n d Mrs. Earl D . B a b s t of 580 Park avenue, to George P a y n e Bent ot Chicago i s tak ing p lace today i n the chapel of St. Bartholomew's Church.

T h s ceremony Is b e i n g performed by the rector, the R e v . Dr . George PauU T. S a r g e n t

Mr. Bent i s t h s s o n of Mr. and Mrs. George Harry B e n t , formerly of Chicago, now of Pasadena , C a t , who are present a t t h e wedding.

Miss Babst i s a t tended by her sister, Mrs. George Holcombe Par­sons of S t Ravlds , P a . , a s matron of honor, and Is g iven in marriage by her father. T h e r e are no brides­maids.

Mr. B s n t h a s h i s brother, Henry Wingate B e n t of Chicago a s best man, and Robert G. Anderson, Wil­liam R. Dick inson Jr. , Cyrus H. Adams 3d e n d Theodore W. Lamb, ail of Chicago, a n d WUllarn F . Gil­lespie Jr. a n d J e r o m e V. Roscoe of N s w York a s ushers .

The marriage ceremony a t the chapel i s t o be foUowed by a recep­tion at the Colony Club e n d attend­ed by m a n y out-of-town relatives and friends of both the bride and bridegroom. After a trip to N a s ­sau Mr. B e n t a n d b i s bride wil l take up their p e r m a n e n t residence in Chicago.

Among the out-of-town relat ives and friends a t t h e wedding an* Mrs. Will iam B. B r o w n , Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Gardnsr , Mr. a n d Mrs. Robert A . Gardner, Mrs. Wi l ­liam F . Anderson, Rober t A. Gard­ner Jr., Gifford Gardner, Miss E v e ­lyn Gardner, Miss El isabeth Brown, Miss Jane t B r o w n , Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. King, Mrs . John P . Wil­son Jr„ Mrs. Bernard F. Rogers , Mrs. Cyrus H . A d a m s , Miss Mary Seymour Adams , Mr. and Mrs. Ed­ward DsWlt t S h u m w a y , Miss Grace Shumway, all of Chicago; Mrs. Benjamin S. Warren , Mr. and Mrs. Standlsh B a c k u s , Mr. and Mrs. Gay lord W. Gillis, all of Detroi t ; Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y E . Freeman of Springfield, O h i o ; Marshall M. Uhl and John H . Uh l of Grand Rapids and Dav id Anderson of Cambridge.

Mr. a n d Mrs. Bftbst entertained the wedding party a n d t h s out-of-town guests a t s. dinnsr-dftnee last night at the S t R e g i s .

J. Trum, Inc . , of which his father is president. Upon their return from a month ' s wedding trip t o Florida and Havana, Cuba, the couple will make their home a t 189 E a s t E ighteenth street, Brooklyn.

Miss Jeanne Lathe Engaged to Marry

At ft cocktail party at their h o m e this afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe S. L a t h s of 141 Columbia He ights Brooklyn, are announcing the en ­gagement of their daughter. Miss Jeanne R. Lathe, to John B. Quincy. Mr. Qulney is the son of Mrs. Wilbur G. Quincy and the late Mr. Quincy of Hlngbam, Mass., and formerly of Elisabeth, N . J .

MJw L a t h s is a graduate of P a c k ­er Collegiate Institute and Skid-more College. Mr. Quincy attended the HIU School and Yale Univer­sity, and is now affiliated w i t h Stewart, Warren and Benson cf t h i s city. H e i s a member of the Cres­cent Athlet ic Club.

$150,000. Mr. Harkness gave the |"»f P a n y were deed to the property a few weeks £ m v ' " * n * Quentln F

of A T T H E P I E R R E .

Capt. Maxwell W. Balfour Tulsa. Okla. . Is a t ths Pierre,

BECOMES ENGAGED

ago. The property wil l be used for a camp for all of the Boy Scout troops of N a s s a u county, and should the council decide to seU It the fund obtained must be used as a perpetual endowment for the council.

The estate is in the immediate neighborhood of those of Mrs. Payne Whitney, Mrs. Frederic Allen, Grover A. Whs len , Robert G. Elbert and Inisfada, the Brady estate which became a Jesuit House of Studies.

