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The Edwardsville Intelligencer from Edwardsville, Illinois • Page 5

Location:
Edwardsville, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Intelligencer's Daily Society and Feature Page Couple Were Married. Miss Amanda Nobbe and Arthur Hillebrand, widely known young people of Worden, were united In marriage at tho parsonage of the Lutheran Church on Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. ROT. H. C.

Kothe performed the double ring ceremony. The were Miss Pearl Meyer of Staunton and William Hillebrand of Wood River. The bride waa attractively attired in an ensemble of brown silk crepe with hat and slippers to match and wore a corsage of pink roses. The bridesmaid wore a costume of dark blue with hat to match and a corsage of pink roses. Following the ceremony a reception was held at tho home of the bride's parents for the Immediate The couple will reside on a a near Worden where the groom hns erected a home.

The bride It an attractive young lady, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. diaries Nobbe. The couple weie married on tlio fortieth wedding unnlver- nary of tho groom's parento, Mr. and Mr, Charles Hlllpbrnnd of I'nilrle- tov, n.

Guests piosent tit the inception wen- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hllle- brand and Alfred and Ewald Hllle- brnnd, Misses Vern, and Mildred Htllebraml, Mr. and Mrs. i and a i all of a Mr, and Mrs.

August Albi-pclit, Miss Nora Birmingham of Warden, Mr and Mrs. Malvern Mar- mndtike, Mr nnd Mrs. William Wolft and a i of LoulB. 1'nrlj Hi-lil. Dr.

ami Mrs. H. O. inirtl entertained three tables at bridge with a topsy-turvy pnrty rday evening. The guests wore Invited for 7 o'clock dinner.

Plans for tho evening were cloveily arranged by tho host and host oss. "Fresh Paint. Use Rear Door" was the sign that confronted the guests. They compiled with the request and Into the house. Furnishings were topsy-turvy, chairs being upside down, vases and other articles out of natural position and faces of were turned to thu wall.

Dinner wns served i a style and no order was arranged for (Kn- partners. Crcim tomato was served In sherbets. Awarding of prlzoi was not in the usual order, lliose with high scores receiving HIP booby prizes. The vent to Mrs Vos Jones of St. Louis, Mrs.

Pearl Blown, Chas. F. Foul und Herbert Crocker. Entertain- With Luncheon. Miss Helen Keslmer and Mis Mary Whlteslde entertained at.

a o'clock bridge at the former'! horn Saturday afternoon. A detleiou luncheon was served. Chrysanth mums were used In decorating. There were six tables. Favor were awarded to Mrs.

J. E. Mahone of Wood River, Misses Doroth Gecrs, Verlee Schwarz and Virgin! Harris, The out of town guests were Mr, John Stolze, Mrs. P. L.

Meek Granlt, City, Miss Lucille Sheets St. Louis, Miss Mary Parsons, R. Akcn, Miss Bernadette Merke Miss Lucille Young of Alton, Mrs. Muhoney and Mrs. Alvln Stolze Wood River.

lUrthday Was Observed. Mr. and Mrs. William Henke en tertalned guests at their home Sunday evening In honor of Hcnke's birthday. Cards and musl furnished entertainment and a lunch eon was served.

Those present were Mr. and Mrs Oby Dawson, and daughter Mildred Mr. and Mrs. Relnhardt Kruckeberg Mr. and Mrs.

Wlllard Henke an family, Mr. and Mrs. August Henke Mr. and Mrs. Walter Gueldner, Mr and Mrs.

L. 'Henke, Mrs. Katherln Henke, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Stllle an daughter Lucille, Mr.

and Mrs. Oil; or Wllhold and son Earl. Entertained at Bridge. Mlbscs Jessie Little and Doroth Cunningham entertained at bridge a the Cunningham home on Saturda afternoon complimentary to Mis Evelyn Smith. The favors at bridge were award eel Mrs.

