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The Racine Journal-Times Sunday Bulletin from Racine, Wisconsin • Page 19

Location:
Racine, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Bridge Honor Is Accorded Mrs. White Mrs. Dorothy Collins White, 3120 Taylor executive secretary of the WisconsinUpper Michigan Bridge Association, has been elected first vice president of the executive board of the American Contract Bridge Other officers are Irving Berkson, Chicago, president, and Mrs. Leigh Grant, Hammond, second vice president. Previously, Mrs.

White had been appointed to the League's board of governors, representing Wisconsin and Upper Michigan. The election to vice president of the executive board comes from District 13, which she will represent. District 13 includes the Chicago area and part of northern Illinois, northern Indiana, Wisconsin and Upper Michigan. Wisconsin has been alloted a new Regional event for 1959, Mrs. White has announced.

Scheduled Sept. 17 to 20 in Milwaukee, it is expected to draw many national bridge experts and will be the largest ever held in Wisconsin. The Racine Duplicate Bridge Club and the Racine Women's Duplicate Bridge Club will host the 1959 Wisconsin State Championship events at the Elks Club Oct. 17 and 18. MRS.

JOHN HAGY JR. (Sharon Dykstra) Sharon Dykstra Now Mrs. Hagy Sharon Joy Dykstra, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dykstra formerly of Racine and now residing in Altus, became the bride of John Hagy son of Mr.

and Mrs. John Hagy Wilcoe, W.Va., when the couple spoke their wedding vows in Altus Bast Chapel at Altus Air Force Base, where the bridegroom is stationed. The 3 p.m. ceremony Dec. 27 was performed by Chaplain Hass.

The bride, given in marriage by her father, appeared in a light blue gown. Her accessories and the hat holding her short veil were in white. She carried a bouquet of white carnations intermingled with lilies of the valley. Mrs. Donald Crowell of Sturtevant, attended her sister as matron of honor attired in a medium blue gown with which she had beige accessories and a corsage of pink carnations.

The bridegroom had W. Blackman of Altus AFB, as his best man, Mrs. Dykstra attended her daughter's wedding wearing a medium blue dress accented by a white carnation corsage. The bridal couple was honored with a wedding dinner Sagamar preceding an evening reception in the Servicemen's Club on the base. They left on a wedding trip to Vernon, and returned to reside in Altus.

and Mrs. Dykstra are expected to visit in Racine after his discharge from the Air Force in February. They go to West Virginia where the bridegroom plans to serve with the State Highway Patrol, Vermont is the only state the east with a mountain running through the middle the state for its entire length. -Journal-Times Photo Mrs. Louis L.

Cahoon Marks Her 90th Milestone All of her great -grandchildren, five of her eight grand- of Mr. and Mrs. Richard V. Jones of Deerfield. Mrs.

children and all four of her daughters were present when Cahoon was born Winifred Van Arsdale in Kenosha, and Mrs. Louis L. Cahoon, 1441 College celebrated her came to Racine as a young girl. She attended Winslow 90th birthday anniversary on Sunday, Jan. 18.

Above, School. Mrs. Cahoon and her late husband built the home Mrs. Cahoon is shown with the -grandchildren, in- on College Ave. which she still occupies.

Her daughters cluding Betsy Sue Jones, 3, on her lap and (continuing are Miss Carolyn Cahoon, Mrs. Ellsworth O. (Alice) Jones, clockwise) Stephen Cahoon Jones, Ann Cahoon Jones, Mrs. Herman (Louise) Lynch and Mrs. John (Grace) Geyer.

Richard Craig Jones, and Sally Lynn Jones, 8. Ann is For 60 years Mrs. Cahoon has been an active member of the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Jones of Racine, the Woman's Club.

Its Graham-Cahoon Unit is named while Sally, Richard, Stephen and Betsy Sue are children for her and for the late Mrs. O. P. Graham. Five Sisters Take Part in Wedding as Sixth Becomes Mrs.

David Kramer The choir of Holy Name Church, of which the bride i is a member and her father the director, sang the nuptial music when Trudy Beth Rodenkirch, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Rodenkirch, 924 Villa and Cpl. David. R.

Kramer, USMC, son Dave Kramer, Route 1, were united in marriage. The Rev. Vincent Schneider was celeof the wedding mass at 11 a.m. Jan. 17 in Holy Name Church.

The bride, escorted by her father, appeared in white slipper satin, styled with a Peter Pan collar of rosepoint lace. The lace was repeated at the waistline to form an Empire motif, and the full skirt extended in a sweep train. Her fingertip French illusion veil was caught to a pleated net plateau headpiece. For "something old," she wore the gold cross of her paternal grandmother. Her prayerbook boucombined sweetheart roses the valley and white mums.