Thomas Hitchcock Jr., Interna­tionally known polo player, has purchased a W a s p powered Bel-lanca Skyrocket plane, wh ich for­merly was owned by Dr. Richard U. Light cf Kalamazoo, Mich. The plane has been brought to Roose­velt Field, stored in Hangar D , and Mr. Hitchcock's pilot, Joseph Gaeta, i s supervising the installa­tion of two-way radio equipment Mr. Hitchcock plans to have the plane equipped wi th pontoons so that he can use the ship for com­muting between h i s home a t Sands Point and the Wal l street seaplane base.

Miss Suzanne Close gave a dinner in the Persian R o o m of t h e Plaza last n ight before go ing w i t h her guests to the Junior Assembly a t th# R1tz-Carlton. A m o n g those in

uaorie i ia Feitner,

David W e s t and J a m e s G. Black.

Mr. and Mrs. Wil l iam H. Harding of Purchase , N . Y. , are a t the Carlyle. Mrs. Harding Is the for­mer Miss Barbara M. Stursberg, daughter of Mrs. Albert H. Sturs­berg.

Palmer Loenlng has joined his parents , Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pal ­mer Loening of Southampton, L. I., a t the Ambassador.

Mr. and Mrs. H. Alsr ic W. Myrin of Bryn Mawr are a t the.Waldorf-Astoria for a month ' s s tay .

W A S H I N G T O N . Secretary of Labor Miss Frances

Perkins entertained a t dinner last evening in honor of t h e Brit ish Ambassador, Lord Lothian.

Miss BeUe Gurnee wil l entertain at a dinner tomorrow evening be­fore Clarence Streits 's lecture at the Town HaU.

Mrs. Warren De lano Robblns has as her guest Mrs. Sumner Warren of Boston, Mass.

F O E R X D I N N E R A T S T . R E G I S . Mr. and Mrs. Charles A . Foehl Jr.

of Orange, N. J. , entertained at din­ner last n ight in the Hawai ian Maisonette of ths St . Reg i s for Mr. Mid Mrs. 8 . Harrison Rolllnson Jr. of West Orange, Mr. and Mrs. Carlos D. KeHy of Rumson, Mr, and Mrs. James O. Campbell and Lawrence G. Ward j r . of South Orange.

, A T T H E COMMODORE. Mrs. John W. Leevl t t of Brook-

V.t*», Mass., is s t the Commodore.

Mrs. Stuart Crocker Entertains at Ritz

Mrs. Stuart M. Crocker gave a luncheon yesterday in the Oval R o o m of t h s Rlts-Carlton for Mrs. T h o m a s P . MandsU, Mrs. Francis Cmannings, Mrs. David H. Morris Jr. a n d Mrs. Joseph McElroy.

Mrs. Dickarman Holllster enter­tained at luncheon there in honor of Mrs . Charles H. Taylor and Mrs. Will iam Nichols and Mrs. Donald O. MacRae had as hsr luncheon gues t s Mrs. Lytt leton Fox, Mrs. George 8. Mahana, and Mrs. F 4-n e y D. Ripley.

Miss Nancy Handy Makes Her Debut At Dinner-dance at Hampshire House

Tuxedo Residents Are Enjoying Longest Skating Season in Years

Spcrtel DUpatfih *• TSTS SB*. T U X E D O P A R K , N. Y., F s b . 8.—

There has been more skating here this winter thmn In any s eason since 1918. D u e t o the unusual skat ­ing facilities y o u n g people w h o are attending pr ivate schools in N e w York are c o m i n g here week ends with friends.

While the older set have carried out the usual practice here of pass-lag January In the city they have returned this week and will remain here for the February social and sports act iv i t ies . There is a dinner-dense at t h s d u b t o n i g h t

Over the next week snd there will be m a n y house parties w i th a dance a t the club featuring the social e<snts a n d the annual go ld

rackets tournament a t t h s Tuxedo Racquets and Tsnnis Club attract­ing t h s leading rackets stars.

A m o n g those a t the club th i s w e e k end are Lady Camoys and her daughters , t h s Hon. Nadine a n d the* H o n . Noreen Stonor of L o r d o n ; George E . Dadmun, Mr. a n d Mrs. Paul Tuekerman, Capt. Waiter Roper e n d Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Train.

Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius 8. Lee are a t the Jskyl l Island Club for the wlntsr .