Christ Jahns, Misses Mar McLean, Julia Erspamer nnd Mis Smith was presented with a beautifu gift.A delicious luncheon was served The out of town guestj were Mis Hussell Dale of Alton, Mrs. Howar Henley, Granite City, Mrs. Donal Sager of St. Louis and Mis Bernadinc Busick of St. Louis.

RnU'rtnlncd Elnifi Bllrcn entertained i 7 o'clock bridge i at her home on St. Louis Street, Saturday complimentary to her house Kiiuvt Miss Josephine i a of St. Loul" The home was decorated i russet and gold rlujsantlieiiniius and Jack 'o a The Hallowe'en idea i i used tlio com SB i The ptizrs at bridge were awarded to Miss Jtm'plilnu Giiliman, Miss i Lone, i Itaebcr and Jolin Dee. The guests of tho evening were i Cartel 1 nnd Ted Vahl- m.iti of East St. Louis, Miss Mary Kluaboth Soliooley and Chalmers Tucker of a i City, Miss Jose- plilno i a Edwaitl Frlck, John Doe, Hudson Talbott and William i a of St.

Louis, Mlssos Eileen and Frances Bohm atul Clarence Kaebcr of this city. Surprise Was Given. C. C. Rubsell was very pleasantl surprised Sunday at his home on th Troy Road in honor of his 71st birth day.

A chicken dinner was serve and tlio afternoon was spent in social manner. The guests included Mr. and Mrs Dempsey Mlze, and son John an daughter Helen, Mr. and Mrs. N.

Mlze and sons Russell and Reed Bunker Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Calvi Bruce and son-Elmer and daughter Lotino and Katherine, Mrs. Mar Russell and daughter Edythe Stauuton, and Mrs. Charles Geihard and son Jackie of this city.

Snrprlso Party Held. Mrs. William Casey and Mrs. Edit; Moore were pleasantly surprised a their home on Thursday evening neighbors and friends. A pleasan evening, was spent and a luncheon served, Those piesent were Mrs.

Juli Br.rth and children, Mrs. Rudolpl Dtimbrow and daughter, Mrs. Charles Quado and children, Mrs. James Flai'ln and son, Mrs. H.

Constantino Mrs. Everett Butcher and daughter Mrs. James Weaver and children Mis. Noinian Fletcher and children Mrs Pete Spaiks, MIsa Loretta Golf, Club -Wns Entertained Mrs. A Werner entertained members of her card clnb'at hei home on Friday afternoon.

The prize was awarded to Mrs. J. T. Crocker. WILDEY THEATER TONIGHT AND TUESDAY "Texas Jack" Tom Mix's Pal (IX PKHSON) With A High-Class, Snappy Stage Attraction INTRODUCING Marge Meyers HOLLYWOOD'S PERSONALITY COW-GIRL (IN PEnsON) Rifle Sharpshooting Pistol Exhibition Lassoing You have seen "Texas Jack" many times on the silver screen with Tom Mix--now sec nnd meet him in person! Ho is the world's fastest pistol shot and only living; man who can actnolly perform the innie lightning-- fast "draw," "hip-shot" nnd "hamiuer-fannlnit" that made "Wild MIT Hlckok tho most feared gnn fighter Thlf Don fall to sco "Testa, Jack" show these speed-shots on the stage! Both the cowboy and cowgirl give a treat exhibition of trick and fancy lassoing.

TWO COMPLETE PICTURE SHOWS I3EFOKE AND AFTER STAGE PERFORMANCE. THIS ATTRACTION APPEARING ONCE at 0:00 O'CLOCK. Price of Admission: Adults, 35c; Children, 10c FEATURE PICTURE TONIGHT "THE HOUSE OF HORRORS" Meeting at Alton. The Madison County League of Women Voters will hold' a meeting tomorrow at the Stratford Hotel Alton. Following business meet- Ing there will be a tea.

