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SUNDAY, AUGUST 23, 1925 Sere Sor _) @he Casper Sunday Cribune __PAGE FIVE | | Y. W. la HIGH SOCIETY WEDDINGS S COSTLY °- > ° Up fo 55. 000 Spent But Formalities Can Be Had for se BY MARGERY PICKFORD | Central Press Correspondent NEW, YORK, Aug. 22.—How much foes a wedding in high society cost? For the nuptials you have been reading about this season, the aver- age outlay has been about $10,000 to $15,000, S estimated by Park it avenue social secretaries, Some of them cost as much ag $25,000, One of the secretaries gave the itimized cost of a recent marriage in New York: Engraved invitations (shaded Roman antique letters,) sent to 1,000 persons, $150; flowers at the church $9 at the house $500; music at the church $200; sex- ton’s fee $10; canopy at church $35; caterer’s ch 800 guests $450; weddin extra servants $100; by au, $6,000; bri The total here is a little more | than $10,000. At other weddings the | ons are much more costly, or | au ig much more | h more elaborate | refreshments are ed wedding this the At another wedding gown cost $10,- 000 | | $3,000 Wedding Adequate The fi above do not include the total wedding costs, however. There 1s usually an expensive en- sagement dinner, a dowry or a par- ental gift, Ike jewels, etc., and then there 1s a heavy outlay on the part” of the bridegroom in the form of sifts to ushers, fees, etc. The bride also usually gives expensive presente to her attendants, However, all of the demands of} social tradition can be met with a eddin, costing $3,000. ive hundred inyitations on the | finest paper, engraved in script, will | cost about $70, which includes at | ome cards, or reception cards, reh can be decorated especi summer, when flower for $100, and an average sized n be made to look festive for t $100 will make indeed, e or 2 music at the church, out the choir, costs only $26 Tho cost of music at the house would depend upon the number of pieces in the orchestra and the length of {t look ‘very | time they were required to play. The musicians average ‘about $10, for each three hours of playing. /The catering would be less if the bride decided not to have quite as much food as her more plutocratic friend served her guests. Not that she need starve her friends—she can serve them a “glorified” tea, consist- ing of fruit salad, hot rolls, coffee ices and cakes with radishes, olives, candy and nuts as the vital acces Or she can | with the reception altogeth- | have a light supper wedding party. $500 For Linen | A plentiful supply of linen can be the bride's proudest possession, for with judicious purchasing she may obtain it for $500, Linen is fear. fully expensive at present, and for £500 she will not be able to get many very elaborate pieces. If she be nny she will suggest linen to her friends as an idea for gifts. If the bride-to-be has been given $2,000 for her trousseau she will always be glad if she spends $1,000 only before she ‘s married, and saves the other to buy her next season’s clothes. The girl who is employed and wishes’ to pay for her own wedding or part of it should realize when making her pla that simplicity and beauty go hand in hand. She can notify her friends of the wedding by a written note, saving the cost’ of invitations. She can, with the help of her family decorate her home or her church herself, Her trous- seau although small, can include several lovely cresses, as well as some serviceable things, such as a coat—if the girl is clever enough to make her own clothes. One hundred dollars wisely spent will give her a fficlent supply of linen. Wedding dresses are apt to be a useless ex. travagance for girls who must count their pennies, although the mode this season is so simple that a lovely dress can be made for $40 or less, Serpe aeeeelivre semen? H. Hl DINGUS 10 SPEAK AT COURTHOUSE HERE Yor house on his sub- | Now Living do away er and simply ved to her New w ® court 8 o'clock lions Cranberries BROWNS MILLS, N, J.