in the end all you really have is memories 18/new york... · married amos lawrence hopkins, son of...
TRANSCRIPT
MAJOR TOTTEN, ARCHITECT; DIES He Designed Many Public
Buildings in Washington.
ROLAND B. HENNESSY IS DEAD
tor of the London Sketches, a aslne.
When Mr. Hennessy returned to New York he founded the New York Star, a theatrical publication, which he ran for several years, and after that ha became managing editor of the Vaudeville News, published by the Kelth-Albee Circuit.
Mr. Hennessy was born in Mil-ford, Mass., and be attended Columbia University. He lived in New Rochelle for twenty-eight years, but recently moved to Larchmont.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Muriel McArthur Hennessey; two daughters, the Misses Muriel and Cecile Hennessy, both of Larchmont; a son, Roland B. Hennessy Jr. of New
Retired Publisher of Radio World (York; a sister, Mrs. Lillian Ryan of
f a s Former Dramatic Critic.
i
e?
WASHINGTON. Feb. 3.-Major George Oakley Totten Jr., noted architect, died on Wedneaday in Mount Alto Hospital after an ill-D«M of more than six months. He WM 72 years old.
The designer of many homes in this city, he also drew the plans for ten embassies, including the present Turkish and Polish embassies M d the former French embassy. With William E. Lehman, Newark architect, Major Totten deaigned the new Newark Federal Post Office and Courts Building, constructed at a cost of $3,000,000 and opened three years ago.
Major Totten objected to a statue ef justice selected for a court room In the building, declaring that the statue, that of a woman, 1 esps
Staten Island, and a brother, Col. Frederick Hennessy, U. S. A., retired, of Monterey, Cal.
Dinner Pa r t i e s Tonight Precede Junior Assembly
Debutantes Will Be the Honored Guest at
Entertainments.
TO BE DINNER GUEST BEFORE ASSEMBLY
bi-,'likeaheavywelght prlsa fight
er and a neck like a wreatler. Last year when the piece waa put into the room Judge Guy L. Fake soon
Ellen D. Hopkins. Mrs. Ellen Dunlap Hopkins,
painter, author, philanthropist and founder of the New York School of Applied Design for Womea at 180 Lexington avenue, died today at her home at 121 Madison avenue at the age of 81 years. She had been In failing health for some time.
A funeral service will be held in her memory on Monday at 2 P. M. in the school for which nearly half a century ago she raised more than $212,000 to buy the land on which it stands and to erect and equip the building. She was a trustee for life.
Born in New York she waa the daughter of George Lincoln and Ellen Pond Dunlap. In 1886 she married Amos Lawrence Hopkins, son of the famous Mark Hopkins, the President of Williams College. He predeceased her.
A member of the National Insti-nad it taken out. ^ ^ f Q^^ Be l € l l c e i l a n d o f t n e
Major Totten was born in « « * ' | M . M M I - 1 A^m n „ h M „ m , , *».- . n n of th« late i National Arts Club, Mrs. Hopkins H« Z" £ t t ? n d w u » " the author of two books, "His-George Oakley Totten i was a L _M ̂ a i ^ - ^ ( ( M
York.
reetr the Neite
—«Hr; Ts* on the
been ap. i. The
Have
member of a family which had long lived in Staten Island, where Tottenvllle was named for it. In 1891 he was graduated from Columbia University, and four years afterward came to Washington, where he has sinced lived, otherwise spending his time in New York and Paris.
During the world war he was a major in the Engineer Corps. An expert on Mayan architecture. Major Totten was the author of ••*.„ A™>*««»";" « * u U , o c l - p r „ v . by thrir work . „ , th.lr i d e -
Paris, Madrid. Brussels,
The third Junior Assembly of the season will be held tonight in the ballroom of the Ritz-Carlton, pre ceded by many dinner parties for the debutantes of this year and last who, with their sponsors, make up the feminine part of the gathering.
Miss Madeleine Butt, daughter of Mrs. Frederic Foster de Khaiu of Tuxedo Park, is to be a guest before the assembly at a dinner which her godparents, Mr. and Mrs. George B. St. George, will give for her at the S t Regis. Miss Butt was one of the debutantes honored at the autumn ball in October at Tuxedo Park and she made her debut at a tea which her aunts, Miss Dorothy Sbepard of this city and Mrs. B. Devereux Barker of Boston gave in December at the Colony Club.