Mrs. L. Lunde of Chicago will be the speaker. A number from here are planning to attend. Entertained Gnets.

Mr. and Mrs. T. Damkey entertained at dinner yesterday, Mr. and Mrs.

John Damkey, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Damkey and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Chris Rhule and children of Staunton.

Guests at Dinner. Mr. and Mrs. F. W.

Schwager and Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Schwager were entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John L.

Schwager yesterday. Personals Mrs. V. H. Pulsifer is spending several clays visiting in Chicago.

Mrs. H. L. Porter of Decatur is spending the week with Mrs. E.

0. Brown. Mrs. Ann Carr of St. Louis spent Saturday and Sunday with Mrs.

J. T. Crocker. Mr. and Mrs.

J. A. Barnett of Crescent City are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Prank Barnett.

Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Howden spent Sunday at Flat River, with Mr.

and Mrs. D. C. Lucey. Mr.

and Mrs. Paul Scaulze of Springfield spent yesterday with Mr. and Mrs. John Schneider and family. Mr.

and Mrs. J. F. Keshner and daughters spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.

E. P. Keshner of Signal Hill. Mr. and Mrs.

Edward Pauly Jr. and Mr. and Mrd. J. T.

Mooney witnessed the polo game in St. Louis yesterday. Mrs, Louise Armstrong will depart this week for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Armstrong of Indianapolis.

Vcrnon Vallet and Stanley Vallet of St. Louis spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, H. Schrlmpf. Stanley Vallet recently returned from a trip to Europe.

Mra. Lizzie Kopp, Mrs. Fred Drebes, Mrs. William Meckfessel and Miss Marie Ebmeier of St. Louis spent yesterday with Mr.

and Mrs. Louts Kueker. Miss Dorothy Whlttleman of Alton, John Warren of Wood River and Mr. and Mrs. M.

C. Spltze attended the Missouri-Nebraska football game at Columbia, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A.

Brown of Peters and Mr. and Mrs. Perry Massey of Granite City motored to Hillsboro Sunday and visited with Mr. and Mrs, J. R.

Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Clem Brown of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, who are leaving for California to spend the winter with their son, Lawrence Brown. They will also visit at Phoenix, Arizona. Softer Fabrics For Fall LAST RITES WERE HELD FOR MRS.

SCHEIBE OP CARPENTER Funeral services were held Saturday at 1 o'clock from the Lutheran Church of Carpenter for Mrs. Braille Sclieibe, 7G, who died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Oliver Woodcock, of near Waterloo, Wednesday, October 23. She was born In Gru, Saxony Germany, October 21, 1854, and was united In marriage to Charles Sclieibe In 1878. Burial was made at Zlons Cemetery at Carpenter.

She is survived by 3 sons, Max Scheibe of Valmeyer, Charles Schelbe of Edwardsville and Rev. F. L. Schelbe of Pleasant Valley, Oklahoma, and four daughters, Mrs. Oliver Woodcock of Waterloo, Mrs.

Henry Aahauer of Carpenter, Mrs. Gus E)etermann of Edwardsville and Mrs. Win. Woodcock of Waterloo. Mr.

Scheibe preceded his wife in death about 10 years ago. The pallbearers were Milton and 31mer Woodcock, Walter and Oliver Schelbe and Hen-y and Carl Ashauer. 'An Imported coat from Vlonnet (above) is black and white twee with krimmer puff cuffs and a novelty shawl collar. It is topped by a little Marie Christiane black velvet turban. Agnes fashioned a smart tweed beret (below) of beige and brown shading, with a chic oft-the-face move oient and fullness on the side.

NATURAL GRACE Anyone can be graceful. There are two ways to achieve this most desired effect. The first one is to have the lutely perfect co-ordination and control of your muscles that cc-mes from leading an athletic life. The other is to understand how to relax. I shouFd if you have perfect muscular control you do understand how to relax.