Five of the bride's sisters were in the wedding party. Virginia Rodenkirch was her" maid of honor and junior, bridesmaids were Diane, Susan, Toni and Christine Rodenkirch. Serving as bridesmaids were Donna Holsinger and Karen Wilear. The adult aides identical jadette green taffeta frocks ballerina with skirts. bow-trimmed full They matching flowered trimmed with pearls and rhine-000 stones and carried white mums and white carnations pinned to white muffs.

The junior atattendants were in similar jadette dresses with matching halfhats and smaller muffs with holly and white baby mums. Attending the bridegroom were Gene Kupper as best man, and the bridegroom's cousin, Jerry Kramer, and brother, Larry Kramer, as ushwillers. For her daughter's wedding and breakfast and the reception in the church hall, Mrs. Rodenkirch wore antique white. In brocade with fur trim at the range scoop neckline.

Mrs. Kramer, of mother of the bridegroom, was; a mink tone silk sheath with We have a thrilling NEW COLLECTION of MILLINERY Every Hat Personally Selected Gertrude Thielen Williams "HAT SHOP" 318 SIXTH STREET Show Puts Spotlight on Mosaics Thirty mosaic sculptures and panels will be exhibited at Wustum Museum through Feb. 22. They were designed and executed by students of Immaculate Heart College, Los Angeles. Sylvester Jerry, Wustum director, notes that the current exhibit is the "heaviest" show ever brought to Wustum.

Total weight of the 30 pieces is 4,628 pounds. The art program of Immaculate Heart College, based primarily on an attitude of investigation and experimentation with the ordinary in unusual contexts, has had encouraging success, Jerry reports. The department currently has 18 shows of mosaics, banners, paintings and drawings circulating, including the Wustum exhibit. Under the direction of Sister Magdalen Mary and Sister Mary Corita, Immaculate Heart art students have evolved a fresh approach to mosaics that has the quality of a ginuine folk art. Using inexpensive tesserae and tile combined with other unexpected materials, such as discarded costume jewelry, broken and fused glass from bottles, buttons, or anything that will work, in an imbedment of colored magnasite or cement, these mosaics have won respectful attention.

Urge Easy Care for Rough Hands How do your hands feel when you dry them after doing the dishes? Rough, dry and crackly? If they do, you're sharing a common complaint of most women in the wintertime. There's only one thing to do about your hands in the winter months: cream them. Cream them each time you take them out of water. Cream them thorToughly before you go to bed at night. And don't protest that the cream gets all over thing.

There are many every; lotions available which are not in the least sticky. As you cream your hands, remember that the only ugly hands are neglected hands. Hands which look old or dry or cracked are hands which never had the proper care. Yours can look smooth and soft all of your life if you just give them daily attention. -Zahns Studio Arlene Richter Betrothed Announcement is being made by Mr.

and Mrs. William Richter, 1242 Goold of the engagement of their daughter, Arlene Joan, to Edwin Whitt, son of Mrs. Nettie Whitt, Winthrop Harbor, Ill. No wedding date has been set. dyed deep Bros SIXTH AT VILLA Of course, you can RENT Formals and inexpensively! Choose from our large selection of formals.

All freshly cleaned and pressed, and expertly fitted. They're Stain Shy. Crease Resistant, A few dollars rent them, for a most enjoyable evening! RACINE SUNDAY BULLETIN Sunday, January 25, 1959 10 MRS. MILTON BARRY OLSEN (Sharon O'Connell) Olsen-O'Connell Marriage Solemnized at Atonement In a quiet ceremony, with their immediate families as the only witnesses, Miss Sharon Lynn O'Connell and Milton Barry Olsen were united in marriage at 2 p.m. Saturday in Atonement Lutheran Church.

The pastor, the Rev. Jerome Miller, officiated. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Patrick O'Connell, parents of the bride, gave the reception later lat their home, 1116 Main St.

Young Mrs. Olsen is the granddaughter of Mrs. Grover Weyland and the late Mr. Weyland, Ordination Shows International Note FALUN, Sweden--A retired Swedish bishop whose diocese was in India ordained here Chinese theological graduate for a ministry that will begin in England. The new Lutheran pastor, James Ma, is a 31-year-old former major in the Chinese Nationalist Army.

He hopes to organize a self-supporting Chinese Lutheran church in the British port city of Liverpool. This would bring to ten the number of foreign nationalities in Great Britain served in their own tongues by Lutheran pastors. Rev. Ma is a member of the Lutheran Church of Hong Kong and a graduate of its theological seminary. He was ordained by 75-year-old Bishop Emeritus Johannes Sandegren, who was born in India of missionary parents and who was head of the Tamil Lutheran Church there from 1933 till 1956.

Sixteen pastors assisted in the ordination ceremony, and of Mrs. P. J. O'Connell and the late Mr. O'Connell.