Mr. and Mrs. David Wagstaff are vis i t ing Mrs. W a g s t a f f s mothsr, Mrs. Henry Morgan Tilford, a t her horns in P s l m B e e c h . Mr. and Mrs. H u n t Tilford W a g s U f f are a lso gues t s of Mrs. Tilford,

Miss Bet-nice Rocker.

Mr. and Mrs. Truman Parker Handy of 33 Eas t Seventy-fourth street gave a large dinner-dance last night in the Cottage of Hamp­shire House, at which they pre­sented to society their younger daughter, Miss Nancy Handy. Later they took their guests to the third and last of t h s Junior As­semblies of the current season a t the Rlts-Carlton.

Miss Handy, w h o Is a member of the Junior League, received with her mothsr.

Guests included Mr, and Mrs. Fford Burchell, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell H. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Freeman, Mr. and * r s . CorUandt W. Handy, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Larkln, Mr. and Mrs. Loring Washburn, Judge and Mrs. Laurence B . Dunham, Dr. and Mrs. Mather Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander H. Hunter, Mr. «nd Mrs. F. Cecil Baker, Oscar Burke and Dr. Randolph West .

The debutante and younger sets were represented by t h s Misses Marlon Everett, Mary G. Graham, Katharlns D. Hamll l , Marjorie 8. Handy, Emily Hunt , Barbara King, Barbara Mallory, Patricia L. Par­sons, Elvine Richard, Bet ty Dodge, Mary Jellisse, Lucretlft B . Evans , Frances C. Bright , Nancy D. Mar­tin, Nancy Chalmers, Katherlne Phelffer, Phyll is Schnell, Claire Weber, Vera Richard, Julia Cor-scaden, Virginia Richards, Rs id

Handy, Bet ty Brady, Dorothy But­ler, 3 e t t y Green, Eleanor Starring, Ruth Burchell. N a n c y Saunders, Katharine St l l lmar, Ani ta L. Willis, Innes Drury, Anne Colgate, He len H. Zabriskie, Anne D . Holt and Sheila McCreery.

Also John H. Duff, WlUlam Pal­mer, James C. Cleveland, Thomas A Brown, Gardner F. Gillespie, Harry Ames Richards , Arthur Worthington, Edward F. B e a l s 3d, James Palmer Whitlook, Edward Raymond, Wil l iam P . Dunham, J a m e s A. Corscaden, J a m e s Brown, Jack Ewing , T . W . Case Jr. , George E. Brown Jr. , Stanley Wallace, Cyrus Taylor, J a m e s P . Furness . Paul Badger, B e n j a m i n Smith T h o m a s . G. Chamberlain, Henry Loomis and Edward R u t t s r Jr .

Miss Delaiield Engaged to Marry

Mrs. Joseph Liv ings ton Delafield of 1031 P a r k a v e n u e and Quogue Point, W e s t h a m p t o n Beach, L. I., announce* , v * »^e>«e'<>»ri#nt ^f her daughter, Miss Margaret Sloans Delafield, to Charles Barras Swope, son of Mr. a n d Mrs . Earl Barras Swope of Hunt ingdon, Pa .

Miss Delaf le ld's father, the lata Joseph Liv ings ton Delafield, w a s the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Maturin L . Delaf ie ld of this city and Fieldston, Rlverdale-on-Hud-son. Through h i m she is descended from Francis Lewis , a s igner of the Declaration of Independence, and Chancellor Robert R. Livingston, who administered the Presidential oath of office to George Washing­ton.

Her maternal grandparents of ths bride-elect w e r e the late Mr. and Mrs. Will iam MlUigan Sloane of N e w York and Princeton, N . J . Mr. Sloane w a s Se th Low professor of history a t Columbia University, president of the American Academy of Arts and Let ters and author of "The l i f e of N a p o l e o n Bonaparte ."

Miss Delaf ie ld i s a graduate of the Greenwood School, Ruxton, Md., and of V a s s a r College, c lass of '39.

Mr. Swope is a graduate of Phil­lips Andover Academy, Yale Uni­versity, c lass of '35, and the Yale Law School. A t Ya le he w a s elect­ed to Zeta Ps i fraternity and Wolf 's Head. H e is w i t h the law f irm of Carter, Ledynrd A Mllburn, this city.