Among those in the party will be Mr. and Mrs. A. Biddle Duke, Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Bobbins, Mr. and Mrs. Alex C Forbes and the Misses Marion M. and Catherine 8. Colt, Josephine T. Adrian, Lydia B. Murray, Cynthia Fabyan, Madge 8. Lazo, Eleanor W. Mulr, Ethel-ette Tucker, Lister Butt, Patricia G. Foss, Nancy L Post, Mary E. Post, Dorothy D. Butler, Mary E. Plant, Mary Sidney and Wendy Iglehart.
Also William H. Woolverton Jr., John Powers, Edward J. Schirmer, William Jeffery, Laurens M. Hamilton, Jay Rutherford, Lawrence H. Butt, Stuart D. Preston Jr., Knowl-ton Cowdin, W. Barton Baldwin Jr.,
tory of the Stanwood Family"* and "History of the Utbgow Family."
In 1936 Mrs. Hopkins received the Michael Frledsam gold medal I count Basil Adlerberg, John Ker-for her contributions to art in industry. The citation declared her "a courageous leader in the education of women, student of the arts and friend of artists, firm believer in the gospel of work as an asset toward culture and in productive employment as an asset toward citizenship, sympathetic teacher of young designers destined to im-
London, "Sht of successful industrial art.
Vienna and Rome, and he had been appointed by President Roosevelt as secretary-general of the congress to be held here this year.
Major Totten was a member of the American Institute of Architects, being former president of its Washington chapter; the Archi-
F r a n k J . S c h u m a n n . Frank J. Schumann, purchasing
director for the United Drug Company in Boston and an employee of the company for more than a quarter of a century, died today at the Newton Hospital, Newton Falls,
rorker; •> himself. ear Una ef] i people la
and their rw thought I
tectural League and the Chevy)Mass., after an illness of eight Chase and University clubs, and he weeks. Mr. Schumann, who was was an honorary member of the 56 years old, lived at 100 Berkshire •ocltte Ontrale d* Architecture del Road, Newtonville, Mass. Beigique, the Old Russian Society ef Architects and the Austrian and Spanish societies.
society I n c is lurviTm »j mi wiie, Minnie Braster Schumann, and a aon,
In 1921 he married the former Robert, both of Newtonville, and by two aisters, Mrs. Louise Vogel
Vicken von Post and they had twol sangei and Mrs. Katherine Scully, sons, George Oakley Totten 3d and both of Richmond Hill, Queens
it—1 res sirable rutty aatisfs using
the evening n the noisi liar a hard o we hear? ren at play isly la U* i a sort ef harassed ef-i vindicttfs
the hearts i attempt** methlngtsr
servants, » cleaning ap lalation far so to white
Gilbert von Post Totten.
Roland B. Hennessy. Funeral services were held this
afternoon at the G. T. Davis funeral chapel, 14 La Count Place, New Rochelle, for Roland Burke Hen-jpj^^jj" nessy, retired president of the Hennessy Radio Publications Corporation, 146 West Forty-fifth street, publishers of the magazine Radio World. Mr. Hennessy, who was 89 years old, died on Wednesday night at his home in Uw Larchmont Hills Apartments, Larchmont.
A founder of the corporation, he was its head until he retired last
Funeral services will be held at 2:30 P. M. tomorrow at the Newton Highlands Congregational Church in Newton Highlands, Mass., after which the body will be brought to New York for services at 2 P. M. on Monday at the Falrchild Chapel,
avenue and Twelfth
nochan, Ewarts Ziegler, Peter H Hazard, Charles Warner, Edward N. Carpenter, Ralph Parsons, D a vld Hadden, Jamea H. Cleveland Jr., Alex Salm and Charles D. Dickey Jr.
Dinner at Iridium Room. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Poor of 163
East Eighty-first street will give a dinner in honor of their debutant daughter, Miss Grace Tread-well Poor, in the Iridium Room of the St. Regie preceding the assembly.
In the party will be Mr. and Mrs. Hastings Foote, the Misses Mary T. Paige, Nancy Taylor, Barbara Scott, Mary A. Veit, Nina R. Van Vechten, F. Mary Zabriskle and Eleonora Eaton, Charlaa Adsit Jr., Alastaire Anderson, Frederic H. Poor Jr., Walter Poor Jr., Benjamin Riggs, Edward Gibson, Edward Perkins, George Livermore. Charles Dennison, Thomas Walton, Ma-gruder Dent, Schuyler Meyer Jr., George Dtx, Philip Weldel. Francis ijtiue and ^sterling de G. Foots.