You must, of course, watch yourself most carefully for awkward motions and awkward attitudes, and for this there is nothing b'etter than a long mirror. You should make it a part of your dressing table, either build- KTJDNAPPED BOY HAS IDENTIFIED CAPTORS Detroit, Oct. 26--Eight of he men and women held in connec- ion with the ranaon kidnaping of 5-year-old Jackie Thompson today will be taken to the Thompson home where Jackie will attempt to Ident- fy the suspects as the persons who eld him a prisoner 24 dajs. Jackie already has identified James ''ernando, the alleged lead of the Idnapers, from newspaper pictures one of the men who bundled him nto an automobile In front of his ome Sept. 80, police revealed today, ackle was returned home by detoc- ives Wednesday night after his fath- Henry S.

Thompson, IB said to ave given the kipnapers cash and otes totaling $26,000. Sonnomann Out For Congress. Pana, 111., Oct. 28--Otto C. Son- emann, Carllnvllle former state rep- csentatlve, has his candidacy for the epubllcan nomination for Congress- ian of the 21 district Frank M.

arnfcy, present Congressman, will op- ose him. Two years ago Sonncmann jposed Ramey for the nomination, served several terms In the legls- iture. tractive. The one great thing to watch for, is nervous The gieat fault of Arneiican women is that thej are never still, they have no repose and no restfuluess. If their hands are not going their tongues are, and us ually it's both to gether.

Learn to si Quietly, to keep your hands quiet, to relax jour body. Grace and repose come from that. Be as active as you want and go ir as much as jou can for sports, for these will give you muscular control and physical poise both of which tend toward grace. especially recommend dancing as an artificial means of acquhing natural grace. Margaret Scale on the scalp is more easily cured than dandruff, but they are not the same disease in different degrees.

The treatment would be very different iu either case if a scalp spciallst prescribed for them. While cases of scale may be cured a few weeks of daily treatments, dandruff might take months before there was a complete cure. Very dry scalps if neglected will be apt to form scales, and any collection of skin particles on the scalp becomes a germ condition that causes complete deterioration of the head of hair. Even mild cases of scale will choke the life out of the hair about the roots, which cause a great deal of the hair to fall out. Grace Can Be Cultivated.

Ing your dressing table round it or having It near your table in such a position that you get a full length reflection of yourself all the time you dress and do your face. It will show whether you sit badly or well, whether you put your clothes on properly or not, what you look like from the side and back; and, it you observe yourself closely enough, it will show you which of your motions are awkward and which are attractive. The only advice I can give you, really, IB' to watch yourself very closely and to correct as far as you can all gestures that do not look at- ISAAC LAMB DIES OK OLD AGE AT COCXTY HOME HERE Isaac Lamb died at 7 5 5 Satuiday evening at the County Home here. Death was due to complications incident to old age. Mr.

Lamb was born in England, August 5, 1839, and at the time of his death was 90 years of age. Funeral services will be held tomorrow at 2 o'clock from the Straube and Schneider Funeral Home and burial will be made at Sunset Hill Cemetery, Rev, T. M. Porter will officiate. Mr.

Lamb is survived by Sirs. Wm. Ponpson, Margaret Luston'and John Luncsford of St. Louis, Elizabeth Neil and James Lamb of Indiana, Jane Alice Farris of Kansas and Mrs. Charles Waller of Joplin, Mo.

THEY JUST HAVEN'T THE STAMINA Fell to talking about divorce yesterday. Divorce as a fact. Not in the newspapers, but In the lives of everyday people among whom you and I live. One woman who is around 40 and whose friends naturally range around that age said: "You hear a lot about divorce, but I was thinking over my college friends, and my high school triends, and the people in our town that I know best, and you'd be surprised how few divorces there are. There's our bridge club.