Her great-grandmother, Mrs. Kate Braecklein, resides in Pasadena, Calif. For her wedding, the bride chose a champagne suit with mink collar, mink detail and a bow in back. Her tiny hat was champagne colored with velvet trim, and her flowers were purple violets. Mr.

O'Connell gave his daughter in marriage. Attending the bride were her sisters, the Misses Margaret Rae and Kathleen O'Connell. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Peter Olsen, 1416 Deane had Charles Kate as his best man.

The young Olsens will reside in Racine when they return from their wedding trip to northern Wisconsin. Sheer Wool Ideal Fabric of Many Uses -Clairemont Photo MRS. DAVID R. KRAMER (Trudy Rodenkirch) accessories. Both had white orchid corsages.

At the close of the wedding. mass, the bride placed a bouquet of pink carnations on the Blessed Virgin's altar while the choir, with her father as soloist, sang Gounod's "Ave Maria." The newly married couple left for North Carolina where they will reside at Cherry Point while he is stationed there with, the Marines. 35,000 Doctors Take Graduate Training CHICAGO-More than physicians took graduate medical training in 1,400 of the nation's hospitals last year. Of these, 10,198 were serving internships, an increase of 305 over the year before, and 976 were serving residencies, an increase of 1,964. Sheer wool is one of the most versatile of all fabrics.

In gay prints, solid colors or lightweight tweeds, it can do year-round duty in any situation, from boudoir to ballroom. Sheer printed wool is a great idea for a party dress, which will be as correct and comfortable for summer as winter. Sewing experts suggest a short formal dress in sheer wool print, strapless and becoming to any figure. skirted, easy to sew, if you a steam, iron to smooth seams as sew. A girl planning spring for-, mal dances might choose sheer wool print in tones of lime and melon on a white ground, with a hem-length sash of green satin.

A standard patgives full directions, callfor about six yards of fabric, plus a couple of yards of wide ribbon for the sash. A surplice bodice treatment is a new note. To adapt this dress to the Empire mode, simply bone the sash so it rises high at the midriff, allowing it to slope down to the natural waistline back. Add a rose or jeweled pin at one side. For the more formal-minded, the pattern also provides directions for making a net overskirt.

FUR TRIMS FUR Southwest African Lamb sparkles like a black mond, for evening, especially when fur coats made of are trimmed with black mink, fluffy black box, or black Alaskan seal. January 29th-8 p.m. Racine Woman's Club Hall The WHITE-GERLAT Hammond Chord Organ Club Presents Jane Jarvis at the Hammond Concert Organ Hammond and Chord Organ owners and friends are cordially invited to enjoy this outstanding musical event. Century-Old Church Has First Wedding -Peloso Studio Mary G. Hocking Soon to Wed Miss Mary Grace Hocking, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Arthur John Hocking Jr. of 180 E. 79th New York and (granddaughter of the late Arthur John Hocking of Racine, is to become the bride of Judson Richheimer, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Jerome Richheimer of 1085 Park New York. Miss Hocking, whose parents are announcing her engagement today, and her fiancel plan to be married this spring. She attended St. Lawrence Academy and Notre Dame Convent School, and was graduated from Blessed Sacrament Academy. Her fiance prepared at Columbia Grammar School and Paul Smith's and was graduated in 1950 from Lafayette College.

He served with the Navy and is now with Arnessen Electric Co. of New York. GROVE CITY, Ohio -(P)- After 109 years, Concorn Methodist Church near here has become the scene of a wedding. Because the congregation is small (25 at present) and the pastor has several other small churches, weddings have been held elsewhere. Until Phyllis Minton and William Crookham exchanged vows, no record of a wedding could be found in church archives.

OPEN MON. FRI. co A. M. to 9.

P. FELDMAN'S SHOE STORE 915 SIXTEENTH Persian dia- SWA Your Favorite BRIDE- TO -BE Has undoubtedly listed her name an gift preferences in Sandy's Popular Bridal Register. You'll find it easy to select a gift for -she registered her gift preferences here so you could have a big selection and avoid possible duplication. Sandy's Is Racine's Only Complete Gift Store WHERE YOU CAN BUY ALL THESE GIFTS INCLUDING FAMOUS APPLIANCES Housewares, Linens Toasters Irons Wall Decor, Planters Fry Pans, Percolators Clocks, Lamps China, Glassware Washers, Dryers Cutlery, Silverware Rangers, Refrigerators Radios, Television Handbags Perfumes Costume Jewelry Plus A World of Unique and Unusual Gift Ideas RACINE'S MOST INTERESTING GIFT STORE 512-516 WIS. AVE..

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About The Racine Journal-Times Sunday Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
33,229
Years Available:
1954-1970