Dr. Preston Pope Satterwhite w>ll give a dinner at his home at 960 Park avenue in honor of Miss Florence Gilbert Tucker, debutante daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Tucker of the Gables, Locust
I., who is to sail tomor
Miss Hope Lyons To Be Wed Tonight To R. H. Newkirk Dr. Roelif Brooks, Who
Married Her Parents, to Officiate.
— ssssss
•
184 The marriage of Miss Hope Emer
son Lyons, daughter of Mr." and Mrs. Robert T. Lyons of 983 Park avenue, to Rudolph H. Newkirk, son of Mrs. Carl Newkirk of 19 East Eighty-second atreet and the late Dr. Newkirk, who was an attorney of Frankfort, Germany, is to take place this evening in the chantry of St. Thomas Church in the presence of the families.
The rector, the Rev. Dr. Roelif H. Brooks, who officiated at the marriage of the bride's parents twenty-five years ago, will perform the ceremony. A large reception will follow at the Lyons home.
Miss Faith Lyons is to be maid of [honor and Mias Gisela Newkirk J bridesmaid. Rudolph Snell will be best man and Robert Lyons will serve as usher.
The bride, whose father is a well known architect in this city, has studied at the Bennett School in
I Millbrook, N. Y., and at the Finch School here. Mr. Newkirk went to
I schools in Frankfort and Leipzig, Germany, and is in the importing business in New York.
The couple will go to Europe on their wedding trip. They will make their home in New York.
Hal Phjrte Photo. Miss Madeleine Butt, debutante daughter of Mrs. Frederic F. de Rham of Tuxedo, for whom Mr. and Mrs. George B. St. George will give a dinner tonight at the.St. Regis, preceding the Junior
Assembly. 11 T I ' •
By Way of Ment ion NEW YORK.
Willing Spencer is arriving today on the Aquitanla after passing the autumn and early winter with Mrs. Spencer at their home in Paris. He will return to France to join her in several weeks, after making plana for the rebuilding of Bailey's Beach at Newport. Mr. Spencer last autumn succeeded Dr. Henry Barton Jacobs as president of the Spouting Rock Association, the organization that controls the beach.
Sir Louis Beale, British High Commissioner for tne New Xork. World s Fair, and Lady Beale, are returning for another visit after passing part of the autumn here, and others listed on the Aquitanla include Sir William Firth, whose son, John Dudley Firth, married Mias Edythe
Miss Prichitt Is Bride Oi E. G. Miller Jr.
In the Church of the Resurrection this afternoon Miss Carol Prichitt, daughter of Mrs. James Tilney Houghton of 25 Eaat Eighty-sixth street and the late Hugh Kirkman Prichitt, is being married to Edward Godfrey Miller Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Godfrey Miller of Havana, Cuba. The Rev. Gordon Wadhams la performing the ceremony, and a reception follows at the Cosmopolitan Club.
The bride has her sister, Miss Margaret Prichitt, for her maid of
(honor. The other attendants are Pauline Robinson gave a luncheon M r > Aahbel T. Wall 3d, Mrs. Thoo-
TWEED COATS ffir Women*and iMisses,
19 Were, $2Q95 to $399$
The finest tweeds and monotones from famous Ajnetican mills — in plaids, stripes and vibrant mixtures. Also included are 21 two-piece' monotone suits in broken sizes, that were *39.9>,
IPOtTt SHOP • tOUKTH FlOOft
DE PINNA FIFTH AVENUE AT 3 2 as" STREET
there for Miss Virginia French.
The Duchess of Leinster entertained at luncheon yesterday at the Cafe Trouville for Mrs. Kenneth Ives, Mrs. Charles 8. Whitman, Miss Natalie Merrill and Mias Madeleine Mason Manheim.
Sir Victor Sassoon, Major Keith Trevor, the Marchioness of Reading and Count Charles Hugo Seilern,
street, Garden City, L. I. Burial will be in Evergreen Cemetery.