—Experl ments will be made August 26, near | Pemberton on the possibility of air- plane dusting of cranberry bogs to control cranberry rot. <A 200-acre bog will be dusted. Under present methods this would take 15 men five days. One Hour of Time ' Banishes;Two Years |from ‘Appearance’. The Hired look ok wil be arti complexion freshened Feated by ; iv Gres indicat oe «Samed Pd mpl ning ma ke, jor makeup chee Prope rections re ee Parlor h | sons only three v Tribune Building Phone 707 Two brides of the season, Left, Hon. Mrs. E. D. Metcalfe, nee Lady Alexandra Curzon. Right, Mrs. Frederic Cameron Chureh, nee Mure! Vanderbilt, Their weddings probably were the most notable of the British and American seasons, respectively, from a social standpoint. Miss Abby Rockefellers was another prominent event. Wonders of Piano Study, ‘To Be Demonstrated In Recital Friday Kvening Pupils of McBride School to Show Results of Few Weeks Instruction in Entertainment at the Wells Store. Opportunity to enjoy an evening In addition to the Dunning work, of music and at the same time wit-| solos will be played and the follow: ness a demonstration of one of the| ing pupils will appear: Helen Mar- most interesting studies of music ev-| shall, Emil Coltrane, Robert Brand, er devised will be presented F Juanita Campbell, Orlo Thomas, evening, August 28, at the Chas. ‘E.| Dick Schwartz, Anne Boyce and Wells Music store. Pupils of the! ¢ n Thompson; McBride Piano school will appear in recital and the demonstration will center around the Dunning System of Improved Music Study. The pupils who will have studied only a sh more than ten weeks and some only three weeks. With the Dunning | System the child not only learns’ to | participate | rt time, none | | Setting The Styles ~ play, but also learns the reason for everything done which lays the} foundation for intelligent music| By AILEEN LAMONT atudy, it is said | (Copyright, 1925) Casper Tribune) Harmony is the grammar of mu-| ~NEW YORK, Aug. Like Leon sic, and its first principles are just| Errol's stage drunk scenes; the ap- as essential to music s' mar is to the study of E The dictation, notation and writ ten transposition will ne by Frances La Mar and Bs ernice Garri pearance of fullness in many of the | fait ts is deceitful. Many of the skirts are as slim and closely cut As ever, but the appearance of a bell-like sweep at the hém is given son, and Ethel Douglas will play a| by a deep band of fluffy flowers. waltz of sixteen measures in the Koy | One such gem, just imported from of C, and then transpose it into any; Paris, is of cyclamen mousseline dé major or minor key named by the | Sole, with a tight bodice and a great audience. Ann Hemingway will do | frill of huge mousseline de sole roses the rhythm test. She will be given | posed about the skirt, eral rows of notes arranged in a New Velours she has never seen before. She Men have more to do with wo- will divide them into measures gnd| men’s fashions than they imagine, bring down the ect mensitre| Engiis this year abandoned the signs. Th done v put t a large extent In fa- thorough anding of t the ,Ughtweight felts. The r be drawr r n e country ¢ ¢ t, E partie he Scotch vison Hall Hanson. | than the therweight ve- Schwartz will give the history | lours and felts which are water- and Bob Rose the evolution of the} proofed and proof algo against 10. The.grand f will be built | crushing. John who has had Ie eks, the memo test by F neces La Mar, and modu ion by thel Douglas. She will Teodulate from any flat key to the next flat key, or any sharp key to the next sharp key that the audience will call for. The resolutio of the dominant seventh: will be written and played by Arthur Milek in any major minor key called for by the Thames Night into Day asbion has turned night into day, far an pajamas are concerned. The night-time garments now are be- ing worn in the afternoon as tea gowns. The jackets are slightly Jonger and more voluminous then the ordinary pajama jacket and the ilkx and satins of which they are | made heavily embroidered in or | and silver. The nether gar- udi-| ments are close-fitting and do not lower than I ence. He is a Thermopolis boy who | come mid-calf and are has studied with Mr. Je two | devold of ornament years and has completed the full Try Dunning cour Tribune Want Ads for Results KIDDIES ONLY SPECIAL PRICES On Children’s Photos THIS WEEK ONLY 2) PHONE 2702 For Particulars and Appointment CREDELL STUDIO 131 SOUTH CENTER STREET ‘ticlpating C. A. at 6:45 p, m cour n Healt s. Dr. K. Fr e big | siclan w xr ¥, W. ©, A, Summer School Jane Bell Thirty-two states, Canada and Ja-| onal Y.. separa : pan were represented at the summe sto}: . Young Women's Christian Asso-) earlier in the soason, will meet at ; rses of