Benjamin Miller Jr. Weds Miss Stelle

Miss Catherine Laurler Stelle, dsughter of Mr, and Mrs. Fred­erick W. SteUe of Ossinlng, N . Y.. w s s married today a t All Saints ' Church, Briarcliff Manor, to Ben­jamin Frankl in MlUsr Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Frankl in Miller of Phi ladelphia, by the Rev . Frank C. L e e m l n g of St. Peter 's Church, Peekskl l l , wi th only t h s immediate family present.

T h s bride w a s g iven in marriage by her father. Miss Margaret Coo-ley Stelle was her sister's only at­tendant. Robert Dundors MUler was h i s brother's best m s n .

Miss Bernice Rocker Engaged to Marry

Mr. and Mrs. Louis P, Rocker of 88 Central Park West and the Rocksr Farm, Andover, N . J . , an­nounced today the engagement of their daughter, Hiss Bernice Rock-sr, to Sidney Frledberg of N e w York and West End, N. J. The an­nouncement was made at t h s horns of Mrs. Rocker.

Mr. Rocker Is a member of t h s N s w York Stock Exchange and is a partner In the brokerage f irm of Adler, Coleman A Co.

Miss Rocker attended the Fie lds-ton School and Vassar College. Mr. Frledberg Is a graduate of N e w York University and ths Yale Law School. H s Is a member of Phi B e t a Kappa fraternity and Is asso­ciated wi th the U w firm of PhlUlps * N i t e r .

Knickerbocker Dance To Be Held Tonight

T h s second Knickerbocker As­sembly of the season will be held tonight a t tiis Rlts-Carlton. T h s ds tes of t h s Knlcksrboeksrs a r s traditional, t h s flnst being held on the Saturday after Thanksgiving, i n s second on t h s Saturday oefore Ash Wednesday, and the final

g A ^ * * ^ * h i < * ' H z e U ftTfrVurniir H . T n o ^ £

Miss Loizeanx Wed To Paul Halstead

- ! • - • • • M i l l — • ' l » ^ — | , ,||

Miss Marion Loiseaux, daughter of Dr . and Mrs. Leon 8. Lolsesuir of 4 Bast Eighty-e ighth street and Darien, Conn., is be ing married this afternoon in the Br ick Church on Park avenue to Paul Cotton Hal-stead, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bel lamy Halstead of N s w Canaan. Conn., by Dr. Paul Aust in Wolfe, pastor.

The bride \t being g iven in mar­riage by her father, and David Gor­don Halstead i s h i s brother's best man. Only Immediate members of the family are at tending the cere­mony.

Miss Loiseaux was graduated from Saint Agatha ftnd the Katharine Cibbs School.

Mr. Halstead prepared at WUUaten Academy, was a s tudent a t Dart­mouth College and w a s graduated trom '..he Daniel Guggenheim School of Aeronautics, H e w York Univer­sity, where he w a x a member of

lows Easter Sunday.

P

1st rue lor of aeronaut! al sciences at

In the Continental

Manner No lent** deas Borep* set the Mftttn foe t r w l e i Urine> N«v it't New Ysckl And in New Yotk. eh* Pierre htm fsJIen sola hair m Aa ssom of eras Ccadeeetsl boe-pinliff. And hire, «•##, yea wgi tad that debonair foreiaa lawrnphera. lot dte Went'* mtmM9omwtm . , . its «jote locality . . . M Coatiaaruil fir, tm trwr SsWSSjS tiaJy ua-like tany i "

Mlneola. a l l ? V c ^ S l r m l n t r ^ p • 2 5 ? . »£*£""" ^ ^ **°* " consists of Mrs. Frederick W. Long­fellow, chairman; Mrs. Thatcher M. Brown, Mrs. F. Kingsbury Curtis, Mrs. Lyman Delano, Mrs, Adrian V. S. Lambert, Mrs. Wilton Lloyd Smith, Mrs. John Sloans, and Mrs. Wil l iam Jay Schiefftlln Jr.

When in New York—be Coetl-Beatat! Star •< die Viarr*.

G U E S T S AT T H E AMBASSADOR. Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Thornburgh

Carlton Thornburgh Jr., of P r o s e s Points , Mich., and Provi-denee, R. I., are at the Ambas­sador, Untitled Document

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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

www.fultonhistory.com

Untitled Document

file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AM

Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069

www.fultonhistory.com