William M. Van Thoff. Funeral services were held this
afternoon in the Fort Washington Presbyterian Church, Wadsworth avenue and 174th street, for Wil Ham M. Van Thoff, who retired in
Valley, L. i woo is w> s>u "»roor-t 0 w y n n e Pearson of New York and row on the Georg c with her grand- 3 u l n m l t > as, j . ; S i r ^UKA a n d t^dy mother, Mrs Brokaw Dugmore for M c A l p l n e u d M r . a n d M r i . J o h n c a cruise to the West Indies and a w Buxton utter visit with Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Vail Brokaw in Paim Beach.
The guests, who will later go to the assembly, are. to include the Misses Joyce Ward, Elisabeth Howe, Suzanne Sturgts, Elvira Fairchild, Anne Wisner, Innes Drury, Eleanor Vom Rath, Sylvia White and Violet Rothwell and their escorts.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Melville Bull will give a dinner in the Sert
dore Newton, Mrs. Benedict Johnson, the Mlssea Sara Hanford, Henrietta Larkin and Patricia Miller, sister of the bridegroom.
John B. Miller is best man for his brother. The ushers are Harold W. Knight 2d, Harding F. Bancroft, Joun Robert A. Beatty, Lawrence D. Cavanagh, T. Rosa Cissel Jr., Garrard W. Glenn Jr., Townsend Munson, Robert F. Wagner Jr., William J. Welch, John F. Wilbur,
who a r r t ^ W e r d a v ' o V t h e ' N o r * - ! 3 * ^ Christopher and Dr. Pedro mandie, are at the Ambassador. , _ . ° .
• | The bride waa introduced to so-~ ' clety here three seasons ago.
Princess Margaret Boncompagnl T h e ^^^ w l n g o t o Nassau on of Paris, who arrived yesterday on their wedding trip. On their return the Normandle, will be at the W a l - j t h e y w i u U v e a t 3 1 1 j ^ geventy-dorf-Astoria until Monday, when , e c o n ( i atreet she will go to Washington.
tort-being de. open lot-
in the its? AM
• a dramatic i 1 9 2 7 * f t e r "*rvins* fifty-two years Room of the Waldorf-Astoria be ^ J e Tor The New York Morning H 1 " t h e N e w Y o r k C « n t r a l Sys- for. the assembly to introduce their £ 2 . r a „ h and tnln W M edi t™of t e m ' H e d , e d o n Wednesday at daughter, Mias Patricia Bull. The J^%J%J2!%JFmE!l£ 5? ** e o f 7 5 **** a n l , l n e M °« ••butant. was graduated last June iS ,Sn \E ZZSi*£m^£raa^dl>ear,y * y e a r - * H v e d a t 1 0 8 f r o m t h e *3naP«» ^hool acquentry serving for a year as eoi- W e - t 227th street.
Sieb Mr. Van Thoff went to work with
the railroad in 1879 as a messenger, working later in the freight and purchasing departments. For many
COLEMAX-Xavier, February 1, « » . y ^ r , n e w a a active in the Repub-Funeral 9 o'clock Saturday morn-],,---, C l u h o f t h ( , Twentv-third Aa-Ing. Stephen Merritt Chapel, W. 7Srd St.
MH
Entertain at Pierre.
The Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, who arrived yeaterday on the Normandle for a visit to Florida, have lent their London home In Kensington Palace Gardens for the wedding reception of the letter's niece, Miss Anne de Trafford, and D. H. Parker Bowles, whose marriage will take place at Brompton Oratory on February 1%.
The bride-to-be is the daughter of Sir Humphrey and Lady de Trafford, who have many friends here, and who two years ago passed a part of the winter at Palm Beach. Sir Humphrey is a steward of the English Jockey Club, and owns one
Mrs. Watson B. Dickerman and Watson B. Dickerman Jr. of Oyster Bay, L I., are at the Plaza.
Peter Cooper Bryce, who was at the Plaza, has departed for his home in Santa Barbara, Cal.
Mr. and Mrs. Halsted H. Myers of New Canaan, Conn., are expected at the Savoy-Plaza today.
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Green of!of the largest English racing King's Point, Great Neck, L I., stables. One of Miss de Trafford's will give a dinner for their daugh ter, Miss Georgina W. Green, tonight on the north balcony of the
sembly District and he waa inter- Corinthian Room at the Pierre and ested in the men's Bible class of later the members of the party will
thetwad uplift?