ahs National Training elation, Corner First and Wolcott. | tle y. Ww A. Wednesday evening hool of the Y. W. C. A., which are 1 Office telephone 1456. General Sec-| at six o'clock. The group will go| now drawing to'a close. The courses | retary’s telephone 281-J. for a short hike and eat supper to-| were ducted in two centers, one | Tennis sether around campfi Each girl] at the headquarters of the National | i ° t Tennis is ideal exercise for the} will take her own lunch, Coffee will| Board in New York with an enn | fea 1 " yyy fall_ mornings and eyenings. The| be pr all, Business girls| ment of 105, and the other in con-| aera dota . pa Mince ¥. W. C. A. tennis court ia open to] who have not previously attended | nection with the University of C vu veree : Ge ee anone who desires to schedule per-| the hikes are cordially invited fornia at Berkeley, enrolling twenty. owe ; ea: iods at the Y. W. C. A. office and Swimming four young women choosiig the Y. | : a pay the nominal fee of ten cents| Three members of the Y. W. C. A.| W. C. A. aa a profession. thee aa bane dB for admission to the court. sses passed the life-saving test] ‘The courses were planned pri-} ture or one ipods) auaoed fe Rooms Registry given by the Red Cross and will re-| marily to furnish preliminary train- ; dee runes Special work will be done this| ceive t life saver'’s medallion. | ing for the workers of the various . ¥ 7 week in preparing the rooms regis-| Those test are phases of association work, giving Stes id BF ater bs 4 try list for teachers particularly. | Brown, rn and } a knowledge of the organization, oe i The rooms listed at the. office wil!| George Bentley. Conside the technique of the various depart- y . . ¥ be visited by a representative of the} short season during which t ments and a general under: WAAL iil Mother of 7 homas ¥..W. C. A. Anyone wanting to ope: much credit f the problems confront x list rooms should do so early this e Who Were able to pass the test. | 1 leaders, i | Costello Is Dead* week. The office is open from eight ructor of Umeyo | to six every day excep: Sunday. the examine Q 1, is a student of-the New Y | i The Y. W. C. A. could use a few and w t rtiffcate | school. She has come to Amor | t ¥ deputy Inter-p ears Friday and Saturday of this] given to leged be ex-| study in order that she may return } }nal c x ea toh week to take new teachers to rooms. | aminers ¢ to | land and take up the ( lala is ae If there are those who can spare a Friday evenings | work ves of the | | Mrs. gp little time and a car, their services e who ha | Kobe A. All sections | ¥ I c ) | ’ > at ap will be greatly appreciated, both by >. A, swimming c the y are represented by r 1 &| r 1 * the association service department © care to go with the| thirt ates, many coming fr \ 7 and by the teachers who are new in itinue sWwir , the d south, as well as the] wae town near | id Hiking Club | rt g intro-} plex prog ~ The Hiking club which was so duced th New York } | Teil the Advert wae in much enjoyed by those school "Studies | her r p r King F The Tribune New York--and Only Exquisitely created = t designed to sell at | These hats were New shades—Mosul, Bois de Rose, Pansy, Pewenche, Wood Brown and Black. which are regularly priced $ and which are offer of the month a In the rich new fabric trimmings, they good taste. —at only Under Sprecher’s Pharmacy OT New Fall Fashions In Smart Millinery New Modes Direct from Paris and Beautiful materials 50 to $15.00 Velvet and Satin Combinations Violet, Pencil Blue, Marvelous Fall and Winton Coats 5 to $85 d to you for the balance a wonderful saving. with handsome fur appeal to the woman of Leading style creators have competed keenly to produce these —appealing to the woman who wants better things ; and yet who appreciates savings forcibly in evidence at this store. Hl —Clever Modes for Fall costumes at notable reductions for the balance of ‘August. Women have exclaimed with delight over the new ; Fall) | Dresses | at $45.00 and $48.50 remarking “what beauti- ful styles and materials! how harmonious the col- or effects!” Now we offer these to you at only | | | | | } . 1 } for the balan month In lustrous satins and striking combinations Favorite high grade ma- } terials have been used with new and pleasing effects, The colors that are in most demand for fall are being shown in all their richness ! omar