Charles McCarthy employed by Hemingray will be married

[Newspaper]

Publication: The Muncie Morning Star

Muncie, IN, United States
vol. 50, no. 63, p. 8, col. 1-2


SOCIETY

 

CONCLUDING a group of lovely and interesting nuptial events which has marked the month's social calendar will be the wedding of Miss Pauline E. Fell, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Fell, 125 East Eighth street, who will plight her troth to Charles McCarthy, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mc­Carthy, of Kirby avenue, at the 8 o’clock mass this morning at the Saint Lawrence Catholic Church, in the presence of 150 guests. Father Houlihan will read the double ring service. The church will be ar­ranged with palms, ferns, and stand­ards filled with choice summer blos­soms and the altar will be outlined with southern smilax. Before the appointed hour the church choir will sing a group of bridal airs, chang­ing to Mendelssohn's wedding march for the entrance of the bridal party. The ushers Fred Fell, brother of the bride, and Clement McCarthy, brother of the bridegroom will enter first, followed by Miss Margaret Hogan and Bruce McCarthy, brother of the bridegroom. Miss Hogan will be becomingly gowned in white taf­feta, made Colonial fashion and trimmed with white silk lace. She will wear a large white picture hat and carry a nosegay of Sunburst roses and orchid sweet-peas. Next will come the little flower girls Mary McCarthy and Lillian Louise Walterhouse, dressed in dainty white frocks and carrying baskets filled with rose petals which they will scatter in the pathway of the bride and bridegroom who will enter to­gether. The bride will wear an exquisiste [sic] exquisite gown of white georgette, fashioned with a bouffant skirt and tight fitting basque and her long filmy veil of white tulle will be caught about the head by a band of pearls and orange blossoms. She will wear white satin slippers with hose to match and carry a lovely shower bouquet of bride s roses and pink sweet-peas. During the service a group of bridal airs will be played softly with Mendelssohn’s wedding march to be played for the reces­sional.

Immediately following the cere­mony an elaborate wedding break­fast will be served at the home of the bride s parents. A color note of pink and white will be carried out in all the appointments and the individual tables will be adorned with bowls of Killarney roses. A large wedding cake and a miniature bride and bridegroom will grace the bridal table, the center decora­tion to be surrounded with ropes of smilax and ferns. At noon the young couple will leave for an ex­tended motor trip through the East, and will stop at New York City, Philadelphia and other points of in­terest. The bride will travel in a tailored dress of Roman striped silk, black patent leather slippers, white hose, white box-weave coat and a Milan bonnet hat.

Since her announcement sometime ago, the bride has been feated ex­tensively. She is popular among the city’s younger social set and is a member of the P. A. C. and A. P. C. clubs. She was graduated from the Muncie High School with this year’s class. The bridegroom is well known in this community and is connected with the Hemingray Glass Company in the engineering department. Among the out-of-town guests at­tending the wedding were, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Book, of Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fell, of Harri­son, O.; Mrs. Rose, of Connersville; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCarthy, of Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Reed, of Portland, Ore.; Mr. and Mrs. L. Wallace, of Anderson, and Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Mitchell, of Chicago, Ill., Dewey Compton, of Richmond, and Clement McCarthy, of Detroit.


Keywords:Hemingray
Researcher notes: 
Supplemental information: 
Researcher:Bob Stahr
Date completed:August 12, 2023 by: Bob Stahr;