[playground! Indication at noma
that bourt that they
the parent! i we going to
dapri**« w Faro entitled,
our bomas Is going to
playing
E. P. ».
F10iT-On Wednesday, February 1, the Fort Washington Church, of at New Rochelle, N. Y., Jessie Ken- which be was a member and an nedy, age 78, widow of Orln C. elder of the session. He was also Frort and beloved mother of Mrs. a m e mber of the New York Rail-Edward B. Llbbey. Funeral private, j rom^ c i u f t .
•OFKlNa-Ellen Dunlap, on Febru-| Surviving are his wlfe^Mra Jo-i, M», daughter of the late George aephlno Johnson Van Thoff, and Lincoln and Ellen Pond Dunlap, founder of the N. Y. School of Applied Design for Women. Funeral service at the school, Lexington •v and aoth it., on Monday at 2 P. M.
KEPFLEB-ElljabHh Neely. beloved
a sister, Mrs. Anna Blauvelt.
T h o m a s D . A d a m s . Thomas Daviss Adams, for the
past eighteen years an engineer with the Borden Company, died on Wednesday night in Post Graduate
wife of Frederick L. Keppler. on Hospital after an extended illness. February 2. 1939. at 11:80 P. M. He waa in his fifty-eighth year. Funeral iervlcee on Saturday. Feb- i | r . Adams waa born In Westport, ruary 4. »t 2 p. M., at the Brick Conn., where he lived at his death, PMfertortaa Church Chapel, Park a n d „« W M g r a d u ated from Shef
field Scientific School of Yale Unl
it M la eoneeroed
n t the futura iboui wcttc"
Hfteaat potat I adTttakUn
alma of"1* R la toaaeST* k to devrtoP m. and tbsre-Xdeat of for-eottoo. g £
bee it include* lata axpan**08
»ark#t y ^ pooova.
a Haw Tasss
KEVSER-On February 3, 1939, at Monte Carlo, of pneumonia. Samuel 8tauffer Keyser, in hi* sixty-ninth year, beloved brother of Mrs. Crawford Clark.
•CHFMANN on February 3, 1»3» at Newton Hospital, Newton Falls. Mast., Frank J. Beloved husband of Minnie Braster and father of Robert F and brother of Mrs. Louise Vogelaanger and Mrs. Katherine foully. Services at the Fairchild Chspel, Franklin Ave., at 12th St., Garden City, Monday, at 2 p. m.
•n.VE*MAjr-Rachel. on -February I 1»39. in her 95th year, at her ""m*. Hotel Alamac. beloved wife
versify In 1902. He was a wldowsr, hi- wife, the former Minnie Sherwood, having died In 1936.
Furviving are a aon, Thomas D. Jr. of Memphis, Tenn.; two daughters, Miss Betty Adams and Mrs. Donald C. Harrison, both of New York; two brothers, Joseph Adams of Westport and Edward D. Adams of Brooklyn, and three aisters, Dorothy Adams of Westport, Mrs. T. Carroll Davis of Philadelphia and Mrs. Frank Dlabrow of Paaa- by Mrs. Richard
attend the assembly. Miss Green is a granddaughter
of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Rodman Townsend and a great-granddaughter of the late Charles Augustus Coe. She is a sister of Miss Alison Green, a senior at Bennington College, whose engagement to Alvah Woodbury Sulloway, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Charles Sulloway of Concord, N. H., waa announced earlier in the season
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Austin Clark of Southampton and Flushing, L. I., will entertain at dinner at the Pierre before the aaaembly for their daughter, Mias Elisabeth Dixon Clark. A tea dance waa given for Mias Clark at the Colony Club during the holiday season, and a New Year's Day reception at Evergreen Lawn, the home of her parents in Flushing. Miss Clark Is a sophomore at Smith College.
Peach trees in bloom against a background of largo oedar trees, sprays of forsythla and dusters of daffodils and purple Iris will be need in decorating the ballroom of the Ritz-Carlton for the aaaembly.
The guests will bo received by members of the committee headed
C Colt, and in-dena, Cal. eluding Mrs. S. Sloan Colt, Mrs.
Harry T. Peters, Mrs. Walter Phelps Bliss, Mrs. M. Walker Edwin Fisher Willis.