Not a single livorce. And only one among 12 girls roomed on the top floor my senor year. Of course two aren't married, but even at that one divorce out of ten doesn't sound like the figures you read in the newspapers. I think all this talk is greatly And then another i said: 'Yes, I know. But you are talking about people between 40 and 50.

They are really people of the last genera- ion, aren't they And it isn't they who are getting the divorces so much as the younger set. Think of the youngsters you know between 20 and 30 and see if that isn't a different story." We did think, and to me at least hat did open a surprising vista. There were two youngsters who used come to a camp near us summers seems two or three years ago that hey were boys 15. As a matter of act, I suppose it was nearer ten years knew that one of them had been married and divorced; and recently he other of whose affairs we knew tothing, came down with a girl and ame to call. We wondered if it were ils fiancee, but in a moment when the girl was elsewhere he took our breath away and explained: "No sir, I'm hrough with marriage for life.

I got my divorce last year." (We hadn't yet eard of his marriage but subsequent- found it only lasted six months.) And then I thought of a fine old amily I knew in which divorce was unheard of in the older generations. The children of the branch I know are not yet of the marrying age, but two ephews, who are both under 30, have leen married, stuck it out a ypar or ess and passed through the divorce ourts. These are typical cases. Divorce for he younger people is in the air. It's a last resort possible hut not to bo taken if it can any way be avoided! It's just an ever present exit to used to avofd any unhapplness or discipline.

What's made the difference? Partly the lifting of social ban on divorce. Partly the weakening of religious faith, the spreading of the feeling "this is the only life I have to lead and I must get all the personal happiness out of It I can" (and the failure to realize that, entirely apart from any expectation of punishment or reward, you can't destroy other people's happiness without killing something in yourself). And partly, I think, the fact that today's (and yesterday's) children have rio many luxuries, so many indulgences, such a continual round of pleasures that they too much of life. Consequently when they are thrown on their own and have to put up with some discipline, some self denial, some sacrifice, they blame it on marriage or on their specific partner in marriage. What's going to be the end of it all? A reaction toward the old way of living? Or are we really going to modify or even abolish the institution of marriage as it now exists? How one would like tr look forward a hundred years and see! SHABBILY DRESSED BUT HAD IX St.

Louis, Oct. 28--Police today were attempting to determine why a man, dressed in shabby clothes, should have concealed in his clothing, $2,929. While -walking a beat last night, Patrolman James Fox picked up a poorly dressed man. Believing him to be a bum. Fox took him to headquarters for possible arraignment on vagrancy charges.

A seaich revealed the money and tho man was sent to an observation ward. The money was found in a coat lining. A Chuckle A Day Hannibal. Oct. 28--Isaac White 1 lias just obtained a Hunting license for the coming year.

PRAYER AND BUSINESS. If through the business of the day I can but one buef moment spend Unselfishly to play the friend And help another on his way Then with better heart, may pray To God for help at that day's end, If I have put myself aside For one brief moment to bestow On one who, bowed by care or woe. Asks for the aid I can Then who oft am tiouble tried. With better grace to God maj go. But if I count my busy the need I plainly see And will not pause the fiiem! to be; What right have I in my dismay At any time to God to pray Beseeching Him to comfort Peerless Cleaners Reduce Cleaning Prices MEN'S SUITS SI Cleaned and Pressed MEN'S O'COATS SI Cleaned and Pressed PLAIN SILK DRESS Cleaned and Pressed WOMEN'S PLAIN COATS Cleaned and Pressed Cl With FUR COLLAR $1.25 A 5 0 Cleaned and Blocked WE INSURE ALL CUSTOMERS' GOODS MEMBER OF NATIONAL ASSOCIATION CLEANERS AND DYERS PHONE 401 Edwardsville, III.

Wood River, III. ANYTHING A CVEBrnUNG 110 St. Louis Street 2t3 Ferguson Avenue fSPA-PERI.

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About The Edwardsville Intelligencer Archive

Pages Available:
172,747
Years Available:
1869-1977