NASHVILLE, Feb. S (A. P . ) . - £>f*™- »Jrs. Charles Pratt, Mrs "f the late Louis, devoted mother of! Edwin Fisher Willis. 74, widely William Jay Schleffelln. Jr , and ««IHe, Ann and th* late Oeorg« and known churchman, Is dead. For i M r i - J u n , u * s - Morgan.
•me, toy,,, grandmother of
Jia •aid a*
Syd • nd loved great-grandmother of »ydne, *ecnnd. Services Temple Kmsnu-EI, ASth st. A 5th ave., Sunday. February 8, at 2 P. M. 8yra-fu«e. Albany, Rochester and Buf-
_alo papers please copy.
3n jWemoriam •frfEr.¥,fNG—In loving memory of
Lucie How Scbelllng, died February I 1838.
bridesmaids will be Miss Virginia Brand, a niece of Lady Astor.
Miss Frances Thord-Gray of Greenwich, Conn., and Mrs. Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte are in Baltimore today to serve aa judges at the annual dog show of the Maryland Kennel Club. The show will continue through tomorrow. A number of small social affairs will be given for the several out of town visitors. Among those from here who are exhibiting at the ahow are Mrs. Angler B . Duke, Mrs. Dodge Sloane, Mlsa Laura Delano, Mrs. Sherman R. Hoyt and Mrs. M. Hartley Dodge. «
Lady Mendl, the former Elsie de Wolfe, who was a recent visitor at the home of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor at Cap d'Antibes, haa leased the Chateau de la Garoupe on the Rivera, in the vicinity of the Ducal residence. Lady Mendl returned there yeaterday from Paris, and will remain until April 1.
Miss Alexandra Grosset oi May-fair House will give a dinner this evening in the Sert Room of the Waldorf-Astoria in honor of Miaa Frances S. Whitall of Acorn Farm, Katonah, N. Y., and her fiance, John L. C'aivocoressi, who are to be married on February 18.
Mrs. Ernest Harrah had Mrs. James Lenox Banks Jr., Mrs. Talbot Ewart and Mrs. R. Beverley Corbln among her guests at luncheon yesterday at the Madison. Miss
WASHINGTON. Mr. and Mrs. Jouett Shouae have
gone to Miami, where they will be guests of Col. and Mrs. M. Robert Guggenheim aboard their yacht.
Mr. and Mrs. James C. Dunn will go to New York on Monday next to meet their daughter, Countess Guy de BalUet-Latour, the former Miss Marianna Dunn, who will be with them in Washington for a abort viait before proceeding with Mrs. Dunn to Boca Grande, Fla.
Miss Andrea Sterling Engaged to Be Wed
Louis V. Sterling of 944 Park avenue today announced the engagement of bis daughter, Miss Andrea Sterling, to Roger Van Nest Pow-elson, son of Wilfred Van Nest Powelaon of 960 Fifth avenue, and the late Mrs. Powelaon.
Miss Sterling Is a graduate of the Spence School and is a member of the Junior League.
Mr. Powelaon was graduated from the University of Virginia and the Columbia Law School. He ia a member of the University Club, the Piping Rock Club and Squadron A. Mr. Powelaon ia at present an assistant United States District Attorney for the southern district of New York.
H. A. Rhodes to Wed Miss Betty Butler
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Butler of 115 Central Park West, today announced the engagement of their daughter, Miss Betty Butler, to Herbert A. Rhodes of thia city, aon of Mrs. Arthur C. Rhodes and the late Arthur C. Rhodes. Miss Butler waa graduated from the Gardner School last May.
Mr. Rhodea attended Storm King School and Swarthmore.
The wedding will take place In the spring.
ENTIRE STOCK OF Cjtur Trimmed
TWEED COATS *
38 regardless of cost
Lavish fur collars and cuffs of
BADGER • BEAVER • SKUNK • WOLF
tPORTS SHOP • FOVtTM rlOOt
DE PINNA FIFTH AVENUE AT S2s« STREET
5 | t I
below tb*
i feature aa medical f**|
t « m for 0°** [term toT
Imowa i*i
astro**
Salter IB. Coofee DlGMIrlEDFUHER*iS^$i50
la ota showrooms w» many mas-mftcttit ritkrri m hrnitir mihni • OT. out and metal, which »r« plainly marked, and the price tact ud at complete funeral.
1 1 7 Want 72nd I t . let, S rfwoy end CatmfcbtM *»«.
#• I V Km** V » i » i « n "
CaN TWafafgae 7 o700
retire «e Write fee
twenty-six years he waa treasurer! _ . . . ^ . - i * T S / J of the, executive committee of for- r . fV. C / H / a S WeaS elgn missions of the Presbyterian I f jV* Jean loers Church In the United States. ' '
Sheriff McGuirk. Sheriff Joseph J. McGuirk of
Hudson coanty died of a heart attack today at Miami Beach, Fla., It waa announced at the office of Mayor Hague in Jersey City.
Sheriff McGuirk lived at 140 Win-field avenue, Jersey City. Ha went South recently and waa stopping at the Hotel Embassy. Deputy Mayor Malone of Jersey City took charge of the body pending the arrival of Mayor Hague, who waa due In Miami Beach today for a several weeks" holiday In Florida.
Frank A. Brownall. ROCHESTER, N. T., Fab. S (A.
P.).—Frank A. Brownell, former manufacturer and bank official, who was associated with the late Oeorge Eastman In the early development of roll films and cameras died yesterday at his hoi hero at tan aga ef M> yaara«
Mias Jean Joers, daughter of Mrs. William H. Joers, of 3 Eaat Sixty-ninth street is being married today to Frederick Newell Childa of this city, son of the lata Mr. and Mrs. C. Frederick ChlkJs of Lake Forest, 111., in the chantry of St Thomas Church, by the rector, the Rev. Dr. Roelif H. Brooks. A reception follows at the Colony Club.
Mias Anne Joers is her sister's maid of honor. Attendants also include Mrs. Philip Dater and Miaa Nancy Miller of this city: Miss Virginia Schoepf of Scarsdale, N. T., Miss Ruth Dlercks of Kansaa City and Miss Eleanor Mullaly of New York.
Theodore S. Proxmlre Jr., Lake Forest Is best man. Ushers are Aldts J. Browne Jr., Chicago, and William R. Tupper, A. Sanford Kellogg, C. Alan Hudson Jr. and Wil-
B. Coburn, Now York. l " d h i m rnejr ^ o t i Other Society News an Page 28,
DINNER AND
SUNDAY NIGHT ENTERTAINMENT
1 Wpx* S 154 East 54 St.
F.rale MaJst ant Him Orthtttrm
Announcing o Now Policy
'ROAD TO MANDALAY"
AT1H!
DELMQNICO •A*K A v iNUI ••»•»*» tT
SUPPER ROOM Oeea beet. 10 ». M. Sail* •«<«o> $»n<fa«
Cover tkerae SahwSa* I SO ear eenrm
jSjBnsjSj Qs js asjssajsi IMaateono*
Oreti • referred •
NEIIA GOO0CUI
JOStrH I IN IS I MIS ORCHESTRA
MlhrOt AND ROOT
0»OSA COSTItlO WITH H H
' ICHOfS Of CUeA"
MANDALAY BAR Cocktail Dancing daily lecludino
Sunday
CHARUl WtlOMT-Sonos & Muilc
lOS CAIAVARAS—Troubadon
Msndosov Cocktail Orchettro
j«4»e- VOfeata** 1-1100
1
c/njtmdujewgL:
freak K. Pakefcad
FAIRCHILD
X T TAKES a long time to build a service organization such as the one my father
started in Brooklyn in 1886. That is because this is one service that simply has to be right! People come to us shocked and dazed by the loos of a loved one and expect us to carry them over some of the most difficult days of their entire life. And we do i t How? That ia the thing I want to make clear.
"Above all the others, one circumstance stands out It isn't the fact of our long experience; it isn't our extensive resources. It isn't even the smooth coordination of many large and small details which make for the perfect service as a whole. All these are present but there is something else. That "something" is found in the kind of men and women who render Fairchild service.
"The things these men and women do reflect their special temperament and special training. They find their work interesting, never morbid and often inspiring. I think the public ought to know more about these people and I am going to have them speak for themselves in a series of advertisements which we shall call "FAIRCHILD P»notmlitim?\ They will appear regularly in this newspaper, starting a week from today. I hope and believe you will find them worth reading.
FAIRCHILD SONS INC MORTICIANS
8 6 LeffcrU P U e e • Bi-ooltl.rn
jAMAsea
a t . W •sy^f tB id Sssl
FLOSRntO aaafagif CITY
i—mmf
mrwkk
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